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                  <text>If- The Dally Sentinel, Mldd!eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 26.1 972

Millionaire Sportsman
•

Pressure Cited by Hughel .Grader Cost Was $17,995
The Dayton. Democrat of·
lered his resignation June 22,
but later withdrew it because
he "considered it a forced

COLUMBUS(UPI) - James
E. Hughel said he w•s asked to
resign as chairman of the stato
Personuel Board of Review
after refusing to "swing Ulc
votes of the other two board
daughter of W. Woolworth, members" on cases in which
inherited the five and dime certain administration officials
store fortune and · is still
had an interest.
regarded as the world's richest
"It was lower-echelon peowoman . Miss Hutton was pie ," Hughel told Scripps-Howmarried six times. Whe11 ard Newspapers, but he deReventlow was asked about his clined to identify those he said
mother, all he would say was, approached him.
"I admire my mother ."
"They wanted to take me up
Born on Feb. 24, 1936, he was to a hotel room, they wanted to
Ute .most guarded baby in the get me a state car," ·Hughel
world . An elaborate burglar was quoted as saying. ·"Did
alarm was installed to protect they think I would stop driving
him as an infant. Com- my Eldorado to drive a state
plications from his Caesarean car?
delivery left his mother fragile
"They wanted me to swing
and she was unable to regain the votes of the otber two board
the strength she lost.
members/' he said.
Quarrels over Reventlow's
Hughel was named in Janueducation lelr to Miss Hutton's ary to be chairman of the
divorce from Lance's father' in, board, which rules on dis·
1938 in Copenhagen. A custody missals, tran,slers and reduc·
fight over the child lasted tlons appealed by state and
seven years.
local civil service employes.

Killed m Plane Crash
' ASPEN, Colo. (UP!) Lance Reventlow, heir to the
Woolworth five -and-dim e
fortune and son of Barbara
Hutton, one of the world's
richest women, was killed with
three other persons Monday in
the crash of a small plane in
the Colorado Rockies, law
officers disclosed Tuesday.
Reventlow, 30, a sports car
•acer who was given the Iitle of
"the world's richest baby" at
birth, was killed··in the crash
during a heavy thunderstorm
17 miles north of this Colorado
resort.
Reventlow had been surveying a tract of land he
wanted to buy, officials said.
Killed with him were the pilot
and two other passengers, all

Miss O'Brien
(Continued from Page I)
years, member of the Girls'
Athletic Association two years,
school librarian one year, girls'
basketball team one year and
Ml.ss Valentine Majorette in
'72.
Peggy, who rates high
scholastically, loves to water
ski, has studied piano four
years, and is a member of the
Girl Scouts and 4-H Clubs.
Miss.Charm Pageants will be
conducted in 22 states this year
with the International contest
to be held in Houston, Texas.
Trophies will be awarded to
Miss Charm and the first and
second runnersup,. the winner
of the !.alent division and
personality award. This is the
first time the Miss Charm
Pageant has been held in Ohio.
Awards will also be given to
four age groups ranging from 3
to 18 years of age.
Judges ·will be from
Columbus Modeling Agencies
and former Ml.ss Charm title
holders.

July26-27-28
Double Feafura Program

SHOOT OUT
!Color)
Gregory Peck

11

1 was born with

money . It just makes life
convenient. "
His mother, the grand-

Strike
(Continued from Page I)
reportedly also far apart on the
wage issue. The old contract
, had a scale ra~ging from $6.41
an hour to $6.76 an hour.
Although Local 639 may
strike, members don't really
want to. Many are out of work,
according to Davis.
Davis believes a strike would
shut the area "down tight."
However, work would continue
at sites where a contractor
would agree to accept terms
retroactively.

Hughel said Paul Tipps,
Montgomery County

s:

Desi Arnaz. Jr.

IGPJ

.MEIGS ntEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
JuiY26-27

NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
July 28-29

ZACHARIAH
(Technicolorl
John Rubinstein
Pat Quinn

IGPJ
Also
FliGHT OF THE
DOVES
!Technicolor)
Ron Moody
Jack Wild
IGJ
Show Starts 7 P.M.

Four defendants were fined
and seven others forfeited
bonds in Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle's court Tuesday
evening.
Fined were Jeffrey C. Lewis,
18, Middleport, $10 and costs,
speeding, and"$5 and costs, no
Ohio operator's license;
Dwight S. Haley, 24, Gypsy, W.
Va., $10 and costs, illegal
license t.ags, and Leondus Lee,
37, Racine, and Marvin M.

Judges to

News . . . in Briefs

OJt Lawyers

(Continued from Page 11
militants would trigger a war on the assumption that possession
o! offensive weapons was a guarantee for victor¥, the source
said.
WASHINGTON -CONGRESSIONAL DOVES fresh from a
· th e House
triumph in the Senate have opened up a secret front' m
,'
.
.
·
and scored a prellmmary victory m thetr effort. to legts1ate an
end to U. S. military involvement in Indochma .. In an ~precedented action, the once loyal House Foretgn Affwrs
Committee broke with the administraUon Tuesday and approved
an antiwar amendment to the foretgn atd btll that would seek aU.
S. military withdrawal by Oct. I.
The Senate Monday approved an amendment directing a
withdrawal within four months but then turned around and killed
the aid measure. Opponents of administration policy in and out of
Congress are hoping that the new burst of antiwar activity in the
House might help revive that measure and persuade enough dove
senators who voted against the bill because of their dislike of the
military aid program to vote for it if given a second chance .
REPUBLICANS MAINTAINED A DISCREET silence about
Sen Thomas F Eagleton's revelation that he once received
·
· ·
·
1 •
psychiatric care, whtle ~ocrats pratsed Eag eton s courage
and promised to back hiS VIC~ prest?en\lal candidacy. .
But Utah State Democratic Chatrman John Klas satd the
disclosure would not help the chances of Sen. George . S.
McGovern and Eagleton beating President Nixon and Vtce
President Spiro T. Agnew in November. And Gov. Warren
Hearnes, the Democratic national committeeman from
Missouri, said he feared that "the administration will have a
hatchetman make it an issue, under cover."

The BEACHCOMBER • C11131
Features Custom "Parma-Set" VHF
Fine Tuning ; Automallc "Fringe·
Lock" Circuit; "Audio Guard"
FM·TV . Sound System; Monopole
Antenna and built-In carry handle.

o 3-ITAGE l.f. AMPLIFIER
o FRONT MOUNTED SPEAKER
oZEIITH HANDCRAFTED DUAliTY
o DELUXE VIP EO RANGE TUNING
SYSTEM
.
atUIO YOLTI Of PICTURE PO,WER

LOW,
LOW
PRICE

$ggoo

.

carry It anywhefe...fits anywhere beautifully I
~ rhe qua/fly goes In before rhe name goes o,..

INGELS FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp;

Sat. Nights

Middleport

the

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

No Fire FoWld

County Commissioners met
Tuesday evening.
·
Others submitting bids were
Cecil I. Walker Machinery
Company of Charleston, W.
Va., $23,000, and Quality High·
way Equipll)ent of Galion, 0.,
$19,225.
The commission will preside
at a public hearing ol1 August
29 at 9:30 a.m. in the commissioners' office, Meigs
County Courthouse, to consider
statements on the proposed
location and design of the
improvement of a portion of
Meigs County Road 75.
In other business the commission granted permiS!Iion of
Meigs County Recorder,
Eleanor Robson, and her
deputy, Louise Heines, to attend a District 3 meeting in
Lancaster today.
The Meigs County Com·
missioners are Charles Karr,
Warden Ours, and Bob Clark
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

Gala Day Uniting River Towns
By EDITH FOX
CLIFTON, W.Va. - From where I live, the Pomeroy Bend
Bridge looks mighty lonesome. If as reported, over 9000 cars a
day go o.ver this bridge daily, you ·can imagine how it seems now,
towering so stately ,. against the backdrop of the trees of the
hillside in Ohio, and !be lighted cross on Lincoln Heights standing
guard.
.
Well, let's go back to Friday, Nov.l, 1946. That was when the
last barrier to free trade between residents of Ohio and West
Virginia was eliminated. That day the son and grandson of the
men who originated the Blue and Gray Trail (U. S. Route 33) cut
a ribbon symbolizing the freeing from tolls of the PomeroyMason Bridge.
A white ribbon stretched across the bridge roadway was cut
by Norbert Compton, son of Walter Compton, and Theodore
Reed, Jr., grandson of the late W. F. Reed.
A moment later, an Ohio automobile driven by W. W. Farley
of Middleport crossed the million dollar span, toll free.
The event and preliminary ceremonies were witnessed by a
crowd estimated at from 5,000 to 6,000 persons.
A sidelight of the event was the release of homing pigeons
which carried the news of the bridge freeing to state capitols at
Columbus and Charleston.
The crowd gathered at lbe Well Virginia end of the bridge 1!11 ·

high school bands from Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Middleport
paraded across the silver structure to join the red and black
uniformed high school band from Point Pleasant. The massed
· bands, under the direction of Philip Bley, Pomeroy, played
''America.''
A luncheon at the Federated Church in Pomeroy for 75
honorary committee members opened the program. The com·
mittee in charge, with chairmen W. A. Smith and Circuit Judge
Edgar Ervin, sponsored the dinner.
(Continued on page 5)

TOP RIGHT : Norbert Compton and Theodore Reed, Jr.,
cut the ribbon across the roadway, symbolizing the opening
of the bridge. At left: about everybody wanted to try out the
free bridge that day.

•

Keep Tabs
COLUMBUS (UP!)-The
Ohio Supreme Court will give
judges the authority to
determine whether a defense
attorney
has the
too many
to already
tak
cases
eon ano r one,
Chief Justice C. William
O'Neill said Tuesday night.
The proposed rule to go into
effect Sept. 1, will ease the
backlog in court dockets,
O'Neill told a conference at the
Ohio State University Center
for Tomorrow on · criminal
justice and the news media.
"This rule is designed to
·limit those lawyers who have
more cases than they can pas~ibl~ try, ho~ding up the trial,
parllcularlr, if, a ~an IS ~wlty
ofacrune, ONetllsaid. Hhe
hires such a lawyer, he then
knows that his case will not
come up for two years or more.
"And if he can make bail, he
can be out committing more
crimes," O'Neill said.
If a lawyer ts fouod to have
more cases than be can handle
speedily, the judge shall
require him to find a sub6titute
counsel to try the cases when
they are ready to be tried.
H!be lawyer refuses to find a
substitute, be could be removed from the case by the
judge, O'Neill said .

West Virginian
Is Plain Lucky
Larry F. Oldham, 21, Let.art,
W. Va ., escaped possible
serious injury at 112:33 a.m .
today when he lost control of
his auto on SR 33 two miles
north of County Road 20, !be
Meigs County Slieriff's office
reported.
Oldham, traveling south, lost
control at the point where the
four-lane highway becomes
two lanes at the bypass construction site in that area. His
car skidded 75 feet, narrowly
missing construction barrels in
!be road, and turned over on its
top, demolished . Oldham
escaped with some visible
injuries, but was not immediately
treated.
A
passenger,
Paul
Gary
McKinney, 19, Pt. Pleasant,
suffered no injuries. Oldham
was cited for excess speed .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
July Clearance Sale
_ _ _ . , _ _ . _ . . . . . . ._.

-

VOL. XXV NO. 72

POMEROY-MWDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972

Mens 3.95 Short Sleeve

Sport and Dress Shirts

~

Sizes small 114-14 112), medium (15- 15'12 ),
large (16-16'12 ). exira large (1 7- 171!, ) .
Dress shirts, sizes 14 112 to 17.

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

4.95
5.95
6.95
8.95

Ju~

Clearance Sale

Shirts ·
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

,..r-·•

Save On
GIRLS
INFANTS

_

WORJUI!.'I.Jm ~""-n Bridge wu ,_.
completion as workmen Wednesday applied a water proofing
substance. The next application is rubberized asphalt. Work
on the bridge's road surface will be completed after it is
applied.

and

2.75

During the

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

3.00
3.75
4.00
5.00

Suspect Inside
Encircled Area

TODDLERS WEAR
.On The Second Floor
Special sale prices now on
Girls Shorts - Girls Knit
Tops · Girls Swimwear ·
Girls Slips · Girls Sleepwear · Toddlers Slips ·
and
Toddlers
Girls
Playwear.

The second manhunt in two
days in Southeastern Ohio
apparently was eoded this
morning as Washington and
Noble Cotfilty sheriffs deputies,
with volunteers, were believed
to have surrounded a man
suspected of shooting a farmer
Monday night.
Neither the identity of the
man sought, nor the reason for
the shooting is known. Searchers are now in their third day
of trudging through the hilly,
sparsely-populated area of
southern Noble County and
northern Washington County.
The Washington County
sheriff's office said this
morning that the apparent
assailant Is surrounded near a

Sale!
BOYS
WALK
SHORTS
Sizes 8 to 18. Good selec- '
lions.

SHELLY COMPANY

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- Bobby Fischer came out of
his shell.
The 29-year&lt;&gt;ld American
challenger for th e world chess
title, who settled lor a tic in his
seventh ' game
against
river in a diamete r of a few champion Boris Spsssky of the
miles. A plane was being flown Soviet Union Wednesday ,
over the area this morning· on turned up in the cafeteria of his
the lookout for this suspect.
hotel after the game to have a
The search began Monday hamburger, chat with fans,
night when Sheriff Richard and- inevitably ...,set up a
Fogle stopped a car believed to chess hoard to study moves .
have been stolen, and the
It was, in effect, Fischer's
driver grabbed his .38-ealibre first public appearance in
revolver and lied. As the Iceland . Apart from his
search began for the man, moments at the chess board in
Robert McKown, 28, Beverly, the downtown hall where the
was shot near his rural home. 24-game series of matches ·are
Deputies said he had been shot being held, he has remained
with a .31kalibre handgun.
holed up first in a private villa
and later in the presidential
McKown is in guarded suit of a hotel.
condition, but improving, - The eighth game was scheaccording to the intensive care duled for today, beginning at 5
unit at !be Marietta Memorial p.m . with Fischer playing
Hospital this morning.
white ~eaning his was the

Sale 1.50
3.95 Walk Shorts

..

·Sale 2.00
In The Mens
and .
Boys Department

SPECIAL
SALE
PRICES
Mens Swim Trunks - Boys
Swim Trunks - Mens Walk
Shorts · Mens Sport Coats Little Boys · size 3 to 7
Shirts · Little Boys Flare
· Slacks.
..
.
Stop in - · look around at
the many bargains and
save now.

Ju~

aearance Sale
BOYS 2.95

.

•

Short Sleeve Shirts
Sizes a·to 20. Big selection - Permanent
press. Buy now for Back-to-School wear.

2.00

Boys 3.95 S~ort Sleeve Shirts ,
Boys 1.95 Short Sleeve Shirts

Sale 2.75'
Sale 1.50

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

..

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - SEN. WilLIAM B. SAXBE, R-Ohio,
Wednesday attacked as '1he dodo of modem warfare" a
proposed nuclear-powered aircraft carrier the Navy wanta.
Despite Saxbe's adamant opposition to It, the Senate refused to
delete a provision authorizing $299 million for initial purchases
toweard building the new carrier. The provision was part of a
$20.6 billion military procurement bill.
The new carrier's flight deck would carry 5,300 men. The
House already has approved it. "The carrier is the dodo of
modern warfare," Saxbe said and is a ship that "you can sink'
witb a motorboat ."
WASHINGTON- AMERICAN AUTO MAKERS want to
increase their 1973 car prices from $90 to $150 a model. Ralph
Nader wants the government's Price Commission to hold lm·
mediate public hearings on the requests. He went to court over
the issue Wednesday.
Nader and Conswners Union Inc., a nonprofit product testing
organization, asked U. S. Dlsirict Court to order Price Commission Chairman C. Grayson Jackson Jr. to hold the hearings.
They argued the Price Commission is violating federal law by
refusing to hold the public evidenc1!11athering sessions.
AKRON -A TENTATIVE AGREEMENT was reached late
Wednesday in the 111-day municipal employes strike that has left
more than one million pounds .of uncollected garbage accumulating in this northeastern Ohio city ol290,000. The striking
American Federation of state, County and Municipal Employes
(AFSCME), representing the 800 city workers, called an
executive board meeting for 10 a. m. today to discuss the
propOsal ironed out in a marathon bargaining session with city
olliclals Wednesday.
The board meeting was to be followed by a general mem·
bel'lhlp meeting at 11 a. m. today for tbe purpose,of ratl!y!ng the
contract.
'

y

Three supervisors have been
assigned to Ohio Electric Co.'s
General James M. Gavin Plant
under construction near
Cheshire, plant manager J. W.
(Bill ) Liz on announced today.
11..' :;; The appointments are effective
Aug. I.
Russell L. Baker is the new
ma in tenan ce supervisor,
Roger W. Goff assumes duties
as the operation supervisor and
men mb: the water proofing substance applied to the Pomeroy-Mason bridge's floor
James J. Alleman becomes tbt
personnel supervisor.
surface Wednesday .
Baker began his career at
Ohio Power's Philo Plant Aug.
11 , 1940 as a laborer. He
became a maintenance
foreman in 1962 and maintenance supervisor in 1970.
first move.
agreed to discuss the matter one square-a move Spassky
Valedictorian of the 1935
Mter Wednesday's game, with American Broadcasting had decided on the day before Philo High School graduating
instead of returning to his suite Company (ABC) executives and had left in a sealed en- class, he served in the Navy
he went to the cafeteria and and said he was willing to go to velope.
from 1943 to 1946 and for two
ordered a hamburger. He sat the hall and see if a new
The Russian world champion years during the Korean
down at a table and im- position for the cameras was had found what appeared to be Conflict. ·
mediately set up a chess board. satisfactory.
the only move to escape defeat.
He has a daughter, Mrs.
When several patrons gingerly
For the end of the seventh One hour and eight moves later Patricia Bronkar of Lancaster,
approached him he appeared game-it started Tuesday but it was over. Fischer looked up, Ohio, and two grandchildren.
affable and friendly in contrast was adjourned until Wed- Spassky nodded and accepted Baker and his wife, Opal , who
to the shell he has put around nesday after 40 moves- the challenger's hand. The live in Duncan Falls, are
himself since his arrival three Fischer arrived late, as he has seventh game in the world planning to live in the
weeks ago.
for every match. But Spassky chess championship had been Gallipolis area.
At the end of the seventh appeared unconcerned. He drawn on the 49th move.
Goff graduated from the
game, Fischer led four points leaned back and rocked in his
University of Cincinnati in 1959
to three points for Spassky, a new $470 black leather swivel
with a BS degree in mechanical
~year&lt;&gt;ld Leningrad journa- chair, then got up and strolled
engineering and also earned 1
list. With a maximum of 24 round the flower-decorated
degree at Marietta College.
games scheduled, Fischer stage as if he was out lor a
GRIDDERS TO MEET
His employment with tbt
needs 121'.. points to win and Sunday afternoon walk.
All boys interested in playing American Electric Power ·
Spassky 12 to retain his
As Fischer walked in Ger- Southern Local Tornado System began in July of 1962 81
championship.
man referee Lothar Schmid football this year will have a a test engineer at Ohio Power's
Another matter sti ll un- approached the wooden chess meeting Friday, July 28 at 8 p. Muskingum River Plant. He
settled was the question of hoard . The 1,500 spectators m. in the Soulhe~n High School, became plant performance
television. Fischer has refused watched silently while Schmid Head Coach BtU Jewell an- ~neer in 1966 and perto permit cameras to film the quickly slit open the large noun ced Wednesday. Boys in "lormance supervisor in 1969.
play despite a $125,000 con- brown envelope at Fischer's grades 9 through 12 are He moved to Big Sandy Plant
tract. But Wednesday night he side and moved the white·oawn eli~ible ·
of Kentucky Power Co. last
..
year as operations supervisor.
Residing on Route 4, Louisa,
Ky., Goff is single. His parents,
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Goff, reside
at Point Pleasant.
Alleman, a 1951 graduate of
Wellsburg (W. Va .) High
School,
completed
a
correspondence course In
• ~ a
business administration and
....,'
purchasing,
the
AEP
'
Management Program at tbt
University of Michigan and
various company first aid and
supervisory training
programs.
Hired at Windsor Plant J!Uy
9, 1951, as a junior stores attendon t, he became stores
(Continued on page 10)

Fischer in New, Amiable Mood

2.95 Walk Shorts ·

'

TEN CENTS

""Appointed

·Special July Sale prices on
Womens Dresses - Coordinate
Sportswear
Womens
Blouses
Womens Shorts · Womens
Swi mwear
Cobbler
Aprons and Smocks.

Price

PHONE 992-2156

. . .. . _ . , _ . .

YUM, YUM, YUM
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppen Plains Communily
Club will sell h1111emade ice
cream Saturday beginning a1·1
PJ!l· at the Sohlo SlaUon here.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

Visit the Busy Ready-ToWear Department on the
2nd Floor.

Sale

Senator Tom Jones ; back row , Representative Ben F .
Turner, Judge Edgar Ervin, W. A. Smith and Theodore Reed .
(These pictures from the files of old newspaper clippings of
Mrs . Fox.)

ent1ne

Save On
WOMENS
WEAR

DIVORCE ASKED
Filing suits for divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court today were Patricia
Hindy, 161 N. Fifth Ave.,
Middleport, plaintiff, against
David Hindy, Brownell Ave.,
Middleport, defendant, and
Betty Vujaklija, 1258 Powell
St., Middleport, plaintiff,
against Brownie Vujaklija,
same address.
HOMECOMING SET
LONG BOTTOM - The
annual
Long
Bottom
Homeconing will be held at the
Metbodist Church here Sunday
with Sunday School and
worship services at the regular
hour and a basket dinner at
noon followed by a program ·at
1:30. The public is invited.

I

In the small picture, front row, T. A. May, C. D. Shaler,

•

a1 y

SHOP THURSDAY FROM 9:30 AM to 5 PM
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 AM to 9 PM

DRAWING PRAISE
A reauJraciug job on SR
124 from Pomeroy to Racine
which bas been completed by
the Shelly Compnay, is
drawing praise for excellence.
Center and edge lining is
being done today by employes of the State Highway
Depariment, James Bailey,
superintendent, reported.

·

HI-IWTED ...
IIEIICI'S #I T¥
11TH T¥'1 IDIT
lilTED FEITUIESI

A low bid of $17,995 was
Democratic party cbairman, awarded to the Southeastern
demanded that he quit. Tipps Equipment Company of
recommended Hughel for the · Cambridge for the purchase of
job in the first place. Last a motor grader when the MeigS
month Hughellost his party job
as editor of the county
.
.
organization's newsletter.
A fire call was answered by
the Middleport Volunteer Dept.
Wednesday at 1:58 p.m. from
the Gallia County Sheriff's
Moore, 41, Middleport, $1110 and Dept. that had .been reported
costs each, three days con- from the Gavin Power Plant at
finement, driving while in· Cheshire.
toxicated.
Firemen went to the area
Forfeiting bonds were Ralph back of Kyger ·Creek
E. Thompson,. 33, New Haven; Elementary where the fire was
Cecil H. Smith, 51, Middleport, reported, but could find no fire .
and Robert S. Marcinko, 51, It was learned later that a road
Tuppers Plains, $30 bond each, construction crew had been
intoxication; Kenneth D. burning lumber from old
Mohler, 34, Middleport, $30, bridges on County Road 554.
disturbing the peace; Robert
LOCAL TEMPS
A. Marcinko, 26, Columbus,
Temperature in downtown
Paul E. Clark, 43, Middleport
and Sharon M. Newell, 30, Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m.
Cheshire, $200 each, driving was 78 degrees, under sunny
skies.
while intoxicated.

Four Draw Court Fmes
•

Manhunt

!GPI

Richard Thomas
Catherine Burns

•

friends.

resignation."

ATLANTA - GOVERNMENT HEALTH officials have
expressed shock over a syphilis treatment program for 40(1
Alabama blacks in which the patients were denied penicillin long
after the cure was discovered. The program was begun by the U.
S. Public Health Service in 1932 in Macon County, Ala ., where 80
pet. of the black male population was found to have the deadly
venereal disease.
(Continued from Page I)
Details of the program, dubbed the "Tuskegee Study" after
broke into the trailer and stole the county seat in Alabama and Tuskegee Institute, were
the boat in which he went to
revealed Tuesday by officials of the Health Service's Center for
Parkersburg.
Disease
Control (COC) in Atlanta. "When I first came to the
Tuesday afternoon, Roy Cox,
30, and James Collins, no age center and heard about the Tuskegee Study I couldn't believe it
given, were captured in a ... it's almost like genocide," said Dr. Don Printz, chief of
cornfield near Belleview. operational research in the venereal disease branch of CDC. "A
Tuesday night , Browning's literal sentence of death was passed on some of those people," he
capture ended the extended said.
search.
WASHINGTON -THE SENATE CHOSE UP SIDES today
The disarming of a police
on
the
merits of a new billion-dollar .nuclear aircraft carrier.
officer in Noble County
Monday night, which was Supporters said the ship would be the backbone of the Navy in the
thought to have been done by 1980s, but opponents said it would be a sitting duck that costs too
one of the escapees, was a much.
separate incident involving
Called up for debate was a $299 million authorization that
other men who had stolen a car would allow the Pentagon to buy lead-time items to start con·
in West Virginia.
struction of the big carrier known as the CVN· 70. The item is part
Working in the search from of a $20.6 billion military procurement bill which the Senate
this area were Sheriff Har- started considering Monday. Two city blocks long with a fiight
tenbach, Deputies Beegle, deck ol4.5 acres, the CVN-70 would be the fourth atom-powered
James Soulsby, and Ray carrier in the Americac fleet. It would carry a crew of 5,000 and
Manley, Syracuse Police Chief serve as the base for· 100 aircraft.
Milton Varian, Middleport
Pollee Chief J. J . Cremeens,
MOSCOW -A MOSCOW COURT TODAY found dissident
and Steve Hartenbach.
Jew Gavriel Shapiro guilty of evading military training and
sentenced him to one year of "corrective labor," a penalty that
will allow him to keep his freedom while working at an assigned
job.
.
The red.flaired husband of American Judy Silver Shapiro, of
Cincinnati, Ohio, who has been pressing the White House to in·
tervene on his behalf, credited "the force ofthe U. S. government
and my wife" with saving him from the maximwn penalty of one
year in prison. "The verdict was not so unexpected," the smiling,
elated Shapiro said as he was hugged and kissed by Jewish
friends outside the courthouse.

Tonight, Thur., Fri.

- PlusRED SKY
AT MORNING
!Color I

unidentified .
The craft slammed into a
wooded mountainside eight
·miles from the nearest road.
Sheriff Caroll Whitmire said
lhe wreckage was spotted by
another plane. A rescue crew
reached the site Monday night
and confirmed that all aboard
were dead.
Reventlow married ·actress
Jill Jt. John on March 24, 1960,
in San Francisco. They were
divorced in 1963.
On Nov. 8, 1964, he married
starlet Heryle Holdridge, then
19. The only relative who attended the wedding was Cary
Grant, a former husband of
Miss Hutton's.
Reventlow was an ardent
sports car enthusiast and polo
player . He built and drove
Gt·and Prix racing cars and
developed _his own racing
engine . His personal fortune
was estimated at between $50
million and $100 million .
On his 50th birthday, his
mother gave him a $500,')()()
home in Beverly Hills, Calif.
He was the son of Miss Hutton's
marriage to Danish Count Curt
von Haugwitz • Reventiow.
"So you were born with
brown eyes," he would tell

-F reeing of Bridge in '46 Was

RV"'1' IUUR

"CC" Olin'

. ....

.~

•

,f,UIIIAIIIMAJ(

Shades of Bobby
Fischer in Ohio

Mn1ce to ~peed
trallBpOrtation service for residents Of the Pcmeroy-Mason
area. Shown from the Ohio side, one ferry makes Its way to
West Virginia and the Second ferry returns to the Ohio shore.
Doc McCoy, owner of the two ferries, report.ed Wednesday he

A sECOND FERRY wu pre

I .I

1 1:i Into

'
had no Idea how many trips had been made, but noted that
they were busy . The ~ond ferry was brought in Tuesday.
The Pomeroy-Mason bridge was closed Monday lor repair.
Work on the bridge Is to be completed in seven days.

The World Champions of
Chess are batWng it out In
Iceland to determine the World
Grandmaster Title, Now the
residenla of Southeastern Ohio
are going to have the opportunity to determine their
own Chess Grandmaster.
Jackson County Chess
Association members Tom
Triplett and Mark Jacoba have
announced the Southeastern
Ohio 0.. Open to be played

the weekend of August 19 and
20th. The tournament, which II
open to all residents of .
Southeastern . Ohio, will
determine Southeastern Ohio's
own Bobby Fisclter aa ()rand·
master and will award
trophies, cash prizes or

merchandise.
Chess matches wW be played
in Wellston on . 1 single
elimination b8lla on AIIIIWit
(Continued on Pllt $)

�2- The Dal)y Sentinel, Miaweport-Pomeroy, 0. 1July '!/,11172

The Egyptian Gambit

Generation Rap

WIN AT BRIDGE

BROAD QUESTION
Helen and Sue:
This is Ute second time I've asked. Hope you'll now consider
my question which is:
When in your estimatioos can parents do what would hurt
Utelr children most ? - HUNTER F.

NORTH
.65

¥Q1097 5
t A107

.AK6

WEST
EAST
.AJ82
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¥AJ84
¥ K632
• 2
• 543
.7532
SOUTH (D)
• 973

O..r Hunter:
Abroad question.Also a challenging one! That's why! put it
aside for more Utought.
Parents can do many Utings that might temporarily hurt
Uteir children - for none of us is perfect. But I believe the most
damaging blight - one that could cause permanent harm comes from the CONSTANT WITHHOLDING OF LOVE. HELEN

.J4

¥Votd

t KQJ986
.Ql098
North-South vulnerable

+++

w.. t North

Hunter :
Let's narrow that down a little: I Utink making a child feel
worthless and unimportant - taking Ute steam out of his self·
esteem - is Ute thing 'that could hurt him most. -SUE

Pass
Pass
Pass

2¥

5t

E.ost S&lt;Juth

a

P... 3.
Pass Pass

OpeninR lead- • A

+++
Dear Rap:
My boyfriend says he Is not ready to settle down and,
besides, I'm a poor marriage risk. (We're both over 21. J We've
been casually dating, and he inaists we're just good friends, not
"tied" to each other.
With all Utls perfectly clear, he still thinks sex Is part of the
deal, and calls me stupid for oot agreeing with him. I just can't
give him up, which must happen if I don't go along with his "no
strings" liberated relationship.
He Will not take me among his family or friends . He says if I
accidentally got pregnant, there are always places a girl can go
to have her baby, or he'd "spring for an abortion, so what's the
problem?"

I don't happen to think sex is immoral between two un·
married people who care for each other, but am I being im·
mature (as he says) to expect it should be more than just a
paasing experience? -NOT VENTURESOME

\

iiiJbbbbJJ

db

. 1 7 '1'"'"JWJP 5bblb Jt

hid

I Voice along Br'Way I
BY JACK O'BRIAN

ED170RIALS

Counsel by Phone
Flourishing Big

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some years ago the late
Walter Malowan reported on
how he was being victimized
by the jack of clubs. Here
we find California expert
Jim Kauder reportmg on
how the sam e card mis·
treated him
Jim's two·diamond c a II
was one of those weak two
bids after which the partner·
ship proceeded to a good dia·
mond game.
West opened the ace of
spades and continued with
the deuce. E as t won the
tnck with the q u e e n and
shifted to a trump. Jim won
in hts own hand : ruffed his
last spade in dummy ; led
and ruffed a heart with both
opponents playing low; en·
tered dummy with a trump ;
cashed the ace of clubs ·
ruffed another heart ; drew
East's last trump and
stopped to count.
West had discarded the
jack of spades and Jack of
hearts on the last two trump
leads. Obviously his last lour
cards were three clubs and
the ace of hearts. East had
to he holding two hearts, the
king of spades and one club.
The odds in favor of find·
ing the jack of clubs tn the
West hand were three to one
sc J1m made the expert's
p I a y of leading his 10 of
clubs and lethng it rid e.
East cashed a surprise trick
with his singleton Jack and
the expert had paid the pen·
alty of knowing too much.

myself I had to share their insecurities, and I
really w1sh they could share my stardom. That
age needs all the mor-ale-boosting it can get.
"But that 's sllli now the answer. These
same guys, grown up, Purple Heart survivors of
adolescence and thereafter, 15 years later, are
married to a g1rl who now swoons over Robert
GoJIIet or Tom Jones, and they still feel
lhreal ened or at least inadequate.
" If the men in these audiences could understand that what the artist gains Is not
s&lt;&gt;meling taken from them, 11 would be so much
beller I don't want to walk out on stage thinking
I ha l for every girlish shout, I'm also taking on
Ihe an imosity of her boyfriend - tt dilutes the
wlwle feeling.
"The artist on stage is so safe. The
adoratwn of his fans Is a threat only.to htmself.
OUWSPAPER ENTU:PAISI ASSN J
H1s female fans can love him, cry over hlDI, tell
lheu; troubles to him - only in the1r dreams, ...
":V II!d' 1s not very satisfying. In real life they
!urn ti1 that guy who's sitting next to them, and
The bidding has been.
he becomes the knight in shining armor, Wtsl North
E.ost South
3.
because he's there, he's touchable, and he can
Dble
P...
Pass
?
respund. What an opportunity - to be the
You, South, hold.
l'eaiizatwn of someone's far-flung dreams ! An
6J86
t AK9U .162
artiSt JS only the stuff dreams are made of, and
What do you do now?
lhe dreams stay intact only because of the
A-Bid throe spades. You bid
distance that separates him from his fans.
diamonds primarily u a lead
"And up there on stage, w1th the applause director.
nnging in his ears, the artist Js warming to the
TODAY'S QUESTION
response of Ius audience. He knows that if he
West JUmps to five clubs. Your
mops Ius brow, they'll fight over the sweaty partner doubles. What do you
do now?
t&lt;~wel. Today. He also knows - at his pert! lww fickle an audience can be, and that
tomorrow, they may lavish their love on
Oil-Free Make-up
someone else. They adore his unreal self, the
0 II y complexions b ave
self he's created just for them, the self kept problems with a greaay look
even with make-up. But the
alive by their applause.
new
oil-free make-ups are
"But who will be there to applaud his low
perlect for such complex·
moods, his sphtting headache, his less·thsn· Ions. They eUmlnate aa olly
shini ng self? An audience will never tell ..."
shine with a sort dewy look.

TO DAVID, ENVY'S A GOLIATH
NEW YORK (KFS) - The Pied Piper of the
Dear N.V.:
pre-:een and slightly older set, whose mothers
Aman who wants all fun, oo commitment, isn't "liberated," used to scream for Elvis Presley, is a man to be
he's just plain selfish. Tell him a "poor marriage risk" is the type reckuned with on the concert scene .. We're
who picks up and leaves when things don't suit her. And prove it! referring to David Cassidy, of course, who has
(Or are you some kind of masochist who enjoys being
wnggled his way to sex symboldom by way of
strangled w!Ut a "no strings" arrangement?) - HELEN
reco1·ds and "The Partridge Family." We sort
+++
&lt;&gt;I had to keep remmdmg ourselves that this
Dear Helen or Sue :
embo&lt;hment of everyone's Idea of a modern all·
I'm invited to a leap y~ar party where the girls ask the boys. American teenager ISnow 22 .. And how does 1t
What I want to know Is : if this girl asks me, pays my way,
feel lo be in the dreams or all these young
even drives the car, then who starts the move? That is, do the female fans'
girls make the first passes if there's to be some making-out af.
"I w1sh I could share the phenomenon with
terwards?- GUY
every guy in the world 1" exclaimed David.
"Girls automatically share it because they
Dear Guy:
make it possible. Wi thout them, it would be hke
If you don't know the girl well enough to answer this question
the lree !a(hn ~ i~ th ~ ,fore~!. But guys get left
~ fo=~· f.?~ don,·.~ l_&lt;:now her well enous)l ~9 ::~rt Mlpve.': oul, and they shouldn 't be, because they need Jt
most.
' '
'
'
~ ··~..;.; :
+++ ' '
"I tlunk it's qu1te beyond the average
Dear Guy :
Jmagmatwn to approximate the feehng a
It's her car, her money and her evening. So just go along for
performer gets when he rushes on stage, and IS
the ride. - HELEN
gree ted by shouts and screams of adoratiOn before he's sung a smgie note, or so much as
said 'HJ - Jl's good to be here.' To have that
kind of attentwn ramed on you - to be loved without Jts depe nding on whether you 're m a
good or bad mood, whether you wear the nght
deodorant, or whether or not you squeeze th e
tooth-paste from the middle, is m tis own
More than 250 telephone counseling services to help
peculiar way, a sort or perfection.
troubled people have sprung up. 10 every state in the
nation
"! w1sh every guy my age could exper1 ence
that unquestioning love . The boys who are the
. "Cnsis intervention centers , telephone counseling serv·
Ices , hot lines, help lines, hfehnes- by whatever name
contemporanes of my fans usually feel
the ~rocedure of counsehng the troubled by telephone 1;
threatened by me, and no wonder. Teens and
ftour1sh10g ac~oss the country," says Edwin Kiester Jr. ,
pre-teens
who are gomg through those fi rst
:eportmg on ~Js study of the new develop ment 10 a recent
moments with the opposite sex, who are plagued
ISsue of Famlly Health magazme.
Many provide specialized help such as drug counseling,
by all the social pressures - are so vulnerable .
ad:v1ce on youth problems, compamonship for the elderly,
ll wasn' t so long ago that I was m'that positiOn
smcide preventwn. Others do no counseling but tell callers
where they can go for ass1stance
Onginally i~tende~ for teen-agers, the first hot tme was
started by Children s Hospital of Los Angeles to enable
young people to talk anonymously with sympathetiC
adults when they felt cut off from their own parents
Other agencies quiCkly saw the technique as a way to
~ombat drug usage and drug hot lines were soon operatmg m many metropolitan areas and umvers1ty towns
provtdt~g the names ol rehabJhtalion services and othe~
counselmg
At. Stony Brook, Long Island the human-to·human hot
h~e IS called "Response" and t's sponsored by the United
Mmtstnes of Suffolk County.
In Philadelphia, "Help Line" was orgamzed at a " street
people's" headquarters to help teen.agers w1th drug·
related problems
By REV. DAVID POLING
In New York City, another "Help Line" JS operated by
Marble Collegiate Church and is one of 24 such c hurch·
sponsored services in the nation.
Arizona and California have the great bulk of farm
"We don't have barn-raisings and other events to help,
mvolved m the orgamzmg activity of the United
laborers
~.ach othe~ an,Y more," says a volunteer at "Response ·
Farm
Workers,
led and inspired by Cesar Chavez. Follow·
The hot line Js one way we can show people they do have
mg
the
.
large
gains
in Califorma, Chavez and the UFW
fmnds, that other people really do care about them ."
have JOtn~dbattle w1th the growers who own and manage
the vast lfrlgated farms m Arizona . Lettuce, not grapes,
ts the key word and a signifiCant number of people have
JOmed m the boycott.
It's a noisy .iet that blows nobody any good.
Arizon~ Gov Jack Williams guided a bill through the
Four sctenltsts at the University of North Carolina in
state legislature th1s sprmg which greatly hampers the
Greensboro .have dtscoyered that the kind of no1se pro.
UFW and th~tr boycott strategy. Many opponents of the
d~ced by a Jethner takmg off ca uses turnip seeds to ger·
measure beheve Jt to be unconstttutional and are develmmate faster than normally.
opmg a co urt challenge. Meanwhtle , the debates, disagree·
The researchers ~u~jected both dry and wet turnip
men!~ and controversys over the present farm labor law
seeds to a level of notse eqmvalent to that or a 7'1:1 revving
have touched almost every seg ment of this southwestern
up 100 feet away on the runway. The notse had no elfect
state.
on dry seeds, reports Sc'ience News Bu( wet seeds germi·
It should be 1,1oted here that the Chrishan churches in
nated in a~out 10 per cent less time and had about a 100
the state, espectally those 11 denominations that make up
per . cent htgher germmatlon rate than seeds in a quiet
envtronment
the Amona Ecumenical Council, have placed themselves
m the center of the controversery. With tis broad base in
, One explanatilm is that the sound waves break down the
the Protestant-Roman Catholic-Greek Orthodox commu·
exterior coatmg of a seed m some way that lets water and
mty, the Council is providing a unique service to the whole
oxygen enter m~re easily. Another theory is that the
sta te through public meetings
waves affect the mterwrs of cells within the seed.
.The research opens up at least two interesting poSSJ·
This wnter attended a two·hour session at Our Savior's
bllibes.
Lutheran Church in· Tucson recently where two 'state
In hot regions of the earth, for example, ground ternsenators,. a umversity economist, and 'a farm worker at·
perature ts often so high that seeds planted go into a state
torney
dtscussed boycotts, unionization, Cesar Chavez
of dormancy Sou.nd irradiation might break up that dor·
and a farm labor law before a large audience.
mancy and perm!! two crops a season instead of one.
'!here were many impressions and many points but the
Sound waves mtgh! also be used to make weeds germi·
abtdlng
theme was this : The Christian church cares about
nate before a field ts !!anted. They could then be de·
in Arizona, the Ecumenical Council wants to
people
Here
atroyed by bemg plowe under and the desired crop sown
express the Christian faith in the issues that confront
ln a weed-free field .
man. In the redhot salad of a lettuce boycott draped
The scientists admit th~t broadcasting airport-level
around the recently enacted farm labor law (and recall
noise over the countrys1de ts not an appealing prospect
move of Governor Williams ) the Council is holding meet·
Work is .going forward to see if particular wavelengths
mgs around the state to hear all sides and communicate
or combmattons of . wavelengths can produce the same
'
fatthfully, the truth of the debates.
eft'ects at lower decibel l~ve!s, and also to determine the
minimum duration of n01se needed
Underthe direction.of President Richard K. Smith, the
the questions are answered favorably, suggests Sci·
Ec.umemcal Coun~il ts demonstrating· the strength and
ence News, the day may come when farmers set up loud·
umty of the Chnsllan famtly. " We· are seeking to be sup·
speakers .to . play .noise at their crops even as they now
port1ve of one another," remarked Smith. 'There 1s no
play mustc m the1r barns to keep the cows contented.
Cathohc posttion . no Presb_yterian approach, no Lutheran

1. ,. 3.
•sc

The Church and
The Form Boycott

BERRY'S WORLD

~----

Seeds React to Jet Sound

I,

1Tube Talk ,
i

By Paul Crabtree ,

Wanted lor murder : Ben Cartwright and Matt Dillon.
What did they murder?
Over Ute course of half-a-generation on TV, Ben, Matt and
the gangs at the Ponderosa and umg Branch have killed off the
big, opulent, expensive Western, the kind that flourished from
the late Thirties to the mid-Fifties.
Willtheyhang ?Nope, I wouldn'teven vote to convict.
Because the kind of Western they killed off was almost
always incredibly bad. (Gary Cooper fans, lay off - I'm not
counting "High Noon," perhaps the first of the "adult"
Westerns,)
I think there have been three distinct kinds of Westerns on
the big and little screens :
1. - The Saturday-matinee, low-budget job, produced by
Republic or, Monogram, and featuring some awfUl acting (Cliff
Sterrett, Buster Crabbe), some fair singing (Gene Autry, Roy
Rogers), and usually both. Strictly kid stuff.
2. - The high-budget, Technlcolored, name-star ex·
travaganza that featured spectacular seta (but ignored the finest
scenery or all- the West itself), and some of the most inane plots
ever conceived in Hollywood's tinsel-tanks.
3.-The "grown-up" version, characterized by "High Noon"
in the movies and "Gunsmoke" on TV, which showed that the
real people of the Old- West weren't baubled, jut-jawed, guitar·
plunking idiots. When show biz discovered Utat Westemf!'s
sometimes sweated, drank, cursed, couldn't sing, and weren't
always nice to Indians, we 'd come a long way.
Last Saturday afterooon, entirely by surprise, the late
Forties epic, "San Antonio," came on the screen, courtesy of an
error in the TV schedules and my 11-year-old daughter. I couldn 'I
avoid part of it. It was ghastly.
Errol Flynn was a totally Improbable hero. AlelliB Smith
sang, and shouldn't have. And S. Z. (Cuddles) Sakall headed the
supporting cast. The 11-year-old loved it - and she should have,
because it was made for her mental level.
But what impreased me was the eoormous amount of money
spent on seta, spectacular scenes, and a cast (as they used to
say) of Utousands. How they ever got their money back on this
me I'll never !mow.
So chalk up one for TV: There's more honest story-telling,
characterization, faithfulness to historical accuracy, and

genuine drama in an average ''Bonanza''or ''Gunsmolr:e" than in
all that star«udded tripe of yesteryear. It's not that Ben Cart·

wrl&amp;ht and Matt Dillon are all that good -It's just that the richer
of their ancestors were so awful, awful, awful - and expensive,
to boot.
ON THE TV DIAL: Frankly, Utere illll't a dam thing on
television tonight that hBllll't been seen before, ezcept for Ute
Johnny Carson, Dick Cavett and Paul Nuchims shows. So, if you
plan to l[lread a picnic, read a book, spin a record, catch a fish,
cr take a ride, th!B Is a good night to do It.
Movies: "Tomorrow Is Forever," midnight, and "Wyoming
Mall," 4 p.m. Friday, both WBNS.TV.

•.

'

Middleport Upsets Bidwell 7-3
Middleport's "A" Pony
baseball team parlayed three
hits, one a bunt smgie, seven
bases on balls, three hit bats.
men, a balk, and two costly
Bidwell errbrs into seven runs,
good for a 7-3 victory over
Bidwell in Galha-Meigs Pony
League action at Middleport
Wednesday evening .
While that was going on,
Bidwell's covey of sluggers
pounded out 11 hils, mcludmg
two home runs, but producing
only three runs 1
The dlllerence was on the
mound and m the field . For
Middleport, righthander Perk
Ault was tough with the bases
populated an d the defense
behind him was superb when it
had to be. Ault fanned 13,
walked nobody, and hi t nobody.
For Bidwell, lefty Jack
Gardner had control problems
(7 walks), h1t three batsmen
and Middleport baserunners
had a picmc stealing second
base and thtrd base once they
got on
Defensive play of the mght
was made by red·ha ~red M1ke
May of Middleport mnght held
m the Bidwell fourth. After
T1m Stout and Jeff Holian·
baugh singled w1th one out,
Ault fan ned Gregg James for
the second out. Bug Fred
Logan [lied to shor t nghtfJeld.
May made a d1vmg catch after
a long run lor the third out.
In the Bidwell fifth w1th one
out and one on, Gardner's
skimmer through the hole on
the left side was headed for
extra bases, probably a home
run But Middleport's M1ke
Magnotta ranged far to hJs
nghtciose to the line to get the
ball, holdmg Gardner to a
single Auit then fa nned Carl
McMillen and got Gene Payne

Television Log

"O(r..:._()h, I SEE-You want to pay in-CASH. May 1
please see two forms of identification?"

pa~er here ..The Council believes that it must join the his·
~or1c. an~ Btbhcal !radition of the church to the present

ay JSSU&lt;S .. There ts no other way. But If we do it well
and fatrly , tt wll! help society as much as the church.,
In developing the facts of the various parties in the
farm worker debate, the church is bringine a refreshina
breeze to a society already Uttered with 1 " ,
•
releases and farm labor hand-outs Whaf!vower~press
iob:, the poor, the f~rgotten, and the lonely .:; not eo~g
0.
shoved astde tf the Ecumenical Council has an

1

~

\

to ground out to thirdsacker
Chris Miller.
The v1ctory gave Middleport
an 8-5 record w1th Vinton to
play at Vinton Friday.
The loss put Bidwell at 11·2
Followmg a meeting of league
officers and managers at the
game, and by agreement with
Pomeroy manager Woody Call,
B1dwell JS co-champion with
Pomeroy. Pomeroy last week
won a forfeit game over Bid·
well m a ga me Bidwell
protested to no avail.
B1dweii and Pomeroy have

one make-up game remaining,
but each 1s· with Racine. By
agreement, neither will be
played.
HOW ITWENT
Middleport got a 1~ lead m
the bottom of the f~rst when
Ault )ed off walking, stole
second and thtrd, and scored on
Eh Ebersbach's sacri!Jce fly to
centerfield .
Bidwell m the second go t 1ls
quota ol three runs when Gene
Welch led orr with a triple,
Bruce Runyon homered, and
Gardner home red Ault,

Ml•1t Morin Still
0 ut
·- l n T; u ble ?
~o

I

• 1

'

HIRAM, Ohio (UPIJ Cleveland Browns tight end
Milt Morin wants to be paid for
what he does and "not have to
qualify for a group of bonuses
to ga m what I lee! I should be
gelling in the first place."
Morin, a seven.year veteran
who will be Jfl.years-&lt;J!d in Oc·
Iober, remains unsigned w1th
the club. He plans to take a
strong stand, but he could be m
for trouble.
"I'll play m the scrimmage
Saturday (against Cincinnati )
but I won't play in any game
until I've signed a new contract," said Morin Wednesday
afte r his latest fmancJa!
discusswn with Browns' v1ce
president
and
ge neral
manager Harold Sauerbre1
"They've got me agamst the
wall.
"I've come down several
times in the money I'm seek. mg, another $1,000 smce OW'
talk last Saturday. They seem
to think I'll keep coming down
and fmaily get disgusted
enough to take what they're offering. I've got to establish a
strong base salary now."
Morin, who has caught 187

•

career passes for 2,902 yards,
says he has talked to "three or
four hght ends around the
league and I know what they're
getting."
"It 's a lot more than my
salary, but I set my figure 10 to
20 per ce nt below theirs,"
Morin said. ' 'That was my nus·
take."
Morin, who sa1d he prefers
the more dramatic achon of
sitting out some games in order
w get the contract issue settled, may leave himself open
for a legal debate should he de·
cide not to play out his option.
''I'm not going to play out my
option," Morin S8ld. "It may
sound silly not doing that and
refusing to play without a new
contract, but my mind Is made
up . I may turn all the talking
over to a lawyer friend of
mine."

Under the National Football
League's option clause, Morm,
despite the fact he has not negotiated a new contract, is still
under the club's jurisdiction.
He must play out his option, at
a 10 per cent reduction in pay,
in order to gain the right to
negotiate with another club.

Carlson Appointed

Programs for Tonight

•
•
0
mmi8810B@r
C
ABA

and Tomorr:ow . .

.

THURSDAY, JULY 27
- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Con!leq . 6; I Drea m ot
Jeannie 13; Sesame St. 20; Hathayoga 33
6· 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, 13; CBS News 8.10. Folk
Gulfar 33.
7:00 - Elec Co. 20. Cour..,of Our Tlmes 33 ; Let's Make a Deal
3; Dick Van Dyke" What's My Line? 8; Big Red Jubilee 15;
News 6; Wild Wild West 13
7. 30 - I'll See You In Court 4: Dragnel 8; In The Know 10 ·
Chapter 33; Hollywood Squares 3, To Tell The Trulh 6; Wild
Kingdom 10; Mr. Rogers 20.
8 00 - Alias Smith and Jones 13; NBC Advenhure Theatre 3, 4,
15; My World and Welcome To It 8, 10 ; Jean Shepherd's
America 20, 33.
.
8. 30- My ThreeSons8, 10; Jazz Set20, 33.
9. 00 - Longstreet6,13 ; lronsideJ. 4, 15, Hollywood Telev ision
Theatre 20, JJ ; Movie "The Com'edlans" 8. 10
10:00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13; News 20 , 1lobby Darin 3, 4, 15,
Paul Nuchlms 33.
11 :00 - News 3, 4. 6, 10, 13, 15.
1:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S; Dick Cavett 6: Movie "C laudelle
Inglish,'' 13.
12:00 - Mov
ie "Desperate Sea rch" 8; Mov ie "Tomorrow Is
11
6. 00

COME IN to see us
often
we are
READY to ser ve you
to yo ur comple te
sa li sfac!ton. at R1zer

Oil .

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

Forever 10.

1:00 - News 4
1:30 - News 13.
FRIDAY, JULY 28

John Now

6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10

Sesame St. 20.

~q~~~~~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .. July '¥1.19'12

; : ....... ~:;$

6: IS - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8; Blue Ridge Quartet
13; News 6; Herald of Truth 10.
6:45 - Corncob Reporf 3.
·
7:00 - Today 3, 4,15 ; CBS News8, 10
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Underdog 13.
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13 6· Sesa me
Street 33.
' '
8 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6 ; Jack LaLanne 13.
9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Lucl's Toyshop 10; Peyton Place 13 ·
Romper Room 8; Phil Donahue 15 , What Every Woma~
Wants to Know3:' Timmy&amp; Lassle6; Mr. Rogero33.
9.30 - Truth or Con seq. 3; Mike Douglas 6: One Lite lo live 13 ·
Electric Co. 33; My Three Sons 8.
'
10·00 - Dinah Shore 3,15; lucille BalllO. Phil Donahue 8; Dick
Van Dyke 13; Hathayoga 33.
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Beverly Hlllbillie;
~ . 1n-Sc hool Instruction 33. Split Second 13; My Three Sons
0
10:45 - lucille Rivers 6.
11:00 - Family Affair 8, 10; love American Style 13; Com.
munlque6; Sale oftheCentury 3. 15; Elec. Co. 20.
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15; love of Live 8· Bewitched 6 13 .

DAVID POLING, D.D.

.r

l W'" .. " M:om\0\t

Jack of C)ubs
.Is NemeSIS t

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Dear Not:
No way!!!
This guy sounds as if he wants a part-time sex partner to
keep uphlsego.It's plain,ifhewon'tshare you with his family or
friends, that you'll never be more than just something to use and
hide.
You "don't wantto lose him" ? You don 'I even have him!
Move on, before you really get hurt. - SUE

I; •

'

•

.

12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; Password 6·
Local News 10; News 13; Contact 8.
'
12·30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search for Tomorrow 8 tO · Spill
Second 6; Electric Co. 33.
' '
1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Divorce Court 8· Green
. Acres 10; Watch Your Child I 15; International Cookbook 33.
1.30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; let's Make a Deal 6 13 · As The
World Turns 8, 10; Sewing Skills 33.
' '
2:00- Days of Our Llves3, 4,15; Newlywed Game 13· VIr inla
Graham 6; Love Is Splendored Thing 8 10 · Socletle~ In fran
sltlon 33.
' '
·
2· 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Guiding Light 6 10
Evening at P0ps 33.
' '
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6 13 · Secret
Storm 8, 10; Tennis Anyone? 33.
' '
3·30-; Return t~ Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; Edge of Night 8, 10·
. JeffsColllo13 ; 0ffTheRecord33;0neLifetoLive6
'
4.00
M
r.
Ca
rtoon
3;
Somserset
15;
Sesame
20,
33;
Fllntslones
. 6• 13 ; 8a1man 8; Movie "Wyoming Mall" 10.
4.30 - GreenAcresJ: I Love lucy6; VIrginian 8; Password 13
lhrv Griffin 4: Andy Griffith 15.
'
5:00- If Takes A Thief 4; Wagon Train 3; Maverick 13 . El
Co. 33; Mister Rogero20; Dlclt Van Dyke 15 · Big Valle' 6 ec.
s;JO - Marshall Dillon 15 ; Electric Co. 33.'
Y •
6.00 - News3,4,8, 10.15; NBCNewsB,10; Truth or Conseq 6 · 1
. Dream of Jeannle13; Sesame 51.20; Hathayoga 33.
· '
7. 00 - Porter Wagoner 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6. tO; Whats
My Line1 8; Eloc. Co. 20; Wild, Wild West 13· Tom Jones 15 ·
Mast-'"" ""~ 1 Theatre 33.

'

•

NE W YORK (UPI J- Robert
Carlson became the Amencan
Basketball Association 's third
commissiOner today w1th a
prom1se "to serve as long as
they need me" and the hope
tha t he would be given
authority denied to his prede·
cessor, Jack Dolph.
The 47-year-oid Wall Street
attorney, who has represented
the ABA in many legal hassles
during the last lew years, was
chose n Wednesda y by the
league trustees.
"I will serve as long as they
need me," he said. " ...1£ a
merger with the National
Basketball Association occurs
I would go back to the firm.
"But we have to make plans
to operate and be successful on
our own," he contmued. "We
will be a !().team league this
year·\ I am not at liberty to
discuss wh1ch franchise will be
added but an announcement
will be made within the next
week .''
The 11-team ABA or 1971-72
became a nine-team league
when the Pittsburgh and

Floridian teams gave up their
franchises .
Carlson said one ol his first
tasks will be to obtain a
television package for the ABA
-an area m which the league
has lagged badly behind the
rival NBA.
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Deuce, driven by Charles
Hopkins, passed two horses in
the last 25 yards to wm the
featured pace at Scioto Downs
Wednesday night by a neck
over Chma Doll.
The wmner covered the mUe
in 2:04 2-5.
Bomb's Boo Boo (3) woo the
!Jrst race and Sweet and Easy
(3) the second to return $10.40
in the daily double.
The crowd of 4,547 wagered
$207,529.
NICKLAUS RECOVERING
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Jack Nicklaus was expected to
be released today from
Universtty Hospital here where
he underwent surgery on an
infected right index linger .
"We are going day by day,"
his doctor said. "Mter we look
at it today, we'll know a little
more at that time."
REDS RESUME ACTION
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Fred
Norman will be on the mound
tonight when last-place San
Diego opens a three-game
series against the National
League West leaders, Cln·
CJnnatl.
Norman, ii-7, will be opposed
by
Cincmnati's
Jack
Billingham, 6-9.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF

the

MEIGS ·MASON AREA
CHESTER L, TANNEHILL ,

'

'

7:30-To Tell the Truth 6: Dragnet 8; Adam.J2 3; I Dream of
Jeann1e4; Governor and J. J. 10; Mr. Rogers20
·
8:00 - Washington Wee!&lt; In ReYiew 20· O'Hara s Trea
8; Book Beat33; Brady Bunch6.13· Partners3 4 IS
sury
8:30Ch- Pa~1dge Family 6. 13; Space Between' Words 20, 33 ,
rono 1vv 3, 4, 15.
9:00- Room 227, 13; Olympians '72 6; Movie "Island of love"
8; Movie "The Jayhawkers" 10.
·
9:~;t~t~o6~t ~~~ng 20, 33; NBC News Speclal3, 4, 15: All siar
''3:00-News 20; Doln' it 33.
l :30- Ur. )lmon Locke 3; Dr. In The House 4 · Rollin' on River
IS: News 20; Washington Week In Review' 33
11 :00-NewS3,4,6,8,10,13, 15 .
·•
11 :30 - Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 15; Movie "Harum
Sc~rum" 8; Movie "The Strangler" 10.
1 : ~:- Roller Derby 4; Movie "HOr'O!,' ~otel" 10; Movie "·30-"
2:00- News 4.
'
3 : ~ - Newt 13.

.

u

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

COMING SOON!
e----un;c

7L7L

Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Publi s hed daily

except

Saturday by The Ot110 Valley
Pub l1s h lno Company, 111

Coun Sf. Pomeroy . Ohio,
liS769. Bus tness Off•te Phone
992 2156, Ed1lorial Phone 992

1157

Sec ond crass postage pa 1d at
Pomeroy , Oh 10 .
National advertising~
representative
eottlnetn .
Gallagher, Inc , 12 East •2nd
St . , New York C1ty, New York
IH Subscrtplion rates · oe .
ll ¥ered by c arr,er whtre
avat lllble SO cents per week ; •
By Motor Route where cerritr

serv1ce not availlble : One
month Sl 75

By ma11 in Oh io

and W va .. One ')lear su 00
Si x

months

$7 25 .

~ha ken, managed to !an Me· (
Millen f•Jr the first out, allowed .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Gene Payne to single, fanned
Stout, gave up a second smg!e
to Hollanbaugh, imt fanned
power-Jntter Greg J ames to get
out or the inning.
Middleport got five runs in
Ute third. Agam Ault led off
with a walk. Ebersbach skted
out to cen ter, but Terry
Whitlatch got an infield single
and Rick Stobart singled both
runner s home. Magnotta
walked, Chnss Miller fanned
for the second out, and Steve
Walburn walked to load the
bases. Don Vaughan's fly ball
into short rig htfield was
almost, but not quit.! caug ht,
two runs scoring. Then Stobart
stole home. Vaughan was
thrown out trying to steal thtrd
ending the inning.
Middleport got its seventh
run tn the sixth on two walks
. and two htl batsmen, a run
being forced in.
Bidwell
030 000 1}-3 11 2
Midd 'A'
105 001 X-7 3 1
Gardner and Stout. Ault and
Stcbart Umpires, A. Stobart,
plate ; C. Ingles, bases.
PONY STANDINGS
Won Lost
11
2
Pomeroy
11
2
Bidwell
8
5
Midd. 'A'
6
7
Cheshie
4
5
Rae me
2
Southwestern
10
2 10
Vinton
0 14
Midd. 'B'

Racine in

Ma ior league Standin9s
By United Press lnternattonal
Nahonal League

P1llsburgh
New York
St LOUIS
Chicago
Mon t real

RACINE - Racine won both
ends of a doubleheader 6-2 and
12-1 m Galha-Meigs Pony
League action Wednesday
night at Racme. Racine is now
5-4 on the year while Vmton is
2-10.
In Ute first game Pete Sayre

511 10
511 10
460 141f?

45 43
46 44
40 47

Philadelphia 31 57 352 24
West
w. I. pet. g.b.

Cincinnati

Houston

55 33 .625

51 41 554

6

Los Angeles
47 42 528 81/2
Atlanta
42 49 462 l41f-l
San Francisco 41 52 441 W h
San D•ego
33 56 371 22 112
No games Wednesday

. Today's Probable Pitcher&gt;
IAll limes EDTl
St. louis !Cleveland 11 -5) at

Montreal (M oor e 2 4), 8 p m .

San Franc•sco (Man cha l 4 10)

at Atlanta (Mclam 1-lL 8 p.m.
los Angeles !Osteen 10·71 at
Houston IForsch S.Sl . 8:30p.m.
San Diego !Norman 5-71 at
Cincmnali (Bill&gt;ngham 6-9), 8
pm
Ch•cago (Jenkms

12-9 and

Hooton 7-8) at Philadelphia

(Reynolds 0-6 and Champ1on 4-

111 2. 5·35 p.m
New York IKoosman 7·5 and
Matlack 9 5) at Pittsburgh
(Bnles 9 3 and Moose 5-6) 2,
6 05 p m

Fnday's Games
St L ou1s al Montreat

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Billy Martin, a iii-year-old
from Palos Verdes, Calif. , who
plays so well he was put in the
JUrnors 16-to·IB class, goes
agamst top-seeded Fred de
Jesus of Santurce, P R., in the
quarterfmals today 1n the
Western Open Juniors and
Boys Tennis Championships.
Martin has been scouting De
Jesus, who, be&lt;::ause he JS 18 JS
mehgible for this tournament
after this year. De Jesus won
the boys title m 1969 and 1970.
"Fred will run you to death,"
says Martin. "That's how he
beats a lot of guys .''
De Jesus beat Bill Matyastik
of Waco, Tex., 6-1, 6-2, Wed·
nesday while Martm downed
15th seeded Grey King of
Gainesville, Fla., 7-9, 6-4.
John Holla&lt;t;·, of La Jolla,
Calif., the lOth junior seed,
upset fifth-seeded Victor
Amaya of Holland, Mich.,
Wednesday, 6-5, 6-4. In other
juniors action, Brian Teacher
of San Diego, Calif., the second
seed, beat Nick Saviano of Los
Altos, Calif., 3-9, 6-3, 7-6.
David Parker of Galesburg,

m., downed Craig Johnson of Lakeland, Fla., today.
Los Angeles, 6-1, 6-7, ~. while
In junior doubles action,~
4th seeded Vitas Gerulatis of seeded Martin and TreJ
Howard Beach, N.Y., beat 9th· Waltke, of St. Louis, lint
seeded Joe Edles of Long downed Mark Millikan ol m.
Beach, Calif., ~. 6-1.
dianapolls and Brunner Smllb
Third-seeded Patrick Dupre of Sarasolfl, Fla., 1).2, 6-1, U.O
of Birmingham, Ala., ellDlinal· beat SU!wart Keller of PhoeDIK
ed Billy Brock of Norfolk , Va., and Butch Walts of Fresno,
7-6, 6-1. Eric Friedler of Calif., 6-4, 6-4.
Evanston, Ill., beat Gary Plock
The
top-8eeded
b071
of Lowsvilie, Ky., 6-2, 6-4.
doubles- ·Bruce MaMOn and
Top-seeded boy Jack Gor· Perry Wrighl--i!ot by Tim
such or St. Louis Wednesday Conlin of Vienna, Ohio, and
beat Richard Finger of Bob Dresler of Pepper Pike,
Houston, 6-0, 6-1. He meets Ohio, 1).1, 6-J, and Ron Meyers
tenUt..seeded Dan McKown of and Mike Sassano, 7-6, 6-J.

fO~ BET!~
EATING
&gt;\ I
~~

CAN
PRESTO
IT
MIRRO.MATIC
YOURSELF IN A

PRESSURE CANNER

Ch1cago at Ph1ladelph•a
New York at Pi tt. n1ght

773·5583

Los Ang eles at Houston, n ight
San D1 ego at C1n, night
Amencan League

Detro1t
Baltimore

Boston

New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee

Oakland
Mmnesota
. Kansas City
Cal1fornia
Tex:as

East
w. I.
51 37
5() 38
45 41

Hours:
7 a. m.

San Fran at Atlan ta. night

Ch•cago

Two Wins

East
w. I. pet. g.b.
55 33 625
49 38 563 5'12

Quarterfinals Underway

pet. g.b.
.580
.568 1
.523 5

42 43 .494

]1 12

49 41 .544

6lf2

36 51 .414 J41J,
35 52 .402 151;,
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
56 35 .615
45 42 .517 9
44 45 .494 11

40 52 .435 l61f2
37 53 .411 l81f2

No games Wednesday
Today's Probable Pitchers
I All times EDTI
Minnesota IBiyleven 9·12) at
Oakland !Holtzman 12-8) , 10:30
p.m.
Texas IBroberg 5-8) at

AHEAD OF 1971
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Herve
Filion, who won a record 543
races and nearly $2 milhon m
prize money last year, is run·
ning ahead of 1971's schedule
this year, according to the
United States
Trotting
Association.
With five months of the
season to go, Fllion has 266
race wins and more Ulan $1
million in earnings.
Joe Marsh Jr . is second in
wins wiUt 164 and Del Insko is
second in earnings with
$740,599, accordmg to figures
through July 22.

MASON, W. VA.
to 9 p. m. Friday &amp; Saturday

VilLAGE
PHARMACY
lor Your

DRUG* NEEDS

Callforn1a (A llen 2-7), 11 p.m

Cleve land (T1drow 7·91 at
Balt1more !Dobson 12·81. 7:30
pm .
struck out seven and walked
Boston IPatt1n 8-81 at New
York
IKI1ne 9-41. 7.30 p.m.
only three hatters m hur!irig a
Kan sas C1ty (Nel son 2 4 and
sparkling four-hitter for Spl!ttorff 9-51 at Ch1cago (Wood
Racme . J Norman started for 15-10 and Bradley 10-9) , 2. 6:30
Vmton and R. Justus came on p m.
Detroit ll olich 17-6 and
in the third.
Coleman 12 8) at Milwaukee
Hitters for the winners were (Parsons 8 7 and Ryer son 2 1),
Greg Dunning with a double 2, 6 p m
Friday's Game$ 1
-and two singles, Mitoh Nease a M 1nn esota
at Oakland, n1ght
double and single, Jim Riffle a Texas at California , night
double, and David Jenkms and Kansas C1 ty at Chicago. night
at Baltimore night
Steve Hendricks, each had a Cleveland
Detro it at Mil wau kee, night
single.
Boston at N. Y., 2, tw in1ght
Vmton hitters were Norman
with a triple and single, T.
Norman, and T. Justus each a
Cheshire Claims
single.
Pete Sayre was even better
in the second game, allowing
only three hits, walking none, Pee Wee Crown
and fanning four while
Home runs by Bruce Gilmore
collecting a triple and Utree
and
Tim Price behind the nosingles at the plate . Quite a
performance for a 15-year-old hit pitching ol Jackie Minor
gave Cheshire a ~ victory
boy.
M. Justus started on the hill over Addaville Wednesday
for Vinton and was relieved by night m the championship
T. Norman in the third and R. game of the Ohio Valley Pee
Wee League.
Justus m the fourth.
Coach Ca rl Wamsley's
Racine hitters besides Sayre
Cheshire
team finished with an
were John Salser with two
singles, Nease a double, and overall 7·1 record. Coach Larry
Riffle and Dunning each a Sheets' Addaville team took
single. J. Norman, Issac, and second place with a 1).2 mark.
Davis all had a single for
Vinton's three hits.
FIRST GAME
LOSE UGLY FAT
Vinton
001 111-2 4
losing we1ght t~doy~r
Racine
005 10-6 8 Start
money ba ck . MONAD X I a
tln_y tablet and easy o t e.
SECOND GAME
MONAD EX will help curb our
Vinton
000 01- 1 3 desire for e&gt;&lt;cen food. Eat less
weigh le ss Contains no
Racine
431 4x-12 8 dangerous
drug s and wil l not
you
nervous
No
FIRST GAME: J . Norman make
strenuous ex:erclse . Change
(LP), R. Justus (3) and your life . . start todoy .
MONAOEX costs S3.00 tor a 20
Tackett. Sayre and Dunning. day
supply . Large economy size
SECOND GAME : M. Justus Is SS.OO. Lose ug ly fat or your
money will be refunded with no
(LP), T. Norman (3), R. Justus t~uestrona
asked . MONAOEX is
with this guarantee by :
(4), and Tackett. Sayre and sold
Swisher &amp; Lohse Oru,s, 112 E.
Dunning.
M1 in, Pomeroy &amp; Du ton Drug

7 a . m . to5 : 30 p.m . Oa1ly

STOCK YOIIR M!DICIN! CH!ST

IN EIGHTH PLACE
MINDEN, Nev. (UPI )
DJCk Schroeder of Bryan, Ohio,
was in eighth place going mto
the final two flights of the
National Soaring Cham·
p10nships here.
Schroeder had 5,826 points.
The leaders were Ray Gimney
of ReilwoOd .City, Calif., 'lind
l'eter Newgard of Sacramento,
Ca~ each wtth 6,302 points.
Fifty-three contestants were
entered in the competion ,
which involves flighls in all di·
rectwns from the local airport.

'THE CR!ATOR 01'
REASONAII.I! DRUG PlllaS"

.'

When you
think of
Loans or
Financing •. •

,.

'( I,

,,\ ,

.•,.J V 'I)

....

.....

_.

NOW

'

f

Store, Middleport. M•ll Orden
Filled .

Kerm Says:

THANK YOU
FOR MAKING HIS SALE
LAST WEEKEND

Ctty Loan is the answer We make
quick , convenient si gnat ur e loans in
amounts up to $1000 . . . .. and larger loans for bill
consolidation , eme rg encies , tr ave l and o\her
family expenses.
Wh en you buy anyth ing which requires financing ,
we have a plan to lit you r budget. We're on the local
scene and give fa st se rvi ce. It wi ll always pay to
ask your dealer for thrifty City Loan "Action-Plan
Financing."

SUCH ASUCCESS!

i$ the an$wer

However, he still has quite a few Real
Good Buys left. It will be wortli your
while to take your car or take the ferry
to see what is left at Greatly Reduced
Prices.

"Kerm:. Komer"

New York Clothing House

PH~

125 E. MAIN

992-2171

POMEROY, 0.

I

Three

monttls u .so . Subscr•phon

pr tc e includes Sunday Tlmts·
Senttnel.

(j

BASEBAU
STANDINGS

POMEROY, OHIO

1912 • FINANCING OHIO PEOPLE .FOR 60 YEARS • 1972

�2- The Dal)y Sentinel, Miaweport-Pomeroy, 0. 1July '!/,11172

The Egyptian Gambit

Generation Rap

WIN AT BRIDGE

BROAD QUESTION
Helen and Sue:
This is Ute second time I've asked. Hope you'll now consider
my question which is:
When in your estimatioos can parents do what would hurt
Utelr children most ? - HUNTER F.

NORTH
.65

¥Q1097 5
t A107

.AK6

WEST
EAST
.AJ82
.KQI04
¥AJ84
¥ K632
• 2
• 543
.7532
SOUTH (D)
• 973

O..r Hunter:
Abroad question.Also a challenging one! That's why! put it
aside for more Utought.
Parents can do many Utings that might temporarily hurt
Uteir children - for none of us is perfect. But I believe the most
damaging blight - one that could cause permanent harm comes from the CONSTANT WITHHOLDING OF LOVE. HELEN

.J4

¥Votd

t KQJ986
.Ql098
North-South vulnerable

+++

w.. t North

Hunter :
Let's narrow that down a little: I Utink making a child feel
worthless and unimportant - taking Ute steam out of his self·
esteem - is Ute thing 'that could hurt him most. -SUE

Pass
Pass
Pass

2¥

5t

E.ost S&lt;Juth

a

P... 3.
Pass Pass

OpeninR lead- • A

+++
Dear Rap:
My boyfriend says he Is not ready to settle down and,
besides, I'm a poor marriage risk. (We're both over 21. J We've
been casually dating, and he inaists we're just good friends, not
"tied" to each other.
With all Utls perfectly clear, he still thinks sex Is part of the
deal, and calls me stupid for oot agreeing with him. I just can't
give him up, which must happen if I don't go along with his "no
strings" liberated relationship.
He Will not take me among his family or friends . He says if I
accidentally got pregnant, there are always places a girl can go
to have her baby, or he'd "spring for an abortion, so what's the
problem?"

I don't happen to think sex is immoral between two un·
married people who care for each other, but am I being im·
mature (as he says) to expect it should be more than just a
paasing experience? -NOT VENTURESOME

\

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. 1 7 '1'"'"JWJP 5bblb Jt

hid

I Voice along Br'Way I
BY JACK O'BRIAN

ED170RIALS

Counsel by Phone
Flourishing Big

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some years ago the late
Walter Malowan reported on
how he was being victimized
by the jack of clubs. Here
we find California expert
Jim Kauder reportmg on
how the sam e card mis·
treated him
Jim's two·diamond c a II
was one of those weak two
bids after which the partner·
ship proceeded to a good dia·
mond game.
West opened the ace of
spades and continued with
the deuce. E as t won the
tnck with the q u e e n and
shifted to a trump. Jim won
in hts own hand : ruffed his
last spade in dummy ; led
and ruffed a heart with both
opponents playing low; en·
tered dummy with a trump ;
cashed the ace of clubs ·
ruffed another heart ; drew
East's last trump and
stopped to count.
West had discarded the
jack of spades and Jack of
hearts on the last two trump
leads. Obviously his last lour
cards were three clubs and
the ace of hearts. East had
to he holding two hearts, the
king of spades and one club.
The odds in favor of find·
ing the jack of clubs tn the
West hand were three to one
sc J1m made the expert's
p I a y of leading his 10 of
clubs and lethng it rid e.
East cashed a surprise trick
with his singleton Jack and
the expert had paid the pen·
alty of knowing too much.

myself I had to share their insecurities, and I
really w1sh they could share my stardom. That
age needs all the mor-ale-boosting it can get.
"But that 's sllli now the answer. These
same guys, grown up, Purple Heart survivors of
adolescence and thereafter, 15 years later, are
married to a g1rl who now swoons over Robert
GoJIIet or Tom Jones, and they still feel
lhreal ened or at least inadequate.
" If the men in these audiences could understand that what the artist gains Is not
s&lt;&gt;meling taken from them, 11 would be so much
beller I don't want to walk out on stage thinking
I ha l for every girlish shout, I'm also taking on
Ihe an imosity of her boyfriend - tt dilutes the
wlwle feeling.
"The artist on stage is so safe. The
adoratwn of his fans Is a threat only.to htmself.
OUWSPAPER ENTU:PAISI ASSN J
H1s female fans can love him, cry over hlDI, tell
lheu; troubles to him - only in the1r dreams, ...
":V II!d' 1s not very satisfying. In real life they
!urn ti1 that guy who's sitting next to them, and
The bidding has been.
he becomes the knight in shining armor, Wtsl North
E.ost South
3.
because he's there, he's touchable, and he can
Dble
P...
Pass
?
respund. What an opportunity - to be the
You, South, hold.
l'eaiizatwn of someone's far-flung dreams ! An
6J86
t AK9U .162
artiSt JS only the stuff dreams are made of, and
What do you do now?
lhe dreams stay intact only because of the
A-Bid throe spades. You bid
distance that separates him from his fans.
diamonds primarily u a lead
"And up there on stage, w1th the applause director.
nnging in his ears, the artist Js warming to the
TODAY'S QUESTION
response of Ius audience. He knows that if he
West JUmps to five clubs. Your
mops Ius brow, they'll fight over the sweaty partner doubles. What do you
do now?
t&lt;~wel. Today. He also knows - at his pert! lww fickle an audience can be, and that
tomorrow, they may lavish their love on
Oil-Free Make-up
someone else. They adore his unreal self, the
0 II y complexions b ave
self he's created just for them, the self kept problems with a greaay look
even with make-up. But the
alive by their applause.
new
oil-free make-ups are
"But who will be there to applaud his low
perlect for such complex·
moods, his sphtting headache, his less·thsn· Ions. They eUmlnate aa olly
shini ng self? An audience will never tell ..."
shine with a sort dewy look.

TO DAVID, ENVY'S A GOLIATH
NEW YORK (KFS) - The Pied Piper of the
Dear N.V.:
pre-:een and slightly older set, whose mothers
Aman who wants all fun, oo commitment, isn't "liberated," used to scream for Elvis Presley, is a man to be
he's just plain selfish. Tell him a "poor marriage risk" is the type reckuned with on the concert scene .. We're
who picks up and leaves when things don't suit her. And prove it! referring to David Cassidy, of course, who has
(Or are you some kind of masochist who enjoys being
wnggled his way to sex symboldom by way of
strangled w!Ut a "no strings" arrangement?) - HELEN
reco1·ds and "The Partridge Family." We sort
+++
&lt;&gt;I had to keep remmdmg ourselves that this
Dear Helen or Sue :
embo&lt;hment of everyone's Idea of a modern all·
I'm invited to a leap y~ar party where the girls ask the boys. American teenager ISnow 22 .. And how does 1t
What I want to know Is : if this girl asks me, pays my way,
feel lo be in the dreams or all these young
even drives the car, then who starts the move? That is, do the female fans'
girls make the first passes if there's to be some making-out af.
"I w1sh I could share the phenomenon with
terwards?- GUY
every guy in the world 1" exclaimed David.
"Girls automatically share it because they
Dear Guy:
make it possible. Wi thout them, it would be hke
If you don't know the girl well enough to answer this question
the lree !a(hn ~ i~ th ~ ,fore~!. But guys get left
~ fo=~· f.?~ don,·.~ l_&lt;:now her well enous)l ~9 ::~rt Mlpve.': oul, and they shouldn 't be, because they need Jt
most.
' '
'
'
~ ··~..;.; :
+++ ' '
"I tlunk it's qu1te beyond the average
Dear Guy :
Jmagmatwn to approximate the feehng a
It's her car, her money and her evening. So just go along for
performer gets when he rushes on stage, and IS
the ride. - HELEN
gree ted by shouts and screams of adoratiOn before he's sung a smgie note, or so much as
said 'HJ - Jl's good to be here.' To have that
kind of attentwn ramed on you - to be loved without Jts depe nding on whether you 're m a
good or bad mood, whether you wear the nght
deodorant, or whether or not you squeeze th e
tooth-paste from the middle, is m tis own
More than 250 telephone counseling services to help
peculiar way, a sort or perfection.
troubled people have sprung up. 10 every state in the
nation
"! w1sh every guy my age could exper1 ence
that unquestioning love . The boys who are the
. "Cnsis intervention centers , telephone counseling serv·
Ices , hot lines, help lines, hfehnes- by whatever name
contemporanes of my fans usually feel
the ~rocedure of counsehng the troubled by telephone 1;
threatened by me, and no wonder. Teens and
ftour1sh10g ac~oss the country," says Edwin Kiester Jr. ,
pre-teens
who are gomg through those fi rst
:eportmg on ~Js study of the new develop ment 10 a recent
moments with the opposite sex, who are plagued
ISsue of Famlly Health magazme.
Many provide specialized help such as drug counseling,
by all the social pressures - are so vulnerable .
ad:v1ce on youth problems, compamonship for the elderly,
ll wasn' t so long ago that I was m'that positiOn
smcide preventwn. Others do no counseling but tell callers
where they can go for ass1stance
Onginally i~tende~ for teen-agers, the first hot tme was
started by Children s Hospital of Los Angeles to enable
young people to talk anonymously with sympathetiC
adults when they felt cut off from their own parents
Other agencies quiCkly saw the technique as a way to
~ombat drug usage and drug hot lines were soon operatmg m many metropolitan areas and umvers1ty towns
provtdt~g the names ol rehabJhtalion services and othe~
counselmg
At. Stony Brook, Long Island the human-to·human hot
h~e IS called "Response" and t's sponsored by the United
Mmtstnes of Suffolk County.
In Philadelphia, "Help Line" was orgamzed at a " street
people's" headquarters to help teen.agers w1th drug·
related problems
By REV. DAVID POLING
In New York City, another "Help Line" JS operated by
Marble Collegiate Church and is one of 24 such c hurch·
sponsored services in the nation.
Arizona and California have the great bulk of farm
"We don't have barn-raisings and other events to help,
mvolved m the orgamzmg activity of the United
laborers
~.ach othe~ an,Y more," says a volunteer at "Response ·
Farm
Workers,
led and inspired by Cesar Chavez. Follow·
The hot line Js one way we can show people they do have
mg
the
.
large
gains
in Califorma, Chavez and the UFW
fmnds, that other people really do care about them ."
have JOtn~dbattle w1th the growers who own and manage
the vast lfrlgated farms m Arizona . Lettuce, not grapes,
ts the key word and a signifiCant number of people have
JOmed m the boycott.
It's a noisy .iet that blows nobody any good.
Arizon~ Gov Jack Williams guided a bill through the
Four sctenltsts at the University of North Carolina in
state legislature th1s sprmg which greatly hampers the
Greensboro .have dtscoyered that the kind of no1se pro.
UFW and th~tr boycott strategy. Many opponents of the
d~ced by a Jethner takmg off ca uses turnip seeds to ger·
measure beheve Jt to be unconstttutional and are develmmate faster than normally.
opmg a co urt challenge. Meanwhtle , the debates, disagree·
The researchers ~u~jected both dry and wet turnip
men!~ and controversys over the present farm labor law
seeds to a level of notse eqmvalent to that or a 7'1:1 revving
have touched almost every seg ment of this southwestern
up 100 feet away on the runway. The notse had no elfect
state.
on dry seeds, reports Sc'ience News Bu( wet seeds germi·
It should be 1,1oted here that the Chrishan churches in
nated in a~out 10 per cent less time and had about a 100
the state, espectally those 11 denominations that make up
per . cent htgher germmatlon rate than seeds in a quiet
envtronment
the Amona Ecumenical Council, have placed themselves
m the center of the controversery. With tis broad base in
, One explanatilm is that the sound waves break down the
the Protestant-Roman Catholic-Greek Orthodox commu·
exterior coatmg of a seed m some way that lets water and
mty, the Council is providing a unique service to the whole
oxygen enter m~re easily. Another theory is that the
sta te through public meetings
waves affect the mterwrs of cells within the seed.
.The research opens up at least two interesting poSSJ·
This wnter attended a two·hour session at Our Savior's
bllibes.
Lutheran Church in· Tucson recently where two 'state
In hot regions of the earth, for example, ground ternsenators,. a umversity economist, and 'a farm worker at·
perature ts often so high that seeds planted go into a state
torney
dtscussed boycotts, unionization, Cesar Chavez
of dormancy Sou.nd irradiation might break up that dor·
and a farm labor law before a large audience.
mancy and perm!! two crops a season instead of one.
'!here were many impressions and many points but the
Sound waves mtgh! also be used to make weeds germi·
abtdlng
theme was this : The Christian church cares about
nate before a field ts !!anted. They could then be de·
in Arizona, the Ecumenical Council wants to
people
Here
atroyed by bemg plowe under and the desired crop sown
express the Christian faith in the issues that confront
ln a weed-free field .
man. In the redhot salad of a lettuce boycott draped
The scientists admit th~t broadcasting airport-level
around the recently enacted farm labor law (and recall
noise over the countrys1de ts not an appealing prospect
move of Governor Williams ) the Council is holding meet·
Work is .going forward to see if particular wavelengths
mgs around the state to hear all sides and communicate
or combmattons of . wavelengths can produce the same
'
fatthfully, the truth of the debates.
eft'ects at lower decibel l~ve!s, and also to determine the
minimum duration of n01se needed
Underthe direction.of President Richard K. Smith, the
the questions are answered favorably, suggests Sci·
Ec.umemcal Coun~il ts demonstrating· the strength and
ence News, the day may come when farmers set up loud·
umty of the Chnsllan famtly. " We· are seeking to be sup·
speakers .to . play .noise at their crops even as they now
port1ve of one another," remarked Smith. 'There 1s no
play mustc m the1r barns to keep the cows contented.
Cathohc posttion . no Presb_yterian approach, no Lutheran

1. ,. 3.
•sc

The Church and
The Form Boycott

BERRY'S WORLD

~----

Seeds React to Jet Sound

I,

1Tube Talk ,
i

By Paul Crabtree ,

Wanted lor murder : Ben Cartwright and Matt Dillon.
What did they murder?
Over Ute course of half-a-generation on TV, Ben, Matt and
the gangs at the Ponderosa and umg Branch have killed off the
big, opulent, expensive Western, the kind that flourished from
the late Thirties to the mid-Fifties.
Willtheyhang ?Nope, I wouldn'teven vote to convict.
Because the kind of Western they killed off was almost
always incredibly bad. (Gary Cooper fans, lay off - I'm not
counting "High Noon," perhaps the first of the "adult"
Westerns,)
I think there have been three distinct kinds of Westerns on
the big and little screens :
1. - The Saturday-matinee, low-budget job, produced by
Republic or, Monogram, and featuring some awfUl acting (Cliff
Sterrett, Buster Crabbe), some fair singing (Gene Autry, Roy
Rogers), and usually both. Strictly kid stuff.
2. - The high-budget, Technlcolored, name-star ex·
travaganza that featured spectacular seta (but ignored the finest
scenery or all- the West itself), and some of the most inane plots
ever conceived in Hollywood's tinsel-tanks.
3.-The "grown-up" version, characterized by "High Noon"
in the movies and "Gunsmoke" on TV, which showed that the
real people of the Old- West weren't baubled, jut-jawed, guitar·
plunking idiots. When show biz discovered Utat Westemf!'s
sometimes sweated, drank, cursed, couldn't sing, and weren't
always nice to Indians, we 'd come a long way.
Last Saturday afterooon, entirely by surprise, the late
Forties epic, "San Antonio," came on the screen, courtesy of an
error in the TV schedules and my 11-year-old daughter. I couldn 'I
avoid part of it. It was ghastly.
Errol Flynn was a totally Improbable hero. AlelliB Smith
sang, and shouldn't have. And S. Z. (Cuddles) Sakall headed the
supporting cast. The 11-year-old loved it - and she should have,
because it was made for her mental level.
But what impreased me was the eoormous amount of money
spent on seta, spectacular scenes, and a cast (as they used to
say) of Utousands. How they ever got their money back on this
me I'll never !mow.
So chalk up one for TV: There's more honest story-telling,
characterization, faithfulness to historical accuracy, and

genuine drama in an average ''Bonanza''or ''Gunsmolr:e" than in
all that star«udded tripe of yesteryear. It's not that Ben Cart·

wrl&amp;ht and Matt Dillon are all that good -It's just that the richer
of their ancestors were so awful, awful, awful - and expensive,
to boot.
ON THE TV DIAL: Frankly, Utere illll't a dam thing on
television tonight that hBllll't been seen before, ezcept for Ute
Johnny Carson, Dick Cavett and Paul Nuchims shows. So, if you
plan to l[lread a picnic, read a book, spin a record, catch a fish,
cr take a ride, th!B Is a good night to do It.
Movies: "Tomorrow Is Forever," midnight, and "Wyoming
Mall," 4 p.m. Friday, both WBNS.TV.

•.

'

Middleport Upsets Bidwell 7-3
Middleport's "A" Pony
baseball team parlayed three
hits, one a bunt smgie, seven
bases on balls, three hit bats.
men, a balk, and two costly
Bidwell errbrs into seven runs,
good for a 7-3 victory over
Bidwell in Galha-Meigs Pony
League action at Middleport
Wednesday evening .
While that was going on,
Bidwell's covey of sluggers
pounded out 11 hils, mcludmg
two home runs, but producing
only three runs 1
The dlllerence was on the
mound and m the field . For
Middleport, righthander Perk
Ault was tough with the bases
populated an d the defense
behind him was superb when it
had to be. Ault fanned 13,
walked nobody, and hi t nobody.
For Bidwell, lefty Jack
Gardner had control problems
(7 walks), h1t three batsmen
and Middleport baserunners
had a picmc stealing second
base and thtrd base once they
got on
Defensive play of the mght
was made by red·ha ~red M1ke
May of Middleport mnght held
m the Bidwell fourth. After
T1m Stout and Jeff Holian·
baugh singled w1th one out,
Ault fan ned Gregg James for
the second out. Bug Fred
Logan [lied to shor t nghtfJeld.
May made a d1vmg catch after
a long run lor the third out.
In the Bidwell fifth w1th one
out and one on, Gardner's
skimmer through the hole on
the left side was headed for
extra bases, probably a home
run But Middleport's M1ke
Magnotta ranged far to hJs
nghtciose to the line to get the
ball, holdmg Gardner to a
single Auit then fa nned Carl
McMillen and got Gene Payne

Television Log

"O(r..:._()h, I SEE-You want to pay in-CASH. May 1
please see two forms of identification?"

pa~er here ..The Council believes that it must join the his·
~or1c. an~ Btbhcal !radition of the church to the present

ay JSSU&lt;S .. There ts no other way. But If we do it well
and fatrly , tt wll! help society as much as the church.,
In developing the facts of the various parties in the
farm worker debate, the church is bringine a refreshina
breeze to a society already Uttered with 1 " ,
•
releases and farm labor hand-outs Whaf!vower~press
iob:, the poor, the f~rgotten, and the lonely .:; not eo~g
0.
shoved astde tf the Ecumenical Council has an

1

~

\

to ground out to thirdsacker
Chris Miller.
The v1ctory gave Middleport
an 8-5 record w1th Vinton to
play at Vinton Friday.
The loss put Bidwell at 11·2
Followmg a meeting of league
officers and managers at the
game, and by agreement with
Pomeroy manager Woody Call,
B1dwell JS co-champion with
Pomeroy. Pomeroy last week
won a forfeit game over Bid·
well m a ga me Bidwell
protested to no avail.
B1dweii and Pomeroy have

one make-up game remaining,
but each 1s· with Racine. By
agreement, neither will be
played.
HOW ITWENT
Middleport got a 1~ lead m
the bottom of the f~rst when
Ault )ed off walking, stole
second and thtrd, and scored on
Eh Ebersbach's sacri!Jce fly to
centerfield .
Bidwell m the second go t 1ls
quota ol three runs when Gene
Welch led orr with a triple,
Bruce Runyon homered, and
Gardner home red Ault,

Ml•1t Morin Still
0 ut
·- l n T; u ble ?
~o

I

• 1

'

HIRAM, Ohio (UPIJ Cleveland Browns tight end
Milt Morin wants to be paid for
what he does and "not have to
qualify for a group of bonuses
to ga m what I lee! I should be
gelling in the first place."
Morin, a seven.year veteran
who will be Jfl.years-&lt;J!d in Oc·
Iober, remains unsigned w1th
the club. He plans to take a
strong stand, but he could be m
for trouble.
"I'll play m the scrimmage
Saturday (against Cincinnati )
but I won't play in any game
until I've signed a new contract," said Morin Wednesday
afte r his latest fmancJa!
discusswn with Browns' v1ce
president
and
ge neral
manager Harold Sauerbre1
"They've got me agamst the
wall.
"I've come down several
times in the money I'm seek. mg, another $1,000 smce OW'
talk last Saturday. They seem
to think I'll keep coming down
and fmaily get disgusted
enough to take what they're offering. I've got to establish a
strong base salary now."
Morin, who has caught 187

•

career passes for 2,902 yards,
says he has talked to "three or
four hght ends around the
league and I know what they're
getting."
"It 's a lot more than my
salary, but I set my figure 10 to
20 per ce nt below theirs,"
Morin said. ' 'That was my nus·
take."
Morin, who sa1d he prefers
the more dramatic achon of
sitting out some games in order
w get the contract issue settled, may leave himself open
for a legal debate should he de·
cide not to play out his option.
''I'm not going to play out my
option," Morin S8ld. "It may
sound silly not doing that and
refusing to play without a new
contract, but my mind Is made
up . I may turn all the talking
over to a lawyer friend of
mine."

Under the National Football
League's option clause, Morm,
despite the fact he has not negotiated a new contract, is still
under the club's jurisdiction.
He must play out his option, at
a 10 per cent reduction in pay,
in order to gain the right to
negotiate with another club.

Carlson Appointed

Programs for Tonight

•
•
0
mmi8810B@r
C
ABA

and Tomorr:ow . .

.

THURSDAY, JULY 27
- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Con!leq . 6; I Drea m ot
Jeannie 13; Sesame St. 20; Hathayoga 33
6· 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, 13; CBS News 8.10. Folk
Gulfar 33.
7:00 - Elec Co. 20. Cour..,of Our Tlmes 33 ; Let's Make a Deal
3; Dick Van Dyke" What's My Line? 8; Big Red Jubilee 15;
News 6; Wild Wild West 13
7. 30 - I'll See You In Court 4: Dragnel 8; In The Know 10 ·
Chapter 33; Hollywood Squares 3, To Tell The Trulh 6; Wild
Kingdom 10; Mr. Rogers 20.
8 00 - Alias Smith and Jones 13; NBC Advenhure Theatre 3, 4,
15; My World and Welcome To It 8, 10 ; Jean Shepherd's
America 20, 33.
.
8. 30- My ThreeSons8, 10; Jazz Set20, 33.
9. 00 - Longstreet6,13 ; lronsideJ. 4, 15, Hollywood Telev ision
Theatre 20, JJ ; Movie "The Com'edlans" 8. 10
10:00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13; News 20 , 1lobby Darin 3, 4, 15,
Paul Nuchlms 33.
11 :00 - News 3, 4. 6, 10, 13, 15.
1:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S; Dick Cavett 6: Movie "C laudelle
Inglish,'' 13.
12:00 - Mov
ie "Desperate Sea rch" 8; Mov ie "Tomorrow Is
11
6. 00

COME IN to see us
often
we are
READY to ser ve you
to yo ur comple te
sa li sfac!ton. at R1zer

Oil .

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

Forever 10.

1:00 - News 4
1:30 - News 13.
FRIDAY, JULY 28

John Now

6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10

Sesame St. 20.

~q~~~~~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .. July '¥1.19'12

; : ....... ~:;$

6: IS - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8; Blue Ridge Quartet
13; News 6; Herald of Truth 10.
6:45 - Corncob Reporf 3.
·
7:00 - Today 3, 4,15 ; CBS News8, 10
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Underdog 13.
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13 6· Sesa me
Street 33.
' '
8 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6 ; Jack LaLanne 13.
9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Lucl's Toyshop 10; Peyton Place 13 ·
Romper Room 8; Phil Donahue 15 , What Every Woma~
Wants to Know3:' Timmy&amp; Lassle6; Mr. Rogero33.
9.30 - Truth or Con seq. 3; Mike Douglas 6: One Lite lo live 13 ·
Electric Co. 33; My Three Sons 8.
'
10·00 - Dinah Shore 3,15; lucille BalllO. Phil Donahue 8; Dick
Van Dyke 13; Hathayoga 33.
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Beverly Hlllbillie;
~ . 1n-Sc hool Instruction 33. Split Second 13; My Three Sons
0
10:45 - lucille Rivers 6.
11:00 - Family Affair 8, 10; love American Style 13; Com.
munlque6; Sale oftheCentury 3. 15; Elec. Co. 20.
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15; love of Live 8· Bewitched 6 13 .

DAVID POLING, D.D.

.r

l W'" .. " M:om\0\t

Jack of C)ubs
.Is NemeSIS t

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Dear Not:
No way!!!
This guy sounds as if he wants a part-time sex partner to
keep uphlsego.It's plain,ifhewon'tshare you with his family or
friends, that you'll never be more than just something to use and
hide.
You "don't wantto lose him" ? You don 'I even have him!
Move on, before you really get hurt. - SUE

I; •

'

•

.

12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; Password 6·
Local News 10; News 13; Contact 8.
'
12·30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search for Tomorrow 8 tO · Spill
Second 6; Electric Co. 33.
' '
1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Divorce Court 8· Green
. Acres 10; Watch Your Child I 15; International Cookbook 33.
1.30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; let's Make a Deal 6 13 · As The
World Turns 8, 10; Sewing Skills 33.
' '
2:00- Days of Our Llves3, 4,15; Newlywed Game 13· VIr inla
Graham 6; Love Is Splendored Thing 8 10 · Socletle~ In fran
sltlon 33.
' '
·
2· 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Guiding Light 6 10
Evening at P0ps 33.
' '
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6 13 · Secret
Storm 8, 10; Tennis Anyone? 33.
' '
3·30-; Return t~ Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; Edge of Night 8, 10·
. JeffsColllo13 ; 0ffTheRecord33;0neLifetoLive6
'
4.00
M
r.
Ca
rtoon
3;
Somserset
15;
Sesame
20,
33;
Fllntslones
. 6• 13 ; 8a1man 8; Movie "Wyoming Mall" 10.
4.30 - GreenAcresJ: I Love lucy6; VIrginian 8; Password 13
lhrv Griffin 4: Andy Griffith 15.
'
5:00- If Takes A Thief 4; Wagon Train 3; Maverick 13 . El
Co. 33; Mister Rogero20; Dlclt Van Dyke 15 · Big Valle' 6 ec.
s;JO - Marshall Dillon 15 ; Electric Co. 33.'
Y •
6.00 - News3,4,8, 10.15; NBCNewsB,10; Truth or Conseq 6 · 1
. Dream of Jeannle13; Sesame 51.20; Hathayoga 33.
· '
7. 00 - Porter Wagoner 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6. tO; Whats
My Line1 8; Eloc. Co. 20; Wild, Wild West 13· Tom Jones 15 ·
Mast-'"" ""~ 1 Theatre 33.

'

•

NE W YORK (UPI J- Robert
Carlson became the Amencan
Basketball Association 's third
commissiOner today w1th a
prom1se "to serve as long as
they need me" and the hope
tha t he would be given
authority denied to his prede·
cessor, Jack Dolph.
The 47-year-oid Wall Street
attorney, who has represented
the ABA in many legal hassles
during the last lew years, was
chose n Wednesda y by the
league trustees.
"I will serve as long as they
need me," he said. " ...1£ a
merger with the National
Basketball Association occurs
I would go back to the firm.
"But we have to make plans
to operate and be successful on
our own," he contmued. "We
will be a !().team league this
year·\ I am not at liberty to
discuss wh1ch franchise will be
added but an announcement
will be made within the next
week .''
The 11-team ABA or 1971-72
became a nine-team league
when the Pittsburgh and

Floridian teams gave up their
franchises .
Carlson said one ol his first
tasks will be to obtain a
television package for the ABA
-an area m which the league
has lagged badly behind the
rival NBA.
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Deuce, driven by Charles
Hopkins, passed two horses in
the last 25 yards to wm the
featured pace at Scioto Downs
Wednesday night by a neck
over Chma Doll.
The wmner covered the mUe
in 2:04 2-5.
Bomb's Boo Boo (3) woo the
!Jrst race and Sweet and Easy
(3) the second to return $10.40
in the daily double.
The crowd of 4,547 wagered
$207,529.
NICKLAUS RECOVERING
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Jack Nicklaus was expected to
be released today from
Universtty Hospital here where
he underwent surgery on an
infected right index linger .
"We are going day by day,"
his doctor said. "Mter we look
at it today, we'll know a little
more at that time."
REDS RESUME ACTION
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Fred
Norman will be on the mound
tonight when last-place San
Diego opens a three-game
series against the National
League West leaders, Cln·
CJnnatl.
Norman, ii-7, will be opposed
by
Cincmnati's
Jack
Billingham, 6-9.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF

the

MEIGS ·MASON AREA
CHESTER L, TANNEHILL ,

'

'

7:30-To Tell the Truth 6: Dragnet 8; Adam.J2 3; I Dream of
Jeann1e4; Governor and J. J. 10; Mr. Rogers20
·
8:00 - Washington Wee!&lt; In ReYiew 20· O'Hara s Trea
8; Book Beat33; Brady Bunch6.13· Partners3 4 IS
sury
8:30Ch- Pa~1dge Family 6. 13; Space Between' Words 20, 33 ,
rono 1vv 3, 4, 15.
9:00- Room 227, 13; Olympians '72 6; Movie "Island of love"
8; Movie "The Jayhawkers" 10.
·
9:~;t~t~o6~t ~~~ng 20, 33; NBC News Speclal3, 4, 15: All siar
''3:00-News 20; Doln' it 33.
l :30- Ur. )lmon Locke 3; Dr. In The House 4 · Rollin' on River
IS: News 20; Washington Week In Review' 33
11 :00-NewS3,4,6,8,10,13, 15 .
·•
11 :30 - Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 15; Movie "Harum
Sc~rum" 8; Movie "The Strangler" 10.
1 : ~:- Roller Derby 4; Movie "HOr'O!,' ~otel" 10; Movie "·30-"
2:00- News 4.
'
3 : ~ - Newt 13.

.

u

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

COMING SOON!
e----un;c

7L7L

Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Publi s hed daily

except

Saturday by The Ot110 Valley
Pub l1s h lno Company, 111

Coun Sf. Pomeroy . Ohio,
liS769. Bus tness Off•te Phone
992 2156, Ed1lorial Phone 992

1157

Sec ond crass postage pa 1d at
Pomeroy , Oh 10 .
National advertising~
representative
eottlnetn .
Gallagher, Inc , 12 East •2nd
St . , New York C1ty, New York
IH Subscrtplion rates · oe .
ll ¥ered by c arr,er whtre
avat lllble SO cents per week ; •
By Motor Route where cerritr

serv1ce not availlble : One
month Sl 75

By ma11 in Oh io

and W va .. One ')lear su 00
Si x

months

$7 25 .

~ha ken, managed to !an Me· (
Millen f•Jr the first out, allowed .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Gene Payne to single, fanned
Stout, gave up a second smg!e
to Hollanbaugh, imt fanned
power-Jntter Greg J ames to get
out or the inning.
Middleport got five runs in
Ute third. Agam Ault led off
with a walk. Ebersbach skted
out to cen ter, but Terry
Whitlatch got an infield single
and Rick Stobart singled both
runner s home. Magnotta
walked, Chnss Miller fanned
for the second out, and Steve
Walburn walked to load the
bases. Don Vaughan's fly ball
into short rig htfield was
almost, but not quit.! caug ht,
two runs scoring. Then Stobart
stole home. Vaughan was
thrown out trying to steal thtrd
ending the inning.
Middleport got its seventh
run tn the sixth on two walks
. and two htl batsmen, a run
being forced in.
Bidwell
030 000 1}-3 11 2
Midd 'A'
105 001 X-7 3 1
Gardner and Stout. Ault and
Stcbart Umpires, A. Stobart,
plate ; C. Ingles, bases.
PONY STANDINGS
Won Lost
11
2
Pomeroy
11
2
Bidwell
8
5
Midd. 'A'
6
7
Cheshie
4
5
Rae me
2
Southwestern
10
2 10
Vinton
0 14
Midd. 'B'

Racine in

Ma ior league Standin9s
By United Press lnternattonal
Nahonal League

P1llsburgh
New York
St LOUIS
Chicago
Mon t real

RACINE - Racine won both
ends of a doubleheader 6-2 and
12-1 m Galha-Meigs Pony
League action Wednesday
night at Racme. Racine is now
5-4 on the year while Vmton is
2-10.
In Ute first game Pete Sayre

511 10
511 10
460 141f?

45 43
46 44
40 47

Philadelphia 31 57 352 24
West
w. I. pet. g.b.

Cincinnati

Houston

55 33 .625

51 41 554

6

Los Angeles
47 42 528 81/2
Atlanta
42 49 462 l41f-l
San Francisco 41 52 441 W h
San D•ego
33 56 371 22 112
No games Wednesday

. Today's Probable Pitcher&gt;
IAll limes EDTl
St. louis !Cleveland 11 -5) at

Montreal (M oor e 2 4), 8 p m .

San Franc•sco (Man cha l 4 10)

at Atlanta (Mclam 1-lL 8 p.m.
los Angeles !Osteen 10·71 at
Houston IForsch S.Sl . 8:30p.m.
San Diego !Norman 5-71 at
Cincmnali (Bill&gt;ngham 6-9), 8
pm
Ch•cago (Jenkms

12-9 and

Hooton 7-8) at Philadelphia

(Reynolds 0-6 and Champ1on 4-

111 2. 5·35 p.m
New York IKoosman 7·5 and
Matlack 9 5) at Pittsburgh
(Bnles 9 3 and Moose 5-6) 2,
6 05 p m

Fnday's Games
St L ou1s al Montreat

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Billy Martin, a iii-year-old
from Palos Verdes, Calif. , who
plays so well he was put in the
JUrnors 16-to·IB class, goes
agamst top-seeded Fred de
Jesus of Santurce, P R., in the
quarterfmals today 1n the
Western Open Juniors and
Boys Tennis Championships.
Martin has been scouting De
Jesus, who, be&lt;::ause he JS 18 JS
mehgible for this tournament
after this year. De Jesus won
the boys title m 1969 and 1970.
"Fred will run you to death,"
says Martin. "That's how he
beats a lot of guys .''
De Jesus beat Bill Matyastik
of Waco, Tex., 6-1, 6-2, Wed·
nesday while Martm downed
15th seeded Grey King of
Gainesville, Fla., 7-9, 6-4.
John Holla&lt;t;·, of La Jolla,
Calif., the lOth junior seed,
upset fifth-seeded Victor
Amaya of Holland, Mich.,
Wednesday, 6-5, 6-4. In other
juniors action, Brian Teacher
of San Diego, Calif., the second
seed, beat Nick Saviano of Los
Altos, Calif., 3-9, 6-3, 7-6.
David Parker of Galesburg,

m., downed Craig Johnson of Lakeland, Fla., today.
Los Angeles, 6-1, 6-7, ~. while
In junior doubles action,~
4th seeded Vitas Gerulatis of seeded Martin and TreJ
Howard Beach, N.Y., beat 9th· Waltke, of St. Louis, lint
seeded Joe Edles of Long downed Mark Millikan ol m.
Beach, Calif., ~. 6-1.
dianapolls and Brunner Smllb
Third-seeded Patrick Dupre of Sarasolfl, Fla., 1).2, 6-1, U.O
of Birmingham, Ala., ellDlinal· beat SU!wart Keller of PhoeDIK
ed Billy Brock of Norfolk , Va., and Butch Walts of Fresno,
7-6, 6-1. Eric Friedler of Calif., 6-4, 6-4.
Evanston, Ill., beat Gary Plock
The
top-8eeded
b071
of Lowsvilie, Ky., 6-2, 6-4.
doubles- ·Bruce MaMOn and
Top-seeded boy Jack Gor· Perry Wrighl--i!ot by Tim
such or St. Louis Wednesday Conlin of Vienna, Ohio, and
beat Richard Finger of Bob Dresler of Pepper Pike,
Houston, 6-0, 6-1. He meets Ohio, 1).1, 6-J, and Ron Meyers
tenUt..seeded Dan McKown of and Mike Sassano, 7-6, 6-J.

fO~ BET!~
EATING
&gt;\ I
~~

CAN
PRESTO
IT
MIRRO.MATIC
YOURSELF IN A

PRESSURE CANNER

Ch1cago at Ph1ladelph•a
New York at Pi tt. n1ght

773·5583

Los Ang eles at Houston, n ight
San D1 ego at C1n, night
Amencan League

Detro1t
Baltimore

Boston

New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee

Oakland
Mmnesota
. Kansas City
Cal1fornia
Tex:as

East
w. I.
51 37
5() 38
45 41

Hours:
7 a. m.

San Fran at Atlan ta. night

Ch•cago

Two Wins

East
w. I. pet. g.b.
55 33 625
49 38 563 5'12

Quarterfinals Underway

pet. g.b.
.580
.568 1
.523 5

42 43 .494

]1 12

49 41 .544

6lf2

36 51 .414 J41J,
35 52 .402 151;,
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
56 35 .615
45 42 .517 9
44 45 .494 11

40 52 .435 l61f2
37 53 .411 l81f2

No games Wednesday
Today's Probable Pitchers
I All times EDTI
Minnesota IBiyleven 9·12) at
Oakland !Holtzman 12-8) , 10:30
p.m.
Texas IBroberg 5-8) at

AHEAD OF 1971
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Herve
Filion, who won a record 543
races and nearly $2 milhon m
prize money last year, is run·
ning ahead of 1971's schedule
this year, according to the
United States
Trotting
Association.
With five months of the
season to go, Fllion has 266
race wins and more Ulan $1
million in earnings.
Joe Marsh Jr . is second in
wins wiUt 164 and Del Insko is
second in earnings with
$740,599, accordmg to figures
through July 22.

MASON, W. VA.
to 9 p. m. Friday &amp; Saturday

VilLAGE
PHARMACY
lor Your

DRUG* NEEDS

Callforn1a (A llen 2-7), 11 p.m

Cleve land (T1drow 7·91 at
Balt1more !Dobson 12·81. 7:30
pm .
struck out seven and walked
Boston IPatt1n 8-81 at New
York
IKI1ne 9-41. 7.30 p.m.
only three hatters m hur!irig a
Kan sas C1ty (Nel son 2 4 and
sparkling four-hitter for Spl!ttorff 9-51 at Ch1cago (Wood
Racme . J Norman started for 15-10 and Bradley 10-9) , 2. 6:30
Vmton and R. Justus came on p m.
Detroit ll olich 17-6 and
in the third.
Coleman 12 8) at Milwaukee
Hitters for the winners were (Parsons 8 7 and Ryer son 2 1),
Greg Dunning with a double 2, 6 p m
Friday's Game$ 1
-and two singles, Mitoh Nease a M 1nn esota
at Oakland, n1ght
double and single, Jim Riffle a Texas at California , night
double, and David Jenkms and Kansas C1 ty at Chicago. night
at Baltimore night
Steve Hendricks, each had a Cleveland
Detro it at Mil wau kee, night
single.
Boston at N. Y., 2, tw in1ght
Vmton hitters were Norman
with a triple and single, T.
Norman, and T. Justus each a
Cheshire Claims
single.
Pete Sayre was even better
in the second game, allowing
only three hits, walking none, Pee Wee Crown
and fanning four while
Home runs by Bruce Gilmore
collecting a triple and Utree
and
Tim Price behind the nosingles at the plate . Quite a
performance for a 15-year-old hit pitching ol Jackie Minor
gave Cheshire a ~ victory
boy.
M. Justus started on the hill over Addaville Wednesday
for Vinton and was relieved by night m the championship
T. Norman in the third and R. game of the Ohio Valley Pee
Wee League.
Justus m the fourth.
Coach Ca rl Wamsley's
Racine hitters besides Sayre
Cheshire
team finished with an
were John Salser with two
singles, Nease a double, and overall 7·1 record. Coach Larry
Riffle and Dunning each a Sheets' Addaville team took
single. J. Norman, Issac, and second place with a 1).2 mark.
Davis all had a single for
Vinton's three hits.
FIRST GAME
LOSE UGLY FAT
Vinton
001 111-2 4
losing we1ght t~doy~r
Racine
005 10-6 8 Start
money ba ck . MONAD X I a
tln_y tablet and easy o t e.
SECOND GAME
MONAD EX will help curb our
Vinton
000 01- 1 3 desire for e&gt;&lt;cen food. Eat less
weigh le ss Contains no
Racine
431 4x-12 8 dangerous
drug s and wil l not
you
nervous
No
FIRST GAME: J . Norman make
strenuous ex:erclse . Change
(LP), R. Justus (3) and your life . . start todoy .
MONAOEX costs S3.00 tor a 20
Tackett. Sayre and Dunning. day
supply . Large economy size
SECOND GAME : M. Justus Is SS.OO. Lose ug ly fat or your
money will be refunded with no
(LP), T. Norman (3), R. Justus t~uestrona
asked . MONAOEX is
with this guarantee by :
(4), and Tackett. Sayre and sold
Swisher &amp; Lohse Oru,s, 112 E.
Dunning.
M1 in, Pomeroy &amp; Du ton Drug

7 a . m . to5 : 30 p.m . Oa1ly

STOCK YOIIR M!DICIN! CH!ST

IN EIGHTH PLACE
MINDEN, Nev. (UPI )
DJCk Schroeder of Bryan, Ohio,
was in eighth place going mto
the final two flights of the
National Soaring Cham·
p10nships here.
Schroeder had 5,826 points.
The leaders were Ray Gimney
of ReilwoOd .City, Calif., 'lind
l'eter Newgard of Sacramento,
Ca~ each wtth 6,302 points.
Fifty-three contestants were
entered in the competion ,
which involves flighls in all di·
rectwns from the local airport.

'THE CR!ATOR 01'
REASONAII.I! DRUG PlllaS"

.'

When you
think of
Loans or
Financing •. •

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.•,.J V 'I)

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NOW

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Store, Middleport. M•ll Orden
Filled .

Kerm Says:

THANK YOU
FOR MAKING HIS SALE
LAST WEEKEND

Ctty Loan is the answer We make
quick , convenient si gnat ur e loans in
amounts up to $1000 . . . .. and larger loans for bill
consolidation , eme rg encies , tr ave l and o\her
family expenses.
Wh en you buy anyth ing which requires financing ,
we have a plan to lit you r budget. We're on the local
scene and give fa st se rvi ce. It wi ll always pay to
ask your dealer for thrifty City Loan "Action-Plan
Financing."

SUCH ASUCCESS!

i$ the an$wer

However, he still has quite a few Real
Good Buys left. It will be wortli your
while to take your car or take the ferry
to see what is left at Greatly Reduced
Prices.

"Kerm:. Komer"

New York Clothing House

PH~

125 E. MAIN

992-2171

POMEROY, 0.

I

Three

monttls u .so . Subscr•phon

pr tc e includes Sunday Tlmts·
Senttnel.

(j

BASEBAU
STANDINGS

POMEROY, OHIO

1912 • FINANCING OHIO PEOPLE .FOR 60 YEARS • 1972

�..
4 ~The Da_ily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pomeroy, 0., July 27,1972

Bengals Practicing
WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UPI)- The Cincinnati
Bengals are practicing what
they refer tn as th.e "hat drill."
Offensive line coach Bill
Johnson puts his hal on the
groW&gt;d several yards behind
the line of scrimmage. The hat
represents the quarterback.
Then · an offensive · uneman
·squares off against a defensive
lineman and the battle begins.
The offensive player tries to
get to the quarterback, the defensive player tries tn stop

offense and defense,': says offensive tackle Rufus Mayes.
"It gives the defensive linemen a chance to work on their
moves and it gives us a chance
to work on pass protection."
Veteran guard Pat Matson
and defensive tackle Mike Reid
always seem to draw each other as opponents and their battles have been judged some of
the toughest of training camp.
"There's a lot of pride in~
volved," said Mayes. "Nobody
likes to look bad. And it makes
him.
you a better person if you get
"It's a good drill for both the beat.
11

Income Up 7%
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio's
personal income rate in May
was $47.4 billion, up 7 per cent
from the level of a year ago,
the Ohio State University
· Center for Business and Economic Research reported
Wednesday.
The rate for the first five
months of 1972 also was 7 per
cent above the corresponding
1971 period, the center said.
The center reported a 4 per
cent increase in May-to-May
payrolls for production
workers and other nonsupervisory employes, and a 4
per cent increase in the first
five months of 1972 compared
to the corresponding 1971
period.
This. category does not include agricultural, governmental or public education

iI

employes.
All counties for Ohio's eight
major cities showed May-toMay payroll gains except
Cincinnati - Hamilton County,
down 1 per cent Gains were
Akron -Summit, and Cleveland
·Cuyahoga, 5 per cent; Canton
· Stark and Columbus .
Franklin, 6 per cent; Dayton .
Montgomery, 3 per cent;
Toledo · Lucas, 7 per cent, and
Youngstown • Mahonir.g, 1 per
cent.
Payrolls in Ohio's construction industry in May were
down 8 per cent from a year
ago, and down 5per cent for the
five-month period. Mines and
quarries showed a 14 per cent
increase from May to May and
an 11 per cent decline for the
first five months.

Disclosure Hurt Ticket
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Disclosures by Democratic
vice presidential candidate
Thomas F . Eagleton of
treatment for nervousness and
elthaustion probably will hurt
the Democratic ticket in Ohio
thbr fall, Gov. John J. Gilligan
said Wednesday.
Eagleton, a U.S. senator
from Missouri, should have
told Sen. George McGovern,
the Democratic presidential
nominee, about the treatments
before he agreed to become
McGovern's running mate,
Gilligan said.
"I .think It's bound to have

some effect," Gilligan, a
Democrat, said of Eagleton's
disclosure Tuesday that he had
been hospitalized three times
in the past 12 years.
"Mental or emotional
illnesses are still scare terms
to some people - how many I
don't know,'' Gilligan said. " II
cannot be a plus."
Gilligan said he agreed with
Eagleton's handling of the
situation by reporting voluntarily of the hospitalizations.
"I must say, however, I think
he might have told Sen .
McGovern at the time he was
invited tn be on the ticket."

5-Th Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., July '¥/, 1m

!lf''i:i:;=::,,,,,,,,,,~X'~,,,,,,,,,,,,,. ,~~~,~,,,,,,,*,~''' ' ' ' '&lt;-''@m-~'\W-''!1

ISpo~!.!~'!.t!e

IFirStTime In Friday's Tilt

UPI Sports Edilor
ATLANTA (UPI)-Carefree, yoWlg, healthy and collecting
better than a thousand bucks a week for doing whatever he
pleases, and that includes nothing, Dave Bristol looks like the
living, breathing model of the man who has everything.
Looks have a wa~ or being deceiving, though.
Get Dave Bristol to bare some of his soul and be 'll surprise you
by confiding he really has nothing.
Dave Bristol is what they call an obsessive compulsive.
He Misses Baseblll
The thing he's compulsively obsessive about is work. He loves
it. The more the better. Even Frank Lane, the gen•ral manager
of the Milwaukee Brewers who fired Bristol two months ago, will
tell y9u he's never seen a harder worker in his life, and Lane has
been aroWld a long, long time.
Dave Brilrtnl, who's 3!1 and could pass for maybe 10 years
younger, showed up here for the All .Star game, ostensibly to see
some of his old baseball buddies, and naturally one of the first
things they asked him was whether he missed baseball."
"Do I?" said Dave Brilrtol, those big blue eyes of his b~mlng
•a mile wide.
"Everyday a little bit more. Every day I set aside a little time
tn meditate about baseball. I try to figure out what I d(d wrong
and how I can do better next time because I've got a long time
ahead of me. l read those boxscores assiduously every day."
Several Clubs Interested
Even though he's no longer working for them, the Brewers
keep paying Bdstol every two weeks on the basis of his $60,000-ayear contract.
Ali the other ball clubs know Bristol would much rather work
than sit around at home in Andrews, N.C., and you keep hearing
a lot of things about where he could wind up next.
You keep hearing 1louston is interested in Dave Bristol. You
• know the Phillies are because they called him before they let go
Frank Lucchesi, presumably to ask his advice about some
American League players, which is the oldest dodge in the world
when you wish to establish contact with a prospective manager
without waking up the whole county. You also know the Indians
offered Bristol the managership last fall before they gave it to
Ken Aspromonte, and Bristol turned down the job tn stay with the
Brewers.
One thing you can make book on: Dave Brbrtol will be back in
baseball. Preferably managing in the big leagues, but one way or
another he'll be back. He's an obsessive compulsive, a doer, who
simply can't sit still, and won't very long.

Discipline Broke Down
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William B. Saxhe, R-Ohio,
charged today end-the-war
moves were succeeding in
Congress because Republican
' Party discipline had declined
in the failure of White House
liaison with the GOP leadership.
Saxbe's comments carne at a
news conference a day after
the Senate passed an arnendmentro 'stop u.s. involvement
in Indochina within four
months, but then killed it by
defeating the foreign aid bill it
was attached to.
"The Republicans were

Cowboys Face Triple OptiQn

running aroWld like chickens
with their heads cut off&gt;
Saxhe said.
He placed the blame for no
liaison with both the President
and the Republican National
Committee.
"The leadership has not had
adequate access with the White
House," the Ohio Republican
added .
Saxhe, a regional GOP whip,
said tl\at sometimes the party
word ''never gets passed on
down to me."
"We've got to get shaped up.
I know it the President's desire
isn't getting through. "It's the
same thing in the house."

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(UPI)-The triple option with
all its complexities will probably get "a full tryout Friday
night for the first time against
a professional football club.
Tom Landry, as much as
anyone, Is curious as tn what
the results will be.
'l,'he College Ali.Stars . are
expected to run some triple
option plays against the Super
Bowl champion
Dallas
Cowboys in the opening game
of the pro football season with
J.erry Tagge of national
champion Nebraska quarterbackiing the offense.
''Thill is an intriguing game
for a lot of people," said
Landry on the eve of his club's
departure for Chicago. "This
was all the off-season talk
about how the pros would
defense the triple option.
"The way this game goes will
Influence some (professional
football) people one way or

another. I think the option will say :
''Our defense will have a real
work in the pros, but I don't
think it would work as a steady
diet. I don't think your quarterbacking would last in the

SUPER PLENAMINS *

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pros. 11

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Not only will the pros be
interested in seeing bow the
allstars
the option, but tbey
will be interested in seeing how
the Cowboys go about defending it. Landry, of course, Is
not too keen on giving out
technical specifics, but he does

72

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TOURNEYS SET
There will be a slo-pitch
A.S.A. softball tournament for
women on August 4, 5 and 6 and
for men on August 11, 12 and 13
at Nelsonville, Ohio. For information call Fred Cluff at
614..193-3120. The tournaments
are sponsored by the Barons
Softball Team of Athens.

Kennedy's adrenal condition
was a "far more serious
problem for a president tn have
than something like this."
Commenting on the Missouri
D•mocrat's revelation, Dr.
David Wade, Texas Commissioner of Mental Healtu and
Mental Retardation, said that
electric shock treatment "has
no lasting effects whatever."
"This thing cuts through
pretty rapidly,'' he added,

STRONG PITCHING
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI)Dover MarUte and Zane Bre)'ll
exhibited strong pitching Wednesday night tn advance in the
losers' bracket of the state Na·
tiona! Baseball Congress
Tournament here.
Dover pitcher John Haupt
threw a tw~itter to beat
Zanesville Senior Pioneers 4-2.
Terry Watton of Zane Grey
gave up three hits as he
blanked Wooster 7-0.

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United Press Internalional
Psychiatrists generally
agreed Wednesday that the
electric shock therapy undergone by vice presidential
candidate Sen. Thomas
Eagleton was commonplace
and "should not impede a man
from holding high office."
Dr. Donald LWlde, Stanford
University Department of
Psychology said a lot of people
have mistaken ideas about
electro convulsive treatments. •
He said that properly administered, it is a very effective treatment.
Lunde said President John F.

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THISTLEDOWN RESULTS
CLEVELAND (UPI I- Racy
Road won the featured allowance race at Thistledown Wednesday after Tapped In was
dropped tn last place for interference.
·
Racy Road covered the six
furlong~~ in 1:12.4 and paid
f5.60, $3.20 and $2.411. Under
Arrest was second with Road
To Royality third.
Showmanship and Lucky
Brian (1-8) paid $74 on the dally
double.
Attendance was 4,121 with a
hllndle ol $355,153 on the 10..
race program.

O~iiO

*
* * * * * * *- * * * * * * **

CUSTER, S.D. (UPI)Democratlc presidential
nominee George S. McGovern
said •Wednesday he would not
be "stampeded" by demands
that he remove Sen. Thomas S.
Eagleton from the ticket.
McGovern, standing in front
ol his vacation cabin in the
Black Hills, steadfastly maintained his support for Eagletnn
in a brief interview with UP!
and said he had ''no intentions"
of accepling Eagleton's offer to
C!llil as the vice presidential
candidate.
McGovern said he had not
seen telegrams corning into his
camp urging him to replace
Eagleton as a result of
disclosures by the vice presidential nominee that he was
under a psychiatrist's care for

a nervous condition on three
occasions between 1960 and
1966. Eagletnn did not tell
McGovern of his medical past
when he was selected to run as
vice president .
McGovern denied as "1,000
per cent untrue" reports that
he was waiting for public
OPinion to develop before a

Shades .·or

final decision is made.
"I'm not going to be stampeded,". he said. "I am cer·
tainly not going to let a handful
of telegrams determine public
policy ."
McGovern insisted he knew
nothing of reports from his ·
staff that some of his key
financial advisers were "disSAXBE UNDECIDED
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Wllllam B. Saxhe, R·
Ohio, says he Is not
"seriously considering"
running for governor in 1974
Instead of seeking a second
Senate term.
"I'm not going to do or say
anything until after the 197%

(Continued from page I)
19th. The two finalists winners
or the single elimination
matches will then meet the
next day on August 20th for a
five game championship
match to determine the
Southeastern · Ohio Chess
Champion.
election," Saxbe said at a
All persons interested in news conference Wed·
taking part in the tournament nesday. "I'm going to be
should send their name and busy In 197Z aiding the GOP
address to: Chess Cham- national and local cam·
PLEASANT VALLEY
pionship, Box 270, Wellston, palgns." Saxbe was asked
DISCHARGES: William Ohio. All necessary detailed about his plans after rumors
Harbison, Mason; Penny information about the tour- had circulated that he might
Rainey, Apple Grove; Pearl nament and your playing time seek the
Republican
Snyder, Ewington, 0.; Billy will be sent to you. All entries nomination lor governor.
Jones, Point Pleasant; must be received no later than
Sherman Bonecutter, August 9.
Gallipolia; Mrs. David Beaver
There
are
no
nge
and daughter, Gallipolis; Mrs. requirements and $5 entry fee
Marian Riffle, daughter, MI. will be collected the iirst day of
Alto; Mrs. Charles Waugh, the tournament.
Point Pleasant ; Michele • Chess is perhaps the oldest
Roush, Hurricane; Oden and certainly the most popular
Pearson, Point Pleasant; Mrs. game In the world. So everyone
Richard Woodyard, Harold and who can play chess in the
Edna Darst, Belinda Uvely, Southeastern Ohio area and
Albert Sisson, all Point would !Ike to test their abilities,
Pleasanl.
should join In the touranament.
· Who knows you may be
WASHINGTON ( UPI )Southeastern Ohio's 1972 Chess
President
Nixon says his adChampion .
ministration has met its
election-year goal of cutting in
half the rate by which inflation
BEAUTY SALON
TWO FINED
is eroding the buying power of
Put body back In limp hair
Two defendants were fined in the dol(ar.
through sweltering summer
Pomeroy Mayor William
In preview of its strategy for
days. Take advantage of lhls
Baronlck's Court Wednesday handling the economic issue in
night. Jerry Hubbard, 18, the Nov. 7 election campaign,
$10.00
Syracuse,
was fined $10 and the White House promised
PERMANENT WAVE
costs for squealing tires and there would be no tax increase
AUG . I THRU AUG . 5
Dorsa Parsons, 20, Racine, $5 next year and pointed with
and costs, assured clear pride to tax cuts enacted since
Call 992-7056
distance .
Nixon took office.
"We have achieved a substantial sucess in our battle
against the inflation we
inherited in 1969," Nixon said
in a message to Congress
Wednesday. "Instead of the
'ljlore than 6 per cent ofj~. wt.
are now . . .o a rate bf 2.f1
•
per cent ptr~r. In0ati6n haS '
been cut in half."
Nixon did not explain the
figures but he apparently
referred to the Department of
Labor's Consumer Price Index. The index last montt. was
2.9 per cent higher than the
figure for JW&gt;e of 1971.
Nixon did not mention a
Department of Agriculture report that food prices rose 3.6
Strike il rich wilh lhis t4K gold,17
jewel timepiece ... Caravelle by
per cent in the last year. With
Bulo"Ja. Extraordinarily low·priced
food
prices rising faster than
... a solid !old classic and gu.uother
prices, Democratic
anteed by Bu o..-a. Give it to someone you love or hoard it yourself .
critics may concentrate on the
cost of eating instead of the
overall cost of living.
John D. Ehrlichrnan, Nixon's
chief domestic adviser, tnld
newsmen at the Whiie House
that the administration is

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'inancial contributor say anything to me," he said. "I
haven 't seen any kind of
telegram or letter or
anything ."

mayoo" about the problem.
raising the possibility that it
will affect his ability to supporl
a sustaiqed campaign.
"I haven't had a single

Congress Praised
For Big Spending
WASHINGTON
(UPI) Nobel prize-winning economist
Paul
A.
Samuelson
congratulated Congress today
for producing multibilliondollar deficits and urged it not
to relax its efforts now.
In testimony prepared for
Congress' Joint Economic
Committee: Samuelson said
deficit spending over the past
few years was solely responsible for the healthy state of
today's economy, with employment rising, unemployment dropping and profits
soaring.
"Congress has responsibly
insisted upon budget deficits
that by histnrical standards
would have been considered
large," he said, but which have
been shown "to be vitally
necessary to turn an anemic
expansion into a vigorous one.''
He contrasted the economy's
vigor with the sluggish growth

GOP Ordered
To Lay Off
Medical Point

of the Eisenhower administration, when, he said, Congress
heeded administration
"warning against the excesses
of Sodom and Gomorrah" and
trimmed government spen' ding .
Samuelson, a professor at
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, is one of a number
of economists who believes
increased government red ink
spending is necessary to take
up the slack when private
spending dries up and the
economy dawdles.
His advice stood in sharp
contrast with a message
President Nixon sent to Capitol
Hill Wednesday warning that a
deficit this year in excess of the
one he had proposed would be
hurtful. ·
"The inevitable result would
be higher taxes and more income~ating inflation in the
form of higher prices,'' Nixon
said.

NEW YORK (UP! )
President Nixon has ordered
his staff not to make Sen .
Thomas F. Eagleton's past
health problems a campaign
issue, campaign director Clark
McGregor said today·
McGregor told a news
conference at the Roosevelt
Hotel, " The mandate 'and
directive from the President is
that no one connected with him
would have any comment to
make about this very personal
matter . I concur 100 per cent." .
McGregor added later that
voters consider a wide range of
issues when they cast. their
ballot&amp; and•that it was the ·duty
of the candidates to assist them
in their consideration of policy
matters, not personalities.
"The individual citizens will
decide for themselves on "this
hosissue
(Eagleton's
pitalization three times
between 1960 and 1966 for
" nervous exhaustion and
fatigue),' ' McGregor said,
"and they need no assistance
from me ."
convinced It can operate next
year without higher taxes.
Nixon emphasized the tax
cuts voted by Congress since he
was inaugurated in 1969.
"We have cut the personal
income tax so that a family of
four with an income of fl;,OOO
has had its individual income
taxes reduced by 66 per cent
since 1969, and a family of four
with an income ~f $10,000 has
had its income taxes reduced
by 26 per cent since that date."

(Continued from page I)
At 12:30p. m. the Pomeroy High School !land and Middleport
High School Band sirnullltaneously marched from the center of
their towns tn the Ohio approach to the llridge. There they were
met by the Gallipolis band and paraded across the bridge.
Ernest Johnson and David Goodwin climbed the heights of
the structure tn deck it out with national colors. The bunting was
supplied by Charles McMaster's committee or Middleport
business and professional men. Glenroy Ewing of Pomeroy was
in charge of bridge decorations:
At 1:30 p.m. the crowd gathered around the red, white and
blue decorated speakers' platform where Judge Edgar Ervin
made the opening address. This was also the occasion for
rededication of the Blue and Gray Trail which connects
Tidewater, ih Virginia to Benton Harbor, Mich.
The freeing of the bridge was a time of rejoicing by cities all
along the scenic route.
Six mayors of communities in tri-county area and one acting
mayor were introduced: George Howell, Pomeroy; B. W.
Krodel, Pt. Pleasant; H. W. Craig, Middleport; John Raybould,
Mason; .John Dillon and J. V. McGrew, New Haven and Hartford,
and Judge William Jones, acting Mayor of Gallipolis.
Raymond Musgrave, West Virginia State Senator, was introduced as was F. G. Gans or the U.S. Disrict Engineers.
Judge Ervin, Middleport, was Master of Ceremonies. Rev.
W. L. Gearhart, Mason; Barto Jones, Ohio-W. Va . Tri.County
bidustrial Association, and Sen. Tom Jenkins of Ohio were introduced.
This was a great day ! Free trade between Ohio and West
Virginia was made possible and friendship between these two
great states was cemented. This has been a lasting friendship
through the years.
"It is my belief, orienting ourselves in terms of time and
events, we are at the beginning of mighty changes in our way of
working and living and I look upon our future as a great opportunity of scaling undreamed of heights", is a quotation from
one of the speeches made that day.
, And now, the stately bridge stands all but deserted, bot
repairs will be made. If weather permits, the bridge will be reopened by next Monday. The cars' lights again will make a
beautiful scene each evening, one I never tire of enjoying from
my front porch.

PARIS (UPI)- The United
States, calling a cease-fire the
key to peace in Indochina,
proposed tnday an end to the
fighting and the release of
American prisoners of war,
followed by a military withdrawa! .
The Communists rejected
theofferandsaidthecease-fire
could come only after Arnerican troops were sent home.
Chief Hanoi delegate Xuan
Thuy said u .S. demands for a
cease-fire and release of
prisoners-followed by a U.S.
military pullout four months
later-left political issues
unanswered.
"As regards the cease-lire,
we have mai)Y tirnes made' it
clear that after agreement on
all the military and political
questions, a cease-fire would
iake place,'' he said. " Only
such a cease..fire would ensure
laSting peace. This is a correct
way of posing the problem. The
United States has previously
agreed to it, why does it change
its views now?"
u.s. Ambassador William J.
Porter told the 15:/nd weekl y
negotiating session that a
RIGHT UPHELD
AKRON (UP I) - The
Cl eveland
Electric
Illuminating Co.'s right to
construct 345,000-volt transmission lines through Macedonia was upheld Wednesday by the Summit CoW&gt;ty
Court of Appeals. Wednesday's
ruling affirms the ruling
previously handed down by the
Summit CoW&gt;ly Common Pleas
Court.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downBODY RECOVERED
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. was
AVON
LAKE, Ohio (UP!)80 degrees under partly cloudy
The body of David Stevens, 25,
skies.
Lekewood, killed Sunday when
his boat exploded on Lake Erie,
was recovered by firemen here
Marriage Ucense
Wednesday
a few hundred
Charles Lee Newhouse, 25,
yards
from
the wreckage.
Pomeroy Route · 4, and Anita
Joyce Estep, 26, Pomeroy Authorities said the blast was
caused by a ruptured gas line . .
Route 4.

THE

SHOE

lltll• t

.,...,...n.r, rou

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'Mnllr·lin. wun

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a•t ldtq~•

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ltiiCI d•1

tMnily·• •:e

l061!&amp; •ndtptFWanttr or at tht umt

timt 11 00.1 t-.errth•na• sliM ..,._ • •
....,nclryl)l.r
Ito llaor aptet

clot•-'"

WE TEIJ.THE
WHOLE STORY•••

b
wiJe~awake on

~

drJw lhNii hlft12 - ~ W~SI'Itf I'll!
11.,11111 pllll0./l(llf Mllonl Clfytr hn
htnfld C.,CIH liP lo 110 m.n11lt1 ...ct 1
NQ
Cr&lt;:lt lor • •un1. lluthna. Per
IIWMnl ltrH' C1r11n bolh WISIW:r Mitt
drytr lltlPS no rron (1011'\H h"D !h11r

it
all
s~ eosY~
kmakes

MONDAY,. JULY 31

ARRIVING DAILY

&amp; SLACKS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Nellie
Russell, Mason; Iva Howell,
Rutland; Hariett Neigler,
Racine; Lonna Hollon, Minersville; Cora Salser, Racine and
Diana Neal, Mason.
DISCHARGES - Mary
Roush,. Elizabeth Gilkey,
Grace Anderson, Alice Fink,
Harley Perkins, Gary Hysell
and Thomas Karr.

BLUE BIRD SWEATERS

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IMt-'1 lbt l.tu"*l' C.mtt ..mttt tiM
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Boy"

Three Hurt
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ways.

"cease-fire is the key" to end- said he and Sauth Vietnam's
ing the killing in Vietnam. He delegate Pham Dang · Lam
were ready to discuss any
variation of a cease-fire, plus
arrangements for the day when
the U.S. prisoners will be freed.
Thuy stuck to the provisions
of the Viet Qmg seven-point
peace plan calltng for the
Three persons were slightly release of POW's only when the
injured in a two car accident at
5:15 p. m. Wednesday on Rt. 7, United States has agreed tn the ~-~---...- -.....
of a coalition govern- ...
-------P.--~:::11
one mile south of the Gallia- creation
rnent with Viet Cong participa- 1
Meigs County line.
lion in Saigon, and a complete,
.
According to the Gallia- unconditional military withMeigs Post State Highway drawal.
Patrol, an auto driven by Sally The Saigon envoy again
Where Shoes are
K. Waugh, 3D, Cheshire, pulled rejected a coalition with the
Sensibly Priced
from Roush's Dalryland into ComrnW&gt;ists.
MIDDLEPORT, D.
the path of an auto operated by
"
Anna ' Marl~ Neal; 23: tJoliit
Pleasant. ·
Both drivers sustained minor
injuries. Paul Waugh, age six,
a passenger in the Waugh car
complained of a bruised chest.
Mrs. Waugh was charged
with failing to yield the right of
way.
Asecond mishap occurred on
Rt. 554, one and four-tenths
DRESSES by Cinderella &amp; Tiny Town
miles east of Rt. 325, where
vehicles driven by Thomas D.
Sizes 5 thru 14
Vititoe, 39, Rt. 2, Oak Hili, Kim
Haney, 20, Rt. I, Bidwell, and
BILLY THE KID SLACKS
Nelson K. Howell, 63, Rt. 4, Oak
Hill, collided. There was
ROB ROY SHIRTS
moderate damage to all three
cars. Vititoe was charged with
Sizes 8 thru 12
improper passing while Haney
was booked for driving left of
HEALTH TEX SHIRTS
the center.

'."". Buitt like tllis ...

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movin'

Cease Fire is Rejected

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" ,Everylhing In Hardware"

FIRE CHIEFS MEET
TROY, Ohio (UP! ) - Ohio's
fire chiefs want the state fire
marshal to he appointed by
Civil Service rather than by the
governor. Concluding its 68th
annual conference here
Wednesday, the Ohio Fire
Chiefs Associalion passed a
resolution
calling
lor
restructuring or the fire
marshal's office, placing it
entirely under civil service.
The association also called for
federal funds to implement
public fire safety programs.

Freeing of Bridge

McGovern·Won't Be Pushed

$29.95 Gold Piece

•. NOW
WITH OUR

"and it takes six weeks to
accomplish what might take
·six months with psychotrophic
drugs. Electric shock treatment is used more commonly
by busy people thsn by unbusy
people."
RECAIJ.. LEFI'Y
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Indians Wednesday
recalled left-banded relief pit·
cher Steve Mingori from the
club's Portland farm club and
at the same time optioned out·
fielder Ron Lolich to the Beavers on a ~ur recall basis.
Lolich, wbo appeared in 24
games with the Indians, hatted
.188, had two home runs and
eight RBI's.
While with Portland, Mingori
won two games and had two
saves.

1-lOMI .... OY,

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EUGENE, Ore. (UP!)- An
orthopaedic surgeon from
Buffalo, N. Y., Wednesday
suggested elimination of the
position of pitcher in Uttle
League baseball.
Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey, chief
of orthopedic surgery at
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said risks of elbow joint
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Diplo~a
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"No kid of mine would ever
Twenty..five game protectors
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Academy in Columbus on July restrictions of motion or an
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28.
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William B. Nye will award throwing overhand at an early
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Godfrey made his remarks in
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become available . Among sports medicine course here of
them is John S. Wells, Long the American Academy of
Orthopedic Surgeons.
Bottom . .
He said he would recommend
that methods such as a pitching
machine, a tee as in golf, or a
tnss-up mechanism he used to
set the ball up to hit in both
practice sessions and games.
NAMED ASSISTANT
GRANVII..LE, Ohio (UPI)Bill Jacobs, a Kent State Graduate student, was named assistant football coach at Denison
University Wednesday.
Jacolx!, a native of Berea, replaces Mario Russo, who
resigned to coach at Bowling
Green.
A
Wittenberg.
University gra(luate, Jacobs br
now completing his master's
degree at Kent State. Jacolxi'
primary responsibility will be
the defensive line, according to
Denison coach Keith Piper.

Wells Getting

mental test in thla ban game.
"If the all-etars are able to
get us disorganized then they
are going to have some suc•
cess. The key is our ability to
stop the option.
"But we have tn stop the big
play, too, because it could give
them a real emotlonallifl.

the

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4 ~The Da_ily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pomeroy, 0., July 27,1972

Bengals Practicing
WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UPI)- The Cincinnati
Bengals are practicing what
they refer tn as th.e "hat drill."
Offensive line coach Bill
Johnson puts his hal on the
groW&gt;d several yards behind
the line of scrimmage. The hat
represents the quarterback.
Then · an offensive · uneman
·squares off against a defensive
lineman and the battle begins.
The offensive player tries to
get to the quarterback, the defensive player tries tn stop

offense and defense,': says offensive tackle Rufus Mayes.
"It gives the defensive linemen a chance to work on their
moves and it gives us a chance
to work on pass protection."
Veteran guard Pat Matson
and defensive tackle Mike Reid
always seem to draw each other as opponents and their battles have been judged some of
the toughest of training camp.
"There's a lot of pride in~
volved," said Mayes. "Nobody
likes to look bad. And it makes
him.
you a better person if you get
"It's a good drill for both the beat.
11

Income Up 7%
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio's
personal income rate in May
was $47.4 billion, up 7 per cent
from the level of a year ago,
the Ohio State University
· Center for Business and Economic Research reported
Wednesday.
The rate for the first five
months of 1972 also was 7 per
cent above the corresponding
1971 period, the center said.
The center reported a 4 per
cent increase in May-to-May
payrolls for production
workers and other nonsupervisory employes, and a 4
per cent increase in the first
five months of 1972 compared
to the corresponding 1971
period.
This. category does not include agricultural, governmental or public education

iI

employes.
All counties for Ohio's eight
major cities showed May-toMay payroll gains except
Cincinnati - Hamilton County,
down 1 per cent Gains were
Akron -Summit, and Cleveland
·Cuyahoga, 5 per cent; Canton
· Stark and Columbus .
Franklin, 6 per cent; Dayton .
Montgomery, 3 per cent;
Toledo · Lucas, 7 per cent, and
Youngstown • Mahonir.g, 1 per
cent.
Payrolls in Ohio's construction industry in May were
down 8 per cent from a year
ago, and down 5per cent for the
five-month period. Mines and
quarries showed a 14 per cent
increase from May to May and
an 11 per cent decline for the
first five months.

Disclosure Hurt Ticket
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Disclosures by Democratic
vice presidential candidate
Thomas F . Eagleton of
treatment for nervousness and
elthaustion probably will hurt
the Democratic ticket in Ohio
thbr fall, Gov. John J. Gilligan
said Wednesday.
Eagleton, a U.S. senator
from Missouri, should have
told Sen. George McGovern,
the Democratic presidential
nominee, about the treatments
before he agreed to become
McGovern's running mate,
Gilligan said.
"I .think It's bound to have

some effect," Gilligan, a
Democrat, said of Eagleton's
disclosure Tuesday that he had
been hospitalized three times
in the past 12 years.
"Mental or emotional
illnesses are still scare terms
to some people - how many I
don't know,'' Gilligan said. " II
cannot be a plus."
Gilligan said he agreed with
Eagleton's handling of the
situation by reporting voluntarily of the hospitalizations.
"I must say, however, I think
he might have told Sen .
McGovern at the time he was
invited tn be on the ticket."

5-Th Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., July '¥/, 1m

!lf''i:i:;=::,,,,,,,,,,~X'~,,,,,,,,,,,,,. ,~~~,~,,,,,,,*,~''' ' ' ' '&lt;-''@m-~'\W-''!1

ISpo~!.!~'!.t!e

IFirStTime In Friday's Tilt

UPI Sports Edilor
ATLANTA (UPI)-Carefree, yoWlg, healthy and collecting
better than a thousand bucks a week for doing whatever he
pleases, and that includes nothing, Dave Bristol looks like the
living, breathing model of the man who has everything.
Looks have a wa~ or being deceiving, though.
Get Dave Bristol to bare some of his soul and be 'll surprise you
by confiding he really has nothing.
Dave Bristol is what they call an obsessive compulsive.
He Misses Baseblll
The thing he's compulsively obsessive about is work. He loves
it. The more the better. Even Frank Lane, the gen•ral manager
of the Milwaukee Brewers who fired Bristol two months ago, will
tell y9u he's never seen a harder worker in his life, and Lane has
been aroWld a long, long time.
Dave Brilrtnl, who's 3!1 and could pass for maybe 10 years
younger, showed up here for the All .Star game, ostensibly to see
some of his old baseball buddies, and naturally one of the first
things they asked him was whether he missed baseball."
"Do I?" said Dave Brilrtol, those big blue eyes of his b~mlng
•a mile wide.
"Everyday a little bit more. Every day I set aside a little time
tn meditate about baseball. I try to figure out what I d(d wrong
and how I can do better next time because I've got a long time
ahead of me. l read those boxscores assiduously every day."
Several Clubs Interested
Even though he's no longer working for them, the Brewers
keep paying Bdstol every two weeks on the basis of his $60,000-ayear contract.
Ali the other ball clubs know Bristol would much rather work
than sit around at home in Andrews, N.C., and you keep hearing
a lot of things about where he could wind up next.
You keep hearing 1louston is interested in Dave Bristol. You
• know the Phillies are because they called him before they let go
Frank Lucchesi, presumably to ask his advice about some
American League players, which is the oldest dodge in the world
when you wish to establish contact with a prospective manager
without waking up the whole county. You also know the Indians
offered Bristol the managership last fall before they gave it to
Ken Aspromonte, and Bristol turned down the job tn stay with the
Brewers.
One thing you can make book on: Dave Brbrtol will be back in
baseball. Preferably managing in the big leagues, but one way or
another he'll be back. He's an obsessive compulsive, a doer, who
simply can't sit still, and won't very long.

Discipline Broke Down
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William B. Saxhe, R-Ohio,
charged today end-the-war
moves were succeeding in
Congress because Republican
' Party discipline had declined
in the failure of White House
liaison with the GOP leadership.
Saxbe's comments carne at a
news conference a day after
the Senate passed an arnendmentro 'stop u.s. involvement
in Indochina within four
months, but then killed it by
defeating the foreign aid bill it
was attached to.
"The Republicans were

Cowboys Face Triple OptiQn

running aroWld like chickens
with their heads cut off&gt;
Saxhe said.
He placed the blame for no
liaison with both the President
and the Republican National
Committee.
"The leadership has not had
adequate access with the White
House," the Ohio Republican
added .
Saxhe, a regional GOP whip,
said tl\at sometimes the party
word ''never gets passed on
down to me."
"We've got to get shaped up.
I know it the President's desire
isn't getting through. "It's the
same thing in the house."

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(UPI)-The triple option with
all its complexities will probably get "a full tryout Friday
night for the first time against
a professional football club.
Tom Landry, as much as
anyone, Is curious as tn what
the results will be.
'l,'he College Ali.Stars . are
expected to run some triple
option plays against the Super
Bowl champion
Dallas
Cowboys in the opening game
of the pro football season with
J.erry Tagge of national
champion Nebraska quarterbackiing the offense.
''Thill is an intriguing game
for a lot of people," said
Landry on the eve of his club's
departure for Chicago. "This
was all the off-season talk
about how the pros would
defense the triple option.
"The way this game goes will
Influence some (professional
football) people one way or

another. I think the option will say :
''Our defense will have a real
work in the pros, but I don't
think it would work as a steady
diet. I don't think your quarterbacking would last in the

SUPER PLENAMINS *

G·P

pros. 11

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Not only will the pros be
interested in seeing bow the
allstars
the option, but tbey
will be interested in seeing how
the Cowboys go about defending it. Landry, of course, Is
not too keen on giving out
technical specifics, but he does

72

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TOURNEYS SET
There will be a slo-pitch
A.S.A. softball tournament for
women on August 4, 5 and 6 and
for men on August 11, 12 and 13
at Nelsonville, Ohio. For information call Fred Cluff at
614..193-3120. The tournaments
are sponsored by the Barons
Softball Team of Athens.

Kennedy's adrenal condition
was a "far more serious
problem for a president tn have
than something like this."
Commenting on the Missouri
D•mocrat's revelation, Dr.
David Wade, Texas Commissioner of Mental Healtu and
Mental Retardation, said that
electric shock treatment "has
no lasting effects whatever."
"This thing cuts through
pretty rapidly,'' he added,

STRONG PITCHING
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI)Dover MarUte and Zane Bre)'ll
exhibited strong pitching Wednesday night tn advance in the
losers' bracket of the state Na·
tiona! Baseball Congress
Tournament here.
Dover pitcher John Haupt
threw a tw~itter to beat
Zanesville Senior Pioneers 4-2.
Terry Watton of Zane Grey
gave up three hits as he
blanked Wooster 7-0.

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United Press Internalional
Psychiatrists generally
agreed Wednesday that the
electric shock therapy undergone by vice presidential
candidate Sen. Thomas
Eagleton was commonplace
and "should not impede a man
from holding high office."
Dr. Donald LWlde, Stanford
University Department of
Psychology said a lot of people
have mistaken ideas about
electro convulsive treatments. •
He said that properly administered, it is a very effective treatment.
Lunde said President John F.

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THISTLEDOWN RESULTS
CLEVELAND (UPI I- Racy
Road won the featured allowance race at Thistledown Wednesday after Tapped In was
dropped tn last place for interference.
·
Racy Road covered the six
furlong~~ in 1:12.4 and paid
f5.60, $3.20 and $2.411. Under
Arrest was second with Road
To Royality third.
Showmanship and Lucky
Brian (1-8) paid $74 on the dally
double.
Attendance was 4,121 with a
hllndle ol $355,153 on the 10..
race program.

O~iiO

*
* * * * * * *- * * * * * * **

CUSTER, S.D. (UPI)Democratlc presidential
nominee George S. McGovern
said •Wednesday he would not
be "stampeded" by demands
that he remove Sen. Thomas S.
Eagleton from the ticket.
McGovern, standing in front
ol his vacation cabin in the
Black Hills, steadfastly maintained his support for Eagletnn
in a brief interview with UP!
and said he had ''no intentions"
of accepling Eagleton's offer to
C!llil as the vice presidential
candidate.
McGovern said he had not
seen telegrams corning into his
camp urging him to replace
Eagleton as a result of
disclosures by the vice presidential nominee that he was
under a psychiatrist's care for

a nervous condition on three
occasions between 1960 and
1966. Eagletnn did not tell
McGovern of his medical past
when he was selected to run as
vice president .
McGovern denied as "1,000
per cent untrue" reports that
he was waiting for public
OPinion to develop before a

Shades .·or

final decision is made.
"I'm not going to be stampeded,". he said. "I am cer·
tainly not going to let a handful
of telegrams determine public
policy ."
McGovern insisted he knew
nothing of reports from his ·
staff that some of his key
financial advisers were "disSAXBE UNDECIDED
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Wllllam B. Saxhe, R·
Ohio, says he Is not
"seriously considering"
running for governor in 1974
Instead of seeking a second
Senate term.
"I'm not going to do or say
anything until after the 197%

(Continued from page I)
19th. The two finalists winners
or the single elimination
matches will then meet the
next day on August 20th for a
five game championship
match to determine the
Southeastern · Ohio Chess
Champion.
election," Saxbe said at a
All persons interested in news conference Wed·
taking part in the tournament nesday. "I'm going to be
should send their name and busy In 197Z aiding the GOP
address to: Chess Cham- national and local cam·
PLEASANT VALLEY
pionship, Box 270, Wellston, palgns." Saxbe was asked
DISCHARGES: William Ohio. All necessary detailed about his plans after rumors
Harbison, Mason; Penny information about the tour- had circulated that he might
Rainey, Apple Grove; Pearl nament and your playing time seek the
Republican
Snyder, Ewington, 0.; Billy will be sent to you. All entries nomination lor governor.
Jones, Point Pleasant; must be received no later than
Sherman Bonecutter, August 9.
Gallipolia; Mrs. David Beaver
There
are
no
nge
and daughter, Gallipolis; Mrs. requirements and $5 entry fee
Marian Riffle, daughter, MI. will be collected the iirst day of
Alto; Mrs. Charles Waugh, the tournament.
Point Pleasant ; Michele • Chess is perhaps the oldest
Roush, Hurricane; Oden and certainly the most popular
Pearson, Point Pleasant; Mrs. game In the world. So everyone
Richard Woodyard, Harold and who can play chess in the
Edna Darst, Belinda Uvely, Southeastern Ohio area and
Albert Sisson, all Point would !Ike to test their abilities,
Pleasanl.
should join In the touranament.
· Who knows you may be
WASHINGTON ( UPI )Southeastern Ohio's 1972 Chess
President
Nixon says his adChampion .
ministration has met its
election-year goal of cutting in
half the rate by which inflation
BEAUTY SALON
TWO FINED
is eroding the buying power of
Put body back In limp hair
Two defendants were fined in the dol(ar.
through sweltering summer
Pomeroy Mayor William
In preview of its strategy for
days. Take advantage of lhls
Baronlck's Court Wednesday handling the economic issue in
night. Jerry Hubbard, 18, the Nov. 7 election campaign,
$10.00
Syracuse,
was fined $10 and the White House promised
PERMANENT WAVE
costs for squealing tires and there would be no tax increase
AUG . I THRU AUG . 5
Dorsa Parsons, 20, Racine, $5 next year and pointed with
and costs, assured clear pride to tax cuts enacted since
Call 992-7056
distance .
Nixon took office.
"We have achieved a substantial sucess in our battle
against the inflation we
inherited in 1969," Nixon said
in a message to Congress
Wednesday. "Instead of the
'ljlore than 6 per cent ofj~. wt.
are now . . .o a rate bf 2.f1
•
per cent ptr~r. In0ati6n haS '
been cut in half."
Nixon did not explain the
figures but he apparently
referred to the Department of
Labor's Consumer Price Index. The index last montt. was
2.9 per cent higher than the
figure for JW&gt;e of 1971.
Nixon did not mention a
Department of Agriculture report that food prices rose 3.6
Strike il rich wilh lhis t4K gold,17
jewel timepiece ... Caravelle by
per cent in the last year. With
Bulo"Ja. Extraordinarily low·priced
food
prices rising faster than
... a solid !old classic and gu.uother
prices, Democratic
anteed by Bu o..-a. Give it to someone you love or hoard it yourself .
critics may concentrate on the
cost of eating instead of the
overall cost of living.
John D. Ehrlichrnan, Nixon's
chief domestic adviser, tnld
newsmen at the Whiie House
that the administration is

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'inancial contributor say anything to me," he said. "I
haven 't seen any kind of
telegram or letter or
anything ."

mayoo" about the problem.
raising the possibility that it
will affect his ability to supporl
a sustaiqed campaign.
"I haven't had a single

Congress Praised
For Big Spending
WASHINGTON
(UPI) Nobel prize-winning economist
Paul
A.
Samuelson
congratulated Congress today
for producing multibilliondollar deficits and urged it not
to relax its efforts now.
In testimony prepared for
Congress' Joint Economic
Committee: Samuelson said
deficit spending over the past
few years was solely responsible for the healthy state of
today's economy, with employment rising, unemployment dropping and profits
soaring.
"Congress has responsibly
insisted upon budget deficits
that by histnrical standards
would have been considered
large," he said, but which have
been shown "to be vitally
necessary to turn an anemic
expansion into a vigorous one.''
He contrasted the economy's
vigor with the sluggish growth

GOP Ordered
To Lay Off
Medical Point

of the Eisenhower administration, when, he said, Congress
heeded administration
"warning against the excesses
of Sodom and Gomorrah" and
trimmed government spen' ding .
Samuelson, a professor at
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, is one of a number
of economists who believes
increased government red ink
spending is necessary to take
up the slack when private
spending dries up and the
economy dawdles.
His advice stood in sharp
contrast with a message
President Nixon sent to Capitol
Hill Wednesday warning that a
deficit this year in excess of the
one he had proposed would be
hurtful. ·
"The inevitable result would
be higher taxes and more income~ating inflation in the
form of higher prices,'' Nixon
said.

NEW YORK (UP! )
President Nixon has ordered
his staff not to make Sen .
Thomas F. Eagleton's past
health problems a campaign
issue, campaign director Clark
McGregor said today·
McGregor told a news
conference at the Roosevelt
Hotel, " The mandate 'and
directive from the President is
that no one connected with him
would have any comment to
make about this very personal
matter . I concur 100 per cent." .
McGregor added later that
voters consider a wide range of
issues when they cast. their
ballot&amp; and•that it was the ·duty
of the candidates to assist them
in their consideration of policy
matters, not personalities.
"The individual citizens will
decide for themselves on "this
hosissue
(Eagleton's
pitalization three times
between 1960 and 1966 for
" nervous exhaustion and
fatigue),' ' McGregor said,
"and they need no assistance
from me ."
convinced It can operate next
year without higher taxes.
Nixon emphasized the tax
cuts voted by Congress since he
was inaugurated in 1969.
"We have cut the personal
income tax so that a family of
four with an income of fl;,OOO
has had its individual income
taxes reduced by 66 per cent
since 1969, and a family of four
with an income ~f $10,000 has
had its income taxes reduced
by 26 per cent since that date."

(Continued from page I)
At 12:30p. m. the Pomeroy High School !land and Middleport
High School Band sirnullltaneously marched from the center of
their towns tn the Ohio approach to the llridge. There they were
met by the Gallipolis band and paraded across the bridge.
Ernest Johnson and David Goodwin climbed the heights of
the structure tn deck it out with national colors. The bunting was
supplied by Charles McMaster's committee or Middleport
business and professional men. Glenroy Ewing of Pomeroy was
in charge of bridge decorations:
At 1:30 p.m. the crowd gathered around the red, white and
blue decorated speakers' platform where Judge Edgar Ervin
made the opening address. This was also the occasion for
rededication of the Blue and Gray Trail which connects
Tidewater, ih Virginia to Benton Harbor, Mich.
The freeing of the bridge was a time of rejoicing by cities all
along the scenic route.
Six mayors of communities in tri-county area and one acting
mayor were introduced: George Howell, Pomeroy; B. W.
Krodel, Pt. Pleasant; H. W. Craig, Middleport; John Raybould,
Mason; .John Dillon and J. V. McGrew, New Haven and Hartford,
and Judge William Jones, acting Mayor of Gallipolis.
Raymond Musgrave, West Virginia State Senator, was introduced as was F. G. Gans or the U.S. Disrict Engineers.
Judge Ervin, Middleport, was Master of Ceremonies. Rev.
W. L. Gearhart, Mason; Barto Jones, Ohio-W. Va . Tri.County
bidustrial Association, and Sen. Tom Jenkins of Ohio were introduced.
This was a great day ! Free trade between Ohio and West
Virginia was made possible and friendship between these two
great states was cemented. This has been a lasting friendship
through the years.
"It is my belief, orienting ourselves in terms of time and
events, we are at the beginning of mighty changes in our way of
working and living and I look upon our future as a great opportunity of scaling undreamed of heights", is a quotation from
one of the speeches made that day.
, And now, the stately bridge stands all but deserted, bot
repairs will be made. If weather permits, the bridge will be reopened by next Monday. The cars' lights again will make a
beautiful scene each evening, one I never tire of enjoying from
my front porch.

PARIS (UPI)- The United
States, calling a cease-fire the
key to peace in Indochina,
proposed tnday an end to the
fighting and the release of
American prisoners of war,
followed by a military withdrawa! .
The Communists rejected
theofferandsaidthecease-fire
could come only after Arnerican troops were sent home.
Chief Hanoi delegate Xuan
Thuy said u .S. demands for a
cease-fire and release of
prisoners-followed by a U.S.
military pullout four months
later-left political issues
unanswered.
"As regards the cease-lire,
we have mai)Y tirnes made' it
clear that after agreement on
all the military and political
questions, a cease-fire would
iake place,'' he said. " Only
such a cease..fire would ensure
laSting peace. This is a correct
way of posing the problem. The
United States has previously
agreed to it, why does it change
its views now?"
u.s. Ambassador William J.
Porter told the 15:/nd weekl y
negotiating session that a
RIGHT UPHELD
AKRON (UP I) - The
Cl eveland
Electric
Illuminating Co.'s right to
construct 345,000-volt transmission lines through Macedonia was upheld Wednesday by the Summit CoW&gt;ty
Court of Appeals. Wednesday's
ruling affirms the ruling
previously handed down by the
Summit CoW&gt;ly Common Pleas
Court.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downBODY RECOVERED
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. was
AVON
LAKE, Ohio (UP!)80 degrees under partly cloudy
The body of David Stevens, 25,
skies.
Lekewood, killed Sunday when
his boat exploded on Lake Erie,
was recovered by firemen here
Marriage Ucense
Wednesday
a few hundred
Charles Lee Newhouse, 25,
yards
from
the wreckage.
Pomeroy Route · 4, and Anita
Joyce Estep, 26, Pomeroy Authorities said the blast was
caused by a ruptured gas line . .
Route 4.

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ADMISSIONS - Nellie
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DISCHARGES - Mary
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NEW SHWMENT

·-

OF

He••

AIL£EN &amp; RED EYE

!)lomilt.

Frllldllre bothers to build In more I!IIP

BAKER ·FURNITURE

'

\

(SEE THIS NEWSPAPER)
\'

IHtllf'H tl"'""r "'"'-' . .

'i

(I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BOX

.

1 I instead of tflis

IMt-'1 lbt l.tu"*l' C.mtt ..mttt tiM
11111h II - bathroom. ""'""'¥· k•ltl\tn ,
mob•ltl\otnt S.'4 t"ne tlld 'ltPI In

Boy"

Three Hurt
In Accident

....,-.

I

ways.

"cease-fire is the key" to end- said he and Sauth Vietnam's
ing the killing in Vietnam. He delegate Pham Dang · Lam
were ready to discuss any
variation of a cease-fire, plus
arrangements for the day when
the U.S. prisoners will be freed.
Thuy stuck to the provisions
of the Viet Qmg seven-point
peace plan calltng for the
Three persons were slightly release of POW's only when the
injured in a two car accident at
5:15 p. m. Wednesday on Rt. 7, United States has agreed tn the ~-~---...- -.....
of a coalition govern- ...
-------P.--~:::11
one mile south of the Gallia- creation
rnent with Viet Cong participa- 1
Meigs County line.
lion in Saigon, and a complete,
.
According to the Gallia- unconditional military withMeigs Post State Highway drawal.
Patrol, an auto driven by Sally The Saigon envoy again
Where Shoes are
K. Waugh, 3D, Cheshire, pulled rejected a coalition with the
Sensibly Priced
from Roush's Dalryland into ComrnW&gt;ists.
MIDDLEPORT, D.
the path of an auto operated by
"
Anna ' Marl~ Neal; 23: tJoliit
Pleasant. ·
Both drivers sustained minor
injuries. Paul Waugh, age six,
a passenger in the Waugh car
complained of a bruised chest.
Mrs. Waugh was charged
with failing to yield the right of
way.
Asecond mishap occurred on
Rt. 554, one and four-tenths
DRESSES by Cinderella &amp; Tiny Town
miles east of Rt. 325, where
vehicles driven by Thomas D.
Sizes 5 thru 14
Vititoe, 39, Rt. 2, Oak Hili, Kim
Haney, 20, Rt. I, Bidwell, and
BILLY THE KID SLACKS
Nelson K. Howell, 63, Rt. 4, Oak
Hill, collided. There was
ROB ROY SHIRTS
moderate damage to all three
cars. Vititoe was charged with
Sizes 8 thru 12
improper passing while Haney
was booked for driving left of
HEALTH TEX SHIRTS
the center.

'."". Buitt like tllis ...

POMEROY

movin'

Cease Fire is Rejected

L~

110 W. MAIN

personalily
for today's
spiri ted,

•

Ftts ~-·

" ,Everylhing In Hardware"

FIRE CHIEFS MEET
TROY, Ohio (UP! ) - Ohio's
fire chiefs want the state fire
marshal to he appointed by
Civil Service rather than by the
governor. Concluding its 68th
annual conference here
Wednesday, the Ohio Fire
Chiefs Associalion passed a
resolution
calling
lor
restructuring or the fire
marshal's office, placing it
entirely under civil service.
The association also called for
federal funds to implement
public fire safety programs.

Freeing of Bridge

McGovern·Won't Be Pushed

$29.95 Gold Piece

•. NOW
WITH OUR

"and it takes six weeks to
accomplish what might take
·six months with psychotrophic
drugs. Electric shock treatment is used more commonly
by busy people thsn by unbusy
people."
RECAIJ.. LEFI'Y
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Indians Wednesday
recalled left-banded relief pit·
cher Steve Mingori from the
club's Portland farm club and
at the same time optioned out·
fielder Ron Lolich to the Beavers on a ~ur recall basis.
Lolich, wbo appeared in 24
games with the Indians, hatted
.188, had two home runs and
eight RBI's.
While with Portland, Mingori
won two games and had two
saves.

1-lOMI .... OY,

MA.IN ST

Prescripflon Service-4 Registered Pharmacists to Serve
You! Open Daily 8:00a.m. to 10 p.m.- Sunday 10:30 a.m.
lo 12:30 a.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.

Psychiatrists in Agreement·

Hot Weather Wear

~,,;,.tfy ,I'""'' [nJJUHf!Ut

ID

PICNIC
Shop Now For

*

*
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run
*
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*
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Surgeon Would * TABLETS
Eliminate LL
* IN REUSABLE APOTHECARY JAR *
Pitch Position *
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TOTAL VALUE $13.67
*
YOU SAVE
** '4.98
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* ••••••••••••••••••
*
5WISHER ..oLOHSE

EUGENE, Ore. (UP!)- An
orthopaedic surgeon from
Buffalo, N. Y., Wednesday
suggested elimination of the
position of pitcher in Uttle
League baseball.
Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey, chief
of orthopedic surgery at
Buffalo's Children's Hospital,
said risks of elbow joint
changes were severe enough to
Diplo~a
warrant the step.
"No kid of mine would ever
Twenty..five game protectors
will graduate from the division pitch Utile League baseball,"
of wildlife training school at he said. "The possibilities or
the Ohio State Highway Patrol sustaining permanent elbow
Academy in Columbus on July restrictions of motion or an
abnormal area at the elbow
28.
may definitely stem from
Natural Resources Directnr
William B. Nye will award throwing overhand at an early
certificates to the graduates of age."
Godfrey made his remarks in
the 11-week school which began
on May 15. The men will fill a panel on "The Young
game protector's jobs as they Athlete" at a. postgraduate
become available . Among sports medicine course here of
them is John S. Wells, Long the American Academy of
Orthopedic Surgeons.
Bottom . .
He said he would recommend
that methods such as a pitching
machine, a tee as in golf, or a
tnss-up mechanism he used to
set the ball up to hit in both
practice sessions and games.
NAMED ASSISTANT
GRANVII..LE, Ohio (UPI)Bill Jacobs, a Kent State Graduate student, was named assistant football coach at Denison
University Wednesday.
Jacolx!, a native of Berea, replaces Mario Russo, who
resigned to coach at Bowling
Green.
A
Wittenberg.
University gra(luate, Jacobs br
now completing his master's
degree at Kent State. Jacolxi'
primary responsibility will be
the defensive line, according to
Denison coach Keith Piper.

Wells Getting

mental test in thla ban game.
"If the all-etars are able to
get us disorganized then they
are going to have some suc•
cess. The key is our ability to
stop the option.
"But we have tn stop the big
play, too, because it could give
them a real emotlonallifl.

the

.

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVJNGS!

LADIES'
.

SPORTSWEAR
TRY OUR

LAY-AWAY.
PLAN

IN THE VERY
LATEST

FASHIONS
FOR

FALL

�7-The DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July '1:1, 1972

.~~X«:~:::x::::::::::::::::s::::::::::~:;~·

Nelson Families !il Social 11 Youths Enjoy Picnic
Met in Columbus Calendar

I

I

Juni cr America n Legion
Auxiliary of Feen&lt;'y·Hennrtl
Post 12: '• Middleporl , enjoyed a
wiener roast TuesdC\y even;•!''
THURSDAY
at the home of Mo o. Charles"
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8 Kessinger in Bailey Run.
p.m. Thursday at the hall .
Prayer . wa s given by
chaplain Sheryl Barnhart and
POMEROY WCTU, Thurs- pledge to the flag was give n in
day n(){m picni c at the home of unison. It was decided to have
Mi ss Lucreti a Genheimer
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
'

a housewares party on Aug . 10
at 7 p.m. at the Legion hall.
A memorial fund wilt be sent
to the Ma rie Moure fund in
memory of Wilma Davis,
deceased
Unit
charter
member , and to American
Legion Child Welfare foundation in memory of decea sed
Post member, · William
Ohlinger.

Cookout Held Sunday
RACINE - Mrs. Vivian their grandchildren Lydia and
Johnson of Racine was tihe Eddie Johnson, Middleport,
hostess for a family reunion and Mr. and Mrs. William R.
cook-out at the Syracuse Park Stephenson and tiheir children,
Sunday.
Tammy, Ricky, and Jimmy.
Guests were her son and his
Joey Stephenson is spending
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Robert a week with his mother, Mrs.
Stephenson and their four Johnson. Stephenson has been
children, Judy, Kathy , Andrea, attending college In Oklahoma .
and
Debbie ,
from
Philadelphia, Penn. ; Mrs.
Stephenson's mother , Mrs.
PICNI.C PLANNED
Bertha Wisler ; Mr. and Mrs.
The Past Matrons and Past
John Stephenson and their Patrons of Evangeline Chapter
daughter Susan, Beaver ; Mr. will' hold a family picnic Friday
and Mrs. Robert Rhinehart and at tihe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert King at6 :15p. m. Those
attend in g are to bring a
covered dish and table service.
RETURNSTOBGU
A short business meeting will
Leo Loring Vaughan, 11,
follow
the picnic.
returned to Bowling Green

Pulled Back

.Mrs.
Mar guerite
F.
Bangerter, widow of the la te
Rev. L. A. Bangerter, former
RUTLAND - The Nelson Nelson and Tracy, Miss Berpas tor of Hea th M. E. Church
family reunion was held July 9 nice Buffington, Mrs . Mella
Middlepor t, is a surgicai
at Westgate Park, Columbus. Schieler and daughter, Mr . and
patien t at Bethesda Hospital,
Attending were, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Clair Nelson, Mr. and
Room 401, Zanesville, 43701.
Frank McKibben and family, Mrs. Jim Dyer, Mr. and Mrs.
She would appreciate hearing
Mrs . Pearl Ogdin, Mr. and Kenneth Cooper, Mr; and Mrs.
from frie nds.
Mrs. Homer Dillon ~ nd Donald Nelson and family, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stover
dtlughter, Mrs. Jewell Buf- and Mrs. Dwight Nelson and
MEIGS CHRISTIAN
were in Lancaster Tuesda y to
fington, Mr. and Mrs. Iv an daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Women's Fellowship July 27,
accom pany their gra ndRedd, Dana Nelson, Mrs. Ora Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Thursday, at 7:30p.m . at the
children, Chris, Eric and Terra
Profitt, Mr. and Mrs. Downie Nelson and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Middlepor t Church ·of Cl1rist.
Hubbard, here for se veral
'Ch~an Up' ~ign
Nelson and daughters, and Mr. Da le . Goff, Mr . and Mrs.
&lt;lays'
visit while their pa rents,
SPECIAL meeting of Shade
and Mrs . Walter Canode and Donald Mansfield, Mr. and
Mr.
and
Mrs. James Hubbard,
Cleans Up Tahle
family.
Mrs. Danny Mansfield and son River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM Thursspend a few days in Celina,
Also Mr. and Mrs. Edwin and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin York day 7 p.m. Work in EA Degree.
Kan .
All Master Masons are invited.
fl y POLLY CRAMEH
Ne lson, Mr. and Mrs. Paul and family .
Mt·. and Mrs. Myron Miller State University to assist in
FRIDAY
DEAH POL LY - I am one lemal e in a house hold wi th
have
re turned from a week's
PAST Matrons and Past ~ hr ce me n fo lk s . I ~a s ::~ 1 m y wi t's e nd over their leav in g
BASICCOMPLETED
autumn orientatill'll, after
vacation
which included a visit spending the weekend witih his
Patrons of Evangeline Chapter tee cream bowls, dtrt y kntve s, ope n mayonnaise jars and
Airman Paul F. Dill, son of
with Mr. Miller's sister; Mr .
'
family picnic Friday home of what ever after mak ing snac ks on the kit chen table in .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo L. Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Dill of
and Mrs. Kenneth Hughes, at Vau ghan , Pomeroy . He ' Pomeroy, has completed his U.
'•
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King at stead of returning thin gs that belonged in th e refrigerator
SYRACUSE - The flower wedding of Grace Crow Tolson, 6: 15 p.m. Bring covered dish and putt1ng dtrt y thm gs tn the stnk Finally I dev ised a
Dravosburg, Pa., an aunt, Mrs .
recently returned from Canada S. Air ~.. basic training at
;; garden at the home of Mr. and of Canton and Letart Falls
stgn
that
says
"
!'l
ease
clean
!he
tab
le"
tn bright red : on
George Sprag ue , at Chadds where he .represented the Phi tihe ;Arr Training Command's
and
table
service.
Business
'~ Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse , area, daughter of the late
the other s1 de 1 wrote "Thank yo u" and below that " I
Ford , Pa. , Mrs. Miller 's Delta Theta Fraternity at Lackland AFB, Tex. He is
mee ting will follow.
love you" m blue. Th is sign is heavy cardboard . stapled
:! was the scene of the recent William 0 . Crow, to Mr. Paul
Mrs . Amelita Taylor
sisters,
SATURDAY
at the top 111 seve ral places an d be nt down about an inch
Montreal, Quebec. Vaughan is remaining at Lackland for
G. Eich of Tripoli, Libya,
HOMEMADE ice cream will from the top so H will stand . At li rst it had to stay on · and family of Riesterstown , president of the Phi Delta training in the security police
Tuesday evening.
Md., and Mrs. Edna Faulkner The ta Fraternity at Bowling field. Airman Dill is a 1972
be sold by the Tuppers Plains the. tabl e mos l ol I he time but now it is only needed oc·
AT CONVENTION
Vows of the wedding Community Club Saturday caSio nal ly as a remtnder. When thev clean the tabl e t
of Wilmington, Del. They also
graduate of M~igs High School.
Mrs. Carrie M. Neutzling , ceremony were read by the beginning at I p.m. at the Sohio turn the si gn so th e ·' Th ank you" side is seen . Thi s h'as visited the Brandywine River Green .
been a so urce of fu n and reall y bi'Oug hl r es u l t s. ~ N . 1 ~' . 1-1
dele gate from American Rev. Charles Norris, pastor of Stnlion in Tuppers Plains .
Mus eum an d viewed the
n n ~- n
n ~~ n r
: Legion Auxiliary, Drew the Racine Baptist Church.
famous
N.C. Wyeth paintings.
Polly's Problem
Webster Post 39, Mrs. Florence Attendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Capt. and Mrs. John H.
. IJI, AH POLLY - We h ave indoor·outdoor ca rpet·
Richards, delegate from Un it Crow. Mr . and Mrs. Eich will Tuppers Plains
Korneder (Barbara Hughes 1
mg throughout most ol our house . We a lso have a
• 263, Middleport, and Mrs. Lula make their horne in Tripoli
5-m onth -old baby who has a tendency to spit up a
have arrived in Yokosuka,
• B. Hampton attended depart- where Mr. Eich is an executive
bt t so there C:ll' e whtt e spot s all ove r the carpetin g
Japan, ac cording to word
th ai I ca nnot remove . I have lried dtfferen l ca rpet
ment Convention American of Esso Standard Libya .
received from Mrs. E. L.
• Legion Auxiliary held Friday,
cleaners and eve n mopped the spots with fluor
Hu
ghe s.
Korn eder was
clea ners, but nothin g work s. There ar e al so a [ew
By Evelyn Briekles
Saturday and Sunday at the
recentl y promoted to the rank
ground -in spots that [ can not clean Please, someSunday School attendance at
Sheraton Hotel in Cincinnati.
SCHOOL SET
of captain in the Marine Corps.
one• help me.- MHS . J. B
.,
On Friday afternoon Mrs.
RACINE - Vacation Bible the United Methodist Church
Ricky Long of Columbus is
Neutzling presided over unit Sc hool will be held at the was 44 and offering $1~.46 and
D(,; AJI POLLY - My Pet Peeve concer ns early shoppers spending the wee k with his
activities which is composed of Rac ine Baptist Church worship attendance was 38 and at garage sales. I recentl y had one which was adve rtised
grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs .
National Security, Civ il beginning Monday through offering $30.26.
in the paper with th e tw o days of the sale clea rl y stated . Alfred Roush.
·
Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs. We were both amazed and worn -o ut the ni gh l before the
Defense, Spirit of '76, and Aug. II, from 6 to 8 p. m.
Rev. a nd Mrs. Fred I.
• Legislation. Representatives
Pre-registration will be held Edna Reibel' and Mrs. Edna sale as our doorbell neve r stopped rin gin g. When in- Gardner of J ohn son City,
from the state of Ohio at- Saturday at 11 a. m. at the Wayland, all of Middleport, form ed lhat th ey were one day ea rly and we cou ld not
Tenn., were guests Wednesday
make sal t!s, those people 's replies were oft en much less
~ tended . The group returned church . For additional in- visited a day this past week
than polite. With tile hi gh cost of li vin g today. I kn ow of Mrs. Mildred Hawley and
with Mr. and Mrs. R. K. . people lmcludm g myselfI are alw ays looki ng for barga in &lt; Miss Nan Moore, and dinne r
Saturday evening.
·
formation phone 949-2845.
Rowan .
bul ea rly sa les are un fat r tu th&lt;• majori ty of lh&lt;· bargain
gues ts of Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Welch and hun!ers and ca use much extra wo r k and bother - C D. Ray mond Cole Wednesday
family bought the Billy
DEAfl POLLY- Like Lila , I had a rug th at ha d been
evening.
Chapman property and have fol ded and then would not lay flat on llw floor . I boughl
moved there.
a rot ! of double-s ti ck carpet tape in the ru g depa rtment
l."hr •f · ~· Our
Summer to Fall
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Chapman store. (Poll)·'s notc-Soml' hardware stores sell thi s. too.)
l'rin• T1 1th1y
and children have movep to the I tu rne d the ru g over . stu ck the tape ovt! r each fold,
Sttils made of washable,
Dora Mae Calaway property. tctrned the r ug over. p_ressed fi rml y to the floo r along the wrinkle-fre e knit s fur la te
lolds and walk ed on tt for at least a week before using summer ca n be the beginSeveral from here attended the varuum .- LILA
ning of your fall wa rd robe .
the Charles Norris Crusade at
(NEWSPAPER ENHI!PI!ISE ASSN. I
FURNITURE
W 11 h all the mix a nd
tile football stadium at Racine
ma tch es, a sui! of skirt and
PH. 713·5592
Sunday
evening . A large c~owd
You wlll receive a dollar If Pollv uses vour favorit e jac ket ca n be expand ed with
•
homemaking idea. Pet Peeve, Pollv's Problem or solution a long vest, pants and the
of over 600 attended.
MASON. W. VA.
to
a problem . Write Polly· In care of this newspaper.
· Mr . and Mrs. La mont
latesl in blo uses and swea t'
" ·•' ',,,, ' '" ,,... ,,,.,..
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
ers.
Gray. which will be a
Nichols
of
Tampa,
Fla
.
spent
••
• W I II lo. ••o\1 1&gt; 1111 1 loU l'ol ,
V
DL
dbi g fall color , mak es it
several days vacation here 'T'
6,000
'"
J KII'I\IIKII I 'I,oll ll
.1
L
through the summ er mix ed
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
....... ,,,
6
w1th soft pas tels.
•
to
t
\II
I II III
Lo lli II
Clarence Nichols.
1.., ,.,,,.,, m•••ll oUun I"'"
•
"'" "'"' ,,, ,,_ ,, ,-'''"'
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Grimes
Members uf the program program committee attending
• l'loi! SI'II ll I .\..,;
·~
24,000 BTIJ '"~'' "' '"" .,..... '"'"'''" ·"' ....~ . "' ""'""" ......~ .... ,,
and mother, Mrs. Cora Grimes commi ttee a nd offi cers of were Ruth Owens of Jackson
of Athens, and Mrs. Neisel Delta Kappa Gam ma _ a Ethel Chapman of Rutland:
Weatherman all were Sunday N.lilional Honorary Teac hers' Mildred Hawley of Middleport,
guests of his sister, Rev. and Society _ met on July 12th at Anna Elizabet h Turner of
NATIONAL APPLIANCE MONTH AT SEARS
Mrs. Clyde Webster and son of Salem Cen ter School to plan Rutland and Gertrude Trace of
11
11
Salem Center, Ohio.
the programs for the coming Coalton. Refreshm ents were
Marvin Walker is a patient at two years.
served.
Camden Clark HospitHI ,
Mrs. Roberta Wi lson local
The first meeting of the year
· Parkersburg. ·
.....JlfCsident, Mrs. Rachel Warne; will be held at Lake Hope on
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Newell of Jackson, vice president and Monday evening, Sept. 4th with
and son Larry of Columbus and program chairman, and Mrs. a dinner meeting at the lodge.
M~ . and Mrs. P. T. Wtll and Edith Hoffman of McArthur,
An area workshop at the Trichildren of Charleston, W. Va., past president, were in charge County Vocational School in
were Sunday guests of Mr. and of the meeting. Others of the Nelsonville was announced for
Mrs. Jesste Newell.
August 18th. Officers, chair·
man, and members are inThose visiting Marvin Mrs. Ethel Stout Sunday .
vited . Appli cations
fo r
Walker at Ca mden Clark
Mrs . Edith Harper and Mrs . reservations may be found in
Hospital , Parkersburg, were Effie Watson attended the the recent issue or 11 Voice".
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY
•'
Mr . and Mrs. Truman Clark homecoming at Silver Ridge
'
•,
and her sister, Mrs. Dimple Sunday .
.
Miller and daughters Shirley
~.,
Don Landon and Harley
and Mrs. Opel Maddox, and Godfrey returned home after
••
REFRIGERATORS
'
two daughters, Pauline and undergoing surgery at Camden
FREEZERS
Darlene of Dayton, 0 ., and Jeff
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg
Newell of Columbus. Jeff spent
WASHERS - DRYERS
and is recovering satisfaca week here with the Walkers torily.
DISHWASHERS
and returned to his home
Mrs. Russell Spencer and
Sunday. Mrs. Clark and Mrs.
TELEVISION- STEREOS
grandson Gregory Michael
Miller are sisters of Mr .
Cooper, and daugliter Judy
Walker.
Spencer of Chester visited Mr.
Mr. and Mrs . Mi chael
and Mrs. Wayne · Brickles
Watson of Middleport spent Friday afternoon.
Tuesday evening with his
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Perry of
POMEROY
220 E. MAIN
992-2178
g
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORN E
ran dmo th er, Mrs. Effie Shade and Virgil Roush of West
Watson .
Shade called on Gerald Violet
Mon .. Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sal. 9 to 5, Thurs .
9 to Noon, Friday 9: oo to 9:00
Miss Patty Dorst of Parkers- Sunday evening. Virgil Roush
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _.........._ _.;.._ _ _ __. burg visited her grandmother,
was on his way to the hospital
at Parkersburg to visit his wife
Betty Roush
who
is
THURS., FRIDAY,
hospitalized there.
SATURDAY ONLY
Mr. and Mrs. Mario
Calantoni of Torrence, Calif.,
are visiting her ·parents, Mr.
e CHOOSE FROM 20 COLORS- ALL IN STOCK
and Mrs. Everett Shultz and
e IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
family .

POU.\"'S POINTERS

SAIGON (UPI)-Soutih Viet- night blasted the two· basesnamese soldiers today pulled
out of tihe fortress Citadel they
stormed in Quang Trl City
tihree days ago. South of tihe
city, North Vietnamese troops
overran two key links in tihe
defenses of Hue.
Military spokesmen said
government marines replaced
paratroopers today in the
. battle for Quang Tri city,
captured by the North Vietnamese 88days ago, but efforts
to retake the 13-acre Citadel
were temporarily abandoned
when tihe paratroopers were
withdrawn. A· U.S. military
source said the marines did not
try to enter the fortress. He
gave no explanation.
Forty miles south of Quang
Tri, U.S. sources said Communists overran Fire Bases
Bastogne and Checkmate, two
vital links in the defenses of
Hue, the country's third largest
city 400 miles north of Saigon.
U.S. advisers have predicted a
North Vietnamese assault on
the old imperial capital before
Oct. I.
A Saigon conunand spokesman said the paratroops were
witihdrawn from the Quang Tri
fighting and sent to an undisclosed area for a new
operation. ·The marines who
replaced them fought a sixhoW" battle northeast of tihe
Citadel today, the spokesman
said, kUling ~3 Communists
and capturing 32 weapons. He
said there was no report of
marine casualties.
U.S. sources said heavy
fighting was under way today
in the area around Bastogne
and Checkmate, 12 and 13
miles southwest of Hue . One
source said Bastogne has
changed hands six times since
tihe Communist offensive in
South Vietnam began March
30.
The sources said North
Vietnamese gunners during tihe

. Grace Crow Tolson Recent Bride
"'
~

..

•.n

Society News

Kelvinator Air Conditioners

tbe

MASON

'

.

.".

.~

..
I'

I'T

I(

~

WO-

•• l • lo l on • ,oo n ll u oo . ,.·.o~·o ·tll

I ll"~ '

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY- JULY 29th
ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING

..,

GREAT SAVINGS
ON SEARS
COMPLETE LINES

SEARS

DAYTON - John P. Gilliam ,
a member of the 1972
graduating class of Meigs High
School, has been awarded a
four-year General Motors
college scholarship by Ohio
University.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lather E. Gilliam, Jr., Route 4,
Pomeroy, he plans to pursue a
course
in
mechanical
engineering or chernlstry.
John ' s demonstrated

ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT &amp;
K. V. OOMPUTING DEPT.
OF UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.

pi'IC8S

SHIRt
FINISHING

U. S. 60 WEST - HUNTINGTON

SA~E

DAY
SERVItE
In At9- 0ut AI S

IN
POl NT PLEASANT,
W.VA.
ANNOUNCES

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT

plus Fire Bases Birmingham,
T-Bone and Lion along tihe Hue
defense line- with more tihan
3,000 rounds · of 122irun artillery, rockets and mortar
shells . Another !50-round
barrage of mortar and
recoilless rifle fire hit an
element of South Vietnam's
ii4tih Regiment a mile from
Bastogne but the infantrymen
counterattacked and killed 17
Communists at a cost of two
government troops dead and
six wounded, the Saigon
conunand said.
In a separate development,
the Saigon command today
said 50 South Vietnamese
marines were killed north of
Quang Tri July 11 in the worst
single helicopter crash of the
war . A spokesman said
Communist gunners downed
the chopper in the middle of a
North Vietnamese antiaircraft
emplacement. He said 10
Americans were wounded in
the incident and two are
missing .
A government spokesman
only hours before today's with·
drawal from the Quang Tri
Citadel said the Communists
remained in control of the
western portion of the 19th
Century fortress but that
" (North
Vietnamese)
resistance is weakening every
day." The paratroopers
Wednesday raised their
country's flag over tihe in·
stallation but sources said half
of tihe Citadel was still in
Communist hands.
The U.S. command said 24
U.S. B52 bombers dumped
more tihan, two million pounds
of explosives on Communist
troops and supply dumps
within 14 miles of Quang Tri
City overnight. Eight more
flights of the big planes
unloaded about 111 million
pounds of bombs on suspected
North Vietnamese positions
around Hue .

OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
VESPRE
SPRAY MIST OR
POWDER

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Robinson:s aeaners
21~

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30 YRS .

•DUPONT 501
NYLON

CARPET '

EXPER~f.NCE

40 SQ. YDS.
CARPET

Recycle cans,
bottles and paper.

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

~

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RIGHT GUARD
NATURAL SCENT
==~
ANTI
PERSPIRANT

SCOPE
FAMILY SIZE
Re~t.

5 OL

1.59

1

REG.

11.29

69¢

5 oz.

Reg.
sug

GILLETTE

59¢
BARBASOL

The Dry

SHAVE
CREAM

Look
7 oz.
REG.

1.49

1

88¢

Olairor

11 OL CAN

Balsam2

REG. 98'

60 Second Conditioner and
Creme Rinse in one

8 oz.

Available in
R1~ler and,
Protein Body
Formulas

REG. '1.59

88t
1

AFTER

SPRAY NO

CUTEX
POLISH
REMOVER

SETIING
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Regular or
Extfa Hold

3

oz.

REG. 43'

8 OZ. SIZE

REG.

REGULAR OR
HARD TO HOLD

13 oz.
REG. 98'

SOFT &amp; DRI
12 oz.
Reg. 12.45

LIFE SAVERS

2.50

1

1.25

1

a:•

GILLETIE

29¢

4 OL
REG.

@ 1972 CLA.IROL \NC.

HELENE CURTIS

SHAVE LOTION

6 PACK

REG. 1.89
1

ONLY

36¢

GREAT BODY

SHAMPOO
REGULAR OR OILY
REG. 11.99

99¢

CITRONELLA

CANDLE

CLAIROL
COMPACTS

Reg. 89t

39¢

99¢

8 oz.
REG.

2.25

1

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Df:NTUIHi AO .. I SIVII C"' ! AM

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tba

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lARGE SIZE

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

99

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FINAL NET

•NrJA$/illt/f

116 MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-7590

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CALM 2
ANTI·PERSPIRANT

SET
REG. $4 77 SPRAY POWDER
8.95
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leadership qualities and
scholllstlc achievement in high
school were instrumental in his
selection by Ohio Un.ivet~sit.Y'
for the coveted GM award. The
scholarship is one of 135 to be
awarded this year by over 100
colleges and universities
throughout the country as part
of GM's overall program of
support for higher education.
In ali, over 800 students are
attending colleges with GM
assistance. Each scholarship is
va lued at from $200 to $2,000 a
year depending on the need of
the student. Ali private
colleges participating in the
program also receive annual
grants-in-aid from GM of $500
to $800 per scholarship, based
on tuition cosls.
In addition to his high
scholastic achievement, John
was a candidate for Outstanding Freshman, and a
member of the National Honor
Society and Mu Alpha Theta.

-wr--11.!!1
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&amp;SATURDAY

JULY 27-28-29

5 OL
REG. 12.19

1

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

THURSDA~ FRIDAY

7 oz.

7 Ol
REG. 11.29

REG.

lA'f.

WOODSY OWL HOOTS:

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REG. '1.89

Master Portrait

REUNION SET
The annual Cleland reunion
will be held Aug. 13 at Forest
Acres Park with a basket
dinner at noon .

INSECT
REPELLANT

MEDIUM SIZE

THAT

SPECIAL OFFER

NOXZEMA
SUNBURN
SPRAY

6-12 PLUS

GM Awards Scholarship
To Gilliam of Meigs Hi

ear proaramrutnne

•

THURS., FRIDAY
SAT.URDAY
and SUNDAY

South Viets

6- The Daily Sentinel, Midd!qJOrt-Pomeroy, 0., July 'l:l, 1972

'129
r.

~

ECONOMY SizE
REG.

.

'1.29 .............

88¢

Wil Keep Sharing
Until Jf1 R_un Out o,l
Sa1J1ngsl

�7-The DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July '1:1, 1972

.~~X«:~:::x::::::::::::::::s::::::::::~:;~·

Nelson Families !il Social 11 Youths Enjoy Picnic
Met in Columbus Calendar

I

I

Juni cr America n Legion
Auxiliary of Feen&lt;'y·Hennrtl
Post 12: '• Middleporl , enjoyed a
wiener roast TuesdC\y even;•!''
THURSDAY
at the home of Mo o. Charles"
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8 Kessinger in Bailey Run.
p.m. Thursday at the hall .
Prayer . wa s given by
chaplain Sheryl Barnhart and
POMEROY WCTU, Thurs- pledge to the flag was give n in
day n(){m picni c at the home of unison. It was decided to have
Mi ss Lucreti a Genheimer
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
'

a housewares party on Aug . 10
at 7 p.m. at the Legion hall.
A memorial fund wilt be sent
to the Ma rie Moure fund in
memory of Wilma Davis,
deceased
Unit
charter
member , and to American
Legion Child Welfare foundation in memory of decea sed
Post member, · William
Ohlinger.

Cookout Held Sunday
RACINE - Mrs. Vivian their grandchildren Lydia and
Johnson of Racine was tihe Eddie Johnson, Middleport,
hostess for a family reunion and Mr. and Mrs. William R.
cook-out at the Syracuse Park Stephenson and tiheir children,
Sunday.
Tammy, Ricky, and Jimmy.
Guests were her son and his
Joey Stephenson is spending
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Robert a week with his mother, Mrs.
Stephenson and their four Johnson. Stephenson has been
children, Judy, Kathy , Andrea, attending college In Oklahoma .
and
Debbie ,
from
Philadelphia, Penn. ; Mrs.
Stephenson's mother , Mrs.
PICNI.C PLANNED
Bertha Wisler ; Mr. and Mrs.
The Past Matrons and Past
John Stephenson and their Patrons of Evangeline Chapter
daughter Susan, Beaver ; Mr. will' hold a family picnic Friday
and Mrs. Robert Rhinehart and at tihe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert King at6 :15p. m. Those
attend in g are to bring a
covered dish and table service.
RETURNSTOBGU
A short business meeting will
Leo Loring Vaughan, 11,
follow
the picnic.
returned to Bowling Green

Pulled Back

.Mrs.
Mar guerite
F.
Bangerter, widow of the la te
Rev. L. A. Bangerter, former
RUTLAND - The Nelson Nelson and Tracy, Miss Berpas tor of Hea th M. E. Church
family reunion was held July 9 nice Buffington, Mrs . Mella
Middlepor t, is a surgicai
at Westgate Park, Columbus. Schieler and daughter, Mr . and
patien t at Bethesda Hospital,
Attending were, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Clair Nelson, Mr. and
Room 401, Zanesville, 43701.
Frank McKibben and family, Mrs. Jim Dyer, Mr. and Mrs.
She would appreciate hearing
Mrs . Pearl Ogdin, Mr. and Kenneth Cooper, Mr; and Mrs.
from frie nds.
Mrs. Homer Dillon ~ nd Donald Nelson and family, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stover
dtlughter, Mrs. Jewell Buf- and Mrs. Dwight Nelson and
MEIGS CHRISTIAN
were in Lancaster Tuesda y to
fington, Mr. and Mrs. Iv an daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Women's Fellowship July 27,
accom pany their gra ndRedd, Dana Nelson, Mrs. Ora Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Thursday, at 7:30p.m . at the
children, Chris, Eric and Terra
Profitt, Mr. and Mrs. Downie Nelson and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Middlepor t Church ·of Cl1rist.
Hubbard, here for se veral
'Ch~an Up' ~ign
Nelson and daughters, and Mr. Da le . Goff, Mr . and Mrs.
&lt;lays'
visit while their pa rents,
SPECIAL meeting of Shade
and Mrs . Walter Canode and Donald Mansfield, Mr. and
Mr.
and
Mrs. James Hubbard,
Cleans Up Tahle
family.
Mrs. Danny Mansfield and son River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM Thursspend a few days in Celina,
Also Mr. and Mrs. Edwin and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin York day 7 p.m. Work in EA Degree.
Kan .
All Master Masons are invited.
fl y POLLY CRAMEH
Ne lson, Mr. and Mrs. Paul and family .
Mt·. and Mrs. Myron Miller State University to assist in
FRIDAY
DEAH POL LY - I am one lemal e in a house hold wi th
have
re turned from a week's
PAST Matrons and Past ~ hr ce me n fo lk s . I ~a s ::~ 1 m y wi t's e nd over their leav in g
BASICCOMPLETED
autumn orientatill'll, after
vacation
which included a visit spending the weekend witih his
Patrons of Evangeline Chapter tee cream bowls, dtrt y kntve s, ope n mayonnaise jars and
Airman Paul F. Dill, son of
with Mr. Miller's sister; Mr .
'
family picnic Friday home of what ever after mak ing snac ks on the kit chen table in .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo L. Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Dill of
and Mrs. Kenneth Hughes, at Vau ghan , Pomeroy . He ' Pomeroy, has completed his U.
'•
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King at stead of returning thin gs that belonged in th e refrigerator
SYRACUSE - The flower wedding of Grace Crow Tolson, 6: 15 p.m. Bring covered dish and putt1ng dtrt y thm gs tn the stnk Finally I dev ised a
Dravosburg, Pa., an aunt, Mrs .
recently returned from Canada S. Air ~.. basic training at
;; garden at the home of Mr. and of Canton and Letart Falls
stgn
that
says
"
!'l
ease
clean
!he
tab
le"
tn bright red : on
George Sprag ue , at Chadds where he .represented the Phi tihe ;Arr Training Command's
and
table
service.
Business
'~ Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse , area, daughter of the late
the other s1 de 1 wrote "Thank yo u" and below that " I
Ford , Pa. , Mrs. Miller 's Delta Theta Fraternity at Lackland AFB, Tex. He is
mee ting will follow.
love you" m blue. Th is sign is heavy cardboard . stapled
:! was the scene of the recent William 0 . Crow, to Mr. Paul
Mrs . Amelita Taylor
sisters,
SATURDAY
at the top 111 seve ral places an d be nt down about an inch
Montreal, Quebec. Vaughan is remaining at Lackland for
G. Eich of Tripoli, Libya,
HOMEMADE ice cream will from the top so H will stand . At li rst it had to stay on · and family of Riesterstown , president of the Phi Delta training in the security police
Tuesday evening.
Md., and Mrs. Edna Faulkner The ta Fraternity at Bowling field. Airman Dill is a 1972
be sold by the Tuppers Plains the. tabl e mos l ol I he time but now it is only needed oc·
AT CONVENTION
Vows of the wedding Community Club Saturday caSio nal ly as a remtnder. When thev clean the tabl e t
of Wilmington, Del. They also
graduate of M~igs High School.
Mrs. Carrie M. Neutzling , ceremony were read by the beginning at I p.m. at the Sohio turn the si gn so th e ·' Th ank you" side is seen . Thi s h'as visited the Brandywine River Green .
been a so urce of fu n and reall y bi'Oug hl r es u l t s. ~ N . 1 ~' . 1-1
dele gate from American Rev. Charles Norris, pastor of Stnlion in Tuppers Plains .
Mus eum an d viewed the
n n ~- n
n ~~ n r
: Legion Auxiliary, Drew the Racine Baptist Church.
famous
N.C. Wyeth paintings.
Polly's Problem
Webster Post 39, Mrs. Florence Attendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Capt. and Mrs. John H.
. IJI, AH POLLY - We h ave indoor·outdoor ca rpet·
Richards, delegate from Un it Crow. Mr . and Mrs. Eich will Tuppers Plains
Korneder (Barbara Hughes 1
mg throughout most ol our house . We a lso have a
• 263, Middleport, and Mrs. Lula make their horne in Tripoli
5-m onth -old baby who has a tendency to spit up a
have arrived in Yokosuka,
• B. Hampton attended depart- where Mr. Eich is an executive
bt t so there C:ll' e whtt e spot s all ove r the carpetin g
Japan, ac cording to word
th ai I ca nnot remove . I have lried dtfferen l ca rpet
ment Convention American of Esso Standard Libya .
received from Mrs. E. L.
• Legion Auxiliary held Friday,
cleaners and eve n mopped the spots with fluor
Hu
ghe s.
Korn eder was
clea ners, but nothin g work s. There ar e al so a [ew
By Evelyn Briekles
Saturday and Sunday at the
recentl y promoted to the rank
ground -in spots that [ can not clean Please, someSunday School attendance at
Sheraton Hotel in Cincinnati.
SCHOOL SET
of captain in the Marine Corps.
one• help me.- MHS . J. B
.,
On Friday afternoon Mrs.
RACINE - Vacation Bible the United Methodist Church
Ricky Long of Columbus is
Neutzling presided over unit Sc hool will be held at the was 44 and offering $1~.46 and
D(,; AJI POLLY - My Pet Peeve concer ns early shoppers spending the wee k with his
activities which is composed of Rac ine Baptist Church worship attendance was 38 and at garage sales. I recentl y had one which was adve rtised
grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs .
National Security, Civ il beginning Monday through offering $30.26.
in the paper with th e tw o days of the sale clea rl y stated . Alfred Roush.
·
Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs. We were both amazed and worn -o ut the ni gh l before the
Defense, Spirit of '76, and Aug. II, from 6 to 8 p. m.
Rev. a nd Mrs. Fred I.
• Legislation. Representatives
Pre-registration will be held Edna Reibel' and Mrs. Edna sale as our doorbell neve r stopped rin gin g. When in- Gardner of J ohn son City,
from the state of Ohio at- Saturday at 11 a. m. at the Wayland, all of Middleport, form ed lhat th ey were one day ea rly and we cou ld not
Tenn., were guests Wednesday
make sal t!s, those people 's replies were oft en much less
~ tended . The group returned church . For additional in- visited a day this past week
than polite. With tile hi gh cost of li vin g today. I kn ow of Mrs. Mildred Hawley and
with Mr. and Mrs. R. K. . people lmcludm g myselfI are alw ays looki ng for barga in &lt; Miss Nan Moore, and dinne r
Saturday evening.
·
formation phone 949-2845.
Rowan .
bul ea rly sa les are un fat r tu th&lt;• majori ty of lh&lt;· bargain
gues ts of Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Welch and hun!ers and ca use much extra wo r k and bother - C D. Ray mond Cole Wednesday
family bought the Billy
DEAfl POLLY- Like Lila , I had a rug th at ha d been
evening.
Chapman property and have fol ded and then would not lay flat on llw floor . I boughl
moved there.
a rot ! of double-s ti ck carpet tape in the ru g depa rtment
l."hr •f · ~· Our
Summer to Fall
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Chapman store. (Poll)·'s notc-Soml' hardware stores sell thi s. too.)
l'rin• T1 1th1y
and children have movep to the I tu rne d the ru g over . stu ck the tape ovt! r each fold,
Sttils made of washable,
Dora Mae Calaway property. tctrned the r ug over. p_ressed fi rml y to the floo r along the wrinkle-fre e knit s fur la te
lolds and walk ed on tt for at least a week before using summer ca n be the beginSeveral from here attended the varuum .- LILA
ning of your fall wa rd robe .
the Charles Norris Crusade at
(NEWSPAPER ENHI!PI!ISE ASSN. I
FURNITURE
W 11 h all the mix a nd
tile football stadium at Racine
ma tch es, a sui! of skirt and
PH. 713·5592
Sunday
evening . A large c~owd
You wlll receive a dollar If Pollv uses vour favorit e jac ket ca n be expand ed with
•
homemaking idea. Pet Peeve, Pollv's Problem or solution a long vest, pants and the
of over 600 attended.
MASON. W. VA.
to
a problem . Write Polly· In care of this newspaper.
· Mr . and Mrs. La mont
latesl in blo uses and swea t'
" ·•' ',,,, ' '" ,,... ,,,.,..
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
ers.
Gray. which will be a
Nichols
of
Tampa,
Fla
.
spent
••
• W I II lo. ••o\1 1&gt; 1111 1 loU l'ol ,
V
DL
dbi g fall color , mak es it
several days vacation here 'T'
6,000
'"
J KII'I\IIKII I 'I,oll ll
.1
L
through the summ er mix ed
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
....... ,,,
6
w1th soft pas tels.
•
to
t
\II
I II III
Lo lli II
Clarence Nichols.
1.., ,.,,,.,, m•••ll oUun I"'"
•
"'" "'"' ,,, ,,_ ,, ,-'''"'
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Grimes
Members uf the program program committee attending
• l'loi! SI'II ll I .\..,;
·~
24,000 BTIJ '"~'' "' '"" .,..... '"'"'''" ·"' ....~ . "' ""'""" ......~ .... ,,
and mother, Mrs. Cora Grimes commi ttee a nd offi cers of were Ruth Owens of Jackson
of Athens, and Mrs. Neisel Delta Kappa Gam ma _ a Ethel Chapman of Rutland:
Weatherman all were Sunday N.lilional Honorary Teac hers' Mildred Hawley of Middleport,
guests of his sister, Rev. and Society _ met on July 12th at Anna Elizabet h Turner of
NATIONAL APPLIANCE MONTH AT SEARS
Mrs. Clyde Webster and son of Salem Cen ter School to plan Rutland and Gertrude Trace of
11
11
Salem Center, Ohio.
the programs for the coming Coalton. Refreshm ents were
Marvin Walker is a patient at two years.
served.
Camden Clark HospitHI ,
Mrs. Roberta Wi lson local
The first meeting of the year
· Parkersburg. ·
.....JlfCsident, Mrs. Rachel Warne; will be held at Lake Hope on
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Newell of Jackson, vice president and Monday evening, Sept. 4th with
and son Larry of Columbus and program chairman, and Mrs. a dinner meeting at the lodge.
M~ . and Mrs. P. T. Wtll and Edith Hoffman of McArthur,
An area workshop at the Trichildren of Charleston, W. Va., past president, were in charge County Vocational School in
were Sunday guests of Mr. and of the meeting. Others of the Nelsonville was announced for
Mrs. Jesste Newell.
August 18th. Officers, chair·
man, and members are inThose visiting Marvin Mrs. Ethel Stout Sunday .
vited . Appli cations
fo r
Walker at Ca mden Clark
Mrs . Edith Harper and Mrs . reservations may be found in
Hospital , Parkersburg, were Effie Watson attended the the recent issue or 11 Voice".
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY
•'
Mr . and Mrs. Truman Clark homecoming at Silver Ridge
'
•,
and her sister, Mrs. Dimple Sunday .
.
Miller and daughters Shirley
~.,
Don Landon and Harley
and Mrs. Opel Maddox, and Godfrey returned home after
••
REFRIGERATORS
'
two daughters, Pauline and undergoing surgery at Camden
FREEZERS
Darlene of Dayton, 0 ., and Jeff
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg
Newell of Columbus. Jeff spent
WASHERS - DRYERS
and is recovering satisfaca week here with the Walkers torily.
DISHWASHERS
and returned to his home
Mrs. Russell Spencer and
Sunday. Mrs. Clark and Mrs.
TELEVISION- STEREOS
grandson Gregory Michael
Miller are sisters of Mr .
Cooper, and daugliter Judy
Walker.
Spencer of Chester visited Mr.
Mr. and Mrs . Mi chael
and Mrs. Wayne · Brickles
Watson of Middleport spent Friday afternoon.
Tuesday evening with his
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Perry of
POMEROY
220 E. MAIN
992-2178
g
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORN E
ran dmo th er, Mrs. Effie Shade and Virgil Roush of West
Watson .
Shade called on Gerald Violet
Mon .. Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sal. 9 to 5, Thurs .
9 to Noon, Friday 9: oo to 9:00
Miss Patty Dorst of Parkers- Sunday evening. Virgil Roush
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _.........._ _.;.._ _ _ __. burg visited her grandmother,
was on his way to the hospital
at Parkersburg to visit his wife
Betty Roush
who
is
THURS., FRIDAY,
hospitalized there.
SATURDAY ONLY
Mr. and Mrs. Mario
Calantoni of Torrence, Calif.,
are visiting her ·parents, Mr.
e CHOOSE FROM 20 COLORS- ALL IN STOCK
and Mrs. Everett Shultz and
e IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
family .

POU.\"'S POINTERS

SAIGON (UPI)-Soutih Viet- night blasted the two· basesnamese soldiers today pulled
out of tihe fortress Citadel they
stormed in Quang Trl City
tihree days ago. South of tihe
city, North Vietnamese troops
overran two key links in tihe
defenses of Hue.
Military spokesmen said
government marines replaced
paratroopers today in the
. battle for Quang Tri city,
captured by the North Vietnamese 88days ago, but efforts
to retake the 13-acre Citadel
were temporarily abandoned
when tihe paratroopers were
withdrawn. A· U.S. military
source said the marines did not
try to enter the fortress. He
gave no explanation.
Forty miles south of Quang
Tri, U.S. sources said Communists overran Fire Bases
Bastogne and Checkmate, two
vital links in the defenses of
Hue, the country's third largest
city 400 miles north of Saigon.
U.S. advisers have predicted a
North Vietnamese assault on
the old imperial capital before
Oct. I.
A Saigon conunand spokesman said the paratroops were
witihdrawn from the Quang Tri
fighting and sent to an undisclosed area for a new
operation. ·The marines who
replaced them fought a sixhoW" battle northeast of tihe
Citadel today, the spokesman
said, kUling ~3 Communists
and capturing 32 weapons. He
said there was no report of
marine casualties.
U.S. sources said heavy
fighting was under way today
in the area around Bastogne
and Checkmate, 12 and 13
miles southwest of Hue . One
source said Bastogne has
changed hands six times since
tihe Communist offensive in
South Vietnam began March
30.
The sources said North
Vietnamese gunners during tihe

. Grace Crow Tolson Recent Bride
"'
~

..

•.n

Society News

Kelvinator Air Conditioners

tbe

MASON

'

.

.".

.~

..
I'

I'T

I(

~

WO-

•• l • lo l on • ,oo n ll u oo . ,.·.o~·o ·tll

I ll"~ '

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY- JULY 29th
ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING

..,

GREAT SAVINGS
ON SEARS
COMPLETE LINES

SEARS

DAYTON - John P. Gilliam ,
a member of the 1972
graduating class of Meigs High
School, has been awarded a
four-year General Motors
college scholarship by Ohio
University.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lather E. Gilliam, Jr., Route 4,
Pomeroy, he plans to pursue a
course
in
mechanical
engineering or chernlstry.
John ' s demonstrated

ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT &amp;
K. V. OOMPUTING DEPT.
OF UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.

pi'IC8S

SHIRt
FINISHING

U. S. 60 WEST - HUNTINGTON

SA~E

DAY
SERVItE
In At9- 0ut AI S

IN
POl NT PLEASANT,
W.VA.
ANNOUNCES

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT

plus Fire Bases Birmingham,
T-Bone and Lion along tihe Hue
defense line- with more tihan
3,000 rounds · of 122irun artillery, rockets and mortar
shells . Another !50-round
barrage of mortar and
recoilless rifle fire hit an
element of South Vietnam's
ii4tih Regiment a mile from
Bastogne but the infantrymen
counterattacked and killed 17
Communists at a cost of two
government troops dead and
six wounded, the Saigon
conunand said.
In a separate development,
the Saigon command today
said 50 South Vietnamese
marines were killed north of
Quang Tri July 11 in the worst
single helicopter crash of the
war . A spokesman said
Communist gunners downed
the chopper in the middle of a
North Vietnamese antiaircraft
emplacement. He said 10
Americans were wounded in
the incident and two are
missing .
A government spokesman
only hours before today's with·
drawal from the Quang Tri
Citadel said the Communists
remained in control of the
western portion of the 19th
Century fortress but that
" (North
Vietnamese)
resistance is weakening every
day." The paratroopers
Wednesday raised their
country's flag over tihe in·
stallation but sources said half
of tihe Citadel was still in
Communist hands.
The U.S. command said 24
U.S. B52 bombers dumped
more tihan, two million pounds
of explosives on Communist
troops and supply dumps
within 14 miles of Quang Tri
City overnight. Eight more
flights of the big planes
unloaded about 111 million
pounds of bombs on suspected
North Vietnamese positions
around Hue .

OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
VESPRE
SPRAY MIST OR
POWDER

·use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson:s aeaners
21~

t OVEk
30 YRS .

•DUPONT 501
NYLON

CARPET '

EXPER~f.NCE

40 SQ. YDS.
CARPET

Recycle cans,
bottles and paper.

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

~

•IIW!N/ill(l'llllllr.t1JW/WIDfl ti1fJt7J1
•INVMMIIMf/Mfi/IKI.JIIIIf(f

Guaranteed Satisfaction On All Milterials &amp; Workmanship

NAIR LOTION

HAIR
REMOVER

CARPETLAND, Inc.·
"Wall-To-Wal{ Carpet Spe.c~lists"
•

\

Portraff Size Available from Wallets to 30•40
AHOm: DON'T POllUTE
e~

lfONE 011/CE J0JfrAI/JIN6AYE. JCIN~fllt! ~1110 1So6Z

/If~~~~~/(

66~

11.19

RIGHT GUARD
NATURAL SCENT
==~
ANTI
PERSPIRANT

SCOPE
FAMILY SIZE
Re~t.

5 OL

1.59

1

REG.

11.29

69¢

5 oz.

Reg.
sug

GILLETTE

59¢
BARBASOL

The Dry

SHAVE
CREAM

Look
7 oz.
REG.

1.49

1

88¢

Olairor

11 OL CAN

Balsam2

REG. 98'

60 Second Conditioner and
Creme Rinse in one

8 oz.

Available in
R1~ler and,
Protein Body
Formulas

REG. '1.59

88t
1

AFTER

SPRAY NO

CUTEX
POLISH
REMOVER

SETIING
LOTION
Regular or
Extfa Hold

3

oz.

REG. 43'

8 OZ. SIZE

REG.

REGULAR OR
HARD TO HOLD

13 oz.
REG. 98'

SOFT &amp; DRI
12 oz.
Reg. 12.45

LIFE SAVERS

2.50

1

1.25

1

a:•

GILLETIE

29¢

4 OL
REG.

@ 1972 CLA.IROL \NC.

HELENE CURTIS

SHAVE LOTION

6 PACK

REG. 1.89
1

ONLY

36¢

GREAT BODY

SHAMPOO
REGULAR OR OILY
REG. 11.99

99¢

CITRONELLA

CANDLE

CLAIROL
COMPACTS

Reg. 89t

39¢

99¢

8 oz.
REG.

2.25

1

~~~
· ~
fRI
DH·

lA S T(

.

.

pOLI•GRIP
Df:NTUIHi AO .. I SIVII C"' ! AM

POLl-GRIP

tba

SMALL SIZE

'

p ~~~:

REG.$~

II SOON!

'

'

Q:
,.

.~.

66¢
9r... .......... .
RE~.

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

'

..........36¢

lARGE SIZE

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

99

di/AAANTUO'

REG.

HOLDS 3 TIMES LONGER

•'

l.fO~ COV~!£ ·

1

DISPOSABLE BOTTLES

FINAL NET

•NrJA$/illt/f

116 MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-7590

,

CALM 2
ANTI·PERSPIRANT

SET
REG. $4 77 SPRAY POWDER
8.95
•-____________

6 oz.

..

OiflffT IPI,I..flll.ll(f·JHIJA/IItY

TOSS' EMS
DISPOSABLE NURSER

CLAIROL

TO INTROPUCE THEIR CO~OA ARTISTRY
W! Off/A /-/11/f- t /WKt;
COI.O~ llOI?fAAIT

10'5

$109

"-

10 AM TO 7 PM

Completely Installed
Over Heavy Sponge Pad .

REG. 11.79

1.49

leadership qualities and
scholllstlc achievement in high
school were instrumental in his
selection by Ohio Un.ivet~sit.Y'
for the coveted GM award. The
scholarship is one of 135 to be
awarded this year by over 100
colleges and universities
throughout the country as part
of GM's overall program of
support for higher education.
In ali, over 800 students are
attending colleges with GM
assistance. Each scholarship is
va lued at from $200 to $2,000 a
year depending on the need of
the student. Ali private
colleges participating in the
program also receive annual
grants-in-aid from GM of $500
to $800 per scholarship, based
on tuition cosls.
In addition to his high
scholastic achievement, John
was a candidate for Outstanding Freshman, and a
member of the National Honor
Society and Mu Alpha Theta.

-wr--11.!!1
~-=-_z.:::_;::g::

&amp;SATURDAY

JULY 27-28-29

5 OL
REG. 12.19

1

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

THURSDA~ FRIDAY

7 oz.

7 Ol
REG. 11.29

REG.

lA'f.

WOODSY OWL HOOTS:

~~

REG. '1.89

Master Portrait

REUNION SET
The annual Cleland reunion
will be held Aug. 13 at Forest
Acres Park with a basket
dinner at noon .

INSECT
REPELLANT

MEDIUM SIZE

THAT

SPECIAL OFFER

NOXZEMA
SUNBURN
SPRAY

6-12 PLUS

GM Awards Scholarship
To Gilliam of Meigs Hi

ear proaramrutnne

•

THURS., FRIDAY
SAT.URDAY
and SUNDAY

South Viets

6- The Daily Sentinel, Midd!qJOrt-Pomeroy, 0., July 'l:l, 1972

'129
r.

~

ECONOMY SizE
REG.

.

'1.29 .............

88¢

Wil Keep Sharing
Until Jf1 R_un Out o,l
Sa1J1ngsl

�I

8- The Daily Sentinei,Mkldi•.,Ort-POO&gt;erov, O., Jnlv27. 1972

~-

.,••.,

"

•'••

'.,.

·:'•
'•
'•

••
••

'
"·
·'•'

..·'

,s

wANYAos
Notice
INFORMATION
REDUCE safe and fast wllh
, • DEA~INES
P.M. Day Before Pvbo;callo" . GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Monday ~e adline 9 a.m.
" water pills," Nelson Drug.

-========::::..._,
GRAND
TOUR
OF
EUROPE

REGUlATIONS

Tht Publisher r eserves t he
r ight to edit or reject an y

ad~
T~ e

deemed
oblectl ona l.
publishv will not be respons ible
for mo~ than one, incorrect
insertlol'l .

RATES

Minimum Charge 75c ..

,
•

'~

~

·•
,I

i•
._,

,.,

"

:

~·

••'

12 cents per ' word three
con secut ive rnse-rtioris .
18 cents per 'word sfx con se cut'lve insertions . , ~
, 25 Per Cent Discount on pale

ads and ads pe ld with in 10 days

3 weeks departing on
September 5th, only
$889 .00 Round Trip
from N.Y. escorted by
John · and Charlotte
Heiskell, Rt. J, Box
S9S, South Point, Ohio.
Phone 614-377-4791.

CAitO OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addJtlonat word 2c .

- BLIND ADS .
Additional 25c Charge

Advert isement .

OFFICE

HOIIR~,

per

• .

:· 8: 30a .m•. to 5 ;00,p .m, Datly_.
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 :0(1 Noon
Saturdav .

"+
of Thanks
.:.' WECard
WOULD like to express our

'·

6-29-3otp

Cai'\Cellatlon - Co r rect ions
Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for .
Day ot Publicat ion
r

Wan't Ad Serv ice
''· s c entFor
ts per Wor d one innrtLon

"

Have Yot• Had A

deepest appreclallon to all
who came, sent cards and
gifts or in any way helped us
recently to make lhe Golden

Razor Cut?

Why Not stop in and let Mick
and Fi-ed cut and style your
hair for neater and better
con trolled ha i r .

Anniversary of our parents,

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Varian
of Clifton, W. Va ., a success .
May yov be greatly rewarded
f or

your

thoughtfulness

KARR'S

to

them .
Sincerely.
The
Children.
.
7-27 -ltc

milea~e

actUal

little over

53,000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
snow tires . Call 992-2897.

7-27-6tc

Wanted To Rent

TOMATOES,
cucumbers

MIDDLEPORr
Phone Faye Manley
992-5592
In
Pome,roy
Phone 992·2156

Proffitt,
7-21 -61&lt;

pol ~ fo e s,
and
beans.

Clarence Proffit. Portland.
Ohio; phone 843-225~ .
'
. 7-19-flc

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

2 REFRIGERATORS- Phllco
with automatic dotroster;
large family size wlfh 160 lb.
freezer unit, like new; also
Frigidaire, make good utility
box ; phone m-5131.
7-27-Jtc
8 ROOM house,
recreation plus
basement and
porch . River
polnlmenl only.

"and girls. Hurry lo ...
POMEROY
... - Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
_. . . · Phone 992·2181
.

house for rent In Pomeroy
area. 3 bedrooms, garage,
basement &amp; yard In nice
neighborhOod. 3 children and

dog . Call collect 1-304-242·
3747 .
7-27-31c

STUD PONY colt, weaned . SIS
or besl offer . Phone 667-3906.

124, close to deep mine ; take
late model car or housetrailer

in trade ; also trailer space for
rent ; M II. G Food Market. 3
mi. South , Middleport, Rl. 7.
7-21·61c

26 3

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WALNUT. Modern style, 4
speaker sound system , .4

speed automatic changer .
Balance $64.89 . Use our
budget terms . Call '192-7085.
7-21 -61c

-- -- - BEAUTIFUL Early American
style ,

stereo -radio

com -

bination , 4 speaker, AM-FM
radio, 4 speed changer .
Balance $78 .67. Use our
budget terms. Call '192-7085.
7-21 ·61c

model used or repossessed
Mobile Home at Berry-Miller
Mobile Home Sales. Used and
repossessed Mobile Homes is
our specialty - not our
sideline. We have a complete
selection ol 8. 10 &amp; 12 wide
Mobile Homes in stock. We
are also the area franchised
dealer for one of the oldest

and best homes In lhe
business - DETROITER famous for price and quality .

Don't walt, stop now at BerryMiller Mobile Home Sales, 705
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
phone 423-9S31 - Open 7 days.
7-27-2tc

Sl NGER Sian! Needle sewing CASij paid for ail mal&lt;es and
models of mobile homes .
machine, equipped lo zig zag,
Pho.ne area code 614-423-9531.
make buttonholes. etc .
4-13-tfc
Balance
$~1.02
.
Use
our
992-2448
budget terms. Call '192-7085. -~---:-.- -·Pomeroy, 0.
7-2J.61c so x 10, PRICED reasonable ;
phone Cheste r 98S -3379.
WHY nollry cosmetics thai ore 15 FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
1·21-6fp
h.p. motor, also 1956 Harley·
truly
different
and
Davidson 74, phone '192-5271.
refreshing? The famous mink
1·1B-12tp FOR THE BEST deal In a new
oil base and now we have fhe
or used mobile home. try
lemon grove. Just lhlnk , 1~
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
specials !his monlh, some for HEREFORD bull ; phone '192·
Kanauga,
Ohio.
men as well as women . It's
6765.
7·16-JOtc
KOSCOT of course. Phone
7-25-31c
'192-lll3.
·'1-tfc HEREFORD heifer call ; phone
--~--~..J..."'---7.,;
. .. '"
'
843-2778.
• Air Conditioners
1·2S-3tc
Wanted' T'tl Do
•Awnings
WILL do lronlngs in my home ; 1970 YAMAHA 2SO Enduro,
• Underpinning
phone 949-4451.
excellent condition, $500 ; Guy
7·25·31c
Sargent, Phone '192-6432.
Complete mobile home
7-25-31c service -.- plus g igan t ic
Female Help Wanted
--:-::-- 'display of mobile homes
1972 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine always available at ...
HO~SEWIF'E to represent our
lefl In layaway. Beautiful

'Pomeroy
~

WHITE

R EALTY~

of water .

$28.000.
3 BEDROOM, bath, furnace.
carpet and paneling, Jf• acre
lot. $11 ,500 .

vinyl and st~el siding ;
fiberglas, brick and · slone i
complete line of reslaeilllao
and commercial ·roofing ;

complete lin"' of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to

protection . 32 N. 2nd. '192·
3918.
AlLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

POMEROY
3 BEDROOM, 1'/, bath,
kitchen complete with ref . &amp;
ran~:~e.

carpet &amp; drapes Included, on 2 lots near school.

$1S,500.
ALBANY
NEW 3 bedroom. l'h bath,
ran ch house, carport . Nice

level lot In new addition ,
owner transferring, mu st

sell. $24.500.

Wheels balanced
All
tronlcally .

guaranteed .

REALTY

.....Pomerovo.

1
Ohi~

LEVEL LOT90x90
SYRACUSE - 1'12 story

private entrance i phone 992·

and a pitcher of draft
beer from 6 til 12 at the

2780 or '192-3432.

7-23-tfc
-----~

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

Wanleti T(
OLD Furniture, oak !abies,
organs, dishes,

Free music featuring Donnie
Sedwick on lfle organ &amp;

clocks,

brass

beds, or complete households.
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6·28-lfc '

accordion.

From 10 Tii2

~-----

liefp

EXPERIENCED

SHOWALTER 'S Wei Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio, · has added
shopping

seml .dump

truck driver. If nol ex perlenced , do not inquire.

ceramic wares for customer's
gift

Wanted

Phone 992-5639.

convenience.

7-26-Jtc

7-27-Jtp

SI Toysl Toys! Sell
GUN SHOOT, also rifle mal· TOY
Playhouse
toys, Aug. to Dec.
ches, open sites only, Forked . Free training.
Good comRun Sportsman Club, Sunday,
mission,
No
cash
Investment.
July 30, 12 noon.
No
delivery
.
No
colleclinQ.
S
7-26-31c
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. 0.11
Margaret Fortune 9oi'I-.14TA or
SHOOTING match, Saturday,
Barbara Lambert 446-:Mtl.
July 29th, at the Rac ine
7-26-JOic
Planing Mlllal6 p.m. Factory
choke guns only.· Assorted BABYSITTER lo stay In my
meal . Sponsored by lhe
home from 8 a . m. lo 4 p. m.
Syracuse Fire Dept.
Call
offer ~ p. m. 992 -3580.
7-26-Jtp
7-27-Jtc

. ..

;;;;;;;;;::::=:=:::::====~

... ,.....

We talk to JGU

'WMP0/1390
Oti .TOUR DIAl.
.•

WAITRESS wanted from 4p. m,
to 12:30p. m. Apply In person,
Blue Tartan . No experience
necessary.

7·27·61c

"T..

f.tow
Joln the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gill
Party Plan In the &lt;;ountry
- our 25th yoar I Com missions up to 30 pet. Fantastic Hostess Awards. Call or
wrile "SANTA's PARTIES"
Avon, Conn. 06001 . Telephone
1 !203) 673 · 3~55. ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
7·2-JOic

LEFT IN lay-away, 1972 Zig
Zag sewing machine. This
mach i ne overcasts , darns,

embroideries with just a turn
of lhe dial . Pay balance of
$4~ . 50 or pay $6.21 a month . FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Phone '192·5331.
frame house, six rooms lind
7-20-lfc
bath. Large lot. Located In
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
LOVE MUSIC??? Try !his 1972
house on lefl going north
1 track stereo console In your
Inside corporation line.
home . Pay balance of $98.80
7-27-11
or payments can be arranged. - - - - - - - - - Phone 992-5331.
.RACINE - 10 room house:
7·20·1fc
bath, basement, garage, lwo
2 LOTS In Meigs Memorial
lois. Phone 949-4313.
Gardens; phone '192-271&gt;&lt;1.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4_-s.lfp
7-21 -6tc
--------RACINE - A good going
r estaurant business for man
BOAT. motor and trailer ; 15 fl .
and wife team . stock and
boa! of wooden construction,
equipment
, 1 Ice cream
65 h.p. Mercury motor ; In top
machine not Included ; this Is
shape ; - new battery , skis,
a very good buy at $5,500;
cushions, etc .; will sacrifice ;
Phone 949-3211 ; George
phone '149-5656.
Hobo teller , Real Estate
. 7-16-12tc
Broker, Pomeroy, Oh io.
7·25·31c

VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE
LETART FALLS, OHIO

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

t H. DOUGHTY

HANNA .COAL OOMPANY
.

CADIZ. OHIO 43907-

TELEPHONE (614) 9.2 4641

ON MY reMPORARV
LICENSE EXAM, t:l".D.

'IHINK

"ttO HAD ENOUGH

AS

8 tMOS

free

For

· estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. . V.

10 LEf ME DRIVE
FARmER 'THAN 11-£ ,

iT's liME

LE~1H

T~IR.T'I l

OF CtiR

r:tKIVEWAY 1

FAI'IH IN·ME ...

I'vE HAD FOR1V

1350

Sole 1
1 Gravely Model C-121 12 HP
walking troctor wllfl 50"
mower.
·
Llsl$1215.00
Sole

'TI?AININ:#AT

SCHOOL.

IJJOO

1 Gravely Super C·l walking

tractor with 30 mower.
11

U'LABNER

List SIU.OO . Sale 1735
1 Gravely Super C-1 waiklng
tractor with 30" mower.
LIIIS7t5.00
Sa.lt '675
1 Eltt· Trak Model E-12 wtm

MOOSE15
LAUG~ 11-IG !!

HtGH
Ae.cNE
DOOPATCH,
DWELL

s1250

Li&amp;I$1599.11U
Sole
1 Snapper Comei, Madel
JOIX, 1 HP riding mower,
3011 cut.
S40Q
List S499.95
~le
1 Snapper 5 HP Rotary
Tiller.
Llsl$236.95 · Sl_le
All carry new Warranty

THE
REMNANTS
OF' THE

'??·FOR HUNDREDS OF
MOONS, HE NOT LAUGH
-HE NOT E.VEN SP&amp;AKHE c.JUST SIT THERE
~· , AAID SULK

5EEGAASTAW
INDIANS

1200

Grave~

Johnson. and Son, Inc.

3·2·11•

Tractor Sales

! WAS GOI toJG

..,.,...._...

MY M..J61C

I ., .. , ... .,, ,_,,..

Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992-2975

®AS IF IT AIN'T' MD
ENOUGH 5ERVIN 1
TIME: HERE,WADDA

WE GOTTA lOOK
FORWARD 10

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been :
your
can celled?
Lost

YOU MEAN
'VOU roN'r CIIRl'
W ETHER YOU'RE
PAROLED?

o.JEEZ ! IT t'lfN'T THAT,
Ml~ WINKLE!

~E

ONLY.Xlf&gt;

TRIIININ ' WE
GET HERE IS
WORKING IN
THE lAUNDRY.

EI'Bm:JNE
WANT5 OUTTA
HERE !

MY

WE NEED 10 iRIIIN
RJR A J06 1HA1'&amp; IN Tt:RE511N6 IMYBE A
LITILE f!XCITIN6 /

EXCITING?
INTE!iESTING?

WHI:N WE GET

our ?

6·15-lfc

·PAPER hanging ; interior and 0
ex terior pa inting ;

~'(LELAND~

T~A'f,

DON'T 'IOU

I HAD A I'I:RFECT SCORE

'

-AS LONG
~E'S UNPER

1-Z1

·"

HoURS OF DRM:R

RP,.c.nn,.hl~

2966.

WILL TJ.IE STUPENT$
GO ALONG WITII

Nt&amp;.. k. h l a... ~.s. r.. Ott

· ~

EliPE~IENCE !

operator' s license? Call 992·,

160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C ofllce .

A~S5~, T~e.

PENT MUST ~AVE AT
LEAST TWENTY YEARS
OF ADMINISTRATIVE

rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
992-3213.
I · U · ITC

Arthur

Musser, phone 742·5223.
7-18·30tp

... IS DOC
AU. SET?

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir:
ser vi ce, all makes. 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors . 1

3-29-tf c
r&lt;_E_A_D_Y_·M
- 1X
- -C
-::-0-::-N
- C-::-R::-::ET E'
del ivered right fo y&lt;&gt;ur j'
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992·32U.:
Goegle ln Ready -Mix Co ..1
Middleport, Ohio.
\

-----

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

newly painted and carpeted ;
nice yard , porches and

T~EN,

elec ·
work

For Rent

FRIDft NIGHTPillA NIGHT

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

tune up and brake service.

- - ---===--

STORE, stock ond equ ipment,
all lor S6.600. Phone 742-3144
or '193-6048.
7-2J.6tp

~:l":t~suo

.BACKHOE AND DOZER work)
Septic lanks lnsfalled. Getll'ge
(BHI) Pullins. P~onf99H41~,
4-25-lfc

r epresentative .

CLATIER

,197?'

42" maw1r.

-O'DELL WHEEL allgnmeni
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end ser.lce,

'---· --·----- ·---._

Demonsbator Sale

SEE us FOR : Awnings, s!orm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum 'siding
and railing . -A.. Jacob, sales

Real Estate For Safe

----FURNISHED apartment, all

"·

1 Gravely Model 430, 12 HP
. ~!ding tractor with 50"

:sm.

IT 1bDI'\'1' I
--~

" (~
"

COmGE'S NEW PRESI·

I

Al.L RIGHT, 'fW'Lt..
QIA.JE IT 10 ME\

•- •

COUNTED ON

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complele Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
'Crill Bradford
S·l ·fiC

I

~- -

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
· aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992:

painting ;

c:ustomer satisfaction. · We
are fully Insured for your

·c

trucks and loW-boy for hire .

remodeling ,
building,
suspended ceilings, Interior
exterior

-

Dozer &amp; End loader work,.
ponds , buemenl, land . scaping. We hove 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by. hour or contract. 11
Free · Estimates. We also .
·na.l 1111 dirt, top,soil. Dump ,

We specialize In aluminum,

and

•

EARTH MOVING

garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13.750

MIDDLEPORT
7 ROOMS, bath, loi 100x190.
$7,900.50.

Employment Wanted

Notice

FER?

1t1 1m~

606 E.

3 BedfOC)m home, with
brick f'ront, I car

Real Estate For Sale

{7} 17 , 20, 24 , 27 , .. ,

~ETE L L I N ' ME

5-12-H,

HoJiit·&amp;· Auto .

OpenS . 5
M~oday lhru

Pursuant to the provisions of
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath,
the Commun !cat ions Act of 193,.
NEW for ced air gas furnace,
as amended, notice Is her eby
porche
s,
basement .
given that Radio Mld -Pom, Inc .
ss.ooo.oo.
Hcense Of Station w M P o
RIVER FRONTAGE
Middteport, Ohio has fllel;t an
·
..,.,-::
:a... ',l f
6-30-Hc ;
P- PPIIcatlon with· the Federa l
SYRACUSE - 2 story
. __,:________...._______.,_~Ommunlcatlons• · Comm ission
frame,
7
rooms,
2
baths,
4
SEWING MACHINE serv ice,
fO.r a construction perm it for a
bedrooms, 2 porches. util ity
new FM broadcast station to be
clean , oil, set tension $4.99. 1
room , some paneling, gas
operated on a frequency of 92 .1
Sp ec ial Electro -Grande
megacycles, Channel 221 With
forced air furna ce, full
Company . Phone '192-6517.
an elfecflve radiated power of 3
basement.
garage .
S-2 1 -lf~
kilowatts. th e tower witl be
$12,500.00.
:-o-----::-:-;::~located .5 m lies north of High 1 MILE TO RUTLAND
"C:ALL Guy N-e lgle~ for Building
way 7 on th e Robert Burdette
Home
4 years ald.- 111~ acre
farm at Laurel Cliff . The an .
Houses.
tenna height will be 239 teet
ground ,
7
rooms ,
4
6·28-tfc
abOve average terra in. The FM
company, ordering and
bedrooms, bath, 2 storage
pastel
color,
full
size
modeL
stud ios w i ll be located in the
MILLER
stocking our merchandise In a
bu ildings, lois of cabinets In SEPTIC tanks clean·ed. Miller
All built-In lo buttonhole, do
sam e bu ild i ng as the present
local store In Pomeroy ; lllp·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
kitchen
. A buy at just
stretch
sewing
and
fan
cy
AM studios on Route 12 4
proximately
3
to
4
hours
e\tery
MOBILE
HOMES
662·3035.
$16,900.00.
Bradbury , Middleport, Oh io.
stitching. Pay lust $47.75 cash
1S days; $2 per hour; Write
2-12-lfc
The off cers. directo r s and
MIDDLEPORT RT. 1
1220 Wuhington Blvd,
or
term s available . Trade·ins
Box 729-F, c-o The Daily
owners of 10 pet. or more of the
1
story,
3
bedrooms,
accepted.
Phone
'192
-5641.
423-7S21
BELPRE,
0.
NEW
· DOZER ·and back licie work,
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio
stock are John E . M . Kerr,
7-21 -61c
bath, NEW forced air fur ·
president and Frank X. Rauch
ponds and septic tanks ; B II. K
45769.
nace, paneling, utility room,
Jr ., vice president. Members of
EKcavatl ng , Ph one '192-S367,
7-21 -6tc VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
porches. storage building,
the public who des ire to br i ng to
Dick Karr , Jr.
model. Complete wllh all
the commIssion 's attention
fruit room, $9,800 ,00.
5-21-tfc
fa cts concernlnr the operat ion
clean ing tools . Small paint 2 NEW HOMES, all electr ic, 3
SHOWN
BY
of the station should write to the
damag·e In shipping. Will sell
APPOINTMENT ONLY
~edrooms. full basement and
Federal Commun i cat i ons WILL DO welding after 5 p.m.
for $6.1.50 cash or terms
garage,
with
lake
frontage
;
at
Commission , Wash ington 1 D. C.
available. Phone '192·5641.
and weekends, any place •
2055,. no later than August 12,
Five Points area ; phone 992HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
7-21 -6tc
phone
'
1
92-5271.
1972. Letters should set for th in
HOUSE I ~ Long Bottom, phone'
2571 or '192-:W75.
REALTOR
7-18-12lp
detail the specific facts wh i ch
98S-3529.
PHONE
992·22S9-992-2568
the writer wishes the Com .
1- ~20 JOHN Deere dozer; 1 '64
mission to consider in passing
Chev. Dump Truck ; Earl
on th iS appl i cation . A copy of
Werner. Rl. 1. Mlddiep&lt;lfl,
th e applicat ion and retated
Ohio ; phone 992-2769.
material are on file ror public ROOM &amp; board, phone 675-4SS5.
7-23-6tp
3-31 -tfc
1·26-61c
inspection a t Radio Mid -Porn
In c. Route 124 Bradbur y, .- - - - -- Middleport, Oh io between the '3 AND 4 ROOM furnished an'4 COAL, Limestone, E)( celslor LOTS on Wr ight Street,
hours of 8:30a .m . and 4:30p . m .
Salt Works, E. Main St..
unfurnished apartments .
Pomeroy ; phone 7~2- 5937 .
110 Mechanic Street
week days .
Pomeroy, Phone '192 -3891 .
Phone '192-Sd4.
•·

1·11·12tc
4-12-lfc
4·12·11&lt;
,.:---::-:,----"'
2"'B"'
E"D~
R-=oo::-:-:M'"'m-ob-.:-::11e -:-ho_m
_e_ wItt. TOMATOES, cucumbers, green 3 BEDROOM house In Mason,
near churches and schools,
peppers
and
canning
air-conditioning ; 10 miles
dishwasher and di sposal. Call
tomaloe&amp;.
Geraldine
Cleland,
East of Pomeroy ; phone '192.
675 - ~292 after 4 p.m.
Racine, Ohio.
6329.
7-26-4tc
7-20-tfc
7·19-lfc

Buf

.

- GUARANTEEo--;;..
· Pho'ntt 9?.2~2094

Ph . 992-2174

JOHN

barns, plenty

From the largesf
Bulldozer Radl'l),or ~ .to
Smallest Healer Core .
Nolflan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
· MOTORS. INC.
Pomefay

'

nHEIL"

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

PH. 992-2571
OR 992·3975

.3 bedrooms,
bar, garage,
large front 17'h ' CONTINENTAL Travel
Trailer, 1'171 model, self·
View . Ap ·
Conlatl Associate
Call '192-5310.
contained: awning. mirrors
and hitch ; phone 992·5982.
7·2Htc
VERA EBLIN
1·12-lfc
300 GAL. stainless steel bulk
992-3020
milk tank and refrigerating POODLE puppies, Sliver To~·; 160 Coal St.
Middleport
unit. automatic; cost S2.500
Park view Kennels, Phone 992· ·
RUTLAND
would like S1,250; used very
5443.
acres,
4
lillie; phone 992 -7178.
8-15-lfc · FARM- 106
bedroom,
modern
home,
2
7-25-31p

For Sale or Trade

MAW .. WE GOT
ONE MORE
CARP PLA'IER
THRN WE

Business Services
Whfet-Aiii!ment
'5.55
On trl.ost Americ:in Coq ;

W ISH I. CCU.D, e:€ 1&lt;.,
l -JUST IXliJ'T 1-\IWE

aE I

WHRT IN THUNDER

·3 BEDROOMS

Buy 2 Pairsand
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All kinds, all sizes for men,
women, young men, bJys

BARNEY

'

NEW HOMES
2 New Homes, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, with lake frontage;
at Five Points area.

I

.

Real Estate For Sale

SALEI

For Safe

and Saturday on Larkin St..
Rutland .
7-26-Jtc

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

OUT-OF -TOWN family needs

LEGAl NOTICE

For Safe
TOMATOES, Joann
ph,one 843-2826'.

:====.. . --=
: . --=-=-::::;-' -------~~
=-· . t\ Mobile Homes For Sale
YARD sale, Thursday, Friday YOU can saves s son a late

- - - -- -

LEGAL NOTICE

IN

seen at :W~ South Sixth,
Middleport or phone '192-7375.
1·2S·6tc

Ph . m -2367
400-AFL-CIO

1964 TWO DOOR V.W., good
body and motor recently
overhauled ; good tires front &amp;
rear ; 3S miles per gallon gas.
Phone '192·2897.
7-27-6tc

PASTURE for 1 horse In
Chester area. Call before 4 p.
m. 98S-3549.
7-27-3tc

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

cessories, $300 as Is ; may be

Pomeroy

:: 196S DODGE Station Wagon,

..

.

BOAT, motor , trailer and ac- 4 ROOMS, bath, nice lot on Rt .

BARBER
SHOP
Lynn Sl .

Auto Safes
.,..

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! S~ntinel- Classifieds G~t Results!

I•

.••,,

.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
117 ACRE S - In gas area of Lebanon Township. Has gas
well now. A 6 room house, barn and several outbuildings.
Want to try your luck ala pig In a poke. Only 120.000.00
toda y.
FIVE POINTS
NEW HOME - 3 bedroom s, nice bath, kitchen with stove
and r efrigerator . Wall-to-wall carpet ing In living . Has 2

large lot s for only $16.000.

S BEDROOMS
BUTTERNUT STREET - Near downtown shopping .
Ni ce kitchen with doubl e sink. Full basement. 2 porches.
Ask ing just
. $7500.00 for quick sale.

.

Best Setvice

Finest Cars

•.

1971 Chevrolet ..... ~ ................... 3295
5

,-=---

--

.......

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title , sandalwood finish, with brown vinyl roof. vinyl saddle In-

terior , 4-season air conditioning, turbohydramatlc, power
steering, while-wall !ires, rally wheels, lronf &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.

~

1970 Dodge .....................:....... 52195

~

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Polara , factory air conditioning, V-8 engine. automatic
transmission, power steer ing . power brakes, good wh ite ·
side-walls, many more extras. While finish, black vinyl

1970 Ford ................................ 51995
Galaxle 500 hardtop coupe. V-8 engine, aulomatlc transmission , power steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl lop, vlnyl lnlerlor. White-wall tires, like new, radio.

ACROSS

Local 1 owner car, green finish , clean Interior, good tires,

I. Judge's

sentene:e
5.Doneturn
(2 wds.)
8. Temple
Image

1969 Chev. Kingswood Sl Wagon '2295
V-8 with automatic trans .. power steering, &amp; brakes.
luggage rack, factory air, color while with green vinyl
Interior, like new while-wall tires, radio.

DICK TRACY

9.Amuse ;

I'VE SEEN nilS TRIO
ON TilE STRUT MANV
TIMES, MR. TRACY,

1968 Buick La Sabre H.T. Cpe. ....'l495

IN FACT, ONE OF nlESE

RATS 501.0 001&gt;! TO MV
BOV. I SAW 111M.

I KNOW WI-IEAE
Tloii!.V l.IVE,

"""'-'

•

1966 Chev. Biscayne 4 lbJr ........ 5595
TERRY
WHAT IOIIPQ' A~ .

W/15111 PIP 'll:ltJ 6fT
A

6 cyl., std. trans.

'12495

73·

in Russia
16.Three matcb
(2 wds.)
17. Strange
11. -energy
F.;-'-' ZO. Jekyll's
alter ego
Zl.l,760
yanls
'""uz. Telling
whack

UIIICramble these r.... Jumbles,
one letter to each oquare, to
form lour ordinary worda.

~~An~r
·"' l._~ru~S~VrQ-+·-~~~~~
r·"~
29. Brief

(2 wds.)

4. Wapiti
5. Medium's
state
6. Greek

moun-

tains
1. Moslem
ruler
10. Johnny
Cash song
(4wds. )
11. Jacob's

12. Presbyter
16. Unctuous
19. Entangled
20. Cache

~ ~;~:r;
(sl.)

25• Place
abet
28.

St~

contest
(hypb.

wd.J

30. Poet's

~~~~;~·

32.
35. Society

L

r-----,
1 YVMST

I I t) I I

I
I I rj

' --"---""'""-'---'---'

36. Old-time
g a l ,. GRVIDT
,
:::ure

I

(Aa.wen .... ,,••,

\·e.aerday' t

JumbiH, NATAL fLUID ATOMIC nCOON
!newer: Spo••• in p•bUd-A fOUNTAIN

near
Padua
17. Bact out
ofadeal ·

•

Plenty of New Chrvrolets with Air Conditioning In Stock. We are here to please you
- you'll like our Appralul &amp; Trading Polley I

RC COLA

if. Moorish
drum
15. Scandi·

~WJMID~;-{"-t ::::~ -'r:

U. Agile
H. BIIBin of
Europe
zs. "If Only
You:t.llne"
H. Apple
fancier
Sour
ZC. Most
ancient
Astronaut
Grissom
Turl
38. Fre•hness
symbol
M.Gnawed
16. Town

8' Pickup, v.a engine, automatic transmission, power
steering, custom comfort &amp; convertible equipment, full
wheel covers, chrome front bumper &amp; rear stop
bumper, heavy duty wheels &amp; tires. sharp white &amp; red
orange finish , radio. A great buy, and mighty nice to
drive .

At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124

entertain

13. Cheat

(C 1172 Kin~ Ftalurtl Syndleote, Toe.)

(sl.)

IT~ Ucrti5E! 6~

.

Yflierdl7'1 C.,&amp;Gqaote: IF YOU WANT TO BE AN ORA.
rg.~ F~ GET YOUR GREAT CAUSE.-WENDELL PIIJI,

38. Stringed
instrument
39.-vivant
40. - Errol
DOWN
I. Zodiac
sign
2. Fool
3. Johnny
Cash song

navians

1967 Chev. Impala Sl Wagon ..... '1395

1970 CHEVROLET ~ Ton .

MILLER &amp; SONS

MAI&lt;ING A DOPE F'1END
OUT Ot:' MY K10! TilEY
ISW&lt;lUlD ae SHOT DCWIN ON

' SIOHTI

_....,

350-V. a engine, automatic trans., power steering &amp;
brakes, vinyl Interior, be ige exterior finish , good w-w
tires, radio. A local car &amp; very nice.

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY!

n-.-".----~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

2000cc eng ine, radio, -4-speed trans.

1965 Chev. Impala ~ ............. 5395

@

~-'6td'

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr................ 51850

Local 1 owner new car trade-In, beige finish, vinyl ln.
lerlor, V-8, automatic, power afeerlng &amp; brakes, radio,
good W •W tires, luggage rack. A nice one.

! D\D ... IT tiiAS
F'RECISEL'/
2:25'.

__L@~
. ~~~:;:::=--:1~_.2:::?_~~·-2:1

roof . Priced to move!

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

Plus Tu

~our~e lf!

- ~ P\l~ll ls?

factory sticker, 241 .

1963 Dodge 4 Door .................. 5199

&amp; Deposit

can't explain it!
clown and .;;ee for

t he
trouble.

covers, bumper guards, and all1h• extras. Low mileage,

DO YOU HAVE A GOOD 2 BEDROOM HOME
REASONAB LY PRICED, THAT WE CAN BUY. LET US
HEAR FROM YOU, WE'LL LOOK.

816 PAK
oz. Botls.

What'G

4-door; 3So V·8, factory air, turbo hydramatlc, power
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vinyl
roof , vinyl interior trim. radio, while wall !Ires, full wheel

V-8, automatic, p. steering.

1-614-992·3325

Walt
.;; jck?

1972 Chevelle Malibu ................ 53795

1 owner, low mileage, 6 cyl., std. trans .
NEW LISTING
LAND - 50 acres of II, In Rutland Township. A good buy
for $5,000.00.

GASOUNE ALLEY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hen's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
Qne Teller simply standi for anotber. In tbil 11n1plo A IJ
UHd for the three L'1, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slncle letlen,
apc!atrophes, the len&amp;th and formation of the wordo are 111
hinu. Each day the code letlero are dU!trent 1

,.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

CltYPTOQUOTBS
BRr,S
GLUGFL
lZL
YLBTFVLZLV
ORLC OLSV OU YLNUAL NZLVHFUHD.
-NIF.KTS NUUJ'TVIL

With ••ch $2.01 PurchaN
of Ashloncl Gasoline.

-

,.
i'

'

'•

A NICE SAlAD liiOOLO 60 QXD
ON !UAAM II/IH6•.1/ES A NICE
FRUIT ~WITH MA'IDE
OOME ICEOTEA ••

�I

8- The Daily Sentinei,Mkldi•.,Ort-POO&gt;erov, O., Jnlv27. 1972

~-

.,••.,

"

•'••

'.,.

·:'•
'•
'•

••
••

'
"·
·'•'

..·'

,s

wANYAos
Notice
INFORMATION
REDUCE safe and fast wllh
, • DEA~INES
P.M. Day Before Pvbo;callo" . GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Monday ~e adline 9 a.m.
" water pills," Nelson Drug.

-========::::..._,
GRAND
TOUR
OF
EUROPE

REGUlATIONS

Tht Publisher r eserves t he
r ight to edit or reject an y

ad~
T~ e

deemed
oblectl ona l.
publishv will not be respons ible
for mo~ than one, incorrect
insertlol'l .

RATES

Minimum Charge 75c ..

,
•

'~

~

·•
,I

i•
._,

,.,

"

:

~·

••'

12 cents per ' word three
con secut ive rnse-rtioris .
18 cents per 'word sfx con se cut'lve insertions . , ~
, 25 Per Cent Discount on pale

ads and ads pe ld with in 10 days

3 weeks departing on
September 5th, only
$889 .00 Round Trip
from N.Y. escorted by
John · and Charlotte
Heiskell, Rt. J, Box
S9S, South Point, Ohio.
Phone 614-377-4791.

CAitO OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addJtlonat word 2c .

- BLIND ADS .
Additional 25c Charge

Advert isement .

OFFICE

HOIIR~,

per

• .

:· 8: 30a .m•. to 5 ;00,p .m, Datly_.
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 :0(1 Noon
Saturdav .

"+
of Thanks
.:.' WECard
WOULD like to express our

'·

6-29-3otp

Cai'\Cellatlon - Co r rect ions
Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for .
Day ot Publicat ion
r

Wan't Ad Serv ice
''· s c entFor
ts per Wor d one innrtLon

"

Have Yot• Had A

deepest appreclallon to all
who came, sent cards and
gifts or in any way helped us
recently to make lhe Golden

Razor Cut?

Why Not stop in and let Mick
and Fi-ed cut and style your
hair for neater and better
con trolled ha i r .

Anniversary of our parents,

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Varian
of Clifton, W. Va ., a success .
May yov be greatly rewarded
f or

your

thoughtfulness

KARR'S

to

them .
Sincerely.
The
Children.
.
7-27 -ltc

milea~e

actUal

little over

53,000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
snow tires . Call 992-2897.

7-27-6tc

Wanted To Rent

TOMATOES,
cucumbers

MIDDLEPORr
Phone Faye Manley
992-5592
In
Pome,roy
Phone 992·2156

Proffitt,
7-21 -61&lt;

pol ~ fo e s,
and
beans.

Clarence Proffit. Portland.
Ohio; phone 843-225~ .
'
. 7-19-flc

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

2 REFRIGERATORS- Phllco
with automatic dotroster;
large family size wlfh 160 lb.
freezer unit, like new; also
Frigidaire, make good utility
box ; phone m-5131.
7-27-Jtc
8 ROOM house,
recreation plus
basement and
porch . River
polnlmenl only.

"and girls. Hurry lo ...
POMEROY
... - Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
_. . . · Phone 992·2181
.

house for rent In Pomeroy
area. 3 bedrooms, garage,
basement &amp; yard In nice
neighborhOod. 3 children and

dog . Call collect 1-304-242·
3747 .
7-27-31c

STUD PONY colt, weaned . SIS
or besl offer . Phone 667-3906.

124, close to deep mine ; take
late model car or housetrailer

in trade ; also trailer space for
rent ; M II. G Food Market. 3
mi. South , Middleport, Rl. 7.
7-21·61c

26 3

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WALNUT. Modern style, 4
speaker sound system , .4

speed automatic changer .
Balance $64.89 . Use our
budget terms . Call '192-7085.
7-21 -61c

-- -- - BEAUTIFUL Early American
style ,

stereo -radio

com -

bination , 4 speaker, AM-FM
radio, 4 speed changer .
Balance $78 .67. Use our
budget terms. Call '192-7085.
7-21 ·61c

model used or repossessed
Mobile Home at Berry-Miller
Mobile Home Sales. Used and
repossessed Mobile Homes is
our specialty - not our
sideline. We have a complete
selection ol 8. 10 &amp; 12 wide
Mobile Homes in stock. We
are also the area franchised
dealer for one of the oldest

and best homes In lhe
business - DETROITER famous for price and quality .

Don't walt, stop now at BerryMiller Mobile Home Sales, 705
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
phone 423-9S31 - Open 7 days.
7-27-2tc

Sl NGER Sian! Needle sewing CASij paid for ail mal&lt;es and
models of mobile homes .
machine, equipped lo zig zag,
Pho.ne area code 614-423-9531.
make buttonholes. etc .
4-13-tfc
Balance
$~1.02
.
Use
our
992-2448
budget terms. Call '192-7085. -~---:-.- -·Pomeroy, 0.
7-2J.61c so x 10, PRICED reasonable ;
phone Cheste r 98S -3379.
WHY nollry cosmetics thai ore 15 FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
1·21-6fp
h.p. motor, also 1956 Harley·
truly
different
and
Davidson 74, phone '192-5271.
refreshing? The famous mink
1·1B-12tp FOR THE BEST deal In a new
oil base and now we have fhe
or used mobile home. try
lemon grove. Just lhlnk , 1~
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
specials !his monlh, some for HEREFORD bull ; phone '192·
Kanauga,
Ohio.
men as well as women . It's
6765.
7·16-JOtc
KOSCOT of course. Phone
7-25-31c
'192-lll3.
·'1-tfc HEREFORD heifer call ; phone
--~--~..J..."'---7.,;
. .. '"
'
843-2778.
• Air Conditioners
1·2S-3tc
Wanted' T'tl Do
•Awnings
WILL do lronlngs in my home ; 1970 YAMAHA 2SO Enduro,
• Underpinning
phone 949-4451.
excellent condition, $500 ; Guy
7·25·31c
Sargent, Phone '192-6432.
Complete mobile home
7-25-31c service -.- plus g igan t ic
Female Help Wanted
--:-::-- 'display of mobile homes
1972 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine always available at ...
HO~SEWIF'E to represent our
lefl In layaway. Beautiful

'Pomeroy
~

WHITE

R EALTY~

of water .

$28.000.
3 BEDROOM, bath, furnace.
carpet and paneling, Jf• acre
lot. $11 ,500 .

vinyl and st~el siding ;
fiberglas, brick and · slone i
complete line of reslaeilllao
and commercial ·roofing ;

complete lin"' of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to

protection . 32 N. 2nd. '192·
3918.
AlLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

POMEROY
3 BEDROOM, 1'/, bath,
kitchen complete with ref . &amp;
ran~:~e.

carpet &amp; drapes Included, on 2 lots near school.

$1S,500.
ALBANY
NEW 3 bedroom. l'h bath,
ran ch house, carport . Nice

level lot In new addition ,
owner transferring, mu st

sell. $24.500.

Wheels balanced
All
tronlcally .

guaranteed .

REALTY

.....Pomerovo.

1
Ohi~

LEVEL LOT90x90
SYRACUSE - 1'12 story

private entrance i phone 992·

and a pitcher of draft
beer from 6 til 12 at the

2780 or '192-3432.

7-23-tfc
-----~

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

Wanleti T(
OLD Furniture, oak !abies,
organs, dishes,

Free music featuring Donnie
Sedwick on lfle organ &amp;

clocks,

brass

beds, or complete households.
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6·28-lfc '

accordion.

From 10 Tii2

~-----

liefp

EXPERIENCED

SHOWALTER 'S Wei Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio, · has added
shopping

seml .dump

truck driver. If nol ex perlenced , do not inquire.

ceramic wares for customer's
gift

Wanted

Phone 992-5639.

convenience.

7-26-Jtc

7-27-Jtp

SI Toysl Toys! Sell
GUN SHOOT, also rifle mal· TOY
Playhouse
toys, Aug. to Dec.
ches, open sites only, Forked . Free training.
Good comRun Sportsman Club, Sunday,
mission,
No
cash
Investment.
July 30, 12 noon.
No
delivery
.
No
colleclinQ.
S
7-26-31c
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. 0.11
Margaret Fortune 9oi'I-.14TA or
SHOOTING match, Saturday,
Barbara Lambert 446-:Mtl.
July 29th, at the Rac ine
7-26-JOic
Planing Mlllal6 p.m. Factory
choke guns only.· Assorted BABYSITTER lo stay In my
meal . Sponsored by lhe
home from 8 a . m. lo 4 p. m.
Syracuse Fire Dept.
Call
offer ~ p. m. 992 -3580.
7-26-Jtp
7-27-Jtc

. ..

;;;;;;;;;::::=:=:::::====~

... ,.....

We talk to JGU

'WMP0/1390
Oti .TOUR DIAl.
.•

WAITRESS wanted from 4p. m,
to 12:30p. m. Apply In person,
Blue Tartan . No experience
necessary.

7·27·61c

"T..

f.tow
Joln the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gill
Party Plan In the &lt;;ountry
- our 25th yoar I Com missions up to 30 pet. Fantastic Hostess Awards. Call or
wrile "SANTA's PARTIES"
Avon, Conn. 06001 . Telephone
1 !203) 673 · 3~55. ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
7·2-JOic

LEFT IN lay-away, 1972 Zig
Zag sewing machine. This
mach i ne overcasts , darns,

embroideries with just a turn
of lhe dial . Pay balance of
$4~ . 50 or pay $6.21 a month . FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Phone '192·5331.
frame house, six rooms lind
7-20-lfc
bath. Large lot. Located In
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
LOVE MUSIC??? Try !his 1972
house on lefl going north
1 track stereo console In your
Inside corporation line.
home . Pay balance of $98.80
7-27-11
or payments can be arranged. - - - - - - - - - Phone 992-5331.
.RACINE - 10 room house:
7·20·1fc
bath, basement, garage, lwo
2 LOTS In Meigs Memorial
lois. Phone 949-4313.
Gardens; phone '192-271&gt;&lt;1.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4_-s.lfp
7-21 -6tc
--------RACINE - A good going
r estaurant business for man
BOAT. motor and trailer ; 15 fl .
and wife team . stock and
boa! of wooden construction,
equipment
, 1 Ice cream
65 h.p. Mercury motor ; In top
machine not Included ; this Is
shape ; - new battery , skis,
a very good buy at $5,500;
cushions, etc .; will sacrifice ;
Phone 949-3211 ; George
phone '149-5656.
Hobo teller , Real Estate
. 7-16-12tc
Broker, Pomeroy, Oh io.
7·25·31c

VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE
LETART FALLS, OHIO

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

t H. DOUGHTY

HANNA .COAL OOMPANY
.

CADIZ. OHIO 43907-

TELEPHONE (614) 9.2 4641

ON MY reMPORARV
LICENSE EXAM, t:l".D.

'IHINK

"ttO HAD ENOUGH

AS

8 tMOS

free

For

· estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. . V.

10 LEf ME DRIVE
FARmER 'THAN 11-£ ,

iT's liME

LE~1H

T~IR.T'I l

OF CtiR

r:tKIVEWAY 1

FAI'IH IN·ME ...

I'vE HAD FOR1V

1350

Sole 1
1 Gravely Model C-121 12 HP
walking troctor wllfl 50"
mower.
·
Llsl$1215.00
Sole

'TI?AININ:#AT

SCHOOL.

IJJOO

1 Gravely Super C·l walking

tractor with 30 mower.
11

U'LABNER

List SIU.OO . Sale 1735
1 Gravely Super C-1 waiklng
tractor with 30" mower.
LIIIS7t5.00
Sa.lt '675
1 Eltt· Trak Model E-12 wtm

MOOSE15
LAUG~ 11-IG !!

HtGH
Ae.cNE
DOOPATCH,
DWELL

s1250

Li&amp;I$1599.11U
Sole
1 Snapper Comei, Madel
JOIX, 1 HP riding mower,
3011 cut.
S40Q
List S499.95
~le
1 Snapper 5 HP Rotary
Tiller.
Llsl$236.95 · Sl_le
All carry new Warranty

THE
REMNANTS
OF' THE

'??·FOR HUNDREDS OF
MOONS, HE NOT LAUGH
-HE NOT E.VEN SP&amp;AKHE c.JUST SIT THERE
~· , AAID SULK

5EEGAASTAW
INDIANS

1200

Grave~

Johnson. and Son, Inc.

3·2·11•

Tractor Sales

! WAS GOI toJG

..,.,...._...

MY M..J61C

I ., .. , ... .,, ,_,,..

Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992-2975

®AS IF IT AIN'T' MD
ENOUGH 5ERVIN 1
TIME: HERE,WADDA

WE GOTTA lOOK
FORWARD 10

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been :
your
can celled?
Lost

YOU MEAN
'VOU roN'r CIIRl'
W ETHER YOU'RE
PAROLED?

o.JEEZ ! IT t'lfN'T THAT,
Ml~ WINKLE!

~E

ONLY.Xlf&gt;

TRIIININ ' WE
GET HERE IS
WORKING IN
THE lAUNDRY.

EI'Bm:JNE
WANT5 OUTTA
HERE !

MY

WE NEED 10 iRIIIN
RJR A J06 1HA1'&amp; IN Tt:RE511N6 IMYBE A
LITILE f!XCITIN6 /

EXCITING?
INTE!iESTING?

WHI:N WE GET

our ?

6·15-lfc

·PAPER hanging ; interior and 0
ex terior pa inting ;

~'(LELAND~

T~A'f,

DON'T 'IOU

I HAD A I'I:RFECT SCORE

'

-AS LONG
~E'S UNPER

1-Z1

·"

HoURS OF DRM:R

RP,.c.nn,.hl~

2966.

WILL TJ.IE STUPENT$
GO ALONG WITII

Nt&amp;.. k. h l a... ~.s. r.. Ott

· ~

EliPE~IENCE !

operator' s license? Call 992·,

160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C ofllce .

A~S5~, T~e.

PENT MUST ~AVE AT
LEAST TWENTY YEARS
OF ADMINISTRATIVE

rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
992-3213.
I · U · ITC

Arthur

Musser, phone 742·5223.
7-18·30tp

... IS DOC
AU. SET?

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir:
ser vi ce, all makes. 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors . 1

3-29-tf c
r&lt;_E_A_D_Y_·M
- 1X
- -C
-::-0-::-N
- C-::-R::-::ET E'
del ivered right fo y&lt;&gt;ur j'
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992·32U.:
Goegle ln Ready -Mix Co ..1
Middleport, Ohio.
\

-----

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

newly painted and carpeted ;
nice yard , porches and

T~EN,

elec ·
work

For Rent

FRIDft NIGHTPillA NIGHT

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

tune up and brake service.

- - ---===--

STORE, stock ond equ ipment,
all lor S6.600. Phone 742-3144
or '193-6048.
7-2J.6tp

~:l":t~suo

.BACKHOE AND DOZER work)
Septic lanks lnsfalled. Getll'ge
(BHI) Pullins. P~onf99H41~,
4-25-lfc

r epresentative .

CLATIER

,197?'

42" maw1r.

-O'DELL WHEEL allgnmeni
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end ser.lce,

'---· --·----- ·---._

Demonsbator Sale

SEE us FOR : Awnings, s!orm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum 'siding
and railing . -A.. Jacob, sales

Real Estate For Safe

----FURNISHED apartment, all

"·

1 Gravely Model 430, 12 HP
. ~!ding tractor with 50"

:sm.

IT 1bDI'\'1' I
--~

" (~
"

COmGE'S NEW PRESI·

I

Al.L RIGHT, 'fW'Lt..
QIA.JE IT 10 ME\

•- •

COUNTED ON

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complele Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
'Crill Bradford
S·l ·fiC

I

~- -

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
· aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992:

painting ;

c:ustomer satisfaction. · We
are fully Insured for your

·c

trucks and loW-boy for hire .

remodeling ,
building,
suspended ceilings, Interior
exterior

-

Dozer &amp; End loader work,.
ponds , buemenl, land . scaping. We hove 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by. hour or contract. 11
Free · Estimates. We also .
·na.l 1111 dirt, top,soil. Dump ,

We specialize In aluminum,

and

•

EARTH MOVING

garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13.750

MIDDLEPORT
7 ROOMS, bath, loi 100x190.
$7,900.50.

Employment Wanted

Notice

FER?

1t1 1m~

606 E.

3 BedfOC)m home, with
brick f'ront, I car

Real Estate For Sale

{7} 17 , 20, 24 , 27 , .. ,

~ETE L L I N ' ME

5-12-H,

HoJiit·&amp;· Auto .

OpenS . 5
M~oday lhru

Pursuant to the provisions of
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath,
the Commun !cat ions Act of 193,.
NEW for ced air gas furnace,
as amended, notice Is her eby
porche
s,
basement .
given that Radio Mld -Pom, Inc .
ss.ooo.oo.
Hcense Of Station w M P o
RIVER FRONTAGE
Middteport, Ohio has fllel;t an
·
..,.,-::
:a... ',l f
6-30-Hc ;
P- PPIIcatlon with· the Federa l
SYRACUSE - 2 story
. __,:________...._______.,_~Ommunlcatlons• · Comm ission
frame,
7
rooms,
2
baths,
4
SEWING MACHINE serv ice,
fO.r a construction perm it for a
bedrooms, 2 porches. util ity
new FM broadcast station to be
clean , oil, set tension $4.99. 1
room , some paneling, gas
operated on a frequency of 92 .1
Sp ec ial Electro -Grande
megacycles, Channel 221 With
forced air furna ce, full
Company . Phone '192-6517.
an elfecflve radiated power of 3
basement.
garage .
S-2 1 -lf~
kilowatts. th e tower witl be
$12,500.00.
:-o-----::-:-;::~located .5 m lies north of High 1 MILE TO RUTLAND
"C:ALL Guy N-e lgle~ for Building
way 7 on th e Robert Burdette
Home
4 years ald.- 111~ acre
farm at Laurel Cliff . The an .
Houses.
tenna height will be 239 teet
ground ,
7
rooms ,
4
6·28-tfc
abOve average terra in. The FM
company, ordering and
bedrooms, bath, 2 storage
pastel
color,
full
size
modeL
stud ios w i ll be located in the
MILLER
stocking our merchandise In a
bu ildings, lois of cabinets In SEPTIC tanks clean·ed. Miller
All built-In lo buttonhole, do
sam e bu ild i ng as the present
local store In Pomeroy ; lllp·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
kitchen
. A buy at just
stretch
sewing
and
fan
cy
AM studios on Route 12 4
proximately
3
to
4
hours
e\tery
MOBILE
HOMES
662·3035.
$16,900.00.
Bradbury , Middleport, Oh io.
stitching. Pay lust $47.75 cash
1S days; $2 per hour; Write
2-12-lfc
The off cers. directo r s and
MIDDLEPORT RT. 1
1220 Wuhington Blvd,
or
term s available . Trade·ins
Box 729-F, c-o The Daily
owners of 10 pet. or more of the
1
story,
3
bedrooms,
accepted.
Phone
'192
-5641.
423-7S21
BELPRE,
0.
NEW
· DOZER ·and back licie work,
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio
stock are John E . M . Kerr,
7-21 -61c
bath, NEW forced air fur ·
president and Frank X. Rauch
ponds and septic tanks ; B II. K
45769.
nace, paneling, utility room,
Jr ., vice president. Members of
EKcavatl ng , Ph one '192-S367,
7-21 -6tc VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
porches. storage building,
the public who des ire to br i ng to
Dick Karr , Jr.
model. Complete wllh all
the commIssion 's attention
fruit room, $9,800 ,00.
5-21-tfc
fa cts concernlnr the operat ion
clean ing tools . Small paint 2 NEW HOMES, all electr ic, 3
SHOWN
BY
of the station should write to the
damag·e In shipping. Will sell
APPOINTMENT ONLY
~edrooms. full basement and
Federal Commun i cat i ons WILL DO welding after 5 p.m.
for $6.1.50 cash or terms
garage,
with
lake
frontage
;
at
Commission , Wash ington 1 D. C.
available. Phone '192·5641.
and weekends, any place •
2055,. no later than August 12,
Five Points area ; phone 992HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
7-21 -6tc
phone
'
1
92-5271.
1972. Letters should set for th in
HOUSE I ~ Long Bottom, phone'
2571 or '192-:W75.
REALTOR
7-18-12lp
detail the specific facts wh i ch
98S-3529.
PHONE
992·22S9-992-2568
the writer wishes the Com .
1- ~20 JOHN Deere dozer; 1 '64
mission to consider in passing
Chev. Dump Truck ; Earl
on th iS appl i cation . A copy of
Werner. Rl. 1. Mlddiep&lt;lfl,
th e applicat ion and retated
Ohio ; phone 992-2769.
material are on file ror public ROOM &amp; board, phone 675-4SS5.
7-23-6tp
3-31 -tfc
1·26-61c
inspection a t Radio Mid -Porn
In c. Route 124 Bradbur y, .- - - - -- Middleport, Oh io between the '3 AND 4 ROOM furnished an'4 COAL, Limestone, E)( celslor LOTS on Wr ight Street,
hours of 8:30a .m . and 4:30p . m .
Salt Works, E. Main St..
unfurnished apartments .
Pomeroy ; phone 7~2- 5937 .
110 Mechanic Street
week days .
Pomeroy, Phone '192 -3891 .
Phone '192-Sd4.
•·

1·11·12tc
4-12-lfc
4·12·11&lt;
,.:---::-:,----"'
2"'B"'
E"D~
R-=oo::-:-:M'"'m-ob-.:-::11e -:-ho_m
_e_ wItt. TOMATOES, cucumbers, green 3 BEDROOM house In Mason,
near churches and schools,
peppers
and
canning
air-conditioning ; 10 miles
dishwasher and di sposal. Call
tomaloe&amp;.
Geraldine
Cleland,
East of Pomeroy ; phone '192.
675 - ~292 after 4 p.m.
Racine, Ohio.
6329.
7-26-4tc
7-20-tfc
7·19-lfc

Buf

.

- GUARANTEEo--;;..
· Pho'ntt 9?.2~2094

Ph . 992-2174

JOHN

barns, plenty

From the largesf
Bulldozer Radl'l),or ~ .to
Smallest Healer Core .
Nolflan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
· MOTORS. INC.
Pomefay

'

nHEIL"

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

PH. 992-2571
OR 992·3975

.3 bedrooms,
bar, garage,
large front 17'h ' CONTINENTAL Travel
Trailer, 1'171 model, self·
View . Ap ·
Conlatl Associate
Call '192-5310.
contained: awning. mirrors
and hitch ; phone 992·5982.
7·2Htc
VERA EBLIN
1·12-lfc
300 GAL. stainless steel bulk
992-3020
milk tank and refrigerating POODLE puppies, Sliver To~·; 160 Coal St.
Middleport
unit. automatic; cost S2.500
Park view Kennels, Phone 992· ·
RUTLAND
would like S1,250; used very
5443.
acres,
4
lillie; phone 992 -7178.
8-15-lfc · FARM- 106
bedroom,
modern
home,
2
7-25-31p

For Sale or Trade

MAW .. WE GOT
ONE MORE
CARP PLA'IER
THRN WE

Business Services
Whfet-Aiii!ment
'5.55
On trl.ost Americ:in Coq ;

W ISH I. CCU.D, e:€ 1&lt;.,
l -JUST IXliJ'T 1-\IWE

aE I

WHRT IN THUNDER

·3 BEDROOMS

Buy 2 Pairsand
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All kinds, all sizes for men,
women, young men, bJys

BARNEY

'

NEW HOMES
2 New Homes, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, with lake frontage;
at Five Points area.

I

.

Real Estate For Sale

SALEI

For Safe

and Saturday on Larkin St..
Rutland .
7-26-Jtc

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

OUT-OF -TOWN family needs

LEGAl NOTICE

For Safe
TOMATOES, Joann
ph,one 843-2826'.

:====.. . --=
: . --=-=-::::;-' -------~~
=-· . t\ Mobile Homes For Sale
YARD sale, Thursday, Friday YOU can saves s son a late

- - - -- -

LEGAL NOTICE

IN

seen at :W~ South Sixth,
Middleport or phone '192-7375.
1·2S·6tc

Ph . m -2367
400-AFL-CIO

1964 TWO DOOR V.W., good
body and motor recently
overhauled ; good tires front &amp;
rear ; 3S miles per gallon gas.
Phone '192·2897.
7-27-6tc

PASTURE for 1 horse In
Chester area. Call before 4 p.
m. 98S-3549.
7-27-3tc

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

cessories, $300 as Is ; may be

Pomeroy

:: 196S DODGE Station Wagon,

..

.

BOAT, motor , trailer and ac- 4 ROOMS, bath, nice lot on Rt .

BARBER
SHOP
Lynn Sl .

Auto Safes
.,..

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! S~ntinel- Classifieds G~t Results!

I•

.••,,

.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
117 ACRE S - In gas area of Lebanon Township. Has gas
well now. A 6 room house, barn and several outbuildings.
Want to try your luck ala pig In a poke. Only 120.000.00
toda y.
FIVE POINTS
NEW HOME - 3 bedroom s, nice bath, kitchen with stove
and r efrigerator . Wall-to-wall carpet ing In living . Has 2

large lot s for only $16.000.

S BEDROOMS
BUTTERNUT STREET - Near downtown shopping .
Ni ce kitchen with doubl e sink. Full basement. 2 porches.
Ask ing just
. $7500.00 for quick sale.

.

Best Setvice

Finest Cars

•.

1971 Chevrolet ..... ~ ................... 3295
5

,-=---

--

.......

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title , sandalwood finish, with brown vinyl roof. vinyl saddle In-

terior , 4-season air conditioning, turbohydramatlc, power
steering, while-wall !ires, rally wheels, lronf &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.

~

1970 Dodge .....................:....... 52195

~

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Polara , factory air conditioning, V-8 engine. automatic
transmission, power steer ing . power brakes, good wh ite ·
side-walls, many more extras. While finish, black vinyl

1970 Ford ................................ 51995
Galaxle 500 hardtop coupe. V-8 engine, aulomatlc transmission , power steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl lop, vlnyl lnlerlor. White-wall tires, like new, radio.

ACROSS

Local 1 owner car, green finish , clean Interior, good tires,

I. Judge's

sentene:e
5.Doneturn
(2 wds.)
8. Temple
Image

1969 Chev. Kingswood Sl Wagon '2295
V-8 with automatic trans .. power steering, &amp; brakes.
luggage rack, factory air, color while with green vinyl
Interior, like new while-wall tires, radio.

DICK TRACY

9.Amuse ;

I'VE SEEN nilS TRIO
ON TilE STRUT MANV
TIMES, MR. TRACY,

1968 Buick La Sabre H.T. Cpe. ....'l495

IN FACT, ONE OF nlESE

RATS 501.0 001&gt;! TO MV
BOV. I SAW 111M.

I KNOW WI-IEAE
Tloii!.V l.IVE,

"""'-'

•

1966 Chev. Biscayne 4 lbJr ........ 5595
TERRY
WHAT IOIIPQ' A~ .

W/15111 PIP 'll:ltJ 6fT
A

6 cyl., std. trans.

'12495

73·

in Russia
16.Three matcb
(2 wds.)
17. Strange
11. -energy
F.;-'-' ZO. Jekyll's
alter ego
Zl.l,760
yanls
'""uz. Telling
whack

UIIICramble these r.... Jumbles,
one letter to each oquare, to
form lour ordinary worda.

~~An~r
·"' l._~ru~S~VrQ-+·-~~~~~
r·"~
29. Brief

(2 wds.)

4. Wapiti
5. Medium's
state
6. Greek

moun-

tains
1. Moslem
ruler
10. Johnny
Cash song
(4wds. )
11. Jacob's

12. Presbyter
16. Unctuous
19. Entangled
20. Cache

~ ~;~:r;
(sl.)

25• Place
abet
28.

St~

contest
(hypb.

wd.J

30. Poet's

~~~~;~·

32.
35. Society

L

r-----,
1 YVMST

I I t) I I

I
I I rj

' --"---""'""-'---'---'

36. Old-time
g a l ,. GRVIDT
,
:::ure

I

(Aa.wen .... ,,••,

\·e.aerday' t

JumbiH, NATAL fLUID ATOMIC nCOON
!newer: Spo••• in p•bUd-A fOUNTAIN

near
Padua
17. Bact out
ofadeal ·

•

Plenty of New Chrvrolets with Air Conditioning In Stock. We are here to please you
- you'll like our Appralul &amp; Trading Polley I

RC COLA

if. Moorish
drum
15. Scandi·

~WJMID~;-{"-t ::::~ -'r:

U. Agile
H. BIIBin of
Europe
zs. "If Only
You:t.llne"
H. Apple
fancier
Sour
ZC. Most
ancient
Astronaut
Grissom
Turl
38. Fre•hness
symbol
M.Gnawed
16. Town

8' Pickup, v.a engine, automatic transmission, power
steering, custom comfort &amp; convertible equipment, full
wheel covers, chrome front bumper &amp; rear stop
bumper, heavy duty wheels &amp; tires. sharp white &amp; red
orange finish , radio. A great buy, and mighty nice to
drive .

At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124

entertain

13. Cheat

(C 1172 Kin~ Ftalurtl Syndleote, Toe.)

(sl.)

IT~ Ucrti5E! 6~

.

Yflierdl7'1 C.,&amp;Gqaote: IF YOU WANT TO BE AN ORA.
rg.~ F~ GET YOUR GREAT CAUSE.-WENDELL PIIJI,

38. Stringed
instrument
39.-vivant
40. - Errol
DOWN
I. Zodiac
sign
2. Fool
3. Johnny
Cash song

navians

1967 Chev. Impala Sl Wagon ..... '1395

1970 CHEVROLET ~ Ton .

MILLER &amp; SONS

MAI&lt;ING A DOPE F'1END
OUT Ot:' MY K10! TilEY
ISW&lt;lUlD ae SHOT DCWIN ON

' SIOHTI

_....,

350-V. a engine, automatic trans., power steering &amp;
brakes, vinyl Interior, be ige exterior finish , good w-w
tires, radio. A local car &amp; very nice.

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY!

n-.-".----~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

2000cc eng ine, radio, -4-speed trans.

1965 Chev. Impala ~ ............. 5395

@

~-'6td'

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr................ 51850

Local 1 owner new car trade-In, beige finish, vinyl ln.
lerlor, V-8, automatic, power afeerlng &amp; brakes, radio,
good W •W tires, luggage rack. A nice one.

! D\D ... IT tiiAS
F'RECISEL'/
2:25'.

__L@~
. ~~~:;:::=--:1~_.2:::?_~~·-2:1

roof . Priced to move!

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

Plus Tu

~our~e lf!

- ~ P\l~ll ls?

factory sticker, 241 .

1963 Dodge 4 Door .................. 5199

&amp; Deposit

can't explain it!
clown and .;;ee for

t he
trouble.

covers, bumper guards, and all1h• extras. Low mileage,

DO YOU HAVE A GOOD 2 BEDROOM HOME
REASONAB LY PRICED, THAT WE CAN BUY. LET US
HEAR FROM YOU, WE'LL LOOK.

816 PAK
oz. Botls.

What'G

4-door; 3So V·8, factory air, turbo hydramatlc, power
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vinyl
roof , vinyl interior trim. radio, while wall !Ires, full wheel

V-8, automatic, p. steering.

1-614-992·3325

Walt
.;; jck?

1972 Chevelle Malibu ................ 53795

1 owner, low mileage, 6 cyl., std. trans .
NEW LISTING
LAND - 50 acres of II, In Rutland Township. A good buy
for $5,000.00.

GASOUNE ALLEY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hen's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
Qne Teller simply standi for anotber. In tbil 11n1plo A IJ
UHd for the three L'1, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slncle letlen,
apc!atrophes, the len&amp;th and formation of the wordo are 111
hinu. Each day the code letlero are dU!trent 1

,.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

CltYPTOQUOTBS
BRr,S
GLUGFL
lZL
YLBTFVLZLV
ORLC OLSV OU YLNUAL NZLVHFUHD.
-NIF.KTS NUUJ'TVIL

With ••ch $2.01 PurchaN
of Ashloncl Gasoline.

-

,.
i'

'

'•

A NICE SAlAD liiOOLO 60 QXD
ON !UAAM II/IH6•.1/ES A NICE
FRUIT ~WITH MA'IDE
OOME ICEOTEA ••

�•
''
10 - The [l•Hv Sentinel, Mida. •.,ort-Pomeroy, 0., July Tl, 1972

McOmg Accepts New ·Call
Rev. W. Dale McClurg,
Senior Pastor of the Southern
Cluster of the Meigs Ministry
of the United Metl10dist Church
in the Racine Area, is to be the
new pastor of Christ United
Methodist Church in Gallia
County.
He is to succeed · the Rev.
James Morrison who was
appointed to th e Barlow
Charge in Washington County.
Chosen for this appointment
because of his educational and
wor k background having
graduated from Portsmouth
Interstate Business College
with a diploma in Business
Admini stration and Higher
Accounting, and a degree in
Elementary Education from
Rio Grande College. He also
attended Ohio and Marshall
Universities . Previous employment included
the
Treasury and Accounting
Department of Ohio Valley
Electr&gt;c Company, Sargent;;,
Ohio, and teaching in the

Supervisors
(Continued from page I)
coordinator in 1965, senior
personnel assistant in 1966 and
Windsor Plant personnel
supervisor in 1967. He served in
the Army from 1953 to 1955 in
Europe .
The new personnel supervisor and his wife, Judith, have
tw o children, Jeffrey, 10, and
J osep h, 4. They prese ntly

reside at House 40, Power, W.
Va.
First unit of the 2.6-million·
kilowatt Gavin Plant is
sc heduled for operation in 1974
and the second in 1975.

.

MASON DRIVE-IN
M.1 ,(,. , Vv V.1
A ( ,u toll ll Nrq 111 1V

Adding to

Kenneth Vining
Died Wednesday

Kenneth Vining, 46, Route 2,
Pomeroy, passed away
Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mr. Vining
was preceded in death by his
Gregory Peck
IGP)
father, Howard Vining, and a
- Plussister,
Marie Jones .
RED SKY
Mr.
Vining
is survived by his
AT MORNING
( Color )
mother, Minnie Vining, Route
Richard Thoma s
2, Pomeroy ; two brothers, Leo
Ca lherJne Bu rns
Vining, Pomeroy, and Eldon
Desi Arnaz, Jr .
Vining, Rutland; four sisters,
IGPI
Francis Overholts, Eaton,
NICHOLS SHOT IT
Sam Nichols III, Pt.
. .- - - - - - - - - . Ohio;
Betty
Sarver,
Chillicothe; Bernice Jeffers, Pleasant, photographer emMiddleport, and Phyllis ployed by the Point Pleasant
Vining, Route 2, Pomeroy, and Register, took the unusual
Tonighl, July 27
several nieces and nephews. night scene of the ferry barge
NOT OPEN
Funeral services will be held with Pomeroy in the
at 1 p. m. Saturday at the background from the Mason
Friday &amp; Salurday
Hiland Church. Burial will be ferry landing Monday night.
July 28-29
at
the Bradford Cemetery . The picture , published
ZACHARIAH
Friends
may cail-anytime at Tuesday in The Daily Sentinel
(Technicolorl
the Ewing Funeral Home.
John Rubinstein
and the Register, has attracted
Pal Quinn .
wide attention. Nichols used a
(G PI
30-second exposure on Tri·X
Also
film.
FLIGHT OF THE
WRONG ADDRESS
DOVES
In a list of out-of-town guests
{Tecllnicolor)
at
the wedding of Miss Bobbie
WREN MOVES UP
Ron Moody
Lou
Moore
and
John
Randolph
Mike
Wren, ex-Athens High
Jack Wild
published recently the address School and Miami University
IGI
Show Starts 7 P.M .
of Mr . and Mrs. Guy Harper is basketball star, was named
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, not Middleport assistant varsity basketball
as stated.
coach at Farleigh Dickinson
College Tuesday. Wren, son of
ex.Qhio University baseball
coach Bob Wren, was assistant
coach at ·clemson University
last year.

MEIGS THEATRE

VISITORS HERE
?upils in the Head Start
Program were entertained
Wednesday by a halon twirling
group from Nelsonville.
Making up the visiting group
were Jeffri Leach, Gail
Deardorff, Leeann French and
Brenda Bruce. William Bruce,
teacher at Nelsonville, ac·
companied them.

Little
Do-gooders
Help Your
Busy Family
All those little drugs and sundries the ac·
live family needs for keeping fit . Your
pharmacist has a wide' array of nationally
known brands. So, come on in.

DOCTOR CALLED
The Middleport E·R unit was
called Wednesday evening at
5:56 p.m. to SR 7 near Kings
Arms for Delbert Russell who
complained of chest pains. Dr.
R. R. Pickens was summoned.
SING PLANNED
There will be a hymn sing at
the Stlversvllle Community
Church Sunday at 1:30 p. m.
Everyone is welcome to attend.
HAS SURGERY
Darwyn Enevoldsen,
Reedsville, underwent surgery
Monday
at
U~lversity
Hospital, Columbus.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Coso No. 20,112

Flea and Tick Spray or
Powder -

Sargenrs Tick

and Flea Collars · Worm
Medicine • Antibiotics,
Rabies DHL Vaccine

estate

of

Elbert

Taylor

Deceued.

Notice Is nerebv given that
Sharon ouncen of Pomeroy ,
Route 2, Oh lo, has been du'Y,
appointed Executrix of the
Estate of Elbert Taylor,
deceesed, 'late of Pomeroy ,
Route 2, Meigs county, Ohio .
creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
wlthln four months .
Dated this 22nel day of Julv
1972.
John C. Bacon

Judge

(7) 27 (8) 3, 1~, 31

•
'

•

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Selected From Stock

.

I

,BRAS AND GIRDlES

~PRICE

SLEEPWEAR

SELECTED FROM STOCK

Men's and Boys' WEAR

SALE!
Replacement Cushions

1st Floor

For

Y2 __.PRICE
,. . ,. . ,. .
I
'

-~LEAR.ANCESALEi
Mens
1
I Mens

8.95
7.95
Mens · 6.95
Mens 5.95
I Mens 4.95
Mens 3.95
Mens 2.95
Boys 1.95

l

Summer
Women's
•
· Sportswear l SWlmwear
112
1:

_·-

PRICE

l
I l/.2
7~

PRICE

h PRICE

1

SPECIAL PRICES

Women's Jeans ·
Women's Blouses
PRETEEN

WOMEN'S

Famous Maker

1f2 PRICE

r---~--·--~-·

SPECIAL GROUP

OUR ENTIRE STOCK
FAMOUS BRAND

Final Cle;mmce Sale

Local Store Hole·in-One
PT. PLEASANT - Heck's
President Fred Haddad today
announced a 6,000 square feet Contest to
shopping area expansion of its
Point Pleasant store.
Construction of the new End Aug. 5
addition by the Childers
Plans for the annual Hole In
One Golf contest were complelc rt Wednesday by the
Pome&gt;'Y ·Middleport Lions
Club foli&gt;wing lunch at the
Meigs Inu.
The Hole In One at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds began
Monday, July 25, and will run
through Saturday, Aug. 5, from
5 to 9 p.m. daily .
The person closest to the pin
each day will receive a dozen
golf balls. Those hitting a hole
in one will receive $200. For the
man and woman closest to the
pin during the week will be
awarded a trophy in their
divisions as wHl players 16 and
under in the Junior division of
each sex.
Additional prizes will be
given daily. Prizes are sponsored by City Loan, Farmers
Bank.· and Savings, Citizens
National Bank, Pomeroy
National Bank, Racine Home
National Bank, Economy
Savings and Loan Company
and the Athens County Savings
and Loan, Meigs Branch.
Louis Osborne announced a
work party in preparation for
the event will be held Thursday
night at the home of Karl
Kraulter.
In other business, Don
Pearch, president, announced
a new membership drive for
the month of October and read
qualifications for a good, ac·
Uve club.
The district governor will
visit the club on Aug. 23.

'

FRIDAY, JULY 28 - SATURDAY, JULY 29 - MONDAY,. JULY 31

Hecks is

Tonight &amp; Friday
July 27-28
Double Featura Program
SHOOT OUT
I Color)

'

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY
JULY CLEAR·ANCE SALE

Northwest . Local School pointment was in 1959 on the
District of Scioto County, Ohio, Otway Charge. In 1!166, he
prior to entering the full-time became an Associate Minister ·
on the West PortsmoutH
ministry in June, 1968.
Charge.
In 1967, keeping one of
His first ministerial ap.
the West Portsmouth Churches
(Bethel) a new charge was .
formed:
Bethel-Moores
ChapeL Assigned to the Racine
Charge in 1968, he has been
active .in Meigs County
ministry.

Construction Company of
Huntington got started Wednfsday.
"The expansion of our Point
Pleasant store," said Mr .
Haddad, "reflect;; our con·
fidence in the continued growth
and propsperity of Mason
County and the entire area."
The new section of the store
is being constructed at the
south end of the existing
building near Second St.
The expansion project is
scheduled for completion in the
next 90 days, it was reported.
Heck's in Point Pleasant, one
of a large chain of stores
operated by the Charleston·
based firm headed by Mr.
Haddad, was first opened some
four years ago with 28,000
square feet of floor space. The
structure, as well as the new
addition, is leased to the Heck's
firm by local building
developers, Brerry and E.
Bartow Jones.

''

'~'

I

Sport Sh!rts
Sport Sh1rts
Sport Shirts
Sport Shirts
Sport Shirts
Sport Shirts
sport Shirts
Sport Shirts

- · ·
- ..
.. ...
- - ·
. - ·
. ..
· · ·

· ...•
- ... •
- · · · ·
....•
· - · · ·
· · · · ·
. . ...
· · · · ·

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
sale
Sale

Outdoor Furniture

5.00
4.50
4.00
3.75
3.00
2.75
2.oo

Easy care Vinyl Plastic ·
multi colored floral pr ints.
Chair cushion sets · 2 pc.
Chaise Cushions - 2 pc. 3
Pc . Glider cushion sets.
Chaise Palds · Chair Pads Glider Pads . Redwood
Chaise and Chair Cushions .

UO

:~~~ ~::~ ~~~~: ~~:~:~ ::: :: : :: ~:: ~:~~

'

· ALL AT

Mens 3.95 Walk Shorts · · • · • · · · Sale 2.00
Mens 4.95 Walk Shorts · · · · · · · · Sale 2.50
Mens 5.49 &amp; 7.95 Walk Shorts· - . · . · Sale 3.00
Boys 2.95 Walk Shorts · · · · · · · · Sale 1.50 t------.-~.,....,--,.,..'"'-~-~
-­
Boys 3.95 Walk Shorts · · · · · · • • Sale 2.00 Cleanup Sale
Mens &amp; Boys Swim Trunks ·· · · Sale 'lz Price
Mens 29.95 Sport Coats . . . . . • · Sale 19.00
Little Boys 2.95 &amp; 1.95 Shorts · · · · · Sale 99c

~--·--·---.L-~-·-----

SALE PRICES

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE

WOMEN 'S SHORTS

BLANKETS

y2 PRICE

r~~~~~e~::~~e~~Y~ F~:e~:lacks

---:· ~~- ~· ~· ~- -~---~-l
Final Clearance Sale

lf2 PRICE

BOYS' FLARE LEG SLACKS

Sizes 6 to 18 in regulars and slims. Corduroys .

FINAL CLEARANCE

Girls' Knit Tops . Shorts .

denimS . 100

I Corduroys · Blue Den ims . Brushed denims . -C-;,tlon and
i Polyester blends. Sizes 28 to 42 waist. Select vour correct

Infants and Toddlers Playwear

Y2 PRICE

1---;;:~::n:-T~:a-:~e:-r::-;;;-e-·
Sale
Womens Sleeveless

SHIFT
GOWNS

1

1 JUNIOR SUMMER

I

SLEEPWEAR
1

SALE I. MILL ENDS

NYLON RUGS
Bound all around · 12 loot widths · lengths 15' to
21 '. Good selection of colors and patterns including gold, rust, orange, moss green, avocado
green , blue, bronze, red . Plain weaves, sculptured effects. shags, candy str ipes.
An Excellent Group

SALE PRICE $ 88.00
Also atE lberfelds Warehouse- Big sale
of Summer Lawn and Porch Furniture .
Axminster Rugs 9'x12 size $68.00 - 12
foot wide Rubber Back Carpeting for
dining rooms - kitchens, bathrooms Linoleum (excellent selection) - Ozite
Indoor-Outdoor Carpeting.

1 Grou~

FURNITURE
THROWS

4.88
5.38

5.88
6.38
6.88

(small lot - only 17)
i.halr end Sofa sizes . While
they last.

1j2

MEN'S KNIT DRESS SLA'CKS
29 waist to 42 waist . Solid colors and neat

patterns.
You can really save during this big sales event.
11.95
12.95
!3.95
14.95
16.95

Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit

Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks

·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
•
·

·
·
·
•
·

•
·
•
•
·

·
·
·
•
·

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

8.88
9.88
10.38
11.88

12.88

I Lot

KITCHEN
CURTAINS
Swags . Tiers . Cottage
Values to S4.95.

Sets.

Whllo They U&amp;l

SALE! MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

2.00

Not every size in every style- but a good overall

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

7.95
5.95
4.95
3.95

...••.
Knit Shirts . . . . . . . .
Knit Shirts . · . · . . . .
Knit Shirts . • . . . . . .
&amp; 3.49 Knit Shirts . . . . .

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

5.00
4.50
3.75
3.00
2.50

-Sale!

$10.95

GOOSE DOWN
PILLOWS
Wuhablo quality Bed
Pillow. Fine quality finish

covering.

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS
Limited quantity -

Priced low for this sale.

Boys 3.95 Knit Shirts · • · · • · · Sale 2.50
Boys 2.95 Knit Shirts . • · • • • . Sale 2.00
Boys 1.95 Knit Shirts · · · · • . • Sale 1.50

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT
B.IG.SALEI

METAL UTILITY CABINETS
Wardrobes . Base Cabinets • Kitchen Cabinets
· China Cabinets.
Big selection of sizes - Avocado • Harvest
Gold · Coppertone and White.
If you need extra storage space- you should
see this fine line of cabinets and buy yours now
during this sale.

SALE 8.00
CLEANUP SALE

STEEL SlAT
VENETIAN BLINDS
White with duck tape
64" long.
Small quantity (24)
SIzes from 23 to 33
. While They Last

r

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9:00 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
l

PRICE

r-----------11

~--~--·~~~·-~-----~---------~~-----·-.---~------

~.~~~:_. L-~-~~.I__C_E_-1 ::::ti:.~-5 ~:. ~:dK:~a::ii:;ss

At Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street.

1----------1

For This Sale

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 73

•

enttne
PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1972

Mostly cloudy south and
partly cloudy north today and
tonight and cool. Highs this
afternoon in 70s except ranging
to low 80s extreme south. Low
tonight in the 50s and Saturday,
fair and mild, high 75 to 80.

TEN CENTS

•

eace opes In
•
•
1etnam a1se

2 PC. - LID AND
FRINGED RUG

llength. Periecl for ba ck -lo-sc hool wear.

I Size

Weather

Devoted To The Interests ()_(The Meigs-Mason Area

3.29

FLARE LEG SLACKS

!

at y

Excellent Colors

Skorts • Swim wear - Jackets ~~~~~ ~:~: ~::; ~::~~! :::::::
SPECIAL GROUP

•

The first Pony Express rider
to rea ch the California state
Capitol March 3, 1860, was
flanked by a mounted escort of
the Sacramento Hussars, a
militia unit ancestral to the
California NG in featherlnpped fur hats and red and
yellow boots.

BATHMAT SETS

~-~~;;-~e:s and Young Mens

~-----------·----·-~-----....,

Now You Know

$4.99

I

Young Mens 5.95 Slacks - · - - . . . Sale
Sale
1
Sale
Young Mens 8.95 Slacks - - - . . . . Sale
v~.n~-~e~~slacks - . - . • . . Sale

lf2 PRICE

SCENE OFT REPEATED- Tragedy, at right, never
fails to draw people. This headon collision occurred in
Minersville Thursday. One driver is in critical condition, and
a 13-year old girl is seriously Injured. The second driver was
not seriously injured . Picture by Larry Baker.

56.99 Sale . · . 53.49
58.95 Sale . . . $4.49
$9.99 Sale . • . $5.49

BOYS 4.95 SLACKS - . · · · . . • SALE 3.88
BOYS 5.95 SLACKS · . · · · · . . SALE 4.88
1BoYs 6.95 sLAcKs - - - - . . . . sALE 5.~8

--·---·---- -·-·--·---·-·!

turn. There was moderate
damage to his vehicle, and a
passenger Edith Adkins, ~.
claimed injuries, but was not
treated . There was no arrest.
At 7:05 p.m. Lynn Diane
Aleshire, 16, Route 3 Pomeroy,
struck the rear of a parked car
owned by Harland Whitlatch,
Pomeroy, at the Minersville
Ball Park . There was light
damage to the Whitlatch auto
and none to Aleshire's. There
were no arrests or injuries.
At 3:~ p.m. the sheriff's
office reported another ac·
cident on Route 124 where
Maria W. Walding, 45,
Columbus, thought she was
about to have a flat tire and
went off the right side of the
road, striking three culverta
before bouncing back onth the
highway. There were no in·
juries or arrests. Damage was
moderate.

SALE 2.99

pet . cotton · cotton and pol yester blends . Excellent selection
ofslyles and colors. Buy nowforba ck .lo-schoolwear .

G1rls' Summer Sleepwear

One witness was Pal
Winebrenner, Syracuse, who
said she was driving an
estimated 250 feet behind the
mishap.
The accident is still woder
. investigation. On the scenewas
Robert C. Hartenbach, Meigs
County Sheriff; Bernard Fultz,
prosecutor; Sgt. Henry Werry
of the Pomeroy Police Dept.,
and Sgt. Sheets. Both the
Pomeroy and Middleport
emergency squads were at the
scene.
Other accidents investigated
by the sheriff's Dept. included
one at the state route 33 con·
structlon site where the fuurlane highway is reduced to two
lanes. At 11 :30 p.m. Thursday,
Homer Leroy Adkins, 41,
Gallipolis, smashed Into a
barrel at that site, thinking the
road went straight ahead in·
stead of taking a sharp left

S4.19 and S4.99

Y2 PRICE
I
-"FIN'A'i-ciiA-i.iNc£i
f!;
!:g~~ ~:~~ ~~:~~~ :::::::: ~:~~ ~:::
,

Gilbert (Gib) R. Sellers, 27,
Racine, is in ·critical condition
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
with severe injuries suffered in
a spectacular headon collision
on State Route 124 In front of
the Vic Brown residence at 5:45
p.m. Thursday in Minersville.
Teresa Riffle, 13, Chester
Rd., Pomeroy, is in guarded
condition. She was in Sellers'
auto. Richard Robert Young,
the other driver, 32, Racine
Route 2, is in satisfactory
condition. Both are also at
Veterans Memorial.
According to the Meigs
County Sheriff's office, Young
was !reveling southeast and
Sellers northwest when Young
apparently went left of center,
skidded 54 feet, then struck the
Sellers auto in its right side.
The 1972 Ford truck driven
by Young bounced 22 feet ~Iter
the impact, investigating of·
fleer Sgt. David Sheet;;, deputy
sheriff, reported . There were
skidmarks three inches left of
center at the point of impact.
There were reportedly no
skidmarks left by Sellers' auto,
a 1967 Plymouth Belvedere .
Both the car and truck were
demolished.

Twin, Full, King size .

Specia I For This Sa Je

1

WOMEN'S SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

(Only_60 to soli)

Man and Girl . 13,
Hurt in Collision

Bn.L HAYES

ANGIE HUBIIAIID

RODNEY HOLMAN

JEAN SLOTER

Students
Going to
Institute
Twelve Meigs County high
achool student;; will be leaving
soon for the eighth annual
Teenage Institute on Alcohol
and Drugs at the Ohio
Dominican
College
in
Columbus.
Most of the Meigs County
students will attend the session
August 6-9, with the remainder
going to an Augusl13-16 session
covering the same materiaL
Dr. Joseph K. Wittemann,
director of the institute, said,
"We of this institute are
strongly commilled to the
philosophy that change,
positive and permanent
change, begins with the young.
It is through the insight of our
youth that we may avert or at
least reduce the plight that
alcoholism
or
drug
dependency may bring. On
lhe basis of this philosophy we
are planning a workshop that is
truly unique because it focuses
directly on youth, their ideas,
insight,
and
recom·

LINDA BROGAN

STEVE McGUFFIN

GEORGE MORA

mendations.''
Leaders in the field of
medi c ine , psychology ,
sociology, and law have been
assembled to discuss the
problems openly and frankly'.
Complementing their
presentations will be small
group discussion under the
direction of individuals who
have had close contact with
young people and some real
understanding of the problems
surrounding the Issue of
alcohol and other drugs.
There will also be plenty of
opportunity for the students·to

become better acquainted with
other students from across the
state through recreational
activities.
Attending from Meigs
County will be Larry Atherton,
Angie Hubbard, George Mora,
William Hayes, John Gerard,
Jan Kennedy, Unda Brogan,
John Moore, Steven McGuffin,
Jean Slater, George Holman,
and Sheri Young.
These students will be
returning pledged to work with
the Meigs County Alcoholism
and Drug Abuse Program
throughout the county, The $35

scholarships needed to send
each student were provided
through the county program's
citizens group from various
local businesses, groups, and
individuals.
The next meeting of the
Meigs County Alcoholism and
Drug Abuse Program will be
held on August 1, Tuesday, at
7:30 p.m. at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church Fellowship
Hall. The program will be new
films on alcoholism and drug
abuse followed by discussion
and coffee . The public is
cordially invited .

WASHINGTON (UP!)President Nixon, declaring the
chance for a negotia ted peace
in Vietnam "better now than it
has ever been," has pledged to
try to end the war before th e
Nov. 7 presidential election.
" ... We hope to do everything
we can to bring this war to an
end" in the three months
before the election, Nixon said
Thursday at a White House
news con£erence.
He met reporters in his oval
office and told them he did not
"want to raise any false hopes"
but believed "the enemy is
failing in his military offensive" and suffering from the
consequences of the American
blockade and bombing canl·
paign in North Vietnam.
'"Under
thes e
cir·
cumstances, the enemy ... has

Tuesday night the recom·
mendatlon for the establish·
ment of a coffee house was
presented by Roger Hooker
and James Wiles following
which the, commlltee, after
discussion, took three actions:
- Went on record . agreeing
there Is a deep need for a youth
center (coffee house) In Meigs
Cowtly.
- Passed a resolution en•.
couraging a wide-based
citizens committee of youth
and adUlts be organized to
bring about a well planned and
supervised youth center
(coffee house).
-And recommended that

such a committee should
consist of approximately 6-11
youth ;jlld 6-11 teenagers.
Tlie executive comml\tee
also approved a resolution that
the Meigs County Alcoholism
and Drug Abuse 'Program will
give assistance in anyway
possible consistent with Its own
program to such a committee
when it is formed .
The next public meeting for
the Meigs County Alcoholism
and Drug Abuse Program will
be August!, Tuesday, at 7:30
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. The program will be
new films dealing with
alcoholism · and drug abuse

Pomeroy Postmaster Jim
Soulsby disclosed today a new
method is in use by the United
States Postal Service to bring
faster mail service .
All collection and street
letter boxes are being
repainted and relabeled with
the collection schedules, in·
eluding "White Star" boxes for
later collection service. The
innovation is to be used in
Middleport and in third and
fourth class post offices that
have white star boxes.

followed by discussion and the Meigs County Alcoholism
refreshments . All adults and and Drug Abuse Program met
on Tuesday evening, July 25, at
teenagers are invited.
The Executive Committee of (Continued on page 10)

Meigs, Gallia Share Subsidy
A total of $6,819,766.57 in
general relief subsidy was
distributed in July to the 88
counties, Auditor of State
JosephT.Fergusonsaidtoday .
The general relief subsidy is
a state financed program to
give counties support for their
local welfare programs. The
money Is in addition to the
programs heavily f~ced by

\ \ the Eagleton affair

f~

ii

:

',:',I,.\:

White Star Boxes
To Speed Service

Need for Coffee House Cited
A coffee house, or youth
' center, is needed badly In
Meigs County ,
That was the position sup.
ported strongly Tuesday
evening by the executive
committee of the Meigs County
Alcohollsm and Drug Abuse
Program In a meeting at St.
Paul Lutheran Church.
WhUe not sponsoring, or
planning such a youth center
dlrecUy, spokesmen for the
executive committee emphasized today the A&amp;DA
Program "sees the need for II' ~
at•d "is encouraging liOIIle
~r group, or groups, to start
II."

every incentive to negotiate, " ·:::::::::~:!.a:::~::::::$~::~'!::~::::::~-::~:·to&amp;:~::~~..:::::e~:.~···:·:·;~;;;::;:::~:~~·:·:·:::~~:~:!;!«~~::r.:
the President said.
"At this point, the chance for
a negotiated settlement is
By United Press International
····
better now than il has ever [\\'
:;=
SANFRANCISCO-DEMOCRAT!Cvice presidential
been."
·
candidate
Thomas F. Eagleton said Thursday his cam· :::l
Nixon also denounced U.N. ~
I
Secretary General Kurt Wald· :,:;~=:, paign would at ttmes be "dirty and rough, but I'm not i~
beim for criticizing American
going In quit."
·
~
bombing. Nixon said Waldheim
Eagleton labeled as, a "damnable lie" a report by "1&lt;1,
~
was seizing on "enemye
Washington columnist Jack Anderson that Eagleton was &amp;!
in spired propaganda " as
arrested between six and II times on charges which in· ~
"many well·mlentioned and
eluded drunken and reckless driving.
~
naive people" have in charging
"Jack Anderson is not going to run me out of town or ':l
U.S. planes had bombed dikes
run me off this Democratic ticket," Eagleton Thursday ~~.
and dams in the North.
told a cheering crowd of 1,100 delegates attending the ''
Nixon conceded there may
annual convention of the Retail Clerks International :S
have been some "incidental
Association, AFL-CIO, in Hawaii.
:::
damage" to the dikes but in·
CUSTER, S. D. - SEN GEORGE S. McGOVERN,
sisted the United States had
standing
ftrm on his vice presidential selection amid
exerted great restraint.
growing criticism, said Thursday he will meet again with :!\
"We are not using the great
sen
. Thomas F. Eagleton early next week when they both ::::
power that could finish off
return to Washington. For the second time in six days, ~
McGovern reprimanded his staff, telling them only he or -;~
Eagleton would discuss the situation.
:~·~
«
"!have made my support for Sen. Eagleton clear and
I want no further comment on the matter by any one
connected with the campaign other than Sen. Eagleton or
myself," McGovern said in a statement.
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. Gn.LIGAN said
through a spokesman Thursday night he had not been
::~
contacted for a possible plact on the Democratic ticket ::::.~..
:;:: should Sen. Thomas Eagleton withdraw . Robert Tenen·
Boxes on which a 11 White ·.•,
·
::::
Sta , 1. d'1 1 d
~l baum, Gilligan's press secretary, said: "The governor .:~
r
s SP aye will be ~ has not been contacted about ' accepting the vice ,,
tapped at 5 p.m. or later, and ::::
ld t'al
t An
,
d
•-· ,. :._;;
also have a Sunday and holiday :·:· pres en 1 spo . y rumors gomg aroun are un., ue.
.
· k
Th '
'II
;':.,:'·.:',:.
CLEVELAND - MILLIONAmE-Democrat Howard :;~
~~~~~:~s w~~ de:;:b:~ Metzenbamn says he expects Sen. Thomas Eagleton to ~:~:
deposit mail in these boxes at 5 ;::: with= fr: th~f~~~~denti~ ~le beca;s" ~:· ::::
p.m. and be assured of an ;:~ cum
es ve
y rna
ancts o w
g ....

· federal fwods, such as aid for
dependent children, aid for the
blind and aid for the aged. The
amount distributed Is based on
the need ln~ach of the coun·
ties.
Distri!Jution of the general
relief subsidy included $22,189
In r;Jallia County , and $14,957to
Meigs County.

:0'

epvening dispatch of maiL
muc~SemnoreEadiffgl'
eicultont.ha"s said he doesn't want to be
·,:.; _·.,:
atrons should always check ::~
·
a
the collection schedule posted ;!:: liability to the ticket and I think you could go so far as to ....
on the street letter boxes . Mail @ I!IY ~at for that reason , a change will take plact volun· ::::
deposited in the post office :~: ..~Y by Sen. Eagleton," Metzenbaum said Thursday.
....
drop by 5:45p.m. will also be :~: ·: ALMOST EVERY INFLUENTIAL Democrat who has ::1
dispatched that same evening . :~· expressed an opinion says thai Sen. Thonuts F. Eagleton's ::::
Soulsby suggested that ;$. admission of undergoing psychiatric treatment will :::;
customers use airmail service ~ · hamperDemocraUcchancesofdefeatingPresldeniNIJ:on :~:
when mailing beyond 150 , :::: in Novenlber. And a growing number of Democrats are :~
miles. Airmail is handled ·~l asking Eagleton to withdraw as the viet presidential ::::
separately at all phases of 'tlJe.,.· f.l candidate.
[:[:
post offive . operation and ..iS_ ':~
PRESIDENT NIXON predicted Thursday a "close,
g•ven _pr10~1ty over all mall, :::t hard.fought" campaign despite the current disarray of ~
mcludmg ftrst class. Norma~y 1::. tbe Democratic party. Nbon was asked at a news con·
. Y 0 ~ can e~pec~ next dtty j;j terence Thursday If he was conctrned about over· ~
d~hvery on a&gt;rmail to all ~ajar :;:; confidence In the organization that will attempt to win him i~
c&gt;ties and second day delivery [:[: 8 second tenn 1n the White House.
'
to every city co:'st to. coast.
?!.
"I have told all my associates this -that regardless
"We are gettmg 95 pet, of ::::
local first class mial delivered ;:; olwbat the polls show, whether we are ahead or behind,
the next day and airmail has ::~ t1111
be a close, hard-fought election right down to the
greatly improved, too," Souls· :;[; wire, NIJ:on said.
"·
by said.
~~~~:.:=r.~:;;:;::::::::::~::o:::~::;:;i::~:;,t.:;:::;~::_z:;:::~o:::::::::$:=:::::*::--:=::::.::;:::::::::::::~:w.-=::r....e::::::~~
When sending any class
mail, customers are urged to
EXAPANSION SET
make sure the address is
DOCKS STRUCK
CINCINNATI· (UP!)
legible and complete and to
LONDON (UP!)- Britain's Procter &amp; Gamble plans a $12
include their return address . 41,000 longshoremen began a million addition to its Ivory.
The new collection and nationwide strike today, idling dale plant In suburban St.
delivery standards are just the nation's ports In a walkout Bernard. The new building, to
part of the "Serving America" government officials said. be completed In 1974, will J.n.
program now underway In the would seriously affect the crease the capacity of Pl&amp;&lt;l'l
postal service.
cowotry's economy.
tiquid detergent producing.

t

!
l

':!ll

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