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                  <text>.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
',' '

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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.

. ,... :-

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. ,..,"Y ..

"""f•J'•

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~

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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...

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...

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J- Tbe Dilly Semlllel, MldcDeport·l'lmerOY, 0., Au~t I, 1972

Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree
with Anyone Else But Me ... "

IDITORIALS

A Bit Hurried

with that Ace

Credit Cords: We
Use, Disapprove

.KQ32
.AQJ
•~u
• KG~

You may love them or you may hate them , but chances
are you've got at least one of them- those little p1eces of
plastic called cred1t card~
Today, one out of every two fam1hes uses at least one
credit card, reports Lew1s Mandell, who directed the first
comprehensive exammallon of cred1t card use m the
United States for the Umvers1ty of M1ch1gan's Institute
for Soc1al Research
The survey found that 1f a fam1ly uses credit cards at
all, it generally uses several Three cred1t cards " the
median number lor those famll1es that use them. and a
SIZable proportwn use s1x cards or more
The interesting thmg 1s that whlle cred1t cards are
widely used, they are not w1dely approved of
"Few Amencans tend to thmk of cred1t cards as a good
thmg, whether th~y use them or not," says Mandell, who
found that 75 per cent of all persons mterv1ewed thought
that credit cards make 1t too easy to buy thmgs they may
not really want or can't really afford
Is the credit card replacmg money or checks• Mandell's
findings md1cate 1t 1s not Fam1hes usmg credltcards tend
to write more checks per month than lam11ies who do not
use such cards
The conclusiOn 1s that cred1t cards are takmg a place m
America's flnanc1al life but are not takmg the place of
trad1bonal methods of mcurnng debts 01 paymg bills

.AJ97

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Opening lead-t 8

"

• 7 ????W? '9227

I I

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
THE SEA STD..L HAS ITS CALL
NEW YORK (KFS) - Ocean travelmg by
luxury sh1p takes very httle spec1al knowledge
Vanous sh1ps have assorted characters, personalihes, moods The f1rst year the greatest
Ammcan Atlantic liner, The Umted States, was
m achon, a fnend of ours took 11 to Europe,
mspected 1t m detail as was his nosy wont and
discovered It was a lavishly camouflaged
troopship: 1ts walls were steel pamted m
pastels, its pohte ameruhes cloaked 1ts true
funcbonal use -to be shifted m time of war to a
great vessel for transporting troops When sa1d
fnend returned, we asked what the trip m the
mmden year of the Umted States had he en like,
and he replied, "Uke gomg to Europe on the
New Yorker Hotel "

I

ocean voyage is a cinch. Especially if thl8 WI·
!rocked gravedigger and dock walloper can
make 1t
And so our tips on traveling on the ocean
g~antsare few and simple: don't be wary of the
seemmg hyster1a of boarding: the QE2
swallows up a couple thousand travelers within
a few hours dockside. There will be enough help
there for all. Our serendipity years ago was
unusual, we admit We'd Interviewed a
young1sh waterfront dock walloper named Ray
Skarlca because hlS interests went considerably
beyond luggage toting. We learned he not only
served on the Cunard dock, but owned a karate
school in Queens on Long Island, taught that
esoteric VIolence to men and women, the latter
expanding their mterest m self defense with
every new tale of a mugger in the papers. Ray
Skanca also taught judo and the Rench science
of Savate, m which the educated toe Is used for
more than a ballet dancer's en pointe; It can, in
the case of a skilled Savate student, enable you
to dropkick an assailant Into the happy world ol
unconsciousness. W1th Ray's total expertlae
assimilated by a student, man or woman, a trip
through Central Park might even seem a
convement a! fresco workout at the gym. Ray
also now promotes prizefighting on Long Island.
It was through our prior meetings with Ray
Skanca that our arrivals shipside at the Cunard
dock (once at 54th St. and the North River, now
at 44th St ) took on the simplest method of
boardmg Ray pointed out It was just the
friendly face that caused us to think we were
bemg raced through magically.
"See that family there," be pointed to a
group of four. "They're getting a complete
stranger to take their luggage. Watch," and we
did; the family got aboard the QE3 at the same
moment we did. So that Is no problem.
Arrival at Southampton in England or
O!erbuurg in France 18 equally simple. Your
room steward and stewardess do all tile work,
will even pack for you; and foreign immigration
and customs inspection 18 not even close to the
necessarily finicky attention paid to your bags
on your return to the United States.
We almost alwaysretw:n by plane; the new
747s are faster and more comfortable of coll.'le
than the old 7lrls or the first planes we took
across oceans, the DC6s and DC'Is. You get the
Jet Lag on return, of course, and lt'a our
suggestion that you don't return by air the day
before you go back to work. ()therwile you'll be
a zombie for the several days It takes to attain a
normal compatibility with your alann clock.

Now, no one ever accused the estunable
oommercral hotel, The New Yorker, now bemg
turned mto a great Manhattan hosp1tal, of bemg
a luxury hotel. Functional, to he sure; luxury,
hardly.
Traveling on the QE2 1s something
By Belen and Sue Bottel
agreeJ!,bly else: it's .like sailing lo Europe
abqjlrd
, ~ Ilorc)l¢er, the Savoy, ,or
HOW POW BRACELET, SALEs HELP
Claridges, all great London hotels And if we
Helen and Sue:
Tbank.s for telling us where to send for POW bracelets, but dwell on the subJect of great luxury ocean
here's a question several people asked me · How does the money travel, 1t's because 1t was a dream come true
when we started taking ships to Europe more
fflm 11811!11 belp?
than 15 years•ago.
Money alone won't get these men out of priSOn camp5. We've crossed on the old Uberte, a great
a&gt;NCERNED ABOUT OUR POW'S
French ship now sold for Junk; we've been on
most Atlant1c lmers over the last JO years as
Coocemed:
True, we can't "buy" our POWs' release, but bracelet money traveler or sh1p news reporter, and these great
helps keep the public (including Han01) aware of their plight and , Atlantic sh1ps have been umversally satisfying,
mcludlng the same old Uruted States, now m
our will to bring them home.
We sent your question to aVIVA executive who answered 1t mothballs at Norfolk, Va or somesuch abeyant
storage, awmtmg a war 1t will be ready for,
811 follows:
"Having been Informed of the tragic Situation Wllh our though unhkely m this optunist's llfetune.
But the luxury of ocean lmers will contmue,
American POW-MIAs, vrvA chose in October, 1970, to set aside
all other activities and concentrate solely on the solution of this also m our optimistic vern· 1t's our smcere
conVICtion surface ocean travel never will
problem until ALL prisoners are freed.
disappear; diminish 1t has, but like all the great
"Here are some of the projects financed by bracelet sales
"1. VIVA gave a national symposium for POW-MIA faml11es mvent10ns which seemed set to erase the
fflm aU over the country so that they might plan and organiZe medium of travel 91' conunurucatlons just
previous, and haven't, merely adJusted the
National POW-MIA Week
"2.11 placed ads with a cllp.outletter to Congress in 70 maJor emphases, we can't see mtercontinental airplanes completely removmg ocean liners from
newspapers.
"3. vrvA buys advertising space on 25 million match books the marvelolL'lly luxur1ous world every youngster may admrre to expenence sometime; if
per monlb, wblch infonn people of the POW -MIA plight.
"4. It helps POW-MIA family groups whenever Jhere lS a George McGovern can make the Pre&amp;denllal
nommation, if a drugstore clerk named Hubert
need.
"5. It has infOI'IlUitlon Inserted in college newspapers to can get one toe pomted toward the White House,
1f a humble store worker named Nixon can call
reach over two millloo students.
"6. It supplies materials, arranges for speakers, and help5 1600 Pennsylvarua Ave . home, then an ultimate
plan apprmdmately 250 POW-MIA programs a week in schools,
abopping centers, conventiOIUI, etc.
"7. VIVA an!IWers some 2,000 written requests for literature,
The Almanac
The moon 1s approaching Its
etc. per day. It receives and forwards at least 100 letters a day By United Press International last quarter
frcm dtlze1111 to family members. These not only boost farmly
The mormng stars are VenllS
Tuday lS Tuesday, Aug. 1, the
morale, but also will be meaningful to men who return after 214th day of 1972 w1th !52 to and Saturn.
7'!&amp;n of bearing the enemy say that Amencans don 'I care
follow.
The even1ng stars are
"8. It will provide funds, when justified, to establish offices in
dUes which are directing a POW-MIA efforts, 1e. pay rent or
salary of the office manager."
Mainly, "Concerned," your bracelet money insures that the
coontry will not forget.
POW bracelets may be had by sending a donation of 12 50
(for nickel) or $3 (for copper) to VWA, 10966 LeConte, Los
Angeles, Callf., 90024, or POW-MIA CAMPAIGN, 2053 "R"
Street, McClellan Air Force Base, Calif., 95652. - HELEN AND
SUE
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. ask him to help you get the
operatiOn Stenllzabon oper·
Oear Or. Lamb-! would ations should be cons1dered
Dear Rap:
What's your definition of "g088ip," and what's the difference hke some informatiOn on as permanent and no woman
between g018lplng and being painfully frank? Which is tymg of a woman's tubes I should have one unless she IS
had th1s done about seven absolutely sure she doesn't
preferable?- STIJDENT OF HUMAN NATURE
years ago and I would hke want any more chlldren You
to have more chlldren now are nght that 17 is too young
Dear Student:
Can they be untied. I had foF th1s operation, m most
about a 15-mmute operation. circumstances The same
a-lp 18 what you wouldn't IIBY If the person were there
I
have had trouble w1th my thing u~plles to men who
"Painful frankness" Is saying It WHEN the person 18 there.
stomach
ever since I had have the1r tubes tied (vasI think we could do will! out BOTH I -SUE
this done, but every doctor I ectomy )
+++
go to tells me I am healthy
Dear Dr. Lamb- Some
Dear SOHN:
I was too young to have
years
ago, my doctor started
Galaip- among women -Ia repeating something which, lf th1s done, only 17 years old.
me
taking
two thyroid pills a
llllclto a girl's face, might bring a slap. Among men? Well, they I only have one ch1ld and I
day and told me I would
CAlL It "informative dilcwJIIon."
•
' am now mamed.
have to take them the rest of
When a periOD brags about being ''painfully frank" he's
Dear Reader- Some spe- my hfe At that time I had
.uallyaylng "l' envious "whetherhereallzesltornot.
ciahsts m female problems tests to prove I needed them.
' '
'
(gynecologists) do r e conJnf..:t,bothgoulpingandhurtfulfranknessoftenstemfrom nect the tubes. Vaned suc·
I have continued taking
tbe urge to bring olberllow; but I think the latter 18 the mere cess IS reported, but even m them and feel fme, but oth'riclaul. - HELEN
the best of circumstances er members of my famlly inp .S. Ccme to think of it, a Utile g018lp IBn't such a bad thing you would have only about Sist that I shouldn 't continue
-ltllftNac:on..,.Uoo provldellgoodreadlng and allows that one chance m four of a sue- Without havmg more tests to
'
.._.d ourse1'
If 11
cessful operation and the prove I need them. Do you
we"rt lllllllnterelted In 110111eone """' es
ves.
were ab11ity to get pregnant Still thmk I should have a test or
•.....,Iy banned, the world would aeem pretty dull. -HELEN that 1s better than no chance believe my doctor and just
MID SUE
See your obstetnclan and contmue takmg them •

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AMB

Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Leo. Francis
Scott Key, who wrote the Star
Spangled BaMer, was born
Aug. I, 1779

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We aren't going to assess
the blame for the slightly un·
sound slam contract reached
by North and South. Why
should we • South made 1t!
South won the trump lead
and promptly led h1s eight
of spades This dldn 't fool
West in the slightest. He had
been around for a long time
and knew that this immediate spade lead a I m o s t
surely md1cated a smgleton
Otherw1se, South would not
have played it nght away.
So West went right up with
his ace of spades. He got his
spade trick all right but he
also gave South the slam
Later on South was able to
discard two clubs on dummy's king and queen of
spades and wind up with the
12 tricks he needed.
If West had not suffered
from "grasshopper disease"
he would simply have covered the eight of s p a d e s
with bls nine and not rushed
to take bls ace.
The strange thing about
tbls hand Is that if South
did hold more than one spade
there would be no way to
beat the slam. South would
have one less club or heart.
After West ducked the first
s~ade, South would return to
h1s hand, drawmg trumps;
lead a second spade and get
the same two spade tricks
he got when the ace was
played the first time.
(NlWSPAPER lHTEIPIISE ASSN )

The b1ddm1 hu been·
Wet! North Eut
Pass

1• 1•
Pasa

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You, South 1 hold:

.87U

tAK9U .78Z

What do you do now'

A-Bid four cllamoncll. YoUl
partner Is lrylnc lor a olam and

6 ao ~ News 3, 4, I, 10, 15, CBS News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie
13, TruthorConseq 6; SesameS! 20; Halhayoga33.
6 30- NewsJ, 4, 6, 8, 10, IS; Gre)'ld Mas!Jrs Cheso 33
7 00- News6, 10; What's My Line I, Eltc. Co. 20, Green Acres
3: Farmers Daughtori3; Andy Griffith 15; Dick Van Dyke 4:
Insight 33.
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; Ponderosa 3. 15: Mod Squad 6,
13; Jerry Reed 8: A Birthday Story 20, Maoterplece Theatre
33 , E•pto '72 6, 8, 15. John Byner Comedy Hour 10.
1 00 - Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 20.
1 30 - Hawaii Flve-0 I, 10, NI\C ,Action Playhouse 3, 4,
Evening at Pops20, 33, Movle6, 13; Deeth Valley Days 15
9 00- Baseball 15
9 30- James Garner 3, 4. Cannon B. 10, Ooln' It 20, Handsfuls
of Ashes 33
10 00- News, Weather, Sports 20, Marcus Welby 4, 6, 13, Firing
Line 33
11 OO-News3,.4,6, 8,10, 13,15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Car11011 3, 4. 15: Movie "The
Power" 1, Movie "The Shoot" 10, Movie "Merrill's
12 00- Johnny Carson 15
1 00 - Your Health, 4.
1 30 - News, Weather 4, Local News 13.
WEDNESDAY,AUIJU)l z
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, sacred He'lrl 10.
6 15- Farmtime 10, Ferm Report 13, 6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4: Bible Answers 8. Urban League 13
6 45 - Corncob Report3; 6 55- Rocky&amp; Bullwlnkle13
7 00- Today J, 4, 15, CBS News8, 10, News6
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Underdog 13
8.00- Capt. Kangeroo 10, New Zoo Revue6. 13, Sesame St 33
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13: Tennetsee Tuxedo 6
9.00- Paul Dlxoo 4, Phil Donahue 15, Lucl's Toyshop 10;
Peyton Place 13; Romper Room 8, Mr Rogers 33, What
Every Woman Wants to Know3; Timmy and Lassie 6.
9 30- Truth or Conseq 3. Electric Co. 33. Mike Douglas 6: One
Life to Live 13. My Three Sons 8
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15, Lucille Ball 10, Dick Van Dyke 13 ,
Halhayoga JJ
10 30 - Concentration J, 15; Phil Donahue 4, Amateur's Guide to
Love 10; Spill Second 13, Beverly HlllbiiiiH 8. My Three Sons
10; In School Instruction 33, Love, American Style 6
11 00- Family Affair 8, 10, Love American Style 13. Sale of
Century J. 15. Communique 6
11 30 - HollywoodSquareU, 15 , Love Of Life B. 10. Bewllched6.
13; Sesame Street 20
12 00- Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
News 13. Contact 8, News 10
1 30-J W'sGame 3, 15, Spill Second 6. Search for Tomorrow 8,
10 : Electric Co 33
1 00- News, Weather, Sports J. All My Children 6, 13, Divorce
Court 8; Green Acres 10 , Walch Your Child 15. French Chef
33
1 20 - Lucille Rivers J
1 30- Three On A Match 3, 4, 15, Lei's Make A Deal6, 13. As
The World Turns 8, 10, Sewing Skills 33
2 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15. Newlywed Gamel3, Vlrgln18
Graham 6. Love Splendored Thing 8, 10 , Bridge 33
2 30- Dating Game 13, Guiding Light 8, 10. Handfuls of Ashes
33, Baseball 3, 4, Doctors 15
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15. General Hospital 6. 13, Secret
Storm 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30- One Life to Live 6, Edge of Night 8, 10 , Jeff's Collie 13,
Return to Peyton Place J, 4, 15.
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15; Fllntstones 13, Sesame
St 33, Huckleberry Hound 6, Batmen 8. Movie " The
Dangerous Days of Kiowa Jones" 10
4 25 - Sporl$ Club 6
4 30-Merv Griffin 4, I Love Lucy 6: Virginian 8, Password 13 .
Andy Griffith 15, Green Acres 3
5 00- Wagon Train J, Maverick IJ , Mr Rogers 33 . Dick /an
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6
5 JO-Marshall Dillon 15, Electric Co 33 , Dragnet4
6 00- Truth or Conseq 6, News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15. I Dream of
Jeannie 13, Sesame Sl 20; Hathayoga 33
6 30-NewsJ,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, BrldgeJ3
7 00- Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6, 10, What's My Line 8, Elec
Co.20: Wild, Wild West 13, Deeth Valley Days 15, Milestones
of Progress33, Movie "Tammy and The Doctor" J
1 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Hollywood Squares 3, Dragnet 8,
The Judge 10, Episode Action 33, Mr Rogers 20 , lassie 15.
Doctors on Call 4
8 00- Adam·12 4, A Public Affair 20, 33, Green Acres 3, The
Super6, 13 , Explo '721 , David Steinberg 10
8 30- Corner Bar6, 13, Movle20, 33. Columbo3, 4, 15
9 00 - Medical Center 8. 10; Marly Feldman . Comedy
Machine ll, Baseball 15
9 30- Kopycat 13 , Explo '72 6
10 00-Mannlx 8, 10. News 20. Soul 33, Night Gallery 3, 4
10 30- Pure Gold 6, Newsmaker 13
11 OO-News3,4,6,8.10, 13,15
11 30-Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Mov ie " A Step OJ!
of Line" 8, Movie " Fighter Squadron" 10, /ok&gt;vle "Malaga"
13

100-News&lt;
1:30- News 13

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to five
spades. What do you do now?

Answer tomorrow

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTEit L TANNEHILL,

Euc. Ed

ROIERT HOEFLICH,

Cit'( Editor
Published datly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
PubiiSh•no Comp•nv , 111

Court St. Pomeroy , Oh•o,
45"9 Bus.nen Offfce Phone
"1 2156, Edllorlol Phor• 992

2157

Second class postage peld et

Pomeroy, Ohfo

National adverf111ng
rtpruentat•vt 8oltlneltl

Gallagher/ Inc , 12 East 42nd
St, New York City, New York

Subscription ratu
De
lnvered by cerrler where
nellable 50 cent$ per week ,
By Motor Route where carrter
ltfV!CI not IVIillble
One
month $1 75 By mall In Oh 10
tnd w va , One year su 00
$111.
monltu S7 25 Three
months u so Subscr•pllon
pnce Includes !.unday Tlmu
Sentinel

A thought fer the day : In the
American national anthem,
Francis Scott Key wrote: "lls
the Star-tpangled banner I 0,
loog may It wave o'er the land
of the free and the home of the

trave!"

In Men and Women

TUESDAY, AUGUST 1

it is up to you. to eooperate and
ehow your di1100nd eonpool.

The Daily Sentinel

!ilould profanity and vulgarity be permitted on telev18ioo?
Well, 7'!S aod no.
At the risk (nope, with the certainty) of getting my fingers
burned, I'd Uke to discuss the subject for a spell.
Let's start with this as a thesis .
Televllion, at times, should be an accurate and faithful
portrayal of lffe as It really Is.
Life, as It really 18, 18 full of people who use profane and
vulgar language.
Therefore, It follows, that It would be unreallsllc - and
unfaithful to real life - absolutely to prohibit the use of any
e~:clamatory language on televlsloo.
However, because TV 18 so aU-encompassing, parUcularly
reaching the ears of chlldren, very, very judicious restraints
must be placed on any use of Impolite language.
Taklngthesepointa (and you don'thave to), we can therefore
e~:pound Rules One and Two:
1. - Only 111der the most extreme conditions should any
profane ezpreadoo be used at an hour when large numbers of
children are likely to be tuned ln.
2.- The use of an eJpletive can be justified when, and only
when, It seems vital to the characterization of the cast or
development of the story line.
Th111, there 18 absolutely no reason why Captain Kangaroo or
the CoOkie Monster ever should about a four-letter no-no. Nor
abould there be any reason for a contestant to resort to barrackroom verbiage when he misses the question on Final Jeopardy.
On the other Bide of the coin, It would be totally out of
character to think that General CUster muttered, "Aw, shucks!"
when the Indiana attacked, or that Dillinger was saying "Oh,
Fudge'" when !he G-Men clOied In on him.
·~
In these circumstances, historical fldeUty must apprOilmate

Sterilization Usua Ily Permanent ~n:;=~~aix!~~~e!~er~=~
Dear Reader-Your letter
doesn't suggest that members of your family hav~ a
medical degree. If they do
not, they are mcompetent m
this area and no matter how
well meanmg they are, the
end result 1s that they are
meddlesome busy bodies.
Your letter suggests that
you are seemg a doctor for
this problem and if he
thought you needed a new
test he would have one done.
The fact tha• you feel fine
and are doing well suggests
that he must be doing something right. Perhap11 that is
why you are paying him.
A small amount of thyroid,
even m a person with a
normal thyroid gland, usually will not cause any harm.
The normal thyroid gland
just produces leu hormone
to ba!ance thmgs out.
Dear Dr. Lamb- Would
you kmdly explain what bilateral nephroptosis IS and

tell me if anything can be
done to relieve the pain
Dear Reader- A fancy
name for dropped kidneys.
When a person with this
problem stands upright, the
kidneys fall, kinking the
ureter tube that drains the
kidney and caualng pain. If
the condition Ia serious and
causing symptoms, It Is
sometimes n e c es sa r y to
have an operation to tack the
kidney In place so It won't
fall. If the condition is not
causing symptoms It Is often
left alone.
(HIWSPAPIR INI'IRPIUII AIIM)

,, - ''"""' ,.w., • ,.,_..,

~ittl Toi1IIIIOIIf ,...., """' 1o IHI

Dt.

L_.,, 6ooAiot lot •Ilk• Ito oo-

I'Jfll yoor · - · tiNs ....
jed. s-..4 50 t:lllb .. Dr. l.alllb,

in coro oiiiHs _.,.,.,, ,.0, lox
1551, ~lo Cily Sutloo, How Yilt,
NY. 100,, Ask II&lt; "lo/1«111 Diot"

\

.. .

5 30- Marshall Dillon~ Eltc Co. 33.

Marauders11 13.

Both vulnerable
W•t North Eul South

Generation Rap

•'

.QlOU

"K76

The WAVES Hove Subsided

' !

.10832

t8762
.J9

.8

•·.

.. '
...

•t54

SOU'111 (D)

-·.,.
In an age of prollreratmg acronyms - PACE, COPE
CROP, HUD, NASA, etc , etc , etc -It 1s encouraging to
learn that one well-known member of the spec1es has been
discontinued
When women were brought mto the Navy to stay on
July 30. 1942, to replace homefront manpower, they were
called WAVES, a rather stramed acronym formed of the
first letters of "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service "
By way of observmg the 30th anmversary of this event
the Navy has announced that women m the Navy wlll
henceforth be referred to s1mply as women m the Navy
Once a reserve component, the distaff sailors are now
an established part of the regular Navy and the Naval
Reserve Formerly restricted to the contmental Umted
States, women m the Navy are now servmg m England ,
Japan, Spam, Iceland, Italy, Germany and Guam ·
Women's libbers may also be pleased to hear that
among other changes, enbsted women are now bemg
ass1gned to Pac1f1c Fleet a1r squadrons, wh1ch had p1 e
viously been considered all-male preserves, and one female airman recently became the first hebcopter plane
captain In the Navy

EAST
.106H

WFST

•' '

. '.,
••

1

NORTH

1- 'l'ht l'lii)J llenllnel, Middlepoft-Pcmeroy, 0., August I, 1972

Television Log

11

early every Saturday). It would destroy his character to be
!Inver saying "goeh-darn" or "dlgo~~&amp;b4t," when you know
that's not really a t be Ia thinking - «' 118)'1nc,
So, lfyou accept thl8, we can proceed to another rule:
3. - Televillon must have the ril!ht to use 11n occasional
profaile expression, but never merely fer the sensational or
slloa value It might contain. It must be integral to the story or
event being portrayed,
Here, I'm tblnklng ct a iDt of "R" and "X" rated movies that
are going to have to be wblttled and ei)IUllied befclre they're ever
lit fw the 111111U IICI'MD,
Up to this polnl, lei me mike clear, I am talking about
profanity, bywhit'Jtlmeananocculonal "damn" cr "beD," and
words a! that Ilk. 1 tiUk TV 18 Imaginative enougb to let lCI'IllllJ
the Ideal without gelling much lltronger than that.
Vulprlty 18 an enUrely different matter, and I plan to talk
about lhll lor a bit lomclTow.

++++ '

ON mE TV DIAL: Al&amp;rl• ct fl"llllillii on lbe (lrell Youth
antlatyO'ulade, ''Eiplo "12," held In Tau In JUDe, will be
an (1llflt the t11a1 this -k. Sinal NCb lltiii!Gn' IChedulel at a
different time, It's han! to 117 mort t11an that tha debit will be at
7:10p.m., W'I'VN·TV and WTAP-TV. Cledi dal)J lap 1Gr this allwee~~; ..,.dal ... Jolin Byner, a Cflllic, llartla mlnl...n. olllve
lhtmm WBNS-TV at 7:30 ... PlrllleloCirdutl, WTAP-TV.
Movlea: '"1'111 Sboot," 11:30 p.m., IIIII ''Illnltrwl Dlya ct
IQowa J-," f p.m. Wednelday, both WINS..TV.

•

the Sports
By Chet Tannehill Desk
Remember Jaspey? You do, If you're at least 40 years old
Go beck to those awful!940s, when an earber generatwn sweated
out the draft - without benef1ts of a lucky lottery draw - but
shored with patrlotisin heated up by the dastardly deed perpetrated by Mr Tojo at Pearl Harbor
Jaspey was Jun Porter, sports ed1tor for the Gall1pohs
Tribune, the fellow who started Dave Diles of Middleport, then a
high school student, covermg Yellow Jacket fOQtball, basketball
and baseball D1les today lS a top echelon ABC-TV sports commentator, Detro1t radio stahon sports reporter, and anchor man
for TV documentafles.
Jaspey lS a lot older today. But he remembers hlS golden
7t~ars as a sports leg man w1th greater warmth than the salary he
drew JUStified A professor now at R10 Grande College, after a
tour of duty m the state senate, Jun has supplied to Sports Desk
the followmg memorul to "Mr Football" of southeastern OhiO
BY J. SHERMAN PORTER
(Alias Jaspey)
Death lS not a happy th1ng to commemorate, and followers of
sports especially are so energehc, achve, and partiSan that 1t's
farthest from their mmds. But I want to remmd the today
generahon that Aug Its an anruversary that should be marked
It was on this date 10 1956 that Wilham Evan (Bill) T1.umas died
at 75 years of age Maybe we should have prmted these ed1Ional
thoughts about hun hack on h1s birthday , Feb l9, but today
starts cond1tiorung of high school football players It's appropriate . and not unhappy'
People who are playmg footballm 1972 m the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League were bemg born when B11l Thomas, founder
of the league, died Let us look at the record
It was March 7, 1925, that B1ll Thomas mVIted all the school
aupermtendents, prmc1pals, athletic directors, and coaches to
meet in what 18 now the Coach House, Wellston The name of this
restaurant lS swtable for the purposes of this sports ed1tonal,
because Bill Thomas once was a coach
The schooimen accepted the conshtution which B1ll Thomas
had written for the SEOAL. They wanted to elect hun the first
preSident, but he showed them the clause m the const1tuhon they
had just adopted which lumted the off1cers to fulltune schoolmen
employed by the school board. &lt;
Thomas was "Mr Football" of Wellston for decades About
the time the league was a quarter of a century old, Jaspey
pomted out that fans may have been lahormg under the delusiOn
that the famous statue of liberty play was the mvent1on of
Fielding H Yost at the Umvers1ty of M1ch1gan But that's wrong
We held then - and st1U do - that Blll Thomas was the frrst
coach to tutor hls boys m the play, and he "stumbled" upon 1t by
accrdent It was f~rst known m 1907 as the Grmny-Gallagher play,
before anybody on the local news staffs today was even born
That year, when Wellston's Golden Rockets didn 't have a
regular, paid coach, Bill Thomas took over the rems w1thout pay,
as he did four or f1ve other hmes 1n that school's early gnd
history.
Wellston had a halfback named Grmnell, whose father lived
m Detroit. It had a quarterback named Joe Gallagher, pres1dent
of Frick-Gallagher at Wellston many years later, who died only
three or four years ago.
Grinnell went buck to pass, but he dropped the ball, and
Gallagher, who had gone back with him to protect him from
tacklers, caught the pigskin before It touched the groWld and ran
for a touchdown Coach Thomas thereupon taught hls boys how to
work the "Grinny-Gallagher" play 011 purpose, and 11 never
failed.
Grinnell's girl friend in Detroit was the s1ster of a Wolverme
grldder He told her about the play. She told her brother Her
lrother told F1elding Yost. And Michigan's football players used
It, and Yost became famous because of 1t
Bill Thomas coached the Golden Rockets m 1915 when they
played off the state champtonship with Fostona, losmg to a team
coached by the late Red Trautman, years later cormmsswner of
rmnor league baseball and father of an ex-Athens Bulldog who
made All-America m the line for Oh10 State Uruvers1ty Thomas
had the Popes, Glllens, and Handleys, among others ·
The first lime Wellston ever had a football team Bill Thomas
not only coached it but organized 11 and played quarterback on 11
That was in 1898. They dldn'thave enough boys to play football m
1899, and football was purely mtramural in 1900, the year Blll
Thomas graduated from h1gh school
Thomas was a Big Ten football offlcral. He refereed the Oh10
Stadium dedicatory game with Michigan, a highlight In his
career, and he worked up to the B1g Ten by officiating h1gh school
games around here. Next step pp was the "b1g-time" h1gh school
games in the Buckeye state; from there to the Ohio conference,
and then the Western cooference.
Wellston now has a newspaper, the Sentry, wh1ch sounds
someWhat like the Wellston Daily Sentinel, wh1ch was 1ts
predecessor Thomas acquired the Sentinel Jan I, 1928. He was
postmaster 12 years from 1923, where he had starll!d as a clerk m
1910
Aug.! an unhappy anruversary? It's a day to remember that
the youths who are playing football m !972are m the same league
Bill Thomas established hack wben their grandfathers were
playing
It's a day to be proud of the achievements of Wtlham Evan
Thomas, sports figure par excellence '

ROOKIES CUT
LATROBE, Pa. (UPI)- The
Pittsburgh Steelers placed two
rookies from the University of
Dayton on waivers Monday.
They were linebacker Dan
Qulhn and defensive back
Sonny Allen.

'

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
B11ly Wllhams cracked out
four stnught hits Monday to
back the s1x-hlt p1tchmg of
Ferguson Jenkms as the
Clucago Cubs completed a
sweep of their four-game sems
Wllh the St. Loms Cardinals
w1th a 4..0 tnumph
Wtlhams ratsed h1s average

to 346 w1th h1s four safelles to
head the NL battmg race
"I beheve that Wngley F1eld
makes a better hitter out of

s Blaitks Cardinals 4-0
me," W1lhams satd

" In : ames th1s year .

the
b1g
park ,
you
take that all · out swmg
and, as a result, you take
your eye off the ball In
Wngley Field, I know I don't
have to pump to h1t the ball out,
so I keep my eye on the p1tch
better. And I also take a
shorter swmg," he added
Jenkms, postmg his 14th wm
agamst mne losses, hurled hlS
19th complete game of the
season m beatmg the Cardmals
for the first tune m three

stra1ght Vlclory over the
Dodgers Denny McLa10,' who
went seven 10mngs, picked up
h1s second VIctory of the season
and allowed two of the three
f,.os Angeles runs .
Don Carnthers returned
fr om a 28-day ex1Ie m the
bullpen to heat the Reds m
lim1hng Cmc10nat1 to seven
h1t.s The G1anis backed up
Camthers w1th a 12-hlt attack
that mcluded Bobby Bonds '
17th homer of the season
Duffy Dyer hlt a two-run
homer 10 the e1ghth mmng and
Brent Strom and Oanny
Fnsella combmed to p1tch a
four-h11ler as the Mets
defeated Montreal Dyer hlt h1s
seventh home run of the season
m the eighth mnmg after Cleon
Jones had walked

BY KEITH WISECUP
Qwte a few good breaks and
a prayer answered every now
MAJOR
and then could make Meigs
LEAGUE
High School a serious contender for the Southeastern
Ohio football champ10nsh1p
By Un1ted Press International thiS year. But thiS holds true
for any team that ever took the
National League
East
field.
w I pet g b
Talk about hard h1t by
60 35 632
P1ttsbvrlh
New Yor
52 41 559 7 graduation' You've probably
Ch1cago
51 46 526 10 never seen the like until you
St LOUIS
46 48 489 131!2
Montrea l
42 50 457 16'h skim down the personnel losses
Ph&lt;ladelph•a 34 61 358 26 the Marauders suffer thu year.
West
Nmeteen of 22 starhng
wlpctgb positions are gone, vanished,
Cmcmnat1
57 37 606
Houston
54 44 551 5 disappeared, or "not there no
Los Angeles
49 46 516 9112 mo'/' wh1chever expression
Atlanta
46 50 479 12
you prefer
San Franc:tsco 4.4 54 449 15
Probably the best way to
San Otego
36 59 379 21'/'
Monday's Results
describe the 1972 edition of
ChJcago 4 Sf Lou1s 0
Me1gs football, the pr1de and
P1tlsburgh 2 Ph1 iadelph1a 0
joy of the SEOAL, Is several
New York 4 Montreal 2
small feet replacmg the g1ant
Atlanta 4 Los Angeles J
Houston 3 San Otego 2
shoes left behind from last
San Franc1sco 7 Cmcmnati 2
year But anything Ia in our
Today S Probable Pitchers
favor, "We've got Charley
(All Ttmes EDT!
Ch1 cago (Hooton 7 8) at O!ancey and they ain ~. "
Montreal (Stoneman 9 71. 8 The Marauder defense,
pm
Ph1ladelph1a ITw1fchell 2 1 which has been the highlight of
and Carlton 15 6) at New York Coach Otancey's brilliant five(Matlack 10 5 and Koosman 7 year career at Meigs, will have
61. 2, 5 30 p m
P1tlsburgh (Briles 9 41 at St one returnee, safety Cluck
LOUIS (5antorml 4 7), 9 p m
Faulk, and two who saw plenty
San D1ego (Kirby 7 11 and of action, end Bill Chaney and
Acosta 2 51 at Atlanta ISchueler linebacker Dallas Weber. But
4 4 and Kelley 5·61. 6 p m
CmC1nnat1 ($1mpson 6 4) at other than that IBn 't much to
Houslon !Forsch55l . 8 30pm write home about.
San Francisco ( Bryant 9 5) at
los Angeles ( Oownmg 56) , 11 Graduated from the defense
are middle guard John
pm
Wednesday's Games
Thomas, tackles Jon Grueser
Ch1 at Mont, 2. twl nl~ht and all-SEOAL Fred Lee,
Phlla at New York, night P1tls
at St Louis, n1ghl San D1ego at linebackers Ted Lehew and
Atlanta, night Cine I at Houston, two-time all-SEOAL Tiny
ntght San Fran at los Angeles, Wilhams, cornerbacks Ron
n1ght
Sm1th and Keith Van Jnwagen,
Amer1can League
ends Larry Harmon and allEast
w I pet g.b SEOAL Jeff Morris, and backs
Detro1t
55 40 579
Rick Ash and Tom Cooke.
Baltrmore
52 42 553 21f2 Offensively, Meigs has their
New York
47 45 511 61f2
Boston
47 46 505 7
Cleveland
42 52 447 12112
M1lwaukee
37 58 389 18 Oakland {Holtzman 13 91. 11
West
pm
w I. pet gb.
Minnesota (Woodson 7 9) at
Oakland
59 38 .608
Texas (Broberg 5-81.8 30p m
Ch1cago
53 43 .552 51!, Caltfornla IWright II 5) at
Minnesota
47 45 .511 91!, Chicago (Bradley 11 9), 9p m
KansasCtfy 46 49 484 12
Milwaukee (Lockwood 4 9) at
Caltforn1a
44 53 454 15 Detroit (Coleman 12 8) , 9p m
Texas
39 57 406 19'h Baltimore !McNally 10·81 at
Monday's Results
Cleveland (Perry 178), 7 30
pm
Chicago 8 Minnesota 1
New York 5 Batt 2, lsi
New York !Stoltiemyre 10 111
New York 2 Bait 1, 2nd
at Boston (Siebert 9 6), 7 30
pm
Cleve J Mllw 2. lsi, 10 mns l
Cleve 1 Mllw 0, 2nd
Wednesday's Games
Delr01f 5 Boston 2
Kan C1ty at Oakland. night
M1nnesota at Te)(aS, night
Oakland 2 Texas 0
Kan C1fy 1 California 0
Cal1fornla at Chicago
Today 's Probable Pitchers
Mllw at Detro•!, night
(All Times EDT!
Bait at Cleve, 2, twl night
Kansas C1ty (Spllttorlf 9-6) at New York at Bos. 2. day-night

b1ggest weapons returning,
slick quarterback Andy
Vaughan, who last year was
the f1rst Marauder lith year
man ever to call the signals for
the vars1ty But the other back·
field members, fullbacks T.
Williams and, super-eub Van
Inwagen,
tailback
M.
Williams, and wingback Smith.
On the Une, center Eddie
Young has graduated as have
DISCHINGER TRADED
starting guards Roger DIXon
PORTLAND (UP! )
and Lehew. Lee, first team all- Veter,an forward 'ferry
SEOAL, was one tackle that Dischinger Monday was traded
will be no more thiS year, and by the Detroit Pistons of the
the ends Harmon and Morrl8, Nst1onal Basketball
also a first team all-SEOAL Association to the Portland
ch01ce
Trall Blazers . Portland gave
Mark Werry, who played up 1ts second-round college
only four quarters all last chOice m 1973 and cash to the
season due to a ser1ous Philadelphia 76ers lor forward
shoulder mjury suffered m the Fred Foster and then shipped
second game, should be strong Foster to Detr01t for
agam this year. The 245 pound Dischmger
senior tackle started in his
sophomore year
,---------Although the pads and
WOODSY OWL HOOTS:
headgear won't start banging
'
together unlll August 14,
condlt10nmg drills began
today. And Coach Otancey,
who always seems to get the
very ubnost from all hls
players, will have 'em ready.
While the Meigs grid p1cture
may not be as glum as it would
seem on paper, it certainly
doesn't suggest roses. Even so,
there are several tough, hard·
hlttmg, and desire·fllled
players who'll wear the
"Maroon and Gold" thl8 year
With pride
Let's hope thiS year will be a
season like the Gallipolis Blue
Devil season m !970. They won
the tiUe by wlnnmg one game
at a time (they won all nine of
theirs), nunlmlzing errors, and GIVE AHOm: DON'T POWITE
capltallzmg on opponents'
misfortunes.

Giants Stop Reds
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
San Franc1sco G1ants may be
m fifth place, 15 games behmd
the loop-leadmg Cmcinnat1
Reds m the Nahonal League
West, but Charley Fox 1sn't
smgmg the blues
Fox beheves as Bobby Bonds
does that the G1ants "are the
team of the future, " as Bonds
put 1t the last tune the Reds
were m San Franc1sco
It was Monday mght after 22year-old Carnthers beat
the Reds 7-2 m the finale of a
three-game ser~es at Riverfront Stad1um that Fox brought
up a recent game the G1ant.s
played agmnst the Los Angeles
Dodgers
Frank Robmson was playmg
r~ght f1eld for the Dodgers
Th1s 1s the same Robtnson who
broke mto the majors as a
rook1e for the Reds m 1956
"Would you beheve," sa1d
Fox, "that Robmson had played m some 1,500 more major

league games than the combmed total of the rune players
we put on the held tha~ mght?
Oldest On Field
"That g1ves you an 1dea of
how much youth we have m our
lineup," he said.
Bonds, who rapped out three
of the G1ants' 12 h1ts mcluding
his 17th homer of the season,
has no trouble rememhermg
that game agamst the Dodgers
"I'm 26 and I was the oldest
player on the f1eld that mght,"
sa1d Bonds "In fact, I was the
only player m the lineup who
had played more than one full
season m the major leagues "
The G1ants have won 22 of
the1r last 31 games, a feat Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
finds easy to shrug off
"They aren't gomg anywhere," he said "So why
shouldn 't they he loose ... free
and easy There's no pressure
on them "
Back From Exlle

Lolich Wins
18th Contest

Finished

Cahforma, 1..0, Cleveland won
a twm bdl from M1lwaukee, 3-2
and 1-0, and ChiCago tr1ppe&lt;l
Mmnesota, 8-1
Dave Cash and W1lhe
Stargell smgled home runs as
the Pirates opened the game
With four straight h1ts and went
on to defeat Philadelphia Bob
Moose p1cked up the v1ctory ,
his seventh m 13 dems10ns Ken
Reynolds, who has yet to wm,
dropped hiS eighth game.
John Edwards walked w1th
the bases-loaded m the bottom
of the mnth mnmg to force 10
Cedeno w1th the w10mng run to
g1ve the Astros a v1ctory over
San Diego
Oscar Brown slammed a 2run thple 10 the seventh mnmg
lo pull the Braves from behmd
and
g1ve them the1r th1rd
Anderson also was ununpressed by the young Carrithers, but, qwte naturally,
the sentunent wasn 't shared
by
Fox
In
fact, he
thought the
performance was remarkable
&amp;nee 1t came after he had returned from a 21klay exile m
the bullpen.
Camthers was relegated to
the role of rehef p1tcher when
the f1rst hve hatters he faced
reached base safely m a July 3
starting ass1gnment agamst
the Pluladelphla Ph1ls.
In other NatiOnal League
games, P1ltsburgh blanked
Phlladelphla , 2-&lt;1, New York
topped Montreal, 4-2, Atlanta
edged Los Angeles, 4-3,
Houston mpped San D1ego, 3-2,
and San Franc1sco npped
Cmcmnatl, 7-2
In the Amencan League New
York swept a doubleheader
from Jlallunore, 5-2 and 2-1,
Detrmt downed Boston, f&gt;-2,
Oakland shut out Texas, 2..0,
Kansas
C1ty
blanked

Marauders .Lost
Heavily from

Graduations

Standings

By VITO STELLINO
Franc1sco npped Cmcmnah, 7·
UP! Sports Writer
2, and Ch1cago blanked St
On a day when Mickey Lohch Lows, 4-0
won h1s 18th game, V1da Blue
Lohch, who may be the
p1tched a two-hitler and steadiest pitcher m baseball,
Sparky Lyle saved both games • JUSt keeps rollmg up the vicof .a Yankee doubl eheader tones He made 1t to No 16 by
sweep over. Baltunore IQ, 1111, fmng a seven-h1tter at Boston
press Earl Weaver 1\oltlj, t~e m a natiOnally televiSed game
unportance of rebel pitchers, 11 At the very least, Lohch has a
was shll DICk Allen who stole good shot at back-to-back 25lhe show
v1ctory seasons and that hasn't
Allen, the much-mahgned been done smce another
and traveled standout who has Detrmt lefty named Hal Newfound a home m Ch1cago, heuser turned the tr1ck m 1944,
smashed two 10s1de the park '45 and '46
homers - how 's that for
Spr10g trammg may fmally
husthn g - to lead the Wh1te be over for V1da Blue The
Sox to an 8-1 rout over the f1rebalhng Oakland lefthander
M10nesota Twms Monday
showed h1s old form Wlth a twoThe performance had h11ler as Oakland downed
Mana ger Chuck Tanner Texas It left Blue w1th a 4-S
s10gmg the pra1ses of the record but 1t could mdlcate
player who has been traded he'll be m good form for the
three t1mes m three years
playoffs Joe Rud1 drove m the
"! beheve DICk Allen IS the two runs of the game w1th
best player m the maJOr samflCe fl1es
leagues He not only h1ts for
Sparky Lyle 1sn't the type to
power but also for average. He gloat and he sa1d 11 didn't make
knocks m runs for us about 80 any difference. But he must
pet of the llme when he comes have enJoyed savmg both
up w1th men on base He's my games as New York swept a
Sw1ss watch," Tanner sa1d
doubleheader from Baltimore
Allen's f1rst ms1de-the-park for the f1rst tune smce 1960.
homer scored Pat Kelly and Lyle, who now has 22 saves,
Lws Alvarado for a 3-0 f~rst was left off the All-Star team
mmng lead Allen c~rcled the by Balllmore manager Earl
bases after h1s hne drive Weaver, who could have used a
bounced away from cen- good rehever when the
terf1elder Bobby Darwm, who Amencan League blew the
shpped trymg to f1eld the ball. lead m the nmth 10nmg.
Allen 's second blast also
Nolan Ryan, the Califorma
bounced away from Darw10, flamethrower, went mto the
who tr1ed to make a shoestrmg e1ghth mnlng wtth no-h1tter for
catch m the fifth mnmg
the second straight game
Total Boosted
Kansas City eventually got
Allen 's h1ts were h1s 12th and three hits while beatmg the
13th homers m July and Angels but the Royals scored
boosted his major league- the only run of the game back
leadmg total to 27 They m the fourth mnlng w1thout a
enabled Stan Bahnsen to coast hit as Amos Otis stole home. ;;m nu.z_ n r
to h1s 13th wm on a Slx-hltter. Ryan , who made three errors, ---~(}.20, Ron Ferguson 16432,
In the other Amencan helped set It up Wlth a wild
Boggs 9-1-19, R. Sayre IHI-12, League games, New York pickoff throw
Howard !0-6-20, Craig IH).JO swept a doubleheader from
John Brohamer led off the
FRIENDLY TAVERN (91) Baltimore, 5-2 and 2-1, Detroit lOth innmg of the opener w1th
- Adams ~. Morgan 7-G-14, downed Boston, 5-2, Oakland h1s th1rd homer to g1ve
Hall IHI-12, Ebersbach IHI-12, blanked Texas, 2-0, Kansas Cleveland the victory over
Wh1Uatch ~. Hubbard 18-3- C1ty shut out California, 1..0, Milwaukee . The Indians then
39
and Cleveland won two from made it a sweep when
Second Game
Milwaukee, 3-2 and 1..0.
Milwaukee rook1e Gary
DAILY SENTINEL (90) In the Nallonal League, Ryerson made a wlld throw to
Ritchie 11-&lt;1-22, E1chmger 14-1- Pittsburgh
b Ian ked the plate w1th a potential
29, Rod Ferguson IHI-12, Halley Philadelphia, 2-0, New York double play ball w1th one out
f&gt;-2-12, T. Walters 6-3-15
topped Montreal, 4-2, Atlanta and the bases loaded In the
MID. DEP'T STORE (79) - edged Los Angels, 4-3, Houston mnth
F1fe lf&gt;.2-32, O!afin 6-0-12, Fr . nipped San · Diego, 3-2, San
Burney 8-3-19, Hawley IHI-12,
Cremeens 2-G-4
Third Game
ADOLPH'S (62) - Noe 15-333, Archer 5-1·11, Orr IHI-12,
Quillen 142, Gr. Walburn 2-G-4.
POM. NAT. BANK (61) Vaughan 11-1-23, Coates f&gt;.2-12,
Magnotta 2-3-7, Wise 2-1-li, S.
Walburn 6-2-14

Deadlock Remains
The Mark V Polar Bears and
!he Dally Sentinel News1es
remained deadlocked for f1rst
place as both picked up wms
Monday In the Middleport
Independent Basketball
League
The Polar Bears walloped
the Friendly Tavern 113-91 and
the Newsies whipped the
Middleport Department Store
90-79. Mark V and the Sentinel
both have 11-2 slates Wlth only
two games left on. the regular
seaaon schedule.
Ron Ferguson led Mark V
with 32 points while Doxie
Walters and Mike Howard
added 2Qeach. Jerry "Big Cat"
Hubbard led the Friendly
Tavern with 39.
~nnls Eichinger paced the
Sentinel With 29 while Bob
Ritchie added 22. The
~partment Store was led by
Dave FUe with 32.
In the third game, Adolph's
Dairy Valley nipped the
Pomeroy National Bank IIUI.
Jimmy Noe led Adolph's with
33 whUe !!ill Vaughan paced
the Banken with 23.
Flnl Game
MARK V (113)- Walters!G-

Jen

Phillies

1

--n

n

-

!!!~!!~

The f1reworks have ended
and when the smoke cleared,
the Pomeroy Phllhes and
Bidwell were on top, tied for
the title
With two games to go, 1t
seemed nearly unposs1ble for
Pomeroy to have a shot at the
crown, but two B1dwell losses
combmed w1th two straight
Pomeroy wms turned the tr1ck.
Bidwell, rolling along with
ease over everybody they
played, had a I ().(I record while
Pomeroy was 9-2 Bidwell lost
their two !mal games to
Pomeroy 6-1 and to Middleport
" A" 7-3 Bes1des beallog
powerful Bidwell, Pomeroy
mpped Middleport "A" 6-5.
Coach Woody Call's Phillies
should be given h1gh praise for
the1r never-dymg efforts Thl8
husthng team was not overpower10g such as Bidwell, but
managed to wm most of the
time, mamly because they
made fewer httie m1stakes.
Pomeroy was led on the
mound by nghthanded aces
Jeff McKinney, who at one
time had a str10g of scoreless
mmngs a m1le long, and Jerry
Cremeens
Outstandmg players Included Mike Nesselroad,
Charley and Barry Marshall,
Woody Call, Jr , Fred Burney,
and several others.

Soil is for plants,
Not for tire tracks.

-~

\

OUTSTANDING BUYS I I

for the OFFICE
FURNITURE &amp; SUPPLIES

-----~-'

'

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

• -------------··--

Strong

ON DISPLAY. COME IN l SEE THEM'TODAY.

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J- Tbe Dilly Semlllel, MldcDeport·l'lmerOY, 0., Au~t I, 1972

Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree
with Anyone Else But Me ... "

IDITORIALS

A Bit Hurried

with that Ace

Credit Cords: We
Use, Disapprove

.KQ32
.AQJ
•~u
• KG~

You may love them or you may hate them , but chances
are you've got at least one of them- those little p1eces of
plastic called cred1t card~
Today, one out of every two fam1hes uses at least one
credit card, reports Lew1s Mandell, who directed the first
comprehensive exammallon of cred1t card use m the
United States for the Umvers1ty of M1ch1gan's Institute
for Soc1al Research
The survey found that 1f a fam1ly uses credit cards at
all, it generally uses several Three cred1t cards " the
median number lor those famll1es that use them. and a
SIZable proportwn use s1x cards or more
The interesting thmg 1s that whlle cred1t cards are
widely used, they are not w1dely approved of
"Few Amencans tend to thmk of cred1t cards as a good
thmg, whether th~y use them or not," says Mandell, who
found that 75 per cent of all persons mterv1ewed thought
that credit cards make 1t too easy to buy thmgs they may
not really want or can't really afford
Is the credit card replacmg money or checks• Mandell's
findings md1cate 1t 1s not Fam1hes usmg credltcards tend
to write more checks per month than lam11ies who do not
use such cards
The conclusiOn 1s that cred1t cards are takmg a place m
America's flnanc1al life but are not takmg the place of
trad1bonal methods of mcurnng debts 01 paymg bills

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Opening lead-t 8

"

• 7 ????W? '9227

I I

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
THE SEA STD..L HAS ITS CALL
NEW YORK (KFS) - Ocean travelmg by
luxury sh1p takes very httle spec1al knowledge
Vanous sh1ps have assorted characters, personalihes, moods The f1rst year the greatest
Ammcan Atlantic liner, The Umted States, was
m achon, a fnend of ours took 11 to Europe,
mspected 1t m detail as was his nosy wont and
discovered It was a lavishly camouflaged
troopship: 1ts walls were steel pamted m
pastels, its pohte ameruhes cloaked 1ts true
funcbonal use -to be shifted m time of war to a
great vessel for transporting troops When sa1d
fnend returned, we asked what the trip m the
mmden year of the Umted States had he en like,
and he replied, "Uke gomg to Europe on the
New Yorker Hotel "

I

ocean voyage is a cinch. Especially if thl8 WI·
!rocked gravedigger and dock walloper can
make 1t
And so our tips on traveling on the ocean
g~antsare few and simple: don't be wary of the
seemmg hyster1a of boarding: the QE2
swallows up a couple thousand travelers within
a few hours dockside. There will be enough help
there for all. Our serendipity years ago was
unusual, we admit We'd Interviewed a
young1sh waterfront dock walloper named Ray
Skarlca because hlS interests went considerably
beyond luggage toting. We learned he not only
served on the Cunard dock, but owned a karate
school in Queens on Long Island, taught that
esoteric VIolence to men and women, the latter
expanding their mterest m self defense with
every new tale of a mugger in the papers. Ray
Skanca also taught judo and the Rench science
of Savate, m which the educated toe Is used for
more than a ballet dancer's en pointe; It can, in
the case of a skilled Savate student, enable you
to dropkick an assailant Into the happy world ol
unconsciousness. W1th Ray's total expertlae
assimilated by a student, man or woman, a trip
through Central Park might even seem a
convement a! fresco workout at the gym. Ray
also now promotes prizefighting on Long Island.
It was through our prior meetings with Ray
Skanca that our arrivals shipside at the Cunard
dock (once at 54th St. and the North River, now
at 44th St ) took on the simplest method of
boardmg Ray pointed out It was just the
friendly face that caused us to think we were
bemg raced through magically.
"See that family there," be pointed to a
group of four. "They're getting a complete
stranger to take their luggage. Watch," and we
did; the family got aboard the QE3 at the same
moment we did. So that Is no problem.
Arrival at Southampton in England or
O!erbuurg in France 18 equally simple. Your
room steward and stewardess do all tile work,
will even pack for you; and foreign immigration
and customs inspection 18 not even close to the
necessarily finicky attention paid to your bags
on your return to the United States.
We almost alwaysretw:n by plane; the new
747s are faster and more comfortable of coll.'le
than the old 7lrls or the first planes we took
across oceans, the DC6s and DC'Is. You get the
Jet Lag on return, of course, and lt'a our
suggestion that you don't return by air the day
before you go back to work. ()therwile you'll be
a zombie for the several days It takes to attain a
normal compatibility with your alann clock.

Now, no one ever accused the estunable
oommercral hotel, The New Yorker, now bemg
turned mto a great Manhattan hosp1tal, of bemg
a luxury hotel. Functional, to he sure; luxury,
hardly.
Traveling on the QE2 1s something
By Belen and Sue Bottel
agreeJ!,bly else: it's .like sailing lo Europe
abqjlrd
, ~ Ilorc)l¢er, the Savoy, ,or
HOW POW BRACELET, SALEs HELP
Claridges, all great London hotels And if we
Helen and Sue:
Tbank.s for telling us where to send for POW bracelets, but dwell on the subJect of great luxury ocean
here's a question several people asked me · How does the money travel, 1t's because 1t was a dream come true
when we started taking ships to Europe more
fflm 11811!11 belp?
than 15 years•ago.
Money alone won't get these men out of priSOn camp5. We've crossed on the old Uberte, a great
a&gt;NCERNED ABOUT OUR POW'S
French ship now sold for Junk; we've been on
most Atlant1c lmers over the last JO years as
Coocemed:
True, we can't "buy" our POWs' release, but bracelet money traveler or sh1p news reporter, and these great
helps keep the public (including Han01) aware of their plight and , Atlantic sh1ps have been umversally satisfying,
mcludlng the same old Uruted States, now m
our will to bring them home.
We sent your question to aVIVA executive who answered 1t mothballs at Norfolk, Va or somesuch abeyant
storage, awmtmg a war 1t will be ready for,
811 follows:
"Having been Informed of the tragic Situation Wllh our though unhkely m this optunist's llfetune.
But the luxury of ocean lmers will contmue,
American POW-MIAs, vrvA chose in October, 1970, to set aside
all other activities and concentrate solely on the solution of this also m our optimistic vern· 1t's our smcere
conVICtion surface ocean travel never will
problem until ALL prisoners are freed.
disappear; diminish 1t has, but like all the great
"Here are some of the projects financed by bracelet sales
"1. VIVA gave a national symposium for POW-MIA faml11es mvent10ns which seemed set to erase the
fflm aU over the country so that they might plan and organiZe medium of travel 91' conunurucatlons just
previous, and haven't, merely adJusted the
National POW-MIA Week
"2.11 placed ads with a cllp.outletter to Congress in 70 maJor emphases, we can't see mtercontinental airplanes completely removmg ocean liners from
newspapers.
"3. vrvA buys advertising space on 25 million match books the marvelolL'lly luxur1ous world every youngster may admrre to expenence sometime; if
per monlb, wblch infonn people of the POW -MIA plight.
"4. It helps POW-MIA family groups whenever Jhere lS a George McGovern can make the Pre&amp;denllal
nommation, if a drugstore clerk named Hubert
need.
"5. It has infOI'IlUitlon Inserted in college newspapers to can get one toe pomted toward the White House,
1f a humble store worker named Nixon can call
reach over two millloo students.
"6. It supplies materials, arranges for speakers, and help5 1600 Pennsylvarua Ave . home, then an ultimate
plan apprmdmately 250 POW-MIA programs a week in schools,
abopping centers, conventiOIUI, etc.
"7. VIVA an!IWers some 2,000 written requests for literature,
The Almanac
The moon 1s approaching Its
etc. per day. It receives and forwards at least 100 letters a day By United Press International last quarter
frcm dtlze1111 to family members. These not only boost farmly
The mormng stars are VenllS
Tuday lS Tuesday, Aug. 1, the
morale, but also will be meaningful to men who return after 214th day of 1972 w1th !52 to and Saturn.
7'!&amp;n of bearing the enemy say that Amencans don 'I care
follow.
The even1ng stars are
"8. It will provide funds, when justified, to establish offices in
dUes which are directing a POW-MIA efforts, 1e. pay rent or
salary of the office manager."
Mainly, "Concerned," your bracelet money insures that the
coontry will not forget.
POW bracelets may be had by sending a donation of 12 50
(for nickel) or $3 (for copper) to VWA, 10966 LeConte, Los
Angeles, Callf., 90024, or POW-MIA CAMPAIGN, 2053 "R"
Street, McClellan Air Force Base, Calif., 95652. - HELEN AND
SUE
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. ask him to help you get the
operatiOn Stenllzabon oper·
Oear Or. Lamb-! would ations should be cons1dered
Dear Rap:
What's your definition of "g088ip," and what's the difference hke some informatiOn on as permanent and no woman
between g018lplng and being painfully frank? Which is tymg of a woman's tubes I should have one unless she IS
had th1s done about seven absolutely sure she doesn't
preferable?- STIJDENT OF HUMAN NATURE
years ago and I would hke want any more chlldren You
to have more chlldren now are nght that 17 is too young
Dear Student:
Can they be untied. I had foF th1s operation, m most
about a 15-mmute operation. circumstances The same
a-lp 18 what you wouldn't IIBY If the person were there
I
have had trouble w1th my thing u~plles to men who
"Painful frankness" Is saying It WHEN the person 18 there.
stomach
ever since I had have the1r tubes tied (vasI think we could do will! out BOTH I -SUE
this done, but every doctor I ectomy )
+++
go to tells me I am healthy
Dear Dr. Lamb- Some
Dear SOHN:
I was too young to have
years
ago, my doctor started
Galaip- among women -Ia repeating something which, lf th1s done, only 17 years old.
me
taking
two thyroid pills a
llllclto a girl's face, might bring a slap. Among men? Well, they I only have one ch1ld and I
day and told me I would
CAlL It "informative dilcwJIIon."
•
' am now mamed.
have to take them the rest of
When a periOD brags about being ''painfully frank" he's
Dear Reader- Some spe- my hfe At that time I had
.uallyaylng "l' envious "whetherhereallzesltornot.
ciahsts m female problems tests to prove I needed them.
' '
'
(gynecologists) do r e conJnf..:t,bothgoulpingandhurtfulfranknessoftenstemfrom nect the tubes. Vaned suc·
I have continued taking
tbe urge to bring olberllow; but I think the latter 18 the mere cess IS reported, but even m them and feel fme, but oth'riclaul. - HELEN
the best of circumstances er members of my famlly inp .S. Ccme to think of it, a Utile g018lp IBn't such a bad thing you would have only about Sist that I shouldn 't continue
-ltllftNac:on..,.Uoo provldellgoodreadlng and allows that one chance m four of a sue- Without havmg more tests to
'
.._.d ourse1'
If 11
cessful operation and the prove I need them. Do you
we"rt lllllllnterelted In 110111eone """' es
ves.
were ab11ity to get pregnant Still thmk I should have a test or
•.....,Iy banned, the world would aeem pretty dull. -HELEN that 1s better than no chance believe my doctor and just
MID SUE
See your obstetnclan and contmue takmg them •

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AMB

Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Leo. Francis
Scott Key, who wrote the Star
Spangled BaMer, was born
Aug. I, 1779

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We aren't going to assess
the blame for the slightly un·
sound slam contract reached
by North and South. Why
should we • South made 1t!
South won the trump lead
and promptly led h1s eight
of spades This dldn 't fool
West in the slightest. He had
been around for a long time
and knew that this immediate spade lead a I m o s t
surely md1cated a smgleton
Otherw1se, South would not
have played it nght away.
So West went right up with
his ace of spades. He got his
spade trick all right but he
also gave South the slam
Later on South was able to
discard two clubs on dummy's king and queen of
spades and wind up with the
12 tricks he needed.
If West had not suffered
from "grasshopper disease"
he would simply have covered the eight of s p a d e s
with bls nine and not rushed
to take bls ace.
The strange thing about
tbls hand Is that if South
did hold more than one spade
there would be no way to
beat the slam. South would
have one less club or heart.
After West ducked the first
s~ade, South would return to
h1s hand, drawmg trumps;
lead a second spade and get
the same two spade tricks
he got when the ace was
played the first time.
(NlWSPAPER lHTEIPIISE ASSN )

The b1ddm1 hu been·
Wet! North Eut
Pass

1• 1•
Pasa

4•

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Pus

You, South 1 hold:

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What do you do now'

A-Bid four cllamoncll. YoUl
partner Is lrylnc lor a olam and

6 ao ~ News 3, 4, I, 10, 15, CBS News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie
13, TruthorConseq 6; SesameS! 20; Halhayoga33.
6 30- NewsJ, 4, 6, 8, 10, IS; Gre)'ld Mas!Jrs Cheso 33
7 00- News6, 10; What's My Line I, Eltc. Co. 20, Green Acres
3: Farmers Daughtori3; Andy Griffith 15; Dick Van Dyke 4:
Insight 33.
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; Ponderosa 3. 15: Mod Squad 6,
13; Jerry Reed 8: A Birthday Story 20, Maoterplece Theatre
33 , E•pto '72 6, 8, 15. John Byner Comedy Hour 10.
1 00 - Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 20.
1 30 - Hawaii Flve-0 I, 10, NI\C ,Action Playhouse 3, 4,
Evening at Pops20, 33, Movle6, 13; Deeth Valley Days 15
9 00- Baseball 15
9 30- James Garner 3, 4. Cannon B. 10, Ooln' It 20, Handsfuls
of Ashes 33
10 00- News, Weather, Sports 20, Marcus Welby 4, 6, 13, Firing
Line 33
11 OO-News3,.4,6, 8,10, 13,15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Car11011 3, 4. 15: Movie "The
Power" 1, Movie "The Shoot" 10, Movie "Merrill's
12 00- Johnny Carson 15
1 00 - Your Health, 4.
1 30 - News, Weather 4, Local News 13.
WEDNESDAY,AUIJU)l z
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, sacred He'lrl 10.
6 15- Farmtime 10, Ferm Report 13, 6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4: Bible Answers 8. Urban League 13
6 45 - Corncob Report3; 6 55- Rocky&amp; Bullwlnkle13
7 00- Today J, 4, 15, CBS News8, 10, News6
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Underdog 13
8.00- Capt. Kangeroo 10, New Zoo Revue6. 13, Sesame St 33
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13: Tennetsee Tuxedo 6
9.00- Paul Dlxoo 4, Phil Donahue 15, Lucl's Toyshop 10;
Peyton Place 13; Romper Room 8, Mr Rogers 33, What
Every Woman Wants to Know3; Timmy and Lassie 6.
9 30- Truth or Conseq 3. Electric Co. 33. Mike Douglas 6: One
Life to Live 13. My Three Sons 8
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15, Lucille Ball 10, Dick Van Dyke 13 ,
Halhayoga JJ
10 30 - Concentration J, 15; Phil Donahue 4, Amateur's Guide to
Love 10; Spill Second 13, Beverly HlllbiiiiH 8. My Three Sons
10; In School Instruction 33, Love, American Style 6
11 00- Family Affair 8, 10, Love American Style 13. Sale of
Century J. 15. Communique 6
11 30 - HollywoodSquareU, 15 , Love Of Life B. 10. Bewllched6.
13; Sesame Street 20
12 00- Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
News 13. Contact 8, News 10
1 30-J W'sGame 3, 15, Spill Second 6. Search for Tomorrow 8,
10 : Electric Co 33
1 00- News, Weather, Sports J. All My Children 6, 13, Divorce
Court 8; Green Acres 10 , Walch Your Child 15. French Chef
33
1 20 - Lucille Rivers J
1 30- Three On A Match 3, 4, 15, Lei's Make A Deal6, 13. As
The World Turns 8, 10, Sewing Skills 33
2 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15. Newlywed Gamel3, Vlrgln18
Graham 6. Love Splendored Thing 8, 10 , Bridge 33
2 30- Dating Game 13, Guiding Light 8, 10. Handfuls of Ashes
33, Baseball 3, 4, Doctors 15
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15. General Hospital 6. 13, Secret
Storm 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30- One Life to Live 6, Edge of Night 8, 10 , Jeff's Collie 13,
Return to Peyton Place J, 4, 15.
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15; Fllntstones 13, Sesame
St 33, Huckleberry Hound 6, Batmen 8. Movie " The
Dangerous Days of Kiowa Jones" 10
4 25 - Sporl$ Club 6
4 30-Merv Griffin 4, I Love Lucy 6: Virginian 8, Password 13 .
Andy Griffith 15, Green Acres 3
5 00- Wagon Train J, Maverick IJ , Mr Rogers 33 . Dick /an
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6
5 JO-Marshall Dillon 15, Electric Co 33 , Dragnet4
6 00- Truth or Conseq 6, News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15. I Dream of
Jeannie 13, Sesame Sl 20; Hathayoga 33
6 30-NewsJ,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, BrldgeJ3
7 00- Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6, 10, What's My Line 8, Elec
Co.20: Wild, Wild West 13, Deeth Valley Days 15, Milestones
of Progress33, Movie "Tammy and The Doctor" J
1 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Hollywood Squares 3, Dragnet 8,
The Judge 10, Episode Action 33, Mr Rogers 20 , lassie 15.
Doctors on Call 4
8 00- Adam·12 4, A Public Affair 20, 33, Green Acres 3, The
Super6, 13 , Explo '721 , David Steinberg 10
8 30- Corner Bar6, 13, Movle20, 33. Columbo3, 4, 15
9 00 - Medical Center 8. 10; Marly Feldman . Comedy
Machine ll, Baseball 15
9 30- Kopycat 13 , Explo '72 6
10 00-Mannlx 8, 10. News 20. Soul 33, Night Gallery 3, 4
10 30- Pure Gold 6, Newsmaker 13
11 OO-News3,4,6,8.10, 13,15
11 30-Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6, Mov ie " A Step OJ!
of Line" 8, Movie " Fighter Squadron" 10, /ok&gt;vle "Malaga"
13

100-News&lt;
1:30- News 13

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to five
spades. What do you do now?

Answer tomorrow

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTEit L TANNEHILL,

Euc. Ed

ROIERT HOEFLICH,

Cit'( Editor
Published datly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
PubiiSh•no Comp•nv , 111

Court St. Pomeroy , Oh•o,
45"9 Bus.nen Offfce Phone
"1 2156, Edllorlol Phor• 992

2157

Second class postage peld et

Pomeroy, Ohfo

National adverf111ng
rtpruentat•vt 8oltlneltl

Gallagher/ Inc , 12 East 42nd
St, New York City, New York

Subscription ratu
De
lnvered by cerrler where
nellable 50 cent$ per week ,
By Motor Route where carrter
ltfV!CI not IVIillble
One
month $1 75 By mall In Oh 10
tnd w va , One year su 00
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monltu S7 25 Three
months u so Subscr•pllon
pnce Includes !.unday Tlmu
Sentinel

A thought fer the day : In the
American national anthem,
Francis Scott Key wrote: "lls
the Star-tpangled banner I 0,
loog may It wave o'er the land
of the free and the home of the

trave!"

In Men and Women

TUESDAY, AUGUST 1

it is up to you. to eooperate and
ehow your di1100nd eonpool.

The Daily Sentinel

!ilould profanity and vulgarity be permitted on telev18ioo?
Well, 7'!S aod no.
At the risk (nope, with the certainty) of getting my fingers
burned, I'd Uke to discuss the subject for a spell.
Let's start with this as a thesis .
Televllion, at times, should be an accurate and faithful
portrayal of lffe as It really Is.
Life, as It really 18, 18 full of people who use profane and
vulgar language.
Therefore, It follows, that It would be unreallsllc - and
unfaithful to real life - absolutely to prohibit the use of any
e~:clamatory language on televlsloo.
However, because TV 18 so aU-encompassing, parUcularly
reaching the ears of chlldren, very, very judicious restraints
must be placed on any use of Impolite language.
Taklngthesepointa (and you don'thave to), we can therefore
e~:pound Rules One and Two:
1. - Only 111der the most extreme conditions should any
profane ezpreadoo be used at an hour when large numbers of
children are likely to be tuned ln.
2.- The use of an eJpletive can be justified when, and only
when, It seems vital to the characterization of the cast or
development of the story line.
Th111, there 18 absolutely no reason why Captain Kangaroo or
the CoOkie Monster ever should about a four-letter no-no. Nor
abould there be any reason for a contestant to resort to barrackroom verbiage when he misses the question on Final Jeopardy.
On the other Bide of the coin, It would be totally out of
character to think that General CUster muttered, "Aw, shucks!"
when the Indiana attacked, or that Dillinger was saying "Oh,
Fudge'" when !he G-Men clOied In on him.
·~
In these circumstances, historical fldeUty must apprOilmate

Sterilization Usua Ily Permanent ~n:;=~~aix!~~~e!~er~=~
Dear Reader-Your letter
doesn't suggest that members of your family hav~ a
medical degree. If they do
not, they are mcompetent m
this area and no matter how
well meanmg they are, the
end result 1s that they are
meddlesome busy bodies.
Your letter suggests that
you are seemg a doctor for
this problem and if he
thought you needed a new
test he would have one done.
The fact tha• you feel fine
and are doing well suggests
that he must be doing something right. Perhap11 that is
why you are paying him.
A small amount of thyroid,
even m a person with a
normal thyroid gland, usually will not cause any harm.
The normal thyroid gland
just produces leu hormone
to ba!ance thmgs out.
Dear Dr. Lamb- Would
you kmdly explain what bilateral nephroptosis IS and

tell me if anything can be
done to relieve the pain
Dear Reader- A fancy
name for dropped kidneys.
When a person with this
problem stands upright, the
kidneys fall, kinking the
ureter tube that drains the
kidney and caualng pain. If
the condition Ia serious and
causing symptoms, It Is
sometimes n e c es sa r y to
have an operation to tack the
kidney In place so It won't
fall. If the condition is not
causing symptoms It Is often
left alone.
(HIWSPAPIR INI'IRPIUII AIIM)

,, - ''"""' ,.w., • ,.,_..,

~ittl Toi1IIIIOIIf ,...., """' 1o IHI

Dt.

L_.,, 6ooAiot lot •Ilk• Ito oo-

I'Jfll yoor · - · tiNs ....
jed. s-..4 50 t:lllb .. Dr. l.alllb,

in coro oiiiHs _.,.,.,, ,.0, lox
1551, ~lo Cily Sutloo, How Yilt,
NY. 100,, Ask II&lt; "lo/1«111 Diot"

\

.. .

5 30- Marshall Dillon~ Eltc Co. 33.

Marauders11 13.

Both vulnerable
W•t North Eul South

Generation Rap

•'

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"K76

The WAVES Hove Subsided

' !

.10832

t8762
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SOU'111 (D)

-·.,.
In an age of prollreratmg acronyms - PACE, COPE
CROP, HUD, NASA, etc , etc , etc -It 1s encouraging to
learn that one well-known member of the spec1es has been
discontinued
When women were brought mto the Navy to stay on
July 30. 1942, to replace homefront manpower, they were
called WAVES, a rather stramed acronym formed of the
first letters of "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service "
By way of observmg the 30th anmversary of this event
the Navy has announced that women m the Navy wlll
henceforth be referred to s1mply as women m the Navy
Once a reserve component, the distaff sailors are now
an established part of the regular Navy and the Naval
Reserve Formerly restricted to the contmental Umted
States, women m the Navy are now servmg m England ,
Japan, Spam, Iceland, Italy, Germany and Guam ·
Women's libbers may also be pleased to hear that
among other changes, enbsted women are now bemg
ass1gned to Pac1f1c Fleet a1r squadrons, wh1ch had p1 e
viously been considered all-male preserves, and one female airman recently became the first hebcopter plane
captain In the Navy

EAST
.106H

WFST

•' '

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••

1

NORTH

1- 'l'ht l'lii)J llenllnel, Middlepoft-Pcmeroy, 0., August I, 1972

Television Log

11

early every Saturday). It would destroy his character to be
!Inver saying "goeh-darn" or "dlgo~~&amp;b4t," when you know
that's not really a t be Ia thinking - «' 118)'1nc,
So, lfyou accept thl8, we can proceed to another rule:
3. - Televillon must have the ril!ht to use 11n occasional
profaile expression, but never merely fer the sensational or
slloa value It might contain. It must be integral to the story or
event being portrayed,
Here, I'm tblnklng ct a iDt of "R" and "X" rated movies that
are going to have to be wblttled and ei)IUllied befclre they're ever
lit fw the 111111U IICI'MD,
Up to this polnl, lei me mike clear, I am talking about
profanity, bywhit'Jtlmeananocculonal "damn" cr "beD," and
words a! that Ilk. 1 tiUk TV 18 Imaginative enougb to let lCI'IllllJ
the Ideal without gelling much lltronger than that.
Vulprlty 18 an enUrely different matter, and I plan to talk
about lhll lor a bit lomclTow.

++++ '

ON mE TV DIAL: Al&amp;rl• ct fl"llllillii on lbe (lrell Youth
antlatyO'ulade, ''Eiplo "12," held In Tau In JUDe, will be
an (1llflt the t11a1 this -k. Sinal NCb lltiii!Gn' IChedulel at a
different time, It's han! to 117 mort t11an that tha debit will be at
7:10p.m., W'I'VN·TV and WTAP-TV. Cledi dal)J lap 1Gr this allwee~~; ..,.dal ... Jolin Byner, a Cflllic, llartla mlnl...n. olllve
lhtmm WBNS-TV at 7:30 ... PlrllleloCirdutl, WTAP-TV.
Movlea: '"1'111 Sboot," 11:30 p.m., IIIII ''Illnltrwl Dlya ct
IQowa J-," f p.m. Wednelday, both WINS..TV.

•

the Sports
By Chet Tannehill Desk
Remember Jaspey? You do, If you're at least 40 years old
Go beck to those awful!940s, when an earber generatwn sweated
out the draft - without benef1ts of a lucky lottery draw - but
shored with patrlotisin heated up by the dastardly deed perpetrated by Mr Tojo at Pearl Harbor
Jaspey was Jun Porter, sports ed1tor for the Gall1pohs
Tribune, the fellow who started Dave Diles of Middleport, then a
high school student, covermg Yellow Jacket fOQtball, basketball
and baseball D1les today lS a top echelon ABC-TV sports commentator, Detro1t radio stahon sports reporter, and anchor man
for TV documentafles.
Jaspey lS a lot older today. But he remembers hlS golden
7t~ars as a sports leg man w1th greater warmth than the salary he
drew JUStified A professor now at R10 Grande College, after a
tour of duty m the state senate, Jun has supplied to Sports Desk
the followmg memorul to "Mr Football" of southeastern OhiO
BY J. SHERMAN PORTER
(Alias Jaspey)
Death lS not a happy th1ng to commemorate, and followers of
sports especially are so energehc, achve, and partiSan that 1t's
farthest from their mmds. But I want to remmd the today
generahon that Aug Its an anruversary that should be marked
It was on this date 10 1956 that Wilham Evan (Bill) T1.umas died
at 75 years of age Maybe we should have prmted these ed1Ional
thoughts about hun hack on h1s birthday , Feb l9, but today
starts cond1tiorung of high school football players It's appropriate . and not unhappy'
People who are playmg footballm 1972 m the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League were bemg born when B11l Thomas, founder
of the league, died Let us look at the record
It was March 7, 1925, that B1ll Thomas mVIted all the school
aupermtendents, prmc1pals, athletic directors, and coaches to
meet in what 18 now the Coach House, Wellston The name of this
restaurant lS swtable for the purposes of this sports ed1tonal,
because Bill Thomas once was a coach
The schooimen accepted the conshtution which B1ll Thomas
had written for the SEOAL. They wanted to elect hun the first
preSident, but he showed them the clause m the const1tuhon they
had just adopted which lumted the off1cers to fulltune schoolmen
employed by the school board. &lt;
Thomas was "Mr Football" of Wellston for decades About
the time the league was a quarter of a century old, Jaspey
pomted out that fans may have been lahormg under the delusiOn
that the famous statue of liberty play was the mvent1on of
Fielding H Yost at the Umvers1ty of M1ch1gan But that's wrong
We held then - and st1U do - that Blll Thomas was the frrst
coach to tutor hls boys m the play, and he "stumbled" upon 1t by
accrdent It was f~rst known m 1907 as the Grmny-Gallagher play,
before anybody on the local news staffs today was even born
That year, when Wellston's Golden Rockets didn 't have a
regular, paid coach, Bill Thomas took over the rems w1thout pay,
as he did four or f1ve other hmes 1n that school's early gnd
history.
Wellston had a halfback named Grmnell, whose father lived
m Detroit. It had a quarterback named Joe Gallagher, pres1dent
of Frick-Gallagher at Wellston many years later, who died only
three or four years ago.
Grinnell went buck to pass, but he dropped the ball, and
Gallagher, who had gone back with him to protect him from
tacklers, caught the pigskin before It touched the groWld and ran
for a touchdown Coach Thomas thereupon taught hls boys how to
work the "Grinny-Gallagher" play 011 purpose, and 11 never
failed.
Grinnell's girl friend in Detroit was the s1ster of a Wolverme
grldder He told her about the play. She told her brother Her
lrother told F1elding Yost. And Michigan's football players used
It, and Yost became famous because of 1t
Bill Thomas coached the Golden Rockets m 1915 when they
played off the state champtonship with Fostona, losmg to a team
coached by the late Red Trautman, years later cormmsswner of
rmnor league baseball and father of an ex-Athens Bulldog who
made All-America m the line for Oh10 State Uruvers1ty Thomas
had the Popes, Glllens, and Handleys, among others ·
The first lime Wellston ever had a football team Bill Thomas
not only coached it but organized 11 and played quarterback on 11
That was in 1898. They dldn'thave enough boys to play football m
1899, and football was purely mtramural in 1900, the year Blll
Thomas graduated from h1gh school
Thomas was a Big Ten football offlcral. He refereed the Oh10
Stadium dedicatory game with Michigan, a highlight In his
career, and he worked up to the B1g Ten by officiating h1gh school
games around here. Next step pp was the "b1g-time" h1gh school
games in the Buckeye state; from there to the Ohio conference,
and then the Western cooference.
Wellston now has a newspaper, the Sentry, wh1ch sounds
someWhat like the Wellston Daily Sentinel, wh1ch was 1ts
predecessor Thomas acquired the Sentinel Jan I, 1928. He was
postmaster 12 years from 1923, where he had starll!d as a clerk m
1910
Aug.! an unhappy anruversary? It's a day to remember that
the youths who are playing football m !972are m the same league
Bill Thomas established hack wben their grandfathers were
playing
It's a day to be proud of the achievements of Wtlham Evan
Thomas, sports figure par excellence '

ROOKIES CUT
LATROBE, Pa. (UPI)- The
Pittsburgh Steelers placed two
rookies from the University of
Dayton on waivers Monday.
They were linebacker Dan
Qulhn and defensive back
Sonny Allen.

'

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
B11ly Wllhams cracked out
four stnught hits Monday to
back the s1x-hlt p1tchmg of
Ferguson Jenkms as the
Clucago Cubs completed a
sweep of their four-game sems
Wllh the St. Loms Cardinals
w1th a 4..0 tnumph
Wtlhams ratsed h1s average

to 346 w1th h1s four safelles to
head the NL battmg race
"I beheve that Wngley F1eld
makes a better hitter out of

s Blaitks Cardinals 4-0
me," W1lhams satd

" In : ames th1s year .

the
b1g
park ,
you
take that all · out swmg
and, as a result, you take
your eye off the ball In
Wngley Field, I know I don't
have to pump to h1t the ball out,
so I keep my eye on the p1tch
better. And I also take a
shorter swmg," he added
Jenkms, postmg his 14th wm
agamst mne losses, hurled hlS
19th complete game of the
season m beatmg the Cardmals
for the first tune m three

stra1ght Vlclory over the
Dodgers Denny McLa10,' who
went seven 10mngs, picked up
h1s second VIctory of the season
and allowed two of the three
f,.os Angeles runs .
Don Carnthers returned
fr om a 28-day ex1Ie m the
bullpen to heat the Reds m
lim1hng Cmc10nat1 to seven
h1t.s The G1anis backed up
Camthers w1th a 12-hlt attack
that mcluded Bobby Bonds '
17th homer of the season
Duffy Dyer hlt a two-run
homer 10 the e1ghth mmng and
Brent Strom and Oanny
Fnsella combmed to p1tch a
four-h11ler as the Mets
defeated Montreal Dyer hlt h1s
seventh home run of the season
m the eighth mnmg after Cleon
Jones had walked

BY KEITH WISECUP
Qwte a few good breaks and
a prayer answered every now
MAJOR
and then could make Meigs
LEAGUE
High School a serious contender for the Southeastern
Ohio football champ10nsh1p
By Un1ted Press International thiS year. But thiS holds true
for any team that ever took the
National League
East
field.
w I pet g b
Talk about hard h1t by
60 35 632
P1ttsbvrlh
New Yor
52 41 559 7 graduation' You've probably
Ch1cago
51 46 526 10 never seen the like until you
St LOUIS
46 48 489 131!2
Montrea l
42 50 457 16'h skim down the personnel losses
Ph&lt;ladelph•a 34 61 358 26 the Marauders suffer thu year.
West
Nmeteen of 22 starhng
wlpctgb positions are gone, vanished,
Cmcmnat1
57 37 606
Houston
54 44 551 5 disappeared, or "not there no
Los Angeles
49 46 516 9112 mo'/' wh1chever expression
Atlanta
46 50 479 12
you prefer
San Franc:tsco 4.4 54 449 15
Probably the best way to
San Otego
36 59 379 21'/'
Monday's Results
describe the 1972 edition of
ChJcago 4 Sf Lou1s 0
Me1gs football, the pr1de and
P1tlsburgh 2 Ph1 iadelph1a 0
joy of the SEOAL, Is several
New York 4 Montreal 2
small feet replacmg the g1ant
Atlanta 4 Los Angeles J
Houston 3 San Otego 2
shoes left behind from last
San Franc1sco 7 Cmcmnati 2
year But anything Ia in our
Today S Probable Pitchers
favor, "We've got Charley
(All Ttmes EDT!
Ch1 cago (Hooton 7 8) at O!ancey and they ain ~. "
Montreal (Stoneman 9 71. 8 The Marauder defense,
pm
Ph1ladelph1a ITw1fchell 2 1 which has been the highlight of
and Carlton 15 6) at New York Coach Otancey's brilliant five(Matlack 10 5 and Koosman 7 year career at Meigs, will have
61. 2, 5 30 p m
P1tlsburgh (Briles 9 41 at St one returnee, safety Cluck
LOUIS (5antorml 4 7), 9 p m
Faulk, and two who saw plenty
San D1ego (Kirby 7 11 and of action, end Bill Chaney and
Acosta 2 51 at Atlanta ISchueler linebacker Dallas Weber. But
4 4 and Kelley 5·61. 6 p m
CmC1nnat1 ($1mpson 6 4) at other than that IBn 't much to
Houslon !Forsch55l . 8 30pm write home about.
San Francisco ( Bryant 9 5) at
los Angeles ( Oownmg 56) , 11 Graduated from the defense
are middle guard John
pm
Wednesday's Games
Thomas, tackles Jon Grueser
Ch1 at Mont, 2. twl nl~ht and all-SEOAL Fred Lee,
Phlla at New York, night P1tls
at St Louis, n1ghl San D1ego at linebackers Ted Lehew and
Atlanta, night Cine I at Houston, two-time all-SEOAL Tiny
ntght San Fran at los Angeles, Wilhams, cornerbacks Ron
n1ght
Sm1th and Keith Van Jnwagen,
Amer1can League
ends Larry Harmon and allEast
w I pet g.b SEOAL Jeff Morris, and backs
Detro1t
55 40 579
Rick Ash and Tom Cooke.
Baltrmore
52 42 553 21f2 Offensively, Meigs has their
New York
47 45 511 61f2
Boston
47 46 505 7
Cleveland
42 52 447 12112
M1lwaukee
37 58 389 18 Oakland {Holtzman 13 91. 11
West
pm
w I. pet gb.
Minnesota (Woodson 7 9) at
Oakland
59 38 .608
Texas (Broberg 5-81.8 30p m
Ch1cago
53 43 .552 51!, Caltfornla IWright II 5) at
Minnesota
47 45 .511 91!, Chicago (Bradley 11 9), 9p m
KansasCtfy 46 49 484 12
Milwaukee (Lockwood 4 9) at
Caltforn1a
44 53 454 15 Detroit (Coleman 12 8) , 9p m
Texas
39 57 406 19'h Baltimore !McNally 10·81 at
Monday's Results
Cleveland (Perry 178), 7 30
pm
Chicago 8 Minnesota 1
New York 5 Batt 2, lsi
New York !Stoltiemyre 10 111
New York 2 Bait 1, 2nd
at Boston (Siebert 9 6), 7 30
pm
Cleve J Mllw 2. lsi, 10 mns l
Cleve 1 Mllw 0, 2nd
Wednesday's Games
Delr01f 5 Boston 2
Kan C1ty at Oakland. night
M1nnesota at Te)(aS, night
Oakland 2 Texas 0
Kan C1fy 1 California 0
Cal1fornla at Chicago
Today 's Probable Pitchers
Mllw at Detro•!, night
(All Times EDT!
Bait at Cleve, 2, twl night
Kansas C1ty (Spllttorlf 9-6) at New York at Bos. 2. day-night

b1ggest weapons returning,
slick quarterback Andy
Vaughan, who last year was
the f1rst Marauder lith year
man ever to call the signals for
the vars1ty But the other back·
field members, fullbacks T.
Williams and, super-eub Van
Inwagen,
tailback
M.
Williams, and wingback Smith.
On the Une, center Eddie
Young has graduated as have
DISCHINGER TRADED
starting guards Roger DIXon
PORTLAND (UP! )
and Lehew. Lee, first team all- Veter,an forward 'ferry
SEOAL, was one tackle that Dischinger Monday was traded
will be no more thiS year, and by the Detroit Pistons of the
the ends Harmon and Morrl8, Nst1onal Basketball
also a first team all-SEOAL Association to the Portland
ch01ce
Trall Blazers . Portland gave
Mark Werry, who played up 1ts second-round college
only four quarters all last chOice m 1973 and cash to the
season due to a ser1ous Philadelphia 76ers lor forward
shoulder mjury suffered m the Fred Foster and then shipped
second game, should be strong Foster to Detr01t for
agam this year. The 245 pound Dischmger
senior tackle started in his
sophomore year
,---------Although the pads and
WOODSY OWL HOOTS:
headgear won't start banging
'
together unlll August 14,
condlt10nmg drills began
today. And Coach Otancey,
who always seems to get the
very ubnost from all hls
players, will have 'em ready.
While the Meigs grid p1cture
may not be as glum as it would
seem on paper, it certainly
doesn't suggest roses. Even so,
there are several tough, hard·
hlttmg, and desire·fllled
players who'll wear the
"Maroon and Gold" thl8 year
With pride
Let's hope thiS year will be a
season like the Gallipolis Blue
Devil season m !970. They won
the tiUe by wlnnmg one game
at a time (they won all nine of
theirs), nunlmlzing errors, and GIVE AHOm: DON'T POWITE
capltallzmg on opponents'
misfortunes.

Giants Stop Reds
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
San Franc1sco G1ants may be
m fifth place, 15 games behmd
the loop-leadmg Cmcinnat1
Reds m the Nahonal League
West, but Charley Fox 1sn't
smgmg the blues
Fox beheves as Bobby Bonds
does that the G1ants "are the
team of the future, " as Bonds
put 1t the last tune the Reds
were m San Franc1sco
It was Monday mght after 22year-old Carnthers beat
the Reds 7-2 m the finale of a
three-game ser~es at Riverfront Stad1um that Fox brought
up a recent game the G1ant.s
played agmnst the Los Angeles
Dodgers
Frank Robmson was playmg
r~ght f1eld for the Dodgers
Th1s 1s the same Robtnson who
broke mto the majors as a
rook1e for the Reds m 1956
"Would you beheve," sa1d
Fox, "that Robmson had played m some 1,500 more major

league games than the combmed total of the rune players
we put on the held tha~ mght?
Oldest On Field
"That g1ves you an 1dea of
how much youth we have m our
lineup," he said.
Bonds, who rapped out three
of the G1ants' 12 h1ts mcluding
his 17th homer of the season,
has no trouble rememhermg
that game agamst the Dodgers
"I'm 26 and I was the oldest
player on the f1eld that mght,"
sa1d Bonds "In fact, I was the
only player m the lineup who
had played more than one full
season m the major leagues "
The G1ants have won 22 of
the1r last 31 games, a feat Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
finds easy to shrug off
"They aren't gomg anywhere," he said "So why
shouldn 't they he loose ... free
and easy There's no pressure
on them "
Back From Exlle

Lolich Wins
18th Contest

Finished

Cahforma, 1..0, Cleveland won
a twm bdl from M1lwaukee, 3-2
and 1-0, and ChiCago tr1ppe&lt;l
Mmnesota, 8-1
Dave Cash and W1lhe
Stargell smgled home runs as
the Pirates opened the game
With four straight h1ts and went
on to defeat Philadelphia Bob
Moose p1cked up the v1ctory ,
his seventh m 13 dems10ns Ken
Reynolds, who has yet to wm,
dropped hiS eighth game.
John Edwards walked w1th
the bases-loaded m the bottom
of the mnth mnmg to force 10
Cedeno w1th the w10mng run to
g1ve the Astros a v1ctory over
San Diego
Oscar Brown slammed a 2run thple 10 the seventh mnmg
lo pull the Braves from behmd
and
g1ve them the1r th1rd
Anderson also was ununpressed by the young Carrithers, but, qwte naturally,
the sentunent wasn 't shared
by
Fox
In
fact, he
thought the
performance was remarkable
&amp;nee 1t came after he had returned from a 21klay exile m
the bullpen.
Camthers was relegated to
the role of rehef p1tcher when
the f1rst hve hatters he faced
reached base safely m a July 3
starting ass1gnment agamst
the Pluladelphla Ph1ls.
In other NatiOnal League
games, P1ltsburgh blanked
Phlladelphla , 2-&lt;1, New York
topped Montreal, 4-2, Atlanta
edged Los Angeles, 4-3,
Houston mpped San D1ego, 3-2,
and San Franc1sco npped
Cmcmnatl, 7-2
In the Amencan League New
York swept a doubleheader
from Jlallunore, 5-2 and 2-1,
Detrmt downed Boston, f&gt;-2,
Oakland shut out Texas, 2..0,
Kansas
C1ty
blanked

Marauders .Lost
Heavily from

Graduations

Standings

By VITO STELLINO
Franc1sco npped Cmcmnah, 7·
UP! Sports Writer
2, and Ch1cago blanked St
On a day when Mickey Lohch Lows, 4-0
won h1s 18th game, V1da Blue
Lohch, who may be the
p1tched a two-hitler and steadiest pitcher m baseball,
Sparky Lyle saved both games • JUSt keeps rollmg up the vicof .a Yankee doubl eheader tones He made 1t to No 16 by
sweep over. Baltunore IQ, 1111, fmng a seven-h1tter at Boston
press Earl Weaver 1\oltlj, t~e m a natiOnally televiSed game
unportance of rebel pitchers, 11 At the very least, Lohch has a
was shll DICk Allen who stole good shot at back-to-back 25lhe show
v1ctory seasons and that hasn't
Allen, the much-mahgned been done smce another
and traveled standout who has Detrmt lefty named Hal Newfound a home m Ch1cago, heuser turned the tr1ck m 1944,
smashed two 10s1de the park '45 and '46
homers - how 's that for
Spr10g trammg may fmally
husthn g - to lead the Wh1te be over for V1da Blue The
Sox to an 8-1 rout over the f1rebalhng Oakland lefthander
M10nesota Twms Monday
showed h1s old form Wlth a twoThe performance had h11ler as Oakland downed
Mana ger Chuck Tanner Texas It left Blue w1th a 4-S
s10gmg the pra1ses of the record but 1t could mdlcate
player who has been traded he'll be m good form for the
three t1mes m three years
playoffs Joe Rud1 drove m the
"! beheve DICk Allen IS the two runs of the game w1th
best player m the maJOr samflCe fl1es
leagues He not only h1ts for
Sparky Lyle 1sn't the type to
power but also for average. He gloat and he sa1d 11 didn't make
knocks m runs for us about 80 any difference. But he must
pet of the llme when he comes have enJoyed savmg both
up w1th men on base He's my games as New York swept a
Sw1ss watch," Tanner sa1d
doubleheader from Baltimore
Allen's f1rst ms1de-the-park for the f1rst tune smce 1960.
homer scored Pat Kelly and Lyle, who now has 22 saves,
Lws Alvarado for a 3-0 f~rst was left off the All-Star team
mmng lead Allen c~rcled the by Balllmore manager Earl
bases after h1s hne drive Weaver, who could have used a
bounced away from cen- good rehever when the
terf1elder Bobby Darwm, who Amencan League blew the
shpped trymg to f1eld the ball. lead m the nmth 10nmg.
Allen 's second blast also
Nolan Ryan, the Califorma
bounced away from Darw10, flamethrower, went mto the
who tr1ed to make a shoestrmg e1ghth mnlng wtth no-h1tter for
catch m the fifth mnmg
the second straight game
Total Boosted
Kansas City eventually got
Allen 's h1ts were h1s 12th and three hits while beatmg the
13th homers m July and Angels but the Royals scored
boosted his major league- the only run of the game back
leadmg total to 27 They m the fourth mnlng w1thout a
enabled Stan Bahnsen to coast hit as Amos Otis stole home. ;;m nu.z_ n r
to h1s 13th wm on a Slx-hltter. Ryan , who made three errors, ---~(}.20, Ron Ferguson 16432,
In the other Amencan helped set It up Wlth a wild
Boggs 9-1-19, R. Sayre IHI-12, League games, New York pickoff throw
Howard !0-6-20, Craig IH).JO swept a doubleheader from
John Brohamer led off the
FRIENDLY TAVERN (91) Baltimore, 5-2 and 2-1, Detroit lOth innmg of the opener w1th
- Adams ~. Morgan 7-G-14, downed Boston, 5-2, Oakland h1s th1rd homer to g1ve
Hall IHI-12, Ebersbach IHI-12, blanked Texas, 2-0, Kansas Cleveland the victory over
Wh1Uatch ~. Hubbard 18-3- C1ty shut out California, 1..0, Milwaukee . The Indians then
39
and Cleveland won two from made it a sweep when
Second Game
Milwaukee, 3-2 and 1..0.
Milwaukee rook1e Gary
DAILY SENTINEL (90) In the Nallonal League, Ryerson made a wlld throw to
Ritchie 11-&lt;1-22, E1chmger 14-1- Pittsburgh
b Ian ked the plate w1th a potential
29, Rod Ferguson IHI-12, Halley Philadelphia, 2-0, New York double play ball w1th one out
f&gt;-2-12, T. Walters 6-3-15
topped Montreal, 4-2, Atlanta and the bases loaded In the
MID. DEP'T STORE (79) - edged Los Angels, 4-3, Houston mnth
F1fe lf&gt;.2-32, O!afin 6-0-12, Fr . nipped San · Diego, 3-2, San
Burney 8-3-19, Hawley IHI-12,
Cremeens 2-G-4
Third Game
ADOLPH'S (62) - Noe 15-333, Archer 5-1·11, Orr IHI-12,
Quillen 142, Gr. Walburn 2-G-4.
POM. NAT. BANK (61) Vaughan 11-1-23, Coates f&gt;.2-12,
Magnotta 2-3-7, Wise 2-1-li, S.
Walburn 6-2-14

Deadlock Remains
The Mark V Polar Bears and
!he Dally Sentinel News1es
remained deadlocked for f1rst
place as both picked up wms
Monday In the Middleport
Independent Basketball
League
The Polar Bears walloped
the Friendly Tavern 113-91 and
the Newsies whipped the
Middleport Department Store
90-79. Mark V and the Sentinel
both have 11-2 slates Wlth only
two games left on. the regular
seaaon schedule.
Ron Ferguson led Mark V
with 32 points while Doxie
Walters and Mike Howard
added 2Qeach. Jerry "Big Cat"
Hubbard led the Friendly
Tavern with 39.
~nnls Eichinger paced the
Sentinel With 29 while Bob
Ritchie added 22. The
~partment Store was led by
Dave FUe with 32.
In the third game, Adolph's
Dairy Valley nipped the
Pomeroy National Bank IIUI.
Jimmy Noe led Adolph's with
33 whUe !!ill Vaughan paced
the Banken with 23.
Flnl Game
MARK V (113)- Walters!G-

Jen

Phillies

1

--n

n

-

!!!~!!~

The f1reworks have ended
and when the smoke cleared,
the Pomeroy Phllhes and
Bidwell were on top, tied for
the title
With two games to go, 1t
seemed nearly unposs1ble for
Pomeroy to have a shot at the
crown, but two B1dwell losses
combmed w1th two straight
Pomeroy wms turned the tr1ck.
Bidwell, rolling along with
ease over everybody they
played, had a I ().(I record while
Pomeroy was 9-2 Bidwell lost
their two !mal games to
Pomeroy 6-1 and to Middleport
" A" 7-3 Bes1des beallog
powerful Bidwell, Pomeroy
mpped Middleport "A" 6-5.
Coach Woody Call's Phillies
should be given h1gh praise for
the1r never-dymg efforts Thl8
husthng team was not overpower10g such as Bidwell, but
managed to wm most of the
time, mamly because they
made fewer httie m1stakes.
Pomeroy was led on the
mound by nghthanded aces
Jeff McKinney, who at one
time had a str10g of scoreless
mmngs a m1le long, and Jerry
Cremeens
Outstandmg players Included Mike Nesselroad,
Charley and Barry Marshall,
Woody Call, Jr , Fred Burney,
and several others.

Soil is for plants,
Not for tire tracks.

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4-The Dlllr lleMlnel, ~. o., Alllllltl, tm ·

Ualled PrtN IDierlladobal
How long Is Duarie '111omu
diiiUn!ld to stay In San Dlego1
That'• the question miny pro
· football obaervers were asking
Monday after the San Diego
Chargers gambled by obtalnlng the controversial
halfback from the Dallas
Cowboya for Mike Montgomery
111d Billy Parks I'M than an
hour before the deadline for
lnt~r-conference trades at
midnight.
.
U lbO!Das and the Chargers
can stay on good terms, there
Ia no doubt the Chargers have
picked up one of pro football's
best running backs. The
Cowboys figure they're good
enough to win without Thomas
but lt'aan interesting point that
they've !)OVer made the Super
Bowl without him.
A puzzling aspect of the deal
was the acquisition of Parks by
the Cowboys. He Is one of the
brlsht, young receivers In pro
ball and was leading the NFL
with 41 catches before he
suffered a broken arm last
year. But since the Cowboys
already have Bob Hayes,
Lance Alworth and Ron
Sellers, they seem to be loaded
with wide receivers.
Second-Year Back

Montgomery Is uecond year
back irom Kansas State, who
ran for 228 yarda, caught 28
passes and c&lt;impleted three
more for the Chargers.
While the Cowboys were
unloadln~ Thomas, their No. I
challenger in the NFC - the
Minnesota Vikings - was
having problems of Its own.
Defensive back Charlie West
walk!ld out of camp because of
a dispute over the "In·
terpretallon" of his contract.
West, Clinton Jones and
Gene Washington have been
involved In a dispute over
contract terms. '111ey first said
they wanted to negotiate
together . Then they agreed to
terms individually but Jones
and Washington haven 't
reported yet and West walked
. out after reporting.
Another ,free agent, John
Henderson, also hasn't come to
terms but a Vikings' spokesman said he's "likely"to sign a
contract "soon."
The San Francisco 49ers,
another top NFC challenger
along with Minnesota and
Dallas, announced they have
traded tight end Bob Windsor
to New England for the P•ts'
No. 1 draft choice in 1974.
Windsor lost his job to Ted

.

Questions Pain Jack
BIRMINGHAM, Mich .
(UP!) - ll's the questions
about It that pain Jack
Nicklaus, not his right index
linger.
Nicklaus arrived at Oakland
Hilla Country Club for a
Monday practice round
wearing just two thin bandages
OVI!S' the flngi!S', which recently
had the back portion of the nail
IIUI'gicaUy removed to cure an
Infection.
He prOIIIptly made himself at
leu! a co-favorite again with
Lee Trevino for the 54th annual
Proleuional Golfers'
Alloclatlon championship by
eagllng the 521-yard, par-live
aecond hole.
"ll feell fine. It feels fine,"
Jlllcklaua said with just a min!ll'
toudl of irTitatlon In his voice
at yet another queatim on the
llatus of his c:elebrated digit.
"It's the queatlons about It all
the time that I don't llke."
U the f200,000 tournament
ltarted today, "I wouldn't be
u sharp aa I'd like to be," he
aald.
"I JI'Obably don't believe any
of the top four or five will win
It," Bob Goalby aald. "You can
eliminate Jack becauae of the
finger. That .and he haan 't
played ..-.tty. I believe he'll
be !DIIItally down. He's got to
be down now that his chances
for the ll1am are over."
"I dm't think !hat losing
over there (the British open to
Trevino) bOthered him," Dave
Hlll•ld. "l have to pick him."
"Jack Ia almost beyond the
normal," John Miller said. "A
normal guy, I'd say he can't
win but Jack Is just from a
different Wll'ld. "He's the only
guy in the 1aat 20 yeara who can
just play average and win.
Anybody else bas to. have four
good rounda to win a tournament," Miller said. "Jack
can have four average rounds
and do II."
Trevino practiced with
Arnold Pahner and Lanny
Wadkins, not keeping score

this time after shooting a 65 on
Sunday. But he might have
been showing some stress signa
when he replied "Why don't
you write about Nicklaus'

•~

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••

Doctors Remove
.·
Cast From

Carr's Foot

•0

'

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Doctors removed the cast from
Aufttln Carr's right foot
Monday and said they
ware"very happy with the way
the bone looks."
Carr, alar guard for the
Cleveland Cavaliers of the
NBA, underwent bone graft
111'81!S'Y May 31 alter fracturing his foot t~ce In his
rookie ~eason.
Team surgeon Dr. Jon
Hardacre aald alter Haying
the foot: "It Is knitting as we
had planned and anticipated it
'lfOtlld."
Cllrr waa put on a condltlonlnl procrarn to get him
Jll1ldual1y ntady to play. The
ten op1111 Ita training camp
Sept. 10.

r

CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP!) -Former United Mine
Workers Vice President
George Tiller said Friday the
U. S. Labor Department has
prevented him from earning
$20,000 a year as a union
representative and has denied
him six months vacation pay.
Shortly before he resigned
last July I, Titler said he told
UMW President W. A. ''Tony"
Boyle he wanted to go to Kentucky and organize a non-union
surface mine In eastern Kentucky. Tiller, In a telephone Jn..
terview from his home in Beck·
ley, sald Boyle agreed to pay
him $20,000 a year for such
work as a representative of the
International union.

and inventory of the nation's
dams and water impoUildments.
The bill directs the Army
Corps of Engineers to inspect
thousands of publicly and
privately maintained dams
which are 1n excess or six feet
high and have a water storage
capacity of 15 acre feet or
more.
Tlie measure, which won
unanimous House approval,
authorizes the Corps of
Engineers to cond.uct the
survey and report Its Ondlngs
to the Congress no later than
July I, 1974. Wherever
hazardous conditions that
threaten life or property are
found, the Corps would report
Its findings . to appropriate
Stale authorities and then
assist In the .correction of the
. situation .

"The

and Mrs. Clay Jordan and
Barbara along with Bonnie
Fraley took her to her home in
Summerville and viewed
points of interest in that area.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly and
granddaughter, Leah Gaston,
visited Mrs . Gillogly's brolherin~ law and sister, Mt. and Mrs.
Olhu Gregory, Radcliff.
Guests of Mrs. Murl
Galaway were Mrs. Alta
Murphy and Mrs. Betty Andrews of McArthur.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gaston and
Linda of Syrma, Delaware,
visited relatives in the area.
Those attending a family
gathering at !he James Gaston
home were Mr. and Mrs.

Clifford Smith and Nellie, Mr.
Arthur Gaston and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gaston of Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gaston,
Lois, Leah and Joe Gaston and
Kathy Massey, local.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gaston
and daughter were guests of
another brother and sister-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gaston, in Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Sanders
and children, Alisa and David
of Oak Hill, W. Va., and
granddaughter, Frances Dietz,
Summerville, W. Va ., visited
Mrs. Sanders'

niece

and

family, Mr. and Mrs. Clay
Jordan, Dale and Barbara.
Frances Dietz spent several
days with the Jordan family

·

ACCEPTS NEW POST
BUFFALO, N. Y. (UPI ) James L. Bedell, who recently
ended a six·year association as
athletic director at Adelphi
University , Monday accepted a
similar post with Canisius
College. Bedell is president of
the U. S. Intercollegiate
Lacrosse Association.

fall. The skydivers will carry
smoke canisters to make their
flight easy to follow from the
ground.
Merjcal, who Is employed by
Penny Fare , has 71 jwnps to
his credit.
The skydivers are scheduled
to land near the carnival on
Saturday and in a field just
east of the old lock property on
Sunday.
All three jumpers are
members of the United States
Parachute Association. They .
do most of their jumping at a
club iri Bidwell, Ohio.
Other events planned for the
Ohio River Festival Aug.·ll-13
include a historic pageant,
sanctioned·outboard racing, a
calliope concert by the Delta
Queen, a whistle toot, a car' nival, a ski show, a horseshoe
pitching contest, the state
women's softball ·tournament,
skydiving and an art show.
Ravenswood's Ohio River
Festival is being featured in,
. this week's Issue of HlllbUJy.
The articles on the festlval ·
were prepared for the weekly .
by Ermalee Boice.
Jim Comstock, editor of
Hlllbllly,issending1,000copies
of the Issue to the festival
committee to be distributed
during the celebration.
"

Tiller, 77, is regarded as one
of the best UMW organizers In
the union's history. He
organized what was called
"bloody" Harlan County, Ky.,
early in his career.
"I told Tony when I retired
that there was a big strip mine
in Kentucky that was
producing 100 (coal) cars a day
and I wanted to go down and
organize It," Tiller said. "The
Labor Department won't Jet
them appoint me to the job."
The Labor Department has
been overseeing all union activities since a federal judge in
Washington voided the 1969
UMW elections. New elections
have ordered lor Dec. 1-jJ,
Tiller said he would be glad
to organize the Kentucky mine
without pay, if the union wants
him to because "I am the best
organizer In the United Mine
Workers."
He also said he has been
denied pay for six months
vacation he accumulated
through the years.
Titter said he should be paid
$20,000 In vacation pay, a
figure which Is half his yearly
salary . He sald he hoped the
Labor Department · would
"have enough hiDDanlty" to
allow him to be paid lor his
vacation time.
Tiller disputed reports he Is
now receiving a monthly pension of $1,000, saying he has not
applied lor the pension because
he Is seeking re-election to his

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Authorized Dealer

USDA CHOICE BEEF

SUPERIORS All MEAT

SAUSAGE

Tony Venoy hurled a no-run
no-hit game for the champion
Indians as they walked away
from the Reds 14.0 in Mid.dleport Boys' League play last
Saturday night.
Venoy fanned nine &amp;nd
walked five in his brilliant
performance. George Gum
went the distance for the Reds,
fanning six and walking four .
Hitters for the Indians were
Mark Venoy with a double and
two singles, Creson Pratt a
triple, Terry Gardner a double,
and Keith Lynch, T. Venoy ,
and Steve Carsoneach a single.

JOHNSON TRADED
CARLISLE, Pa . (UP!)
Mitch Johnson, a veteran of·
fensive tackle with the
Cleveland Browns who had
retired as a player, Monday
was traded !.o the Washington
Redskins for a future draft
choice.

you ' ve

.

1

FARM

O•ffitter

HINDY OMITTED
Mike Hlndy, star hurler for
lhe Middleport Indians, was
inadvertently left off the
Middleport All-star
,. roster .

chair

.

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS SLICED

Attending a professional golf
clinic at Whispering Pines, N.
C., the past week were Jeff
Warner, son of Mrs. Jean
Warner, and Chuck FoUrod,
son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
FoUrod, both of Pomeroy.
Warner was presented a
silver plated candy dish lor
winning second place in the
third flight and a money cer·
tificate for low medalist. Bruce
Blackston was scheduled to
attend the clinic but did not due
to an accident In which he
fractured his arm.

LA-Z-BOV

'

BRAUN SCHWEIGER

In Golf Clinic

position as an Independent
candidate .
"I don't draw a pension," he
sald. "I will file an application
for one if I lose the election."
Tider added he Is eligible for a
pension of $1,150 per month.

.

9 to ll CHOPS

Venoy Otalks
U N
p

,..-

FAMILY PACK

Two Take Part

dreamed of at our low
prices.
"Molly Magulrea"
Molly Maguires" was
the name of a secret society
of Irish Immigrant miners
who fought for better living
and . working conditions in
Pennsylvania in the 1870s.
Tbe society was suppressed
In 18T.'.
'

Carpenter News, Event

RAVENSWOOD - Stars of
the WWVA "Jamboree USA"
show will appear in Ravenswood for two shows on Aug. 12.
The free entertainment is
being provided by the Ohio
River Festival which will be
held in Ravenswood Aug. tl, 12
and 13.
Bob Gallion, Patti Powell,
Pat!( Joy, l,lud Cutright and the
Bob Gallion Band will make up
the cast for the shows.
A stage for the productions
will be erected In the lot beside
the Jackson County Bank . Both
an afternoon and evening
performance will be given.
Bob, a regular member of
the "Jamboree USA" show,
has also appeared on the Grand
Ole Opry and the Louisiana
Hayride. Recording and
personal appearances are part
of his world. He is also an
accomplished composer with
such tunes as "Your Wild
Life's Gonna Get You Down,"
"Happy Anniversary," "Not
Once But a Hundred Times,"
and "Happy Birthday, My
Darling'" to his credit. After a
long association with Acuff.
Rose Publishing Company,
Bob has now formed his own
company in Wheeling.
Also appearing with Bob is
dark-eyed, dark-haired Patti
Powell -- or as she is known by
some people, "The Long Haul
Widow." A native Georgian,
Patti now lives in Wheeling
where she is a featured star on
!he "Jamboree USA" show.
Patti's Hockory record, :•r..ong
Haul Widow," is a smash hit
!hat promises to be the first of
many for this bright new star.
Among Patti's credits are the
Bill Anderson Show, Del
Reeves Country Carnival and
the Grand Ole Opry TV show .
Arrangements for the personal appearances of these
stars in Ravenswood were
made by Don Flesher.
Doug Merica! of Ravenswood , Ronnie Dixon of Evans,
and David Whipley of Belpre
will give two exhibitions of
skydiving in Ravenswood Aug.
12-13. The skydivers will
perform as part of the Ohio
River Festival.
The exhibitions will include a
21).second free fall and an attempt to hook up during free

- ._

This Special Value On Sale Wedn esday Thru Saturday

Kan City
000'100 OOD--1 3 0
California
000 000 1)()0--j) 3 4
Nelson (4·41 and Kirkpatrick ;
Ryan, Fisher {9) and Stephenson. LP- Ryan (12 - ~ ).

UMW Organizer
Oaiming 'Foul'

Senate Has House Dam,
Water Impoundment ACt
WASHINGTON- The House
of Representatives has approved and sent to the Senate
legislation co,sponsored by
Congressman Clarence Miller
which calls for the Inspection
1
·

~~

(lsi, 10 inns)
Milw
010 010 000 o-- 2 10 0
000 200 000 1-- 3 8 0
·~
COLUMBUS (UPI) -1be 10 umpires who have called !!!! Cleve
Parsons (8.9) and Rodriguez.
~~
every game the pest three moatha for the MUHtoc- :;:; Azcue (9) ; Lamb, Kilkenny (9)
~ Mendel Little League baaebaU teams were happy to hear !!!~ and Fosse. WP- KIIkenny (3.1) .
~:::
today they will be on hand as referees Ia Ulde League :::: HRs- Lowenstein (4th ), Brahamer IJrdl.
~~
football next month. Tbe 10 are Ohio Penitentiary in· ...!:~: I2nd game I
~·.·
000 000 1100-- 0 5 3
\.';! mates.
:;:;: Milw
Cleve
000 000 1101- I 8 0
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The honor dorm prisoners said they enjoyed umpiriDg !!!!' Ryerson (2-3)
and A zc ue ;
j§ the suburban Berwick games.
:;:~ Tidrow (8-9) and Moses.
§:;
"l'be klda are beautlflllaad eo are their pareuts," sald :;:~
Texas
000 000 110(}- 0 2 2
';!!: umpire • Inmate Joha Palby. ''They take us Into their !;!! Oakland
1101 000 01x- 2 2 0
t:!:' homes to eat aud aceepl us Uke neighbors."
!:~:
Hand, Lindblad (8) , Cox (8)
)~!
Another Ohio Pen ump, Gene WDUams, said the :::: and Bill ings: Blue (4·51 and
Duncan . LP-- Hand (8·71.
::} progr'am hu gone 1moothly.
!;!:
101 1100 000- 2 7 0
:!:l
"'lbe warden Insisted the players aud their famllies ;!;! Boston
Detroit
200
Olx- 5 12 I
"' mO»t Jmow we were lamates "WWiams said "As far as ':&lt; Patlln, Tatum 020
(7) and Fisk :
·• can see, It hasn't'made ••bll of ciinerence to
Lolich {18·6) an'd Freehan . LP
...~; . them,otaad
'•'•
lt'a been a wonderful experience lor us."
::::. - Pall in 18·101 . HRs- Rodriguez
«
·:·:· {7th), Yastrzemskl (2nd ). Free.
~:::;:~:~:?,!:;::::::8:::::::::~::::::::8:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::~;:;~:;:;~~::::::::::::::::::::::: han (6th) .

i ..,

MILLER HONORED- Bob MWer, Pomeroy, manager
of The City Loan and Savings Co. in Pomeroy, was among 170
employes honored when the company held its annual service
award ceremony and 60th birthday anniversary at its home
office in Lima recently. Miller has 15 years of service with
the company. Each year an annual service award ceremony
is given in honor of those employes who have reached each
consecutive five year period of employement . A gold pin is
presented, set with a diamond for each five years of service.

{lSI

finger?" to one journalist.
Palmer won't be wearing
either glasses or contact lenses
for the tournament. "I'll be
going in blind," he said.

Umpires Will Tum Referees

game)
New York 000 000 5110- 5 9 I
Baltimore 000 001 010-- 2 8 1
Peterson, lyle {8) and
Munson ; Dobson, Leonhard {7),
Scott (8) and Etchebarren . WP
- Peterson (lJ . Il) . LP- Dobson
112·101. HR- Buford (3rd ).
£2nd game I
New York 000 000 01o-- 2 8 2
Baltimore 001 000 ooo-- 1 2 0
Gardner , Lyle (8) and Ellis;
Alexander. Wall ( ~ ) and Oates .
WP-Gardner {3·01. LP- Aiex·
ander 15·6) .

.

'

Festival Offers
Jrunhoree's Stars

Cowboys Trade Thomas

Major leogue Results
By United Press lnlernollonol
Notiono.l Ltogue
Kwalickandaskedtobe'traded SI . Louis 000000000 - 0 61
Chicago
001 210 110• - 4 1? 2
so he could play first string
Cleveland, Grzenda 161. Bare
again .
17), Drabowsky (81 and Sim·
mons ; Jenkins (14·9) and
The Washington RedskinS Hundley . LP- Cieveland (12·6) ,
acquired offensive tackle
Mitch Johnson, who had . Plllsbrgh 200000 110(}- 2 7 0
Phi Ia
000 000 110(}- 0 6 0
retired as a player for the Moose (7-61 and Sangulllen:
Cleveland Browns, lor a future Reynolds, Scarce (91 and
draft choice. He Is expected to Bateman. LP- ~eynolds (0-8).
fill the hole left vacant when San Fran
201 2101101- 7 12.0
Jim Snowden was In jut~ in Cincinnati 000 000 1102- 2 7 1
training camp.
Carrithers 13·61 and Rader;
The St. Louis Cardinals Billingham. Borbon (41. Gullett
· (6), Sprague (9) and Bench. LP
picked up reserve lineman - Billingham (7-10) . HR- Bonds
Mike Siewk from the (17th) .
Washington Redskins on
waivers. The Cards had ~~t~~r:
88J ~ J8~= ~ ~ ~
released him last year but
Osteen, Richert (7) and
decided to take a second Cannizzaro; McLain, Hardin
chance on him.
(B) and Will iams. WP- Mclaln
(2·1) . LP- Osteen (11 -8) . HR- ·
Don Parish, the veteran Bruckner (3rd) .
linebacker acquired from St.
000 000 2110- 2 4 1
Louis lasfyear, was suspended Montreal
N.Y.
00001102x- 4 61
Monday by Los Angeles coach
Moore, Renko (7) , Slrohmay·
Tommy Prothro. He got in an er (8) and Humphrey; Strom,
(7) and Dyer. WPaltercation with an uniden- Frisella
Frisella (4·51 . LP- Renko I J.7) .
tified assistant coach. Prothro HR- Dyer 17th) .
said It .was the first player he
Diego 110 000 110(}- 2 8 1
has ever SUSPOnded in his San
Houston
101 000 001- 3 10 1
career and said he will try to
Arlin 18·13) and Goddard ;
Dierker (9.6) and Edwards.
trade Parish.
Lee White, who said he was
Americ~ n League
retiring five days ago when he Chicago
300 031 1110- 8 9 1
left the San Diego camp, Minnesota 000 010 110(}- 1 6 2
Bahnsen (13-11) and Herrreturned Monday and said he mann
; Blyleven , Strickland (5).
was attending to personal Gebhar d (6) , Goltz (~) and
matters during his absence. Borgmann. LP- Biyleven {914) . Hrs-AIIen, 2 (26th and
27th) , Herrmann (5th) .

.. .

.•

"I dig driving. The
Guard taught me ho-,v to
drive trucks. 2 ~ -tonners.

3,4 -tons. And jeeps. It's a
great change of pace from
my civilian job."
You, too, can get a
regular paycheck from the
Guard. For a car. For clothes.
For a stereo set. You name it.
More than that, in the Army
· or Air Natio1,1al Guard, you
get a chance to learn a trade
or skill. A chance to meet
other people. People who
could giye you leads for a
good civilian job.
And maybe you belong

3664th LIGHT MAINTENANCE CO.

TIDE

in the Guard because it's an
outfit the community and
country look to for help.
Because it belongs to
all the people.
Give yourself a chance.
Give us a call now.

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SUP·ER MARKET • Ooeil .~ 9 to 10 • Sun.
We Accept Federal t'Ood Stamps . ,

I

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PHONE: ~92·3480

Comer Mill ana_Second Sts. . "Wti.Rourvo Tho Right To Limit.Quantities"
-LEPORT. 0:
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�.'

4-The Dlllr lleMlnel, ~. o., Alllllltl, tm ·

Ualled PrtN IDierlladobal
How long Is Duarie '111omu
diiiUn!ld to stay In San Dlego1
That'• the question miny pro
· football obaervers were asking
Monday after the San Diego
Chargers gambled by obtalnlng the controversial
halfback from the Dallas
Cowboya for Mike Montgomery
111d Billy Parks I'M than an
hour before the deadline for
lnt~r-conference trades at
midnight.
.
U lbO!Das and the Chargers
can stay on good terms, there
Ia no doubt the Chargers have
picked up one of pro football's
best running backs. The
Cowboys figure they're good
enough to win without Thomas
but lt'aan interesting point that
they've !)OVer made the Super
Bowl without him.
A puzzling aspect of the deal
was the acquisition of Parks by
the Cowboys. He Is one of the
brlsht, young receivers In pro
ball and was leading the NFL
with 41 catches before he
suffered a broken arm last
year. But since the Cowboys
already have Bob Hayes,
Lance Alworth and Ron
Sellers, they seem to be loaded
with wide receivers.
Second-Year Back

Montgomery Is uecond year
back irom Kansas State, who
ran for 228 yarda, caught 28
passes and c&lt;impleted three
more for the Chargers.
While the Cowboys were
unloadln~ Thomas, their No. I
challenger in the NFC - the
Minnesota Vikings - was
having problems of Its own.
Defensive back Charlie West
walk!ld out of camp because of
a dispute over the "In·
terpretallon" of his contract.
West, Clinton Jones and
Gene Washington have been
involved In a dispute over
contract terms. '111ey first said
they wanted to negotiate
together . Then they agreed to
terms individually but Jones
and Washington haven 't
reported yet and West walked
. out after reporting.
Another ,free agent, John
Henderson, also hasn't come to
terms but a Vikings' spokesman said he's "likely"to sign a
contract "soon."
The San Francisco 49ers,
another top NFC challenger
along with Minnesota and
Dallas, announced they have
traded tight end Bob Windsor
to New England for the P•ts'
No. 1 draft choice in 1974.
Windsor lost his job to Ted

.

Questions Pain Jack
BIRMINGHAM, Mich .
(UP!) - ll's the questions
about It that pain Jack
Nicklaus, not his right index
linger.
Nicklaus arrived at Oakland
Hilla Country Club for a
Monday practice round
wearing just two thin bandages
OVI!S' the flngi!S', which recently
had the back portion of the nail
IIUI'gicaUy removed to cure an
Infection.
He prOIIIptly made himself at
leu! a co-favorite again with
Lee Trevino for the 54th annual
Proleuional Golfers'
Alloclatlon championship by
eagllng the 521-yard, par-live
aecond hole.
"ll feell fine. It feels fine,"
Jlllcklaua said with just a min!ll'
toudl of irTitatlon In his voice
at yet another queatim on the
llatus of his c:elebrated digit.
"It's the queatlons about It all
the time that I don't llke."
U the f200,000 tournament
ltarted today, "I wouldn't be
u sharp aa I'd like to be," he
aald.
"I JI'Obably don't believe any
of the top four or five will win
It," Bob Goalby aald. "You can
eliminate Jack becauae of the
finger. That .and he haan 't
played ..-.tty. I believe he'll
be !DIIItally down. He's got to
be down now that his chances
for the ll1am are over."
"I dm't think !hat losing
over there (the British open to
Trevino) bOthered him," Dave
Hlll•ld. "l have to pick him."
"Jack Ia almost beyond the
normal," John Miller said. "A
normal guy, I'd say he can't
win but Jack Is just from a
different Wll'ld. "He's the only
guy in the 1aat 20 yeara who can
just play average and win.
Anybody else bas to. have four
good rounda to win a tournament," Miller said. "Jack
can have four average rounds
and do II."
Trevino practiced with
Arnold Pahner and Lanny
Wadkins, not keeping score

this time after shooting a 65 on
Sunday. But he might have
been showing some stress signa
when he replied "Why don't
you write about Nicklaus'

•~

~::si!::;:~~~:i!i!i!~s;:!!;:::::;:;:::i!;:?;:.1:::;:;~:*:~S::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~!$!::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~

••

Doctors Remove
.·
Cast From

Carr's Foot

•0

'

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Doctors removed the cast from
Aufttln Carr's right foot
Monday and said they
ware"very happy with the way
the bone looks."
Carr, alar guard for the
Cleveland Cavaliers of the
NBA, underwent bone graft
111'81!S'Y May 31 alter fracturing his foot t~ce In his
rookie ~eason.
Team surgeon Dr. Jon
Hardacre aald alter Haying
the foot: "It Is knitting as we
had planned and anticipated it
'lfOtlld."
Cllrr waa put on a condltlonlnl procrarn to get him
Jll1ldual1y ntady to play. The
ten op1111 Ita training camp
Sept. 10.

r

CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP!) -Former United Mine
Workers Vice President
George Tiller said Friday the
U. S. Labor Department has
prevented him from earning
$20,000 a year as a union
representative and has denied
him six months vacation pay.
Shortly before he resigned
last July I, Titler said he told
UMW President W. A. ''Tony"
Boyle he wanted to go to Kentucky and organize a non-union
surface mine In eastern Kentucky. Tiller, In a telephone Jn..
terview from his home in Beck·
ley, sald Boyle agreed to pay
him $20,000 a year for such
work as a representative of the
International union.

and inventory of the nation's
dams and water impoUildments.
The bill directs the Army
Corps of Engineers to inspect
thousands of publicly and
privately maintained dams
which are 1n excess or six feet
high and have a water storage
capacity of 15 acre feet or
more.
Tlie measure, which won
unanimous House approval,
authorizes the Corps of
Engineers to cond.uct the
survey and report Its Ondlngs
to the Congress no later than
July I, 1974. Wherever
hazardous conditions that
threaten life or property are
found, the Corps would report
Its findings . to appropriate
Stale authorities and then
assist In the .correction of the
. situation .

"The

and Mrs. Clay Jordan and
Barbara along with Bonnie
Fraley took her to her home in
Summerville and viewed
points of interest in that area.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly and
granddaughter, Leah Gaston,
visited Mrs . Gillogly's brolherin~ law and sister, Mt. and Mrs.
Olhu Gregory, Radcliff.
Guests of Mrs. Murl
Galaway were Mrs. Alta
Murphy and Mrs. Betty Andrews of McArthur.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gaston and
Linda of Syrma, Delaware,
visited relatives in the area.
Those attending a family
gathering at !he James Gaston
home were Mr. and Mrs.

Clifford Smith and Nellie, Mr.
Arthur Gaston and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gaston of Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gaston,
Lois, Leah and Joe Gaston and
Kathy Massey, local.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gaston
and daughter were guests of
another brother and sister-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gaston, in Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Sanders
and children, Alisa and David
of Oak Hill, W. Va., and
granddaughter, Frances Dietz,
Summerville, W. Va ., visited
Mrs. Sanders'

niece

and

family, Mr. and Mrs. Clay
Jordan, Dale and Barbara.
Frances Dietz spent several
days with the Jordan family

·

ACCEPTS NEW POST
BUFFALO, N. Y. (UPI ) James L. Bedell, who recently
ended a six·year association as
athletic director at Adelphi
University , Monday accepted a
similar post with Canisius
College. Bedell is president of
the U. S. Intercollegiate
Lacrosse Association.

fall. The skydivers will carry
smoke canisters to make their
flight easy to follow from the
ground.
Merjcal, who Is employed by
Penny Fare , has 71 jwnps to
his credit.
The skydivers are scheduled
to land near the carnival on
Saturday and in a field just
east of the old lock property on
Sunday.
All three jumpers are
members of the United States
Parachute Association. They .
do most of their jumping at a
club iri Bidwell, Ohio.
Other events planned for the
Ohio River Festival Aug.·ll-13
include a historic pageant,
sanctioned·outboard racing, a
calliope concert by the Delta
Queen, a whistle toot, a car' nival, a ski show, a horseshoe
pitching contest, the state
women's softball ·tournament,
skydiving and an art show.
Ravenswood's Ohio River
Festival is being featured in,
. this week's Issue of HlllbUJy.
The articles on the festlval ·
were prepared for the weekly .
by Ermalee Boice.
Jim Comstock, editor of
Hlllbllly,issending1,000copies
of the Issue to the festival
committee to be distributed
during the celebration.
"

Tiller, 77, is regarded as one
of the best UMW organizers In
the union's history. He
organized what was called
"bloody" Harlan County, Ky.,
early in his career.
"I told Tony when I retired
that there was a big strip mine
in Kentucky that was
producing 100 (coal) cars a day
and I wanted to go down and
organize It," Tiller said. "The
Labor Department won't Jet
them appoint me to the job."
The Labor Department has
been overseeing all union activities since a federal judge in
Washington voided the 1969
UMW elections. New elections
have ordered lor Dec. 1-jJ,
Tiller said he would be glad
to organize the Kentucky mine
without pay, if the union wants
him to because "I am the best
organizer In the United Mine
Workers."
He also said he has been
denied pay for six months
vacation he accumulated
through the years.
Titter said he should be paid
$20,000 In vacation pay, a
figure which Is half his yearly
salary . He sald he hoped the
Labor Department · would
"have enough hiDDanlty" to
allow him to be paid lor his
vacation time.
Tiller disputed reports he Is
now receiving a monthly pension of $1,000, saying he has not
applied lor the pension because
he Is seeking re-election to his

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DAN DEE

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Q- How many drfams do
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REG. '1.79
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.,

·'.,•

Sir OFF

•'

FAMILY
SIZE
"With National Guard
paychecks. I'm saving them
up for a down payment on a
new car, and I've got a lot
saved up already."

always

Hormon Grote
777.5592
Mason, W. v•.

CHOPPED

JO-BO DOG FOOD

Now you can buy that
comfortable
La·Z·Boy

MASON
FURNITURE

.~:.

1.~·.

REGUlAR &amp; TODDLERS

CHAIRS
Authorized Dealer

USDA CHOICE BEEF

SUPERIORS All MEAT

SAUSAGE

Tony Venoy hurled a no-run
no-hit game for the champion
Indians as they walked away
from the Reds 14.0 in Mid.dleport Boys' League play last
Saturday night.
Venoy fanned nine &amp;nd
walked five in his brilliant
performance. George Gum
went the distance for the Reds,
fanning six and walking four .
Hitters for the Indians were
Mark Venoy with a double and
two singles, Creson Pratt a
triple, Terry Gardner a double,
and Keith Lynch, T. Venoy ,
and Steve Carsoneach a single.

JOHNSON TRADED
CARLISLE, Pa . (UP!)
Mitch Johnson, a veteran of·
fensive tackle with the
Cleveland Browns who had
retired as a player, Monday
was traded !.o the Washington
Redskins for a future draft
choice.

you ' ve

.

1

FARM

O•ffitter

HINDY OMITTED
Mike Hlndy, star hurler for
lhe Middleport Indians, was
inadvertently left off the
Middleport All-star
,. roster .

chair

.

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS SLICED

Attending a professional golf
clinic at Whispering Pines, N.
C., the past week were Jeff
Warner, son of Mrs. Jean
Warner, and Chuck FoUrod,
son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
FoUrod, both of Pomeroy.
Warner was presented a
silver plated candy dish lor
winning second place in the
third flight and a money cer·
tificate for low medalist. Bruce
Blackston was scheduled to
attend the clinic but did not due
to an accident In which he
fractured his arm.

LA-Z-BOV

'

BRAUN SCHWEIGER

In Golf Clinic

position as an Independent
candidate .
"I don't draw a pension," he
sald. "I will file an application
for one if I lose the election."
Tider added he Is eligible for a
pension of $1,150 per month.

.

9 to ll CHOPS

Venoy Otalks
U N
p

,..-

FAMILY PACK

Two Take Part

dreamed of at our low
prices.
"Molly Magulrea"
Molly Maguires" was
the name of a secret society
of Irish Immigrant miners
who fought for better living
and . working conditions in
Pennsylvania in the 1870s.
Tbe society was suppressed
In 18T.'.
'

Carpenter News, Event

RAVENSWOOD - Stars of
the WWVA "Jamboree USA"
show will appear in Ravenswood for two shows on Aug. 12.
The free entertainment is
being provided by the Ohio
River Festival which will be
held in Ravenswood Aug. tl, 12
and 13.
Bob Gallion, Patti Powell,
Pat!( Joy, l,lud Cutright and the
Bob Gallion Band will make up
the cast for the shows.
A stage for the productions
will be erected In the lot beside
the Jackson County Bank . Both
an afternoon and evening
performance will be given.
Bob, a regular member of
the "Jamboree USA" show,
has also appeared on the Grand
Ole Opry and the Louisiana
Hayride. Recording and
personal appearances are part
of his world. He is also an
accomplished composer with
such tunes as "Your Wild
Life's Gonna Get You Down,"
"Happy Anniversary," "Not
Once But a Hundred Times,"
and "Happy Birthday, My
Darling'" to his credit. After a
long association with Acuff.
Rose Publishing Company,
Bob has now formed his own
company in Wheeling.
Also appearing with Bob is
dark-eyed, dark-haired Patti
Powell -- or as she is known by
some people, "The Long Haul
Widow." A native Georgian,
Patti now lives in Wheeling
where she is a featured star on
!he "Jamboree USA" show.
Patti's Hockory record, :•r..ong
Haul Widow," is a smash hit
!hat promises to be the first of
many for this bright new star.
Among Patti's credits are the
Bill Anderson Show, Del
Reeves Country Carnival and
the Grand Ole Opry TV show .
Arrangements for the personal appearances of these
stars in Ravenswood were
made by Don Flesher.
Doug Merica! of Ravenswood , Ronnie Dixon of Evans,
and David Whipley of Belpre
will give two exhibitions of
skydiving in Ravenswood Aug.
12-13. The skydivers will
perform as part of the Ohio
River Festival.
The exhibitions will include a
21).second free fall and an attempt to hook up during free

- ._

This Special Value On Sale Wedn esday Thru Saturday

Kan City
000'100 OOD--1 3 0
California
000 000 1)()0--j) 3 4
Nelson (4·41 and Kirkpatrick ;
Ryan, Fisher {9) and Stephenson. LP- Ryan (12 - ~ ).

UMW Organizer
Oaiming 'Foul'

Senate Has House Dam,
Water Impoundment ACt
WASHINGTON- The House
of Representatives has approved and sent to the Senate
legislation co,sponsored by
Congressman Clarence Miller
which calls for the Inspection
1
·

~~

(lsi, 10 inns)
Milw
010 010 000 o-- 2 10 0
000 200 000 1-- 3 8 0
·~
COLUMBUS (UPI) -1be 10 umpires who have called !!!! Cleve
Parsons (8.9) and Rodriguez.
~~
every game the pest three moatha for the MUHtoc- :;:; Azcue (9) ; Lamb, Kilkenny (9)
~ Mendel Little League baaebaU teams were happy to hear !!!~ and Fosse. WP- KIIkenny (3.1) .
~:::
today they will be on hand as referees Ia Ulde League :::: HRs- Lowenstein (4th ), Brahamer IJrdl.
~~
football next month. Tbe 10 are Ohio Penitentiary in· ...!:~: I2nd game I
~·.·
000 000 1100-- 0 5 3
\.';! mates.
:;:;: Milw
Cleve
000 000 1101- I 8 0
~~:
The honor dorm prisoners said they enjoyed umpiriDg !!!!' Ryerson (2-3)
and A zc ue ;
j§ the suburban Berwick games.
:;:~ Tidrow (8-9) and Moses.
§:;
"l'be klda are beautlflllaad eo are their pareuts," sald :;:~
Texas
000 000 110(}- 0 2 2
';!!: umpire • Inmate Joha Palby. ''They take us Into their !;!! Oakland
1101 000 01x- 2 2 0
t:!:' homes to eat aud aceepl us Uke neighbors."
!:~:
Hand, Lindblad (8) , Cox (8)
)~!
Another Ohio Pen ump, Gene WDUams, said the :::: and Bill ings: Blue (4·51 and
Duncan . LP-- Hand (8·71.
::} progr'am hu gone 1moothly.
!;!:
101 1100 000- 2 7 0
:!:l
"'lbe warden Insisted the players aud their famllies ;!;! Boston
Detroit
200
Olx- 5 12 I
"' mO»t Jmow we were lamates "WWiams said "As far as ':&lt; Patlln, Tatum 020
(7) and Fisk :
·• can see, It hasn't'made ••bll of ciinerence to
Lolich {18·6) an'd Freehan . LP
...~; . them,otaad
'•'•
lt'a been a wonderful experience lor us."
::::. - Pall in 18·101 . HRs- Rodriguez
«
·:·:· {7th), Yastrzemskl (2nd ). Free.
~:::;:~:~:?,!:;::::::8:::::::::~::::::::8:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::~;:;~:;:;~~::::::::::::::::::::::: han (6th) .

i ..,

MILLER HONORED- Bob MWer, Pomeroy, manager
of The City Loan and Savings Co. in Pomeroy, was among 170
employes honored when the company held its annual service
award ceremony and 60th birthday anniversary at its home
office in Lima recently. Miller has 15 years of service with
the company. Each year an annual service award ceremony
is given in honor of those employes who have reached each
consecutive five year period of employement . A gold pin is
presented, set with a diamond for each five years of service.

{lSI

finger?" to one journalist.
Palmer won't be wearing
either glasses or contact lenses
for the tournament. "I'll be
going in blind," he said.

Umpires Will Tum Referees

game)
New York 000 000 5110- 5 9 I
Baltimore 000 001 010-- 2 8 1
Peterson, lyle {8) and
Munson ; Dobson, Leonhard {7),
Scott (8) and Etchebarren . WP
- Peterson (lJ . Il) . LP- Dobson
112·101. HR- Buford (3rd ).
£2nd game I
New York 000 000 01o-- 2 8 2
Baltimore 001 000 ooo-- 1 2 0
Gardner , Lyle (8) and Ellis;
Alexander. Wall ( ~ ) and Oates .
WP-Gardner {3·01. LP- Aiex·
ander 15·6) .

.

'

Festival Offers
Jrunhoree's Stars

Cowboys Trade Thomas

Major leogue Results
By United Press lnlernollonol
Notiono.l Ltogue
Kwalickandaskedtobe'traded SI . Louis 000000000 - 0 61
Chicago
001 210 110• - 4 1? 2
so he could play first string
Cleveland, Grzenda 161. Bare
again .
17), Drabowsky (81 and Sim·
mons ; Jenkins (14·9) and
The Washington RedskinS Hundley . LP- Cieveland (12·6) ,
acquired offensive tackle
Mitch Johnson, who had . Plllsbrgh 200000 110(}- 2 7 0
Phi Ia
000 000 110(}- 0 6 0
retired as a player for the Moose (7-61 and Sangulllen:
Cleveland Browns, lor a future Reynolds, Scarce (91 and
draft choice. He Is expected to Bateman. LP- ~eynolds (0-8).
fill the hole left vacant when San Fran
201 2101101- 7 12.0
Jim Snowden was In jut~ in Cincinnati 000 000 1102- 2 7 1
training camp.
Carrithers 13·61 and Rader;
The St. Louis Cardinals Billingham. Borbon (41. Gullett
· (6), Sprague (9) and Bench. LP
picked up reserve lineman - Billingham (7-10) . HR- Bonds
Mike Siewk from the (17th) .
Washington Redskins on
waivers. The Cards had ~~t~~r:
88J ~ J8~= ~ ~ ~
released him last year but
Osteen, Richert (7) and
decided to take a second Cannizzaro; McLain, Hardin
chance on him.
(B) and Will iams. WP- Mclaln
(2·1) . LP- Osteen (11 -8) . HR- ·
Don Parish, the veteran Bruckner (3rd) .
linebacker acquired from St.
000 000 2110- 2 4 1
Louis lasfyear, was suspended Montreal
N.Y.
00001102x- 4 61
Monday by Los Angeles coach
Moore, Renko (7) , Slrohmay·
Tommy Prothro. He got in an er (8) and Humphrey; Strom,
(7) and Dyer. WPaltercation with an uniden- Frisella
Frisella (4·51 . LP- Renko I J.7) .
tified assistant coach. Prothro HR- Dyer 17th) .
said It .was the first player he
Diego 110 000 110(}- 2 8 1
has ever SUSPOnded in his San
Houston
101 000 001- 3 10 1
career and said he will try to
Arlin 18·13) and Goddard ;
Dierker (9.6) and Edwards.
trade Parish.
Lee White, who said he was
Americ~ n League
retiring five days ago when he Chicago
300 031 1110- 8 9 1
left the San Diego camp, Minnesota 000 010 110(}- 1 6 2
Bahnsen (13-11) and Herrreturned Monday and said he mann
; Blyleven , Strickland (5).
was attending to personal Gebhar d (6) , Goltz (~) and
matters during his absence. Borgmann. LP- Biyleven {914) . Hrs-AIIen, 2 (26th and
27th) , Herrmann (5th) .

.. .

.•

"I dig driving. The
Guard taught me ho-,v to
drive trucks. 2 ~ -tonners.

3,4 -tons. And jeeps. It's a
great change of pace from
my civilian job."
You, too, can get a
regular paycheck from the
Guard. For a car. For clothes.
For a stereo set. You name it.
More than that, in the Army
· or Air Natio1,1al Guard, you
get a chance to learn a trade
or skill. A chance to meet
other people. People who
could giye you leads for a
good civilian job.
And maybe you belong

3664th LIGHT MAINTENANCE CO.

TIDE

in the Guard because it's an
outfit the community and
country look to for help.
Because it belongs to
all the people.
Give yourself a chance.
Give us a call now.

BOX

2.29

IHIHI~ ·

Thursday Only!

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bois.

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and
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SUP·ER MARKET • Ooeil .~ 9 to 10 • Sun.
We Accept Federal t'Ood Stamps . ,

I

I

PHONE: ~92·3480

Comer Mill ana_Second Sts. . "Wti.Rourvo Tho Right To Limit.Quantities"
-LEPORT. 0:
.
'

I

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'I

,,

follow ing the candlelight
memorial service for 24
ileceased members. During the
chapeaux passe luncheon, Mrs.
Martin was Initiated lniQ the
Chapeau'!' Passe Club.
·
Installation of. the new officers took place at the
banquet. Mrs. Marlin at that
time was also installed as the
pouvior member nationale. A·
cbapeau passe pin was
presented to her by Mrs.
Esther Edgar and Mrs. Myrtle
Breathwaite sang "May the
Good Lord Bless ai!d Keep
You" . to Mrs. Martin. Mrs.
Martin presented a pin to Mrs.

Waller, retiring le secretalre •
casslere, and Introduced her
husband, Osby Martin, son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
!Wbert Martin and Stephanie,
Alliance, and , her son-in-law '
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Letcher Wines, Cleveland.
Included in trophy awards
presented in addition to those
received by the Meigs Salon
were Best Chapeau Report,
Swnmitt County and Gallia
County; Arree Marshal\
'l'rophy for best rounded
program in cystic fibrosis, 10 to
35 members, Gallia County;
Mary Martin 'l'rophy, best

program In tuberculosis,
Hamilto,n County; Sue Sonnenstine 'l'rophy for best
constitution and by-law report,
Gallia. County; and the MarY
Martin Trophy, publicity
scrapbook, Crawford County.
Speaker at the banquet was
Richard
M.
Bluestein,
ex~cutive director of the
National Jewish Hospital,
Denver.
Committees serving for the
convention
were
Mrs.
Singleton, Mrs . Houston,
general chairmen; Sarah
Wolfe, credentials; Mabel
Brown, Gallipolis, rules and

mien: Allee Foepp and Grace II uccllt
Klilepp, information; Evelyn
. Brill, music; M!II'Y Walker,
properties . and seating;
Georgia Brown, publicity;
Betty Koelsch and Helen
Moehring, registration; Anna
Kruger, time keeper; Btllle
Mederbach, flower chairman;
Thelma Crosthwaite and Edna
McDonald, Banquet chairman,
and
Eleanor
Ullum,
distinguished guest chairman.
At the American Legion
Auxiliary convention which
preceded the Eight and Forty
meeting, Mrs. Marlin was· a
guest for a breakfast ·and

anetlnp .rnm llli

7-TIIeO.U,&amp;nlnei,Middlepurt-Pcmeroy, O.,Aucuit l,tm

.....

A surprise
reception !Wnald Hanning, Mrs. Helen
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shuler, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Sauer of Middleport on their Swanson, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
11lver wedding anniversary Harris and family, Mr. and
was held Sunday at the Mid· Mrs. Charles Asa Bradbury
dleporl
First
United and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ira
~sbyterlan Church. Hosting Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. John
II were their children, Mrs. Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Carolyn Satterfie.ld, George Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W.
. Sauer, and Miss Lois Sauer.
Nease, Jr. and famUy, Mr. and
Cake, punch, coffee and Mrs. Gene Lambert and
mlnla were served. Engraved family, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
napkins and book matches Houdashelt and family, Mr.
were given as favors. Miss and Mrs. H. E. Warner and
Sauer poured the punch, Mrs. family, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Carroll Swanson and Mrs. Jack Cowan and family, Mr. and
Satterfield, Sr. served the Mrs. Walter Crooks, Mr. and
cake, and Mrs. !Wberl Wiley of Mrs. Shirley E. Guinther, Mr.
Glhanna presided at the coffee and Mrs. Charles E. Griffith
service.
Guests
were and family, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
registered by Mrs. Francis Will, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Anderson and Mrs. Myron · Morarity, Mr.andMrs. Denver
Miller, and Mrs. Claude Rice and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Durgee of J.&gt;jttsburgh, Pa., Henry Clatworthy.
registered the gifts presented
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wallace,
to the couple. Pictures were Mr. and Mrs. Charlec ..rcher
laken .by Jack Satterfield, Jr. and family, Mr. and Mrs.
during the reception hours of 2 Richard Chambers and family,
· to tp.m. and assisting with the Mrs. Harold Long, Mr. and
serving were Mrs. Ronald Mrs. Paul Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Hanning and Mrs. Jack Sat· W. A. Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Gail
terfleld, Jr.
Buck and family, Mrs. Dorothy
A buffet dinner for close Jenkins, Mrs. Ruth Hawkins,
friends and relatives held after Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson and
the reception at the home of family, Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Mr. and Mrs. Sauer was hosted Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs. George
by btetr daughters and son.
Hackett, Jr. and f~lly , Mr.
On Saturday evening a · and Mrs . Paul Casct, Mr. and
dinner party was held at the Mrs. W. F. Koenig, Mr. and
Meigs Inn In observance of the Mrs . Kenneth Fridley and
occasion. Attending that were family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Satterfield, Burns, Mr. and ,.Mrs . Milton
Jr. and Amy, George Sauer, _Hood, Mr. and Mrs. P. L.
Miss Kathie Hardman of Mitch, Mrs . A. R. Pullen , Miss
Marietta, Miss Lois Sauer, Mr. Jerry Pullen, Mrs . Clyda
and Mrs. Robert Wiley, Allensworth, !Wdney Sauer,
Gahanna and Kenneth Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks
Sunnyval~, Calif.
and family, Theodore Smith,
'l'he guest list lor the Mr. and Mrs. Danny Brown
reception included Mrs. 0 . B. and family, Mr. and Mrs. John
Stout,
Miss
Freddie Blaettnar and family, Mr. and
Houdashelt, Mrs . Harry Mrs . Fred Blaettnar, Mr. and
Houdashelt, Mr . and Mrs. Mrs . George Harris, Jr. and

MRS. RHODA HACKE'll, ~. [W I ttl Mra. Mary Martin, outgoing chapeau In the State
of (lllo with a lifetime membtnllp In the Ladles Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39. Mrs.
Martin~ Pomeroy, will a11o receive a pin through Meigs Salon 710, 8 and 40, in recognition of
her work with the aand 401n0hlo. Mrs. Hackett is the new chapeau of the Me1gs Salon.

Four Trophy Awards Madft
.,

(Con linued from page 1)
temental, participated In the
installation of officers for the
197~73 year and Mrs. Welsh
served as the personal page for
Mrs. Martin at the cottventlon.
The Ia.marche got underway
with a dutch supper and pte·
marche pouvlor In the ball·
room at the Sheraton-Gibson
Hotel with Mrs. Davis and Mrs.
Brinker of the Meigs Salon
assisting Mrs. Audrey Glaub,
la concierge in advancing the
colors. Mrs. Walker conducted
the roll call and Mrs. Martin
introduced the chapeaux
passes, Lorraine Elwell, Ethel.
Van
Fossen,
Louisa
Kramenbuhl, Angle McElroy,
Elizabeth Gilbert, Bernice
Christensen, Frances Sher·
man, Esther Edgar, Arree
Marshall, Virginia Rahe,
VIolet Ahlchholz, Hazel Elliott
and Helen Kilworth.
Special guests lor the convention introduced by Mrs.
Martin were Miss Dorothy M.
Dolle, natlonale chapesu, of

Kentucky, and Gamel Grant,
Kentucky departemental
chapeau. Following the pre·
marche, parodies were held
under the direction of Elda
'l'rickey, Marion, along with a
reception honoring Mrs.
Marlin, retiring departemental
chapesu.
Mrs. Martin waa a guest at
the chapeaux passe br$dast
held preceding the la marc he.
Penny Singleton extended the
welcome to open the la marche
with Evalina Berkley of
Nevada, elected 1972-73
departemental chapesu, giving
the response. Mrs. Walker's
roll call showed 153 delegates
and delegates at large In attendance.
In the reports of committee
chairmen It was noted that the
afghan made by Mrs. Ruth 'H.
Thornton of Pomeroy raised
over $500 for the Eight and
Forty project work. Mrs. Hene
Lorreat, chairman of children
and youth work in Ohio noted
that $1,~1 had been raised for

the bed endowment at the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver.
Officers elected for the 197~
73 year were Mrs. Berkley,
Nevada, departemental
chapeau; Irene Mier, Sebring,
demi chapeau premiere;.Doris
Stanrlff, 'l'oledo, demi chapeau
duexleme; Marzella Houston;
Cincinnati, I 'aumonier;
Audrey Glaub, Columbus, Ia
archiviste ; Reva Cihla, Shiloh,
la concierge.
Bernice Christensen was
named le secreta ire . cassiere,
Hazel EIHolt, Mrs. Martin and
Mrs. Berkley will be delegates
to the national convention in
Chicago, Aug. 24-26, along with
Irene Mler, Mrs. Stanriff, Mrs.
Alchholz, and Mrs. Walker of
Racine. Chairman of tellers
for the election was Mrs. Lula
Hampton . Mrs. Hysell of the
Meigs Salon served as one of
the tellers.
Mrs. Slanrilf presented a
book of prayers to Mrs. Martin

Coming
Events

Ohio Employment, Payrolls
Down from Figures in 1970
'
'
•'••
••
,'

,•'
'

Employment in the private
sector of the Ohlo economy
totaled 3,157,984 In March 1971,
a decreaoe of 102,0'16 from
March 1970, and payrolls
amounted to f5.8 billion, down
$9.6 miUion, according to a
report Issued today by the
Bureau of the Census, Social
and Economic Statistics Administration, U. S. Department
of Commerce.
Cuyahoga County had the
largest employment, 643,794, a
decrease of 41,070, and payroll,
$1.2 btlllon, down ISO mtlllon
from a year earlier.
'l'he report,
"County
Business Patterns, 1971, Ohio,"
is the latest in a series of an·
nual reporla providing first
quarter economic statistics for
States and counties. It preaents
data by detailed Industry
claSBificatlon on mid-March
employment, first quarter
taxable payroll , and the
number and employment size
of reporting units for thoae
private, non-farm business
firms reporting to the Social
Security Administration under.
the non.farm business !inns
reporting to the Social Security

Administration under the
Federal Insurance Contributions Act (F.I.C.A.). A
special mall survey Is conducted to obtain industry and
county detail not reported to
the Social Security .Ad·
ministration.
About three-fourths of all
employees In the United States
are covered in the reports for
the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
VIrgin Islands, American
Samoa and Guam, and the U.
s. Summary .
Not Included are employees
of federal, state, and local
governments, sell-employed
persODB, farm workers and
those employed in domestic
and certain transportation
,
services.
'l'he detailed reports are

useful to business and
governments in administration
and planning, analyzing
market potential, setting sales
quotas and budgets, and
measuring the effectiveness of
sales
and
advertising
programs.
Copies of the Ohio report are
available at $1.75 from the
Superintendent of Documents,
U. S. ·. Government Printing
Office, Washington , D. C.
20402, or from Department of
Commerce field offices in
major cities.
Information by county and
by Industry also will be
avaUable at cost on punchcards and computer tapes
from the Economic Statistics
and Surveys Division, Bureau
of the Census, Washington, D.
c. 20233.

Actual stze

Free iced tea glass
with each S3 gasoline purchase.

Wolfpen
News, Notes
A famUy fet-tQgether picnic
was enjoyed Saturday evening
at the home of Mrs. Helen
Johnson. Those attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lambert,
David, Mr, and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly, AIsla, Steve of
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Haning of Flatwoods, Mr. and
Mrs . Lee Roush, ,Rodney ;
Cheryl and Joseph Allen of
Logan, Mra. Kenneth Grover,

TIJESDAY
REGULAR meeting, Mid·
dleport Lodge 36:!, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. tonight at temple. All
Master Masons Invited.
CHESTER Councll323, D. of
A., Tuesday, 8 p.m. at hall.
Silent auction by good of order
committee.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
helping In county · fair
restaurant report at 6 p.m.
Wednesday to office of Dr· Ray
Pickens, Middleport, for
testing required for securing
food handlers cards.
LE'l' ART 4-H members
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at Letart
Falls Community HaD. Bring
project books .
DANCE, Wednesday, 9-12,
former Pomeroy Junior High
School sponsored by Meigs
County Committee on Drug
and Alcohol Abuse. •1 ad·
mission. Music by AtlanUs and
Lost John and Seek Hut·
chlnson, Athens.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Issue of
Importance to be discussed and
all members urged to attend.
NEW MEIGS Junior High
School students register · at
office In Middleport as soon as
posllble. Office open 8 a.m . to 3
p.m. for registration.
SAnlRDAY
OLD FASHIONED Ice cream
social, Saturday, Columbia
Chapel Church located on
Route 889 at Point Rock,
Albany-Wilkesville Road.
Serving starting at 5 p.m. with
pies, cake and sandwiches also
to be served. Proceeds to
church building fund .

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Personal Notes

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POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

r - ..

W. honor BlnkAmorleord
and ~altor Charge crldll car~• .

'

Mr. ant! Mrs. William N.
Moore, Carla and Cathy,
Alhland, Ky. spent the
-kend here with Mr. and
Mra. Harry S. MOore.
Brett Bunton will return to
Qndlinatl ibis weekend after
beinl here v!Jitlng his grand·
parenll, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
.Rlchardl. He will leave lor his
home 1n Denver, Colo. early
next week, after visiting
relall- In Cincinnati.
Mr.111d Mrs. Lee Baughman
111c1 a Jeffrey, have returned
from 1
to Smoke Hole~ W.
VI. They mao vllited other
acen1c II)OIIIn W!lllt Virginia,
.· MlrJIIIICIIIICI Virginia.

irtp

r

Two-Day
Yard Sale
Planned

Sewing Club
Holds Cookout

Coolville-

Reception for
Sauers Surprise

Eight 111d Forty. Sbe wu mao
a 1 guest at ev~is of the
· Amertc111 Legion, ~ Forty
ll{ld Eight, and the Auxiliary
Past ~lldenla Parley lun·
cheon. At the Auxiliary convenlion llht wu ·presented an
award for the btsl aD-around
clvU defenae and emergency
planning program for Unit 39 of
Pomeroy. Mrs. Martin also
attenjled the reception
honoring Mrs. Donald Miller,
new Auxiliary president, rode
In the Legion parade, and
attended the memorial service
at Convention Center.

Banner
The Best
COOLVILLE - Best Photo
of Coolville was honored
Sunday when judges at Cin·
cinnati's Riverfront Stadium
awarded the 11 Banner Day"
grand prize to two of its employes, Judy Mills and Linda
Mr. and Mn. Sauer
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack family, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Satterfield, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Charles Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
James Buchanan, Mr. and Dabo, Mr . and Mrs. John Fultz
Mrs. Harold Sauer and family, and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert·'l'ewksbary, Mrs. John
Carl Norris and family, Sprouse and family, Mr . and
William Hamm, and Mr. and Mrs. William E. Lewis, Miss
Mrs. George Buchanan .
Phyllis Joachim, Mr. and Mrs.
'l'he Rev. and Mrs. Dwight Eddie Burkett, Mr. and Mrs.
Zavitz , Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leland Brown and family, Mr.
Mills and family, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Rodney Downing, Mr.
Robert Haggerty and family, and Mrs. Bethel Coleman, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Judson White, Wanda Beck, and Mrs. Jean
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Hap- Theine!.
l&lt;iilstall and family, Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. James Miller,
Mrs. J. W. Morris and family, . Waverly; Mr . and Mrs. EdMr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery, ward Stein and family, Poca,
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Miller W.Va .; Mr. and 'Mrs. Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Francis An· Wiley and family, Gahanna;
derson and family, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Witham
Mrs. Thomas Rue and family, and family, Gahanna; Clifford
Mr . and Mrs. C. R. Karr, Mr. Smith and family, Pittsburgh,
and Mrs. Karl Owen, Mrs . Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Richard Owens, Mrs. J. W. Durgee and family , PittsWaddell, Mr . and Mrs. Marcus burgh ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Chambers, Mrs. R. M. Sher- Smith, Beaver, Pa .; Mr . and
man, Mrs . J. E. Harley, Mrs. Mrs . Larry Manns and family,
Plummer Beeson, Mr. and Pittsburgh , Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Everett Bachner, Mr.-and Robert Smith, Jt . and family,
Mrs. Russell Lyons, Mrs. C. 'l'. Beaver, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Shumaker , Mrs. Edward William Smith and family,
'l'ewksbary, Mr . and Mrs . Beaver, Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
William Ohlinger, Mr. and Kenneth Sauer and family,
Mrs . Leo Kennedy, Sr., Mr . Sunnydale, Calif.; Mr. and
and Mrs. Thomas Kelly and Mrs. Oliver Smith and family ,
family, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scottsdale, Arizona;
Vaughan and family .
Mr. and Mrs. William Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle and family, Gahanna; Mr. and
and family , Robert L. Sharp, Mrs. James lllingsworth, San
Mr. and Mrs . Carl Horky and Mateo, Calif.; and Miss Kathie
Hardman, Marietta.

SYRACUSE - A yard sale
was planned for Aug. 9 and 10
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church of Syracuse when the
Eagles Class met at the Ohio
River Camp site of Mr . and
Mrs. Millard Van Meter near
Racine. A wiener roast was
held.
Bill Winebrenner, president,
presided at the meeting which
opened with prayer by Mrs.
Opal Kloes . Miss Eleanor
Robson gave devotions entitled
"I Am the Way". Mrs. Wanda
Rizer gave the secretary and
treasurer's reports and several
fund raising projects were
discussed .
A white elephant sale was
held and at the close of the
meeting Mrs. Kloes and Mrs.
van Meter served refreshments.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Dorothy
Winebrenner, Mrs. Helen
reaford, Mrs. Mary Lisle,Miss
Marcia Karr, Franklin Rizer,
Addie Norris, Carroll Norris,
Mrs. Irene Hobach, Charles
Hobach, and !Wbert F1anagan .
Guests were Eldon Will and
Debra Hartenbach.

WIW HOST PICNIC
The Wilting Workers Class of
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church held a
family picnic recently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Will. During a brief business
meeting the sale of church
plates was discussed. Lori
Pullins ·won the wonder box.
Others attending the picnic
were the Rev. and Mrs. Stanton
Smith and daughter, Janie,
Mrs . Agnes Weeks, Mrs.
Cordelia Bentz, Mrs. Ruby
frick, Becky, Brenda, Beverly
and Brian Will, Unda Pullins,
Rodney, Steve and Kevin, Paul
Hall, and Danny Hall.

PROJEct PLANNED
A concrete slab will be
poured on a section of the
Harrisonville Elementary
School playground before
school " starts, according to
plina made at meeting Friday
night of the Harrisonville PTO.
Meeting at the school~ discuss
the project were Mr. and Mrs.
Junior l'ayne, Mr . and Mrs.
Blahop, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Welch, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Barrett, Connie Chapman,
N111cy White, Sally Welch, and
. Clrolene Bing.

Ritenour ~

The presentation of a $250
check by the vice mayor of
Cincinnati,
William
J.
Chenault, culminated over 600
man hours of Ia bor to build a
mammouth banner displaying

Couple Plans
Celebration
Bruce Hysell, son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell, is
visiting his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman M. Hysell;
Bashan.
Mrs . Henry Arnold, Mason,
W. Va .; Mrs. !Wger Jeffers,
Mrs . Norman E. Hysell ,
Pomeroy RD, attended the
funeral services Tuesday for
Mrs. Iva Baird at Southside, W.
Va. Mrs. Baird was the mother
of Mrs. !Wbert Lee Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Mullins
and daughter, Deanna, who
have been living in 'l'exas for
the past year have returned to
Meigs County and are
currently staying with Mrs.
Mullins' parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Bentz .
DINNER GIVEN
'l'he 20th wedding anniversary of Sr . M. Sgt. and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr .
was celebrated Sunday with a
dinner party hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. James Bearhs, Pomeroy.
Guests were the hosts'
children, 'l'inuny and &amp;ott,
Dennis Spurrier, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Wildermuth and
'l'eresa, Mr . and Mrs. Steven
Ray Scott, Allen Dill, Sr., and
Lillian Napper. Cake was
served following the dinner.
Games were played.

Mr. and Mrs. Flavy Sigman
will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary at a
party to be held Saturday, Aug.
5, at the home of their son and
ds ughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sigman, Uma.
Mr. and Mrs. Sigman are the
parents of six daughters, Mrs.
Charles (Marjorie) Nelson,
and Mrs. Gary (Helen )
Alexander, both of Paden City;
Mrs. Arnold (Mary) Green,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mrs.
!Wbert (Ruth) Bobo, Langsville, Mrs. Dennis (Agnes)
Thompson, Safford, Arizona;
Mrs . Pete ( Kathalene)
Painter, California; five sons,
Roy of Langsville; Paul of
Middleport; Eimer of Toledo;
Robert of Pomeroy , and
Charles of Lima; 37 grand·
children, and live 'greatgrandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Sigman have a daughter, Mrs.
Erma Haynes, who is
deceased.
Congratulatory cards may
he sent to the couple at 95 Pearl
St., Middleport, or to them in
care of Charles Sigman, 3552
Bellefontaine &amp;ad, Lima.

PICNIC HELD
Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Hysell, OJIIdren's Home Road,
entertained Saturday night
with a wiener roast for
members of the primary and
junior Sunday school classes of
the United Faith C)lurch .
Games were played during the
evening. Attending were Bruce
Coleman, Cheshire; Bruce
Hysell, Jo Ellen Lawrence,
Middleport ; Mrs. Ronnie
Martin, !Wnnle and Kim, New
Haven, W. Va. and the hosts.
TRAVEUI 'l'O WES'l'
Miss
Joyce
Grueser,
daughter of MI. and Mrs.
!Wbert E. Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, has been camping and
fishlng in Branson, Mo., and
Arkansas, with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles· J .. Young of Mason.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr." and Mrs. Darrell Wolfe,
St. Louis, Mo., announce the
birth of a daughter, Jennifer
Lynn, July 19. The 'Infant
weigbed six pounds and four
and one-half ounces. The infant
is the granddaughter of Mrs.
Pauline Wolfe of Racine and
the late Gary Wolfe. Great- •
grandmother is Mrs. Hazel
'l'od, St. Louis: Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Adams, St. Louls .

'\

the message

·~express

to

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD LAKE
MASON-Miss Cheryl Lynn Sleeth, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. E. L. Sleeth, 4th St ., Mason , and Mr. Richard G. Lake,
son of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Lake, 4thSt.,Mason, were united in
marriage on June 19th, at Gaffney, S.C. Judge VV. R. Douglas
performed the double ring ceremony. The bride wore a Ooor
length gown of blue dotted swiss with lace lrim on the bodice
and sleeves. She wore a single strand of pesrls and a corsage
of white carnations. Her shoulder length veil was held in
place by a head piece of white flowers. The newlyweds are
residing on 4th St., in Mason.

•
Members of the Sew-RiteSewing Club met recently at
llle !Wadside Park on !Wute 33
for a cookout hosted by Mrs.
Willard Boyer and Mrs.
OJarles Hoffman.
The shower of gifts awarded
each meeting was received by
Mrs. BUl McDaniel, who
thanked the members for gifts
sent her daughter who was
recently hospitalized. Mrs. Don
Collins and Mrs. Flo Strickland
11111 host a cookout at the
Collins home later thia month.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Jack Handley, Mrs.
Don McKnight, Mrs. Ray
Baity, Mrs. &amp;nald Browning,
Mrs . Edward Wells, Mrs.
George Hoffman, Mrs. Don
Mullens, Mrs. Elmer White,
Mrs. Jim Neutzllng, and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Jr.
About two weeks ago the
group traveled to Logan where
they mel at the home of Mrs.
White on Lake Logan.

series, 72-Reds". The banner
was buill as a group project by
20 Best employes and their
families. It consisted of more
than 7,200paper tillies bound to cording to the rules of the Patty Linton, 'l'ammy Chap·
a chicken wire frame with 1,500 Banner Day contest only two man, Becky and Patty Misner,
REUNION SET
yards of string. When fully persons could carry each entry Carol Parrish, Jayne Mar-'
'l'he annual Nicholson
assembled, the entry was 15 in order to qualify. Most ob- ceilus, Esther Atkinson ,
reunion
will be held Sunday at
servers
were
skeptical
that
the
Yvonne
Jenkins,
Susie
Shanks,
feet long by eight feet high.
Forest
Acres Park, near
Members of Best Photo's two girls chosen to represent Mary Jo Flowers, Bonni ~
customer service department lhe company would be able to Dowler, Debbie Goodwin, Mrs. Rutland .
originally conceived the idea go the distance. The parade Witlatch and Molly Witlatch,
after hearing a radio an- course extended from center Ruth Henry , Donna Reed,
nouncement promoting the field to home plate and back . Sandy Gregg, Barbara Fronko,
With a little help from t6e Georgia Solnhorst, Jim, Carol,
weekend
doubleheader.
. KATHRYN ANN
Banner Day is an annual event weatherman, however , the Kelly and Kevin Morris, Mary
which allows fans to show their winds at the stadium subsided and Martha Carson, Melody
enthusiasm for lhe Reds Ball long enough for Judy Mills and Hughes, Irene 'l'racewell, Susie
DRESS MAKING
Club. It was particularly Linda Ritenour lo display the Westfall, Ann Wright, Patricia
significant this year because winning entry. Out of the more Barnhart, Joyce Cleta and
By
Cincinnati leads its division than 1,400 banners presented Media Kruschkl, and Bruce
and appears to be a good bet between games, Best Photo McNeil .
Appointment
for the National League pen- won the top award. Five other
cash prizes were presented to
nant.
Presidents Jackson, Fill·
Only
Work on the banner began runners-up for the best two- more, Buchanan, Lin co 1 n
man
banner
~
one
man
banner,
last Monday at the Coolville
and Garfield were born in
Ph. 992-7145
Village Fire Station. Each day most creative, and most , log cabins.
during the week lhe group met original. Best employes will
from 6 until 11 p.m., plus all domite their $250 prize to local
day Saturday to gel the entry charities.
Members of the Best Pt.oto
into shape. The girls began
with 50 boxes of. tissues folding banner crew included Brian,
PHONE 992-2342
and tying them individually in Elaine and K. B. Summers,
MIDDLEPORT,O.
the shape of carnations. The Marie Butler, Joann, Cindy,
paper flowers were then Jeff, Susan and John Church,
arranged in the wire mesh and Elsie, Bill and John Humspray-painted by the men. phrey , ~nda , Bryan , Jan,Jody
Most of the lettering was in and Gary Ritenour, Linda and
red. The background in white, Craig Morgan, Judy Smith,
and the training complete with Judy Mills, Phyllis and Gene
wheels and couplings in black. Draggett, Vicki and Darrell .
There was considerable Williams, Julie Robin, Julie.
anxiety as Sunday's com- Robin &amp; Cindy Russell, Robin
Agency
petition approached. Ac- Swartz, Cheryl Tanthorey,

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

INSURANCE • BONDS
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Meigs County's Oldest and Largest

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Its a comfortable, 6-cylinder American compact
that's actually priced below the Volkswagen 113.
'·

If you can afford aVolkswagen 113 -or almost an~

little import- you can afford a Maverick. Look:

Mission Group

FORD MAVERICK

:Z·dour

6-c:ylinckr

$2,1411.*

VW 113 (Super Beelte)

2-duor

4-nlinder

$2;159.'

Gives Service

'l'QYOTA COROLLA 1600

l-door

4-cylinder

$1,109.•

DATSUN PL 510

2-door

4-cylinder

$1,.106.•

A program of inslrwnental
and vocal selections, readings
and meditations by the
Missionary Society highlighted
the Sunday morning service at
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church.
Mrs.NeUieWinston and Mrs.
Ervin Bumgardner gave
with
Arnold
devotions
Richards slnglng "Without
Him" · Ervin Bumgardner,
'
"Precious
Lord", with guitar'
accompaniment; James
Hughes, "Must Jesus Bear the
Cro88"; Mrs. Con Young, "I
Must Tell Jesus" . Mrs.
Campbell Harper played a
plano solo, "Touch Me Lord
Jesus", and there were
readings by Mrs. Myrtle
Warren, Carrie Ward, Mrs.
Bumgardner, and · Mrs.
Henrietta &amp;blnson.
Topics discussed were "Ho&gt;lv I
Bread" by Mrs. Winston,
''Purpose of Ml8slons" by Mrs.
Arnold Richards. The ushers
were Kevin Angel and Brett
Bunton. ·To conclude the
program · each of the women
sang her favorite hymn, first
u a aolo and then all at the
same time .

• Mlmufact urer 's sugaested ret ail pnce fo r 2·door models . Excludes de:1ler

preparation charges lf any, destinat ion charges, title and tuxes.

NOTE: People ask us how we ca n affo rd to olfcr a roomy,
6-cylinder compact at about th e same pr ice as the li tt le impo rt s.
First , we've been making small cars since !908. Experience helps.
Second , we ha ven' t changcJ Maverick-except for mech anica l
improvements-since v.c fi rst inrroJ uced it..That kind of contin uity
helps to control costs.
ThirJ. re ce nt cu rrency reva luatlon s and devaluation s have
helpeJ restore the co mpet itive stance of American manufacturers.

Most little.imports give
. you 4-cylinder engines.
· Maverick gives you
a 6-cylinderehgine.
It's smooth . It's reliable.
It lets you accelerate into
turn pike traffic with 'Co ntidenc~ and hold your own on
stee p hills. And it delivers
su rprisingly good gas mileage.

Ample room inside.
Maverick's front seat, for example: O\trB'" more
sho ul~er

room than Volkswagen t 13. '
There 's no wasted space inside Maverick. Allhe
same time. n·one of that small-car crowded feeling.

Maintenance: Even simpler
mdre colivenieat than the little Imports.
VW, for example, recommends normal service
every 3000 miles or three months, whichever comes
first. On Maverick, it's 6000 miles or six months.
So Maverick's recommended service interval is twice
as long as Volkswagen's.
We also\lesigned Maverick to be a simple
machine to care for. In fact, we've eve n prepared a
manual which tells you how to do many maintenance
jobs yourself.
One more convenience : there are over 5,600
Ford dealers in the country. VW has about 1,100.

Agood car for long trips.
Maverick's rear track is 2.9" wider than Volkswagen's . Its wheelbase is 7 .7" longer. There's a bit more weight, too. By themselves,
these diflerences aren't very big-but ihey can add up to a big
diflerence in the way Maverick drives and handles the open road.
Beller idea for safety ''' buckle up!

FORD MAVERICK
FORO OIVIisiON . . .

It may just be the best car value in America today.

EllH GOBLE FORD, INC.

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461 .S. Thid St., MidcltDO(" Ohio
l

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follow ing the candlelight
memorial service for 24
ileceased members. During the
chapeaux passe luncheon, Mrs.
Martin was Initiated lniQ the
Chapeau'!' Passe Club.
·
Installation of. the new officers took place at the
banquet. Mrs. Marlin at that
time was also installed as the
pouvior member nationale. A·
cbapeau passe pin was
presented to her by Mrs.
Esther Edgar and Mrs. Myrtle
Breathwaite sang "May the
Good Lord Bless ai!d Keep
You" . to Mrs. Martin. Mrs.
Martin presented a pin to Mrs.

Waller, retiring le secretalre •
casslere, and Introduced her
husband, Osby Martin, son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
!Wbert Martin and Stephanie,
Alliance, and , her son-in-law '
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Letcher Wines, Cleveland.
Included in trophy awards
presented in addition to those
received by the Meigs Salon
were Best Chapeau Report,
Swnmitt County and Gallia
County; Arree Marshal\
'l'rophy for best rounded
program in cystic fibrosis, 10 to
35 members, Gallia County;
Mary Martin 'l'rophy, best

program In tuberculosis,
Hamilto,n County; Sue Sonnenstine 'l'rophy for best
constitution and by-law report,
Gallia. County; and the MarY
Martin Trophy, publicity
scrapbook, Crawford County.
Speaker at the banquet was
Richard
M.
Bluestein,
ex~cutive director of the
National Jewish Hospital,
Denver.
Committees serving for the
convention
were
Mrs.
Singleton, Mrs . Houston,
general chairmen; Sarah
Wolfe, credentials; Mabel
Brown, Gallipolis, rules and

mien: Allee Foepp and Grace II uccllt
Klilepp, information; Evelyn
. Brill, music; M!II'Y Walker,
properties . and seating;
Georgia Brown, publicity;
Betty Koelsch and Helen
Moehring, registration; Anna
Kruger, time keeper; Btllle
Mederbach, flower chairman;
Thelma Crosthwaite and Edna
McDonald, Banquet chairman,
and
Eleanor
Ullum,
distinguished guest chairman.
At the American Legion
Auxiliary convention which
preceded the Eight and Forty
meeting, Mrs. Marlin was· a
guest for a breakfast ·and

anetlnp .rnm llli

7-TIIeO.U,&amp;nlnei,Middlepurt-Pcmeroy, O.,Aucuit l,tm

.....

A surprise
reception !Wnald Hanning, Mrs. Helen
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shuler, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Sauer of Middleport on their Swanson, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
11lver wedding anniversary Harris and family, Mr. and
was held Sunday at the Mid· Mrs. Charles Asa Bradbury
dleporl
First
United and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ira
~sbyterlan Church. Hosting Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. John
II were their children, Mrs. Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Carolyn Satterfie.ld, George Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W.
. Sauer, and Miss Lois Sauer.
Nease, Jr. and famUy, Mr. and
Cake, punch, coffee and Mrs. Gene Lambert and
mlnla were served. Engraved family, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
napkins and book matches Houdashelt and family, Mr.
were given as favors. Miss and Mrs. H. E. Warner and
Sauer poured the punch, Mrs. family, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Carroll Swanson and Mrs. Jack Cowan and family, Mr. and
Satterfield, Sr. served the Mrs. Walter Crooks, Mr. and
cake, and Mrs. !Wberl Wiley of Mrs. Shirley E. Guinther, Mr.
Glhanna presided at the coffee and Mrs. Charles E. Griffith
service.
Guests
were and family, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
registered by Mrs. Francis Will, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Anderson and Mrs. Myron · Morarity, Mr.andMrs. Denver
Miller, and Mrs. Claude Rice and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Durgee of J.&gt;jttsburgh, Pa., Henry Clatworthy.
registered the gifts presented
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wallace,
to the couple. Pictures were Mr. and Mrs. Charlec ..rcher
laken .by Jack Satterfield, Jr. and family, Mr. and Mrs.
during the reception hours of 2 Richard Chambers and family,
· to tp.m. and assisting with the Mrs. Harold Long, Mr. and
serving were Mrs. Ronald Mrs. Paul Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Hanning and Mrs. Jack Sat· W. A. Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Gail
terfleld, Jr.
Buck and family, Mrs. Dorothy
A buffet dinner for close Jenkins, Mrs. Ruth Hawkins,
friends and relatives held after Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson and
the reception at the home of family, Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Mr. and Mrs. Sauer was hosted Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs. George
by btetr daughters and son.
Hackett, Jr. and f~lly , Mr.
On Saturday evening a · and Mrs . Paul Casct, Mr. and
dinner party was held at the Mrs. W. F. Koenig, Mr. and
Meigs Inn In observance of the Mrs . Kenneth Fridley and
occasion. Attending that were family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Satterfield, Burns, Mr. and ,.Mrs . Milton
Jr. and Amy, George Sauer, _Hood, Mr. and Mrs. P. L.
Miss Kathie Hardman of Mitch, Mrs . A. R. Pullen , Miss
Marietta, Miss Lois Sauer, Mr. Jerry Pullen, Mrs . Clyda
and Mrs. Robert Wiley, Allensworth, !Wdney Sauer,
Gahanna and Kenneth Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks
Sunnyval~, Calif.
and family, Theodore Smith,
'l'he guest list lor the Mr. and Mrs. Danny Brown
reception included Mrs. 0 . B. and family, Mr. and Mrs. John
Stout,
Miss
Freddie Blaettnar and family, Mr. and
Houdashelt, Mrs . Harry Mrs . Fred Blaettnar, Mr. and
Houdashelt, Mr . and Mrs. Mrs . George Harris, Jr. and

MRS. RHODA HACKE'll, ~. [W I ttl Mra. Mary Martin, outgoing chapeau In the State
of (lllo with a lifetime membtnllp In the Ladles Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39. Mrs.
Martin~ Pomeroy, will a11o receive a pin through Meigs Salon 710, 8 and 40, in recognition of
her work with the aand 401n0hlo. Mrs. Hackett is the new chapeau of the Me1gs Salon.

Four Trophy Awards Madft
.,

(Con linued from page 1)
temental, participated In the
installation of officers for the
197~73 year and Mrs. Welsh
served as the personal page for
Mrs. Martin at the cottventlon.
The Ia.marche got underway
with a dutch supper and pte·
marche pouvlor In the ball·
room at the Sheraton-Gibson
Hotel with Mrs. Davis and Mrs.
Brinker of the Meigs Salon
assisting Mrs. Audrey Glaub,
la concierge in advancing the
colors. Mrs. Walker conducted
the roll call and Mrs. Martin
introduced the chapeaux
passes, Lorraine Elwell, Ethel.
Van
Fossen,
Louisa
Kramenbuhl, Angle McElroy,
Elizabeth Gilbert, Bernice
Christensen, Frances Sher·
man, Esther Edgar, Arree
Marshall, Virginia Rahe,
VIolet Ahlchholz, Hazel Elliott
and Helen Kilworth.
Special guests lor the convention introduced by Mrs.
Martin were Miss Dorothy M.
Dolle, natlonale chapesu, of

Kentucky, and Gamel Grant,
Kentucky departemental
chapeau. Following the pre·
marche, parodies were held
under the direction of Elda
'l'rickey, Marion, along with a
reception honoring Mrs.
Marlin, retiring departemental
chapesu.
Mrs. Martin waa a guest at
the chapeaux passe br$dast
held preceding the la marc he.
Penny Singleton extended the
welcome to open the la marche
with Evalina Berkley of
Nevada, elected 1972-73
departemental chapesu, giving
the response. Mrs. Walker's
roll call showed 153 delegates
and delegates at large In attendance.
In the reports of committee
chairmen It was noted that the
afghan made by Mrs. Ruth 'H.
Thornton of Pomeroy raised
over $500 for the Eight and
Forty project work. Mrs. Hene
Lorreat, chairman of children
and youth work in Ohio noted
that $1,~1 had been raised for

the bed endowment at the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver.
Officers elected for the 197~
73 year were Mrs. Berkley,
Nevada, departemental
chapeau; Irene Mier, Sebring,
demi chapeau premiere;.Doris
Stanrlff, 'l'oledo, demi chapeau
duexleme; Marzella Houston;
Cincinnati, I 'aumonier;
Audrey Glaub, Columbus, Ia
archiviste ; Reva Cihla, Shiloh,
la concierge.
Bernice Christensen was
named le secreta ire . cassiere,
Hazel EIHolt, Mrs. Martin and
Mrs. Berkley will be delegates
to the national convention in
Chicago, Aug. 24-26, along with
Irene Mler, Mrs. Stanriff, Mrs.
Alchholz, and Mrs. Walker of
Racine. Chairman of tellers
for the election was Mrs. Lula
Hampton . Mrs. Hysell of the
Meigs Salon served as one of
the tellers.
Mrs. Slanrilf presented a
book of prayers to Mrs. Martin

Coming
Events

Ohio Employment, Payrolls
Down from Figures in 1970
'
'
•'••
••
,'

,•'
'

Employment in the private
sector of the Ohlo economy
totaled 3,157,984 In March 1971,
a decreaoe of 102,0'16 from
March 1970, and payrolls
amounted to f5.8 billion, down
$9.6 miUion, according to a
report Issued today by the
Bureau of the Census, Social
and Economic Statistics Administration, U. S. Department
of Commerce.
Cuyahoga County had the
largest employment, 643,794, a
decrease of 41,070, and payroll,
$1.2 btlllon, down ISO mtlllon
from a year earlier.
'l'he report,
"County
Business Patterns, 1971, Ohio,"
is the latest in a series of an·
nual reporla providing first
quarter economic statistics for
States and counties. It preaents
data by detailed Industry
claSBificatlon on mid-March
employment, first quarter
taxable payroll , and the
number and employment size
of reporting units for thoae
private, non-farm business
firms reporting to the Social
Security Administration under.
the non.farm business !inns
reporting to the Social Security

Administration under the
Federal Insurance Contributions Act (F.I.C.A.). A
special mall survey Is conducted to obtain industry and
county detail not reported to
the Social Security .Ad·
ministration.
About three-fourths of all
employees In the United States
are covered in the reports for
the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
VIrgin Islands, American
Samoa and Guam, and the U.
s. Summary .
Not Included are employees
of federal, state, and local
governments, sell-employed
persODB, farm workers and
those employed in domestic
and certain transportation
,
services.
'l'he detailed reports are

useful to business and
governments in administration
and planning, analyzing
market potential, setting sales
quotas and budgets, and
measuring the effectiveness of
sales
and
advertising
programs.
Copies of the Ohio report are
available at $1.75 from the
Superintendent of Documents,
U. S. ·. Government Printing
Office, Washington , D. C.
20402, or from Department of
Commerce field offices in
major cities.
Information by county and
by Industry also will be
avaUable at cost on punchcards and computer tapes
from the Economic Statistics
and Surveys Division, Bureau
of the Census, Washington, D.
c. 20233.

Actual stze

Free iced tea glass
with each S3 gasoline purchase.

Wolfpen
News, Notes
A famUy fet-tQgether picnic
was enjoyed Saturday evening
at the home of Mrs. Helen
Johnson. Those attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lambert,
David, Mr, and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly, AIsla, Steve of
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Haning of Flatwoods, Mr. and
Mrs . Lee Roush, ,Rodney ;
Cheryl and Joseph Allen of
Logan, Mra. Kenneth Grover,

TIJESDAY
REGULAR meeting, Mid·
dleport Lodge 36:!, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. tonight at temple. All
Master Masons Invited.
CHESTER Councll323, D. of
A., Tuesday, 8 p.m. at hall.
Silent auction by good of order
committee.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
helping In county · fair
restaurant report at 6 p.m.
Wednesday to office of Dr· Ray
Pickens, Middleport, for
testing required for securing
food handlers cards.
LE'l' ART 4-H members
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at Letart
Falls Community HaD. Bring
project books .
DANCE, Wednesday, 9-12,
former Pomeroy Junior High
School sponsored by Meigs
County Committee on Drug
and Alcohol Abuse. •1 ad·
mission. Music by AtlanUs and
Lost John and Seek Hut·
chlnson, Athens.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Issue of
Importance to be discussed and
all members urged to attend.
NEW MEIGS Junior High
School students register · at
office In Middleport as soon as
posllble. Office open 8 a.m . to 3
p.m. for registration.
SAnlRDAY
OLD FASHIONED Ice cream
social, Saturday, Columbia
Chapel Church located on
Route 889 at Point Rock,
Albany-Wilkesville Road.
Serving starting at 5 p.m. with
pies, cake and sandwiches also
to be served. Proceeds to
church building fund .

''
I

Get this tall, 16-ounce,
Harvest Gold glass at
participating Ashland Oil stations.
Come in today and start collecting
a set.

fine wood finishing lends charm

I
:n:~ ~~~tom~: !~!~!l~~ 38" PALE TRIM VARNISH
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
•

Middleport
Personal Notes

a"d family of Flatwoods.

2-HOUR

CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd

Pomeroy

, JIItciM m -s.21

Colorful stain effects in paneling, trim or furniture can
be yours with these superb wood finishes. Dark, medium
or pastel tints can be brushed ·or wiped on hard or soft
woods for unusual beauty with Tonetlc Steins. "38"
Pale Trim Varnish in Gloss, Satin or Dull , all equally
pale and durable, will preserve that beauty lo,r
ytara to come. No other finish ina is ne&lt;:essary.

..

Ashland..

'

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

r - ..

W. honor BlnkAmorleord
and ~altor Charge crldll car~• .

'

Mr. ant! Mrs. William N.
Moore, Carla and Cathy,
Alhland, Ky. spent the
-kend here with Mr. and
Mra. Harry S. MOore.
Brett Bunton will return to
Qndlinatl ibis weekend after
beinl here v!Jitlng his grand·
parenll, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
.Rlchardl. He will leave lor his
home 1n Denver, Colo. early
next week, after visiting
relall- In Cincinnati.
Mr.111d Mrs. Lee Baughman
111c1 a Jeffrey, have returned
from 1
to Smoke Hole~ W.
VI. They mao vllited other
acen1c II)OIIIn W!lllt Virginia,
.· MlrJIIIICIIIICI Virginia.

irtp

r

Two-Day
Yard Sale
Planned

Sewing Club
Holds Cookout

Coolville-

Reception for
Sauers Surprise

Eight 111d Forty. Sbe wu mao
a 1 guest at ev~is of the
· Amertc111 Legion, ~ Forty
ll{ld Eight, and the Auxiliary
Past ~lldenla Parley lun·
cheon. At the Auxiliary convenlion llht wu ·presented an
award for the btsl aD-around
clvU defenae and emergency
planning program for Unit 39 of
Pomeroy. Mrs. Martin also
attenjled the reception
honoring Mrs. Donald Miller,
new Auxiliary president, rode
In the Legion parade, and
attended the memorial service
at Convention Center.

Banner
The Best
COOLVILLE - Best Photo
of Coolville was honored
Sunday when judges at Cin·
cinnati's Riverfront Stadium
awarded the 11 Banner Day"
grand prize to two of its employes, Judy Mills and Linda
Mr. and Mn. Sauer
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack family, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Satterfield, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Charles Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
James Buchanan, Mr. and Dabo, Mr . and Mrs. John Fultz
Mrs. Harold Sauer and family, and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert·'l'ewksbary, Mrs. John
Carl Norris and family, Sprouse and family, Mr . and
William Hamm, and Mr. and Mrs. William E. Lewis, Miss
Mrs. George Buchanan .
Phyllis Joachim, Mr. and Mrs.
'l'he Rev. and Mrs. Dwight Eddie Burkett, Mr. and Mrs.
Zavitz , Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leland Brown and family, Mr.
Mills and family, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Rodney Downing, Mr.
Robert Haggerty and family, and Mrs. Bethel Coleman, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Judson White, Wanda Beck, and Mrs. Jean
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Hap- Theine!.
l&lt;iilstall and family, Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. James Miller,
Mrs. J. W. Morris and family, . Waverly; Mr . and Mrs. EdMr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery, ward Stein and family, Poca,
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Miller W.Va .; Mr. and 'Mrs. Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Francis An· Wiley and family, Gahanna;
derson and family, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Witham
Mrs. Thomas Rue and family, and family, Gahanna; Clifford
Mr . and Mrs. C. R. Karr, Mr. Smith and family, Pittsburgh,
and Mrs. Karl Owen, Mrs . Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Richard Owens, Mrs. J. W. Durgee and family , PittsWaddell, Mr . and Mrs. Marcus burgh ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Chambers, Mrs. R. M. Sher- Smith, Beaver, Pa .; Mr . and
man, Mrs . J. E. Harley, Mrs. Mrs . Larry Manns and family,
Plummer Beeson, Mr. and Pittsburgh , Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Everett Bachner, Mr.-and Robert Smith, Jt . and family,
Mrs. Russell Lyons, Mrs. C. 'l'. Beaver, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Shumaker , Mrs. Edward William Smith and family,
'l'ewksbary, Mr . and Mrs . Beaver, Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
William Ohlinger, Mr. and Kenneth Sauer and family,
Mrs . Leo Kennedy, Sr., Mr . Sunnydale, Calif.; Mr. and
and Mrs. Thomas Kelly and Mrs. Oliver Smith and family ,
family, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scottsdale, Arizona;
Vaughan and family .
Mr. and Mrs. William Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle and family, Gahanna; Mr. and
and family , Robert L. Sharp, Mrs. James lllingsworth, San
Mr. and Mrs . Carl Horky and Mateo, Calif.; and Miss Kathie
Hardman, Marietta.

SYRACUSE - A yard sale
was planned for Aug. 9 and 10
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church of Syracuse when the
Eagles Class met at the Ohio
River Camp site of Mr . and
Mrs. Millard Van Meter near
Racine. A wiener roast was
held.
Bill Winebrenner, president,
presided at the meeting which
opened with prayer by Mrs.
Opal Kloes . Miss Eleanor
Robson gave devotions entitled
"I Am the Way". Mrs. Wanda
Rizer gave the secretary and
treasurer's reports and several
fund raising projects were
discussed .
A white elephant sale was
held and at the close of the
meeting Mrs. Kloes and Mrs.
van Meter served refreshments.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Dorothy
Winebrenner, Mrs. Helen
reaford, Mrs. Mary Lisle,Miss
Marcia Karr, Franklin Rizer,
Addie Norris, Carroll Norris,
Mrs. Irene Hobach, Charles
Hobach, and !Wbert F1anagan .
Guests were Eldon Will and
Debra Hartenbach.

WIW HOST PICNIC
The Wilting Workers Class of
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church held a
family picnic recently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Will. During a brief business
meeting the sale of church
plates was discussed. Lori
Pullins ·won the wonder box.
Others attending the picnic
were the Rev. and Mrs. Stanton
Smith and daughter, Janie,
Mrs . Agnes Weeks, Mrs.
Cordelia Bentz, Mrs. Ruby
frick, Becky, Brenda, Beverly
and Brian Will, Unda Pullins,
Rodney, Steve and Kevin, Paul
Hall, and Danny Hall.

PROJEct PLANNED
A concrete slab will be
poured on a section of the
Harrisonville Elementary
School playground before
school " starts, according to
plina made at meeting Friday
night of the Harrisonville PTO.
Meeting at the school~ discuss
the project were Mr. and Mrs.
Junior l'ayne, Mr . and Mrs.
Blahop, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Welch, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Barrett, Connie Chapman,
N111cy White, Sally Welch, and
. Clrolene Bing.

Ritenour ~

The presentation of a $250
check by the vice mayor of
Cincinnati,
William
J.
Chenault, culminated over 600
man hours of Ia bor to build a
mammouth banner displaying

Couple Plans
Celebration
Bruce Hysell, son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell, is
visiting his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman M. Hysell;
Bashan.
Mrs . Henry Arnold, Mason,
W. Va .; Mrs. !Wger Jeffers,
Mrs . Norman E. Hysell ,
Pomeroy RD, attended the
funeral services Tuesday for
Mrs. Iva Baird at Southside, W.
Va. Mrs. Baird was the mother
of Mrs. !Wbert Lee Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Mullins
and daughter, Deanna, who
have been living in 'l'exas for
the past year have returned to
Meigs County and are
currently staying with Mrs.
Mullins' parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Bentz .
DINNER GIVEN
'l'he 20th wedding anniversary of Sr . M. Sgt. and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr .
was celebrated Sunday with a
dinner party hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. James Bearhs, Pomeroy.
Guests were the hosts'
children, 'l'inuny and &amp;ott,
Dennis Spurrier, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Wildermuth and
'l'eresa, Mr . and Mrs. Steven
Ray Scott, Allen Dill, Sr., and
Lillian Napper. Cake was
served following the dinner.
Games were played.

Mr. and Mrs. Flavy Sigman
will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary at a
party to be held Saturday, Aug.
5, at the home of their son and
ds ughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sigman, Uma.
Mr. and Mrs. Sigman are the
parents of six daughters, Mrs.
Charles (Marjorie) Nelson,
and Mrs. Gary (Helen )
Alexander, both of Paden City;
Mrs. Arnold (Mary) Green,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mrs.
!Wbert (Ruth) Bobo, Langsville, Mrs. Dennis (Agnes)
Thompson, Safford, Arizona;
Mrs . Pete ( Kathalene)
Painter, California; five sons,
Roy of Langsville; Paul of
Middleport; Eimer of Toledo;
Robert of Pomeroy , and
Charles of Lima; 37 grand·
children, and live 'greatgrandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Sigman have a daughter, Mrs.
Erma Haynes, who is
deceased.
Congratulatory cards may
he sent to the couple at 95 Pearl
St., Middleport, or to them in
care of Charles Sigman, 3552
Bellefontaine &amp;ad, Lima.

PICNIC HELD
Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Hysell, OJIIdren's Home Road,
entertained Saturday night
with a wiener roast for
members of the primary and
junior Sunday school classes of
the United Faith C)lurch .
Games were played during the
evening. Attending were Bruce
Coleman, Cheshire; Bruce
Hysell, Jo Ellen Lawrence,
Middleport ; Mrs. Ronnie
Martin, !Wnnle and Kim, New
Haven, W. Va. and the hosts.
TRAVEUI 'l'O WES'l'
Miss
Joyce
Grueser,
daughter of MI. and Mrs.
!Wbert E. Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, has been camping and
fishlng in Branson, Mo., and
Arkansas, with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles· J .. Young of Mason.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr." and Mrs. Darrell Wolfe,
St. Louis, Mo., announce the
birth of a daughter, Jennifer
Lynn, July 19. The 'Infant
weigbed six pounds and four
and one-half ounces. The infant
is the granddaughter of Mrs.
Pauline Wolfe of Racine and
the late Gary Wolfe. Great- •
grandmother is Mrs. Hazel
'l'od, St. Louis: Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Adams, St. Louls .

'\

the message

·~express

to

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD LAKE
MASON-Miss Cheryl Lynn Sleeth, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. E. L. Sleeth, 4th St ., Mason , and Mr. Richard G. Lake,
son of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Lake, 4thSt.,Mason, were united in
marriage on June 19th, at Gaffney, S.C. Judge VV. R. Douglas
performed the double ring ceremony. The bride wore a Ooor
length gown of blue dotted swiss with lace lrim on the bodice
and sleeves. She wore a single strand of pesrls and a corsage
of white carnations. Her shoulder length veil was held in
place by a head piece of white flowers. The newlyweds are
residing on 4th St., in Mason.

•
Members of the Sew-RiteSewing Club met recently at
llle !Wadside Park on !Wute 33
for a cookout hosted by Mrs.
Willard Boyer and Mrs.
OJarles Hoffman.
The shower of gifts awarded
each meeting was received by
Mrs. BUl McDaniel, who
thanked the members for gifts
sent her daughter who was
recently hospitalized. Mrs. Don
Collins and Mrs. Flo Strickland
11111 host a cookout at the
Collins home later thia month.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Jack Handley, Mrs.
Don McKnight, Mrs. Ray
Baity, Mrs. &amp;nald Browning,
Mrs . Edward Wells, Mrs.
George Hoffman, Mrs. Don
Mullens, Mrs. Elmer White,
Mrs. Jim Neutzllng, and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Jr.
About two weeks ago the
group traveled to Logan where
they mel at the home of Mrs.
White on Lake Logan.

series, 72-Reds". The banner
was buill as a group project by
20 Best employes and their
families. It consisted of more
than 7,200paper tillies bound to cording to the rules of the Patty Linton, 'l'ammy Chap·
a chicken wire frame with 1,500 Banner Day contest only two man, Becky and Patty Misner,
REUNION SET
yards of string. When fully persons could carry each entry Carol Parrish, Jayne Mar-'
'l'he annual Nicholson
assembled, the entry was 15 in order to qualify. Most ob- ceilus, Esther Atkinson ,
reunion
will be held Sunday at
servers
were
skeptical
that
the
Yvonne
Jenkins,
Susie
Shanks,
feet long by eight feet high.
Forest
Acres Park, near
Members of Best Photo's two girls chosen to represent Mary Jo Flowers, Bonni ~
customer service department lhe company would be able to Dowler, Debbie Goodwin, Mrs. Rutland .
originally conceived the idea go the distance. The parade Witlatch and Molly Witlatch,
after hearing a radio an- course extended from center Ruth Henry , Donna Reed,
nouncement promoting the field to home plate and back . Sandy Gregg, Barbara Fronko,
With a little help from t6e Georgia Solnhorst, Jim, Carol,
weekend
doubleheader.
. KATHRYN ANN
Banner Day is an annual event weatherman, however , the Kelly and Kevin Morris, Mary
which allows fans to show their winds at the stadium subsided and Martha Carson, Melody
enthusiasm for lhe Reds Ball long enough for Judy Mills and Hughes, Irene 'l'racewell, Susie
DRESS MAKING
Club. It was particularly Linda Ritenour lo display the Westfall, Ann Wright, Patricia
significant this year because winning entry. Out of the more Barnhart, Joyce Cleta and
By
Cincinnati leads its division than 1,400 banners presented Media Kruschkl, and Bruce
and appears to be a good bet between games, Best Photo McNeil .
Appointment
for the National League pen- won the top award. Five other
cash prizes were presented to
nant.
Presidents Jackson, Fill·
Only
Work on the banner began runners-up for the best two- more, Buchanan, Lin co 1 n
man
banner
~
one
man
banner,
last Monday at the Coolville
and Garfield were born in
Ph. 992-7145
Village Fire Station. Each day most creative, and most , log cabins.
during the week lhe group met original. Best employes will
from 6 until 11 p.m., plus all domite their $250 prize to local
day Saturday to gel the entry charities.
Members of the Best Pt.oto
into shape. The girls began
with 50 boxes of. tissues folding banner crew included Brian,
PHONE 992-2342
and tying them individually in Elaine and K. B. Summers,
MIDDLEPORT,O.
the shape of carnations. The Marie Butler, Joann, Cindy,
paper flowers were then Jeff, Susan and John Church,
arranged in the wire mesh and Elsie, Bill and John Humspray-painted by the men. phrey , ~nda , Bryan , Jan,Jody
Most of the lettering was in and Gary Ritenour, Linda and
red. The background in white, Craig Morgan, Judy Smith,
and the training complete with Judy Mills, Phyllis and Gene
wheels and couplings in black. Draggett, Vicki and Darrell .
There was considerable Williams, Julie Robin, Julie.
anxiety as Sunday's com- Robin &amp; Cindy Russell, Robin
Agency
petition approached. Ac- Swartz, Cheryl Tanthorey,

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

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'l'QYOTA COROLLA 1600

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DATSUN PL 510

2-door

4-cylinder

$1,.106.•

A program of inslrwnental
and vocal selections, readings
and meditations by the
Missionary Society highlighted
the Sunday morning service at
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church.
Mrs.NeUieWinston and Mrs.
Ervin Bumgardner gave
with
Arnold
devotions
Richards slnglng "Without
Him" · Ervin Bumgardner,
'
"Precious
Lord", with guitar'
accompaniment; James
Hughes, "Must Jesus Bear the
Cro88"; Mrs. Con Young, "I
Must Tell Jesus" . Mrs.
Campbell Harper played a
plano solo, "Touch Me Lord
Jesus", and there were
readings by Mrs. Myrtle
Warren, Carrie Ward, Mrs.
Bumgardner, and · Mrs.
Henrietta &amp;blnson.
Topics discussed were "Ho&gt;lv I
Bread" by Mrs. Winston,
''Purpose of Ml8slons" by Mrs.
Arnold Richards. The ushers
were Kevin Angel and Brett
Bunton. ·To conclude the
program · each of the women
sang her favorite hymn, first
u a aolo and then all at the
same time .

• Mlmufact urer 's sugaested ret ail pnce fo r 2·door models . Excludes de:1ler

preparation charges lf any, destinat ion charges, title and tuxes.

NOTE: People ask us how we ca n affo rd to olfcr a roomy,
6-cylinder compact at about th e same pr ice as the li tt le impo rt s.
First , we've been making small cars since !908. Experience helps.
Second , we ha ven' t changcJ Maverick-except for mech anica l
improvements-since v.c fi rst inrroJ uced it..That kind of contin uity
helps to control costs.
ThirJ. re ce nt cu rrency reva luatlon s and devaluation s have
helpeJ restore the co mpet itive stance of American manufacturers.

Most little.imports give
. you 4-cylinder engines.
· Maverick gives you
a 6-cylinderehgine.
It's smooth . It's reliable.
It lets you accelerate into
turn pike traffic with 'Co ntidenc~ and hold your own on
stee p hills. And it delivers
su rprisingly good gas mileage.

Ample room inside.
Maverick's front seat, for example: O\trB'" more
sho ul~er

room than Volkswagen t 13. '
There 's no wasted space inside Maverick. Allhe
same time. n·one of that small-car crowded feeling.

Maintenance: Even simpler
mdre colivenieat than the little Imports.
VW, for example, recommends normal service
every 3000 miles or three months, whichever comes
first. On Maverick, it's 6000 miles or six months.
So Maverick's recommended service interval is twice
as long as Volkswagen's.
We also\lesigned Maverick to be a simple
machine to care for. In fact, we've eve n prepared a
manual which tells you how to do many maintenance
jobs yourself.
One more convenience : there are over 5,600
Ford dealers in the country. VW has about 1,100.

Agood car for long trips.
Maverick's rear track is 2.9" wider than Volkswagen's . Its wheelbase is 7 .7" longer. There's a bit more weight, too. By themselves,
these diflerences aren't very big-but ihey can add up to a big
diflerence in the way Maverick drives and handles the open road.
Beller idea for safety ''' buckle up!

FORD MAVERICK
FORO OIVIisiON . . .

It may just be the best car value in America today.

EllH GOBLE FORD, INC.

.. ,

461 .S. Thid St., MidcltDO(" Ohio
l

�( I' .I ( I . r I

i

I

U '(

f

rr " ,.. r r ( f

....

• r . •. ' .

I I (

"

~

. .., ,..

.

'

.-·

"

... ,.,

'

,

rf((

·.
8- The Daily !:P"tin&lt;\1. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. August I, ~'12

.

.

,

TJ·.Sentinei' Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel· C~ttss. ifieds Get .Results!
••'I

""
"l
·''

Carpenter

.
••
,.
·',.' .

News, Event

'r---~
.·i f"'C"
:._

••,

•'' &gt;.
•'

'

·'
''

.,'

,.,.

•i

~

.

•.

I"' '' • '
I' -...··

' ' '· J¥,

., .

I ' ~ ~~ I

..
••••
I' '

For Sale or Trade

I'' '

• •

areas enroute.

Thomas FaUber, Jr . has been
returned horne from O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
where he spent some time with
a serious illness caused by a
kidney ailment.
Cecil Gillogly and son,
Jeffrey, accompanied by
George Guess and David Hawk
attended Lad-Dad Day at
Camp Kootago near Parke•sburg as a Cub Scout activity
on Saturday.
Mrs. Ethel Shell, Linda and
Rolland of Sooubenville were
Sunday night guests of Mr. and
"~ ! '
Mrs . Mendal Jordan . Rolliind
'I '
,t ' ' remained for a vacation here
'I'
,.
while Mrs. Shell and Linda
,:,·. went
to Marietla on Monday to
' '
:~.I
secure an apartment for Linda
I) • Shell who will teach in Warren
,r!:: Local School District starting
with the fall classes.
"'',.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
•'•' have returned from a vacation
•!
trip to Kansas City, Missouri ,
'' ••
where they vi.siOOd hi.s brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
"
Peck. They journeyed
,,
,. Donald
to Ofutt Air Force Base from
••
there and their daughter ,
,,.I II ' .• Airman Helen Peck, acI
companied them to their home
,' here .
'
Helen Peck was honored with
,.
a hayride and wiener roast by
relatives while she was on
,
', ' . furlough here. Those attending
': included Mr. and Mrs. Robert
: :.... Peck, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
"
"•• Loudner and granddaughter,
'. Mrs. Linda Rowe and son and
'' Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Davis and
'.
children of Nelsonville, Mr.
: ·:~
and Mrs. Jake Edwards and
children, Mrs. Elsie McVay
"
",I and daughter and Mrs. Lulu
•',.
Williamson of Albany, Kathy
•;1 :. Massey and the host family ,
.·'~·
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck,
"
Alice and Wanda and the
"
honored guest. Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Brady of Ashville also
visited their parents and
sisoors recently and Wanda
Peck accompanied them home
for a vacation visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
and family joined relatives for
a family gathering at the home
of Mrs. Gillogly's sister, Mrs.
Helen Johnson of Pomeroy.
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Haning, Mr. and
Mrs . Marvin White and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lamber t and David, Mrs .
Kenneth Grover and Jennifer
and Mr . and Mrs . Larry
Johnson and family of the
Pomeroy area.

-

ThQ Publisher rnerves the
right to edit or reject any ad~
dee med
obt&amp;ctional.
Th e
publ ishey will not be responsible
for moile than one , incorrect
insertion .

'l''

(',.;..~
- ~ .'

phone 992-6547.
8-1-3tc

Auto Sales

1965 DODGE Station -Wagon,

Actditlona l 2Sc
Advertisement.

OFFICE

,.- 8:30a .m.. to 5:00,p.m, Daily_,
a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

~

"..

...

..
..

..

..

.

.,.._

..

Sheriff'~

'

· after 7 p.m. or phone 992. 5232 .

POMEROY

3364.

7-30-:Jic

For Sale

1:, .JackPhone992-2181
W. Carsey, Mgr.

oven

gas range , like

ARNOLD
.BROTHERS

TWO Hereford bulls. Phone 742- 8 TRACK stereo. in lovely
handrubbed console ; pay
3949 .
balance of $96.41 or pay S7.2S
7-31-Sic
a month; call 992-5331 .
8-1-6tc
DRIVE A LITTLE - save a
lot!!! Besides our usual TOMATOES ,
potatoes ,
selection of clean. used fur ·
cucumbers
and
beans ,
nit ure,
~uaranteed
ap ·
Clarence Proffit, Portland ,
Ohio ; phone 843-2254 .
pliances, 1ust arrived are
several elegant dining room
7· 19-ff c
outfits. bedroom su ites, new - - - - - - - - -

Pomeroy, o.

pup; phone Chester 985 -3565.
7.JQ.Jtp

Help Wanted

Gihon

$1. 7S to 3.S7 PER HOUR. 13
young mer1 and women are
needed for delivery and sales
of small appliances . Musl be

the conten ts of large farm
house, Including many ant iques, small fa r m tool s and
large
amount
ot
mis·

neat and dependable . no

cel laneou s

e)(perience necessary. Ful l or
par t t ime. Call Mr . Given 446·

" MAC " McCoy , auctioneer .

prefer couple to l ive-in; apply

at the Meigs Inn. See John
7-30-tfc

- ----Join

of

Real Estate For Sale

road}

in

South

Par kersburg, W. Va . Will sell

llems.

1.

Carpet Inn .

0.

7-28-7tc

7-30-3tc AKC regi stered Wiemaraner
pu.ps ; J. E. Pape, Box 265,

large antique rolled top desk,
S150; must sell. leaving area ;

Real Estate For Sale

CLELAND
REALTY
.

...__

Pomeroy, Ohio

locatedal Crossroads, R:t . 1241.
Complete front end serv ice,
tvne up and brake serv ice.
Whee l s
balanced
ele c.

NO STEPS HERE
1 story frame, 6 room s, 3
bedrooms , panel ed , bath ,
level lot, good neighborhood.
fruit and storage room .
porches , in good condition. in

side to suit you . $16,900.00.

Ironi cally .

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
I

·~

1

•,,1'
'. J' " .... .,

••
. , .' '
....~

---

&amp;

Al l

AH HAIN'T
ACCUSTOMED
TO ANN'

doors and windows, cArports
marquees, aluminum 'sidlnt
and rai ling . "A. Jacob, sale~
representat ive . F·or fret

( -SIYEcR."-)

BIRDS FO'
FAVORS ---

WHAT'S IT

REST ON
TEETER IN'

TO KEEP
ME OFF?

NOT

ROCK.~'

WORTH
T0'/00

Yw ..

..To

AHSHOULD
TH INK '/O'D
HAVETH'
COMMON
DECENCY--

. . ..

~ ??- -,_.

Johnson and Son, Inc . ·

3-2- tf•,
~------:--

7-18 30tp

SEPTIC tanks c leaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewar t. Ohio . Pn .

662-3035.

2-12-ttc

Mobile Homes For Sale

dining area with ca binet s,
porches . 2 car garage,
hardwo od floors, l ot s of
shrubery, all in excelle nt

suggests taulty plumbing. IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
ASS ISTANCE in getting a
qui ck buyer call us today.

Phone 949-3821
Ra cine, Ohio

WE WERE:
DI5C1J551NG JO!l

'":ri ft Bradf ord

S-1-lh

... .

POSSII:!&gt;ILillfS
WHEN THEY GET
PAROLED!

llol TIPPING)

WT I ONLY

GOT'THflEE
Y&amp;\R510
GO,TES51f:!

Musser. phone 742·5223 .

Here is a buy , I stor y fram e,
I iving room has fireplace,

Use a " nothing to-do" af .
ternoon to fix lea k ing
faucets . Dripping wa l er
discolors sink enamel and

A!O YOU KNOW,
I DOioi'T BEI.IEVE

Complete Service

! ·U· TTC

-~---:----

condition . $14,900.00.
IS YOUR HOUSE
FOR SALE?

~E~E ' S THe
EXACT AMOUNT!

M/&gt;.KE A WISH l

.BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Insta lled . Georqe
\B ill I Pu.lll ns . Ph~_rl~ 9~:1 478 ,
PAP ER hanging ; in ter ior and
4-25-tf c
ex t erlo r pa int ing ; Arthur
992-3213.

NEED2 BEDROOMS
large bath. large kitchen and

DON'T FO~GET 10

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

·Air Conditioners
•Awnings
·Underpinning

MARINE SALES
J81 z FT . fibr e gla ss boat with

1970 lOS h.p. Chrysler motor

wilh al l equipment complete.
$2,500 ; can finan ce; call 992 ·

2720 or 992 -3589.
7-30-31c
CABIN Cru iser, 19 ft . Skiff

GASOUNE AILEY

Cra ft , 75 h.p. Evinrude. ex cellent condit ion ; Schwarze! 's
fv\arine, Hockingport , Oh io.

woman

7-30-3tc

wa~

Th•:. t. e"e~e · s Special

'co mpl ete mobile home
serv_ice ._.. plus gigant ic
'di splay of mobile homes
always available at ...

MILLER

. MOBILE HOMES

'.

USED CARS

1220 Washington Blvd.
423 -7521
BELPRE. Co .

70 VOLKSWAGEN

HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REAL TOR
992-2259

'1595
.Karr &amp; Van Zandt

es ta te. The real estate is locat ed
intermixed changer, dual
al 462 S. Fifth Avenue, M id·
volume cont rol, A speaker S ROOM hou se and bath , S6,SOO ;
ctl eport, Ohio, and cons ists of a TOYS! Toys ! Toys! Sell
phone 992-5786.
lwo -story, three .bedroom
Playhouse toys, Aug . lo Dec.
sound system, beautiful
7-30-6tc
re siden ce, with basemen t ,
Free training. Good com walnut fin ish. Balance $67.34.
forced air heat, two bathroom s.
Use our budget terms . Call
mission, No cash Investment.
hardwood f loors and plenty of
No delivery. No collecting. S
992-7085.
storage. The res iden ce may be
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
7-28-6tc
seen
by
appolnlmenl.
Margaret Fortune 949-Sm or
Telephone 992 ·2186. Th e r ight is
Barbara Lambert 446-3411. MAPLE -STEREO radio
rese rv ed to reject any or all
bicts .
combination, AM-FM radio , 4
7-26-30tc
speaker sound system, 4
Witletta A . Bougher ,
speed automatic changer.
EXPERIENCED
janitor,
part
E&gt;:ecu tr ix.
separate controls. Balance
time work, local area ; phone
Estate ot Mary L. Emmish
S76.4S. Use our budget te rms. 2 New Homes, all electric, 3
17130.3 1151 1. 2.3. 4, 61
446-9:W2 for appointment.
Call 992-7085.
8-1-:Jip
bedrooms, f ull basement and

------

7-28-6tc

TWIN needle sewing mach ine

garage, with lake frontage ;
at Five Points area .

1971 model in walnut stand .

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

fancy designs and do str"' tch
sewing . Also buttonholes,

bl ind hems, etc. S.O 3S cash
price

or

terms

Phone 992-5641.

available .

~~~e:ll"
ACROSS
1. Amateur
radio
operator
4. Abe and
Mary
Todd's

name

IZ. Black
cuckoo

13. Craggy
hill
14. "Gentle-

man Jim"

OR 992-3975

L-----------&gt;.

champ,

Jack25. Pugilistie
term
28. Weight
29.!sland
(Fr.)
30. Editorial
pronoun
31. Sioux
32. Primo 34. Empyrean
35. Jole de

14 HOMES TO CHOOSE!

50x12 to 70xl4- 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOMS
WITH GAS &amp; ELECrRIC FURNACES

All THESE FAMOUS HOMES ON SAL£

1

unfurolshed, apartments .
Phone 992- ~4 .
•
·
•
4-12-Hc

2 B~LJI&lt;WM mobile nome with
air-conditioning; 10 miles
John c . Bacon
East of Pomeroy ; phone 992PROBATE JUDGE
6329.
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
Ill 1. It
7-19-lfc

1·

COUNTRY ACRES
OVER 7 ACRES - On Route 7 with T.P. - CHESTER
water. Mostly ' cl""red and ready for housing .·
CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKE'R FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE ABOVE.
·HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

YMF

Yesterday's Answer
ZO. Ruined,
informally

SW

ISAE

SW

YZDEL .- DRRDJ

Unoeramblethe~fourJumbln,
one
letter to eath square, to
form four ordinary words.

34. Fall
guy

ISAE

i

...,=

~~~~i~

~~~~

s

.TOUMH

II

I
J I

[J I

~JAUttW(

II

ROOIIRR

THe. Bit:. NO I55
MEANS P:EAL...

15U51Nt:SS!

I

Now

&amp;rr~n~e the circled letten

V" ~
to form the aurprioe anawer, u
;::=·:::::::·======l~_d==~·::ur~r~e:::et:ed:_:by the above ..rtoon

I

tI I I

=tll=SURPII=ISI=ANSWIII=IIn
::.:...__l

Prill
='

. _ I_ _

Ytlh~rday'a

Jumbl•" IOOT1' CHIME OXYGEN CORNER
Anawer: Tlu~ union rl'qrlirtrl lllitt lf•mJIOrflry af,ttf"ntt1
from

umrk - A HO~IYMOON

.'

measure

IN A Sil\IATI:lN LIKE 'TJ.!Itl',

eith _GQble Mobile Home ,Sales

DAIL\' CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

PHONE 992·7004 • MIDDLEPORT

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
_used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnsle letters,
apostrophe•, the len1th ond formotlon of the words are all
'blntJ. Eacll day the code !etten are dllferent.

II

A X Y D L BAA X .R
L 0 N G F B L L O·W

'c'OU Ali.JAI(51ll~k) 10
iHIRO

OR 10 HOME!

•l---7=-rr------1 l(jf_..J~;:-t"-"''&lt;:

-~----

.

i

.

]I

(Aa.wen to•orrowl

17. Be
mistaken
.J8. Form
of
John
41. Calendar
abbrevl•·
tlon

See Dan Thompson NOW - We se~-vice What W• Sell Hours: ato a &lt;Thur~. &amp; Sat. ato , CloMd oli

VZTP

36. "-

21. Team race
Bede"
ZZ. Actress,
37. Pianist
Martha
Peter
chanlp,
38. u.s.
24. Rifte
Max Treasury
recoil
B.Opposed
agents
25. ''The .
to
(hyph.
Brown
D. Items in a
wd .)
Bomber" 39. Neophyt~
box score(2 wds.)
15, Life
U . lmmov(comb.
Z6.Nimbus
able
form)
27. - muffin 42. MemoraU . Scull
33. New
ble perioq
19. Regarding
(comb.
44. - Paulo .
(2 ~ds.)
form)
45. Purpose

36. Brazilian
tapir'
39. Likewise ·
CO. "The
Manassa
Mauler"
43. Function
ca. Metric
land

THE BIG SALE IS AT

jl'

SAL

~&amp;MIDIL~;::;,::I:~:

vivre

Hillcrest by Skyline - Graywood and
Flamingo - Redman - Van Dyke by
Guerdon -'- Belmont by Guerdon Nor~is Goldseal.

SAVE UP TO

Front porch side yard . Only $21,000.00. .

4, Sa voir
faire
5.In the
past
&amp;.German
article
7. Heavyweight

-

For Rent

':lAND~ ROOM fur.nfshed ali\! ·

RSTP

VJ!&amp;Ierday's Cryptoquote: BROTHERHOOD IS THE VERY
PRrCE AND CONDITION OF MAN'S SURVIVAL.-CARLOS
P. ROMULO

buster"

of
r, ~~~~~;~(~~ 11, Aquarius"

16. Pallet.
18. Eye part
19. - Minor
·21. GreekR
23. Heavyweight

Free Delivery &amp; Set-Up,

TDJ

SAL

'DOWN
1. Sombrero
2. Turmoil
3. "The
Brockton
Block-

son

MIDDLEPORT

we talk to you

50, Chinese
"way"
51. Do lawn
work

7.Humbug!
10. Girl's

ALL 72's

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

!SA

MX D FDUMTDR TE ZD LAEZ- .

KSEPXYS C VAL !SA ·TDJ'L RSTJio YMF

11

NOTHING HELD BACK

D VSI

by THOMAS JOSEPH

PH. 992-2571

All features bu ill-in to make

IN

CRYPTOQUOTES

STARTS
WED.,
AUG. 2

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

Any person Interested rna~
file written exceptions to nld
accounts or to matters per.
• tainlng to the execution of the
t trust, not less then f ive days
i prior to the dare set for hearing.

- e'JUT WI'.~ .
'10' KINE.L'{

•estimates. phone Charles
· Li sle, Syracuse, V. V.;

work

NOTICE

day to day""'" finally dlspoltd
Of.

DON 'rSIT Tiit:::RE:,
~ , 5T7\t{) UP!..

U'L ABNER

'"'I . -

SEE US FOR : Awnings. s)u• n

gvaranteed .
Rf'r.(,nn~hl~&gt;
r ates . Phon e 742 ·3232 or

Wanted To Buy

1IN YOUR DIAL

CONCRETE
right to y&lt;&gt;ur

O' DELL WHEEL alignment

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

.1

'

'

61le E. Main

Real Estate For Sale

..WMP0/1390.

pa i nting ;

the
,FOR THE BE ST deal in a new
Two door, new pa int
Gift
or used mobile home , try
white
; rad io, tape pia
Third Ave., Middleport.
Party Plan In the Country
Kanauga Mobi le Home Sales,
Four
speed, sharp .
If
no
answer
992-2658
7-30-3tc - our 2S th year! Com Kanauga, Ohio .
7-30-3tc
take over payments, 181
mi ssi ons up to 30 pel. Fan 7-16-30ic
Beech St., Midd leport.
tastic Hostess Awards. Call or COAL limestone, Excelsior
B-1-31p 2 NEW HOMES. all elec tr ic, 3
wr ite "SANTA's PARTIES"
mobile
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
bedrooms, ful! basement and AIR -COND ITIONED
Avon , Conn . 06001 . Telephone
home
and
lot,
$3.500;
phone
Pomeroy
,
Phone
992-3891
.
~EGA~
RACINE - 6 room hou se, ba th ,· garage, with lake fr on tage; at 992 -5186 .
1 1203) 673 -3455 . ALSO
4-12-lfc util ity room, garage, SlO,OOOi
Five Points area ; phone 992 ·
BOOKING PARTIES .
1-30-6tc
•,hone 949 -4195.
· 2S71 or 992-3975.
" Y~u 'l l Like Our Qua lity
NOTICE OF SUE
7-2-3otc
7-13-tfc
-CANNI
NG
tomatoes
,
sweet
3-31-tfc
Bids will be rece ivect at the - - - -- - - - Way of Do ing Business."
corn ,
cucumbers
and - - - - , - - - - - , - - , - - CASij paid tor all makes anc
off ices of Webster and Fultz.
GMAC FINANCING
Atforneys , Pomeroy National WAI T RESS wanted from 4p. m .
mangoes; Geraldi ne Cleland, 8 ROOM house, bath. large lot,
m odels of mobile homes 1 992 - ~5342
Pomeroy
HOU
SE
in
Long
Bo
ttom
,
phone'
Ban k. 9uilcting , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
to 12:30 p. m . App ly in person ,
Racine , 0 .
PhQJie area code 614-&lt;23-9531 .
ga s and electric, Rt . 1,
Open
Evenings
'Til8
:00 ·
985-3529.
until Saturday , August 5, 1972 .
Bl ue Tartan . No experience
7-28-tfc
4-13-tfi:
Middleport, phone 992-26U2.
atlO :OO o'clock A .M . tor the sale
till P.M. S•t
'
necessary.
6-11 -tfc
or th e M&amp;ry L . Em mls h r eal
7-28-6tc
7-27-61c STEREO-radio Con sole, 4 speed

Chattel

' like ~ pt!ISOIL :

l

;

protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992-

I

Open 8 Till
Mondav thru Saturday
• ~06 E. Main , P~.rov.~. Q._

dellv~red

CAI' ETER1A

3'118 .

'

Pomel'!ly Ho,!llif ·&amp;·Auto

READY -MIX

exter ior

a

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEif
RE,O,SONABLE rates. Ph. 446
Goeglein Read y-Mi x Co .,;
4782, Ga llipoli s, John Russell .
Middleport, Ohio.
,
Owner &amp; Operator .
.
6-30-lfc
.S-12-Hc

doors, will repa int" the out-

Con ley Slarcratt Sales , Rt . 62,
N. of Pt. Pleasant behin d Red

'

TlfE CLASSROOM!

T"IS STU~F
COMES FRO,'&lt;\ T~E

estimates . Phone 992 -328•.

it; phone 949-3461.

master ,. Campers .
1973
Campers on dis play , used
campers in stock . Camp

'

I

projec1. Fa st and easy . Free

storage building , modern
kitchen, storm windows and

7-28-6tc FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Accounts and vouchers of the
Property
frame house, six rooms and
following
named
fidu
ciaries
The Tr l County Bank
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro bath. Large lot. Located In
h~ve been filed In the Probate
vs
Phone Faye Manley
Court, Meigs County , Ohio , for
Hyg ie ne New Demonstrator Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
James fuiU, etal
approva
l
and
settlement
:
' 992-5592
has all cleaning attachments house on left going north
Case No . 15,056
CASE NO . 17,861 Th ir teenth
plus the new Electro Suds for Inside corporation line .
In
Account of M.!!ir ion Jean
shampoo
ing carpet . Only
7-27-tf
In pursuance to an Exec ution Current
Pomeroy
issued from the Court of Warner , Guard i an of the
S27.SO
cash
pri
ce
or
te
rms
-Common Pleas , Meigs County , guard ianship estates Of Stephen
Phone 992 -2156
Ray
Werne
r
,
Jeffrey
Jay
avai
lable
.
Phone
992-5641
.
RACINE
_
lO
room
hous&lt;!:•
Porn eroy , Ohio on I he 1st Cla y of
7·28 ·6lc bath, basement, garage , two
Warner , and John Lauren ce ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
July, 1972 a net to me direc led In Warner
,
minors
.
th e case named above, 1 will
lots. Phone 949-4313.
CASE NO . 20, 117 Third WOMAN to live In with elderly - , - - - -- - - - expose to sa le at Publ ic Auc . Current
4-5-lfp ',
Account
of
Wayne
o
.
t lon, at the front of the Court
lady, light housework , no
---~-Hou:se , Pomeroy , ·Ohio, Meigs Bea!, Gua rd ian of the Guar .
laundry. Phone 992-5397 or
Estate ot Will iam G.
County , Ohio, on Tuesday , the dlanshlp
992-3507.
Be
a!
.
15th day of August , 1972 at 10 : 15
CASE NO . 20,316 First and
7-31-3tc
A.M . the following goods and Fina
of Marjor ie L .
cha ttels to ·wit :
· Sm ithl , Account
Ex:ecutrlx of the Estate
One 1972 two bedroom house
Margar&amp;t Bailey, Deceased .
lra ller, name Rebel, 12' 1t 6A', ol CASE
NO . 20 ,373 First and
110 MechBnic Street
Ser ial Number RH6019 F.
Final Account of Thomas W.
Cash in hanct on date of sa le. Dun
can , Administrator of the OLD Furniture. oak tables,
Take n as the proper ty ·of
of Edward B. Dun can ,
organs, dlshe!, clocks, brass
Jam es Fultz lo. satis fy an Estate
.
E&gt;:ecut fon in favor of the Tri Deceased
beds, or complete households.
CASE
NO
.
20,631
First
and
Cour'ltv Bank .
Write
M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
NEW LISTING
Fina l Account ol Harrietl M ..
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Administratrix
of
th
e
Spencer,
MIDD
LEPORT
3
nice bedrooms. large living with
Robert C. Ha r tenba ch,
of Ralph G. Spencer ,
6-28-lfc '
fireplace
•nd
air
conditioned.
Bath, gas furnace, modern
Meigs County Sher iff Estatt
Deceased .
~----Pom,roy , Oh io
kitchen
with
double
sink.
Wall
to wall carpeting. Full
CASE NO . 20,636 First tnd MINIBIKE or go-c•rt In good
basement,
level
lot.
All
for
only
518,000.00.
Fina
l
Ac
count
of
Alma
G.
181 1. 't1
condil lon; Ralph Tr·ussell; ·
Peterson , Admlnlstratr l,.; of the
phone
949-5884.
Estate of Olaf Peterson ,
NEW LISTING
7·30-31c
Deqased .
HARRISONVILLE - 3 nice lots suitable f r hOIJslng .
unless exceP,tlon.s are filed
thereto , said accounts will be
$2,000.00.
tor hear ing before said Court on
DOWNTOWN
the 31st day of August , 1972 , at
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooMs, bath. fireplace with bookshelves
Wh i ch time said accounts will be ROOM &amp; board, phone 675-4SSS.
considered and continued from
on e•ch side. G•s furn•ce, full basement. Double g•rage.
7-26-6tc
Sale

ponds and septic tanks ; B &amp; K.

'

On Most Americin ra~ J

-G UAR 'A NfE ED-Phone 992-2094

FOOl) ALLOWEl&gt; IN

and commercial ·roofif1Q i

TH"N IT'S
A'L R 1G~T,
SIR ...

customer satlsfactlon. We
are ful ly insured for your

$5.5!»

Service. We S.harpen Scissors. · '

excellent condition; also 300
gal. fre sh water tank , never
had anything but ci ty water in

s ROOM house , double lot, 2 car
466 S. 2nd Sl .. Middleport.
, Ca rson Reed, Mason ,
1-J0-6tc garage
W. Va.; phone 773-5606 .
8-1-6tp
NICE MARE pon y, 40" high, S -------~­
years old, S2S. Phone 992-2990 MUST sell leav in g town - •
or 992-2759.
bedroom house, carpeted ;

Musser .

· Avon , chain saw, clothing , ACT NOW miscellaneous; 918 South
oldest
Toy

1

gold nylon carpets , oak POODLE puppies , Silver Toy·",
icebox . KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER, Rt. 7 "at auction
Parkv iew Kennels, Phone992·
ligh t," l'uppers Plains . 54.08_15 .H,
Closed Mondays only. Phone : - - - - - - - - Rutland.
667.3858 ·
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
7-30-61c 85,000 BTU Lennox Fuel oil
lurnace with two 27S gal. fuel · 1112 acres of ground , 4
PUREBRED female beegle tanks and thermostat ; in bedrooms, bath, TV room .

0677 , Monday and Tuesday, 9
a.m. lo 6:30p .m.
ONE 3 piece bedroom suite ,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 ; phone
7-30-31c
complete, $30 ; dining room
992-3420 .
suite , 7 pc. , S2S: plano ,
7-28-12tc
upright, reconditioned , - - - - - - - - WANTED :
MANAGER ,
natural fini sh, nice SlSO ; 1
LaSalle Hotel In Middleport ;

992-2448

2966 . .

E&lt;eavat ing , Phone 992-5367,
sell for small balance of $3L:W
Dick Karr, Jr .
or pay ss a month; call 992S-21-tfc
5331.
- ---,-----,-8-1-61c

7-28-6tp
KOSCOT of course. Phone · ESTATE AUCTION . Saturday,
August
Slh,
starting
at
12
:00
992-5113.
noon at the home of the late STARCRAFT Close-Out on 1972
7-9-ttc
models. Save $700 on 18 ft .,
Lola Holtz just off Gihon road
$815 on : J fl ., $37S on Star(follow auction signs from

Electrical Work

cancel led?
lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

complete fine of resT&lt;rei!llal

and

EXPERT
Wheet'111i&amp;J!rilent·

AUTOMOBILE Insuran ce been .

YOU KNOW THE RULf ,
MR. 81JRNS ... NO

complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to

..

8-1-6tp

-------

specials this month, some for
men as well as women. It's

Window,
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-1174
Pomeroy

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceirlngs. Interior

---

dition ; White Interior, air·
conditioned ; stero ; phone 667- SINGER Sewing Machine, will

lemon grove. Just think, !4

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-lS2S ·

- - - -- -

refreshing? .The famous mink
oil base and now we have the

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CARPORT Sale, August 2nd
and 3rd, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. ;

women, young men. b~ys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

1968 IMPALA Custom Coupe, new; phone 667-3643 or 6673-29-lfc
blac~ with while vinyl lop ; · 3969.
excellent n"~ echanical con 8-1-Jip DOZER and back hoe work,

WHY not try cosmetics that are
truly
diffe rent
and

'1iEIL"

trucks and low-bOy for. hire .

double

--------~~30-3tp

•,

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

fiberglas, bri ck and Storie?

haul fill dirt, top.soil. Dvmp

.CAMPUS .CLATTER

We specialize In aluminum,
viny l ;&gt;nd steel siding ;

Smallest Heater Core.

--~--,-­

I

'!

.

ON l,Y $13,7SO

From the largest
Bulldozer Radi"',or- to the

7-27-6tc - - -----:-:-.e._ __ __ 6-lS-tfc'
'71 CHEVY Vega and '72 Honda
'71 FIAT Spider with radio and 350: call 742-3773.
SEW ING MACHINE S. Repalr j
tape player 1 10,000 aclual
8-1-61p
service, all makes. 992-2284.
miles ; phone 985-4211.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .,
7-30-6tp AVOCADO green Kenmore
Authorized Singer Sales and

anyone other than myself.
Signed : Brownie Vujak lija.

Notice

End loader work, .

All kinds, all sizes for men,

phone 992-5082.

Phone 992-2897.

1 WILL NOT be responsible for
any debt s contracted by

.8 : 30

Buy 2 Pairs and

GET 1 PAIR FREE

body and motor recently
overhauled ; good tires front &amp; 1971 YAMAHA motorcycle ; 175
cc Enduro, good condition ;
rear ; 35 miles per gallon ga s.

:-::--:-~---

HOU'R~, '

llttl.e over

&amp;

1964 TWO DOOR V.W.. good

7-30-6tc

Charge per

mlleaRe

53.000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
snow tires. Call 992-2897 .
7-27-6tc

Dozer

, ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free · Estimates. We. also~

SALE I

23,000

----::--,---,----

rFor Wanl Ad Service
S cents per Word one insertion
M inimum Charge 75c ..
12 cents per word. three
KARR'S BARBER SHOP
•
consecutive insertioris.
Lynn sr. tf2-2l67 Pam troy
18 cents per ·word sl·x con.:
Barbers' LOCI I 400-AFL -CIO
secutlve insertions . •
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id with in 10 days. WILl care for preschool
CARD OF THANKS
children dn my home, $3 a
&amp; OBITUARY
day ; Mrs . Glenn Smith,
SI .SO for SO word minimum .·
phone 992-6187.
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

re.conditioned;

miles; phone 992 -3589.
7-28-6tc

a'ctual

'r{)U

i&lt;EEP :\MIUIX, AT ME

3· Bedfoqm home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
fully

MW, f.i\ADAN\' Do

NOT OVER 1\T MY
OADB URN HOUSE
WE AIN'T!!

For Sale

standard, reasonably priced;

OD vou have curly or herd to
menegt helrt
Stop In and have M lck or
Fred relax your hair for 1
more man~geeble hair.

RATES

-----'------:-

196S DODGE, 4 dr .. 6 cyll,der,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

..,.

'•'•

Business _______
Services _,,

and porch ; phone 992-2780 Of' CLEAN up J•nltor Service;
992-3.02.
phone 446-9202.
8-1-31p
8-1-ttc

Mr.
and Mrs. Glen
1970 DODGE
$2195
Polara. factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic
Gassaway , Powell, visited
transmi ssion, power steering , power brakes, good white
their son-in-law and daughoor,
side-walls, many more extras . White fini sh, blac vinyl
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller ·
roof. Priced to move!
and family.
1970 FORD
$1995
Mr. and Mrs. John Cordray
Ga
la
xie
500
hardtop
coupe,
V-8
engine,
automatic
trans.
of Fullerton, California, are
mission , power steering &amp; brakes. while finish, black
vac~ Honing
here
with
vfny l tOp, vlriyllnterlor . White-wall tires, li.k e new, radio.
relatives . They were guests at
1971 FORD PINT02 DR.
$1850
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Locall owner car, green finish , clean interior, good tires,
Jeffers. Mr. Cordray is a
2000cc engine, ra dio, 4-speed trans .
brother of Mrs. Jeffers.
Mr. and . Mrs. Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
have returned from a two week
vacation trip which took them
OP-EH EVES. loGO P.M..into 16 states. They were ac1'ptoiEI!O., OHIO
companied by his sister, Mrs.
of
Bernice
McKnight
WANYADS
Notice
Cohimbus. Points of inoorest
INFORMATION,
visited included MI. Rush. , DEADt.INES
more,
South
Dakota, ) P.M . Day Before Publication-.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Yellowstone National Park ,
Can-cellation - Corrections
Hoover Dam and points around Will b&amp; &amp;ccep led until 9 a.m . for.
Day of Publication
Tucson, Arizona , and other
REGULATIONS

~ k•• •

,.,."

2 BEDROOM house . nice yard

GOSHEN!!

WE SHORE HAVE HAD US
A LONG DRY SPELL- - AIN 'T WE, LOWEE'Z'I?

Business Services

For Rent

Po•roy .
Motor Co.

LAND

••

�( I' .I ( I . r I

i

I

U '(

f

rr " ,.. r r ( f

....

• r . •. ' .

I I (

"

~

. .., ,..

.

'

.-·

"

... ,.,

'

,

rf((

·.
8- The Daily !:P"tin&lt;\1. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. August I, ~'12

.

.

,

TJ·.Sentinei' Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel· C~ttss. ifieds Get .Results!
••'I

""
"l
·''

Carpenter

.
••
,.
·',.' .

News, Event

'r---~
.·i f"'C"
:._

••,

•'' &gt;.
•'

'

·'
''

.,'

,.,.

•i

~

.

•.

I"' '' • '
I' -...··

' ' '· J¥,

., .

I ' ~ ~~ I

..
••••
I' '

For Sale or Trade

I'' '

• •

areas enroute.

Thomas FaUber, Jr . has been
returned horne from O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
where he spent some time with
a serious illness caused by a
kidney ailment.
Cecil Gillogly and son,
Jeffrey, accompanied by
George Guess and David Hawk
attended Lad-Dad Day at
Camp Kootago near Parke•sburg as a Cub Scout activity
on Saturday.
Mrs. Ethel Shell, Linda and
Rolland of Sooubenville were
Sunday night guests of Mr. and
"~ ! '
Mrs . Mendal Jordan . Rolliind
'I '
,t ' ' remained for a vacation here
'I'
,.
while Mrs. Shell and Linda
,:,·. went
to Marietla on Monday to
' '
:~.I
secure an apartment for Linda
I) • Shell who will teach in Warren
,r!:: Local School District starting
with the fall classes.
"'',.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
•'•' have returned from a vacation
•!
trip to Kansas City, Missouri ,
'' ••
where they vi.siOOd hi.s brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
"
Peck. They journeyed
,,
,. Donald
to Ofutt Air Force Base from
••
there and their daughter ,
,,.I II ' .• Airman Helen Peck, acI
companied them to their home
,' here .
'
Helen Peck was honored with
,.
a hayride and wiener roast by
relatives while she was on
,
', ' . furlough here. Those attending
': included Mr. and Mrs. Robert
: :.... Peck, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
"
"•• Loudner and granddaughter,
'. Mrs. Linda Rowe and son and
'' Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Davis and
'.
children of Nelsonville, Mr.
: ·:~
and Mrs. Jake Edwards and
children, Mrs. Elsie McVay
"
",I and daughter and Mrs. Lulu
•',.
Williamson of Albany, Kathy
•;1 :. Massey and the host family ,
.·'~·
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck,
"
Alice and Wanda and the
"
honored guest. Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Brady of Ashville also
visited their parents and
sisoors recently and Wanda
Peck accompanied them home
for a vacation visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
and family joined relatives for
a family gathering at the home
of Mrs. Gillogly's sister, Mrs.
Helen Johnson of Pomeroy.
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Haning, Mr. and
Mrs . Marvin White and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lamber t and David, Mrs .
Kenneth Grover and Jennifer
and Mr . and Mrs . Larry
Johnson and family of the
Pomeroy area.

-

ThQ Publisher rnerves the
right to edit or reject any ad~
dee med
obt&amp;ctional.
Th e
publ ishey will not be responsible
for moile than one , incorrect
insertion .

'l''

(',.;..~
- ~ .'

phone 992-6547.
8-1-3tc

Auto Sales

1965 DODGE Station -Wagon,

Actditlona l 2Sc
Advertisement.

OFFICE

,.- 8:30a .m.. to 5:00,p.m, Daily_,
a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

~

"..

...

..
..

..

..

.

.,.._

..

Sheriff'~

'

· after 7 p.m. or phone 992. 5232 .

POMEROY

3364.

7-30-:Jic

For Sale

1:, .JackPhone992-2181
W. Carsey, Mgr.

oven

gas range , like

ARNOLD
.BROTHERS

TWO Hereford bulls. Phone 742- 8 TRACK stereo. in lovely
handrubbed console ; pay
3949 .
balance of $96.41 or pay S7.2S
7-31-Sic
a month; call 992-5331 .
8-1-6tc
DRIVE A LITTLE - save a
lot!!! Besides our usual TOMATOES ,
potatoes ,
selection of clean. used fur ·
cucumbers
and
beans ,
nit ure,
~uaranteed
ap ·
Clarence Proffit, Portland ,
Ohio ; phone 843-2254 .
pliances, 1ust arrived are
several elegant dining room
7· 19-ff c
outfits. bedroom su ites, new - - - - - - - - -

Pomeroy, o.

pup; phone Chester 985 -3565.
7.JQ.Jtp

Help Wanted

Gihon

$1. 7S to 3.S7 PER HOUR. 13
young mer1 and women are
needed for delivery and sales
of small appliances . Musl be

the conten ts of large farm
house, Including many ant iques, small fa r m tool s and
large
amount
ot
mis·

neat and dependable . no

cel laneou s

e)(perience necessary. Ful l or
par t t ime. Call Mr . Given 446·

" MAC " McCoy , auctioneer .

prefer couple to l ive-in; apply

at the Meigs Inn. See John
7-30-tfc

- ----Join

of

Real Estate For Sale

road}

in

South

Par kersburg, W. Va . Will sell

llems.

1.

Carpet Inn .

0.

7-28-7tc

7-30-3tc AKC regi stered Wiemaraner
pu.ps ; J. E. Pape, Box 265,

large antique rolled top desk,
S150; must sell. leaving area ;

Real Estate For Sale

CLELAND
REALTY
.

...__

Pomeroy, Ohio

locatedal Crossroads, R:t . 1241.
Complete front end serv ice,
tvne up and brake serv ice.
Whee l s
balanced
ele c.

NO STEPS HERE
1 story frame, 6 room s, 3
bedrooms , panel ed , bath ,
level lot, good neighborhood.
fruit and storage room .
porches , in good condition. in

side to suit you . $16,900.00.

Ironi cally .

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
I

·~

1

•,,1'
'. J' " .... .,

••
. , .' '
....~

---

&amp;

Al l

AH HAIN'T
ACCUSTOMED
TO ANN'

doors and windows, cArports
marquees, aluminum 'sidlnt
and rai ling . "A. Jacob, sale~
representat ive . F·or fret

( -SIYEcR."-)

BIRDS FO'
FAVORS ---

WHAT'S IT

REST ON
TEETER IN'

TO KEEP
ME OFF?

NOT

ROCK.~'

WORTH
T0'/00

Yw ..

..To

AHSHOULD
TH INK '/O'D
HAVETH'
COMMON
DECENCY--

. . ..

~ ??- -,_.

Johnson and Son, Inc . ·

3-2- tf•,
~------:--

7-18 30tp

SEPTIC tanks c leaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewar t. Ohio . Pn .

662-3035.

2-12-ttc

Mobile Homes For Sale

dining area with ca binet s,
porches . 2 car garage,
hardwo od floors, l ot s of
shrubery, all in excelle nt

suggests taulty plumbing. IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
ASS ISTANCE in getting a
qui ck buyer call us today.

Phone 949-3821
Ra cine, Ohio

WE WERE:
DI5C1J551NG JO!l

'":ri ft Bradf ord

S-1-lh

... .

POSSII:!&gt;ILillfS
WHEN THEY GET
PAROLED!

llol TIPPING)

WT I ONLY

GOT'THflEE
Y&amp;\R510
GO,TES51f:!

Musser. phone 742·5223 .

Here is a buy , I stor y fram e,
I iving room has fireplace,

Use a " nothing to-do" af .
ternoon to fix lea k ing
faucets . Dripping wa l er
discolors sink enamel and

A!O YOU KNOW,
I DOioi'T BEI.IEVE

Complete Service

! ·U· TTC

-~---:----

condition . $14,900.00.
IS YOUR HOUSE
FOR SALE?

~E~E ' S THe
EXACT AMOUNT!

M/&gt;.KE A WISH l

.BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Insta lled . Georqe
\B ill I Pu.lll ns . Ph~_rl~ 9~:1 478 ,
PAP ER hanging ; in ter ior and
4-25-tf c
ex t erlo r pa int ing ; Arthur
992-3213.

NEED2 BEDROOMS
large bath. large kitchen and

DON'T FO~GET 10

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

·Air Conditioners
•Awnings
·Underpinning

MARINE SALES
J81 z FT . fibr e gla ss boat with

1970 lOS h.p. Chrysler motor

wilh al l equipment complete.
$2,500 ; can finan ce; call 992 ·

2720 or 992 -3589.
7-30-31c
CABIN Cru iser, 19 ft . Skiff

GASOUNE AILEY

Cra ft , 75 h.p. Evinrude. ex cellent condit ion ; Schwarze! 's
fv\arine, Hockingport , Oh io.

woman

7-30-3tc

wa~

Th•:. t. e"e~e · s Special

'co mpl ete mobile home
serv_ice ._.. plus gigant ic
'di splay of mobile homes
always available at ...

MILLER

. MOBILE HOMES

'.

USED CARS

1220 Washington Blvd.
423 -7521
BELPRE. Co .

70 VOLKSWAGEN

HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REAL TOR
992-2259

'1595
.Karr &amp; Van Zandt

es ta te. The real estate is locat ed
intermixed changer, dual
al 462 S. Fifth Avenue, M id·
volume cont rol, A speaker S ROOM hou se and bath , S6,SOO ;
ctl eport, Ohio, and cons ists of a TOYS! Toys ! Toys! Sell
phone 992-5786.
lwo -story, three .bedroom
Playhouse toys, Aug . lo Dec.
sound system, beautiful
7-30-6tc
re siden ce, with basemen t ,
Free training. Good com walnut fin ish. Balance $67.34.
forced air heat, two bathroom s.
Use our budget terms . Call
mission, No cash Investment.
hardwood f loors and plenty of
No delivery. No collecting. S
992-7085.
storage. The res iden ce may be
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
7-28-6tc
seen
by
appolnlmenl.
Margaret Fortune 949-Sm or
Telephone 992 ·2186. Th e r ight is
Barbara Lambert 446-3411. MAPLE -STEREO radio
rese rv ed to reject any or all
bicts .
combination, AM-FM radio , 4
7-26-30tc
speaker sound system, 4
Witletta A . Bougher ,
speed automatic changer.
EXPERIENCED
janitor,
part
E&gt;:ecu tr ix.
separate controls. Balance
time work, local area ; phone
Estate ot Mary L. Emmish
S76.4S. Use our budget te rms. 2 New Homes, all electric, 3
17130.3 1151 1. 2.3. 4, 61
446-9:W2 for appointment.
Call 992-7085.
8-1-:Jip
bedrooms, f ull basement and

------

7-28-6tc

TWIN needle sewing mach ine

garage, with lake frontage ;
at Five Points area .

1971 model in walnut stand .

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

fancy designs and do str"' tch
sewing . Also buttonholes,

bl ind hems, etc. S.O 3S cash
price

or

terms

Phone 992-5641.

available .

~~~e:ll"
ACROSS
1. Amateur
radio
operator
4. Abe and
Mary
Todd's

name

IZ. Black
cuckoo

13. Craggy
hill
14. "Gentle-

man Jim"

OR 992-3975

L-----------&gt;.

champ,

Jack25. Pugilistie
term
28. Weight
29.!sland
(Fr.)
30. Editorial
pronoun
31. Sioux
32. Primo 34. Empyrean
35. Jole de

14 HOMES TO CHOOSE!

50x12 to 70xl4- 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOMS
WITH GAS &amp; ELECrRIC FURNACES

All THESE FAMOUS HOMES ON SAL£

1

unfurolshed, apartments .
Phone 992- ~4 .
•
·
•
4-12-Hc

2 B~LJI&lt;WM mobile nome with
air-conditioning; 10 miles
John c . Bacon
East of Pomeroy ; phone 992PROBATE JUDGE
6329.
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
Ill 1. It
7-19-lfc

1·

COUNTRY ACRES
OVER 7 ACRES - On Route 7 with T.P. - CHESTER
water. Mostly ' cl""red and ready for housing .·
CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKE'R FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE ABOVE.
·HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

YMF

Yesterday's Answer
ZO. Ruined,
informally

SW

ISAE

SW

YZDEL .- DRRDJ

Unoeramblethe~fourJumbln,
one
letter to eath square, to
form four ordinary words.

34. Fall
guy

ISAE

i

...,=

~~~~i~

~~~~

s

.TOUMH

II

I
J I

[J I

~JAUttW(

II

ROOIIRR

THe. Bit:. NO I55
MEANS P:EAL...

15U51Nt:SS!

I

Now

&amp;rr~n~e the circled letten

V" ~
to form the aurprioe anawer, u
;::=·:::::::·======l~_d==~·::ur~r~e:::et:ed:_:by the above ..rtoon

I

tI I I

=tll=SURPII=ISI=ANSWIII=IIn
::.:...__l

Prill
='

. _ I_ _

Ytlh~rday'a

Jumbl•" IOOT1' CHIME OXYGEN CORNER
Anawer: Tlu~ union rl'qrlirtrl lllitt lf•mJIOrflry af,ttf"ntt1
from

umrk - A HO~IYMOON

.'

measure

IN A Sil\IATI:lN LIKE 'TJ.!Itl',

eith _GQble Mobile Home ,Sales

DAIL\' CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

PHONE 992·7004 • MIDDLEPORT

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
_used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnsle letters,
apostrophe•, the len1th ond formotlon of the words are all
'blntJ. Eacll day the code !etten are dllferent.

II

A X Y D L BAA X .R
L 0 N G F B L L O·W

'c'OU Ali.JAI(51ll~k) 10
iHIRO

OR 10 HOME!

•l---7=-rr------1 l(jf_..J~;:-t"-"''&lt;:

-~----

.

i

.

]I

(Aa.wen to•orrowl

17. Be
mistaken
.J8. Form
of
John
41. Calendar
abbrevl•·
tlon

See Dan Thompson NOW - We se~-vice What W• Sell Hours: ato a &lt;Thur~. &amp; Sat. ato , CloMd oli

VZTP

36. "-

21. Team race
Bede"
ZZ. Actress,
37. Pianist
Martha
Peter
chanlp,
38. u.s.
24. Rifte
Max Treasury
recoil
B.Opposed
agents
25. ''The .
to
(hyph.
Brown
D. Items in a
wd .)
Bomber" 39. Neophyt~
box score(2 wds.)
15, Life
U . lmmov(comb.
Z6.Nimbus
able
form)
27. - muffin 42. MemoraU . Scull
33. New
ble perioq
19. Regarding
(comb.
44. - Paulo .
(2 ~ds.)
form)
45. Purpose

36. Brazilian
tapir'
39. Likewise ·
CO. "The
Manassa
Mauler"
43. Function
ca. Metric
land

THE BIG SALE IS AT

jl'

SAL

~&amp;MIDIL~;::;,::I:~:

vivre

Hillcrest by Skyline - Graywood and
Flamingo - Redman - Van Dyke by
Guerdon -'- Belmont by Guerdon Nor~is Goldseal.

SAVE UP TO

Front porch side yard . Only $21,000.00. .

4, Sa voir
faire
5.In the
past
&amp;.German
article
7. Heavyweight

-

For Rent

':lAND~ ROOM fur.nfshed ali\! ·

RSTP

VJ!&amp;Ierday's Cryptoquote: BROTHERHOOD IS THE VERY
PRrCE AND CONDITION OF MAN'S SURVIVAL.-CARLOS
P. ROMULO

buster"

of
r, ~~~~~;~(~~ 11, Aquarius"

16. Pallet.
18. Eye part
19. - Minor
·21. GreekR
23. Heavyweight

Free Delivery &amp; Set-Up,

TDJ

SAL

'DOWN
1. Sombrero
2. Turmoil
3. "The
Brockton
Block-

son

MIDDLEPORT

we talk to you

50, Chinese
"way"
51. Do lawn
work

7.Humbug!
10. Girl's

ALL 72's

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

!SA

MX D FDUMTDR TE ZD LAEZ- .

KSEPXYS C VAL !SA ·TDJ'L RSTJio YMF

11

NOTHING HELD BACK

D VSI

by THOMAS JOSEPH

PH. 992-2571

All features bu ill-in to make

IN

CRYPTOQUOTES

STARTS
WED.,
AUG. 2

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

Any person Interested rna~
file written exceptions to nld
accounts or to matters per.
• tainlng to the execution of the
t trust, not less then f ive days
i prior to the dare set for hearing.

- e'JUT WI'.~ .
'10' KINE.L'{

•estimates. phone Charles
· Li sle, Syracuse, V. V.;

work

NOTICE

day to day""'" finally dlspoltd
Of.

DON 'rSIT Tiit:::RE:,
~ , 5T7\t{) UP!..

U'L ABNER

'"'I . -

SEE US FOR : Awnings. s)u• n

gvaranteed .
Rf'r.(,nn~hl~&gt;
r ates . Phon e 742 ·3232 or

Wanted To Buy

1IN YOUR DIAL

CONCRETE
right to y&lt;&gt;ur

O' DELL WHEEL alignment

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

.1

'

'

61le E. Main

Real Estate For Sale

..WMP0/1390.

pa i nting ;

the
,FOR THE BE ST deal in a new
Two door, new pa int
Gift
or used mobile home , try
white
; rad io, tape pia
Third Ave., Middleport.
Party Plan In the Country
Kanauga Mobi le Home Sales,
Four
speed, sharp .
If
no
answer
992-2658
7-30-3tc - our 2S th year! Com Kanauga, Ohio .
7-30-3tc
take over payments, 181
mi ssi ons up to 30 pel. Fan 7-16-30ic
Beech St., Midd leport.
tastic Hostess Awards. Call or COAL limestone, Excelsior
B-1-31p 2 NEW HOMES. all elec tr ic, 3
wr ite "SANTA's PARTIES"
mobile
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
bedrooms, ful! basement and AIR -COND ITIONED
Avon , Conn . 06001 . Telephone
home
and
lot,
$3.500;
phone
Pomeroy
,
Phone
992-3891
.
~EGA~
RACINE - 6 room hou se, ba th ,· garage, with lake fr on tage; at 992 -5186 .
1 1203) 673 -3455 . ALSO
4-12-lfc util ity room, garage, SlO,OOOi
Five Points area ; phone 992 ·
BOOKING PARTIES .
1-30-6tc
•,hone 949 -4195.
· 2S71 or 992-3975.
" Y~u 'l l Like Our Qua lity
NOTICE OF SUE
7-2-3otc
7-13-tfc
-CANNI
NG
tomatoes
,
sweet
3-31-tfc
Bids will be rece ivect at the - - - -- - - - Way of Do ing Business."
corn ,
cucumbers
and - - - - , - - - - - , - - , - - CASij paid tor all makes anc
off ices of Webster and Fultz.
GMAC FINANCING
Atforneys , Pomeroy National WAI T RESS wanted from 4p. m .
mangoes; Geraldi ne Cleland, 8 ROOM house, bath. large lot,
m odels of mobile homes 1 992 - ~5342
Pomeroy
HOU
SE
in
Long
Bo
ttom
,
phone'
Ban k. 9uilcting , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
to 12:30 p. m . App ly in person ,
Racine , 0 .
PhQJie area code 614-&lt;23-9531 .
ga s and electric, Rt . 1,
Open
Evenings
'Til8
:00 ·
985-3529.
until Saturday , August 5, 1972 .
Bl ue Tartan . No experience
7-28-tfc
4-13-tfi:
Middleport, phone 992-26U2.
atlO :OO o'clock A .M . tor the sale
till P.M. S•t
'
necessary.
6-11 -tfc
or th e M&amp;ry L . Em mls h r eal
7-28-6tc
7-27-61c STEREO-radio Con sole, 4 speed

Chattel

' like ~ pt!ISOIL :

l

;

protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992-

I

Open 8 Till
Mondav thru Saturday
• ~06 E. Main , P~.rov.~. Q._

dellv~red

CAI' ETER1A

3'118 .

'

Pomel'!ly Ho,!llif ·&amp;·Auto

READY -MIX

exter ior

a

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEif
RE,O,SONABLE rates. Ph. 446
Goeglein Read y-Mi x Co .,;
4782, Ga llipoli s, John Russell .
Middleport, Ohio.
,
Owner &amp; Operator .
.
6-30-lfc
.S-12-Hc

doors, will repa int" the out-

Con ley Slarcratt Sales , Rt . 62,
N. of Pt. Pleasant behin d Red

'

TlfE CLASSROOM!

T"IS STU~F
COMES FRO,'&lt;\ T~E

estimates . Phone 992 -328•.

it; phone 949-3461.

master ,. Campers .
1973
Campers on dis play , used
campers in stock . Camp

'

I

projec1. Fa st and easy . Free

storage building , modern
kitchen, storm windows and

7-28-6tc FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Accounts and vouchers of the
Property
frame house, six rooms and
following
named
fidu
ciaries
The Tr l County Bank
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro bath. Large lot. Located In
h~ve been filed In the Probate
vs
Phone Faye Manley
Court, Meigs County , Ohio , for
Hyg ie ne New Demonstrator Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
James fuiU, etal
approva
l
and
settlement
:
' 992-5592
has all cleaning attachments house on left going north
Case No . 15,056
CASE NO . 17,861 Th ir teenth
plus the new Electro Suds for Inside corporation line .
In
Account of M.!!ir ion Jean
shampoo
ing carpet . Only
7-27-tf
In pursuance to an Exec ution Current
Pomeroy
issued from the Court of Warner , Guard i an of the
S27.SO
cash
pri
ce
or
te
rms
-Common Pleas , Meigs County , guard ianship estates Of Stephen
Phone 992 -2156
Ray
Werne
r
,
Jeffrey
Jay
avai
lable
.
Phone
992-5641
.
RACINE
_
lO
room
hous&lt;!:•
Porn eroy , Ohio on I he 1st Cla y of
7·28 ·6lc bath, basement, garage , two
Warner , and John Lauren ce ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
July, 1972 a net to me direc led In Warner
,
minors
.
th e case named above, 1 will
lots. Phone 949-4313.
CASE NO . 20, 117 Third WOMAN to live In with elderly - , - - - -- - - - expose to sa le at Publ ic Auc . Current
4-5-lfp ',
Account
of
Wayne
o
.
t lon, at the front of the Court
lady, light housework , no
---~-Hou:se , Pomeroy , ·Ohio, Meigs Bea!, Gua rd ian of the Guar .
laundry. Phone 992-5397 or
Estate ot Will iam G.
County , Ohio, on Tuesday , the dlanshlp
992-3507.
Be
a!
.
15th day of August , 1972 at 10 : 15
CASE NO . 20,316 First and
7-31-3tc
A.M . the following goods and Fina
of Marjor ie L .
cha ttels to ·wit :
· Sm ithl , Account
Ex:ecutrlx of the Estate
One 1972 two bedroom house
Margar&amp;t Bailey, Deceased .
lra ller, name Rebel, 12' 1t 6A', ol CASE
NO . 20 ,373 First and
110 MechBnic Street
Ser ial Number RH6019 F.
Final Account of Thomas W.
Cash in hanct on date of sa le. Dun
can , Administrator of the OLD Furniture. oak tables,
Take n as the proper ty ·of
of Edward B. Dun can ,
organs, dlshe!, clocks, brass
Jam es Fultz lo. satis fy an Estate
.
E&gt;:ecut fon in favor of the Tri Deceased
beds, or complete households.
CASE
NO
.
20,631
First
and
Cour'ltv Bank .
Write
M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
NEW LISTING
Fina l Account ol Harrietl M ..
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Administratrix
of
th
e
Spencer,
MIDD
LEPORT
3
nice bedrooms. large living with
Robert C. Ha r tenba ch,
of Ralph G. Spencer ,
6-28-lfc '
fireplace
•nd
air
conditioned.
Bath, gas furnace, modern
Meigs County Sher iff Estatt
Deceased .
~----Pom,roy , Oh io
kitchen
with
double
sink.
Wall
to wall carpeting. Full
CASE NO . 20,636 First tnd MINIBIKE or go-c•rt In good
basement,
level
lot.
All
for
only
518,000.00.
Fina
l
Ac
count
of
Alma
G.
181 1. 't1
condil lon; Ralph Tr·ussell; ·
Peterson , Admlnlstratr l,.; of the
phone
949-5884.
Estate of Olaf Peterson ,
NEW LISTING
7·30-31c
Deqased .
HARRISONVILLE - 3 nice lots suitable f r hOIJslng .
unless exceP,tlon.s are filed
thereto , said accounts will be
$2,000.00.
tor hear ing before said Court on
DOWNTOWN
the 31st day of August , 1972 , at
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooMs, bath. fireplace with bookshelves
Wh i ch time said accounts will be ROOM &amp; board, phone 675-4SSS.
considered and continued from
on e•ch side. G•s furn•ce, full basement. Double g•rage.
7-26-6tc
Sale

ponds and septic tanks ; B &amp; K.

'

On Most Americin ra~ J

-G UAR 'A NfE ED-Phone 992-2094

FOOl) ALLOWEl&gt; IN

and commercial ·roofif1Q i

TH"N IT'S
A'L R 1G~T,
SIR ...

customer satlsfactlon. We
are ful ly insured for your

$5.5!»

Service. We S.harpen Scissors. · '

excellent condition; also 300
gal. fre sh water tank , never
had anything but ci ty water in

s ROOM house , double lot, 2 car
466 S. 2nd Sl .. Middleport.
, Ca rson Reed, Mason ,
1-J0-6tc garage
W. Va.; phone 773-5606 .
8-1-6tp
NICE MARE pon y, 40" high, S -------~­
years old, S2S. Phone 992-2990 MUST sell leav in g town - •
or 992-2759.
bedroom house, carpeted ;

Musser .

· Avon , chain saw, clothing , ACT NOW miscellaneous; 918 South
oldest
Toy

1

gold nylon carpets , oak POODLE puppies , Silver Toy·",
icebox . KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER, Rt. 7 "at auction
Parkv iew Kennels, Phone992·
ligh t," l'uppers Plains . 54.08_15 .H,
Closed Mondays only. Phone : - - - - - - - - Rutland.
667.3858 ·
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
7-30-61c 85,000 BTU Lennox Fuel oil
lurnace with two 27S gal. fuel · 1112 acres of ground , 4
PUREBRED female beegle tanks and thermostat ; in bedrooms, bath, TV room .

0677 , Monday and Tuesday, 9
a.m. lo 6:30p .m.
ONE 3 piece bedroom suite ,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 ; phone
7-30-31c
complete, $30 ; dining room
992-3420 .
suite , 7 pc. , S2S: plano ,
7-28-12tc
upright, reconditioned , - - - - - - - - WANTED :
MANAGER ,
natural fini sh, nice SlSO ; 1
LaSalle Hotel In Middleport ;

992-2448

2966 . .

E&lt;eavat ing , Phone 992-5367,
sell for small balance of $3L:W
Dick Karr, Jr .
or pay ss a month; call 992S-21-tfc
5331.
- ---,-----,-8-1-61c

7-28-6tp
KOSCOT of course. Phone · ESTATE AUCTION . Saturday,
August
Slh,
starting
at
12
:00
992-5113.
noon at the home of the late STARCRAFT Close-Out on 1972
7-9-ttc
models. Save $700 on 18 ft .,
Lola Holtz just off Gihon road
$815 on : J fl ., $37S on Star(follow auction signs from

Electrical Work

cancel led?
lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

complete fine of resT&lt;rei!llal

and

EXPERT
Wheet'111i&amp;J!rilent·

AUTOMOBILE Insuran ce been .

YOU KNOW THE RULf ,
MR. 81JRNS ... NO

complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to

..

8-1-6tp

-------

specials this month, some for
men as well as women. It's

Window,
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-1174
Pomeroy

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceirlngs. Interior

---

dition ; White Interior, air·
conditioned ; stero ; phone 667- SINGER Sewing Machine, will

lemon grove. Just think, !4

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-lS2S ·

- - - -- -

refreshing? .The famous mink
oil base and now we have the

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CARPORT Sale, August 2nd
and 3rd, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. ;

women, young men. b~ys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

1968 IMPALA Custom Coupe, new; phone 667-3643 or 6673-29-lfc
blac~ with while vinyl lop ; · 3969.
excellent n"~ echanical con 8-1-Jip DOZER and back hoe work,

WHY not try cosmetics that are
truly
diffe rent
and

'1iEIL"

trucks and low-bOy for. hire .

double

--------~~30-3tp

•,

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

fiberglas, bri ck and Storie?

haul fill dirt, top.soil. Dvmp

.CAMPUS .CLATTER

We specialize In aluminum,
viny l ;&gt;nd steel siding ;

Smallest Heater Core.

--~--,-­

I

'!

.

ON l,Y $13,7SO

From the largest
Bulldozer Radi"',or- to the

7-27-6tc - - -----:-:-.e._ __ __ 6-lS-tfc'
'71 CHEVY Vega and '72 Honda
'71 FIAT Spider with radio and 350: call 742-3773.
SEW ING MACHINE S. Repalr j
tape player 1 10,000 aclual
8-1-61p
service, all makes. 992-2284.
miles ; phone 985-4211.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .,
7-30-6tp AVOCADO green Kenmore
Authorized Singer Sales and

anyone other than myself.
Signed : Brownie Vujak lija.

Notice

End loader work, .

All kinds, all sizes for men,

phone 992-5082.

Phone 992-2897.

1 WILL NOT be responsible for
any debt s contracted by

.8 : 30

Buy 2 Pairs and

GET 1 PAIR FREE

body and motor recently
overhauled ; good tires front &amp; 1971 YAMAHA motorcycle ; 175
cc Enduro, good condition ;
rear ; 35 miles per gallon ga s.

:-::--:-~---

HOU'R~, '

llttl.e over

&amp;

1964 TWO DOOR V.W.. good

7-30-6tc

Charge per

mlleaRe

53.000 miles. Good tires. 2 new
snow tires. Call 992-2897 .
7-27-6tc

Dozer

, ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free · Estimates. We. also~

SALE I

23,000

----::--,---,----

rFor Wanl Ad Service
S cents per Word one insertion
M inimum Charge 75c ..
12 cents per word. three
KARR'S BARBER SHOP
•
consecutive insertioris.
Lynn sr. tf2-2l67 Pam troy
18 cents per ·word sl·x con.:
Barbers' LOCI I 400-AFL -CIO
secutlve insertions . •
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id with in 10 days. WILl care for preschool
CARD OF THANKS
children dn my home, $3 a
&amp; OBITUARY
day ; Mrs . Glenn Smith,
SI .SO for SO word minimum .·
phone 992-6187.
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

re.conditioned;

miles; phone 992 -3589.
7-28-6tc

a'ctual

'r{)U

i&lt;EEP :\MIUIX, AT ME

3· Bedfoqm home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
fully

MW, f.i\ADAN\' Do

NOT OVER 1\T MY
OADB URN HOUSE
WE AIN'T!!

For Sale

standard, reasonably priced;

OD vou have curly or herd to
menegt helrt
Stop In and have M lck or
Fred relax your hair for 1
more man~geeble hair.

RATES

-----'------:-

196S DODGE, 4 dr .. 6 cyll,der,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

..,.

'•'•

Business _______
Services _,,

and porch ; phone 992-2780 Of' CLEAN up J•nltor Service;
992-3.02.
phone 446-9202.
8-1-31p
8-1-ttc

Mr.
and Mrs. Glen
1970 DODGE
$2195
Polara. factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic
Gassaway , Powell, visited
transmi ssion, power steering , power brakes, good white
their son-in-law and daughoor,
side-walls, many more extras . White fini sh, blac vinyl
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller ·
roof. Priced to move!
and family.
1970 FORD
$1995
Mr. and Mrs. John Cordray
Ga
la
xie
500
hardtop
coupe,
V-8
engine,
automatic
trans.
of Fullerton, California, are
mission , power steering &amp; brakes. while finish, black
vac~ Honing
here
with
vfny l tOp, vlriyllnterlor . White-wall tires, li.k e new, radio.
relatives . They were guests at
1971 FORD PINT02 DR.
$1850
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Locall owner car, green finish , clean interior, good tires,
Jeffers. Mr. Cordray is a
2000cc engine, ra dio, 4-speed trans .
brother of Mrs. Jeffers.
Mr. and . Mrs. Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
have returned from a two week
vacation trip which took them
OP-EH EVES. loGO P.M..into 16 states. They were ac1'ptoiEI!O., OHIO
companied by his sister, Mrs.
of
Bernice
McKnight
WANYADS
Notice
Cohimbus. Points of inoorest
INFORMATION,
visited included MI. Rush. , DEADt.INES
more,
South
Dakota, ) P.M . Day Before Publication-.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Yellowstone National Park ,
Can-cellation - Corrections
Hoover Dam and points around Will b&amp; &amp;ccep led until 9 a.m . for.
Day of Publication
Tucson, Arizona , and other
REGULATIONS

~ k•• •

,.,."

2 BEDROOM house . nice yard

GOSHEN!!

WE SHORE HAVE HAD US
A LONG DRY SPELL- - AIN 'T WE, LOWEE'Z'I?

Business Services

For Rent

Po•roy .
Motor Co.

LAND

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'
•

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 1,11172
readers of his "earnest desln! ·
to serve them with the best
paper that I may be capable of ·
[Continued from page 1)
producing," and he .looked
manager of Gallipolis Savings forward to · growth and im·
and Loan Company, where he provement.
Growth came. There · were
served lor 16 years .
Ohio Valley Publishing 830 subscribers to the Tribune
Company IJoughl the Tribune then; in 11 years, they had
from Dear Publications in 1959, nearly tripled to 2,410; 22 years
and moved to its present after Mr. Wetherholt took over,
they numbered 5,100, six times
location in November, 1967.
Born Jan . 19, 1900, in tlle 1924 ~~originals. "
Improvement came. His
Gallipolis, Harold Wetherholt
friends
say that at least some
was a member ol the last
of
Harold
Wetherholt's success
. graduating class of the old
Ga!lia Academy High school with the Tribune resulted from
with commencement in the his choice of assistants. First,
Bankrupt Store location in he had T. Uoyd Bush, now of
1917. The "new" GAHS is Terrace Park, a suburb of
today ' s old Junior High Cincinnati. Bush left in 1930.
Another was the late Ruth
building on Fourth Ave.
After brief military service, .Mills Richards, for years
he enrolled at Ohio Stale circulation· manager.
Even 0. 0. Mcintyre ·
University, and received his
bachelor of journalism degree ('joined" the TribWle, when
Mr. Wetherholt contracted for
there in 1923.
·
Mr. Wetherholt had worked the renowned columnist's
summers with Mr. Sibley, "New York Day by Day." Old·
"father" of the Daily Tribune, timers around Gallia county,
until Mr . Sibley sold the news- however, say that the young
paper to Dr . Charles E. Holzer, publisher's greatest stroke of
Sr ., in 192tl. Mr. Sibley's total genius was his employment of
career with the Tribune Earl W. (Squire) Mauck as
covered the years 1690 to 192tl. associate editor in 1931. Mr.
Mr. Sibley's son, Ellis, ran Wetherholt 's editorials and
the paper for Dr. Holzer, and Squire Mauck's sprightly
Harold Welherholt recognized newswriting, observers say,
him in an " inaugural " sparked the upswing in
statement which ended: Tribune circulation. To assist
"Should his future work take Mr. Mauck , the publisher
him away !rom Gallipolis, I summoned Jim Porter from
know that at! the Tribune's Kentucky in 1940 on the 112·
patrons, readers, and em- page sesquicentennial, and he
ployees will join me in wishing later became editor of The
Ellis Sibley good luck and Gallia Times. Mr. and Mrs.
Wetherholt bought the Gallia
Godspeed."
Times
in 1942. J. Willard (Bill)
The statement assured the
Potter was editor, who left the
Tribune in 1952 to edit and
manage the Pomeroy Sentinel.
James E. Danner , ad·
Tonight, Aug. 1
vertising director for the
Tribune
and Daily Sentinel,
DIAMONDS ARE
was
appointed
the Tribune's
FOREVER
ITechnicolorl
first advertising manager in
Sean Connery
1937 by Mr. Wetherholt. John
Jill St. John
IGPJ
Morgan, pressman, is another
who started under Mr.
Disney Cartoon:
'Gentlemen's Gentlemen
Wetherholt (1947) when the
Show Starts 7 P.M.
Tribune was published on an
old flat-bed press. Shirley Beck
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Brown, now part-time proof·
Aug. 2)
reader, even ante-dated Mr.
NOT OPEN
Wetherholt, who kept her on
the "force" as a typesetter.
W. Vernon Deweese, the
Tribune's advertising
manager, and composing room
stall members Gayland Bush,
Eustice Wilson, Fred and Bill
Tonighl, July 30-Aug. 1
Hollman were all employed by
Double Feature Program
Mr. Wetherholt in the late
" BIG DOLL HOUSE"
1940s.
R'obert Coll ins
Danner and· all his sons
Judy Brown
worked .as Tribune carrier
- Piusboys under Mr . Wetherholt,
"WOMEN IN CAGES"
and
so did the present editor,
Jennifer Gan
Judy Brown
Hobart Wilson, Jr., who later
covered sports in the
Wetherholt regime.
Wed .. Thur . . Fri.
Founding president of the
August 2-3-4
Southeastern Ohio Newspaper
Double Feature Program
"THE REIVERS"
Association, Harold W.
{TechnicolorJ
Wetherholt also was a former
Steve McQueen
president
ol the Blue Pencil
Sharon Farrell
Club,
an
editors'
group , and
- Pluscharter member of the Ohio
" A MAN
CALLED HORSE "
Valley . Kanawha chapter of
(Technicolor)
Sigma Delta Chi, professional

Wetherholt

MEIGS lHEATRE

Ri chard Harris

Dame Judith Anderson
IGPI

Seven, F .• A)'!, of the York
Rite bodies Ot Masonry, and
Aladdin Temple 'Shrine. Mr.
Wethe.rholt was a trustee and
former board chairman of the
Gallia County District Ubrary,
a member of the Gallipolis
Civil Service commtaston, and
a member of the Tenth
Congressional District's
Academy Selection Com·
mittee.
Mr. Wetherhol.t inducted 0.
0. Mcintyre posthumously into
the Ohio Journalism Hall of
Fame, and, back in 1935, was
one of the signers of the letter
inviting the columnist to come
back to Gallipolis.
He was a charter member of
the Gallipolis Rotary Club.
Harold Wetherholt was
preceded in ·death by his
parents, Elias and Serville
Watts Wetherholt, and his
brother, Editor Dwight C.
Wetherholt.

Walter Thomas
Died Monday

Dick Adams

Save All of Your
Saleslips From
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•••

in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
Judge Gerhard A. Gesell.
The National Association of Letter Carriers and slx federal
workers from the Washington metropolitan area asked the court
to enjoin the U. S. Civil Service Commission from enforcing the
Act. They challenged a clause that prohibits employes of federal
executive agencies or the District of Columbia from laking "an
active part in political management or political campaigns."

AT THIS

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~:::L:::. w~:~;~:~~ell~~ :1/::~rful •.,:'1·~
0

psntsull, the young woman clung~~ the railing Tuesday on
the city's South Side Bridge, prepared to end her life in the ···

veteran, happened by and lelt hls troflic duties to chat a
whlle.
·
"I told her to come on and get In the car and I would
buy her a Coke," the officer said. "She smiled. 1 took her
to the detective bureau, but I didn't make on olficlal
report.H
"The thing that helps someone like the young woman
Is the simple realization that someone really cares. I :.:',:.',::.
talked to her. I wanted to help her and I think she knew
that." Monk said he didn't know why the woman was bent .•,~,..:·.: ,.
on committing suicide.

!

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By United Press International
BELFAST -GUN BATTLES AND bomb explosions swept
across Northern Ireland's two main cities early today, shattering
a two-day lull in violence, an army spokesman said. Gunmen
fired at soldiers at least25 times in Belfast and Londonderry and
set off seven bombs, he said. Soldiers claimed they hit five of the
gunmen but suffered no casualties among themselves.
A military source said the surge in strife indicated the
ouUawed irish Republican Army (!RA J may now be filtering
back into Northern Ireland from the south after fleeing before
the army's occupation of IRA "no go" areas Monday in the two
cities and other tqwns in the province.

COL~BUS -CLEVElAND WU.L BE the site of the Ohio
Democratic par,ty's convention for the first time in modern
history, it was reported today, and Sen. George McGovern will
give the keynote address.
The Ohio Scrip[.IS·Howard Bureau said state chairman
William Lavelle revealed the plan to hold the convention the last
week in September or the first week in October. Lavelle said
plans, however, were incomplete.

!_

Weather

· includes automatic ice maker plus
porcelain crispers, 3 adjustable cantilever
shelves and 2 door sbelves in the refrigerator ..
. . . and a full-width bi·level shelf and 2 ,., 't"packa~e deep" door shelves in the freezer . · ·h

$

359

•

Pansy Jordon, Clair Swan ,

Vernon Weber, Beatrice Wood,
Ernest Wood, Jean Wood, Lee
Wood, Norman Wood, Dee
Brown , June Yost, Marvin
Wilson, Mont Vance, Austin
Phillips, Rosalie Sayre, Linda
Morris, Nick Grueser, Worley
Haley, Alice Globokar, Hie!
French, Naomi Floyd, Pauline
Darst,

Teresa

AROUSING CURIOSITY IN DOWNTOWN Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon were these
Marquette Cement Co. barges, towed by the Charles K. The barges were headed into the shore
below the parking lot on West Main St. Although several theories evolved as to why the boat
and barges were stopped crosswise on the Ohio River, it turned out that the stop was made to
allow workers to pick up supplies in the business section.

Cremea ns,

Letha Cotterill, Virgil Carl,
Buster Barrell, Bit! Smith,
Minnie Thornton, Mary D.
!Continued on page 10)

•

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at y

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXV NO. 76

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Z, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Killer anted
fNe=;;:fu];r;j;t Either allace
Or Mr. Nixon

WASHINGTON -AFTER TRYING FOR more than a year,
(Continued on page 10)

·

Spurlock, Clarence Wickline ,
Paul Sellers, Earl Cross, Ray
Proffitt, · Gordon Proffitt ,
Ru ssell Cline , Marshall
Adams, Mary Rose, Robert
Shook, Alfred Wolle, Ron
Eastman, .Frank Upton ,
Denver ijysell, Fay Manley ,
Linda Jell, Ralph McCumber,
Leo Morris, William Ratliff,

JL= = = = = = = = = = = = = : : : : :;: : ;: ;: : : =:=: :=:=:= = =:=:=: ;: : = = =: := :=:= = : : =:=:=: : : : : :=:= = =:=: ;: : =: ;:;:;: :=~=~=:=~{;:

BIG SUR, CALIF. -A FOREST FIRE pushed by stiff sea
breezes burned out of control today in a vast wilderneSs area
along the Pacific Ocean. An army of 400 fire fighters arrived on
the lire lines Tuesday night about five hours after flames erupted
two miles north of this colorful coastal community on private
land known as the Vallejo Ranch.
By nightfall, flames had blackened more than 1,000 acres of
brush and limber and limited the flow of vacation traffic on
scenic California Route I which winds along the ocean through
the Big Sur wilderness.

•

Two Bedford Township
families requested that their
properties be transferred from
the Meigs Local School District
to tile Eastern Local School
District when the Meigs County
Board, of Education mel
Tuesrtay night.
It had been determined that
the properties are in the Meigs
Local School District, but the
children - three are involved
-have been attending Eastern
Local Schools. The families
were advised they would have
to pay tuition if their children
were to continue attending the
)::astern Schools.
Because all board members
were not present Tuesday
night, no action was taken on
the matter. It will be studied,
however .
The board issued bus driver
certificates to Dan Smith, Bob

·.

Ka~~!':te~i::r, patrolman Danny Monk, a seven-year

tries."

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M

BE!RliT - LIBYA TODAY REPORTED progress toward
the birth of p new nation in the Arab world - a union of Egypt
and Libya which it said would be able to face up to Israel. In a
commentary on talks under way in Benghazi between the two
countr ies' leaders, the government · controlled Tripoli Radio
said their meetings wiU "produce important and positive results.
"The Arabs are looking with hope to this meeting that it may
respond to their dear wish for a merger between the two conn·

!

BOYS

SALE:

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. MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE, for the third consecutive -year, has won the pedestrian safety
Citation of the American Automobile Assn . Presenting the award to Middleport Police Chief J.
J. Cremeans, left, is James H. Conroy, safety director of the Automobile Club of Southern Ohio.
(See story on Page 10).

Leonard

Make Elberfelds Your
Shopping Center

THE
GOAL OF

IS

NEW HAVEN - Suzanne
Davidson of New liaven' has
returned home after l!oervlng as
a staffer In the 28th annual
camp for 101 West Virginia
crtppied children which was
held at Camp Horseshoe near
St. George recently.
Miss Davidlon served as
Girl's Unit Leader and Water
Safety Inatructor and Mason
County's Red Cross O!apter
gave certificates for the
swimmen, In a well-balanced
program.
The project, sponsored by
the Harrison County Easter
Seal Society for Crippled
Children and Adults, was held

Vemon Darst '
Died Monday ·Ottawa. Has

$8,590 Asked
In Court Suit

News

2 Families
Want Switch

Miss DaWJson War Staffer

.for the second year for a three
Jllly ZWl
. McClellan, Gary Foster, Joann
week period.
DISCHARGES - Brenda ElliOtt, Many Dugar, Mrs.
Included were camp crafts,
Walter Thomas, 88, formerly Amos, Patricia Ferguaoll, ~yd Damer and daughter,
arts / and crafts, . sports,
of Meigs County, died Monday '-&lt;&gt;rena Bonecutter, Edna Wa- Leecboma Cl!apman, Florence
swimming, story hours and
at his home in Gahanna.
land, Ruth Feuerbacher, Bwicb, Cora Blrcb, Krilta
quiet games, camp songs. and
Mr. Thomas was ·a j;C)-year · Christine Poe, Caryl Bauer, · Cloncb, . Mrs. J~m~es Beaver
rhythm band; campfires,
member of Racine Masonic Sandts Qoabtree, Mrs. James and aon, Phyllis Baird, Opal
overnight camp-&lt;~uts,. three
Lodge &lt;161 F&amp;AM. He ill sur·. Ghearlng and daughter, Bechner, Helen Nutter,
feature movies, an old
vlved by a brother, David, of Mildred L!tcas, Vada Teaford, Gueneda Allen, Leo Rainey,
fashioned hayride, a tal~nt
Gahanna. Preceding him in Rita Taylor, Rema Cl!aftn, Judson Meacham, Aileen
show, a craft shop production
death about a year ago was his Faith White, Willlalil Nance, Angels, Anna Perry, Mrs.
and many other special events.
Minnie Harriaon, Alfred WUliam Kisor and daughter,
Many children, attending
wi~~eral services will be held Ferguson, Ricky Oary, Nonna Evelyn Hammond, Marg~et
camp for the first time, came
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Johnson, Maude Young, Potter , Diana Caruthen,
oo crutches, in braces and even
Mifflin Methodist Church at Michael Wickline, Lilllari Virginia ' Rees, · .. Okey
tn wheel chairs. Many learned
Gahanna. The body Is at the Welcb, Mrs. Joseph Webster Longfellow, Bryant , Harmon,
to swim in the new heated
Margraum and Son Funeral and daughter, VIrginia Roush, Jacob Weinberger, Michael
swimming pool guided by Miss
Home, 335 Johntown Road, Russell Ragan, Nancy Meeks, Plymale, MrS. Charles Mllflln
Davidson.
Gahanna.
Mrs. Moae Norman and son, and son, Allee Keirns, Mrs.
' Learning to get along with
Samuel Morris II, &lt;ltristopher Curtis Dalton and son, Mary
others ·was of prime im· '
Colley, Martha Chambers,
portance. at the camp. Th.ey
REUNION SET
Pauline Brewer, Margaret
were also given an opportunity
The
annual
Teaford family to learn Independence.
Young, Patricia Gibbs,
Florence Crossin, Tiffany reunion wW be held SUnday at
Detty, Wyoma Hatfield, the state park on Route 33, on
Vernon Darst, 76, of 355 Ash
Pamela Qoow, Pamela Herd- the left going north. There will .
St., Middleport, a retired
man, Charles Allen, Cecil be a potluck dinner at noon
employe of the New York
Central Railroad, with 39 years Richard E. (Dick) Adams, Sines, Ruth Hendricks, Mrs. followed by a business session
(Continued from page I)
service, died Monday at former head football coach at William Russell and daughter, and games.
Kyger
Creek
High
School,
has
Marvin Thaxton, Donna White,
During World War II, Leonard
A suit lor money has been Veterans Memorial Hospital .
officially
signed
a
pro
contract
Lorna
Young,
Mlreille
Hurd,
served
In the Coast Guard.
filed in Meigs County Common
Mr. Darst Is survived by a
with
the
Ottawa
Roll8h
Riders
Donald
Erwin,
Mary
Tilley,
He
Is
a member of the
Pleas Court by Myrtle Gard· son, Ellison, East Ridge,
of
the
Canadian
Football
John Dennis, Mary OaviB, VeteraDJ Memorial Hospital Central Ohio Management
ner, Rutland, Rt. I, plaintiff, Tenn.; four da1J8hters, Mrs.
Lorayne Jones, Edward.
vs.
Donald
Weaver, Wanda Searles, Columbus; League.
ADMITTED - Charles Assn., Buckeye Chapter of the
Adams,
an
all
Southeastern
Patterson
Jr.,
Leora
Zwilling,
Harrisonville, in the amount of Mrs. Martha Wolfe, Mid·
Watkins, Point Pleasant; Society for the Preservation
Ohio
grldder
at
Athens
High
Robert E. Lee, Guy Lee, Charles Hysell, Middleport; and Encouragement of Bar·
$8,590 .
dleport; Mrs. Freda Russell,
'!'he plaintiff charges the Springfield, Ohio, and Kay School and twi~ the Most Elizabeth Welch, Mrs. Donald Lawrence Leadbetter, Miners· bershop Quartet Sibging in
defend an l did not compensate Barnett, Wheeling, w. Va.; 16 Valuable Player of the Mid· Tucker and son, George ville; Constance Craig, America, and Pomeroy Lodge
her for her share of crops, did grandchildren, and 13 great- American Conference while Thomas, Robert &amp;nith, Don Pomeroy; Robin Barrett, No. 164 of the Masons.
playing at a cornerback for Slane, Asalea Odister, Doral Rutland; John Oiler, Cheshire,
Leonard and his wife, Joyce,
not perform labor, and that grandchildren.
Miami
University,
survived
Nottgen,
Nooga
Roberts,
Nellie
when he moved from the 146and Maggie Gilmore, Racine. live at 76 Brevoort Rd .,
His
wife,
Elizabeth,
Parker, Nora McOellan, Mrs.
acre farm in Rutland Township preceded him in death in 1958 the final cut Monday .
DISCHARGED - Irene Columbus. They have two sons,
Adams will be a starting Mickey Hutton and son, Mrs. Russell, Lawrence Harrison, Kyle Allan,l7, and Randal Lee,
he was Indebted to the plaintiff as did two infant children.
in the amount of $2,100 and took
16, and a da~hter , Michele, 13.
Funeral services wiU be held defensive safety, the punter Fred Howell and daughter, and Judy McNickle.
equipment and personal at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the and on the punt 'receiving and Nellie Conley, Woodrow Call
•
and Carrie Blankenship.
belongings owned by the Ewing Funeral Home where kick-&lt;~ff return units.
During
his
best
college
year,
BIRTHS:
Mrs.
Harold
plaintiff.
friends may call any time.
In other court action, Roy Burial will be in the Kyger 1969, Adams led Miami in pass Stover, son, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
interceptions, punling, punt Thomas Moulton, daughter,
Lee Buchanan, Minersville, Cemetery.
Gallipolis; Mrs. Creighton
returns and kickoff returns.
filed suit for divorce from Iris
Crawford, son, Gallipolis; Mrs.
His
1971
Kyger
Creek
Bobcats
0. Buchanan, Parkersburg, PICNIC PLANNED
charging gross neglect of duly
RACINE - The Racine finished second In the Southern Jerry Downey, daughter,
and extreme cruelly, and Baseball Assn. will hold a Valley Athletic Conference Coalton; Mrs. John VanMeter,
Gloria K. Brown was granted a wiener roast beginning at 5 with a 4-1 slate. Overall, KC son, Syracuse; Mrs. Robert
divorce from Jerry E. Brown. p.m. Wednesday at the Shrine finished 4-4-1. His baseball Ervin Jr., daughter, Wellston
Park in Racine. All members team also finished second In and Mrs. Earl Riley, son, New
TITLE AT STAKE
Haven.
of the Pony, Utile, Peewee and the SVAC with a 9-3 mark.
Racine and Syrac~se, both 6- Bantam Teams and their Adams' successor is James
PLEASANT VAlLEY
2, clash headon Wednesday for families are Invited.
E. Sprague of Beverly, an
DISCHARGES:
Alpha
the championship of the Meigs
assistant coach the pas~ three Woodall, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Jr.' Girls' Softball League at 6
years at Fort Frye in Kermeth Gillenwater, Grimmll
LODGE TO MEI&gt;'T
p.m. on the Minersville Field.
Washington County. ·
Landing; and Mrs. Jerry HW
Forest Run, 4-4, plays
A regular meeting of
and daughter, Addison, 0.
Pomeroy, ().8, in the second Pomeroy Lodge 1114, F&amp;AM,
game at 7. These two games will be held at 7:30 p.m.
end regular season play. A Wednesday at the Masonic
league tournament will be held Temple. Refreshments will be
next week.
· served.

UPPER MARLBORO, MD. - A DEFENSE attorney con·
tends the man accused of shooting Alabama Gov. George C.
Walla~ was "weird" and probably "sick the day he was born."
Attorney Benjamin Lipsitz made the statement to a jury of
six men and six women Monday as the trial of Arthur Herman
Bremer, 21, a former Milwaukee bW!boy and janitor, began.
Bremer sat in the courtroom smiling endlessly. Once he stuck his
journalism fraternity .
tongue out at a spectator, smiled broadly and cbuckled to him·
He was a member of Mor·
ning Dawn Lodge Number self.
ALGIERS -FIVE HIJACKERS who "believed that money
destroys people'' excbanged 87 passengers for a record $1 million
ransom Monday then forced the crew of a Delta Air Lines jet to
fly them and their children to Algeria today. The plane, Flight
1141 which carried a total of 101 persons when it was com·
mandeered during a Detroit to Miami flight, landed In Algeria at
3:19a.m. EDT, said a spokesman for Delta Air l.Jnes In Atlanta.
Algerian officials Indicated they may refuse a request for
asylum If one is made. Sucb a refusal would be a rarity. One
Algerian source hinted at a posalble refuaal when he said,
"Aigerlahasgivenand will always give asylum to a refugee or a
political opponent, but it is also evident that a ganglier who
demands money through threats does not belong to this cateogty
of men persecuted lor political activities."

BANK

HOSPITAL NEWS

Hemsley Services

Cloudy tonight and Thurs·
day, scattered thundershowers Friday in East
lik~ly . Highs today generally In
Funeral services for Rollie
the low to mid 80s. Low tonight
around 70 and the high Thurs· Hemsley, 65, formerly of
and
former
day in the low to mid 8tls south. Syracuse
professional baseball player
and manager, have been set for
11 a.m. Friday at the Pum·
More Phone Paths phrey Funeral Home, George
Ave., Silver Springs, Md.
Mr. Hemsley died Monday
Added to Letart
after suffering a heart attack.
He was operator of a real
Falls Exchange
estate office in Langford Park, ··
LETART FALLS- More Md., near Silver Springs, at the
"calling paths" have been time of his death. Burial will be
Installed from Letart Falls to at Silver Springs.
Athens and Pomeroy,
General Telephone Co. of
VOTE TOGETHER
Ohio announced today .
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Kenley Krlnn, Athens Both Republican senators from
district commercial Ohio, William Saxbe and
manager, said' the facilities Robert Taft Jr., voted against
are being added to keep pace a proposal by Sen. George
with Increased calling McGovern Tuesday to cut $4
volumes.
billion !rom the defense
"The quantity of calling budget. The proposal was
(lith&amp; added will be sufficient rejected 59-33.
for needs until 1974," Krlnn
stated. "Plans are now being
STRIKE AVERTED
mide to add more equipCOLUMBUS (UPli - The
ment at that time."
state Department of Uquor
The Letart Falls exchange Control Tuesday agreed to
serves 181 telephones In a
implement 11 of 12 arbitrated
15.5 square-mile area of grievance awards, ending the
Melgo county.
threat of a statewide strike by
Uquor store clerks.

UPPER MARLBORO, Md.
(UP!) -A psychoanalyst told a
hushed courtroom today that
Arthur Bremer decided about
March I to assassinate either
President Richard Nixon or
George Wallace -and then
crisscrossed the conn try in
pursui l of that goal.
It was two and one-half
monllls later that Bremer, 21,
was arressed following the
shooting of Wallace at a
Laurel, Md . shopping center .
The psychoanal · t, Dr. Eugene Brody, r'.h r
of the
jlSychiatry d(~artmen )at the
University ·~f
ryland

Medical School, was the first
defense witness to address the
jury as Bremer 's trial went
into its third day.
Brody spoke slowly and in a
monotone while describing his
interview with Bremer three
weeks after · the May 15
shooting. He said Bremer
became progressively more
aliented alter losing his
girlfriend - the only person he
el\ he ever had a close
relationship with - in mid·
January .
Bremer then fluctuated between homocidal and suicidal
tendencies, Brody said, his

personal stress apparently
ending about March I when he
made his decision to murder
either Nixon or Wallace.
The doctor said Bremer's
fanatic pursuit of his goal was
"impulsive and erratic," with

the former Milwaukee busboy
showing great attention to
detail on some minor points
while missing seemingly obvious major points. For
example, Brody said, Bremer
took his automobile through a
carwash to eliminate the odor
of gunpowder so that police
dogs would not be alerted .
(Continued on page 10)

Youngster Wins in Kansas
KANSAS CITY, Kan. iUP I)
- Morris Kay, 40, Kansas
House majority leader,
stunned former Gov. John
Anderson Jr. Tuesday to win a
four .way race for the
Republican nomination for
governor.
With 90 pet. of the vote
counted, Kay, the underdog
when he entered the race June
20 just before the filing
deadline, got 46 pet. to Anderson's 30 pet. There are no

runoffs in Kansas primary
elections. The candidate with
the plurality or votes is the
nominee.
Former state Farm Bureau
Director Kay Frisbie managed
only 15 pet., flopping in urban
areas, and Lt. Gov. Reynolds
Shultz received 1 pet. of the

tota l vote, finishing a distant
fourth. Kay had a 43 ,3 17-vote
lead.
Democra tic Gov . Robert
Docking was unopposed for
nom ination for an un·
precedented fourth con.
secutive term in his party's
primary.

BARBECUE SET
The Middleport Fire Dept.
will hold a chicken barbecue
Saturday at the Legion Park
behind the post office. Starling
time is 11 a.m. The barbecue
will last until the supply is
exhausted. Proceeds will go
toward equipping the new fire
station now under construction
on Race St.

THE GRAND OPENING of the Jones Boys new store in Pomeroy Tuesday was given a
royal re~ption by area residents. Two police officers were employed on West Main St. in front
of the store to control traffic and several parking attendants of the store were kept busy handling parking on the lotJ..car lot in front of the store and on another lot across Uberty Ave. Due
to the reception of the public, heavy equipment was called in Tuesday to begin making more
parking area on nearby leased land. Instructing Jim Montgomery, equipment operator, on the
new parking area are left, Dan Black, store mana ger , and right, Robert Wiseman, vice
president of Jones Boys, Inc. The new store will be open from 9a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through
Saturday, and from lto 9 p.m. each Sunday.

Ordinances Hurried Up

Kay used a barr age of
television ads to place his
athletic lace in front or many
Kansans for the firs t time.
SYRACUSE - Three orProfessionally produced and dinan ces were approved by
directed, the ads bought Kay Syracuse Village Council
the . statewide attention his Tuesday
night
under
older and more established emergency rul es. They :
opponents carried into the
- Made Worchester St. one
campaign and took for gran- way off of SR 124 (Third St. to
ted .
Second St. ).
Kay, in a state where ri~ing
-Set up procedures when
taxes were the maln issue, said persons fa il to appear in
he would abolish the sales tax mayor's court.
on food and medicine, giving
- And setting fin es and costs
citizens immediate tax relief. for failure to pay fines.
For the elderly, he promised a
In other business council
new state agency to dea l with agreed to install a maximum of
their concerns, and for the five streetlights, with three of
property
laxpayer,
he them along SR 124, beginning
proposed a constitutional at the lower corporation limits
amendment to place a lid on extending to Syracuse Post
property tues.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Friday through Sunday:
Mostly cloudy through the
period with a chance of
showers Friday night and
Saturday. Daytime highs In
the upper 70s to lower 80s
Friday and in the low to mid
80s Saturday and Sunday.
Lows at night In the upper
50s lo lower 60s north and
mid to supper 60s south.

Office.
Council also discussed
progress being made on the
new fire station and municipal
building. The concrete floor
has been poured.
An inspection of the building
is to be made by each council
member. Following it, each
member is to submit their
findings including what has to
be completed amf corrections
suggested, to Mayor Herman
London.
Police Chief Mitton Varian
reported
that Don Hunnei '
.
manager of the Legion
Baseball Team, expressed his
appreciation to village council
for the use of the Syracuse Ball
Field.
Varian said the Legion would
like to show its appreciation
and suggested erecting a chain
link fence on the ball park, if
funds can be obtained,
providing council agreed .
Council said such an im·

provement would be greatly
appreciated.
Attending were Mayor
London, Robert Wingett, Al
Lipscomb, Art Sylvester, Troy
Zwitling and Charles Neuman,
council members; George
Holman , treasurer; Kathryn
Crow, clerk; Eber Pickens,
and Ralph Lavender , and
Varian.

Manning Webster ·

Now 'His Honor'
COLUMBUS (UPIJ Manulng Drew Webster, an
attorney from Pomeroy,
Ohio, today was appointed
by Gov. John J . Gilligan as
judge of the probate division
of the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas.
Webster, 65, litis the '
vacancy created by the
resignation of Judge Frank
H. O'Brien.
DINNER FOR VISITOR
Mrs. Lily Hayman Morgan
and son, Howard, of Alberta,
Canada , have arrived for a
short visit with her sister, Mrs.
Earl (Nora ) Gorham and
husband and her brother,
Thomas Hayman, and other
relatives. A potluck dinner at
6:30p.m. Friday at the Letart
Falls Community Hall is
planned honoring Mrs.
Morgan , who is 92 yearf old.
Mrs. Morgan, active and alert,
invites he.r relatives and
friends to the dinner. She was a
former Letart Falls school '
teacher.

RC TO MEET
The Meigs County Chapter of
the American Red Cross will
hold its monthly meeting at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Veter~ns Memorial Hospital.

/..nose Ends of Fair Tied Up

DONATIONS PRESENTED - A check for $3,500 was presented to Syracuse Mayor
Herman London, center, Tuesday night by Eber Pickens, left, assistant chief of the Syracuse
Fire Department and Ralph Livender, fire chief, for th.e new fire station and municipal
ooUdlng. The three are shown in front of the new bulld)ng which is near completion.

Routine arra ng eme nts
preparatory to opening of the
109th anitual Meigs County
Fait on Aug. 15 were made by
the Meigs County Fair Board
at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Monday night.
. It was emphH;;izcd h.v th e
board - as a iu•t tlllnute deta il
- that straw will not be
provided for animals on the.
fairgrounds during this year 's
lair as has been the policy in

previous years . However ,
straw will be available for
purchase on the grounds
during all five days of the fair.
It was pointed out that kiddie
day will be observed Wed·
ncsday afternoon, Aug. 16, and
that ndes will be recluced to 20
cents with lew exceptions
during the designated hours.
The Gamble Amusement Co.
.will be on the midway.

.

BOARD TO MEET
The Eastern Local .School
District Board of Education
will meet at 8 p.m. today at the
Eastern High School. ·

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