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· ~ ·•oo

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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

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•

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

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•

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 •

�.

......l .

)

BIRRV:itih; CONVENTION
'

BRUCE SIOSS:Ar
'

Democrats

s-

A~uislled

MAJOR
LEAGUE

. By BRUCE BIOSSAT

primary .
It cannot be rubbed from the recorJ that this under·

taking had the sanction of virtually all of McGovern's
presidential rivals- not just vocar.Sen. Hubert Humphrey
but ·qu1et Sen. Edmund Musk1e an~ a long list including
even U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm. t~at supposed advocate
of things new and different and better.

--

Retained Fluids
Cause Discomfort

By Helen,and Sue Bottel

"

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
~.

Dear Dr. Lamb-! have
noticed that my body holds
fluid . The doctor prescribed
a water pill for me to use
before my periods and this
helped tremendously, but
now I've started retaining
fluid all the lime, rather
than just before my period.
It causes me to have awful
headaches and sluggishness.
I get very irritable and
short-tempered. I told my
doctor this and he told me I
could take the water pills
every other day and they
wouldn't hurt me. I would
like to know what causes this
condition and what could be
done to cor rect it. I am on
thyroid which I have to take
lor the rest of my life .any·
"Louisiana votes-23 ham and ch~se-3 e99 salad-78
way and I'd hate to take
peanut butter and ;elly!"
these too since I'm only 35
"Sonofagun! He hasn't quit trying/"
-----------------~--years old .
Dear Reader - These are
many
reasons for retaining
WIN AT BRIDGE
Huid . The premenstrual reWhat do y ou do now~
tention .of fluid is pretty well
A-Pass. You have iried for
known and, of course, is reseven and yo ur part n e r has
lated
to the hormones. What
settled £or six. Pass and hope he
Q- Whu wrote til e "Ti»• ·
really
happens is the body
makes
it.
Pass
3 .$.
Pass
uthu Titcomb Lett ers''?
NORTH
13
retains
salts and the more
Pass
5•
Pass
A - The American writer
TODAY'S QUESTIOI"
.A4
salt
th
e
body retains the
Pass
5¥
Pass
In stead of bidd ing fi vl! clubs . Josiah Gilbert Holland . They
• A872
more
water
one accumu?
Pass
6•
Pass
your partner has bid four dia- were a commentary on the
t652
lates.
Other
causes
for reYou, South, hold :
and
morals
of
his
manners
nwnds over your four clubs.
763
taining
fluid
include
such
• AJ513 • K9763 t void •QI07 What do you do now?
time s.
WEST
EAST
things as heart disease. kid·
6 Void ,
• Q6532
ney disease and liver dis·
¥QJI0953
.K6
ease. I rather doubt you
UL u
tl094
tJ87 3
have any of these unless you
.J954
.Q IO
have some symptoms which
SOUTH (D)
you didn 't mention .
6KJ109 87
Why don't you try cutting
down
on the amount of salt
tAKQ
BY JACK O'BRIAN
else."
you use? The water pills
.A8 2
SOMETHING OLD AND SOMETHING NUDE
The other intelleclual was a celebrated actually work by causing the
East-West vulnerable
NEW YORK (KFS) - O'bservations college professor renowned in his limited kidneys to eliminate salt and
West North East South
Showbiz-at-Large ... Why don 'I they call the esthetic sphere (probably an ideal for a Dick thereby. eliminate the excess
16
water. Remember salt and
Pass 2 .r.
Pass
New Morality by its proper label: The Old Cavell one-man-shrug) who married a lovely water go together. The prob·
Pass 4N.T.
Pass 4 • ·
Immorality ... The syndicated Merv Griffin bubbleheaded Broadway chorus girl . . . His lem with water pills is they
Pass 5 •
Pass 5N.T.
Show suffers by the loss of its marvelous voice peers in academe decried the seemingly until· sometimes flush out other
Pass 6 t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
death-parted gaffe and gave it six weeks to six minerals. An ideal way to
of impudent cheerfulness, Arthur Treacher.
down on your salt IS to
Opening lead-• Q
One of the few celebrity...,ppendages of the months , . . On their 25th anniversary, the cut
stop using salt in cooking
last few decades who never has seemed to try constan~y contented couple, surroWJded by the and don 't add any free salt.
l!y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby and use his erstwhile royal pilot-fish position to same gaggle of cynical doubledomes were the There will still be quite a
Old man Z looked over the his present or future aggrandizement is Capt. only two lruly happy people present . .. One of bit of salt in your regular
dummy c~refully. He had to Pe~r Townsend, Princess Margaret's great the professors (by then dean and college
The Almanac
Jose a club and he had to love, who went along to modeslly successful president) was cornered surreptitiously by an
take care of the queen of activities and the respect of all ... It always old acquaintance who demanded the secret of By United Press International
trumps.
Today is Thursday, July 13,
Z remarked, "This looks struck us thai the Duke of Windsor when King success of this totally disparate union ; the the !95th day of 1972 with 17lto
like a hand I played in Wil· Edward and beleaguered by the less-than-royal happy celebrant smiled and replied, "I simply follow.
bur Whitehead's c o I u m n and mosUy lower·than-noble British establish· never wished to come home nights to match
The moon is between its ~w
back in 1925. In any case menl which harassed him into abdicating, wits."
phase and first quarrer.
there is no reason not to pro: easily could have told them all to go to wherezis
Ditto the audience of any TV show; in·
The morning stars are Venus
vide for a possible trump
and what could they have done? The then eluding notably the Dick Cavett Show, for which and Saturn.
coup."
Then he called for dum- current government would have fallen, was the we have .enormous respect-with-an-explanation , The evening stars are Mercumy's ace of hearts and a selfish bleat; and so what?
- we also do not wish to match wits with his ry, Mars and Juplrer.
lead of a low heart at trick
There is an often WI Used but preferable way guests who do not interest our less than in·
Those born on this date are
two.
to
book
TV
talk
shows
which
generally
escapes
wllectual,
if
never
anli·intelleclual,
id.
under the sign of Cancer.
He ruffed and led a· trump
Tiny Tim's marriage on the Carsoncast
Father Edward Flanagan,
to dummy's ace. We s t shows in trouble, a Ia the Dick Cavell flailin g
. .. Dick's addiction to the critics who proclaim gave that welterweight cavacade its highest-toshowed out.
Z said, "Just as Whitehead his in~Uectuality makes him understandably then rating; couldn 't such impressively trivial
set the hand up." Then he myopic to other elements available to him; he triumphs now be extrapolated to other WI·
led the four of spades and seems WJsuilably WJimpressed with glamor, the precedented attractions . . . Such as the
finessed against the queen.
popular performers in any sphere - showbiz, growing, or distending, nwnber of showbiz
The top diamonds and the
ace·klng M c I u b s were liwralure, politics - and self-indulgent in his couples not only living in what used to be called
cashed·next. East had to fol- selection of visitors who might satisfy his and sin but actually proclaiming proudly their life
low all those leads and Z his prewntiously mollified critics who adore a styles and delighting in recounting lulure or
was home - I e a d another whole show about Indians, or neighborhood recent babies born out of wedlockt couldn't
heart from dummy and ruff gangs, etc.; which turns off great gobs of Carson or Griffin or Cavett contract the more
it. It In a d e no difference
whether East ruffed first or viewers . .. Reminds us of the several brushes prominent celebrities to stage the acdiscarded his last diamond. we've had with intellectuals who enjoy an un· couchement on their shows? Seems the only
Now Z was left with the common ability to keep feet firmly planted on suggestible extrapolation toward new and
king.jack of trumps and a the groWld instead of in thin air ... One .once greater. ratings via vulgarity.
low club. He led the low asked us, "May I strike a blow for mediocrity,"
We noted our conviction that Laurel &amp;
club. West tried to take the which alone enchanged us.
1
Hardy were. overpraised posthwnously, the
trick, but East had to ruff
He
worked
12to
18
hours
a
day
at
his
indeed
The l'jational Forest Sys.
longer
gone ,.the greater the fawning; while
and lead a trump into Z's
tern
is made up of 154 Na.
tenace.
inwllectual pursuits and explained that, when Charles Chase was a silent film comedian oflar
Uonal
Forests, 19 National
The care taken at trick arri.ving home at the lag end of his overex- greater comical impact whose lack of broad
Grasslands
and other mi·
two had paid off and Z had tended intellectuality he did not wish to tWJe In physical mannerisms seem to have limlted, or ·
nor
acreages
which total
scored another slam .
TV to a ' discussion .of The Pill, abortion, buried, his posthwnous appeal . . . The very about 187 million acres In
(NEWSP4PEit EN.TERPRISE ASSN.J
geopolitics, or c0mparallve psychology: "l cornball physical tricks of several long.gone 44 states, Puerto fllco and
want to take off my shoes and watch 'Highway clowns, hooted at by all but the movie masses of the Virgin Islands, The
Patrol,' was his cerebral-rotating solution to his the day, now appeal to the eternally extended World Almanac notes. This
system is administered by
otherwise endless application of brainpower ... juveniliiies of a few comics able to imitate their the Forest Service or the
The bidding has been:
Sir Winston S. Churchill put it ever so harmlessly cheerful, limited talents.
U.S. Department of Agrl·
w..t North East
satisfactorily: "A vacation ill doing somethin~
culture .

-

-.

QillCKQUIZ

Between Devil and Deep---

.K

,,.

.,.

"'"'

Voice along Br'Way

.4

3.
6.

'"'

..
'I

I

diet, since there is sodium,
or salt, naturally in meat,
milk and, to a lesser extent,
in vegetables . Even so this
will make a tremendous dif·
ference in your salt intake.
It's worth a try and it may
decrease your need to take
the water pills and improve
your over-aU feeling. lnci·
dentally, rice and fruit are
relatively devoid of salt and
you may find them helpful in
your effort.
'Dear Doelor - I read an
article by a doctor warning
people of the radium used on
watch dials. He claimed that
the human body absorbed
enough through these
watches that the dials were
harmful. Our son is con·
te.mp)atlqg byying a watch to
be worn daily and also In
scuba diving. ,Tbere Is a lot
of luminous material on the
watch . Is it safe to use this
type of watch?
Dear Reader-Of course, it
is or the Federal Trade Commission would have had it
withdrawn from the market.
Some luminous dials are produced by using s'mall
amounts of radium . This
could be harmful to em·
ployes making the dials and
continuously exposed but
proper precautions are tak·
en. There were some reports
years ago of workers in
watch factories w h o de·
veloped difficulties in using
radium materials to make
luminous dials. I don't know
of a single case of anyone
who has ever had radiation
sickness from wearing a
watch with a luminous dial.

American League

National League ·
East
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
Pi'tl b
w. I. pel. g.b. Detro it
43 34 .SS8
N s urgh
48 29 .623
Baltimore
41 36 .532 2
York
4S 33 .S77 3'12 Boston
37 36 .507 4
Ch Louis
41 36 .532 7 New York
37 37 .500 4'12
M lcago
42 38 .S2S 1•12 Cleveland
32 44 .421 10'12
p ontreal
34 44 .436 14,/2 Milwaukee
30 45 .400 12
h!ladelphia 28 S2 .3SO 21'/2
West
West
w. t. pet. g.b.
C
w. I. pel. g.b. Oakland
48 30 .615
lnclnnali
47 31 .603
Chicago
45 34 .570 3'h
Houston
47 3.4 .580 111-2 Millllesota
39 37 .51 3 8
Los Angeles 42 38 .S2S 6 Kansas City 40 38 .S1 3 8
Atlanta
37 43 .463 11 California · 36 44 .4SO 13
· Sa n Francisco 36 49 424 14 V.- Texas
36 46 .41 8 IS'h
San Diego
30 so :m 18
.
Wednesday's Results
Wednesday's Results
Houston 10 Chicago 6
Chicago 5 Cleveland 4
New York 4 San Fran o ,
Kan City 1l Baltimore 4
San Diego 6 Monlreal s
Minnesota 7 Milwaukee 1
Los Ang 9 Phi lade Iph ia s
Detroit 3 Texas 1
St. Louis 7 Allanta 0
Boston 7 Oakland
Cine! 6 Pitlsburgh 3
New York 5 California 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Reuss S.Sl at
Today's Probable Pitchers
Chicago (Jenkins ]1 .7), 2:30
tAll Times EDT)
p.m.
Basion (Cu!p S·7l at Minneso.
Atlanta (Hardin 2·0 or Stone Ia (Corbin 4·2), 8:30 p.m.
2·6) at St. Louis (Cleveland 10. Cleveland· !Colbert ].6) at
4). 9 p.m.
Texas (Bos man 4·7). 8:30 .p.m.
Pitlsburgh (Blass 10·2) al
Kansas City (Spllttorff 9·4) at
Clncinnali (Nolan 12~ 2). 8 p.m. Delroll (Lolich 14·61. 9 p.m.
(On ly games scheduled)
(Or ly games scheduled)

.st"

Fridays Games

Hous at Pltlsburgh, night
Montreal at Los Ang, night
New York al San Diego. night
AUanta at Chicago
C1ncl at Sl. Louts. night
· Phila at San Francisco, night

en, Jack Third

·

Friday's Games

at Minnesota, night
Cleveland at Texas, night
Kan City al Detroit, night
Ch1cago at Bait, 2, fwi.nite
Cal If at Mllw, night
Oakland at N.Y., 2. twt.nlte

PUBUC NECKING JUST FOR KIDS?
•
Dear Helen and Sue :
We have an aunt who Is divorced, with a teenage son. She's
going out with a divorced man.
They hug and kiss whenever they feel like It, which Is a lot!
They even hold hands going down the street. It loob funny,
seeing middle-aged people loving It up in public. Everybody
turns around and stares.
Aren't they old enough to know bet~r? - H. P.
1

'

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Clay
Carroll learned his lesson three
years ago. That's why he's not
planniog on being in Atlanta
during dle AIJ..Star game break
later this mont().
"Sure, it bugged me during
1969 when I wasn't picked on
the team," Clay said Wednesday night after he gained his
18th save or the season as the
Cincinnati Reds made it two in
a row over the Pittsburgh Pi·
rates with a 6-3 victory.
Carroll owned a 124 record
at the All..S!Br game break in
1969.

~

Boston

Dear H.:
I don't see anything wrong with a middle-aged ~le
showing a little affection in public, like holding hands ... a small
kiss or hug. !lit's more of a heavy scene- yeB, that embarr.._
or amuses people, depending on whether they're related to the
lovebugs or just out for the view.
However,lt's their life so, for now, ,just turn your head and
whistle Dixie. - SUE

+++
Dear H. :
•
... With emphasis on the "Look away" llne !
:
Here's a good te§l: If some of your friendl publicly necked aa ~
much .as do your aunt and her bo~ WWJil'lhey fiDllari'llil1,-;l
you! II not, then you 're llOIIdeJMln8 beca111e of age, not actlollll. :-&lt;
Remember, the yoWJg don't have a monopoly on love. HELEN

+++
Hey, Bottels:
Whllt would you say if you were in a singing group and tbey
did something to make you mad -)II least 110meone told you they
said bad thinp about you -so you quit the group, and you told
your mother about It, and she got angry at the group and said you
could never go back. Then you decided you liked tbese kids aeain
and they asked you back and you wanted to go, but your motller
was sUII tee-ed oH and said, "Absolutely Not!!!"
I've never had a big disagreement with my mother before, 10
how can I change her mind? - DISAPPOINTED SEVENTif •
••
GRADER

••
•

Disappointed:
'
Your first mistake waa relllng your Mom. It's hard lor ~
parents NOT to lake sides when they hear those awfulllorlea
about bow mean the ,kids are to their tittle girl. And It's hard ••
changing dlrectlons, ~ when their tittle finally geta the facta •
straight.
(NIWSPArU ENTERPRISE ASSH.)
All you can do now Is explain the misunderstanding and how ••
'
fast ldds forget. I think she'll relent.
•'
Do rou H.e qutJtions obout im·
., And next time, 111INK before you say all'lhotte bad th1nga '
pottncel II JO, 'lfM''II "'"'' to rHd
about
your frlendl just to get sympathy. Mothers remember long
Dr. Lamb's ik*ltt ;" which Itt Gil ·
~f
swen your qmticwts obout this J.Mh- after you wish they wouldn't! -SUE
jocl Send 50 cwntt to Dt.. l.dmb,
••
;,. core ol tfJis news,.,ptr, 1.0 . lor
'
Dear
Disappointed's
Mother: :
•
rssr, Rtdio City St•tiM, Hw York,
(l think Sue 18 trying to tell me something ... But 1 could '
N.Y. 10019. A.d (ot 1tttpotMCt"
remind her ci the many times I played Devtl 'a advocate and took ·
booldol.
the other side of a typical junior hll!h school feud - only to get the ••
founder of Boy's Town In typical teenaged girlllllJWer, "But M~ther, you JUST elm 't •
Nebraska, waa born July 13, UNDERSTAND how mean they are I")
It 'a hard not to play Mother Hen when your chick !lel!llllll ~
1888.
lhreatened,
but if you'll look back lo your teen years- or evm to
On this day in history :
In 1863 opposition to the the last PTA haasle -you'll reilllze that mOtlt quarrellw two- t
federal Conscription Act led to aided, U8118lly blown out ci proportion - and as soon blown ov1r
riots in New York City, in unli!IIB someone keeps buffing and puffing.
whl~h more than 1,000 persons . Don't stay in a huff! -HELEN
were killed.
(

••

•

•••

11

•
•

lED
CUSTOMERS make
gleam
us
with
delight. Enjoy our
cheerful. dependable
service, at Rizer Oil

Co.

See
Uncle
Frank
or .Uncle

~

••
••

!'

=e.
•

J

(7/. ~
(//1//)

tJ
I

prize in the $IZ5,000 greater
Milwaukee Open.
Only 21 of the top 50 money
winners are enrered here with
Cramploo, Chi Chi Rodriguez
and Grier Jones the only entries nswd in the top 15 .
Dave Eichelberger is the
defending champion in the
meet at Tripoli CoWitry Club
on the City's Northwest side.
Eichelberger broke from a
tightly bunched field on the
final boles to win the 1971 meet.
Ken SUII, the 1969 'champion,
and Deane Beman, wbo won in
1970, are also enrered this year.
Wednesday, playing in the
pro-am, Still equalled the
tourney record w1th a !kinder·
plr821andhadalantastlc:18'on·'"
the back •nine. Still's rfiund
broke the course competitive
record of 63.
"When you're hot, you're
bot,'' Still said later and,
remembering some of the
problems he has had, quickly
added, "yeh, and when you're
not you're not.''
Jim Wiechers, also entered
in this year's meet, now shares
the GMO mark with SUII.
Wiechers got his 62 when the
meet was held at the longer
North Shore Country Club.
The GMO field also includes
Gay Brewer , who won the
Canadian Open last week, and
tour winners Jones, Rodriguez,
Miller Barber, Bob Rosburg,
Homero Blancas, Bob Shaw,
Bob Lunn and J.C. Snead.
The field wlll be cut after 36
boles on Friday for the final
two rounds Saturday and
Sunday.

" It was a real letdown when I more deserving of a berth on
wasn't picked,'' admitted Car· the All.Star 511uad than the
roll. "I was hurt because I Reds' relief ace.
really thought I deserved to be
No Mental Letdown
on the team."
"But ill don't make it," says
Carroll suffered and so, as it Clay, "it's not going to be like
turned out, did the Reds . Clay 1969.l'm not going to have any
didn't win a game the second mental letdown. Sure, it would
half of that 1969 season, but he be great to be in the game but
did add two more losses to fin· the World Series is a lot more
ish with a 1U record.
important to me and the other
This year Carroll's pitching guys on this team.~~
better than ever. Since Clay's
"All I have to say," com·
18 saves are accompanied by a mented Reds manager Sparky
4-1 won-loss record and a 1.49 Anderson, "is that if a relief
earned run average there's pitcher is selected, Carroll has
hardly a pitcher in the league to be the one."

while Swve Lee established
htmself as one of three Meigs
American Legion pitching aces
as lhe club edged New Haven
Wednesday at New Haven, 74
in eight innings.
Tom Cooke, sidelined 17 days
w1th a sertous mouth injury
suffered in a game with New
Haven , put on the cleats
Wednesday. He made it into

the game at second base in the
sixth frame .
He led off with a single in the
seventh and cracked a two-out,
two-run single in the eighth.
J.,ee, winner of two in a row
alter losing his first three,
allowed only one·hit, the third
safely he has allowed in the
lasll7 frames . All four of New
Haven's runs were unearned.
With the game tied 44 going
into the eighth - the game was

Canada Loaded
por Russ; nns
L'

TOP MONEY
AKRON, Ohio (UP!)Nelson Burton Jr. of St. Louis
continues to head the official
money standings of tbe Profes.
sional Bowlers Association
with $43,9a5, more than $6,000
better than runnerup Don
Johnson of Akron.
Larry Laub of San Fran·
cisco, who was second to Mike
McGrath of El Cerrito, Calif.,
in the recent $50,000 Winston·
Salem Open, moved Into fourth
place with earnings of $32,930.

John Now

11-

be

loca 18 will
(&gt;inning their
hopes on.
Trevino also was in good
position after carding an even·
par 71 on a day that saw the
6,892-yard course in command.
High winds and rain lashed the
exposed course Wednesday
and only seven men bettered
par.
Tied with Nicklaus at 70 were
Frank ~ard and Dave Marr, a
couple of former big money
winners who now are slum~

f?JI..- ·_ .
1/~· if{qu. ..

I

loa

1 ••

: ..

..

,

; '

,

"

'I'ORON'l'tf( IJ,P,p-The' mO:St ' Hull, according to Team
awesome hockey squad ever . Canada regulations, will not be
assembled-at least on paper- able to play for the team if he
was Wlveiled Wednesday. It is haS;toot signed wilh a National
to carry the colors of Team Hockey League ream by Aug.
Canada, which will meet the 13, when training camp opens.
Soviet Union in an eight.game
He recently signed a multi·
hockey series in Seprember. million dollar contract with the
. Thirty-five players, most of Winnipeg Jets of the newly
them the cream of National formed World Hockey Associa·
Hockey League talent, will go lion. According to Team
into training here Aug. 13 and Canada officials he would have
will meet the Russians first in to sign with an NHL team,
Montreal on Sept. 2. Three preswnably his old team, the
other games will be played in Chicago Black Hawks, in order
Canada between that date and to represent his country.
Sept. 8 and lour games will be
The following is Team
played in Russia from Sept. 2t). Canada's r'¥ter as annoWlced
28.
by Sinden: ·
It wlll be the first time that
Goal: Tony Esposito, ChicaCanada has been able to have go; Ken Dryden, Montreal;
WJlimired access to its profes· Gerry Cheevers, Boston.
slonal hockey players in inter.
Defense: Bobby Orr and Don
national competition.
Awre¥ Boston; Brad Park and
Team Canada Coach Harry Rod Seiling, New York; J. C.
Sinden, a fonner mentor of the Tremblay, Jacques Laperriere
Boston Bruins, chose the and Serge Savard, Montreal;
game's biggest stars-Bobby Jocelyn Guevremont, VanHull, Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito couver; Gary Bergman, De- but added a few lesser troit ; Pat Stapleton and Bill
known-but-steady checking White, Chicago.
players like Toronto's Ron
Center: Phil Esposito and
Ellls and Boston's Wayne Derek Sanderson, Boston; Gil·
Caslunan to give his squad a bert Perreault, Buffalo;
winning balance.
Marcel Dionne and Red
The status of two of the .Berenson, Detroit; Jean
team's top players, Orr and Ratelle, New York ; Bobby
Hull, was In doubt.
Clarke, Philadelphia.
Orr, recovering from a postLeft Wing: Bobby Hull,
season knee operation, has said Chicago (now Winnipeg Jets of
he wlll not be able to play in the WHA); Dennis Hull, Chicago;
first four games but thinks he Peter and Frank Mahovlich,
can make It for the last four in Montreal; Wayne Caahman,
Russia.
Boston; Jean-Paul Parise,
Minnesota; Paul Henderson,
Toronto, Vic Hadfield, New
York; Richard Martin, Buffalo . ·
Right Wing : Rod Gilbert,
New York; Yvan Cournoyer,
I. WE'RE
Montreal; Ron Ellis, Toronto;
Mickey Redmond, Detroit; Bill
TO SERVE
Goldsworthy, Minnesota.

HERE

Y~U!

The Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIG~ · MASON.AII EA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

sc heduled lor sel'en - Swve
Dunfee walked with one out,
.went to second on Dave Boyd's
sacrifice, came around to third
on Kevin Sheets' single, and
scored on a wild pitch. That
ga ve Meigs a 54 lead, but this
was not the place to slop.
Jon Buck whiffed at a third
strike but went on to first as the
catcher couldn't handle the
ball. Cooke's single then drove
in two more tallies. Lee
followed wi lh a single but there
was no further scoring .
New Haven, coac hed by ex·
major leaguer Mel Clark ,
jumped out to a 3.{) lead in the
second when Curtis Roush,
leading off, got on through an
error. Chester Roush grounded
sharply back to the mound but
Lee's throw was wild al
second.
After Danny Gardner
sacrificed the runners to
second and third , pitcher
Kyser doubled to left to score
both Roushes . Kyser then
scored on the third error of the
inning.
Meigs came back with four in
the fifth when Sheets and Buck

HOEFLICH ,
City EOIIor

Publ ished daily except
S•turday by Tht OhiD Valley
Publishing Company , 111
Courl Sl ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
45169 . Business Office Phone
"2·21S6, Editorial Flhone 992 -

Bur CALL. ll•i
5IGI&lt; AND
L15riN TO

FR'\10'5

2157.

TUNE...

Pass

•

MoadiJ llilit 5lilrdiJ
(

·'

basic or otherwise . A
questioner asked if his practice
of switching from the small
British-sized 1.62 inch hall to
lhe American 1.68 inch hall at
the short holes called for a
radical, or otherwise, variation
in technique.

well/' he said . 111 was a bit

short and a little quick, but I hit
a lot of good shots also. I had to
or I wouldn't have gotten out of
some of the places the bad
shots put me."
Trevino wasn't too worried
about technical problems,

"I wouldn't know:' ' said the'
wis~·crac,king Mexican
blandly . "I'm too dumb to
notice any difference."

fifth victory against three deCarroll was one of An· could do."
Bench
on
Binge
feat.s.
derson's All-Star selections
Carroll came to the Reds in a
last .year. ·
Bench, off on another homer
"Just say I'm a longshot this mid-season deal with the binge, !tit his 23rd and 24th of
Braves in the summer of 1968. the season while boosting his
year," said Carroll.
The score was 1&gt;-2 when Clay RBI total to69. Perez added his
"But it would be nice making
the team, especially since the entered the game Wednesday 14th homer and Tolan degame· is in Atlanta," mused night in the ninth inning with livered what proved to be the
one out. However, there were game-winning blow when he
Clay.
Carroll is remembering his two rurmers on base.
singled home lwo runs in the
Gene Alley greeted Carroll seventh innilog.
days as a member of the AI·
with a single to drive home the
lanla pitching staff.
The ruos in this game were
"They just shoved me into a Pirates' third and final run. the first the Reds have scored
corner and rorgot about me, " Clay then retired the next two for Simpson in his last three
he said. " It wasn't unlill was batters.
starts.
Johnny Bench, Tony Perez
traded to the Reds that l really
Gary Nolan will fa ce the PIgot a chance to show what I and Bobby Tolan furnished the rates' Sreve Blass as the Reds
firepower as Wayne Simpson, wind up the series and their
with Carroll's help, gained his current homes land tonight.

.
.
na.,Neu~

MEIGS
·INN

......

Secon.d clan poslage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Na'tional advtrl isl ng
rtpresenlat i ve
Bottlnelll ·
Gellaghtr , Inc ., 12 East A"2nd
St ., New York City , Ntw York .
· $ubtcrlptlon rattS : De ·
livered by cerrler whtrt
avellable SO cents per wtek ;
ly Motor Routt wt'lert cerrltr
strvice not ava ilable : One
month $1.15, By mail in Ohio
and w. va .• Ont year S\.4 .00.
Six months s~ . 2s . Thret
months u .so . Subscription
price Includes Sunday Times .
s.ntinel. .

led of! with si ngles, Lee
doubled Sheets home with one
out, Van Maire doubled home
two more runs with two out,
and Roller Dixon singled home
Van Matre from second.
New Haven tied it in the filth
when Bret Clark walked with
one out and scored on a threebase error.
Kyser, a lefthanded curve.
baUer with excellent control,
fanned lour and walked none in
five innings. Chandler came on
in the sixlh and was charg ed
with the loss as he fanned four
but walked three in three in-

MEN'S JEANS
DRESS JEANS
CASUAL JEANS
PATCH POCKET
JEANS
SIZES 27-38

- $}Q98

nings.

Lee fanned 11 and walked
seven in his eight-inning stint.
The other Meigs hils were a
second single by Buck and a
triple by Dunfee.
Coach George Nesselroad 's
Meigs club, now 15-!J..l, will
take on the Ironton Legion at
Syracuse this Saturday all and
on Sunday travel to New
Matamoras.
Meigs
000 040 03-7 11 5
N.Haven 030 010 00-4 I I
Lee and Dixon , Kyser,
Chandler (LP) (6 ), and Lewis.

BOYS ' SIZES

6 TO 18

- $5~

KERM'S KORNER

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Charleston
Louisvi lle
Tidewater
Rochester

Toledo

Richmond

Syracuse
Peninsula

.

W L Pet GB

48 32
45 38
44 40
41 43
40 42

.600

POMEROY, OHIO
.

United Press International

.542
.S24
.488
.488

4'12
6
9
9

39 42 .481

91J2

'.

ROOF COATING

. 40 44 .476 10

33 49 .402 16

Wednesday's Results

Tidewater 5 Louisville 1

Charleston 13 Toledo 2

Rocheste.r 8 Syracuse 4, 1st

Syracuse 8 Rochester 4 2nd
P~ninsula at Richmond, ppd.

ra1n.

'

FIRST DEFENSE
HONOLULU (UPI) - Ben
Villa !lor , a 19-year-old
Filipino, will make the first
defense of his World Boxing
Association jWJior lightweight
title here against Victor
Echegaray of Argentina on
Aug. 22.
Villaflor took the title by
outpointing Alfredo Marca no of
Venezuela April 25.
BREAKS RECORD
BERLIN (UP! ) - Gudrun
Wegner clocked 9 minutes 10.5
seconds lor the 800 meters
freestyle Wednesday to break
the European women's record
during the closing dsy of the
East German swimming
championships in Leipzig, it
was reported by ADN.
Novella Catigarls of Italy
he\d the old mark of 9:13.4

BLACK

~Aluminum

·Asbesb Fibre

Wdh Asbestos Fibre

·or Asphaltum

'3"·

•375

5 GAL CAN

GAllON

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

Tune Into A· TUNE-UP. Here, Soon

hoc . EO .

Luneh~D.

strokes separate the top 14
men.
Nicklaus was satisfied with
his score, but not with his
game.
"I didn't swing particularly

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

I=DA

ROBERT

Buffet

ping, and young Britons Craig
Defoy and Peter Townl&gt;Ond.
Trevino's group included
fi vetime Open winner Peter
Thomson of Australia, Gary
Player, who won the first of his
two tiUes here in 1959, and
Doug Sanders, the flamboyant
Texan who has twice finished
' in the runner-up spot.
Britons John Garner and
Brian Barnes and Spaniard
Antonio Garrido also carded
71s, so thai means only three

Cookie Returns, Hot as Ever

$125,()()() Milwaukee Open chugging
The "Cookie" is back and
along at full pace
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPIJFor a while Bruce Crampton
must have felt like he was
shooting for lbe "runnerup
grand slam of golf."
' He was finished second to
l.Jack Nicklaus in the U.S. Open
and the Masters this year, the
first two legs of the elusive
"grand slam of golf" Nicklaus
Is seeking.
But this week while Nicklaus
Is working on the British Open,
the third part of the slam,
Crampton Is battling it out with
other golfers here for the first

halves of 34.J4 for a threeWider-par 68 which proved too
good for golfing aces from 18
countries, including the mighty
Jack Nicklaus.
Big Jack, the Grand Slam
chaser, was silting pretty,
however. Afirst round "of 70 left
him only two shots off the ·pace
and one behind British idol
Tony Jacklin, who had a 34--356!1. The winner of the British
and u.s. Opens in successive
years, Jacklin is the man the

Bench Hits Pair In Reds16-3 Win

Crampton Top EntrY in

11:00 UllnL 1:30 .

'I

MUIRFIELD, Scotland ·
(UP!) - The cases. of empty
champagne bottles outside thf!
"courtesy rent" k!ll the story two Englishmen lead the
British Open, and that's a
rarity worthy of celebration.
Peter Tupliflll, a 22-year-old
former Walker 'tup player who
has won only $750 this year on
the British pro circuit, led the
star--studded field into today's
second roWJd. The six-footer
from Sheffield put together

STANDINGS

By Unlted Press tnternatfonat

'

Generation Rap

0 ••

...
I

A twist of irony sure to be remembered, too, is the
fact that McGovern's adversaries· donned .the robes of
reform as tliey struck hard at the man whose name is
stanlped on the sweeping party reforms of 1972. They
invoked the glories of proportional representation, or
something' for everybody, though their real aim was to
see that !here was less for McGovern than he had won.
Here in this setting, I am stlll talking to party people
I have sounded out all year. It is unmistlikably plain
that many regulars -'have what• they believe are legitl·
mate fears and grievances relatipg to McGovern.
It is going over old ground to say they see him as too
far-out on issues, as the choice of too lew Democrats for
aU his primary victories and his overwhelming delegate
strength, as a probable disaster for the Democratic ticket.
What I find interesting in their comment is how small
a number of these regulars is willing to bow gracefully
to the inevitable. Only a handful tell me , "Let McGovern
have it and let's see what he does with it." The rest,
stepped upon or shunted aside by ,McGovern's avenging
angels (his young cadres)' want revenge in their turn.
The consequences of their harsh response could be
brutal. An Illinois man shepherding some Muskie dele·
gates says he is "pretty disgusted with the whole thing"
that is happening to his parly. The mood of revulsion is
widening steadily. Even as its first fruits · appear, party
reform among Democrats seems tainted and abused .
But, as scholar DeVries says, everything is linked. The
ferment and trauma of 1968 produced reform. Reform
brought some excess and revenge against the old . And
now, here in convention, we are watching the party's
self-destructive impulse of counter-revenge .

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

.
Sentinel, Mldti~Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972

Two Englishmen Head British

'R
. · 'Reform '
· e..v enge ' Ta1nts
MIAMI BEACH iNEAJ
The Democratic party assemb)ed here in convention is
movmg .further each day into a lime of anguished divl·
s1on wh1ch w1U endure whether or not it captures the
111·esidency this November.
No healing words heard at this turn from its 1972 presi·
dential nominee 'will purge it of its troubles. There is no
way to apply soothing balm to the wounds it is ~ufferlng .
Political scholar Walter DeVries has told me, and on
the evidence I believe him, that' there is an unbroken
continuity in the life of a great f&gt;?litical party . It cannot
shake otf bitter experience as If il never happened. It
cannot "get something out of its system" and start
afresh. Its future can only be created from all it has ~one
•n lhe past.
.
And what the Democrats are now doing is tormenting
themselves with irreconcilable conflict. With the world
watching through television 's eye, they are tearing at the
Iabrie which binds them .
The men who decided to trr. to fstop the nomination of
Sen. George McGovern by political maneuver ralher than
delegate votes !which they did not have) gave the party
its final thrust down this dark path.
Leaders in labor and many top party regulars made
this choice, lashing at McGovern through a convention
committee. which-for a turbulent few days-cut away
some of hts huge delegate wmnongs from the California

TheDaUy

.

TRUUBLE·I=REIE
DRI\nNG•••
M_.'i h~ Center
lxJIIIIIJ llllttllll

IIIOCXS . .
IIAKa .

MUfPLIRS
TAIL PIPIS

PllOPISSIONAL 'IUNI-UP

•17.95 ';L!:.~"
Is your cor odlng up?

~

111o wtnlor

boon hard on }'Our oulo? - ' • tho
time to "-vt • tuno-up. We con hoWl
your COt running moolhly In no lime.
S.ve money et Moort41 .

MOORE'S
SenkefAntli
.124 w. Meln

··Po-or

""·'"·*'

�.

......l .

)

BIRRV:itih; CONVENTION
'

BRUCE SIOSS:Ar
'

Democrats

s-

A~uislled

MAJOR
LEAGUE

. By BRUCE BIOSSAT

primary .
It cannot be rubbed from the recorJ that this under·

taking had the sanction of virtually all of McGovern's
presidential rivals- not just vocar.Sen. Hubert Humphrey
but ·qu1et Sen. Edmund Musk1e an~ a long list including
even U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm. t~at supposed advocate
of things new and different and better.

--

Retained Fluids
Cause Discomfort

By Helen,and Sue Bottel

"

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
~.

Dear Dr. Lamb-! have
noticed that my body holds
fluid . The doctor prescribed
a water pill for me to use
before my periods and this
helped tremendously, but
now I've started retaining
fluid all the lime, rather
than just before my period.
It causes me to have awful
headaches and sluggishness.
I get very irritable and
short-tempered. I told my
doctor this and he told me I
could take the water pills
every other day and they
wouldn't hurt me. I would
like to know what causes this
condition and what could be
done to cor rect it. I am on
thyroid which I have to take
lor the rest of my life .any·
"Louisiana votes-23 ham and ch~se-3 e99 salad-78
way and I'd hate to take
peanut butter and ;elly!"
these too since I'm only 35
"Sonofagun! He hasn't quit trying/"
-----------------~--years old .
Dear Reader - These are
many
reasons for retaining
WIN AT BRIDGE
Huid . The premenstrual reWhat do y ou do now~
tention .of fluid is pretty well
A-Pass. You have iried for
known and, of course, is reseven and yo ur part n e r has
lated
to the hormones. What
settled £or six. Pass and hope he
Q- Whu wrote til e "Ti»• ·
really
happens is the body
makes
it.
Pass
3 .$.
Pass
uthu Titcomb Lett ers''?
NORTH
13
retains
salts and the more
Pass
5•
Pass
A - The American writer
TODAY'S QUESTIOI"
.A4
salt
th
e
body retains the
Pass
5¥
Pass
In stead of bidd ing fi vl! clubs . Josiah Gilbert Holland . They
• A872
more
water
one accumu?
Pass
6•
Pass
your partner has bid four dia- were a commentary on the
t652
lates.
Other
causes
for reYou, South, hold :
and
morals
of
his
manners
nwnds over your four clubs.
763
taining
fluid
include
such
• AJ513 • K9763 t void •QI07 What do you do now?
time s.
WEST
EAST
things as heart disease. kid·
6 Void ,
• Q6532
ney disease and liver dis·
¥QJI0953
.K6
ease. I rather doubt you
UL u
tl094
tJ87 3
have any of these unless you
.J954
.Q IO
have some symptoms which
SOUTH (D)
you didn 't mention .
6KJ109 87
Why don't you try cutting
down
on the amount of salt
tAKQ
BY JACK O'BRIAN
else."
you use? The water pills
.A8 2
SOMETHING OLD AND SOMETHING NUDE
The other intelleclual was a celebrated actually work by causing the
East-West vulnerable
NEW YORK (KFS) - O'bservations college professor renowned in his limited kidneys to eliminate salt and
West North East South
Showbiz-at-Large ... Why don 'I they call the esthetic sphere (probably an ideal for a Dick thereby. eliminate the excess
16
water. Remember salt and
Pass 2 .r.
Pass
New Morality by its proper label: The Old Cavell one-man-shrug) who married a lovely water go together. The prob·
Pass 4N.T.
Pass 4 • ·
Immorality ... The syndicated Merv Griffin bubbleheaded Broadway chorus girl . . . His lem with water pills is they
Pass 5 •
Pass 5N.T.
Show suffers by the loss of its marvelous voice peers in academe decried the seemingly until· sometimes flush out other
Pass 6 t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
death-parted gaffe and gave it six weeks to six minerals. An ideal way to
of impudent cheerfulness, Arthur Treacher.
down on your salt IS to
Opening lead-• Q
One of the few celebrity...,ppendages of the months , . . On their 25th anniversary, the cut
stop using salt in cooking
last few decades who never has seemed to try constan~y contented couple, surroWJded by the and don 't add any free salt.
l!y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby and use his erstwhile royal pilot-fish position to same gaggle of cynical doubledomes were the There will still be quite a
Old man Z looked over the his present or future aggrandizement is Capt. only two lruly happy people present . .. One of bit of salt in your regular
dummy c~refully. He had to Pe~r Townsend, Princess Margaret's great the professors (by then dean and college
The Almanac
Jose a club and he had to love, who went along to modeslly successful president) was cornered surreptitiously by an
take care of the queen of activities and the respect of all ... It always old acquaintance who demanded the secret of By United Press International
trumps.
Today is Thursday, July 13,
Z remarked, "This looks struck us thai the Duke of Windsor when King success of this totally disparate union ; the the !95th day of 1972 with 17lto
like a hand I played in Wil· Edward and beleaguered by the less-than-royal happy celebrant smiled and replied, "I simply follow.
bur Whitehead's c o I u m n and mosUy lower·than-noble British establish· never wished to come home nights to match
The moon is between its ~w
back in 1925. In any case menl which harassed him into abdicating, wits."
phase and first quarrer.
there is no reason not to pro: easily could have told them all to go to wherezis
Ditto the audience of any TV show; in·
The morning stars are Venus
vide for a possible trump
and what could they have done? The then eluding notably the Dick Cavett Show, for which and Saturn.
coup."
Then he called for dum- current government would have fallen, was the we have .enormous respect-with-an-explanation , The evening stars are Mercumy's ace of hearts and a selfish bleat; and so what?
- we also do not wish to match wits with his ry, Mars and Juplrer.
lead of a low heart at trick
There is an often WI Used but preferable way guests who do not interest our less than in·
Those born on this date are
two.
to
book
TV
talk
shows
which
generally
escapes
wllectual,
if
never
anli·intelleclual,
id.
under the sign of Cancer.
He ruffed and led a· trump
Tiny Tim's marriage on the Carsoncast
Father Edward Flanagan,
to dummy's ace. We s t shows in trouble, a Ia the Dick Cavell flailin g
. .. Dick's addiction to the critics who proclaim gave that welterweight cavacade its highest-toshowed out.
Z said, "Just as Whitehead his in~Uectuality makes him understandably then rating; couldn 't such impressively trivial
set the hand up." Then he myopic to other elements available to him; he triumphs now be extrapolated to other WI·
led the four of spades and seems WJsuilably WJimpressed with glamor, the precedented attractions . . . Such as the
finessed against the queen.
popular performers in any sphere - showbiz, growing, or distending, nwnber of showbiz
The top diamonds and the
ace·klng M c I u b s were liwralure, politics - and self-indulgent in his couples not only living in what used to be called
cashed·next. East had to fol- selection of visitors who might satisfy his and sin but actually proclaiming proudly their life
low all those leads and Z his prewntiously mollified critics who adore a styles and delighting in recounting lulure or
was home - I e a d another whole show about Indians, or neighborhood recent babies born out of wedlockt couldn't
heart from dummy and ruff gangs, etc.; which turns off great gobs of Carson or Griffin or Cavett contract the more
it. It In a d e no difference
whether East ruffed first or viewers . .. Reminds us of the several brushes prominent celebrities to stage the acdiscarded his last diamond. we've had with intellectuals who enjoy an un· couchement on their shows? Seems the only
Now Z was left with the common ability to keep feet firmly planted on suggestible extrapolation toward new and
king.jack of trumps and a the groWld instead of in thin air ... One .once greater. ratings via vulgarity.
low club. He led the low asked us, "May I strike a blow for mediocrity,"
We noted our conviction that Laurel &amp;
club. West tried to take the which alone enchanged us.
1
Hardy were. overpraised posthwnously, the
trick, but East had to ruff
He
worked
12to
18
hours
a
day
at
his
indeed
The l'jational Forest Sys.
longer
gone ,.the greater the fawning; while
and lead a trump into Z's
tern
is made up of 154 Na.
tenace.
inwllectual pursuits and explained that, when Charles Chase was a silent film comedian oflar
Uonal
Forests, 19 National
The care taken at trick arri.ving home at the lag end of his overex- greater comical impact whose lack of broad
Grasslands
and other mi·
two had paid off and Z had tended intellectuality he did not wish to tWJe In physical mannerisms seem to have limlted, or ·
nor
acreages
which total
scored another slam .
TV to a ' discussion .of The Pill, abortion, buried, his posthwnous appeal . . . The very about 187 million acres In
(NEWSP4PEit EN.TERPRISE ASSN.J
geopolitics, or c0mparallve psychology: "l cornball physical tricks of several long.gone 44 states, Puerto fllco and
want to take off my shoes and watch 'Highway clowns, hooted at by all but the movie masses of the Virgin Islands, The
Patrol,' was his cerebral-rotating solution to his the day, now appeal to the eternally extended World Almanac notes. This
system is administered by
otherwise endless application of brainpower ... juveniliiies of a few comics able to imitate their the Forest Service or the
The bidding has been:
Sir Winston S. Churchill put it ever so harmlessly cheerful, limited talents.
U.S. Department of Agrl·
w..t North East
satisfactorily: "A vacation ill doing somethin~
culture .

-

-.

QillCKQUIZ

Between Devil and Deep---

.K

,,.

.,.

"'"'

Voice along Br'Way

.4

3.
6.

'"'

..
'I

I

diet, since there is sodium,
or salt, naturally in meat,
milk and, to a lesser extent,
in vegetables . Even so this
will make a tremendous dif·
ference in your salt intake.
It's worth a try and it may
decrease your need to take
the water pills and improve
your over-aU feeling. lnci·
dentally, rice and fruit are
relatively devoid of salt and
you may find them helpful in
your effort.
'Dear Doelor - I read an
article by a doctor warning
people of the radium used on
watch dials. He claimed that
the human body absorbed
enough through these
watches that the dials were
harmful. Our son is con·
te.mp)atlqg byying a watch to
be worn daily and also In
scuba diving. ,Tbere Is a lot
of luminous material on the
watch . Is it safe to use this
type of watch?
Dear Reader-Of course, it
is or the Federal Trade Commission would have had it
withdrawn from the market.
Some luminous dials are produced by using s'mall
amounts of radium . This
could be harmful to em·
ployes making the dials and
continuously exposed but
proper precautions are tak·
en. There were some reports
years ago of workers in
watch factories w h o de·
veloped difficulties in using
radium materials to make
luminous dials. I don't know
of a single case of anyone
who has ever had radiation
sickness from wearing a
watch with a luminous dial.

American League

National League ·
East
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
Pi'tl b
w. I. pel. g.b. Detro it
43 34 .SS8
N s urgh
48 29 .623
Baltimore
41 36 .532 2
York
4S 33 .S77 3'12 Boston
37 36 .507 4
Ch Louis
41 36 .532 7 New York
37 37 .500 4'12
M lcago
42 38 .S2S 1•12 Cleveland
32 44 .421 10'12
p ontreal
34 44 .436 14,/2 Milwaukee
30 45 .400 12
h!ladelphia 28 S2 .3SO 21'/2
West
West
w. t. pet. g.b.
C
w. I. pel. g.b. Oakland
48 30 .615
lnclnnali
47 31 .603
Chicago
45 34 .570 3'h
Houston
47 3.4 .580 111-2 Millllesota
39 37 .51 3 8
Los Angeles 42 38 .S2S 6 Kansas City 40 38 .S1 3 8
Atlanta
37 43 .463 11 California · 36 44 .4SO 13
· Sa n Francisco 36 49 424 14 V.- Texas
36 46 .41 8 IS'h
San Diego
30 so :m 18
.
Wednesday's Results
Wednesday's Results
Houston 10 Chicago 6
Chicago 5 Cleveland 4
New York 4 San Fran o ,
Kan City 1l Baltimore 4
San Diego 6 Monlreal s
Minnesota 7 Milwaukee 1
Los Ang 9 Phi lade Iph ia s
Detroit 3 Texas 1
St. Louis 7 Allanta 0
Boston 7 Oakland
Cine! 6 Pitlsburgh 3
New York 5 California 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Reuss S.Sl at
Today's Probable Pitchers
Chicago (Jenkins ]1 .7), 2:30
tAll Times EDT)
p.m.
Basion (Cu!p S·7l at Minneso.
Atlanta (Hardin 2·0 or Stone Ia (Corbin 4·2), 8:30 p.m.
2·6) at St. Louis (Cleveland 10. Cleveland· !Colbert ].6) at
4). 9 p.m.
Texas (Bos man 4·7). 8:30 .p.m.
Pitlsburgh (Blass 10·2) al
Kansas City (Spllttorff 9·4) at
Clncinnali (Nolan 12~ 2). 8 p.m. Delroll (Lolich 14·61. 9 p.m.
(On ly games scheduled)
(Or ly games scheduled)

.st"

Fridays Games

Hous at Pltlsburgh, night
Montreal at Los Ang, night
New York al San Diego. night
AUanta at Chicago
C1ncl at Sl. Louts. night
· Phila at San Francisco, night

en, Jack Third

·

Friday's Games

at Minnesota, night
Cleveland at Texas, night
Kan City al Detroit, night
Ch1cago at Bait, 2, fwi.nite
Cal If at Mllw, night
Oakland at N.Y., 2. twt.nlte

PUBUC NECKING JUST FOR KIDS?
•
Dear Helen and Sue :
We have an aunt who Is divorced, with a teenage son. She's
going out with a divorced man.
They hug and kiss whenever they feel like It, which Is a lot!
They even hold hands going down the street. It loob funny,
seeing middle-aged people loving It up in public. Everybody
turns around and stares.
Aren't they old enough to know bet~r? - H. P.
1

'

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Clay
Carroll learned his lesson three
years ago. That's why he's not
planniog on being in Atlanta
during dle AIJ..Star game break
later this mont().
"Sure, it bugged me during
1969 when I wasn't picked on
the team," Clay said Wednesday night after he gained his
18th save or the season as the
Cincinnati Reds made it two in
a row over the Pittsburgh Pi·
rates with a 6-3 victory.
Carroll owned a 124 record
at the All..S!Br game break in
1969.

~

Boston

Dear H.:
I don't see anything wrong with a middle-aged ~le
showing a little affection in public, like holding hands ... a small
kiss or hug. !lit's more of a heavy scene- yeB, that embarr.._
or amuses people, depending on whether they're related to the
lovebugs or just out for the view.
However,lt's their life so, for now, ,just turn your head and
whistle Dixie. - SUE

+++
Dear H. :
•
... With emphasis on the "Look away" llne !
:
Here's a good te§l: If some of your friendl publicly necked aa ~
much .as do your aunt and her bo~ WWJil'lhey fiDllari'llil1,-;l
you! II not, then you 're llOIIdeJMln8 beca111e of age, not actlollll. :-&lt;
Remember, the yoWJg don't have a monopoly on love. HELEN

+++
Hey, Bottels:
Whllt would you say if you were in a singing group and tbey
did something to make you mad -)II least 110meone told you they
said bad thinp about you -so you quit the group, and you told
your mother about It, and she got angry at the group and said you
could never go back. Then you decided you liked tbese kids aeain
and they asked you back and you wanted to go, but your motller
was sUII tee-ed oH and said, "Absolutely Not!!!"
I've never had a big disagreement with my mother before, 10
how can I change her mind? - DISAPPOINTED SEVENTif •
••
GRADER

••
•

Disappointed:
'
Your first mistake waa relllng your Mom. It's hard lor ~
parents NOT to lake sides when they hear those awfulllorlea
about bow mean the ,kids are to their tittle girl. And It's hard ••
changing dlrectlons, ~ when their tittle finally geta the facta •
straight.
(NIWSPArU ENTERPRISE ASSH.)
All you can do now Is explain the misunderstanding and how ••
'
fast ldds forget. I think she'll relent.
•'
Do rou H.e qutJtions obout im·
., And next time, 111INK before you say all'lhotte bad th1nga '
pottncel II JO, 'lfM''II "'"'' to rHd
about
your frlendl just to get sympathy. Mothers remember long
Dr. Lamb's ik*ltt ;" which Itt Gil ·
~f
swen your qmticwts obout this J.Mh- after you wish they wouldn't! -SUE
jocl Send 50 cwntt to Dt.. l.dmb,
••
;,. core ol tfJis news,.,ptr, 1.0 . lor
'
Dear
Disappointed's
Mother: :
•
rssr, Rtdio City St•tiM, Hw York,
(l think Sue 18 trying to tell me something ... But 1 could '
N.Y. 10019. A.d (ot 1tttpotMCt"
remind her ci the many times I played Devtl 'a advocate and took ·
booldol.
the other side of a typical junior hll!h school feud - only to get the ••
founder of Boy's Town In typical teenaged girlllllJWer, "But M~ther, you JUST elm 't •
Nebraska, waa born July 13, UNDERSTAND how mean they are I")
It 'a hard not to play Mother Hen when your chick !lel!llllll ~
1888.
lhreatened,
but if you'll look back lo your teen years- or evm to
On this day in history :
In 1863 opposition to the the last PTA haasle -you'll reilllze that mOtlt quarrellw two- t
federal Conscription Act led to aided, U8118lly blown out ci proportion - and as soon blown ov1r
riots in New York City, in unli!IIB someone keeps buffing and puffing.
whl~h more than 1,000 persons . Don't stay in a huff! -HELEN
were killed.
(

••

•

•••

11

•
•

lED
CUSTOMERS make
gleam
us
with
delight. Enjoy our
cheerful. dependable
service, at Rizer Oil

Co.

See
Uncle
Frank
or .Uncle

~

••
••

!'

=e.
•

J

(7/. ~
(//1//)

tJ
I

prize in the $IZ5,000 greater
Milwaukee Open.
Only 21 of the top 50 money
winners are enrered here with
Cramploo, Chi Chi Rodriguez
and Grier Jones the only entries nswd in the top 15 .
Dave Eichelberger is the
defending champion in the
meet at Tripoli CoWitry Club
on the City's Northwest side.
Eichelberger broke from a
tightly bunched field on the
final boles to win the 1971 meet.
Ken SUII, the 1969 'champion,
and Deane Beman, wbo won in
1970, are also enrered this year.
Wednesday, playing in the
pro-am, Still equalled the
tourney record w1th a !kinder·
plr821andhadalantastlc:18'on·'"
the back •nine. Still's rfiund
broke the course competitive
record of 63.
"When you're hot, you're
bot,'' Still said later and,
remembering some of the
problems he has had, quickly
added, "yeh, and when you're
not you're not.''
Jim Wiechers, also entered
in this year's meet, now shares
the GMO mark with SUII.
Wiechers got his 62 when the
meet was held at the longer
North Shore Country Club.
The GMO field also includes
Gay Brewer , who won the
Canadian Open last week, and
tour winners Jones, Rodriguez,
Miller Barber, Bob Rosburg,
Homero Blancas, Bob Shaw,
Bob Lunn and J.C. Snead.
The field wlll be cut after 36
boles on Friday for the final
two rounds Saturday and
Sunday.

" It was a real letdown when I more deserving of a berth on
wasn't picked,'' admitted Car· the All.Star 511uad than the
roll. "I was hurt because I Reds' relief ace.
really thought I deserved to be
No Mental Letdown
on the team."
"But ill don't make it," says
Carroll suffered and so, as it Clay, "it's not going to be like
turned out, did the Reds . Clay 1969.l'm not going to have any
didn't win a game the second mental letdown. Sure, it would
half of that 1969 season, but he be great to be in the game but
did add two more losses to fin· the World Series is a lot more
ish with a 1U record.
important to me and the other
This year Carroll's pitching guys on this team.~~
better than ever. Since Clay's
"All I have to say," com·
18 saves are accompanied by a mented Reds manager Sparky
4-1 won-loss record and a 1.49 Anderson, "is that if a relief
earned run average there's pitcher is selected, Carroll has
hardly a pitcher in the league to be the one."

while Swve Lee established
htmself as one of three Meigs
American Legion pitching aces
as lhe club edged New Haven
Wednesday at New Haven, 74
in eight innings.
Tom Cooke, sidelined 17 days
w1th a sertous mouth injury
suffered in a game with New
Haven , put on the cleats
Wednesday. He made it into

the game at second base in the
sixth frame .
He led off with a single in the
seventh and cracked a two-out,
two-run single in the eighth.
J.,ee, winner of two in a row
alter losing his first three,
allowed only one·hit, the third
safely he has allowed in the
lasll7 frames . All four of New
Haven's runs were unearned.
With the game tied 44 going
into the eighth - the game was

Canada Loaded
por Russ; nns
L'

TOP MONEY
AKRON, Ohio (UP!)Nelson Burton Jr. of St. Louis
continues to head the official
money standings of tbe Profes.
sional Bowlers Association
with $43,9a5, more than $6,000
better than runnerup Don
Johnson of Akron.
Larry Laub of San Fran·
cisco, who was second to Mike
McGrath of El Cerrito, Calif.,
in the recent $50,000 Winston·
Salem Open, moved Into fourth
place with earnings of $32,930.

John Now

11-

be

loca 18 will
(&gt;inning their
hopes on.
Trevino also was in good
position after carding an even·
par 71 on a day that saw the
6,892-yard course in command.
High winds and rain lashed the
exposed course Wednesday
and only seven men bettered
par.
Tied with Nicklaus at 70 were
Frank ~ard and Dave Marr, a
couple of former big money
winners who now are slum~

f?JI..- ·_ .
1/~· if{qu. ..

I

loa

1 ••

: ..

..

,

; '

,

"

'I'ORON'l'tf( IJ,P,p-The' mO:St ' Hull, according to Team
awesome hockey squad ever . Canada regulations, will not be
assembled-at least on paper- able to play for the team if he
was Wlveiled Wednesday. It is haS;toot signed wilh a National
to carry the colors of Team Hockey League ream by Aug.
Canada, which will meet the 13, when training camp opens.
Soviet Union in an eight.game
He recently signed a multi·
hockey series in Seprember. million dollar contract with the
. Thirty-five players, most of Winnipeg Jets of the newly
them the cream of National formed World Hockey Associa·
Hockey League talent, will go lion. According to Team
into training here Aug. 13 and Canada officials he would have
will meet the Russians first in to sign with an NHL team,
Montreal on Sept. 2. Three preswnably his old team, the
other games will be played in Chicago Black Hawks, in order
Canada between that date and to represent his country.
Sept. 8 and lour games will be
The following is Team
played in Russia from Sept. 2t). Canada's r'¥ter as annoWlced
28.
by Sinden: ·
It wlll be the first time that
Goal: Tony Esposito, ChicaCanada has been able to have go; Ken Dryden, Montreal;
WJlimired access to its profes· Gerry Cheevers, Boston.
slonal hockey players in inter.
Defense: Bobby Orr and Don
national competition.
Awre¥ Boston; Brad Park and
Team Canada Coach Harry Rod Seiling, New York; J. C.
Sinden, a fonner mentor of the Tremblay, Jacques Laperriere
Boston Bruins, chose the and Serge Savard, Montreal;
game's biggest stars-Bobby Jocelyn Guevremont, VanHull, Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito couver; Gary Bergman, De- but added a few lesser troit ; Pat Stapleton and Bill
known-but-steady checking White, Chicago.
players like Toronto's Ron
Center: Phil Esposito and
Ellls and Boston's Wayne Derek Sanderson, Boston; Gil·
Caslunan to give his squad a bert Perreault, Buffalo;
winning balance.
Marcel Dionne and Red
The status of two of the .Berenson, Detroit; Jean
team's top players, Orr and Ratelle, New York ; Bobby
Hull, was In doubt.
Clarke, Philadelphia.
Orr, recovering from a postLeft Wing: Bobby Hull,
season knee operation, has said Chicago (now Winnipeg Jets of
he wlll not be able to play in the WHA); Dennis Hull, Chicago;
first four games but thinks he Peter and Frank Mahovlich,
can make It for the last four in Montreal; Wayne Caahman,
Russia.
Boston; Jean-Paul Parise,
Minnesota; Paul Henderson,
Toronto, Vic Hadfield, New
York; Richard Martin, Buffalo . ·
Right Wing : Rod Gilbert,
New York; Yvan Cournoyer,
I. WE'RE
Montreal; Ron Ellis, Toronto;
Mickey Redmond, Detroit; Bill
TO SERVE
Goldsworthy, Minnesota.

HERE

Y~U!

The Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIG~ · MASON.AII EA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

sc heduled lor sel'en - Swve
Dunfee walked with one out,
.went to second on Dave Boyd's
sacrifice, came around to third
on Kevin Sheets' single, and
scored on a wild pitch. That
ga ve Meigs a 54 lead, but this
was not the place to slop.
Jon Buck whiffed at a third
strike but went on to first as the
catcher couldn't handle the
ball. Cooke's single then drove
in two more tallies. Lee
followed wi lh a single but there
was no further scoring .
New Haven, coac hed by ex·
major leaguer Mel Clark ,
jumped out to a 3.{) lead in the
second when Curtis Roush,
leading off, got on through an
error. Chester Roush grounded
sharply back to the mound but
Lee's throw was wild al
second.
After Danny Gardner
sacrificed the runners to
second and third , pitcher
Kyser doubled to left to score
both Roushes . Kyser then
scored on the third error of the
inning.
Meigs came back with four in
the fifth when Sheets and Buck

HOEFLICH ,
City EOIIor

Publ ished daily except
S•turday by Tht OhiD Valley
Publishing Company , 111
Courl Sl ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
45169 . Business Office Phone
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Bur CALL. ll•i
5IGI&lt; AND
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FR'\10'5

2157.

TUNE...

Pass

•

MoadiJ llilit 5lilrdiJ
(

·'

basic or otherwise . A
questioner asked if his practice
of switching from the small
British-sized 1.62 inch hall to
lhe American 1.68 inch hall at
the short holes called for a
radical, or otherwise, variation
in technique.

well/' he said . 111 was a bit

short and a little quick, but I hit
a lot of good shots also. I had to
or I wouldn't have gotten out of
some of the places the bad
shots put me."
Trevino wasn't too worried
about technical problems,

"I wouldn't know:' ' said the'
wis~·crac,king Mexican
blandly . "I'm too dumb to
notice any difference."

fifth victory against three deCarroll was one of An· could do."
Bench
on
Binge
feat.s.
derson's All-Star selections
Carroll came to the Reds in a
last .year. ·
Bench, off on another homer
"Just say I'm a longshot this mid-season deal with the binge, !tit his 23rd and 24th of
Braves in the summer of 1968. the season while boosting his
year," said Carroll.
The score was 1&gt;-2 when Clay RBI total to69. Perez added his
"But it would be nice making
the team, especially since the entered the game Wednesday 14th homer and Tolan degame· is in Atlanta," mused night in the ninth inning with livered what proved to be the
one out. However, there were game-winning blow when he
Clay.
Carroll is remembering his two rurmers on base.
singled home lwo runs in the
Gene Alley greeted Carroll seventh innilog.
days as a member of the AI·
with a single to drive home the
lanla pitching staff.
The ruos in this game were
"They just shoved me into a Pirates' third and final run. the first the Reds have scored
corner and rorgot about me, " Clay then retired the next two for Simpson in his last three
he said. " It wasn't unlill was batters.
starts.
Johnny Bench, Tony Perez
traded to the Reds that l really
Gary Nolan will fa ce the PIgot a chance to show what I and Bobby Tolan furnished the rates' Sreve Blass as the Reds
firepower as Wayne Simpson, wind up the series and their
with Carroll's help, gained his current homes land tonight.

.
.
na.,Neu~

MEIGS
·INN

......

Secon.d clan poslage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Na'tional advtrl isl ng
rtpresenlat i ve
Bottlnelll ·
Gellaghtr , Inc ., 12 East A"2nd
St ., New York City , Ntw York .
· $ubtcrlptlon rattS : De ·
livered by cerrler whtrt
avellable SO cents per wtek ;
ly Motor Routt wt'lert cerrltr
strvice not ava ilable : One
month $1.15, By mail in Ohio
and w. va .• Ont year S\.4 .00.
Six months s~ . 2s . Thret
months u .so . Subscription
price Includes Sunday Times .
s.ntinel. .

led of! with si ngles, Lee
doubled Sheets home with one
out, Van Maire doubled home
two more runs with two out,
and Roller Dixon singled home
Van Matre from second.
New Haven tied it in the filth
when Bret Clark walked with
one out and scored on a threebase error.
Kyser, a lefthanded curve.
baUer with excellent control,
fanned lour and walked none in
five innings. Chandler came on
in the sixlh and was charg ed
with the loss as he fanned four
but walked three in three in-

MEN'S JEANS
DRESS JEANS
CASUAL JEANS
PATCH POCKET
JEANS
SIZES 27-38

- $}Q98

nings.

Lee fanned 11 and walked
seven in his eight-inning stint.
The other Meigs hils were a
second single by Buck and a
triple by Dunfee.
Coach George Nesselroad 's
Meigs club, now 15-!J..l, will
take on the Ironton Legion at
Syracuse this Saturday all and
on Sunday travel to New
Matamoras.
Meigs
000 040 03-7 11 5
N.Haven 030 010 00-4 I I
Lee and Dixon , Kyser,
Chandler (LP) (6 ), and Lewis.

BOYS ' SIZES

6 TO 18

- $5~

KERM'S KORNER

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Charleston
Louisvi lle
Tidewater
Rochester

Toledo

Richmond

Syracuse
Peninsula

.

W L Pet GB

48 32
45 38
44 40
41 43
40 42

.600

POMEROY, OHIO
.

United Press International

.542
.S24
.488
.488

4'12
6
9
9

39 42 .481

91J2

'.

ROOF COATING

. 40 44 .476 10

33 49 .402 16

Wednesday's Results

Tidewater 5 Louisville 1

Charleston 13 Toledo 2

Rocheste.r 8 Syracuse 4, 1st

Syracuse 8 Rochester 4 2nd
P~ninsula at Richmond, ppd.

ra1n.

'

FIRST DEFENSE
HONOLULU (UPI) - Ben
Villa !lor , a 19-year-old
Filipino, will make the first
defense of his World Boxing
Association jWJior lightweight
title here against Victor
Echegaray of Argentina on
Aug. 22.
Villaflor took the title by
outpointing Alfredo Marca no of
Venezuela April 25.
BREAKS RECORD
BERLIN (UP! ) - Gudrun
Wegner clocked 9 minutes 10.5
seconds lor the 800 meters
freestyle Wednesday to break
the European women's record
during the closing dsy of the
East German swimming
championships in Leipzig, it
was reported by ADN.
Novella Catigarls of Italy
he\d the old mark of 9:13.4

BLACK

~Aluminum

·Asbesb Fibre

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Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

Tune Into A· TUNE-UP. Here, Soon

hoc . EO .

Luneh~D.

strokes separate the top 14
men.
Nicklaus was satisfied with
his score, but not with his
game.
"I didn't swing particularly

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

I=DA

ROBERT

Buffet

ping, and young Britons Craig
Defoy and Peter Townl&gt;Ond.
Trevino's group included
fi vetime Open winner Peter
Thomson of Australia, Gary
Player, who won the first of his
two tiUes here in 1959, and
Doug Sanders, the flamboyant
Texan who has twice finished
' in the runner-up spot.
Britons John Garner and
Brian Barnes and Spaniard
Antonio Garrido also carded
71s, so thai means only three

Cookie Returns, Hot as Ever

$125,()()() Milwaukee Open chugging
The "Cookie" is back and
along at full pace
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPIJFor a while Bruce Crampton
must have felt like he was
shooting for lbe "runnerup
grand slam of golf."
' He was finished second to
l.Jack Nicklaus in the U.S. Open
and the Masters this year, the
first two legs of the elusive
"grand slam of golf" Nicklaus
Is seeking.
But this week while Nicklaus
Is working on the British Open,
the third part of the slam,
Crampton Is battling it out with
other golfers here for the first

halves of 34.J4 for a threeWider-par 68 which proved too
good for golfing aces from 18
countries, including the mighty
Jack Nicklaus.
Big Jack, the Grand Slam
chaser, was silting pretty,
however. Afirst round "of 70 left
him only two shots off the ·pace
and one behind British idol
Tony Jacklin, who had a 34--356!1. The winner of the British
and u.s. Opens in successive
years, Jacklin is the man the

Bench Hits Pair In Reds16-3 Win

Crampton Top EntrY in

11:00 UllnL 1:30 .

'I

MUIRFIELD, Scotland ·
(UP!) - The cases. of empty
champagne bottles outside thf!
"courtesy rent" k!ll the story two Englishmen lead the
British Open, and that's a
rarity worthy of celebration.
Peter Tupliflll, a 22-year-old
former Walker 'tup player who
has won only $750 this year on
the British pro circuit, led the
star--studded field into today's
second roWJd. The six-footer
from Sheffield put together

STANDINGS

By Unlted Press tnternatfonat

'

Generation Rap

0 ••

...
I

A twist of irony sure to be remembered, too, is the
fact that McGovern's adversaries· donned .the robes of
reform as tliey struck hard at the man whose name is
stanlped on the sweeping party reforms of 1972. They
invoked the glories of proportional representation, or
something' for everybody, though their real aim was to
see that !here was less for McGovern than he had won.
Here in this setting, I am stlll talking to party people
I have sounded out all year. It is unmistlikably plain
that many regulars -'have what• they believe are legitl·
mate fears and grievances relatipg to McGovern.
It is going over old ground to say they see him as too
far-out on issues, as the choice of too lew Democrats for
aU his primary victories and his overwhelming delegate
strength, as a probable disaster for the Democratic ticket.
What I find interesting in their comment is how small
a number of these regulars is willing to bow gracefully
to the inevitable. Only a handful tell me , "Let McGovern
have it and let's see what he does with it." The rest,
stepped upon or shunted aside by ,McGovern's avenging
angels (his young cadres)' want revenge in their turn.
The consequences of their harsh response could be
brutal. An Illinois man shepherding some Muskie dele·
gates says he is "pretty disgusted with the whole thing"
that is happening to his parly. The mood of revulsion is
widening steadily. Even as its first fruits · appear, party
reform among Democrats seems tainted and abused .
But, as scholar DeVries says, everything is linked. The
ferment and trauma of 1968 produced reform. Reform
brought some excess and revenge against the old . And
now, here in convention, we are watching the party's
self-destructive impulse of counter-revenge .

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

.
Sentinel, Mldti~Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972

Two Englishmen Head British

'R
. · 'Reform '
· e..v enge ' Ta1nts
MIAMI BEACH iNEAJ
The Democratic party assemb)ed here in convention is
movmg .further each day into a lime of anguished divl·
s1on wh1ch w1U endure whether or not it captures the
111·esidency this November.
No healing words heard at this turn from its 1972 presi·
dential nominee 'will purge it of its troubles. There is no
way to apply soothing balm to the wounds it is ~ufferlng .
Political scholar Walter DeVries has told me, and on
the evidence I believe him, that' there is an unbroken
continuity in the life of a great f&gt;?litical party . It cannot
shake otf bitter experience as If il never happened. It
cannot "get something out of its system" and start
afresh. Its future can only be created from all it has ~one
•n lhe past.
.
And what the Democrats are now doing is tormenting
themselves with irreconcilable conflict. With the world
watching through television 's eye, they are tearing at the
Iabrie which binds them .
The men who decided to trr. to fstop the nomination of
Sen. George McGovern by political maneuver ralher than
delegate votes !which they did not have) gave the party
its final thrust down this dark path.
Leaders in labor and many top party regulars made
this choice, lashing at McGovern through a convention
committee. which-for a turbulent few days-cut away
some of hts huge delegate wmnongs from the California

TheDaUy

.

TRUUBLE·I=REIE
DRI\nNG•••
M_.'i h~ Center
lxJIIIIIJ llllttllll

IIIOCXS . .
IIAKa .

MUfPLIRS
TAIL PIPIS

PllOPISSIONAL 'IUNI-UP

•17.95 ';L!:.~"
Is your cor odlng up?

~

111o wtnlor

boon hard on }'Our oulo? - ' • tho
time to "-vt • tuno-up. We con hoWl
your COt running moolhly In no lime.
S.ve money et Moort41 .

MOORE'S
SenkefAntli
.124 w. Meln

··Po-or

""·'"·*'

�..

,,

..i

i

5- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972
4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July

Lugut Lucien
:I
By Uniled Pross lnt&lt;trnotl~l 'I
·
Leading Batters
l&amp;
National Lugue
g. •b r. h. pc1_. .... ·_.
1
Mota, LA 61 194 · 31 67 .345 ~
Cdeno Hou 72 287 56 99 .3'15 '.U
sngulln. Pit 73 281 Js 94 .335 ·
Baker, All 57 175 18 58 .331
Brock, St.L 77 331 42 109 .329
Wilms, Chi 79 316 54 104 .329
Garr All 7~ 309 49 99 .320 ""
Ollv~r. Pit 1~ 313 47 100 .319 •'•
Bcknr, LA 55 193 19 61 , .316 ,
Alou, St.L 70 270 32 85 .315
Lee. SD
68 251 35 79 .315n ..
~lor

Groves Retains
Lead In Oh.ioam
I

PERRYSBURG, Ohio
(UP!)- Steve Groves, 21,
Lancaster, who set an ama~ur
record on the tough Belmoot
Country Club course on
Tuesday; skied to a fiJle-overPI!r 77 Wednesday to cling to
just a onestroke lead going into
the third round today of the
Ohio Amateur Golf Tour·
nament.
.
Groves' 77, added to his firstround 69, put him 146 at the
halfway mark of the tourney.
Groves hit IS greens Wednesday, "but on the other three

holes I hit some weird shots,"
he said.
He had triple bogeys on both
the aecond and lith boles and a
double 11ogey on j'io. 18.
Groves' tee shot came to rest
about four feet frol)l a pond on
the 18th and he had to stand on
the very edge of the water to
make the shot. ·
Trailing just one shot back of
Groves today was John Fisher
of Dayton, with a 147. Fisher,
the seven-time Moraine Country Club champion, fired a oneover par 73 Wednesday.

Fisher was one of the steadiest of the 62 players who
qualified for the final 36 hOles
of the tourney .
Three were bunched in third
place with 146:s ..., Gary Artz of
Akron, Luddy .. Schenk of
Mansfield-and Ted Biskind of
Shaker Heights.
At 149 were Joe Harper of
Columbus, Bob Widener of
Strongsville, Jack Durgin of
1Columbus, Jeff Feyes of
Toledo, Lalu Sabotin of Warren
and Glenn Apple of Olmsted
Falls.

_

American League
..-,.
g. ab r. h. pet.
Shblm KC 64 214 30 72 .3:16

Pniela: KC 76 293 47 93 .317 !
Fisk, 8os ~ 59 - 202 41 63 .312 ·
Otis, KC
75 284 36 88 .310... ,
Rudl KC. 74 301 48 93 .309
M.&gt;y' Chi 'J,7 272 47 81 .298'"
Berr'y Cal -l3 185 22 55 .297 , "
Mabry, KC"i7 254 24 74 .291 , ..
Carew, Min 76 287 28 83 .28i
Oliver, Cal 78 310 34 89 .287 ...
Rojas, KC 74 2.65 31 76 .281.
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cin
24; Kingman. SF 21 ; Aaron, All
and Williams, Chi 19; May, Hou"·
and Colbert, SD 18.
,,.
American League~ Allen, Ch1

18; Cash, Del 16; Jackson. OaK ":
15; Duncan and Epstein, Oak,\•
14 .

Nation•l League: Bench ~

'Cheshire, City Ice&amp;. Fuel,
WIN CHAMPIONSHIP - The Fruth Phannacy softba
team won its fourth tournament of the 1972 season by
defeating Rich's of Charleston in the !&amp;-team Point Pleasant
Invitational Slo-Pitch Tournament_that concluded SWJday.
Other tournaments won by the Fruth Pharmacy team this
year include the Quaker Stale, Big Bend and Royal Crown
events. Pictured are, front row, from left, Puddin' Hemsley ,

Joe Bob Hemsley, mascots; Bob Whaley, Ron Quillen, Ed
Van Matre, John CWidiff, mascot. Second row, Jimmy Joe
Hemsley, player-manager; Bunny Arthur, Gregg Gibbs,
Raymie Cundiff, Ray Van Matre, Tom Grueser, Bob Bur.delte. Back row, Jack Fruth, sponsor; Gary Clark, Don
Swisher, Jerry Davenport, Steve Halstead, Sam Van Maire,
Dennis Gilkey and Lynn Fruth. Absent were players Dennis
Ault, Danny Rizer and Ed Baer.

White Sox Nip Cleveland, 5-4
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Wilbur Wood, working with
two days of rest for the 14th
time this year, scored his 13th
victory Wednesday night when
the White Sox defeated the
Cleveland Indians, 5-4, on
Carlos May's ninth-inning sin·
gle. If Wood matches his
second-half performance of
1971 this sealiOil he will finish
with 26 victories-t!Je most by
a White Sox pitcher since
Urban "Red" Faber won 25
games in 1921.
The Bostoo Red Sox defeated
· the Oakland Athletics, 7-6, the
Kansas City Royals beat the
Baltimore Orioles, 11-4, with a
seven-run lOth inning rally, the
NewYorkYankeesblankedthe
CaUfornia Angeles, IMJ, the
~troll Tigers ' edged out ·the
~xas Rangers, 3:1, ~d the
Minnesota Twins downed the
Milwaukee Brewers, 7-1, in
other .American League
games.

In the Nalional League, it
was Houston 10 Chicago 6, New
York 4 San Francisco 0, San
Diego 6 Montreal S, Los
Angeles 9 Philadelphia S, St.
Louis 7 Atlanta 0 and Cincinna ti 6 Pittsburgh 3.
Wood's Wednesday night
performance was characteristicin that he had trouble in
an early inning-the second
when the Indians scored three
runs on homers by Ray Fosse
and Ron Lolich-and then
settled down for a complete
game with five strikeouts and
one walk.
"They've got to get him early
or they're not going to get him
at all," says teammate Bill
Melton, the AL home run
champion in 1971. "When be
. gets in the groove and starts to
throw easily it's like 1-t'Ying to
hit a dead.ball."
May delivered his game- ·
winning single after Tony
Muser led off the ninth with a
single and went to second on
Rick Reichardt's sacrifice.
carlton Fisk · hit his 12th
homer and drove in two runs
LOSE UG~Y FAT while Rico Petrocelli, Juan
Start losi'ng Welgtit today or Beniquez and Rick Miller each
money ba cK. MONADEX is a had two hits and an RBI for the
tln_y tablet and easy to take .
MONAD EX will nelp curb your Red Sox, who dealt the
des ire for excess food . Eat less Athletics their third straight
welgt'l tess . Contains no
dangerous drugs and will not loss with a 12-hit attack. Bill
mak ~ you
nervous .
No
strenuous exercise . Change Lee won his sixth game against
your life ... start today . three losses.
MONAD EX costs $3 .00 for a 20
Reliever Eddie Watt forced
day supply . Large economy size
Is $5 .00. Lose ugly fat or your in the tie-breaking rWJ by
moner, will be refunded with no
quest ons asked . MONAOEX is hitting Lou Piniella with a
sold w ith this guarantee by :
pitch with the bases loaded in
Swlstler &amp; Lohse Drugs
the loth inning and CoOkie
111 E. M.ain &amp;
Dutton Drug Store
Rojas followed with a grand
Middleport
slam homer off Mickey Scott as
Mill Orders FUied
the Royals turned their game

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69 ; Kingman, SF 58 ; Stargell,"'
Pitt 56 ; Oliver, Pitt 55; May.•.
and Rade r, Hou and Colbert , .

Services Held
For Dale Drake

Middleport Indians .Advance
The powerful and undefeated outs. Even though it is a
R.
record,
Cheshire Tigers showed why dubious
Winebrenner
has
the.
distincthey 're the Kyger Creek Utile
League Tournament favorites tion holding onto the record
Wednesday night with a 17-0 that may stand forever .
In other action Wednesday
win over Harris,onville, scoring
night,
Pl. Pleasant City, Ice
all of their runs in the first
and Fuel, also undefeated, took
inning.
In that first inning, R. the Gallipolis Indians !:HI and
Winebrenner, the catcher of the undefeated Middleport
the Tigers, made all three outs Indians whipped the Gallipolis
as the other eight starters Orioles 19-0.
In the Middleport Indianscollected 12 hits and made no

Linescores

GREAT SAVINGS
ON_SEA_8S
COMPLETE LINES

' SEARS

:7'·

SD 54.

scored the tying and tiebreaking rur.; in the third
inning on an error by Lenny
Randle . Slayback won his
second game with a ninestrikeout performance while
Casey Cox lost his first game
for the Rangers against two
wins.
Homers by Rick Renick,
Bobby Darwin and Eric Soderholm powered a six-run fifthinning outburst which carried
the Twins to their victory over
the Brewers. Renick's leadoff
homer in the fifth was the first
hit off Ken Brett, who suffered
NEW YORK (UP!)-Frank
his ninth loss.
Robinson can make himself at
home anywhere.
He's been with the Los
· Angeles Dodgers only six
By United Press International •
American League
months, but be's at home with
National League ·
Chi cago
300 100 001 - 5 11 1 them already
San Fran
000 090 ooo- 0 4 I Cleveland 030 010 ooo- 4 9 I ..
. •
·
Wood {13-9) ' 'Bnd · !l'gan, 'Maywn&lt;ii'Bsmucbashe.was'
~.Y.
120 000 lOx- 4 :51
McDowell, Reberger, (5), Herrmann 181 ; Kilkenny, Lamb with the Baltimore Orioles, but
Moll itt (81 and Healy ; Matlack {51 . Hilgendorf {91 and Fosse. you have to remember he put
{9-51 and Dyer. LP- McDowell LP- Lamb {2-4). HRs- Re1ch- . ·
ardt (5th) , Williams 12nd) , utstxyearswt'Urlhe
. m, they.all
{8-71 .
Lol ich {2nd), Fosse (6th) .
looked up to hlffi as thetr
Houston
101 023 201-10 I l l
leader, someone special, which
Chicago
104 000 001- 6 12 3 t 10 innings)
Roberts, Griffin {7) and Kan City 202 000 000 7- 11 11 0 he was for them, and besides,
020 000 200 0- 4 9 I when you get right down to it,
Edwards; Reuschel. Pizarro Bait
Nelson , Burgmeier (7) , Aber - nobodyhascomeupwithaway
{7 ), Phoebus {71. Aker (9) and
Rudolph, Hundley {7) and nathy (7) , Fitzmorris (10') and
Marlin {91 . WP- Roberts { 8 ~ 4) . Kirkpatrick . May 1101 ; Dobson, yet to make six months the
LP- Reuschel {3·21 . HRs- Harrison {41. Jackson 181. Watt same thing as six years.
Miller {21. May 1181. Wynn 2 {101, Scott (10) and Dates, Frank Robinson looked perliS and 161. Williams 1191. Etchebarren (8) . WP- Aber- fectly at home with the
nathy {2-t). LP- Jackson 10-1) .
Hickman (101 .
HRs- Johnson {2nd) , Powell Dodgers when I saw him the
other day.
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0 {7th), Rojas {2nd) .
St. Louis
030 200 20x- 7 9 0
Tacked up above his locker
Schueler, McLain (51. Me·
was
the glossy centerfold out of
Queen (7) and
Casanova; Milw
000 001 OOQ- 1 5 I
Playboy
Magazine showing
Gibson {9-51 and Simmons. LP Minn
000 060 lOx- 7 10 1
- Schueler (3-4) . HRs- Gibson
Brett, Bell {51. Sanders 171 Miss July in one of those cool
{3rdl. Brock (2nd).
and Ratliff ; Blyleven {9-101 and December-like poses. When I
M!tterwald, Root 171 LP- Brett
San Diego 021 210 ooo- 6 10 I (5-9) . l:tRs-Reni ck {2nd ), Dar- asked who put the picture up
Mon !real
300 020 ooo- 5 11 0 win {lith), Soderholm (lOth ).
there, Robinson said :
Caldwell. Corkins (5), Schael·
"! did. I think it's a nice
fer {81. Ross 191. Norman 191. Texas
000 001 OOQ- 1 8 2 picture to have."
Grell {9) and Corrales; Stone- Detroit
002 10000x- 3 90
man, McAnally {41. Strohmayer
Cox,
Panther
(5) , Gogolewski Good Eye for Pictures
{5 1. Walker (7) , Renko (9) and {7) , Lindblad {81
and King ; Frank Robimon has as good
Humphrey. WP- Corkins (1 ·51 . Slayback {2-3) and Halter. LPan eye for pictures as anyone.
LP- Stoneman {8-6). HRs- Cox (2.1).
Stahl (5th). Gaston {4th).
The talk got around to the
Orioles. The once-mighty OrPiftsbrgh
100 000 002- 3 10 1
100 032 too- 7 12 2 ioles who aren't so mighty now,
Cinci
010 200 2lx- 6 8 o Boston
Walker , Ki son (4). Johnson Oakland
012 010 002- 6 16 3 and whose .221 team batting
(7). Hernandez {7) and Sanguil ~
Curtis, Tiant 141. Krausse average Is the poorest in the
len; Simron, Gullett IBJ, 151. L~ e 161. N.ewhaus~r (91 majors.
Carroll (9 and Bench. WP- and F1sk ; Ham1 lfon, Fmgers uTh ,
· t
ssed
eyre JUS me
Up
Simpson 15·31. LP- Walker 13· {51 Knowles (8) and Duncan.
5). HRs- Perez (141hl. Bench 2 .WP- Lee {6-3). LP- Fingers {5- right now," said Robinson.
{23rd &amp; 24th) .
31 . HRs- Mangua l (2nd). Fisk "Boog Powell is down below
(12th), Duncan {14th) .
.201l," I said. "He's having a
Los Ang
130 401 ooo- 9 18 1
Phila
300 010 010- 5 13 0 New York 040 ooo 001-5 6 o devil of a time getting unJohn (8-41 aod Sims; Cham - California 000 000 ooo- 0 7 1 tracked."
pion , Lersch (11. Tw itchell {4).
Stottlemyre {9-101 and Mun- "! see that on TV, " said
Scarce : (7) , Selma {9) and son ; L. All en, Barber (2), May
Bateman, Ryan {91. LP- {71 , Fisher (9) and Stephenson, Robinson. "He's getting his
. Champion (4-9 1..
Torborg {3) . LP- L. Allen (2-6). body out In front too quick,
trying to do it with his body
instead of his hands. That's the
way most batters are when
they get into a slump. I'm
guilty
of it, too."
NATIONAL APPLIANCE MONTH AT SEARS
"What do you think of the
Orioles from what you saw?"
"They clobbered Detroit, ~
3, in the game I saw so there
wasn't much to think," answered Robinson. "! feel like
they'll win It though even
though they're having theli'
troubles. I'm very surpr~ at
the guys who are not hitting."
"Besides Powell, did you
notice anyone else swinging
differently?"
"I'm not over there
anymore, and I don't want to
get Into this, buta!nce you a.sk I
did see where Rettenmund Is
holding hla bat higher than be
REFRIGERATORS
used to ."
"How much difference Is
FREEZERS
there between this club and
WASHERS - DRYERS
--- -'
Baltimore?"
Quite a Difference
DISHWASHERS
"Quite a bit," Robinson
TELEVISION - STEREOS
replied. "This club d~'t
have the bitting, the defense
' and the established 'pitching
Baltimore has."
"What about you personally?
992-217&amp;
You loo'k as if you've taken off
220 E. MAIN
POMEROY
LOU &amp; THELMA·OSBORNE
some weight.''
.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal. 9to l, Thurs.
"!have, eight pounds, and I
with the Orioles into a romp,
Richie Scheinblum had three
hits and Amos Otis two for the
Royals.
In the game against the
Angels, Mel Stottlemyre hit a
two-run single in a four-run
second-inning outburst and
pitched a seven-bitter for his ·
fourth shutout of the season for
the Yankees. Stottlemyre's
single and a double by Thurman MWison were the big
blows as the Yankees sent 10
men , to the plate in the big
inning,
Bill Slayback pitched an
eight-hitler for the Tigers, who

Runs Batted In

..AUTHORIZED

CATALOG MEROiANT

- - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - - - '---···-•'•t•o•N•oo•"•'•Fr.id•a•y•9•:0CI-to'!'9:oo
•_ _ _ _ __, feel fine," said RoblnBon,

"How did you do it?"
"By not eating sweets and
starches."
'
Frank Robinson will be 37 in
a few weeks but stlll makes
very few coocessions to his
age. He ran into a wall in St.
thr ·
ks
d
. Loq~ . ,ee ~~ •.ago . ~n an
inJ.qfe? wri~t - ~~turne,d to
nornial'only recently. Stlll you
t hh'lffi piaymg
. safety
nevercac
first baseball.
"Floyd Patterson is 37 and
says he feels he can keep going
indefinitely," I said to Robinson . "What about you?"
"Depends on reflexes and
injuries," he said. "Patterson
could be right. You bave to look
· at each individual and judge
him that way, as an individual.
People in sports all make the
same mistake. They have this
attitude about age and they pot
you in a !racket. They say
'you're 38 and you're over the
hill.' You can't always say
that. All 36-year-olds aren't the

Gallipolis Oriole battle, Mike
Hindy was the winner and
Jackson took the loss.
Leading hitters for the Indians were Hindy , Mark
Venoy, and Keith Lynch all
with two hits apiece.
Schoonover had the Orioles'
only hit.
Second Game
D. Perry hurled a no-hitter
for Pt. Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel while Rice was charged
with the loss for the Gallipolis
Indians, who were the fifth
straight Gallipolis team to lose.
in the first round .
'
D. Blake and T. Bateman led
Pl. Pleasant with a single,
double, and home run each
while R.' Beller had two singles
and a double.
Third Game
In the Cheshire TigerHarrisonville game, which
lasted only one and a half innings, S. Baird was the winner
for the Tigers . He didn 't allow
a hit although pitching only two
frames. R. Jordon took the
loss.
D. Sayre led the Tigers with
a double and triple while R.
Spaulding and G. Mulford each
had tivo singles.
In tonight's action the
Middleport Braves took on the
Gallipolis Padres at 6, at 7: IS
Hometown and Ripley Jack
Myers square off, and the
Pomeroy Pirates take on the
Middleport Reds at 8:30.

REEDLEY, Calif. (UP!)Funeral services were scheduled today for Dale Drake, ,
bead of the company building ;
the Offenhauser racing engine :l l
since 1946. He died ol a heart • :
attack Monday night at the age ~ :
of 70.
:
Since World War II, Offen- . :
hausers-called Drak«lffys '
after Drake took sole control of
production in 1965-have won •
at Indianapolis all but six ·
years, 1965-67 and 1969-71.
Mark Donohue's McLaren.Qffy
captured the Indianapolis 500
in May.
Drake became involved in
'auto racing before World War-! 1
as a partner with his father in
·the J. · A. Drake and Sons :
. ·engineering firm, producer of
Jadson Valves, here.
He is survived by his widow, '
Eve,and a son, John, president'
of Drake Engineering Co . in
Santa Ana, Calif.

.l:

RECORDS SET
TOLEOO (UP!) - Record
sales for the second quarte~ ,
were reported today by OwensIllinols, lnc. of $411 .1 mill!oq
and earnings of $20.1 million,
compared with second quarter
1971 sales of $388.9 million and
earnings of $19.5 million. First
half sales were reported at $1104
milllon , up nearly $80 million
fr om 1971. First half earnings
were $31.9 million, compared
with $30.2 million in 1971.

MEN'S.

Safety Toe Shoes
8"-6" Oxford

same!'

Judge·Tells PC
To Reduce Crew~
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - A
rfl)eral judge gave his approval Wednesday to a controversial plan by Pen Central
Railroad trustees to reduce
· their train crews to three men.
· The move is bitterly opposed
by the United Transportation
Union ( UTU ) which has
lhreatened to slrike if the
benkrupt railroad·goes through
with its plans to eliminate the
6,000 jobs.
The ruling was made by U. ~ ­
District Court Judge J. A.
Fullam who appro~ed a
reorganization plan that included. the reduction in the
crews. He told the railroad to
give at least 14 days notice
before putting the new rule into
effect .
Trustee Jervis Langdon Jr.,
testified before Fullam l~st
month that the reorganization
of the line would .suffer a
"serious blow " unless the Penn
Central reduced its four, l ive
and six-man crews to three
men.
He said the crew redu ctions
would be made through at·

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INJUNCTION ORDERED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
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Discounted

Executioners at

Pen are Indicted

How they Voted

MIAMI BEACH, (UP!) The Ohio delegation to the
Democratic National Con...., .... vention Wednesday elected
carol McClendon and Joseph
....,.,..... Cole, both of Cleveland, to the
national committee .
The goodness of nature . .. put into a
~-· Miss McClendon, a
r.J&lt;--..1 Cleveland city councilwoman,
lccmct9ntlratt9d form of nutrition . . .
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MIDDLEPORT ,DEPARTMENT STORE

DRAPES

Opinions differed on what tract labor support that so far
kind of help McGovern needed generally has been withheld
to bolster hia prospects of from McGovern, Woodcock Is
defeating President Nixon but 61, a Romim Catholic, active in
there was evidence in the badly civil rights and the end-the-war
split vote that gave him top· movement.
Ribi coff,
who
P\!J
place on the ticket that his
McGovern
's
name
m
choice of a running-mate might
nomination, is a close friend of
be crucial.
the
South Dakota senator with
Eagleton, 42, a freshman
wholly
compatible views. He ia
senator with a liberal, antiwar
record, said last night a a Jew and might help rOWJd up
McGovern aide, not named, the Jewish vote in such states
had told him the list of as New York and California
possibilities
had
been where McGovern has , ennarrowed to four- Kennedy, countered some distrust about
Ribicoff, Woodcock and his views on continued
protection of Israel.
himself.
In convention hall Wedl2-14 Still on List
nesday
night, a petition was
Dutton
early
today
circulated
to put on the ticket
discounted this. He said "as
Frances
(Sissy)
many as 12 or 14" names were Rep .
Farenthold,
the
attractive
4Sstill on the possible list.
year-old
Corpus
Christi
mother
Presumably Eagleton was one
of the group. What he could do who shook Texas·politics with a
for the ticket was not clear race for governor that got her
Humphrey, declined comment since his appeal would be to as far as a runoff. Political
about McGovern's nomination. voters who already like pros argued unchivalrously
"I'm not going to tell you," McGovern.
that a woman on the ticket was
King said when asked about
not
what McGovern needed to
Woodcock is a liberal, too,
what McGovern's nomination but might he expected to at- win.
would do to the Democrats. He
uttered another remark, but
quickly said : "You didn't hear
that''
Lots of Homework
State Rep . Patrick Sweeney
of Cleveland, an alternate who
wore buttons calling for a Kennedy draft, claimed Humphrey
could have stopped McGovern
' NOW IN FULL SWING
had he remained in the race.
Featuring All of the
· "McGovern broke it (went
tl ~
over the top on votes) here and
Latest Shoe Fashions ~~ i;;;:l
in California and Illinois," said
WOMEN'S
"'~~
Sweeney.
State Sen. Oliver Ocasek of
Akron, who was pledged to
Humphrey but ended up voling
for McGovern, said he could
Re&amp;~Jiar
support the South Dakota senator .
'18.99
But he said "if the election
were he;~ .1ow it would be an
uphlll battle. "We've got to do a
lot of homework, We've got an
incumbent President running
Mlu America white ond belg• summer dreu lhoeL
against us, .and Ohio is not a
Aloo Party Shoes In sliver and gold. Party group
great liberal state."
lndudes values·tq_ '15.00
Sen. Morris Jackson said he
Re1ub1
believes McGovern can carry
Recular
Regubr
t4.99
11.99
9.99
Ohio because of his campaign
and 1S,99
to 13.99
lo 10.99
organization . "Certainly he
came from nowhere and has to
be reckoned with," Jackson
SIZE 4-B
said.
The Ohio delegation sat
quietly through most of the
speeches during th~ evening.
Some delegates yawned
frequently .
But when McGovern was
nominated and when he won,
his supporters in the Buckeye
delegation went as wild as anyone else.
Previous Humphrey backers
merely gazed around aI the
crowd and held the "Scoop"
Main St.
Pomeroy
SHOES
Jackson banners that had been
'
distributed. .
governors who called on
McGovern to urge that be
invite Kennedy to take second
place on the ticket and, failing
!hal, to offer the role to Mills.
Gov. Pat Lucey of Wisconsin
said
afterwards
that
McGovern "expressed great
admiration and respect . for
Mills."
McGovern, in a IS-minute
telephone conversation with
Kennedy shortly after his
midnight nomination, offered
Kennedy the vice presidential
spot and, as expected, got a flat
turn-down . Kennedy, whose
two brothers were victims of
assassins, cited family and
personal reasons.

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NATURALIZERS

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prescrlpltOII Strvtc..-.4 Roglsltrtd Phlrmaclsts Ia Stnt
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Spiller News, Social Events

SPILLER, July 10- Mr. and children, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. John Busch and three Busch and three children, Edra
children of Nanty Glo, Pa., Bush, Mrs. Cecil Roseberry
spent the past week with his and two children, Mrs. Unda
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Patterson and two sons, Rick
Bush and visited with relatives and Bobby Deeter, and eM I
Johnston. While the young
and friends .
Mr . an.d Mrs. Dennie folks roasted wieners and had
Johnson and family of Elwood, an enjoyable evening, Bill
, Pac, spent the past week with Busch played the piano and
his aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Edward was accompanied on the guitar
Bush and vial ted with relatives by his father, John Busch and
Dennie Johnson . Several
and friends.
hymns were sung during the
Don
Bush
and
his
brother,
FINISH SECOND, THIRD
evening
by Mrs. Bush, Mr. and
LINCOLN. Neb. (UP!) - Frank, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Finneran of Columbus, Cecil Roseberry and family Mrs. Johnson and Mr. Busch.
Ohio, finiahed second alid Tim and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Later in the evening Bobbie
Deeter sang a song acMoore, also of Columbus, was Bush one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bush and companying himself on the
third Wednesday In the men's
one-met~r National
AAU family took dinner with his guitar. All present enjoyed ·the
Diving Championships.
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest evening very much. - Mrs.
Don Dunfield of San Jose, Brewer on Tuesday. Other Ernest Brewer.
Calif., was the winner of the callers during the afternoon
event with 524.61 points. were her brother, Roy Bush,
DRAFT UNDERWAY
Finneran had 494.49 points and and Clint Birch and daughter
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - The
Moore 432.43 points.
Le 0ta •
Mrs. Emma Johnson, while general managers of the World
viaiting in California and other Hockey Association's 12 teams
poln Is of Interest, purchased a began a supplemental draft
salt and pepper set as a gift for .from among a pool of some 600
SCIOTO RESULTS
Mr.andMrs.ErnestBrewer,as Pillyers here today.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
an addition to ~ir salt ·and · A spokesman for the WHA
Kingery Express covered the pepper colleclion.
said players named In the
distance In the $1,800 featured
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer supplemental selection pool did
pace at Scioto Downs Wed- • and daughter, Sylvia, en, not Include the names of 600
nesday night In 2:02 4-5, tertained on Saturday evening, players the teama selected
returning ~.20, U1.60 and $6. July 8, with 8 wiener roast in earller from the league's
K S Tr.eed wu second honor of their two grand- original selection list.
followed by Dusty :H Forbea. daughters Mila vaneasa Todd
Today's draft was to conThe 8·9 nightly double of Columbus and Miss Unda elude a twiH!ay meeting which
combination of Lenawee Song Lawrence of Havertown, ·Pa. also dealt with league
and Grand Jarry paid $58.20 Besides the honored guests organizatioo, rules changes,
Attendance was 4,685 and the those attending were Mr. and schedules and other procedural
handle was $235,674.
Mrs. Dennie Johnson and four matters .
•

669

Straw and Summer Bags Reduced!

Dem 's Committee

AT

5 PC.
BATHROOM
SETS

Mills on Possible Veep List

BACK TO MIAMI
COLUMBUS (UPli
Gov. John J. Gilligan
planned to depart this
moroing for Miami Beach io
MIAMI BEACH I UPI )-Spe- Woddcock and Sens. Abraham
accord with a show of unity culation
on
George Ribicoff of Connecticut and
trition over a period of years
requested by the staff of Sen. McGovern's running-mate Thomas Eagleton of Missow-i.
Mills, 63, is an Arkansas
beyond 1976 and would save the
George McGovero, the widened to include Rep. Wilbur
lawmaker
who as chairman
Penn Central $97 million
Democratic presideotlal D. Mills today after Sen. Eddollars a year.
nominee.
ward M. Kennedy formally since 1957 of the House Ways .
and Mear.; Committee has
He also told the court that if
Robert Tenenbaum, press rejected McGovern's offer.
esulblished
a national reputa·
the UTU walked off the job, the
secretary to GIUigan, sal~
McGovern was to announce
line would be bit with a $50 the governor had Intended to his choice before tonight 's lion as a tax expert and fiscal
million a month loss.
go to the convention city
session of the Democratic conservative.
The ruling gave the trustees
Some convention delegates,
anyway, but that his 9 a. m.
National Convention·.
the legal backing needed •to departure was hastened by
Fred Dutton, a senior Mc- concerned that McGovern's
begin the crew reduction plan. the request telephoned to
Govern adviser, said a dozen or liberal stands on taxes, welfare
However, a Penn Central him Wednesday night.
more n~mes still were on the and other economic issues
spokesman said the trustees . . Tenenbaum said Gilligan
"possible" list when McGovern might frighten cor.;ervative
had "no firm statement as to was taking a commercial "went to hed in the early mor- voters, said Mills might be just
what their im111ediate or long airline filght tp Miami Beach
ning. Other sources had said the man to balance the ticket.
Mills' name was dropped into
term plans will be."
and was expected to arrive
the choice had been narrowed
the
pot Wednesday by a group
there shortly after 11 a. m.
to three prospects, United Auto
Workers president Leonard of Southern and border state
HOSPITAL NEWS today.
July 11
BIRTHS _ Mrs. John Eh- ••••llillfiii1RUIII
. •~::..~
man , son, Patriot; Mrs .
Michael Brothers, daughter,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Terry Oliver,
· daughter , Gallipolis; Mrs.
Caucus voted for McGovern.
By LEE LEONARD
William Hammon, son, Bid"Uphill Battle"
.
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)
well; Mrs. Allan McFann,
got
four
Humphrey
still
Ohio's divided delegation to the
dau ghter , Oak Hill ; Mrs .
Democratic National Con· votes from Ohio, while former
Mi , hael Gray , daughter ,
ventlon reacled early today to Gov. Terry Sanford of' North
Wellston; Mrs. Keith Eblin,
the nomination of Sen. George Carolina received three and
son, Gallipolis and Mrs. Cari
S. McGovern with feelings Sen. Edward M. Kennedy got
Hunt, daughter, Gallipolis.
ranging from jubilation over two, even though he has reDISCHARGES _ Maxine
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - completion of an impossible peatedly denied he would acBailey, Jack Branham, John Robert McAlister, who led Sen. task ~ ~to bitter "can't win" cept the nomination.
W. Brown, Frances Cantrell, George McGovern 's Ohio charges.
The five delegates pledged to
Anne Harris, Larry Harrison, campaign, dismissed today the
Rep
. Wayne L. Hays of Flush·
"We feel every bit of our
David Jackson, Leona King, notion that the South Dakota work was justified," said a joy-. ing held firm for the congressBessie Kirby, Mrs. James senator's camp is filled with ful Howard P. Fink, Ohio State man on the first and only balMelton and daughter, Mrs. radicals.
University law professor who lot.
Gary Moran and daughter,
"! don't believe in labels," headed the McGovern group at
"We are going to have a
Troy Ohlinger Sr. , Daron McAlister, a Columbus at- the convention.
united Democratic party in
Puckett, Ruth Rankin, Michael torney, said .
,Buckeye delegates gave 77 of Ohio and we are going to win in
Stewart, Gary Jones, Carolyn
"They talk abcut radicals in ttkir votes to McGovern, al- November," said Fink. "II will
Mays, Gary Whorbrey and the McGovern camp, but that though only 61 had originally be an uphill battle, but with the
John Holmon.
lS nonsense," he said. "Acbeen pledged to support him on kind of coalition we have, I
July 12
tually McGovern's people have the first ballot.
think we can do it. "
BIRTHS - Mrs. Robert learned to work within the
State Sen. Antbcny 0. Cala·
Sen. Henry -M. Jackson pickAshley, son, New Haven and system ."
ed up 39 Ohio votes from dele- brese of Cleveland screwed up
Mrs . Bob McKinniss, daughter,
McAlister said supporters of gates released by Sen. Hubert his face when asked about McJa ckson.
the
new
Democratic H. Humphrey, while Rep. Shir· Govern as a nominee. "he can't
DISCHARGES - Craig presidential nominee are now ley Chisholm of New York win," said Calabrese.
Wise. Jock Coyan, Melvin hard at work to register the gathered- 23 votes from those
Frank W. King, head of the
Bolight, Verda Cremmens, young voters "and that will pledged to Humphrey.
!53-member Ohio delegation
Frances Ewing, Mary Grin- spill over to help all
and
captain of the Humphrey
State Sen. M. Morris Jackson
nan , Marsea House, Ullian Democrats."
of Cleveland said half of Mrs. forces, turned loose more than
Pierce, Christine Wray,
McAlister took on the task of Chisholm's votes were from 30 AFL-CIO member delegates
Milinda Brumfield, George building up a strong McGovern white delegates who felt they on Jackson's behalf.
Gillilan , Resellen Lee, Arlene campaign in Ohio last year and had been jilted by the party
King, who has had some
McCain, James Miller, James the result was 61 delegates that rules which ended Humphrey's difficulty with the McGovern
Nibert, Mary Ours, Janet went to the convention pledged bid Tuesday .
faction in the delegation and
Shuff, Mrs. Orville Williamson to McGovern .
Jackson said all eight mem· who was disappointed at
and son and Mrs. Clarence Lee
McGovern surprised many hers of the 21st District Black having to throw in the towel on
and daughter.
longtime party men by capturing 12 of the 22
congressional districts in
SOLT SUSPENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The which he w'as' entered and
Ohio Racing Commission narrowly l~ng the popular
Wednesday cited Dr. John J. vote to Sen. Hubert H. Hum·
Soil of Hancock County for phrey.
McAlister, a .New York
vi olation of the state's 411-hour
medication rule , the first native, grew up in Circleville
veterinarian ever to be and graduated from Kenyon
College and Michigan Law
charge'tl under the rule .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The wearing masks," he said. But
Solt was suspended by School.
stabbing death of an Ohio it was not an " execution
Toledo Raceway Park judges
Penitentiary inmate by a squad," he insisted.
for involvement jn medication
masked "execution squad" of Perona said the men's masks
cases after the post-race
convicts was disclosed Wed· were made from surgical gown
urinalysis of two winning
nesday by an Ohio Highway material, probably stolen from
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - patrolman.
horses in June disclosed the
the prison hospital. Although
presenc'e of prohibited How the !53-member Ohio
he
said the squad was made up
Patrol Lt. A. M. Perona said
delegation
voted
as
Sen
.
medications. The trainers of
Charles Sanders was killed of five or six men, only two
McGovern was May 10 in a prison storeroom indictments were returned.
the horses were suspended for George
nominated for President on the while a prison official, held at Cardwell said the shoe
311 days.
first ballot at the Democratic bay by the "squad," observed factory foreman and two inNational Convention Wed- the murder.
mates were held at knifepoint
nesday night:
and
told not to move while
Perona made a report to the
McGovern
77 Franklin County grand jury, Sanders was killed.
Chisholm
"Thia happened when our
23 which returned first degree
Jackson
39 murder indictments against guard force was low," the
Humphrey
4 inmates Walter Atterbury, 24, warden said. "Some of our
WayneHBys
goards had been sent to the
5 and Charles Gray, 26.
Sanford
3
Warden Harold J. Cardwell, new prison at Lucasville, but
Kennedy
2 however,
softened
the they're back now, I don 't think
this type of killing could take
language used by Perona.
"We did have a murder and place here today."
aevelanders on
it did involve some people

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5- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972
4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July

Lugut Lucien
:I
By Uniled Pross lnt&lt;trnotl~l 'I
·
Leading Batters
l&amp;
National Lugue
g. •b r. h. pc1_. .... ·_.
1
Mota, LA 61 194 · 31 67 .345 ~
Cdeno Hou 72 287 56 99 .3'15 '.U
sngulln. Pit 73 281 Js 94 .335 ·
Baker, All 57 175 18 58 .331
Brock, St.L 77 331 42 109 .329
Wilms, Chi 79 316 54 104 .329
Garr All 7~ 309 49 99 .320 ""
Ollv~r. Pit 1~ 313 47 100 .319 •'•
Bcknr, LA 55 193 19 61 , .316 ,
Alou, St.L 70 270 32 85 .315
Lee. SD
68 251 35 79 .315n ..
~lor

Groves Retains
Lead In Oh.ioam
I

PERRYSBURG, Ohio
(UP!)- Steve Groves, 21,
Lancaster, who set an ama~ur
record on the tough Belmoot
Country Club course on
Tuesday; skied to a fiJle-overPI!r 77 Wednesday to cling to
just a onestroke lead going into
the third round today of the
Ohio Amateur Golf Tour·
nament.
.
Groves' 77, added to his firstround 69, put him 146 at the
halfway mark of the tourney.
Groves hit IS greens Wednesday, "but on the other three

holes I hit some weird shots,"
he said.
He had triple bogeys on both
the aecond and lith boles and a
double 11ogey on j'io. 18.
Groves' tee shot came to rest
about four feet frol)l a pond on
the 18th and he had to stand on
the very edge of the water to
make the shot. ·
Trailing just one shot back of
Groves today was John Fisher
of Dayton, with a 147. Fisher,
the seven-time Moraine Country Club champion, fired a oneover par 73 Wednesday.

Fisher was one of the steadiest of the 62 players who
qualified for the final 36 hOles
of the tourney .
Three were bunched in third
place with 146:s ..., Gary Artz of
Akron, Luddy .. Schenk of
Mansfield-and Ted Biskind of
Shaker Heights.
At 149 were Joe Harper of
Columbus, Bob Widener of
Strongsville, Jack Durgin of
1Columbus, Jeff Feyes of
Toledo, Lalu Sabotin of Warren
and Glenn Apple of Olmsted
Falls.

_

American League
..-,.
g. ab r. h. pet.
Shblm KC 64 214 30 72 .3:16

Pniela: KC 76 293 47 93 .317 !
Fisk, 8os ~ 59 - 202 41 63 .312 ·
Otis, KC
75 284 36 88 .310... ,
Rudl KC. 74 301 48 93 .309
M.&gt;y' Chi 'J,7 272 47 81 .298'"
Berr'y Cal -l3 185 22 55 .297 , "
Mabry, KC"i7 254 24 74 .291 , ..
Carew, Min 76 287 28 83 .28i
Oliver, Cal 78 310 34 89 .287 ...
Rojas, KC 74 2.65 31 76 .281.
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cin
24; Kingman. SF 21 ; Aaron, All
and Williams, Chi 19; May, Hou"·
and Colbert, SD 18.
,,.
American League~ Allen, Ch1

18; Cash, Del 16; Jackson. OaK ":
15; Duncan and Epstein, Oak,\•
14 .

Nation•l League: Bench ~

'Cheshire, City Ice&amp;. Fuel,
WIN CHAMPIONSHIP - The Fruth Phannacy softba
team won its fourth tournament of the 1972 season by
defeating Rich's of Charleston in the !&amp;-team Point Pleasant
Invitational Slo-Pitch Tournament_that concluded SWJday.
Other tournaments won by the Fruth Pharmacy team this
year include the Quaker Stale, Big Bend and Royal Crown
events. Pictured are, front row, from left, Puddin' Hemsley ,

Joe Bob Hemsley, mascots; Bob Whaley, Ron Quillen, Ed
Van Matre, John CWidiff, mascot. Second row, Jimmy Joe
Hemsley, player-manager; Bunny Arthur, Gregg Gibbs,
Raymie Cundiff, Ray Van Matre, Tom Grueser, Bob Bur.delte. Back row, Jack Fruth, sponsor; Gary Clark, Don
Swisher, Jerry Davenport, Steve Halstead, Sam Van Maire,
Dennis Gilkey and Lynn Fruth. Absent were players Dennis
Ault, Danny Rizer and Ed Baer.

White Sox Nip Cleveland, 5-4
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Wilbur Wood, working with
two days of rest for the 14th
time this year, scored his 13th
victory Wednesday night when
the White Sox defeated the
Cleveland Indians, 5-4, on
Carlos May's ninth-inning sin·
gle. If Wood matches his
second-half performance of
1971 this sealiOil he will finish
with 26 victories-t!Je most by
a White Sox pitcher since
Urban "Red" Faber won 25
games in 1921.
The Bostoo Red Sox defeated
· the Oakland Athletics, 7-6, the
Kansas City Royals beat the
Baltimore Orioles, 11-4, with a
seven-run lOth inning rally, the
NewYorkYankeesblankedthe
CaUfornia Angeles, IMJ, the
~troll Tigers ' edged out ·the
~xas Rangers, 3:1, ~d the
Minnesota Twins downed the
Milwaukee Brewers, 7-1, in
other .American League
games.

In the Nalional League, it
was Houston 10 Chicago 6, New
York 4 San Francisco 0, San
Diego 6 Montreal S, Los
Angeles 9 Philadelphia S, St.
Louis 7 Atlanta 0 and Cincinna ti 6 Pittsburgh 3.
Wood's Wednesday night
performance was characteristicin that he had trouble in
an early inning-the second
when the Indians scored three
runs on homers by Ray Fosse
and Ron Lolich-and then
settled down for a complete
game with five strikeouts and
one walk.
"They've got to get him early
or they're not going to get him
at all," says teammate Bill
Melton, the AL home run
champion in 1971. "When be
. gets in the groove and starts to
throw easily it's like 1-t'Ying to
hit a dead.ball."
May delivered his game- ·
winning single after Tony
Muser led off the ninth with a
single and went to second on
Rick Reichardt's sacrifice.
carlton Fisk · hit his 12th
homer and drove in two runs
LOSE UG~Y FAT while Rico Petrocelli, Juan
Start losi'ng Welgtit today or Beniquez and Rick Miller each
money ba cK. MONADEX is a had two hits and an RBI for the
tln_y tablet and easy to take .
MONAD EX will nelp curb your Red Sox, who dealt the
des ire for excess food . Eat less Athletics their third straight
welgt'l tess . Contains no
dangerous drugs and will not loss with a 12-hit attack. Bill
mak ~ you
nervous .
No
strenuous exercise . Change Lee won his sixth game against
your life ... start today . three losses.
MONAD EX costs $3 .00 for a 20
Reliever Eddie Watt forced
day supply . Large economy size
Is $5 .00. Lose ugly fat or your in the tie-breaking rWJ by
moner, will be refunded with no
quest ons asked . MONAOEX is hitting Lou Piniella with a
sold w ith this guarantee by :
pitch with the bases loaded in
Swlstler &amp; Lohse Drugs
the loth inning and CoOkie
111 E. M.ain &amp;
Dutton Drug Store
Rojas followed with a grand
Middleport
slam homer off Mickey Scott as
Mill Orders FUied
the Royals turned their game

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Cin

69 ; Kingman, SF 58 ; Stargell,"'
Pitt 56 ; Oliver, Pitt 55; May.•.
and Rade r, Hou and Colbert , .

Services Held
For Dale Drake

Middleport Indians .Advance
The powerful and undefeated outs. Even though it is a
R.
record,
Cheshire Tigers showed why dubious
Winebrenner
has
the.
distincthey 're the Kyger Creek Utile
League Tournament favorites tion holding onto the record
Wednesday night with a 17-0 that may stand forever .
In other action Wednesday
win over Harris,onville, scoring
night,
Pl. Pleasant City, Ice
all of their runs in the first
and Fuel, also undefeated, took
inning.
In that first inning, R. the Gallipolis Indians !:HI and
Winebrenner, the catcher of the undefeated Middleport
the Tigers, made all three outs Indians whipped the Gallipolis
as the other eight starters Orioles 19-0.
In the Middleport Indianscollected 12 hits and made no

Linescores

GREAT SAVINGS
ON_SEA_8S
COMPLETE LINES

' SEARS

:7'·

SD 54.

scored the tying and tiebreaking rur.; in the third
inning on an error by Lenny
Randle . Slayback won his
second game with a ninestrikeout performance while
Casey Cox lost his first game
for the Rangers against two
wins.
Homers by Rick Renick,
Bobby Darwin and Eric Soderholm powered a six-run fifthinning outburst which carried
the Twins to their victory over
the Brewers. Renick's leadoff
homer in the fifth was the first
hit off Ken Brett, who suffered
NEW YORK (UP!)-Frank
his ninth loss.
Robinson can make himself at
home anywhere.
He's been with the Los
· Angeles Dodgers only six
By United Press International •
American League
months, but be's at home with
National League ·
Chi cago
300 100 001 - 5 11 1 them already
San Fran
000 090 ooo- 0 4 I Cleveland 030 010 ooo- 4 9 I ..
. •
·
Wood {13-9) ' 'Bnd · !l'gan, 'Maywn&lt;ii'Bsmucbashe.was'
~.Y.
120 000 lOx- 4 :51
McDowell, Reberger, (5), Herrmann 181 ; Kilkenny, Lamb with the Baltimore Orioles, but
Moll itt (81 and Healy ; Matlack {51 . Hilgendorf {91 and Fosse. you have to remember he put
{9-51 and Dyer. LP- McDowell LP- Lamb {2-4). HRs- Re1ch- . ·
ardt (5th) , Williams 12nd) , utstxyearswt'Urlhe
. m, they.all
{8-71 .
Lol ich {2nd), Fosse (6th) .
looked up to hlffi as thetr
Houston
101 023 201-10 I l l
leader, someone special, which
Chicago
104 000 001- 6 12 3 t 10 innings)
Roberts, Griffin {7) and Kan City 202 000 000 7- 11 11 0 he was for them, and besides,
020 000 200 0- 4 9 I when you get right down to it,
Edwards; Reuschel. Pizarro Bait
Nelson , Burgmeier (7) , Aber - nobodyhascomeupwithaway
{7 ), Phoebus {71. Aker (9) and
Rudolph, Hundley {7) and nathy (7) , Fitzmorris (10') and
Marlin {91 . WP- Roberts { 8 ~ 4) . Kirkpatrick . May 1101 ; Dobson, yet to make six months the
LP- Reuschel {3·21 . HRs- Harrison {41. Jackson 181. Watt same thing as six years.
Miller {21. May 1181. Wynn 2 {101, Scott (10) and Dates, Frank Robinson looked perliS and 161. Williams 1191. Etchebarren (8) . WP- Aber- fectly at home with the
nathy {2-t). LP- Jackson 10-1) .
Hickman (101 .
HRs- Johnson {2nd) , Powell Dodgers when I saw him the
other day.
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0 {7th), Rojas {2nd) .
St. Louis
030 200 20x- 7 9 0
Tacked up above his locker
Schueler, McLain (51. Me·
was
the glossy centerfold out of
Queen (7) and
Casanova; Milw
000 001 OOQ- 1 5 I
Playboy
Magazine showing
Gibson {9-51 and Simmons. LP Minn
000 060 lOx- 7 10 1
- Schueler (3-4) . HRs- Gibson
Brett, Bell {51. Sanders 171 Miss July in one of those cool
{3rdl. Brock (2nd).
and Ratliff ; Blyleven {9-101 and December-like poses. When I
M!tterwald, Root 171 LP- Brett
San Diego 021 210 ooo- 6 10 I (5-9) . l:tRs-Reni ck {2nd ), Dar- asked who put the picture up
Mon !real
300 020 ooo- 5 11 0 win {lith), Soderholm (lOth ).
there, Robinson said :
Caldwell. Corkins (5), Schael·
"! did. I think it's a nice
fer {81. Ross 191. Norman 191. Texas
000 001 OOQ- 1 8 2 picture to have."
Grell {9) and Corrales; Stone- Detroit
002 10000x- 3 90
man, McAnally {41. Strohmayer
Cox,
Panther
(5) , Gogolewski Good Eye for Pictures
{5 1. Walker (7) , Renko (9) and {7) , Lindblad {81
and King ; Frank Robimon has as good
Humphrey. WP- Corkins (1 ·51 . Slayback {2-3) and Halter. LPan eye for pictures as anyone.
LP- Stoneman {8-6). HRs- Cox (2.1).
Stahl (5th). Gaston {4th).
The talk got around to the
Orioles. The once-mighty OrPiftsbrgh
100 000 002- 3 10 1
100 032 too- 7 12 2 ioles who aren't so mighty now,
Cinci
010 200 2lx- 6 8 o Boston
Walker , Ki son (4). Johnson Oakland
012 010 002- 6 16 3 and whose .221 team batting
(7). Hernandez {7) and Sanguil ~
Curtis, Tiant 141. Krausse average Is the poorest in the
len; Simron, Gullett IBJ, 151. L~ e 161. N.ewhaus~r (91 majors.
Carroll (9 and Bench. WP- and F1sk ; Ham1 lfon, Fmgers uTh ,
· t
ssed
eyre JUS me
Up
Simpson 15·31. LP- Walker 13· {51 Knowles (8) and Duncan.
5). HRs- Perez (141hl. Bench 2 .WP- Lee {6-3). LP- Fingers {5- right now," said Robinson.
{23rd &amp; 24th) .
31 . HRs- Mangua l (2nd). Fisk "Boog Powell is down below
(12th), Duncan {14th) .
.201l," I said. "He's having a
Los Ang
130 401 ooo- 9 18 1
Phila
300 010 010- 5 13 0 New York 040 ooo 001-5 6 o devil of a time getting unJohn (8-41 aod Sims; Cham - California 000 000 ooo- 0 7 1 tracked."
pion , Lersch (11. Tw itchell {4).
Stottlemyre {9-101 and Mun- "! see that on TV, " said
Scarce : (7) , Selma {9) and son ; L. All en, Barber (2), May
Bateman, Ryan {91. LP- {71 , Fisher (9) and Stephenson, Robinson. "He's getting his
. Champion (4-9 1..
Torborg {3) . LP- L. Allen (2-6). body out In front too quick,
trying to do it with his body
instead of his hands. That's the
way most batters are when
they get into a slump. I'm
guilty
of it, too."
NATIONAL APPLIANCE MONTH AT SEARS
"What do you think of the
Orioles from what you saw?"
"They clobbered Detroit, ~
3, in the game I saw so there
wasn't much to think," answered Robinson. "! feel like
they'll win It though even
though they're having theli'
troubles. I'm very surpr~ at
the guys who are not hitting."
"Besides Powell, did you
notice anyone else swinging
differently?"
"I'm not over there
anymore, and I don't want to
get Into this, buta!nce you a.sk I
did see where Rettenmund Is
holding hla bat higher than be
REFRIGERATORS
used to ."
"How much difference Is
FREEZERS
there between this club and
WASHERS - DRYERS
--- -'
Baltimore?"
Quite a Difference
DISHWASHERS
"Quite a bit," Robinson
TELEVISION - STEREOS
replied. "This club d~'t
have the bitting, the defense
' and the established 'pitching
Baltimore has."
"What about you personally?
992-217&amp;
You loo'k as if you've taken off
220 E. MAIN
POMEROY
LOU &amp; THELMA·OSBORNE
some weight.''
.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal. 9to l, Thurs.
"!have, eight pounds, and I
with the Orioles into a romp,
Richie Scheinblum had three
hits and Amos Otis two for the
Royals.
In the game against the
Angels, Mel Stottlemyre hit a
two-run single in a four-run
second-inning outburst and
pitched a seven-bitter for his ·
fourth shutout of the season for
the Yankees. Stottlemyre's
single and a double by Thurman MWison were the big
blows as the Yankees sent 10
men , to the plate in the big
inning,
Bill Slayback pitched an
eight-hitler for the Tigers, who

Runs Batted In

..AUTHORIZED

CATALOG MEROiANT

- - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - - - '---···-•'•t•o•N•oo•"•'•Fr.id•a•y•9•:0CI-to'!'9:oo
•_ _ _ _ __, feel fine," said RoblnBon,

"How did you do it?"
"By not eating sweets and
starches."
'
Frank Robinson will be 37 in
a few weeks but stlll makes
very few coocessions to his
age. He ran into a wall in St.
thr ·
ks
d
. Loq~ . ,ee ~~ •.ago . ~n an
inJ.qfe? wri~t - ~~turne,d to
nornial'only recently. Stlll you
t hh'lffi piaymg
. safety
nevercac
first baseball.
"Floyd Patterson is 37 and
says he feels he can keep going
indefinitely," I said to Robinson . "What about you?"
"Depends on reflexes and
injuries," he said. "Patterson
could be right. You bave to look
· at each individual and judge
him that way, as an individual.
People in sports all make the
same mistake. They have this
attitude about age and they pot
you in a !racket. They say
'you're 38 and you're over the
hill.' You can't always say
that. All 36-year-olds aren't the

Gallipolis Oriole battle, Mike
Hindy was the winner and
Jackson took the loss.
Leading hitters for the Indians were Hindy , Mark
Venoy, and Keith Lynch all
with two hits apiece.
Schoonover had the Orioles'
only hit.
Second Game
D. Perry hurled a no-hitter
for Pt. Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel while Rice was charged
with the loss for the Gallipolis
Indians, who were the fifth
straight Gallipolis team to lose.
in the first round .
'
D. Blake and T. Bateman led
Pl. Pleasant with a single,
double, and home run each
while R.' Beller had two singles
and a double.
Third Game
In the Cheshire TigerHarrisonville game, which
lasted only one and a half innings, S. Baird was the winner
for the Tigers . He didn 't allow
a hit although pitching only two
frames. R. Jordon took the
loss.
D. Sayre led the Tigers with
a double and triple while R.
Spaulding and G. Mulford each
had tivo singles.
In tonight's action the
Middleport Braves took on the
Gallipolis Padres at 6, at 7: IS
Hometown and Ripley Jack
Myers square off, and the
Pomeroy Pirates take on the
Middleport Reds at 8:30.

REEDLEY, Calif. (UP!)Funeral services were scheduled today for Dale Drake, ,
bead of the company building ;
the Offenhauser racing engine :l l
since 1946. He died ol a heart • :
attack Monday night at the age ~ :
of 70.
:
Since World War II, Offen- . :
hausers-called Drak«lffys '
after Drake took sole control of
production in 1965-have won •
at Indianapolis all but six ·
years, 1965-67 and 1969-71.
Mark Donohue's McLaren.Qffy
captured the Indianapolis 500
in May.
Drake became involved in
'auto racing before World War-! 1
as a partner with his father in
·the J. · A. Drake and Sons :
. ·engineering firm, producer of
Jadson Valves, here.
He is survived by his widow, '
Eve,and a son, John, president'
of Drake Engineering Co . in
Santa Ana, Calif.

.l:

RECORDS SET
TOLEOO (UP!) - Record
sales for the second quarte~ ,
were reported today by OwensIllinols, lnc. of $411 .1 mill!oq
and earnings of $20.1 million,
compared with second quarter
1971 sales of $388.9 million and
earnings of $19.5 million. First
half sales were reported at $1104
milllon , up nearly $80 million
fr om 1971. First half earnings
were $31.9 million, compared
with $30.2 million in 1971.

MEN'S.

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8"-6" Oxford

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Judge·Tells PC
To Reduce Crew~
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - A
rfl)eral judge gave his approval Wednesday to a controversial plan by Pen Central
Railroad trustees to reduce
· their train crews to three men.
· The move is bitterly opposed
by the United Transportation
Union ( UTU ) which has
lhreatened to slrike if the
benkrupt railroad·goes through
with its plans to eliminate the
6,000 jobs.
The ruling was made by U. ~ ­
District Court Judge J. A.
Fullam who appro~ed a
reorganization plan that included. the reduction in the
crews. He told the railroad to
give at least 14 days notice
before putting the new rule into
effect .
Trustee Jervis Langdon Jr.,
testified before Fullam l~st
month that the reorganization
of the line would .suffer a
"serious blow " unless the Penn
Central reduced its four, l ive
and six-man crews to three
men.
He said the crew redu ctions
would be made through at·

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COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
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WALL ,
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Ohio
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Discounted

Executioners at

Pen are Indicted

How they Voted

MIAMI BEACH, (UP!) The Ohio delegation to the
Democratic National Con...., .... vention Wednesday elected
carol McClendon and Joseph
....,.,..... Cole, both of Cleveland, to the
national committee .
The goodness of nature . .. put into a
~-· Miss McClendon, a
r.J&lt;--..1 Cleveland city councilwoman,
lccmct9ntlratt9d form of nutrition . . .
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MIDDLEPORT ,DEPARTMENT STORE

DRAPES

Opinions differed on what tract labor support that so far
kind of help McGovern needed generally has been withheld
to bolster hia prospects of from McGovern, Woodcock Is
defeating President Nixon but 61, a Romim Catholic, active in
there was evidence in the badly civil rights and the end-the-war
split vote that gave him top· movement.
Ribi coff,
who
P\!J
place on the ticket that his
McGovern
's
name
m
choice of a running-mate might
nomination, is a close friend of
be crucial.
the
South Dakota senator with
Eagleton, 42, a freshman
wholly
compatible views. He ia
senator with a liberal, antiwar
record, said last night a a Jew and might help rOWJd up
McGovern aide, not named, the Jewish vote in such states
had told him the list of as New York and California
possibilities
had
been where McGovern has , ennarrowed to four- Kennedy, countered some distrust about
Ribicoff, Woodcock and his views on continued
protection of Israel.
himself.
In convention hall Wedl2-14 Still on List
nesday
night, a petition was
Dutton
early
today
circulated
to put on the ticket
discounted this. He said "as
Frances
(Sissy)
many as 12 or 14" names were Rep .
Farenthold,
the
attractive
4Sstill on the possible list.
year-old
Corpus
Christi
mother
Presumably Eagleton was one
of the group. What he could do who shook Texas·politics with a
for the ticket was not clear race for governor that got her
Humphrey, declined comment since his appeal would be to as far as a runoff. Political
about McGovern's nomination. voters who already like pros argued unchivalrously
"I'm not going to tell you," McGovern.
that a woman on the ticket was
King said when asked about
not
what McGovern needed to
Woodcock is a liberal, too,
what McGovern's nomination but might he expected to at- win.
would do to the Democrats. He
uttered another remark, but
quickly said : "You didn't hear
that''
Lots of Homework
State Rep . Patrick Sweeney
of Cleveland, an alternate who
wore buttons calling for a Kennedy draft, claimed Humphrey
could have stopped McGovern
' NOW IN FULL SWING
had he remained in the race.
Featuring All of the
· "McGovern broke it (went
tl ~
over the top on votes) here and
Latest Shoe Fashions ~~ i;;;:l
in California and Illinois," said
WOMEN'S
"'~~
Sweeney.
State Sen. Oliver Ocasek of
Akron, who was pledged to
Humphrey but ended up voling
for McGovern, said he could
Re&amp;~Jiar
support the South Dakota senator .
'18.99
But he said "if the election
were he;~ .1ow it would be an
uphlll battle. "We've got to do a
lot of homework, We've got an
incumbent President running
Mlu America white ond belg• summer dreu lhoeL
against us, .and Ohio is not a
Aloo Party Shoes In sliver and gold. Party group
great liberal state."
lndudes values·tq_ '15.00
Sen. Morris Jackson said he
Re1ub1
believes McGovern can carry
Recular
Regubr
t4.99
11.99
9.99
Ohio because of his campaign
and 1S,99
to 13.99
lo 10.99
organization . "Certainly he
came from nowhere and has to
be reckoned with," Jackson
SIZE 4-B
said.
The Ohio delegation sat
quietly through most of the
speeches during th~ evening.
Some delegates yawned
frequently .
But when McGovern was
nominated and when he won,
his supporters in the Buckeye
delegation went as wild as anyone else.
Previous Humphrey backers
merely gazed around aI the
crowd and held the "Scoop"
Main St.
Pomeroy
SHOES
Jackson banners that had been
'
distributed. .
governors who called on
McGovern to urge that be
invite Kennedy to take second
place on the ticket and, failing
!hal, to offer the role to Mills.
Gov. Pat Lucey of Wisconsin
said
afterwards
that
McGovern "expressed great
admiration and respect . for
Mills."
McGovern, in a IS-minute
telephone conversation with
Kennedy shortly after his
midnight nomination, offered
Kennedy the vice presidential
spot and, as expected, got a flat
turn-down . Kennedy, whose
two brothers were victims of
assassins, cited family and
personal reasons.

CHAPMAN'S

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Spiller News, Social Events

SPILLER, July 10- Mr. and children, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. John Busch and three Busch and three children, Edra
children of Nanty Glo, Pa., Bush, Mrs. Cecil Roseberry
spent the past week with his and two children, Mrs. Unda
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Patterson and two sons, Rick
Bush and visited with relatives and Bobby Deeter, and eM I
Johnston. While the young
and friends .
Mr . an.d Mrs. Dennie folks roasted wieners and had
Johnson and family of Elwood, an enjoyable evening, Bill
, Pac, spent the past week with Busch played the piano and
his aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Edward was accompanied on the guitar
Bush and vial ted with relatives by his father, John Busch and
Dennie Johnson . Several
and friends.
hymns were sung during the
Don
Bush
and
his
brother,
FINISH SECOND, THIRD
evening
by Mrs. Bush, Mr. and
LINCOLN. Neb. (UP!) - Frank, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Finneran of Columbus, Cecil Roseberry and family Mrs. Johnson and Mr. Busch.
Ohio, finiahed second alid Tim and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Later in the evening Bobbie
Deeter sang a song acMoore, also of Columbus, was Bush one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bush and companying himself on the
third Wednesday In the men's
one-met~r National
AAU family took dinner with his guitar. All present enjoyed ·the
Diving Championships.
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest evening very much. - Mrs.
Don Dunfield of San Jose, Brewer on Tuesday. Other Ernest Brewer.
Calif., was the winner of the callers during the afternoon
event with 524.61 points. were her brother, Roy Bush,
DRAFT UNDERWAY
Finneran had 494.49 points and and Clint Birch and daughter
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - The
Moore 432.43 points.
Le 0ta •
Mrs. Emma Johnson, while general managers of the World
viaiting in California and other Hockey Association's 12 teams
poln Is of Interest, purchased a began a supplemental draft
salt and pepper set as a gift for .from among a pool of some 600
SCIOTO RESULTS
Mr.andMrs.ErnestBrewer,as Pillyers here today.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
an addition to ~ir salt ·and · A spokesman for the WHA
Kingery Express covered the pepper colleclion.
said players named In the
distance In the $1,800 featured
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer supplemental selection pool did
pace at Scioto Downs Wed- • and daughter, Sylvia, en, not Include the names of 600
nesday night In 2:02 4-5, tertained on Saturday evening, players the teama selected
returning ~.20, U1.60 and $6. July 8, with 8 wiener roast in earller from the league's
K S Tr.eed wu second honor of their two grand- original selection list.
followed by Dusty :H Forbea. daughters Mila vaneasa Todd
Today's draft was to conThe 8·9 nightly double of Columbus and Miss Unda elude a twiH!ay meeting which
combination of Lenawee Song Lawrence of Havertown, ·Pa. also dealt with league
and Grand Jarry paid $58.20 Besides the honored guests organizatioo, rules changes,
Attendance was 4,685 and the those attending were Mr. and schedules and other procedural
handle was $235,674.
Mrs. Dennie Johnson and four matters .
•

669

Straw and Summer Bags Reduced!

Dem 's Committee

AT

5 PC.
BATHROOM
SETS

Mills on Possible Veep List

BACK TO MIAMI
COLUMBUS (UPli
Gov. John J. Gilligan
planned to depart this
moroing for Miami Beach io
MIAMI BEACH I UPI )-Spe- Woddcock and Sens. Abraham
accord with a show of unity culation
on
George Ribicoff of Connecticut and
trition over a period of years
requested by the staff of Sen. McGovern's running-mate Thomas Eagleton of Missow-i.
Mills, 63, is an Arkansas
beyond 1976 and would save the
George McGovero, the widened to include Rep. Wilbur
lawmaker
who as chairman
Penn Central $97 million
Democratic presideotlal D. Mills today after Sen. Eddollars a year.
nominee.
ward M. Kennedy formally since 1957 of the House Ways .
and Mear.; Committee has
He also told the court that if
Robert Tenenbaum, press rejected McGovern's offer.
esulblished
a national reputa·
the UTU walked off the job, the
secretary to GIUigan, sal~
McGovern was to announce
line would be bit with a $50 the governor had Intended to his choice before tonight 's lion as a tax expert and fiscal
million a month loss.
go to the convention city
session of the Democratic conservative.
The ruling gave the trustees
Some convention delegates,
anyway, but that his 9 a. m.
National Convention·.
the legal backing needed •to departure was hastened by
Fred Dutton, a senior Mc- concerned that McGovern's
begin the crew reduction plan. the request telephoned to
Govern adviser, said a dozen or liberal stands on taxes, welfare
However, a Penn Central him Wednesday night.
more n~mes still were on the and other economic issues
spokesman said the trustees . . Tenenbaum said Gilligan
"possible" list when McGovern might frighten cor.;ervative
had "no firm statement as to was taking a commercial "went to hed in the early mor- voters, said Mills might be just
what their im111ediate or long airline filght tp Miami Beach
ning. Other sources had said the man to balance the ticket.
Mills' name was dropped into
term plans will be."
and was expected to arrive
the choice had been narrowed
the
pot Wednesday by a group
there shortly after 11 a. m.
to three prospects, United Auto
Workers president Leonard of Southern and border state
HOSPITAL NEWS today.
July 11
BIRTHS _ Mrs. John Eh- ••••llillfiii1RUIII
. •~::..~
man , son, Patriot; Mrs .
Michael Brothers, daughter,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Terry Oliver,
· daughter , Gallipolis; Mrs.
Caucus voted for McGovern.
By LEE LEONARD
William Hammon, son, Bid"Uphill Battle"
.
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)
well; Mrs. Allan McFann,
got
four
Humphrey
still
Ohio's divided delegation to the
dau ghter , Oak Hill ; Mrs .
Democratic National Con· votes from Ohio, while former
Mi , hael Gray , daughter ,
ventlon reacled early today to Gov. Terry Sanford of' North
Wellston; Mrs. Keith Eblin,
the nomination of Sen. George Carolina received three and
son, Gallipolis and Mrs. Cari
S. McGovern with feelings Sen. Edward M. Kennedy got
Hunt, daughter, Gallipolis.
ranging from jubilation over two, even though he has reDISCHARGES _ Maxine
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - completion of an impossible peatedly denied he would acBailey, Jack Branham, John Robert McAlister, who led Sen. task ~ ~to bitter "can't win" cept the nomination.
W. Brown, Frances Cantrell, George McGovern 's Ohio charges.
The five delegates pledged to
Anne Harris, Larry Harrison, campaign, dismissed today the
Rep
. Wayne L. Hays of Flush·
"We feel every bit of our
David Jackson, Leona King, notion that the South Dakota work was justified," said a joy-. ing held firm for the congressBessie Kirby, Mrs. James senator's camp is filled with ful Howard P. Fink, Ohio State man on the first and only balMelton and daughter, Mrs. radicals.
University law professor who lot.
Gary Moran and daughter,
"! don't believe in labels," headed the McGovern group at
"We are going to have a
Troy Ohlinger Sr. , Daron McAlister, a Columbus at- the convention.
united Democratic party in
Puckett, Ruth Rankin, Michael torney, said .
,Buckeye delegates gave 77 of Ohio and we are going to win in
Stewart, Gary Jones, Carolyn
"They talk abcut radicals in ttkir votes to McGovern, al- November," said Fink. "II will
Mays, Gary Whorbrey and the McGovern camp, but that though only 61 had originally be an uphill battle, but with the
John Holmon.
lS nonsense," he said. "Acbeen pledged to support him on kind of coalition we have, I
July 12
tually McGovern's people have the first ballot.
think we can do it. "
BIRTHS - Mrs. Robert learned to work within the
State Sen. Antbcny 0. Cala·
Sen. Henry -M. Jackson pickAshley, son, New Haven and system ."
ed up 39 Ohio votes from dele- brese of Cleveland screwed up
Mrs . Bob McKinniss, daughter,
McAlister said supporters of gates released by Sen. Hubert his face when asked about McJa ckson.
the
new
Democratic H. Humphrey, while Rep. Shir· Govern as a nominee. "he can't
DISCHARGES - Craig presidential nominee are now ley Chisholm of New York win," said Calabrese.
Wise. Jock Coyan, Melvin hard at work to register the gathered- 23 votes from those
Frank W. King, head of the
Bolight, Verda Cremmens, young voters "and that will pledged to Humphrey.
!53-member Ohio delegation
Frances Ewing, Mary Grin- spill over to help all
and
captain of the Humphrey
State Sen. M. Morris Jackson
nan , Marsea House, Ullian Democrats."
of Cleveland said half of Mrs. forces, turned loose more than
Pierce, Christine Wray,
McAlister took on the task of Chisholm's votes were from 30 AFL-CIO member delegates
Milinda Brumfield, George building up a strong McGovern white delegates who felt they on Jackson's behalf.
Gillilan , Resellen Lee, Arlene campaign in Ohio last year and had been jilted by the party
King, who has had some
McCain, James Miller, James the result was 61 delegates that rules which ended Humphrey's difficulty with the McGovern
Nibert, Mary Ours, Janet went to the convention pledged bid Tuesday .
faction in the delegation and
Shuff, Mrs. Orville Williamson to McGovern .
Jackson said all eight mem· who was disappointed at
and son and Mrs. Clarence Lee
McGovern surprised many hers of the 21st District Black having to throw in the towel on
and daughter.
longtime party men by capturing 12 of the 22
congressional districts in
SOLT SUSPENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The which he w'as' entered and
Ohio Racing Commission narrowly l~ng the popular
Wednesday cited Dr. John J. vote to Sen. Hubert H. Hum·
Soil of Hancock County for phrey.
McAlister, a .New York
vi olation of the state's 411-hour
medication rule , the first native, grew up in Circleville
veterinarian ever to be and graduated from Kenyon
College and Michigan Law
charge'tl under the rule .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The wearing masks," he said. But
Solt was suspended by School.
stabbing death of an Ohio it was not an " execution
Toledo Raceway Park judges
Penitentiary inmate by a squad," he insisted.
for involvement jn medication
masked "execution squad" of Perona said the men's masks
cases after the post-race
convicts was disclosed Wed· were made from surgical gown
urinalysis of two winning
nesday by an Ohio Highway material, probably stolen from
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - patrolman.
horses in June disclosed the
the prison hospital. Although
presenc'e of prohibited How the !53-member Ohio
he
said the squad was made up
Patrol Lt. A. M. Perona said
delegation
voted
as
Sen
.
medications. The trainers of
Charles Sanders was killed of five or six men, only two
McGovern was May 10 in a prison storeroom indictments were returned.
the horses were suspended for George
nominated for President on the while a prison official, held at Cardwell said the shoe
311 days.
first ballot at the Democratic bay by the "squad," observed factory foreman and two inNational Convention Wed- the murder.
mates were held at knifepoint
nesday night:
and
told not to move while
Perona made a report to the
McGovern
77 Franklin County grand jury, Sanders was killed.
Chisholm
"Thia happened when our
23 which returned first degree
Jackson
39 murder indictments against guard force was low," the
Humphrey
4 inmates Walter Atterbury, 24, warden said. "Some of our
WayneHBys
goards had been sent to the
5 and Charles Gray, 26.
Sanford
3
Warden Harold J. Cardwell, new prison at Lucasville, but
Kennedy
2 however,
softened
the they're back now, I don 't think
this type of killing could take
language used by Perona.
"We did have a murder and place here today."
aevelanders on
it did involve some people

Derived from
nature's own
rces.
Nature Fresh.

FIBERGLASS

.ohdbbbbd!LL bbblb \UCUUUUlldd

There's no need to handle your money
like a three-ring circus! Put it
in a savings account or certiAr:ates.
Then, you can sit back and watch

OTHER
SERVICES
AVAILABLE

it grow with the highest interest rates permissible by
law. We can't afford to clown .

• Mortgage ·Loons
• Personal Loans
• Car Loans
• Vacation Loans

around with your money, because
banking is our only business. For
m-oney ma!ters, we're folks in the know.

• Checking Acc'ts
• Trust Acc'ts
• Bank-by-Mall

The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is . Open 9
a.m. to 7 p.m ., (Continuously).
S20,000 Maximum Insurance
·
·

For Each Depositor

�.. '

.

.

•

. 6- The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972

c. •..

I

--r;

'.,
'

.

CON CENTRA TED
7 oz. Tube

Historic backgrou nd an the fomil1ar hairbrush has tu rned up tn the a rchi •es of Caswell-Massey, the oldest apothecary in the Uni ted Sta tes . Frj tz1 Sc heff (left), famous star of the late 1800s, cost a young so les cle rk at the apothecary shop a pretty penny. The wind blew her skirt s, revea ling a bit of ankle . He promptly
d ropped an armful of th e brushes on same frag il e crysta l bottles and his sala ry was docked until the brea kage was paid for. Ade Rehan (center), a brillion~ comed ien ne of the era, received a gilt of a white boar
bristl e brush from a famous actor w1th " I LOVE YOU" spe lled out in bl ock bristles. Today, a pneumatic
rubber pad br ush with 'na tura l br~stles (r~ght) and .a c herrywaod back to pra.ide professional hair core.

REG. 11.99

and

th e hai r

~ h i nv

br us h gd s dirt y but

The

lank g uns :··?\n1erica di scov - One ol· her most ardent afl .

hn irdos that one brushes the Uni ted States . ori gi nally ~' irst free Theater of New
located in Newport. R.I. The York 111 1923 . To adeq ua te!)'
well as the io n ~. lwndled New York shop was opened express his affecti on lor
type [()I" Inri g ~ lro ~es un lo ng on Fifth Aven ue and 25th Miss Rehan. he had Kent
hairdos.
Strep( prior to the Ctvil War. make a special white boar
bristle brush with black
Rccen tl v uncovered in the bristles that spelled ou t " I
Ke nt of ,London ( brusll ·
111akers to royalt y 1 has per-. old a potheca ry 's a rchi ves love y ou .··
ha ps one of the rn ost roman . ar e amusing and fa s ~.:i na tin g
In the 1860s th e brushtic. nos talgic ~nd historica l anecdot es to give us some
makers
de signed a special
ins
ight
into
the
brush
firm
·s
back grounds of any finn . Its
Br
azili
an
R o sew o o d hair
wonderfu
lly
nosta
lgic
begin
wid e ran ge of accomplishbrusl1
to
care
for President
nings
in
Amer
ica
.
ments in c I u de s brushes
Lincoln's
famou
s hair.
made fr om Lord Nelson 's
Ade
Rehan
was
one
of
the
Bri
stle
brllshes
were the
fla gs hip, H.M.S Victor)'. the
most
brilliant
comediennes
rage
of
all
the
ladies
a hun wood of Wat erloo Brid ge.
the
Am
e1
ican
s_tage
eve
r
prodred
yt&gt;a
rs
a
go.
One
socialitl'
wooden -handl e d tooth br ushes made for Ind ian cluced She gatned fame fot was not to be out do ne when
troops, bru shes for clean in g her out standing performance she heard that a friend had
the fus ela ge of World War I in the .. "T am in g of the • just ord ered a b1·ush with
planes and barrel s of J nti· Shrew. as well as her long boar bristles two inches long.
I!S t of suitors and adnm ers . She immedi atel y countered
with an order rOr a spe cial
brush with bnstles measurwith the twist of th&lt;; wri st as

ing 2 1 ~ inches

WELLSTON -An area-wide
livestock judging contest will
be held on Tuesday, July 16, at
the
Jackson
Co unty
Fairgrounds near Wellston.
Boys and girls from nine
counties in southeastern Ohio
will be competing for championship trophies and awards.
Registration will start at 9:30
a. m., and the judging contest

at 10 a. m.
The purpose of the contest is
to help youth of the area
develop a "judging eye" for
livestock and learn methods of
how to compare and evaluate
differences among animals.
They will judge and evaluate
both market and breeding
classes o! beef cattle, sheep
and swine. Members of the

A notabl e lad y of the day
knew a ve ry elegant ge ntl e·
man who used two dlHerent
colog nes- one on t!ach side
Extension · staff will demon- of hi s head . To keep the
stra te methods of giving oral scent s in their proper places
she o ,. d e r e d Club slyle
and written reasons.
This contest is planned to bru s h e s - each hand -engr aved for identificat ion pur help develop county teams for poses-ri
ght and left .
the junior livestock judging
Nichols. the pla.l'·
contest at the state fair and for wriAnn
ght who wrote and pro a slate team that will compete duc ed " Ab ie's Ir is h Rose,"
at regional and natio nal wa s a fr eq uent vi sitor to Gaslivestock shows this fall.
well-Massey . Wh e n Miss
Nicho ls want ed to buy the
Count de Li gnemar a special
gift she thou ght it wou ld be
fittin g to get him a brush to
properl y cater to hi s un usually large Isize 91h 1 head .
Kent made th e larges t hairwill conform to regulations in brush ever produced with
that order .
order to receive a variance.
Deadline for facilities to
Pre -World War I Russian
return the completed ap- peasants collected superlength bristles for years beplication is Aug . 15.
for e th e marriage age as
dowries for thei r dau ghters.
This bristl e was so long it
wa s also used for stitchin g

Air Pollution Permit Forms To be Mailed
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - Ap·
plicalions for air pollution
control permits are to be
mailed this week to some 17,500
Ohio facilities, the state Health
De par tm ent announced
Wednesday.
The applications will be sent
to facilities having emissions
from fuel-fired equipment ,
process equipment, spray
booths, storage tanks or in'
cinerators.
Th~ mailings are being made

to 70 per cent of the 25,000
facilities who returned preregistration forms sent ou t by
the Health Department. The
other 30 per cent have not yet
returned initial forms .
Department officials said if
the facility is in compliance
with all mission regulations it
can apply for a "permit to
Of the 105 s c h o o !-age
operate." If not, a "variance
children in every 1.000 who
permi t" must be sought.
are handicapped . 23 are
The facility must tell the mentally retarded. accordi ng
Health Department when it to Encyclopaedia Britannic• .

:; hoes .

Like an "old first family "
the bristle brush ha s a background dotted with fa sci nlating stori es of a grand past.
And like any ot her "good
stock" it's sti ll a winner .

Frozen Fries for Easy Au' Gratin
will enjoy lrying a quick
By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
rec ipe using !rozen French
fries.
One of the few vegetables
to remain relatively un EASY AU GRATIN
cha nged by new processing
POTATOES
such as freeze drying or de·
1 pound (or 2 9 oz.
hydration is the potato. Raw
packages) frolen
Id aho po tatoes, for example.
French
fri ed Idaho
and the packaged instant popotatoes
tatoes are practically the
same, except fo r th e peel. •;,, cup each butter and
flour
Au gratin' potato fanciers
I teaspoon salt
3 drops of Tabasco JlCppcr
BROWN CRITICIZED
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Socialist Workers Party
charged Wednesday that Ohio
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has "embarked on a
personal crusade to keep all
radical candidates off the Ohio
ballot." Brown las\ week ruled
the par ty's presidential and
vice presidential candidates,
Linda Jenness and Andrew
Pulley, off the ballot because
neither met the age
requirement of 35. The party
said ·Brown was a "petty
tyrant" for his ruling.

•:, cup canned diced
pimiento, If desired
2 ta blespoons frozen or
freeze-dried chives
Buttered bread crumbs
for lopping

Make cheese sauce by
cooking together over low
heal the butter and fl our .
Stir in milk . Cook , stirring
all the while, until thickened
and smooth . AM seasonings
and the cheese, then pimiento and chives. Place
sauce
Worccstershire sm1ce to half unthawed Frenc h fries
in shallow 1~ -quart baking
taste
Cover with half the
dish.
3 cups milk
cheese sauce. Repeat. Sprin•;, pound process American kle with buttered bread
cheese, shredded
crumbs or buttered corn
(about 2 cups)
flake crumbs. Bake in a 40(). .

degree oven for about 20
minutes or until crumbs are
browned and potatoes are
piping hot. Add cooked ham
slices before baking, if desired. For a rea lly speedy
dish , use 2 ca ns Cheddar
cheese soup. followi ng can
directions for cheese sauce .
Makes 4 to 6 servi ngs.
(Note : package weights of
frozen French fries vary.
Check packages for weight.
Use enough to make a little
over a pound--18 ou nces or
so. Plain or crinkle-cut may
be used . Do not thaw .)

Response Great
.
For Veterans
Firecracker replica containers filled with homemade
cookies and candy will be
presented today to each or the
approximately tOO veterans
attending the American Legion
Auxiliary District 6 birthday
party at the Chilli co th e
Veteran s Admi nistration
Hospital.
"The
response
for
homemade candy . and cookies
for the disabled boys was
tremendous" conunented Mrs .
Charles Kessinger, District 8
president. About 250 pounds of
candy and nearly 100 dozen
cookies were donated, not only
by people involved in Auxiliary
work, but by other concerned
Meigs Courtians.
In addition to filling the

Pamphlet on

Revised Form
A revised publication titled
"Flint, Ohio's Official Gemstone f' is now available from
the Ohio Department of
Natura l Resoources.
The pamphlet, printed on 100
per cent recycled paper,
contai ns
10
full -color
photographs. 11 gives th e
history of flint in Ohio, its past
and present uses, and
describes the outstanding
outcrop of beautiful rock in
Ohio - FlintRidge, which runs
from east of Newark almost to
Zanesville in Licking and
Muskingum counties.
Copies of the publication
may be obtained without
charge by writing to th e
Publications Center, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resow-ces, 1500 Dublin Road,
Colombus, Ohio 43215.
The division of geological
sw-vey of the Deparment of
Natural Resow-ces compiled
the publication.

The three varieties of
poodle are classified by
should er height. The toy is
10 inches or under, the miniature from 10 to 15 inches
and the standard over 15
inches.

If rou're fighting a
lostng_· battle .against
heal lind humtdlty In
your Mobile Home ...

To--.

.

)

. 4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

• It's a GENUINE Mobile • Atlexi ble:duct kit that hooks ·
Home Central Air Condl·
up easlly to your existing
tlonar.
duc.t work.
• A bigger blower motor for • Fast. easy installation. combetter air circ ulatio n.
pletely out-ot·doors.
• Amana Electro-toating lin· • Engineered for quiet opera·
ish tor maximum rust pro·
tion, indoors and out.
tection.

McCLURE'S

' Ca II 992-5321 For Free Estimate
Middleport, 0~

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT, O.

I

7's
FREE
RAZOR

Boys ' Sizes 5-12

Shorts - Sleeveless Shirts Dress Suits - Pajamas - Trunks

REG. 11.09

hearing about

SPEC

Girls &amp; Boys

COATS &amp; JAt.:KETS
lhru 14

TheOn Kiddie
Shoppe
T
The

Y.~9.!!.!!H

:rl
eethnn
ovng '5
ore

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

53e

·

·~:;:"':!li irt lhree dove
monev
bock.

REG. 1.69
1

8

13 oz.
REG. 11.49
ONLY

::same

' Easier to

Effective
Formu la

DR. CALDWELL
SYR. PEPSIN

2 oz.
REG. 98'

Swallow

30 TABLETS

¢

66~

-.......
...... ..'""...

--·
~

BUGS BUNNY

VITAMINS
REG.

3.39

1

1C

'

I

.,

''

'•

'
,.~

32 OZ. REG. '2.29

~

ONLY99

~

'~
~

REG. TINTED OR
VANISHING FORMULA
REG. 98~

'

SKIN TONE NEW_ WHITE
VANISHING CREAM

for the man on the go . The
man who wil l pa ck his
BR UT in an o•ernight bag,
tuck an extra bottle in a
glove compartment , keep it
in his desk . BRUT for men ,
1112 oz. Lotion 3.50.

·s e ~
care.

HAROLD E. HUBBARD
We, the undersigned directors attest the correcbtetl8 of this report of 0011•
dillon and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct. ·
Paai s. Smart
Rodney Dowatug -- Dlrecton
James F. Arnold

Reg. '4.95

~

' I(

\

$288 .

JUST

LOTION

$1.59

Very giveable !

"I didn't use my antiperspirant yesterday

and may not today

because I feel
absolutely dry."
Mitchum Anti-Perspirant Spray contains more
anti-perspirant ingredients than any leading spray.
You may be able to skip a day and remain dry.. ,
even if you perspire heavily.

·sCAITER
RUGS

24"x45"

Cr eamy -

smooth, non-st ick y ... and
ex quisitely pac kaged In

Ph OZ.

74·~
CONTINUOUS
ACTION
DECONGESTANT
CAPSULES

de lec tably!

jars ..

REG. '1.17

CONTAe

Coty 's concen trated, ex tra
l ong -la sting
fragrance
form . It melt s into your
sk in
.. . a nd
lingers

delica tely tinted boudoir

BAYER
ASPIRIN

REG. 59'

--------------~----~'l

men . Bu t. now. a brand

'1''

%oz.

I, Harold E. Hu6bard, Exec. V. President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition Is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belle!. ·

2

new size - 1112 oz. Lotion -

100'\179
.REG.

gr
,.

$ 00

Faberge takes BRUT and
creates a whol e other thing
... the new BR UT Jr. Size
Spl it! St ill in th e award
w inning decanter ; sti ll the
same fabu lous lotion for

AGE SPOTS*

4 PAIR

CLEARASIL

I

$}95

THE NEW
BRUT SIZE

I

'I

Only

Set contains Cashet Body Lotion and

MULTIPLE VITAMINS

LA
VORIS·
BABY PANTS
SPECIAL.

•' I

,_

Prince Matchabelle Cologne
Spray Mist Traveler

Those Horrid

STAY DRY

,1

.

~\Thlili"

·~
~

.

$._ 177

CHILDREN'$

•
·''

•',1'

ONLY

capsule shape r11'Tr~s1nriEiR'RE1"t~·-.:r;;;.:r::::;::::;~l

30's

Reg. 79'

50 yedrs

ASSETS
Cash and due from banks · · · · • • • • • • · · • .. · · - . $ 790,245.70
U.S. Treasw-y secw-ities • .. • • • ••• • • . • . . . •. • 2,046,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • . . . • - . 1,253,865.96
Other securities - - - • - - - • .. • • - - • - - - • 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities pw-chased
under agreements to resell • • • • • • • • · - • . • 900,000.00
Loans · • · · • - • • • • · · • - • ·•
· · • • 4,595,591.39
Bank premises, fu rniture and fixtw-es, and
other assets representing bank premises • •
· . . • 67,783.49
Real estate owned other than bank premises • • •• · •. • . • 8,949.70
'
Other assets • · · · · • • • • • • • • • • • · · • • • 5,540.06
TOTAL ASSETS · • • • • · • · · • • • • • · · • • $9,682,976.30
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • • · • • • · ••• • •
• · • . • $1,643,364.50
Time and sayings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • - • · • • • • · · • • • 6,388,992.50
DePosits of United States Government . • • • • • . . • • . 32,342.38
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - • • • • . . • • • 495,193.17
Deposits of conunercial banks • · · · • • • • • • - • . • 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • · • • •
• • • • • • • 37,812.35
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • • · • • • $8 16021704.90
(a) Total demand deposits · · • · - • • • • 12,11!5.!89,77
(b) Total time and savings deposits · •• • • 16,497,515.13
Other liabilities • • • • • • · • · · • • • • · · • • 11!!1,863.76
TOTAL LIABILITIES • • • • • • · • • • • • • •
•• .,., 568 66
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • • • • • • • . • . • .
$70,830.32
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES · • •
$70,830.32
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity Capital-total • • • • •
• • • •
$816,577.32
Conunon Stock-total par value
• • •
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,00o
Surplus • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 100,000.00
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • •
• • •
318,577.32
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
'
818,577.32
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • • • •
.,,882,978.30
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date ••• , • • •
$8,581,318.71
Average of total loans for the 15 caler•· -days ending with call.date • • • • • • •
"',587,ii48. 06

66¢

R:G~~.98 $ 119

rod UCl·ng 1-New: Coty "Colorbrush" Flowing lipstick
New
in a natural hair brush.

s:~s-~~~~ 53¢ ~\no\

'

for over

of Middleporl In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1972
published Ia response lu call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Tille
12, United States Code, SecUon 161.

.........

ln. t

TABLETS

I

99

)&lt;.._;

VANQUISH

In

'••

ONLY

$3
95
~------------7-. ~---~·----·~~~~Sp~la!m~~~---,-~~~s~.O~O~Va~lu~e-~!l~~--J
•...,.~ . .. ..

REG. 11.40

National Bank Region No.4

as~

-~- £_es _ - -·-------~---~....j
¢ U4.~.tr_
Prince Matchabelle '1wo for the Bath"

Crest. ..'

CX-126
FILM

SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS - DRESSES
- BATHING SUITS - PAJAMAS &amp;GOWNS

REG. ~ 1.50

1tchrng and scaling .

2 - 5 OZ. TUBES
REG. s1.73

BARGAN TABLE

3 oz.

leaves ha ir soft, ea sy -fa -manage.
. H~gh l y effective in cOntrol ling

TWIN PACK

Size 3-12

iri s Sizes

New formulat ion of an agen t long
proved clin ica ll y effecti ve in con trol
of dandruff symptom s.
Del ightful l y scen t ed , lathe rs
beautifully .

69e

SPECIAL TABLE

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF mE

\

'

RINSE AWAY
8 oz.

..... _.

FEMININE
HYGIENE
DEODORANT

shampoo you've been

~Erwr t Dl

SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS
SWIMWEAR - PAJAMAS

-

Desert
Flower

'if MIX

.

~ .. . ....

-~

.....

88¢

8 OZ. REG. 11.49

Boys' Sizes Infants thru 4

Charter No. 8441

Flint Out in

Hurry

That Can't Be Beat.

Call No. 482

to /z 0 FF

BOYS SLACKS

REG. 11.49

~ EXTRA BODY

REG. 11.03

A.,

''''" "'""'"''
.. 11''""'"'..,,_
.................. ,..,

1

I

McClure's For,A Dairy Treat
• BRIDGE INSPECTION
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - An
intensified bridge inspection
program was announced
Wednesday by the Public
Utlllties Commission of Ohio
(PU&lt;Xl). "All . railroad companies who have failed to file a
current bridge inspection
report must do so im·
mediately," PUCO Chairman
Henry W. Eckhart said.

containers Wednesday evening
in preparation · for the party
today,IOObags of fr esh fruit each containing two oranges,
two apples and a banana were prepared by Mrs.
Genuna Casci of t~e Pomeroy
urit, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
Erma Hendricks, Mrs. Avanel!
Bass, Mrs. Edith Spencer, Mrs.
Lillian Reitmire, Mrs. Bonnie
Dailey and Angela, Mrs.
Kathleen Manley , Mrs. Velsia
Roush, Becky Roush , Mrs.
Rosie Searles, Mrs. Helen
Ken nedy,
Mrs .
Le lah
Weatherby ,
and
Mrs.
Kessinger, Middlepor t unit.
Businesses contributing to the
project were the Midway
Market and the Pomeroy
Pastry Shop.

8 OZ.

-·-· ·--....

The new anti-dandruff

¢
1;4

~

12% oz.

.40's
WITH 8 FREE

itH.' ha ir erecl Kent brushes over 100 mirers was Butler Daven-

becon-u:os c leaner . /l.ntl th ere years ago when they were port. the famou s actor who
arr bristle brushe s in muny int roduced at Caswell-Mas- founded the Bramhall Theshapes for the new short sey. the oldest apot hecary in ater which later becaRle the

~
. __:91_

~e~,o&amp;·g¢

$1 29

REG. 11.19

MRS. BASS, ANGELA DAILEY, and Mrs. Manley, left
to right, finish packing "goodies" for today's party for
veterans in the Chillicothe Hospital.

SUPER CONDITIONER

EFFERDENT TABLETS

5 oz.

Hairbrush Bristles with History
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEW YORK-t NEA I-The
b r i s t1 e hairbrush once
served a dual purpose . It
ga ve the hai r a s~inin g, luxurious look and i.t added a
rosy blush when applied by
parents to the plump posteriors of petulant progeny .
But today . with the school
psychiatrist or just plain permissiveness in many cases
replacing hairbrush discipline, all that's left fo r the
bristle brush to do is style
and vitalize the hair .
Bristle brushes are costlier than synthetic brushf!s .
After all , bristle comes !rom
a wild boar and nylon !rom
a test tube. But bristle lasts
a long time to begin with and
since grime and dirt adhere
to its uneven surfaces it
hel ps keep the scalp clean

PRELL
LIQUID
SHAMPOO

DEODORANT

'.

.,-,

After years of research, Mitc:hurrrhas found
a way to adapt the famou s formula of it ~

liquid and crea m to a remarkably effective
aerosol spray. Mitchum An!l-Perspirant
Spray contains more an ti-perspir01n1 ingredients than any lea ding spr.t.y you can buy.

Fade Them Out!

The re5ult is an anti -perspirant spray
powerful enough to cape with problem perspiration and h~ lp give protect ion aga inst
perspirat ion odor. You can ..even lee/ the

power of its unique spray.

MITCHUM
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

Yet, Mitchum's special buffering process
makes 1his anli·perspiranl spray safe for
your clothes, gentle to your skin.
Use Mit chum four consecut ive nights.
Then you may discover that you, too, can
skip a day and still remain dry1 even if
perspire heav1/y.

You

· GUARANTEED . If you are notlulty sa lis·
fied, return unused portion to the store
where you purchased it. Your retailer)

authorized to return fu ll cash price.

REG. 1l.50 4.5 OZ. •.._,_,...
tOtt tii.OBLEM I'PISNATION

WHEN
OTHERS FAll.
I

2

$ 69

�.. '

.

.

•

. 6- The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 13, 1972

c. •..

I

--r;

'.,
'

.

CON CENTRA TED
7 oz. Tube

Historic backgrou nd an the fomil1ar hairbrush has tu rned up tn the a rchi •es of Caswell-Massey, the oldest apothecary in the Uni ted Sta tes . Frj tz1 Sc heff (left), famous star of the late 1800s, cost a young so les cle rk at the apothecary shop a pretty penny. The wind blew her skirt s, revea ling a bit of ankle . He promptly
d ropped an armful of th e brushes on same frag il e crysta l bottles and his sala ry was docked until the brea kage was paid for. Ade Rehan (center), a brillion~ comed ien ne of the era, received a gilt of a white boar
bristl e brush from a famous actor w1th " I LOVE YOU" spe lled out in bl ock bristles. Today, a pneumatic
rubber pad br ush with 'na tura l br~stles (r~ght) and .a c herrywaod back to pra.ide professional hair core.

REG. 11.99

and

th e hai r

~ h i nv

br us h gd s dirt y but

The

lank g uns :··?\n1erica di scov - One ol· her most ardent afl .

hn irdos that one brushes the Uni ted States . ori gi nally ~' irst free Theater of New
located in Newport. R.I. The York 111 1923 . To adeq ua te!)'
well as the io n ~. lwndled New York shop was opened express his affecti on lor
type [()I" Inri g ~ lro ~es un lo ng on Fifth Aven ue and 25th Miss Rehan. he had Kent
hairdos.
Strep( prior to the Ctvil War. make a special white boar
bristle brush with black
Rccen tl v uncovered in the bristles that spelled ou t " I
Ke nt of ,London ( brusll ·
111akers to royalt y 1 has per-. old a potheca ry 's a rchi ves love y ou .··
ha ps one of the rn ost roman . ar e amusing and fa s ~.:i na tin g
In the 1860s th e brushtic. nos talgic ~nd historica l anecdot es to give us some
makers
de signed a special
ins
ight
into
the
brush
firm
·s
back grounds of any finn . Its
Br
azili
an
R o sew o o d hair
wonderfu
lly
nosta
lgic
begin
wid e ran ge of accomplishbrusl1
to
care
for President
nings
in
Amer
ica
.
ments in c I u de s brushes
Lincoln's
famou
s hair.
made fr om Lord Nelson 's
Ade
Rehan
was
one
of
the
Bri
stle
brllshes
were the
fla gs hip, H.M.S Victor)'. the
most
brilliant
comediennes
rage
of
all
the
ladies
a hun wood of Wat erloo Brid ge.
the
Am
e1
ican
s_tage
eve
r
prodred
yt&gt;a
rs
a
go.
One
socialitl'
wooden -handl e d tooth br ushes made for Ind ian cluced She gatned fame fot was not to be out do ne when
troops, bru shes for clean in g her out standing performance she heard that a friend had
the fus ela ge of World War I in the .. "T am in g of the • just ord ered a b1·ush with
planes and barrel s of J nti· Shrew. as well as her long boar bristles two inches long.
I!S t of suitors and adnm ers . She immedi atel y countered
with an order rOr a spe cial
brush with bnstles measurwith the twist of th&lt;; wri st as

ing 2 1 ~ inches

WELLSTON -An area-wide
livestock judging contest will
be held on Tuesday, July 16, at
the
Jackson
Co unty
Fairgrounds near Wellston.
Boys and girls from nine
counties in southeastern Ohio
will be competing for championship trophies and awards.
Registration will start at 9:30
a. m., and the judging contest

at 10 a. m.
The purpose of the contest is
to help youth of the area
develop a "judging eye" for
livestock and learn methods of
how to compare and evaluate
differences among animals.
They will judge and evaluate
both market and breeding
classes o! beef cattle, sheep
and swine. Members of the

A notabl e lad y of the day
knew a ve ry elegant ge ntl e·
man who used two dlHerent
colog nes- one on t!ach side
Extension · staff will demon- of hi s head . To keep the
stra te methods of giving oral scent s in their proper places
she o ,. d e r e d Club slyle
and written reasons.
This contest is planned to bru s h e s - each hand -engr aved for identificat ion pur help develop county teams for poses-ri
ght and left .
the junior livestock judging
Nichols. the pla.l'·
contest at the state fair and for wriAnn
ght who wrote and pro a slate team that will compete duc ed " Ab ie's Ir is h Rose,"
at regional and natio nal wa s a fr eq uent vi sitor to Gaslivestock shows this fall.
well-Massey . Wh e n Miss
Nicho ls want ed to buy the
Count de Li gnemar a special
gift she thou ght it wou ld be
fittin g to get him a brush to
properl y cater to hi s un usually large Isize 91h 1 head .
Kent made th e larges t hairwill conform to regulations in brush ever produced with
that order .
order to receive a variance.
Deadline for facilities to
Pre -World War I Russian
return the completed ap- peasants collected superlength bristles for years beplication is Aug . 15.
for e th e marriage age as
dowries for thei r dau ghters.
This bristl e was so long it
wa s also used for stitchin g

Air Pollution Permit Forms To be Mailed
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - Ap·
plicalions for air pollution
control permits are to be
mailed this week to some 17,500
Ohio facilities, the state Health
De par tm ent announced
Wednesday.
The applications will be sent
to facilities having emissions
from fuel-fired equipment ,
process equipment, spray
booths, storage tanks or in'
cinerators.
Th~ mailings are being made

to 70 per cent of the 25,000
facilities who returned preregistration forms sent ou t by
the Health Department. The
other 30 per cent have not yet
returned initial forms .
Department officials said if
the facility is in compliance
with all mission regulations it
can apply for a "permit to
Of the 105 s c h o o !-age
operate." If not, a "variance
children in every 1.000 who
permi t" must be sought.
are handicapped . 23 are
The facility must tell the mentally retarded. accordi ng
Health Department when it to Encyclopaedia Britannic• .

:; hoes .

Like an "old first family "
the bristle brush ha s a background dotted with fa sci nlating stori es of a grand past.
And like any ot her "good
stock" it's sti ll a winner .

Frozen Fries for Easy Au' Gratin
will enjoy lrying a quick
By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
rec ipe using !rozen French
fries.
One of the few vegetables
to remain relatively un EASY AU GRATIN
cha nged by new processing
POTATOES
such as freeze drying or de·
1 pound (or 2 9 oz.
hydration is the potato. Raw
packages) frolen
Id aho po tatoes, for example.
French
fri ed Idaho
and the packaged instant popotatoes
tatoes are practically the
same, except fo r th e peel. •;,, cup each butter and
flour
Au gratin' potato fanciers
I teaspoon salt
3 drops of Tabasco JlCppcr
BROWN CRITICIZED
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Socialist Workers Party
charged Wednesday that Ohio
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has "embarked on a
personal crusade to keep all
radical candidates off the Ohio
ballot." Brown las\ week ruled
the par ty's presidential and
vice presidential candidates,
Linda Jenness and Andrew
Pulley, off the ballot because
neither met the age
requirement of 35. The party
said ·Brown was a "petty
tyrant" for his ruling.

•:, cup canned diced
pimiento, If desired
2 ta blespoons frozen or
freeze-dried chives
Buttered bread crumbs
for lopping

Make cheese sauce by
cooking together over low
heal the butter and fl our .
Stir in milk . Cook , stirring
all the while, until thickened
and smooth . AM seasonings
and the cheese, then pimiento and chives. Place
sauce
Worccstershire sm1ce to half unthawed Frenc h fries
in shallow 1~ -quart baking
taste
Cover with half the
dish.
3 cups milk
cheese sauce. Repeat. Sprin•;, pound process American kle with buttered bread
cheese, shredded
crumbs or buttered corn
(about 2 cups)
flake crumbs. Bake in a 40(). .

degree oven for about 20
minutes or until crumbs are
browned and potatoes are
piping hot. Add cooked ham
slices before baking, if desired. For a rea lly speedy
dish , use 2 ca ns Cheddar
cheese soup. followi ng can
directions for cheese sauce .
Makes 4 to 6 servi ngs.
(Note : package weights of
frozen French fries vary.
Check packages for weight.
Use enough to make a little
over a pound--18 ou nces or
so. Plain or crinkle-cut may
be used . Do not thaw .)

Response Great
.
For Veterans
Firecracker replica containers filled with homemade
cookies and candy will be
presented today to each or the
approximately tOO veterans
attending the American Legion
Auxiliary District 6 birthday
party at the Chilli co th e
Veteran s Admi nistration
Hospital.
"The
response
for
homemade candy . and cookies
for the disabled boys was
tremendous" conunented Mrs .
Charles Kessinger, District 8
president. About 250 pounds of
candy and nearly 100 dozen
cookies were donated, not only
by people involved in Auxiliary
work, but by other concerned
Meigs Courtians.
In addition to filling the

Pamphlet on

Revised Form
A revised publication titled
"Flint, Ohio's Official Gemstone f' is now available from
the Ohio Department of
Natura l Resoources.
The pamphlet, printed on 100
per cent recycled paper,
contai ns
10
full -color
photographs. 11 gives th e
history of flint in Ohio, its past
and present uses, and
describes the outstanding
outcrop of beautiful rock in
Ohio - FlintRidge, which runs
from east of Newark almost to
Zanesville in Licking and
Muskingum counties.
Copies of the publication
may be obtained without
charge by writing to th e
Publications Center, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resow-ces, 1500 Dublin Road,
Colombus, Ohio 43215.
The division of geological
sw-vey of the Deparment of
Natural Resow-ces compiled
the publication.

The three varieties of
poodle are classified by
should er height. The toy is
10 inches or under, the miniature from 10 to 15 inches
and the standard over 15
inches.

If rou're fighting a
lostng_· battle .against
heal lind humtdlty In
your Mobile Home ...

To--.

.

)

. 4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

• It's a GENUINE Mobile • Atlexi ble:duct kit that hooks ·
Home Central Air Condl·
up easlly to your existing
tlonar.
duc.t work.
• A bigger blower motor for • Fast. easy installation. combetter air circ ulatio n.
pletely out-ot·doors.
• Amana Electro-toating lin· • Engineered for quiet opera·
ish tor maximum rust pro·
tion, indoors and out.
tection.

McCLURE'S

' Ca II 992-5321 For Free Estimate
Middleport, 0~

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT, O.

I

7's
FREE
RAZOR

Boys ' Sizes 5-12

Shorts - Sleeveless Shirts Dress Suits - Pajamas - Trunks

REG. 11.09

hearing about

SPEC

Girls &amp; Boys

COATS &amp; JAt.:KETS
lhru 14

TheOn Kiddie
Shoppe
T
The

Y.~9.!!.!!H

:rl
eethnn
ovng '5
ore

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

53e

·

·~:;:"':!li irt lhree dove
monev
bock.

REG. 1.69
1

8

13 oz.
REG. 11.49
ONLY

::same

' Easier to

Effective
Formu la

DR. CALDWELL
SYR. PEPSIN

2 oz.
REG. 98'

Swallow

30 TABLETS

¢

66~

-.......
...... ..'""...

--·
~

BUGS BUNNY

VITAMINS
REG.

3.39

1

1C

'

I

.,

''

'•

'
,.~

32 OZ. REG. '2.29

~

ONLY99

~

'~
~

REG. TINTED OR
VANISHING FORMULA
REG. 98~

'

SKIN TONE NEW_ WHITE
VANISHING CREAM

for the man on the go . The
man who wil l pa ck his
BR UT in an o•ernight bag,
tuck an extra bottle in a
glove compartment , keep it
in his desk . BRUT for men ,
1112 oz. Lotion 3.50.

·s e ~
care.

HAROLD E. HUBBARD
We, the undersigned directors attest the correcbtetl8 of this report of 0011•
dillon and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct. ·
Paai s. Smart
Rodney Dowatug -- Dlrecton
James F. Arnold

Reg. '4.95

~

' I(

\

$288 .

JUST

LOTION

$1.59

Very giveable !

"I didn't use my antiperspirant yesterday

and may not today

because I feel
absolutely dry."
Mitchum Anti-Perspirant Spray contains more
anti-perspirant ingredients than any leading spray.
You may be able to skip a day and remain dry.. ,
even if you perspire heavily.

·sCAITER
RUGS

24"x45"

Cr eamy -

smooth, non-st ick y ... and
ex quisitely pac kaged In

Ph OZ.

74·~
CONTINUOUS
ACTION
DECONGESTANT
CAPSULES

de lec tably!

jars ..

REG. '1.17

CONTAe

Coty 's concen trated, ex tra
l ong -la sting
fragrance
form . It melt s into your
sk in
.. . a nd
lingers

delica tely tinted boudoir

BAYER
ASPIRIN

REG. 59'

--------------~----~'l

men . Bu t. now. a brand

'1''

%oz.

I, Harold E. Hu6bard, Exec. V. President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition Is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belle!. ·

2

new size - 1112 oz. Lotion -

100'\179
.REG.

gr
,.

$ 00

Faberge takes BRUT and
creates a whol e other thing
... the new BR UT Jr. Size
Spl it! St ill in th e award
w inning decanter ; sti ll the
same fabu lous lotion for

AGE SPOTS*

4 PAIR

CLEARASIL

I

$}95

THE NEW
BRUT SIZE

I

'I

Only

Set contains Cashet Body Lotion and

MULTIPLE VITAMINS

LA
VORIS·
BABY PANTS
SPECIAL.

•' I

,_

Prince Matchabelle Cologne
Spray Mist Traveler

Those Horrid

STAY DRY

,1

.

~\Thlili"

·~
~

.

$._ 177

CHILDREN'$

•
·''

•',1'

ONLY

capsule shape r11'Tr~s1nriEiR'RE1"t~·-.:r;;;.:r::::;::::;~l

30's

Reg. 79'

50 yedrs

ASSETS
Cash and due from banks · · · · • • • • • • · · • .. · · - . $ 790,245.70
U.S. Treasw-y secw-ities • .. • • • ••• • • . • . . . •. • 2,046,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • . . . • - . 1,253,865.96
Other securities - - - • - - - • .. • • - - • - - - • 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities pw-chased
under agreements to resell • • • • • • • • · - • . • 900,000.00
Loans · • · · • - • • • • · · • - • ·•
· · • • 4,595,591.39
Bank premises, fu rniture and fixtw-es, and
other assets representing bank premises • •
· . . • 67,783.49
Real estate owned other than bank premises • • •• · •. • . • 8,949.70
'
Other assets • · · · · • • • • • • • • • • • · · • • • 5,540.06
TOTAL ASSETS · • • • • · • · · • • • • • · · • • $9,682,976.30
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • • · • • • · ••• • •
• · • . • $1,643,364.50
Time and sayings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • - • · • • • • · · • • • 6,388,992.50
DePosits of United States Government . • • • • • . . • • . 32,342.38
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - • • • • . . • • • 495,193.17
Deposits of conunercial banks • · · · • • • • • • - • . • 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • · • • •
• • • • • • • 37,812.35
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • • · • • • $8 16021704.90
(a) Total demand deposits · · • · - • • • • 12,11!5.!89,77
(b) Total time and savings deposits · •• • • 16,497,515.13
Other liabilities • • • • • • · • · · • • • • · · • • 11!!1,863.76
TOTAL LIABILITIES • • • • • • · • • • • • • •
•• .,., 568 66
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • • • • • • • . • . • .
$70,830.32
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES · • •
$70,830.32
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity Capital-total • • • • •
• • • •
$816,577.32
Conunon Stock-total par value
• • •
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,00o
Surplus • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 100,000.00
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • •
• • •
318,577.32
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
'
818,577.32
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • • • •
.,,882,978.30
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date ••• , • • •
$8,581,318.71
Average of total loans for the 15 caler•· -days ending with call.date • • • • • • •
"',587,ii48. 06

66¢

R:G~~.98 $ 119

rod UCl·ng 1-New: Coty "Colorbrush" Flowing lipstick
New
in a natural hair brush.

s:~s-~~~~ 53¢ ~\no\

'

for over

of Middleporl In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1972
published Ia response lu call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Tille
12, United States Code, SecUon 161.

.........

ln. t

TABLETS

I

99

)&lt;.._;

VANQUISH

In

'••

ONLY

$3
95
~------------7-. ~---~·----·~~~~Sp~la!m~~~---,-~~~s~.O~O~Va~lu~e-~!l~~--J
•...,.~ . .. ..

REG. 11.40

National Bank Region No.4

as~

-~- £_es _ - -·-------~---~....j
¢ U4.~.tr_
Prince Matchabelle '1wo for the Bath"

Crest. ..'

CX-126
FILM

SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS - DRESSES
- BATHING SUITS - PAJAMAS &amp;GOWNS

REG. ~ 1.50

1tchrng and scaling .

2 - 5 OZ. TUBES
REG. s1.73

BARGAN TABLE

3 oz.

leaves ha ir soft, ea sy -fa -manage.
. H~gh l y effective in cOntrol ling

TWIN PACK

Size 3-12

iri s Sizes

New formulat ion of an agen t long
proved clin ica ll y effecti ve in con trol
of dandruff symptom s.
Del ightful l y scen t ed , lathe rs
beautifully .

69e

SPECIAL TABLE

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF mE

\

'

RINSE AWAY
8 oz.

..... _.

FEMININE
HYGIENE
DEODORANT

shampoo you've been

~Erwr t Dl

SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS
SWIMWEAR - PAJAMAS

-

Desert
Flower

'if MIX

.

~ .. . ....

-~

.....

88¢

8 OZ. REG. 11.49

Boys' Sizes Infants thru 4

Charter No. 8441

Flint Out in

Hurry

That Can't Be Beat.

Call No. 482

to /z 0 FF

BOYS SLACKS

REG. 11.49

~ EXTRA BODY

REG. 11.03

A.,

''''" "'""'"''
.. 11''""'"'..,,_
.................. ,..,

1

I

McClure's For,A Dairy Treat
• BRIDGE INSPECTION
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - An
intensified bridge inspection
program was announced
Wednesday by the Public
Utlllties Commission of Ohio
(PU&lt;Xl). "All . railroad companies who have failed to file a
current bridge inspection
report must do so im·
mediately," PUCO Chairman
Henry W. Eckhart said.

containers Wednesday evening
in preparation · for the party
today,IOObags of fr esh fruit each containing two oranges,
two apples and a banana were prepared by Mrs.
Genuna Casci of t~e Pomeroy
urit, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
Erma Hendricks, Mrs. Avanel!
Bass, Mrs. Edith Spencer, Mrs.
Lillian Reitmire, Mrs. Bonnie
Dailey and Angela, Mrs.
Kathleen Manley , Mrs. Velsia
Roush, Becky Roush , Mrs.
Rosie Searles, Mrs. Helen
Ken nedy,
Mrs .
Le lah
Weatherby ,
and
Mrs.
Kessinger, Middlepor t unit.
Businesses contributing to the
project were the Midway
Market and the Pomeroy
Pastry Shop.

8 OZ.

-·-· ·--....

The new anti-dandruff

¢
1;4

~

12% oz.

.40's
WITH 8 FREE

itH.' ha ir erecl Kent brushes over 100 mirers was Butler Daven-

becon-u:os c leaner . /l.ntl th ere years ago when they were port. the famou s actor who
arr bristle brushe s in muny int roduced at Caswell-Mas- founded the Bramhall Theshapes for the new short sey. the oldest apot hecary in ater which later becaRle the

~
. __:91_

~e~,o&amp;·g¢

$1 29

REG. 11.19

MRS. BASS, ANGELA DAILEY, and Mrs. Manley, left
to right, finish packing "goodies" for today's party for
veterans in the Chillicothe Hospital.

SUPER CONDITIONER

EFFERDENT TABLETS

5 oz.

Hairbrush Bristles with History
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEW YORK-t NEA I-The
b r i s t1 e hairbrush once
served a dual purpose . It
ga ve the hai r a s~inin g, luxurious look and i.t added a
rosy blush when applied by
parents to the plump posteriors of petulant progeny .
But today . with the school
psychiatrist or just plain permissiveness in many cases
replacing hairbrush discipline, all that's left fo r the
bristle brush to do is style
and vitalize the hair .
Bristle brushes are costlier than synthetic brushf!s .
After all , bristle comes !rom
a wild boar and nylon !rom
a test tube. But bristle lasts
a long time to begin with and
since grime and dirt adhere
to its uneven surfaces it
hel ps keep the scalp clean

PRELL
LIQUID
SHAMPOO

DEODORANT

'.

.,-,

After years of research, Mitc:hurrrhas found
a way to adapt the famou s formula of it ~

liquid and crea m to a remarkably effective
aerosol spray. Mitchum An!l-Perspirant
Spray contains more an ti-perspir01n1 ingredients than any lea ding spr.t.y you can buy.

Fade Them Out!

The re5ult is an anti -perspirant spray
powerful enough to cape with problem perspiration and h~ lp give protect ion aga inst
perspirat ion odor. You can ..even lee/ the

power of its unique spray.

MITCHUM
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

Yet, Mitchum's special buffering process
makes 1his anli·perspiranl spray safe for
your clothes, gentle to your skin.
Use Mit chum four consecut ive nights.
Then you may discover that you, too, can
skip a day and still remain dry1 even if
perspire heav1/y.

You

· GUARANTEED . If you are notlulty sa lis·
fied, return unused portion to the store
where you purchased it. Your retailer)

authorized to return fu ll cash price.

REG. 1l.50 4.5 OZ. •.._,_,...
tOtt tii.OBLEM I'PISNATION

WHEN
OTHERS FAll.
I

2

$ 69

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 13,1972

eTr . ,~·. ''*'''''~'~lf

rc;;;;.~~~y$--, FOOD FOR AMERiCANS

ICorner
.

sy charlene Hretlich l .

....

·.•

Mrs. Lysle Meyer, six-year-old Eric, and three-year-old Tim
will be arriving in Pomeroy around the first of August for a
Jl)Onth's vacation with her parents, Mary and Manning Webster.
They come from Moorehead, Minn., where Lysle will remain to
complete the summer session at Moorehead College.
In September, Dr. Meyer and his family will leave for South
Africa. He is taking a sabbatical from Moorehead and the .fa!l
Clllarter will be teaching at Durban. He will do research during
the winter quarter, and then will teach at Rhodesia the spring
quarter. The family will reside near Durban and have taken a
flat for the year they will be there. Their home in Minnesota l1as
been teased for the time they 'll be gone.
Dr. Meyer's major field being African histor~, the year in
Africa is sure to offer a cha1lenge.
lncidentally,Diane's brother, Joe Reichman, stationed with
the U. S. Army in Southern Genn.any, has recenlly been
promoted to Specialis15. Joe has been there a year now and has
abouft8 more months to serve on his tour of duty.
.
He recently purchased a new car and is looking forward to
· doing some sightseeing whenever he has the opportunity and the
time. Bf'!l have a week off later this month and is planning trips
to Ams\etdl!m and Paris.
AFTER 3\2 MONTHS AT Children's Hospital, Columbus,
Denise Byers is home and progressing. Denise, 10-year-old
granddaughter of Mrs. Grace Stace, Middleport, and Ray Byers,
Racine, has had a bad time. She has suffered several strokes and
still has partial paralysis of her left side.
She is gradually getting free from a wheelchair, although she
must wear a brace on her leg, and is now able to gel up and down
steps on her own. Denise has another handicap, too. Born with a
heart ailment, she faces additional surgery sometime in the not
too distant future. For Denise, happiness would be good health.
EXPECT TO SEE A new six foot slide go into place at the
Middleport pool most any day now.
The slide will bernsta1led in the center section and restricted
for the use of children seven through 12, or kids too little for the
deep end and the diving boards, and too big for the shallow end.
FAVORS AT TilE CHAHTER day dinner of the Meigs
County Hwnane Society last night were quite elaborate. They
were ceramic pets created by Mrs. Jean Will, general chairman
of the new chapter. Just adorable!

Birthdays Observed
The 92nd birthday anniversary of Mrs. James
Murray and the fourth
birthday of her greatgranddaughter, Tammy Giles,
· daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Giles, Ravenswood, was
observed Sunday with a party
at the Murray home in Middleport.
The birthday ' cake was
decorated with pink roses and
ins~ri6ed ' "Happy BirtpariV
Grandma and Tammy". Attending the party were Mr. and
Mrs. William Murray, Worthington, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
Randolph Ward, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Down. Mr. and Mrs. Giles,
Tammy and Angela, Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Ward and
children, Ricky, Sherry and

Anniversaries
To be Observed
The 76th anniversary of the
Naomi Baptist Church and the
13th anniversary of the Rev.
Samuel Jackson as its pastor,
will be observed Sunday.
Sunday school will be held at
9:30 a. m. under the direction
of Oscar Qualls, superintendent, and the Rev. A. J.
Ruffin of the Second Jerusalem
Baptist Church of Urbana will
be the speaker at the 11 a. m.
service. Special music will be
presented by the Forest Run
Baptist Church. Dinner will be
served in the church dining
room at noon .
Speaker for the afternoon
service to begin at 2:30 p. m.
will be the Rev. John King of
the Triedstone Baptist Church
in Gallipolis. The choir from
that church will he present to
sing.

Mike, Mrs. Mike Comer and
daughter, Kandy, and son,
Chad, Mr. and Mrs. David
Harpold, all of Ravenswood,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Murray of Point Pleasant, W.
Va .
Numerous pictures were
taken, gifts were presented to
the honored guests, and during
the evening watermelon and
ice cream were served. , Mrs. ' Murfa{
remembered with cards and
gifts from her neighbors and
fr iends. She received a flower
from the Middleport First
Baptist Church and a gift from
the Busy Bee Class.

'aiso

was

VISIT FOLMERS
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Hill, D.
D. and Kim, Washington, D. C.
and Mrs. Judy Durham, Chris
and Susie, Hamburg, N. Y.,
were visitors last week of Mr.
and Mrs. William Folmer,
Pomeroy. The Durham family
and Mrs. Scott Folmer of
Pomeroy went to Washington
with the Hill family and from
there returned to New York.
Before returning home, Mrs.
Scott Folmer will visit
relatives' in Pittsburgh, Pa.

PICNIC ENJOYED
The Christian Women United
of the Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church enjoyed a
picnic at the Syracuse Park
Tuesday evening. Attending
were Miss Marcia Karr, Mrs.
Linda Ferrell, Mrs . Irene
Parker, Mrs. Anna Hildore,
Mrs. Ann Sauvage, Mrs. Helen
Teaford, the Rev. and Mrs.
Merrell Floyd and a guest of
the Floyds, the Rev. Frank
Cheesebrew of Racine .

PICNIC

Best Buys'

\..lgtltw.ighl. MIY 10 mo\'e •!Kind
trom 100m to room . wlnctow to win·
dow. SIMI call with mol&lt;lld pl•tle

===

,.=i:'"::"·::··"::L::•••::"::"::'

JUST ARRIVED

MAGNUS IHHORD
ORGANS
Floor Model with
Bench
$3'1.95 ,
Also Organ Mu•ic Books.
assortment.

•

PLATES, NAPKINS,
KNIVES, FORKS, C:Pnm
ICE CHESTS, '
WATER JUG:s.
Outdoor

Toys

and

Games. Swim, Beach
&lt;~nd

Sand Toys.

YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

~~~~F~2~\~ ~~~~~

l

992-3498
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN JI'IUDAY 6 SA'ItlRDAY NIGHTS ftL I

)

A meat pie fils the va&lt;asch~dule quitewell and Offers. a variation
on br·olled hambur!(ers or
tion ea ting

frankfurters . A cheese and

tomato beef pie also helps
s t r e t c h the budget. ~'or
those who want a shortcut
in mak in g this piecrust. use

a frozen pastry shell. Into
this goes a mixture of lean

ground bee f. tomato soup.
herbs . onion and green pepper topped with wedges of
tomato and grated Cheddar
cheese. Serve with a salad
and fresh fruit for dessert.
CHEESE-TOMATO BEEF'
PIE
•,, cup chopped green
pepper
I lablesp&lt;~on vegetable oil
I p&lt;~und lean ground beef
chuck
(IO'h-&lt;mnce) can
condensed tomaw soup
'&gt; cup bread crumbs
2 tabtesp&lt;~ons instant
mincf'd onion

I cup grated Cheddar
cheese
t egg
'&gt; teaspoon salt
''z teaspoon basil
'• teaspoon pepper

SOCial I Social Events
Calendar!
THURSDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday at the Richard
Chambers' country home .
Steakdinner to be prepared by
Tom &gt;Cassell and his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
PAST COUNCILORS,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America, picnic, 6:30 p.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.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
at hall in Letart Fails, 8 p.m.
Thursday, potluck refreshments.

lly AILEEN CLAlllE
NEA Food Editor ·

SATURDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association Saturday at 5:30
p.m. at state park on route 33.
All newly retired teachers,
wiveS
and husbands are in·
Cheese tomato heef p1e IS attractive and nutriti ou s summer dish_
viled. Each attending to bring
covered
dish and table service.
t unbaked 9-ineh pastry
11 n d i I u t e d s.oup. bread tomato, cut in wedges over
1
shell
c r u m b s. onion. fl cup top. Sprinkle with remaining
cheese. beaten egg and sea· Lfl cup cheese . Return to
t large tomato
SUNDAY
sonings . Turn into pastry oven and bake 3 minutes
REVIVAL
at Silver Run
Cook gree~ pepper lightly shell. Bake 1n a 350·degree longer untll cheese melts.
Free
Will
Bapti'
st Church
rn oil . Add beet. cooking un · oven about 30 minutes. Re- Makes 4 to 6 servings.
beginning
Sunday
through
July
til browned . Combine ·wrth mov&amp;-l'rom o~n and arrangP
:10. The Rev . Merlin Teets will

POLLY'S POINTERS
Hints on Growing
African Violeb
By POLLY CRAMt:tt

DEAR POLLY- I am answering Mildred. who wanted
to know how to care for her African violet plants . I use
African violet potting soi l and liquid fish emulsion for
feeding I both can be bought at garden shops!. When possible, I catch rain or snow water from the caves as they
give the plants more nitrogen . I heat the water, put it
in a large flat pan and set my pots in this until they are
welt-soaked and then put the pots in clean dry dishe s but
never let them stand in water. Do not water too often but
let the soil feet dry to the touch but not for too long .
Do not handle the leaves or get water on them . The
goose-necked plants are old. ones. If plants grow too tali
and spindly they need more ligM. Some 1diluted but not
directl eastern and western sun is good but they do like
to be kept in one spot . While confined at home during my
father's tong iii nes s, I grew these violets as a hobb y.
Many were started from leaves and I eventually had 100
plants that friends said were the loveliest group they
ever saw.-RUTH
DEAR POLLY.:., use regular potting soil for my
African violets and fertilize them every three or four
weeks , according to the directions on the African violet
fertilizer I use . Water from the bottom but do not let
stand after they have absorbed ali needed.
The long thick stem is natural as plants get old . Remove from pot , cut off most of this stalk and place the
plant in a container of damp vermiculite until it grows
hairlike roots 1usuaity in several weeks I and then repot.
Before using old pots they should be thoroughly scrubbed .
then baked in a !50-degree oven for 30 minutes. Mildred
is probably overwatering her plants and more die from
too much than from too little water. Water thoroughly
but then not again until soil feels dry .-WILMA

'"'·"'"'"·&gt;··'!1':~""-' mm: Polly's Problem
DEAlt POLLY - My realty old fami ly album is
soiled and I hope some reader ca n tell me how to
clean it. The front and back covers look like celluloid and the off-white inside sheets have become
very brittle. The edges of these sheets are gold.
Any help would be realty appreciated .-BEATRICE
~:..;~~itlt;'i" ·~~ '..:::.'~i{Z,t~ t!:0E?¥.'!fJ:9."/'=::::~. ,::!f;.,:~;llt~:k~' · &gt;' • ·~ '

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that the majority of
bedspreads cannot be turned end-for·end and thus di stribute the wear . One side of my bed is against the wall
and I find the front side wears out much faster , which
necessitates buying a new spread much sooner than if
I could keep turning it.-MRS. J. K.
RETURN HOME
PARTY ENJOYED
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
The monthly party of the
'Mrs.
Arthur Johnson and Mr.
Homebuilders Class of the
and
Mrs.
Marvin Randolph
Middleport Church of Christ
was staged Tuesday night at have returned to their homes
the Southeastern Ohio Mental here after leaving here Friday
Health Center. Games were for a weekend tour · of New
played with prizes going to the River Canyon at Hawk's Nest,
winners and refreshments Am S lead , W• Va., " LOS t
were seriled. Going to assist World" at Lewisburg, W.Va.;
with the .party were Mr. and White Sulphur Springs and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, Mr. spending Saturday night in
and Mrs. Michael Gerla ch, (:ovington, Virginia . On their
Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs. way home Sunday they toured
Clyda Allensworth, Mr. and "Blue Slone Reservoir.. at
Mrs. Herman Kincaid, and Hinton, . traveling the w. Va.
Turnpike and through Cheiyan
Mrs. Martha Childs.
Memorial Tunnel.

IN HOLZER
Mrs. Frances Qualls,
Chester Road, Pomeroy, is a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Cards may be sent to
the hospital, room 414.

Shop Us
For
• J ••,..., JO.fll. ,.,.

A Meat Pie, for Summer Tastes

·Luncheon a Surprise
Two parties were held in
observance of the birthday
annivers3'ry of Mrs . Gertrude
Miller.
Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Roach ,
Pomeroy, a cookout was held
with cake and ice cream being
served . Attending were the
Roach
chlldren,
Tom ,
Raymond, Trudy, Randy and
Darin, Mrs. Ronald Miiler,
Rebecca, Angela, Rhoda, and
Steven, Levelgreen, Pa., and
Dale Miller, Huntington, W.
Va . Jack Miller of Columbus
calied during the day to extend
best wishes to his mother .
On Tuesday a surprise
luncheon was held for Mrs.
Miller by her six sisters, Mrs.

Susan Rawlings, Mrs. Edith
Jay, Colwnbus; Mrs . Don Fox,
Mansfield, Mrs . William
Grueser, Mrs. Clyda Ailensworth, and Mrs. Carl Brannan, Middleport . They were
joined by Miss Nina Russell for
the observance .

Duckworths Host
Cookout Event

Rachie

deliver the sermons. Special

singmg each evening. Pastor is
the Rev. Howard Kimble .
Everyone is invited to attend .
REVIVAL at the Middleport
Pentecostal Church beginning
Sunday at 7:30p .m. Rev. Jerry
Burns, Evangelist. Special
singing each evening. The Rev .
William Knittel is the pastor.
The public is invited to attend .
ANNUAL PARISH Picnic of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy, Sunday at 12 noon at
Middleport Municipal Park.
Bring covered dtsh and table
se rvice.
HOMECOMING Sunday, Mt.
Moriah Church of God . Picnic
at noon, public invited.
MODERN
WOODMEN
Camp 6335, Middleport, fam ily
picnic Sunday at stale pa'rk on
R'llute 33, on right going north.
Basket dinner at 12:30.
Members, families and guests
invited ; prizes for adults and
juniors, junior director Helen
Hart reports. Take own table
service .

The five daughters of Mr.
and Mrs. William Fred Smith ,
Sr. and their families enjoyed a
cookout Wednesday night at
the home of Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Duckworth, Middleport.
The birthday anniversary of
Tim Smith was observed .
Attending were Mrs. Duckworth, Bobby and Robin, Mr .
and Mrs . Ted Spires, Tom and
MONDAY
Jill, and their grandson, Brett,
SOUTHERN
Local School
Mrs. Ethel Phelps of Santa Defiance; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Board Monday 8 p.m. at high
Hoffman, Mike, Tami, Beverly
Anna , Calif., was the Tuesday
and David, Mr. and Mrs. school.,
visitor of Mr. and Mrs . Perry
Hoffman and family , She has Lawrence Baughman and Jeff,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs .
been here visiting her
Eugene Smith, Tim, John,
daughter, Mrs. Earl Cleland,
Racme, sons, Buster Phelps Cindy and Mark, Syracuse, and
and Earl Phelps, and other Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
relatives, and will be returning Smith, Sr., Bradbury .
The Ted E. Spires family has
to California this weekend.
spent
several days here
Marion Van Meter and
visiting
Mrs. Spires' pa'rents,
daughter, Janie, and Charles
Van Meter, Deanna and· Mr . and Mrs . William Fred
Jeannie, and Joyce Berkley Smith , Sr .
have returned [rom a week's
vacation at Virginia Beach.
Pic. Kenneth Hoffman spent
the Fourth of July weekend
here visiting his parents, Mr.
Jlp!i Mrs . Perry Hoffman . He
returned to Paris Island, S. C.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Edith
Burton was her grandson,
Captain Robert L. Ruth of
Bucyrus. He recently returned
from Germany and following
his furlough will go to
Thailand.
Mr. and Mrs. Chesler Rice
and Mr. and Mrs. George
· Chambers and Clr'nt of Sand
Gates, Ga.,arrived Wednesday
night for a visit with Mrs.
Homer Rice and Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Rice . Over the
weekend they will attend a
wedding in Pennsylvania and
then will return to Middleport
for about 10 days.
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Harris of
Minersville accompanied their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Rice , and
Billy to Sagertown, Pa., for a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. George
Schmitt recently.

By Mn. Francis Morris
Mrs. Grella Simpson was
hostess for the Esther Circle
'
meeting at her home, Monday · )
evening, July 10. "Source of
Joy" was the topic of devotions
by Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen.
Group singing of "You May
Have the Joy Bells" preceded
her scripture reading of Ps.
1:1-6 and meditations. After
the hymn, "In My Heart There
Rings a Melody';, the devotions
closed with prayer.
A business session fo1lowed
and the Love Gift program by
Mrs. Marie Roush; using the
topic, "Live in the World of
God", The Love Gift offering
was given while singing
"Bringing in the Sheaves".
Mrs. Isabell Simpson, assisted
by Mrs. Gretta Simpson, gave
a very interesting report of
Bacone College and the
Murrow Indian Children's
Home at Bacone, Okla., where
they had visited recently.
During the social hour,
delicious refreshments were
served.
A large group of relatives
and friends attended funeral
services at 2 p. m. Sunday .at
the First Baptist Church for
Darrell Badgley.
Graveside services for Mr.
Okey Sayre, 87, formerly of
this area, who died in Florida,
were held at JO:JO a. m.
Munday , July 10, at Letart
Fails Cemetery.
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew is
attending ·a school of missions
at Otterbein College in
Westerville this week.

1\

REUNION PLANNED
Relatives of the late John
and Mary Carr of Rutland will
have a family reunion Sunday
Yo~r
at the west roadside park on
Route 33, five miles north of
Pomeroy. A basket dinner will
be held at noon. Anyone related
or interested in visiting with
any of the famlly members is
invited to attend. Three of the'
eight children of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Carr still living are
Mrs , Genevieve Saxton,
Middleport; Mrs . .Gertrude
Hours : 1 a. m. to5 :30 p.m. Daily
Cash, Athens, and Emerson · 773-5583
MAso·N,
VA.
Carr, Akron,
Lllll!---~7:a~.m~,l:o~9~p~.m:·~F~r~id~a~y~&amp;:.:.::::='----.J

·~~ ~\\V\\f\\~ t\)~~~ ...

See Us · • • For

w.

_ _::..c__.::....:__J_7· •} J.-.'1:...1- -- -

OH, MY POOR HU6&amp;ANt&gt;. 'IHE'I'RE
TAKING 'rQU OFF '10 JAIL. !

-

--~--=-­

ftEMEMBER, I EXPECT"' 1D
lHA.r R'EWAi'&lt;"P FOR 7IPI'NIN0
H!M rill BE;:OI¥ ~ VE.K IS OUT/

GET

YOU SUPPL'i THE
DARKRJOM ...
PHOTOGRAPHY
331

(DARKROOM
TeCHNIQUE)
WHAT WIL.L I

DO ? HOW WIL-L
1 GET ALON0?

HEY.~IMON . .HOW

MIJCH A.KE
YCVI2' HOf a&lt;t:JGs &amp;JNs?

U'L ABNER
LL BE PROUD
TH ' R1'.5T 0' MAH LIFE
AH WA5 TH' FUST lD
REELIZE '10' WAS

1-tOOMtN !!

T&gt;&lt;ESE HAND BUZZERS
ARE ALWAYS GOOD FER
A. L.AUOI-l ~

THIS ITCHIN ' POWDER
15 ONE 0' MY EJe5T
SELL-ERS, ELMER !

&gt;&lt;OWA60UT A

FL.OWER?... A
O'FUN~

1 ONLY CAME
IN TO USE
T~O:

PHONE!

·

~E f&lt;' CIFE

o·nf

PARTY WITH.

'SUGSY:S
6,465 .......

r'M 50711/RSTY

11

L CAN HARDLY

STAR"T:O THI5

SWALLOW!

THtRSTY?'wE

HUNGER STRIKE

1WO DAY5 AGO liM

REVIVAL TO BEGIN
A revival will be held at the
Middleport
Pentecostal
Ch urch, South Third Ave.,
beginning Sunday at 7:30p.m.
Evangelist will be the Rev.
Jerry Burns. Rev . Burns and
his wife recently returned from
South America. The Rev. and
Mrs. Burns will be featured In
ducts each eve ning. The pastor
is William Knittel.. The public
is invited to attend.

NO'IfL.nES.

WH~SHE5

NC5f :;,OTUFF
AFTER ALL!

BTARVIM !

GETTING O.UNK

T'MY ~'LL
BE A CINCH IF HE
CAN NA.V~Tl::!

GASOUNE ALLEY

'

2-HOUR
CLEANING

_(Upon Reauest)

,.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd'
Pomeroy

I OJl'T !'-EM nu, 11®
H€ OSE:D! IT'S ~T FIT

5
i

E~RS

Phone 992-5428

·'

PIE

RJR~~

~l'O'E .

~

!
•

i'
•...~

TilE lARGEST MOST FEROCIOUS 11-Q.F
I'VE EVER SEEN I'OTROlS lN A CIRClE
~ROUrtD T~E. lRE-E. HOUSE.! THE LIOt'i

!

--· UNTIL HE GETS THE SCEf T QF !0
HUMAN --· IN Ill iS CASE · · SHUDDER)···
Mf! I BAREL'( ESCAPED \IJtTH MY UJ:'E !

~
"1~ 1!1

WHO WAS SUPPoSED lO DEVOUR
WARBUCKS ·-- SITS AROUHD DOCILE
AS. A PUSSY('AT ...

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: GRATITUDE IS ONE OF THE
ARTICULATE OF THE EMOTIONS, ESPECIALLY
WHEN IT IS DEEP - FELIX FRANKFURTER
~EAST

~

(0 1972 Ki ne- Features Syndicate, lnr::. )

by THOMAS JOSEPH

by Gill Fox

sc hool

5. Tiger cat

FURNITURE

SIDE GLANCES

41. Wir~draw
42. English

ACROSS
!. On base

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

CELEBRATION SET
PORTLAND - 'Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton R. Smith celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary
VISITING HERE
on June \7. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
Marc Byers of Colwnbus has
were married at Pomeroy on
been
in Pomeroy the past two
June 17, 1922 by the Rev.
weeks
visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Ranson L. Fish.
William Radford.

BARNEY

11. Bard's
river
'----...! 12. or the
bear
family
13. William
Goldin g's
"-of
the Flies"
14. Nervous
laugh
15. Merino's

rna
16. On the
briny
·.;,·;-,;;;;, 117. Luke\11
warm
~110&lt;1.(19. Favorite
~,~;r-1 22. Parched
::.:
24. Censure
25. Advanta~""\!

·

geous

position

DOWN
1. Firc 2. Profess
3. Appetizer

of sorts
4. Finale
Yesterday's Answer '
5. Remote
possibility 19. Job
31.- qua
(2 wds.)
assignnon
6. Howled ;
33. Division
ment
20. Apiece
word
shouted
7. This(Sp.) 21. Llttle
34. Blessing
8. Tipsy
shaver
35. Czarist
2%. Father
village
Isl.l
9. Undivided 23. Oklahoma
commune
10. Thrice
city
36. Metric
(Lat.)
24. One of
land
16. Did
the
measure
likewise
Aliens
37. Fabled
18. Pennsyl26. Salver
bird
vania city 30. Unruffled 38. Fish eggs
r;--r,-,...--r.:-

./

••

...
~

~

(2 wds.)
27. Baptism,
e.g.
28. Nativity
scene
figures

•

i'
••

29. Nigerian

' !! .,
•

city
30. Nuance
31. Reprieve
32. Playing
marble
35. Maid of
Sherwood
Forest
38. "Biggest
Little
City
In the

'•

"What was 1 before I was a mommy? , , , THIN!"

..... -:•

--~--..., r:~-----

• World"

39. Given to
satire

40. Wise
about

•
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LO' NGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the ·length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
ENA

l:

LHRRATAJSA

WJDO

PAEFAAJ

V TGE VJL V CTVXA HK . ENAHT
LHUAJKHW,JK.-ADDAJ CDVKCWF

~

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 13,1972

eTr . ,~·. ''*'''''~'~lf

rc;;;;.~~~y$--, FOOD FOR AMERiCANS

ICorner
.

sy charlene Hretlich l .

....

·.•

Mrs. Lysle Meyer, six-year-old Eric, and three-year-old Tim
will be arriving in Pomeroy around the first of August for a
Jl)Onth's vacation with her parents, Mary and Manning Webster.
They come from Moorehead, Minn., where Lysle will remain to
complete the summer session at Moorehead College.
In September, Dr. Meyer and his family will leave for South
Africa. He is taking a sabbatical from Moorehead and the .fa!l
Clllarter will be teaching at Durban. He will do research during
the winter quarter, and then will teach at Rhodesia the spring
quarter. The family will reside near Durban and have taken a
flat for the year they will be there. Their home in Minnesota l1as
been teased for the time they 'll be gone.
Dr. Meyer's major field being African histor~, the year in
Africa is sure to offer a cha1lenge.
lncidentally,Diane's brother, Joe Reichman, stationed with
the U. S. Army in Southern Genn.any, has recenlly been
promoted to Specialis15. Joe has been there a year now and has
abouft8 more months to serve on his tour of duty.
.
He recently purchased a new car and is looking forward to
· doing some sightseeing whenever he has the opportunity and the
time. Bf'!l have a week off later this month and is planning trips
to Ams\etdl!m and Paris.
AFTER 3\2 MONTHS AT Children's Hospital, Columbus,
Denise Byers is home and progressing. Denise, 10-year-old
granddaughter of Mrs. Grace Stace, Middleport, and Ray Byers,
Racine, has had a bad time. She has suffered several strokes and
still has partial paralysis of her left side.
She is gradually getting free from a wheelchair, although she
must wear a brace on her leg, and is now able to gel up and down
steps on her own. Denise has another handicap, too. Born with a
heart ailment, she faces additional surgery sometime in the not
too distant future. For Denise, happiness would be good health.
EXPECT TO SEE A new six foot slide go into place at the
Middleport pool most any day now.
The slide will bernsta1led in the center section and restricted
for the use of children seven through 12, or kids too little for the
deep end and the diving boards, and too big for the shallow end.
FAVORS AT TilE CHAHTER day dinner of the Meigs
County Hwnane Society last night were quite elaborate. They
were ceramic pets created by Mrs. Jean Will, general chairman
of the new chapter. Just adorable!

Birthdays Observed
The 92nd birthday anniversary of Mrs. James
Murray and the fourth
birthday of her greatgranddaughter, Tammy Giles,
· daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Giles, Ravenswood, was
observed Sunday with a party
at the Murray home in Middleport.
The birthday ' cake was
decorated with pink roses and
ins~ri6ed ' "Happy BirtpariV
Grandma and Tammy". Attending the party were Mr. and
Mrs. William Murray, Worthington, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
Randolph Ward, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Down. Mr. and Mrs. Giles,
Tammy and Angela, Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Ward and
children, Ricky, Sherry and

Anniversaries
To be Observed
The 76th anniversary of the
Naomi Baptist Church and the
13th anniversary of the Rev.
Samuel Jackson as its pastor,
will be observed Sunday.
Sunday school will be held at
9:30 a. m. under the direction
of Oscar Qualls, superintendent, and the Rev. A. J.
Ruffin of the Second Jerusalem
Baptist Church of Urbana will
be the speaker at the 11 a. m.
service. Special music will be
presented by the Forest Run
Baptist Church. Dinner will be
served in the church dining
room at noon .
Speaker for the afternoon
service to begin at 2:30 p. m.
will be the Rev. John King of
the Triedstone Baptist Church
in Gallipolis. The choir from
that church will he present to
sing.

Mike, Mrs. Mike Comer and
daughter, Kandy, and son,
Chad, Mr. and Mrs. David
Harpold, all of Ravenswood,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Murray of Point Pleasant, W.
Va .
Numerous pictures were
taken, gifts were presented to
the honored guests, and during
the evening watermelon and
ice cream were served. , Mrs. ' Murfa{
remembered with cards and
gifts from her neighbors and
fr iends. She received a flower
from the Middleport First
Baptist Church and a gift from
the Busy Bee Class.

'aiso

was

VISIT FOLMERS
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Hill, D.
D. and Kim, Washington, D. C.
and Mrs. Judy Durham, Chris
and Susie, Hamburg, N. Y.,
were visitors last week of Mr.
and Mrs. William Folmer,
Pomeroy. The Durham family
and Mrs. Scott Folmer of
Pomeroy went to Washington
with the Hill family and from
there returned to New York.
Before returning home, Mrs.
Scott Folmer will visit
relatives' in Pittsburgh, Pa.

PICNIC ENJOYED
The Christian Women United
of the Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church enjoyed a
picnic at the Syracuse Park
Tuesday evening. Attending
were Miss Marcia Karr, Mrs.
Linda Ferrell, Mrs . Irene
Parker, Mrs. Anna Hildore,
Mrs. Ann Sauvage, Mrs. Helen
Teaford, the Rev. and Mrs.
Merrell Floyd and a guest of
the Floyds, the Rev. Frank
Cheesebrew of Racine .

PICNIC

Best Buys'

\..lgtltw.ighl. MIY 10 mo\'e •!Kind
trom 100m to room . wlnctow to win·
dow. SIMI call with mol&lt;lld pl•tle

===

,.=i:'"::"·::··"::L::•••::"::"::'

JUST ARRIVED

MAGNUS IHHORD
ORGANS
Floor Model with
Bench
$3'1.95 ,
Also Organ Mu•ic Books.
assortment.

•

PLATES, NAPKINS,
KNIVES, FORKS, C:Pnm
ICE CHESTS, '
WATER JUG:s.
Outdoor

Toys

and

Games. Swim, Beach
&lt;~nd

Sand Toys.

YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

~~~~F~2~\~ ~~~~~

l

992-3498
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN JI'IUDAY 6 SA'ItlRDAY NIGHTS ftL I

)

A meat pie fils the va&lt;asch~dule quitewell and Offers. a variation
on br·olled hambur!(ers or
tion ea ting

frankfurters . A cheese and

tomato beef pie also helps
s t r e t c h the budget. ~'or
those who want a shortcut
in mak in g this piecrust. use

a frozen pastry shell. Into
this goes a mixture of lean

ground bee f. tomato soup.
herbs . onion and green pepper topped with wedges of
tomato and grated Cheddar
cheese. Serve with a salad
and fresh fruit for dessert.
CHEESE-TOMATO BEEF'
PIE
•,, cup chopped green
pepper
I lablesp&lt;~on vegetable oil
I p&lt;~und lean ground beef
chuck
(IO'h-&lt;mnce) can
condensed tomaw soup
'&gt; cup bread crumbs
2 tabtesp&lt;~ons instant
mincf'd onion

I cup grated Cheddar
cheese
t egg
'&gt; teaspoon salt
''z teaspoon basil
'• teaspoon pepper

SOCial I Social Events
Calendar!
THURSDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday at the Richard
Chambers' country home .
Steakdinner to be prepared by
Tom &gt;Cassell and his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
PAST COUNCILORS,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America, picnic, 6:30 p.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.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
at hall in Letart Fails, 8 p.m.
Thursday, potluck refreshments.

lly AILEEN CLAlllE
NEA Food Editor ·

SATURDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association Saturday at 5:30
p.m. at state park on route 33.
All newly retired teachers,
wiveS
and husbands are in·
Cheese tomato heef p1e IS attractive and nutriti ou s summer dish_
viled. Each attending to bring
covered
dish and table service.
t unbaked 9-ineh pastry
11 n d i I u t e d s.oup. bread tomato, cut in wedges over
1
shell
c r u m b s. onion. fl cup top. Sprinkle with remaining
cheese. beaten egg and sea· Lfl cup cheese . Return to
t large tomato
SUNDAY
sonings . Turn into pastry oven and bake 3 minutes
REVIVAL
at Silver Run
Cook gree~ pepper lightly shell. Bake 1n a 350·degree longer untll cheese melts.
Free
Will
Bapti'
st Church
rn oil . Add beet. cooking un · oven about 30 minutes. Re- Makes 4 to 6 servings.
beginning
Sunday
through
July
til browned . Combine ·wrth mov&amp;-l'rom o~n and arrangP
:10. The Rev . Merlin Teets will

POLLY'S POINTERS
Hints on Growing
African Violeb
By POLLY CRAMt:tt

DEAR POLLY- I am answering Mildred. who wanted
to know how to care for her African violet plants . I use
African violet potting soi l and liquid fish emulsion for
feeding I both can be bought at garden shops!. When possible, I catch rain or snow water from the caves as they
give the plants more nitrogen . I heat the water, put it
in a large flat pan and set my pots in this until they are
welt-soaked and then put the pots in clean dry dishe s but
never let them stand in water. Do not water too often but
let the soil feet dry to the touch but not for too long .
Do not handle the leaves or get water on them . The
goose-necked plants are old. ones. If plants grow too tali
and spindly they need more ligM. Some 1diluted but not
directl eastern and western sun is good but they do like
to be kept in one spot . While confined at home during my
father's tong iii nes s, I grew these violets as a hobb y.
Many were started from leaves and I eventually had 100
plants that friends said were the loveliest group they
ever saw.-RUTH
DEAR POLLY.:., use regular potting soil for my
African violets and fertilize them every three or four
weeks , according to the directions on the African violet
fertilizer I use . Water from the bottom but do not let
stand after they have absorbed ali needed.
The long thick stem is natural as plants get old . Remove from pot , cut off most of this stalk and place the
plant in a container of damp vermiculite until it grows
hairlike roots 1usuaity in several weeks I and then repot.
Before using old pots they should be thoroughly scrubbed .
then baked in a !50-degree oven for 30 minutes. Mildred
is probably overwatering her plants and more die from
too much than from too little water. Water thoroughly
but then not again until soil feels dry .-WILMA

'"'·"'"'"·&gt;··'!1':~""-' mm: Polly's Problem
DEAlt POLLY - My realty old fami ly album is
soiled and I hope some reader ca n tell me how to
clean it. The front and back covers look like celluloid and the off-white inside sheets have become
very brittle. The edges of these sheets are gold.
Any help would be realty appreciated .-BEATRICE
~:..;~~itlt;'i" ·~~ '..:::.'~i{Z,t~ t!:0E?¥.'!fJ:9."/'=::::~. ,::!f;.,:~;llt~:k~' · &gt;' • ·~ '

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that the majority of
bedspreads cannot be turned end-for·end and thus di stribute the wear . One side of my bed is against the wall
and I find the front side wears out much faster , which
necessitates buying a new spread much sooner than if
I could keep turning it.-MRS. J. K.
RETURN HOME
PARTY ENJOYED
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
The monthly party of the
'Mrs.
Arthur Johnson and Mr.
Homebuilders Class of the
and
Mrs.
Marvin Randolph
Middleport Church of Christ
was staged Tuesday night at have returned to their homes
the Southeastern Ohio Mental here after leaving here Friday
Health Center. Games were for a weekend tour · of New
played with prizes going to the River Canyon at Hawk's Nest,
winners and refreshments Am S lead , W• Va., " LOS t
were seriled. Going to assist World" at Lewisburg, W.Va.;
with the .party were Mr. and White Sulphur Springs and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, Mr. spending Saturday night in
and Mrs. Michael Gerla ch, (:ovington, Virginia . On their
Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs. way home Sunday they toured
Clyda Allensworth, Mr. and "Blue Slone Reservoir.. at
Mrs. Herman Kincaid, and Hinton, . traveling the w. Va.
Turnpike and through Cheiyan
Mrs. Martha Childs.
Memorial Tunnel.

IN HOLZER
Mrs. Frances Qualls,
Chester Road, Pomeroy, is a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Cards may be sent to
the hospital, room 414.

Shop Us
For
• J ••,..., JO.fll. ,.,.

A Meat Pie, for Summer Tastes

·Luncheon a Surprise
Two parties were held in
observance of the birthday
annivers3'ry of Mrs . Gertrude
Miller.
Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Roach ,
Pomeroy, a cookout was held
with cake and ice cream being
served . Attending were the
Roach
chlldren,
Tom ,
Raymond, Trudy, Randy and
Darin, Mrs. Ronald Miiler,
Rebecca, Angela, Rhoda, and
Steven, Levelgreen, Pa., and
Dale Miller, Huntington, W.
Va . Jack Miller of Columbus
calied during the day to extend
best wishes to his mother .
On Tuesday a surprise
luncheon was held for Mrs.
Miller by her six sisters, Mrs.

Susan Rawlings, Mrs. Edith
Jay, Colwnbus; Mrs . Don Fox,
Mansfield, Mrs . William
Grueser, Mrs. Clyda Ailensworth, and Mrs. Carl Brannan, Middleport . They were
joined by Miss Nina Russell for
the observance .

Duckworths Host
Cookout Event

Rachie

deliver the sermons. Special

singmg each evening. Pastor is
the Rev. Howard Kimble .
Everyone is invited to attend .
REVIVAL at the Middleport
Pentecostal Church beginning
Sunday at 7:30p .m. Rev. Jerry
Burns, Evangelist. Special
singing each evening. The Rev .
William Knittel is the pastor.
The public is invited to attend .
ANNUAL PARISH Picnic of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy, Sunday at 12 noon at
Middleport Municipal Park.
Bring covered dtsh and table
se rvice.
HOMECOMING Sunday, Mt.
Moriah Church of God . Picnic
at noon, public invited.
MODERN
WOODMEN
Camp 6335, Middleport, fam ily
picnic Sunday at stale pa'rk on
R'llute 33, on right going north.
Basket dinner at 12:30.
Members, families and guests
invited ; prizes for adults and
juniors, junior director Helen
Hart reports. Take own table
service .

The five daughters of Mr.
and Mrs. William Fred Smith ,
Sr. and their families enjoyed a
cookout Wednesday night at
the home of Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Duckworth, Middleport.
The birthday anniversary of
Tim Smith was observed .
Attending were Mrs. Duckworth, Bobby and Robin, Mr .
and Mrs . Ted Spires, Tom and
MONDAY
Jill, and their grandson, Brett,
SOUTHERN
Local School
Mrs. Ethel Phelps of Santa Defiance; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Board Monday 8 p.m. at high
Hoffman, Mike, Tami, Beverly
Anna , Calif., was the Tuesday
and David, Mr. and Mrs. school.,
visitor of Mr. and Mrs . Perry
Hoffman and family , She has Lawrence Baughman and Jeff,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs .
been here visiting her
Eugene Smith, Tim, John,
daughter, Mrs. Earl Cleland,
Racme, sons, Buster Phelps Cindy and Mark, Syracuse, and
and Earl Phelps, and other Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
relatives, and will be returning Smith, Sr., Bradbury .
The Ted E. Spires family has
to California this weekend.
spent
several days here
Marion Van Meter and
visiting
Mrs. Spires' pa'rents,
daughter, Janie, and Charles
Van Meter, Deanna and· Mr . and Mrs . William Fred
Jeannie, and Joyce Berkley Smith , Sr .
have returned [rom a week's
vacation at Virginia Beach.
Pic. Kenneth Hoffman spent
the Fourth of July weekend
here visiting his parents, Mr.
Jlp!i Mrs . Perry Hoffman . He
returned to Paris Island, S. C.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Edith
Burton was her grandson,
Captain Robert L. Ruth of
Bucyrus. He recently returned
from Germany and following
his furlough will go to
Thailand.
Mr. and Mrs. Chesler Rice
and Mr. and Mrs. George
· Chambers and Clr'nt of Sand
Gates, Ga.,arrived Wednesday
night for a visit with Mrs.
Homer Rice and Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Rice . Over the
weekend they will attend a
wedding in Pennsylvania and
then will return to Middleport
for about 10 days.
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Harris of
Minersville accompanied their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Rice , and
Billy to Sagertown, Pa., for a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. George
Schmitt recently.

By Mn. Francis Morris
Mrs. Grella Simpson was
hostess for the Esther Circle
'
meeting at her home, Monday · )
evening, July 10. "Source of
Joy" was the topic of devotions
by Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen.
Group singing of "You May
Have the Joy Bells" preceded
her scripture reading of Ps.
1:1-6 and meditations. After
the hymn, "In My Heart There
Rings a Melody';, the devotions
closed with prayer.
A business session fo1lowed
and the Love Gift program by
Mrs. Marie Roush; using the
topic, "Live in the World of
God", The Love Gift offering
was given while singing
"Bringing in the Sheaves".
Mrs. Isabell Simpson, assisted
by Mrs. Gretta Simpson, gave
a very interesting report of
Bacone College and the
Murrow Indian Children's
Home at Bacone, Okla., where
they had visited recently.
During the social hour,
delicious refreshments were
served.
A large group of relatives
and friends attended funeral
services at 2 p. m. Sunday .at
the First Baptist Church for
Darrell Badgley.
Graveside services for Mr.
Okey Sayre, 87, formerly of
this area, who died in Florida,
were held at JO:JO a. m.
Munday , July 10, at Letart
Fails Cemetery.
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew is
attending ·a school of missions
at Otterbein College in
Westerville this week.

1\

REUNION PLANNED
Relatives of the late John
and Mary Carr of Rutland will
have a family reunion Sunday
Yo~r
at the west roadside park on
Route 33, five miles north of
Pomeroy. A basket dinner will
be held at noon. Anyone related
or interested in visiting with
any of the famlly members is
invited to attend. Three of the'
eight children of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Carr still living are
Mrs , Genevieve Saxton,
Middleport; Mrs . .Gertrude
Hours : 1 a. m. to5 :30 p.m. Daily
Cash, Athens, and Emerson · 773-5583
MAso·N,
VA.
Carr, Akron,
Lllll!---~7:a~.m~,l:o~9~p~.m:·~F~r~id~a~y~&amp;:.:.::::='----.J

·~~ ~\\V\\f\\~ t\)~~~ ...

See Us · • • For

w.

_ _::..c__.::....:__J_7· •} J.-.'1:...1- -- -

OH, MY POOR HU6&amp;ANt&gt;. 'IHE'I'RE
TAKING 'rQU OFF '10 JAIL. !

-

--~--=-­

ftEMEMBER, I EXPECT"' 1D
lHA.r R'EWAi'&lt;"P FOR 7IPI'NIN0
H!M rill BE;:OI¥ ~ VE.K IS OUT/

GET

YOU SUPPL'i THE
DARKRJOM ...
PHOTOGRAPHY
331

(DARKROOM
TeCHNIQUE)
WHAT WIL.L I

DO ? HOW WIL-L
1 GET ALON0?

HEY.~IMON . .HOW

MIJCH A.KE
YCVI2' HOf a&lt;t:JGs &amp;JNs?

U'L ABNER
LL BE PROUD
TH ' R1'.5T 0' MAH LIFE
AH WA5 TH' FUST lD
REELIZE '10' WAS

1-tOOMtN !!

T&gt;&lt;ESE HAND BUZZERS
ARE ALWAYS GOOD FER
A. L.AUOI-l ~

THIS ITCHIN ' POWDER
15 ONE 0' MY EJe5T
SELL-ERS, ELMER !

&gt;&lt;OWA60UT A

FL.OWER?... A
O'FUN~

1 ONLY CAME
IN TO USE
T~O:

PHONE!

·

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o·nf

PARTY WITH.

'SUGSY:S
6,465 .......

r'M 50711/RSTY

11

L CAN HARDLY

STAR"T:O THI5

SWALLOW!

THtRSTY?'wE

HUNGER STRIKE

1WO DAY5 AGO liM

REVIVAL TO BEGIN
A revival will be held at the
Middleport
Pentecostal
Ch urch, South Third Ave.,
beginning Sunday at 7:30p.m.
Evangelist will be the Rev.
Jerry Burns. Rev . Burns and
his wife recently returned from
South America. The Rev. and
Mrs. Burns will be featured In
ducts each eve ning. The pastor
is William Knittel.. The public
is invited to attend.

NO'IfL.nES.

WH~SHE5

NC5f :;,OTUFF
AFTER ALL!

BTARVIM !

GETTING O.UNK

T'MY ~'LL
BE A CINCH IF HE
CAN NA.V~Tl::!

GASOUNE ALLEY

'

2-HOUR
CLEANING

_(Upon Reauest)

,.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd'
Pomeroy

I OJl'T !'-EM nu, 11®
H€ OSE:D! IT'S ~T FIT

5
i

E~RS

Phone 992-5428

·'

PIE

RJR~~

~l'O'E .

~

!
•

i'
•...~

TilE lARGEST MOST FEROCIOUS 11-Q.F
I'VE EVER SEEN I'OTROlS lN A CIRClE
~ROUrtD T~E. lRE-E. HOUSE.! THE LIOt'i

!

--· UNTIL HE GETS THE SCEf T QF !0
HUMAN --· IN Ill iS CASE · · SHUDDER)···
Mf! I BAREL'( ESCAPED \IJtTH MY UJ:'E !

~
"1~ 1!1

WHO WAS SUPPoSED lO DEVOUR
WARBUCKS ·-- SITS AROUHD DOCILE
AS. A PUSSY('AT ...

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: GRATITUDE IS ONE OF THE
ARTICULATE OF THE EMOTIONS, ESPECIALLY
WHEN IT IS DEEP - FELIX FRANKFURTER
~EAST

~

(0 1972 Ki ne- Features Syndicate, lnr::. )

by THOMAS JOSEPH

by Gill Fox

sc hool

5. Tiger cat

FURNITURE

SIDE GLANCES

41. Wir~draw
42. English

ACROSS
!. On base

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

CELEBRATION SET
PORTLAND - 'Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton R. Smith celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary
VISITING HERE
on June \7. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
Marc Byers of Colwnbus has
were married at Pomeroy on
been
in Pomeroy the past two
June 17, 1922 by the Rev.
weeks
visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Ranson L. Fish.
William Radford.

BARNEY

11. Bard's
river
'----...! 12. or the
bear
family
13. William
Goldin g's
"-of
the Flies"
14. Nervous
laugh
15. Merino's

rna
16. On the
briny
·.;,·;-,;;;;, 117. Luke\11
warm
~110&lt;1.(19. Favorite
~,~;r-1 22. Parched
::.:
24. Censure
25. Advanta~""\!

·

geous

position

DOWN
1. Firc 2. Profess
3. Appetizer

of sorts
4. Finale
Yesterday's Answer '
5. Remote
possibility 19. Job
31.- qua
(2 wds.)
assignnon
6. Howled ;
33. Division
ment
20. Apiece
word
shouted
7. This(Sp.) 21. Llttle
34. Blessing
8. Tipsy
shaver
35. Czarist
2%. Father
village
Isl.l
9. Undivided 23. Oklahoma
commune
10. Thrice
city
36. Metric
(Lat.)
24. One of
land
16. Did
the
measure
likewise
Aliens
37. Fabled
18. Pennsyl26. Salver
bird
vania city 30. Unruffled 38. Fish eggs
r;--r,-,...--r.:-

./

••

...
~

~

(2 wds.)
27. Baptism,
e.g.
28. Nativity
scene
figures

•

i'
••

29. Nigerian

' !! .,
•

city
30. Nuance
31. Reprieve
32. Playing
marble
35. Maid of
Sherwood
Forest
38. "Biggest
Little
City
In the

'•

"What was 1 before I was a mommy? , , , THIN!"

..... -:•

--~--..., r:~-----

• World"

39. Given to
satire

40. Wise
about

•
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LO' NGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the ·length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
ENA

l:

LHRRATAJSA

WJDO

PAEFAAJ

V TGE VJL V CTVXA HK . ENAHT
LHUAJKHW,JK.-ADDAJ CDVKCWF

~

�.

•

•

U. S. Politics Quite Gear, Really.,.,

Sentinel ClasSifieds Get Action! Sentinel· Clnssifieds:filrResultSt .
•

fi

tw

-

CrleeUatlon-correctlon·,

wru

.

-For Sate, Rent. or Trade Emp Ioymen
a n1 ed
12. 63 MOBILE home; 3 room 'WILL DO doytlme blbylltting
furnished apartment; 8 X 38
lnmyhomeforlor2c:tllldren

P. ·Day Before Publ1tat10n.
Mollday Deadline 9 a .m .

mobile

Je accepted until9'a .m . for.

Day ot Publicat ion

REGULATIONS
. T~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads,
deemed oblectional . The
publlsh~wltlnotberesponslble
for morre than one . Incorrect
lnsqrflon . RATES
rFor Wan' Ad Serv ice

0

home ;

3 , x

storeroom; trailer

0

5

space.Sale

or trade, • rooms, bath. nice

Rates reasonable. Can give
references .

after 5 p .m.

Phone H2-3960

~- 14·30tC

I

5 cents per Word one Insertion

GRAND OPENING
THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY

consecutive insorlloris. '
ts cents per ·word "' con -'
secutlve Insertions. •
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within IOdays.

W

'

anteo

T0

Buy

OLD Furniture, j)ljk tables.

-organs, dishes,_clocks, brass

' beds.orcomplelehouseholds.
''OSSIE'S
.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
RECREATION ROOM"
$1 .50 for so word minimum .'
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call992-6271:
Each addJtrona l word 2c.
In
Middleport
BLIND ADS
6-28-ltc
'
Add itional 25c . Charge per
---------Family EnlertoinmenlAdvertisement. "
·
Register lor door prizes
OFFICE HOIIR~ . •
given
away on Sal.
Help Wanted
fB :JO a .m. to 5:00,p .m., Dally,
Wholesome
Entertainment
6 :30 a . m·. to 12 · 00 Noon
BABYSITTER in my home, 1
Satu rda y.
From 10 a.m. to Midnight
child, 5 days a week, MidDally Except Sundloy
dleport: phone 9'12-58~4or 992Also featuring: Short OrLost
6716.
LARGE black and while Collie. ders, Counter Service &amp;
7·11 ·31C
Reward. Herald Osborne, 985- Table Service.
•
~----3915.
.
BEAUTICIAN, must have
Ossle Martin - Charle1 Ltwil
7-12-6tp
manager's license; Helen's
and Mrs. Artis
Beluty Shop; phone 992-2890.
Located at 20 North Second
MAN'S billfold between Royal Street, formerly Middleport
7-9-6tc
Oak Park and Chester .
Reward If found intact. Call Pool Room.
985-4212 or 992-3793.
HELP WANTED
7-12-4tc SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
-:-----July 15th at the Roclne
Planing Mlllat6p.m. Factory
For Sate or Tralie
choke guns only. Assorted
Must Be Able
10FT. X 261n . metal lathe; 24" . meat . S~onsored by the
metal shaper ; 5 ft. metal
Syracuse Fire Dept.
To Type
planer ; power hack saw;
7-12-3tp
metal bender wllh many dies; ------~
5 DAYS A WEEK
will trade above Items for GUN SHOOT, also rille matalmost anything of value, or
ches, open sites only, Forked
Group tile and tto;,llat lnwill sell for first reasonable
Run Sportsman Club, Sundoy,
''"'"nca
provldod. Reply to
otter. Robert D. Rife, 711 S.
July 16, 12 nQOO.
lox 729-P c-o Tht O.lly
3rd Ave., Middleport. Phone
7-12-31c
Sentinel, Pomeroy giving
992-74'14.
quallllcalloRl ond Wttll
7-12-6tc ON vocation, July 19th to July
ufiiCiod.
28th, Burkett's Barber Shop,
Middleport.
7-12-31c AC:T NOW
Join the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gilt
YARD Sale, Friday all day,
Party Plan ·In the CQuntry
NOTICE OF .
APPOINTMENT
Mlln Street, Rutland, Charles - our 25th year I C:om case No. 20,707
Spires residence .
missions up to 30 pet . FanEstate of Mabel R . Mees
7·12-:Hc:
tastic
Hostess Awards. Call or
Decea~ed .
write "SANTA's PARTIES"
Notice Is hereby given that
Avon, Conn . !MODI . Telephone
Charlotte M . Evans · of 215 CLIFF'S Shoe Repair, Mid·
1 1203) 673-3455. ALSO
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, OhiO , dleport, will bl open from 9 to
BOOKING PARTIES.
nu been duly appointed s p m Closed Mondays
Exeuctrlx of the Estote of
· ·
' 7.'12-3tc
7-2-3otc

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

.-.

IK)()KKEEPER

LEGAL NOTICE

Mabel
R . Mees,Meigs
deceased,
late
of
Pomeroy,
coUnty,
Ohio .

Creditors ere required to file
their ctalms with said fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 30 th day of June

1972.

John C. Bacon
Judge

{7j· 6, 13, 20, 31

~========:.....,
•' -?~~I
•
.._
Dandruff Problem?
com~'lilind let us help you
set-ect a soaplen bne
shalnpoo for yo11r lndlvldull

Sclllp condition . Try us now t

KARRrS .
BARBER
SHOP

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case Na . 2.1111

Estate of EMMA M . BARBER,

Dec~•~
N
e d- s

hereby given that
Mar
Che~elier, of R . 0 .,
Lon
attorn, Ohio , has been
duly . pp'c;Jnted Admin istratrix
of the Estate of Emma M .

Barbers ' LoCI I 400-AFL-CIO

Barbel', deceaSed, late of Olive
Township, Meigs County ,. Ohio . TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop

Creditors are required to file
Their claims with said fiduciary
Within four mcntns .

Dattd tti ls 30th day of June
1972.
John C. Bacon

J udge

(7j •• 13, 20. 31

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No . 20719

Estate of ARCHIE B. BAR ·
BE~ . Deceased .
Notice Cheva
hereby
Martha
lier, given
of R. that
D.,
Long Bottom,· Oh io, has been
duly apointed Administratrix of
lht Estate ol Archie B. Barber ,
deceased, late of Olive Town .
ship, Meigs County . Oh io.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with sa id fiduciary
within four mon ths .
Dated th is 30th day of June
1972 .

is

will be closed for vacation,
July 17th thru July 22nd.
7-13-31c

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

KOSCOT of course. Phone
9'12-5113.

~========7=-9~-tf-,c

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

John C. Bacon
Judge

171 •. 13. 30. 31

SATURDAY

s ..

•

i

...

Busm··es s erv1ce s
. ,

.

·

levellot ;Sole,goodmllkcow;
7-9-'tc
M &amp; G Food Market, 3 mi.
south ot Middleport on Rt. 7.
7-12-6tp WILL paint roots or houses.
trim and cut trees; clean
ttl
b
t
t
a cs;
asemen s, e c.
Notice
Phone 949-3221.

Minimum Charge75c •
12 cents per word three

.

'

·

• _ent'

Wl.....l
_.__·AJ_ t'1an
__
IIIIH' _ ,.-_.Ill
1
,

'5.55

On Most American caq ' '

-GUARANTEE" · '
u-• Pho'n e 992 2094
'
'Pomemu
_ u.....
_ ·-·· ·&amp;_-Ault.
'""I llUIIIa
Open_&amp;Til 5
Monday tllru Saturday ·
.' 606 E. Main, _Pomotroy, Q. .

TOMATOES ,

ponds, basement, land·
scaping . We have 2 .size
From the largest
doters, 2 size loaders. Work
done by . hour or contract. ' ' Bulldozer Radiator to the
Free · Estimates. We also·~ . Smallest Heater Core.

Nathan •iggs

•haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump
truck• and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Joffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525

Radiiltor Specialist

SMITH NELSON .
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

·after 7 p.m. or phone . 992·
)232.

Ph . 992 -2174

3 Bed~IJC!m home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

engine repair ; call Ethan 9.49.

Cucumbers,

2789.

7-t3-6tc

green peppers ; Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

AND DOZER work .·
7-6-lfc BACKHOE
Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478 ,
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track
4-25-tlc
stereo in lovely walnut con.
-sole. Pay balance of $102 .50 or HARRISON'S TV Service, open
pay S7.55 a month. Phone 992 - 9 a.m.. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
53Jl.
7-13-6tc and delivery: phone 992-2522.
6-13-tfc

We specialize in aluminum ,
vi nyl .and steel siding;
fiberglas , brick and stone;
complete line of resideiitlal
and commercial ·roofing ;

remodeling ,

building ,

suspended ceilings', interior
and exterior painting ;
complete I in&amp; of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer sat isfaction. We
are fully Insured for your

STEREO, Early American SEE US FOR : Awn.ing· s, sform
style, AM-FM radio com-

bination, 4 speed automatic
doors and windows, carports, .
changer, 4 speaker sound
marquees, alum inum siding
t
Bal
u
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
7
sys e!l'.
ance 5 8.69 . se
representative
For free '
our time payment plan. Call ·estimates, phone Charles•
992-7085.
· L'IS 1e, Syracuse , V. V ·I'
7•7.6tc
- - - - - -- - Jo,hnson and Son, Inc.

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

BEAUT IF UL WaIn uI II nish c-:-:--::---_:_--,-_:_::3-2· It•!
stereo, 4 speaker sound SEWiN.G MACHIN.E serv-Ice-,
system, 4 speed automatic
changer . Use our budget

'Iii(

•

•

'

..

clean, oil, set tension $4.99 .

terms. Balance $69.15. Use Special Electro -G rand e
our time payment plan. Call
Company. Phone 992-6517.
992-7085.
·
s-21 -ttc
7-7-6tc DOZER and back hoe work.
and septic tanks ; B &amp; K
NEW 1972 Zig-zag sewing ponds
Excavating,
Phone 992-5367, Real Estate For \Sale
.
machine in original factory
RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
carton. Zig-zag to make Di ck Karr. Jr .
utility room, garage, 510,000 ; ·
buttonholes, sew on buttons ,
S·21 .tfc
phone 949-4195.
monograms, and make fancy
·'- ·
- ·
3-31 -lfc
designs with !ustthe tw ist of a AUTOMOBILE insurance been
single-dial. Left In lay-away cancelled?
Lost
your
.
and never been used. Will sell
operator 's license? Call 992 . 1 811 ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
lor only $47 cash, or credit
2966. . ,
ft . frontage . Must see to
terms available. Phone 992- .;;;::;;:;;:;:;;::::;;:;:::-:::;:;::;:;;;-:::
6-_15-ll c
appreciate
.
Rosemary
5641 "
Wllhem, 239-0647, GRAND7_7_61 c SEWING MAtRTIITS'. -Repair
-::--:-:--------service, all makes. 992-2284.
STAFF. INC ., REALTOR,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
471-2112.
7-9-lfc
Cleaner complete with at .
Authorized Singer Sales and

------

MOTHERS - Are r,ou looking
tachments, cordwinder and 1 Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
for something dlf erent? Sell
paint spray. Used but In like
3-29-lfc
Toys. Playhouse Company Is
new condition. Pay 534.45 ·
now hiring for fall. Sell
CONCRETE
cashorbudgetplanavailable . READY -MIX
August to December, no
Phone 992-5641 .
delivere~ right to your
deliveries and no collections.
7-7-6tc
pro jec1. Fast and easy . Free '
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert - - -- - - -- estimates . Phone 992-3284 .:
~-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co.,,
Fortune 94'1-5414. Eorn S &amp; H GAS STOVE with hood for
Middleport, Ohio.
,
restaurant, bar and eight
Green Stamps.
6-30-ttc7-12-12tc
stools; Phone Henderson, W.
Va. 675-4258.
·u:S;:-:E;:-:D:-:b; u-::-i:=ld~in=g=s=u=pp:::;l:-1e-s &amp;
COOK ond waitress, opply In
7-13-41c salvage yard ; will wreck
person, Crow's Steak House.
7-12-6tc 1971 Yellowstone truck camper, houses , buildings, etc . Covert
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
--------like new. Call 843-2524.
RETAIL Sales Clerk, write Box
7-13-6tc Sa lvage Co., Laurel Clift
across
from
Highland
729-D, c-o Sentinel, Pomeroy, - - - - - - - - Ohio, giving experience and FORD 8N Tractor, $700; new 5 Church ; phone 992-5946.
7-9-12tc
ft. 3 pt. and pull-type rotary
references .
7-12-6tc
mowers - S250 and $295;
Ferguson 6 fl. adjustable 3 pt. O'DELL WHEEL alignment
pickup disc - S200; new 6 11. located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
grader
blade - $90; Erme l Complete front end service,
SENTINEL
tune up and brake service.
Luckett.JBox 95, Albany, 0 .,
Wh ee ls balan ced elecphone
·698-3032
.
CARRIERS WANTED
All
work
7-13-31c tron ic ally .
guaranteed .
RP."'c:.nnAhlP
IN
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewing machine . rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
'
992-3213.
I•'J./ •nC
This machine makes but tonholes
,
darns
,
em
MIDDLEPORT
broideries, all without at- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tachments. Pay balance ot REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
Phone Faye Manley
$41.20 or pay $6 a month ; 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell .
992-5592
Phone 9'12-5331 .
Owner &amp; Operator .
In
7-13-61c
5-12-tfc
Pomeroy
17W CONTINENTAL Travel C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
Phone 992-2156
Complete Serv ice
Trailer , 1971 model. selfPhone 949-3821
contained; awning , m irrors
Racine , Ohio
and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
'Cr itt Bradford
7-12-lfc
Pets For Sale
5-1-ltc
TOY Australian Fox Terrier 1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, 4 ,----,---,--- -puppies, 6 weeks old; also
dr .. $300 ; DeWalt Radial 'sEPTIC tanks c••aned . Miller
bollrd for pets and grooming.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
contractors saw 12 11 , phone
Phone 593-3623.
992-7374.
662-3035.
7-13-3tp
7-12-6tc
2-12-ttc .

_

_ L_ _-:--=

It's "See and Save" week
with our
specials

SOME G,REAT

USED BUYS

POMEROY· MOTOR CO.
'3950

19f2 Chevrolet Belair

guards, gold finish. with black vinyl roof, covert vinyl
Interior, used less than 5,000 miles as Driver's Ed. car .

1971 Clevelle Malibuu H.T. Cpe ... )2995
Color red, blk. vinyl top, blk. vinyl Interior, less than
20,000 miles by local careful lady owner. 307 engine with
Turbo Hydramatlc, power steering, P.B.. radio, w-w tires,
spare never used, rally wheels, bumper guards . Your
Inspection ofthls car will tell you It's the nicest. ,

1970 Chevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. .... 12395
2295

1

1970 Dodge Polara

Factory ~lr , c9n~i\lonlng , V-8 engine, automatic transmission , power steering. power brakes, good white sidewalls. many more extras. While fin ish, black vinyl roof.
Priced to move!

1995

1

1970 Ford Galaxie 500

Hardtop coupe, V,.&amp; engine, automatic transmission,
power steorlng &amp; brakes, white finish , black vinyl top,
vinyl InteriOr. Wh ile-wall tires, like new, radio.

1995

1

1969 Ford

LTO Coupe, 390 V-B engine, 3-speed. automatic, power
steering, powe r brakes. factory air , grey finish. GOod
whlte.wall t ires, radio.

1966 Clev. Biscayne

595

1

phone 9'12-2360.

7-7-6tc

~-----

2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
,bedrooms, full basement and
garag,,...with lake frpntageJ at 1
Five Points area ; phone 992-

2571 or 9'12-3975.
RACINE -

7-13-lfc

-~~~~~-

..'

1963 Dodge 4 Door ................. ~.'199

MASON
FURNITURE

Solid body, good tires, 6 cyl., std. trans.

1965

Ford~

Ton 8' Pickup

'79

773-5592

2-1971 Chevrolets (Company Officials
Cars) Going at Reduced Prices.
.,

,• -

,,

WANTED
New Owner For
Lovely 3 B. R. ,
Home in Middleport
Fully corpeted, built-in oven
and range. All in excellent
condition. Call "2-7440 or
slop by at 391 S. Second Ave.
alter 5 p.m. May consider
Rental with Option to Buy.

Jll Slreet c~~

.

THAN K (!
Signed ; Bill Grueser
Lloyd Mclaughlin
------G~
eorge Harr is

POM. EROY MOTOR CO.
Pomeroy

Social Notes
-

BY MARTHA HOI..SINGER
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil
Holsinger and Aleshia, Mr. and
Mrs. Sol Bigley and Martha
Holsinger went Sunday to
Cedar Lakes to the Arts and
Crafts fair.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson, Little Hocking, visited
Sunday evening with Mrs .
Martha Holsinger.
Virginia Carter and Jimmy,
and
Marth a ' Holsinger
Fannie
Bigley
visited
recently
at Greenfield
with Mr . and Mrs . Rod·
ney Holsinger and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kellis
and family visited over the
weekend with Rev. Eldon
Blake.
E. A. Kibble visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Kerwin .
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Holsinger and family, Chester,
vialted Saturday nlght with
Mra. Martha HolJinger.
Mrt. Marteena Rockhold
visited recently with her
daughter, Mrs. Floyd Schull%.
.Mn. Dawaln Dural and Mn.
Jack Rood and Brett, vialted
recently with Mrs. Virgil
Hollinger and Aleshla.
Raymond Holsinger, Racine,
vlllted Mn. Martha Holsinger,
Sunday afternoon.

.REALTY

In 1942 the underground Free
French movement changed its
W. W.II name to "F,ighting

France."
'

'

..
J

Olf

Then, In l·S diU watch In fected skin slough off. Watch
HEAL THY skin appear! NOW

Open Monday tltr~ Saturday 9 1D .5
Budget Tenns

Lohse Drugs :
Nelson Drug 'Store.
&amp;

or BankAmerbrd

' '

~ Adv .

today· sFUNNY
-·

SIZL .

2 RJR

.,,to.
_

.

GINERAL TIRE SALES.

0.

The numbers identify bills now
pending in Congress-House bill
2513 and Senate bill 2467.

Come Through

dayu beavyfavorltea won the
split ~.ooo dhlal0111.
Windy's Daughter, with 11111

H. R. 2513 and S. 2467 are proposed amendments to the Natural
Gas Act. Known as the Sanctity
of Contract bills, they are a significant part of a total effort to stimu. late badly needed domestic gas
exploration and development.

~~~~~·••••••••••IIIIi

-:

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINT

ridden by Jorge Tejelra,
captured the aec:ood dlvlalon .
with four lengtha to apare over

Kadllh.
Bold Liz had the better of the
timings for the ala furloog
lflll'lnl, cloctlnc I:~ ·U, just a
llftb fi a IIIICCIIId fllliler than
Windy's Daughter. Actoll the
board mutuel p'lly 0Ha for
Windy's Daughter wu tUO,
fJ,I)and $2.10 and fl1t IIGid Liz.

uwu p.ao, P-40 aoo .$Z.Il.

j

'

~
,I
\

I

'S'PECIAL

We talk to JOU

WMP0/1390 ·,

PH. 992·7590

the market's upward response
to the news of poestble peace tn
Vlebwn Ia a "bullish sign."
However' Bache adds that
recent std activity indicates
"the current market correction
haa not yet run ita course."
BaChe contends that "in the
final analysis, the market is
stlll lacking the breadth and · .
vollllllf needed on the upside to
11111taln a rally, and WItil this ts
forthcoming, no significant
rally can get under way."

These bills can help solve a crisis
that could soon affect the living
habits of every American . They
deal with the nation's growing
energy shortage.

Shoemall«' aboard, · took the
first dlvtalon by tllree lengths
over Protlill and Bold Liz,

OOOLING

1:.

Strang, quick -drying T·4·L
chech itch ~nd burning or your
Stc b•ck 11 •ny -drug counter.

POMEROY

-

As Favorites

&amp;

N

116 W. MAIN

. •~.' '
... ~ '

An~ for Bache &amp;Co. say

IWVALEV DIBMJSSED
M~W (UPI)- Vladimir
Kovalev; the Soviet figure
BkatJnc champion, hu been
diJmlaed from the team for
being drwtk In publlc, according to a report by tile
neWIP'per Sovtetaky Sjlort.
By Ulllled Prell IDienlaiJoUl.. Kovalev won the bronze
There _.., 1111 aurpr1.te11 In medal at the world figure
the Lallie Stakea for S.year- Bkatlng champlonahlps earlier
o1da at Hollywood Part 'l'lea- thla year.

"ttEIL''

liket~

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialilts

-*

THE ENERGY CRISIS IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE

No Surprises

=-~--,--;-~-=-­

CULAND

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

CARPET-LAND, INC.

48 ACRE farm, 4 room house,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.. Broker

Eden News

·

lii.t

Don't kid yourself . Buying
tram a reputable and well
establl,hed dealership Is good
judgment . We will olfer you
ouldence when try ing to
pur chase an automobile .
Come In and look around or
feel free to call.

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

'· "" · "'·pollclea
'

of Sen. George
McGovern and market
teclltlcal atatlatlco u negative
~ra bringing prelllft on
the current atoclt market.
However, tile ftrm allo pointll
to the overall economic upturn,
the contalmlent of abort and
long Interest rales, the growth
of money aupply, little
presaure caused by oveneaa
monetary problem~ and increaalng capital expenditures
aa politlve Wall Streetfactora.
From lbllt, the firm aays, ''we
derive that near term market
Faulkner, Dawkins &amp; JI'Ospecll wlll remain hi&amp;hlY
&amp;illivan 1oolta at aetbacta in volaWe, but there Ia problbly
VIetnam, tile high rate of In- an upward blu to the trend."
Dation for tile lint quarter of
the year, price controls,
unemployment, the economic

Plenty Of New Chevrolets With
Air Conditioning In Stock

992-2126

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

ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT.
IN ONE HOUR,

~~ SWIIhlr

'

WHA DRAFJ'
ClEVELAND (UPI)--Some
100 players were Included in a
pool of eUgible names for
drafting by members clubs of
the World Hockey Aasociation.
The draft was scheduled to
begin at 9 a.m. EDT today.

Mason

NEW YORK (UPI)-Wall
Street "desperately" wanll
peace lndkator Digest says In
Ita
review A "peace
raUy" last week ~dlcaled that
whenpeaceftnaUyCOIIlell "the
reaction Ia likely to be 'spectacular "the firm adds On tile
technl~l aldt of the ptdure It
ootes that July Ia traditionally
billlah and It adviaes that any
rally ~ould ..-ovide a good
opportunity for selling before
any severe decline
·

bath, basement, garage, two

4-5-tfp

Australia too."
Perha~ the toughest job was
explaining why some . of the
Democrats were actively campaigning for the vice presidential nomination.
''There's a move under way
Ill make the vice presidency an

-· ·

The talk along Wall Street

10 room house :

lots. Phone 949-431 3.

Herman Grate

"The only way the delegates . "It's .a matter of moral
canmakeuptheirmlnds on the rectitude," I nplained :
various -issues, and thus avoid "Thanks to rule changes, many
a deadlock, is to gel up and of the delegates attending this
walk around when someone is convention are young people.
addressing them."
And Miami Beach is a wicked
The Australian said, " I city where sinful night life and
understand. We have a few turpitude abound.
orators like that In my country
"By keeping the ·convention
too."
in. session all night, the
Later on, tile visitor ex- program chairman keeps these
pressed puzzlement as to why callow youths away from the
the Democrats wentto so much flesh pots and other tern~
, trouble to televise the proceed· lations lllo lurid to mention."
ings and then delayed impor·
The Australian said, !'I
tant business until most view- understand. We have a few
· program chairmen like that in
ers 1\:lt'e asleep.

be tp'8JUd 'em"'CCJ."
The Auatrallan uld,- "I
1aldenland. We have a lew
oowarda In Allllrllla too."

CAPRA OPTIONED
NEW YORK ( UPI )- Buzz
Capra,
a
25-year-old
rlghthanded pitcher, has been
optioned to Tidewater of the
International League by the
New York Meta 10 that he can
benefit from more work.
Capra appeared in 14 games
for the Mets this season, ·
primarily ln relief, and turned
ln a 3-2 record with an earned
nm average of 4.58.

Many Other Items Not listed

4 Door, 6 cyl., std. trans., low mileage. l lacal owner .

alum. cover tor body . Spoclo,lly Priced

basement , ga s furna ce, 200ft.
r iver frontage . Also S room
house wi lh bath . basement,
gas furnace on adjoin ing lot.
Sam Arnold , SyracUse. Ohio;

so

350 cu . in. V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes, rad io, red vinyl Interior, black fin ish. White-wall
tires , like new .

4 BEDROOM

full

1 Extra Nice Hotpoint· Refrlg~rator
99.95
· 1 Kelvi_nator 19 cu. ft. Side-by-Side
Refrtgerator- Freezer Combination
135.00
1 Double Door . . Norge Refrigerator, real
sharp
•
·
65.00
1. ~ngidatre Upright Freezer, good condtfton
Check Our Price
1 ~uble ~or G. E. Refrigerator
60.00
• hNtce Admtral Elec. Range
only 50.00
1 Real Good Gas Range
49.95
1 Square Tu~ Maytag Washer,
All Recondttioned
68.00
1 Sq~a.re :rub Maytag Washer
49.95
1 Frtgtda•re auto. Washer, was 75.00 now 50.00
t Westinghouse Electric Dryer
oo
1·3 pc. ~a!nut Bedroom Suite (like new! aa:oo
1 Oak Dintng Room Suite (with China! 100 oo
1 Red Dinette Set
39.95
4995
1,Grey Dinette Set
1 Small Dinette,
only 1o:oo
1 Set End Tables
3 for 10 00
1 Set Blonde Oak Tables, 3for
3o'oo
,
15:00
1 Aqua ~Ia Bed
1-2 pc. Wtne Co.lor Livl_ng Room Suite
49.95
1-2 pc. Nylon Ltving Room Suite, tan
30.00
1-2 pc. Brown Nylon Living Room Suite
(Realgood)
4995
39.95
1 Sofa Bed, real nice
1 Gold Love. Seat
20.00
I Odd Sola with Slip Covers, only
15:00
I Red Sola Bed
25.00
2 Good used T.V. Sets

4-door sedan, tactory air, V-8 engine, power steering &amp;
brakes, Turbohydramatlc, radla, wheel covers, bumper

V-8 engine, automatic trans ., custom cab, W. Coast
chrome mirrors, chrome frt . &amp; R. Bumpers, 8 ft .

home,

Furniture, ApplianceS and TV

Slicker Price $4552

LOTS in Me igs School District ;
phone 992-6329.
7-7-6tp

------

By DICK WEST
WASIUNGTON (UP!) - In a
preu release thil1 week, Rep.
Otla G. Pike, 0-N..Y., wrote
that Americans would have a
hard time explaining our
political conventions to
foreigners.
Actually, It isn't aU that
difficult.
I happened to have watched
portiona of tile Democratic
National Convention with a
group that included an Austra' llan wbo had only been in this
country a few days.
He frequentlt turned to me
for guidance and It only took a
few words of clarification for
him to ·understand what was
going on.
Or at leu! he said he un·
derstood what was going on.
During the credentials debate, lor example, the Austra·
lian asked me why ,the
delegates were mllllng around
on the floor rather than
listening to the argwnents.
Oratory Highly Persuasive
"You've got to realize that
convention oratory is highly
persuasive," I replied. "If the
delegates paid attention to the
speeches, they would find both
sides equally convincing and
would be unable_to_~e how
to vote. That woull:l Iring the
convention to a complete
standstill.

'l
(' '

l, .

. Dozer &amp; End loader work, ..

LAWN MOWER and small

·For Sal"

~~

,

EARTH MOVING

·

\ ;·

.

··~=:::::=:;:::::::====::r;:s:::::::=====~::;::;=-;=~~~=:;;;~~~~
-,-.: - ·· ·

EXPERT·
_

~f

Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Hysell Run ;
phone m -6009.
Real Estate For Sate
JUST
arrived
1973
Starcrafl
CALL
Guy
Neig;er
ror
Building
Music by:
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
7-_
1
2-6tc
,-------------...,
For Rent
Campers - All 1972 units at
Houses.
George Stewart &amp; The
huge discount. We service
6-28-lfc HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
SMALL 3 room furnished
Maverick•
what we sell. Camp Conley _ _ __ _ _ _ _.::_:
985-3529 .
apartment
with
both.
Ideal
5 Piece Bond
Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62, N. of
6-11 -tf c
for one or two working men.
Pt. Pleasant behind Red ,Mobile Homes For ~ · ~ .: 110 Mechanic Street
Completely private. Utllllles
Carpet Inn .
I HAVE now In my possession 1..-nllhed. Phone m-3881 or
FARM - 106-acre ranch type
12_
7tc
CASI-j
paid
lor
all
makes
ana
7_
office machines wt'tlcl'l were
farm , 2 bi!rns, plenty of
m-3134 olter 4 p.m.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
models of mobile homes . water,
placed In the Arthur Ebers7-12-61p - - - - - - - - 32 acres tillable, 20
LARGE
size
refrigerator
.
PhO!'e
area
code
614-423-9531.
1
bi!ch repair shop. Will the
·acres timber, 54 fenced,
COUNTRY HOME
freezer combination ; • ,
.
~- 13-lfc
persons claim ing same , 4 ROOM furnished new apartrolling acres. Beautiful 4NEAR
POMEROY
- One floor , 3 bedrooms, both, fur wooden windows valances, ~·· _...
~
pleese come to the Arthur
bedroom ranch home. all
ment, everything new, on
nace.
Nice
built-In
·kitchen with cook units and blr
36"
wide
;
1
large
size
50
X
10,
2
bedroom
,
priced
Ebersbach residence at 3~2 S.
carpeted and paneled, large
Main hlghwoy In Mason, W.
Recreation
room
and
carport. $17,500.00.
'
.·
aluminum
storm
door
;
26"
reasonably
,
phone
Chester
6th Ave .. Middleport, 0 .
ba th and ut ility room, at Va. Reynolds Flower Shop up
NEW
girl
's
bike
for
parts
only;
985·3379.
within the next 30 doys and
tached garage, basement
near drive-In thoter, phone
• 7-9-6tp
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with stove and
phone 992-3173.
pick them up? After the
with forced air furnace .
m.sw.
refrigerator-freezer . Full basement with garage. All
7-12-3tc
allotted lime, machines will _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7-_
Fenced paddock lor showing
12-6tp
electroc. Less than $25,000.00.
be disposed of.
horses. Sold with all mlnerol
rights. Located 1 mile out of
LOT
7·11·31p 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults GERMAN Shepherd puppies;
' Air Conditioners
can be A.K.C. registered ;
Rutland on Happy Hollow
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
•Awnings
only ; phone m-5247.
males, $35 ; fema les, $25; also
A REVIVAL Is In progress 11
building. 52500.00.
Rd., $28,500. Phone 9'12-3020.
7-11 ·12tp
·Underpinning
1960 Nvilrcury Comet, S100;
The Church ot God, Chester,
7-11 -5tc
COMMERCIAL
0111o, 7:30 p.m. each evening 'l"AND 4 ROUM furnished ari". see Bob Young on Success
CHESH IRE - Business lot with block building on Rt 7
Road near big water tower ; 'complete mobile home
thru July 16th. Evangelisl
BUILDING LOTS
, .
apartments .
phone
Reedsville 667-3512.
Rev . Mark Muncie of Mt. unfurPllshed...
service ~ plus gigantic
WE have several locations. All sizes ond prices.
Phone
9'12-5434.
·
.
·
7-12-6tp 'display of mobile homes
Moriah Church of God.
COUNTRY HOME
4-12-ltc
Special singing each evening.
always available at ...
ON
ROUTE
7
2
bedrooms, both, Plains water Nice
Everybody welcome.
UNFURN ISI-iED - . apartmen· , POODLE puppil!s, Sliver ToV,
kitchen
with
stove
.
Some
paneling: 4 acres of land·. Only
7-11 -4tc
MILLER
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9o:
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-,
$9,500.00.
5443.
.
3962.
. 608 E. Main St.
HELEN·L. TE~FORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
MOBILE HOMES
6-11-11
Pomeroy, Ohio
, ..
FA'lflfi'C' 1NN, Polyester
1220 Washington Blvd.
BUILDERS
.
ONE bedroom troller apart- Ooubleknlts tor leS5. Hun· 4!3-7521
BELPRE, 0.
OPPORTUNITY
ments , Ideal for couples. dreds of Yords. From TupContoct McClure's Polry Isle. pers Plains, pass school, go A ·
Close in, 30 acres, good
I
drainage, Chester water,
m -5241 or m-3436.
I-Htc miles, turn left onto County Auto Sales
good roads, IDEAL lor
HEATI~G
' --------Rd. 50, sign. Between •
homeslles . $26,800.00.
Hockingport and Reedsville,
WHAT A KITCHEN I
PASTURE, phone m-'329.
turn onlo County Rd. 50 near 1971 TOYOTA Corolla 2 dr
If your Mrs. likes to cook,
7;11 ;6tp· Ed en Churc h, s Ign. Ph one 378- sedan, low mileage excelleni
'
Window
then her Mr. ought to see this',
•
6276.
condition,· phone ~2- 702• .
COUNTRY nome , close to
n
•
new modernized kitchen.· 3
Air Conditioner~
7
Forked Run Lake; lrH gas, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __-9-6tp
7-?-6tc
large bedrooms, walk -In
'
Hot Water .Heaters
partly furnished. Reasonable
1965 OLDS '88, $580 ; 19 67
closets, IVi baths, ullllt~
rent; profer retired couple ;
Thunderbird, $875 ; 1970 Ford
room, 'f ull basement , grear.
· Plumbing
references: phone 371-6298. July Price Buster!
Ranger Truck, $2,250; all In
rec . room, 1 acre ground, ir1
Electrical Wor_k
' --------7--7-tfc
good condition; call 742-3437.
town. $28,500.00.
$1,000.00 DOWN
'.
PANTS &amp; JEANS
7-11 -31p
3 BEDROOM houn, carpeted
VI~W
OF
THE
RIVER,
:i
living and dining room,
be rooms, bath , porches ,
SALEI
finished recreation room,
pa t basement, metal roof·, '
Iorge scroened porch, range
Buy
2
Poirund
storage bulldln~ . garage,
and refrigerator Included.
GET
1
PAIR
FREE
$6.900.00.
.
Phone 882· 290~.
992-2'448
BATTLE OF THE
7·13-3tp All kinds, all sizes lor men,
Pomeroy, 0.
BULGE?
..
women, young men, boys
MOSJ ,ANY
.
If
you
are
fighting to provide
-REOU1...~
·and girls. Hurry to ...
)du~ dll&lt;l rt.~l "lTh . For Sail!
enough room for a growing
GoBese Toblets &amp; E·Vap
family •.. Here's a place
PCiMEROY · . ·
"woter pills/' Nelson Drug. dO ALL CROP hirvester, Allis~
· Plus Casing
Ideally
suited. 4 bedroom"
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
j
6-29•30fp . Chalmers; phone 742-3656.
w,
baths,
call
for
par.
7-,-6tp ., ~- .• Phone 9h-21tl
ticulars. $12,800.00.
WANTED - Customers ot
LET US SELL YOUR
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop DEMCO Satellite CB radio with COAL, Limestone, E•celslor ;
3 BEDROOM HOME .
D 104 microphone, S200;
Chesler, Ohio. No experience
Salt Works, E. Mlln St.,
HENRY
E. CLELAND SR.·
necessary.
ph- 992·3364 . .
YOUR DIAL
Pomeroy, Phone m -3891 .
992-7161
N. 2nd Ave.
REI&lt;LTOR
Middleport,
7-11-6lp
7-9-20tp
4-12-tfc : ·
I'HON E m -2259
--~--....._ _ _ __J

10 'TIL 2

all-volunteer job," I 111ld.
"Politicians who have Ded ID
Canada to avoid being drafted
for vice president would then

The Lighter Side

10-The.Daily Sentinel . Mlddleport-Pcm&gt;....,y, 0 .. July 13, 18'/2 .

WANT- ADS
INFORMATION
M . OEAD\.INES .

'

~-·· Min cclntinued to
llhow berlelf :u one of the
better juveaile fiUiel Ill the
East .. abe ipld to Ill lmpreuive 1~-lenlth verdict
ovw O.K. Pll Ill tb8 $21,(110
. Altorla Stake~ at o\qlledllet. It
wit the third COIIMCIItlve
, . _ for the claqlit. tl
llllb Pr!Dce, llllllhe nllimeci
ta.IO.
and
~ lecl fl'l1m lllrt to
flnllb. to Win lhl Pl,l7l 1W

•u•

l

'"

,[
)
j
)

1

I

p.eo,

Jen1J llreldlrtt StUu at
llm!NIIIIb l'lrllllld paid tl80,
Gtui)idlbWU I ...80 wll. .
·In tlle l'llbn at Dalann,
01Jialla (tf.le)
Ubert)'
BeD ,ind i1DJ11t O'Oif plitl

tl.»-atAr'l P

-·t

The search .for new gas supplies
in this country has declined
steadily in the past fifteen years,
the number of exploratory wells
dropping by 50%. Why? Because
producers' costs have risen substantially faster than government-controlled gas prices,
resulting in wholly inadequate
economic incehtives for gas
exploration.
These bills set more realistic
standards for determining gas
prices. They will also assure producers that once pricBs and other

economic terms of contracts have
been approved by the Federal
Power Commission, they will not
subsequently be changed.
H. R. 2513 and S. 2467 are two
. of the best hopes for increasing
gas supplies now before Congress. Help assure their approval.
Write to your Senators and Repre·
sentative today. · Let them know
you are concarned about the
growing energy crisis and urge
them to support these bills. Help
prevent the energy crisis from be·
coming a disaster.

'

4-"
2"NYLON
J649VAWf

·I.Ht/Al
IIIII

•
William J. Keating
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M McCulloch
Delbert L. Latta
William H. Flarsha

UNITED STATES SENATORS
William B. Saxbe
Robert Taft. Jr.
'
UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVES
Clarence J: Brown
Charles A. Mosher
Jackson E. Beus
J ohn F. Seiberling
Thomas L. Ashley
Chalmers P. Wylie
Clarence E. Miller
Frank T. Bow
J. William Stanton
John M. Ashbrook.
Samuel L. Devine
Wayne L. Hays

Charles J Carney
James V. Stanton
Louis Stokes
Charles A. Vanik
William E. Minshs/1
Walter E. Powell

r. ------------.,

,

·TU

'SlOIII DOORS

Valley Lumber &amp;
'

I
I
I

Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
Name
138 North Second Avenue
·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•
Streal __ _ _ __
Please send me a copy
of your booklet
.
"An Action Program
Cily
to Help Correct
the Na1ional
Energy Crisis".
©U~~~~

__ _ · _ __

I
I
A
. __
I
1
L .... __a.;:.s.:::u:_ .. _- -.I
Zip

(.

'.

.,
.,

'

•

•.

'I

\l

�.

•

•

U. S. Politics Quite Gear, Really.,.,

Sentinel ClasSifieds Get Action! Sentinel· Clnssifieds:filrResultSt .
•

fi

tw

-

CrleeUatlon-correctlon·,

wru

.

-For Sate, Rent. or Trade Emp Ioymen
a n1 ed
12. 63 MOBILE home; 3 room 'WILL DO doytlme blbylltting
furnished apartment; 8 X 38
lnmyhomeforlor2c:tllldren

P. ·Day Before Publ1tat10n.
Mollday Deadline 9 a .m .

mobile

Je accepted until9'a .m . for.

Day ot Publicat ion

REGULATIONS
. T~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads,
deemed oblectional . The
publlsh~wltlnotberesponslble
for morre than one . Incorrect
lnsqrflon . RATES
rFor Wan' Ad Serv ice

0

home ;

3 , x

storeroom; trailer

0

5

space.Sale

or trade, • rooms, bath. nice

Rates reasonable. Can give
references .

after 5 p .m.

Phone H2-3960

~- 14·30tC

I

5 cents per Word one Insertion

GRAND OPENING
THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY

consecutive insorlloris. '
ts cents per ·word "' con -'
secutlve Insertions. •
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within IOdays.

W

'

anteo

T0

Buy

OLD Furniture, j)ljk tables.

-organs, dishes,_clocks, brass

' beds.orcomplelehouseholds.
''OSSIE'S
.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
RECREATION ROOM"
$1 .50 for so word minimum .'
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call992-6271:
Each addJtrona l word 2c.
In
Middleport
BLIND ADS
6-28-ltc
'
Add itional 25c . Charge per
---------Family EnlertoinmenlAdvertisement. "
·
Register lor door prizes
OFFICE HOIIR~ . •
given
away on Sal.
Help Wanted
fB :JO a .m. to 5:00,p .m., Dally,
Wholesome
Entertainment
6 :30 a . m·. to 12 · 00 Noon
BABYSITTER in my home, 1
Satu rda y.
From 10 a.m. to Midnight
child, 5 days a week, MidDally Except Sundloy
dleport: phone 9'12-58~4or 992Also featuring: Short OrLost
6716.
LARGE black and while Collie. ders, Counter Service &amp;
7·11 ·31C
Reward. Herald Osborne, 985- Table Service.
•
~----3915.
.
BEAUTICIAN, must have
Ossle Martin - Charle1 Ltwil
7-12-6tp
manager's license; Helen's
and Mrs. Artis
Beluty Shop; phone 992-2890.
Located at 20 North Second
MAN'S billfold between Royal Street, formerly Middleport
7-9-6tc
Oak Park and Chester .
Reward If found intact. Call Pool Room.
985-4212 or 992-3793.
HELP WANTED
7-12-4tc SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
-:-----July 15th at the Roclne
Planing Mlllat6p.m. Factory
For Sate or Tralie
choke guns only. Assorted
Must Be Able
10FT. X 261n . metal lathe; 24" . meat . S~onsored by the
metal shaper ; 5 ft. metal
Syracuse Fire Dept.
To Type
planer ; power hack saw;
7-12-3tp
metal bender wllh many dies; ------~
5 DAYS A WEEK
will trade above Items for GUN SHOOT, also rille matalmost anything of value, or
ches, open sites only, Forked
Group tile and tto;,llat lnwill sell for first reasonable
Run Sportsman Club, Sundoy,
''"'"nca
provldod. Reply to
otter. Robert D. Rife, 711 S.
July 16, 12 nQOO.
lox 729-P c-o Tht O.lly
3rd Ave., Middleport. Phone
7-12-31c
Sentinel, Pomeroy giving
992-74'14.
quallllcalloRl ond Wttll
7-12-6tc ON vocation, July 19th to July
ufiiCiod.
28th, Burkett's Barber Shop,
Middleport.
7-12-31c AC:T NOW
Join the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gilt
YARD Sale, Friday all day,
Party Plan ·In the CQuntry
NOTICE OF .
APPOINTMENT
Mlln Street, Rutland, Charles - our 25th year I C:om case No. 20,707
Spires residence .
missions up to 30 pet . FanEstate of Mabel R . Mees
7·12-:Hc:
tastic
Hostess Awards. Call or
Decea~ed .
write "SANTA's PARTIES"
Notice Is hereby given that
Avon, Conn . !MODI . Telephone
Charlotte M . Evans · of 215 CLIFF'S Shoe Repair, Mid·
1 1203) 673-3455. ALSO
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, OhiO , dleport, will bl open from 9 to
BOOKING PARTIES.
nu been duly appointed s p m Closed Mondays
Exeuctrlx of the Estote of
· ·
' 7.'12-3tc
7-2-3otc

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

.-.

IK)()KKEEPER

LEGAL NOTICE

Mabel
R . Mees,Meigs
deceased,
late
of
Pomeroy,
coUnty,
Ohio .

Creditors ere required to file
their ctalms with said fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 30 th day of June

1972.

John C. Bacon
Judge

{7j· 6, 13, 20, 31

~========:.....,
•' -?~~I
•
.._
Dandruff Problem?
com~'lilind let us help you
set-ect a soaplen bne
shalnpoo for yo11r lndlvldull

Sclllp condition . Try us now t

KARRrS .
BARBER
SHOP

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case Na . 2.1111

Estate of EMMA M . BARBER,

Dec~•~
N
e d- s

hereby given that
Mar
Che~elier, of R . 0 .,
Lon
attorn, Ohio , has been
duly . pp'c;Jnted Admin istratrix
of the Estate of Emma M .

Barbers ' LoCI I 400-AFL-CIO

Barbel', deceaSed, late of Olive
Township, Meigs County ,. Ohio . TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop

Creditors are required to file
Their claims with said fiduciary
Within four mcntns .

Dattd tti ls 30th day of June
1972.
John C. Bacon

J udge

(7j •• 13, 20. 31

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No . 20719

Estate of ARCHIE B. BAR ·
BE~ . Deceased .
Notice Cheva
hereby
Martha
lier, given
of R. that
D.,
Long Bottom,· Oh io, has been
duly apointed Administratrix of
lht Estate ol Archie B. Barber ,
deceased, late of Olive Town .
ship, Meigs County . Oh io.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with sa id fiduciary
within four mon ths .
Dated th is 30th day of June
1972 .

is

will be closed for vacation,
July 17th thru July 22nd.
7-13-31c

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

KOSCOT of course. Phone
9'12-5113.

~========7=-9~-tf-,c

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

John C. Bacon
Judge

171 •. 13. 30. 31

SATURDAY

s ..

•

i

...

Busm··es s erv1ce s
. ,

.

·

levellot ;Sole,goodmllkcow;
7-9-'tc
M &amp; G Food Market, 3 mi.
south ot Middleport on Rt. 7.
7-12-6tp WILL paint roots or houses.
trim and cut trees; clean
ttl
b
t
t
a cs;
asemen s, e c.
Notice
Phone 949-3221.

Minimum Charge75c •
12 cents per word three

.

'

·

• _ent'

Wl.....l
_.__·AJ_ t'1an
__
IIIIH' _ ,.-_.Ill
1
,

'5.55

On Most American caq ' '

-GUARANTEE" · '
u-• Pho'n e 992 2094
'
'Pomemu
_ u.....
_ ·-·· ·&amp;_-Ault.
'""I llUIIIa
Open_&amp;Til 5
Monday tllru Saturday ·
.' 606 E. Main, _Pomotroy, Q. .

TOMATOES ,

ponds, basement, land·
scaping . We have 2 .size
From the largest
doters, 2 size loaders. Work
done by . hour or contract. ' ' Bulldozer Radiator to the
Free · Estimates. We also·~ . Smallest Heater Core.

Nathan •iggs

•haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump
truck• and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Joffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525

Radiiltor Specialist

SMITH NELSON .
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

·after 7 p.m. or phone . 992·
)232.

Ph . 992 -2174

3 Bed~IJC!m home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

engine repair ; call Ethan 9.49.

Cucumbers,

2789.

7-t3-6tc

green peppers ; Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

AND DOZER work .·
7-6-lfc BACKHOE
Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478 ,
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track
4-25-tlc
stereo in lovely walnut con.
-sole. Pay balance of $102 .50 or HARRISON'S TV Service, open
pay S7.55 a month. Phone 992 - 9 a.m.. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
53Jl.
7-13-6tc and delivery: phone 992-2522.
6-13-tfc

We specialize in aluminum ,
vi nyl .and steel siding;
fiberglas , brick and stone;
complete line of resideiitlal
and commercial ·roofing ;

remodeling ,

building ,

suspended ceilings', interior
and exterior painting ;
complete I in&amp; of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer sat isfaction. We
are fully Insured for your

STEREO, Early American SEE US FOR : Awn.ing· s, sform
style, AM-FM radio com-

bination, 4 speed automatic
doors and windows, carports, .
changer, 4 speaker sound
marquees, alum inum siding
t
Bal
u
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
7
sys e!l'.
ance 5 8.69 . se
representative
For free '
our time payment plan. Call ·estimates, phone Charles•
992-7085.
· L'IS 1e, Syracuse , V. V ·I'
7•7.6tc
- - - - - -- - Jo,hnson and Son, Inc.

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

BEAUT IF UL WaIn uI II nish c-:-:--::---_:_--,-_:_::3-2· It•!
stereo, 4 speaker sound SEWiN.G MACHIN.E serv-Ice-,
system, 4 speed automatic
changer . Use our budget

'Iii(

•

•

'

..

clean, oil, set tension $4.99 .

terms. Balance $69.15. Use Special Electro -G rand e
our time payment plan. Call
Company. Phone 992-6517.
992-7085.
·
s-21 -ttc
7-7-6tc DOZER and back hoe work.
and septic tanks ; B &amp; K
NEW 1972 Zig-zag sewing ponds
Excavating,
Phone 992-5367, Real Estate For \Sale
.
machine in original factory
RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
carton. Zig-zag to make Di ck Karr. Jr .
utility room, garage, 510,000 ; ·
buttonholes, sew on buttons ,
S·21 .tfc
phone 949-4195.
monograms, and make fancy
·'- ·
- ·
3-31 -lfc
designs with !ustthe tw ist of a AUTOMOBILE insurance been
single-dial. Left In lay-away cancelled?
Lost
your
.
and never been used. Will sell
operator 's license? Call 992 . 1 811 ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
lor only $47 cash, or credit
2966. . ,
ft . frontage . Must see to
terms available. Phone 992- .;;;::;;:;;:;:;;::::;;:;:::-:::;:;::;:;;;-:::
6-_15-ll c
appreciate
.
Rosemary
5641 "
Wllhem, 239-0647, GRAND7_7_61 c SEWING MAtRTIITS'. -Repair
-::--:-:--------service, all makes. 992-2284.
STAFF. INC ., REALTOR,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
471-2112.
7-9-lfc
Cleaner complete with at .
Authorized Singer Sales and

------

MOTHERS - Are r,ou looking
tachments, cordwinder and 1 Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
for something dlf erent? Sell
paint spray. Used but In like
3-29-lfc
Toys. Playhouse Company Is
new condition. Pay 534.45 ·
now hiring for fall. Sell
CONCRETE
cashorbudgetplanavailable . READY -MIX
August to December, no
Phone 992-5641 .
delivere~ right to your
deliveries and no collections.
7-7-6tc
pro jec1. Fast and easy . Free '
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert - - -- - - -- estimates . Phone 992-3284 .:
~-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co.,,
Fortune 94'1-5414. Eorn S &amp; H GAS STOVE with hood for
Middleport, Ohio.
,
restaurant, bar and eight
Green Stamps.
6-30-ttc7-12-12tc
stools; Phone Henderson, W.
Va. 675-4258.
·u:S;:-:E;:-:D:-:b; u-::-i:=ld~in=g=s=u=pp:::;l:-1e-s &amp;
COOK ond waitress, opply In
7-13-41c salvage yard ; will wreck
person, Crow's Steak House.
7-12-6tc 1971 Yellowstone truck camper, houses , buildings, etc . Covert
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
--------like new. Call 843-2524.
RETAIL Sales Clerk, write Box
7-13-6tc Sa lvage Co., Laurel Clift
across
from
Highland
729-D, c-o Sentinel, Pomeroy, - - - - - - - - Ohio, giving experience and FORD 8N Tractor, $700; new 5 Church ; phone 992-5946.
7-9-12tc
ft. 3 pt. and pull-type rotary
references .
7-12-6tc
mowers - S250 and $295;
Ferguson 6 fl. adjustable 3 pt. O'DELL WHEEL alignment
pickup disc - S200; new 6 11. located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
grader
blade - $90; Erme l Complete front end service,
SENTINEL
tune up and brake service.
Luckett.JBox 95, Albany, 0 .,
Wh ee ls balan ced elecphone
·698-3032
.
CARRIERS WANTED
All
work
7-13-31c tron ic ally .
guaranteed .
RP."'c:.nnAhlP
IN
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewing machine . rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
'
992-3213.
I•'J./ •nC
This machine makes but tonholes
,
darns
,
em
MIDDLEPORT
broideries, all without at- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tachments. Pay balance ot REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
Phone Faye Manley
$41.20 or pay $6 a month ; 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell .
992-5592
Phone 9'12-5331 .
Owner &amp; Operator .
In
7-13-61c
5-12-tfc
Pomeroy
17W CONTINENTAL Travel C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
Phone 992-2156
Complete Serv ice
Trailer , 1971 model. selfPhone 949-3821
contained; awning , m irrors
Racine , Ohio
and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
'Cr itt Bradford
7-12-lfc
Pets For Sale
5-1-ltc
TOY Australian Fox Terrier 1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, 4 ,----,---,--- -puppies, 6 weeks old; also
dr .. $300 ; DeWalt Radial 'sEPTIC tanks c••aned . Miller
bollrd for pets and grooming.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
contractors saw 12 11 , phone
Phone 593-3623.
992-7374.
662-3035.
7-13-3tp
7-12-6tc
2-12-ttc .

_

_ L_ _-:--=

It's "See and Save" week
with our
specials

SOME G,REAT

USED BUYS

POMEROY· MOTOR CO.
'3950

19f2 Chevrolet Belair

guards, gold finish. with black vinyl roof, covert vinyl
Interior, used less than 5,000 miles as Driver's Ed. car .

1971 Clevelle Malibuu H.T. Cpe ... )2995
Color red, blk. vinyl top, blk. vinyl Interior, less than
20,000 miles by local careful lady owner. 307 engine with
Turbo Hydramatlc, power steering, P.B.. radio, w-w tires,
spare never used, rally wheels, bumper guards . Your
Inspection ofthls car will tell you It's the nicest. ,

1970 Chevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. .... 12395
2295

1

1970 Dodge Polara

Factory ~lr , c9n~i\lonlng , V-8 engine, automatic transmission , power steering. power brakes, good white sidewalls. many more extras. While fin ish, black vinyl roof.
Priced to move!

1995

1

1970 Ford Galaxie 500

Hardtop coupe, V,.&amp; engine, automatic transmission,
power steorlng &amp; brakes, white finish , black vinyl top,
vinyl InteriOr. Wh ile-wall tires, like new, radio.

1995

1

1969 Ford

LTO Coupe, 390 V-B engine, 3-speed. automatic, power
steering, powe r brakes. factory air , grey finish. GOod
whlte.wall t ires, radio.

1966 Clev. Biscayne

595

1

phone 9'12-2360.

7-7-6tc

~-----

2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
,bedrooms, full basement and
garag,,...with lake frpntageJ at 1
Five Points area ; phone 992-

2571 or 9'12-3975.
RACINE -

7-13-lfc

-~~~~~-

..'

1963 Dodge 4 Door ................. ~.'199

MASON
FURNITURE

Solid body, good tires, 6 cyl., std. trans.

1965

Ford~

Ton 8' Pickup

'79

773-5592

2-1971 Chevrolets (Company Officials
Cars) Going at Reduced Prices.
.,

,• -

,,

WANTED
New Owner For
Lovely 3 B. R. ,
Home in Middleport
Fully corpeted, built-in oven
and range. All in excellent
condition. Call "2-7440 or
slop by at 391 S. Second Ave.
alter 5 p.m. May consider
Rental with Option to Buy.

Jll Slreet c~~

.

THAN K (!
Signed ; Bill Grueser
Lloyd Mclaughlin
------G~
eorge Harr is

POM. EROY MOTOR CO.
Pomeroy

Social Notes
-

BY MARTHA HOI..SINGER
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil
Holsinger and Aleshia, Mr. and
Mrs. Sol Bigley and Martha
Holsinger went Sunday to
Cedar Lakes to the Arts and
Crafts fair.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson, Little Hocking, visited
Sunday evening with Mrs .
Martha Holsinger.
Virginia Carter and Jimmy,
and
Marth a ' Holsinger
Fannie
Bigley
visited
recently
at Greenfield
with Mr . and Mrs . Rod·
ney Holsinger and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kellis
and family visited over the
weekend with Rev. Eldon
Blake.
E. A. Kibble visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Kerwin .
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Holsinger and family, Chester,
vialted Saturday nlght with
Mra. Martha HolJinger.
Mrt. Marteena Rockhold
visited recently with her
daughter, Mrs. Floyd Schull%.
.Mn. Dawaln Dural and Mn.
Jack Rood and Brett, vialted
recently with Mrs. Virgil
Hollinger and Aleshla.
Raymond Holsinger, Racine,
vlllted Mn. Martha Holsinger,
Sunday afternoon.

.REALTY

In 1942 the underground Free
French movement changed its
W. W.II name to "F,ighting

France."
'

'

..
J

Olf

Then, In l·S diU watch In fected skin slough off. Watch
HEAL THY skin appear! NOW

Open Monday tltr~ Saturday 9 1D .5
Budget Tenns

Lohse Drugs :
Nelson Drug 'Store.
&amp;

or BankAmerbrd

' '

~ Adv .

today· sFUNNY
-·

SIZL .

2 RJR

.,,to.
_

.

GINERAL TIRE SALES.

0.

The numbers identify bills now
pending in Congress-House bill
2513 and Senate bill 2467.

Come Through

dayu beavyfavorltea won the
split ~.ooo dhlal0111.
Windy's Daughter, with 11111

H. R. 2513 and S. 2467 are proposed amendments to the Natural
Gas Act. Known as the Sanctity
of Contract bills, they are a significant part of a total effort to stimu. late badly needed domestic gas
exploration and development.

~~~~~·••••••••••IIIIi

-:

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINT

ridden by Jorge Tejelra,
captured the aec:ood dlvlalon .
with four lengtha to apare over

Kadllh.
Bold Liz had the better of the
timings for the ala furloog
lflll'lnl, cloctlnc I:~ ·U, just a
llftb fi a IIIICCIIId fllliler than
Windy's Daughter. Actoll the
board mutuel p'lly 0Ha for
Windy's Daughter wu tUO,
fJ,I)and $2.10 and fl1t IIGid Liz.

uwu p.ao, P-40 aoo .$Z.Il.

j

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\

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'S'PECIAL

We talk to JOU

WMP0/1390 ·,

PH. 992·7590

the market's upward response
to the news of poestble peace tn
Vlebwn Ia a "bullish sign."
However' Bache adds that
recent std activity indicates
"the current market correction
haa not yet run ita course."
BaChe contends that "in the
final analysis, the market is
stlll lacking the breadth and · .
vollllllf needed on the upside to
11111taln a rally, and WItil this ts
forthcoming, no significant
rally can get under way."

These bills can help solve a crisis
that could soon affect the living
habits of every American . They
deal with the nation's growing
energy shortage.

Shoemall«' aboard, · took the
first dlvtalon by tllree lengths
over Protlill and Bold Liz,

OOOLING

1:.

Strang, quick -drying T·4·L
chech itch ~nd burning or your
Stc b•ck 11 •ny -drug counter.

POMEROY

-

As Favorites

&amp;

N

116 W. MAIN

. •~.' '
... ~ '

An~ for Bache &amp;Co. say

IWVALEV DIBMJSSED
M~W (UPI)- Vladimir
Kovalev; the Soviet figure
BkatJnc champion, hu been
diJmlaed from the team for
being drwtk In publlc, according to a report by tile
neWIP'per Sovtetaky Sjlort.
By Ulllled Prell IDienlaiJoUl.. Kovalev won the bronze
There _.., 1111 aurpr1.te11 In medal at the world figure
the Lallie Stakea for S.year- Bkatlng champlonahlps earlier
o1da at Hollywood Part 'l'lea- thla year.

"ttEIL''

liket~

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialilts

-*

THE ENERGY CRISIS IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE

No Surprises

=-~--,--;-~-=-­

CULAND

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

CARPET-LAND, INC.

48 ACRE farm, 4 room house,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.. Broker

Eden News

·

lii.t

Don't kid yourself . Buying
tram a reputable and well
establl,hed dealership Is good
judgment . We will olfer you
ouldence when try ing to
pur chase an automobile .
Come In and look around or
feel free to call.

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

'· "" · "'·pollclea
'

of Sen. George
McGovern and market
teclltlcal atatlatlco u negative
~ra bringing prelllft on
the current atoclt market.
However, tile ftrm allo pointll
to the overall economic upturn,
the contalmlent of abort and
long Interest rales, the growth
of money aupply, little
presaure caused by oveneaa
monetary problem~ and increaalng capital expenditures
aa politlve Wall Streetfactora.
From lbllt, the firm aays, ''we
derive that near term market
Faulkner, Dawkins &amp; JI'Ospecll wlll remain hi&amp;hlY
&amp;illivan 1oolta at aetbacta in volaWe, but there Ia problbly
VIetnam, tile high rate of In- an upward blu to the trend."
Dation for tile lint quarter of
the year, price controls,
unemployment, the economic

Plenty Of New Chevrolets With
Air Conditioning In Stock

992-2126

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

ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT.
IN ONE HOUR,

~~ SWIIhlr

'

WHA DRAFJ'
ClEVELAND (UPI)--Some
100 players were Included in a
pool of eUgible names for
drafting by members clubs of
the World Hockey Aasociation.
The draft was scheduled to
begin at 9 a.m. EDT today.

Mason

NEW YORK (UPI)-Wall
Street "desperately" wanll
peace lndkator Digest says In
Ita
review A "peace
raUy" last week ~dlcaled that
whenpeaceftnaUyCOIIlell "the
reaction Ia likely to be 'spectacular "the firm adds On tile
technl~l aldt of the ptdure It
ootes that July Ia traditionally
billlah and It adviaes that any
rally ~ould ..-ovide a good
opportunity for selling before
any severe decline
·

bath, basement, garage, two

4-5-tfp

Australia too."
Perha~ the toughest job was
explaining why some . of the
Democrats were actively campaigning for the vice presidential nomination.
''There's a move under way
Ill make the vice presidency an

-· ·

The talk along Wall Street

10 room house :

lots. Phone 949-431 3.

Herman Grate

"The only way the delegates . "It's .a matter of moral
canmakeuptheirmlnds on the rectitude," I nplained :
various -issues, and thus avoid "Thanks to rule changes, many
a deadlock, is to gel up and of the delegates attending this
walk around when someone is convention are young people.
addressing them."
And Miami Beach is a wicked
The Australian said, " I city where sinful night life and
understand. We have a few turpitude abound.
orators like that In my country
"By keeping the ·convention
too."
in. session all night, the
Later on, tile visitor ex- program chairman keeps these
pressed puzzlement as to why callow youths away from the
the Democrats wentto so much flesh pots and other tern~
, trouble to televise the proceed· lations lllo lurid to mention."
ings and then delayed impor·
The Australian said, !'I
tant business until most view- understand. We have a few
· program chairmen like that in
ers 1\:lt'e asleep.

be tp'8JUd 'em"'CCJ."
The Auatrallan uld,- "I
1aldenland. We have a lew
oowarda In Allllrllla too."

CAPRA OPTIONED
NEW YORK ( UPI )- Buzz
Capra,
a
25-year-old
rlghthanded pitcher, has been
optioned to Tidewater of the
International League by the
New York Meta 10 that he can
benefit from more work.
Capra appeared in 14 games
for the Mets this season, ·
primarily ln relief, and turned
ln a 3-2 record with an earned
nm average of 4.58.

Many Other Items Not listed

4 Door, 6 cyl., std. trans., low mileage. l lacal owner .

alum. cover tor body . Spoclo,lly Priced

basement , ga s furna ce, 200ft.
r iver frontage . Also S room
house wi lh bath . basement,
gas furnace on adjoin ing lot.
Sam Arnold , SyracUse. Ohio;

so

350 cu . in. V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes, rad io, red vinyl Interior, black fin ish. White-wall
tires , like new .

4 BEDROOM

full

1 Extra Nice Hotpoint· Refrlg~rator
99.95
· 1 Kelvi_nator 19 cu. ft. Side-by-Side
Refrtgerator- Freezer Combination
135.00
1 Double Door . . Norge Refrigerator, real
sharp
•
·
65.00
1. ~ngidatre Upright Freezer, good condtfton
Check Our Price
1 ~uble ~or G. E. Refrigerator
60.00
• hNtce Admtral Elec. Range
only 50.00
1 Real Good Gas Range
49.95
1 Square Tu~ Maytag Washer,
All Recondttioned
68.00
1 Sq~a.re :rub Maytag Washer
49.95
1 Frtgtda•re auto. Washer, was 75.00 now 50.00
t Westinghouse Electric Dryer
oo
1·3 pc. ~a!nut Bedroom Suite (like new! aa:oo
1 Oak Dintng Room Suite (with China! 100 oo
1 Red Dinette Set
39.95
4995
1,Grey Dinette Set
1 Small Dinette,
only 1o:oo
1 Set End Tables
3 for 10 00
1 Set Blonde Oak Tables, 3for
3o'oo
,
15:00
1 Aqua ~Ia Bed
1-2 pc. Wtne Co.lor Livl_ng Room Suite
49.95
1-2 pc. Nylon Ltving Room Suite, tan
30.00
1-2 pc. Brown Nylon Living Room Suite
(Realgood)
4995
39.95
1 Sofa Bed, real nice
1 Gold Love. Seat
20.00
I Odd Sola with Slip Covers, only
15:00
I Red Sola Bed
25.00
2 Good used T.V. Sets

4-door sedan, tactory air, V-8 engine, power steering &amp;
brakes, Turbohydramatlc, radla, wheel covers, bumper

V-8 engine, automatic trans ., custom cab, W. Coast
chrome mirrors, chrome frt . &amp; R. Bumpers, 8 ft .

home,

Furniture, ApplianceS and TV

Slicker Price $4552

LOTS in Me igs School District ;
phone 992-6329.
7-7-6tp

------

By DICK WEST
WASIUNGTON (UP!) - In a
preu release thil1 week, Rep.
Otla G. Pike, 0-N..Y., wrote
that Americans would have a
hard time explaining our
political conventions to
foreigners.
Actually, It isn't aU that
difficult.
I happened to have watched
portiona of tile Democratic
National Convention with a
group that included an Austra' llan wbo had only been in this
country a few days.
He frequentlt turned to me
for guidance and It only took a
few words of clarification for
him to ·understand what was
going on.
Or at leu! he said he un·
derstood what was going on.
During the credentials debate, lor example, the Austra·
lian asked me why ,the
delegates were mllllng around
on the floor rather than
listening to the argwnents.
Oratory Highly Persuasive
"You've got to realize that
convention oratory is highly
persuasive," I replied. "If the
delegates paid attention to the
speeches, they would find both
sides equally convincing and
would be unable_to_~e how
to vote. That woull:l Iring the
convention to a complete
standstill.

'l
(' '

l, .

. Dozer &amp; End loader work, ..

LAWN MOWER and small

·For Sal"

~~

,

EARTH MOVING

·

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··~=:::::=:;:::::::====::r;:s:::::::=====~::;::;=-;=~~~=:;;;~~~~
-,-.: - ·· ·

EXPERT·
_

~f

Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Hysell Run ;
phone m -6009.
Real Estate For Sate
JUST
arrived
1973
Starcrafl
CALL
Guy
Neig;er
ror
Building
Music by:
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
7-_
1
2-6tc
,-------------...,
For Rent
Campers - All 1972 units at
Houses.
George Stewart &amp; The
huge discount. We service
6-28-lfc HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
SMALL 3 room furnished
Maverick•
what we sell. Camp Conley _ _ __ _ _ _ _.::_:
985-3529 .
apartment
with
both.
Ideal
5 Piece Bond
Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62, N. of
6-11 -tf c
for one or two working men.
Pt. Pleasant behind Red ,Mobile Homes For ~ · ~ .: 110 Mechanic Street
Completely private. Utllllles
Carpet Inn .
I HAVE now In my possession 1..-nllhed. Phone m-3881 or
FARM - 106-acre ranch type
12_
7tc
CASI-j
paid
lor
all
makes
ana
7_
office machines wt'tlcl'l were
farm , 2 bi!rns, plenty of
m-3134 olter 4 p.m.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
models of mobile homes . water,
placed In the Arthur Ebers7-12-61p - - - - - - - - 32 acres tillable, 20
LARGE
size
refrigerator
.
PhO!'e
area
code
614-423-9531.
1
bi!ch repair shop. Will the
·acres timber, 54 fenced,
COUNTRY HOME
freezer combination ; • ,
.
~- 13-lfc
persons claim ing same , 4 ROOM furnished new apartrolling acres. Beautiful 4NEAR
POMEROY
- One floor , 3 bedrooms, both, fur wooden windows valances, ~·· _...
~
pleese come to the Arthur
bedroom ranch home. all
ment, everything new, on
nace.
Nice
built-In
·kitchen with cook units and blr
36"
wide
;
1
large
size
50
X
10,
2
bedroom
,
priced
Ebersbach residence at 3~2 S.
carpeted and paneled, large
Main hlghwoy In Mason, W.
Recreation
room
and
carport. $17,500.00.
'
.·
aluminum
storm
door
;
26"
reasonably
,
phone
Chester
6th Ave .. Middleport, 0 .
ba th and ut ility room, at Va. Reynolds Flower Shop up
NEW
girl
's
bike
for
parts
only;
985·3379.
within the next 30 doys and
tached garage, basement
near drive-In thoter, phone
• 7-9-6tp
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with stove and
phone 992-3173.
pick them up? After the
with forced air furnace .
m.sw.
refrigerator-freezer . Full basement with garage. All
7-12-3tc
allotted lime, machines will _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7-_
Fenced paddock lor showing
12-6tp
electroc. Less than $25,000.00.
be disposed of.
horses. Sold with all mlnerol
rights. Located 1 mile out of
LOT
7·11·31p 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults GERMAN Shepherd puppies;
' Air Conditioners
can be A.K.C. registered ;
Rutland on Happy Hollow
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
•Awnings
only ; phone m-5247.
males, $35 ; fema les, $25; also
A REVIVAL Is In progress 11
building. 52500.00.
Rd., $28,500. Phone 9'12-3020.
7-11 ·12tp
·Underpinning
1960 Nvilrcury Comet, S100;
The Church ot God, Chester,
7-11 -5tc
COMMERCIAL
0111o, 7:30 p.m. each evening 'l"AND 4 ROUM furnished ari". see Bob Young on Success
CHESH IRE - Business lot with block building on Rt 7
Road near big water tower ; 'complete mobile home
thru July 16th. Evangelisl
BUILDING LOTS
, .
apartments .
phone
Reedsville 667-3512.
Rev . Mark Muncie of Mt. unfurPllshed...
service ~ plus gigantic
WE have several locations. All sizes ond prices.
Phone
9'12-5434.
·
.
·
7-12-6tp 'display of mobile homes
Moriah Church of God.
COUNTRY HOME
4-12-ltc
Special singing each evening.
always available at ...
ON
ROUTE
7
2
bedrooms, both, Plains water Nice
Everybody welcome.
UNFURN ISI-iED - . apartmen· , POODLE puppil!s, Sliver ToV,
kitchen
with
stove
.
Some
paneling: 4 acres of land·. Only
7-11 -4tc
MILLER
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9o:
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-,
$9,500.00.
5443.
.
3962.
. 608 E. Main St.
HELEN·L. TE~FORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
MOBILE HOMES
6-11-11
Pomeroy, Ohio
, ..
FA'lflfi'C' 1NN, Polyester
1220 Washington Blvd.
BUILDERS
.
ONE bedroom troller apart- Ooubleknlts tor leS5. Hun· 4!3-7521
BELPRE, 0.
OPPORTUNITY
ments , Ideal for couples. dreds of Yords. From TupContoct McClure's Polry Isle. pers Plains, pass school, go A ·
Close in, 30 acres, good
I
drainage, Chester water,
m -5241 or m-3436.
I-Htc miles, turn left onto County Auto Sales
good roads, IDEAL lor
HEATI~G
' --------Rd. 50, sign. Between •
homeslles . $26,800.00.
Hockingport and Reedsville,
WHAT A KITCHEN I
PASTURE, phone m-'329.
turn onlo County Rd. 50 near 1971 TOYOTA Corolla 2 dr
If your Mrs. likes to cook,
7;11 ;6tp· Ed en Churc h, s Ign. Ph one 378- sedan, low mileage excelleni
'
Window
then her Mr. ought to see this',
•
6276.
condition,· phone ~2- 702• .
COUNTRY nome , close to
n
•
new modernized kitchen.· 3
Air Conditioner~
7
Forked Run Lake; lrH gas, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __-9-6tp
7-?-6tc
large bedrooms, walk -In
'
Hot Water .Heaters
partly furnished. Reasonable
1965 OLDS '88, $580 ; 19 67
closets, IVi baths, ullllt~
rent; profer retired couple ;
Thunderbird, $875 ; 1970 Ford
room, 'f ull basement , grear.
· Plumbing
references: phone 371-6298. July Price Buster!
Ranger Truck, $2,250; all In
rec . room, 1 acre ground, ir1
Electrical Wor_k
' --------7--7-tfc
good condition; call 742-3437.
town. $28,500.00.
$1,000.00 DOWN
'.
PANTS &amp; JEANS
7-11 -31p
3 BEDROOM houn, carpeted
VI~W
OF
THE
RIVER,
:i
living and dining room,
be rooms, bath , porches ,
SALEI
finished recreation room,
pa t basement, metal roof·, '
Iorge scroened porch, range
Buy
2
Poirund
storage bulldln~ . garage,
and refrigerator Included.
GET
1
PAIR
FREE
$6.900.00.
.
Phone 882· 290~.
992-2'448
BATTLE OF THE
7·13-3tp All kinds, all sizes lor men,
Pomeroy, 0.
BULGE?
..
women, young men, boys
MOSJ ,ANY
.
If
you
are
fighting to provide
-REOU1...~
·and girls. Hurry to ...
)du~ dll&lt;l rt.~l "lTh . For Sail!
enough room for a growing
GoBese Toblets &amp; E·Vap
family •.. Here's a place
PCiMEROY · . ·
"woter pills/' Nelson Drug. dO ALL CROP hirvester, Allis~
· Plus Casing
Ideally
suited. 4 bedroom"
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
j
6-29•30fp . Chalmers; phone 742-3656.
w,
baths,
call
for
par.
7-,-6tp ., ~- .• Phone 9h-21tl
ticulars. $12,800.00.
WANTED - Customers ot
LET US SELL YOUR
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop DEMCO Satellite CB radio with COAL, Limestone, E•celslor ;
3 BEDROOM HOME .
D 104 microphone, S200;
Chesler, Ohio. No experience
Salt Works, E. Mlln St.,
HENRY
E. CLELAND SR.·
necessary.
ph- 992·3364 . .
YOUR DIAL
Pomeroy, Phone m -3891 .
992-7161
N. 2nd Ave.
REI&lt;LTOR
Middleport,
7-11-6lp
7-9-20tp
4-12-tfc : ·
I'HON E m -2259
--~--....._ _ _ __J

10 'TIL 2

all-volunteer job," I 111ld.
"Politicians who have Ded ID
Canada to avoid being drafted
for vice president would then

The Lighter Side

10-The.Daily Sentinel . Mlddleport-Pcm&gt;....,y, 0 .. July 13, 18'/2 .

WANT- ADS
INFORMATION
M . OEAD\.INES .

'

~-·· Min cclntinued to
llhow berlelf :u one of the
better juveaile fiUiel Ill the
East .. abe ipld to Ill lmpreuive 1~-lenlth verdict
ovw O.K. Pll Ill tb8 $21,(110
. Altorla Stake~ at o\qlledllet. It
wit the third COIIMCIItlve
, . _ for the claqlit. tl
llllb Pr!Dce, llllllhe nllimeci
ta.IO.
and
~ lecl fl'l1m lllrt to
flnllb. to Win lhl Pl,l7l 1W

•u•

l

'"

,[
)
j
)

1

I

p.eo,

Jen1J llreldlrtt StUu at
llm!NIIIIb l'lrllllld paid tl80,
Gtui)idlbWU I ...80 wll. .
·In tlle l'llbn at Dalann,
01Jialla (tf.le)
Ubert)'
BeD ,ind i1DJ11t O'Oif plitl

tl.»-atAr'l P

-·t

The search .for new gas supplies
in this country has declined
steadily in the past fifteen years,
the number of exploratory wells
dropping by 50%. Why? Because
producers' costs have risen substantially faster than government-controlled gas prices,
resulting in wholly inadequate
economic incehtives for gas
exploration.
These bills set more realistic
standards for determining gas
prices. They will also assure producers that once pricBs and other

economic terms of contracts have
been approved by the Federal
Power Commission, they will not
subsequently be changed.
H. R. 2513 and S. 2467 are two
. of the best hopes for increasing
gas supplies now before Congress. Help assure their approval.
Write to your Senators and Repre·
sentative today. · Let them know
you are concarned about the
growing energy crisis and urge
them to support these bills. Help
prevent the energy crisis from be·
coming a disaster.

'

4-"
2"NYLON
J649VAWf

·I.Ht/Al
IIIII

•
William J. Keating
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M McCulloch
Delbert L. Latta
William H. Flarsha

UNITED STATES SENATORS
William B. Saxbe
Robert Taft. Jr.
'
UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVES
Clarence J: Brown
Charles A. Mosher
Jackson E. Beus
J ohn F. Seiberling
Thomas L. Ashley
Chalmers P. Wylie
Clarence E. Miller
Frank T. Bow
J. William Stanton
John M. Ashbrook.
Samuel L. Devine
Wayne L. Hays

Charles J Carney
James V. Stanton
Louis Stokes
Charles A. Vanik
William E. Minshs/1
Walter E. Powell

r. ------------.,

,

·TU

'SlOIII DOORS

Valley Lumber &amp;
'

I
I
I

Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
Name
138 North Second Avenue
·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•
Streal __ _ _ __
Please send me a copy
of your booklet
.
"An Action Program
Cily
to Help Correct
the Na1ional
Energy Crisis".
©U~~~~

__ _ · _ __

I
I
A
. __
I
1
L .... __a.;:.s.:::u:_ .. _- -.I
Zip

(.

'.

.,
.,

'

•

•.

'I

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�'

•
Green Upset 4-2.

..

ELBERFELDS I·N.POMEROY

RACINE - Racine upset
Green 4-2 behind the tl1ree-hit
Cloudy arid continued warm pitching of Jimmy Powell iii
and humid today. tonight and Little League action Tuesday .
',
Friday with thundershowers · sCott Wolfe batted in three of
•
~t Pomeroy Mayor William
likely today and a chance of the four Racine runs with a
Bnronick Wednesday night thundershowers continuing
I
,torfeited three bonds and fined tonight and Friday. High today bases loaded walk and a,single
while
Mark
Sayre
had
two
ic en defendants.
85 to 90. Low tonight 65 to 70. singles. Mike Huddleston
~ Forfeiting bonds were David High Friday in the low to mid
"
_.., --..-.-..-....-.--.-.-.---..:..-.-_.....-.._,..,.
_,:,
played an outstanding game at --~--~-_......_...._....._..
il&gt;fartin, 30, Westerville, $50, I!Os.
shortstop .
.l'eckless operation ; Richard
Sale!
Anderson, hurling for Green,
:llogg, West Colwnbia, $25,
also allowed but three hits.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
~nt oxicatio n , and George
Green
hitters were AndersOn, a
..,,
I.
Ohio extended outlook, ·
~sto, 22, Pomeroy, $18.70,
Saturday through Monday. ! home run, Graham a double,
Lingerie Dep.artment . 1st Floor.
&lt;lpeeding.
A special group of blouses selected from our
Full slips and half ~l ips.
and
Blankenship
a
single.
Variable
cloudiness
during
·
: Fined were Floyd Pullins, 18,
Polyester and cotton . also
regular stock for th is sale - including long
nylon . Siles 9 mo. to 12 mo.
the period wilh a chance of
'l&gt;omeroy. 110 and cos ts,
s leeves, short s leeves and sleeveless styles SALE 6.49
10,00 BODY SHIRTS
· 2 to 6~&lt; and 7 to 14.
scattered thundershowers.
~reckless operation, and $10 for
Veterans Memorial Hospital
prints, solids. checks and paisleys.
'
SALE 5.89
9.00 BODY SHIRTS
Daytime highs In the I!Os.
:excessive speed; Mark Miller,
ADMITTED
Jenny
·
Regular and extra sizes.
Friday-Saturday Sale
SALE 5.19
8.00 BODY SHIRTS
Lows at night mostly in !he Newmyer, Wilkesville; Freda
)8, .Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
2.00
Girls
Slips
1.00
SALE 4.49
. 7.00 BODY SHIRTS
....._.._.._ ..................
...... ,_.., _..
2.50 Girls Slips . . US
reckless operation; Gary
60s.
Wya tt , Middleport; Leona
SALE 3.84
6.00 BODY SHIRTS
3.00 Girls Slips . - uo
'Simpson, 21, Pomeroy, $.\ and
Kennedy, Middleport ; Maggie
·costs, running a red light;
Rosenkranz, Long Boltom ;
•= · - - - ............. 36 dresses in this group - long sleeve and .,..,_.._,._.._.,_,.__.._..,_~.-1"0---.o...-- .............. o - ;Herman Hoffner, 77, Pomeroy ,
TRACTOR ('ULL
Eve lyn Moore, Syracuse ;
Boys and Girls
s leeveless styles . A ~sort ed fabrics and styles Mens ·54.95 Acrylic Knit
·$5 and costs, failure to yield
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Archie F. M~Kinney, Rutland,
and
reg
ular
styles
.
junior
•rightofway; Sammy Little, 36, Tuppers Plains Community and Billy Cornell, Portland .
:Middleport, $15 and costs, no Club will sponsor a garden
DISCHARGED - Ralph
:'operator's license , and $10 for tractor pull beginning at 6 p.m. Macomber, Charles Leonard,
intoxication; Hobar t Raub, 64, Saturday on the grounds near Berry Stewart, Wanda Swartz,
Solid colors and solid colors with contrast color
Printed cotton jac kets with
,-Pomeroy, $5 and costs, failure the club's new building here: Sharon Cunningham, Ches ter
1 soft
flanneJ lining . All
trim .
·
:to yield right of way, and Seven classes will be included Foutty and Jessie White.
washable . Sizes 18 mon ths,
Sizes- small, med ium and large .
Save this weekend on Women s Dresses 2 years and 3 years.
~ Darrell Edwards, 24, Hartford,
in the competition, The tire size
Friday· .saturday Sale
Regular U.SO
selected from our . regular stock. Hundreds to
;·$5 and costs, running a red is 23-a.S0-12. Refreshments will
INFANT DIES
choose from - bea ut iful styles. Ail easy care
~ )ight.
be available on the grounds.
RACINE
Graveside
.•
fabrics. Junior, m isses and ha lf sizes. About 300
The public is invited.
services for Scott Franklin
to
c hoose from . All famous name brands .
j
•
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
;Sleepy Driver
Smith, Racine, who died at 11--.--.... ---- ,.._.._._._.._.._.._...__.,__._,._..._.._ir------~-..-.~·------~~~....JCOSTS NOTED
birth at St. Joseph Hospital in
Clean Up Sale!
Sale! Friday and Saturday
Criminal costs during fiscal
Parkersburg, will be held at 'II
reeks His Car
year 1972 exceeded all
r
a.m. Friday at the Letart Falls
MEN'S - YOUNG MEN'S
estimates
causing $179,802.03
On tile 2nd Floor
:: A car was demolisliM in a
Cemetery . Besides the parents,
: Single-car accident at 15 a. m. in additional funds to be spent gra ndp are nts surviving are
Sizes 32 to 40 - 42 to 52
: today on U. S. Route '33, five- for subsidies beyond the 1.5 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith,
Rl!--a li s tic
l oOking
polyethylene fl owers.
•ienths of a mile south of the Rt. million allotted by the state Portland, and Bert' Teaford,
Sizes 28 to 38. Good se lection of slyl.e s and colors .
REG. 21. 00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 12.S9
, State Auditor
While They Lasl
: j and 33 intersection the Meigs legislature
Racine. Of!icialing will be the
REG.
20.00
SWIMWEAR
SALE
11.99
,' County
Sheriff 's
Dept. Joseph T. Ferguson reports. Rev. Charles Norris.
REG . 19.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 11.39
SALE 2.50
3.95 SWIM TRUNKS •
The subsidies disclributed to
REG. 17.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 10.19
reported.
SALE
3.00
4.95
Meigs
County
totaled
$796.75.
SWIM
TRUNKS
·
REG. 16.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 9.59
James Richard Cundiff, 34,
REG . 1S.OO SWIMWEAR
SALE 8.99
SALE 3.50
5.95 SWIM TRUNKS ·
' Racine, Rt. I, driving south on
.
REG . 14.00 SWlMWEAR
SALE 8.J9
;)3 left the highway on the left
CALLED TO NILES
REG . 13.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 7.79
(Continued from page I)
REG . 12. 00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 7.19 .J-illle Bo.ys S1.9S
.:side, traveled 70 feet and hit a
Mr . and Mrs. Lester R.
REG
.
11.00
SWIMWEAR
SALE 6.59
promising
left-camped
at
his
·Culvert. Cundiff said he fell Russell , 432 Spring Ave.,
REG
.
10.00
SWIMWEAR
SALE S.99
:· asleep at the wheel. There . Pomeroy, and John H. Russell doorstep daylong Wednesday.
REG
.
9.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE S.39
.:;.ere no injuries, and no of Atlanta, Ga., have been Bearing a VietCong flag , about
REG . 8.00 SWIMWEAR
SALE 4.79
Boy s sizes 6 to 20 . Stretch tr unks'- denims and
REG . o.OO SWIMWEAR
SALE 3.49
·;~ltation was issued.
· called to Niles, Ohio, due to the 100 militant leftists took over
cotton
pr ints.
.• · Meanwhile , a 14-year-old death of their son-in-law and the lobby of his luxury hotel
A good selection of styles and co lors.
·girl, a rwiaway from her home brother-in-law, Robert Lee and demanded to confront the
Sizes 2 to 6. Solid colors .
senator
with
their
charge
that
st ripe5 . Permanent press .
;'In New Bremen, Ohio, was Schultz, Sr., husband of Betty
he
had
modified
his
demand
lor
.. flicked up by the depariment. Russell Schultz. Death was due
Boys 1.95 Swim Trun~s
Sale 1.35
Polye ster and cotton- Knits in solid colors and prints
an unconditional pullout from
·.and Is in custody .
to a heart attack .
Sizes 2 to 6x and 7 to 14.
Boys
2.
95
Swim
Trunks
Sale
2.00
Vietnam. Against the worried
Boys 3.95 Swim Trunks
Sale 2.50
advice of the Secret Service,
MEETING CALLED
2.49 Skorts and Shorts
Sale 1.68
·.
RUTLAND - A county-wide McGovern descended to the
4.98
Skor
l
s
and
Shorts
Sale
2.88
Boys S2.95
class meeting will be held at 2 lobby to meet them. A shouting
Famous Make
5.98
Skorts
and
Shorts
Sale
3.58
p. m. Sunday at the Rutland match ensured for 30 minutes .
3.50 Skorls and Shorts
Tonight, July 13
Sale 2.18
I
Later, he told an interviewer
MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S
8.98 Skorls and Shorts
NOT OPEN
Community Church with Okey
Sale 4.18
I
that
memories
of
the
Chicago
3.98
Skorts
and
Shorts
Sale
2.l8
Ahart serving as leader. The
1.98 Skorts and Shorts
Sale 1.48
violence had driven him lo
public is in vi ted.
Sizes J to 16 · 100 per cent
meet
his
challengers.
He
said
Friday &amp; Saturday
acry li c khit . shor1 sleeves.
Soli d co lors and heather tone shades. Fits s izes 10
Pre-Teen Junior Sizes 5 to 16
the encounter was "a Sunday
July 14-15
So l id colors.
throu
gh 13.
·
KLUTE
Friday.Saturday Sale
afternoon excursion compared
PICNIC SET
(Technicolor,
75 per cent Hi Bulk orion ac r ylic, 25 per cent
The annual picnic of Ohio to that."
Jane Fonda
st
r et ch nylon . Stock up on your needs for now
The Secret Service's m1ease
Valley Commandery will be
Donald Sutherland
and back-to -sc hool wear .
held at 2 p. m. Sunday at the was reinforced by the arrest
carloons
.SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Friday-Saturday Sale
Racine Shrine Park. There will near McGovern's hotel of two
2.98 SPORTSWEAR I· . . . .
. . . SALE 1.78
men
,
members
of
a
black
be barbecued chicken and a
3.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE 2.J8
One Group
nationalist group called the
potluck dinner.
4.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE 2.88
..-..-.-.---..-.._....._.___......_.,
Republic of New Africa, by
5.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE 3.58
6.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE 4.18
agents who found handguns in
Special Group
7.98
SPORTSWEAR
SALE 4.78
their
automobile.
The
two
were
.
.
8.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE S.J8
TIGERS TAKEN
held
under
$100,000
bail
on
a
9.98
SPORTSWEAR
SALE s.ts
~.
I
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse charge of ca rrying concealed
SALE 7.78
.12.98 SPORTSWEAR
Regula r and sl im sizes 8 to
Little League team knocked oil weapons .
14.98 SPORTSWEAR
SALE 8.85
18. So lid colors . Permanent
Tonight &amp; Friday
De nim s · cotton and polyesler bl ends .__ Brushed
previously-und efeated
pres s. Abou t 69 pairs tci
McGovern 's staff told UP! of
July 13-14
de nims . Sizes 29 to 38 waist . Regular price $5 .95
se ll .
Pomeroy Tigers 5-3 Tuesday plans to undertake a bold
While
They
Last
,
Dauble Feature Program
to $9 .95 . Selecled fro m our regular stock.
night at Syracuse in a non- campaign by mail to solidi $1
LiHie Fauss
Friday · Saturday Sale
leag'Ue match behind th e million contributions of $25
and BIG HALSY
Sl eeveless and short sleeves - solid colors ai'ld stripes. Sizes
hurlin g of Rick Hubbard .
each. The drive, using extenRobert Redford
2 lo 14.
Michael J. Pollard
sive mailing lists McGovern
2.29 KNIT TOPS
SALE 1.48
(R i
has compiled since his first
NOT
AT
MEIGS
2.49
KNIT
TOPS
SALE 1.68
Plus
2.98 KNIT TOPS
BOYS' SIZES 2 TO 7
A physical fitness program race lor Congress !rom So uth
SALE 1.98
"LAST MERCENARY"
2.79
KNIT
TOPS
SALE
1.7S
indicated Wednesday to start Dakota in 1953, is to be an
Friday · Saturday Sale!
3.49 KNIT TOPS
SALE 2.18
next Monday at Meigs High enlarged version of the one
4.98
KNIT
TOPS
SALE 2.88
SATURDAY
was at Southern High instead. which collected $4.5 million
S.98 KNIT TOPS
July 15
SALE 3.58
from 160,000 people in his
Doubl e Feature
primary campaign.
" PLAZA SUITE"
LOCAL TEMPS
(Color) ·
UnJtnown in its effeCt was an
The temperature in down·
Walter Mathau
iGP)
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. announceme nt by Wallace
Fashion styled slacks
Also
Thursday was 81 degrees under Wednesday night that he would
in
a good selection ot
not run against Nixon and McTHE HORSEMEN
Cottons · cotton and dacron blends . av ri l
sunny skies.
solid co lor s and
Cotton, polye st er and nylon. Sma l l. medium, large and extra
!Color I
Govern on a third-party ticket.
large si zes.
and cotton blends - 100 per cent acetates.
Omar Shar if
patterns.
Analysts
differed
on
whether
ON
TUB
E
l eigh Taylor. Young
Dots · Floral patterns . Geometries .
(GPI
The Soulhern Ohio Crusade Wallace's absence would help . 2.98 TOPS
SALE 1.78
Novelty patterns.
will be on Channel 5 Cable TV the Republican or the
3.50 TOPS
SALE 2.18
Democratic
ticket.
J.98
TOPS
SALE
2.38
at 7:30 p. m. today.
4.98 TOPS
SALE 2.N
5.98 TOPS
SALE 3.5s
2.95 and 3.25 Slacks
7.00 TOPS
SALE 4.18
7.98 TOPS
SALE ua
SALE 2.00
Run, Skip, Jump or Drive . .. But Hurry to
9.00 TOPS
SALE 5.38
.... -.._____._..._..
, ,..,, .........
9.98 TOPS
SALE He
3.95 and 4.50 Slacks

ln·
.. Pomeroy

•

·FRIDAY __
AND -SATU-R.OAY~ SALE ____
OPEN BO'FH NIGHTS 'TIL. 9
______________...
.

.

Sale! Women's Body Shirts

GIRLS SLIPS.

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

--- ---

---------.....

SALE! WOMEN'S LONG DRESSES

I .......

·
-·
---i
Sale! Women's ·();~;

--~---· ~~

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS

JACKETS

McGovern, Eagleton Launch 15-Week Campaign
MIAMI BEACH • (UP!) George S. McGovern launched
his quest for the presidency
tQday, trying to convince
dubious Democrats that
bloodshea in Vietnam and
economic !ears at home can
carry ~hem to victory over
President Nixon .
Bul with only 15 weeks
remaining before the election,
the restructuring of the old
Democratic alliance still
eluded McGovern and littleknown Thomas F. Eagleton of
Missouri, the freshman senator
he chose as vice presidential
ca ndidate to add sparkle lo the
ticket.
Demon st rating their
divisions .to the very end,

delegates to the Democratic
convention drifted home today,
tired of oratory and clearly
concerned about McGovern's
chances of upsetting a popular
President who believes both
issues are working in his favor .
In a plea lor unity,
McGovern appeared before the
convention at 3 a.m. EDTafter most of the television
audience had gone to bed-and
embraced Edward M. Kennedy
and tiie men he had defeated
for the nomination.
Kennedy Rouses Crowd
First Kennedy roused the
huge crowd with a oldfashioned partisan· roll call of

Nixon's stewardship.
Then came McGovern, and
many-but not all- the delegateswho had been serious and
busineslike for three days
broke into shouts and cheers.
Recalling that Nixon had
won the presidency with a
11 Secret plan," to end the war,·
McGovern said 20,000 young
Americans had needlessly
been killed since then-and the
war goes on .
"I have no secret plans for
peace,'' he said, ''I have a
public plan ... Within 90 da~s of
my inauguration, every
American soldier and every
American prisoner will be out
Democratic he r oes, and a of the jungle and out of their
denunciatwn of President cells and back home in

SALE OF WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR

. ~-.

·w

a1 y

2.50

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

McGovern

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXV NO. 63

·.r ----..

SALE! BOYS' SWIM TRUNKS

.. MEIGS THEATRE

SPORTSWEAR SALE

1

,

I

___

Bovs 3.50

MASON DRIVE-IN
'

1.00 ORLON SOCKS .

HONDO SLACKS

,

~~-~

Young Men's Flare Slacks

GIRLS .KNIT TOPS

1.00

---- --·

FLARE LEG
SLACKS

WOMEN'S SLEEVELESS TANK TOPS
ALSO SHORT SLEEVE KNIT TOPS

4.00

45 INCHES WIDE

DRESS MATERIALS

SALE PRICED

69e____
YARD

Sale Starts Today!

SALE 2.50

INFANTS PLAYWEAR - SUNSUITS - SUNDRESSES
Sizes 6 mo . to 18 mo. and 2 to 4 years.

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

3 .'18 Infants Wear

3.50 Infants Wear
5.98 Infants Wear

6.00 Infants Wear
2.98 Infants Wea r

7.50 Infants Wear
4.50 Infants Wear

7.00

lnl~nts

Wear

-- - -

S.OO Infants Wear

_...,-

OF SELECTED GROUPS OF DRESSES
1 GROUP DRESSES, VALUES TO '20.00 .............. :..... ~.... NOW '5.00
1 GROUP BETTER DRESSES, ............... ;.. ...... REDUCED TO 40% OFF

Mens Banlon

-----·
----

.,._._,
-~~---~-----· ~.....

2.38
2.18
3.58
3.58
1.78
4.38
2.68
4.18
2.88

-~---

SALE! BESTFORM BRAS
Regular 3.00 Fullv Padded Bras . . . . Sale 2 lor s:oo
Regular 3.00 Fiberfill Lightly Padded Bras
Sale 21or 5.00
Regular J.OO and 3.50 Tricot Bra s wilh
Petal Inse rts . Stretch

Sale 21or 5.00

Other SWtUiler Oear~ce Sale Specials
BATHING SUITS
% TO '12 OFF

COTTON &amp; POLYESTER
DUSTERS, % PRICE

. ALL MATERNITY CLOTHES ................................... NOW lh PRICE

ALL SHORTS. TOPS, PPNTS SUITS, CULLOTTE ANO HOT .PANTS SETS,
'REDUCED To •••• •• •••••••••••·•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• 400170 OFF

••·.

••
•

•'
•
•'

i.O LA'S
. &lt;..

DRESS SHOP &amp; BEAUTY SALON
234 E. MAIN
POMEROY

-------------------------·
Sale! Bestform

Long Leg Playback Girdles
Regular 7.00 Girdles • • - · • .· . Sale 4.99
(Small. rytedium, large . extra large)
Regular 8.00 Girdles' · . . • . . . Sale 5.99
! Reglllar and extra large sizes)

Dress Socks
Qne size fits all sizes
10 through 13. Big
selection of black and
solid colors.
Friday-Saturday Sale

2

pairs
-

1.00

w-•

Furniture Department
3rd Floor
$69.00 and $79.00

CHAIRS

Sale $49
Swivol rockers . rtclhls
and boudoir chairs.

SALE! QUINTERO CLOTH
Used for Bedspreads · Draperies . Slipcovers •
Clothing. A fine all purpose cloth . 48 inches wide .
solid colors. Regularly $1 .19 yard .
Friday · Saturday Sale

2 yards 1.00
100% Polyester

DOUBLE KNIT YARD GOODS
60 inches wide · Jacquard knits and diamond
pattern and fancy designs. White. For dresses .
slacks · shorts . suits .

3.99 yard
See Our New Selection

TABLE COVERS

COAST TO COAST by bicycle are Dan Scharf, Long Island, N.Y., and Uoyd Garten, Staten
Island, N. Y., 1-r. The two boys were in Pomeroy Tuesday boarding a bus to Louisville, Ky.,
alter they wrecked their bicycle on SR 7. They plan to purchase a new bike in Louisville arid
continue from there to California .

ews.• in Briefi
By unued Press International
MIAMI BEACH - THE COMBAT OF THE Democra~c ..
National Convention ended Thursday and the business of uniting
the warring factions began with Democratic State Cbairman
William A. Lavelle making the first moves. Lavelle urged all
Democrats to get behind Sen. George McGovern, the party
standard-bearer who he said could carry Ohio with the help of
three factors. '
Lavelle said McGovern's chances in Ohio would depend on
the situation in Vietnam, the state of IIJ.e economy and the ef!ectiveness
of young people at the time of the election.. "The
,
.
senators freshness, newness of approa~h ,?"d credibihty w1ll
come across and enable him to carry Ohio, Lavelle told newsmen.

ELBERFELDS IN POM E.Rov ·

Victory
Expected

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. - PRESIDENT NIXON
prepared to welcome his favorite Democrat, John B. Connally,
home !rom a round-the-world mission today and give him a
"very important" new government job.
The President disclosed in his last news conference two
weeks ago that he had another· job In mind for the former
Treasury secretary and Texas governor, who returned Tuesday
!rom a 35-&lt;lay tour that took him to 15 nations for conferences
with foreign leaders. The President did not Immediately disclose
details of the new assignment.
CINCINNATI, OHIO - A U. S. APPEALS COURT has
delayed until at leas! Monday an order that the Detroit Bawd of
Educa tion buy buses to be used in integrating the city 's largely
black schools with those in 52 predominantly white suburban
school districts.
The U. S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals Tuesday issued a
temporary stay of an order' by U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth
that 295 buses be purchased for use in September. The order
came on the day Roth had set as the deadline for ordering the
buses. The temporary stay remains in effect until at least
Monday when a three-judge panel of the appellate court will
hear arguments by the state of Michigan.
REYKJAVI&amp;, ICELAND - BOBBY FISCHER stayed in
bed, so once again the world chess championship was in doubt.
The 29-year.(lld American challenger !ailed to show for his
second game against titleholder Boris Spassky of Rusaia to
protest te levision cameras in the hall where they ate playing. ·
Referee Lothar Schmid a~arded the game to Spass'ky,
putting the Russian ahead two games to zero. Fischer challenged
Schmid's ruling and the matter went to a conunittee today.

ON THE 1st FLOOR
An excellent selection of oval shapes _ rounds •
oblongs. All permanent press. Solid colors . neat
patterns· needlepoints. Select the color and 5t 1
that's right for your table.
Ye

response to his recent public
invitation to residents to ex·
press their complaints about
U1e district. The invitalion
fo llowed the second failure last
spring of a new school tax levy.
Hargraves has indicated that
he feels that the tax was turned
down by voters, not necessarily
because of the money involved
but, rather, because of complaints that residents may
have on operations in !he
district.
He invites residents to
continue writing letters expressing the areas of their
concern so that the problems
can be studied and improvements made. He emphasized that residents need
not sign their letters . So far,
letters have indicated a diverse
area of problems , the
superintendent
said.
John L. Mora, 117 Kerr St.,
Pomeroy, a teacher in the
Meigs Local School District, is
one of over 50 high school math
teachers from as far away as
California and Italy attending
the 15th consecutive National
Science Foundation
Approximately 446 farmers
Mathematics Institute' at the
Meigs County have received
in
University of Vermont in
land
se t-aside program
Burlington.
The summer institute, which payments totaling $1221650 in
is part of a nationwide the first two weeks of July - an
program to train mathematics average of $275 each - acteachers, is entirely supported cording to Herbertl E. Shields,
by funds from the National County Executive Director for
Science Foundation . Tuition is the Agricultural Stabilization
free and students receive a and Conservation Service
weekly cost-of-living stipend (ASCS).
By the end of the month, the
which allows them to attend
total
will be about $130,000 to
the session at no cost. Subjects
481
farmers
, Shields predicted.
at this year's sessions are
Nationwide, approximately
functions, calculus, statistics
750,000
cotton, feed grain and
and probability and geometry.

Mora At
Institute

1.69

SKIRTS - SHIRTS - SKORTS

,

I

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

Ten vacancies existed today
on 'the teaching staff of ·the
Meigs Local School District,
George Hargraves, superintendent, said today . Three of
th e 10 were in specia l
education.
Of nine special ed ucation
classes, including three each
on the grade school, junior high
and senior high school levels,
three need teachers. The seven
other vacancies are in a
variety of dep artme nts,
Hargraves said.
The superintendent disclosed
also today that he has received
a dozen or so letters in

99~

KNIT SPORT SHIRTS

•

Teachers Needed

GIRLS SKORTS AND SHORTS

SALE

defeat. Shouts punctuated
every Kennedy sentence. He
said the convention had' met .
"the test of greatness" by
nominating McGovern.
McGovern's own reception
was enthusiastic but 1\ss
electric.
Returns to Theme
He retutned to the themeuncompromising opposition to
America's p_articipation in
Vietnam's war- that had led to
his dismissal as an "one-issue
candidate" when he announced
his for the presidency 18
months ago.
He also chided the adminis.tration's refusa l to propose tax
reform-an issue championed
(Conl!nued on page 12)

Three are in Special Educatio11
Classes: More Letters Invited

~.

.

as party chainnan. O'Brien
has strong ties with the party's
old guard and McGovern had
asked him to stay on.
Labor's disquiet with McGovern stretches back to votes
cast years ago in favor of rightto-work laws, outlawing the
closed shop, and to his
references to ~~ union bosses" in
his primary campaign against
Hwnphrey and Sen. Henr~ M.
Jackson of Washington,
another longtime favorite of
the union movement.
Kennedy - .the man AFL.CJO
President George Meany most .
would bave liked to have seen ·
nominated-drew a thunderous
roar when he stepped before
the convention to urge Nixon's

enttne

FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1972

1f2 -PRICE

SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRTS

in its view than McGovern's
own Senate record. The darkbrowed Missourian apparently
was chosen because of his
urban background, his com..
patibility with McGovern's
own Views, his impeccable
record as a big-vote getter and
his Roman Catholic faith.
TomWbo-? .
Eagleton acknowledged that
he was unknown outside his
home state. "I'm Tom who-?"
he laughed with reoorters.
, In yet another blow to
McGovern's hopes of getting
mobilizing organized labor and
other disenchanged elements
of the party behind his candidacy, Lawrence 'F. O'Brien
S&lt;lid he would no longer serve

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meigs-Mcuon Area

SWIM TRUNKS

.,.,

fiance of McGovern and some
in fun .
While Eagleton won a
majority o( 1, 74f.81 votes with
ease on the first ballot, 407
votes went to Frances "S~ssyu
Farenthold , 222 went to Sen.
Mike Gravel of Alaska and 107
to former Massachusetts Gov.
Endicott Peabody .
McGovern settled on the
Eagleton, 42, after first offering the nomination to three
other Senate colleagues Kennedy, Abraham A. Ribicoff
of Connecticut, who turned it
down on grounds that at 62 he
was too old ; and Sen. Walter F.
Mondale of Minnesota.
Eagleton has a voting record
rated by the AFL.CIO as better

•

•

I

SALE 399

America
where
they
belong .. .let us choose life, not
death."
At home, he said, Nixon h!ld
given the nation three years of
"stagnation and a rising level
of joblessness ... the most false
and wasteful economics."
His first and highest priority,
he promised, "will be to insure
that every American able to
work has a job to do."
Battle Is Uphfil
McGovern's battle for the
convention's support was
uphill to the very end. Even his
handpicked running-mate had
to fight for his nomination. No
fewer than 74. names were
nominated from the floor to
oppose Eagleton-aome in de-

:~:::t.=:=:=:=:=:=:~:::::::::::::::::::::x::::;:;::::::::::::::;::::::;::

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Monday at 8
p.m. at the high school.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extende4 outlook,
Sunday lbrough Monday.
· Warm wflb a chance of
dally showers mainly over
the southern secllona.
Daytime high temperatures
LOCAL TEMPS
Ia tbe low to mid 80s.
The temperature in down- Overnlgbl low temperatures
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. In the mid lOs.
Friday was 8:1 degrees under
IIUilny skies.
I p

..

l

MIAMI BEACH (UPI) Looking fresh after just two
hours sleep, George S.
McGovern went promptly to
work today and predicted "~
dramatic . and sweep 1 ~g
v1ctori ~n ./ 1 ~ Ncampa 1gn
agJamt
s f' eshl en ftxton .be.mg
us tve ours a er
sent on the campaign trail to
the cheers of 3,000 Democratic
convention delegates at the
final gavel of their four-&lt;lay
meeting, the South Dakota
senator met with congressional
and other Democratic leaders.
AI the traditional "unity
breakfast" that comes on the
morning
alter
each
Democratic Convention ends,
the newly crowned presidential
nominee and his vice
presidential running mate,
Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton of
Misso uri , sounded upbeat
themes on how, with a united
party, they could oust Nixon
from office.
McGovern told reporters he
got two hours sleep, but both he
and Eagleton looked alert and
refreshed.
Both stressed at the breakfast gathering at the Fountainebleau Hotel that only with
all elements of the party
working together would Nixon
be defeated . With cooperation,
they said, there was no doubt
about the outcome.
"We're going to win one of
the most swee ping and
dramatic victories in the
country," said McGovern.
He pledged to mesh . his
widely praised organization of
volunteers with the regular
Democratic party apparatus
while striving' to reach an
accommodation with big labor
- which opposed McGovern's
nomination and his threatened
to sit out the election.

In conne ction wit h the
problem of getting the tax levy
passed, a public meeting has
been called for August 14 at the
junwr high school auditorium
in Middleport, following the
regular board of education
meeting that evening.
Hargraves stressed that
residents will be given an
opportunity to air the ir coniplaints and to ask any
questions they might have
pertaining to the district at that
meeting.
Mea nwhil e, the superin·
tendent said Thursday he has
compiled a 39 page report on
dress code which has been
turned over to the board of
education for study prior to
their August meeting . Material •
in the report was gathered
from various local and area
soW'ces.

/

MAUREEN HENNESSY, 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas HeMessy , Pomeroy, and a student at Meigs High
School, was caught by The Sentinel camera just before she
left Pomeroy Thursday enroute to Dayton where she will
compete In the Miss Ohio Teen-Ai!er Pageant at the Sheraton
Dayton Hotel in Dayton. She was accompanied by her
parents. Mr: Hennessy returned home and Mrs. Hennessy
stayed in Dayton to serve as one of the pageant chaperones.
Ml8a Henneesy ill aponaored In lhe pageant by the Racine
Home National Bank, The Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,·
the Pomeroy National Bank and the Citizens National Bank .

Set-aside Subsidy Paid Early
wheat producers were mailed a
total of $850 million in ex·
pedited preliminary payments
in time for the checks to arrive
in producers hands on July 1.
Payments under the setaside programs are made to
farmers who agree to set aside
part of their land !rom
production in order to meet a
national objective of balancing
supply and demand in certain
commodities.
These payments help to
offset the loss of returns from
cropland that otherwise would

Two Youths in Capital
Two area 4-H'ers , Steven
.Stanley and Janice Holter of
Meigs County, are attending a
Cit izen sh ip Education
Program in Washington, D. C.
at the National 4-H Center
highlighted by tours of the
Capital and discussions and
workshops on leadership.
Stanley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley, lives In
Harrisonville, where he is a
member of the Harcisonvllle
Boys 4-H Club. He is president
of the Meigs County· Junior
Fair Board Wld belongs to the
Junior Leadership Club. He
has been in 4-H for 10 years and
has participated In State Fair
Activities several times.
Miss Holter is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter of
Five Points. She is a member
of the Five Point Star Stitchers
4-H Club, the Meigs County
Leadership Club, tile Junior
Fair Board Wld the Meigs
County oetter Uvestock Qairy
4-H Club. She has been in·
volved in ·4-H for the past nlne
years aria has been W1he State
Fair with her work.
'
The Citizenship Short Course
Trip, which rJW !rom July 9 to
July 15, is sponsored by the
Citizens National Bank In
Middleport and the Meigs'
County 4-H Advisory Committee.

PICNIC SET
' Tlie annu~ pic(\ic of ,the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club
will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the home of Miss
Freddie Houdashelt.

EVANGELIST COMING
Dorothy Overton will be the
evangelist at a "Miracle
Revival" to be held at 7:30p.m.
Mondsy at the Salvation Army,
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
The public 11 lnvl~.

STEVEN STANLEY

JANICE HOLTER

be used for income-yielding
production , and on which the
farmer is obliged to contlnue to
pay taxes and apply needed
conservation steps. Payments
to producers are limited to
$55,000 per person for each of
three crops, feed grain, wheat,
and cotton, under the
Agricultural Act of 1970.
Nationally, total paymenis
are expected to be about $3.7
billion . Total 1972 farm setaside program payments · in
Meigs County are expected to
be about $130,000.
The expedited !arm program
payments are made possible
by streamlined procedures
inaugurated in 1970 by ASCS.
The acti on enabled farmers to
receive the entire payment due
them in the 1970 and 1971
programs six to eight weeks

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Betty Adams,
Mason ; Eunice Will, Syracuse;
Betty Conkle, Cheshire ; Ellen
Stewart, Middleport ; Sara
Bush, Letart; Cynthia Zech,
Parkersburg; Kenneth VIning,
Pomeroy; Elizabeth Gilkey,
Shade; Elmer NoweU, Portland ; Frances Philson,
Racine; Mary Ann Pierce,
Pomeroy ; Daniel Stanley,
Albany and Barbara Marshall,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Connie
Mash, Lucille Lambert, Bill
Cornell, Rex Argabrite and
Maggie Gilmore.

earlier than ever before.
These early payments help
many producers reduce their
need for long term credit and
cut the amount of interest paid .
The now of cash at this time
again will be of major
significance to rural communities and the U. S.
agricultural economy, USDA
o!licials said.

First Meeting

At Riverview
Next Tuesday
Apublic meeting, the first of
several planned to discuss a
2.75 bond issue to be voted on
next month in the Eastern
Local School District, has been
set for 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Riverview Elementary School.
The first public session on
the matter had originally been
scheduled for Monday but was
changed to Tuesday due to a
conflict of another meeting .
Voters of the Eastern
District will go to the pollil on
Tuesday, Aug. 15, to decide
upon the new bond issue which
would provide funds for a
. building program in the·
dislrict. The building prog~am
will be discussed at the
Tuesday public meeting. Other
sessions are planned later In ·
the Tuppers Plains and Chester
communities.

Tech Training Institute Funded
.~

WASHINGTON - The Ap·
palachian Regio nal Commission (ARC) has informed
lOth District Representative
Clarence E. Miller of the approval of a $445,831 grant for
construction of a comprehensive Health Training
Institute of the Hocking
Technical College at Nelsonville.
The funds will assist in the
construction of a new health
careers building ilnd to expand
the school's allied health
program c urri c ulum .
two
health
Presently,
programs are offered, practical nursing and en-

vironmental h~alth technology,
The addition of three new
health courses at Hocking
Technical was disclosed · Qnly
last week as Rep. Miller and
the Appalachian Conunisslon
announced the awarding of a
$57,000 grWlt to help inltlate Wl
associate degree nursing
program, a medical records
technician pr9gram, and a
physiciWlS assistant program.
According to John Ught,
J)resident of the college, the
Health Training Institute will
eventually offer enrollees
courses In as many as 18 or 19
medically • rela~ fields.

'
The State of Ohio • ill provlding1 $362,~20 to the
construction and course
expension projeCt. Total
cost of that project is set
at $808,000.

Rep. Miller said the new
health programs to be offered
at the school "are In concert
with a number of related ef·
forts aimed at broadening the
availability of better health
services and health delivery
throughout Southeulern
Ohio ." Miller specifically
signaled" out the need for.
. "ex'panded educational oppor!unitiel In the ~ of ,

emergency health care." The
new Health Training Institute
is expected to offer courses to
train emergency medical
technicians.
. The ARC also WlnOWlced the
approval of a $83,109 grant to
the Ohio University CoUege of
Education for the :fifth year
continuation of a mental
retardation e;aluation
program in a scven-:uunty
area of Southeastern Ohio. The
program began In July, 11111,
and Includes the counties of
Hocking, VInton, Meigs,
Athena, Jackson, Gallla and
Lawrence.'

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