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                  <text>tti- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 19, 1972

AFL-CIO Approval Sought
CUSTER, S.D. (UPI) -'- A
tired Sen. George McGovern
slllrted a two-week vacation in
lhe, Black Hills amid controversy within the AFLCIO, a
tr .1ditional mainstay of
Democratic presidential
can4idates, over whether to
endorse him
for the
presidency.
A key aide said as th e
Democr atic presidential
candidate fl·ew here Monday

'Peewee Angels
Whip

Kissinger

By Mayor

News.

Otanges Seen

In Elections

''

'

I

'

1'

:,

•'

&gt;

I •, II' Itt I '

Tonight-Thur.-Fri,
July 19-20·21
Double Feature Program ·

WAR BETWEEN
THE PLANETS
Jack Stuart
Plus
"SUPER ARGOVS.
FACELESS GIANTS"

MEIGS THEATRE
Toni~ hi &amp; hursday
July 19·20
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
July 21.22
TALES FROM
THE CRYPT
Peter Cushing
Joan Coll ins
Also

"GP"

DOWNHILL RACER
(Technlcolorl
Robert Redford
Gene Hackman

"GP"

Sinatra
(Continued from page I )
damage done in the newspapers?" said Sinatra, who
complained the committee
should have told reporters
after Barboza's testimony that
" it was a great mistake, a
character assassination."
Although Sinatra got no
arguments from the committee
about the validity of Barboza's
statements, he was questioned
closely about his $55,000 interest purchased in 1962 in
Berkshire Downs Race Track
near Hancock, Mass.
Committee spokesmen have
claimed that Patriarca held a
hidden Interest in the now
defunct track and committee
members chided Sinatra for
not ordering a more thorough
check before making his shortterm investment.
Sinatra testified that the 5
per cent share of the track
resulted from a discussion with
S, A. Rizzo at an Atlantic City
nightclub where Sinatra was
performing.

@LiJWm !J!J@r!l!R
Closeout All '72

'.

• •

in Briefs

Boards Soon

COLOR TELEVISION

Hearing Aid
Service Center

Fr.om
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
To repair and service
hea ring aids.

$244 •

January 21, 1819 the General
Assembly passed an act to
create the county of Meigs
from parts of Athens and
Gallia Counties.
· · February 18, 1820, by joint
resolution of the legislature,
David Mitcheii of Scioto
County, Elnathan Schofield, of
Fairfield Coun ty and Joseph J.
Martin of Pike County were
appointed commissioners to
locate the county scat of Meigs
County . These commissioners
selected a location 1Lot No.

Batteries and supplies
r
all makes for sale.
Mr. Garshaw will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest Bellone Elec tronic equipment.
If hearing is your
problem Bellone is
the answer

BELlONE

Ingels Furniture

Hearing Aid Center

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

601 Sixth Avenue
Huntington, W. Va.
Phone 525-7221

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 83 degrees
under sunny skies .
Warm and humid through
Thursday, chance of thundershowers afternoon and
even in g. Lows Wedn esday
night in the upper 60s and low
iOs.

Now you Know
Slavery appeared as a
systematic institution in North
America in 1619 when a Dutch
ship arrived in Virginia with a
cargo of black Africans.

2-HOUB
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

tfOBINSON'S.
:cLEANERS
~~·e .

2nd'
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

.

Medications Are Stolen
Gallia County sheriff's
deputies are investigatin~ the
theft of 12 bottles of medication
taken from a drug ca binet at
the, new Holzer Medical Center
on Rt. 160 and 35.
Bob Daniel, clinic ad·
ministrator, said someone took
a small cabinet from a wall on
the surgjca l department
located orfthe second floor of
the $20 million facility.

The theft occurred sometime
between 5 p.m, Friday and 8
a.m. Tuesday.
Sheriff's deputies did not
make the incident public until
today.
Daniel said only a small
amount of drugs was taken.
The ca binet was loca ted in an
unlocked room in a service unit
area used by hospital nurses,

cheaper at that time. The
above information is from
Hardesty's Historical Encyclopedia , History of Meigs
County, 1883,
A story handed down from
genera hon to generation in the
Tuppers Plains-Joppa area
relates that the brickmaker for
the Chester courthouse was
Francis Heiney and that the
bricks were made near the site.
He was also supposed to have
operated a pottery near
Tuppers Plains before the Civil
War. The site of a pottery kiln
was found recently by two
youths, James Landon and Jeff
Fultz.
Francis Heiney was the
father of Jasper Heiney, a
strong Southern sympathizer
in the Joppa comm unity of
Olive township.

•

Now You Know
A foliowup report to the 1968
Kerner Commission report on
civil disorders said Sept. 23
that if present trends continue,
"most cities by 1980 will be
preponderan tly black and
brown and totally bankrupt. "

VOL XXIV

commission ruled.
the change in 1821

jailor's residence, one story
and a half frame, 16x:W feet,
and a brick edifice of small
dimensions for the county
clerk's offi ce also were built.
The whole of these buildings
cost probably not more than
$5 ,000, as most building
material and labor were much

then in' Orange township 1af·
terwards Chester ). Levi
Stedman gave 30 acres of lan d
for public buildings and village
Juts .
A brick courthouse 36x38
feet, two stories high was
erected; a jail of hewn logs.
20x20 feet, two stories : a

313, in T-1, R-13) now within the
incorporated limits of Mid~ieport. Benjamin Smith
donated 20 acres of land for
public buildings and village
lots. The deed was · signed,
sealed and acknowledged
before James E. Phelps, one of
the associate judges, and
recorded July 2, 1821, Meigs
County Records, Vol. pp. 200,
201, 202 by R. C. Bar ton,
recorder. Eli Sigler was appointed director of the seat of
justice.
Considerable di ssatisfaction
b ~ in g expressed for this
location , the legislature,
January 31, 1822, appointed a
new commiss ion of William
Vance, Russ County; John
Barr, Pickaway County, and
William Dunn , Belmont
County , who relocated the seat
of justice on Sec. 24, T-3, R-12,

&lt;

~ ~~~! J.j.t~~

Courthouse at Chester:

150· Years Old

Weather
Friday a chance of afternoon
and evening thundershowers.
Highs Friday in the upper 80s
and low 90s except mid 80s
extreme north near Lake Erie ,
Fair toni ght with lows in the
upper 60s to low 70s.

enttne

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 67

PARIS (UP! ) ..:. North and
South Vietnam apparently
remained as far apart a8 ever
today in a n attempt to
negotiate
an
end to
the Vietnam War despite U.S:
pleas for a calm discussion of
proposals and a private session
between American Henry A.
Kissinger and the two top
North Vietnamese negotiators.
Representatives from Hanoi
and the Viet Cong met
delegations from the United
States and South Vetnam in the
!51st semi-public session less
than 24 hours after Kissinger,
President Nixon's special
adviser, and top Hanoi
A suit for $150,000 asking negotiators Xuan Thuy and Le
damages for in juries suffered Due Tho held their 14th private
in a motorcycle-auto collision conference.
Ne ither side made any
was filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court this

NO DUCKS FOR SALE HERE - Joe Penner's famous
qumlon, "Wo!lha buY• duck?" lti a no-no at the borne of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Vaughan, South Third Ave., Middleport.
They love their ducks!
'
THREE WHITE DUCKS were purchased for the
Vaughan's six-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter, Zandra, at Easter time. So
taken with their web-footed friends was the entire family that
two dark birds were acquired later. These hot, dry days are
no problem for the ducks who have taken over Zandra 's
swimming pool in the side yard .
To answer Joe Penner's question, if you "wanna buy a
duck," look somehwere else. The Vaughan' ducks are not for
sale.

reference

· ~ Better

In today's session, however,

11

mor:ning .

IN

By United Press lntemalional
.
WASHINGTON - DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL
nominee GeorgeS. McGovern hurried back to the Senate today to
cast a vote on an issue crucial to organized labor and important
to B.4 mlilion working people.
Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Colo ., a chief sponsor of tbe administration bill which would hold the raise Ill $2an hour, said his
~ide would prevail with the help of conservative Democrats.
Asked how narrow he expected his winning margin to be, he held
up two fing ers.
About 14.7 million low-wage workers are now exempt from
coverage. The Democratic bill would bring under the minimum
8.4 million of tbem - between 750,000 and 1.5 million workers on
medium-size farms, 1.4 million retail store employes, 1.2 million
domestic maids and servants, 1.7 million federal employes and
3.2 million state and local government employes. The bill would
raise the minhnum wage to $2 in 60 days of enactment and to
$2.20 a year later . The minimum is now $1 .60 for most workers
and $1.30 for workers on large farms .
THE l;AIRO NEWSPAPER AL ABRAM TODAY described
. (Continued on Page 10)

Drive Extended
A program conducted by
the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club to gather used
eye glasses to help the needy
has been extended through
the first week of August.
Boxes .are In a number of
business houses where the
eyeglasses can be left. The
businesses having the boxes
are Citizens National Bank,
Dutton
Drug
Store,
Columbia Gas Co., Middleport;

private

the Vietnamese Communists
strongly denounced U. S. attempts to seek a cease-fire first
and a political se ttlement later
only minutes after U, S.
negotiator William J, Porter
appealed for a calm discussion.
South VIetnamese negotiator
Pham Dang Lam vigorously
rejected the VietCong demand
for a coalition government and
said the Communists do not
want a truce.
"You would agree to end the
killing only if your own
political solution is accepted or
only if you are assured of
reaching the same aims, Lam
said.
··u did not take us lon g to
discover t~at your speeches do
not contain any new elements
susceptible of provoking a
breakthrough
in
the
negotiations, as you wanted to
make us believe . Neither your

Is Asked

e;;·~·: in jj~i;;~

t~e

Schools
Certain

session . The White House said
they had pledged not to reveal
U1e contents of the secret talks.

$150,000

James PhiUip Grim and Gale
Grim, Milford, Ohio , th e
plaintiffs, want $150,000 from
Jesse C. Proffitt, Route 4
Albany, and Ester F, An·
derson, Dexter, defendants, for
injuries suffered by Grim when
Profitt, driving a car owned by
Anderson, allegedly went left
of center and struck the cycle
on July 25, 1970 on County Road
1. The amount asked includes
$100,000 for judgment and
$50,000 for loss of Mr. Grim's
services.
Also filed in the same court
was a suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreements Act by
Mary Ellen Fields, St. Cloud,
Fla., against Roger Wayne
Cleland, Route I, Langsville.
Three minor children are. involved.
Audra Run yo n has been
gra nted a divorce from Paul
Runyon on charges of gross
(Continued on page 10)

to

TEN CENlS

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, JULY 20. 1972

ar'sEnd
No Closer

On Sale
On The

N ~arly

•

at y

..88

Meigs Inn
Pomeroy , Ohio
·• on
Thursday July 20

The RIDGEWAY • C3710 - Charcoal Brown
and Char,coal Black colors (C3710C), or
Beige and Dark Brown colors (C3710L).
Slide controls. Handcrafted Chassis.
Chromat ic Brain Colo r Demodulator. Su per
Video Range Tuner. Sunshine' Picture
Tube . Top Carry Handle. VHF Dipole
.
Antenna. UHF Loop Antenna.

Meigs County's first courthouse in Chester still stands.
Although nearly 150 years old,
it serves as a meeting hall for
Chester Grange.
The following article on the
first Meigs Coun ty cour thouse
was prepared by Mrs. Agnes
Hill, Tuppers Plains historian.

Summer Dresses

Mr . Bruce Garshaw
Will Be AI

16"OIA G portable

•

•

Womens Regular 16 to 21

BEllONE

Middleport was
to be the seat
of justice; new

Second Commission Switched
First Courthouse to Chester

Elberfelds Are Open Thursday 9:30 to 5:00

Sale!

MASON DRIVE-IN

Ohio extended outlook
Friday through Sunday.
&lt;;onlinued hoi and humid
througboullbe period with a
chance of thundet•howers
mainly iu the afternoon and
evening. Daytime highs In
the upper 80s and low 90s.
Nighttime lows In the upper
&amp;Os and low 70s.

Cyclist-Injured

PT. PLEASANT - Charles d8mage to the cycle. Bailey
FEMALE REPORTER
Political Education (COPE),
W. Bailey, '!1, Pomeroy, was wascitedforfailuretobavehis
the union 's polit.ical fund
.:·PAPER" DOLL
listed in fair to good condition vehicle under control.
raising arm.
today at Pleasa'nt Valley
N91njuries were reported In
Seven defendants have been
McGovern 's advisers think
Hospital
where
he
was
·ada
two-vehicle
mishap Tue""ay
fined- one on three charges one reason why Meany has
mitted
Tuesday
night
following,
.
morning
on
U.S.
!louie 33 neat
by Middleport. Mayor J9hn
been critical of him is a belief
a motorcycle accident at 10:30 · the Phillip Sporn Plant.
/ Zerkle.
that radicals are in charge of
p.m. on State Route 62near the
Sherirr Huffman said Lucy
Okey E. Kiser, 41, Racine,
McGovern's campaign. They
traffic
circle
of
the
Mason
Ann
'Kaylor, 38, Letart, W.Va.,
was fined $too and costs and
believe that, once he realizes
County Fairgrounds. Bailey was driving an auto owned by
given a three day jail sentence
McGovern's staff is chieny
suffered
multiple lacerations Robert Clarke, also of Letart,
un a charge of driving while
composed
of
skilled
E-R
Unit
Goes
of
the
mouth.
when she pulled from the
intoxicated ; a second fine of
professional organizers,
Sheriff Troy Huffman said Graham Baptist Church
$150and costs and three days in
Meany will put the union's full
Twice
to
Help
the
cycle skidded to the side of driveway, in a bad curve on
jail on a seco"d DWI charge,
resources behind the camthe
road
and hit a large pile of Route 33, and coUided with a
and fined $10 and costs for
The Pomeroy E-R squad at
paign.
7-&lt;.7
having an open flask.
' ' · 1'172 ~~ NU.• lftf.
1:09 a.m. Wednesday went to blacktop which threw the cycle · car driven by Ben H. Philson,
McGovern was heartened by
Others fined were William the aid of Eber Gillen, old and the driver approximately 60, Racine, which was owned
Ch icago Mayor Richard
T!Mio15
FUNNY
.ill
poy
$1
.00
lo
r
Harmon, 48, Middleport, $50 Route 7 near Che~ter, who was 30 feet. One witness said the by Chaddle Leases, Inc. The
Daley's decision Monday to I rocn original "Iu nny " 1n~d . Srnd gog ~
and costs, failure to appear in having difficulty breathing. He vehicle and driver went investigation is being consupport the' Democratic ticket ~ ~~ · T~ doy'1 FUNNY , 1200 Wur Third
1
L..::.:..:..:r.elund,
Oh
to
&lt;f411l
court on a citation; Donald R. ·was taken to Veterans through the air, the cycle tinued. There was $250 damage
even though the mayor exLovett, 48, Portland, $15 and Memorial Hospital where he coming down on top of Bailey . to the Philson vehicle.
pressed
bitterness
at
There was an estimated $500
costs, intoxication; William was admitted for treatment.
McGovern supporters who he
McHaffie, 46, Middleport, $10
feels were responsible for
At 8:29 p.m. Tuesday the
and costs, intoxication ;. Jerry squad answered a call to ·Eagle
unseating Daley's delegates to
Ward, 72, Middleport, $5 and Ridge for Rose Rosebury, 17,
the Democratic National Concosts,
assured clear distance, who also was having difficulty
(Continued from page 1)
vention .
and costs only for trespassing ; breathing. She was taken to material it bad pledged.
George
McDaniel,
45 , Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, in- where she was treated and
PLEASANT VALLEY
COLUMBUS -GOV. JOHN J. GJLUGAN and his "gluttoxication; and Dale Kautz, 45, released,
DISCHARGES- Mrs. Larry
tonous
appetite for taxpayers' money" will be the No. I Issue
Special deputies will be Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
Spears, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
used by RepubUcans campaigning for the state legislature this
Jo n Stover, Leon; Addie appointed on a yearly basis and clear distance.
fall,
House Speaker Charles Kurfess said Tuesday. Kurfess said
Forfeiting bonds were .
Wooten, Point Pleasant; Mrs. changes may be made in
CALLED TWICE
Gilligan, a Democrat, had "outlandish tax revenues requests and
David Beaver, Gallipolis; Mrs, election boards for certain William L. Brookover, 35,
The Middleport emergency expenditure proposals."
Dwight Casey, Gaiiipolis areas it was agreed by the Paden City, W. Va ., $30 posted squad answered a call to the
"He has said time and again we haven't spent enough and he
Ferry; Mrs. Darrell Jefferies, Mason County Court during a on an intoxication charge, and Ashland Service Station on
wants
much more," the Bowling Green Republican said. "He
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Atthur regular meeting Monday Walter Lewis, 44, Ashland, Ky ., Locust St. at 9:33p.m. Tuesday
Moore, Buffalo; Infant son of· evening in its courthouse of- $200, posted for driving while for Carroll Brinker, an em- could launch spending programs that would demand a tax hike
later, so any brake must come from a Republica~H:ontrolied
intoxicated.
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Thomas, fice.
ploye, who had gotten battery legislature, " he said.
·
The Court went along wilh a
infan t sun of Mr. and Mrs.
acid in both eyes. He was taken
Donald Metz, Nancy Bowen, request from Civil Defense
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
MARIETIA,OHIO -A SINGLE CAR crashed on Interstate
Ashton; Rundle Given, Point Director Richard Grinstead
CALLED OFF
and then transferred to the
and
Sheriff
Troy
Huffman
that
77
ahout
five inlles north of here Tuesday night when a lire blew
Pleasant; Mrs. Delbert Riffle,
There will be no meeting this O'Bienness Hospital in. Athens.
special
deputies,
previously
Leroy; Mrs. H. J. Denison,
week of the Meigs County At 11 :10 p.m. the squad was out, killing a West Virginia woman.
Ohio Highway Patrolmen identified the victim as Rosalee
Middleport; Mrs. George assigned for one week during Democrati c Executive caiied for · Mrs , Oiler in
the
fair
period,
instead
be
Turner, Point Pleasant.
Committee which would Bradbury, a maternity patient, Hamlin, 21, of Charlestown, W.Va., formerly of Pittsburgh. She
made deputies on a 12 month normally have been held
who was taken to the Holzer was dead on arrival at a local hospital. Police .said the car
basis. and that they be bonded Thursday night.
smashed against a guardrail when tbe tire blew out.
Medical Center.
and author ized to carry side
SERVICE SET
arms.
f'uneral services for Mrs,
it was pointed out that
Ellen Wilson, 13, South Third through this action , the
Ave ., Middleport, who died deputies would be available for
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial any emergency in addition to
Hospital , will be held at 2 p.m , assisting at the Fair. The
Thursday at the Rawlings- deputies volunteer their ser91
50
Coats Funeral Home in Mid. vices through Civil · Defense
dieport with the Rev. Charles and no pay is involved.
Norris officiating. Friends
Those to · be installed as
may can at the funeral home. special deputies immediately
arc Richard Grinstead, Fred
Ta ylor, Ross Roush, Cecil
Duncan, Robert Poore, George
JOBS OFFERED
The Leading Creek Con- VanMatre , George Carson.
ser\'ancy District is now ac- Donald Johnson.
Election boards were
cepting applica tions for work
discussed,
when it was pointed
in both their Operation Main
Stream and Project H.O.P.E. ou t tha t the law provides
Porgrams. Individuals in - . double boa rds for precincts
terested in applying should where 300 or more vote and
visit in person the Leading sing le boards for precincts
Creek Conservancy District where the vote is 299 or less.
Action will be taken to comply
offices located in Rutland .
with this ruling for the next
election. which is the General
Election November 7.
A spec ial purchase of womens polyester
SOCIAL SET
In further action, the court
kn it dresses ~ sleeve less and short sleeve
The annual ice cream social appointed Leonard Upton of
beaut ifu l pastels and white .
sty les will be held beginning at 5 p.m. Leon to a five year term on the
Junior sizes S to 13 and misses sizes 8 to 20 .
Saturday at the Wilkesville Mason County Board of Health.
Also take advantage of the sate prices of
womens
bathing sui ts, coordina te spor tsUnited Methodist Church. Upton previously fill ed the
wear , blouses, knit tops, g irl s' playwear ,
Besides severa l fl avo rs of unexpired term of the late
juni or spor tswear .
homemade ice cream, pie, George Rairden .
cake and various other items of
The court renegotiated its
food and drink will be sold . All, yearly con tract with the Approceeds go to the church palachian Power Company for
program.
preventive maintenance on the
courth ouse air conditioning
and heating system.
DIVORCE ASKED
Caroline Deem, Racine, Rt.
1, filed suit for divorce in Meigs
Veterans Memorial Hospital
County common pleas court
ADMITTED - ~a rbara
against Jimmy Deem charging Baer, Minersville; Harley
gross neglect of duty and ex- Slack, Pomeroy; Vi cky De
treme cruelty.
Bord, Columbus and Nellie
Brown , Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Steve
SURGERY PLANNED
Eblin, Nora Curtis, Keith
Mrs. Charles Warn er of Mattox, Elmer Norvell, Vonda
Ebenezer St., Pomeroy, is a Wolfe. Woodrow Ca ll and
patien t at the Holzer Medical Christina Holley .
Center, and will undergo eye
surgery there .
'
LIFERS IN APHA
George Baer and so n,
Minersville Route 1, have been
named life members of the
American Polled Here ford
Assn.

that McGovern was not encouraging either directly or
indirectly the AFL-CIO
component unions- including
the Machinists and the
American Federation of
Federal, State and Municipal
Employes- who have endorsed
him over the stringent objections of AFL-CIO President
George Meany.
(The New York Times
reported today that McGovern '
mailed letters Monday to the
presidents of !:ill international
labor unions, including Meany,
offering to meet with them "to
talk about our common interMus~s · ests
and disc uss any differences we may have." The
In Peewee action Tuesday Times quoted McGovern as
the Pomeroy Angels defeated
saying, "I told them that I
the Middleport Mustangs 1&gt;-11 thought we had an uphill battle
at Pomeroy.
but that we could win the
For the winners Jerry Fields
election and we would be the
~it a grand slam home run.
. kind of an administration they
Other hitters for the winners
would be proud of.")
were Chuck Bailey, Sean
The dissident unions were
Gilmore, and Mike Smith each reportedly planning to put
• a single, Todd Fife three preSsure on Meany to endorse
singles. and Rick Eisenhower McGovern at Wednesday 's
and Lyle Moon each two AFL-CIO council meeting or
singles. On the mound for the face the loss of their contribuAngels was Todd Fife. Behind tion to the Committee for
the plate was Greg Lee.
For the Mustangs Ty Herman and Terry Wayland were
the big bats with three singles
each. Tim Justice had two
!Continued from page 11
singles, Denny Gleason a
triple, and Jeff Whittington a Paris with Le Due Tho on May
single.
2.
The United States and South
Vietnam resumed talks with
their Communist counterparts
1
100 REWARD
last Thursday. Tho arrived in
the French capital last
weekend
and said he was ready·
Fur Information leading to
to consider any new U.S. offer.
!lie Arrest &amp; Conviction of
Ten days ago Kissinger told
anyone vandaliziug ur
reporters
in San Clemente,
stealing property owned by
Calif. , that there were indicaany member of the Tritions that Hanoi was ready to
County Automobile Dealers
resume negotiations with a
Association.
new and responsive attitude.

a

today·s FUNNY Seven ·F"med ~·.EXTENDED
eo:""... ·OUTLOOK
,..,.",.,.

)

position nor your objectives
have varied," he said.

TAX TAKE DOWN
Retail sales tax receipts in
Meigs County for June, 1972,
were down $9,491.24 or 13.30
percent under last year for
June according to the report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey, state
treasurer. Receipts for this
June totaled $61,855.91 while
receipts for June of 1971 totaled
$71,347.15.

LT. ERNEST WIGGLESWORTH, COMMANDER of the
Gallia-Meigs Post, State Highway Patrol, points to a red
lightning bolt on local patrol car. "Now tbe public can tell
how many 'hits' an officer has. made in apprehending a car
thief. The number of auto theft arrests an officer has made is
clearly exhibited by the number of bolts on his patrol car. A
Blue Max Award wiU be presented annually to the patrolman
with the most on-the-11pot car recoveries with apprehensions .
Thus far, Patrolman W. F. Wiggins and Sgt. D. L. Proffit of
the Gallia-Meigs Post each have earned one bolt.

Foote's Sales,
Earnings Down

GRAHAM STATION, W. Va.
- Foote Mineral Company
today reported from its home
offices at Exton, Pa., net sales
of $45,418,235 for the first six
months of 1972 compared with
net sales of $54,874,211 during
the comparable period of 1971.
Net earnings for the 1972 half
were $453,517 compared with
the $2,400,027 reported for the
LOCAL TEMPS
same period of 1971. After
The temperature in down- provision for the pro rata
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. dividend requirement of the
Thursday was 86 degrees under Company's preferred stock,
sunny skies.
there were no earnings in the

Baer' s Market,

Syracuse; Gaul's Markel,
Chester; Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy
National Bank and New
York Clothing House,
Pomeroy; Clark's Service
Slatton, Harrisonville, and
the Racine Home-National
Bank.

Approval of a proposed 2.75
mill bond issue at a special
election on Aug. 15 would
improve conditions at the
Riverview Elementary Schoolin the Eastern Local School
District.
This was the conclusion at a
citizens' meeting on the bond
issue, designed to provide
building p· •1ram funds in the
district, 1 uesday night at
Riverview School.
The question arose as to
whether pa888ge ol the bond
is•ue would lead to a closing of
the Riverview School If
classroom space was added to
other schools in the district.
Supt. John Riebel, several
board members, and Clerk C.
0. Newland, said, on the
contrary, conditions would be
improved at the Riverview
School if the measure passes
because seventh and eighth
graders could be taken from
Riverview to join other
students of those grade levels
at the high school building.
As a result, Riverview School
would have six grades compared to the eight grades and
six teachers now at the school.
Classes are now combined in
the upper grades.
Commenting on the meeting,
Supt. Riebel, who presided,
said that school officials felt
that it was an enthusiastic
session. Funds from the 2.75
mill bond Issue would provide
money to build an eight room
addition to the high school and
a band room. A band room was
not provided for in the original
plans of the building.
A question was raised on
present millage being paid in
(Continued on page 10)

first half of 1972 available to
the common stock compared
with 48c per common share in
the first half of 1971.
Both sales and earnings
during the first half of 1972
reflect lower operating rates in
the specialty steel industry as
co mpared with the same
period in 1971 when the steel
mills were operating at high
levels in anticipation of a
strike. However, there is an
improvement compared to the
second half of 1971 when the
Company suffered operating
losses on reduced sales
volumes.
During tbe second quarter of
1972 net sales were $23,741,222
compared with $28,552,080 in
the 1971 period. Net earnings
were $i:l6,254 in the 1972 second
The Meigs Local School
quarter compared with
District
Ubrary will be con$1,179,091 in 1971. There were
ducting an opinion poU perno common earnings in the
taining to Its services through
second quarter of 1972 comJuly
28.
pared with 23c in 1!111.
Residents of Pomeroy,
The Company .noted that it
Middleport, Letart Falla,
expects the level of sales to
Portland, Racine and Rutland
increase during the balance of
wUl be phoned or questioned on
the year, particularly to its
the streets for their opinions.
steel related customers. Foote
operates a steel alloys plant John Triplett ol Wellston will
be interviewing residents,
here.
using !ive questions to be
answered, as part of a
cooperaUve plan by the Ohio
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
- Eber Valley Area Libraries on
Gillilan , Chester-; William behalf oJ its members.
Information obtained from
Klein , Pome~oy; Audry
Theobald, Middleeort; this short interview wW aerve
Pauilne Stewart, Mason; as the basis for future planning
Emerson Houdashelt , by the Meigs Local School
P.omeroy, and Robin Bell, District Ubrary, ill brandieS
all(j bookmobile.
.Racine.
Beca-.e everyone cannot be
DISCHARGED - Cindy
phoned
the publlc Is Invited to
Crabtree, Steven Lavalley,
call
992~13
to expreas opinion
Wilma Riggs, Barbara Marshall, Pauline Derenberger on tbe service p•ovided by the
district.
and Chesler Van Meter. ·

Opinion Poll

Being Taken of

Second
Floor
At
Elberfelds

Library's Work

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Sale! Record Albums

Special prices on 33 andon~-third RPM record
albums. Popular, Country Western, Sacred.
instrumental and bard rock.
4.79 Record Albums
Sale 3.49
5.79 Record Albums
Sale 4.49
6.79 Record Albums
Sale 5.49
7.79 Record Albums
'
Sale 6.49
9.79 Record Albums - Sale 7.49
12.79 Record Albums · - - - -- - - Sale 9.79
AlSo • nice selection of 45 RPM records. We have the top
SO hits, also tree sheets ot the top hits.
.
:orne and browse and pld&lt; up your tree sheets.

'

VISit the 3rd Floor Furniture, Applian~
and Carpet Departments
Prompt Delivery

Continuous Seroice

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Sensible Credit

Elbetfel~s In Pomeroy

..
MEIGS lEGION BASEBALL TEAM - Front row, 1..-, Dave Boyd, Johnny Roush, Johnny ·
· ' uAird, Howle Taylor, Mlck Ash, Roger Dixon, Rick Ash, Homer Smith, Jr. (bat boy); second
row, George Neuelroad, manager; Lou McKinney, Dave Wolfe, Rick Van Maire, Steve Lee,
. • Steve Dunfee,. Bill Chaney, Jon Buck, Stan Perry, Kevin Sheets, Tom Cooke, and Mike Werry,
•

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assistant coach. Absent was Skipper Johnson, who was ill Tbe team record is 17-9-1. It opens
district play Salurday 'at II a. m. on Trautwein Field in Athens against Lancaster. See Keith
Wisecup's account on Page 3 Of tbe club's 11~ June-up victory Wednesday evening at Syracuse
over New Haven. Picture by Katie Crow.

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•-The Datly Sentill&lt;'l, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 20 1972

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GLOBAL VIEW

~Tube

Look What's Up Mr.. Nixon's Sleeve Now
Ill II\\ CliUMLE\

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Fo1 etgn stt att.'g\ pl ovldt"s tht&gt; 1azzamatazz 111 P1 ~st
dent Nixon s Ieelection campaign And a VIetnam break
through would be a llmlle~ If achieved
But NIXon has undei wav a SCIIes of economic sleepe1'
which could p1 ov1de a Sundav punch by electiOn day
None of these has the glam01 of Chma Russia m a
VIetnam selllement lndividuall) the1 ma) get few head
hues But then cumulative effect could mean an econom1
I ambling ugh! along !his fall 111 1cal 01 de1 s and even
gt eater prospects
The pattem can be seentn the new ag1eement by which
Moscow Will buy $750 million m g1 ams these next tin ee
years-and prospects thiS orde1 Will be mcreased
A maJoi purpose of Secreta1 1 of State Wilham Roge1 s
VISit to East Em ope was to set the stage for Increased
shipments of fa1 m goods- pumanly to Yugoslavia and
Poland
A top pnonl} m the upcommg 11 aM talks with Japan
Is to sell Tokyo on buymg $100 million 01 so a yea1 more
m Ameucan products A sales hst has been prepared
A boost of say $100 million a vea1 m sales to Pekmg
Is m the talkmg stage And If D1 Hem v K1ssmger IS as

succes~tu l

ht:•H as 111 8o ntt ul Ins olhtJ hiu:s the fusl
l~su ll s should b&lt;glll lo show llelo1&lt; tl&lt;•ciJon day Ahrady
tiieJe sa ICjlOJied b11•aklluou~h on )l'l s.olcs and hopes
101 cotton tobacco seeds and ~ ~ ams
But we may mel ell haw• hooked at the llp ol the Ice
bet~ rf agtecment can bl made on sellhng Moscow s
WOJ!d Wa1 II debts to !he Umted Stales 1f Export Impo1 t
Bank and other credits can be a11 anged and If U S ex
poo t Iules a1 e slackened
What 1s bemg talked about JS a senes of mui!Imllhon
dolla1 contracts for U S technolog1 backed by US loaps
w1th much of the repavment m lluss1an productiOn from
1

those mvestmenfs

Take some cu11 en! negotiations It IS understood one
ma101 concern 1s wmkang toward a conltact on a $160
million wood pulp plan! to be paid 1m 111 la1 ge measu1 e
by the plant s output
Two Ameman compames IepOJiedly have Russian
letteJ s of mtent on $58 million m cont1 acts to supply turn
kev plants to make tableware and othe1 Items
Anothe1 American hrm IS sa1d to have landed a SIO
million contract to design the woJid s lar~e st found1 y
to suppl y the mammoth Kama Rive, truck plant the
Russians a1 e buiidmg U S comoames are compehng
for an expected $200 m1lllon 1n tJ ~ m~rh• POJtlr\mPnt the

~

By Helen and Sue BoHel
FASHION 'NOTS" FROM A MALE
Sue and Helen
I am JUSt back from a California vacation and I have to say
something that doesn't sync w1th a college jliiUor - very male
I saw more female bare backs than I really wanted to see this
summer
Why IS It that gtrls and women who shouldn't, ptck up on new
styles first? (You saw the shortest skirts on Old Falknees• and
Droopyhips gets herself up m hot pants )
But back to the subJect - backless, braless dresses held up
by one little strap at the neck All I've gotto say ts
Halter tops not for dame who flops 1 - HARVEY
Harvey
Your fashiOn "not" duly noted Here's another
Backless-straps only for fatless backs -HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear Rap
I'm not mto drugs but I like to know what's gomg on Lately
I've heard about two new ones sunshine and sopors Are they
replacmg pot? - CURIOUS BUT NOT SAMPLING

'

Dear CBNS
"Sunshme" IS acid, said by pushers to be a supenor type of
LSD - satd by a former drug user fnend to be Dangerous
unpredictable -wtth LSD, you never know whtch trip will mess
up your mmd
'Sopors" are downers non'barbiturate sleepmg p11ls
(Methaqualone) Accordmg to a recent wu-e release, sopors are a
new fad at summer music feshvals and they're bolter seUers
than pot They produce a floating, out of It" sensation, which
can usually be slept off ( but not always) Habitually used with
alcohol, they may cause senous bram damage -RAP
P S Here's a letter we hesttaled to prmt until we cheeked 11
out With a former user who says these reactions are possible -Ill
ISolated cases-if the JOillt (sometimes not pot but parsley) Is
soaked 10 strong hallucmogemc chenucals, such as THC and
STP
It m1ght never happen to you - but 1t COULD'

I

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EDITORIAL

McGovern Needs
Winning Formula

The

Oat~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ec:lttor
PtJbl•shed daly except
Saturday by The Oh o Valley
Publ•!&gt;h 1n9 Company
111

CotJrt

St

Pomeroy

OhiO

45769 Bus•ness Olf•cP Phone
992 215 6 Ed tonal Phone 992

+++

Dear Rap
Tbts IS not a cop-&lt;Jut but a plea to anyone who has ever
thought about trymg drugs DON'T' Too many things can go
wrong, even With supposedly harmless mariJuana
My fnend got me some grass from a dealer off the street We
dido t know It had been miXed With somethmg It was my fu-st
try, and I'll never be qwte physically right agam It did
something to part of my bram and doctors don't give me much
hope
Here's what happens I never know when It will start up, but
I'll go blind for several hours Then the numbness starts m my
legs and works its way mto my face and arms I can't walk or
feel I've choked on my own sabva because I couldn't lee! to
swallow, and I've come close to swallowmg my tongue I've seen
my husband break down and cry because there wasn't anything
he could do but hold my arms down so I couldn't tear at myself
when I get a wild flash-back Once I broke my hand from
poundmg on the waU I've retched and VOJJUted and wanted to
die I've trembled and cried and screamed until I've passed out
Sure, thiS 1s that "one-111-a-nullion" chance But as long as
there are street drugs, it can happen Don't take It' And lf you
find tune, stop and pray for me, please - SOMEONE WHO
KNOWS

Sen George McGovern s amaz mg th1 ee year JOurne}
1157
from pohtfcal obscunty to national prom10ence 1s far
Second class postage pad ar
from completed
Pomeroy Oh o
Nat•ona l advert s.•nQ
It IS one thm g-a It hough no small teat - to have
repreHntattve
Bott.nel lt
snatched the leadership of the Democratic party out of
Gallagher In c 12 East 42nd
the hands of the old pros and to have apparently begun a
St New York Ctfy New York
Subscr~p lton
rates
De
fundamental reshapmg of the party mto a broad coalition
I vered by carr.er where
of youths and mmont1es and wa1 opponents and assorted
available 50 cents per week
new and old leftists
By Motor Route where carrter
serv ce not avatlable
One
It Will be quite another thmg howeve1 to translate the
month
51
1S
By
mat!
•n
Oh•O
superb orgamzallon and hard work and enthusiasm of his
and W Va One year 51 A 00
supporters, which enabled hom to wm pnmary afte1 pn
S111. months $7 25
Three
months S4 so SuMcr•pl•on
mary this spnng, mto a wmnmg formula that will gam
pr1ce 1nc ludes Sunclay T mes
the coveted grand pnze on Nov 7
Sent nel
It remams to be seen whether George McGovem IS co1
rect m behevmg as he stated m a Lofe magazme mter
view, that I am movmg woth an advance guard that the
ma)onty of AmeiiCan people are ready to rally around
For one thmg despite his meteonc me McGovern re
mams an unknown quanllty m the mmds of that maJority
he hopes to rallY, I This IS even more true 10 the case of
his Spuo who ? runmng mate Sen Thomas F Eagleton
Q-What was !he !JI!e of
of MISSOUri I
Regardless of what hap Wilham A!ten Wlute &lt; most
pens here people like me /umuus edltorzal?
The latest poll by the Hams orgamzallon found McGov
are gomg to own the party A-ln 1896 White wrote an
ern trailing President Nixon by a 12-pomt margm m a
10 1976
three way race 145 to 33 per cent! and by 16 pomts m a
editonal entitled
What s
two-way race I54 to 38 per centl
- Mtchae/ A Rappeport 34 the Matter with Kansas?
u d~ l e ga t e t" the Demo rh1 s made h1m famous over
More sigmficantly 11 was also found that McGovern had
mght
craLTc Cmwentwn
slipped surpnsmgly m certam areas For mstance the
number of voters who gave him cred it for bemg an early
opponent of the VIetnam war and who considered him a
fighter for tax reform was smaller than 1t had been m
May
But t e most stnkmg reversa l was that more votersnot fewer- than m May now thmk McGovern has too
extreme liberal VIews '
Much of thiS, of course may be due not to thmgs Me
Govern himself has said but what others have said he has
said or have satd m his name
Actually , 11 Is not George McGovern who IS the worn
some unknown quanllty to many people (after all how
far out can the soft spoken son of a m1mster from South
llv BRUCE BIOSSAT
Dakota be? ) It Is the Ideological company he keeps- or
MIAMI BEACH (NEAl
rather the compa ny that seems to ha ve been attracted
to him
The 1972 Democratic convention had a tot of good and
new thmgs about 11 What 11 d1d not have was elecll ICily
It was, for example not an msp1rmg sight when a crowd
and excitement and a truly umfymg spmt
•
of youths demandmg a clanficahon or a statement by
him on VIetnam forced a confrontation with him 10 his
I have more to compare 1t with than do most observers
M1am1 Beach hotel headquarters and drowned h1m out
s1nce I have seen all the conventions m both parlles from
With shouts of "AbortiOn' Amnesty' MariJuana'
1940 on Th1s was by all odds one of the dullest
Such emotiOn-charged words could be as fatal to Me
Sen George McGovern was the clea1 choice of the dele
Govern, and as unfairly so as the slogan Rum Roman
gates, but their cheers for h1m were frail compared to the
Ism and RebeUwn ' was to Republican candidate James
sou nds that filled other halls m other hmes for Franklin
G Blame m 1884
Roosevelt and Wendell Wlllkie and Dwight Eisenhower
and John F j{ennedy
Yet strangely, McGovern's acceptance speech h1s first
opportumty to address the American public as the pres1
One delegate who was for McGovern all the way tned
d~ntial nommee of the Democratic party as well as to
to put his finger on the m1ssmg quahty As he sees It
begm the healing process of the nfts w1thm that party
affection for him as a man IS not the dommant thmg. He
was delivered m the wee hours when most of Amenca
IS perceived as an mstrument of protest a vehicle bear
was asleep
mg their concerns over the ISSues
This may be remembe1 ed as the first blunder by a can
The view makes sense It woulrl help to explam why the
dtdate m the 1972 campatgn
cheers ll&gt;Ually had a disembodied air about them and
why fm all Its McGovern diCtated discipline the assem
Nevertheless those who blithely nred1ct a Nixon walk
blage here always seemed less like a conventiOn than JUSt
away fn November may be m fo1 .orne sw pnses Much
a collection of people-a kmd of pohllcal Woodstock
of the percentage·pomt difference between him and Me
Govern ls stmply a recogmtlon gap and IS bound to shnnk
Former Sen Eugene McCarthy who can mix sharp
Not only that, but any man who has shOwn himself to
observatiOn With hos ftip md1fference forecast
be a fighter like George McGovern has can be counted on
This conventiOn IS not gomg to end It 1s JUS( gomg to
to make a real race of 1t
be gone

Thoughts

QUICK QUIZ

BRUCE BIOSSAT

McGovern More
Symbol than Man

A Kind of
Double-Salety
NORTH
• 75

20

(D)

¥AKJ654 3
• 94
.85

lUST
• QI02
¥Q1098
• J 108
oi&gt;J 73
SOUTH

EAST
• J963

¥Vood
• Q6 53 2
.Q964

• AK84

• 72
t AK7
• A K 102
Both vulnerable

\\est

J.

North

East

South

Pass

6NT

II\ Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Readers of Dumas Will re
c.lll that D Artagnan was the
.1c•atest swordsman 10
h ance Readers of thiS col
umn also know him as the
best bndge player of the
day Here we hod him cross
1ng swords at the bridge
table With the wily Roche·
fOil
D Artagnan's Jump to s1x
uo 11 ump was typical of h1s
lite style Porthos his part·
11e1 '" bndge and all other
act JVIlles was not much of
a card player and D Artag
nan want«d ~o.r jake , full
cha t ge
, ""
D Artagnan won the open

mg lead and saw that h1s
no II ump slam would make
taSI!y unless East held all
tour hearts The safety play
to Ruard agamst fmdmg all
four m Rochefort's hand
I Rochefort was West J would
be to play low from dummy
after West followed With the
eight, mne or 10 but the
wily Rochefort played the
queen
D Artagnan started to play
dummy s ace and claim
seven but paused to reflect
that Rochefort was not com
pletely reliable m matters
concernmg queens Then he
let the queen hold the trick o
I don t know why I play
bndge with
groaned
Rochefort
might have
some chance With swords '
{NEWSPAPlll: ENTIII'liSl 4S1N 1

The boddmg has been
Wesl

Pass
Pass

1•+

North

2
3•

You South,

East

Pass

Pass
Pass

hold

.AJ543 ¥K97S3 tv01d.QI01
Q-Who was the last US
I'' eszde~tt to have served 111 What do you do now'
A- Bid four clubs. You are
the Amencan Revo!utwn'
headmr
for • slam somewhere
A-Andrew Jackson who
and
w•nl
more 1nform~tion.
JOined the mounted militia

of South Ca1 alma at the age
of 13

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner goes on to r1ve
clubs What do you do now'

And so 1t was, havmg consumed pnme television time
for four straight days to parade tts dreartest events and
put on Its relabvely more mteresttng happemngs from
near midmght to the small hours or the mornmg
It can be argued that we observers stmply were disap·
pomted because our predictions of chaos here never came
to pass There may be somethmg to that Yet the alter
native to chaos need not be smothermg dullness
Good thmgs ought not to be unexc1tmg and, as mdtcated
at the outset, there were good thmgs
Weeks ago a McGovern aide told me that the senator
and h1s managers were not gomg to pull too ttght a rem
on h1s hundreds of delegates They were judged to be
umquely mdlVIdual and mdependcnt, and the feehng was
It would be wrong to clamp down It would violate the
whole sp1nt of openness fostered by the Democratic
party"s ~ forms-reforms which helped nommate Me
Govern
In actual fact, however, the discipline applied by him
was very tough It was used with great precision m parha·
mentary maneuvers It was used to keep damagm~ thln~s
like the abortion tssue out of the platform t "Don t do It
you II hurt the candidate " said one young woman dele
gate to an a borhon advocate )
~1rm orders came down too, on the matter of decorum
- no demonstrations no boomg ' So the umquely ind1
vidual delegates who made 1t here never got their chance
to be umquely mdiVIdual
Cunously some of the sting was taken out of all this
by the strong but good-humored way m whtch National
Chairman Lawrence 0 B~1en ran the proceedings His
little proddmgs hke "come on gang" had more zest than
anyth10g the delegates d1d all week
They were admirably serlous responsive on the Issues,
responsibly attentive to duty through the most gruelling
all night sessiOns But they somehow contrived to make
savmg the nation for liberty and justice seem JUSt about
the most umnsp1rmg enferpnse on eat th

By Paul Crpbtree

One thing, though, we disagree with
A special award IS being gtven to the player who gel8 the
greatest total vote There'll be no great quarrel with the 1972
honoree in the National League, JohMy Bench or the great Hank
Aaron
UBench won (we don'tknowaswewrttethiS), he had to beat
out some fine catchers, principally the Pirates' Manny
Sangutllen And Aaron IS competing agalnst some great outfielders and deserves recognition, notwithstanding a mediocre
year for Hanunem' Hank

3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 20.1972

Legion Bats Perk Up in
Regular Season Finale
Rick Van Maire, Stan Perry
and Steve Lee, the three aces of
the Meigs American Legion
pltchmg staff combmed to fire
a four-hit shutout while the1r
supporting cast backed them
with 16 hits as Meigs ran away
with an 11.() wm over Ne11
Haven Wednesday 10 the
regular season fmale
Van Maire started on the hill
and went the ftrst three, fan
mng two walkmg one and
allowmg to hits Perry hurled
the middle three frames
fanmng seven, walking none
and giVIng up two hits Steve

Lee toed the mound for the
!mal two frames g1vmg up no
hits, fanmng two, and walkmg
one
Perry (6-11 was credited with
the wm
Meigs broke 10to the scor10g
column 111 the siXth with six
runs
Meigs got mto the scormg
column 111 the fifth w1th SIX
runs Kevm Sheets led off with
a walk, Lou McKmney smgled,
and with one out Tom Cooke
doubled home one run Roger
DIXon smgled home two more,
Perry followed with a smgl•,

and hot-hitting Steve Dunfee
doubled home two more Dave
Boyd cracked a two-vut double
to plate Dunfee
The Meigs Count1ans broke 11
wide open m the siXth with four
more as R Ash led off with a
smgle, Cooke was hit by a
p1tch and Dixon sacnfiCed
both runners ahead With two
out Dunfee tnpled to right,
scormg two more runs Howie
Taylor followed with a smgle,
sconng Dunfee and Boyd
smacked another long double
to left Taylor crossmg the
plate

+++
But what 1f you're the only really top-notcher at one posttion
- and still not an AU-star among All-stars'
For example, at third base, the Cardlnals' Joe Torre IS
runnmg away from the pack, and is a flne athlete (the 1971
batting champ J But looking around the league, the current crop
of thu-d basemen IS ordinary, to say the least
HoustOn's Doug Rader IS probably the second choice, wlth a
dandy glove and a lot of powl:r, but a very low batting average
And after Rader, who' Chlcago's Ron Santo or the Met's Jim
FregoSI, both hampered by injury• Rlchie Hebner, who hasn't
really gotten untracked this season wtth the Pirates•
I'm glad to see Bench and Aaron get11118 the best of the voting
- and I am not really opposed to honoring the top vote11etter In
some way
But it would seem a shame if a man of even Jesser abilltles
than Joe Torre, who's a fme athlete, should nose out certified
Hall-&lt;Jf-Famers just because he's the best of a mediocre lot In
some future year

+++

Pass
Pass
Pass
Openmli{ lead-t J

lou "

Talk

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE

The New Balance of Power

::::ow

We're coming up to the All.Star break m'the baseball season,
and the work of Organized Baseball and the Gillette people in
returnlllg the voting to.the fans Is getting better every year.
The days when fans could stuff the baUot box and put practically a whole squad on the field (as Reds' fans dld ln 1!1:!6) has
been eliminated Tbe 1972 squads aren't going to please
everyone, but the teams that take the field at Atlanta for the
summer NBC spectacular are gomg to be reasonably
representative
When the players were plcking the squads, we always had
the feeling the AII.Star voting was a little like a beauty contest,
favormg !be gnys who weren't the scrappiest competitors, and
also giving an edge to a player who had been around, wlth three
or four teams

1\usSJans nwv l&gt;uy for thai !roundly and for a share m the
$1 2 milium II uck Jllanl 1lselr
In the llniterl States, meanwhile consumer buymj! IS on
the upsw ml( Major mventory bu1ld-ups are expected to
sta1 t by September Government spendmg IS set to con
&lt; enll ate heavily on the first f1ve months of thiS new
f~&lt;tal yea1 July through November
Thou~h une111ployment conllnues h1~h employment "
e&lt; pccted to grow at a thumpm~ pace m the next several
months I(IVIO~ hope to those who don't have JObs H.-her
S'&gt;elal Secu11ty payments have been enacted mto law
The admmistJ all on IS push10g hard to Ret a new GI edu
catwn b1H through Congress before this session ends The
new h1~her rates a1 e exuected to lure more veterans mto
school this fall a small but Important assist to the un•
emnlovment outlook
The Nixon men expect these economic olusses, one after
another m thump thumo thump order, to create a
swm~ of opllm1sm that will lead to even more consumer
spendmg more mdustnal hmng and greater mdustr1al
mvestment m new machmes
Nixon IS known to believe the state of the economy
m 1960 lost him the election m his race agamst John
Kennedy He IS not about to let this happen aga1n 1! he
can prevent II

Generation Rap

·;;;;;: .. ::

ON THE TV DIAL Wbat do you do when a TV film 18 too
short• Do a complete Instant replay - if you're running
"Lemonade" on Hollywood TV Theatre. See It (twice) on wr.rutTV, 9 p.m West Virginia GOP Chainnan Thomas Potter and
Democratic chalnnan Bill Watson talk With Paul Nuchims at 10
on WMlJL.TV
Movies "Conspirators," 11 30p m, and "Veils of Bagdad,"
4 p.m F'l;iday, both WBNS.TV

tournament play T~e T•gers
scored three runs m the first
mmng on a· walk, error and htts
b) Steve Baird and Roger
Spauldmg The Padres cut the
lead by platmg a run on a bases
loaded walk to Dellinger
Cheshire wrapped 11 up with
two runs 111 the second, three
runs m the third and two 10 the
siXth Claude Cornelius and
Spauldmg paced the attack
w1th two hits each Glendon
Vmson and Kent Shawver had

Linescores
Marshall (91 and
Amencan League
Humphrey Mancha! Moffott
Calof
000 020 ooo- 2 8 1 !91 and Rader WP- Torrez 110
Boston
030 032 oox- 8 11 0 51 LP- Moff1tt (1 I) HRsWr.ght Messersm1th (61 and Baoley (8th) S10glelon (7 th 1
Torborg. McGlothen (3 2) and
Fosk LP- Wr.ghl (10 51 HRs- New York
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0
Fosk I l51h)
Los Ang
000 300 20x- 5 9 1
By Unrted Press lnternattonal

M10n
010 000 21»- 3 11 3
021 703 oox- 13 12 0
NV
Perry Slr.ckland (31, Gran
ger (~) Gebhard (41. LaRoche
171 and Borgmann Keklch
Bebne (7) and Munson WPKek•ch (9 8) LP-Perry (7 9)
HRs- Biomberg (7 lhl White
I 5th I

Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
THURSDAY, JULY20
6 oo - News Weather, Sports 3 4 8 10, 15, Truth or Con seq 6
I Dream of Jeannie 13 Sesame St 20 Ha!hayoga 33
6 30 - NBCNewsl 4 15 CBSNews8 10 FolkGultar33
7 00 - Dick Van Dyke 4 News, Weather 6 10 What's My Line
8 Course of Our Times 33 Big Red Jubilee 15 Elec Co 20.
Lers Make A Deal3 Wild Wild Wesll3
7 30 - Hollywood Squares3 Ill See You In Court 4 To Tell The
Truth 6 Chapler 33 Dragnet 8 Wild Kingdom 10 Mr
Rogers 20
8 oo - NBCAdven!ureTheatrel 4 15 Al lasSml!hand Jones6
13 My World and Welcome To II 8 Jean Shepherds
America 20, 33, Ask The Mayor 10
8 30 - My Three Sons 8 Jazz Sel20 33
9 oo - Longstreet 6 13 lronsodes 3 15 Hollywood Television
Theatre 20 Jl Mov1e 'The Cornie" 8 10
10 00 - Dean Martin 3, 4 15 News Weather Sports 20, O..en
Marshall Counselor at Law 6 13 Paul Nuchlms 33
II 00 - News, Weather Sports J 4, 6 8 10, 13 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4 IS Dick Cavett 6 Movie The AJ&gt;
poln!ment' 8 Movie The Conspirators 10 Movie The
Hanging Tree 13 I 00 - News Weather 4
1 JO - Local News 13
FRIDAY, JULY 21
6 00 - Sunrose Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 1~Farmllme 10 6 2D-Farm Report 13 6 25 - Paul
Harvey 13 6 25- Blue Ridge Quartet 13
6 JO- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8 Public Affairs 10
6 45-CorncobReporl3 6 55-Rocky&amp; Bullwlnkle 13
7 00 - ToctayJ 4,15 CBSNews8,10 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St
33
a 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Lucl's Toyshop 10, Peyton Place 13
Romper Room 8 Phil Donahue 15 Mr Rogers 33 Timmy
and Lassie 6 What Every Woman Wants to Know J
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3 Phil Donahue 8 Electric Co JJ
Mike Douglas 6 One Life to Live 13
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15 Lucille Ball 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
Hathayoga JJ
10 30- Concentration 3, 15 Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13 My
Three Sons 10, In School Instruction 33 Beverly Hillbill ies 8
Love American Style 6
'
10 45 - Carol DeVall 6
II 00 - Family Affair a, 10, Love America" Style 13 Sale of the
Century 3, 15 Communique 6
11 30- Hollywood Squares 4 IS Love of Live 8 Bew1tched6 13
,

The !mal two Gallipolis Little
League teams were eltmma ted
from further compellhon
Wednesday mght 111 the 14th
Annual Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament
Cheshire's powerful Tigers
defeated the Galhpohs Padres,
11·1, New Raven's Reds edged
the Galhpohs Red Sox 3-1, and
Hometown, W Va , bombed
Pomeroy's Pirates, 19·2
Cheshire cpa lured Its second
straight tournament victory to
remam unbeaten m league and

Torrez,

Seaver

Television Log

Sesl!lme St. 20

Cheshire Romps

'

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
Local News 10 News 13 , Contact a
12 30 - l W's Game 3, 15, Search for Tomorrow a 10 Split
Second6 12 55-NBCNewsJ, IS Electric Co 33
I 00 - News l All My Children 6 13 Divorce Court 8 Green
Acres 10, International Cookbook 33, Watch Your Child 15
1 JO - On A Match 3, 4 15, Lers Make A Deal6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Sewing Skills 33
2 00 - Days of Our Lives J, ~. 15, Newlywed Game 13 VIrginia
Graham 6 Love Is Splendored Thing 8, 10 Societies tn
Transition JJ
2 JO- Doctors 3 ~ 15, Dating Game IJ Guiding Light a 10
Evening at Pops JJ
' '
l 00 - Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospita l 6 13 Secret
Storm 8 10
' '
3 30- Return to Peyton Pla~J. 4,15, Edge of Nlghta 10, One
Life to Live 6, Off The Record 33 Jell's Collie IJ
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St Jl, Fllntstones
13 Huckleberry Hound 6 Batman a. Movie 'The Veils of
Bagdad'
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- Green Acres 3 I Love Lucy 6 VIrginian a Password 13,
Merv Griffin ~. Andy Griffith 15
5 00 - It Takes A Thief 4 Wagon Train J Maverick 13, Dick
Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers JJ1 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Electric Co 33
6 00 - News3, ~. 8,10, 15, NBC Ntws8,10, Truth or Conseq 6 1
Dream of Jeannie 13, Sesame St 20, Hathayoga 33
'
6 30-News3,4, 6,8.10,13,15, FrenchChefll.
7 00- Dick Van Dyke 4, News 6, 10. What's My Line 8, Eloc
Co 20, Tom J.nes 15, Porter Wagner 3, Wild, Wild West 13
Masterpiece Th'!lltre 33
'
7 30 - To Tell The Truth.6 Dragneta, Adam-12 J 1 Dream of
Jeanntu, Mr Rogers 201 Governor and J J 10
8 00- Washington Week In Preview 20, Brady Bunch 6 IJ
O'Hara U S Treasury a, Book Beat 33, Sandford and sOn 31'
Baseball 4
8 30- Partridge Family 6, 13, Movie "Far From the Maddlnft
Crowd," 3, 15, Betwoen Words 20, 33
•
9 00- Room 2:12 6, 13, Movie "Duel In the Jungle," a, Movie 10
9 30-0ddCouple6,13, DevootYoung20,33
10 oo- LD'IeAmerlcan Slvle6, 131 News 20, Doln' ltl3
10 30 - Dr Simon Locke j Dr In the House 4, Rolli"; on River
15
11 oo- News J. 4, 6, 8, 10 tl, 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Movie "Travis
Logan, D A " 8, Movie ' Horrible Dr Hlchcock.'' tO Movie
"Wake of the Red Witch " 13
'
1 00- Roller Derby4, Movle"Unknown lsland"IO
1 30 - News 13
2 110 - News 4

Sadeck1

(7)

and

Grote Osteen I 10 7) and s,ms
LP- Seaver I 12 6)
t 11 onmngs)
Ph1 la
200 000 000 01- 3 13 o
SD
110 000 000 I»- 2 7 l
Carlton I 136) and Bateman
Kirby (6 101 and Kendall

SIL
200130000-680
Hous
000 000 ooo- 0 8 1
Chicago
000 100 02D- 3 7 1
Wise I 10 9) and S1mmons
Detroot
000 000 11 (1.;-,2 7 I D~erker, Culver (5) York (6)
Wood,
Forsler (8) and Ray (8) and Edwords LPHerrmann Timmerman Scher
Dierker (8 6) HR- S•mmons
man 171 Holler !91 and (8th)
Freehan WP- Wood ( 14 101
LP- Scherman (3 11 HRs- All
100 110 OOD- 3 92
Reichardt 2 (6th &amp; 7th I
Pott
11 1 200 30x- 8 13 0
Noekro Upshwa (7 ) Mclain
Cleve
040 000 002- 6 12 0 181 and Williams
Br.les
KC
000 010 000-- 1 7 I Walker (7) and Sangulllen WP
Perry I 16 7) and Fosse - Brlle (9 31 LP- Niekro 19 81
Drago Fotzmorrls (21 Hedlund HRs- Aaron I20th) Alley llrdl
(6) Burgme1er (8) and Korkpa
!rock LP- Drago 17 10)
Bait
100 001 OOD- 2 11 I
Texas
100 000 02x- 3 52
Cuellar ta a1 and Etchebar
ren Paul Panther (71 Plna
Cuellar (8 ~I and tlchebarren
Paul Panther 171 Plna 181 and
Bill in gs WP- Panther (5 51
HR- Ford (8th)

Oak

000 021 60&lt;&gt;- 9 13 0
Mllw
000 003 003- 6 10 1
Odom Fingers (9) and
Duncan Reynolds Bell (61
Colborn (7) Sanders t8) and
Felske WP- Odom (9 21 LPBell (0 11 HRs-Brown (Jrdl
Ferraro (2nd)

BRAVES SIDELINE CARTY
ATLANTA
(UP I)Outfielder Rico Carty, who has
been plagued by mjur1es
throughout his maJor league
baseball career, was placed on
the 21-&lt;lay disabled liSt Wednesday by the Atlanta Braves
Carty, who missed one
season because of tuberculosis
and parts of several others
with various injunes, was
replaced on the roster by
Larvell Blanks, a 22:year-&lt;Jid
infielder called up from the
Braves' Savannah farm club

National League
Clncl
001 002 012- 6 11 o
Chicago
000 010 ooo- 1 so
Grimsley ta 31 and Bench
Pappas Phoebus (8), McGonn
(8) Hamilton (9), Hands (91
and Hundley LP- Pappas (6 61 INJURED RACER MENDING
ANN ARBOR, M1ch (UPI)HR- Beckert (Jrdl
Auto racer Merle BetMontreal
101 000 001- 3 8 I tenhausen, who suffered the
San Fran
100 001 ooo- 2 5 1 loss of hiS nght ann m a crash
durlng the Michigan 200 last
Mojar League Leaders
By United Press International Sunday, was satd by doctors of
Le1d1ng Batters
the Burn Center of the
Nallonol League
University of Michigan
gobrhpct
Cedeno Hou 75 300 58 105 350 Medical Center Wednesday to
Mota, L/.
66 213 36 72 338 be "ln good splr1ts "
Williams Chi 86 J.45 57 116 336 A spokesman satd BettenSngllen,Pitt 80 307 36 100 326 hausen Is resting comfortably
Brock, St L 84 358 44 115 321
Garr, All
7a 317 50 101 319 and has been out of bed for
Oliver, Pitt
84 343 50 109 318 short periods
Atou, St L
77 295 36 93 J1S
Lee SO
68 251 35 79 315
Clmnte Pitt 62 252 46 78 310
Amertcan League
PBA LEADERS
gobr hpct
Schnblum KC 71 239 36 79 Jll AKRON, Ohio (UP!)Pinlella, KC aJ 322 50 !OJ 320 Nelson Burton Jr 's etghth·
Otis, J&lt;C
82 313 41 97 310 place fmlsh in tbe Houston
Fisk, Bos
66 225 46 69 307
Rudl, Ook
81 331 53 100 302 Sertoma Open last week
Carew. Mlnn a2 JOB JJ 92 2" enabled the St Lows bowler to
Rojas KC
81 28'1 32 86 298 increase hfs lead m the
Berry Cal 1 59 208 2A 61 293
I
Allen, Chi
85 298 51 a7 292 Professlona Bowlers AssoOIIver, Cal
85 336 35 97 28'1 elation money.wJnnlng race
Homo Runs
PBA figures announced
Natlanol League Bench, Cln Wednesday showed that
24, Williams, Chi Colbert, SD
and Kingman. SF 21. Aaron. Burton has earned _..,935 In
All and May, Hou ~o
prize money Don Johnson of
Amorlcon Loaguo • Allen, Chi Akron Ohio ranks second wJth
19 Epstein and Jackson, Ook
'
18, Cash, Del 17, Fisk, Bos 15 $3'1,513 and Gus hampo of
Runs Bitted tn
Endicott, NY., Is third wtth
Natla.. t League Bench, Cln $34 216
71, Stargell, Pitt 66, May, Hou
'
and Colbert, SO 62, Oliver, Pill
59
American Leagu1: Allen Chi
61, Jackson, Ook 53, Mayberry,
KC 52, Bando and Epstein, Ook

BARBS

ol'l

Pitching
Nltlo .. l LHgut Nolan, Cln
13 2 Carlton, Phll13 6, Seaver,
NY 12 6i Jenkins, Chi 12 8,
Sutton, LA and Cleveland, St L
115
Amerlcon Lug" Lollch,
Del 16 6, Perry, Clev 16-7,
Wood, Chi 1&gt;4-10, Palmer. Ball
tl-4, Huntw, Olk 12 4, Holtz
m.,, 011 12-7.

By PHIL PASTORET
The boss ts trying to find
aut who painted "suggestton
box" on the Incinerator door

• • •

After workmg so you
can get away, you usually

spend a two weak vacatwn

'"e on lv hils off Kelly
Wmebrenner ond Dallas Sayre
New Haven s Reds pounded
out four hits m the third mnmg
to snap a 11 lie en route to a 3 I
victory over the Gallipolis lied
Sox
The 10mng featured smgles
By K Goldsberry and B Powe
ell, double by H Rose and a
tr1ple by J Collier Collier led
tl1e w10ners with t11o h1ts
Gallipolis' on ly run came on a
triple by B Wo) an and an
error
Collectmg h1 ts for the Red
Sox "ere Woyan, D Steele and
J McKenzie
Hometown plated 11 runs 10
the fifth mmng 10 routmg
Pomeroy s Pirates 19·2
Young led the w10ners w1th
four hits m four trips
Qualls Roach Couch and
Milch had Pomeroy's four hits
Tomght, Centerville and 1110
Grande will tangle at 6 p m ,
Pomeroy's Tigers and the Pt
Pleasant K1wams Club will
meet at 7 15 p m and Ad
dav1lle s Jets meet Ripley
Damel Boone at 8 30 p m

Ali ·Awl ill
Rest For
,

Next Go

Il
j

Debeve

P1ttsbvrgh
New York
Sl LOUIS
Ch1cago
Montreal
Ph1ladelph1a

w I pet gb
54 31 635
47 36 566 6
.... 40 524 9lf 2
45 42 517 10
37 46 446 16
30 55 353 24
West
w

WILMINGTON Ohw (UP! )
- Cmc1nnat1 Bengals coach
Paul Brown has a lot of talent
to choose from for h1s
linebackers this season, all of
11hom have been speed) In
dnlls this week
Starling linebackers nght
now are Bill Bergey Ken
Avery and Bill Peterson, but at
least five others are batllmg
for spots on the team They
mclude second-year man Doug
Adams from OhiO State, Bob
Bruggere, obtamed from San
Diego, Jim LeClair of North
Dakota Jim Edwards of
Morehead and Mark Debevc of
Ohio State
'All our guys are around 4 B
m the 40, ' Brown sa1d ' And
that's pretty good, too Bill
Bergey at 4 7 was the fastest •
Debevc, here for a second
trial With the Bengals, has
drawn Brown's attention
'Debevc really pops people
m the dnlls , ' he said. "He's
hke Avery - the same kmd of
player "
Peterson was a starter on the
nght side m 1969, but dropped
out of the lineup in 1970 wben
10Jured Avery took over the
pos11Ion then and kept 11
The hnebacking coach IS
Vmce Costello, who Brown
says IS ' like a mother duck
With a whole bunch of
ducklings"
"Costello IS really llckled
w1 th his group," Brown satd
"There IS real camaraderte

Buffet

Luncheon

CIN CINNATI WPIJ - A shoulder InJUry that IS
"more aggravating than pamful" Will keep Gary
Nolan, the Cmcmnab Reds' ace righthander, out of
next Tuesday's All-Star game

I

pel

gb

Los Angeles
Atlanta

53 32
49 40

624
551

45 40 529
39 48 448

San Fran

39 51

433

Nolan, whose 13·2 record IS
the
best 10 the NatiOnal
8
15
League, pitched Tuesda)
W h agamsl the Chicago Cubs, but
21
left the game m the s1xth mnmg
because of a muscle spasm m
his shoulder
He later departed the team to

Cmcmnat 1
Houston

San Doego

6

32 53 376

Wednesday's Results

C1ncmnat1 6 Ch1 1
Montreal 3 San Fran 2

P1tt 8 Atlanta 3 n•ght
St L 6 Houston 0 noght

Ph1la 3 S D 2 11 mn n1ght
Los Ang 5 New York 0 n1ghf
Today's Probable P1tchers
Lou1s {San torml 4 7) at
Atlanta IHardon 2 0) 805 p m
New York (Gentry 4 6) at Los
Angeles ( Oownmg 55) 11 p m
(Only games schedu led)
Frtday's Games
Cmc1nnafl at P fl n1ght
St Lou1s at All n1ght
Chtcago at Houston n1ght
Ph1la at Los Ang n•ght
Mont at San D1ego n1ght
New York at San Fran

East

Oakland

w I pet g b
48 36 571
41 37 560 I
41 39 513 5
39 41 488 7
35 48 422 1212
33 49 402 14
West
wlpclgb
54 31 635

Ch cago
46 40 535 8112
M1nnesota
42 40 512 101 2
Kansas City
43 42 506 11
Cailforn1a
38 49 437 17
Texas
36 50 419 18 11
Wednesdays Results
New York 13 M1nnesota 3
Boston 8 Cal1fornta 2
Cleve 6 Kan Co ly I noght
Texas 3 Bait 2 ntght
Oak 9 Milwaukee 6 n1ght
Ch1cago 3 Det 2 n1ght
Today's Probable P1tchers

(All Tomes EDT)
Ball1more I Palmer 13 4) a!
Kansas Coly I Nelson 2 4) 8 30
pm
Detrool iSalyback 3 31 at
Texas I (Broberg 5 71 8 30 p m
M 1nnesota (Woodson 6 8) at

Molwaukee !Ryerson I I) 2 30
pm
Calofornoa IMay 3 7) at New
Y ark ( Peterson 8 11 ) 7 30 p m

Oakland I Holtzman 12 7 and
Blue 2 51 at Boston !Patton 7 8

and Peters 1 1)

pm

tw 1 n1gh t

5

Fnday's Games
Mmn at Mi lwaukee ntght

Ball at Kansas Coly noght

Cal of a! N Y tw , n•ght

Oakland at Boston n ght
Detro1t at Texas n1ght

IIIITERIIIATIOIIIAL LEAGUE

Un1ted Press International
W L Pet GB
Char leston
50 35 588
Lou1svllle
.49 39 557 21 2
Ttdewater
Rochester

46 45 505
.45 46 495

7
8

R1chmond

43 46 483

9

Penmsula

36 54 400 16 12

Toledo
Syracuse

44 45 494 8
44 47 484 9

Wednesday s Results
Charleston 8 T1dewater 6
Lou 1Sv 1lle 4 Toledo 1
Syracuse 8 Pemnsula 5

11

mnmgs
R1chmond 7 Rochester 4

INDIANS SWAP PITCHERS
CLEVELAND (UPI )-Vmce
Colbert, who had a 1·7 record
and a 4 50 earned run average
m 19 games for the Oeveland
Indians thiS season, was op.
lloned Wednesday on 24-hour
recall to Portland m the Pacific
Coast League
The Indians recalled Steve
Dunnmg, who was 4-7 With
Portland, to take Colbert s
place on their roster

CHICAGO (UPI I - The Cm·
cmnah Reds have looked lnl·
press1ve this season but It
hasn t been agamst the Chicago Cubs
Although the Reds hold a six
game edge 10 the Nat10nal
League West ~nd won two of
the three games here this
week, the Cubs still won eight
or their 12 games agamst the
Reds Ihis season
The teams closed out the1r
season with each other Wed
nesday mght as Cmcmnall won
6-I
Ross Gnmsley got his eighth
wm by tossmg a five hitter for
the Reds The one run the Cubs
got was a homer by Glenn Becke rt m the fifth mnmg
Cmcmna\1 was held scoreless
through the f1rst two 1nnmgs,
breakmg loose for one run on
two smgles and two back-tohack sacnflce flies m the third
Pete Rose scored the goahead run after gett10g on base
by bemg hit bv pitcher Milt
·~,; •:,::::::::•:•:,:•:•:•::;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::

CLINIC SET UP
ATHENS - A cli nic
designed pnmarfly for
coaches 10 southeastern Ohio
who are mterested In lear·
nfng more a bout athletic
injunes and the techniques
ln rehabilitation and taping
Is planned for August 4 and 5
al Ohio University
Sklp Vosler, the head
trainer at Ohio University
and a certified athletlc
trainer, will direct tbe cllnlc.
Hfs staff wfll be comprised of
the coaching, trafnlng and
medical slaff of Ohfo
UniverSity A fee of $15
covers tuition materials and
The
coffee
breaks
registration deadlfne Is July
24 Further Information may
be obtained by calling 59f.
4907 or writing the
Workshops Office, 301
Tupper Hall, Athens

WOODSY

OWL

HOOTS

Lea\le torests
and par\&lt;S c\ean
...or c\eaner.

GARY NOLAN

DRYER KILLS MAN
DAYTON Ohw ( UPI )
Willard Shepherd, 32 rural
Dayton, was electrocuted
Wednesday wh1le usmg a11
electric hm dryer to dry his
car alter washmg the vehicle

After 6-l Win

Amencan League
Detrod
Balt1more
Boston
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee

return to Cmcmnall for an
exammallon by Reds team
physician Dr George Ballou
Reds Manager Sparky An·
derson sa 1d he will not start
Nolan agam until after the All
Star break, g1vmg him at least
eight days of rest

Reds Take Break

(All Tomes EDT)

St

Cleve at Ch1cago n1ght

Attention

All Star Tilt

By Un1ted Press International
Nat10na I league
East

!Only ~ames scheduled)

Drawing

Nolan To Miss

STANDINGS

1

DUBLIN
(UP I)
Muhammad Ail plans a bner
res t before returmng to the
gymnasiUm to prepare for a
fall heavyweight date with
Floyd Patterson
'I've got to shake off thiS
head cold before I ca n thmk of
puttmg on the gloves agam, •
Ah said shor tly after stoppmg
AI Blue ' Lewis of Detrmt m
the 11th round here Wednesday
mght
Ah, 30, boxed with feet of
clay In the scheduled 12·
rounder at Croke Park He did
not diSplay the fastest feet in
the heavyweight divisiOn but
elected to fight at close
quarters for most of the bout
The crowd of 20,000, which
Included IriSh Premier Jack
Lynch, was dtsappomted at not
seemg a vmtage Ah performance
Ah came close to stoppmg
the fight m the flfth round when
he decked the 29·year-old
Lewis w1 th a left-nght combmatiOn to the head
Lewis survived and soaked
up punishment lor another five
rounds but the lOth signalled
the begmnmg of the end as Ali
hlt his opponent wtth every
shot In his armory LewiS
returned to hiS corner on there."
wobbly legs
Sensmg the end was near,
Ah came out dancmg ln the
lith and a straight left had
Lewis going Referee Lew
Eskin stepped in and called 1
halt at one mmute, 15 llecondl
of the round
Ali pafd tribute to Lewis for
givmg him one of hiS IQUghest
workouts
"He hurt me wJth a couple of
shols while he showed just why
all the top men have avoided
him I'd rate him m the tGp
five," he 118id.
Ali, who gave away a1x
pounds at 217~. recorded hill
38th victory in 39 starts It wu
his seventh wm since his 10118 to
Joe Frazier for the undisputed
heavyweight championship in
March, 1971 Lewis IS now 28-i
in 31 bouts
Despite his loas he gained a
measure of conaolalton in the
fact that his purse ol $40,000
was the biggest of hts
11:00 UNnL 1:30
professional career
.....,ttn•¢ ..
Ali eared n:;o,ooo for his
mght's work

'

Me1gs !mal run came 10 the
seventh .. 11en M1ck Ash led off
w1th a double and scored 011
Johnny Baird's one-out smgle
to left
Kayser star led on the hill for
New HaHn and was relieved
by RICk Hesson 10 the fourth
Kevm Camp pitched one out 10
the SIXth and all the seventh
frame They combmed for four
slnk eou ls and four walks
Hesson was charged with the
loss In Kayser s three mmngs,
Me1gs managed JUSt three hils
and no runs
Other hitters besides these
menttoned m the scormg were
McK10ney with a second
s10gle Rick Ash with a second
smgle and Perry had a double
w1th hiS smgle
Hillers for New Haven were
Brett Hart With two s10gles and
Randy Clark aod Mike Lewis
each a smgle
Coach George Nesselroad s
Meigs club Is 17 9-1 on the year
fhey play Lancaster Saturday
at II a m on Troutwem F1eld
In Athens m District tour
nament play All Me1gs fans
players and managers hope tu
recetve as much suppor t as
possible m district play
Everybody "ho can make It
to Athens. get up there
Saturday and watch top fli ght
baseball for free o
New Haven 000 000 00- 0 4 5
Meigs
000 064 Ox- 11 16 1
Kayser, Hesson (LP) ( 4)
Camp (6) and Lewis Van
Matre, Perry (WP) (41, Lee (71
and Dixon Ash (7)
Game called after seven and
a half IDOJngs by mutual
agreement Umpires, Homer
Sm1 th plate, Charley Marshall
and Jimmy Joe Hemsley
bases

~BASEBALL

Pappas m the SIXth He took
second on an mfleld out and
came home when Bobby Tolan
singles up the m1ddle Tony
Perez brought 10 the second
run of the mmng with a smgle
Perez doubled m another run
m the eighth mnmg and that
was ali for Pappa&amp; Steve
Harrulton came on m relief
Grunsley got hiS second hit
of the day tn the mnth IMfng
and later scored on a sacrifice
fly Tolan doubled home the
last run of the game
The Reds took a break today
and then moved on to Pitts·
burgh for a weekend series
with the Pirates, starting
Fnday mght
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!) -A new
world record for two year-old
geldmgs was set Wednesday
mght at Scioto Downs as To R1
Boy won the featured eighth
race m I 09 2-0 The previous
record - set m 1957 by Corsican - was 1 59 4-5
To R1 Boy paid $4 60 $2 20
and $2 20
Steady Airliner was second
followed by C B Toro
Mm1 Blaze and Little Time
combmed for a dally double
payoff of $310 60
The 5 097 fans wagered
$237,655

BUILDING
CON
SUMER
CON
FIDENCE
w1lh
courteous serv1ce and
q!\l,al,ty products at
fair pnces - that's
our a1m, at R1zer 011
Co

See
Uncle

Frank
or Uncle
John Now

Resurrectlon Slte
Many people m Jerusalem
are of the behef that the
resurrechon of the dead will
take place m the Valley of
Kidron a hallowed burial
grou nd for Chmllans Jews
and Moslems just outstde the
walls of the city

Our
Service

WE'll

Cool .It
FOR YOU!

100 REWARD

1

For Information lead111g to
the Arrest &amp; Con vtction of
anyone vandahzmg or
stealing property owned by
any member of the Tri·
County Automobtle Dealers
Assoctallon

GIVE AHOur DON'T PDiliJTE
e~

By Hunter...
WE'RE11ERE
TO SERVE YOU!

7-BLADE
20" FANS
4-BLADE

By Fasco
4-BLADE
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MEIGS
INN
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•

MOORE'S
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992·2148

•'

.

�ffi".,..

•-The Datly Sentill&lt;'l, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 20 1972

•

.,....,1,,,r~.~w~z·

GLOBAL VIEW

~Tube

Look What's Up Mr.. Nixon's Sleeve Now
Ill II\\ CliUMLE\

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Fo1 etgn stt att.'g\ pl ovldt"s tht&gt; 1azzamatazz 111 P1 ~st
dent Nixon s Ieelection campaign And a VIetnam break
through would be a llmlle~ If achieved
But NIXon has undei wav a SCIIes of economic sleepe1'
which could p1 ov1de a Sundav punch by electiOn day
None of these has the glam01 of Chma Russia m a
VIetnam selllement lndividuall) the1 ma) get few head
hues But then cumulative effect could mean an econom1
I ambling ugh! along !his fall 111 1cal 01 de1 s and even
gt eater prospects
The pattem can be seentn the new ag1eement by which
Moscow Will buy $750 million m g1 ams these next tin ee
years-and prospects thiS orde1 Will be mcreased
A maJoi purpose of Secreta1 1 of State Wilham Roge1 s
VISit to East Em ope was to set the stage for Increased
shipments of fa1 m goods- pumanly to Yugoslavia and
Poland
A top pnonl} m the upcommg 11 aM talks with Japan
Is to sell Tokyo on buymg $100 million 01 so a yea1 more
m Ameucan products A sales hst has been prepared
A boost of say $100 million a vea1 m sales to Pekmg
Is m the talkmg stage And If D1 Hem v K1ssmger IS as

succes~tu l

ht:•H as 111 8o ntt ul Ins olhtJ hiu:s the fusl
l~su ll s should b&lt;glll lo show llelo1&lt; tl&lt;•ciJon day Ahrady
tiieJe sa ICjlOJied b11•aklluou~h on )l'l s.olcs and hopes
101 cotton tobacco seeds and ~ ~ ams
But we may mel ell haw• hooked at the llp ol the Ice
bet~ rf agtecment can bl made on sellhng Moscow s
WOJ!d Wa1 II debts to !he Umted Stales 1f Export Impo1 t
Bank and other credits can be a11 anged and If U S ex
poo t Iules a1 e slackened
What 1s bemg talked about JS a senes of mui!Imllhon
dolla1 contracts for U S technolog1 backed by US loaps
w1th much of the repavment m lluss1an productiOn from
1

those mvestmenfs

Take some cu11 en! negotiations It IS understood one
ma101 concern 1s wmkang toward a conltact on a $160
million wood pulp plan! to be paid 1m 111 la1 ge measu1 e
by the plant s output
Two Ameman compames IepOJiedly have Russian
letteJ s of mtent on $58 million m cont1 acts to supply turn
kev plants to make tableware and othe1 Items
Anothe1 American hrm IS sa1d to have landed a SIO
million contract to design the woJid s lar~e st found1 y
to suppl y the mammoth Kama Rive, truck plant the
Russians a1 e buiidmg U S comoames are compehng
for an expected $200 m1lllon 1n tJ ~ m~rh• POJtlr\mPnt the

~

By Helen and Sue BoHel
FASHION 'NOTS" FROM A MALE
Sue and Helen
I am JUSt back from a California vacation and I have to say
something that doesn't sync w1th a college jliiUor - very male
I saw more female bare backs than I really wanted to see this
summer
Why IS It that gtrls and women who shouldn't, ptck up on new
styles first? (You saw the shortest skirts on Old Falknees• and
Droopyhips gets herself up m hot pants )
But back to the subJect - backless, braless dresses held up
by one little strap at the neck All I've gotto say ts
Halter tops not for dame who flops 1 - HARVEY
Harvey
Your fashiOn "not" duly noted Here's another
Backless-straps only for fatless backs -HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear Rap
I'm not mto drugs but I like to know what's gomg on Lately
I've heard about two new ones sunshine and sopors Are they
replacmg pot? - CURIOUS BUT NOT SAMPLING

'

Dear CBNS
"Sunshme" IS acid, said by pushers to be a supenor type of
LSD - satd by a former drug user fnend to be Dangerous
unpredictable -wtth LSD, you never know whtch trip will mess
up your mmd
'Sopors" are downers non'barbiturate sleepmg p11ls
(Methaqualone) Accordmg to a recent wu-e release, sopors are a
new fad at summer music feshvals and they're bolter seUers
than pot They produce a floating, out of It" sensation, which
can usually be slept off ( but not always) Habitually used with
alcohol, they may cause senous bram damage -RAP
P S Here's a letter we hesttaled to prmt until we cheeked 11
out With a former user who says these reactions are possible -Ill
ISolated cases-if the JOillt (sometimes not pot but parsley) Is
soaked 10 strong hallucmogemc chenucals, such as THC and
STP
It m1ght never happen to you - but 1t COULD'

I

'

EDITORIAL

McGovern Needs
Winning Formula

The

Oat~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ec:lttor
PtJbl•shed daly except
Saturday by The Oh o Valley
Publ•!&gt;h 1n9 Company
111

CotJrt

St

Pomeroy

OhiO

45769 Bus•ness Olf•cP Phone
992 215 6 Ed tonal Phone 992

+++

Dear Rap
Tbts IS not a cop-&lt;Jut but a plea to anyone who has ever
thought about trymg drugs DON'T' Too many things can go
wrong, even With supposedly harmless mariJuana
My fnend got me some grass from a dealer off the street We
dido t know It had been miXed With somethmg It was my fu-st
try, and I'll never be qwte physically right agam It did
something to part of my bram and doctors don't give me much
hope
Here's what happens I never know when It will start up, but
I'll go blind for several hours Then the numbness starts m my
legs and works its way mto my face and arms I can't walk or
feel I've choked on my own sabva because I couldn't lee! to
swallow, and I've come close to swallowmg my tongue I've seen
my husband break down and cry because there wasn't anything
he could do but hold my arms down so I couldn't tear at myself
when I get a wild flash-back Once I broke my hand from
poundmg on the waU I've retched and VOJJUted and wanted to
die I've trembled and cried and screamed until I've passed out
Sure, thiS 1s that "one-111-a-nullion" chance But as long as
there are street drugs, it can happen Don't take It' And lf you
find tune, stop and pray for me, please - SOMEONE WHO
KNOWS

Sen George McGovern s amaz mg th1 ee year JOurne}
1157
from pohtfcal obscunty to national prom10ence 1s far
Second class postage pad ar
from completed
Pomeroy Oh o
Nat•ona l advert s.•nQ
It IS one thm g-a It hough no small teat - to have
repreHntattve
Bott.nel lt
snatched the leadership of the Democratic party out of
Gallagher In c 12 East 42nd
the hands of the old pros and to have apparently begun a
St New York Ctfy New York
Subscr~p lton
rates
De
fundamental reshapmg of the party mto a broad coalition
I vered by carr.er where
of youths and mmont1es and wa1 opponents and assorted
available 50 cents per week
new and old leftists
By Motor Route where carrter
serv ce not avatlable
One
It Will be quite another thmg howeve1 to translate the
month
51
1S
By
mat!
•n
Oh•O
superb orgamzallon and hard work and enthusiasm of his
and W Va One year 51 A 00
supporters, which enabled hom to wm pnmary afte1 pn
S111. months $7 25
Three
months S4 so SuMcr•pl•on
mary this spnng, mto a wmnmg formula that will gam
pr1ce 1nc ludes Sunclay T mes
the coveted grand pnze on Nov 7
Sent nel
It remams to be seen whether George McGovem IS co1
rect m behevmg as he stated m a Lofe magazme mter
view, that I am movmg woth an advance guard that the
ma)onty of AmeiiCan people are ready to rally around
For one thmg despite his meteonc me McGovern re
mams an unknown quanllty m the mmds of that maJority
he hopes to rallY, I This IS even more true 10 the case of
his Spuo who ? runmng mate Sen Thomas F Eagleton
Q-What was !he !JI!e of
of MISSOUri I
Regardless of what hap Wilham A!ten Wlute &lt; most
pens here people like me /umuus edltorzal?
The latest poll by the Hams orgamzallon found McGov
are gomg to own the party A-ln 1896 White wrote an
ern trailing President Nixon by a 12-pomt margm m a
10 1976
three way race 145 to 33 per cent! and by 16 pomts m a
editonal entitled
What s
two-way race I54 to 38 per centl
- Mtchae/ A Rappeport 34 the Matter with Kansas?
u d~ l e ga t e t" the Demo rh1 s made h1m famous over
More sigmficantly 11 was also found that McGovern had
mght
craLTc Cmwentwn
slipped surpnsmgly m certam areas For mstance the
number of voters who gave him cred it for bemg an early
opponent of the VIetnam war and who considered him a
fighter for tax reform was smaller than 1t had been m
May
But t e most stnkmg reversa l was that more votersnot fewer- than m May now thmk McGovern has too
extreme liberal VIews '
Much of thiS, of course may be due not to thmgs Me
Govern himself has said but what others have said he has
said or have satd m his name
Actually , 11 Is not George McGovern who IS the worn
some unknown quanllty to many people (after all how
far out can the soft spoken son of a m1mster from South
llv BRUCE BIOSSAT
Dakota be? ) It Is the Ideological company he keeps- or
MIAMI BEACH (NEAl
rather the compa ny that seems to ha ve been attracted
to him
The 1972 Democratic convention had a tot of good and
new thmgs about 11 What 11 d1d not have was elecll ICily
It was, for example not an msp1rmg sight when a crowd
and excitement and a truly umfymg spmt
•
of youths demandmg a clanficahon or a statement by
him on VIetnam forced a confrontation with him 10 his
I have more to compare 1t with than do most observers
M1am1 Beach hotel headquarters and drowned h1m out
s1nce I have seen all the conventions m both parlles from
With shouts of "AbortiOn' Amnesty' MariJuana'
1940 on Th1s was by all odds one of the dullest
Such emotiOn-charged words could be as fatal to Me
Sen George McGovern was the clea1 choice of the dele
Govern, and as unfairly so as the slogan Rum Roman
gates, but their cheers for h1m were frail compared to the
Ism and RebeUwn ' was to Republican candidate James
sou nds that filled other halls m other hmes for Franklin
G Blame m 1884
Roosevelt and Wendell Wlllkie and Dwight Eisenhower
and John F j{ennedy
Yet strangely, McGovern's acceptance speech h1s first
opportumty to address the American public as the pres1
One delegate who was for McGovern all the way tned
d~ntial nommee of the Democratic party as well as to
to put his finger on the m1ssmg quahty As he sees It
begm the healing process of the nfts w1thm that party
affection for him as a man IS not the dommant thmg. He
was delivered m the wee hours when most of Amenca
IS perceived as an mstrument of protest a vehicle bear
was asleep
mg their concerns over the ISSues
This may be remembe1 ed as the first blunder by a can
The view makes sense It woulrl help to explam why the
dtdate m the 1972 campatgn
cheers ll&gt;Ually had a disembodied air about them and
why fm all Its McGovern diCtated discipline the assem
Nevertheless those who blithely nred1ct a Nixon walk
blage here always seemed less like a conventiOn than JUSt
away fn November may be m fo1 .orne sw pnses Much
a collection of people-a kmd of pohllcal Woodstock
of the percentage·pomt difference between him and Me
Govern ls stmply a recogmtlon gap and IS bound to shnnk
Former Sen Eugene McCarthy who can mix sharp
Not only that, but any man who has shOwn himself to
observatiOn With hos ftip md1fference forecast
be a fighter like George McGovern has can be counted on
This conventiOn IS not gomg to end It 1s JUS( gomg to
to make a real race of 1t
be gone

Thoughts

QUICK QUIZ

BRUCE BIOSSAT

McGovern More
Symbol than Man

A Kind of
Double-Salety
NORTH
• 75

20

(D)

¥AKJ654 3
• 94
.85

lUST
• QI02
¥Q1098
• J 108
oi&gt;J 73
SOUTH

EAST
• J963

¥Vood
• Q6 53 2
.Q964

• AK84

• 72
t AK7
• A K 102
Both vulnerable

\\est

J.

North

East

South

Pass

6NT

II\ Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Readers of Dumas Will re
c.lll that D Artagnan was the
.1c•atest swordsman 10
h ance Readers of thiS col
umn also know him as the
best bndge player of the
day Here we hod him cross
1ng swords at the bridge
table With the wily Roche·
fOil
D Artagnan's Jump to s1x
uo 11 ump was typical of h1s
lite style Porthos his part·
11e1 '" bndge and all other
act JVIlles was not much of
a card player and D Artag
nan want«d ~o.r jake , full
cha t ge
, ""
D Artagnan won the open

mg lead and saw that h1s
no II ump slam would make
taSI!y unless East held all
tour hearts The safety play
to Ruard agamst fmdmg all
four m Rochefort's hand
I Rochefort was West J would
be to play low from dummy
after West followed With the
eight, mne or 10 but the
wily Rochefort played the
queen
D Artagnan started to play
dummy s ace and claim
seven but paused to reflect
that Rochefort was not com
pletely reliable m matters
concernmg queens Then he
let the queen hold the trick o
I don t know why I play
bndge with
groaned
Rochefort
might have
some chance With swords '
{NEWSPAPlll: ENTIII'liSl 4S1N 1

The boddmg has been
Wesl

Pass
Pass

1•+

North

2
3•

You South,

East

Pass

Pass
Pass

hold

.AJ543 ¥K97S3 tv01d.QI01
Q-Who was the last US
I'' eszde~tt to have served 111 What do you do now'
A- Bid four clubs. You are
the Amencan Revo!utwn'
headmr
for • slam somewhere
A-Andrew Jackson who
and
w•nl
more 1nform~tion.
JOined the mounted militia

of South Ca1 alma at the age
of 13

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner goes on to r1ve
clubs What do you do now'

And so 1t was, havmg consumed pnme television time
for four straight days to parade tts dreartest events and
put on Its relabvely more mteresttng happemngs from
near midmght to the small hours or the mornmg
It can be argued that we observers stmply were disap·
pomted because our predictions of chaos here never came
to pass There may be somethmg to that Yet the alter
native to chaos need not be smothermg dullness
Good thmgs ought not to be unexc1tmg and, as mdtcated
at the outset, there were good thmgs
Weeks ago a McGovern aide told me that the senator
and h1s managers were not gomg to pull too ttght a rem
on h1s hundreds of delegates They were judged to be
umquely mdlVIdual and mdependcnt, and the feehng was
It would be wrong to clamp down It would violate the
whole sp1nt of openness fostered by the Democratic
party"s ~ forms-reforms which helped nommate Me
Govern
In actual fact, however, the discipline applied by him
was very tough It was used with great precision m parha·
mentary maneuvers It was used to keep damagm~ thln~s
like the abortion tssue out of the platform t "Don t do It
you II hurt the candidate " said one young woman dele
gate to an a borhon advocate )
~1rm orders came down too, on the matter of decorum
- no demonstrations no boomg ' So the umquely ind1
vidual delegates who made 1t here never got their chance
to be umquely mdiVIdual
Cunously some of the sting was taken out of all this
by the strong but good-humored way m whtch National
Chairman Lawrence 0 B~1en ran the proceedings His
little proddmgs hke "come on gang" had more zest than
anyth10g the delegates d1d all week
They were admirably serlous responsive on the Issues,
responsibly attentive to duty through the most gruelling
all night sessiOns But they somehow contrived to make
savmg the nation for liberty and justice seem JUSt about
the most umnsp1rmg enferpnse on eat th

By Paul Crpbtree

One thing, though, we disagree with
A special award IS being gtven to the player who gel8 the
greatest total vote There'll be no great quarrel with the 1972
honoree in the National League, JohMy Bench or the great Hank
Aaron
UBench won (we don'tknowaswewrttethiS), he had to beat
out some fine catchers, principally the Pirates' Manny
Sangutllen And Aaron IS competing agalnst some great outfielders and deserves recognition, notwithstanding a mediocre
year for Hanunem' Hank

3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 20.1972

Legion Bats Perk Up in
Regular Season Finale
Rick Van Maire, Stan Perry
and Steve Lee, the three aces of
the Meigs American Legion
pltchmg staff combmed to fire
a four-hit shutout while the1r
supporting cast backed them
with 16 hits as Meigs ran away
with an 11.() wm over Ne11
Haven Wednesday 10 the
regular season fmale
Van Maire started on the hill
and went the ftrst three, fan
mng two walkmg one and
allowmg to hits Perry hurled
the middle three frames
fanmng seven, walking none
and giVIng up two hits Steve

Lee toed the mound for the
!mal two frames g1vmg up no
hits, fanmng two, and walkmg
one
Perry (6-11 was credited with
the wm
Meigs broke 10to the scor10g
column 111 the siXth with six
runs
Meigs got mto the scormg
column 111 the fifth w1th SIX
runs Kevm Sheets led off with
a walk, Lou McKmney smgled,
and with one out Tom Cooke
doubled home one run Roger
DIXon smgled home two more,
Perry followed with a smgl•,

and hot-hitting Steve Dunfee
doubled home two more Dave
Boyd cracked a two-vut double
to plate Dunfee
The Meigs Count1ans broke 11
wide open m the siXth with four
more as R Ash led off with a
smgle, Cooke was hit by a
p1tch and Dixon sacnfiCed
both runners ahead With two
out Dunfee tnpled to right,
scormg two more runs Howie
Taylor followed with a smgle,
sconng Dunfee and Boyd
smacked another long double
to left Taylor crossmg the
plate

+++
But what 1f you're the only really top-notcher at one posttion
- and still not an AU-star among All-stars'
For example, at third base, the Cardlnals' Joe Torre IS
runnmg away from the pack, and is a flne athlete (the 1971
batting champ J But looking around the league, the current crop
of thu-d basemen IS ordinary, to say the least
HoustOn's Doug Rader IS probably the second choice, wlth a
dandy glove and a lot of powl:r, but a very low batting average
And after Rader, who' Chlcago's Ron Santo or the Met's Jim
FregoSI, both hampered by injury• Rlchie Hebner, who hasn't
really gotten untracked this season wtth the Pirates•
I'm glad to see Bench and Aaron get11118 the best of the voting
- and I am not really opposed to honoring the top vote11etter In
some way
But it would seem a shame if a man of even Jesser abilltles
than Joe Torre, who's a fme athlete, should nose out certified
Hall-&lt;Jf-Famers just because he's the best of a mediocre lot In
some future year

+++

Pass
Pass
Pass
Openmli{ lead-t J

lou "

Talk

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE

The New Balance of Power

::::ow

We're coming up to the All.Star break m'the baseball season,
and the work of Organized Baseball and the Gillette people in
returnlllg the voting to.the fans Is getting better every year.
The days when fans could stuff the baUot box and put practically a whole squad on the field (as Reds' fans dld ln 1!1:!6) has
been eliminated Tbe 1972 squads aren't going to please
everyone, but the teams that take the field at Atlanta for the
summer NBC spectacular are gomg to be reasonably
representative
When the players were plcking the squads, we always had
the feeling the AII.Star voting was a little like a beauty contest,
favormg !be gnys who weren't the scrappiest competitors, and
also giving an edge to a player who had been around, wlth three
or four teams

1\usSJans nwv l&gt;uy for thai !roundly and for a share m the
$1 2 milium II uck Jllanl 1lselr
In the llniterl States, meanwhile consumer buymj! IS on
the upsw ml( Major mventory bu1ld-ups are expected to
sta1 t by September Government spendmg IS set to con
&lt; enll ate heavily on the first f1ve months of thiS new
f~&lt;tal yea1 July through November
Thou~h une111ployment conllnues h1~h employment "
e&lt; pccted to grow at a thumpm~ pace m the next several
months I(IVIO~ hope to those who don't have JObs H.-her
S'&gt;elal Secu11ty payments have been enacted mto law
The admmistJ all on IS push10g hard to Ret a new GI edu
catwn b1H through Congress before this session ends The
new h1~her rates a1 e exuected to lure more veterans mto
school this fall a small but Important assist to the un•
emnlovment outlook
The Nixon men expect these economic olusses, one after
another m thump thumo thump order, to create a
swm~ of opllm1sm that will lead to even more consumer
spendmg more mdustnal hmng and greater mdustr1al
mvestment m new machmes
Nixon IS known to believe the state of the economy
m 1960 lost him the election m his race agamst John
Kennedy He IS not about to let this happen aga1n 1! he
can prevent II

Generation Rap

·;;;;;: .. ::

ON THE TV DIAL Wbat do you do when a TV film 18 too
short• Do a complete Instant replay - if you're running
"Lemonade" on Hollywood TV Theatre. See It (twice) on wr.rutTV, 9 p.m West Virginia GOP Chainnan Thomas Potter and
Democratic chalnnan Bill Watson talk With Paul Nuchims at 10
on WMlJL.TV
Movies "Conspirators," 11 30p m, and "Veils of Bagdad,"
4 p.m F'l;iday, both WBNS.TV

tournament play T~e T•gers
scored three runs m the first
mmng on a· walk, error and htts
b) Steve Baird and Roger
Spauldmg The Padres cut the
lead by platmg a run on a bases
loaded walk to Dellinger
Cheshire wrapped 11 up with
two runs 111 the second, three
runs m the third and two 10 the
siXth Claude Cornelius and
Spauldmg paced the attack
w1th two hits each Glendon
Vmson and Kent Shawver had

Linescores
Marshall (91 and
Amencan League
Humphrey Mancha! Moffott
Calof
000 020 ooo- 2 8 1 !91 and Rader WP- Torrez 110
Boston
030 032 oox- 8 11 0 51 LP- Moff1tt (1 I) HRsWr.ght Messersm1th (61 and Baoley (8th) S10glelon (7 th 1
Torborg. McGlothen (3 2) and
Fosk LP- Wr.ghl (10 51 HRs- New York
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0
Fosk I l51h)
Los Ang
000 300 20x- 5 9 1
By Unrted Press lnternattonal

M10n
010 000 21»- 3 11 3
021 703 oox- 13 12 0
NV
Perry Slr.ckland (31, Gran
ger (~) Gebhard (41. LaRoche
171 and Borgmann Keklch
Bebne (7) and Munson WPKek•ch (9 8) LP-Perry (7 9)
HRs- Biomberg (7 lhl White
I 5th I

Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
THURSDAY, JULY20
6 oo - News Weather, Sports 3 4 8 10, 15, Truth or Con seq 6
I Dream of Jeannie 13 Sesame St 20 Ha!hayoga 33
6 30 - NBCNewsl 4 15 CBSNews8 10 FolkGultar33
7 00 - Dick Van Dyke 4 News, Weather 6 10 What's My Line
8 Course of Our Times 33 Big Red Jubilee 15 Elec Co 20.
Lers Make A Deal3 Wild Wild Wesll3
7 30 - Hollywood Squares3 Ill See You In Court 4 To Tell The
Truth 6 Chapler 33 Dragnet 8 Wild Kingdom 10 Mr
Rogers 20
8 oo - NBCAdven!ureTheatrel 4 15 Al lasSml!hand Jones6
13 My World and Welcome To II 8 Jean Shepherds
America 20, 33, Ask The Mayor 10
8 30 - My Three Sons 8 Jazz Sel20 33
9 oo - Longstreet 6 13 lronsodes 3 15 Hollywood Television
Theatre 20 Jl Mov1e 'The Cornie" 8 10
10 00 - Dean Martin 3, 4 15 News Weather Sports 20, O..en
Marshall Counselor at Law 6 13 Paul Nuchlms 33
II 00 - News, Weather Sports J 4, 6 8 10, 13 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4 IS Dick Cavett 6 Movie The AJ&gt;
poln!ment' 8 Movie The Conspirators 10 Movie The
Hanging Tree 13 I 00 - News Weather 4
1 JO - Local News 13
FRIDAY, JULY 21
6 00 - Sunrose Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 1~Farmllme 10 6 2D-Farm Report 13 6 25 - Paul
Harvey 13 6 25- Blue Ridge Quartet 13
6 JO- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8 Public Affairs 10
6 45-CorncobReporl3 6 55-Rocky&amp; Bullwlnkle 13
7 00 - ToctayJ 4,15 CBSNews8,10 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St
33
a 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Lucl's Toyshop 10, Peyton Place 13
Romper Room 8 Phil Donahue 15 Mr Rogers 33 Timmy
and Lassie 6 What Every Woman Wants to Know J
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3 Phil Donahue 8 Electric Co JJ
Mike Douglas 6 One Life to Live 13
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15 Lucille Ball 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
Hathayoga JJ
10 30- Concentration 3, 15 Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13 My
Three Sons 10, In School Instruction 33 Beverly Hillbill ies 8
Love American Style 6
'
10 45 - Carol DeVall 6
II 00 - Family Affair a, 10, Love America" Style 13 Sale of the
Century 3, 15 Communique 6
11 30- Hollywood Squares 4 IS Love of Live 8 Bew1tched6 13
,

The !mal two Gallipolis Little
League teams were eltmma ted
from further compellhon
Wednesday mght 111 the 14th
Annual Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament
Cheshire's powerful Tigers
defeated the Galhpohs Padres,
11·1, New Raven's Reds edged
the Galhpohs Red Sox 3-1, and
Hometown, W Va , bombed
Pomeroy's Pirates, 19·2
Cheshire cpa lured Its second
straight tournament victory to
remam unbeaten m league and

Torrez,

Seaver

Television Log

Sesl!lme St. 20

Cheshire Romps

'

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
Local News 10 News 13 , Contact a
12 30 - l W's Game 3, 15, Search for Tomorrow a 10 Split
Second6 12 55-NBCNewsJ, IS Electric Co 33
I 00 - News l All My Children 6 13 Divorce Court 8 Green
Acres 10, International Cookbook 33, Watch Your Child 15
1 JO - On A Match 3, 4 15, Lers Make A Deal6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Sewing Skills 33
2 00 - Days of Our Lives J, ~. 15, Newlywed Game 13 VIrginia
Graham 6 Love Is Splendored Thing 8, 10 Societies tn
Transition JJ
2 JO- Doctors 3 ~ 15, Dating Game IJ Guiding Light a 10
Evening at Pops JJ
' '
l 00 - Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospita l 6 13 Secret
Storm 8 10
' '
3 30- Return to Peyton Pla~J. 4,15, Edge of Nlghta 10, One
Life to Live 6, Off The Record 33 Jell's Collie IJ
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St Jl, Fllntstones
13 Huckleberry Hound 6 Batman a. Movie 'The Veils of
Bagdad'
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- Green Acres 3 I Love Lucy 6 VIrginian a Password 13,
Merv Griffin ~. Andy Griffith 15
5 00 - It Takes A Thief 4 Wagon Train J Maverick 13, Dick
Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers JJ1 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Electric Co 33
6 00 - News3, ~. 8,10, 15, NBC Ntws8,10, Truth or Conseq 6 1
Dream of Jeannie 13, Sesame St 20, Hathayoga 33
'
6 30-News3,4, 6,8.10,13,15, FrenchChefll.
7 00- Dick Van Dyke 4, News 6, 10. What's My Line 8, Eloc
Co 20, Tom J.nes 15, Porter Wagner 3, Wild, Wild West 13
Masterpiece Th'!lltre 33
'
7 30 - To Tell The Truth.6 Dragneta, Adam-12 J 1 Dream of
Jeanntu, Mr Rogers 201 Governor and J J 10
8 00- Washington Week In Preview 20, Brady Bunch 6 IJ
O'Hara U S Treasury a, Book Beat 33, Sandford and sOn 31'
Baseball 4
8 30- Partridge Family 6, 13, Movie "Far From the Maddlnft
Crowd," 3, 15, Betwoen Words 20, 33
•
9 00- Room 2:12 6, 13, Movie "Duel In the Jungle," a, Movie 10
9 30-0ddCouple6,13, DevootYoung20,33
10 oo- LD'IeAmerlcan Slvle6, 131 News 20, Doln' ltl3
10 30 - Dr Simon Locke j Dr In the House 4, Rolli"; on River
15
11 oo- News J. 4, 6, 8, 10 tl, 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Movie "Travis
Logan, D A " 8, Movie ' Horrible Dr Hlchcock.'' tO Movie
"Wake of the Red Witch " 13
'
1 00- Roller Derby4, Movle"Unknown lsland"IO
1 30 - News 13
2 110 - News 4

Sadeck1

(7)

and

Grote Osteen I 10 7) and s,ms
LP- Seaver I 12 6)
t 11 onmngs)
Ph1 la
200 000 000 01- 3 13 o
SD
110 000 000 I»- 2 7 l
Carlton I 136) and Bateman
Kirby (6 101 and Kendall

SIL
200130000-680
Hous
000 000 ooo- 0 8 1
Chicago
000 100 02D- 3 7 1
Wise I 10 9) and S1mmons
Detroot
000 000 11 (1.;-,2 7 I D~erker, Culver (5) York (6)
Wood,
Forsler (8) and Ray (8) and Edwords LPHerrmann Timmerman Scher
Dierker (8 6) HR- S•mmons
man 171 Holler !91 and (8th)
Freehan WP- Wood ( 14 101
LP- Scherman (3 11 HRs- All
100 110 OOD- 3 92
Reichardt 2 (6th &amp; 7th I
Pott
11 1 200 30x- 8 13 0
Noekro Upshwa (7 ) Mclain
Cleve
040 000 002- 6 12 0 181 and Williams
Br.les
KC
000 010 000-- 1 7 I Walker (7) and Sangulllen WP
Perry I 16 7) and Fosse - Brlle (9 31 LP- Niekro 19 81
Drago Fotzmorrls (21 Hedlund HRs- Aaron I20th) Alley llrdl
(6) Burgme1er (8) and Korkpa
!rock LP- Drago 17 10)
Bait
100 001 OOD- 2 11 I
Texas
100 000 02x- 3 52
Cuellar ta a1 and Etchebar
ren Paul Panther (71 Plna
Cuellar (8 ~I and tlchebarren
Paul Panther 171 Plna 181 and
Bill in gs WP- Panther (5 51
HR- Ford (8th)

Oak

000 021 60&lt;&gt;- 9 13 0
Mllw
000 003 003- 6 10 1
Odom Fingers (9) and
Duncan Reynolds Bell (61
Colborn (7) Sanders t8) and
Felske WP- Odom (9 21 LPBell (0 11 HRs-Brown (Jrdl
Ferraro (2nd)

BRAVES SIDELINE CARTY
ATLANTA
(UP I)Outfielder Rico Carty, who has
been plagued by mjur1es
throughout his maJor league
baseball career, was placed on
the 21-&lt;lay disabled liSt Wednesday by the Atlanta Braves
Carty, who missed one
season because of tuberculosis
and parts of several others
with various injunes, was
replaced on the roster by
Larvell Blanks, a 22:year-&lt;Jid
infielder called up from the
Braves' Savannah farm club

National League
Clncl
001 002 012- 6 11 o
Chicago
000 010 ooo- 1 so
Grimsley ta 31 and Bench
Pappas Phoebus (8), McGonn
(8) Hamilton (9), Hands (91
and Hundley LP- Pappas (6 61 INJURED RACER MENDING
ANN ARBOR, M1ch (UPI)HR- Beckert (Jrdl
Auto racer Merle BetMontreal
101 000 001- 3 8 I tenhausen, who suffered the
San Fran
100 001 ooo- 2 5 1 loss of hiS nght ann m a crash
durlng the Michigan 200 last
Mojar League Leaders
By United Press International Sunday, was satd by doctors of
Le1d1ng Batters
the Burn Center of the
Nallonol League
University of Michigan
gobrhpct
Cedeno Hou 75 300 58 105 350 Medical Center Wednesday to
Mota, L/.
66 213 36 72 338 be "ln good splr1ts "
Williams Chi 86 J.45 57 116 336 A spokesman satd BettenSngllen,Pitt 80 307 36 100 326 hausen Is resting comfortably
Brock, St L 84 358 44 115 321
Garr, All
7a 317 50 101 319 and has been out of bed for
Oliver, Pitt
84 343 50 109 318 short periods
Atou, St L
77 295 36 93 J1S
Lee SO
68 251 35 79 315
Clmnte Pitt 62 252 46 78 310
Amertcan League
PBA LEADERS
gobr hpct
Schnblum KC 71 239 36 79 Jll AKRON, Ohio (UP!)Pinlella, KC aJ 322 50 !OJ 320 Nelson Burton Jr 's etghth·
Otis, J&lt;C
82 313 41 97 310 place fmlsh in tbe Houston
Fisk, Bos
66 225 46 69 307
Rudl, Ook
81 331 53 100 302 Sertoma Open last week
Carew. Mlnn a2 JOB JJ 92 2" enabled the St Lows bowler to
Rojas KC
81 28'1 32 86 298 increase hfs lead m the
Berry Cal 1 59 208 2A 61 293
I
Allen, Chi
85 298 51 a7 292 Professlona Bowlers AssoOIIver, Cal
85 336 35 97 28'1 elation money.wJnnlng race
Homo Runs
PBA figures announced
Natlanol League Bench, Cln Wednesday showed that
24, Williams, Chi Colbert, SD
and Kingman. SF 21. Aaron. Burton has earned _..,935 In
All and May, Hou ~o
prize money Don Johnson of
Amorlcon Loaguo • Allen, Chi Akron Ohio ranks second wJth
19 Epstein and Jackson, Ook
'
18, Cash, Del 17, Fisk, Bos 15 $3'1,513 and Gus hampo of
Runs Bitted tn
Endicott, NY., Is third wtth
Natla.. t League Bench, Cln $34 216
71, Stargell, Pitt 66, May, Hou
'
and Colbert, SO 62, Oliver, Pill
59
American Leagu1: Allen Chi
61, Jackson, Ook 53, Mayberry,
KC 52, Bando and Epstein, Ook

BARBS

ol'l

Pitching
Nltlo .. l LHgut Nolan, Cln
13 2 Carlton, Phll13 6, Seaver,
NY 12 6i Jenkins, Chi 12 8,
Sutton, LA and Cleveland, St L
115
Amerlcon Lug" Lollch,
Del 16 6, Perry, Clev 16-7,
Wood, Chi 1&gt;4-10, Palmer. Ball
tl-4, Huntw, Olk 12 4, Holtz
m.,, 011 12-7.

By PHIL PASTORET
The boss ts trying to find
aut who painted "suggestton
box" on the Incinerator door

• • •

After workmg so you
can get away, you usually

spend a two weak vacatwn

'"e on lv hils off Kelly
Wmebrenner ond Dallas Sayre
New Haven s Reds pounded
out four hits m the third mnmg
to snap a 11 lie en route to a 3 I
victory over the Gallipolis lied
Sox
The 10mng featured smgles
By K Goldsberry and B Powe
ell, double by H Rose and a
tr1ple by J Collier Collier led
tl1e w10ners with t11o h1ts
Gallipolis' on ly run came on a
triple by B Wo) an and an
error
Collectmg h1 ts for the Red
Sox "ere Woyan, D Steele and
J McKenzie
Hometown plated 11 runs 10
the fifth mmng 10 routmg
Pomeroy s Pirates 19·2
Young led the w10ners w1th
four hits m four trips
Qualls Roach Couch and
Milch had Pomeroy's four hits
Tomght, Centerville and 1110
Grande will tangle at 6 p m ,
Pomeroy's Tigers and the Pt
Pleasant K1wams Club will
meet at 7 15 p m and Ad
dav1lle s Jets meet Ripley
Damel Boone at 8 30 p m

Ali ·Awl ill
Rest For
,

Next Go

Il
j

Debeve

P1ttsbvrgh
New York
Sl LOUIS
Ch1cago
Montreal
Ph1ladelph1a

w I pet gb
54 31 635
47 36 566 6
.... 40 524 9lf 2
45 42 517 10
37 46 446 16
30 55 353 24
West
w

WILMINGTON Ohw (UP! )
- Cmc1nnat1 Bengals coach
Paul Brown has a lot of talent
to choose from for h1s
linebackers this season, all of
11hom have been speed) In
dnlls this week
Starling linebackers nght
now are Bill Bergey Ken
Avery and Bill Peterson, but at
least five others are batllmg
for spots on the team They
mclude second-year man Doug
Adams from OhiO State, Bob
Bruggere, obtamed from San
Diego, Jim LeClair of North
Dakota Jim Edwards of
Morehead and Mark Debevc of
Ohio State
'All our guys are around 4 B
m the 40, ' Brown sa1d ' And
that's pretty good, too Bill
Bergey at 4 7 was the fastest •
Debevc, here for a second
trial With the Bengals, has
drawn Brown's attention
'Debevc really pops people
m the dnlls , ' he said. "He's
hke Avery - the same kmd of
player "
Peterson was a starter on the
nght side m 1969, but dropped
out of the lineup in 1970 wben
10Jured Avery took over the
pos11Ion then and kept 11
The hnebacking coach IS
Vmce Costello, who Brown
says IS ' like a mother duck
With a whole bunch of
ducklings"
"Costello IS really llckled
w1 th his group," Brown satd
"There IS real camaraderte

Buffet

Luncheon

CIN CINNATI WPIJ - A shoulder InJUry that IS
"more aggravating than pamful" Will keep Gary
Nolan, the Cmcmnab Reds' ace righthander, out of
next Tuesday's All-Star game

I

pel

gb

Los Angeles
Atlanta

53 32
49 40

624
551

45 40 529
39 48 448

San Fran

39 51

433

Nolan, whose 13·2 record IS
the
best 10 the NatiOnal
8
15
League, pitched Tuesda)
W h agamsl the Chicago Cubs, but
21
left the game m the s1xth mnmg
because of a muscle spasm m
his shoulder
He later departed the team to

Cmcmnat 1
Houston

San Doego

6

32 53 376

Wednesday's Results

C1ncmnat1 6 Ch1 1
Montreal 3 San Fran 2

P1tt 8 Atlanta 3 n•ght
St L 6 Houston 0 noght

Ph1la 3 S D 2 11 mn n1ght
Los Ang 5 New York 0 n1ghf
Today's Probable P1tchers
Lou1s {San torml 4 7) at
Atlanta IHardon 2 0) 805 p m
New York (Gentry 4 6) at Los
Angeles ( Oownmg 55) 11 p m
(Only games schedu led)
Frtday's Games
Cmc1nnafl at P fl n1ght
St Lou1s at All n1ght
Chtcago at Houston n1ght
Ph1la at Los Ang n•ght
Mont at San D1ego n1ght
New York at San Fran

East

Oakland

w I pet g b
48 36 571
41 37 560 I
41 39 513 5
39 41 488 7
35 48 422 1212
33 49 402 14
West
wlpclgb
54 31 635

Ch cago
46 40 535 8112
M1nnesota
42 40 512 101 2
Kansas City
43 42 506 11
Cailforn1a
38 49 437 17
Texas
36 50 419 18 11
Wednesdays Results
New York 13 M1nnesota 3
Boston 8 Cal1fornta 2
Cleve 6 Kan Co ly I noght
Texas 3 Bait 2 ntght
Oak 9 Milwaukee 6 n1ght
Ch1cago 3 Det 2 n1ght
Today's Probable P1tchers

(All Tomes EDT)
Ball1more I Palmer 13 4) a!
Kansas Coly I Nelson 2 4) 8 30
pm
Detrool iSalyback 3 31 at
Texas I (Broberg 5 71 8 30 p m
M 1nnesota (Woodson 6 8) at

Molwaukee !Ryerson I I) 2 30
pm
Calofornoa IMay 3 7) at New
Y ark ( Peterson 8 11 ) 7 30 p m

Oakland I Holtzman 12 7 and
Blue 2 51 at Boston !Patton 7 8

and Peters 1 1)

pm

tw 1 n1gh t

5

Fnday's Games
Mmn at Mi lwaukee ntght

Ball at Kansas Coly noght

Cal of a! N Y tw , n•ght

Oakland at Boston n ght
Detro1t at Texas n1ght

IIIITERIIIATIOIIIAL LEAGUE

Un1ted Press International
W L Pet GB
Char leston
50 35 588
Lou1svllle
.49 39 557 21 2
Ttdewater
Rochester

46 45 505
.45 46 495

7
8

R1chmond

43 46 483

9

Penmsula

36 54 400 16 12

Toledo
Syracuse

44 45 494 8
44 47 484 9

Wednesday s Results
Charleston 8 T1dewater 6
Lou 1Sv 1lle 4 Toledo 1
Syracuse 8 Pemnsula 5

11

mnmgs
R1chmond 7 Rochester 4

INDIANS SWAP PITCHERS
CLEVELAND (UPI )-Vmce
Colbert, who had a 1·7 record
and a 4 50 earned run average
m 19 games for the Oeveland
Indians thiS season, was op.
lloned Wednesday on 24-hour
recall to Portland m the Pacific
Coast League
The Indians recalled Steve
Dunnmg, who was 4-7 With
Portland, to take Colbert s
place on their roster

CHICAGO (UPI I - The Cm·
cmnah Reds have looked lnl·
press1ve this season but It
hasn t been agamst the Chicago Cubs
Although the Reds hold a six
game edge 10 the Nat10nal
League West ~nd won two of
the three games here this
week, the Cubs still won eight
or their 12 games agamst the
Reds Ihis season
The teams closed out the1r
season with each other Wed
nesday mght as Cmcmnall won
6-I
Ross Gnmsley got his eighth
wm by tossmg a five hitter for
the Reds The one run the Cubs
got was a homer by Glenn Becke rt m the fifth mnmg
Cmcmna\1 was held scoreless
through the f1rst two 1nnmgs,
breakmg loose for one run on
two smgles and two back-tohack sacnflce flies m the third
Pete Rose scored the goahead run after gett10g on base
by bemg hit bv pitcher Milt
·~,; •:,::::::::•:•:,:•:•:•::;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::

CLINIC SET UP
ATHENS - A cli nic
designed pnmarfly for
coaches 10 southeastern Ohio
who are mterested In lear·
nfng more a bout athletic
injunes and the techniques
ln rehabilitation and taping
Is planned for August 4 and 5
al Ohio University
Sklp Vosler, the head
trainer at Ohio University
and a certified athletlc
trainer, will direct tbe cllnlc.
Hfs staff wfll be comprised of
the coaching, trafnlng and
medical slaff of Ohfo
UniverSity A fee of $15
covers tuition materials and
The
coffee
breaks
registration deadlfne Is July
24 Further Information may
be obtained by calling 59f.
4907 or writing the
Workshops Office, 301
Tupper Hall, Athens

WOODSY

OWL

HOOTS

Lea\le torests
and par\&lt;S c\ean
...or c\eaner.

GARY NOLAN

DRYER KILLS MAN
DAYTON Ohw ( UPI )
Willard Shepherd, 32 rural
Dayton, was electrocuted
Wednesday wh1le usmg a11
electric hm dryer to dry his
car alter washmg the vehicle

After 6-l Win

Amencan League
Detrod
Balt1more
Boston
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee

return to Cmcmnall for an
exammallon by Reds team
physician Dr George Ballou
Reds Manager Sparky An·
derson sa 1d he will not start
Nolan agam until after the All
Star break, g1vmg him at least
eight days of rest

Reds Take Break

(All Tomes EDT)

St

Cleve at Ch1cago n1ght

Attention

All Star Tilt

By Un1ted Press International
Nat10na I league
East

!Only ~ames scheduled)

Drawing

Nolan To Miss

STANDINGS

1

DUBLIN
(UP I)
Muhammad Ail plans a bner
res t before returmng to the
gymnasiUm to prepare for a
fall heavyweight date with
Floyd Patterson
'I've got to shake off thiS
head cold before I ca n thmk of
puttmg on the gloves agam, •
Ah said shor tly after stoppmg
AI Blue ' Lewis of Detrmt m
the 11th round here Wednesday
mght
Ah, 30, boxed with feet of
clay In the scheduled 12·
rounder at Croke Park He did
not diSplay the fastest feet in
the heavyweight divisiOn but
elected to fight at close
quarters for most of the bout
The crowd of 20,000, which
Included IriSh Premier Jack
Lynch, was dtsappomted at not
seemg a vmtage Ah performance
Ah came close to stoppmg
the fight m the flfth round when
he decked the 29·year-old
Lewis w1 th a left-nght combmatiOn to the head
Lewis survived and soaked
up punishment lor another five
rounds but the lOth signalled
the begmnmg of the end as Ali
hlt his opponent wtth every
shot In his armory LewiS
returned to hiS corner on there."
wobbly legs
Sensmg the end was near,
Ah came out dancmg ln the
lith and a straight left had
Lewis going Referee Lew
Eskin stepped in and called 1
halt at one mmute, 15 llecondl
of the round
Ali pafd tribute to Lewis for
givmg him one of hiS IQUghest
workouts
"He hurt me wJth a couple of
shols while he showed just why
all the top men have avoided
him I'd rate him m the tGp
five," he 118id.
Ali, who gave away a1x
pounds at 217~. recorded hill
38th victory in 39 starts It wu
his seventh wm since his 10118 to
Joe Frazier for the undisputed
heavyweight championship in
March, 1971 Lewis IS now 28-i
in 31 bouts
Despite his loas he gained a
measure of conaolalton in the
fact that his purse ol $40,000
was the biggest of hts
11:00 UNnL 1:30
professional career
.....,ttn•¢ ..
Ali eared n:;o,ooo for his
mght's work

'

Me1gs !mal run came 10 the
seventh .. 11en M1ck Ash led off
w1th a double and scored 011
Johnny Baird's one-out smgle
to left
Kayser star led on the hill for
New HaHn and was relieved
by RICk Hesson 10 the fourth
Kevm Camp pitched one out 10
the SIXth and all the seventh
frame They combmed for four
slnk eou ls and four walks
Hesson was charged with the
loss In Kayser s three mmngs,
Me1gs managed JUSt three hils
and no runs
Other hitters besides these
menttoned m the scormg were
McK10ney with a second
s10gle Rick Ash with a second
smgle and Perry had a double
w1th hiS smgle
Hillers for New Haven were
Brett Hart With two s10gles and
Randy Clark aod Mike Lewis
each a smgle
Coach George Nesselroad s
Meigs club Is 17 9-1 on the year
fhey play Lancaster Saturday
at II a m on Troutwem F1eld
In Athens m District tour
nament play All Me1gs fans
players and managers hope tu
recetve as much suppor t as
possible m district play
Everybody "ho can make It
to Athens. get up there
Saturday and watch top fli ght
baseball for free o
New Haven 000 000 00- 0 4 5
Meigs
000 064 Ox- 11 16 1
Kayser, Hesson (LP) ( 4)
Camp (6) and Lewis Van
Matre, Perry (WP) (41, Lee (71
and Dixon Ash (7)
Game called after seven and
a half IDOJngs by mutual
agreement Umpires, Homer
Sm1 th plate, Charley Marshall
and Jimmy Joe Hemsley
bases

~BASEBALL

Pappas m the SIXth He took
second on an mfleld out and
came home when Bobby Tolan
singles up the m1ddle Tony
Perez brought 10 the second
run of the mmng with a smgle
Perez doubled m another run
m the eighth mnmg and that
was ali for Pappa&amp; Steve
Harrulton came on m relief
Grunsley got hiS second hit
of the day tn the mnth IMfng
and later scored on a sacrifice
fly Tolan doubled home the
last run of the game
The Reds took a break today
and then moved on to Pitts·
burgh for a weekend series
with the Pirates, starting
Fnday mght
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!) -A new
world record for two year-old
geldmgs was set Wednesday
mght at Scioto Downs as To R1
Boy won the featured eighth
race m I 09 2-0 The previous
record - set m 1957 by Corsican - was 1 59 4-5
To R1 Boy paid $4 60 $2 20
and $2 20
Steady Airliner was second
followed by C B Toro
Mm1 Blaze and Little Time
combmed for a dally double
payoff of $310 60
The 5 097 fans wagered
$237,655

BUILDING
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Many people m Jerusalem
are of the behef that the
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Kidron a hallowed burial
grou nd for Chmllans Jews
and Moslems just outstde the
walls of the city

Our
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100 REWARD

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For Information lead111g to
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anyone vandahzmg or
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PHONE 992·2148

•'

.

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 20, 1972
4- Tht&gt; l?_ail)' Sentinel,

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 20, 1972

s~~&gt;.-::::».&amp;~-:::;::=:m:~~~:=:::;:;:::;::$:=:=:::=:=:=::::::

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ofMajor Hill Commanding

Homecoming
Church Sunday

Cards Blank Houston 6-01

. .ers Shut Out
D0 dg
·
k
M
t
5
o
ew
or
e
S
•
N Y
.

By· FRED McMANE
VPI Sports Writer
While most pitchers dread
the thought ·of drawing New
York Mets' ace Tom Seaver as
an opponent, Claude Osteen of
the Los Angeles Dodgers
set'ms to relish it.
Osteen's lifetime winning
percentage is only slightly
above .500 (154-153), but the
Dodger lefty has been looking
like a Hall of Farner in his
matchups with the Mets' ace
righthander this season.
Osteen, who blanked Seaver
and the Mets at New York 10
days ago, turned the trick
again 'at Los Angeles Wed.nesday night by stopping the
Mets on six hits,~- It was only
Seaver's fourth career loss in 17
decisions against the Dodgers
and his first loss at Dodger

Stadium since Sept. 28, t967.
Oddly, Osteen has been the
winner in three of those four
Dodger victories over Seaver
and all three have been
shutouts.
In other National League
action, Cincinnati downed Chicago, 6-1, Montreal edged San
Francisco, 3-2, Pittsburgh
topped Atlanta, S-3, St. Louis
blanked Houston, 6-0, and
Philadelphia nipped San Diego,
3-2, kl II innings.
The Xankees routed Minnesota, 13-3, Boston beat
California,
8-2,
Cleveland
defeated
Kansas
City, 6-1, Texas nipped Baltimore, 3-2, Oakland outsl\Jgged
Milwaukee, ~. and Chicago
edged Detroit, 3-2, in American
League games.
The Reds notched their

eighthvictoryinn;negamesas
l;loss Grimsley (lh1) tossed a
fivehittcr. Tony Perez and
Bobby Tolan each drove in two
runs.
Ken Singleton led off the
nin th inning with a long homer

Ordinarily, you'd figure all
these problems have Jackie
Robinson down, but if that's the
way you figure, you're 100 per
cent wrong.
The 53-year-{))d ex-Dodger
second baseman isn't the least
bit down.
He demonstrated that Wednesday when he was honored
here by the U.S. Virgin Islands
government for developing opportunities down through the
years for black athletes.
Battling Adversity
Former ballplayers like Joe
Black, Bobby Thomson, Ralph
Branca, Sandy Amoros, Valmy
Thomas, Clyde Sukeforth and
Buck Leonard all had some
fine words to say about him.
Black and Thomas were
particularly eloquent.
But later, after he had
thanked all those who came up
and congratulated him, Jackie
Robinson was the most
eloquent of all.
Certainly his latest adversity
hasn 'tput any crimp in his lifestyle. If ' anything, he exudes
more cheer, more good feeling,
than ever before.
How does he do it?
"Well," he says, laughing, "1
take the bitter with the sweet,
you know. What are we going to
do? We have some problems,
but if we sit and mope about
them, we're not going to cure
them. That will only compound
them. So I follow my doctor 's

Auto Thieves in
Ohio are Warned
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is making it unsafe to
steal a car in Ohio.
An all"'ut effort is underway
by the Highway Patrol to bring
a halt to the ever-increasing
problem of auto theft, says
Patrol Superintendent Colonel
Robert M. Chiaramonte.
The Colonel explained thai,
regardless of the reason for
stopping any vehicle on Ohio's
highways, an immediate check
is made through computerized
law enforcement information
files to learn if the vehicle is
reported stolen or wanted for
any other reason. _
Within seconds, the officer
has the information on the
vehicle, most times before he
URGE CHANGES
COl •n.tBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Democratic party 's
delegate selection reform
committee announced Wed·
nesday it would urge
elimination of a state constitutional requirement for
of
individual
listing
presidential delegate names on
primary ballots.

has even stopped it. Presently,
Ohio Patrol officers are
checking over 70,000 vehicles
each month .
Each time a patrolman Is
successful in recovering a
stolen car and making an
apprehension, a red lightning
bolt is attached to the left door
of his patrol car. "Now the
public can tell how many 'hits'
the officer has made by the
number of red lightning bolts
on his car," the Colonel said.
''This crime which is costing
Ohio citizens over $90 million
per year in stolen property and
increased insurance rates,
must be stopped,'' Cot.
Chiaramonte said.

0

Torrez won his lOth game ::::
against five losses. Bob Bailey :;::

Today S

at~.~:~~~~- f~~~\~e s~~~i 1~ Sport
and Rich Hebner each drove in ··
two runs as the Pirates routed f
the Braves. Nelson Briles went

six innings to gain his ninth
triumph in 12 decisions. Hank
Aaron hit his 20th homer of the
season and the 659th of his
career for the Braves. Aaron's
homer tied him with Babe Ruth
for the most homers hit by a
player for one club.
Ted Simmons hit a three-run
homer and Rick Wise (10-9) .
pitched an eight-hitter as the
Cardinals downed the Astros.
Wise allowed only one runner
beyond second base.
Steve Carlton , who was

orders and try to get the
problems that I have eliminated."
Chance Of Surgery
Robinson has "very little
vision" in his right eye. His left
one also has given him trouble
but is much better now, he
says.
"The doctor feels my right
eye is getting better and he
feels if there is some progress
it's very encouraging. But if it
. doesn 't get better we'll have to
try to cure the leakage we have
in the blood vessel, and if we
can clear that, then they will
operate. If it's successful, I'll
see again; if not, then I may
lose the vision in the right eye.
But hopefully it's going to work
out."
It wouldn't be quite accurate
to say Robinson never becomes
depressed .
"There are limes when I get
tremendously depressed," he
says, "but when you have the
kind of family that! have, and
the love and respect which
come from my children it's
beautiful. The fact I have such
a great family is of great help
to me. We have grown closer
and closer since our tragedy
concerning our son and that
has been a tremendous help."
Baseball's Debt To Blacks
As far as baseball goes,
Robinson says what boll)ered
him until now is "the way it
reached out to old managers
who had been fired for incompetence and brought them
hack when there were guys like
Frank Robinson, who has
made fantastic contributions
and wants to manage, and
others like Jim Gilliam, Elston
Howard or even a Willie Mays
or an Ernie Banks, all guys
who have shown their ability.)
think it's tragic none of them
have been given a chance
because if it hadn 't been for the
blacks, there's no telling where
baseball would be today. "
Robinson admits he would've
liked to manage.
Once, but no more.
"I .even had an offer from
Montreal," he says. "!think it
in 1955 and they asked me
if I'd be interested. Even
though it wasn't an official
thing, it was encouraging and I
said certainly I'd be interested.
But no other offer ever was
forthcoming. I don't want 1o
manage now. l've got too many
other problems to even think
about it "

:;;::

The current Yankees are a
:;;; far cry from the American

Parade

li!

AN
·
By MILTON RICHM
~:~:
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI )- Early Wynn, with that jaw of his stuck out
and that five o'clock shadow, is supposed to have been so mean
and ornery when he was pitching, he'd knock down his own
mother.

Like so many of our products advertised today, this one doesn't
live up to the popular claim.
Certainly Early Wynn was forever knitting his brow and
scowling out there on the mound. He battled for those 300 major
league victories which resulted in his election to Baseball's Hall
of Fame at Cooperstown where he'll he installed in a few weeks.
Certainly he never invited anybody with a hat in his hand to dig in
against him up at home phite, but Wynn never was the hard nose
people thought he was.
Nor has he changed awhole lot now managing the Orlando
Twins in the Class A Florida State League .
,
A Fatherly Approach
He keeps the kids with Orlando on -their toes and doesn 't
pussyfoot around if he sees their hair getting too long, but for the
most part, Wynn regards each one of his young ballplayers and
talkstohimasiftheboywerehisownson.
Actually, Early Wynn 's only son, Joe Early, was a fine
baseball prospect.
He could pitch or play the infield, had good power, a fine pair of
hands and ran better than his old man ever did.
Joe Early was thmking about a possible career in professional
baseball when he was 17, whi ch was a dozen years ago, so
naturally his father had a tittle talk with him.
"He was undecided whether to play ball or not, but I didn 't
push him," says Wynn .
"I talked with him the same way I talk with any of my rookie
players. I told him baseball is the finest way l know of to make a
living. A mighty good living. You 're doing something you like
and you meet many people you otherwise wouldn't. People like
the president and vice president of the United States as well as
movie stars and the highest executives in industry. I tried to
explain the fine pension benefits to my son if he reached the
major leagues. l said there was no guarantee h'e'd reach the
majors, of course, but I also told him nothing was impossible.
And I mean nothing. Why, only a little while back I got a Jetter
from President Nixon congratulating me on my election to the
Hall of Fame. This has got to be rewarding to a guy like me who
used to pick peanuts and cotton on a farm in Alabama."
Early Wynn's son didn't go into baseball, deciding to join the
Marines instead. He served with them four years and now works
in a metal machine shop.
His father, now 52, is working with other kids.
HeMadeThemRuo
Wynn pitched for the Senators, Indians and White Sox over a
22-year period. He posted his 301lth win with Cleveland in 1983 and
then became the Tribe's pitching coach.
One day during spring training he ordered all the Cleveland
pitchers to finish their drill by doing 20 laps around the ballpark.
Luis Tiant, one of the pitchers, ducked behind tbe outfield fence
and giggled over the fa ct he had out-witted Wynn and didn't have
to run. What he didn 't know was that Wynn had spotted him but
hadn't let on.
When the other Cleveland pitchers completed their 20 laps,
completely pooped and nearly keeling over in the process, Wynn
nushed out Tiant from behind the fence and marched the.chunky
Cohan righthander in front of his associates.
"Gentlemen," Wynn addressed them all, "you now will do
another 20 laps, and for this added little pleasure, you may thank
Mr. Luis Tiant."
Tiant's eyeballs went up into his head. He could feel the hot
hostile gaze of the others on him. He was absolutely panic

~:~~ :~s~ ~:o~r~~~

inning. Angel Mangual's tworun triple and Reggie ·
Jackson's tllree-run double
highlighted the rally . The
Brewers had tied the score at 33 on Ollie Brown's three-run
homer in the sixth.
Gaylord Perry, acquired last
winter for Sam McDowell,
pitched a seven-hitter for his
16th victory for the Indians,
who scored four runs in the
second inning with the help of a
throwing error by pitcher Dick
Drago. Perry joined Mickey
Lolich of the Tigers as a 16game winner and is a threat to
finish the season in the 25victory class. Frank Duffy,
also acquired in the McDowell
deal, led the Indians' 12-hit
attack with a triple, double and
single.
The Red Sox ran their
winning streak to four games
as Carlton Fisk hit a three-run
homer and Tommy Harper and
Doug Griffin each drove in two
runs with a double. Fisk's 15th
homer of the season came with
Carl Yastrzemski and Reggie

Smith aboard in the fifth inning
and increased the Red Sox'
lead' to 6-3. Lynn McGlothen
went the distance for the Red
Sox for his third win while
Clyde Wright suffered the loss
for the Angels.
Rick Reichardt's two homers
drove in the White Sox' three
runs and enabled Wilbur Wood
to post his 14th win against 10
losses. Wood was yanked alter
giving up a double lo Ed Brinkman and a walk to open the
eighth and Terry Forster
stopped the Tigers on one hit
the rest of the way. Fred
&amp;herman was the loser.

through 1964 and a generation
of New York fans has grown up
wondering why some people
call tbem "Bronx Bombers."
The Yankees usually scrounge
for runs these days and the
home run no longer is their
trademark.
But Wednesday, with a
Rich Billings' two-run single
crowd of 19,029 looking on in
in
the eighth inning, following
amazement, the Yankees
two
walks and an error, lifted
erupted with an "old time"
the Rangers to their victory
seven-run
fourth
uuung,
over
the Orioles. The Rangers
hammered out two homers and
scored
their other run in the
a triple among their 12 hits and
fourth on Ted Ford's homer as
walloped the Twins, 13-3. It was
they dealt Mike Cuellar his
enough to recall former
eighth
loss against eight vicYankeeownerJacobRuppert's
tories. Bob Grich and Brooks
definition of a relaxing afRobinson
had two hits each for
ternoon at the Stadium: "to
the
Orioles.
watch thii Yankees score seven
runs in the first inning and then
gradually pull away from their
rivals ."
Ron Blomberg and Roy ::!=tZ~ !!!iut~ · rcZ!Z~ ~
u E.. _....
~~- - - White hit homers , Bobby
Murcerweighed in with a triple
and the Yankees sent 12 batters
to the plate in the seven-run
fourth to take a !0-l lead.
Errors by Danny Thompson
and Harmon Killebrew combined with two walks and five
hits to produce the big inning.
Mike Kekich allowed three
runs and 10 hits in 6 1-3 innings
to pick up his ninth win with
late-inning relief help from
Fred Beene. Jim Perry, tagged
for three runs in 2 2-3 innings,
suffered his ninth loss for the
Twins.
The Oakland Athletics
defeated the · Milwaukee
Brewers, ~. the Cleveland
Indians beat the Kansas City
Royals, 6-1 , the Boston Red Sox
clubbed the California Angels,
11-2, the Chicago White Sox
shaded the Detroit Tigers, 3-2,
and the Texas Rangers edged
the Baltimore Orioles, 3-2, in
other American League
Games.
1n the Natiorial League, it
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
was Cincinnati 6 Chicago 1,
Montreal 3 San Francisco 2,
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
Pittsburgh 8 Atlanta 3, St.
Louis 6 Houston 0, Los Angeles
S New York 0 and Philadelphia
5 San Diego 2.
Jolu! Odom received credit
for his ninth win of the season
with ninth-inning relief belp
from Roland Fingers after the '
Athletics bombed the Brewers ~~~
for six runs in the seventh
-'

CHECK ACCEPTED - Miss Olive Rose, Athens County Treasurer, accepts a check for
$498,583.58 from Frank J. Shay, Athens District Manager for Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company. This second half property tax payment, made Thursday, (July 20) brings
the total property taxes paid by the company to Athens County this year to $1,002,852.67 - the
first year this toal has reached a million dollars. Columbus and Southern has been the co unty 's
leading taxpayer since 1950. The Company's 1972 taxes are more than double the amount paid
by the second leading taxpayer in Athens County .

Alger Ethic Just Ain't So
By Patricia McCormack
NEW CANAAN, Conn. (UP I)
- Horatio Alger, an all-American hero, left a great ethicwork hard, give it all you have
and you can get to be president.
·" It just ain 't so," says Dr.
Charles P. Neumann, medical
director of Silver Hill Foundation , a private psychiatric
hospital in New Canaan . In the
area it's known as the Gold
Coast hospital. Its patients,
who are called "guests" include celebrities and, more and
more, corporate executives
who are alcoholics. Some are
there because they swallowed
Alger's words hook, line and
sinker.
What is unusu al about Silver
Hill : All admissions are voluntary and there are no locks. Dr.
Neumann thinks voluntary admissions have a lot to do with
the success Silver Hill has had
in the treatment of alcoholics.
Four hundred have gone
through the treatment, which
includes psychotherapy. One
out of two over the last seven
years had mana ged to be free
of alcoholism. That is a cure
rate of 50 per cent-compared
to the usual 20 or 30 per cent.
Experience wi\11. U~e. corpqrate executive and ' oth er upr)er
class alcoholics at Silver Hill
has led Dr. Neumann and his

the

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No ship ever came in unless someone first launched
it.

• • •

REFRIGERATORS
· FREEZERS
WASHERS - D~ YERS
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TELEVISION - STEREOS

With the school buses
not running, many a kid
is attending t humb er
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to alcoholi sm.

Their needs are met by a
staff of nine attending psychiatrists, two on the psychological
staff . 41 consulting doctors, 49
nurses (who do not wear
un iforms )
and
other
therapists. There are 185 on the
payroll at Silver Hill- all
dedicated to making the guests
feel that Uley ,~re in a place..of
warmth.
,
The Alcholics Anonymous
program is a key part of the
equipment Silver Hill guests
are given to cope with thei r
problem. This provides co nti n·
ui ty o.Ice they are discharged
to their homes and jobs.

NEWCANAAN, Conn. 1 UPI J
- Alcoholism is the na tion's
biggest hushed-up problem .
Authorities es tim ate about
nine million Americans are
alcoholics-1 .5 per cent of the
adult population . The National
Coun cil
on Alcoholism
estimates that one out of every
12 to IS drinkers in the nation
has alcoholism.
Alcoholism costs American
business alone about $6 to $8
billion,
according
to
authorities. This is double the
amount of time lost in a year by
all workers because of strikes.
What's worse, alcohol was a
factor in more than 25,000 of
the 50,000-plus fatal auto accidents last year. Alcoholism
shortens life, too . The life
expectancy of an alcoholic is
about 10 to 12 years less than
that of the average population,
according to the National

1.~------------------· Institute of Mental Health.

In Hardw11re"
•

PoMEROY.

•
The annual homecoming of
the Snuth Bethel United
Methodist Church at Silver
Ridge will be held Sunday
with Sunday School starting
at 9:15 a.m. and worship
service at 10 a.m. with Eldon
Young speaking. Singing will
be by the Bissell Brothers of
Chester, Mr. and Mrs .
Garrell Christy of Grol'e
City, and the South Bethel
Choir. There will be a basket
dinner at noon.
· The alternoon service will
begin at 2 p.m. with a song
fest featuring the above
singers and local talent.
Speaking in the afternoon
will be the Rev. Roy
Gearhart, Columbus. The
Rev. Jacob Lehman extends
an invitation to the public.

Hntg. District Corps
HUNTINGTON - Major 0 . of the Army Corps of
K. Hill has assumed hi s Eng ineers and related real

positi on ~s depu ty distr1ct
engineer , second in command,

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To Hike Meat Supplies
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Communist government of the
Soviet Union is offerin g
capitalist-style incentives to
farmers in its campaign to step
up meat production .
Snme phases of current So\1et policy, in fact, sound like
the directives had been written
by U.S. farm leaders who counte r criticism of high domestic
beef prices by insisting profitable cattle prices are needed to
ass ure an adeq uate supply.
Agriculture Secretary Earl
L. Butz, for example, told an
audience recently the "only
way to have more meat... is for
farmers and ran chers to be
able to make a reasonable
profit raising beef."
"Our economy operates on
the profit motive, not the loss
motive," Butz said.
In the Soviet Union, which
recently agreed to buy a minimum of $750 million worth of
U.S. grain over the next three
years to help fuel a livestock
expansion program, a report
by Agriculture Department
observers noted that profit

profitable to the (collective or
sla te) farm and attractive to ·
the worker," officials said in
an article in the current issue
of "Foreig n Agriculture." The
weekly magazine is published
by the Foreign Agricultural
Servi ce (FAS 1.
"Average gove rnment procurement prices paid to farm ers for livestock products appear to be two to three times
the comparable prices in the
United States and well above
prices in Western Europe,"lhe
article noted.
The incentives are part of a
five-year plan ,launched in 1971
to meet rising soviet consumer
demands. The plan is designed
to boost meat production 30 per
cent, milk by 21 per cent, and
eggs by 29 per cent.
In addition to "incentive
pricing" and imports of grain
to feed expa nded numbers of
livestock and poultry , the
report said the Soviet program
also includes:
- Plans to convert some general collective and state farms
into specialized livestock and
poultry operations by offering
long-term, low-mterest loans to

incentives are also being used . finance the conversion .
" An impressive incen tive - Creation
of
"inter·

and honus program is in effect collective" feeding centers for
to mak e livestock raising cattle , hogs "I'd sheep. These
:::.~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Ex-Ferguson
Aide Indicted
CO LUMBUS iU PIJ - Mrs.
Do1·o thy J. Taylor . 53, a former
aide to state Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson , has been i ndw ~d by
a Franklin Coun ty grand jury
on charges she attempted to
solicit $38,000 in bribes, il was
revealed Wednesday .
Mrs. Taylor was indicted in
co nnection wi th Ferguson ' s
inves ti gation into travel expenses submitted by former
Ohio
State
University
professor John C. Ullery .
Ferguson claims Ullery owes
the state $17,000 paid to him for
expenses to meetings the
auditor claims Ullery never
attended.
Mrs. Taylor surrendered a t
the Fran klin County sheriff's
office and was released on her
own recognizance.
She wa s char ged with
telephoning Ullery in Clear-

and said he did so because of an
alleged bribery attempt .
Mrs . Taylor called the
dismissal political. Her attorney, J . Gordon Peltier, was
head of the state Commerce
Department for the eight years
that former Gov . .James A.
Rhodes was in office .
McE lroy is a former
assistant to Rhodes and Ullery
is a close fri end of the former
governor .

Ferguson is a veteran of
Democ ratic politics.

Columbus' Landing ·
The first time Ch ri stopher Columbu s set foot on
the North American continent was when he landed in
Honduras m 1502. The lan d·
mg took place on his fourth
and last trip to the New
water, Fla . where he now lives World
and offering information from ~~------lliiilllillil
Ferg_uson 's files .
According to the indictment,
she asked for $16,000. The indictment also said on the next
day she co nta cted John
McElroy, Ullery's Columbus
attorney and offered him the
documents for $22,751.
McElroy told the Ohio Highway Patrol and she was
arrested when she came to his
office with the documents.
fo"E. 2nd'
Pomeroy
Ferguson fired Mrs. Taylor
Phone 992-5428

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es tate fum:tions , in central and
southeastern Oh io, eastern

fur th e Army Cor ps · of Kentucky, a portion of midEnginee rs IO&lt;::ated he re. He west ern Virginia , a small
succeeded M::t jur Julin R. Hill, portion of northwestern North
Jr.. deputy distric t engineer Cil r?lina, and all but the northsince July 1970, who is at- ern panhandle and northlending th e Comma nd and eastern port1 on of Wes t
General Sl&lt;!ff College at F'ort Virginia . The Huntington
Leavenwor th, Kan.
d1strict is part of the Corps'
The Corps of.En ginecrs plans Ohi o River Division .
and executes a llU:tJur mtlwnal
Pn or to joining the Hunwater resou rces dome stic lin~lon District, Major Hill
development program under se rved two to urs of duty in
national policies and direct1ves Vietnam with MACV Engineer
cst.1blished by the President Staff and as District Senior
and Congress.
Adv isor. He also has served in
The Huntingto n di strict is Ge rmany and Bolivia, South

1

6.84 ...

Ebersbach Hard1rare·
*

with mental and emotional
illnesses make up another bloc.
Still others include women and
men with mental and
emotional sicknesses unrelated

In 5 Gal. Lots·

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" Abstmence," says Dr. John

S. Tamerin , "is the beginning,
not the end , of treatment." Dr .
Tamerin , form erly a research
associa te at the National
Center for Prevention and
Control of Alcoholism, is Silver
Hill's research director.
He said covering up is the
cruelest thi ng anyo ne can do to

a lcoholi c. That IS a
hangover from the days when
alcoholism was considered a
moral weakness, a sin . Today
it is viewed as a treatable
illness.
The Treatment
The treatment at Silver Hill ,
in a capsule, is "getting to
know yourself. " Through the
group therapy and other
th era py (recreational. occupational ) the guests are helped to
see themselves and their
problems through vision unclouded by the haze of alcohol.
About 25 per cent of the
guests are sick with
alcoholism . Adolescents with
ar

SUPPLIE~

stricken .

"Weeen! " he pleaded. "What you try to do, get me keeled ?"
Early Wynn didn't relent by so much as one lap. He made
everybody go another 20.
But knock down his own mother?
Never.

associates to this belie: .
Affluence No Buffer
Despite the differences in
wealth and position, the upperdass alco holic genera ll y
drinks for the same reasons as
his less affluent brethren. Case
after case illustrates how affluence and high position are
no buffer against feelin gs of
inadequa cy, dependency
problems, anx iety , depression,
lonel mess, rage, repressed
sexuality and the multiplicity
of dynamics e~ident in the
drinking of upper-class
alcoholi cs.
In one report of 32 corporate
alcoholi cs, mean age 51. Dr.
Neumann and his co-workers
noted that the prob lem
drinking had been maintai ned
about 10 years before treatment beca me mandatory for
survival.
Many who enter Silver Hill
are on the road to detoxification-strivin g for abstinence
from alcholi c beverages.

PICNIC

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BARBS

I

pushingthe Philliespastthe
Padres. Carlton, who has lost
six , struck out eight and
boosted his major league
leading total to 195 while going
the distance for the 14th time.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Yankees, who
have put on many days for
their old-time stars, staged one
~~eg:v~a~o~~~~c!~ tri:~~ g::::::::;}&lt;'!&lt;':::::::::::::::·:;·:· ':·:':·::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::~~~~:&gt;:'&gt;\'1.':':1. ~~~sday for their old-time

Jackie Holds to Optimism
NEW YORK (UPI )-Jackie
Robinson, you'd figure, would
be down now. Way down.
The tragic death of his son in
an auto accident not that long
ago look a lot out of him.
• Gil Hodges' death and Roy
Campanella being stricken
again, coming one on top of the
other as they did, shook him up
tremendously also.
More recently, Jackie Robinson
discovered
added
trouble.
His eyes.
Due to diabetes, Robinson's
vision deteriorated recently to
the point where he was unable
lo drive his car and somebody
had to take him every day 1o
his office which he occupies as
president of Goodrich Associates Construction Co,
Unable To Read
Jackie Robinson would like
to read "The Boys of Swnmer," Roger Kahn's bestseller, because he's an integral
part of the book and it would
~ing back a lot of warm
nitnlorles of his days with the
old Brooklyn Dodgers.
But he's Wlable to.
"I can't read except very
close, and then tbe words kind
of go together and it's difficult," he says. "I have been
Wl&amp;ble to read 'The Boys of
Summer,' but I've gotten
tremendous thrills out of the
few pages my wife, Rachel, has
tieen able to read to me ."

trade;forWiscduringtheoff·
season, pitched 11 innings and
gained his 13th victory of the
year when Bill Robinson
doubled honie Denny Doyle
with two out in the lith,

Yankees, Like In Days 1
»~ 0£ Old, Explode For Win~

6,000
to
24,000 BTU

e
I

!',•••••:"'"

II •'" ' I " ' I" ' I IIJHII " I "'" '"
1
11 11 \1 RIMI\I ... I[\I I(}QII"" ;
o/11., I •••I • ll •lo[,h m ,

~~

He has received the Bronze
Star Medal; the Air Medal; the
Meritorious Service Medal ;
and the Combat Infantryman's
Badge.
Maj br Hill is a native of Ben
Lomond, Calif. He graduated
from the Uni ted States Military
Academy in 1958 with a
Bachelor oLScience degree. He
also holds a Master of Science
degree in civil engineering
from the University of
California, Berkeley, and is a
grad uate of the Armed Forces
Staff College, Norfolk.
He is married to the former
Harriet Hooper of Felton,

ROLLBACK ORDERED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Pittsburgh and Midway Coal
and Mining Co. was ordered
Wednesday by the ,Price
Com mission to reduce price
mcreases made in apparent
violation of the Economic
Stabilization Act. The action
was the larges t price rollback
ordered so far by the commission .

EARNINGS BEST
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!)
The Cooper Tire and Rubber
Co. reported today all time
record sales and earnings for
the first six months of the year.
Wayne B. Brewer, president
and chairman of the board
sa id earn ings were $2,138,999
or $1.05 per share on sales of
$65.7 million.

GEO. HALL IS BACK!

THE CYCLONIANS
KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB

i

Reserve District No. 4
' Slate No. 223X
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and ll&lt;lmestlc Subsidlaries, at the close of
business June 30, 1972, a state banking institution. organized and operaiiDC
under the banking laws of the State and a member of !be Federal Reserve
System. Published in accordance with a caD made by the Stale Banking
Authorities and by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS

Cash and due from hanks · - · - · - - • - •• - • - • ••• • $ 1,213,643.94
U.S. Treasury securities • • · • · - - - - · • - - - • - • - • 1,610,439.32
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations · · • - • • - • • • - • • • 303,740.88
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • - • • • 964,891.91
Other securities · - • · • . - - - - • • - • • • • • • • • 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • . - - • • - 750,000.00
Other loans . - - . • • - - - • • • •
• • • • 6,919,072.11
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing hank premises • • • • 453,544.80
Other assets . - • . • • . • - - - •
- • • • • - • 689.34
TOTAL ASSETS • • - · • • • - . - - - - • • • • • $12,237,022.30
LIABU..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • • • . . • • • . . ,.- • • • • - • $2,661,081.74
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - • - •• - - • • • - • - 7,976.922.12
Deposits of United Stales Government - • • • . • . • • . • 45,542.115
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - . - •• - ••• 258,869.44
Deposits of commercial banks • • • - • • • • • • • •
• 183.42
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • . • . - • • - • • . . • 48,922.35
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • - • - • • $10,99!,521.92
(a) Total demand deposits • · · • • • - • · $ 310!4,599.80
(b) Total time and savings deposits • - • • • $ 7,976,922.12 --==-.,.,..,.-=
Other liabilities • • - • • - . • • • - - • • 395,484.71
TOTAL .UABIUTIES • • • · · • • • • - • • • • - $11,387 11106.63
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • - ••• - • - - • . . • • • $ l1,026.96
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
- • • - $11,026.96
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total - • • • •
- ' 838,988.71
Common stock-total par value • - • - . .
• 300,000.00
No. shares authorized
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Surplus - - • • • • - • - • - - • - - • • • • • • •
400,000.00
Undivided profits - • • - - • • - • •
138,988.71
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
838,988.71
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • $12,237,022.30
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • • - • • • - - •• •• - - - • $11,013,083.74
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • - - - - - • • - - • • • - •• $ 8,133,027.71
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct aDd guaranteed; '
pledged to secure deposits and other llabilities
•• - $890,000.00
I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the aboVHIIJiled bank do he;..by declare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. .
Roger HyseD

w.

We, the undersigned directors, atteat the correctne58 of this report of
condition and declare thai it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
C. Wl)'lll! Swflber
: Fred W. Crow - D1ftcton
Thereoa Jail-

fi h•l hdtio&gt;ol hu"l'li

' '"""') oKIIU•I•b l.

~~~•••o o

tl! l ~ [' II~Jli"H o 1011... i'h ''"~' f\ )I.~IJIU lll l. &gt;'r.,~,lf ~ lfl.

•

~~~ :. :.:,~;', ~.~.~. ~~·~~~~.L • &gt;\llu•• l'&lt;~'ll.t"t"l i~·•~lt•Jk&gt;ft: ''"'

I

T'lltJ.SI't+D

I~A."'

Ca lif. They have three
children, Rebecca 9, Rowland 8
and Douglas 6. They will reside
he re at 501 Norway Ave.

huge fee dlots , following a
pattern used in the United
States, fatten stock raised by
nonspecialized general farms.
The " inter -co llectiv e"
operates as a cooperative, with
WITH THE FAMOUS INTERNATIOMAL ACT
profits distributed back to the
member farms.
- Creation
of
" intercollective" feed mixing plants
That have appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show .
to prepare complete rations
Hollywood Palace.
and specia l premixed feed
concentrates for livestock
They Will Appear At The
feeding.
- And purchase of highquality breeding stock ineluding over 300 U.S. bulls and
SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY - JULY 22
heifers, more than 100 British
-THREE SHOWsbulls, and nearly 1,000
Ca nadian cattle.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •...~.;.;.;.~.;.~

State of, Ohio County of Meigs ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 18th day of July, 1972.

•k'"l "'' '" m.

ll'llh '" ..... ...........

MAJOR HILL

llh' ~l~h" ~~~ lfl' t tll ~~ WlUII/~1 &lt;OO U.. tl

\

MaryP. YCJWII,NolllryPubUc
My Commission e:rplres July I, 1974.

'

.....

~ .

'l

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 20, 1972
4- Tht&gt; l?_ail)' Sentinel,

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 20, 1972

s~~&gt;.-::::».&amp;~-:::;::=:m:~~~:=:::;:;:::;::$:=:=:::=:=:=::::::

~;J$.§(.•P*·~~·#-:·."·:w.:x...:..;-J.::!..~..,*~*!il1~;:¢j·to:ee::'ll~:::::;:;:;:~::::::::::»m:~=::~t&gt;.\W~·:-om::::::-«=:--m~::m:, _

ofMajor Hill Commanding

Homecoming
Church Sunday

Cards Blank Houston 6-01

. .ers Shut Out
D0 dg
·
k
M
t
5
o
ew
or
e
S
•
N Y
.

By· FRED McMANE
VPI Sports Writer
While most pitchers dread
the thought ·of drawing New
York Mets' ace Tom Seaver as
an opponent, Claude Osteen of
the Los Angeles Dodgers
set'ms to relish it.
Osteen's lifetime winning
percentage is only slightly
above .500 (154-153), but the
Dodger lefty has been looking
like a Hall of Farner in his
matchups with the Mets' ace
righthander this season.
Osteen, who blanked Seaver
and the Mets at New York 10
days ago, turned the trick
again 'at Los Angeles Wed.nesday night by stopping the
Mets on six hits,~- It was only
Seaver's fourth career loss in 17
decisions against the Dodgers
and his first loss at Dodger

Stadium since Sept. 28, t967.
Oddly, Osteen has been the
winner in three of those four
Dodger victories over Seaver
and all three have been
shutouts.
In other National League
action, Cincinnati downed Chicago, 6-1, Montreal edged San
Francisco, 3-2, Pittsburgh
topped Atlanta, S-3, St. Louis
blanked Houston, 6-0, and
Philadelphia nipped San Diego,
3-2, kl II innings.
The Xankees routed Minnesota, 13-3, Boston beat
California,
8-2,
Cleveland
defeated
Kansas
City, 6-1, Texas nipped Baltimore, 3-2, Oakland outsl\Jgged
Milwaukee, ~. and Chicago
edged Detroit, 3-2, in American
League games.
The Reds notched their

eighthvictoryinn;negamesas
l;loss Grimsley (lh1) tossed a
fivehittcr. Tony Perez and
Bobby Tolan each drove in two
runs.
Ken Singleton led off the
nin th inning with a long homer

Ordinarily, you'd figure all
these problems have Jackie
Robinson down, but if that's the
way you figure, you're 100 per
cent wrong.
The 53-year-{))d ex-Dodger
second baseman isn't the least
bit down.
He demonstrated that Wednesday when he was honored
here by the U.S. Virgin Islands
government for developing opportunities down through the
years for black athletes.
Battling Adversity
Former ballplayers like Joe
Black, Bobby Thomson, Ralph
Branca, Sandy Amoros, Valmy
Thomas, Clyde Sukeforth and
Buck Leonard all had some
fine words to say about him.
Black and Thomas were
particularly eloquent.
But later, after he had
thanked all those who came up
and congratulated him, Jackie
Robinson was the most
eloquent of all.
Certainly his latest adversity
hasn 'tput any crimp in his lifestyle. If ' anything, he exudes
more cheer, more good feeling,
than ever before.
How does he do it?
"Well," he says, laughing, "1
take the bitter with the sweet,
you know. What are we going to
do? We have some problems,
but if we sit and mope about
them, we're not going to cure
them. That will only compound
them. So I follow my doctor 's

Auto Thieves in
Ohio are Warned
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is making it unsafe to
steal a car in Ohio.
An all"'ut effort is underway
by the Highway Patrol to bring
a halt to the ever-increasing
problem of auto theft, says
Patrol Superintendent Colonel
Robert M. Chiaramonte.
The Colonel explained thai,
regardless of the reason for
stopping any vehicle on Ohio's
highways, an immediate check
is made through computerized
law enforcement information
files to learn if the vehicle is
reported stolen or wanted for
any other reason. _
Within seconds, the officer
has the information on the
vehicle, most times before he
URGE CHANGES
COl •n.tBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Democratic party 's
delegate selection reform
committee announced Wed·
nesday it would urge
elimination of a state constitutional requirement for
of
individual
listing
presidential delegate names on
primary ballots.

has even stopped it. Presently,
Ohio Patrol officers are
checking over 70,000 vehicles
each month .
Each time a patrolman Is
successful in recovering a
stolen car and making an
apprehension, a red lightning
bolt is attached to the left door
of his patrol car. "Now the
public can tell how many 'hits'
the officer has made by the
number of red lightning bolts
on his car," the Colonel said.
''This crime which is costing
Ohio citizens over $90 million
per year in stolen property and
increased insurance rates,
must be stopped,'' Cot.
Chiaramonte said.

0

Torrez won his lOth game ::::
against five losses. Bob Bailey :;::

Today S

at~.~:~~~~- f~~~\~e s~~~i 1~ Sport
and Rich Hebner each drove in ··
two runs as the Pirates routed f
the Braves. Nelson Briles went

six innings to gain his ninth
triumph in 12 decisions. Hank
Aaron hit his 20th homer of the
season and the 659th of his
career for the Braves. Aaron's
homer tied him with Babe Ruth
for the most homers hit by a
player for one club.
Ted Simmons hit a three-run
homer and Rick Wise (10-9) .
pitched an eight-hitter as the
Cardinals downed the Astros.
Wise allowed only one runner
beyond second base.
Steve Carlton , who was

orders and try to get the
problems that I have eliminated."
Chance Of Surgery
Robinson has "very little
vision" in his right eye. His left
one also has given him trouble
but is much better now, he
says.
"The doctor feels my right
eye is getting better and he
feels if there is some progress
it's very encouraging. But if it
. doesn 't get better we'll have to
try to cure the leakage we have
in the blood vessel, and if we
can clear that, then they will
operate. If it's successful, I'll
see again; if not, then I may
lose the vision in the right eye.
But hopefully it's going to work
out."
It wouldn't be quite accurate
to say Robinson never becomes
depressed .
"There are limes when I get
tremendously depressed," he
says, "but when you have the
kind of family that! have, and
the love and respect which
come from my children it's
beautiful. The fact I have such
a great family is of great help
to me. We have grown closer
and closer since our tragedy
concerning our son and that
has been a tremendous help."
Baseball's Debt To Blacks
As far as baseball goes,
Robinson says what boll)ered
him until now is "the way it
reached out to old managers
who had been fired for incompetence and brought them
hack when there were guys like
Frank Robinson, who has
made fantastic contributions
and wants to manage, and
others like Jim Gilliam, Elston
Howard or even a Willie Mays
or an Ernie Banks, all guys
who have shown their ability.)
think it's tragic none of them
have been given a chance
because if it hadn 't been for the
blacks, there's no telling where
baseball would be today. "
Robinson admits he would've
liked to manage.
Once, but no more.
"I .even had an offer from
Montreal," he says. "!think it
in 1955 and they asked me
if I'd be interested. Even
though it wasn't an official
thing, it was encouraging and I
said certainly I'd be interested.
But no other offer ever was
forthcoming. I don't want 1o
manage now. l've got too many
other problems to even think
about it "

:;;::

The current Yankees are a
:;;; far cry from the American

Parade

li!

AN
·
By MILTON RICHM
~:~:
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI )- Early Wynn, with that jaw of his stuck out
and that five o'clock shadow, is supposed to have been so mean
and ornery when he was pitching, he'd knock down his own
mother.

Like so many of our products advertised today, this one doesn't
live up to the popular claim.
Certainly Early Wynn was forever knitting his brow and
scowling out there on the mound. He battled for those 300 major
league victories which resulted in his election to Baseball's Hall
of Fame at Cooperstown where he'll he installed in a few weeks.
Certainly he never invited anybody with a hat in his hand to dig in
against him up at home phite, but Wynn never was the hard nose
people thought he was.
Nor has he changed awhole lot now managing the Orlando
Twins in the Class A Florida State League .
,
A Fatherly Approach
He keeps the kids with Orlando on -their toes and doesn 't
pussyfoot around if he sees their hair getting too long, but for the
most part, Wynn regards each one of his young ballplayers and
talkstohimasiftheboywerehisownson.
Actually, Early Wynn 's only son, Joe Early, was a fine
baseball prospect.
He could pitch or play the infield, had good power, a fine pair of
hands and ran better than his old man ever did.
Joe Early was thmking about a possible career in professional
baseball when he was 17, whi ch was a dozen years ago, so
naturally his father had a tittle talk with him.
"He was undecided whether to play ball or not, but I didn 't
push him," says Wynn .
"I talked with him the same way I talk with any of my rookie
players. I told him baseball is the finest way l know of to make a
living. A mighty good living. You 're doing something you like
and you meet many people you otherwise wouldn't. People like
the president and vice president of the United States as well as
movie stars and the highest executives in industry. I tried to
explain the fine pension benefits to my son if he reached the
major leagues. l said there was no guarantee h'e'd reach the
majors, of course, but I also told him nothing was impossible.
And I mean nothing. Why, only a little while back I got a Jetter
from President Nixon congratulating me on my election to the
Hall of Fame. This has got to be rewarding to a guy like me who
used to pick peanuts and cotton on a farm in Alabama."
Early Wynn's son didn't go into baseball, deciding to join the
Marines instead. He served with them four years and now works
in a metal machine shop.
His father, now 52, is working with other kids.
HeMadeThemRuo
Wynn pitched for the Senators, Indians and White Sox over a
22-year period. He posted his 301lth win with Cleveland in 1983 and
then became the Tribe's pitching coach.
One day during spring training he ordered all the Cleveland
pitchers to finish their drill by doing 20 laps around the ballpark.
Luis Tiant, one of the pitchers, ducked behind tbe outfield fence
and giggled over the fa ct he had out-witted Wynn and didn't have
to run. What he didn 't know was that Wynn had spotted him but
hadn't let on.
When the other Cleveland pitchers completed their 20 laps,
completely pooped and nearly keeling over in the process, Wynn
nushed out Tiant from behind the fence and marched the.chunky
Cohan righthander in front of his associates.
"Gentlemen," Wynn addressed them all, "you now will do
another 20 laps, and for this added little pleasure, you may thank
Mr. Luis Tiant."
Tiant's eyeballs went up into his head. He could feel the hot
hostile gaze of the others on him. He was absolutely panic

~:~~ :~s~ ~:o~r~~~

inning. Angel Mangual's tworun triple and Reggie ·
Jackson's tllree-run double
highlighted the rally . The
Brewers had tied the score at 33 on Ollie Brown's three-run
homer in the sixth.
Gaylord Perry, acquired last
winter for Sam McDowell,
pitched a seven-hitter for his
16th victory for the Indians,
who scored four runs in the
second inning with the help of a
throwing error by pitcher Dick
Drago. Perry joined Mickey
Lolich of the Tigers as a 16game winner and is a threat to
finish the season in the 25victory class. Frank Duffy,
also acquired in the McDowell
deal, led the Indians' 12-hit
attack with a triple, double and
single.
The Red Sox ran their
winning streak to four games
as Carlton Fisk hit a three-run
homer and Tommy Harper and
Doug Griffin each drove in two
runs with a double. Fisk's 15th
homer of the season came with
Carl Yastrzemski and Reggie

Smith aboard in the fifth inning
and increased the Red Sox'
lead' to 6-3. Lynn McGlothen
went the distance for the Red
Sox for his third win while
Clyde Wright suffered the loss
for the Angels.
Rick Reichardt's two homers
drove in the White Sox' three
runs and enabled Wilbur Wood
to post his 14th win against 10
losses. Wood was yanked alter
giving up a double lo Ed Brinkman and a walk to open the
eighth and Terry Forster
stopped the Tigers on one hit
the rest of the way. Fred
&amp;herman was the loser.

through 1964 and a generation
of New York fans has grown up
wondering why some people
call tbem "Bronx Bombers."
The Yankees usually scrounge
for runs these days and the
home run no longer is their
trademark.
But Wednesday, with a
Rich Billings' two-run single
crowd of 19,029 looking on in
in
the eighth inning, following
amazement, the Yankees
two
walks and an error, lifted
erupted with an "old time"
the Rangers to their victory
seven-run
fourth
uuung,
over
the Orioles. The Rangers
hammered out two homers and
scored
their other run in the
a triple among their 12 hits and
fourth on Ted Ford's homer as
walloped the Twins, 13-3. It was
they dealt Mike Cuellar his
enough to recall former
eighth
loss against eight vicYankeeownerJacobRuppert's
tories. Bob Grich and Brooks
definition of a relaxing afRobinson
had two hits each for
ternoon at the Stadium: "to
the
Orioles.
watch thii Yankees score seven
runs in the first inning and then
gradually pull away from their
rivals ."
Ron Blomberg and Roy ::!=tZ~ !!!iut~ · rcZ!Z~ ~
u E.. _....
~~- - - White hit homers , Bobby
Murcerweighed in with a triple
and the Yankees sent 12 batters
to the plate in the seven-run
fourth to take a !0-l lead.
Errors by Danny Thompson
and Harmon Killebrew combined with two walks and five
hits to produce the big inning.
Mike Kekich allowed three
runs and 10 hits in 6 1-3 innings
to pick up his ninth win with
late-inning relief help from
Fred Beene. Jim Perry, tagged
for three runs in 2 2-3 innings,
suffered his ninth loss for the
Twins.
The Oakland Athletics
defeated the · Milwaukee
Brewers, ~. the Cleveland
Indians beat the Kansas City
Royals, 6-1 , the Boston Red Sox
clubbed the California Angels,
11-2, the Chicago White Sox
shaded the Detroit Tigers, 3-2,
and the Texas Rangers edged
the Baltimore Orioles, 3-2, in
other American League
Games.
1n the Natiorial League, it
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
was Cincinnati 6 Chicago 1,
Montreal 3 San Francisco 2,
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
Pittsburgh 8 Atlanta 3, St.
Louis 6 Houston 0, Los Angeles
S New York 0 and Philadelphia
5 San Diego 2.
Jolu! Odom received credit
for his ninth win of the season
with ninth-inning relief belp
from Roland Fingers after the '
Athletics bombed the Brewers ~~~
for six runs in the seventh
-'

CHECK ACCEPTED - Miss Olive Rose, Athens County Treasurer, accepts a check for
$498,583.58 from Frank J. Shay, Athens District Manager for Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company. This second half property tax payment, made Thursday, (July 20) brings
the total property taxes paid by the company to Athens County this year to $1,002,852.67 - the
first year this toal has reached a million dollars. Columbus and Southern has been the co unty 's
leading taxpayer since 1950. The Company's 1972 taxes are more than double the amount paid
by the second leading taxpayer in Athens County .

Alger Ethic Just Ain't So
By Patricia McCormack
NEW CANAAN, Conn. (UP I)
- Horatio Alger, an all-American hero, left a great ethicwork hard, give it all you have
and you can get to be president.
·" It just ain 't so," says Dr.
Charles P. Neumann, medical
director of Silver Hill Foundation , a private psychiatric
hospital in New Canaan . In the
area it's known as the Gold
Coast hospital. Its patients,
who are called "guests" include celebrities and, more and
more, corporate executives
who are alcoholics. Some are
there because they swallowed
Alger's words hook, line and
sinker.
What is unusu al about Silver
Hill : All admissions are voluntary and there are no locks. Dr.
Neumann thinks voluntary admissions have a lot to do with
the success Silver Hill has had
in the treatment of alcoholics.
Four hundred have gone
through the treatment, which
includes psychotherapy. One
out of two over the last seven
years had mana ged to be free
of alcoholism. That is a cure
rate of 50 per cent-compared
to the usual 20 or 30 per cent.
Experience wi\11. U~e. corpqrate executive and ' oth er upr)er
class alcoholics at Silver Hill
has led Dr. Neumann and his

the

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• • •

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WASHERS - D~ YERS
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With the school buses
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200-202 East Main St.
992-3498
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SA'ruRDAY NIGH'I'S TILt

to alcoholi sm.

Their needs are met by a
staff of nine attending psychiatrists, two on the psychological
staff . 41 consulting doctors, 49
nurses (who do not wear
un iforms )
and
other
therapists. There are 185 on the
payroll at Silver Hill- all
dedicated to making the guests
feel that Uley ,~re in a place..of
warmth.
,
The Alcholics Anonymous
program is a key part of the
equipment Silver Hill guests
are given to cope with thei r
problem. This provides co nti n·
ui ty o.Ice they are discharged
to their homes and jobs.

NEWCANAAN, Conn. 1 UPI J
- Alcoholism is the na tion's
biggest hushed-up problem .
Authorities es tim ate about
nine million Americans are
alcoholics-1 .5 per cent of the
adult population . The National
Coun cil
on Alcoholism
estimates that one out of every
12 to IS drinkers in the nation
has alcoholism.
Alcoholism costs American
business alone about $6 to $8
billion,
according
to
authorities. This is double the
amount of time lost in a year by
all workers because of strikes.
What's worse, alcohol was a
factor in more than 25,000 of
the 50,000-plus fatal auto accidents last year. Alcoholism
shortens life, too . The life
expectancy of an alcoholic is
about 10 to 12 years less than
that of the average population,
according to the National

1.~------------------· Institute of Mental Health.

In Hardw11re"
•

PoMEROY.

•
The annual homecoming of
the Snuth Bethel United
Methodist Church at Silver
Ridge will be held Sunday
with Sunday School starting
at 9:15 a.m. and worship
service at 10 a.m. with Eldon
Young speaking. Singing will
be by the Bissell Brothers of
Chester, Mr. and Mrs .
Garrell Christy of Grol'e
City, and the South Bethel
Choir. There will be a basket
dinner at noon.
· The alternoon service will
begin at 2 p.m. with a song
fest featuring the above
singers and local talent.
Speaking in the afternoon
will be the Rev. Roy
Gearhart, Columbus. The
Rev. Jacob Lehman extends
an invitation to the public.

Hntg. District Corps
HUNTINGTON - Major 0 . of the Army Corps of
K. Hill has assumed hi s Eng ineers and related real

positi on ~s depu ty distr1ct
engineer , second in command,

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To Hike Meat Supplies
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Communist government of the
Soviet Union is offerin g
capitalist-style incentives to
farmers in its campaign to step
up meat production .
Snme phases of current So\1et policy, in fact, sound like
the directives had been written
by U.S. farm leaders who counte r criticism of high domestic
beef prices by insisting profitable cattle prices are needed to
ass ure an adeq uate supply.
Agriculture Secretary Earl
L. Butz, for example, told an
audience recently the "only
way to have more meat... is for
farmers and ran chers to be
able to make a reasonable
profit raising beef."
"Our economy operates on
the profit motive, not the loss
motive," Butz said.
In the Soviet Union, which
recently agreed to buy a minimum of $750 million worth of
U.S. grain over the next three
years to help fuel a livestock
expansion program, a report
by Agriculture Department
observers noted that profit

profitable to the (collective or
sla te) farm and attractive to ·
the worker," officials said in
an article in the current issue
of "Foreig n Agriculture." The
weekly magazine is published
by the Foreign Agricultural
Servi ce (FAS 1.
"Average gove rnment procurement prices paid to farm ers for livestock products appear to be two to three times
the comparable prices in the
United States and well above
prices in Western Europe,"lhe
article noted.
The incentives are part of a
five-year plan ,launched in 1971
to meet rising soviet consumer
demands. The plan is designed
to boost meat production 30 per
cent, milk by 21 per cent, and
eggs by 29 per cent.
In addition to "incentive
pricing" and imports of grain
to feed expa nded numbers of
livestock and poultry , the
report said the Soviet program
also includes:
- Plans to convert some general collective and state farms
into specialized livestock and
poultry operations by offering
long-term, low-mterest loans to

incentives are also being used . finance the conversion .
" An impressive incen tive - Creation
of
"inter·

and honus program is in effect collective" feeding centers for
to mak e livestock raising cattle , hogs "I'd sheep. These
:::.~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Ex-Ferguson
Aide Indicted
CO LUMBUS iU PIJ - Mrs.
Do1·o thy J. Taylor . 53, a former
aide to state Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson , has been i ndw ~d by
a Franklin Coun ty grand jury
on charges she attempted to
solicit $38,000 in bribes, il was
revealed Wednesday .
Mrs. Taylor was indicted in
co nnection wi th Ferguson ' s
inves ti gation into travel expenses submitted by former
Ohio
State
University
professor John C. Ullery .
Ferguson claims Ullery owes
the state $17,000 paid to him for
expenses to meetings the
auditor claims Ullery never
attended.
Mrs. Taylor surrendered a t
the Fran klin County sheriff's
office and was released on her
own recognizance.
She wa s char ged with
telephoning Ullery in Clear-

and said he did so because of an
alleged bribery attempt .
Mrs . Taylor called the
dismissal political. Her attorney, J . Gordon Peltier, was
head of the state Commerce
Department for the eight years
that former Gov . .James A.
Rhodes was in office .
McE lroy is a former
assistant to Rhodes and Ullery
is a close fri end of the former
governor .

Ferguson is a veteran of
Democ ratic politics.

Columbus' Landing ·
The first time Ch ri stopher Columbu s set foot on
the North American continent was when he landed in
Honduras m 1502. The lan d·
mg took place on his fourth
and last trip to the New
water, Fla . where he now lives World
and offering information from ~~------lliiilllillil
Ferg_uson 's files .
According to the indictment,
she asked for $16,000. The indictment also said on the next
day she co nta cted John
McElroy, Ullery's Columbus
attorney and offered him the
documents for $22,751.
McElroy told the Ohio Highway Patrol and she was
arrested when she came to his
office with the documents.
fo"E. 2nd'
Pomeroy
Ferguson fired Mrs. Taylor
Phone 992-5428

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es tate fum:tions , in central and
southeastern Oh io, eastern

fur th e Army Cor ps · of Kentucky, a portion of midEnginee rs IO&lt;::ated he re. He west ern Virginia , a small
succeeded M::t jur Julin R. Hill, portion of northwestern North
Jr.. deputy distric t engineer Cil r?lina, and all but the northsince July 1970, who is at- ern panhandle and northlending th e Comma nd and eastern port1 on of Wes t
General Sl&lt;!ff College at F'ort Virginia . The Huntington
Leavenwor th, Kan.
d1strict is part of the Corps'
The Corps of.En ginecrs plans Ohi o River Division .
and executes a llU:tJur mtlwnal
Pn or to joining the Hunwater resou rces dome stic lin~lon District, Major Hill
development program under se rved two to urs of duty in
national policies and direct1ves Vietnam with MACV Engineer
cst.1blished by the President Staff and as District Senior
and Congress.
Adv isor. He also has served in
The Huntingto n di strict is Ge rmany and Bolivia, South

1

6.84 ...

Ebersbach Hard1rare·
*

with mental and emotional
illnesses make up another bloc.
Still others include women and
men with mental and
emotional sicknesses unrelated

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" Abstmence," says Dr. John

S. Tamerin , "is the beginning,
not the end , of treatment." Dr .
Tamerin , form erly a research
associa te at the National
Center for Prevention and
Control of Alcoholism, is Silver
Hill's research director.
He said covering up is the
cruelest thi ng anyo ne can do to

a lcoholi c. That IS a
hangover from the days when
alcoholism was considered a
moral weakness, a sin . Today
it is viewed as a treatable
illness.
The Treatment
The treatment at Silver Hill ,
in a capsule, is "getting to
know yourself. " Through the
group therapy and other
th era py (recreational. occupational ) the guests are helped to
see themselves and their
problems through vision unclouded by the haze of alcohol.
About 25 per cent of the
guests are sick with
alcoholism . Adolescents with
ar

SUPPLIE~

stricken .

"Weeen! " he pleaded. "What you try to do, get me keeled ?"
Early Wynn didn't relent by so much as one lap. He made
everybody go another 20.
But knock down his own mother?
Never.

associates to this belie: .
Affluence No Buffer
Despite the differences in
wealth and position, the upperdass alco holic genera ll y
drinks for the same reasons as
his less affluent brethren. Case
after case illustrates how affluence and high position are
no buffer against feelin gs of
inadequa cy, dependency
problems, anx iety , depression,
lonel mess, rage, repressed
sexuality and the multiplicity
of dynamics e~ident in the
drinking of upper-class
alcoholi cs.
In one report of 32 corporate
alcoholi cs, mean age 51. Dr.
Neumann and his co-workers
noted that the prob lem
drinking had been maintai ned
about 10 years before treatment beca me mandatory for
survival.
Many who enter Silver Hill
are on the road to detoxification-strivin g for abstinence
from alcholi c beverages.

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BARBS

I

pushingthe Philliespastthe
Padres. Carlton, who has lost
six , struck out eight and
boosted his major league
leading total to 195 while going
the distance for the 14th time.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Yankees, who
have put on many days for
their old-time stars, staged one
~~eg:v~a~o~~~~c!~ tri:~~ g::::::::;}&lt;'!&lt;':::::::::::::::·:;·:· ':·:':·::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::~~~~:&gt;:'&gt;\'1.':':1. ~~~sday for their old-time

Jackie Holds to Optimism
NEW YORK (UPI )-Jackie
Robinson, you'd figure, would
be down now. Way down.
The tragic death of his son in
an auto accident not that long
ago look a lot out of him.
• Gil Hodges' death and Roy
Campanella being stricken
again, coming one on top of the
other as they did, shook him up
tremendously also.
More recently, Jackie Robinson
discovered
added
trouble.
His eyes.
Due to diabetes, Robinson's
vision deteriorated recently to
the point where he was unable
lo drive his car and somebody
had to take him every day 1o
his office which he occupies as
president of Goodrich Associates Construction Co,
Unable To Read
Jackie Robinson would like
to read "The Boys of Swnmer," Roger Kahn's bestseller, because he's an integral
part of the book and it would
~ing back a lot of warm
nitnlorles of his days with the
old Brooklyn Dodgers.
But he's Wlable to.
"I can't read except very
close, and then tbe words kind
of go together and it's difficult," he says. "I have been
Wl&amp;ble to read 'The Boys of
Summer,' but I've gotten
tremendous thrills out of the
few pages my wife, Rachel, has
tieen able to read to me ."

trade;forWiscduringtheoff·
season, pitched 11 innings and
gained his 13th victory of the
year when Bill Robinson
doubled honie Denny Doyle
with two out in the lith,

Yankees, Like In Days 1
»~ 0£ Old, Explode For Win~

6,000
to
24,000 BTU

e
I

!',•••••:"'"

II •'" ' I " ' I" ' I IIJHII " I "'" '"
1
11 11 \1 RIMI\I ... I[\I I(}QII"" ;
o/11., I •••I • ll •lo[,h m ,

~~

He has received the Bronze
Star Medal; the Air Medal; the
Meritorious Service Medal ;
and the Combat Infantryman's
Badge.
Maj br Hill is a native of Ben
Lomond, Calif. He graduated
from the Uni ted States Military
Academy in 1958 with a
Bachelor oLScience degree. He
also holds a Master of Science
degree in civil engineering
from the University of
California, Berkeley, and is a
grad uate of the Armed Forces
Staff College, Norfolk.
He is married to the former
Harriet Hooper of Felton,

ROLLBACK ORDERED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Pittsburgh and Midway Coal
and Mining Co. was ordered
Wednesday by the ,Price
Com mission to reduce price
mcreases made in apparent
violation of the Economic
Stabilization Act. The action
was the larges t price rollback
ordered so far by the commission .

EARNINGS BEST
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!)
The Cooper Tire and Rubber
Co. reported today all time
record sales and earnings for
the first six months of the year.
Wayne B. Brewer, president
and chairman of the board
sa id earn ings were $2,138,999
or $1.05 per share on sales of
$65.7 million.

GEO. HALL IS BACK!

THE CYCLONIANS
KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB

i

Reserve District No. 4
' Slate No. 223X
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and ll&lt;lmestlc Subsidlaries, at the close of
business June 30, 1972, a state banking institution. organized and operaiiDC
under the banking laws of the State and a member of !be Federal Reserve
System. Published in accordance with a caD made by the Stale Banking
Authorities and by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS

Cash and due from hanks · - · - · - - • - •• - • - • ••• • $ 1,213,643.94
U.S. Treasury securities • • · • · - - - - · • - - - • - • - • 1,610,439.32
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations · · • - • • - • • • - • • • 303,740.88
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • - • • • 964,891.91
Other securities · - • · • . - - - - • • - • • • • • • • • 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • . - - • • - 750,000.00
Other loans . - - . • • - - - • • • •
• • • • 6,919,072.11
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing hank premises • • • • 453,544.80
Other assets . - • . • • . • - - - •
- • • • • - • 689.34
TOTAL ASSETS • • - · • • • - . - - - - • • • • • $12,237,022.30
LIABU..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • • • . . • • • . . ,.- • • • • - • $2,661,081.74
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - • - •• - - • • • - • - 7,976.922.12
Deposits of United Stales Government - • • • . • . • • . • 45,542.115
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - . - •• - ••• 258,869.44
Deposits of commercial banks • • • - • • • • • • • •
• 183.42
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • . • . - • • - • • . . • 48,922.35
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • - • - • • $10,99!,521.92
(a) Total demand deposits • · · • • • - • · $ 310!4,599.80
(b) Total time and savings deposits • - • • • $ 7,976,922.12 --==-.,.,..,.-=
Other liabilities • • - • • - . • • • - - • • 395,484.71
TOTAL .UABIUTIES • • • · · • • • • - • • • • - $11,387 11106.63
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • - ••• - • - - • . . • • • $ l1,026.96
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
- • • - $11,026.96
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total - • • • •
- ' 838,988.71
Common stock-total par value • - • - . .
• 300,000.00
No. shares authorized
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Surplus - - • • • • - • - • - - • - - • • • • • • •
400,000.00
Undivided profits - • • - - • • - • •
138,988.71
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
838,988.71
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • $12,237,022.30
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • • - • • • - - •• •• - - - • $11,013,083.74
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • - - - - - • • - - • • • - •• $ 8,133,027.71
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct aDd guaranteed; '
pledged to secure deposits and other llabilities
•• - $890,000.00
I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the aboVHIIJiled bank do he;..by declare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. .
Roger HyseD

w.

We, the undersigned directors, atteat the correctne58 of this report of
condition and declare thai it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
C. Wl)'lll! Swflber
: Fred W. Crow - D1ftcton
Thereoa Jail-

fi h•l hdtio&gt;ol hu"l'li

' '"""') oKIIU•I•b l.

~~~•••o o

tl! l ~ [' II~Jli"H o 1011... i'h ''"~' f\ )I.~IJIU lll l. &gt;'r.,~,lf ~ lfl.

•

~~~ :. :.:,~;', ~.~.~. ~~·~~~~.L • &gt;\llu•• l'&lt;~'ll.t"t"l i~·•~lt•Jk&gt;ft: ''"'

I

T'lltJ.SI't+D

I~A."'

Ca lif. They have three
children, Rebecca 9, Rowland 8
and Douglas 6. They will reside
he re at 501 Norway Ave.

huge fee dlots , following a
pattern used in the United
States, fatten stock raised by
nonspecialized general farms.
The " inter -co llectiv e"
operates as a cooperative, with
WITH THE FAMOUS INTERNATIOMAL ACT
profits distributed back to the
member farms.
- Creation
of
" intercollective" feed mixing plants
That have appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show .
to prepare complete rations
Hollywood Palace.
and specia l premixed feed
concentrates for livestock
They Will Appear At The
feeding.
- And purchase of highquality breeding stock ineluding over 300 U.S. bulls and
SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY - JULY 22
heifers, more than 100 British
-THREE SHOWsbulls, and nearly 1,000
Ca nadian cattle.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •...~.;.;.;.~.;.~

State of, Ohio County of Meigs ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 18th day of July, 1972.

•k'"l "'' '" m.

ll'llh '" ..... ...........

MAJOR HILL

llh' ~l~h" ~~~ lfl' t tll ~~ WlUII/~1 &lt;OO U.. tl

\

MaryP. YCJWII,NolllryPubUc
My Commission e:rplres July I, 1974.

'

.....

~ .

'l

�v -

7- The Dilly Sentinel, MlddlePort·POIIIet'Oy' 0., o!uly II, 19'12

The Daily Sen line I. Middlcport-Pmncroy, 0 ., July 2U, 1972

BERRY'S WORLD

ere is Abe Schwartz?
I

ll) ,Ml'RR\ \' OLnEBM.\r\

11' ~ 111\H'

" J ~· an ' t Ji \"t• li~L' !Ill' WI\P S
. LA~ VEGAS. Ne1· - &lt;Nl•:.·\ 1
ul
war pn.sm wrs. slw s a _,·s .
1
. -SvllJ('\\'IWI't:' in thi s wor ld .
dt"ad ur. ~1lin•. tht'l't' rs " That's llll h · twl f a livlllg _ I
Anam Schwartz. l-It• l'ould 1 1 ~1\' t' 110 hitit that lll' 's :J ii\' L' .
be- buried in :o;mnt&gt; llt&gt;Sulall' · I gi n• 11p. I ~H' l'l'l&gt;1 it . I ha\'t'
corner of the \"ast Nl' r ada tiH 'L't' lwalth _\· cflildn•n to
d~sert.

Or ht' could bt• lh·i n ~

anOn\'mousl v in Sw itzt;&gt; ria nrt
with··tlw lu"xun of a num bered bank ·at t'llunt. lit•
could be al lhe bollom ol
some abandoned mint-' sliaf1.
Or Jw cou ld be Si:•(_Tt•lly
tucked awa~· in hi s na! t\'t'

Israel.
B a b s Sehwarlz
know .

do~..·~ n·t

'

She's Avra m·s wil t•. On

ra Jst.•.

J

Babs had l.ll'L'Il sL•t•ing
sign.s ut' strain 111 :\l&gt;L·. "Tht·
la s t m otllh ." s ilt• n •eall s.
" lw w:. ls uptight. lit• starlt'd
to guml&gt;ll' Il l' stu rh:d snwk -

11\g agwn .
T!it' dav bt'lort&gt; Allt· l':lilt'd
to CtlllH' Ji{lll\l', hOWl'Vl'l . t·,afl
bet&gt;n quilt' nornwl ami n·-

..~

"Even with all his l'ITn li &lt;:

than two month s since Abe
vanished . Babs got a JOb as
a secretary at a children's
day camp at $60 a week .
She ten !hal and plans lo
work for a land compan_,.

habits." mainta ins !.la bs. " I
knew he was n'l runnin g
around . He'd come home at
5 in the mornin g and it wa ."
Ihe same old Abe ...
The police said . " l·le has
brin ging in prospecti ve cus- t o be mi ssin g 72 hour s."
lom~rs . ll's specu lalive work.
She notified Ihe FB I and
It s nol enough lo ke ep up was told i~ wasn't in their
a fom·•bedroom house w1th a • . . . ·
N
1
.
.
·u be
1 It
~;~~11~m,~~~rsp~~iore s~~~ can

JUI'l sdJc tw n.

u ransom no

.'

Caravene~by

Bulova.

Sltike it rich wilh Ihis 14K gold, 17
jewel timepiece . . . Caravelte b~
8utova. Extraordinarily low-pr1ced
a sol id gold classic and guar-

anteed by Bulo.a. Give it to some·

or hoard it

yoursel f.

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court Sl Pomeroy
1

h&gt;gm:

uiTict&gt; . " Tiw U.S. i\ttonll'Y ':-;

onin• IW!-i tOld us till' C~ISl'
dot•sn't lit unr statut t:•s. (lllill•
franktv . I t1ui1k ltt' 's d&lt;•a&lt;l.
lit&gt; wit:-; 111v ulvt'd with tlll St' l'flfllllou s l'iwnicll' I' S who
were total h· . l:npablt• uf t'l' ·
IIWVill ).! hilll "

Tht• onh· adiun to dalt• in
tlw ~.: a s l:' 1;f Avram SC.'Ilwartz _
li s1t•d . ~1s J mi :o;!-iill_t.: pl•r xun.

I It' ll!' .

Yl'l it ·:-~ s till dii firul t to
IIII S il~lrl 111«.' ullinwtt• mot ivl'
ILJr Iii ~ disappearum:l' bt' l' &lt; ltl~«.' tht•re SPidom ha s Ul'l'l1
~l btJ s ine s~ man lik~ Avram

Schwart z

l-It• and Rabs arr iv ed 111
Lu s Vt• gas t• ight yea rs ago .
:\\·rum lwd a tl'm:hi11g de gret· from the ll t·rzlia lil'brl•v.· In stitute in New York.

The 'l'l'!!lple Belh Shotom
l1ircd hun at $6.500 a year .
1-Jp wa s a small.

intenst&gt;

m&lt;Jn- and pt•nnile ss . lie wa s

rai sed in a .Jt&gt;I'U!-lalem or -

lu

;\ tw ,

br;H·I

Ill

phanage. althou gh he wa s a
s ixth - gl~ n er ation

Sabra

t na -

tive-born Israeli r. He met
and marri ed Ba bs i n New

York His molher-in·law had
to bllv him clothes tor lhe
weddi'ng.
Eventually . Abe got his
su lan a t dw temple up to
$11.1UiU He also slar led doing a littlp moonlighting.

powder t o the
hi g La s Vt:gas ho! t: ls. Ht'
was Pnergetic and did well.

sell i ng soa p

"Ev t:ry th ing he 1oucht!d ."

says

~ a b s.

" lw

made

n w n e ~ ·.

h1 HJ6B. he llll'l a mol el
owrw r wh o wantcd to nwn•

l!
I

QUALIIY 4" USI

lfRff\
.
I,PEt/Al :
IJFIEII

pen eve !'y da y. " sa ys Lt.
lor ont: reaSon or li r egg of Ihe d e I ec I i v e
another . Uut now I'm nut so bureau of lhe Clark Counly

,,

II) Law rence Lamb. M.ll.
I felt thts slor y lo ask you
llear llr . Lamb- Yoo had if you won't stres s to your
a letter in vour t olumn from reader s lhat if they are in
a ,.,oman Who had perni ci ous doubl abou t lhe lrealment
they tire rere iving to sel' an-

other doctor . A repulable
will nol be offended if
doclor
and had never had a blood
you
ask
for anot her consultate st. Thi s reminded me or
lion
.
bul
i[ he is. thai is the
the problem conce rni ng my
tim
e
tu
make
a chan ge . Almother . She hac/ gone to the
though
99
per
cent of the
doctor for a number of year's
are
reputable
!here
doctors
fo r pernicious anemia and
is
bound
to
be
a
black
sheep
had rece ived a monlhly shot
of B-12 but !here had been in the medical profes sion just
no bl ood tesls or other treat· as there is in others.
menl . She kept get ting wor se
Dear Reader- ! don 't di s·
and wilh much ur ging she agree with your observation .
fin all y wenl to see my doctor The Iruth is I have seen very
who is a specialist m internal lew people who have been
medici ne . When he examined canonized in life and thi s
her he immedialely pul her includes doclor s. In defend·
in lh e hn spilal and slarted ing physicians . however , I
gi ving - her massiv~ doses of wilt say !hat as a group
B-12. She responded welt ami !hey are one of the hardest
was a new lJt!rson . My dud or working segmen t s of uur sowas so distressed wi lh the ciety and must uf them take
lreatment tbat she had re- thei.r responsibililies quile
ce rved !hat he reported the seri ously . "
problem to the county mediI don 't know of many other
cal as sociation . Apparenlly segments of our society who
this wa sn't the first lime that would permit their private
!his cloctor had a problem li!e lo be interrupted to the
and eventually his office was degree thai mo sl physicians
·
vacaled .
do or would work Ihe same
number of hours, including
weekends and holidays and
all hours of the night or
would, in rae!, do as much
charily work as many physi •

111

di s app~ ar .

" liP had gu ttt•1 1 acu• s:-;

$100.0011 in th t· last \'l'&lt;ll . l11
tlw las t lour muntli!'i alulll'
ht· sold st oc J..: s lor $1iU.ooo . I !t•
mu st h&lt;IVl' been 111 ~dwu t to
.lifft•I'L'Ill tilin g ~ y lit• h;H!
thrt•e ur 111ur mawr law ~ ~u b

11 Qt.

BINS

under suspi cious ci rc um - l~il

sla nres . The onl y thin g is.
th er e' s no r eason for him to
be gone ."
There ar e

report s Abe
!liJn 't pay !axes th e last

SPECIAL

LAUNDRY BASKET
PLASTIC
BUSHEL
DISH
SIZE
PAN

QILING
Our Low Price

nu

SPECIAL ON STORM DOORS

SCOTTIE$
TISSUES

,

200
Pack

BOXES

on~

0
R

lNG

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply

ut hume 1A Ill' dutn 't hclie\t '
111 bonh a c c u 11 11I s1 . l' in'
th uu sa ml WL'Ill l or ::1 moll'!
pa yme nt . The ns t. a Lashier's check lor $25.UIIIJ . wu s
gont·. Al ong wi t h :\bt' . In llw
wake uf his di sa ppt:'u ran ce:

Tiabbi Gold wu s d1 smissed
br lh c• lemple.
" Cases li ke his don 't l~t.ip ·
lhev get some thin g out ot
being able to do something
for !hem. This is not to say
that the y don 't enjoy their
inconw as physicians. but
lht• inc onw

does n't

keep

them [ro m enjoying the other
aspec ts common to the prat tict! of medicin e .
I agree that if "

~alieni is
concerned about his treal·
men! he should have a con ·
sullation . If nothin g else.
such attitude on the part ot
the patient reflects a tack of
confidence and it interferes
with the normal lreatmcnl
relatio nship between lhe doc ·
tor and the palient. The way
to solve lhe problem is lo
have a consullation and clear
the air. Most doctors who
are really concerned aboul
how their patient is doing
and are for some reason or
anolhet· u n cer I a in aboul
eilher the pall en!' s state or
what to do for him usually

will ask for a consultation
from another physician who

The !ruth is that mosl doc - might be able to help with
tor s like !heir palienls and lhe problem .

II you're fighting a
losing bltUe agalnSI
heat and humidity In
your Mobile Home ,,

• It' a 1 . GENUINE Mobile • A flexible duct kit that hooks

Home Cenlral Air Condl·
up easily to your existing
!loner.
duct work.
• A bigger blower motor lor • Fast. easy installation. combeUer atr circulation.
ptelety oul-ol-doors.
• Amana Etectro--coatlng fin· • Engineered tor Quiet operamaximum rust pro·

VEGETABLE

SPECIAL

\.!~ALL~~~,,

tlll'l't' vears. that he gmn·
hl i.'d bi g a! t he Palom ino
" Ht&gt; w a ~ \'l' n 0111spukl•n l ·~ u iJ 1hi s fath er-i n-la w saw
.(Jild t:l' t' ~l k d ))l ~) n \· 1:' 1\ P IJl i ( •~
r:1m lose $700 ont' ni ght J.
fl t WJ S (l .'i llla l.!' j)t'I' ~ UII I' ' llw t " he wa s run ning ar ound
sl :J I III' l' Il l· W~l ll t l• tl t o ...:1 \1 ' wit h bro ad s e\'ery ni ght. ..
CARLOAD OF
JUST
liln l."it'lt :1 rw nw as ~~ h 1:.;
· \\hen rou chec k int o
shot ..
ARRIVED
:\ bl' s ulfa irs ... c aut io n s
Tht'l' t&gt; were eni gma s. :11o. lht' t ' Bl is s. " yu u' rt' louhin ,L!
\\'itll ~ II llw mone \·. Ill' IJur - in to a hornt•1' s nes1. ..
J'uWl'd $2 .!lOO tro1.n 0.1 l.a ~
But wh o kn ows whe n• llw
\'t:'g i:l s b an k un ~~ slw r!-lt·rrn IH I!'Ilt' l is'!
S. 3rdAve.
loan It ha s n't been repai d
Two lsn.1 eli lri e nds ).! :J\'t' him
\ ' l r tua l t ~· IIH:' II' IIll' S&lt;J Vlllgs ut
$W.11llO on AIJe 's promist:• lht.ll
'
~I
ht wuu!d gt•l tht"lll (f 20 Jll'l'
Call
No. 482
Charter No. 9815
NaUonal Rant Region No.4
l'l'lll r l' I u r 11 or bt'tt«.~ r
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
Thi.',Y ·n· ll·!t wit hout n l' ('JI!.
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF 11JE
Ba h ~ knl'W thl'n ' w~J ~ ;1
t u t &lt;.~l ut $.1tt .UUO in l llt' i r .-. ~Il l'
IWnclin g

PAILS

WITH EVERY ,:

101 SUPtR ONE:CO.U
PAINT

S h ~ rilf' s Office . " !Jut we do
ge t a half dozen a year in
lo the same category- miss ing

su!'e . He had ,l!.OUU rra !'u n ~

to

SPECIAL
PLASTIC

S6~9 VALUE

Dave Bl 1ss. ·· 1s ltJat hl' wa s

Ask Consultation,
It Is No Insult

ish for

SPECIAL
PLASTIC

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINT

done

motels untll now tht•n• is
onl\' one . a Grad e D plan·
catt ed lhe Hanch Inn . l&lt;•fl in
hi s name . He shift ed hi s at ·
tention to land developm ent
a nd in partnership w i I h
Dave Bli ss. a La ~ Ve l' (:j S
motel ow ner . formed OPC .
(nc: 1 ULJ tsidt' Perso nal Con tact 1. whit::h worked on a
personal s e r v 1 c e cun tratl
wi th Cava n a ~h Lam! Co m·
rnun ities. deliverin g · lm:a ·
tions . It wa s a bi g mon e~
deal.
" M\' first reaeti un wh en
Abt' · di sappt·ared ... s a v s

tection .

j

i

FO.R THE BEST BARGAINS
IN TOWN, SHOP M&amp;R

.\\ram Schwartz

He starled to unload lhe

cians do.

1

AND 2" NYLON TRIM BRUSH

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

I

l f

sl11 p wi1h H ~1hl11 1\ ~JI'Oil t: 11ld
ol Ji ll' lt'!Hplt•. lt&gt;&lt;JSt'd Hu·
molt&gt;l. Then Aht• ae&lt;plin•d
aiHJI'Jt ~·r mold a 1ul uno1 11l'r .
~111d :J.IIO!llt'r. tin1iJ SHOl l 1!1'
wa s opl'rut ing l'iVl' l liiJil'l s.
fh' w;,ts torel'd to v,h:t• up hi s
ll'ilthi11g jub thrt'l' _\"t'ill' ~
&lt;.~go . B_
, . fht·n . lw con!d i. ll'l'urd
to .
Ahl' upt·r&lt;.~ll'd hi s nwh'l ~
undl·r u l'Hrporu1iun which
"'' l'Uiil·d ND&lt;i Till' il'!I&lt;'I'S
wt•n• s i~nit'i&lt;:a nl. Tht&gt;y stoml
fot " Nehm die Gelt," which
is co llo4Uial Yiddi s h fm
" take lhe mo11er ." ti e kepi
no fi ll's . Hi s ba'nk actounts
werP bunll•rlint~ . M o 11e y
passl•tl through hi ~ ·hands in
h u g t• dl'IHJillinations . It's
t&gt;s lilllalt•U ht' went thnn1gl1
&lt;.1 hal t'- mi!l ion dollar::i in th«.·
l~st llll'l'l' n·m·s . Till' book keeping is chaotic . tic ck·ull
i11 the stuck market. traded
i11 silvt·r a11d l'\11:'11 brandlt•d
out to an intt'l'est i n a Grt'l'l1 ·
wit.:h \'i ll Jgt• l'aft&gt; in N&lt;'w
York .
·
" li t: Wa S a tough IJUSIIICSS man ," admit s hi s wife .
" People drdn't li ke him . He
Jrovt' a hard bargain. li e
nuu.le l'!lt?mit:s. ThNe WPI'f-'

,.

anem ia . She had heen re ·
l't'i vin g B-12 once a month

\

p;JJ"!1lt ' l

threat s on his llfl' ...

!Ill

\ r

hou.~e

He was a tough businessman.
t&gt;eople didn't like him. He drove
hard bargains. He made enemies.
There were threats on his life.

l'

The ca r wa s taler found m
the parking lot where Abe
tell 11.
" He's missin g and !hat 's
al l we know to dal e." says
an agent of lhe local Vl.l l

$29.95 Gold Piece

one you love

/~11.~

e11rly
·tlw morning of M11y 15 111U! tli.'inppellrell.
Not. 11 tmt·e. As if he nevl'r existed.

or ev i dence of kidnapin g..

hope lo collecl Abe' s S25U.UUO
in life insurance . Luck)
meanwhile she found a spare
$1.000 in the safe they kept
at hom e. She's worried and
mystified. Bul no Iunger

,,

h&gt;ji his

taxed. Sundav brunch al till' ts 1'1.'\'l'lution tll m1 anli.lzi n g Flami11gu y,;ilh lh1b:::; and 1 ~ t'U il)pf ~X Wt•IJ ()f IJ USilll'SS
B&lt;•lla . 7.1 .'\dam. land Ira. 2 dt·;.ll s v,;hil.:h tur m•d i.l :;ln·
:\n Israeli coupk ~..·ame OVl'l' (liuu s 1il'bn·w school lt·acher
in thl' afternoon- Abc. al.so a &lt;~ t tilt..' unl.v temple in Las
native of ls rat&gt; l. was try ing \ ' q~ a s into an uptight. garn to he lp kee p !hem in the llling. 1'11b1ering t•n!I'PJII'l' ·

lhe morning ol May 15. a
Monday. Avram got up earl)'
- 6 :30 ·a.m.- lor a bu smess
meNing at the offices ot' a
land company in Las Vegas .
He lefl lhe low protite ranch c ounlrv . In ttw earlv t,n' ·
house in a neat residential nin g. i-~ab s ' parent s s'tup ,,ed
lracl on Ba ncr ott Circle. 011 llv. AI 9:15. !.labs and twr
the easlern ed ge ot the cily. nlothe r we11l shopping i.ll a
S UIJt'l'llliUkeL a good tinu.• 111
• at 7 a.m.
hot .Las Vt:gas. Abc und Mul.
~;
He disappeared . Nol a his f~l lher - i11 - law , stuyl'd
~ trar.:e. As it he uever exi ::; tcd . homt and playNI gin .
~
The ph u n e nwg . A lw
Avram· s clot hes - he had
jusl replenislled hi s ward· draggt!d it in I u &lt;mothe r
, robe $2,000 wort h-still han g roo111 . unus ual fur him . The
~~.~ in the closet of the tlliiSier call WiJ S trum a CaUun ' ia
·~
~ bedroom . Hi s picture is in promoter n a llll' d William
den. His children- lh1·ee F' aiscll. who had bought a
~~ the
of !hem . ages 7. 4 and 2 motel from Abe " You
-still talk vivid I v about know ." he sa id to Ma l when
he hung up. " tha t Fai.sch is
" Daddy ."
afraid of me. I got to m('et
But a Las Vegas new s- him in th e morning ."
paper headlined : " Fea r
Brig ht and ear ly . hP druvl'
Vegas Businessman Munkr
the
leased Cadillac lo an ol·
Viclim."
fi r e park 111g tot al Las
" I believe it. " say s Bab s. Vegas Boulevard South and
Abe Sc hwart z. as he was Clla rleston . When Abe didtd
known to the people around ~.: all br ,) in tlw afl e rno u11.
town . is or was 33 years old . Balls 'wa s perturbed . H&lt;' d
He had made a fanta stic ufll'n t:umc hunu.• lat(.' . but
score in a fa sl·paced hus· ht! alwa vs let her kn ow. Sht·
tier's city that is used to too k th ~ kids out tu ~Jc .
fortune s being yanked up Donald 's fur hambur ge rs .
and down like a well bucket. Bv 9 she wa s reall v worr iPd .
Abe for lhe tasl two years Slie start ed calling tlw ll os·
has been walkin g around pilots and hotels on llw
with nothing smaller than Str ip. Fi11ally. the pol ice .
$100 bill s in his pockels .
The poli ce d idn't get t'X·
l'itt'd . La s Vegas is a pl u ~.:l'
Babs was getting the same wllrre I.J l'Ople h a v t· bee n
way. She was always used to kn own to d is ap~w a r. utten
a few grand around the voluntaril y. Tht&gt;n• 31'1:' di ~­
house .
t ra&lt;.:l ions.
It ' s di fferent now . more

H1~

...........

tion , indoors and out.

Call992-5321 For Free Estimate

Foreman &amp; AbbQtt
MIDDLEPO~J·

O.

ASSETS
Cash and due !rom bank.s - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 501,516.19
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,267,887.89
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations - , - - - - - - - - 170,499.82
Obligations of States and political sutxlivisions - - - - - - 91,228.91
Other securilies - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - .
- - - 12,m.oo
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - · - - - ·
• - 350,000.00
Loans - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - 3,174,4~7.34
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
1
olher assets representing bank premises - - - 1~,000.00
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - 21314.65
TOTAL ASSETS • - • - - - · - - · - - • - - • • • (5,585,419.80
l.IABll.ITIES
Demand deposits or individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - , - - - - · - - - - · - - $1,222,934.71
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - 3,096,853.63
Deposits of United States Government - . - - - - - - - 20,854.78
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions - - - - - - · - - 644,737.58
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - • • - • - 21,077.72
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - $51006,458.42
(a) Total demand deposits - - - $1,589,604.79
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - • $3,416,853.63
Otherliabilities----- - - - - - - - - - - •
116.865.16'
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - • • • • - - - • - • • $5,123,323.58
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Other reserves on loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $46,788.83
Reserves on securities - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - 650.00
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - $47,438.63
CAPIT AI. ACCOUNTS
Equity Capital-total - - - - $4 14,657.~
Common Stock-total par value
125,000.00
No. shares aurhorized 5,000
No. shares outstanding 5,000
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • - - - - 125,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - - - - - - ·
164,657.39
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
414,657.39
TOTAL UABJUTIES, RESERVES AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
f5,585,419.80
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for !he 15 calendar
days ending with &lt;;all dale - - • - - - - $4,912,733.12
Average of total loans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with Cllll dale - - - - - • - $3,170,659.78
I, John T..Wolfe, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition is true and correct to the beat of my knowledge and
belief.
JolmT.Wolle .
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thb report of CGII·
dillon and declare that, it has been examined by us and to the belt of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
Charles D. Y01t
Earl Croso - Dlrectm
J, W. Weaver, Jr.

TABLETS

PLASTIC

THE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

of Racine in the Slate or Ohio, at the close ol business oo Juoe 30, 071 publhhed
in response to Call made by Comptroller of the currency, uoder Title 12, Ualted
States Code, Section 161.

EFFERDENT

SPECIAL
!f·CUt~ERY TRA
40
TABLETS~

EA.

•

SPECIAL
UTILITY TUB
'Plastic

CURAD

NSPARENT
BANDAGES

SAYALLE

YARN
REG.
•

'

$1.39
SKEIN

ANTIQUE OAK
PANELING 4'
FOIL
INSULATION

•
•·

;WHITE
.
I

80 COUNT

'

12" I 12"

.43
X 8'

4" Thick

SHEET

�v -

7- The Dilly Sentinel, MlddlePort·POIIIet'Oy' 0., o!uly II, 19'12

The Daily Sen line I. Middlcport-Pmncroy, 0 ., July 2U, 1972

BERRY'S WORLD

ere is Abe Schwartz?
I

ll) ,Ml'RR\ \' OLnEBM.\r\

11' ~ 111\H'

" J ~· an ' t Ji \"t• li~L' !Ill' WI\P S
. LA~ VEGAS. Ne1· - &lt;Nl•:.·\ 1
ul
war pn.sm wrs. slw s a _,·s .
1
. -SvllJ('\\'IWI't:' in thi s wor ld .
dt"ad ur. ~1lin•. tht'l't' rs " That's llll h · twl f a livlllg _ I
Anam Schwartz. l-It• l'ould 1 1 ~1\' t' 110 hitit that lll' 's :J ii\' L' .
be- buried in :o;mnt&gt; llt&gt;Sulall' · I gi n• 11p. I ~H' l'l'l&gt;1 it . I ha\'t'
corner of the \"ast Nl' r ada tiH 'L't' lwalth _\· cflildn•n to
d~sert.

Or ht' could bt• lh·i n ~

anOn\'mousl v in Sw itzt;&gt; ria nrt
with··tlw lu"xun of a num bered bank ·at t'llunt. lit•
could be al lhe bollom ol
some abandoned mint-' sliaf1.
Or Jw cou ld be Si:•(_Tt•lly
tucked awa~· in hi s na! t\'t'

Israel.
B a b s Sehwarlz
know .

do~..·~ n·t

'

She's Avra m·s wil t•. On

ra Jst.•.

J

Babs had l.ll'L'Il sL•t•ing
sign.s ut' strain 111 :\l&gt;L·. "Tht·
la s t m otllh ." s ilt• n •eall s.
" lw w:. ls uptight. lit• starlt'd
to guml&gt;ll' Il l' stu rh:d snwk -

11\g agwn .
T!it' dav bt'lort&gt; Allt· l':lilt'd
to CtlllH' Ji{lll\l', hOWl'Vl'l . t·,afl
bet&gt;n quilt' nornwl ami n·-

..~

"Even with all his l'ITn li &lt;:

than two month s since Abe
vanished . Babs got a JOb as
a secretary at a children's
day camp at $60 a week .
She ten !hal and plans lo
work for a land compan_,.

habits." mainta ins !.la bs. " I
knew he was n'l runnin g
around . He'd come home at
5 in the mornin g and it wa ."
Ihe same old Abe ...
The police said . " l·le has
brin ging in prospecti ve cus- t o be mi ssin g 72 hour s."
lom~rs . ll's specu lalive work.
She notified Ihe FB I and
It s nol enough lo ke ep up was told i~ wasn't in their
a fom·•bedroom house w1th a • . . . ·
N
1
.
.
·u be
1 It
~;~~11~m,~~~rsp~~iore s~~~ can

JUI'l sdJc tw n.

u ransom no

.'

Caravene~by

Bulova.

Sltike it rich wilh Ihis 14K gold, 17
jewel timepiece . . . Caravelte b~
8utova. Extraordinarily low-pr1ced
a sol id gold classic and guar-

anteed by Bulo.a. Give it to some·

or hoard it

yoursel f.

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court Sl Pomeroy
1

h&gt;gm:

uiTict&gt; . " Tiw U.S. i\ttonll'Y ':-;

onin• IW!-i tOld us till' C~ISl'
dot•sn't lit unr statut t:•s. (lllill•
franktv . I t1ui1k ltt' 's d&lt;•a&lt;l.
lit&gt; wit:-; 111v ulvt'd with tlll St' l'flfllllou s l'iwnicll' I' S who
were total h· . l:npablt• uf t'l' ·
IIWVill ).! hilll "

Tht• onh· adiun to dalt• in
tlw ~.: a s l:' 1;f Avram SC.'Ilwartz _
li s1t•d . ~1s J mi :o;!-iill_t.: pl•r xun.

I It' ll!' .

Yl'l it ·:-~ s till dii firul t to
IIII S il~lrl 111«.' ullinwtt• mot ivl'
ILJr Iii ~ disappearum:l' bt' l' &lt; ltl~«.' tht•re SPidom ha s Ul'l'l1
~l btJ s ine s~ man lik~ Avram

Schwart z

l-It• and Rabs arr iv ed 111
Lu s Vt• gas t• ight yea rs ago .
:\\·rum lwd a tl'm:hi11g de gret· from the ll t·rzlia lil'brl•v.· In stitute in New York.

The 'l'l'!!lple Belh Shotom
l1ircd hun at $6.500 a year .
1-Jp wa s a small.

intenst&gt;

m&lt;Jn- and pt•nnile ss . lie wa s

rai sed in a .Jt&gt;I'U!-lalem or -

lu

;\ tw ,

br;H·I

Ill

phanage. althou gh he wa s a
s ixth - gl~ n er ation

Sabra

t na -

tive-born Israeli r. He met
and marri ed Ba bs i n New

York His molher-in·law had
to bllv him clothes tor lhe
weddi'ng.
Eventually . Abe got his
su lan a t dw temple up to
$11.1UiU He also slar led doing a littlp moonlighting.

powder t o the
hi g La s Vt:gas ho! t: ls. Ht'
was Pnergetic and did well.

sell i ng soa p

"Ev t:ry th ing he 1oucht!d ."

says

~ a b s.

" lw

made

n w n e ~ ·.

h1 HJ6B. he llll'l a mol el
owrw r wh o wantcd to nwn•

l!
I

QUALIIY 4" USI

lfRff\
.
I,PEt/Al :
IJFIEII

pen eve !'y da y. " sa ys Lt.
lor ont: reaSon or li r egg of Ihe d e I ec I i v e
another . Uut now I'm nut so bureau of lhe Clark Counly

,,

II) Law rence Lamb. M.ll.
I felt thts slor y lo ask you
llear llr . Lamb- Yoo had if you won't stres s to your
a letter in vour t olumn from reader s lhat if they are in
a ,.,oman Who had perni ci ous doubl abou t lhe lrealment
they tire rere iving to sel' an-

other doctor . A repulable
will nol be offended if
doclor
and had never had a blood
you
ask
for anot her consultate st. Thi s reminded me or
lion
.
bul
i[ he is. thai is the
the problem conce rni ng my
tim
e
tu
make
a chan ge . Almother . She hac/ gone to the
though
99
per
cent of the
doctor for a number of year's
are
reputable
!here
doctors
fo r pernicious anemia and
is
bound
to
be
a
black
sheep
had rece ived a monlhly shot
of B-12 but !here had been in the medical profes sion just
no bl ood tesls or other treat· as there is in others.
menl . She kept get ting wor se
Dear Reader- ! don 't di s·
and wilh much ur ging she agree with your observation .
fin all y wenl to see my doctor The Iruth is I have seen very
who is a specialist m internal lew people who have been
medici ne . When he examined canonized in life and thi s
her he immedialely pul her includes doclor s. In defend·
in lh e hn spilal and slarted ing physicians . however , I
gi ving - her massiv~ doses of wilt say !hat as a group
B-12. She responded welt ami !hey are one of the hardest
was a new lJt!rson . My dud or working segmen t s of uur sowas so distressed wi lh the ciety and must uf them take
lreatment tbat she had re- thei.r responsibililies quile
ce rved !hat he reported the seri ously . "
problem to the county mediI don 't know of many other
cal as sociation . Apparenlly segments of our society who
this wa sn't the first lime that would permit their private
!his cloctor had a problem li!e lo be interrupted to the
and eventually his office was degree thai mo sl physicians
·
vacaled .
do or would work Ihe same
number of hours, including
weekends and holidays and
all hours of the night or
would, in rae!, do as much
charily work as many physi •

111

di s app~ ar .

" liP had gu ttt•1 1 acu• s:-;

$100.0011 in th t· last \'l'&lt;ll . l11
tlw las t lour muntli!'i alulll'
ht· sold st oc J..: s lor $1iU.ooo . I !t•
mu st h&lt;IVl' been 111 ~dwu t to
.lifft•I'L'Ill tilin g ~ y lit• h;H!
thrt•e ur 111ur mawr law ~ ~u b

11 Qt.

BINS

under suspi cious ci rc um - l~il

sla nres . The onl y thin g is.
th er e' s no r eason for him to
be gone ."
There ar e

report s Abe
!liJn 't pay !axes th e last

SPECIAL

LAUNDRY BASKET
PLASTIC
BUSHEL
DISH
SIZE
PAN

QILING
Our Low Price

nu

SPECIAL ON STORM DOORS

SCOTTIE$
TISSUES

,

200
Pack

BOXES

on~

0
R

lNG

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply

ut hume 1A Ill' dutn 't hclie\t '
111 bonh a c c u 11 11I s1 . l' in'
th uu sa ml WL'Ill l or ::1 moll'!
pa yme nt . The ns t. a Lashier's check lor $25.UIIIJ . wu s
gont·. Al ong wi t h :\bt' . In llw
wake uf his di sa ppt:'u ran ce:

Tiabbi Gold wu s d1 smissed
br lh c• lemple.
" Cases li ke his don 't l~t.ip ·
lhev get some thin g out ot
being able to do something
for !hem. This is not to say
that the y don 't enjoy their
inconw as physicians. but
lht• inc onw

does n't

keep

them [ro m enjoying the other
aspec ts common to the prat tict! of medicin e .
I agree that if "

~alieni is
concerned about his treal·
men! he should have a con ·
sullation . If nothin g else.
such attitude on the part ot
the patient reflects a tack of
confidence and it interferes
with the normal lreatmcnl
relatio nship between lhe doc ·
tor and the palient. The way
to solve lhe problem is lo
have a consullation and clear
the air. Most doctors who
are really concerned aboul
how their patient is doing
and are for some reason or
anolhet· u n cer I a in aboul
eilher the pall en!' s state or
what to do for him usually

will ask for a consultation
from another physician who

The !ruth is that mosl doc - might be able to help with
tor s like !heir palienls and lhe problem .

II you're fighting a
losing bltUe agalnSI
heat and humidity In
your Mobile Home ,,

• It' a 1 . GENUINE Mobile • A flexible duct kit that hooks

Home Cenlral Air Condl·
up easily to your existing
!loner.
duct work.
• A bigger blower motor lor • Fast. easy installation. combeUer atr circulation.
ptelety oul-ol-doors.
• Amana Etectro--coatlng fin· • Engineered tor Quiet operamaximum rust pro·

VEGETABLE

SPECIAL

\.!~ALL~~~,,

tlll'l't' vears. that he gmn·
hl i.'d bi g a! t he Palom ino
" Ht&gt; w a ~ \'l' n 0111spukl•n l ·~ u iJ 1hi s fath er-i n-la w saw
.(Jild t:l' t' ~l k d ))l ~) n \· 1:' 1\ P IJl i ( •~
r:1m lose $700 ont' ni ght J.
fl t WJ S (l .'i llla l.!' j)t'I' ~ UII I' ' llw t " he wa s run ning ar ound
sl :J I III' l' Il l· W~l ll t l• tl t o ...:1 \1 ' wit h bro ad s e\'ery ni ght. ..
CARLOAD OF
JUST
liln l."it'lt :1 rw nw as ~~ h 1:.;
· \\hen rou chec k int o
shot ..
ARRIVED
:\ bl' s ulfa irs ... c aut io n s
Tht'l' t&gt; were eni gma s. :11o. lht' t ' Bl is s. " yu u' rt' louhin ,L!
\\'itll ~ II llw mone \·. Ill' IJur - in to a hornt•1' s nes1. ..
J'uWl'd $2 .!lOO tro1.n 0.1 l.a ~
But wh o kn ows whe n• llw
\'t:'g i:l s b an k un ~~ slw r!-lt·rrn IH I!'Ilt' l is'!
S. 3rdAve.
loan It ha s n't been repai d
Two lsn.1 eli lri e nds ).! :J\'t' him
\ ' l r tua l t ~· IIH:' II' IIll' S&lt;J Vlllgs ut
$W.11llO on AIJe 's promist:• lht.ll
'
~I
ht wuu!d gt•l tht"lll (f 20 Jll'l'
Call
No. 482
Charter No. 9815
NaUonal Rant Region No.4
l'l'lll r l' I u r 11 or bt'tt«.~ r
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
Thi.',Y ·n· ll·!t wit hout n l' ('JI!.
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF 11JE
Ba h ~ knl'W thl'n ' w~J ~ ;1
t u t &lt;.~l ut $.1tt .UUO in l llt' i r .-. ~Il l'
IWnclin g

PAILS

WITH EVERY ,:

101 SUPtR ONE:CO.U
PAINT

S h ~ rilf' s Office . " !Jut we do
ge t a half dozen a year in
lo the same category- miss ing

su!'e . He had ,l!.OUU rra !'u n ~

to

SPECIAL
PLASTIC

S6~9 VALUE

Dave Bl 1ss. ·· 1s ltJat hl' wa s

Ask Consultation,
It Is No Insult

ish for

SPECIAL
PLASTIC

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINT

done

motels untll now tht•n• is
onl\' one . a Grad e D plan·
catt ed lhe Hanch Inn . l&lt;•fl in
hi s name . He shift ed hi s at ·
tention to land developm ent
a nd in partnership w i I h
Dave Bli ss. a La ~ Ve l' (:j S
motel ow ner . formed OPC .
(nc: 1 ULJ tsidt' Perso nal Con tact 1. whit::h worked on a
personal s e r v 1 c e cun tratl
wi th Cava n a ~h Lam! Co m·
rnun ities. deliverin g · lm:a ·
tions . It wa s a bi g mon e~
deal.
" M\' first reaeti un wh en
Abt' · di sappt·ared ... s a v s

tection .

j

i

FO.R THE BEST BARGAINS
IN TOWN, SHOP M&amp;R

.\\ram Schwartz

He starled to unload lhe

cians do.

1

AND 2" NYLON TRIM BRUSH

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

I

l f

sl11 p wi1h H ~1hl11 1\ ~JI'Oil t: 11ld
ol Ji ll' lt'!Hplt•. lt&gt;&lt;JSt'd Hu·
molt&gt;l. Then Aht• ae&lt;plin•d
aiHJI'Jt ~·r mold a 1ul uno1 11l'r .
~111d :J.IIO!llt'r. tin1iJ SHOl l 1!1'
wa s opl'rut ing l'iVl' l liiJil'l s.
fh' w;,ts torel'd to v,h:t• up hi s
ll'ilthi11g jub thrt'l' _\"t'ill' ~
&lt;.~go . B_
, . fht·n . lw con!d i. ll'l'urd
to .
Ahl' upt·r&lt;.~ll'd hi s nwh'l ~
undl·r u l'Hrporu1iun which
"'' l'Uiil·d ND&lt;i Till' il'!I&lt;'I'S
wt•n• s i~nit'i&lt;:a nl. Tht&gt;y stoml
fot " Nehm die Gelt," which
is co llo4Uial Yiddi s h fm
" take lhe mo11er ." ti e kepi
no fi ll's . Hi s ba'nk actounts
werP bunll•rlint~ . M o 11e y
passl•tl through hi ~ ·hands in
h u g t• dl'IHJillinations . It's
t&gt;s lilllalt•U ht' went thnn1gl1
&lt;.1 hal t'- mi!l ion dollar::i in th«.·
l~st llll'l'l' n·m·s . Till' book keeping is chaotic . tic ck·ull
i11 the stuck market. traded
i11 silvt·r a11d l'\11:'11 brandlt•d
out to an intt'l'est i n a Grt'l'l1 ·
wit.:h \'i ll Jgt• l'aft&gt; in N&lt;'w
York .
·
" li t: Wa S a tough IJUSIIICSS man ," admit s hi s wife .
" People drdn't li ke him . He
Jrovt' a hard bargain. li e
nuu.le l'!lt?mit:s. ThNe WPI'f-'

,.

anem ia . She had heen re ·
l't'i vin g B-12 once a month

\

p;JJ"!1lt ' l

threat s on his llfl' ...

!Ill

\ r

hou.~e

He was a tough businessman.
t&gt;eople didn't like him. He drove
hard bargains. He made enemies.
There were threats on his life.

l'

The ca r wa s taler found m
the parking lot where Abe
tell 11.
" He's missin g and !hat 's
al l we know to dal e." says
an agent of lhe local Vl.l l

$29.95 Gold Piece

one you love

/~11.~

e11rly
·tlw morning of M11y 15 111U! tli.'inppellrell.
Not. 11 tmt·e. As if he nevl'r existed.

or ev i dence of kidnapin g..

hope lo collecl Abe' s S25U.UUO
in life insurance . Luck)
meanwhile she found a spare
$1.000 in the safe they kept
at hom e. She's worried and
mystified. Bul no Iunger

,,

h&gt;ji his

taxed. Sundav brunch al till' ts 1'1.'\'l'lution tll m1 anli.lzi n g Flami11gu y,;ilh lh1b:::; and 1 ~ t'U il)pf ~X Wt•IJ ()f IJ USilll'SS
B&lt;•lla . 7.1 .'\dam. land Ira. 2 dt·;.ll s v,;hil.:h tur m•d i.l :;ln·
:\n Israeli coupk ~..·ame OVl'l' (liuu s 1il'bn·w school lt·acher
in thl' afternoon- Abc. al.so a &lt;~ t tilt..' unl.v temple in Las
native of ls rat&gt; l. was try ing \ ' q~ a s into an uptight. garn to he lp kee p !hem in the llling. 1'11b1ering t•n!I'PJII'l' ·

lhe morning ol May 15. a
Monday. Avram got up earl)'
- 6 :30 ·a.m.- lor a bu smess
meNing at the offices ot' a
land company in Las Vegas .
He lefl lhe low protite ranch c ounlrv . In ttw earlv t,n' ·
house in a neat residential nin g. i-~ab s ' parent s s'tup ,,ed
lracl on Ba ncr ott Circle. 011 llv. AI 9:15. !.labs and twr
the easlern ed ge ot the cily. nlothe r we11l shopping i.ll a
S UIJt'l'llliUkeL a good tinu.• 111
• at 7 a.m.
hot .Las Vt:gas. Abc und Mul.
~;
He disappeared . Nol a his f~l lher - i11 - law , stuyl'd
~ trar.:e. As it he uever exi ::; tcd . homt and playNI gin .
~
The ph u n e nwg . A lw
Avram· s clot hes - he had
jusl replenislled hi s ward· draggt!d it in I u &lt;mothe r
, robe $2,000 wort h-still han g roo111 . unus ual fur him . The
~~.~ in the closet of the tlliiSier call WiJ S trum a CaUun ' ia
·~
~ bedroom . Hi s picture is in promoter n a llll' d William
den. His children- lh1·ee F' aiscll. who had bought a
~~ the
of !hem . ages 7. 4 and 2 motel from Abe " You
-still talk vivid I v about know ." he sa id to Ma l when
he hung up. " tha t Fai.sch is
" Daddy ."
afraid of me. I got to m('et
But a Las Vegas new s- him in th e morning ."
paper headlined : " Fea r
Brig ht and ear ly . hP druvl'
Vegas Businessman Munkr
the
leased Cadillac lo an ol·
Viclim."
fi r e park 111g tot al Las
" I believe it. " say s Bab s. Vegas Boulevard South and
Abe Sc hwart z. as he was Clla rleston . When Abe didtd
known to the people around ~.: all br ,) in tlw afl e rno u11.
town . is or was 33 years old . Balls 'wa s perturbed . H&lt;' d
He had made a fanta stic ufll'n t:umc hunu.• lat(.' . but
score in a fa sl·paced hus· ht! alwa vs let her kn ow. Sht·
tier's city that is used to too k th ~ kids out tu ~Jc .
fortune s being yanked up Donald 's fur hambur ge rs .
and down like a well bucket. Bv 9 she wa s reall v worr iPd .
Abe for lhe tasl two years Slie start ed calling tlw ll os·
has been walkin g around pilots and hotels on llw
with nothing smaller than Str ip. Fi11ally. the pol ice .
$100 bill s in his pockels .
The poli ce d idn't get t'X·
l'itt'd . La s Vegas is a pl u ~.:l'
Babs was getting the same wllrre I.J l'Ople h a v t· bee n
way. She was always used to kn own to d is ap~w a r. utten
a few grand around the voluntaril y. Tht&gt;n• 31'1:' di ~­
house .
t ra&lt;.:l ions.
It ' s di fferent now . more

H1~

...........

tion , indoors and out.

Call992-5321 For Free Estimate

Foreman &amp; AbbQtt
MIDDLEPO~J·

O.

ASSETS
Cash and due !rom bank.s - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 501,516.19
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,267,887.89
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations - , - - - - - - - - 170,499.82
Obligations of States and political sutxlivisions - - - - - - 91,228.91
Other securilies - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - .
- - - 12,m.oo
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - · - - - ·
• - 350,000.00
Loans - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - 3,174,4~7.34
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
1
olher assets representing bank premises - - - 1~,000.00
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - 21314.65
TOTAL ASSETS • - • - - - · - - · - - • - - • • • (5,585,419.80
l.IABll.ITIES
Demand deposits or individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - , - - - - · - - - - · - - $1,222,934.71
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - 3,096,853.63
Deposits of United States Government - . - - - - - - - 20,854.78
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions - - - - - - · - - 644,737.58
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - • • - • - 21,077.72
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - $51006,458.42
(a) Total demand deposits - - - $1,589,604.79
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - • $3,416,853.63
Otherliabilities----- - - - - - - - - - - •
116.865.16'
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - • • • • - - - • - • • $5,123,323.58
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Other reserves on loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $46,788.83
Reserves on securities - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - 650.00
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - $47,438.63
CAPIT AI. ACCOUNTS
Equity Capital-total - - - - $4 14,657.~
Common Stock-total par value
125,000.00
No. shares aurhorized 5,000
No. shares outstanding 5,000
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • - - - - 125,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - - - - - - ·
164,657.39
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
414,657.39
TOTAL UABJUTIES, RESERVES AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
f5,585,419.80
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for !he 15 calendar
days ending with &lt;;all dale - - • - - - - $4,912,733.12
Average of total loans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with Cllll dale - - - - - • - $3,170,659.78
I, John T..Wolfe, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition is true and correct to the beat of my knowledge and
belief.
JolmT.Wolle .
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thb report of CGII·
dillon and declare that, it has been examined by us and to the belt of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
Charles D. Y01t
Earl Croso - Dlrectm
J, W. Weaver, Jr.

TABLETS

PLASTIC

THE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

of Racine in the Slate or Ohio, at the close ol business oo Juoe 30, 071 publhhed
in response to Call made by Comptroller of the currency, uoder Title 12, Ualted
States Code, Section 161.

EFFERDENT

SPECIAL
!f·CUt~ERY TRA
40
TABLETS~

EA.

•

SPECIAL
UTILITY TUB
'Plastic

CURAD

NSPARENT
BANDAGES

SAYALLE

YARN
REG.
•

'

$1.39
SKEIN

ANTIQUE OAK
PANELING 4'
FOIL
INSULATION

•
•·

;WHITE
.
I

80 COUNT

'

12" I 12"

.43
X 8'

4" Thick

SHEET

�..

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 20, 1972

~Paugh-Bumgarner

KERR

DOMINO SUGAR - )

· ~/1 JELLY
7«t~t ... GLASSES

N~;w

H!l VEN - Miss Debra
Paugh, daughter of Mrs. Pal

CASE OF 12
BONELESS

CHARCOAL
STEAKS

CASE
OF 24

$

BEECH-NUT .
STRAINED

SELF-BASTING FRESH FROZEN

BABY FOOD

ONLY

LB.

IVORY LIQUID
48 OZ. BOTTLE

rrour.·('
l\ To.s-the
· rn Oht'o
.1. I
1 'I I

SUPERIORS

J

CARNIVAL
WIENERS

LEAN &amp; TENDER

2 LB. PKG.
PAPER PLATES 100 CT. 59~

LEAN

IIGA NAPKINS

LB.

GROUND

BEEF

3 LB. OR MORE

SWIFl'S
EVER SWEET

SLICED
BACON

d~L49~1 ARM ROAST

ICE CREAM

Vz GAL

27~1

LB.

oNLY

LB.

89e

12

'

32 OZ. BOTTLE

FRENCH
FRIES
5 LB. BAG

5 EARS

GREEN
ONIONS
BCH.

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

1o~

-CHUNK TUNA

1 LB. VAC. PAK

SEMI-BONELESS

HAMS
WHOL£ OR HAlf

M R
SHOPPING CENTER

Dopier and Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Koenig and son, Ted.
At East Liverpool they visited
the high school where Ted
Koenig is in administration. He
had previously been a band
teacher.
Following their return home,
the family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Myers and children Of
Chester, Mrs. Alzora Markle of
GallipoHs, an aunt of Mr.
McDaniel, and Mrs. Carrie
Smith of Middleport.
The family spent a week of
their vacation cam ping at
Forked Run State Park,
Reedsville.

matching ·funds fl'tll1l' the sta(t
of West Virginia. The Federlil
support has now run out and
the school is financed through
West Virginia University, The
Commission of Religion in
Appalachia, individual
denominations and participant
fees .
Rev. Lund's courses this
summer session included
Social, Economic and Political
Issues in Appalachia; Advanced Pastoral Care; Rapid
Reading and Educational
Simulation. Mrs. Lund took two
different courses in Appalachian Culture and the
Church and Medicine alone
with Social, Economic and
Political
Issues ' and

w,a ..

·

KRAFT OIL

FRESH

1

Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. MeDaniel, Sr. and son, Paul, Jr.,
of 488 South Fourth Ave. ,
Middleporthavereturnedfrom
a trip through northern Ohio
visiting fri ends and relatives.
They were guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Gene McKauley and
children and Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Hawley and children,
Craig, Brenda and Christina
Ann, Columbus, and visited the
Eastland Shopping Center mall
while there. They traveled
through New Concord, home of
Col. John Glenn and then went
to East Liverpool where they
visited Mr . and Mrs. Harold

~

~;::::==:;!::;f

1

I

M&amp;R Shopping. Center

.

'

' '

Flesher to
Coordinate
Festival
RAVENSWOOD - Don
Flesher has been appointed
program coordinator for the
Ohio River Festival to be held
at Ravenswood, Aug. 11-13.
Flesher, a Jackson County
native', brings to his position
many years Of experience in

~~;;ar ~rrii~~~~ th~~~gh~~~

. pointment was announced by

. ~7:~~~~·~:::1~;:~ 0~~

BY JACK O'BRIAN
rnitlee.
proud to number among her friends and patrons
Flesher will he responsible
GROWING BOLDER
such wonderful people as Robert Kennedy (ollll for coordinating the many
ON ROCK SCENE
of the finest and most sensitive men I've ever events planned for the Ohio
NEW YORK (KFS) -Trude Heller is a
met), his brother Ted, Prince Rainier and River Festival and for
rock impresario of . Greenwich Village who
Princess Grace, Marlon Brando, Bob Hope and scheduling entertainment for
abandoned the big town last year ... Well, the
so
many, many more.
the festival.
club is still thriving and she has returned to the
"Ted Kennedy drops in nearly every time
Flesher has hust finishe&lt;: a
scene, chatting endlessly and dropping names
he
comes
to
town.
I
well
remember
the
time
he
two-year
job as executive
faster than the Social Register after a police
raid. ·we love you, Trude, Trude dear ... So came in following his near fatal plane crash. director of the Huntington
Although still suffering from the accident, he Centennial Commission. There
where's it all hanging out?
"There's an epigram the French love to danced all evening, never missing a turn on the he planned and directed 100
floor.
events durmg the centennial
quote," quoted Trude. "'The more things
"Running a nightclub gives one an entlreb'..• year Of l,971. ·Hun~gton has
change the more they are the same' - that I
different
slant on people," says Trude. "Gre'ta ·• illneo!declded to continue many
believe apUy describes the contemporary music
scene. Modern music is a combination of rock, Garbo has a reputation for wanting to be alone. 0!. theae events on an annual
jazz, soul and Bach, tomorrow's music will be It isn't so - I've wa.tched the lady time lll!d , ba::·wal 011 the staff Of the
today's music slightly modified and the music of agam m my club. Shes never been there alone. West 'Virginia c t · 1
. .th the Da 'd N.
en ennta
the day after tomorrow undoubtedly will dip Gener ally ' she dro ps m WI
VI
IVen:l Commission In 1962-63 as press
and other friends, always smiling and chatting relations director and was in
back into the past for some Of its inspiration.
"I note a trend toward dancing cheek to with the other members of the ~Y· ~neUiing, the public relations departcheek again, the little things that we thought so she nev~ dances but enjoys swaymg II) lime to ment at Kaiser for about five
..
. years during the building of the
camp yesterday are the 'In' things to do today. the mua1c.
"Rudolf Nureyev and Ml!l"got Fonleyn 1111. plant at Ravenswood.
Of course, nothing will change my opinion that
among
our favorites. Nureyev has one distlncFlesher has also been acti¥e
rock is the dominant force In our music - a
somewha.t subdued rock, not the hard, driving tion, .he never stops dancing. 113 you know, I in the annual July 4 celebration
rock that exploded into a cultural revolution in always have two live bands playing - Rudoll in Ripley Iince it was started in
the entire world. Ills my thought that we are goes on the floor and, when he's in a dancing 1946 as a homecoming for the
World War II soldiers.
now well into 'The Cool 7~,' a refreshing mood, literally wears out both groups.
''The
always
elegant
leonard
Bernstein
Two March of Dimes
epilog'1f to 'The Noisy &amp;lm.'
,"It was just about 12years ago that I visited enjoys constant experimenting with blends of , telethons are among Flesher's
the .newly-opened Peppennint Lounge, In rock, soul, classical and jazz. Apparently he had credits. He produced and
company with a group of friends, including been shopping the last time I saw btm since ~ directed the 1966 WliTN-TV
. Tallulah Bankhead, Marcello Mastroianni and was carrying a Bloomingdale's shopping 11q effort and the 1968 WSAZ-TV
-Morgana King, to se~ and hear for mysell just · which he didn't bother to check but placed on effort for th~ March of Dimes.
what this new sound. rock and roll, was all the floor alongside his chair, a Ia Tiny Tim. Ah . Flesher has also been inwell, all geni\1888 have their little eccentricities, lere.sled ~~ the Jackson County
about.
"Another thing, Jack, I'd Uke to give a bil Jun1or Fa1r and has arranged
"It bowled me over. So much so, in fad,
110 the e~tertalrunent for thE. past
that I inunediately changed the format of Trude boost to that much maligned city that I love
.
· thret yean.
Heller's and, in a comparatively short period, de epIY- New York·
.
Both Flaber and hie U
"Wilen lleft town a year ago, I honestly fd ' Jaale are
· tired but~
was described variously as the Queen of Rock,
the
city,
and
parllcularly
the
Viljq:e,
wu
ibou&amp;
~~
1o
~
~ Besides
the High Priestess of tbe Sub.CUlture or, in the
ale. ' lJil Q . J\lver Festival
word! of a writer I dislike, the TexaS Guinan of to explode. Wben I returned sb:
the Jet :;.t,
·
·
was delighted and amazed with the. ella~ proJ,e d; die Fleshers plan to do
"Actually, I'm just a hard-working gal who wrought in the past len months. Our town ts on some TV stories, do some
likes tt believe that she's always In step with the the upbeat. I want to congratulate ,all t111111! tal,en\ booking, assist with the
times and who runs a night club, bearing her publlc-t~pirlled citizens who lll't! mHina tbf..· Jlcklon County Junior Fair
name, which tries to keep the fickle public In- renaissance of tbis wonderful town their lint and enjoy their two grand:
chlldrtn, Noelle and Heather.
terested, stimulated and excited. And who's order of bualneas."

weea

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

8Slllstar[~t'Sh.Qllld':Cl~mt Rev .

Lurid.

.
.
l ..... . ,B,
. . ,..,,.,. W.
. ."""' "' ,,
.I ozce a ong r ay 1

~------~~~&amp;

1

FROZEN

ENGLISH
LEAN .

FAIRMONT

ASST. FLAVORS

320l

WASTE FREE

FRESH

Chuck Roast

160 CT.

\TOPPS ROOT BEER

BONELESS

ROAST

brothers of the groom, were
ushers. LilUe Miss Suzette
Paugh uf New Haven ~nd Mr. P•ugh was flower girl and
Joseph Paugh of Point Robbie Edwards served·as ring
Pleasant, and Mr. Leland C. bearer. Acolytes were Rodney
Bumgarner, Jr.,Son of Mr. and Vickers of New Haven and
Mrs. Leland Bumgarner , Shawn Paugh of Lemrt.
The bride's mother wore ·a
noute I, Let&lt;lrl, exc hanged
riuplial vows July 7 at St. Paul pink and beige knit dress, with
Lutheran Chu rch in New black accessories and a corHaven with the Rev . John sage of while pompons. The
Haeberle performing the bridegroom's mother's dress
double-ring ce remony at 6:30 was while with red and navy
p. Ill .
trim. She wore navy acWhrle
gladioli
and cessories and a navy corsage of
el u·ysan themums arranged in pompons.
large baskets were used in the
Miss Jackie Paugh, sister of
decorations, seven-branched U1e bride, registered guests.
candelabras were placed on
A reception following the
either side of the a lwr, and wedding was in the social room
sprays of ivy were used in the of the church, featuring a t&lt;lble
windows.
covered with a white cloth with
Mrs. Wi.lliam Russell, a wide lace edging, centered
THE GOSPELAIRES will present a special service of
organist, played •·o, Perfecl with a three-tiered wedding gospel singing at the Bidwofi United Methodist Church.
Wedding cake with crystal ca ndle Bidwell, beginning at 7:30p.m. Saturday, July 22. Everyone
Love,"
" The
Prayer", and "The Wedding holders on each side holding is welcome.
Benediction ."
pink candles. Ivy, dotted with
The bride, given in marriage while pompons encircled the
by her father, wore a floor- cake. Ladies of the church
length gown of white dolled assisted at the reception, insw iss , featuring a high cluding Mrs. Bethel Vance,
neckline, empire waist and who served the cake, Mrs. John
Victorian sleeves, with ac- C. Fry pouring coffee and Mrs.
cented lace trim down the front Lloyd ~oush serving the
and on the sleeves. The dress punch.
had a deU.clmble chapel train
The bride 's traveling
The Rev. Arthur C. Lund, Educational Simulation . The
and the bride wore a finger-tip costwne was a brown and Pastor of St. Paul Lutheran courses are U!ughl by various
veil of illusion . She carried a white polyester dress, with Church, Pomeroy, and his university ·· and seminary
bridal bouquet of white gladioli while accessories, and she wife, Corrine, have returned professors, chaplains and other
and pompons, trimmed with wore a corsage of gladioli and from the recent Appalachian clergy from across' the counwhite ribbon streamers. The pompons. The co up le is Regiooal School for Church try.
gown was made by Mrs. Jack residing at 3607 Cleveland Leaders at West Virginia
Pastor Lund received a
Paugh, aunt of the bride.
Ave., Columbus, Ohio.
Un iy.ersily in Morgantown scholarship to attend the school
Miss Debra Gilland served
The bride is a 1972 graduate which ran July 3 - July 14 with it&lt;om the Division of American
as maid .of honor . Her floor of Wahama High School. The classes being held on all days Missions of the American
length dress was of pink dolled groom is a 1971 graduate of the except Sunday.
Lutheran Church. Mrs. Lund
swiss, fea turing an A-line skirt, same school and completed one
The school was an recejved one of two scholarempire waist and puff sleeves. year at B.T.I. in Cleveland. He ecumenical effort for clergy ships offered to pastor's wives
Her flowers were pink pom- plans to attend Columbus and laity from churches in the in Ohio given by the Ohio
pons with pink ribbon Technical Institute, and is general region called "Ap- District's American Lutheran
streamers. The bridesmaid, presentlyemployedattheOhw . palachia.' ' This year ;~ . Church Women. The women's
Miss Rebecca Paugh, sister of NatiOnal Bank 10 Columbus. den om in at ions we r.f group Of St. Paul Lutheran
the bride, was dressed in a
Out-of-town guests attending represe nted among the 160 Church in Pomeroy is an active
floor-length mint green dotted the .weddmg were Sharon and participants.
memller Of this organization.
swiss dress, the same style as Debra Rtekard of St. Mary's,
In order to complete the
This school will be held again
the one worn by the maid of Mrs. Robert Harless and Robin entire program a participant during the first two weeks of
honor. Her flowers were green of Columbus, Mrs . Waller must attend three summer July, 1973, and offers area
pompons with mint green Taylor of Columbus, Mrs. sessions. This was the second clergy and lay leaders an
streamers. The dresses were Floyd Miller of Marietta, Mary session that Pastor and Mrs. opportunity to receive training
made by the bride.
and Joy Kautz of Chesler. Lund have attended. The to more effectively minister to
Mr. David Russell of New Allan .Lambert of Syracuse, school was est&lt;lblished five people's needs in rural southHaven was best man, and V~rgmla Wolfe •. Syracuse and years ago under a Tille One • east Ohio. Anyone wishing
John Bumgarner and Gary Mrs. Marjone G1bbs of Educational Grant from the ·. more information on the school
Bumgarner, of Let&lt;lrt, Route I, Columbus.
Federal Government with and possible scholarship

Pastor, Wije Return
From Church School

10-14 LB.

CHUCK
STEAK

PLUS
DEPOSIT

8 oz.

.

Vows Exchanged

10 LB. BAG

SWIFT' GOLD CREST

.

�..

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 20, 1972

~Paugh-Bumgarner

KERR

DOMINO SUGAR - )

· ~/1 JELLY
7«t~t ... GLASSES

N~;w

H!l VEN - Miss Debra
Paugh, daughter of Mrs. Pal

CASE OF 12
BONELESS

CHARCOAL
STEAKS

CASE
OF 24

$

BEECH-NUT .
STRAINED

SELF-BASTING FRESH FROZEN

BABY FOOD

ONLY

LB.

IVORY LIQUID
48 OZ. BOTTLE

rrour.·('
l\ To.s-the
· rn Oht'o
.1. I
1 'I I

SUPERIORS

J

CARNIVAL
WIENERS

LEAN &amp; TENDER

2 LB. PKG.
PAPER PLATES 100 CT. 59~

LEAN

IIGA NAPKINS

LB.

GROUND

BEEF

3 LB. OR MORE

SWIFl'S
EVER SWEET

SLICED
BACON

d~L49~1 ARM ROAST

ICE CREAM

Vz GAL

27~1

LB.

oNLY

LB.

89e

12

'

32 OZ. BOTTLE

FRENCH
FRIES
5 LB. BAG

5 EARS

GREEN
ONIONS
BCH.

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

1o~

-CHUNK TUNA

1 LB. VAC. PAK

SEMI-BONELESS

HAMS
WHOL£ OR HAlf

M R
SHOPPING CENTER

Dopier and Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Koenig and son, Ted.
At East Liverpool they visited
the high school where Ted
Koenig is in administration. He
had previously been a band
teacher.
Following their return home,
the family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Myers and children Of
Chester, Mrs. Alzora Markle of
GallipoHs, an aunt of Mr.
McDaniel, and Mrs. Carrie
Smith of Middleport.
The family spent a week of
their vacation cam ping at
Forked Run State Park,
Reedsville.

matching ·funds fl'tll1l' the sta(t
of West Virginia. The Federlil
support has now run out and
the school is financed through
West Virginia University, The
Commission of Religion in
Appalachia, individual
denominations and participant
fees .
Rev. Lund's courses this
summer session included
Social, Economic and Political
Issues in Appalachia; Advanced Pastoral Care; Rapid
Reading and Educational
Simulation. Mrs. Lund took two
different courses in Appalachian Culture and the
Church and Medicine alone
with Social, Economic and
Political
Issues ' and

w,a ..

·

KRAFT OIL

FRESH

1

Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. MeDaniel, Sr. and son, Paul, Jr.,
of 488 South Fourth Ave. ,
Middleporthavereturnedfrom
a trip through northern Ohio
visiting fri ends and relatives.
They were guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Gene McKauley and
children and Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Hawley and children,
Craig, Brenda and Christina
Ann, Columbus, and visited the
Eastland Shopping Center mall
while there. They traveled
through New Concord, home of
Col. John Glenn and then went
to East Liverpool where they
visited Mr . and Mrs. Harold

~

~;::::==:;!::;f

1

I

M&amp;R Shopping. Center

.

'

' '

Flesher to
Coordinate
Festival
RAVENSWOOD - Don
Flesher has been appointed
program coordinator for the
Ohio River Festival to be held
at Ravenswood, Aug. 11-13.
Flesher, a Jackson County
native', brings to his position
many years Of experience in

~~;;ar ~rrii~~~~ th~~~gh~~~

. pointment was announced by

. ~7:~~~~·~:::1~;:~ 0~~

BY JACK O'BRIAN
rnitlee.
proud to number among her friends and patrons
Flesher will he responsible
GROWING BOLDER
such wonderful people as Robert Kennedy (ollll for coordinating the many
ON ROCK SCENE
of the finest and most sensitive men I've ever events planned for the Ohio
NEW YORK (KFS) -Trude Heller is a
met), his brother Ted, Prince Rainier and River Festival and for
rock impresario of . Greenwich Village who
Princess Grace, Marlon Brando, Bob Hope and scheduling entertainment for
abandoned the big town last year ... Well, the
so
many, many more.
the festival.
club is still thriving and she has returned to the
"Ted Kennedy drops in nearly every time
Flesher has hust finishe&lt;: a
scene, chatting endlessly and dropping names
he
comes
to
town.
I
well
remember
the
time
he
two-year
job as executive
faster than the Social Register after a police
raid. ·we love you, Trude, Trude dear ... So came in following his near fatal plane crash. director of the Huntington
Although still suffering from the accident, he Centennial Commission. There
where's it all hanging out?
"There's an epigram the French love to danced all evening, never missing a turn on the he planned and directed 100
floor.
events durmg the centennial
quote," quoted Trude. "'The more things
"Running a nightclub gives one an entlreb'..• year Of l,971. ·Hun~gton has
change the more they are the same' - that I
different
slant on people," says Trude. "Gre'ta ·• illneo!declded to continue many
believe apUy describes the contemporary music
scene. Modern music is a combination of rock, Garbo has a reputation for wanting to be alone. 0!. theae events on an annual
jazz, soul and Bach, tomorrow's music will be It isn't so - I've wa.tched the lady time lll!d , ba::·wal 011 the staff Of the
today's music slightly modified and the music of agam m my club. Shes never been there alone. West 'Virginia c t · 1
. .th the Da 'd N.
en ennta
the day after tomorrow undoubtedly will dip Gener ally ' she dro ps m WI
VI
IVen:l Commission In 1962-63 as press
and other friends, always smiling and chatting relations director and was in
back into the past for some Of its inspiration.
"I note a trend toward dancing cheek to with the other members of the ~Y· ~neUiing, the public relations departcheek again, the little things that we thought so she nev~ dances but enjoys swaymg II) lime to ment at Kaiser for about five
..
. years during the building of the
camp yesterday are the 'In' things to do today. the mua1c.
"Rudolf Nureyev and Ml!l"got Fonleyn 1111. plant at Ravenswood.
Of course, nothing will change my opinion that
among
our favorites. Nureyev has one distlncFlesher has also been acti¥e
rock is the dominant force In our music - a
somewha.t subdued rock, not the hard, driving tion, .he never stops dancing. 113 you know, I in the annual July 4 celebration
rock that exploded into a cultural revolution in always have two live bands playing - Rudoll in Ripley Iince it was started in
the entire world. Ills my thought that we are goes on the floor and, when he's in a dancing 1946 as a homecoming for the
World War II soldiers.
now well into 'The Cool 7~,' a refreshing mood, literally wears out both groups.
''The
always
elegant
leonard
Bernstein
Two March of Dimes
epilog'1f to 'The Noisy &amp;lm.'
,"It was just about 12years ago that I visited enjoys constant experimenting with blends of , telethons are among Flesher's
the .newly-opened Peppennint Lounge, In rock, soul, classical and jazz. Apparently he had credits. He produced and
company with a group of friends, including been shopping the last time I saw btm since ~ directed the 1966 WliTN-TV
. Tallulah Bankhead, Marcello Mastroianni and was carrying a Bloomingdale's shopping 11q effort and the 1968 WSAZ-TV
-Morgana King, to se~ and hear for mysell just · which he didn't bother to check but placed on effort for th~ March of Dimes.
what this new sound. rock and roll, was all the floor alongside his chair, a Ia Tiny Tim. Ah . Flesher has also been inwell, all geni\1888 have their little eccentricities, lere.sled ~~ the Jackson County
about.
"Another thing, Jack, I'd Uke to give a bil Jun1or Fa1r and has arranged
"It bowled me over. So much so, in fad,
110 the e~tertalrunent for thE. past
that I inunediately changed the format of Trude boost to that much maligned city that I love
.
· thret yean.
Heller's and, in a comparatively short period, de epIY- New York·
.
Both Flaber and hie U
"Wilen lleft town a year ago, I honestly fd ' Jaale are
· tired but~
was described variously as the Queen of Rock,
the
city,
and
parllcularly
the
Viljq:e,
wu
ibou&amp;
~~
1o
~
~ Besides
the High Priestess of tbe Sub.CUlture or, in the
ale. ' lJil Q . J\lver Festival
word! of a writer I dislike, the TexaS Guinan of to explode. Wben I returned sb:
the Jet :;.t,
·
·
was delighted and amazed with the. ella~ proJ,e d; die Fleshers plan to do
"Actually, I'm just a hard-working gal who wrought in the past len months. Our town ts on some TV stories, do some
likes tt believe that she's always In step with the the upbeat. I want to congratulate ,all t111111! tal,en\ booking, assist with the
times and who runs a night club, bearing her publlc-t~pirlled citizens who lll't! mHina tbf..· Jlcklon County Junior Fair
name, which tries to keep the fickle public In- renaissance of tbis wonderful town their lint and enjoy their two grand:
chlldrtn, Noelle and Heather.
terested, stimulated and excited. And who's order of bualneas."

weea

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

8Slllstar[~t'Sh.Qllld':Cl~mt Rev .

Lurid.

.
.
l ..... . ,B,
. . ,..,,.,. W.
. ."""' "' ,,
.I ozce a ong r ay 1

~------~~~&amp;

1

FROZEN

ENGLISH
LEAN .

FAIRMONT

ASST. FLAVORS

320l

WASTE FREE

FRESH

Chuck Roast

160 CT.

\TOPPS ROOT BEER

BONELESS

ROAST

brothers of the groom, were
ushers. LilUe Miss Suzette
Paugh uf New Haven ~nd Mr. P•ugh was flower girl and
Joseph Paugh of Point Robbie Edwards served·as ring
Pleasant, and Mr. Leland C. bearer. Acolytes were Rodney
Bumgarner, Jr.,Son of Mr. and Vickers of New Haven and
Mrs. Leland Bumgarner , Shawn Paugh of Lemrt.
The bride's mother wore ·a
noute I, Let&lt;lrl, exc hanged
riuplial vows July 7 at St. Paul pink and beige knit dress, with
Lutheran Chu rch in New black accessories and a corHaven with the Rev . John sage of while pompons. The
Haeberle performing the bridegroom's mother's dress
double-ring ce remony at 6:30 was while with red and navy
p. Ill .
trim. She wore navy acWhrle
gladioli
and cessories and a navy corsage of
el u·ysan themums arranged in pompons.
large baskets were used in the
Miss Jackie Paugh, sister of
decorations, seven-branched U1e bride, registered guests.
candelabras were placed on
A reception following the
either side of the a lwr, and wedding was in the social room
sprays of ivy were used in the of the church, featuring a t&lt;lble
windows.
covered with a white cloth with
Mrs. Wi.lliam Russell, a wide lace edging, centered
THE GOSPELAIRES will present a special service of
organist, played •·o, Perfecl with a three-tiered wedding gospel singing at the Bidwofi United Methodist Church.
Wedding cake with crystal ca ndle Bidwell, beginning at 7:30p.m. Saturday, July 22. Everyone
Love,"
" The
Prayer", and "The Wedding holders on each side holding is welcome.
Benediction ."
pink candles. Ivy, dotted with
The bride, given in marriage while pompons encircled the
by her father, wore a floor- cake. Ladies of the church
length gown of white dolled assisted at the reception, insw iss , featuring a high cluding Mrs. Bethel Vance,
neckline, empire waist and who served the cake, Mrs. John
Victorian sleeves, with ac- C. Fry pouring coffee and Mrs.
cented lace trim down the front Lloyd ~oush serving the
and on the sleeves. The dress punch.
had a deU.clmble chapel train
The bride 's traveling
The Rev. Arthur C. Lund, Educational Simulation . The
and the bride wore a finger-tip costwne was a brown and Pastor of St. Paul Lutheran courses are U!ughl by various
veil of illusion . She carried a white polyester dress, with Church, Pomeroy, and his university ·· and seminary
bridal bouquet of white gladioli while accessories, and she wife, Corrine, have returned professors, chaplains and other
and pompons, trimmed with wore a corsage of gladioli and from the recent Appalachian clergy from across' the counwhite ribbon streamers. The pompons. The co up le is Regiooal School for Church try.
gown was made by Mrs. Jack residing at 3607 Cleveland Leaders at West Virginia
Pastor Lund received a
Paugh, aunt of the bride.
Ave., Columbus, Ohio.
Un iy.ersily in Morgantown scholarship to attend the school
Miss Debra Gilland served
The bride is a 1972 graduate which ran July 3 - July 14 with it&lt;om the Division of American
as maid .of honor . Her floor of Wahama High School. The classes being held on all days Missions of the American
length dress was of pink dolled groom is a 1971 graduate of the except Sunday.
Lutheran Church. Mrs. Lund
swiss, fea turing an A-line skirt, same school and completed one
The school was an recejved one of two scholarempire waist and puff sleeves. year at B.T.I. in Cleveland. He ecumenical effort for clergy ships offered to pastor's wives
Her flowers were pink pom- plans to attend Columbus and laity from churches in the in Ohio given by the Ohio
pons with pink ribbon Technical Institute, and is general region called "Ap- District's American Lutheran
streamers. The bridesmaid, presentlyemployedattheOhw . palachia.' ' This year ;~ . Church Women. The women's
Miss Rebecca Paugh, sister of NatiOnal Bank 10 Columbus. den om in at ions we r.f group Of St. Paul Lutheran
the bride, was dressed in a
Out-of-town guests attending represe nted among the 160 Church in Pomeroy is an active
floor-length mint green dotted the .weddmg were Sharon and participants.
memller Of this organization.
swiss dress, the same style as Debra Rtekard of St. Mary's,
In order to complete the
This school will be held again
the one worn by the maid of Mrs. Robert Harless and Robin entire program a participant during the first two weeks of
honor. Her flowers were green of Columbus, Mrs . Waller must attend three summer July, 1973, and offers area
pompons with mint green Taylor of Columbus, Mrs. sessions. This was the second clergy and lay leaders an
streamers. The dresses were Floyd Miller of Marietta, Mary session that Pastor and Mrs. opportunity to receive training
made by the bride.
and Joy Kautz of Chesler. Lund have attended. The to more effectively minister to
Mr. David Russell of New Allan .Lambert of Syracuse, school was est&lt;lblished five people's needs in rural southHaven was best man, and V~rgmla Wolfe •. Syracuse and years ago under a Tille One • east Ohio. Anyone wishing
John Bumgarner and Gary Mrs. Marjone G1bbs of Educational Grant from the ·. more information on the school
Bumgarner, of Let&lt;lrt, Route I, Columbus.
Federal Government with and possible scholarship

Pastor, Wije Return
From Church School

10-14 LB.

CHUCK
STEAK

PLUS
DEPOSIT

8 oz.

.

Vows Exchanged

10 LB. BAG

SWIFT' GOLD CREST

.

�,

,_
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 20,1972

Fifth"Game is Critical
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-Bobby Fischer and noris
Spa¥ky sit down at the chess
board again today. But .this
timt it is different-Fischer
isn't threatening to walk out.
The fifth . game of the 24game world chess championship match hegins at 5 p.m. (I
p.m. EDT) with titleholder
Spassky, a
35-year-old
Russian, playing white- 'Which
means he makes the first
move.
Fischer, 29, has protested
every previous game, mostly
b~cause or television cameras
in the playing hall. He even
failed to turn up for the second
game, forfeiting it to Spassky.
Going into the fifth game,
Sp~ssky leads with 21&gt; points to
Fischer's II&gt;. The American
challenger needs 121&gt; points~
win counts one point, a draw 12
lor each player- to take the
title, while the defending
champion. needs . only 12 to

retain the championship.
Although the question of the
television cameras remained
unresol~d. it appeared not to
bother Fischer .· - for the
moment. Organizers said they
were awaiting word from New
York on whether the closedcircuit cameras could be
reinstalled.
A spo~esman for the cornpany that has bought the film
rights, Chester Fox, Inc., said:
"We hope to resolve the
problem before today's game
starts. But cameras must not
bother Mr. Fischer. That is our

prime and principal concern."
Fischer's second, Father
William Lombardy, said the
lanky New Yorker "only just
started" his Campaign to wrest
the title from SpasskY. Lorn·
bardy, a Catholic priest who
also is a grand master, admitted Fischer "had a narrow
escape in the fourth game but
don't forget how he demolished
Spassky in the third."
Iceland grand master
Fridrik Olafsson said "the next
couple of games coUld be
decisive."

Emma A. Hedrick

EXTENDED OUTWOK
Ohio extended outlook
Saturday through Monday.
Continued hot and humid
with daytime highs 85 to 90
north and 90 to 95 south
portion. Lows at night in the
upper 60s and lower 70s.
Chance of showers north
portion Sunday otherwise
little or no precipitation
expected.

Died Wedne~day

Emma A. Hedrick, 82, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday morning at
Wooland Nursing Home,
Columbus.
Mrs. Hedrick is survived by
three daughters , Josephine
Adams and Alice Stevens, both
of Columbus, and Dorothy
Moore, Charleston; three sons,
Clifford Hedrick, Cadiz; HUgh
Hedrick, Toledo, and Cecil
(Continued from page 1)
the district for
bond Karman, Pomeroy; 10 grandchildren and 12 greatretirement.
"This now stands at four grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
mills," Riebel said. In comparison, 81&gt; mills are being her parents, the late John and
paid on bond retirement in the Mary Findling. Funeral serMeigs Local School District, in vices will be announced by
addition to a % mill payment Ewing Funeral Home.
on state funds used.
S. B. 405 was also discussed
at Tuesday night's meeting . Estimated 250
The bill requires that by Dec. 1, Attend Crusade
1972, all districts must submit a
RACINE - A crowd of applan to the state for taking care
proximately
250 was on hand
of handicapped students, including the educable mentally Wednesday night for the
opening of the annual outdoor
retarded.
Evangelistic
Crusade at the
With the construction of the
new addition, the district would Southern High School Stadium
have facilities within the here.
Vocal
numbers
were
structures to take care of these
presented
by
the
Norris
students, Riebel said. If the
district does not, then it would Quartet, by Dennis Manuel and
have to enter into a contract Duane Wolfe, a duet, and the
with another district to provide soloist, Sharon Pyles. The Rev.
for these students which is an Charles Norris spoke on "The
expensive process, Riebel said. Ten Commandments."
Several persons went for: There is no program existing in
ward
for rededication and
• the district for these students
•• at the present time, Riebel committemnt.
The second service will be
; stated.
; The district superintendent held today at 7:45 p. m. with
\ also pointed out that in 19S8 music to include a trio from
: when the present high school Middleport and a vocal duet by
: and the Riverview School were Janice Salser and the Rev. Mr.
The topic will be
• constructed, enrollment in the Norris.
11
Twelve
Hours to Live."
) distric t was slightly under 800.
• Now the enrollment is slightly Services will continue each
' over 1,000, about a 25 pet. in- evening through Sunday.
; crease, indicative of the need
. for expanding the school plant Body Recovered
' facilities, Reibel pointed out.
Fw:ther meetings to inform At Reedsville
· the public of the issues in the
The body of Evelyn Dale
: special election on the 2. 75 mill
Miller,
46, Washington County,
bond issue on August· 15 have
was
found
in the Ohio River
been set for next week. The
first of these will be held Wednesday at 9:33a. m. at the
Monday at the Chester Reedsville Locks and Dam by
Elementary School, the second Robert Beegle, an · employe
there.
on Tuesday at the Tuppers
Mrs. Miller was an apparent
Plains Elementary School.
according to the Meigs
suicide,
Both meetings will be at 8 p.
m. and the Tuppers Plains County Sheriff's Dept. She was
Boosters Club will meet in reported to have jumped into
conj uncti on with the later Duck Creek near her home at 9
meeting. The Riverview PTA p. m. on July 17. Her husband
held its session in conjunction made positive identification of
with Tuesday night's meeting the body . The body has been
when Riebel pointed out that removed to Washingto n
County.
the law provides that kindergarten pupils in the future
must be transported both to
DANCE SET
and from classes at Chester.
The Meigs County Junior
Previously , the district was
· responsible only for tran- Leaders will sponsor a dance
sportation in one direction Saturday at the Pomeroy
while parents were responsible Junior High School from 9 to 12
midnight. Music by "Foxx",
for the other.
Reibel said he will work out with admission of $1.
the plans for the two-way
tran sportation of the kin dergarten pupils, all of whom
IN PROGRESS
attend classes at the Chester
Arevival is in progress at the
building.
Besides the eight additional Middleport United Pentecostal
classrooms and the band room Church, South Third Ave.,
which would be provided by nightly at 7:30 p.m. with the
funds from the bond issue, Rev. Jerry Burns the
additional office facilities evangelist. Rev. Burns and his
· would be provided for in the wife just returned from South
\ addition to the high school America . Special singing each
evening. The public is invited.
building, Reibel concluded.

Schools

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
PHILCO APPLIANCES
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Phone 992-5321

_R are Taxpayer: He'd Do

Mrs. Conde, 86
Died at Hospital
Elizabeth C. Conde, 86, Oak
St., Pomeroy, died this morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs . Conde was preceded in
death by her parents;- Michael
and Barbara Ebert Zwilling;
her husband, Joseph, and
brothers, Frederick, Andrew
and Leo.
Mrs. Conde is survived by
these sisters-in-law, Bertha
Conde, Pomeroy; Louise
C~nde, Mrs. Mary Crowe,
Pittsburgh; Jesse Zwilling,
Bucyrus, and Leora Zwilling,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Conde was a member of
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church and the Ca-tholic
Women's Club.
Rosary services will be
Friday at 7:30p.m. at Ewing
Chapel. Funeral services will
be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church with the Rev. Father
Bernard Krajovic officiating.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

More, not Less Paying
W~HINGTON

. (UPI)-J.
lrwm Miller, a · wealthy
Republican businessman from
the Midwest, says he doesn't
pay enough taxes "nd ne 1·the,r
does anyone else.- u
Miller went before a
congressiona 1 committee
Wednesday to argue that the
government isn 'I doing its job
well enough and nothing- no
amount of tax reform and no
amount of increased uovern-"
,
men! ef£iciency- is g01·ng to
supplant the need lor more
federal revenue.
"You gentlemen arc g01·ng to
have to raise taxes," he told
the Join t Econo 1111·c Committee.
His contention wa s that
Amerl·cans 1·n the1·r pr1·vate
li~s are doing line, with a
steadily rising standard of
living.
But in that part of the1·r ll'ves
where they depend upon the
government to do what they
cannot do-&lt;&gt;veryth 1·11g frorn
defending the country to
delivering the mail - the
· ( 11·
t
SYSt em IS
a mg apar .
"My kids have twice as
many youngsters in their
classroom than when 1 went to
public school," Miller said.
"Public tran sportation was
better 30 years ago. The quality
of air and water was better.
Even the universities are going
broke."
Miller is the chairman o! the
board of the Cununins Engine
Co. of Columbus, Ind.

Democratic Coalition
In .Deeper
. . ·D.1sarray
.

Educated ai Yale and Oxford,
he has served on a number or
·
·
•
government commissions and · WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
.
d h
·
task forces .
or his rule.
what he an ot er umon
T
, decision of the giant AFL-CIO
The real practical signifi- . leaders tell them, although the
" axes," he said, "are not
'bad'
to straddle the fence in this cance of the vote was to deny AFL-C!O said surveys show
anyf more than the price year's pres1.de ntial election has any of the AFL-CIO's political that about seven out of 10 union
we pay or anything we want
h
and need is 'bad .'
l rown an already divided fund - about $10 million members vote in line with their
"W
labor movement and disjointed this year- to the McGovern union's position.
e complain as much about
deteriorating services as we do Democratic coalition into campaign. But some of the
In · talking to reporters,
about high taxes. Our wants further disarray.
unions supporting McGovern Meany refused to list his
d
Some of the 117 AFL-CIO may reduce or cut off their complaints agail&lt;lt McGovern
1o ay are very great indeed.
w
unions will follow the lead of political funds to the AFL-CIO saying only that the South
e want equal justice
·
- bl
lhe1r parent feder ation and its and donate them directly to the Dakotan was not good enough
ava1 1a e to every citizen
'th
d
77-year-&lt;Jid president, George McGovern campaign effort. for labor. The AFL-C!O has
w1 ou1 regar to his wealth, Meany, and remain neutral
Meany himself conceded that rated McGovern's voting
race or religion.
•w
t
.
between President Nixon and most union members will vole "right" on 93 per cent of labor
' e wan contmuously adeDemocrat
George
S. their own way regardless of issues.
qua 1e 1ransportalion, steadily MeG
b
·
·
overn, ut many will go
unproymg
education for our
children, a clean environment
out on their own and support
.
an ad_equate defense, pleasant' McGovern.
And
1east one of the
·t·
·
·
at
c1 1es, supenor 1Jealth care and
the rest of the services we unions , the Marine Engineers,
has endorsed Nixon, joining Soviet friendship as irreplaceable and blamed President Nixon
expec 1 1rom government.
"What we are reluctant to with the big independent for Egypt's decision to send home Soviet military advisers.
Union and an
1ace, and what the Congress Teamsters
The semiofficial newspaper said in a front.page analysis:
f
t
.
th
t
.
una
filiated
Federal
Employee
1
11
rntL' ace 1s a a th1s, even
·
"There are only two super powers. The United States is on the
perform'ed with ideal ef- Umon in supporting the Repub- side of the enemy . The Soviet Union is on our side. Therefore, the
f'ICief\CY,
·
. going to cost more. lican , ticket-an almost unIS
d
heard-of act in the labor friendship of the Soviet Union is not only important to us, it iS
1nor er to bring our public and movement.
irreplaceable.''
private standards o! living into
SAIGON-U.S. MARINE HELICOPTER gunships raided
· l.;abor 's disarray contrasts
balance, you gentlemen are
the
North
Vietnamese coast Wednesday, the second time in the
going to have to r)lise taxes."
sharply with the loyalty it has
given Democratic presidential war that helicopters have been used in offensive operations over
Auto Dan1aged
candida tes since Franklin D. the North, the U.S. command said today. Military sources said
Roosevelt forged labor into his about six AHl Sea Cobras Oying off the USS Denver from the U.
To $2,500 Extent
Democratic coa lition lour de- S. 7th Fleet offshore reported destroying three water craft and
Damages were estimated to cades ago-a coalition that damaging six others 86 miles north o! the Demilitarized Zone
be $2,500 in a car fire Wed- appears ~o be breaking up (DMZ) separating the two Vielnams.
nesday evening on Secondary under the takeover of the party
In fighting in South Vietnam, Communist gunners WedRoute 39 at Glenwood.
by McGovern and his youthful nesday shot down a U. S. jet fighter -bomber and two U. S.
Point Pleasant Volunteer and liberal supporters.
helicopters supporting the South Vietnamese drive to recaplure
firemen doused the blaze.
The AFL-CIO's Executive Quang Tri City. Four Americans were wounded .
which according to a fire Council voted 27-3 for political
ROBERT MCAL!SfER, OHIO comapign manager for
spokesman, occurred through neutrality Wednesday. It was Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern, said
the carburetor.
more a show of loyalty to today he feels organized labor will take a "wait..and..see" attitude
Deputy sheriff Bob Uhl, the Mea ny than a vote against with McGovern but eventually most labor unions will endorse
MeG overn~ sance
· the number of
(Continued from page I)
in vestigating officer, recel'ved
neg Iect o! duty and extreme the call at 5·.30 p.In. and sal·d those on th e majority side had him . .
McAlister, a ·Columbus attorney, made the comment
crue Ity, and Pearlie F. Jewell the car was O"'ned by l.e"ll·e B. a1rea dY en dorsed McGovern
hasalsobeengranledadivorce
"
•
d oth ers pan
1 to mobilize following an announcement Tuesday by Ar'L-CIO chief George
(rom Patricia Jewell for gross Carr of PomerO)', 0. and was an
Meany that his organization would not support either candidate.
th
·
·
f
. driven b)• Ronald 1•sll·e Carr.
e&gt;r umons or the Democratic
neglect of duty and extreme
~
t' k t
WASHINGTON- TilE CORVAIR, A LONG·TIME target of
26, 259 Lincol n Avenue, IC e ·
cruelty.
critic
Ralph Nader who claimed it was prone to roll over even at
Pomeroy. The car was a total
There is no doubt the action
low
speeds,
today was given a defect-free endorsement by a
hurts McGovern's chances to
loss
..
police
said,
with
the
two
MRS. STACEY BETTER
·
front til·es being new ones.
defeat Nixon, but the damage government study.
Mrs. Victoria Stacey, who
"No potential safety-related defect exists" in the 196lk13
Four firemen were on the to McGovern will be lessened
recently suffered a stroke, is
with each union that decides to mndel Corvair, a two-year investigation concluded by the
reported to be improved at the seefl e as lhey answered the support him on its own. Meany Transportation Department claimed. Nader reacted with a letter
1
Mark Rest Center, McConnels- 66th a arm of the year' while and most other labor leaders Ill Sen . Warren Magnuson chairman of the Senate Commerce
ville, Ohio. Cards may be six others remained at the have severely criticized Nixon Committee, urging an ~ediate investigation of the report,
addressed to Mrs . Stacey at the stat i o~ after responding to the and said the nation could which he labeled "a whitewash " of the compact rear engine car.
call.
Rest Center.
hardly stand four more years

News.

••

in Briefs

$150,C)()(}

Philco, 5,000 BTU-Sll9.95; Westinghouse,
5,000 BTU-$119.95; Westinghouse, 5,000 BTU
Deluxe-$139.95; Westinghouse, 6,000 BTU$159.95; Westinghouse, 8,000 BTU-$225.00;
Westinghouse, 12,000 BTU-$259.95; Philco,
16,000 BTU-$299.95; Westinghouse, 18,000
BTU4299.95; Philco, 19,000 BTU-:-$325,00;
Comfort-Air, 23,000 BTU4415.00; ComfortAire, 25,000 BTU -$450.00; Comfort-Aire,
30,000 BTU-$530.00.

On Sunda11'J z·n· M.tuu1e
·.J.JT ,ll.Y or,.t· .l:.l ~'alenda
·
r!This
Sandwich
is
for
Baking
\J
AII.EI·:~
&gt;:·

A reunion of the Lewis family
was held Sunday at the Middlepl&gt;rtLegionMemorlaiPark.
Mrs. Roxie Oiler and Mrs
Violet Batey planned the event:
Attending w
Cl k
.
ere ar , Kay,
Kristma, Kamala and Karml·n
Carter, Bonnie, Craig and
Connie McDowell, Roy and
Mary Casto, Columbus ·
Lawrence Manley, Mari~
Manley, Rosemary Hysell ,
Brenda, Penny, Sherri and
Julie Hysell, Eddie Manley,
Frances Manley, Lisa Manley
David Manley, Lawrence'
Hysen• MI.ke Manley, Susan
Manley , Charlene Batey
Shawn Batey, Middleport. '
B
H ~n HoldMerman, Rocky
o erman, ary Beth Mike
and Tina Holderman, •Cindy
Milliron
B b Ed
d
R
' Edo
war s,
osemary
wards, Bobby,
R ty
d Be k
us h aPen . c y Edwards,
Josep
1 pmx, Melissa Penix '
Be verY enix, Joe Penix
· G
'
Wayne Pemx, ary Leonhard
Norma Davis, Columbus:
Lawrence Lewis, Clara Lewis
Tammy Lewis and Sharo~

Lewis Pauley, Robin and Kip
Pauley, Pat Pauley, Dunbar,
W. Va .; Dorothy Stewart;
Gerald Stewart, Coluthbus;
Margaret and Austin Bower,
Roseville,· Dianna Willi .......""'n,
Jack ' w·
R ~·~
· te Iseman, aymo~d
Manley, Selby Manley, Cathy
~an ley, Joe Manley, Kevin
an ey, Susie Veith, Junior
Veith, Jeanette Veith, Krista!
~:~~~b~~d Michael Veith,
Bobby Joe, Keith and Paula
K II v·
e y leth, Cheshire; Maxine
and Clarence Byers, Colurnbus; Violet and George Batey,
Sr d G
·an eorge Batey , Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Bobo, Dunbar,
w. Va.; Robert Lewis, Jr.,
Middleport ·, Ronald and Janl·ce
Miller, Rebecca, Angie, Ronda
and Steven of Pennsylvania;
Charles E. Lewl·s , Lucl'lle
Lewis, Charles Robert Lewis,
ElizabethLewl·s,Lester Lewis,
Gloria Grover, Lucl'lle Grover,
Cornelius Phillips, Barbara
Philll'ps, Rebecca Phl'lll' ps,
Benton Phillips, Martha
Phillips, Isabelle Pnilli~s.

1

1

LOSE UGLY FP,T
Start losing weight t~day~r
money back . MONAD X i a
tiny tablet and easy

o

t

e.

The annual family picnic of
u1e Middleport Bus1·ness and
dangerous drugs and will not Professional Women 's Club
make
you
ner"Vous.
No
.
strenuous uerclse . Change was held Monday mght at the
your l ife ... start today . home
of Miss Freddie
MONADEX cosh $3 .00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy size Houdashelt, Grant St.
Is $5.00 . Lose ugly fat or your
D · th b ·
·
moner. will be refunded with no
urmg e usmess sessiOn
quest ens uked . MONADEX is follo win g the picnic comsold with this . guarantee by :
.
.
'
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drur•· 112 E. nuttee chairmen for the 1972-73
Mlln. Pomeroy &amp; Du ton Dru9 year appointed were Mr s
Store, Middleport. Mall Orders M
·
Filled.
ary Kunzelman and Mrs.

MONAOEX will hel p cllrb our
desire for e)(cess food. Eat les1
- we igh less. Contains no

.

Give Up Bonds

~

Six defendants forfeited
bonds - two on charges of
driving while intoxicated and two others were fined
Wednesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor William Baronick.
Forfeiting bonds were Cecil
H. Smith, 50, Honolulu, Hawaii,
and Wilma F. Siders, 61,
Racine Route 2, each $200 •
posted for DWI; Roger Hendricks, 19, Pomeroy, $18.70,
speeding; Jan M. Pickett, 31,
Pomeroy, Route 4, $25, unsafe
vehicle and $50, fictitious
plates; Kenneth H. Romine, 38,
Rutland Route I, $33.70,
speeding, and Randy Joe
Lieving, 18, Letart, W. Va.,
Route 1, $26.70, speeding.
Fined were Earl C. Kau!f,
Jr., 19, Hemlock Grove, $10 and
costs, squealing tires, and
Michael R. Bendum, 18, .
Reedsville, $5 and costs,
running a red light.

--~---

.,._ ...

.

the

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

ONE OF THE MANY FINE FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES.

Skinny Washer/Dryer
(ONLY 2 FEET WIDE]

Skinnv
Mini~

THEFT PROBED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept . is investigating the
circwnstances of a pickup
truck round abandoned
Monday on township road 112.
The truck, reported to have
been stolen in May, belonged to
Donald
VanMeter
of
Youngstown. It had been
stripped of its tires, battery,
and radio.

IN HOSPITAL
Darw-yn Enevoldsen,
Reedsville, chief of electrical
construction at the Gavin
Power Plant, Cheshire, i ~ a
palient at University Hospital
in Columbus.

Abraham of Navarre was
appointed Wednesday as
wildlife supervisor lor north·
eastern Ohio.

Frigidaire WEEK - - -

SNYDER PARALYZED
Rick Snyder, 17, Racine, was
reported in satisfactory condition at University Hospital
where he was taken Saturday
after receiving severe back
and neck injuries when he
dived an estimated 20 feet from
the parking lot wall in
Pomeroy into three feet of
water at the edge of the river.
Snyder is reported paralyzed
from the neck down. His room
number is 929, ninth floor.

INJURY TREATED
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to Dexter, Route I at
11:38 p. m. Wednesday for
Bonnie Darst who had suffered
a head laceration and back
injury in a !all at the home of
Juanita Darst. She was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was treated and
released.

THURSDAY
Lucille Boyles, Eugene Boyles,
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Sarah Boyles, Shirley Huti- Health Ciub,ll:30a.m.Thursbard, Wayne Hubbard, Angie day at ruadside park, going
Hubbard, David Hubbard, north on Route 33. Members to
John Buckner, Kathrine take food, table service and
Buckner, Clarence. Boyles, article fo 1· provram.
~
Marvin Boyles, Julia Boyles,
WILLING Workers Class.
Dorothy Veith, John Veith, Enterprise United Methodist
Noel Hermann, local.
Church, 6:30p.m. Thursday at
·Don, Connie and Robbie the home of Mrs. James Will. A
Jayerskil, Columbus; Midge picnic with Mrs. Will to pwvide
and Orville Milliron and son, barbecued chicken.
Jerry, and grandson, Allen,
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Reynoldsburg ; Mrs. Helen Beta Sima Phi couples picnic
Dehanke and daughters, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Ft.
Detroit, Mich. ·, .,
••ndy Veith, Me1gs.
·
p 1
ot uck dinner. Bring
Keith, Kelly and Bobby Joe, table service.
Linda and Vickie Boyles, Jim
LAST YEAR's seventh and
Sue and Scott Veith, Mila,
Randy, Bob and Chris Siders, eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Reynoldsburg; Jerry, Phyllis, J · H' h s h 11 h
unwr 1g c oo ore earse
Jenny, Angie, Jolm and Joe for choru" "'OI'k at the outdoor
Stewart, Paul Casto, Kathy
""
H 11 G
Racine evangelistic crusade.
a , reg Byers and Roger
Byers, Columbus; Joe Lieving,
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health
Club, 6:30p.m. ThursBetty Jo Lieving, Jennifer Jo
Lievmg
· andTeresa M. Lieving, day at the Route 33 roadside
park.
FRIDAY
Mason,
W.
va:
Dr.
Edward
W:
W. Lewis, Judith .Dee Lewis
HARRISONVILLE PTO,
and
Dee
Lewis
of
Friday at the school.
7:30p.m.
MiiSS8chusetts.
SATURDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, Saturday, starting at 4 p.m . at
Pomeroy First Baptist Chu rch
basement.
ICE
CREAM
social,
Grace Pratt, finance; Mrs.
beginning
5
p.
m.
Saturday
at
Nellie Vale, public relallons;
Miss Houdashelt, bulletin; United Methodist Church at
Mrs. Betty Conkle, scholar- Wilkesville. Sandwiches,
Ship; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, desserts, beve rages available
membership ; Miss Olga also .
Pierotti, personal development; Mrs. Belly Cline, world
SUNDAY
affairs; Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
GOSPEL
CRUSADER
legislation; and Mrs. Edith
Quartet
appearing
Sunday, II
Forrest, Nike Samothice, and
Mrs. Wilma Sargent, foun- a. m. at Southern Bsplist
Church, Mason, W. Va . Pastor
dation development.
Stan
Crai g, Jr., invites public .
Mrs. Alwilda Werner, new
REVIVAL
STARTING
president, appointed Mrs.
Sunday
at
Mason
Church of
Kunzelman, Miss Houdashelt
and Miss Pierotti to revise the Christ, Miller St., Mason, W.
by-laws . The hospitaliza tion of Va .. at 7:30 each evening
Mrs . Conkle was reported. through Friday. Robert Turner
Mrs. Werner will host the of Burnett, Tex ., speaker. He is
lecturer and writer . OldAugust meeting.
fashioned
congregational
Attending were Mrs. Cline,
Mrs. Vale, Mrs. Pratty, Amy singing, no collections to be
Erwin, Miss Pierotti, Mrs. taken .
Linda Stobart, Roger Stobart,
Michelle Stobart, Edd ie
MONDAV
Grimm, H. S. Grimm, Belinda
REVIVAL starlmg Monday,
Grimm, Edith and Homer
7:30
p. m. each evening;
Forrest, !drs. Norma Wilson,
special
singing each night. The
Mrs. Dorinda Nardei and son,
Michael, Mrs. earl Reynolds, Rev. John Dill, pastor, extends
Mrs. Nina Bland, Mrs. Jean and invitallon to the public.
ANNUAL FAMILY picnic,
Archer, Cheryl Archer, Mrs.
Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Kun· Monday, 7 p.m. Ken Amszelman, Mr. and Mrs. Werner, bary Chapter, fzaak Walton
Martin Davis, Miss Houdashelt League of America, at
and Mrs. Harry Houdashelt. clubh ouse. Families lake table
service, covered dish and
dessert, meat to be provided .
MEIGS HIGH School Band
Boosters meeting, 7:30 p. m.
Monday at band room in high
SUPEnVISORS NAMED
sc
hool.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Fred

B&amp;PW Picnic Held

Six Defendants

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, July 20,
the ·202nd day of 1972 with 164
to follow .
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Sir Edmund Hillary, the New
Zealand explorer who was the
first man to scale Mount
Everest, was born July 20, 1919.
On this day in hislilry:
.
In 1859 American baseball
Iars were charged an · admission fee for the first time .
Fifteen hundred spectators paid
50 cents each to see Brooklyn

!'LA litE

1\_1

:&gt;01-:t\ Food Editur
A l&gt;:1kcd '" n 11 w i c 11 fur

S&gt;lllliiH'r lunche&lt; or a hurry·
HJI ' u II p er " a pleu&gt;a HI
e h a n g e !rom l he nmnwl
daily fure of eo ld nil &lt; Try
a ript· olivt' and Ched(lar
. seaso ned
\'1l('t'Sl' CO!tl bina linn
with m u, tar d. onion and
chill pow c1 ,. r. Serve with
col&lt;· slaw . eherrv t&lt;llllatm•s
a nd fre&gt;h on111ge &gt;liees for
ile«ert.
TO,\STim UIEES~:t RII'E
OLIVE SANII\\'ICII
cupCalirornia
ranned pitt"d
ript• oli\' t~s
., &lt;·ups grat"d l'IH'ddar
"heest•
' ··
eup mayonna ise
~ tablespoon lt·mon jui•·•·
tt•a&lt;poons preJ&gt;an,d
mustard
h·aspoon onion powder
lca~pnor'l dtili pnwdrr
•, slic~s rirm -lcx turcd
t2
bread
1 :! t•up buttrr or margarint•
I' r c· heat oven to 400 de·
_l!ree!';. Chop olives toarse1y
Mix together cheese. mayon·
rJJise. lemon juice . mustard .
onion powd€1r and chili pow·
rlf'r . Stir in o I i v es Trim
t ' r us I s from
bread a nO
:op re&lt;1d 12 sl ires wit h butter.
Sprt&gt;ad cln~ e s t" -olive mixture
tilickl.1• and evenly on the 12
slil·e:;. For NH.:h sa ndwidl.

place t h r e e slice&lt;. cheese
,.; ide up . on top of eac h
otlwr. Press ligh tly together
!'lace on fla t baking pan

L•~lldr,

Your new car dealer wants to see our highways ·safe.
And he wants to see you safe, whether you're behind the
wheel or just a passenger.
So join the battle against careless talkers. Help them
face their responsibilities-and the road
....••••
ahead -a n_d all their stories will have
··~~\
happy endtngs.
~
~

.,

Dealers who display this seal subscribe to the NAOA Code of
Business Pract ices. Address your correspondEtflCe to: Consumer

Relations Service. 2000 "K" Street N.W.. Washington . D.C. 20006.

~

'
·,.

I' ;

• ••
•••cu,,•

National Automobile Dealers Association
Wtttl lngton .' D.C.

l~===·:O:N~TH=E=T:::IN:M~ID~D=LE::PO:R:T::::::::::U

ONE GROUP OF

RUSS

.

.

-

'"'"'"'
""'"'.,.''
"' "'~ .............
'1"1•••1 "'"
~ 1\lltl lllrtl
..... -... .....
-

BAKER .FURNITURE

One in a series presented by N.A.D.A., The Dally Sentinel and the Tri-Couoty Automobile Dealers AIIOC.

'6.66.
SlacM
L. .
Reg . m .oo
0nly '8•66
••.••.•.•..••••••.
On~

RED EYE

Slacks Reg. 116 · 115

Now '10.66 . 10.00
'5.00 Now '3.33
Tops Reg. '6.00 Now '4.00
Tops Reg. '7.00 Now 14.66

00

Blouses ....~:~~ ~~~~ • ••• On~ 18.00

1 1m~

Fri2idaire bothers to build in more help

Reg . sto.oo
Scan t SkI'rt .............

Reg. SlS.OO
Blouses .....•
,•.•..•.••Qn.,lu , 10.OO

•~II~'""'
'""''"' ...
...........

'"
.. ..,
'""",.. .
lftl" "fll '"""
llltDo,.
. ....

plus Delr(flt ~eltr n li D•~er hn
cycles up lu J ]() mmu t e~ and a
No Htlll eyrie to• aoron jj llul1mg. Per
manenl Pre'~ Ca re 1n bolh wa~her ~nd
d•yf r hrlps no lfM etothn keep the• r
l)fornose

Shorts ....... ~~;;,~ :~~ .... Only 15.33
.Jts Reg . $13 .00
Pan t Sk1 ............... On~ '8.66
8

Reg . no.oo 0 I 113 33
Jackets ••••.•••.•.•••••
ny •

1 .... ··"""'' · ~ ... ~. ~ ""! """' .. , .......
....... ' " .. ...... ~., .... ~ .. ~· ""'rllot

Re1Jul~•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

Sh orts .............•.•..... 0nly 4.66

IUIU!'U • flmilw wlllltr 1nd

Ollic l• l ori0Janl7at lon of Americ a '•lr• ncltiHd new Cllr and truck deal era •

SPECIAL BARGAN TABLE

Th e K'dd,
1 le Sh OD pe

dryer should INw: 2 ~td W.t~ her ~ n

Drivers who insist on facing their audience while they
talk-instead of the road ahead-can be deadly bores.
Even their funny stories can turn tragic in a hurry. A
punch line can be killed instantly by a car that stops
suddenly, an intersection, a curve in the road. By .anything that gets in the way.
No one is safe with drivers like this. Neither passengers or people in other cars , .. nor pedestrians. If you
know someone who has this deadly habit, think about
the consequences.
·
Straighten him out or refuse to ride with him.

Shelby Duncan, Mary Ingels,
Clara Burris, Betty Burris,
Becky Burris, Agnes Grimm,
Nancy Powell and Mrs. Pansy
Frye.

SUMMER SALE
Y4 to V2 OFF

w~;~~~~~~N ?~~~'

6-Year Nationwide
Protection Pla.n

,,_.,

at once. Makes 4 servings.

Project judging
Planned july 24

I , I instead of this

.,

cheese is bubbly. Cut each
stack into 4 slices and serve

Bake about 10 to 1.5 minutes.
until ligh tly to ast e cl and

.

SUMMER SANDALS

F1mlly·51lfl. W~sh ~M dry tamol) 51lt
IOidl •rtcle penclen rly or at lhf same
t1mt It does ever yl~ o n1 a ' tde·bY·Sode
11undr~ paor does-•n tts~ Hour ~ .

rope ol ive/cheese spread offers differen t taste ..

pink candies in crystal holders. tending were Beverly Hester,
A large crystal bowl held white Madalyn Vance, Enid Adams,
punch bearing a topping of two Carol Roush, Mildred Roush,
frozen pink roses. Also among Mrs. Loyd Roush, Mrs. Johnny
ATHLETE 'S FOOT GERM
decorations was a miniature r'ry, Terry Gandee, Anna
HOW TO KILL IT.
ONE HOUR,
bride and groom accen ted with McFarland, Janice Bradley, Strong ,INquick
-drying T - 4-L
a pink umbrella and rosebuds. Myra Roush, Hilda Smith, checks Itch and burning or your
bac.k at any drug counter.
Several gifts were presented Lillian Smith, Lois Bumgard- S9c
Then, tn J.s days watch inskin slough otf. Walch
to the bride-elect and refresh- ner, Doris Curry, Charlotte fected
HEAL!HY skin appear! NOW
ments were served to the Roush, Mrs. Jim Circle, Helen at Swrsher &amp; Lohse Drugs ·
following :
Abel, Cozy Cook, Mrs. Thomas Nelson Drug Store . · - Adv.·
· Edna Roush, Sarah Dawson, Grinstead, Orpha Ohlinger,
Mrs . Harry Layne, Ginny
Dodd, Ronda Wood, Esther
LAST
Gress, Elizabeth Reichert,
Jan e Russell , Mrs. Irene
WEEK OF
McGrew, Velma Roush,
Rachel Sayre, Catherine
Pierce, Esther Barker, Rose
Boys' Sizes Infants 1ru 4
Wolfe, Mrs . Ja ck Flesher,
Maysil Clevenger, Jane Bird,
SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS
Marion · Batey ; . 'D6t6thy
'·
Jenkins, Kitty Lowe, Marjorie
SWIMWEAR - PAJAMAS
Hoffman, Venus Ward, Mabel
Morgan, Frances Haeberle,
Boys' Sizes 5-12
Nancy Roush, Louise Powell,
Shorts · Sleeveless Shirts ·
Norene
Layne,
Lucille
Swackhamer and Lillian
Dress Suits · Pajamas · Trunks
Project judging was an- Greene .
Sending gifts, but not a tnounced lor July 24 when the
SPECIAL TABLE
Pomeroy Live Wires met
BOYS SLACKS
Size 3-12
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Robert Wamsley, advisor.
The 10 girls attending were
advised that those whose
projects are not judged next Ohio was declared a major
Girls &amp; Boys
week will go in ·for judging on disaster area Wednesday by
COATS &amp; JACKETS
Aug . 7. The style revue will be President Nixon as a result of
Girls Sizes Infants thru 14
held on Aug. 8. A demon- flooding, high winds and heavy
stration on child care was rainran the weekend or June 23.
RTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS -- DRESSES
give n by Becky Thomas who Gov. John J. Gilligan had
BATHING SUITS - PAJAM AS &amp; GOWNS
used Tracy Korn to show how requested the declaration
to diaper a baby . Mrs. Wam- based on widespread public
sley and Susan Wright served and private property damage
refreshments. Vanessa Folmer in Cuyahoga, Lorain, Lake,
is reporter for the club.
Be !mont, Jefferson and
- - - - - - - - - - - Monroe counties.
play New York.
In 1917 the first draft lottery
for World War I was conducted
in Washington.
In 1944 German Nazi dictator
Adolf Hitler narrowly escaped
death in an assassination plot
engineered by a group of high
military and civil officials.
In 1945 the flag of the United
States was raised over Berlin
ONE GROUP OF
as the first American troops
DURABLE,
ATTRACTIVE
A~D
moved in to participate in the
occupation government.
EASY TO CARE FOR

..Buill like this ...
-.- .. ~...

w•th

NEW HAVEN - Miss Karen
Kay Greene of New Haven,
bride-elect of David E. Jenkins
of Middleport, was honored
with a pre-brida l shower
recently in the social rooms of
St. Paul Lutheran Church here.
The couple will be married in
a ce remony Aug. 12 at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
Hostesses for the event
Greene.
honoring Miss
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roba
G. Greene of New Haven, were
Miss Candy Ingels, Mrs .
Eugene Hester and Mrs .
William Russell.
An arrangement of pink and
white daisies cente red the
refreshment table, flanked by

GRAND CLEARANCE OF

'"'"'".I · plumb•l'lli ilfld vt!l'l lmg

Baked sandw1ch

Bride-to-be Honored at Shower

Ftts

ln•t•ll the Llundry CeMt!r wfttre !ht
wnlt il - ~alhroom . ~u o serv ~ol(heo ,
mob• le llome sa~e tune 1rnd steps In
stalin anywhere )'{lucan ge l aoequate

·

Reg. S7 .00

,..,--.

391 North Second Avenue

Air Conditioner Clearance Sale

i;';/;t;'p;:,,:;t;,7?.;iJnion WasfTociailFOOD FOR AMERICANS

Siga~
but 1tt &amp;lell!f Sty&amp;l

mt

Reg. Sll.OO

Blouses ................ On~ '7 .33
Reg. $7.00

Blouses ........

I .......

On~

[.,...._.........,.___..
..
THE
-SHOE

BOX

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Tops Reg. 18.00 Now '5.33

ALL SWIMWEAR
GRtATLY REDUCED

s4.66 :

Tops Reg. '9.00 Now '6.00

�,

,_
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 20,1972

Fifth"Game is Critical
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-Bobby Fischer and noris
Spa¥ky sit down at the chess
board again today. But .this
timt it is different-Fischer
isn't threatening to walk out.
The fifth . game of the 24game world chess championship match hegins at 5 p.m. (I
p.m. EDT) with titleholder
Spassky, a
35-year-old
Russian, playing white- 'Which
means he makes the first
move.
Fischer, 29, has protested
every previous game, mostly
b~cause or television cameras
in the playing hall. He even
failed to turn up for the second
game, forfeiting it to Spassky.
Going into the fifth game,
Sp~ssky leads with 21&gt; points to
Fischer's II&gt;. The American
challenger needs 121&gt; points~
win counts one point, a draw 12
lor each player- to take the
title, while the defending
champion. needs . only 12 to

retain the championship.
Although the question of the
television cameras remained
unresol~d. it appeared not to
bother Fischer .· - for the
moment. Organizers said they
were awaiting word from New
York on whether the closedcircuit cameras could be
reinstalled.
A spo~esman for the cornpany that has bought the film
rights, Chester Fox, Inc., said:
"We hope to resolve the
problem before today's game
starts. But cameras must not
bother Mr. Fischer. That is our

prime and principal concern."
Fischer's second, Father
William Lombardy, said the
lanky New Yorker "only just
started" his Campaign to wrest
the title from SpasskY. Lorn·
bardy, a Catholic priest who
also is a grand master, admitted Fischer "had a narrow
escape in the fourth game but
don't forget how he demolished
Spassky in the third."
Iceland grand master
Fridrik Olafsson said "the next
couple of games coUld be
decisive."

Emma A. Hedrick

EXTENDED OUTWOK
Ohio extended outlook
Saturday through Monday.
Continued hot and humid
with daytime highs 85 to 90
north and 90 to 95 south
portion. Lows at night in the
upper 60s and lower 70s.
Chance of showers north
portion Sunday otherwise
little or no precipitation
expected.

Died Wedne~day

Emma A. Hedrick, 82, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday morning at
Wooland Nursing Home,
Columbus.
Mrs. Hedrick is survived by
three daughters , Josephine
Adams and Alice Stevens, both
of Columbus, and Dorothy
Moore, Charleston; three sons,
Clifford Hedrick, Cadiz; HUgh
Hedrick, Toledo, and Cecil
(Continued from page 1)
the district for
bond Karman, Pomeroy; 10 grandchildren and 12 greatretirement.
"This now stands at four grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
mills," Riebel said. In comparison, 81&gt; mills are being her parents, the late John and
paid on bond retirement in the Mary Findling. Funeral serMeigs Local School District, in vices will be announced by
addition to a % mill payment Ewing Funeral Home.
on state funds used.
S. B. 405 was also discussed
at Tuesday night's meeting . Estimated 250
The bill requires that by Dec. 1, Attend Crusade
1972, all districts must submit a
RACINE - A crowd of applan to the state for taking care
proximately
250 was on hand
of handicapped students, including the educable mentally Wednesday night for the
opening of the annual outdoor
retarded.
Evangelistic
Crusade at the
With the construction of the
new addition, the district would Southern High School Stadium
have facilities within the here.
Vocal
numbers
were
structures to take care of these
presented
by
the
Norris
students, Riebel said. If the
district does not, then it would Quartet, by Dennis Manuel and
have to enter into a contract Duane Wolfe, a duet, and the
with another district to provide soloist, Sharon Pyles. The Rev.
for these students which is an Charles Norris spoke on "The
expensive process, Riebel said. Ten Commandments."
Several persons went for: There is no program existing in
ward
for rededication and
• the district for these students
•• at the present time, Riebel committemnt.
The second service will be
; stated.
; The district superintendent held today at 7:45 p. m. with
\ also pointed out that in 19S8 music to include a trio from
: when the present high school Middleport and a vocal duet by
: and the Riverview School were Janice Salser and the Rev. Mr.
The topic will be
• constructed, enrollment in the Norris.
11
Twelve
Hours to Live."
) distric t was slightly under 800.
• Now the enrollment is slightly Services will continue each
' over 1,000, about a 25 pet. in- evening through Sunday.
; crease, indicative of the need
. for expanding the school plant Body Recovered
' facilities, Reibel pointed out.
Fw:ther meetings to inform At Reedsville
· the public of the issues in the
The body of Evelyn Dale
: special election on the 2. 75 mill
Miller,
46, Washington County,
bond issue on August· 15 have
was
found
in the Ohio River
been set for next week. The
first of these will be held Wednesday at 9:33a. m. at the
Monday at the Chester Reedsville Locks and Dam by
Elementary School, the second Robert Beegle, an · employe
there.
on Tuesday at the Tuppers
Mrs. Miller was an apparent
Plains Elementary School.
according to the Meigs
suicide,
Both meetings will be at 8 p.
m. and the Tuppers Plains County Sheriff's Dept. She was
Boosters Club will meet in reported to have jumped into
conj uncti on with the later Duck Creek near her home at 9
meeting. The Riverview PTA p. m. on July 17. Her husband
held its session in conjunction made positive identification of
with Tuesday night's meeting the body . The body has been
when Riebel pointed out that removed to Washingto n
County.
the law provides that kindergarten pupils in the future
must be transported both to
DANCE SET
and from classes at Chester.
The Meigs County Junior
Previously , the district was
· responsible only for tran- Leaders will sponsor a dance
sportation in one direction Saturday at the Pomeroy
while parents were responsible Junior High School from 9 to 12
midnight. Music by "Foxx",
for the other.
Reibel said he will work out with admission of $1.
the plans for the two-way
tran sportation of the kin dergarten pupils, all of whom
IN PROGRESS
attend classes at the Chester
Arevival is in progress at the
building.
Besides the eight additional Middleport United Pentecostal
classrooms and the band room Church, South Third Ave.,
which would be provided by nightly at 7:30 p.m. with the
funds from the bond issue, Rev. Jerry Burns the
additional office facilities evangelist. Rev. Burns and his
· would be provided for in the wife just returned from South
\ addition to the high school America . Special singing each
evening. The public is invited.
building, Reibel concluded.

Schools

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
PHILCO APPLIANCES
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Phone 992-5321

_R are Taxpayer: He'd Do

Mrs. Conde, 86
Died at Hospital
Elizabeth C. Conde, 86, Oak
St., Pomeroy, died this morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs . Conde was preceded in
death by her parents;- Michael
and Barbara Ebert Zwilling;
her husband, Joseph, and
brothers, Frederick, Andrew
and Leo.
Mrs. Conde is survived by
these sisters-in-law, Bertha
Conde, Pomeroy; Louise
C~nde, Mrs. Mary Crowe,
Pittsburgh; Jesse Zwilling,
Bucyrus, and Leora Zwilling,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Conde was a member of
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church and the Ca-tholic
Women's Club.
Rosary services will be
Friday at 7:30p.m. at Ewing
Chapel. Funeral services will
be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church with the Rev. Father
Bernard Krajovic officiating.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

More, not Less Paying
W~HINGTON

. (UPI)-J.
lrwm Miller, a · wealthy
Republican businessman from
the Midwest, says he doesn't
pay enough taxes "nd ne 1·the,r
does anyone else.- u
Miller went before a
congressiona 1 committee
Wednesday to argue that the
government isn 'I doing its job
well enough and nothing- no
amount of tax reform and no
amount of increased uovern-"
,
men! ef£iciency- is g01·ng to
supplant the need lor more
federal revenue.
"You gentlemen arc g01·ng to
have to raise taxes," he told
the Join t Econo 1111·c Committee.
His contention wa s that
Amerl·cans 1·n the1·r pr1·vate
li~s are doing line, with a
steadily rising standard of
living.
But in that part of the1·r ll'ves
where they depend upon the
government to do what they
cannot do-&lt;&gt;veryth 1·11g frorn
defending the country to
delivering the mail - the
· ( 11·
t
SYSt em IS
a mg apar .
"My kids have twice as
many youngsters in their
classroom than when 1 went to
public school," Miller said.
"Public tran sportation was
better 30 years ago. The quality
of air and water was better.
Even the universities are going
broke."
Miller is the chairman o! the
board of the Cununins Engine
Co. of Columbus, Ind.

Democratic Coalition
In .Deeper
. . ·D.1sarray
.

Educated ai Yale and Oxford,
he has served on a number or
·
·
•
government commissions and · WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
.
d h
·
task forces .
or his rule.
what he an ot er umon
T
, decision of the giant AFL-CIO
The real practical signifi- . leaders tell them, although the
" axes," he said, "are not
'bad'
to straddle the fence in this cance of the vote was to deny AFL-C!O said surveys show
anyf more than the price year's pres1.de ntial election has any of the AFL-CIO's political that about seven out of 10 union
we pay or anything we want
h
and need is 'bad .'
l rown an already divided fund - about $10 million members vote in line with their
"W
labor movement and disjointed this year- to the McGovern union's position.
e complain as much about
deteriorating services as we do Democratic coalition into campaign. But some of the
In · talking to reporters,
about high taxes. Our wants further disarray.
unions supporting McGovern Meany refused to list his
d
Some of the 117 AFL-CIO may reduce or cut off their complaints agail&lt;lt McGovern
1o ay are very great indeed.
w
unions will follow the lead of political funds to the AFL-CIO saying only that the South
e want equal justice
·
- bl
lhe1r parent feder ation and its and donate them directly to the Dakotan was not good enough
ava1 1a e to every citizen
'th
d
77-year-&lt;Jid president, George McGovern campaign effort. for labor. The AFL-C!O has
w1 ou1 regar to his wealth, Meany, and remain neutral
Meany himself conceded that rated McGovern's voting
race or religion.
•w
t
.
between President Nixon and most union members will vole "right" on 93 per cent of labor
' e wan contmuously adeDemocrat
George
S. their own way regardless of issues.
qua 1e 1ransportalion, steadily MeG
b
·
·
overn, ut many will go
unproymg
education for our
children, a clean environment
out on their own and support
.
an ad_equate defense, pleasant' McGovern.
And
1east one of the
·t·
·
·
at
c1 1es, supenor 1Jealth care and
the rest of the services we unions , the Marine Engineers,
has endorsed Nixon, joining Soviet friendship as irreplaceable and blamed President Nixon
expec 1 1rom government.
"What we are reluctant to with the big independent for Egypt's decision to send home Soviet military advisers.
Union and an
1ace, and what the Congress Teamsters
The semiofficial newspaper said in a front.page analysis:
f
t
.
th
t
.
una
filiated
Federal
Employee
1
11
rntL' ace 1s a a th1s, even
·
"There are only two super powers. The United States is on the
perform'ed with ideal ef- Umon in supporting the Repub- side of the enemy . The Soviet Union is on our side. Therefore, the
f'ICief\CY,
·
. going to cost more. lican , ticket-an almost unIS
d
heard-of act in the labor friendship of the Soviet Union is not only important to us, it iS
1nor er to bring our public and movement.
irreplaceable.''
private standards o! living into
SAIGON-U.S. MARINE HELICOPTER gunships raided
· l.;abor 's disarray contrasts
balance, you gentlemen are
the
North
Vietnamese coast Wednesday, the second time in the
going to have to r)lise taxes."
sharply with the loyalty it has
given Democratic presidential war that helicopters have been used in offensive operations over
Auto Dan1aged
candida tes since Franklin D. the North, the U.S. command said today. Military sources said
Roosevelt forged labor into his about six AHl Sea Cobras Oying off the USS Denver from the U.
To $2,500 Extent
Democratic coa lition lour de- S. 7th Fleet offshore reported destroying three water craft and
Damages were estimated to cades ago-a coalition that damaging six others 86 miles north o! the Demilitarized Zone
be $2,500 in a car fire Wed- appears ~o be breaking up (DMZ) separating the two Vielnams.
nesday evening on Secondary under the takeover of the party
In fighting in South Vietnam, Communist gunners WedRoute 39 at Glenwood.
by McGovern and his youthful nesday shot down a U. S. jet fighter -bomber and two U. S.
Point Pleasant Volunteer and liberal supporters.
helicopters supporting the South Vietnamese drive to recaplure
firemen doused the blaze.
The AFL-CIO's Executive Quang Tri City. Four Americans were wounded .
which according to a fire Council voted 27-3 for political
ROBERT MCAL!SfER, OHIO comapign manager for
spokesman, occurred through neutrality Wednesday. It was Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern, said
the carburetor.
more a show of loyalty to today he feels organized labor will take a "wait..and..see" attitude
Deputy sheriff Bob Uhl, the Mea ny than a vote against with McGovern but eventually most labor unions will endorse
MeG overn~ sance
· the number of
(Continued from page I)
in vestigating officer, recel'ved
neg Iect o! duty and extreme the call at 5·.30 p.In. and sal·d those on th e majority side had him . .
McAlister, a ·Columbus attorney, made the comment
crue Ity, and Pearlie F. Jewell the car was O"'ned by l.e"ll·e B. a1rea dY en dorsed McGovern
hasalsobeengranledadivorce
"
•
d oth ers pan
1 to mobilize following an announcement Tuesday by Ar'L-CIO chief George
(rom Patricia Jewell for gross Carr of PomerO)', 0. and was an
Meany that his organization would not support either candidate.
th
·
·
f
. driven b)• Ronald 1•sll·e Carr.
e&gt;r umons or the Democratic
neglect of duty and extreme
~
t' k t
WASHINGTON- TilE CORVAIR, A LONG·TIME target of
26, 259 Lincol n Avenue, IC e ·
cruelty.
critic
Ralph Nader who claimed it was prone to roll over even at
Pomeroy. The car was a total
There is no doubt the action
low
speeds,
today was given a defect-free endorsement by a
hurts McGovern's chances to
loss
..
police
said,
with
the
two
MRS. STACEY BETTER
·
front til·es being new ones.
defeat Nixon, but the damage government study.
Mrs. Victoria Stacey, who
"No potential safety-related defect exists" in the 196lk13
Four firemen were on the to McGovern will be lessened
recently suffered a stroke, is
with each union that decides to mndel Corvair, a two-year investigation concluded by the
reported to be improved at the seefl e as lhey answered the support him on its own. Meany Transportation Department claimed. Nader reacted with a letter
1
Mark Rest Center, McConnels- 66th a arm of the year' while and most other labor leaders Ill Sen . Warren Magnuson chairman of the Senate Commerce
ville, Ohio. Cards may be six others remained at the have severely criticized Nixon Committee, urging an ~ediate investigation of the report,
addressed to Mrs . Stacey at the stat i o~ after responding to the and said the nation could which he labeled "a whitewash " of the compact rear engine car.
call.
Rest Center.
hardly stand four more years

News.

••

in Briefs

$150,C)()(}

Philco, 5,000 BTU-Sll9.95; Westinghouse,
5,000 BTU-$119.95; Westinghouse, 5,000 BTU
Deluxe-$139.95; Westinghouse, 6,000 BTU$159.95; Westinghouse, 8,000 BTU-$225.00;
Westinghouse, 12,000 BTU-$259.95; Philco,
16,000 BTU-$299.95; Westinghouse, 18,000
BTU4299.95; Philco, 19,000 BTU-:-$325,00;
Comfort-Air, 23,000 BTU4415.00; ComfortAire, 25,000 BTU -$450.00; Comfort-Aire,
30,000 BTU-$530.00.

On Sunda11'J z·n· M.tuu1e
·.J.JT ,ll.Y or,.t· .l:.l ~'alenda
·
r!This
Sandwich
is
for
Baking
\J
AII.EI·:~
&gt;:·

A reunion of the Lewis family
was held Sunday at the Middlepl&gt;rtLegionMemorlaiPark.
Mrs. Roxie Oiler and Mrs
Violet Batey planned the event:
Attending w
Cl k
.
ere ar , Kay,
Kristma, Kamala and Karml·n
Carter, Bonnie, Craig and
Connie McDowell, Roy and
Mary Casto, Columbus ·
Lawrence Manley, Mari~
Manley, Rosemary Hysell ,
Brenda, Penny, Sherri and
Julie Hysell, Eddie Manley,
Frances Manley, Lisa Manley
David Manley, Lawrence'
Hysen• MI.ke Manley, Susan
Manley , Charlene Batey
Shawn Batey, Middleport. '
B
H ~n HoldMerman, Rocky
o erman, ary Beth Mike
and Tina Holderman, •Cindy
Milliron
B b Ed
d
R
' Edo
war s,
osemary
wards, Bobby,
R ty
d Be k
us h aPen . c y Edwards,
Josep
1 pmx, Melissa Penix '
Be verY enix, Joe Penix
· G
'
Wayne Pemx, ary Leonhard
Norma Davis, Columbus:
Lawrence Lewis, Clara Lewis
Tammy Lewis and Sharo~

Lewis Pauley, Robin and Kip
Pauley, Pat Pauley, Dunbar,
W. Va .; Dorothy Stewart;
Gerald Stewart, Coluthbus;
Margaret and Austin Bower,
Roseville,· Dianna Willi .......""'n,
Jack ' w·
R ~·~
· te Iseman, aymo~d
Manley, Selby Manley, Cathy
~an ley, Joe Manley, Kevin
an ey, Susie Veith, Junior
Veith, Jeanette Veith, Krista!
~:~~~b~~d Michael Veith,
Bobby Joe, Keith and Paula
K II v·
e y leth, Cheshire; Maxine
and Clarence Byers, Colurnbus; Violet and George Batey,
Sr d G
·an eorge Batey , Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Bobo, Dunbar,
w. Va.; Robert Lewis, Jr.,
Middleport ·, Ronald and Janl·ce
Miller, Rebecca, Angie, Ronda
and Steven of Pennsylvania;
Charles E. Lewl·s , Lucl'lle
Lewis, Charles Robert Lewis,
ElizabethLewl·s,Lester Lewis,
Gloria Grover, Lucl'lle Grover,
Cornelius Phillips, Barbara
Philll'ps, Rebecca Phl'lll' ps,
Benton Phillips, Martha
Phillips, Isabelle Pnilli~s.

1

1

LOSE UGLY FP,T
Start losing weight t~day~r
money back . MONAD X i a
tiny tablet and easy

o

t

e.

The annual family picnic of
u1e Middleport Bus1·ness and
dangerous drugs and will not Professional Women 's Club
make
you
ner"Vous.
No
.
strenuous uerclse . Change was held Monday mght at the
your l ife ... start today . home
of Miss Freddie
MONADEX cosh $3 .00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy size Houdashelt, Grant St.
Is $5.00 . Lose ugly fat or your
D · th b ·
·
moner. will be refunded with no
urmg e usmess sessiOn
quest ens uked . MONADEX is follo win g the picnic comsold with this . guarantee by :
.
.
'
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drur•· 112 E. nuttee chairmen for the 1972-73
Mlln. Pomeroy &amp; Du ton Dru9 year appointed were Mr s
Store, Middleport. Mall Orders M
·
Filled.
ary Kunzelman and Mrs.

MONAOEX will hel p cllrb our
desire for e)(cess food. Eat les1
- we igh less. Contains no

.

Give Up Bonds

~

Six defendants forfeited
bonds - two on charges of
driving while intoxicated and two others were fined
Wednesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor William Baronick.
Forfeiting bonds were Cecil
H. Smith, 50, Honolulu, Hawaii,
and Wilma F. Siders, 61,
Racine Route 2, each $200 •
posted for DWI; Roger Hendricks, 19, Pomeroy, $18.70,
speeding; Jan M. Pickett, 31,
Pomeroy, Route 4, $25, unsafe
vehicle and $50, fictitious
plates; Kenneth H. Romine, 38,
Rutland Route I, $33.70,
speeding, and Randy Joe
Lieving, 18, Letart, W. Va.,
Route 1, $26.70, speeding.
Fined were Earl C. Kau!f,
Jr., 19, Hemlock Grove, $10 and
costs, squealing tires, and
Michael R. Bendum, 18, .
Reedsville, $5 and costs,
running a red light.

--~---

.,._ ...

.

the

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

ONE OF THE MANY FINE FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES.

Skinny Washer/Dryer
(ONLY 2 FEET WIDE]

Skinnv
Mini~

THEFT PROBED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept . is investigating the
circwnstances of a pickup
truck round abandoned
Monday on township road 112.
The truck, reported to have
been stolen in May, belonged to
Donald
VanMeter
of
Youngstown. It had been
stripped of its tires, battery,
and radio.

IN HOSPITAL
Darw-yn Enevoldsen,
Reedsville, chief of electrical
construction at the Gavin
Power Plant, Cheshire, i ~ a
palient at University Hospital
in Columbus.

Abraham of Navarre was
appointed Wednesday as
wildlife supervisor lor north·
eastern Ohio.

Frigidaire WEEK - - -

SNYDER PARALYZED
Rick Snyder, 17, Racine, was
reported in satisfactory condition at University Hospital
where he was taken Saturday
after receiving severe back
and neck injuries when he
dived an estimated 20 feet from
the parking lot wall in
Pomeroy into three feet of
water at the edge of the river.
Snyder is reported paralyzed
from the neck down. His room
number is 929, ninth floor.

INJURY TREATED
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to Dexter, Route I at
11:38 p. m. Wednesday for
Bonnie Darst who had suffered
a head laceration and back
injury in a !all at the home of
Juanita Darst. She was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was treated and
released.

THURSDAY
Lucille Boyles, Eugene Boyles,
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Sarah Boyles, Shirley Huti- Health Ciub,ll:30a.m.Thursbard, Wayne Hubbard, Angie day at ruadside park, going
Hubbard, David Hubbard, north on Route 33. Members to
John Buckner, Kathrine take food, table service and
Buckner, Clarence. Boyles, article fo 1· provram.
~
Marvin Boyles, Julia Boyles,
WILLING Workers Class.
Dorothy Veith, John Veith, Enterprise United Methodist
Noel Hermann, local.
Church, 6:30p.m. Thursday at
·Don, Connie and Robbie the home of Mrs. James Will. A
Jayerskil, Columbus; Midge picnic with Mrs. Will to pwvide
and Orville Milliron and son, barbecued chicken.
Jerry, and grandson, Allen,
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Reynoldsburg ; Mrs. Helen Beta Sima Phi couples picnic
Dehanke and daughters, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Ft.
Detroit, Mich. ·, .,
••ndy Veith, Me1gs.
·
p 1
ot uck dinner. Bring
Keith, Kelly and Bobby Joe, table service.
Linda and Vickie Boyles, Jim
LAST YEAR's seventh and
Sue and Scott Veith, Mila,
Randy, Bob and Chris Siders, eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Reynoldsburg; Jerry, Phyllis, J · H' h s h 11 h
unwr 1g c oo ore earse
Jenny, Angie, Jolm and Joe for choru" "'OI'k at the outdoor
Stewart, Paul Casto, Kathy
""
H 11 G
Racine evangelistic crusade.
a , reg Byers and Roger
Byers, Columbus; Joe Lieving,
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health
Club, 6:30p.m. ThursBetty Jo Lieving, Jennifer Jo
Lievmg
· andTeresa M. Lieving, day at the Route 33 roadside
park.
FRIDAY
Mason,
W.
va:
Dr.
Edward
W:
W. Lewis, Judith .Dee Lewis
HARRISONVILLE PTO,
and
Dee
Lewis
of
Friday at the school.
7:30p.m.
MiiSS8chusetts.
SATURDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, Saturday, starting at 4 p.m . at
Pomeroy First Baptist Chu rch
basement.
ICE
CREAM
social,
Grace Pratt, finance; Mrs.
beginning
5
p.
m.
Saturday
at
Nellie Vale, public relallons;
Miss Houdashelt, bulletin; United Methodist Church at
Mrs. Betty Conkle, scholar- Wilkesville. Sandwiches,
Ship; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, desserts, beve rages available
membership ; Miss Olga also .
Pierotti, personal development; Mrs. Belly Cline, world
SUNDAY
affairs; Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
GOSPEL
CRUSADER
legislation; and Mrs. Edith
Quartet
appearing
Sunday, II
Forrest, Nike Samothice, and
Mrs. Wilma Sargent, foun- a. m. at Southern Bsplist
Church, Mason, W. Va . Pastor
dation development.
Stan
Crai g, Jr., invites public .
Mrs. Alwilda Werner, new
REVIVAL
STARTING
president, appointed Mrs.
Sunday
at
Mason
Church of
Kunzelman, Miss Houdashelt
and Miss Pierotti to revise the Christ, Miller St., Mason, W.
by-laws . The hospitaliza tion of Va .. at 7:30 each evening
Mrs . Conkle was reported. through Friday. Robert Turner
Mrs. Werner will host the of Burnett, Tex ., speaker. He is
lecturer and writer . OldAugust meeting.
fashioned
congregational
Attending were Mrs. Cline,
Mrs. Vale, Mrs. Pratty, Amy singing, no collections to be
Erwin, Miss Pierotti, Mrs. taken .
Linda Stobart, Roger Stobart,
Michelle Stobart, Edd ie
MONDAV
Grimm, H. S. Grimm, Belinda
REVIVAL starlmg Monday,
Grimm, Edith and Homer
7:30
p. m. each evening;
Forrest, !drs. Norma Wilson,
special
singing each night. The
Mrs. Dorinda Nardei and son,
Michael, Mrs. earl Reynolds, Rev. John Dill, pastor, extends
Mrs. Nina Bland, Mrs. Jean and invitallon to the public.
ANNUAL FAMILY picnic,
Archer, Cheryl Archer, Mrs.
Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Kun· Monday, 7 p.m. Ken Amszelman, Mr. and Mrs. Werner, bary Chapter, fzaak Walton
Martin Davis, Miss Houdashelt League of America, at
and Mrs. Harry Houdashelt. clubh ouse. Families lake table
service, covered dish and
dessert, meat to be provided .
MEIGS HIGH School Band
Boosters meeting, 7:30 p. m.
Monday at band room in high
SUPEnVISORS NAMED
sc
hool.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Fred

B&amp;PW Picnic Held

Six Defendants

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, July 20,
the ·202nd day of 1972 with 164
to follow .
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Sir Edmund Hillary, the New
Zealand explorer who was the
first man to scale Mount
Everest, was born July 20, 1919.
On this day in hislilry:
.
In 1859 American baseball
Iars were charged an · admission fee for the first time .
Fifteen hundred spectators paid
50 cents each to see Brooklyn

!'LA litE

1\_1

:&gt;01-:t\ Food Editur
A l&gt;:1kcd '" n 11 w i c 11 fur

S&gt;lllliiH'r lunche&lt; or a hurry·
HJI ' u II p er " a pleu&gt;a HI
e h a n g e !rom l he nmnwl
daily fure of eo ld nil &lt; Try
a ript· olivt' and Ched(lar
. seaso ned
\'1l('t'Sl' CO!tl bina linn
with m u, tar d. onion and
chill pow c1 ,. r. Serve with
col&lt;· slaw . eherrv t&lt;llllatm•s
a nd fre&gt;h on111ge &gt;liees for
ile«ert.
TO,\STim UIEES~:t RII'E
OLIVE SANII\\'ICII
cupCalirornia
ranned pitt"d
ript• oli\' t~s
., &lt;·ups grat"d l'IH'ddar
"heest•
' ··
eup mayonna ise
~ tablespoon lt·mon jui•·•·
tt•a&lt;poons preJ&gt;an,d
mustard
h·aspoon onion powder
lca~pnor'l dtili pnwdrr
•, slic~s rirm -lcx turcd
t2
bread
1 :! t•up buttrr or margarint•
I' r c· heat oven to 400 de·
_l!ree!';. Chop olives toarse1y
Mix together cheese. mayon·
rJJise. lemon juice . mustard .
onion powd€1r and chili pow·
rlf'r . Stir in o I i v es Trim
t ' r us I s from
bread a nO
:op re&lt;1d 12 sl ires wit h butter.
Sprt&gt;ad cln~ e s t" -olive mixture
tilickl.1• and evenly on the 12
slil·e:;. For NH.:h sa ndwidl.

place t h r e e slice&lt;. cheese
,.; ide up . on top of eac h
otlwr. Press ligh tly together
!'lace on fla t baking pan

L•~lldr,

Your new car dealer wants to see our highways ·safe.
And he wants to see you safe, whether you're behind the
wheel or just a passenger.
So join the battle against careless talkers. Help them
face their responsibilities-and the road
....••••
ahead -a n_d all their stories will have
··~~\
happy endtngs.
~
~

.,

Dealers who display this seal subscribe to the NAOA Code of
Business Pract ices. Address your correspondEtflCe to: Consumer

Relations Service. 2000 "K" Street N.W.. Washington . D.C. 20006.

~

'
·,.

I' ;

• ••
•••cu,,•

National Automobile Dealers Association
Wtttl lngton .' D.C.

l~===·:O:N~TH=E=T:::IN:M~ID~D=LE::PO:R:T::::::::::U

ONE GROUP OF

RUSS

.

.

-

'"'"'"'
""'"'.,.''
"' "'~ .............
'1"1•••1 "'"
~ 1\lltl lllrtl
..... -... .....
-

BAKER .FURNITURE

One in a series presented by N.A.D.A., The Dally Sentinel and the Tri-Couoty Automobile Dealers AIIOC.

'6.66.
SlacM
L. .
Reg . m .oo
0nly '8•66
••.••.•.•..••••••.
On~

RED EYE

Slacks Reg. 116 · 115

Now '10.66 . 10.00
'5.00 Now '3.33
Tops Reg. '6.00 Now '4.00
Tops Reg. '7.00 Now 14.66

00

Blouses ....~:~~ ~~~~ • ••• On~ 18.00

1 1m~

Fri2idaire bothers to build in more help

Reg . sto.oo
Scan t SkI'rt .............

Reg. SlS.OO
Blouses .....•
,•.•..•.••Qn.,lu , 10.OO

•~II~'""'
'""''"' ...
...........

'"
.. ..,
'""",.. .
lftl" "fll '"""
llltDo,.
. ....

plus Delr(flt ~eltr n li D•~er hn
cycles up lu J ]() mmu t e~ and a
No Htlll eyrie to• aoron jj llul1mg. Per
manenl Pre'~ Ca re 1n bolh wa~her ~nd
d•yf r hrlps no lfM etothn keep the• r
l)fornose

Shorts ....... ~~;;,~ :~~ .... Only 15.33
.Jts Reg . $13 .00
Pan t Sk1 ............... On~ '8.66
8

Reg . no.oo 0 I 113 33
Jackets ••••.•••.•.•••••
ny •

1 .... ··"""'' · ~ ... ~. ~ ""! """' .. , .......
....... ' " .. ...... ~., .... ~ .. ~· ""'rllot

Re1Jul~•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

Sh orts .............•.•..... 0nly 4.66

IUIU!'U • flmilw wlllltr 1nd

Ollic l• l ori0Janl7at lon of Americ a '•lr• ncltiHd new Cllr and truck deal era •

SPECIAL BARGAN TABLE

Th e K'dd,
1 le Sh OD pe

dryer should INw: 2 ~td W.t~ her ~ n

Drivers who insist on facing their audience while they
talk-instead of the road ahead-can be deadly bores.
Even their funny stories can turn tragic in a hurry. A
punch line can be killed instantly by a car that stops
suddenly, an intersection, a curve in the road. By .anything that gets in the way.
No one is safe with drivers like this. Neither passengers or people in other cars , .. nor pedestrians. If you
know someone who has this deadly habit, think about
the consequences.
·
Straighten him out or refuse to ride with him.

Shelby Duncan, Mary Ingels,
Clara Burris, Betty Burris,
Becky Burris, Agnes Grimm,
Nancy Powell and Mrs. Pansy
Frye.

SUMMER SALE
Y4 to V2 OFF

w~;~~~~~~N ?~~~'

6-Year Nationwide
Protection Pla.n

,,_.,

at once. Makes 4 servings.

Project judging
Planned july 24

I , I instead of this

.,

cheese is bubbly. Cut each
stack into 4 slices and serve

Bake about 10 to 1.5 minutes.
until ligh tly to ast e cl and

.

SUMMER SANDALS

F1mlly·51lfl. W~sh ~M dry tamol) 51lt
IOidl •rtcle penclen rly or at lhf same
t1mt It does ever yl~ o n1 a ' tde·bY·Sode
11undr~ paor does-•n tts~ Hour ~ .

rope ol ive/cheese spread offers differen t taste ..

pink candies in crystal holders. tending were Beverly Hester,
A large crystal bowl held white Madalyn Vance, Enid Adams,
punch bearing a topping of two Carol Roush, Mildred Roush,
frozen pink roses. Also among Mrs. Loyd Roush, Mrs. Johnny
ATHLETE 'S FOOT GERM
decorations was a miniature r'ry, Terry Gandee, Anna
HOW TO KILL IT.
ONE HOUR,
bride and groom accen ted with McFarland, Janice Bradley, Strong ,INquick
-drying T - 4-L
a pink umbrella and rosebuds. Myra Roush, Hilda Smith, checks Itch and burning or your
bac.k at any drug counter.
Several gifts were presented Lillian Smith, Lois Bumgard- S9c
Then, tn J.s days watch inskin slough otf. Walch
to the bride-elect and refresh- ner, Doris Curry, Charlotte fected
HEAL!HY skin appear! NOW
ments were served to the Roush, Mrs. Jim Circle, Helen at Swrsher &amp; Lohse Drugs ·
following :
Abel, Cozy Cook, Mrs. Thomas Nelson Drug Store . · - Adv.·
· Edna Roush, Sarah Dawson, Grinstead, Orpha Ohlinger,
Mrs . Harry Layne, Ginny
Dodd, Ronda Wood, Esther
LAST
Gress, Elizabeth Reichert,
Jan e Russell , Mrs. Irene
WEEK OF
McGrew, Velma Roush,
Rachel Sayre, Catherine
Pierce, Esther Barker, Rose
Boys' Sizes Infants 1ru 4
Wolfe, Mrs . Ja ck Flesher,
Maysil Clevenger, Jane Bird,
SHORTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS
Marion · Batey ; . 'D6t6thy
'·
Jenkins, Kitty Lowe, Marjorie
SWIMWEAR - PAJAMAS
Hoffman, Venus Ward, Mabel
Morgan, Frances Haeberle,
Boys' Sizes 5-12
Nancy Roush, Louise Powell,
Shorts · Sleeveless Shirts ·
Norene
Layne,
Lucille
Swackhamer and Lillian
Dress Suits · Pajamas · Trunks
Project judging was an- Greene .
Sending gifts, but not a tnounced lor July 24 when the
SPECIAL TABLE
Pomeroy Live Wires met
BOYS SLACKS
Size 3-12
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Robert Wamsley, advisor.
The 10 girls attending were
advised that those whose
projects are not judged next Ohio was declared a major
Girls &amp; Boys
week will go in ·for judging on disaster area Wednesday by
COATS &amp; JACKETS
Aug . 7. The style revue will be President Nixon as a result of
Girls Sizes Infants thru 14
held on Aug. 8. A demon- flooding, high winds and heavy
stration on child care was rainran the weekend or June 23.
RTS - SHIRTS - SUNSUITS -- DRESSES
give n by Becky Thomas who Gov. John J. Gilligan had
BATHING SUITS - PAJAM AS &amp; GOWNS
used Tracy Korn to show how requested the declaration
to diaper a baby . Mrs. Wam- based on widespread public
sley and Susan Wright served and private property damage
refreshments. Vanessa Folmer in Cuyahoga, Lorain, Lake,
is reporter for the club.
Be !mont, Jefferson and
- - - - - - - - - - - Monroe counties.
play New York.
In 1917 the first draft lottery
for World War I was conducted
in Washington.
In 1944 German Nazi dictator
Adolf Hitler narrowly escaped
death in an assassination plot
engineered by a group of high
military and civil officials.
In 1945 the flag of the United
States was raised over Berlin
ONE GROUP OF
as the first American troops
DURABLE,
ATTRACTIVE
A~D
moved in to participate in the
occupation government.
EASY TO CARE FOR

..Buill like this ...
-.- .. ~...

w•th

NEW HAVEN - Miss Karen
Kay Greene of New Haven,
bride-elect of David E. Jenkins
of Middleport, was honored
with a pre-brida l shower
recently in the social rooms of
St. Paul Lutheran Church here.
The couple will be married in
a ce remony Aug. 12 at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
Hostesses for the event
Greene.
honoring Miss
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roba
G. Greene of New Haven, were
Miss Candy Ingels, Mrs .
Eugene Hester and Mrs .
William Russell.
An arrangement of pink and
white daisies cente red the
refreshment table, flanked by

GRAND CLEARANCE OF

'"'"'".I · plumb•l'lli ilfld vt!l'l lmg

Baked sandw1ch

Bride-to-be Honored at Shower

Ftts

ln•t•ll the Llundry CeMt!r wfttre !ht
wnlt il - ~alhroom . ~u o serv ~ol(heo ,
mob• le llome sa~e tune 1rnd steps In
stalin anywhere )'{lucan ge l aoequate

·

Reg. S7 .00

,..,--.

391 North Second Avenue

Air Conditioner Clearance Sale

i;';/;t;'p;:,,:;t;,7?.;iJnion WasfTociailFOOD FOR AMERICANS

Siga~
but 1tt &amp;lell!f Sty&amp;l

mt

Reg. Sll.OO

Blouses ................ On~ '7 .33
Reg. $7.00

Blouses ........

I .......

On~

[.,...._.........,.___..
..
THE
-SHOE

BOX

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Tops Reg. 18.00 Now '5.33

ALL SWIMWEAR
GRtATLY REDUCED

s4.66 :

Tops Reg. '9.00 Now '6.00

�,.. . l

t l - The Daily Sentinel, MiddleP.Ort·PIXIleroy,

POLLrs

0., July 20,1972'

Project ·Reports
Given to Circles

I'UINT~HS

Bluing .Hdp~ to
. Henun t•
Streuk~

f'•·om

8)·

,

and Mrs ..Fred Hoffman, Mrs. Houdashelt, Mrs , Elizabeth · nlnl, Mrs. Dina Hamm ard
Dale Walburn, Miss Freddie Gardner, Mrs. Golda Mour· Mrs. John Fultz.
··

POLl.\' t'IIAMEJC

.SATURDAY- JULY 22nd
FOR

DEAR POLLY-M~ answer is in regard to Darlene's
problem with her husband's black dungarees having a
Project reports were given at teres I missionaries was from Mrs. Emma Matthews, a
white cast or white streaks over them after they are
washed . Turn wrong side out when washing them and DO the Tuesday night meetings ·of presented by Mrs. Charles resident at the Meigs County
NOT wash with any light -colored things. A large amount
the circles of the B. H. Sanborn Searles at the Love Joy Circle Infirmary. Mrs. Bert Bodimer
of bluin g added to the last rinse also helps solve tins prob- Missionary Society of the meeting held at the farm home conducted the love gift
lem. Lint is easily rei110ved from black gamwn ts by . Middleport First Baptist of Mrs. Harold Chase. !\Irs.
adding vi negar to the last l'inse wa ter. Jus.• a rathe r la t·ge. Church . It was also noted Manning Kloes, chairman, dedication . Mrs. Dana Hamm
will host the August meeting
amount and havtJ no v in e~ar odor h.\ft in garnwnt~ .­
during
the
meetings
that
opened
the
meeting
with
and
will also have devotions at
MRS. C. S.
Stephanie Hughes, astudent at prayer and devotions by Mrs. that meeting. Plans were made
DEAR (i!RLS-Overcrowdlng tht• washer could be an· · Denison University, is the new . Harry Houdashelt were on the to remember Mrs. Merle Rice
other cause, particular!~· if you havt• bt•en filling it with
Baptist scholarship girl.
theme of love and taken from on her birthday anniversary.
light an~ dark·colured things. Fabric softt•n•r in the LAST
The
EJecta
Circle
members
the Secret Place.
Refreshments were served
rinse might also be tried.-POLLY
A thank you note was read by the hostess to those named
.enjoyed a picnic at the home of
· ·· ,. ·.;
· Polly's Problem
Mrs. Tony Fowler preceding
the meeting which opened with
DEAR POLLY- ! was given a muskt·at coat tha t
a poem, ~~Beca use " from
, is in beautiful condition except for two thi ngs . It has
a very musty odor as if it had been stored in a
Guideposts by Mrs. Richard
THE ENERGY CRISIS
damp trunk . Should I hang it outside and air it"
Owen. Mrs . Richard Owen's
Also there is some kind of oil. or it may be petrodevotions were on the prodigal
leum jelly . on the fur near the bottom of the coat
son and were entitled "Cake
which I wo ul d hate to cut Any suggestions. anyone '?
Frosting Sinners." Mrs. ·
- KATHY D. . ·
Arland King dedicated the love
gift offering of $1Z.70 and
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve conce rns the lack of
reports were made on gifts and
consideration on the part of some children's parents.
visits
to shutlns during the past
Frequently we invite friends of my lO·year·old son to
month.
join us for various occasions and also to our home to
Attending the meeting
spend the day . This has been going on for fo ur years but
besides those named were Mrs.
my son is rarely invi ted tojoin his friends ' fam ilies. He
has no father and it would be so nice if the father d or.·,
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
of his friends would take him with them once in awhile.
Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Charles
Parents must think I just love having their children
Edwards, Mrs. Fielding
around all the time and they see m delighted to get rid of
Hawkins
, Mrs. Elizabeth
theirs . It is no wonder that when childt·en reach the age of
Slavin, Mrs. Leora Sigman,
12 or 14 the communication lines are cut Please do nul
and Una Dodson, Judy Owen,
publish my full name .-B. C. K .
Michl King, Marsha Beth King
(NEWSf'APER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
and Tony Fowler, guests.
A program on special inYou will receive a dollar if Polh uses vour favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Pollr's Problem or solution
to a problem. Writt• Polly In ca re
this newspaper.

ol

i··...· : pINt
ersona oes

Mrs. Elleen Bahr has a new .
granddaughter. Mrs. Cleland
installed Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler,
associate vice councilor, and
. Mrs. Ethel Orr, treasurer.
Mrs. Mary Hayes thanked the
council for gilts and cards
during her illness.
It was noted that a silent
auction will be held at the Aug.
I meetin g by the good of the
order committee.
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Letha Wood, Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Mrs. Goldie Frederick,
Mrs. Alice Curtis, Mrs. Ada
Morris, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs.
Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Dorothy Myer,
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. lnzy Newell,
Mrs. Mary Showalter, Mrs.
Golda Wolfe, Miss Fern
Showalter and Mrs. Jean
Summerfield.

well-known horticulturist of the
Lima area, will present a
program at the Commons
Building. He will discuss good
varieties of plants to grow,
common sense propagation,
and conduct a question and
answer period. A special
educational table will be a
feature of the day. Mrs. Clifton
Reames, state horticulture
committee, is general chair·
man for the event.

Mrs. Estill Moore returned
Tuesday from a several days'
visit in Flint, .Mich., with her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Walker.
Mary Evelyn Folmer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Folmer of Madison , Ohio, has
spent the past two weeks here
with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Max Folmer. Her
grandparents returned her
home today.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Montanez and children, Mary
Lou and Brunie, of Boston,
Mass., Miss Carman Montanez
and nephew, !van Ortez of San
Juan, Puerto Ricci, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Ables , Jr. of Vale
St., Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph
Corrigan of Columbus spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
Mrs. Corrigan, the former
Josephine Curtis, is a sister of
Mrs. Andrews . They also
visited with Mrs. Francis
Andrews and Mrs. Joseph
Wippel.
Mrs. Phyllis Chase of
Leesburg, Fla., her daughter,
Mary, and her granddaughter,
Marcia, were viflitors last week
or Miss Nelle Bing .

PASTOR HONORED

~

A farewell party honoring
the Rev. Eugene Gill, pastor of
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church for the past 12 years,
will be held. tonight alB p.m. at
the church. Families are asked
to take cookies for the social
hour.
DINNER GIVEN
Mrs. Fred Crow, Jr.,
Syracuse, entertained Monday
with a Karr senior citizen
dinner party at her home. Her
guests were Mrs. Glenroy
Karr, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Chester; and
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse.

PICKENS ROOF

$369

A Ulought for

"A

In goo4
the many
dark things
besi~es
Santa ·
go around

Claus."

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

s sot..oW

IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE

PRICE .

1ME~'RE TO

0 K01

' . ..·.
10 HAND\.E • .

•

7 a. m. to' m.
~:71:3 ·:'51:3~~~~~~~~iJ:=~::w.~
. v:A~-

r:

?.J
~~
,•,•.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Miss Lucy Amsbary of
Pomeroy, a graduate student
at Ohio University, made the
dean's list for upperclassmen
VISITING HERE
for
the fourth quarter. She
Mrs. \layme Hartenhach,
Kent, and Robert Lengs, attained a 3.5 grade average.
Ravenna, are in Middleport
AT SEMINARY
visiting Mr. and Mrs. James
REUNION SET
The Rev. Ferrell Floyd and
Simpson and other a rea
The
48th
annual
Hayesthe
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew,
relatives. Mrs. Hartenbach is
Young-Halliday
School
United
Methodist Church
Mr . Simpson's mother.
Reunion will be held on Sun· · ministers, are in Illinois for a
day, Aug. 6, at the old Halliday four-week course at the
School grounds.
Theological Seminary.
PREDICTS DEFECTIONS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Massive Democratic defec·
!ions to the Republic party
Try Our Own Brand·,.·
were predicted Wednesday by
Charles D. Ross, director of the
Ohio Committee to Re-Elect
the President. "Hundreds of
Democrats across the slate
BLACK
have already offered to
campaign for the President,"
WITH OR ONLY
said Ross. "They believe not
5 GALLON
WITHOUT
only that the President has
done a good job, but also their
BUCKET
FIBER
party's candidate George
McGovern does not represent
their beliefs or desires.
the day:
President Herbert Hoover liald:

..

OF

tt Pomeroy ... il

State Tour August 1
RUTLAND - The state
horticulture lour of the Ohio ·
Association of Garden Clubs
will be held on Aug. I at the
home of Miss Betty Williams,
171 South Norwich, Hilliard,
according to Mrs. Joe Bolin of
Rutland, Region 11 director.
The tour will begin at 10:30
a.m. with Miss Williams to
explain techniques of growing
prize winning flowers. Those
attending are asked to take a
sack lunch which will be eaten
ab the high school at noon .
Coffee will he served. There
will be a 50 cent registration
fee for expenses of the event.
At 1:30 p.m. Earl Lockwood,

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"

~::ce'g:;:W:~.h:m..'"W(.X

99th Birthday
Is Celebrated
CHESTER-The 99th birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham was observed Tuesday . night at a
meeting of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
Mrs. Wickham was escorted
to the altar by the flag bearers
and a tribute to her was given
by Mrs. Betty Roush. Mrs.
Opal Holon, chairman of the
good of the order committee,
pre~nted her with a gift. Other
mei'&gt;!leH!Ilf!the'Council having
birtbdays in July were honored
also. Mrs. Erma Cleland,
deputy state councilor,
presented each one with a card
and the council sang "Happy
Birthday" after they were
escorted to the altar. In the
group were Mrs. Dorothy
Richie, Mrs. Doris Koenig,
Mrs . Doris Grueser, Mrs. Betty
Roush and Mrs. Mary K.
Holter.
Mrs. Thelma White presided
at the meeting attended by 30
members. It was reported that

·AT
NELSON'S

CAMDEN 'PARK RESERVED

'

Dungul't~t·~

SAVE BIG

-

.. If,.,,,.,, 60 TABLETS
.. ...
,

RE~. :1:6~

JOHNSON'S
BABY NEEDS
STARTER SET

99¢

LECTRIC SHAVE

$119

The National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA). passed in
1970, had as its objective th e im ·
provement of the environment
and quality of life. Co lumbi a unqualifiedly endorses this objec·
live . However, en vi ron ment a I
concerns can and must be ba lanced realistically with the na·
tion's growing energy require·
ments. An adequ at e supp ly of
energy and a proper e nvironm~nt
are both essential to the physical
and economic well -bei ng of the
American people.

Congress should promptly review
the National Environmental Policy
Act, including its current ad mi n·
istration and the courts' interpre·
lations of it, and should amend
the Act to provide for realistic
procedures and less time -consu ·

You can help. Your elected of·
ficials re spond to your wishes
when you make them known .
Write to your Senators and Representative about the growing
energy cri sis. Urge them to review
the National Environm~ntal Pol·
icy Act and amend it to assure
a proper balance between your
energy needs and the safety of
your environment.

Charles A. M osilor
J oi111 F. SeriJerling
Chalmers P Wylie
ffillrk T. Bow
J uiln M Ashbmnk
Wayne L. H,?ys

Clarence J Bmwn
Jaek.'!OII E. Bells
TIJOIIiiiS L. Ash/uy

Clarence E. Miller

Stanton

Samuel L. Devmo

I
I
I

Please send me a copy
of your booklet
"An Action Program
to Help Correct
the National
Energy Crisis" .

Street
City

J..

State

77¢

EXTRA STRENGTH
12 oz.

'139

REG. 11.29

FEMININE

·- ·--

·

@~}l!J1D~~Ob\ l
GAS ©J[;5 ©J[)=[]O©J

·- .. -Ztp -· -·-

- ----

L- ------- ---.1
I

WITH FREE
NAIL CLIPPER

FDS.

HYGIENE ~.

'1.98 $

SHOWER TO SHOWER
~

9¢,

NOXZEMA
a~~N CREAM
RE~. suo ONLY

BODY POWDER
7lf20Z.
REG. 894 ONLY

77

¢

6·12 LIQUID
1'fz oz.
REG. 99'

.

liST SILLIH

Hair Lookinn!I' Cl ean~...... MM•o•uSt•a
IM TNl WOill
And Natural

eeps
.11
!'

$133

SIZE

ss~

VITALIS
4'0Z.

REG. 91

490

09

MEDI-QUIK
FIRST AID SPRAY
3 oz.
¢
REG. '1.50
NOW ONLY

GOOD FOR
SUNBURN

TOO

COMMAND
DRY &amp; NATURAL

·5 oz. TAHITIAN
4 oz. LIME SCENT...

e

REG. '1.00

I

49¢

oz.

REG. 95

1

fo~ basic skin care
. !illr'e;Hro:aegraBable

BATH
.... ,., ,

Neutrogena ... so
different, it's palented
·non-drying
·non-irritating
• contains no ha rdeners
or preservatives .. .
·no freealka 1i .

LOTION

¢ ·

Reg. 11.00

' ,

.

8 oz.

$ 0Q

77 2

ShaN':!1 Puwdtr &amp; Coiolne

RAZOR BLADESlS
REG.
'2.49

51Jz

lA!IVIN - ARPEGE SETS

FDS

66~

•

I
I
I

GILLETTE
PLATINUM PLUS

5 oz.
REG.
NOW ONLY

REG. '1.79
REG. 1.25

$1''

SPRAY

1 oz.

1

Reg. 13.24

MICRIN

98' -

OCUSOL
Eye Drops

Name

138 N. Second Av e.
Middleport. Ohio-45760

Only
'

REG. 79'

r ----------- ,
Columbia Ga s of Ohio, Inc.

YOURSELF"

ANIMAL
SOAP

Charles J. Carney
James V. Stanton
L0111s Stokes
Clw!es A. Vamk
William E. Minshall
Waf/Dr E. Powell

TEGRIN
SHAMPOO
Economy Size
Tube

MEDICATED POWDER

AFTER

REG.

"BABY

with the World's
Finest Powder!

66¢

BAN SPRAY
DEODORANT
7 oz.

1-'-t'-·
1 ~61.

BATH PALS

UNITED STATES REPRESEN~ATIVES

Wtlfi EIIII

59¢

.ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Jlh oz.
REG. 13.00

,,._, ·

RniJert T,Jft . Jr

William B. Saxbe

J

oz.

THE DRY SYSTEM

UNITED STATES SENATORS

William J. Keating
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M M cCullocli
Delbert L. Latra
Wi!iiam H. Harsha

acne plmplu.

REG.

lotion

5 oz.
REG. 11.98

Medication hides
and he lps c lear

'1.89$}29

4~

NATURALLY
FEMININE

&amp;kin-Tone Acne

.75

,

14 oz.
REG. '1.29

•• noxzema.

60's
REG.
ONLY

•

.POWDER

ming administration .
This must be done now. All of our
major gas supp ly projects con·
tinue to face delays because of
multiple and overlapping deci·
sions and reviews. The nation's
economy will suffer. energy costs
will rise unnecessarily, and ulti ·
mately some areas of our country
will face energy shortage s of
major proportions.

77¢

-·-·-~~-~·~~--~~baby

BABY

WILLIAMS

Unfortun at el y, vague standard s
set forth in the Act, and unwi eldy
procedures used by some admin istrative agencies to implement
the law, have cau sed unnecessary
delays in efforts to supply you
and other consumers with energy,
in clud in g clean - burning natural
gas. As N EPA is now interpreted
and adm ini stered . almost anyone
can stall any energy project in the
courts for long period s of time
without regard to his direct inter·
est, the needs of others, or the
added costs of such delays.

REG. '1.49 ONLY

~

ONLY

Can America better its env iron ·
ment and develop its energy re ·
sources at the same time? It can and must. In fact improving the
quality of every citizen's life is de·
pendent upon having enough
energy to make it happen.

BABY OIL
10 oz.

9 oz.
REG. '1.29

e

701.
REG. '1.69

REG.
. 11.09

BAB¥ LOTION

AFTER SHAVE LOTION
REG. 98'

I

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

•=a

4 oz. .

30's

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

'129

REG. '2.49
~~

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

REG. '3.25

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC
320Z.

~

�,.. . l

t l - The Daily Sentinel, MiddleP.Ort·PIXIleroy,

POLLrs

0., July 20,1972'

Project ·Reports
Given to Circles

I'UINT~HS

Bluing .Hdp~ to
. Henun t•
Streuk~

f'•·om

8)·

,

and Mrs ..Fred Hoffman, Mrs. Houdashelt, Mrs , Elizabeth · nlnl, Mrs. Dina Hamm ard
Dale Walburn, Miss Freddie Gardner, Mrs. Golda Mour· Mrs. John Fultz.
··

POLl.\' t'IIAMEJC

.SATURDAY- JULY 22nd
FOR

DEAR POLLY-M~ answer is in regard to Darlene's
problem with her husband's black dungarees having a
Project reports were given at teres I missionaries was from Mrs. Emma Matthews, a
white cast or white streaks over them after they are
washed . Turn wrong side out when washing them and DO the Tuesday night meetings ·of presented by Mrs. Charles resident at the Meigs County
NOT wash with any light -colored things. A large amount
the circles of the B. H. Sanborn Searles at the Love Joy Circle Infirmary. Mrs. Bert Bodimer
of bluin g added to the last rinse also helps solve tins prob- Missionary Society of the meeting held at the farm home conducted the love gift
lem. Lint is easily rei110ved from black gamwn ts by . Middleport First Baptist of Mrs. Harold Chase. !\Irs.
adding vi negar to the last l'inse wa ter. Jus.• a rathe r la t·ge. Church . It was also noted Manning Kloes, chairman, dedication . Mrs. Dana Hamm
will host the August meeting
amount and havtJ no v in e~ar odor h.\ft in garnwnt~ .­
during
the
meetings
that
opened
the
meeting
with
and
will also have devotions at
MRS. C. S.
Stephanie Hughes, astudent at prayer and devotions by Mrs. that meeting. Plans were made
DEAR (i!RLS-Overcrowdlng tht• washer could be an· · Denison University, is the new . Harry Houdashelt were on the to remember Mrs. Merle Rice
other cause, particular!~· if you havt• bt•en filling it with
Baptist scholarship girl.
theme of love and taken from on her birthday anniversary.
light an~ dark·colured things. Fabric softt•n•r in the LAST
The
EJecta
Circle
members
the Secret Place.
Refreshments were served
rinse might also be tried.-POLLY
A thank you note was read by the hostess to those named
.enjoyed a picnic at the home of
· ·· ,. ·.;
· Polly's Problem
Mrs. Tony Fowler preceding
the meeting which opened with
DEAR POLLY- ! was given a muskt·at coat tha t
a poem, ~~Beca use " from
, is in beautiful condition except for two thi ngs . It has
a very musty odor as if it had been stored in a
Guideposts by Mrs. Richard
THE ENERGY CRISIS
damp trunk . Should I hang it outside and air it"
Owen. Mrs . Richard Owen's
Also there is some kind of oil. or it may be petrodevotions were on the prodigal
leum jelly . on the fur near the bottom of the coat
son and were entitled "Cake
which I wo ul d hate to cut Any suggestions. anyone '?
Frosting Sinners." Mrs. ·
- KATHY D. . ·
Arland King dedicated the love
gift offering of $1Z.70 and
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve conce rns the lack of
reports were made on gifts and
consideration on the part of some children's parents.
visits
to shutlns during the past
Frequently we invite friends of my lO·year·old son to
month.
join us for various occasions and also to our home to
Attending the meeting
spend the day . This has been going on for fo ur years but
besides those named were Mrs.
my son is rarely invi ted tojoin his friends ' fam ilies. He
has no father and it would be so nice if the father d or.·,
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
of his friends would take him with them once in awhile.
Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Charles
Parents must think I just love having their children
Edwards, Mrs. Fielding
around all the time and they see m delighted to get rid of
Hawkins
, Mrs. Elizabeth
theirs . It is no wonder that when childt·en reach the age of
Slavin, Mrs. Leora Sigman,
12 or 14 the communication lines are cut Please do nul
and Una Dodson, Judy Owen,
publish my full name .-B. C. K .
Michl King, Marsha Beth King
(NEWSf'APER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
and Tony Fowler, guests.
A program on special inYou will receive a dollar if Polh uses vour favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Pollr's Problem or solution
to a problem. Writt• Polly In ca re
this newspaper.

ol

i··...· : pINt
ersona oes

Mrs. Elleen Bahr has a new .
granddaughter. Mrs. Cleland
installed Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler,
associate vice councilor, and
. Mrs. Ethel Orr, treasurer.
Mrs. Mary Hayes thanked the
council for gilts and cards
during her illness.
It was noted that a silent
auction will be held at the Aug.
I meetin g by the good of the
order committee.
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Letha Wood, Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Mrs. Goldie Frederick,
Mrs. Alice Curtis, Mrs. Ada
Morris, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs.
Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Dorothy Myer,
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. lnzy Newell,
Mrs. Mary Showalter, Mrs.
Golda Wolfe, Miss Fern
Showalter and Mrs. Jean
Summerfield.

well-known horticulturist of the
Lima area, will present a
program at the Commons
Building. He will discuss good
varieties of plants to grow,
common sense propagation,
and conduct a question and
answer period. A special
educational table will be a
feature of the day. Mrs. Clifton
Reames, state horticulture
committee, is general chair·
man for the event.

Mrs. Estill Moore returned
Tuesday from a several days'
visit in Flint, .Mich., with her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Walker.
Mary Evelyn Folmer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Folmer of Madison , Ohio, has
spent the past two weeks here
with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Max Folmer. Her
grandparents returned her
home today.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Montanez and children, Mary
Lou and Brunie, of Boston,
Mass., Miss Carman Montanez
and nephew, !van Ortez of San
Juan, Puerto Ricci, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Ables , Jr. of Vale
St., Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph
Corrigan of Columbus spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
Mrs. Corrigan, the former
Josephine Curtis, is a sister of
Mrs. Andrews . They also
visited with Mrs. Francis
Andrews and Mrs. Joseph
Wippel.
Mrs. Phyllis Chase of
Leesburg, Fla., her daughter,
Mary, and her granddaughter,
Marcia, were viflitors last week
or Miss Nelle Bing .

PASTOR HONORED

~

A farewell party honoring
the Rev. Eugene Gill, pastor of
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church for the past 12 years,
will be held. tonight alB p.m. at
the church. Families are asked
to take cookies for the social
hour.
DINNER GIVEN
Mrs. Fred Crow, Jr.,
Syracuse, entertained Monday
with a Karr senior citizen
dinner party at her home. Her
guests were Mrs. Glenroy
Karr, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Chester; and
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse.

PICKENS ROOF

$369

A Ulought for

"A

In goo4
the many
dark things
besi~es
Santa ·
go around

Claus."

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

s sot..oW

IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE

PRICE .

1ME~'RE TO

0 K01

' . ..·.
10 HAND\.E • .

•

7 a. m. to' m.
~:71:3 ·:'51:3~~~~~~~~iJ:=~::w.~
. v:A~-

r:

?.J
~~
,•,•.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Miss Lucy Amsbary of
Pomeroy, a graduate student
at Ohio University, made the
dean's list for upperclassmen
VISITING HERE
for
the fourth quarter. She
Mrs. \layme Hartenhach,
Kent, and Robert Lengs, attained a 3.5 grade average.
Ravenna, are in Middleport
AT SEMINARY
visiting Mr. and Mrs. James
REUNION SET
The Rev. Ferrell Floyd and
Simpson and other a rea
The
48th
annual
Hayesthe
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew,
relatives. Mrs. Hartenbach is
Young-Halliday
School
United
Methodist Church
Mr . Simpson's mother.
Reunion will be held on Sun· · ministers, are in Illinois for a
day, Aug. 6, at the old Halliday four-week course at the
School grounds.
Theological Seminary.
PREDICTS DEFECTIONS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Massive Democratic defec·
!ions to the Republic party
Try Our Own Brand·,.·
were predicted Wednesday by
Charles D. Ross, director of the
Ohio Committee to Re-Elect
the President. "Hundreds of
Democrats across the slate
BLACK
have already offered to
campaign for the President,"
WITH OR ONLY
said Ross. "They believe not
5 GALLON
WITHOUT
only that the President has
done a good job, but also their
BUCKET
FIBER
party's candidate George
McGovern does not represent
their beliefs or desires.
the day:
President Herbert Hoover liald:

..

OF

tt Pomeroy ... il

State Tour August 1
RUTLAND - The state
horticulture lour of the Ohio ·
Association of Garden Clubs
will be held on Aug. I at the
home of Miss Betty Williams,
171 South Norwich, Hilliard,
according to Mrs. Joe Bolin of
Rutland, Region 11 director.
The tour will begin at 10:30
a.m. with Miss Williams to
explain techniques of growing
prize winning flowers. Those
attending are asked to take a
sack lunch which will be eaten
ab the high school at noon .
Coffee will he served. There
will be a 50 cent registration
fee for expenses of the event.
At 1:30 p.m. Earl Lockwood,

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"

~::ce'g:;:W:~.h:m..'"W(.X

99th Birthday
Is Celebrated
CHESTER-The 99th birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham was observed Tuesday . night at a
meeting of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
Mrs. Wickham was escorted
to the altar by the flag bearers
and a tribute to her was given
by Mrs. Betty Roush. Mrs.
Opal Holon, chairman of the
good of the order committee,
pre~nted her with a gift. Other
mei'&gt;!leH!Ilf!the'Council having
birtbdays in July were honored
also. Mrs. Erma Cleland,
deputy state councilor,
presented each one with a card
and the council sang "Happy
Birthday" after they were
escorted to the altar. In the
group were Mrs. Dorothy
Richie, Mrs. Doris Koenig,
Mrs . Doris Grueser, Mrs. Betty
Roush and Mrs. Mary K.
Holter.
Mrs. Thelma White presided
at the meeting attended by 30
members. It was reported that

·AT
NELSON'S

CAMDEN 'PARK RESERVED

'

Dungul't~t·~

SAVE BIG

-

.. If,.,,,.,, 60 TABLETS
.. ...
,

RE~. :1:6~

JOHNSON'S
BABY NEEDS
STARTER SET

99¢

LECTRIC SHAVE

$119

The National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA). passed in
1970, had as its objective th e im ·
provement of the environment
and quality of life. Co lumbi a unqualifiedly endorses this objec·
live . However, en vi ron ment a I
concerns can and must be ba lanced realistically with the na·
tion's growing energy require·
ments. An adequ at e supp ly of
energy and a proper e nvironm~nt
are both essential to the physical
and economic well -bei ng of the
American people.

Congress should promptly review
the National Environmental Policy
Act, including its current ad mi n·
istration and the courts' interpre·
lations of it, and should amend
the Act to provide for realistic
procedures and less time -consu ·

You can help. Your elected of·
ficials re spond to your wishes
when you make them known .
Write to your Senators and Representative about the growing
energy cri sis. Urge them to review
the National Environm~ntal Pol·
icy Act and amend it to assure
a proper balance between your
energy needs and the safety of
your environment.

Charles A. M osilor
J oi111 F. SeriJerling
Chalmers P Wylie
ffillrk T. Bow
J uiln M Ashbmnk
Wayne L. H,?ys

Clarence J Bmwn
Jaek.'!OII E. Bells
TIJOIIiiiS L. Ash/uy

Clarence E. Miller

Stanton

Samuel L. Devmo

I
I
I

Please send me a copy
of your booklet
"An Action Program
to Help Correct
the National
Energy Crisis" .

Street
City

J..

State

77¢

EXTRA STRENGTH
12 oz.

'139

REG. 11.29

FEMININE

·- ·--

·

@~}l!J1D~~Ob\ l
GAS ©J[;5 ©J[)=[]O©J

·- .. -Ztp -· -·-

- ----

L- ------- ---.1
I

WITH FREE
NAIL CLIPPER

FDS.

HYGIENE ~.

'1.98 $

SHOWER TO SHOWER
~

9¢,

NOXZEMA
a~~N CREAM
RE~. suo ONLY

BODY POWDER
7lf20Z.
REG. 894 ONLY

77

¢

6·12 LIQUID
1'fz oz.
REG. 99'

.

liST SILLIH

Hair Lookinn!I' Cl ean~...... MM•o•uSt•a
IM TNl WOill
And Natural

eeps
.11
!'

$133

SIZE

ss~

VITALIS
4'0Z.

REG. 91

490

09

MEDI-QUIK
FIRST AID SPRAY
3 oz.
¢
REG. '1.50
NOW ONLY

GOOD FOR
SUNBURN

TOO

COMMAND
DRY &amp; NATURAL

·5 oz. TAHITIAN
4 oz. LIME SCENT...

e

REG. '1.00

I

49¢

oz.

REG. 95

1

fo~ basic skin care
. !illr'e;Hro:aegraBable

BATH
.... ,., ,

Neutrogena ... so
different, it's palented
·non-drying
·non-irritating
• contains no ha rdeners
or preservatives .. .
·no freealka 1i .

LOTION

¢ ·

Reg. 11.00

' ,

.

8 oz.

$ 0Q

77 2

ShaN':!1 Puwdtr &amp; Coiolne

RAZOR BLADESlS
REG.
'2.49

51Jz

lA!IVIN - ARPEGE SETS

FDS

66~

•

I
I
I

GILLETTE
PLATINUM PLUS

5 oz.
REG.
NOW ONLY

REG. '1.79
REG. 1.25

$1''

SPRAY

1 oz.

1

Reg. 13.24

MICRIN

98' -

OCUSOL
Eye Drops

Name

138 N. Second Av e.
Middleport. Ohio-45760

Only
'

REG. 79'

r ----------- ,
Columbia Ga s of Ohio, Inc.

YOURSELF"

ANIMAL
SOAP

Charles J. Carney
James V. Stanton
L0111s Stokes
Clw!es A. Vamk
William E. Minshall
Waf/Dr E. Powell

TEGRIN
SHAMPOO
Economy Size
Tube

MEDICATED POWDER

AFTER

REG.

"BABY

with the World's
Finest Powder!

66¢

BAN SPRAY
DEODORANT
7 oz.

1-'-t'-·
1 ~61.

BATH PALS

UNITED STATES REPRESEN~ATIVES

Wtlfi EIIII

59¢

.ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Jlh oz.
REG. 13.00

,,._, ·

RniJert T,Jft . Jr

William B. Saxbe

J

oz.

THE DRY SYSTEM

UNITED STATES SENATORS

William J. Keating
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M M cCullocli
Delbert L. Latra
Wi!iiam H. Harsha

acne plmplu.

REG.

lotion

5 oz.
REG. 11.98

Medication hides
and he lps c lear

'1.89$}29

4~

NATURALLY
FEMININE

&amp;kin-Tone Acne

.75

,

14 oz.
REG. '1.29

•• noxzema.

60's
REG.
ONLY

•

.POWDER

ming administration .
This must be done now. All of our
major gas supp ly projects con·
tinue to face delays because of
multiple and overlapping deci·
sions and reviews. The nation's
economy will suffer. energy costs
will rise unnecessarily, and ulti ·
mately some areas of our country
will face energy shortage s of
major proportions.

77¢

-·-·-~~-~·~~--~~baby

BABY

WILLIAMS

Unfortun at el y, vague standard s
set forth in the Act, and unwi eldy
procedures used by some admin istrative agencies to implement
the law, have cau sed unnecessary
delays in efforts to supply you
and other consumers with energy,
in clud in g clean - burning natural
gas. As N EPA is now interpreted
and adm ini stered . almost anyone
can stall any energy project in the
courts for long period s of time
without regard to his direct inter·
est, the needs of others, or the
added costs of such delays.

REG. '1.49 ONLY

~

ONLY

Can America better its env iron ·
ment and develop its energy re ·
sources at the same time? It can and must. In fact improving the
quality of every citizen's life is de·
pendent upon having enough
energy to make it happen.

BABY OIL
10 oz.

9 oz.
REG. '1.29

e

701.
REG. '1.69

REG.
. 11.09

BAB¥ LOTION

AFTER SHAVE LOTION
REG. 98'

I

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

•=a

4 oz. .

30's

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

'129

REG. '2.49
~~

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

REG. '3.25

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC
320Z.

~

�_ _. . ...... w .. "'

.

.l.~T.eDai!fSenUnei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,July:20,1m

..

.

. ••·

'

•

Notice

") •".~.11:1.. •

.·

. ---~--:-:-~:-.

consecutfye lnsertloris.

1J conts per ' word olx con.· SHOOTING Milch, Saturday,
secutiVe Insertion~ . •
· J 1 22nd at the Racine
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
uY
F ·t
Odland ads paid within 10 doys .' Planing Milia16 p.m. a• ory
CARD OF THANKS
choke guns only. Assorted
&amp; DIITUARY
meal. Sponsored by lha
11.50 for 50 word minimum ." Syracuse Fire Dept.
Each addjtlonal word 2c .
7-lf-ltp
BLIND AOS

Add it ional 25c -Charge per
Advertisement.

,
OFFICI HOITRt· o
: 8&lt;30 o.m,. to S:OG,p.m, Dally,
1: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon

'

'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

C.tst No. 20,717
Estate Of Mabel R. Mees
Decetsed .
Notice Is hereby given ·that
Charlotte M. Evans or 2l5
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
hu been duly appointed
Exeuctrlx of the Estate of
Ma~el R. Mees, decused, late
o4 Pomeroy, Meigs County,

Ohio.

. Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f iduciary
within four months.
Dated this 30th day of June

1972.

John c. Bacon

(7) 6,

Judge

13, 20, 3t

''HElL"

HEATING.
. &amp;
COOUNG

Window,
Air Conditioners

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy.

0.

NOTICE OF
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 23. t
APPOINTMENT
p, m. Factory choked guns
Coso No. 20711
only. Second place shooters
Estate of EMMA M . BARBER ,
qel frte shot In next match .
Dectased .
Assorted meets. Racine Gun
Notice Is hereby given that
Martha Chevalier, of R. D.•
Club.
Long Bottom , Ohio, has been
7·20.Jlc

duly appointed Adm inistratrix
of the Estate or Emma M .
Barber , deceased, late of Olive
Township, Meigs County , 01110 .
CreditOrs are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated th is 30th day of June

1972.

•().) 6,

John C. Bacon
Judge

13, 20, 3t

Cne No. 20719 .

Estate of ARCHIE B. BAR ·
BE A• Deceased .
Nolfce Is her:eby given that

Martha Chtvalltr. of R. D.,

Long Bottom , Ohio , has been
duly a pointed Administratrix of
the Estate ol. Archie 8. Barber ,
deceased. late of Olive Town ·
ship, Meigs county , Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
w ithin tour months.
Oate.d thll 30ttl day of JurYe

1972.

,_....-::.:_ .......~ Jotm-G.-Bef.on

I

/"'

Judge

(7) 6, 1:r. 30, 31

Meigs
Property

Transfers

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

LEGAL NOTICE

F'ursuant to the provisions of
the Communlcafions Act of t93.t
as amended, notice is hereby
given that Radio M id-F'om, tnc.
license of Station w M P 0
M iddleport, Ol11o has flltG an
IPPIICitiOn With the Federal
Communications Commlulon
for a construction perm if tor a
new F M broad cut station to bt
operaltd on a frequtncy of 92. 1
megacycles , Channel 221 wlttl
an effective radiated power of 3
kilowatts . The tower will be
located .5 m lies nortl1 of H lgh .
way 7 on the Robert Burdette
farm at Laurel Cliff . The an ·
tenna tlelght will be 239 feet
above average terrain . The FM
studios will be located In the
same building as the present
AM studios on Route lH
Bradbury, Middleport, Oh io.
Tl'le Officers , directors and
owners of 10 pet . or more of the
stock are John E. M . Kerr ,
president and Frenk X. Rauch
Jr., vice president . Members of
ttle public who desire to bring to
the commission's attention
facts concerninr the operation
ot the station stlould wrltt to the
Federal Communications
CommiSSIOn , Wnhlnoton, 0 . C.
205S.t no later than August 12,
1972. Letters should ut forth In
deTail the specific facts wl11ch
the wrlter w ishes the Com mission to consider In passing
on this application. A copy of
the application and related
material are on file for public
Inspection at Radio MJd.Pom
Inc . Route 121 Bradbury ,
Middleport, Ohio between ttle
hour&amp; of 8: 30a .m. and 4:30p .m .
week days.

(7) 17, 20, 2&lt;. 27 . .,

{

changer, separate controls .

.· .
.
'
o, rev\,._,, ctrl'f·· '" "•ret to

Balance S79 .56. Use our
budget terms . Call 992·7085.
·
7·1Hic

man111 •aft'
SlOP In 1nd have Mldl. or
Fnd r•l•x your hllr tor •
mort r'nilnnuble hllr.
Lwnn St. Ht·IUJ flelt'ler•r
llrbtr~'.·: LtCII fM,A,L·CIO

Wanted To Buy
OLD Furniture, oak tables.
organs, dishes. clocks, brass
bods, or complete house~olds .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-lfc

Help Wanted

S~~TINEL

.,
CARRiERS WANttD

NEW HOME -

$16,000.00.

.

A LARGE HOUSE
4 BEDROOMS -

l 'h baths, modern kitchen with bar .

Dining room . Wall to wall carpeting . Outbuilding 40x70 for
busi ness or contractor . Plenty of parking space. Asking

only $25,000.00.
142 ACRES
EX CELLENT SPRING - Large larm pond. 4 bedroom

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

992-3325

THREE bedroom house with
bath , 1h acre lot, on publi c
water system, 3J.. .mile from

Chester on Country Rd . 25.
Phone 985·4262 .
1·16·61c

appreciate .

Ro se mary

Withem , 239.()6.47, GRAND·
STAFF , INC .• REALTOR ,
471 ·2112.
7·9·1fC

- - - -- -

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985·3529.
6·11 ·1fC
10 ACRES in Langsvi lle; phone
992·7791.
7· t9.4tc

Pom eroy, Ohio

RACINE ..::.. 6 room hovse, baln ,
utility room. garage , $10,000 ;
~hone

9A9·AI 9S.

3·31 ·11C

JULY BRUSH HOG SALES. 3

1970 CHEVROLET 1h TON ........ .:S2495
8' wide body, v.a engine, automatic trans .. : power
steering, custom comfort &amp; conv . cab equipped, radio,
West coast mirrOrs. full wheel 'overs, chrome frt.
bumpers&amp; rear step bumpers, lnstru. gauges. heavy duty
whee ls &amp; extra good tires . This Is a sharp one &amp; loaded
with the goodies, color while &amp; red orange.

~OW MAN~

T1 MES
tlO I HAVE TO
TE"L YOU l

· NO JOKES ABOUT .
MINORITY
GROUPS~

ALL RIGHT,
60C\\H300M BRADl-EY.

YOU'fi I/Nlle1l

1969 FORD. ........•• ,. ................. $2095 ·

~.RI¥&amp;T!

v.e J/• ton custom cab &amp; mouldings . heavy duty lS" tires &amp;
fin ish. SHARP &amp; NICE .

U'LABNER

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY

1968 CHEVROLET lA TON ......... $1469

IFAH HAD MAH
DP.UTH ERS, AH
OP.UTH ER NOT

8 foot Steps ide, good heavy duty Iires, V·8 engine, 3·Speed
transm ission, solid cab, local 1-owner truck .

LOOK L1 KE

'/o:

MAMMY DEAR

1966 CHEVROLET ...................... $1595

..~IE1Y

- e&gt;UT IT DIDN'T STOP
ME FUM TRAPPIN' A

WE

HAVE

THE

I?OfMt.IGC~

- MAH BEST FRIE ND. ALL TH'B0'/5
HUNG 'ROUN D HER, NATCHERL'/.
S HE. PI CKED ONE-AN' AH
GOT TH ' LEFTOVERS .~'

HUSBIN. AH MERELY

MADE. TH' PURTIES T
GAL IN TOWN ·--

~ ~'J))

I'

r,_Jq~ ·

I)

\~:&amp;._·~\ )J~
~ .;;;}
.

../

HMMM!

I WONDER
WHAT
HAPPENED

CON ·

TACTS.
CAN YOU US E THEM?
Chances are , we have
prospects right now who
would be inte r ested in your
prope rty . If not, we hav e
many contacts - are helping
many peop le and com pan ies
with t heir r eal estate
problems . If you want to sell
see us today .

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION

story f rame, 2 large
be drooms with walk. -in
closets, large living roo m
fireplace ,
bath,
w i th
basement , hardwood floors ,
2 car garage . AL L IN EX ·
CELLE NT
CONDIT IO N.

"10

SYLVEST&amp;~!

V-8 112 ton, 8ft. pickup with aluminum cover, automatic

WARDEN, WHERE'5 J).jAT

transmission. good tires, chrome front &amp; rear bumper.
West Coast mirror s. custom cab. White &amp; mist green
fin ish.

EXPERT MARkSMAN
'&gt;OU WERE TALKINBA60UT?

1964 CHEVROLET t4 TON ........... !750
8 fl. body, 6 cyl. eng ine, 3·speed trans .. H. duly wheels &amp;
good H. duty t ires,

a

real solid truck .

1964 CHEVROLET ..................... s369
1h

Ton utility body .

SEVERAL NEW CHEVROLET lh-+4·1 TON .
&amp; 2lh TON TRUCKS IN STOCK
- SEE &amp; SAVE TODAY!
Plenty of New Chevrolets with Air Con ditioning in Stock . We are here to please you you'll like our Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

"

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

Pomeroy

Business Services

SAVE MORE
OF KENTUCKY

,;_· .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment'

$5.55

t
K) 1 I I
I I

July

Sale~

I

.

\1/E"L, T~E~E
WAS TillS ~ON EST
LANOI.ORD-.

1965 FORD.............................. $795

semi loads of cutters just RACINE - 10 room house, Sl4 ,900 .00 .
bath , basement , garage, two
Ann M. Ryther, Admls.,
arrived , 4-5·6 ft. cutters, 3
IS MINUTES
point
and
pull
type,
all
types
lots . Phone 949.4313.
George W. Moore, dec., to
FROM POMEROY
4-S·IfP
of other farm machinery , new
IN
3.05 acre es ta te , 1 story, 3
Leona Kay Roach, 2.12 acres,
and used ; stop and see us - - -- -bedrooms w ith closets , bath ,
Middleport.
before you buy . Jim' s Farm LOTS on Wr ight Slreel.
util i ty room , own water
MIDDLEPORT
Equip . Center, 5 miles West
Pomeroy ; phone 742 ·5937 .
supply or Cheste r water,
llhamar D. Weed, Ex., Bessi
or Rt. 35, Gal lipol is, Ohio ;
7 · 18-12tc
large garage and workshop
Anne Weed, dec . to Gladys
Phone Faye Manley
Jix21. fru i t bu il ding , 25 frui t
phone 441J.t077 or 446·3592.
trees , grapes , berri es,
Gertrude Smith, I&gt; Int. In lots,
1.1s.3tc
992-5592
others ,
4
years
old .
Pomeroy.
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
GREATEST BUY OF THE
In
11'12' CONTINENTAL Travel
YEAR . S IB ,900.
Richard Craig Jarboe, Anne
Pomeroy
Trailer , 1971 model , self. SALE! SALE! SALE! This
.,Jarboe to
Greg , Markley,
co:ntained ; awn ing, minors week at Berry.Miller Mobile
Ph.one 992-2156
HENRY E .'t~ELANDSR .
Home Sales we have 6 new
and. hitch ; phone 992·5982.
Miriam•. 1'1. Markley, 38.18
REAtfOR
and
used
Mobile
Homes
that
7·12.1fc
acres, Scipio.
PHONE tt2·22S9
will
be
sold
at
hundreds
of
Harry E. Johnson, Dolores MARRIED man for farm work, CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S lor
dol lars below retail price . 1 .
steadT work year ~ound; no
1973 60xl2 Oelroller , 2 or 3
M. Johnson to Edward J,
clean
used
furniture ,
Ia y-o I ; modern house ;
bedroom
, was $5995 .00, now 2 NEW HOME S, all electric, 3
guaranteed appliances .
wtekly wages and ..other
Schaefer,
Mary
Smith
bedrooms. full basemen! and
$5495
.00
; 1 · 1972 60 x 12
Upright deep freezes now in
benefits ; must · ~e · ex·
garage , with lake frontage ; at
Schaefer, .528 acre, Salisbury ,
Delroiler,
reduced
S600.0G
:
1
.
stock!! KUHL'S BARGAIN
perienced and sober ; ;wrlte P.
Five Poin ts area ; phone 992 ·
1971 60x12 Scholl , 2 bedroom,
Sarah Elizabeth Osborne to
CENTER. St . Rl . 7 "at
D. Box 685, Cambrl&lt;!ge, Ohio
2S71
or 992·3975.
with
.tx
12
ti
p-out
,
redu
ced
caution l i ght ," Tupper s
ons.
·
Vernon Ray Maxey, Mary Lee
7.13·Uc
$1500
.00
;
1
.
1971
60x12
Plains , Ohio. Phone: 667·3ll58 ;
7·1B·61c
Maxey, 77 Acres, Olive.
Cresthaven.
pr
iced
for
qu
ick
open to 6 p.m .; closed Mon·
sale at $3995.00; 1 . 1972 65x12
Joan W. Goegleln, Frederlch NEED barn buill, phone 667days .
Kirkwood Imperial
extra
7·16·6tc
6227.
B. Goeglein to Carl Frederich
sharp
.
save
$1000.00
on
this
7·11-6tp
Goeglein, int. in Lot 3,
unit ; 1 · 1971 60x12 Elcona
COAL, Limestone , E)(celsior
Salisbury.
wi th two expandos . reduced
Sail Works, E. Main Sl.,
$1280.00. We al so have a
Wayne Turner, Melva Business Opportunities
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
complete selection of good
4-J2.tfc
Turner toG. Keith Kennedy, V.
used 8 and ID wide M obile
--::-::--:-::--Irene Kennedy, .IM acre,
Homes. Low down payment
PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig.Zag
and bank rate financing is
Rutland .
sew ing machines . Still in
.
available . Before you buy any
odginal cartons . No at .
Harriett M. Spencer to
Mobi le Home, see Berry .
. tachments needed as our
Marvin R. Spencer, parcels,
Miller Mobi le Hom es first .
controls are built-in . Sews
Open 6 day s a week - Closed
Pomeroy, Chester, Bedford .. Is seeking an operator lor
with 1 or 2 needles , makes
Sunday . Berry .Mill er Mob ile
buttonholes, monogram s and
Dorsie Wllllams, Susie Solo-Sell Service Gasoline
Home Sales , 70S Farson
.Jn Most American_(;_au_,
blind
hem
stitch
.
Full
cash
Williams to Charles Thomas Stotion in ·Now Haven, W.
Str eet. Belpre, Ohio. Phone
price,
S38.50
or
budget
plan
- GUARANTEE[)...:
Va .
A2J.9S31.
Tucker, Roselyn Tucker, lot,
available. Phone 992·5641.
Guoranlttd commlnlon ,
1
·20·31c
Phone 992-2094
7-IHic
Olive.
Ront-fr" home lor livt ln.
Delbert A. Smith, Ruth D.
Call collect 614·ff2-S221 or
THE BEST deal In a new. Pomeroy Home··&amp;· AutG
TOMATOES, cucumbers. green FOR
write S.vt More of Ken·
Smith to Columbia Gas
or used mobile home, try
peppers
and
canning
lucky, P.O. Bo• 427, Russell,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Open 8111 &gt;
Transmission Corp., easement,
tomatoes . Geraldine Cleland,
Kanauga, Ohio.
Monday lhru Saturday
'Ky. 41169.
Racine
,
Ohio
.
Sulton.
. 7-J6.3Qic
604 E. Main. Pomtroy, Q.
7-20·1fc
Church of Chrlllt of ReedsCASH pa id for all ma1&lt;es an~ '::
_S
_E_P
_T
_ IC_T_A_N_K_S_C_L_E_ A
_ N:...
Ec..
Dl!t,
ville to Columbia Gu of Ohio, For Rent ··
CROSSMAN Pellet Gun . Good
model s of mob ile homes . REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
condition . Phone 992·2418.
right of way, Olive.
Phone area code 6l4-4lH 531 · 4782, Gall ipolis, John Russell ,
HOUSE,
Ideal
for
couple
or
7·20·31p
18 Easement, Columbus
A·l3·Hc Owner &amp; Opera lor .
gentleman ; bafh &amp; · shower;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. ·
.•
complete privacy; · gas hell I; LEFT IN lay -away , 1972 Zig
S·l2·1fc
clooe to Middleport; com Albert F. Bolen, Dorothy M,
Zag sewing machine, This
pletely furnished , phone 992.
C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
machine overcasts , darns ,
• Air Conditioners
Bolen to Franklin Reel Estate
Complete Serv ice
779t .
embroideries with just a turn
• Awnings
Co ., 125 acres, Columbia,
Phone 949·3ll21
7·19·41c
of the dial. Pay balance of
Salem.
Racine, Ohio
W .SO or pay 56.21 a month .
• Underpinning
..·Crill Bradford
Phone 992-5331.
.,
S·l·tfC
7·20·1fC Complete mobile hom ,

I "(I1 III I)"

, l I

1tn" wu., "'"-· "'' t., u1 .... • ·

2· ton 1:14" C. A. - 292 cu. in. 6 cylinder engine , 2-speed rear
aKie, 82Sx20. IO·ply tires, solid cab &amp; ready to work .

I

0

~

ll,)

1965 FORO. ............................. $795

CLELAND
REALTY

88 ACRES, low 520's, farmhouse
and other bu ild ings. Over 200
ft . frontag e. Must see to

'r-----.

II

TARNATION ARE 1/E
CHURNIN'OUT HERE IN
TH' MIDDLE OFTH'
WOODS FER?

2-ton 84" C.A.-292 cu. in. 6 cylinder eng ine. 2·speed rear
ax le, 825-&gt;20, JQ.ply tires , solid cab &amp; ready to work .

service ..... plus giganti c

il I

.,...~

wheels, 4-speed transmission , rear step bumper, dark red

WHEN YOU ADVERTI SE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
YOU OPEN VOIIR DOOR TO ANYONE . BE SAFE AND
LIST WI TH US . 98 PCT. OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
LOOKER S, 2 PCT. ARE BUYER S. WE WILL SCREEN
THEM AND TRY TO BRI NG ONL V THE BUYER S.

LOVE MUSIC??? Try this 1972 'display of mobile homes .
8 track stereo console In your always available at .. .
home. Pay balance of $98.80
or payments can be arranged .
ONE 4 room and bath furnished
MILLER
Phone 992-5331.
apartment, Arnold Grate,
7-20-lfc
Rutland Furniture, phone1A2MOBILE HOMES .
4211 '
INTERNATIONAL
1220 Washington Blvd.
1·18-31c 1958
Com per bus; can be used as 423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
paosenger bus ; rebuilt
'3 AND 4 ROUM furnlshad an'd
engine, A:l condition ; phone
unfurnished apartments .
667·3372.
Phone 992-544.
•
1
7.19·61c Auto Sales
,
4·t2·11c
RVHYR
THREE bedroom country RIDING horses, polled bull 1962 DODGE A dr ., 6 cyl.,
calves ; C. 0. Harr ison, Rl . 1,
standard shill. priced to sell.
home,
Bowman',s Run,
S195. Hilton Wolle, Racine,
Recine, Ohio; Robert.;D. Fife, . Middleport.
Ohio. Phone 949·3211.
7·19-61p
phone 992·7&lt;194.
1·20·31C
7-IUic
WHAi 'THEY
TOMATOES,
polafoes.
FAIIDLE
A9011T TrlE
cucumbers• and
beans , '71 CHEVELLE Super Sport
600F'I LINEN.AN.
PASTURE. phone 992-6329.
Coupe. V-8, 4 speed, $2200.
Clarence
Proffit,
Portland,
7.18-61c
Phone 742·3722.
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
7-J9.1fc
1·20·61c
N
tho lrcW letlen 2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
NlRCIJo'
"!'~._.C...
only; phone 992·5247.
'64 BUICK Skylark , V·B,
.
loaOmhno-.. - - . •
7-11-121p
, good tires ; must
Price Buster! automatic
•unntodbJthoaliol'ecan- - - - - - - sell, returning to service ;
phone 992-6716.
7·18·31c
lliii*IIIBAIISWIUn
For
·
,..
PANTS &amp; JEANS
·
-- - - - -22 FT. TagalonG treveMraller.
•
&lt;Ataowon ,_..., 1972 model;sfHpa1oOr, self·
'57 CHEVY, 2 dr., V.8, 3 speed,
SALE
S150; phone 949-4843.
l•"""'"• HELLO ClOWN IICKII INCOII
contelnld, phone ~24960.
·
·. ) ! .
..r;•, ·o7•tol-61c
7·18·41p
Buy
2
Pairs
ond
Ycea.rd.7"•
.
'
..
GETt PAIR FREE
A....lll', T/U, I'UteW.ee ""«'• .,.
TilAILEA lot in Rutland ; phone All kinds. all sizes for men, 1967 RED &amp; white Dodge
•reo~I-ACitOKII
Coronel RT, 440 engine, 4
742-4211,
women, young men, b~ys
speed,
low mileage ; phone
7·t8·31c
and girls. Hurry to ...
992·6689,
7-19-61c
16 FT. SWISS Colony camper,
POMEROY ,
,
I
sleeps six. J-burntr si&lt;)Ve;
. ••- ,Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
phone 992-6329.
.
7-14-61c ,!il!ill. Phone "Hill

I I

r .;t,

... .. .

CAPRI
NEW - J bedrooms, nice bath, stove and refrigerator in
kitchen. Lots of large closets. City water, ga s heat.

AREAL BUY - Block business building near A&amp;P, and a
modern J bedroom paneled home . Bath, furnace, and air
conditioned. Concrete front porch and large lot with pine
trees . A prime location for only $25,000.00.

ACT NOW Join the
o!dest
Toy
1o
Gift BOAT, motor and tra iler ; 15 fl .
Party Plan In the ·. Country
boat of wooden construction ,
65 h.p. Mercury motor : in top
- our 251h year I Com ·
shape ; new battery . skis,
missions up fo JO pet. Fan·
cushions, etc.; wi ll sacrifi ce;
lasllc Hostess Awards. Call or
write "SANTA's PARTIES"
phone 949·5656.
Avon, Conn. 06001 . Telephone
7·16·121C
1 (203) 673-3455. ALSO
15FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
BOOKING PARTIES.
h.p. motor, also t9S6 Harley·
1·2·301C
Davidson 74, phone 992 ·527 1.
WANTED: Someone to paint
7· t8.1 21p
house, 2 gor•a:~:d· other
bulldlnga: Ira
'•· .Aacine, 30" ELECTRIC cook stove ; pop
Ohio, Phone ut.
..
cooler , used 2 su mme rs ;
· 7-20-Jlc
stone iars ; green mason jars;
quarts and pints wllh glass
lids ; wheat cradle and other
MOTHERS "" Are r.ou looking
antiques ; May tag washer :
for something dlf erent? Sell
phone 985·3ll 11 .
Toys. Playllouse Company Is
7. ts.3tp
now hiring for fall. Sell
August Ia Dtcember, no
delfvorl.s and no collections. STUD pony coli, wea ned, $20 ;
phone 667·3906.
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert
7·18·31c
4-46-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
Fortune 949·5414. Earn S &amp; H
1 EXTRA nice, 3 year old,
Green Stamps.
Holste in springing hei f er ;
7·12-12lc
phone 949·2172.
7.18·3tc

. ~·.,.

basement . Chester water. Only 51 2,000.00.

gra ss. Would like $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING

CALL 992-2903 from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Aller S call 992-7440.

.... .

,"'''' ' · ' ' '''

A TERRIBLE T.IME 6 1TTIN'
TO SLEEP AN' I S HORE
AIM TO.
HIM"U P

NEW LISTING
2 bedrooms, electri c .heal, bath,

165ACRES

Fully carpeted , modern
kitcheo with builf ·in oven &amp;
range, lull basement and
carport.

.,..,. ~

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

2 hou ses · 4 farm pond s, 2 cisterns and well. Plenty of good

TWO STORY,
THREE BEDROOM
HOME

.

110 Mechanic Street

house, 2 barns, several outbuildings on stale rou te.
$32,500 .00 or will consider offer .

PRICE REDUCED

. KAIUt'S tor.RIIi SHOP

Saturday

LEGAL NOTICE

BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
stereo, AM-FM radio, fOUfl.
speakers, 4 speed aulomalif

*" ... ...... )

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

cr

·

I HAD
TATER
DON'T
WAKE

~EElV!!VVHATIN

Real btate For Sa!~

'for Sale

wAtir'Aos
Notice
:.:?:·:
INFORMATION
· fy.
1/A~UUM Cleaner new 1972
• _. 1 • DEAD\.tNES
WANTED - Cuatomers at Wt!Y noi try ci&gt;SrMtt&lt;'s tflatere '· m~-1. Complete with all
) P.M. Day Befort Publlcollon. Sh-elter's Wet Pot Shop.
t 1
f111
.-.-. · and
~
••
d D
•"
ru1 -h·
Y l'..,. Theoro
"" '
Cleaning tools. Small paint
~on ay tldllne 9 a.m .
c•··ter.
""lo.
No
ex
.
-rlenco
t~"''''" mink
Cancellation - Corrocflons
•"'"
•·
ro rv• •-. .
~·~&gt;
damage In sh)pplng. Will lake
w :11 be occepteo untll9 a.m. for . necenary.
oil base 1~4 nOw'"" hive the
$27 cash or budget plan
7•9·201p
Doyot Publication
lemon gro!Vt. Just·..thlnl&lt;, 14
available. Phone 992-5641.
REGULA TIDNS
~----~-.:-:--:speclall .11111 month, ,i9f!le t
7. u .61c
·n .. PubliShor reserves the REDUCE safe and fast with
men a1 well as wom111. 11 s
right to edit or reject ony ods, GoBese Tablet.s &amp; E·Vap
KOSCOT .'of. COUI:M- · l&gt;hone ••
WALNUT . STEREO radio
dt,mod obleclionll. Th e "woter pills.'' Nelson Drug.
992·5113...
' .. . .
combination, four speed in.
publish.; will not btrespon•lblt
· 6·29·301P
~ 7-9.tfc
for morae than one . Incorrect
,.
•· t
·termlxed changer, .4 speaker
sound system , dual volume
Insertion .
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches
RATES
F k~
control . Balance $68.42. Use
•For Won' Ad Service
, - open sites only, or ""
· · 'our budgel terms . Call 992·
S cents p.r word .one Insertion Run Sportsman Club~ Sunday, 1
7085.
Minimum Charge 75c ..
July 23, 12 noon. ·
.
7-IHtc
12 cent• per wqra three
7-19-Jtc

.

'•

Sentinel Cla.ssifi~ds: ~tAction! ·sentinel Clllssifieds· G_~t Results!
.•.

..

1

,.

.- Employment Wanted

MOBILE
troller, · air - . POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy , 'WILL 00 welding after 5 p.m.
conditioned and lot; ." phone . Parkvlow Kennels. Phone 992- ~ and weekends, any place ;
992·5716.
f· '
5443.
phone 992-5271.
8-15-tfc I
.:..__
1·18-12lp
,•''
. ,. ' 7-11-6tc
.

_____

SEE US FOR : Awnings , Slorm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

and railing. A Jacob. sales
representative .

For

free

· estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

Fro m the largest Truck
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

tlafhon Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

Pomeroy

•

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, ,
ponds , b1sement, fand scaping·. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract .
Fret · EStimates. We ilso~

·haul till dirt, fop,soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire ,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
· aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992-

-'-"-------;o.,, usect biii'lcil~g . supplies &amp;

like

a-..·

WMP0/1390
'ON YOUR DIAL

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum ,

vi nyl and steel siding ;
liberglas , brick and stoiie i
'complete fine of res/Oemllit
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling ,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting;
complete lin• of Mlloonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured lor your
protoctlon. 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918.
•
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON$TR CO
I

"'L. . ~.

'\:a..

I

salvage yard; will wreck
hou..s, buildings, etc. Caver~
&amp; Marlin Wreckage &amp;
Salyage Co., Laurel Cliff
across
from
Highland
Church; phone 992·5946.
7-9-121c

7-::.,..------

o·l:iELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. ·
Complete front end service.
tune up •nd brake service.
Wheels
balanced eloc- ·
Ironically.
All
work
guaranteed.

. Re111\\nn111hl•

.,.I'M
FAMOUS!
MY,

SKETCH
IS 011
TV,.,

S"OUTS

......

t

.._ , -·

...'
' '

been • ,

O,UTOMOBILE Insurance
cancelled?
Lost ' your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966. .
5232 .
6-15-ttc
--:-::---:----SeW ING MAI.:HINES. Repair,"~ EP'fiC tanks cleaned. Miller•
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
ser vice, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . 661&lt;!035.
Authorized Singer Sales and
2·12-ttc ,
' Service. We Sharpen Scissors: -~--,,.....~--3·29-tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work '··=-=--~=-:-:--:c--::-:­
Septic tank s installed . George READY -MIX
CONCRETE
( Bill) Pullins. Phone 99H478.' ; dellv~red right to )'OUP
·
4·25·1fc
pro/ect. Fast and easy . Frlf
·es t males. Phone 992-328•
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.
Middleport, Ohio.
PAPER hanging ; inferior and
exterio r painting ; Arthur
6-JO.tfc
Musser, phone 742·5223.
7·18·301p CALL Guy Neigler for Building
Houses.
6·28-llc
DOZER and back hoe wor~,
ponds and septic lanks; ·B &amp; K SE WING MACHINE iervlce,
Excavating, Phone 992·5367, clean, oil, set tension $4.99.
1
Dick Karr , Jr .
Special Eleotro. Grande
5·21 ·1fC
Company. Phone 992·6517. ·
---.,,----.,......-,S· 2t · lf~ ,
.

we·talk to you

~

3 BedfQ~?m home, with
brick f'ront , 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..

•:•:
:::;
••

-

·'I&gt;'
'

., '
· .;.
::::.:
•. · _.
·'

'.

,.

-·-·
'128·

'~$14995
WllH 12'BAR ANDCHAIN,

AIJIOMATIC OIUNG.

.

. ..
, '
'I

/

.·'. \

~ -~ ~~
;. \

-

'' )

WE WON'T BE ABt_E
TRAIL. TI-lE TRIO
ANYMORE? .

''SINCE REL.EASE
OF TI-lE SKETCHES
YESTERDAY, TI-IEV'VE
EVAPORATED.•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1. "Be lie··
I. Indian
of Spain
st ate
5. - no\-·a
2. Feeling
10, Egy ptian
comfy
sun god
(2 wds.•
11 . Amorous
3. Acting
p1·e ma~
fellow
t2, Pape1·
turely.
(sl.)
size
13. Classify
(3 wd.&lt;. 1
4. An Alcott
H . Criminal
charge
heroine.~
(sl.)
5.Sew:
15, Co njunr·
slitch
lion
6. IVW IT
16. Ascot.
s py
for one
oulftl
17. Stupid
( ohbr.l
7. Boosts
19. Medit.
(s l. )
island
(4 wds.)
(abbr. )
8. ~1agazinl•
20. Duenna 's
feature
Iitle
9. Illood
2J .•Full of
vessel
rlcks
22. noffen·
ll.-Loa
sivl' oath
23. Interdict
24. Primrose

l

-·

- ~ -. ·

POMEROY ,

}\

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Yesterday's Answer
15. Guided
missile
( sl.)
18. World's
first
zoologist ·.•
21. Electrical
term

23. Outdo
24. Certain
soups

25. Items
of
business

26. - oul
ladmin ·
ist e.-ed 1
27. Mrmh..of
Levi·~

tribe
28. Puulrl"s
aid
30. Hazard
35, Close
margin
36. Philit•·
pint.' tree

WITHOUT

Hl6
6UIDE.ll00fo\

IIE'D THINK
IT W"S

MOUNT
VE.RNoN!

26.Courage
29. How
awful:
3U. Make it
through
31. Caddoan
Indian
32, Man at
the bar
(abbr.1
33. llitlrr·,
wife
3f. Hire
36. Raised
platform
37. Elicited
38. Com·
media
dell '39. Less hare ·
brained
40. 11ebrcw

'

.. ,•

H

iI

measure

I

DAILY

CRYI''l'OIIU01't;- Here's hoir to work It:

A X Y D I. B A A X R
Is I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
Om· lcllcl' simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the lcnglh and fotmatlon of the wards · are aU
hint•. Each day the code lellers arc differenl.

~ . FastStrtfQ ·Dtllii~WE

~Lmiled

YeolerUJ'I CrJ:tteoeee: A OOJOlii ID IS Till 8.U'IIr

PLACE TO PASS THE BUCK.-GARY B. WBlGil'l'
(0 1872 JCinJ: Ftalortt 87n4ioelf,lna.)

RATS ...I u,vo6 'lwJNG
FOR A HV6!

CRYPTOQUOTES
0 A J C T Q·R D

UWCXWSCR
ARQSRQH

W QR.

DWHXQWC

YX Q

E y B H L:~~U::::..;;:::!:::S :::..:!:=;,;~

QRBYXQOR . -

AYYVRQ

rates. Phone 741·3232 or
192-32t3.
, ..,.rrc
(I

�_ _. . ...... w .. "'

.

.l.~T.eDai!fSenUnei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,July:20,1m

..

.

. ••·

'

•

Notice

") •".~.11:1.. •

.·

. ---~--:-:-~:-.

consecutfye lnsertloris.

1J conts per ' word olx con.· SHOOTING Milch, Saturday,
secutiVe Insertion~ . •
· J 1 22nd at the Racine
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
uY
F ·t
Odland ads paid within 10 doys .' Planing Milia16 p.m. a• ory
CARD OF THANKS
choke guns only. Assorted
&amp; DIITUARY
meal. Sponsored by lha
11.50 for 50 word minimum ." Syracuse Fire Dept.
Each addjtlonal word 2c .
7-lf-ltp
BLIND AOS

Add it ional 25c -Charge per
Advertisement.

,
OFFICI HOITRt· o
: 8&lt;30 o.m,. to S:OG,p.m, Dally,
1: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon

'

'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

C.tst No. 20,717
Estate Of Mabel R. Mees
Decetsed .
Notice Is hereby given ·that
Charlotte M. Evans or 2l5
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
hu been duly appointed
Exeuctrlx of the Estate of
Ma~el R. Mees, decused, late
o4 Pomeroy, Meigs County,

Ohio.

. Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f iduciary
within four months.
Dated this 30th day of June

1972.

John c. Bacon

(7) 6,

Judge

13, 20, 3t

''HElL"

HEATING.
. &amp;
COOUNG

Window,
Air Conditioners

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy.

0.

NOTICE OF
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 23. t
APPOINTMENT
p, m. Factory choked guns
Coso No. 20711
only. Second place shooters
Estate of EMMA M . BARBER ,
qel frte shot In next match .
Dectased .
Assorted meets. Racine Gun
Notice Is hereby given that
Martha Chevalier, of R. D.•
Club.
Long Bottom , Ohio, has been
7·20.Jlc

duly appointed Adm inistratrix
of the Estate or Emma M .
Barber , deceased, late of Olive
Township, Meigs County , 01110 .
CreditOrs are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated th is 30th day of June

1972.

•().) 6,

John C. Bacon
Judge

13, 20, 3t

Cne No. 20719 .

Estate of ARCHIE B. BAR ·
BE A• Deceased .
Nolfce Is her:eby given that

Martha Chtvalltr. of R. D.,

Long Bottom , Ohio , has been
duly a pointed Administratrix of
the Estate ol. Archie 8. Barber ,
deceased. late of Olive Town ·
ship, Meigs county , Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
w ithin tour months.
Oate.d thll 30ttl day of JurYe

1972.

,_....-::.:_ .......~ Jotm-G.-Bef.on

I

/"'

Judge

(7) 6, 1:r. 30, 31

Meigs
Property

Transfers

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

LEGAL NOTICE

F'ursuant to the provisions of
the Communlcafions Act of t93.t
as amended, notice is hereby
given that Radio M id-F'om, tnc.
license of Station w M P 0
M iddleport, Ol11o has flltG an
IPPIICitiOn With the Federal
Communications Commlulon
for a construction perm if tor a
new F M broad cut station to bt
operaltd on a frequtncy of 92. 1
megacycles , Channel 221 wlttl
an effective radiated power of 3
kilowatts . The tower will be
located .5 m lies nortl1 of H lgh .
way 7 on the Robert Burdette
farm at Laurel Cliff . The an ·
tenna tlelght will be 239 feet
above average terrain . The FM
studios will be located In the
same building as the present
AM studios on Route lH
Bradbury, Middleport, Oh io.
Tl'le Officers , directors and
owners of 10 pet . or more of the
stock are John E. M . Kerr ,
president and Frenk X. Rauch
Jr., vice president . Members of
ttle public who desire to bring to
the commission's attention
facts concerninr the operation
ot the station stlould wrltt to the
Federal Communications
CommiSSIOn , Wnhlnoton, 0 . C.
205S.t no later than August 12,
1972. Letters should ut forth In
deTail the specific facts wl11ch
the wrlter w ishes the Com mission to consider In passing
on this application. A copy of
the application and related
material are on file for public
Inspection at Radio MJd.Pom
Inc . Route 121 Bradbury ,
Middleport, Ohio between ttle
hour&amp; of 8: 30a .m. and 4:30p .m .
week days.

(7) 17, 20, 2&lt;. 27 . .,

{

changer, separate controls .

.· .
.
'
o, rev\,._,, ctrl'f·· '" "•ret to

Balance S79 .56. Use our
budget terms . Call 992·7085.
·
7·1Hic

man111 •aft'
SlOP In 1nd have Mldl. or
Fnd r•l•x your hllr tor •
mort r'nilnnuble hllr.
Lwnn St. Ht·IUJ flelt'ler•r
llrbtr~'.·: LtCII fM,A,L·CIO

Wanted To Buy
OLD Furniture, oak tables.
organs, dishes. clocks, brass
bods, or complete house~olds .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-lfc

Help Wanted

S~~TINEL

.,
CARRiERS WANttD

NEW HOME -

$16,000.00.

.

A LARGE HOUSE
4 BEDROOMS -

l 'h baths, modern kitchen with bar .

Dining room . Wall to wall carpeting . Outbuilding 40x70 for
busi ness or contractor . Plenty of parking space. Asking

only $25,000.00.
142 ACRES
EX CELLENT SPRING - Large larm pond. 4 bedroom

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

992-3325

THREE bedroom house with
bath , 1h acre lot, on publi c
water system, 3J.. .mile from

Chester on Country Rd . 25.
Phone 985·4262 .
1·16·61c

appreciate .

Ro se mary

Withem , 239.()6.47, GRAND·
STAFF , INC .• REALTOR ,
471 ·2112.
7·9·1fC

- - - -- -

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985·3529.
6·11 ·1fC
10 ACRES in Langsvi lle; phone
992·7791.
7· t9.4tc

Pom eroy, Ohio

RACINE ..::.. 6 room hovse, baln ,
utility room. garage , $10,000 ;
~hone

9A9·AI 9S.

3·31 ·11C

JULY BRUSH HOG SALES. 3

1970 CHEVROLET 1h TON ........ .:S2495
8' wide body, v.a engine, automatic trans .. : power
steering, custom comfort &amp; conv . cab equipped, radio,
West coast mirrOrs. full wheel 'overs, chrome frt.
bumpers&amp; rear step bumpers, lnstru. gauges. heavy duty
whee ls &amp; extra good tires . This Is a sharp one &amp; loaded
with the goodies, color while &amp; red orange.

~OW MAN~

T1 MES
tlO I HAVE TO
TE"L YOU l

· NO JOKES ABOUT .
MINORITY
GROUPS~

ALL RIGHT,
60C\\H300M BRADl-EY.

YOU'fi I/Nlle1l

1969 FORD. ........•• ,. ................. $2095 ·

~.RI¥&amp;T!

v.e J/• ton custom cab &amp; mouldings . heavy duty lS" tires &amp;
fin ish. SHARP &amp; NICE .

U'LABNER

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY

1968 CHEVROLET lA TON ......... $1469

IFAH HAD MAH
DP.UTH ERS, AH
OP.UTH ER NOT

8 foot Steps ide, good heavy duty Iires, V·8 engine, 3·Speed
transm ission, solid cab, local 1-owner truck .

LOOK L1 KE

'/o:

MAMMY DEAR

1966 CHEVROLET ...................... $1595

..~IE1Y

- e&gt;UT IT DIDN'T STOP
ME FUM TRAPPIN' A

WE

HAVE

THE

I?OfMt.IGC~

- MAH BEST FRIE ND. ALL TH'B0'/5
HUNG 'ROUN D HER, NATCHERL'/.
S HE. PI CKED ONE-AN' AH
GOT TH ' LEFTOVERS .~'

HUSBIN. AH MERELY

MADE. TH' PURTIES T
GAL IN TOWN ·--

~ ~'J))

I'

r,_Jq~ ·

I)

\~:&amp;._·~\ )J~
~ .;;;}
.

../

HMMM!

I WONDER
WHAT
HAPPENED

CON ·

TACTS.
CAN YOU US E THEM?
Chances are , we have
prospects right now who
would be inte r ested in your
prope rty . If not, we hav e
many contacts - are helping
many peop le and com pan ies
with t heir r eal estate
problems . If you want to sell
see us today .

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION

story f rame, 2 large
be drooms with walk. -in
closets, large living roo m
fireplace ,
bath,
w i th
basement , hardwood floors ,
2 car garage . AL L IN EX ·
CELLE NT
CONDIT IO N.

"10

SYLVEST&amp;~!

V-8 112 ton, 8ft. pickup with aluminum cover, automatic

WARDEN, WHERE'5 J).jAT

transmission. good tires, chrome front &amp; rear bumper.
West Coast mirror s. custom cab. White &amp; mist green
fin ish.

EXPERT MARkSMAN
'&gt;OU WERE TALKINBA60UT?

1964 CHEVROLET t4 TON ........... !750
8 fl. body, 6 cyl. eng ine, 3·speed trans .. H. duly wheels &amp;
good H. duty t ires,

a

real solid truck .

1964 CHEVROLET ..................... s369
1h

Ton utility body .

SEVERAL NEW CHEVROLET lh-+4·1 TON .
&amp; 2lh TON TRUCKS IN STOCK
- SEE &amp; SAVE TODAY!
Plenty of New Chevrolets with Air Con ditioning in Stock . We are here to please you you'll like our Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

"

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

Pomeroy

Business Services

SAVE MORE
OF KENTUCKY

,;_· .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment'

$5.55

t
K) 1 I I
I I

July

Sale~

I

.

\1/E"L, T~E~E
WAS TillS ~ON EST
LANOI.ORD-.

1965 FORD.............................. $795

semi loads of cutters just RACINE - 10 room house, Sl4 ,900 .00 .
bath , basement , garage, two
Ann M. Ryther, Admls.,
arrived , 4-5·6 ft. cutters, 3
IS MINUTES
point
and
pull
type,
all
types
lots . Phone 949.4313.
George W. Moore, dec., to
FROM POMEROY
4-S·IfP
of other farm machinery , new
IN
3.05 acre es ta te , 1 story, 3
Leona Kay Roach, 2.12 acres,
and used ; stop and see us - - -- -bedrooms w ith closets , bath ,
Middleport.
before you buy . Jim' s Farm LOTS on Wr ight Slreel.
util i ty room , own water
MIDDLEPORT
Equip . Center, 5 miles West
Pomeroy ; phone 742 ·5937 .
supply or Cheste r water,
llhamar D. Weed, Ex., Bessi
or Rt. 35, Gal lipol is, Ohio ;
7 · 18-12tc
large garage and workshop
Anne Weed, dec . to Gladys
Phone Faye Manley
Jix21. fru i t bu il ding , 25 frui t
phone 441J.t077 or 446·3592.
trees , grapes , berri es,
Gertrude Smith, I&gt; Int. In lots,
1.1s.3tc
992-5592
others ,
4
years
old .
Pomeroy.
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
GREATEST BUY OF THE
In
11'12' CONTINENTAL Travel
YEAR . S IB ,900.
Richard Craig Jarboe, Anne
Pomeroy
Trailer , 1971 model , self. SALE! SALE! SALE! This
.,Jarboe to
Greg , Markley,
co:ntained ; awn ing, minors week at Berry.Miller Mobile
Ph.one 992-2156
HENRY E .'t~ELANDSR .
Home Sales we have 6 new
and. hitch ; phone 992·5982.
Miriam•. 1'1. Markley, 38.18
REAtfOR
and
used
Mobile
Homes
that
7·12.1fc
acres, Scipio.
PHONE tt2·22S9
will
be
sold
at
hundreds
of
Harry E. Johnson, Dolores MARRIED man for farm work, CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S lor
dol lars below retail price . 1 .
steadT work year ~ound; no
1973 60xl2 Oelroller , 2 or 3
M. Johnson to Edward J,
clean
used
furniture ,
Ia y-o I ; modern house ;
bedroom
, was $5995 .00, now 2 NEW HOME S, all electric, 3
guaranteed appliances .
wtekly wages and ..other
Schaefer,
Mary
Smith
bedrooms. full basemen! and
$5495
.00
; 1 · 1972 60 x 12
Upright deep freezes now in
benefits ; must · ~e · ex·
garage , with lake frontage ; at
Schaefer, .528 acre, Salisbury ,
Delroiler,
reduced
S600.0G
:
1
.
stock!! KUHL'S BARGAIN
perienced and sober ; ;wrlte P.
Five Poin ts area ; phone 992 ·
1971 60x12 Scholl , 2 bedroom,
Sarah Elizabeth Osborne to
CENTER. St . Rl . 7 "at
D. Box 685, Cambrl&lt;!ge, Ohio
2S71
or 992·3975.
with
.tx
12
ti
p-out
,
redu
ced
caution l i ght ," Tupper s
ons.
·
Vernon Ray Maxey, Mary Lee
7.13·Uc
$1500
.00
;
1
.
1971
60x12
Plains , Ohio. Phone: 667·3ll58 ;
7·1B·61c
Maxey, 77 Acres, Olive.
Cresthaven.
pr
iced
for
qu
ick
open to 6 p.m .; closed Mon·
sale at $3995.00; 1 . 1972 65x12
Joan W. Goegleln, Frederlch NEED barn buill, phone 667days .
Kirkwood Imperial
extra
7·16·6tc
6227.
B. Goeglein to Carl Frederich
sharp
.
save
$1000.00
on
this
7·11-6tp
Goeglein, int. in Lot 3,
unit ; 1 · 1971 60x12 Elcona
COAL, Limestone , E)(celsior
Salisbury.
wi th two expandos . reduced
Sail Works, E. Main Sl.,
$1280.00. We al so have a
Wayne Turner, Melva Business Opportunities
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
complete selection of good
4-J2.tfc
Turner toG. Keith Kennedy, V.
used 8 and ID wide M obile
--::-::--:-::--Irene Kennedy, .IM acre,
Homes. Low down payment
PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig.Zag
and bank rate financing is
Rutland .
sew ing machines . Still in
.
available . Before you buy any
odginal cartons . No at .
Harriett M. Spencer to
Mobi le Home, see Berry .
. tachments needed as our
Marvin R. Spencer, parcels,
Miller Mobi le Hom es first .
controls are built-in . Sews
Open 6 day s a week - Closed
Pomeroy, Chester, Bedford .. Is seeking an operator lor
with 1 or 2 needles , makes
Sunday . Berry .Mill er Mob ile
buttonholes, monogram s and
Dorsie Wllllams, Susie Solo-Sell Service Gasoline
Home Sales , 70S Farson
.Jn Most American_(;_au_,
blind
hem
stitch
.
Full
cash
Williams to Charles Thomas Stotion in ·Now Haven, W.
Str eet. Belpre, Ohio. Phone
price,
S38.50
or
budget
plan
- GUARANTEE[)...:
Va .
A2J.9S31.
Tucker, Roselyn Tucker, lot,
available. Phone 992·5641.
Guoranlttd commlnlon ,
1
·20·31c
Phone 992-2094
7-IHic
Olive.
Ront-fr" home lor livt ln.
Delbert A. Smith, Ruth D.
Call collect 614·ff2-S221 or
THE BEST deal In a new. Pomeroy Home··&amp;· AutG
TOMATOES, cucumbers. green FOR
write S.vt More of Ken·
Smith to Columbia Gas
or used mobile home, try
peppers
and
canning
lucky, P.O. Bo• 427, Russell,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Open 8111 &gt;
Transmission Corp., easement,
tomatoes . Geraldine Cleland,
Kanauga, Ohio.
Monday lhru Saturday
'Ky. 41169.
Racine
,
Ohio
.
Sulton.
. 7-J6.3Qic
604 E. Main. Pomtroy, Q.
7-20·1fc
Church of Chrlllt of ReedsCASH pa id for all ma1&lt;es an~ '::
_S
_E_P
_T
_ IC_T_A_N_K_S_C_L_E_ A
_ N:...
Ec..
Dl!t,
ville to Columbia Gu of Ohio, For Rent ··
CROSSMAN Pellet Gun . Good
model s of mob ile homes . REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
condition . Phone 992·2418.
right of way, Olive.
Phone area code 6l4-4lH 531 · 4782, Gall ipolis, John Russell ,
HOUSE,
Ideal
for
couple
or
7·20·31p
18 Easement, Columbus
A·l3·Hc Owner &amp; Opera lor .
gentleman ; bafh &amp; · shower;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. ·
.•
complete privacy; · gas hell I; LEFT IN lay -away , 1972 Zig
S·l2·1fc
clooe to Middleport; com Albert F. Bolen, Dorothy M,
Zag sewing machine, This
pletely furnished , phone 992.
C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
machine overcasts , darns ,
• Air Conditioners
Bolen to Franklin Reel Estate
Complete Serv ice
779t .
embroideries with just a turn
• Awnings
Co ., 125 acres, Columbia,
Phone 949·3ll21
7·19·41c
of the dial. Pay balance of
Salem.
Racine, Ohio
W .SO or pay 56.21 a month .
• Underpinning
..·Crill Bradford
Phone 992-5331.
.,
S·l·tfC
7·20·1fC Complete mobile hom ,

I "(I1 III I)"

, l I

1tn" wu., "'"-· "'' t., u1 .... • ·

2· ton 1:14" C. A. - 292 cu. in. 6 cylinder engine , 2-speed rear
aKie, 82Sx20. IO·ply tires, solid cab &amp; ready to work .

I

0

~

ll,)

1965 FORO. ............................. $795

CLELAND
REALTY

88 ACRES, low 520's, farmhouse
and other bu ild ings. Over 200
ft . frontag e. Must see to

'r-----.

II

TARNATION ARE 1/E
CHURNIN'OUT HERE IN
TH' MIDDLE OFTH'
WOODS FER?

2-ton 84" C.A.-292 cu. in. 6 cylinder eng ine. 2·speed rear
ax le, 825-&gt;20, JQ.ply tires , solid cab &amp; ready to work .

service ..... plus giganti c

il I

.,...~

wheels, 4-speed transmission , rear step bumper, dark red

WHEN YOU ADVERTI SE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
YOU OPEN VOIIR DOOR TO ANYONE . BE SAFE AND
LIST WI TH US . 98 PCT. OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
LOOKER S, 2 PCT. ARE BUYER S. WE WILL SCREEN
THEM AND TRY TO BRI NG ONL V THE BUYER S.

LOVE MUSIC??? Try this 1972 'display of mobile homes .
8 track stereo console In your always available at .. .
home. Pay balance of $98.80
or payments can be arranged .
ONE 4 room and bath furnished
MILLER
Phone 992-5331.
apartment, Arnold Grate,
7-20-lfc
Rutland Furniture, phone1A2MOBILE HOMES .
4211 '
INTERNATIONAL
1220 Washington Blvd.
1·18-31c 1958
Com per bus; can be used as 423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
paosenger bus ; rebuilt
'3 AND 4 ROUM furnlshad an'd
engine, A:l condition ; phone
unfurnished apartments .
667·3372.
Phone 992-544.
•
1
7.19·61c Auto Sales
,
4·t2·11c
RVHYR
THREE bedroom country RIDING horses, polled bull 1962 DODGE A dr ., 6 cyl.,
calves ; C. 0. Harr ison, Rl . 1,
standard shill. priced to sell.
home,
Bowman',s Run,
S195. Hilton Wolle, Racine,
Recine, Ohio; Robert.;D. Fife, . Middleport.
Ohio. Phone 949·3211.
7·19-61p
phone 992·7&lt;194.
1·20·31C
7-IUic
WHAi 'THEY
TOMATOES,
polafoes.
FAIIDLE
A9011T TrlE
cucumbers• and
beans , '71 CHEVELLE Super Sport
600F'I LINEN.AN.
PASTURE. phone 992-6329.
Coupe. V-8, 4 speed, $2200.
Clarence
Proffit,
Portland,
7.18-61c
Phone 742·3722.
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
7-J9.1fc
1·20·61c
N
tho lrcW letlen 2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
NlRCIJo'
"!'~._.C...
only; phone 992·5247.
'64 BUICK Skylark , V·B,
.
loaOmhno-.. - - . •
7-11-121p
, good tires ; must
Price Buster! automatic
•unntodbJthoaliol'ecan- - - - - - - sell, returning to service ;
phone 992-6716.
7·18·31c
lliii*IIIBAIISWIUn
For
·
,..
PANTS &amp; JEANS
·
-- - - - -22 FT. TagalonG treveMraller.
•
&lt;Ataowon ,_..., 1972 model;sfHpa1oOr, self·
'57 CHEVY, 2 dr., V.8, 3 speed,
SALE
S150; phone 949-4843.
l•"""'"• HELLO ClOWN IICKII INCOII
contelnld, phone ~24960.
·
·. ) ! .
..r;•, ·o7•tol-61c
7·18·41p
Buy
2
Pairs
ond
Ycea.rd.7"•
.
'
..
GETt PAIR FREE
A....lll', T/U, I'UteW.ee ""«'• .,.
TilAILEA lot in Rutland ; phone All kinds. all sizes for men, 1967 RED &amp; white Dodge
•reo~I-ACitOKII
Coronel RT, 440 engine, 4
742-4211,
women, young men, b~ys
speed,
low mileage ; phone
7·t8·31c
and girls. Hurry to ...
992·6689,
7-19-61c
16 FT. SWISS Colony camper,
POMEROY ,
,
I
sleeps six. J-burntr si&lt;)Ve;
. ••- ,Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
phone 992-6329.
.
7-14-61c ,!il!ill. Phone "Hill

I I

r .;t,

... .. .

CAPRI
NEW - J bedrooms, nice bath, stove and refrigerator in
kitchen. Lots of large closets. City water, ga s heat.

AREAL BUY - Block business building near A&amp;P, and a
modern J bedroom paneled home . Bath, furnace, and air
conditioned. Concrete front porch and large lot with pine
trees . A prime location for only $25,000.00.

ACT NOW Join the
o!dest
Toy
1o
Gift BOAT, motor and tra iler ; 15 fl .
Party Plan In the ·. Country
boat of wooden construction ,
65 h.p. Mercury motor : in top
- our 251h year I Com ·
shape ; new battery . skis,
missions up fo JO pet. Fan·
cushions, etc.; wi ll sacrifi ce;
lasllc Hostess Awards. Call or
write "SANTA's PARTIES"
phone 949·5656.
Avon, Conn. 06001 . Telephone
7·16·121C
1 (203) 673-3455. ALSO
15FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
BOOKING PARTIES.
h.p. motor, also t9S6 Harley·
1·2·301C
Davidson 74, phone 992 ·527 1.
WANTED: Someone to paint
7· t8.1 21p
house, 2 gor•a:~:d· other
bulldlnga: Ira
'•· .Aacine, 30" ELECTRIC cook stove ; pop
Ohio, Phone ut.
..
cooler , used 2 su mme rs ;
· 7-20-Jlc
stone iars ; green mason jars;
quarts and pints wllh glass
lids ; wheat cradle and other
MOTHERS "" Are r.ou looking
antiques ; May tag washer :
for something dlf erent? Sell
phone 985·3ll 11 .
Toys. Playllouse Company Is
7. ts.3tp
now hiring for fall. Sell
August Ia Dtcember, no
delfvorl.s and no collections. STUD pony coli, wea ned, $20 ;
phone 667·3906.
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert
7·18·31c
4-46-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
Fortune 949·5414. Earn S &amp; H
1 EXTRA nice, 3 year old,
Green Stamps.
Holste in springing hei f er ;
7·12-12lc
phone 949·2172.
7.18·3tc

. ~·.,.

basement . Chester water. Only 51 2,000.00.

gra ss. Would like $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING

CALL 992-2903 from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Aller S call 992-7440.

.... .

,"'''' ' · ' ' '''

A TERRIBLE T.IME 6 1TTIN'
TO SLEEP AN' I S HORE
AIM TO.
HIM"U P

NEW LISTING
2 bedrooms, electri c .heal, bath,

165ACRES

Fully carpeted , modern
kitcheo with builf ·in oven &amp;
range, lull basement and
carport.

.,..,. ~

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

2 hou ses · 4 farm pond s, 2 cisterns and well. Plenty of good

TWO STORY,
THREE BEDROOM
HOME

.

110 Mechanic Street

house, 2 barns, several outbuildings on stale rou te.
$32,500 .00 or will consider offer .

PRICE REDUCED

. KAIUt'S tor.RIIi SHOP

Saturday

LEGAL NOTICE

BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
stereo, AM-FM radio, fOUfl.
speakers, 4 speed aulomalif

*" ... ...... )

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

cr

·

I HAD
TATER
DON'T
WAKE

~EElV!!VVHATIN

Real btate For Sa!~

'for Sale

wAtir'Aos
Notice
:.:?:·:
INFORMATION
· fy.
1/A~UUM Cleaner new 1972
• _. 1 • DEAD\.tNES
WANTED - Cuatomers at Wt!Y noi try ci&gt;SrMtt&lt;'s tflatere '· m~-1. Complete with all
) P.M. Day Befort Publlcollon. Sh-elter's Wet Pot Shop.
t 1
f111
.-.-. · and
~
••
d D
•"
ru1 -h·
Y l'..,. Theoro
"" '
Cleaning tools. Small paint
~on ay tldllne 9 a.m .
c•··ter.
""lo.
No
ex
.
-rlenco
t~"''''" mink
Cancellation - Corrocflons
•"'"
•·
ro rv• •-. .
~·~&gt;
damage In sh)pplng. Will lake
w :11 be occepteo untll9 a.m. for . necenary.
oil base 1~4 nOw'"" hive the
$27 cash or budget plan
7•9·201p
Doyot Publication
lemon gro!Vt. Just·..thlnl&lt;, 14
available. Phone 992-5641.
REGULA TIDNS
~----~-.:-:--:speclall .11111 month, ,i9f!le t
7. u .61c
·n .. PubliShor reserves the REDUCE safe and fast with
men a1 well as wom111. 11 s
right to edit or reject ony ods, GoBese Tablet.s &amp; E·Vap
KOSCOT .'of. COUI:M- · l&gt;hone ••
WALNUT . STEREO radio
dt,mod obleclionll. Th e "woter pills.'' Nelson Drug.
992·5113...
' .. . .
combination, four speed in.
publish.; will not btrespon•lblt
· 6·29·301P
~ 7-9.tfc
for morae than one . Incorrect
,.
•· t
·termlxed changer, .4 speaker
sound system , dual volume
Insertion .
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches
RATES
F k~
control . Balance $68.42. Use
•For Won' Ad Service
, - open sites only, or ""
· · 'our budgel terms . Call 992·
S cents p.r word .one Insertion Run Sportsman Club~ Sunday, 1
7085.
Minimum Charge 75c ..
July 23, 12 noon. ·
.
7-IHtc
12 cent• per wqra three
7-19-Jtc

.

'•

Sentinel Cla.ssifi~ds: ~tAction! ·sentinel Clllssifieds· G_~t Results!
.•.

..

1

,.

.- Employment Wanted

MOBILE
troller, · air - . POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy , 'WILL 00 welding after 5 p.m.
conditioned and lot; ." phone . Parkvlow Kennels. Phone 992- ~ and weekends, any place ;
992·5716.
f· '
5443.
phone 992-5271.
8-15-tfc I
.:..__
1·18-12lp
,•''
. ,. ' 7-11-6tc
.

_____

SEE US FOR : Awnings , Slorm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

and railing. A Jacob. sales
representative .

For

free

· estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

Fro m the largest Truck
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

tlafhon Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

Pomeroy

•

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, ,
ponds , b1sement, fand scaping·. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract .
Fret · EStimates. We ilso~

·haul till dirt, fop,soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire ,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
· aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992-

-'-"-------;o.,, usect biii'lcil~g . supplies &amp;

like

a-..·

WMP0/1390
'ON YOUR DIAL

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum ,

vi nyl and steel siding ;
liberglas , brick and stoiie i
'complete fine of res/Oemllit
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling ,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting;
complete lin• of Mlloonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured lor your
protoctlon. 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918.
•
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON$TR CO
I

"'L. . ~.

'\:a..

I

salvage yard; will wreck
hou..s, buildings, etc. Caver~
&amp; Marlin Wreckage &amp;
Salyage Co., Laurel Cliff
across
from
Highland
Church; phone 992·5946.
7-9-121c

7-::.,..------

o·l:iELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. ·
Complete front end service.
tune up •nd brake service.
Wheels
balanced eloc- ·
Ironically.
All
work
guaranteed.

. Re111\\nn111hl•

.,.I'M
FAMOUS!
MY,

SKETCH
IS 011
TV,.,

S"OUTS

......

t

.._ , -·

...'
' '

been • ,

O,UTOMOBILE Insurance
cancelled?
Lost ' your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966. .
5232 .
6-15-ttc
--:-::---:----SeW ING MAI.:HINES. Repair,"~ EP'fiC tanks cleaned. Miller•
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
ser vice, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . 661&lt;!035.
Authorized Singer Sales and
2·12-ttc ,
' Service. We Sharpen Scissors: -~--,,.....~--3·29-tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work '··=-=--~=-:-:--:c--::-:­
Septic tank s installed . George READY -MIX
CONCRETE
( Bill) Pullins. Phone 99H478.' ; dellv~red right to )'OUP
·
4·25·1fc
pro/ect. Fast and easy . Frlf
·es t males. Phone 992-328•
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.
Middleport, Ohio.
PAPER hanging ; inferior and
exterio r painting ; Arthur
6-JO.tfc
Musser, phone 742·5223.
7·18·301p CALL Guy Neigler for Building
Houses.
6·28-llc
DOZER and back hoe wor~,
ponds and septic lanks; ·B &amp; K SE WING MACHINE iervlce,
Excavating, Phone 992·5367, clean, oil, set tension $4.99.
1
Dick Karr , Jr .
Special Eleotro. Grande
5·21 ·1fC
Company. Phone 992·6517. ·
---.,,----.,......-,S· 2t · lf~ ,
.

we·talk to you

~

3 BedfQ~?m home, with
brick f'ront , 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..

•:•:
:::;
••

-

·'I&gt;'
'

., '
· .;.
::::.:
•. · _.
·'

'.

,.

-·-·
'128·

'~$14995
WllH 12'BAR ANDCHAIN,

AIJIOMATIC OIUNG.

.

. ..
, '
'I

/

.·'. \

~ -~ ~~
;. \

-

'' )

WE WON'T BE ABt_E
TRAIL. TI-lE TRIO
ANYMORE? .

''SINCE REL.EASE
OF TI-lE SKETCHES
YESTERDAY, TI-IEV'VE
EVAPORATED.•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1. "Be lie··
I. Indian
of Spain
st ate
5. - no\-·a
2. Feeling
10, Egy ptian
comfy
sun god
(2 wds.•
11 . Amorous
3. Acting
p1·e ma~
fellow
t2, Pape1·
turely.
(sl.)
size
13. Classify
(3 wd.&lt;. 1
4. An Alcott
H . Criminal
charge
heroine.~
(sl.)
5.Sew:
15, Co njunr·
slitch
lion
6. IVW IT
16. Ascot.
s py
for one
oulftl
17. Stupid
( ohbr.l
7. Boosts
19. Medit.
(s l. )
island
(4 wds.)
(abbr. )
8. ~1agazinl•
20. Duenna 's
feature
Iitle
9. Illood
2J .•Full of
vessel
rlcks
22. noffen·
ll.-Loa
sivl' oath
23. Interdict
24. Primrose

l

-·

- ~ -. ·

POMEROY ,

}\

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Yesterday's Answer
15. Guided
missile
( sl.)
18. World's
first
zoologist ·.•
21. Electrical
term

23. Outdo
24. Certain
soups

25. Items
of
business

26. - oul
ladmin ·
ist e.-ed 1
27. Mrmh..of
Levi·~

tribe
28. Puulrl"s
aid
30. Hazard
35, Close
margin
36. Philit•·
pint.' tree

WITHOUT

Hl6
6UIDE.ll00fo\

IIE'D THINK
IT W"S

MOUNT
VE.RNoN!

26.Courage
29. How
awful:
3U. Make it
through
31. Caddoan
Indian
32, Man at
the bar
(abbr.1
33. llitlrr·,
wife
3f. Hire
36. Raised
platform
37. Elicited
38. Com·
media
dell '39. Less hare ·
brained
40. 11ebrcw

'

.. ,•

H

iI

measure

I

DAILY

CRYI''l'OIIU01't;- Here's hoir to work It:

A X Y D I. B A A X R
Is I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
Om· lcllcl' simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the lcnglh and fotmatlon of the wards · are aU
hint•. Each day the code lellers arc differenl.

~ . FastStrtfQ ·Dtllii~WE

~Lmiled

YeolerUJ'I CrJ:tteoeee: A OOJOlii ID IS Till 8.U'IIr

PLACE TO PASS THE BUCK.-GARY B. WBlGil'l'
(0 1872 JCinJ: Ftalortt 87n4ioelf,lna.)

RATS ...I u,vo6 'lwJNG
FOR A HV6!

CRYPTOQUOTES
0 A J C T Q·R D

UWCXWSCR
ARQSRQH

W QR.

DWHXQWC

YX Q

E y B H L:~~U::::..;;:::!:::S :::..:!:=;,;~

QRBYXQOR . -

AYYVRQ

rates. Phone 741·3232 or
192-32t3.
, ..,.rrc
(I

�.

~

.

'

--------------------------------------------------

•• - uM'Ually :semme1, 1\'UOdleport·Pomeroy, 0., July 20, m2

Death no
Basis to
Sue Ohio

Elberfelds In Pomeroy July Clearance Sale

\

·Store Hours: Open Friday and SatUrday 9:30am to 9 pm. All week days 9:30am to 5 pm

By RICK VANSANT
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
father of a Kent State Univer~
sity coed killed by Ohio National Guardsmen cannot sue the
state oi Ohio for alleged "negligent and wanton'' misconduct,
the state Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday.
Arthur Krause or Churchill
Borough, Pa., had brought a
wrongful death sujt against the
state for the' death of his
daughter Allison, one of four
students shot and killed by
guardsmen May 4, 1970 on the
KSU campus.
The guardsmen had been
called in to quell a demonstra- .
lion.
"The state of Ohio is not
subject to suits in tort in the
courts of this state ·without the
consent of the General Assembly," the court ruled.
In Pittsburgh, Krause called
the decision a "miscarriage of
justice" and said he would appeal to the U.S. Supreme (;()uri.
Krause claimed the court
justices "were more interested
in money than the lives of four
people."
Money Worries
~ "They were not really In·
terested in the case, they were
worried about where the state
of Ohio was going to get the
money to pay for our suit," he
said.
"When I sat in that court·
room on April !I (when merits
of the case were heard) I could
see that money was the basic
question, not the lives of four
people.
"They were wondering how
much of a lien we were going to
put against the state," he said.
"That was the basic question
the judges were interested ln.
"I'm not bitter. I've gone beyond bitterness. I'm just dis·
gusted.
"Why are they (Supreme
Court justices ) afraid to get
this in court," he asked. "Is
Mr. Rhodes (former Gov.
James A. Rhodes) being
protected?"

Krause lost his original case
in Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Court, but an appeals
court reversed that decision.
Ohio Left Behind
The Supreme Court, in overturning the appeals court,
pointed out the Ohio Constitution provides that "suits may
be brought against the state in
such courts and in such man·
ner as may be provided by
law."
"This provision is not sel£executing and statutory con·
sent is a prerequisite to such a
suit," the court ruled . "Since
the General Assembly has
ena~ted no statute authorizing
the suit, the trial court
properly dismissed the state as
a party.
"The doctrine of governmental immunity from suits Is not
violative of the equal protec·
lion clause of the constitution
of the United States,' • the court
said.
Benson
A.
Wolman,
executive director of the
American Civil Liberties Union
of Ohio, said the decision
"leaves Ohio behind the rest or
the nation in terms of the
ability of citizens to resolve
disputes within the judicial
system."
"It is indeed an unfortunate
decision," Wolman said. "It
plays into the hands of those
who say that grievances cannot
be redressed within the

system.''

rM~ON DRIVE-IN
. ..

.

''

Tonight &amp; Friday
July 10·11

-

-.....
Sale!

--·---~~-...---.....-·--·~~---··~-----.....-.-·----..---·-.--·---------·---------..............---------~~------Sale! Lingerie Department lsi Floor

_..,___..~~-·--~---~-~---·

special sale!

Including vests, blouses, skirts, jackets.
Missy and extra sizes.
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

24.50 Sportswear
21.50 Sportswear
19.50 Sportswear
18.00 ·Sportswear
17 .so Sportswear
14.98 Sportswear
13.98 Sportswear
12.9V Sportswear
11.98 Sportswear
10.98 Sportswear
9.98 Sportswear
8.98 Sportswear
7.98 Sportswear
6.98 Sportswear
5.98 Sportswear

14.69
12.89
11.69
10.79
10.49
8.99
8.39
7.79
7.19
6.59
5.99
5.39
4.79
4.19
3.59

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, July 20
NOr' OPEN
Fridly &amp; Saturday
July21·21
TALES FROM
·THE CRYPT
Peter Cushing
Joan Collins
"GP"

Also
DOWNHILL RACER
ITechnicolorl
Robert Redford
Gene Hackm•n

" GP"

10.00
9.00
8.00
7.00
6.00

BODY SHIRTS
BODY SHIRTS
BODY SHIRTS
BODY SHIRTS
BODY SHIRTS

Including long sleeves. short sleeves, and
sleeveless styles . Selected from our regular
stqck - hundreds to choose from - regular and
extra sizes.
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular

10.98
7.98
7.oo
6.98
6.00
5.98
4.98
4.00
3.50

Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens

Blouses ..
Blouses ..
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

6.98
5.00
5.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
3.00
2.50
2.50

SALE 1.79
SALE 1.59
SALE 1.49
SALE 1.19
SALE 1.09
SALE 99c
SALE 79c

I
·1
I
~-R~:~~~~~ .~ :_.~ .:_~~...:._;~~

~l

SALE! WOMEN'S BLOUSES

GIRDLES
GIRDLES
BRAS
BRAS.
BRAS
BRAS
BRAS

59c

Sale!
Famous Brands

SALE! LEE s5.98 SHORT SLEEVE

l
1

KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT

permanent pre ss. Solid

Sale $2.49
Sale $3 .00
$5 .98 Shifts

GIRLS SWIMWEAR
Sizes

1.95
1.95
3.98
4.98
5.98
7.98

!I

2

to

6

and

1

lingerie Department
lsi Floor

to 14.

SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR . . . . . -

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

Sale! Boys Walk Shorts

Sale $4.00

r~~~~-------------~---~-----~--~---~---~-----~--·--1

I

A good selection. Sizes 3 to 6 and 8 to 18.
Boys 2.95 and 2.50 Walk Shorts · • • · · Sale 1.50
Boys 3.95 and 3.49 Walk Shorts · . · · · Sale 2.00

Form Frt Rogers

1.35
1.00
1.39
3.00
3.50
4.50

Briefs and
Bikinis
Regular

Sizes 36 to 46 in regulars and longs. An ex ·
cellent selection . For wear right now and for
special occasions .

11.15

Regular 45.00 Womens Dresses

Sale 38.00
Sale 30.00
Sale 18.00
Sale 18.00
Sale 16.00
Sale 15.00
Sale 11.00
Sale 19.00
Sale 16.00
Sale 14.00
Sale 13.00
Sale 13.00
Sale 12.00
Sale 10.00
Sale 9.00
Sale 8.00

Regular 36.00 Womens Dresses

Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular

34.50
34.00
32.00
29.50

Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens

Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses

Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular

27.50
24.50
21.50
19 .50

Womens
Womens
Womens
Womens

Dresses
Dresses
Dresses

Dresses

Regular 18.00 Womens Dresses
Regular 17.50 Womens Dresses
Regular 16.98 Womens Dresses

Regular 14.98 Womens Dresses
Regular 13.98 Womens Dresses

Regular 12 .98 Womens Dresses

Sale!

Sale 3pair 11.65

\1.98 PLAYWEAR
3.50 PLAYWEAR
3.98 PLAYWEAR
4.50 PLAYWEAR
5.00 PLAYWEAR
5.50 PLAYWEAR
5.98 PLAYWEAR
7.00 PLAYWEAR
7.50 PLAYWEAR

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

....

-~---------·~--~------~·-~---~--.._.._.

Sale!

______

GIRLS SHORTS AND
1.98
1.49
3.50
3.98
4.98
5.98
6.98

1.78 .
2.18
2.38
2.68
1.88
3.38
3.58
4.18
4.38

Regular 6.98 Womens Shor ts

Regular 5.98 Womens Shorts . . . . . . .
Regular 4.98·5.00 Womens Shorts - . . - ..
Regular 4.00 Womens Shorts . . . . • . . .

Regular 3.98 Womens Shorts . . . . . . . .

Regular 2.98 Womens Shorts . . . . . . . .·

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

5.99
4.79
4.19
3.59

Sale

3 . 3~

4,79

Sale 2.89
Sale 1.69
Sale 1.89

womens nationally adve rti sed

sw imwear . Hundreds to choose Irom in regular and extra
sizes .
Regular 21.00
Regular 20.00
Regular 19.00
Regular 11.00
Regular 16.00
Regular 15.00
Regular 14.00
Regular 13.00
Regular 12.00
' Regular 11 .00
Regular 10.00
Regular 9.00
Regular 8.00
Regular 6.00

Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear
Womtns Swimwear
Womens SwimWear
Worn ens Swimwear
Womens Swim wear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swim wear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear
Womens Swimwear

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

Sale 11.59
Sale 11.99
Sale 11.39
Sale 10.19
.
Sale 9.59
.
Sale 8.99
.
Sale 8.39
.
Sale 7.79
.
. - Sale 7.19
- .. - - . - Sale 6.59
Sale 5.99 •
.
Sale 5.39
. - - - - - - Sale 4.79
. . - - . - . Sale 3.49

TODDLERS AND GIRLS SLEEPWEAR
Sizes 4 to 14
SLEEPWEAR
SLEEPWEAR
SLEEPWEAR
SLEE: PWEAR
SLEE PWEAR
SLE E PWEAR
SLEEPWEAR • • • I. . · SLEEPWEAR
SLEEPWEAR
SLEEPWEAR

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

4.19
3.59
2.99
2.69
2.39
2.09
1.79
1.49
1.50
2.49

UPHOLSTERY FABRIC

Full slips and half
slips. 9 months to 18
months . 2 to 6 and 7 to
14.

54" width . Rayon and Rayon Blends. Beautiful
brocades and solids in an exceptional range of
colors.
For This Sale

2.99 yard

SALE 1.00

2.50 SLIPS

1.48
1.68
1.18
1.38
2.88
3.58
4.18

SALE 1.25

-~~~-_.--------~----~~~--~--~
Another Shipment

3.00 SLIPS
SALE 1.50
Sale Prices!

!

Cobbler Aprons and Smo.cks

. BOYS'
SWIM TRUNKS
Buy what you need and

save Friday and saturday.

$2.19 Aprons
- - - - - Sale S1.79
$2.29 Aprons
- - - - - Sale 1.89
$2.49 Aprons
Sale $1.99
$2 .69 Aprons
Sale $2.19
$2 .98 Aprons
Sale $2.49
$3.49 Aprons
Sale $2.99
Sale $4.19
$5.49 Smocks .
Sale $3.69
4.98 Smocks - - - $4.49 Smocks ·
Sale $3.39

__

_.._..

·--

SALE! MEN'S WALK SHORTS
Regular conservative styles · cut offs and Hot
Pants styles . ·
Si zes 29 to 42. Some extra sizes 44 to 50.
3.50 and 3. 95 Mens Shorts .. ·. - .
4.50 and 4. 95 Mens Shorts ..

•----·-·------··~-·....--------~·------------~--~--~---------~----··~ 5.49 and 7.95 Mens Shorts -

6.98
5.98
4.98
4.50
3.98
3.49
2.98
2.49
2.75
3.25

Girls Slips
2.00 SLIPS

2nd Floor Sale

SALE! WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR
Save this weekend on

Special Purchase!

~

Cotton knits, polyester knit s and ca ftan seer sucker. Regular
and ex tra sizes.

Regular 7.98 Womens Shorts

Sale 3 pair S2 .35

jl

WOMEN'S SHORTS
Regular 9.98 Womens Shorts
Regular 8.00 Womens Shorts

Stretch Bikinis

S~ORTS

SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS
SHORTS AND SKORTS

19.00

Regular Sl.OO

~

.........

__

,_......,,

__

-

-:.

Big Summer Sale!

$1.95

Swim Trunks
Sale $1.00
$2 .95 Swim Trunks
Sale $1.50
$3.95 Swim Trunks
Sale $2.00

r-----~---~·-.1
Sale!

MEN'S
SWIM TRUNKS
Good selection.

style.

Stretch

$4.95

Swim
Swim

50% Kodel Polyester · 50% Avril Rayon
Permanent Press · No Ironing. Beautiful
colors- While, Pink . Lilac, Maize, Blue. Melon.
45" length
$2.99
Lime , Red .
24" length
S2 .49 !4" length
$J.29
36" length
S2 .49 63" length
$3.59
Matching Valances . .
. • • .
$1.29

Sale!

TUFTED CHAIR PADS
For Dinelte, Dining Room, Pull· up, Desk &amp; Captain's Chairs.
Reversible and washable. Filled with shredded urethane
foam . Circle tufting and extra long matching ties . Corduroy .
Velveteen · Printed Cotton. All colors.
·

52.50 Pads
53.00 Pads
$4.50 Pads

knits .

Trunks

.......... _... ....

$5.95

SALE 2.00

Lightweight Fashion. Colorful iloral print.

Trunks

Swim

(ONLY 21 PIECES IN LOT)

Trunks

Short sleeve shirts. Permanent press. Sizes 8 to
20. Buy for wear now and back-to-school use.

REGULAR 4.99-3.99-2.99

SALE 3.00
SPECIAL SALE!

YOUNG MEN'S
FLARE SlACKS

BOYS' SHIRTS

REGULARLY

6.95 to 9.95

SALE 1.99
AIRWAY

LUGGAGE
11 small lot--&lt;1 pc.l

3.95 BOYS SHIRTS............ SALE 2.75
2.95 BOYS' SHIRTS ........... SALE 2.00
1.95 BOYS' SHIRTS .... ~ ...... SALE 1.50
~~~-~~

---~~-

I

Sale 1.99
Sale 2.49
Sale 3.49

"SILVER STAR" LUGGAGE

SALE 2.50
Sale 2.00
Sale 2.50
Sale 3.00

--- ------

Bo)(er

Novelties.

$3.95

CAPE COD CURTAINS

---.

Selected From
Regular Stock

SALE 4.00

Regular $39.95 and $34.95
Color White
While They Last

~

PRICE

CLEANUP SALE
· (1 GROUP)
. .

BEDSPREADS
(all slzesond colors)
Rogulor $9,91
To$11.98 Values
While They Last

Yz
PRICE
-~·~·~--~-~---~--~~--~-=~------~-1--------~~~~~~L-----~~~~~~~
...

Prompt Delivery, Continrwus Service, Sensible Credit

STEPHANIE ORD packs tomatoes at
Jim and Earl Adams' packing plant at Letart
Falls . The ultra-modern conveyor belt
washes and sorts the tomatoes. Miss Ord
packs the tomatoes after they have been
washed and sorted.

at y
Devoted To The lnteresu Of The

VOL. XXV NO. 68

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OH 10

Today, in addition to his tomato business, Earl Adams raises
layers.
Approximately 80 to 90 thousand tomato plants and 20 acres
of peppers were planted last spring.
In addition to the coolers and conveyor belt in their packing
shed, Adams and his son have a "foamer," which uses a substance made or chicken feathers that protects the plants from
early frost, and an irrigation system.
Earl lives on the farm at Letart Falls but Jim, who is principal of Southern High School, resides in Pomeroy.

en tine
Meig~-Mason

Area

FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

JN~~.~i~"'lJri;_f;l Court En·Joins Air
p OII U t IOn
e
e
Oh
e
Ill
IO
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - 111E TECHNICAL JOURNAL Science
saldtodaythaltheUnitedStatestriedatle8lltthreetimesinl965,
1966and 1967 to ignite what Defense Department planners called
"fire storms" in some of South Vietnam's most valuable timher
country. "All three attempts, however, fizzled out," the
magazine said.
So the effort was abandoned as impracticnl in the wet woods
of South Vietnam, Science said. Fire storms, far more
destructive than ordinary fires, have occurred accidentally in
dry timberlands of the American West and in Australia and
southern France. They also occurred as a result of World War II
bombings in Dresden and Hamburg, Germany, and Tokyo and
Hiroshima, Japan.
A fire storm happens when an area of intense burning sucks
in oxygen from adjacent regions at such a rate that ground winds
of more than I00 miles an hour may be genera led .

SAIGON -A 1,500-MAN government ask force stormed into
Bong Son district town in South Vietnam's most populous
province and recaptured it today after 83 days of Communist
occupation, the Saigon command said.
The retaking of the Binh Dinh Province town, 290 miles north
of Saigon, was a major step in reopening Highway I in the coastal
highlands, spokesmen said. The operation climaxed a thr~ay
government drive to reopen the Bong Son Pass dominating the
highway.
NEW YORK - CUFFORD ffiVING HAS FOUND a firm
willing to publish his account of how he carried out the Howard
Hughes "autobiography" hoax. This time, he intends to tell the
truth.
"When you get burned the way I've been burned, you don't do
it a second time," Irving said Thursday in announcing Grove
Press will publish the book. Irving, 41, pleaded guilty to
defrauding McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. out of $750,000 for ·the
bogus book on the reclusive billionaire. He is due to begin serving
a 21&gt;-year ja,J term Aug. 28.
"I've been told In no uncertain terms by the U.S. attorney's
(Continued on page 12)

Elderly Need
Special &amp;dge
Senior Citizens are being
reminded again by Mrs.
Eleanor 'l'homas that they
must advise the Meigs
County Council on Aging
office at 2571&gt; Mill St.,
Middleport, If they Intend to
attend the Senior Citizens
Day actlvltles at the Meigs
County Fair.
In order to get onto the
fairgrounds (or the baH·
price admission price, senior
clUzeas must wear special
badges. These badges will be
either deUvered or mailed
prior to the fair. Mrs.
Thomas encourages par·
tlcipatlon and has asked that
senior citizens advise her by
Aug. 1.
Arrangements are being
mllde for traasportatloa. A
1peclal teat for tile display of
budlcraft made by oenlor
cltlse111 and for a rest areli
where refremmenta wDI be
anilllblt will be provided by
the
Mete•
County
Apicalture Society.
· ~J~m·xan· ·· r ~·= ·= ··'1 · ·r~2!:
II

PAUL JUSTICE ANDsonBIDloadalargedlesel truck at
the Adams farm with tomatoes lor shipment. The Adams'
keep three trucks busy hauling tomatoes during the peak of
the season.

Cost of Living
Up Again, hut
Somewhat Less

•

MEN'S 29.95 SPORT COAtS

Nylon stretch. One size fits
all. White and colors .

INFANTS AND TODDLERS PLAYWEAR

· operation. They're in the depth of their harvest, as are other
producers.
LETART FALL - July is Tomato Month here.
The building in which the Adamses tomatoes are packed
This is when, depending on the weather, availability of labor,
once
housed poultry. Several years ago after a storm razes a
disease, and the market, truck farmers of Letart Falls annually
portion of it, Earl converted the remaining portion into a packing
are made or broken.
house . The packing house contains modern equipment that
The tomato market, true to form again this year, opened to washes and sorts the tomatoes, then moves them along a confarmers here with $2.50 to $2.75 per 10 lb. hasket for top grade veyor belt from which workers pack them.
fruit. This week, however, still true to form, it dropped to $1.50.
Earl and his brothers, Jack and Marshall, and the late Jake
Earl Adams and his son, Jim, operate a lather:.On tomato Adams, were in the poultry business approximately 25 years.

SPECIAL PURCHASE AND SALE

Stretch Briefs

Save this week end on womens dresses selected from our regular stock. Hundreds to
choose - beautiful styles. All easy care fabrics
- junior. misses and half sizes.

BY KATIE CROW

WOR.K OR SPORT SHIRTS ...............SALE 2.50

$4.98 Shifts

BARGARA DUGAN, niece of Earl
Adams, Letart Falls, assists her uncle in the
packing of tomatoes. In addition to working at
the packing plant, Barbara also had 10,000
tomato plants of her own.

FATHER.SON OPERATION- Earl Adalll8, right, and his 1011, Jim, operate one of many
large truck fanns in Letart Falls. Approximately IS to 20 thousand baskets of tomatoes are
packed at the Adams' packing house each day and sent to market. Todd Adams, Jim and Earl,
1-r, above, are in one of the two large cold rooms where tomatoes are stored until shipped by a
fleet of three large trucks .
·

Letart Falls Truck Farmers in Annual Tomato Harvest

3.99
LEE 4.98 SHORT SLEEVE COORDINATE

$3 .98 Shifts

1.48
1.68
1.98
1.78
1.18
1.88
3.58
1.38

5.00
4.50
4.00
3.75
3.00
2.75
2.00

Fine Lee quality . permanent press - two
button thru flap pockets · solid colors.
Small, medium, large and extra large
sizes.

colors and prints .

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

TOPS
TOPS
TOPS
TOPS · .
TOPS
TOPS
TOPS · · .
TOPS ·

SHIRTS
SHIRTS
SHIRTS
SHIRTS
SHIRTS
SHIRTS
SHIRTS

WORK SHIRTS

Small, med ium. large and
extra large sizes. Most all

--~-~----~-t-s:;~e~-- -·~-~~-------1

SALE! WOMEN'S DRESSES

Regular $9.00 and $10.00 ·
Gowns
Sale $6.99
Regular $6.00 and 17.00
Gowns
Sale $4 .99

Sizes 2 to 6 and 7 to 14.

1.19
1.49
1.98
11.79
3.49
4 98
5.98
3.98

MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

8.95
7.95
6.95
5.95
4.95
3.95
2.95

WOMEN'S
SHIFTS

GIRLS KNIT TOPS

~
I

Short sleeves. An excellent .s election of styles colors ·· sizes.

Long Gowns and
Shortie Gowns

BESTFORM .BRA AND GIRDLE SALE
2.99
2.59
2.49
1.99
1.69
1.59
1.29

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

GOWNS

. SALE 6.49
SALE 5.89
SALE 5.19
SALE 4.49
SALE 3.89

Sale!

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Big Sale!

Form At Rogers

Solid colors · terry and stretch knits. A good selection.

Double Feature Program

WAR BETWEEN
THE PLANETS
Jack Stuart
Plus
"SUPER ARGO VS.
FACELESS GIANTS"

WOMEN'S BODY SHIRTS

Women's C9ordinate Sportswear
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regul.a r
Regular
Regular
Regular

Sale of Carpet • Linoleum •

Same Store Hours at Elherfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street
Porch Furniture· Lawn Mowers

.

·

.
United Press International
porar y restraining order to curb air pollution beca use of
The Ohio attorney general 's against about 20 Steubenville hot and humid wea ther even if
office today obtained a tern- area industries requiring them it meant curta iling production
because "the pollution was so
bad you could taste it."
The injun ction was obtained
by C. Raymond Marvin, head

Force fr om lhe att or ney
general's office.
Marvin filed for the order in
Steubenville in Common Pleas
Court and it was granted by
Judge John J. Griesinger Jr. lt
is good for 14 days.

WASHINGTON (UP I) - Higher prices for meat, freSh fruit,
vegetables, used cars and homes pushed the cost of living up
again last month, although the rise was slightly less than the
month before, the government said today.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the cost of living went up
0.2percentduring June compared to a 0.3 per cent jump in May.
Supermarket food prices in June went up 0.6per cent overall,
reflectmg what shoppers already knew - that meat and
vegetable prices shot up sharply since mid-May. Meat, poultry
and fish were up 1.3 per cent in June while fruit and vegetable
prices were up 2.7 per cent.
The food price increases
were offset by declines in such prices rose at a yearly rate of
other items as eggs, cereals, 3.6 per cent in the first quarter.
dairy products, and texllles.
Rising food prices led Nmon
The June rise left the Con- earlier this month to clamp the
sumer Price Index (CPI) at 2.9 same price · controls on r...,.
per cent above one year earlier farril prOducts that had been
- the first time in more than Imposed on pr0l!e88ed foods
four and a half years that the since last August.
12-month change was a rise of
Among nonfood comless than 3 per cent.
modities, used cars prices shot
The report said the CPI went up 3.1 per cent, while prlces for
up at an annual rate of 2.2 per new cars went down 0.1 per
cent in the second quarter of cent. Prices for homes also
this year, well below President rose significanUy, but prices
Nixon's goal of a 2.5 to 3 per declined for clothing, gasoline,
cent annual rate of inflation by alcoholic beverages and furthe end of this year. Consumer niture.

Machines W0 r th
$3,000 Heisted ~~i;;~: strik~,;,E~edo~;d~d 40,000 Came to
PT. PLEASANT - Office
machines · valued at nearly
$3,000 were stolen from the
Mas on Co un ty Board of
Education office on Eighth
Street some lime early Thursday morning.
Mason County Sheriff Troy
Huffman said Friday lhe theft
was discovered at 8:30 a.m.
when an oflice employe, Reba
Woodruin, noticed the missing
\articles after she reported lor
\.ork.
Police said that although one
window was broken, entrance
was made through another
window, which apparently had
not been locked. Attempts were
made to enter through the
window which was broken, but
when this failed to he pried
open, a second window was
used as means of entrance on

the east side of the building
toward the hill .
According to police, workmen had been usin g this
window
for
deliverin g
materials the day before for a
renovation project, and had
propped the window open with
a stick, which. was found lying
in the floor by one of the carpenters when he arrived on lhe
job.
Among the missing articles
are two Remin~ton Calculators
valued at $500 each; one Victor
adder, 10 keys, $200; one NCR
adder, $200 ; one full key hoard,
$250; one Remington adder,
$200; two electric typewriters,
one a Remington and the other
a Royal valued at $450 each.
The robbery, still under
investigation, is believed to
have occurred around 2 a.m.

'gr,

v

p

111 •
T.
•
.L' Or lfiezgs J URlOr
A com binati on FrenchEnglish teacher is needed in
the Meigs Loca l School
District, Supt.
George
Hargraves said today.
Applicants may contact
Hargraves at the junior high
school building in Middleport .
The superin ten dent also
reported that plans have been
made to expand the music
program of the junior high
school. Last year four different
teachers were used in the vocal
and instrumenta l music
program. This year John Ruth,
new assistan t band director,
will be in charge or both.
He will organize seventh and

H"lDh nuear
I
"'e'

eigh th grade choral groups
which will practice each day.
Last year music was offered on
a one day a week basis. The
choral groups will be on a
volunteer basis. There will also
be separate seventh and eighth
grade bands under Ruth 's
direction .
Greg McCall, a leacher in the
Harriso nville Elementary
School, has been named
coordinator
of federa l
prog rams in the district. He
replaces John Lisle who asked
to be removed from the post in
order to devote the time involved in that work in study
toward his Master Degree.

Dr G•oham
a

CLEVELAND (UPI) Another crowd of 41l,OOO came
to hear Billy Graham at
Cleveland Stadium Thursday
night, the next to last night of
his crusade here.
The turnout brought the total
attendance for seven nights to
253,665. Of those, 13,409 have ·
SUIT FILED
A $57,033 damage suit was
filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas court this
morning in which Cecil Giles,
Clair Giles, Jr., and Thelma I.
Giles, all Pomeroy Route 4, ask
compensation from Charles W.
Chapman, Route 4 Pomeroy,
defendant, for injuries suffered
by Cecil Giles when . he was
struck on his motorcycle by a
car driven by Chapman on

Successful Summer Program CompIeted ;:~~~i!~7~~n~;unty
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
With your permission, I will discuss several
topics in this brief report this week. It is my hope that
there will be something of interest for you.
Our swnmer program has been completed. We
will be having Mr. Morris and Mr, Lisle give a more
complete report in the future. Let us just say now that
better than four of every five students in the program
registered Improvement
- as shown on test results.
.

.

Speaking of Schools-No. 243
This shows that some real effort went into this
program. Over 100 parents attended the open house
last week. Thanks to all who made this a success.
Over the past few weeks I have requested that
you write your suggestions an~ complaints to me,
unsigned. A significant number has been ·received.
· They are proving_ very helplul. I appreciate 110 much
yolD' laking the time to write, Some acUon has
already come as a result of these letters and more ts
ptanned. Please, .keep sending me your ideas,
11118gestioDS and your complaints. I consider them to
be or great value.
,
For 11early a quarter of a century schools have
been a main focal point of .my life and my work. You
should understand that I am intensely interested in
this district.
·
As a result of a pair of recent disappointments at
the ballot box, I have written a couple of columns that

were aharp and critical. My intense interest and keen
connection with the dress code. Recommendations of
disappointment overcam~ better judgment. If I of- final draft of the code will be considered by o\Ir board
fended you, I'm sorry, and I apologize. I hope that we
in August. We know now that there is no dress code
can forget the past and that we can get a fresh start. that will please everyone. There is just too much
Your Wlderstanding is needed and will be ap- difference of opinion . We do need something that is
preciated.
sensible and that provides for safety, health and that
Sl'UDENT ACCIDENT insurance will be .offered
limits disruption in the school.
again this year. The Downing-Childs Agency will .
School news is not plentiful during the months
serve as the local agent. The coverage will start on
when school is not in session. There won't necessarily
the date that the premium is p!'ld. All students who
be a column each week during the summer months
will participate in any athletics during the year will
because of this. I appreciate Chet's (Tannehill,
need to purchase this coverage. The Athletic Board
editor J understanding in this matter. I do so much
will pay the extra premium for football. We hope to
appreciate the opportunity Ill use this space to try to
get the information and enrollment envelopes to •. keep you posted on the district and 1111 activity .
students early during the first week of school.
NEWS AND NOTES - We wish only the best to
WE STilL have some teaching vacancies. These
those staff members who are leaving for new
have resulted m011tly !rom last minute resignations.
positions - Our best wishes are with Fenton Taylor
We have nine special education classes. Just a few
811 he a881DDes the responsibility of uststant high
days agu we also had nine apedal education teachers. school principal- It's certai)lly good to have Larry
One is going to Shaker Heights. One is going to
Morrison back ·on the job lull time - Studenta inHouston, Texas. One is going to northwestern Ohio. terested in early graduation ahould conta!!( Mr. Diehl
One is be!:omlng our asslatant high school principal.
811 10011 u poulble - PLEASE, continue to write .;,
We have filled two of the four 'vacancies and have
me your letters with 11118gestlons, ideas, complainta,
some prOIIJM!Cts for the others. That's how It goes in etc. I greatly appreciate your help - Don't forget to
July and August each year. The sanie situation exists ,mark Aug. 14 on your calendar : on that date, MOn·
with a couple of other openings that we have had 'day, the board will have its meeting with the public in
come up suddenly.
*-"e Junior Hl8h School in Middleport. Come and
It was mentioned in an article in the Sentinei last ~ak your piece. We want to hear what is bothering
week that a lot of llludy, collection of opinions,
you. That's 8 pm. on Monday, Aug. 1•, in the Junior
discussioDS, writing &amp;nd rewriting have gone on in. jHI&amp;h School buildlng in_Middleport. '

•

road

C OF C TO MEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meet Monday,
July 24, at noon at the Meigs
Inn.

I

come forward 8ll "inquirers"
to bear witness to Christ.
"This is the greatest, most
sacred moment of their Uvea
for most of them," one coun.
selor said of the Inquirers. "It's
inspiring to see and thrilling to
be part of."
The number of inquirers
Thursday night was 2,450.
Graham greeted the crowd
with a fiery 1er111on on youth
and the devU. He talked about
occultism and then asked for
those present to make a
decision.
"It's voting night tonight,"
he said. "Christ or the devU.
I'm asking you to vote for
Christ."
At that point, the 2,450 eame
forward. Graham then talked
about God : worsbip of demoDS,
idolatry, sex without marriage,
sorcery, theft and vlolenee.
"Now the Bible says this is
all going to happen· in that
great time of judgment just
before Armageddon," he said.
"Are we approaching that
time?" he asked. "I don't
know. It may be a tmusand
years. I don't know."

Miss Smith Dies
Miss Harrie Marie Smith, 73,
well known Middleport resident and a former director or
the Meigs County Welfare
Dept., died Friday morning at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Miss Smith during her career
was employed in the telegraph
office in Middleport and later
was associated with the Ohio
Fuel Gas Co. before becoming
head of the county's weUare
agency. She was a member of·
the Sacred Heart Church,
Pomeroy, and was an active
garden club member, winning
wide recognition for her talents
in creating arrangements lor
flower shows. She belonged to
the Catholic Women's Club of
her church.
·

MissSmlthwas bprn Aug. 14,
18981n Huntington, W.Va., the
daughter of the late Charles E.
and Josephine Connerton
Smith. The Smiths had been
residents of Middleport many
years.
Surviving Miss Smith are
several couslns.
Funeral aervices will be hald
at 10 a.m. Moilday ill the
Sacred Heart Church with lhe
Rev .
Father
Bernard
Krajcovic officiating. Burial
will be in the St. Joeepb ·
Cemtery at Colwnbus. Frienda
may call at the Raw!inp.Coata
Funeral Home after 11 am.
SUnday. Rosary services wW
be held at 7:30pm. SUnday at
the funeral home.

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