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                  <text>Now You Know

•

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at y

The oceans cover about 140
million ·square miles or 70.8
pet. of the earth's total surface.

Weather

enttne

Devoted To 17w lntere&amp;il Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXIV

ATOTH£R

NO. 74

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

om ers

PLACES ..•

'(OU'L:L

FIND .AL:L

SAIGON (UPI)- A U.S. Air
Force 852 bomber and a pair of
F4 Phantom jet fighter-bombers crashed Sunday as the
U.S. command accelerated the
air war with more than 600
missions over North and Suuth
Vietnam, military spokesmen
said today .
Air Force and Navy fighterbombers scored bullseyes with
guided bombs to destroy five
bridges near Hanoi and Haiphong, the command said. A
bail of fire rose 3,000 feet after
a strike at a Haiphong po11l
facility.
The command said the 852
carried a crew of six and was
headed for a bombing mission

--~ BE.TWEE:N IHE ' COV.ERS

OF A

THIS AND

(

over Indochina when it went
down in a thunderstorm near
lRlon Rathchathani, 300 miles
northeast of Bangkok. Cause of
the crash was not known. The
U.S. embassy in Bangkok said
one survivor was found but
there was no word on the
remaining five crewmen.
According to unofficial records, it was the sixth 852 to
crash during the Vietnam war
and the second to crash in bad
weather this month.
Both · Air Force Phantom
fighter-bombers eras' ~ .1 in the
Gulf of Tonkin Sunday . One
was downed in a dogfight with
a North Vietnsinese MIG. The
rescued crewmen said they did

BOOK'!

MORE IF

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SHOULD

I

•

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NATURAL RESOURCES Director William B. Nye
congratulates JohnS. Wells of Long Bottom for completion of
the Ohio division of wildlife game protector school. Wells was
graduated Friday in ceremonies at the Highway Patrol
Academy .

TINKLY
ME GOT'
ION ED
iN&lt;.JUN

-whereas

must rem1nd vou that.Y?J

mere

marry anyof1e,dear; but I

By United Press International
UPPER MARLBORO, MD.- ARTHUR Herman Bremer,
the Milwaukee Lusboy accused of critically wounding Gov.
George C. Wallace, goes on lrial today in a pale green Prin&lt;;e
Georges County courtroom. Bremer, 21, has pleaded not guilty
by reason of insanity to charges he attempted to murder
Wallace, a campaign worker, s Secret Service agent, and an
Alabama state trooper.
He could receive prison terms totaling 123 years if he is
convicted. The shooting incident occurred May 15 as Wallace
completed a campaign rally at a Laurel, Md., shopping center
parking lot. A spinal injury left Wallace paralyzed from the hips
down, and he now is undergoing therapy in his home state.

certainly 11ot.~!
let him Clear
hosown
homestead-

he is a

~!!

come from a rong line of
beard fleas-

PE;;RHAP? 'IOLJ
COULD

Dlfi£.L

THE: TE'ETH
OUT OF HI?

NOeiEL

Ot.JE HS?ITATE:? TO OAMACSc
?oUCH t.JNIQIJE 5PECIME:IIJ?! THE&lt;Y
DE?S~VE TO BE: MOUtJTSD,.,
LI.KS E.!..ISPHAIIJT IVORY 1

worth it

HAMILTON, OHIO -RICHARD McCOY. JR .. sentenced tn
45 years in prison for air piracy, says ~e would rather go "before
a firing squad or go to the gas chamber than spend the rest of my
life behind bars." McCoy, 29, of Provo, Utah, is In the Butler
County jail here awaiting transler to the federal penitentiary at
Lewisburg, Pa ., to begin his sentence for hijacking a \!nited
Airlines jet and extorting $500,000 in ransom money.
He said in a weekend Interview in his cell that defendants in
capital cases should have the optioo of death or long prison
terms. "If it's between a long prison sentence and death by
execution, a guy should get the option," the former Brigham
Young University student said. "He should be allowed to make
the choice."

tow1n her
hands!!-l

can clear the
brush away

. burni"i it-

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

CAPTAIN EASY

'

Wl'rCH CHILD'~ 15!mJ0 CONSULTISD!

6FtSEN TH' FROB All.!' Jl:J:D THi
RO?J:.,,TSETH
RIGHT
IN ?OMeOIJJS'!!&gt;

WI: DlDI'J'T MEAt./

T' JAM THO?!: ?ABERiOOTii TI&lt;SSR. TUS.K$&gt;
UPGRAMPA'~
NO~El

HOJ]MA,LA. -SEN .ALLEN J . ELLENDER, a backwoods
bayou boy who went into politics and became dean of the U. S.
Senate, will be buried today in the southern Louisiana Cajun
country where he was born 81 years ago.
· The funeral was scheduled at noon EDT with President
Nixon and more than 100 other Washington officials among those
planning to attend. Included among some 40 fanner Senate
colleagues on the list were Sens. George McGovern and Thomas
Eagleton, meeting for tile first time since disclosure of
Eagleton's past medical history last week.
NEW YORK - A QUINTET OF POIJTE, well dressed
bandits who seemed to know "where they were looking" broke
Into the safe deposit boxes of the post Plaza Hotel early today,
fleeing with an undetermined amount of_cash and valuables.
"They looked like real professionals," a detective said. Police
said it would "probably take quite a while" to determine the
amount taken in tile robbery.
The five men, at least three armed and all sporUng
moustaches, entered the famous hotel about 4 a.m., police said.
They came equipped with 12 pairs of handcuffs and rounded up 18
employes on duty, a male guest, a cab driver and a delivery man
and herded them Into a reservations office.

WASHINGTON iUPI)- With
top party officials apparently
on signal urging him to step
down, Sen. Thomas F.
Eagle tor~&gt;. meets with Sen.
George S. McGovern tonight
"to make my case" to stay on
the Democratic ticket.
The two running mates were
to fly with Senate colleagues in
separate Air Force planes to
Louisiana for the funeral of
Sen. Alien J. Ellender, D-La.
Alter returning, they were tn
meet for the first time since
Eagletoo disclosed six days
ago he hss been hospitalized
three times lor peychlatric
reasons.
"It's my Intention to stay in
the race," Eagleton said
Sunday . "I'm going to make

t..en::.-

VIGOROU~L..Y! ... BUT
E~t.OOK 01\J THE Bfi:IGHi
~IDE' ... AT L.E:A?T THI;Y'RE:-

NO

LONGe~&lt;:

h111P/.IICEP!

DENT17T~ HEl-P

as e
Stratofortress crash. The $8
million plane was based at UTapao Air Force Base in
Thailand, home of most of the
8528 that fly missions over
Vietnam. The command said
the specific mission of the
aircraft was not known.
8528 Dew three missions and
there were 310 tactical air
strikes over the North during
the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m.
TESTING TODAY
All persons working In the
restaurant of the Meigs
Local School District
Athletic Boosters at the
county fair are required to
have food handler cards.
Free testing necessary for
obtaining the cards will be
done at the office of Dr. R. R.
Pickens in Middleport at 6
this evening or at the same
hour on Wednesday. There Is
no charge for the testing and
cards.

Sunday, the command said.
About 93 of the big planes
dumped an estimated 2,325
tons of explosives on North
Vietnamese supply dumps and
emplacements, where fighterbombers struck 277 times
Sunday.
Air Force jets using guided
bombs dropped the middle
swivel span of a 738-foot-loog
brid~e five miles northea.•t. of
Hanoi Sunday . They also
destroyed !he center span of
the 550-foot Dap Cau Bridge on
Highway I, 18 miles from the
North Vietnamese capital, the
command said.
Navy planes armed with
"Walleye" radar-guided
bombs wrecked three bridges
on key routes around
Haiphong, North Vietnam's
major port city. A strike by
carrier planes at the Hon Gai
port facility 25 miles northeast
of Haiphong left the target
covered by smoke and marked
by. numerous explosions and a
fireball that billowed up to
3,000 feet, pilots said.

TeE:Tif GROW ~TR0N6

CO-OPERATE, DR.$PROI'J6 AND TAE
TOOl'H FAIRY WIL-L. ~I-lOW YOU-

.... . ....

'
---.

a.

Really B-o·h·h·y
REYKJAVIK (UPI)
World chess champion Boris
Spassky who canceled Sunday's game against U. S.
challenger Bobby Fischer
because of a head cold is undergoing a mental crisis that
may cost him his title, chess
experts said today.
"You'll find the name of
Spassky 's illness is spelled B-ob-b-y not c-o-1-d," said
Yugoslav grandmaster
Svetozar Gligoric upon hearing
that the 9th game in the
$250,000 "match of the century" had been postponed until
Tuesday.
"Spassky is in a serious
stress crisis," ·Gligoric said.
''His crown is slipping and he is
worried over the level of his
game.''

The game was postponed by
German arbiter Lothar Schmid
who said that Spassky's
second, · Ivo Ney, telephoned
him Sunday morning to say the
Russian was suffering from a
head cold.
"It is nothing serious/' said

Ney, "just an ordinary cold.
But you must remember chess
is not like football or tennis.
Even the slightest cold is upsetUng when you have to sit in
deep concentraUon for five

But Fischer aide Fred
BELFAST - BRITISH TROOPS AND TANKS swept
Cramer,
a vice president of the
through Roman Catholic barricades across Northern Ireland at
lioternational Chess Federation
dawn today and occupied every Irish Republican Army (IRA)
"no go" area and stronghold. The immediate respoose was a (FIDE), said he thought
retaliatory bomb attack. Three bombs ripped the village of Spassky wanted time
Claudy, a largely Roman Catholic community near Lon- · recover from Thursday nlahi•,
8th game defeat.
donderry.
"If you look over the past
First reports said six persons, were killed, including an eighthistory
of ·world championship
year-old girl. The anny said !lVI! peraollll were kUled and at least
matches, this has happened
29 Injured. Two gunmen were 8)lot to death In Londonderry juat
before. These illnesses have a
after the troops moved in but tbere was little initial resistance In
way of cropping up after a
the ·Catholic strongholds. Their deatha ralaed the toll for three
years of bloodshed in Northern Ireland to at least 4811, with 71 of
REGISTER SOON
them since a brief IRA truce colla peed July 9.
New students at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport lor tho new ~ehool year
are requested to register as
MARRIAGE
UCENSE
LOCAL TEMPS
soon as P,Oasible. The office Is
The temperature in downAlan Brent Swindell, 23, open to handle registrations
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. Shade, Rt. I, and Tanna Marie from aa.m. to 3 p. m. Anyone
Monday was ·74 degrees under Gardner, 21, Middleport.
needing further information
may call 992-3058.
cloudy· sides.

ANP HEIILTHY, LSJ&lt;OY! IF VOLJ'!..t..

my case to him, which I think is
a good case. " The vice
presidential nominee said his
candidacy had met with a
favorable response from the
people.
But Democratic National
Chairman Jean Westwood and
Vice Chairman Basil Paterson
urged Eagleton to resign so the
campaign could focus on issues
instead of personalities. lmmediately after Mrs. Westwood,
McGovern selectioo as chairman, made tile statement on
nationwide television, she went
to the presidential nominee's
home for several hours of
talks.
Campaign manager Gary
Hart, political director Frank
Mankiewiscz and adviser John

Spassky's Illness

ho\U's."

lf,J A TWit-JKI.l'-!6!,., r--H_E_M_U_?-T'...
VE.-1-~H-A-~-e:D_TO_O--.

TEN CENTS

TAKE ME MY TEDDY BEAR- Thill attractive member of the Meigs High SchooiiiJind
was preparing to board one of the buses for band camp Sunday, teddy bear and all. One hundred and eight members left for camp at Rio Grande College for one week. A band show wUI be
presented at 9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, at Rio Grande . The show Is open to the public. Dwight
Goins is band instructor. Band Members held their tag day Saturday which was termed a
success. Awards were presented to members collecUng the most monev. Kennv Hoffman was
the overall winner, Karen Wheeler lor the Pomeroy Area, Kathy Werry and Jan Holter the
Middleport area, and Judy Snowden, the RuUand area.

:· .' .• Eagleton Will Plead Case Tonight

L~~K ...

you have the fleadcim to

not think . the plane was
damaged by· the Communist
fighter before crashing 80
miles offshore from Vinh.
The second F4 crashed at sea
85 miles from Haiphong after
failing to rendezvous with a
tanker. Both of the $2 million
airplanes were returning from
missions ·over North Vietnam
when they crashed.
Radio Hanoi charged in a
Saigon-monitored broadcast
that U.S. planes July 19
bombed the dike system on the
Chu River in North Vietnam, a
sewage system at Thanh Hoa,
83 miles southwest of Hanoi,
and the sewage system at Thai
Binh. 0 .S. officials do not
oomment on Radio Hanoi
. allegations.
On the war front in South
Vietnam, government soldiers
in separate battles Sunday
reopened two sections of Highway 1, the vital supply line
running through the northern
part of the country.
Official spokesmen in Saigon
said they had few details of the

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, JULY 31, 1972

Cloudy; becoming parUy
cloudy south sections today.
Highs today in the low and
middle IIOs. Fair north, partly
cloudy south tonight with lows
in the low and middle ea..
MosUy sunny Tuesday wltb
highs in the middle and upper
80s.

Douglas also were at the
McGovern home for tile six
hours of afternon talks. Ali
refused to comment to reporters waiting outside when they
left.
McGovern said during his
return to Washington Saturday
night after two weeks in the ·
Black Hills that a decision on
whether Eagleton would
remain on the ticket would be a
"mutual one." But he added:
"He's the one that going to, in
the final analysis, have to
make the decision ."
Eagleton was nominated by
the Democratic National Convention and theoretically could
resist any suggestion from the
McGovern camp to resign. But
as a practical matter, political

RULES ARE RULES
To avoid any serious accidents, Pomeroy Pollee
Chief Jed Webster asks that
rules for riding bicycles be
obeyed.
Websteo· said there are
rules for riding bicycles the
same as there are for driving
autos.
He especially warns
youngsters riding bikes at
night they must have a
headlight and a reflector on
the rear fender. Riders on
Lincoln Heights and Lincoln
Hill Drive are especially
subject to danger, he said.

nasty loss," he said.
Many other experts agreed.
They said Spassky appears to
have become so rattled by
Fischer's constant objections
to playing conditions and his
failing to show up on time for
tile games that he is losing his
control over the match .
Grandmasters said that
Spassky's defeat Thursday
night was his worst in the 24game match so far. He
resigned on the 37th move after
making what Argentine
grandmaster Miguel Najdorf
said was a "childish, almost
crazy mistake on the 19th."
It left Fischer who has
scored four wins and two draws
Dennis Ray Larkins, 9, Stuttin the last six games, with a :&gt;-3
gart,
Germany, was killed
point lead.
Saturday at the 56th Field
Artillery Base where his father
is stationed with the U. S.
Army, relatives here learned
today.
Dennis was playing with
other children on an end loader
when its motor accidentally
started.
Dennis Larkins was born at
Augsburg, Germany, the son of
Sgt. First Class Raymond W.
and Uane Martel Larkins of
near Suttgart, Germany.
Dennis was a fourth grade
student at the military base
school.
In addiUon to his parents, he
is survived by a sister,
Catherine, at home; paternal
grandparents, ·Mr. and Mrs.
Fred .Larkins, Long Bottom;
his maternal grandmother,
CAROL KENFIELD
Carol B. Heafleld Is the Mrs. Annie Martel, Aystetten,
new Home Economist with Germany, and a maternal
Columlnll and Souther~~ Ohio great-grandmother living in
Electric Com[Niay. A native Germany, and several cousinll,
of Cleveland, she graduated aunts and uncles.
Funeral services have been
· from the Ohio State
tentatively
set pending arrival
Unlvenlty Ia June, 1971,
of
the
body,
and family from·
with a bachelor of science
degree Ia Home Ecoaomles. Gennany for Wednesday at 2
She Ia a member of the Ohio p.rri. at the White Funeral
Vocatlo1111 AsBOClatlon and Home in CoolvUle. The Rev.
the
American
Home Charles Norris will officiate.
Burial · will be in Meigs
Eeon•mlu AIIIOClalloa.
Min Heafleld realdea Memory Gardens. Friends
at
13!1
W:
Sev- . may call at the White Funeral
Home Wednesd&amp;y morning.
enlb Ave., Columbua.

Boy Age
9 Killed

observers said it would be
almost impossible for him to
resist the pressure frr.m a
presidential candidate at the
lOp of tile ticket and from the
party hierarchy .
"I would have to weigh it,"
Eagleton replied when asked
what he would do if McGovern
asked him to leave the ticket.
"Certainly I'll listen respectfully and attentively to what it
is,and I'll weigh his words. But
I won't in advance prejudge
what tile result will be, or say
what my predetermined,
irrevocable decision will
be."

Mrs. Westwood said that ·if
Eagleton were to decide to stay
oo the ticket, "we will go ahead
and support him, of course."

Asked if this woUld be difficult,
she replied ''yes, but I will still
do it."
Paterson
said
the
Democratic National Committee would be able to meet
within 10 days to choose a
successor.
At first McGovern expressed
full support of Eagleton after
he made his disclosure at a
joint news conference in the
Black Hills last Tuesday. But
during the weekend, staff
members and McGovern himself seemed to be opening the
door for a possible Eagleton
withdrawal.
It alSo seemed ahnost inconceivable that Mrs. Westwood
and Paterson would urge
Eagleton to step down without

clearing It in advance with the
McGovern camp.
McGovern, in his midnight
news conference aboard a
jetliner, praised Eagleton as
being a skillful campaigner
and also one of the best new
senators in the last three or
four years. But he said the
issue involved "a combination
of things."
"Does it in any way impair
his capacity of leadership?
Does it arouse anxiety In a
public that Is already nervous
and uptight about its naUonal
leadership? Does It damage
our chances ol winnln&amp; lbe
election 1
·-·
··
''These are all lhqs I
frankly cannot aii8Wer," McGo.vern said.

Busing Plan Due Today
DETROIT (UPI)- The De- mostly black.
A super ''shadow" school
troit schools desegregation padistrict
financial plan with
nel today presents a sweeping
and highly controversial money raised locally but doled
busing and financing pian for out "equitably" by the state
integrating public schools in would be created for nearly
the city and 52 of its suburbs. 800,000 students -one-third of
Michigan's entire school
If carried out, 350,000 population .
students would be bused across
Almost 50 per cent of the
district and county lines to students would be bused to and
achieve a racial balance in from their schools in a tranmore than 1,000 schools that sportation program involving
now are either mostly white or more than 2,000 buses and

71;2-Month Strike Ends
WARREN , Ohio (UP!) Members of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers Local 1067 voted
Sunday night to accept a new
labor contract and end their
seven and one-half moJlth
strike against the United
Telephone Co. Warren District,
which has some 70,000 subscribers.

Details of the agreement
were withheld, including what
provision was made about
strikers who were replaced a
few weeks ago.

2 Calls Answered
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to the Vernon
Darst home, 355Ash St., at 7:34
p. m. Saturday. Darst, suffering from a possible stroke,
was taken to· Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.
At 10:08 p. m. Suqday the
squad was called for Jimmy
Queen, 348 Uncoln St., who was
having difficulty walking. He
was taken to \he _ Holzer
Medieal Center via private car.
NO BURNING
Positively no burning ol any
ktnd will be pennltted In
Middleport alter 5 p.m.' each
day, Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle said today.
Even residents with pennits
will not be . allowed to burn
after 5, the mayor warned. lje
also said no burning Is to take
place on Sundays or holidays.
VIolators will be cited to
Mayor's court, he concluded;

The . company said it expected the telephone operators,
who struck Jan . 4, to return to
their jobs within a week.
The agreement also lets
members of Local 1966, which
repref'ents linemen , instsllers
and maintenance workers, to
go back to work today. That
group also struck witll the long
dislance operators but reached
a contract settlement a month
ago. They remained off the job
pending outcome of the
operators walkout.
Service has been maintained
since Jan. 4 by supervisory
personnel and non-union
employes.

costing an estimated $100
million a year.
The pian envisions a student
population that would be 75 per
cent white and 25 per cent
black in the 1,010 schools In
Wayne, Oakland and MaComb
counUes.
Detroit's school population
overall is 65 per cent black, but
most of the city's schools have
a black population in exce9S of
90 per cent. Some ou• r.u)e area
schools are almost ~'' wr cent
white.
Because of court appeala, the
panel does not expect to implement even an Interim plan
for some elementary grades
lnis fall, but Is looking toward
partial
integration
in
February, 1973, with 1'full and
complete" lntegratloo by we
fall of 1973.
In . addition to busing of
students, the panel propoees
. the transfer of black teachers ·
from Detroit schools to tbe
suburbs and white teachen
from the suburbs to the city to
achieve Integrated staffa of
about 25 per cent black to 75
.per cent white.

Weber Hm1
Autos Damaged
In Accident
Two autos had medium
I

damage in an accident on West
Main St. at 4:50p.m. Sunday,
Pomeroy police said.
Acar driven by Joyce Kerns,
17, Middleport, was in a left
turn when it was struck by a
car driven by Carol Baker, ~.
Long Bottom. Police said the
Baker car's brakes failed. No
charge waa filed, and there
were no injuries.
1

SOCIALPLANNED

An old fashlooed Ice cream

RUTLAND - That old gray ,
mare ain't what she used to be.
But neither are some of tho
cowboys who rode her.
Vernon Weber, RuUand,
owner of the Quality Print Shop
in Middleport,. I&amp; confined to
Room 221 at the Holler Medical
Center alter a freak accident
Thursday night.
Weber went Into a field to get ·
a hOC'se · tllat belongs to IIIII
family and decided to ride IIIII
animal from the field.
In leaping onto the bene be
struck his pelvic bone 011 IIIII .
animal'• ilhoulcler. He wu
taken to lbe office li Dr. J.l.
Davia In Middleport and bpiD
the medical center. U will be

IOCial will be held Saturday at
the Columbia Cbapel Church
located on Route 888 at Point
Rock on lbe Albeny·WU!teavllle
Road. Serving will start at 5 p.
m. There will be plea, cakes
and sandwiches available. approlllmalely u WHU
Proceedl will go to the building before Weber will be abll 111
program o! tho church. The rebn lo lull tlmt duty at bll
bu;.
public Ia Invited.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 19'/2 '

...

bb

,

ill

71 ,

A SHIP OFF THE OLD DOCK
Programs for Tonight
NEW YORK (KFS) - We sallsfted one of
our most durable silly dreams when we sailed to
and Tomorrow
Europe aboard the QE2. a m1dmght sailing, a
dream born of Scott Fitzgerald and MelvYn
Douglas and Claudette Colbert and Roz Russell
S 00 - Wagon Tra1n :1 Stg Valley 6 , Mr Rogers 33 , Mavenck
and the Duke of Windsor, and any number of
13 , Dick Van Dyke 15 , To Be Announced 4
characters almost of fiction (the movie stars
5 30- Electric Co 33 , Marshall D1ilon 15
6 00- News3, 4, 8, 10, Truth or Conseq 6, I Dream of Jeannre
were) who whetted our snob appetlte for some
13 ; Sesame Sf 20 , News 15 , Halhayoga 33
of
the exqmstlely lmpo.sslble delicaCies of life .
6 30 - NBC News3, 4, 15 , ABCNews6, 13 1 CBSNews8,10, Folk
It was the movies first MelvYn Douglas m
Guitar 33
7: 00 - Elef Co 20, News6 It Takes A Thief 3. Dick Van Dyke evenmg clothes with Claudette or Roz m some
4, Whats My L1ne 8, Saint 15. Off The Record 33 Mov1e
Impossible madcap predicament, in which a
"Hud" 13
midnight satllng on a splendid ocean hner
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Traffic C0 urt 10, Mr Rogers 20
Episode Acllon33, I Dream of Jeannle4 Dragnets
played Its galormous role And there IS the QE2,
8 00 - Gunsmoke8. 10; Baseball3. 4. 15 Jesse Owens Returns
perhaps delayed by an early.,season storm or a
to Berlin 6, 13. A New Home for the Arts. 20, 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8. Ghost Story 3, 4, 15. Mov1e " Nolh~ng but
couple of bomb hoaxes that may keep Cunard
the Best" 6. 13, Jack Nicklaus Profole 10
carefully searching for the unknown . . So the
9 30-DorlsDayS. 10. Bookat20, Boy That Grew Up33
authentic m1dmght sailing IS w1thui an hour of
10 00 - News20, Suspense PlayhouseS, 10, News 20
10 30- Human Dlmens•ons 33
target
11 OO-Newsl,4,6, News a, 10,15
PhllopBarry, m h1s gbttermg comedy, "The
11 30- Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 , Movte ' The Wild
Pluladelplua Story," had one !me which
One" 8, Movie "Attack' 10, Mov1e 'House of Women' 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
somewhat summed up for us the old syndrome
1 30 - News 13
"There IS no prettier picture than the priVIleged
2 00 - News 4
class
en]oymg 1ts prlVlleges "
TUESDAY, AUGUST I
It's
a very pretty p1ct1Ire Manljattan's
6 00 - Sunrise Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13.6 20- Paul Harvey 13
galaxy of lights on one stde, New Jersey's
6 30 - Columbus Today ~ Bible Answers 8
recently glamorous expanse of luxury apart6 45 - Corncob Report 3, 6 55 - Rocky &amp; Bullwonkle 13
menta rismg out of what once was a drab New
7 00 - Today3, 4. 15, CBS News8, 10, Sports Club 13
7 30- Sleer. Jeffers B. Romper Room 6, Underdog 13
Jersey topography, a very pretly two-stded
8·00- Cap Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue6, 13 Sesame St 33
mural mdeed The glamorous sailing parties,
8. 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6, Jack La La nne 1J
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15 , Loc i' s Toyshop 10
emphasis on champagne, considerably
Peyton Place 13, Romper Room 8 Mr Rogers 33 Whaf
discouraged smce some v1c1ous nut started
E\lery Woman Wants to Know J; Timmy and Lass1e 6
makmg disgraceful phone calls to Cunard, still
9 30 - Truth or Con seq 3. Phil Donahoe B. Moke Douglas 6 , One
Life to Live 13. Eleclm Co 33
take place under considerably less hysterical
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3. 15. Luc1lle BalllO , D1 ck Van Dyke 13
auspices,
JUSt as well: some of the parties took
Hathayoga 33
,
on a mood of desperatiOn, as if 1! were the last
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4 Spi1l Second 13
Beverly Hillbillies H, My Three Sons 10, In School lnsfrucfoo~
great celebration ever
33 ; Love, Amencan Sty le 6
Of course, the great passenger sh1ps are
Troot" 0, Love, American Style 6
10 45- Lucille Rivers 6
part of the cause; mdeed, most of It No one
11 00 - Sale of Century 3, IS, Family Affaor a. 10 Love much bothers to see you off at Kennedy Airport
American Style 13; Communique 6
except an occasiOnal worrywart parent certam
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Lofe 8 10 Sesame Sl
33, Bewitched 6 13
of engme !allure or hijacking We've crossed the
12 00 - JeopardyJ 15 Bob Braun ' s 50 50 Club 4 Local News 13
Atlantic dozens of limes, and the same friends
Password 6 Jack1e Obt1nger 8
who mstst on seemg us off on a ship wouldn't
12 30-3W'sGame3,15 . Spi 1I Second6 Search for TomorrowS.
10. Elec Co 33
even consider a wave at Kennedy Airport It's
1 00- News 3, All My Children 6, 13. D1vorce Court 8 Green
the sheer glamour of ocean travel, and tl's
Acres 10, Walch Your Ch1ld 15; Joyce Chen Cooks 33
1 30-3 On A Match J• .4, 15 , Let 's Make A Deal6 , 13 As The
totally true
World Turns 8, 10, Sewing Ski ll s 33
Until tighter restrictions were laid on by
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3, 4 lS., Newlywed Game 13 V•rg1ma
Graham 6. Love Splendored Thmg 8, 10 . Grand Master Chess Cunard because of the cruel hoaxes, hundreds of
33
people with no one they knew sailing sunply
2 30 - Doctors 3. 4, 15, Daf~ng Game 13, Guld1ng L1ghl 8 10,
appeared
at the Cunard docks, donated to the
Library 33.
1

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

HUSBAND'S PLAINT - OR EXCUSE'
Dear Helen

,., " ¥X W\i~ hi!IJIUesm~andma~~~ me look ridiculous m front of

compai)Y,, Sh~ ~ri\iCIZe~ !'le to the chi)&lt;b;en. Says I do the same to
her , but should I JUStsllthere and take 1!? She hacks away at my
manhood, never mtssmg a chance to twist the knife
Then sh~expects me to get exc1ted JUSt because she appears
ma sexy rnghtgown and a receptive mood If I can't, she says I'm
a pansy - when she's 101 suspectmg an affall' with another
woman
10
Would you please· tell WIVes, Helen, that "the body has a
head"' I can't forget her meannesses that soon.
The more she nags, the less our sex life. The less our sex life.
the more she cuts me up. She thinks I'm usmg her "bttchiness"
as an excuse I say a man can't perform if he IS constantly put
down
Won't someone get through to women that half of man's
r:-:·&amp;&amp;&amp;:::·:·:::::·:·:·:~::::.:: :·:·:·:·: ....:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· ..........•...... problems are of their makmg• - EMASCULATED

~

i

Tuhe T;Jkl
By Paul Crabtree

Property

None of this on today's luxury transatlantic
voyages. Takmg the trtp totally subJectively, we
find It our personal ideal way to start a long
summer holiday
In the first and possibly most unportant
place, you are not faced With that modern
trauma called "Jet Lag,".amvmg ma different
lime zone from the one your body and mmd
have tuned to for a year It's a very real
physical problem. Doctors have studied it and
have all but thrown up their scalpels. There IS
no cure for It, likely, never will be. You take a
plane from Kemedy at 10 p.m and you amve
without sleep (don't tell us anyone can sleep
properly on a plane! We've failed at 1t for more
Ulan 25 years 1) somewhere close to noon, what
With time racmg ahead The problems of landing, customs, imrrugratlon, luggage (yliJ ')
take up what seems days; if your bags are lost
- double-)'lil! Aboard the QE2, clocks are set
back one hour a day (we liked It even better
when they were reversed JO..rnmutes each I2
hours, but that's a small whun, It's all
academic). And you do arrtve rested
LuxuriOusly.

a.

1

·Meigs

Seamtn's ~'u.1d and had themselves a
glamorous af.ernoon
.
In Ibis era of starkly lowermg - glowermg'
- denominators, of life and religion and sex and
street·Vtolence and creepy attire and shabby
standards and switchblade mentalities and
elements seeking the cruddier life styles, let's
strike a blow for sheer luxury and luxury IS
something that takes few lessons to accomplish
"Certainly luxury takes money; but not so
much as it once seemed. Luxury Isn't just a
pose, a wavmg of greenbacks, a showmg-off of
sudden prosperity. You get luxury when you
turn on your color-TV set, get into y011r car, don
a sports Jacket, buy a fme pair of shoes, attend
the theatre, catch a mov1e (especially at today's
prices), or buy a steak; especially a steak.
There's a fantastic seremty in a transatlantic tr1p by sea. Granted, wmter cruises are
a blt more heche, but that's the naiiire of the
passengers who want to do somethmg every
moment, or they worry about the cost Such as
the lad who asked a girl to dance late on the last
rught of a Caribbean cruise and murmured,
"Gosh, only another half hour of music!" The
girl replied, "l'mdancmgas fast as I can!"

a

3 00 - General Hosp1fal 6, 13, Secref Storm
10. Another
World 3, 4, 15, Let's Travel 33
3 30- One L1fe to L1ve 6, Edge of Night 10 Return to Peyfon
Place 3, 4, 15, Jeff's Coll1e 13 Edplsode Act1on 33
c 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15, Fl1ntstones 13 , Sesame
St 33 , Huckleberry Hound 6. Batman 8, Mov1e 'The Strange
One" 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
,. 30 - GreenAcresJ, V1rgln1an8 , Password 13 I Love Lucy6
Andy Grlffoth 15, Merv Gnffon 4
5 00 - It Takes A Th1ef 4, D1ck Van Dyke 15 Wagon Tra1n 3
Mavenck 13 , B1g Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 , Elec. Co 33
6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 , CBS News 8. 10. I Dream of Jeann~e
13; Truth or Con seq 6. Sesame 51 20 Halhayoga 33
6 30- News 3. 4. 6. 8, 10, 15 Grand Masters Chess 33
7 00 - News6. 10. What's My Lme 8, Elec Co 20 , Green Acres
3, Farmers Daughter 13, Andy Grlffllh 15 , Dock Van Dyke 4
Insight 33
7 30- Masterpiece Theatc.e 33. Ppnde•osa ,J, .U11Mod Squad 6.
13. Jerry Reed
A Birthday Story 20, Masterpiece Theatre
33; Explo '72 6, 8, 15, John Byner Come\ly Hour 10
8 00- Magg1e and the Beautiful Machine 20
8 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8, 10 , NBC Action Playhouse 3, 4
Evening al Pops 20 33 . Movoe 6. 13 Death Valley Days 15
9 00 - Baseba ll 15
P 30 - James Garner 3, 4 Cannon 8, 10, Oo10' It 20 , Handsfuls
of Ashes 33
00- News, Weather, Sports 20 . Marcus Welby 4, 6. 13 F1nng
Line 33
11 00- News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10, 13. 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6. Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15 Mov •e · The
Power" 8, Mov1e " The Shoot " 10, Mov 1e 'Merrills
Marauders" 13
12 00 - Johnny Carson 15
1 00- Your Health 4
1 30 - News, Weather 4, Local News 13

J

1

Voice along Br'Way

Television Log

I

7

Dear Emasculated:
Emasculating women are seldom perceptive They don't
realize
that males are often VICtims of the sensitiVIty they're
·:·:
programmed to hide or perhaps they DO sense thiS and take
!!!! advantage
....
On the other hand, men worried about thell' potency
sometimes read a putdown In every little remarks They may
even subconsciOusly welcome fights because they provide an
excuse not to try - and fat!
Whichever, you're m a VICious circle here, and the only way
out 1s via self-understanding. When you two can talk without
blammg, you may learn what's behind the nags and slashes
(Insecurity, compehllon, envy, "getting even," dislllustonment,
plam old female bossmess or male muliShness) . Only then can
you work to change thtngs It will probably take the help of a very
perceptive mamage counselor. - H

+++

Dear Helen :
My husband IS a secret smoker, and I say thiS IS worse than a
secret eater, and almost as bad as a secret drinker
He told us he qwt and he never smokes around me or the
children, but I smell tobacco m the car and on his clothes and he
'
gets mcreastngly Irritable through the evening On weekends
he
finds excuses to leave for a while, and I know he lights up the
mmute he'sout of our stght-andcanfmda cigarette.
I hate lying - even more than I dislike tobacco I've told him
to smoke In front of us but he'd rather pretend How can I stop
thts subterfuge• - WIFE OF A DIFFERENT KIND OF
CHEATER
Dear Wife
Perhaps this is your husband's way of "cuttmg down " so
don't knock It. Substitute praiSe for suspicion. Let him kno~ you
appreciate his efforts - and a few Cigarettes at the office are
better than a tray of stubs at home every night. They'll be much
less Irresistible when he realiZes you don't condenm him for
every puff. - H.
Q-WI!o established the
first pnntmg press m what

A thought for the day
now the Umted States?
Amerocan wnter Henry
A-Stephen Daye, m 1638
t Cambridge, Mass The
Thoreau satd " It takes two to
first
book that came from
speak the truth, one to spe
the
pre
s s was "The Bay
the other to hear."
Psalm Book" m 1640

chance of ram, and Huntington 60 t., we split the difference at
50 pet. most nf the time. And sometimeS, e just get the local
Wire-service copy, as provided to radio stall , and pray a lot.
Don't blame the stations, the newspape or us. Blame the
Weather SerVIce.
ON TBETV DIAL: Red Sox-Tigers bas 11,8 15, WSAZ-TV
... Jesse Owens special on returning to site of -"'victories in the
"Hitler Olympics" of 1936, 8, WIITN-TV .. A profile on the great
Jack Nicklaus, 9, WBNS.TV. Movies: "Attack," 11:30 p.m., and
"Strange One," 4 p.m. Tuesday, both WBNS..TV •

Lafe Wtlhamson, dec'd , to
Georgia Wtlhamson, Sarah
Gtbbs, Jeanne Hundley,
George E Wtlhamson, Phyllis
J Richards, All Trans ,
Sahsbury.

WIN AT BRIDGe

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 31, 1972
?=-~~~-=·=·&gt;&gt;:!%$ .'Uo'X· :. ...~·:::-».x·~-=-=··:.·::.·~:·::~=::~~»r« : .·:·:

The /Grasshopper Disease'

'·Td'
\~ o ay s

Transfers
Clara Bird Powell to Irwin R
U!nce II, Mary F Lance,
Landmg, Letart
Huntmgton Nat!. Bank,
Trus , Thomas A May, dec , to
C H Williams, Sutton.
Lute Stanley to Forrest A
Ward, Eula I. Ward, 31 A.,
Ohve
Jobn Jacobs to Joseph D
Almendmger, 14 A, Bedford
Martha Chapman, Lawrence
R Chapman to Franldm Real
Estate Co., 81 A , Columbia
Ernest L Jones, Uta Raye
Jones to Franldm Real Estate
Co , Re record Deed, Salem.
Bonme Poling to William B.
Gregory, 67 A , Columbia
Dale B. Adams, Bonme
Adams to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease., Olive.
Bert DeVoe, Edith DeVoe to
Ralph H. Gamer, Ruth I.
Gainer, Parcels, Olive
Katherme
F.
Bush,
Lawrence M. Bush to Wesley
H Gilkey, Linda A. Gilkey, 2 14
A , Middleport
Odetta Pierotti, dec , to Olga
Pteroth, Cert for trans.,
Pomeroy
Archie E Lee, June P. Lee to
Hugh Murray McPhail,
Martha Carson McPhail, Lot,
Syracuse
Georgia Williamson, dec , to
Sarah Gibbs, Jeanne Hundley,
George E. Williamson, Phyllis
J Richards, Cert. of Trans ,
Salisbury.
Cecil Bolin, dec'd., to Joe M.
Bolin, Cert. of Trans , Rutland
Charles H. Cornell, Agnes
Cornell to Harry E. Johnson,
Dolores M Johnson, 0 796 A'
Chester
Robert C Hartenbach,
Sheriff, Muriel Wanzo Jackson
to William J. Hobstetter, Lot,
Rutland.
Consolida lion Coal Co to
Charles Wayne Swisher, Mma
Mae Swisher, Parcels, Letart
Laura J . Wll'es, Laura J
·Fields, Gay Fields to ElliS W

31

NO II'Ill
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EAST

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.J64
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(D)

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were led

.A

• K108

1.4.

East- West vulnerable

West

Nc1rlh

Unfortunately fo~ the ~aJ.
!ant defenders, 'that lost mne.
spot represented a lost trick
East actually led the four.
South's e1ght for c e d the
queen and later on the 10
forced the ace and left
South's kmg as a wmner "
Oswald " West could have
asked for a d1amond lead by
simply dtscardmg hts three
of clubs and pI a y 1n g the
deuce of heat ts when hearts

Easl

Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead- • K

South

~~

Jtm "Thts mt ght not have
caused East to lead a diamond and If he dtdn 'I lead a
dtamond South would be able
to stnp the hand and make
hts conII act but th e mne of
diamonds play made thmgs
a cmch for declare! "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J1m " Last M on day we
discussed the 'Scotch syndrome '. a d1sease that causes
some players to refuse to
play an unnecessanly high
card Here os a hand that
ollustrates the 'grasshopper
dtsease ' Th1s causes players
to waste an Important htgh
card to signal their partner "
Oswald ' The grasshopper
disease takes other forms
but the form you mentwn 1s
the most deadly West opens
the kmg of clubs a g a 1n s t
South's four spades contract
South I a k e s hts ace and
plays out the ace and kmg
of trumps "
J1m " At this pomt grass·
hopper West played his mne
of diamonds He wanted to
tell hts partner to lead a dta·
mond 1f partner ever got m
The s1gna l was read and
when South led a heart to
East's ace, the diamond was
promptly played

The b1dd mg has heen
We"t
Norlh
East

1¥

I•

?

You, South hold

.H743 ¥2 tAK943 "-162
What do yo u do now)
A- Btd three spade); Tlus is
nol an absolute fot ce, but does
ask partner to JCO on to game
Wtlh any excuse
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do brd thr ee spades and
pa r tn er con lmu es lo fo UJ clubs
What do yo u do now? 1

Answer tomorrow

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS. MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
C1ty Ed1tor
Publ i shed dally e)(cepl
Saturday by Tl'1e Oh 10 Valley
P u bi1 Sh 1ng Company
111

Cour t

Ward, Anna Marte Ward, ~ A ,
Pomeroy.
Lester J Taylor, Maqorte E
Taylor to Lily Groppenbacher,
Samuel Carr Wmters, Lot,
Middleport.
Charles H Stalnaker, Orpha
M. Stalnaker to Charles W
Th ompson, Mary 0 Thomas,
p arce ls , Leba non
J ames E. Se 11ers, Mabel
Sell t J h
ers o o n L Arnott, Jmna
L. Arnott, 100 A., Sutton

Snuth

Pass

415769

Sf

Pom eroy

Oh10

Busm ess OH •ce Phone

992 1156 Ed1fOr 1al Phon e 992
'2157

Se&lt;. Ond class postage pa 1d at

Pom e roy Oh 1o

Nat• o nal ad\l e ri•S•ng
represenlat 1ve
Bott•ne111

Gallagher In c , 12 East A2nd
51 New York C•tv , New York
Subscr•pt.on rate s
De
llven&gt;d by Citrr•er wtlere

avadllb le SD cents per week
By Molor Route where carr .er
serv.ce not available One
month Sl 75 By mad 1n Oh10
and

w

VI.J , One year SlA 00

SHe month s $7 2.S
Thr e e
m onth s S~ 50 Subscr •JJI Ion
1:mce .ncl udes Sunday T l me s

Sent .nel

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••
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•

•••
•••
••
••
•••
•••
••
•

-I

.

t.~J. Sport Parade

..ll.
,iJ·
.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI)-Every grown man remembers that first
time.
He remembers the first ttme some member of his family,
usually his father, sat down with htm and told hliD the facts of
life.
Gene Mauch also remembers
He remembers the forst \IIDe someone took him aside and
talked to him about love
"I was 24 years old and I was playmg for Btlly Southworth wtth
the Boston Braves," says Montreal's provocative 46-year-old
manager "He satd to me 'one day you're gonna be a manager
and l'mgonna g1ve you one piece of advice Don't fall in Jove w1th
your players ' It's the first piece of advice I got, and maybe the
best, but I've never been able to ab1de by 11 Incidentally, neither
could he."
'Booody Sunday'
Gene Mauch happened on this strange subJect, strange for a
bit league manager to be diSCUssmg m a nOisy, tobacco-stamed
old dugout, anyway, because the Expos have a series commg up
With the Phillies In a few days and thts wdl be their first meetmg
smce they staged tllell' own pnvate little Viet Nam m Montreal
on June 25.
That was bloody Sunday, a day when the two clubs partiCipated
m a general free-for-all after Steve Carlton, the Pluls' lefthanded
fireballer, hit Tun Fob, the Expos' shortstop, with a p1tch on the
back of the head and knocked him groggy.
Foh staggered toward Carlton m what was meant to be a
belligerent action, both benchs IIIlilledtately emplled, and Gene
Mauch, completely forgettmg the late Billy Southworth's sound
adv1ce, was the one who absorbed the worst beatmg
Jim Nash caught him on the back of the neck and Roger Freed
and Don Money got m some good licks, too.
Gene Mauch says he has forgotten all about the fight which IS
about the same as Muhammad Ah saymg he has forgotten all
about Joe Frazier
"! never give 11 a thought," says Mauch with a perfectly
straight face, "unless somebody asks me or I roll over on my left
shoulder m bed "
Still Smart&amp;
It 1s ftve weeks now smce Mauch got worked over by the Phils,
a club he managed nearly nme seasons, and he still feels some of
the aches and pams from punches which were mfhcted on him
"I got pounded on pretty good," he says. "Probably a manager
has no busmess gomg out there swlngmg at someone, but
sometunesa SWitch goes off and you do somethmg you shouldn't
When Carlton hit Foh, I just went blind I know It wasn't the
smartest thmg m the world to do, but if I thought someone hit one
of my players, I might get pounded on agam "
Gene Mauch has good thmking eqUipment He's m !me
physical condition, or at least he was until !1ve weeks ago, and
ordinarily he 1s a man of reason, but as he pmnts out, ' 'there are
times when words won't get 11 done "
Mauch certainly lsn 't gomg around looking for more matches
As a matter of fact, he even JOkes about hiS ftstt c efforts, saymg
"when I was young I used to Wish I was btg and strong Now !Just
wish I was young."
Some ballplayers speak about the dU'ect, sometimes strident,
Montreal manager the same way they used to about Leo
nurocher They say Mauch IS abrasive, and worse
A Rival Speak.!
Says one rival outfielder
"Playing against him, I can't stand the man. Lisle rung to '!'hal
h1s players say about him, thoogh, I get the feeling I'd love to
play for him myself "
Coming from a ballplayer, that's qwte a complunent
"You know why some guys on other ball clubs say some of the
things they do a bout Gene Mauch •" offers Jun Bragan, one of his
coaches "Only because he 's such a competitor and knows the
game so well. He IS without parallel m hiS knowledge of the
game. The closest man I know to him IS Bobby Bragan, and I'm
not saying that simply because Bobby IS my brother Techmcally
speakmg, Gene Mauch IS hke Bear Bryant Everybody Isn't m
love with Bryant, either, but all! know IShe always gets the JOb
done "

Orioles Trail
Tigers by One
By United Press International wtnnmg hits as the Rangers

The Baltimore Orioles heal
the New York Yankees, lMI,
Sunday with a homer by Boog
Powell giving southpaw Mike
'Cuellar an early cushion for tlle
shutout
The victory, coupled W!lh
Detroit's split of a doubleheader with Boston, moved the
Orioles to w1lhln one game of
the front-runnmg Tigers. The
Win was Baltimore's lith in Its
past 15 games.
Powell slammed a Ron
Klimkowsld fastball over the
left center field fence w1th two
out 1n the third Inning and
Merv Rettenmund aboard on a
walk.
Cuellar raised h1s lifetime
record agaUISt the Yankees to
11-3. He also shut out the Yanks
on June 28th when the Orioles
won a ~ deciSioo
In other American league
games Detroit and Boston
divided a doubleheader, ' the
Red Sox winning the opener, 43, and the Tigers taking the
second game, 7-2. Texas took
oakland twice, 2-1 and 4-2,
Minnesota blanked Clncago ,1·
D, Cleveland swept a twlnblll
from Milwaukee, 3-2 and 6-1,
and California edged Kansas
ICily, 4.J,
Sore~egged Gates Brown h1t
a tie-breaking home run in the
fifth and drove in another with
a sacrifice fly 1n a four-run
sixth Inning of the second game
to help Detroit to its second
game victory over Boston. The
Red Sox had won the opener
when John Kennedy, who had
been hitting Uor-21, hit a lazy
atngle to right field to help
Lynn McGlothen earn his
fourth victory In seven

took a twmbtll from Oakland
The Ranger third baseman,
who was 7-for~ before the
games, smgled home Jim
Mason for the btg tally m the
seventll mnlng of the mghtcap
to hand Don Stanhouse hiS fll'st
major league victory. Nelson
had four hits m nme trips to the
plate and stole four baseshikmg his league-lead m that
department to 33'
Harmon Killebrew's home
nm and Jun Perry's clutch
pltchmg produced a shutout
victory for Minnesota over
Chicago The home run broke a
scoreless duel m the sixth
inning between Perry and
Wilbur Wood
Thirty-year old left-bander
Tom Hllgendorf hurled hls first
major league victory in the
rughtcap after Tom McCraw
bad sparked Cleveland to Its
opening game victory with h1s
fourth home run of the season.
Hllgendorf, picked up from
Kansas City's Omaha farm
club on July 9, struck out
seven, walked two allowed Sill
hits in making his first major
league start.
Bob Oliver led off the bot·
tom of the 11th Inning with his
13tll home run as the Angels
downed at Royals. Oliver, who
began the season with Kansas
City, homered against AI
Fitzsimmons
COLEMAN SELECTED
CINCINNATI (UPIJ - The
Cincinnatl Reds announced
today that former first
h• ...m•n r.ordv r.oleman had
been elected by baseball fans
to the Reds Hall of Fame.
Coleman, now director of the
team'a speakers bureau, will
d•clli0115.
be Inducted as the 36th
Dave Nellon liNtpped out of member prior to tonight's
1ooC llump with I plir of plllllo ftedi.Giall Ia 1110e

Pirates Just Roll Along
By United Press International
The Pittsburgh Pirates retamed their strong lead m the
National League East Sunday
by beating the Philadelphia
Phtll!es, 7·1
The Pirates' VIctory, aided
by R1ch1e Hebner's three-run
homer in the eighth tnnmg,
enabled them to remam seven
games ahead of the New York
Mets, who broke a three.game
losmg streak with a 3-1 trmmph
over the Montreal Expos
The Chicago Cubs swept the
St LOUIS Cardinals 4-tl and 1&gt;-4,
the San Francisco Giants
topped the Cincmnati Reds S.l,
after a 4..() loss, the Houston
Astros scored a 4-3 victory m 10
mnmgs after losmg their
opener to the San Diego Padres
lll-7 m 14 mmngs and the
Atlanta Braves beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 14-4 and 5-4 m
other NL games
The Phtlhes had a 1-tl lead
going mto the eighth when the
pressure of the Pirates' top-tobottom ba ttlng strength took
Its toll on Barry Lersch They
scored one run on a smgle by
Gene Chnes and AI Oliver's
two run double and wrapped 11
up when Hebner hit his lOth
homer Three more runs m the
rnnth made II that much easte•
for Bruce Kison to raise his
season r~cord to 5-3
The Mets snapped a J.1 lie m
the seventh on Cleon Jones '
tr1ple and a smgle by Duffy
Dyer and added a run m the
e1ghth on Tommie Agee's
homer Tug McGraw shut out
the Expos on two hits for the
fmM three mnmgs to earn his
fourth vtclory and help saddle
Carl Morton wtth his nmth loss

Defense
Dominates
Scrimmage
WILMINGTON,
Ohto
(UP!)- The offense scummbed to the defense 10 the Cm·
cmnab Bengals' "controlled
scnmmage" durmg the
weekend, scQrmg only one
touchdowlt"\lifl' the• 71i-fninute
contest
Coach Paul Brown sa1d It
was "not unusual at th1s stage"
for the defense to domma te,
but added he had hoped "we
would move the ball a httle
better "
Second·year man Doug
Dressler scored the one touchdown, a one.yard plunge that
capped a 7:0.yard march. Apall'
of fteld goals, 47·yarder by
rookie Dave Green of OhiO
Urnvers1ty and a 29-yarder by
veteran Horst Muhlmann,
capped the scormg
The defense, Brown satd,
"was dmng a better JOb," and
noted the offense dtd better
wtth the run than with the pass
Passing problems were
caused by "letdowns on the of.
fenstve lme," he satd
"But I might add we dropped
some balls you shouldn't drop
m pro football," he said
Ken Anderson, a second..year
quarterback, started mstead of
veteran VIrgil Carter and
Brown was qutck to pomt out
"there is no significance to 11
whatsoever."

Rookie Rtck Reuschel p1t
ched a stx-lntter for hi's fourth
VIctory m the first game and
Glenn Beckert's two-run
e1ghthinnmg double enabled
the , Cubs to wm the second
game and complete their
sweep of the Cardma1s Jose
Cardenal drove m two runs m
the ftrst game while Tom
Phoebus intched two scoreless
uuungs of relief to earn his
third VIctory for the Cubs m the
rughtcap
Ross Grtmsley p1tched an
e1ght·lntter to raiSe his season
mark to 9-4 for the Reds m the
first game but Ed Goodson's
three-run
pinch
tnple
highlighted a five-run lOthmmng outburst which gave the

litants a spht of their
doubleheader The key blows m
the Reds' openmg.game
triUmph, which tagged Juan
Marwhal w1th hos lith defeat,
were doubles by Johnny Bench
and Darrel Chaney and a triple
by Dems Menke
JIIIlilly Stewart's loth-mmng
smgle drove m the wmmng run
for the Astros m their second
game as the teams completed a
marathon weekend durtng
which they played 41 1nnmgs,
mcludmg a 17~nnmg game
Saiitrday mght, m 41 hours
Nate Colbert hit hiS 24th and
25th homers, takmg away the
maJor league lead from Bench,
to account for all San Diego's
runs m the mghtcap.

Impressive

Naf•ona I League
East
wlpctgb
P11t
59 35 628
New York
51 "
554 7
Ch•cago
50 46 52 1 10
St L OUI S
46 47 495 12 1/)
M on treal
42 49 462 151/ 2
Phil
34 60 362 25
West
w I pclgb
CinCI

CINCINNATI (UP! ) Bobby Bonds calls 11 the best
homer he has ever htt
The San FranciSco Gtant outfielder was referrmg to his
smash over the centerfield
fence m the second game of
Sunday's doubleheader
Bonds' homer accounted for
the Giants first run of the
game They added five more m
the lOth mmng off the Cmcmnati Reds' Clay Carroll to gam
a 6-1 victory and a split of the
doubleheader after droppmg
the opener 4..() to lefty Ross
Grtmsley
Tommy Hall was the vtcllm
of Bonds' homer That IS why
Bobby was so elated
Hall and Bonds are old
fnends - and nvals. They
grew up m Riverside, Cahf ,
and still make their homes
there
"Tommy and I Joked all wmter about what we were gomg
to do to each other thts season," Bonds sa td "This was
after Tommy was traded to the

Reds by Mmnesota."
Durmg !hell' scholasllc days,
Bonds and Hall played for nval
high schools
Eleven Strikeouts
"Tommy," Bobby saId Sun.
day, "use to stnke me out all
tile llme m htgh school."
Hall struck out a lot of other
batters too
"In one htgh school game,"
recalled Bonds, "Tommy
struck out 23 batters I told the
guys before Sunday's game
Tommy would stnke out a lot
of batters "
Hall did, too Before depart.
mg for a pmch batter, after
eight innmgs of the second
game !ted 1-1, Hall struck out
11 and walked ftve
Hall, back only a few days
from two weeks of m1htary
duty, had worked only four m·
mngs m three weeks pnor to
Sunday's game
Blunders Hurt
W1th a httle luck, Carroll
might have gotten out of the

rnnth mnmg without a run
scormg

However, first baseman Joe
Hague nussed a tag on ChriS
Speier on an attempted pickoff
by Johmy Bench, and Darrel
Chaney missed a pop fly for an
error.
These blunders along w1th an
mtenllonal pass, a tamted hit
by Tito Fuentes, a triple by Ed
Goodson and a wild pitch added
up to f1ve runs, more than
enough for a Giant victory
Grunsley, pitching hiS fll'st
shutout of the season, gamed
his mnth victory agamst four
losses m the opener

Doxie Walters pumped m 26
for Mark V while Ron
Ferguson added 15. Bob Rit·
chte topped the Sentinel with
15 Rod Ferguson added 14
Arthur Clark led the
Department Store m Its wm
wtlh 32 whtle Sam Mitchell
contributed 31 Steve Price led
Adolph's w1th 19 and Eh Ebers·
bach added 18
Randy Crawford set the

The Reds bunched three hits,
all for extra bases, for two runs
off Juan Marichal m the second
mning and then added two
more m the thtrd to hard the
Gtant ace hts lith loss agamst
four Vlctones
The two clubs wmd up the
senes tomght w1th Jack
B1llmgham gomg agamst the
Giants' Tom Carnthers

Big Victories
For 2 Golfers

scormg record for the two-year
league w1th 56 points, toppmg
tlle previous htgh of \6 held by
Ron Ferguson last year.
Crawford, htltmg from
everywhere on the court, had
28 f1eld goals Btlly "The Ktd"
Vaughan led the Bankers w1th
31 and Greg Donahue had 26.
Me1gs Htgh School semor
eager Mtke Sayre suffered a
broken ank le m Sunday's
actwn
First Game
MARK V (64) - Ron
Ferguson 7·1·15, Walters 12-2·
26, R Sayre :0.111, M Howard
7~14, Boggs 040, Craig 040
SENTINEL
(52 )
Etchmger 1)..().12, Ritchie 6-3-15,
Batley 4~. Rod Ferguson &amp;.2·
14, Childs 1-I.J
Second Game
DEP'T STORE (97) - Clark
16·0·32, Mitchell 15·1-31,
Burney 1-1·3, Cremeans 346,
Fife 12·1·25
ADOLPH'S (61) - Ebersbach 9~18 , Tyree ~10, Rtch
Gtlkey 6·0·12, Price 8-3-19,
Coates 1~2
Tblrd Game
FRIENDLY TAVERN (121)
- Harr1s 8-0-16, Crawford 28.(1.
56, T. Walters 5-(1.10, Adams 6ll-12, Morgan 12-3-27
POM. NAT BANK (110) Magnotta 6-3-15, Donahue 13-026, B Vaughan 13-5-31, Coates
11)..().20, Ault 9~18
Tonight's Games
Mark V vs Fr Tav , 6 p.m.
D Sent vs Mid. Dep't., 7
pm.
Adolph's vs Porn. Nat., 8
p.m.

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Darmg Kmght edged All Right
by one-half length Saturday
mght to wm the featured $7,000
Pace at Sctoto Downs in I 59 35, the 19th time 'a' two-minute
mile or better has been
recorded here thts year
All Right and th1rd place
Sovereign Warrior also
Fonoshed m less than two
mmutes The last horse In the
fiVe pacer field was limed In
2 00 3-5
Henrietta Farve] (8) won the
first race and Dtck Painter (7 )
the second to return $51 40 In
the dally double

Ball
Bos ton
New York

Oeve
Mil wa

w
54
52
41
45
40

I

40
40
45
45
52
37 56

pel.
574
565
511
500
435
398

g.b.
1

6
7
13
161h

We st

w I pet gb
58 38 604
52 43 547 5'1&gt;
47 44 516 811&gt;
Mmn
45 49 479 12
KC
44 52 458 14
Cali f
39 56 411 l a'h
Texas
Sunday ' s Results
Cleve 3 M 1iwa 2 I ls i)
Cleve 6 M ilwa 1 l 2n d l
Bos ton 4 De tro 1t J (1st )
De tro t 7 Bost on 2 (2nd)
Mtnn 1 (h tcag o 0
Ba tt 5 New Y or k 0
Tex as 2 Oak land 1 ( ls i)
Tex as 4 Qa kland 2 ! 2nd )
Cal1f 4 K C 3 ( 11 mns)
Today 's Probable Polchers
(All Times EDT)
Texa s I Paul 3 3) at Qakland
I Blue 3 5) 4 30 p m
Ch1 cag o ( Bahn sen 12 1ll at
M1nn ( Bl yle ven 9 13) 2 15 p m
K C (N elson 3 41 at Calif
! Ryan II 8) 11 p m
Boston ( Patftn 8 9) at Detroat
I Loloch 17 6 ) 8 15 p m
Milwauk ee (Parsons 8· 8 and
Ryerson 2 2) io1 Cleveland
(T idrow 7 9 and Lamb 2 4) 2,
5 30 p m
New York (Peterson 10 11
and Gardner 2 0) at Balttmore
! Dobson 12 9and Alexander 55)
2 5 30 p m
Tuesday 1 s Games
K C at Oakland
M nn a t Texas
Cal1f at Ch1 cag o
Mllwa at Detro1t
Balhmore at Cle ve
New York at Bos ton

Oakl and
Ch 1cago

A. ntai ctica covetS about
55 m1111 on squ are mil es, all
but 4';&lt;, pet cent of wh1ch 1s
bun ed unde1 snow and 1ce

In surance
Agent

DALE

Our Pot•cy Is
Ent1re Coverage
Rest assured when you
1nsure wtth us that your
ts covered for f1re,
theft , habtllfy. Come 1n and
got the soofhrng facts

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
1H Court Sf
Pomeroy

This guide lays
out the facts. What
technical fields have
JOb openings. Where
to write for the
names of schools
that are best qualified to prepare
you for these careers. There's even a section
on getting help w1th tuitiOn moncy:Most technictans' jobs pay double what
the average high school graduate earns. As
much as some college graduates make. So
they're surely worth investigating.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

I

De tr cSI I

The low-down on
technical careers and
technical schools.
Straight from the
U.S. government.

(Upon Request)

i$ the all$wer

Am encan league
East

Yaur

2-HOUR
CLEANING

J#Jrrisome bills a problem ?

61 3

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
By Un1ted Press Internationa l
W L Pet GB
Louisville
58 44 569
Charleston
55 46 545 2V~
T1dewafer
55 49 529 4
Rochester
55 50 524 41/~
Toledo
53 50 515 5'h
Syracuse
4t,l 56 467 10 1 /~
Richmond
48 55 466 10'1&gt;
Penmsula
40 63 388 18•12
Sunday's Results
LOU I SVI lle a Penmsula 3
Rochester 13 Ttdewater 6
Charleston 7 Syracuse 0
Toledo 3 R1chmond 2

Polar Bears Upend Newsies
The Mark V 'Polar Bears"
moved mto a lie with the Da1ly
Sentmel for first place m the
Middleport Independent
Basketball League wtth a 64-52
upset wm over the Newsies
Sunday
The Middleport Department
Store clouted Adolph 's Dairy
Valley 97-lil and the Friendly
Tavern outscored the Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank 121-liO m other
games

57 36

Houston
53 44 546 6
l A
49 45 521 8112
Allanla
45 50 474 13
San Fr an
43 54 443 16
San D1ego
36 58 383 21'11
Sunday 's Results
Cmc1 4 San Fran 0 (1st)
San Fran 6 (i nc• 1 (2nd 10
1nnmg s)
Allan Ia 14 LA 4 l l sfl
Afl anfa 5 L A 4 l 2nd)
Ch1 cag o 4 Sf Lou iS 0 (Is II
Ch1 cag o 5 Sf LOuiS 4 (2nd )
New Yor k 3 Montreal 1
San O ego 10 Hou ston 7 (1st, 14
1nnmg s) J
Houston 4 San D1ego 3 (2nd 10
1nn1ng s)
P1flsburgh 7 Philadelphia 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
tAll Tomes EDT)
Sf LouiS !Cleveland 12 5) at
Ch 1cago 1Jenk1ns 13 91 2 30
pm
Los Angeles (Osteen 11 7) af
Allanla (M c La •n I I ) 8 p m
San 01 ego ( Arl 1n 8 11) at
Houston ( D1erker 8 6), 8 15
pm
P1flsburgh (Moose 6 6) af
Ph1iadelph1a (Reynolds 0 7) ,
7 35 p m
San Franc1 sco (Carnthers 2
6) at Cmcmnat1 (Bdllngham 7
9) 8 p m
Montreat {Moore 2 41 at New
York (Sfrom o O). 8 p m
Tuesday's Games
Ch1cago at Montreal
Phil at New York 2,tw1 n1ght
PQITT AT Sf LouiS ,n1ghl
San D1ego at Atlanta n1ght
Cmc1 at Houston n1ght
San Fran af Atlanta ,n1ghl

Sorry, Old Buddy

LIGONIER , Pa (UPI) - partner, young Jack LewiS,
Kermtt Zarley ended one fmtshed With a 70 and 275 total
streak Sunday and Babe for a 30th place tie worth $710
Hiskey began another wtth each.
thell' victory m the NatiOnal
M1ller made f1ve of the eight
Team Championship
birdies for his team m their 63,
For Zarley, 11 was the end of the best round of the final day,
a frustratmg three months that vaulted them into the
during which, he said "the last runnerup spot.
round of every tournament was
"! told Grier that if we shot
my worst " Th~t mcluded the 62, we'd wm," Miller said. "We
U S. Open, where he lost a almost did."
chance to wm by shooting 79
One of the tournament's
the !mal day.
more curious admissions came
Hiskey earned himself a from Condy, who concended
valued exemption on the pro "the second and third days, I
tour for his part of the victory, just got psyched out putting "
HIRAM, Ohto (UP!)
Cleveland Browns Coach Nick which means that for the next Those days he and his partner
Skorich, unpressed by quar- year he will not have to go scored 70 and 71 Theil' scores
terback Mike Phipps in a through the grind of Monday the first and last days were 62
and 64.
weekend scrimmage, plans to mornmg qualifiers.
"But,"
he
said,
"1
think
I'll
There was a four-way tie for
start hun against the Los
just
take
the
next
week
off
and
fourth
place at 269 among Dale
Angeles Rams Friday rnght on
enjoy
1!."
Douglass-Hale lrwm, Mike
the West Coast .
Three
three-stroke
victortes
HillDave Hill, George Archer·
The Purdue All-American,
Sunday,
with
a
final
66
and
72"Bobby Nichols, and Harry
who failed to become the
hole
score
of
22-&lt;mderilar
262
Toscano-Jun Wtechers Bob
Browns' No. I Signal-caller last
(only
tile
lower
score
on
each
Smith.John
Schlee and Charles
season, completed six of 11
hole
counted
toward
the
total)
Slfford-Bob Stone fmiahed anpasses Saiiirday m the intrawas
worth
$20,000
a
man
other stroke behind.
squad game, leading the of.
Johnny
Miller
and
Grier
fense to a 13-11 "voctory" over
Jones, who hit!! 1!3 Sunday,
the defense.
were
next at 265 while Lanny
Q- \Vhat Am e TIC an ex
"! was very pleased with tlle
Wadkins
and
Gibby
Gilbert
plorer
crossed the Goh!
workout," sald Skor1ch.
Ve5ert
by
automobile'
"Ph1pps in particular looked were at 286 and Tommy Aaron
A-Roy
Chapman
Andrew,s 210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
good, especially on some and Charles Coody at 267
In
1910
Phone 9\12. 5428
Hlskey
bad
16
birdies
and
check-off plays at tlle line of
Zarley s• ven in the four
scrimmage."
Skorich said there were some rounds
Zarley made three of the ~-..·:•(•'."~'-'"").;..;.o~o~o&gt;·:·&lt;-&lt;~o&lt;~o~&lt;o·)"'.;o"'o:.')o:·'l&gt;&lt;-++o;.&lt;o.;.(oo~&lt;&lt;o+·:·~"'"'"'~"'
nuxups ln the backfield, "but I
think that was mostly because team's five birdies in the final
we were running a lot of check· round includmg the etght..foot
offs with young ruming backs put that wrapped It up on No
17.
in the backfield."
Both players said they were
The defense was succeasful
early In the scrimmage In hold- glad to end the two-year Arnold
ing back the offenae, but Palmer-Jack Nicklaus
Phipps fired a short pass to domination of thls tournament,
rookie wide receiver Charles but Zarley oblerved somewhat
"Cookie" Brinkman who realistically, "they probably
scampered 28 yards for a would have won it agam if they
teed It up."
touchdown.
"But lt's great to wm," he
125 E. Main
Rookie placekicker George
Ph. 992·2111
said.
"I was getting tired of
!Iunt and veteran Don Cockroft
Pomeroy, Ohio
each booted a field goal lo ac- them wiMinglhll thing."
Palmer and h1l aubltitutettotttooot••••~••••••••••oooooototooto,.ooeeo•
COUnt for the other Iii poltltll.

Phipps Looks

By Un.ted Press International

Infielder Dave Roberts , no
relation to the pitcher of the
same name, drove m rave runs
m the first game Del Thomas
singled home the winmng run
for the Astros m the 14th tnnmg
of the opener and Roberts
followed w1th a two-fun smgle
which clinched the decision
Earl Wtlhams and Mtke Lum
each drove m three runs and
the Braves too~ advantage of
three errors and four wtld
pitches by the Dodgers m thell'
first game Ralph Garr 's
threerun seventh-mning homer
was the b1g blow of the second
game as Pat Jarvis raiSed his
record to 9-4 and the Braves
handed Jun Brewer his fourth
loss agamst SIJ( VICtories

Now it doesn't cost you a cent to investigate them. Ju_st send in this ad today.

I~------------------------~I

1 To Careers, Washmgton , DC 20202

1

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1

I

Name

I

I

I

Mdress

I

~~·'~'------------------~Z~IL_______

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I
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I

L---------------~--------J

~dmUslll1 Contributed for tht lhlbllc IOOd In coo.,tranon •1th
Tht Advtrtlllq Council •M U\t lnternttlol'loll Hewsptptr Mvtrt1llftC betlltlwtl

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 19'/2 '

...

bb

,

ill

71 ,

A SHIP OFF THE OLD DOCK
Programs for Tonight
NEW YORK (KFS) - We sallsfted one of
our most durable silly dreams when we sailed to
and Tomorrow
Europe aboard the QE2. a m1dmght sailing, a
dream born of Scott Fitzgerald and MelvYn
Douglas and Claudette Colbert and Roz Russell
S 00 - Wagon Tra1n :1 Stg Valley 6 , Mr Rogers 33 , Mavenck
and the Duke of Windsor, and any number of
13 , Dick Van Dyke 15 , To Be Announced 4
characters almost of fiction (the movie stars
5 30- Electric Co 33 , Marshall D1ilon 15
6 00- News3, 4, 8, 10, Truth or Conseq 6, I Dream of Jeannre
were) who whetted our snob appetlte for some
13 ; Sesame Sf 20 , News 15 , Halhayoga 33
of
the exqmstlely lmpo.sslble delicaCies of life .
6 30 - NBC News3, 4, 15 , ABCNews6, 13 1 CBSNews8,10, Folk
It was the movies first MelvYn Douglas m
Guitar 33
7: 00 - Elef Co 20, News6 It Takes A Thief 3. Dick Van Dyke evenmg clothes with Claudette or Roz m some
4, Whats My L1ne 8, Saint 15. Off The Record 33 Mov1e
Impossible madcap predicament, in which a
"Hud" 13
midnight satllng on a splendid ocean hner
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Traffic C0 urt 10, Mr Rogers 20
Episode Acllon33, I Dream of Jeannle4 Dragnets
played Its galormous role And there IS the QE2,
8 00 - Gunsmoke8. 10; Baseball3. 4. 15 Jesse Owens Returns
perhaps delayed by an early.,season storm or a
to Berlin 6, 13. A New Home for the Arts. 20, 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8. Ghost Story 3, 4, 15. Mov1e " Nolh~ng but
couple of bomb hoaxes that may keep Cunard
the Best" 6. 13, Jack Nicklaus Profole 10
carefully searching for the unknown . . So the
9 30-DorlsDayS. 10. Bookat20, Boy That Grew Up33
authentic m1dmght sailing IS w1thui an hour of
10 00 - News20, Suspense PlayhouseS, 10, News 20
10 30- Human Dlmens•ons 33
target
11 OO-Newsl,4,6, News a, 10,15
PhllopBarry, m h1s gbttermg comedy, "The
11 30- Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 , Movte ' The Wild
Pluladelplua Story," had one !me which
One" 8, Movie "Attack' 10, Mov1e 'House of Women' 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
somewhat summed up for us the old syndrome
1 30 - News 13
"There IS no prettier picture than the priVIleged
2 00 - News 4
class
en]oymg 1ts prlVlleges "
TUESDAY, AUGUST I
It's
a very pretty p1ct1Ire Manljattan's
6 00 - Sunrise Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13.6 20- Paul Harvey 13
galaxy of lights on one stde, New Jersey's
6 30 - Columbus Today ~ Bible Answers 8
recently glamorous expanse of luxury apart6 45 - Corncob Report 3, 6 55 - Rocky &amp; Bullwonkle 13
menta rismg out of what once was a drab New
7 00 - Today3, 4. 15, CBS News8, 10, Sports Club 13
7 30- Sleer. Jeffers B. Romper Room 6, Underdog 13
Jersey topography, a very pretly two-stded
8·00- Cap Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue6, 13 Sesame St 33
mural mdeed The glamorous sailing parties,
8. 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6, Jack La La nne 1J
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15 , Loc i' s Toyshop 10
emphasis on champagne, considerably
Peyton Place 13, Romper Room 8 Mr Rogers 33 Whaf
discouraged smce some v1c1ous nut started
E\lery Woman Wants to Know J; Timmy and Lass1e 6
makmg disgraceful phone calls to Cunard, still
9 30 - Truth or Con seq 3. Phil Donahoe B. Moke Douglas 6 , One
Life to Live 13. Eleclm Co 33
take place under considerably less hysterical
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3. 15. Luc1lle BalllO , D1 ck Van Dyke 13
auspices,
JUSt as well: some of the parties took
Hathayoga 33
,
on a mood of desperatiOn, as if 1! were the last
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4 Spi1l Second 13
Beverly Hillbillies H, My Three Sons 10, In School lnsfrucfoo~
great celebration ever
33 ; Love, Amencan Sty le 6
Of course, the great passenger sh1ps are
Troot" 0, Love, American Style 6
10 45- Lucille Rivers 6
part of the cause; mdeed, most of It No one
11 00 - Sale of Century 3, IS, Family Affaor a. 10 Love much bothers to see you off at Kennedy Airport
American Style 13; Communique 6
except an occasiOnal worrywart parent certam
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Lofe 8 10 Sesame Sl
33, Bewitched 6 13
of engme !allure or hijacking We've crossed the
12 00 - JeopardyJ 15 Bob Braun ' s 50 50 Club 4 Local News 13
Atlantic dozens of limes, and the same friends
Password 6 Jack1e Obt1nger 8
who mstst on seemg us off on a ship wouldn't
12 30-3W'sGame3,15 . Spi 1I Second6 Search for TomorrowS.
10. Elec Co 33
even consider a wave at Kennedy Airport It's
1 00- News 3, All My Children 6, 13. D1vorce Court 8 Green
the sheer glamour of ocean travel, and tl's
Acres 10, Walch Your Ch1ld 15; Joyce Chen Cooks 33
1 30-3 On A Match J• .4, 15 , Let 's Make A Deal6 , 13 As The
totally true
World Turns 8, 10, Sewing Ski ll s 33
Until tighter restrictions were laid on by
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3, 4 lS., Newlywed Game 13 V•rg1ma
Graham 6. Love Splendored Thmg 8, 10 . Grand Master Chess Cunard because of the cruel hoaxes, hundreds of
33
people with no one they knew sailing sunply
2 30 - Doctors 3. 4, 15, Daf~ng Game 13, Guld1ng L1ghl 8 10,
appeared
at the Cunard docks, donated to the
Library 33.
1

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

HUSBAND'S PLAINT - OR EXCUSE'
Dear Helen

,., " ¥X W\i~ hi!IJIUesm~andma~~~ me look ridiculous m front of

compai)Y,, Sh~ ~ri\iCIZe~ !'le to the chi)&lt;b;en. Says I do the same to
her , but should I JUStsllthere and take 1!? She hacks away at my
manhood, never mtssmg a chance to twist the knife
Then sh~expects me to get exc1ted JUSt because she appears
ma sexy rnghtgown and a receptive mood If I can't, she says I'm
a pansy - when she's 101 suspectmg an affall' with another
woman
10
Would you please· tell WIVes, Helen, that "the body has a
head"' I can't forget her meannesses that soon.
The more she nags, the less our sex life. The less our sex life.
the more she cuts me up. She thinks I'm usmg her "bttchiness"
as an excuse I say a man can't perform if he IS constantly put
down
Won't someone get through to women that half of man's
r:-:·&amp;&amp;&amp;:::·:·:::::·:·:·:~::::.:: :·:·:·:·: ....:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· ..........•...... problems are of their makmg• - EMASCULATED

~

i

Tuhe T;Jkl
By Paul Crabtree

Property

None of this on today's luxury transatlantic
voyages. Takmg the trtp totally subJectively, we
find It our personal ideal way to start a long
summer holiday
In the first and possibly most unportant
place, you are not faced With that modern
trauma called "Jet Lag,".amvmg ma different
lime zone from the one your body and mmd
have tuned to for a year It's a very real
physical problem. Doctors have studied it and
have all but thrown up their scalpels. There IS
no cure for It, likely, never will be. You take a
plane from Kemedy at 10 p.m and you amve
without sleep (don't tell us anyone can sleep
properly on a plane! We've failed at 1t for more
Ulan 25 years 1) somewhere close to noon, what
With time racmg ahead The problems of landing, customs, imrrugratlon, luggage (yliJ ')
take up what seems days; if your bags are lost
- double-)'lil! Aboard the QE2, clocks are set
back one hour a day (we liked It even better
when they were reversed JO..rnmutes each I2
hours, but that's a small whun, It's all
academic). And you do arrtve rested
LuxuriOusly.

a.

1

·Meigs

Seamtn's ~'u.1d and had themselves a
glamorous af.ernoon
.
In Ibis era of starkly lowermg - glowermg'
- denominators, of life and religion and sex and
street·Vtolence and creepy attire and shabby
standards and switchblade mentalities and
elements seeking the cruddier life styles, let's
strike a blow for sheer luxury and luxury IS
something that takes few lessons to accomplish
"Certainly luxury takes money; but not so
much as it once seemed. Luxury Isn't just a
pose, a wavmg of greenbacks, a showmg-off of
sudden prosperity. You get luxury when you
turn on your color-TV set, get into y011r car, don
a sports Jacket, buy a fme pair of shoes, attend
the theatre, catch a mov1e (especially at today's
prices), or buy a steak; especially a steak.
There's a fantastic seremty in a transatlantic tr1p by sea. Granted, wmter cruises are
a blt more heche, but that's the naiiire of the
passengers who want to do somethmg every
moment, or they worry about the cost Such as
the lad who asked a girl to dance late on the last
rught of a Caribbean cruise and murmured,
"Gosh, only another half hour of music!" The
girl replied, "l'mdancmgas fast as I can!"

a

3 00 - General Hosp1fal 6, 13, Secref Storm
10. Another
World 3, 4, 15, Let's Travel 33
3 30- One L1fe to L1ve 6, Edge of Night 10 Return to Peyfon
Place 3, 4, 15, Jeff's Coll1e 13 Edplsode Act1on 33
c 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15, Fl1ntstones 13 , Sesame
St 33 , Huckleberry Hound 6. Batman 8, Mov1e 'The Strange
One" 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
,. 30 - GreenAcresJ, V1rgln1an8 , Password 13 I Love Lucy6
Andy Grlffoth 15, Merv Gnffon 4
5 00 - It Takes A Th1ef 4, D1ck Van Dyke 15 Wagon Tra1n 3
Mavenck 13 , B1g Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 , Elec. Co 33
6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 , CBS News 8. 10. I Dream of Jeann~e
13; Truth or Con seq 6. Sesame 51 20 Halhayoga 33
6 30- News 3. 4. 6. 8, 10, 15 Grand Masters Chess 33
7 00 - News6. 10. What's My Lme 8, Elec Co 20 , Green Acres
3, Farmers Daughter 13, Andy Grlffllh 15 , Dock Van Dyke 4
Insight 33
7 30- Masterpiece Theatc.e 33. Ppnde•osa ,J, .U11Mod Squad 6.
13. Jerry Reed
A Birthday Story 20, Masterpiece Theatre
33; Explo '72 6, 8, 15, John Byner Come\ly Hour 10
8 00- Magg1e and the Beautiful Machine 20
8 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8, 10 , NBC Action Playhouse 3, 4
Evening al Pops 20 33 . Movoe 6. 13 Death Valley Days 15
9 00 - Baseba ll 15
P 30 - James Garner 3, 4 Cannon 8, 10, Oo10' It 20 , Handsfuls
of Ashes 33
00- News, Weather, Sports 20 . Marcus Welby 4, 6. 13 F1nng
Line 33
11 00- News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10, 13. 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6. Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15 Mov •e · The
Power" 8, Mov1e " The Shoot " 10, Mov 1e 'Merrills
Marauders" 13
12 00 - Johnny Carson 15
1 00- Your Health 4
1 30 - News, Weather 4, Local News 13

J

1

Voice along Br'Way

Television Log

I

7

Dear Emasculated:
Emasculating women are seldom perceptive They don't
realize
that males are often VICtims of the sensitiVIty they're
·:·:
programmed to hide or perhaps they DO sense thiS and take
!!!! advantage
....
On the other hand, men worried about thell' potency
sometimes read a putdown In every little remarks They may
even subconsciOusly welcome fights because they provide an
excuse not to try - and fat!
Whichever, you're m a VICious circle here, and the only way
out 1s via self-understanding. When you two can talk without
blammg, you may learn what's behind the nags and slashes
(Insecurity, compehllon, envy, "getting even," dislllustonment,
plam old female bossmess or male muliShness) . Only then can
you work to change thtngs It will probably take the help of a very
perceptive mamage counselor. - H

+++

Dear Helen :
My husband IS a secret smoker, and I say thiS IS worse than a
secret eater, and almost as bad as a secret drinker
He told us he qwt and he never smokes around me or the
children, but I smell tobacco m the car and on his clothes and he
'
gets mcreastngly Irritable through the evening On weekends
he
finds excuses to leave for a while, and I know he lights up the
mmute he'sout of our stght-andcanfmda cigarette.
I hate lying - even more than I dislike tobacco I've told him
to smoke In front of us but he'd rather pretend How can I stop
thts subterfuge• - WIFE OF A DIFFERENT KIND OF
CHEATER
Dear Wife
Perhaps this is your husband's way of "cuttmg down " so
don't knock It. Substitute praiSe for suspicion. Let him kno~ you
appreciate his efforts - and a few Cigarettes at the office are
better than a tray of stubs at home every night. They'll be much
less Irresistible when he realiZes you don't condenm him for
every puff. - H.
Q-WI!o established the
first pnntmg press m what

A thought for the day
now the Umted States?
Amerocan wnter Henry
A-Stephen Daye, m 1638
t Cambridge, Mass The
Thoreau satd " It takes two to
first
book that came from
speak the truth, one to spe
the
pre
s s was "The Bay
the other to hear."
Psalm Book" m 1640

chance of ram, and Huntington 60 t., we split the difference at
50 pet. most nf the time. And sometimeS, e just get the local
Wire-service copy, as provided to radio stall , and pray a lot.
Don't blame the stations, the newspape or us. Blame the
Weather SerVIce.
ON TBETV DIAL: Red Sox-Tigers bas 11,8 15, WSAZ-TV
... Jesse Owens special on returning to site of -"'victories in the
"Hitler Olympics" of 1936, 8, WIITN-TV .. A profile on the great
Jack Nicklaus, 9, WBNS.TV. Movies: "Attack," 11:30 p.m., and
"Strange One," 4 p.m. Tuesday, both WBNS..TV •

Lafe Wtlhamson, dec'd , to
Georgia Wtlhamson, Sarah
Gtbbs, Jeanne Hundley,
George E Wtlhamson, Phyllis
J Richards, All Trans ,
Sahsbury.

WIN AT BRIDGe

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 31, 1972
?=-~~~-=·=·&gt;&gt;:!%$ .'Uo'X· :. ...~·:::-».x·~-=-=··:.·::.·~:·::~=::~~»r« : .·:·:

The /Grasshopper Disease'

'·Td'
\~ o ay s

Transfers
Clara Bird Powell to Irwin R
U!nce II, Mary F Lance,
Landmg, Letart
Huntmgton Nat!. Bank,
Trus , Thomas A May, dec , to
C H Williams, Sutton.
Lute Stanley to Forrest A
Ward, Eula I. Ward, 31 A.,
Ohve
Jobn Jacobs to Joseph D
Almendmger, 14 A, Bedford
Martha Chapman, Lawrence
R Chapman to Franldm Real
Estate Co., 81 A , Columbia
Ernest L Jones, Uta Raye
Jones to Franldm Real Estate
Co , Re record Deed, Salem.
Bonme Poling to William B.
Gregory, 67 A , Columbia
Dale B. Adams, Bonme
Adams to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease., Olive.
Bert DeVoe, Edith DeVoe to
Ralph H. Gamer, Ruth I.
Gainer, Parcels, Olive
Katherme
F.
Bush,
Lawrence M. Bush to Wesley
H Gilkey, Linda A. Gilkey, 2 14
A , Middleport
Odetta Pierotti, dec , to Olga
Pteroth, Cert for trans.,
Pomeroy
Archie E Lee, June P. Lee to
Hugh Murray McPhail,
Martha Carson McPhail, Lot,
Syracuse
Georgia Williamson, dec , to
Sarah Gibbs, Jeanne Hundley,
George E. Williamson, Phyllis
J Richards, Cert. of Trans ,
Salisbury.
Cecil Bolin, dec'd., to Joe M.
Bolin, Cert. of Trans , Rutland
Charles H. Cornell, Agnes
Cornell to Harry E. Johnson,
Dolores M Johnson, 0 796 A'
Chester
Robert C Hartenbach,
Sheriff, Muriel Wanzo Jackson
to William J. Hobstetter, Lot,
Rutland.
Consolida lion Coal Co to
Charles Wayne Swisher, Mma
Mae Swisher, Parcels, Letart
Laura J . Wll'es, Laura J
·Fields, Gay Fields to ElliS W

31

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were led

.A

• K108

1.4.

East- West vulnerable

West

Nc1rlh

Unfortunately fo~ the ~aJ.
!ant defenders, 'that lost mne.
spot represented a lost trick
East actually led the four.
South's e1ght for c e d the
queen and later on the 10
forced the ace and left
South's kmg as a wmner "
Oswald " West could have
asked for a d1amond lead by
simply dtscardmg hts three
of clubs and pI a y 1n g the
deuce of heat ts when hearts

Easl

Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead- • K

South

~~

Jtm "Thts mt ght not have
caused East to lead a diamond and If he dtdn 'I lead a
dtamond South would be able
to stnp the hand and make
hts conII act but th e mne of
diamonds play made thmgs
a cmch for declare! "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J1m " Last M on day we
discussed the 'Scotch syndrome '. a d1sease that causes
some players to refuse to
play an unnecessanly high
card Here os a hand that
ollustrates the 'grasshopper
dtsease ' Th1s causes players
to waste an Important htgh
card to signal their partner "
Oswald ' The grasshopper
disease takes other forms
but the form you mentwn 1s
the most deadly West opens
the kmg of clubs a g a 1n s t
South's four spades contract
South I a k e s hts ace and
plays out the ace and kmg
of trumps "
J1m " At this pomt grass·
hopper West played his mne
of diamonds He wanted to
tell hts partner to lead a dta·
mond 1f partner ever got m
The s1gna l was read and
when South led a heart to
East's ace, the diamond was
promptly played

The b1dd mg has heen
We"t
Norlh
East

1¥

I•

?

You, South hold

.H743 ¥2 tAK943 "-162
What do yo u do now)
A- Btd three spade); Tlus is
nol an absolute fot ce, but does
ask partner to JCO on to game
Wtlh any excuse
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do brd thr ee spades and
pa r tn er con lmu es lo fo UJ clubs
What do yo u do now? 1

Answer tomorrow

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS. MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
C1ty Ed1tor
Publ i shed dally e)(cepl
Saturday by Tl'1e Oh 10 Valley
P u bi1 Sh 1ng Company
111

Cour t

Ward, Anna Marte Ward, ~ A ,
Pomeroy.
Lester J Taylor, Maqorte E
Taylor to Lily Groppenbacher,
Samuel Carr Wmters, Lot,
Middleport.
Charles H Stalnaker, Orpha
M. Stalnaker to Charles W
Th ompson, Mary 0 Thomas,
p arce ls , Leba non
J ames E. Se 11ers, Mabel
Sell t J h
ers o o n L Arnott, Jmna
L. Arnott, 100 A., Sutton

Snuth

Pass

415769

Sf

Pom eroy

Oh10

Busm ess OH •ce Phone

992 1156 Ed1fOr 1al Phon e 992
'2157

Se&lt;. Ond class postage pa 1d at

Pom e roy Oh 1o

Nat• o nal ad\l e ri•S•ng
represenlat 1ve
Bott•ne111

Gallagher In c , 12 East A2nd
51 New York C•tv , New York
Subscr•pt.on rate s
De
llven&gt;d by Citrr•er wtlere

avadllb le SD cents per week
By Molor Route where carr .er
serv.ce not available One
month Sl 75 By mad 1n Oh10
and

w

VI.J , One year SlA 00

SHe month s $7 2.S
Thr e e
m onth s S~ 50 Subscr •JJI Ion
1:mce .ncl udes Sunday T l me s

Sent .nel

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••
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•

•••
•••
••
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•••
•••
••
•

-I

.

t.~J. Sport Parade

..ll.
,iJ·
.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI)-Every grown man remembers that first
time.
He remembers the first ttme some member of his family,
usually his father, sat down with htm and told hliD the facts of
life.
Gene Mauch also remembers
He remembers the forst \IIDe someone took him aside and
talked to him about love
"I was 24 years old and I was playmg for Btlly Southworth wtth
the Boston Braves," says Montreal's provocative 46-year-old
manager "He satd to me 'one day you're gonna be a manager
and l'mgonna g1ve you one piece of advice Don't fall in Jove w1th
your players ' It's the first piece of advice I got, and maybe the
best, but I've never been able to ab1de by 11 Incidentally, neither
could he."
'Booody Sunday'
Gene Mauch happened on this strange subJect, strange for a
bit league manager to be diSCUssmg m a nOisy, tobacco-stamed
old dugout, anyway, because the Expos have a series commg up
With the Phillies In a few days and thts wdl be their first meetmg
smce they staged tllell' own pnvate little Viet Nam m Montreal
on June 25.
That was bloody Sunday, a day when the two clubs partiCipated
m a general free-for-all after Steve Carlton, the Pluls' lefthanded
fireballer, hit Tun Fob, the Expos' shortstop, with a p1tch on the
back of the head and knocked him groggy.
Foh staggered toward Carlton m what was meant to be a
belligerent action, both benchs IIIlilledtately emplled, and Gene
Mauch, completely forgettmg the late Billy Southworth's sound
adv1ce, was the one who absorbed the worst beatmg
Jim Nash caught him on the back of the neck and Roger Freed
and Don Money got m some good licks, too.
Gene Mauch says he has forgotten all about the fight which IS
about the same as Muhammad Ah saymg he has forgotten all
about Joe Frazier
"! never give 11 a thought," says Mauch with a perfectly
straight face, "unless somebody asks me or I roll over on my left
shoulder m bed "
Still Smart&amp;
It 1s ftve weeks now smce Mauch got worked over by the Phils,
a club he managed nearly nme seasons, and he still feels some of
the aches and pams from punches which were mfhcted on him
"I got pounded on pretty good," he says. "Probably a manager
has no busmess gomg out there swlngmg at someone, but
sometunesa SWitch goes off and you do somethmg you shouldn't
When Carlton hit Foh, I just went blind I know It wasn't the
smartest thmg m the world to do, but if I thought someone hit one
of my players, I might get pounded on agam "
Gene Mauch has good thmking eqUipment He's m !me
physical condition, or at least he was until !1ve weeks ago, and
ordinarily he 1s a man of reason, but as he pmnts out, ' 'there are
times when words won't get 11 done "
Mauch certainly lsn 't gomg around looking for more matches
As a matter of fact, he even JOkes about hiS ftstt c efforts, saymg
"when I was young I used to Wish I was btg and strong Now !Just
wish I was young."
Some ballplayers speak about the dU'ect, sometimes strident,
Montreal manager the same way they used to about Leo
nurocher They say Mauch IS abrasive, and worse
A Rival Speak.!
Says one rival outfielder
"Playing against him, I can't stand the man. Lisle rung to '!'hal
h1s players say about him, thoogh, I get the feeling I'd love to
play for him myself "
Coming from a ballplayer, that's qwte a complunent
"You know why some guys on other ball clubs say some of the
things they do a bout Gene Mauch •" offers Jun Bragan, one of his
coaches "Only because he 's such a competitor and knows the
game so well. He IS without parallel m hiS knowledge of the
game. The closest man I know to him IS Bobby Bragan, and I'm
not saying that simply because Bobby IS my brother Techmcally
speakmg, Gene Mauch IS hke Bear Bryant Everybody Isn't m
love with Bryant, either, but all! know IShe always gets the JOb
done "

Orioles Trail
Tigers by One
By United Press International wtnnmg hits as the Rangers

The Baltimore Orioles heal
the New York Yankees, lMI,
Sunday with a homer by Boog
Powell giving southpaw Mike
'Cuellar an early cushion for tlle
shutout
The victory, coupled W!lh
Detroit's split of a doubleheader with Boston, moved the
Orioles to w1lhln one game of
the front-runnmg Tigers. The
Win was Baltimore's lith in Its
past 15 games.
Powell slammed a Ron
Klimkowsld fastball over the
left center field fence w1th two
out 1n the third Inning and
Merv Rettenmund aboard on a
walk.
Cuellar raised h1s lifetime
record agaUISt the Yankees to
11-3. He also shut out the Yanks
on June 28th when the Orioles
won a ~ deciSioo
In other American league
games Detroit and Boston
divided a doubleheader, ' the
Red Sox winning the opener, 43, and the Tigers taking the
second game, 7-2. Texas took
oakland twice, 2-1 and 4-2,
Minnesota blanked Clncago ,1·
D, Cleveland swept a twlnblll
from Milwaukee, 3-2 and 6-1,
and California edged Kansas
ICily, 4.J,
Sore~egged Gates Brown h1t
a tie-breaking home run in the
fifth and drove in another with
a sacrifice fly 1n a four-run
sixth Inning of the second game
to help Detroit to its second
game victory over Boston. The
Red Sox had won the opener
when John Kennedy, who had
been hitting Uor-21, hit a lazy
atngle to right field to help
Lynn McGlothen earn his
fourth victory In seven

took a twmbtll from Oakland
The Ranger third baseman,
who was 7-for~ before the
games, smgled home Jim
Mason for the btg tally m the
seventll mnlng of the mghtcap
to hand Don Stanhouse hiS fll'st
major league victory. Nelson
had four hits m nme trips to the
plate and stole four baseshikmg his league-lead m that
department to 33'
Harmon Killebrew's home
nm and Jun Perry's clutch
pltchmg produced a shutout
victory for Minnesota over
Chicago The home run broke a
scoreless duel m the sixth
inning between Perry and
Wilbur Wood
Thirty-year old left-bander
Tom Hllgendorf hurled hls first
major league victory in the
rughtcap after Tom McCraw
bad sparked Cleveland to Its
opening game victory with h1s
fourth home run of the season.
Hllgendorf, picked up from
Kansas City's Omaha farm
club on July 9, struck out
seven, walked two allowed Sill
hits in making his first major
league start.
Bob Oliver led off the bot·
tom of the 11th Inning with his
13tll home run as the Angels
downed at Royals. Oliver, who
began the season with Kansas
City, homered against AI
Fitzsimmons
COLEMAN SELECTED
CINCINNATI (UPIJ - The
Cincinnatl Reds announced
today that former first
h• ...m•n r.ordv r.oleman had
been elected by baseball fans
to the Reds Hall of Fame.
Coleman, now director of the
team'a speakers bureau, will
d•clli0115.
be Inducted as the 36th
Dave Nellon liNtpped out of member prior to tonight's
1ooC llump with I plir of plllllo ftedi.Giall Ia 1110e

Pirates Just Roll Along
By United Press International
The Pittsburgh Pirates retamed their strong lead m the
National League East Sunday
by beating the Philadelphia
Phtll!es, 7·1
The Pirates' VIctory, aided
by R1ch1e Hebner's three-run
homer in the eighth tnnmg,
enabled them to remam seven
games ahead of the New York
Mets, who broke a three.game
losmg streak with a 3-1 trmmph
over the Montreal Expos
The Chicago Cubs swept the
St LOUIS Cardinals 4-tl and 1&gt;-4,
the San Francisco Giants
topped the Cincmnati Reds S.l,
after a 4..() loss, the Houston
Astros scored a 4-3 victory m 10
mnmgs after losmg their
opener to the San Diego Padres
lll-7 m 14 mmngs and the
Atlanta Braves beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 14-4 and 5-4 m
other NL games
The Phtlhes had a 1-tl lead
going mto the eighth when the
pressure of the Pirates' top-tobottom ba ttlng strength took
Its toll on Barry Lersch They
scored one run on a smgle by
Gene Chnes and AI Oliver's
two run double and wrapped 11
up when Hebner hit his lOth
homer Three more runs m the
rnnth made II that much easte•
for Bruce Kison to raise his
season r~cord to 5-3
The Mets snapped a J.1 lie m
the seventh on Cleon Jones '
tr1ple and a smgle by Duffy
Dyer and added a run m the
e1ghth on Tommie Agee's
homer Tug McGraw shut out
the Expos on two hits for the
fmM three mnmgs to earn his
fourth vtclory and help saddle
Carl Morton wtth his nmth loss

Defense
Dominates
Scrimmage
WILMINGTON,
Ohto
(UP!)- The offense scummbed to the defense 10 the Cm·
cmnab Bengals' "controlled
scnmmage" durmg the
weekend, scQrmg only one
touchdowlt"\lifl' the• 71i-fninute
contest
Coach Paul Brown sa1d It
was "not unusual at th1s stage"
for the defense to domma te,
but added he had hoped "we
would move the ball a httle
better "
Second·year man Doug
Dressler scored the one touchdown, a one.yard plunge that
capped a 7:0.yard march. Apall'
of fteld goals, 47·yarder by
rookie Dave Green of OhiO
Urnvers1ty and a 29-yarder by
veteran Horst Muhlmann,
capped the scormg
The defense, Brown satd,
"was dmng a better JOb," and
noted the offense dtd better
wtth the run than with the pass
Passing problems were
caused by "letdowns on the of.
fenstve lme," he satd
"But I might add we dropped
some balls you shouldn't drop
m pro football," he said
Ken Anderson, a second..year
quarterback, started mstead of
veteran VIrgil Carter and
Brown was qutck to pomt out
"there is no significance to 11
whatsoever."

Rookie Rtck Reuschel p1t
ched a stx-lntter for hi's fourth
VIctory m the first game and
Glenn Beckert's two-run
e1ghthinnmg double enabled
the , Cubs to wm the second
game and complete their
sweep of the Cardma1s Jose
Cardenal drove m two runs m
the ftrst game while Tom
Phoebus intched two scoreless
uuungs of relief to earn his
third VIctory for the Cubs m the
rughtcap
Ross Grtmsley p1tched an
e1ght·lntter to raiSe his season
mark to 9-4 for the Reds m the
first game but Ed Goodson's
three-run
pinch
tnple
highlighted a five-run lOthmmng outburst which gave the

litants a spht of their
doubleheader The key blows m
the Reds' openmg.game
triUmph, which tagged Juan
Marwhal w1th hos lith defeat,
were doubles by Johnny Bench
and Darrel Chaney and a triple
by Dems Menke
JIIIlilly Stewart's loth-mmng
smgle drove m the wmmng run
for the Astros m their second
game as the teams completed a
marathon weekend durtng
which they played 41 1nnmgs,
mcludmg a 17~nnmg game
Saiitrday mght, m 41 hours
Nate Colbert hit hiS 24th and
25th homers, takmg away the
maJor league lead from Bench,
to account for all San Diego's
runs m the mghtcap.

Impressive

Naf•ona I League
East
wlpctgb
P11t
59 35 628
New York
51 "
554 7
Ch•cago
50 46 52 1 10
St L OUI S
46 47 495 12 1/)
M on treal
42 49 462 151/ 2
Phil
34 60 362 25
West
w I pclgb
CinCI

CINCINNATI (UP! ) Bobby Bonds calls 11 the best
homer he has ever htt
The San FranciSco Gtant outfielder was referrmg to his
smash over the centerfield
fence m the second game of
Sunday's doubleheader
Bonds' homer accounted for
the Giants first run of the
game They added five more m
the lOth mmng off the Cmcmnati Reds' Clay Carroll to gam
a 6-1 victory and a split of the
doubleheader after droppmg
the opener 4..() to lefty Ross
Grtmsley
Tommy Hall was the vtcllm
of Bonds' homer That IS why
Bobby was so elated
Hall and Bonds are old
fnends - and nvals. They
grew up m Riverside, Cahf ,
and still make their homes
there
"Tommy and I Joked all wmter about what we were gomg
to do to each other thts season," Bonds sa td "This was
after Tommy was traded to the

Reds by Mmnesota."
Durmg !hell' scholasllc days,
Bonds and Hall played for nval
high schools
Eleven Strikeouts
"Tommy," Bobby saId Sun.
day, "use to stnke me out all
tile llme m htgh school."
Hall struck out a lot of other
batters too
"In one htgh school game,"
recalled Bonds, "Tommy
struck out 23 batters I told the
guys before Sunday's game
Tommy would stnke out a lot
of batters "
Hall did, too Before depart.
mg for a pmch batter, after
eight innmgs of the second
game !ted 1-1, Hall struck out
11 and walked ftve
Hall, back only a few days
from two weeks of m1htary
duty, had worked only four m·
mngs m three weeks pnor to
Sunday's game
Blunders Hurt
W1th a httle luck, Carroll
might have gotten out of the

rnnth mnmg without a run
scormg

However, first baseman Joe
Hague nussed a tag on ChriS
Speier on an attempted pickoff
by Johmy Bench, and Darrel
Chaney missed a pop fly for an
error.
These blunders along w1th an
mtenllonal pass, a tamted hit
by Tito Fuentes, a triple by Ed
Goodson and a wild pitch added
up to f1ve runs, more than
enough for a Giant victory
Grunsley, pitching hiS fll'st
shutout of the season, gamed
his mnth victory agamst four
losses m the opener

Doxie Walters pumped m 26
for Mark V while Ron
Ferguson added 15. Bob Rit·
chte topped the Sentinel with
15 Rod Ferguson added 14
Arthur Clark led the
Department Store m Its wm
wtlh 32 whtle Sam Mitchell
contributed 31 Steve Price led
Adolph's w1th 19 and Eh Ebers·
bach added 18
Randy Crawford set the

The Reds bunched three hits,
all for extra bases, for two runs
off Juan Marichal m the second
mning and then added two
more m the thtrd to hard the
Gtant ace hts lith loss agamst
four Vlctones
The two clubs wmd up the
senes tomght w1th Jack
B1llmgham gomg agamst the
Giants' Tom Carnthers

Big Victories
For 2 Golfers

scormg record for the two-year
league w1th 56 points, toppmg
tlle previous htgh of \6 held by
Ron Ferguson last year.
Crawford, htltmg from
everywhere on the court, had
28 f1eld goals Btlly "The Ktd"
Vaughan led the Bankers w1th
31 and Greg Donahue had 26.
Me1gs Htgh School semor
eager Mtke Sayre suffered a
broken ank le m Sunday's
actwn
First Game
MARK V (64) - Ron
Ferguson 7·1·15, Walters 12-2·
26, R Sayre :0.111, M Howard
7~14, Boggs 040, Craig 040
SENTINEL
(52 )
Etchmger 1)..().12, Ritchie 6-3-15,
Batley 4~. Rod Ferguson &amp;.2·
14, Childs 1-I.J
Second Game
DEP'T STORE (97) - Clark
16·0·32, Mitchell 15·1-31,
Burney 1-1·3, Cremeans 346,
Fife 12·1·25
ADOLPH'S (61) - Ebersbach 9~18 , Tyree ~10, Rtch
Gtlkey 6·0·12, Price 8-3-19,
Coates 1~2
Tblrd Game
FRIENDLY TAVERN (121)
- Harr1s 8-0-16, Crawford 28.(1.
56, T. Walters 5-(1.10, Adams 6ll-12, Morgan 12-3-27
POM. NAT BANK (110) Magnotta 6-3-15, Donahue 13-026, B Vaughan 13-5-31, Coates
11)..().20, Ault 9~18
Tonight's Games
Mark V vs Fr Tav , 6 p.m.
D Sent vs Mid. Dep't., 7
pm.
Adolph's vs Porn. Nat., 8
p.m.

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Darmg Kmght edged All Right
by one-half length Saturday
mght to wm the featured $7,000
Pace at Sctoto Downs in I 59 35, the 19th time 'a' two-minute
mile or better has been
recorded here thts year
All Right and th1rd place
Sovereign Warrior also
Fonoshed m less than two
mmutes The last horse In the
fiVe pacer field was limed In
2 00 3-5
Henrietta Farve] (8) won the
first race and Dtck Painter (7 )
the second to return $51 40 In
the dally double

Ball
Bos ton
New York

Oeve
Mil wa

w
54
52
41
45
40

I

40
40
45
45
52
37 56

pel.
574
565
511
500
435
398

g.b.
1

6
7
13
161h

We st

w I pet gb
58 38 604
52 43 547 5'1&gt;
47 44 516 811&gt;
Mmn
45 49 479 12
KC
44 52 458 14
Cali f
39 56 411 l a'h
Texas
Sunday ' s Results
Cleve 3 M 1iwa 2 I ls i)
Cleve 6 M ilwa 1 l 2n d l
Bos ton 4 De tro 1t J (1st )
De tro t 7 Bost on 2 (2nd)
Mtnn 1 (h tcag o 0
Ba tt 5 New Y or k 0
Tex as 2 Oak land 1 ( ls i)
Tex as 4 Qa kland 2 ! 2nd )
Cal1f 4 K C 3 ( 11 mns)
Today 's Probable Polchers
(All Times EDT)
Texa s I Paul 3 3) at Qakland
I Blue 3 5) 4 30 p m
Ch1 cag o ( Bahn sen 12 1ll at
M1nn ( Bl yle ven 9 13) 2 15 p m
K C (N elson 3 41 at Calif
! Ryan II 8) 11 p m
Boston ( Patftn 8 9) at Detroat
I Loloch 17 6 ) 8 15 p m
Milwauk ee (Parsons 8· 8 and
Ryerson 2 2) io1 Cleveland
(T idrow 7 9 and Lamb 2 4) 2,
5 30 p m
New York (Peterson 10 11
and Gardner 2 0) at Balttmore
! Dobson 12 9and Alexander 55)
2 5 30 p m
Tuesday 1 s Games
K C at Oakland
M nn a t Texas
Cal1f at Ch1 cag o
Mllwa at Detro1t
Balhmore at Cle ve
New York at Bos ton

Oakl and
Ch 1cago

A. ntai ctica covetS about
55 m1111 on squ are mil es, all
but 4';&lt;, pet cent of wh1ch 1s
bun ed unde1 snow and 1ce

In surance
Agent

DALE

Our Pot•cy Is
Ent1re Coverage
Rest assured when you
1nsure wtth us that your
ts covered for f1re,
theft , habtllfy. Come 1n and
got the soofhrng facts

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
1H Court Sf
Pomeroy

This guide lays
out the facts. What
technical fields have
JOb openings. Where
to write for the
names of schools
that are best qualified to prepare
you for these careers. There's even a section
on getting help w1th tuitiOn moncy:Most technictans' jobs pay double what
the average high school graduate earns. As
much as some college graduates make. So
they're surely worth investigating.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

I

De tr cSI I

The low-down on
technical careers and
technical schools.
Straight from the
U.S. government.

(Upon Request)

i$ the all$wer

Am encan league
East

Yaur

2-HOUR
CLEANING

J#Jrrisome bills a problem ?

61 3

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
By Un1ted Press Internationa l
W L Pet GB
Louisville
58 44 569
Charleston
55 46 545 2V~
T1dewafer
55 49 529 4
Rochester
55 50 524 41/~
Toledo
53 50 515 5'h
Syracuse
4t,l 56 467 10 1 /~
Richmond
48 55 466 10'1&gt;
Penmsula
40 63 388 18•12
Sunday's Results
LOU I SVI lle a Penmsula 3
Rochester 13 Ttdewater 6
Charleston 7 Syracuse 0
Toledo 3 R1chmond 2

Polar Bears Upend Newsies
The Mark V 'Polar Bears"
moved mto a lie with the Da1ly
Sentmel for first place m the
Middleport Independent
Basketball League wtth a 64-52
upset wm over the Newsies
Sunday
The Middleport Department
Store clouted Adolph 's Dairy
Valley 97-lil and the Friendly
Tavern outscored the Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank 121-liO m other
games

57 36

Houston
53 44 546 6
l A
49 45 521 8112
Allanla
45 50 474 13
San Fr an
43 54 443 16
San D1ego
36 58 383 21'11
Sunday 's Results
Cmc1 4 San Fran 0 (1st)
San Fran 6 (i nc• 1 (2nd 10
1nnmg s)
Allan Ia 14 LA 4 l l sfl
Afl anfa 5 L A 4 l 2nd)
Ch1 cag o 4 Sf Lou iS 0 (Is II
Ch1 cag o 5 Sf LOuiS 4 (2nd )
New Yor k 3 Montreal 1
San O ego 10 Hou ston 7 (1st, 14
1nnmg s) J
Houston 4 San D1ego 3 (2nd 10
1nn1ng s)
P1flsburgh 7 Philadelphia 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
tAll Tomes EDT)
Sf LouiS !Cleveland 12 5) at
Ch 1cago 1Jenk1ns 13 91 2 30
pm
Los Angeles (Osteen 11 7) af
Allanla (M c La •n I I ) 8 p m
San 01 ego ( Arl 1n 8 11) at
Houston ( D1erker 8 6), 8 15
pm
P1flsburgh (Moose 6 6) af
Ph1iadelph1a (Reynolds 0 7) ,
7 35 p m
San Franc1 sco (Carnthers 2
6) at Cmcmnat1 (Bdllngham 7
9) 8 p m
Montreat {Moore 2 41 at New
York (Sfrom o O). 8 p m
Tuesday's Games
Ch1cago at Montreal
Phil at New York 2,tw1 n1ght
PQITT AT Sf LouiS ,n1ghl
San D1ego at Atlanta n1ght
Cmc1 at Houston n1ght
San Fran af Atlanta ,n1ghl

Sorry, Old Buddy

LIGONIER , Pa (UPI) - partner, young Jack LewiS,
Kermtt Zarley ended one fmtshed With a 70 and 275 total
streak Sunday and Babe for a 30th place tie worth $710
Hiskey began another wtth each.
thell' victory m the NatiOnal
M1ller made f1ve of the eight
Team Championship
birdies for his team m their 63,
For Zarley, 11 was the end of the best round of the final day,
a frustratmg three months that vaulted them into the
during which, he said "the last runnerup spot.
round of every tournament was
"! told Grier that if we shot
my worst " Th~t mcluded the 62, we'd wm," Miller said. "We
U S. Open, where he lost a almost did."
chance to wm by shooting 79
One of the tournament's
the !mal day.
more curious admissions came
Hiskey earned himself a from Condy, who concended
valued exemption on the pro "the second and third days, I
tour for his part of the victory, just got psyched out putting "
HIRAM, Ohto (UP!)
Cleveland Browns Coach Nick which means that for the next Those days he and his partner
Skorich, unpressed by quar- year he will not have to go scored 70 and 71 Theil' scores
terback Mike Phipps in a through the grind of Monday the first and last days were 62
and 64.
weekend scrimmage, plans to mornmg qualifiers.
"But,"
he
said,
"1
think
I'll
There was a four-way tie for
start hun against the Los
just
take
the
next
week
off
and
fourth
place at 269 among Dale
Angeles Rams Friday rnght on
enjoy
1!."
Douglass-Hale lrwm, Mike
the West Coast .
Three
three-stroke
victortes
HillDave Hill, George Archer·
The Purdue All-American,
Sunday,
with
a
final
66
and
72"Bobby Nichols, and Harry
who failed to become the
hole
score
of
22-&lt;mderilar
262
Toscano-Jun Wtechers Bob
Browns' No. I Signal-caller last
(only
tile
lower
score
on
each
Smith.John
Schlee and Charles
season, completed six of 11
hole
counted
toward
the
total)
Slfford-Bob Stone fmiahed anpasses Saiiirday m the intrawas
worth
$20,000
a
man
other stroke behind.
squad game, leading the of.
Johnny
Miller
and
Grier
fense to a 13-11 "voctory" over
Jones, who hit!! 1!3 Sunday,
the defense.
were
next at 265 while Lanny
Q- \Vhat Am e TIC an ex
"! was very pleased with tlle
Wadkins
and
Gibby
Gilbert
plorer
crossed the Goh!
workout," sald Skor1ch.
Ve5ert
by
automobile'
"Ph1pps in particular looked were at 286 and Tommy Aaron
A-Roy
Chapman
Andrew,s 210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
good, especially on some and Charles Coody at 267
In
1910
Phone 9\12. 5428
Hlskey
bad
16
birdies
and
check-off plays at tlle line of
Zarley s• ven in the four
scrimmage."
Skorich said there were some rounds
Zarley made three of the ~-..·:•(•'."~'-'"").;..;.o~o~o&gt;·:·&lt;-&lt;~o&lt;~o~&lt;o·)"'.;o"'o:.')o:·'l&gt;&lt;-++o;.&lt;o.;.(oo~&lt;&lt;o+·:·~"'"'"'~"'
nuxups ln the backfield, "but I
think that was mostly because team's five birdies in the final
we were running a lot of check· round includmg the etght..foot
offs with young ruming backs put that wrapped It up on No
17.
in the backfield."
Both players said they were
The defense was succeasful
early In the scrimmage In hold- glad to end the two-year Arnold
ing back the offenae, but Palmer-Jack Nicklaus
Phipps fired a short pass to domination of thls tournament,
rookie wide receiver Charles but Zarley oblerved somewhat
"Cookie" Brinkman who realistically, "they probably
scampered 28 yards for a would have won it agam if they
teed It up."
touchdown.
"But lt's great to wm," he
125 E. Main
Rookie placekicker George
Ph. 992·2111
said.
"I was getting tired of
!Iunt and veteran Don Cockroft
Pomeroy, Ohio
each booted a field goal lo ac- them wiMinglhll thing."
Palmer and h1l aubltitutettotttooot••••~••••••••••oooooototooto,.ooeeo•
COUnt for the other Iii poltltll.

Phipps Looks

By Un.ted Press International

Infielder Dave Roberts , no
relation to the pitcher of the
same name, drove m rave runs
m the first game Del Thomas
singled home the winmng run
for the Astros m the 14th tnnmg
of the opener and Roberts
followed w1th a two-fun smgle
which clinched the decision
Earl Wtlhams and Mtke Lum
each drove m three runs and
the Braves too~ advantage of
three errors and four wtld
pitches by the Dodgers m thell'
first game Ralph Garr 's
threerun seventh-mning homer
was the b1g blow of the second
game as Pat Jarvis raiSed his
record to 9-4 and the Braves
handed Jun Brewer his fourth
loss agamst SIJ( VICtories

Now it doesn't cost you a cent to investigate them. Ju_st send in this ad today.

I~------------------------~I

1 To Careers, Washmgton , DC 20202

1

I

I

1

I

Name

I

I

I

Mdress

I

~~·'~'------------------~Z~IL_______

I
I c.o
I ""'----,---- I

I

I
I
---- I
I

I

L---------------~--------J

~dmUslll1 Contributed for tht lhlbllc IOOd In coo.,tranon •1th
Tht Advtrtlllq Council •M U\t lnternttlol'loll Hewsptptr Mvtrt1llftC betlltlwtl

�•

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 1972

4- The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 1972

I.Jneecores
ly Unlltd Press lnterno1ionol

Natlona 1Leagw
list)
San Fran·
000 000 ooo- 0 8 2
Oncl
022 000 oox- • 8 o
Mar lchal, Moffi tt (5) , McMahon (7) and Rader ; Grlm slev
(t-•1 and Bench. LP - Marichal
(4-11) .
(2nd, 10 inns)
San Fran 000 010 000 s--'- 6 7 0
Clncl
.000 010 000 1)- 1 3 1
Barr (0) and Healy ; Hall ,
Carroll (9) and Bench. LPCarroll 14-l l. HR - Bonds
(161h) .
Montreal
000 100 ooo- 1 6 1
New York
000 100 11x- 3 7 0
Morton, Walker (5) and
Humphrey ; McAndrew. McGraw (1) and Dyer. WPMcGraw (4-4). LP-Morton (59). HR-Agee (6th).
(111)
Los Angeles 100 020 1oo- 4 9 2
Atlanta
330 600 02x- 14 12 0
Singer, Strahler W and
Cannizzaro; Reed, Upshaw (8)
and Williams. WP- Reed (9-10).
LP- Singer (4-9) .
Undl
Los Angeles 013 000 ooo- 4 13 4
Atlanta
000 101 JOx- 59 0
John, Brewer (7J and Dietz,
Cannizzaro (7); Stone, Jarvis

(51 , Hoerner (8) and Williams .
WP- Jarvls (9-4) . LP- Brewer
16-4). HR- Roblnson IIJihl.
Williams (17th) , Garr (6th).
Pitt
Phil

000 000 043- 7 12 0
000 000 1DO- 1 7 1

Klson (5-3)' and Sangulllen ;
Ler.sch, Selma (8) , Scarce (9)
and Bateman. LP-Lersch (1 .
41 . HR-Hebner (loth) .

(lsi)
St. Louis
000 000 ooo- o 6 2
Chicago
013 000 oox- 4 8 1
Durham, Bare (6), Drabow ·
sky (8) and Simmons; Reuschel
(4-41 and Hundley . LPDurham (0-3).
(2nd)
St. Louis
400 000 ooo- 4 10 1
Chicago
1to 100 02x- 5 9 2
Higgins, Cumberland (3),
Segul W, Grzenda 18) and
Simmons; Bonham , Phoebus
(7) , Aker (8) and Rudolph . WP
- Phoebus (3-3) . LP-Segui (21).

llsl, 14 Inns. l
San Diego
112 000 OJO 000 OJ-10 15 0
Houston
010 230 001 000 OD-7 11 2
Norman, Acoslo (51, Ross
(5) , _ Severlnsen (6). Schaeffer
18), Caldwell (81 and Kendall.
R'oberts (121 ; Richard, Culver
(3), Ray (6), Gladding (9),
York (12) , Griffin (14) and
Howard, Edwards (14) . WPCaldwell (4-A) . LP-York (0-1).
HR-Rader (16th), Roberts
(3rd).
2nd, 10 lnnsl
San
Diego 000
000 Ot1
102 000 ~
39 4
Houoton
010 1_ 4 8 1
Grell. Ross (8), Schaeffer
(10) and Blefary; ~oberlll (9-Sl
ond Edwords. LP-Ross (3-2) .

•

LEADING
Steel Profits
BATTERS
Un~er Squeeze

By Uni1ed Press lnfernationdl

Leading Batters

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Beginning Tuesday, it will btl
harder lor steel producers to
make a buck, ilccording to
Industry Week mag~zine .
Industry Week said today
employment
costs . for
producing a ton of steel mill
prod~!s will jwnp $6 because
of the Aug. I automatic in·
crease under the industry's
labor agreement with the
United Steelworkers of
America.
Last year, mills raised prices
to cover increased costs, but
this time they are voluntarily
committed to holding the price
line until the end of the year on
most of their products, Industry Week pointed out.
In the first year of the three
year labor contract that
became effective last Aug. 1,
the steel employment cost
increase in producing a ton of
finished steel was about $12.25.
The increase, and the one
calculaled for the year
beginning Tuesday are ba&lt;ied
on 1970 productivity data, the
magazine said.
·
Employment costs for the
steel industry in May, latest
month for which information is

National League

available, averaged $6.98 per
hour per worker. In addition to
wages, the figure covers

g. ab . r.' h. pel.
83 332 67 115 .346

Cdn, Hou
Wilms, Chi 95 378 61 128 .33'1
Mota,
LA 73 233 38 79 .339
pensions, insurance, supGarr,
All
349 58 115 .330
plemental unemployment Snglen, Pitt 86
89 341 3'1 112 .328
benefits , the non-payroll Baker, All 70 228 75 73 .320
portions of savings and Brock, St.L 93 398 49 126 .317
. St.L 85 328 39 104 .317
vacation plan costs, and legally Alou
Lee. SO
68 251 35 79 .315
required payroll taxes. The Olvr. Pitt 93 373 56 117 .314
American League
May figure is Sl.03 higher than
g . ab. r. h . pet.
that for July 1971, just before Pnll. KC 92
358 52 113 .316
the
three-year
labor Fisk, Bos 75 257 SO 81 .315
Shnblm, KC
agreement went into effect.
80 273 37 85 .311
. The employment cost in- Rudi, Oak 92
377 62 117 .310
crease In the year beginning Allen, Chi 95 325 60 100 .308
Tuesday will average around Otis, KC 88 333 46 102 .306
seven pd., or 50 cents per Berry, Cal 6/ 235 27 72 .306
manhour and will push the Carew, Minn
84 316 33 95 .301
totJII employment cost per hour Krkplrck, KC
69 226 32 68 .301
per worker to about $7.50,
Roja5,
KC
88 315 34 92 .292
Industry Week said.
Home Runs
The boost includes a general
National League: Colbert, SO
wage increase of 12.5 cents per 25 ; Bench , Cin 24 ,· Williams,
and Stargell. Pitt 22; May,
hour, a .4 · cent rise in in- Chi
Hou and Kingman. SF 21.
cremen Is between 33 job
American League: Allen. Chi
classes, and cost of living 25; Cash, Del and Jackson. Oak
20; Killebrew, Mlnn and Epallowances of one cent per hour stei
n, Oak 18.
for each .4 of a point increase in
Runs Batted In
Nationa I League : Bench, Cln
tlle government's conswner
price index on a quarterly 75 ; Stargell, Pitt 74 ; Williams,
Chi 69 ; Colbert, SO 68; May,
bosis .
Hou 66.
American League: Allen, Chi
Pensions also will be improved, with another paid 72; Jackson, Oak 59 ; Mayberry,
KC 56 ; Darwin, Minn and
holiday provided.
Bando, Oak 52.
Pitching
National

Yanks Win Final Game
The Yankees - runnerup in
season play - ended their
season on a winning note with a
surprising 9-3 win over the
champion Tigers in Pomeroy
Boys' LA!ague action Saturday.
Randy Phillips pitched the
distance for Coach Woody
Call's Yankees, fanning three
and walked none. Bob McClure
had five strikeouts and walked
two in pitching a fine game for
the Tigers.
Greg Smith and Steve Call
each had a single and double in
pacing the Yanks at the plate.
Other hitters were Steve Little
with two singles, Phillips a
triple, Mark Norton a double,

and Del Call, Gene Ownphreys, and Tim Hood each a
single.
Hitters for the Tigers were
McCIIU'e, Rich Johnson, Randy
Marshall, and Dave Balke each
a single.
Tigers
200 100-3 4
Yankees
120 06x-9 9
McClure and Browning.
Phillips and Little.

.-

·

.

•

Raineoat Is UniCJlll~
DEAR POLLY- Do lell C.B .. whose raincoat is siaim·d
With newsprml. that many an invention or des ign has
stemm ed from misfortune or error. What a conversati on
p1ece to h_ave a raincoat with newsprint marks in selected
·areas or m an allove•· pattern! - MRS . G. P.
DEAR GIRLS-Mrs. G. P.'s suggesllon remindt•d mt•
of my white silk-looking umbrella that Is printed all over
like pages from a newspaper. It alwa•·s attracts attention
and lnterest.-POLL \'
·

..

CLOSED

~, .

;r.

il

SUNDAY

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
Prices Good Thru Tues., Aug. tst."" '

~

clothing but on that of anyone who happens ·to brush ,
agamst 1t m passmg. I do hope some reader has a
, solution for this " hairy" problem .- LEE
DEAR POLLY -1 feel sure there must be at least a
million mothers who would back me up in my Pet Peeve.
Why can't children 's thermos bottle fillers be made of
an unbreakable mat~rial, such as used in thermo-cups,
Jugs, etc ? The glass f11lers sm.ash so easily when dropped.
As we live m a rural area thiS often means a long drive
to the store. I would also like to see plastic. used for
making lunch boxes as the hinges and locks rust so
easily and fall apart. l do hope someone will ~elp us
poor frustrated mothers.-MRS. A. D. B.
DEAR POLLY -1 have a
Pointer for the lady who
has trouble meas urin g teaspoons of salt when pouring it from the entire package . I always keep some Si##=;::;i~~
salt in an empty baking i
powder can and use the
half-circle of cardboard at
the top to level off a teaspoonful. My can is covered with pretty adhesivebacked paper and I enjoy
having this handy sa lt container on my spice shelLMRS. L. J . B.

lolich,

DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is for those expec tant
mothers who cannot find good-fitting panty hose. Take
an old pa~r ,c ut a V-shape out of the front top , rip the
front seam m a new pair down about three inches and
insert the V-shaped piece in the ope n seam to have instant maternity panty hose.-PAT

and Hunter, Oa k 13-4: Holtz-

man, Oak 13-9.

Goolagong
Top-Seeded

:- " ... Amtrl&amp; L'H ue • ~-~ -· ''l'iet'alit'%iiiiii'i-i.r'!Wr¥.1!rsplliitseverar . ayS"'i:!ffi"Mrt -··;~';:n!:"1!:'6-t:::~
(11
La rkin s were Mrs. Dons
· I.e na PIckenng.
·
K CInns) 000 0 0 0 oo- 3
tlle 1959 Wimbledon champion '
calli
Michael Martin of Alexan- meeting Jim Delaney the 1972
000 on 2 ~ 01 _ 4 l~ ~ Marks of ·Chester, Mr. and
He d 1u n d, Burgmeler (7), Mrs. James E. Caruthers and dria, Va., spent a week witll his Amateur runnerup. '
WFrtlght (7), Abernathy (8), Penny of Louisville, Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Other matches Include No 1
I
zmorrls
(10)
and
KlrkpaE
it
C
of
C
1
b
G
t
B
·
d
M'k
1
0 wn us,
Irick; Messersmith, Barber (7J,
m Y ongrove
ran ormg an . . ~men's seed Jim Connors ·of
Allen 18l and Torborg, Hiatt Mrs. Dana Houck of Bashan,
Mr. and Mrs. B11l W1ll1ams of Belleville, Ill., opposing Ken
181. WP-AIIen (3-ll . LP- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Smitll of Athens, Ga., were recent McMillan of McAllen Tex.
Fitzmorris (2-41. HR-OIIver Laurelville • Mrs · Jerry visitors at the WilliamsSeeded secon d beh~md M'1ss
(13th).
Courson and daughter, Balderson home. .
Goolagong the Wimbledon
list Gomol
Patricia of Clrclevill~ and Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pooler of runnerup w'oo lost the Bonne
Mllw
000 110 001)- 26 1 and M~s. Wayne Harmon of Pomeroy R. D., and Mr. and Bell Cup finals Sunday at
Cleve
000 100 002-3 11 o
Mrs. Sexson Demaree and Cleveland to Chris Evert was
Stephenson, Linzy (8) and Laurev11le.
Mrs.
George
Arnold
of
family
of Pomeroy R.d. were Linda Tuero of Metaire' La.
Rodriguez; Wilcox , Rlddlebergor W. Farmer (71, Hennigan Northridge, Calif., and Mr~ . T. visitors at tlle home of Mr. and Margaret Court, Austr~lia's
(8) and Fosse. WP- Hennlgan S. Mul1tauaopele of San D1ego Mrs_. D.ohrman Reed and second-ranked "!.oman, is
(2.1). LP- Linzy (2-21. HRfam1ly.
seeded third and Pa t
Scott (11th I, McCraw (4th) .
Mrs. Helen Archer visited Pretorius, No. 1 ~anked woman
(2nd Gomo)
with Mr. and Mrs. Milton player in Soutll Africa, is
Mllw
000 010 ooo- 1 6 4
Tuttle
of Chester recently.
seeded fourth .
Cleve
120 003 oox- 6 9 0
Reynolds, Bell (7) and
Jean Whitehead spent the
No. 2 men's seed is Patrick
Felske ; Hilgendorf 11-0l and
weekend
witll
a
friend
at
Proisy
of France; third is Dick
Moses. LP- Reynolds (0-1) .
Medina.
Stockton of Port Washington,
Chicago
000 000 ooo- o 6 1
Sgt. and Mrs . J . M. Crary N.Y., the 1972 NCAA champ,
Mlnn
000 001 OOx- 1 5o
Visiling recently with Mr. and family of Florida were and Bob Hewitt, South Africa's
Wood, Acosta (81 and Herrmann ; Perry (9-9) and Borg- family of Pomeroy R.D., were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Reed top-ranked player, is seeded
mann. LP- Wood (16-11) . HR- Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson and Crary and Mr. and-Mrs. Grant fourth.
KIIIebrew (i 8th) .
family of Colwnbus, Mr. and · Smith and family. .
Neither Stan Smitll nor VirMrs
Frank
Hudson
and
Toni
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bowm
Vorys
of
ginia
Wade, the 1971 singles
llsll
Boston
011 101 ooo- 4 9 o Mr ..and Mrs. Gene Hudson of Pleasantville were weekend chlllllpions, returned to defend
Detroit
111 000 ooo- 3 7 0 Racine and Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold their titles.
McGlothen, Lee (8J, NeThe tourney at the Queen
'whau!ll!r (9) and Fisk ; Seel - Shelby Pickens and family of E. Cowdery·
- Mrs. L. Balderson City Racquet Club continues
bach, Coleman (6J, Zachary Syracuse.
(1), Hiller (9) and Freehan. WP
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Harris,
FRUIT BOWL
through Sunday.
- McGlothen (4-3) . LP- Seel ·
bach (7.6) . HR-G . Brown Debbie, DeAnn, Mr. and Mrs.
BASIC ITEMS
(&amp;lh).
David Harris of Xenia spent
Apples. bananas. oranges
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. are some of the bastes of the
SETS RECORD
(2ndl
Boston
001 010 ooo- 2 11 2 Homer Circle, Verna and fru it bowl. Seasonal newcom- . GREENVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
Detroit
100 114 oox- 7 11 0 Wavie Circle.
ers add novelty and variety . . - Lorene Thomas of Lockport,
· Tlant, Curtis (6). Krausse (7)
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Apples have sometimes been N. Y., set a new women's
and Montgomery ; Nlekro (3-2) Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl called "nature's toothbrush"
.
and Hailer. LP- Tiant 14-4).
because they have a gentle qua l'f
' ymg
recor d during
HR-G. Brown (7th).
l.eAnn, were guests of Mr. and scrubbing eflect on the teeth weekend qualifying for the
New York
000 000 ooo- 0 3 0 Mrs. Clyde John and daughter as they are eaten . Their Juicy World Horseshoe Tournament
Baltimore 200 001 02x- 5 8 1 of Hamden a recent Sunday. appeal is great when doing here.
Kllmkowskl, McDaniel (7)
Mr . and Mrs. William a chore around the house. or
Mrs. Thomas totaled 261
and Munson ; Cuellar (10-8) and Carleton of Racine, Betty Van when the children are study- points, six points better than
Hendricks. LP- KIImkowskl (0- Meter, Patrie, Sheryl LA!Ann ing. OJ' watching TV . Bananas th
rd t . h
1) . HR- Powell (12th ).
.
are a great American favor e reco se e1g t years ago
Johnson, spent a rece nt itc. Peel and eat. Couldn't be by Sue Gillespie of Portland,
(lSI)
evening
with Eunie Brinker. easier. Children love to eat Ind. Mrs. Thomas also erased
Texas
100 000 001- 2 10 1
Circle of New Haven oranges that have been cut Miss Gillespie's record of
James
Oakland
000 001 ooo- t 8 1.
called
at
the home of Mary In four so they can &lt;avor the double ringers with 36, lwo
Bosman , Lindblad (6) and
Fahey ; Ddom, Locker (9) and Clrcle on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Juicy fruit inside. There's more than the old mark.
Duncan . WP- Lindblad (4-41 . Melvin Circle and family great fun and great nutrition Women's competition is .
LP-Qdom (9-3) .
returned to Columbus on In these frui ts tha t are based
among the richest sources of
on 100 shoes and men's
(lnd)
Sunday .
•·ltamtn "C".
on 200 shoes.
Texas
110 000 20D- 4 9 1
Oakland
200 000 ooo- 2 6 o
Stanhouse, Pina (9) and
Billings; Hamilton, Fingers (71 ,
Locker (8) and Tenoce. WPStonhouse (1 -2 ). LP- Hamllton

DEAR POLLY - When visiting a hospital. wear softsoled shoes. or tho se with •·quiet" heels. Many people
do not reahze how di stractin g the click-click of heels
gomg up and down unca rpeted corridors ca n be to many
pallents .-SHIRLEY
( l\lfWSP.A.PIR ENTUPRISE

Syracuse News, Society
Only

Each
,.,

, ,

"

,. , "

"· ....

! t jl t; , I I

1 I' I

'(.;l ll I

Wild mere
Brand

doz.
Marvel Homogenized Vlt. D

Carmel News,

•

By the Day

gallon
carton
Jane Parker

Marvel

00

$

20·01.

46•01.
cans

lvs.

CHERRY,

•

ORANGE,
GRAPE

'

(6-4).

PERFECI' WEEKEND
CANTON, Ohlo (UPI) - It
wu a perfect weekend lor
Lamar Hunt, an lnatrwnental
parUclpant In what he calls
"the g11111e, of our day."
Hunt, a founder of the
American Football League and
owner of the . Kansas Clty
'Cblefs, was Inducted Saturday
lnlo the Pro Football Hall of
Fame Jlri!JI' to the annual Hall
,~ F110e gmne; won thls year
117 the Ollefs, 23-17 over tht
New York Glant.l.

•

ISN'T HARD TO FIND
.
in the

•

Yellow
Pages

••
••

Iumbo

•

rolls

•

•

•
'

I

.t~SSN . )

You wiU receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaldng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

JUMBO
4 SIZE

i

•

article," says Jean Hart,
librarian at tlle Pomeroy unit.
"Even the bookmark we
produced and distributed
together is reproduced in living
color," adds Jane Bailey from
tlle Middleport library.
Jerry Grim, Di rector of
OVAL, is quoted in the article:
"Public libraries .play a large
part in the lives of the people in
Appalachian Ohio. Even those
who don't receive information
direcUy from the libraries get
it secondhand or benefit from
the activities that result from
information requested by
others."

~"'~ ~~~~~q~~_w*'~;..·mm;t.:f;~.r,""

Del 17-6; Perry, Clev 17-8;
Wooc, Ch i 16-11 ; Palmer, Ball

CINCINNATI (UP!)
Evonne Goolagong of Australia
Final S!Jiodlngs
turns 21 today at the 85th WestPomeroy Boys' LA!ague
em Tennis Championships in
Team
W. L. which she is tbe top-seeded
Tigers
10 2 woman.
Yankees
9 3
Miss Goolagong, who does
Giants
3 9 not meet her first-r ound oppoPirates
2 10 nent here until Tuesday, will be
guest of honor at a center court
birthday party tonight, completewitha chocolate cake, her
'
favorite .

DEAR POLLY- My mother-in-law gave me a

!i to wear more often but it sheds not only on my

8.

League :

·:;,,,+"'"'/ ··;"' -s·.:, Polly's Problem

~ beautiful hand n1ade angora stole that I would like '.

Phil 15-6; Nolan. Cin 13-2;
Jenkins. Chi 13-9; Torrez. Mont
and Cleveland. SI.L 12-5;
Sutton, LA 12-6; Seaver. NY 12·
American

Activities of Vilma Pikkoja
in connection with the recent
White House Conference on
A~ing are described in this
month'S issue of "Appalachia:
a .Journal of the Appalachian
Regional Commission."
In a 15 page article by
Cla udine Smith, editor for the
S!Jite Library of Ohio, library
ac'tivi ties throughout Appalachian Ohio are explained.
"The M eig~ Local School
District Library, a member of
OVAL (Ohio Valley Area
Libraries), is proud of the
national recognition of OVAL's
coo perative efforts in this

B.•· PULL\' l'll1\MER

League : Carlton,

Ree ds VIlle
• News
·
Notes

..t.IR....calqerJ U 2Ub.,INI.Wh). " . -

Newspl'inl-slailwd

MON. THRU SAT.
9 AM TO 9 PM

Major League Leader•

'

POU.Y'S POINTERS

Mrs. Marvin McKelvey sP.,nt
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh McPhail, and sons were a week at a Presbyterian
-catle!ltoGraltlln; W. Va . due lo Synod School at Wooster.
Mr. Bill Hysell of Colwnbus
the death of his father , Mr.
Hugh R. McPhail, on July 20. was here for tbe funeral of
i'llrs. Christena Grimm has Darrell Badgley at the Ewing
returned to her home after Funeral Home In Pomeroy .
Mrs . Ada Slack spent a
visiting her children in
weekend
in Freeport with her
Colwnbus.
Mr . and Mrs . Marvin son and daughter-in-law, Mr .
McKelvey spent a weekend in and Mrs. Elden Slack and
children . On Saturday she
Akron and Rittman.
Re&lt;:ent visitors at the James accompanied her son Elden to
Teaford home were Mr . and Sandyville where they visited
Mrs . Howard Teaford, of Mr . and Mrs. John Slack, and
Granville; Mr. and Mrs. John Mr . and Mrs. Robert Slack and
Rowe Jr. and son Shawn, of flllllily of Richville.
Mr. and Mrs. Elden Slack
Pennsylvania; and Mrs.
and
children left Monday
Frances Rowe, Donna and
evening for Camp Pendelton,
~ky, ol LA! tart Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gordon, of Calif.
Myla Hudson visited with her
Colwnbus visited her sister,
sisters and brothers-in-law,
Mrs. Oma HyselL
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Gerlach
Russell, of Middleport moved and Mr. and Mrs. William
in to their newly purchesed Brooks of LA!tart, W. Va.
home In the Rustle Hills Ad·
dillon . He is employed at
Kyger Creek Electric Plant.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Brown spent a weekend with
their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks of
Louisa, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. John Slack and
children of Sandyville, spent a
few days with his mother, Mrs,
Ada Slack, and her parents at
Rutland. They were enroute
home
after
attending
graduaUng exercises of his
brother, Elden (Gene) Slack at
the Marine Base at Parris
IBiand, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs . Terry Pierce,
Dean and Cheri, of Elyria
spent a weekend here witll his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Pierce and children . Mrs .
Pierce, Tony 'and Tina, accompanied them home for a
week's visit.
Mrs . Orville Crooks has
returned to Iter home from
Holzer Hospjlal.
Mrs. Terri Cozart of
Colwnbus . visited with her
parenis, Mr. and Mrs. Damon
Ferrell.
Mr. Bill Hysell and friend,
Jack Kanable, of Mansfield
spent a lew days with the
former's mother, Mrs. Oma
Hysell .
Mrs. Elden Slack, Suzanne,
and Philip and Gall Lee
Newnan, of Freeport, spent a
night with Ada Slack, enroute
to Parris lsland1S. C. to attend
the graduating exerCISes of
Elden Slack, from the U.S.
Marines.
Mr. and ~ra. Harold
Langltern, and son Johnny, of
Jacklon, Mich. spent from
Tuelday 111tll Friday with her
.·'•ter and btother-in-law, Mr.
and.Mn. Clinton Pierce, and
family 11H1 other relatlva.
If l

Wolfpen News, Notes
In the fa ll of '72ch ildren's shoes will be both rugge d and fashi onable. The you ng man's shoes (le ft ) o re
of rough oxblood lea the r and ore ankle -length- mode to toke any kind of kid abuse. H1s girl par tner' s
shoes toke to on serts of ru st, red and b rown in tough buck suede. Li ltl e girl 's fo sh1on ret urns to the clos ·
socs but on updated versoons. Seen (nghtl argy le- type plo1d, fr eshened by gold, green and mage nt a and
toppe d by a gold s h~rt and green Y-necked swea ter. Pl a ids aplenty in c uffed pan ts w1 th gold predom~not ­
'ng and p1nk and blue odd~ng a softer !'ate Comple ting the fosh1on scene motch1ng shoes, colors bright ened and layered to co mplement today s fos h1on look All shoes o re Educator Royals f rom Kinney Shoes.

~Vhat

to Wear Back to School

For Little Girls, Multiple Choice
. This fall little girls slep
mto fa shton feet first , rac ing
fnr shoes that are both pracNEW YORK - 1NEA 1 - tica l and fun to wear . Kin J ust as the new open class- ney 's new back-to-sc hool col·
rooms are a long way from lec tion, for example. makes
the little red schoolhouse. therapeutic-looking
h oo l
th ere is a new wide-open at- sho es in dull colorssclook
titude toward back-to-sc hool thing of lhe past. Inste ad.a
clothes. l n s t ea d of turnin g th ere are durable tie shoes
lo traditi o n a I classroom
colors to match her new
clothes, loday's little gi rl in
pants
looks. Old favorites
learn s early to do her own like penn
y loaf ers and
thing 1n the fas hion class. saddl e shoes
are upd ated
She has defi nite opinions for 1972 in fresh
colors an d
about what she likes to wear strea mlined styli ng.
Best of
and demand s multiple
c h o 1c e s mstead of fashion
rules.
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor

Children's wear designe rs
are taking cues from grawnup clo thes and sca ling them
down for youn g hig h fashio n.
The layered look of smocks.

Apple Grove News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Orville Harpold
of Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Shane and baby of Gallipolis
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Fox-and David.
Mrs . Joyce Badgely of
Fairfox, Va., and son Danny
returned home Sunday after a
week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner and David .
Christi Badgely remained for a
week 's visit with her grandparents, the Gloeckners.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst
and daughters, Julie Ann and
Judy Ann , of Gallipolis spent
Wednesday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Don Bell and Lorna.
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Gaskill
and children of Colwnbus spent
Sunday night at the cottage of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
Mrs. Enna Wilson spent
Sunday evening with her
brother, Chester VanMeter at
Morning Star , who was
recently .returned home from
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill

Bald Knobs News Notes

Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel Mission July
23 was 44. Offering was $10.
Mr. John Bailey Sr., Mr. and
Mrs . John Bailey Jr. of
Charleston visited Mrs. Nona
Long and Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Autherson
of Newark visited Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Autherson and other
relatives. While here Mrs.
Georgia Autherson fell and
broke her leg.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Autherson and Patricia, Mrs.
Elva Dailey ol Syracuse, Mrs.
VIolet Brewer and Bill, Mrs.
Freda Middleswart, local,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ozls Frederick
of Chester and Mr. and Mrs.
Jay Scott and . family of
Colwnbus visited Mrs. Sylvia
Carpenter.
Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter
visited her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Oris Frederick of
Chester.
Clint Birch and daughter
Leota, accompanied by Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Wallace of
Racine visited Mr. and. Mrs.
Thomas Birch and Randall at
Waterford and Mr. and Mrs.
George Roe at Malta.
Mrs. May Brewer and Mrs.
Esther Dalley are patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mra. Virgil Cozart
and family moved from Portland to thls commlltlty.
• Leota Birch visited Mr. and
Ml'l. Harold Rouah at Portlond
IIIII visited with frieDda Mr
and Mn. Robert Euler' and
family from Elkview, W. Va.,
ll1d Mr, and Mn. Heni-y Euler

all . the new lea thers are
treated to sta nd loi s of Iough
wea r with a minimum of pol·
ishin g.

of Hemlock Grove.

Mrs. Bernice Evans, Mrs .
Charles Warth and sons, Mrs .
Donald Runnel and son, Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger and daughter,
all of Pomeroy, Mrs. Betty
Ward, Kimberly, Diane and
Troy, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
Leota Birch, Mrs , Jill
Lawrence and Jeremy, Nicki
Van Meter, all local, visited
Mrs. Michael Evans and
family. They all helped
celebrate Cindy Evans' 7th
birthday. Afterward they went
swimming a I Forked Run
Lake.

Eag·Je Ridge
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Houck
were SUnday guests of l'!lr. and
Mrs. John Roee and daughters.
We are glad to report that
Christina Halley who has been
in Vete~s Memorial Hospital
Is home and recuperating
nicely.
Mrs. Emily Congrove of
Colwnbus was a recent house
guest ol Mrs. Phillp Houck for
several days.
.
Mr. and Mrs . Milford
Frederick and granddaughter,
Tina; were re&lt;:ent visitors of
relatives In Newport, Ky.
· SUnd1y School attendance at
Eagle Ridge on July 23 was 53

entertained Thursday in honor
of their daughter, Mrs. Jan
Norris, who was celebrating a
birthday . Attending were Mr.
and Mrs.- Marshall Roush and
son, Joey, Mrs . Dolly ·Wolf.,
Arl and Dean Hill and Darrell' ·
Norris.
Mrs. Cindy Winebrenner of
Columbus visited Saturday
with Mrs. Debbie Roush.
Burhl Wolfe and son Louie of
Columbus visited Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Wolfe and called on other
relatives.
Brice Hart of Racine Is
visiting with Keith Hayman .
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and children of LA!tart, W. Va.
Rt. , spent Thursday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman.
Mrs. Focie Hayman and son
Keith attended a birthday
party for Beth Ann Hart
Saturday afte rnoon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart at Racine.
Mrs . Ella Quillen and friend
of Syracuse, John Day and
George Fish of Gallipolis
visited Tuesday with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Otis
Russell of Mason, W. Va., spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Roush and
Roger. Sharon and Cindy
Roush and Jeff Miller also
visited the Roushes Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Marvin
Wickersham held a cookout
Tuesday evening in honor of
their son Jeff's eleventh birthday . A birthday cake was
presented Jeff by his grandmother, Mrs . Ferne B.
Hayman. Attending were
Mike, Vicki and Johnnie
ROiish, Dav,e and Rick Findley.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith Sr. over the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith Jr., and daughter Donna
of Millville, Pa . Donna
remained for a week's visit.
Also visiting the Smiths were
Mr: and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
and children Rodney Neigler
and Valerie Johnson of Racine.

and total collection was $27.29.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W.
Houck will leave August I for
ail extended vacation through
the Pacific Northwest and Into
NIH'thern Canada where they
will visit Mr. Houck'~ sisters.
Mr. and Mn. DOugl8s Circle
were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Tuttle SUnday.
Mr. and· Mrs. John Roae,
Julie, Mandie and Debbie
Mildau called on Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Houck recently.
Mrs. PhiUp Houck called on
Mrs. Charles Warner recently .
•

pinafores, vests and shortsleeved jac kels over bright
little blouses is one exam ple
of that kmd of t hi n k i n g.
Wide pants is anolher look
stolen from mother, complete with cuffs and. plea ted
fronts. With the new fash ion
freedom in the classroom
pants are so mething both
teacher and pupil ca n wear.
Girls will still be wearing
lots of dresses and skirts.
Some are in the classic ve in
but dune wilh such style and
im ag ination that we would
hardly recognize them . Cap-

sleeved dresses have the illusion of se p arates with
sleeves or yokes of a differen! fabric . Other dres ses
come with a p a t t e r ne d
shr ink sweater or vest. Long
dresses are tops for party
wear and often go to school ,
too . The bold plaid jumper
ts an all·t•m e favorite that
comes back again with a
smock or pinafore look .
The monochromatic look is
tops in fa s h i o n for both
mother and dau ghter. This
means one color from head
to toe with Jots of variety in
patterns, texture and fabric .
C o v e r in g up the young
fas hi on story are new wide
coats. In lhe bi ggest, bold·
est plaJds ever, they wrap up
snugly or swing free. Some
drop right down to the tops
of cozy fur-trimmed boots.

Friday evening guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin
and Mrs. Guy Sargent were and family spent a few days
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Eimer Bailey, Henry Eblin of Illinois.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sayre
Mrs. Skip Logan, Mr. George of Charleston, Mr. and Mrs.
Logan, Miss Bernice King, Mr. Charles Sayre and family of
and Mrs. Avery Logan, Seath Chester and Mr. and Mrs.
and Gary of Tapsham, Maine. William Sayre of Colwnbus
The group enjoyed homemade were Sunday visitors of their
ice cream during the evening. parents, Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Sayre.
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
Mr . and Mrs. .Donald
and Mrs. Norris Simms of Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Crown City and Charles Knapp Haggy of Akron were weekend
of Clifton, w. Va ., Mrs. Harold visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gillogly, Vicki and Bruce, Mr. RusselL
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
family of Albany, Mrs. Carrie of Colwnbus were weekend
Wears and Mrs. Helen John- visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
son.
Howard Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
family of Rutland were Sunday Kail, Charles and Kevin were
afternoon visitors of her Sunday visitors of Mr. and
parents , Mr . and Mrs. Howard Mrs. Charley Smith.
Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene ThompMr . and Mrs. Larry Barr and son and family were Sunday
P.lmily visited wit}) her visitors of Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
grandparents Sunday evening, Warner .
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy of
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts Akron, Mrs. Ronnie Russell ,
and son of King Hill were. daughter, visited Sunday with
Sunday afternoon visitors of their brother and husband, Mr .
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene Haning. Ronnie Russell stationed at
. .--llll!~llll!'!'!'•!"!!"!!'~F~ort Knox with the U. S. Army .

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLUH:
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,

(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSM .)

TOMORROW, AUGUST 1st
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

-

~~·---

-.

BARGAINS GALORE
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!
WATCH FOR YOUR BIG
16 PAGE VALUE-PACKED
.GRAND OPENING MAILER •
•

�•

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 1972

4- The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31, 1972

I.Jneecores
ly Unlltd Press lnterno1ionol

Natlona 1Leagw
list)
San Fran·
000 000 ooo- 0 8 2
Oncl
022 000 oox- • 8 o
Mar lchal, Moffi tt (5) , McMahon (7) and Rader ; Grlm slev
(t-•1 and Bench. LP - Marichal
(4-11) .
(2nd, 10 inns)
San Fran 000 010 000 s--'- 6 7 0
Clncl
.000 010 000 1)- 1 3 1
Barr (0) and Healy ; Hall ,
Carroll (9) and Bench. LPCarroll 14-l l. HR - Bonds
(161h) .
Montreal
000 100 ooo- 1 6 1
New York
000 100 11x- 3 7 0
Morton, Walker (5) and
Humphrey ; McAndrew. McGraw (1) and Dyer. WPMcGraw (4-4). LP-Morton (59). HR-Agee (6th).
(111)
Los Angeles 100 020 1oo- 4 9 2
Atlanta
330 600 02x- 14 12 0
Singer, Strahler W and
Cannizzaro; Reed, Upshaw (8)
and Williams. WP- Reed (9-10).
LP- Singer (4-9) .
Undl
Los Angeles 013 000 ooo- 4 13 4
Atlanta
000 101 JOx- 59 0
John, Brewer (7J and Dietz,
Cannizzaro (7); Stone, Jarvis

(51 , Hoerner (8) and Williams .
WP- Jarvls (9-4) . LP- Brewer
16-4). HR- Roblnson IIJihl.
Williams (17th) , Garr (6th).
Pitt
Phil

000 000 043- 7 12 0
000 000 1DO- 1 7 1

Klson (5-3)' and Sangulllen ;
Ler.sch, Selma (8) , Scarce (9)
and Bateman. LP-Lersch (1 .
41 . HR-Hebner (loth) .

(lsi)
St. Louis
000 000 ooo- o 6 2
Chicago
013 000 oox- 4 8 1
Durham, Bare (6), Drabow ·
sky (8) and Simmons; Reuschel
(4-41 and Hundley . LPDurham (0-3).
(2nd)
St. Louis
400 000 ooo- 4 10 1
Chicago
1to 100 02x- 5 9 2
Higgins, Cumberland (3),
Segul W, Grzenda 18) and
Simmons; Bonham , Phoebus
(7) , Aker (8) and Rudolph . WP
- Phoebus (3-3) . LP-Segui (21).

llsl, 14 Inns. l
San Diego
112 000 OJO 000 OJ-10 15 0
Houston
010 230 001 000 OD-7 11 2
Norman, Acoslo (51, Ross
(5) , _ Severlnsen (6). Schaeffer
18), Caldwell (81 and Kendall.
R'oberts (121 ; Richard, Culver
(3), Ray (6), Gladding (9),
York (12) , Griffin (14) and
Howard, Edwards (14) . WPCaldwell (4-A) . LP-York (0-1).
HR-Rader (16th), Roberts
(3rd).
2nd, 10 lnnsl
San
Diego 000
000 Ot1
102 000 ~
39 4
Houoton
010 1_ 4 8 1
Grell. Ross (8), Schaeffer
(10) and Blefary; ~oberlll (9-Sl
ond Edwords. LP-Ross (3-2) .

•

LEADING
Steel Profits
BATTERS
Un~er Squeeze

By Uni1ed Press lnfernationdl

Leading Batters

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Beginning Tuesday, it will btl
harder lor steel producers to
make a buck, ilccording to
Industry Week mag~zine .
Industry Week said today
employment
costs . for
producing a ton of steel mill
prod~!s will jwnp $6 because
of the Aug. I automatic in·
crease under the industry's
labor agreement with the
United Steelworkers of
America.
Last year, mills raised prices
to cover increased costs, but
this time they are voluntarily
committed to holding the price
line until the end of the year on
most of their products, Industry Week pointed out.
In the first year of the three
year labor contract that
became effective last Aug. 1,
the steel employment cost
increase in producing a ton of
finished steel was about $12.25.
The increase, and the one
calculaled for the year
beginning Tuesday are ba&lt;ied
on 1970 productivity data, the
magazine said.
·
Employment costs for the
steel industry in May, latest
month for which information is

National League

available, averaged $6.98 per
hour per worker. In addition to
wages, the figure covers

g. ab . r.' h. pel.
83 332 67 115 .346

Cdn, Hou
Wilms, Chi 95 378 61 128 .33'1
Mota,
LA 73 233 38 79 .339
pensions, insurance, supGarr,
All
349 58 115 .330
plemental unemployment Snglen, Pitt 86
89 341 3'1 112 .328
benefits , the non-payroll Baker, All 70 228 75 73 .320
portions of savings and Brock, St.L 93 398 49 126 .317
. St.L 85 328 39 104 .317
vacation plan costs, and legally Alou
Lee. SO
68 251 35 79 .315
required payroll taxes. The Olvr. Pitt 93 373 56 117 .314
American League
May figure is Sl.03 higher than
g . ab. r. h . pet.
that for July 1971, just before Pnll. KC 92
358 52 113 .316
the
three-year
labor Fisk, Bos 75 257 SO 81 .315
Shnblm, KC
agreement went into effect.
80 273 37 85 .311
. The employment cost in- Rudi, Oak 92
377 62 117 .310
crease In the year beginning Allen, Chi 95 325 60 100 .308
Tuesday will average around Otis, KC 88 333 46 102 .306
seven pd., or 50 cents per Berry, Cal 6/ 235 27 72 .306
manhour and will push the Carew, Minn
84 316 33 95 .301
totJII employment cost per hour Krkplrck, KC
69 226 32 68 .301
per worker to about $7.50,
Roja5,
KC
88 315 34 92 .292
Industry Week said.
Home Runs
The boost includes a general
National League: Colbert, SO
wage increase of 12.5 cents per 25 ; Bench , Cin 24 ,· Williams,
and Stargell. Pitt 22; May,
hour, a .4 · cent rise in in- Chi
Hou and Kingman. SF 21.
cremen Is between 33 job
American League: Allen. Chi
classes, and cost of living 25; Cash, Del and Jackson. Oak
20; Killebrew, Mlnn and Epallowances of one cent per hour stei
n, Oak 18.
for each .4 of a point increase in
Runs Batted In
Nationa I League : Bench, Cln
tlle government's conswner
price index on a quarterly 75 ; Stargell, Pitt 74 ; Williams,
Chi 69 ; Colbert, SO 68; May,
bosis .
Hou 66.
American League: Allen, Chi
Pensions also will be improved, with another paid 72; Jackson, Oak 59 ; Mayberry,
KC 56 ; Darwin, Minn and
holiday provided.
Bando, Oak 52.
Pitching
National

Yanks Win Final Game
The Yankees - runnerup in
season play - ended their
season on a winning note with a
surprising 9-3 win over the
champion Tigers in Pomeroy
Boys' LA!ague action Saturday.
Randy Phillips pitched the
distance for Coach Woody
Call's Yankees, fanning three
and walked none. Bob McClure
had five strikeouts and walked
two in pitching a fine game for
the Tigers.
Greg Smith and Steve Call
each had a single and double in
pacing the Yanks at the plate.
Other hitters were Steve Little
with two singles, Phillips a
triple, Mark Norton a double,

and Del Call, Gene Ownphreys, and Tim Hood each a
single.
Hitters for the Tigers were
McCIIU'e, Rich Johnson, Randy
Marshall, and Dave Balke each
a single.
Tigers
200 100-3 4
Yankees
120 06x-9 9
McClure and Browning.
Phillips and Little.

.-

·

.

•

Raineoat Is UniCJlll~
DEAR POLLY- Do lell C.B .. whose raincoat is siaim·d
With newsprml. that many an invention or des ign has
stemm ed from misfortune or error. What a conversati on
p1ece to h_ave a raincoat with newsprint marks in selected
·areas or m an allove•· pattern! - MRS . G. P.
DEAR GIRLS-Mrs. G. P.'s suggesllon remindt•d mt•
of my white silk-looking umbrella that Is printed all over
like pages from a newspaper. It alwa•·s attracts attention
and lnterest.-POLL \'
·

..

CLOSED

~, .

;r.

il

SUNDAY

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
Prices Good Thru Tues., Aug. tst."" '

~

clothing but on that of anyone who happens ·to brush ,
agamst 1t m passmg. I do hope some reader has a
, solution for this " hairy" problem .- LEE
DEAR POLLY -1 feel sure there must be at least a
million mothers who would back me up in my Pet Peeve.
Why can't children 's thermos bottle fillers be made of
an unbreakable mat~rial, such as used in thermo-cups,
Jugs, etc ? The glass f11lers sm.ash so easily when dropped.
As we live m a rural area thiS often means a long drive
to the store. I would also like to see plastic. used for
making lunch boxes as the hinges and locks rust so
easily and fall apart. l do hope someone will ~elp us
poor frustrated mothers.-MRS. A. D. B.
DEAR POLLY -1 have a
Pointer for the lady who
has trouble meas urin g teaspoons of salt when pouring it from the entire package . I always keep some Si##=;::;i~~
salt in an empty baking i
powder can and use the
half-circle of cardboard at
the top to level off a teaspoonful. My can is covered with pretty adhesivebacked paper and I enjoy
having this handy sa lt container on my spice shelLMRS. L. J . B.

lolich,

DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is for those expec tant
mothers who cannot find good-fitting panty hose. Take
an old pa~r ,c ut a V-shape out of the front top , rip the
front seam m a new pair down about three inches and
insert the V-shaped piece in the ope n seam to have instant maternity panty hose.-PAT

and Hunter, Oa k 13-4: Holtz-

man, Oak 13-9.

Goolagong
Top-Seeded

:- " ... Amtrl&amp; L'H ue • ~-~ -· ''l'iet'alit'%iiiiii'i-i.r'!Wr¥.1!rsplliitseverar . ayS"'i:!ffi"Mrt -··;~';:n!:"1!:'6-t:::~
(11
La rkin s were Mrs. Dons
· I.e na PIckenng.
·
K CInns) 000 0 0 0 oo- 3
tlle 1959 Wimbledon champion '
calli
Michael Martin of Alexan- meeting Jim Delaney the 1972
000 on 2 ~ 01 _ 4 l~ ~ Marks of ·Chester, Mr. and
He d 1u n d, Burgmeler (7), Mrs. James E. Caruthers and dria, Va., spent a week witll his Amateur runnerup. '
WFrtlght (7), Abernathy (8), Penny of Louisville, Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Other matches Include No 1
I
zmorrls
(10)
and
KlrkpaE
it
C
of
C
1
b
G
t
B
·
d
M'k
1
0 wn us,
Irick; Messersmith, Barber (7J,
m Y ongrove
ran ormg an . . ~men's seed Jim Connors ·of
Allen 18l and Torborg, Hiatt Mrs. Dana Houck of Bashan,
Mr. and Mrs. B11l W1ll1ams of Belleville, Ill., opposing Ken
181. WP-AIIen (3-ll . LP- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Smitll of Athens, Ga., were recent McMillan of McAllen Tex.
Fitzmorris (2-41. HR-OIIver Laurelville • Mrs · Jerry visitors at the WilliamsSeeded secon d beh~md M'1ss
(13th).
Courson and daughter, Balderson home. .
Goolagong the Wimbledon
list Gomol
Patricia of Clrclevill~ and Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pooler of runnerup w'oo lost the Bonne
Mllw
000 110 001)- 26 1 and M~s. Wayne Harmon of Pomeroy R. D., and Mr. and Bell Cup finals Sunday at
Cleve
000 100 002-3 11 o
Mrs. Sexson Demaree and Cleveland to Chris Evert was
Stephenson, Linzy (8) and Laurev11le.
Mrs.
George
Arnold
of
family
of Pomeroy R.d. were Linda Tuero of Metaire' La.
Rodriguez; Wilcox , Rlddlebergor W. Farmer (71, Hennigan Northridge, Calif., and Mr~ . T. visitors at tlle home of Mr. and Margaret Court, Austr~lia's
(8) and Fosse. WP- Hennlgan S. Mul1tauaopele of San D1ego Mrs_. D.ohrman Reed and second-ranked "!.oman, is
(2.1). LP- Linzy (2-21. HRfam1ly.
seeded third and Pa t
Scott (11th I, McCraw (4th) .
Mrs. Helen Archer visited Pretorius, No. 1 ~anked woman
(2nd Gomo)
with Mr. and Mrs. Milton player in Soutll Africa, is
Mllw
000 010 ooo- 1 6 4
Tuttle
of Chester recently.
seeded fourth .
Cleve
120 003 oox- 6 9 0
Reynolds, Bell (7) and
Jean Whitehead spent the
No. 2 men's seed is Patrick
Felske ; Hilgendorf 11-0l and
weekend
witll
a
friend
at
Proisy
of France; third is Dick
Moses. LP- Reynolds (0-1) .
Medina.
Stockton of Port Washington,
Chicago
000 000 ooo- o 6 1
Sgt. and Mrs . J . M. Crary N.Y., the 1972 NCAA champ,
Mlnn
000 001 OOx- 1 5o
Visiling recently with Mr. and family of Florida were and Bob Hewitt, South Africa's
Wood, Acosta (81 and Herrmann ; Perry (9-9) and Borg- family of Pomeroy R.D., were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Reed top-ranked player, is seeded
mann. LP- Wood (16-11) . HR- Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson and Crary and Mr. and-Mrs. Grant fourth.
KIIIebrew (i 8th) .
family of Colwnbus, Mr. and · Smith and family. .
Neither Stan Smitll nor VirMrs
Frank
Hudson
and
Toni
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bowm
Vorys
of
ginia
Wade, the 1971 singles
llsll
Boston
011 101 ooo- 4 9 o Mr ..and Mrs. Gene Hudson of Pleasantville were weekend chlllllpions, returned to defend
Detroit
111 000 ooo- 3 7 0 Racine and Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold their titles.
McGlothen, Lee (8J, NeThe tourney at the Queen
'whau!ll!r (9) and Fisk ; Seel - Shelby Pickens and family of E. Cowdery·
- Mrs. L. Balderson City Racquet Club continues
bach, Coleman (6J, Zachary Syracuse.
(1), Hiller (9) and Freehan. WP
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Harris,
FRUIT BOWL
through Sunday.
- McGlothen (4-3) . LP- Seel ·
bach (7.6) . HR-G . Brown Debbie, DeAnn, Mr. and Mrs.
BASIC ITEMS
(&amp;lh).
David Harris of Xenia spent
Apples. bananas. oranges
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. are some of the bastes of the
SETS RECORD
(2ndl
Boston
001 010 ooo- 2 11 2 Homer Circle, Verna and fru it bowl. Seasonal newcom- . GREENVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
Detroit
100 114 oox- 7 11 0 Wavie Circle.
ers add novelty and variety . . - Lorene Thomas of Lockport,
· Tlant, Curtis (6). Krausse (7)
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Apples have sometimes been N. Y., set a new women's
and Montgomery ; Nlekro (3-2) Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl called "nature's toothbrush"
.
and Hailer. LP- Tiant 14-4).
because they have a gentle qua l'f
' ymg
recor d during
HR-G. Brown (7th).
l.eAnn, were guests of Mr. and scrubbing eflect on the teeth weekend qualifying for the
New York
000 000 ooo- 0 3 0 Mrs. Clyde John and daughter as they are eaten . Their Juicy World Horseshoe Tournament
Baltimore 200 001 02x- 5 8 1 of Hamden a recent Sunday. appeal is great when doing here.
Kllmkowskl, McDaniel (7)
Mr . and Mrs. William a chore around the house. or
Mrs. Thomas totaled 261
and Munson ; Cuellar (10-8) and Carleton of Racine, Betty Van when the children are study- points, six points better than
Hendricks. LP- KIImkowskl (0- Meter, Patrie, Sheryl LA!Ann ing. OJ' watching TV . Bananas th
rd t . h
1) . HR- Powell (12th ).
.
are a great American favor e reco se e1g t years ago
Johnson, spent a rece nt itc. Peel and eat. Couldn't be by Sue Gillespie of Portland,
(lSI)
evening
with Eunie Brinker. easier. Children love to eat Ind. Mrs. Thomas also erased
Texas
100 000 001- 2 10 1
Circle of New Haven oranges that have been cut Miss Gillespie's record of
James
Oakland
000 001 ooo- t 8 1.
called
at
the home of Mary In four so they can &lt;avor the double ringers with 36, lwo
Bosman , Lindblad (6) and
Fahey ; Ddom, Locker (9) and Clrcle on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Juicy fruit inside. There's more than the old mark.
Duncan . WP- Lindblad (4-41 . Melvin Circle and family great fun and great nutrition Women's competition is .
LP-Qdom (9-3) .
returned to Columbus on In these frui ts tha t are based
among the richest sources of
on 100 shoes and men's
(lnd)
Sunday .
•·ltamtn "C".
on 200 shoes.
Texas
110 000 20D- 4 9 1
Oakland
200 000 ooo- 2 6 o
Stanhouse, Pina (9) and
Billings; Hamilton, Fingers (71 ,
Locker (8) and Tenoce. WPStonhouse (1 -2 ). LP- Hamllton

DEAR POLLY - When visiting a hospital. wear softsoled shoes. or tho se with •·quiet" heels. Many people
do not reahze how di stractin g the click-click of heels
gomg up and down unca rpeted corridors ca n be to many
pallents .-SHIRLEY
( l\lfWSP.A.PIR ENTUPRISE

Syracuse News, Society
Only

Each
,.,

, ,

"

,. , "

"· ....

! t jl t; , I I

1 I' I

'(.;l ll I

Wild mere
Brand

doz.
Marvel Homogenized Vlt. D

Carmel News,

•

By the Day

gallon
carton
Jane Parker

Marvel

00

$

20·01.

46•01.
cans

lvs.

CHERRY,

•

ORANGE,
GRAPE

'

(6-4).

PERFECI' WEEKEND
CANTON, Ohlo (UPI) - It
wu a perfect weekend lor
Lamar Hunt, an lnatrwnental
parUclpant In what he calls
"the g11111e, of our day."
Hunt, a founder of the
American Football League and
owner of the . Kansas Clty
'Cblefs, was Inducted Saturday
lnlo the Pro Football Hall of
Fame Jlri!JI' to the annual Hall
,~ F110e gmne; won thls year
117 the Ollefs, 23-17 over tht
New York Glant.l.

•

ISN'T HARD TO FIND
.
in the

•

Yellow
Pages

••
••

Iumbo

•

rolls

•

•

•
'

I

.t~SSN . )

You wiU receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaldng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

JUMBO
4 SIZE

i

•

article," says Jean Hart,
librarian at tlle Pomeroy unit.
"Even the bookmark we
produced and distributed
together is reproduced in living
color," adds Jane Bailey from
tlle Middleport library.
Jerry Grim, Di rector of
OVAL, is quoted in the article:
"Public libraries .play a large
part in the lives of the people in
Appalachian Ohio. Even those
who don't receive information
direcUy from the libraries get
it secondhand or benefit from
the activities that result from
information requested by
others."

~"'~ ~~~~~q~~_w*'~;..·mm;t.:f;~.r,""

Del 17-6; Perry, Clev 17-8;
Wooc, Ch i 16-11 ; Palmer, Ball

CINCINNATI (UP!)
Evonne Goolagong of Australia
Final S!Jiodlngs
turns 21 today at the 85th WestPomeroy Boys' LA!ague
em Tennis Championships in
Team
W. L. which she is tbe top-seeded
Tigers
10 2 woman.
Yankees
9 3
Miss Goolagong, who does
Giants
3 9 not meet her first-r ound oppoPirates
2 10 nent here until Tuesday, will be
guest of honor at a center court
birthday party tonight, completewitha chocolate cake, her
'
favorite .

DEAR POLLY- My mother-in-law gave me a

!i to wear more often but it sheds not only on my

8.

League :

·:;,,,+"'"'/ ··;"' -s·.:, Polly's Problem

~ beautiful hand n1ade angora stole that I would like '.

Phil 15-6; Nolan. Cin 13-2;
Jenkins. Chi 13-9; Torrez. Mont
and Cleveland. SI.L 12-5;
Sutton, LA 12-6; Seaver. NY 12·
American

Activities of Vilma Pikkoja
in connection with the recent
White House Conference on
A~ing are described in this
month'S issue of "Appalachia:
a .Journal of the Appalachian
Regional Commission."
In a 15 page article by
Cla udine Smith, editor for the
S!Jite Library of Ohio, library
ac'tivi ties throughout Appalachian Ohio are explained.
"The M eig~ Local School
District Library, a member of
OVAL (Ohio Valley Area
Libraries), is proud of the
national recognition of OVAL's
coo perative efforts in this

B.•· PULL\' l'll1\MER

League : Carlton,

Ree ds VIlle
• News
·
Notes

..t.IR....calqerJ U 2Ub.,INI.Wh). " . -

Newspl'inl-slailwd

MON. THRU SAT.
9 AM TO 9 PM

Major League Leader•

'

POU.Y'S POINTERS

Mrs. Marvin McKelvey sP.,nt
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh McPhail, and sons were a week at a Presbyterian
-catle!ltoGraltlln; W. Va . due lo Synod School at Wooster.
Mr. Bill Hysell of Colwnbus
the death of his father , Mr.
Hugh R. McPhail, on July 20. was here for tbe funeral of
i'llrs. Christena Grimm has Darrell Badgley at the Ewing
returned to her home after Funeral Home In Pomeroy .
Mrs . Ada Slack spent a
visiting her children in
weekend
in Freeport with her
Colwnbus.
Mr . and Mrs . Marvin son and daughter-in-law, Mr .
McKelvey spent a weekend in and Mrs. Elden Slack and
children . On Saturday she
Akron and Rittman.
Re&lt;:ent visitors at the James accompanied her son Elden to
Teaford home were Mr . and Sandyville where they visited
Mrs . Howard Teaford, of Mr . and Mrs. John Slack, and
Granville; Mr. and Mrs. John Mr . and Mrs. Robert Slack and
Rowe Jr. and son Shawn, of flllllily of Richville.
Mr. and Mrs. Elden Slack
Pennsylvania; and Mrs.
and
children left Monday
Frances Rowe, Donna and
evening for Camp Pendelton,
~ky, ol LA! tart Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gordon, of Calif.
Myla Hudson visited with her
Colwnbus visited her sister,
sisters and brothers-in-law,
Mrs. Oma HyselL
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Gerlach
Russell, of Middleport moved and Mr. and Mrs. William
in to their newly purchesed Brooks of LA!tart, W. Va.
home In the Rustle Hills Ad·
dillon . He is employed at
Kyger Creek Electric Plant.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Brown spent a weekend with
their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks of
Louisa, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. John Slack and
children of Sandyville, spent a
few days with his mother, Mrs,
Ada Slack, and her parents at
Rutland. They were enroute
home
after
attending
graduaUng exercises of his
brother, Elden (Gene) Slack at
the Marine Base at Parris
IBiand, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs . Terry Pierce,
Dean and Cheri, of Elyria
spent a weekend here witll his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Pierce and children . Mrs .
Pierce, Tony 'and Tina, accompanied them home for a
week's visit.
Mrs . Orville Crooks has
returned to Iter home from
Holzer Hospjlal.
Mrs. Terri Cozart of
Colwnbus . visited with her
parenis, Mr. and Mrs. Damon
Ferrell.
Mr. Bill Hysell and friend,
Jack Kanable, of Mansfield
spent a lew days with the
former's mother, Mrs. Oma
Hysell .
Mrs. Elden Slack, Suzanne,
and Philip and Gall Lee
Newnan, of Freeport, spent a
night with Ada Slack, enroute
to Parris lsland1S. C. to attend
the graduating exerCISes of
Elden Slack, from the U.S.
Marines.
Mr. and ~ra. Harold
Langltern, and son Johnny, of
Jacklon, Mich. spent from
Tuelday 111tll Friday with her
.·'•ter and btother-in-law, Mr.
and.Mn. Clinton Pierce, and
family 11H1 other relatlva.
If l

Wolfpen News, Notes
In the fa ll of '72ch ildren's shoes will be both rugge d and fashi onable. The you ng man's shoes (le ft ) o re
of rough oxblood lea the r and ore ankle -length- mode to toke any kind of kid abuse. H1s girl par tner' s
shoes toke to on serts of ru st, red and b rown in tough buck suede. Li ltl e girl 's fo sh1on ret urns to the clos ·
socs but on updated versoons. Seen (nghtl argy le- type plo1d, fr eshened by gold, green and mage nt a and
toppe d by a gold s h~rt and green Y-necked swea ter. Pl a ids aplenty in c uffed pan ts w1 th gold predom~not ­
'ng and p1nk and blue odd~ng a softer !'ate Comple ting the fosh1on scene motch1ng shoes, colors bright ened and layered to co mplement today s fos h1on look All shoes o re Educator Royals f rom Kinney Shoes.

~Vhat

to Wear Back to School

For Little Girls, Multiple Choice
. This fall little girls slep
mto fa shton feet first , rac ing
fnr shoes that are both pracNEW YORK - 1NEA 1 - tica l and fun to wear . Kin J ust as the new open class- ney 's new back-to-sc hool col·
rooms are a long way from lec tion, for example. makes
the little red schoolhouse. therapeutic-looking
h oo l
th ere is a new wide-open at- sho es in dull colorssclook
titude toward back-to-sc hool thing of lhe past. Inste ad.a
clothes. l n s t ea d of turnin g th ere are durable tie shoes
lo traditi o n a I classroom
colors to match her new
clothes, loday's little gi rl in
pants
looks. Old favorites
learn s early to do her own like penn
y loaf ers and
thing 1n the fas hion class. saddl e shoes
are upd ated
She has defi nite opinions for 1972 in fresh
colors an d
about what she likes to wear strea mlined styli ng.
Best of
and demand s multiple
c h o 1c e s mstead of fashion
rules.
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor

Children's wear designe rs
are taking cues from grawnup clo thes and sca ling them
down for youn g hig h fashio n.
The layered look of smocks.

Apple Grove News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Orville Harpold
of Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Shane and baby of Gallipolis
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Fox-and David.
Mrs . Joyce Badgely of
Fairfox, Va., and son Danny
returned home Sunday after a
week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner and David .
Christi Badgely remained for a
week 's visit with her grandparents, the Gloeckners.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst
and daughters, Julie Ann and
Judy Ann , of Gallipolis spent
Wednesday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Don Bell and Lorna.
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Gaskill
and children of Colwnbus spent
Sunday night at the cottage of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
Mrs. Enna Wilson spent
Sunday evening with her
brother, Chester VanMeter at
Morning Star , who was
recently .returned home from
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill

Bald Knobs News Notes

Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel Mission July
23 was 44. Offering was $10.
Mr. John Bailey Sr., Mr. and
Mrs . John Bailey Jr. of
Charleston visited Mrs. Nona
Long and Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Autherson
of Newark visited Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Autherson and other
relatives. While here Mrs.
Georgia Autherson fell and
broke her leg.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Autherson and Patricia, Mrs.
Elva Dailey ol Syracuse, Mrs.
VIolet Brewer and Bill, Mrs.
Freda Middleswart, local,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ozls Frederick
of Chester and Mr. and Mrs.
Jay Scott and . family of
Colwnbus visited Mrs. Sylvia
Carpenter.
Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter
visited her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Oris Frederick of
Chester.
Clint Birch and daughter
Leota, accompanied by Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Wallace of
Racine visited Mr. and. Mrs.
Thomas Birch and Randall at
Waterford and Mr. and Mrs.
George Roe at Malta.
Mrs. May Brewer and Mrs.
Esther Dalley are patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mra. Virgil Cozart
and family moved from Portland to thls commlltlty.
• Leota Birch visited Mr. and
Ml'l. Harold Rouah at Portlond
IIIII visited with frieDda Mr
and Mn. Robert Euler' and
family from Elkview, W. Va.,
ll1d Mr, and Mn. Heni-y Euler

all . the new lea thers are
treated to sta nd loi s of Iough
wea r with a minimum of pol·
ishin g.

of Hemlock Grove.

Mrs. Bernice Evans, Mrs .
Charles Warth and sons, Mrs .
Donald Runnel and son, Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger and daughter,
all of Pomeroy, Mrs. Betty
Ward, Kimberly, Diane and
Troy, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
Leota Birch, Mrs , Jill
Lawrence and Jeremy, Nicki
Van Meter, all local, visited
Mrs. Michael Evans and
family. They all helped
celebrate Cindy Evans' 7th
birthday. Afterward they went
swimming a I Forked Run
Lake.

Eag·Je Ridge
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Houck
were SUnday guests of l'!lr. and
Mrs. John Roee and daughters.
We are glad to report that
Christina Halley who has been
in Vete~s Memorial Hospital
Is home and recuperating
nicely.
Mrs. Emily Congrove of
Colwnbus was a recent house
guest ol Mrs. Phillp Houck for
several days.
.
Mr. and Mrs . Milford
Frederick and granddaughter,
Tina; were re&lt;:ent visitors of
relatives In Newport, Ky.
· SUnd1y School attendance at
Eagle Ridge on July 23 was 53

entertained Thursday in honor
of their daughter, Mrs. Jan
Norris, who was celebrating a
birthday . Attending were Mr.
and Mrs.- Marshall Roush and
son, Joey, Mrs . Dolly ·Wolf.,
Arl and Dean Hill and Darrell' ·
Norris.
Mrs. Cindy Winebrenner of
Columbus visited Saturday
with Mrs. Debbie Roush.
Burhl Wolfe and son Louie of
Columbus visited Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Wolfe and called on other
relatives.
Brice Hart of Racine Is
visiting with Keith Hayman .
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and children of LA!tart, W. Va.
Rt. , spent Thursday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman.
Mrs. Focie Hayman and son
Keith attended a birthday
party for Beth Ann Hart
Saturday afte rnoon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart at Racine.
Mrs . Ella Quillen and friend
of Syracuse, John Day and
George Fish of Gallipolis
visited Tuesday with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Otis
Russell of Mason, W. Va., spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Roush and
Roger. Sharon and Cindy
Roush and Jeff Miller also
visited the Roushes Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Marvin
Wickersham held a cookout
Tuesday evening in honor of
their son Jeff's eleventh birthday . A birthday cake was
presented Jeff by his grandmother, Mrs . Ferne B.
Hayman. Attending were
Mike, Vicki and Johnnie
ROiish, Dav,e and Rick Findley.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith Sr. over the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith Jr., and daughter Donna
of Millville, Pa . Donna
remained for a week's visit.
Also visiting the Smiths were
Mr: and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
and children Rodney Neigler
and Valerie Johnson of Racine.

and total collection was $27.29.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W.
Houck will leave August I for
ail extended vacation through
the Pacific Northwest and Into
NIH'thern Canada where they
will visit Mr. Houck'~ sisters.
Mr. and Mn. DOugl8s Circle
were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Tuttle SUnday.
Mr. and· Mrs. John Roae,
Julie, Mandie and Debbie
Mildau called on Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Houck recently.
Mrs. PhiUp Houck called on
Mrs. Charles Warner recently .
•

pinafores, vests and shortsleeved jac kels over bright
little blouses is one exam ple
of that kmd of t hi n k i n g.
Wide pants is anolher look
stolen from mother, complete with cuffs and. plea ted
fronts. With the new fash ion
freedom in the classroom
pants are so mething both
teacher and pupil ca n wear.
Girls will still be wearing
lots of dresses and skirts.
Some are in the classic ve in
but dune wilh such style and
im ag ination that we would
hardly recognize them . Cap-

sleeved dresses have the illusion of se p arates with
sleeves or yokes of a differen! fabric . Other dres ses
come with a p a t t e r ne d
shr ink sweater or vest. Long
dresses are tops for party
wear and often go to school ,
too . The bold plaid jumper
ts an all·t•m e favorite that
comes back again with a
smock or pinafore look .
The monochromatic look is
tops in fa s h i o n for both
mother and dau ghter. This
means one color from head
to toe with Jots of variety in
patterns, texture and fabric .
C o v e r in g up the young
fas hi on story are new wide
coats. In lhe bi ggest, bold·
est plaJds ever, they wrap up
snugly or swing free. Some
drop right down to the tops
of cozy fur-trimmed boots.

Friday evening guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin
and Mrs. Guy Sargent were and family spent a few days
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Eimer Bailey, Henry Eblin of Illinois.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sayre
Mrs. Skip Logan, Mr. George of Charleston, Mr. and Mrs.
Logan, Miss Bernice King, Mr. Charles Sayre and family of
and Mrs. Avery Logan, Seath Chester and Mr. and Mrs.
and Gary of Tapsham, Maine. William Sayre of Colwnbus
The group enjoyed homemade were Sunday visitors of their
ice cream during the evening. parents, Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Sayre.
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
Mr . and Mrs. .Donald
and Mrs. Norris Simms of Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Crown City and Charles Knapp Haggy of Akron were weekend
of Clifton, w. Va ., Mrs. Harold visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gillogly, Vicki and Bruce, Mr. RusselL
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
family of Albany, Mrs. Carrie of Colwnbus were weekend
Wears and Mrs. Helen John- visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
son.
Howard Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
family of Rutland were Sunday Kail, Charles and Kevin were
afternoon visitors of her Sunday visitors of Mr. and
parents , Mr . and Mrs. Howard Mrs. Charley Smith.
Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene ThompMr . and Mrs. Larry Barr and son and family were Sunday
P.lmily visited wit}) her visitors of Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
grandparents Sunday evening, Warner .
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy of
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts Akron, Mrs. Ronnie Russell ,
and son of King Hill were. daughter, visited Sunday with
Sunday afternoon visitors of their brother and husband, Mr .
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene Haning. Ronnie Russell stationed at
. .--llll!~llll!'!'!'•!"!!"!!'~F~ort Knox with the U. S. Army .

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLUH:
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,

(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSM .)

TOMORROW, AUGUST 1st
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

-

~~·---

-.

BARGAINS GALORE
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!
WATCH FOR YOUR BIG
16 PAGE VALUE-PACKED
.GRAND OPENING MAILER •
•

�(

.. .

.

~

'· "

)

'\ .

,,0

,

•

6 - The Daily Sen!inel, Middlep:&gt;rt-Pomcroy, 0., July 31, 19'/2
\"'

l

'••
•
!
'\

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clt!ssifieds Get Results!.
Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGNS
Of

\

\

'•

DUALITY

•••
''I

$379s'

4-door, 350 v.a, factory air, turbo hydramatic, po~er
steeri ng , power brakes. gulf.green color, w~th green vrnyl
roof vinyl interior trim , radto, white wal l ftres, full wheel
cov~rs, bumper gua rds, and al l the extras . Low ":~ileage,
factory sticker, 241 .

.,
r

•••

..•
t.·

!t69 CHEV. KINOSWOOD ST. WAGON

!
(•

·/

II '

'·
,,,,.•I...
I •

•
••I .
~

.J

••'"'•

L

WILL DO welding alter 5 p.m.
and weekends.

;I'

OLD Furniture, oak tables.
Write M, D. Miller , Rt . 4,
Pomeroy. 011io. Ca ll 992-6271.
6·28·1fc

WANT ADS

INFORMATION

Sea led bid s will be r ece ived
M eigs

Loc"l

Schoo l

District BoBrd of Education at

their office In the Meigs. Junior
High Sc hool Building, Mid·
dleport, Ohio, for passeng er

sc hool buses until 12 : 00 o'cloc k
on August 7. 1972. acc ord ing to
spec if ications of sa id Boa rd of

7-18-1 2tp

organ s, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or comp lete households.

LEGAL NOTICE

the

place ;

Wanted To Buy

--~~--~~~--=-~ ,

by

any

phone 992·5271.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~PMEROY, OHIO

•

co ntain ed, awning, pi cn ic - - - - - - - - - e.cellen f Mob~e
condition. $1.550 ; reason for

}

. , DEADt.INES

Pom eroy, Phone 992·3891 .

7-30·3fc

REGULATIONS

The Pub l is her reser ves the SE T of cult ivbtors for Far mall
r ight to ecm or r ejec t any ads.
A tractor , old style; Russell
Education . Separate and in · deemed
objectional.
The
Cline , Long Bottom, phone
dependent b ids will be receiv ed
985-3534_
w ith respect to the chassis and publ iShEtf wi II no t be resp onsib le
body ty pe, and will state that for m o~ than one . incorrect
7·28-3tc
the buses. when assembled and insertion .
prior to delivery, comply with

all

schoo l

district

specifications, and all safety
r egu lat ions and current Ohio
Minimum Standards lor School

Real Estate For Sale

P.M . Day Before Publica t iort. MINIBIKE or go-cart in good COAL, Limestone, Excelsior 2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
condition ; Ralph Trussell ;
Salt Works, E. Main Sf..
phone 949·5884.

RATES

•For Wan' Ad Service

.5 cen ts per Word one insertion

MARINE SALES

M inimum Charge 7Sc ..
1
12 cents per word three l8 1:1 FT. fibre glass boat with
1970 lOS h .p. Chrysler motor
consecut ive insertloris.
w ith all equipment complete.
18 ce n Is per ' word six con .
sec uti \le Insertions. ,
$2,500; ca n finance; ca ll 99225 Per Cent Discount on paid
2720 or 992·3589.
ads and ads paid with in 10 days
7·30-3tc

Dozer

&amp;

End loader work

ponds, basement , land.
scaping . We have 2 5ile
dozers, 2 siie loaders. Work
done . by hour
or contract.
.
Free · Eshmales . We also .

.

·haul fill dirt, top,soit. Dump .
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
se lling , bu ying
larg er AIR-CONDITIONED
mobile
after ·7 p.m. or phone 992trailer. See at 702 - 4th St , home and lot, $3,500 ; phone
.
5ll2.
New Haven or phone Jini
992-5786.
Roush 882-2843.
7·30·6tc
7·30-21p - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOR THE BEST dea l in a new SE WING MACHINE serv ice.
clean, oi l , s~t tension $4.99 .
or used mobile home. try
Spec ia l E'lectro · Grande
BOAT, motor , trail er and acKanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Company. Phone 992-6517.
cessories, $300 as is; may be
Kanouga, Of11o.
5-21·1fr
seen at 394 South Sixth.
7.J6.301c
Middleport or phone 992·7375.
PAPER hanging ; interior anu
1·2l·6tc

~~-=-----:-c­

Car.ce llat lon - Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . tor.
Day of PIJblication

4·12·tfc

- -- -- -

257 1 or 992-3975.

1·1 3·1fc

Zag sew ing machine . Th is
machine o11ercasts, darns, RACINE- 6 room house, bath ,
utility room, garage, $10 ,000 ;
embroideries with just a turn

of lhe dial. Pa y balance of ~. hone 949.4195.
$44.5() or pay $6.21 a month.
3·31 -lfc
Phone 992-5331.
--------7-20-ttc ·LOTS on Wright Street.
Pomeroy ; phone 742-5937.

7-18- 12fc

- - -- -- -

- - -- - For Rent

~==========­

We specialize In aluminum,

vinyl and

complete line of reslaei'fllal
and commercial ·roofing ;
rem od el i ng. .. building,
suspended ceilings, interior
and e,xter lor
pain t ing ;
complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
t~.Jstomer satisfaction. 1 We
are fully insured for your

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

AR:NOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Musser. phone 742 -5223.
7-18-30tp

i

•

ALL THREE
WISHES!!

GLORI( BE !!
'IE OUGHT "1'0 WR IT€
THAT UP FER TH'
HOOTIN' HOLLER
GAZETTE

ASK 'THE

CAt.JDiDATE.
A QJESTIQI.J

662 -3035.

2·12-tfc

CLELAND
REALTY

CAI-JDIDATE
A 4X.]ESTION
7. 31

.•

'IOU WONf FIND
PEOPL£ OUR

so FOOI..ISI+.

DO VOU EVER GET
T~E

Pomeroy Home &amp;· Auto

eEE LING

T~Ev 'RE

ALbT~U\IBS ~

Open8Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

WA'ISHTING
1HEIR LIVESH

ON DRIA65 .
NEVEIZ
~lNG.

f"NJL., ltJSTEAO OF SfT'rlN&amp;
,AI2CIJN(7 1He.- ~'
DON'r YaJ F!ZAcTTCE
EV'RY YEAR IT

~Billl

Pullins. Phone 992-2478,
4·25·ffC

2966.

6-15.tfc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes . 992-2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Serv ice. We Sharpen Scissors

3·29-tfc

HM-50WHATI
DOMATTERSA
LOTTO YOU'?

GETS - I'UC~.'­

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

Septic tank s instal led . Geor~e

opera tor 's license? Cal l 992 ·

5-21 -lfc

JS.55

~THE

. U1. Pol OH.

American C~U •
- GUI\RANTEEl.t-;
Pholle 992-2094
On Mos1

BACKHOE AND DOZER work:

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septi c tan ks; B &amp; K AUTOMOBILE insuran ce been
cancelled?
Lost
you r
Exca11ating . Phone 992-5367,

-----Real Estate For Sale

Wh~ Alignment

Nalhan Biggs

.-~--,----

Dick Karr, Jr .

EXPERT

Radiator Specialist

TOUGHERTO

MAKE
FLORIDA-

MIDNibHT ~DE=!'

IT'S A
MATTERO'
LIFE. AN'

DEATH!!

Ph . 991 ·2174

O"bE LL WHEEL alignment
located af Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Comple te front ·end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels balan ced
tronically.
All

elecwor k

RP.=t ~nn" hl~:~

guaranteed .

rates. Phone 742·3232 or
992·3213.
I ·U ·TIC
&gt;E E US FOR : Awnings,

s)orm

doors and wi ndows, carports ,
marquees, aluminum "siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
represen tat ive. For free,
· es tim ates, phone Charles-

WINNIE WINKLE

4

Mobile Homes For Sale

Lisle.

Sy racuse,

V.

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc.

• Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinnino.
'c omplete mobile home
ser vice ........ plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

PH. 992-2571

OR 992-3975

1220 Washington Blvd .
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
CAS fj paid for all makes ana
models of mobile homes .

PhOJ1e area code 614-423·9531.
4·13·11c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONAB LE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gal lleolls, John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator .

5·12·1fc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949·3821
Rac ine, Ohio
'Cr ill Bradford
5-1-lfc
GASOUNE AU.EY
READY -MIX

CONCRETE

deltvtred righ t
project. Fast and

to

easy.

y.our
Free

You look

tired, Ph~ IIis!

est imates . Phone 992 -3284.
Goeg leln Ready -MiK Co .
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.tfc

Auto Sales

Big capacitv

Maytav
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of wa ter
temps .
Auto .
water
leve l
cont rol .
Lin t
Filler or Powe-r
Fin Agitator .
Perm a-Pre ss
Maytag
Halo of Hut
Drnrs
Sur round cloth es
with gentle , e... en
heat . No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh L int
F i Iter .
We Speclal jze In
MAY TAG

------

-------

For Sale

- - - - - --

------

J: ·JI)$T ~ IIDM&amp; /JO.i\E'S!
Oil, t.OOK, IS~'r THAT BRIJTU$
WAt.Kit-11..:&gt; TOWAAD TH&amp;

Fairview

field were weekend guests of
1·30-31c
(7) ll. 181 7, ,,
light," Tu ppers Plain s. - -- - - - VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
l\lr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson WANTED :
Closed
Mondays
only.
Phone:
MANAGER,
Hygiene New Demonstra tor
667-3858.
and family ,
LaSalle Hotel in Middleport ;
has all cleaning attachments
7-J0-6tc
prefer couple to live.in ; apply
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
plus the new Electro Suds for
at
the Meigs Inn. See John PUREBRED female beegle
sham pooing carpe t. Only
of Niles, Ohio visited Saturday
Q-How large does the
Musser .
$27.50 cash price or term s
pup; phone Chester 985·3565.
with Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mrs.
dwarf
sea horse grow?
1·30-tf c
available . Phone 992-5641.
].JO.Jtp
Russell Roush and Mr. and - -- -- A-The
dwarf sea horse is
7·28-61c
- - - -Join the
never more than two inches
Mrs . Herbert Roush and ACT NOW
oldest
To y
&amp;
Gift ESTATE AUCTION . Saturday,
long.
Roger .
August 5fh, starling at 12:00 Real Estate For Sale
Party Plan in the Country
Mrs. Mildred Spencer left
noon at the home of the late
- our 25th year! Com Lola Holtz lust off Gihon road
missions up to 30 pet . Fan .
Tuesday for an indefinite visit
(follow auction signs from
tastic Hostess Awards . Call or
with her grandchildren, Darin
Giho n road)
in
South
write " SANTA's PARTIES"
and Billy Jackson, at Leeotonia
Parkersburg, W. Va . Will sell
Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone
the" contents of larg~ farm
while their parents, Mr. and
1 (2031 673 -3455 . ALSO
110 Mechanic Street
house, Including man y an .
BOO KING PARTIES.
Mrs. Bill Jackson, are on
tiques. sm all farm tools and
7-2·301c
vacation.
large
amount
61 m is·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of WAITRESS wanted from 4 p. m.
cetlaneous Items. I. 0 .
'' MAC" M cCoy , auctioneer .
lo 12 :30 p. m: Apply in person,
Clifton visited Sunday with Mr.
NEW LISTING
7-30-3tc
Blue
Tartan
.
No
exper
ience
and Mrs. Russell Roush. Mr.
MIDDL
E,PORT
3
ni ce bedrooms, large living with
-----necessary .
fireplace and air conditioned . Bat h, gas furnace, modern
Lewis is on vacation from the
7 -27 -,61~ 1.72 ACRE lot, 5 guns, phone
kitchen with double sink. Wall to wall carpeting. Full
742·3656.
Imperial Electric Plant at : - - - - - - - - basemenl, level tot. All for only S18.000.00.
1·30·21p
TOYS!
Toys!
Toys!
Sell
Middleport.
Playhouse toys. Aug . to Dec.
Free train ing. Good com·
NEW LISTING
mission, No cash in11estment.
HARRISONVI LLE - 3 nice lots suitable fer housing.
July
Price
Buster!
No delivery. No coltectln;. S
$2,000.00.
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
DOWNTOWN
PANTS &amp; JEANS
Margaret Fortune 949-5414 or
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms. bath, fireplace with bookshelves
Barbara Lambert · 446-3411.
on each side. Gas furnace. full basement. Double garage.
SALE
T-26-JOtc
liket~
Front porch side yard. Drily $21.000.00.
Buy 2 Pairs and
WOMAN to II ve In with elderly.
lady, light housework,~ no
GETI PAIR FREE
COUNTRY ACRES
laundry. Phone 992-5397 or
All
kinds,
all
sizes
for
men.
OVER
1
ACRES
On Route 7 with T.P. - CHES.TER
992·35()7.
women,
young
men,
b.,)y-;
water.
Mostly
cleared
and ready for housi ng .
7-JJ .Jtc
and g Iris. Hurry to ...
CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKER FOR MORE INPOri\ ERin
FORMATION ON THE ABOVE .
9.- Jock W. Carsey, Mgr
The starfish does not have
...
Phone 992-2111
teeth.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, A
lATE
m -3J25

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

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

741 -4211

Arnold Grate

UNLE5S HE'S PlAHNIN' T' ~ CHIHA,
9. SMIRCH'S GOT OTHER lllf&lt;\S ffiAM

SMIN' THE WilD LIFE 1M THreE I'PRTS,
TliAT'S FOR. SORE!

&amp; YOUR DIAL .

'•

THE BOSS SAYS T' KEEP AN EYI! Oli
lHE KID! SHE'S TOO SMART FOR

HER o,.; GOOD!

-·
~

Rutland

Saiurday's Cryploquote: AN ENEMY IS A SUCCESSFUL
WHOSE VIEWS OPPOSE OUR OWN. - GARY

~ER~~~~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

_ _('-10 1972 King Features Sy ndica te, Inc.)

ACROSS
1. Saintly
symbol
5. Chair
9. Esau's

STARTS
WED.,
AUG. 2

grandson

NOTHING HELD BACK - 14 HOMES TO CHOOSE!

50xl2 to 70x14 - 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOMS
WITH GAS &amp; ELECTRIC FURNACES

fl:)o.IC! FINt' A

LACl( CHlU!'
TO THE 117E~mY
OF THE HIT AHrl

All THESE FAMOUS HOMES ON SALE
Free Delivery &amp; Set-Up.

Hillcrest by Skyline - Graywood and
Flamingo - Redman - Van Dyke by
Guerdon - Belmont by Guerdon Norris Goldseal.

I!IIH IIRIV!R WHO

STRUCK l'tlWK

TliE 015/liER

OF THE CITY'5
L!AIIIHG II'INI&lt;.

.v--

10. Venezu e·
lan penin·
sula
ll. ln trouble
(4 wds .)
"£1-£;~Tiive
13. Before
~
(pre!.)
1·
14. Kind of
L~~~~~~~
collar
15. Malt yeast
16. - bono
publico
19. Film star
(2 wds.)
23. German
river
24. Gaelic
25. Popular
chaser (2
wds.)
29. Paddle
30. Listen!
31. Festal
32. Every bit
35. Genealog·
ical chart
(2 wds.)
38. Expunge
39. Quebec's
patron
saint
to. Subside
41 . Boister·
ous outcry

JJ&amp;lOOIDibL;®u..J k·-~~"' -J ,_.

7. Intent
8. Check
10. Educalor,
Angelo

hv HEN R I AllNOlU •" '"' !I O il l f r

t:nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

12. "Hud"
Oscar·
winning
actress

'"·'· ~-~

wine

U.Vin 18. European
river
19. Blbllcal
mount
20. Taj Mohal
site
21. Sunder
22. lneffec·

live

26. -

lounge

SAVE UP TO

......

"o'oiR . !I ~' "''"' '

15. Farm
building
16. Dessert
Y01lerdl)''l Aaower
27. G&lt;!rman
city
28... King
Kong"

girl star

31. Federal
law
enforcer

32.1talian
river

33.

I

IMEOI

I (J

~~:::::s

I

[J

I

"Victory''
34
·
35. Not many , f7--,;,'! ~
, -1--...-,_,.,r.....,~
36. Altar con,:1 .
. ~
stellatlon ~:::=~=~-l.......J:"-~
31. Sailor
RECRON

~n:c~~- ,tNOXEGY

I

UNION REQUIRES

THI&amp; TEMPORAR:Y

J

L

. [j lX) I
IPriUe SIIPRISUIISWIUere I A

A35ENCc Ff«lM WOP.K.
Now arranre the drelod letters .
to form the ourprt.. answer, u
surrt~tod by the above cortoo~~o

t I l I XII r I ]

(Anewen tomGrrow)
Saturday'•

Jumblno SWOOP CURRY

FIIVOI HECKLE

Anewf'ra l11 Nlhich the •uiljcd U q••ite d ear- fOCUS

lVO(, THAT'S

ll&lt;E FIFTH TIME
TOOA~ '&lt;OU'VE

DOWN
I. Ring
2. Asian

'(ou'RE SWIN6IN6 TOO liARD

STRUCK OUT !

river
3. Recent
4. Gold
(Sp.)
5. Strauss
opera
8. Hibernia

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

We talk to you

j WMP0/1390

HIM P6 ASTAW-IIJ FOR BRliTVS
Ot.J a ..ose·uPS!

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;.~;:··

..

I

W..T'S Dvfl. lJSI~~~ --.~
Ml&lt;. SWEcw.JI t.UAM ... I llS6

WHO IS
WHAT HAPPfit-JED
TO 13!&lt;LITU?r:

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ALL 72's

Help Wanted

. '\'

BETTER'N
THAT

ME AN' PAW PULLE:D
THREE WISHBONES
THIS WEEK AN' I GOT

From the largest
Bulldozer RadiaJpr to the
Sma llest Heater Core .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

- - - - - --

NOPE ..

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON~TR. CO.

3 BEDROOMS

'\HEll"

steel siding;

fi,berglas, ~r ick and Stoilei

NEW HOMES

Notice

'

ONLY 513,750

exterior pa i nting ; Arthur

garage, with lak e fr ontage; at SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
F.ive Points area ; phone 992Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.

LEFT IN lay -away, 1972 Zig

LOVE MU SIC??? Try this 1972

I

Bus Construction of
the
8 track stereo console In your - - - - - - - - - Department of Education
home. Pay balance of $98.80 RACINE - 10 room house;
adopted by and with the consent
or payments can be arranged.
bath, basement, garage, two
of the Dire ctor of Highway
Phone 992-5331.
lots. Phone 949 -4313.
Safety pursuant to Sect ion
CARO OF THANKS
7-20-tfc
45 11.7601 the Rev ised Code and
4·5·tfp
~-:-:--=----­
&amp; OBITUARY
all other per ti nent prov isions of
CAB IN Cruiser, 19 ft . Ski fl
SI.SO
fo
r
SO
word
minimu
m
.
608 E. Main
law .
Craft, 75 h.p. Evinrude , ex - 15F T. BOAT and trailer with 25
Each addJtiona l word 2c.
Sp eci fi catio ns
and
in .
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone'
h.p.
motor
,
also
1
956
Har
leycellent
condi
t
ion
;
Schwarzel's
BLIND ADS
structions to bidders may be
985·3529.
Dav idson 74, phone 992·5271.
Marine, Hock ingport, Ohio.
Add ition al 25c Charge per
obta in ed
from
Assistant
7-18·121p
Adver
t
isement.
7-30-Jic
Su per i ntendent Morrisori ,
OFFICE HOliR$ ,
NO STEPS HERE
M iddlepor t, Ohio.
The Board of Education ,' 8:30a .m,. to S :OO. p . m~ Daily,
1 story frame. 6 room s, 3
AKC registered Wiemaraner
reserves the right to r eject any 8:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
pups; J . E. Pape. BoK 265,
bedroom s, panel ed. bath ,
Saturday .
ancl all bids .
Syra cuse, Ohio 45779; phone
level lot, good neighborhood .
By order of the
ROOM &amp; board , phone 675-4555.
992-3420.
fruit and storage room.
Board of Educat ion
7-26-6lc
7-28-12fc
L . W. M cComas
porches. in good condition , in
.
-Clerk · Treasurer
Rutland.
.3
AND
4
ROUM
furni
shed
anil
FA
BRIC
INN
.
Collons
with
17) 10, 17, 24, 31, 4t
JUST4 YEARS OLD
unfurn ished. apartments.
polyester, 75c to 98c yd.;
2
New
Homes.
all
electric,
3
1112
acres of ground . 4
Phone 992-5434.
polyester knits. $2.97; County
bedrooms, full base ment and
bedrooms, bath. TV room ,
4·12-tf&lt;
Road 50 between Tupper s
LEGA'L NOTICE
.;
Plains &amp; Reedsvil le; phone
garage, with lake frontage;
storage build i ng , modern
The Meigs county Reg ional
I
378-6276.
2 BEDROOM mobile home wiln
at Five Points area.
kit chen, storm w indows and
Planning Co mmission will have 1
ai r -conditioning ; 10 miles
7·28·3fp
a publ ic hearing concerning the
doors, will repa int the auf.
proposed SUtl · d iv l s i on
East of Pomeroy; phone 992side to sui t you. $16.900.00 .
r eg ulations for Meigs Cou nty.
6329.
1 GOOD used Ccnera l Electr ic
NEED2 BEDROOMS
This meeting wi ll be hel d on
automati c washer; I good
7-19-tfc
Aug us t 14th , 7:30 p.m . at the
Here
is a buy , 1 stor y frame ,
Ma ytag drye r; 1 good break Coun ty Extension Off i ce in
living
room has f irepla ce ,
fast set ; 1962 Ford , standard
FURNISHED apartment, all
Pomer oy, Ohio.
Window
large
bath,
large kitchen and
shift
;
can
be
seen
at
169
N.
'
'
newly
painted
and
carpeted
;
Copies of the proposed sub ·
Air Conditioners
2nd Sf . Middleport or cal l 8 ROOM house, bath, large lot, din ing area w ith cabinets,
div ision reg ula tions may be
n ice yard, porches and
reviewed by any in terested
belore 3:30p.m. 992·9919.
pr ivate entrance ; phone m .
por ches, 2 ca r garage ,
gas and el ectric , Rl. 1,
Hoi Water Healers
parties during the office hours
7-28-31p Middleport , phone 992·2602. hardwood floors , lots of
2780 or 992-3432.
Of 9 a.m . to 4 p.m., Monday th ru
Plumbing
7-23·1fc
7-28·6tc shrubery, all In excel lent
Fr iday at the County Extension
HOUSEHOLD fur nitur e, would
Off ice .
Electrical Work
condition. $14,900.00.
like to se ll comple te; phone 1 ROOM brick house in Rutland ,
E. F. Rob inson, Pres .
IS YOUR HOUSE
992-2797.
M eig~ County Regional
fu ll basement, bath , coal
FOR SALE?
Pl&amp;nning Commission
7·28·3tc
furnace , city water, also gas ;
1
~- nr ,7, 24,31 (8l 7, Ate
Use
·a
"
nothing to-do" af 1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner, - - - - - -- - - large barn ; containing apternoon to-. fix leaki ng
ful ly re-conditioned ; 23,000 85,000 BT U Lennox: Fuel oil
proximately .34 acre ; extra
miles ; phone 992 .J589.
fa ucets . Dripp ing wa l er
furnace with two 275 gal. fuel
land available; phone 742·4691
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that a
tanks and ther mostat ; in
after 5 p.m.
7·28·61c
di scolors sink enamel and
pemion by owners of l ots in the
exce ll ent cond it ion ; also 300
7·28.Jtc
992 ·2448
suggests fau lty plumbing. IF
Immediate vicinity of a 20 fe et
gal.
'fresh
water
tank,
never
Pomeroy,
1965
DODGE
·
Station
Wagon.
YO U
WAN T
alley, tying between tots 2~0 and
had anything but ci ty wa ter in
act ual mileaqe little over
241 and leading from east Main
PROFESSIONAL
it ; phone 949·3461.
Str eet , through said tots toward
53,000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
ASSISTANCE in getting a
7·28-61p 5 ROOM house and bath, S6.500 ;
the cliff beh ind said tots, has WILL care for preschool
snow !ir es . Call 992·2897 .
quick
buyer cal l us today .
-phone
992-5786.
·
children
in
my
home,
SJ
a
been P.resented to the co un cil of
7·27·61c STAR CRAFT Close-Out on 1972
7-30·61c
the VIllage of Pomeroy , praying
day ; Mrs. Glenn Smith,
tor .the vacation ~f _s_ai~ 2~ . fee!
phone 992-6187.
models. Save $700 on 18 tt., =:-:-:=-=------:---HENRYE . CLELANDSR.
1964 TWO DOOR V.W.. good
alley, from Eut Main Street
$815
on
70 fl ., $375 on Star- STORE, stock and equipment,
730-6tc
REALTOR
bod y and motor recently
to ttle Cl ttts ; ana ma r sa.ta
master
Campe r s.
1973
all for 56,600. Phone 742·3144
992-2259
~~=---overhauled ; good tires fron t &amp;
petition Is now pend ing before
Campers on display, used
or 993·6048 .
said coun cil and f ina l action 1 WILL NOT be res ponsi ble tor
If no answer '92-2658
rear ; 35 miles per gallon ga s.
ca mpers i n stock . Camp
7-23·6tp
any debt s co nt ra cted b(
thereon according to law w ill be
Phone 992-2897.
Conley Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62, - - - - - - - - - anyone other tf'1an my sel .
taken on and after September 5,
7-27-61c
N. of Pl . Pl easa nt behind Red
Signed : Brownie Vujakli ja .
1972.
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SALE by ow ner. Yellow
Carpe 1 1nn .
Jane Walton
7·30-Ji p
Sealed bids will be re cei ved in
frame house , six rooms and
Clerk ollh e - - - - - - - - - 71 FIAT Spider with radio and
1·26 ·7fc th e office of th e Cler k on Second
bath. Large lot . Located In
Village of Pom eroy CARPORT Sale, August 2nd
Street, V illag e ot Pomeroy ,
tape player, 10,000 actual
17124,31; 8)7, 14,21,28, 61
d d
I
Syra
cuse on Rt. 12~ . Second
Ohio
,
unti
l
12
o'clock
noon
,
CAN
NIN
G
tomatoes.
sweet
. an 3r , 9 a.m. o 5 p.m .;
miles; phone 985-4211.
house on left going north
Monday , August 21, 1912, fo r the
corn
,
cucumber
s
and
A11on,
chain
saw,
clothing,
7·30-6tp
NOTICE OF SALE
inside corporation line.
mangoes ; Geraldine Cleland, follow ing proposal.
m i sce llaneous; 918 South
Bids w ill be received at the
For 1.000 tons , more or less. ol
.
1·27·1f
Raci
ne,
0
.
Th~rd
Ave.,
Middleport
.
1968
IMPALA
Custom
Coupe,
Off ices or Webster and Fultz ,
Asphall concrete in place . To be
7-28.tfc placed on var ious streets as
Attorneys, Pomeroy Na ti onal
7-30-3tc
black with white vinyl top;
Bank Bu ild ing , Pomeroy, Ohio,
excellent mechanical condesigned by Vill ag e Council.
until Sa turday . August 5. 19 72. WHY not tr y cosmetics that are
All mater ials and equipment
dition ; white interior , air- STEREO·radio Console. 4speed
atlO :OOo'ctock A.M . Ior the sale
inte rm ixed changer , dual are to meet Ohio Department of
truly
different
and
condit
ioned
;
stero;
phone
667of the Mary L . Emmish r ea l
volume controL 4 speaker Highway speci fi ca t ions.
refreshing? The famous mink
3364.
estate . The real es tate is located
All bles are to be by th e ton In
oi
l
base
and
now
we
have
the
sound
sys tem , beautiful
1·30-Jic
at 462 S. Fifth Avenue, M id ·
and th e pr ice per ton sha ll
lemon grove. Just think , 14
walnut finish . Balance $67 .34. place
dleport , Ohio, and consists of a
include all necessary cleaning .
specials th is month, some for
Use our budget terms . Ca ll Speci fi cations of the stree ts to
two . story, thr ee .bedroom
r esidence, with basement ,
992-7085.
men as well as women . It's
surfa ced are on file in the offi ce
forced air heat, two bathrooms .
KOSCOT of course. Phone
1·28·61c of the Mayor in th e Village of
hardwood floors and plenty of
992-5113.
.
TWO Hereford bulls. Phone 742· MAPLE . STEREO radi o Pomeroy
storage . Th e residence may be
Each bid must contain the full
7-9-tfc
3949.
.
seen
by
appo int men t.
com binati on, AM -FM radi o, 4 name of every person or
Telephone 992 ·2186. The r ig ht is
7·31 ·51c
spea ker soun d sys tem , 4 com pan y int er es t ed In the
reserved to reject any or all REDUCE safe and fast with
same, and be accompanied by a
bids .
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
speed automatic c hanger, bona or certified cf'1 ec k in the
ALLIS
Chalmers
com
bi
ne;
"wa ter pill s," Nelson Drug .
separate controls . Balance sum of $100 .00 to the satisfac t ion
phone 742·3656.
Willetta A. Bougf'1er.
$76.45. Use our budget terms. Of V i llag e Council , as a
6·29-301p
Executr ix ,
7-30-21p
Call 992-7085.
guaranty that if the bid is ac .
Es tate of Mary L . Emmish
7-28-6fc cepted, a contract will be en .
17) 30, 31 (8 ) 1, 2, 3, 4, 6t
tered into and Its performance
DRIVE A LITTLE - save a
properly secu red .
$1.75 to 3.57 PER HOUR. 13
lot! ! ! Besides our usual TW IN needle sewing machine
These checks or bonds will be
young men and women are
1971 moclel in wa lnt.Jf stand. retur:ned
selection of clean , used fu r ·
at once to all except
needed for delivery and sales
Al l features bui lt-i n to m.Jke tne successful bidder . His check
niture,
~uaranteed
ap of small app liances . Must be
fancy designs and do stretch or bond will be he ld until the
pliances, tust arri ved are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maybe
neat and dependab l e, no
sewi ng . Also buttonholes, contract or bid is properly
severa l elegant dining room
experience necessary. Full or
blind hems, etc . $43.35 cash executed by him .
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
ou lfi Is, bedroom suites, new
The right is reserved to r e!ect
part
t
ime.
Cal
l
Mr.
Given
446·
pr ice or term s available.
gold nylon ca rpet s, oak.
Charles Delaney and children
any
and all bids .
0677, Monday and Tuesday, 9
Phone 992-5641.
iceboK . KUHL'S BAR GA IN
Ja ne Watton, Clerk
and Evelyn Lawson of Mansa.m. to 6:30p .m .
7·28·6fc
CENTER . Rt . 7 "at auction
VIllage of Pomeroy

i

3 Bedroqm home, with
brick front. 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

Homes For Sale

screen hou se,

EmploYment Wanted

Pomeroy Motor Co.

•

/

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

$1495

vi ny l interior. beige exterior fini sh, good w-w ttres, radto.
A 1oca l _£~r &amp; ver y ni ce .

\

/

In

DON'T TELL
ME SNUFFY
GIVE UP
MOONS HIN IN',
CARDS AN'
GAMBLIN '--

·-. ---,

and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
7-12-tfc

NICE MARE pony, 40" high, S TO MATOES ,
potatoes ,
years old, 525. Phone 992-2990
cuc
umbers
and
beans ,
or 992-2759.
Clarence Proffit, Portland.
7·30·31c Of1io; phone 843-2254.
-----19' TRAVEL Trailer. se lf 1·19·1fc

992-5592

350 V-8eng ine, automatic trans. , power steer i n~ &amp; br ak~s,

•••
•I

7-30·6tc

Phone Faye Manley

$2295

1968 BUICK LA SABRE H.T. CPE.

.,
..

MIDDLEPORT

V-8 with automatic trans ., power steering, &amp; brakes ,
luggage ra ck. factor y air, color whi te wi th green viny l
interior, like new white-wa ll ti res, radio.

Busin·ess Services

ONE 3 piece bedroom suitP. ?OODLE puppies, Silver To)/,
compl':!l e, $30 ; dining room
Park view Kennels. P"'"e 992
suite, 7 pc ., $25 ; piano,
5.W3.
u pr ight , reconditioned ,
8-15·H&lt;
natural finish, nice $150; 1
N ~E~N~T~A-L~T-rovel
large antique rolled top desk , ~~ y~,.~C~O~N~T~ISl 50; must sel l. leaVing area ;
Trailer, 197 1 model . self·
406 S. 2nd St.. Middleport.
contained ; awning, m irrors

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

BEEN A BANNER
WEEK FER ME,
ELVINEif ..

For Sale

For Sale

IN

1972 CHEVELLE MALIBU

l•

'

lielp Wanted

THIS SHORE HAS

THE BIG SALE IS AT

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales
PHONE 992·7004 • MIDDLEPORT
~e Da~ Thompson Now - We Service What We Sen- Up to .12 y
Ftnanctng. Hours: 8 to 8 I Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8 to 6), Closed on Sunclays.
rs.

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In thls sample A
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Slnrle letters;
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all · ti:t=,~;.::(
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
'•

tJ

CRYPTOQUOTES
NV I D S M V S I IF

K V R U M. L W F

R C

D S M

0 M V P ,,

U I W F R 0 R I W I A E L W ' C:

C JVOROLG . -U LVGIC

K

VIEJGJ

• M'&lt; MT ~s 'MRE. 8!rr,
THE Mu. DIDN'T SHOW VP!

'

�(

.. .

.

~

'· "

)

'\ .

,,0

,

•

6 - The Daily Sen!inel, Middlep:&gt;rt-Pomcroy, 0., July 31, 19'/2
\"'

l

'••
•
!
'\

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clt!ssifieds Get Results!.
Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGNS
Of

\

\

'•

DUALITY

•••
''I

$379s'

4-door, 350 v.a, factory air, turbo hydramatic, po~er
steeri ng , power brakes. gulf.green color, w~th green vrnyl
roof vinyl interior trim , radto, white wal l ftres, full wheel
cov~rs, bumper gua rds, and al l the extras . Low ":~ileage,
factory sticker, 241 .

.,
r

•••

..•
t.·

!t69 CHEV. KINOSWOOD ST. WAGON

!
(•

·/

II '

'·
,,,,.•I...
I •

•
••I .
~

.J

••'"'•

L

WILL DO welding alter 5 p.m.
and weekends.

;I'

OLD Furniture, oak tables.
Write M, D. Miller , Rt . 4,
Pomeroy. 011io. Ca ll 992-6271.
6·28·1fc

WANT ADS

INFORMATION

Sea led bid s will be r ece ived
M eigs

Loc"l

Schoo l

District BoBrd of Education at

their office In the Meigs. Junior
High Sc hool Building, Mid·
dleport, Ohio, for passeng er

sc hool buses until 12 : 00 o'cloc k
on August 7. 1972. acc ord ing to
spec if ications of sa id Boa rd of

7-18-1 2tp

organ s, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or comp lete households.

LEGAL NOTICE

the

place ;

Wanted To Buy

--~~--~~~--=-~ ,

by

any

phone 992·5271.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~PMEROY, OHIO

•

co ntain ed, awning, pi cn ic - - - - - - - - - e.cellen f Mob~e
condition. $1.550 ; reason for

}

. , DEADt.INES

Pom eroy, Phone 992·3891 .

7-30·3fc

REGULATIONS

The Pub l is her reser ves the SE T of cult ivbtors for Far mall
r ight to ecm or r ejec t any ads.
A tractor , old style; Russell
Education . Separate and in · deemed
objectional.
The
Cline , Long Bottom, phone
dependent b ids will be receiv ed
985-3534_
w ith respect to the chassis and publ iShEtf wi II no t be resp onsib le
body ty pe, and will state that for m o~ than one . incorrect
7·28-3tc
the buses. when assembled and insertion .
prior to delivery, comply with

all

schoo l

district

specifications, and all safety
r egu lat ions and current Ohio
Minimum Standards lor School

Real Estate For Sale

P.M . Day Before Publica t iort. MINIBIKE or go-cart in good COAL, Limestone, Excelsior 2 NEW HOMES, all electric, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
condition ; Ralph Trussell ;
Salt Works, E. Main Sf..
phone 949·5884.

RATES

•For Wan' Ad Service

.5 cen ts per Word one insertion

MARINE SALES

M inimum Charge 7Sc ..
1
12 cents per word three l8 1:1 FT. fibre glass boat with
1970 lOS h .p. Chrysler motor
consecut ive insertloris.
w ith all equipment complete.
18 ce n Is per ' word six con .
sec uti \le Insertions. ,
$2,500; ca n finance; ca ll 99225 Per Cent Discount on paid
2720 or 992·3589.
ads and ads paid with in 10 days
7·30-3tc

Dozer

&amp;

End loader work

ponds, basement , land.
scaping . We have 2 5ile
dozers, 2 siie loaders. Work
done . by hour
or contract.
.
Free · Eshmales . We also .

.

·haul fill dirt, top,soit. Dump .
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
se lling , bu ying
larg er AIR-CONDITIONED
mobile
after ·7 p.m. or phone 992trailer. See at 702 - 4th St , home and lot, $3,500 ; phone
.
5ll2.
New Haven or phone Jini
992-5786.
Roush 882-2843.
7·30·6tc
7·30-21p - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOR THE BEST dea l in a new SE WING MACHINE serv ice.
clean, oi l , s~t tension $4.99 .
or used mobile home. try
Spec ia l E'lectro · Grande
BOAT, motor , trail er and acKanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Company. Phone 992-6517.
cessories, $300 as is; may be
Kanouga, Of11o.
5-21·1fr
seen at 394 South Sixth.
7.J6.301c
Middleport or phone 992·7375.
PAPER hanging ; interior anu
1·2l·6tc

~~-=-----:-c­

Car.ce llat lon - Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . tor.
Day of PIJblication

4·12·tfc

- -- -- -

257 1 or 992-3975.

1·1 3·1fc

Zag sew ing machine . Th is
machine o11ercasts, darns, RACINE- 6 room house, bath ,
utility room, garage, $10 ,000 ;
embroideries with just a turn

of lhe dial. Pa y balance of ~. hone 949.4195.
$44.5() or pay $6.21 a month.
3·31 -lfc
Phone 992-5331.
--------7-20-ttc ·LOTS on Wright Street.
Pomeroy ; phone 742-5937.

7-18- 12fc

- - -- -- -

- - -- - For Rent

~==========­

We specialize In aluminum,

vinyl and

complete line of reslaei'fllal
and commercial ·roofing ;
rem od el i ng. .. building,
suspended ceilings, interior
and e,xter lor
pain t ing ;
complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
t~.Jstomer satisfaction. 1 We
are fully insured for your

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

AR:NOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Musser. phone 742 -5223.
7-18-30tp

i

•

ALL THREE
WISHES!!

GLORI( BE !!
'IE OUGHT "1'0 WR IT€
THAT UP FER TH'
HOOTIN' HOLLER
GAZETTE

ASK 'THE

CAt.JDiDATE.
A QJESTIQI.J

662 -3035.

2·12-tfc

CLELAND
REALTY

CAI-JDIDATE
A 4X.]ESTION
7. 31

.•

'IOU WONf FIND
PEOPL£ OUR

so FOOI..ISI+.

DO VOU EVER GET
T~E

Pomeroy Home &amp;· Auto

eEE LING

T~Ev 'RE

ALbT~U\IBS ~

Open8Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

WA'ISHTING
1HEIR LIVESH

ON DRIA65 .
NEVEIZ
~lNG.

f"NJL., ltJSTEAO OF SfT'rlN&amp;
,AI2CIJN(7 1He.- ~'
DON'r YaJ F!ZAcTTCE
EV'RY YEAR IT

~Billl

Pullins. Phone 992-2478,
4·25·ffC

2966.

6-15.tfc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes . 992-2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Serv ice. We Sharpen Scissors

3·29-tfc

HM-50WHATI
DOMATTERSA
LOTTO YOU'?

GETS - I'UC~.'­

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

Septic tank s instal led . Geor~e

opera tor 's license? Cal l 992 ·

5-21 -lfc

JS.55

~THE

. U1. Pol OH.

American C~U •
- GUI\RANTEEl.t-;
Pholle 992-2094
On Mos1

BACKHOE AND DOZER work:

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septi c tan ks; B &amp; K AUTOMOBILE insuran ce been
cancelled?
Lost
you r
Exca11ating . Phone 992-5367,

-----Real Estate For Sale

Wh~ Alignment

Nalhan Biggs

.-~--,----

Dick Karr, Jr .

EXPERT

Radiator Specialist

TOUGHERTO

MAKE
FLORIDA-

MIDNibHT ~DE=!'

IT'S A
MATTERO'
LIFE. AN'

DEATH!!

Ph . 991 ·2174

O"bE LL WHEEL alignment
located af Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Comple te front ·end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels balan ced
tronically.
All

elecwor k

RP.=t ~nn" hl~:~

guaranteed .

rates. Phone 742·3232 or
992·3213.
I ·U ·TIC
&gt;E E US FOR : Awnings,

s)orm

doors and wi ndows, carports ,
marquees, aluminum "siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
represen tat ive. For free,
· es tim ates, phone Charles-

WINNIE WINKLE

4

Mobile Homes For Sale

Lisle.

Sy racuse,

V.

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc.

• Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinnino.
'c omplete mobile home
ser vice ........ plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

PH. 992-2571

OR 992-3975

1220 Washington Blvd .
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
CAS fj paid for all makes ana
models of mobile homes .

PhOJ1e area code 614-423·9531.
4·13·11c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONAB LE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gal lleolls, John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator .

5·12·1fc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949·3821
Rac ine, Ohio
'Cr ill Bradford
5-1-lfc
GASOUNE AU.EY
READY -MIX

CONCRETE

deltvtred righ t
project. Fast and

to

easy.

y.our
Free

You look

tired, Ph~ IIis!

est imates . Phone 992 -3284.
Goeg leln Ready -MiK Co .
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.tfc

Auto Sales

Big capacitv

Maytav
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of wa ter
temps .
Auto .
water
leve l
cont rol .
Lin t
Filler or Powe-r
Fin Agitator .
Perm a-Pre ss
Maytag
Halo of Hut
Drnrs
Sur round cloth es
with gentle , e... en
heat . No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh L int
F i Iter .
We Speclal jze In
MAY TAG

------

-------

For Sale

- - - - - --

------

J: ·JI)$T ~ IIDM&amp; /JO.i\E'S!
Oil, t.OOK, IS~'r THAT BRIJTU$
WAt.Kit-11..:&gt; TOWAAD TH&amp;

Fairview

field were weekend guests of
1·30-31c
(7) ll. 181 7, ,,
light," Tu ppers Plain s. - -- - - - VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
l\lr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson WANTED :
Closed
Mondays
only.
Phone:
MANAGER,
Hygiene New Demonstra tor
667-3858.
and family ,
LaSalle Hotel in Middleport ;
has all cleaning attachments
7-J0-6tc
prefer couple to live.in ; apply
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
plus the new Electro Suds for
at
the Meigs Inn. See John PUREBRED female beegle
sham pooing carpe t. Only
of Niles, Ohio visited Saturday
Q-How large does the
Musser .
$27.50 cash price or term s
pup; phone Chester 985·3565.
with Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mrs.
dwarf
sea horse grow?
1·30-tf c
available . Phone 992-5641.
].JO.Jtp
Russell Roush and Mr. and - -- -- A-The
dwarf sea horse is
7·28-61c
- - - -Join the
never more than two inches
Mrs . Herbert Roush and ACT NOW
oldest
To y
&amp;
Gift ESTATE AUCTION . Saturday,
long.
Roger .
August 5fh, starling at 12:00 Real Estate For Sale
Party Plan in the Country
Mrs. Mildred Spencer left
noon at the home of the late
- our 25th year! Com Lola Holtz lust off Gihon road
missions up to 30 pet . Fan .
Tuesday for an indefinite visit
(follow auction signs from
tastic Hostess Awards . Call or
with her grandchildren, Darin
Giho n road)
in
South
write " SANTA's PARTIES"
and Billy Jackson, at Leeotonia
Parkersburg, W. Va . Will sell
Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone
the" contents of larg~ farm
while their parents, Mr. and
1 (2031 673 -3455 . ALSO
110 Mechanic Street
house, Including man y an .
BOO KING PARTIES.
Mrs. Bill Jackson, are on
tiques. sm all farm tools and
7-2·301c
vacation.
large
amount
61 m is·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of WAITRESS wanted from 4 p. m.
cetlaneous Items. I. 0 .
'' MAC" M cCoy , auctioneer .
lo 12 :30 p. m: Apply in person,
Clifton visited Sunday with Mr.
NEW LISTING
7-30-3tc
Blue
Tartan
.
No
exper
ience
and Mrs. Russell Roush. Mr.
MIDDL
E,PORT
3
ni ce bedrooms, large living with
-----necessary .
fireplace and air conditioned . Bat h, gas furnace, modern
Lewis is on vacation from the
7 -27 -,61~ 1.72 ACRE lot, 5 guns, phone
kitchen with double sink. Wall to wall carpeting. Full
742·3656.
Imperial Electric Plant at : - - - - - - - - basemenl, level tot. All for only S18.000.00.
1·30·21p
TOYS!
Toys!
Toys!
Sell
Middleport.
Playhouse toys. Aug . to Dec.
Free train ing. Good com·
NEW LISTING
mission, No cash in11estment.
HARRISONVI LLE - 3 nice lots suitable fer housing.
July
Price
Buster!
No delivery. No coltectln;. S
$2,000.00.
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
DOWNTOWN
PANTS &amp; JEANS
Margaret Fortune 949-5414 or
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms. bath, fireplace with bookshelves
Barbara Lambert · 446-3411.
on each side. Gas furnace. full basement. Double garage.
SALE
T-26-JOtc
liket~
Front porch side yard. Drily $21.000.00.
Buy 2 Pairs and
WOMAN to II ve In with elderly.
lady, light housework,~ no
GETI PAIR FREE
COUNTRY ACRES
laundry. Phone 992-5397 or
All
kinds,
all
sizes
for
men.
OVER
1
ACRES
On Route 7 with T.P. - CHES.TER
992·35()7.
women,
young
men,
b.,)y-;
water.
Mostly
cleared
and ready for housi ng .
7-JJ .Jtc
and g Iris. Hurry to ...
CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKER FOR MORE INPOri\ ERin
FORMATION ON THE ABOVE .
9.- Jock W. Carsey, Mgr
The starfish does not have
...
Phone 992-2111
teeth.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, A
lATE
m -3J25

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

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

741 -4211

Arnold Grate

UNLE5S HE'S PlAHNIN' T' ~ CHIHA,
9. SMIRCH'S GOT OTHER lllf&lt;\S ffiAM

SMIN' THE WilD LIFE 1M THreE I'PRTS,
TliAT'S FOR. SORE!

&amp; YOUR DIAL .

'•

THE BOSS SAYS T' KEEP AN EYI! Oli
lHE KID! SHE'S TOO SMART FOR

HER o,.; GOOD!

-·
~

Rutland

Saiurday's Cryploquote: AN ENEMY IS A SUCCESSFUL
WHOSE VIEWS OPPOSE OUR OWN. - GARY

~ER~~~~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

_ _('-10 1972 King Features Sy ndica te, Inc.)

ACROSS
1. Saintly
symbol
5. Chair
9. Esau's

STARTS
WED.,
AUG. 2

grandson

NOTHING HELD BACK - 14 HOMES TO CHOOSE!

50xl2 to 70x14 - 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOMS
WITH GAS &amp; ELECTRIC FURNACES

fl:)o.IC! FINt' A

LACl( CHlU!'
TO THE 117E~mY
OF THE HIT AHrl

All THESE FAMOUS HOMES ON SALE
Free Delivery &amp; Set-Up.

Hillcrest by Skyline - Graywood and
Flamingo - Redman - Van Dyke by
Guerdon - Belmont by Guerdon Norris Goldseal.

I!IIH IIRIV!R WHO

STRUCK l'tlWK

TliE 015/liER

OF THE CITY'5
L!AIIIHG II'INI&lt;.

.v--

10. Venezu e·
lan penin·
sula
ll. ln trouble
(4 wds .)
"£1-£;~Tiive
13. Before
~
(pre!.)
1·
14. Kind of
L~~~~~~~
collar
15. Malt yeast
16. - bono
publico
19. Film star
(2 wds.)
23. German
river
24. Gaelic
25. Popular
chaser (2
wds.)
29. Paddle
30. Listen!
31. Festal
32. Every bit
35. Genealog·
ical chart
(2 wds.)
38. Expunge
39. Quebec's
patron
saint
to. Subside
41 . Boister·
ous outcry

JJ&amp;lOOIDibL;®u..J k·-~~"' -J ,_.

7. Intent
8. Check
10. Educalor,
Angelo

hv HEN R I AllNOlU •" '"' !I O il l f r

t:nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

12. "Hud"
Oscar·
winning
actress

'"·'· ~-~

wine

U.Vin 18. European
river
19. Blbllcal
mount
20. Taj Mohal
site
21. Sunder
22. lneffec·

live

26. -

lounge

SAVE UP TO

......

"o'oiR . !I ~' "''"' '

15. Farm
building
16. Dessert
Y01lerdl)''l Aaower
27. G&lt;!rman
city
28... King
Kong"

girl star

31. Federal
law
enforcer

32.1talian
river

33.

I

IMEOI

I (J

~~:::::s

I

[J

I

"Victory''
34
·
35. Not many , f7--,;,'! ~
, -1--...-,_,.,r.....,~
36. Altar con,:1 .
. ~
stellatlon ~:::=~=~-l.......J:"-~
31. Sailor
RECRON

~n:c~~- ,tNOXEGY

I

UNION REQUIRES

THI&amp; TEMPORAR:Y

J

L

. [j lX) I
IPriUe SIIPRISUIISWIUere I A

A35ENCc Ff«lM WOP.K.
Now arranre the drelod letters .
to form the ourprt.. answer, u
surrt~tod by the above cortoo~~o

t I l I XII r I ]

(Anewen tomGrrow)
Saturday'•

Jumblno SWOOP CURRY

FIIVOI HECKLE

Anewf'ra l11 Nlhich the •uiljcd U q••ite d ear- fOCUS

lVO(, THAT'S

ll&lt;E FIFTH TIME
TOOA~ '&lt;OU'VE

DOWN
I. Ring
2. Asian

'(ou'RE SWIN6IN6 TOO liARD

STRUCK OUT !

river
3. Recent
4. Gold
(Sp.)
5. Strauss
opera
8. Hibernia

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

We talk to you

j WMP0/1390

HIM P6 ASTAW-IIJ FOR BRliTVS
Ot.J a ..ose·uPS!

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;.~;:··

..

I

W..T'S Dvfl. lJSI~~~ --.~
Ml&lt;. SWEcw.JI t.UAM ... I llS6

WHO IS
WHAT HAPPfit-JED
TO 13!&lt;LITU?r:

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ALL 72's

Help Wanted

. '\'

BETTER'N
THAT

ME AN' PAW PULLE:D
THREE WISHBONES
THIS WEEK AN' I GOT

From the largest
Bulldozer RadiaJpr to the
Sma llest Heater Core .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

- - - - - --

NOPE ..

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON~TR. CO.

3 BEDROOMS

'\HEll"

steel siding;

fi,berglas, ~r ick and Stoilei

NEW HOMES

Notice

'

ONLY 513,750

exterior pa i nting ; Arthur

garage, with lak e fr ontage; at SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
F.ive Points area ; phone 992Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.

LEFT IN lay -away, 1972 Zig

LOVE MU SIC??? Try this 1972

I

Bus Construction of
the
8 track stereo console In your - - - - - - - - - Department of Education
home. Pay balance of $98.80 RACINE - 10 room house;
adopted by and with the consent
or payments can be arranged.
bath, basement, garage, two
of the Dire ctor of Highway
Phone 992-5331.
lots. Phone 949 -4313.
Safety pursuant to Sect ion
CARO OF THANKS
7-20-tfc
45 11.7601 the Rev ised Code and
4·5·tfp
~-:-:--=----­
&amp; OBITUARY
all other per ti nent prov isions of
CAB IN Cruiser, 19 ft . Ski fl
SI.SO
fo
r
SO
word
minimu
m
.
608 E. Main
law .
Craft, 75 h.p. Evinrude , ex - 15F T. BOAT and trailer with 25
Each addJtiona l word 2c.
Sp eci fi catio ns
and
in .
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone'
h.p.
motor
,
also
1
956
Har
leycellent
condi
t
ion
;
Schwarzel's
BLIND ADS
structions to bidders may be
985·3529.
Dav idson 74, phone 992·5271.
Marine, Hock ingport, Ohio.
Add ition al 25c Charge per
obta in ed
from
Assistant
7-18·121p
Adver
t
isement.
7-30-Jic
Su per i ntendent Morrisori ,
OFFICE HOliR$ ,
NO STEPS HERE
M iddlepor t, Ohio.
The Board of Education ,' 8:30a .m,. to S :OO. p . m~ Daily,
1 story frame. 6 room s, 3
AKC registered Wiemaraner
reserves the right to r eject any 8:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
pups; J . E. Pape. BoK 265,
bedroom s, panel ed. bath ,
Saturday .
ancl all bids .
Syra cuse, Ohio 45779; phone
level lot, good neighborhood .
By order of the
ROOM &amp; board , phone 675-4555.
992-3420.
fruit and storage room.
Board of Educat ion
7-26-6lc
7-28-12fc
L . W. M cComas
porches. in good condition , in
.
-Clerk · Treasurer
Rutland.
.3
AND
4
ROUM
furni
shed
anil
FA
BRIC
INN
.
Collons
with
17) 10, 17, 24, 31, 4t
JUST4 YEARS OLD
unfurn ished. apartments.
polyester, 75c to 98c yd.;
2
New
Homes.
all
electric,
3
1112
acres of ground . 4
Phone 992-5434.
polyester knits. $2.97; County
bedrooms, full base ment and
bedrooms, bath. TV room ,
4·12-tf&lt;
Road 50 between Tupper s
LEGA'L NOTICE
.;
Plains &amp; Reedsvil le; phone
garage, with lake frontage;
storage build i ng , modern
The Meigs county Reg ional
I
378-6276.
2 BEDROOM mobile home wiln
at Five Points area.
kit chen, storm w indows and
Planning Co mmission will have 1
ai r -conditioning ; 10 miles
7·28·3fp
a publ ic hearing concerning the
doors, will repa int the auf.
proposed SUtl · d iv l s i on
East of Pomeroy; phone 992side to sui t you. $16.900.00 .
r eg ulations for Meigs Cou nty.
6329.
1 GOOD used Ccnera l Electr ic
NEED2 BEDROOMS
This meeting wi ll be hel d on
automati c washer; I good
7-19-tfc
Aug us t 14th , 7:30 p.m . at the
Here
is a buy , 1 stor y frame ,
Ma ytag drye r; 1 good break Coun ty Extension Off i ce in
living
room has f irepla ce ,
fast set ; 1962 Ford , standard
FURNISHED apartment, all
Pomer oy, Ohio.
Window
large
bath,
large kitchen and
shift
;
can
be
seen
at
169
N.
'
'
newly
painted
and
carpeted
;
Copies of the proposed sub ·
Air Conditioners
2nd Sf . Middleport or cal l 8 ROOM house, bath, large lot, din ing area w ith cabinets,
div ision reg ula tions may be
n ice yard, porches and
reviewed by any in terested
belore 3:30p.m. 992·9919.
pr ivate entrance ; phone m .
por ches, 2 ca r garage ,
gas and el ectric , Rl. 1,
Hoi Water Healers
parties during the office hours
7-28-31p Middleport , phone 992·2602. hardwood floors , lots of
2780 or 992-3432.
Of 9 a.m . to 4 p.m., Monday th ru
Plumbing
7-23·1fc
7-28·6tc shrubery, all In excel lent
Fr iday at the County Extension
HOUSEHOLD fur nitur e, would
Off ice .
Electrical Work
condition. $14,900.00.
like to se ll comple te; phone 1 ROOM brick house in Rutland ,
E. F. Rob inson, Pres .
IS YOUR HOUSE
992-2797.
M eig~ County Regional
fu ll basement, bath , coal
FOR SALE?
Pl&amp;nning Commission
7·28·3tc
furnace , city water, also gas ;
1
~- nr ,7, 24,31 (8l 7, Ate
Use
·a
"
nothing to-do" af 1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner, - - - - - -- - - large barn ; containing apternoon to-. fix leaki ng
ful ly re-conditioned ; 23,000 85,000 BT U Lennox: Fuel oil
proximately .34 acre ; extra
miles ; phone 992 .J589.
fa ucets . Dripp ing wa l er
furnace with two 275 gal. fuel
land available; phone 742·4691
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that a
tanks and ther mostat ; in
after 5 p.m.
7·28·61c
di scolors sink enamel and
pemion by owners of l ots in the
exce ll ent cond it ion ; also 300
7·28.Jtc
992 ·2448
suggests fau lty plumbing. IF
Immediate vicinity of a 20 fe et
gal.
'fresh
water
tank,
never
Pomeroy,
1965
DODGE
·
Station
Wagon.
YO U
WAN T
alley, tying between tots 2~0 and
had anything but ci ty wa ter in
act ual mileaqe little over
241 and leading from east Main
PROFESSIONAL
it ; phone 949·3461.
Str eet , through said tots toward
53,000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
ASSISTANCE in getting a
7·28-61p 5 ROOM house and bath, S6.500 ;
the cliff beh ind said tots, has WILL care for preschool
snow !ir es . Call 992·2897 .
quick
buyer cal l us today .
-phone
992-5786.
·
children
in
my
home,
SJ
a
been P.resented to the co un cil of
7·27·61c STAR CRAFT Close-Out on 1972
7-30·61c
the VIllage of Pomeroy , praying
day ; Mrs. Glenn Smith,
tor .the vacation ~f _s_ai~ 2~ . fee!
phone 992-6187.
models. Save $700 on 18 tt., =:-:-:=-=------:---HENRYE . CLELANDSR.
1964 TWO DOOR V.W.. good
alley, from Eut Main Street
$815
on
70 fl ., $375 on Star- STORE, stock and equipment,
730-6tc
REALTOR
bod y and motor recently
to ttle Cl ttts ; ana ma r sa.ta
master
Campe r s.
1973
all for 56,600. Phone 742·3144
992-2259
~~=---overhauled ; good tires fron t &amp;
petition Is now pend ing before
Campers on display, used
or 993·6048 .
said coun cil and f ina l action 1 WILL NOT be res ponsi ble tor
If no answer '92-2658
rear ; 35 miles per gallon ga s.
ca mpers i n stock . Camp
7-23·6tp
any debt s co nt ra cted b(
thereon according to law w ill be
Phone 992-2897.
Conley Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62, - - - - - - - - - anyone other tf'1an my sel .
taken on and after September 5,
7-27-61c
N. of Pl . Pl easa nt behind Red
Signed : Brownie Vujakli ja .
1972.
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SALE by ow ner. Yellow
Carpe 1 1nn .
Jane Walton
7·30-Ji p
Sealed bids will be re cei ved in
frame house , six rooms and
Clerk ollh e - - - - - - - - - 71 FIAT Spider with radio and
1·26 ·7fc th e office of th e Cler k on Second
bath. Large lot . Located In
Village of Pom eroy CARPORT Sale, August 2nd
Street, V illag e ot Pomeroy ,
tape player, 10,000 actual
17124,31; 8)7, 14,21,28, 61
d d
I
Syra
cuse on Rt. 12~ . Second
Ohio
,
unti
l
12
o'clock
noon
,
CAN
NIN
G
tomatoes.
sweet
. an 3r , 9 a.m. o 5 p.m .;
miles; phone 985-4211.
house on left going north
Monday , August 21, 1912, fo r the
corn
,
cucumber
s
and
A11on,
chain
saw,
clothing,
7·30-6tp
NOTICE OF SALE
inside corporation line.
mangoes ; Geraldine Cleland, follow ing proposal.
m i sce llaneous; 918 South
Bids w ill be received at the
For 1.000 tons , more or less. ol
.
1·27·1f
Raci
ne,
0
.
Th~rd
Ave.,
Middleport
.
1968
IMPALA
Custom
Coupe,
Off ices or Webster and Fultz ,
Asphall concrete in place . To be
7-28.tfc placed on var ious streets as
Attorneys, Pomeroy Na ti onal
7-30-3tc
black with white vinyl top;
Bank Bu ild ing , Pomeroy, Ohio,
excellent mechanical condesigned by Vill ag e Council.
until Sa turday . August 5. 19 72. WHY not tr y cosmetics that are
All mater ials and equipment
dition ; white interior , air- STEREO·radio Console. 4speed
atlO :OOo'ctock A.M . Ior the sale
inte rm ixed changer , dual are to meet Ohio Department of
truly
different
and
condit
ioned
;
stero;
phone
667of the Mary L . Emmish r ea l
volume controL 4 speaker Highway speci fi ca t ions.
refreshing? The famous mink
3364.
estate . The real es tate is located
All bles are to be by th e ton In
oi
l
base
and
now
we
have
the
sound
sys tem , beautiful
1·30-Jic
at 462 S. Fifth Avenue, M id ·
and th e pr ice per ton sha ll
lemon grove. Just think , 14
walnut finish . Balance $67 .34. place
dleport , Ohio, and consists of a
include all necessary cleaning .
specials th is month, some for
Use our budget terms . Ca ll Speci fi cations of the stree ts to
two . story, thr ee .bedroom
r esidence, with basement ,
992-7085.
men as well as women . It's
surfa ced are on file in the offi ce
forced air heat, two bathrooms .
KOSCOT of course. Phone
1·28·61c of the Mayor in th e Village of
hardwood floors and plenty of
992-5113.
.
TWO Hereford bulls. Phone 742· MAPLE . STEREO radi o Pomeroy
storage . Th e residence may be
Each bid must contain the full
7-9-tfc
3949.
.
seen
by
appo int men t.
com binati on, AM -FM radi o, 4 name of every person or
Telephone 992 ·2186. The r ig ht is
7·31 ·51c
spea ker soun d sys tem , 4 com pan y int er es t ed In the
reserved to reject any or all REDUCE safe and fast with
same, and be accompanied by a
bids .
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
speed automatic c hanger, bona or certified cf'1 ec k in the
ALLIS
Chalmers
com
bi
ne;
"wa ter pill s," Nelson Drug .
separate controls . Balance sum of $100 .00 to the satisfac t ion
phone 742·3656.
Willetta A. Bougf'1er.
$76.45. Use our budget terms. Of V i llag e Council , as a
6·29-301p
Executr ix ,
7-30-21p
Call 992-7085.
guaranty that if the bid is ac .
Es tate of Mary L . Emmish
7-28-6fc cepted, a contract will be en .
17) 30, 31 (8 ) 1, 2, 3, 4, 6t
tered into and Its performance
DRIVE A LITTLE - save a
properly secu red .
$1.75 to 3.57 PER HOUR. 13
lot! ! ! Besides our usual TW IN needle sewing machine
These checks or bonds will be
young men and women are
1971 moclel in wa lnt.Jf stand. retur:ned
selection of clean , used fu r ·
at once to all except
needed for delivery and sales
Al l features bui lt-i n to m.Jke tne successful bidder . His check
niture,
~uaranteed
ap of small app liances . Must be
fancy designs and do stretch or bond will be he ld until the
pliances, tust arri ved are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maybe
neat and dependab l e, no
sewi ng . Also buttonholes, contract or bid is properly
severa l elegant dining room
experience necessary. Full or
blind hems, etc . $43.35 cash executed by him .
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
ou lfi Is, bedroom suites, new
The right is reserved to r e!ect
part
t
ime.
Cal
l
Mr.
Given
446·
pr ice or term s available.
gold nylon ca rpet s, oak.
Charles Delaney and children
any
and all bids .
0677, Monday and Tuesday, 9
Phone 992-5641.
iceboK . KUHL'S BAR GA IN
Ja ne Watton, Clerk
and Evelyn Lawson of Mansa.m. to 6:30p .m .
7·28·6fc
CENTER . Rt . 7 "at auction
VIllage of Pomeroy

i

3 Bedroqm home, with
brick front. 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

Homes For Sale

screen hou se,

EmploYment Wanted

Pomeroy Motor Co.

•

/

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

$1495

vi ny l interior. beige exterior fini sh, good w-w ttres, radto.
A 1oca l _£~r &amp; ver y ni ce .

\

/

In

DON'T TELL
ME SNUFFY
GIVE UP
MOONS HIN IN',
CARDS AN'
GAMBLIN '--

·-. ---,

and hitch ; phone 992-5982.
7-12-tfc

NICE MARE pony, 40" high, S TO MATOES ,
potatoes ,
years old, 525. Phone 992-2990
cuc
umbers
and
beans ,
or 992-2759.
Clarence Proffit, Portland.
7·30·31c Of1io; phone 843-2254.
-----19' TRAVEL Trailer. se lf 1·19·1fc

992-5592

350 V-8eng ine, automatic trans. , power steer i n~ &amp; br ak~s,

•••
•I

7-30·6tc

Phone Faye Manley

$2295

1968 BUICK LA SABRE H.T. CPE.

.,
..

MIDDLEPORT

V-8 with automatic trans ., power steering, &amp; brakes ,
luggage ra ck. factor y air, color whi te wi th green viny l
interior, like new white-wa ll ti res, radio.

Busin·ess Services

ONE 3 piece bedroom suitP. ?OODLE puppies, Silver To)/,
compl':!l e, $30 ; dining room
Park view Kennels. P"'"e 992
suite, 7 pc ., $25 ; piano,
5.W3.
u pr ight , reconditioned ,
8-15·H&lt;
natural finish, nice $150; 1
N ~E~N~T~A-L~T-rovel
large antique rolled top desk , ~~ y~,.~C~O~N~T~ISl 50; must sel l. leaVing area ;
Trailer, 197 1 model . self·
406 S. 2nd St.. Middleport.
contained ; awning, m irrors

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

BEEN A BANNER
WEEK FER ME,
ELVINEif ..

For Sale

For Sale

IN

1972 CHEVELLE MALIBU

l•

'

lielp Wanted

THIS SHORE HAS

THE BIG SALE IS AT

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales
PHONE 992·7004 • MIDDLEPORT
~e Da~ Thompson Now - We Service What We Sen- Up to .12 y
Ftnanctng. Hours: 8 to 8 I Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8 to 6), Closed on Sunclays.
rs.

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In thls sample A
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Slnrle letters;
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all · ti:t=,~;.::(
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
'•

tJ

CRYPTOQUOTES
NV I D S M V S I IF

K V R U M. L W F

R C

D S M

0 M V P ,,

U I W F R 0 R I W I A E L W ' C:

C JVOROLG . -U LVGIC

K

VIEJGJ

• M'&lt; MT ~s 'MRE. 8!rr,
THE Mu. DIDN'T SHOW VP!

'

�.8- The Daily Sllntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31,1972

Wayne Williams, 87, Is Oaimed
Wayne C. Williams, 87,
formerly of Meigs County, died
recently at Olathe, Colo.
Mr . Williams was the son of
the late John and Jane Castle
Williams of the Burlingham
area of Meigs County. He went
to Colorado as a young man
due to ill health and became a
prosperous farmer.

, Surviving are his wife, the
•

former Lizzie Wilson, who was
a teacher in Meigs County
schools a number of years ago;
two children, Fred i n
California, and Mrs. Lois Neff,
of Evergreen, Colo. Mr.
Williams was an uncle of Avis
Frecker of Racine, and a
co usin of Marcia Karr,
Syracuse.

Mrs. Mary Miles Wright, 69,
Pomeroy Route 4, died early
Sunday morning at the Country
Court Convalescent Home in

Mount Vernon, Ohio.
A member of the Melhodist
Church, Mrs. Wright is survived by a daughter, Mrs. John
Moore 7 Fredericktown; two
sons, Charles Miles of
Columbus, and Leroy Miles of
Marengo; a brother, Walter
Robinson of Rutland ; seven
grandchildren , and three
great·grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the
Snyder Funeral Home in

Fredericktown with the Rev.
Roy Doan officiating. Burial
will be in Forest Cemetery at
Dol ATO MEET
CHESTER
Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, will meet at 8 p. m.
Tuesday at the hall. The Good
of the Order Committee will
have a silent auction.

MASON DRIVE-IN
',' '

(), (

I

II .,,,11

,\

N

,

'

l, I

!I'

Tonight &amp; Tuesd~V
July 30 · Aug. 1
Double Feature Program

" BIG DOLL HOUSE"
Robert Collins
Judy Brown

- Pius" WOMEN IN CAGES"
Jen ni fer Gan
Judy Brown

MEIGS THEATRE

Ohioan Captured Twice now Jailed

morning's escape bringing
chuckles at the sheriff's office
today, since no one was hurt.
"I'm as cool as a cucumber, ''
commented deputy Floyd
Stover, when asked of his
"condition" today.
Although Skiver takes time
to tell his story in a jestful way.
he was disarmed Sunday at
gunpoint.
Stover said it began at 9:45
a.m . Sunday when city
Fredericktown . Friends may
patrolman Donald Spence
call at the funeral home from 7
came in to fingerprint Gray.
kJ 9 p. m. this evening .
Stover went into the cell area
and brought Gray out to the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
front office. Others in the room
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
at the time were Billy Leport
- Gertrude Bass, Pomeroy;
and C. L. "Bud" Head. Leport
Ronald Bostic, Point Pleasant ;
comes in regularly to talk with
Doris Curry, New Haven;
police and Mr . Head, as Stover
Douglas Smith, New Haven,
explained,
visits him weekly to
and Vernon Darst, Middleport.
bring
a
program
from the
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
nearby
Trinity
United
- Lenore Scha rt, Chris
Methodist
Church.
Capehart, Lonna Hollon,
In the midst of the group,
Harley Stewart, Mildred
Gray loosened Spence's gun,
Phillips, Donna Hill, Lucy
threw Spence against the desk
McCune, Harrison Robinson,
and,
backed up against the
Rolan d Morris and John
fin~erprinting board, held the
Bigelow.
gun
on Spence and Stover.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS _
"You
give me your gun ," he
Clarence Wickline, Racin e;
said
to
Stover,
who replied, "I
Rona ld Lyons,
Mason;
ain't giving you nothing."
Tammie DeBord, Pomeroy;
At this point, Stover said
Robert Staats, Middleport;
Gray
walked over to him and
Orland Laudermilt, Pomeroy;
once mo re repeated the
Mabel Rumbaugh, Syracuse ;
demand
and Stover once more
Wilma Riggs, Racine; Timothy
gave
him
the same answer. A
Klein, Minersville; Avanell
lhird time Gray demanded,
Bass, Pomeroy; Marga ret
"Man, give me that gun," as he
Blankenship, Albany, and
drew
it up, Stover said Spence
Maxine Oldaker, Letart, w.
threw up both hands and said,
Va.
"Wait a minute. Let me talk ."
SUNDAY DISCHARGES _
Spence said to Stover, "Give
Joseph Bowers, Deborah
him your gun." Gray then
Norri s, Douglas Smith, Charles
grabbed
Stover's gun and
Varian, Joseph Rudolph,
ord ered th e thr ee, Stover ,
Leona Kennedy, Ava Gilkey .
Leport and Head in to the cell
and Harold Triplett.
section while holding the gun
on Spence.
Gray ordered Leport to go in
and release the other jail
COOLVILLE - Charles F.
Funeral services will be held prisoners.
He ordered Spence to lock
Barranger, 64, Coolville, died Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the White
them
in, but Spence appeared
Sunday morning at St. Joseph Funeral Home here with the
to
lock
the door, but instead,
Hospital, Parkersburg, of a Rev. Roy Deeter officiating .
sudden illness.
Burial will be in Coolville only turned the key, and
Mr. Barranger was born in cemetery. Friends may call at leaving it unlocked.
Leport, according to Stover
New Brighton, Pa., the son of the funeral home any time.
didn 't stay aroimd to see what
lhe late James D. and Laura
else
was taking place but made
Pullins Barranger. He resided
his way out through the
in the Coolville area most of
basemen t of the jail quarters.
his life. ·
He
is still being joshed about
He is survived by his w1te,
his qualifications for joining a
Hattie , Pomeroy;
five
track team.
brothers, James and Ernest of
A trustee who was in the
Reedsville; WI!Uam, of
The infant son of Robert and upstairs section of lhe jail ,
Sebring, Ohio; Henry, of Patrice Stauffer Montie, Rt. 5,
Carrollton, and Clyde of Athens, died at birth Saturday came down and saw the man .
Hockingport; a sister , Bessie night at O'Bleness Hospital, Stover called to him to get
Sheriff Troy Huffman.
Dearth, Alliance, a"nd several Athens.
Meanwhile, Gray had taken
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, the Spence, still at gun point,
infant is survived by the downstairs at the reg ular exit.
paternal grandparents, Mr . When they reached the bottom
and Mrs. Ralph Mantle, Guys- of the steps, Spence said, "The
ville Rt. I ; maternal grand- state police are sitting out
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip there in the car" in an attempt
Stauffer, Athens ; paternal to scare Gray, and when Gray
great-grandparents, Mr. and heard this he put one gun under
Mrs . Isadore Montie, Guys- his arm and the other down in
ville, Rt. I, and Mrs. Bernice his belt. The state police
Meeks, Shade ; the maternal quarters were near the exit,
great-grandmother, Mr s. but none was around .
Dorothy Malpas, Columbus,
As they went out the door,
and several cousins, aWlts and Spence threw the door open
uncles.
and ran. It was the stray bullet
Graveside rites will be from a 38 caliber shot by Gray
conducted today at 5p.m. at St. at Spence that veered across
John's Catholic Cemetery, the street, went through the
Guysville, Rt. I, with the Rev. wall of the Gospel Tabernacle,
Father Frank Palata of- and fell in the church during a
ficiating. White Funeral Home song service.
in Coolville is in charge of
The
Rev .
Howard
arrangements.
Killingsworth
said the
The Antarctic is a COJl ,i· congregation finished the song
nent surrounded by three and then he dismissed the
oceans while the Arctic is an group to go into their individual
ice ocean surrou nded by Sunday School classrooms,
three continents.
after he realized it was gunfire.
Not knowing where it came
from he took it to the sheriff's
office, and then the story was
pieced together.
Meanwhile, Spence ran to the
city police station to get
another gun and Gray ran to
Main Street to the cab stand
' where he demanded a car. He
was told by attendants, "We
don't have any keys, that 's
what we're waiting for now ."
From there Gray made his
way down by the floodwall to

Mary Wright Died Sunday

PT. PLEASANT - An Ohio
man who Saturday ni ght
eluded police several hours,
was .captured, then escaped
Sunday.
Approximately 14 shots were
flre"d in the incident
surrounding the capture " of
Herbert J. Gray, Jr., 23, of
Columbus, Ohio. However,
several police officers, Gray,
as well as others, were not hit.
The incident began Saturday
morning when Gray, reportedly driving a stolen car, got
service at a Mason gas station
and pulled away without
paying.
City police here joined the
chase which led to the Flatrock
area when the police cruiser
and the car Gray was driving
wrecked. Gray made his way
on foot in high weeds and
grass, eluding two city
patrolmen who fired several
shots at him.
The Sheriff's Dept. joined the
search and it was Saturday
night that deputy Bob Uhl
capt ured Gray - wi thout
resistance - and brought him
into the local jail.
Uhl said he spent some four
hours combing the barns and
other outbuildings in the
vicinity when finally, about 10
p.m. he stopped at a restaW'ant
to pick up a sandwich. There he
learned a resident had seen
Gray on the highway.
"I was looking for a dark
grey uniform and went on by
him one time," Uhl said, but
turned, and came back, and
the
after
questioning
"pedestrian," placed him
under arrest and brought him
in to jail.
There are several stories
surroundin g Gra y's Sunday

Coolville' Man Claimed Sunday

Infant Montie

Tonig ht &amp; Tuesday
July JI .Aug. 1

DIAMONDS ARE
FOREVER

Died At Birth

ITechnicolor)
Sean Connery

Jill 51. John
IGP)
Disney Cartoon:
Gentlemen's
Gentlemen

' Show Slarts 1 P.M.

•.•.•.•

.!

the City Ice and Fuel boat
dock. By this time state police
Cpl. R. L. Presson, patrolman
· ~ence, Sheriff Huffman, Scott
Huffman, armed with shotguns
and the trustee and others had
joined the hunt.
After one of the group saw
Gray, two shots were fired in
attempts~ to get him ou t.
Finally police asked Gray to
lay down the guns outside a
door and to surrender.
In the short time he was on
lhe boat, Gray had managed to
change shirts, don a life jacket
and put a couple cans &lt;&gt;f food in
his pockets.
Today he is behind bars after
being charged by city police

Swtday Busy Day
For Pomeroy E-R
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad wa~ called to the
Pomero;,: levee about I : 12·a . m.
Sunday for Warren Teeter,
New Haven, who was having
difficulty breathing. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Haspital where he was treated
and released. Police said he
will be charged lor inklxication .
At 5:28 p. m. Sunday, the
squad was called for Avanell
Bass, Liberty Ave., who had
suffered a back injury. She was
.taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and was admitted for
treatment.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMITTED - Mrs. Frank
Schult, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
David Chapma n and son,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Forrest
Stover, Ashton; Mrs. Richard
Daley, Central Fall, Rhode
Island; Mrs. Luther McCarty,
Ashton ; Mrs. Denny Garnes,
Rutland, 0.; Loretta Noet,
Julia Mintoo, Point Pleasant.
REUN ION SET
The Martin and Emma Sayre
fam ily reunion will be held at
·lhe Shrine Park in Racine oo
Sunday, with a basket dinner at
12 :30 p. m.
LODGE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Mid·
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will
be at 7:30p . m. on Tuesday . All
Master Masons are in vited .

with reckless drtvtnR and
resisting an officer . This
morning he stated to Cpl.
Presson that he would
voluntarily waive extradition
to Marietta, Ohio where he is
wanted for car theft. A charge
of petit larceny is also expected
to be placed by the Mason
service station operator.

.

..•..· ·.·.

: .. .·

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Extelldetl Oullook ...:.
Wednesday throqh Friday:
Motlly cloudy through the
period wtth a ebance of
showers, makily In the afternoon and evealng. Highs
In the Ilk Wednesday and In
the upper 7111 to mid 80s
Thursday and Friday. Nightlime lows In the low and mid
60s north and mid and upper
60s south through the period.

I n flat IOn
• Blamed
On Military Costs.
·

·

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Charging that military
spending the last six years has
been the "main cause of inw
flation ," Se n. George S.
McGovern said today he would
introduce an amendment · to
keep the administration from
increasing the Pentagon's
budget.
The Democratic presidential
candidate said the amendment, which he would introduce Tuesday, would hold
military spending to the level
of last year's $77.6 billion .
This would in effect cut $4
billion from President Nixon's
request for milita ry spending
for the .current fiscal year.
McGovern described his
move as "the only proper
response to the President's
plea that federal spending be
held t&lt;&gt; $250 billion this year."
Nixon has criticized Congress
for contributing to inflation by
inc rea sing government
spending.
" Holding military expenditures to the present level
will allow the Congress to keep
within the spending ceiling and
still provide some urgently
needed support for schools,
housin2. hospitals, jobs and
other domestic requirements,''
McGovern said he had made it
clear repeatedly that he
considered an arms budget
identical to last year's to be
"far in excess of what the
country needs for its own
security ."
"But in a watershed election
year, surely it is prudent to
wait for the judgment of the
people on the great debate between President Nixon and
myself over the prope r
direction of military spending
and the soundest budget

priorities for the years ahead,"
McGovern said. "I ask Mr.
Nixon and I ask the Congress :
why not hold steady this year,
and let the people be heard?"
"Tbe main cause of inflation
for the last hall dozen years,
under both the Republicans
and the Democrats, has been
military spending, and more
particularly the Vietnam
war," he said.

Broken Tie Rod
Causes Accident

Portland Has

Bantam Title
In Baseball
Portland claimed th•
Southern Bantam League title
after;defeattng Racine No. 2by
the' score 211-13 in Ute final
game'of Ute season Thursday .
Sllcond place Racine No. 1 took
Syracuse No. 2 team 9-4, and
Letart outscored Syracuse No.
I by 1:1-8 in oUter games.
In the Lelru't- Syracuse No. I
battle, Steve !l;iffie and Robin
Fortune led ' Letart wiUt two
home r1111s each while Kenny
Parson and Rick Miller each
had one home run. Tony Salser
had a home run and B. K.
Armes a single for the
Syracuse team.
Racine No. I was led by Bob
Lee with a triple and single in
their win over Syra'cuse No. 2.
Other Racine hitters were Jay
Rees and Alan Pape with two
singles each, Kent Wolfe had a
double, and Kent Varney
collected one single. Bob
Patterson led Syracuse No. 2
with a home run, double, and
single while Steve Hayes had a
triple and Terry McNickles
had a sin~le .

No injuries were reported in
FINAL STANDINGS
a single car accident Sunday at
So. Bautam League
12 :02 a.m. on SR 248 in Olive
'
W. L.
Township, five miles east of SR Portland
7 I
7 at Chester.
Racine No. I
6 2
The Meigs County Sheriff's Letart
5 3
Department said Randy A. Racine No. 2
3 5
Young, 19, Minersville, Rt. I, Syracuse No. I
3 5
was traveling west on 248 when Syracuse No.2
0 8
the left tie rod apparently
Thursday's Seores
failed. The vehicle went off the
Portland 2q Racine No. 2, 13.
road to the left and struck an
Racine No. 2 9, Syracuse No.
embankment. Young said he 2, 4.
was unable to steer the car,
Letart 13, Syracuse No. I, 8.
'
which was heavily damaged.
.

·Make Elberfelds Your
Shopping Center
Save All of Your
Saleslips From
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NOR

by FEDDERS
LWA.1815A
Mat ching drrer •~•ilable

' " A ca rp enter can hamm er
h~me his a rgum ent, bu l his
wtfe always knows how to

nail him." ...

TURBOSWeEP

Has your wi fe been tr ying
to nai l you down Ia doing thai
do· ll.yo urse lf
job you
promi sed to do la st year?
Drop In and pick up what you
need fr om one of our
" FR I Ef'jDL Y ONES" today
!She'll lie glad you did !) .. :

~202
LINT FILTER AGITATOR
Gets clothes really clean I

Ingels Furniture
Open Friday &amp; Saturday Nights
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

f

-

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Taylor
and daughters, Debbie and
Racheal of Helper, Utah,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Tannehill. The Taylors are the
parents of Mrs. Tannehill. Mrs.
Tannehill and son Brian were
previous visitors to Utah.
Miss Maria Grueser spent
the weekend at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Bylicki of
Lorain, Ohio.
Mrs . Levi Kauffman of
Martinsbqrg, Penn., spent the
past week visiting with her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Opha Offutt.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
have returned home from
vacationing in the Smokies and
at Virginia Beach.

. ,... :-

- . ,. "'

.......

·:' ......

. ,..,"Y ..

"""f•J'•

,.

...

.

•

~

Now You Know

VOL XXIV

Devoted To The Interest. Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dems Needing
New Candidate
psychiatric reasons.
Eagleton is the first vice
presidential candidate ever to
accept lhe nomination and
later resign from the ticket.
" In the joint decision we
have reached, health was not a
factor," McGovern said in a
· prepared statement. "But the
public debate over Sen. Eagleton's past medical history
continues kJ divert attention
from Ute great national issues
that need wbe discussed."
Reacwu is Mixed
Reaction was mixed. California State Democratic Chairman Charles Manatt said "this
will allow us to quickly refocus
on the problems of the
economy, the war and the lack
of leadership in tbe Nixon
presidency."
"The net effect will be a
positive one," Manatt said.
But Missouri Democratic
Chairman Delton Houtchins
said "it was a real deal ... they

fNews •• i;; Brief~
By Uuited t'ress IDternatloual
WASHINGTON- NET FARM INCOME will boom this year
wa record of about $18.1 billlon, up $2 billion from last year and
$1 billion over Ute previous record set a quarter of a century ago,
the Agriculture Department predicts.
Department economists, in a revised "Farm Income
Situation" report, clung to earlier predictions that net income
this year would be about $2 bllllon better than in 1971. But the 1971
income figure , previously putat$15.7 billion, was revised Ill $16.1
bWion, pu.!hlng Ute 1972 estimate up also.
CLEVELAND -mE CLEVELAND INDIANS, in a move
that could either set a precedent for all of baseball or hurt the
club's dwindling attendance even more, amounced today a
tentative home schedule lor next season that eliminates weekday
night games.
1
Instead of playing at night on Monday through Thursday, as
is the usual case now, the team will play in the afternoon with a
!2:30pm. starting time according to team president Nick Mileti.
Mlletl also said all home Sunday games, with the exception of one
date, wll1 be doubleheaders.

~The witk-awake bank makes itcof£.so ~

The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

.I

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY AUGUST I, 1972

..&lt;Ji;.
.Jil'

can count Missouri out as far
as I'm concerned this fall."

Colorado Chairman Bill Leave!
said Eagleton was "a fine man
who got caught in a tough
situation."
It was obvious lhat Eagleton
did not want to quit the ticket.
The former Missouri attorney
general said he spent the first
15 minutes of his 102 minutes
with McGovern "in my laywerlike marshalling of evidence"
in support of staying on the
ticket . McGovern
said
Eagleton disagreed with Ius
judgment about public reaction.
"I Utought Utat In another
two or three weeks if I crisscrossed this country, that
pretty soon it would run its
course," Eagleton said.
Paying
tribute
to
McGovern's courtesy and
gentlemanliness during the
week, Eagleton said be bowed
Ill the presidential candidate's
belief that time was of the
essence and that issues must
be addressed promptly .
Will Not Divide Party
" I will not divide the
Democratic party, which al·
ready has too many divisions,"
Eagleton said. "My personal
feelings are secondary to the
necessity to unify tbe Democratic party and elect George
McGovern president of the
United States."
Eagleton said he would write
his letter of resignation to
Democratic National Chairman Jean Westwood this
morning. Party officials have
said they could summon the
national conunittee within 10
days

Allan L. Leonard, Columbus,

company's General Offices in
Columbus. Three years later
he was promoted to junior rate
account ant in the Rate
Department and in 1960
became senior rate ac- ·
countant. He was promoted to
Pomeroy
Middleport
manager in 1964 was named
Martins. Ferry manager in
1967, and was promoted to his
most recent position in 1970:
Born in Wilkinsburg, Pa.,
Leonard was grad uated from
high school there in 1945. He
ALLAN LEONARD
received a bachelor of arts
deg ree in busin ess ad- College, Westerville, in 1953.
valuation technic ian in the ministration from Otterbein
(Continued on page 10)

formerly of j\leigs County,
Central District manager of
community relations for
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., has
been promoted to Southeastern
Di strict manager of community relations for Colurtlbia
Gas of Ohio and Ohio Valley
Gas Co. with hea dqua~ters in
Athens. Both compames are
,.........................
.,,...,. :. .,.,..,..""
w.,..................
. . ...·.· · · ··.·······················
· · · · · ······· · · ·· , System.
part of Hethesucceeds
Columbia
JohnGas
W.
CONSERVE WATER
Cottrill, Athens, who will retire
SYRACUSE - S~r&amp;cuse later this year.
Mayor Herman London asks
Leonard, 45, started with the
residents to refrain from gas company in 1953 as a

Harold W. Wetherholt
Wetherholt leaves two sons and
three granddaughters.
The sons are Manning E.
Wetherholt, a printer, and
Dougl as J . Weth erholt, a
realtor . Douglas spen t years as
a photogra pher and writer
before returning to the Old
French City. He is now ·
associated with The Ohio River
Realty Co.
Manning's French City Press
is located in part of the old
Tribune property on Second
Ave., above the Public Square
- the property Harold
Wetherholt bought nearly a
half.eentury ago; the Tribune
was written, printed, and
prepared for distribution in
that building until Ohio Valley
Publishing Company moved to
its present Upper Third Ave.,

Joseph of Parkersburg, a son
and daughter, and three grandchildren, John Ritchhart, West
Point; Brian and Jean Ann
Ritchhart, both of Syracuse.
He was also preceded in death
by a daughter, Joan.
Hemsley broke in baseball
with Frederick, Md. in the Blue
Ridge League as an outfielder .
He hit .242 in 1925, .256 in 1928,
and .310 in 1927. He was a
catcher the last two years.
With PittsbW'gh in 1928 to
1931, he hit .271, .289 and .253.
He was traded to the Chicago
Cubs in 1931 for catcher Earl
Grace and hit .289 in 1931 and
.238 in 1932. He was sold to
Cincinnati in 1932, and was
with the Reds only one year,
hitting .190.
·
Picked up by the St. Louis
Browns on Waivers In 1933, he
played there from 1933 to 1937,
batting .309 in 1934, in the best
hitting year of his career.
Traded to Cleveland iD 1938
A car was heavily damaged for pitcher Ed Cole, infielder
today at 6a.m. when it struck a Roy Hughes and catcher Bllly
600 lb. bull on SR 124 in front of Sullivan, he led Ute league's
the George Deem residence. catchers in fielding in 1940 and
The Meigs County Sheriff's set the all time Cleveland
Dept . said James Profitt, 45, record for defensive work. His
Portland, Rt. I, was traveling fielding average was .994ln 117
northwest on 124 when the games.
Sold to Cincinnati in 1942, be
inciden\ occurred. The acwas
released by the Reds and
cident did not kill the animal,
signed
by Ute Yankees in 1942;
owned by Deem.
Monday at 3 p.m. in Rutland, then was sold to Philadelphia
Randy J. Hysell, 16, Mid- in 1946.
He entered the U. S. Navy In
dleport Rt. I, and Elmer 0 .
Graham, Pomeroy, were August, 1944, and was
pushing a motorcycle to ·get it discharged In October 1946.
He caught lor the PllllUes In
ltarted, when the motor did
start, the two boys jumped on, 1946 and two games in 1947;
but the accelerator stuck and cailght on wiUt Seattle in
they lost control of the bike in Pacific Coast League where he
assisted as coach, Uten · was
gravel.
released
in 1946from Seattle to
Graham had abrasions over
his body and was taken to free lance .
Hemsley held the World
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Series
record for having struck
by private car.
out most times as a pinch
hitter. caught in three All Star
games, in 1936 with Browns, in
1940 with the Indians, and 1944
with the Yankees. His lifetime
major league batting average
was .261.
In 1946, he managed the
Nashville Vols and in 1949 was
appointed
manager
of
Columbus
Red
Birds,
Columbus.

Auto, BrJ.l in
Road Collision
On Route 124

Leonard Promoted
By Colwnbia Gas

Wednesday aud Wednesday
evenlug, as tbe Iowa's
pumps wiU not be operallng.
The pumps will be put
back In operation Thursday
at Ba.m.

•

IS

site.
Harold W. Wetherholt served
longer as publisher, including
two years as editor under
different ownership, than any
predecessor. He was publisher
for 29 years, July I, 1924, to
Feb. 12, 1953, when he sold to
Dear Publications of New
Jersey, a chain of newspapers
through the East and Midwest.
Harold Wetherholt then stayed
on fo r a two-year transition
period as editor, making his
total years of executive
association with the Tribune 31
.rears, one year more than
another famed figure In
Gallipolis
newspapering:
William Giddings Sibley.
In 1955, Harold Wetherholt
resi gned to become secretary (Continued on page 10 )

,..

Nurses scholarship, first
place in salons 10 to 35 partners, Pearl Knapp, local
chairman; children and youth
In salons, 10 to 35 members,
first place, Marie Boyd, local
chainnan; memorial service,
second place, Edith Fox, Meiga
chaliman; partnership, first to
reach goal in state; history,
third place, Mary Roush, local
chainnan.; and parody, third
place.
. Present to accept the awards
for the salon were Catherine
Welsh, Rhoda Hackett, Julia
Hysell, Iva Powell, Pearl
Knapp, Eunie Brinker, Veda
Davis, Lula Hampton, Myrtle ·
Walker, and Mrs. Martin. Mrs.
Welch and Mrs. Walker 1e
secretaire - caS~~iere depar(Continued on Page 6)

Dead

Minor Damages
In 2 Accidents

11AB0LD W. W&amp;f&amp;ft'M'LT

Meigs Salon .Awarded
Four Service Trophies
Four trophy. awards In the scholarship fund.
recognillon of outstanding
In addition to the trop)lles,
Eight and Forty work wiUt .. ,Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
children
afflicted with retiring departemental
tuberculosis and cystic chapeau', gave a certificate to
frlbrosis and the nurses the Meigs County Salon for
scholarship program were carrying out the best all around
presented to Meigs County program hi the state in all,
· Salon 710 at the 46th annual La · phases of Eight and Forty work
Marebe held last week In for the 1971-72 year. The Meigs
Cincinnati.
County Salon was first runnerThe Salon received the Angie .up in competition for the Grace
McElroy Trophy for having the Garrison Trophy which is
beat all around program in all given for the best l'aumonier
!aceta of Eight and Forty work, report, and was in tliird place
the Maybelle Gamble Trophy for Ute Etta McDonald Trophy
for the best children and youth .which is given for Ute best
program in the state, the Role history.
Decker ·Trophy for the most Besides the four trophies and
outstanding program in n!lfses the certificate from the
liCholanhlp, and the Esther departementai chapeau, ll'feigs
Allen 'fi'QPhY for giving the CoiiJlty Salon rec~ved six cash
largeetdollatioilspercapfta for awards aa follow&amp;:

TEN CENTS

Doug Hemsley, Syracuse,
received word today of the
sudden death of his brother,
Rollie, professional baseball
player, Monday night at Silver
Springs, Md.
Hemsley, 65, operated a real
es tate office in nearby
Langford Park, Md. Prior to
his heart attack Monday, he
had been in good health and
had attended the All-Star
baseball game last week in
Atlanta.
Hemlsey was the son of the
late Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
Hemsley, Syracuse.
He is survived by two
brothers, Doug, Syracuse, and

RmBON CUTI'ING CEREMONIES were held Tuesday morning to
mark Ute official opening of the new Jones Boys Store - the fifth - on
Pomeroy's West Main St. Taking part were from the left , Bernard Fultz,
attorney for the company ; William Baronick, mayor of Pomeroy; Dan
Black, manager of the new 18,000 square feet store, and Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle. Shortly following the ceremonies, shoppers poW'ed into the new
store to take advanta ge of price specials being offered during the week-long
grand opening.

using excess water all day

Variable cloudiness tonight
and Wednesday wiUt a chance
of showers and thWIdershowers north ton!Bht and
in Ute entire slate ·Wednesday.
Lows tonight 65 to 70 and hf8lw
Wednesday in the lower to mid
80s.

Hemsley of
Baseball is
Dead at 65

•

Whipping Posts Again

Hey.! Listen to thi s ! There's a bank yo u ca n count on to keep an eye on your future . It's
a Wide-awake bank. There's a bank that makes it easy going to go their wa·y. It's a
w1de-awake Uflllk. If you wonder who we are and where we've been all your life, don't
wonder anymore.
. We're right here. Just waiting for you. At THE wide-awake bank.

en tine

at y

NO.. 75

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Saying he has made " no
decision more painful or difficult" than asking Sen.
Thomas F. Eagleton to step
down, Sen. George S.
McGovern searched klday for
a running mate to help turn Ute
public's attention and get his
campaign rolllng again.
McGovern said he had not
decided on a vice presidential
nominee but would make a
recommendation to the Democractic National Conunittee
''within a few days."
McGovern and Eagleton announced at a news conference
In the Sllnate Caucus Room
Monday night their "joint
decision" that Eagleton step
down from the ticket. II came
only six days after the 42-yearold Missourian disclosed at an
equally dramatic joint news
conference in the Black Hil1B of
South Dakota that he had been
hospitalized Utree times for

. . .. . . -

-- ......

Weather

Harold Wether holt is dead!
One of Gallipolis' giants of
journalism, 72-year.,ld Harold
Watts Wetherholt, died of a
heart attack at 4:15 p.m.
Monday in the basement of the
ancient, palatial home, 409
was
virtually First Ave., where he and his
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A dreadful, very dreadful ... I security
wife, Coell Jividen Wetherholt,
retired raUroad worker who don 't want to die a violent nonexistent.
Mrs. W., 81, a resident of resided for 32 years.
says he fears for his life every death ... I used to go out all Ute
Services under the
time be steps out of his home in time, but now I'm afraid to go King-Kennedy Estates, said direction of the McCoy a Cleveland public housing to tbe corner store to buy she ll!ld many other residents Wetherholt-Moore Funeral
bad been robbed by someone
area would like to see whipping aspirin ."
who had a key to Utelr apart- Home will be held there at 7
posts revived for criminBis.
Acting Committee Chainnan ments. She said friends were pm., Wednesday with the Rev.
"'lbe TV would be there and
Paul Hawks, pastor of Grace
the youngsiers who commit Harrison A. Williams, D-N.J., assaulted In elevators and United Methodist Church ,
these crimes would be com- said Ute situation Is so bad in stairwells and mugged in officiating . Burial will be in
pelled to attend while we whip some areas that Ute elderly are !road daylight.
Banks, who lives In Wilson Mound HU1 Cemetery. Friends
these criminals Utat perfonn "sitting ducks" for muggers.
"An old person may no long- Estates not far from King-Ken- may call at the late residence
these acts of violence ...," Paul
after 7 o'clock this evening.
Banks, 87, told Ute Seaate Com- er have the strengUt or the nedy, said Ute problem is ''too
Besides the widow, whom
health to resist and Ute crimi- much permissiveness."
mittee on Aging Monday.
he wed June 27, 1923, :Mr.
'lbe conunittee is looking in- nal knows it,'' Wllliams said.
"Sentences are too light," he
Banks and another Cleveland
to Ute extent elderly persons
are victimized by crlmlnals. witness, Identified only as Mrs. said'. "Bond Is too easily ob•
"l'n not basically a coward,' .. W., said Robbery, assault and tained. I wish to God Ute cow1s
Banks said, "but in the last 10 burglary were common in their would start meeting out senY,earS the situation has become housing projects because tences.'~

The GreatAwakening

_, _

•

The speed of light was first
scientifically es timated as
roughly 180,000 miles per
second in 1676. Modern
measurements calculate the
velocity at 188,282 miles per
second.

WASHJNGTON -THE JJ3t HATCH ACT prohibiting federal
workers from partisan political activities has been ruled unconstitutionally vague by a panel of three federal judges. "This is
a cl8811lc case of a statute which in itself on occasion has a
'chilling effect ' unacceptable 1111der Ute 1st Amendment," said
(ContlnJJed on page 10)

HEAVY-DUTY
18 LB.
AUTOMATIC WASHER

Rock Springs
Area Events

,

Two minor accidenls, one a
chipped windshield and the
other a broken mirror, were
reported to the Gallia-Meigs
State Patrol P!Mit Mon~ay ,
The first occurred at 8:05
IJD. on State Route 7 one lel.Ut
tJl a mile · south of U.S. 35 in
Meigs County when James J.
Enyart, 29, Jackson Pike,
Galllpolis, was northbound on
7, passed a southbound auto,
and a small object cracked into
Enyart's windshield. There
were no injures or cl~tlon.
At 9:30 a.m. the second
mishap occurred on State
IIDute 124, one and seventh
tenths miles west of the·
Rutland Corporation llmlt in
Meigs County, when Nlal
Salser, 43, Syracuse, and an
111llnown auto swiped on a hW
with Ute side-view rnlrrora
making contact. The unknown
vehicle continued on. Salser's
dump truck came up with a
lli'oken mirror. There .were no
citations or injuries.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy ' at 1~ a.m.
Tuesday was 76 degrees under
cloudy skies.

MEETING SET

.r

MEIGS SALON 710 8 ANil 40 memben wltll four
traveling trophies the Salon was awarded at the recent' state
convention. From 1he left are Mrs. Marie Boyd, Salon
chU~en and youth chairman, holding Ute Mabelle Gamble
trophy for the best all-around children and youUt program by
any Saloo; Mrs. Mary Martin, outgoing Ohio Chapeau and a
member of Ute Meigs Salon, with t]le Esther C. Allen trophy,
won for the sixth time locally for the best nursing scholarship

I

'

The Meiga Colinty Bqet
CornmiSIIon
will meet at 1p.m.
prolfllll; Mn. Cltherille Welltl, lmm•&lt;liate pill cbapelll of·
Monday at the omce of Melp
Ute Meip s&amp;lon, holding the trophy for the best all-around
· County Auditor Gordon
program in Ohio, and
Rhoda Hackett, new lOcal
Caldwell. Budgets of townchapeau, holding Ute Rose Decker !Cholarshlp trophy lor the
ships, school dlalrlctl,
best all-around program dealing with scholarships. It was
munielpalllles and depart·
the fifth year that the Mabelle Gamble trophy has been won
mental beads lor 1873 will be
by the local group.
conaldered. Anyone .. " " ' ~ attend tile mee~~n&amp;.

Mrs:

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          <elementText elementTextId="53272">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53271">
              <text>July 31, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="225">
      <name>barringer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1105">
      <name>miles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7737">
      <name>montle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="305">
      <name>williams</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
