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8- Thr Dmly S..nhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 24, 1912

Gertrude Mees
Died Saturday
Mrs. Ge111 ude Mees . 84,
Pomeroy. died Saturday m the
Vrlla Nurs1ng Home, POllsmouth .
She was b01 n Jan 27, 1B88, at

Mason, W Va, the daughter of
the la te John E Snuth and
Mary Ramsey Smtth She was
also preceded 111 death by her
husba nd. Albert. and l'o\O sons,
Otto and F1ederick, and one
daughter, Ph yll1s
Survtvmg are two daughtei s,

M.s. Lucille Shay, Grafton, W
Va . and M1 s Gertrud e Erwin ,
Crown Ctty, tlm~e sons, Gilbert
'and Max, both of Pomeroy-;-and
Richard. Rt. 2, Pomeroy . a
brother . Mrs Cora Denney,
Pomero}, 15 grandch ildren
and 10 great . grandchildren
F'uneral serv1ces wtll be
Tuesday all 30 p m at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church w1th the
Rev Arthur C Lund o f-~
ficwt mg Burtal will be m
Beech Grove Cemetery.
F11ends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home from
7 lo 9 p m today and at the
church from 10: 30 a m to I 30
pm

MISS HESS CROWNED
TOLEDO (UP! ) - V1ck1e
Hess, a tnm beauty from the
Colwnbus suburb of Whitehall,
was crowned Saturday mght as
M•ss Oh1o-World The threeday cum pell llon at th e
Hosp1tahty Motor Inn here
attracted 30 Oh10 entnes.

MASON DRIVE-IN
~."',1 ' l)rl

A(_

11

W V,l
to,w N1q ll11

f

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
July 14-15
" BIG JAKE"
(Color!
John Wayne

Rtcha rd Boone
IG I
Plu s

PROFESSIONALS

THE

(Techmcolorl

Bu rt Lancaster
Lee Marvtn
Robert Rya n

(Conllnued from pQge I)
paper Guild executive board of Sen. George S. McGovern for
Pres1dent has been diSavowed by 297 WpJiington.IJased members of the working press. The newsmeb~and women signed an
advertisement that appeared Sun~y hi'Tt.e Washington Post.
"We m the news business have an ct~ligation to inform the
public," the statement sa1d. "The Guild has no busmess in·
ter jectmg its members mto a partisan political role. Its efforts to
do so demean us as professiOnals whose hallmark is fairness It
lies us to a political decision we personally may or may not
favor "
The endorsement of McGovern lfa.!i announced at the
Democratic National Convention Ill Miami Beach by union
President Charles A Perlik Jr. He said the union executive
board made the endorsement on authority granted by the union's
annual meetmg. It was the first time The Newspaper Guild had
endorsed a political candidate.
THUNDERSTORMS AHEAD OF A COLD FRONT moved
mto Oh10 late Sunday, resulting in the deaths of at least four
persons. Three persons in Solon were killed alter bemg struck by
hghtning, and a middle-aged Toledo man died after be1ng hit by
hghtning on Lake Erie.
Charles W. Loeschen, 37, his son David, 13, both of Solon, and
James A. Hess, 29, Lakewood, were struck by lightning while
f1shmg in a pond in the Cleveland suburb of Solon. Ted Zink,
about 50, of Toledo, was struck by lightning while be sat in his
boat on Lake Erie. He died shortly after being taken to a Toledo
hosp1tal
The rains, accompanied by some high gli~ty winds, dumped
60 mch at Cleveland, .44 at Canton and .30 at Youngstown, while
Dayton got only a trace. The rain is expected to lmger through
southern Ohio today and tomght.
CINCINNATI - THE OHIO IJlVISION of the American
Legion adopted a resolution Sunday opposblg broad amnesty for
draft evaders and military deserters. The Legion said if amnesty
were to be granted, it should be given upon individual consideration of each request, not to all resisters and deserters at
once.
The Legion also adopted resolutiOns caUing for a "mustermg
out" bonus for Vietnam veterans of $350 and urging the death
penalty for any crune corrurutted with a gun. The Legion, in
calling lor the Vietnam bunus, pornted out that such bonuses
were pa1d soldiers who left the serv1ce after other wars Amenca
was involved in.
Before the 6,000 delegates ended their state convention here,
they elected Galen J.'Houser of McClure (Henry County) as new
state commander.
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE CALLED UP lor a final
round of debate today Democrallc leader Mike Mimsfield's
proposal to require withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Vietnam
by Oct. I. The issue IS expected to provide a new test of antiwar
sentilnent in the Senate.
The Mansfield amendment would provide for the pullout of
American troops in exchange lor the return of U. S. prisoners of
war and an accounting of those missing in acllon. It would allow
American forces to remam elsewhere in Southeast Asia in the
absence of an internationaily - supervise&lt;; j.'ease.fire. Final action on the amendment, which 1s attached to a $1.8 billion fore1gn
ald bill, was expected by 9 p.m. EDT. But It was not to come up
until a series of votes on other anti-war amendments.
ANCHORAGE, ALASKA - VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T.
Agnew is makmg his first campaign swing since WlJUling
President NIXon's endorsement for a second term, and his
opening theme was to suggest that the administration and the
news media can 41CO..exlst."
'Agnew was in Alaska for Republican lund-raising appearances, including a $1110·i)er-person cocktail party here
Sunday and a dmner in Fairbanks where he flies later today .

Wm. Ohlinger Died on Sunday

"success 1s bes t ex plam ed by
a four letter work WORK• "

You ' ll

hnd your

pamhng
when

a tm ost " work f ree"

you use PRATT &amp; LAM.
BERT PAINT, lhe pa1nt lhal

prc m1ses success evervhme
- and mak es 1ts promise

good .

W Va .

Funeral serv1ces w1ll be held
at the West Columbia Umted
Methodist Church Wednesday
at 1·30 p. m. with the Rev.
Bobby L. Woods and Rev
James C. Demsey officiatmg.
Bunal w1il be m the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. The body
w111 be taken to the church to
he m state one hour prior to
serv1ces.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home after
4 p m. Tuesday.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Pa~! c•a
Buchanan,
Coolvilltf" Charles Varian,
Hartford), Lena Marklns, Pl.
Pleasant, and Alvan Barnett,
Pomeroy
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- W111ia Harris, Audrey
Theobald, Bobble Winebrenner, Vicky Deboard, Charles
Findley, Wanda Swartz,
Raymond Lambert, Conrad
Berkley, Emerson Houdashelt
and William Kline.

the

'
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
FOR BIG DIS.COUNT SAVINGS!

COMINI SOON!

uang Tri Retaken

..•. : =·=·=·· :·: :::·:·.·:•, ;-:-:.-:-:~···:®.~:::::::::!::::::::::::::::::::::.:·:·~:·:-:OJi»»:·::.'!=.o!:&gt;.:;::::;;.;.;::;:;::.;.:.:-.-.:o·

News ... in( Briefs

WEST COLUMBIA
IV1IIlam H Ohlinger, 61, West
Columbia, who died Sunday 111
ll1e Pleasant Valley Hosp1tai,
was born Feb 18, 1911, at New
Haven. He was the son of the
late Henry D and Addie Roush
Ohlinger.
He was an LCL operator at
the Foote Mmeral Corp ,
Graham Station, a World War 2
vete ran , and a member of the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amencan Leg1bn of Mid dleport
SurviVors mclude h1s wife,
Gladys Lucille, West Columbia; three sons, B1llie Ray
Ohhnger , West Columbia, and
Ron me Lee and M1chael Henry
Ohhnger, both of Mason; four
grandchi ldren, a sister, Mrs .
VannaRoush,NewHaven,and
two brothers, Pearl, of New
Haven, and Arthur of Lelart,

*...
..,: ::
f: Passenger Is Injured ::1

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Harriett Walley, Chicago;··
James Nelson , Columbus ;
Dale Clonch, Middleport ; John
F1sher, Racine ; Dewey Sunpson, Middleport; Josep Bower,
Reedsville;
Iris
Carr,
Coolville; Margaret Thompson, Pomeroy; Claude Roy,
Racme; Joseph Rudolph,
Athens; , Roland Morris,
Pomeroy, and Eva McKinney,
Dexter.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Ethe l Adkins, Mabel Wolle,
Clara Hess, James Nelson and
W1lham Bormg .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday

July 24-25
L'lVE STORY
( Techni~olor)

All McGraw
RyanO'Neot
Cartoons ,

Tennis Rocque!
Donild's Vocation
Show Slorts 7 P.M.

~

~

Bess1o Mae Sho,.allc• , 7
I..au~sv lle, IS shll 1mderg:mng
obser·vatiun at the Vet.c1· ,.
Memorial Hospital r•.r lllJUI'I CS
suffered when the c~r m wh1ch
she was a passenger struck the
nghl slee1 railing at a one-lane
bnd~e on county rllad 4at 10 05

Sunday.
Aecording ll' tlw sheriff's
department, Roy E :lhowalter,
68, Langsville, was travelling
west when he rounded a curve
and sl ruck, b1 oke off, and bent
uver lhe railing The car
partially wen t over the Side of
lhc bndge. Mrs. Showalter was
lhrown In to the windshield at

Union

the 1mpact.

1,

Answers
Goodyear
PT. PLEASANT - Dame I L.
Chnstian, president of Local
644, Rubber, Cork, Lmoleum
and Plastic Workers of
America, AFL-CIO, today took
1ssue w1th recent reports by
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company.
The Statement by Chnshan
1s relevant to the stnke at
Goodyear plant at Apple Grove
which began June I.
In Ius statement, Chnst1an
refers to releases of July 21,
and 19. Friday's report was a
matter of routine release sent
out by the parent hrm at
Akron , OhiO, pertaimng to
sales and earnmgs wh1le that of
July 19 released by local
G&lt;H&gt;dyear plant manager M1ke
BuCCI dealt directly w1th the
current local strike
Mr . Christian, local 644
representa tive , sa1d 1n hts
prepared statement.
"The art1cle which appeared
in the newspapers Fnday, July
21, 1972, wh1ch was headimed
'Best Year Reported by
Go&lt;&gt;dyear' was one of several
reasons why members of Loca l
644 are on str1ke
" Mr. Bucc1, m an artlcle to
news med1a on Wednesday,
July 19, 1972, seemed to be
usmg scare taches In order to
get public sympathy fm the
cumpany Mr. Bucci's article
related mos tly to wages but
there are several other acute
1ssues Involved wh1ch helped
bnng about the strike.
"Goodyear's offer as to date,
47 cents over a three-year
peruxl, 1s approximately 4.0
percent wage increase Th 1s
figure is somewhat lower than
s.s pet. which is considered
non-uiflatwnary by President
NIXon and the pay board.
"We know of no other un10n
wh1ch has settled for th1s small
a percentage wage increase
Local Un10n 644 IS mterested m
a wage mcrease wh1ch 1s large
enough to keep 1ts members
from failing more behind in the
fast-nsmg economy
"Other key issues as afore
mentioned are vacation
scheduling, mainte nan ce
productiOn work JUrisdiction,
•mproved
job
biddin g
procedures , mamtenance re~
alignmen t,
work sh1ft
scheduling, Improved arbltratwn system, items concernmg
seniortty,
ac~
cwnulation outs1de bargaimn g
unit and 1tems concermn g
better company -employee
relatwnships.
"We m the union are m~
terested m get~mg th1s str1ke
settled as soon as possible lor
we also realize that a strike
hurts employees, the company
and the commumty.
"The company by 1ts decision
to bring in employees from
Pennsylvama, North Carolina,
Ohw, Alabama, etc., as has
been reported to us to work our
job does not contr\bute to a
qu1ck contract settlement
"We the members of Local
644 have In the past and will m
the future continue to try for
community betterment;
however, we are still mlerested
m a selllemenllhalls fa1r and
equ1 table."

Estimated 1500
Attend Crusade
Approximately 1,500 persons
attended the community
evangelisllc Crusade Saturday
and Sunday evenings at
Southern High School stad1um
by the Racine First Baptist
Church.
Saturday and Sunday, the
fmaltwo mghts of the Crusade,
featured the Duncan Family, a
professional music group of
Tampa, Fla. The Rev. Mr.
Noms used as his topic on
Saturday night, "Christ Is the
Answer," and Sunday mght,
"What Way America."
Saturday 'and Sunday
•evening service may be seen
over Channel S !hiS evenin~
and Tuesday evening at 8 p.m.

1&gt;.111

Mrs. Slwwalter was taken to
the Veterans Mem onai
Hosp1tal by the Pomeroy
emergency squad. There was
heavy damage to the veh1cle
No c1tatwn was issued.

Robbers.
(Continued from Page I)
makmg the mvestigation are
Shenff Troy Huffman and
State Police Trooper A. E.
Baumgardner.
Witnesses des cnbed the
couple saying the young
woman was atllred in wh1le
slacks and the man, who was
cqnsiderably older, wore a
"burr halJ'cut." They were
beheved to have escaped mto
Ohio with the car bearing Ohio
license tags.
Persons w1th further information are being asked to
nollfy Harrah at 773-5201,
Sheriff Huffman at 675-3810 or
Trooper Baumgardner at 6751101.
Mrs. Bradford sa1d since
many payroll checks were
included in the money bag she
would appreciate those who
had checks cashed at the store
stopping by and giving
descr1pt10ns and attempts
would be made to stop payment
on the checks.

Edith Paynter
Died Saturday
PORTLAND - Ed1th A.
Pa~nter , Portland, 65 , passed
awa; Saturday at tile Pleasa nt
Valley Hospital. She was
preceded Ill death by her f•rst
husband , Robert Codner, and
was pastor of the Pentecostal
Assemb ly Church at Dorcas
sw·v1vors 1nclude her second
husband , Okey Payn ter, Portland, l\\ o suns , Robert W.
Codner, Long Bottom, and
John S Cod ner , Racine , four
da ughters, Mrs Wilham Joyce
Hoback, Ra cme, Mrs Russell
Slllfley Gnmm, St. Clairsville,
Mrs. Robert (Elaine ) Sayre,
Ra cwe, an d Mrs Charles
1June 1 Baker, Racme ; three
step~su n s,
Paul Paynter,
Albany; Glenn Paynter 111
Oreg on, and Carl Paynter,
North l,awrence, Oh10 , 23
gra ndchi ldr en, thr ee grea tgrandchildren ; three Sisters,
Mr s Florence Turner tn
Cahforma, Mrs. Alv1e Spragg,
Bathhurst 1 New Brunswick,
Can ., and Mrs. Helen Cra btree,
Bangor , Mame, and a brother,
Chesley Eddy, Bath hurst. New
Brunsw1ck.
Funeral serv1ces w•ll be held
at Ewmg Funeral Home
Tuesday at I p.m. Bunal will
be at the Great Bend Bapllst
Cemetery w1th Lawrence and
Charles Bush offiCiating .
Fnends may call any lime.
AUTOS COLLIDE
Pomeroy police mvesllgated
a two-car acciden t Saturday at
9.24 p. m. on Pomeroy's West
Mam St, m wh1cb Thomas
Reitm1re. 18, Letart, W. Va.,
h1s auto stopped m line of
traff1c, "as struck from the
rear by a car dnven by Dorsa
Parsons, 19, Racine. There
were no injuries and medium
damage to both vehicles
Parsons was cited for assured
clear distance.
CUT NEAR EYE
The Pomeroy E-R unit was
called Saturday at 4 56 p m. to
the Joe Hood reSidence m
Mi nersville to assist Michael
M11ler who had suffered a cut
near Ius eye m a boating accident. Deta1is of the accident
were not available. He was
removed to Veterans Memonai
Hospital.
TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Middleport E-R squad
was called Sunday at I 45/i. m.
to Turkey Run Road, Cheshire,
RD . fnr Elv1ra Barcus, 96, who
suffered a possible heart attack. She was taken to Holoer
Medical Center.
LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Job 's Daughters,
Bethel 62, will meet this
evening at 7 30 at the Masonic
Temple, Pomeroy.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE
Southern
Alhlellc Boosters will hold a
special meeting this evening at
FIREMEN TO MEET
The Pomeroy F1re Dept. w1ll 8 at Soathern High School in
huld a special meeting Tuesday Ra c i~ e Persons who plan to
1n the f1rst a1d room in city hall help at the Meigs County Fa1r
al 7:30 p, r...
are urged '" attend.

Hopes dim for Miners
BLACKSVILI.E, W.Va .
( UPI) - Rescue workers
battled a raging, smoky mine
fire today m an effort to reach
nine men trapped more than a
mile underground since
Saturday rught.
But
John
Corcoran,
president of ConsolidatiOn Coal
Co., said, "Hopes are quite dim
at this point."
"Conditions are unfavorable
... butobviouslythere1salways
hope," he said. "Our prilnary
efforts at the moment are to
find the men in the mme ."
W.R. Park, an inspector for
the U.S. Bureau of Mines, also
told newsmen the situation
"doesn 't look good."
"Rescue teams are searchmg every possible place," he
sa1d. "The fire has been
localized three quarters of a
mile down a haulageway by
foam but we're having trouble
encircling it."
Thirty-one miners escaped
ahead of the smoke and flames.
The trapped men contacted the
outs1de by telephone shortly
after the fire erupted but the
contact was broken after a
br1ef conversallon

Company officials said the
men, who were doing maintenance work at the tilne of the
lire, were wearing self-&lt;!Ontained oxygell' equipment
which would enable them to
breath up to live hours in the
smoke.filled passageways.
Park said rescue teams were
drilling a hole through the top
of the mine to an area where
lour of the men were believed
: trapped. The hole was live
inches m diameter and it would
enable officials to check air
quality and to listen for sigrls of
. hie.
The trapped men were
believed to be in two locations
-four in one area and five in
another. Federal and state
mine inspectors sa1d they
apparently were trapped m
miles from the entrance.
The mine shaft is located rn
West Virginia but the coal
seams extend north under
PeMsylvania. The mine is
located about 20 miles north of
Farmington, W.Va., where 78
men were killed in a 1968 mme
fire. Consolidation Coal owns
both mines.
The mme accident was the

firat incident of its type since 91
miners were killed in Idaho's
&amp;mahine Mine last May 2.
The nine men were Identified
as Justin. A. Beach Jr., 23;
Conrad J. Belt 34 ; Billy
Murray, 37; Roy L. Sieler, :M;
Roy E. Dalton, 42; Kenneth
Haines, 21, and Robert H.
Tressler, 32, all of Morgan•town, W.Va. and Frederick
Phillips, 42, and Terrence
Stoneking, 29, both of Mount
Morris Pa .
Arnold Miller reform candidate for president of the Unitee
Mine Workers union, ~nd E.J.
Pnakovich, vice president of
the UMW criticized federal and
state mme officials, clailning
the fire was caused by safety
violations.'
Miller said the men were
taking a continuous mining
machine to another section of
the mine when It accidentially
touched an overhead electrlcial cable, setting off the lire
He said the nine missing men
were behind the machine, a
violation of West Virginia
mining laws.

Simple Kindness Great Surprise ,: '
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J- "Nothing could be a bigger surprise than the silnple kindness of
people we have met ever since we left New York.''
That was the reactwn of a New York City cab driver who fulfilled the dream of a decade by
drivmg his cab across the land so his family could "see th1s beautiful country and learn about the
people of the United States."
Fortunato DiMarco, 44, a native of Palermo, Sicily, who came to the United States in 19SO,
saved for nine years so he could drive his yellow 1970 Ford cab to the Golden Gale. With him came
his w•le, Anna, and their two sons, Dommie, 16, and John, 12.
·
"I never thought I would see such vanety m my lifetune," DiMarco said Sunday. "The plains
and the mountains- so many different kinds of mountains . After 20 years, we are finally seemg
it," he said.
"In New York, when I piCk up people from San FranciSco, they always tell me to come here, to
see their city . And they are very proud of this city, not like New York people," DiMarco said.
" It is a peaceful, beautiful country," said Mrs. DiMarco. "People are relaxed and happy
about their lives. They sm1le and have a good time instead of rush, rush, rush like New York C1ty
It's crazy m New York City. "
DIMarco told of a Cllallon put on his wmdshield by a Salt Lake City traffiC policeman after he
had left h1s cab too long ma parking zone. It wasn't a summons, but a note saying: "Welcome to
Salt Lake City. You're overparked, but 11's okay because you're a guest of ours."
''Can you ilnagine such a thing," exclauned DiMarco. "Why, In New York you can get 10
summons m two mmutes . And not a one of them to say welcome to anything."
The DiMarcos have been on the road smce July 9 and figure they will cover 10,000 miles before
they get back home. They plan to stop at Disneyland, Las Vegas and points east such as Gettysburg and Valley Forge.
U DiMarco had had a paying fare for his New York to San Francisco trip, instead of driv1ng
his own cab, 1t would have netted hiln $1,200, be estimates

Five Auto Accidents Logged
Mary Lou Fellure , 39 ,
Eureka Star Rt , Galhpohs,
was Cited to Mumc1pal Court
for fa1lure to y1eid the right of
way followmg a traffic accldentat3· 45p .m Saturdayon
Rt 7 and 216,
The Gallla-Me1gs Post State
Hi gh wa y Patrol sa1d the
Fellure car pulled mto the path
of an auto operated by Archie
Clayton Meadows, 34, Rt 2,
Crown C1ty. There was
moderate damage to both ca rs
Asecond mishap occurred at
6·54 p. 111. on Cow1ty Rd: F1ve
m Me1gs County, lour-tenths of
a mile north of Rt 1 where a
truck loaded w1th Jogs struck a
teleph one w1re. Arthur R
R1pp, 3S, Rt. I, Logan, the
dr1ver, was not charged.
Another Me1gs County
m1shap occurred on Rt 124,
une-lenth of a m1le east of
Ru tland where Angeha Eblen,
26, Pomeroy, swerved her car
to avoid a colhswn, lost control, ran off the highwa y and
mto a d1tch . There was mmor

dama ge. No charge was f1ied
The first of two acc1dent

Sunday" occurred at 3·55 p. m.
on the Ebenezer-Carmel Rd ,
on~ mile west of Rl. 325 where
cars driven by Timothy E.
Banks, 21, Rt. 2, Vinton, and
(Contmued from page I)
Terry Wayne Lloyd, 19,
for those who violate anti- Gallipolis, collided headon .
pollution laws, gtves citizens There was moderate damage
greater mvolvement in to both cars. No one was inprotecting their own en- jured or cited.
The final accident occurred
vironment and creates a Power
Siting CommiSSion to rnvolve at 4:4S p.m. on Rl. 554, where
the state in land use plaMing . an auto driven by Michael F.
"It does not, I am sorry to Tbonolone, 25, High Falls, N.
say, do everything we had Y , traveling east h1t a large
hoped," Gilligan said . "It does bump in the road damaging h1s
not go far enough, for example manifold pipe.
in the area of citizen particlpallon . It is not as comprehensive
as we had hoped.
"But it is a beginning. And
·What is more important, it
TO VISIT HAWAII
gives us the tools to launch a
WASHINGTON (UPI)
strong administrative program President N1xon will attempt to
aimed at carrying out the goals repair strained relations
outlined by the Citizens Task between the United States and
Force on Environmental Japan by flymg to Hawaii Aug.
Protection, which gave us the 31 lor a two-day meeting with
unpetus for this legislation," newly-elected Japanese Prilne
the governor said.
Minister Kakuei Tanaka.

EPA Act

Elberfelds Invite You
COME IN AND SEE THE NEW

1973 LINE OF RCA
Arriving daily now '73 black and white portable TV's,
portable color TV, color console sets, new '73 model RCA
stereos with radios and tape players.
The new RCA transistor radios, .table radios, clock
radios, cassette tape players and recorders and portable
record players.

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY
HEADQUARTERS OF RCA
'

spokesman said. "We now
control tlie city of Quang Trl. "
Hesa1d there were no reports
of casualhes.
The command specifically
denied reports that the airborne soldiers bad rushed the
Citadel Monday. "That was not
true,11 the spokesman smd.
After capturmg tbe 500-yard
square Citadel by noon, the
paratroopers faMed out to
search for North Vietnamese
stragglers left in the rubble of
the 19th-eentury walled city.
The Communists captured
Quang Tr1 City May I and
apparently pulled out of the

Citadel along an escape route and nine paratroopers, spok.sto the northwest purposely left men said .
The capture of the province
open to them by government
commanders . The South capital capped the gover.
Vietnamese drive to recapture ment's four-week-old drive Into
Quang Trl was in its fourth ~ang Tri Province. Presldeat
Nguyen Van Thieu bas order-ed
week todaY.
There were no immediate the 20, 000-man government
dela1ls on the fighting. Para- task Ioree to retake the entire
troop commanders had earlier provmce by Sept. 19.
said they expected heavy
U.S . Bii2 bombers have
battling at the CitadeL
pomded suspected Communist
The Sa1gon command report- positions around the city and
ed lighting around Quang Tri allied air &amp;trikes have Down
city Monday as close as 700 missions almost daily in the
yards from the thick stooe government push to retake
walls of the Citadel. Two Quang Tri. Monday, BiiZs
battles. killed 23 Communists dumped more than 2¥• milllon
pounds of explosives on North
Vietnamese troops and supplies headed toward the city.

HUD Grant Will
Expedite Studies
BRIDGE CLaiED- The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge since

Its opening in 1928 is closed lor extensive repairs to the

lrldge's road l!lll'face. The Shelly Company at 9a.m. Monday
began the major overhaul job. The bridge is expected to be
closed lor a seven day period.

•

at y

Followmg recent approval of
a $5,000 federal grant by the
Ohw Department of Econom1c
and Community Development,
the feas1bility of low-moderate
income housmg will be studied
and existing plannmg structures can be improved .
Gov. John J . G11!1gan made
the announce ment follow1.ng

approval by the Development
Department and the U. S.
Department of Housmg and
Urban Development (HUD )
which is funding the grant to
Me1gs County
Me1gs County's grant IS part
of a $176,950 total grant to 20
local communities and county
or reg10nal plannmg com-

en tine

Devoted To 'l1u! Interest. Of The Meig&amp;-Mason Area
VOL. XXV

NO. 70

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1972

Council Acts to Spruce
Up Middleport's Streets
Middleport council Monday
night agreed to ask local
merchants to refram from
dispiaymg merchandi se on
village sidewalks.
Council, 10 an effort to keep
the sidewalks clear, w11l ask
merchants to limit th e1 r
displays of merchandiSe.
In this connectiOn, Mayor
John Zerkle sa1d that although
the street department cleans
the stree ts each Fr1day between 5 and 5:30 a.m. some
merchants sweep htter from
their sidewalks nght back onto
the street!
Coun cil · is
askmg
businessmen to p1ck up trash,

not sweep it into the street
Smce the v1llage 1s pickmg
up trash inside town, the cost of
U1e extra serv1ce will have to
be covered by a charge The
ordinan ce comm1llee 1s to
prepare an ordmance on se ttmg up collection charges at
the next regular meeting of
coun c11.
Councli also discussed the
sale of ice cream from a truck
that 1s stahoned near the
Middleport Pool. Council on
Jure 12 agreed to let the owner
of the truck se rve the area lor a
Jlkla y period. The village was
to receive 10 pet of the profit.
Counc1i has rece1ved no

proceeds yet
Mayor Zerkle suggested that
the matter be referred to the
Middl e port Re c reatiOn
Comm1ss10n for a dec1sion.
Discussed earher was the
erosion at the lagoon caused by
h1 gh water Mayor Zerkle
reported that he had wntten
Cong . Clarence Miller for
government ass1stance. Miller
mformed Zerkle that he has
contacted the Corps of
Engmeers and would mlorm
the mayor of 1ts decision as
soon as poss1bie .
It was disclosed that smce
Remer's Bakery 1s moving
from the town 's bmlding on

Park Street the first of the
month, part of the garage
eqmpment will be housed m the
bmldmg after it IS vacated .
Res1dents of Broadway and
Elm Sts. reported that
mosquitoes are becoming a
nmsan ce in the area The
mayor agreed to contact the
health department. Council
also agreed to purchase 51111
feet of guardrail to be placed
on Middleport HilL
Attending were Mayor
Zerkle, Fred Hoffman, David
Ohlinger , Lawrence Stewart
and D1ck Vaughan, council
members, and Gene Grate,
clerk.

fNe.;;:·: ift ".Bri~~~ Prison Besieged
By Dockworkers

By United Pre" International
SAN ANTONIO, TEX.- FORMER PRESIDENT Lyndon B.
Johnson was hospitalized Monday night when stricken from
LONOON (UPI)- Thousands
chest pains and nausea. Doctors asid there was no indication he
of atriking dockers and other
bad suffered another heart attack.
"II may be several days before any definite conclusions can workers marched behind
be drawn about the nature of his present illness," a Brooke Army flying trade union baMerS to
Hospital bulletin said. "However, at 10 p.m. he was comfortable, London's lortresslike Pentonville Prison today to
In exceUent spirits and his general condition was qu1te
demand the release of five
satisfactory. "There have been no irregulanties in the heart
jailed longshoremen.
rhyUun or blood pressure."
Protest strikes snowbailed
across the country, plunging it
WASHINGTON -BRIG. GEN. JAMES F. HAMLET, who into deepening industrial
just returned from Vietnam where he commanded the 3rd chaos.
Brigade of the lsi Calvary Division, bas been nominated to be the
A goverrunent spokesman
second Negro major general in U.S. Army history.
estimated about 140,000
Hamlet, 50, a naUve of Alliance, Ohio, got his first star just 15 workers were off the job, inmonths ago. The former heUcopter pilot and graduate of St. cluding 40,000 longshoremen
Benedict's CoUege In Kansas currently is assigned lo work at the whose walkout brought
Pentagon with the Army's assistant chief of staff for Ioree Britain's seaports to a neardevelopment. The Army currenUy has only one blaclt tw&lt;H~Iar total shutdown.
Prl~e Minister Edward
general, Maj. Gen. Frederic E. Davison, 53, now serving as a
Heath
conferred with key
division conunander in Europe.
ministers. But officials said the
government
bad no Immediate
WASHINGTON - OPPONENTS CALLED IT A "boondoggle," but the House passed 177 to 170 Monday a bill to compensate bottlers, farmers and others who !oat money in the 1969
DRAW GEAR TODAY
bsn on cyclamates.
Meigs High School Head
The cost of the bill, whl¢1 still must pass the Senate, was
Football
Coach Charles
estimated at from $100 miUion to ' 'many times that." The
Chancey announced that
legl.slation would authorize growers, manufacturers, packers
football equipment will be
and dl.strlbutors of foods and drinks prepared with cyclamates to
issued to varsity players today
coUect for direct and indirect IOIISI!S resulting from the federal at 6:30p.m. at the high school.
ban.Amounts would be detennlned by the U. S. Court of Claims.
THE SEMIOmCJAL CAIRO NEWSPAPER AL ABRAM
Clllled today lor an Arab-wide campaign againat American lnt«esta In the Middle East. Another government - controlled
newi!Japer in Cairo said the United states was as much an enemy
ofEgyptaslarael. The newspapers were commenting in reaction
to a four-llour speech by President Anwar Sadat Monday. in
which he expressed dismay that U. S.lnfiuence in the Arab world
WIB increalling.
Sadat saki Araba pomssed the meana of putting pressure on
lhe United states "and \Mile means are very active
(CooUnued on P1111e 10)

Music Department 2nd Floor

'

By ARTHUR HIGBEE
SAIGON (UPI)-.South VIetnamese paratroopers stormed
and recaptured the inner
fortress Citadel in Quang Tr1
City without a fight today and
took control of the province
capital held by Communist
troops for nearly three months,
the Saigon command S81d.
Spokesmen said about 250
paratroopers rushed the thick
atone walls of the Citadel this
mornmg and met no Communist resistance.
"ThiS was the first try by the
paratroopers to get mto the
Citadel and they made it," a

plans to proclaim a national
state of emergency. They said
food stocks are adequate.
The Industrial tunnoil-the
worst the country bad known
for years-61emmed from jailing last Friday of live
longshoremen for contempt of
a National Induatrial Relations
Court order to cease illegal
picketing
of
container
depots.
The official solicitor, Norman Turner, visited the five
men in jaU this morning. He
said they told him they refused
to ''purge" their contempt by
apologizing to the- court.
But he said he was applying
anyhow lor a court order "not
later than Wednesday afternoon" for early release of the
five.
His functions as official
solicitor include reviewing cases of persons jaUed for contempt.
The official solicitor is an
official of the high court. He
bas an office which forms part
of the high court. He acts on
behalf of the court and not for
the government.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

FT&amp;R Sued for $1.5 Million
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Arnold E. Crabtree ol Oak Hill
filed a $1.5 million suit Monday In U. S. District Court here
agaiost the Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co., which he claimed
was responsible for the death of his teeuage son In 1970.
Eddy Crabtree was fatally injured while Inflating a
truck tire at a Jackson service station where be was em·
ployed. The suit claims the truck wheel and rim were
defective and had Improperly fitted Oanges, allowing tbe
assembly to explode when Inflated.
Two subsidiaries of the Akron-based tlremaldng
company, Electric Wheel Co. and Firestone Steel Products,
also were named In the suit, along with Fred Allen of Oak
Hill, uwuer of the truck young Crabtree was worldng on.

Tag Day Fixed
Saturday was designated as
Tag Day in Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland, and plans
for band camp were completed
by the Meigs Band Boosters
::::::;.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::..::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday:
Partly cloudy Thursday.
Chance of showers Thursday
night and Friday or Satur·
day. Temperatures
averaging near normal.
Highs In the 80s. Lows In the
early morning from mid 50s
to mid 60s Thursday and In
the 60s Friday and Saturday
morning.
FIRM FINED
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Archem Corp. of Portsmouth
was fined $1,51111 m U. S.
District Court here Monday
after pleading no contest to 10
counts of misbranding polSon
products, failing to register
and failing to give proper
warnings on some products .
The court also put Archem on
probation for three years.
CLOTHING DAY
Free Clothing Day will be
held at the Salvation Army
Headquarters, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday from
10 a.m. until noon. All in need
of clothing are welcome.
FARMER APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UPI)- AStow
farmer, Charles E. Call, has
been appointed to the Ohio
Parks and Recreation Council,
Gov. John GiUigan said today.

feed the fire burlng IMide.
A spokesman for Consolidation Coal Co., owner of the
mine, said the next 72 boors
would be critical because of the
danger of more explosions.
"The entire area haa been
evacuated- and l mean evac-

Twelve B52s blaated supply
dumps in North Vietnam's
panhandle and U.S. fighterbombers streaked into Hanoi's
suburbs lor the second successive day Monday. The U.S.
command said the lighters
blasted a battery plant, touching off explosions that sent a
column of smoke billowing
nearly a mlle Into the sky. The
B52s hit supply dumps south of
Dong Hoi, a major port city 38
m1les
north
of
the
Demllltamed Zone (DMZ)
separating the two Vietnams.

Debates Out
To Nominees

By United Press lntertllltlonll
While Sen. Goerge S. McGovern and administration
leaders sparred from Washington to Alaskil, the White House
said President Nixon bas no
intentions of debating the
Democratic presidential
candidate.
In Custer, S.D., McGovern
said Nixon's Vietnam policy of
seeking release of U.S. prisoners by bombing North Vietnam was "the height of folly.''
Monday mght.
In Anchorage, Alaska, VIce
Band members will leave
President
Spiro T. Agnew
Sunday to attend a camp at Rio
Grande for one week. Members criticized McGovern's
will board a bus Sunday at 3 proposals for draft dodger
amnesty and reform of
p m. at Me1gs High School.
In other busmess, Dwight marijuana possession laws.
Republican National ChairGoms, new band director ,
man
Robert J . Dole said in
introduced h1s new assistant,
Fred Ruth . Goins also Washington that McGovern
distributed enrollment form bas taken "consistent stands
cards for band camp for against governments friendly
to the United States, and in
parents' signatures.
strong
favor of any governBand practice will be held
ment
antagonistic
to the United
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
school when members will be States."
With the first campaign
given their music scores.
salvos
since Nixon tapped
The booster meeting date
was changed to the third Agnew to complete the GOP
Monday of each month. A ticket atill ringing, the White
membership tea wiU be held at House confirmed Monday that
the next meeting on Aug. 21 Nixon would not engage in
with Mrs. Paul Taylor
chairman and with majorette
mothers assisting.
A dance will be held
Saturday at the Pomeroy
Junior H1gh School from 8 to 12
sponsored by the boosters.
The boosters extended their
thanks to merchants who
donated to Merchants Tag
Day. Merchants who still wish
to contribute may do so by
William Grueser , who
mailing contributions to Mrs.
presided
at the Pomeroy
Alfred Rusche! , 119 Ebenezer
Chamber of Commerce
St., Pomeroy.
meeting Monday in the absence of Jack Kerr, president,
commended the work of Kerr
LOCAL 64' TO MEET
PT. PLEASANT - Local 644, and other chamber members
United
Rubber,
Cork, that resulted in ferry service
Linoleum and Plastic Workers while the Pomeroy-Mason
of America AFL-CIO, will ~old Bridge is closed lor repairs. He
a regular monthly meeting said it has proved worthwhile.
The ferry Monday was
Fr1day evening at 7 p.m. In the
making
trips every 10 minutes
Carpenter's Union Hall in
Po10t Pleasant. Daniel to accommodate the large lines
"Danny" Christian, president,
urges all members to attend.

debates.
Pre1111 Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler tA&gt;ld a White HouM
11ews briefing that Nixon's
campaign director, Clark MacGregor, was presenting the
President's view "in an
authoritative way" wben be
said last week that Nixon
. would not debate McGovern.
McGovern was working out
campaign atratety toda)" at
custer with his running mate,
Sen. Thomas F, Eagleton ol
Missouri.
In other political developments, the Republican
National Pisiform Committee
named 14 persons to head
seven subcommittees drafting
specific planks for neltt
month's convention and
McGovern outlined his campaign team.
Rep. John Rhodes, R-Arlz.,
Platform Committee chairman, said the general beacllnp
for lhe planks will be human
concerns; human rlghta and
responsibilities; building a
greater prosperity; community
and
national
development; agriculture,
national resources and .be
(Continued on Pa1e lO)

Ferry Services

•

Prove of Valoe

9 Men· Entombed at Blacksville
BLACKSVILLE, W.Va. soft coal operation.
(UPI)- The Blacksville No. I
Officials said the last seal
mine was sealed today and was placed in position at 5:30
became a tomb for nine miners a.m., EDT, after maintenance
who were trapped deep un- men
worked
nlglltiong
derground and given up lor pouring concrete onto reindead when a series of ex- forced roda to assure that no
plosi01l8 rwnbled through the air see(ll! Into the tunnel!l to

m1ss10ns approved by the
department under its administration of HUD comprehensive planning assistance
funds. The county w11l supply
matchmg funds on a 50 pet.
lederai-Stl pet. local basis lor
comprehensive planmng
prOJeCts. Projects funded by
Um grant are for fiScal year
1973, wh1ch began July I, 1972.
" The federal grant will
enable Me1gs County to carry
out a comprehensive planning
program necessary for
meet~ng
the impending
changes brought about by a
$115 m1ihon mimng operation
tha t is underway 1n the
co unty .'' Development
Director David C. Sweet said.
The mmes will feed coal to
the $446 million Gavin Power
Plant in Cheshire.

U.S. air and naval gun
strikes in and aromd the
besieged city had been banned
since July 13, reportedly 110
that the South Vietnamforces could claim an "aUVietnamese victory."
Quang Tri was the third
Communist-(!OntroUed town to
fall to South Vietnamese forces
in three days. Last Saturday,
Bong Son dlstr1cl town on the
central coast was retaken and
Tam Quan district capital in
the same area was recaptured
without a light Monday.

ualed," Hazlett Cochran, the
Consolidation spokesman said.
"Even I can't get up there
(mine area) .
"The next 72 hours will be llie
critical period In determining
whether the seal will hold.''
(Coatlnued on Pace 10)

. Weather
Partly cloudy and not quite
so warm today with scattered
afternoon thundershowers
south portion. High In the 80s.
Clearmg and mild tonight, low
in the low and mid !lOll. Wed·
nesday sunny with high from
upper 7lill to mid IKII.

of traffic that waited on both
sides of the river. Cost per car
,. 75 cents.
The Shelly Company began
making major repairs to the
bridge's road surface Monday
at 9 a.m.
Chamber members also
discussed the placing of a
temporary sign on the
chamber's office quarters
located on the ground floor of
the courthouse. It was concluded that some kind of sign·
should be placed on the door
until a large sign l.s obtained.
The telephone number at the
chamber office is m6006.
Chamber members nave
been unable to determine how
much money waa made at the
Big Bend Regatta, if any.
Grueser obaerved that addiUonal money for advertlsln&amp;
is yel to be collected.
Attending were Grueaer,

Richard Chambers, WendeD
Hoover, Bob Jacoba, Jack
Caney apd IlennW Keney.

;

(

·-

�2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July ~. 1972

EDITORIAL

l.n Medical Work
A look at the orgamzatton du1 mg 11 ~ 5Ji ve t ann I\ VI sal\
celebratiOn shows that much has changed- tncludmg tht•
name Todav the mote than 5111100 ph ys tctans call themPh~:slcl a n:;

tAAFPI
The AAFP ts the onl\ nat tonal medtcal ot gamz atwn
that 1 equu es tis membet s to take 1511 hout s ol appt·oved
conlmumg &lt;'duc atmn PVe l' \' th1·ep \ears A numi.&gt;t'r of
state medical 01 gamzatiOn s al so havE&gt; Slmtlal 1 equue

ments
"Educatton ha s continued to be a btg thmg wtth us
and not JUSt conllnmng educatton. · savs Dt .Jetonw
Wtldgen AAFP pt·estdent
'There IS now a spectalty of fanuly medtcme that cetlt
lies doc tots tn thiS dtsctphne by exammatton thet eby
furntshmg proof to the publtc and pt oless10n that these
men ate sktlled and competent So vou see the acad
emy's conststent focus on educatton has btought fanul v
medtctne a long way from the hot se and buggy Dt
Wtldgen says
Twent) -ftve )eatS ago t~et e were plenty of famtly doc
tors 74 5 pet cent or all ductot s wet e genet al pt acll
lloners. but they were not 01 gamzed and fast gom g
down the dt am 111 the face of met easmg spectahzatron
Indeed by 1970 only 16 per cent of all doctotS wete GPs
It was the raptd rrse m medtcal spectaltzalton that al
most sounded the death knell f01 the famtly doctot ~' ewet
and fewer medtcal students became mtet ested tn gomg
mto famtlv practice medtcme and there gtew a certam
rtng of nonpreshge m the pht ase that a doctot was just
a general practitioner ·
All of thiS occulted not onlv to the chag11n ol dedt
cated. well educated ramtiv doctors but to the dts ma'
of the people who were bemg It eat ed bv good old Dt
Jones whom I have known all my life

Just as tmportant was that 'Doc knew Ius pattent s
too Not Just then allerg\ acne 01 adenoids. but all of
them The total patten!. and Ius famtly too
and m many c ases 1t wa s II ue

that such doct01 s Simply dtd nut keep up wtth new medt
cal ad1 ances Genet al practtttonet s wet e Ihought to be
generalists . guys who wet en t good enough or dedicated
enough to go on to become spectaltsts
It look a number of years fot the ot·gamzallon ol tam
tl~ doctors to become sufflctentl) ot gantzed to agam IJcgm to rebuild both the ptesllge and the ranks of tam th
practice phySicians
Toda y there IS a 1estdency 11 ammg svstem m lanuly
medtcme- just as fat other spec rahsts- and the svstem
encompasses more than tOO Amettcan Medrcal Assn
approved reSidencies and some 700 1estdents There at e
today departments or dtvtstons for teachmg famtl v medt
cme to students m more than 50 Umted States medtcal
schools
It would seem that the famtl y phvStctan todav would
have a lot more studvmg to do than any of hiS super
spectaltsl colleagues After all how man y limes mote
knowledge does a doctor need to deal wtth a whole per son
than wtth an y of that person 's pat Is'
To be sure spectailsts should plav an tmpmtant part m
the practice of medtcme
But as the nat ton s medrcal cunsumet s can attest we
are tired of doctors who treat us as cases tnstead uf people Three cheers for the AAFP. and heres hopmg the'
succeed 1n putttng more ·ramrlv mto the practtce ol
medJcmf

. ..

. ...·.·. ··. ··. ·-::: :· ..

:-·

JAt;K O'BRIAN
NEW YORK \KFSl - Once upm a
theatncal tune there was a movte called "The
Bowery," and then a movte titled "42nd St "and
last uptown~nobile street-tune out, "52nd St ,
detathng the JOys of j)tzz and rowdy :!!&gt;-yearsago nocturnal fun . It 's been our longrun contention that the showbtz hub of Manhattan agam
slowly ts moving north , thiS tune to the area
around E 57th St , where hteraiiy dozens of
movte houses have opened, ptggyback doubletheater SIZe in several mstances; and they have
bee~ surrounded by hundreds of shops, snack
bars, restaurants and other attracllons. 42nd St.
Isn't dead but 11 IS diseased.
The movement north and east of legttunate
theaters won 'I happen m a hurry, there tsn 't
enough morrey in operating theaters to start a
rush of such new showcases anywhere The
~ubert Theatrtcal Emptre JUSt tossed down the
gauntlet to Mayor John lindsay that 1! the
theatrtcal area tsn 't cleaned up even more than
the commendable lldymg accomphshed
recently, Shubert Will sell a flock of tis fmest
theatres (on 44th and 45th Sis ) to an eagerly
awattmg real estate ftrm , object - offtce
skyscrapers, whtch would clean up the
theatrtcal area mdeed - to the pomt of
steTiltzallon It would become as lively at mght
as Wail St m the same hours A few mamtenance people, httle recreation
Ah r But what about 57th St ? It's a great
street, a styhsh fatl-safe m case everything
fmally d.,.. move north and east It's hardly a
fallow prairie even now It stops betng rafftsb
and dangerous east of 8th Ave, starts perking
prethly around 7th Avenue where Carnegie Hall
potses majesttcaiiy wtth two huge apartment
butldmgs on netghbormg (Northeast and Northwest) corners Scads of affluent showfolk
mhabtt the ptle of flats across from Carnegie
Hall Barbara Walters, song,\Titers, silent, but
not very, star Carmel Myers, even the
celebTities' chromcler Earl Blackwell who has a
penthouse whtch contams a ballroom m turn
crammed wtth partyable celebnttes of stage,
screen and mtddle-soctety Diagonally across
from Carnegie Haiits The Osborne, A Stanford
White-&lt;lestgned sohd anltqmty whose tenants
have mcluded everyone from opera and concert
stars down to Leonard Bernstem Make that up
tf you're a Bernstemphtle
Movmg nght along East on 57th, Uncle
Sam's Umbrella Shop Prest dents, even kings,
have bought hts bumbershoots and walking
canes (Harry Truman, Junmy Walker most
Amencan - notably ) Carnegie Hall Studios
nses abaft The Hall, full of classtcal mstructors
and to make tl chtc, Bobby Short. The RusSian
Tea Room, populariZed by liberal-to-ttlt~earung
actors, producers, drrectors etc . totters to port
BY

Just over 25 vears ago the Amel u. an Atadt.'IH) nl t,clt·
et·al Ptacllce was lounded bl phystctans 111 an Allan tll
City. N J.. hotel

Many felt , howeve1

'0

, . , ,.,.,., 7 1 1

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 25,1972
·~

Voice along Br'Way

Putting 1 Famil{

selves the Amencan Academy of Farm !\

:a.'uc

·.·. ·.· ·:;

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel
•
•
IS DAD AS BAD AS HE SEEMS?
Dear Helen and Sue .
I'd hate my father even if l wasn't related to him. Here are
some of the stupid things he does :
He tries to help Mom with the wasbmg and turns our clothes
all different colors. Then he complams about a light left on m the
daytime. Here he's cost us maybe fifty dollars m rumed clothes
and yet he makes an mteinat10nal mctdent out of a few cents'
worth of electricity.
He hollers and raves about me not domg any work. l do 11 but in my own tune.
He quit drinking and thinks we should do homage to hiS great
will power. But I can only remember when he was an alcohohc
and how much pain he caused us.
One time my sister and I were havmg a ststerly ftght. He tore
mto the room like a super-ltero, knocked me down on the bed, and
then satd, "I'm sorry, but I had to do 11 ... JUSt like a doctor siaps
a hysterical patient. " Who was hystertcal' We were only havmg
a httle disagreement.
He yells at my older lrother who doesn 't gtve my mother any
board money smce he's got a full tune job
Our family ts split down the middle, With my mother and
sister on my father's stde, and me, my brother and my cat on
"our" side.
l started smoking when !was 12because my father got me so
nervous.) don't want to rum my hfe wtth drugs, but that wtll be
next if he doesn't shape up.
Please don't say talk tl over WJth my mother. I've already
done that. No help. - N W
Dear N:
It occurs to me that you and your father are of the same
mold: both nervous, quick-tempered, a little trigger-ltappy
... And you're both overly eager to blame the other person
uke breeds hke, but tl also breeds DISlike because you mirror
each other's faults
Instead of stding wtth your older brother (who seems a btl
selfish on the board-money thing), start comparing your actions
with those of your dad's Then, next time he blows up, be the
"different one." Somebody bas to change first How about you '
- HELEN

+++
Dear N.W. :
The saying, "Everyone sbould have a graveyard for the
faults of his friends" goes double for parents!
Why must you remember all the bad things about your dad
and give hun no credtt for I. Staying dry; 2. Trymg to help; 3
Caring about you.
You say he "drove you to smokmg, and drugs mtght be
next." What drove HIM to booze? ·
What mtght drive him back to booze? Don't let it be you r SUE
Rap:

•
Speaking of marrtage, "Afraid to Otance It" has a new
survey on her side Only 53 pet. of wives questioned said they
would definitely choose the same mate tf they had tl to do over
again. Nearly one fourth- 22 pet. SBld they weren't sure, and a
whopping 25 pet. said ''No way t ! " .
That pretty well cotncides with our one-m.three-or-four
divorce rate. - M. P.
M.P.:
Hm-m-m-m ... Wonder bow husbands would answer that
question? - HELEN
P .S. Almost anythmg you tackle In life has a 50.50 chance,
and IIOIDetimes the odds are a lot higher If three-fourths of the
wives questioned are either happy, contented, or "maybe," then
the institution of mamage isn't as threatened or threatemn~; as
110111e moderns think. Right? ;- HELEN AND SUE

preclselv wl&gt;&lt;or&lt;• tis good humored ndverttsmg
annotlllCed, · " utile to the Left of Carnegie
Ha l! ' Barbara Walters goes there because it's
clrhc lo h• .. c , she hkes Dick Nixon, In fact,
wh •cn makC!&gt; her hardly popular with showbtz
types such as Zero Mostel, to bottom things out.
The street starts getting even classier as you
saunter closer lo 5th Ave. :
Henry Bendel gets the chtc-buds rollmg,
and at 57th &amp; 5th ts the very stylish Bergdorf.
Goodman block wherein owner Andrew
Goodman (Andrew retamed ownership of the
real estate and land when he peddled hi$ great
store to Broadway-Hale) IS the official janitor:
no one may tive m a N Y commercial building
except the jamtor. Ergo, Andrew utularly
sweeps up mghts, mostly after parties tn his
splendtd top-floor apartment, one party Andrew
tossed there startled even our neo-jaded enthustasm - Be My Goodman's band accompanymg Ella Fitzgerald were paid performers
Diagonally across from Andrew's pad is
Tiffany's; null satd. BonWJI Teller surrounds
Tiffany's m an architectural "L" building.
Downstreet shghtly ts Knoedler's art gallery
now owned by Vtctor Hammer who still owns hiS
old gallery on 57th St. E. of MadiSOn Ave.
Cepelia Corp ts the font of Pohsb artifacts at 5
E. 57th St., James RobUISOn's fabulous antique
stiver and porcelainS and jewelry from
Elizabethan tbrough George IV IS at 12 East.
The Incurable Collector IS a rtchly mventorted
antique shop at 36 East, reportedly owned by
.Jules St.elfi, chatrman of MCA.
Portratts Inc. at 41 East, agents lor some
200 of the finest phtzz pamters Anttques sbops
galore !me both stdes of 57th St down to
l;exmgton Ave.; betwixt ts Le Pavtllon
restaurant for affluent wallets, medtum prtced
to drugstore cuiSme and snackertes further
along. In the age of Spectahzatton, Sherle
Wagner at 125 East offers luxurtous bathroom
decor from plumbmg up The natton of
Colombta chose 57th St. for tis N Y centre, at
140 East. Hammacher - Schlemmer ts at 145
East, famed so long 11 even had a SchwartzDietz song set tn a famed Broadway revue
"Hammacher Schlemmer l U&gt;ve You "
And suddenly you are at 3rd Ave where the
smgmgest young people and lots of older Withtis congregate rughtiy m more than two-dozen
movte theatres wtthtn a few blocks plus the
appurtenanced eatertes Skttch Henderson's
Dandelion saloon ts a couple blocks north on 3rd
There are llahan, French, German, Scandinavtan, Russian, Gypsy, Spamsh, even Arab
restaurants wtthm sauntermg distance. And of
course, several wherein everything IS Kosber
It's a great street. It's Fun's Future.

Middleport Takes Cheshire
•''

•

tum01r O\... ~ Ralph
F:merson essavtst

Heart Lead Shuts Out Clubs
posstble for Jtm to try to
develop the club suit and he
must go a f t e r three dta·
mond trtcks
.91 6 3
He leads a dtamond to
WEST
EAST
dummy's queen at tnck two
.10152
The queen holds and Jtm's
109 3
• Q874 2
ftrst thought IS to contmue
tKI06 2
t 53
wtth the ace A httle more
.K42
&lt;loA 5
thought shows that there IS a
SOUTH (D )
better play at hts disposal
• K86
provided that West does hold
.AK
the ktn g of dtamonds
• J9 84
Jtm returns to hiS hand
oloQJ 108
wtth the km g of spades and
None vulnera ble
leads the dtam ond Jack
We!&lt;il
Snrth East S~1ulh
Thts play would cost hun
an ovet tuck m case West
Pass
1•
Pass !NT
had started wtth kmg and
Pasc;
3 NT Pat.s Pass
one
It makes no diffet ence
Pass
agamst any 3 3 break or 1!
Openm g lead- ¥ J
East started wtth a doubleton 10-s pol but tt b r 1n g s
home the contract agam st
B) Os"ald &amp; James Jacob) th e actual holdm g of km g 10J ames Kauder one of the x-x tn th e West hand
NORTH

Z5

"'AQJ9
• 65
t AQ1

.43
.J

'"'

IHfWSPAPER lNTERPRI SE AS!.N )

top young west t: oast pi a \ l'IS has pt oduced a book
ca lled th e Bndge Phtloso
phet It tS a collectton of 40
hands pla yed b¥ htm 111 tubllet brtdge and du pltcal e
games Wntten m the fu st
petSo n each hand silows

some mteres tmg feature

West

North

East

South

Pass
?
You, South, hold ·
.J86 \'54 t A K943 .162

t&lt;lo

1•

What do you do now?
A-81d two spades. A two ~
d i a m o n d call after partner's
overull demes support for his
SUit

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do b1d two spades West

passes and your partner co nhnuc s to thr~:c spad es What do
you do no v. ''

More Stenos Use II
Gregg shorthand , mtroduced b~ John Robert Gregg
m 1888, IS t a u g h t m more
s c h o o Is and practiced by
more stenographers m the
Untied States than any other
note-takmg system , accordmg to Encyclopaedia Brttan-

cat d pla y
The general tenor IS to en-

Programs for Tonight

Green Acres 3, Otck Van Dyke 4, What's My Lme" 6. Tom

·:·.: :·:·=~~~:·:·:·=-~=·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·: :.:::·:::::::::..·. :·:·: :·:·:·:•.· .:·:·:·: :·:·.···:·:::::·. ::.::. :·:=:·:·: ••·: ·!·!·:·:·:·:···:·i

.-.

'Misfi res Point
Kissinger S Way
1

H• Il.\ \ (

110\IL~: \

IV ASHI NGTOf\ t NC:A'
The unh appt ness at State Department ove r Dt llent'
Ktssmger's g1ea t powet as Pte srdent N1xon s adv 1se1 on
f01 e1gn and natio na l set tll l t) affau s IS we ll kn own

Not genetall \ rea l11ed
other kev

potnl s

tn

tS

the equ alh ht gh co nce rn at

the govr1 nnwnt

Defense Secre ta r·v Melv tn Laud has had two ser tous
confr ontat ions Wit h K1 ss mge1 on defen se L aird cam e out

on lop m bot h tn stances-but onlv beca use he ha s pt oved
to be a vet y stt ong man tnrleed tn th iS ty pe of tn-house
ftghlmg
!'here IS worr y too 111 th e ht ghet ec helons of Tt easurv
Co mm erce and tn the Whtle House tl sel f Th ts tepot let ts
told that one reason Petet Petet so n now Co mmerce Departm ent sec tclat y left hts Whtte House economic post
so qutc kl) was that bUilt-Ill ttvalt v wtth the KISsinger
gt oup made hts JOb ail bu t ttnposs to le
The concet n ove r KISstnge t 's role IS tn part a pt obIem of nat111 al pet sonal JOustin g In pat t tl ts a confltct
of nattunal sec ut tly and fore rgn poltcv concepts But
ther e Is m01 e

A maJO t ptoblem ts KtSs tn get 's tsola ttO n He has fe w
tnltmate f11 ends lew men he It usts tnt ellectually. He
gets no determtned at gumcnt s h om hiS sta ff They
tunnel rn atcrtal to httn he ptcks a nd chooses Thus
then· at e ft&gt;" men wh o ca n pound at h1 s 1deas Ull tii the
bugs at e beaten out
t:vet y man thiS 1eportet has talked to conceded Kt sstngct 's b11lttance as a ht stonan And as a novel and
mnov att ve mmd ca pahle of des rgmng precedent shatter
mg concepts But th en pe rsiStent wort y tS that t&gt;ory
castle Brtlltant tdeas trequentl} have unexpectedlv
se11ous mdn ect effects tf not argued at length bv men
wl\h dtffet ent types of expemnce
Yet qu tte fr equ entl y the men who ate to be key actors
tn any dec tston heat about a new lme much too late to
make mea mn gful changes
The n too Kt ssmger ts a thmk et not an operati ons
man ' Hem y does n I know how to ca rt y thmgs out and
he won t let" others tn on the opera lions says one colleague 'Even well-thought-out td eas have operattonal
bugs The stde effec ts can break you It s a one-man
show and one-man shows are dange rous ·
Wttness th e btlter unnecessary Stde effects of tw o 1e
cent K1ssmg:er mvolvement s

The Chtna h tp as ca11 ted out resulted m a neat diS aster tn Japan It undet cut out closest fnends 111 th'at
tSiand country. tht eatened a se11ous loosc .ung of Tok yo's
close ltes wtth the Umted Sta tes
The h agedy ts that 11 need not ha ve been The Japanese
government dti:l not obJec t to an openmg 111 Chma Tokyo
rn ract wanted a Chma approach. and had held off only
at the tnSistence of the Umted States
The problem lay tn the way Ktssmger earned out the
plan We dtd not take the Japanese mto our confidence
The need for thiS close collaboratiOn wtth our ailtes m
advance or actton has been recogmzed publicly and prt
vately by Ktssmger m the strongest terms But m practice he ~lipped up A cross ftre of sptnted argument
before the action would cet tamly have resulted m shtfts
111 techmque whtch could have prevent ed the shock to
Japan
The Ki sSinger-mspued beiund-the-scenes negottattons
to prevent the lndta-Paktslan wat was a bnlhant ap
proach But 11 mtsfu ed. as Is qutle evtdent now. because
of the way the plan was camed out Som• sharp preaotton discussions mtght have changed the pictut e

Jones 1S
7 30 - Masterprece Theatre 33 . Mod Squad 13. Jerry Reed 8,
10 . Mr Rogers 20 Home Run Heroes 3, Televtston Forum 6
8 00 - Magg1e and the Beauhful Mach1ne 20 . All Star Pre

Game Show 3, 4, IS
8 lS - Baseball All Star Game 3 ; ,

tb
8 30 - Evenmg al Pops 20 33, Mo vte ' Th e People,' 6 13 ,
Hawau F tve 0 8, 10

RAY CROMLEY

By Paul Crabtree
What would you thmk tf a top engmeer at GM, Ford or' Otrysler announced that a new car was bemg developed, and desert bed
II hke this
Well, tl'll have four wheels, and probably an engme, and
there'll be some place for the people to sit m 11, and It won't be
any smaller or larger than the cars on the road
You'd say he's nuts - rtght? Because a descrtptton like this
could apply to a 1909 Model T, or a 1973 Rolls-Royce Totally
unsattsfactory, to say Ute least.
But such generalization IS not only acceptable, but even
routme, m the wild, wtld world of televtston.
ABC a!Ulounces a new "departure" m daytune 1V fare, gals
- away from the soaps and quwes
But what ts tt• Why, ABC tsn't really saymg- and you get
the unpresston they really don't know.
It'snot gomg to be a dally show, or really a series But, on the
other hand, It may appear fairly regularly (and what else is a
sertes?)
It won't have a "cast," although two characters will be
regulars And tt won't be an "anthology," which indicates some
sort of continuity from eptsode to eptsode.
Wild as tt may be, frankly I'm lookmg forward to the show and wtth good reason, I think Frrst episode is tomorrow, I· 30
p m., WHTN-lV.
Despite the never-never land of TV program development,
the ABC people have two solid characters lined up as stars, and
they can handle a broad, broad variety of comedy asstgllliients.
One is Henry Gtbson, the addled poet and sanctunonious
parson or "Laugh-ln." The other is Rose-Marte, the self-effaClllg
master of the put-&lt;lown on the old Dick Van Dyke Show. Both are
pros, and tf anyone can brtghten the afternoons on AB, I'd put my
money on ,them.
So, although ABC won:t say exactly what creature they're
spawning, the Henry Gibson-Rose-Marie combination does offer
some surcease from the endless parade of paste&lt;kln smiles of the
quiz show hosts, and the equally artificial miseries of the soap
operas, wtth their trtals, dtvorces, mfidelittes, and assorted

9 30 - Cannon 8. 10, Handfuls ot Ashes 33. Doln' rf 20
10 00 -

News Weather. Sports 20 . F1r lng Lme 33

Mar cus

Welby. M D 6, 13
10 30 - Arthur Sm1lh 8

II 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
II 30 - D1 ck Cavett 6, Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Mov1e

Night

Chase" 8, Mov&gt;e • A Prize ol Gold, ' 10 , Movie • So Big " 13
WEDNESDAY. JULY 26
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
6 IS - Farmtlme tO 6 20 - Farm Reporl 13 6 25 - Paul
Harvey 13
6

30 - Columbus Today 4, News, Weather Spo.-ts

Answers 8, Urban League Prsents 10, Glory Road 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13
6 45 - Corncolr Report 3 Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13.

6,

Brble

Romper
Room 6. CBS News 8. 10
7 008today 3. 4, 15 . News 6, B. 13
7,JO - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jetfers 3. Underdog 13
8 00 - Captain Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 13, 6, Sesame
St 33
8 JO -

Tennessee

TuJ~;edo

HALL OF FAME SI'ARTERS
NEW YORK (UPI)- Aiex
Webster, head coach of the
New York Giants, announced
Monday that Randy Johnson
would be his startmg quarterBy JACK WILKINSON
back thts Saturday agaUISt the
ATLANTA
(UPI) - The
Kansas City Chiefs in the Hall
heavy
htttmg
National
League
of Fame game at Canton , Ohio
All-Stars, wtth a somewhat
reluctant startmg pitcher, take
on the Amertcan League's best
tomght In a National League
stadium noted for tis home
runs
The Nallonals, gunrung for
thetr 13th VIctory 1n the last 15
games, wtll be aunmg for the
fences m the cozy confmes of

Nationals Are Favores

Bengals Will

Make Cuts

On Saturday

mca

Television Log

6, Jack Lalanne 13

8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4. Phil Donahue 15. Jack ie Oblinger 8, Lucl's
Tovshoo tO. Pevton Place 13. What Every Woman Wants to
Know 3, T1mr.1y , Lassie 6. Mrs Rogers JJ

9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas 6, My Three Sons 8.
One Lrle lo Live 13 , Electric Co 33
9 55 - Chuck Wh tte Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS , Lucrlle Ball tO . Drck Van Dyke 13,
Hathayoga 33
10 JO - Concentration 3. 15. Phrl Donahue 4, Spilt Second 13 , My
Three Sons 10. Beverly Hlllbllt•es 8, In School lnslructron 33.
Love, Amencan Style 6

11 00 - Sale ot Century 3, 15 , Family Altair 8 Love American
Style 13 , Commun1que 6

11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4. IS· Bewltched6, IJ , Love of Lrle
8, tO, Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy J. 15. Bob Braun's SO so Club 4, Local News 10.
News 13. Medicine 20. Contact 8. Password 6
12 30 - 3W's Gamel, 15, Spilt Second 6 , Search for Tomo.-row 8,
10 12 55 - NBC News 3, IS
t 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Ch ildren 6, 13 Watch
Your Child 15; Divorce Courl 8. Green Acres 10, French Chef
33
1 20 - Lucille Rivers J
1. 30 - 3 On AMatch J, ; , 15 , As The World Turns 8. 10. Sewrng
Skills ll. AFB Afternoon Playbreak 6, 13.
2 00 - Days of Our Ltves, 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game IJ , Virg inia
Graham6 , LoveSptendored Thlng8, 10, BrldgeJJ.
2 30 - Doclo.-s 3, 4. 15; Dating Game 13, Guiding Light 8, 10.
Handfuls of Ashes 33.
3 00 - Another World 3, ;, IS, General Hosprtal 6. IJ. Secret
Storm 8. 10. Masterprece Theatre 33
mmor sms.
J 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, ; , 15; One Life to Live 6, Edge
of Night 8, 10. Jeff's Cottle 13
+++
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Somerset 4. 15, Fllntstones 13; Sesame
The new sbow wtll continue, on a hit.flkip basis, Into the fall
St 20,33 , Huckleberry Hound6 ; Batman8, Movie "Sierra" tO
(ABC isn~ saying much about this, etther).
4 30 - Green Acres 3; Merv Grltfln 4, I Love Lucy 6; Virginian
8, Password 13. Andy Grllflth 15
I think I'll make one other observation about Utts program:
5
00 - Wagon Train J, Mister Rogers 33, Maverick 13, Dick
The Van Dyke Show flotDldered for a season or more, and ahnost
Van Dyke 15 , Big Valley 6
felt the ax due to poor ratings, before its characterizations (Rose- 5 30 - Marshall Dixon 15; Electric Co 33.
- News, Weather, Sports J. 4. 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6.
Marie's mcluded) crystallized and made it a long..-un hit. And 6 I00Dream
of Jeannie 13; SesameS! 20, Hathayoga 33
people are still wondering just what "Laugh-In" really ts. So we 6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15. ABC News 6, 13 , CBS News 8, 10 ·
~-ll
'
not only have two proven stars- they surely must be adaptable
7
00
News,
Weather,
Sports
6,
10,
Elec.
Co.
20;
Wild,
Wild
ones, too.
West 13; Millstones ot Progress 33; Movie "Joe Butterfly" J·
Dick Van Dyke 4, What's My Line 8.
'
+++
ON TilE TV DIAL: One of those rare nights -a summer 7 JO - Episode Action 33 , To Tell The Truth 6, Doctors on Call
IS ; DragnetS; The Judge 10, Mr Rogers 20.
evenmg of very good lV. Baseball's big midsummer night, the 8;,00Lassie
- The Super 6. IJ. Adam 12 ;, IS ; Davia Steinberg 8 tO •
Public Affairs 20, lJ
' '
All.Star Game from Allanta, will pit the class of the National and
- ColumboJ, 4, 15, Corner Bar 6. tJ. Movie "The Cabinet
American leagues, WSAZ-TV at 8. The most-followed local 8of30Dr
Callgara," 20, 33
teams, the Pirates and Reds, dominate the NL squad ... "Reach 9 00 - Marly Feddman Comedy Machine 13, Mo•le "The
Green Eyed Blond," 6; Medical Center 8, 10.
•1
Out With Music" features a concert at Cincinnati's Eden Park,
9
30
Kopycats
13.
,
7:30pm., WLWC-TV ... And Ohioans should enjoy a political tO 00 - Ntghl Gallery J, 4, 15; Mannix 8, 10, Soul 33, News
round-table, with Democratic Gov. John Gilli-an and the
We.ther, Spo.-ts 20.
'
Republican leadersbtp of the General A5Sembly, 7:30 on WTVN· 10 JO- ABC News Inquiry 6, 13
II 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3. 4, 6, 8. 10, IJ, 15.
1V ... And, later, Dick Cavett spends 90 minutes chattmg with TV 11
30 - Johnny Car""n 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Movie "The
pioneer Allen FWlt, 11·30 on WTVN-TV.
Biggest Bundle of Them All," 8, Movie "UpStairs . and
Down•talrs," 10, Movte "The FBI Story," 13.
Movies: "Prize of Gold," 11:30 p.m., and "Sierra," 4 p.m.
t: 00 - News and Wealher 4.
Wednesday, both WBNS-TV.
1:30 - Local NeW$ IJ

wiLMINGTON . Ohio
(UPI) 1'he Cmcmnati
Bengals will scrunmage for the
first time Ill summer trmmng
camp Saturday, and then the
ax wiU fall on a few who had
hoped to make the team
"We'll probably cut two or
three people after our scrunmage Saturday," coach Paul
Brown said Monday .
Performance In the scrunmage and tests the players
took last weekend wtll help
Brown make hts mtnd up about
who aeto cut.
"What we're looking for Is
players who, g(J'ierally, know
wlult the entire team does on a
gtven play," he satd. "That will
help them In every phase of the

game "

Atlanta Stadium, whtch twtce

m Its seven-year htstory has
led the league m homers htt
As if 111 anttctpation, the fans
voted m a raft of home run
hitters, tncludmg catcher
Johnny Bench of Cmcmnatt,
who bas 24, rightfielder Hank
Aaron of Atlanta and ftrst
baseman Lee May of Houston,
each wtth 20, and Ptttsburgh's
Wtlhe Stargell, the left ftelder,
who has htt 19
Addmg to the power, exPittsburgh sktpper Danny

Colmnhus Pro-am
Action
• un d erway
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Picture Mr Average Golfer
teemg off on the No. 1 bole of
his favortte golf course before
10,000 people, trying to
remember to keep his head
down, take the club back
slowly and follow through
That was Bob Tatum, who

round Ntcklaus, who sbot a 74
over his former home Sctoto
Oluntry Club Course, told Ute
group's htgh handicapper not
to let 11 bother hun when he
scuffed a shot
Although Tatum ptcked up
the ball on several holes, he
ftgured he fmtshed with about a

16

95

never played belore more

than 25 people before."
Monday when he and hts 16
handicap were teamed wtth a
group headed by Jack Ntcklaus
and Bob Hope at the seventh
annual Ollumbus Pro-Am Golf
Tournament
"My band was shakmg so, I
could hardly put 11 on the tee,"
satd the 47-year-old petroleum
geologiSt, "but I really laced

Missing thiS weekend's
scnmmage wtll be three
rooktes who are wtth the
College All .Stars preparmg for
their game Frtday mght m
Chicago wtth the world It "
champion Dallas Cowboys.
"Really," Tatum, a native of
They are Tom De Leone, Ohto Texas who moved to Canton
State's All-Arnencan center, three years ago from Olney, DL
Slerman White, the Bengals' satd, "I played better than 1
No I draft chotce thts year, thought I would. I was very
and Tom Casanova, a cor- nervous before we startrd, but
nerback from U&gt;utstana Slate. when we got started, I cooled
The Bengals, meanwhile, are down.''
holding tWJce-a-&lt;lay drills this
He said he woke up at 4 am .
week. Therr fiTst exhibition giVing him some eight hours to
game wtll be Aug. 4 agamst the sweat out before hts noon tee
Green Bay Packers.
time
Shook Him Up
"I don't know of anythmg
that could shake a guy up
more," Tatum said, but "It
was absolutely the greatest
FAMILY RETURNS
thmg that's ever happened to
Mr and Mrs Charles me''
Goegletn, and chtldren
Hope and Nicklaus, both, of
Charlene, Mtchael and Mark,' course, expenenced at perhave returned home after formmg before large galleries
vtstllng at Dtsney World , or audiences, trted to help keep
Flortda Whtle In Flonda they Tatum and hts other two amavtstted wtth Mr and Mrs teur partners at ease.
Larry Roush of Wmter Haven
Hope, a pretty fair golfer
and Mrs Margaret Heaton of himself, advtsed Tatum to slow
Bradenton
down on his swing early m the

"I never once worried about
hittmg anybody," he smd. "My
mam thought was JUSt domg
what I was capable of "
Tatum's wtfe, Betty, "a 34
handicapper," followed him
around mstde the roped off
faiTweys "She didn't Jump on
me for any of my bad shots,"
he satd
Trevloo Complains
Top money wmners m the
event were Gtbby Gtlbert, who
fiTed a four-under-par 67 over
the 6,4~yard Sctoto Course to
take top tndtvtdual honors, and
Bob Shaw, who had a 72 to lead
)tis team to a best-ball 12underpar 59, one sbot better
than three other teams
Ed Sneed, a Columbus
nattve, and Homero Blancas
both had 69s to take second
money among mdlVldual
ftmsbers, whtle Tom Wetskopf,
yet another Columbusite,
fmtshed wtth one-under 70
Jun Jamieson had a 7las his
team hed for second with a 60
along with those of Omck
Courtney and Lee Bonse. Other
7ls were turned in by U&gt;u
Graham, John Schroeder, .run
Gerrlng and amateur Rick
Jones.
Lee Trevtno, who had most of
the morning gallery to himself
and complamed of the rough
treatment he received from
autograph seekers, ftred a
three-under 33 on the front stde
but faded to a 40 on the back
nine for a 73
Hope and Ntcklaus planned
to take part today In an exhibi·
tion match in Cincinnati for the
benefit of the Bob Hope House,
a home for teenage boys needmg guidance and a healthy environment .
It marks Hope's seventh exhibition match to rwse money
for the project.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

City Editor

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Sllfurday by Tht Oh10 Valley
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The Browns' No. I draft
choice this year, Mtchigan's
Tom Darden, IS at the College
All.Star trammg camp tn Dllinots and will start at defenstve
back in the game Frtday mght
against the Dallas Cowboys.
manton Collier' the former
Browns' head coach, looked In
on Darden at the camp and reported back his unpresstons of
the rookie
" ! liked hts hustle and the
way he came up to make tackles," said Collier
The Browns are practicing
twice a day this week and will
scrlnunage agam Saturday.
The Browns annoWlced Monday that tickets for thetr game
with the Cinclllnati Bengals
Sept. 3 m Columbus wtll start
being mailed Aug. 15 and
should all be delivered by Sept.

ON DISPlAY. COME IN &amp; SEE THEM TODAY.

Ttdewater

52

Rochester
Toledo

RJChmond

Syracuse
Penrnsuta

St 47
SO 48

531

2

520 3
StO 3'12

47

485

6'1?

46

46

SO

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The Browns also said that
center Fred Hoaglin had
agreed to contract terms for
his seventh season wtth the
team

552

•

•

469 8
388 16

38 60
Monday 1s Results

Loursvrtre 2 Richmond 0 (tst )
Loursv.lle 7 Rrchmond 6 {2nd)
Rochester t Charleston 0

Tidewater 2 Syracuse o

Toledo 4 Pentnsula J {1st)
Penrnsula 17 Toledo 7 !2nd)

.-···--- .---·•

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I

OLYMPIC SCULLS STAR
MOSCOW (UPI)- Yurt Malyshev of the Sovtet Umon won
his country's smgle sculls
champtonshtp Monday With a
tune of 7 00 6 desptte a 90degree heat and thus establtshed htmself a dehmte
Utreat for the Olympic gold
medal m Mumch.

"I'm only now gettmg to correct the things I was doing last
year, such as looking mto the
offenstve backfteld," Scott satd
Monday.
"But the btg thmg IS that I
feel so good out there," he satd.
"That means so much."
Scott had several problems
last Saturday durmg the
team' s scrtmmage. Frank
Pitts caught a 65-yard pass
from quarterback Mtke Phipps
and managed to elude Scott to
score. Then he was called for
mterference on a 15-yard toss
to Pttts.
Scott took over the cornerback posttion in the second
quarter of the Browns' frrst
exhibition game last year and
bas been in all but one game

e THE 11'7.2 "ORO

QUICK DRY

ROlE RT HOEFLICH,

ease."

son, Allen, leftfielder Carl
Yastrzemskt of Boston, surprise starter Bobby Grtch of
Balttmore at shortstop, lhtrd
baseman Brooks Robinson ,
also of Baltunore, catcher Bill
Freehan of Detroit and
Pahner
Murtaugh wtll lead off WJth
second baseman Joe Morgan of
Cmctnnalt, centerftelder
Ruberto Clemento of Ptttsbm gh, makmg hts 12th AllStar appearance, Aaron m
rtght, Stargell m left. catcher
Bench, fiTst baseman Lee May
of Houston, third baseman Joe
Torre of St. U&gt;uts, last year's
most valuable player, shortstop Don Kessmger of Chicago
anll Gtbson.
A standing..-oom-only crowd
of more than 53,999 fans , plus a
natiOnal televtston audtence is
m prospect for the ftrst All-star
game played m the South. The
National League holds a 23-18-1
edge
First ptlch ts scheduled for
8 30 p m EDT.

PORCH AND FLOOR

Euc Ed.

the

Murtaugh, who came back to
manage the Nationals, chose
slugger Btlly Wtlltams of the
Chtcago Cubs and Nate Colbert
of San Diego as oulfteld subs
Each has belted 22 homers this
year
"There'll be qmte a few
homers htt Tuesday mght,"
predicted Aaron , the greatest
hvtng home run htlter and
playmg m hiS own park
But the two teams will have
lo go some to top the Six home
run productiOn of the 1971
game, whtch the American
League won 6-4 It wtll be a
Iough feat, even for the
beckomng bleachers of Atlanta
stadium
Ftreballer Bob Gtbson of St
Louts, who "If I bad my
druthers," would be a reltever
and not a starter, was tabbed
by Murtaugh to open for the
Nationals Muflaugh ,
dtsregardmg Gtbson's
statement that he would rather
only pttch one I!Ulmg because
he was scheduled to start m a
regular season game Thursda), satd the Cardmal ace bad
"earned the rtght" to start.
Gtbson, currently the hottest
pttcher m the majors, has won
11 stratght after droppmg hts
frrst ftve
American League manager
Earl Weaver of Balttmore
chose hts own righthander Jun
Palmer (13-4) over 17-game
wmner Mickey Loltch of
Detroit and Gaylord Perry of
Cleveland, who has won 16 He
satd [.()Itch would follow
Pahner and tf Perry felt like tl
(he pttched Sunday), he would
pttch next.
Dick Allen or the Chicago
White Sox, who played for the
National League in four previous All-Star games , and
Reggte Jackson of Oakland,
who htt one of last year's
homers, provtde the long ball
threat for Weaver's American
League team. Allen bas htt 22
and Jackson 18
Weaver named second baseman Rod Carew of Mmnesota
to lead off, followed by Bobby
Murcer of the New York
Yankees m center field. Jack-

CHIEF (Chicago)

DEVOTED TO THE
I~TEREST OF
ME IG 5 - MASO~ AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,

Senhn~l

.'·- .

Cornerback

1'EN YEARS AGO, Jim Bunning of the Detroit Tigers opened the first of 1962's two
All Star games by pitching to Dick Groat of Pittsburgh, left. llrooks Robinson or
Baltlmor~ later had words for umpire Mel Steiner, abo~e, as the National League
won at \\ashingtou, 3-1. The American League came back three \leeks later to beat
the Nationals at Chicago's Wrigley Field, 9-4.

Th e bJddmg has been

•

or

\\ a hh •

At Ease At ,

All Star Action: 1961

WIN AT BRIDGE

c.:o urage bnd ge player s to

1

went the distance f&lt;•r Mtd- when he lea ped up to snag
dleporl, was w btg trouble Terry Lucas' hard liner and
lw1ce, cmce 1n the second wh en doubled Bruce Arnett off third.
twrr smgles and three walks That made two out, and the
netted two run s f or Ches htre thtrd came when Ben Arnett
and agatn tn · the top or the groWlded out to short
vic.:l or) over Cheshire 1n a se v enth wh en a h1 t, an en or
For Cheshire Bruce Arnett
make-up gam e tn the Ga ll ta •nd a walk ftlted the bases wt th and Ben Arnett, each had two
Metgs Pony League Monday nobody out
&gt;tngles and Chns Preston,
event ng at th e Mtdd le porl
ln the ftrst mstance he was Tc t ry Lucas and Blazer each
Park.
saved when shorts top Bnan one smgle
Tire htthng parade was at the Lucas popped out to MidOther Middleport httters
expense of Cheslure's lefty Jeff dleport shortstop Magnotl&lt;l for ' were Perk Ault and Eh EbersBlazer who a mon th ago had the third out In the seventh baclr, each wtth a smgle
held the same squad to one thndsacker Chrts Mtlter mad~
Mtddleport plays Pomeroy
scratch smgle m seven 1nn1ngs
the defenstve pla y of the day tlus eve mng at 6 30 then
Rt ghthander_Whttlatch, who
iltdwelt Wednesday, both at
Mtddleport, and concludes Its
season Frtday at Vmton
SCIOTO RES ULTS
Mtdd leport ts 7-4, 1n thtrd
COLUMBUS I UP! )
pl ace behtnd Btdweii and
Fnsco's Va lentme won the Pomeroy Cheshire IS 6-S, in
featured etghth race Monday fourth place, wtUt games at
mght at Sctolo Downs by one home aga mst Vmton tomght
and a half lengths tn It ont of and Racme, to be scheduled.
Btg Red Machme Brenna Scot Ches htre
022 000 {)-.1 8 1
11as thtrd
Mdd A
400 410 X-9 11 I
The ftve-year-old geldtng
HIRAM, Ohio (UPI )- ClarBlazer and Ben Arnett, Wtse
ence Scott , the Cleveland covered the nule 111 2 09 4-5, (5) Wlutlatch and Stobart,
Ault {7)
Browns' second-year corner- returmng $11 , $7 and $4 80
The
4,124
pa
trons
at
the
track
back, says one of the differUmptres J Tannehtll, Dtck
Vaughan
ences between now and last bet a total of $233,764
season ts that he feels "at

Scott Feels

THOUGHTS

o 11 my WCll!
I IH /(l!j (Ill(/ tU niiii /UUi (11 /d fiH.'
du y jo flmm11cJ (o1 1r t rt nlotl

Tmtely lrt tttn g by Terry
Wlrttlatch, Mtke Magnotta , and
Clrrts Mtller , each wtth two,
and Rtck St11bart, three St ogies
"' f~&gt;ur at bats, led the Middleport "A" Pony squad to" 9-4

--

•

tlunk and while the book ts
and Tomorrow
rather advanced 11 ts well
Founded Religion
wot th t eadtn g by an yone
The Mormon rehgion was \'4ho wants to ge t a ftrst hand
t\11d IH! son/ tu t llfm
(;(} he tlw t a pwphet sho'' '''
tounded
by Joseph Smtih Jr look at expet t lhmkmg
IIIUI tell rlwt fv t Be lt ole/ I {Je /I S/1 aWU'lj {1 0 111 / tNSIISfl
TUESDAY, JULY2S
When
he
was 25. he organHere we fmd J tm 111 a nor- 6 00 ~ N ew s 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , I Dream of Jeanme
ca ~ L our denrtms cw d pe r
'errr - Luke 13 32 33
ned the Church of Jesus ma l t h1 ee no-trump contract
fonn c u1 e~ l udn 11 uH&lt;f fom r11
or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20 , Hathayoga JJ
Chmt
of Latter Day Samts l'he heat t lead makes 11 1111 6 3013-, Truth
um. w ul tl !t! t1 111 &lt;1 dar, 1
News 3, ;, 6, 8, 10. 15 Grand Masten Chess 33
l'r u g 1ess IS the a c tivit~ ul at Fayette, N Y m 1830
7 00 - News 6, Elec Co 20 Farmers Daughter 13. lnsighl 33 .
jun ~ /1 mtJ &lt;: ou rse Neve t tlw· tollat aml th t;! a~s m ullt: c ul
le ss 1 nu tsf giJ

-

Ford Team's '72 Showdown
Ctaaranco Sate.

•

at

MOORE'S
POMEIOY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2141

See Your Nearest Ford Dealer Today • ••

1

I

�2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July ~. 1972

EDITORIAL

l.n Medical Work
A look at the orgamzatton du1 mg 11 ~ 5Ji ve t ann I\ VI sal\
celebratiOn shows that much has changed- tncludmg tht•
name Todav the mote than 5111100 ph ys tctans call themPh~:slcl a n:;

tAAFPI
The AAFP ts the onl\ nat tonal medtcal ot gamz atwn
that 1 equu es tis membet s to take 1511 hout s ol appt·oved
conlmumg &lt;'duc atmn PVe l' \' th1·ep \ears A numi.&gt;t'r of
state medical 01 gamzatiOn s al so havE&gt; Slmtlal 1 equue

ments
"Educatton ha s continued to be a btg thmg wtth us
and not JUSt conllnmng educatton. · savs Dt .Jetonw
Wtldgen AAFP pt·estdent
'There IS now a spectalty of fanuly medtcme that cetlt
lies doc tots tn thiS dtsctphne by exammatton thet eby
furntshmg proof to the publtc and pt oless10n that these
men ate sktlled and competent So vou see the acad
emy's conststent focus on educatton has btought fanul v
medtctne a long way from the hot se and buggy Dt
Wtldgen says
Twent) -ftve )eatS ago t~et e were plenty of famtly doc
tors 74 5 pet cent or all ductot s wet e genet al pt acll
lloners. but they were not 01 gamzed and fast gom g
down the dt am 111 the face of met easmg spectahzatron
Indeed by 1970 only 16 per cent of all doctotS wete GPs
It was the raptd rrse m medtcal spectaltzalton that al
most sounded the death knell f01 the famtly doctot ~' ewet
and fewer medtcal students became mtet ested tn gomg
mto famtlv practice medtcme and there gtew a certam
rtng of nonpreshge m the pht ase that a doctot was just
a general practitioner ·
All of thiS occulted not onlv to the chag11n ol dedt
cated. well educated ramtiv doctors but to the dts ma'
of the people who were bemg It eat ed bv good old Dt
Jones whom I have known all my life

Just as tmportant was that 'Doc knew Ius pattent s
too Not Just then allerg\ acne 01 adenoids. but all of
them The total patten!. and Ius famtly too
and m many c ases 1t wa s II ue

that such doct01 s Simply dtd nut keep up wtth new medt
cal ad1 ances Genet al practtttonet s wet e Ihought to be
generalists . guys who wet en t good enough or dedicated
enough to go on to become spectaltsts
It look a number of years fot the ot·gamzallon ol tam
tl~ doctors to become sufflctentl) ot gantzed to agam IJcgm to rebuild both the ptesllge and the ranks of tam th
practice phySicians
Toda y there IS a 1estdency 11 ammg svstem m lanuly
medtcme- just as fat other spec rahsts- and the svstem
encompasses more than tOO Amettcan Medrcal Assn
approved reSidencies and some 700 1estdents There at e
today departments or dtvtstons for teachmg famtl v medt
cme to students m more than 50 Umted States medtcal
schools
It would seem that the famtl y phvStctan todav would
have a lot more studvmg to do than any of hiS super
spectaltsl colleagues After all how man y limes mote
knowledge does a doctor need to deal wtth a whole per son
than wtth an y of that person 's pat Is'
To be sure spectailsts should plav an tmpmtant part m
the practice of medtcme
But as the nat ton s medrcal cunsumet s can attest we
are tired of doctors who treat us as cases tnstead uf people Three cheers for the AAFP. and heres hopmg the'
succeed 1n putttng more ·ramrlv mto the practtce ol
medJcmf

. ..

. ...·.·. ··. ··. ·-::: :· ..

:-·

JAt;K O'BRIAN
NEW YORK \KFSl - Once upm a
theatncal tune there was a movte called "The
Bowery," and then a movte titled "42nd St "and
last uptown~nobile street-tune out, "52nd St ,
detathng the JOys of j)tzz and rowdy :!!&gt;-yearsago nocturnal fun . It 's been our longrun contention that the showbtz hub of Manhattan agam
slowly ts moving north , thiS tune to the area
around E 57th St , where hteraiiy dozens of
movte houses have opened, ptggyback doubletheater SIZe in several mstances; and they have
bee~ surrounded by hundreds of shops, snack
bars, restaurants and other attracllons. 42nd St.
Isn't dead but 11 IS diseased.
The movement north and east of legttunate
theaters won 'I happen m a hurry, there tsn 't
enough morrey in operating theaters to start a
rush of such new showcases anywhere The
~ubert Theatrtcal Emptre JUSt tossed down the
gauntlet to Mayor John lindsay that 1! the
theatrtcal area tsn 't cleaned up even more than
the commendable lldymg accomphshed
recently, Shubert Will sell a flock of tis fmest
theatres (on 44th and 45th Sis ) to an eagerly
awattmg real estate ftrm , object - offtce
skyscrapers, whtch would clean up the
theatrtcal area mdeed - to the pomt of
steTiltzallon It would become as lively at mght
as Wail St m the same hours A few mamtenance people, httle recreation
Ah r But what about 57th St ? It's a great
street, a styhsh fatl-safe m case everything
fmally d.,.. move north and east It's hardly a
fallow prairie even now It stops betng rafftsb
and dangerous east of 8th Ave, starts perking
prethly around 7th Avenue where Carnegie Hall
potses majesttcaiiy wtth two huge apartment
butldmgs on netghbormg (Northeast and Northwest) corners Scads of affluent showfolk
mhabtt the ptle of flats across from Carnegie
Hall Barbara Walters, song,\Titers, silent, but
not very, star Carmel Myers, even the
celebTities' chromcler Earl Blackwell who has a
penthouse whtch contams a ballroom m turn
crammed wtth partyable celebnttes of stage,
screen and mtddle-soctety Diagonally across
from Carnegie Haiits The Osborne, A Stanford
White-&lt;lestgned sohd anltqmty whose tenants
have mcluded everyone from opera and concert
stars down to Leonard Bernstem Make that up
tf you're a Bernstemphtle
Movmg nght along East on 57th, Uncle
Sam's Umbrella Shop Prest dents, even kings,
have bought hts bumbershoots and walking
canes (Harry Truman, Junmy Walker most
Amencan - notably ) Carnegie Hall Studios
nses abaft The Hall, full of classtcal mstructors
and to make tl chtc, Bobby Short. The RusSian
Tea Room, populariZed by liberal-to-ttlt~earung
actors, producers, drrectors etc . totters to port
BY

Just over 25 vears ago the Amel u. an Atadt.'IH) nl t,clt·
et·al Ptacllce was lounded bl phystctans 111 an Allan tll
City. N J.. hotel

Many felt , howeve1

'0

, . , ,.,.,., 7 1 1

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 25,1972
·~

Voice along Br'Way

Putting 1 Famil{

selves the Amencan Academy of Farm !\

:a.'uc

·.·. ·.· ·:;

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel
•
•
IS DAD AS BAD AS HE SEEMS?
Dear Helen and Sue .
I'd hate my father even if l wasn't related to him. Here are
some of the stupid things he does :
He tries to help Mom with the wasbmg and turns our clothes
all different colors. Then he complams about a light left on m the
daytime. Here he's cost us maybe fifty dollars m rumed clothes
and yet he makes an mteinat10nal mctdent out of a few cents'
worth of electricity.
He hollers and raves about me not domg any work. l do 11 but in my own tune.
He quit drinking and thinks we should do homage to hiS great
will power. But I can only remember when he was an alcohohc
and how much pain he caused us.
One time my sister and I were havmg a ststerly ftght. He tore
mto the room like a super-ltero, knocked me down on the bed, and
then satd, "I'm sorry, but I had to do 11 ... JUSt like a doctor siaps
a hysterical patient. " Who was hystertcal' We were only havmg
a httle disagreement.
He yells at my older lrother who doesn 't gtve my mother any
board money smce he's got a full tune job
Our family ts split down the middle, With my mother and
sister on my father's stde, and me, my brother and my cat on
"our" side.
l started smoking when !was 12because my father got me so
nervous.) don't want to rum my hfe wtth drugs, but that wtll be
next if he doesn't shape up.
Please don't say talk tl over WJth my mother. I've already
done that. No help. - N W
Dear N:
It occurs to me that you and your father are of the same
mold: both nervous, quick-tempered, a little trigger-ltappy
... And you're both overly eager to blame the other person
uke breeds hke, but tl also breeds DISlike because you mirror
each other's faults
Instead of stding wtth your older brother (who seems a btl
selfish on the board-money thing), start comparing your actions
with those of your dad's Then, next time he blows up, be the
"different one." Somebody bas to change first How about you '
- HELEN

+++
Dear N.W. :
The saying, "Everyone sbould have a graveyard for the
faults of his friends" goes double for parents!
Why must you remember all the bad things about your dad
and give hun no credtt for I. Staying dry; 2. Trymg to help; 3
Caring about you.
You say he "drove you to smokmg, and drugs mtght be
next." What drove HIM to booze? ·
What mtght drive him back to booze? Don't let it be you r SUE
Rap:

•
Speaking of marrtage, "Afraid to Otance It" has a new
survey on her side Only 53 pet. of wives questioned said they
would definitely choose the same mate tf they had tl to do over
again. Nearly one fourth- 22 pet. SBld they weren't sure, and a
whopping 25 pet. said ''No way t ! " .
That pretty well cotncides with our one-m.three-or-four
divorce rate. - M. P.
M.P.:
Hm-m-m-m ... Wonder bow husbands would answer that
question? - HELEN
P .S. Almost anythmg you tackle In life has a 50.50 chance,
and IIOIDetimes the odds are a lot higher If three-fourths of the
wives questioned are either happy, contented, or "maybe," then
the institution of mamage isn't as threatened or threatemn~; as
110111e moderns think. Right? ;- HELEN AND SUE

preclselv wl&gt;&lt;or&lt;• tis good humored ndverttsmg
annotlllCed, · " utile to the Left of Carnegie
Ha l! ' Barbara Walters goes there because it's
clrhc lo h• .. c , she hkes Dick Nixon, In fact,
wh •cn makC!&gt; her hardly popular with showbtz
types such as Zero Mostel, to bottom things out.
The street starts getting even classier as you
saunter closer lo 5th Ave. :
Henry Bendel gets the chtc-buds rollmg,
and at 57th &amp; 5th ts the very stylish Bergdorf.
Goodman block wherein owner Andrew
Goodman (Andrew retamed ownership of the
real estate and land when he peddled hi$ great
store to Broadway-Hale) IS the official janitor:
no one may tive m a N Y commercial building
except the jamtor. Ergo, Andrew utularly
sweeps up mghts, mostly after parties tn his
splendtd top-floor apartment, one party Andrew
tossed there startled even our neo-jaded enthustasm - Be My Goodman's band accompanymg Ella Fitzgerald were paid performers
Diagonally across from Andrew's pad is
Tiffany's; null satd. BonWJI Teller surrounds
Tiffany's m an architectural "L" building.
Downstreet shghtly ts Knoedler's art gallery
now owned by Vtctor Hammer who still owns hiS
old gallery on 57th St. E. of MadiSOn Ave.
Cepelia Corp ts the font of Pohsb artifacts at 5
E. 57th St., James RobUISOn's fabulous antique
stiver and porcelainS and jewelry from
Elizabethan tbrough George IV IS at 12 East.
The Incurable Collector IS a rtchly mventorted
antique shop at 36 East, reportedly owned by
.Jules St.elfi, chatrman of MCA.
Portratts Inc. at 41 East, agents lor some
200 of the finest phtzz pamters Anttques sbops
galore !me both stdes of 57th St down to
l;exmgton Ave.; betwixt ts Le Pavtllon
restaurant for affluent wallets, medtum prtced
to drugstore cuiSme and snackertes further
along. In the age of Spectahzatton, Sherle
Wagner at 125 East offers luxurtous bathroom
decor from plumbmg up The natton of
Colombta chose 57th St. for tis N Y centre, at
140 East. Hammacher - Schlemmer ts at 145
East, famed so long 11 even had a SchwartzDietz song set tn a famed Broadway revue
"Hammacher Schlemmer l U&gt;ve You "
And suddenly you are at 3rd Ave where the
smgmgest young people and lots of older Withtis congregate rughtiy m more than two-dozen
movte theatres wtthtn a few blocks plus the
appurtenanced eatertes Skttch Henderson's
Dandelion saloon ts a couple blocks north on 3rd
There are llahan, French, German, Scandinavtan, Russian, Gypsy, Spamsh, even Arab
restaurants wtthm sauntermg distance. And of
course, several wherein everything IS Kosber
It's a great street. It's Fun's Future.

Middleport Takes Cheshire
•''

•

tum01r O\... ~ Ralph
F:merson essavtst

Heart Lead Shuts Out Clubs
posstble for Jtm to try to
develop the club suit and he
must go a f t e r three dta·
mond trtcks
.91 6 3
He leads a dtamond to
WEST
EAST
dummy's queen at tnck two
.10152
The queen holds and Jtm's
109 3
• Q874 2
ftrst thought IS to contmue
tKI06 2
t 53
wtth the ace A httle more
.K42
&lt;loA 5
thought shows that there IS a
SOUTH (D )
better play at hts disposal
• K86
provided that West does hold
.AK
the ktn g of dtamonds
• J9 84
Jtm returns to hiS hand
oloQJ 108
wtth the km g of spades and
None vulnera ble
leads the dtam ond Jack
We!&lt;il
Snrth East S~1ulh
Thts play would cost hun
an ovet tuck m case West
Pass
1•
Pass !NT
had started wtth kmg and
Pasc;
3 NT Pat.s Pass
one
It makes no diffet ence
Pass
agamst any 3 3 break or 1!
Openm g lead- ¥ J
East started wtth a doubleton 10-s pol but tt b r 1n g s
home the contract agam st
B) Os"ald &amp; James Jacob) th e actual holdm g of km g 10J ames Kauder one of the x-x tn th e West hand
NORTH

Z5

"'AQJ9
• 65
t AQ1

.43
.J

'"'

IHfWSPAPER lNTERPRI SE AS!.N )

top young west t: oast pi a \ l'IS has pt oduced a book
ca lled th e Bndge Phtloso
phet It tS a collectton of 40
hands pla yed b¥ htm 111 tubllet brtdge and du pltcal e
games Wntten m the fu st
petSo n each hand silows

some mteres tmg feature

West

North

East

South

Pass
?
You, South, hold ·
.J86 \'54 t A K943 .162

t&lt;lo

1•

What do you do now?
A-81d two spades. A two ~
d i a m o n d call after partner's
overull demes support for his
SUit

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do b1d two spades West

passes and your partner co nhnuc s to thr~:c spad es What do
you do no v. ''

More Stenos Use II
Gregg shorthand , mtroduced b~ John Robert Gregg
m 1888, IS t a u g h t m more
s c h o o Is and practiced by
more stenographers m the
Untied States than any other
note-takmg system , accordmg to Encyclopaedia Brttan-

cat d pla y
The general tenor IS to en-

Programs for Tonight

Green Acres 3, Otck Van Dyke 4, What's My Lme" 6. Tom

·:·.: :·:·=~~~:·:·:·=-~=·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·: :.:::·:::::::::..·. :·:·: :·:·:·:•.· .:·:·:·: :·:·.···:·:::::·. ::.::. :·:=:·:·: ••·: ·!·!·:·:·:·:···:·i

.-.

'Misfi res Point
Kissinger S Way
1

H• Il.\ \ (

110\IL~: \

IV ASHI NGTOf\ t NC:A'
The unh appt ness at State Department ove r Dt llent'
Ktssmger's g1ea t powet as Pte srdent N1xon s adv 1se1 on
f01 e1gn and natio na l set tll l t) affau s IS we ll kn own

Not genetall \ rea l11ed
other kev

potnl s

tn

tS

the equ alh ht gh co nce rn at

the govr1 nnwnt

Defense Secre ta r·v Melv tn Laud has had two ser tous
confr ontat ions Wit h K1 ss mge1 on defen se L aird cam e out

on lop m bot h tn stances-but onlv beca use he ha s pt oved
to be a vet y stt ong man tnrleed tn th iS ty pe of tn-house
ftghlmg
!'here IS worr y too 111 th e ht ghet ec helons of Tt easurv
Co mm erce and tn the Whtle House tl sel f Th ts tepot let ts
told that one reason Petet Petet so n now Co mmerce Departm ent sec tclat y left hts Whtte House economic post
so qutc kl) was that bUilt-Ill ttvalt v wtth the KISsinger
gt oup made hts JOb ail bu t ttnposs to le
The concet n ove r KISstnge t 's role IS tn part a pt obIem of nat111 al pet sonal JOustin g In pat t tl ts a confltct
of nattunal sec ut tly and fore rgn poltcv concepts But
ther e Is m01 e

A maJO t ptoblem ts KtSs tn get 's tsola ttO n He has fe w
tnltmate f11 ends lew men he It usts tnt ellectually. He
gets no determtned at gumcnt s h om hiS sta ff They
tunnel rn atcrtal to httn he ptcks a nd chooses Thus
then· at e ft&gt;" men wh o ca n pound at h1 s 1deas Ull tii the
bugs at e beaten out
t:vet y man thiS 1eportet has talked to conceded Kt sstngct 's b11lttance as a ht stonan And as a novel and
mnov att ve mmd ca pahle of des rgmng precedent shatter
mg concepts But th en pe rsiStent wort y tS that t&gt;ory
castle Brtlltant tdeas trequentl} have unexpectedlv
se11ous mdn ect effects tf not argued at length bv men
wl\h dtffet ent types of expemnce
Yet qu tte fr equ entl y the men who ate to be key actors
tn any dec tston heat about a new lme much too late to
make mea mn gful changes
The n too Kt ssmger ts a thmk et not an operati ons
man ' Hem y does n I know how to ca rt y thmgs out and
he won t let" others tn on the opera lions says one colleague 'Even well-thought-out td eas have operattonal
bugs The stde effec ts can break you It s a one-man
show and one-man shows are dange rous ·
Wttness th e btlter unnecessary Stde effects of tw o 1e
cent K1ssmg:er mvolvement s

The Chtna h tp as ca11 ted out resulted m a neat diS aster tn Japan It undet cut out closest fnends 111 th'at
tSiand country. tht eatened a se11ous loosc .ung of Tok yo's
close ltes wtth the Umted Sta tes
The h agedy ts that 11 need not ha ve been The Japanese
government dti:l not obJec t to an openmg 111 Chma Tokyo
rn ract wanted a Chma approach. and had held off only
at the tnSistence of the Umted States
The problem lay tn the way Ktssmger earned out the
plan We dtd not take the Japanese mto our confidence
The need for thiS close collaboratiOn wtth our ailtes m
advance or actton has been recogmzed publicly and prt
vately by Ktssmger m the strongest terms But m practice he ~lipped up A cross ftre of sptnted argument
before the action would cet tamly have resulted m shtfts
111 techmque whtch could have prevent ed the shock to
Japan
The Ki sSinger-mspued beiund-the-scenes negottattons
to prevent the lndta-Paktslan wat was a bnlhant ap
proach But 11 mtsfu ed. as Is qutle evtdent now. because
of the way the plan was camed out Som• sharp preaotton discussions mtght have changed the pictut e

Jones 1S
7 30 - Masterprece Theatre 33 . Mod Squad 13. Jerry Reed 8,
10 . Mr Rogers 20 Home Run Heroes 3, Televtston Forum 6
8 00 - Magg1e and the Beauhful Mach1ne 20 . All Star Pre

Game Show 3, 4, IS
8 lS - Baseball All Star Game 3 ; ,

tb
8 30 - Evenmg al Pops 20 33, Mo vte ' Th e People,' 6 13 ,
Hawau F tve 0 8, 10

RAY CROMLEY

By Paul Crabtree
What would you thmk tf a top engmeer at GM, Ford or' Otrysler announced that a new car was bemg developed, and desert bed
II hke this
Well, tl'll have four wheels, and probably an engme, and
there'll be some place for the people to sit m 11, and It won't be
any smaller or larger than the cars on the road
You'd say he's nuts - rtght? Because a descrtptton like this
could apply to a 1909 Model T, or a 1973 Rolls-Royce Totally
unsattsfactory, to say Ute least.
But such generalization IS not only acceptable, but even
routme, m the wild, wtld world of televtston.
ABC a!Ulounces a new "departure" m daytune 1V fare, gals
- away from the soaps and quwes
But what ts tt• Why, ABC tsn't really saymg- and you get
the unpresston they really don't know.
It'snot gomg to be a dally show, or really a series But, on the
other hand, It may appear fairly regularly (and what else is a
sertes?)
It won't have a "cast," although two characters will be
regulars And tt won't be an "anthology," which indicates some
sort of continuity from eptsode to eptsode.
Wild as tt may be, frankly I'm lookmg forward to the show and wtth good reason, I think Frrst episode is tomorrow, I· 30
p m., WHTN-lV.
Despite the never-never land of TV program development,
the ABC people have two solid characters lined up as stars, and
they can handle a broad, broad variety of comedy asstgllliients.
One is Henry Gtbson, the addled poet and sanctunonious
parson or "Laugh-ln." The other is Rose-Marte, the self-effaClllg
master of the put-&lt;lown on the old Dick Van Dyke Show. Both are
pros, and tf anyone can brtghten the afternoons on AB, I'd put my
money on ,them.
So, although ABC won:t say exactly what creature they're
spawning, the Henry Gibson-Rose-Marie combination does offer
some surcease from the endless parade of paste&lt;kln smiles of the
quiz show hosts, and the equally artificial miseries of the soap
operas, wtth their trtals, dtvorces, mfidelittes, and assorted

9 30 - Cannon 8. 10, Handfuls ot Ashes 33. Doln' rf 20
10 00 -

News Weather. Sports 20 . F1r lng Lme 33

Mar cus

Welby. M D 6, 13
10 30 - Arthur Sm1lh 8

II 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
II 30 - D1 ck Cavett 6, Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Mov1e

Night

Chase" 8, Mov&gt;e • A Prize ol Gold, ' 10 , Movie • So Big " 13
WEDNESDAY. JULY 26
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
6 IS - Farmtlme tO 6 20 - Farm Reporl 13 6 25 - Paul
Harvey 13
6

30 - Columbus Today 4, News, Weather Spo.-ts

Answers 8, Urban League Prsents 10, Glory Road 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13
6 45 - Corncolr Report 3 Rocky &amp; Bullwrnkle 13.

6,

Brble

Romper
Room 6. CBS News 8. 10
7 008today 3. 4, 15 . News 6, B. 13
7,JO - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jetfers 3. Underdog 13
8 00 - Captain Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 13, 6, Sesame
St 33
8 JO -

Tennessee

TuJ~;edo

HALL OF FAME SI'ARTERS
NEW YORK (UPI)- Aiex
Webster, head coach of the
New York Giants, announced
Monday that Randy Johnson
would be his startmg quarterBy JACK WILKINSON
back thts Saturday agaUISt the
ATLANTA
(UPI) - The
Kansas City Chiefs in the Hall
heavy
htttmg
National
League
of Fame game at Canton , Ohio
All-Stars, wtth a somewhat
reluctant startmg pitcher, take
on the Amertcan League's best
tomght In a National League
stadium noted for tis home
runs
The Nallonals, gunrung for
thetr 13th VIctory 1n the last 15
games, wtll be aunmg for the
fences m the cozy confmes of

Nationals Are Favores

Bengals Will

Make Cuts

On Saturday

mca

Television Log

6, Jack Lalanne 13

8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4. Phil Donahue 15. Jack ie Oblinger 8, Lucl's
Tovshoo tO. Pevton Place 13. What Every Woman Wants to
Know 3, T1mr.1y , Lassie 6. Mrs Rogers JJ

9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas 6, My Three Sons 8.
One Lrle lo Live 13 , Electric Co 33
9 55 - Chuck Wh tte Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS , Lucrlle Ball tO . Drck Van Dyke 13,
Hathayoga 33
10 JO - Concentration 3. 15. Phrl Donahue 4, Spilt Second 13 , My
Three Sons 10. Beverly Hlllbllt•es 8, In School lnslructron 33.
Love, Amencan Style 6

11 00 - Sale ot Century 3, 15 , Family Altair 8 Love American
Style 13 , Commun1que 6

11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4. IS· Bewltched6, IJ , Love of Lrle
8, tO, Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy J. 15. Bob Braun's SO so Club 4, Local News 10.
News 13. Medicine 20. Contact 8. Password 6
12 30 - 3W's Gamel, 15, Spilt Second 6 , Search for Tomo.-row 8,
10 12 55 - NBC News 3, IS
t 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Ch ildren 6, 13 Watch
Your Child 15; Divorce Courl 8. Green Acres 10, French Chef
33
1 20 - Lucille Rivers J
1. 30 - 3 On AMatch J, ; , 15 , As The World Turns 8. 10. Sewrng
Skills ll. AFB Afternoon Playbreak 6, 13.
2 00 - Days of Our Ltves, 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game IJ , Virg inia
Graham6 , LoveSptendored Thlng8, 10, BrldgeJJ.
2 30 - Doclo.-s 3, 4. 15; Dating Game 13, Guiding Light 8, 10.
Handfuls of Ashes 33.
3 00 - Another World 3, ;, IS, General Hosprtal 6. IJ. Secret
Storm 8. 10. Masterprece Theatre 33
mmor sms.
J 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, ; , 15; One Life to Live 6, Edge
of Night 8, 10. Jeff's Cottle 13
+++
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Somerset 4. 15, Fllntstones 13; Sesame
The new sbow wtll continue, on a hit.flkip basis, Into the fall
St 20,33 , Huckleberry Hound6 ; Batman8, Movie "Sierra" tO
(ABC isn~ saying much about this, etther).
4 30 - Green Acres 3; Merv Grltfln 4, I Love Lucy 6; Virginian
8, Password 13. Andy Grllflth 15
I think I'll make one other observation about Utts program:
5
00 - Wagon Train J, Mister Rogers 33, Maverick 13, Dick
The Van Dyke Show flotDldered for a season or more, and ahnost
Van Dyke 15 , Big Valley 6
felt the ax due to poor ratings, before its characterizations (Rose- 5 30 - Marshall Dixon 15; Electric Co 33.
- News, Weather, Sports J. 4. 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6.
Marie's mcluded) crystallized and made it a long..-un hit. And 6 I00Dream
of Jeannie 13; SesameS! 20, Hathayoga 33
people are still wondering just what "Laugh-In" really ts. So we 6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15. ABC News 6, 13 , CBS News 8, 10 ·
~-ll
'
not only have two proven stars- they surely must be adaptable
7
00
News,
Weather,
Sports
6,
10,
Elec.
Co.
20;
Wild,
Wild
ones, too.
West 13; Millstones ot Progress 33; Movie "Joe Butterfly" J·
Dick Van Dyke 4, What's My Line 8.
'
+++
ON TilE TV DIAL: One of those rare nights -a summer 7 JO - Episode Action 33 , To Tell The Truth 6, Doctors on Call
IS ; DragnetS; The Judge 10, Mr Rogers 20.
evenmg of very good lV. Baseball's big midsummer night, the 8;,00Lassie
- The Super 6. IJ. Adam 12 ;, IS ; Davia Steinberg 8 tO •
Public Affairs 20, lJ
' '
All.Star Game from Allanta, will pit the class of the National and
- ColumboJ, 4, 15, Corner Bar 6. tJ. Movie "The Cabinet
American leagues, WSAZ-TV at 8. The most-followed local 8of30Dr
Callgara," 20, 33
teams, the Pirates and Reds, dominate the NL squad ... "Reach 9 00 - Marly Feddman Comedy Machine 13, Mo•le "The
Green Eyed Blond," 6; Medical Center 8, 10.
•1
Out With Music" features a concert at Cincinnati's Eden Park,
9
30
Kopycats
13.
,
7:30pm., WLWC-TV ... And Ohioans should enjoy a political tO 00 - Ntghl Gallery J, 4, 15; Mannix 8, 10, Soul 33, News
round-table, with Democratic Gov. John Gilli-an and the
We.ther, Spo.-ts 20.
'
Republican leadersbtp of the General A5Sembly, 7:30 on WTVN· 10 JO- ABC News Inquiry 6, 13
II 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3. 4, 6, 8. 10, IJ, 15.
1V ... And, later, Dick Cavett spends 90 minutes chattmg with TV 11
30 - Johnny Car""n 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Movie "The
pioneer Allen FWlt, 11·30 on WTVN-TV.
Biggest Bundle of Them All," 8, Movie "UpStairs . and
Down•talrs," 10, Movte "The FBI Story," 13.
Movies: "Prize of Gold," 11:30 p.m., and "Sierra," 4 p.m.
t: 00 - News and Wealher 4.
Wednesday, both WBNS-TV.
1:30 - Local NeW$ IJ

wiLMINGTON . Ohio
(UPI) 1'he Cmcmnati
Bengals will scrunmage for the
first time Ill summer trmmng
camp Saturday, and then the
ax wiU fall on a few who had
hoped to make the team
"We'll probably cut two or
three people after our scrunmage Saturday," coach Paul
Brown said Monday .
Performance In the scrunmage and tests the players
took last weekend wtll help
Brown make hts mtnd up about
who aeto cut.
"What we're looking for Is
players who, g(J'ierally, know
wlult the entire team does on a
gtven play," he satd. "That will
help them In every phase of the

game "

Atlanta Stadium, whtch twtce

m Its seven-year htstory has
led the league m homers htt
As if 111 anttctpation, the fans
voted m a raft of home run
hitters, tncludmg catcher
Johnny Bench of Cmcmnatt,
who bas 24, rightfielder Hank
Aaron of Atlanta and ftrst
baseman Lee May of Houston,
each wtth 20, and Ptttsburgh's
Wtlhe Stargell, the left ftelder,
who has htt 19
Addmg to the power, exPittsburgh sktpper Danny

Colmnhus Pro-am
Action
• un d erway
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Picture Mr Average Golfer
teemg off on the No. 1 bole of
his favortte golf course before
10,000 people, trying to
remember to keep his head
down, take the club back
slowly and follow through
That was Bob Tatum, who

round Ntcklaus, who sbot a 74
over his former home Sctoto
Oluntry Club Course, told Ute
group's htgh handicapper not
to let 11 bother hun when he
scuffed a shot
Although Tatum ptcked up
the ball on several holes, he
ftgured he fmtshed with about a

16

95

never played belore more

than 25 people before."
Monday when he and hts 16
handicap were teamed wtth a
group headed by Jack Ntcklaus
and Bob Hope at the seventh
annual Ollumbus Pro-Am Golf
Tournament
"My band was shakmg so, I
could hardly put 11 on the tee,"
satd the 47-year-old petroleum
geologiSt, "but I really laced

Missing thiS weekend's
scnmmage wtll be three
rooktes who are wtth the
College All .Stars preparmg for
their game Frtday mght m
Chicago wtth the world It "
champion Dallas Cowboys.
"Really," Tatum, a native of
They are Tom De Leone, Ohto Texas who moved to Canton
State's All-Arnencan center, three years ago from Olney, DL
Slerman White, the Bengals' satd, "I played better than 1
No I draft chotce thts year, thought I would. I was very
and Tom Casanova, a cor- nervous before we startrd, but
nerback from U&gt;utstana Slate. when we got started, I cooled
The Bengals, meanwhile, are down.''
holding tWJce-a-&lt;lay drills this
He said he woke up at 4 am .
week. Therr fiTst exhibition giVing him some eight hours to
game wtll be Aug. 4 agamst the sweat out before hts noon tee
Green Bay Packers.
time
Shook Him Up
"I don't know of anythmg
that could shake a guy up
more," Tatum said, but "It
was absolutely the greatest
FAMILY RETURNS
thmg that's ever happened to
Mr and Mrs Charles me''
Goegletn, and chtldren
Hope and Nicklaus, both, of
Charlene, Mtchael and Mark,' course, expenenced at perhave returned home after formmg before large galleries
vtstllng at Dtsney World , or audiences, trted to help keep
Flortda Whtle In Flonda they Tatum and hts other two amavtstted wtth Mr and Mrs teur partners at ease.
Larry Roush of Wmter Haven
Hope, a pretty fair golfer
and Mrs Margaret Heaton of himself, advtsed Tatum to slow
Bradenton
down on his swing early m the

"I never once worried about
hittmg anybody," he smd. "My
mam thought was JUSt domg
what I was capable of "
Tatum's wtfe, Betty, "a 34
handicapper," followed him
around mstde the roped off
faiTweys "She didn't Jump on
me for any of my bad shots,"
he satd
Trevloo Complains
Top money wmners m the
event were Gtbby Gtlbert, who
fiTed a four-under-par 67 over
the 6,4~yard Sctoto Course to
take top tndtvtdual honors, and
Bob Shaw, who had a 72 to lead
)tis team to a best-ball 12underpar 59, one sbot better
than three other teams
Ed Sneed, a Columbus
nattve, and Homero Blancas
both had 69s to take second
money among mdlVldual
ftmsbers, whtle Tom Wetskopf,
yet another Columbusite,
fmtshed wtth one-under 70
Jun Jamieson had a 7las his
team hed for second with a 60
along with those of Omck
Courtney and Lee Bonse. Other
7ls were turned in by U&gt;u
Graham, John Schroeder, .run
Gerrlng and amateur Rick
Jones.
Lee Trevtno, who had most of
the morning gallery to himself
and complamed of the rough
treatment he received from
autograph seekers, ftred a
three-under 33 on the front stde
but faded to a 40 on the back
nine for a 73
Hope and Ntcklaus planned
to take part today In an exhibi·
tion match in Cincinnati for the
benefit of the Bob Hope House,
a home for teenage boys needmg guidance and a healthy environment .
It marks Hope's seventh exhibition match to rwse money
for the project.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

City Editor

Publ lshtd dally except
Sllfurday by Tht Oh10 Valley
Publ iSh i ng Company , 111
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smce.

The Browns' No. I draft
choice this year, Mtchigan's
Tom Darden, IS at the College
All.Star trammg camp tn Dllinots and will start at defenstve
back in the game Frtday mght
against the Dallas Cowboys.
manton Collier' the former
Browns' head coach, looked In
on Darden at the camp and reported back his unpresstons of
the rookie
" ! liked hts hustle and the
way he came up to make tackles," said Collier
The Browns are practicing
twice a day this week and will
scrlnunage agam Saturday.
The Browns annoWlced Monday that tickets for thetr game
with the Cinclllnati Bengals
Sept. 3 m Columbus wtll start
being mailed Aug. 15 and
should all be delivered by Sept.

ON DISPlAY. COME IN &amp; SEE THEM TODAY.

Ttdewater

52

Rochester
Toledo

RJChmond

Syracuse
Penrnsuta

St 47
SO 48

531

2

520 3
StO 3'12

47

485

6'1?

46

46

SO

52

The Browns also said that
center Fred Hoaglin had
agreed to contract terms for
his seventh season wtth the
team

552

•

•

469 8
388 16

38 60
Monday 1s Results

Loursvrtre 2 Richmond 0 (tst )
Loursv.lle 7 Rrchmond 6 {2nd)
Rochester t Charleston 0

Tidewater 2 Syracuse o

Toledo 4 Pentnsula J {1st)
Penrnsula 17 Toledo 7 !2nd)

.-···--- .---·•

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'659
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11SI

'
I

OLYMPIC SCULLS STAR
MOSCOW (UPI)- Yurt Malyshev of the Sovtet Umon won
his country's smgle sculls
champtonshtp Monday With a
tune of 7 00 6 desptte a 90degree heat and thus establtshed htmself a dehmte
Utreat for the Olympic gold
medal m Mumch.

"I'm only now gettmg to correct the things I was doing last
year, such as looking mto the
offenstve backfteld," Scott satd
Monday.
"But the btg thmg IS that I
feel so good out there," he satd.
"That means so much."
Scott had several problems
last Saturday durmg the
team' s scrtmmage. Frank
Pitts caught a 65-yard pass
from quarterback Mtke Phipps
and managed to elude Scott to
score. Then he was called for
mterference on a 15-yard toss
to Pttts.
Scott took over the cornerback posttion in the second
quarter of the Browns' frrst
exhibition game last year and
bas been in all but one game

e THE 11'7.2 "ORO

QUICK DRY

ROlE RT HOEFLICH,

ease."

son, Allen, leftfielder Carl
Yastrzemskt of Boston, surprise starter Bobby Grtch of
Balttmore at shortstop, lhtrd
baseman Brooks Robinson ,
also of Baltunore, catcher Bill
Freehan of Detroit and
Pahner
Murtaugh wtll lead off WJth
second baseman Joe Morgan of
Cmctnnalt, centerftelder
Ruberto Clemento of Ptttsbm gh, makmg hts 12th AllStar appearance, Aaron m
rtght, Stargell m left. catcher
Bench, fiTst baseman Lee May
of Houston, third baseman Joe
Torre of St. U&gt;uts, last year's
most valuable player, shortstop Don Kessmger of Chicago
anll Gtbson.
A standing..-oom-only crowd
of more than 53,999 fans , plus a
natiOnal televtston audtence is
m prospect for the ftrst All-star
game played m the South. The
National League holds a 23-18-1
edge
First ptlch ts scheduled for
8 30 p m EDT.

PORCH AND FLOOR

Euc Ed.

the

Murtaugh, who came back to
manage the Nationals, chose
slugger Btlly Wtlltams of the
Chtcago Cubs and Nate Colbert
of San Diego as oulfteld subs
Each has belted 22 homers this
year
"There'll be qmte a few
homers htt Tuesday mght,"
predicted Aaron , the greatest
hvtng home run htlter and
playmg m hiS own park
But the two teams will have
lo go some to top the Six home
run productiOn of the 1971
game, whtch the American
League won 6-4 It wtll be a
Iough feat, even for the
beckomng bleachers of Atlanta
stadium
Ftreballer Bob Gtbson of St
Louts, who "If I bad my
druthers," would be a reltever
and not a starter, was tabbed
by Murtaugh to open for the
Nationals Muflaugh ,
dtsregardmg Gtbson's
statement that he would rather
only pttch one I!Ulmg because
he was scheduled to start m a
regular season game Thursda), satd the Cardmal ace bad
"earned the rtght" to start.
Gtbson, currently the hottest
pttcher m the majors, has won
11 stratght after droppmg hts
frrst ftve
American League manager
Earl Weaver of Balttmore
chose hts own righthander Jun
Palmer (13-4) over 17-game
wmner Mickey Loltch of
Detroit and Gaylord Perry of
Cleveland, who has won 16 He
satd [.()Itch would follow
Pahner and tf Perry felt like tl
(he pttched Sunday), he would
pttch next.
Dick Allen or the Chicago
White Sox, who played for the
National League in four previous All-Star games , and
Reggte Jackson of Oakland,
who htt one of last year's
homers, provtde the long ball
threat for Weaver's American
League team. Allen bas htt 22
and Jackson 18
Weaver named second baseman Rod Carew of Mmnesota
to lead off, followed by Bobby
Murcer of the New York
Yankees m center field. Jack-

CHIEF (Chicago)

DEVOTED TO THE
I~TEREST OF
ME IG 5 - MASO~ AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,

Senhn~l

.'·- .

Cornerback

1'EN YEARS AGO, Jim Bunning of the Detroit Tigers opened the first of 1962's two
All Star games by pitching to Dick Groat of Pittsburgh, left. llrooks Robinson or
Baltlmor~ later had words for umpire Mel Steiner, abo~e, as the National League
won at \\ashingtou, 3-1. The American League came back three \leeks later to beat
the Nationals at Chicago's Wrigley Field, 9-4.

Th e bJddmg has been

•

or

\\ a hh •

At Ease At ,

All Star Action: 1961

WIN AT BRIDGE

c.:o urage bnd ge player s to

1

went the distance f&lt;•r Mtd- when he lea ped up to snag
dleporl, was w btg trouble Terry Lucas' hard liner and
lw1ce, cmce 1n the second wh en doubled Bruce Arnett off third.
twrr smgles and three walks That made two out, and the
netted two run s f or Ches htre thtrd came when Ben Arnett
and agatn tn · the top or the groWlded out to short
vic.:l or) over Cheshire 1n a se v enth wh en a h1 t, an en or
For Cheshire Bruce Arnett
make-up gam e tn the Ga ll ta •nd a walk ftlted the bases wt th and Ben Arnett, each had two
Metgs Pony League Monday nobody out
&gt;tngles and Chns Preston,
event ng at th e Mtdd le porl
ln the ftrst mstance he was Tc t ry Lucas and Blazer each
Park.
saved when shorts top Bnan one smgle
Tire htthng parade was at the Lucas popped out to MidOther Middleport httters
expense of Cheslure's lefty Jeff dleport shortstop Magnotl&lt;l for ' were Perk Ault and Eh EbersBlazer who a mon th ago had the third out In the seventh baclr, each wtth a smgle
held the same squad to one thndsacker Chrts Mtlter mad~
Mtddleport plays Pomeroy
scratch smgle m seven 1nn1ngs
the defenstve pla y of the day tlus eve mng at 6 30 then
Rt ghthander_Whttlatch, who
iltdwelt Wednesday, both at
Mtddleport, and concludes Its
season Frtday at Vmton
SCIOTO RES ULTS
Mtdd leport ts 7-4, 1n thtrd
COLUMBUS I UP! )
pl ace behtnd Btdweii and
Fnsco's Va lentme won the Pomeroy Cheshire IS 6-S, in
featured etghth race Monday fourth place, wtUt games at
mght at Sctolo Downs by one home aga mst Vmton tomght
and a half lengths tn It ont of and Racme, to be scheduled.
Btg Red Machme Brenna Scot Ches htre
022 000 {)-.1 8 1
11as thtrd
Mdd A
400 410 X-9 11 I
The ftve-year-old geldtng
HIRAM, Ohio (UPI )- ClarBlazer and Ben Arnett, Wtse
ence Scott , the Cleveland covered the nule 111 2 09 4-5, (5) Wlutlatch and Stobart,
Ault {7)
Browns' second-year corner- returmng $11 , $7 and $4 80
The
4,124
pa
trons
at
the
track
back, says one of the differUmptres J Tannehtll, Dtck
Vaughan
ences between now and last bet a total of $233,764
season ts that he feels "at

Scott Feels

THOUGHTS

o 11 my WCll!
I IH /(l!j (Ill(/ tU niiii /UUi (11 /d fiH.'
du y jo flmm11cJ (o1 1r t rt nlotl

Tmtely lrt tttn g by Terry
Wlrttlatch, Mtke Magnotta , and
Clrrts Mtller , each wtth two,
and Rtck St11bart, three St ogies
"' f~&gt;ur at bats, led the Middleport "A" Pony squad to" 9-4

--

•

tlunk and while the book ts
and Tomorrow
rather advanced 11 ts well
Founded Religion
wot th t eadtn g by an yone
The Mormon rehgion was \'4ho wants to ge t a ftrst hand
t\11d IH! son/ tu t llfm
(;(} he tlw t a pwphet sho'' '''
tounded
by Joseph Smtih Jr look at expet t lhmkmg
IIIUI tell rlwt fv t Be lt ole/ I {Je /I S/1 aWU'lj {1 0 111 / tNSIISfl
TUESDAY, JULY2S
When
he
was 25. he organHere we fmd J tm 111 a nor- 6 00 ~ N ew s 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , I Dream of Jeanme
ca ~ L our denrtms cw d pe r
'errr - Luke 13 32 33
ned the Church of Jesus ma l t h1 ee no-trump contract
fonn c u1 e~ l udn 11 uH&lt;f fom r11
or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20 , Hathayoga JJ
Chmt
of Latter Day Samts l'he heat t lead makes 11 1111 6 3013-, Truth
um. w ul tl !t! t1 111 &lt;1 dar, 1
News 3, ;, 6, 8, 10. 15 Grand Masten Chess 33
l'r u g 1ess IS the a c tivit~ ul at Fayette, N Y m 1830
7 00 - News 6, Elec Co 20 Farmers Daughter 13. lnsighl 33 .
jun ~ /1 mtJ &lt;: ou rse Neve t tlw· tollat aml th t;! a~s m ullt: c ul
le ss 1 nu tsf giJ

-

Ford Team's '72 Showdown
Ctaaranco Sate.

•

at

MOORE'S
POMEIOY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2141

See Your Nearest Ford Dealer Today • ••

1

I

�..

4- the Daily Senllntl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. July 25, 1972 ,

Six Graduate from ·Legion. Club .
.

BY ~EITH WISECUP
Donning the Blue and \Vhile
Meigs American Legion
baseball uniforms lor the llnal
lime Swlday were catcher
Roger Dixon, centerfielder
Rick Ash, pitcher-shortstop
Stan Perry, pitcher ·outfielder
Rick Van Matre," first baseman
Dave Boyd, and shortstop ·
outfielder Steve Dunfee.
Dixon led the club in at bats,
runs batted in, stolen bases ,

.

0.87. Va11 Matre duuc wl •etlrer in rightfield at
led the stall in wins wiU1 eight shurtsluu, t11· at the plaLc 2wd
while !using only one game, played 'll'illianlly it• the final
and had pitched three years lor lwo weeks of the seaStm.
Howie Taylor is '':"IC uf the
the Meii-\S Le gion .
Dave Boyd, who hit the lung finest fielding ~hortstops
ball. was the number one first· anywl1erc, but with teammates
baseman on the squad. He had like Perry and Dunfee also
a hut loumament with a triple shortstops, plus ljght-hilting,
evel'yone through the area fur and single in U1e final game limiled his playing time.
great stuff on the mound . against I.ancaster.
Coach George Nesselruad's
Going into tournament play his
Steve Dunfee was "Mr. local nine ended with an 111-11·1
nine·inning earn ed run Consistent" as he got the job slate. Mauy fans think this club ·
was disappointing in the

and balled at a .341 pace while
e~wning one ·uf the best arms
behind the plate opposing
runner·s laced
year. Ash
was the dub 's top hitter with
an average of .357 and played
centerfield in 29 of Meigs' 30
games.
. Perr·y was known by

average was

all

distrh•l lttUI'IIHIIICIIl, fi11ishin~
SON ARRFSTED
lhil'd uul uf f11ur teams.
PHILADEI.PHIA iUPIJ
But . this just doesn't )wid The s&lt;m of Gino Marchetti,wa ter, wilh teams such as lormer defensive end ~I the
f.ancasler,l9-5, and Athens, 2iJ. Baltimore Cults professional
:1, compet.illg . For every · loot.ball team, was being held
·yinner, there's a 'loser, and Mor•day with two others on
Meigs was a fint! loser. just as charges they robbed a hitch·
111uch as Athen~ ur Lant'aster hiker at knilepoint of $41.
will be a fine winner.
Police said Ernest Mar·
chetti, 21 , of St. Davids, Pa.,
and tw o companions, Edward
REDS INK DRAFT CHOICE Glowitz and. Michael Mintzer,
CINCINNATI (UPI )-Larry stole the money from Kark
Payne, a pitcher from Bedia, Oslerag alter giving the man a
Texas, signed with the Cincin· ride in their van last Saturday.
!Ulli Reds Monday. Payne, 18, Ail three were being held in
was the Reds' No:1 draft choice Muntgomery County jail
in the recent free agen_t draft. pending a hearing.

5- The Dallf Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 25,1972
3d C!Jt:ee.an'~; :::~. , Y:::::
r·r.::":CW:!:'&lt;~':':Ot~•~:\(-*::::;~

'

~Ol

® Today's

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992·2342

I• Sport Parade

Ml DDLE PORT, 0.

:w
~l

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS .

G

Dave Wolfe

Mick Ash
Jon Buck
Bill Chaney
Steve Lee
Johnny Roush
..Skip Johnson
Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
Rlck Van Maire
Dove Boyd

AB

Kevin Sheets
Lou McKinney

Stan Perry
Howle Taylor
Steve Dunfee
Others- X

4

15
10
16

27
11
33

2
6

24

53

13

14
13
11

17
27

4

Pitching :
Pllyar
Johnny Baird
Stan Perry
Rick Ash
BiliChaney
Skip Johnson
Steve Lee
Rick Van Maire

1I
9
53
84

.192

GS
2
0
8
6

.212
. 196
.232
.077
.2'6
.173
.237

3

12
2
3
5

TOTALS

0
1
4

0
I
2

10

5

II

tO
30

2
6

30

Steve Lee
Rick Van Maire
Stan Perry
BiliChaney
TOTALS

1
I
I

3

0

0

0
I
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

2

1

0

2
4
2

2
0

0
0
0

2
I

I
0

0
0

2
I
0

I
0
0
3

I
0
0

2
2
26

Today~

Almansc
By-United PresalnteroaUonal
Today is Tuesday, July 25,
the 207th day of 1972 with 159 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
full phase .
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
·
The evening stars are Mereu·
ry, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Leo.
American artist Maxfield
Parrish was born July 25, 1870.
On this day In history:
In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant
became the first American
officer to reach the rank of
general In the U.S. Army.
In 1934, Chancellor Englebert
Dolfuss of Austria was assas·
sinated by troops of the Nazi
black guard as Adolf Hitler
tried unsucce!ISfully to take
over that country.
, In 1943, King Victor Emmanuel or Italy replaced Fascist
dictator Benito MussolinL.who
wu executed by a squad of
parlilanslq 1945.
In 1962, Puerto Rico became
a Jelf.govemlng U.S. common.
wealth.
A thought for the day :
American statesman Daniel
Webster said, "Let our object
be our cowttry, our whole
country, and nothing but our
coun try."
.

' 9
8

20
6

2

.000

59 2-3
3
10 2-3
19 2-3

17
2
5

2

.750

21

0
0
I
3

0
I
I
4

.000
.000

50 1-3

2
5
6
12

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
l~rance Agency.

22
90

15
57

8

I

.889

18

11

.621

R
6

ER

IP

GS
I
I
I

I

I

3
2

4
5

3

9

3

12

3
3

10
9

3

12

3
3

8
8

6

s

4
4

10 2-3
6 1-3

8

0

7
0

0

I

3

18

14

26

R
0
0
0
0

H

Avg.

0
0

0
3
5

.000
.000
.200
.000
.333
.000
.333
.417

I
1

.125
.125

1

0
4

0
0
2
I
I
I

2

8

I

2

.250

3

9

3

9S

3
9

3
20

.333
.211

ERA
5.06
5.68
4.50
0.00
4.85

7
7
I

14

I

12
7

7
3

4

6

1
I

11

0

3

I

I

7

3

2

3

4

3

0
0
0

3

16

62

14
6

13
6
105

198

13
13
26
42
ISO

2.89
2.15
2.01
2.36

I
I

I

H
15
19

5

02

.429

0

7

8
18
12
25
10
14
21

6.00
1.36
6.00

.500

2
0
2

W
10

K
11
52 101
I
3
5
9
6

14

26
29
128

47
76
257

W L
I
I

W K H
5 10 ' 7

0
0
0
I

7
10
0
22

0
1
0
2

6
6
1
23

••

5
3
0
15

Headquarters for

Accutron®
by Bulova
The hea rt of an Accutron

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a tiny,

electroni c ally·powered
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accuracy to within a
minute a month . .:-. See
o ur f ull selec t ion of
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I

From $110.

Smith was the winning pitcher
while Smith was charged with
the loss.
The Kiwanis team plated two
runs in the first on an error,
double by Nibert and single by
Pearson.
PATRIOTS' CUTS
AMHERST, Mass . (UPI)Veteran cornerback Randy
Beverly, linebacker Jerry
Murtaugh, wide receiver Eric
Crabtree, tight end Roland
Moss and rookie running hack
Mike Mikolayunas were cut
Monday by the New England
Patriots of the National Fool·
ball League.
In a s tronomy , Baily's
beads are a number of bright
points of light which can be
seen for ~ lew seco nds at the
instant when a solar eclipse
becomes total.
-~~

I

•

•

::::..
:-:·

UPI Sports Editor

"It's an honor to be selected in this game and I don't think
anyone who 's ever selected should say I don't wanna play," said
the bantam Baltimore field boss. "Ninety.five per cent of this
gate goes to the pension land . If we start saying this·game isn't
important, it won't be . This pays for my retirement and his
retirement. It pays for all the players' retirement and they better
not forget that. "
Calmer Appraisals Later
Weaver later said he wasn't as critical of Gibson as he was
over those who reported what he had said.
"He said it after pitching a tough game," said the Orioles'
leader . "It's not his fault. It's yours for writing it. "
Weaver pointed to members of the press when he made his
remarks.
When Weaver's comments first were reported to Gibson, the
Cards' ace pretty much said what came naturally- that other
word on his rtng .
But later when all of Weaver's statements were repeated for ·
him, Gibson softened and said:
"I didn't hear what Weaver said first-hand so I can't answer
hiln."
Still later, during a question.,nd-answer session with lhe
media, Gibson again was questioned about his reported attitude
toward the All-Star game .
"I didn't say I didn 't want to play," the St . Lolli£ righthander
said slowly, deliberately . "What l said is I hoped I w'ouldn 't have
to pitch more than an inning ."
"What if everybody, all the players, felt like you ?" came a
question.
''That won 't happen," Gibson replied. "Everybody's differ·
ent. u
Gibson Speaks Ills Mind
Some people who don't know Bob Gibson got the wrong idea
abcrut him.
Because he speeks out lor what he believes, articulates well
and doesn't beat around the bush, offering soft, sweet answers to
some pointed, gutburning questions, he "has been labeled a
''mUitant" in a few quarters.
Bob Gibson says he couldn't care less, and I say hooray for Bob
Gibaon lor saying what he feels, for speeking his mind.
Joe Torre, hislesmmate with the Cards, feeis ·the same way.
"! understand perfectly when he says he'd much rather pitch
Thursday than Tuesday night," says Torre. "He's concerned
with the pennant race. We had it tough enough when we had only
four starters. Now with Scipio Spinks out, we've got only lhree.
But don't worry about Bob Gibson not giving everything he's got
in lhe All-Star game . He wouldn't know how to do anything else.
There's a guy who has as much pride as anybody I've ever seen."
Even Earl Weaver buys that.
Long alter all lhe original furor had subsided, the little guy
leading the AL All-Stars said:
"I'm not really blaming Gibson. I don't think he should've said
what he said, but llhink the headline writers crucified him. How
do I feel about hlm personally? I like him. He's one helluva
pitcher. I'm glad he's pitching only three imings against us."
The nest thing you know, Bob Gibson is. going to let Earl
Weaver wear his ring.

Actual size

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy
will adjust t o this t olerance, If

--~

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-

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with each S3 gasoline purchase.

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Get this tall, 16-ounce,
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··2·HOUR .
CLEANlNG

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--........

the

Fischer Driving
For 3rd Straight

i~

. . ' *'l. .. ),~· ,

7

0
0
0
9
9
0
3
21
1

Pet Era

L

0
0
2
0

.

ATLANTA (UPl)-Bob Gibson wear~ this unique ring.
It's done in Florentine gold and actually has two sides.
Glblon wears the ring on .his left pinky and usually the side
that's showing says LOVE.
But there is anolher word on the other side.
Maybe the best way to illustrate this other word would be to
explain one of its rpany, many meanings is ... aw, the devil with
all those daily problems forever plaguing huma,nity.
Bob Gibson, the National League starter in tonight's AIIStar
contest and the 36-year-old superhummer who has won II in a
row for the St. Louis Cardinals after losing his first five, em·
ployed that word when he first heard what Earl Weaver had to
say about him.
Weaver, the blunt, little Baltimore manager handling the
American League All-Stars, threw something of a harpoon into
Gibaon for remarks attributed to him regarding his selection to
his eighth AII-Btar team.
'·" · · • Hot Words At Fl1'8t
·GI~n, more concerned with the regular National League ra.;.
and ~e prospect of missing his regular tum when the Cards
resume against the Montreal Expos Thursday, had said he hoped
he wouldn't have to pitch more than an inning tonight.
Some headline writers got hold of that and when Weaver
arrived here he was carrying two samples of their work with
him.
One of the heads said :
"Cards' Gibson Hopes to Duck Star Nod."
The other said :
"Streaking Gibson Is Cool to Classic."
That's what gal Weaver all worked up.

SB

7
5
2
10

8

I
10
9

6

New Haven, Ripley In
KC Tournament Finals
New Haven's ·Reds, given a
new lease on Hie with the
ouster of Hometown, W. Va.,
from the 14th . Annual Kyger
Creek Little League Tour·
nament, exploded for II runs in
the first inning enroute to a
four inning, 12-2 victory over
Pt. Pleasant Kiwanis In the
semi finals of the tournament
Mondar night.
New Haven will meet Ripley
Daniel Boone in the cham·
pionship of the tournament at
8: IS p.m. this evening.
Cheshire's Tigers and Pt.
Pleasant Kiwanis will meet in
the consolation game.
The big first inning rally
featured a grandslam home
run by K. Goldsberry. M.

9
I
3
0

0

B

W Sac

7
10
15
4
7
3

4
3
I
0 10
0
4
1 104

2

W

4

0
0

(&gt;

ER

K

3
0
3

8

MEIGS LEGION
TOURNAMENT STATISTICS
G AB

TOTALS

3

Rbi

9

G
2

PLAYER

HR
0

0
0
0

IS

67
18 223

Pitching:

R

IP

CG
12

38
0
0
2

.341

29
2
5
30 827 . 12S 196

G

28

.148
.182
.182
.24 5
.236
.296
.000
.000
.371
.357
.188

IS

TOTALS
X - No longer with team .

PLAYER

Avg.

H

8
0
8
0
22
13 17
29
17 30
25 64
8 12
24 73
5 14
29 88
18 30
25 5 2 9 1 1
2656811
18 43
6 10
16 26
2
2
26 69 12 17

Roger DixOn

MlckAsh
Jon Buck
Steve Lee
Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
Rick Van Maire
Dave Boyd
Roger Dixon
Kevin Sheets
lou McKinney
Stan Perry
Steve Dunfee

R

By MILTON RICHMAN

.,...

MEIGS AMERICAN LEGION
FINAL BASEBALL STATISTICS
t30 GAMES)

Blttil1jj:
Player
Johnny Baird

··

American League

Detroit
Balllmore
Boston
New York
Ct!veland

Mllwoukee

11.
e·~~
51 3

's•s'o·
.

t .b.

50 38 .568

1

AS 41 .523

5
7'1f2
Ulf2

_.2 AJ .494
36 51 .41-4

w~sr 52

.402 15'1•
w. I. pet. g.b.

Ooklond
Chlcogo
Minnesota
Kansas Ci ty
Celifornia

56
&lt;9 35
&lt;1 .615
.5« ,,,,
AS A2 .517 9
.u AS .-49A 11
-40 52 .435 16 1h
Texas
37 53 .411 18 1/l
No gamu Monday
Today's Game

AII ·Sfors
vs. NL. All
-Stars
at AL
Atlanta,
8: 30p.m
EDT
No g1m11 Wednes.day

'

"IT'S TRUE"···

~· !:1\lo':~&lt;"·· ~

...

•;.~

..~

.,.·. ~. ·\- ,.'

LEU JJUilOCHF:It, the winningest ac·-•·
live ri1anager in the major leagues, is
closing in on the 2,tltlO·victory mark.
{llis teams had won I.Kti5 ~ames and
lost 1.570 entering the 1972 season.! He
began his managing career in 1939
with the llrooklyn !lodgers. whW&gt;e 1944
satin night uniform he modeled at left .
lluroch'er man aged the New York
Giants, above, from 194H to 1955. winning two National League pennants ,
and has directed the Chicago Cubs
since 1966. when he returned tu baseball after a 10-Har absru&lt;'t' .

Leo Let Go
.
B Y Ch lCU bS
·

•

.

ATLANTA (UPI) - Carroll
"Whitey" Lockman celebrated
his 46th birthday today as the
new manager of the Chicago
Cubs replacing Leo Durocher,
the fifth managerial casualty
so far this season .
The sixth could be in the
works.
Eddie Mathews, it is being
reported here, will take over
for Lwnan Harris as manager
of the Atlanta Braves possibly
as early as this week.
The Lockman-Durocher
swi tc h wasn 't exa ctly a
shocker.
It was supposed to have
transpired last November, but
Phil Wrigley, owner-president
of the Cubs, had a sudden
change of mind and permitted
Durocher to retain the Cubs'
managerial job eight more
months.
Lockman, who once served
under Durocher as first base.
man for the old New York
Giants, was asked whether he
was surprised by the switch,
which was announced here by
Cubs' General Manager John
Holland in the early hours of
this morning .
11
Yes, I was,'' he replied, but
he didn't look overly surprised.
He said he would not make
any changes.
"I think the personnel we
have here is good enough," he
said. "l don't think we have to
make any changes."
Lockman will be in charge of
the team when the Cubs
resume play in Philadelphia
July '1:1 following the All..star
game break. He was named
manager lor the duration of the
season only and also was
elevated to vice president.

Until laking over for the 6!iyear-old Durocher, Lockman
was assistant to Holland and
director of player development.
Durocher. who has been in
baseball almost SO years, will
remain with the Cubs as a
consultant.
Durocher and Wrigley met in
Chicago Monday night and
when the decision was reached
by Wrigley to make the
change, Holland and Lockman
were notified here .
"Leo wished us both luck,"
said Holland. "I wouldn't say I
noticed any change in him over
the telephone. He was his usual
self. I told him I enjoyed the six
and a hall years we worked
together. We never had any
real problems. We had mutual
respect for each other's job. I
never interfered with his job
and he never interfered with
mine. ' '

Durocher's departure lroin
the managerial ranks, perhaps
for good, followed by a week
the exit of Minnesota manager
Bill Rigney who, like Lockman,
once played for Durocher with
the Giants . Frank Quilici
succeeded Rigney as field boss
of the Twins. In other
managerial changes this sea·
son, Del Crandall took over for
Dave Bristol at Milwaukee,
Don Zinuner replaced Preston
Gomez at San Diego and.Paul
Owens succeeded Frank Luc·
chesi at Philadelphia.
The official release the Cubs
handed out here said that
Durocher had "stepped aside"
as manager but none of the
baseball men gathered for
tonight's AII·Star game
doubted that he had been fired.

·Wants More Cash
By JOE CARNICEILI

UPI Sports Writer
Joe Namath is getting ready
to play football again. The only
question now is when.
Namalh, the New York Jets'
celebrated and oft-injured
quarterback, reported to the
club's training camp at Hofstra
University and engaged in his
first workouts Monday. But he
has yet to sign a contract with
the Jets, who paid hlm over
$400,000as a rookie in 1966, and
claims" he won't take part in
any preseason game until he is
signed.
"I'm here because It's my
job and I want to prepare for
lhe season like everyone else,"
Namath said. "I'm ready to
play. I don't want to leave the
Jets. But I won't play in any
exhibition games until l have a
signed contract."
Namalh appeared in ex·
cellent condition during his two

9t).minute workouts and coach
Weeb Ewbank was optimistic.
Elsewhere in the pro football
camps, the New England
Patriots traded Jlm Nance, the
bulwark of their runnirig game
in the mid~. to the Philadelphia Eagles for a high draft
choice next season. Nance had
asked to ~ traded beecause he
felt he was not being used
enough.
Bill Thomas, Dallas' No. I
draft choice from Boston
College, will be out for three
weeks with a shoulder injury.
X-rays revealed that a staple
pin in the running back's
shoulder from previous
surgery two seasons ago had
worked loose.
·
Quarterback
Roman
Gabriel, who suffered a
collapsed lung last week, was
back in the Los Angeles Hams'
training camp Monday, about .
two weeks ahead of schedule.

lf

one Soviet official said.

11

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will be in his seat on time."
Fischer has arrived late lor

Eased

.

FACTORY AIR .

*1495

Fischer led 31!. points to 21!. for.
8Passky. With a win counting

Karr &amp;_Van.Zandt

~~re !~~~f::e:, ::7iJ~~o~e~

"You'll Like Our Qual ity
COLUMBUS (UP!)- The do anything lor the next 90
Way of Do ing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
Ohio Air Pollution Control days," Whitman was told by needed 12 points to retain the
.Pomeroy
Board adopted state open Earl McMunn, senior board championship while Fischer 992-5342
Open Evenings·'Til8 :00
burning restrictions with only member.
needed 121,2 to win it.
Til S P.M. Sat.
minor modifications Monday,
The board generally left in·
Fischer lost the opening
including allowing farmers to tact guidelines drafted July 6
burn waste as part of their after a public hearing. It
normal agricultural activities. turned down most proposals by
The
board , however, special interest groups
rejected a suggestion by the representing contractors,
Ohio Contractors Association farmers and railroads to soften
to expand the burning options the regulations.
of highway builders and
The board declined to adopt a ·
refused to write~n "catch..all" proposal by the Montgomery
language to allow uncontrolled County Tuberculosis
burning of railroad ties.
Association which would have
The board did approve revi· ·forbidden open burning in any
sions to emission regulations major urban area in Ohio.
and procedures lor granting
Jack Wunderle, representing
permits and variances, in theboard'sstaff,said there are
response to the Federal En· regulations curtailing bw-ning
vironmental Agency.
in cities, and a cutoff of open
Ira Whitman, director of the burning there would not
newly created state Environ· significantly improve air
mental Protection Depart· outside the metropolitan areas.
ment, urged the board to
The board reduced the zone
continue its supervision of around municipal cqrporations
pollution control permits within which no open burning
during the next 110 days. Then ·. p1ay ~ur. ,"
"
'
the board will go out of
Original guidelines called for
existence and Whitman's new a one-mile ban-&lt;Jn--burning belt
agency will take over its func· · aroWJd municipalities of 1,000
lions.
population .
The
board
"Personally,! wouldn't want amended them to he cities of
to see us close up shop and not 10,000 or more, and voted to
allow open bw-ning within 1,000
feet outside smaller towns.
The board also rejected a
Including: Smiley, Ecology
Gabriel did some running and section of the regulations
light throwing.
which would have forbidden
and Red-White-Blue (one tie)
Defensive tackle Mike Tille· variances on emissions of
man of the Houston Oilers will "fugitive dust" which is raised
undergo exploratory surgery by trucks or emitted from
for a groWth in his abdomen. factory windows rather than
Tilleman had a malignant stacks.
growth removed from his
abdomen two years ago and an
Majof LecigUe Standings
MIDDLEPORT 0.
abnormality showed up during By United Press International
National League
routine X-rays Monday.
East
New York Giants coach Alex
w. 1. pel . g.b,
55 33 .625
Webster said that Randy Pittsburgh
New York
49 38 .563 5 112
Johnson , currently battling SL Loui s
45 43 .511 10
Chi cago
46 44 .511 10
Norm Snead lor the starting Montrea
SUMMER
t
40 47 ..460 lA 112
quarterback job, will open Phi ladelph ia 31 57 .352 24
West
against the Kansas City Chiefs
w. I. pet. g.b.
in their preseason game Satur· Cin c inna t i
55 33 :625
Houston
51 41 .554 6
day at Canton, Ohio.
L os Ange l es
47 42 .528
81h
Chuck Hixson, a former Atlanta
42 49 .46 2 Ulh
F ranci sco 41 52 . 4-11 16•h
passing star at Southern San
San D iego
33 56 .371 22112
Methodist, retired from
No games Monday
Today's Game
football Monday after being
AL A!I .Stars vs. NL AII ·Sters
traded from Kansas City to at At l anra , 8 :30p .m . EDT
No games Wednesday
Bufffalo.

A WEDNESDAY MORNING

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game on a mistake, then for.
leited the second game by not
showing up to protest televisiOI!
cameras installed in the hall
where they are playing. Then
he won lhe third game, drew
the next, and won the last two
to go into the lead.
In chess at the championship
level, three wins in a row lor
Fischer could he shattering to
8Passky's morale despite his
reputed catm. 8Passky's se·
conds went out of their way to
point out · that Mikhail Bot·
vinnik lost three games in a
row before winning the world
title from Mikhail Tal in 19tll.

REYKJAVIK,Iceland (UPI )
~Bobby Fischer, his drive to
take the world chess cham·
pionship away· from Bori s
Spassky already off to a
powerful start, goes lor his
third win in a row today_,. win
that could be a demoralizing
blow to the titleholder.
With the hassle over televi·
sion cameras still smouldering
in the background, too players
were to sit down at the board
for the seventh game at I p.m.
EDT. Spassky, 35, a Russian
journalist, plays white..,.nd
thus has the advantage of the
first move.
Soviet chess officials denied
rumors that Spassky would try
to postpone today's game io get
a respite from the two shat·
tering defeats Fischer, 29, a
New Yorker, handed him.
" Mr. Spassky is a
professional chess player and
does not seek cheap excuses
when he has been defeated,"

'

'!'

lAKER

I'UINIIUB

III!IDOIJ, 0.

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115 W. Second

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•

�..

4- the Daily Senllntl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. July 25, 1972 ,

Six Graduate from ·Legion. Club .
.

BY ~EITH WISECUP
Donning the Blue and \Vhile
Meigs American Legion
baseball uniforms lor the llnal
lime Swlday were catcher
Roger Dixon, centerfielder
Rick Ash, pitcher-shortstop
Stan Perry, pitcher ·outfielder
Rick Van Matre," first baseman
Dave Boyd, and shortstop ·
outfielder Steve Dunfee.
Dixon led the club in at bats,
runs batted in, stolen bases ,

.

0.87. Va11 Matre duuc wl •etlrer in rightfield at
led the stall in wins wiU1 eight shurtsluu, t11· at the plaLc 2wd
while !using only one game, played 'll'illianlly it• the final
and had pitched three years lor lwo weeks of the seaStm.
Howie Taylor is '':"IC uf the
the Meii-\S Le gion .
Dave Boyd, who hit the lung finest fielding ~hortstops
ball. was the number one first· anywl1erc, but with teammates
baseman on the squad. He had like Perry and Dunfee also
a hut loumament with a triple shortstops, plus ljght-hilting,
evel'yone through the area fur and single in U1e final game limiled his playing time.
great stuff on the mound . against I.ancaster.
Coach George Nesselruad's
Going into tournament play his
Steve Dunfee was "Mr. local nine ended with an 111-11·1
nine·inning earn ed run Consistent" as he got the job slate. Mauy fans think this club ·
was disappointing in the

and balled at a .341 pace while
e~wning one ·uf the best arms
behind the plate opposing
runner·s laced
year. Ash
was the dub 's top hitter with
an average of .357 and played
centerfield in 29 of Meigs' 30
games.
. Perr·y was known by

average was

all

distrh•l lttUI'IIHIIICIIl, fi11ishin~
SON ARRFSTED
lhil'd uul uf f11ur teams.
PHILADEI.PHIA iUPIJ
But . this just doesn't )wid The s&lt;m of Gino Marchetti,wa ter, wilh teams such as lormer defensive end ~I the
f.ancasler,l9-5, and Athens, 2iJ. Baltimore Cults professional
:1, compet.illg . For every · loot.ball team, was being held
·yinner, there's a 'loser, and Mor•day with two others on
Meigs was a fint! loser. just as charges they robbed a hitch·
111uch as Athen~ ur Lant'aster hiker at knilepoint of $41.
will be a fine winner.
Police said Ernest Mar·
chetti, 21 , of St. Davids, Pa.,
and tw o companions, Edward
REDS INK DRAFT CHOICE Glowitz and. Michael Mintzer,
CINCINNATI (UPI )-Larry stole the money from Kark
Payne, a pitcher from Bedia, Oslerag alter giving the man a
Texas, signed with the Cincin· ride in their van last Saturday.
!Ulli Reds Monday. Payne, 18, Ail three were being held in
was the Reds' No:1 draft choice Muntgomery County jail
in the recent free agen_t draft. pending a hearing.

5- The Dallf Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 25,1972
3d C!Jt:ee.an'~; :::~. , Y:::::
r·r.::":CW:!:'&lt;~':':Ot~•~:\(-*::::;~

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~Ol

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Bill Chaney
Steve Lee
Johnny Roush
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Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
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Dove Boyd

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Kevin Sheets
Lou McKinney

Stan Perry
Howle Taylor
Steve Dunfee
Others- X

4

15
10
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27
11
33

2
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53

13

14
13
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17
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4

Pitching :
Pllyar
Johnny Baird
Stan Perry
Rick Ash
BiliChaney
Skip Johnson
Steve Lee
Rick Van Maire

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TOTALS

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TOTALS

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26

Today~

Almansc
By-United PresalnteroaUonal
Today is Tuesday, July 25,
the 207th day of 1972 with 159 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
full phase .
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
·
The evening stars are Mereu·
ry, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Leo.
American artist Maxfield
Parrish was born July 25, 1870.
On this day In history:
In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant
became the first American
officer to reach the rank of
general In the U.S. Army.
In 1934, Chancellor Englebert
Dolfuss of Austria was assas·
sinated by troops of the Nazi
black guard as Adolf Hitler
tried unsucce!ISfully to take
over that country.
, In 1943, King Victor Emmanuel or Italy replaced Fascist
dictator Benito MussolinL.who
wu executed by a squad of
parlilanslq 1945.
In 1962, Puerto Rico became
a Jelf.govemlng U.S. common.
wealth.
A thought for the day :
American statesman Daniel
Webster said, "Let our object
be our cowttry, our whole
country, and nothing but our
coun try."
.

' 9
8

20
6

2

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59 2-3
3
10 2-3
19 2-3

17
2
5

2

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3
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4
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3

9

3

12

3
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10
9

3

12

3
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8
8

6

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4

10 2-3
6 1-3

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14

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20

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3

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3

4

3

0
0
0

3

16

62

14
6

13
6
105

198

13
13
26
42
ISO

2.89
2.15
2.01
2.36

I
I

I

H
15
19

5

02

.429

0

7

8
18
12
25
10
14
21

6.00
1.36
6.00

.500

2
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W
10

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11
52 101
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128

47
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257

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Smith was the winning pitcher
while Smith was charged with
the loss.
The Kiwanis team plated two
runs in the first on an error,
double by Nibert and single by
Pearson.
PATRIOTS' CUTS
AMHERST, Mass . (UPI)Veteran cornerback Randy
Beverly, linebacker Jerry
Murtaugh, wide receiver Eric
Crabtree, tight end Roland
Moss and rookie running hack
Mike Mikolayunas were cut
Monday by the New England
Patriots of the National Fool·
ball League.
In a s tronomy , Baily's
beads are a number of bright
points of light which can be
seen for ~ lew seco nds at the
instant when a solar eclipse
becomes total.
-~~

I

•

•

::::..
:-:·

UPI Sports Editor

"It's an honor to be selected in this game and I don't think
anyone who 's ever selected should say I don't wanna play," said
the bantam Baltimore field boss. "Ninety.five per cent of this
gate goes to the pension land . If we start saying this·game isn't
important, it won't be . This pays for my retirement and his
retirement. It pays for all the players' retirement and they better
not forget that. "
Calmer Appraisals Later
Weaver later said he wasn't as critical of Gibson as he was
over those who reported what he had said.
"He said it after pitching a tough game," said the Orioles'
leader . "It's not his fault. It's yours for writing it. "
Weaver pointed to members of the press when he made his
remarks.
When Weaver's comments first were reported to Gibson, the
Cards' ace pretty much said what came naturally- that other
word on his rtng .
But later when all of Weaver's statements were repeated for ·
him, Gibson softened and said:
"I didn't hear what Weaver said first-hand so I can't answer
hiln."
Still later, during a question.,nd-answer session with lhe
media, Gibson again was questioned about his reported attitude
toward the All-Star game .
"I didn't say I didn 't want to play," the St . Lolli£ righthander
said slowly, deliberately . "What l said is I hoped I w'ouldn 't have
to pitch more than an inning ."
"What if everybody, all the players, felt like you ?" came a
question.
''That won 't happen," Gibson replied. "Everybody's differ·
ent. u
Gibson Speaks Ills Mind
Some people who don't know Bob Gibson got the wrong idea
abcrut him.
Because he speeks out lor what he believes, articulates well
and doesn't beat around the bush, offering soft, sweet answers to
some pointed, gutburning questions, he "has been labeled a
''mUitant" in a few quarters.
Bob Gibson says he couldn't care less, and I say hooray for Bob
Gibaon lor saying what he feels, for speeking his mind.
Joe Torre, hislesmmate with the Cards, feeis ·the same way.
"! understand perfectly when he says he'd much rather pitch
Thursday than Tuesday night," says Torre. "He's concerned
with the pennant race. We had it tough enough when we had only
four starters. Now with Scipio Spinks out, we've got only lhree.
But don't worry about Bob Gibson not giving everything he's got
in lhe All-Star game . He wouldn't know how to do anything else.
There's a guy who has as much pride as anybody I've ever seen."
Even Earl Weaver buys that.
Long alter all lhe original furor had subsided, the little guy
leading the AL All-Stars said:
"I'm not really blaming Gibson. I don't think he should've said
what he said, but llhink the headline writers crucified him. How
do I feel about hlm personally? I like him. He's one helluva
pitcher. I'm glad he's pitching only three imings against us."
The nest thing you know, Bob Gibson is. going to let Earl
Weaver wear his ring.

Actual size

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy
will adjust t o this t olerance, If

--~

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with each S3 gasoline purchase.

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the

Fischer Driving
For 3rd Straight

i~

. . ' *'l. .. ),~· ,

7

0
0
0
9
9
0
3
21
1

Pet Era

L

0
0
2
0

.

ATLANTA (UPl)-Bob Gibson wear~ this unique ring.
It's done in Florentine gold and actually has two sides.
Glblon wears the ring on .his left pinky and usually the side
that's showing says LOVE.
But there is anolher word on the other side.
Maybe the best way to illustrate this other word would be to
explain one of its rpany, many meanings is ... aw, the devil with
all those daily problems forever plaguing huma,nity.
Bob Gibson, the National League starter in tonight's AIIStar
contest and the 36-year-old superhummer who has won II in a
row for the St. Louis Cardinals after losing his first five, em·
ployed that word when he first heard what Earl Weaver had to
say about him.
Weaver, the blunt, little Baltimore manager handling the
American League All-Stars, threw something of a harpoon into
Gibaon for remarks attributed to him regarding his selection to
his eighth AII-Btar team.
'·" · · • Hot Words At Fl1'8t
·GI~n, more concerned with the regular National League ra.;.
and ~e prospect of missing his regular tum when the Cards
resume against the Montreal Expos Thursday, had said he hoped
he wouldn't have to pitch more than an inning tonight.
Some headline writers got hold of that and when Weaver
arrived here he was carrying two samples of their work with
him.
One of the heads said :
"Cards' Gibson Hopes to Duck Star Nod."
The other said :
"Streaking Gibson Is Cool to Classic."
That's what gal Weaver all worked up.

SB

7
5
2
10

8

I
10
9

6

New Haven, Ripley In
KC Tournament Finals
New Haven's ·Reds, given a
new lease on Hie with the
ouster of Hometown, W. Va.,
from the 14th . Annual Kyger
Creek Little League Tour·
nament, exploded for II runs in
the first inning enroute to a
four inning, 12-2 victory over
Pt. Pleasant Kiwanis In the
semi finals of the tournament
Mondar night.
New Haven will meet Ripley
Daniel Boone in the cham·
pionship of the tournament at
8: IS p.m. this evening.
Cheshire's Tigers and Pt.
Pleasant Kiwanis will meet in
the consolation game.
The big first inning rally
featured a grandslam home
run by K. Goldsberry. M.

9
I
3
0

0

B

W Sac

7
10
15
4
7
3

4
3
I
0 10
0
4
1 104

2

W

4

0
0

(&gt;

ER

K

3
0
3

8

MEIGS LEGION
TOURNAMENT STATISTICS
G AB

TOTALS

3

Rbi

9

G
2

PLAYER

HR
0

0
0
0

IS

67
18 223

Pitching:

R

IP

CG
12

38
0
0
2

.341

29
2
5
30 827 . 12S 196

G

28

.148
.182
.182
.24 5
.236
.296
.000
.000
.371
.357
.188

IS

TOTALS
X - No longer with team .

PLAYER

Avg.

H

8
0
8
0
22
13 17
29
17 30
25 64
8 12
24 73
5 14
29 88
18 30
25 5 2 9 1 1
2656811
18 43
6 10
16 26
2
2
26 69 12 17

Roger DixOn

MlckAsh
Jon Buck
Steve Lee
Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
Rick Van Maire
Dave Boyd
Roger Dixon
Kevin Sheets
lou McKinney
Stan Perry
Steve Dunfee

R

By MILTON RICHMAN

.,...

MEIGS AMERICAN LEGION
FINAL BASEBALL STATISTICS
t30 GAMES)

Blttil1jj:
Player
Johnny Baird

··

American League

Detroit
Balllmore
Boston
New York
Ct!veland

Mllwoukee

11.
e·~~
51 3

's•s'o·
.

t .b.

50 38 .568

1

AS 41 .523

5
7'1f2
Ulf2

_.2 AJ .494
36 51 .41-4

w~sr 52

.402 15'1•
w. I. pet. g.b.

Ooklond
Chlcogo
Minnesota
Kansas Ci ty
Celifornia

56
&lt;9 35
&lt;1 .615
.5« ,,,,
AS A2 .517 9
.u AS .-49A 11
-40 52 .435 16 1h
Texas
37 53 .411 18 1/l
No gamu Monday
Today's Game

AII ·Sfors
vs. NL. All
-Stars
at AL
Atlanta,
8: 30p.m
EDT
No g1m11 Wednes.day

'

"IT'S TRUE"···

~· !:1\lo':~&lt;"·· ~

...

•;.~

..~

.,.·. ~. ·\- ,.'

LEU JJUilOCHF:It, the winningest ac·-•·
live ri1anager in the major leagues, is
closing in on the 2,tltlO·victory mark.
{llis teams had won I.Kti5 ~ames and
lost 1.570 entering the 1972 season.! He
began his managing career in 1939
with the llrooklyn !lodgers. whW&gt;e 1944
satin night uniform he modeled at left .
lluroch'er man aged the New York
Giants, above, from 194H to 1955. winning two National League pennants ,
and has directed the Chicago Cubs
since 1966. when he returned tu baseball after a 10-Har absru&lt;'t' .

Leo Let Go
.
B Y Ch lCU bS
·

•

.

ATLANTA (UPI) - Carroll
"Whitey" Lockman celebrated
his 46th birthday today as the
new manager of the Chicago
Cubs replacing Leo Durocher,
the fifth managerial casualty
so far this season .
The sixth could be in the
works.
Eddie Mathews, it is being
reported here, will take over
for Lwnan Harris as manager
of the Atlanta Braves possibly
as early as this week.
The Lockman-Durocher
swi tc h wasn 't exa ctly a
shocker.
It was supposed to have
transpired last November, but
Phil Wrigley, owner-president
of the Cubs, had a sudden
change of mind and permitted
Durocher to retain the Cubs'
managerial job eight more
months.
Lockman, who once served
under Durocher as first base.
man for the old New York
Giants, was asked whether he
was surprised by the switch,
which was announced here by
Cubs' General Manager John
Holland in the early hours of
this morning .
11
Yes, I was,'' he replied, but
he didn't look overly surprised.
He said he would not make
any changes.
"I think the personnel we
have here is good enough," he
said. "l don't think we have to
make any changes."
Lockman will be in charge of
the team when the Cubs
resume play in Philadelphia
July '1:1 following the All..star
game break. He was named
manager lor the duration of the
season only and also was
elevated to vice president.

Until laking over for the 6!iyear-old Durocher, Lockman
was assistant to Holland and
director of player development.
Durocher. who has been in
baseball almost SO years, will
remain with the Cubs as a
consultant.
Durocher and Wrigley met in
Chicago Monday night and
when the decision was reached
by Wrigley to make the
change, Holland and Lockman
were notified here .
"Leo wished us both luck,"
said Holland. "I wouldn't say I
noticed any change in him over
the telephone. He was his usual
self. I told him I enjoyed the six
and a hall years we worked
together. We never had any
real problems. We had mutual
respect for each other's job. I
never interfered with his job
and he never interfered with
mine. ' '

Durocher's departure lroin
the managerial ranks, perhaps
for good, followed by a week
the exit of Minnesota manager
Bill Rigney who, like Lockman,
once played for Durocher with
the Giants . Frank Quilici
succeeded Rigney as field boss
of the Twins. In other
managerial changes this sea·
son, Del Crandall took over for
Dave Bristol at Milwaukee,
Don Zinuner replaced Preston
Gomez at San Diego and.Paul
Owens succeeded Frank Luc·
chesi at Philadelphia.
The official release the Cubs
handed out here said that
Durocher had "stepped aside"
as manager but none of the
baseball men gathered for
tonight's AII·Star game
doubted that he had been fired.

·Wants More Cash
By JOE CARNICEILI

UPI Sports Writer
Joe Namath is getting ready
to play football again. The only
question now is when.
Namalh, the New York Jets'
celebrated and oft-injured
quarterback, reported to the
club's training camp at Hofstra
University and engaged in his
first workouts Monday. But he
has yet to sign a contract with
the Jets, who paid hlm over
$400,000as a rookie in 1966, and
claims" he won't take part in
any preseason game until he is
signed.
"I'm here because It's my
job and I want to prepare for
lhe season like everyone else,"
Namath said. "I'm ready to
play. I don't want to leave the
Jets. But I won't play in any
exhibition games until l have a
signed contract."
Namalh appeared in ex·
cellent condition during his two

9t).minute workouts and coach
Weeb Ewbank was optimistic.
Elsewhere in the pro football
camps, the New England
Patriots traded Jlm Nance, the
bulwark of their runnirig game
in the mid~. to the Philadelphia Eagles for a high draft
choice next season. Nance had
asked to ~ traded beecause he
felt he was not being used
enough.
Bill Thomas, Dallas' No. I
draft choice from Boston
College, will be out for three
weeks with a shoulder injury.
X-rays revealed that a staple
pin in the running back's
shoulder from previous
surgery two seasons ago had
worked loose.
·
Quarterback
Roman
Gabriel, who suffered a
collapsed lung last week, was
back in the Los Angeles Hams'
training camp Monday, about .
two weeks ahead of schedule.

lf

one Soviet official said.

11

Tt-u :. neek ·s Special

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He

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on Farmsju~of::~~~v~~s:::~game.
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will be in his seat on time."
Fischer has arrived late lor

Eased

.

FACTORY AIR .

*1495

Fischer led 31!. points to 21!. for.
8Passky. With a win counting

Karr &amp;_Van.Zandt

~~re !~~~f::e:, ::7iJ~~o~e~

"You'll Like Our Qual ity
COLUMBUS (UP!)- The do anything lor the next 90
Way of Do ing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
Ohio Air Pollution Control days," Whitman was told by needed 12 points to retain the
.Pomeroy
Board adopted state open Earl McMunn, senior board championship while Fischer 992-5342
Open Evenings·'Til8 :00
burning restrictions with only member.
needed 121,2 to win it.
Til S P.M. Sat.
minor modifications Monday,
The board generally left in·
Fischer lost the opening
including allowing farmers to tact guidelines drafted July 6
burn waste as part of their after a public hearing. It
normal agricultural activities. turned down most proposals by
The
board , however, special interest groups
rejected a suggestion by the representing contractors,
Ohio Contractors Association farmers and railroads to soften
to expand the burning options the regulations.
of highway builders and
The board declined to adopt a ·
refused to write~n "catch..all" proposal by the Montgomery
language to allow uncontrolled County Tuberculosis
burning of railroad ties.
Association which would have
The board did approve revi· ·forbidden open burning in any
sions to emission regulations major urban area in Ohio.
and procedures lor granting
Jack Wunderle, representing
permits and variances, in theboard'sstaff,said there are
response to the Federal En· regulations curtailing bw-ning
vironmental Agency.
in cities, and a cutoff of open
Ira Whitman, director of the burning there would not
newly created state Environ· significantly improve air
mental Protection Depart· outside the metropolitan areas.
ment, urged the board to
The board reduced the zone
continue its supervision of around municipal cqrporations
pollution control permits within which no open burning
during the next 110 days. Then ·. p1ay ~ur. ,"
"
'
the board will go out of
Original guidelines called for
existence and Whitman's new a one-mile ban-&lt;Jn--burning belt
agency will take over its func· · aroWJd municipalities of 1,000
lions.
population .
The
board
"Personally,! wouldn't want amended them to he cities of
to see us close up shop and not 10,000 or more, and voted to
allow open bw-ning within 1,000
feet outside smaller towns.
The board also rejected a
Including: Smiley, Ecology
Gabriel did some running and section of the regulations
light throwing.
which would have forbidden
and Red-White-Blue (one tie)
Defensive tackle Mike Tille· variances on emissions of
man of the Houston Oilers will "fugitive dust" which is raised
undergo exploratory surgery by trucks or emitted from
for a groWth in his abdomen. factory windows rather than
Tilleman had a malignant stacks.
growth removed from his
abdomen two years ago and an
Majof LecigUe Standings
MIDDLEPORT 0.
abnormality showed up during By United Press International
National League
routine X-rays Monday.
East
New York Giants coach Alex
w. 1. pel . g.b,
55 33 .625
Webster said that Randy Pittsburgh
New York
49 38 .563 5 112
Johnson , currently battling SL Loui s
45 43 .511 10
Chi cago
46 44 .511 10
Norm Snead lor the starting Montrea
SUMMER
t
40 47 ..460 lA 112
quarterback job, will open Phi ladelph ia 31 57 .352 24
West
against the Kansas City Chiefs
w. I. pet. g.b.
in their preseason game Satur· Cin c inna t i
55 33 :625
Houston
51 41 .554 6
day at Canton, Ohio.
L os Ange l es
47 42 .528
81h
Chuck Hixson, a former Atlanta
42 49 .46 2 Ulh
F ranci sco 41 52 . 4-11 16•h
passing star at Southern San
San D iego
33 56 .371 22112
Methodist, retired from
No games Monday
Today's Game
football Monday after being
AL A!I .Stars vs. NL AII ·Sters
traded from Kansas City to at At l anra , 8 :30p .m . EDT
No games Wednesday
Bufffalo.

A WEDNESDAY MORNING

DOOR BUSTER SALE
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9 A.M. Til 12 Noon

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100 Maottr Chara- _&lt;rtcllt cordi.

game on a mistake, then for.
leited the second game by not
showing up to protest televisiOI!
cameras installed in the hall
where they are playing. Then
he won lhe third game, drew
the next, and won the last two
to go into the lead.
In chess at the championship
level, three wins in a row lor
Fischer could he shattering to
8Passky's morale despite his
reputed catm. 8Passky's se·
conds went out of their way to
point out · that Mikhail Bot·
vinnik lost three games in a
row before winning the world
title from Mikhail Tal in 19tll.

REYKJAVIK,Iceland (UPI )
~Bobby Fischer, his drive to
take the world chess cham·
pionship away· from Bori s
Spassky already off to a
powerful start, goes lor his
third win in a row today_,. win
that could be a demoralizing
blow to the titleholder.
With the hassle over televi·
sion cameras still smouldering
in the background, too players
were to sit down at the board
for the seventh game at I p.m.
EDT. Spassky, 35, a Russian
journalist, plays white..,.nd
thus has the advantage of the
first move.
Soviet chess officials denied
rumors that Spassky would try
to postpone today's game io get
a respite from the two shat·
tering defeats Fischer, 29, a
New Yorker, handed him.
" Mr. Spassky is a
professional chess player and
does not seek cheap excuses
when he has been defeated,"

'

'!'

lAKER

I'UINIIUB

III!IDOIJ, 0.

LOOK FOR ME LATER
IN 1HIS
NEWSPAPER!

SGDN!

7 .,.

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115 W. Second

992·2284 ·

Pomeroy, 0.

•

�6- The Daily Sentilll'l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 25, 1972

,·:~:.:::~,

Diehl Hosts Garden Club
Ja mes Diehl en· Sept embe r. The August
the Bend of the River m eellflg wil! include a
Garden club at thei r July workshop tu plan tht• club's
mee ting. New offi cers elected &lt;.'u nlrt butlon lv th e Me igs
wer e presiden t, Mrs. Ber t CHunty Fa ir flower show, dale
Mrs.

ter ~ i ned

Grlmm: vice president, Mrs.

In lM:&gt; announced.

Andrew Cross; secretary, Mrs.
Edward
Sim pson , and
l!·easurer, Mrs. Cliffor d
Morris. lnstallathm w11l be
held at the September meeting.
Mrs. Si mpson was head of the
nomina ting committee.
The devotional leader, Mr5.
Wilson Carpenter, read Psalm

The proJcel at the Lcllorl
Fa ll s ce metery, whi ch in·
eluded a plan leo· and bench,
has been co mpl eted c111d
dugwood trees, donated by
Mo·s. W. 0. Barmtz, have bee n
plunled.
Tl1e program, prepared by
Mrs. Ed Simpson in cluded
pla nnin g and ca re of
ca ladiums, cannas
an d
glad ioli.
Mrs. Ben Phi lson gave an
i11 teres ting talk on her rece nt
European trip. She spoke of the
nuts tan din g bea uty of th e
fluwers in homes gardens
'
J
'
busi ness plaees and public
squares in Ita ly.
Ribbons for red, white and
bl ue a t·ra ng.emcnts were
awarded Mrs Carpenter, Mrs.

124, an d a reading,

~· H orn i n ~

Pogeon5 In the Fog." Roll call
was a favo rite patriotic song.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn ga ve a
report on a recent visit to the
Gallipolis Sta le Institute, and a
letter of thanks was r ead from

the Pomeroy Post offi ce for a
donatio n to th e flower boxes
fu nd. The regular meeting
night was changed from the
th ird Monday of the month to
the fo urth Monday, starting in

Grimm, Mrs. Murr is ll.lld Mrs.

IIIC'IIIbcr of the el•uir. Mr:...

Cross.

Di eld t..c r·ved r cfr ·..!s llment:-:

·

Dui'IIIJ.: lllc SOl'iCI I

hOur

fn u11 a l.able t·e uh.Tcll w; ::
yellow rlc 1wers a nd 1.ipcirs. Till.!
lrave li n~-: prize wa~ awarded
Mr;i. Andrew Cross.

a

recording of lh l~ All Ohi u Choi r
w:ts pla yed. T ll i ~ was
espcc u:tlly lll tcrcsliug tu the
l'iuiJ ns Miss J n F.llen Dif'hl is a
~~:::::::;:;:::~::::::::::::::::.::::::~~::::::::::::::;:: :: :::::::::::::

i ~::~:YN~; I
Spending the weekend al
Calednnia woth the Terry
Kmg hts and sun Stevie were:

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight,
sun Di ck and Sandy Ya tes, and

Mr. and Mrs. Wolliam Matlack.
The bir thda ys .,f. Mr. Matlack
a11d Mrs. Chester Kntght wer e
ubservel!. A featur e included a

large birthda y cake baked on
j he fol'lll or a buok with in sc rip ltUII " Happ y Birthday
Bill " &lt;HI, one side and "Happy
Bu·thday Mom" Qn the other.
Mrs. Belly Riggs, employed

Hideaway Furniture Today
Beats the Space Squeeze

lhe Blue and Gr ay
rest.:mn mt, has re turned from
&lt;.1 week's visit in Cincinnati
with fr ie nds.
M1111day lun cheo n gues ts uf
Mr. ct rtd Mr s. Del mar A.
Canaday were: Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Fisher, Pumeroy; Mr.
"''d Mrs. Mayna rd Car nes,
Mrs. Ruth Hall , Mrs. •Freda
Price, Mrs. Munna Andrews ,
Mrs. Edi th Slewao·t, Mrs. Ca rol
JaCIJbstm, Mr s.
Mildr ed
Gambli11
and
Teddy
Tewksbary, all of Columbus.
Mcii'Y. Radfor·d is again at
h,.mc afte r an eight day stay at
Riverside Methodi st hospi ta l,
Columbus. SI1e is the daughter
j1f
Mr . and Mr s. Willia m
Radf,wd .
al

"Sorrowful Night" Tree
Th e Ir e e known as the
" tr ee of the sorrowful night"
is loca ted in Mexico Cit y.
Lege nd says Hernando Cortes
wept under thi s cy press in
1520 aft er the Aztecs routed
hi s a r m,y .

ALL SMILES after taking
ovr r di rection of the Pr('Si·
dent's rc-e I e t lion drivr.

Decorot1ve folding ta ble and choors otfer o soluti on to the home space prob.'
Iem . One approa ch I S a tabl e tha t come5 in a s e l ~c t o on ol eigh t unusua l des igns
on th e top and ma y hang on wa ll os art when not .n use Thos Dorec t10ns mot 1l
IS o design of Coloforn ia n Sharon de Leon for So msonite and fa ld.ng chatrs
come in six solid "we t look." shades. A fo ldi ng slong cho or ge ts 1ts sc ulptura l
elan from a chrome tubul a r steel fram e. Fabric fo r Expresso X IS remova ble
washab le vi nyl, al so on S1x " wet look." colo rs an d table 15 40-o nch d 1ameter
By AILEEN SNODDV

NEW YORK - t NEAI Shrinkin g livi ng space in
most homes and apartments
goes hand·in ·hand with the
swing to more home enter·
tai nment. And such a trend
brings up the question of
where to pu t the extra furn i·
lure necessary when guests
appear on the sce ne. Fort u.
nately. furniture designers
are coming to the aid of the
space sque eze.
For example. there now
are tables that hang on the
wall and look like artwork
chairs tha t fold in a sc ul p:
tural form , inflatable sto ols
and chairs, cushions and
clamp-on lamps that can be
moved from room to room .
The futur e in casual furni·
l ure for din ing or playing
card s, for example. defon ite·
ly is more arc hitectural.
Accordin g to fl obert Fuj i·
oka a nd Art Ellswoo·th. "Our
homes always refl ect our
life·s tyles and as our life.
styles change, so do our
homes.· · The award -winnmg
tea m of Design Wes t created
winning designs for Sarnsonite F ur niture recently.

Their approach is built
a round the thought th at "We
ar·e less forma l . . . more
porta ble people. With homes
use d mo re freq uently for
cas ual

enter taini ng,

furni-

ture must be more than just
a pretty face. It mu st be
functional. ''
B reak t~ ro u g h s

in tec hno·
logy allow such des igners as

Fujioka and Ellsworth to
c:pme ~p with truly imagina trve pteces. New svnl heti(.'S
help in mnkJ ng new ap·
proac hes to structure and
comfort and plastic are im ·
portant materials by them ·
selves. Steel, too. is shaped
in exci ti ng forms a nd not
just at rigid ri ght angles
New fabrics mean less ca re
All these advances. the de·
signers explain . encourage
co upl es to use then· home
reg ularly as a base fo r ~ ~~ ·
tertainin g.

Anna Wiks is
Club 's Hostess

Clark MacGregor is laking
a ser ious vicn: of the coun p a i g n a h e a d . li e has
\\'arncd HetJnblicans not tu
be o ve r cnn fld t.• nt . Mm'(jrcgur. a Whitt• U o u s,.
ai dt.• a nd ror111cr co n ~rt• ss ­
man rrom Minneso ta. sut··
tN•dcd r II r Ill t• r AHurnt' Yr;,-ncral .Juhn ~ l iii'IH' Il ;,.
ta nqmi~n t'h it'f .

POLl,l'"S POINTERS
He n • Are EasY \VaYs

To Hemow Smoke ( )dor
ll.r l'O I.L\' l ' H..\MEII

DI•:A H POLLY- I wan t to tell Mrs A W . who had a
fire in her home and cannot ge l rid of th e smo ke odor.
11m_t ):ihe rmght sp ray he r house Wit h oil of wi ntergreen.
whoch c~ n be bought at a drugsto re. One ta!Jiespoon in
a p 111 1 ol water put 111 a spray can or bot tle 1s great for
smoke oclor We ha d a f1re and the smoke smel l remained
in the ai r &lt;:o n d iti o n ~r unt il we used this method . wh ich
I lear ned fr om so me ladoes in my circle . II surely worked
lor '" so I hupt• ol due5 as we ll for Mrs. .~ . W - MH S.

,~

Mr . a11d Mrs. Her! Btl{.limer
~.pc 11 t the weekf' l'd il• Hu cyrus
with their da ughter , Mrs.
lland&lt;l Burke and fami ly.
Mrs. Gerto·ude Miller and
Mrs. Wr lliam Gruese r were
recent visi tors with relatives in
Cl!lulllbus.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Raymond
Burns and daughter, Kathy , of
Cu vin glon,
Ky . a rrived
Sa turday for a week's visit
~ i l lo Mrs. Martha Childs and
oll1cr rela tives.
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Yeauger and Kevin , and Mrs .
Frank Beach have returned
£r om a wee k's visi t in
Melbour ne, Fla. with Mrs.
Beach's nephew, Robert
Taylor and family. They went
by plane and visited Cape
Kennedy , Disneyland and
other· points of interest. The
Yea ugers left Sunday for a few
days' sllty al Pipestem Park in
Wes t Virginia.
Mr . and Mrs. George Ed
G1·eenlee and daughters, Eva
Lynn and Katie, of Westerville
were guests last week of Mr.
Greenlee's mother, Mrs. E. C.
Gree nlee.
Mrs. Charles fock and son,
Dana, of Chester were recent
guests of Mr. an~Mr s. M. L .
Kelly .
Mrs. Leo Sea rls and son,
Dana, of Chester were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. I..
Kelly.
Mrs. Leo Searls and Dee
Hart inger left Sa turday for
Saupul pa, Okla., fot• a visit
w1t h th eir cu usi n, F ran k
Anguish.
Mrs. Charles Warner was
released Monday from Holzer
hospita l where she underwer1t
surgery. She will spend several
weeks with her son, John
Sewell , in Marietta .
Mrs. Ri ley Cassell, Patrick,
Michael and Charlene returned
'" their hume in Cadiz Sunda y
followmg a week's visit woth
Mrs. Elui lla L. Cassell, Bryan
Place. Mrs. Casse ll aceompan ied th em for a two
weeks' v1sil.
Mrs . Wi lber Theobald had
the misfortune to fall down a
fl og111 or steps al her home and
suslloined a broken righ t arm.
She was taken lo Veterans
Memor ial Hospital, and
return ed lo her home Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Roush
entertained recently with a
fa nuly dinner at their hom e on
Rutland Street. Presen t were
Mr. an d Mrs. Will iam L.
Roush, daughters Ana Maria
aPd Luellen of Syracuse, N. Y.,
aPd Mr. and Mrs. Paul Roush,
Tom and Amy of Chester.
Mr. an d Mrs. Wilford Floren
of Mari on spent the weekend
~ itlo Mrs. Bess ie Ashl ey.
Sunday th.ey were din ner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
Topton of Ches hire.
Mr. a11d Mrs. William L.
Roush. Ana Mar ia and Luellen
of Syracuse . N.Y. left Sunday
for a vacation in the East and
Sout h, after a two weeks' visit

Il

BALLARD'S

·.soc 1a·1 .::

~"ns

·

·t . eJ.w.:.~.cx~~

Calendar

Meet a new friend ·
with an old problem.

WHOLE HOG

:•.·

BETTY CANARY

I

Wipe Your ·Nose
Anti Buy a S~fa

TUESDAY
DREW WEBSTER Auxiliary
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the ha ll.
Prog ram : Buckeye Girls' S~te
represe ntatives and a film on
drug abuse to be shown by Carl
Hyse ll . Juni or members
hostesses.
PUBLIC MEETINGS, 8 p.m.
Monday at Chester Elementary School; 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Tuppers Plains School. Special
election on 2. 75 mi ll building
btmd issue in Eastern Local
School Distric t, Aug. 15, to be
up for discussion at both
sessions.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday , 8 p.m. at
Post Home .
WEDNES DAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club luncheon, 12 noon
Wednesday, at Meigs Inn. All
members urged to be present.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Minersville, Wednesday at 8
p.m. at United Methodis t
Chur ch. Betty Lou Dean ,
Demonstrat or. Open meeting
and workshop. Officers are

with Mr. Roush's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. L. L. Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Rober t Schuck
and daughter, Debbie, left
Sunday for a vacati on at
Dearborn, Mich. Enroute th ey
wil l visit relati ves in
Washingtonville, Oh io. Debbie
was a r ecent pati ent at
Riverside Methodist hospil&lt;ll in
Columbus.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

12 oz.

SAUSAGE

NECK BONES

BOLOGNA

WIENERS

pkg.

5 lb. $1 1b.39e

9~

lb.

Middleport ·Q.
~~;

~

Kelvinator Air Conditioners

t •'" t'.,.o,l

I

•

•

,

Prit·•· Totl•y

MASON
FURNITURE
~H. m~m

MISON, W. i~

61000

''" ,,

.........

~

• ~ "·'

1• • •

~osrt 1 n 1 .1.:11

h"''' •' ,,,...~... d

r h.•••!.~o lr••••nl"'' ... "''&lt;litlfl.

,,, • • 1"' ".. '""'

t "' "''" ' .,,

-··~· ..... . ,...

,.,th .. .,,_,

,~

\

•

QUEEN OF SCOT 12 oz. can
ORANGE JUICE
SCOT LAD
LEMONADE

6 oz. can

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

9 oz. can

Supply of Ice Cubes

12~

MEADOW RICH

89¢
$

qts.
for

RICH'S WHIPPED
TOPPING

3

lb.

r-----~------------~-·
JULY 26th THRU 29th

Golden Ripe

10 AM TO 7 PM

,. .

llf~~fa1ef~1t

.y

11

I A'!

llfiff~'

1[

I

~', '1

"f

,,,,..

FIRESIDE

Graham
Crackers Crackers Crackers

size 99¢

l-Ib.
bxs.

Round All Purpose

$

l~b.

$

bxs.
for

$

bxs.

2~~n~~69¢
3

59t
We Accept Federal Food Stumps

Sugar Free

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

" Wt

PHON E: ~92·3480
Reserve The Right To Lim it Ouont ltoes" '~QD LEPORT. 0.
. .

AYGO

DIET

Thursday Only!

LA

POP

-

8
16 oz.

•

....

PLAYm
RUJIBER.GLOVES
Willi I Frw, Exl rl Ri,ht . Hind
Glovo Fret.

t\

W

89'

R\19.
1.49

WilliPOll
Coo

AT MARK V STORI
,I

C.0""!'

Per CUmmtr-b!ll'" . / •JII•l

SPECIAL .
CLOSEOUT!

I
o

,. ·:

---·

MARK VSTORE
,.. ...........

69

cans for$

,

Willi n. Ct ..... ONLY
t
Wltheut Coupon ~ pllon obe s,.puf :
Fabrle Soft...,... 79' Tlall Oft'er Good
1
thn ;8+72 .Goad Oal,. at

MI'!IK IAN CHAAGE
GI/A~ANTEEIJ

~

FABRIC
SOFTENER ·.

99

IJ OF COV.fl£

J~

591/io

TO INTIOPUCE THE/II C0/.0/l AllTIITAY
WEOil/A /-1/K!f. U/1/Kt;

HONE OffiCE Jt01/ARPIN6AYE. JC!tl!(Jr/1/E tJIIIO _,5661

WITH PURCHASE OF 4
LIGHT BULBS AT REGUlAR
PRICE.

SCOT LAD

bot$.

WED., THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.

•t!IIIT I Pfi.J(JI/f( T·J !11./ANftll

32 oz.

ORE IDA
24 oz. pkg.
DINNER FRIES

BANANAS

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUQ STORE

'~N+~·~u Size Available from Wallets to 30•40

SHERWOOD
STRAWBERRIES

Another Banana Sale!

IN'f.

•lfll'l-lriiii!IJIIMiflla!lffffJOII

BANQUET
BUFFET D

SCOT LAD

59~

¢

lb.
bag

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9.to 10 • Sun.

Master Portrait

•lrtrJIWAIIIMTfiAT/rr/fl. .filii(!
ol/()Alll/ltlf

32 oz.
bol

SALTINE

24 cl pkg.

BOOTH
16 oz. pkg.
OCEAN PERCH

10 oz.
cont.

THAT

COI.OA PfMTIWT

NORTH STAR
TWIN POPS

BANQUET WHOLE
$139
FRIED CHICKEN 2 lb. pkg.

1 gal. crt.

ANNOUNCES

Join Woodsy. •
Give a hoot. Don't pollute.
Work out ways to
make' wastes useful.

¢

2 lb.
pkg.

SCOT LAD
18 oz. pkg.
BREADED
......... VEAL

W. VA.

SUGAR

IVORY
LIQUID
20COFF

7
9¢
_ ,_.......,___

..

POl NT PLEASANT,

Don't pollute.

SAVE 34c

Fig Bars

SCOT PRIDE
ICE MILK

"

Ill

• •~~ ~ •• :::, ~~·-~.~ ~-~-~~'. l

•

..,, . 'l

'"

o IUI"I ' ' ' • III .... . IOJII

to
24,000 BTU

.

• &lt; I l l ' • •••1 1!1\IIUlt
r ,.,,~'"'~l., t..~,._j~ , ....1f
. '
"
·~·
0 11 11\1 ~"''"'"H&gt;I ll)lfll&gt;jh
t•
.oli~• l.tM. ....,,

... ,,

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ............................ lb.·39~

FIRESIDE

t:lu'f'k Our

IN

Give a hoot!

69e

'!'""

A. D. S

DEAH POLLY- I have fin ally lo und a qu ic k and eifi ·
crent WilY tu store rny 1rad·
mg stamps . A long slit is
cu i in the plastic ltd of a
pretty lhree·po und coffee
ca n so 11 is quick and easy
lo drop the sta mps into the
ca n just after I come home
fr om the m a r k e t. This
eli minates a lot of the mo·
tion used w h e n pu tting
th em in some thi ng where
the lid has to be re moved
.or tryin g to pas te them in
the boo k eac h tim e. Save5 loss, too I keep my ca n in the
kitchen. close by the place where I re move groceries
from til e bags .-MRS. V. W. H.

lb.

QUICK-FIX
FOODS
1

...

FRANKIES

SUPERIORS SLICED

.---·-----------------J

" "'

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS PORK

Kathem Ann Dressmaking
'

GROUND CHUCKu••••••• ~b~ gg~

SUPERIORS POLISH

OP EN 10 A.M. Til 4 P.M.

•

SIRLOIN

BEAT·THE
HEAT•••

Phone After 4-992 ·? 145

lb.

lb. 69~

QUICK SER VICE

·~ -

CHOPPED
SALT FISH

. .. •'·:f.·· .•,

'

USDA CHOICE BEEF •.. BEST FOR THE GRILL

lb.

DRESS MAKING
ALTERATIONS

Corner Thi rd &amp; Main

79e

lb.

SUPERIORS
LUNCH MEATS

"aeh of us can affor d only so m a n ~ human frailties.
Therefore. some time ago I gave up gomg to auc\Jons.
And let me stale here that I do not agree with those who
acc use auctionee rs of taking advantage of buyers. We've
a U heard stor ies of how a person wiped hi.s nose and
bcught a set of ho rsehide pa rlor furniture woth. the gest ure. Buyers a re not la mbs being led to slaughter. We
huund and leap and beg for the hammer to fa ll .
We have formed a sort of Auctoon s Anonymo us and
have enj oved a penod of true bliss in our home. Actuall y,
it is a tre mendous rel ief to have a hom e again, one I can
walk about in and caB my own. There was a time when
eve ry nook and crann ~ was fil.led witb the quaint, the
curious and th e unrepaored. Adorable rocking chairs with
the run gs gone ioned my hall wa y. Cracked c rock~ry vied
for space wi th darl ing littl e chests that only needed a bit
uf fix ing in order to be good enough to give to Good, Will .
I have, fr om tim e to time , fallen off the wagon and ,
like a not ·so-reform ed drinker, attended an auction in
order to prove to myse lf that t co uld take them or leave
1hem
Not lo ng ago, my fr iend Inez 1another charter member
of AA 1 attended an auction wit h me . It was a test of woll
power and sales resistance. A test we fail ed.
Inez held my ha nd5 while I saw a perfectly fine Franklin stove go fo r $35. I held her hands while a sterlin g
silve r bowl Ionly sli ghtly dented 1 went for 50 ce nts. We
both wept.
In a daze. we saw a man wi th a fas t right arm take a
set of Waterford glasses for $3 50. We started bidding.
With our usual luck . ·
,
Inez snapped up a bro ken pump organ 1the moving man
charged $45 to bring ot to her back door! . And I acquired
hostesses.
a
bea uti ful · ver v old" Victorian loveseat- Sears &amp; Roe·
TllURSDAY
buck
. ci rca 1959.·
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall .
RELATIVE DIES
REUNION SET
POMEROY WCTU, Th ursMr. and Mrs . Charles Wise,
The
annual
Matlack Reunion
day noon pic nic at the home of Wav erly, re ceived word
will be held Sunday at Rising
Miss Lucretia Genh eimer , recently of the death of J oe
Par k, La ncaster. Relatives
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy.
Stanford at Sidney, Neb., while and friends are cordially inenroute to Califor nia . Mr . vited. Dinner will be served at
Com mercial Term
Stanford , a polio victim, was 12:30 p.m.
1'.0 ll . means " f r e e on the son-in-law of Mrs. Mabel
board ." a comme rcial ex·
IN HOSPITAL
p r e s s i o n describ ing the Sanborn. Funeral services
at
his
home
in
Ceres,
were
held
RACINE
- Mrs. Cora Webb
term s of sale. The seller
Calif.
M
r
.
Stanford
and
his
must load the goods on a
has enwred Grant Hospital,
rao lroad ca r. ship . plane or family had visited in Ohio for Columbus. Her room nwnber is
oth er carri er at the location se veral wee k ~ recently .
546.
na med in the contract.

The fastest land speed by
a wh e e I e d vehicle was
ac hie ve d by the '·Blue
Flame." powered by a Iiquod n a tur a l gas motor .
Ga ry Gabelich aver a ge d
622.4ll7 m iles per hour in
two r uns on the Bonneville
Sa lt Flats . Utah, on Oc t. 23.
t970, The World Almanac
says.

FARM
SAUSAGE

Large Assortment

Hy Jlt;'ITY CANARY

Dt;AH fiiRLS- lf a trace uf tho• smo kt• odor still re·
mu ins, un open bow l of wa ter with one tables poon of am The Pomeroy Jun ior Garden monia added might be left out in an inconspicuous pla ce
Club mel Monda y afternoon at or a saucer of vi negar. A wldclv know n bra nd of housethe home of Anna Wiles. Mrs. hold spra)· disinfecta nt cll min:ites smoke odors. too.POLLY
Robert Lewis and Mrs. Alice
Th ompson gave instru ctions on
Polly's Problem
how to mak e fl ower
OF.Afl PO LLY- I hope some reader can tell me
arrangeme nts for entries at the
how to nd my law n of night craw lers. as some
people call tll ern My lawn is fu ll of the holes they
Meigs County Fair.
make
so I rea ll y need hclp.-JVD Y
Attend ing in addition to those
named were Shar i Mitch,
DI~A H POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with gues ts who ar·
Li nda Rose nba um, Kenda
Bra un , Li nda Kova lchik, r iVt' ea rlier tha n expec ted With sm all chilrtre n it IS no t
Mar·ia Leg ar and Elaine always possible to be ready ahead of lime and, more
olte n than not, I am putting the fin ishing touche5 on
Barn hart.
tilin g" at the las t miuule. Ot co ur se. if they want to pitch
in and giw the kids a bat h they are doing me a favo r
if they arr ive ea rly - C. J R.
CORRECTION MADE
The open house to he held at
the Wellston Nursing Home,
Wellston, Aug. 9 will be in
obse rva nce of Lizzie McCumber's 100th birthday, not
El izabeth Montgomery's as
was announ ced.

'\

::=:
:;~

STA-FLO

SPRAY STAROi .
REG. 69' 39~

With

COUPOft

Good At Mlrk V Only

.EXPIRES:

8-6-72

I

FRUIT DRINK

All PACKAGE

SEEDS

10 quart
Dispenser

SAVE 50'

GOOcl It

~k.Y.O!J iY

EXPIRES: .

VEGETABLE

Y2 PRICE
I

I

&amp;FLOWER

\

�6- The Daily Sentilll'l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 25, 1972

,·:~:.:::~,

Diehl Hosts Garden Club
Ja mes Diehl en· Sept embe r. The August
the Bend of the River m eellflg wil! include a
Garden club at thei r July workshop tu plan tht• club's
mee ting. New offi cers elected &lt;.'u nlrt butlon lv th e Me igs
wer e presiden t, Mrs. Ber t CHunty Fa ir flower show, dale
Mrs.

ter ~ i ned

Grlmm: vice president, Mrs.

In lM:&gt; announced.

Andrew Cross; secretary, Mrs.
Edward
Sim pson , and
l!·easurer, Mrs. Cliffor d
Morris. lnstallathm w11l be
held at the September meeting.
Mrs. Si mpson was head of the
nomina ting committee.
The devotional leader, Mr5.
Wilson Carpenter, read Psalm

The proJcel at the Lcllorl
Fa ll s ce metery, whi ch in·
eluded a plan leo· and bench,
has been co mpl eted c111d
dugwood trees, donated by
Mo·s. W. 0. Barmtz, have bee n
plunled.
Tl1e program, prepared by
Mrs. Ed Simpson in cluded
pla nnin g and ca re of
ca ladiums, cannas
an d
glad ioli.
Mrs. Ben Phi lson gave an
i11 teres ting talk on her rece nt
European trip. She spoke of the
nuts tan din g bea uty of th e
fluwers in homes gardens
'
J
'
busi ness plaees and public
squares in Ita ly.
Ribbons for red, white and
bl ue a t·ra ng.emcnts were
awarded Mrs Carpenter, Mrs.

124, an d a reading,

~· H orn i n ~

Pogeon5 In the Fog." Roll call
was a favo rite patriotic song.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn ga ve a
report on a recent visit to the
Gallipolis Sta le Institute, and a
letter of thanks was r ead from

the Pomeroy Post offi ce for a
donatio n to th e flower boxes
fu nd. The regular meeting
night was changed from the
th ird Monday of the month to
the fo urth Monday, starting in

Grimm, Mrs. Murr is ll.lld Mrs.

IIIC'IIIbcr of the el•uir. Mr:...

Cross.

Di eld t..c r·ved r cfr ·..!s llment:-:

·

Dui'IIIJ.: lllc SOl'iCI I

hOur

fn u11 a l.able t·e uh.Tcll w; ::
yellow rlc 1wers a nd 1.ipcirs. Till.!
lrave li n~-: prize wa~ awarded
Mr;i. Andrew Cross.

a

recording of lh l~ All Ohi u Choi r
w:ts pla yed. T ll i ~ was
espcc u:tlly lll tcrcsliug tu the
l'iuiJ ns Miss J n F.llen Dif'hl is a
~~:::::::;:;:::~::::::::::::::::.::::::~~::::::::::::::;:: :: :::::::::::::

i ~::~:YN~; I
Spending the weekend al
Calednnia woth the Terry
Kmg hts and sun Stevie were:

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight,
sun Di ck and Sandy Ya tes, and

Mr. and Mrs. Wolliam Matlack.
The bir thda ys .,f. Mr. Matlack
a11d Mrs. Chester Kntght wer e
ubservel!. A featur e included a

large birthda y cake baked on
j he fol'lll or a buok with in sc rip ltUII " Happ y Birthday
Bill " &lt;HI, one side and "Happy
Bu·thday Mom" Qn the other.
Mrs. Belly Riggs, employed

Hideaway Furniture Today
Beats the Space Squeeze

lhe Blue and Gr ay
rest.:mn mt, has re turned from
&lt;.1 week's visit in Cincinnati
with fr ie nds.
M1111day lun cheo n gues ts uf
Mr. ct rtd Mr s. Del mar A.
Canaday were: Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Fisher, Pumeroy; Mr.
"''d Mrs. Mayna rd Car nes,
Mrs. Ruth Hall , Mrs. •Freda
Price, Mrs. Munna Andrews ,
Mrs. Edi th Slewao·t, Mrs. Ca rol
JaCIJbstm, Mr s.
Mildr ed
Gambli11
and
Teddy
Tewksbary, all of Columbus.
Mcii'Y. Radfor·d is again at
h,.mc afte r an eight day stay at
Riverside Methodi st hospi ta l,
Columbus. SI1e is the daughter
j1f
Mr . and Mr s. Willia m
Radf,wd .
al

"Sorrowful Night" Tree
Th e Ir e e known as the
" tr ee of the sorrowful night"
is loca ted in Mexico Cit y.
Lege nd says Hernando Cortes
wept under thi s cy press in
1520 aft er the Aztecs routed
hi s a r m,y .

ALL SMILES after taking
ovr r di rection of the Pr('Si·
dent's rc-e I e t lion drivr.

Decorot1ve folding ta ble and choors otfer o soluti on to the home space prob.'
Iem . One approa ch I S a tabl e tha t come5 in a s e l ~c t o on ol eigh t unusua l des igns
on th e top and ma y hang on wa ll os art when not .n use Thos Dorec t10ns mot 1l
IS o design of Coloforn ia n Sharon de Leon for So msonite and fa ld.ng chatrs
come in six solid "we t look." shades. A fo ldi ng slong cho or ge ts 1ts sc ulptura l
elan from a chrome tubul a r steel fram e. Fabric fo r Expresso X IS remova ble
washab le vi nyl, al so on S1x " wet look." colo rs an d table 15 40-o nch d 1ameter
By AILEEN SNODDV

NEW YORK - t NEAI Shrinkin g livi ng space in
most homes and apartments
goes hand·in ·hand with the
swing to more home enter·
tai nment. And such a trend
brings up the question of
where to pu t the extra furn i·
lure necessary when guests
appear on the sce ne. Fort u.
nately. furniture designers
are coming to the aid of the
space sque eze.
For example. there now
are tables that hang on the
wall and look like artwork
chairs tha t fold in a sc ul p:
tural form , inflatable sto ols
and chairs, cushions and
clamp-on lamps that can be
moved from room to room .
The futur e in casual furni·
l ure for din ing or playing
card s, for example. defon ite·
ly is more arc hitectural.
Accordin g to fl obert Fuj i·
oka a nd Art Ellswoo·th. "Our
homes always refl ect our
life·s tyles and as our life.
styles change, so do our
homes.· · The award -winnmg
tea m of Design Wes t created
winning designs for Sarnsonite F ur niture recently.

Their approach is built
a round the thought th at "We
ar·e less forma l . . . more
porta ble people. With homes
use d mo re freq uently for
cas ual

enter taini ng,

furni-

ture must be more than just
a pretty face. It mu st be
functional. ''
B reak t~ ro u g h s

in tec hno·
logy allow such des igners as

Fujioka and Ellsworth to
c:pme ~p with truly imagina trve pteces. New svnl heti(.'S
help in mnkJ ng new ap·
proac hes to structure and
comfort and plastic are im ·
portant materials by them ·
selves. Steel, too. is shaped
in exci ti ng forms a nd not
just at rigid ri ght angles
New fabrics mean less ca re
All these advances. the de·
signers explain . encourage
co upl es to use then· home
reg ularly as a base fo r ~ ~~ ·
tertainin g.

Anna Wiks is
Club 's Hostess

Clark MacGregor is laking
a ser ious vicn: of the coun p a i g n a h e a d . li e has
\\'arncd HetJnblicans not tu
be o ve r cnn fld t.• nt . Mm'(jrcgur. a Whitt• U o u s,.
ai dt.• a nd ror111cr co n ~rt• ss ­
man rrom Minneso ta. sut··
tN•dcd r II r Ill t• r AHurnt' Yr;,-ncral .Juhn ~ l iii'IH' Il ;,.
ta nqmi~n t'h it'f .

POLl,l'"S POINTERS
He n • Are EasY \VaYs

To Hemow Smoke ( )dor
ll.r l'O I.L\' l ' H..\MEII

DI•:A H POLLY- I wan t to tell Mrs A W . who had a
fire in her home and cannot ge l rid of th e smo ke odor.
11m_t ):ihe rmght sp ray he r house Wit h oil of wi ntergreen.
whoch c~ n be bought at a drugsto re. One ta!Jiespoon in
a p 111 1 ol water put 111 a spray can or bot tle 1s great for
smoke oclor We ha d a f1re and the smoke smel l remained
in the ai r &lt;:o n d iti o n ~r unt il we used this method . wh ich
I lear ned fr om so me ladoes in my circle . II surely worked
lor '" so I hupt• ol due5 as we ll for Mrs. .~ . W - MH S.

,~

Mr . a11d Mrs. Her! Btl{.limer
~.pc 11 t the weekf' l'd il• Hu cyrus
with their da ughter , Mrs.
lland&lt;l Burke and fami ly.
Mrs. Gerto·ude Miller and
Mrs. Wr lliam Gruese r were
recent visi tors with relatives in
Cl!lulllbus.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Raymond
Burns and daughter, Kathy , of
Cu vin glon,
Ky . a rrived
Sa turday for a week's visit
~ i l lo Mrs. Martha Childs and
oll1cr rela tives.
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Yeauger and Kevin , and Mrs .
Frank Beach have returned
£r om a wee k's visi t in
Melbour ne, Fla. with Mrs.
Beach's nephew, Robert
Taylor and family. They went
by plane and visited Cape
Kennedy , Disneyland and
other· points of interest. The
Yea ugers left Sunday for a few
days' sllty al Pipestem Park in
Wes t Virginia.
Mr . and Mrs. George Ed
G1·eenlee and daughters, Eva
Lynn and Katie, of Westerville
were guests last week of Mr.
Greenlee's mother, Mrs. E. C.
Gree nlee.
Mrs. Charles fock and son,
Dana, of Chester were recent
guests of Mr. an~Mr s. M. L .
Kelly .
Mrs. Leo Sea rls and son,
Dana, of Chester were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. I..
Kelly.
Mrs. Leo Searls and Dee
Hart inger left Sa turday for
Saupul pa, Okla., fot• a visit
w1t h th eir cu usi n, F ran k
Anguish.
Mrs. Charles Warner was
released Monday from Holzer
hospita l where she underwer1t
surgery. She will spend several
weeks with her son, John
Sewell , in Marietta .
Mrs. Ri ley Cassell, Patrick,
Michael and Charlene returned
'" their hume in Cadiz Sunda y
followmg a week's visit woth
Mrs. Elui lla L. Cassell, Bryan
Place. Mrs. Casse ll aceompan ied th em for a two
weeks' v1sil.
Mrs . Wi lber Theobald had
the misfortune to fall down a
fl og111 or steps al her home and
suslloined a broken righ t arm.
She was taken lo Veterans
Memor ial Hospital, and
return ed lo her home Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Roush
entertained recently with a
fa nuly dinner at their hom e on
Rutland Street. Presen t were
Mr. an d Mrs. Will iam L.
Roush, daughters Ana Maria
aPd Luellen of Syracuse, N. Y.,
aPd Mr. and Mrs. Paul Roush,
Tom and Amy of Chester.
Mr. an d Mrs. Wilford Floren
of Mari on spent the weekend
~ itlo Mrs. Bess ie Ashl ey.
Sunday th.ey were din ner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
Topton of Ches hire.
Mr. a11d Mrs. William L.
Roush. Ana Mar ia and Luellen
of Syracuse . N.Y. left Sunday
for a vacation in the East and
Sout h, after a two weeks' visit

Il

BALLARD'S

·.soc 1a·1 .::

~"ns

·

·t . eJ.w.:.~.cx~~

Calendar

Meet a new friend ·
with an old problem.

WHOLE HOG

:•.·

BETTY CANARY

I

Wipe Your ·Nose
Anti Buy a S~fa

TUESDAY
DREW WEBSTER Auxiliary
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the ha ll.
Prog ram : Buckeye Girls' S~te
represe ntatives and a film on
drug abuse to be shown by Carl
Hyse ll . Juni or members
hostesses.
PUBLIC MEETINGS, 8 p.m.
Monday at Chester Elementary School; 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Tuppers Plains School. Special
election on 2. 75 mi ll building
btmd issue in Eastern Local
School Distric t, Aug. 15, to be
up for discussion at both
sessions.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday , 8 p.m. at
Post Home .
WEDNES DAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club luncheon, 12 noon
Wednesday, at Meigs Inn. All
members urged to be present.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Minersville, Wednesday at 8
p.m. at United Methodis t
Chur ch. Betty Lou Dean ,
Demonstrat or. Open meeting
and workshop. Officers are

with Mr. Roush's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. L. L. Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Rober t Schuck
and daughter, Debbie, left
Sunday for a vacati on at
Dearborn, Mich. Enroute th ey
wil l visit relati ves in
Washingtonville, Oh io. Debbie
was a r ecent pati ent at
Riverside Methodist hospil&lt;ll in
Columbus.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

12 oz.

SAUSAGE

NECK BONES

BOLOGNA

WIENERS

pkg.

5 lb. $1 1b.39e

9~

lb.

Middleport ·Q.
~~;

~

Kelvinator Air Conditioners

t •'" t'.,.o,l

I

•

•

,

Prit·•· Totl•y

MASON
FURNITURE
~H. m~m

MISON, W. i~

61000

''" ,,

.........

~

• ~ "·'

1• • •

~osrt 1 n 1 .1.:11

h"''' •' ,,,...~... d

r h.•••!.~o lr••••nl"'' ... "''&lt;litlfl.

,,, • • 1"' ".. '""'

t "' "''" ' .,,

-··~· ..... . ,...

,.,th .. .,,_,

,~

\

•

QUEEN OF SCOT 12 oz. can
ORANGE JUICE
SCOT LAD
LEMONADE

6 oz. can

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

9 oz. can

Supply of Ice Cubes

12~

MEADOW RICH

89¢
$

qts.
for

RICH'S WHIPPED
TOPPING

3

lb.

r-----~------------~-·
JULY 26th THRU 29th

Golden Ripe

10 AM TO 7 PM

,. .

llf~~fa1ef~1t

.y

11

I A'!

llfiff~'

1[

I

~', '1

"f

,,,,..

FIRESIDE

Graham
Crackers Crackers Crackers

size 99¢

l-Ib.
bxs.

Round All Purpose

$

l~b.

$

bxs.
for

$

bxs.

2~~n~~69¢
3

59t
We Accept Federal Food Stumps

Sugar Free

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

" Wt

PHON E: ~92·3480
Reserve The Right To Lim it Ouont ltoes" '~QD LEPORT. 0.
. .

AYGO

DIET

Thursday Only!

LA

POP

-

8
16 oz.

•

....

PLAYm
RUJIBER.GLOVES
Willi I Frw, Exl rl Ri,ht . Hind
Glovo Fret.

t\

W

89'

R\19.
1.49

WilliPOll
Coo

AT MARK V STORI
,I

C.0""!'

Per CUmmtr-b!ll'" . / •JII•l

SPECIAL .
CLOSEOUT!

I
o

,. ·:

---·

MARK VSTORE
,.. ...........

69

cans for$

,

Willi n. Ct ..... ONLY
t
Wltheut Coupon ~ pllon obe s,.puf :
Fabrle Soft...,... 79' Tlall Oft'er Good
1
thn ;8+72 .Goad Oal,. at

MI'!IK IAN CHAAGE
GI/A~ANTEEIJ

~

FABRIC
SOFTENER ·.

99

IJ OF COV.fl£

J~

591/io

TO INTIOPUCE THE/II C0/.0/l AllTIITAY
WEOil/A /-1/K!f. U/1/Kt;

HONE OffiCE Jt01/ARPIN6AYE. JC!tl!(Jr/1/E tJIIIO _,5661

WITH PURCHASE OF 4
LIGHT BULBS AT REGUlAR
PRICE.

SCOT LAD

bot$.

WED., THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.

•t!IIIT I Pfi.J(JI/f( T·J !11./ANftll

32 oz.

ORE IDA
24 oz. pkg.
DINNER FRIES

BANANAS

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUQ STORE

'~N+~·~u Size Available from Wallets to 30•40

SHERWOOD
STRAWBERRIES

Another Banana Sale!

IN'f.

•lfll'l-lriiii!IJIIMiflla!lffffJOII

BANQUET
BUFFET D

SCOT LAD

59~

¢

lb.
bag

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9.to 10 • Sun.

Master Portrait

•lrtrJIWAIIIMTfiAT/rr/fl. .filii(!
ol/()Alll/ltlf

32 oz.
bol

SALTINE

24 cl pkg.

BOOTH
16 oz. pkg.
OCEAN PERCH

10 oz.
cont.

THAT

COI.OA PfMTIWT

NORTH STAR
TWIN POPS

BANQUET WHOLE
$139
FRIED CHICKEN 2 lb. pkg.

1 gal. crt.

ANNOUNCES

Join Woodsy. •
Give a hoot. Don't pollute.
Work out ways to
make' wastes useful.

¢

2 lb.
pkg.

SCOT LAD
18 oz. pkg.
BREADED
......... VEAL

W. VA.

SUGAR

IVORY
LIQUID
20COFF

7
9¢
_ ,_.......,___

..

POl NT PLEASANT,

Don't pollute.

SAVE 34c

Fig Bars

SCOT PRIDE
ICE MILK

"

Ill

• •~~ ~ •• :::, ~~·-~.~ ~-~-~~'. l

•

..,, . 'l

'"

o IUI"I ' ' ' • III .... . IOJII

to
24,000 BTU

.

• &lt; I l l ' • •••1 1!1\IIUlt
r ,.,,~'"'~l., t..~,._j~ , ....1f
. '
"
·~·
0 11 11\1 ~"''"'"H&gt;I ll)lfll&gt;jh
t•
.oli~• l.tM. ....,,

... ,,

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ............................ lb.·39~

FIRESIDE

t:lu'f'k Our

IN

Give a hoot!

69e

'!'""

A. D. S

DEAH POLLY- I have fin ally lo und a qu ic k and eifi ·
crent WilY tu store rny 1rad·
mg stamps . A long slit is
cu i in the plastic ltd of a
pretty lhree·po und coffee
ca n so 11 is quick and easy
lo drop the sta mps into the
ca n just after I come home
fr om the m a r k e t. This
eli minates a lot of the mo·
tion used w h e n pu tting
th em in some thi ng where
the lid has to be re moved
.or tryin g to pas te them in
the boo k eac h tim e. Save5 loss, too I keep my ca n in the
kitchen. close by the place where I re move groceries
from til e bags .-MRS. V. W. H.

lb.

QUICK-FIX
FOODS
1

...

FRANKIES

SUPERIORS SLICED

.---·-----------------J

" "'

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS PORK

Kathem Ann Dressmaking
'

GROUND CHUCKu••••••• ~b~ gg~

SUPERIORS POLISH

OP EN 10 A.M. Til 4 P.M.

•

SIRLOIN

BEAT·THE
HEAT•••

Phone After 4-992 ·? 145

lb.

lb. 69~

QUICK SER VICE

·~ -

CHOPPED
SALT FISH

. .. •'·:f.·· .•,

'

USDA CHOICE BEEF •.. BEST FOR THE GRILL

lb.

DRESS MAKING
ALTERATIONS

Corner Thi rd &amp; Main

79e

lb.

SUPERIORS
LUNCH MEATS

"aeh of us can affor d only so m a n ~ human frailties.
Therefore. some time ago I gave up gomg to auc\Jons.
And let me stale here that I do not agree with those who
acc use auctionee rs of taking advantage of buyers. We've
a U heard stor ies of how a person wiped hi.s nose and
bcught a set of ho rsehide pa rlor furniture woth. the gest ure. Buyers a re not la mbs being led to slaughter. We
huund and leap and beg for the hammer to fa ll .
We have formed a sort of Auctoon s Anonymo us and
have enj oved a penod of true bliss in our home. Actuall y,
it is a tre mendous rel ief to have a hom e again, one I can
walk about in and caB my own. There was a time when
eve ry nook and crann ~ was fil.led witb the quaint, the
curious and th e unrepaored. Adorable rocking chairs with
the run gs gone ioned my hall wa y. Cracked c rock~ry vied
for space wi th darl ing littl e chests that only needed a bit
uf fix ing in order to be good enough to give to Good, Will .
I have, fr om tim e to time , fallen off the wagon and ,
like a not ·so-reform ed drinker, attended an auction in
order to prove to myse lf that t co uld take them or leave
1hem
Not lo ng ago, my fr iend Inez 1another charter member
of AA 1 attended an auction wit h me . It was a test of woll
power and sales resistance. A test we fail ed.
Inez held my ha nd5 while I saw a perfectly fine Franklin stove go fo r $35. I held her hands while a sterlin g
silve r bowl Ionly sli ghtly dented 1 went for 50 ce nts. We
both wept.
In a daze. we saw a man wi th a fas t right arm take a
set of Waterford glasses for $3 50. We started bidding.
With our usual luck . ·
,
Inez snapped up a bro ken pump organ 1the moving man
charged $45 to bring ot to her back door! . And I acquired
hostesses.
a
bea uti ful · ver v old" Victorian loveseat- Sears &amp; Roe·
TllURSDAY
buck
. ci rca 1959.·
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall .
RELATIVE DIES
REUNION SET
POMEROY WCTU, Th ursMr. and Mrs . Charles Wise,
The
annual
Matlack Reunion
day noon pic nic at the home of Wav erly, re ceived word
will be held Sunday at Rising
Miss Lucretia Genh eimer , recently of the death of J oe
Par k, La ncaster. Relatives
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy.
Stanford at Sidney, Neb., while and friends are cordially inenroute to Califor nia . Mr . vited. Dinner will be served at
Com mercial Term
Stanford , a polio victim, was 12:30 p.m.
1'.0 ll . means " f r e e on the son-in-law of Mrs. Mabel
board ." a comme rcial ex·
IN HOSPITAL
p r e s s i o n describ ing the Sanborn. Funeral services
at
his
home
in
Ceres,
were
held
RACINE
- Mrs. Cora Webb
term s of sale. The seller
Calif.
M
r
.
Stanford
and
his
must load the goods on a
has enwred Grant Hospital,
rao lroad ca r. ship . plane or family had visited in Ohio for Columbus. Her room nwnber is
oth er carri er at the location se veral wee k ~ recently .
546.
na med in the contract.

The fastest land speed by
a wh e e I e d vehicle was
ac hie ve d by the '·Blue
Flame." powered by a Iiquod n a tur a l gas motor .
Ga ry Gabelich aver a ge d
622.4ll7 m iles per hour in
two r uns on the Bonneville
Sa lt Flats . Utah, on Oc t. 23.
t970, The World Almanac
says.

FARM
SAUSAGE

Large Assortment

Hy Jlt;'ITY CANARY

Dt;AH fiiRLS- lf a trace uf tho• smo kt• odor still re·
mu ins, un open bow l of wa ter with one tables poon of am The Pomeroy Jun ior Garden monia added might be left out in an inconspicuous pla ce
Club mel Monda y afternoon at or a saucer of vi negar. A wldclv know n bra nd of housethe home of Anna Wiles. Mrs. hold spra)· disinfecta nt cll min:ites smoke odors. too.POLLY
Robert Lewis and Mrs. Alice
Th ompson gave instru ctions on
Polly's Problem
how to mak e fl ower
OF.Afl PO LLY- I hope some reader can tell me
arrangeme nts for entries at the
how to nd my law n of night craw lers. as some
people call tll ern My lawn is fu ll of the holes they
Meigs County Fair.
make
so I rea ll y need hclp.-JVD Y
Attend ing in addition to those
named were Shar i Mitch,
DI~A H POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with gues ts who ar·
Li nda Rose nba um, Kenda
Bra un , Li nda Kova lchik, r iVt' ea rlier tha n expec ted With sm all chilrtre n it IS no t
Mar·ia Leg ar and Elaine always possible to be ready ahead of lime and, more
olte n than not, I am putting the fin ishing touche5 on
Barn hart.
tilin g" at the las t miuule. Ot co ur se. if they want to pitch
in and giw the kids a bat h they are doing me a favo r
if they arr ive ea rly - C. J R.
CORRECTION MADE
The open house to he held at
the Wellston Nursing Home,
Wellston, Aug. 9 will be in
obse rva nce of Lizzie McCumber's 100th birthday, not
El izabeth Montgomery's as
was announ ced.

'\

::=:
:;~

STA-FLO

SPRAY STAROi .
REG. 69' 39~

With

COUPOft

Good At Mlrk V Only

.EXPIRES:

8-6-72

I

FRUIT DRINK

All PACKAGE

SEEDS

10 quart
Dispenser

SAVE 50'

GOOcl It

~k.Y.O!J iY

EXPIRES: .

VEGETABLE

Y2 PRICE
I

I

&amp;FLOWER

\

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 2li, 1972

8-

,

~entinel . Classifieds . Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

~

:~

. " ....'
"

... ..

1

1' \Yanten

Po••r.Of ·

OL D

·

5795
V-8 117 ton 8ft. pickup with aluminum cover. automatic
transmi ssion, good tires. chrome front &amp; rear bumper.
- ~est Coast mirrors, custom cab. White &amp; mist green
finish .

, 15FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
motor, also 1956 Harley1 h.p.
Davidson 74, phone 992 -5271.
'
7-18-12tp

1968 CHEVROLET ¥• TON
S1469
8-foot Stepside, good heavy duly tires. v.s engine. 2·speed
• transmission, solid cab. local 1-owner truck.

. r-omeroy Motor ( o...
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
f'JJMEROY, OHIO

®

300 GAL. stainless ' steel bulk

1,,/t'

1/1"':

•LL-_--_-------,---,..-..,...---~-----,.,_~
:!

ilHEi\1,'H TEST is the purpose or lhls device developed
b)· NASA as a by producl of space research. The auto·

matic mobile medical gas anulvzer meusures cumposi·

ilon of air a patienl breathes In and ex hales as an aid
(u ln·atin~ respiratory and heart aliments. The medical
~dvance IS the resull of research lhat began In 1960.
~nglnaliy directed to measuring the gas composition
~ t tht• t·arlh's almosphen•.

~cGovernites
'

to

hope
heal Wounds

By United Press International

Sen. George S. McGovern
intlicates he will spend most of
A~gust trying to bind up the
wounds to the Democratic
party caused during the battle
that gave him the presidential
ntirnination.
McGovern was joined in
so).mding the unity theme
S$day by his running mate,
Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, and
by Basil Paterson, the newly·
elected vice chairman of the
DOmocratic National Commit-

tee.
McGovern sa id he intended
\o : \our the nation during
August to see party leaders. He
said one of those he wanted to
talk to was former President
Lyhdon B. Johnson . He said he
hadn't " given up even on
Prfsident (George ) Meany" of
til~

AFL-CIO.

Meany and his AFL-CIO
executive council, in a break
with tra dition last week,
declined to endorse a presidentia l cand idate . The labor
federation's endorsements in
recent years have gone to
Democratic candidates.
Eagleton said he hoped to
gain an a udience with Meany

"in the near future."
"Maybe I'm not persuasive,
but I'm persistent," Eagleton
said.
Paterson said in New York
he was positive McGovern
could win the support of "so·
ca lled old Democrats" in the
November election.
11

It'S a big task,'' Paterson

said of the party unity drive.
" It's going to take a lot of time.
I think he'll be able to do it and
I think he will do it. "
McGovern added that he
wanted to "talk with some of
my competitors in the recent

primaries and convention."
·

McGovern made his remarks
on the CBS-TV in te rview

program uFace the Nation. "
Eag leton was interviewed on
ABC-TV's "Issues and An-

swers. "
President Nixon announced
Saturday that Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew would be
retained on the Re publican
ticket. Agnew was in Anchorage, Alaska, Sunday night for a
Re publican fund-raising
dinner .

today· s FUNNY
.YOU :OO~·:jjj.'j

·1'0.JE:r, BUIB:JIJ U1:
·A Hocie, "t:t5~B

.PIAST:~~P,i\::t;:.,::

In Memory
IN MEMO.RY of Murl Belt who
passed away 2.t years ago
today, July 25, t9.S. She's
sadly missed by her husband,
Raymond, and children,
Wilma
Ervin, Dorothr.
Chaney. Don and Jim Bel .
The world may change, From
year to year ;
And our friends from day to
day, But never will the one we
love,
·
From memory pass away .
- - - - - , - - - - --7·_:
25-ltp

PRICE REDUCED

GRAND
TOUR
OF
EUROPE
3 weeks departing on
September Sth. only
$889.00 Round Trip
from N.Y. escorte'd by
John and Charlotte
Heiskell . Rt. 3, Box
595, South Point, Ohio.
Phone 614-377-4791.
REDUCE safe and fast wi th
GoBese Tablets II. E-Vap
"water pills," Nelson Drug .
6-29-301p

KARR'S
BARBER
SHOP

Ba rbers' Locai-400-AFL -CIO

··HEll''
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window 1
Air Conditioners

·WMP0/1390
..
{ Todo;'s 'UNNY· will poy $1.00 for
each original "funny" used. Sfnd gags
lo: Today'1 FU NNY, 1200 Wel l Thl1d
St., Cle¥tlond, Oh io •411]

ON YOUR DIAL

milk tank and relr igerating
unit, automatic; cost $2,500
would like $1,250; used very
little ; phone 992-7178.
_________7·_
2s:3tp

J Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage.
carpeHng .
Priced at ••
ONLY $13,750

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, .
ponds, basement, ladd ·
scaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 si ze loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Fret · Estimates. We also"
haul fill dirt, top ~soil . Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jailers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
auer 7 p .m . or phone 9925232.

ARNOLD
BRO.THERS

We specia lize in aluminum,
vinyl and stee l si di ng ;
fiberglas, . bri ck and
complete line of residerit1a1
and commercial ·roofing;

Stone;

remodel ing,

building ,

suspended ceilings, Interior
and ~xter ior painting;
complete line of Masonry

work . All work guaranteed to
custom er sati sfaction. We
are fully i nsured for your
protect ion . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918,.
.

SEPTIC tanks clean'ed . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662 -3035.
2·12·tfC

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

=-------

BACKHOE AND DOZER worl&lt; i
Seplic tanks installed. George
t Bill l Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
· ·
4·25·ttc'

From the largest .
Bulldozer RadicUDr to the
Small est Heater Core.
· Nolhon Biggs
Radiator Speciollsl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

. Ph . 991:-2174

WANTED - Cuslomers at
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop,
Chester, Ohio. No experience
necessary.
7-9·20tp
WHY not try CO$mellcs th•t are
truly
different
and
refreshing? The famous mink
oil base and now we have the
lemon grove. Just think, 1~
specials lhls month, some for
men as well as women. It's
KOSCOT ol course. Phone
992.5113.
7-t·tlc

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

•

I Kt-OW Cli.D v.oRRIES
ABOUI US KID51 KAtHY.

CAMPUS CLATIER
LET T~IS BE A
CLAS$. 81MO$ 500

WOROS OF COPY
NETTEO ' ~tM

A

MERE.'C"

'!liE t-.1 OONT lAKE
11' 50 !1ARD1TiNA .
'.OU'RE LEARNING

IN ADVERTISING
ITS NOT 'mE NUMBER
OF WOROS .'mAT
COUNTS

CIN!JY$
8RtEI" MESSI\"E
~ATEO AN 'A+"

10 BE A GOOD

DRNER.

EXPERT
Wh~_ Alipment
55.55
On Most AmeriJin Caq ,

-GUARANTEE I).-:
BOAT, motor, trailer and ac cessor ies, $300 as Is: may be
· Phone 992-2094
' '
seen at .394 South SiKih,
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
bee~
Middleport or phone 992-7375.
cancelled?
Lost
your Pomei!IJ
DOZER and back hoe work.
7-25-6tc
operator's license? Call 992-,
ponds
and
septic
tanks;
B
II. K
_ __ _ __ _ __:_:
Open BTII S
2966 . .
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
WA LNUT, Modern style, -4
6-15-ttc
Monday
lhru Soturdly
Dick Karr, Jr .
speaker soun d system , -4
5-21-tfc
--606
E:
Main,
_Pomoroy •.Q._
d
1
t'
h
PAPER hanging; interior and
spee au oma IC c anger . - - -- - '' - -Balance $64.89 . Use ou r SEWING MACHINE service,
ex ter io r pa in ting ; Arthur SEE us FOR : Awnings, ijerm'
budge t terms. Cal l 992-7085.
Musser, phone 7.42-5223.
doors and windows, carports. ~
clean, oi l, set tension $4.99.
7-21-6tc
7-18·30tp
marquees, aluminum siding
Specia l Elect ro -Grande
Company . Phone 992-65 17.
SEWING MA&lt;.HINES . Repair; and ra iling. A Jacob, sales,
BEAUTIFUL Early American
representative. For fre"
5·21 ·tfc
st yle, stereo -radio com serv ice. a II ma kes. 992-2284. ' esti mates , phone Charle~
bination, 4 speaker, AM-FM - - - - -The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Ll t
s
v v
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Authorized Singer Sales and . Johnson
s e , and
yracuse,
·I
radio , -4 speed changer . REASO NABL E rates. Ph. 446·
Son, Inc. ·
1
Balance $78 .67 . Use our
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
J.2·tf•t
budge! terms. Call 992-7085. 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
3-29-tfc
7-21-6tc Owner &amp; Opera tor.
5· t2-tfc _R_E_A_D_Y___M_I_X__C_O_N_C R E"T E. 'o;oE·i. L WH E E L . all g n men;
SINGE R Slant Needle sewing · -----~--delivered rig hi to your : located at Crossroads, Rt . 12•.
machine, equipped to zig zag. C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
project. Fast and easy. Free
Complete front end service,
make button holes. etc .
Complete Service
esti mates. Ph one 99 2_3284 ,. tune up and brake service.
Balance $41.02. Use our
Phone949-382l
Goe 1ein Ready·Mix co.,, Wheels balanced elec·
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Raci ne, Ohio
t Oh'
Ironically,
All
work
MId Iepor'
10 •
i
guaranteed .
AP..11-.nn.ahl•
7-21-6tc
,· Crill Bradlord
3
6- 0·tfc
rates. Phone 742·3232 or
--------s.J.tfc
-992·3213.
/ -"·TTC
HEREFORD bull ; phone 9'12. - - - - -- - - 6765.
Rea I Estate For Sale
CALL Guy Nelgler for Building
7·25·3tc For Sale or Trade
Houses.
4 ROOMS. bath , nice lot on Rt.
6-28-tfc
__::_
HEREFORD heifer calf ; phone
124, close to deep mine ; ta ke
843-2778.
late
model
car
or
housetrailer
SENTINEL
in trade ; also trailer space for
7-25-Jtc
Real Estate For Sale
rent ; M &amp; G Food Market, 3
CARRIERS WANTED
1970 YAMAHA 250 Enduro,
mi. Sou th, Middleport, Rt . 7.
excellent condition, $500 ; Guy
7·21-6tc
IN
Sargent, Phooe 992 -6432.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
7-25-3tc
Auto SaiP.s
MIDDLEPORT
1972 ZIG -ZAG sewing machine '71 CHEVELLE Super Sporl
· Contact Associate
left in layaway. Beautiful
Coupe, V·8, 4 speed, 12200.
Phone Faye Manley
POmeroy, Ohio
pastel color, fu ll size model.
Ph
one
742-3722.
992-5592
All built -in to buttonhole, do
VERA
EBLIN
7-2D-6tc
stretch sewi ng and fancy
In
992-3020
stitching . Pay ius t $47.75 cash
LEVEL LOT90x90
Pomeroy
160
CoaiSI.
Middleport
1967
RED
&amp;
white
Dodge
or terms available . Trade-ins
SYRAC USE - Jlh story
Coronet RT, 4.40 engine, 4
RUTLAND
Phone 992-2156
accepted . Phone 992-5641.
trame. l bedrooms, bath,
speed , tow mileage ; phone
FARM- 106
acres , 1 -4
1 2t -6tc
NEW for ced a ir gas furnace,
992-6689.
------bedroom. modern home, 2
porches, basement .
SEAMSTRESS needed. apply in VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
7·19-6tc
barns, plenty of wate r .
$5,000.00.
person ,
Kathryn
Ann
modeL Complete wi th all -::-~==-=-:--:-::-­
$28,000.
RIVER FRONTAGE
Dressmaking, Main &amp; Jrd,
cleaning tools . Small paint 1967 DODGE Dart Convert ible,
SYRACUSE 2 story
Middleport.
damage in shi pp ing. Will sell
automatic , power steering.
3
BEDROOM,
bath.
furnace.
7-23-3tc
frame
,
7
rooms.
2
baths, 4
for S64.50 cash or terms
rad io, dark blue finish ; phone
bedrooms, 2 por ches, util ity
carpet and paneling , J.r... acre
available. Phone 992-5641 .
949-20 14.
roOm, some paneling, gas
MOTHERS - Are you looking
7·21-6tc --~-----7..::
· 23- 31&lt; lot. $1 1.500.
forced
air furnace, full
tor something different ? Sell
1969
FORD
Sedan,
·
power
basement,
ga ra ge .
MIDDLEPORT
Toys. Playhouse Company is 1- 420JOHN Deere dozer: 1'64
steering , power brakes. low 7 ROOMS. bath. lot 100x 190.
$12,500.00.
now hiring for fall. Se ll
Chev . Dump Truck ; Earl
mileage. excel lent condition ; $7,900.50 .
1 MILE TO RUTLAND
Werner, Rt. l, Middleport,
August to December . no
11.495 ; phone 985-4116.
Home 4 years old, 11/l acre
deliveries and no collections . Ohio; phone 992-2769.
7 23-3tc
ground . 7
rooms , -4
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert
7-23·61p
POMEROY
bedrooms. bath, 2 slorage
446-3411 or Mrs . Margaret
3 BEDROOM. 1'11 bath,
CORVETTE Stingray, both
Fortune 949-5414. Earn S &amp; H COAL, limes tone, Excelsior '64tops.
build lngs, lots of cabinets In
11. 800 : '68 Ford pickup,
kitchen comp lete with ref . &amp;
Green Stamps.
Sa lt Wor ks. E. Main St .,
kitchen.
A buy at just
standard with overdrive, V-8,
ranqe, carpe t &amp; drapes In7 -12-12tc
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
$16,900.00.
32,000 miles , $1,200 . Phone
cluded. on 2 lots near school .
cA"'c"'T=--:N
- o"'w
_____
4-12-trc
MIDDLEPORT AT. 1
992-6048 or 742 -3144.
515,500.
Join the
1
story,
3 bedrooms. NEW
-23-3tp
oldest
Toy
II.
Gift TOMATOES. cucumbers. green _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_
ALBANY
balh , NEW forced atr fur·
Party Plan m the Country peppers
and
canning
NEW 3 bedroom. p;, baih,
nace. paneling, utility room,
- our 25th year! Com .
tomatoes. Geral dine Cleland,
ranch
house,
carport.
Nice
porches, storage building,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
missions. up to 30 pet. FanRacine, Ohio.
level
lot
in
new
addition,
fru it room, $9,800.00.
7-20
-tlc
CAS
f!
paid
for
all
makes
and
tastic Hostess Awards. Call or
SHOWN BY
owner
tran
sferring
,
mu
st
mode ls of mobile homes .
write "S ANTA's PARTIE S"
APPOINTMENT
ONLY
sell
.
$24,5()0.
Phone
area
code
614-423-9531.
Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone LEFT IN lay -away , t972 Zig
4·13·tfc
1 12031 673-3455 . ALSO
Zag sewing machine. Th is
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
BOOKING PARTIES.
mach ine ove rcasts , darns ,
160 Coat Street - Also
REALTOR
7-2-J()tc
em broideries with just a turn sa x 10, PRICED reasonable ;
location of the Middleport C
- - - -- phone Chester 985-3379.
of the d ial . Pay balance ot
PHONE
992-2259·992·2561
of C office.
BAR MAIO. lull-t ime. Inquire $44.50 or pay $6.21 a month. --~-----7-·
21 ·6tp
in person at M.e igs Inn .
Phone 992·5331.
7·20·tfc FOR THE BEST deal In a new
7-23-3tc
or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobi le Home Sales,
S3 .75 PER HOUR . Need 12 men LOVE MU SIC??? Try this 1972
Kanauga , Ohio.
for light delivery and sales . 8 track stereo console in your
home . Pay balance ol 598.80
7-16-30tc
No experience necessary,
110 Mechanic Street
must be neat and dependable . or payments can be arranged .
Phone 992·5331.
r
Call Mr . Howard, 9 a.m. to
7·20·tfc
7:30 p.m., .Tuesda y on ly at
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·. Air Conditioners
446·0677.
·Awnings
2 LOTS in Meigs Memor ial
7·..::
23·3tc
Gardens ; phone 992 -2766.
• Underpinning
NEW LISTING
7-21 -61c
Female Help Wanted
117
ACRES
In
gas
area ol Lebanon Townsh ip. Has gas
- - - - -'complete mobile home
we
ll
now.
A
6
room
hou
se, barn and several outbuildings.
HOUSEWIFE to represent our BOAT. motor and !rai ler ; 15ft. service - plus gigantic
Want
to
try
your
luck
a
t a pig in a poke. Only 520.000.00
company, ordering and
boat of wooden construction,
toda y.
stockin?. our merchandise in a 65 h.p. Mercury motor ; in top 'di splay of mobile homes
local s ore in Pomeroy ; ap- shape ; new battery, skis, always available at .. .
prox imatefy Jto 4 hoursevery cushions, e~ . ; wil l sacrifice ;
FIVE POINTS
MILLER
15 days ; $2 per hour ; Write phone 949-5656.
NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms, nice bath, kitchen with stove
Box 729·F, c-o The Da ily
7·16·12tc
and refrige rator. Wall-to-wa ll carpet ing In living. Has 2
MOBILE HOMES .
Sentinel. Pomeroy , Ohio
large lois lor only 516,000.
45769.
1220 Washington Blvd.
TOMATOES. Joann Prolfilt ;
7-21 -6tc
phone 843-2826.
423-7521 ·
BELPRE,O.
- -- -- - -- 7-21-6t c
5 BEDROOMS
EXTRA INCOME! We need - - - - - - - - BUTTERNUT STREET - Near downtown shopp ing .
ladies as part-time Personal 1958 INTERNATIONAL Real Estate For Sale
Nice ki tchen with double sink. Full basement. 2 porches .
Shof)pers. Average SJ per Camper bus; ca n be used as
Asking
just $7500.00 for quick sa le . .
r ebu ilt RACINE - A good going
hour. Flexible hours . Write passenger bus;
Personal Shopper Depart. engine, A-1 condition ; phone
restaurant busi ness for man
and wife team , stock and
ment, Box 10, Watkins 667-3372.
Products, In c., Winona ,
7-19-6tc
equipment. 1 Ice cream
NEW LISTING
55987
LAND - 50 acres of it, In Rutland Township. A good buy
Minnesota
·
machine
nollncluded;
lhls
Is
7-24-31c RIDING horse s, polled bull
a very good buy at 55,500;
for 55,000.00.
- - - - -- - - ca lves ; C. 0. Harr ison, Rt. 1.
Phone 949-3211; George
Employment Wanted
Middleport.
Hobstetter, Real Estate
7-19·6fp
Broker, Pomeroy , Ohio.
DO YOU HAVE A GOOD 2 BEDROOM HOME
WILL DO welding after 5 p.m.
7·25·3tc
REASONABLY PRICED, THAT WE CAN BUY. LET US
and weekends , any place ; TOMATOES,
polatoes , - - - - - - - - HEAR FROM YOU, WE'LL LOOK.
phone 992·5271 .
cucum bers and
bean s, RAC IN E - 10 room house;
7-t8·12tp
Clarence Proffit. Portland,
bat h, basement, garage, two
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
lots. Phone 949-4313.
1
For Rent
7· 9-tfc :-:-:--- - -- --4-5-ttp
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
1·614·"2·3325

~

U'L ABNER

HO!li"U Auto .

AH'LL BE BAC K

_____

t-,.-,-,.-,-"T"",..-,r-,;n;;-...-nirl ::--..., r-,...1

:i

NI:XT

~

VACATION --

~· ~~1}1.1~

TAKE

1'-----. _

IT ALL
Ot= F' .. '

_.r

Tl-l5'

~!

3

'IOU MUST BE:
EXHA/JSTEO/ I'D
NO tOEA YOU'D
BEEN WAITING
OUTSIDE
NIGflT !

PLEA~E MAI&lt;E '!OURSELVES
COMFORTABLE ! I'LL HAVE
COFFEE ANDSANDWICHE&amp;
SENT IN!

I'M &amp;URE.

SOMETHING

CAN BE DONE
ABOUT ~A'Jj

GIRLS!

.

------

'

lllE~

'bJ~T, ~
~rrf£1S!

--::==-=----

---~.--

.

~ ~

.

- - - - --

-==========-..;

HOUSETRAILER, 2 bedroom,
STORE, stock and equipment,
running water, septic tank July Price Buster!
all lor 56.600. Phone 742 -3144
installed, nice front porch,
or 993·60.S.
l-23-6tp
partially lurnlshed. Beautiful
PANTS &amp; JEANS
-----location In Salem Twp.• near
6 ROOM house and bath. See at
Ohio Power .Jrea. Call G. C.
650 Osborne Street. No phone
Oiler. Columbus. 235·1227 or
SALEJ
calls .
write 880 Elaine Rd.,
1·23-3tp
Buy 2 Pairs and
Columbus, Ohio. Available
GET 1 PAIR FREE
August 6th ; $120 per monlh .
7· 2•·31p All kinds, all sizes for men , 2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
;-.
3-A::-N~-D,.
__4_R
_OU
,_M
- t_u_rn_ts""h-ed..,...an" women. young men. boys
garage, with lake frontage; at
unfurnl5hed. epartments. and girls . Hurrv to ...
Fiv·e Points area ; phone 992·
Phone 992-S.3-4.
•· ,
2571 or 992-3975.
o4-12·ttc '
.
POMEROY
7·13·tlc
,.......,,.,........,......,..,..--'1'•. Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.,
2 BEDROOM mobile home wtlh . , . · ·Phone992,2111
. RACI N·e - 6 'room house','liatii, ·
&lt;II r -conditioning; 10 m iles '----:..:.:.:.:..::.:..:.:..::..__ __;
utility room , garage, $10.000;
phone 949·4195.
·
17W
CONTINENTAL
Travel
Easl of Pomeroy; phone 992·
3·31 -tfc
6329 ·
Trailer , 1971 modeL self.
7·19.tfc
contained ; awning , mirrors
.
:F::-U:-:R:-:N
cci-::SH"'E"'
D- a_pa_r_t_m_enlc-, all
and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
LOTS on Wright Slreet.
newly painted and carpeted ;
7·12-tfc
Pomeroy, phone 742·5937.
•
d ' ·
..
7·18-12tc
I
d
n ce yor • po~c,.e s an
POODLE puppies, Sliver To~, . :-:::-::-:-::-:-----:..:.:...
~t~a~ ~;~a:;ie , phone 992· · Parkview Kennels, Phone 992· . HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone'
5443.
965 ·3529.
·
7_23.11
6·ll·tfc
---------e.Js.tfc •

ACROSS
1. Off one 's
head
5. Haggard
novel
8. Semi·

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

c

.

.

. Yesterdoy's Cryptoquote: THERE 'S NOTHING NEW IN
COMPUTER MATCHING OF COUPLES TO EACH OTHER
GUYS HAVE BEEN HOOKED FOR MANY YEARS BY .A
CALCULATING MOTHER.- R. M. WALSH

by THOMAS JOSEPH

precious

_________

- - -- - -

992-2448

AST A

STLJPID
QUESTION ..

Radla
S.rvlce

ao

TO

YOUR

ROOM!

stone
9.Former
light
heavy·
weight
champion,

Jose -

13.Saucy;
sprightly
1t.Miss
Lansbur;
15. Fall into
sin
16. Musical
syllable
17. Drop the
bait
. lightly

11. "Pouring"

TERRY
•..RAI110 w.;PATt:HfR 5AII'
'litE I'IITNfSS CAILECI FROM
THE 5TA110H!RY 5TOI!f:, CORNER
Of Gro'IE ~p HORTH PtNE...

Of A Pt!tC£ 10
fli&gt;Y !'OR A

H£0(

THING

Ul(f

term
(2 wds. )
21. Back talk
21. Equalled
22.Nota~----' 23. Blanched
25. Dilute
26. British
urblne
27. Seoman

II. Newcastle
upon - ,
England

(C 1972 King Features Syndicate, Ine.)

~&amp;WJ]3!1rn;IJ.i ::::!!:! .-Jc

DOWN
1. Gaits
2. 11 Fedora"

is a
famous
one
3. Sucoeed
at a task
(along)
(3 wds .)
4. Danube
· tributary
5. Gave a
fixed
look
6. Chinese
province
7.Work
unit .
10. Memora·
ble time
(slang)
(3 wds.)
II. Arthurtan
lady

Unacr1111ble theH four Jumbleo,
one leiter to each square, to
form four ordinary worda.
Yeaterdly'a ADswer

u:arlllsh

military
engineer
16. At
that
time
19. What the
nallves
eall

~~:~~:nt

22.
23. Postulate
24. Mode
of"
broadcasting

25. Hold it!
'27. Resort
town
in
conn.
29• ~~rmula
belief

30
'

;~ker"

'Y e.t~:rda,-'•

Cui

.

ri~er

31. Site of the
"'--- - - '
Alcazar
D. Equitable
tt. Cuneio

lint

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AJ:YDLBAAXR

It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply atancb for another, In tl!is sample A II
llled for the tbre6 L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sin&amp;le letten,
apostrophea, the len&amp;tb ond formation or the words ore all
hints. Eoch doy the tode letten are different.
CaYP'roQtiOTES

CADIZ. OHIO 43907

GMLSIULL

TELEPMONI (614) ·~t 4641

SL

PSEU

GSFZFPU .:.U SQOUJ ZBK

JSA.SIT

N

EU.UD WBCSIT

BJ ZB.J( YNPP ABX !.- NMQOBJ MIEIBXI

•

V "l

COME:&amp; FIR5T IN
MAKIN6 SHOES.

\ Antwu: A

··~u11rr"

••••rre•)

NIIILI

any cop can mah - CANOft'Y

.·

,....,..-----......., . ,,

S'l. Itallon

E. H. DOUGKIY
HANNA COAL OOMPANY

BOGTLE

lomb!&lt;" JULIP COACH GUILlY

school
(abbr.)

lion

28 Separate Parcels . Totaling 1500
Acres
River bottom land along State Route ·
338 above Racine Locks and Dam.
Call or write:

II I II
.

(A.. . ,..

35. Fritz or

VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE
LETART FALLS, OHIO

~----~~--L--L.--~.----

ZS.Roligi~

fancy
32.Eventful
period
U . CoUI'ure
Item
34. Altere•·

.

WOALC

L.:~O;;..:.;:r:~f--lr-.,..1__,1

sculptor
31. Cocnizant
"- .A
36. Unused L_L.-.l.-...L-..l-......1~-'1
37. Fore
and -

~.Afoollsb

;:::========--

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Pomeroy, 0.

We talk 1D you
like t . . .

Business Services.

WANT ADS
L
tNFORMATtON
EGAL NOTICE
. DEADLINES
.s P.M. Oav Before Publ ica tion
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
NOTICE OF
Cancellation- Corrections
APPOINTME~J T
Will be accept!!d until 9 a.m. for
Case No. 20717
Dayal Publication
Estate of MARY L . EMMISH .
REGULATIONS
Deceasl!'d .
ThQ Publisher reserves the Notice is her eby given that
r ig ht to edit or relect any ads. W i llette E . Bougher of 111 2 E.
deemed obJ ec tional.
The Coo ke Rd ., Columbus, Ohio , has
publisher will not be responsible been duly appointed Executrix
for mor'e than one Incorrect of the Estate of MARY L.
insertion.
EMMISH , dece ased, la te of
RATES
M~igs County, Oh io
For Wan1 Ad Service
. Creditors are reQuired to fi le
5 cents per Word one lnserl lon their claims with said fiduc iary
Minimum Charoto 7Sc "
within four mon ths.
12 ce~ts per w~rd three
Dated th is 7th day of July
consecut1ve insertions.
1972
18 cents per word she con Johrl c. Ba con
secutlvto Insertion, . .
Judge
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id (7) 11 , 18, 25, 3t
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.'
~ARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addit ional word 2c.
Wanted To Do
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per WILL do ironlngs in my home ;
phone 949·44.11.
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOUR$ '
7-25-3tc
8:30a.m . to S : OO _ p . m ~ Daily,
B:JO a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
satur da y.
Help Wanted

In New York, Sen. Jacob K.
Javits, R-N.Y., said it was
Agnew's name-calling that
persuaded him to suggest
replacing Agnew on the
Republican ticket. Javits made
his suggestion last Tuesday but
after
Nixon
aiilioUneed
Agnew's retention said he
would support the ticket.
Javlts said he believed that Card of Thanks
"in strictly political terms"
nothing was gained by Nixon's WE WOULD like to e&gt;press our
sincere thanks and apdecision.
preciation to the doctors and
"The President would have
nurses of the Universitv
Hospital , Columbus. Oh io;
gotten conservative and way·
Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
out Wallace votes anyway,"
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Javits said.
Pomeroy, Ohio ; RawlingsCoats Funeral Home, Mid Former Treasury Secretary ·
dleport, Oh io, Foglesong
John B. Connally said in
Funeral Home, Mason , W.
Washington he never believed
Va., friends and neighbors for
their kindness , generosity and
Nixon would select him as a
sympathy; Rev . Charles
running mate in place of
Norris for his cor"~ soling words
Agnew. Connally, a Democrat
during Ihe illness and death of
our son, brother and grand·
who is publicly working for
son. Rick w. Snider .
Nixon's r~lection, said he
Mr . and · Mrs. Raymond
"assumed aU along it would be
Snider and family , Grandmother, Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Mr. Agnew."
7·25-ltp
Connally said he did not
believe McGovern represented
Notice
the Democratic party "as I
conceive of it."
"He represents a segment
maybe," Connally said.
Connally was interviewed on
lWO STORY,
NBC's "Meet the Press."
McGovern told reporters at
THREE BEDROOM
Rapid City, S.D., that he was
HOME
"furious" with aides over a
car
pet ed. modern
Fully
report leaked to newsmen that
kitchen
with
built -in oven &amp;
Lawrence F. O' Brien, the
range, full basement and
former Democratic national carport.
chairma n, had been given a
CALL 992 -290llrom 9 a.m . to
s p.m. After S call 992·7440.
mere titular role in the cam·
paign. He said he regarded ~========::::::=====:;
O'Brien as "probably most
. 1 ?_ ?_ ..
experienced"
of
the
Dandruff Problem?
Democratic profess ionals
.
Cb me in and Itt us hlp
you
"with a wide range of friends
sei'ect
.11
soapleu base
1
and conta cts " across the
shampoo tor your Individual
nation .
scalp condition. Try us now !
Notice

tables,

For Sale
8 ROOM house, 3 bedrooms,
recreation plus bar, garage,
basement and large front
porch. River Vi e w. Appointment only . Call 992-53 10.
7·24.6tc

1!65 FORD

·

Furn iture, oak

6·28·ttc

·

WHY DON'T YE GIT OFF 'N ~&lt;ORE
BACKSIDES AN ' CHOP
SOME WOOD FER
"""&lt;=
LOWEEZY?

"-----'-o

Pomeroy. Ohio . Call 992-6271.

1!65 FORD
5795
2-ton 84" C.A. - 292 cu . in. 6 cylinder engine, 2-speed rear
axle, 82Sx2o; 10-ply tires, solid cab &amp; ready to work.

' D

To Buy

organ s. diShes, clorks, brass
beds. or complete households.
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,

.tor Co.

QUALm

SNUFFY!! 'IOU LA2.Y WHELP!~

.

·

2 SIGNS.
OF

BARNEY

'•

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 2li, 1972

8-

,

~entinel . Classifieds . Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

~

:~

. " ....'
"

... ..

1

1' \Yanten

Po••r.Of ·

OL D

·

5795
V-8 117 ton 8ft. pickup with aluminum cover. automatic
transmi ssion, good tires. chrome front &amp; rear bumper.
- ~est Coast mirrors, custom cab. White &amp; mist green
finish .

, 15FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
motor, also 1956 Harley1 h.p.
Davidson 74, phone 992 -5271.
'
7-18-12tp

1968 CHEVROLET ¥• TON
S1469
8-foot Stepside, good heavy duly tires. v.s engine. 2·speed
• transmission, solid cab. local 1-owner truck.

. r-omeroy Motor ( o...
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
f'JJMEROY, OHIO

®

300 GAL. stainless ' steel bulk

1,,/t'

1/1"':

•LL-_--_-------,---,..-..,...---~-----,.,_~
:!

ilHEi\1,'H TEST is the purpose or lhls device developed
b)· NASA as a by producl of space research. The auto·

matic mobile medical gas anulvzer meusures cumposi·

ilon of air a patienl breathes In and ex hales as an aid
(u ln·atin~ respiratory and heart aliments. The medical
~dvance IS the resull of research lhat began In 1960.
~nglnaliy directed to measuring the gas composition
~ t tht• t·arlh's almosphen•.

~cGovernites
'

to

hope
heal Wounds

By United Press International

Sen. George S. McGovern
intlicates he will spend most of
A~gust trying to bind up the
wounds to the Democratic
party caused during the battle
that gave him the presidential
ntirnination.
McGovern was joined in
so).mding the unity theme
S$day by his running mate,
Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, and
by Basil Paterson, the newly·
elected vice chairman of the
DOmocratic National Commit-

tee.
McGovern sa id he intended
\o : \our the nation during
August to see party leaders. He
said one of those he wanted to
talk to was former President
Lyhdon B. Johnson . He said he
hadn't " given up even on
Prfsident (George ) Meany" of
til~

AFL-CIO.

Meany and his AFL-CIO
executive council, in a break
with tra dition last week,
declined to endorse a presidentia l cand idate . The labor
federation's endorsements in
recent years have gone to
Democratic candidates.
Eagleton said he hoped to
gain an a udience with Meany

"in the near future."
"Maybe I'm not persuasive,
but I'm persistent," Eagleton
said.
Paterson said in New York
he was positive McGovern
could win the support of "so·
ca lled old Democrats" in the
November election.
11

It'S a big task,'' Paterson

said of the party unity drive.
" It's going to take a lot of time.
I think he'll be able to do it and
I think he will do it. "
McGovern added that he
wanted to "talk with some of
my competitors in the recent

primaries and convention."
·

McGovern made his remarks
on the CBS-TV in te rview

program uFace the Nation. "
Eag leton was interviewed on
ABC-TV's "Issues and An-

swers. "
President Nixon announced
Saturday that Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew would be
retained on the Re publican
ticket. Agnew was in Anchorage, Alaska, Sunday night for a
Re publican fund-raising
dinner .

today· s FUNNY
.YOU :OO~·:jjj.'j

·1'0.JE:r, BUIB:JIJ U1:
·A Hocie, "t:t5~B

.PIAST:~~P,i\::t;:.,::

In Memory
IN MEMO.RY of Murl Belt who
passed away 2.t years ago
today, July 25, t9.S. She's
sadly missed by her husband,
Raymond, and children,
Wilma
Ervin, Dorothr.
Chaney. Don and Jim Bel .
The world may change, From
year to year ;
And our friends from day to
day, But never will the one we
love,
·
From memory pass away .
- - - - - , - - - - --7·_:
25-ltp

PRICE REDUCED

GRAND
TOUR
OF
EUROPE
3 weeks departing on
September Sth. only
$889.00 Round Trip
from N.Y. escorte'd by
John and Charlotte
Heiskell . Rt. 3, Box
595, South Point, Ohio.
Phone 614-377-4791.
REDUCE safe and fast wi th
GoBese Tablets II. E-Vap
"water pills," Nelson Drug .
6-29-301p

KARR'S
BARBER
SHOP

Ba rbers' Locai-400-AFL -CIO

··HEll''
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window 1
Air Conditioners

·WMP0/1390
..
{ Todo;'s 'UNNY· will poy $1.00 for
each original "funny" used. Sfnd gags
lo: Today'1 FU NNY, 1200 Wel l Thl1d
St., Cle¥tlond, Oh io •411]

ON YOUR DIAL

milk tank and relr igerating
unit, automatic; cost $2,500
would like $1,250; used very
little ; phone 992-7178.
_________7·_
2s:3tp

J Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage.
carpeHng .
Priced at ••
ONLY $13,750

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, .
ponds, basement, ladd ·
scaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 si ze loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Fret · Estimates. We also"
haul fill dirt, top ~soil . Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jailers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
auer 7 p .m . or phone 9925232.

ARNOLD
BRO.THERS

We specia lize in aluminum,
vinyl and stee l si di ng ;
fiberglas, . bri ck and
complete line of residerit1a1
and commercial ·roofing;

Stone;

remodel ing,

building ,

suspended ceilings, Interior
and ~xter ior painting;
complete line of Masonry

work . All work guaranteed to
custom er sati sfaction. We
are fully i nsured for your
protect ion . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918,.
.

SEPTIC tanks clean'ed . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662 -3035.
2·12·tfC

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

=-------

BACKHOE AND DOZER worl&lt; i
Seplic tanks installed. George
t Bill l Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
· ·
4·25·ttc'

From the largest .
Bulldozer RadicUDr to the
Small est Heater Core.
· Nolhon Biggs
Radiator Speciollsl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

. Ph . 991:-2174

WANTED - Cuslomers at
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop,
Chester, Ohio. No experience
necessary.
7-9·20tp
WHY not try CO$mellcs th•t are
truly
different
and
refreshing? The famous mink
oil base and now we have the
lemon grove. Just think, 1~
specials lhls month, some for
men as well as women. It's
KOSCOT ol course. Phone
992.5113.
7-t·tlc

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

•

I Kt-OW Cli.D v.oRRIES
ABOUI US KID51 KAtHY.

CAMPUS CLATIER
LET T~IS BE A
CLAS$. 81MO$ 500

WOROS OF COPY
NETTEO ' ~tM

A

MERE.'C"

'!liE t-.1 OONT lAKE
11' 50 !1ARD1TiNA .
'.OU'RE LEARNING

IN ADVERTISING
ITS NOT 'mE NUMBER
OF WOROS .'mAT
COUNTS

CIN!JY$
8RtEI" MESSI\"E
~ATEO AN 'A+"

10 BE A GOOD

DRNER.

EXPERT
Wh~_ Alipment
55.55
On Most AmeriJin Caq ,

-GUARANTEE I).-:
BOAT, motor, trailer and ac cessor ies, $300 as Is: may be
· Phone 992-2094
' '
seen at .394 South SiKih,
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
bee~
Middleport or phone 992-7375.
cancelled?
Lost
your Pomei!IJ
DOZER and back hoe work.
7-25-6tc
operator's license? Call 992-,
ponds
and
septic
tanks;
B
II. K
_ __ _ __ _ __:_:
Open BTII S
2966 . .
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
WA LNUT, Modern style, -4
6-15-ttc
Monday
lhru Soturdly
Dick Karr, Jr .
speaker soun d system , -4
5-21-tfc
--606
E:
Main,
_Pomoroy •.Q._
d
1
t'
h
PAPER hanging; interior and
spee au oma IC c anger . - - -- - '' - -Balance $64.89 . Use ou r SEWING MACHINE service,
ex ter io r pa in ting ; Arthur SEE us FOR : Awnings, ijerm'
budge t terms. Cal l 992-7085.
Musser, phone 7.42-5223.
doors and windows, carports. ~
clean, oi l, set tension $4.99.
7-21-6tc
7-18·30tp
marquees, aluminum siding
Specia l Elect ro -Grande
Company . Phone 992-65 17.
SEWING MA&lt;.HINES . Repair; and ra iling. A Jacob, sales,
BEAUTIFUL Early American
representative. For fre"
5·21 ·tfc
st yle, stereo -radio com serv ice. a II ma kes. 992-2284. ' esti mates , phone Charle~
bination, 4 speaker, AM-FM - - - - -The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Ll t
s
v v
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Authorized Singer Sales and . Johnson
s e , and
yracuse,
·I
radio , -4 speed changer . REASO NABL E rates. Ph. 446·
Son, Inc. ·
1
Balance $78 .67 . Use our
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
J.2·tf•t
budge! terms. Call 992-7085. 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
3-29-tfc
7-21-6tc Owner &amp; Opera tor.
5· t2-tfc _R_E_A_D_Y___M_I_X__C_O_N_C R E"T E. 'o;oE·i. L WH E E L . all g n men;
SINGE R Slant Needle sewing · -----~--delivered rig hi to your : located at Crossroads, Rt . 12•.
machine, equipped to zig zag. C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
project. Fast and easy. Free
Complete front end service,
make button holes. etc .
Complete Service
esti mates. Ph one 99 2_3284 ,. tune up and brake service.
Balance $41.02. Use our
Phone949-382l
Goe 1ein Ready·Mix co.,, Wheels balanced elec·
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Raci ne, Ohio
t Oh'
Ironically,
All
work
MId Iepor'
10 •
i
guaranteed .
AP..11-.nn.ahl•
7-21-6tc
,· Crill Bradlord
3
6- 0·tfc
rates. Phone 742·3232 or
--------s.J.tfc
-992·3213.
/ -"·TTC
HEREFORD bull ; phone 9'12. - - - - -- - - 6765.
Rea I Estate For Sale
CALL Guy Nelgler for Building
7·25·3tc For Sale or Trade
Houses.
4 ROOMS. bath , nice lot on Rt.
6-28-tfc
__::_
HEREFORD heifer calf ; phone
124, close to deep mine ; ta ke
843-2778.
late
model
car
or
housetrailer
SENTINEL
in trade ; also trailer space for
7-25-Jtc
Real Estate For Sale
rent ; M &amp; G Food Market, 3
CARRIERS WANTED
1970 YAMAHA 250 Enduro,
mi. Sou th, Middleport, Rt . 7.
excellent condition, $500 ; Guy
7·21-6tc
IN
Sargent, Phooe 992 -6432.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
7-25-3tc
Auto SaiP.s
MIDDLEPORT
1972 ZIG -ZAG sewing machine '71 CHEVELLE Super Sporl
· Contact Associate
left in layaway. Beautiful
Coupe, V·8, 4 speed, 12200.
Phone Faye Manley
POmeroy, Ohio
pastel color, fu ll size model.
Ph
one
742-3722.
992-5592
All built -in to buttonhole, do
VERA
EBLIN
7-2D-6tc
stretch sewi ng and fancy
In
992-3020
stitching . Pay ius t $47.75 cash
LEVEL LOT90x90
Pomeroy
160
CoaiSI.
Middleport
1967
RED
&amp;
white
Dodge
or terms available . Trade-ins
SYRAC USE - Jlh story
Coronet RT, 4.40 engine, 4
RUTLAND
Phone 992-2156
accepted . Phone 992-5641.
trame. l bedrooms, bath,
speed , tow mileage ; phone
FARM- 106
acres , 1 -4
1 2t -6tc
NEW for ced a ir gas furnace,
992-6689.
------bedroom. modern home, 2
porches, basement .
SEAMSTRESS needed. apply in VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
7·19-6tc
barns, plenty of wate r .
$5,000.00.
person ,
Kathryn
Ann
modeL Complete wi th all -::-~==-=-:--:-::-­
$28,000.
RIVER FRONTAGE
Dressmaking, Main &amp; Jrd,
cleaning tools . Small paint 1967 DODGE Dart Convert ible,
SYRACUSE 2 story
Middleport.
damage in shi pp ing. Will sell
automatic , power steering.
3
BEDROOM,
bath.
furnace.
7-23-3tc
frame
,
7
rooms.
2
baths, 4
for S64.50 cash or terms
rad io, dark blue finish ; phone
bedrooms, 2 por ches, util ity
carpet and paneling , J.r... acre
available. Phone 992-5641 .
949-20 14.
roOm, some paneling, gas
MOTHERS - Are you looking
7·21-6tc --~-----7..::
· 23- 31&lt; lot. $1 1.500.
forced
air furnace, full
tor something different ? Sell
1969
FORD
Sedan,
·
power
basement,
ga ra ge .
MIDDLEPORT
Toys. Playhouse Company is 1- 420JOHN Deere dozer: 1'64
steering , power brakes. low 7 ROOMS. bath. lot 100x 190.
$12,500.00.
now hiring for fall. Se ll
Chev . Dump Truck ; Earl
mileage. excel lent condition ; $7,900.50 .
1 MILE TO RUTLAND
Werner, Rt. l, Middleport,
August to December . no
11.495 ; phone 985-4116.
Home 4 years old, 11/l acre
deliveries and no collections . Ohio; phone 992-2769.
7 23-3tc
ground . 7
rooms , -4
Call Mrs. Barbara Lambert
7-23·61p
POMEROY
bedrooms. bath, 2 slorage
446-3411 or Mrs . Margaret
3 BEDROOM. 1'11 bath,
CORVETTE Stingray, both
Fortune 949-5414. Earn S &amp; H COAL, limes tone, Excelsior '64tops.
build lngs, lots of cabinets In
11. 800 : '68 Ford pickup,
kitchen comp lete with ref . &amp;
Green Stamps.
Sa lt Wor ks. E. Main St .,
kitchen.
A buy at just
standard with overdrive, V-8,
ranqe, carpe t &amp; drapes In7 -12-12tc
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
$16,900.00.
32,000 miles , $1,200 . Phone
cluded. on 2 lots near school .
cA"'c"'T=--:N
- o"'w
_____
4-12-trc
MIDDLEPORT AT. 1
992-6048 or 742 -3144.
515,500.
Join the
1
story,
3 bedrooms. NEW
-23-3tp
oldest
Toy
II.
Gift TOMATOES. cucumbers. green _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_
ALBANY
balh , NEW forced atr fur·
Party Plan m the Country peppers
and
canning
NEW 3 bedroom. p;, baih,
nace. paneling, utility room,
- our 25th year! Com .
tomatoes. Geral dine Cleland,
ranch
house,
carport.
Nice
porches, storage building,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
missions. up to 30 pet. FanRacine, Ohio.
level
lot
in
new
addition,
fru it room, $9,800.00.
7-20
-tlc
CAS
f!
paid
for
all
makes
and
tastic Hostess Awards. Call or
SHOWN BY
owner
tran
sferring
,
mu
st
mode ls of mobile homes .
write "S ANTA's PARTIE S"
APPOINTMENT
ONLY
sell
.
$24,5()0.
Phone
area
code
614-423-9531.
Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone LEFT IN lay -away , t972 Zig
4·13·tfc
1 12031 673-3455 . ALSO
Zag sewing machine. Th is
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
BOOKING PARTIES.
mach ine ove rcasts , darns ,
160 Coat Street - Also
REALTOR
7-2-J()tc
em broideries with just a turn sa x 10, PRICED reasonable ;
location of the Middleport C
- - - -- phone Chester 985-3379.
of the d ial . Pay balance ot
PHONE
992-2259·992·2561
of C office.
BAR MAIO. lull-t ime. Inquire $44.50 or pay $6.21 a month. --~-----7-·
21 ·6tp
in person at M.e igs Inn .
Phone 992·5331.
7·20·tfc FOR THE BEST deal In a new
7-23-3tc
or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobi le Home Sales,
S3 .75 PER HOUR . Need 12 men LOVE MU SIC??? Try this 1972
Kanauga , Ohio.
for light delivery and sales . 8 track stereo console in your
home . Pay balance ol 598.80
7-16-30tc
No experience necessary,
110 Mechanic Street
must be neat and dependable . or payments can be arranged .
Phone 992·5331.
r
Call Mr . Howard, 9 a.m. to
7·20·tfc
7:30 p.m., .Tuesda y on ly at
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·. Air Conditioners
446·0677.
·Awnings
2 LOTS in Meigs Memor ial
7·..::
23·3tc
Gardens ; phone 992 -2766.
• Underpinning
NEW LISTING
7-21 -61c
Female Help Wanted
117
ACRES
In
gas
area ol Lebanon Townsh ip. Has gas
- - - - -'complete mobile home
we
ll
now.
A
6
room
hou
se, barn and several outbuildings.
HOUSEWIFE to represent our BOAT. motor and !rai ler ; 15ft. service - plus gigantic
Want
to
try
your
luck
a
t a pig in a poke. Only 520.000.00
company, ordering and
boat of wooden construction,
toda y.
stockin?. our merchandise in a 65 h.p. Mercury motor ; in top 'di splay of mobile homes
local s ore in Pomeroy ; ap- shape ; new battery, skis, always available at .. .
prox imatefy Jto 4 hoursevery cushions, e~ . ; wil l sacrifice ;
FIVE POINTS
MILLER
15 days ; $2 per hour ; Write phone 949-5656.
NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms, nice bath, kitchen with stove
Box 729·F, c-o The Da ily
7·16·12tc
and refrige rator. Wall-to-wa ll carpet ing In living. Has 2
MOBILE HOMES .
Sentinel. Pomeroy , Ohio
large lois lor only 516,000.
45769.
1220 Washington Blvd.
TOMATOES. Joann Prolfilt ;
7-21 -6tc
phone 843-2826.
423-7521 ·
BELPRE,O.
- -- -- - -- 7-21-6t c
5 BEDROOMS
EXTRA INCOME! We need - - - - - - - - BUTTERNUT STREET - Near downtown shopp ing .
ladies as part-time Personal 1958 INTERNATIONAL Real Estate For Sale
Nice ki tchen with double sink. Full basement. 2 porches .
Shof)pers. Average SJ per Camper bus; ca n be used as
Asking
just $7500.00 for quick sa le . .
r ebu ilt RACINE - A good going
hour. Flexible hours . Write passenger bus;
Personal Shopper Depart. engine, A-1 condition ; phone
restaurant busi ness for man
and wife team , stock and
ment, Box 10, Watkins 667-3372.
Products, In c., Winona ,
7-19-6tc
equipment. 1 Ice cream
NEW LISTING
55987
LAND - 50 acres of it, In Rutland Township. A good buy
Minnesota
·
machine
nollncluded;
lhls
Is
7-24-31c RIDING horse s, polled bull
a very good buy at 55,500;
for 55,000.00.
- - - - -- - - ca lves ; C. 0. Harr ison, Rt. 1.
Phone 949-3211; George
Employment Wanted
Middleport.
Hobstetter, Real Estate
7-19·6fp
Broker, Pomeroy , Ohio.
DO YOU HAVE A GOOD 2 BEDROOM HOME
WILL DO welding after 5 p.m.
7·25·3tc
REASONABLY PRICED, THAT WE CAN BUY. LET US
and weekends , any place ; TOMATOES,
polatoes , - - - - - - - - HEAR FROM YOU, WE'LL LOOK.
phone 992·5271 .
cucum bers and
bean s, RAC IN E - 10 room house;
7-t8·12tp
Clarence Proffit. Portland,
bat h, basement, garage, two
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
lots. Phone 949-4313.
1
For Rent
7· 9-tfc :-:-:--- - -- --4-5-ttp
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
1·614·"2·3325

~

U'L ABNER

HO!li"U Auto .

AH'LL BE BAC K

_____

t-,.-,-,.-,-"T"",..-,r-,;n;;-...-nirl ::--..., r-,...1

:i

NI:XT

~

VACATION --

~· ~~1}1.1~

TAKE

1'-----. _

IT ALL
Ot= F' .. '

_.r

Tl-l5'

~!

3

'IOU MUST BE:
EXHA/JSTEO/ I'D
NO tOEA YOU'D
BEEN WAITING
OUTSIDE
NIGflT !

PLEA~E MAI&lt;E '!OURSELVES
COMFORTABLE ! I'LL HAVE
COFFEE ANDSANDWICHE&amp;
SENT IN!

I'M &amp;URE.

SOMETHING

CAN BE DONE
ABOUT ~A'Jj

GIRLS!

.

------

'

lllE~

'bJ~T, ~
~rrf£1S!

--::==-=----

---~.--

.

~ ~

.

- - - - --

-==========-..;

HOUSETRAILER, 2 bedroom,
STORE, stock and equipment,
running water, septic tank July Price Buster!
all lor 56.600. Phone 742 -3144
installed, nice front porch,
or 993·60.S.
l-23-6tp
partially lurnlshed. Beautiful
PANTS &amp; JEANS
-----location In Salem Twp.• near
6 ROOM house and bath. See at
Ohio Power .Jrea. Call G. C.
650 Osborne Street. No phone
Oiler. Columbus. 235·1227 or
SALEJ
calls .
write 880 Elaine Rd.,
1·23-3tp
Buy 2 Pairs and
Columbus, Ohio. Available
GET 1 PAIR FREE
August 6th ; $120 per monlh .
7· 2•·31p All kinds, all sizes for men , 2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
;-.
3-A::-N~-D,.
__4_R
_OU
,_M
- t_u_rn_ts""h-ed..,...an" women. young men. boys
garage, with lake frontage; at
unfurnl5hed. epartments. and girls . Hurrv to ...
Fiv·e Points area ; phone 992·
Phone 992-S.3-4.
•· ,
2571 or 992-3975.
o4-12·ttc '
.
POMEROY
7·13·tlc
,.......,,.,........,......,..,..--'1'•. Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.,
2 BEDROOM mobile home wtlh . , . · ·Phone992,2111
. RACI N·e - 6 'room house','liatii, ·
&lt;II r -conditioning; 10 m iles '----:..:.:.:.:..::.:..:.:..::..__ __;
utility room , garage, $10.000;
phone 949·4195.
·
17W
CONTINENTAL
Travel
Easl of Pomeroy; phone 992·
3·31 -tfc
6329 ·
Trailer , 1971 modeL self.
7·19.tfc
contained ; awning , mirrors
.
:F::-U:-:R:-:N
cci-::SH"'E"'
D- a_pa_r_t_m_enlc-, all
and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
LOTS on Wright Slreet.
newly painted and carpeted ;
7·12-tfc
Pomeroy, phone 742·5937.
•
d ' ·
..
7·18-12tc
I
d
n ce yor • po~c,.e s an
POODLE puppies, Sliver To~, . :-:::-::-:-::-:-----:..:.:...
~t~a~ ~;~a:;ie , phone 992· · Parkview Kennels, Phone 992· . HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone'
5443.
965 ·3529.
·
7_23.11
6·ll·tfc
---------e.Js.tfc •

ACROSS
1. Off one 's
head
5. Haggard
novel
8. Semi·

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

c

.

.

. Yesterdoy's Cryptoquote: THERE 'S NOTHING NEW IN
COMPUTER MATCHING OF COUPLES TO EACH OTHER
GUYS HAVE BEEN HOOKED FOR MANY YEARS BY .A
CALCULATING MOTHER.- R. M. WALSH

by THOMAS JOSEPH

precious

_________

- - -- - -

992-2448

AST A

STLJPID
QUESTION ..

Radla
S.rvlce

ao

TO

YOUR

ROOM!

stone
9.Former
light
heavy·
weight
champion,

Jose -

13.Saucy;
sprightly
1t.Miss
Lansbur;
15. Fall into
sin
16. Musical
syllable
17. Drop the
bait
. lightly

11. "Pouring"

TERRY
•..RAI110 w.;PATt:HfR 5AII'
'litE I'IITNfSS CAILECI FROM
THE 5TA110H!RY 5TOI!f:, CORNER
Of Gro'IE ~p HORTH PtNE...

Of A Pt!tC£ 10
fli&gt;Y !'OR A

H£0(

THING

Ul(f

term
(2 wds. )
21. Back talk
21. Equalled
22.Nota~----' 23. Blanched
25. Dilute
26. British
urblne
27. Seoman

II. Newcastle
upon - ,
England

(C 1972 King Features Syndicate, Ine.)

~&amp;WJ]3!1rn;IJ.i ::::!!:! .-Jc

DOWN
1. Gaits
2. 11 Fedora"

is a
famous
one
3. Sucoeed
at a task
(along)
(3 wds .)
4. Danube
· tributary
5. Gave a
fixed
look
6. Chinese
province
7.Work
unit .
10. Memora·
ble time
(slang)
(3 wds.)
II. Arthurtan
lady

Unacr1111ble theH four Jumbleo,
one leiter to each square, to
form four ordinary worda.
Yeaterdly'a ADswer

u:arlllsh

military
engineer
16. At
that
time
19. What the
nallves
eall

~~:~~:nt

22.
23. Postulate
24. Mode
of"
broadcasting

25. Hold it!
'27. Resort
town
in
conn.
29• ~~rmula
belief

30
'

;~ker"

'Y e.t~:rda,-'•

Cui

.

ri~er

31. Site of the
"'--- - - '
Alcazar
D. Equitable
tt. Cuneio

lint

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AJ:YDLBAAXR

It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply atancb for another, In tl!is sample A II
llled for the tbre6 L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sin&amp;le letten,
apostrophea, the len&amp;tb ond formation or the words ore all
hints. Eoch doy the tode letten are different.
CaYP'roQtiOTES

CADIZ. OHIO 43907

GMLSIULL

TELEPMONI (614) ·~t 4641

SL

PSEU

GSFZFPU .:.U SQOUJ ZBK

JSA.SIT

N

EU.UD WBCSIT

BJ ZB.J( YNPP ABX !.- NMQOBJ MIEIBXI

•

V "l

COME:&amp; FIR5T IN
MAKIN6 SHOES.

\ Antwu: A

··~u11rr"

••••rre•)

NIIILI

any cop can mah - CANOft'Y

.·

,....,..-----......., . ,,

S'l. Itallon

E. H. DOUGKIY
HANNA COAL OOMPANY

BOGTLE

lomb!&lt;" JULIP COACH GUILlY

school
(abbr.)

lion

28 Separate Parcels . Totaling 1500
Acres
River bottom land along State Route ·
338 above Racine Locks and Dam.
Call or write:

II I II
.

(A.. . ,..

35. Fritz or

VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE
LETART FALLS, OHIO

~----~~--L--L.--~.----

ZS.Roligi~

fancy
32.Eventful
period
U . CoUI'ure
Item
34. Altere•·

.

WOALC

L.:~O;;..:.;:r:~f--lr-.,..1__,1

sculptor
31. Cocnizant
"- .A
36. Unused L_L.-.l.-...L-..l-......1~-'1
37. Fore
and -

~.Afoollsb

;:::========--

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Pomeroy, 0.

We talk 1D you
like t . . .

Business Services.

WANT ADS
L
tNFORMATtON
EGAL NOTICE
. DEADLINES
.s P.M. Oav Before Publ ica tion
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
NOTICE OF
Cancellation- Corrections
APPOINTME~J T
Will be accept!!d until 9 a.m. for
Case No. 20717
Dayal Publication
Estate of MARY L . EMMISH .
REGULATIONS
Deceasl!'d .
ThQ Publisher reserves the Notice is her eby given that
r ig ht to edit or relect any ads. W i llette E . Bougher of 111 2 E.
deemed obJ ec tional.
The Coo ke Rd ., Columbus, Ohio , has
publisher will not be responsible been duly appointed Executrix
for mor'e than one Incorrect of the Estate of MARY L.
insertion.
EMMISH , dece ased, la te of
RATES
M~igs County, Oh io
For Wan1 Ad Service
. Creditors are reQuired to fi le
5 cents per Word one lnserl lon their claims with said fiduc iary
Minimum Charoto 7Sc "
within four mon ths.
12 ce~ts per w~rd three
Dated th is 7th day of July
consecut1ve insertions.
1972
18 cents per word she con Johrl c. Ba con
secutlvto Insertion, . .
Judge
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id (7) 11 , 18, 25, 3t
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.'
~ARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addit ional word 2c.
Wanted To Do
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per WILL do ironlngs in my home ;
phone 949·44.11.
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOUR$ '
7-25-3tc
8:30a.m . to S : OO _ p . m ~ Daily,
B:JO a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
satur da y.
Help Wanted

In New York, Sen. Jacob K.
Javits, R-N.Y., said it was
Agnew's name-calling that
persuaded him to suggest
replacing Agnew on the
Republican ticket. Javits made
his suggestion last Tuesday but
after
Nixon
aiilioUneed
Agnew's retention said he
would support the ticket.
Javlts said he believed that Card of Thanks
"in strictly political terms"
nothing was gained by Nixon's WE WOULD like to e&gt;press our
sincere thanks and apdecision.
preciation to the doctors and
"The President would have
nurses of the Universitv
Hospital , Columbus. Oh io;
gotten conservative and way·
Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
out Wallace votes anyway,"
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Javits said.
Pomeroy, Ohio ; RawlingsCoats Funeral Home, Mid Former Treasury Secretary ·
dleport, Oh io, Foglesong
John B. Connally said in
Funeral Home, Mason , W.
Washington he never believed
Va., friends and neighbors for
their kindness , generosity and
Nixon would select him as a
sympathy; Rev . Charles
running mate in place of
Norris for his cor"~ soling words
Agnew. Connally, a Democrat
during Ihe illness and death of
our son, brother and grand·
who is publicly working for
son. Rick w. Snider .
Nixon's r~lection, said he
Mr . and · Mrs. Raymond
"assumed aU along it would be
Snider and family , Grandmother, Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Mr. Agnew."
7·25-ltp
Connally said he did not
believe McGovern represented
Notice
the Democratic party "as I
conceive of it."
"He represents a segment
maybe," Connally said.
Connally was interviewed on
lWO STORY,
NBC's "Meet the Press."
McGovern told reporters at
THREE BEDROOM
Rapid City, S.D., that he was
HOME
"furious" with aides over a
car
pet ed. modern
Fully
report leaked to newsmen that
kitchen
with
built -in oven &amp;
Lawrence F. O' Brien, the
range, full basement and
former Democratic national carport.
chairma n, had been given a
CALL 992 -290llrom 9 a.m . to
s p.m. After S call 992·7440.
mere titular role in the cam·
paign. He said he regarded ~========::::::=====:;
O'Brien as "probably most
. 1 ?_ ?_ ..
experienced"
of
the
Dandruff Problem?
Democratic profess ionals
.
Cb me in and Itt us hlp
you
"with a wide range of friends
sei'ect
.11
soapleu base
1
and conta cts " across the
shampoo tor your Individual
nation .
scalp condition. Try us now !
Notice

tables,

For Sale
8 ROOM house, 3 bedrooms,
recreation plus bar, garage,
basement and large front
porch. River Vi e w. Appointment only . Call 992-53 10.
7·24.6tc

1!65 FORD

·

Furn iture, oak

6·28·ttc

·

WHY DON'T YE GIT OFF 'N ~&lt;ORE
BACKSIDES AN ' CHOP
SOME WOOD FER
"""&lt;=
LOWEEZY?

"-----'-o

Pomeroy. Ohio . Call 992-6271.

1!65 FORD
5795
2-ton 84" C.A. - 292 cu . in. 6 cylinder engine, 2-speed rear
axle, 82Sx2o; 10-ply tires, solid cab &amp; ready to work.

' D

To Buy

organ s. diShes, clorks, brass
beds. or complete households.
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,

.tor Co.

QUALm

SNUFFY!! 'IOU LA2.Y WHELP!~

.

·

2 SIGNS.
OF

BARNEY

'•

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 25,1972

1,414 Emergencies Served
At Holzer Center in June
Holzer Medical Center
treated 1,414 patients in the
emergency room at the new $21
million facility during June,
the first full month of
operation. This is a marked
increase over the number of
emergencies treated at the old
hospital on First Ave. and
Cedar St. before it was closed
. for remodeling.
Of these, 492 were accident
victims with :i9 traffic accident
cases, 85 recreational ac-

cidents, 140 industrial ac·
cidents and 208 home accidents.
Of the 1,414 patients ·seen,
I ,Ill were sent home from the
emergency room, 43 returned

to work, II were transferred to
another medical institution, .

and 24S were admitted to
Holzer Medical Center.
· During the month two cases
were dead-&lt;m-arrival at the
emergency room and two more
died while in emergency.
Holzer Medical Center of·
ficiais said this is the first time
accurate statistics could be
compiled in the emergency
room area of the hospital since
the ER at tile old facility was so
closely connected with
physicians examining rooms,
many emergency cases were
see n there and never went to
tl1e actual emergency room. At
the new building, emergency is
separated from patient floors

'

PORTLAND EDGED
Racine No. I edged within
one game of league leading
Portland with an upset II~ win
over the first place team.
Hitters for Racine No. I were
Zane Beegle with a home run,
triple, and single ; Varney with
a home run and two doubles,
and Kent Wolfe a home run and
two singles. Hitters for Portland were Randy Congo with a
home run and Brian Lawrence
and Brian Johnson each a
triple.
League Standings
Tea'll
W. L.
Portand·
6 I
Racine No. I
5 2
Letart
4 3
Syracuse No. I
3 4
&amp;cine No.2
3 4
Syracuse No. 2
0 7
Scores:
Racine No. I II Portland 6
Letart 17 Racine No. 2 14
Syracuse No. I 5 Syracuse
No. 2 3

MEIGS THEATRE

News . . . in Briefs
(Continued from Page I)
economically, strategiically and politically, However, we do not
seem to realize the value of what we possess."
WASHINGTON- SEN. EDWARD W. BROOKE, R-Mass.,
assuming leadership of the Senate's antiwar forces, today
pressed !or another showdown on :he withdrawal of U.S . troops
from Indochina in exchange for the release of American
prisoners.
The Senate adopted the far;eaching amendment Monday
then nullified the action by killing the .1.8 billion foreign mllltary
aid bill to which it was attached. Brooke immediately announced
he would offer the amendment to the $20.6 billion military
procurement bill, now pending in the Senate. The amendment
would withdraw all U.S . forces- "land, sea, and air" - from
Indochina four months after enactment if the POWs were
released.
BLACKSVILLE, W. VA. -OFFICIALS DECIDED to seal
off a mile-deep coal mine and nine men trapped in It by a
weekend fire when a series of explosions Monday ended hope the
miners would be found alive.
RelaUves and friends of the men trapped since Saturday
night were quickly evacuated for fear the explosions might
spread to a Consolidation Coal Co. office just a few hundred feet
from the entrance of the Blacksville Mine No. I.
COLUMBUS - IN PROfl?81' of ·the Vletnsm war, about IS ·
persons refused to pay the federal excise tax included in their
telephone bill Monday. The protestors donated the exclile taz,
totaling about $SO, to a Quaker Jrojecl organized to establish and
maintain a hospital for·war-disabled chUdren in VIetnam.
The JrOtestors, wbo said their action symbolizes that money
being spent on the war should be plit to humanitarian purposes,
passed out leaflets stating that the cost of one nuclear powered
aircraft carrier equals salaries paid 100,000 elementary
education teachers.

Tonight, July 25
LOVE STORY
(Techni~olor)

All McGraw
Ryan O' Neal

Cartoons :

Tennis Racquet

Donald's Vacation

Show Slarls 7 P.M.
Wednasday &amp; Thursday
July 26-27
NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN '
.

and examining rooms and an
accurate count can be main·
tained.
The new emergency room
area at Holzer Medical Center
has five examining rooffis,
three observation rooms, and
two treatment rooms which
can be divided into two rooms
each. A physician is present in
the emergency room 24 hours a
day 'seven days a week and
specialists from the clinic staff
are on call to handle any type
emergency or disaster that
might Occur.
The emergency room is
located on the ground floor of
U.e medical center on the east
side of the building facing State
Route 160.

.

'

'. . . .

Tonight, July 25
"BIG JAKE"

!Color)

COLUMBUS - JAMES M. FRIEDMAN, RECENTLY
ousted as Gov. John J. Gilligan's top assistant, today was appointed by the governor as chairman of the Ohio Civil Rlghls
Commlilsion.
Friedman, a Cleveland lawyer, will begin a five-year ierm
Friday. He succeeds Hugh A. Sabato of Cincinnati, whose term
expires. The chairmanship which will require Friedman to make
at leaat one trip a month to Columbus, Iii a part-time job.
Friedman will receive $11,794 a year plus expenses. As Gilligan's
chief of staff, he received about $31,000 annually.
·

John Wayne
Richa rd Boone

IGl

Plus

THE PROFESSIONALS
(Technicolor I
Burt Lancaster
Lee Marvin
Robert Rya n

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Esther
Dailey, Po.rtland ; Harrison
Robinson, Letart, W. Va .;
Freda Henderson, Pomeroy ;
Chris Capehart, Rutland ;
Thomas Karr, Pomeroy;
Debra Hager, Cheshire;
Dorothy Greathouse, Racine ;
Ruby Bryant, Portland ;
Lawrence Harrison, Mid·
dleport, and Julia Hutchison,
Rutland.
DISCHARGES - Harriett
Thompson, Harriett Walley,
Doris Adams and John Fisher.

Wed., Thur ., Fri.
July 26·27-28

Double Featura Program
SHOOT OUT

!Color)

Gre-gor y Peck

IGP)
·- Plu sRED SKY
AT MORNING

!Color)

Richard Thoma s
Ca ther ine Burns

Desl Arna z. Jr.
IG P)

ACITIZENS NATIONAL
checking account is

a grat.way to pass the
Buck!

Three Divorces
Granted in Meigs
Three divorces were granted, with a defendan t in
another case granted custody
of a minor child, by Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Monday.
Granted divorces were Ciyda
R. Bing from Guy E. Bing on
grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. One
minor child is involved. Also
granted divorces were Sandra
K. Fields from Michael A.
Fields and Judy A. Landers
from Orville K. Landers, both
on charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. The
Landers' case involves four
minor children.
Cecil R. See, father of
Danelle Lynn See, was
awarded her custody from the
mother, Sandra See .

Debates
(l»ntinued from Page

I)

Fitzgerald Wins Logru;t'~.. .Head .Job

'
coach one year to accept the Coach Charles McAfee's
government; and national setop job ·at . Zanesville, hlil Bulldogs to two consecutive
curity and foreign policy.
Southeastern 'Ohio League
hometown.
McGovern said ' Gary HaiL
Fitzgerald moved to Athens · cbampionshiJlll.
would be his campaign manaThe new Logan mentor was
when he was a sophomore in
ger; Frank Mankiewict, politihigh school. He helped lead All-Southeastern his junior and
cal director; Henry Kimelman,
senior years. He was named
national finance director, and
the SEOAL's Most Valuable
Lawrence F. O'Brien, national
Player in 1963-64, and was
· campaign chairman.
named First Team All-Ohio in
McGovern said his wife
1964.
Eleanor will have a "major
After graduating from AHS
role" and new Democratic
The Holzer Medical Center agreement to reimburse Jackson, Meigs and Vinton in 1~, Fitzgerald enrolled at
national chairwoman Jean
Florida Southern College,
Westwood will be campaign Clinic, Gallipolis, Monday filed plaintiff the sum of $25,000 Counties in Ohio and Mason
Lakeland, Fla., where he was a
overseer, with a . special em- a breach of contract suit in upon demand for benefits and Jackson Counties in West regular for four years. He had
Gallia County Common Pleas conierred him as a member of Virginia.
phasis on women.
According to the petition, the a 14-polnt career scoring
At his first news conference Court against Dr. Mel P. the Holzer Hospilal Center
average while playing college
since winning the nomination, Simon, 15S First Av e., Clinic upon his leaving !he defendant, Dr . Simon, bas
group by retirement, with- breached the agreement by ball, and was captain of
McGovern said, if elected, he Gallipolis.
Plaintiff contends that on drawal, or separation and upon refusing to pay the agreed upon Florida Southern his senior
would go to Hanoi to negotiate
year.
the release 'of prisoners if that Aug . 20. 1968 plaintiff and the his practicing the profession of · swn upon demand after having
After receiving a BS degree
defendant entered into an medicine or surgery in Gallia, left th e group and after
was necessary.
in
business administration
'
practicing the profession of
"President Nixon, for three
from
FSC in 1968, Fitzgerald
medicine and surgery in one or
and a half years, has been
more counties specified con· attended Ohio State and Ohio
begging Hanoi to release the
trary to the 11greement, both University for post-graduate
prisoners and ~mbing at the
before and after leaving the work in education. He joined
same time. l don't think the
the Logan faculty in 1970.11
RIO GRANDE - This pool . Children under the age of group.
two go together," McGovern
where
he taught driver's
week's schedule of community . .~ight will not be allowed in the
said.
Plaintiff prays that defen·
Dole said he was "puzzled" use of the Paul R. Lyne pool pool unless accompanied by an dan t be requlre!J to perform the education. ~e alilo served as an
by McGovern's foreign policy includes open swim sessions in adult. The age limit is a safety contract loialing $25,000 plus assistant football coach.
Last year, Fitzgerald guided
both the afternoon and precaution , because the interest and c"''ts. ·
proposals.
the Logan reserves to a second
"The senator promises to evenings . The schedule, an· shallowest part of the pool is
place
finish in the reserve
withdraw support from nounced today by Dr. Bruce four feet deep.
and finished the
standings
Monday, Tuesday, Thurs·
Greece, thereby weakening the Curtis, is effective until July
season with a I~ record ..
day, and Friday the Lyne
U.S. presence in the 31.
Don Husted, Adena (in the
The pool will be open from 2 Cenoor pool will be open for
Mediterranean and jeoparHarrison
County area) was
dizing the security of Israel, to 4and ?to 8:30 for community community use from 7 to 8:30.
also a ctJnsistent McGovern swimming . The pool is used for Saturday the gym will be open ' The Family Planning named reserve coach.
goal," the GOP chairman said. ctJmmun ity swimming lessons from 2 to 4 and Sunday from 2 Agency in Southeast Ohio has
"And ·he seeks to extend for children 5 through 12 years to 4 and 7 to 9.
appointed a board of directors
Camp Crescendo will use U.e from the seven county area of
recognition to ctJuntries such old from 4:30 to a:30, and open
as Castro's Communist Cuba. on Saturday from 2 to 4 and on gym from 8:30 to 10 weekday Ohio Valley Health Services
This stand is consonant with Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. evenings, and will use the gym and three representatives from
(l»ntinued from Page I)
his strongly sympathetic
There is a charge of 25 cents all evening Wednesday.
Meigs County to meet four
About 200 yarda from the
There is no charge for using times a year in order to reach
posture toward the Communist for students and 50 cents for
mine, fellow workers of the
government of Hanoi."
adults to use the Lyne Center the gym at Lyne Center.
people who need the help of the nine entombed miners kept
For more information on the Family Planning Service.
watch in a parking lot for any
community swimming lessons
A meeting will be held signs of further possible exploor open swim periods, con tact Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the
Second o{Five
Dr. Bruce Curtus at Lyne fellowship hall at St. Paul sions becauae of the vast qu&amp;n·
Cenoor. The college number is Lutheran Church, Pomeroy. tity of volatile methane gil!!
Escapees Taken
trapped Inside the mine tun24S.S3S3.
Staff representatives from nelil.
The second of five escapees RACINE _ Cheshire scored
Athens and Meigs County
Before the final seal waa
from the Wood County jail in five runs in the final inning to
Board
members
will
be
present
placed, ~~enaltlve mlcroph"!'es
Parkersburg was apprehended break an 11-8 deadlock and
to answer any questions and to were dropped through a fiveMonday on the Parkersburg defeat Racine 13-8 in Little
offer suggestions how the inch hole bored into one of the
High School campus.
League action here Monday.
-program can be expanded.
tunnels In a futlle attempt to
Gilbert Kmg, the escapee, . Racine scored all of its runs
Family
Planning
Services
pick up any lign of life.
gave no struggle_. He sa1d he in the first frame but were
Mrs. Edith M. Bing, 72, has been functioning since
Stanley Olecky, a member of
had swum the Ohio RIVer after shutout the rest of the way by Wooster, a former Meigs Dec., 1971 with satisfying
Local
OBSafety Committee,
escapmg, stol e a boat, and winnin
itcher Claude Cor- County resident, died Monday results.
returned to Parkersburg. He r g p
predicted the seal would be
at I a.m. after a lingering
Those wh o have any blasted off. He said such exalso said the other three men ne~~~~~rs for Racine were Herb
illness.
questions in regard to the plosions were normal after a
who escaped are still 10 the Ervin with a bases loaded
She was the daughter of the meeting may call Family
Beiiv•ew
area . T aken triple, Mark Sayre a triple and late Charles and Adi Buckk Planning Services at 992-MI2 mine Iii sealed to snuff out the
yesterday mornin g In the Mike Huddleston , Scott Wolfe, Randolp~. who were formerly or Mrs. Arthur Lund at 992- fire.
Relatives and friends of the
~~~i~tlle area was Ronald Perry Hill, Bill Harris, and Jim fr om Hemlock Grove. Mrs . 2688.
nine
men who were trapped
Th ·Wood C 1 Sh .11' Powell each had a smgle and Bing was preceded in death by
inside
Saturday night were
. e .
oun Y er• s Richard Teaford two singles. her husband, Wade Bing, in
evacua!M fr001 the mine area
offiCe said at 11:30 a.m. today Soove Hill made fine several 1956.
RACINE WINS
there are . no further plays catching for Racine.
RACINE - Racine defeated Ml\ftdafmf&lt;lfafear eJplolions
Mrs. Bing had one daughter,
developments m the ~anhunt. Rick Winebrenner had four Mrs. Kenneth (Phyllis) San· Vinton 21·1 at Racine Monday might 1prea lo the mlne's
The BeiiVIew area IS bemg singles for Cheshire while ders of Wooster and four sons, night in Peewee league action. main office a few hWJdred feet
watched more closely than any·. Kelly Winebrenner added two Elbie E. Bing, Shade: Lowell Hitters for Racine were Kent from the main entrance.
other at the moment.
.
.
.
The nine miners given up for
smgies, Cornelius two smgles, L. Bing, Long Bottom ; Wilford Varney, a home run, two
Baird a triple , and D. Sayre, B. Bing, Columbia Station, and triples, and a single; Kent dead left a total of 16 children.
John
Corcoran, ConLOCAL TEMPS
Wolfe two home runs, John
Harris, Russ Lucas, and Randy Virgil R. Bing, West Salem .
solidation
president, said
Tempera ture in downtown Lucas each a single .
Mrs. Bing, an ex-member of Pape a home run, Zane Beegle
Pomeroy Tuesday at 1l a.m. Racine concludes iIs season the Hemlock Grove Church, a round-tripper, Jonathan Rees Monday there was no
was 77 degrees, under pa rtly with a doubleheader at Cen- has seven sisters. Mrs. Carrie a triple, and Dennis Wolfe and possibility rescue operations
could be continued.
oorville Thursday.
cloudy skies.
Nigmier,
Athens;
Mrs. Bob Lee each a single. Spencer
"We dare not continue," he
Dorothy Hess, Pomeroy Route had a single for Vinton's only said.
3; Miss Pearl Randol ph , hit. Kent Wolfe was the win·
Oeecky said when the under·
Coolville RFD ; Mrs. Bernice ning pitcher for Racine ground fire burned itself out
Meeks, Shade; Mrs. Batrice although he needed relief help the mine would be reopened
Births
Mary
Bobo,
Bertha Bentz, l.ancaster; Mrs. Opal from Frees.
and a search made for the
Blankenship, Mrs. Larry Van Meter, Columbus, and
bodies of the nine miners.
July 21 - Mrs. Richard Bennett and daughter, James Mrs. Juani ta Swartz, Coolville
"But thoee fires down there
Elliott, son, Bidwell.
Batey . Pauline Bartels and RFD; two brothers, Linder
SISTER OMI'ITED
won 'I be out for another three
July 22 - Mrs. James Evans, Ronald Chamberlin .
Randolph, Wilmington, and
daughter, Wellston; Mrs. John July 22 - Robert L. Neal, Binas Randolph, Huntington, , In lis ting survivors of George months," Olecky said.
A. Eastman, 85, Route 3,
Offlclala said the lire apRadcliff, daughter, Hamden; Mrs. James Taylor and W. Va.; 19 grandchildren, and
Pomeroy, who was the victim parently llarled when spark&amp;
Mrs. Dan iel Rynyon, son , daughter, Delilah Johnson, 21 great-grandchildren.
of a tractor acddent, the name Ignited hydraulic oil on a minRadcliff, and Mr~. Charles Ralph Grimm Jr., Mrs. Robert
Funeral services will be held of a sisoor, Mrs . Velma Stout of Ing machine which was being
Martin, son, Middleport.
Crace and daughter, William at 2:30p.m. Wednesday at. the Albany, was unintentionally
moved and it came In cmtact
July 23 - Mrs. William Cox Jr., Debra Mitchell, Lelia Spencer Funeral Home in omitted.
with an overhead electrical
Kisor , daugh)er, Wellston; Scott. Mary Kise r , Leota Belpre. Burial will be at the
..
cable.
Mrs . James Beaver, so n, Ja ckson, Wealthy Vance, Cherry Ridge Cemetery in
UNIT
CALLED
Arnold Miller, a reform canNorthup, and Mrs. Dwaine Berni ce Glass burn , Wa rren Meigs County. Friends may
The
Pomeroy
E·R
squad
was
didate
for the
UMW
Jordan , daughoor, Albany.
Comer, Orville Skinner, Ross call anytime after 7p.m. today.
called
al8:40
a.m.
to
Howery's
pnsldency,
said
the
men
were
Discharges
Kent. Alice Barber, William
Store
in
Carpenter
for
Walter
working behind the machine in
July 21 - Stephen Clary, Ham and Emil Eynon .
Kin
g,
a
medical
patient,
who
violation of mlnlng regqlatlons.
DANCE
SET
Betty Phillips, Ida Conley, July 23 - Patricia Morgan,
was
taken
to
Veterans
According lo the U. S.
A benefit dance will be held
Leslie
Evans,
Sandra Raymond Fields, Mrs. Gerald
Bureau of Mines, the
Woodyard, Lena Slone, Jane Landrum and son, William at the Pomeroy Junior High Memorial Hospital.
Blacksville mine had acSchool
beginning
at
9
p.m.
Scott, Mrs. Jesse Morris and Buchanan, Ray Masters ,
cumula!M 485 federal safety
MARRIAGE LICENSE
son, Garrett Kerns. Mrs. Dexter Hughes, Polly Brewer, Bands featured will be The
violations
Iince it opened in
Foxx
and
the
Aquarians.
The
Ben
Harrlil,
Jr.,
21,
Racine,
George Folmer and son, Malcom Wills, Craig Houck
1968.
A
bureau
report llhowed
dance is sponsored by the laborer , and Barbara Jean
Leonard Dowdle, Dudl ey and Wayne Massie.
Meigs Alcoholism and Drug Scarberry, 20, Racine , at that on 19 occas1001 the mine
Eggleton, Anne Bradbury ,
·was closed because of
home.
Abuse Committee.
HOSPITAL NEWS
dangeroua working conditions.
July 24
Now
You
Know
The mlne was last inspected
CALLED TO NORWALK
Births- Mrs. Uoyd Danner,
The
characteristic
greenish
by
federal olllclalll two days
Walter Reibel , Pomeroy,
dau ghter, Gallipolis; Mrs.
mold
of
Gorgonzola
cheese
Iii
before
Ute fire broke out. A
James Ghearing, daughter , was called to Norwalk, Ohio,
achieved
by
piercing
it
with
report showed there stW were
Wellston, and Mrs. Joseph iue to the sudden death of Earl
copper
needles
after
it
bas
violali001 ouliltan~ against
Webster, daughter, Gallipolis. Shaw Saturday night.
been
oven-dried
for
20
days.
the
mine.
Discharges
Rueben
Higginbo tham, Lillian Ed·
Nards, Carrie Ross, William
Smith, Evelyn Gahm, Hannie
Salyer, Joseph Horton, Charles
Stull, Scott Hineman, Corbett
Stull, Hazel Davis, Mrs.
Delmer Grady and son, Mrs.
James Toler and son, Mrs.
Richard Elliott and son, Lena
Basham , Margaret Justice,
Lewis Sheets, Frances Gardner, John Evans, Arnold
Lawless, Virginia Harrington,
Edward Daniels, Marie Wells,
Netta Warner, Jady Stout,
Phyllis Rowland, Carrie Dale
and Armena Lambert.
enviror.ment; r e,s ponsi ve

Physician Sued for $25,~

Oteshire in

Strong Rally

Edith M. Bing

Died on Monday

-

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

tbe

llibeJ's ,aiional

'

-·£1~CINNATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depoillt l01urance l»rporatloa

t

I

John P. Browning, 2J,
Pa rkersburg ,
~&gt;as
apprehended by West Virginia
lawmen north of Ravenswood
at 8 p.m. Tuesday. ending a
ma ssive manhunt for five
escapees from the Wood
County, W. Va ., jaiL
Sunday the five men escaped
by shorting the electric lock on
the jail about 10:30 p.m. They
hit the officer orl duty at the jail
on his head wi th a pipe, a
wound that required stitches.
The live then fled in a car
stationed outside the jaiL At
IO:IS a.m. Monday morning
the Meigs County Sheriff's
office received a call from the
Gallia-Meigs State Patrol Post

•

at y

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
\

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: Dennis Baisden,
of Henderson; Ronald Carr,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Muriel Kiggins
and daughter, Gallipolis
Ferry; Carl · Barnett, Apple
Grove; Patty McDade, Herman Jones, Evelyn Bauer, ail
of Point Pleasant.

FOR YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHiNGS
FOR YOUR HOME.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
VISIT ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE ON MEOWIIC STRUT

that twofully clothed men were
seen swimming the Ohio River
near the Belleville Locks and
Dams at Reedsville.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach
an d Deputy · Robert Beegle
immediately went to the sce ne.
They notified residents in
Reedsville of the jail-break.
Morris Reed, a resident there,
reported passing two men
walking along the road. Reed
said they hitched a ride in a
truck that went to the junction
of 144 and 124 in Hockingport
where they went from the truck
into brush.
Sheriff Hartenbach , in
pursuit, captured Ronal McGill
Monday afternoon in a brushy

~~,.,

area. McGill gave no struggle,
but gave no information as to
the whereabouts of his com- .
panion.
.
The area was sealed off by
law officers after the capture
of McGill. Assisting in this was
the Belpre Police Dept., Athens
County deputies, Athens Police
De pt., Washington 'county
lawmen and civilians.
Monday at about 7 p.m. the
C. E. Cuckler trailer in
Hocki ngport along the river
was broken into. Food and beer
were missing~ as was a J7.foot
boat. Gilbert King, 23, was
apprehended shortly afterward
in Parkersburg. He said he
(Continued on Page 14)

.....

,•

..... ..

•

enttne

RAY MANLEY and Steve Hartenbach, minutes before
leaving the Belleville Locks and Dam to patrol another area
in search of escaped Wood County. W. Va . prisoners.

Devoted To The /nlerest&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

: : Eagleton Hopes Public Will

I

Accept Him as Candidate

J

~:.-:·:;:~:.; ::::::&amp;:~:::::::~:~:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;::::::::::::::::~:::«:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

VOL. XXV NO. 71

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992-2 156

WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1972

TEN CENTS

Food Costs at Record Highs
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Spurred by a 2.8 per cent jump
in farm prices, the retail ctJst of
a typical family food market
basket rose 0. 9 per cent in June
to a record high, the Agricul·
lure Department reported today.
The retail increase was the
sharpest monthly gain since
February when Jrlces rose 1.9

per cent. It left the market
basket cost , which had
declined in March and April
before beginning a new rise in
May, at 0.6 per cent above
March levels and 3.6 per cent
above a year ago.
The department's monthly
"Price Spread" report showed
supermarkets reduced their
margins for the third consecu-

live month as a partial offset to
June increases in raw farm
products. But the narrowed
margins absorbed only part of
the raw product and wholesale
gains', leavin g part of them to
be passed on in the form of
higher retail prices.
The report said the chief
factors in the June price in·
creases were "substantially

higher" farm returns for beef
cattle. which reached record
levels, and for hogs. Increases
were also reported in I arm
values of fry ing chickens and
fresh fruit, while far m and
retail prices for eggs were
down sharply.
Officials noted the recently.
released Co nsumer Price
Index report for June showed

retaii food prices up 0.6 per
cent compared with the bigger
0.9 per cent gain shown in the
Agriculture Department study .
The difference came because
the agriculture figures cover
beef and pork rises for the
entire month of June, while the
CPl survey was made only in
the first week of the month.
The 0.9 per cent June market
basket increase lifted the
annual cost of the foo d fo r a
typical family of four to a
record $1,299, up $11 from a
month earlier and $2 above the

ry, 1972.
The farm value of foods in
the market basket was put at a
record $528 for June, up 2.8 per
cent from a month earlier, S.3
per cent above March and 10.6
per cent above a year earlier.
The spread between farm
and retail prices-the middleman's share of the food
dollar-fell to $771 on an annual
basis in June. This was 0.4 per
cent below a month early, 2.4
per cent below March and 0.8
per cent below a year ago.

I

~-~·

:,:.:,·
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Democratic vice
: presidential nominee Thomas F. Eagleton went Into biA :;:;
.-:· first big campaign swing today aayillg be Is determined to ~ ..
=::: keep his history of lrealmenl for nervous problems from :~ ·

beco:~~~:nm;~~ ::::!:tt~ r::;~nd

::!:
on biA original
···· announcement, and said he doesn't want to ·talk about it
:.'_:,.:,: again, even atthe rl&amp;k of allenatiag some inquirers.
He said be had offered to resign the nominallon If the
:&gt;; party's presidential nominee, Sen. George McGovern,
:::i thought It would embarrass the ticket.

:. ':~,.=:;'·

~
~

.~=&lt;
,$
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Asked here what he fell would be the political results
of hio disclosures, Eagleton said, "I don't !mow wbat the :~;
public's reaction wm be, only time wm tell. I just lmow for ~~
;;;; tbe put six years I bave been blessed by God with good ::~:
i\i: health and a fine famUy. I hope the public accepts me." [fj
:?:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:e::::::::::::~:::~:::::::::?~~~(

:~~~;:;:;~~candidate' sPsyche
REYKJAVIK , Iceland
(UP!)
American
challenger Bobby Fischer
sat up until 5 a.m. today
plolliog his strategy against
world chess champion Boris
Spassky. Aides said he went
lo bed nsatisfled" he could

take today's game - the
seventh in th e $250,000
match.
The game, which was

adjourned alter 40 moves
Tuesday, resumed at 5 p.m.
Despite Fischer's eon·
lldence, other chess experts
said the American appeared
headed for a draw. (See
early account on Pg. 12. )

HOSPITAL NEWS

LOTS OF BARGAINS ALL THIS WEEK. ALL
OVER THE STORE WEARING APPAREL

Checking Account For You.

I

Board Named in
Family Agency

ELBER.FELDS CLEARANCE SALE!

Let Us Open A

AREA CAMPERS are worried, above, as they scan the Ohio River. Campers are
vacationing a short distance from where the third and fourth escapees were apprehended. The
es&lt;;li~S were considered dangerous.

Pool Hours Given

MiD.ers.

-

Manhunt Ends

ScoJt Fitzgerald, 25, a native Monday night.
of Lfxington, Ky., and former
Fitzgerald, wlio coached the
.\li.Ohio Class AAA ~a sketbali Logan reserves during the
player at Athens High School, 1971,72 campaign , succeeds
was ·named head bqsketbali Dick Taylor. T!zylor re~igned
coach at Logan High School last week after serving as head

TAMMY EICHINGER

PEGGY O'BRIEN

Weather

Mostly sunn y and mild
today. High from mid 70s to
lower
80s.
Increasing
cloud!ness tonight with chance
of showers west late tonight.
Low from mid 50s to mid 60s.
Peggy Lynn O'Brien will be routine.
Thursday mostly cloudy with
Peggy
is
a
Meigs
High
School
the
senior
con testan t
chance of showers or thunreprese nting Meigs County at Majore tte, was a member of dershowers. High in upper 70s
Ohio's Miss Cha rm Pageant the Junior Gio-Ettes several and lower 80s.
Saturday in the ball room of the years and also had several
years of tap and ballet. She has
Neil House, Columbus.
entered
only three ba ton
Miss O'Brien, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James O'Brien, contests and won II trophies.
Lincoln Hili, Pomeroy, will She was second runnerup in the Veterans Memorial Hospital
participate in the 13 to 18 year Valentine Queen co ntest
ADMISSIONS
John
sponsored by the Heart Fund, Bigelow, Middleport ; Lucy
age group.
Miss O'Brien is being five county strutting champ, McCune, Addison; Constance
sponsored by The Farmers participated in the Big Bend Shields, Pomeroy, and Clyde
Bank and Savings Company, Minstrel shows for three years, Henderson, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES .- Maggie
Simon's Market and Mid- member of the Meigs High
School band four years, Meigs Ellis, Iris Carr, Glen Tucker,
dleport Department Store.
For her talent Peggy will be High Student Council two Anna Tucker, Nita Conde and
(Continued on Page 14)
Charles Moorehead.
fP.alured in a iazz baton

Meigs Girls in Charm Contest
Tammy Eichinger will
represent Meigs County in
Ohio's Miss Charm Pageant to
be held Saturday in the ball
room of the Neil House,
Columbus .
Tammy,daughter of Mr. and
Mrs .
Paul
Eichinger,
Pomeroy, will compete in the 7
to 10 age group. Her sponsor Is
New York Clothing House.
For her talent number
Tammy will be featured in a
patriotic baton routine.
Tammy, who is listed in
NBTA Who's Who of Baton, is
the only girl in the area to hold
a NBTA state title. She was
little Miss Majorette of Ohio
Strutting Camp in '71, sbe was
second runnerup for the UUe of
Little Miss Majorette of Ohio in
'71, she took second place
honors at the Ohio State Fair
championship twirling contest,
look fourth and fifth place
honors in the Ohio State NBTA
championship in '71 at Mans-

field and was chosen Little
Miss Autumn at Lancaster in
1970.
Tammy is the leader of the
"Wee Glo-Etoos." The Wee
Glo-Eltes have won several
trophies in NBTA dance and
twirl and performed at a show
sponsored by the Meigs County
Cancer Society.
·
Tammy took part in the Big
Bend Minstrel shows making
her first appearance at the age
of five.
She has won several trophies
in solo baton and received the
good sportsman trophy at Rio
Grande in '71.
Tammy is an A student at
Pomeroy Elementary and bas
had training in swimming and
won a blue ribbon for her art
work. She is a member of the
choir at the Pomeroy United
Methodlilt Church.
She bas also had training in
lap ballet and acrobats as well
as baton from her instructor
Gloria Buck Wallace.

New Issue in '72
CUSTER, S.D. (UP! ) - ctJnfessed they did not know Eagleton did not tell McGovern
George McG overn' s what the voter reaction would about the difficulty when he
pre sident i,a l campaign, be in November to Tuesday's was tapped by the Democratic
already off to a bumpy start, disclosure by Sen. Thomas F. nominee as his runningmate at
the Miami Beach convention.
ran into more problems Eagleton, [).Mo.
·
"There just liln 't any way we
Tuesday when his vice · Eagleton said he had
can
measure what this will
presidential candidate an· been hospitalized three
11
for
a
nerva do," said Fred Dutton, a
nounced he had been under times
psychiatric care during the ous condition " and had political advisor to McGovern.
The main hope in 1he
undergone electric shock
early 1960s.
(Con tinued on page 12) ·
Key aides to McGovern therapy between 1900 and 1966.

Ag Society Membership::
Tickets Offered Public
ROCK SPRINGS - Membership tickets for the annual
Meigs County Fair running
Aug IS through 19 are on sale at
several business establishments in the area.
The tickets designate the
purchaser as a member of the
Meigs County Agricultural
Society and provide free gate
admission and auto parking
during the entire fair.
Tickets are on sale at
Reuter 's Service Station,
Domigan's Sohio Service
Station, Simon's Grocery, New
York Clothing House, Green
Lantern, Sugar Run Flour Mill,
Swisher and Lohse Drugs and
the Five Points Grill, all in

information, contact Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, 148 Uncoin
Hill, Pomeroy, or phone 992- •
7376 soon.
·
The 1972 fair will feature
many top name artists in free : ·
grandstand attractions.
::
Thursday evening, beginning :.
al8 :30, Kenny Price, Zeke and :·
Bill, and the popular Flowe• s ·
Family, brought back by :
demand after last year's .,
performance, will be in the top
billing. They well known Blue :
Ridge Quartet, gospel and folk ~
singers, will present a concert .:: ·
Saturday at 8:30 at the grandsland. The All.Qhio Boys' Band
from the Ohio State Fair will be
on the grounds Wednesday
afternoon at 4 o'clock.
Trotting horse races,
quarterhorse races, horse
shows, catlle shows, parades,
flower shows, dog shows and a
wide range of 4-H dl!plays
further highlight the fair
program.

Strike Threat

INew~:. i~ n;i~f~
By UDIIM Preu lnlernalloual

BLACKSVIlLE, W. VA. -COAL MINES in northern West
VIrginia stood idle today in silent tribute to nine men entombed in
a flery l»nsolldation Coal 1». mlne.
Thousands of miners mourned the deaths of their fellow
workers in a ~ur memorial that has bectJme a traditional
aequelto such tragedies aa Blacksville No. I.

WNDON -'rilE SOVIET tOOoN REFUSED to supply 1111
latest aecret weapons to Egypt because It waa afraid they might
laD Into the hands of 1.-ael or the West, a diplomatic aource said
today. '
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat blamed RIIISlan failure to
11\fPlY the weapons for hiB. ouster of Soviet experts. Another
reuon for the Soviet refusal wu the Kremlin's fear Egyptian
(~Unued on Page 14)

Pomeroy.
Middleport Department
Store , Middleport; Miller Bros.
Grocery in Rutland; Waid
Cross Sons, Racine ; Baum
Lumber Company of Chester,
or at tbe secretary's office ·on
the fairgrounds after paying
one day's admission to the
grounds. Cost of the tickets Is
$3 each.
Holders of tickets are eligible
to vote or file for the board of
directors of the Society . As
always, they are being sold
only to individuals, not to a
company or organization.
Thursday of the fair will be
designated as "Senior Citizen's
Day," when all persons 6().
years old and over will be
admitted tri the grounds at halt
price provided they display a
pass issued to them by the
Meigs County Council on
Aging.
All persons in thaI age group
are invited to take advantage
of the observance. For more

RARE, UNUSUAL NJGifl' SCENE - Thlil is how
Pomeroy looks at night from Mason, W. Va. In the
foreground is the Pomeroy-Mason ferry acci!J)ting business.

The ferry h11 been pullnlo service for one week while the
Pvmeroy-Maaon bridge, completed in 1928, is closed for
repairs.

Laborers LOcal 639indicsted
Monday it may soon strike the
Marietta area because of
stalled talks With the Parkersburg • Marietta Contractors
Association .
George Davis,. business
manager of the 350-man labor
local headquartered in
Marietia, reported the local
and the coo tractors are sWI far
apart in contract talks despite
weeks of negotiations.
A strike could pose trouble
for construction activity except highway work - in
Washington, Monroe, and
Morgan counties. Local 639 has

'

\

:~

:•

;~

:;
·• ·

..·;.·:.
~:

~:

:~

jurisdiction in those three

:i

coWJties.

~.:

The association's contract .,•
with Local 639 expired June I, '·
but II was extended to continue ;:
negotiations; However, Davis ;,.
said the contractors aeek to -;!•·
phase out certain work CIIIIMI . ~
in the old contract that lbe ~;
union regards important to &lt;:
retain.
~~
One of theae requires that 1 ::
general
contractor
be ~;
responsible for the sub- · •·
contractor on a job fuliDilnc
the Ierma of the COIItract.
The local and Clllltractora are
(Con~ on Page It)

I

'j

.
·. ·

/o

'

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