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                  <text>rfiv~·mill levy m~t ·· Meigs Local Offered Third Chance
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be approved,

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Meigs Local School Bosrd additional school levy the third ·
Monday night voted to place on lime at a public meeting with
the November ballot a 5-rnill 36 dti~ens attending. The levy,

·•

Now You I:\now
PAGE *-FAIR SECI'ION .

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 14, 1972

Texas is unique among states
·in having the right under. the
joint resolution that annexed it
to the United States to divide
itself into smaller states.

VOL XXIV

l:ocai e'jther to . Ea.stern . or "~ve '?, pass the additional
~·· uthern Local D1stnct which millage.
has the levy.
Porter explained that of the
When Meigs Local is total amount of funds used in
assigned to another di,str(ct it the s~hool syS\em, 30 pet. is
automatically w1ll have to pay supplied locally and 70 pet.
22~, mills, whether or not from the state. He said the
M~i gs Local voted to pass its school board members in·
own levy. :
. dividually certainly did not
Porter added that the Meigs want higher taxes.
Local Board was not asked
Of the $2 million budget last
about the 22~, mill levy by the year, basically $63,000 is all the
state but was told it would board has much to say about.

if approved, would bring the school sy"tem, based o" the
total taxes .for schools in the cost per pupil.
district to 1211.. mills. Board
The state legislature, when it
President Frank POrter
passe~ ~ouse Bii.1475,1asl year
plained how the district get. .itS . told the ·Meigs Local Board that
money:
in order to receive •tate a1d
·He said there are two Meigs Loc;il District would
sources: (1) money irom IQC~l have to have·in existence a 221'.
real esiate taxes, and (2), the milllevy .for seh&lt;iols.
State Foundation Program.
If the levy is not passed, the
The state each year state board of education would
calculate• the amount of dissolve the Meigs Local
money needed io operate the · School Board and assign Meigs

$•

the $63,000, $48,000 was
spent on textbooks, ap:
proximately $16 per student.
The bal!l'lce, $15,000, wa• use,4
on contingencies that come up,
Por~r explamed.
Oil~ person. sidd he did not
~lieve in noli-property owners
votjzlg on the issue, also that
soin~ people on social security
could not allord to have taxes
raised . To this, Porter replied
that it was not their decision,

enttne

Devoted To 'The lntere&amp;l&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1972

but the state's.
It was also mentioned that
vandalism and . Uttering on
people's personal property
during school houn is excess1ve. Students should be
reminded what a trash can Is
for , this speaker $aid.
Russell Moore, principal at
Meig9 Junior High in Middleport, said students found
guilty of littering were con(Continued on Page 6)

Weather

•

at y

NO. 85

or

Charice of showers today;
south. Highs in the upper 70s
lower 80s north and the
mid and upper 80s south.
Partly cloudy and cooler
tonight with lows in the &gt;0s
north and' 60s south. Partly
cloudy Wednesday with highs
In the upper 70s and 80s.

and

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Portland School Will be
Reopened on August 28
RACINE - Southern Local
School · Bosrd Monday night
voted to open the Portland
Grade School beginning A11g.
28 for grades one through six.
TilE PORTLAND school was
closed in 1988. Qlljective for
opening the schoo)ls to obtain
more space and cut down on
teacher1Jupll ratlp.
Ralph Sayre, superln·
tendent, said a letter from
WUJiam Murphy, supervisor of
Elementary Edu~alion,
Columbus, best summarized
the bosrd's poslllon in Ita ac·
Uon.
Addressed to Mr . Sayre, it
said :
It would appear after our
e•amlnatlon of the Portland
Elementary School on July 18,
1972 and our dl5cusslon con·

school

must

be

plant

reduced

throughout the district. The

houslrig

a school

enrollment.

While the rehabilitation of
the facility may appear to be
costly, the Portland foclllty

overcrowded classrooms at the

Racine Elementary School In
particular do not allow the staff
to plan sufficiently to meet the
needs ot the Individual pur,lls .

would provide the much
needed classroom space .
Seve·ral
alternative
organizational patterns could
be utilized In the reopening of

Also oversized classes res rlct

the opportunity for children to

respond to the instruction In
terms of response to qvestions,
discussion and general par·
th;lpatlon.

the Portland facility.
-Sell contained classrooms.
K-5 or 1-6, depending upon

The Portland fa&lt;:illty built In
1951 and containing four

actual numbers of pupils .

classrooms, an office area,
gyMnasium , kitchen and small
storage area Is the most
r e c en t I y
C'O n s t r u c ted
system . (Racine Elementary
School was constructed In
1911 )'
Refurbishing .
such
as
classroom • storage,
replacement of windows, doors
and floor tile where It has been
damaged , roof repair to

consideration must be given to

the addition of staff members,

certificated
and
non·
professional to support the
educational program.

In addition sufficient , and
appropriate
Instructional

materlala and media must be
made
available . Future

(Continued on Page 10)

would appear to be the most
eKpedlent as It would re~ulre

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday and
Saturday. Chance of showers
Friday. Highs In the upper
70s and 80s with lows In the
upper 50s and 60s.

- Nongraded, with pupils

eliminate
leaks ,
point
throughout, and other normal
rehabilitation would be
euentlal prior to the re ·
opening of the ochool. In ad·
dillon, a health service clin ic lo

JUNIOR FAIR PARTICIPANTS will be distributing
colorful label pins during the junior fair in excllange lor
contributions to the building fund. Proceeds wiU go into a
fund whicll will help provide a new permanent building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Wa~ce Bradford, right, senior
fair board president, received the first lapel pin Monday
afternoon from Steve Starlley, president of the Meigs County
Junior Fair Board. Others at the booth where the pins will be
distributed are, from the left, Lee Hysell, Denise Philips and
Sharon Holter.

it

ranging ln age from 6 years to
12 years 11·5 grade levels),
utilizing all four classrooms.
While th is could be the most
desirable pattern, special
attention would need to be
devoted to much prior in·
services education for the

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:~~m.?-::::::~::::::::8

staff. The availability and use
of multi ·level materials and
equipment essential to the
success of such a program

would have to become 1 prime
eoncern .lor the statj, I The lwo
elementary JIIJlef'VIoors at tho
county level ohould be a
The names of 75 cltlzens
definite assl'st In the
development of such a drawn for poaalble duty on the
program) .
-lhe facility could become September term grand and ·
a primary or .an Intermediate petit juries were announced
building. housing pupils at the this morning in the office of
same grade level from the Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, clerk of
entire school distr ict. For
e.omple, all sixth grade court.
students could be bused lo the
Attending the drawing were
schooL While this organization Mrs. Lucke, Nellie Brown,
does. provide certain ad vantages for grouping of puflls deputy clerk, Judge John C.
for instruction, caution mus be Bacon, Freeland Norris, and
exercised to ensure that ex- Lauren Hoffman of the jury
cessive bus lime does not commission, and David SheetS,
become a factor , A poll of
parent opinion should ac ·· deputy of the Meigs County

By United Press Inlernatloaal
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - CARRYING through on itS
peopl~ented

campaign, the Democratic Party drafted a
platform Monday night which pledged legislation abolishing
strip mining of coal in West VIrginia.
If itS endeavors to cut out strip mining should not pass the
legislature, the Democrats pledged "the strongest possible
enforcement of laws now on the books - laws which have been
generally ignored by the Moore Administration." The 19member platform committee will consider the IS-page document
at a meeting Friday. The work of a four-member sub-committee
will go before the Democratic State Convention here Saturday.

Sheriff's Dept.
Names drawn for the petit
jury panel are Henry Turner,
Albany; Sharon Black,
Rutland; Wayne H. Chase,
Albany; Ina Massar, Reeds·
ville; Leo Kennedy, Mid·
dleport; Violet Jefferson,
Middleport; Aaron Wolfe,
Racine; Golda Gillilan,
Racine ; Dinsmore Boyles,
Coolville; Dwayne Stanley,
Pomeroy; Rollin Radford,
Pomeroy; David Thomas,

~~~~~·;!~ti~:~7~!o~~c~:

self.contalned setting . This
would utllile three of !he four
classrooms In the lacillly for
pupils In the Portland at.
tendance area, grades 1-6. and
the proposed E.M.R . class for

Shirley Johnson,
Seniors' Tent Offering Middleport;
Portland;Hazel Francis,
Langsville; Grover Salser, Jr.,
Forest Neig.Jer,
• ht }Y y OUthS p rogrant Racine;
NIg
Racine; Howard LoAan,
. ..
,
.
Pomeroy; Mildred L. Gillilan,

assigned to one teacher in a

Firemen go

On 14 Calls

Insurance Plan under Study
Pat Kenney, Metropolitan pointed out that some
Insurance Co. representative, municipalities are adopting
outlined the coverage offered this Insurance plan and are
in· non-occupational insurance paying a part, or the entire,
through his . company for premium for employes of their
vmBae 'employes when Mid· " communities.
dleport Village CouncU met 1n
Counc!l took no action on
regular sp~lon Monday niRht. Kenney s Insurance, but
, 1
• ' referred it to councll~oman
The lnaur,ance, he said, Mts. Roger Morgan for
would
be
a
baaic detailed study.
hOIJ)ItaJlzation plan covering
Council appt:oved the report
sicknen and injurie• not of Mlddlepoft Mayor Jobn
ruultlqlrOm the employment Zlrile for the month of July
of the Individual which would showing receipts of f!,:IIIU5
be covered by Workmen's which Included f2,42UI in
CompeilllltiOII Insurance. He ~ llld feet llld •11• In

Mid&lt;!jeport; Hope Peck,
Albany; J. W. Brown, Rutland;
Florence Myers, Reedsville;
Charles
Butcher,
Pomeroy;Betty Gaul, Chester;
Mildred Meadows, Pomeroy;
Bernice .L. Swan, .Pomeroy;
Eds Russell, Middleport; Dale
Barr, Reedsville; Bernice
Winn, Middleport; Marilyn
Meir, Middleport; Charles
Bennett, Middleport; Donna
Davidson, Rutland; Oris
Smith, Long Bottom; Oma

- Two grades could be

company this type of move .

BEVERLY Hn.LS, CAIJF. -OSCAR Levant, the plano
genius with the sharp tongue who ridiculed hla own tortured
payclle, died in his sleep Monday at the age of 65. Leva'nt was
known DB one of the foremost interpreters of the work,s of another
genius.and his close friend, composer George Gershwin, and for
the scalding wit he dlaplayed on his Los Angeles discussion •
Interview ·Insult television show. Levant himself once sugges~d
the show be called "What's Malign?"
''There is a thin line between genius and Insanity," he once
aald. "I have erased thst line." He balled his own sponsors and
joked aboqt his own mental e«tdition. He once told hls audience
The Middleport Fire
that "I've been in four hofiP(tals in the past six years. I have had
insulin shock therapy, electroshock therapy and psychotherapy. Department answered 14 calls,
One of these days I'm going to do this show in a white tie and . three for fires and 11 for first
aid, during the month of July
straitjacket."
·
according to the repori of Fire
BERLIN -AN EAST GERMAN JEI'LINER exploded and Chief Bob E. Byer presented to
crashed shortly after takeoff on a flight to a Bulgarian resort Middleport Council Monday
Monday, killing an 156 persons aboard in the worst single air- night.
Two of the fire calls were in
craft accident in aviation history.
town,
one at a residence and
"We can give no details untO the investigation 18 completed,"
one, a car on fire, and the third
an East German offlclal18ld, Al1148 passengers and eight crew
was a false alarm to Cheshire
members on the Sovlet.IJullt Dyushin IL62 jet of the govenunent • Towmhip. or the emergency
operated lnterfiug airline were k!Ued, the East perman news calls five were in !oWl) and six
1ervlce ADN said.
were out of town. Two calls
were for accidents involving
SAN flUNCISCO- U. S. ATI'ORNEY General Rlcllard G. motor vehicles and nine calls
Kleindienst promlse8 sweeping arresllt should unruly crowds at involved Illnesses or Injuries.
the Republican National Convention ilse the tactics employed in
All vehicles were driven 267.5
Washington's 1971 May Day demonstration.
miles in answering the 14 calls.
Speaking at a news COilference MOilday during the American There were 15.5 man hours
Bar Association's 9lst annual cOilvention, Kleindienst quickly involved In the fire calls with
added that such protestS were not expected at the Miami Beach an average of nine men on each
gathering.
of those calls.

I
,,. '

plemented in tHe Portland
facility for this school year,

no fundamental change in
philosophy or instructional
pract ice .

elementary building In the

the

organizational pattern im·

While this is not the most

desirable organization ,

cernlng ele mentary school
enrollments In the Scutllern
Local School District, that
several general statements
may be made :
Ctaso otze I~ the elementary an essential provision In a

L

the school district.
Regardless
ot

merchant pollee collections.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
read a letter from a Cincinnati
firm which deals in the
issuance of revenue bonds. The
Jetter asked that the vlllage
contact the finn If It plam. to
malte an extension or irn·
,provemen!S to Ita waterworlis.
The letter was referred to the
bosrd of public affa~.
Mayor Zerkle recooirilended
installation of a new street
light between Pearl and Custer
St. and council voted
(Continued on Page 6)

It may be the semo~ Citizens
tent, but a progr~ With plenty
of youth appeal Mil be offe~ed
each evening at the Me~gs
, County Fair.
At9and IOo'clockeachnight
at the senior citizens' tent
located near the county dog
p~d at the Rock Spnngs
Fairgrounds, Jay Gr~gory and
DaveStukey, Otterbem CoUege·
students, will present popular
• and religious songs to their
guitar accompaniment.
Young people wm be invited
to join in the singing during the
program which is under the
sponsorship of the Reach.Out
Committee of the Meigs
Ministry. Annie Ohlinger and

Conme Radford are am~ng the
local young people heading the
program.

Young people will be asked to
complete questionnaires
during their visils on matters
such as what they like and
dislike about their respective
churches and what should be
done in the way of a youth
program in the county. A
numbered stub will be
removed from each qustionnaire completed, and a
drawing held on Saturday with
the person holding the number
drawn to receive a $10 cash
prize donated by Vernon
Weber.

Racine; Herbert White,
Racine; Leonard Greer,
Pomeroy; Norma Gall Wilcox,
Middleport; Wllbur Dalley,
Albany; Ora Hill, Racine;
Kenneth Riggs Reedsville ·
Isabel Slmps~n, Racine;
Vivian Humphreys, Reeds·
vllle;
Charles
Legar,
Pomeroy; Daile Pigott, Long
Bottom; Wllllam Winebrenner,
Syracuse; Denver Hysell,
Pomeroy; Vera Holcomb,
Albany; David Yost, Great
River, and Roy H. Poole,
Pomeroy.
Names drawn for the grand
jury were, John W. Mulford,
Cheshire; Pearl Canaday,
(Continued on page 10)

Board is 3-2 for Hair
Meigs Local Board of
Education voted 3 to 2 Monday
night to adopted a revised
dress code for · studentS of
MeiS~t Local Schools.
Casting no votes on Its
passage were Frank W. Porter,
board president, and Joe
Sayre.
· Porter went on record that he
was opposed to the portion of

Women Nominated
To High Honors
Ruby Vaughan and Jeanette
Thomas, both of Middleport,
have been selected "Outstanding Young Women of
America" for 1972, the Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority announced
today.' .
The two were nominated by
the organisation earlier tht.
year on the basis of their
achievement..
Now in itS eighth year, the
Outalanding Young Women of
American Program recognized
young women between the a~es
of 21 and 35 for their corr
tributionil to the betterment of
their communities, professiom
and country.

R ules A
The Meigs county Regional
Planning Commlsai!Kl meeting
Monday night voted to accept
the sulHIIvlslon regulations ·as
(repared for Meigs County by
Surveys Unllrnlted, Inc., of
Cable, Ohio, the official
planning finn of the county.
The regulations govern such
matters in sub-dlvlslolll offive
acres or more as sewage,
utilities, streets, sidewalks,
setbacks and open spaces.
Monday night marked the
"official hearing" on the
subdivision reaulatlons as
(repared by the company.
The regulations as ap[ll'oved
will not be sulmltted to the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners which allo will
have to have a hearing on the
matter before the rules can
become official. Two of the

The 109th annual Meigs
County Fair opened for Its first
full dsy of activity this mor·
ning at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Judging ·of the domestic arta
department, ·inclutlbig .palntlnp, got under way at 10 a.m.
with judaing to be on the uptake Wednesday when aevetal
departrnenllt wiU be graded.
The flrat flower show - two

'r

.

commissioners, Robert Clark
and Warden Ours, were at
Monday n'ight's planning
commisalon session.
Presenting the regulations
which have been drawn up over
the past months foUowing IntenB!ve study was Pat Meeker
of Surveys Unllrnlted. Thereon Johnson, chairman of the
commissioner's executive
committee presided over the
meeting. '
others attending were Bob
Walters and Larry Ridenour,
Ohio Power Co . representatives;·C. E. Blakeslee, UndJ
Roush, E. F. Robinson, David
Parry, Carl BarnhiU, Carl.
Qualls, Virgil Teaford, Ber·
nard Fultz, Edison Baker,
Pomeroy Mayor William
Baronlck.

The Meigs County Junior
Fair Demonstrations Com·
mlttee has 48 demonstrationa
and illustrated talks scheduled
for three dsys during the fair.

Award
ribbon•
and
premiums will be given on
grade basis wltll a champion
and reserve champion rosette,
and a best of the dar trophy
each day . Trophies are
prqvided by the Meigs county
Fair federallon board.
A "representative from ·the
board has been a.ked to
present the trophies according
to the declalon of the judges at
the conclusion of .the demon· ,
stration eacll dsy.
Notices have been sent to
each participant notlfylna
them of their lime to participate In the conteat. Thts' will
be compile!~ with as much u
poalble, u no participant
apecl!les tht length Or 11m1
needed for their demon-.

the dress code allowing any
Member Don Mullen, who
length of hair for male voted for the issue, admitted
students. Porter slated he \liat he did not "care for long
favored relaxation of the code, hair," but he felt It was not the
but not hair at any length.
respomlblllty of the board to Tractor Weigh-in
Sayre also was against the dictate to parents DB to what
portion ·of the code allowing their children wore or their Time is 8 p.m.
any length of hair for male mode of dress. Carron Pierce
Weigh-in for the Garden
student. because In his oponion agreed.
Tractor Pulling Contest will be
it posed a problem in safety
YlrgU King also was against at ap.m., Wedneaday, Aug. 16,
and cle&amp;nllness.
(Continued on Page 10)
at the Landmark scales in
Pomeroy. ,
Ed Cr011, chairman of the
contest, said the event will get
underway at ep.m. In front of
!he grandstand following
complete shows to be held - and the presentation of Youth Night acUvltles. •
will ,be underway· at I p.m. achievement awards. The
Cia- are provided for
Wednesday when Judging wlll parade will move at 7 p.m. thoie In two dlvillona, Ul1der 18
'take place. There are over 200 following,·a 6 p.m. dog show. years ofaae llld over 18. Eptry stratton.
entries In the show which is The Ohio Boys Band will be on fee is for each c:1ua entered.
If anyone 1!ilhea to enter tbt
headed by Mrs. Margarel Ella hand from 4 to 6 p.m. Wed·
e«tlelt, aet in toueb w1111
Lewla. Junior Fair night will nesday.
IOIIIIbody (Kl the COIIIIIIiltle
MAJUUAGE LI:INIIE
All exhibits must be in place
Jam1i Vlncllnt Broderick, be!on 1!0!!11 Wednelldly, Alii·
take over the grandatinil
Wedne.day evening when a by 6 this .evening. The . 20,Routei,Pcimei'O)t,BIIITtm 16. Judgee a Mrs. l'lltl1
number of events related to the evening's grandstand event Is Corp., llld Rebecca Jo Sleele, Clllpmln, Mrs. Jolin Mc:Graw,
young people wll) be pre~ented the annual pony pu!Ung C!Kltest 11, ·Route I, Pomeroy, Mrs. C. E. BJaW!et, Mn.
wallrta.
·
including the annual parade starting at 7:30p.m.
lflrold Labli, and .nm ......

aJr m ts
·

cce~nte

d

48 Talks Planned

F • • I F•
.

The women included in the
1972 edition are now in competition for further state and
national awards. This faU,,50 of
them.- one from each state will be named as their state's
. outa~l!l,ng ~0!!1111 .woman ol
the • • ~ II» 10 lille
winners, the national 10 outstanding young women of
America for 1972 will be
selected.
Mr!. Thomas is a teacher in
the Melg9 County Community
School. Mrs. Vaughan is
manager of the Middleport
Community
Park
and
president of the Meigs County
Council of the PTA.

Ir.s t Full Day

'1

)

..

�•

~-The

Da1l) Sfnlonel.1&gt;!klcUeport-Pomeruy, 0 , Aut!IISII~.l972

EDITORIAl.

"We've Got to Dress Her Up a Bit Before
I Take Herl on the Road~"
·

Vice-Presidency?
Sure It's Useful

\

th~

mventlon of man cont11vPd 01 his

•

Restraint Gives·
'

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By Paul Crabtree

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If you're reaching for the TV dial ~ fond Cable Ch 11, WOIJS.
"TV In Athens, don 'I wasthour lime It's off the air for a couple,of
months So Is WOUB-FM, which we've been carrying as,.the
audioportlonofourCh 51ocalnewscoverage.
•
We hate to see the staUon go black, because It was the only
one available that emph,asized Southeastern Ohio ne~ In TV •
plus top stories from this part of West Vtrgwa - plus good PBS
programming
~
·
But the cutoff was necessary In the name of progress.
A new tower Is being erl!(!ted at the site of the old tower, In
order to provide mocrowave relays to two new public televllnon
outlets In Portsmouth and Lancaster, plus (eventual) relays to
medical cen~ like Holzer.
The WOUB-TV -FM signals sllould be back on In the latter
part of September. Meanwhile, mo~of the programs can be seen
on WMUL-TV, Ch 9
\
j

-

....

- " ,f,+-* '__ • •

- ..

Voice along Br'Way

Television Log

!

rr ~

BRUCE BIOSSAT

s•
•z

It

·

Generation Rap

ATLANTA (UPl)-11 wasn't
the m061 proddetive game
Jolmny Bench ever had with
his b1g bat, but It could have
~en
'
Bench, playmg r~ght ' f1eld
onstead of catching, dro've In
love fWlS Monday rught as
Cincmnati crushed the AtlaQta
Braves •12-2.
I
Later Bench was asked if this
was his top RBI noght In the
majors
"No, I had seven agalJlsl St
Louos two years ago. Three

'

I

I'm generally Wlhappy about all this, On two counts, and you ,
Openong lead-+ K
sllould be, too
WMUL-TV does no programmmg at all on weekends,
Rv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby whereas WOUB-TV had about three hours of shows on Sunday
'
The fact that you have evening.
Reason Nwnber Two 1s that we were promised general
made a hmot bid does not
mean that you won't fln\1 an- weekend-evening network telecastlag from the Public Broadother call of partner JUmps castlag System. It ne~r showed up, and we never learn~:() why
to game, provoded that his
Of course, there was the lastoiJllnute budget veto of public
jump to game 1s made on
lroadcutlng
money at the White House, but, that shouldn' have
some new suot
affected the PBS plans lor the current summer.
North's one no·trump re·
AI any rate, WMUL-TV IS provullng "Sesame Streel" and
sponse IS correct He only
has eoghl hogh-card points the usual fare on the Interim while WOUB-TV Ia black
and definitely should not re+++
spond two hearts Had South
Dick Cavett fans In the area may lynch me for this, but I
JUmped to three no·trump or lhlni the "compromlBe" regarding his sllow worked out Iaiii
four spades North would
have passed quo c k Iy but week by ABC may he very promising - or It may be one of the
South JUmped to four hearts world's great nops.
and North's hand suddenly
, The mid-path chart laid out by the network will have Cavett
became tremendous
In his regular ~~pot (11 ·30 p.m., WTVN-TV) one week a month
He dec1ded to use Black· Another week will be filled by Jack Paar, former ''Tonight" holll
wood on !he way to a slam and a strong personality (and a very different one) In his oliO
and when South JUmped to right. The other two weeks each month, ABC says It will elBY JACK O'BRIAN
Coast artist John spent a cozy weekend at sox clubs, North went onto a
perunent with revues, variety shows, and Innovating new
Magda's Southampton, L I , manse only a fort- real huddle
EX-MAYOR IS REDUCED
rught before Rememher when good homes
Theoretically, the six-club program 1deu. The format starta In December.
There II very little mthe way of Innovation at ABC or any
TO CERFOOM
•- H' ood call showed no aces and a
cost
less
than
$17,000'
Las
Vegas
"'
w
valuable
void
su1t
but
clearly
other
network these days, and even If the network'&amp; big Idea lays
NEW YORK (KFS) _The ex-Mayor Bob
tycoon Del Coleman rented "21" partner SouUrwould not have jumped a big fat egg,lt will be Interesting to see the pfOII'ammlng Ideas
Wagner and the merroest w1dow Phyllos (Mrs
Sheldon Tannen's Southampton mansion at that to s1x With no aces After all,
Bennett) Cerf are senous
The new head· proce JUSt for the summer, furnished, except North had limited his h1gh being developed, along with reduced portions of Cavett and some
card holding when ~e re· spicy !Jll'lnldlng of Jack Paar.
master at Caroline's former convent school IS Del supphe;; his own blondes
sponded one no-trump
+++
an ex.Jesu11 priest now wed to an ex-11un
Actress Jean Norman was plagu ed bY an
What could the bid mean'
ON
THE
TV
DIAL·
Not
much except reruns, although the
GOP's John Mitchell peddled h1s lavosh obscene phone caner for months Cops nabbed Could South hold a club su1t?
John
Byner
Comedy
Hour
may
offer a laugh or two, and WSAZWatergate c~H&gt;p in Wasllqton to the Dems' him, and he demanded a dune to make a phone Impossible 1 Then what did
Sen Russell !Jlng for a reputed,$200,000 Tom call - and made 11 to Jean '
Marvelous he hold' North I In a II y TV's uaually-etlmulatlng "Conunent" llhow at 10 30 may be
Jones hired Peter Lawford's H'wood manse for Emery Deutsch of early radio days IS fldcUing worked ot out and b1d the thought.provoklng Byner shows up at 7:30, WCHS-TV .
heart grand slam
two months, $10,000 .. The lavish co-op apart- romantically at Moami Beach's Palm Bay Club Just for the fun of 11, take
menthouse on Park Ave at71st St , once falsely
a look at the West hand He
. Groucho marrymg his "secretary"'
annoWJced to he Ari 's and Jackie's town house
Leo Durocher's busy denymg he'll JOin the had made a trap pass over
I
sote,IS!mlshed, the most expensiVe flats mtown Yankees of maybe Ralph Houk becomes Red the one spade opemng, a
_ pr~ces to more than half a million woth Sox mgr next year Not the way the sozzlmg sur prosed pass over the four
heart rebid and a r e a II y
mamtenance ahnost $3,000 a month - and 1t's
Yanksfmally are catchmg fore·· Ed Sullivan's brolllant pass over th~ final
sold only three of 28 apartments · · Arlene longplay early TV producer, Marlo lewis, iiJ a contract of seven hearts He
FranCis' radio show turned down a H'wood second lime grandpop voa daughter Mrs. Bill paod off to the grand slam,
authornwho swiahed ~ get,on her show,lj!,plug , PP.J!il!ll~ ·,~. Veteran adman Milton Blow's very bu~ t&gt;e sa~ed the ~XIf.~ ~?lnJs
Pro~ams for 'Toijiglit~~ '
his new ~k, tiU~ tl#: surr.eal, "'Ib.e.. ~d Is Ill '"' .,Rolier£, Mitchum soloed at I!fie"'new a" dbU!tli! ow,l!ul&lt;f 'loiN~ 1:\isl
1
'
r, ,
I'U'r\'al!dance Spenrfiilll rurhollrWecJdllg 'wtnel Lhun ' · ' "
' Jn"
• My Shepherd and He Knows l'm Gay." " '
n • '-'',..
and
Tomorrow
INEWSrAP!O ENTIOrOISI ASSN I
Capt Carl Parlatore of Plamview, N Y., os labels Pickpocketing'S on the rose here again
a hero1&gt;ilot, a Phantom commander m V1etnam
N 'i i and LA aren't as smlli~'ts''the erstfor a second tour (with m combat IDISSions)
while sllcks an Albuquerque adult movie
and he reports Jane Fonda's disgraceful pro- house has a topless popcorn gal Stella Stevens The bodding hu been
TIJESDAY
Hanoo speeches had his feCJw flYil\IYS reacting boasts she's "one of the three greatest actresses Weot North
East
6
00
News
3,
4,
8,
10,
15.
CBS News 8. 10. I Dream of Jeann ie
tins way · a third deCided she was an odoot and m !Urns today The other two are Katharme ••
Dble
P...
13,
Truth
or
Conseq.
6.
Halhayoga 33
2•
PU9
ognored her, a third laughed at her, and the mt Helpburn and lngrod Bergman " . She's one of Pass
6
30News3,
A,
6,
8,
10,
15,
Grand Masters Chess 3J
Pass
p..,
7' oo- News 6, 10 , Whafs My Line 6, Elec Co 20, Green Acres
"got mad as hell and even more determmed to the most modest, too
Pap Staples of The You, South hold
3. Farmer's Daughter 13 , Andy Griffith 15, Dick Van Dyke •· •
carry out their moss1ons" Some sage asked Staple Smgets os heong verbally belted by some .8743
B~ BRUCE BIOSSAT
Insight 33
+AKIU.7U
how come she didn't demand the Hano1 military blacks who want hos work to be more
7
30
- Masterpiece Thealre 33, Ponderosa 3, 4. IS. Mod Squed
What do you do now'
WASHINGTON •NEAl
6, t3, Masterpiece Theatre 33, Explo '72 6, 8. 15, John Byner
stop bombing
"relevant." Pop shrugs his "message" os A-Bid ll•e diamonds You
Comedy Hour 10
Sen. George McGovern has been so busy getting nom on·
Jane's the gal whose "deep" knowledge "peace, freedom and love I can only be ha•e a) ready bid your full 8 30 - Hawa11Five08, 10, NBCAttlonPiayhouseJ,o, Evening
ated and solvtng hos voce pres1dentoal problems that he
' 1r e n 11 h, but you still must
al Pops 33. Movie "War and ~"~!ace" 6, IJ
shallowed on the Dick Cavell Show when she myself"
has had no time to 1ron out a puzzlmg wronkle on hos de
11how your diamond ton trol.
9
30
- James Garner 3, o, Cannon 8, 10, Handfuls of Ashes 33
demanded
we
get
out
of
Voetnam
because
she
Gotham scene· Johnny Welssmuller and
fense program a proposal to halt ongoong changes on
tO
00~reus Welby 4, 6. 13, Firing LlneJ3
'
TODAY'S QUESTION
claimed the Americans In our revolution "didn't Flip Wilson shaking hands on forst meetq at
our mlsslle·bearong submanne fleet
11 OO-News3.4. 6.8, 10.13, 15.
',
Don't see this much any
Your parlner goes to six 11 30- Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4 15, Movie "Westward
get any outs1de help" whoch must've had the Hoteal PIBza
On Jan 17, McGovern's top aodes laod oot on a back·
spades What do you do now"
the Women" a, Movie " Nightmare Alley" 10. Movie " April
ground sessiOn the senator's · alternative national defense
Lafayette rolling over m his grave and more The Grenadier restaurant bakes ots own
Love" 13
postu1 e" calhng for a cut of some $32 bolllon on U S de·
Kosciusko laughing mto his heavenly kilbaSSJ .
tread Try the ltaloan nui-Bprlnkled bread at
1
ooYour Healtl1 •
fense outlays by hscal 1975
1 30 - News, Weather o, Local News 13
Another mmonty heard from Some American Patsy's on w ~th St , heeyooteful . No-Cal's
Among the specoflc recommendations was one to stop
Japanese demanded the "J A.P " dress form plant at College Pomt, L I , across from
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16
converting our moss1le submarones to longer range weal&gt;'
drop
1ts
name
as
a
conscious
raCist
slur.
It
LaGuardoa
Airport
not
only
gives
Its
workers
6
00
Sunrise
Stmlnar
•· Sacred fieri 10
onry We have 41 such vessels Before maJor conversion
6
15Farmtlme
10;
Fum
Report 13
or1gmated
With
a
Japanese
designer
m
PariS
free parkmg space - but they also can park
began, each bore 16 advanced A·3 Polaros moss1Ies
6 25 - Paul fiarvey 13
Junmy Weston's steaks and jazz hauled m theor boats alongside (Where are the customer's If the whole sky were filled 6 30 - Columbvs Today o, Bible Answers 8; Urban League 13
Well under way os a funded program to convert 31 of
The
Jets' Weeb Ewbank and his Slffiilarly yachts')
the 41 submarmes to carroers of a longer range Poseidon
Actor·wll Harold Gary whispers w1th full moons, they would 6 55 - Rocky &amp; Bullw1nkle 13
Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News I, 10; News6.
m•ss1le holdmg not JUSt one warhead but 10 ondependentstrange-11amed assistant Wunp Hewgle ..
that JohMY Carson's suddenly ex-wife Joanne give about one-fifth of the 77 0030SIHpy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6 , Underdog 13
ly·largetable warheads
Magda Gabor's marriage to Tibor Halta1 "Got a divorce setUement of a mill1on dollars llght which 1s given by the 8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New ZOO Revue 6, 13, Sesame St 33
sun
In McGovern's 56·page defense presenlahon, It was
I 30- Jack LaLanne 13, TtMISSte Tuxedo 6
starUed her very recent ~au, John MorriS, W and a parachute "
argued that our m•ss•le·heanng fleet os our choef nuclear
9 oo - Paul Dixon o, Phil Donahue 15, Lucl's Toyshop 10.
Peyton Plate 13, Romper Room 8, Mr. Rogers 33; What
deterrent agamsl the Sovoet Umon or any other con
EveryWomanWantsto
Know3 ; Timmy&amp; Lassle6 r
celvable aggressor Traversong molloons of miles of ocean
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Eleclrlc Co 33 , Mike Oougla~6, One
undetected these vessels can mount a second·stnke nu
Life to Live 13; My Three Sons I
clear response wothon monutes after an enemy forst strtke
tO 00- Dinah Shore 3, 15. Lucille Ball 10. Dick Van Dyke 13;
*-::~ ~w· ·· · ~·"®.:stL&lt;«- ··:!!·&gt;....:S..., ..$. w
t· · · ·- ~
hegms
fiathayogo 33.
salutation would he more conalstent with the body' Examplell : 10 30Concentration 3, IS, Lucille Ball10, D Amateur's Guide
Nevertheless, McGovern proposed on mod January to
"Precious, Beloved, Cherished, Worthleas, Unimportant,
to Lov•tO, Spill Second 13; Beverly Hillbillies 8, MY, Three
stop converting Polans submannes to the more advanced
Sons 10, ln.Schoollnstructlon 33 , love, American Sty e6
Despised, Peaceful, Boring, Skungy, Freakish, Sneaky, etc , etc.
Poseidon
11
00- Family Affolr a, 10; Love American Slyle 13 , Sale of
Soandso . or Hey You, Hi Guy (Gal), You Big Dummy, Brother
Century 3, 15, Citmmunlque 6
H1s document says nothong about the alleged advantage
By Helen and Sue Bottel
.,
Rat ..
11 30 - Hollywood Square• 4, 15, Love of Life 8, tO, Bewitched 6.
of havmg longer range weapons The greater range, of
13; Sesame St 20
course, permlls the vessels to move through still woder
"Agaon, assuming Helen and Sue are correet, we mu.st not
WARNING TO BEARS - OR WOLVES?
12
00
- Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
undersea areas farther from the presumed enemy
stop With merely deleting 'Dear .• We musl omit 01' alter the fifth
News 13, Contacl 8, News 10
Helen
and
Sue:
targets
Split Second 6, Search for Tomorrow 8. 10. Elec Co 33
I'm sure you've seen those leather thingoes some people have part (complunentary close) of the letter, ualng Instead of 'Yours 12 30News3
What he does argue agaonst os the need to equ1p the
truly,'
'Sincerely
.
cordiaUy
"'
rupectfully
yours,
etc.,
such
tied aroWJd the1r wriSts woth koots In them l asked my Slslet
1 00 - News, Wealher. Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Divorce
submarones woth multi-warhead weapons His poont Js
Court 8, Green Acres 10. Walth Your Child 15; French Chef
wbat they are for and she said, "To keep bears away " Well, 1 closongs as
that these are designed to penetrate soph1sllcated Sovoet
33
"Sinfully
Yours,
Bug
Off
Bu~,IM-!??Io!,
Quite
Hatefully,
antiballistic m•ssole defenses. but thai Russoa has not
thought It was cute, so I'm wearmg one.
I 20 - Lucille Rivers 3
really developed these
A guy r hang around with acted like there was somethmg Deviously, DoUbtfully, ImpervlOUJly Yours, ~~ Striving for
I 30- Three on a MatchJ, 4, IS , Lef&amp; Make A Deal6, 13; As the
World Turns 8, 10, Sewln9 Skills 33.
The puzzle comes not from thos proposition, however
dirty about them and sa1d a knotted leather bracelet Is a "done. Med•ocr•ly, You're a Great Human Being, etc
2
oo
- Days of Ovr Llves3. 4. 1S; Newlywed Game 13, VIrginia
argoable some defense spec1ahsts may regard ot, but
"I
protest
this
would
add
a
new
dimenalon
to
correllpolllime thing," whatever that means.
Graham6,
Love Splendored Thlrl!)l, 10; Brldge33
from 1&gt;1cGovern's specofoc suggestion on January that
dence, and the world Is not ready for IIICh hoolllty. Therefore,
2:30Dating
Gamo tl, Guiding Lights, 10. Handfuls of Ashes
Do
the
knots
mean
you're
a
foxy
chick
or
something,
or''''
Poseodon conversiOns be stopped at seven out of the
33,
Baseball
3, 4., Doctors 15
until
further
notice
thil
office
will
conUnue
with
'Dear
-'
and
-KEEPING BEARS AWAY
proposed 31
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 1S, General Hospital 6, t3, Secret
'Sincerely yours,' let the modernJ fall where they may 1 Storm 8, 10, Masforpleco Theatre 33.
Forst off, McGovern's aodes conceded on Jan 17 that
Respectfully Atlackmg Helen's and Sue's Break With 'l'ndillon
3 30 a one Life to Live 6. Edge of Night I, 10, Jeff's Collie 13,
KB.A.
seven was an unreahstoc fogure, that more converted ves·
Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15.
sels than that number would be on the water before he
Sorry,I pass I always thought thos kind of wrosUet was just a - YOUR BOSS" - Readlngly an4 Enjoylngly Yours. 4
00
- Mr Cartoon 31 Somerset 4, 15; Fllntstones 13; Sesame
could take of11ce as presodent It was not clear why the
RUTHANN
leather thing with knots In 1t.
St. 33,1 fiutkleberry Hound 6, Batman 8, Movie "Hell Below
f1gure .even was chosen
Zero' 10
1
Help, people, does 11 really keep bears away' - SUE
Soon afterward, J• chl!(!ked and found there were al·
•
·
25
Sports
Club
6
Hwnorous
RuthaM
and
Her
Boss:
+++
4 JO - ~rv Griffin 4, I Love Lur.y 6; Death Valley Days 8.
ready more than seven Pose1don.equ1pped submarines In
Approcoatingly yours - HELEN AND SUE
Keeping
Bears
Away
Password 13, Andy Grlflltl1 15; GrHn Acres 3.
the water I have JUSt checked agaon, and the figure
5 00- Wagon Train 3, Maverick 13, Mr Rogers 33, Dick Van
+++
'
. . Or does 11 attract wolves' Different areas have different
today os 12 converted, woth eight more on the ways AI
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6
least two of these e1ghr will be on the water before the
symb&lt;Jis. If knotted leather thongs are some kind of scqre- Dear Hap
5 JO- Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33
During the past few weeb I have been having dreamllbout
next presidential maugurallon
6 00 - Trutll or Conseq. 6. News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS; I Dream of
keepq chart m your town, you'd better lind out WHAT kind
Jennie 13; Sasamo St 20; Hathayoga 33
i
people dying on my swlmml~g pool, which lncldent.uy does not
So the hard prospect for next Jan 20 Is at least 14
before you lie any more knots - HELEN
6
JO-News3,4,6,1,10,13,15,
Brld9f33
Poseidon vessels m the water and on statiOn, a total
exist. Last night I dreamed my former math teacher cracked his
+++
7 00- Dick Van Dykt 4; News6, 10; What's My Line18, Elec.
exscUy double the fi~ure McGovern's "alternatove na·
skull In a fall onto my pool. Today I hear he had a Jlerious heart
Co 20; Wild, Wild Wnt 13, Mllnlones of Progrns 33, Movie
Helen and Sue
Ilona! defense posture ' sets as a top limit
"That
Funny Fooling" 3, ~y1r'1 R~t 15 1 , •
attack.
The
mght
before
It
wu
my
EtcUah
teacher
who
fell
lDio
After reading your column on " 'Dear' Not Here With
Furthermore, the remaomng SIX on the ways woU he m
7
JO
To
Tell The Truth 6, Hollywood uares 3. Pfagnet I;
Moderns," (as a salutation for letters), I mformed my boas that the pool, but he only got shook up. He walll'l ataummer IChool
TheJud~~t10, EplsodeActlon33, Latsle 5; Doctors on C.IIO.
fairly advanced stages of conversoon by early 1973, and
8.00- Adam 12 o, A Pllbllt Affair 33; Green Acres l1,1'l!e~uper
"Dear Soandso" was no longer "on" according to Sue and her yesterday and today - home sick. Not serloua though. Am I a
still more vessels may he slarted on the process
6, 13, Expldr 72 8, David Steinberg 10, I
heser?
-TilE
DREAM:ER-HEXER
.
readera.
In theory, submarmes In this state could be kept from
I 30- Corntr Bar6. 13; Columbo3, 4, 15, Movie "Ma~ of Aran"
ful~ convers•on But submarmes on the ways represent
Here Is his reply.
33
'
1
Dear
"Hexter"
9
00Medlc:al
Center
8,
10.
~rty
Feldman
Comedy
~khlne
about a rtfth of the mlsslle·heanng fleet To leave them
''Today my world came craahq down aa Helen and Sue
13
1
In mldconverslon would subtract seriously from our nu·
I
thlnkyou'rea
houer.Nice
try
HELEN
agreed 'Dear' 1sout, baaed on a possible conflict With the body of
9 JO- ABC News Inquiry 6, 13.
clear deterrent To try to reconvert them to Polaris
+++
10
00-Mannlxa. 10; Soul33; NlghtGelltry 3, 4.
the
letter,
I
e.
telling
someone
to
wrap
it
!n
barbed
wore,
drop
weapons Is deemed Impractical.
Dear
Dreamer
11
00News3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
~·
dead, etc., would not he consostent wllh the above;nenUoned
Probably their conversion would have to be fm1shed
11
.
JOJohnny
Carson
3,
4,
15,
Dick
c.
..
tt
6;
Mol.~
~
der
Mebbe you hate your teachers and you'redytna fgr a pool,ao
salutation.
That would g1ve os at least 20 of a scheduled 31 Poseidon
Once Removed" 1: Movie "The lntormen" 10; Movl "Top
Stcret Affair" 13.
"Presupposing that the logic here Is corroct, would It not ~ yOU let them do the dyq for YQU • Or 10111ething ... Dr. Freud,
velll811, roughly triple the total. of seven McGovern fixed
100-Nnt4
where
are
you?
SUE
In January as the upper lim1!
more 'logical' to alter the prefll than debate ot, so that the
I: JO -- Nlwl 13.

McGovern Defense
Plan Way, Way Off

.

j

,,

.,.

Bench In TQp Form, Reds Romp

TUbe·\T
.\

Slctm lnlo

conceoved "
Theodore Roosewlt saod he \\ould a goeat dt•alo,oth&lt;'l
' he aontlung else. sa\ poofessor of lustoo v
, Now Sen Robert Taft Jo . R·Ohoo. s u~gesls we atmhsh
; It entn·ely · It· of course os lhe \'Ice poeSidt•nc\ wlut·h
John Nance Gaoneo probabl~ desc11bed '"'"' pungt•nlh
·as ·not worlh a pitcher of warm spot ·
, Manr Amel'lcans would ago ee woth Tall Voce
,denhal candodatcs aoe geneo all\ selected to balanc&lt;' "
,llcket
All lou frequently the selectoon ol a voce·pl eso
; dentoal candodale os determmed by who woll bung llw
ticket stoength oatheo than who can bung stoenglh tu the
country '
No doubt there weoe moments durmg lhe Eaglelon
crosos when Democratic po esodentoal eandodate Geoo ge
McGovern woshed that Amerocans on the11 wosdom had
seen fit to do away woth the No 2 posotoon veaos ago
' Tht&gt; Amencan vice-prestdency IS one of th e mote cur1
; 'ous feat.ures of the system or government fashooned on
Pholadelphoa on 1787 Creatoon of the posollon was almost
. oan afterthoufht The voce·presodent was goven onl\ one
constitutions functiOn that of presodong ove1 the Senate
woth the roght to vote to break a lie
Yet despite the low esteem vooced by Adams. the vtce·
, presodency from the begmnong was Intended and expl!(!ted
to be flll&lt;&gt;d by capable men-m fact. by the man rece!Vong
the second hoghest number of electoral votes and th11s
presumably the SI!(!Ond most quahfoed man on the nallon
This was soon changed by the rose or pohtlcal pao ties
and by the 12th Amendment. whoch specohed sepal ale
ballots for presodent and voce·presodent
It was then that the practice began of · balancong the
•icket"- Northerner woth Southerneo Easleo ne1 wit~
Westerner. liberal With conservative etc
There Is strong doubt that the Foundong Fatheo s eveo
ontended the VICe-president to be anythong but onterom,
acting president m the event or the death oo removal of
the ell!(!ted presodent But John Tyler assuming the full
powers of the presodency upon the death of William Henrv
Harrison m 1841, set the precedent that has been followed
unquestioningly ever sonce
At one tome in 1ts history, due to deaths and o·et11 e
ments, the Unoted States was wothout a v1ce-po esldenl for
seven years. Not until 1967, woth the ratif•catoon of the
2$1h Amendment. dod the natoon see fot to provode for the
•mmedlate f1ihng of a voce·presldenllal vacancy
As recenUy as 1932, a voce·presldent could be portraved
In the musiCal, "Of Thee I Smg," as a comoc noneniol'
named Alexander Throttle bottom But after hotlmg Tho ot ·
tlebottom, the voce-presodency had nowhere to go but up
The last four admm•stratJons have witnessed a vasl
enlargement of the dulles of the voce presodent and a
correspondmg enlargement of hos poestoge
In addition to presldong over the Senate' the voce pre so
dent now serves, by statute law, as chaorman of the Na
Uonal Secur1ty, Space and Peace Corps councils and, b)
rl!(!ent custom, as the president's mternatoonal ambassa.
dor
Because, begmmng woth Eisenhower and Noxon the
vlce·pres•dent has been made an mformed and active
partner In the day.to-day runmng and decosoon·makmg of
the execuhve branch, we have almost come to look upon
h•m as presodenl·m-trammg, even though no man smce
Martin Van Buren has succeeded m helng elected doreclly
from the vlce·presldency to the presodency
Senator Taft has some good arguments, but most of
them are about 20 years too late Were we lo abolish the
vice.presidency now, we m1ght well doscover that we
would have to turn around and onvent something very Joke
11 1to
lls
, , . , " ,, , , , ,
\J take
I
l
'
~ placo..
;o:,
,

-

.' .

I

•

&lt;'

,.

&gt;

.

"

'

'

3- Tht Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., A\lgust 1$, 1972

John Adams call&lt;&gt;d ot the most on&lt;O~Illft ea nt ofht•t• 111.11
111!'\' el

, ...~ t

home runs," he sa1d
"But I missed a hangmg
slider or I would have had e1ght
tonight "
The lost opporturuty came on
the ninth inning with Cincmnali
roughing up Tom Kelley, the
third Atlanta pitcher. Bench
sWWJg hard and missed Kelley's second p1tch-the one h!
later said was the hangong
shder
"Then he made a good curve
ball and got me" for the third
strike, Bench saod.

\

The Reds dldn 't need any
more. They smacked 16 hits
th!lf 12 runs gave them a
tot I of 21 off AUanta pitching
II\ wo no.ghts. The Braves won
the first two games of the fourgame ser~es before the Reds
turned on the power
Bench hit a two-rWJ homer m
the f~rst inning, drove m
another run m the sixth woth a
Single, and two more m the
seventh with a double. That
gave him 26 home runs and 85
Rms for the season.

ant

lSked "What can you say about
a game like that? There just
osn't anything you can say "
"We're a htUe short of potchong. McLam was Sick
ton1ght, and he's got a personal
problem, and (Jun) Hardin
had a sore shoulder That's
why I had to leave Kelley m. I
explamed It to him "
Tom Kelley, potchong 10
rehef, gave up fiVe rpns m
three mrungs
Bench made Atlanta fans
groan, but before the game he

Pete Rose drove on three
runs w1th a smgle and a double
Dusty Baker hit a slxthmmllg home run for the Braves
to extend a personal hitting
streak to II games
SParky Anderson, the Reds'
manager, was beammg on the
VISitors clubhouse ''This os the
f1rst time on a long time we've
been hilling well," he saod
"We JUSt hadn't heen hitting
good before th1s "
In Atlanta's clubhouse,
manager Eddie Mathews

drew a lot of laughs when the
Braves players played theor
wove&amp;. Bench dod a parody of
the Braves' Susoe the Sweeper
by commg out on "hot pants"actually, athletic sh~rts­
sweepmg off the bases and then
giVIng umpore Jerry Quarry,
the boxer, a k1ss at home pia te
The Reds move on to Phtla·
delphia for a three-day seroes
w1th the Philhes startong torught

BASEBALL STANDIN~~
Natrona I League Sta'nd~ngs

Amencan League

By Umted Press lnternattonal

East

Nahonal League
East

P1tlsburgh
New York

Ch1cago
St LouiS

Mon Irea I
Phd a del phta

w I pel
68 40 630
57 49 538
58 52 527
52 55 486
49 sa ,\58
41 67 380
West
w I pet

Cmcmnatt

66 42

611

Houston
Los Angele s

62 49
57 50

559
533

Atlanta

w I pet 9.b
60 50 54S

Balf1more
Detro• I
New York

gb

10

59 51 536 I
511 51 532 1'1-.
54 53 505 .t'h
51 58 468 81fl
43 67 391 17
West
w I pet 9.b.
65 46 586

Boston

1l

Cleveland

15 1!~
18 1/ 2

Milwaukee

27

Oakland

gb

Ch1 cago
M innesota
Kansas C1ty
Calllorn1a

51J:;81!:1

51 61 455 17

57.4 l'l'l
528 6 1/2
481 11111
450 15

44 65 404 20
Monday's
Results
San D1ego
42 66 389 24
Kansas C1ty 3 New York 0
Monday's Results
Oakland 5 Balt1more 2
Cmc mnalt 12 Atlanta 2
IOnly games scheduled I
Houston
7
San
Fran
5
•
Today's Probable P•tchers
(Only games scheduled)
I All T1mes EDTI
Today•s Probable P1tchers
New York I Kek1ch 10 111 at
(All T1mes EDT I
Hous ton ( Dterker 1l 6) at Kansas C1ly !Hedlund 4 5), $ JO
Montreal !Stoneman 9 9) 8 05 pm
Boslon (McGiolhen 54) at
pm
Texas !Stan house 2 21 8 30
Allan Ia IN1ekro 10 101 al New pm
The Yankees fell Into third error. Bobby Floyd followed
By GREG GALW
York (McAndrew 8 Jl 8 05
Milwaukee (Parsons 9 10) at
glad I got the opporturuty to do place 1n the East, 1n games
th
I
Sch Ito Angelim got the next two
pm
UP! Sports Wrfler
what 1 dl~. I've never been
.,
wo a smg e movmg aa
batters and receoved cred1t for
Cmcmnatt {Stmpson 7-4 ) at Ch1cago I Bradley 12 9), 9 p m
beblnd the Omles, as Bruce third Floyd, himself, went to his forst maJor league save
The anger stored up ms1de of more happy m my life."
M•nnesota ICorbm 6 6) at
Philadelphia ITw•lchel l 2 J),
Delr01l (Coleman 12111,9 p m
Dal Canton and Norm Angelini second on the plav at third base
lltUe Bert CampaneCIS the psst
7
35
p
m
Johnny Bench hit hos 26th
WILMINGTON, OhiO (UP!)
California (May 5 81 at
The Other Games
combmed for a four-hitter for on Schaal
Pittsburgh I KISon 5 41 al Los
three weeks was unleashed by
homer of the year and drove m - Cmconnab Bengals Coach Angeles (Osteen 13 8), 11 p m Cleveland I Dunnmg 2 11. 7 30
In
the
only
other
American
the
Royals
Lou
Plnoella
Singled
on
the
Earl Weaver pnd the
51 LOUIS (Durham 0 51 al San pm
The Royals got all the runs llnul Royal run In the seventh fove rWJs to pace the Reds Paul Brown revoewed films of Diego
!Only games scheduled)
Baltimore Orooles Monday League game, Kansas City
(Caldwell S 51 10 30 p m
VICtory over the Braves Pete the weekend exhobobon won
shutoutNewYork,:l-0, while on they needed off loser Steve mmng
Wednesday's Games
Ch1cago
I
Hands
9
71
at
San
rught as the speedy shortstop
Rose
also
knocked
m
three
over
Detroot
and
dl!(!oded
'we
New
York at Kan Coty, n~ght
Cincinnati Klme, IU, on the third mnlng
Dal Canton, who got credit
Franctsco (A\anchal 4 13) 11
stole three bases and unnerved the NatiOnal League 12
Boston at Tell.as, ntght
fWIS
for
the
Reds
to
help
Jack
were
lucky
"
2
pm
- • and Paul Schaal reached safely on for hisslxthwm m 10 docis1ons,
Mtlwaukee at Chtcago
Jom Palmer onto a run- routed Atlanta,
Wednesday's Games
"We are not sahsloed at all
Hou
sl~n
trimmed
San
FranciS- shortstop Gene Mochael's left With one out m the mnth Billingham to his eoghth won of
Mlnnesola at Detroit, n1ght
Chtcago at San Franctsco
producong balk to lead the co, """·
the season Dusty Baker overlhewayDetrootmoved the Houston at Montrea l, n1ght
Call at Cleveland, n1ghl
Oakland Athletics to victory
Campanert.s sJ.ngled wtth one .:=·· =·~· '!'\&amp;.:.·.··· ·:··-=···=···· ·:·· -=·=·=-··· •••.. • ••· ·.·: ::... ·====·:(.&lt;·:·:·: ••••••• •:::-·-:=:=:~........ ..,.,..; ·-: • • connocted for a homer off ball agaonst us," Brown saod Atlanta at New York n1ghl
Oakland at Salttmore, ntght
Campanel'lll, who was m tine out m the fifth inmng, stole :;.
Bollongham m the sixth lnnmg
"You can't allow 334 yards Cine I at Phlla n1ght
for a startq herth on the second, continued to third on :;:
P1tts at Lo• Ang, n1ght
UlUlY S
The Astros fought from passong and 442total yards and St
LouiS al San D1ego night
American League All-Star catcher Andy Etchebarren's :·
behind Ill wope out a ~ San expect Ill beat many teams on
team In Atlanta on July 25 but throwlngerror,andwaswaved i~
• FranciSCo lead and heat the the National Football League
~nort
was passed up by Manager home when he caused loser "
I:'
C I I U
::: Goants The bog hots were a two- We won the game, but we were
Weaver for his own Bobby Palmer to cOilliJlll a balk when
fWl double by Roger Metzger
lucky "
Groch, ran wild on the he attempted to pick CPmpanefly MILTON RICHMAN
and a two-run songle by Cesar
The Ben gals, who meet
basepalhs Monday night on l'1ll off base
UPI Sports Editor
Cedeno
M1am1 at Riverfront Stadoum
Baltimore to lead the A's to a ~
Mike Epstein and Joe Rudi
THE BOWERY (UP!) -They're strictly neutral down here
Bobby Bonds homered for th1s weekend, heat the Lions on
2 victory
added the long ball power to They couldn't care less who wms, Bobby FISCher or Boris the Goants, hiS 20th.
theor SI!(!Ond exhobotoon game
His pride hurt by the anub by the Oakland attack by each Spassky
Saturday noght 28-20.
WASHINGTON (UPI )-"l'd whipped the Democrats
W•aver, CamPIIJlerls refused slammmg a horne fWl and
Most Bowery residents don't even know the two are playmg up
Brown sa1d the Loons • hke to !honk ot woll he thos easy Monday for the nmth straoght ,
to play m the ~.Star game
Rollie Fingers chipped on w1th there on Teykjavik.
' strong suo t was their ground on the fall presidential elec- year
m
the
annual 1
FROSH INVITED OUT
Instead, he waited for the first a lwo·M relief stint over the
Some do, though.
game,"
and
the
Ben
gals
had
tion,''
said
Rep
Robert
Mochel,
congressoonal
baseball
game
All Meigs Junior Hlgh
meeting beiWefll the Alher~can lmal4 2-31nrungs to pick up the
"Chess reminds me of baseball," sa1d one of them "Too dull.
trouble
"droppmg
the
ball
"
R-Ill
,
after
the
Repubhcans
Mochel allowed five hits m
School boys Interested In
league's two dlvillon leading won
See,they make XI moves m 3¥.. hours That would drive me outta football are asked to report
He said he would cot no one
the
five onnlng game that the
teams to show Weaver and the
Epstein belted his 19th my cottonp•ckln' mmd. !like contmoous action !like to go, go,
thos
week,
but
would
make
GOP
won, 7-2 Don Clausen, Rto the Meigs Junior High
Orioles JUSt how good he really homer of the season leading off go all the time "
some
deCISIOns
after
thos
Calil.,
had a two-run songle on
stadium in Middleport at
IS
the fourlh.mning and Rud1 hit
The derelict who made those remarks osn't re.olly gomg 6·30 p.m. Wednesday, John weekend's game Currently 57
the Repuhhcans' hve-run third '
"I wanted to show tonight his 16th In the fifth. Both came anywhere He can't He has no leftleg and no nghlfoot Frostbite
are on the roster
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Bloom
mnmg that pmned the defeat on
Arnott, freshman coach,
that I could play baseball,"
The
Bengals
conclude
theor
off Palmer, who suffered his took both That's what comes of sleepmg on Sidewalks too long m
won
the
featured
eoghth
race,
a
Rep Henry Gonzalez, D-Tex '
reports
said the fiery Latin, who also soon defeat against 15 v•cbfr
th
traomng camp here Sept 3
$1,100
pace,
at
Scooto
Downs
Vmegar Bend Mozell, R-N .C.,
to
l
su
eez~ng
wea
er
collected two hits and scored
the
former major league pitMonday
mght
and
returned
~gers was brilliant in relief ThiS particular derelict's name Is Frank- "l'd rat~r you don't
two runa. "I wanted to show
cher
who has been barred from
$16
60,
$7
and
$3
60
that! should have been playing of starter Ken Holtzman as he use my last name ~ause I have a brother and soster back m
The wmnmg lime of 2 04 3 the mound In these games, ,
on that game In Atlanta. I struck outfour and walked only South Dakota and I ve still got enough common decency left not
was
the hest ever for Bloom, drove m two runs on a Single ·
wanted to steal base I felt I one In raising his rl!(!ord to &amp;-:; to unpose on them "
who
trailed Wllil the stretch and a double
had something to prove tonoghl
The win boosted the A's lead
He's Bundled Up
and won by a nl!(!k over Flymg
The congressoonal game preto some people and I'm real In the AL West to 1¥.. games
The temperature was In the mld-M's when we talked, hot
ceded
an exhibition game '
Success
,
who
pa1d
$3
60
and
over the Idle Chicago White enough for most men to he walking aroWJd on their shirtsleeves,
,.J
$2
80
Third
place
Charlies
between
the New York Mets '
Sox The Orioles l06t groWJd to but Frank was bundled up m a grease-stamed trench coat chiefly
Bomb returned $3 20
and Boston Red Sox The Mets
~lor Luguo Rosulls
Detroit and now lead the Tigers hecause that constitutes the nucleus of hos wardrobe and if he
won, 4-1, before ' a crowd of
Major
League
LO'a'ders
·
''
Ehzat&gt;etlt
·
Da1sl,
'dec
ld
'
The
IWlth
race
IHl
qumella
By Unllod
Pms ~~~~.··!ION
I, ' .Jn lhe..Eatt by Me ~tame
·; ge,••r·~'nfo1'
~8w heH'Jle'"·'a,;:e)ll
' thl.S
~
N1tiolal l:
• 11 •
{\
¥~ J ~ "l~rr ' JJ. ~, ::r••
••
..
~ ;.., , ,,
. ...... . By.Ututod
lnlof'flllio"'"i Vernon· Da'rstr •Elhson- Darst, - was worth $61.20 The mghtly 43,342
, lnclnnatl :1111 ooo..01- 12160
Frank sat with his back up asii.fust, an.l!l)o;Ienl tenemeat . , , '" · "l.aadil&gt;lll&lt;ltters · " • Whnlfll: seiltllts :'F!'el!rR!i!A~Il; ''' double combinaUon of Charger
Rookie Bob Rauch •UOWI!&lt;I
Allan Ia
01 0 001 00()- 2 a o
building and talked a little about sports on the Bowery
National
Le•gue
Martha Wolfe, Kay Barnett, Lobell In the fust race and the Red Sox only two hila In siJ: ~
gabrhpcl
Billingham {8 101 and Plum
"The reason 1 like football more than baseball IS because
mer , Stone Upshaw 16), Kelley
.
Cdeno, Hoo ' 97 389 81 136 350 Aff for trans , ModdlepOrt.
Rendezvous Loper on the IMings to pick up the v1ctory. ~
171and Wlllloms Casanova (8)
there's more act1on," he said "!like anythmg with action toot " Dvlllo, Pol
83 259 43 88 340
Luella Hanmg, Dana Hanmg second 4-7, paid $39
LP- Stone (o 9) fiRs- Bench
Does he like life on the Bowery?
142 339
Wilms,LA
Chi 183
08 4268
19 67
Attendance was 4,324 woth a
Mola,
42 89 332 to Jerrold E Solhvan, Parcels,
ThiS Week's Spec1al
l26lh), Baker IBth)
~!*:B~E~a. (UP!)- "No," he came right back. "It's like baseball Too mono- Garr Atl
99 403 6S 132 328 Bedford
handle of $198,481
San Fran , IOo 000 ooo-- 5 10 I Tight end Bob Adams of the tonous "
Buckner. LA 74 257 JO 83 323
Orville E. Hudnall, Anzona
Baker, All
as 286 36 92 322
1
Houston
ooo
304
oox7
10
I
Houston
Oilers
suffered
a
How
long
has
he
been
on
the
Bowery
'
Alou, st l
Reberger, Stone (61, MoffiH
98 379 42 120 317 Hudnal to Ralph C Durst,
161 , Johnsoo (7) and Healy. sprained right knee m the
"Twenty-one years," he sa1d
Sngu1ln, P1t 99 380 43120 316 Naomi J Durst, Lots 3U, 310,
Lee, SO
68 251 35 79 31S Salosbury
D A Rader Ill , Rober Is. Culver game against the New York
If ot's so monotonous, why does he stay?
American League
Frankhn Real Estate Co to
13),
Forsth
141. Richard (5), Jets last Saturday and Is ex"The
thing
!like
about
this
place
os
that
you
can
go
where
you
POMEROY LANES
Griffin (7), Gladd'"g (9) and
gabrhptt
Early Sunday Mo•ed
USED CARS
Edwards WP- Richard (1 01 peeled to miss the club's up. like, do what you want and nobody asks you any questions," he Rud1,0ak 101440 73140 318 Oh10PowerCo, Coal 50 Acres,
August 6, 1972
Shblm,KC
93 311 42 98 315 Salem
LP- Stone (58) HR- Bonds commg pre-eeason game w1th swd
Won Lost
Pnlela, KC 106 403 52 12S 310
Ralph H Gamer, Ruth I
I20th)
the Atlanla Falcons
"Look at these," he went on, thrusting out his hands ''They're Allen
Gutter Busters
41
23
Ch1
108 366 69 112 306
40
24
IOnly games scheduled)
all cut up and filthy Dirty hands, no shave I'd be embarrassed Carew, M1n 97 367 43 112 305 Gamer to Stephen V Men- Odd Balls
DT s
38 26
Americon Leogue
going uptown looking like this I still have feelings Down here Berry, Ca I 79 273 32 83 .304 delson, Gail P Mendelson, Frigid Pinks
38
26
New York 000 000 QOO-- 0 • 4
'•
OilS , KC
101 384 S2 116 302 Jeffrey M Mendelson, Stanley leaml
28 36
though, you're one of the boys They're m the same predicament May ,Chl
KanCity
002 000 10K- 3 10 0
106 37S 66 Ill 296
Fisk, Bos
87 301 53 89 296 D Bobrof, Parcels, Olive
Allin lhe Fam•ly
7
57
Kline 113 Sl and Munson Do l
you're In Nobody feels superior"
H1gh lnd Game - Larry
Canton, Angelini 191 and ·MONEY LEADER
Tmpsn.M~n 98 394 OA 114 289
Norman
Deem,
Jamce
Deem
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jack
Farther down the Bowery, six other derelicts were grouped m
Dugan 245 and Ma)(me Dugan
Kirkpatrick WP- Dal Canton
fiome Runs
to Lawrence Riehle, VIolet 171
(6 .,
Nicklaus, who picked up the a seml-corcle, love of them slwnped agawt a brick wall and the
Nahonal Lea9ue Colbert, SO
32, Stargell, Pitt 27 . Benth, Cln Rotchoe, Lots 27 , 29 , at,
Second H1gh - Ed Petne 224
$~0,000 forst prize m last sllrth stretched out on the pavement looking stone cold dead on
and Max1ne Dugan and Julia
Clakland
too 120 01o-- 5 9 0
26, Aaron, All, Williams, Ch1 Lebanon - New Portland
Balllmore 000 020 QOO-- 2 12 I weekend's Westchester Open, the sidewalk.
and May, Hou 24
Lawrence A Ritchoe, Violet Boyles, 164
' YQu'll L•ke Our Quality
Senes - Ed Petne 617
Holtzman, Fingers {51 and mcreased his lead over runner"He's okay, he's only resting," said one of those m the group
American League : Allen, Chi Ritchie to Norman Deem, andHigh
Way
of Doong Business "
Larry Dugan 601 , NKIKme
Duncan , Palmer, Harr1son {6} , up Lee Trevino In the PGA
28, Cash, Det 22 , Jackson, Clak
GMAC
FINANCING
"He
hadda
lltUe
too
much
of
that
California
White
Port
wine.
Jackson (81 and Etcheberren. money-winning list to over
21. K1llebrew, Minn. Murcer, Janice Deem, Lot I and Lot 3, Dugan 485 and Sus1e Grueser 99l-Sl42
,Pomeroy
462
Care
for
some?
Oh,
sports.
Damn
rJghl
we're
Interested
In
the
Dates (7) WP- Fmgers 16·51
NY and Epstein. Clak 19
New PorUand '
Open
Evemngs
'T•II
oo
Team
H1gh
Game
and
Senes
LP- Palmer (156) HRs- Ep $100,000. Nicklaus has won ball games down here. Sex, no, but sports, yes Ain't that right
Runs B•tted In
Fl
T1ISPM
Sat
N•tlonal League. Stargell,
orence Harden Potts, - Fng1d Pinks 706 and 1962
stein (19thl. Rud1 {16th). S240,415 this year
feHas' I'm from Ch1cago myself and shot pool once with Willie Pltl 89. Colbert, SO 86, Bench, Harry Potts to Rohert Harden,
Johnson (4th)
Moscoru. Honest. But you oughtta talk to Elmer over there He Cln 85, Williams, Chi 77 , May, Dorothy Harden, Earl Harden,
played some football."
H'l:',;;r,tan League. Allen, Chi Ferrold Harden, Leota KenElmer had one of those llhort haorcuts and the general ap. 82 , Scott. Mil and Murcer, NY dall, Mary Lisle, Lot 62
pearance of a man who might have once been an athlete He has 65, Jackson, Clak 61. Darwin, Quollen's Add , Sutton Syracuse.
missed a few meals lately though because some of his bones Mlnn 511 Pllchon9
Nahonal Lea 9u1 : Carlton,
Thelma F
Eagle to
protrude. Elmer S81d he was 57, had spent 20 years on the
Phil
19
6,
Jenk1ns,
Chi
16·10;
Monongahela
Power
Co ,
Bowery, was originally from Wyoming and had ~en looked at by
Nolan, C1n 13 3, Sutton, LA and Ease , Olive
the Pittsburgh Steelers after having played college baH m Blass, P1tt 13 6, Torrez, Mont
Missouri
13 7, Osteen, LA 13 8. Seaver,
13 9
"I've always loved football, particularly pro football," he sa1d. NYAmerocan
The Daily Sentinel
League Wood, Chi
"I follow It, whenever I get a chance. They've got some sports- 20·11 , Lol1ch, Det 18·9, Perry,
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
minded guys down here on the Bowery but most of them are too Clev 1811, Palmer, Bait and
MEIGS MASON AREA
Hunler,
Oak
15
6,
Bahnsen,
Ch•
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
opinionated, they never listen to what you've got to say.
15 IJ
Exec Ed
"Me?" Elmer shrugged, looking a little forlorn In his begrtmed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Ctl'f EC111or
peaclH:olored shirt which didn't qwte match his baggy, paintPublished dally r•crpt
smeared khaki trouaers "Like I say, I try to follow the pro
Saturday bV The OhtO Vlllty
International Lea9ue
Publish tng Company , 111
football teams, butl've really got nothlng.l'm doing nothing, and
Stand1n9s
Court St
Pomeroy On lo
Unoted Press lnternltlonal
going nowhere. I used to run pretty good, but can't anymore.
•5769 Business Othe r Phone
W. L Pet. G.B. 992 2156. Ed tiOrtal Phone 992
Emphysema. ! can't even walk up the stepa. All I'm really doll\8 LouiSVIlle
1157
•,
69 50 580
19 walling to die."
Second class postage patd at
Charleston
67 51 568 1'12 Pomeroy,
Ohto
Tidewater
65 56 537 5
l
Nat ton a l advertts l n;
Rochester
6:j 60 512 8
representa ttve
Bottmelll
•1
Toledo
60 60 500 912 Gallagher , Inc , I? East 42nd
Syracuse
58 65 472 13
St , New York (tty, New York
Subscr.ptlon rates
De
Richmond
S7 65 467 13\f'
'
P1cture your rig on
tires
Peninsula
45 75 375 24\f, 1111ered bv carrter where
avatlable
50
cents
per
week
and come on In .. BUY 'EM HERE I 'I
Monday's Results
By
Motor
Route
where
carrier
Charleston 4 Louisville 0 {lsi) servtce not available Ont
1
...
LouiSville 12 Charleston 3 (2nd I month 11 75 av mail '" Ohio
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EDITORIAl.

"We've Got to Dress Her Up a Bit Before
I Take Herl on the Road~"
·

Vice-Presidency?
Sure It's Useful

\

th~

mventlon of man cont11vPd 01 his

•

Restraint Gives·
'

.

IS

•z.KJ864

mw ~ nM11nl1

By Paul Crabtree

.

NOKTII

+A843

•us
WEST

EAST

• KJIP9

.73

.AQIOZ

.KJ7643

•;
+ KQJ7

I""''

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+ t09H

SOUTH (D)

• AQ8854
.AQ9732

+2

.V01d
vulnerable

Both
We~~~t

North

Eut

· Pa..
Pass

I NT
4NT

Pus
p..,

7.

Pia

PUll

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"Pa!!;s

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Soulh

Pus

If you're reaching for the TV dial ~ fond Cable Ch 11, WOIJS.
"TV In Athens, don 'I wasthour lime It's off the air for a couple,of
months So Is WOUB-FM, which we've been carrying as,.the
audioportlonofourCh 51ocalnewscoverage.
•
We hate to see the staUon go black, because It was the only
one available that emph,asized Southeastern Ohio ne~ In TV •
plus top stories from this part of West Vtrgwa - plus good PBS
programming
~
·
But the cutoff was necessary In the name of progress.
A new tower Is being erl!(!ted at the site of the old tower, In
order to provide mocrowave relays to two new public televllnon
outlets In Portsmouth and Lancaster, plus (eventual) relays to
medical cen~ like Holzer.
The WOUB-TV -FM signals sllould be back on In the latter
part of September. Meanwhile, mo~of the programs can be seen
on WMUL-TV, Ch 9
\
j

-

....

- " ,f,+-* '__ • •

- ..

Voice along Br'Way

Television Log

!

rr ~

BRUCE BIOSSAT

s•
•z

It

·

Generation Rap

ATLANTA (UPl)-11 wasn't
the m061 proddetive game
Jolmny Bench ever had with
his b1g bat, but It could have
~en
'
Bench, playmg r~ght ' f1eld
onstead of catching, dro've In
love fWlS Monday rught as
Cincmnati crushed the AtlaQta
Braves •12-2.
I
Later Bench was asked if this
was his top RBI noght In the
majors
"No, I had seven agalJlsl St
Louos two years ago. Three

'

I

I'm generally Wlhappy about all this, On two counts, and you ,
Openong lead-+ K
sllould be, too
WMUL-TV does no programmmg at all on weekends,
Rv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby whereas WOUB-TV had about three hours of shows on Sunday
'
The fact that you have evening.
Reason Nwnber Two 1s that we were promised general
made a hmot bid does not
mean that you won't fln\1 an- weekend-evening network telecastlag from the Public Broadother call of partner JUmps castlag System. It ne~r showed up, and we never learn~:() why
to game, provoded that his
Of course, there was the lastoiJllnute budget veto of public
jump to game 1s made on
lroadcutlng
money at the White House, but, that shouldn' have
some new suot
affected the PBS plans lor the current summer.
North's one no·trump re·
AI any rate, WMUL-TV IS provullng "Sesame Streel" and
sponse IS correct He only
has eoghl hogh-card points the usual fare on the Interim while WOUB-TV Ia black
and definitely should not re+++
spond two hearts Had South
Dick Cavett fans In the area may lynch me for this, but I
JUmped to three no·trump or lhlni the "compromlBe" regarding his sllow worked out Iaiii
four spades North would
have passed quo c k Iy but week by ABC may he very promising - or It may be one of the
South JUmped to four hearts world's great nops.
and North's hand suddenly
, The mid-path chart laid out by the network will have Cavett
became tremendous
In his regular ~~pot (11 ·30 p.m., WTVN-TV) one week a month
He dec1ded to use Black· Another week will be filled by Jack Paar, former ''Tonight" holll
wood on !he way to a slam and a strong personality (and a very different one) In his oliO
and when South JUmped to right. The other two weeks each month, ABC says It will elBY JACK O'BRIAN
Coast artist John spent a cozy weekend at sox clubs, North went onto a
perunent with revues, variety shows, and Innovating new
Magda's Southampton, L I , manse only a fort- real huddle
EX-MAYOR IS REDUCED
rught before Rememher when good homes
Theoretically, the six-club program 1deu. The format starta In December.
There II very little mthe way of Innovation at ABC or any
TO CERFOOM
•- H' ood call showed no aces and a
cost
less
than
$17,000'
Las
Vegas
"'
w
valuable
void
su1t
but
clearly
other
network these days, and even If the network'&amp; big Idea lays
NEW YORK (KFS) _The ex-Mayor Bob
tycoon Del Coleman rented "21" partner SouUrwould not have jumped a big fat egg,lt will be Interesting to see the pfOII'ammlng Ideas
Wagner and the merroest w1dow Phyllos (Mrs
Sheldon Tannen's Southampton mansion at that to s1x With no aces After all,
Bennett) Cerf are senous
The new head· proce JUSt for the summer, furnished, except North had limited his h1gh being developed, along with reduced portions of Cavett and some
card holding when ~e re· spicy !Jll'lnldlng of Jack Paar.
master at Caroline's former convent school IS Del supphe;; his own blondes
sponded one no-trump
+++
an ex.Jesu11 priest now wed to an ex-11un
Actress Jean Norman was plagu ed bY an
What could the bid mean'
ON
THE
TV
DIAL·
Not
much except reruns, although the
GOP's John Mitchell peddled h1s lavosh obscene phone caner for months Cops nabbed Could South hold a club su1t?
John
Byner
Comedy
Hour
may
offer a laugh or two, and WSAZWatergate c~H&gt;p in Wasllqton to the Dems' him, and he demanded a dune to make a phone Impossible 1 Then what did
Sen Russell !Jlng for a reputed,$200,000 Tom call - and made 11 to Jean '
Marvelous he hold' North I In a II y TV's uaually-etlmulatlng "Conunent" llhow at 10 30 may be
Jones hired Peter Lawford's H'wood manse for Emery Deutsch of early radio days IS fldcUing worked ot out and b1d the thought.provoklng Byner shows up at 7:30, WCHS-TV .
heart grand slam
two months, $10,000 .. The lavish co-op apart- romantically at Moami Beach's Palm Bay Club Just for the fun of 11, take
menthouse on Park Ave at71st St , once falsely
a look at the West hand He
. Groucho marrymg his "secretary"'
annoWJced to he Ari 's and Jackie's town house
Leo Durocher's busy denymg he'll JOin the had made a trap pass over
I
sote,IS!mlshed, the most expensiVe flats mtown Yankees of maybe Ralph Houk becomes Red the one spade opemng, a
_ pr~ces to more than half a million woth Sox mgr next year Not the way the sozzlmg sur prosed pass over the four
heart rebid and a r e a II y
mamtenance ahnost $3,000 a month - and 1t's
Yanksfmally are catchmg fore·· Ed Sullivan's brolllant pass over th~ final
sold only three of 28 apartments · · Arlene longplay early TV producer, Marlo lewis, iiJ a contract of seven hearts He
FranCis' radio show turned down a H'wood second lime grandpop voa daughter Mrs. Bill paod off to the grand slam,
authornwho swiahed ~ get,on her show,lj!,plug , PP.J!il!ll~ ·,~. Veteran adman Milton Blow's very bu~ t&gt;e sa~ed the ~XIf.~ ~?lnJs
Pro~ams for 'Toijiglit~~ '
his new ~k, tiU~ tl#: surr.eal, "'Ib.e.. ~d Is Ill '"' .,Rolier£, Mitchum soloed at I!fie"'new a" dbU!tli! ow,l!ul&lt;f 'loiN~ 1:\isl
1
'
r, ,
I'U'r\'al!dance Spenrfiilll rurhollrWecJdllg 'wtnel Lhun ' · ' "
' Jn"
• My Shepherd and He Knows l'm Gay." " '
n • '-'',..
and
Tomorrow
INEWSrAP!O ENTIOrOISI ASSN I
Capt Carl Parlatore of Plamview, N Y., os labels Pickpocketing'S on the rose here again
a hero1&gt;ilot, a Phantom commander m V1etnam
N 'i i and LA aren't as smlli~'ts''the erstfor a second tour (with m combat IDISSions)
while sllcks an Albuquerque adult movie
and he reports Jane Fonda's disgraceful pro- house has a topless popcorn gal Stella Stevens The bodding hu been
TIJESDAY
Hanoo speeches had his feCJw flYil\IYS reacting boasts she's "one of the three greatest actresses Weot North
East
6
00
News
3,
4,
8,
10,
15.
CBS News 8. 10. I Dream of Jeann ie
tins way · a third deCided she was an odoot and m !Urns today The other two are Katharme ••
Dble
P...
13,
Truth
or
Conseq.
6.
Halhayoga 33
2•
PU9
ognored her, a third laughed at her, and the mt Helpburn and lngrod Bergman " . She's one of Pass
6
30News3,
A,
6,
8,
10,
15,
Grand Masters Chess 3J
Pass
p..,
7' oo- News 6, 10 , Whafs My Line 6, Elec Co 20, Green Acres
"got mad as hell and even more determmed to the most modest, too
Pap Staples of The You, South hold
3. Farmer's Daughter 13 , Andy Griffith 15, Dick Van Dyke •· •
carry out their moss1ons" Some sage asked Staple Smgets os heong verbally belted by some .8743
B~ BRUCE BIOSSAT
Insight 33
+AKIU.7U
how come she didn't demand the Hano1 military blacks who want hos work to be more
7
30
- Masterpiece Thealre 33, Ponderosa 3, 4. IS. Mod Squed
What do you do now'
WASHINGTON •NEAl
6, t3, Masterpiece Theatre 33, Explo '72 6, 8. 15, John Byner
stop bombing
"relevant." Pop shrugs his "message" os A-Bid ll•e diamonds You
Comedy Hour 10
Sen. George McGovern has been so busy getting nom on·
Jane's the gal whose "deep" knowledge "peace, freedom and love I can only be ha•e a) ready bid your full 8 30 - Hawa11Five08, 10, NBCAttlonPiayhouseJ,o, Evening
ated and solvtng hos voce pres1dentoal problems that he
' 1r e n 11 h, but you still must
al Pops 33. Movie "War and ~"~!ace" 6, IJ
shallowed on the Dick Cavell Show when she myself"
has had no time to 1ron out a puzzlmg wronkle on hos de
11how your diamond ton trol.
9
30
- James Garner 3, o, Cannon 8, 10, Handfuls of Ashes 33
demanded
we
get
out
of
Voetnam
because
she
Gotham scene· Johnny Welssmuller and
fense program a proposal to halt ongoong changes on
tO
00~reus Welby 4, 6. 13, Firing LlneJ3
'
TODAY'S QUESTION
claimed the Americans In our revolution "didn't Flip Wilson shaking hands on forst meetq at
our mlsslle·bearong submanne fleet
11 OO-News3.4. 6.8, 10.13, 15.
',
Don't see this much any
Your parlner goes to six 11 30- Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4 15, Movie "Westward
get any outs1de help" whoch must've had the Hoteal PIBza
On Jan 17, McGovern's top aodes laod oot on a back·
spades What do you do now"
the Women" a, Movie " Nightmare Alley" 10. Movie " April
ground sessiOn the senator's · alternative national defense
Lafayette rolling over m his grave and more The Grenadier restaurant bakes ots own
Love" 13
postu1 e" calhng for a cut of some $32 bolllon on U S de·
Kosciusko laughing mto his heavenly kilbaSSJ .
tread Try the ltaloan nui-Bprlnkled bread at
1
ooYour Healtl1 •
fense outlays by hscal 1975
1 30 - News, Weather o, Local News 13
Another mmonty heard from Some American Patsy's on w ~th St , heeyooteful . No-Cal's
Among the specoflc recommendations was one to stop
Japanese demanded the "J A.P " dress form plant at College Pomt, L I , across from
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16
converting our moss1le submarones to longer range weal&gt;'
drop
1ts
name
as
a
conscious
raCist
slur.
It
LaGuardoa
Airport
not
only
gives
Its
workers
6
00
Sunrise
Stmlnar
•· Sacred fieri 10
onry We have 41 such vessels Before maJor conversion
6
15Farmtlme
10;
Fum
Report 13
or1gmated
With
a
Japanese
designer
m
PariS
free parkmg space - but they also can park
began, each bore 16 advanced A·3 Polaros moss1Ies
6 25 - Paul fiarvey 13
Junmy Weston's steaks and jazz hauled m theor boats alongside (Where are the customer's If the whole sky were filled 6 30 - Columbvs Today o, Bible Answers 8; Urban League 13
Well under way os a funded program to convert 31 of
The
Jets' Weeb Ewbank and his Slffiilarly yachts')
the 41 submarmes to carroers of a longer range Poseidon
Actor·wll Harold Gary whispers w1th full moons, they would 6 55 - Rocky &amp; Bullw1nkle 13
Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News I, 10; News6.
m•ss1le holdmg not JUSt one warhead but 10 ondependentstrange-11amed assistant Wunp Hewgle ..
that JohMY Carson's suddenly ex-wife Joanne give about one-fifth of the 77 0030SIHpy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6 , Underdog 13
ly·largetable warheads
Magda Gabor's marriage to Tibor Halta1 "Got a divorce setUement of a mill1on dollars llght which 1s given by the 8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New ZOO Revue 6, 13, Sesame St 33
sun
In McGovern's 56·page defense presenlahon, It was
I 30- Jack LaLanne 13, TtMISSte Tuxedo 6
starUed her very recent ~au, John MorriS, W and a parachute "
argued that our m•ss•le·heanng fleet os our choef nuclear
9 oo - Paul Dixon o, Phil Donahue 15, Lucl's Toyshop 10.
Peyton Plate 13, Romper Room 8, Mr. Rogers 33; What
deterrent agamsl the Sovoet Umon or any other con
EveryWomanWantsto
Know3 ; Timmy&amp; Lassle6 r
celvable aggressor Traversong molloons of miles of ocean
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Eleclrlc Co 33 , Mike Oougla~6, One
undetected these vessels can mount a second·stnke nu
Life to Live 13; My Three Sons I
clear response wothon monutes after an enemy forst strtke
tO 00- Dinah Shore 3, 15. Lucille Ball 10. Dick Van Dyke 13;
*-::~ ~w· ·· · ~·"®.:stL&lt;«- ··:!!·&gt;....:S..., ..$. w
t· · · ·- ~
hegms
fiathayogo 33.
salutation would he more conalstent with the body' Examplell : 10 30Concentration 3, IS, Lucille Ball10, D Amateur's Guide
Nevertheless, McGovern proposed on mod January to
"Precious, Beloved, Cherished, Worthleas, Unimportant,
to Lov•tO, Spill Second 13; Beverly Hillbillies 8, MY, Three
stop converting Polans submannes to the more advanced
Sons 10, ln.Schoollnstructlon 33 , love, American Sty e6
Despised, Peaceful, Boring, Skungy, Freakish, Sneaky, etc , etc.
Poseidon
11
00- Family Affolr a, 10; Love American Slyle 13 , Sale of
Soandso . or Hey You, Hi Guy (Gal), You Big Dummy, Brother
Century 3, 15, Citmmunlque 6
H1s document says nothong about the alleged advantage
By Helen and Sue Bottel
.,
Rat ..
11 30 - Hollywood Square• 4, 15, Love of Life 8, tO, Bewitched 6.
of havmg longer range weapons The greater range, of
13; Sesame St 20
course, permlls the vessels to move through still woder
"Agaon, assuming Helen and Sue are correet, we mu.st not
WARNING TO BEARS - OR WOLVES?
12
00
- Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
undersea areas farther from the presumed enemy
stop With merely deleting 'Dear .• We musl omit 01' alter the fifth
News 13, Contacl 8, News 10
Helen
and
Sue:
targets
Split Second 6, Search for Tomorrow 8. 10. Elec Co 33
I'm sure you've seen those leather thingoes some people have part (complunentary close) of the letter, ualng Instead of 'Yours 12 30News3
What he does argue agaonst os the need to equ1p the
truly,'
'Sincerely
.
cordiaUy
"'
rupectfully
yours,
etc.,
such
tied aroWJd the1r wriSts woth koots In them l asked my Slslet
1 00 - News, Wealher. Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Divorce
submarones woth multi-warhead weapons His poont Js
Court 8, Green Acres 10. Walth Your Child 15; French Chef
wbat they are for and she said, "To keep bears away " Well, 1 closongs as
that these are designed to penetrate soph1sllcated Sovoet
33
"Sinfully
Yours,
Bug
Off
Bu~,IM-!??Io!,
Quite
Hatefully,
antiballistic m•ssole defenses. but thai Russoa has not
thought It was cute, so I'm wearmg one.
I 20 - Lucille Rivers 3
really developed these
A guy r hang around with acted like there was somethmg Deviously, DoUbtfully, ImpervlOUJly Yours, ~~ Striving for
I 30- Three on a MatchJ, 4, IS , Lef&amp; Make A Deal6, 13; As the
World Turns 8, 10, Sewln9 Skills 33.
The puzzle comes not from thos proposition, however
dirty about them and sa1d a knotted leather bracelet Is a "done. Med•ocr•ly, You're a Great Human Being, etc
2
oo
- Days of Ovr Llves3. 4. 1S; Newlywed Game 13, VIrginia
argoable some defense spec1ahsts may regard ot, but
"I
protest
this
would
add
a
new
dimenalon
to
correllpolllime thing," whatever that means.
Graham6,
Love Splendored Thlrl!)l, 10; Brldge33
from 1&gt;1cGovern's specofoc suggestion on January that
dence, and the world Is not ready for IIICh hoolllty. Therefore,
2:30Dating
Gamo tl, Guiding Lights, 10. Handfuls of Ashes
Do
the
knots
mean
you're
a
foxy
chick
or
something,
or''''
Poseodon conversiOns be stopped at seven out of the
33,
Baseball
3, 4., Doctors 15
until
further
notice
thil
office
will
conUnue
with
'Dear
-'
and
-KEEPING BEARS AWAY
proposed 31
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 1S, General Hospital 6, t3, Secret
'Sincerely yours,' let the modernJ fall where they may 1 Storm 8, 10, Masforpleco Theatre 33.
Forst off, McGovern's aodes conceded on Jan 17 that
Respectfully Atlackmg Helen's and Sue's Break With 'l'ndillon
3 30 a one Life to Live 6. Edge of Night I, 10, Jeff's Collie 13,
KB.A.
seven was an unreahstoc fogure, that more converted ves·
Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15.
sels than that number would be on the water before he
Sorry,I pass I always thought thos kind of wrosUet was just a - YOUR BOSS" - Readlngly an4 Enjoylngly Yours. 4
00
- Mr Cartoon 31 Somerset 4, 15; Fllntstones 13; Sesame
could take of11ce as presodent It was not clear why the
RUTHANN
leather thing with knots In 1t.
St. 33,1 fiutkleberry Hound 6, Batman 8, Movie "Hell Below
f1gure .even was chosen
Zero' 10
1
Help, people, does 11 really keep bears away' - SUE
Soon afterward, J• chl!(!ked and found there were al·
•
·
25
Sports
Club
6
Hwnorous
RuthaM
and
Her
Boss:
+++
4 JO - ~rv Griffin 4, I Love Lur.y 6; Death Valley Days 8.
ready more than seven Pose1don.equ1pped submarines In
Approcoatingly yours - HELEN AND SUE
Keeping
Bears
Away
Password 13, Andy Grlflltl1 15; GrHn Acres 3.
the water I have JUSt checked agaon, and the figure
5 00- Wagon Train 3, Maverick 13, Mr Rogers 33, Dick Van
+++
'
. . Or does 11 attract wolves' Different areas have different
today os 12 converted, woth eight more on the ways AI
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6
least two of these e1ghr will be on the water before the
symb&lt;Jis. If knotted leather thongs are some kind of scqre- Dear Hap
5 JO- Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33
During the past few weeb I have been having dreamllbout
next presidential maugurallon
6 00 - Trutll or Conseq. 6. News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS; I Dream of
keepq chart m your town, you'd better lind out WHAT kind
Jennie 13; Sasamo St 20; Hathayoga 33
i
people dying on my swlmml~g pool, which lncldent.uy does not
So the hard prospect for next Jan 20 Is at least 14
before you lie any more knots - HELEN
6
JO-News3,4,6,1,10,13,15,
Brld9f33
Poseidon vessels m the water and on statiOn, a total
exist. Last night I dreamed my former math teacher cracked his
+++
7 00- Dick Van Dykt 4; News6, 10; What's My Line18, Elec.
exscUy double the fi~ure McGovern's "alternatove na·
skull In a fall onto my pool. Today I hear he had a Jlerious heart
Co 20; Wild, Wild Wnt 13, Mllnlones of Progrns 33, Movie
Helen and Sue
Ilona! defense posture ' sets as a top limit
"That
Funny Fooling" 3, ~y1r'1 R~t 15 1 , •
attack.
The
mght
before
It
wu
my
EtcUah
teacher
who
fell
lDio
After reading your column on " 'Dear' Not Here With
Furthermore, the remaomng SIX on the ways woU he m
7
JO
To
Tell The Truth 6, Hollywood uares 3. Pfagnet I;
Moderns," (as a salutation for letters), I mformed my boas that the pool, but he only got shook up. He walll'l ataummer IChool
TheJud~~t10, EplsodeActlon33, Latsle 5; Doctors on C.IIO.
fairly advanced stages of conversoon by early 1973, and
8.00- Adam 12 o, A Pllbllt Affair 33; Green Acres l1,1'l!e~uper
"Dear Soandso" was no longer "on" according to Sue and her yesterday and today - home sick. Not serloua though. Am I a
still more vessels may he slarted on the process
6, 13, Expldr 72 8, David Steinberg 10, I
heser?
-TilE
DREAM:ER-HEXER
.
readera.
In theory, submarmes In this state could be kept from
I 30- Corntr Bar6. 13; Columbo3, 4, 15, Movie "Ma~ of Aran"
ful~ convers•on But submarmes on the ways represent
Here Is his reply.
33
'
1
Dear
"Hexter"
9
00Medlc:al
Center
8,
10.
~rty
Feldman
Comedy
~khlne
about a rtfth of the mlsslle·heanng fleet To leave them
''Today my world came craahq down aa Helen and Sue
13
1
In mldconverslon would subtract seriously from our nu·
I
thlnkyou'rea
houer.Nice
try
HELEN
agreed 'Dear' 1sout, baaed on a possible conflict With the body of
9 JO- ABC News Inquiry 6, 13.
clear deterrent To try to reconvert them to Polaris
+++
10
00-Mannlxa. 10; Soul33; NlghtGelltry 3, 4.
the
letter,
I
e.
telling
someone
to
wrap
it
!n
barbed
wore,
drop
weapons Is deemed Impractical.
Dear
Dreamer
11
00News3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
~·
dead, etc., would not he consostent wllh the above;nenUoned
Probably their conversion would have to be fm1shed
11
.
JOJohnny
Carson
3,
4,
15,
Dick
c.
..
tt
6;
Mol.~
~
der
Mebbe you hate your teachers and you'redytna fgr a pool,ao
salutation.
That would g1ve os at least 20 of a scheduled 31 Poseidon
Once Removed" 1: Movie "The lntormen" 10; Movl "Top
Stcret Affair" 13.
"Presupposing that the logic here Is corroct, would It not ~ yOU let them do the dyq for YQU • Or 10111ething ... Dr. Freud,
velll811, roughly triple the total. of seven McGovern fixed
100-Nnt4
where
are
you?
SUE
In January as the upper lim1!
more 'logical' to alter the prefll than debate ot, so that the
I: JO -- Nlwl 13.

McGovern Defense
Plan Way, Way Off

.

j

,,

.,.

Bench In TQp Form, Reds Romp

TUbe·\T
.\

Slctm lnlo

conceoved "
Theodore Roosewlt saod he \\ould a goeat dt•alo,oth&lt;'l
' he aontlung else. sa\ poofessor of lustoo v
, Now Sen Robert Taft Jo . R·Ohoo. s u~gesls we atmhsh
; It entn·ely · It· of course os lhe \'Ice poeSidt•nc\ wlut·h
John Nance Gaoneo probabl~ desc11bed '"'"' pungt•nlh
·as ·not worlh a pitcher of warm spot ·
, Manr Amel'lcans would ago ee woth Tall Voce
,denhal candodatcs aoe geneo all\ selected to balanc&lt;' "
,llcket
All lou frequently the selectoon ol a voce·pl eso
; dentoal candodale os determmed by who woll bung llw
ticket stoength oatheo than who can bung stoenglh tu the
country '
No doubt there weoe moments durmg lhe Eaglelon
crosos when Democratic po esodentoal eandodate Geoo ge
McGovern woshed that Amerocans on the11 wosdom had
seen fit to do away woth the No 2 posotoon veaos ago
' Tht&gt; Amencan vice-prestdency IS one of th e mote cur1
; 'ous feat.ures of the system or government fashooned on
Pholadelphoa on 1787 Creatoon of the posollon was almost
. oan afterthoufht The voce·presodent was goven onl\ one
constitutions functiOn that of presodong ove1 the Senate
woth the roght to vote to break a lie
Yet despite the low esteem vooced by Adams. the vtce·
, presodency from the begmnong was Intended and expl!(!ted
to be flll&lt;&gt;d by capable men-m fact. by the man rece!Vong
the second hoghest number of electoral votes and th11s
presumably the SI!(!Ond most quahfoed man on the nallon
This was soon changed by the rose or pohtlcal pao ties
and by the 12th Amendment. whoch specohed sepal ale
ballots for presodent and voce·presodent
It was then that the practice began of · balancong the
•icket"- Northerner woth Southerneo Easleo ne1 wit~
Westerner. liberal With conservative etc
There Is strong doubt that the Foundong Fatheo s eveo
ontended the VICe-president to be anythong but onterom,
acting president m the event or the death oo removal of
the ell!(!ted presodent But John Tyler assuming the full
powers of the presodency upon the death of William Henrv
Harrison m 1841, set the precedent that has been followed
unquestioningly ever sonce
At one tome in 1ts history, due to deaths and o·et11 e
ments, the Unoted States was wothout a v1ce-po esldenl for
seven years. Not until 1967, woth the ratif•catoon of the
2$1h Amendment. dod the natoon see fot to provode for the
•mmedlate f1ihng of a voce·presldenllal vacancy
As recenUy as 1932, a voce·presldent could be portraved
In the musiCal, "Of Thee I Smg," as a comoc noneniol'
named Alexander Throttle bottom But after hotlmg Tho ot ·
tlebottom, the voce-presodency had nowhere to go but up
The last four admm•stratJons have witnessed a vasl
enlargement of the dulles of the voce presodent and a
correspondmg enlargement of hos poestoge
In addition to presldong over the Senate' the voce pre so
dent now serves, by statute law, as chaorman of the Na
Uonal Secur1ty, Space and Peace Corps councils and, b)
rl!(!ent custom, as the president's mternatoonal ambassa.
dor
Because, begmmng woth Eisenhower and Noxon the
vlce·pres•dent has been made an mformed and active
partner In the day.to-day runmng and decosoon·makmg of
the execuhve branch, we have almost come to look upon
h•m as presodenl·m-trammg, even though no man smce
Martin Van Buren has succeeded m helng elected doreclly
from the vlce·presldency to the presodency
Senator Taft has some good arguments, but most of
them are about 20 years too late Were we lo abolish the
vice.presidency now, we m1ght well doscover that we
would have to turn around and onvent something very Joke
11 1to
lls
, , . , " ,, , , , ,
\J take
I
l
'
~ placo..
;o:,
,

-

.' .

I

•

&lt;'

,.

&gt;

.

"

'

'

3- Tht Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., A\lgust 1$, 1972

John Adams call&lt;&gt;d ot the most on&lt;O~Illft ea nt ofht•t• 111.11
111!'\' el

, ...~ t

home runs," he sa1d
"But I missed a hangmg
slider or I would have had e1ght
tonight "
The lost opporturuty came on
the ninth inning with Cincmnali
roughing up Tom Kelley, the
third Atlanta pitcher. Bench
sWWJg hard and missed Kelley's second p1tch-the one h!
later said was the hangong
shder
"Then he made a good curve
ball and got me" for the third
strike, Bench saod.

\

The Reds dldn 't need any
more. They smacked 16 hits
th!lf 12 runs gave them a
tot I of 21 off AUanta pitching
II\ wo no.ghts. The Braves won
the first two games of the fourgame ser~es before the Reds
turned on the power
Bench hit a two-rWJ homer m
the f~rst inning, drove m
another run m the sixth woth a
Single, and two more m the
seventh with a double. That
gave him 26 home runs and 85
Rms for the season.

ant

lSked "What can you say about
a game like that? There just
osn't anything you can say "
"We're a htUe short of potchong. McLam was Sick
ton1ght, and he's got a personal
problem, and (Jun) Hardin
had a sore shoulder That's
why I had to leave Kelley m. I
explamed It to him "
Tom Kelley, potchong 10
rehef, gave up fiVe rpns m
three mrungs
Bench made Atlanta fans
groan, but before the game he

Pete Rose drove on three
runs w1th a smgle and a double
Dusty Baker hit a slxthmmllg home run for the Braves
to extend a personal hitting
streak to II games
SParky Anderson, the Reds'
manager, was beammg on the
VISitors clubhouse ''This os the
f1rst time on a long time we've
been hilling well," he saod
"We JUSt hadn't heen hitting
good before th1s "
In Atlanta's clubhouse,
manager Eddie Mathews

drew a lot of laughs when the
Braves players played theor
wove&amp;. Bench dod a parody of
the Braves' Susoe the Sweeper
by commg out on "hot pants"actually, athletic sh~rts­
sweepmg off the bases and then
giVIng umpore Jerry Quarry,
the boxer, a k1ss at home pia te
The Reds move on to Phtla·
delphia for a three-day seroes
w1th the Philhes startong torught

BASEBALL STANDIN~~
Natrona I League Sta'nd~ngs

Amencan League

By Umted Press lnternattonal

East

Nahonal League
East

P1tlsburgh
New York

Ch1cago
St LouiS

Mon Irea I
Phd a del phta

w I pel
68 40 630
57 49 538
58 52 527
52 55 486
49 sa ,\58
41 67 380
West
w I pet

Cmcmnatt

66 42

611

Houston
Los Angele s

62 49
57 50

559
533

Atlanta

w I pet 9.b
60 50 54S

Balf1more
Detro• I
New York

gb

10

59 51 536 I
511 51 532 1'1-.
54 53 505 .t'h
51 58 468 81fl
43 67 391 17
West
w I pet 9.b.
65 46 586

Boston

1l

Cleveland

15 1!~
18 1/ 2

Milwaukee

27

Oakland

gb

Ch1 cago
M innesota
Kansas C1ty
Calllorn1a

51J:;81!:1

51 61 455 17

57.4 l'l'l
528 6 1/2
481 11111
450 15

44 65 404 20
Monday's
Results
San D1ego
42 66 389 24
Kansas C1ty 3 New York 0
Monday's Results
Oakland 5 Balt1more 2
Cmc mnalt 12 Atlanta 2
IOnly games scheduled I
Houston
7
San
Fran
5
•
Today's Probable P•tchers
(Only games scheduled)
I All T1mes EDTI
Today•s Probable P1tchers
New York I Kek1ch 10 111 at
(All T1mes EDT I
Hous ton ( Dterker 1l 6) at Kansas C1ly !Hedlund 4 5), $ JO
Montreal !Stoneman 9 9) 8 05 pm
Boslon (McGiolhen 54) at
pm
Texas !Stan house 2 21 8 30
Allan Ia IN1ekro 10 101 al New pm
The Yankees fell Into third error. Bobby Floyd followed
By GREG GALW
York (McAndrew 8 Jl 8 05
Milwaukee (Parsons 9 10) at
glad I got the opporturuty to do place 1n the East, 1n games
th
I
Sch Ito Angelim got the next two
pm
UP! Sports Wrfler
what 1 dl~. I've never been
.,
wo a smg e movmg aa
batters and receoved cred1t for
Cmcmnatt {Stmpson 7-4 ) at Ch1cago I Bradley 12 9), 9 p m
beblnd the Omles, as Bruce third Floyd, himself, went to his forst maJor league save
The anger stored up ms1de of more happy m my life."
M•nnesota ICorbm 6 6) at
Philadelphia ITw•lchel l 2 J),
Delr01l (Coleman 12111,9 p m
Dal Canton and Norm Angelini second on the plav at third base
lltUe Bert CampaneCIS the psst
7
35
p
m
Johnny Bench hit hos 26th
WILMINGTON, OhiO (UP!)
California (May 5 81 at
The Other Games
combmed for a four-hitter for on Schaal
Pittsburgh I KISon 5 41 al Los
three weeks was unleashed by
homer of the year and drove m - Cmconnab Bengals Coach Angeles (Osteen 13 8), 11 p m Cleveland I Dunnmg 2 11. 7 30
In
the
only
other
American
the
Royals
Lou
Plnoella
Singled
on
the
Earl Weaver pnd the
51 LOUIS (Durham 0 51 al San pm
The Royals got all the runs llnul Royal run In the seventh fove rWJs to pace the Reds Paul Brown revoewed films of Diego
!Only games scheduled)
Baltimore Orooles Monday League game, Kansas City
(Caldwell S 51 10 30 p m
VICtory over the Braves Pete the weekend exhobobon won
shutoutNewYork,:l-0, while on they needed off loser Steve mmng
Wednesday's Games
Ch1cago
I
Hands
9
71
at
San
rught as the speedy shortstop
Rose
also
knocked
m
three
over
Detroot
and
dl!(!oded
'we
New
York at Kan Coty, n~ght
Cincinnati Klme, IU, on the third mnlng
Dal Canton, who got credit
Franctsco (A\anchal 4 13) 11
stole three bases and unnerved the NatiOnal League 12
Boston at Tell.as, ntght
fWIS
for
the
Reds
to
help
Jack
were
lucky
"
2
pm
- • and Paul Schaal reached safely on for hisslxthwm m 10 docis1ons,
Mtlwaukee at Chtcago
Jom Palmer onto a run- routed Atlanta,
Wednesday's Games
"We are not sahsloed at all
Hou
sl~n
trimmed
San
FranciS- shortstop Gene Mochael's left With one out m the mnth Billingham to his eoghth won of
Mlnnesola at Detroit, n1ght
Chtcago at San Franctsco
producong balk to lead the co, """·
the season Dusty Baker overlhewayDetrootmoved the Houston at Montrea l, n1ght
Call at Cleveland, n1ghl
Oakland Athletics to victory
Campanert.s sJ.ngled wtth one .:=·· =·~· '!'\&amp;.:.·.··· ·:··-=···=···· ·:·· -=·=·=-··· •••.. • ••· ·.·: ::... ·====·:(.&lt;·:·:·: ••••••• •:::-·-:=:=:~........ ..,.,..; ·-: • • connocted for a homer off ball agaonst us," Brown saod Atlanta at New York n1ghl
Oakland at Salttmore, ntght
Campanel'lll, who was m tine out m the fifth inmng, stole :;.
Bollongham m the sixth lnnmg
"You can't allow 334 yards Cine I at Phlla n1ght
for a startq herth on the second, continued to third on :;:
P1tts at Lo• Ang, n1ght
UlUlY S
The Astros fought from passong and 442total yards and St
LouiS al San D1ego night
American League All-Star catcher Andy Etchebarren's :·
behind Ill wope out a ~ San expect Ill beat many teams on
team In Atlanta on July 25 but throwlngerror,andwaswaved i~
• FranciSCo lead and heat the the National Football League
~nort
was passed up by Manager home when he caused loser "
I:'
C I I U
::: Goants The bog hots were a two- We won the game, but we were
Weaver for his own Bobby Palmer to cOilliJlll a balk when
fWl double by Roger Metzger
lucky "
Groch, ran wild on the he attempted to pick CPmpanefly MILTON RICHMAN
and a two-run songle by Cesar
The Ben gals, who meet
basepalhs Monday night on l'1ll off base
UPI Sports Editor
Cedeno
M1am1 at Riverfront Stadoum
Baltimore to lead the A's to a ~
Mike Epstein and Joe Rudi
THE BOWERY (UP!) -They're strictly neutral down here
Bobby Bonds homered for th1s weekend, heat the Lions on
2 victory
added the long ball power to They couldn't care less who wms, Bobby FISCher or Boris the Goants, hiS 20th.
theor SI!(!Ond exhobotoon game
His pride hurt by the anub by the Oakland attack by each Spassky
Saturday noght 28-20.
WASHINGTON (UPI )-"l'd whipped the Democrats
W•aver, CamPIIJlerls refused slammmg a horne fWl and
Most Bowery residents don't even know the two are playmg up
Brown sa1d the Loons • hke to !honk ot woll he thos easy Monday for the nmth straoght ,
to play m the ~.Star game
Rollie Fingers chipped on w1th there on Teykjavik.
' strong suo t was their ground on the fall presidential elec- year
m
the
annual 1
FROSH INVITED OUT
Instead, he waited for the first a lwo·M relief stint over the
Some do, though.
game,"
and
the
Ben
gals
had
tion,''
said
Rep
Robert
Mochel,
congressoonal
baseball
game
All Meigs Junior Hlgh
meeting beiWefll the Alher~can lmal4 2-31nrungs to pick up the
"Chess reminds me of baseball," sa1d one of them "Too dull.
trouble
"droppmg
the
ball
"
R-Ill
,
after
the
Repubhcans
Mochel allowed five hits m
School boys Interested In
league's two dlvillon leading won
See,they make XI moves m 3¥.. hours That would drive me outta football are asked to report
He said he would cot no one
the
five onnlng game that the
teams to show Weaver and the
Epstein belted his 19th my cottonp•ckln' mmd. !like contmoous action !like to go, go,
thos
week,
but
would
make
GOP
won, 7-2 Don Clausen, Rto the Meigs Junior High
Orioles JUSt how good he really homer of the season leading off go all the time "
some
deCISIOns
after
thos
Calil.,
had a two-run songle on
stadium in Middleport at
IS
the fourlh.mning and Rud1 hit
The derelict who made those remarks osn't re.olly gomg 6·30 p.m. Wednesday, John weekend's game Currently 57
the Repuhhcans' hve-run third '
"I wanted to show tonight his 16th In the fifth. Both came anywhere He can't He has no leftleg and no nghlfoot Frostbite
are on the roster
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Bloom
mnmg that pmned the defeat on
Arnott, freshman coach,
that I could play baseball,"
The
Bengals
conclude
theor
off Palmer, who suffered his took both That's what comes of sleepmg on Sidewalks too long m
won
the
featured
eoghth
race,
a
Rep Henry Gonzalez, D-Tex '
reports
said the fiery Latin, who also soon defeat against 15 v•cbfr
th
traomng camp here Sept 3
$1,100
pace,
at
Scooto
Downs
Vmegar Bend Mozell, R-N .C.,
to
l
su
eez~ng
wea
er
collected two hits and scored
the
former major league pitMonday
mght
and
returned
~gers was brilliant in relief ThiS particular derelict's name Is Frank- "l'd rat~r you don't
two runa. "I wanted to show
cher
who has been barred from
$16
60,
$7
and
$3
60
that! should have been playing of starter Ken Holtzman as he use my last name ~ause I have a brother and soster back m
The wmnmg lime of 2 04 3 the mound In these games, ,
on that game In Atlanta. I struck outfour and walked only South Dakota and I ve still got enough common decency left not
was
the hest ever for Bloom, drove m two runs on a Single ·
wanted to steal base I felt I one In raising his rl!(!ord to &amp;-:; to unpose on them "
who
trailed Wllil the stretch and a double
had something to prove tonoghl
The win boosted the A's lead
He's Bundled Up
and won by a nl!(!k over Flymg
The congressoonal game preto some people and I'm real In the AL West to 1¥.. games
The temperature was In the mld-M's when we talked, hot
ceded
an exhibition game '
Success
,
who
pa1d
$3
60
and
over the Idle Chicago White enough for most men to he walking aroWJd on their shirtsleeves,
,.J
$2
80
Third
place
Charlies
between
the New York Mets '
Sox The Orioles l06t groWJd to but Frank was bundled up m a grease-stamed trench coat chiefly
Bomb returned $3 20
and Boston Red Sox The Mets
~lor Luguo Rosulls
Detroit and now lead the Tigers hecause that constitutes the nucleus of hos wardrobe and if he
won, 4-1, before ' a crowd of
Major
League
LO'a'ders
·
''
Ehzat&gt;etlt
·
Da1sl,
'dec
ld
'
The
IWlth
race
IHl
qumella
By Unllod
Pms ~~~~.··!ION
I, ' .Jn lhe..Eatt by Me ~tame
·; ge,••r·~'nfo1'
~8w heH'Jle'"·'a,;:e)ll
' thl.S
~
N1tiolal l:
• 11 •
{\
¥~ J ~ "l~rr ' JJ. ~, ::r••
••
..
~ ;.., , ,,
. ...... . By.Ututod
lnlof'flllio"'"i Vernon· Da'rstr •Elhson- Darst, - was worth $61.20 The mghtly 43,342
, lnclnnatl :1111 ooo..01- 12160
Frank sat with his back up asii.fust, an.l!l)o;Ienl tenemeat . , , '" · "l.aadil&gt;lll&lt;ltters · " • Whnlfll: seiltllts :'F!'el!rR!i!A~Il; ''' double combinaUon of Charger
Rookie Bob Rauch •UOWI!&lt;I
Allan Ia
01 0 001 00()- 2 a o
building and talked a little about sports on the Bowery
National
Le•gue
Martha Wolfe, Kay Barnett, Lobell In the fust race and the Red Sox only two hila In siJ: ~
gabrhpcl
Billingham {8 101 and Plum
"The reason 1 like football more than baseball IS because
mer , Stone Upshaw 16), Kelley
.
Cdeno, Hoo ' 97 389 81 136 350 Aff for trans , ModdlepOrt.
Rendezvous Loper on the IMings to pick up the v1ctory. ~
171and Wlllloms Casanova (8)
there's more act1on," he said "!like anythmg with action toot " Dvlllo, Pol
83 259 43 88 340
Luella Hanmg, Dana Hanmg second 4-7, paid $39
LP- Stone (o 9) fiRs- Bench
Does he like life on the Bowery?
142 339
Wilms,LA
Chi 183
08 4268
19 67
Attendance was 4,324 woth a
Mola,
42 89 332 to Jerrold E Solhvan, Parcels,
ThiS Week's Spec1al
l26lh), Baker IBth)
~!*:B~E~a. (UP!)- "No," he came right back. "It's like baseball Too mono- Garr Atl
99 403 6S 132 328 Bedford
handle of $198,481
San Fran , IOo 000 ooo-- 5 10 I Tight end Bob Adams of the tonous "
Buckner. LA 74 257 JO 83 323
Orville E. Hudnall, Anzona
Baker, All
as 286 36 92 322
1
Houston
ooo
304
oox7
10
I
Houston
Oilers
suffered
a
How
long
has
he
been
on
the
Bowery
'
Alou, st l
Reberger, Stone (61, MoffiH
98 379 42 120 317 Hudnal to Ralph C Durst,
161 , Johnsoo (7) and Healy. sprained right knee m the
"Twenty-one years," he sa1d
Sngu1ln, P1t 99 380 43120 316 Naomi J Durst, Lots 3U, 310,
Lee, SO
68 251 35 79 31S Salosbury
D A Rader Ill , Rober Is. Culver game against the New York
If ot's so monotonous, why does he stay?
American League
Frankhn Real Estate Co to
13),
Forsth
141. Richard (5), Jets last Saturday and Is ex"The
thing
!like
about
this
place
os
that
you
can
go
where
you
POMEROY LANES
Griffin (7), Gladd'"g (9) and
gabrhptt
Early Sunday Mo•ed
USED CARS
Edwards WP- Richard (1 01 peeled to miss the club's up. like, do what you want and nobody asks you any questions," he Rud1,0ak 101440 73140 318 Oh10PowerCo, Coal 50 Acres,
August 6, 1972
Shblm,KC
93 311 42 98 315 Salem
LP- Stone (58) HR- Bonds commg pre-eeason game w1th swd
Won Lost
Pnlela, KC 106 403 52 12S 310
Ralph H Gamer, Ruth I
I20th)
the Atlanla Falcons
"Look at these," he went on, thrusting out his hands ''They're Allen
Gutter Busters
41
23
Ch1
108 366 69 112 306
40
24
IOnly games scheduled)
all cut up and filthy Dirty hands, no shave I'd be embarrassed Carew, M1n 97 367 43 112 305 Gamer to Stephen V Men- Odd Balls
DT s
38 26
Americon Leogue
going uptown looking like this I still have feelings Down here Berry, Ca I 79 273 32 83 .304 delson, Gail P Mendelson, Frigid Pinks
38
26
New York 000 000 QOO-- 0 • 4
'•
OilS , KC
101 384 S2 116 302 Jeffrey M Mendelson, Stanley leaml
28 36
though, you're one of the boys They're m the same predicament May ,Chl
KanCity
002 000 10K- 3 10 0
106 37S 66 Ill 296
Fisk, Bos
87 301 53 89 296 D Bobrof, Parcels, Olive
Allin lhe Fam•ly
7
57
Kline 113 Sl and Munson Do l
you're In Nobody feels superior"
H1gh lnd Game - Larry
Canton, Angelini 191 and ·MONEY LEADER
Tmpsn.M~n 98 394 OA 114 289
Norman
Deem,
Jamce
Deem
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jack
Farther down the Bowery, six other derelicts were grouped m
Dugan 245 and Ma)(me Dugan
Kirkpatrick WP- Dal Canton
fiome Runs
to Lawrence Riehle, VIolet 171
(6 .,
Nicklaus, who picked up the a seml-corcle, love of them slwnped agawt a brick wall and the
Nahonal Lea9ue Colbert, SO
32, Stargell, Pitt 27 . Benth, Cln Rotchoe, Lots 27 , 29 , at,
Second H1gh - Ed Petne 224
$~0,000 forst prize m last sllrth stretched out on the pavement looking stone cold dead on
and Max1ne Dugan and Julia
Clakland
too 120 01o-- 5 9 0
26, Aaron, All, Williams, Ch1 Lebanon - New Portland
Balllmore 000 020 QOO-- 2 12 I weekend's Westchester Open, the sidewalk.
and May, Hou 24
Lawrence A Ritchoe, Violet Boyles, 164
' YQu'll L•ke Our Quality
Senes - Ed Petne 617
Holtzman, Fingers {51 and mcreased his lead over runner"He's okay, he's only resting," said one of those m the group
American League : Allen, Chi Ritchie to Norman Deem, andHigh
Way
of Doong Business "
Larry Dugan 601 , NKIKme
Duncan , Palmer, Harr1son {6} , up Lee Trevino In the PGA
28, Cash, Det 22 , Jackson, Clak
GMAC
FINANCING
"He
hadda
lltUe
too
much
of
that
California
White
Port
wine.
Jackson (81 and Etcheberren. money-winning list to over
21. K1llebrew, Minn. Murcer, Janice Deem, Lot I and Lot 3, Dugan 485 and Sus1e Grueser 99l-Sl42
,Pomeroy
462
Care
for
some?
Oh,
sports.
Damn
rJghl
we're
Interested
In
the
Dates (7) WP- Fmgers 16·51
NY and Epstein. Clak 19
New PorUand '
Open
Evemngs
'T•II
oo
Team
H1gh
Game
and
Senes
LP- Palmer (156) HRs- Ep $100,000. Nicklaus has won ball games down here. Sex, no, but sports, yes Ain't that right
Runs B•tted In
Fl
T1ISPM
Sat
N•tlonal League. Stargell,
orence Harden Potts, - Fng1d Pinks 706 and 1962
stein (19thl. Rud1 {16th). S240,415 this year
feHas' I'm from Ch1cago myself and shot pool once with Willie Pltl 89. Colbert, SO 86, Bench, Harry Potts to Rohert Harden,
Johnson (4th)
Moscoru. Honest. But you oughtta talk to Elmer over there He Cln 85, Williams, Chi 77 , May, Dorothy Harden, Earl Harden,
played some football."
H'l:',;;r,tan League. Allen, Chi Ferrold Harden, Leota KenElmer had one of those llhort haorcuts and the general ap. 82 , Scott. Mil and Murcer, NY dall, Mary Lisle, Lot 62
pearance of a man who might have once been an athlete He has 65, Jackson, Clak 61. Darwin, Quollen's Add , Sutton Syracuse.
missed a few meals lately though because some of his bones Mlnn 511 Pllchon9
Nahonal Lea 9u1 : Carlton,
Thelma F
Eagle to
protrude. Elmer S81d he was 57, had spent 20 years on the
Phil
19
6,
Jenk1ns,
Chi
16·10;
Monongahela
Power
Co ,
Bowery, was originally from Wyoming and had ~en looked at by
Nolan, C1n 13 3, Sutton, LA and Ease , Olive
the Pittsburgh Steelers after having played college baH m Blass, P1tt 13 6, Torrez, Mont
Missouri
13 7, Osteen, LA 13 8. Seaver,
13 9
"I've always loved football, particularly pro football," he sa1d. NYAmerocan
The Daily Sentinel
League Wood, Chi
"I follow It, whenever I get a chance. They've got some sports- 20·11 , Lol1ch, Det 18·9, Perry,
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
minded guys down here on the Bowery but most of them are too Clev 1811, Palmer, Bait and
MEIGS MASON AREA
Hunler,
Oak
15
6,
Bahnsen,
Ch•
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
opinionated, they never listen to what you've got to say.
15 IJ
Exec Ed
"Me?" Elmer shrugged, looking a little forlorn In his begrtmed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Ctl'f EC111or
peaclH:olored shirt which didn't qwte match his baggy, paintPublished dally r•crpt
smeared khaki trouaers "Like I say, I try to follow the pro
Saturday bV The OhtO Vlllty
International Lea9ue
Publish tng Company , 111
football teams, butl've really got nothlng.l'm doing nothing, and
Stand1n9s
Court St
Pomeroy On lo
Unoted Press lnternltlonal
going nowhere. I used to run pretty good, but can't anymore.
•5769 Business Othe r Phone
W. L Pet. G.B. 992 2156. Ed tiOrtal Phone 992
Emphysema. ! can't even walk up the stepa. All I'm really doll\8 LouiSVIlle
1157
•,
69 50 580
19 walling to die."
Second class postage patd at
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67 51 568 1'12 Pomeroy,
Ohto
Tidewater
65 56 537 5
l
Nat ton a l advertts l n;
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6:j 60 512 8
representa ttve
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60 60 500 912 Gallagher , Inc , I? East 42nd
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58 65 472 13
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Subscr.ptlon rates
De
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and come on In .. BUY 'EM HERE I 'I
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A's Stop Palmer, Orioles, 5-2
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PHONE 992-2342

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Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Au2ust 15. 1!17?

Raiders Blank-Baltimore, 16-0
OAK:..AND ( UPI )_:_The
rushing and pass receiving of
llltleused third-year ruMing
back Don Highsmith and a
rugged defense lifted the
'Oakland Raiders to an eagy IS.
0 win over the Baltimore Col1s
in a ·pre..eason game Monday
night.
The Colts, with only one field
goal in two pre..eason losses
and scoreless for seven
straight . periods, failed to
penetrate deeper than the

Raider 22-yard line despite lhe
excellent first-half passing of .
John Unitas.
Highsmith rushed for 65
yards in the first quarter and
set up two of three field goals
by ageless George Blanda. The
night's performance may have
earned the S-foot, 200-pound
back from Michigan Slate a
starting job. Clarence Davis, .
who won the running back spot
late last season, sustained a

shoulder injury in the first
quarter and may be sidelined
for 10 weeks.
Blanda had field goals of 24,
30 and 23 yards and secondstring quarterback Ken Stabler
threw anll'yard scoring pass to
Fred Biletnlkoff midway
through the third quarter.
Oakland wide receiver Warren Wells, jailed during the
1971 season for a probation
violation, made his '72 debut

during a tl)jrd-quarter drive
and dropped the only pas.
thrown at him.
· Unitas completed nine of 16
passes for 126 yards while
guiding the Colts in lhe first.
half. But the Raider defense
held Baltimore to only 18 yards
rushing when Unitas was at the
helni.
Jim O'Brien missed Colt
field goal attempts from the 49
and 35, both in the first half.

Skorich "Hopeful about Browns
HffiAM, Ohio (UPI) - De·
spite losing the first two exhibition games; Cleveland Browns
coach Nick Skorich says his
team is seeing mistakes that
by
For instance, take rookie de-

~;~~ ~:so;'::;::;ated

who made the interception just
helore the pass was thrown,
"but it was. too late and I let it

go ."
schedule Sunday afternoon
The Browns play the third of against the Detroit Lions in
their six'game exhibition Ann Arbor, Mich.

w00dCOCk· Thm• k S NIXOD
•
'

THOMAS ROUSH
CLIFTON, W. Va.
Airman Thomas E. Roush,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Detoer
Roush Jr., Clllloo, has
completed Air Force basic
training at Lacklaad AFB,
Tex. ·He .Is remaining at the
Air Tralolog Command l!ase
for specialized . training In
the security pollee field.
Roush is a 1972 graduate of
Wahama High School.

~i~,io~\!!~i~:F~i~ Could Blow Reelection Suffering

49ers
receiver
Gene
Washington get behind him for
COLUMBUS (UP!)
for blowing elections."
an easy 31 yard touchdown Leonard Woodcock, president
Asked if that meant Nixon
pass play.
of the United Auto Workers, would have to make a mlstake
"Brooks made the fatal mis- said Monday tbat if President during the campaign for Me!llke of aU young defeniliire Ni.&lt;on becomes compia...nt or Govern to win, Woodcock rebacks," fa&lt;orich said. "He took makes a mistake during the plied: "!think tbat's part and
his eye off the receiver and upcoming campaign, he could parcel of the future."
looked at the quarterback. He well end . up "blowing" the
He also said If Nixon "acts
has to make mistakes to learn, election. .
like he doesn't have to fight for
though."
Woodcock addresed 850 dele- votes, we'll have another
Brooks said he's certain to gates to the leadership confer. Thomas Dewey on our bands."
improve after the San Fran- ence of the Ohio UAW ComNo Friendship
cisco game.
munity Action Progr.11m CounWoodcock told the delegates
"That was the worst game I ell and urged them to follow If Nixon is re-elected by a wide
have played in my life," he their international executive mar.gin,labor will be without a
said. "I'd never had a touch- board in endorsing the Demo- friend in tbe White House for
down thrown on me ~fore. I ·cratic ticket of Sen. George S. · another four years.
don't feel quite so ba
ough McGovern and Sargent
"Some of the press has rebecause of who did it t me. Shriver.
ported that If Nixon is reWashington is qui e a
The delegates~ representing elected he'll think he's king,"
receiver."
225,000 local umon members Woodcock said. "Well, if NixOn
Another first year man, from Ohio, West Virginia and is re-elected by a big mandate,
safety Tom Darden of western Pennsylvaniabu, voted he won't think he's king. He'll
Michigan, said he was on the endorsement I the think he 's the Lord God
"pleased, but not satisfied" results were not available until Jehovah. The working man
with his play in the 49ers game. ballots are counted in Detroit won't have anybody to turn
"I have confidence in the de· today.
to."
lenses and know pretty much
"There's been a real hatchet
Little dissent
to a
what I'm domg· ,"he said. "It's job done on George McGovern
Democratic
endorsement
was
Iast few weeks, and 1·t•s heard during the 2'L hour
a matter of polishing my fool- in
the
bo
ha
11
n
work and getting more experund lo ve an e eel on meeting as union officials and
ience."
. some people," Woodcock
fdsaid. local presidents praised the
San Francisco iced the game . 'M
'But I ~ave, great con 1 e~cte ticket and called for unity.
on an interception by safety '" r · NIXon s grea1 capac! Y One local official, John JorMike Simpson a,nd a couple of
Browns blamed themselves.
n~
Left_ guard John Demar•e
.
a.I!..,..U
sa\d ~·,"br~)!'"dQ,~. early"
., -·; • .•
-::
, 11,
anH ~~(Earl EdW&amp;fds, 49er
COL\)Ma1Js, (Ui'l) , Soy- American agrl ture ' and we
dete.f!ssfve taCkle', put-too much beans were declared the "king as soybean farmers must treat
pressure on Browns quar- -of American agriculture" here them (soybeans) with the reterback . Mike Phipps, who Monday by the president of the spect demanded," Kuehn said.
threw the interception.
Ameri c an Soybean "Better land, better fertiliza"Hithadn'lheenforthatwe Association.
lion, better management and
would have won the game,"
U.S.Secrelaryof Agriculdture better marketing techniques
DeMarie said.
Earl Butz was to address e1e- will keep soybeans the king and
Phipps shouldered part of the gates to the American Soybean return more dollars to your
blaine. He said he saw the man Conference today . He planned pocket."
to hold a news conference at 10
Kuelm predicted sales of soyCincinnatians
a.m.
beans in America in 1972 would
"For the first time in history, reach $3.82 billion .
Edged in Tourney a president of this organization " It would be easy for one to
can stand before you and pro- imply, with soybeans priced at
MONROE, N. C. (UPI) - claim soybeans the No . I cash $3 and with strong demand for
Seattle, Pensacola, Fla., and crop in the nation," Harold soybeans around the world,
San Antonio, Tex., emerged Kuelm told conventioneers.
that we have achieved suewinners Monday night in the
"I will not let this moment in cess," he said. "That would be
Babe Ruth League Tour- agricultural history go un- stating the case too strongly
nament of Champions here.
noticed," he said. "We have because !here is still a big job
San
Antonio
downed played second fiddle too long. to do.
Anaheim, Calif. 8-2, Seattle
"Soybeans are now 'king of
"But our efforts of the past
edged Cincinnati 2-1 and
Pensacola whipped CharlotteMonroe 3-2.
Cincinnati pitcher Ray
·Penno had a no-hitter going
into the 'seventh but the game
was lOilt when Seattle's Marty
Harkins singled home Jim
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - work, we will be sentencing 18
Glascock for the first of two
runs in .the final inning. Two Former gov. James A. Rhodes million more young people to a
wild ·pitches advanced the testified Monday before a life of limited job opportunity
'd ·
runners, the second of which subcommittee of Republican in the ned decade," he sa1 .
drove in John Mciver to score. Resolution Committee that the " We cannot afford this
Cincinnati's run came in the No. I domestic problem today repeated disaster in our
fifth when Rick Llnz doubled is the primary and secondary society.
In but one year we can
and Mike Weiss drove him in. education system.
Rhodes,
in
prepared count 830, 000 high school
remarks, said the system had dropouts for whom the
HELDMAN RESIGNS
denied )5 mlllion young people present educational process
HOUSTON (UP!) -Gladys between the ages of 16 and 25 has little or no nieaolng," be
Heldman, di,rec~to[of the an equal opportunity to
women's tennis tour or the prepare themselves for the said. · · ·
" In the same year we wit··
U.S. Lawn Tennis
iation, world of work.
ness the graduation of 650,000
.announced Monday she will
"Unless we change courses general course . students who
resign that poaitlon at the end In education, unless the enter the labor market without
of this year's tournament educational system is adjusted the skills or training they need
schedule (Oct. 15).
to the needs of the real world of to cope with our highly
technical work world," he said.
Rhodes contended the
present educational system is
geared . too closely with
preparation for. college.
!
"Today only 14 of every 100
youngslers
entering the first
Some caU it whole&amp;lle
grade will be graduated from
college,'' he said. "Only 35 pel.
Some call it di.cormt
of our high achool graduates

soybe!Jn

dan of Cleveland, questioned
McGovern's "crawl to Hanoi
and beg" for peace statement,
as well as the issue of homosexuality.
A Columbus chapter from
North American Rockwell
urged no endorsement because
of McGovern's proposals to cut
the defense budget.
But Woodcock dealt with all
arguments in a lengthy speec h
and later said he anticipated a
"substantial endorsement" of
the McGovern.shriver ticket.
Woodcock gave the Nixon
admlnistration some "pluses"
in foreign policy, notable the
President's visits to Moscow
and Peking. But he said Indochina was a "big minus" and
that the administration was
"distorting the economy in the
direction of the rich and
powerful by pumping profits to
the highest level on record."
, Woodcock said the neutral
position of the AFL-CIO may
"in the long run be a plus, because the unions have been put
on their mettle and will work
harder than If there had heen
routine endorsements."

We named it our.Budget Shop

Come see - Compare You 'U find the beat values at

·Baker Furniture

~

Cited if
Tax Voided

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
executive director of the Ohio
Association for Retarded
Children, said Monday hundreds of thousands of Ohioans
would suffer without the slate
income tax.
James P. White said repeal
of the lax would deprive mentally retarded and bandlcapped persons of education,
training and an opportunity to
become productive members
of society.
"For the first time in Ohio's
history, the mentally retarded
and handicapped children and
adults have been given an opportunily through a new level
of funding to participate in
special education and training
programs never available to
local communities before,"
White said.
A group of Ohio House Republicans are leading a drive to
put repeal of the lax on the
Nove~ber ~llot. .
.
White claimed If the tax IS
!'!!fs., r.~pe~Jed : , .
•. •
•; u
..
1 ,:;.- ·•,.... ~~ least .400 staffers at m·.'
.yeats def!mteijl.are,
•·stitullons for !lie• mentally reto bear fruit," he said. "Ameri- .Jarded, where for the first time
can soybean growers ha~e wards are covered oo a 24-hour
built a base that now puts us m basis, would lie laid off.
the doorway of opportunity."
- Ohio would not qualify any
Kuelmsaidtherewereseven of its mental facilities under
major challenges facing soy- the American Accreditation
bean growers:
Standards.
- The constant threat of in- - Hundreds of special
creased imports.
education classes for han- The damaging effect of dicapped children in local
dock strikes.
school districts would be
- The need to encourage na· elimlnated .
tioQal policies which allow for a
New
institutional
responsible growth of the in- programs tbat are helping
dustry.
educate aod train severely
- To earn markets on mentally retarded and han·
quality and not price .
dicapped persons would be
-To boost the nati111's soy- eliminated.
bean yield.
- Funding of corrununlty
- Pass a soybean checkoff in mental health and mental re·
every soybean producing state. lardation programs would be
- Sign up new members.
seriously reduced.

l d K•
.c. are :v,""· ·

Rhodes Presses for Plank
On Vocational Education
enter college in the first place.
"And 65pct. who do not enter
college must abrupUy confront
the frightenm
· g reality that
they have no vocational or
technical skills to put on their
job reswnes," he said. "The
politics of intellectua·l sno·bbery runs rampant in such a
system."
IUlodes recommended . the
sutH:ommitlee include in its
plank on education.
_ The establishment in the
Wh ite House and directly
under the president an office to
advise, plan ana coordinate all
national programs 'relating to
career education and job
training.
,
- Creationofafederalboard
of Vocational - Technical
Manpower Occupational
Education .
- Enlist the support Qf all
segments of the economy, as
well as of national, state and
local government, an explanation of the importance of

FAIR WEEK
SPECIALS!

Candidate
Visiting in
YoungstoWn
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- Democratic presidential
nominee GeorgeS. McGovern
today makes his first visit to
Ohio since being nominated.
McGovern was scheduled to
go on a walking tour In this
northeastern Ohio City and
then travel to nearby Lord·
stown this afternoon to address
members of the United Auto
Workers Union who work at' the
·huge General Motors complex.
McGovern's timetable called
for him to arrive at Youngstown Municipal Airport at
10:30 a.m., toor · the city's
southside at 11:30 a.m. and
hold a news conference at the
Voyager Hotel at 2 p.m. .
The candidate was to speak
to wrlon members in Lords· .
town at 3:20p.m., then depart
Youngstown Airport at 5:20
p.m. for Springfield, Ill.

Treasurer's
Report Made
At Middlennrt
:r~

The total in all village funds
as of July 31 totaled ....
...,.,750.27
according to the monthly
report of clerk-treasurer Gene
Grate when Middleport Village
Council met Monday night.
The receipts, disbursements
during the month and the July
31 balance, respectively, of
each fund includes :
General, $3,418,90, $6,232.33,
$32,022.05; cemetery, $102.17,
$489.40, $1,176.12; fire equipment, no receipts, $64.30,
$635.56; swimming pool,
$2,387.90, $1,662.04, $4,419.52;
planning commission, no
receipts, $149.21, $683.52; street
••
rna intenance, $187 .20 , ••1 ,694 ....
,
$11218
66
, . .
Sanitary sewer, $3,948 .27,
••2 ,836 .45 , $23 ,573 .03 ; wa ter,
$6,443.92, $6,226.98, $23,266.67;
water meter deposit trusts,
$IOO, $!50, $6, 027.23 ; sanitary
escrow fund, no ,receipts, no
disburs~m,,nts, $58,837.82; ffre
house constr'ucJion, $60,375,
$510 60 $S 9 864 40· general
· '
' · '
bond
retirement,
disbursement, $! 7, $375,
. . no
025 69
Receipts for !he month
totaled $77,338.36 while
disbursements totaled
$ , . .
20 016 04

Mission to South Vietnam
Described at Church Event

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480

Dear Sir :
.
1 feel the Soutbem Local Board of Education and DIStrict
Superintendent Ralph Sayre shoultl be highly commended for
their effort they have put· forth in t&lt;ecent months toward getting
the Portland Elementary School reopened. .
·
It Is my understanding the coilclusion of this effort was
reached dufing a meeting of the board members and Mr. Sayre
this past weekend with formal action •being approved ~ once
again hold classes in the school facilily,at Portland~ 1 ,
In addition to considering the faCt· that a achool ~ans a
great deal to any community, I am certain the Southern Local
Board of Education too~ into thogght that the Portland
Elementary faclllty is lhe newest gracfe school structure in the
district, as they studied lhe feasibility of reopening lt.
The people of the Portland area are, just as they alwllya have
been, proud folks. But I can't help thlnkln,g that !heir pride ;will be
bolstered somewhat by the board of education's decision to
reopen the school.
1am one of the persons from the other end of the district who
is delighted for them.
Sincerely,
Robert Wingett,
Syracuse, 0.

,C~rner Mill and Se,con~ Sts.

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'au wo;kers, regardless of 1.
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f
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1
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•
ALL PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
secure employment, and the I
ENTER . NO EMPLOYE 0~ MEMB.ER OF
dignity and decency that go I DEPOSIT
FAMILY MAY ENTER .
with it," he aaid. "They want
ONE PRIZE TO A FAMILY
work, not relief.
I AT
· DRAWING SAT. NIGHT AUq. 19 AT 8 P.M.
"They want to become I
OUR
. You Do Not Have to be Pre'sentto Win
productiye,'' he said. "I
M&amp; R SHOPPING CENTER
believe they a~ enUiled to I
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producing a class of angry and
WASHINGTON (UPI) workers
in
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- rebellious
Mass., has asked Congress to America," l{eMedy said.
The bill lteMedy introduced
spend $20 million for research
Into the problems of the Monday would authorize
assembly line '!'orker, who he research on bow widespread
said is becoming "angry and and severe job discontent lB
and what It Is coating the
rebellious ."
Kennedy said the research economy.
It also directs research into
specifically was aimed at
plants like the Lordstown, the Incidence of mental and
Ohio, General Motors complex, physical disease and seeks recwhich turns out 101 Vegas ommendations on bow to overevery hour, the fastest come w;orker alienation.
assembly speed in the world.
Kennedy said the production
line
fosters
"worker
alienation," resulting in high
absenteeism and turnover·"
rates and increased use of
alcohol and drallll· ;: ' ·· !
He cited testimony tielote hiS
Senate Manpower Subcommittee about a worker who
took a day off to attend the
funeral of a friend and ''was
Use Our FrH Parking LOI
disciplined for two days
because this was an unexcused

SAVE

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fOr

·~IDOLEPORT, 0.

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Study Proposed

absence .,.

GROUND CHUCK

ROYAL BRAND ,

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

The Ken Sa.lyers family, Sherr! Osborne,
Smith Elizabeth
illl J
which soon will open a home Duffy, Olive
, B e ean
for homeless children in South Carter, Jeannette Carter,
1
Vietliam, spoke to the Meigs Marilyn Wlkox, Bever Y
County Christian Women's Wilcox, Norma Russell,
Fellowship Thursday evening Frances Hysell, Merle John·
at the Pomeroy Church of -son, Edna Ruasell, Mildred
s·
B i
Pi k
Christ. The meeting was · 1s~on,
onn e
c ens,
especially planned so the Tressie Hendricks, Hlldred
Salyers' famlly could appear .. Carson , Marge Wilt, Eleanor
Closed All Day Thursday, Aug. 17 for the
·I'!Ir. · Salyers· . and his wife, Hoover, Bernice May, Thelma
Eunice and two children Vicki Osborne, Peggy Brlckles,
Meigs County Fair;
'
and K~nneih,. will leav~ later Trudy Andrews, Bettyd Spen. \
thismonthtostartthehomefor cer,
Ca dEileen Bowers an Doris
I
children in South Vietnam. .
r er ·
JEWELRY STORE
The couple presented a
The next meeting ·will be
COURT ST.
program of slides showing the Sept. 28 at I :30 p.m. at the
POMEROY
area they will be living in and Rutland Church of Christ.
explained their hope to extend
. . . . . . . . . . . . ., .. .
•II
love, undersianding, and
I
Christian training to these
I
childrenwhohaveneverbeard
I
of Christ. Mrs . Salyers closed
the program with a moving
song, "Does It Make Any
Difference To You?"
After a short business
meeting, refreshments and a
hJUr were enjoyed by the
•••••••Ii~ii-···•••••··--~··,..,:ial
1
following ladles and guests,
Lou . Osborne, Bill McDaniel,
•Bill Carter, Debbie Osborne,
ENTRY BLANICJ
ENTER
NAME - -

·r •••••

'

FREE ON-STREET
PARKING AfTER 5 P.M.

''These are some of the problems and rrustrations that are

PAPERS FILED
Articles of Incorporation
have heen filed in Columbus
with Secretary of Slate Ted W.
Brown by the Temple United
Methodist Church in Columbia
Township for Arthur Crabtree,
Donald Comer, Dale Scott, by
their Agent, Arthur Crabtree,
Albany Rt. 3.

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~ - The

Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Au2ust 15. 1!17?

Raiders Blank-Baltimore, 16-0
OAK:..AND ( UPI )_:_The
rushing and pass receiving of
llltleused third-year ruMing
back Don Highsmith and a
rugged defense lifted the
'Oakland Raiders to an eagy IS.
0 win over the Baltimore Col1s
in a ·pre..eason game Monday
night.
The Colts, with only one field
goal in two pre..eason losses
and scoreless for seven
straight . periods, failed to
penetrate deeper than the

Raider 22-yard line despite lhe
excellent first-half passing of .
John Unitas.
Highsmith rushed for 65
yards in the first quarter and
set up two of three field goals
by ageless George Blanda. The
night's performance may have
earned the S-foot, 200-pound
back from Michigan Slate a
starting job. Clarence Davis, .
who won the running back spot
late last season, sustained a

shoulder injury in the first
quarter and may be sidelined
for 10 weeks.
Blanda had field goals of 24,
30 and 23 yards and secondstring quarterback Ken Stabler
threw anll'yard scoring pass to
Fred Biletnlkoff midway
through the third quarter.
Oakland wide receiver Warren Wells, jailed during the
1971 season for a probation
violation, made his '72 debut

during a tl)jrd-quarter drive
and dropped the only pas.
thrown at him.
· Unitas completed nine of 16
passes for 126 yards while
guiding the Colts in lhe first.
half. But the Raider defense
held Baltimore to only 18 yards
rushing when Unitas was at the
helni.
Jim O'Brien missed Colt
field goal attempts from the 49
and 35, both in the first half.

Skorich "Hopeful about Browns
HffiAM, Ohio (UPI) - De·
spite losing the first two exhibition games; Cleveland Browns
coach Nick Skorich says his
team is seeing mistakes that
by
For instance, take rookie de-

~;~~ ~:so;'::;::;ated

who made the interception just
helore the pass was thrown,
"but it was. too late and I let it

go ."
schedule Sunday afternoon
The Browns play the third of against the Detroit Lions in
their six'game exhibition Ann Arbor, Mich.

w00dCOCk· Thm• k S NIXOD
•
'

THOMAS ROUSH
CLIFTON, W. Va.
Airman Thomas E. Roush,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Detoer
Roush Jr., Clllloo, has
completed Air Force basic
training at Lacklaad AFB,
Tex. ·He .Is remaining at the
Air Tralolog Command l!ase
for specialized . training In
the security pollee field.
Roush is a 1972 graduate of
Wahama High School.

~i~,io~\!!~i~:F~i~ Could Blow Reelection Suffering

49ers
receiver
Gene
Washington get behind him for
COLUMBUS (UP!)
for blowing elections."
an easy 31 yard touchdown Leonard Woodcock, president
Asked if that meant Nixon
pass play.
of the United Auto Workers, would have to make a mlstake
"Brooks made the fatal mis- said Monday tbat if President during the campaign for Me!llke of aU young defeniliire Ni.&lt;on becomes compia...nt or Govern to win, Woodcock rebacks," fa&lt;orich said. "He took makes a mistake during the plied: "!think tbat's part and
his eye off the receiver and upcoming campaign, he could parcel of the future."
looked at the quarterback. He well end . up "blowing" the
He also said If Nixon "acts
has to make mistakes to learn, election. .
like he doesn't have to fight for
though."
Woodcock addresed 850 dele- votes, we'll have another
Brooks said he's certain to gates to the leadership confer. Thomas Dewey on our bands."
improve after the San Fran- ence of the Ohio UAW ComNo Friendship
cisco game.
munity Action Progr.11m CounWoodcock told the delegates
"That was the worst game I ell and urged them to follow If Nixon is re-elected by a wide
have played in my life," he their international executive mar.gin,labor will be without a
said. "I'd never had a touch- board in endorsing the Demo- friend in tbe White House for
down thrown on me ~fore. I ·cratic ticket of Sen. George S. · another four years.
don't feel quite so ba
ough McGovern and Sargent
"Some of the press has rebecause of who did it t me. Shriver.
ported that If Nixon is reWashington is qui e a
The delegates~ representing elected he'll think he's king,"
receiver."
225,000 local umon members Woodcock said. "Well, if NixOn
Another first year man, from Ohio, West Virginia and is re-elected by a big mandate,
safety Tom Darden of western Pennsylvaniabu, voted he won't think he's king. He'll
Michigan, said he was on the endorsement I the think he 's the Lord God
"pleased, but not satisfied" results were not available until Jehovah. The working man
with his play in the 49ers game. ballots are counted in Detroit won't have anybody to turn
"I have confidence in the de· today.
to."
lenses and know pretty much
"There's been a real hatchet
Little dissent
to a
what I'm domg· ,"he said. "It's job done on George McGovern
Democratic
endorsement
was
Iast few weeks, and 1·t•s heard during the 2'L hour
a matter of polishing my fool- in
the
bo
ha
11
n
work and getting more experund lo ve an e eel on meeting as union officials and
ience."
. some people," Woodcock
fdsaid. local presidents praised the
San Francisco iced the game . 'M
'But I ~ave, great con 1 e~cte ticket and called for unity.
on an interception by safety '" r · NIXon s grea1 capac! Y One local official, John JorMike Simpson a,nd a couple of
Browns blamed themselves.
n~
Left_ guard John Demar•e
.
a.I!..,..U
sa\d ~·,"br~)!'"dQ,~. early"
., -·; • .•
-::
, 11,
anH ~~(Earl EdW&amp;fds, 49er
COL\)Ma1Js, (Ui'l) , Soy- American agrl ture ' and we
dete.f!ssfve taCkle', put-too much beans were declared the "king as soybean farmers must treat
pressure on Browns quar- -of American agriculture" here them (soybeans) with the reterback . Mike Phipps, who Monday by the president of the spect demanded," Kuehn said.
threw the interception.
Ameri c an Soybean "Better land, better fertiliza"Hithadn'lheenforthatwe Association.
lion, better management and
would have won the game,"
U.S.Secrelaryof Agriculdture better marketing techniques
DeMarie said.
Earl Butz was to address e1e- will keep soybeans the king and
Phipps shouldered part of the gates to the American Soybean return more dollars to your
blaine. He said he saw the man Conference today . He planned pocket."
to hold a news conference at 10
Kuelm predicted sales of soyCincinnatians
a.m.
beans in America in 1972 would
"For the first time in history, reach $3.82 billion .
Edged in Tourney a president of this organization " It would be easy for one to
can stand before you and pro- imply, with soybeans priced at
MONROE, N. C. (UPI) - claim soybeans the No . I cash $3 and with strong demand for
Seattle, Pensacola, Fla., and crop in the nation," Harold soybeans around the world,
San Antonio, Tex., emerged Kuelm told conventioneers.
that we have achieved suewinners Monday night in the
"I will not let this moment in cess," he said. "That would be
Babe Ruth League Tour- agricultural history go un- stating the case too strongly
nament of Champions here.
noticed," he said. "We have because !here is still a big job
San
Antonio
downed played second fiddle too long. to do.
Anaheim, Calif. 8-2, Seattle
"Soybeans are now 'king of
"But our efforts of the past
edged Cincinnati 2-1 and
Pensacola whipped CharlotteMonroe 3-2.
Cincinnati pitcher Ray
·Penno had a no-hitter going
into the 'seventh but the game
was lOilt when Seattle's Marty
Harkins singled home Jim
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) - work, we will be sentencing 18
Glascock for the first of two
runs in .the final inning. Two Former gov. James A. Rhodes million more young people to a
wild ·pitches advanced the testified Monday before a life of limited job opportunity
'd ·
runners, the second of which subcommittee of Republican in the ned decade," he sa1 .
drove in John Mciver to score. Resolution Committee that the " We cannot afford this
Cincinnati's run came in the No. I domestic problem today repeated disaster in our
fifth when Rick Llnz doubled is the primary and secondary society.
In but one year we can
and Mike Weiss drove him in. education system.
Rhodes,
in
prepared count 830, 000 high school
remarks, said the system had dropouts for whom the
HELDMAN RESIGNS
denied )5 mlllion young people present educational process
HOUSTON (UP!) -Gladys between the ages of 16 and 25 has little or no nieaolng," be
Heldman, di,rec~to[of the an equal opportunity to
women's tennis tour or the prepare themselves for the said. · · ·
" In the same year we wit··
U.S. Lawn Tennis
iation, world of work.
ness the graduation of 650,000
.announced Monday she will
"Unless we change courses general course . students who
resign that poaitlon at the end In education, unless the enter the labor market without
of this year's tournament educational system is adjusted the skills or training they need
schedule (Oct. 15).
to the needs of the real world of to cope with our highly
technical work world," he said.
Rhodes contended the
present educational system is
geared . too closely with
preparation for. college.
!
"Today only 14 of every 100
youngslers
entering the first
Some caU it whole&amp;lle
grade will be graduated from
college,'' he said. "Only 35 pel.
Some call it di.cormt
of our high achool graduates

soybe!Jn

dan of Cleveland, questioned
McGovern's "crawl to Hanoi
and beg" for peace statement,
as well as the issue of homosexuality.
A Columbus chapter from
North American Rockwell
urged no endorsement because
of McGovern's proposals to cut
the defense budget.
But Woodcock dealt with all
arguments in a lengthy speec h
and later said he anticipated a
"substantial endorsement" of
the McGovern.shriver ticket.
Woodcock gave the Nixon
admlnistration some "pluses"
in foreign policy, notable the
President's visits to Moscow
and Peking. But he said Indochina was a "big minus" and
that the administration was
"distorting the economy in the
direction of the rich and
powerful by pumping profits to
the highest level on record."
, Woodcock said the neutral
position of the AFL-CIO may
"in the long run be a plus, because the unions have been put
on their mettle and will work
harder than If there had heen
routine endorsements."

We named it our.Budget Shop

Come see - Compare You 'U find the beat values at

·Baker Furniture

~

Cited if
Tax Voided

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
executive director of the Ohio
Association for Retarded
Children, said Monday hundreds of thousands of Ohioans
would suffer without the slate
income tax.
James P. White said repeal
of the lax would deprive mentally retarded and bandlcapped persons of education,
training and an opportunity to
become productive members
of society.
"For the first time in Ohio's
history, the mentally retarded
and handicapped children and
adults have been given an opportunily through a new level
of funding to participate in
special education and training
programs never available to
local communities before,"
White said.
A group of Ohio House Republicans are leading a drive to
put repeal of the lax on the
Nove~ber ~llot. .
.
White claimed If the tax IS
!'!!fs., r.~pe~Jed : , .
•. •
•; u
..
1 ,:;.- ·•,.... ~~ least .400 staffers at m·.'
.yeats def!mteijl.are,
•·stitullons for !lie• mentally reto bear fruit," he said. "Ameri- .Jarded, where for the first time
can soybean growers ha~e wards are covered oo a 24-hour
built a base that now puts us m basis, would lie laid off.
the doorway of opportunity."
- Ohio would not qualify any
Kuelmsaidtherewereseven of its mental facilities under
major challenges facing soy- the American Accreditation
bean growers:
Standards.
- The constant threat of in- - Hundreds of special
creased imports.
education classes for han- The damaging effect of dicapped children in local
dock strikes.
school districts would be
- The need to encourage na· elimlnated .
tioQal policies which allow for a
New
institutional
responsible growth of the in- programs tbat are helping
dustry.
educate aod train severely
- To earn markets on mentally retarded and han·
quality and not price .
dicapped persons would be
-To boost the nati111's soy- eliminated.
bean yield.
- Funding of corrununlty
- Pass a soybean checkoff in mental health and mental re·
every soybean producing state. lardation programs would be
- Sign up new members.
seriously reduced.

l d K•
.c. are :v,""· ·

Rhodes Presses for Plank
On Vocational Education
enter college in the first place.
"And 65pct. who do not enter
college must abrupUy confront
the frightenm
· g reality that
they have no vocational or
technical skills to put on their
job reswnes," he said. "The
politics of intellectua·l sno·bbery runs rampant in such a
system."
IUlodes recommended . the
sutH:ommitlee include in its
plank on education.
_ The establishment in the
Wh ite House and directly
under the president an office to
advise, plan ana coordinate all
national programs 'relating to
career education and job
training.
,
- Creationofafederalboard
of Vocational - Technical
Manpower Occupational
Education .
- Enlist the support Qf all
segments of the economy, as
well as of national, state and
local government, an explanation of the importance of

FAIR WEEK
SPECIALS!

Candidate
Visiting in
YoungstoWn
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- Democratic presidential
nominee GeorgeS. McGovern
today makes his first visit to
Ohio since being nominated.
McGovern was scheduled to
go on a walking tour In this
northeastern Ohio City and
then travel to nearby Lord·
stown this afternoon to address
members of the United Auto
Workers Union who work at' the
·huge General Motors complex.
McGovern's timetable called
for him to arrive at Youngstown Municipal Airport at
10:30 a.m., toor · the city's
southside at 11:30 a.m. and
hold a news conference at the
Voyager Hotel at 2 p.m. .
The candidate was to speak
to wrlon members in Lords· .
town at 3:20p.m., then depart
Youngstown Airport at 5:20
p.m. for Springfield, Ill.

Treasurer's
Report Made
At Middlennrt
:r~

The total in all village funds
as of July 31 totaled ....
...,.,750.27
according to the monthly
report of clerk-treasurer Gene
Grate when Middleport Village
Council met Monday night.
The receipts, disbursements
during the month and the July
31 balance, respectively, of
each fund includes :
General, $3,418,90, $6,232.33,
$32,022.05; cemetery, $102.17,
$489.40, $1,176.12; fire equipment, no receipts, $64.30,
$635.56; swimming pool,
$2,387.90, $1,662.04, $4,419.52;
planning commission, no
receipts, $149.21, $683.52; street
••
rna intenance, $187 .20 , ••1 ,694 ....
,
$11218
66
, . .
Sanitary sewer, $3,948 .27,
••2 ,836 .45 , $23 ,573 .03 ; wa ter,
$6,443.92, $6,226.98, $23,266.67;
water meter deposit trusts,
$IOO, $!50, $6, 027.23 ; sanitary
escrow fund, no ,receipts, no
disburs~m,,nts, $58,837.82; ffre
house constr'ucJion, $60,375,
$510 60 $S 9 864 40· general
· '
' · '
bond
retirement,
disbursement, $! 7, $375,
. . no
025 69
Receipts for !he month
totaled $77,338.36 while
disbursements totaled
$ , . .
20 016 04

Mission to South Vietnam
Described at Church Event

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480

Dear Sir :
.
1 feel the Soutbem Local Board of Education and DIStrict
Superintendent Ralph Sayre shoultl be highly commended for
their effort they have put· forth in t&lt;ecent months toward getting
the Portland Elementary School reopened. .
·
It Is my understanding the coilclusion of this effort was
reached dufing a meeting of the board members and Mr. Sayre
this past weekend with formal action •being approved ~ once
again hold classes in the school facilily,at Portland~ 1 ,
In addition to considering the faCt· that a achool ~ans a
great deal to any community, I am certain the Southern Local
Board of Education too~ into thogght that the Portland
Elementary faclllty is lhe newest gracfe school structure in the
district, as they studied lhe feasibility of reopening lt.
The people of the Portland area are, just as they alwllya have
been, proud folks. But I can't help thlnkln,g that !heir pride ;will be
bolstered somewhat by the board of education's decision to
reopen the school.
1am one of the persons from the other end of the district who
is delighted for them.
Sincerely,
Robert Wingett,
Syracuse, 0.

,C~rner Mill and Se,con~ Sts.

" _Wt Reserve The Right To Lim it Ouan h ties"

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Headquarters

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- ...---llllli!'!!!ii-.!JIIl.!l - -....- ·this."

I.

SCOT PRIDE - TRAY PAK

·i

II
1
I DURING OUR 9TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI
1
I
'au wo;kers, regardless of 1.
TODAY
f
occupation, to our society as a 1 '
c Ty
sTATE _.- -:--ij
whole.
1
"Our young people · want
•
ALL PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
secure employment, and the I
ENTER . NO EMPLOYE 0~ MEMB.ER OF
dignity and decency that go I DEPOSIT
FAMILY MAY ENTER .
with it," he aaid. "They want
ONE PRIZE TO A FAMILY
work, not relief.
I AT
· DRAWING SAT. NIGHT AUq. 19 AT 8 P.M.
"They want to become I
OUR
. You Do Not Have to be Pre'sentto Win
productiye,'' he said. "I
M&amp; R SHOPPING CENTER
believe they a~ enUiled to I
SJO)~R:E_:::::::

' ONlY ~41

POT PIES........ ~~~~~~~................ 5~~: 89~
OCEAN PERCH . ~~:.~.~~.~.......~~:55~
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FOODLINER
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RobinsoR:s aeaners

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We have an admirable
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11/ustrnted: Two new 17 jewel
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e 9

3 OZ. BOXES

producing a class of angry and
WASHINGTON (UPI) workers
in
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- rebellious
Mass., has asked Congress to America," l{eMedy said.
The bill lteMedy introduced
spend $20 million for research
Into the problems of the Monday would authorize
assembly line '!'orker, who he research on bow widespread
said is becoming "angry and and severe job discontent lB
and what It Is coating the
rebellious ."
Kennedy said the research economy.
It also directs research into
specifically was aimed at
plants like the Lordstown, the Incidence of mental and
Ohio, General Motors complex, physical disease and seeks recwhich turns out 101 Vegas ommendations on bow to overevery hour, the fastest come w;orker alienation.
assembly speed in the world.
Kennedy said the production
line
fosters
"worker
alienation," resulting in high
absenteeism and turnover·"
rates and increased use of
alcohol and drallll· ;: ' ·· !
He cited testimony tielote hiS
Senate Manpower Subcommittee about a worker who
took a day off to attend the
funeral of a friend and ''was
Use Our FrH Parking LOI
disciplined for two days
because this was an unexcused

SAVE

CUBE TEAK

$

c

Of Worker Plight

fOr

·~IDOLEPORT, 0.

USDA
()IOICE BEEF

Study Proposed

absence .,.

GROUND CHUCK

ROYAL BRAND ,

I

GOESSLER

II

.

.,

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

The Ken Sa.lyers family, Sherr! Osborne,
Smith Elizabeth
illl J
which soon will open a home Duffy, Olive
, B e ean
for homeless children in South Carter, Jeannette Carter,
1
Vietliam, spoke to the Meigs Marilyn Wlkox, Bever Y
County Christian Women's Wilcox, Norma Russell,
Fellowship Thursday evening Frances Hysell, Merle John·
at the Pomeroy Church of -son, Edna Ruasell, Mildred
s·
B i
Pi k
Christ. The meeting was · 1s~on,
onn e
c ens,
especially planned so the Tressie Hendricks, Hlldred
Salyers' famlly could appear .. Carson , Marge Wilt, Eleanor
Closed All Day Thursday, Aug. 17 for the
·I'!Ir. · Salyers· . and his wife, Hoover, Bernice May, Thelma
Eunice and two children Vicki Osborne, Peggy Brlckles,
Meigs County Fair;
'
and K~nneih,. will leav~ later Trudy Andrews, Bettyd Spen. \
thismonthtostartthehomefor cer,
Ca dEileen Bowers an Doris
I
children in South Vietnam. .
r er ·
JEWELRY STORE
The couple presented a
The next meeting ·will be
COURT ST.
program of slides showing the Sept. 28 at I :30 p.m. at the
POMEROY
area they will be living in and Rutland Church of Christ.
explained their hope to extend
. . . . . . . . . . . . ., .. .
•II
love, undersianding, and
I
Christian training to these
I
childrenwhohaveneverbeard
I
of Christ. Mrs . Salyers closed
the program with a moving
song, "Does It Make Any
Difference To You?"
After a short business
meeting, refreshments and a
hJUr were enjoyed by the
•••••••Ii~ii-···•••••··--~··,..,:ial
1
following ladles and guests,
Lou . Osborne, Bill McDaniel,
•Bill Carter, Debbie Osborne,
ENTRY BLANICJ
ENTER
NAME - -

·r •••••

'

FREE ON-STREET
PARKING AfTER 5 P.M.

''These are some of the problems and rrustrations that are

PAPERS FILED
Articles of Incorporation
have heen filed in Columbus
with Secretary of Slate Ted W.
Brown by the Temple United
Methodist Church in Columbia
Township for Arthur Crabtree,
Donald Comer, Dale Scott, by
their Agent, Arthur Crabtree,
Albany Rt. 3.

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FOR

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ONLY

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DEBBIE

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QUMT

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YOU BUY
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• •..:.STANT

.,

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.I
I
I

AT-MARK V STORE

oz. :M. -~ .. ""'"

I

•

••
I
I

--·~.J

�,.

Sentinel, Middle.,Ort-P&lt;meroy, 0., AugWill~. 1972
f'''~,,~::::,,,,M,
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"',~,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;;::-L_,;,&gt;)!~-:f.~~_..w.al·.-.~wx:-~*':.-,

~

~.

e1gs oc
(Contlnued from Page I)

· Carrier

·1
~~

Jitioning of the · center core
rooms at the high school has
been completed, paid for with
interest earned during the
buildiitg program, no money
being used from the district's
general fund .
In other ·business the board
appointed Ted Hatfield as
custodian at Harrisonville on a
one-year cootract; appointed
Charles Pullins custodian at
Rutland under a one-year
contl'act, and designated the
following persons to be paid
from Title I funds (all
previously ,a ppointed),
Richard Sweet, Joett&amp; Weber,
Jan Corder, Sheila Black,
Katherine Jacobs, Annalu Hill,
Juditl) Mart.ln, John Lisle,
Muriel Foley, Kim Bruno,
Greg McCall, L. W. McComas,
and Donald Wolfe.
The board approved a
request from Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Holter for their daughter,
Janice,, to attend Meigs High
SchO!ll on a tuition basis.

.

·. . · · . . ·

·

Sentinel subscribers have only until this Friday to cast thell' ballots to help rnd their Dally
Sentinel carrier to Kings Island.
· ·
.
The Daily Sentinel is awarding six carriers a trip to the new amusement center ne11r Clnctnnatl.
Two of these will be In Pomeroy, two in Middleport, one in Mason and one to a carrier from the
Racine-syracuse area. Just fill in the accompanying ballot on the personality, promJIInea and neat1
ness of your carrier and mail it to the Sentinel, Box 729,Pomeroy, Ohio 45'169.

fined tv the sehoul building
during the noon hour . Moore
also said student.&lt;; who ride.
, I
buses to school often go to a
store in the area before school
start.&lt;; in the morning which
I Name of carrier
.
· I
adds to the litter problem . He
I
I
stated that a teacher was
I Personolily:
Excellent 0
Good c:::::J. Folr C7 Poor z::::::t
I
assigned to police the area last
' Promptness:
Excellent .c:;;7 Good c::::J Fair r=:7
Poor c:::1
year.
It was also observed that
1 (Neatness:
Excellent c::::J Good c:::J Fair c::J
Poor r=::::J
I
some of the school bus drivers
I
.
are over the age limit of 65.
I
I
Assistant Principal Larry
Any other comments: .
Morrison countered that
substitute
drivers
are
I
desperately needed. Due to the
I
I
fact that the job of driving a
I
Your
Nome
and
Address
I
school bus involves only 2 to 4
I
I
hours a day, it is difficult to
employ drivers such short
hours, for 11 Very little"
time. Children whose mothers
remuneration.
are oil welfare or ald for
The board, following the
dependent
children would have
public meeting, continued ill;
their fees provided through the
regular meeting.
respective
agencies, Miss
It voted to give Pomeroy
Solomon
report.&lt;;.
Village an easement behind the
Miss Solomon is now atPomeroy Junior High School
The board adopted a policy
tempUng
to detennlne the
Building
to
lay
lines
for
a
.
recommended by 'the county
Aday care center for young- which would include a morning
response
on
the need for such a
proposed new water system. board and CoWJty Superin- sters from age 3 through 6 of snack or all day which would
GIRL smUTS ARE also a part of the Meigs County Junior Fair. Mrs. April Smith,left on
A formal easement will be tendent concerning the rules Meigs County soon may be include a morning and af- center. Residents interested
platform, works with Susan Burns, on platform, and from the left, Paige Smith and Cathy
prepared
by Pomeroy Village and regulations for early ad- · opened in Pomeroy.
ternoon snacks plus a balanced are asked to write her at the
Blaettnar in completing the booth of Pomeroy Troop 61. ·
Athens address above.
Solicitor Fred Crow listing mission to kindergarten and
Progressing with plans to lunch.
exact conditions expected of grade one; approved a open the Cl!nter is Barbara
A graduate of Ohio
the board such as the village resolution of certification for Solomon, 38 North Schaefer St., University, Miss Solomon
being responsible for any cooperation in the ·n-county Athens, Ohio 45701.
re~ort.o; that she hopes to have a
·In 1966, the New York Herald
damage to underground lines, project, approved these pay
According to tentative plans building selected by the end of Trl.bune went out af business
restoring the property to it.&lt;; dates for the next twelve the day care center, for 14 or this week. The structure would
after 131 years.
original condition, and not months, Sept. 15, 29; Oct. 13, more youngsters, would open be temporary until a more
interfering with the footbaU 31; Nov. 15, 30; Dec. 15, 21; at 8 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. permanent ty.p,e structure
program.
Jan. 15, 31; Feb. 15, 28; March each day. Three staff members could be built.
Work on the new water lines 15, 30; April13, 30; May 15, 25; are required to meet federal
Children at the center would
be
given an educational opThe quality of the en- Install an animal waste part of our economy." The is not expected to begin until June 15, 29; July 13, 31, and standards.
ds.
Aug. 15, 31.
Children may be left at the portWlity in addition to an
vironment in rural Ohio has disposal facility. This farm value of cattle and calves next spring, Porter said.
The following report.&lt;; were
been improved by the in- facility was designed to store alone is estimated to be over
A schedule for inspection of center on a half-day basis opportunity to be assoclaled
with their equals in age and
stallation of several hundred waste from 100 cows for a 90- 480 million dollars, according made:
facilities prior to opening of
The board received $30,000 school on Aug. 28 is as follows:
animal
waste
disposal day period. After lis first to 1971 Ohio Agricultural
development, Miss Solomon
reimbursement to pay for the Salem Center, by Carroll
points out.
systems, and additional year in operation, the Roush Statistics.
Mine
·
Mechanics
Class
project.&lt;; are being installed at Brothers state that this is an
The center would serve not
Pierce ; Harrisonville, by Joe
According to Quiliam, one of
Equipment,
but
the
Rutland
only
working mothers but
a steady rate.
Sayre;
Rutland
Elementary
effective and economic the major problems which
gym
will
not
be
expanded
for
These· project.&lt;; are being
mothers
who need more free
and
Rutland
Gym,
by
Pierce;
means of disposing of the could limit livestock enmine
mechanics
classes
since
Installed on private lands by animGI waste.
Bradbury and Salisbury, by
CONTEST DAY SET
terprises is an effective and'
there
is
a
lack
of
interest
in
the
individual landowners, acVirgil
King;
Pomeroy
The SCS provides technical economical means of disposing
A garden tractor pulling
cording to Robert E. Quilliam, assistance to landowners to of the animal wastes. This junior class, four student.&lt;; have Elementary and Junior and contest for youth alld adult.&lt;;
state conservationist in Ohio plan, design, and construct problem increases each year dropped from the senior class, Senior buildings, and Meigs will be held at 9 p.m. Wedfor the U. S. Soil Conservation animal waste disposal systems due to the trend toward larger and an adult class did not High School, by Frank Porter, nesday as a part of the Meigs
Service (SCS).
and Middleport Schools, by County Fair.
to reduce agricultural pollution and higher .density livestock materialize.
John Scragg will begin work Don Mullen.
The Orton and Oris Rojisb
hazards to natural resources. confinement operations and
There will be five classes in
fal'lll, Salem Center, was the
Attending were Porter, the contest in two age groups,
This assistance is furnished with the increase of residenCI!s on Aug. 17 on a three month
. first farm In Meigs County to
in each Ohio county through and industrial plants in areas trial period as bus mechanic at Mullen, Sayre, Pierce, King, 16and under, and those over 16.
the local soil aQd water con- which have traditionally been $2.50 per hour; the blacktop- board members; George Prizes for each class are $10, $5
• MULTI-POSITION
servation district. Meigs devoted
exclusively
to ping at Salisbury, Pomeroy Hargraves, superintendent, and $2.50. Weigh-in time is at 8
and Rutland play areas has and Larry Morrison, assistant p.m. at the Lan~JD8rk scales in
County SCS office is in the agriculture.
•BLACK ONLY
'POmero . J" ., 111 •
Masonic Temple building on
Livestock farmers are, been completed ; the air con- superintendent.
.
,,·''
y
b C: ,.
.
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. however, making major i~­
Quilliam said that the vestments to solve the animal
(Continued from page 1)
production of livestock and 'waste problems; and with state
unanimously in favor of the poultry is "big business" in
installation which will cost Ohio and a "very important or federa l assistance they can
succeed, Quilliam noted.
$37.50 a year .
It was reported that Chief of
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- of war would be released as
Police J. J. Cremeans is
Clark said the minister
Former Attorney General part of a military and political "guaranteed" him I be POW's
checking housetrailers in the
Ramsey Clark has denied that settlement of the war. He said would be freed, but "I don't
commWJity to see that new
underpinning requirements
Discharges
and twin sons, Marcia Tipton, he had ever made any he spoke with Trinh almost know, first, whether he meall8
arc being met. '
Shani Bailes, Virgil Davis, Alva Viers, Fred Henderson. broadcast.&lt;; over Radio Hanoi three hours and then was given it, or second, whether he can.
Alms Newton appeared Dorothy Jean Roush, Harold Josephine Gurney, Joyce during his visit to North a signed note reaffirming th~ But I know he said it."
talks.
before council to complain W. Massie, Sr., Mrs. Allan Darlene, Dale, Eva Holley, Vietnam.
against dust caused by Brown and son, Harold Steele, Charles Parks, Nikki Thaxton,
Clark, who. returns to Washdragging the ball diamonds at Mary Tilley, Lena Basham, Okey Longfellow, Howard ington today with two suitcases
the Middleport Community Robert Stanley, Charles Donald Call, Mike Hale, Carla of material he gathered on the
daughter, Sherry, of Columbus
Mrs. Herbert Roush
fark. Mayor Zerkle turned the Whittington, Cecil Blackwood, Jean Lambert, Arminda An- "senseless bombing" damage
Mrs. Ruth Parsons of Tan- were weekend guests of Mr.
complaint over to a committee Harley Thomas , Jennie derson , Tor a Rinlinson, Mrs. to the Communist country, said
to investigate.
Spencer, Alice Tirchie, Darin Terry Wolfe and son, Elizabeth Monday his comments while in ners Run was a Sunday dinner and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
700 W. MAIN STREET
Harold
Hayman
of'
Police Chief Cremeans said Rees, Leonard New, Frances Willford, Mrs. Jerry West- Hanoi may have been tape guest of Mrs. Bessie Stitt.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene WesterviUe visited his brother,
he has had to talk to local McCormick, Zeffie l.oveday, moreland and son, William recorded and broadcast on the
POMEROY, OHIO
Coulson
of
North
Vinton,
InRay
Hayman,
and
also
visited
merchant.&lt;; about keeping their Brian Lewis, Earl King, Betty Weaver, Carl Taylor, Russell air.
sidewalks clean and further Hughes, Mrs. Paul Harris and Scott, Henry Roush, Mark
"I'm a free man, I talk, I diana, visited Tuesday with Mrs. Lilly Hayman Morgan.
stated that "some of them" daughter, Mary Gillilan, Mrs. Phillips, Garnet Philtips, Mark express myself, but I did not Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller.
r----------------------------------------~
sweep dirt from their sidewalk Lannis Gilbert and son, Bruce Markham, Tandy Jenkins, talk on Radio Hanoi," be said. The Coulsons were former 1
SEND YOUR SENTINEL CARRIER TO KINGS ISLAND CONTESJ
Into the street.
The prisoner of war resident.&lt;; of the Letart Falls
Dray, Herbert Callicoat, Marla Shelly Hook, Vernon GrwnbName of carrier
I
Maintenance Supervisor Brandau, Denise Brickles, ling, Tera Finlinson, Annthela issue domin ated Clark 's area.
Jeff Donohew of Ft. Meade, 1. Personality:
Harold Chase said Middleport Vinda Biggs, Gary Bellomy, Donahoe, Sarah Coulbourne, farst news conferenCI! since
E•c.lfent a
Good 1:::::1. Fair .c::J
Poor c=::J·
has an ordinance against William Adkins, Helen Culmer, Jo Lynn Chafin, Mary Board, returning from his twcrweek Md., spent a weekend with his
I
Excellent t:=:l Good c:::::J Fal r z::::::7
parent.&lt;;, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
sweeping dirt from sidewalks Helen Comer, Jacqueline John C. Bacon Ill and journey. Clark ~d :
Promptness:
Poor
I
into streets. Followi ng a Sta pleton, Fred Burnett, Elizabeth Allman.
-Hanoi's foreign ministry Donohew and Greg.
I
Excellent c::I Good~ Fair c::J
Neatness :
Poor
"guaranteed" him that AmeriMr. and Mrs. Robert Casper
general discussion on littering, Harley Taylor, Trent Evans,
I
Birtbs
can POWs would be released and Billy Dye of Columbus
Chief Cremeans asked that Sue West, Dean Varga, KenI
Aug. II - Mrs. George Moss, immediately after a war- spen t a weekend with Mrs.
Any other comments :
officials and resident.&lt;; notify neth Owens, Beatrice May,
I
I
his department of auto lice nse Geneva Howell, Virginia da~~;te~2 Ga~~~li~ohn l.ong, ending treaty was im- Dolly Wolfe and Mr. and Mrs.
I
numbers of the offenders and Harrington, Mrs. Walter Green son, Gallipolis Ferry·, Mrs. plemented by the United Dallas Hill and attended
I
States.
funerai services for Pete Wolfe
notify his department.
and son, Hariett Gaskill. Jessie Dexter Webb, daughter'
- The editor of North Viet- at the Ewing Funeral Home
I
Attending the meeting were Dixon, Mrs. Jerry Custer and Ravenswood
; Mrs. Kenneth .
, 1 din
told
I
J k
nam s ea g newspaper
Sunday. Interment was in
Mayor
Zerkle,
Chief son, Sharon Butcher, Clara Wh'te
Your Name and A~dress
1 .' son, _ .ac son; Mrs. him that if Sen. George
I
Plants Cemetery.
Cremeans, Chase, Mrs. Ball, Robert Baker, Mrs .
I
Melvm Chrtsttan, daughter, McGovern was elected presMr. and Mrs. Harold Grimm
Morgan, Fred Hoffman, Douglas Peifer and son, Carl
Jackson_; Mrs: Denver Hall, ident some prisoners would be of Colwnbus brought St. Clair -~-------------------------l
Lawrence Stewart and William Barnett, Carl Higgenbotham,
....,
Walters, council members, and Elizabeth Nibert, Janet Ed· son, Wtlkesvtlle, and_ Mrs. released on inaugural day and llill to his home Wednesday
Robert Rodgers, son, Btdwell. all of them within 90 days after and were diQner guest.&lt;; of Mr.
Clerk-Treasurer · Gen·e Grate. wards, Mrs. Danny Harbour
Aug. 13 - Mrs. Samuel the new administration takes and Mrs. Don Bell and Lerna .
Morris, daughter, BidweU.
office.
Dal~ Hill of Moore Haven, Fla.,
-He held a "bull session" was also a dinner guest of the
with I 0 Americans in a Bells.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
prisoner of war camp and they
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Discharges : Mrs. Harry were in good health, good
daughter, Lorna, and Bruce
109th
Kearns, Letart; Mrs. Bruce spirit.&lt;; and well-treated.
Hart attended a ball game in
Way and son, Ashton ; Mrs.
Clark said North Vietnam's Cincinnati a reCI!nt Sunday.
MEIGS
William Barton, Syracuse: deputy premier and foreign
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
John Huber, Point Pleasant; minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh, and Eric of Marion, Mr. and
COUNTY
Robert Vince, Gallipolis; guaranteed him the prisoners
Mrs. Lowell Burton and
Stephanie Whalen, Point
Pleasant; Loyal Wright,
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16
Henderson.
8:0!! A.M.-Junior Fa_lr Swine Judging
.
Births: Aug. 11, a son to Mr.
9. 15 A.M.- Junior Fa~r Beef Showmanship and Judging
followed by Sheep
'
and Mrs . William Barton,
10:00 A.M.-4-H Club Outstanding Class Awards
Syracuse; Aug . 12, a son to Mr.
Confomatlon Show- Horses and Ponies
and
Mrs. Ronald Plumley,
12:0!! 1Noon i-4· H Flower Show Judging
Gallipdfis Ferry; Aug. 13; a son
Afternoon Demo'nstrat ions- FHA
1:00 P.M.- Open Class Beef Judging
to Mr. and Mrs. John
Decorama
Stapleton,
Crown City, Ohio;
Horse Show
Now you can buy that
Aug. 14, a son to Mr. and Mrs.
.
Flower Show Judging
comfortable
La.Z-Boy
2:00 P.M. fo 4:00 P.M . - Oemonstraf ions-" Best of Day"
William K. .Baird, Gallipolis
chair
you've always
3.00 P.M.-Jumor Fair Sheep Judging tat close of beef
Ferry; Aug. 15, a soo to Mr.
show)
dreamed of at our low
and Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
prices.
4:00P.M. to 6:00 P.M.-All Ohio Boys Band
6:00 P.M.- Junior Fa ir Night
Southside.
Dog Show
x7:.00 P.M.- Parade moves (starting fining up at 6:00
Authorized Dealer
alter parade, little Prince and
Pr;·,ncessllmmedlatefy
Contest)
Klng·and Queen
A thought for the day:
British n()velist George
Awards
Meredith said, "Who rises
youth
Herman Grate
from prayer a better man, his
for youth
777-5591
Muon, w. v•.
prayer Is answered. ~'

j

f~-------~ENnvouRs~nNn-;RR~ijOi;G;~;~~nifl
~

~

I

I
I

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

OU Graduate to
Open Day Center

TUEsDAY
ANNUAL picnic Women's
Auxiliary, Veterans Memorial
It's official now ...
Hospital,
6 p.m. Tuesday,
Gene Harris has been transferred by Kaiser Aluminum from
,.. the Ra~enswood plant to New Orleans and the family will be home of Mrs. Charles Karr,
Naylors RWl llill., Pomeroy .
! movtng at the end of the month.
Gene-and Janet spent four days down there and located just Each take own table service
and covered dish. Regular
therighthousefor themselves in East New Orleans . Things are a
meeting following dinner .
bit indefinite just now, bot it may be lbat Rob will be remaining
FRIENDLY 'Circle, Trinity
here with his sister, Margie, for the first semester of his junior Church, 8 p.m. Tuesday. Miss
year at Meigs lligh School. Kathy, who will be a freshman, will Mary Elizabeth Chapman to
be moving with the family and starting school in New Orleans. have the program.
Mrs. A. R. Hecox will also be going to live in New Orleans
WEDNESDAY
with her daughter and family, and the lovely.baby grand piano on ·
DANCE FEATURING
which she taught so many, many students ,lhrough the years will Atlantis and Mulberry Olive
be moved there along with the Harris furnishings.
Wednesday, 9 p.m. to 12
Nancy will be a senior at Ohio State this fall, and Patty. has midnight, at former Pomeroy
enrolled at Morehead in Kentucky. The lovely, roomy Harris Junior lligh Wlder sponsorship
home on North Third will be rented.
of the Coffee House Committee.
LENA HUBER CELEBRATED her 87th birthday an·
niversary recently atthe home of her daughter in Hallifax, Mass.
and traveling over for the occasion were another daughter, Alice
Globokar, and a granddaughter, Sally Erwin. Tbe two felt their
visit was the nicest birthday gifttbey could give Mrs. Huber.
FRANCES KLEIN REMAINS confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment of a shoulder injury suffered in
a fall at her home last Friday morning. It has now been determined that there are two"hairline" fractures and a cast will be
applied later this week.
VACATIONERs ARE returning and just in time for the
Meigs County Fair,a week to rest, and then back to school. We
repeat - where has the summer gone!
In from a 6,000 mlie trip through 16 states are Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Wright of Route 1, Dexter. The couple went especially to
visit relatives in Sacramento, Calif., but took in the sights aloog
the way including Fort Robinson in Nebraska, Hoover Dam, Salt
River in Kansas, Death Valle)·, and several national parks.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy, got home
Sunday from Daytona Beach. They had a leisurely trip home
stopping ar Marinel.and, touring St. Augustine, and visiting the
federal buildings of the Atomic Energy Commission at Oak
Ridge, Tenn .
Mr. and Mrs. James Soulsby are convinCI!d that you can
meet jast about anyone, anywhere at almost any time.
Vacation night travelers, the Soulsby and children, Susie,
Pat, Jirnmer, and Cindy, and Mary Midkiff were enroute to
London Lake at Hale, Mich. when they stopped at a roadside rest
In Michigan about 4 one morning. Who should be there but
Mary's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of Pomeroy.
They were on their way to Canada for a vacation.
Coming home two weeks later at about 2:45one morning the
Soulsby family pulled into a serviCI! station at Bowling Green.
There at the same time were those 14 Pomeroy area men who
had been in Northern Canada on a fishing trip and were returning
home.
'Tis such a small world!

Of Animal Waste Systems

NAUGAHYDE

RECLINER

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Insurance

Clark·Denies Charge

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WEDDIN'dj DAy SET
Miss Rosemary Reed,
daughterofMr. and Mrs. K. W.
Kennedy, Yellow Springs, and
Mr . Michael Borgan, son of
Mrs. Nellie Borgan of
Pomeroy, Route 4, will be

tbl

Apple Grove News, Events

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OON'T RJLLUTE

LA-Z-BOV

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MASON
FURNITURE

He

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Dean, Mrs. Uoyde King, Mrs.
Eddie King, Mrs. Kenneth
Markins. Mrs . Norman Wood,
hostesses, .Mrs. Helen Dais, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs. Clair
Mrs. Grace White, Miss Linda Waggoner, Miss Kar'la Beal ,
Beal, and Mrs: Yvonne Young . Mrs. Dale Harrison, Mrs . Leo
Games were played and Story, Mrs . Edna Lee, Mrs.
prizes won by Mrs. Ardis Delores King , Mrs. Virginia
Waggoner, Mrs. Gaye Smalley , Smith , Mrs. l.ouise Harrison,
Mrs. Roger Young, Mrs. Carl
Miss Anita Watkins .
Hall,
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Presenting gifts were Mrs.
Harold White , Mrs . John Mrs. Karen Murray, Mr s.
Perdas, Mrs. Gerold Gilkey, Homer Bailey, Mrs. Sally
Charles and Susie King, Mrs. Byers, Mrs. Joe Hall , Mrs .
Hobart Samlley, Mrs. John Ralph Carl. Mrs. Helen Dais,

many gifts, refreshm ent.&lt;; of
punch, ice cream, cake and
mints were served by the

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PARENTS VJSI'i'ED
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Grueser of
Cincinnati spent tl)e weekend
here with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Karl Grueser. The two
will be completing courses at
the University of Cincinnati
next week and will then return
to .crooksville and their
teaching positions there.

Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mrs. Roy
Brickles, Mrs. Homer Good·
win, Mrs. Paul Paynter, Mrs.
Floyd Ross, Mrs. Carl Robert
Hall, Mrs . William Eichinger,
Mrs . Charles Sayre, and Mrs.
Roberta Carruthers.
MEETING CALLED
The program planning
committee of th e Chester
MOTHER VISITED
Elementary School PTA will
Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Tracy of
meet at 7:30p.m. on Tuesday,
Columbus
spent the weekend
Aug. 22, at the school, achere
visiting
his mother, Mrs.
cordin g to Mrs. Maxine
Nellie Tracy .
Goeglein, president .

Plans have been completed
for the open church wedding of
Mi~s Anita Watkins and Mr.
John Walter Dean on Saturday,
Aug. 19, at 7:30 p.m . at the
Carleton Church on Kingsburg
Road. The Rev. Jay Stiles will
officiate at the double ring
ceremony.
Pre-nuptial music provided
by Miss Linda Beal and Mr.
Richard Dean, soloist, will
begin at 7 p.m. Bridal attendants will be Miss Alicia
Lewis, maid of honor, Mrs.
Ruth Ann SpaWI, Miss Debbie
Pierce, and Miss Kathy Dill,
bridesmaids. Mr. Richard
Dean will be best man for the
bridegroom and the ushers will
be Mr. Harold Hanson, Mr.
Terry Garten, and Mr. Bill
SpaWl .
An open reception will be
held at the Bedford Youth
Center immediately following
the wedding.

t'

Students Assist
At Bible School

Mary Boggs, Mary Blaettnar
and Jayne Hutchinson, Meigs
Junior
High
School
c heerleaders, attended
cheerleading camp recently at
Rio Grande College.
The three eighth grade girls,
in competition with varsity and
reserve cheerleaders, received
three ribbons, one for outslanding and two for excellent
performances. Of the 250 girls
attending, Miss Boggs was one
of 25 selected to try-out for
Miss Crescendo Camp.
The other three cheerleaders
for Meigs Junior lligh are
Becky Thomas, Jenny Grate,
and Melinda Humphreys.
Jackie King · is the alternate
and Mrs. Dana Kessinger their
adviSor.

GIVEAHCOf!

CHAIRS

A bridal shower was conducted in the socia.l rooms of
the Carleton Church for Miss
Anita Watkins, bride-&lt;ilect of
John Walter Dean . The open
church wedding will be at the
Carleton Church Aug.l9 at 7:30
p.m.
A yellqw and white color
scheme was carried out with
white and yellow streamers
and white wedding bells
decorated the gift table.
Alter Anita had gracefully
acknowledged and opened her

Actual size

Girls Do Well
During Camp

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LET'S GO!

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Miss Nedra Helenberger of
Frost, Texas, a student at the
Navarro Universitx. )!!. .T~xas,
married in an open chiarch and Miss Sehoy r&gt;;;;:ant of
Cl!remony at 7:30p.m. on Sept. Mobile, Ala ., a student at
2 at Grace United Church of L.ouisiana State College, Baton
Christ in Columbus. A Rouge, were in Pomeroy last
reception will be held im· week to assist at a Bible school
mediately following the conducted by the First
ceremony.
Southern Baptist Church.
Average attendanCI! for the
school was 59. The Bibl~..school
picnic held at Royal Oak Park
Saturday was attended by 70.
During their time here Miss
Helenberger and Miss Durant
were dinner guest.&lt;; of Pastor
and Mrs . Fred Hill, Mr. -and
Mrs. Gene Coleman, James
Polly, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mills, Dale Colburns, and Mrs.
Nora Mills .

ONLY

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Wedding Plans
Are Completed

Roush Farm Showing Value

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

Shower Given Bride-to-be at Carleton Church "

Contest Ends on 'Friday

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NOW! AVARIID OF SALE FABRICS.
SEE OUR NEW FALL &amp; ScHooL SELECTION.

.
SINGER SALES&amp; 5ERVt ce •
.
. McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

t'ts

w. ·second

992 2284

Pomeroy, 0.

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Free iced tea glass
with each S3 gasoline purchase.
Get this tall, 16-ounce,
Harvest Gold glass at
participating Ashland Oil stations.
Come in today and start c~llecting
a set.

'

PARTY PLANNED
The Chester PTA will
sponsor a get-acquainted party
for kindergarten pupils of the
Eastern Local School District
on Thursday afternoon, Aug.
24, from I to 3 p.m., at the
Chester Elementary School. At
thiS time, chlldren,parents and
the teacher, Mrs. Howard
Parker will get acquainted.
RefreShments will be served.

VISIT IN WAVERLY
Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Ault, Perry and Merri, and
Greg Bush were recent visitors
in Waverly with Mr. and Mrs.
Cluirles H. Wise. Merri stayed
IIi Waverly with Mrs. Wise
while her husbaijtl traveled to
Toledo on bualness !or the Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.

Ashland.
We honor B.lnkAm•ricard

and Master Charge cr~lt cardo.

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Sentinel, Middle.,Ort-P&lt;meroy, 0., AugWill~. 1972
f'''~,,~::::,,,,M,
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"',~,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;;::-L_,;,&gt;)!~-:f.~~_..w.al·.-.~wx:-~*':.-,

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e1gs oc
(Contlnued from Page I)

· Carrier

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Jitioning of the · center core
rooms at the high school has
been completed, paid for with
interest earned during the
buildiitg program, no money
being used from the district's
general fund .
In other ·business the board
appointed Ted Hatfield as
custodian at Harrisonville on a
one-year cootract; appointed
Charles Pullins custodian at
Rutland under a one-year
contl'act, and designated the
following persons to be paid
from Title I funds (all
previously ,a ppointed),
Richard Sweet, Joett&amp; Weber,
Jan Corder, Sheila Black,
Katherine Jacobs, Annalu Hill,
Juditl) Mart.ln, John Lisle,
Muriel Foley, Kim Bruno,
Greg McCall, L. W. McComas,
and Donald Wolfe.
The board approved a
request from Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Holter for their daughter,
Janice,, to attend Meigs High
SchO!ll on a tuition basis.

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Sentinel subscribers have only until this Friday to cast thell' ballots to help rnd their Dally
Sentinel carrier to Kings Island.
· ·
.
The Daily Sentinel is awarding six carriers a trip to the new amusement center ne11r Clnctnnatl.
Two of these will be In Pomeroy, two in Middleport, one in Mason and one to a carrier from the
Racine-syracuse area. Just fill in the accompanying ballot on the personality, promJIInea and neat1
ness of your carrier and mail it to the Sentinel, Box 729,Pomeroy, Ohio 45'169.

fined tv the sehoul building
during the noon hour . Moore
also said student.&lt;; who ride.
, I
buses to school often go to a
store in the area before school
start.&lt;; in the morning which
I Name of carrier
.
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adds to the litter problem . He
I
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stated that a teacher was
I Personolily:
Excellent 0
Good c:::::J. Folr C7 Poor z::::::t
I
assigned to police the area last
' Promptness:
Excellent .c:;;7 Good c::::J Fair r=:7
Poor c:::1
year.
It was also observed that
1 (Neatness:
Excellent c::::J Good c:::J Fair c::J
Poor r=::::J
I
some of the school bus drivers
I
.
are over the age limit of 65.
I
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Assistant Principal Larry
Any other comments: .
Morrison countered that
substitute
drivers
are
I
desperately needed. Due to the
I
I
fact that the job of driving a
I
Your
Nome
and
Address
I
school bus involves only 2 to 4
I
I
hours a day, it is difficult to
employ drivers such short
hours, for 11 Very little"
time. Children whose mothers
remuneration.
are oil welfare or ald for
The board, following the
dependent
children would have
public meeting, continued ill;
their fees provided through the
regular meeting.
respective
agencies, Miss
It voted to give Pomeroy
Solomon
report.&lt;;.
Village an easement behind the
Miss Solomon is now atPomeroy Junior High School
The board adopted a policy
tempUng
to detennlne the
Building
to
lay
lines
for
a
.
recommended by 'the county
Aday care center for young- which would include a morning
response
on
the need for such a
proposed new water system. board and CoWJty Superin- sters from age 3 through 6 of snack or all day which would
GIRL smUTS ARE also a part of the Meigs County Junior Fair. Mrs. April Smith,left on
A formal easement will be tendent concerning the rules Meigs County soon may be include a morning and af- center. Residents interested
platform, works with Susan Burns, on platform, and from the left, Paige Smith and Cathy
prepared
by Pomeroy Village and regulations for early ad- · opened in Pomeroy.
ternoon snacks plus a balanced are asked to write her at the
Blaettnar in completing the booth of Pomeroy Troop 61. ·
Athens address above.
Solicitor Fred Crow listing mission to kindergarten and
Progressing with plans to lunch.
exact conditions expected of grade one; approved a open the Cl!nter is Barbara
A graduate of Ohio
the board such as the village resolution of certification for Solomon, 38 North Schaefer St., University, Miss Solomon
being responsible for any cooperation in the ·n-county Athens, Ohio 45701.
re~ort.o; that she hopes to have a
·In 1966, the New York Herald
damage to underground lines, project, approved these pay
According to tentative plans building selected by the end of Trl.bune went out af business
restoring the property to it.&lt;; dates for the next twelve the day care center, for 14 or this week. The structure would
after 131 years.
original condition, and not months, Sept. 15, 29; Oct. 13, more youngsters, would open be temporary until a more
interfering with the footbaU 31; Nov. 15, 30; Dec. 15, 21; at 8 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. permanent ty.p,e structure
program.
Jan. 15, 31; Feb. 15, 28; March each day. Three staff members could be built.
Work on the new water lines 15, 30; April13, 30; May 15, 25; are required to meet federal
Children at the center would
be
given an educational opThe quality of the en- Install an animal waste part of our economy." The is not expected to begin until June 15, 29; July 13, 31, and standards.
ds.
Aug. 15, 31.
Children may be left at the portWlity in addition to an
vironment in rural Ohio has disposal facility. This farm value of cattle and calves next spring, Porter said.
The following report.&lt;; were
been improved by the in- facility was designed to store alone is estimated to be over
A schedule for inspection of center on a half-day basis opportunity to be assoclaled
with their equals in age and
stallation of several hundred waste from 100 cows for a 90- 480 million dollars, according made:
facilities prior to opening of
The board received $30,000 school on Aug. 28 is as follows:
animal
waste
disposal day period. After lis first to 1971 Ohio Agricultural
development, Miss Solomon
reimbursement to pay for the Salem Center, by Carroll
points out.
systems, and additional year in operation, the Roush Statistics.
Mine
·
Mechanics
Class
project.&lt;; are being installed at Brothers state that this is an
The center would serve not
Pierce ; Harrisonville, by Joe
According to Quiliam, one of
Equipment,
but
the
Rutland
only
working mothers but
a steady rate.
Sayre;
Rutland
Elementary
effective and economic the major problems which
gym
will
not
be
expanded
for
These· project.&lt;; are being
mothers
who need more free
and
Rutland
Gym,
by
Pierce;
means of disposing of the could limit livestock enmine
mechanics
classes
since
Installed on private lands by animGI waste.
Bradbury and Salisbury, by
CONTEST DAY SET
terprises is an effective and'
there
is
a
lack
of
interest
in
the
individual landowners, acVirgil
King;
Pomeroy
The SCS provides technical economical means of disposing
A garden tractor pulling
cording to Robert E. Quilliam, assistance to landowners to of the animal wastes. This junior class, four student.&lt;; have Elementary and Junior and contest for youth alld adult.&lt;;
state conservationist in Ohio plan, design, and construct problem increases each year dropped from the senior class, Senior buildings, and Meigs will be held at 9 p.m. Wedfor the U. S. Soil Conservation animal waste disposal systems due to the trend toward larger and an adult class did not High School, by Frank Porter, nesday as a part of the Meigs
Service (SCS).
and Middleport Schools, by County Fair.
to reduce agricultural pollution and higher .density livestock materialize.
John Scragg will begin work Don Mullen.
The Orton and Oris Rojisb
hazards to natural resources. confinement operations and
There will be five classes in
fal'lll, Salem Center, was the
Attending were Porter, the contest in two age groups,
This assistance is furnished with the increase of residenCI!s on Aug. 17 on a three month
. first farm In Meigs County to
in each Ohio county through and industrial plants in areas trial period as bus mechanic at Mullen, Sayre, Pierce, King, 16and under, and those over 16.
the local soil aQd water con- which have traditionally been $2.50 per hour; the blacktop- board members; George Prizes for each class are $10, $5
• MULTI-POSITION
servation district. Meigs devoted
exclusively
to ping at Salisbury, Pomeroy Hargraves, superintendent, and $2.50. Weigh-in time is at 8
and Rutland play areas has and Larry Morrison, assistant p.m. at the Lan~JD8rk scales in
County SCS office is in the agriculture.
•BLACK ONLY
'POmero . J" ., 111 •
Masonic Temple building on
Livestock farmers are, been completed ; the air con- superintendent.
.
,,·''
y
b C: ,.
.
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. however, making major i~­
Quilliam said that the vestments to solve the animal
(Continued from page 1)
production of livestock and 'waste problems; and with state
unanimously in favor of the poultry is "big business" in
installation which will cost Ohio and a "very important or federa l assistance they can
succeed, Quilliam noted.
$37.50 a year .
It was reported that Chief of
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- of war would be released as
Police J. J. Cremeans is
Clark said the minister
Former Attorney General part of a military and political "guaranteed" him I be POW's
checking housetrailers in the
Ramsey Clark has denied that settlement of the war. He said would be freed, but "I don't
commWJity to see that new
underpinning requirements
Discharges
and twin sons, Marcia Tipton, he had ever made any he spoke with Trinh almost know, first, whether he meall8
arc being met. '
Shani Bailes, Virgil Davis, Alva Viers, Fred Henderson. broadcast.&lt;; over Radio Hanoi three hours and then was given it, or second, whether he can.
Alms Newton appeared Dorothy Jean Roush, Harold Josephine Gurney, Joyce during his visit to North a signed note reaffirming th~ But I know he said it."
talks.
before council to complain W. Massie, Sr., Mrs. Allan Darlene, Dale, Eva Holley, Vietnam.
against dust caused by Brown and son, Harold Steele, Charles Parks, Nikki Thaxton,
Clark, who. returns to Washdragging the ball diamonds at Mary Tilley, Lena Basham, Okey Longfellow, Howard ington today with two suitcases
the Middleport Community Robert Stanley, Charles Donald Call, Mike Hale, Carla of material he gathered on the
daughter, Sherry, of Columbus
Mrs. Herbert Roush
fark. Mayor Zerkle turned the Whittington, Cecil Blackwood, Jean Lambert, Arminda An- "senseless bombing" damage
Mrs. Ruth Parsons of Tan- were weekend guests of Mr.
complaint over to a committee Harley Thomas , Jennie derson , Tor a Rinlinson, Mrs. to the Communist country, said
to investigate.
Spencer, Alice Tirchie, Darin Terry Wolfe and son, Elizabeth Monday his comments while in ners Run was a Sunday dinner and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
700 W. MAIN STREET
Harold
Hayman
of'
Police Chief Cremeans said Rees, Leonard New, Frances Willford, Mrs. Jerry West- Hanoi may have been tape guest of Mrs. Bessie Stitt.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene WesterviUe visited his brother,
he has had to talk to local McCormick, Zeffie l.oveday, moreland and son, William recorded and broadcast on the
POMEROY, OHIO
Coulson
of
North
Vinton,
InRay
Hayman,
and
also
visited
merchant.&lt;; about keeping their Brian Lewis, Earl King, Betty Weaver, Carl Taylor, Russell air.
sidewalks clean and further Hughes, Mrs. Paul Harris and Scott, Henry Roush, Mark
"I'm a free man, I talk, I diana, visited Tuesday with Mrs. Lilly Hayman Morgan.
stated that "some of them" daughter, Mary Gillilan, Mrs. Phillips, Garnet Philtips, Mark express myself, but I did not Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller.
r----------------------------------------~
sweep dirt from their sidewalk Lannis Gilbert and son, Bruce Markham, Tandy Jenkins, talk on Radio Hanoi," be said. The Coulsons were former 1
SEND YOUR SENTINEL CARRIER TO KINGS ISLAND CONTESJ
Into the street.
The prisoner of war resident.&lt;; of the Letart Falls
Dray, Herbert Callicoat, Marla Shelly Hook, Vernon GrwnbName of carrier
I
Maintenance Supervisor Brandau, Denise Brickles, ling, Tera Finlinson, Annthela issue domin ated Clark 's area.
Jeff Donohew of Ft. Meade, 1. Personality:
Harold Chase said Middleport Vinda Biggs, Gary Bellomy, Donahoe, Sarah Coulbourne, farst news conferenCI! since
E•c.lfent a
Good 1:::::1. Fair .c::J
Poor c=::J·
has an ordinance against William Adkins, Helen Culmer, Jo Lynn Chafin, Mary Board, returning from his twcrweek Md., spent a weekend with his
I
Excellent t:=:l Good c:::::J Fal r z::::::7
parent.&lt;;, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
sweeping dirt from sidewalks Helen Comer, Jacqueline John C. Bacon Ill and journey. Clark ~d :
Promptness:
Poor
I
into streets. Followi ng a Sta pleton, Fred Burnett, Elizabeth Allman.
-Hanoi's foreign ministry Donohew and Greg.
I
Excellent c::I Good~ Fair c::J
Neatness :
Poor
"guaranteed" him that AmeriMr. and Mrs. Robert Casper
general discussion on littering, Harley Taylor, Trent Evans,
I
Birtbs
can POWs would be released and Billy Dye of Columbus
Chief Cremeans asked that Sue West, Dean Varga, KenI
Aug. II - Mrs. George Moss, immediately after a war- spen t a weekend with Mrs.
Any other comments :
officials and resident.&lt;; notify neth Owens, Beatrice May,
I
I
his department of auto lice nse Geneva Howell, Virginia da~~;te~2 Ga~~~li~ohn l.ong, ending treaty was im- Dolly Wolfe and Mr. and Mrs.
I
numbers of the offenders and Harrington, Mrs. Walter Green son, Gallipolis Ferry·, Mrs. plemented by the United Dallas Hill and attended
I
States.
funerai services for Pete Wolfe
notify his department.
and son, Hariett Gaskill. Jessie Dexter Webb, daughter'
- The editor of North Viet- at the Ewing Funeral Home
I
Attending the meeting were Dixon, Mrs. Jerry Custer and Ravenswood
; Mrs. Kenneth .
, 1 din
told
I
J k
nam s ea g newspaper
Sunday. Interment was in
Mayor
Zerkle,
Chief son, Sharon Butcher, Clara Wh'te
Your Name and A~dress
1 .' son, _ .ac son; Mrs. him that if Sen. George
I
Plants Cemetery.
Cremeans, Chase, Mrs. Ball, Robert Baker, Mrs .
I
Melvm Chrtsttan, daughter, McGovern was elected presMr. and Mrs. Harold Grimm
Morgan, Fred Hoffman, Douglas Peifer and son, Carl
Jackson_; Mrs: Denver Hall, ident some prisoners would be of Colwnbus brought St. Clair -~-------------------------l
Lawrence Stewart and William Barnett, Carl Higgenbotham,
....,
Walters, council members, and Elizabeth Nibert, Janet Ed· son, Wtlkesvtlle, and_ Mrs. released on inaugural day and llill to his home Wednesday
Robert Rodgers, son, Btdwell. all of them within 90 days after and were diQner guest.&lt;; of Mr.
Clerk-Treasurer · Gen·e Grate. wards, Mrs. Danny Harbour
Aug. 13 - Mrs. Samuel the new administration takes and Mrs. Don Bell and Lerna .
Morris, daughter, BidweU.
office.
Dal~ Hill of Moore Haven, Fla.,
-He held a "bull session" was also a dinner guest of the
with I 0 Americans in a Bells.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
prisoner of war camp and they
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Discharges : Mrs. Harry were in good health, good
daughter, Lorna, and Bruce
109th
Kearns, Letart; Mrs. Bruce spirit.&lt;; and well-treated.
Hart attended a ball game in
Way and son, Ashton ; Mrs.
Clark said North Vietnam's Cincinnati a reCI!nt Sunday.
MEIGS
William Barton, Syracuse: deputy premier and foreign
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
John Huber, Point Pleasant; minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh, and Eric of Marion, Mr. and
COUNTY
Robert Vince, Gallipolis; guaranteed him the prisoners
Mrs. Lowell Burton and
Stephanie Whalen, Point
Pleasant; Loyal Wright,
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16
Henderson.
8:0!! A.M.-Junior Fa_lr Swine Judging
.
Births: Aug. 11, a son to Mr.
9. 15 A.M.- Junior Fa~r Beef Showmanship and Judging
followed by Sheep
'
and Mrs . William Barton,
10:00 A.M.-4-H Club Outstanding Class Awards
Syracuse; Aug . 12, a son to Mr.
Confomatlon Show- Horses and Ponies
and
Mrs. Ronald Plumley,
12:0!! 1Noon i-4· H Flower Show Judging
Gallipdfis Ferry; Aug. 13; a son
Afternoon Demo'nstrat ions- FHA
1:00 P.M.- Open Class Beef Judging
to Mr. and Mrs. John
Decorama
Stapleton,
Crown City, Ohio;
Horse Show
Now you can buy that
Aug. 14, a son to Mr. and Mrs.
.
Flower Show Judging
comfortable
La.Z-Boy
2:00 P.M. fo 4:00 P.M . - Oemonstraf ions-" Best of Day"
William K. .Baird, Gallipolis
chair
you've always
3.00 P.M.-Jumor Fair Sheep Judging tat close of beef
Ferry; Aug. 15, a soo to Mr.
show)
dreamed of at our low
and Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
prices.
4:00P.M. to 6:00 P.M.-All Ohio Boys Band
6:00 P.M.- Junior Fa ir Night
Southside.
Dog Show
x7:.00 P.M.- Parade moves (starting fining up at 6:00
Authorized Dealer
alter parade, little Prince and
Pr;·,ncessllmmedlatefy
Contest)
Klng·and Queen
A thought for the day:
British n()velist George
Awards
Meredith said, "Who rises
youth
Herman Grate
from prayer a better man, his
for youth
777-5591
Muon, w. v•.
prayer Is answered. ~'

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f~-------~ENnvouRs~nNn-;RR~ijOi;G;~;~~nifl
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OU Graduate to
Open Day Center

TUEsDAY
ANNUAL picnic Women's
Auxiliary, Veterans Memorial
It's official now ...
Hospital,
6 p.m. Tuesday,
Gene Harris has been transferred by Kaiser Aluminum from
,.. the Ra~enswood plant to New Orleans and the family will be home of Mrs. Charles Karr,
Naylors RWl llill., Pomeroy .
! movtng at the end of the month.
Gene-and Janet spent four days down there and located just Each take own table service
and covered dish. Regular
therighthousefor themselves in East New Orleans . Things are a
meeting following dinner .
bit indefinite just now, bot it may be lbat Rob will be remaining
FRIENDLY 'Circle, Trinity
here with his sister, Margie, for the first semester of his junior Church, 8 p.m. Tuesday. Miss
year at Meigs lligh School. Kathy, who will be a freshman, will Mary Elizabeth Chapman to
be moving with the family and starting school in New Orleans. have the program.
Mrs. A. R. Hecox will also be going to live in New Orleans
WEDNESDAY
with her daughter and family, and the lovely.baby grand piano on ·
DANCE FEATURING
which she taught so many, many students ,lhrough the years will Atlantis and Mulberry Olive
be moved there along with the Harris furnishings.
Wednesday, 9 p.m. to 12
Nancy will be a senior at Ohio State this fall, and Patty. has midnight, at former Pomeroy
enrolled at Morehead in Kentucky. The lovely, roomy Harris Junior lligh Wlder sponsorship
home on North Third will be rented.
of the Coffee House Committee.
LENA HUBER CELEBRATED her 87th birthday an·
niversary recently atthe home of her daughter in Hallifax, Mass.
and traveling over for the occasion were another daughter, Alice
Globokar, and a granddaughter, Sally Erwin. Tbe two felt their
visit was the nicest birthday gifttbey could give Mrs. Huber.
FRANCES KLEIN REMAINS confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment of a shoulder injury suffered in
a fall at her home last Friday morning. It has now been determined that there are two"hairline" fractures and a cast will be
applied later this week.
VACATIONERs ARE returning and just in time for the
Meigs County Fair,a week to rest, and then back to school. We
repeat - where has the summer gone!
In from a 6,000 mlie trip through 16 states are Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Wright of Route 1, Dexter. The couple went especially to
visit relatives in Sacramento, Calif., but took in the sights aloog
the way including Fort Robinson in Nebraska, Hoover Dam, Salt
River in Kansas, Death Valle)·, and several national parks.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy, got home
Sunday from Daytona Beach. They had a leisurely trip home
stopping ar Marinel.and, touring St. Augustine, and visiting the
federal buildings of the Atomic Energy Commission at Oak
Ridge, Tenn .
Mr. and Mrs. James Soulsby are convinCI!d that you can
meet jast about anyone, anywhere at almost any time.
Vacation night travelers, the Soulsby and children, Susie,
Pat, Jirnmer, and Cindy, and Mary Midkiff were enroute to
London Lake at Hale, Mich. when they stopped at a roadside rest
In Michigan about 4 one morning. Who should be there but
Mary's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of Pomeroy.
They were on their way to Canada for a vacation.
Coming home two weeks later at about 2:45one morning the
Soulsby family pulled into a serviCI! station at Bowling Green.
There at the same time were those 14 Pomeroy area men who
had been in Northern Canada on a fishing trip and were returning
home.
'Tis such a small world!

Of Animal Waste Systems

NAUGAHYDE

RECLINER

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flt

!l

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~:
;•

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Insurance

Clark·Denies Charge

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WEDDIN'dj DAy SET
Miss Rosemary Reed,
daughterofMr. and Mrs. K. W.
Kennedy, Yellow Springs, and
Mr . Michael Borgan, son of
Mrs. Nellie Borgan of
Pomeroy, Route 4, will be

tbl

Apple Grove News, Events

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OON'T RJLLUTE

LA-Z-BOV

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MASON
FURNITURE

He

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Dean, Mrs. Uoyde King, Mrs.
Eddie King, Mrs. Kenneth
Markins. Mrs . Norman Wood,
hostesses, .Mrs. Helen Dais, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs. Clair
Mrs. Grace White, Miss Linda Waggoner, Miss Kar'la Beal ,
Beal, and Mrs: Yvonne Young . Mrs. Dale Harrison, Mrs . Leo
Games were played and Story, Mrs . Edna Lee, Mrs.
prizes won by Mrs. Ardis Delores King , Mrs. Virginia
Waggoner, Mrs. Gaye Smalley , Smith , Mrs. l.ouise Harrison,
Mrs. Roger Young, Mrs. Carl
Miss Anita Watkins .
Hall,
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Presenting gifts were Mrs.
Harold White , Mrs . John Mrs. Karen Murray, Mr s.
Perdas, Mrs. Gerold Gilkey, Homer Bailey, Mrs. Sally
Charles and Susie King, Mrs. Byers, Mrs. Joe Hall , Mrs .
Hobart Samlley, Mrs. John Ralph Carl. Mrs. Helen Dais,

many gifts, refreshm ent.&lt;; of
punch, ice cream, cake and
mints were served by the

. ....

. .. -.- .•

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PARENTS VJSI'i'ED
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Grueser of
Cincinnati spent tl)e weekend
here with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Karl Grueser. The two
will be completing courses at
the University of Cincinnati
next week and will then return
to .crooksville and their
teaching positions there.

Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mrs. Roy
Brickles, Mrs. Homer Good·
win, Mrs. Paul Paynter, Mrs.
Floyd Ross, Mrs. Carl Robert
Hall, Mrs . William Eichinger,
Mrs . Charles Sayre, and Mrs.
Roberta Carruthers.
MEETING CALLED
The program planning
committee of th e Chester
MOTHER VISITED
Elementary School PTA will
Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Tracy of
meet at 7:30p.m. on Tuesday,
Columbus
spent the weekend
Aug. 22, at the school, achere
visiting
his mother, Mrs.
cordin g to Mrs. Maxine
Nellie Tracy .
Goeglein, president .

Plans have been completed
for the open church wedding of
Mi~s Anita Watkins and Mr.
John Walter Dean on Saturday,
Aug. 19, at 7:30 p.m . at the
Carleton Church on Kingsburg
Road. The Rev. Jay Stiles will
officiate at the double ring
ceremony.
Pre-nuptial music provided
by Miss Linda Beal and Mr.
Richard Dean, soloist, will
begin at 7 p.m. Bridal attendants will be Miss Alicia
Lewis, maid of honor, Mrs.
Ruth Ann SpaWI, Miss Debbie
Pierce, and Miss Kathy Dill,
bridesmaids. Mr. Richard
Dean will be best man for the
bridegroom and the ushers will
be Mr. Harold Hanson, Mr.
Terry Garten, and Mr. Bill
SpaWl .
An open reception will be
held at the Bedford Youth
Center immediately following
the wedding.

t'

Students Assist
At Bible School

Mary Boggs, Mary Blaettnar
and Jayne Hutchinson, Meigs
Junior
High
School
c heerleaders, attended
cheerleading camp recently at
Rio Grande College.
The three eighth grade girls,
in competition with varsity and
reserve cheerleaders, received
three ribbons, one for outslanding and two for excellent
performances. Of the 250 girls
attending, Miss Boggs was one
of 25 selected to try-out for
Miss Crescendo Camp.
The other three cheerleaders
for Meigs Junior lligh are
Becky Thomas, Jenny Grate,
and Melinda Humphreys.
Jackie King · is the alternate
and Mrs. Dana Kessinger their
adviSor.

GIVEAHCOf!

CHAIRS

A bridal shower was conducted in the socia.l rooms of
the Carleton Church for Miss
Anita Watkins, bride-&lt;ilect of
John Walter Dean . The open
church wedding will be at the
Carleton Church Aug.l9 at 7:30
p.m.
A yellqw and white color
scheme was carried out with
white and yellow streamers
and white wedding bells
decorated the gift table.
Alter Anita had gracefully
acknowledged and opened her

Actual size

Girls Do Well
During Camp

-------------

LET'S GO!

.. '

Miss Nedra Helenberger of
Frost, Texas, a student at the
Navarro Universitx. )!!. .T~xas,
married in an open chiarch and Miss Sehoy r&gt;;;;:ant of
Cl!remony at 7:30p.m. on Sept. Mobile, Ala ., a student at
2 at Grace United Church of L.ouisiana State College, Baton
Christ in Columbus. A Rouge, were in Pomeroy last
reception will be held im· week to assist at a Bible school
mediately following the conducted by the First
ceremony.
Southern Baptist Church.
Average attendanCI! for the
school was 59. The Bibl~..school
picnic held at Royal Oak Park
Saturday was attended by 70.
During their time here Miss
Helenberger and Miss Durant
were dinner guest.&lt;; of Pastor
and Mrs . Fred Hill, Mr. -and
Mrs. Gene Coleman, James
Polly, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mills, Dale Colburns, and Mrs.
Nora Mills .

ONLY

l

·' .

Wedding Plans
Are Completed

Roush Farm Showing Value

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

Shower Given Bride-to-be at Carleton Church "

Contest Ends on 'Friday

· ·

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NOW! AVARIID OF SALE FABRICS.
SEE OUR NEW FALL &amp; ScHooL SELECTION.

.
SINGER SALES&amp; 5ERVt ce •
.
. McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

t'ts

w. ·second

992 2284

Pomeroy, 0.

~
- ;;.:.

Free iced tea glass
with each S3 gasoline purchase.
Get this tall, 16-ounce,
Harvest Gold glass at
participating Ashland Oil stations.
Come in today and start c~llecting
a set.

'

PARTY PLANNED
The Chester PTA will
sponsor a get-acquainted party
for kindergarten pupils of the
Eastern Local School District
on Thursday afternoon, Aug.
24, from I to 3 p.m., at the
Chester Elementary School. At
thiS time, chlldren,parents and
the teacher, Mrs. Howard
Parker will get acquainted.
RefreShments will be served.

VISIT IN WAVERLY
Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Ault, Perry and Merri, and
Greg Bush were recent visitors
in Waverly with Mr. and Mrs.
Cluirles H. Wise. Merri stayed
IIi Waverly with Mrs. Wise
while her husbaijtl traveled to
Toledo on bualness !or the Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.

Ashland.
We honor B.lnkAm•ricard

and Master Charge cr~lt cardo.

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8- The Daily Sentirel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. August 15, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resultsl-~1
LOVING

memory

of

Adelbert 0 . Lee who. departed
this life, August 15, 1963.

Mrs . Adelbert 0 . Lee
8.Js .ltp

Dorcas

Social Notes

•

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·Notice

In Memory

IN

'

Organ lessons by
qualified graduate of Cin ci nnati Conservatory of

PIANO &amp;

Music. Phone 992 -JS25.

8·3 12tc
1970 MONTE CARLO

Carpenter
News, Event

For Sale

Ponteroy
•tor Co.

-----·-- -- - -

.

GROCERY store stock and

12195

Locall owner with less then 21, 000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body, blk . knit Int erior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power st""ing, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice luj:ury car.

1"7 CHEV. IMPALA IT. WAGON

51295

'

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RACINE -6 room house. bath, ·
utility room , .gar.1QC, SlO,OOO ;
:,hone 949-4195.

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Business Services

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LOOKY, TATER!!

PLUMB

FERGOT 'IE
WU:Z. BELOW

'/ONDER. COMES
l.iORE PAW

SEE LEVEL

3·31 ·11c

EX_PERT
Whpet Alignment·

equipment. Douglas Grocery,
Minersville, Ohio .

8·1Hip
1970 HONDA 450, phone 992·
5951 .
8·1Hfp

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiatgr to the
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
.RiildiiiltOr sPecialist

s5.55

On Most American. ~
-GUARANJEEo-:
Phone 992-2094

eiWOFING
eHEATING
ePLUMBING
eCARPENTRY
e:SPOU'11NG ,, .
•PAINTING
' .
'

By Edna Knopp
- - - -- - Local I owntr new clr tr·a de-in, beige finish, vinyl-- in SE VERAL varieties of fop
Ruby Ludwig and children,
. terior, V-8, automatiC., j(wer steering &amp; brakes, radio,
quality, tree ripened, canning
good w-w tires.luggagt fict&lt;. A nice one. Reduced!
Becky. Frankie, and Kelly Sue,
Pomeroy Hom(!'&amp; Au~
peaches; now available
of Cleveland were acMrs. Leland Moore , Gina and
through early September;
Opon 8 Til5
1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE
$81'1
Bob's Market, Mason, W.Va .,
For Free Estimate
companied by her sister, Dee Dee, Canton, were guests
Monday
thru Saturday
4-door, V-8, automatic , iJoll."er steering, good tires, priced
abo11e the Pomeroy-Mason
Thelma and Ralph Miller and of her brother-in -law and
PI\.
992-2174
. Pomeroy
606 E. Main, PotNtroy. ~
to please.
· ~&lt;f ...
Bridge; phone 773-5308.
PHONE 992·2550
daughter. Karen Sue, of East . sister, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
8·15·flc
Uverpool when they visited Nelson and other relatives here
--~--AUTOMOBILE insurance been
ANTIQUES for sale. Thursday,
Fm Sale
cancelled?
Lost
your
with their parents, Winnie and and in Albany and also visited
Friday and Saturaar - 3
operator's license? Call 992EARTH MOVING
Omar Dailey and their brother, Mrs. Taylor Moore at pt. Rock.
piece walnut parlor se ; large
OPEN I¥ES. Nt P.M.
2966.
Chrysler chandelier, never 1970 HONDA CL·70, e&gt;cellent
Floyd and Marie Dailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mattox
6·15-flc' Dozer &amp; End lo1der work,
fiPMHOY, lllliO
condition; phone 985·3816.
been
electrified; 6 cane
Lena Ailey of , Charleston and Mr. and Mrs. carl Crabponds, basement , land·
8 13 3
French chairs; hand painted -------~
:_
·
tp
SEE U~RlR : Awnings, storm scaping. We have l size
visited recently with her sister, tree, Russell and Kevin, en.
French chair, French music
doors and windows, carports,
doters, l size loaders. Work
Lesta and Jess Pic.kens .
joyed a combined business and
stand, Lincoln and Victorian
marquees, aluminum ·siding
high
backed
beds,
dressers
Mobile Homes For
Emma Johnson spent the vacation trip to Kansas City,
and railing. A Jacob, sales done by hOur or contract.,
WANT ADS
Free Estimates. We also
Help
Wanted
and
chests,
oil
paintings.
6
representative. Far free
month of JW1e in Wilmington, Missouri, the past week.
INFORMATION
rose carved back chairs. Jove
haul fill dirt, top,soll. Dump
·
estimates,
phone
Charle~
, DEADliNES
..
California, with her son, Dale,
Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. McKnight
seat, wicker chairs and desk ,
-.Air Conditioners
trucks and low-bOy for hire .
Lisle. Syracuse, V.. V
~P.M . Day Before P·ubllcaflon . RELIABLE babysiller. prefer
old sewing machine with
and his family, formerly of visited with Mr. and Mrs. Glen
JOhnson
and
Son,
Inc.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Monday Deadline 9 1 .tt1 .
•Awnings
25 years or older. Parents
pearl inlay, wardrbbe, lamps,
3·2·11•
CallCellation-- Corre-ctionS
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
Dorcas. She traveled by jet Haning at Downington .
work ing . Good salary . Live in
large blanket chest, hat chest.
·Underpinning
Will be accepted unt il 9 a .m. for,
or
oul
.
Call
773-5314
after
S
·
.
aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992.'
from Colwnbusand while there
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers ,
coat rack and 6 toot mirror all
Day of Pu61fcafion
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
war~ .
sm.
p.m.
in one, brass candelabras,
•EGULATIONS
they spent some time sight- Margie, Lester, Marco, and
Complete mobile home '
Septic tanks Installed. Geor~e .
8·J3.6tc
Th' Publishel' reserv.S: th e
china and dishes, many other
service - ·~plus gigantic
(Bill) Pull ins. Phone 992-2418.
;eeing in Mexico. Mrs. Johnson Robert, attended the wedding right
to ed it or reject lri&lt;f ads.
items. All old pieces in good "display of mobile homes
4·25·tlc ' O~bELL WHEEL alignment .
deP.med
obleclionat.
,
The
brought each of her children a of their cousin, Victoria Corcondition, phone 1-304-422- always avail~ble at ...
===:-;:--;-c--;-=
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
publlshe.r wi ll not be respOfitlble Wanted To Rent
6m.
hand painted picture on velvet dray at SWlbury on Sunday. for mol"e than one ini::ottect
SEWING Machine Service,
Complete Irani end service,
8·15·41c
from Mexico.
Margie registered guests at the insertion .
ctean , olf,adjust, $399, in your
tune up and brake service .
HOME in Middleport - Pomeroy
MILLER
RATES
home;
phone
992·5331.
Wheels
balan ced elec·
area
by
Meigs
Local
Teacher
,
Captain and Mrs. Spencer wedding and Robert was ring
For Wanl Ad Servfat
8·11·30tc
Ironically
.
All
work
MOBILE
HOMES
wife
and
son;
e:~~celtent
Carpenter and son, James, bearer. Miss Cordray is !He 5 cents per Word one instrt.ion
NEW
1972
Zig
-zag
sew
ing
-guaranteed
.
RP.III'-nnAhllll&gt;
references
;
phone
992
-5281
.
Min imum Chargp 75c '
1220 Washington Blvd.
visited recently with his daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
PAPER hanging ; interior and
8·10 6fp mach ine in original factory 423 -7521
rates . Phone 742·3232 or
12 cents per word lf'lf-ee
BELPRE, 0.
carton. Zig.- za_g to make
ex terior painting; Arthur
992·3213.
I ·U·TIC
mother, Betty carpenter, and Robert Cordray of SWlbury. consecutive insertioris .
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
18 cents per word sill: con .
Musser.
phone
742·5223.
sisters, Cricket and Linda and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jories secutlve insertions , .
monograms, and make fancy
For Rent or Sale
7·18·30tp . SEPTIC TANKS CL.EANED
25 Per Cent Ciscount on paid
VAGABOND 1963 2 bedroom
Jim · Diddle and son, Chris.
of Nelsonville called on her
designs
with
just
the
twlsl
of
a
REASONABLE rate~. Ph. 446ads paid within Jo•ays. TRAILER for sale or rent ; call
trai ler, 10 x 54 with awning;
si ngle-dial. Left in lay -away
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. ,
Pattie Tarr and children, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl ads and
CARD OF THANKS
992-6872 or 992·6658.
SEPTIC tanks cleane.J. Miller
phone
667·3640.
and
never
been
used
.
Will
sell"
Owner
&amp; Operator ,
8.1).31p
&amp; OBITUARY
Beth Ann and Shawn, of Starkey.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
8·15·3fc
for only $47 cash or credit
5-12-11&lt;
51.50 for so wotd minlrf'lum .
662·3035.
Cuyahoga Falls visited her
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tolliver of
terms available. Phone 992·
Each additional word 2c .
2.12.ttc
5641.
BLIND ADS
grandparents, Vashti and Jacksonville and Mr . and Mrs.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Auto
Sales
1971
,
60 X 1i:. MOBILE home in -~--,---Addit
ional
25c
Ch8n;t•
per
8·11·61c
Complete Service
Earnest Grimm and Edna and James Blower, Billy and Advertisement.
Tuppers Plains. on 100' x 200' READY.MIX
CONCRETI
--Phone 949·3i21
1972 FORD Pinto runabout. ELECTROLUX Vacuum
OFFICE HOURS 1
Otis Knopp. She was enroute Jamie, of McArthur, were
lot ; ready to move into; see
d eli vered right to you1
Racine, Ohio
8:30a.m . to 5:00p .m Oai! y,
Dorset Miller at trai ler in
project. Fast and easy. Free
home after a visit with her Sunday evening guests of Mr. 11 : 30 am . to ' ,.2:00' Nelon excellent condition . with all
Cleaner comple te with at .
'Crill
Bradford
ex tras , automatic trans Arbaugh Addition .
estimates. Phone 992·328•.
tachments , cordwinder and
5·1·flc
sister, Tom and Barbara and Mrs~ · Dwaine Jordan , Saturday .
mission, WS, WJ 2000 cc
Goegleln Ready .Mi&gt; Co .. . - , - -. , . . , . - - - - paint spray . Used but In like
8·9-61p
engine. Originally 52,600, now
Brulvan and children, Jenifer Bryan and Keith.
Middleport, Ohio.
new condition. Pay S34.45 - - - -- - -- - just $1,995 . Phone 9411-5913 .
and Jeffery of Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stanscash or budget plan available . FOR THE BEST deal in a new
6·30·HC
1·11 ·61c
Phone 992·5641.
...
or used mobile home, try
Steve Dailey, who allends an bury and family of Groveport
8· 11 .6fc
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
electronics school in Colwn· visited his parents, Mr. · and
1963
CHEVY
Station
Wagon,
Kana1.1ga,
Ohio.
·
Notice
bus, spent a weekend with his Mrs. Dale Stansbury and other
$275; 1965 Chevelle Mal ibu, MAPLE , Early American
7·16·301c
Stereo-radio co mbi na tion.
S575; 1969 Oldsmobile 88,
parents, Floyd and Marie relatives in the area.
$1,875; call 992.5786.
Beaut iful maple ca binet, with CASH pa id tor all ma1&lt;es and Real Estate For Sale
Dailey.
Mr. and Mrs. John Culwell of THE CARL Chevalier Used
Clothino Store at Shade tUvor
8·11·61c 4 speed changer , 4 speakers,
models at mo~lle homes .
Jerry Johnson and his Colwnbus spent a day with his
dual volume control. Balance
is now 3 miles from RaCine,
Phone area code 614-423·9531 .
$77 .43. Use our budget terms .
.
4·13-11'
mother, Emma Johnson, spent parents, Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Ohio on Rt. 338 ; signs at '68 FORD pickup, V.8 stanaara;
Call 992.7085.
store; open 1 days a we.k .
overdrive, new paint, good
a couple of days in East Culwell and other relatives
8·11-6tc
condition $1,200. Phone 742 1·13·3tp
Liverpool. They attended the here .
'DOZE~ and back hoe work.'
-----J 144 or 992·6048.
Real Estate For Sale
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; 1&lt;1 .
funeral of the infant daughter
The Columbia Make-It 4'H
8·1J.61p WALNUT Stereo -radio com REWARD,
lor
shopping
at
Excavat ing , Phone 992·5367,
bination, duat volume control. CONVE NIENT but secluded
(Heather Honey ) of Emma's Club Girls and their guests
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop, ' 64 CORVETTE, 2 tops, good
Dick Karr. Jr .
4 speed intermixed changer, 4
building lots at Rock Springs,
granddaughter, Mrs. Mikie enjoyed a swinuning party and
Chester, Ohio : 10 per ctnt of
5·21·ffc ;
speaker
sound
system,
close to High School &amp; Fair
condition, for sale or lrade,
2 New Homes. all electric. 3 - -- - , - - - , - your total purchase may be
Ancion . They were ac- picnic at Lake Hope State
balance $62 .57. Use our
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte,
$1.800. Phone 992-6048 or 742bedrooms, full basement and
.'
applied Ia the purchase o.l •ny
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
992-2789 after 5 p.m . week 3t44.
companied home by her Park. Those in atlendance
ceramic iterfls.
LEGAL
NOTICE
garage, with lake frontage ;
day
s.
8.
JJ.6tc
8·1l-61p
granddaughter, Shawn, who were Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
;~I :
at Five Points area .
8·6·JOfc
will spend some time with her. Jordan, Jane, Jackie , Danny,
LEGAL NOTICE
,' •
'67 CHEVY, 4 speed V-8, 5375 ;
ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine ; this
The. amo»et
of
LOd1l ':.l
phone 992·6048 or 742·3144.
APAR,TMENT:buJtdinq
,
corner
Otis and Edna Knopp visited Belly and Jerrie Sue, David
Government ~~lo IncOme Ta,¥
,
8·1Hfp machine Is dressmaker
Locust an'd West Ma in.
PH. 992-2571
Sunday evening with Dick and Uew!yn, Mr. and Mrs. William
Monies to be &amp;I located to ' ttf'f'. 1
model ; this machine makes
Pomeroy. Call 446 -2596.
verious sub -div isions of Me-lgs.
buttonholes , darns, em Lois Sterrett and sons, Mike, Lawson and Cheryl, Tammy
'59 JEEP Sta tion Wagon. 4 broideries;
County , Ohio, es set forth by · ,
8·1l·31c
take
over
OR
992·3975
Mall and Max, and Sherry Wood, Kim Wessel, Pat
The Me tg s County Budget :
wheel drive. 6 cylinder, good
payments at 55.10 or pay S6 a
Commission et the completion , .
condition , $500 ; Mason, W.
Knopp of Gallipolis.
Lawson, Debbie and Jeff
8
ROOM
house,
bath,
large
lol,
monlh ; call 992·533 1.
of their meeting held In the ~,•
Va . 773 5584.
gas and electric , Rt . 1,
Jeff Wendorf spent swnmer Birchfield, Wayne Borgan,
8·9·6fc
Cou'nty Auditor ' s Off let! on ·-~
Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
August 7, 1972 showing per cent
vacation with his grand· Mrs . Edward Coen, Ruth,
--~----8·_
15·5fc
8·13.6tc
of ettocet ion. also the actual ··
1\loo .•
mother, Mrs. Alice Beegle at Rachael and John, Sherry
1963 DODGE , 4 door , good tires.
mon thly amount Is es toii1WI: ..
,. ,..,
Townships - 22 Pet.
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lake
good running condition , $185 ;
Price
Smash!
Duluth, Minn. They spent some Snillz, Lisa Peerey and Lester
REALTY
Windtw
(As to Township Rnd M)
.
phone
949·3211
.
Conchas.
New
Me&gt;lco.
S2,975
.
601
E.
Main
I
time aboard the Sir. Arthur M. Jeffers.
Bedford
8. 18
$1 ,926.96 ' ··
Air Conditioners
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo .
8·13.3fc
Pomerov. Ohio
Chester
12.17
2,867.04
PANTS &amp; JEANS.
Anderson on the Great Lakes
f or 119 mos . Vacation
Columbia
7.18
1.092.00 .
Hot
Waler
Heater·
s
Parad
i
se
.
Free
Brochure
.
with his grandfather, Capta in
Lebanon
9.98
1,350.01 '
Pets
For
Sal~
SALE I
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Bmc
Plumbing
Letart
4.7 9
1.128.00 •}
601 E. Main Street
Harold Beegle .
200
100,
Alameda,
California
Olive
9.78
2,303.o4!"
INTELLIGENT
and
lovable
Ohio
Pomeroy,
Eleclrical Work
Buy 2 Pairs and
Paul and Frances Bradford
94501.
Orang e
7.78
1,833.00. "'
registered toy fox terrier
GET
1 PAIR FREE
Rutland
9.18
2 , 162.o.4 t~
8·6·301p .. P.OMEROY- 2 story frame,
and children, Lisa and Todd, of
puppies . Both male and
Salem
10 .19
2,J 9P . 04 ~ ·
female . Ready to go. Vernon All kinds, all sizes ·for men,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
Athens visited recently with his Harris, Keith Ashley, Diana,
Salisbury
S. 99
L-41D.OO/
HOUSE
in
Long
Bottom,
phone'
Weber, phone 742·5625.
women, young men, bJys
gas furnace, porches, part
Scipio
7.99
1,880.0-4
··,..
parents, AWlt Lottie and Uncle Bobbie, Debra and Denise
985·35 29.
8·1J.61c and girls . Hurry to ...
basement, garage, view of
sutton
6.79
1,598.04 ,',
Otto Bradford.
Cross. His guests presented
6·11 ·tlc
Corporations - 21 Pel .
!he river. $6,900.00.
I As Per Capltl 1f70J
POMEROY
Dick and Romaine Beegle of him with a gallon jar of olives.
For Rent
RACINE
10
room
houso!;
Pomeroy
38 .110
$11.950.32
992-1441
'
••.
SYRACUSE - 1'h story
~ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Gilbert Beegle of Fairborn
Ravenna spent a week with his
bath , basement, garage, two
Middleport 39.01
12,015.00
MIDDLEPORT.
4
rooms
and
frame,
3
bedrooms
,
·
Phone
992·2111
Pomer.. ;.
~;, ,;
R8c ine
1,713.32
&lt;ots
.
Phone
949·4313
.
brothers, Bob and Martha Lou .spent Saturday with Mr. and ' - - bath, ni cely furnished, rent '-~---------l
basement, bath, new gas
-.....
·'
Rutland
2.•A2
....
·C
H ·IIP
Beegle and Tonuny Beegle.
Mrs . Robert Beegle.
· t
reasonable, no children, no AKC
· 1 d
forced air furna ce, porSyracuse
2,608.10
1
not try cosrlltftlcs ttilt!M
pets, private entrance; phone
regis ere
m n1a ure =---~---.,....
ches, large level lot .
Ber nard
and
Bernice
Tammy Beegle and AWl! WHY
Schnauzers, 7 wks. old. Ph . FOR SALE by owner . Yellow
truly
different
•nd . 992 .2731
Gordon H. Caldwell ,
frame house, six rooms and
Lavalley and children, Debbie, Vera Beegle are in Akron
1·15·5fc 446·2497.
.
refreshing? The famous ~Ink
Me tgs County Auditor .~.
MIDDLEPORT
2
story
bath. Large lot. Located In
1·10·6fc
all base and now we have the
Clerk of •!
and Steve, and Bernice 's visiting with Eileen and Kyle
frame, 5 bedrooms, Ph
Syracuse on Rl. 124. Second
Budget Commiss ion . :•
lemon
grove.
Just
think,
14
2
baths,
enclosed
porches,
mother, Emma Johnson, spent Stwnp and family . They were
a~~:;;e~iph';n ho~~~e:~~~~ -19_6_3_G_A_L
_A_X
- IE-.-,-o-ur- do-or-.good
(II) 15, He
,'
house on lett going north
specials lhls mpnth. some tor
small basement, In very
Inside corporation line.
a week in Shelbourn. Vermont called there by the illness of
phone 992·3028.
tor parts. cheap. Harry
men as well as womeri. It's
good conijlflon, garage and
- - - - - - - ' ' - '' "•
vis iting Bernard's
father,. Aunt Vera's siste r, Clara
7-27·11
8·J5.3fp Schwab, 405 W. Ma in
KOSCOT at course. Pll6ne
- carport. Close to shopping.
~~--~-.,---St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·5113.
.i ,,
512,800.
Tuffield Lavelley who makes Roush 1 who was in critical
8·l3·3tp 5 ROOM &amp; bath home located In
NOTICE OF
~f:ffc HOUSE and housetrailer on
his home with a gra nd - condition at a hospital there .
APPOINTMENT
SYRACUSE
Large
2
slory
Middleport. close to schools
~ .
~~~~eet in Rutland; phone ONE horse. _one pony with
Case No . 20,722
daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Guthrie
? ? ?
I._!
and stores; all new watl.toframe , -4 bedrooms. 2
Est8te Of Herold E . Smi th
·
.
_
tc
saddles
,
brtdles.
blankets,
8 15 3
Earnest Bragg. Bernard Jr. (Marjorie Theiss), daughter
baths, gas forced air
Deceased .
5300; call 992-6872 or 992.6658. wall carpet in all rooms; new
Dandruff Problem?
; gas floor furnace ;
furnace , basement,
Not ice Is hereby given that ·
and Kenny Neigler also spent and friend, and Larry's cbme in and let us help ybu
8·t3·31p drapes
large
patio,
newly
garage, good neigh ,
Alma
Evelyn
Smith
of ·
2 BEDROOM trailer. adults - - - - - - - -three days in Vermont wilh his parents of Bonnus Ferry, se!\'ct a soap tess b•Je
Syracuse. Me igs County , Ohio,
redecorated; if interested
borhood.
overlooking
the
only. Phone 992·5247.
AIR COMPRESSOR, Fr lgidairp
has b~en duly appointed ..
gra.ndfather. Emma said the Idaho, have been visiting her shainpoo for your indiv idual
phone 992-5433 or 992-6353.
river .
8-l.t -12tc
Flair electric ranqe ; also
Executrix ot the Estelt of .
scalp
condition
Try
us
now!
8·13·5fc
air was so clear she could read parents , Paul and Marie
Harold
E . Smith, deceased , lete
trash drums . Phone 992.5765.
WE
HAVE
OTHER
of Syracuse, Meigs County,
without her glass and was Theiss, brother Roger Theiss
4 AND 5 room furnished
8-l3-61c NEW2bedroom house on small
PROPERTIES.
JUST
Ohio.
•
KARR'S
apartments ;
for
senior - - - -- - - -- having a hard time reading and sister, Pauline Hill.
CALL
lol, 'I• mile from Rt. 33; bu ill·
Creditors are required to file '
ci tizens; utilities furnished; POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
BARBU
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
th eir claims with sa id fiduciary
with them arter getting home. Margie called on Martha Lou
in kitchen, gas furnace; some
reasonable rent ; Bailey 's
Park view Kennels, Phone 992within four months.
SHO~
REALTOR
work needed to be completed;
Steve Dailey of Colwnbus Beegle one day.
Store, Middleport.
5443.
Dated this 11th day of August &lt;
all material Included: phone
992·2259
1972 .
• &gt;
Robert G. and Martha Lou
and friend , Rhonda Ervin, of
8·1Htp _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8·_
15·flc • 992-6947.
II no answer 992·2568
Gallipolis visited with Steve's Beegle spent Saturday in
8·11 ·3tc
s · Menn ing D Webster . •·
6 ROOM house, elderly couple COAL, Limestone, E&gt;celslor
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ashland , Ky., as guests at a
Judgt · '
Barbers ' Local 400-AFL·.I (
only. at end of Depot Sl., Salt Works.· E. Main St.,
Court of Common Pleas, f4
' '·· .
picnic honoring Buck Hale, a
Omar Dailey .
Rutland , Ohio; phone 592·
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
Probate Division ,.
3410.
Ill 15. 22. 29, Jtc
Uncle Otto Bradford is home retiring lock master.
4·12·11c
8·1J.61c ·- - - - - - __:
Wanted
after spending some time at
BTU Lenno• Fuel oil
the Veterans Hospital in LEGAL NOTICE
20 SOU ND railroad cross t ies, 4 ROOM house and bath ; 3 room 85,000
furnace with two 275 gal. fuel
NOTICE OF
delivered. Phone 992-6688,
Cincinnati where he was filled
apartment and bath ; bolh
110 Mechanic Street
tanks and thermostat ; in
APPOINTMENT
Ray
Williams.
newly remodeled ; furnished
e:~~cellent co ndition ; phone
NOTICE ON FILING
with a new heart pacer. He
Case\No. 20751 "
8·13·3fc
or unfurnished ; no children ;
OF
INVENTORY
949·3461.
Estate or Vernon' Darst
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
feels much better and would
Deceased .
AND APPRAISEMENT
Mrs. J . W. Weaver , Racine,
8·11 ·6tp
enjoy friends dropping in to see The State of Ohio , Meigs WANTED good used wall ·l~fle
Notice Is hereby given that ..
Oh io: phone 949·3584.
-Countv . Probate Co11r1 .
Ellison Darst of 6625 State Line
gas furna ce; etso new.or um
him.
8·10·6fc
DE LUXE 8 track stereo in
To the Execu l or of Ad ·
Road, East Rldge, Tennesset
building malerlol . any kind;
VILLAGE PROPERTY
Walnut console, will sell for
Howard ( Deak ) Johnson of ministrator Of the estate; to
has been duty appointed
phone
992·7494.
In
living.
Modern
bath,
handy
3
BEDROOMSFireplace
sucn of the following as are
3 ROOM apartment , un .
balance due at 588.21 or pay
Executor of the Estate Of ··
Carrollton, Texas, spent two residents
S.9..tc
kitchen . Front and back porches. On a level lot near store.
of the State of Ohio,
furnished , 408 Spring Ave ..
$6.10 a month; call 992.5331.
Vernon Darst; deceased, tate of
NEW LISTING
.
weeks with his sisters, Laura vil : - the surviv ing spouse, th!
Mldoleport, Meigs County
Pomeroy .
8·9·6fc
MODERN
INSIDE
4 bedrooms, nice bath. and kitchen .
next
or
kin
,
the
beneflc
lanes
Ohio .
'
Circle and Lizzie Wood and undE?r th e will ; and to the at - OLD Furniture. oak table$,
8·10·flc
Living 12&gt;28. Wall·fe&gt;wall carpeting. Large front ord side
Cred itors are required to file
organs,
dishes.
clocks,
br~ss
brothers Douglas and Waid torney
CAN,NING tomatoes, sweet
or
attorneys
porch overlooking the Ohio River. Spoce lor trailer.
th.etr claims with said fiduciary
beds. or complete households. 3 BEDROOM furnished home,
epresenti ng any of
the
corn~
cucumbers
and
Within four months.
CITY HOME
Johnson. He lert Columbus by raforementioned
persons :
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
lull basement, 7 miles North
Oat ed this 11th day of A.uguat _,·. 1
mangoes; Geraldine Cleland,
3 BEDROOMS - Gas llreptaceln living, with wall.fe&gt;wall
1972.
plane for his home. His
Ethel
Chevalier ,
Olive
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
of Salem Center, 1 mi. all U.S.
Racine, 0.
carpeting in dining and sliding glass doors. Modern kif.
ip , Meigs County , Ohio ,
143, phone 698.5457; musl
6·28·1fc
•
daughter, Jan , is married and Townsh
7·28·11C
chen with refrigerator-freezer and stove. Gas forced air
No . 20697.
s ·Manning D. Webster.·_ ,
have references .
furnace
.
Double
garage
and
2
lets.
I
,,1
has a nine month old baby .
You are hereby notified tha t
Probate Judge
RURAL
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
Helu Wante" . ·
l -9·61c TOMATOES,
potatoes ,
of said County
Their youngest, Mathew , has praisement
of the esta te ol the
~
..,
:.::-:-:':':'-=~---cucumber$
and
beans ,
LETART - 3 bedroom frame home. 2 fireplaces. Back
181 15 , 22, 29. Jlc
graduated !ram high school, aforement ioned , deceased, tate TOYS I Toys I loyol.:;.u)l 3 AND 4 ROOM fu rnis hed an'cl Clarence Proffit, Portland,
porch, cellar and nice tot wllh sondy garden. Only
of said County, was filed In ttl is
Ployhouse toys. Aug . to '6ee. unfurnished apartments. Ohio; phone 843 . 2254 .
S5.1100.00.
and. Mike is working near court
. Said Invento ry and
Free traininG,, Good ~·
i&gt;hone 992-543•.
•;
7-19-Hc
NEW LISTING
home. Howard Jr . is in lllinois Appraisement will be for "rnlssion,
'
No ~~h lnvn~t .
4-12·tlcl- - - - - - - - - . . :
3 BE'OROOMS- Living Ux22. Furnace heat, bath, cellar.
hearing
before
this
Co
urt
on
the
getting his PhD degree. Both 1s t day ol September, 1972, at
Nice lot with garden space. Fenced yard. Chesler water.
Nq"~~ll\lery. t'ft' Collit!
SUMMER clearance of pottern
Howard Jr. and Mike have 10 :00 o'c lock A .M .
Asking se.ooo.oo.
&amp; H'Green Stalttp bonu"
11 For Sale
books and imrorted yarns .
Marnaret
Fortune 949.••1'•
Any person desir ing to file
NEW COUNTRY HOME
been in service. Mrs. Johnson exceptions
•
"" • ••
Needlecraft S op, Rt. 124
9orbtra
thereto must ftte
J LARGE BEDROOMS - 11h baths, nice kitchen with
Lambert
44f',.11.
GRAVELY
tractor,
6.6
h.p.,
East,
Syracuse.
10
a.m.
to
7
(Pauline) is fine. They were them at least f ive days prior to
•' '
dining area. All electric. Chester water. Garage lor 2 cars.
--:-----·
~
_
,
_7_··fUtt
..._
,
,c
electr~
start,
battery
and
p.m.
daily
except
Sunday.
date se t fo r hearing.
'I I
residents of Dorcas for several ttleGiven'
Acre lot on old JJ.
governor , attachments,
l ·lO.Ifc
under my hand and F L
..~ '
years.
U L TIME bartender; fiply sulky, 30" rotary mower, - - -- -- - - seal ot said Cour t, this 12th day
LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH US FOR BEST
of August 1972.
tn
person
at
the
Meigs
.(jin.
snowblade,
dual
wheels,
BICYCLE
wilh
steering
wheel
;
August 4, Bill Beegle was
RESULTS. 91 PCT, OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
Mann ing u. W&amp;Dsrer
...., ! '
·
....,t t:hains , rear cultivators and drag brakes; chrome fenders
LOOKERS.
WE WILL TRY TO BRING ONLY· THE 2
Judge and ex-officio -::--.-----":-:--"'!'"'
honored guest at a l)irthday
drag;
one
Sears
6"
jointer,
and
a
slick
;
phone
992·9965
'f
Clerk or said CoiJrt FULL time bar n\ald: allilllUn
PCT. BUYERS.
i,
adjustable table with motor
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. or
barbecue at the home of ·his
Iii
come to 121 Seventh Ave. ,
person at Whi~j~erlng''llliift and cast Iron stand; phone
By Janet E. Ml)rris
parents, Bob and Marty
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992·331!
,:Jr
Nile Club.
' ••
614-9.,·2224.
Middleport and see Crenson
•
Ch
ief
Deputy
Clerk
Beegle. Attending were Jeff 181 ,,, 22, 21
~ ~~
......:.._
l·lH\c
8.J3·3fc
Pratt.
••
•••
8·13·3fc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

YOU'VE c:ot' 10 HELP I&amp;
FIND If, Q=FIGER. I'VE '

GEAAt:.HED FOR 'IHRI'.E c:\1\'lG.
I UNDERSTANI:&gt;

~E'S RETURNtNG A
TESr ON ,1\EDtS.VAJ..
lltSTOII.Y...

Pomeroy i6tor Co.
;

~FOOD.

NO WAlER .

1 CAN'T
GJON .

0

Sale

Bxl?l£! . I:S
lHAT 'J'OU?'

U'LABNER
(-'LI'L DO THEY RJ::ELIZE
iHAR GooD PROV/o.E'R

GOT·S0/3T-ONLY A FI&lt;W
aAYS 7V LiVE-")

0

DAYDKEAMINb! ..

(-!;T8US7S MAHH~ 7D THINK
7HAR STANDARD 0'LIVIN'MIGHT
GO DOWN. AFTJ::R. AH !S60N£.~'"')

NO WONDER

. ~kY OUR
;JuMBO

8-l.r

I'M THIRSTY!
I HAVEN ' T

a

Ct-IP

WINKLE

HAD 1&gt; .
DRINK 0'
WATER

ftf.ALLY' 1

ataMR~ 1 1F WE 'TRANSR:RED
mE MALE PRISONERS
10 'IHI:: STATE PRISON 1 WE
CCULD OPEN A NI::W
JiSMAL! CEll.. &amp;LOCK
HERE!
.

0

GlfA&amp;S YOl.l .

NON WERE OXlKIN 1!
GENTl.EMEN ! iHAT

FER

TWENTY
M INUTES!

COVERS lJoiE LASr

MMOR 0135T'ACLE:
IN 'TE$SIE'IJ .USr
OF GRIEVANCf5

NEW HOMES

3 BEDROOMS

-

•

·
0

A~

stated
m4 wire, i:he•re

seems

0
0

c.nmr

I

0 0

''HE IL''

6

:

------

HEATING &amp;

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

COOI.iftG ...

/'Wi\TGH IT! lliAT
M)J(l;S 'TWICE ~00"/E
JUST MISSE'D AilE

fCLELAND~
......

.J

QW.la::.

LITrLE ORP»AN ANN1E
SAY, BOSS· ·· IN'OULD
VOU LOOK

ARNOLD

~T

IH f SE

'SAMPtE S, AriD ·· HE Y'!

1' ~1

(G ASP)

~EELi ri G,

FAINl·--·•

BROTHERS,~:.·

~~~_,
ACROSS
1. Prop for
4

«.Rose
fragment
I. Condemn
11. Divert
12. Way-out
(3 wds.)
U.Enu·

.

merate

\.

_____

15. Esteem
11. Scarce

item on a

rainy day
21. Chou and
Mao
22. Appraise
Z3. State
Rower of

~1~...;::::::1

· '

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

fi

lJ

a

Yesterday'• Answer
2C. Mon·

31. - Le

sieur's

mate
28. Captain
Queeg's
mine

Gallienne

32.-,zwei,
drei
33. Man's

LES1'US

~

V/SWEL

I

II

name

sweeper

29. Quarrel
30.Sheep
tl&lt;k

III

3C. Pinch
35.Sandra

I t]

Now arranp the circled )etten
~
to form the surprlle anawor, u
=:.::=~=.~~~~·~~·~~·_•:::u::'::'=,ttted by the above urtoon.

;==:·I

V

I I I.

&lt;-...........;Prinl=
' :..::
~:..::-==ANSW:.:::IR::..::m
:::..___,l

D rI I I 1
(AII.twrn tomorrow)

Jumbl•"
Ytlterd•:r'•
Antwerl

AUGUR VITAL GENIUS AMAZON
You'll ftf!l 'rr lrflm 111lronvnry jud tloins

1M- STARGAZING

HE's NEVER HEARD AN Ot'f:RA
OR A ~~Mf'ltl~~ .. HE'~ NEVER
~EEN A MOVIE OR A PLA« ...

Beatrice

Portinari
II. Mimic

4
)
)
,'
"'
"'
"
'
\_';-'

DoWN

LCom·
motion
! . Old

French

eo in
3. Poker

· ki.ttY

DAILY CRYP'fOQUO'l'E- Here's how to work lt:

r---------,

AXYDLBAAXR
!• ··LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the ,three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ~~~~~~fJ~~C~-J
apostrophes, the length and formation of th e word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters. are different.

We talk to JOU

WOOD5'10CK FEEL5 THAT HE'S
LED A VE~ FULL LIFE !

CRYPTOQUOTES
FA MSD TNEDV GT KDA NAH IGKDA

"'"" ' t

W

F VDD XGH.-INBM ISFMKNA .
Y..terday's Cryptoquole: ONE MEAL A DAY IS ENOUGH
FOR A LION, AND IT OUGHT TO BE FOR A ·f.I-'!N .GEORGE FORDYCE

1JN YOUR DIAL
L----------------------'-------....,...:_ _....,:jl•

•''

distance
22. Wrest

e ~~·~.;:~::e:·!h•

resort

.,••

J

a

I TONJI

17. Lake port
II. He loved

. like ' ,...., ' ..

_____

·

off
6.· ofwar
7.Rowan
1. 11-Me
Entertain
You"
11. City in
Illinois
13. Eldest
15. United
(2 wds .)
16. Mournful
melody
17. Magician
(archaic )
18. Waterway
19. Expiate
20.Phi Kappa
2l.From

H.Freneh

- -----

WMP0/1390.

Alaska
(3 wds.)
25. ' 'Angel"
of Paris
26. Kind of ,
oil
27. Caddoan
Indian
28. Pamper
29.-Teas·
dale
10. Remem·

Unsenmble these four Jumbloo,
one letl&lt;r tO ea&lt;h square, to
form rour ordinary word1.

f. Old hat
5. Give

ber (3
wdi.Y

------

:·s ---------

•Cleo-

patra"

&lt;I

0

JJ(()JMOO~®:Z.:::x::.:.c:

by THOM"S JOSEPH

o.

To Buy

SJRR'/,
1\-IORIJAPP!EI
6!VE ME
N-Kl111ER

ftC 1972 Ki n~: Ft.:ubnb Syndicate, Inc. )

..

,

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8- The Daily Sentirel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. August 15, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resultsl-~1
LOVING

memory

of

Adelbert 0 . Lee who. departed
this life, August 15, 1963.

Mrs . Adelbert 0 . Lee
8.Js .ltp

Dorcas

Social Notes

•

r-----------~~--------~--------~

·Notice

In Memory

IN

'

Organ lessons by
qualified graduate of Cin ci nnati Conservatory of

PIANO &amp;

Music. Phone 992 -JS25.

8·3 12tc
1970 MONTE CARLO

Carpenter
News, Event

For Sale

Ponteroy
•tor Co.

-----·-- -- - -

.

GROCERY store stock and

12195

Locall owner with less then 21, 000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body, blk . knit Int erior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power st""ing, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice luj:ury car.

1"7 CHEV. IMPALA IT. WAGON

51295

'

'

RACINE -6 room house. bath, ·
utility room , .gar.1QC, SlO,OOO ;
:,hone 949-4195.

l

I

I

Business Services

I

LOOKY, TATER!!

PLUMB

FERGOT 'IE
WU:Z. BELOW

'/ONDER. COMES
l.iORE PAW

SEE LEVEL

3·31 ·11c

EX_PERT
Whpet Alignment·

equipment. Douglas Grocery,
Minersville, Ohio .

8·1Hip
1970 HONDA 450, phone 992·
5951 .
8·1Hfp

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiatgr to the
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
.RiildiiiltOr sPecialist

s5.55

On Most American. ~
-GUARANJEEo-:
Phone 992-2094

eiWOFING
eHEATING
ePLUMBING
eCARPENTRY
e:SPOU'11NG ,, .
•PAINTING
' .
'

By Edna Knopp
- - - -- - Local I owntr new clr tr·a de-in, beige finish, vinyl-- in SE VERAL varieties of fop
Ruby Ludwig and children,
. terior, V-8, automatiC., j(wer steering &amp; brakes, radio,
quality, tree ripened, canning
good w-w tires.luggagt fict&lt;. A nice one. Reduced!
Becky. Frankie, and Kelly Sue,
Pomeroy Hom(!'&amp; Au~
peaches; now available
of Cleveland were acMrs. Leland Moore , Gina and
through early September;
Opon 8 Til5
1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE
$81'1
Bob's Market, Mason, W.Va .,
For Free Estimate
companied by her sister, Dee Dee, Canton, were guests
Monday
thru Saturday
4-door, V-8, automatic , iJoll."er steering, good tires, priced
abo11e the Pomeroy-Mason
Thelma and Ralph Miller and of her brother-in -law and
PI\.
992-2174
. Pomeroy
606 E. Main, PotNtroy. ~
to please.
· ~&lt;f ...
Bridge; phone 773-5308.
PHONE 992·2550
daughter. Karen Sue, of East . sister, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
8·15·flc
Uverpool when they visited Nelson and other relatives here
--~--AUTOMOBILE insurance been
ANTIQUES for sale. Thursday,
Fm Sale
cancelled?
Lost
your
with their parents, Winnie and and in Albany and also visited
Friday and Saturaar - 3
operator's license? Call 992EARTH MOVING
Omar Dailey and their brother, Mrs. Taylor Moore at pt. Rock.
piece walnut parlor se ; large
OPEN I¥ES. Nt P.M.
2966.
Chrysler chandelier, never 1970 HONDA CL·70, e&gt;cellent
Floyd and Marie Dailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mattox
6·15-flc' Dozer &amp; End lo1der work,
fiPMHOY, lllliO
condition; phone 985·3816.
been
electrified; 6 cane
Lena Ailey of , Charleston and Mr. and Mrs. carl Crabponds, basement , land·
8 13 3
French chairs; hand painted -------~
:_
·
tp
SEE U~RlR : Awnings, storm scaping. We have l size
visited recently with her sister, tree, Russell and Kevin, en.
French chair, French music
doors and windows, carports,
doters, l size loaders. Work
Lesta and Jess Pic.kens .
joyed a combined business and
stand, Lincoln and Victorian
marquees, aluminum ·siding
high
backed
beds,
dressers
Mobile Homes For
Emma Johnson spent the vacation trip to Kansas City,
and railing. A Jacob, sales done by hOur or contract.,
WANT ADS
Free Estimates. We also
Help
Wanted
and
chests,
oil
paintings.
6
representative. Far free
month of JW1e in Wilmington, Missouri, the past week.
INFORMATION
rose carved back chairs. Jove
haul fill dirt, top,soll. Dump
·
estimates,
phone
Charle~
, DEADliNES
..
California, with her son, Dale,
Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. McKnight
seat, wicker chairs and desk ,
-.Air Conditioners
trucks and low-bOy for hire .
Lisle. Syracuse, V.. V
~P.M . Day Before P·ubllcaflon . RELIABLE babysiller. prefer
old sewing machine with
and his family, formerly of visited with Mr. and Mrs. Glen
JOhnson
and
Son,
Inc.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Monday Deadline 9 1 .tt1 .
•Awnings
25 years or older. Parents
pearl inlay, wardrbbe, lamps,
3·2·11•
CallCellation-- Corre-ctionS
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
Dorcas. She traveled by jet Haning at Downington .
work ing . Good salary . Live in
large blanket chest, hat chest.
·Underpinning
Will be accepted unt il 9 a .m. for,
or
oul
.
Call
773-5314
after
S
·
.
aiter 7 p.m. or phone · 992.'
from Colwnbusand while there
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers ,
coat rack and 6 toot mirror all
Day of Pu61fcafion
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
war~ .
sm.
p.m.
in one, brass candelabras,
•EGULATIONS
they spent some time sight- Margie, Lester, Marco, and
Complete mobile home '
Septic tanks Installed. Geor~e .
8·J3.6tc
Th' Publishel' reserv.S: th e
china and dishes, many other
service - ·~plus gigantic
(Bill) Pull ins. Phone 992-2418.
;eeing in Mexico. Mrs. Johnson Robert, attended the wedding right
to ed it or reject lri&lt;f ads.
items. All old pieces in good "display of mobile homes
4·25·tlc ' O~bELL WHEEL alignment .
deP.med
obleclionat.
,
The
brought each of her children a of their cousin, Victoria Corcondition, phone 1-304-422- always avail~ble at ...
===:-;:--;-c--;-=
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
publlshe.r wi ll not be respOfitlble Wanted To Rent
6m.
hand painted picture on velvet dray at SWlbury on Sunday. for mol"e than one ini::ottect
SEWING Machine Service,
Complete Irani end service,
8·15·41c
from Mexico.
Margie registered guests at the insertion .
ctean , olf,adjust, $399, in your
tune up and brake service .
HOME in Middleport - Pomeroy
MILLER
RATES
home;
phone
992·5331.
Wheels
balan ced elec·
area
by
Meigs
Local
Teacher
,
Captain and Mrs. Spencer wedding and Robert was ring
For Wanl Ad Servfat
8·11·30tc
Ironically
.
All
work
MOBILE
HOMES
wife
and
son;
e:~~celtent
Carpenter and son, James, bearer. Miss Cordray is !He 5 cents per Word one instrt.ion
NEW
1972
Zig
-zag
sew
ing
-guaranteed
.
RP.III'-nnAhllll&gt;
references
;
phone
992
-5281
.
Min imum Chargp 75c '
1220 Washington Blvd.
visited recently with his daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
PAPER hanging ; interior and
8·10 6fp mach ine in original factory 423 -7521
rates . Phone 742·3232 or
12 cents per word lf'lf-ee
BELPRE, 0.
carton. Zig.- za_g to make
ex terior painting; Arthur
992·3213.
I ·U·TIC
mother, Betty carpenter, and Robert Cordray of SWlbury. consecutive insertioris .
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
18 cents per word sill: con .
Musser.
phone
742·5223.
sisters, Cricket and Linda and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jories secutlve insertions , .
monograms, and make fancy
For Rent or Sale
7·18·30tp . SEPTIC TANKS CL.EANED
25 Per Cent Ciscount on paid
VAGABOND 1963 2 bedroom
Jim · Diddle and son, Chris.
of Nelsonville called on her
designs
with
just
the
twlsl
of
a
REASONABLE rate~. Ph. 446ads paid within Jo•ays. TRAILER for sale or rent ; call
trai ler, 10 x 54 with awning;
si ngle-dial. Left in lay -away
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. ,
Pattie Tarr and children, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl ads and
CARD OF THANKS
992-6872 or 992·6658.
SEPTIC tanks cleane.J. Miller
phone
667·3640.
and
never
been
used
.
Will
sell"
Owner
&amp; Operator ,
8.1).31p
&amp; OBITUARY
Beth Ann and Shawn, of Starkey.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
8·15·3fc
for only $47 cash or credit
5-12-11&lt;
51.50 for so wotd minlrf'lum .
662·3035.
Cuyahoga Falls visited her
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tolliver of
terms available. Phone 992·
Each additional word 2c .
2.12.ttc
5641.
BLIND ADS
grandparents, Vashti and Jacksonville and Mr . and Mrs.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Auto
Sales
1971
,
60 X 1i:. MOBILE home in -~--,---Addit
ional
25c
Ch8n;t•
per
8·11·61c
Complete Service
Earnest Grimm and Edna and James Blower, Billy and Advertisement.
Tuppers Plains. on 100' x 200' READY.MIX
CONCRETI
--Phone 949·3i21
1972 FORD Pinto runabout. ELECTROLUX Vacuum
OFFICE HOURS 1
Otis Knopp. She was enroute Jamie, of McArthur, were
lot ; ready to move into; see
d eli vered right to you1
Racine, Ohio
8:30a.m . to 5:00p .m Oai! y,
Dorset Miller at trai ler in
project. Fast and easy. Free
home after a visit with her Sunday evening guests of Mr. 11 : 30 am . to ' ,.2:00' Nelon excellent condition . with all
Cleaner comple te with at .
'Crill
Bradford
ex tras , automatic trans Arbaugh Addition .
estimates. Phone 992·328•.
tachments , cordwinder and
5·1·flc
sister, Tom and Barbara and Mrs~ · Dwaine Jordan , Saturday .
mission, WS, WJ 2000 cc
Goegleln Ready .Mi&gt; Co .. . - , - -. , . . , . - - - - paint spray . Used but In like
8·9-61p
engine. Originally 52,600, now
Brulvan and children, Jenifer Bryan and Keith.
Middleport, Ohio.
new condition. Pay S34.45 - - - -- - -- - just $1,995 . Phone 9411-5913 .
and Jeffery of Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stanscash or budget plan available . FOR THE BEST deal in a new
6·30·HC
1·11 ·61c
Phone 992·5641.
...
or used mobile home, try
Steve Dailey, who allends an bury and family of Groveport
8· 11 .6fc
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
electronics school in Colwn· visited his parents, Mr. · and
1963
CHEVY
Station
Wagon,
Kana1.1ga,
Ohio.
·
Notice
bus, spent a weekend with his Mrs. Dale Stansbury and other
$275; 1965 Chevelle Mal ibu, MAPLE , Early American
7·16·301c
Stereo-radio co mbi na tion.
S575; 1969 Oldsmobile 88,
parents, Floyd and Marie relatives in the area.
$1,875; call 992.5786.
Beaut iful maple ca binet, with CASH pa id tor all ma1&lt;es and Real Estate For Sale
Dailey.
Mr. and Mrs. John Culwell of THE CARL Chevalier Used
Clothino Store at Shade tUvor
8·11·61c 4 speed changer , 4 speakers,
models at mo~lle homes .
Jerry Johnson and his Colwnbus spent a day with his
dual volume control. Balance
is now 3 miles from RaCine,
Phone area code 614-423·9531 .
$77 .43. Use our budget terms .
.
4·13-11'
mother, Emma Johnson, spent parents, Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Ohio on Rt. 338 ; signs at '68 FORD pickup, V.8 stanaara;
Call 992.7085.
store; open 1 days a we.k .
overdrive, new paint, good
a couple of days in East Culwell and other relatives
8·11-6tc
condition $1,200. Phone 742 1·13·3tp
Liverpool. They attended the here .
'DOZE~ and back hoe work.'
-----J 144 or 992·6048.
Real Estate For Sale
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; 1&lt;1 .
funeral of the infant daughter
The Columbia Make-It 4'H
8·1J.61p WALNUT Stereo -radio com REWARD,
lor
shopping
at
Excavat ing , Phone 992·5367,
bination, duat volume control. CONVE NIENT but secluded
(Heather Honey ) of Emma's Club Girls and their guests
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop, ' 64 CORVETTE, 2 tops, good
Dick Karr. Jr .
4 speed intermixed changer, 4
building lots at Rock Springs,
granddaughter, Mrs. Mikie enjoyed a swinuning party and
Chester, Ohio : 10 per ctnt of
5·21·ffc ;
speaker
sound
system,
close to High School &amp; Fair
condition, for sale or lrade,
2 New Homes. all electric. 3 - -- - , - - - , - your total purchase may be
Ancion . They were ac- picnic at Lake Hope State
balance $62 .57. Use our
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte,
$1.800. Phone 992-6048 or 742bedrooms, full basement and
.'
applied Ia the purchase o.l •ny
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
992-2789 after 5 p.m . week 3t44.
companied home by her Park. Those in atlendance
ceramic iterfls.
LEGAL
NOTICE
garage, with lake frontage ;
day
s.
8.
JJ.6tc
8·1l-61p
granddaughter, Shawn, who were Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
;~I :
at Five Points area .
8·6·JOfc
will spend some time with her. Jordan, Jane, Jackie , Danny,
LEGAL NOTICE
,' •
'67 CHEVY, 4 speed V-8, 5375 ;
ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine ; this
The. amo»et
of
LOd1l ':.l
phone 992·6048 or 742·3144.
APAR,TMENT:buJtdinq
,
corner
Otis and Edna Knopp visited Belly and Jerrie Sue, David
Government ~~lo IncOme Ta,¥
,
8·1Hfp machine Is dressmaker
Locust an'd West Ma in.
PH. 992-2571
Sunday evening with Dick and Uew!yn, Mr. and Mrs. William
Monies to be &amp;I located to ' ttf'f'. 1
model ; this machine makes
Pomeroy. Call 446 -2596.
verious sub -div isions of Me-lgs.
buttonholes , darns, em Lois Sterrett and sons, Mike, Lawson and Cheryl, Tammy
'59 JEEP Sta tion Wagon. 4 broideries;
County , Ohio, es set forth by · ,
8·1l·31c
take
over
OR
992·3975
Mall and Max, and Sherry Wood, Kim Wessel, Pat
The Me tg s County Budget :
wheel drive. 6 cylinder, good
payments at 55.10 or pay S6 a
Commission et the completion , .
condition , $500 ; Mason, W.
Knopp of Gallipolis.
Lawson, Debbie and Jeff
8
ROOM
house,
bath,
large
lol,
monlh ; call 992·533 1.
of their meeting held In the ~,•
Va . 773 5584.
gas and electric , Rt . 1,
Jeff Wendorf spent swnmer Birchfield, Wayne Borgan,
8·9·6fc
Cou'nty Auditor ' s Off let! on ·-~
Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
August 7, 1972 showing per cent
vacation with his grand· Mrs . Edward Coen, Ruth,
--~----8·_
15·5fc
8·13.6tc
of ettocet ion. also the actual ··
1\loo .•
mother, Mrs. Alice Beegle at Rachael and John, Sherry
1963 DODGE , 4 door , good tires.
mon thly amount Is es toii1WI: ..
,. ,..,
Townships - 22 Pet.
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lake
good running condition , $185 ;
Price
Smash!
Duluth, Minn. They spent some Snillz, Lisa Peerey and Lester
REALTY
Windtw
(As to Township Rnd M)
.
phone
949·3211
.
Conchas.
New
Me&gt;lco.
S2,975
.
601
E.
Main
I
time aboard the Sir. Arthur M. Jeffers.
Bedford
8. 18
$1 ,926.96 ' ··
Air Conditioners
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo .
8·13.3fc
Pomerov. Ohio
Chester
12.17
2,867.04
PANTS &amp; JEANS.
Anderson on the Great Lakes
f or 119 mos . Vacation
Columbia
7.18
1.092.00 .
Hot
Waler
Heater·
s
Parad
i
se
.
Free
Brochure
.
with his grandfather, Capta in
Lebanon
9.98
1,350.01 '
Pets
For
Sal~
SALE I
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Bmc
Plumbing
Letart
4.7 9
1.128.00 •}
601 E. Main Street
Harold Beegle .
200
100,
Alameda,
California
Olive
9.78
2,303.o4!"
INTELLIGENT
and
lovable
Ohio
Pomeroy,
Eleclrical Work
Buy 2 Pairs and
Paul and Frances Bradford
94501.
Orang e
7.78
1,833.00. "'
registered toy fox terrier
GET
1 PAIR FREE
Rutland
9.18
2 , 162.o.4 t~
8·6·301p .. P.OMEROY- 2 story frame,
and children, Lisa and Todd, of
puppies . Both male and
Salem
10 .19
2,J 9P . 04 ~ ·
female . Ready to go. Vernon All kinds, all sizes ·for men,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
Athens visited recently with his Harris, Keith Ashley, Diana,
Salisbury
S. 99
L-41D.OO/
HOUSE
in
Long
Bottom,
phone'
Weber, phone 742·5625.
women, young men, bJys
gas furnace, porches, part
Scipio
7.99
1,880.0-4
··,..
parents, AWlt Lottie and Uncle Bobbie, Debra and Denise
985·35 29.
8·1J.61c and girls . Hurry to ...
basement, garage, view of
sutton
6.79
1,598.04 ,',
Otto Bradford.
Cross. His guests presented
6·11 ·tlc
Corporations - 21 Pel .
!he river. $6,900.00.
I As Per Capltl 1f70J
POMEROY
Dick and Romaine Beegle of him with a gallon jar of olives.
For Rent
RACINE
10
room
houso!;
Pomeroy
38 .110
$11.950.32
992-1441
'
••.
SYRACUSE - 1'h story
~ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Gilbert Beegle of Fairborn
Ravenna spent a week with his
bath , basement, garage, two
Middleport 39.01
12,015.00
MIDDLEPORT.
4
rooms
and
frame,
3
bedrooms
,
·
Phone
992·2111
Pomer.. ;.
~;, ,;
R8c ine
1,713.32
&lt;ots
.
Phone
949·4313
.
brothers, Bob and Martha Lou .spent Saturday with Mr. and ' - - bath, ni cely furnished, rent '-~---------l
basement, bath, new gas
-.....
·'
Rutland
2.•A2
....
·C
H ·IIP
Beegle and Tonuny Beegle.
Mrs . Robert Beegle.
· t
reasonable, no children, no AKC
· 1 d
forced air furna ce, porSyracuse
2,608.10
1
not try cosrlltftlcs ttilt!M
pets, private entrance; phone
regis ere
m n1a ure =---~---.,....
ches, large level lot .
Ber nard
and
Bernice
Tammy Beegle and AWl! WHY
Schnauzers, 7 wks. old. Ph . FOR SALE by owner . Yellow
truly
different
•nd . 992 .2731
Gordon H. Caldwell ,
frame house, six rooms and
Lavalley and children, Debbie, Vera Beegle are in Akron
1·15·5fc 446·2497.
.
refreshing? The famous ~Ink
Me tgs County Auditor .~.
MIDDLEPORT
2
story
bath. Large lot. Located In
1·10·6fc
all base and now we have the
Clerk of •!
and Steve, and Bernice 's visiting with Eileen and Kyle
frame, 5 bedrooms, Ph
Syracuse on Rl. 124. Second
Budget Commiss ion . :•
lemon
grove.
Just
think,
14
2
baths,
enclosed
porches,
mother, Emma Johnson, spent Stwnp and family . They were
a~~:;;e~iph';n ho~~~e:~~~~ -19_6_3_G_A_L
_A_X
- IE-.-,-o-ur- do-or-.good
(II) 15, He
,'
house on lett going north
specials lhls mpnth. some tor
small basement, In very
Inside corporation line.
a week in Shelbourn. Vermont called there by the illness of
phone 992·3028.
tor parts. cheap. Harry
men as well as womeri. It's
good conijlflon, garage and
- - - - - - - ' ' - '' "•
vis iting Bernard's
father,. Aunt Vera's siste r, Clara
7-27·11
8·J5.3fp Schwab, 405 W. Ma in
KOSCOT at course. Pll6ne
- carport. Close to shopping.
~~--~-.,---St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·5113.
.i ,,
512,800.
Tuffield Lavelley who makes Roush 1 who was in critical
8·l3·3tp 5 ROOM &amp; bath home located In
NOTICE OF
~f:ffc HOUSE and housetrailer on
his home with a gra nd - condition at a hospital there .
APPOINTMENT
SYRACUSE
Large
2
slory
Middleport. close to schools
~ .
~~~~eet in Rutland; phone ONE horse. _one pony with
Case No . 20,722
daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Guthrie
? ? ?
I._!
and stores; all new watl.toframe , -4 bedrooms. 2
Est8te Of Herold E . Smi th
·
.
_
tc
saddles
,
brtdles.
blankets,
8 15 3
Earnest Bragg. Bernard Jr. (Marjorie Theiss), daughter
baths, gas forced air
Deceased .
5300; call 992-6872 or 992.6658. wall carpet in all rooms; new
Dandruff Problem?
; gas floor furnace ;
furnace , basement,
Not ice Is hereby given that ·
and Kenny Neigler also spent and friend, and Larry's cbme in and let us help ybu
8·t3·31p drapes
large
patio,
newly
garage, good neigh ,
Alma
Evelyn
Smith
of ·
2 BEDROOM trailer. adults - - - - - - - -three days in Vermont wilh his parents of Bonnus Ferry, se!\'ct a soap tess b•Je
Syracuse. Me igs County , Ohio,
redecorated; if interested
borhood.
overlooking
the
only. Phone 992·5247.
AIR COMPRESSOR, Fr lgidairp
has b~en duly appointed ..
gra.ndfather. Emma said the Idaho, have been visiting her shainpoo for your indiv idual
phone 992-5433 or 992-6353.
river .
8-l.t -12tc
Flair electric ranqe ; also
Executrix ot the Estelt of .
scalp
condition
Try
us
now!
8·13·5fc
air was so clear she could read parents , Paul and Marie
Harold
E . Smith, deceased , lete
trash drums . Phone 992.5765.
WE
HAVE
OTHER
of Syracuse, Meigs County,
without her glass and was Theiss, brother Roger Theiss
4 AND 5 room furnished
8-l3-61c NEW2bedroom house on small
PROPERTIES.
JUST
Ohio.
•
KARR'S
apartments ;
for
senior - - - -- - - -- having a hard time reading and sister, Pauline Hill.
CALL
lol, 'I• mile from Rt. 33; bu ill·
Creditors are required to file '
ci tizens; utilities furnished; POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
BARBU
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
th eir claims with sa id fiduciary
with them arter getting home. Margie called on Martha Lou
in kitchen, gas furnace; some
reasonable rent ; Bailey 's
Park view Kennels, Phone 992within four months.
SHO~
REALTOR
work needed to be completed;
Steve Dailey of Colwnbus Beegle one day.
Store, Middleport.
5443.
Dated this 11th day of August &lt;
all material Included: phone
992·2259
1972 .
• &gt;
Robert G. and Martha Lou
and friend , Rhonda Ervin, of
8·1Htp _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8·_
15·flc • 992-6947.
II no answer 992·2568
Gallipolis visited with Steve's Beegle spent Saturday in
8·11 ·3tc
s · Menn ing D Webster . •·
6 ROOM house, elderly couple COAL, Limestone, E&gt;celslor
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ashland , Ky., as guests at a
Judgt · '
Barbers ' Local 400-AFL·.I (
only. at end of Depot Sl., Salt Works.· E. Main St.,
Court of Common Pleas, f4
' '·· .
picnic honoring Buck Hale, a
Omar Dailey .
Rutland , Ohio; phone 592·
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
Probate Division ,.
3410.
Ill 15. 22. 29, Jtc
Uncle Otto Bradford is home retiring lock master.
4·12·11c
8·1J.61c ·- - - - - - __:
Wanted
after spending some time at
BTU Lenno• Fuel oil
the Veterans Hospital in LEGAL NOTICE
20 SOU ND railroad cross t ies, 4 ROOM house and bath ; 3 room 85,000
furnace with two 275 gal. fuel
NOTICE OF
delivered. Phone 992-6688,
Cincinnati where he was filled
apartment and bath ; bolh
110 Mechanic Street
tanks and thermostat ; in
APPOINTMENT
Ray
Williams.
newly remodeled ; furnished
e:~~cellent co ndition ; phone
NOTICE ON FILING
with a new heart pacer. He
Case\No. 20751 "
8·13·3fc
or unfurnished ; no children ;
OF
INVENTORY
949·3461.
Estate or Vernon' Darst
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
feels much better and would
Deceased .
AND APPRAISEMENT
Mrs. J . W. Weaver , Racine,
8·11 ·6tp
enjoy friends dropping in to see The State of Ohio , Meigs WANTED good used wall ·l~fle
Notice Is hereby given that ..
Oh io: phone 949·3584.
-Countv . Probate Co11r1 .
Ellison Darst of 6625 State Line
gas furna ce; etso new.or um
him.
8·10·6fc
DE LUXE 8 track stereo in
To the Execu l or of Ad ·
Road, East Rldge, Tennesset
building malerlol . any kind;
VILLAGE PROPERTY
Walnut console, will sell for
Howard ( Deak ) Johnson of ministrator Of the estate; to
has been duty appointed
phone
992·7494.
In
living.
Modern
bath,
handy
3
BEDROOMSFireplace
sucn of the following as are
3 ROOM apartment , un .
balance due at 588.21 or pay
Executor of the Estate Of ··
Carrollton, Texas, spent two residents
S.9..tc
kitchen . Front and back porches. On a level lot near store.
of the State of Ohio,
furnished , 408 Spring Ave ..
$6.10 a month; call 992.5331.
Vernon Darst; deceased, tate of
NEW LISTING
.
weeks with his sisters, Laura vil : - the surviv ing spouse, th!
Mldoleport, Meigs County
Pomeroy .
8·9·6fc
MODERN
INSIDE
4 bedrooms, nice bath. and kitchen .
next
or
kin
,
the
beneflc
lanes
Ohio .
'
Circle and Lizzie Wood and undE?r th e will ; and to the at - OLD Furniture. oak table$,
8·10·flc
Living 12&gt;28. Wall·fe&gt;wall carpeting. Large front ord side
Cred itors are required to file
organs,
dishes.
clocks,
br~ss
brothers Douglas and Waid torney
CAN,NING tomatoes, sweet
or
attorneys
porch overlooking the Ohio River. Spoce lor trailer.
th.etr claims with said fiduciary
beds. or complete households. 3 BEDROOM furnished home,
epresenti ng any of
the
corn~
cucumbers
and
Within four months.
CITY HOME
Johnson. He lert Columbus by raforementioned
persons :
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
lull basement, 7 miles North
Oat ed this 11th day of A.uguat _,·. 1
mangoes; Geraldine Cleland,
3 BEDROOMS - Gas llreptaceln living, with wall.fe&gt;wall
1972.
plane for his home. His
Ethel
Chevalier ,
Olive
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
of Salem Center, 1 mi. all U.S.
Racine, 0.
carpeting in dining and sliding glass doors. Modern kif.
ip , Meigs County , Ohio ,
143, phone 698.5457; musl
6·28·1fc
•
daughter, Jan , is married and Townsh
7·28·11C
chen with refrigerator-freezer and stove. Gas forced air
No . 20697.
s ·Manning D. Webster.·_ ,
have references .
furnace
.
Double
garage
and
2
lets.
I
,,1
has a nine month old baby .
You are hereby notified tha t
Probate Judge
RURAL
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
Helu Wante" . ·
l -9·61c TOMATOES,
potatoes ,
of said County
Their youngest, Mathew , has praisement
of the esta te ol the
~
..,
:.::-:-:':':'-=~---cucumber$
and
beans ,
LETART - 3 bedroom frame home. 2 fireplaces. Back
181 15 , 22, 29. Jlc
graduated !ram high school, aforement ioned , deceased, tate TOYS I Toys I loyol.:;.u)l 3 AND 4 ROOM fu rnis hed an'cl Clarence Proffit, Portland,
porch, cellar and nice tot wllh sondy garden. Only
of said County, was filed In ttl is
Ployhouse toys. Aug . to '6ee. unfurnished apartments. Ohio; phone 843 . 2254 .
S5.1100.00.
and. Mike is working near court
. Said Invento ry and
Free traininG,, Good ~·
i&gt;hone 992-543•.
•;
7-19-Hc
NEW LISTING
home. Howard Jr . is in lllinois Appraisement will be for "rnlssion,
'
No ~~h lnvn~t .
4-12·tlcl- - - - - - - - - . . :
3 BE'OROOMS- Living Ux22. Furnace heat, bath, cellar.
hearing
before
this
Co
urt
on
the
getting his PhD degree. Both 1s t day ol September, 1972, at
Nice lot with garden space. Fenced yard. Chesler water.
Nq"~~ll\lery. t'ft' Collit!
SUMMER clearance of pottern
Howard Jr. and Mike have 10 :00 o'c lock A .M .
Asking se.ooo.oo.
&amp; H'Green Stalttp bonu"
11 For Sale
books and imrorted yarns .
Marnaret
Fortune 949.••1'•
Any person desir ing to file
NEW COUNTRY HOME
been in service. Mrs. Johnson exceptions
•
"" • ••
Needlecraft S op, Rt. 124
9orbtra
thereto must ftte
J LARGE BEDROOMS - 11h baths, nice kitchen with
Lambert
44f',.11.
GRAVELY
tractor,
6.6
h.p.,
East,
Syracuse.
10
a.m.
to
7
(Pauline) is fine. They were them at least f ive days prior to
•' '
dining area. All electric. Chester water. Garage lor 2 cars.
--:-----·
~
_
,
_7_··fUtt
..._
,
,c
electr~
start,
battery
and
p.m.
daily
except
Sunday.
date se t fo r hearing.
'I I
residents of Dorcas for several ttleGiven'
Acre lot on old JJ.
governor , attachments,
l ·lO.Ifc
under my hand and F L
..~ '
years.
U L TIME bartender; fiply sulky, 30" rotary mower, - - -- -- - - seal ot said Cour t, this 12th day
LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH US FOR BEST
of August 1972.
tn
person
at
the
Meigs
.(jin.
snowblade,
dual
wheels,
BICYCLE
wilh
steering
wheel
;
August 4, Bill Beegle was
RESULTS. 91 PCT, OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
Mann ing u. W&amp;Dsrer
...., ! '
·
....,t t:hains , rear cultivators and drag brakes; chrome fenders
LOOKERS.
WE WILL TRY TO BRING ONLY· THE 2
Judge and ex-officio -::--.-----":-:--"'!'"'
honored guest at a l)irthday
drag;
one
Sears
6"
jointer,
and
a
slick
;
phone
992·9965
'f
Clerk or said CoiJrt FULL time bar n\ald: allilllUn
PCT. BUYERS.
i,
adjustable table with motor
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. or
barbecue at the home of ·his
Iii
come to 121 Seventh Ave. ,
person at Whi~j~erlng''llliift and cast Iron stand; phone
By Janet E. Ml)rris
parents, Bob and Marty
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992·331!
,:Jr
Nile Club.
' ••
614-9.,·2224.
Middleport and see Crenson
•
Ch
ief
Deputy
Clerk
Beegle. Attending were Jeff 181 ,,, 22, 21
~ ~~
......:.._
l·lH\c
8.J3·3fc
Pratt.
••
•••
8·13·3fc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

YOU'VE c:ot' 10 HELP I&amp;
FIND If, Q=FIGER. I'VE '

GEAAt:.HED FOR 'IHRI'.E c:\1\'lG.
I UNDERSTANI:&gt;

~E'S RETURNtNG A
TESr ON ,1\EDtS.VAJ..
lltSTOII.Y...

Pomeroy i6tor Co.
;

~FOOD.

NO WAlER .

1 CAN'T
GJON .

0

Sale

Bxl?l£! . I:S
lHAT 'J'OU?'

U'LABNER
(-'LI'L DO THEY RJ::ELIZE
iHAR GooD PROV/o.E'R

GOT·S0/3T-ONLY A FI&lt;W
aAYS 7V LiVE-")

0

DAYDKEAMINb! ..

(-!;T8US7S MAHH~ 7D THINK
7HAR STANDARD 0'LIVIN'MIGHT
GO DOWN. AFTJ::R. AH !S60N£.~'"')

NO WONDER

. ~kY OUR
;JuMBO

8-l.r

I'M THIRSTY!
I HAVEN ' T

a

Ct-IP

WINKLE

HAD 1&gt; .
DRINK 0'
WATER

ftf.ALLY' 1

ataMR~ 1 1F WE 'TRANSR:RED
mE MALE PRISONERS
10 'IHI:: STATE PRISON 1 WE
CCULD OPEN A NI::W
JiSMAL! CEll.. &amp;LOCK
HERE!
.

0

GlfA&amp;S YOl.l .

NON WERE OXlKIN 1!
GENTl.EMEN ! iHAT

FER

TWENTY
M INUTES!

COVERS lJoiE LASr

MMOR 0135T'ACLE:
IN 'TE$SIE'IJ .USr
OF GRIEVANCf5

NEW HOMES

3 BEDROOMS

-

•

·
0

A~

stated
m4 wire, i:he•re

seems

0
0

c.nmr

I

0 0

''HE IL''

6

:

------

HEATING &amp;

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

COOI.iftG ...

/'Wi\TGH IT! lliAT
M)J(l;S 'TWICE ~00"/E
JUST MISSE'D AilE

fCLELAND~
......

.J

QW.la::.

LITrLE ORP»AN ANN1E
SAY, BOSS· ·· IN'OULD
VOU LOOK

ARNOLD

~T

IH f SE

'SAMPtE S, AriD ·· HE Y'!

1' ~1

(G ASP)

~EELi ri G,

FAINl·--·•

BROTHERS,~:.·

~~~_,
ACROSS
1. Prop for
4

«.Rose
fragment
I. Condemn
11. Divert
12. Way-out
(3 wds.)
U.Enu·

.

merate

\.

_____

15. Esteem
11. Scarce

item on a

rainy day
21. Chou and
Mao
22. Appraise
Z3. State
Rower of

~1~...;::::::1

· '

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

fi

lJ

a

Yesterday'• Answer
2C. Mon·

31. - Le

sieur's

mate
28. Captain
Queeg's
mine

Gallienne

32.-,zwei,
drei
33. Man's

LES1'US

~

V/SWEL

I

II

name

sweeper

29. Quarrel
30.Sheep
tl&lt;k

III

3C. Pinch
35.Sandra

I t]

Now arranp the circled )etten
~
to form the surprlle anawor, u
=:.::=~=.~~~~·~~·~~·_•:::u::'::'=,ttted by the above urtoon.

;==:·I

V

I I I.

&lt;-...........;Prinl=
' :..::
~:..::-==ANSW:.:::IR::..::m
:::..___,l

D rI I I 1
(AII.twrn tomorrow)

Jumbl•"
Ytlterd•:r'•
Antwerl

AUGUR VITAL GENIUS AMAZON
You'll ftf!l 'rr lrflm 111lronvnry jud tloins

1M- STARGAZING

HE's NEVER HEARD AN Ot'f:RA
OR A ~~Mf'ltl~~ .. HE'~ NEVER
~EEN A MOVIE OR A PLA« ...

Beatrice

Portinari
II. Mimic

4
)
)
,'
"'
"'
"
'
\_';-'

DoWN

LCom·
motion
! . Old

French

eo in
3. Poker

· ki.ttY

DAILY CRYP'fOQUO'l'E- Here's how to work lt:

r---------,

AXYDLBAAXR
!• ··LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the ,three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ~~~~~~fJ~~C~-J
apostrophes, the length and formation of th e word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters. are different.

We talk to JOU

WOOD5'10CK FEEL5 THAT HE'S
LED A VE~ FULL LIFE !

CRYPTOQUOTES
FA MSD TNEDV GT KDA NAH IGKDA

"'"" ' t

W

F VDD XGH.-INBM ISFMKNA .
Y..terday's Cryptoquole: ONE MEAL A DAY IS ENOUGH
FOR A LION, AND IT OUGHT TO BE FOR A ·f.I-'!N .GEORGE FORDYCE

1JN YOUR DIAL
L----------------------'-------....,...:_ _....,:jl•

•''

distance
22. Wrest

e ~~·~.;:~::e:·!h•

resort

.,••

J

a

I TONJI

17. Lake port
II. He loved

. like ' ,...., ' ..

_____

·

off
6.· ofwar
7.Rowan
1. 11-Me
Entertain
You"
11. City in
Illinois
13. Eldest
15. United
(2 wds .)
16. Mournful
melody
17. Magician
(archaic )
18. Waterway
19. Expiate
20.Phi Kappa
2l.From

H.Freneh

- -----

WMP0/1390.

Alaska
(3 wds.)
25. ' 'Angel"
of Paris
26. Kind of ,
oil
27. Caddoan
Indian
28. Pamper
29.-Teas·
dale
10. Remem·

Unsenmble these four Jumbloo,
one letl&lt;r tO ea&lt;h square, to
form rour ordinary word1.

f. Old hat
5. Give

ber (3
wdi.Y

------

:·s ---------

•Cleo-

patra"

&lt;I

0

JJ(()JMOO~®:Z.:::x::.:.c:

by THOM"S JOSEPH

o.

To Buy

SJRR'/,
1\-IORIJAPP!EI
6!VE ME
N-Kl111ER

ftC 1972 Ki n~: Ft.:ubnb Syndicate, Inc. )

..

,

'\

'

�.

~

'

..... .
-

.

. .

. ,. .. .,

.

.

'

'

..

~

.

..

......

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..f'Gmeroy, 0., Auglllt 15, 1972

••

.
.

·-·
'

~ -

• ...;r. ·'

Meeting jn !!(M!Cial session , . paying tuition as required by
the Meigs County Board of law ~nee they actually lived in
Education voted rectnt!y to. · the Meigsbistricl. The request
grant the request or two ·.. as taken under advisement
Bedford Township families to and the two properties have
transfer their properties from · now been transferred. The
the Meigs Local School District county board also hss issued
to the Eastern Local School bus driver certifiCates to
Di.strict.
Thomas Thei.ss, Jesse Brinker,
It had been determined that Junior Darst, Jettie Arix, .
three children of the. two Theodore Pullins and Gary
families have been attending Dill .
Eastern Local Schools but that
Attending the meeting when
the homes are in the Meigs the transfer was approved
Local School District . The were County Supt. Robert
families reo.~ested the boand to Bowen , board members,
transfer the homes into the George Perry, Gordon Collins,
Eastern Di.strict so that the Virgil Atkins and Harold
children could continue classes Roush.
in the Eastern District without

I

Portland School
(Coninued from page 11 ' gave Mrs. McClurg permission
planning should include vas! to attend a home econorntcs

' II • . I
~

OVER 31Xl'exhibits of the work of Meigs County school students will be featured in four
booths being completed today for the aMual Meigs County Fair. Working on the booths, from
the left, are Mrs. Nellie Vale and Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs County school supervi.sors, and their
assistant, Debbie Miller. Lighting for the booths was completed by Robert Bowen, county
superintendent of schools,' who is superintendent of the department.
In 1971, President Nixon
ordered a !llklay wage-pricerent freeze and announced
imposition of a 10 per cent
Fifty-one arrests, including
surcharge on foreign imports. 13for intoxication and eightfor
driving while intoxicated, were
made by the Middleport Police
Department in July, Chief of
Police J. J. Cremeans reported
Tonight, August 15
to Middleport Council Monday
SUMMER OF '42
IRl night.
Giher offenses for which
Cartoons:
Berry Funnv
arrests were made included
Oscars Thinking Cap
Admission : Adults, $1.50 ; lour lor speeding ; · three lor
assured clear distance; two no
Children : $1 .00 .
Show Starts 7 P.M. ~
operator's license; live for
disturbing the peace and one
Wednesday lhru Saturday
each for reckless operation;
August16-19
failure to yield the right. of
NOT OPEN

Police Make 51 Arrests

MEIGS THEATRE

MASON DRIVE-IN

...

.'

o

Trailer Rig's Th;.ver Hurt

Transfers Approved

'

~

'

'

o1

''

,

Tonight."Aug. 15
Qouble Feature Program

"HITCHHIKERS"
Misty Rowe
Linda Avery

Judy Brown
- PlusDRIVE. HE SAID
William Tepper

--Karen Black

I Rl

Wed.-Thur.-Fri.
August 16·17·18

Double Feature Program

BLESS THE BEASTS
·&amp; CHILDREN
i GPl

- Plus"MAFIA"
Claudia Card inale
Franco Nero
Lee J . Cobb

Rated IGP)

Jury List
(Continued from page I )
Rutland; Jean Custer, Middleport; Joe McMurray,
Rutland; Jack M. Hawley,
Middleport; Raymond
Frecker, Reedsville; James .
Rees, Racine; Joan Childs,
Middleport; Otho Karr,
Middleport; Anderson Wooten,
Albany; Jack Hart, Bedford
East;
Jesse
Freeman,
Langsville; Charles D.
Hamilton, Minersville; Cora
Hilton, Portland; Goldie Hawk,
Pomeroy; Rose M. Patterson,
Rutland; Robert Craig,
Middleport; Frank Puckett,
Langsville ; C. A. Payne ,
Middleport; Hortense Humphrey, Rock Springs; Deloris
Frank, Long Bottom; John A.
Anderson, Pomeroy; Archie
McKinney, Rutland; Ernest
Sellarils, Rutland, and Beulah
Perry, Albany .

•

A CHECKING ACCOUNT
CAN SAVE YOU ALL
KINDS OF TIME.

With cooking , shopping , laundry, kids- your
time is prec ious . So why waste it running
around paying bills . Save time and legwork.
Write a check and drop your payment in the
mail.
You'll feel a lot safer with checks. too,
when you go shopping . And remember, a
cancelled check is legal proof of payment . So
open a time-saving Checking Account today .
There's no better way to beat the clock .

Wf1E~

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURi:H

f1c

lllbens ,alional . nk
....C. CINCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT

OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Oepilolt lluurance Corporation

way; blocking street ; improper turn; illegal license
tags; assault and battery;
disorderly manner ; failure to
appeal ; failure to pay fines ;
failure to pay parking tickets;
unclean premises. Charges
were dropped in five instances.
The department investigated
13 accidents during the month
and collected $1,292.50 in
parking meter deposits. The
cruiser was driven 4,591 miles
during the month.

Mr. Laudermilt
Died On MOndaY
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Everett C. Laudermilt, 74, New
Haven, died Monday at noon at
Pl&amp;asant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Laudermilt, formerly a
member of the town council,
was a member of the United
Methodist Church here 50
years, a trustee of the church,
and its Sunday school
superintendent many years.
He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are his wife,
Wrenna ; a daughter, Ruth
Ann, at home; two brothers,
Homer of Mason, and Okey of
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
New Haven United Methodist
Church with the Rev. William
DeMoss officiating. Burial will
he in the Union Cemetery.
Friends may call any time
after noon on Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home. The
body will be taken to the
church one hour prior to the
services.

quantities of
inservice convention today and Wed~
educaliori thai are designed to nesday in Columbus.
~=rft ~,;i~~~~~~~~~~~rJI~frl~t Ralph Sayre was named by
Examples might be in - the board as local education
dividualizatlon of instruction ; agency representative for all
multi -unit organizalion ,. in - federal program for 1972-73
d1v1dually gu1ded education ;
. .
nongraded elementary school s. and Jim Adams, prmc1pal was
elc.
appointed educational officer
Sincerely, of the di.strict for the 1972-73
William l. Murphy .
school year.
In other business the board
Ralph Wigal was named
hired the following teachers, administrative officer of all
Kathryn Hill, Sandra Hill, athletic funds as of Sept. I.
Charles Baer, Beverly Price,
Debra Wolfe was hired as
Janine Spurlock, and Carla custodian
at
Portland
Salser.
elementary beginning her
Mrs. Ruth Bumgarner was duties today.
hired as adult sewing class
The boand also voted to place
instructor under the super- on the Nov. 7ballotthefivemill
vision of Mrs. Erma McClurg. renewal levy. The board also
Roher! Spurlock was granted accepted the resignation of
permission to purchase sup- Mrs. Chlorus Grimm, Mrs.
plies for vocation education Grimm will be placed 'on the
program and John Dudding substitute teacher's list Sayre
was named junior high football reported.
coach.
Southern 's school lunch
In other business the board program was approved.
Students lunches will be 30
cents per child and nonteaching 50 cents per lunch.
The Midland Food was given
the contract for canned goodS,
Portion Pak the contract for
SYRACUSE - Eunice Will, meats and Empire Foods the
80, Syracuse, died today at contract for produce and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. frozen foods.
Mrs. Will was preceded in
John Codner was given the
death by her parents, Walter contract to repair all the
and Josephine Bookman electric
and
manuel
McCullough; two brothers, typewriters in the school.
Varian and Kenneth McCullough, and a sister, Nina
McCullobgh.
Mrs. Willis survived by her
husband, Eldon Will; a
daughter, Mrs. Opal KJoes,
Syracuse; one niece, Nina
Miller of Beverly and one
nephew, Kenneth McCullough,
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Will was a inember of
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
,
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 3 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Merrill
Floyd officiating . Burial will be
in Letart Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 7 p.m. today.

Ewrlce Will
Died Tuesday

.

'

57, Rt. 2,- Crown City:
A trucker was sllg)lUy in· of Rt. 141. Officers said a horse Bevan,
Lucille E. Jesse, 64;
jured in an accident at 6:10 owned by br. Neal Pren- · Pomeroy, was cited ·to MeigS:
p.m. Monday on Rt. 160, one dergast ran into the path of 8 County Court for improper left:
mile south of Vinton.
car operated by Marjorie F. turn follcnrtna a.traffic mishap:
According to the Galliaat 5:.20 p.m.·at ll)e .junction oC
Me'igs Post State Highl'lay
Rt. 33 and 7, The patj'ol sal~
Patrol; Claire Martin, 27, Rt. I,
Mrs . Jesse turned lntp a:
Vinton, after losing control, ol
private driveway lllto the ·piltli
iContinued from Page 1)
his tractor-trailer, ran off the
of an auto operated by Steve E:
roadway into an .embankment. long hair, but he had concluded Powell 18, Pomeroy. There
He was taken ·to the Holzer the school principals and was m~erate damage to botli
Medical Center by a McCoy- teachers had to spend too much cars.
·,
time checking· the length of
Moore ambulance.
A'rear-end
accident
OCC'Ifl'ed
A horse was killed in an students' hair.
He said he hoped parents at 5:45 P·!'l· on Rt. 7 at the
accident at 11 :15 p.m. on Rt. 7,
junction toRt. 33 where an auto
one and two tenths miles south_ would use good judgment in the
driven
by Howard P. Ritchie,
length of hair their children
48 Ev'"sville, !Iid., struck the
would wear.
car'. operated by
Superintendent Geo~ge re~r of
James
E:
Spiezel,'30;
Syracuse.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Hargraves read the following
ADMITTED : Bernice dress code, which was adopLaVal1ey, Racine; Hasel ted: .
Edgell, Long Bottom; Florence
Dress Code-Grode$7-12
·
All studenls are encouraged to use gQOd tosle .In dress ·and In
Frank, Pomeroy; lri.s Morri.s,
N!!W Haven, and Nancy Neutz- grooming. Very Important aspecls of good taste are neatneso.
simplicity and appropriateness.
ling, Syracuse.
Student dress and grooming must be of a no lure thai will not
DISCHARGED
Ada be disruptive
of the school program and nol creole a health or
Tackett, Retha Decker and Iris safely problem for the student or others In the school .
Carr.
Acts ol grooming shouiU take place In restrooms and not In

•

;!

a•

GALLIPOLIS TRIBUNE

Board

MASON COUNTY NEWS
POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

latnt
Shldes

1.49

classrooms or halls .

In all shops In which there Is equipment with moving parts,

VALUE

electricity or heat 1 all student!. must wear a hat, a net or other

comparable hair covering for safety. when working with or near
DEDICATION SET
.
Rev. Dr. Robert Persons, such equipment.
Students
and
parents
are
to
use
discretion
In selection the lit,
speaker for the recent
style
and
modesly
of
clolhlng
.
Southern Ohio Crusade, will
Neal, clean T-shlrlsor sweat shirts may be worn at any time.
dedicate the Plants Memorial Immodest, obscene or suggestive wording or symbols on T-shlrts
Church near the Racine Locks or sweat shirts will nol be permltled.
•.Shoes, sandals or some odequatefootw¥rwlllbt!oreqolred at
and Dam with appropriate
remarks, beginning at 7:30 all times lor safety and health.
Shorls of "bermuda" or mid-thigh length may be worn
p.m., Friday. There will be during
the flrsl and last grading periods. but not during the
special singing. The public is second through the fifth grading periods. "Hoi pants" and "short
invited.
shorts" wlli ·not be permitted.

Sold only in. '
Pack of 3 BaB '

· Girls may wear dean, neat slack$, levis, culottes anti pant
suits at any time .
Hair curlers or pins to set hair shall not be worn except when

1

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesda y at 11 a.m.
was 79 degrees under extremely cloudy skies.

Merchandised by: B &amp; E Slin Co. Inc,
12630 Greenlleld Rd .
Detroit, Michigan 48227

S1l1 St1rt1 low

a

COUPLE SLAIN
DAYTON (UPI) - A woman
and a man were shot and killed
late Monday by a gunman in a
moving car on the city's west
side . Killed were Barbara
Warner, 35, and Philip Weaver
30, police reported. They wer~ •
outside Weaver S home on
Alhens Ave. when the assailant
poked a shotgun through a car
window and hegan firing.

SUPPLEMENT TO
POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

I
I
I
I
.I

per milled by the principal prior to special social events or when
connected with work being done In the cosmetology course .

___,

Boys' hair must be clean and well -groomed. Mustaches may
be worn. Beards may not be worn. Sideburns may extend ~o the

Limit Two

ooltom ol the taw and be up to three Inches In wldlh.
This dress code shall he reviewed annually by the Board of
Education. Suggestions lor revision shall be sought from all
concerned.

IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PROVISIONS of this Dress
Code:
It shall be the responsibility of every professional staff ·
member to Implement the provisions of this dress code. Aspecial
responsibility for doing so belongs to the homeroom teacher who
is the fl"t to see the student each day.
In the implementallon of this code the following pattern of
procedures shall be followed :
Each vlolallon witt be reported to the student by the Prln·
cipal ; second violation, contact with !he parent by the Principal,
and third violation, suspension ollhe student by the principal .
Specific details and forms to Implement Section 538.132 shall
be developed by the building pr incipal$.
·The professional stall will have the complete •upporl of the
Board of Education in the implementation of the provlsl0f1s of
this dress code.

lariJII si~e; 5:1/8" x
3~1/8"

l

11)14" 0Hp

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SENSATIONAL FASHION DUO!

FROM

l•

1
i

sun weave

SUIT FILED
One suit was filed and
another dismissed in the Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court
thi.s morning, Filed was a
judgment action for $1,255 by
the Ohio Casualty Insurance
Co., Hamilton, Ohio, against
Ralph E. Christian, Galion.
Dismissed for lack of
prosecution was the suit by the
Pomeroy National Bank
against Grace V. French.

.i

r

Contains no
phosphalls
QUART BTl,..

-1
15

ls

NO-IRON STAIN RELEASE

:g.

i .

TA·BL·ECLOTH

Gallia Out Ahead,
Otamher is Told
John Reece, public relations McGraw said. Both warned
coordinator for the Gavin · "first impressions are the most
Power Plant, and John important."
McGraw, _personnel manager
The Pomeroy Chamber
of the Me1gs Mmes, spoke at decided to make available to
the ·noon luncheon of the mine employees a brochure
Pomeroy Chamber of Com- listing what Is available in
merce Monday at The Meigs Meigs County.
Inn.
.
McGraw said production at
Reece mtroduced Mr . the mine will begin Sept. I with
McGraw as the first super- a total of 70 employes already
v1sory pe:son at the new mmes hired . He expects that 100 new
to reside m Pomeroy. McGraw employes will be hired each
came. here from North quarter, and the mine will
Amer1can Coal Co. of Johns- generate a $30 million annual
town, Pa.
payroll when in full production.
R~ec~ advised that the Atotal of 2,601lemployes will be
Galhpohs Chamber of Com- employed at the mines when
merce has prepared a full production is re~ched
brochure for employes at the McGraw noted.
'
mine of what is ava!lable in
A large work force will be
Galha County. There IS a lack hired the second quarter of
of communication between 1973 McGraw said.
other c~mmunities affected by
R~ece suggested that the
the mme, except Gallipolis, chamber list what is available
Reece wa~ned.
.
in Pomeroy and Middleport as
He sa1d t.he Gallipolis well as Syracuse and Racine.
Chamber supplies new people a If the information is
listing of houses for sale or rent provided, Reece told members,
each week. This list is posted at · "We will be glad to give the
the mine site for the benefit of information to mine emmen employed there.
ployees,"
McGraw pointed .out that
Attending were Jack 'Kerr,
housmg and schools are top president· C. E. Blakeslee Bill
priority when new · workmen Grueser,' Fred Crow 'Bob
arrive. in an area. As a rule, Jacobs, N, w. Compton', Earl
men moving into the area have Ingels, and Tom Cassell.
only about two weeks to locate,

'

I

!

l

Choice of

· Mlny Colort
'

.~

.i
$..

EASY TO ASSEMBLE STURDY

!
l

TABLE
I

..

'

I

'

DECORATIVE COMBINATION TO GIVE

\ . .'I
,.\'~.,_

I, .

ANY ROOM IN THE HOUSE A

.'

· I._ \ .

DRAMATIC TOUCH. A 72" ROUND
PRINTED TABLECLOTH FRINGED TO

*Elberfelds will close
Thursday at noon for the

· REACH .THE FLOOR. THE TABLE HAS
'
'
SIMULATED WOOUGHAIN. PRINT ON

Meigs County Fair.

CORRUGATED PAPERBOARD STRONG

'

'

.,

.,

ENOUGH IU SUPPORT 100 lBS,

' •..
,.._.._

.

SHOP FRIDAY AND SAtURDAY·9:30 TO 9 PM
.,

ELBERFELDS I'N.POMEROY

'

..
.

'

J

r

I

I•

I

\

·-"·r.
'..

�.

~

'

..... .
-

.

. .

. ,. .. .,

.

.

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'

..

~

.

..

......

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..f'Gmeroy, 0., Auglllt 15, 1972

••

.
.

·-·
'

~ -

• ...;r. ·'

Meeting jn !!(M!Cial session , . paying tuition as required by
the Meigs County Board of law ~nee they actually lived in
Education voted rectnt!y to. · the Meigsbistricl. The request
grant the request or two ·.. as taken under advisement
Bedford Township families to and the two properties have
transfer their properties from · now been transferred. The
the Meigs Local School District county board also hss issued
to the Eastern Local School bus driver certifiCates to
Di.strict.
Thomas Thei.ss, Jesse Brinker,
It had been determined that Junior Darst, Jettie Arix, .
three children of the. two Theodore Pullins and Gary
families have been attending Dill .
Eastern Local Schools but that
Attending the meeting when
the homes are in the Meigs the transfer was approved
Local School District . The were County Supt. Robert
families reo.~ested the boand to Bowen , board members,
transfer the homes into the George Perry, Gordon Collins,
Eastern Di.strict so that the Virgil Atkins and Harold
children could continue classes Roush.
in the Eastern District without

I

Portland School
(Coninued from page 11 ' gave Mrs. McClurg permission
planning should include vas! to attend a home econorntcs

' II • . I
~

OVER 31Xl'exhibits of the work of Meigs County school students will be featured in four
booths being completed today for the aMual Meigs County Fair. Working on the booths, from
the left, are Mrs. Nellie Vale and Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs County school supervi.sors, and their
assistant, Debbie Miller. Lighting for the booths was completed by Robert Bowen, county
superintendent of schools,' who is superintendent of the department.
In 1971, President Nixon
ordered a !llklay wage-pricerent freeze and announced
imposition of a 10 per cent
Fifty-one arrests, including
surcharge on foreign imports. 13for intoxication and eightfor
driving while intoxicated, were
made by the Middleport Police
Department in July, Chief of
Police J. J. Cremeans reported
Tonight, August 15
to Middleport Council Monday
SUMMER OF '42
IRl night.
Giher offenses for which
Cartoons:
Berry Funnv
arrests were made included
Oscars Thinking Cap
Admission : Adults, $1.50 ; lour lor speeding ; · three lor
assured clear distance; two no
Children : $1 .00 .
Show Starts 7 P.M. ~
operator's license; live for
disturbing the peace and one
Wednesday lhru Saturday
each for reckless operation;
August16-19
failure to yield the right. of
NOT OPEN

Police Make 51 Arrests

MEIGS THEATRE

MASON DRIVE-IN

...

.'

o

Trailer Rig's Th;.ver Hurt

Transfers Approved

'

~

'

'

o1

''

,

Tonight."Aug. 15
Qouble Feature Program

"HITCHHIKERS"
Misty Rowe
Linda Avery

Judy Brown
- PlusDRIVE. HE SAID
William Tepper

--Karen Black

I Rl

Wed.-Thur.-Fri.
August 16·17·18

Double Feature Program

BLESS THE BEASTS
·&amp; CHILDREN
i GPl

- Plus"MAFIA"
Claudia Card inale
Franco Nero
Lee J . Cobb

Rated IGP)

Jury List
(Continued from page I )
Rutland; Jean Custer, Middleport; Joe McMurray,
Rutland; Jack M. Hawley,
Middleport; Raymond
Frecker, Reedsville; James .
Rees, Racine; Joan Childs,
Middleport; Otho Karr,
Middleport; Anderson Wooten,
Albany; Jack Hart, Bedford
East;
Jesse
Freeman,
Langsville; Charles D.
Hamilton, Minersville; Cora
Hilton, Portland; Goldie Hawk,
Pomeroy; Rose M. Patterson,
Rutland; Robert Craig,
Middleport; Frank Puckett,
Langsville ; C. A. Payne ,
Middleport; Hortense Humphrey, Rock Springs; Deloris
Frank, Long Bottom; John A.
Anderson, Pomeroy; Archie
McKinney, Rutland; Ernest
Sellarils, Rutland, and Beulah
Perry, Albany .

•

A CHECKING ACCOUNT
CAN SAVE YOU ALL
KINDS OF TIME.

With cooking , shopping , laundry, kids- your
time is prec ious . So why waste it running
around paying bills . Save time and legwork.
Write a check and drop your payment in the
mail.
You'll feel a lot safer with checks. too,
when you go shopping . And remember, a
cancelled check is legal proof of payment . So
open a time-saving Checking Account today .
There's no better way to beat the clock .

Wf1E~

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURi:H

f1c

lllbens ,alional . nk
....C. CINCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT

OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Oepilolt lluurance Corporation

way; blocking street ; improper turn; illegal license
tags; assault and battery;
disorderly manner ; failure to
appeal ; failure to pay fines ;
failure to pay parking tickets;
unclean premises. Charges
were dropped in five instances.
The department investigated
13 accidents during the month
and collected $1,292.50 in
parking meter deposits. The
cruiser was driven 4,591 miles
during the month.

Mr. Laudermilt
Died On MOndaY
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Everett C. Laudermilt, 74, New
Haven, died Monday at noon at
Pl&amp;asant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Laudermilt, formerly a
member of the town council,
was a member of the United
Methodist Church here 50
years, a trustee of the church,
and its Sunday school
superintendent many years.
He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are his wife,
Wrenna ; a daughter, Ruth
Ann, at home; two brothers,
Homer of Mason, and Okey of
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
New Haven United Methodist
Church with the Rev. William
DeMoss officiating. Burial will
he in the Union Cemetery.
Friends may call any time
after noon on Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home. The
body will be taken to the
church one hour prior to the
services.

quantities of
inservice convention today and Wed~
educaliori thai are designed to nesday in Columbus.
~=rft ~,;i~~~~~~~~~~~rJI~frl~t Ralph Sayre was named by
Examples might be in - the board as local education
dividualizatlon of instruction ; agency representative for all
multi -unit organizalion ,. in - federal program for 1972-73
d1v1dually gu1ded education ;
. .
nongraded elementary school s. and Jim Adams, prmc1pal was
elc.
appointed educational officer
Sincerely, of the di.strict for the 1972-73
William l. Murphy .
school year.
In other business the board
Ralph Wigal was named
hired the following teachers, administrative officer of all
Kathryn Hill, Sandra Hill, athletic funds as of Sept. I.
Charles Baer, Beverly Price,
Debra Wolfe was hired as
Janine Spurlock, and Carla custodian
at
Portland
Salser.
elementary beginning her
Mrs. Ruth Bumgarner was duties today.
hired as adult sewing class
The boand also voted to place
instructor under the super- on the Nov. 7ballotthefivemill
vision of Mrs. Erma McClurg. renewal levy. The board also
Roher! Spurlock was granted accepted the resignation of
permission to purchase sup- Mrs. Chlorus Grimm, Mrs.
plies for vocation education Grimm will be placed 'on the
program and John Dudding substitute teacher's list Sayre
was named junior high football reported.
coach.
Southern 's school lunch
In other business the board program was approved.
Students lunches will be 30
cents per child and nonteaching 50 cents per lunch.
The Midland Food was given
the contract for canned goodS,
Portion Pak the contract for
SYRACUSE - Eunice Will, meats and Empire Foods the
80, Syracuse, died today at contract for produce and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. frozen foods.
Mrs. Will was preceded in
John Codner was given the
death by her parents, Walter contract to repair all the
and Josephine Bookman electric
and
manuel
McCullough; two brothers, typewriters in the school.
Varian and Kenneth McCullough, and a sister, Nina
McCullobgh.
Mrs. Willis survived by her
husband, Eldon Will; a
daughter, Mrs. Opal KJoes,
Syracuse; one niece, Nina
Miller of Beverly and one
nephew, Kenneth McCullough,
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Will was a inember of
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
,
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 3 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Merrill
Floyd officiating . Burial will be
in Letart Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 7 p.m. today.

Ewrlce Will
Died Tuesday

.

'

57, Rt. 2,- Crown City:
A trucker was sllg)lUy in· of Rt. 141. Officers said a horse Bevan,
Lucille E. Jesse, 64;
jured in an accident at 6:10 owned by br. Neal Pren- · Pomeroy, was cited ·to MeigS:
p.m. Monday on Rt. 160, one dergast ran into the path of 8 County Court for improper left:
mile south of Vinton.
car operated by Marjorie F. turn follcnrtna a.traffic mishap:
According to the Galliaat 5:.20 p.m.·at ll)e .junction oC
Me'igs Post State Highl'lay
Rt. 33 and 7, The patj'ol sal~
Patrol; Claire Martin, 27, Rt. I,
Mrs . Jesse turned lntp a:
Vinton, after losing control, ol
private driveway lllto the ·piltli
iContinued from Page 1)
his tractor-trailer, ran off the
of an auto operated by Steve E:
roadway into an .embankment. long hair, but he had concluded Powell 18, Pomeroy. There
He was taken ·to the Holzer the school principals and was m~erate damage to botli
Medical Center by a McCoy- teachers had to spend too much cars.
·,
time checking· the length of
Moore ambulance.
A'rear-end
accident
OCC'Ifl'ed
A horse was killed in an students' hair.
He said he hoped parents at 5:45 P·!'l· on Rt. 7 at the
accident at 11 :15 p.m. on Rt. 7,
junction toRt. 33 where an auto
one and two tenths miles south_ would use good judgment in the
driven
by Howard P. Ritchie,
length of hair their children
48 Ev'"sville, !Iid., struck the
would wear.
car'. operated by
Superintendent Geo~ge re~r of
James
E:
Spiezel,'30;
Syracuse.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Hargraves read the following
ADMITTED : Bernice dress code, which was adopLaVal1ey, Racine; Hasel ted: .
Edgell, Long Bottom; Florence
Dress Code-Grode$7-12
·
All studenls are encouraged to use gQOd tosle .In dress ·and In
Frank, Pomeroy; lri.s Morri.s,
N!!W Haven, and Nancy Neutz- grooming. Very Important aspecls of good taste are neatneso.
simplicity and appropriateness.
ling, Syracuse.
Student dress and grooming must be of a no lure thai will not
DISCHARGED
Ada be disruptive
of the school program and nol creole a health or
Tackett, Retha Decker and Iris safely problem for the student or others In the school .
Carr.
Acts ol grooming shouiU take place In restrooms and not In

•

;!

a•

GALLIPOLIS TRIBUNE

Board

MASON COUNTY NEWS
POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

latnt
Shldes

1.49

classrooms or halls .

In all shops In which there Is equipment with moving parts,

VALUE

electricity or heat 1 all student!. must wear a hat, a net or other

comparable hair covering for safety. when working with or near
DEDICATION SET
.
Rev. Dr. Robert Persons, such equipment.
Students
and
parents
are
to
use
discretion
In selection the lit,
speaker for the recent
style
and
modesly
of
clolhlng
.
Southern Ohio Crusade, will
Neal, clean T-shlrlsor sweat shirts may be worn at any time.
dedicate the Plants Memorial Immodest, obscene or suggestive wording or symbols on T-shlrts
Church near the Racine Locks or sweat shirts will nol be permltled.
•.Shoes, sandals or some odequatefootw¥rwlllbt!oreqolred at
and Dam with appropriate
remarks, beginning at 7:30 all times lor safety and health.
Shorls of "bermuda" or mid-thigh length may be worn
p.m., Friday. There will be during
the flrsl and last grading periods. but not during the
special singing. The public is second through the fifth grading periods. "Hoi pants" and "short
invited.
shorts" wlli ·not be permitted.

Sold only in. '
Pack of 3 BaB '

· Girls may wear dean, neat slack$, levis, culottes anti pant
suits at any time .
Hair curlers or pins to set hair shall not be worn except when

1

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesda y at 11 a.m.
was 79 degrees under extremely cloudy skies.

Merchandised by: B &amp; E Slin Co. Inc,
12630 Greenlleld Rd .
Detroit, Michigan 48227

S1l1 St1rt1 low

a

COUPLE SLAIN
DAYTON (UPI) - A woman
and a man were shot and killed
late Monday by a gunman in a
moving car on the city's west
side . Killed were Barbara
Warner, 35, and Philip Weaver
30, police reported. They wer~ •
outside Weaver S home on
Alhens Ave. when the assailant
poked a shotgun through a car
window and hegan firing.

SUPPLEMENT TO
POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

I
I
I
I
.I

per milled by the principal prior to special social events or when
connected with work being done In the cosmetology course .

___,

Boys' hair must be clean and well -groomed. Mustaches may
be worn. Beards may not be worn. Sideburns may extend ~o the

Limit Two

ooltom ol the taw and be up to three Inches In wldlh.
This dress code shall he reviewed annually by the Board of
Education. Suggestions lor revision shall be sought from all
concerned.

IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PROVISIONS of this Dress
Code:
It shall be the responsibility of every professional staff ·
member to Implement the provisions of this dress code. Aspecial
responsibility for doing so belongs to the homeroom teacher who
is the fl"t to see the student each day.
In the implementallon of this code the following pattern of
procedures shall be followed :
Each vlolallon witt be reported to the student by the Prln·
cipal ; second violation, contact with !he parent by the Principal,
and third violation, suspension ollhe student by the principal .
Specific details and forms to Implement Section 538.132 shall
be developed by the building pr incipal$.
·The professional stall will have the complete •upporl of the
Board of Education in the implementation of the provlsl0f1s of
this dress code.

lariJII si~e; 5:1/8" x
3~1/8"

l

11)14" 0Hp

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SENSATIONAL FASHION DUO!

FROM

l•

1
i

sun weave

SUIT FILED
One suit was filed and
another dismissed in the Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court
thi.s morning, Filed was a
judgment action for $1,255 by
the Ohio Casualty Insurance
Co., Hamilton, Ohio, against
Ralph E. Christian, Galion.
Dismissed for lack of
prosecution was the suit by the
Pomeroy National Bank
against Grace V. French.

.i

r

Contains no
phosphalls
QUART BTl,..

-1
15

ls

NO-IRON STAIN RELEASE

:g.

i .

TA·BL·ECLOTH

Gallia Out Ahead,
Otamher is Told
John Reece, public relations McGraw said. Both warned
coordinator for the Gavin · "first impressions are the most
Power Plant, and John important."
McGraw, _personnel manager
The Pomeroy Chamber
of the Me1gs Mmes, spoke at decided to make available to
the ·noon luncheon of the mine employees a brochure
Pomeroy Chamber of Com- listing what Is available in
merce Monday at The Meigs Meigs County.
Inn.
.
McGraw said production at
Reece mtroduced Mr . the mine will begin Sept. I with
McGraw as the first super- a total of 70 employes already
v1sory pe:son at the new mmes hired . He expects that 100 new
to reside m Pomeroy. McGraw employes will be hired each
came. here from North quarter, and the mine will
Amer1can Coal Co. of Johns- generate a $30 million annual
town, Pa.
payroll when in full production.
R~ec~ advised that the Atotal of 2,601lemployes will be
Galhpohs Chamber of Com- employed at the mines when
merce has prepared a full production is re~ched
brochure for employes at the McGraw noted.
'
mine of what is ava!lable in
A large work force will be
Galha County. There IS a lack hired the second quarter of
of communication between 1973 McGraw said.
other c~mmunities affected by
R~ece suggested that the
the mme, except Gallipolis, chamber list what is available
Reece wa~ned.
.
in Pomeroy and Middleport as
He sa1d t.he Gallipolis well as Syracuse and Racine.
Chamber supplies new people a If the information is
listing of houses for sale or rent provided, Reece told members,
each week. This list is posted at · "We will be glad to give the
the mine site for the benefit of information to mine emmen employed there.
ployees,"
McGraw pointed .out that
Attending were Jack 'Kerr,
housmg and schools are top president· C. E. Blakeslee Bill
priority when new · workmen Grueser,' Fred Crow 'Bob
arrive. in an area. As a rule, Jacobs, N, w. Compton', Earl
men moving into the area have Ingels, and Tom Cassell.
only about two weeks to locate,

'

I

!

l

Choice of

· Mlny Colort
'

.~

.i
$..

EASY TO ASSEMBLE STURDY

!
l

TABLE
I

..

'

I

'

DECORATIVE COMBINATION TO GIVE

\ . .'I
,.\'~.,_

I, .

ANY ROOM IN THE HOUSE A

.'

· I._ \ .

DRAMATIC TOUCH. A 72" ROUND
PRINTED TABLECLOTH FRINGED TO

*Elberfelds will close
Thursday at noon for the

· REACH .THE FLOOR. THE TABLE HAS
'
'
SIMULATED WOOUGHAIN. PRINT ON

Meigs County Fair.

CORRUGATED PAPERBOARD STRONG

'

'

.,

.,

ENOUGH IU SUPPORT 100 lBS,

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SHOP FRIDAY AND SAtURDAY·9:30 TO 9 PM
.,

ELBERFELDS I'N.POMEROY

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COMPLETE FAMILY ·

r·HAIRCUTTIII&amp; KIT

'Makes cutting or .trimming easv tor everyone i~ the
familY. Heavy duty clipper with blend·o-matoc
and blade guard . Barber comb, tube o
tachmen t
· 1 dad U L
. oil, instructions and storilge case me u . . .
·
Fulll -year guarantee.

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Non-slip rubber top with zero·

•

set adjustment. A must for
every bathroom. Choice of

7.95

JW.ICE AS NICE

colors .

· VALUE

5.95 VALUE

SHAMPOO

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Both For

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.
. FITS 2OR 3 RiNG BINDERS

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.99

1.98

BABIES'

VALUE

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TRI-VI-SOL
LIQUID
VITAMINS

VI PENTA
ZESTABS

. . 10' VAUJE, , .
'

BOTTLE OF 130 TABLETS
ZESTABS
REG. $3.49

sure your baby receives his daily

IN.COMI'A.:'r SPACE

'239

LIMIT 1

PIOI 'DF )1-. .
SCRITCI ·PADS

.

MEDICATED
CRU Ex SPRAY
POWDER

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BTL.

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2.79 VALUE

OII'IIIUI.IVI~I

VA~UE ,·~ . v~~E 19~~~

' 29c

vitamins .

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.Vinyf·AIIorl*l Colors

.- ZIPPERED
PEICil·:·,,CASE
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ON

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Forrtlief of jo~'k itch,
pri'ckly hill, chlfing.

.

DESENEX
POWDER

DECDN GEST ANT ·ANTI HISTAMINIC

ALLEREST
TABLETS

Helps relieve p!linful itching
and discomfort of athlete's foot.

1.49 VALUE

4-0Z. .

•or.

ATHL8TI! 'S

SIZE

29c

VALUE

'

For symptomatic relief of HAY
FEVER

JIIIOWDIR

Eesy to Assemble. No-Mar Feet.
'

1.98

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The safe,. gentle way to make

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1.98

VALUE

VALUE
LIMIT 1

12·-WATER COLOR
.MARKER.PEl SET·

TABLETS

2.00 .

An effective Anti-Ges Antacid
to relieve discomfort.

TABLETS

VALUE

Anti•Gu
Anllcld

OISHINASH EA
SAFE AND
UNBREAKABLE

BARBASOL
SHAVE
CREAM
REG. 98'

100'1

KIDD.IE'S
MUGS I BOWLS

24's

LIMIT 1

DI~GEL

12 Asmted Colon · Non-Toxic

VALUE

I

VALUES TO 69c

•

PAIN RELIEF-WITHOUT ASPIRIN

TYLENOL
TABLETS

If you should not take npirin,
take Tylenol for safe, fas1
relief. . .with outa'l'irin .

REGULAR or MENTHOl.

98• VALUE
24'1

LIMIT 1

l

bowl and 10 ounce size cup.

••

LIMIT 1

FOR99e

2.10

PerrMnent colorful design$ to delight the k;idsl

ounce size

99e

$

. WODD-MElAL:EDIE.:
'12-1 . RULER . .

FOR 12 TAPES

20

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Bottle of 100 &amp;30 FREE
REG $7.65

.

FOR 6 TAPES .

HOLDS 9

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7 oz.
With Free Hairbrush

For all standard pe~ill . ., .id111l for
horne, office or 1hop. Mounts on -wall
or d8s k, tcrtwl P'OVidtd. Smooth
opera ling, sturdy metal111nd:: ·

Beautifully finished vinyl
albu'ms with special molded
cassette compartments and
unique index reference page.
Tapes not Included .

. 1.49
VALUE

'!\YADEC
VITAMINS

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HEMORRHOIOAL

AIUSOL

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SupposHories

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. eiiV oto 0 ...,,,tpiiJ.proof tip on trey; Sturdy,
foldlna lirasi •tinlsl\ld legs. use . . bed ,..y·
,.V, Viewing Of pa~use .•Colorful design :
~It's ..fl~tllrn or child's car100r
lllllwatlon. ·

."·1o49..YALU• • YOUR ~HOICE ·

~LUES LIKE MAmi:-No r .• ,....,UI\1

LOntlellinl comfort
• , .in f'linullll

RUB 'I ILUE

·SOl
TAB

For•ft,lffiCtin ild
to n11UIII4ih sletp.

SOOTHES· COMFORTS

:VISIIIE
EYE DROPS

BAYER" ASPiRIN

Cle1n ndness, comforts
irri11111d eyes.

For effect·lVI, f ast· . . .tafe
·
rei' I
of heedtehe and minor b~d~ P~~n.

Hohlt iM11ndy· dlivil1 time-Wihliol ·
...

12'·•

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lfld ldlool
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1.91

1.$0

200 COUNT SIZE

1.89 VALUE

VALUE

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SALE!·

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with loud bell alarm plut I'M!ep
·tt&lt;:ond hand. large eaav·to-read .

'','2.00

'

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EFFERVESCENT DENTURE CLEANER

Comfortable-Deoorative-Yersatilel Jumbo 21" .
. 21" )( 3" . .
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Leathet-look vinyl wipes clean easil y, stainproof,
Use Indoors Qr out. Inllates easily with vacuLrm
deaner adapter included,

lOBEII ILIRI

YO II

ACTIVE OXYGEN

.

FLOOR CUSHJOI·

·. ELECTRIC

\.oak,, vourNif on lhllight lidll Urg~S"' x
tO" tiD mirrors· with uo'd toM ""•' framt.
Choice oi 8 novtt clisiiJli. Sltf•dv honging hook
..,d nand' an bM:k. Choice of col.o n.
.

VINYL

ele c t ~c

cord. Futt

·1-vear guarantee .

. 5.95. VALUE

Cleans false teeth without brushing.
LIMIT 1

1.19 VALUE

40'~
LONG LASTIIIiG·FEL T TIPPED

&amp;·MAR

PElS

Set of Assorted Colors-Non-Toxic
fide &amp; Wat&amp;rproof. $1.00 VALUE

' Aelu on a cloudt. .. Maket anv surface a
~'Chtir"l Pure comfoit for reading, TV vi ew·
mg. and lounging indoors or out. Jumbo
~2 " ." ~7" • 20" size in tUQ9!d, f'!eavv
.,.nvl ~lh leether.Jike fin is h. Completely

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ch.t~, choice of colo!'l.

4,95 VALUE

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18 0%. 1,59 VALUE

G~EGG

TOOTH POLISH
lOoTH
PousH

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REG. s1.09

11fz OZ.

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VISINE
EYE DROPS

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WIRE BIUID . · WIRE IOUID
STEIIIIIK . , .TREIE 1111

PEARL DROPS
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PICK IF 30.·
PUSH Pill .
49c

1-.00

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29~

VAbUE

FAMOUS SKIN-TONE FORMULA

CLEARASIL
MEDIC::A TED
CREAM ·

VASELINE

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TUBE

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FOR BEAUTIFUL HAIR,

BRECK BASIC
CONDITIOIER

The rexturlzer for Hair
Take care of your h1ir, 1nd keep it

'

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REG. s1.19

98•
VALUE
LIMIT 1

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Effective medication for pimples and acne.

.65..0%.

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.. CILCUUTIR

69t;

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THE EFFECTIVE OANDRUF

· ' e.., to -UM-81'111 time!

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In Handy Plastic TuiJ•

Cluns as it conditions.
Helps keep split ends 1wayl

Fighb d1ndruff
u it cleans.

soft and shiny ... Condition Ill

7..0Z. SIZE
1.59 V.ALUE

4..0Z. SIZE
2.25 VALUE

9~

FELT-TIPPEI
TWIIIIRIEI

· ' Lilli~ .... ltr-fltlw nntillti'n drys
IWIIIIR, socks-fiSt. Suctian cup flit

Rtd l , .... leyed CIPI '

v:uE29~

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VALUE

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PROTEIN-21 Head:·&amp;Shoulden
SHA POO

Help• Beat the Frizzles

.·IJLOI.FOLI-IWIY,iWEiTER' DRYER .

WRITES FROM BOTH EN

,·LJIIE IOYEL ZIMIEI.CASE
Pltflct fonhour · ·

,_Is, PWnnnd ·.

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i-!Cnyolii;;MI!Iy D. . . VALUE ·
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PA(kAGES

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CALF BORN AT FAIR -A Holstein calf was born the first day of the Meigs County Fair.
The calf is pictured with its owner Melanie Dean.

•

GETTING READY - Debbie Crank, left and Melanie
Boggess get a Hereford Heifer ready for open class judging
at the Meigs County Fair. The animal is owned by Buller
Farms of Gallipolis. In the background is Randy Young with
a Hereford cow owned by Royal Oak Farms.

PA'l1'Y EBLIN, Pomeroy, astride her three year old
gelling, "Dusty". Patty and her horse will be taking part in
the horse show Wednesday afternoon at the Meigs County
Fair.
;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:

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Devoled To Tire lnleresu Of Tire Meigs-Mawn Area

VOL XXV

NO. 86

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1972

PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CENTS

SAIGON (UPli - Dr.}
{;! Henry A. Kissinger arrived :::;
';!;in Saigon tonight on a ;:;:;
::::special mission that so mdl
} political ligures believed ;:~
:;::signaled a breakthrough in :;:;
~:~:: hi s sec ret Vietnam peace :f
:::! talks in Paris. North !::
;:;:Vietnam 's Le Due Tho, who ·:;:;
l~~~ met Kissinger in Paris, i~i~
:;:; was flying to Hanoi but ;:;:

EDGAR VANINWAGEN,
survivor ol the infamous
Bataan Death March of the
World War II era, is putting
in his seventh year at the
Meigs County Fair helping
with tralflc control. Drew
Webster l'ost 39, American
Legion, til whi ch he is a
member. again has cha rge
of ha.ndllng the heavy traffic
at the fair. With \'anlnwagen
is Melvin Swisher.

Building

~~called his trip " rouUne." ::;:

. UIE . .
PEl··MARIER.
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29c VALUE SonY', Limit.Six .

Horse harn ess racing, a
highlight of the Meigs Coun ty
Fair, will get underway at 6
p.m. Thursday at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds with two
colt stake races included in the
schedule.
Pari-mutuel betting on the
races will be permitted and a
good field of entries, including
some locally owned and driven
horse, are expected to be
among them.
Heading the speed depart·
ment which conducted twilight
horse harness racing on both
Thursday and Friday evenings
at 6 and at 3 p.m. on Saturday
are William Smith, Fred
Goegiein a nd William B.
Downie.
The 109th annual fair got off
to a seemiiog ly slow start for its
first full day Tuesday. There
was judging in the domestic

ltYLON iRlSTLES, ASSORTED COLORS

TEISII&amp;·.

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HAIR ·BRU:SH
~VA~U£ ~;tlm!tTwo ·_ . .

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arts and tarm crop aepart·
ments. However , today judging
and other activities moved in to
high gear.
Highlighting this eve ning's
.activities at the fair will be
JUni or fair night which will
open with a dog show
at 6 p.m.. the crowning of the little prince
and princess , achievement
award prcsentalions, games
and races for youth, a garden
tractor pull for both youths and
adults , horse games and other
activities.
At I p.m. Thursday, quarter
horse racing will be held and
open class dairy cattle judging
will gel underway. Appearing
at Ute grandstand Tltursday
evening at 8:30 will be Zeke
and Bi ll, the Flowers Family
and Kenny Price, professional
entertainers.

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VALUI
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Limit Four. :

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PONY PULL - A demonstration of skill and strength
was given Tuesday night at the pony pulling contest at the

~' ive cash prize s were
awarded winners in ea..,h of
three classes in the annua l
Pony Pulling contest as the
grandstand event Tuesday
night at the Meigs County Fair.
Prixes of $30, $25, $20, $15 and
$10 we re awarded to the top
f ive winners in th e three
classes.
First place in the 42-inches or
under category went to the
team of Chester Meadows,
Carroll, with second going to
the team of Danny Gobel of
Rock Bridge. Tltird was won by
the Schlarb Brothers of Baltic,
fourth to the team of Jimmy
McGuire, Crown City, and fifth
to a team owned by Gary
Lamm, Gallipolis .
Other entries were teams of
Waller Douglas of Athens,
Robert Calloway of Reedsville
and Alton Douglas. and son of
Shade.
In the 46-inches and under
class, first place went to th e

learn of Herman Ru sse ll ,
Zanesville; second to Frank
Black's team , Col umbus ; third
to Law rence Meadows of
Lanca ster, fourth to Shirley
McNeal 1s team, Logan , and
fifth the tern ol Greg Meeks of
Athens. Other entries were
Arthur Cross, Athens: Doug
Carr, Coo lville; Richard

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Suspe~;ts
In a mat~r of a few hours,
Meigs Coll!'ty Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach and Deputy Shertll
Robert Beegle apparently
solved a breaking and entering
Wednesday.
·An unoccupied house owned
by Albert Parker located north
of Chester ori SR 7 was broken
into at approximately 3 p.m.
yesterday. Entrance was
gained through a rear window .
Several items were taken from
the house, which Is furnished .
Deputy Beegle, on his way
l!ack from the scene stopped a
passing vehicle, and aller
checking out the driver, Carl
Edward Myers, Galllpol!s, took
him into custody.
Myers admitted to the
breaking and entering. His

p.

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Chol.:.of

Cololi

binod with tho p&lt;OVOO cit'
pondlbilltY of Swlu crwfto

nwnship. Your ' choice a

_.......,.rn t~tcltln9 co10t'llt '
todly'l
bltndwlth or tcCtnt
t""lono. Full 2"101' gulf·

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1.00
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Charged
confession led to the arrest of
Bonnie and Sterling Neville,
Middlepor t, a nd James
Johnson, Gallipolis, Rt. 2, who
are also in custody. All have
been charged with breaking
and entering in the night
season, Sheriff Hartenbach
said.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Jason Leon,
Racine; Alice Mills, Middleport; Myrtle Robinson,
Pomeroy; William Dye, New
Haven; Jerry Ward, Middleport, and Rhonda Hager,
Vorhees and Dray, Gallipolis, Cheshire.
DISCHARGED - Lawrence
and filth to Shriver and Cross
of Athens. The only other entry Leadbetter , Nellie Hanson,
in the class was a second team Lynn Rolf, and Mary Lambert.
owned by Dray.
Hig h Custer, Da nny Zirkle
NOW YOU KNOW
and Clarence Henderson of the
The carp, which sometimes
fair board headed the event, ·
grows to more than 50 pounds,
and Ed Rickard was the an· is a member of the minnow
nouncer.
fam ily.

Three Meigs Countians won
two blue ribbons each in Ute
largest of a specimen class on
display at the Meigs County
Fair during the judging of farm
crops Tuesday.
Winning two first each were
Evelyn Hollon, the largest

Weather

apple and the largest onion;
Bryan Windon, the la rges t
tomato and the largest potato,
and Dale Kautz, th e largest
beet and the largest head of
cabbage . Edison Hollon won
the blue award for the largest
ear of hybrid corn .
in the hay show, a special
category with the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District providing trophies for
the fi rst place winners, Earl
Dean was first in hay, 50 pet. or
greater legume, with Edison
Hollon taking second and Dean
taking third; Dale Kautz, first
in the 49 pet. or less legume hay
and also third with Donald
Mora laking second, and Kautz

winnin g the first and second
pla ce awards in th e ail grass
hay with Ed ison Hollon, third.
Hollo11 took first place for the
best six ears of ye ll ow hybrid
corn and Dean was second. In
the best peck of wheat Hollon
was aga in first with Mora,
seco11d . Mora was first and
seco nd place winner in the best

Mostly sunny today and
Thursday. Warmer Thursday .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Highs today in the mid and
Ohi o Extended Outlook
upper 70s to the lower 80s .
Friday
Through Sunday:
Highs Thursday in the 80s.
Fair and mild with highs in
Clear and cool tonight with
the
80s and lows in the upper
lows in the lower 50s to lower
50s and 60s.
Another school tax measure 60s.
in Meigs County went down to
defeat Tuesday when voters of
th e Eastern Local School
District went to the polls to
vote 460.306 against a 2.75 mill
bond issue.
The bond issue would have
provided funds to build an
addition of approximately
eight new classrooms to the
high school, plus music
facilities. Under the proposed
plan, a jUnior high school
would th en have been
established at the high school
to permit more room in the
district's elementary schools
which would have bee n
reduced from eight to six·
grades.
Here's how · voters in the
polling places of the district
cast their ballots in Tuesday's
special elec tion :
'''
YES NO
"'
North Chestl!r
93 86
'
South Chester
69 90 .
Portland (Small
part in District)
4 I
LongBottom
8 67
Olivedale
LARGE TROPIDES PROVIDED by the Meigs Soil and Water Conserv"tion District were
30 48
Reedsville
35 51
preS&lt;nted winners of the Hay Show at the MeigsCollJ11Y Fair Tuesday. Making the presentation
Alfred
II 73
on the left is David Perry, local conservationist. Winners are Mrs. Earl Dean, accepting on
Tuppers Plains
56 44
behalf of her husband for the best 50 per cent on greater legume hay, and Dale Kautz , two
Totals
306 460
trophies, one for best. all grass hay and, one for best ml~edhay with 49per cent or less legume.
'

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lireen , H1 o Grande : Han k
Douglas of Pome roy; Merrill
Shriver, Bidwell, and Dick
Shriver of Rio Grande.
In the 5().inches and under
class, Dale Vorhees o! Rock
Bridge won first place, second
wen t to Cla ude Dray of
Gallipolis, third to Paul Gobel
of Rock Bridge. fourth to

-·

DEA.TII ACCIDENTAL
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Asa
Hughes, 57, Toledo, was shot to
death here Tuesday night by
his son, in what police called an
accidental shooting . Police
said he was shot by his son,
Samuel, 19, who was handling .•
gwt thought to be unloaded.

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

,)

Needed
ByCHC
The Meigs County "Coffee
House Committee" Tuesday
night at the cafeteria in Middleport Junior High School
ca nvassed possible locations of
its proposed recreation center.
The committee is seeking a
building ·\o house facilities .
Made up of area young pe&lt;&gt;ple,
ministers, community leaders

and interested citizens. the
Coffee House Committee has
sponsored several dances in
the former Pomeroy Juni or
High School to ra ise funds.
The committee expect' to
combat alcohol, drug abuse
and vandalism, all of which it
believes is too prevaleht.
Organizing recrea tiona!
program s, providing trained
counselors and a variety of arts
and crafts progra ms, the
committee hopes to offer
popular alternatives to young
people.
As a building and funds
become ava ilable, specific
programs that the commi ltee
wi ll organize include arts and
crafts, music, a snack shop
with a juke box. educational
(Continued 011 page 10)

Hollan, Windon, Kautz Crops Top Field

Voters Axe

A COLORFUL AND wide-ranged display of many items
made by senior citizens of Meigs County is featured at the
senior citizens tent at the Meigs County Fair. Here, Henry
Watson points out an attractive covered wagon and Mrs.
Margaret Amberger holds an attractive plaque from the
display. Watson and Mrs. Amberger are employed in the
county's senior citizens program. Chairs are placed in the
tent for those who want to rest.

Meigs County Fair. Robert Calloway of Reedsville is shown
working his team in the first event of the contest .

Money Won in Pony Pull Tests

Bond Issue

'

and ::;;
~j white Air Force Boeing 707?
~;;;mad e its way through thick !!!!
;:;::rain douds into Saigon 's;:;:
~:han Son Nhut Air Base ;:;:
~:~where Kissinger was :~:;
:;;;greeted by U. S. Am·:;:;
:;:;:bassador Ellsworth Bunker ;::;
';!(and Gen. Frederick:;:;
:-:..
:·:·
::;;Weyand, commander of U. ::::
;!;!;s. forces In South Vietnam. ;!;!
;!;!; The belief In Saigon was ;:;:
~:~ithere had been an im- ;j;~
)hortant development, but ::~
:·;n:;:south Vietnamese officials ;:;:
,•,•
[:;were divided among them· :;:;
::::selves over whether :::;
!;!!Kissinger was flying here ';~;
!~!to dump President Hguyen !;!;
....
·.·.
;:::Van Thieu or to assure him ;:;:
!)is political future was ;!;!
~~secure.
::::

Colt Stakes
Open Racing

. NYLON TIP, ASSORTED £0UIRS

.

:;~ Ki ssinger's blue

..

.

peck of wi nter oats. Edison
Hollon was first and Mora
second in the best peck of
spring oats judging with Mora
winning first with the best peck
of barley and Hollon winning
second.
Earl Dean won the blue

award for the cobbler judging
with Evelyn Hollon, second.
Dean was first also in the
miscellaneous five specimen of
potatoes with Mrs. Holl on
second .
In the judging of vegetables,
(Continued on Page 2)

Proposals·Heard
Meeting with the Meigs
Co unty Comm issioners
Tuesday was Charles Bissell,
Trustee of Chester Township
who proposed the commission
taking over township road 79
and repairing it, as well as fix
other township roads as
needed.
In other business the commission adopted a resolution
authorizing
the
co unty

engineer to act for it in contractual matters related to the
planning and construction of
county road 75. The com.
mission also approved the
resurfacing of Letart Township
Roads 95 and 96.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Bob Clark, and Warden
Ours, commissioners, and ·
Susan Andrews, acting clerk .

Kiddies' Re·Tre~t
A record first-day at- Amusement Co. on the midway
tenqance at the county fair for for Thursday.
at least the past 10 yea rs was
The company will operate
set Tuesday, Wallace Brad. rides from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
lord, president of the Meigs Thursday with the charge to be
County Fair Board, said today. reduced to 20 cents for all rides
An estimated 4,000 , persons but two. These also will be
were on the grounds.
reduced, but not to 20 cents.
In appreciation for the ex·
cellent turnout Tuesday, which
also brought up first day
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
revenues to a new 10-year high,
The
Middleport E-R squad
a second "Kiddie Day" has
been se t by the Gambill was called for Jerry Ward,
Beech St. , at 9:57 p.m .
Tuesday, who, hav ing difficulty breathing, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
CLOSING THURSDAY
where he was admitted.
Middleport village office will
close at noon Thursday so that
employes may attend the
BAND TO PLAY
county fair. This includes the
RACTNE - The band at
office of the mayor, the board Southern Local High School
of public affairs and the will be featured at the Meigs
maintenance department. ·
County Fair Friday afternoon,

'"

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