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· ~·

AMA.NDA PANDA

-•

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

COUNT HOW

A RABBIT/

MAN'/ THINGS!
PULL. OOT OF

M'/ HAT."

.

THAT'S

CAMPSITES AT ROYAL OAK PARK - Seven.years ago Horace Karr opened his Royal
Oak Park near Pomeroy with 60 campsites. Today there are 230, with 60 of them served by
sewer and water hookups. Weekend campers have to get their reservations in early. Ad·
vertised nationally in outdoor type publications, Royal Oak Park is known everywhere.
AT LEFT, Celia McCoy,right, and Jenny Dean brighten the landscape standing at a flower
bed that also adds beauty to the sylvan setting of the 130 acres on which Karr has developed
Royal Oak Park. Karr has received state and regional recognition for his contribution in
development of the recreation industry in Meigs County.

•

Two!

at y

Spas sky
Protest

en tine

Upheld

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO. 64

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ar's
From Rags
to 8ritc!Jes
-KEEP'YORE PIGS

WAt\JrA ·
KNOWN AS A Wtr?
(-AH'LL DO
ANYTHIN6

UNDER.Tl-1' BED LIKE'·
YO'ALUJS USED TO-

f.N' THEY 'NON'T GIT
STOLE. ! !' .---_.../

AI-\ WiLL LAFF ·
AT ')'ORE.

FO'A .
PRIC£!ij ·

uOKES.

By United Press International
HONG KONG -ONE OF THE WORLD'S longest and finest
diamonds, the Jonker Diamond , was sold to a Japanese
ooslnessman for about $3.5 million recently, the diamond's
iJ'evlous owners said today . "The Japanese flew to the ·colony
last month for tbe sole purpose of buying the diamond. II took
him three weeks to complete negotiations with us," a spokesman
for the Chow Tai Fook Jewelry Co. said.
The diamond came to Hong Kong four months ago from
Europe . lt was once owned by King Farouk of Egypt but after his
exile It was said to have been bought by a tycoon in Europe . It
weighs 125.65 carats and is about I .5 inches long, 1.2 inches wide
and more than an inch deep.

AN AUTO BEING CHASED BY A POLICE car in Fayette
·County crashed Sunday, killing three men and adding to a
weekend traffic toll of at least 18.
Floyd Sinunons, 25, Chillicothe, Robert Hurless, 20,
Greenfield and David Mootispaw, 31, Washington Court House
were killed when their speeding car crashed - just south of
Washington Court House. Police said they had been illegally dra g
racing and apparently were attempting to escape a citation.

Srt A Jol&lt;r=::_

&lt;JONES

',,

BEIRUT - MOAMMAR KHADAFY , the 29-year.old army
officer who overthrew the Libyan monarchy in 1969, emerged
from a government shakeup Sunday as the country's undisputed
strongman, Arab diplomatic sources said today.
Khadafy SW'rendered the premiership to his No.2 man, Maj.
Abdel Salam Jalloud, but the sources said he retained the
country's most powerful position as chairman of a joint committee of the cabinet and the Revolutionary Command Council
(RCC). Thecouncll comprises officers who helped Khadafy seize
power Sept. I, 1969, and the sources said this body, not the
cabinet, wielded the power in Libya ,

ONLY REASON AH WENT
INTO THIS BuSINESS \'./AS

TOGIT A PAIP.O' PAt&gt;ITSff

50 FAR - NO LUCK-

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. -PRESIDENT NIXON and his

by Crooks &amp; Lawr-e nce

CAPTAIN EASY
MY TWIN

GRAND~ON~

ARE' COMI~G TO SEE: THf,
COMPANY'G P-JEiW GCIJ:;NCE'
MU~SUMl

?PLE N DID,J.P. ~

ri..J..
?HOW THEM THI? SABER-

TOOTHED TIGER

WE'R&amp;

F:ECON5TRUCTI!'JG~

liS TEE:TH WI~~·Be ,.. WHICH, OF COlJR?E, CAJ.J
Fll&lt;.ED I"' PLACE: SY PE:R'r'IAioJ!:NTL'I f&gt;OND ANY.
McKEE I~DU$TRIE5' THIN6 10 ANYTHING!
~UPER

GJ.UIH

601..1..'/! THE?E DOOR?

TO

GRAMPA'.~

e&gt;E?

~TUCK:

M1HEE

INP~5TRIES

SCIENCE
MUSEUM

BY GEORGE! WITH OU~ GLUE,
EV&amp;N .,YNAMITE WO"''T Se ABLe
TO BL.A~T TllO?J: TEeTH LOO~E!

1\JE:W

MUSEUM MUGT

TAKE: G. MU?CLE1 IG ALL~ ...

C'MOtJ! LET'$ BACK OFF

AND SATTER 'J:M OPIEN!

Moscow-bound secretary of commerce looked today lo a wide
ranging new policy for more trade between the United States and
RIIS81a.
Secretary Peter G. Peterson leaves Thursday to open talks
with Soviet leaders, in a followup to Nixon's summit confe rence
In May , Foreign policy adviser Henry A. Kissinger predicted last
week that the talks would make "major progress" toward a
"comprehensive new approach lo the issue of U.S ..Soviet
economic relations ."
·1
JESSUP, MD. -GOV. MARVIN MANDEL was determined
there would not be another Attica when 200 inmates went on a
rampage at the Maryland House of Corrections. "I am a peace
loving man," the Democratic governor said. "Let's talk to them
instead. He succeeded in getting them to go back to their cells.
Three hundred helmeted state policemen, carrying loaded rifles
and tear gas launchers, stood in the backgrou~d Sunday as
Mandel and Rep. Barren J. Mitchell, a black congressman from
Baltimore, moved to within five yards of the angry inmates to
talk to them through two chain link fences .
"I can't guarantee anything, except that no one will be
hurt," Mandel told a spokesman for the inmates . "These men
must disperse, go back to their cells." The convict spokesman
had his face covered by a rag to conceal his identity. "They (the
pollee) have rifles, and if we go back they'll kill all of us," he
said. Mitchell promised the Q\mates they would not be hurt.
"Have I everlet you brothers down ?" he asked.

MONDAY, JULY 17, 1972

EXTEN DED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday.
Warm and humid Wed·
ncsday through Friday with
a chance of showers and
thundershowers Wednesday
through Friday with a
chance of showers and
thundershowers Wednesday
and Thursday. Highs 85 to 90,
lows 65 to 10.

SANDUSKY, Ohio (UP)) Gaylord Zechman of Green
Springs, Ohio, took rirst place
in three of the seven divisions
of a tractoriJulllng contest
sponsored by the Erie-HuronOttawa County Vocational
Educa tion Young Farmers
organization here Sunday.
Zechman, driving a twinChrysler epgine tractor, won
the 5,000, 7,000 and 9,000-pound
modified categories.
Rex
Crumlick
of
Jeromesville won the 5,000pourid stock division, Tom
uugard of Lakeville took the
7,QOO.pound stock category and
Joe Whitney of St. Marys won
the 9,000-pound stock event.
Dale Kohl of Perrysburg won
the 12,QOO.pound stock competition.
There were 55 entrants from
three states competing for
prizes totaling $1,200.

Death Penalty Waived for
Convicted Airport Slayer
ZRIFIN, Israel (UPI ) - A
military tribunal conv~ ,
Kozo Okamoto today for hi.s
part In the Lod Airporr
massacre, bu\ the prosecution
waived the death penalty and
asked for life in prison.
The military court convicted
the youn~ Japanese on ail four
charges against him, three of
which could have carried the
death penalty. The court did
not impose sentence im·
mediately·.
"The deeds attributed to

Okamoto were proven beyond
any reasonable 'doubt and
constitute proof of guilt to the
charges. Therefore, we convict
the defendant," said Lt. Col.
Avraham Frisch, president of
the tribunal.
·

movement was the blinking of
the eyes.
The defendant fully admitted
carrying out the deeds ' at·
tributed to ' him in an undisputable way," Frisch said.
"From his remarks it can be
understood that he undertook
the action of his own free will
and in full conscience.

Okamoto, asked to stand in
his steeliJlated wooden dock
·while the verdict was read,
"The implementation constood manacled at the wrists to
formed
with the plan and the
two military policemen.
flanking him. He started results conformed with the
straight at the wall. He only intention Frisch said.

.

1"

HORACEKARR

azn at ssue

Weather

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP! )
- Refer ee Lothar Schmid
today upheld a protest from
champion Boris Spassky and
moved the adjourned third
game of the $250,000 world
chess championships back in to
Reykjavik's main sports hall ,
despite American challenger
Bobby Fischer's earlier objec ti ons to it.
The Rev. William Lombardy,
Fischer 's second, said the 2'J.
year-old challenger would be at
the board when the game
resumes at 5 p.m. 11 p.m.
EDT ).
"Why shouldn't he? Bobby is
go ing to win this game,"
Lombardy said after a tw ohour emergency meeting with

vacation.
said Frank Sinatra was expectliB the antiwar debate is ed to appear during the week at
expected to continue for some its hearing into the role of
time, assistant Senate Demo- orga nized · crime in hor se
cratic leader Robert C. Byrd racing.
has scheduled a "tandem"
"The committee wishes to
work arrangement that will inquire of Mr. Sinatra relative
allow the Senate to debate the to his connec lion with the
foreign aid bill for several Berkshire Downs track in
hours each day and then devote Massachusetts," a committee the match committee and
the rest of its time to other announcement sa id.
representatives for the
measures.
Russian camp.
The Senate also had under
Spassky holds a 2-ll lead in
consideration loday a bill tha t
Ute match but Fischer had a
would increase the $1.60 per
one pawn advantage and a
hour minimum wage to $2.20
stronger attacking position
during the next two years. The
when the third game adjourned
House already has passed a bill
Sunday after ~I moves. Most
that would boost it to $2 over
experts gave Fischer the edge
two years.
to take the game.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
The House expected to take
Schmid said playing condiup routine bills early in the Dept. investigated a single cat· tions in lhe backstage table
week while waiting for the accident Sunday al 12:20 a.m. tennis room on the first floor of
Rules Committee to clear a on county road 29 in Sutton the sports hall were inferior.
$2.58 billion authorization bill Twp.
"Mr. Spassky had agreed to
Keith D. Ashley , 19, Racine, play there for one session only
for military defense construction . A floor vote on that bill is Rt. 2, traveling west, failed to and felt the conditions were
round a sharp turn and hit an very poor . He said !here was
planned Thursday.
embankment.
There were no noise fr om the streets
Spokesmen for the House
Select Committee on Crime injuries or arrest. There was outside , he could hear
damage to the right side of the chi ldr en pl ay and the
car .
light and the chess board
The department disclosed
was not up to the highest
loday it is investigating theft of
standard.
a rod and reel from a car " ! w.eighcd the two playing
owned by Hilton Wolfe, Sr., and venues against each other and
a breaking and entering of an decided to move the third game
unoccupied house owned by back into the big hall," Schmid
Verna Davis, Dexter, Rt. I.
said.
The rod and reel was taken
The game was moved backfrom the Wolfe vehicle some stage Sunday after Fischer
time Satu•day or Sunday
year re-selected this year are of Mr . and Mrs. William Witte, morning while il was parked in protested against the presence
Brenda Taylor, daughter of Rock Springs area; Susan front of Wolfe's home, Sixth of closed circuit television
cameras .
Mr . and Mrs. Paul E. Taylor, Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and St., Racine.
Pomeroy; Jenny Chapman, Mrs. Neal Jeffers, Dexter ; Charles Barrett reported the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cathy Werry, daughter of Mr . breaking and entering of the
Chapman. Pomeroy ; Leta and Mrs. Charles Werry, David house . Taken was an
Floyd, daughter of Mr. and Pomeroy; Peggy O'Brien, elec tri c stove, organ, an
Mrs. Orland Floyd, of near daughter of Mr. and Mrs . unknown amount of antique
Rock Springs, and Sonya James O'Brien, Pomeroy, and articles and hand tools.
Ohlinger, daughter of Mr . and Joyce Hutchison, as special
All windows in the house
Mrs. David Ohlinger, Mid· featW'ed twirler, daughter of were broken.
dleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Milo Hutchison,
New members of the corps Rutland.
BELFAST (UP!) - British
selected at the tryouts are Jan
troops reported hitting five
Holter . da~~hter of Mr. and
Flagbearers for the new
gunmen
in firefi ghl.'l in Belfast
Mrs . Roy Holter, Pomeroy school year will be announced
and
Londonderry
today. HunRoute 3; Babs Witte, daughter later .
dreds of Roman Catholic
fa milies stayed away fr om
Uteir Belfast homes to protest
'
CHESHIRE - Terry Lynn
Ute presence of troops they said
Miller, 13, Cheshire Rt. 2, died made the area a battleground.
early today at Cabei Huntington Hospital from injuries
British troops reported
lac with New Jersey plates, freight company.
suffered
in
an
automobile
hitting four P.Unmen in a twoDetectives said they plan lo
registered to a New Jersey
accident July 7 in Gallia hoW' clash in Belfast's Catholic
call
on
other
key
underworld
record company owned by Ute
County which claimed the life Old Park area and another
61-year-old underworld figures for questioning.
Eboli, an heir to the crime of her mother, Anna Ceile gunman in Londonderry .
chieftain had been seen in the
The army said sniper atlacks
area shortly before the empire of the late Vito Miller. She was Gallia County's
fifth
traffic
fatality
of
1972.
wounded
one soldier in
Genovese, was the latest
shooting.
She
was
a
sixth
grade
Belfast 's Catholic Lower Fall
Two other suspicious gangland figure to die In what student
at
Bradbury area and an other in Strabane
is
believed
to
be
a
power
vehicles were found within
Elementary School last year. on the Irish Republic border . ·
blocks of the scene; one a 1965 struggle tooched off by the
She is SIU'Vived by her father ,
Plymouth with a machine gun · near.fatal shooting of Joseph
James;
a brother, Jimmy, at
A bombing wave which the
and a 24-bullet clip inside, the Colombo at an Italian- home; maternal grandparents,
ffiA
has said aims at wrecking
other a yellow panel truck American Unity Day rally last Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schuler,
Londonderry's economy also
found abandoned with the faiL
Sr., Cheshire Rt .' 2, and her roared on . Bombs blasted a
·
Eboli
had
an
arrest
record
motor left running. The truck
paternal grandmother, Mrs. fertilizer factory in IRA·
was registered to a Manhattan dating from 1933 to 1966, but
conlrolied Catholic Bogside
never served time in prison. He Bonnie Miller, Rutland ,
Funeral services will be held district, a barricaded area
was convicted once for disorderly conduct and twice for Thursday at 2 p. m. at the closed off to the anny and
assault, and fined in each case. Rutland Nazarene Church with police, and a downtown wholesame time a car driven by
He reportedly held Interests the Rev. Uoyd Grinun of· sale grocery. In both cases
Lawrence R. Yeauger, 43, Rt. in gam bUng, policy, and narco- ficiating. Friends may call at gunmen who planted the
2, Cheshire, attempted to pass. tics rackets, and was attempt· the Martin Funeral Home after bombs gave warning and there
There was moderate damage ing, with other alleged under- noon on Wednesday until noon were no casll81ties.
to both cars.
world figures including Car· Thursday when the body will
A single car mishap occurred mine "The Snake" Persico, to be taken to the church.
Belfast's Loriadoon a"~.a. )ar.
gely
evacuated by Catholic
at 2:15 p.m. on the Bladen- reassert control over waterfamilies Sunday, remained )ar.
Mercerville Rd., 1 where front activities. His legitimate
LOCAL TEMPS
Thomas H. Simms, 20, Eureka enterprises included record
The temperature in dowp· ge ly deserted today except for
Star Rt., Gallipolis,lost control companies, a bagel bakery, town Pomeroy
a. m. trcops and men of the Catholic
of his car on a curve and struck and a vending machine Monday was 81 degrees under ex~rvicemen's organization
on.volunteer patrol.
an embankment.
company .
extremely cloudy skies.

bill. Scali said he expected aid authorization bill . The
Congress to deal with the amendment is supported by
McGovern, whose antiwar
legislation qui ckly.
The $1.8 billion would be in sta nce helped him rise to
addition to the $200 million leadership of the Democratic ·
authorized
earlier
by party . McGovern planned to fly
Congress. It would be used to to South Dakota today for a
liberali ze cash grants and
loans to property owners ,
residents, communities and
MASON - The Mason
businesses in areas devastated
emergency squad will
by the floods last month.
conduct First Aid classes
Funds also are included for
beginning on Thursday, July
federal agencies to increase
20th, at the Mason squad
relief work.
building beginning at 1:30
Debate was scheduled to
p.m.
resume today on Mansfield's
Instructor for the six
end- the -wa r amendment,
weeks course will be Joe
which is attached to a foreign
Struble of th e Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
All interested persons,
male or female, 18 years of
age and up, are invited to
Cloudy, mild tonight, lows in
attend. Those wanting to
the 60s ; warm and humid
take the course are asked to
Tuesday with a chance of contact Jim Lavendar of the
showers and thundershowers.
Mason Emergency Squad,
Highs Tuesday in the mid to prior to enrollment.
upper 80s except for low 90s
extreme south .
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::·:·:·:·:::·:·:-:-:;;;;.;.;:;::

DriV'er
Unhurt

New Majorette Corps

Away to College Camp

Top Tractorman

Took 3 Firsts

TEN CENTS

•

n
WASHINGTON (UP! )-{;ongress returns from its Democratic convention recess today,
facing a new battle in the effort
to end the Indochina war by
legislation.
The struggle over the proposal by Sena te Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield to cut
off funds for U.S. combat
forces in Vietnam after Aug. 31
could provide a test of the
tnfluence of Sen. George S.
McGovern , the Democratic
presidential nominee .
Congress also will be asked
to provide swift aid for the
victims of tropical storm
Agnes. Senate Republican
leader Hugh Scott said he
would introduce an administration $1.8 billion relief

PHONE 992-2 156

.

Girls of the new majorette
corps of the Meigs High School
marching band, selected
Friday night, left Sunday for
Rio Grande College where they
will attend majorette camp
thi3 week .
Selecting the corps for the
1972-73year in tryouts at Meigs
High School was the new band
director, Harry Goins.
Appointed head majorette in
that phase of the competition
was Julie Hutchison, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Milo Hutchison, Rutland .
Members of the corps last

Troops Hit
5 Gunmen

Terry Miller Is
2nd Victim

Of Accident

NEW YORK (UPI) Reputed underworld kingpin
Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli
was found sprawled face up in
a pool of blood early Sunday
morning in the 18th ganglandstyle slaying in just over a
. yeo.-. He had been shot at least
five times in the face and neck.
Police said that Eboli's own
car may have been used as a
getaway vehicle following his
murder Sunday on II quiet
street in the Crown Heights
section of Brooklyn. '
The car, a late-model Cadil-

Patrol Probes Minor Mishaps
Two minor traffic accidents
were investigated Sunday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway PatroL
The first occurred at 11: 40
a.m. on Rt. 7, one and nine
tenths mlies ·north of the
Gallia-Meigs County line
where an auto driven by
Marjorie P. Ferguson, 24, New
Haven, made a' left turn at the

a;..u

;

�EDifORIAL
~=w· · '*'~

Nonsmokers Hove
Health Peril, Too
Take a deep breath
II you are m a crowded room a bus a plane 01 a 1es
taurant chances are good that you have JUSt mhaled a
fa1r quanllty of c1garette smoke perhaps sp1ced With a
pungent dose of c1gar fumes
Are your eyes smartmg a little? Are your lungs rebel
ling at the touch of tamted atr? Do you wmce at tlle occa
s1onal direct gust of smoke that curls under your nose 1
Unless you are one of those devout Cigarette wm
sh1pers to whom pure a1r smells bad you are unhkely to
escape at least an occaswnal adveiSe reactton to the
smoke filled room And even 1! you are not aware of 1l
the smoke ma1 be domg some unpleasant thmgs to vour
body
Up to now the anll&lt;mokmg campa1gn has concenll a ted
on the hal mful effects smokmg has on smokers them
selves
Swce the 1964 Surgeon General s report linked Cigarette
smokmg w1th cancer and other dtseases Amencans have
m fact cut down But there remams ~ hard core of those
who e1ther refuse to believe or choose to diSregard re
search fmdmgs leavmg us w1th a smoky mmonty ol
about 44 m1lhon peole who patrromze ctgarette make1s
plus the c1gar and p1pe clientele
And all too many of these smokers- at worst arro
gantly selfiSh at best carelessly thoughtless-ms•st on
mdulgmg the1r noXIous habit m public places someltmes
1ndulgmg those hab1ts nght m the faces of unsuspectmg
passersby
ft 1s bad enough that bemg smoked at IS a nUisance
But new research has shown that nonsmokers health 1s
measurably harmed when they are m confmed area• w1t~
smokers
The 1972 Surgeon General s report on the health conse
quences of smokmg cites ev1dence that carbon monox1de
from tobacco smoke ma) dependmg on the length o'
exposure be suff1c1ent to be harmful to the health of an
exposed person Th1s 1s espec~ally true the report adds
of exposed people With chrome lung or heart problems ot
certam types
The report also pomts out that other components of to
bacco smoke have been shown to have harmful effects on
ammals but lhat there IS not yet enough mformatwn on
how thev affect humans
Surgeon General Jesse L Stemfeld says that non
smokers have as much nght to clean a1r as smokers have
to their so called nght to smoke The pt oblem of en
forcmg that rtght remams
No smokmg Signs are diSobeyed as often as not and
such efforts as segregahng smokers on a1rllnes have met
w1th onlv md1fferent success
Should nonsmokers retaliate by chewmg garlic and
breathmg m the faces of those who puff g11mly on ctga
rettes on packed buses? Should they grab the c1garettes
out of the mouths of those who ftll coffee shops w1th acnd
fumes? Should thev demand a new prohJbJ\Ion law ban
nmg ctgarettes ?
A httle extreme perhaps But ctgarette smokers must
for thetr own good as well as everyone else s begm to
avotd smokmg m pubhc places Nonsmokers should be
come a little less shy about politely askmg smokers to
cease and destst Those charged w1th e.nforcmg extstmg
rules agamst smokmg should be courteously but mcreas
mgly strtct
And m lhe meantime maybe you should not take that
deep breath after all

1· ·· Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

CANDIDATE FOR MEANEST MAN
Dear Helen
I have an older fnend who ts blmd and uses a Seemg Eye dog
When they go for a walk the dog sometimes uses a nearby open
lot for hts nature call
The man who ltves next door to the lot has complamed three
times and has notifted the pollee He says h1s chtldren play there
I thmk tt s better that the dog chooses the lot than someone s
lawn BeSides 1t doesn t happen often as the dog 1s very well
tramed
Wouldn t you think a man w1th eyes could help a man Without
them to the extent of uSJng a shovel once m a whtle? - TAKES
ALL KINDS I GUESS
Dear TAKIG
1 certamly do I And I m sure that others on the block would
feel the same so why don t your fr1end and his dog av01d the lot
and stick to the HUMAN stde of the street' - H

++++

Dear Helen
Yea-a-a for your suggestiOn of a boys1e magazme on the
coffee table to counteract those gtrlle mags our husbands love
My man has pored over the nudies for two and one-haH
years So I framed a ptcture of ' Burt • and scattered a few more
around as per your equal stghts - and my husband hasn t
brought a g~rlie magazme m the house smce - EQUAL SIGHTS
FOREVER
P S Are there really Burt calendars?
Dear Equal
Don t think so But a Burt Reynolds calendar might be a hot
1tem come O.rtstmas Cosmo - take note - H

+++
Dear Helen
Is a daughter-In law still a daughter-m~aw after she and
your son are dtvorced' My son s former wife and I are very good
friend• Rnd live two doors from each other ~e Is here often wtth
the children (Tom and Sue my grandchildren ) and we go many
places together
But my son ts re;named and, as I only have the one boy tt
gets rather confusmg when I Introduce each as 'my daughter-m
law 1at different luncttons of course)
What do you call your 'ex daughter-In-law? My sons
former wife sounds cold - as if she IS excludoo from the family
- and I s!lll constder her a daughter - EX MOTHER IN
LAW?
Dear Ex
How about May llntroduce my son s ltrst wife
or my
first daughter-m law
or (if your lrtends already know the
grandchildren), Toms and Sues mother
Someone should wrtte an etiquette book Utled Broken
Branches of a Family Tree rtght' - H
PS Read on
Dear Helen
I just attended a weddmg where the father of the groom was
badly hurt as the result of a broken home He went through the
receptton line like an outs1der while the groom's step-father (the
'new • husband) stood m the rece1vmg line next to the young
man
Next month the man s daughter will be married and the real
father 's name IS not on the lnvttatlon And thiB Is a FRIENDLY
divorce where the man has done hiS share financially' Correct•
- COUSIN OF THE GROOM
Dear Cousin
Not correct 1An ex-ltusband 18 still the lather of hts children
He should have his part m their weddlnp - H

.••_ 3- The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0
••,,
•..

.'.

2- The DaUy Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , July 17 1972

"That Young Jerk May Be Around
for a Long T1mel"

Safety Play
Cinches Slam
NOKTII (D )
4 A 71 4
• 12
t A KQ h o

Television Log

¥J1097
• 10
... J 653

o!o914

¥AK

• 43
... K Q 10 8
Both vuln er alle
"est North East Soulh

Pass

14

Pass
Pass
Pass

4 N T.
oN T.

p "

Open r ~

10 30 -

64

tNfWSPAPf R fNTEA PRISE ASSN l

The b dd ng ha s been
West
North
East

l•

3 tft
4t

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
5•
Pass
Pass
6•
Pass
You South hold
4 i\1543 ¥ K9763 t vmd o!o Q107

Wh at do you do now"
A- Pass You tr1ed to get to
seven and your partner reruscd
)()Ur IDVI(BfiOD

TODAY S QUESTION
l n s t e ad of reb1dd ng th ree
lubs yo r partner eb ds tv. o

diamonds What do you do now"
Answer tomorn w

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Monday July 17 the
!Wth day of 1972 w1th 167 to
follow
The moon IS approachmg 1ts
f1rst quarter
The mormng stars are Venus
and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mereu
ry Mars and Jup1ter
Those born on lh1s date are
under the s1gn of Cancer
Televtston personality Art
Lmkletter was born July 17
1912
On th1s day m hiStory
In 1821 Flonda was formally
ceded to the Umted States by
Spam

Human Dtmenstons 33

Movre

Pass
ll!ad- • J

J1m We haven t wntten
about safety plavs fm a long
t1me Why don t we disc uss
them th1s week
Oswald Why not? Let s
sta1t w1th a standard one
South cons1ders b1ddmg sev
" ' s p a d e s but dec1des
agawst 11 on the theory that
11 No1 th holds the queen of
spades m add11lon to Ills aces
en• k111g ~ Will b1d the
grand sian. I m self He wms
the ope mn g heart lead and
IS pleased to see that h1s
restramt wa s the COli ect ac
hon
J•m
If South IS at all
careless he w1ll lead a low
11 ump to dummv s ace at
tnck two East w1ll show out
and South will have to lose
t"o II umps and hiS slam
Oswald It IS bad luck to
fmd all foul trumps gathe1 ed
togethe1 m the wron g hand
but 11 does happen H South
knows about safety plays he
has a perfect one at hiS d1s
posal here
J1m
He simply I a y s
down hiS kmg of trumps at
tnck two If both opponents
follow he can 1 I o s e two
11 ump l1 Jcks If East show s
out he can now hold West
to one trump tnck tf West
shows out he c a n handle
East s case
Oswald ThiS safety play
costs little South wms all
the tncks any !lme the quee n
of trumps drops on the fu st
01 second trump lead

,

News 20

Su clde Commandos

1 00 -

Foxus on Columbus

1 30 - News 13
200 - News 4

~

4

15 - Corncob ReporiJ

6

55 - Rocky &amp; Bultwlnkle 13

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Romper Room 6 7 25 -

Sports Club 13
7 30- SteepyJelfers8 Romper Room6 Underdog 13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St 33
Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack Lalanne 13

9 00 - Paul DIXon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Lue&lt; s Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 Romper Room 8 Mr Rogers 33 What Every
Woman Wants to Know 3 T mmy and Lass le6

9 30 - TrulhorConseq 3 PhltDonahue8 Ml keDouglas6 One
L1fe to Live 13 Electr ic Co 33
o 00 - D nah Shore 3 lS Luc lie Ball 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
Hathayoga 33
10 30 - Con central on 3 15 Ph l Donahue 4 Spilt Second ll
Beverly Hlflb II es 8 My Three Sons 10 In School Instruct on

I

t "'... bUb bdU bUbU..

bL

... , "' ., ,

,

,

.. ,

..

tJbbJLJ

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN

33 F Troop

I

GUY NAMED JOE
IS ROUGH ON RATS
NEW YORK (KFS) - There have been lots
of rats m mov1es the ktnd of rats that had fans
' m public
and were all sweetness and hght
Lately however m keepmg w1th the ever
growmg swmg to reahty movte rats have been
furry and have had teeth and talls Ftrst there
was W11lard and 1! that d1dn t repel you
sufficiently now there IS Ben starrmg
Joseph Campanella as the b1g cheese of a
detective who has to clean up the rats
The rat p1ctures have been produced by
Bmg Crosb) s company (maybe hiS next wtll be
Roden! to Morocco ) and we asked Cam
paneUa to COIIU1Ient on hiS costars
Most actors wlll tell you that they do not
like to appear m mov1es With two nvals children and an1111als sa1d Joe Both they
claun are natural scene stealers- and to some
degree they are rtght I would hate to appear m
mov1e or televlSlon production wtth Lass1e
because she (or he) would monopolize the
screen Even a star like Elizabeth Taylor
menhoned that the beautiful Collie got more
attentiOn when they were m a f1lm together
JohnnyWe1ssmuller used to complam that
m the senes of Tarzan pictures that he made
there was absolutely no chance to show any
acting ability because the vanous anunals
nresent - especially the chunps - were natural
scene stealers Johnny satd this did not hother
him particularly because he never conSidered
himself a threat to S1r Laurence Olivier but tt
did upset co-star Maureen 0 Sulhvan who was
proud of her JUStifiable acting talents
Will1am Powell and Myrna Lily frankly
admitted that m their Thm Man senes they
were more than once upstaged by the httle wtre
hatred Temer who played Asta Powell who IS
a rather cultivated easy gomg guy admitted he
got a little upset when the dog s owner-tramer
msJSted the pooch get equal bllhng when ap
pearmg w1th hun and M1ss Lily
Powell sa1d at the tune I II share bllhng
w1th the hound as soon as you produce figures to
show me how many dogs purchase moVIe
tickets each week That ended the argument
The 1dea of working wtth a gang of rats
held no great allure for me and I told the
production company thts when they approached
me w1th the 1dea The producer explamed that
not only were the rats lr1endly they were
downr1ght lovable Later events proved he was
rtghl The animal !ramer on the mov1e Moe Dt
Sesso assured me that the rats were JUSt as
frtendly and even tempered as rabbtts - except
when hungry

fair Play Triumphs:

McGovern Had It All Along
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT

10 45 -

Ameri can Style 13 Communrque 6

11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 tS Love of Life 8 to Sesame St
33 Bewt!ched 6 13
12 OO - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun s 5050 Club4 Local News 13
Pass word 6 Jackre Obi nger 8 News 10

12 30 - 3 w s Game 3 15 Spit Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8
10 Elec Co 33
1 oo - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Dlvorce Court 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Ch ld 15 Joyce Chen Cooks 33
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Sewmg Sk11ts 33
2 00 - Days of Our L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 VIrgin a
Graham 6 Love Splendored Thing 8 10 Grand Master Chess
33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Dahng Game 13 Guid ing Light 8 10
Librar y 33
3 00 - General Hasp tal 6 13 Secret Stor m 8 10 Another
World 3 4 15 Great Crrcus Parade 20 JJ

3 30- One Ltfe to Live 6 Edge of Nigh! 10 Hodgepodge Lodge
33 Return lo Peyton PlaceJ 4 15 Jefl sCollte 13
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 4 15 Gilligan s Is 8 Flint
ston es 13 Sesame 51 33 Huckleberry Hound 6 Mov ie The
Rag&lt;ng T de 10
4 25 - Sporls Club 6
Gree n Acres 3 Vrrgmran 8 Pa ssword 13

Leave It To

Beaver 15 I Love Lucy 6 Andy Gr ff th 15 Merv Gr ffl n 4

s oo - II Takes A Th ef 4 D ck Van Dyke 15 Wagon Tra&lt;n 3

Ma ve r ck 13 B&lt;g Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall D lion IS Elec Co 33
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 CBS News 8 10 I Dream of Jeann ie
13 Truth or Con seo 6 S•&lt;&gt;me St 20 Halhayoqa 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 GrandMastersChessJ
7 oo - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec Lo ~u ureen Acr es
3 Farmers Daughter 13 Andy Gr ff lth IS Dick Van Dyke4
lnstght 33
7 JO - Ma sterpi ece Theatre 33 Ponderosi 3 lS MDd Squad 6
13 Jerry Reed 8 A B&gt;rlhday Story 2il Masterpiece Theatre

33
8 00 - Magg e and The Beautiful Machine 20
8 30 - Ha wa 1 F ve 0 8 10 Advocates 20 33 NB C Actlon
Pla yhouse J 4 Mov 1e 6 13 Evenmgat Pops20 33
9 30 - Cannon 8 Do n lt 20 Handluls of Ashes
Vlbrat1ons From London 3 4 15

33 Good

10 00 - News Weather Sports 20 Marcus Welby 4 6 13 Flrtng
Lme 33

10 30 - WSAZ Comment 3 Arthur Smith 8 Probe The World
Around Us 4 Road Ra e n~:~ s White Wave 15

11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 IS
11 30 -

0 ck Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Move

Mother s House 8 Mov1e Night and Da y
McCall 13
I 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - News 4 13

Our

Movie Cash

By Paul Crabtree
ProvtnCial pride and sechonal jealous1es are two of the most
damagmg facets of Appalachta In general and West Vtrglnta In
particular
Opportuntltes lor cooperahon too often are passed up In
favor of cuttmg the other guy s throat - at the expense of both If
Dallas-Forth Worth and Mmneapolls-St Paul tore mto each
other the way Huntmgton and O.arleston do, they d st1U be onehorse towns
AHuntmgt.Jn TV stalton dtd a cutting put-down of O.arleslon
on the Fourth of July remmdmg VIewers of the great
celebrabons gomg on around the region (particularly at
Gallipolis and Ripley, both near ne1ghbors of ours) Then the
screen swttched to O.arleston, showmg a vacant street wtth one
vacant-faced mdlvtdual proclaunmg that the Fourth was 'a
pretty qmet day here •
It stung And the funny part ts that Huntington didn't do
much m the way of observmg 1ts own grand and glorious Fourth
Before you pomt a finger reproachful!y let s not forget that
we share some of the gu1lt, too There Is too milCh unhealthiness
m the rtvalry between Galltpolts and Pt Pleasant, between
Pomeroy and Middleport and between all four of these mld.Qhlo
Valley towns
Compet1110n ts healthy but blind unreason In rival sltuattons
ts stuptd

~

MIAMI BEA CH INEA&gt; subJec ted to great press ures from skillful pa rty reg ula rs
In th1s Democratic conventiOn bent toward Sen George and labor operahves bitterly opposed to McGove1n s
McGovern old laws of human behaviOr prove d as deciSIVe nommatwn
The smashm g McGovern tr1umph demonstrated how
as the heralded new pollhcs
ever
that an outraged sense or faJrness ts a powerful
One such law JS that 11 IS dangerous to employ pollhcal counter
press ure especially 10 the h1ghly charged atmos
tact1cs whtch outrage people s sense of fa1rness There
phere
of
a natwnal convention It had be~n proved so m
may be short range gains but they 1end to produce a
1952
when
Gen Dwtght Etsenhower won a test fa1r play
counter trend that may more than offset the advance
vote over Robert A Taft and thereby clmched that years
That ts exactly what happened thiS time to y1eld Me Republican preSidential nommahon
Govern hts sweepmg v1ctory m the key credenhals battle
Even before the Cahforma vote here Jt was plam that
fot !51 Callforma delegates After he won them m a June another old law was workmn. for McGovern Its essence
pr1mary they had been taken from h1m by a stop Me IS that a front r unner who bmlds a commandmg lead auto
Govern power play wh1ch m effect changed the rules that matlcally becomes a strong magnet attrachng tn a steady
had gutded a campatgn cons1gned at that late stage to How the rest of the delegates he needs
hiStory
My careful checks usmg the most conservahve md1
McGovern s dev1ce from the moment of that reversal cators show that McGovern was on a slow but umnter
was to call for fa1r play It worked better than he rupted upward course m delegate totals from th~ moment
hoped
he htt thts conventwn scene
By my updated dele~ate count on conventwn eve the
From Saturday to m1d afternoon of the Monday opemng
senator had a strong gr1p on about I 42() of the I 509 dele of the convenhon nearly 100 delegates swttched from for
gate votes needed for nommatlon Yet he won 1618 votes mally uncommtlted status to open support of cand1dales
to hiS stde m the btg Cahforma challenge
Most of those went to McGovern m small clusters of two
Most of that excess of roughly 200 votes he added onto three and four
hiS coll'mltteq strength was conSidered by hts own stra
I have observed thiS pattern at woQ&lt; m every conven
tegJSts to be soft meamng uncertam m prospect
twn 1 have covered from 1952 on Surface clamor and con
When I talked to tho~ e McGovern a1des they sa1d the fttct may suggest that the outcome ts m doubt But for
soft delegates mdtcated almost umformly that they the developmg wmner the old delegate ftow chart tells a
were offended by what th~y deemed the InJUStice of the d1fferent story Underneath all the notse he climbs h•gher
move deprtvmg the senator of those 151 Caltforma dele by the hour
gates
So tt was thts hme for George McGovern He realh had
These extras were not counted as hard supporters won the key "Votes before he came
because the delegates themselves sa1d they were ~emg
(NIWSPAP£1t lNTEIIPRISI ASSN )

6
Lucrtle Rrvers 6

11 00 - Sale of Century 3 15 Fam ly Affa ir 8 10 Love

4 30 -

Cine
Houston
Los Ang

Atlanta
San Fran

47 3.4

580

4

1

40 524
9
42 39 s 9 9 '
36 45 444 IS ,
29 54 349 23 '
West
wlpctgb
51 31 622
48 38 556 S
4d

43 40

518

91 -.

38 46 452 14
38 so 432 16

Sa n D•eg
3 52 373 201 2
Sunday s Results

+++
Pat Boone tsn 1 my favortte smger by any means, but I've
always regarded hun as a class guy
But the COilll11erctal he cut for a special mall-order albwn of
reltgtous records IS one of the poorest efforts I've ever seen
anywhere - and mail-order record offers on TV are generally
very bad at best
It really isn t Pat s fault The editing and timing of the sales
pttch ts just dreadful and he looks embarrll!l!ed by the whole

thing

(II s more a ptty, because the album and Its arttsts look
attracttve )

+++
I ve decided I like Canadian pro football, even If It did &amp;how
up preciously early on the screen It 'a a bit of a job getting used to
the three-tries for first-down, and that 110-yard field they 1111e
What I like best, I believe, Is the Idea of getting a single point
for kicking the ball over the other team s goal line Part of thill
rule pennlts a Jllllll ret:elveftn a close game to catch the baU and
(if he can) boot It right back over the other team's goal for a
point It s an exciting part of the game In Canada, and might be
worth a try down here In the colonies

East
w I

Del
Ball

46 35

Bos ton

New York

Cleve

Mlwa

45
38
37
34
32

36
39
41
46
47

pet

566

9b

1
494 6
474 7 '
425 II '
405 13

556

West

Oa k
Chtc

M nn
KC
Calf
Texas

wlpctgb
52 30 634
45 38

54271

41

500 11

42 38 525 9
41

38 46 452 15
35 48 422 17' 1

Cmc 4 St Lou1 s 1

Oakl and 5 New York 2

Ball 6 Ch c 1 ( 1st game 7 nn s
ra m )

San 0 ego 7 New York 3

Fran 10 Ph ta 7

Cn c al Bait !2nd game ppd

Los Ang 4 Montreal 2

ram
Tex as 3 Clev e 2 ( 12 nn ngs

n ght)

Today s Probable P1tchers
IAll Tomes EDT I
Cn cago 1Reuschel 3 21 2 30
pm
Ch c t Bradley 10 7) al Detro I
Atlanla (Schueler 3 41 at Pitt ILol ch IS 61 8 IS p m
IWal ker 3 S) 8 15 p m
Oak IHorten 2 t) at M&lt; lwa
S Lou s (Glbson 9 51 at !Stephenson 2 2) 8 30 p m
Cal I I Barber 2 ll at Boston
Hous ton ( Rober ts 8 4)
8 15
pm
tCurl sS3) 7 30pm
( S1mpson

5 3)

at

Tuesdays Games

IHand

Cmc a t Ch cago
St Loui s at Houston
New York at Los Ang

Cleve at K C 2 llw&lt; n ghtl
Batt at Te.as
Cht cag o at Detr o I
Oakland at Mt lwa
M nn at New York
Ca l t at 8os ton

Pirates Sweep
Doubleheader
By Unlled Press lolernalwnal
Dave Gtustl the Natwnal
League s lead10g rehef pitcher
won the first game for the
Pittsburgh Ptrates Sunday and
got cred1t for hiS 13th save m
the second game as the Pirates
scored a patr of 3-2 vtctones
over the Houston Astros
The wms wtdened the Pirates
Nahonal League East lead to
41&gt; games The San D1ego
Padres helped the P~rates s
cause by beahng the second
place New York Mets 7-3
The Cmcmnatt
Reds
defeated the St U.u1s Car
dina Is 4 I the Clucago CUbs
heat the AUanta Braves S-3
lhe Los Angeles Dodgers
~d the Moptr~pl expos, 4
2 and the San Franc1sco
Gtants topped the Phtladelphla
Plullles 1().7 m other NL
games
Gtush pitched one shutout
Inning 10 the first game
markmg the 18th stra1ght
appearance m which he did not
allow a run and then ptcked up
the save m the second game
although he was tagged for a
tw&lt;H'lln smgle The runs were
charged to Bruce Klson who
went 8 2-3 mrungs for his fourth
W10
Relief pttcher Fred Gladdmg
hit Bob Robertson With a p1tch
wtth the bases ftlled In the lOth
mnlng forcmg m the wmnmg
run of the opener The Ptrates
had Ued the score at 2-2m the
etghth when Robertson doubled
home Renme Stennett A
double by Wtllle Stargell and
smgles by Al Oliver and
Stennett were the big blows of
the rughtcap for the PJTates
The Padres took advantage
of throwmg errors by pttchers
Jerry Koosman and Danny
FriSella to score lour runs m
the seventh mmng and down

I eague s West ern DiviSion
race

The Reds swept all three
games "1th the Cardmals
puttmg the toppmg on It With a
4 1 wm Sunday to take a f1ve
game lead over Houston m th e
diVISIOn

The games closed out the
season ser1es between the Reds

and Cards w1th Cmcmnat1
wmner of 10 of 12 games
Darrel Chaney scored the
f1rst Cincmnall run 1n the th1rd
mnmg when he doubled went

the Mets Reliever Bill Greif
shut out the Mets on one hit for
the !mal three mn10gs to wm
his f1fth game aga1nst II losses
Rook1e Dave Schneck had a
homer double and smgle for
the Mets
Bobb) Tolan s fourth&lt;nmng
homer gave the Reds a 2 1 lead
and Tolan doubled and scored
another run on Tony Perez
smgle m the SIXth as the Reds
closed their season senes w1th
the Caro10als w1th a !().2 edge
Jack Bllhngham p1 tched an
eight-hitter to wm hiS s1xlh
game for the Reds Lllu Brock
and Ed Crosby had two h1ts
each for the Cardinals
Run-6cor10g s10gles by Jose
C3rdenal and Don Kessinger
!tnd Randy Hundley s sacnhce
Oy enabled the Cubs to score
three runs 10 the e1ghth mnmg
and hand Atlanta s Ron Stone
his seventh loss Jack Aker
emergmg as a star rehever for
the Cubs allowed one run m
the last two 10rungs for his
fourth straight vtctory
Don Sutton pitched a seven
hitter to w10 hiS 11th game for
the Dodgers who scored their
four runs m the ftrst mnmg
w1th the help of a two-run tr1ple
by Btll Buckner It was the
e1ghth complete game of the
year for Sutton wh1le BtU
Stoneman who went stx m
nmgs suffered hiS seventh
setback agamst e1ght wms
Tito Fuentes ftrsl maJor
league grand slam clunaxed a
SIHUn third 10mng and Garry
Maddox drove m three other
runs wtth a fourth mmng
homer for the Gtants Jtm Barr
allowed 13 hits but went the
distance for the Gtants for his
thtrd wm mftve decJStons whtle
Woody Fryman was the loser
Greg Luzmsk1 h1t his lOth
homer for the Phillies

By Urutcd Press lnternatwnal
Boog Powell slammed h1s
~

,:: horn" run m hi S last five

games SIOC u ) to help tne
Balllmore Onoles gam a 6 1
VICtory over tlle Ch1cago Wh1te
Sox m a game shortened to
seven mrungs because of ram
The second game of what was
to have been a doubleheader
was postponed
The b1g mf1elder also ha d a
smgle m three llmes at ba t to
boost hiS anem1c average from
196 to 205
The VICtory enabled Balli
more to remam one game

behind Detroit m the Amencan
League East as the Tigers beat
the Kansas City Royals 2.0 In
the West the Oakland A s took
a commanding 7 ''-' game (ead
over runnerup Cl1cago by
wh1pp1n g th e Ne w York
Yankees 52
Elsewhere Cahforma and
Milwauke e
split
a
doubleheader th e An gels
taking the f1rst game J.j} and
th e Brewers w1nnm g the

second 2 I the Boston Red Sox
beat the Mtnnesota Twms 6-1
and the Texas RJ!n gers shaded
the Cleveland lndJans 3 2 m 12
1nnmgs
Jtm Palmer, wh o now has
won 11 of hiS I&lt;J,st 12 deciSIOns
\las the benef1c1ary of Balt1
more s JJ.lut assault on Chica

Gonzales Last
Minute Entry
COlUMBUS ( UP I )
Pancho Gonzales the grand
old man of tenms was a last
mmute entry m the thtrd an
nual Buckeye Tenms Cham
pwnsh1p wh1ch gets underwa)
today at Buckeye Boys RJ!nch
111 nearby Grove C1ty
Gonzales 44 IS seeded fourth
m th e tournam ent behmd
J1mmy Connars Bob Hew1tt
and D1ck Stockton
Although he has hm1ted h1s
tournament actiVIty m recent
years Gonzales now 44 won
several events last year m
cludmg the Southern Call forma
Championship
Connors 19 of Bellville Ill
was one of Gonzales proteges
He was runnerup m las t year s
Buckeye Tour ney to Tom
Gorman of Seattle

().12 Noe 8-0-16 Orr I 1 3 Pr1ce
2-().4
SENTINEL (57) - Rd
Ferguson 3-1 7 R1tchte 3-2-8
E1eh10ger 7 115 Ch1lds 7~14
Douglas 6-1 13

MID DEPT STORE (64 ) B Vaughan 9 2 20 Chaney 2-1
5 Hill3 2-8 Garnes 6-3 15 Wtse
4-0-8 Sm1th 3-4 10

Movies 'Suicide Owpmed," 11 • p.m, llld
T!de,'' ( p.m Tuelclay. baCb WI!II-TV

"Racial

ve1 the weekend 7-4 But 1ts
game \\.l th New Ma tamoras

Sund ay was p 1stponed Me1gs
s 16 9 I on the year
The match was a tWleup f01
go s Wilbur Wood Powell s
Me1gs
opemng game m th e
runth homer of th e year came
m tl e SIXth mmng with Bobby D1stn ct I..eg1on Tour name nt
begmmng Saturday Jul y 22 al
Gnch aboard
Rook1e Bill Slayback p1tched 11 a m agamst always tough
his first maJor league shutout La ncaster on Trautwem F1eld
allowmg Kansas C1ty five h1ts at OhiO Un11ersJly Athens
and stnkmg out seven batters Legwn takes on Logan on the
as the T1gers won for the Athens County Fa1rgroUJ ds
se1enth tune m then last eJght diamond at the same ti me
The Iron s l.egwn team
games Norm Cash and Aureho
Rodnguez prov1ded th e DetrOit whi ch w111 campa1gn m dJStr ct
play agamst teams from Pmts
runs wtth homers
Joe Rudi touched off Oak mouth Hillsboro Chillicothe
lands soonng w1th a first and others IS pretty much a
mnmg homer and M1ke Epstem copy of Ironton H1gh School s
smashed a two-rwt homer m
the s1xth to help the A s
complete a four game s11eep of
the Yankees Dave Hamilton
Saturday's Ttlts
11 1th seventh mmn g rehef from
Bo b U.cker boosted hiS record
to 6 3 Johnn y Ell1s delivered Are Ramed Out
New York s oly runs w1th a
Saturda) mght s games 111
two run homer m the nmth
George Scott drove m 111 0 th e Kyger Creek L1ttle
run s w1th an e1ghth 1nnmg League Tournament \I ere all
smgle to g1ve Milwaukee a split ramed out They have been
after the Angels had taken the moved up to tomght
Remammg games will be
opener behmd the two hll
moved up one day
p1tchmg of Rudy May Vada
Scheduled to play tomght
Pinsorr drove home th e only
are
the Gallipolis Tigers
run of the fi rst ga me w1th a
agamst Centerville at 6 the
sacnhce fly m the lhlfd 1nnmg
Mart y Pattin reg1stered h1s New Haven Clubs agamst
fifth consecutl\ e VIctory with a the undefeated Pomero y
four h1tter aga1nst Mmnesota T1gers at 7 15 and at 8 PI
and Boston got two-run homers Pleasant Kmants pi'.Y f.be
from Regg1e Sm1th and Danny Gallipolis Whlte Sox
In Tuesday mght s achon
Cater
the
Pomeroy Yankees play
Len Randle brought home
Texas 1110nmg run agamst Addav1lle at 6 In the opemng
Cleveland when he smgled w1 th or the second round At 7 15
one out 1n the 12th moved to Ripley plays Bidwell and the
Middleport Ind1ans play PI
second on a sac nflce went to
Pleasant
C1ty Ice and Fuel at
thlfd on a w1ld p1tch by loser
RJ!y Lamb and came home on 8 m a batt! ~ of two un
beatens
Dave Nelson s smgle

mmng w tho ut fUI tl c1 cJ[i mi;t gC
when Rogel Dtxo n sl ot down
S1les a tt em ptl 1g to stea l
second and Dt essell fCJ mcd
IHs e 1 ~ht l wm uf the veat
W1tl th e Situ tlur Jook11g
aga nst on ly one defeat was
gn m Me1gs cane f1on fuur
M1 Cor ll ol as he fanned 10
" tlked five h I one !mu ted r Wl Sdown Y.. ttl s x of liS uwn m
It mton t ' SIX h ls a 1d ~avl up U e Me1gs seH ntt \\I en Jon
Buck led off w1tl a ~ alk Lou
f w ' ms all eat r ed
h onton l 10k a 2 0 lead m the McKmney smglcd Van Malrc
th rd umng when Rill Dressell ~ a lked Cooke wa lked to force
walked w1th one out and Jeff n the hrst run R1c k Ash
Mm nahan the nwnber nme walked to make 1! 4 2 and
b&lt;ttlel crac ked a Van Maire DIXon groun ded lt lo a !wider s
f &gt;St ball dee p nto nghtfleld fo r chm ce that scm ed Van Maire
a horne mn the fl rst rutmd and also Cooke who came ho ne
l11pper off Me1gs p1 tchmg th1s on "' attempted double pia\
throw to fu st
ye \1
Me1gs took t1 c lcdd w1th two
1he lead was upped to 4 0 n
Ue seventh 11 hen Ke1th Parkc1 out 1hen Jon Buck blooped a
led off w1lh a su gle and con wmd blr wn doub le to IIghtfi eld
t nue to second on an error m to score Dtxun and Dave Bovd
th e outfi eld Dave Knebel was who had walke&lt;l
Me1gs scored an msurance
Jut by a p1tch f o ll o ~ 1ng
1un m the eighth when Cooke
Parkers h1 t
After Bayert fanned Myers Jed uff 111lh an mfwld smgle
wa lked to load the bases S1tes \\ Cnt to second on R Ash s
tllen lined a smgle to ce nter s&lt;~cn flce bunt an d came home
Uu ee consecut1\ c v. alks to
ch 1 v1 n ~ 10 boll Parke1 and
Stc\
e Dwtfce Bo) d 1 1Ci Kc' 11
Kl cJbel w1th M)els gomg to
llu d Me1gs g t out of th e SJ eels
Othe1 Me1gs hitters "ere
D xon v.1th a f1rst mn ng s1n~ l c
International League
a I ne shot double by Dunfee m
Standmgs
Untied Pre ss Int ernational "' the second and a second s ngle
W L Pel G B bv McKmn ey
Charl eston
48 34 585 8
Mur na han al lowed thr ee
Lou sv I e
47 38 553 'l 2 lu ts no run s fanned SIX a nd
Ttd ewa ter
45 43 511 6
walked none mIns fi ve nmngs
Rochest er
44 44 500 7
Toledo
43 43 500 7
wmk Kevm Collm' perm1tted
R ch mond
41 45 477 9
one h1 t four run s fanned four
Syracuse
41 47 466 10
and \'r alked se \ en m one and a
Pen nsula
36 51
4l d 14 1
Sunday s Results
, 11 11 d mmngs Massey th e
Charl es1on at Lou sv tll e 2 lose1 all,9~d on~ h~ two
ppd a n
nu•s fan neJlone and ~alked
Pe n ns ul a 8 R chm ond 6
one m two th1rds of an mnmg
Roc hester 7 Syrac use 0
Ttdew ater 4 To edo 0 (1st 7 and Myers allo11 ed one hit one
nn tn gs)
To ledo 2 T dewa ter 0 (2nd 7 1un fanned one and wa lked
three m one mmng
nntngs)
t hOL gh ' f. ' s 11 a I 1 I ~
n1t1ve h 1h1 11 11 f' MOi ll£'\
p ne wl en p 11t ed m th e
l tlh e1 n hf n J'i ol et e IS rh e
l1stest ~ Jtl\\ ng t mbt t pn e

1 IIH
I he

Ih

1111 111

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11&lt; Cl OSS ( !1 Sll l l I
II da 1 n

SI&lt;J I
ce nt

The

I

11,

a nd lil t: &lt;:

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l

TANNEHill

E)Cec Ea

ROBERT HOEFl CH
CtrEdlor
Pubt shed da y l')( Ce p
sa vrday bY The Oh o va ey
P u b s h ng

Ct1m p an'r'

I

Covr r

St
Pome r o.,. on o
45 769 Bus ness Off ce Ph one
99 2 1156 E ~ to a Phone Y9 2

'1 57
Secon d c l ass po!:. ta ge pa d at
P o m er o y

Oh

1irl

,- - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

s

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1
I

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Na t o n a
adver s ng
r epr ese ntat ve
Bor n~ 1
Gal ag he r
nc
2 Eas A 2nd
51 New York C t y New Y or..k.
Subscr p t on rat es
De
ve r ed by car r er where
a va able 50 cen ts per wee k
B y Mo tor Rou t e w here carr er
se r v ce not ava l ab ~
One
month Sl 75 By na I n Oh o
andW va Onevea r \1400
S • mo nt hs S7 25
Thr ee
m ontns S4 50 Su bscr p t on
p ce n cl ude s Sund ay T mes

Sen I ne t

POMEROY
NATIONAL
BANK I66) - Clark 12-3-27
Mitchell 4-0-8 F1le 7~14 Fr
Burney 1~2 Cremeens 3-3-9
Archer W-4

brought Q1aney home
J1m McG lothlin the wmnmg
pitcher allowed seven hits tn
the five mmngs he worked ReI e\er Tom Hall y1elded three
more m the final four mnlng,s
The Reds begm a three-day
sen es at Ch1cago ton1ght
Wayne Sunpson 15-3 ) ts the
scheduled starter for the Reds

If your kids
don't know where
they're going,
this guide can help
point the way.

Me 1gs has one game left
be f01 c

tour name nt ttme
a s xth meetmg wtth

be ~1 n s

Ne11 Jl a~en at Sy ra cuse
II &lt; Jnesd I) al 5 30 p m Meigs
\\ 1 f tu uf the f1ve previous
llll Ct ln f,:S

h nton
002 000 200-4 6 6
Mugs
000 000 6!x- 7 6 I
Mun a han Collins (6)
Massc) (I Pi 1 Myers 8 and
KJ 1ebel Van Matre and D1xon
Um p1res Homer Smtih
plate Doc Ingels and Art
Stobart bases

YOllr
Insurance
Agent

DALE

Our Polley Is
Enftre Coverage
Rest assured when you
msure wrth us 1hat your
ts covered tor f1re
1 "'"" habrllty Come rn and
get the soothtng facts

C~n~uh
....

,

'lfs Sodjl

*

;,.w

Davis-Warner Ins.
Pt'tone 991 2966

14 Court Sl

Pomeroy

If you
can't manage
n~ how are you

going to
ntanage later?
Money s t1ght You feel pretty lucky
If you can stretch your paycheck
enough to meet all the everyday
expenses It s harder than ever to
save a buck And how are yo u gomg
to take ca1e of the fut ure, when
you ve got enough houb le JUSt tak
mg care of the present I
But, you can mana ge to saveby Jommg the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work It's a sure way to
get started on a nest egg that you
can depend on 111 the future
The amount you destgnate Will
be automatically set as1de fr0m your
pay check and used to buy U S
Savmgs Bond s before you get your
check, and before you can spend It
So J0111 the Payroll Savmgs Plan
and start on your "secret stash" to
day And then Just relax and don't
worry about tomorrow You'll
manage

The go vernment
puts 1t out
lt's abouttcchm
c,d careers that
don't take four
years of college to
prepare for
Careers th,1t
P·'Y double what a htgh school gradu ttc
usually c.1rns As much as some college
gr,1duates make
If you can't swmg four years of college
LUltiOn, you can st1ll help your ktds to a great
career
Send for the gu1d~: today It's ft ee

---------- - -------------~I
To Careers Wa&lt;htngton D C 20202
I

I

tbe

~PC~~• BIG
\

.... .:\

I

Name

'

+++
ON THE TV DIAL Anyone who knows 811Yth1ng at all about
ballet probably thinks first of ' Swan Lake,' and thitl classic Ia on
WMtJL.TV at 8 Cardlnals-Aatros Ia the I'!fonQy night NBC
game, 8 15 on WSAZ..TV See Btwt Reynoldltn a 188'1 pilot !bat
didn't make It at 10 on WCHS-TV

Rose hit a g1ound ball to se&lt;:
ond base but St I oms catcher
red S1mmons was called lor
nterference and the ruling
forced 111 a 1un
Mm gan smgled home l\lo
runs folan brought m another
and Morgan scored on a wild
p1tch Rose added the fmal run
m the e~g hth With a smgle that

coach George Nes:etroad s state Class AA cha1 tpiO 1s of
Me1gs Legwn club beat AA th1s sp111 g
h1gh school champiOn Ironton R ck V m M 1ll e whu ga med

MARK V 193)- M SayreS.
2-16 R Sayre 4 I 9 Morgan 1~
2 Ferguson 9 1 19 Howard 6-1
13 Boggs 4-2 10 Walters 11~
22
FRIENDLY TAVERN (75)
- HarriS 11~22 Russell 1~2
B Adams ().0.() R Clark 5-2-12
F1elds J..0.6 Crawford 7 1 15
Hubbard 8-0-16, Hall W-4

OHIOAN KILLED
WAYNESVILLE Mo IUPI)
- Juamta Lou Bova 46,
Parma Ohio was ktlled
Sunday when her car sktdded
across a raised med1al strip on
U S 66 and struck another car
headon The accident occw-red
stx miles east of here

Jmd had smglcd m one •unand
Joe Morgan scored another on
Bench s sacnf1ce fly
fhe Heds scored anothe1 1un
m the fuurth wd Geron 1rno
dJ ove m h1s th1rd run of the
game m the fifth w1th a smgle
Cmcmnall added f1ve runs m
th e seventh oH reliever Joe
Grzenda With U1e bases loaded

Meigs Tuned for Opener
,:~~"":~:~~:::::%: In Legion District Play

Chicago, 6-1

Newsies Knocked Down
The Da1ly Sentmel lost for
the ltrst tame as Adolph s
Da1ry tw-ned the trtck 67.07 and
reduced thetr hold on first
place lo one game over Mark V
who defeated The Frtendly
Tavern 93-75 In the other game
the Pomeroy Nahonal Bank
edged
the
Middleport
Department Store 66 64 m
Mtddleport Independent
Basketball League action
Sunday mght
Steve Dunfee paced Adolph s
to their upset wm wtth 19 pomts
while Jimmy Noe had 16
Dennis E1chmger led the
Sentinel with 15 whtle Mtck
Childs popped 10 14
Doxie Walters led Mark V
w1th 22 while M1ke Sayre had 16
and Ron Ferguson 19 Barry
Harns topped the Fnendly
Tavern wtth 22
Arthur Clark led the
Pomeroy National Bank to
thetr wm wtth 'll whtle Dave
F1fe added 14 Btll Vaughan led
, the Department Store with 2()
while Jon Garnes had 15
ADOLPH S (67) - Haggerty
" ;.3-13 Dunfee !1-1-19 Moms 6-

to thJrdona sacnflce and ca me 1uute for the second straight
hom e wh en the Cardinals m1 ss ume
The Reds won t2 2 on Satur
ed on a try fo r a double play
day
m a showplace game for
The Cards came back m their
ha lf of the th1rd w1th a run on Cesa r Geronuno who collected
Matty Alou s RBI smglc but four hits and drove m three
Bobby Tolan led off tlle f1 fth runs
Geronimo drove m Boby To
mnmg With hiS f1fth homer or
and Tony Perez m th e first
Jan
the year and what turned out to
mmn
g ~•th a tnplc after To
be the wmmng run of the game
I olan also doubled m the SIX
th mmng and scored on Tony
Perez smgle Dennis Menke
scored Johnny Bench 1\llh a
sacnf1ce bunt m the e1ghth mn
mg for the Reds fm al 1un
The wm was Ja ck 81lhng
ham s makmg hun 6-9

Baltimore RipS

Bal l (Dobson 10 8) at Texa s
S 7) 8 30 p m
Tuesdays Games

Atlan ta at P Its

Ph Ia at San 0 ego
Montre al at San Fra n

ST LOUIS I UPI )-A muple
of more sem s like the one here
dur10 g the weekend and the
Cmc•nna tl Reds can stop
swea lln g the
NatiOnal

Sunday s Results

P I 3 Houston 2 I1st game 10 Bos ton 6 M nn 1
nn ngs)
Detroi2KC O
P 11 3 Hous ton 2 (2nd game)
Call 1 M lwa 0 I lsi game)
Ch1cago S Atl anta 3
M twa 2 Call (2nd game )

tAll T1mes EDT)

Sunrise Semmar 4
6 15- Farm ReporllJ 6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8

0

Ph&lt; la

C nc•

6 00 -

8 JO -

Montreal

East
w I pet gb
52 30 634

Today s Probable P1tchers

TUESDAY JULY 18 1972

6

Ch cago
St Lou

s,

10 13

12 00 - Movoe On the Waterfront

Amencan League

Naf1onal League

"

11 oo - News 3 4 6 NewsB 1015
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 VIewpoint 8

B1 Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

Pass

By Umted Press International

~

6 oo - News 3 4 8 tO Truth or Conseq 6 1 Dream of Jeannie
tl Sesame St 20 News 15 Hathayoga 33
6 30- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 13 CBS News 8 10
Folk Guitar 33
7 oo - Elec Co 20 News 6 It Takes a Thief 3 Dick Van Dyke
4 What s My Line• 8 Movie Love with the Proper
Stranger ll Sa nl 15 Oft the Record 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Traffic Court 10 Mr Rogers 20
~oJSode Action 33
I Dream ol Jeann&lt;e 4 Dragnet 8
8 oo - Baseballl 4 15 tn Search of the Lost World 6 Gun
smoke 8 tO Swan Lake 20 33
9 DO-Heres Lucy 8 10 Mov1e Divorce American Style 6 13
9 30 - Doris Day 8 10 Book Beal20 Toy That Grew Up 33
10 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 News 20 Toy That Grew Up 33

• J 98 7 2

6+

..'

MONDAY EVENING

SOUTH
4 K J 98o

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

••

New York

¥Q86o4

It
34
54

"
"•

~ P it

EAST
• Yoo

• Q 103 2

~

r.

and Tomorrow

4A 2

WEST

~

Programs for Tonight

17

July 17,1972

I
I
M el c'""'--- - ----I
I
I
Cl1 y
I
I
Stale
__ .,. . Zn_
________
_ _______________
JI

DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
AOwertil ln&amp; cont lbuted lor the public &amp;DOd In coooer al Or\ with

Tilt Advtrtlslna Cou!K\1 .tncllht nte rnat ona ~ewspaper Adve, llsin&amp; Elec ut

NowEBonda pay5~% mterea t when held to
ma.tur ty Df 5 ye an. 10 monthJ 4It t he fi n t
IU"e replaced if 10111 llillen 1 o~
deetroY«! When needed they au be al8hal
at your bank lntere~~t 111 not Jubject. to &amp;tate
or local neome tues and federal talC may
be lklfe n!d u t I n!dempt.wn

year Bonds

~'
~

*
\:

:1*

Take stock in America.
Buy U.S. Savmgs Bonds.

vu

�EDifORIAL
~=w· · '*'~

Nonsmokers Hove
Health Peril, Too
Take a deep breath
II you are m a crowded room a bus a plane 01 a 1es
taurant chances are good that you have JUSt mhaled a
fa1r quanllty of c1garette smoke perhaps sp1ced With a
pungent dose of c1gar fumes
Are your eyes smartmg a little? Are your lungs rebel
ling at the touch of tamted atr? Do you wmce at tlle occa
s1onal direct gust of smoke that curls under your nose 1
Unless you are one of those devout Cigarette wm
sh1pers to whom pure a1r smells bad you are unhkely to
escape at least an occaswnal adveiSe reactton to the
smoke filled room And even 1! you are not aware of 1l
the smoke ma1 be domg some unpleasant thmgs to vour
body
Up to now the anll&lt;mokmg campa1gn has concenll a ted
on the hal mful effects smokmg has on smokers them
selves
Swce the 1964 Surgeon General s report linked Cigarette
smokmg w1th cancer and other dtseases Amencans have
m fact cut down But there remams ~ hard core of those
who e1ther refuse to believe or choose to diSregard re
search fmdmgs leavmg us w1th a smoky mmonty ol
about 44 m1lhon peole who patrromze ctgarette make1s
plus the c1gar and p1pe clientele
And all too many of these smokers- at worst arro
gantly selfiSh at best carelessly thoughtless-ms•st on
mdulgmg the1r noXIous habit m public places someltmes
1ndulgmg those hab1ts nght m the faces of unsuspectmg
passersby
ft 1s bad enough that bemg smoked at IS a nUisance
But new research has shown that nonsmokers health 1s
measurably harmed when they are m confmed area• w1t~
smokers
The 1972 Surgeon General s report on the health conse
quences of smokmg cites ev1dence that carbon monox1de
from tobacco smoke ma) dependmg on the length o'
exposure be suff1c1ent to be harmful to the health of an
exposed person Th1s 1s espec~ally true the report adds
of exposed people With chrome lung or heart problems ot
certam types
The report also pomts out that other components of to
bacco smoke have been shown to have harmful effects on
ammals but lhat there IS not yet enough mformatwn on
how thev affect humans
Surgeon General Jesse L Stemfeld says that non
smokers have as much nght to clean a1r as smokers have
to their so called nght to smoke The pt oblem of en
forcmg that rtght remams
No smokmg Signs are diSobeyed as often as not and
such efforts as segregahng smokers on a1rllnes have met
w1th onlv md1fferent success
Should nonsmokers retaliate by chewmg garlic and
breathmg m the faces of those who puff g11mly on ctga
rettes on packed buses? Should they grab the c1garettes
out of the mouths of those who ftll coffee shops w1th acnd
fumes? Should thev demand a new prohJbJ\Ion law ban
nmg ctgarettes ?
A httle extreme perhaps But ctgarette smokers must
for thetr own good as well as everyone else s begm to
avotd smokmg m pubhc places Nonsmokers should be
come a little less shy about politely askmg smokers to
cease and destst Those charged w1th e.nforcmg extstmg
rules agamst smokmg should be courteously but mcreas
mgly strtct
And m lhe meantime maybe you should not take that
deep breath after all

1· ·· Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

CANDIDATE FOR MEANEST MAN
Dear Helen
I have an older fnend who ts blmd and uses a Seemg Eye dog
When they go for a walk the dog sometimes uses a nearby open
lot for hts nature call
The man who ltves next door to the lot has complamed three
times and has notifted the pollee He says h1s chtldren play there
I thmk tt s better that the dog chooses the lot than someone s
lawn BeSides 1t doesn t happen often as the dog 1s very well
tramed
Wouldn t you think a man w1th eyes could help a man Without
them to the extent of uSJng a shovel once m a whtle? - TAKES
ALL KINDS I GUESS
Dear TAKIG
1 certamly do I And I m sure that others on the block would
feel the same so why don t your fr1end and his dog av01d the lot
and stick to the HUMAN stde of the street' - H

++++

Dear Helen
Yea-a-a for your suggestiOn of a boys1e magazme on the
coffee table to counteract those gtrlle mags our husbands love
My man has pored over the nudies for two and one-haH
years So I framed a ptcture of ' Burt • and scattered a few more
around as per your equal stghts - and my husband hasn t
brought a g~rlie magazme m the house smce - EQUAL SIGHTS
FOREVER
P S Are there really Burt calendars?
Dear Equal
Don t think so But a Burt Reynolds calendar might be a hot
1tem come O.rtstmas Cosmo - take note - H

+++
Dear Helen
Is a daughter-In law still a daughter-m~aw after she and
your son are dtvorced' My son s former wife and I are very good
friend• Rnd live two doors from each other ~e Is here often wtth
the children (Tom and Sue my grandchildren ) and we go many
places together
But my son ts re;named and, as I only have the one boy tt
gets rather confusmg when I Introduce each as 'my daughter-m
law 1at different luncttons of course)
What do you call your 'ex daughter-In-law? My sons
former wife sounds cold - as if she IS excludoo from the family
- and I s!lll constder her a daughter - EX MOTHER IN
LAW?
Dear Ex
How about May llntroduce my son s ltrst wife
or my
first daughter-m law
or (if your lrtends already know the
grandchildren), Toms and Sues mother
Someone should wrtte an etiquette book Utled Broken
Branches of a Family Tree rtght' - H
PS Read on
Dear Helen
I just attended a weddmg where the father of the groom was
badly hurt as the result of a broken home He went through the
receptton line like an outs1der while the groom's step-father (the
'new • husband) stood m the rece1vmg line next to the young
man
Next month the man s daughter will be married and the real
father 's name IS not on the lnvttatlon And thiB Is a FRIENDLY
divorce where the man has done hiS share financially' Correct•
- COUSIN OF THE GROOM
Dear Cousin
Not correct 1An ex-ltusband 18 still the lather of hts children
He should have his part m their weddlnp - H

.••_ 3- The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0
••,,
•..

.'.

2- The DaUy Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , July 17 1972

"That Young Jerk May Be Around
for a Long T1mel"

Safety Play
Cinches Slam
NOKTII (D )
4 A 71 4
• 12
t A KQ h o

Television Log

¥J1097
• 10
... J 653

o!o914

¥AK

• 43
... K Q 10 8
Both vuln er alle
"est North East Soulh

Pass

14

Pass
Pass
Pass

4 N T.
oN T.

p "

Open r ~

10 30 -

64

tNfWSPAPf R fNTEA PRISE ASSN l

The b dd ng ha s been
West
North
East

l•

3 tft
4t

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
5•
Pass
Pass
6•
Pass
You South hold
4 i\1543 ¥ K9763 t vmd o!o Q107

Wh at do you do now"
A- Pass You tr1ed to get to
seven and your partner reruscd
)()Ur IDVI(BfiOD

TODAY S QUESTION
l n s t e ad of reb1dd ng th ree
lubs yo r partner eb ds tv. o

diamonds What do you do now"
Answer tomorn w

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Monday July 17 the
!Wth day of 1972 w1th 167 to
follow
The moon IS approachmg 1ts
f1rst quarter
The mormng stars are Venus
and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mereu
ry Mars and Jup1ter
Those born on lh1s date are
under the s1gn of Cancer
Televtston personality Art
Lmkletter was born July 17
1912
On th1s day m hiStory
In 1821 Flonda was formally
ceded to the Umted States by
Spam

Human Dtmenstons 33

Movre

Pass
ll!ad- • J

J1m We haven t wntten
about safety plavs fm a long
t1me Why don t we disc uss
them th1s week
Oswald Why not? Let s
sta1t w1th a standard one
South cons1ders b1ddmg sev
" ' s p a d e s but dec1des
agawst 11 on the theory that
11 No1 th holds the queen of
spades m add11lon to Ills aces
en• k111g ~ Will b1d the
grand sian. I m self He wms
the ope mn g heart lead and
IS pleased to see that h1s
restramt wa s the COli ect ac
hon
J•m
If South IS at all
careless he w1ll lead a low
11 ump to dummv s ace at
tnck two East w1ll show out
and South will have to lose
t"o II umps and hiS slam
Oswald It IS bad luck to
fmd all foul trumps gathe1 ed
togethe1 m the wron g hand
but 11 does happen H South
knows about safety plays he
has a perfect one at hiS d1s
posal here
J1m
He simply I a y s
down hiS kmg of trumps at
tnck two If both opponents
follow he can 1 I o s e two
11 ump l1 Jcks If East show s
out he can now hold West
to one trump tnck tf West
shows out he c a n handle
East s case
Oswald ThiS safety play
costs little South wms all
the tncks any !lme the quee n
of trumps drops on the fu st
01 second trump lead

,

News 20

Su clde Commandos

1 00 -

Foxus on Columbus

1 30 - News 13
200 - News 4

~

4

15 - Corncob ReporiJ

6

55 - Rocky &amp; Bultwlnkle 13

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Romper Room 6 7 25 -

Sports Club 13
7 30- SteepyJelfers8 Romper Room6 Underdog 13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St 33
Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack Lalanne 13

9 00 - Paul DIXon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Lue&lt; s Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 Romper Room 8 Mr Rogers 33 What Every
Woman Wants to Know 3 T mmy and Lass le6

9 30 - TrulhorConseq 3 PhltDonahue8 Ml keDouglas6 One
L1fe to Live 13 Electr ic Co 33
o 00 - D nah Shore 3 lS Luc lie Ball 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
Hathayoga 33
10 30 - Con central on 3 15 Ph l Donahue 4 Spilt Second ll
Beverly Hlflb II es 8 My Three Sons 10 In School Instruct on

I

t "'... bUb bdU bUbU..

bL

... , "' ., ,

,

,

.. ,

..

tJbbJLJ

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN

33 F Troop

I

GUY NAMED JOE
IS ROUGH ON RATS
NEW YORK (KFS) - There have been lots
of rats m mov1es the ktnd of rats that had fans
' m public
and were all sweetness and hght
Lately however m keepmg w1th the ever
growmg swmg to reahty movte rats have been
furry and have had teeth and talls Ftrst there
was W11lard and 1! that d1dn t repel you
sufficiently now there IS Ben starrmg
Joseph Campanella as the b1g cheese of a
detective who has to clean up the rats
The rat p1ctures have been produced by
Bmg Crosb) s company (maybe hiS next wtll be
Roden! to Morocco ) and we asked Cam
paneUa to COIIU1Ient on hiS costars
Most actors wlll tell you that they do not
like to appear m mov1es With two nvals children and an1111als sa1d Joe Both they
claun are natural scene stealers- and to some
degree they are rtght I would hate to appear m
mov1e or televlSlon production wtth Lass1e
because she (or he) would monopolize the
screen Even a star like Elizabeth Taylor
menhoned that the beautiful Collie got more
attentiOn when they were m a f1lm together
JohnnyWe1ssmuller used to complam that
m the senes of Tarzan pictures that he made
there was absolutely no chance to show any
acting ability because the vanous anunals
nresent - especially the chunps - were natural
scene stealers Johnny satd this did not hother
him particularly because he never conSidered
himself a threat to S1r Laurence Olivier but tt
did upset co-star Maureen 0 Sulhvan who was
proud of her JUStifiable acting talents
Will1am Powell and Myrna Lily frankly
admitted that m their Thm Man senes they
were more than once upstaged by the httle wtre
hatred Temer who played Asta Powell who IS
a rather cultivated easy gomg guy admitted he
got a little upset when the dog s owner-tramer
msJSted the pooch get equal bllhng when ap
pearmg w1th hun and M1ss Lily
Powell sa1d at the tune I II share bllhng
w1th the hound as soon as you produce figures to
show me how many dogs purchase moVIe
tickets each week That ended the argument
The 1dea of working wtth a gang of rats
held no great allure for me and I told the
production company thts when they approached
me w1th the 1dea The producer explamed that
not only were the rats lr1endly they were
downr1ght lovable Later events proved he was
rtghl The animal !ramer on the mov1e Moe Dt
Sesso assured me that the rats were JUSt as
frtendly and even tempered as rabbtts - except
when hungry

fair Play Triumphs:

McGovern Had It All Along
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT

10 45 -

Ameri can Style 13 Communrque 6

11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 tS Love of Life 8 to Sesame St
33 Bewt!ched 6 13
12 OO - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun s 5050 Club4 Local News 13
Pass word 6 Jackre Obi nger 8 News 10

12 30 - 3 w s Game 3 15 Spit Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8
10 Elec Co 33
1 oo - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Dlvorce Court 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Ch ld 15 Joyce Chen Cooks 33
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Sewmg Sk11ts 33
2 00 - Days of Our L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 VIrgin a
Graham 6 Love Splendored Thing 8 10 Grand Master Chess
33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Dahng Game 13 Guid ing Light 8 10
Librar y 33
3 00 - General Hasp tal 6 13 Secret Stor m 8 10 Another
World 3 4 15 Great Crrcus Parade 20 JJ

3 30- One Ltfe to Live 6 Edge of Nigh! 10 Hodgepodge Lodge
33 Return lo Peyton PlaceJ 4 15 Jefl sCollte 13
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 4 15 Gilligan s Is 8 Flint
ston es 13 Sesame 51 33 Huckleberry Hound 6 Mov ie The
Rag&lt;ng T de 10
4 25 - Sporls Club 6
Gree n Acres 3 Vrrgmran 8 Pa ssword 13

Leave It To

Beaver 15 I Love Lucy 6 Andy Gr ff th 15 Merv Gr ffl n 4

s oo - II Takes A Th ef 4 D ck Van Dyke 15 Wagon Tra&lt;n 3

Ma ve r ck 13 B&lt;g Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall D lion IS Elec Co 33
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 CBS News 8 10 I Dream of Jeann ie
13 Truth or Con seo 6 S•&lt;&gt;me St 20 Halhayoqa 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 GrandMastersChessJ
7 oo - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec Lo ~u ureen Acr es
3 Farmers Daughter 13 Andy Gr ff lth IS Dick Van Dyke4
lnstght 33
7 JO - Ma sterpi ece Theatre 33 Ponderosi 3 lS MDd Squad 6
13 Jerry Reed 8 A B&gt;rlhday Story 2il Masterpiece Theatre

33
8 00 - Magg e and The Beautiful Machine 20
8 30 - Ha wa 1 F ve 0 8 10 Advocates 20 33 NB C Actlon
Pla yhouse J 4 Mov 1e 6 13 Evenmgat Pops20 33
9 30 - Cannon 8 Do n lt 20 Handluls of Ashes
Vlbrat1ons From London 3 4 15

33 Good

10 00 - News Weather Sports 20 Marcus Welby 4 6 13 Flrtng
Lme 33

10 30 - WSAZ Comment 3 Arthur Smith 8 Probe The World
Around Us 4 Road Ra e n~:~ s White Wave 15

11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 IS
11 30 -

0 ck Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Move

Mother s House 8 Mov1e Night and Da y
McCall 13
I 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - News 4 13

Our

Movie Cash

By Paul Crabtree
ProvtnCial pride and sechonal jealous1es are two of the most
damagmg facets of Appalachta In general and West Vtrglnta In
particular
Opportuntltes lor cooperahon too often are passed up In
favor of cuttmg the other guy s throat - at the expense of both If
Dallas-Forth Worth and Mmneapolls-St Paul tore mto each
other the way Huntmgton and O.arleston do, they d st1U be onehorse towns
AHuntmgt.Jn TV stalton dtd a cutting put-down of O.arleslon
on the Fourth of July remmdmg VIewers of the great
celebrabons gomg on around the region (particularly at
Gallipolis and Ripley, both near ne1ghbors of ours) Then the
screen swttched to O.arleston, showmg a vacant street wtth one
vacant-faced mdlvtdual proclaunmg that the Fourth was 'a
pretty qmet day here •
It stung And the funny part ts that Huntington didn't do
much m the way of observmg 1ts own grand and glorious Fourth
Before you pomt a finger reproachful!y let s not forget that
we share some of the gu1lt, too There Is too milCh unhealthiness
m the rtvalry between Galltpolts and Pt Pleasant, between
Pomeroy and Middleport and between all four of these mld.Qhlo
Valley towns
Compet1110n ts healthy but blind unreason In rival sltuattons
ts stuptd

~

MIAMI BEA CH INEA&gt; subJec ted to great press ures from skillful pa rty reg ula rs
In th1s Democratic conventiOn bent toward Sen George and labor operahves bitterly opposed to McGove1n s
McGovern old laws of human behaviOr prove d as deciSIVe nommatwn
The smashm g McGovern tr1umph demonstrated how
as the heralded new pollhcs
ever
that an outraged sense or faJrness ts a powerful
One such law JS that 11 IS dangerous to employ pollhcal counter
press ure especially 10 the h1ghly charged atmos
tact1cs whtch outrage people s sense of fa1rness There
phere
of
a natwnal convention It had be~n proved so m
may be short range gains but they 1end to produce a
1952
when
Gen Dwtght Etsenhower won a test fa1r play
counter trend that may more than offset the advance
vote over Robert A Taft and thereby clmched that years
That ts exactly what happened thiS time to y1eld Me Republican preSidential nommahon
Govern hts sweepmg v1ctory m the key credenhals battle
Even before the Cahforma vote here Jt was plam that
fot !51 Callforma delegates After he won them m a June another old law was workmn. for McGovern Its essence
pr1mary they had been taken from h1m by a stop Me IS that a front r unner who bmlds a commandmg lead auto
Govern power play wh1ch m effect changed the rules that matlcally becomes a strong magnet attrachng tn a steady
had gutded a campatgn cons1gned at that late stage to How the rest of the delegates he needs
hiStory
My careful checks usmg the most conservahve md1
McGovern s dev1ce from the moment of that reversal cators show that McGovern was on a slow but umnter
was to call for fa1r play It worked better than he rupted upward course m delegate totals from th~ moment
hoped
he htt thts conventwn scene
By my updated dele~ate count on conventwn eve the
From Saturday to m1d afternoon of the Monday opemng
senator had a strong gr1p on about I 42() of the I 509 dele of the convenhon nearly 100 delegates swttched from for
gate votes needed for nommatlon Yet he won 1618 votes mally uncommtlted status to open support of cand1dales
to hiS stde m the btg Cahforma challenge
Most of those went to McGovern m small clusters of two
Most of that excess of roughly 200 votes he added onto three and four
hiS coll'mltteq strength was conSidered by hts own stra
I have observed thiS pattern at woQ&lt; m every conven
tegJSts to be soft meamng uncertam m prospect
twn 1 have covered from 1952 on Surface clamor and con
When I talked to tho~ e McGovern a1des they sa1d the fttct may suggest that the outcome ts m doubt But for
soft delegates mdtcated almost umformly that they the developmg wmner the old delegate ftow chart tells a
were offended by what th~y deemed the InJUStice of the d1fferent story Underneath all the notse he climbs h•gher
move deprtvmg the senator of those 151 Caltforma dele by the hour
gates
So tt was thts hme for George McGovern He realh had
These extras were not counted as hard supporters won the key "Votes before he came
because the delegates themselves sa1d they were ~emg
(NIWSPAP£1t lNTEIIPRISI ASSN )

6
Lucrtle Rrvers 6

11 00 - Sale of Century 3 15 Fam ly Affa ir 8 10 Love

4 30 -

Cine
Houston
Los Ang

Atlanta
San Fran

47 3.4

580

4

1

40 524
9
42 39 s 9 9 '
36 45 444 IS ,
29 54 349 23 '
West
wlpctgb
51 31 622
48 38 556 S
4d

43 40

518

91 -.

38 46 452 14
38 so 432 16

Sa n D•eg
3 52 373 201 2
Sunday s Results

+++
Pat Boone tsn 1 my favortte smger by any means, but I've
always regarded hun as a class guy
But the COilll11erctal he cut for a special mall-order albwn of
reltgtous records IS one of the poorest efforts I've ever seen
anywhere - and mail-order record offers on TV are generally
very bad at best
It really isn t Pat s fault The editing and timing of the sales
pttch ts just dreadful and he looks embarrll!l!ed by the whole

thing

(II s more a ptty, because the album and Its arttsts look
attracttve )

+++
I ve decided I like Canadian pro football, even If It did &amp;how
up preciously early on the screen It 'a a bit of a job getting used to
the three-tries for first-down, and that 110-yard field they 1111e
What I like best, I believe, Is the Idea of getting a single point
for kicking the ball over the other team s goal line Part of thill
rule pennlts a Jllllll ret:elveftn a close game to catch the baU and
(if he can) boot It right back over the other team's goal for a
point It s an exciting part of the game In Canada, and might be
worth a try down here In the colonies

East
w I

Del
Ball

46 35

Bos ton

New York

Cleve

Mlwa

45
38
37
34
32

36
39
41
46
47

pet

566

9b

1
494 6
474 7 '
425 II '
405 13

556

West

Oa k
Chtc

M nn
KC
Calf
Texas

wlpctgb
52 30 634
45 38

54271

41

500 11

42 38 525 9
41

38 46 452 15
35 48 422 17' 1

Cmc 4 St Lou1 s 1

Oakl and 5 New York 2

Ball 6 Ch c 1 ( 1st game 7 nn s
ra m )

San 0 ego 7 New York 3

Fran 10 Ph ta 7

Cn c al Bait !2nd game ppd

Los Ang 4 Montreal 2

ram
Tex as 3 Clev e 2 ( 12 nn ngs

n ght)

Today s Probable P1tchers
IAll Tomes EDT I
Cn cago 1Reuschel 3 21 2 30
pm
Ch c t Bradley 10 7) al Detro I
Atlanla (Schueler 3 41 at Pitt ILol ch IS 61 8 IS p m
IWal ker 3 S) 8 15 p m
Oak IHorten 2 t) at M&lt; lwa
S Lou s (Glbson 9 51 at !Stephenson 2 2) 8 30 p m
Cal I I Barber 2 ll at Boston
Hous ton ( Rober ts 8 4)
8 15
pm
tCurl sS3) 7 30pm
( S1mpson

5 3)

at

Tuesdays Games

IHand

Cmc a t Ch cago
St Loui s at Houston
New York at Los Ang

Cleve at K C 2 llw&lt; n ghtl
Batt at Te.as
Cht cag o at Detr o I
Oakland at Mt lwa
M nn at New York
Ca l t at 8os ton

Pirates Sweep
Doubleheader
By Unlled Press lolernalwnal
Dave Gtustl the Natwnal
League s lead10g rehef pitcher
won the first game for the
Pittsburgh Ptrates Sunday and
got cred1t for hiS 13th save m
the second game as the Pirates
scored a patr of 3-2 vtctones
over the Houston Astros
The wms wtdened the Pirates
Nahonal League East lead to
41&gt; games The San D1ego
Padres helped the P~rates s
cause by beahng the second
place New York Mets 7-3
The Cmcmnatt
Reds
defeated the St U.u1s Car
dina Is 4 I the Clucago CUbs
heat the AUanta Braves S-3
lhe Los Angeles Dodgers
~d the Moptr~pl expos, 4
2 and the San Franc1sco
Gtants topped the Phtladelphla
Plullles 1().7 m other NL
games
Gtush pitched one shutout
Inning 10 the first game
markmg the 18th stra1ght
appearance m which he did not
allow a run and then ptcked up
the save m the second game
although he was tagged for a
tw&lt;H'lln smgle The runs were
charged to Bruce Klson who
went 8 2-3 mrungs for his fourth
W10
Relief pttcher Fred Gladdmg
hit Bob Robertson With a p1tch
wtth the bases ftlled In the lOth
mnlng forcmg m the wmnmg
run of the opener The Ptrates
had Ued the score at 2-2m the
etghth when Robertson doubled
home Renme Stennett A
double by Wtllle Stargell and
smgles by Al Oliver and
Stennett were the big blows of
the rughtcap for the PJTates
The Padres took advantage
of throwmg errors by pttchers
Jerry Koosman and Danny
FriSella to score lour runs m
the seventh mmng and down

I eague s West ern DiviSion
race

The Reds swept all three
games "1th the Cardmals
puttmg the toppmg on It With a
4 1 wm Sunday to take a f1ve
game lead over Houston m th e
diVISIOn

The games closed out the
season ser1es between the Reds

and Cards w1th Cmcmnat1
wmner of 10 of 12 games
Darrel Chaney scored the
f1rst Cincmnall run 1n the th1rd
mnmg when he doubled went

the Mets Reliever Bill Greif
shut out the Mets on one hit for
the !mal three mn10gs to wm
his f1fth game aga1nst II losses
Rook1e Dave Schneck had a
homer double and smgle for
the Mets
Bobb) Tolan s fourth&lt;nmng
homer gave the Reds a 2 1 lead
and Tolan doubled and scored
another run on Tony Perez
smgle m the SIXth as the Reds
closed their season senes w1th
the Caro10als w1th a !().2 edge
Jack Bllhngham p1 tched an
eight-hitter to wm hiS s1xlh
game for the Reds Lllu Brock
and Ed Crosby had two h1ts
each for the Cardinals
Run-6cor10g s10gles by Jose
C3rdenal and Don Kessinger
!tnd Randy Hundley s sacnhce
Oy enabled the Cubs to score
three runs 10 the e1ghth mnmg
and hand Atlanta s Ron Stone
his seventh loss Jack Aker
emergmg as a star rehever for
the Cubs allowed one run m
the last two 10rungs for his
fourth straight vtctory
Don Sutton pitched a seven
hitter to w10 hiS 11th game for
the Dodgers who scored their
four runs m the ftrst mnmg
w1th the help of a two-run tr1ple
by Btll Buckner It was the
e1ghth complete game of the
year for Sutton wh1le BtU
Stoneman who went stx m
nmgs suffered hiS seventh
setback agamst e1ght wms
Tito Fuentes ftrsl maJor
league grand slam clunaxed a
SIHUn third 10mng and Garry
Maddox drove m three other
runs wtth a fourth mmng
homer for the Gtants Jtm Barr
allowed 13 hits but went the
distance for the Gtants for his
thtrd wm mftve decJStons whtle
Woody Fryman was the loser
Greg Luzmsk1 h1t his lOth
homer for the Phillies

By Urutcd Press lnternatwnal
Boog Powell slammed h1s
~

,:: horn" run m hi S last five

games SIOC u ) to help tne
Balllmore Onoles gam a 6 1
VICtory over tlle Ch1cago Wh1te
Sox m a game shortened to
seven mrungs because of ram
The second game of what was
to have been a doubleheader
was postponed
The b1g mf1elder also ha d a
smgle m three llmes at ba t to
boost hiS anem1c average from
196 to 205
The VICtory enabled Balli
more to remam one game

behind Detroit m the Amencan
League East as the Tigers beat
the Kansas City Royals 2.0 In
the West the Oakland A s took
a commanding 7 ''-' game (ead
over runnerup Cl1cago by
wh1pp1n g th e Ne w York
Yankees 52
Elsewhere Cahforma and
Milwauke e
split
a
doubleheader th e An gels
taking the f1rst game J.j} and
th e Brewers w1nnm g the

second 2 I the Boston Red Sox
beat the Mtnnesota Twms 6-1
and the Texas RJ!n gers shaded
the Cleveland lndJans 3 2 m 12
1nnmgs
Jtm Palmer, wh o now has
won 11 of hiS I&lt;J,st 12 deciSIOns
\las the benef1c1ary of Balt1
more s JJ.lut assault on Chica

Gonzales Last
Minute Entry
COlUMBUS ( UP I )
Pancho Gonzales the grand
old man of tenms was a last
mmute entry m the thtrd an
nual Buckeye Tenms Cham
pwnsh1p wh1ch gets underwa)
today at Buckeye Boys RJ!nch
111 nearby Grove C1ty
Gonzales 44 IS seeded fourth
m th e tournam ent behmd
J1mmy Connars Bob Hew1tt
and D1ck Stockton
Although he has hm1ted h1s
tournament actiVIty m recent
years Gonzales now 44 won
several events last year m
cludmg the Southern Call forma
Championship
Connors 19 of Bellville Ill
was one of Gonzales proteges
He was runnerup m las t year s
Buckeye Tour ney to Tom
Gorman of Seattle

().12 Noe 8-0-16 Orr I 1 3 Pr1ce
2-().4
SENTINEL (57) - Rd
Ferguson 3-1 7 R1tchte 3-2-8
E1eh10ger 7 115 Ch1lds 7~14
Douglas 6-1 13

MID DEPT STORE (64 ) B Vaughan 9 2 20 Chaney 2-1
5 Hill3 2-8 Garnes 6-3 15 Wtse
4-0-8 Sm1th 3-4 10

Movies 'Suicide Owpmed," 11 • p.m, llld
T!de,'' ( p.m Tuelclay. baCb WI!II-TV

"Racial

ve1 the weekend 7-4 But 1ts
game \\.l th New Ma tamoras

Sund ay was p 1stponed Me1gs
s 16 9 I on the year
The match was a tWleup f01
go s Wilbur Wood Powell s
Me1gs
opemng game m th e
runth homer of th e year came
m tl e SIXth mmng with Bobby D1stn ct I..eg1on Tour name nt
begmmng Saturday Jul y 22 al
Gnch aboard
Rook1e Bill Slayback p1tched 11 a m agamst always tough
his first maJor league shutout La ncaster on Trautwem F1eld
allowmg Kansas C1ty five h1ts at OhiO Un11ersJly Athens
and stnkmg out seven batters Legwn takes on Logan on the
as the T1gers won for the Athens County Fa1rgroUJ ds
se1enth tune m then last eJght diamond at the same ti me
The Iron s l.egwn team
games Norm Cash and Aureho
Rodnguez prov1ded th e DetrOit whi ch w111 campa1gn m dJStr ct
play agamst teams from Pmts
runs wtth homers
Joe Rudi touched off Oak mouth Hillsboro Chillicothe
lands soonng w1th a first and others IS pretty much a
mnmg homer and M1ke Epstem copy of Ironton H1gh School s
smashed a two-rwt homer m
the s1xth to help the A s
complete a four game s11eep of
the Yankees Dave Hamilton
Saturday's Ttlts
11 1th seventh mmn g rehef from
Bo b U.cker boosted hiS record
to 6 3 Johnn y Ell1s delivered Are Ramed Out
New York s oly runs w1th a
Saturda) mght s games 111
two run homer m the nmth
George Scott drove m 111 0 th e Kyger Creek L1ttle
run s w1th an e1ghth 1nnmg League Tournament \I ere all
smgle to g1ve Milwaukee a split ramed out They have been
after the Angels had taken the moved up to tomght
Remammg games will be
opener behmd the two hll
moved up one day
p1tchmg of Rudy May Vada
Scheduled to play tomght
Pinsorr drove home th e only
are
the Gallipolis Tigers
run of the fi rst ga me w1th a
agamst Centerville at 6 the
sacnhce fly m the lhlfd 1nnmg
Mart y Pattin reg1stered h1s New Haven Clubs agamst
fifth consecutl\ e VIctory with a the undefeated Pomero y
four h1tter aga1nst Mmnesota T1gers at 7 15 and at 8 PI
and Boston got two-run homers Pleasant Kmants pi'.Y f.be
from Regg1e Sm1th and Danny Gallipolis Whlte Sox
In Tuesday mght s achon
Cater
the
Pomeroy Yankees play
Len Randle brought home
Texas 1110nmg run agamst Addav1lle at 6 In the opemng
Cleveland when he smgled w1 th or the second round At 7 15
one out 1n the 12th moved to Ripley plays Bidwell and the
Middleport Ind1ans play PI
second on a sac nflce went to
Pleasant
C1ty Ice and Fuel at
thlfd on a w1ld p1tch by loser
RJ!y Lamb and came home on 8 m a batt! ~ of two un
beatens
Dave Nelson s smgle

mmng w tho ut fUI tl c1 cJ[i mi;t gC
when Rogel Dtxo n sl ot down
S1les a tt em ptl 1g to stea l
second and Dt essell fCJ mcd
IHs e 1 ~ht l wm uf the veat
W1tl th e Situ tlur Jook11g
aga nst on ly one defeat was
gn m Me1gs cane f1on fuur
M1 Cor ll ol as he fanned 10
" tlked five h I one !mu ted r Wl Sdown Y.. ttl s x of liS uwn m
It mton t ' SIX h ls a 1d ~avl up U e Me1gs seH ntt \\I en Jon
Buck led off w1tl a ~ alk Lou
f w ' ms all eat r ed
h onton l 10k a 2 0 lead m the McKmney smglcd Van Malrc
th rd umng when Rill Dressell ~ a lked Cooke wa lked to force
walked w1th one out and Jeff n the hrst run R1c k Ash
Mm nahan the nwnber nme walked to make 1! 4 2 and
b&lt;ttlel crac ked a Van Maire DIXon groun ded lt lo a !wider s
f &gt;St ball dee p nto nghtfleld fo r chm ce that scm ed Van Maire
a horne mn the fl rst rutmd and also Cooke who came ho ne
l11pper off Me1gs p1 tchmg th1s on "' attempted double pia\
throw to fu st
ye \1
Me1gs took t1 c lcdd w1th two
1he lead was upped to 4 0 n
Ue seventh 11 hen Ke1th Parkc1 out 1hen Jon Buck blooped a
led off w1lh a su gle and con wmd blr wn doub le to IIghtfi eld
t nue to second on an error m to score Dtxun and Dave Bovd
th e outfi eld Dave Knebel was who had walke&lt;l
Me1gs scored an msurance
Jut by a p1tch f o ll o ~ 1ng
1un m the eighth when Cooke
Parkers h1 t
After Bayert fanned Myers Jed uff 111lh an mfwld smgle
wa lked to load the bases S1tes \\ Cnt to second on R Ash s
tllen lined a smgle to ce nter s&lt;~cn flce bunt an d came home
Uu ee consecut1\ c v. alks to
ch 1 v1 n ~ 10 boll Parke1 and
Stc\
e Dwtfce Bo) d 1 1Ci Kc' 11
Kl cJbel w1th M)els gomg to
llu d Me1gs g t out of th e SJ eels
Othe1 Me1gs hitters "ere
D xon v.1th a f1rst mn ng s1n~ l c
International League
a I ne shot double by Dunfee m
Standmgs
Untied Pre ss Int ernational "' the second and a second s ngle
W L Pel G B bv McKmn ey
Charl eston
48 34 585 8
Mur na han al lowed thr ee
Lou sv I e
47 38 553 'l 2 lu ts no run s fanned SIX a nd
Ttd ewa ter
45 43 511 6
walked none mIns fi ve nmngs
Rochest er
44 44 500 7
Toledo
43 43 500 7
wmk Kevm Collm' perm1tted
R ch mond
41 45 477 9
one h1 t four run s fanned four
Syracuse
41 47 466 10
and \'r alked se \ en m one and a
Pen nsula
36 51
4l d 14 1
Sunday s Results
, 11 11 d mmngs Massey th e
Charl es1on at Lou sv tll e 2 lose1 all,9~d on~ h~ two
ppd a n
nu•s fan neJlone and ~alked
Pe n ns ul a 8 R chm ond 6
one m two th1rds of an mnmg
Roc hester 7 Syrac use 0
Ttdew ater 4 To edo 0 (1st 7 and Myers allo11 ed one hit one
nn tn gs)
To ledo 2 T dewa ter 0 (2nd 7 1un fanned one and wa lked
three m one mmng
nntngs)
t hOL gh ' f. ' s 11 a I 1 I ~
n1t1ve h 1h1 11 11 f' MOi ll£'\
p ne wl en p 11t ed m th e
l tlh e1 n hf n J'i ol et e IS rh e
l1stest ~ Jtl\\ ng t mbt t pn e

1 IIH
I he

Ih

1111 111

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11&lt; Cl OSS ( !1 Sll l l I
II da 1 n

SI&lt;J I
ce nt

The

I

11,

a nd lil t: &lt;:

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l

TANNEHill

E)Cec Ea

ROBERT HOEFl CH
CtrEdlor
Pubt shed da y l')( Ce p
sa vrday bY The Oh o va ey
P u b s h ng

Ct1m p an'r'

I

Covr r

St
Pome r o.,. on o
45 769 Bus ness Off ce Ph one
99 2 1156 E ~ to a Phone Y9 2

'1 57
Secon d c l ass po!:. ta ge pa d at
P o m er o y

Oh

1irl

,- - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

s

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1
I

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Na t o n a
adver s ng
r epr ese ntat ve
Bor n~ 1
Gal ag he r
nc
2 Eas A 2nd
51 New York C t y New Y or..k.
Subscr p t on rat es
De
ve r ed by car r er where
a va able 50 cen ts per wee k
B y Mo tor Rou t e w here carr er
se r v ce not ava l ab ~
One
month Sl 75 By na I n Oh o
andW va Onevea r \1400
S • mo nt hs S7 25
Thr ee
m ontns S4 50 Su bscr p t on
p ce n cl ude s Sund ay T mes

Sen I ne t

POMEROY
NATIONAL
BANK I66) - Clark 12-3-27
Mitchell 4-0-8 F1le 7~14 Fr
Burney 1~2 Cremeens 3-3-9
Archer W-4

brought Q1aney home
J1m McG lothlin the wmnmg
pitcher allowed seven hits tn
the five mmngs he worked ReI e\er Tom Hall y1elded three
more m the final four mnlng,s
The Reds begm a three-day
sen es at Ch1cago ton1ght
Wayne Sunpson 15-3 ) ts the
scheduled starter for the Reds

If your kids
don't know where
they're going,
this guide can help
point the way.

Me 1gs has one game left
be f01 c

tour name nt ttme
a s xth meetmg wtth

be ~1 n s

Ne11 Jl a~en at Sy ra cuse
II &lt; Jnesd I) al 5 30 p m Meigs
\\ 1 f tu uf the f1ve previous
llll Ct ln f,:S

h nton
002 000 200-4 6 6
Mugs
000 000 6!x- 7 6 I
Mun a han Collins (6)
Massc) (I Pi 1 Myers 8 and
KJ 1ebel Van Matre and D1xon
Um p1res Homer Smtih
plate Doc Ingels and Art
Stobart bases

YOllr
Insurance
Agent

DALE

Our Polley Is
Enftre Coverage
Rest assured when you
msure wrth us 1hat your
ts covered tor f1re
1 "'"" habrllty Come rn and
get the soothtng facts

C~n~uh
....

,

'lfs Sodjl

*

;,.w

Davis-Warner Ins.
Pt'tone 991 2966

14 Court Sl

Pomeroy

If you
can't manage
n~ how are you

going to
ntanage later?
Money s t1ght You feel pretty lucky
If you can stretch your paycheck
enough to meet all the everyday
expenses It s harder than ever to
save a buck And how are yo u gomg
to take ca1e of the fut ure, when
you ve got enough houb le JUSt tak
mg care of the present I
But, you can mana ge to saveby Jommg the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work It's a sure way to
get started on a nest egg that you
can depend on 111 the future
The amount you destgnate Will
be automatically set as1de fr0m your
pay check and used to buy U S
Savmgs Bond s before you get your
check, and before you can spend It
So J0111 the Payroll Savmgs Plan
and start on your "secret stash" to
day And then Just relax and don't
worry about tomorrow You'll
manage

The go vernment
puts 1t out
lt's abouttcchm
c,d careers that
don't take four
years of college to
prepare for
Careers th,1t
P·'Y double what a htgh school gradu ttc
usually c.1rns As much as some college
gr,1duates make
If you can't swmg four years of college
LUltiOn, you can st1ll help your ktds to a great
career
Send for the gu1d~: today It's ft ee

---------- - -------------~I
To Careers Wa&lt;htngton D C 20202
I

I

tbe

~PC~~• BIG
\

.... .:\

I

Name

'

+++
ON THE TV DIAL Anyone who knows 811Yth1ng at all about
ballet probably thinks first of ' Swan Lake,' and thitl classic Ia on
WMtJL.TV at 8 Cardlnals-Aatros Ia the I'!fonQy night NBC
game, 8 15 on WSAZ..TV See Btwt Reynoldltn a 188'1 pilot !bat
didn't make It at 10 on WCHS-TV

Rose hit a g1ound ball to se&lt;:
ond base but St I oms catcher
red S1mmons was called lor
nterference and the ruling
forced 111 a 1un
Mm gan smgled home l\lo
runs folan brought m another
and Morgan scored on a wild
p1tch Rose added the fmal run
m the e~g hth With a smgle that

coach George Nes:etroad s state Class AA cha1 tpiO 1s of
Me1gs Legwn club beat AA th1s sp111 g
h1gh school champiOn Ironton R ck V m M 1ll e whu ga med

MARK V 193)- M SayreS.
2-16 R Sayre 4 I 9 Morgan 1~
2 Ferguson 9 1 19 Howard 6-1
13 Boggs 4-2 10 Walters 11~
22
FRIENDLY TAVERN (75)
- HarriS 11~22 Russell 1~2
B Adams ().0.() R Clark 5-2-12
F1elds J..0.6 Crawford 7 1 15
Hubbard 8-0-16, Hall W-4

OHIOAN KILLED
WAYNESVILLE Mo IUPI)
- Juamta Lou Bova 46,
Parma Ohio was ktlled
Sunday when her car sktdded
across a raised med1al strip on
U S 66 and struck another car
headon The accident occw-red
stx miles east of here

Jmd had smglcd m one •unand
Joe Morgan scored another on
Bench s sacnf1ce fly
fhe Heds scored anothe1 1un
m the fuurth wd Geron 1rno
dJ ove m h1s th1rd run of the
game m the fifth w1th a smgle
Cmcmnall added f1ve runs m
th e seventh oH reliever Joe
Grzenda With U1e bases loaded

Meigs Tuned for Opener
,:~~"":~:~~:::::%: In Legion District Play

Chicago, 6-1

Newsies Knocked Down
The Da1ly Sentmel lost for
the ltrst tame as Adolph s
Da1ry tw-ned the trtck 67.07 and
reduced thetr hold on first
place lo one game over Mark V
who defeated The Frtendly
Tavern 93-75 In the other game
the Pomeroy Nahonal Bank
edged
the
Middleport
Department Store 66 64 m
Mtddleport Independent
Basketball League action
Sunday mght
Steve Dunfee paced Adolph s
to their upset wm wtth 19 pomts
while Jimmy Noe had 16
Dennis E1chmger led the
Sentinel with 15 whtle Mtck
Childs popped 10 14
Doxie Walters led Mark V
w1th 22 while M1ke Sayre had 16
and Ron Ferguson 19 Barry
Harns topped the Fnendly
Tavern wtth 22
Arthur Clark led the
Pomeroy National Bank to
thetr wm wtth 'll whtle Dave
F1fe added 14 Btll Vaughan led
, the Department Store with 2()
while Jon Garnes had 15
ADOLPH S (67) - Haggerty
" ;.3-13 Dunfee !1-1-19 Moms 6-

to thJrdona sacnflce and ca me 1uute for the second straight
hom e wh en the Cardinals m1 ss ume
The Reds won t2 2 on Satur
ed on a try fo r a double play
day
m a showplace game for
The Cards came back m their
ha lf of the th1rd w1th a run on Cesa r Geronuno who collected
Matty Alou s RBI smglc but four hits and drove m three
Bobby Tolan led off tlle f1 fth runs
Geronimo drove m Boby To
mnmg With hiS f1fth homer or
and Tony Perez m th e first
Jan
the year and what turned out to
mmn
g ~•th a tnplc after To
be the wmmng run of the game
I olan also doubled m the SIX
th mmng and scored on Tony
Perez smgle Dennis Menke
scored Johnny Bench 1\llh a
sacnf1ce bunt m the e1ghth mn
mg for the Reds fm al 1un
The wm was Ja ck 81lhng
ham s makmg hun 6-9

Baltimore RipS

Bal l (Dobson 10 8) at Texa s
S 7) 8 30 p m
Tuesdays Games

Atlan ta at P Its

Ph Ia at San 0 ego
Montre al at San Fra n

ST LOUIS I UPI )-A muple
of more sem s like the one here
dur10 g the weekend and the
Cmc•nna tl Reds can stop
swea lln g the
NatiOnal

Sunday s Results

P I 3 Houston 2 I1st game 10 Bos ton 6 M nn 1
nn ngs)
Detroi2KC O
P 11 3 Hous ton 2 (2nd game)
Call 1 M lwa 0 I lsi game)
Ch1cago S Atl anta 3
M twa 2 Call (2nd game )

tAll T1mes EDT)

Sunrise Semmar 4
6 15- Farm ReporllJ 6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8

0

Ph&lt; la

C nc•

6 00 -

8 JO -

Montreal

East
w I pet gb
52 30 634

Today s Probable P1tchers

TUESDAY JULY 18 1972

6

Ch cago
St Lou

s,

10 13

12 00 - Movoe On the Waterfront

Amencan League

Naf1onal League

"

11 oo - News 3 4 6 NewsB 1015
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 VIewpoint 8

B1 Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

Pass

By Umted Press International

~

6 oo - News 3 4 8 tO Truth or Conseq 6 1 Dream of Jeannie
tl Sesame St 20 News 15 Hathayoga 33
6 30- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 13 CBS News 8 10
Folk Guitar 33
7 oo - Elec Co 20 News 6 It Takes a Thief 3 Dick Van Dyke
4 What s My Line• 8 Movie Love with the Proper
Stranger ll Sa nl 15 Oft the Record 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Traffic Court 10 Mr Rogers 20
~oJSode Action 33
I Dream ol Jeann&lt;e 4 Dragnet 8
8 oo - Baseballl 4 15 tn Search of the Lost World 6 Gun
smoke 8 tO Swan Lake 20 33
9 DO-Heres Lucy 8 10 Mov1e Divorce American Style 6 13
9 30 - Doris Day 8 10 Book Beal20 Toy That Grew Up 33
10 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 News 20 Toy That Grew Up 33

• J 98 7 2

6+

..'

MONDAY EVENING

SOUTH
4 K J 98o

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

••

New York

¥Q86o4

It
34
54

"
"•

~ P it

EAST
• Yoo

• Q 103 2

~

r.

and Tomorrow

4A 2

WEST

~

Programs for Tonight

17

July 17,1972

I
I
M el c'""'--- - ----I
I
I
Cl1 y
I
I
Stale
__ .,. . Zn_
________
_ _______________
JI

DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
AOwertil ln&amp; cont lbuted lor the public &amp;DOd In coooer al Or\ with

Tilt Advtrtlslna Cou!K\1 .tncllht nte rnat ona ~ewspaper Adve, llsin&amp; Elec ut

NowEBonda pay5~% mterea t when held to
ma.tur ty Df 5 ye an. 10 monthJ 4It t he fi n t
IU"e replaced if 10111 llillen 1 o~
deetroY«! When needed they au be al8hal
at your bank lntere~~t 111 not Jubject. to &amp;tate
or local neome tues and federal talC may
be lklfe n!d u t I n!dempt.wn

year Bonds

~'
~

*
\:

:1*

Take stock in America.
Buy U.S. Savmgs Bonds.

vu

�~-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 17,1972

4-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17, 1972

Cheshire

'{'"'"'''''''''''':::*"::::».::&gt;.'*''~&lt;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,*"-'''''''"''''''''~'"''''''''''''''''''''''''''''"''''''''_,_,,,,,@

~ : Fischer Holds
·13th In RowiiJ Strong Position
Tigers Cop

The undefeated Cheshire
Tigers made Vinton their 13th
straight victim of the year, 213, Thursday behind the combined three hit pitching of
Claude Cornelius and Kelley
Winebrenner . Cornelius pitched the first four innings
allowing two hits, one a
homerun by Vinton's fine
shortstop, Davies, while
striking out nine and walking
lhree.
Kelley Winebrenner hurled
the last two innings giving up
'one hit, while striking out three
and walking two. Bush pitched
all the way for Vinton and took
lhe loss as the Tigers pounded
out 21 hits off his hurling.
Cheshire scored eight runs in
lhe first inning and followed
with 10 more runs in the third
Inning to win handily.
The Tigers were led in hitting
by Rick Winebrenner with two
Jriples and a single; Roger
Spaulding with three doubles;
Dallas Sayre with a double and
two singles, and Steve Baird
with two long homeruns.
In other games Thursday,
Centerville downed Green 7-5,
Bidwell topped Salem 14-9 and
Addaville nudged Racine, 8-5.
Cheshire plays Addaville
tonight at Cheshire.

i

PIay-off

Ill Forced in
I

_,_

ISport Parade

The Yankees forced a playoff with the Tigers for the
second half championship as
' they knocked off the ln1proved
Pirates 6-2 in Pomeroy Boys'
League action Saturday
mornin·g.
Both the Tigers and
Yankees, COI!Ched by Woody
Call, have 5-1 second half
records. They will play it off at
a date to be determined. If the
Yankees win , a three-game
play-&lt;Jff will be needed to
detennine the overall champion as the Tigers were winners of the first half.
Randy Phillips hurled all the
way for the Yankees and
fanned nine while issuin~ but
three bases on balls. Mark
Mitch went the distance for the
Pirates, fanning three and
walking but one batter.
Greg Smith was the top hitter
for the winners as he cracked
two doubles and a booming
home run which unfortunately
hit a car in centerfield but
fortunately (perhapsl was his
parents'. Tim Hood added a
single and double, Del Call had
two singles, Steve Call had a
double, and Mark Norton and
Gene Hwnphrey each collected
a single.
Jim Rosenbaum had a
double and Blaine Qualls and
Randy Roach each a single.
Pirates
001 010-6 10
Yankees
140 IOx-2 3
Mitch and Soulsby . Phillips
and Hawley .

Vinton Salon 752 I Soci'a 1----l
Launched Friday I! Calendar!~

NOT OPEN .
ON SUNDAY

t\ Boys Play

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) er Nikolai Krogius, and left for
- For a final 30 seconds Bobby their hotel to analyse the
Fischer towered over the chess situation.
Until 90 minutes before the
board . Then he allowed himself
a rare smile, collected his start of Sunday's third game
pencils and walked out of the Fischer kept the chess world
room Sunday after one of the ·guessing whether he would
most dramatic days in world appear or continue his boycott
in protest against television
championship chess.
Minutes earlier world cham- cameras,or ''the evil eyes,'' as
pion Boris Spas,sky of the he called them .
Only after · the Icelandic
Soviet Union had completed his
41st move and left the room, organizers broke a $120,000
pensive and worried.
contract with Chester Fox Inc.,
The third game in the 24- a New York firm which had
, match world championship ·acquired all film and television
was adjourned with the 29- rights, and moved the board
year-&lt;~ld American challenger
into an adjoining table tennis
in a conunanding position. The room, did Fischer give in.
match reswnes at 5 p.m. 11
Hilmar Viggoson, treasurer
p.m. EDT) today.
of the Icelandic Chess
U. S. grandmaster Robert Federation, said he did not
Byrne looked up from a pocket know _the implications of the
chess board and said: "He breach of contract.
(Spassky) is almost finished. I
"We had to cancel a meeting
cannot see Bobby letting him' wilh Mr. Fox but the matter
slip out of the rope . He will be straightened out later,"
(Fischer) has the advantage of he said. "We heard a nasty
a pawn and is in a very stroog rwnor he will sue us for
~:!!!Jn.!il hut let's see what
attacking position."
Most experts on hand gave t.appens."
Fischer a 70-30 chance of
Fred Cramer, a U.S. Chess
winning and reducing the 35- Federation vice president, said
year-&lt;!ld Russian's 2-0 lead.
Fischer had been persuaded to
Immediately after the game appear because of the great
Spassky jumped into a car with number of cables he received
one of his seconds, grandmas!- from all over the world
"begging him to sit down op~~~-,.;,w.;:::::::::::;:;;:::;;::::::::::::;::::::;:::;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;~::~~:::;::::.~:::;::::}:
posite Spassky."
Fischer staged a 35-minutes
~:
protest during Tuesday's first
game by inspecting the hall for
hidden cameras and subsequently resigned after 56
....
moves. He then boycotted
By MILTON RICHMAN
Thursday's
second match,
!lfl:
UP! Sports Editor
sulking inside his presidential
NEW YORK (UPI)- The best time to judge a man is not when suite in protest against the
cameras. German referee
he wins, but when he loses.
You can ten much more about him then. That's when his faults Lothar Schmid awarded the
game to Spassky.
and mistakes generally lie exposed, or to put it another way,
!hat's when his laundry is out there on the line for everybody to
see.
Some men are so good at their craft they even gain stature in
losing; stature or public acceptance, which sometimes have ~­
way of amounting to lhe same thing.
Go back to that first fight between Gene Tunney and Jack
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)Dempsey in Philadelphia. Dempsey was out on his feet at the Jim Col bert is a great believer
end. He lost his title, and his face was a mess.
in the power of positive
"What happened, Ginsberg?" his first wife asked him, em- thinking. He also didn't want to
ploying a pet name the two used.
let his father show him up too
"!forgot to duck, honey," Dempsey replied, and his stock with much .
everybody shot up higher !han ffiM.
Maybe that's why the 31Or if you don't go back !hat far, remember how Roberto "I did year-o ld pro golfer from
a stupid ... " DeVicenzo blew lhe Masters four years ago over a Overland Park , Kan ., is $25,000
simple mistake on a scorecard. Bob Goalby won the title that richer today .
year, but DeVicenzo won the people.
Colbert won that amount
Sunday
by playing "the best
Graceful In Defeat
Clearly the same thing happened to Jack Nicklaus this past tournament golf of my career"
to capture the $125,000 Greater
weekend.
Milwaukee
Open crown. He
Hfs chances for a Grand Slam, this year, anyway, went down
the drain by one stroke at Muirfield, Scotland, yet in a way he fired a final round of 69 for a 72won something more than he lost, and if there's any lingering hole score of 271-one stroke
doubt in your mind exactly who the foremost golfer of this better than George Johnson,
Chuck Courtney, Grier Jones
generatloo is, merely ask the British Open champion.
and
Brian "Buddy" Allin.
Lee Trevino will tell you the same thing every other touring
Three others-Bert Greene,
goHer wilL
Jim Weichers and Rod Funseth
He'll tell you Jack Nicklaus is off by a class In himself.
- were one stroke further
Nicklaus is so far shead of whomever is second today,
back.
probably Trevino, !hat he can call his shots. Pretty near,
"My dad had a hole in one
anyway.
and won a club championship
He started Saturday's final round of the British Open six shots the other day," Colbert said. "I
back of Trevino, who is no bum.
guess some of i\ rubbed off."
Six shots! Someone else that far hack would've ventured out
Colbert had rounds of 66, 67,
ooly for lhe exercise. Not Nicklaus. He believed he could win . Not 69 and 69 and had only five
only did he believe It, but he saw no reason why he could not bogeys during the 72 holes of
shape his belief Into reality.
play.
11
1
' All I need is a 65," he said. 1 can do it."
"This is the best competitive
The fact no human being in history had ever shot a 65 on
Mulrfield never entered Jack Nicklaus' mind. He'd simply go out
!here and do it.
So Clooe
Well, he didn't. But he'll never come any closer than he did.
He birdied six of the first 11 holes, muscling his way into a tie
for the lead with Trevino and Britain's Tony Jacklin, but a bogey
on the 16th did him in and he wound up with a 66 that equaled lhe
course record.
Even at that, Trevino had to sink a 30-foot chip to bea t Nicklaus
by one stroke.
Jack Nicklaus didn't cry.
"Nobody's fault but my own," he said when he realized there
went his Grand Slam. "I was !here but I let it get away. I had the
65 I felt would do it and then got a little careless. I'll say this
• !hough : if I couldn't win it, l'm glad Trevino did. He can play this

Today's

:: ~ee~~-:-:-:···:::::·:·:·:·:,):: ........·:-··

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
Prices Good Thru Tues., July 18th

Several members of the
Meigs County Salim 710, Eight
and Forty, were at W~lkesville
Friday night to participate in
lhe initiation of members into
lhe newly organized Vinton
County Salon 752 and for the
Installation of U1e Salon's new
officers.
l)laking up the installing
team were Mrs . Mary Martin,
Eight and Forty Departemental Chapeau, installing
officer; Mrs . Pearl Knapp, Ia
concierge; Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, first demi chapeau
premiere; Mrs . Julia Hysell,
second
semi
chapeau
duexieme; and Mrs. Ruth H.
Thornton, Ia archiviste, all of
tl1e Meigs County Salon; Mrs.
Helen Billings, children and
youth; Mrs. June Menton ,
partnership; Mrs. Kay Parsons, ritual and emblems of the
Athens County Salon.
Installed were Mrs. Robbie
Good, chapeau; Mrs . Edna
Trace, first denii chapeau

HOURS
MON. THRU SAT.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Recipe Book Planned
A recipe book will be compiled by the Women 's Society
of Christian Service of the
Chesler United Methodist
Church and sold for a fund
raising project.
M~eting recently at the
church, Mrs. Virgil Windon ,
chairman, announced that the
deadline for submitting recipes
is Aug . I. She asked that they
be sent to Mrs. George Wolf
and invili!d all women of the
church to give a recipe which
will carry !heir name in the
book.
Mrs. Donald Mora told the
Society o( the project of the
Lions Club. Old eye glasses are
collected by the group for
repair and distribution to
people in need . It was reported
that 65 sick calls were made
during the month and roundrobin cards were sent to shut-

••super-

Right"

The ll vena ha:; tht' rn os t
powerfuf ja ws of any anima l
and is kn own as the bone·

Great Go-Togethersl

cruncher of tht&gt; anim al kin g·
dum .

Swqt;a,

llaaMtJ

Colbert Captures GMO
golf I've ever played," he said.
"But that's what happens when
your thinking is right.
"If you think good things,
feel good things and expect
good things the good things will
come. That's lhe way I feel. I
didn't just feel I was going to
win. !,expected it. I expected it
because I was playing well."
The win, Colbert 's first since
1969 and only his second in
seven years on the pro tour,
almost got away, however.
Johnson, who was seeking to
win his first major tournament
and lhus become the first black
to ever be qualified for lhe
Masters, scrambled back from
five strokes off lhe pace tit lhe
midway point of lhe final round
and nearly got a playoffforcing birdie 011 lhe 18th.
But his 12-foot putt lipped lhe
cup aod he had to settle for
second.
Allin almoSt birdied the 18th
also, chipping his third shot to
the pin. But the ball hit the rim
of the cup and rolled off to the
side, leaving him tied for the
second spot.

l·lb.
pkg.

Swift
Premium
Sliced
Bacon

ins.
Mrs. Waide Spencer was
program leader using "A
Conversation in Human
Development" as her topic.
Scripture was taken from
Psalms 9, 7-10, there was group
singing and the Lord 's Prayer
in unison . Mrs. Spencer read a
verse entitled "Trust in
Jesus ." and gave a resume of
the purpose of the program.

TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING of
Riverview PTA, 8 p. m.
Tuesday at school in conjunction with meeting on bond
issue, public invited .
EA DEGREE on one candidate when Middleport Lodge
363, F&amp;AM meets at 7:30p. m.
el &lt;emele Master Masons
invited.
EASTERN High marching
band practice, 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at high
s~hool. All members, including
alwrnates, must be present.
THURSDAY
LAST YEAR's seventh and
eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Junior High School to rehearse
for chorus work at the outdoor
Racine evangelistic crusade.

Mrs. Mary Martin of
Pomeroy, Eight and Forty
Departemental Chapeau, was
honored Wednesday night at a
dinner meeting of the Summit
County Salon held at the Town
and Cowi try Hotel in Cuyahoga
Falls.
Accompanying Mrs. Marlin
to Cuyahoga Falls was Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, her le
secretaire .. cassiere . Mrs.
Martin installed the 1972-73
officers of the Summit County
Salon including Mrs . Iris
Shields, chapeau ; Mrs. Jo

GO TO CAMDEN
Several members of the
Middleport Child Conservation
League took their children to
Camden Park Wednesday for
an all-day outing. In the group
were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Houdashelt and Randy, David
Harris, Mrs. Don Thomas,
Lisa, Danny, Becky and Gre-g;
Mrs. John Sebo and Kim, Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy, Cliff and
Chris,
and Mrs. John Blaker,
1
Ty and Teresa.

M

U

Participating in the program
were Mrs. Robert Bailey , Mrs.
Mora, Mrs . Roscoe Hollon,
Mrs . Leonard Erwin , and Mrs.
Mildred Frank . Mrs . Ralph
Simester told the women about
some of the developments in
Nashville, Tenn . where they
A demonstration on flower
make their jlome in the winwr, arran ging by Mrs. Betty Dean
returning to Chester for the was planned for Aug . 3 when
sun1mer . A discussion period the Rose Garden Club met
followed the program .
recently at the hotne of Mrs.
Floyd Stout.
Th~ August meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs.
Clarence Hc~!l,ley. Mrs. Carl
Barnhill )l&lt;eaided at the
meeting during which time
Sauler, first demi chapeau Mrs. Harold Massar appointed
premiere; Mrs. Eleanor Hart- Mrs. Charles Carr, Mrs. Hazel
line, second demi chapeau Barnhill , Mrs. Grace Stout,
deuxieme ; Mrs. Edna Mae and Mrs. Dorothy Stout to the
Adams, Ia archiviste; Juanita program commitli!e.
Pageant, l'aumonier; Mrs .
The meeting was preceded
Martha Marsh, Ia concierge ; by a picnic supper attended by
Mrs. Emma Zorn , pouvior 10 members and 12 guests. The
member, and Mrs. Dorothy Lord 's Prayer opened the
Brady, Ia surintendante. A meeting and Mrs . Leota
history of the activities of the Massar read the verse of the
salon was read.
monlh . Roll call was answered
Mrs. Martin presented Mrs. by each naming a favorite
Zorn with a gift for having picnic dish. The traveling prize
submitted the best chapeau's donated by Mrs. Vercia Stout
report of the year and with a was won by Mrs. Grace Stout.
book of reports showing the Mrs. Dorothy Stout won the
activities of Ohio during the door prize .
past year. A ritual was given to
Mrs . Shields by Mrs . Martin
IN COLUMBUS
who outlined accomplishments
Mr. and Mrs . Arnold
of her year as chapeau.
Richards, Mrs. Ann Angel and
son, Kevin, Middleport, spent
the weekend in Columb us
"Fat Tuesday"
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Literal meaning of the Smith and family .
French term, "Mardi Gras,"
is " fat Tuesday." The term
arose from the custom of
parading a fat ox through
AWARDS ANNOUNCED
the streets of Paris on
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Shrove Tuesday.
American Bar Association
Sunday announced the winners
of its "gavel" awards and
certificates of merit for contributions to public understanding of the American
system of law and justice ..
Certificate of merit winners
included the Dayton Daily
News, Cincinnati Enquirer,
WGAR Radio, Cleveland, and
WCKY Radio, Cincinnati.

Planned
Aug. 3

-

1·1b. $

bowl
paks

00 100

True enough, but nobody can play it lhe way Nicklaus can.
Trevin will tell you !hat himself.

----

Major· League leaders

By United Press International
Leading Batters

. National league

Ovlll, Pitt
Cdno,Hou
Mota, LA
Wilms. Chi
Snglln, Pitt
Brock, St.L
Garr. lltl
lllou, St.L
Baker, lltl
Lee, SO

g. a b. r. h. pet.
62 t87 33 66 .353
n 287 56 99 .345
64 204 34 70 .343

83 332
77 295
8t 346
76 309
74286
59 183
68 25t

56
35
42
49
34
t8

71; Stargell. Pilt 60 ; May, Hou
and Colbert, SD 59 ; Kingman,
SF 58 .
llmerican League : Allen, Chi
6t ; Mayberry. KC. Bando and
Duncan. Oak 48 ; Epstein. Oak
47.
Pitching
National League : Nolon, Cin

t tt .334
98 .332
tt 2 .324
99 .320
91 .318 13-2; Seaver , NY 12-5; Carlton,
58 .3t7 Phil t2-6; Cleveland, Sf.L tt -4;
35 79 .315 Sutton, LA tl -5; Jenkins, Chi
American league
11 -8.
g. ab. r. h. pet.
American Leigue: Lolich,
Schnbtm, KC 68 230 33 76 .330 Del tS-6 ; Perry, Clev 15-7;
Pnll , KC
80 3t0 48 97 .3t3 Palmer, Ball 13-4; Wood, Chi
Oils, KC
79 300 38 94 .313 13·tO; Holtzman, Oak t2-7.
Fisk, Bos
63 2t7 43 67 .309
Rudi,Oak
78 3t8 52 98 .308
Krkptrck, KC 57 176 26 54 .307
Berry, Col · 57 200 24 6f .305
000 000 ooo- o 50
Carew. Mlnn 80 303 33 92 .304 K. C.
Detroit
010 001 oox- 2 50
Ystrzmsk, Bos
Nelson, Wrlghl (81 and
51 18t 30 55 .304
Allen, Chi
82 285 50 83 .29t Kirkpatrick ; Slayback (3-3) and
Freehan. LP- Nelson (2-4). HR
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cin - Cash (t7fh), Rodriguez 14th).
24; Kingman, SF 21; Will iams.
ItO 003 0&lt;10- 5 tOt
Chi and Colbert, SO 20; 1\aron, Oakland
New York 000 000'002- 2 9 0
All and May, Hou 19.
Ham Ilion, Locker (7) and
Amari.. n League: Allen, Chi
19; Cash, Del and Jackson, Oak Tenace ; Stottlemyre, Blasint7; Epstein, Oak 16; Duncan, game (7) and Munson. WPHamlllon (6-3) . LP- StotfleOek 14.
.
myre (9-111 . HR- Rudi (9th),
Runs Batted In
N,lfonal Leogue: Bench, Cln Epstein lt6fh), Ellis (2nd).

•
.

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'

'

PHOTO SPECIAL

AN 8_x 10

COLOR
FOR ONLY

88

.

PLUS

SOC

¢

Farms+tad
Vanilla
Or
Chocolatt

tha

HANDLING

1 PER SUBJECT, 2 PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT99c PER SUBJECT

TUES.,
10 A.M. to

POMEROY, OHIO

4:30 P.M.

I

••

the pageboy is back I
l!y

IIEL~:N

NJ&lt;:IV YORK - tNEAI Girls are sheddJipg the shag
in favor of the sleek onelayered look of the pageboy.
New for the cu n·ent genera ti on, the pageboy date s
back to th e 194()s when such
screen personalities as Gin ge r Ro gers. Katharine Hepburn and Rosalind Ru ssell
made it fa mous- especiall y
wh en th ey played roles of
successf ul career women.

The pageboy actually began making inr·oads last year
as part of the '40s revival.
But now it has really taken
off because women want a
complete change after the
di sheveled look of th e sha g
for severa l vears . Fashion
desi gn~::rs , toO, are stressing
smooth hairstyles in both the
European and American col·
lections.
If you want to switch to
this cla ssic look but ar e
ca ught with short or long
layered ha ir . yo u can still

111-:NNESSV
do what vou want to do. The

sy nthetic' wig manufacturers
have camP to vour aid with
an abundance. There has
never been such a preponderam:e of styles that are
basically the " page" but are
labeled under such pseudonym s as the " 0 r i en t a I
Look ," the "Dut ch Boy ,"
and the "llob." to name a
few .
Oscar de Ia Renta calls the
pageboy in his new Kaneka lon wi g c o II e c t i o n the
"Ming." It is a chin-length .
center-parted . one-layered
look with th e merest trace of
wav e. According to the fa mous couturier, irs h1s fa vorite and he's a man who
should know an important
trend when l1e sees one.
Whether you wait until
your ends are eve n or go
with a wi g, the " pageboy"
is the look to wear this sea·
son .
{ NfW~PAPER

\

· 4..,.

E~TERPRISE AS S ~ . I

POLLY'S POINTERS
Heel

~larh

Called " Ming ," thi s " pageboy" is fe atured in Osca r
de Ia Rento 's new wig collection. The I 00 per cent
madacryl ic was selected becau se of its lack of plastic glare and its real -li fe look. The style is a short
bob, cut on on angle with the merest trace of wove.
The one-layered synthetic hair swirl s into the back
neckline pageboy style and then ve rti ca lly onto the
stde cheekbones. There is just a suggestion of a

nn Tile

Caw.;e Her Pet Peeve
By POLLY CRAMER

c enter port.

DEAR POLLY - M' Pel Peeve is with !he type of ma te rial used to make children's shof! heels. As we grand mother s ge t old€!' each hee l mark is hard er tu remove
fro m a till- tl oor . II seem s so meone could di scover a w ay

to stop !his pro blem with heel ma rk s.-MRS C. B.

S.

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY- We bought a towel bar with suction cups to attach to th r sid.e pf our ne)'i ran ge but &lt;,
., carinot get it to stick': 'We hav~ ilSe&lt;:l' glyce rin . s q~~, .. '
and just pla in wal er as an aid to adherence but to ·
no avail. We hav e no ollwr place to hang tow els so
do hope someone can help.-i\1 . M.
DEAR POLLY - Rita requested a way lo remove
creases• from rubber-backed draperies. I have found thai
hanging th em at the windows usually removes such
creases within a couple of weeks if the sun wa rms the
backing. 1 was told by a salesperson in the store wher e
l bought mine to put them in Ihe dr yer on low heat for a
short lime and this will soften the backing enough lo remove the creases.- !" AYE
nEAH GIRLS-I would add a bit to Faye's suggestion
and put a just damp bath towel in the dryer with the
draperies. Also be sure th~ curtains have plenty of room
to t.lss around which would often mean doing only onr
panel at a time.-POLLY

DEAR POLLY- We di scovered a help in havin g com plete privacy and ease of
Jiving in our motor home.
ft was hard to keep the
window drapes in a tightly
c I o sed position until I
sewed "open on both ends"'
zippers to the inside edges
of the panels. We merely
zip them together w h e n
needed and know they are
going to stay closed. To
NfA
keep the drapes fully back
and exposin~ as much window as possible while driving .- we clip a clothespin to !he
lop of the rod where needed . This always affords a clear
view.-DELLA
DEAR POLLY-When lengthening my son's permanently pressed trousers I ironed iron-on tape on the
wrong side just over the hemline crease. This made the
trousers like new. After numerous washings, the tape
has never come off and the permanent creases do not
show.-LUCILLE
DEAR POLLY-Newspapers folded in fourths , bundled,
tied and covered with fabric will serve as booster seats
for small guests to be seated at your table.-CAROL
(NEWSPA.PtR ENTERPRISE ASS .... )

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of t,hls newspaper,

The Rev. Audrey Miller,
~a s,t p r ?l the ..Miq~I~porl
Church of the Nazarene, will
spend the next two weeks at the
Central Ohio District Church of
the Nazarene Conference at
ColJ!IIlbus.
The conference will include
the missionary convention, a
two day event which opened
today with Mrs. Miller and
Mrs. Betzy Findley to attend as
delegates from the Middleport
Church. They will return home
following the closing of the
sessions on Wednesday .
The Rev . Mr. Miller. will
at tend the district assembly
which will begin Tuesday and

Bear Attacks
Phihnont Camp
CIMARRON, N. M. (UPI) Four boys were attacked by a
brown bear as they slept in
!heir tents early Sunday at a
campsite at the Philmont Scout ·
Ranch in northeastern New
Mexico.
Two of the four were admilled to Philmont Medical
Lodge for treatment of puncture wounds. They were
identified as Kirk Albracht, 15,
of Massillon, Ohio, and Thomas
Mangels, 16, of Elmont, N.Y.
Philmont medical officer Dr.
David Pugh said the two were
in goOd condition and would be
returned to their homes today
for further treatment.
The other two were treated
for minor scratches and
released to return to the trail
where they were on a 12-day
hiking and camping trek in the
rugged wilderness area near
here.
The bear disappeared after
the rampage and officials said
arrangements were being
made to live-trap the animal so
it could he moved to a less
populous area.

Itl.:U -

153.so.

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I OJ • .$2,10 -

,

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1

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1 tt2 E. Mllln, ~ · I.
I At LNcl119 DNt Cu lw.,l

__________.,

II

•

at

a

PROGRAMS STUDIED
Programs for the 1972-73
ye ar of th e Pomeroy
Elementary PTA were outlined
at a meeting of offi cers held
· Friday at the home of Mrs.
Earl Thoma, president. Mrs.
Jerry Fields will serve as
program chairman for the
year . She has been named as
first vice president to fill a
vacan cy created by the
resignation of Mrs. Arthur
Arnold who has moved to Indiana . Others at the planning
session were Mrs. Tom Smith
and Mrs. Louis Osborne.

continue through July 21, and
A thought for the day:
U1e district camp meeting \0 A1n~l)l;~n ;.yrit~G ,A~~~~~ ~qr&lt;_ow
begin on Julx 2! amj ,cqnclude Lindberg/! sai~,; , ";t~~ )I"QVe of
on July 30. A new missionary the future is coming and t11ere
president and a new district is no fighting it."
superintendent will be elected .
Dr . and Mrs . Harvey S.
Galloway who have served in
the capacities for 27 years will
retire this year.
Speaking at both the morning
and evening services at fhe
Middleport Church on July 23
will be the Rev. Ed Griffith.
5AME DAY
The Rev . George Oiler will be
SERVItE
the speaker at the services on
ln At 9,.-Qut P,t S
July 30. The Rev. Mr . Miller
has asked that persons who
Use Our Free ParkinQ Lot
need his services during his
absence contact either his
home or the campgrounds.
216 E. 2nd , Pomeroy

SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinson!s Cleaners

Four Scouts in

1 EPSAL OINTMENT
lA specialty suspendedepO!&gt;!J)-1
sans drawlnu ointment. 111e 1
l result1 are sfmlllr to ltuit of
l•ook.ing In etsom uttsl
solutlon. Try this a.nd - 1
l results overnight, '12 oz.,

\,

chairman,

meeting of th e Auxiliary of
Le wis ·M anl ey Post 263
Tuesday ni ght at the home of
Mrs. William Smith.
Mrs. Mart in, Eight and
Forty departmen ta l chapeau,
also talked on the various
ac ti vi ties of the group particularl y as it relates to cystic
fi brosis children and nurses
scholarships.
Mrs. Lula Hampton ·opened
th e meeting in ritualistic form
assis ted by Mrs. Nellie Winston , chaplain . Two members
paid annua l dues, and reports
of the offi cers were given.
Committees appointed were
Mrs. Camp bell Har per,
American ism; Mrs. Sherman
Butler, veli!rans affai rs; Mrs.
Naomi Bentley, children and
youth ; Mrs. J ohn James,
commun ity serv ice; Mrs.
Bentley', membership , and
Mrs. Harper . chairman of the
ways and means committee.
A final report was given on
tl1e poppy sale and Mrs . Arnold
Richards presented a program
on flag etiquette. Mrs. Smith
served fri ed chic ken and a
dessert.

Pastor to be at Conference

D.S-IlOISIIS I
I · - US?
1 Try 'This ,.._, Rem~ 1

II SDDN!

JULY 19

Shades ·of Ginger, Rosalind and Katharine

I

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I·

One Day Only

were expali ned by Mrs. Mary
Mar ti n,

I PIMPl£S.-8lACKI I

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

NOW IS THE TIME TO GET THAT
MUCH WANTED FAMILY PORTRAIT.

Details of the . program for
vell!rans at the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Centit at
Athens carried on by the
Ameri can Legion Auxil iary

,.---------·

'

NO AGE LIMIT

Explained

Demonstti'fltz.on

.Mrs. Martin is Honored

A&amp;P Soft

game."

premiere ; Mrs . Evelyn
Napper, second demi chapeau
duexieme; Mrs. Mary Helm, Ia
secretaire - cassiere ; Mrs.
Erma Neutzling, chaplain;
Mrs . Jennie CottJ·ilJ, l'archiviste; and Mrs . Edythe
Wagner, Ia concierge.
The Meigs County Salon
presented Mrs. Good with a
chapeau's pin, and Mrs. Martin
Presenli!d a set of table flags to
Mrs. Wagner . Presentation of
lhe charter for the new salon
was made by Mrs. Martin to
Mrs. Good . Candlelight services were held for both the
initiation and installation
ceremonies . Mrs. Iva Powell
served as Ia concierge for the
meeting . Initiated along with
lhe members of the new Salon
was Mrs. Lula Hampton of the
Meigs County Salon.
Refreshments were served
from a table centered with an
arrangement of artificial red
and white roses flanked by red
tapers.

MONDAY
. SOUTHERN Local School .
Board Monday 8 p.m. at high
school.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter,
Order of DeMolay, 7:30 p. m.
Monday at Middleport Masonic
Temple . Motbers' Club in
basement of temple at same
hour.
ANNUAL PICNIC, Middleport
Business
and
Professional Women's Club,
6:30 p. m. Monday , home of
Miss Freddie Houdashelt.
"MIRACLE REVIVAL" ,
7:30p. m. Monday at Salvation
Army, 110 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Dorothy Overton as
evangelist.

Program is

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.II
\

�~-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 17,1972

4-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17, 1972

Cheshire

'{'"'"'''''''''''':::*"::::».::&gt;.'*''~&lt;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,*"-'''''''"''''''''~'"''''''''''''''''''''''''''''"''''''''_,_,,,,,@

~ : Fischer Holds
·13th In RowiiJ Strong Position
Tigers Cop

The undefeated Cheshire
Tigers made Vinton their 13th
straight victim of the year, 213, Thursday behind the combined three hit pitching of
Claude Cornelius and Kelley
Winebrenner . Cornelius pitched the first four innings
allowing two hits, one a
homerun by Vinton's fine
shortstop, Davies, while
striking out nine and walking
lhree.
Kelley Winebrenner hurled
the last two innings giving up
'one hit, while striking out three
and walking two. Bush pitched
all the way for Vinton and took
lhe loss as the Tigers pounded
out 21 hits off his hurling.
Cheshire scored eight runs in
lhe first inning and followed
with 10 more runs in the third
Inning to win handily.
The Tigers were led in hitting
by Rick Winebrenner with two
Jriples and a single; Roger
Spaulding with three doubles;
Dallas Sayre with a double and
two singles, and Steve Baird
with two long homeruns.
In other games Thursday,
Centerville downed Green 7-5,
Bidwell topped Salem 14-9 and
Addaville nudged Racine, 8-5.
Cheshire plays Addaville
tonight at Cheshire.

i

PIay-off

Ill Forced in
I

_,_

ISport Parade

The Yankees forced a playoff with the Tigers for the
second half championship as
' they knocked off the ln1proved
Pirates 6-2 in Pomeroy Boys'
League action Saturday
mornin·g.
Both the Tigers and
Yankees, COI!Ched by Woody
Call, have 5-1 second half
records. They will play it off at
a date to be determined. If the
Yankees win , a three-game
play-&lt;Jff will be needed to
detennine the overall champion as the Tigers were winners of the first half.
Randy Phillips hurled all the
way for the Yankees and
fanned nine while issuin~ but
three bases on balls. Mark
Mitch went the distance for the
Pirates, fanning three and
walking but one batter.
Greg Smith was the top hitter
for the winners as he cracked
two doubles and a booming
home run which unfortunately
hit a car in centerfield but
fortunately (perhapsl was his
parents'. Tim Hood added a
single and double, Del Call had
two singles, Steve Call had a
double, and Mark Norton and
Gene Hwnphrey each collected
a single.
Jim Rosenbaum had a
double and Blaine Qualls and
Randy Roach each a single.
Pirates
001 010-6 10
Yankees
140 IOx-2 3
Mitch and Soulsby . Phillips
and Hawley .

Vinton Salon 752 I Soci'a 1----l
Launched Friday I! Calendar!~

NOT OPEN .
ON SUNDAY

t\ Boys Play

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) er Nikolai Krogius, and left for
- For a final 30 seconds Bobby their hotel to analyse the
Fischer towered over the chess situation.
Until 90 minutes before the
board . Then he allowed himself
a rare smile, collected his start of Sunday's third game
pencils and walked out of the Fischer kept the chess world
room Sunday after one of the ·guessing whether he would
most dramatic days in world appear or continue his boycott
in protest against television
championship chess.
Minutes earlier world cham- cameras,or ''the evil eyes,'' as
pion Boris Spas,sky of the he called them .
Only after · the Icelandic
Soviet Union had completed his
41st move and left the room, organizers broke a $120,000
pensive and worried.
contract with Chester Fox Inc.,
The third game in the 24- a New York firm which had
, match world championship ·acquired all film and television
was adjourned with the 29- rights, and moved the board
year-&lt;~ld American challenger
into an adjoining table tennis
in a conunanding position. The room, did Fischer give in.
match reswnes at 5 p.m. 11
Hilmar Viggoson, treasurer
p.m. EDT) today.
of the Icelandic Chess
U. S. grandmaster Robert Federation, said he did not
Byrne looked up from a pocket know _the implications of the
chess board and said: "He breach of contract.
(Spassky) is almost finished. I
"We had to cancel a meeting
cannot see Bobby letting him' wilh Mr. Fox but the matter
slip out of the rope . He will be straightened out later,"
(Fischer) has the advantage of he said. "We heard a nasty
a pawn and is in a very stroog rwnor he will sue us for
~:!!!Jn.!il hut let's see what
attacking position."
Most experts on hand gave t.appens."
Fischer a 70-30 chance of
Fred Cramer, a U.S. Chess
winning and reducing the 35- Federation vice president, said
year-&lt;!ld Russian's 2-0 lead.
Fischer had been persuaded to
Immediately after the game appear because of the great
Spassky jumped into a car with number of cables he received
one of his seconds, grandmas!- from all over the world
"begging him to sit down op~~~-,.;,w.;:::::::::::;:;;:::;;::::::::::::;::::::;:::;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;~::~~:::;::::.~:::;::::}:
posite Spassky."
Fischer staged a 35-minutes
~:
protest during Tuesday's first
game by inspecting the hall for
hidden cameras and subsequently resigned after 56
....
moves. He then boycotted
By MILTON RICHMAN
Thursday's
second match,
!lfl:
UP! Sports Editor
sulking inside his presidential
NEW YORK (UPI)- The best time to judge a man is not when suite in protest against the
cameras. German referee
he wins, but when he loses.
You can ten much more about him then. That's when his faults Lothar Schmid awarded the
game to Spassky.
and mistakes generally lie exposed, or to put it another way,
!hat's when his laundry is out there on the line for everybody to
see.
Some men are so good at their craft they even gain stature in
losing; stature or public acceptance, which sometimes have ~­
way of amounting to lhe same thing.
Go back to that first fight between Gene Tunney and Jack
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)Dempsey in Philadelphia. Dempsey was out on his feet at the Jim Col bert is a great believer
end. He lost his title, and his face was a mess.
in the power of positive
"What happened, Ginsberg?" his first wife asked him, em- thinking. He also didn't want to
ploying a pet name the two used.
let his father show him up too
"!forgot to duck, honey," Dempsey replied, and his stock with much .
everybody shot up higher !han ffiM.
Maybe that's why the 31Or if you don't go back !hat far, remember how Roberto "I did year-o ld pro golfer from
a stupid ... " DeVicenzo blew lhe Masters four years ago over a Overland Park , Kan ., is $25,000
simple mistake on a scorecard. Bob Goalby won the title that richer today .
year, but DeVicenzo won the people.
Colbert won that amount
Sunday
by playing "the best
Graceful In Defeat
Clearly the same thing happened to Jack Nicklaus this past tournament golf of my career"
to capture the $125,000 Greater
weekend.
Milwaukee
Open crown. He
Hfs chances for a Grand Slam, this year, anyway, went down
the drain by one stroke at Muirfield, Scotland, yet in a way he fired a final round of 69 for a 72won something more than he lost, and if there's any lingering hole score of 271-one stroke
doubt in your mind exactly who the foremost golfer of this better than George Johnson,
Chuck Courtney, Grier Jones
generatloo is, merely ask the British Open champion.
and
Brian "Buddy" Allin.
Lee Trevino will tell you the same thing every other touring
Three others-Bert Greene,
goHer wilL
Jim Weichers and Rod Funseth
He'll tell you Jack Nicklaus is off by a class In himself.
- were one stroke further
Nicklaus is so far shead of whomever is second today,
back.
probably Trevino, !hat he can call his shots. Pretty near,
"My dad had a hole in one
anyway.
and won a club championship
He started Saturday's final round of the British Open six shots the other day," Colbert said. "I
back of Trevino, who is no bum.
guess some of i\ rubbed off."
Six shots! Someone else that far hack would've ventured out
Colbert had rounds of 66, 67,
ooly for lhe exercise. Not Nicklaus. He believed he could win . Not 69 and 69 and had only five
only did he believe It, but he saw no reason why he could not bogeys during the 72 holes of
shape his belief Into reality.
play.
11
1
' All I need is a 65," he said. 1 can do it."
"This is the best competitive
The fact no human being in history had ever shot a 65 on
Mulrfield never entered Jack Nicklaus' mind. He'd simply go out
!here and do it.
So Clooe
Well, he didn't. But he'll never come any closer than he did.
He birdied six of the first 11 holes, muscling his way into a tie
for the lead with Trevino and Britain's Tony Jacklin, but a bogey
on the 16th did him in and he wound up with a 66 that equaled lhe
course record.
Even at that, Trevino had to sink a 30-foot chip to bea t Nicklaus
by one stroke.
Jack Nicklaus didn't cry.
"Nobody's fault but my own," he said when he realized there
went his Grand Slam. "I was !here but I let it get away. I had the
65 I felt would do it and then got a little careless. I'll say this
• !hough : if I couldn't win it, l'm glad Trevino did. He can play this

Today's

:: ~ee~~-:-:-:···:::::·:·:·:·:,):: ........·:-··

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
Prices Good Thru Tues., July 18th

Several members of the
Meigs County Salim 710, Eight
and Forty, were at W~lkesville
Friday night to participate in
lhe initiation of members into
lhe newly organized Vinton
County Salon 752 and for the
Installation of U1e Salon's new
officers.
l)laking up the installing
team were Mrs . Mary Martin,
Eight and Forty Departemental Chapeau, installing
officer; Mrs . Pearl Knapp, Ia
concierge; Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, first demi chapeau
premiere; Mrs . Julia Hysell,
second
semi
chapeau
duexieme; and Mrs. Ruth H.
Thornton, Ia archiviste, all of
tl1e Meigs County Salon; Mrs.
Helen Billings, children and
youth; Mrs. June Menton ,
partnership; Mrs. Kay Parsons, ritual and emblems of the
Athens County Salon.
Installed were Mrs. Robbie
Good, chapeau; Mrs . Edna
Trace, first denii chapeau

HOURS
MON. THRU SAT.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Recipe Book Planned
A recipe book will be compiled by the Women 's Society
of Christian Service of the
Chesler United Methodist
Church and sold for a fund
raising project.
M~eting recently at the
church, Mrs. Virgil Windon ,
chairman, announced that the
deadline for submitting recipes
is Aug . I. She asked that they
be sent to Mrs. George Wolf
and invili!d all women of the
church to give a recipe which
will carry !heir name in the
book.
Mrs. Donald Mora told the
Society o( the project of the
Lions Club. Old eye glasses are
collected by the group for
repair and distribution to
people in need . It was reported
that 65 sick calls were made
during the month and roundrobin cards were sent to shut-

••super-

Right"

The ll vena ha:; tht' rn os t
powerfuf ja ws of any anima l
and is kn own as the bone·

Great Go-Togethersl

cruncher of tht&gt; anim al kin g·
dum .

Swqt;a,

llaaMtJ

Colbert Captures GMO
golf I've ever played," he said.
"But that's what happens when
your thinking is right.
"If you think good things,
feel good things and expect
good things the good things will
come. That's lhe way I feel. I
didn't just feel I was going to
win. !,expected it. I expected it
because I was playing well."
The win, Colbert 's first since
1969 and only his second in
seven years on the pro tour,
almost got away, however.
Johnson, who was seeking to
win his first major tournament
and lhus become the first black
to ever be qualified for lhe
Masters, scrambled back from
five strokes off lhe pace tit lhe
midway point of lhe final round
and nearly got a playoffforcing birdie 011 lhe 18th.
But his 12-foot putt lipped lhe
cup aod he had to settle for
second.
Allin almoSt birdied the 18th
also, chipping his third shot to
the pin. But the ball hit the rim
of the cup and rolled off to the
side, leaving him tied for the
second spot.

l·lb.
pkg.

Swift
Premium
Sliced
Bacon

ins.
Mrs. Waide Spencer was
program leader using "A
Conversation in Human
Development" as her topic.
Scripture was taken from
Psalms 9, 7-10, there was group
singing and the Lord 's Prayer
in unison . Mrs. Spencer read a
verse entitled "Trust in
Jesus ." and gave a resume of
the purpose of the program.

TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING of
Riverview PTA, 8 p. m.
Tuesday at school in conjunction with meeting on bond
issue, public invited .
EA DEGREE on one candidate when Middleport Lodge
363, F&amp;AM meets at 7:30p. m.
el &lt;emele Master Masons
invited.
EASTERN High marching
band practice, 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at high
s~hool. All members, including
alwrnates, must be present.
THURSDAY
LAST YEAR's seventh and
eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Junior High School to rehearse
for chorus work at the outdoor
Racine evangelistic crusade.

Mrs. Mary Martin of
Pomeroy, Eight and Forty
Departemental Chapeau, was
honored Wednesday night at a
dinner meeting of the Summit
County Salon held at the Town
and Cowi try Hotel in Cuyahoga
Falls.
Accompanying Mrs. Marlin
to Cuyahoga Falls was Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, her le
secretaire .. cassiere . Mrs.
Martin installed the 1972-73
officers of the Summit County
Salon including Mrs . Iris
Shields, chapeau ; Mrs. Jo

GO TO CAMDEN
Several members of the
Middleport Child Conservation
League took their children to
Camden Park Wednesday for
an all-day outing. In the group
were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Houdashelt and Randy, David
Harris, Mrs. Don Thomas,
Lisa, Danny, Becky and Gre-g;
Mrs. John Sebo and Kim, Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy, Cliff and
Chris,
and Mrs. John Blaker,
1
Ty and Teresa.

M

U

Participating in the program
were Mrs. Robert Bailey , Mrs.
Mora, Mrs . Roscoe Hollon,
Mrs . Leonard Erwin , and Mrs.
Mildred Frank . Mrs . Ralph
Simester told the women about
some of the developments in
Nashville, Tenn . where they
A demonstration on flower
make their jlome in the winwr, arran ging by Mrs. Betty Dean
returning to Chester for the was planned for Aug . 3 when
sun1mer . A discussion period the Rose Garden Club met
followed the program .
recently at the hotne of Mrs.
Floyd Stout.
Th~ August meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs.
Clarence Hc~!l,ley. Mrs. Carl
Barnhill )l&lt;eaided at the
meeting during which time
Sauler, first demi chapeau Mrs. Harold Massar appointed
premiere; Mrs. Eleanor Hart- Mrs. Charles Carr, Mrs. Hazel
line, second demi chapeau Barnhill , Mrs. Grace Stout,
deuxieme ; Mrs. Edna Mae and Mrs. Dorothy Stout to the
Adams, Ia archiviste; Juanita program commitli!e.
Pageant, l'aumonier; Mrs .
The meeting was preceded
Martha Marsh, Ia concierge ; by a picnic supper attended by
Mrs. Emma Zorn , pouvior 10 members and 12 guests. The
member, and Mrs. Dorothy Lord 's Prayer opened the
Brady, Ia surintendante. A meeting and Mrs . Leota
history of the activities of the Massar read the verse of the
salon was read.
monlh . Roll call was answered
Mrs. Martin presented Mrs. by each naming a favorite
Zorn with a gift for having picnic dish. The traveling prize
submitted the best chapeau's donated by Mrs. Vercia Stout
report of the year and with a was won by Mrs. Grace Stout.
book of reports showing the Mrs. Dorothy Stout won the
activities of Ohio during the door prize .
past year. A ritual was given to
Mrs . Shields by Mrs . Martin
IN COLUMBUS
who outlined accomplishments
Mr. and Mrs . Arnold
of her year as chapeau.
Richards, Mrs. Ann Angel and
son, Kevin, Middleport, spent
the weekend in Columb us
"Fat Tuesday"
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Literal meaning of the Smith and family .
French term, "Mardi Gras,"
is " fat Tuesday." The term
arose from the custom of
parading a fat ox through
AWARDS ANNOUNCED
the streets of Paris on
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Shrove Tuesday.
American Bar Association
Sunday announced the winners
of its "gavel" awards and
certificates of merit for contributions to public understanding of the American
system of law and justice ..
Certificate of merit winners
included the Dayton Daily
News, Cincinnati Enquirer,
WGAR Radio, Cleveland, and
WCKY Radio, Cincinnati.

Planned
Aug. 3

-

1·1b. $

bowl
paks

00 100

True enough, but nobody can play it lhe way Nicklaus can.
Trevin will tell you !hat himself.

----

Major· League leaders

By United Press International
Leading Batters

. National league

Ovlll, Pitt
Cdno,Hou
Mota, LA
Wilms. Chi
Snglln, Pitt
Brock, St.L
Garr. lltl
lllou, St.L
Baker, lltl
Lee, SO

g. a b. r. h. pet.
62 t87 33 66 .353
n 287 56 99 .345
64 204 34 70 .343

83 332
77 295
8t 346
76 309
74286
59 183
68 25t

56
35
42
49
34
t8

71; Stargell. Pilt 60 ; May, Hou
and Colbert, SD 59 ; Kingman,
SF 58 .
llmerican League : Allen, Chi
6t ; Mayberry. KC. Bando and
Duncan. Oak 48 ; Epstein. Oak
47.
Pitching
National League : Nolon, Cin

t tt .334
98 .332
tt 2 .324
99 .320
91 .318 13-2; Seaver , NY 12-5; Carlton,
58 .3t7 Phil t2-6; Cleveland, Sf.L tt -4;
35 79 .315 Sutton, LA tl -5; Jenkins, Chi
American league
11 -8.
g. ab. r. h. pet.
American Leigue: Lolich,
Schnbtm, KC 68 230 33 76 .330 Del tS-6 ; Perry, Clev 15-7;
Pnll , KC
80 3t0 48 97 .3t3 Palmer, Ball 13-4; Wood, Chi
Oils, KC
79 300 38 94 .313 13·tO; Holtzman, Oak t2-7.
Fisk, Bos
63 2t7 43 67 .309
Rudi,Oak
78 3t8 52 98 .308
Krkptrck, KC 57 176 26 54 .307
Berry, Col · 57 200 24 6f .305
000 000 ooo- o 50
Carew. Mlnn 80 303 33 92 .304 K. C.
Detroit
010 001 oox- 2 50
Ystrzmsk, Bos
Nelson, Wrlghl (81 and
51 18t 30 55 .304
Allen, Chi
82 285 50 83 .29t Kirkpatrick ; Slayback (3-3) and
Freehan. LP- Nelson (2-4). HR
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cin - Cash (t7fh), Rodriguez 14th).
24; Kingman, SF 21; Will iams.
ItO 003 0&lt;10- 5 tOt
Chi and Colbert, SO 20; 1\aron, Oakland
New York 000 000'002- 2 9 0
All and May, Hou 19.
Ham Ilion, Locker (7) and
Amari.. n League: Allen, Chi
19; Cash, Del and Jackson, Oak Tenace ; Stottlemyre, Blasint7; Epstein, Oak 16; Duncan, game (7) and Munson. WPHamlllon (6-3) . LP- StotfleOek 14.
.
myre (9-111 . HR- Rudi (9th),
Runs Batted In
N,lfonal Leogue: Bench, Cln Epstein lt6fh), Ellis (2nd).

•
.

'

'

'

PHOTO SPECIAL

AN 8_x 10

COLOR
FOR ONLY

88

.

PLUS

SOC

¢

Farms+tad
Vanilla
Or
Chocolatt

tha

HANDLING

1 PER SUBJECT, 2 PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT99c PER SUBJECT

TUES.,
10 A.M. to

POMEROY, OHIO

4:30 P.M.

I

••

the pageboy is back I
l!y

IIEL~:N

NJ&lt;:IV YORK - tNEAI Girls are sheddJipg the shag
in favor of the sleek onelayered look of the pageboy.
New for the cu n·ent genera ti on, the pageboy date s
back to th e 194()s when such
screen personalities as Gin ge r Ro gers. Katharine Hepburn and Rosalind Ru ssell
made it fa mous- especiall y
wh en th ey played roles of
successf ul career women.

The pageboy actually began making inr·oads last year
as part of the '40s revival.
But now it has really taken
off because women want a
complete change after the
di sheveled look of th e sha g
for severa l vears . Fashion
desi gn~::rs , toO, are stressing
smooth hairstyles in both the
European and American col·
lections.
If you want to switch to
this cla ssic look but ar e
ca ught with short or long
layered ha ir . yo u can still

111-:NNESSV
do what vou want to do. The

sy nthetic' wig manufacturers
have camP to vour aid with
an abundance. There has
never been such a preponderam:e of styles that are
basically the " page" but are
labeled under such pseudonym s as the " 0 r i en t a I
Look ," the "Dut ch Boy ,"
and the "llob." to name a
few .
Oscar de Ia Renta calls the
pageboy in his new Kaneka lon wi g c o II e c t i o n the
"Ming." It is a chin-length .
center-parted . one-layered
look with th e merest trace of
wav e. According to the fa mous couturier, irs h1s fa vorite and he's a man who
should know an important
trend when l1e sees one.
Whether you wait until
your ends are eve n or go
with a wi g, the " pageboy"
is the look to wear this sea·
son .
{ NfW~PAPER

\

· 4..,.

E~TERPRISE AS S ~ . I

POLLY'S POINTERS
Heel

~larh

Called " Ming ," thi s " pageboy" is fe atured in Osca r
de Ia Rento 's new wig collection. The I 00 per cent
madacryl ic was selected becau se of its lack of plastic glare and its real -li fe look. The style is a short
bob, cut on on angle with the merest trace of wove.
The one-layered synthetic hair swirl s into the back
neckline pageboy style and then ve rti ca lly onto the
stde cheekbones. There is just a suggestion of a

nn Tile

Caw.;e Her Pet Peeve
By POLLY CRAMER

c enter port.

DEAR POLLY - M' Pel Peeve is with !he type of ma te rial used to make children's shof! heels. As we grand mother s ge t old€!' each hee l mark is hard er tu remove
fro m a till- tl oor . II seem s so meone could di scover a w ay

to stop !his pro blem with heel ma rk s.-MRS C. B.

S.

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY- We bought a towel bar with suction cups to attach to th r sid.e pf our ne)'i ran ge but &lt;,
., carinot get it to stick': 'We hav~ ilSe&lt;:l' glyce rin . s q~~, .. '
and just pla in wal er as an aid to adherence but to ·
no avail. We hav e no ollwr place to hang tow els so
do hope someone can help.-i\1 . M.
DEAR POLLY - Rita requested a way lo remove
creases• from rubber-backed draperies. I have found thai
hanging th em at the windows usually removes such
creases within a couple of weeks if the sun wa rms the
backing. 1 was told by a salesperson in the store wher e
l bought mine to put them in Ihe dr yer on low heat for a
short lime and this will soften the backing enough lo remove the creases.- !" AYE
nEAH GIRLS-I would add a bit to Faye's suggestion
and put a just damp bath towel in the dryer with the
draperies. Also be sure th~ curtains have plenty of room
to t.lss around which would often mean doing only onr
panel at a time.-POLLY

DEAR POLLY- We di scovered a help in havin g com plete privacy and ease of
Jiving in our motor home.
ft was hard to keep the
window drapes in a tightly
c I o sed position until I
sewed "open on both ends"'
zippers to the inside edges
of the panels. We merely
zip them together w h e n
needed and know they are
going to stay closed. To
NfA
keep the drapes fully back
and exposin~ as much window as possible while driving .- we clip a clothespin to !he
lop of the rod where needed . This always affords a clear
view.-DELLA
DEAR POLLY-When lengthening my son's permanently pressed trousers I ironed iron-on tape on the
wrong side just over the hemline crease. This made the
trousers like new. After numerous washings, the tape
has never come off and the permanent creases do not
show.-LUCILLE
DEAR POLLY-Newspapers folded in fourths , bundled,
tied and covered with fabric will serve as booster seats
for small guests to be seated at your table.-CAROL
(NEWSPA.PtR ENTERPRISE ASS .... )

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of t,hls newspaper,

The Rev. Audrey Miller,
~a s,t p r ?l the ..Miq~I~porl
Church of the Nazarene, will
spend the next two weeks at the
Central Ohio District Church of
the Nazarene Conference at
ColJ!IIlbus.
The conference will include
the missionary convention, a
two day event which opened
today with Mrs. Miller and
Mrs. Betzy Findley to attend as
delegates from the Middleport
Church. They will return home
following the closing of the
sessions on Wednesday .
The Rev . Mr. Miller. will
at tend the district assembly
which will begin Tuesday and

Bear Attacks
Phihnont Camp
CIMARRON, N. M. (UPI) Four boys were attacked by a
brown bear as they slept in
!heir tents early Sunday at a
campsite at the Philmont Scout ·
Ranch in northeastern New
Mexico.
Two of the four were admilled to Philmont Medical
Lodge for treatment of puncture wounds. They were
identified as Kirk Albracht, 15,
of Massillon, Ohio, and Thomas
Mangels, 16, of Elmont, N.Y.
Philmont medical officer Dr.
David Pugh said the two were
in goOd condition and would be
returned to their homes today
for further treatment.
The other two were treated
for minor scratches and
released to return to the trail
where they were on a 12-day
hiking and camping trek in the
rugged wilderness area near
here.
The bear disappeared after
the rampage and officials said
arrangements were being
made to live-trap the animal so
it could he moved to a less
populous area.

Itl.:U -

153.so.

I

I OJ • .$2,10 -

,

2 01.,

1
1

1 Swisher &amp; Lohse Drup I
1 tt2 E. Mllln, ~ · I.
I At LNcl119 DNt Cu lw.,l

__________.,

II

•

at

a

PROGRAMS STUDIED
Programs for the 1972-73
ye ar of th e Pomeroy
Elementary PTA were outlined
at a meeting of offi cers held
· Friday at the home of Mrs.
Earl Thoma, president. Mrs.
Jerry Fields will serve as
program chairman for the
year . She has been named as
first vice president to fill a
vacan cy created by the
resignation of Mrs. Arthur
Arnold who has moved to Indiana . Others at the planning
session were Mrs. Tom Smith
and Mrs. Louis Osborne.

continue through July 21, and
A thought for the day:
U1e district camp meeting \0 A1n~l)l;~n ;.yrit~G ,A~~~~~ ~qr&lt;_ow
begin on Julx 2! amj ,cqnclude Lindberg/! sai~,; , ";t~~ )I"QVe of
on July 30. A new missionary the future is coming and t11ere
president and a new district is no fighting it."
superintendent will be elected .
Dr . and Mrs . Harvey S.
Galloway who have served in
the capacities for 27 years will
retire this year.
Speaking at both the morning
and evening services at fhe
Middleport Church on July 23
will be the Rev. Ed Griffith.
5AME DAY
The Rev . George Oiler will be
SERVItE
the speaker at the services on
ln At 9,.-Qut P,t S
July 30. The Rev. Mr . Miller
has asked that persons who
Use Our Free ParkinQ Lot
need his services during his
absence contact either his
home or the campgrounds.
216 E. 2nd , Pomeroy

SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinson!s Cleaners

Four Scouts in

1 EPSAL OINTMENT
lA specialty suspendedepO!&gt;!J)-1
sans drawlnu ointment. 111e 1
l result1 are sfmlllr to ltuit of
l•ook.ing In etsom uttsl
solutlon. Try this a.nd - 1
l results overnight, '12 oz.,

\,

chairman,

meeting of th e Auxiliary of
Le wis ·M anl ey Post 263
Tuesday ni ght at the home of
Mrs. William Smith.
Mrs. Mart in, Eight and
Forty departmen ta l chapeau,
also talked on the various
ac ti vi ties of the group particularl y as it relates to cystic
fi brosis children and nurses
scholarships.
Mrs. Lula Hampton ·opened
th e meeting in ritualistic form
assis ted by Mrs. Nellie Winston , chaplain . Two members
paid annua l dues, and reports
of the offi cers were given.
Committees appointed were
Mrs. Camp bell Har per,
American ism; Mrs. Sherman
Butler, veli!rans affai rs; Mrs.
Naomi Bentley, children and
youth ; Mrs. J ohn James,
commun ity serv ice; Mrs.
Bentley', membership , and
Mrs. Harper . chairman of the
ways and means committee.
A final report was given on
tl1e poppy sale and Mrs . Arnold
Richards presented a program
on flag etiquette. Mrs. Smith
served fri ed chic ken and a
dessert.

Pastor to be at Conference

D.S-IlOISIIS I
I · - US?
1 Try 'This ,.._, Rem~ 1

II SDDN!

JULY 19

Shades ·of Ginger, Rosalind and Katharine

I

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I·

One Day Only

were expali ned by Mrs. Mary
Mar ti n,

I PIMPl£S.-8lACKI I

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

NOW IS THE TIME TO GET THAT
MUCH WANTED FAMILY PORTRAIT.

Details of the . program for
vell!rans at the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Centit at
Athens carried on by the
Ameri can Legion Auxil iary

,.---------·

'

NO AGE LIMIT

Explained

Demonstti'fltz.on

.Mrs. Martin is Honored

A&amp;P Soft

game."

premiere ; Mrs . Evelyn
Napper, second demi chapeau
duexieme; Mrs. Mary Helm, Ia
secretaire - cassiere ; Mrs.
Erma Neutzling, chaplain;
Mrs . Jennie CottJ·ilJ, l'archiviste; and Mrs . Edythe
Wagner, Ia concierge.
The Meigs County Salon
presented Mrs. Good with a
chapeau's pin, and Mrs. Martin
Presenli!d a set of table flags to
Mrs. Wagner . Presentation of
lhe charter for the new salon
was made by Mrs. Martin to
Mrs. Good . Candlelight services were held for both the
initiation and installation
ceremonies . Mrs. Iva Powell
served as Ia concierge for the
meeting . Initiated along with
lhe members of the new Salon
was Mrs. Lula Hampton of the
Meigs County Salon.
Refreshments were served
from a table centered with an
arrangement of artificial red
and white roses flanked by red
tapers.

MONDAY
. SOUTHERN Local School .
Board Monday 8 p.m. at high
school.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter,
Order of DeMolay, 7:30 p. m.
Monday at Middleport Masonic
Temple . Motbers' Club in
basement of temple at same
hour.
ANNUAL PICNIC, Middleport
Business
and
Professional Women's Club,
6:30 p. m. Monday , home of
Miss Freddie Houdashelt.
"MIRACLE REVIVAL" ,
7:30p. m. Monday at Salvation
Army, 110 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Dorothy Overton as
evangelist.

Program is

~aJW@ flJ@ff!lf

Closeout All '72

COLOR TELEVISION

16"o,•o

portable

· The RIDGEWAY'• C3710 - Charco al Brown
and Charcoal Black colors (C3710C), or
Beige and Dark Brown colors (C3710L).
Sliqe controls. Handcrafted Chassis.
Chromatic Brain Color Demodulator. Super
VIdeo Range Tuner. Sunshine• Picture
'Tube. Top Carry Handle. VHF b ipole
Antenna. UHF Loop Antenna. ·

$244

Ingels Furniture
. OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

.II
\

�f

6- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cltfssifieds Get Results•.
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to the provisions ot
the Commun i cations Act of 1934

.Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Found

EARTH MOVING

Jc J

------

- - - - --

For Sale Rent or Trade

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

LOKEY!!

GIT FLUSTERED,
HONEY POT -- I'M J 'EST
A WATCHER

JEST DRAWED A
PAIR
JACK S !!

Business Services

LARGE black and white Collie . BOAT, motor and t rai ler ; 15 ft.
boa t of wooden construction,
Reward. Herald Osborne, 985·
65h .p. Mercu ry motor ; in top
gi·1en that Rad io M i d-Pom, Inc
3915 .
.
lic .-~ nse of Stat ion W M P 0
shape ; new battery, skis,
7-12-6tp
M ' 1dleporl , Oh io has f i leQ an
cushions, etc.; wil l sacri f ice;
aJ,. _! Ii cation with the Federal
phone
949-5656.
Communications
Commission
7-16-12tc
'
for a cons tru ction permi t for a
3 Bedr()(!m home. with
ENGAGEMENT
ring
on
new FM"broadcast station to be
Sticker Pri ce, 54552
briok f'ront, 1 car
operated on a f requency of 92 . 1
parking lot in Pomeroy , WHEAT straw. Edison Hol lon,
1972 CHEVROLET BELAIR
$3950
megacy c les , Cl1annel 22 1 with
phone 949-49B9.
owner
identify
and
P&lt;IIY
for
ad.
Dozer &amp; End loader worlt,.
garage, carpeting .
4-door seda n. factory air, V-8 engine, power steering &amp;
an effective radiated pow er of 3
7-16-31p
Phone 992-3B93 after 5 p.m .
'
p
onds, basement, land·
brakes, Turbohydramatic, radio. wheel cove rs, bumper
kilowaHs . The tOwer wilt be
Priced at ..
7-14-3tc
sea
ping. We have 2 size .
locMed .5 miles north of High guards, gold f ini sh, wi th black vi nyl roo f, covert vinyl
AUCTION. Saturday. July 22nd,
From the largest
ONLY $13.750
wa y 7 on the Robert Burdette
dozers, 2 site loaders. Work
inter ior , used less than 5,000 miles as Driver 's Ed . car.
1 p,m .• at the v. D. Cleland
Bulldozer Radi!lfor to
farm at Laurel Cliff. The an We specialize In aluminum.
dare by , hour or contract."' ·
'
restdence on Route 248 m
l eMa lle lg ht will be 239 fee t
Smallest Heater Core .
vinyl
and steel si ding ;
t971
CHEVELLE
MALIBU
H.T.
CPE.
$2995
12 x 63 MOBILE home ; 3 room
Chester. Ohio. HOUSEHOLD:
Free· 'Estimates. We also :
above average terrain . The F M
Nathan Biggs
fiberglas, brick and Stol-iei
Color red. b!k' . v inyl top, blk . viny l inter ior, less than
. furnt_shed apart~ent ; 8 x 38
3 pc. liv ing room $Uite ; round
st ud ios will be located i n the
haul fill dirl, top,soil. Oump
Radiator Specialist
comple\e fine of reslifeilhal
same building as the p rese nt
mobtle home , 30 11: 50
dining table, 2 sets d i ning
20,000 miles by loca l care fu l lad y owner, 307 eng ine w ith
trucks and low-boy for hire.
AM studios on Rou t e 124
and commercial ·roofing;
storeroom; trailer space . S~le
chairs, iron bed complete, 2
Turbo Hydr ama t ic, power steer ing , P. B.. rad io. w-w tires,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers.
Bradbury , Middleport, 011io .
remodeling ,
bu i lding ,
or trade, 4 r ooms, ba_th , ntce
half beds, 3 dressers. chest of
spa r e never used, r ally- wheels, bumper guards . Your
Tl1 e offi cers, direc tors and
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
suspended ceilings, interior
leve l lot; Sale, good mtlk cow,:
dr awers,
Westinghous e
inspec tion of this car wi l l tell you it 's the nicest.
owners of 10 pel . or more of tl1e
"after
7 p.m , or phone · 992 :
and
exterior
painting
;
r efr igerator,
vac uum
M &amp; G F&lt;J:od Market, 3 mt .
stock are . John E M . Kerr,
Ph.
992-2174
Pomeroy
complete
lin~&gt;
of
Masonry
.
5232.
south
of
Mtddleport
oni'Rt.
7.
swee
per
,
trea
dle
se
w
in
g
pr es ident and Fran k X. Rauch
work . All work guaranteed to
Jr .. vice president . Members of
machine, rug, large cedar
7-12-6tp
customer
satisfaction. We
the pub l ic who desire to bring to
LAWN
MOWER
and
sma
l
l
- - -- - - - - -chest, odd cha irs, di shes,
the commission ' s attention
engine repai r ; call Ethan 9.49- are ft.JIIy insured for your
cooki ng
uten sil s;
AN facts concern inr the operation
2789.
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
T IQUES : Secretary, 2 stands,
of th e sta t ion should wr ite to the
391B .
7-13-61c
OPEN
EVES.
1:00
P.M
.
picture
f
rames,
gate
l
eg
Fe d era l Communica ti ons
TRAIL ER space for 12 x 60
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
· table, 2 rockers, kerosene
Com m iss ion , Wasilington, D C.
i'PMEROV, OHIO
mobile home close
to
CONSTR CO
20554 no l.!lt er than August 12,
2
ice
boxes,
c
locks,
lamp,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. M iller
Ga llipol is; phone 992-5592 or
1972 Letters should set rtorth in
sideboard
,
stone
jars
;
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
992-3372.
deta i l th e specific facts whi ch
MISCELLANEOUS :
Power
662-3035 .
7-16-6tc
the writer wishes the Com WANT ADS
lawn mower, lawn chairs,
2-12-ffc
miss ion to consider in passing
)n MOst Amertcan Cad
INFORMATION
pr essure canner, canning
on thi s appl ica ti on. A copy of
.
DEADt.INES
RED
UCE
sa
le
an
d
fa
st
with
jars,
piston
type
water
pump,
GUI\RANTEEDth e app l ication and related
GoBese Tablets &amp; E -Vap .5 P.M. Day Befor e Publi cation.
large amount of misc. items. CALL Guy Ne1gler tor Bu ilding
material are on fil e lor publi c
Pho'ne 992-2094
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Houses .
''water pills," Nel son Drug .
SMALL 3 room furnished
inspec t ion at Rad·io Mid Po m
Ross Cleland, owner; I. 0.
Can.cellation - Correc ti ons
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
6-28-tfc
___.:..:::
In c. Route 12 4 Br adbu r y,
6-29-30tp Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
apartment with bath. Ideal
" M ac" M cCoy, Auct ioneer.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
Middleport, Ohio between the
tor one or two working men .
7-16-llc
Day
of
Publ
ication
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
hours of 8:30a .m and 4:30pm . WHY not try cosmet ics that are
Completely pri vate . Utilities
REGULATIONS
O.Vner
&amp; Operator.
·
Open !Till
week days .
trvly
different
and
furn ished. Phone 992-3881 or CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S l or
Th4 Publ isher reserves the
S-12-ltc
Monda¥
thru Saturday
to
edit
or
r
eject
any
ads.
righ
t
refreshing?
The
famou
s
mink
992-3134 after 4 p.m.
clean
vsed
furnitur e,
(7) 17, 20, 24, 27 , 4t
object iona l .
Th e
606 E. Main . Pomtrov.~
oil base and now we have the deemed
7-12-6tp
gua
r
anteed
appliances
.
c. BRADFORD. Au ctioneer
·Air Conditioners
lemon grove . Just think , 14 publi sil e_r w ill not be respo nsible
Upright deep fr eezes now in
for
mor'e
than
one
incorrect
Complete Service
special s this month, some for ;,,,er tion .
4 ROOM furnished new apartstock!! KUHL 'S BARGAIN
• Awnings
. Phone 949-3B21
SEWING MACHINES . Repair
men as well as women , It's
ment, everything new, on
CENTER. St. Rt. 7 " al
:1 .' \;' ES
Racine, Oh io
·Underpinning
service, all makes . 992-228.4.
KOSCOT of course . Phone
Main
hig
hway
in
Mason
,
W.
·For Wanl Ad Se r vice
cau ti on li ght, "
Tuppers
'
Critt
Bradford
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
By United Press International
992-5113.
5 cents per Word one insert ion
Va . Reynold s Flower Shop up
Pl ains , Ohio. Phone : 667-JBSB ;
5-1-ttc
·compl ete mobi le home
Authorized · Singer Sales and
National League
Minimum Charg e 75c "
7-9-tfc
near drive-in theater, phone
open I a 6 p .m .; closed Men ·
12 cents per word threE 773-5147.
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
service -.- plus gigant ic
Montreal
002 000 001}-- 2 7 1 :-:-:-:-:-=-.,----,-days.
3-29-ltc
LosAng .
400 000 OOx- 4 8 1 WANTED
Customers al consecu ti ve insertioris.
7-12-61p
7-16-61c 'display of mobile homes
HARRISON 'S TV Servi ce, ooen
18 cents pe r ' word six con .
Ston eman, Walker (7) and
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop.
alway~_.
available
at
...
9
a.m.
to
9
p.m.;
free
pickup
sec ut iv e insertion s. ,
CONCRETE
Humphrey; Sutton I 11 ·51 and
Chester. Ohio . No exper ience
and del ivery; phon e 992-2522. READY -MIX
25 Per Cent Discount on paid 3 AND 4 ROUM furnished antl 1.72 ACRE lot . 5 guns, phone
del
ivere
d
right
to )'Our
Sims. LP- Stoneman 18-71 .
necessary .
ads and ads paid within l Od ay s.
unfurnished
apartments
6-13-lfc
742 -3656 .
pro
ject.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
7-9-20tp
CARD OF THANKS
Phone 992-5434.
7-16-21p
estimates
.
Phon
e
992
-32S.;
Atlanta
110 000 001 - 3 5 I
&amp; OBITUARY
4-12-ttc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Chicago
010 001 03x- 5 8 2
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
cancel led?
Lost
your
mo
Washington
Blvd.
Each
addjfional
word
:zc
Stone, Jarvis IBI . Mclain IBJ
Middleport.
Ohio .
2
BEDROOM
ho use
in PAINT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig -Zag
operator 's license? Call 992·
BLIND AOS
423-7521
BELPRE , 0 .
6·30-tfc .
and E. Williams : Hooton .
sew
ing
machines
.
Still
in
Harri sonv il le , la rge l ivi ng
Addit iona l 25c Charge per
2966.
Phoebus (31. Hamilton (71. OLD Furni tu re, oak tables, AdvErtisement
original cartons . No at .
room and kitchen,· part bath ;
6-15-tfc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
Aker (B) and Hund ley . WPOFFICE HOVR$'
tachments needed as our FOR THE BEST deal In a new
phone 742-3123 .
SEW IN G MACHINE ser vice .
or
comp
lete
house
holds.
beds,
Aker (4-0) . LP- Stone (3-71. HR
·. 8:30am,. to S: OO ,p. m~ Daily ,
controls are built-in. Sews
7-14-Jtc
clean, oil , set tension $4 .99 .
Write M . D. M i ller, Rt . 4, 8:30
or
used
mobile
home.
tr
y
SEE
US
FOR
:
Awnings,
storm
- Cardenal (lOth) .
a .m . fO 12:() 0 Noon
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Specia l
Electro -Grande
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cal l 992-627 1. Satu rd ay
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
doors and windows, c~trPorts.
buttonholes, monograms and
THREE bedr oom country
Company . Phone 992-6517 .
6-2B-Ifc
Kanauga , Ohio.
marquees,
aluminum
sidlnc
Cinci .
001 101 01 1}-- 4 8 I
blind hem stitch . Full cash
hom e,
Bowman ' s
Run,
5-21-tfr
7-16-JOtc
and railing . A Jacob, saleS
St . Lou .
001 000 ooo- 1 8 I
price, $38.50 or budget plan
Racine,
Oh
io
;
Robert
D.
Rife,
representative . For tree
Billingham (6-9) and Bench;
avai lable. Phone 992-56.41.
phooe 992 7494 .
· es tima tes, ph one Cha rl es· USED building supplies &amp;
Durham , Segui (BJ and Sim 7-14-6tc
paid
for
all
makes
ana
CASfi
F REE Coll ie pups; acr oss (rom
7-14-6tc
salvage yard; will wreck
Lisle, Sy racu se, V . V .
mons . LP- Durham (0-1). HRTRA C TOR
TRAI LER
models of mobile homes·.
Golf Course. Chester, phone ' - - - - - - - - - houses, buildings, etc. Covert
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Tolan (Sfhl.
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
9B5-410S .
2 BE DROOM trailer , adults
&amp; Mart in Wr eckage &amp;
3·2·11•
can now train to become an
4-13-tfc
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
7-14-31c
on ly ; phone 992-5247.
Salva ge Co.. Laur el Cliff
list game, 10 inns. I
~----over the road dr iver or city
Salt Wor k s, E. Main St. ,
7-ll -12tp
across
from
Hi ghland
Houston
110 000 000 o- 2 13 1
dr ive r . Ex ce ll ent earnings
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Church; phone 992-5946.
DOZER and ba ck hoe wor f&lt; .
Pitts
000 001 010 1- 3 B 0
1971
LIBERTY
mobile
home.
12
after short t raining .on our
4-12 tfc
7-9-12tc
ponds and septi c tanks; B &amp; K
Griffin, Ray (7), Gladding (9)
x 65 , 3 bedroom, l'h bath ;
PASTURE . phone 992-6329 .
tru ck s with our driver in-·
-Excavating. Ph one 992 -5367,
and Edwards, Howard 18) ;
over
payments
of
$91.38
a
take
7;
11
;61p
structors to help you. For
GAS STOVE with hood for . month ; phone 992·3903 .
Di ck Karr, Jr.
Moose, Hernandez (8), Giust i
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .application an d inte rview,
res taurant, bar and eight
5-21
-l
fc
7-14-3tp
(91 and Sanguillen . WP- Giusti
Sept ic tanks lnstalled.-George
COUNTRY
home,
close
to
call 304-344-8B43 , or w r ite
stools; Ph one Hender son, W.
(4-41. LP- Giadding (2 -4).
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·247B.·
Forked Run Lak e ; tree gas,
Sc hool - Safety
Di vision,
Va . 67 S-4258.
4-25-tfc'
___:
partly furnished . Reasonable
Un ited Systems, Inc., c-o
7-13-41c
(2nd Gamel
ren t ; prefer ret ired cot.Jple ;
Terminal Bldg .• 5517 Midland
Houston
000 000 002- 2 5 1
references; phone 378-6298.
Drive , Charl es t on, West
O'DELL WHEEL alignmen t
Pitts
100 200 OOx- 3 B 0
7-7-lfc 1971 Yellowstone truck cam per ,
Virgin ia, 25306 . Appro ved fo r
located al Crossroads, Rt . 124.
like
new.
Call
B43-2524.
Wilson , York I BJ and Ed·
V. A . Benefit s. Pla cement
Complete front end service,
7-13-6tc
Window
wards; Kison. Giusti (9) and
assis tan ce available . Over 700
tune up and brake service.
San9ulllen . WP- Kison 14-2. LP
Air
Conditioners
trans porta tion compan ie s
Wheels
balanced
elec ·
- W1Ison (5.7).
have hired our graduates .
1972
ZIG
ZAG
Sew
ing
machine.
Ironically.
All
work
10 FT.l26 in. metal lathe; 24"
Hot Water Heaters ·
This machine makes but .
guaran~d , ~ R ~~till,nnA~~,.
·'' .-. 110 Mechanic Street
'!'ef&amp;l shaper : 5 ft. metal
' ·"M'-.::.,cilll'
. ... P ' 1! 7' - -~111 - ~tc
Ph&gt;ta- •
•:oo11Do 122~ .7.13 3
ton
holes
,
darns,
em
Plumbing
rates .' Phone 742 -3232
plan·er; poWer hack saw;
San Fran
006 31 0 OOx-1 0 B 2
broideries , all without at·
992-321 3.
/ ·U · 1TC
Electrical
Work
metal
bender
with
many
dies
;
Fryman , Twitchell Il l. Nash
tachmel"jts.
Pay
ba
lance
of
LEGAL NOTICE
will tra de abov~ items for
(4) , Lersch (7), Scarce (B) and
Sealed bids w i ll be rece iv ed
$41.20 or pay S6 a month ;
almost anything of value , or
Bateman , Ryan (8) ; Barr (3-21 by the Meigs Loca l School
Phone 992-,5331.
NEW LISTING
will sel l for first reasonabl e
and Rader . LP- Fryman 13-10) . Distr ict Boa r d of Educat ion at
7-13-6fc
NEW HOME 2 bedroom s, eleclric heat , ba lh ,
offer. Rober t D. Fi fe . 711 S.
HRS- Fuentes (6th ). Maddox their off ice in the M eigs Junior
3rd Ave .• M iddlepor t , Phone
ba sement . Chester wa ter . Only $12,000.00.
(6th). Freed (4th), Luzinski H igh SchoOl Buildi ng , M i d ·
d leport , OhiO, for pa ssenger
992-7494.
17'12' CONTINENTAL Travel
I lOth).
CAPRI
school buses until 12 : 00 o'c lock
7-12-61c
Tra iler . 197 1 m odel . se ll NEW
3
bedrooms,
nice
bath , stove and ref r igerator in
on August 7, 1972, according to
992 -2448
contained : awning, mirrors
New York
010 002 ooo- 3 6 2 specifications of sa id Board of
kitchen . Lots of large closets. City water, gas heat .
Pomeroy, 0 .
San Dieg o
100 002 40x- 7 11 1 Educat ion . Sepa ra te and in and hitch; phone 992-5982.
$16,000.00.
Koosman, Frisella &lt; (71 and dependent bids will be received
7-12-ttc
A LARGE HOUSE
Dyer ; Cork ins, Ross 161. Greif with res pec t to the chassis and
POODLE pups, 5 weeks old.
4 BEDROOMS - 1112 baths, modern kitchen with bar .
(7) and Corral es. WP- Gre if (5 . body type , and will state tha t
GER MAN Shepherd puppies;
$30 ; phone 992-7230 .
the buses, when assembled and BAR WAITRESSE S. apply in
Dini ng room . Wall to wall carpeting. Outbuilding 40x70 for
11 ). LP- Koosman (6-51. HRcan be A.K.C. regi stered ;
7-14-3fp
pr
ior
to
del
ivery,
com
ply
with
business
or contractor . Plenty of parking space. Asking
Sc hneck I 2nd) .
·
person. Red Carpet Inn, Pt .
males , $35; females. $25; also
atl
sc hool
di strict
Pleasant
.
W.
Va
.
after
5
p.m.
only
$25.000.00
.
1960 Mercury Comet ; $100:
specifications , a nd all safe ty
PUREBRED beegle pup s;
7-16-3tc
142ACRES
reg ulations and current Oh io
see
Bob
Young
on
Success
phone Chester 985-3565.
Min imu m Standards lor School
Road near big water tower ;
EXCELLE NT SPRING - Large farm pond . 4 bedroom
7-1631p
Bus Cons tr uc t ion of
the
American League
phone Reedsville 667 ·35 12.
Join t he
house, 2 barns, several outbuild ing s on sta te route.
Departmen t of Educat ion ACT NOW
( 1St game, ·7 inns., rain)
7-12-61p
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gift
$32,500 .00 or will consider offer .
adopt
ed
by
and
with
the
consent
Chicago
000 00 1 o- 1 3 1
Par ty Plan in the Count ry
of tile Dir ector of H igh way
165 ACRES
Ball .
010 102 2-6 12 1 Sa f ety pursuan t to Section
our 25t h year! Com TO
MAT
OES.
Cucumbers.
2
houses
.
4
farm
ponds,
2 cistern s and well. Plenty of good
1968 FOR D Fa irlane with air Wood, Romo (7) and Her - 4511 76 of tile Revised Code and
missions up to 30 peL Fang
reen
pepp
er
s;
Geraldine
conditioning
,
autom
atic
;
'64
grass.
Would
l
ike
$25,000.00.
r mann ; Palmer ( 13-.4) and all other pert inent provisions of
tasti c Hostess Award s. Call or
Cleland. Racine, Ohio .
Pontiac, automatic . Phone
NEW LISTING
Etchebarren. L P- Wood ( 13-10) . law .
write "S ANTA's PAR T IE S"
7-6-tfc
742-5361
.
Specifica
tions
and
in
·
H R- Powell (91h)
A
REAL
BU
YBlock
business bu ild ing near A&amp;P. and a
95
Avon , Conn. 06001. Telephone
Aegulatly
structions to bidde r s may be
7-14-Jtc
modern
3
bedroom
pane
led
home
.
Bath,
furnace,
and
a
ir
1
12031
673
-3455
.
ALSO
from
Assistant
9 YEAR OLD buck skin ri ding
Chic.v Ba it. 2nd game ppd .• ob ta ined
conditioned . Concrete fr ont porch and larg e lot with pine
WITH 12"BAR AND CHAIN,
BOOK I NG PA RTI ES.
Su p er i ntendent Morri son,
mare, Ben Bickers, phone 1149·
rain
Middleport, Ohio .
7·2·30tc
frees.
A
prime
location
for
only
$25,000.00.
AUTOMATlC OIUNG.
4605 .
The Board of EducatiDn
L~
fas1Siarttrg ~
(1st Gamel
7-16·3fc
reserves the righ t to re ject any
MOTHE RS - Ar e you look ing 22 FT. Tagalong travel trai ler,
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
Calif
001 000 ooo- 1 3 o and all bids .
for something differ ent? Seil
SuWY Limned
1972 model, sleeps four, se lf.
YOU OPEN YOUR DOOR TO ANYONE . BE SAFE AND
By ord er of the
Mi lw
000 000 OQO- 0 2 I
Toys . Playhouse Company is
Board of Educa tion
contained. phone 992-6960.
LI ST WI TH US, 98 PCT. OF T HE PROSPE CTS AR.E.
Ma y (J.7) and Stephenson ;
L. W McComas
now hir i ng fo r fall. Sell
7- IHtc
Colborn (2-ll and Felske .
LOOKER S. 2 PCT. ARE BUYERS . WE WILL SC REEN
Cler k -Treasurer
Au?u st to December, no
THEM
AND TRY TO BRING ONLY THE BUYERS .
540 e:. M•ln
I1l 10 , 17 , 24, 31, 4t
deliveries and no col lections . VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
(2nd Gamel
Ph . m -2m
Ca
ll
Mrs.
Barbara
Lambert
Cal it
000 010 ooo- I 9 I
W. C•rny ,
model . Complete wi th all
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATE
992-3325
446-34 11 or Mrs. Margaret
M9r .
Milw
000 000 02x- 2 8 0
cleaning lool s. Small . p~int
Fortune 949-54 14. Earn S &amp; H
Allen. R. Clark (7), Fisher
damage in shipping . Will take
Green Stam ps .
I 8), and Kusnyer ; Parsons.
$27 cash or budget plan
Buy 2 Pairs and
7-12-12tc
RACINE 10 room house i
Linzy (91 and Ratliff. WPavailable . Phone 992-564 1.
GET 1 PAIR FREE
bath, basement, garage , two
LEGAL NOT ICE
Parsons (7-71 . LP- R. Clark 14·
· 7-14-6tc
lots. Phone 949-4313.
All kinds, all sizes for men,
The Me igs County Reg iona l COOK and waitress and
91 .
carhops. apply in pe r~QQ,
Plann ing Commiss ion will have
4-5-lfp
women,
young
men.
boys
a public hea r ing concerning the
Crow's Steak House. 7- 12-6tc JOHN SON CB radio, base or
(12 inns. )
an
d
girls.
Hurry
to
...
mobile unit with antennas :
proposed SUb · tl l \lision
Cleve
000 200 000 ooo- 2 11 0 regulations for Me igs Coun ty.
2 NEW HOMES, all electr ic. 3
phone 949-3334.
RETAIL
Sales
Clerk,
write
Box
DISTRIBUTORS FOR EXCLUSIVE OPPORTUNITY
POMEROY
Texas
200 000 000 001- 3 12 0 Th is meeting w ill be held on
bedrooms . full basement and
7-14-llc
729·
0
,
c-o
Sentinel
,
Pomeroy,
Y._
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Kilkenny, Lamb 141 . Farr.1er August 14th , 7: 30 p.m. at the
garage. w ith lake frontage; al
Ohio, giving experience and
(11) and
Fosse;
Broberg , Cou n ty Extension Off i ce i n
.6il
Pflone992-2181
Five Points area ; phone 992APPROXIMATELY
SO
fryers,
r
eferences.
Lindblad (9). Plna (111 and Pomeroy . Ohio .
. 2571 or 992-3975.
75c each ; 1 polled Hereford
Copies
of
the
proposed
sub7-12-6tc
Bill i ngs. WP- Pina 12·31. LP7-13-tf c
bull. 9m onths old. $250; phone DEMCO Satellile CB radio wilh
division reg ulation s may be
Farmer ( 1-21.
B43-2703.
reviewed by any in teres ted
D 104 microphone , $200:
"'""""' TOYS • GAMES • BOOKS """'"""
parties during the office hour s
7-14·3fc
phone 992-3364.
No Experience NtctsufV
Bos ion
000 1OJ 021}-- 6 II 0 of 9 a.m . to 4 p.m ., Monday til r u
SPI!rt, Part, or Full Time
7-11 -6tp
Minn
001 000 ooo- 1 4 1' Fri day at the County Extension
16 FT. SWISS Colony camper.
Ntw mtril;tti~ IYtttm pttmltt mtn or womtn to distributt multi·mltl lon
Patti n (7-8) and Fisk ; Bl ylev - Offi ce.
sleeps six, 3-burner stove:
$ pr..told Wtlt Disney toyt, pmH tnd book,, Rntock Cotnpllny ~ecurld
E
_F
.
Robin
son,
Pres
POODLE
puppies.
Sliver
Toy,
en. LaRothe (91 and Root . LP
ph one 992-6329 .
KCOUntl wtMtly, with ; high profit, high impul11, list repen ittmt.
Meigs County Regional
- Biy le "en (9-11) . HR - Smith
Parkview Kennels, Phone 9927-14-6tc
IN
Plann ing Commission
NO INITIAL SELLINGIINCOME STARTS IMMEDIATE LVI COMPANY
5443.
(11th : . ~ater (6th).
( 1) 17, 24, 31 (8 ) 7, 4tc
FURNISHED ACCOUNTS! GUARANTEED INVENTORY BUY-BACK I
B-15-tfc
Pomeroy , Oh io
MINIMUM CASH INVESTMENT $1!590.00 UP TO 14690.00
WALNUT -S TEREO
radio
combination, four speed in - BOAT. motor and Ira lien good
A~klnt lhould hnt Cit , minimum of 6 lptrt houtt wotkly, relltblt tnd
Mtgtblt to QWmt bUs.lntll rfiPOntib ilitltl within 30 dtyt. If you mHt
lctowu.J _,j 'fiW
termi xed changer, .4 speaker
Phone Faye Manley
con dition. $425 ; phooe 992·
th... rtqulr.mtntJ, htn th• ctlh inw•tmtnt tnd tinctrtty wtnt to own
sound system, dual volume
WE HAVE THE CON ·
7375 or 992-99B1 .
992 -5592
vour own butln... tflto writ• tnd includt ycH.u phont number to :
TACTS.
con
trol.
Balance
$68
.42
.
Use
7-16-Jtc
Unscmm ble these four Jumbles,
_ _ ___;,A;;;M;:E;;;RICAN ENTERT AtNMENT
CAN YOU USE THEM?
In
our budget terms . Ca ll 992ENTERPRISES ,;_:.;:.;__ _ __
one letter to tach squart, to
Chances are , we hav e
7085.
Pomeroy
form fou.r ordinary words.
pr ospec ts right now who
1700 City ton Rd . Suitt 103
7-14-6fc
would be Interested In your
CttYton, Mo. 63105
Phone 992-2 156
property . If not, we hav e
THREE bedroom house with
BEAUT! FUL Colonial Mapl e
many conflicts- are l"'elp lng
bath , 112-acre lot, on pubflc
stereo, AM-FM radio, four
many people and companies
water system, 3/,.·mlle from
with their real estate
II'
speakers. 4 speed automatic
Chester on Country Rd . 25,
problems . If you want to sell
changer, separate con trol s.
Big Gopocllv
Phone 9B5-4262.
see us today.
Ba
la
nc
e
$79
.56
.
Use
ou
r
Maytag
PRINCESS sel f -contained
7-16·6fc
budge! lerm s. Call 992-7085 .
Automatics
camper will trade tor 16 or lB
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
7-14-6tc
2 speed operation .
fl . camper on wheels; will pay ·
1 story frame , 2 Iaroe
BB ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
Choice ol wa ter
bedrooms w it h walk. .in
difference according to
and other buildings, Over 200
temps ,
Auto .
closets, Iaroe liv ing room
1963 FORD Falrlane SOO, V-B, 4
value ; phone 992-7106.
ft
.
frontage.
Must
see
to
with
fireplace
,
beth
,
water
level
dr
.,
$300
;
DeWalt
Rad
ia
l
7-16-Jic
basemtnt, hardwood floors ,
appreciate .
Rosemary
contro l .
Lint
contractors saw 12", phone
2 c•r gerage. ALL IN EX .
F liter or Power
Withem, 239-0647, GRAND·
992-7374.
CELLENT CONDITION .
Fin Agitator .
STAFF, INC., REAL TOR,
7-12-6tc
$14,900.00.
Perm I · Press
471
-2112
.
HIT BY THE COWBOY
Moytog
7-9-tfc
JUST
arrived
1973
Starcrott
'
t5
MINUTES
A5 HE LEFT TOWN.
Hila
ol Hut
Campers - All 1972 units at
FROM POMEROY
Orytu
3.05 acre eatate 1 story, 3
huge discount . We service HOUSE in Long Softom, phone
SurroUnd clothes
.bedrooms with cfosets, both,
what we sell. Camp Conley
9B5-3529.
With gentle, even
u
II
llty
room,
own
water
Starcratt Sales, Rt. 62, N, of
Now arrange the circled letters
heet . No hot spots,
6-11 -tfc
supplv or Cf'ltster weter.
Pt . Pleasant behind Red
to form the aurprlae answer, p
no
OVtrdrylng . .
large
garage
and
workshop
:R-:A-:C~IN~E:--6-r-oo_m_h_o_u_se::.;.,oa m,' llx21, lrult building , 25 fruit
Carpet Inn.
ouggeated by the above cartooll.
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter .
7· 12·7tc
utility' room, garage, $10',000; . trees , grapes, berr ies ,
1 others ,
.t
years
old .
Wt'Sptcllllltln
~hone 949-4195.
ill
lien
GREATEST BUY OF THE
MAYTAG
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track
3-31 -ttc
YEAR . Sl8,900.
stereo
In
lovely
walnut
con
.
.
.
,
(Amwerl lomorrow)
sole. Pay balance ofS102.50 or
ACRE form, 4 room house,
HENRY E. tLEI.ANDIII.
Junobk" FAIRY COLON BUNtON TEMPER ·
pay $7.55 a mont~. Phone 992Rt. 4, .POI'f1eroy, Hysell Run;
REALTOR
Salllrday'•
5331 .
phone 992-6009.
An•'"'"": For P,.rropC. down lher~ THIS pln('e co1~1tl be
l'HOifE
tf2-22St.
741-4211
Arnold Gr1te
7-1J.61c
7-12-6tc
NO f/NER - "INfiiNO"

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

as am en ded , nolice is hereby

DADBURN !! Rf.J' I
'/ONDER COMES
'IQRE W IFE·MATE

For Sale

Losv

BARNEY

Wanted To Rent

~~~~~TI~ER~--------~
~OW COME
WE DI~N'T KNOW
WE WERE E~~ERIMENTING
¥OUR ELECTRICAL
ENGIN:ERING
CLASS GOT OUT

WHAT c"SE
TJ ~0

EARLY~

ON T~5 PRO~AGATION OF
ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE
IN AN ISOTROPIC ME~IA
WHEN-PoOFJ·NO ~OWEII:J

'"
'tOL-l COMPLAIN JUSf
WALKING 10 TAKE Oi.-IT

YOU'I&lt;E TAKING lt-IE A:JLICE A'll4LEnC
LEAGUE llOY6 ON foN OVERNIGHT

rT-:==7

'114 E GARE5i'.GE.

HIKe'?

WE BLEW
ONE OF THOSE
WHATCHAMACAWTS
AND NO JNE HAD
A PcNNVI

I l-OPE 'ltJU 1RE
NOT GOING TOO
FAR, 6E ~.

EXPERT

Wheet -Alignment'
s5.55

Notice

For Rent

____

ABNF.R
- ' ST E AD 0' THAT
CAN Q'WOf\M5BUT- 6ULPf - GAL5 GOT ,
TO GO 'LONG WIF eo'fS
DRUTH E RS -- ~-----

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Mobile Homes For Sale

- - - -- -

- ONTI L

ONE. AS A HUSB IN.
FUM THEN ON, WE
GITS OUR'N/'

Linescores

------

MILLER
. MOBILE HOMES

Wanteti To Buy

Instruction

WINNIE WINKLE
AND 'THE RIGHT 1D SOCIAliZE
WITH 1H E MALE PRISONERB
ONCE OR 'TWICE A MONTH ...
AND '10 IMI&lt;l' O~IDE
PHONE Ull.!l; ...

NOW WE'lL lET MIBS WINKLE
SAY A FEW WORDS AI!OUTOUR
DEMAND!&gt;! GO AHEA(h _ ~....-'~
HONEY!

Notice

nHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

____

Real Estate For Sale

Mr-;. Cream i5
Fiqqered ver~ honest!
-t hat ol'
llid4'cJ 000
up aq'in.'

Jijrgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

For Sale or Trade

or

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

qave her

a i:went~­

dollar bill
b~ mistake '
She ran all
thi!;l wa~ to
retun1 it '
I'M s::RR~ I 1 fl&amp;VEF.

HTEIJD Ci&lt;CDITl IT
li!RW'.$ FRIE~D.S'HiPS!

- - -- Pets For Sale

Help Wanted

UTILE ORPHAN

ANNIE

A800T fACE ANO H1AD 9ACK TO MR.
SMIRCH 'S PI!1VATE RAILROAD CAR.!

......

Auto Sales

129

HE's GOT (CHUCKLE) PLArl&amp; fOR
VOUR FUTURE!

"""'·"'-'~

85

SENTINEL .
CARRIERS WANTED

JJl]J~®M® IkJ

I

I I

0

I I I

I ...

0]

For Trade.

We talk to JOU
like a~

ICII)(XIIIJ WMP0/1390

SIIRPIIISUIISWIR

I

UN YOUR DIAL

4a

RUTLAND FURNITURE A~~~~~=·· .

i

I

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

with Major Hoople

nur:-~cry

set
(2

wcts . •

Yesterday's Answer

4. Some

bane

5. Attach
6. In ert ga.~
7. Sans krit

Cut short

Bard's

adverb

23. Cushion

12 wds. \
II. One ul 26
12. Compl ell·
16. W ei rd

--'"-'"'Frag ran t

oin tmen t

19. Cavalry

Telling
blow

30. Goll sco r e
31. Gill giver
33. Czec h

20. Carried

school
IU.In (blu ntly 1

Counselor
(abbr.!
U ntie
Squi rrel
monkey

!iWOr(f

ornament

river

2t. Moss
Bart

36. Som e·
thing

book
(2 wds. I
25. Prophet
27, Like
certain
fabrics

curved
37. Eugene
Debs wa s
one
I abbr. 1

(s1. 1
Pu s~

. Cubi&lt;

meter
;'God's
Little -

''

· 27. Adole s·
cent
JfNNIE JO, MY JMIC PIAN
WA5 ~Nil... HAS AH!ONE

fYFFf PRU~OHP~
WRO!fPTII fFI'ORT
JOSAI'OTAG~

~/o~MUSHI!I

R"':STIIOUeLY

IIUGtf55FUL ...

~PIIOW

INJCII li:liJ

RES£/IIIILI!

... COHTRlSUnNG

10 'liE COMPL!l'E
~OI'OHf
OFMR.~'S

MORE CAI!EFIJLL'I
PIANNfP 11!AI'll
:sET AROUNP TliE
WATeR HOlf,

PIJA&lt;;E I'Ofl'T ~E ANNOYI'P
WITll li:liJR WIFf, MR.ClfAHTR Y.
li:liJ WERE I!OiW 10 IRIP
otlf OR AHOT11ER OF
MY AKI1AIIGEMfNTS. ·

28. Flurry
29. Jammed
· 32. Turf
33. See 16

WE'RE 601N6 TO
TR!:E . AND FIND
IN

Acro ss

34. - -Tse
35. Hire
37. Portent

,

WE'RE

38. Gav'e a
menaci ng

GETTIN~

look
I t was

SNOOf¥ ~

39.

TH ERE.

former ly
Chrisli ·

ani a
40. "-Me a
River"
41. Sonn y's
partn er

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

----,.----

Rutlind

\,

8

MIDDLEPORT

0 1

I DAWNT r

W HAT THIS DEPARTMENT
NEEDS IS YOUNG

(0 1972 K ing Ftol\tures Syndic ate. Inc.

thl'

!i UfT Ct'{'l' ·~

VES, IN MV OPINION,

..

:\lainc site
3. Song f or

Hay f ever

CLELAND
REALTY

I SWJU

I. Dcfama·
tory
statcm t•nl
2. U niv . ol

13 . Q~~COU:-l

4i

Real Estate For Sale

I. Actres s

source
8. - Cros.!i
9. Citi ze nry

WANTED

~ w;$f;~f

DOW!\

acid

POMEROY

- - -- - -

,\CROSS
Albright
5. Formic

'

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

H. L. MENCKEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

$149

For Sale

Saturday's Cl)Tptoquote: A CYNIC IS A MA~ Wf!O. WHE[I;

HE SMELLS FLQWER S, LOOKS AROUND FOR A COFF I~ _

Is

how

to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
L ·o N G F E L L 0 W

One letter simply stands lor an'Other . In tliis _,.mp le A i s
used for the three L's, X for the tw.o O's. etc. Smgle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formall~n of the words are -all
hints. Each day the code letters are d1f!er enl .

CRYPTOQUOTES

L K M J T W V F. Y T J T H N Y K L t' .I . M F R L
- MS F.V l ' VVH , FV II YKM Y I. HTMWWN
BH F V Y M (; G V Ill\ Y V

IIY JI · "

'
ST .- t'VETl'

W T \'

M F NY K

f; FA

t "I' "' ;T I1F.V~'

"···

•

�f

6- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cltfssifieds Get Results•.
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to the provisions ot
the Commun i cations Act of 1934

.Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Found

EARTH MOVING

Jc J

------

- - - - --

For Sale Rent or Trade

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

LOKEY!!

GIT FLUSTERED,
HONEY POT -- I'M J 'EST
A WATCHER

JEST DRAWED A
PAIR
JACK S !!

Business Services

LARGE black and white Collie . BOAT, motor and t rai ler ; 15 ft.
boa t of wooden construction,
Reward. Herald Osborne, 985·
65h .p. Mercu ry motor ; in top
gi·1en that Rad io M i d-Pom, Inc
3915 .
.
lic .-~ nse of Stat ion W M P 0
shape ; new battery, skis,
7-12-6tp
M ' 1dleporl , Oh io has f i leQ an
cushions, etc.; wil l sacri f ice;
aJ,. _! Ii cation with the Federal
phone
949-5656.
Communications
Commission
7-16-12tc
'
for a cons tru ction permi t for a
3 Bedr()(!m home. with
ENGAGEMENT
ring
on
new FM"broadcast station to be
Sticker Pri ce, 54552
briok f'ront, 1 car
operated on a f requency of 92 . 1
parking lot in Pomeroy , WHEAT straw. Edison Hol lon,
1972 CHEVROLET BELAIR
$3950
megacy c les , Cl1annel 22 1 with
phone 949-49B9.
owner
identify
and
P&lt;IIY
for
ad.
Dozer &amp; End loader worlt,.
garage, carpeting .
4-door seda n. factory air, V-8 engine, power steering &amp;
an effective radiated pow er of 3
7-16-31p
Phone 992-3B93 after 5 p.m .
'
p
onds, basement, land·
brakes, Turbohydramatic, radio. wheel cove rs, bumper
kilowaHs . The tOwer wilt be
Priced at ..
7-14-3tc
sea
ping. We have 2 size .
locMed .5 miles north of High guards, gold f ini sh, wi th black vi nyl roo f, covert vinyl
AUCTION. Saturday. July 22nd,
From the largest
ONLY $13.750
wa y 7 on the Robert Burdette
dozers, 2 site loaders. Work
inter ior , used less than 5,000 miles as Driver 's Ed . car.
1 p,m .• at the v. D. Cleland
Bulldozer Radi!lfor to
farm at Laurel Cliff. The an We specialize In aluminum.
dare by , hour or contract."' ·
'
restdence on Route 248 m
l eMa lle lg ht will be 239 fee t
Smallest Heater Core .
vinyl
and steel si ding ;
t971
CHEVELLE
MALIBU
H.T.
CPE.
$2995
12 x 63 MOBILE home ; 3 room
Chester. Ohio. HOUSEHOLD:
Free· 'Estimates. We also :
above average terrain . The F M
Nathan Biggs
fiberglas, brick and Stol-iei
Color red. b!k' . v inyl top, blk . viny l inter ior, less than
. furnt_shed apart~ent ; 8 x 38
3 pc. liv ing room $Uite ; round
st ud ios will be located i n the
haul fill dirl, top,soil. Oump
Radiator Specialist
comple\e fine of reslifeilhal
same building as the p rese nt
mobtle home , 30 11: 50
dining table, 2 sets d i ning
20,000 miles by loca l care fu l lad y owner, 307 eng ine w ith
trucks and low-boy for hire.
AM studios on Rou t e 124
and commercial ·roofing;
storeroom; trailer space . S~le
chairs, iron bed complete, 2
Turbo Hydr ama t ic, power steer ing , P. B.. rad io. w-w tires,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers.
Bradbury , Middleport, 011io .
remodeling ,
bu i lding ,
or trade, 4 r ooms, ba_th , ntce
half beds, 3 dressers. chest of
spa r e never used, r ally- wheels, bumper guards . Your
Tl1 e offi cers, direc tors and
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
suspended ceilings, interior
leve l lot; Sale, good mtlk cow,:
dr awers,
Westinghous e
inspec tion of this car wi l l tell you it 's the nicest.
owners of 10 pel . or more of tl1e
"after
7 p.m , or phone · 992 :
and
exterior
painting
;
r efr igerator,
vac uum
M &amp; G F&lt;J:od Market, 3 mt .
stock are . John E M . Kerr,
Ph.
992-2174
Pomeroy
complete
lin~&gt;
of
Masonry
.
5232.
south
of
Mtddleport
oni'Rt.
7.
swee
per
,
trea
dle
se
w
in
g
pr es ident and Fran k X. Rauch
work . All work guaranteed to
Jr .. vice president . Members of
machine, rug, large cedar
7-12-6tp
customer
satisfaction. We
the pub l ic who desire to bring to
LAWN
MOWER
and
sma
l
l
- - -- - - - - -chest, odd cha irs, di shes,
the commission ' s attention
engine repai r ; call Ethan 9.49- are ft.JIIy insured for your
cooki ng
uten sil s;
AN facts concern inr the operation
2789.
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
T IQUES : Secretary, 2 stands,
of th e sta t ion should wr ite to the
391B .
7-13-61c
OPEN
EVES.
1:00
P.M
.
picture
f
rames,
gate
l
eg
Fe d era l Communica ti ons
TRAIL ER space for 12 x 60
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
· table, 2 rockers, kerosene
Com m iss ion , Wasilington, D C.
i'PMEROV, OHIO
mobile home close
to
CONSTR CO
20554 no l.!lt er than August 12,
2
ice
boxes,
c
locks,
lamp,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. M iller
Ga llipol is; phone 992-5592 or
1972 Letters should set rtorth in
sideboard
,
stone
jars
;
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
992-3372.
deta i l th e specific facts whi ch
MISCELLANEOUS :
Power
662-3035 .
7-16-6tc
the writer wishes the Com WANT ADS
lawn mower, lawn chairs,
2-12-ffc
miss ion to consider in passing
)n MOst Amertcan Cad
INFORMATION
pr essure canner, canning
on thi s appl ica ti on. A copy of
.
DEADt.INES
RED
UCE
sa
le
an
d
fa
st
with
jars,
piston
type
water
pump,
GUI\RANTEEDth e app l ication and related
GoBese Tablets &amp; E -Vap .5 P.M. Day Befor e Publi cation.
large amount of misc. items. CALL Guy Ne1gler tor Bu ilding
material are on fil e lor publi c
Pho'ne 992-2094
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Houses .
''water pills," Nel son Drug .
SMALL 3 room furnished
inspec t ion at Rad·io Mid Po m
Ross Cleland, owner; I. 0.
Can.cellation - Correc ti ons
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
6-28-tfc
___.:..:::
In c. Route 12 4 Br adbu r y,
6-29-30tp Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
apartment with bath. Ideal
" M ac" M cCoy, Auct ioneer.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
Middleport, Ohio between the
tor one or two working men .
7-16-llc
Day
of
Publ
ication
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
hours of 8:30a .m and 4:30pm . WHY not try cosmet ics that are
Completely pri vate . Utilities
REGULATIONS
O.Vner
&amp; Operator.
·
Open !Till
week days .
trvly
different
and
furn ished. Phone 992-3881 or CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S l or
Th4 Publ isher reserves the
S-12-ltc
Monda¥
thru Saturday
to
edit
or
r
eject
any
ads.
righ
t
refreshing?
The
famou
s
mink
992-3134 after 4 p.m.
clean
vsed
furnitur e,
(7) 17, 20, 24, 27 , 4t
object iona l .
Th e
606 E. Main . Pomtrov.~
oil base and now we have the deemed
7-12-6tp
gua
r
anteed
appliances
.
c. BRADFORD. Au ctioneer
·Air Conditioners
lemon grove . Just think , 14 publi sil e_r w ill not be respo nsible
Upright deep fr eezes now in
for
mor'e
than
one
incorrect
Complete Service
special s this month, some for ;,,,er tion .
4 ROOM furnished new apartstock!! KUHL 'S BARGAIN
• Awnings
. Phone 949-3B21
SEWING MACHINES . Repair
men as well as women , It's
ment, everything new, on
CENTER. St. Rt. 7 " al
:1 .' \;' ES
Racine, Oh io
·Underpinning
service, all makes . 992-228.4.
KOSCOT of course . Phone
Main
hig
hway
in
Mason
,
W.
·For Wanl Ad Se r vice
cau ti on li ght, "
Tuppers
'
Critt
Bradford
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
By United Press International
992-5113.
5 cents per Word one insert ion
Va . Reynold s Flower Shop up
Pl ains , Ohio. Phone : 667-JBSB ;
5-1-ttc
·compl ete mobi le home
Authorized · Singer Sales and
National League
Minimum Charg e 75c "
7-9-tfc
near drive-in theater, phone
open I a 6 p .m .; closed Men ·
12 cents per word threE 773-5147.
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
service -.- plus gigant ic
Montreal
002 000 001}-- 2 7 1 :-:-:-:-:-=-.,----,-days.
3-29-ltc
LosAng .
400 000 OOx- 4 8 1 WANTED
Customers al consecu ti ve insertioris.
7-12-61p
7-16-61c 'display of mobile homes
HARRISON 'S TV Servi ce, ooen
18 cents pe r ' word six con .
Ston eman, Walker (7) and
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop.
alway~_.
available
at
...
9
a.m.
to
9
p.m.;
free
pickup
sec ut iv e insertion s. ,
CONCRETE
Humphrey; Sutton I 11 ·51 and
Chester. Ohio . No exper ience
and del ivery; phon e 992-2522. READY -MIX
25 Per Cent Discount on paid 3 AND 4 ROUM furnished antl 1.72 ACRE lot . 5 guns, phone
del
ivere
d
right
to )'Our
Sims. LP- Stoneman 18-71 .
necessary .
ads and ads paid within l Od ay s.
unfurnished
apartments
6-13-lfc
742 -3656 .
pro
ject.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
7-9-20tp
CARD OF THANKS
Phone 992-5434.
7-16-21p
estimates
.
Phon
e
992
-32S.;
Atlanta
110 000 001 - 3 5 I
&amp; OBITUARY
4-12-ttc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Chicago
010 001 03x- 5 8 2
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
cancel led?
Lost
your
mo
Washington
Blvd.
Each
addjfional
word
:zc
Stone, Jarvis IBI . Mclain IBJ
Middleport.
Ohio .
2
BEDROOM
ho use
in PAINT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig -Zag
operator 's license? Call 992·
BLIND AOS
423-7521
BELPRE , 0 .
6·30-tfc .
and E. Williams : Hooton .
sew
ing
machines
.
Still
in
Harri sonv il le , la rge l ivi ng
Addit iona l 25c Charge per
2966.
Phoebus (31. Hamilton (71. OLD Furni tu re, oak tables, AdvErtisement
original cartons . No at .
room and kitchen,· part bath ;
6-15-tfc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
Aker (B) and Hund ley . WPOFFICE HOVR$'
tachments needed as our FOR THE BEST deal In a new
phone 742-3123 .
SEW IN G MACHINE ser vice .
or
comp
lete
house
holds.
beds,
Aker (4-0) . LP- Stone (3-71. HR
·. 8:30am,. to S: OO ,p. m~ Daily ,
controls are built-in. Sews
7-14-Jtc
clean, oil , set tension $4 .99 .
Write M . D. M i ller, Rt . 4, 8:30
or
used
mobile
home.
tr
y
SEE
US
FOR
:
Awnings,
storm
- Cardenal (lOth) .
a .m . fO 12:() 0 Noon
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Specia l
Electro -Grande
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cal l 992-627 1. Satu rd ay
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
doors and windows, c~trPorts.
buttonholes, monograms and
THREE bedr oom country
Company . Phone 992-6517 .
6-2B-Ifc
Kanauga , Ohio.
marquees,
aluminum
sidlnc
Cinci .
001 101 01 1}-- 4 8 I
blind hem stitch . Full cash
hom e,
Bowman ' s
Run,
5-21-tfr
7-16-JOtc
and railing . A Jacob, saleS
St . Lou .
001 000 ooo- 1 8 I
price, $38.50 or budget plan
Racine,
Oh
io
;
Robert
D.
Rife,
representative . For tree
Billingham (6-9) and Bench;
avai lable. Phone 992-56.41.
phooe 992 7494 .
· es tima tes, ph one Cha rl es· USED building supplies &amp;
Durham , Segui (BJ and Sim 7-14-6tc
paid
for
all
makes
ana
CASfi
F REE Coll ie pups; acr oss (rom
7-14-6tc
salvage yard; will wreck
Lisle, Sy racu se, V . V .
mons . LP- Durham (0-1). HRTRA C TOR
TRAI LER
models of mobile homes·.
Golf Course. Chester, phone ' - - - - - - - - - houses, buildings, etc. Covert
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Tolan (Sfhl.
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
9B5-410S .
2 BE DROOM trailer , adults
&amp; Mart in Wr eckage &amp;
3·2·11•
can now train to become an
4-13-tfc
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
7-14-31c
on ly ; phone 992-5247.
Salva ge Co.. Laur el Cliff
list game, 10 inns. I
~----over the road dr iver or city
Salt Wor k s, E. Main St. ,
7-ll -12tp
across
from
Hi ghland
Houston
110 000 000 o- 2 13 1
dr ive r . Ex ce ll ent earnings
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Church; phone 992-5946.
DOZER and ba ck hoe wor f&lt; .
Pitts
000 001 010 1- 3 B 0
1971
LIBERTY
mobile
home.
12
after short t raining .on our
4-12 tfc
7-9-12tc
ponds and septi c tanks; B &amp; K
Griffin, Ray (7), Gladding (9)
x 65 , 3 bedroom, l'h bath ;
PASTURE . phone 992-6329 .
tru ck s with our driver in-·
-Excavating. Ph one 992 -5367,
and Edwards, Howard 18) ;
over
payments
of
$91.38
a
take
7;
11
;61p
structors to help you. For
GAS STOVE with hood for . month ; phone 992·3903 .
Di ck Karr, Jr.
Moose, Hernandez (8), Giust i
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .application an d inte rview,
res taurant, bar and eight
5-21
-l
fc
7-14-3tp
(91 and Sanguillen . WP- Giusti
Sept ic tanks lnstalled.-George
COUNTRY
home,
close
to
call 304-344-8B43 , or w r ite
stools; Ph one Hender son, W.
(4-41. LP- Giadding (2 -4).
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·247B.·
Forked Run Lak e ; tree gas,
Sc hool - Safety
Di vision,
Va . 67 S-4258.
4-25-tfc'
___:
partly furnished . Reasonable
Un ited Systems, Inc., c-o
7-13-41c
(2nd Gamel
ren t ; prefer ret ired cot.Jple ;
Terminal Bldg .• 5517 Midland
Houston
000 000 002- 2 5 1
references; phone 378-6298.
Drive , Charl es t on, West
O'DELL WHEEL alignmen t
Pitts
100 200 OOx- 3 B 0
7-7-lfc 1971 Yellowstone truck cam per ,
Virgin ia, 25306 . Appro ved fo r
located al Crossroads, Rt . 124.
like
new.
Call
B43-2524.
Wilson , York I BJ and Ed·
V. A . Benefit s. Pla cement
Complete front end service,
7-13-6tc
Window
wards; Kison. Giusti (9) and
assis tan ce available . Over 700
tune up and brake service.
San9ulllen . WP- Kison 14-2. LP
Air
Conditioners
trans porta tion compan ie s
Wheels
balanced
elec ·
- W1Ison (5.7).
have hired our graduates .
1972
ZIG
ZAG
Sew
ing
machine.
Ironically.
All
work
10 FT.l26 in. metal lathe; 24"
Hot Water Heaters ·
This machine makes but .
guaran~d , ~ R ~~till,nnA~~,.
·'' .-. 110 Mechanic Street
'!'ef&amp;l shaper : 5 ft. metal
' ·"M'-.::.,cilll'
. ... P ' 1! 7' - -~111 - ~tc
Ph&gt;ta- •
•:oo11Do 122~ .7.13 3
ton
holes
,
darns,
em
Plumbing
rates .' Phone 742 -3232
plan·er; poWer hack saw;
San Fran
006 31 0 OOx-1 0 B 2
broideries , all without at·
992-321 3.
/ ·U · 1TC
Electrical
Work
metal
bender
with
many
dies
;
Fryman , Twitchell Il l. Nash
tachmel"jts.
Pay
ba
lance
of
LEGAL NOTICE
will tra de abov~ items for
(4) , Lersch (7), Scarce (B) and
Sealed bids w i ll be rece iv ed
$41.20 or pay S6 a month ;
almost anything of value , or
Bateman , Ryan (8) ; Barr (3-21 by the Meigs Loca l School
Phone 992-,5331.
NEW LISTING
will sel l for first reasonabl e
and Rader . LP- Fryman 13-10) . Distr ict Boa r d of Educat ion at
7-13-6fc
NEW HOME 2 bedroom s, eleclric heat , ba lh ,
offer. Rober t D. Fi fe . 711 S.
HRS- Fuentes (6th ). Maddox their off ice in the M eigs Junior
3rd Ave .• M iddlepor t , Phone
ba sement . Chester wa ter . Only $12,000.00.
(6th). Freed (4th), Luzinski H igh SchoOl Buildi ng , M i d ·
d leport , OhiO, for pa ssenger
992-7494.
17'12' CONTINENTAL Travel
I lOth).
CAPRI
school buses until 12 : 00 o'c lock
7-12-61c
Tra iler . 197 1 m odel . se ll NEW
3
bedrooms,
nice
bath , stove and ref r igerator in
on August 7, 1972, according to
992 -2448
contained : awning, mirrors
New York
010 002 ooo- 3 6 2 specifications of sa id Board of
kitchen . Lots of large closets. City water, gas heat .
Pomeroy, 0 .
San Dieg o
100 002 40x- 7 11 1 Educat ion . Sepa ra te and in and hitch; phone 992-5982.
$16,000.00.
Koosman, Frisella &lt; (71 and dependent bids will be received
7-12-ttc
A LARGE HOUSE
Dyer ; Cork ins, Ross 161. Greif with res pec t to the chassis and
POODLE pups, 5 weeks old.
4 BEDROOMS - 1112 baths, modern kitchen with bar .
(7) and Corral es. WP- Gre if (5 . body type , and will state tha t
GER MAN Shepherd puppies;
$30 ; phone 992-7230 .
the buses, when assembled and BAR WAITRESSE S. apply in
Dini ng room . Wall to wall carpeting. Outbuilding 40x70 for
11 ). LP- Koosman (6-51. HRcan be A.K.C. regi stered ;
7-14-3fp
pr
ior
to
del
ivery,
com
ply
with
business
or contractor . Plenty of parking space. Asking
Sc hneck I 2nd) .
·
person. Red Carpet Inn, Pt .
males , $35; females. $25; also
atl
sc hool
di strict
Pleasant
.
W.
Va
.
after
5
p.m.
only
$25.000.00
.
1960 Mercury Comet ; $100:
specifications , a nd all safe ty
PUREBRED beegle pup s;
7-16-3tc
142ACRES
reg ulations and current Oh io
see
Bob
Young
on
Success
phone Chester 985-3565.
Min imu m Standards lor School
Road near big water tower ;
EXCELLE NT SPRING - Large farm pond . 4 bedroom
7-1631p
Bus Cons tr uc t ion of
the
American League
phone Reedsville 667 ·35 12.
Join t he
house, 2 barns, several outbuild ing s on sta te route.
Departmen t of Educat ion ACT NOW
( 1St game, ·7 inns., rain)
7-12-61p
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gift
$32,500 .00 or will consider offer .
adopt
ed
by
and
with
the
consent
Chicago
000 00 1 o- 1 3 1
Par ty Plan in the Count ry
of tile Dir ector of H igh way
165 ACRES
Ball .
010 102 2-6 12 1 Sa f ety pursuan t to Section
our 25t h year! Com TO
MAT
OES.
Cucumbers.
2
houses
.
4
farm
ponds,
2 cistern s and well. Plenty of good
1968 FOR D Fa irlane with air Wood, Romo (7) and Her - 4511 76 of tile Revised Code and
missions up to 30 peL Fang
reen
pepp
er
s;
Geraldine
conditioning
,
autom
atic
;
'64
grass.
Would
l
ike
$25,000.00.
r mann ; Palmer ( 13-.4) and all other pert inent provisions of
tasti c Hostess Award s. Call or
Cleland. Racine, Ohio .
Pontiac, automatic . Phone
NEW LISTING
Etchebarren. L P- Wood ( 13-10) . law .
write "S ANTA's PAR T IE S"
7-6-tfc
742-5361
.
Specifica
tions
and
in
·
H R- Powell (91h)
A
REAL
BU
YBlock
business bu ild ing near A&amp;P. and a
95
Avon , Conn. 06001. Telephone
Aegulatly
structions to bidde r s may be
7-14-Jtc
modern
3
bedroom
pane
led
home
.
Bath,
furnace,
and
a
ir
1
12031
673
-3455
.
ALSO
from
Assistant
9 YEAR OLD buck skin ri ding
Chic.v Ba it. 2nd game ppd .• ob ta ined
conditioned . Concrete fr ont porch and larg e lot with pine
WITH 12"BAR AND CHAIN,
BOOK I NG PA RTI ES.
Su p er i ntendent Morri son,
mare, Ben Bickers, phone 1149·
rain
Middleport, Ohio .
7·2·30tc
frees.
A
prime
location
for
only
$25,000.00.
AUTOMATlC OIUNG.
4605 .
The Board of EducatiDn
L~
fas1Siarttrg ~
(1st Gamel
7-16·3fc
reserves the righ t to re ject any
MOTHE RS - Ar e you look ing 22 FT. Tagalong travel trai ler,
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
Calif
001 000 ooo- 1 3 o and all bids .
for something differ ent? Seil
SuWY Limned
1972 model, sleeps four, se lf.
YOU OPEN YOUR DOOR TO ANYONE . BE SAFE AND
By ord er of the
Mi lw
000 000 OQO- 0 2 I
Toys . Playhouse Company is
Board of Educa tion
contained. phone 992-6960.
LI ST WI TH US, 98 PCT. OF T HE PROSPE CTS AR.E.
Ma y (J.7) and Stephenson ;
L. W McComas
now hir i ng fo r fall. Sell
7- IHtc
Colborn (2-ll and Felske .
LOOKER S. 2 PCT. ARE BUYERS . WE WILL SC REEN
Cler k -Treasurer
Au?u st to December, no
THEM
AND TRY TO BRING ONLY THE BUYERS .
540 e:. M•ln
I1l 10 , 17 , 24, 31, 4t
deliveries and no col lections . VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
(2nd Gamel
Ph . m -2m
Ca
ll
Mrs.
Barbara
Lambert
Cal it
000 010 ooo- I 9 I
W. C•rny ,
model . Complete wi th all
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATE
992-3325
446-34 11 or Mrs. Margaret
M9r .
Milw
000 000 02x- 2 8 0
cleaning lool s. Small . p~int
Fortune 949-54 14. Earn S &amp; H
Allen. R. Clark (7), Fisher
damage in shipping . Will take
Green Stam ps .
I 8), and Kusnyer ; Parsons.
$27 cash or budget plan
Buy 2 Pairs and
7-12-12tc
RACINE 10 room house i
Linzy (91 and Ratliff. WPavailable . Phone 992-564 1.
GET 1 PAIR FREE
bath, basement, garage , two
LEGAL NOT ICE
Parsons (7-71 . LP- R. Clark 14·
· 7-14-6tc
lots. Phone 949-4313.
All kinds, all sizes for men,
The Me igs County Reg iona l COOK and waitress and
91 .
carhops. apply in pe r~QQ,
Plann ing Commiss ion will have
4-5-lfp
women,
young
men.
boys
a public hea r ing concerning the
Crow's Steak House. 7- 12-6tc JOHN SON CB radio, base or
(12 inns. )
an
d
girls.
Hurry
to
...
mobile unit with antennas :
proposed SUb · tl l \lision
Cleve
000 200 000 ooo- 2 11 0 regulations for Me igs Coun ty.
2 NEW HOMES, all electr ic. 3
phone 949-3334.
RETAIL
Sales
Clerk,
write
Box
DISTRIBUTORS FOR EXCLUSIVE OPPORTUNITY
POMEROY
Texas
200 000 000 001- 3 12 0 Th is meeting w ill be held on
bedrooms . full basement and
7-14-llc
729·
0
,
c-o
Sentinel
,
Pomeroy,
Y._
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Kilkenny, Lamb 141 . Farr.1er August 14th , 7: 30 p.m. at the
garage. w ith lake frontage; al
Ohio, giving experience and
(11) and
Fosse;
Broberg , Cou n ty Extension Off i ce i n
.6il
Pflone992-2181
Five Points area ; phone 992APPROXIMATELY
SO
fryers,
r
eferences.
Lindblad (9). Plna (111 and Pomeroy . Ohio .
. 2571 or 992-3975.
75c each ; 1 polled Hereford
Copies
of
the
proposed
sub7-12-6tc
Bill i ngs. WP- Pina 12·31. LP7-13-tf c
bull. 9m onths old. $250; phone DEMCO Satellile CB radio wilh
division reg ulation s may be
Farmer ( 1-21.
B43-2703.
reviewed by any in teres ted
D 104 microphone , $200:
"'""""' TOYS • GAMES • BOOKS """'"""
parties during the office hour s
7-14·3fc
phone 992-3364.
No Experience NtctsufV
Bos ion
000 1OJ 021}-- 6 II 0 of 9 a.m . to 4 p.m ., Monday til r u
SPI!rt, Part, or Full Time
7-11 -6tp
Minn
001 000 ooo- 1 4 1' Fri day at the County Extension
16 FT. SWISS Colony camper.
Ntw mtril;tti~ IYtttm pttmltt mtn or womtn to distributt multi·mltl lon
Patti n (7-8) and Fisk ; Bl ylev - Offi ce.
sleeps six, 3-burner stove:
$ pr..told Wtlt Disney toyt, pmH tnd book,, Rntock Cotnpllny ~ecurld
E
_F
.
Robin
son,
Pres
POODLE
puppies.
Sliver
Toy,
en. LaRothe (91 and Root . LP
ph one 992-6329 .
KCOUntl wtMtly, with ; high profit, high impul11, list repen ittmt.
Meigs County Regional
- Biy le "en (9-11) . HR - Smith
Parkview Kennels, Phone 9927-14-6tc
IN
Plann ing Commission
NO INITIAL SELLINGIINCOME STARTS IMMEDIATE LVI COMPANY
5443.
(11th : . ~ater (6th).
( 1) 17, 24, 31 (8 ) 7, 4tc
FURNISHED ACCOUNTS! GUARANTEED INVENTORY BUY-BACK I
B-15-tfc
Pomeroy , Oh io
MINIMUM CASH INVESTMENT $1!590.00 UP TO 14690.00
WALNUT -S TEREO
radio
combination, four speed in - BOAT. motor and Ira lien good
A~klnt lhould hnt Cit , minimum of 6 lptrt houtt wotkly, relltblt tnd
Mtgtblt to QWmt bUs.lntll rfiPOntib ilitltl within 30 dtyt. If you mHt
lctowu.J _,j 'fiW
termi xed changer, .4 speaker
Phone Faye Manley
con dition. $425 ; phooe 992·
th... rtqulr.mtntJ, htn th• ctlh inw•tmtnt tnd tinctrtty wtnt to own
sound system, dual volume
WE HAVE THE CON ·
7375 or 992-99B1 .
992 -5592
vour own butln... tflto writ• tnd includt ycH.u phont number to :
TACTS.
con
trol.
Balance
$68
.42
.
Use
7-16-Jtc
Unscmm ble these four Jumbles,
_ _ ___;,A;;;M;:E;;;RICAN ENTERT AtNMENT
CAN YOU USE THEM?
In
our budget terms . Ca ll 992ENTERPRISES ,;_:.;:.;__ _ __
one letter to tach squart, to
Chances are , we hav e
7085.
Pomeroy
form fou.r ordinary words.
pr ospec ts right now who
1700 City ton Rd . Suitt 103
7-14-6fc
would be Interested In your
CttYton, Mo. 63105
Phone 992-2 156
property . If not, we hav e
THREE bedroom house with
BEAUT! FUL Colonial Mapl e
many conflicts- are l"'elp lng
bath , 112-acre lot, on pubflc
stereo, AM-FM radio, four
many people and companies
water system, 3/,.·mlle from
with their real estate
II'
speakers. 4 speed automatic
Chester on Country Rd . 25,
problems . If you want to sell
changer, separate con trol s.
Big Gopocllv
Phone 9B5-4262.
see us today.
Ba
la
nc
e
$79
.56
.
Use
ou
r
Maytag
PRINCESS sel f -contained
7-16·6fc
budge! lerm s. Call 992-7085 .
Automatics
camper will trade tor 16 or lB
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
7-14-6tc
2 speed operation .
fl . camper on wheels; will pay ·
1 story frame , 2 Iaroe
BB ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
Choice ol wa ter
bedrooms w it h walk. .in
difference according to
and other buildings, Over 200
temps ,
Auto .
closets, Iaroe liv ing room
1963 FORD Falrlane SOO, V-B, 4
value ; phone 992-7106.
ft
.
frontage.
Must
see
to
with
fireplace
,
beth
,
water
level
dr
.,
$300
;
DeWalt
Rad
ia
l
7-16-Jic
basemtnt, hardwood floors ,
appreciate .
Rosemary
contro l .
Lint
contractors saw 12", phone
2 c•r gerage. ALL IN EX .
F liter or Power
Withem, 239-0647, GRAND·
992-7374.
CELLENT CONDITION .
Fin Agitator .
STAFF, INC., REAL TOR,
7-12-6tc
$14,900.00.
Perm I · Press
471
-2112
.
HIT BY THE COWBOY
Moytog
7-9-tfc
JUST
arrived
1973
Starcrott
'
t5
MINUTES
A5 HE LEFT TOWN.
Hila
ol Hut
Campers - All 1972 units at
FROM POMEROY
Orytu
3.05 acre eatate 1 story, 3
huge discount . We service HOUSE in Long Softom, phone
SurroUnd clothes
.bedrooms with cfosets, both,
what we sell. Camp Conley
9B5-3529.
With gentle, even
u
II
llty
room,
own
water
Starcratt Sales, Rt. 62, N, of
Now arrange the circled letters
heet . No hot spots,
6-11 -tfc
supplv or Cf'ltster weter.
Pt . Pleasant behind Red
to form the aurprlae answer, p
no
OVtrdrylng . .
large
garage
and
workshop
:R-:A-:C~IN~E:--6-r-oo_m_h_o_u_se::.;.,oa m,' llx21, lrult building , 25 fruit
Carpet Inn.
ouggeated by the above cartooll.
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter .
7· 12·7tc
utility' room, garage, $10',000; . trees , grapes, berr ies ,
1 others ,
.t
years
old .
Wt'Sptcllllltln
~hone 949-4195.
ill
lien
GREATEST BUY OF THE
MAYTAG
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track
3-31 -ttc
YEAR . Sl8,900.
stereo
In
lovely
walnut
con
.
.
.
,
(Amwerl lomorrow)
sole. Pay balance ofS102.50 or
ACRE form, 4 room house,
HENRY E. tLEI.ANDIII.
Junobk" FAIRY COLON BUNtON TEMPER ·
pay $7.55 a mont~. Phone 992Rt. 4, .POI'f1eroy, Hysell Run;
REALTOR
Salllrday'•
5331 .
phone 992-6009.
An•'"'"": For P,.rropC. down lher~ THIS pln('e co1~1tl be
l'HOifE
tf2-22St.
741-4211
Arnold Gr1te
7-1J.61c
7-12-6tc
NO f/NER - "INfiiNO"

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

as am en ded , nolice is hereby

DADBURN !! Rf.J' I
'/ONDER COMES
'IQRE W IFE·MATE

For Sale

Losv

BARNEY

Wanted To Rent

~~~~~TI~ER~--------~
~OW COME
WE DI~N'T KNOW
WE WERE E~~ERIMENTING
¥OUR ELECTRICAL
ENGIN:ERING
CLASS GOT OUT

WHAT c"SE
TJ ~0

EARLY~

ON T~5 PRO~AGATION OF
ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE
IN AN ISOTROPIC ME~IA
WHEN-PoOFJ·NO ~OWEII:J

'"
'tOL-l COMPLAIN JUSf
WALKING 10 TAKE Oi.-IT

YOU'I&lt;E TAKING lt-IE A:JLICE A'll4LEnC
LEAGUE llOY6 ON foN OVERNIGHT

rT-:==7

'114 E GARE5i'.GE.

HIKe'?

WE BLEW
ONE OF THOSE
WHATCHAMACAWTS
AND NO JNE HAD
A PcNNVI

I l-OPE 'ltJU 1RE
NOT GOING TOO
FAR, 6E ~.

EXPERT

Wheet -Alignment'
s5.55

Notice

For Rent

____

ABNF.R
- ' ST E AD 0' THAT
CAN Q'WOf\M5BUT- 6ULPf - GAL5 GOT ,
TO GO 'LONG WIF eo'fS
DRUTH E RS -- ~-----

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Mobile Homes For Sale

- - - -- -

- ONTI L

ONE. AS A HUSB IN.
FUM THEN ON, WE
GITS OUR'N/'

Linescores

------

MILLER
. MOBILE HOMES

Wanteti To Buy

Instruction

WINNIE WINKLE
AND 'THE RIGHT 1D SOCIAliZE
WITH 1H E MALE PRISONERB
ONCE OR 'TWICE A MONTH ...
AND '10 IMI&lt;l' O~IDE
PHONE Ull.!l; ...

NOW WE'lL lET MIBS WINKLE
SAY A FEW WORDS AI!OUTOUR
DEMAND!&gt;! GO AHEA(h _ ~....-'~
HONEY!

Notice

nHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

____

Real Estate For Sale

Mr-;. Cream i5
Fiqqered ver~ honest!
-t hat ol'
llid4'cJ 000
up aq'in.'

Jijrgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

For Sale or Trade

or

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

qave her

a i:went~­

dollar bill
b~ mistake '
She ran all
thi!;l wa~ to
retun1 it '
I'M s::RR~ I 1 fl&amp;VEF.

HTEIJD Ci&lt;CDITl IT
li!RW'.$ FRIE~D.S'HiPS!

- - -- Pets For Sale

Help Wanted

UTILE ORPHAN

ANNIE

A800T fACE ANO H1AD 9ACK TO MR.
SMIRCH 'S PI!1VATE RAILROAD CAR.!

......

Auto Sales

129

HE's GOT (CHUCKLE) PLArl&amp; fOR
VOUR FUTURE!

"""'·"'-'~

85

SENTINEL .
CARRIERS WANTED

JJl]J~®M® IkJ

I

I I

0

I I I

I ...

0]

For Trade.

We talk to JOU
like a~

ICII)(XIIIJ WMP0/1390

SIIRPIIISUIISWIR

I

UN YOUR DIAL

4a

RUTLAND FURNITURE A~~~~~=·· .

i

I

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

with Major Hoople

nur:-~cry

set
(2

wcts . •

Yesterday's Answer

4. Some

bane

5. Attach
6. In ert ga.~
7. Sans krit

Cut short

Bard's

adverb

23. Cushion

12 wds. \
II. One ul 26
12. Compl ell·
16. W ei rd

--'"-'"'Frag ran t

oin tmen t

19. Cavalry

Telling
blow

30. Goll sco r e
31. Gill giver
33. Czec h

20. Carried

school
IU.In (blu ntly 1

Counselor
(abbr.!
U ntie
Squi rrel
monkey

!iWOr(f

ornament

river

2t. Moss
Bart

36. Som e·
thing

book
(2 wds. I
25. Prophet
27, Like
certain
fabrics

curved
37. Eugene
Debs wa s
one
I abbr. 1

(s1. 1
Pu s~

. Cubi&lt;

meter
;'God's
Little -

''

· 27. Adole s·
cent
JfNNIE JO, MY JMIC PIAN
WA5 ~Nil... HAS AH!ONE

fYFFf PRU~OHP~
WRO!fPTII fFI'ORT
JOSAI'OTAG~

~/o~MUSHI!I

R"':STIIOUeLY

IIUGtf55FUL ...

~PIIOW

INJCII li:liJ

RES£/IIIILI!

... COHTRlSUnNG

10 'liE COMPL!l'E
~OI'OHf
OFMR.~'S

MORE CAI!EFIJLL'I
PIANNfP 11!AI'll
:sET AROUNP TliE
WATeR HOlf,

PIJA&lt;;E I'Ofl'T ~E ANNOYI'P
WITll li:liJR WIFf, MR.ClfAHTR Y.
li:liJ WERE I!OiW 10 IRIP
otlf OR AHOT11ER OF
MY AKI1AIIGEMfNTS. ·

28. Flurry
29. Jammed
· 32. Turf
33. See 16

WE'RE 601N6 TO
TR!:E . AND FIND
IN

Acro ss

34. - -Tse
35. Hire
37. Portent

,

WE'RE

38. Gav'e a
menaci ng

GETTIN~

look
I t was

SNOOf¥ ~

39.

TH ERE.

former ly
Chrisli ·

ani a
40. "-Me a
River"
41. Sonn y's
partn er

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

----,.----

Rutlind

\,

8

MIDDLEPORT

0 1

I DAWNT r

W HAT THIS DEPARTMENT
NEEDS IS YOUNG

(0 1972 K ing Ftol\tures Syndic ate. Inc.

thl'

!i UfT Ct'{'l' ·~

VES, IN MV OPINION,

..

:\lainc site
3. Song f or

Hay f ever

CLELAND
REALTY

I SWJU

I. Dcfama·
tory
statcm t•nl
2. U niv . ol

13 . Q~~COU:-l

4i

Real Estate For Sale

I. Actres s

source
8. - Cros.!i
9. Citi ze nry

WANTED

~ w;$f;~f

DOW!\

acid

POMEROY

- - -- - -

,\CROSS
Albright
5. Formic

'

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

H. L. MENCKEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

$149

For Sale

Saturday's Cl)Tptoquote: A CYNIC IS A MA~ Wf!O. WHE[I;

HE SMELLS FLQWER S, LOOKS AROUND FOR A COFF I~ _

Is

how

to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
L ·o N G F E L L 0 W

One letter simply stands lor an'Other . In tliis _,.mp le A i s
used for the three L's, X for the tw.o O's. etc. Smgle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formall~n of the words are -all
hints. Each day the code letters are d1f!er enl .

CRYPTOQUOTES

L K M J T W V F. Y T J T H N Y K L t' .I . M F R L
- MS F.V l ' VVH , FV II YKM Y I. HTMWWN
BH F V Y M (; G V Ill\ Y V

IIY JI · "

'
ST .- t'VETl'

W T \'

M F NY K

f; FA

t "I' "' ;T I1F.V~'

"···

•

�•

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17,1972

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, July 15,1972
SALES REPORT OF
Oblo Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 28 to
28.25; 220 to 250 lbs. 28.25 to
21' iO ; Ught Z4 to 27 50; Fat
Sows 21 to 24.75 ; Stags 20
Down ; Boars 19.50 to 21.75;
Pigs 7 to 21; Shoats 20 to 33.
CATTLE - Steers, 31 to
39.50; Heifers 24 to 32 50; Baby
Beef 38 to 46.75; Fat Cows 18 to
23.25; Canners 16 to 26.25; Bulls
28 to 32.10; Milk Cows 200 to
325.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
51.85 ; Seconds 48 to 50;
Mediwn 45 to 49; Com. &amp; Hvs.
42 to 50; Culls 45 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 85.
LAMBS - Tops 30.45 ;
Seconds 27 to 30; Light Wts. 16
to 21 ; Common 21 Down .
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers: Cho1ce, 36.40-37;
Good, 33.60.35.10; Standard, 31·
33.10.
Heifers : Cho1ce, 34-35 .60 ,
Good, 30 50-33.50.
Cows : Commercial, 25. 75;
Utility, 22-24; Canners and
Cutters, 18 75-20.
Bulls : Commercial, 25.7532.75.
Stockers and Feeders Steer
calves, 36.50-43.75; He1fer
Calves, 25.50-41.50; Yearlings
25.75-38.60.
Veal Calves : Chmce, 53.50;
Good, 44-50
Lambs: Choice, 32.
Hogs : 200.230, 29.25; No. 1,
29.50; 230.240, 29; Sows: 23.81124.50; Boars, 23.40.

·~i:~=~~*:®y..:-:-:&lt;-:

Flies Take Over
City of Akron
AKRON, Ohio (UPII
City Health Director Or.
John Morley said today
" fileo are multiplying by the
teno of thousands" and
producing a serious health
problem In the wake ol a
garbage collector strl~e now
In Its sixth day.
"We also have serious
problem of rat control and
it's going to get worse/'
Morley said. " I'm afraid
we're going to have a lot
more rat biles." There has
been no garbage collection In
this northeastern Ohio city of
293,000 since last Tuesday,
when 800 members of the
State, County and Municipal
Employees Union relused to
work In a dispute with city
officials over Insurance.

e

No One Injured

In Collision
No mjuries were reported in
a two-car accident Saturday at
7:40p.m . at the mtersecllon of
Bndgman and Water Sts. m
Syracuse.
Police Chief Milton Vanan
said James R. Clevmger, 30,
Columbus, and James D.
Teaford, 66, Syracuse, collided.
Clevinger was c1ted for unsafe
operation of a motor vehicle .
There was moderate damage
to both vehicles

Pleasant Valley Hospital
The 1Ce-dese1t of Antal c·
tica susta ms less l1fe than
DISCHARGES - Helen
any other deserl area •n- Thacker, Phny; Charles
l'es tl ga ted on earth
Slonaker, Long Bottom, 0 .;
Mrs. A. L. Stewart, Pt.
Pleasant ;' Mrs . Delbert Smith
and son , Leon ; Mrs. Ernest
Casey , Apple Grove; Mrs.
.
Lester Leonard and twin sons,
,- , " ,,
H~nderson; Mrs . William
Thacker, Henderson; Mrs .
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Larry Miller , Gallipolis;
July 17-18
Virginia c;:arpenter, Pt.
Pleasant; Glen Adkins ,
Double Feature Program
Fraziers Bottom ; Mrs. Earl
" WITCHMAKER"
Gibson, Mason; Mrs. Charles
Plus
"GHOST"
Wheeler , West Colwnbia ; Mrs
Charles Fowler, Apple Grove;
Rebecca Glotfelty, Leon;
Donald Nott, Pt Pleasant;
Mrs . Harry VIckers, Mason ;
Mrs.
Wilhe Varney, Hen Tonight ond Tuesday
dersoli; Mimi Caldwell, Pt.
July t7-18
Pleasant, and Mrs. Thomas
Cecil 8. DeMille's
Whittington, Vinton.
THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS
SMOKY THE DRYER
ITechnicolarl
The
Middleport Fire Dept.
Charleston Heston
Anne Ba xter
answered a call to the home of
"G"
Mrs. Wanda Beck, 391 South
Runnmg T1 me 3 Hrs. 30
Second Ave, Middleport, at
min .
3:41 p. m. Sunday where a
Admission . Sl.SO Adults ; 7Sc
clothes dryer m the basement
Children
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
was throwing out smoke . There
was no blaze.

MASON DRIVE-IN

.

o

H

' '

'

Frank' Pauley
Died on Sunday
· DEXTER - Frank Pauley,
71, Dexter, Rt. I, was dead on
arnval at Holzer Medical
Center Sunday night. Mr .
Pauley was a retired farmer of
the Harrisonville-Dexter area.
He was a member of the Mt.
Union Baptist Church
He .s survived by h1s wife,
Mabel; a son, Paul , Pomeroy;
two grandchildren ; a stster,
Mrs. Anne Burton, Yewkey, W.
Va ., and three brothers, Ben ,
Tango, W.Va.; Emry, Sod, W.
Va ., and Oscar, St. Albans.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2p. m. at the Mt.
Unwn Baptist Church with the
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating.
Burial w1ll be in M1l es
Cemetery Friends may call at
the Mar tin Funeral Home
anyhme Wednesday and unhl
noon Thursday when the body
w1ll be taken to the church.

Amanda Baer
Died Saturday
Amanda Baer, 88, formerly
of Forest Run, died Saturday in
o.: wnhu~ St'le IS survived by a
s1ster, Mrs . V.'lilard (Alda)
Faudree , Harriso nville , a
daughter-in-law, Mary Haer,
Columbus;
two
granddaughters, Mrs John Crago
and Karen Baer , both of
Columbus, and one greatgrandson, Joey
Crago,
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Baer was a charter
member of the Forest Run
Methodist Church and of the
Reynold sbur g Nazarene
Church. Funeral services will
be Tuesday at 2:30p. m. at the
Forest Run Methodist Church
Burial w1ll be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytune.

I

~o .q nt l ,

MEIGS THEATRE

My folks
prepared
for my
education
many
years
ago ...

Grace Vaughan
Died Saturday
Grace
Vaughan ,
52,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, d1ed
at her home Saturday morn mg.
Mrs Vaughan was the owner
and operator of an antique
shop, a member of the Pentecostal Church , Middleport,
and the Walk-In Garden Club,
of Bedford Twp.
She is survived by four sons,
Frank Acton, Dallas, Texas ;
J ohn Acton, Columbus;
Marcus Vaughan , Silver
Sprmgs, Md ., and Michael
Vaughan, Guysv1lle; one
daughter , Na ncy Colllns ,
Pomeroy, and a brother, Louis
Tenagha, Colwnbus.
Funeral serv1ces w1ll be held
Tuesday at 11 a. m. at the
Middleport Pentecostal Church
w1th the Rev. Wilham Knittel
officiating. Burial will be m
Sunset Cemetery, Colwnbus.
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home anytime

at Rest

Today'~

FUNNY w1ll pay SI.OO for

rcteh Draganol "fun11y"uMII. Send 90111
tD

Today's FUNNY,

1200Wtstlh~r4

Sr., Cl•nloncl, Ohie .UIIl.

' - - - -- - - - -.....l

Hattie Abney
Dies Saturday
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Hatt1e
M Abney, 72, New Haven , d1ed
Saturday at Grant Hospital in
Colwnbus
Born July 29, 1699, m Logan,
W.Va., Mrs. Abney was th~
daughter of the late Clarence
and Welthy Runyon Hinkle.
She was preceded m death by
her husband, William E., m
1956. Mrs Abney operated a
rooming house here a number
of years.
Survivin g are two sons,
William H. , of Barberton, Ohio,
and Harold P., of Roanoke,
Va ; two daughters, Mrs.
Wimfred M11Ier and Mrs. Ina
Jean W1ckhn, both of
Columbus; a step-sister, Mrs.
Maud1 e Cremeans, Hunt~n gto n ; a brother , James
Hinkle, of Florida; five grand·
children, and e1ght great .
grandchddren.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
New Haven Umted MethodiSt
Church with the Rev. Clarence
McCloud officiating Bunal
w1ll be 1n the Tnmty Cemetery
at Saugerlles, N. Y The body IS
at the Jerry Spears Funeral
Home m Columbus where
friends may call from 7 to 9
ton1ght.
The body w1ll be brought to
the Foglesong Funeral Home
m Mason where friends mav
call from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p m. Tuesday. Following the
Wednesday serv1ce, the hody
will be flown to Saugerties.
IN HOSPITAL
Miss Katie Guth, well known
Pomeroy res1dent, IS confmed
to St. Joseph Hos pital,
Parkersburg, where she w11I
undergo eye surgery. Cards
may be sent to M1ss Guth at
Room 343, th1rd floor , in care of
the hosp1tal.

CLUB TO MEET
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club w1ll meet at ll ·30
am. Thursday at the roadside
park on Route 33, gomg north .
Members are to take articles
for the program , food, and
their own table service. In case
of ram , the meeting wll l be held
MRS. SMALL DIES
COOLVILLE - Mrs . Nellie at the Rock Sprmgs Grange
Smith Small, formerly of here, Hall .
&lt;1/ed Sunday evemng in Mt
Memorial Hosp1tal, Mt. Vernon. Mrs. Small is survived by
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
her husband, Ben; two The Pomeroy E-R squad
daughters, Mrs. H1lma Reeder , answered a call at 7:41 p. m.
Denver, Colo., and Mrs. Hazel Sunday to the Ehzabeth Conde
Boudreau , Dayton , and a home, 60ak St., where she was
aduaghter-in-law, Mrs. Cleo expenencing diffi ~ulty 1n
Smith , Chester. Funeral breathmg. She was taken to
serv1ces w1ll be ann ounced by Veterans Memonal Hospital
Wh1te Funeral Home here.
and adm1tled for treatment

PICNIC PLANNED
- The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi will hold a
couples picnic Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at Ft. Meigs . Those attendmg the potluck dmner are
to bring the1r own table service.

rhe day I was born, in fact. That's
when my Dad opened a savings
account in my name and started to
make regular deposits every week .
He and Mom added extra on birthdays and other occasions . Now I'm
all ready for college. And the money
is ready for me.

" No matter who you mv1te

WASHINGTON (UP! )-Sen.
George S. McGovern fli es
home to South Dakota today for
a two-week rest before he
starts his underdog effort to
unsea t Pres1dent NIXon.
· McGovern's Democratic
runmng mate, Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton of Missouri, w1ll
remam m Washington for •an
attempt to persuade dissident
labor leaders to support the
Democrats' presidentlal ticket.
It was generally ·agreed that
the South Dakota senator was a
decided underdog at this early
stage of the 1972 campa1gn.
A Newsweek ma gazine survey Indicated that if the
elec twn were held today
McGovern could be certam of
only the four electoral votes of
his home state and the three of
the District of Columb1a. The
survey gave Nixon 236 certain
electoral votes at this stage.
Repubhcan National Chrurman Robert Dole warned his
party 's r egulars of 11 0ver
co nfide nce." He did say,

however, he felt Nii&lt;oo was in
"a very strong position."
Dole was interviewed Sun·
day on the NBC program
"Meet the Press."
McGovern .spent
the
weekend at his Washington
home restmg from the gruehng
primary campaign that saw
him move from the rear of the
pack to capture his party's
nomination at Miami Beach
last week.
He planned to fly today to the
Black H1lls of South Dakota for
two weeks at the rustic Sylvan
l.ooge near Custer His sche·
dule called for nothing but rest
and recreation the first week,
but aides said staff meetings on
campaign strategy would
begin the second week.
·
Eagleton said Sunday he
hoped to meet this week with
AFL-CIO Pres1dent George
Meany in an effort to close the
rift between the lahor leader
and the McGovern ti cket
Eagleton sa1d he beheved he

could persuade Meany that the
McGovern-Eagleton ticket
would be preferable to that of
Nixon and hls running mate.
"He just has to write down
the two tickets and look at
them," Eagleton said.
The AFL-CIO will convene
1ts 35-member Executive
Council Wednesday to consider
the 13.5 million member
federation's campaign course.
Eagleton also predicted that
Ch1cago Mayor Richard J.
Do ley would not "take a walk"
and refuse to work for the
election of McGovern. But, he
added, "I've never posed as
Mandrake the Mag1cian."
Eagleton was interviewed on
CBS' Face the Nahan.
In Miami Sunday, a convention of People's Party members from e1ght southern states
voted to support McGovern
rather than People's Party
candidate Dr. Benjamin Spack.
Robert Kunst, a party spokesman, said the regional meetmg
took the action "because we
want to defeat Nixon. That ls
the maJor aim ."

Syracuse News, Society ,
By ADA SLACK
Mr. and Mrs. R. S Corson of
Morgantown, W. Va , spent a
weekend with the1r daughter
and son·m-law, Mr . and Mrs
Hugh McPhail and sons and
attended the r~c:~·rega lta
Mr. and Mrs. ~..on Ferrell
attended a retirement p1cmc
recently at Coonskin Park near
Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Esther Harden
and Debbie attended a h1gh
school graduatwn of th e1r
mece, Jayne Ellen Ke1ser, at
Iron ton recently.
Spendmg a week in Eyrw
recently were Mrs. Leona rd
Bass and Chern and Dav1d .
They also visited with Mr and
Mrs. Rudy Stewart and son,
Rodney, of Mount Vernon, Mr.
and Mrs Larry Brown of
Delaware and Mr. and Mrs
Carl W1cks of Lancaster
Mrs Chns tena Gnmm
v1s1ted her daughter and sonin-law, Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Teaford a nd fam il y of
Minersville Route for several
days.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul White and
sons, Joe and Ricky, of Oxnard, Calif , v1s1te d Mrs
Rachel McBride and brother,
David M1lls
Earl Harden and son, Dale,
of Canton spent a weekend with
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie and other relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker
spent 13days with th eir son and
daughter-m-law, Mr and Mrs
Howard Parker and family of
Gretna, La . On July II ,
Howard and family left for
Ventura, Cahf. , where he w1ll
be m a school studymg Thermal Recovery. He w1ll be there
four months
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gumther
and children acc ompanied
their son and daughter-in-law,
Mr . and Mrs. W1ihe Gmnther of
Galhpolis Route, to Charleston
where they visited Mrs Elmo
Johnson and brother, Kermit
Wlihams. They all enjoyed a
picnic at the Daniel Boone
Park .
Mrs. Harold Weaver and son,
M1chael, spent several days
w1th her mother, Mrs Roy
Wmebrenner and her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
W1lham Gordon Winebrenner
and fam1ly.
Mr and Mrs. V1rgli Noms of
Mt. Vernon spent a weekend
with his parents , Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norns.
Mr . and Mrs . Ri chard
Weaver and son, Ph1hp, and
grandson, Eddie Sayre, spent a
week m Ja cksonville, Fla.
Mrs Damen Ferrell , accompanied by daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Cozart of Columbus vis1ted Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Stamper at

Some call it wholesale

Ca bm Creek, W. Va . Wh1ie
th ere the y vlSlted the
cemetery
Earl
Summerfie ld
of
Murrysvlile, Pa., and Edna
Summerfield of near Chester
spent an afternoon w1th Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Parker.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie spent a recent
weekend w1th the1r sons and
daughters-in-law, Mr and Mrs
Robert A. Harden and En c of
Manon and Mr. and Mrs
James Harden of London .
Cecil Duncan Jr, of New
Haven spent a week w1th h1s
mother, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Guinther and fam1Iy
Jeffery Don Fn end of
Bashan spent a weekend with
his grandmother, Mrs. Ahce
Capehart.
Rev . Paul Hayman of
Westerville VISited w1th Mr .
an d Mrs. Ross Norns.
Mrs Chmtena Gnmm spent
a da y wi th Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Gnmm of Pomeroy . Mrs
Gri mm 1s 1mprovmg fr om an
eye InJury.
Dar lene Duncan spent
Wednesday mght and Thursday w1th her f;1ther , Mr . and
Mrs Cecil Duncan Sr . of New
Haven They spent Thursday at
Camden Park 1n Huntmgton.

Roush Birthday

Celebration Held
A
surpriSe
birthday
celebratiOn was held Sun day,
July 9, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Brannon, OakMod Drive, for her mother,
Mrs. Melissa Roush m honor of
her 91st b1rthday. Mrs. Roush
IS formerly from the community of Eno.
All of her five ch1idren were
present at the b1rthday
celebratiOn, along with six
grandchildren and ten greatgrandchildren. Unable to attend were four grand ch1ldren
and 18 great-g randchildren.
The children attendmg were
Mrs Luther Goetting, Waco,
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. George
Roush, Marion; Mr. and Mrs .
Glenn Roush, Bidwell, and Mr .
and Mrs. William Frazier and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brannon
of Gallipolis. Her sister, Mrs.
Lelia Vollborn of Gallipolis,
was also present.
Grandchildren and great·
grandchildren attending were
Mr and Mrs . Richard Fowler,
Dav1d and Mark, Mason, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Norman,
ArlmgtonHe1ghts,!ll.; Mr. and
Mrs . Harry Roush, Sandra and
Marsha, Ashville, N. C.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Bolander and
Donna Jean, Marion ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Frazier, Susan and
Jerry , Gallipolis, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Fraz1er, Ricky,
April and Denise of Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .

Blonde Beauty

Is Miss Ohio
SANDUSKY, Ohw (UP!) Karen Sue Sparka, a 21-year·
old blonde who measures 37·2535 and competed as Miss
Bowling
Green
State
University , was crowned M1ss
Ohw Saturday mght.
M1ss Sparka , who IS from
Penfield, N. Y., was declared
the wmner over a field of nine
other beauties 10 the pageant.
She wlil represent the Buckeye
State in the Miss Amencan
PageantmAUant1cC1ty, N. J .,
m September.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- M1ldred Phillips, Mmersv•lle; Clara Karr, Pomeroy,
and Phoebe Lee, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Sarah Bush, Effie Black,
V1ncent Mossman , Hattie
Elam, Vena Marcmko, Cynthia
Zech, Ed1th Osborn, Gerald
Meranda and Nancy Johnson .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Magg1e Ellis, Rutland ; Mabel
Wolfe, Pomeroy;
Irene
Russell , Middleport ; Grace
Ander son , Parker sburg;
Elizabe th Adkins, Ra cme ;
Juamta Conde , Reedsville;
W1Ima
Riggs,
Ra cme;
Ehzabeth Conde, Pomeroy;
Ke1th Mattox, Pomeroy, and
Robert Youn g, New Haven.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carrie Roush, Frances Philson
and ·Ann Pierce.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Rese1·ve System
On Frldayo Our Drive-In Window Is
Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously I.

$28,080 Maxlmmllnsurance
For Each 0.110sitor

Some call it discount

L picnic to start a rob
~nd "find .you haven 't the

We named it our Budget Shop

1

proper tools or materia Is to
hniSh 1t with. Don't let this
happen Ia you. Before you
start your

job, see

Transfers
Charles H. Cornell, Agnes
Cornell to George E . Mw'I'By,
Shelby Murray, parcel,
Chester.
Allen Dean Blackwood, dec.,
to Hazel M. Blackwood,
William Alan Blackwood,
Phihp • Owen Blackwood,
Deanna Blackwood, Cynthia
Darlene Blackwood, cert. of
lrans., Sc1pio.
Daniel C. Hensler, Patricia
D. Hensler to Clifford S.
Morris, Letha J . Morris, .595
Acre, Sutton ,
American Legion Rutland
Post No . 467 to Archie
McKinney, Eva McKinney, 10
acres, Rutland.
Archie McKinney, Eva
McKinney to Frank G. Mills,
Leona Mills, 10 acres, Rutland.
Marvin C. Walker, Mirna
Walker to Gould Riffle, Delor~s
Riffle , 104.85 Acres, Orange .
Mary Harris, Exlrx ., Clara
E. Garland, dec., to Ernest W.
Stewart, Iva May Stewart, .40
acre, Pomeroy.
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
Meigs County, easement,
Salisbury.
Betty I. Pierce to Walter J.
Freeman, parcels, Olive .
Neva L. Bolyard, Clayton
Bolyard to James Casey,
Connie Casey, lots, Middleport.
Mary Wright to Waller
Robinson , 16 sq. rd ., Rutland.
Paul J. Bearhs, Hazel P.
Bearhs to Paul J . Bearhs,
Hazel P. Bearhs , 4 acres,
Sutton.
Jacob M. Gaul, Mildred L.
Gaul to lvor N. Farrar ,
Ehzabeth Farrar, .60 acre,
Orange.
Calvin B. Simpson, Lucetta
G. Simpson to James Neutzhng, Janice Neutzhng, lot,
Pomeroy
Norman G. Rose, Martha E.
Rose to Edward V. Frecker ,
119 acres, Chester.
J. Roger Epple, June Epple
to W11liam James Ritchie, Nita
Jean Ritchie, parcels, Orange .
W1lliam Hess Chapman ,
Patnc1a A. Chapman to Dale
w. Welsh, Marjorie E. Welsh,
lot, Orange.
Clyde F. Headley, Mamie V.
Headley to Leo C. Kennedy Jr. ,
Jlllla II.. Kennedy , 13.35S Berti~
Olive.
Dorothy Perry, Ephraim C.
Perry, Dorothy Perry (his
atty . in fact ) to Ephraim C.
Perry, Dorothy Perry, lots,
Dyesville.
Dorothy G. Perry, Ephraim
C. Perry to Donald E. King,
lots, Columbia, Dyesville.
John Victor Wippel to Larry
Dugan , Maxine Dugan, parcel,
Chester.

On the Main Floor - Special sale
prices on all Pocket Knives. Your
favorite brand. See the many hundreds to select from.

A 1973 budget prov 1dmg for t1v1t1es , $7 ,000;
e s tlmated

FOUR MEIGS COUNTY YOUNG PEOPLE have been oominated for
state-w1de recognition because of out.tanding accomphslunents in 4-H work.
The state-wide contest will have winners selected on the basis of reports. The
Meigs County youths will compete for state honors with wmners from nine
so uthern Ohw counties. From the left are Sharon Wilson, Meigs Saddle
Sitters, horses; Steven Stanley, Hamsonvllle Honor Boys, electricity and
American Inst1tute of Cooperation; Grant Johnson, Me1gs County Better

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO. 65

lberfelds In Pomeroy

Come see - Compare You 'II find the

~~

values at

Baker Furniture

ARE EASilY SPOil ED
In the

$74,357.60 , operatwn of school
plan t, $69,274; mamtenance,
$18,000, specia l serv~ces, $100;
supphes, $148,050, matenals
for maintenance, $24,600 ;
equtpment rep lacement ,
$40,000; contract and open
order serv1ce, $78,850 , f1xed
cha1·ges, $295,470 .14, and
cap1tal outlay, $15,500.
The anhc1pated balance as of
January I, 1974 was set at
$84,513 65
ReSigna ti ons accepted
Monday mght mcluded those of
Tmw Kelly, who has been
workwg in a student employe

Meig~-Mason

mathema hcs teacher in the

d1str1ct, was made basketball
coach for the seventh grade.
John Ruth , a graduate of Mt
Unwn College, was appomted
assistant band direc tor
replacmg Lew1s Shields Mrs
Continued on page B)

Weather
Chance of showers and
thundershowers
sou th ern
sectiOns today . Warm and
hunud tomght and Wednesday
w1th a chance of showers and
thundershowers. Lows tonight
m the upper 60s and low 70s

Area

TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1972

program at Me1gs H1gh School,
and who has been named
guidance counse lor at Eastern
H1gh School, Wendy Schm1dt,
and Marc1a Shultz, spec1al
educatiOn teac hers
Fenton Taylor was employed
as assiSta nt h1gh sc hoo l
pnnc1pal on a two year contract Da v1d Jenkms , who
ear her· was named a

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Teamsters Favor Nixon
RAN CHO LA COSTA, Calif
( UP! )-The Teamsters ,
largest mdependent union m
th e country, broke w1th
traditional labor support for
the Democrats and endorsed
President N1xon Monday,
saying George McGover n
doesn't care ahout middle class
workers.
It was another blow at the
McGovern cand idacy by orga·
mzed labor, wh1ch fierc-e ly
resisted McGovern 's nomination.
The executive coun cil of the
AF'L-CIO-to wh1ch the Teamster s do not be long - ha s
scheduled a spec1al meetmg in
Wash mgton Wednesday to discuss what stand to take The
meetmg· was called by AF'LCIO PreSident George Meany,
a leading figur e in the bitter
preconventi on fi ght against
McGovern .
There have been reports the
g~ant labor orga mzatwn, tradi ti onally a ver y Importa nt
power base fo r the Democratic
candidate, m1ght opt to "sit
out" the campaign , refu sin g it.

suppor t to McGovern but not
gomg to so far as to work for
Nixon's re.election .
The Teamsters' decision was
announced by th e president of
the 2 million member umon ,
Frank E. F1tzs1mmons, who
said he realized such an action
IS "at odds w1th the traditional
and almost reflex support of
labor for th e DemocratiC
ticket."
The board had dec1ded to
back Nixon, he said, because
"the blue collar workers,
which compnsc the backbone
of Amen ca, seem to be of little
concern to the McGover n
ticket. "
Conversa tions with Teamster members convmced him
the N1xon endorsement reflect.
the wishes of the union rankand fil e, he sa1d.
He said the Demo cratic
nommee "has not earned the
support of Amenca's workmg
men and women . Our members
work hard for their wages.
They are entitled to what they
earn , and th ey figure the
government ought to get off of

vv:ews.~
. . . . . . . . . -..zn. . .Brzef~l
.,
·~

By Uolted Press International
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE HAS APPROVED 351 to 3
and sent to the Senate a $1.5 bilhon, three-year program of aid for
th e elderly. Most of the money would go for grants to state and
city agencies to operate a1d programs for persons over 60. The
bill prov1des $335 m•lhon for the 1973 fiscal year, $510 million for
1974 and $683 1mlhon for 1975
SerVIces authonzed by th e bill would mclude suhs1d1zation of
low cost pubhc transportation, construction of Golden Age
centers for social activities, training programs for persons about
to enter retirement, provision of hot meals to shut-ins and
development of hbran es specializmg m the needs and wants of
the elderly .
CLEVELAND - MORE THAN 2,000 YOUNG people came
forward to be w1tnesses lor Christ Monday night on the fourth
mght of B1lly Graham Crusade here.
A crowd of 3o,OOO, mostly young people, assembled at
Municipal Stadium to hear Graham. Unoccupied seats in the
ri ght held stands of the 60,000 seat stadium were lipped to spell
out "Jesus" m huge letters. Monday night's attendance was less
than any night except Friday when the crusade opened.
However , the number of those who came forward, 2,175, was
greater than any other night.

Pocket Knives
and
Hu nil ng
Knives In the
Housew•res
Deportment on
the moin floor.

tr ansportatiOn,

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of The

VOL. XXIV

agenctes ,

auxiliary

•

at y

The fir st workable ballpmnt
pen was patented m 1937 by
Laslo J . Biro, a Hunganan
hvmg m Argentma

exp e nditures

tota l1ng $2,121,471 20 was
approved Monda y mght by the
Me1gs Local• School D1stnc!
Board of Educatwn 10 a
recessed sess ton at Me1gs
Jumor H1gh School 10 Middleport
Anilc1paled revenue for 1973
tota ls $2,2U5 ,9B4 .85, wh ich
Incl udes an antiCi pated
lialance of $84,4i9 :!2 as of
JanuaJ y I, t9n.
Anticipated expend itures for
19i3 tota led $2,121,4i1 20, Inclu din g, admin istrat ion ,
$60,68 1 , 1nst r uct 1on,
$1,2l!9,588.4G , coord~na t e ac-

Uvestock Dub, sheep, and Margie Jeffers, Columbia Superstars,
achievement and home improvement Other area wmners from Me1gs are
Edwm Cross, Citizenship, beef, petrolewn power, and commod1ty marketing
conference delegate ; Janie Holter, dairy foods, home economics, consumer
education, safety, health, Oh10 4-H Teen Council, and Alan Holter, Natwnal
4-H Dairy Conference and Commod1ty Marketing Conference delega te.

Now You Know

WASHINGTON- THE NATION'S industnal output gamed a
moderate 0.3 pet. in June. It was the loth straight monthly increase. The Federal Reserve Board said in a report 1ssued
Monday that the index which measures the production of factories, mines and utilities now has surpassed the high of July,
1969, just before the economy entered its recession.
' The June mcrease, however, was considered less than
robust. Automobile production declined and steel output
remained stagnant. Only business equipment and materials
showed production gains. And the board revised downward from
0.5 to ,0.3 pet. the May index increase.
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. - PRESIDENT Nixon winds up
an 11klay workmg vacation at the Western White House today
and heads back to Washington to confront a Democratic
Congress he claims is feeding inflation by wild &amp;(.lending.
White House aides said the President Is concerned about the
fate of his pending domestic programs and will call in
Republican congressional leaders some time tills week to discuss
them. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler left open the possibility.
Nixon might address the nation on the subject of congressional
Irresponsibility if the Congress continues to make a shambles of
his budget.

our

" FRIENDLY ONES" tor
all the tools and materials
you may need ...

Property

.

.

.

Elberfelds For
Pocket Knives

to a p1cnic, you can most
usually depend on some
ants showing up" ...

School Budget
Is $2,121,471

MeJp

COLUMBUS - THE STATE LIQUOR Department has
expanded Its "remnant sale" to 73 retail stores around Ohio
because of the big hit it has made.
The department opened the sale on June 16 at 27 selected
stores where liquor buyers could save from $1 to $8 on discontinued or !jlow.moving items. "SQme of these items have been In
warehouses for several years,'' explained deputy director Hiram
Camon. "The sale will reduce our Inventory and mean our s+.ock
·will be up to dale."

our bac k and out of our
pockets "
He srud McGovern had cast
antilabor votes on a number of
1ssues, including nght-to-work
laws, and urged Teamster
members "to work and vote to
keep President Nixon m otrice
another four years.''
The Teamster endorsement
did not come as a surprise,
since F1tzsinunons has supported Nixon's pollc•es m the
past, and was th e only union
member to remain on the

federa l Pay Board when other
labor leadersqwt to protest the
adm1nistratwn 's wage co ntrols.
After the endorsement, the
17-member board travelled 40
miles up the coast to the
Western White House, where
they were warmly greeted by
Pres1dent Ntxon.
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler heatedly demed
specul ation linking the
pollti ca lly valuable en'
(Conilnued on page B)

Inspection Set
A re soiu llon a uth oriZing persons can be sealed. The

1n spect10n of the Portland
grade sc hool bUilding that
could lead to 1ts bemg reopened
was approved by the Southern
Loca l Boa rd of EducatiOn
Monday mght.
Ralph Sayre, sup ennl€nd ent, sa1d he and board
members will stud y the
possibility of opemng the
sc hool.
In other business the board
accepted a teacher apphcatwn
fr om Susan Wa1die1gh and
approved the purchase of 200
umts of de sk-c hairs fr om
Carter Craft Co. to be shipped
immediately
Sayre
reported
new
bleachers for the fo otball f1eld
have armed and are being
mslalled. Approximately 488

se pt1c ta nk at Syra cuse
elemen ta ry school has been
repaired and J1m Wi ckline has
been awarded a contract to
paint the mterior of the Letart
Elementary School
Paul Sellers was lured as a
bus dnver and Floyd Hendncks as custod1an at Letart
Elementary lor the 1972-73
school year .
Prin cipal s
and
head
custodians of the diS trict met
with the board in rega rd to
purc hasmg jamtonal supphes
Attendm g we re Sayre,
Charl es Pyles, Clarence
Lawrence , Denny H1ll, Da v1d
Nease and Jum or Salser, boa rd
members, and Nancy Carnahan, clerk

MRS. RUSSELL BROWN of Meigs County accepted
certifi cates of apprec1at10n for Mrs. Ralph Welker, Rev. Btll
Perrin, and Atty. F . W. Porter for the1r efforts in ge tting the
Tn-County Comm umt y Mental Health and Mental Retar-

dation Board off the ground and underway In Meigs County.
Making the presentation during Monday night's first annual
648 Board Meeting at Oscar's in Galli!Xflis is Dr. Bernard
Neilun, acting board chairman.
')

Tri-Co MH&amp;MR Progress Praised
BY HOBART WILSON JR.
" I can't beheve it has really
happened," sa1d Jun Myers ,
Columbus. Coordmator, Oh10
Departmen t
of
Mental
Hygiene, Reg wn Nme, as he
rev1ewed flr st·jear actlvtties
of the Tn-Coun ty Community
Mental Health and Mental
RetardatiO n 'Board Mond ay
mght at Oscar's Restaurant in
Gal lip olis
Address mg approximately 60
perso11s attend 1ng the an nual

....

Gallla, Me1gs and Jackson
Cuun ty 648 Board Meetmg,
Myers pra1sed amb1ti ous tricounty residents who, m one
sho rt year, sta rt ed fr om
sc ratc h and made the Commumty Mental Health and
Menial Retardation project a
rea hty
Actually, 1t has been four
years (19681 s1n ce the 1mtial
steer mg comm1ttee meetmg
was held to get the program
unde rw ay The board wa s

formed in 1969, and 1t began
functwmng m 1970. Monday
mght completed the board's
first formal year of operation
w1th an execut1ve director .
''I ca n truthfully tell you now
that I was surprised that you
were able to accomplish so
much m such a short penod of
hme. ThiS area was one of the
last mOhio to orgamze, and yet
you have surpassed so me
counhes who orgamzed f1ve
years ago when the program

was first approved by the Ohio
Legislature,' Myers said .
My ers left one hasic thought
w1th h1s listeners last night that mental health programs
must be run on a community
bas1s, not from the state house
m Columbus.
Myers said local olllclals
have passed one big hurdle,
but the big task now Is to
convert available resow-ees
Into an efficient program.
The coordinator urged
Ci tizens be mvited to attend
open board meetings. "We
must know the needs of all the
people in order to develop and
improve
an
efficient
program ," Myers said.
docks are in place and all are
In \ concluding, Myers
paid for except two. Lane also disclosed he has been assigned
asked council for a street hght ano ther health position in the
oh Rutland St. Achon was state, and tha t Brenda Mougey
delayed.
has been named his successor
m Regwn Nine .
Dr.
Bernard
N1ehm ,
The mayor's report for June
showing rece1pts 10 the amount Gallipolis Sta te Institute
of $913 70 was accepted. ~t­ superintedentand acting board
tendmg were Mayor Baronick, chairman , was master of
Don Colhns, W1lliam Snouffer, ceremonies.
Dr. Niehm conducted a brief
Ralph Werry , Luc1en Pouhn,
Elma Ru ssell and Mees, board meeting prior to Myers'
council members; Chief message. It was announced
that Malcolm B. Orebaugh,
Webster, Lane and Struble;
Jane Walton, clerk, and Phylhs Gallipolis , board cha1rman,
has res1gned, eff ective June 19.
Hennessy, treasurer.
Orebaugh's res1gna t10n was
accepted witu regret. He will.
(Contmued on page 8)

Second Cruiser Proposed for Pomeroy
What to do about lmtering on
U1e two village-owned nver·
front parkmg lots and speeding
through town, and a request for
additional traffic hghts OC·
cup1ed Pomer oy co uncil
Monday mghl
Coun c1l di scus sed seve ral
suggestions mad~ on how to
control youths loitering on the
pa rking lots. It 1s common
kn owledge that the lots are
crowded with young people as
late as 3 a.m. Mayor W11liam
Baronick observed that there is
an ordinance for a curfew on
all persons under age 18. He
also suggested speeding on
Wes t and East Main Streets,
Mulberry Ave ., and Mulberry
Heights is "becoming qu1te a
problem."
Councilman Jim Mees
pointed out that Pomeroy's
single police cruiser is unable

to patrol the cnhre town . He
thereupon suggested counc1l
conSider buymg an additional
cru1ser and employmg another
offi cer to drive 1t.
The J ones Boys have
requested a traffic light at the
Intersection of East Main and
Liberty Ave., Mayor Baromck
disclosed. Police Chi ef Jed
Webster said a traffic engmeer
will be in Pomeroy next week
to give his opinion on traffic
hghts in the village, among
them one at the mtersection of
Butternut and West Main St
Wesbter pointed out tha t if the

answer to the problem of
spcedmg.
It was reca lled that the ferry
se rv1ce wh1le the PomeroyMason Bnd ge IS closed for
repmrs w1ll begm at 9 a. m on
July 24! Police are to use the1r
uwn JUdgmen t about hooding
meters and control of traffic
Joe Struble received council 's perm1ss10n for Jim Sisson
and h1mself to attend a fire
Webster mamtamed a drag 1nspecllon course for f•v e days
strip is needed He ~md he has 1n September in c'o!umbus
been promised superviSion by Cos t per man is $100.
Ca lv1n
Lane,
s tre et
officers on thear own tame He
sa1d
all
boat
superintendent,
belleves that a drag stn p 1s one
v11lage makes any changes in
1ts llghtmg syste m the sl&lt;lte
requi res two-way hghts m each
lane
Webster disclosed tha t he
has ta lk ed to Meigs County
Engmeer The odore Beegle and
to the state highway department 1n rega rd to using
abandoned hi ghways for a drag
strip

New Swim Session
EXTENDED OULOOK
Ohio extended outlook
Thursday through Saturday : To Start Monday
Jo Wolfe, 37, Ra cme, Rt. 2,
Hot and humid through
when Wolfe had to go left to
A new session of sw1mmmg
Saturday with little chance
avmd workmen resurfa cmg the
of significant rainfall. lessons w11l begm Monday at
road. The truck went into a
Day!ime highs in upper 80s Royal Oak Park, Miss Linda
ditch, throwing Vonda out. Her
and lower 90s. Overnight Hackett, mstr uctor, announced
'
body struck the rea r bumper as
lows in upper '60s and lower today.
To
be
offered
for
the
two
she fell .
70s.
week period are swimmer, 9
She was taken to Veterans
a m to 10 a.m , mtermediate,
Memonal Hospi tal by th e
10 a m. to II a.m., advanced
Pomeroy E-R squad where she
beg mner, 11 a .m. unhl noon.
was admitted.
The fee 1s $&gt;. Also to be offered
dunng the next two weeks is
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Oh10 the junior life savmg course
Univers1ty trustees have from 6 to Bp.m. w1th a fee of $6.
MECHANIC NOW
NEW HAVEN - Arm y tentatively approved leasmg
Pnvate Raym ond T. Mc- 28 6 acres of its former airport
Farland, 21, son of Mr. and near Athens to two Columbus
TIME ' TO FILE
Mrs . Dav1d McFarland, 4th developers for the construction
All 1973 budgels - those of
Street, New Haven , has of a motel, travel park and to wnshi~s . schools, villages
cbmpleted an eight-week wheel re gional shopp mg cen ter.
and county governmental
At the trustees ' meeting here department. - must be filed
vehicle mechanic course at the
U. S Army Training Center, Monda y, ac tion was deferred with Meigs County Auditor
Infantry, Ft. Ord, Calif. Pvt. on leasmg 4~ adjacent acres Gordon Caldwell by July 20 for
McFarland is a 1971 graduate pendin g presentation of a consideration by the county
development plan.
of Wahama High School.
budget corrunisslon.

Girl Injured In Accident

RACINE - A te n-yea r old
Racine girl suffered back and
chest injuries when she fell
from the back of a pickup truck
Monday at 1:30p.m onSR 124,
New TV Program ~­ one. tenth of a mile northwest of
Syracuse, the Meigs County
Dept. repor ted.
Appearing Daily Sheriff's
Vonda Rene Wolfes, Racine,
Readers are advised that Rt. 2, was riding in the back of
the Friday TV section Is a pickup truck dmen by Bobby
being discontinued as of this
week and In Its place Is
BONOS FORFEITED
appearing a dally television
SYRACUSE - Two bonds
log covering programs on aU were forfeited m Syracuse
cable channels the evening Mayor Herman London's Court
of publication and the entire Monday nigh t. James R.
next day.
• Clevinger, . 30, Columbus,
A relaled feature ap· forfeited a $20 bond on charges
pearlng dally Is Paul of unsafe operation of a motor
Crabtree's "Tube Talk " vehicle and John D. Eynon , 40,
•
touching highlights of past Racine, $130, driving wh1le
and lulllre programs on Intoxicated, both on charges
PoinTVIew Cable.
brought by Police Chief M1lton
Vanan .

Fonner Airport
Up for Leasing

I

••

'

Two are Hurt
L.
In Collision
Two persons - one a fiveyear-old g1rl - ~uffered mmor
mjuries in a two-car mishap on
Route 7 two and seven tenths
m1Ies north of the Gallia
Co un ty line at 7:30 am .
Monday
According to the Gallia Meigs State Highway Patrol,
the injured were MlSSle L.
W1se, 5, who was a passenger
in an auto driven by Charles
W1se, 60, Middleport, and Guy
W. Finley, 43, Apple Grove.
Neither of the injured was
treated.
The accident occurred when
Wise turned left into the side of
the Finley auto. There was
mo1erate damage to both
vehicles. Wise was ci ted for
improper turn.

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