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Tanks Threaten DaNang

BETH EWING, 20-MON'nl OLD daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ewlng, Pomeroy, decided to catch a few winks on a
cot in the first aid quuters of the Meigs Home Nursing
Service Safw'day afternoon.

·Convention
(Continued from Page I)
· . .polis showing Nixon's margin
· over McGovern widening and
.· 30 to 40 per cent of registered
.· Pemocrats declaring them. selves ready to vote Republican.
Indifference smothered an
. : attempt at rebellion by black
: · ·.·Republicans.
· . Only six appeared Sunday
. . when Mayor Edward Bivens
Jr. of lnkater, Mich., a Negro,
· ··.called a caucus of the 56 black
·. -delegates and . 84 alternates
·witb the intention of demand·. ing· ·the resignation of GOP
National Chairman Robert
Dole on grounds be was indifferent to women and blacks.
Even fewer showed up at a
second meeting.
Askew'l WelcamiDS Add,...,
Today's agenda at the con-

ventiop hall was all oratorical.
Democratic Gov. Reubin
Askew of Florida, who spurned
McGovern's vice presidential
offer, was ready to welcome
the Republicans.
Tonight, Sen. Edward W.
Brooke of Massachusetts, the
Senate's only Negro, f\{rs.
Anne Armstrong, party cochairman, and youthful Mayor
Richard Lugar of Indianapolis
are to deliver three keynote
addresses followed by actor
.Tunmy Srewart's tribote to Pal
Nixon.
Nixon will be renominated
Tuesday and Agnew Wednesday.
The President's men worked
behind the scenes to produce a
compromise at today's Rules
Committee meeting which
would keep the dispute from
playing itself out Tuesday
night on the ·convention floor.
New York Gov. Nelson A.

a rival last time
1- - - - - - - -. . Rockefeller,
but Nixon's nominator this

MEIGS :ntEATRE
Tonighl&amp; Tuosdoy
Auguot 21-22
THE HOSPITAL
(Technicatorl
George Scott
Dianna Rlgg

(PG)

Cartoons:
No Spoce Like Hom•
Wind Bog
The Duster
Show startST P.M.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
~

MASON DRIVE. IN
.. .

Tonight&amp; Tu..doy
August 21·22

., ·.

Double Feature Program

"DIAMONDS ARE
FOREVER"
Sean Connery
Jilt St. John

(Color)

(GP)
Plus
THE ORGANIZATION
(Color!
Sidney Poltier
Barbara McNair
.
(GP)

time, was in the thick of it,
fighting for the liberals,
vowing to carry the Issue to the
noor even if it embarrasses
Nixon.

News

SAIGON (UPf) - The North
Vietnamese have br ought
tanks into an area only 15 miles
south of the big U.S. air base·at
Da Nang, the U.S. Command
disclosed today. This move a nd
the appearance of big Communist artillery pieces Cartner
south posed new threats to Da
Nang and the heavily
populated coastal regions to
the south.
Communist forces this
weekend captured the district
capital of Que Son, 25 miles
southwes t of Da Nang, and the

and the big guns to ease the
threat.
The U.S. Command said two
&lt;Jf the big Soviet-built guns
were knocked out by U. S. Air
Force Phantom fighters 35
miles southwest of Da Nang
and that another was
damaged. The command
reported erroneously earlier
that the artillery pieces were
seen only 18 miles from Da
Nang, bringing it within range.
Pilots from the aircraft
ca rri er
USS
Oriska~
destroyed one 130 mm gun 30
miles southwest of Da Nang
and South Vietnamese fighterbombers hit ano.iher in the
same area, bringing to six the
St. in front of the Chapman number destroyed there this
home; ' 6:15 to 6:45 p.m. on weekend. These are the same
Sept. 15 at the Post Office;
· 10:45 to 2 p. m. Sept. 19,
Rutland Elementary School,
and Sept. 27, 6:30 to 7: 15 at the
SQUAD CALLED
Rutland Church of Christ. The
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
stops with the most response called today at 7:05a.m. to the
will be continued, the librarian Ea rl Roush residence on
reports.
Wright St. lor Mrs. Roush who
The complete September was dead on arrival of the
schedule will be announced sq uad.
later.
nearby support base, Camp
Ross, uespile heavy U. S. air
a ttacks.
Today's
allnuuncement that tanks and 130
mm guns had been bro~ghl into
the area for the first time
emphasized the new danger
there.
Loss of Que Son and Ross
leaves on ly one major fire base,
Baldy, between the southern
Communist column and Da
Nang where abou t 5,000
Americans a re sti ll stationed .
U. S. fig hter-bombers were
attacki ng the tank formati ons

Eddy's Stops To he Revised

A c ha nge in the sto p
schedules of Mr . Eddy
Educa tor, the Meigs Bookmobile, is being planned, Mrs.
Vilma Pikkoja, extension
librarian, reports. Response at
the various stops will determine future scheduling.
Comments on the bookmobile stops . and suggested
changes are being solicited by
Mrs. Pikkoja. Beginning in
September more stops will be
made in Rutland to determine
need in that community. The
MARRIAGE LICENSE
schedule calls for a stop at the
Charles
Thomas Hill, 21,
park, 7:45lo8 :15 p. m. on Sept.
Route
2,
Racine, heavy
5; 7 to 8 p. m. Sept. II , Salem
equipment operator , and
Debra Kay Tucker, 18, Route 2,
Raci ne, secretary.

"I'm not looking for a fight
BOOSTERS TO MEET
but I'm always anxious to
Eastern Athletic Boosters
support fundamental prin- will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
ciples," he said. "I'm support- the high school. All boosters
ing the principle of one-man, are urged to attend.
one-vote and I don't think the
majority position (in the Rules
Committee ) is in keeping with
J

that."

namese civilians and wounded
72. In one, a bus struck a landmine on the road between
Pleiku and Phu Nnon in the
Central Highlands $unday,
killing 48 persons and injuring

type of guns which have stalled
the government drive to
recapture Quang Tri City .
The South Vietnamese said
ground fighting around Que
Son died out today, but there
were these other developments
in the Indochina War .
- An assassin tried unsuccessfully today to kill
Cambodian Prime Minister
Son Ngoc Thanh with a bomb
plaeed inside an old car in
Phnom Penh. He escaped but .
four of his bodyguards were
wounded.
- The South Vietnamese
reported two weekend in·
ciden ts killed 86 South Viet-

Make Elberfelds Your
Back-to-School
Headquarters!
BE THRIFTY!
SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPS FROM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r--·-----_,..,..,_._._._._..__

..

1
· FOODLINER, Middleport, Ohio
I
Register for Free Gifts
I
I
I DURING OUR 9TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI
I
.I
I ENTER ·NAME - I TODAY ADDRESS------------------- - - - - UNION TO MEET
PT. PLEASANT - The I
CITY
STATE '. --regular monthly meeting of
ALL PER SO NS MU ST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
Local 644, The Tubber, Cork, I
ENT ER . NO EMPLOY E OR ME MBER .QF
Linoleum and Plastic Workers I
FAM I LY MAY ENT ER.
of America , AFL-CIO, will be
DEPOSIT
ONE PRIZE TOA FAMILY
held Tuesday evening at 7 in I
DRAWING SAT. NIGHT AUG. 26 AT 8 P. M.
AT
the
Union Hall in I
You Do Not Have to be Present to Win
Point Pleasant, according to
OUR
I
M&amp; R SHOPPING CENTER
anno un ce ment fr om Daniel
Ch ristian , president. Christian I
STORE
asks all members to attend.
Ca~pen te rs'

.I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·---------------------- •

Sherry Gladney , Postal Worker, Chicago , Ill.

•

species of na~ural sponges .

-How to ntaiJ a letter
today when yo11:
want it delivered
tomorrow.

in Briefs
•(Continued
• • from
Page
I)

MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS, OHIO - nmtTEEN cars of a
52-ear Baltimore &amp; Ohio freight train derailed and plunged 30
feet into a ravine Sunday, taking with them track, ties and part of
the grading. No injuries were reported.
·
"Six feet of the track just disintegrated," an investigating
officer said. "But what can you expect since its been there since
about 1912." Four of the derailed cars were loaded, two with
Valentine's day carda, with auto parts and another with breading
for meat and chicken. The other 10 were emply, police said.
COLUMBUS - THE GRAND EXALTED RULER of the
Fraternal Order of the Elks said here most members of a
conunlttee of past national Elk leaders are on record as favoring
the admission of blacks. But Francis M. Smith of Sioux Falls, S.
D., national leader of the 1.5 million organization, ssid blacks can
be acbultted only if the Elks constitution is altered.
"If there Is to· be a change, it must be voted on by tbe membership," Smith said. "I believe in the right to dissent, bull insist
that '!\'lth it goes the responsibility for orderly process. Dissent
has no value if it is devoid of knowledge and integrity ." The Elks
concluded the three-®y convention with a ritualistic clinic
conducted by Arnold Fitzgerald of Washington, Ind., and KenneY&gt; Strunk of Lima.

Out oftown.
•

·~ :-:_--

- --

ASign For Our Times

•••

-

Be sure to use Air Mail. And remember
to include a Zip Code in the address.
Mail before 4:00p.m. from any specially
marked Air Mail box. Or by 5:00p.m. at
your Main Post Office.
You'll get next-day delivery to major
- - cities within 600 miles almost all the time.
-.And, second-day delivery anywhere in the
country.

In your town.
Again, be sure to include a Zip Code in the
address. Mail by the last pickup before 5:00p.m.
That's it.
.-;;..,;·""'~-;.·,_.,..-;;;
• You'll get next -day delivery in your town and the
,y ·
area around it, most every time you mail.

:

~n

These Zip Code tips can help you.
If you don't know a Zip Code, just look in the handy Zip Code

Section of your phone book. Or call your local Post Office.
Always put your Zip Code in your return address.
So people can copy it down.
People really depend on the mail, and the mail
deperods on Zip Code. Un-Zipped letters can slow
down all the mail. So put a Zip Code
on everything you mai.l.

..'

We fore8ee th at any day of the yenr ou r ·wide-awake owl
can be you r most fuvo rnble s ign. The wide -aw nke ba nk
pa·omi ses to help you with the antidpa ted and the unnnticipated. Because we make lt nil so ea!l.y, people thnnk th eir
lucky stal'l! .

'.

The wide-awoke bank makes itf!!f!o tmJ}.

':·

'~ ,' '.

-

':· ~ '

.

J

'•

'

The Fanners Bank &amp; Savings .Co.
POMEROY. OHIO

. . ..

Member of F-•1 Rtserve Svstem
On FridoYI :Jvr Drlv•ln WlndowlsOponh. m. h7 p.m. (c0nii,.,IMIIIY) ,
at,tiO M11lmum lnourance Far Each Do,osltar

·..-·
.

'

'
:..-::_:.;i.....,..,
__ _;_,., ASK
.'
';

Help us help you.
Use Zip Code.

.

...' .: .
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ABoUT STUDENT FOTO ACCENT CHECKS

\bur Postal Service

('!)

enttne

Devoted To 'l7ae lnlere~ll Of The Meigi·M(JI()n Area

VOL. XXV

. Mall's moving faster. For a lot of reasons . But I'd say
the reason behind it all is Zip Code .... ''

NOW YOU KNOW
There are more than 2,500

at y

42. In the aect&gt;nd incident two
helicopters, one full of
refuged, collided Saturday
near Kontwn, .also In the
Central Highlands, killing 38
and wounding 42.

NO. 90

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.'OHIO

· TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1972

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Pomeroy Facing New Demand
'"fo Complete Sanitary Sewers
Fred Crow, town solicitor,
told Pomeroy Council Monday
night that village officials will
meet with the State Water
Pollution Control Board in
Columbus Wednesday at 2 p.m.
in connection with completing
the sanitary sewage system.
Crow said the control board
in addition to requiring completion of the sewage system
also is demanding that the
storm sewers be separated
from the sanitary sewers.
'
Crow observed that it
seemed clear the cost of such a.
project , would make it unfeasible at this time. Crow said
there is no preliminary cost
estimate of the project, and
asked for a breakdown on

which will be presented to accepted a bid from the Shelly number and extent of sewers
council. The Regional Planning Company to resurfa ce six plugged by weeds and grass, a
Commission will also assist in village streets with asphalt slip on the properly of Jack
financing the building with the concrete and place a sealer on Seelig on Mulberry Ave .
sl.ale paying two-thirds of the the two town parking lots at a causing water to flood the
street during heavy rains.
cost· and Pomeroy one-third. total cost of $10,651.30.
Mayor Baronick said the new
Seelig said he will correct the
Streets to be resurfaced are
village hall, if and when Rutland St., Brown Alley, situation as soon as possible.
erected, will not be located on Point Lane, Shasteen's Road, Seelig felt that the hill will slip
farther, and if work is done
the site of the present city hall. Fourth St. and Laurel St.
The exact ioca Lion of the new
Mayor Baronick announced now it will have to be repeated.
building is not known. The that the Mid-Ohio Valley Since it is going to be a costly
present city hall and lot will be Mayor's Assn . will meet at the operation, he asked for a lillie
sold, Baronick said.
Meigs Inn on Sept. 13 with news more lime. He agreed to fix the
The new proposed building media to be invited. Fifteen faul t.
will be a story and a half with mayors and 15 clerks will atCouncil also &lt;liscussed the
. of grass :rt !leech
'
the mayor's and secrel.ary's tend .
cuttmg
Grove
Roger Manley's request for a Cemetery . Earlier it was
office and water department on
Commission .
Pal Meeker, consult.ant of one floor and the police streetlight on Rutland St. was announced that grass on lots
agreed to.
would be cut only if lot owners
"Surveys Unlimited," will department on the other.
In other business council
Council discussed the paid a fee of $5. Council, not
draw up plans for the building

watet rates and sewage rates
per customer.
In a busy session, council
approved · three required
readings of an ordinance that
will place on the November
ballot a two mill renewal levy.
Of the two proposed mills, one
and one-half will be for street
lighting and one-half for
operation of the police
department.
Mayor William Baronick
announced that his request for
approval of plans for a new
village hall has been approved
by the Regional Planning

Republicans Ridiculed
McGovern as Dangerous
MIAMI BEACH (UPI )-The
RepubUcuns are nominating
President Nixon for re-election
tooight and, in a preview of his
campaign, are portraying
GeorgeS. McGovern as a.naive
and dangerous radical out of
step with the country and his
own party,
Warwhoops of glee and
anticipated victory made
Sen
Barry M.
Goldwater of ,\tlaona and
Gov. Ronald Reagan of
California the convention's
first heroes Monday night
wben they barrunered away at
the Democratic nominee as an
extremist - the tactic the
Democrata used so suecessfully against Goldwater in
11164.
Backstage , liberal and
moderate Republicans from
the big states debated over
whether to break the hannooy
with a convention noor fight at
this afterooon's session in an
attempt to reverse a dedslon
which could give VIce
President Spiro T. Agnew a leg
up on the presidential
nominationinl976ifhechooses
to run. ·
At a stormy, steamy session
in an overcrowded room at the
Eden Roc Hotel, conservatives
prevailed in a 61-27 vote by
which the Rules Committee
adopted a formula giving
rural, stalwart Republican

. . ... .

states disproportionate
strength at the 1976 convention.
UPI Survey• Confidence
A UP! survey showed that
Republican confidence of
victory in November sto)lll
short of total victory. The
survey of key people In every
state delegatioo diacloaed that
even top Republicans expect
Democrata to retain control of·
Congress after the election.
~dent -Nixon 01• her4l
today for a big airport
welcome, to await his nOOlina· tio!l at his Key Biscayne
headquarters. He wW stay
away from the hall until
Wednellday night, when he wW
accept renomination from the
aUver and gray rostrum.
Agnew continued to say
nothing to discourage speculaUon about hl8 future four years
hence. Unoppoeed, Agnew will
be renominated Wednesday
just ahead of Nixon's appearance.
In advance, it appeared
Nixon would get all but one of
the 1,348 delegates' votes. The
onewastogofromNewMexlco
for Rep. Paul McCloskey, of
California, who challenged
Nixon in the primaries until his
money ran out.
Reagan and Goldwater
sought to drive a wedge between
McGovern
and
Democrats wbo were loyal to
his rivals before the

;;;u ... .::..su.::uumrvm;
.. ,. . euen..

ews.. in

" .su~

Bri~efi

Democratic convention six first two parties have a our parties has already surren·
weeks ago.
presidential candidate in the dered to the enemy before
A Three-Party System
coming election."
"Our traditional tw01&gt;arty
Goldwater, white-haired and the election has been held," he
system has become a three- showing his age in his slow, said.
party system- Republican, steady walk to the rostrwn,
Chants of "Four more
McGovern and Democrat," de- laahed at McGovern's war years!" punctuated his speech.
clared Reagan. "And only the views. "A candidate of one of
"I don't know about all of
you," Goldwater said, "but I'm
getting sick and tired of
hearing what is wrong with this
great country."
The White l!oust! !mnounced
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio posal.
that Nixon will unofficially
University President Claude
"In light of Mr. Coulter's kick off his re-election camSowle said today he may meet statement, I am seriously paign Thursday with a speech
with members of the state considering, although I have before the American legion
Board of Regents to argue not decided as yet, the convention in Chicago one day
against the MWet plan of fi. possibility of visiting privarely after a scheduled appearance
nancing for higher education. with each member of the Board by McGovern. Nixon also
Sowle said he was con- of Regenta to explain my stand planned to speak Thursday at
slderjng meeting with each and to answer tbelr questions,'' the dedication of the Dwight D.
member because of a Sowle said today.
Eisenhower High School in
statement last week from
Millet has criticized tbe Ohio Utica, Mich., a key state in
acting chancellor wJlllam University president for 1972, and at an airport rally in
Coulter, who said the board allegedly playing "dirty pool" San Diego, Calif.
was leaning toward the !inane- and distorting the Millet plan.
ing plan proposed by former
''The only thing that has been
chancellor Jolm Millett.
lrought to my attention is that
Under Mllet's plan, students he felt! bad not acknowledged
would pay a grearer portion of the loan program which was an
theactualexpenseofthelredu- integral part of his plan,"
cation. Tultioo would nearly Sowle said.
double at four-year schools, but
"I am concerned about the
would be reduced by 29 per negative attitude that many
cent at two-year schools.
studenta from middle and low
RACINE - New teachers
Sowle travelled throughout income famWes have with rethe state last week,speaklng spect to Increasing the debt will be oriented Friday from
8:15 to 9:30 a.m. at Southern
· against the Millet plan of pre- structures of the famlly beyond
High School in Racine.
senting his own fouriJOint pro- what it may be at a particular
A social period will follow
point," he said.
from 9:30 to 10 a.m. with a
teachers meeting for aU
teachers of the district at 10
BONDS FORFEITED
Warm today and tonight. Three bonds were forfeited in a.m.
Considerable cloudl!!_ess Syracuse Mayor Herman • The invocation will be given
Wednesday, chance of thun- London's court Monday night. by Dwayne Wolfe with Ralph
dershowers today, tonight and They were by Steven G. Sayre, superintendent, . inWednesday. Low tonight from Warner, 24, Pt. Pleasant, who troducing the teachers. Erma
the mid 60s to the lower 70s . forfeited a $20 bond for McClurg, president of the
High Wednesday in the mid squealing tires; James Lee Southern Local Educa tion
and upper 60s.
Hunt, 32, Racine, $20 bond, Association will make an speeding , and Walter L. nouncements pertaining to the
ONE FINED
Davidson, 25, Athellll, $20 bond, association, followed by
One defendant was fined and illegal . mu!Oers on a motor- remarks by Sayre.
one bond was forfeited In cycle. The three were cited by Officers of the Education
Racine Mayor Charles Pyles Police Chief Milton Varian.
Association are Mrs. McClurg,
court Monday night. Marshall
president, Sandra Boothe, vice
Alfred Lyons and the arresting
president,
Leah
Ord,
officer fined Robert L. Riffle,
IN HOSPITAL
secretary , Delores Wolfe ,
40, Route 2, Letsrt, $100 and
Paula Eichinger, daughter of treasurer, and Howard Nolan,
costs, and three days in jail for Mr , and Mrs. Paul Eichinger, legislative chairman.
driving while intolicated. Pomeroy, is in Children 's The association will meet the
Forfeiting bond was Paul E. Hospital, Columbus, where she third Thursday in October,
Ervin, 23, Route 1, Racine, $25, . will undergo major surgery January and March at 7:30 at
reckless operation .
Wednesday morning.
the high school.

Sowle to Argue

Orientation

Set Friday

Weather

•

By United Preu IDternalional .

COWMBUS-OIUO STATE UNJVERSITY wW lose up to
f44,400 in student fees and Jltate aupport unless It comes up with
400 additional freshmen studenta for the fall, a Board of Regents
spokesman said today, OSU olflciall said last week they would be
about 400studentashort of S,tliOfnslunen for which preparationB
have been made. In an effort to rec:rult more students freshmen
enrollment has been extendtd to Sept, 8. Applicati01L5 from 200
new studenlll have been received oo far, a university spokesman
said.
For every student short of the planned freshman class, OSU
will loee about $1,100 a regents spokesman said. OSU willl011e
$481Jper ~udent in state feesand ~per student In tuition.

MIAMI BEACH - MRS. SrAN SOOOKSBERRY, a
Republican convention alternate from Fort Worth, Tel., was
very obviOUI!y very pregnant but she was the object of laughter
on the convention floor Monday nlaht.
Dresaed In a hlgh-wallted floor-length yellow maremlty
dreliB which accentlllted her IeVen months pregnancy, Mrs.
stookaberry wore a white sub on which waa printed in large ted
letters: "Nixon's The One." Adding to her double entendre sub
waa a huge button she wore above it which read Iri large lelten
"Try a Virgin" and beneath that In llllBll letters the word
"Islander."It was given her by a VIrgin Islands delegate.
CLEVELAND - THE BLAND:T WRAPPED body of
Siteldon ToDea, 51, ollllburban Cleveland Heights, who.bad been
~t or bludgeoned to deall\, wu found today In an alley behind
hla ipartment. Pollee llid awamanwu Men chain~ the body
out of an autGmoblll. Allthorltlllleamed her Identity ii.d llcenle
tlllllber and lalued a county-wide llert for ()er arrest u a
material wlinell.
Tollel' held bad been wrapped In a toni and fulened with a
life!)' pin, ponce lllid. The body hi· • been Wl'llpped 111 a blue
blaDbt, •dto fallened :with ul.fli¥ plnl. Tolllll wu a fOI'IIIII'
proprietor tA the CBaw lllr In Qeveland Hellbll, and bad
worked u a u!Mna•.

satisfied with the appearance
of the cemetery, is hoping to
have the si tuation corrected as
the cemetery obviously is in
poor condition.
Council also designated the
Pomeroy National Bank and
The Farmers Bank and
Savings as depositories.
Attending were Mayor
Baronick, Lu cien Poulin,
Ralph
Werry ,
William
Snouffer, Elma Russell, Jim
Mees, and Don Collins, council
members; Jane Walton, Clerk ;
Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer ;
Jed Webster, police chief;
Crow and Seelig .

Copernicus Put
Together While
In Earth Orbit
CAPE KENNEDY iUPI)
- Copernlcu,, the most
powerful observatory ever
launched, settled down In
orbit today for wbat
astronomers hope will be
five years of inqnlry Into the
secrets of the stars.
lis record-size 32-inch
diameter telescope was
ordered to spring together
automatically in space on
command from ground
stations 11 hours after
launch Monday. Dr. James
E. Kupperlan, project
scientist, said the In-orbit
telescope assembly
operation was the first for
the space program. The
telescope was launched tn
three pieces and the radio
commands were to release
springs and allow the units to
snap together. This way, the
delicate quartz mirror and
light analyzlug apparatus
were able to be cushioned
during launch.

Vehicle
Gutted
What was left of a stolen car
was recovered by the Meigs
Coun ty Sheriff's Dept. today.
The auto, a Plymouth, was
sto len in Athens between
midnight and 8 o'clock this
morning. The car when found
was on fire and gutted.
The auto was found on
county road 49, one and onethird miles north of State Route
68. The case is still under
investigation by both the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. and
Athens Police.
Meigs lawmen also Investigated a singlej'vehicle
accident Monday about 9 p.m.
on State Route 692, two tentha
of a mile west of Pageville.
Clifford Whittington, 39, Route
4, Pomeroy, was traveling
southwest when he ran off the
right side of the road in a
curve, lost control, went 75
more feet, over .an em·
bankment, and turned over his
truck. There was moderate
damage to the truck. There
were no injuries or arrest.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.was 82 degrees under partly
cloudy skies .

President Flying to Florida
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon, tanned and
relaud after two weeu In
ltclllllon at hla Camp David
mountain retreat, filea to
Miami Beach today to accept
the Republican nomination for
re.election,
The Wblte HOUle laid Nixon
(Wmed to go immediately to
hla vacation hCIIIe on Key
llllcayne, a few milelsouth of
Miami Beach, IIJ await the
foonal ncmlnat1011 tonight. He
will remain 11 Key Biacayne
until Wednelday wben he will
denver Jl!l acceptance ~peteh.

Nixon will be greeted at the
airport by his family , and
hunckeds of Republican delegates and supporters In a flag.
waving, band-playing rally,
according to White House
aides.
His wife, Pat, and daughters
Julie Nixon Eilenhower and
Tr!cla Nixon Cox bave been In
Miami Beach since Sunday
llllblt!tutlng for the President
at convention affairs. ,
Nixon returned to the White
House from Camp David
Mooday and plaruted to clear
hla desk !A minor domestic

legislation today, his aides
said.
Before leaving the western
Maryland mountains, Nixon
paid a call on Mamie
Eisenhower at her white Irick
farmhouse in Gettysburg, Pa.
Nixon and the former first
lady chattW privately on the
glassed-In sun porch, then
strolled ann-ln.arm acrosa the
l!l'a!IIY ~Will .
At almost the same time, the
Republican Natlonl!l Convention wu paying tribute to
El8enhowet. In the !11m shown
at Miami Beach, Mrs.

·Eisenhower · quoted her
lllaband saying "four years l.s
not long enough for any
president." Then she said, "So
let's aU get behind Mr. Nixon
and see that be l.s re-elected for
that oUter four years."
Nixon signed three Iilla at
Camp David Monday. They

would raise the pay of ~.11011
blue collar federal employes,
appropriate ~.5 mllllon for
Radio Free Europe and Radio
Uberty and establish the
240,00i).acre Scapegoat Wllderneu in Montana.

LOTTA FOOTBALL PLAYER - Randy Faulk, 2ti5lb.
sophomore, out of Meigs Marauder grid drills temporarily
with a pulled muscle, watched his buddies work Monday.
He'll be back at full go soon. Coach Charley Chancey's 1972
Marauders are busy in two-a-®y drills behind the Sallsbury
Elementary S~hool near Meigs High.

Town Hall Will
Have New Look
MASON - Mason's town hall
will take on a new look
following official action in a
regular council meeting
Monday evening.
A major renovation of the
building is being planned after
several months of planning and
discussion. The projectis to get
under way as fund s are
available . Remodeling wi ll
include a new brick front, new
windows, moving the water
department
offi ce
an d
relocating the mayor 's office
and the council room to the
downst.airs.
Extra will be available due to
the recent construction of a fi re
department building which
now is housing fire equipment
formerly kept in the city
building.
Recreation facilities also will
be added to the city park.
CoWlcil, after a request by
Gary Gibbs, recorder, will
purchase basketball goals and

Support Asked
Through Court
Two suits for support under
the Reciprocal Agreement Act
have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Phyllis Anne -Ashley, New
Haven, petitioner, is charging
Robert Grayson Ashley ,
Middleport, respondent, and
Ruth Marie Shane, petitioner,
is charging Daniel E. Shane,
Syracuse, respondent,
In other court action, Paul
Lee Sturgeon, no address, was
convicted on a grand larceny
charge by the state of Ohio.
Sturgeon pleaded guilty and
was made to pay $100
restitution, put on probation
one year, and to pay for the
costs of the action.
The Woodstream Corporation of Utltz, Pa. , was
awarded a default judgment
of 52,094.78 from the Decor
Corporation, Middleport .
Decor will pay that sum plllB
Interest at 6 pet. since April 22,
1971.

PARENTS TO MEET
All parents of klndergarren
!tudents in Southern Local
School District are to meet
Monday, Aug. 28, at 10 a.m. in
the Kindergarten room.
Children are not to report at
this time. Regillar clasaea are
scheduled wbegin on Tueaday.

posts for a court at the west end
of the park.
Howard

Johnson ,

Jr ,

repo rted a drainage ditch
wh ich runs through his
property is continu ally being
fill ed with garbage which he
said is coming through the
south side of U. S. 33.
Council warned that persons
from this area are being
notified that this is a violation
and tha t anyone caught
dumping garbage in ditches, or
any other place in the corporation limits, will be fined
the maximum penalty .
Mayor Roy Harless said no
funds are available to purchase
a new police radio scanner at
this time, so council tabled the
purchase.
It was reported that Banks
Tree Service was awarded the
bid for cutting a tree near the
home of Roger Hysell that has
been declared unsafe . Street
signs for designated areas
have been ordered and will be
installed as soon as delivery is
made.
Mayor Harless also reported
on crosswalks,
council
agreeing to purchase paint for
them.
Mayor Harless and Recorder
Gibbs, councilman Richard
Fowler, Fred Samsel and Joe
Jones attended.

Seven Off for
Navy Boot Camp
Six Meigs-Mason youths
have left for Navy recruit
training, the department of the
Navy reported today.
Included were, Frederick
Robert
Thompson,
18,
Pomeroy; Terry Wayne Wyatt,
17, Letart, W. Va .; Raymond
Eugene Robinson, 18, Racine, ·
ail of whom enlisi~Jd under the
Navy's new occupational
specialty school guarantee
Otis
program ;
Dorsey
Ohlinger, 17, Middleport, who
enlisted under the Navy's new
Seafarer Airman Program;
James Leroy Mash, Jr., and
Skipp Ray Moore, who enlisted
under the Buddy Program.
MEETING SET
Pomeroy Lower Light
Church's weekend Q\l&amp;rftrly
meeting will be held Thurllday
at 7:30 p.m. with dl.strlct
superintendent Rev. Roy
Taylor the speaker. The Rev,
O'Dell Manley l.s the pastor,
Ever-· ,.Ia welccme.

�..
~-The Dallv Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0

• - 1ne DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , August 22, 1972

EDITORIALS

Latest Fashion from Saigon
'

Peace Talk Accusations

Almanac
By Unlled Prell llllel'llltloul
Today IS Tuesday, Aug 22, ·:ol

Fumble? Seems
No Answer
D1d PreSident N1xon really blow a golden oppmlumty
to ach1eve peace m V1elnam m 1969 as cha1 ged by Demo
crahc v1ce presidential candidate Sargent Shnvet US
ambassador to France at the 11me '
Or IS the only thmg betng blown JUSt the hot atr needed
to Inflate an election year balloon as sug~ested by Henry
Cabot Lodge who replaced Averell Harrtman tn 1969 as
chtef negoltator tn Pans•
Or does 11 even matter after more than three years '
It matters For unless Prestdent Ntxon can pull a peac e
settlement out of the hat between now and November
cruc•al numbers of voters could be tnfluenced by the
belief that 18 000 addtt!Onal Amencan soldters needlessly
lost thetr ltves tn V1etnam because of the miSJUdgment
miSplaced pnde or JUSt plam stuptdtty of Rtchard Ntxon
Accordmg to Harrtman who seconds Shrtver s allega
t10n, by the fall of 1969 he and Cyrus Vance, hiS deputy
had overcome the most difficult obstacle delaymg the
start of negottat10ns-gettmg the North Vtetnamese to
accept the presence of South V1elnamese representaltves
Hanm had already stgnalled •ts sertous mtenttons by
Wtthdrawmg nearly 90 per cent of tts troops from lhe
northern two provmces of South Vtetnam
Then talks were delayed fot two more months from
October, 1968 unttl lwo days bef01e PreSident Ntxoo s
mauguralton ftrst b) Sou I h Vtelnamese PreStdenl
Nguyen Van Thteu's refusal to parttctpate then by argu
ments over the shape of the table
Then on Jan 29, 1969 Th1eu refused to engage tn sect el
talks Wtlh the Vtel Cong and by the ltme he changed hts
mmd two months later 11 was too late the Communtsts
would no longer talk to Thteu
Thus the opportumty for negottatwns was loSI says
Hamman because the Ntxon admmiStratwn perm1t1ed
Thteu to sc uttle 1t It was after thtS he says lhat N1xon
hll upon hiS sc heme fot Vtelnamtzmg' the war
It all seems very 1ff1Sh very maybeiSh
Astde from North V1etnam s stgnal of troop wtlh
drawals apparently no concrete dehmte peace offet
was made for anybody to blow ' II could as logtcally
be argued that the North VIetnamese themselves scutlled
th~ opportumty for peace by fatlmg to g1ve the new
Amencan preSident t1me to become accltmaled to offtce
and to ramtltartze htmsell Wtlh the stluatton m Vtetnam
Henry Cabot Lodge flatly demes there eve1 was anv
opportumty for peace m 1969 Ne1ther then, nor smc e
then, he says has Hanot budged from t\s stand demand
lng that the Umted States umlaterally Wtthdraw and de
pose the Thteu regtme
As for Th1eu, says Lodge the fact IS that our power
over htm was and ts very much overestimated The 1dea
that all we had to do was press a button was not ti ue
then and IS not true now
Lodge seems to be correct on this pomt We are so
used to hearmg Thteu bemg descrtbed as a US puppet
that we forget that at least m hiS own eyes hiS regtme m
Satgon 1s as legtltmate as thai of lhe men tn Hanoi who
never reached powet tht ough a popular electton ngged
or otherwiSe
Lodge also has the last word m the form of a questton
"Why did the people tn power m 1969 1£ they had such
mformat1on, wa•t until 1972 to tell us aboul •I''
, Pendmg a good answer from Hamman or Shriver the
one that 1mmedtately suggeSis tlself IS Stmply lhtS- that
1972 ts an electwn year

WIN AT BRIDGE

Safety in Not Finessing
4
3.342.
NORm
QI07
.53

22

• KJ2
.AJ964

~t
ii!A~3

EAST

.KQJ94

•to876 2
. 1063

.J84

't:91!&gt;4

iTo~

.KS

SOUTH

.A

(D)

.K95 2
.AQ8

.QI07 53
None vulnerable

I.

West

Norlh East

South

1.
Pass
Pass

3...
5•

4.
Pass

3.
Pas.'!

Openmg lead- ¥ K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Safety plays are usually a
matter of declarer takmg a
!title extra ca re to msure hiS
contract
They are essential m rub
ber bndge and there are
many occasiOns when they
should be made m match
pomt duphcate
Today's hand shows South
m a very good fiVe club con
tract
In a duphcale ga me most
pn1rs would be playmg at a
club part score Therefore
m etther duphcate or rubber
brtdge South wants to gtve
h1mself the bes t play for, hts
contract
Thts play IS to lead the
queen or clubs at trtck two
and then refuse the club ft
nesse Now hts contract 1s
safe agamst any 2·1 trump
break
He ruffs dummy's last
heart and plays out all the
dtamonds Then he leads a
club and 11 doesn 't matter
whtcl) opponent wms

He must e1ther g1ve South
a ruff and dtscard or lead a
spade In all cases the ~uess
for the spade Jack 1s
ehmmated
Suppose West started wtth
all three clubs• Then South
w1ll w1sh that he had taken
the club fmesse but he will
sbll have a ftfty.flfty chance
for his contract He Will lead
a second trump and eventu
ally try to locate the spade
jad
r

The

VSrAPEit fHTlllPIUU ASSN )

btddins has beet•

West

North

East

1•
Dble
Pass
Pass

Dble

Pass

Pass
3•
4•

Pass
Pass
Pass

South

'

You South hold
.8743
+AK943 ... 762

•2

What do you do now?
A-B•d four d1amonds You
don't know exactly what your
partner IS dmng but four d1a ~
monds tells htm lhat you have a
,~tood dtamond su1 t

TEENAGER DROWNED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Keenan Anderson, 14, of St
i.Duts, Mo , drowned Monday in
a pond m north Columbus The
bo)i.illld two brothers were here
VtSIImg an uncle, Robert
Edward Anderson's body was
found tn seven feet of water
Efforts to reVIve him fatled and
he was dead on arrtval at
Clnldren s Hospttal

GOP HOPEFUL
MIAMI BEACH (UP!)
How key state Repubhcan
leaders attendmg the GOP
National Conventton see their
prospects m thiS fall's
guhernatofiBI, senatortal and
house races
Ohio
Redistricting put together two
Republtcan House seats bpt
they sttll expect to wmd up wtlh
a lli-to-7 edge for loss of one

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Euc Ed

ROBERT HO!FLICH
Ctfy Editor

Pub ! sned dat tv ucept
Saturdav by The Oh o Valley
Publ tShtn; Company 111
Court St
Pomeroy 01'1 o
45749 Bustness Orr tce P.,one
992 21S6 Ed tlo r at Phone 992

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Time May Cure Problem
'

By Paul Crabtree

-

The double-exposure season Is with us, with baseball and
football crowding onto the scene and cunpetlng for the fans'
attention m the newspapers and on television
It could last almost to the end of October
1love both games -If not the too...arly beg!mlng of football
and Utetoo·lateendingofbaseball (Iwasneverwortha nickel at
playmg etUter one, since I stood stXoOile and weighed only 129 at
Ute age of 17.)
'
'
Both claim to be the major national sport, and this IS rather
silly, because after all, most of us just don't have one favorite
book, entertamment personality, singer, etc
But, If you pomted a pistol at my head and asked me to
choose between football and baseball, I'd take baseball.
Why baseball•
Several reasons, really (And remember, I love football )
First It's absolutely Impossible for an outstanding Individual
performer' to be Ignored - no matter how bad a team h'
es
playing for
PhlladeiP!ta may have baseball's worst team this year, but
the dazzling pitching of Steve Carlton has the whole world of
major league baseball buzzing Ditto for Nate Colbert of the
Padres and Gaylord Perry of the Indians
Second, baseball combined Ute best of one~)D-one com·
petition (which gives basketball Its excitement), in the contlnlilng duel between batter and pitcher, but It also con tams the
best elements of team play- on offenae and defense
There's beauty, artistry and pure enjoyment In watching a
superbly-coordinated Infield keep the opposition at bay, on
anything hit on the ground Thus has It been since the days of
Tlnker-111-Evers.ta.Otance
The same thing ts true in watching Pete Ro8e or Cesar
Geronuno working m perfect tandem with Johnny Bench to cut
off a run at the plate, or Tommy Helms executing a perfect hitand-run
Third, there lsn 't the same emphasis on size or height as in
other sports Baseball has room for both f&gt;.4 Fred Patek aoo 6-8
Frank Howard Football aod basketball do not
Finally, baseball Is a more cerebral game, really Football Is
a two-hour emotional binge for players and fans alike, and In a
good game, this Is refreshing and delightful But a tight baseball
game admlnl.sters the adrenalin m small shots, Instead of big,
thetr sexual capactly There continuous doses, and It lets the fan manage almost every pitch,
baSically ISn't anythmg good every play
But the biggest reason of all I'll discuss in the next column
that alcohol has ever been
demonstrated to do for the
+++
ltver the bram or the heart
A note m passing Thanks to the dozen or more fans who
The only medtcal use alcohol
has ts as a sedatlVe or tran- qutckly advised me that Wally Berger was the left ftelder on the
Reds' 1939 pennant-winners PI Pleasant Insurance man Emory
qmhzer
Monroe was the first to call
(~EWSPAPER INTEitPRISE A.SSH )

She's Flabby After. Reducing
Bv Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb - 1 am a
25 year old m o I he r of two
Durmg each pregnancy I
ga med a lol of wetghl and
lost ve1 y little between
pregnanctes In lhe last IB
monlhs I have lost mote than
25 pounds b\ exe1 ctStng and
dtetmg I he skm of my
abdomen does not seem to
be ttghtemng p1 opet Jy As
the amounl of fal behmd 11
lessens 1he skm

IS

loose and flabby

becom mg

near Reader - G1ve tl
ltme and 11 ma y s hrtnk
~fle1 all your letter tndt
cates that you ve sl!elched
11 Wllh 45 pound s of extra
fa t plus th e normal slrelch
that s caused by lwo succes
!-l ive p1 egnanc1es

You
health
rtd of
hope

can Improve your
a gt eat deal by gettmg
vour excess fat and I
yo u II contmue your

program until you are at
vour normal we1ghl If the

I am al

be particularly vtstble
You ve lost the wetght at
the n ght ltme of your life
There Is a much greater ltke
lthood of the skm returnmg
to normal tf people get rtd
of the excess wetght early m
ltfe and keep tl off rather
than watltng unit I Ihey re
much older and thetr skm IS
less elasttc to take sertous
measures about we1ght re
ductton

~

•

i!'1

i

liver fatlure can ensue

Dear TMTil
If you're JUst a 'ktd stSter' to Gar, don 't you suppose he'll
understand' A Homeconmg Dance ts very spectal and a gtrl
should share tt wtth the guy m her liJe, not the former guy m her
hfe
Watt a month and see which tswhtch -SUE
Dear TMTH
And don't be surprised if 1t's netther'
The moral of your letter ts gtrl wtth changeable heart should
not plan three and one-half months ahead - HELEN

+++
Dear Helen and Sue
My mother had thts wild crush on Tom Jones and l'(hen my
grandmother teased her about tl she laughed and satd,
'Remember how you mooned over Liberace - and he was 15
years younger than you'"
Anyway, I thought tl was ruliculous, gomg crackers over TV
stars And then, Donny Osmond came along, and I guess 11 runs
m famthes
My father calls me wacky My brother·m-law asks "Who's
that good looking g1rl' when he sees Donny's ptcture on my
bulletm board My mother says I m 'moony," and I don't dare
renund her of Tom Jones
My stster sympaUttzes but she says I'll never get to meet him
so why bother' No one seems to reahze I'm m love and you can't
turn that off JUSt by bemg pracltcal Bestdes I'm not lonely when
I m thmking of HIM
I wrtte his name all over my books and I've even carved 11 tn
a tree, along wtlh mme I'm jealous when I see him snullng at
someone else (on TV) When other boys are stupid and chtldish, I
pretend I'm talking to Donny and he understands and always
says the rtght thmg
Am I crazy' If there's no hope (IS there, JUSt a ltttle') then
will I ever getovertt• - DONNY FOREVER
Dear DF
No, you're not crazy and, yes, you'll get over thts crush But
meanwhile, It's helping you through what may be a rough time m
your life When a girl Is vaguely lonely and not qu1te ready for
real boys, tt's cornforlmg to have a 'hero" who always says the
rtght thihgs, never makes her feel awkward or dumb, and will be
"Donny on the spot," whenever her lmagmatton calls him
The world would be a sad place for young teenagers (and
older people, too) if they could never daydream
When will you outgrow Donny' - When a real Johnny, Pete,
Dtck, Tommy comes along You'llsee -HELEN AND SUE

ON TilE TV DIAL The Republican Nattonal Convention

Send rour questions fo Dr Lomb,
m cort of thts newspaper P 0 Box
1551 Rorlto C1t7 StattOn New York,
•
•
NY 100/9 Few o copy of Dr Lomb's
Dear Dr Lamb - Please booldet on to11ng we1ght semi 50
tell me how alcohol wtll a£ Cl!nls lo t"e some oddress ond cnk
feel the liver '
lor Losmg We~ghl booklet

sktn doesn'l ttghten up m lhe
most af1 a1d to lose a nothe1 cou rse of several months
20 pound s I don t want to be and 1f 11 really bugs you a
left w1th a flap of extra skm lot f suppose vou could see
hangmg from mv abdomen a su rgeon aboul havm g the
Dear Reader - In large
Whal can I do to lighten the excess sk m removed It amounts alcohol tS a toxm
sk m and posSibly fade the would leave a small tnctSton or potson It has been dem
stretch marks somewhat?
sca r whtch wouldn I need lo onstrated by m1croscoptc
studtes thai the cells of the
heart can be damaged by
dnnkmg alcohol Other cells
m the body can also be
damaged Alcohol not onlv
can damage liver cells but it
can affect thetr normal func By Helen and Sue Bottel
tton Some people who drmk
lots
of alcohol do nol eat an
DANGERS OF DATING AHEAD
adequate d1et and parttcu
Dear Rap
larl y have a deflctency of
When a guy treats you like hls k1d stster, you really work to v t t am t n B 1 or th1amme
make hun fall I thought I was really m love wtlh Gar so I asked Thts furlher contnbutes to
him to our homecommg dance thts November I was real sur- damage or the actual hvet
cells
prtsed when he satd ''Okay '
It's the biggest dance of the year oull&gt;tde of the semor prom
For yea rs there was a hot
and I wouldn't reel rtght unless I went wtth someone I truly loved debale m med1cal ctrcles
Well, now I've discovered I only 'like 'Gar- well enough to whether the alcohol alone
cause damage to the
be frtends but not like I LOVE Tony, who came mto my life two could
ltver or whether 1t had to be
weeks ago
assoctated wtth a thtamme
Last rught Tony asked me to the homecormng baU He's the deftctency It really doesn t
one I want to go wtth so I dtdn't tell hun about my date wtth Gar make any difference which
Instead I put hun off wtth "Lets wa1t a month and see if we sttll factor IS the most Important
ulttmate result of drtnk·
feelltke Uus about each other ' I should have been truthful 'cuz The
mg too much for many peo·
now I'm m a mess Whichever boy I go wtth the other wtll be pie ts damaged Itver cells
mad I don't want to hurt Gar (whom I've known for ftve years) whtch are replaced by scar
but if I lose Tony, I'll DIE
tissue causmg a condttJOn
Should I tell them both I've sworn off dancmg or something' called ctrrhoSls of the liver
In severe degrees eventually
- THREE MONTHS TILL HOMECOMING

~~·w.G~~~;;i:~~ ii;~v

+++

The damaged hver loses
1ts abtlt\y to destroy excess
amounts of estrogen, the fe
male hormone Estrogen 1s

normally produced m men
as well as women When excess amounts accumulate because of liver disease men
expenence a degree of fem mtzatton whtch can a ff e c I

Television Log

Deer Creek

By Mrs W H Thomas
Programs for Tonight
Mr and Mrs Leonard
Cardwell and granddaughter,
and Tomorrow
Fostorta, hts stster, Elsie
Searls, Ewlngton, 'visited their
brother and wife, Mr and Mrs
Francis Cardwell, Keyslone
Road
TUESDAY. AUG 22
Mr and Mrs Landon Vance, 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Truth or
Freeburn, Ky and John Vance
Conseq 6, Halhayoga 33
of Columbus viSited the past 6 30- News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Grand Ma•ters Chess 33 CBS
News 8 10
week wtUt Mrs Joe Blackburn 7 00News 6, 10 Whafs My Line 8 Farmers Daughter 13
and other relatives In UtiB
Andy Griffith 15 Dick Van Dyke 4 Insight 4
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre33 Mod Squad6 13 Snoopy AI The
VIC!nlly
3, 4 15 , Dragnet e, John Byner Comedy Hour 10
Mr and Mrs Frank Parsons 8 30Ice- Follies
Olympics 8
and famtly spent a few days 8 30 - Evening at Pops33 Republican Convention 3 4 e, 10 15
Marcus Welby 1J
w1th Mrs Pearl Tackett and
9
30
- Republican Conventlon6,13 O'Happy Days 33
Mrs Cena Parsons
11 oo - News3 4 6 e 10 13 15
A jomt birthday pJcruc was II 30- Dick cavelt 6 Johnny caroon 3, 4 15 Movies 'A
enjoyed at Lake Thomas
Lawless Street' 10 The Steel Jungle 13
I
00
- Your Heal!~ 4
Sunday, August 13 The
1 30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
honorees were Mr and Mrs
Wtlliam Claypool and Mr and
Mrs Herbert Thomas, all of
WEDNESDAY, AUG 23
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar '· Sacred Hearl 10
WestervUie Other guests tn·
6 15 - Fermtlme 10
eluded Mr and Mrs W w
6 20- Farm Report 13
Thomas, Charles, Ctndy and
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbvs Today 4 News Weather Sporls 6 Bible
Abb1e Wears, Mr and Mrs
Answers&amp; Urban League Present! 10 Glory Ro!d 13
John Thomas and three
7 00- Today3, 4,15. New!6 13 CBS News a
children, Danny Thomas and
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - captain Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame
fnend of Columbus, Kathy
St 33
Fore, Hurrtcane, W Va , and
8 30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack LaLanne 13
Mrs W H Thomas, local
e 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room e
Ml•s Kimberly Cardwell,
Friendly Junction 10 Peyton Place 13 What Every Woman
Romilus, M1ch Is spendmg her
Wants to Know3 'Timmy&amp; Lassre6 Mr Rogers33
vacation wtlh her grand·
9 30- Trut~ or Conseq 3 Mike Douglas 6 My Three Sons 8
parents, Mr and Mrs Francis
One Life to Live 13 Electric Co 33
9 55 - Chuck White Reporls 10
Cardwell and Mr and Mrs
10 00- Dina~ Shore 3 15 Lucille Balle 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13
Johnson
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13 My
Three Sons 10 Beverly Hillbillies 8 In School Instruction 33
Love American Style 6

B~RRfS WORlD

11
11

12
12
12
I

00 - Sale of Cenlury 3, 15. Family Aftalr 8 Farmer's
Daughter 13 Communique 6
30 - HollywoodSquares3 4 15 Bewltched6 13 LoveofLife
8 10 SHame St 33
00 - Jeopardy3 15 , BobBrauns5050Ctub4 Loca1News10
News 13 Contact 8 Password 6
30 -3 W'sGame3,15 SplltSecond6 SearchforTomorrow8,
10
55 - NBC News 3 15
00 - News, Weat~er, Sports 3, All My Children 6 13 To Be
Announced 15 Divorce Court&amp; . Green Acres 10 French Chef

33
I 20I 30 -

Lucille Rivers 3
3 On A Match 3, 4 15 As The World Turns 8. 10,
Designing Women 33 ABC Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
2 00- Days ot Our Llves3 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 VIrginia
Graham6, LoveSplendoredThlnga, to Bridge3l
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, 15 Oatlng Game 13, Guiding Light a to,
0' Happy Day 33
3 oo- Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13 Secret
Storm e, 10 Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30 - Relurnto Peyton Place3, 4,15, One Life to Llve6, Edge
of Nigh! 8, tO , Jeff's Collie 13
4 00- Ml•ter Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15 Fllntstones 3, Sesame
St 33 Huckleberry Hound 6 Batman 8. Movie "Julie" 10
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Merv Griffin 4 I Love Lucy 6 Death
Valley Days 8, Password 13 Andy Griffith 15
5 00 - Wagon Train 3, Mister Rogers 33, Maverick 13 Dick
Van Dyke 15 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Morsholl Dillon 15, Electric Co 33
6 00- News. Weather, Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Truth or Con seq 6.
I Dream of Jeannie 13, Hathayoga 33
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15 ABC News 6, 13, CBS News a, 10,
Bridge 33.
7 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6 10, Wild, Wild West 13:
MIIHtonH of Progress 33, Dick Van Dyke 4. Whars My Line
8; Mayor's Repor115, Petticoat Junction 3
7 30- EpiiiOdt Action 33, To Tell The Truth 6, Republican

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Senttnel

Tube Talk

the 235th day of 1972 with !31 to
follow
The moon Is approaching Its
full phase
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of VIrgo
French composer Claude
Debussy was born on Aug 22,
1862
On this day In hiStory
In 1~1. the U S. yacht
"America" beat Ute British
craft "Aurora" oH Cowes,
England to wm a mlver trophy
The race has smce been known
as "the America Cup "
In 1911, the Mona Ltsa was
stolen from the Louvre
Museum In Paris It was
recovered four months later
In 1941, German Nw troops
advanced to the oulsktrts of
Lenmgrad, Russta durmg
World War II
In 1968, Pope Paul rece1ved a
hearty welcome m Bogota,
Cnlombta It was the first vlstt
to Latin Amenca by a Roman
CatholiC pontiff

+++

The

':Oday~

Convention

"You young whippersnappers behare yourselres while
you're here, now'"

3~ ~~

8, 10, 15

8 00- The SuiH!I' 6, 13, To Ba Announced 33
8 30-Corner8tlr6 13, F11d0dyssey33
9 00 - Marly Feldman Comedy Machine 13
9 30- Republican Convention 4, 13
10 00 - Soul 33
11 OO-News3.4, News a, 10, 13,15
11 30- Johnny carson 3, 4, 15, Dick cavett 6, Movlos "The
Pathfinder' 10. "Duffy of San Quentin" 13, Movie - To Be
Announced 8
1 00 - News and WtNthtlt' 4
1 30- Loc.J News 13

limes But after he got Aaron
for the second out in the 11th,
Dnsty Baker doubled After
Wtlltams was tntenttonally
walked, Ltun hned hts gamewmnmg smgle to center The
first Brave run came m the
second when Fehx Mtllan
doubled and Aaron smgled
Phlladelphta got tis only run
m the etghth mmng on doubles
by Wtlhe Montanez and Greg
Luzmsk1 The Phils eventually
loaded the bases wtth two out
but Ntekro struck out Carlton
to end the threat
In the other games, Cm
ctnnall downed Montreal, 4-1 ,
New York topped Houston, 4 2,
St i.Duts blanked Los Angeles,
4~
and San Diego edged
Chtcago, 6-5
In the Amertcan League,
Oakland beat Detrott, 5 1
Baltunore edged Caltforma, 3
1, and Cleveland routed
Mmnesota, 10.3
Bob Gthson pttched a sevenhitter and h1t a run-scormg
douhle to lead the Cardmals to
the victor) over the Dodgers It
was hts fourth shutout thts
season and the 54th of hts
career, the most for act1ve
Naltonal League pitchers
Reds Top Expos
Reserver catcher Btll Plum
mer drove m two runs w1th a
hfth-mnmg smgle as the Reds
topped the Expos on Jtm
McGiothhn s etght -lulter Mtke
forrez went eight mmngs and
suffered the loss Joe Morgan
homered for Cmcmnatt m the

PP&amp;K Signing
Up Wee Gridders
Young Ohwans aged 8 thru
13, can now regiSter for the 1972
Punt, Pass and K1ck program
at any parttctpatmg Ford
dea lershtp tn the Bucke) e
state
PP&amp;.K competition 1s expected to dra~ over 1,000,0110
young en thusiasts for the ftfth
consecuttve year Ndtlonally a
total of 8 ,2fl ,~ young football
fans have competed m lhe
program Stnce tl ftrsl began 12
years ago
Contestants wtll make thetr
opentng btds for
th e
Professtonal Football Hall of
Fame m less than two months
S1x will make 1t - havmg their
names permanently mscrtbed
at Canton Ohto as nattonal
PP&amp;K wmners
Regtstratwn closes Sep·
!ember 29 RegiStrants must be
accompanted by a parent or
guardtan
PP&amp;K parttc1pants punt
pass and k1 ck agamst others
lhetr o"n age An) youngster
aged e1ght through 13 JS
eltgtble There IS no entry fee
and no specapl eqmpmenl IS
needed There IS no hody
contactdun ng compelttton and
partiCipants do not lose
amateur status
Sconng IS ba!;ed on diStance
and accuracy One potnt IS
gtven for every foot of puntmg,
passmg and k1ckmg dtstance
and a pmnt tS deducted for
every foot off ltne

~

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, August 22, 1972

52,662 Fans
Carleton Miss 16th
By VIto Stelllno
UPI Sports Writer
Pitchmg for the Phtladelphta
Plulltes, who mtght be kindly
called a pathettc team, Steve
Carlton rolled up 15 con·
secutlve VICtories On Monday
Nght, before an enthustasltc
.rowd of 52 662 fans tn
Pluladelplua, he went for No
16
The crowd- mcredtble for a
Monday mght for a last place
team 111 August-was a
testtmomal to how much
Carlton has meant to the club
thts year In the end, his
teammates let hun down
He held the Atlanta Braves to
one run for 10 mnmgs but the
Phils scored only one themselves and Atlanta ftnally
poshed across a run m the 11th
mnmg on Mtke Lum s brokenbat smgle wtth two out That
was enough for a 2-1 Atlanta
VIctory
Plul Ntekro who allowed the
Pluls nine htts m 11 mnmgs, got
the VIctory
It was a heartbreaktng way
for the streak to end but
Carlton tsn 't the kmd of guy
who laments the lack of hitlmg
support
He satd, quite stmply,
'Somet1mes you JUSt get
beSied '
Strtkes Oul Ten
In the losmg effort he struck
oul 10 to boost his league
leading total to 252 and he
fanned Hank Aaron th ree

'

S1x levels of compe tition
produce s1x v.mnet s 1 rophtes

are a"a rded to wtnners at all
levels Cotnpctltwn will begtn
September 10 w1th dealer level
con tests
Starlmg al the fourth level
(lenned area compct1twn ),
partic ip ants match sktlls
before the kickoff and durmg
halftime of NFI games
SIX nattonal ftna iiSts wtll
represent the NFL s Amencan
Co nference and SIX the
Natwnal Football conference
on January 21 at the Pro bowl
game In Dallas Fmaltsls thetr
parents and sponsonng dea lers
will be guests of Ford DIVIston
Naltonall) PP&amp;K IS sponsored
by the Ford dealers of Amenca
and the Nattunal Football
League

first and Plwruner rapped his
smgle m the fifth for a pair of
msurance runs
J1m Beauchamp, celebratmg
his J3rd btrthday, htt a two-run
homer wtth two out m the nmth
mnmg to pace the Mets past the
Astros Jon Matlac.k pttched a
seven.Jlttter to ptck up hiS lith
VIctory Rebever Jun Ray was
the Vlctun of Beauchamp s
blow the Met ftrst baseman's

second of the game, and took
the loss
John Jeter s three-run homer
wtth two out mUte nmth ummg
gave the Padres the VIctory
over the Cubs Jeter capped a
four-run Padre runth wtth hts
Stxth homer Btlly Wtlbams htt
a three-run homer m the top of
the nmth to g1ve the Cubs a 5-2
lead but the Padre rally wtped
out the margm

Today's

·; Sport Parade

CHAIN SAWS

The Saw That Won The Cutting

Contest At The Meigs County Fair

'

BY KEITH WISECUP

B11l W1lson now the star short
1ehef spec1altsl for the Ph1ladelphta
v
Plulhes pttched and played thtrd base
on one of the finest of many ftne
baseball teams produced m Metgs
X County p1gh schools It was the 1960
Pumeroy Panther club
W1lson was not the only star on Coach
Bussell Moores (now Metgs Local Jr
H1gh pnnctpal) Panthers that year
.. unly une of many They were Tom
Grueser, Tom Wlute, who later signed a
' contract w1th the Phtlhes N1ck Coates
1 etr) Kmghl Bob Cunmngham Phtl
liarrtson Ed Bartels, Gary Moore
Howard Parker, and others
That Pomeroy team won the
' Soulheaslet n Oh1o Athie lie League
crov.n without a loss Wmners of the
sout hern diVIsiOn they knocked off
Athens the northern diviSIOn wmners
54
Pomerov tn the mtdsl of the season
was 1n the process of obhteratmg
Rutland 24 0 when the Red bev1ls
'
pe1 haps showmg real good sense
' collected then 10 players and went
.. home
The Panthers thai year went to the
1 egwnals tn Philo where they we1 e
l1anded lhe1r on ly loss by po\\erful
Bndgepori mne 4 0 Bndgeporl later

wen tun to the state fmals before losmg
An excuse always comes up for a loss m

a lournament game, but the Panthers'
altbt for that one seems fltUng enough
L' belteve
The Pomeroy High School semors
went on their annual Washmglon D C
tnp and returned the same day as the
~arne at Phtlo Weary from traveling
VIa atrplane tram and car, the Panlhers were leg weakened and weary by
game hme Pomeroy fans w1tnessmg
the game slill testtfy that the Panther
mne on the Philo held was not the same
they had seen before
Wtlson who had been hardly
touched all of that year, permitted four
runs The semor rtghthander also
hurled w1th a sphttmg headache Wally
Grueser student manager of the team,
remembers W1lson lrudgmg from the
mound to the dugoul after ever) mnmg
say tng hts head was gonna spht 1f he
\o\ent one more mmng But he went the
dtstance Whether he had some aspirin
IS not kno\\ n
Along the lournamenl tratl that
year Pomeroy clouted Belpre II~ m
the first game of the secttonal behmd
W1lson s shutout The Panthers \ then
defeated Alhens 17-6 as they scored 15
run s m the fma l two fra mes to wtpe out
n22 1ie

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
DACHAU (UPI)-Somethmg made me come back here
I m not sure what All I know ts I made two lrtps
Thts place tsn t that btg for repeat vtstls
There was a lime that once you came here, you never left
Even now the ma]onty of those who see Dachau once generally
leave 11 at that
I came back for a ntunber of reasons, I suppose
Maybe I couldn t belteve what I had seen the ftrst tune
Maybe the thought occurred to me had tl not been for a matter
of geography, an acctdent of birth perhaps you'd call 11 I
mtght've wound up here myself
Or maybe thts really IS all lied m wtlh the Olymp1cs and the
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
a 16-6 record at this stage a
growmg ractal tssue which now threatens Saturday's openmg
UPI Sports Wrtter
year ago The btg difference
ceremony m Muntch, only stx mtles down the road from here
It obVIonsly takes more than IS runs Our p1tching has been
That could have somethmg to do wtth my commg back also
the four top starling pttchers m equal to Ute challenge all
Gettmg Here No Trouble
baseball and the best defenstve season We've scored 150 runs
Gettmg here was no trouble at all It never has been down hneup m the majors to lead the less this season than last,' he
through the years
Amencan League's Eastern added
I took that ftrst r1ght outstde the Olymptc Y1llage, the one diVISIOn
Dobson won only hts second
Boog Powell's 17th home run game m stx dectstons smce the
leading mto Dachauer Strasse kept gomg nme kilometers until I
came up agamst a high barbed wtre fence and a sudden dryness m the fifth mmng backed Pat All.Star break He struck out
Dobson's three-htt pttching as ftve and walked two whtle
m my mouth and there I was m a completely dtfferent world
You don t have to be Jewtsh to feel your skin crawl when you the Baltunore Ortoles topped strandmg three Angels
the Cahforma Angels, 3-1,
The vtctory was only Balli
walk through the gate
Nor do you need any emottonal attachment to sense the general Monday mght The vtctory, more s th1rd tn tts past rune
feeltng of death and despatr wh1ch sttll pervades the memortal combmed wtth Detrott's loss to outmgs
Oakland, leftthe Orwles a ball·
In other Amertcan League
Stte concentratiOn camp here 30 years later
I game behtnd the dtVISIOn · games Oakland whipped Del'he abject m1sery of Dachau s quarter of a 1111llion vtctuns htts
leading T1gers
troll, 5-1, and Cleveland defeat·
)OU urunedtately when you walk mto the barracks and see those
Powell shattered a 1-1 tie ed Mmnesota, 10-3, m the only
ptltfully small, msufferably crowded trtple-ltered parltllons
With a two-run shot off losmg games scheduled
which served as 'beds ' and generalltvmg quarters for those
pitcher Andy Messersmtth ~.
In the Natwnal League
unfortunates unprtsoned by Adolf Hitler
after Tommy DaVIS had Cmcmnat• beat Montreal, 4-1,
Part of An Inscription
walked wtth two out
New York downed Houston, 4On the wall of one of the barracks IS part of an mscr~pllon taken
The Ortoles mam problem 2, Atlanta edged Phtladelphta
from a diary kept by one of Dachau's mmates
thiS season has been hittmg- and Steve Carlton, 2-1, tn 11
He talks about the Blockfuhrers, those who contmually or rather the lack of 11
mnmgs and San Htego edged
harassed the prlS(&gt;ners
The Btg Difference
Chicago, 6-5
Frequently they come and np the beds apart, flmgmg the
I've pitched much better
A's Back In First Pluce
beddmg maU directtons•lt needs one of them only to bema vtle thts season than last " satd
Jtm Hunter and Rothe
rage orJl! 4runken temper If he ftnds a bunk badly made, the Dobson, now 14-t2 compared to
culprtt s nwnber ts taken and reported, hts pumshment bemg an
hour 's hangmg at the stake by the wrtsts !ted together hehmd the

Probably lhe most memorable game
tn the secttonal ftna ls was when
Pomeroy edged Manetta 1·0
Manetta s Sptndler and Wtlson dueled
un the mound the entire seven mmngs
wtth Spmdler allowmg ftve h1ts and
Wtlson but two
In the dlslncl Pomeroy defeated
South Pomt 6-2 at Athens A day later
Wilson no hi I Mtnford tn the d1strtct
ftnals 3~ and the Panthers started
pack•ng for both the Washtngton IJ C
trtp and the regiOnal tournament
Wtlson also a great football player
for the Panthers signed a scholarship
wtth Marshall to play on the grtdtron
for the Thundertng Herd He made the
freshman team but dunng the season
hurt h1s arm the begmmng of a score of
a rm and shoulder problems He
dropped out or Marshall as hts football
career ended wtth the tn]ury
On to baseball was the path for
Wilson He worked hts way fr om mtnor
leag ue baseball onto the Philhes by
1969 Havtng gone up and down wtlh
arm and shoulder opero twns Wtlson ts
now en]oymg h1s fmest year C\ en
though he missed the enl1re ftrst half of
the season because of - yes you re
nght - another of many shoulder
surgery operahons

'
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'

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Orioles Trail lf2 Game

back

Reds Fatten Lead

''

There was no such thmg as escape You can see why, too
First , there's thts deep ditch etght feet wtde whtch fronts an
electrically charged barbedwtre fence
Even tf you re Superman and make the fence though, there's
another one 111 front of that and there's barbed wtre on top of tl
also
No One Makes II
No one makes that ftrst fence though
If a prtsoner even so much as steps on the strtp of grass tn front
of the dttch, never mmd the fence, the SS guards Stmply shoot
him dead wtthout warrung
Dachau was the f1rst of 22concentratton camps Httler had butlt
tn Germany
For the opernng of the Olympics Saturday, there wtll be a gala
ceremony In nearby Muruch
lnternaftonal League Standmgs
For the operung of Dachau, Sttuated on the grounds of a one·
By Untied Press International
W L Pel GB time muntttons factory, there was merely a bnef announcement
Charleston
72 54 571 m a Muntch newspaper
l OUISV Ille
73 57 562 1
IUmmler Signed Notice
Rochester
68 62 523 6
"On
Wednesday,
March 22 1933," 11 sa1d, the ftrst conTtdewater
68 62 523 6
Toledo
66 64 508 a
centratiOn camp wtll be opened m the vtcmtty of Dachau It can
Syr acuse
61 69 469 13
Rtchrnond
59 70 457 1.4 !2 accommodate 5,000 people We have adopted this measure,
undeterred by paltry scruples, m the convtctton that our actton
Pentnsu la
49 78 386 23 n
Monday s Results
wtll help to restore the calm to our country and IS m Ute best
Syr acu se J Loutsv lie 1
mterests of our people "
Rochester 6 Toledo .4
Pe nsula 5 Tidewater 4
The announcement was stgned by Muntch 's Commtsstoner of
(on ly games schedul ed)
Poltce-Hemrtch Hurunler
Dachau stands today pretty much as tt did when Httler used 1t
as one of hiS chambers of horrors from 1933 until1945
There ts a museum here now and to get to 1t you have to walk on
the same hard crnshed rock tis vtctuns d1d and you see the same
32 huge burtal pits they did except when they saw them they were
open and not covered over by asphalt as they are now
One Happy Scene
One of the ptctures m the museum stays wtth you a long time
It shows a mother leading three of her small ch1ldren along
w1th her to their execution, and bne of the children crymg, trymg
1o keep from bemg carrted and obvtously not wantmg to go
There's another photograph, blown up liJe..stze
Thts one shows the head of a vtctun on a blood..soaked choppmg
block The scalp has been lrud open The brams stare nght out at
you
And sttll another ptcture, by far the happtest one m the place
It looks ltke one of those pennant-dmchmg scenes, wtth
everyone laughing, and was taken on April 29, 1945 when the
Amencans liberated the camp
Outside the muse tun, you see the grisly oveps where the bodies
were burned More than 30,000 cUed 111 D.acllau. For SOllie, the
STIHL has more than 40 valuab e years of
expertence m the destgn and product on of
name of the ctty stlllts synonymous WJth death Willi~.
powerchatn saws gutde bars and saw ct1atn
•
Athletes VIlli Stte
All of STIHL s saws have the same degree of
"It ts a shame so many people still think the people of Dachau
excellence and of untformtty In des gn and
are bad," one locallte satd to me "We are Bavartan people,
manufacture In conjunction with these STIHL s
frtendly people, who have worked hard all our lives We were
own bars and cham operate so elf c ently and
never told what really went on m the concentration camp, only
well that they have earned world w1d0
that bad people were put m there, people who drank and dtdn't
recognition lor outstandmg performance w1\h
want to work When we'd see the prtsoners marching to work we
m1nlma1 maintenance
would put tread and potatoes on the wmdow sill for them. Most of
the people here in Dachau don't want this place (the concentra·
tlon camp memorial site) because they feel many of those
coming to Munich for Ute Olymptcs al.!o will come here to see this
and not understand we had nothing to do with it."
Some of Ute Olymptc competitors already have made Ute six·
mUe trip from Munich to Utlumall paper.mm town.
They go through the camp, never saying muc~ but most look
at a memonal stone near the exit which, m four different
languages, says "Never Again "
For most Olympic VISitors, one tr1p generally does It
But somethmg made me come back here

Standings

Wilson, Fine Hurler on a Fine Team

MONTREAL I UPI) - The
clnps keep falhng m the rtght
places for the Ctnctnnalt Reds,
who picked up a whole game
un the Houston Astros Monday
mgh l
The Reds ran thetr lead tn
the Natwnal League West to
7' . games by defeatmg Montreal 4 I whtle Houston was
lustng to New York 4-2
Ross Gnmsley ( !!Hi) IS
scheduled to pttch for the Reds
tomght agamst Carl Morton (5101 tn the second game of the
th1ee game senes
Jtm McGiothltn ptcked up h1s
se\Onth vtctory tn 12 deciSIOns
Munday mght, slrtktng out two,
1ssumg etght htts and walkmg
no one The sole Expo run was
the mnth tnmng homer by
M1ke Jorgenson

I

The loss put Montreal 19
games out of first place m the
Nahonal League East
Joe Morgan slammed htS 15th
homer of the season for the
Reds m the first mnmg Re·
serve catcher Bill Plummer
drove tn two runs tn the, ftflh
w1th a stngle The four th run
was scored 1{1 the saxth on
Tony Perez' double and Dems
Menke's smgle
Plummer was ftlltng tn for
Johnny Bench hehtnd the plate
Bench was out wtth an tnjured
finger
After the senes ends here
Wednesday mght, the Reds re·
turn home to Riverfront Sta·
dtum They wtll host a three
game weekend set wtth Phtladelphta beg tnmng Frtday mght

Fmgers pitched Oakland back
mto ftrst place m the Amertcan
League West wtth a vtctory
over Detrmt The A'sare now a
ball-game m front of tdle
Chtcago The Athlettcs JUmped
on Woody Fryman for three
runs m the ftrst mnmg wtth
Fryman suffermg hts ftrst
Amencan league loss after
three consecutive VICtortes
Alex Johnson drove m three
runs wtth a two-run smgle and

Jack Brohamer dr1lled a tworun homer to power Cleveland
past Muutesota
Johnson, who has banged out
rune hits m 14-at bats good for
seven RBis smce hemg reInserted m the startmg lineup
last Saturday, erased a 1~
Twms lead m the ftrst wtth a
line smgle and drtlled his
eighth homer m the fourth
after Buddy Bell hit his sixth
homer to open the mmng

Brown Shook Up

With Slow Start
CINC INNATI !UP!)
Cmcmnal1 Bengals coach Paul
Brown, dlsappomted after hts
l€am's 35-17 loss to the Mtamt
Dolphtns here Saturday mght,
says he may approach the rest
of the ex h1bt It on sc hedule
dtfferenlly
The Bengals went un defeated tn pre season games
last year, but then faltered
badly 1n regular season So
Brown slarled thiS year a ltttle
slo\\er
But thtstsawfully slow, 'he
satd after th e loss to the
Dolphtns whtch dropped the
Bengals record to 1·2 w1th
three ex htbllton games
remammg
The answer may be to brmg
together the team that s gomg
to be ~laymg (regularly ),'
Brown satd We're arrtvmg at
the stage where we d better
hegm to mold 11 a ltttle btl
The Bengals next meet the
Eagles m Phtladelphla Monday
mght and then play the mtrastate rtval Cleveland
Browns Sept 3 In Columbus

Brown sa1d hts players "ere
nut up fur the Dolphms
One of the early things
these )OUng players have to
tearn ts to get themselves
ready,' Brown satd "That. has
to come from wtlhm and we
were not ready '
Quarterback V1rgtl Carter
agreed
We can 1affot d to get f1red
up on ly every other game ' he
sa1d We wet e flat at Green
Bay and we were flat against
M1arn1 '

Cart er played the hrsl half
and ran 1nto problems
throwmg one mterceplion
be1ng tackled thr ee ttmes
lrytng to pass and losmg the
ball once on a fumble
Second year quarterback
Kenny Anderson played the
second half and was fa irly
ImpresSive
'That probably was the best
thmg that happened to us
Brown sa 1d "Kenny sttll
looked ltke he can play quar
terback

lohnson Sharp

J

I

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Alex
Johnson IS "back on the beam '
after bemg Sidelined wtth a
sore ankle and ts htttmg like
crazy
Johnson drove m three runs
wtth a two-run smgle and a
home run Monday night as the
Cleveland Indians whipped the
Mmnesota Twms 10-3 It was
only hts sixth start since the
AII.Star break In July
He drove m three runs wtth a
double and a homer Saturday
and doubled home a run
Sunday agamst the Oakland
A's
"The big spark m our ~~tree­
game wmfllN! str~•k ~s been
th~ hltimg of Alex Johnson,"
.Manager 'Ken Aspromonte
sAid. "He's back on the beam
ahd sl\oul~ con\lnue to ltlt
"He's got that oid aggreastve
swmg back and doesn't swmg
at many bad pitches," Aspromonte added
Perry Tries AgaiD
Johnson's amazing record
smce Saturday, when he was
re-mserted tnla the starting
llneupagam,hasbeen nine htts
in 14 at-bats for seven RBI's
The loss Monday night went
to Jim Perry, now 11·12. Tonight, Jim's kid brother, Gaylord, will try for hiB 19th wm of
the season as he starts for the
Indtans It will be Perry's fifth
try for No 19

The Indtans, who have been
down on their luck lately and
hope to fmlsh the season at the
500 mark, were gt.ven a standmg ovation by the fans after
the game Aspromonte S8ld 11
was hts "btggest thrill "
The Indians scored twice In
each of the first four uutmgs
Jack Brohamer brought two
runs home tn the second on his
homer Ray Fosse smgled
home a thtrd run and Frank
Duffy doubled home another m
the thtrd inning
Wilcox Gets WID
Johnson singled horne the
Indians' llr$1 two runs in the
first lmlng and drilled his
eighth homer of the seaaon
over the left field fence In the
fourth Buddy Bell opened the
fourth with his sixth horner
The Tribe got ano\her run m
the fifth on a throwi!1g error by
catcher Glenn Borgmam and
Gralg Nettles homered In the
sixth to conclude Cleveland's
scormg
Mmnesota scored tis three
runs ol.f starter MUI Wilcox,
who was Ufted for a plnc!Htltter alter five Innings. Bobby
Darwin singled horne a run In
the flrlllnnln&amp; and BorgmaM
homered with one on base In
llle fourth
o:\!promonte S8ld he luld
"llllnd emotions" about WU·
cox' p1tchlnj! ,

Our Full-Service Means:
FAST LOAN servtce
lANK IY MAIL makes
easy. Just a qutck step

It

to the post box.

CHECKING SERVICE
that ma'kes 11 easy to pay

bills, keep a record.

SAFE DEPOSIT vaults
where all valuables and
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are secure.

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
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pay highest permts·

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Member Federal Oepcilll IDI111'1lace CorporaUoo

�..
~-The Dallv Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0

• - 1ne DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , August 22, 1972

EDITORIALS

Latest Fashion from Saigon
'

Peace Talk Accusations

Almanac
By Unlled Prell llllel'llltloul
Today IS Tuesday, Aug 22, ·:ol

Fumble? Seems
No Answer
D1d PreSident N1xon really blow a golden oppmlumty
to ach1eve peace m V1elnam m 1969 as cha1 ged by Demo
crahc v1ce presidential candidate Sargent Shnvet US
ambassador to France at the 11me '
Or IS the only thmg betng blown JUSt the hot atr needed
to Inflate an election year balloon as sug~ested by Henry
Cabot Lodge who replaced Averell Harrtman tn 1969 as
chtef negoltator tn Pans•
Or does 11 even matter after more than three years '
It matters For unless Prestdent Ntxon can pull a peac e
settlement out of the hat between now and November
cruc•al numbers of voters could be tnfluenced by the
belief that 18 000 addtt!Onal Amencan soldters needlessly
lost thetr ltves tn V1etnam because of the miSJUdgment
miSplaced pnde or JUSt plam stuptdtty of Rtchard Ntxon
Accordmg to Harrtman who seconds Shrtver s allega
t10n, by the fall of 1969 he and Cyrus Vance, hiS deputy
had overcome the most difficult obstacle delaymg the
start of negottat10ns-gettmg the North Vtetnamese to
accept the presence of South V1elnamese representaltves
Hanm had already stgnalled •ts sertous mtenttons by
Wtthdrawmg nearly 90 per cent of tts troops from lhe
northern two provmces of South Vtetnam
Then talks were delayed fot two more months from
October, 1968 unttl lwo days bef01e PreSident Ntxoo s
mauguralton ftrst b) Sou I h Vtelnamese PreStdenl
Nguyen Van Thteu's refusal to parttctpate then by argu
ments over the shape of the table
Then on Jan 29, 1969 Th1eu refused to engage tn sect el
talks Wtlh the Vtel Cong and by the ltme he changed hts
mmd two months later 11 was too late the Communtsts
would no longer talk to Thteu
Thus the opportumty for negottatwns was loSI says
Hamman because the Ntxon admmiStratwn perm1t1ed
Thteu to sc uttle 1t It was after thtS he says lhat N1xon
hll upon hiS sc heme fot Vtelnamtzmg' the war
It all seems very 1ff1Sh very maybeiSh
Astde from North V1etnam s stgnal of troop wtlh
drawals apparently no concrete dehmte peace offet
was made for anybody to blow ' II could as logtcally
be argued that the North VIetnamese themselves scutlled
th~ opportumty for peace by fatlmg to g1ve the new
Amencan preSident t1me to become accltmaled to offtce
and to ramtltartze htmsell Wtlh the stluatton m Vtetnam
Henry Cabot Lodge flatly demes there eve1 was anv
opportumty for peace m 1969 Ne1ther then, nor smc e
then, he says has Hanot budged from t\s stand demand
lng that the Umted States umlaterally Wtthdraw and de
pose the Thteu regtme
As for Th1eu, says Lodge the fact IS that our power
over htm was and ts very much overestimated The 1dea
that all we had to do was press a button was not ti ue
then and IS not true now
Lodge seems to be correct on this pomt We are so
used to hearmg Thteu bemg descrtbed as a US puppet
that we forget that at least m hiS own eyes hiS regtme m
Satgon 1s as legtltmate as thai of lhe men tn Hanoi who
never reached powet tht ough a popular electton ngged
or otherwiSe
Lodge also has the last word m the form of a questton
"Why did the people tn power m 1969 1£ they had such
mformat1on, wa•t until 1972 to tell us aboul •I''
, Pendmg a good answer from Hamman or Shriver the
one that 1mmedtately suggeSis tlself IS Stmply lhtS- that
1972 ts an electwn year

WIN AT BRIDGE

Safety in Not Finessing
4
3.342.
NORm
QI07
.53

22

• KJ2
.AJ964

~t
ii!A~3

EAST

.KQJ94

•to876 2
. 1063

.J84

't:91!&gt;4

iTo~

.KS

SOUTH

.A

(D)

.K95 2
.AQ8

.QI07 53
None vulnerable

I.

West

Norlh East

South

1.
Pass
Pass

3...
5•

4.
Pass

3.
Pas.'!

Openmg lead- ¥ K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Safety plays are usually a
matter of declarer takmg a
!title extra ca re to msure hiS
contract
They are essential m rub
ber bndge and there are
many occasiOns when they
should be made m match
pomt duphcate
Today's hand shows South
m a very good fiVe club con
tract
In a duphcale ga me most
pn1rs would be playmg at a
club part score Therefore
m etther duphcate or rubber
brtdge South wants to gtve
h1mself the bes t play for, hts
contract
Thts play IS to lead the
queen or clubs at trtck two
and then refuse the club ft
nesse Now hts contract 1s
safe agamst any 2·1 trump
break
He ruffs dummy's last
heart and plays out all the
dtamonds Then he leads a
club and 11 doesn 't matter
whtcl) opponent wms

He must e1ther g1ve South
a ruff and dtscard or lead a
spade In all cases the ~uess
for the spade Jack 1s
ehmmated
Suppose West started wtth
all three clubs• Then South
w1ll w1sh that he had taken
the club fmesse but he will
sbll have a ftfty.flfty chance
for his contract He Will lead
a second trump and eventu
ally try to locate the spade
jad
r

The

VSrAPEit fHTlllPIUU ASSN )

btddins has beet•

West

North

East

1•
Dble
Pass
Pass

Dble

Pass

Pass
3•
4•

Pass
Pass
Pass

South

'

You South hold
.8743
+AK943 ... 762

•2

What do you do now?
A-B•d four d1amonds You
don't know exactly what your
partner IS dmng but four d1a ~
monds tells htm lhat you have a
,~tood dtamond su1 t

TEENAGER DROWNED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Keenan Anderson, 14, of St
i.Duts, Mo , drowned Monday in
a pond m north Columbus The
bo)i.illld two brothers were here
VtSIImg an uncle, Robert
Edward Anderson's body was
found tn seven feet of water
Efforts to reVIve him fatled and
he was dead on arrtval at
Clnldren s Hospttal

GOP HOPEFUL
MIAMI BEACH (UP!)
How key state Repubhcan
leaders attendmg the GOP
National Conventton see their
prospects m thiS fall's
guhernatofiBI, senatortal and
house races
Ohio
Redistricting put together two
Republtcan House seats bpt
they sttll expect to wmd up wtlh
a lli-to-7 edge for loss of one

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Euc Ed

ROBERT HO!FLICH
Ctfy Editor

Pub ! sned dat tv ucept
Saturdav by The Oh o Valley
Publ tShtn; Company 111
Court St
Pomeroy 01'1 o
45749 Bustness Orr tce P.,one
992 21S6 Ed tlo r at Phone 992

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Time May Cure Problem
'

By Paul Crabtree

-

The double-exposure season Is with us, with baseball and
football crowding onto the scene and cunpetlng for the fans'
attention m the newspapers and on television
It could last almost to the end of October
1love both games -If not the too...arly beg!mlng of football
and Utetoo·lateendingofbaseball (Iwasneverwortha nickel at
playmg etUter one, since I stood stXoOile and weighed only 129 at
Ute age of 17.)
'
'
Both claim to be the major national sport, and this IS rather
silly, because after all, most of us just don't have one favorite
book, entertamment personality, singer, etc
But, If you pomted a pistol at my head and asked me to
choose between football and baseball, I'd take baseball.
Why baseball•
Several reasons, really (And remember, I love football )
First It's absolutely Impossible for an outstanding Individual
performer' to be Ignored - no matter how bad a team h'
es
playing for
PhlladeiP!ta may have baseball's worst team this year, but
the dazzling pitching of Steve Carlton has the whole world of
major league baseball buzzing Ditto for Nate Colbert of the
Padres and Gaylord Perry of the Indians
Second, baseball combined Ute best of one~)D-one com·
petition (which gives basketball Its excitement), in the contlnlilng duel between batter and pitcher, but It also con tams the
best elements of team play- on offenae and defense
There's beauty, artistry and pure enjoyment In watching a
superbly-coordinated Infield keep the opposition at bay, on
anything hit on the ground Thus has It been since the days of
Tlnker-111-Evers.ta.Otance
The same thing ts true in watching Pete Ro8e or Cesar
Geronuno working m perfect tandem with Johnny Bench to cut
off a run at the plate, or Tommy Helms executing a perfect hitand-run
Third, there lsn 't the same emphasis on size or height as in
other sports Baseball has room for both f&gt;.4 Fred Patek aoo 6-8
Frank Howard Football aod basketball do not
Finally, baseball Is a more cerebral game, really Football Is
a two-hour emotional binge for players and fans alike, and In a
good game, this Is refreshing and delightful But a tight baseball
game admlnl.sters the adrenalin m small shots, Instead of big,
thetr sexual capactly There continuous doses, and It lets the fan manage almost every pitch,
baSically ISn't anythmg good every play
But the biggest reason of all I'll discuss in the next column
that alcohol has ever been
demonstrated to do for the
+++
ltver the bram or the heart
A note m passing Thanks to the dozen or more fans who
The only medtcal use alcohol
has ts as a sedatlVe or tran- qutckly advised me that Wally Berger was the left ftelder on the
Reds' 1939 pennant-winners PI Pleasant Insurance man Emory
qmhzer
Monroe was the first to call
(~EWSPAPER INTEitPRISE A.SSH )

She's Flabby After. Reducing
Bv Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb - 1 am a
25 year old m o I he r of two
Durmg each pregnancy I
ga med a lol of wetghl and
lost ve1 y little between
pregnanctes In lhe last IB
monlhs I have lost mote than
25 pounds b\ exe1 ctStng and
dtetmg I he skm of my
abdomen does not seem to
be ttghtemng p1 opet Jy As
the amounl of fal behmd 11
lessens 1he skm

IS

loose and flabby

becom mg

near Reader - G1ve tl
ltme and 11 ma y s hrtnk
~fle1 all your letter tndt
cates that you ve sl!elched
11 Wllh 45 pound s of extra
fa t plus th e normal slrelch
that s caused by lwo succes
!-l ive p1 egnanc1es

You
health
rtd of
hope

can Improve your
a gt eat deal by gettmg
vour excess fat and I
yo u II contmue your

program until you are at
vour normal we1ghl If the

I am al

be particularly vtstble
You ve lost the wetght at
the n ght ltme of your life
There Is a much greater ltke
lthood of the skm returnmg
to normal tf people get rtd
of the excess wetght early m
ltfe and keep tl off rather
than watltng unit I Ihey re
much older and thetr skm IS
less elasttc to take sertous
measures about we1ght re
ductton

~

•

i!'1

i

liver fatlure can ensue

Dear TMTil
If you're JUst a 'ktd stSter' to Gar, don 't you suppose he'll
understand' A Homeconmg Dance ts very spectal and a gtrl
should share tt wtth the guy m her liJe, not the former guy m her
hfe
Watt a month and see which tswhtch -SUE
Dear TMTH
And don't be surprised if 1t's netther'
The moral of your letter ts gtrl wtth changeable heart should
not plan three and one-half months ahead - HELEN

+++
Dear Helen and Sue
My mother had thts wild crush on Tom Jones and l'(hen my
grandmother teased her about tl she laughed and satd,
'Remember how you mooned over Liberace - and he was 15
years younger than you'"
Anyway, I thought tl was ruliculous, gomg crackers over TV
stars And then, Donny Osmond came along, and I guess 11 runs
m famthes
My father calls me wacky My brother·m-law asks "Who's
that good looking g1rl' when he sees Donny's ptcture on my
bulletm board My mother says I m 'moony," and I don't dare
renund her of Tom Jones
My stster sympaUttzes but she says I'll never get to meet him
so why bother' No one seems to reahze I'm m love and you can't
turn that off JUSt by bemg pracltcal Bestdes I'm not lonely when
I m thmking of HIM
I wrtte his name all over my books and I've even carved 11 tn
a tree, along wtlh mme I'm jealous when I see him snullng at
someone else (on TV) When other boys are stupid and chtldish, I
pretend I'm talking to Donny and he understands and always
says the rtght thmg
Am I crazy' If there's no hope (IS there, JUSt a ltttle') then
will I ever getovertt• - DONNY FOREVER
Dear DF
No, you're not crazy and, yes, you'll get over thts crush But
meanwhile, It's helping you through what may be a rough time m
your life When a girl Is vaguely lonely and not qu1te ready for
real boys, tt's cornforlmg to have a 'hero" who always says the
rtght thihgs, never makes her feel awkward or dumb, and will be
"Donny on the spot," whenever her lmagmatton calls him
The world would be a sad place for young teenagers (and
older people, too) if they could never daydream
When will you outgrow Donny' - When a real Johnny, Pete,
Dtck, Tommy comes along You'llsee -HELEN AND SUE

ON TilE TV DIAL The Republican Nattonal Convention

Send rour questions fo Dr Lomb,
m cort of thts newspaper P 0 Box
1551 Rorlto C1t7 StattOn New York,
•
•
NY 100/9 Few o copy of Dr Lomb's
Dear Dr Lamb - Please booldet on to11ng we1ght semi 50
tell me how alcohol wtll a£ Cl!nls lo t"e some oddress ond cnk
feel the liver '
lor Losmg We~ghl booklet

sktn doesn'l ttghten up m lhe
most af1 a1d to lose a nothe1 cou rse of several months
20 pound s I don t want to be and 1f 11 really bugs you a
left w1th a flap of extra skm lot f suppose vou could see
hangmg from mv abdomen a su rgeon aboul havm g the
Dear Reader - In large
Whal can I do to lighten the excess sk m removed It amounts alcohol tS a toxm
sk m and posSibly fade the would leave a small tnctSton or potson It has been dem
stretch marks somewhat?
sca r whtch wouldn I need lo onstrated by m1croscoptc
studtes thai the cells of the
heart can be damaged by
dnnkmg alcohol Other cells
m the body can also be
damaged Alcohol not onlv
can damage liver cells but it
can affect thetr normal func By Helen and Sue Bottel
tton Some people who drmk
lots
of alcohol do nol eat an
DANGERS OF DATING AHEAD
adequate d1et and parttcu
Dear Rap
larl y have a deflctency of
When a guy treats you like hls k1d stster, you really work to v t t am t n B 1 or th1amme
make hun fall I thought I was really m love wtlh Gar so I asked Thts furlher contnbutes to
him to our homecommg dance thts November I was real sur- damage or the actual hvet
cells
prtsed when he satd ''Okay '
It's the biggest dance of the year oull&gt;tde of the semor prom
For yea rs there was a hot
and I wouldn't reel rtght unless I went wtth someone I truly loved debale m med1cal ctrcles
Well, now I've discovered I only 'like 'Gar- well enough to whether the alcohol alone
cause damage to the
be frtends but not like I LOVE Tony, who came mto my life two could
ltver or whether 1t had to be
weeks ago
assoctated wtth a thtamme
Last rught Tony asked me to the homecormng baU He's the deftctency It really doesn t
one I want to go wtth so I dtdn't tell hun about my date wtth Gar make any difference which
Instead I put hun off wtth "Lets wa1t a month and see if we sttll factor IS the most Important
ulttmate result of drtnk·
feelltke Uus about each other ' I should have been truthful 'cuz The
mg too much for many peo·
now I'm m a mess Whichever boy I go wtth the other wtll be pie ts damaged Itver cells
mad I don't want to hurt Gar (whom I've known for ftve years) whtch are replaced by scar
but if I lose Tony, I'll DIE
tissue causmg a condttJOn
Should I tell them both I've sworn off dancmg or something' called ctrrhoSls of the liver
In severe degrees eventually
- THREE MONTHS TILL HOMECOMING

~~·w.G~~~;;i:~~ ii;~v

+++

The damaged hver loses
1ts abtlt\y to destroy excess
amounts of estrogen, the fe
male hormone Estrogen 1s

normally produced m men
as well as women When excess amounts accumulate because of liver disease men
expenence a degree of fem mtzatton whtch can a ff e c I

Television Log

Deer Creek

By Mrs W H Thomas
Programs for Tonight
Mr and Mrs Leonard
Cardwell and granddaughter,
and Tomorrow
Fostorta, hts stster, Elsie
Searls, Ewlngton, 'visited their
brother and wife, Mr and Mrs
Francis Cardwell, Keyslone
Road
TUESDAY. AUG 22
Mr and Mrs Landon Vance, 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Truth or
Freeburn, Ky and John Vance
Conseq 6, Halhayoga 33
of Columbus viSited the past 6 30- News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Grand Ma•ters Chess 33 CBS
News 8 10
week wtUt Mrs Joe Blackburn 7 00News 6, 10 Whafs My Line 8 Farmers Daughter 13
and other relatives In UtiB
Andy Griffith 15 Dick Van Dyke 4 Insight 4
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre33 Mod Squad6 13 Snoopy AI The
VIC!nlly
3, 4 15 , Dragnet e, John Byner Comedy Hour 10
Mr and Mrs Frank Parsons 8 30Ice- Follies
Olympics 8
and famtly spent a few days 8 30 - Evening at Pops33 Republican Convention 3 4 e, 10 15
Marcus Welby 1J
w1th Mrs Pearl Tackett and
9
30
- Republican Conventlon6,13 O'Happy Days 33
Mrs Cena Parsons
11 oo - News3 4 6 e 10 13 15
A jomt birthday pJcruc was II 30- Dick cavelt 6 Johnny caroon 3, 4 15 Movies 'A
enjoyed at Lake Thomas
Lawless Street' 10 The Steel Jungle 13
I
00
- Your Heal!~ 4
Sunday, August 13 The
1 30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
honorees were Mr and Mrs
Wtlliam Claypool and Mr and
Mrs Herbert Thomas, all of
WEDNESDAY, AUG 23
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar '· Sacred Hearl 10
WestervUie Other guests tn·
6 15 - Fermtlme 10
eluded Mr and Mrs W w
6 20- Farm Report 13
Thomas, Charles, Ctndy and
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbvs Today 4 News Weather Sporls 6 Bible
Abb1e Wears, Mr and Mrs
Answers&amp; Urban League Present! 10 Glory Ro!d 13
John Thomas and three
7 00- Today3, 4,15. New!6 13 CBS News a
children, Danny Thomas and
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - captain Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame
fnend of Columbus, Kathy
St 33
Fore, Hurrtcane, W Va , and
8 30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack LaLanne 13
Mrs W H Thomas, local
e 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room e
Ml•s Kimberly Cardwell,
Friendly Junction 10 Peyton Place 13 What Every Woman
Romilus, M1ch Is spendmg her
Wants to Know3 'Timmy&amp; Lassre6 Mr Rogers33
vacation wtlh her grand·
9 30- Trut~ or Conseq 3 Mike Douglas 6 My Three Sons 8
parents, Mr and Mrs Francis
One Life to Live 13 Electric Co 33
9 55 - Chuck White Reporls 10
Cardwell and Mr and Mrs
10 00- Dina~ Shore 3 15 Lucille Balle 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13
Johnson
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13 My
Three Sons 10 Beverly Hillbillies 8 In School Instruction 33
Love American Style 6

B~RRfS WORlD

11
11

12
12
12
I

00 - Sale of Cenlury 3, 15. Family Aftalr 8 Farmer's
Daughter 13 Communique 6
30 - HollywoodSquares3 4 15 Bewltched6 13 LoveofLife
8 10 SHame St 33
00 - Jeopardy3 15 , BobBrauns5050Ctub4 Loca1News10
News 13 Contact 8 Password 6
30 -3 W'sGame3,15 SplltSecond6 SearchforTomorrow8,
10
55 - NBC News 3 15
00 - News, Weat~er, Sports 3, All My Children 6 13 To Be
Announced 15 Divorce Court&amp; . Green Acres 10 French Chef

33
I 20I 30 -

Lucille Rivers 3
3 On A Match 3, 4 15 As The World Turns 8. 10,
Designing Women 33 ABC Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
2 00- Days ot Our Llves3 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 VIrginia
Graham6, LoveSplendoredThlnga, to Bridge3l
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, 15 Oatlng Game 13, Guiding Light a to,
0' Happy Day 33
3 oo- Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13 Secret
Storm e, 10 Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30 - Relurnto Peyton Place3, 4,15, One Life to Llve6, Edge
of Nigh! 8, tO , Jeff's Collie 13
4 00- Ml•ter Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15 Fllntstones 3, Sesame
St 33 Huckleberry Hound 6 Batman 8. Movie "Julie" 10
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Merv Griffin 4 I Love Lucy 6 Death
Valley Days 8, Password 13 Andy Griffith 15
5 00 - Wagon Train 3, Mister Rogers 33, Maverick 13 Dick
Van Dyke 15 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Morsholl Dillon 15, Electric Co 33
6 00- News. Weather, Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Truth or Con seq 6.
I Dream of Jeannie 13, Hathayoga 33
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15 ABC News 6, 13, CBS News a, 10,
Bridge 33.
7 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6 10, Wild, Wild West 13:
MIIHtonH of Progress 33, Dick Van Dyke 4. Whars My Line
8; Mayor's Repor115, Petticoat Junction 3
7 30- EpiiiOdt Action 33, To Tell The Truth 6, Republican

7157

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Senttnel

Tube Talk

the 235th day of 1972 with !31 to
follow
The moon Is approaching Its
full phase
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of VIrgo
French composer Claude
Debussy was born on Aug 22,
1862
On this day In hiStory
In 1~1. the U S. yacht
"America" beat Ute British
craft "Aurora" oH Cowes,
England to wm a mlver trophy
The race has smce been known
as "the America Cup "
In 1911, the Mona Ltsa was
stolen from the Louvre
Museum In Paris It was
recovered four months later
In 1941, German Nw troops
advanced to the oulsktrts of
Lenmgrad, Russta durmg
World War II
In 1968, Pope Paul rece1ved a
hearty welcome m Bogota,
Cnlombta It was the first vlstt
to Latin Amenca by a Roman
CatholiC pontiff

+++

The

':Oday~

Convention

"You young whippersnappers behare yourselres while
you're here, now'"

3~ ~~

8, 10, 15

8 00- The SuiH!I' 6, 13, To Ba Announced 33
8 30-Corner8tlr6 13, F11d0dyssey33
9 00 - Marly Feldman Comedy Machine 13
9 30- Republican Convention 4, 13
10 00 - Soul 33
11 OO-News3.4, News a, 10, 13,15
11 30- Johnny carson 3, 4, 15, Dick cavett 6, Movlos "The
Pathfinder' 10. "Duffy of San Quentin" 13, Movie - To Be
Announced 8
1 00 - News and WtNthtlt' 4
1 30- Loc.J News 13

limes But after he got Aaron
for the second out in the 11th,
Dnsty Baker doubled After
Wtlltams was tntenttonally
walked, Ltun hned hts gamewmnmg smgle to center The
first Brave run came m the
second when Fehx Mtllan
doubled and Aaron smgled
Phlladelphta got tis only run
m the etghth mmng on doubles
by Wtlhe Montanez and Greg
Luzmsk1 The Phils eventually
loaded the bases wtth two out
but Ntekro struck out Carlton
to end the threat
In the other games, Cm
ctnnall downed Montreal, 4-1 ,
New York topped Houston, 4 2,
St i.Duts blanked Los Angeles,
4~
and San Diego edged
Chtcago, 6-5
In the Amertcan League,
Oakland beat Detrott, 5 1
Baltunore edged Caltforma, 3
1, and Cleveland routed
Mmnesota, 10.3
Bob Gthson pttched a sevenhitter and h1t a run-scormg
douhle to lead the Cardmals to
the victor) over the Dodgers It
was hts fourth shutout thts
season and the 54th of hts
career, the most for act1ve
Naltonal League pitchers
Reds Top Expos
Reserver catcher Btll Plum
mer drove m two runs w1th a
hfth-mnmg smgle as the Reds
topped the Expos on Jtm
McGiothhn s etght -lulter Mtke
forrez went eight mmngs and
suffered the loss Joe Morgan
homered for Cmcmnatt m the

PP&amp;K Signing
Up Wee Gridders
Young Ohwans aged 8 thru
13, can now regiSter for the 1972
Punt, Pass and K1ck program
at any parttctpatmg Ford
dea lershtp tn the Bucke) e
state
PP&amp;.K competition 1s expected to dra~ over 1,000,0110
young en thusiasts for the ftfth
consecuttve year Ndtlonally a
total of 8 ,2fl ,~ young football
fans have competed m lhe
program Stnce tl ftrsl began 12
years ago
Contestants wtll make thetr
opentng btds for
th e
Professtonal Football Hall of
Fame m less than two months
S1x will make 1t - havmg their
names permanently mscrtbed
at Canton Ohto as nattonal
PP&amp;K wmners
Regtstratwn closes Sep·
!ember 29 RegiStrants must be
accompanted by a parent or
guardtan
PP&amp;K parttc1pants punt
pass and k1 ck agamst others
lhetr o"n age An) youngster
aged e1ght through 13 JS
eltgtble There IS no entry fee
and no specapl eqmpmenl IS
needed There IS no hody
contactdun ng compelttton and
partiCipants do not lose
amateur status
Sconng IS ba!;ed on diStance
and accuracy One potnt IS
gtven for every foot of puntmg,
passmg and k1ckmg dtstance
and a pmnt tS deducted for
every foot off ltne

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, August 22, 1972

52,662 Fans
Carleton Miss 16th
By VIto Stelllno
UPI Sports Writer
Pitchmg for the Phtladelphta
Plulltes, who mtght be kindly
called a pathettc team, Steve
Carlton rolled up 15 con·
secutlve VICtories On Monday
Nght, before an enthustasltc
.rowd of 52 662 fans tn
Pluladelplua, he went for No
16
The crowd- mcredtble for a
Monday mght for a last place
team 111 August-was a
testtmomal to how much
Carlton has meant to the club
thts year In the end, his
teammates let hun down
He held the Atlanta Braves to
one run for 10 mnmgs but the
Phils scored only one themselves and Atlanta ftnally
poshed across a run m the 11th
mnmg on Mtke Lum s brokenbat smgle wtth two out That
was enough for a 2-1 Atlanta
VIctory
Plul Ntekro who allowed the
Pluls nine htts m 11 mnmgs, got
the VIctory
It was a heartbreaktng way
for the streak to end but
Carlton tsn 't the kmd of guy
who laments the lack of hitlmg
support
He satd, quite stmply,
'Somet1mes you JUSt get
beSied '
Strtkes Oul Ten
In the losmg effort he struck
oul 10 to boost his league
leading total to 252 and he
fanned Hank Aaron th ree

'

S1x levels of compe tition
produce s1x v.mnet s 1 rophtes

are a"a rded to wtnners at all
levels Cotnpctltwn will begtn
September 10 w1th dealer level
con tests
Starlmg al the fourth level
(lenned area compct1twn ),
partic ip ants match sktlls
before the kickoff and durmg
halftime of NFI games
SIX nattonal ftna iiSts wtll
represent the NFL s Amencan
Co nference and SIX the
Natwnal Football conference
on January 21 at the Pro bowl
game In Dallas Fmaltsls thetr
parents and sponsonng dea lers
will be guests of Ford DIVIston
Naltonall) PP&amp;K IS sponsored
by the Ford dealers of Amenca
and the Nattunal Football
League

first and Plwruner rapped his
smgle m the fifth for a pair of
msurance runs
J1m Beauchamp, celebratmg
his J3rd btrthday, htt a two-run
homer wtth two out m the nmth
mnmg to pace the Mets past the
Astros Jon Matlac.k pttched a
seven.Jlttter to ptck up hiS lith
VIctory Rebever Jun Ray was
the Vlctun of Beauchamp s
blow the Met ftrst baseman's

second of the game, and took
the loss
John Jeter s three-run homer
wtth two out mUte nmth ummg
gave the Padres the VIctory
over the Cubs Jeter capped a
four-run Padre runth wtth hts
Stxth homer Btlly Wtlbams htt
a three-run homer m the top of
the nmth to g1ve the Cubs a 5-2
lead but the Padre rally wtped
out the margm

Today's

·; Sport Parade

CHAIN SAWS

The Saw That Won The Cutting

Contest At The Meigs County Fair

'

BY KEITH WISECUP

B11l W1lson now the star short
1ehef spec1altsl for the Ph1ladelphta
v
Plulhes pttched and played thtrd base
on one of the finest of many ftne
baseball teams produced m Metgs
X County p1gh schools It was the 1960
Pumeroy Panther club
W1lson was not the only star on Coach
Bussell Moores (now Metgs Local Jr
H1gh pnnctpal) Panthers that year
.. unly une of many They were Tom
Grueser, Tom Wlute, who later signed a
' contract w1th the Phtlhes N1ck Coates
1 etr) Kmghl Bob Cunmngham Phtl
liarrtson Ed Bartels, Gary Moore
Howard Parker, and others
That Pomeroy team won the
' Soulheaslet n Oh1o Athie lie League
crov.n without a loss Wmners of the
sout hern diVIsiOn they knocked off
Athens the northern diviSIOn wmners
54
Pomerov tn the mtdsl of the season
was 1n the process of obhteratmg
Rutland 24 0 when the Red bev1ls
'
pe1 haps showmg real good sense
' collected then 10 players and went
.. home
The Panthers thai year went to the
1 egwnals tn Philo where they we1 e
l1anded lhe1r on ly loss by po\\erful
Bndgepori mne 4 0 Bndgeporl later

wen tun to the state fmals before losmg
An excuse always comes up for a loss m

a lournament game, but the Panthers'
altbt for that one seems fltUng enough
L' belteve
The Pomeroy High School semors
went on their annual Washmglon D C
tnp and returned the same day as the
~arne at Phtlo Weary from traveling
VIa atrplane tram and car, the Panlhers were leg weakened and weary by
game hme Pomeroy fans w1tnessmg
the game slill testtfy that the Panther
mne on the Philo held was not the same
they had seen before
Wtlson who had been hardly
touched all of that year, permitted four
runs The semor rtghthander also
hurled w1th a sphttmg headache Wally
Grueser student manager of the team,
remembers W1lson lrudgmg from the
mound to the dugoul after ever) mnmg
say tng hts head was gonna spht 1f he
\o\ent one more mmng But he went the
dtstance Whether he had some aspirin
IS not kno\\ n
Along the lournamenl tratl that
year Pomeroy clouted Belpre II~ m
the first game of the secttonal behmd
W1lson s shutout The Panthers \ then
defeated Alhens 17-6 as they scored 15
run s m the fma l two fra mes to wtpe out
n22 1ie

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
DACHAU (UPI)-Somethmg made me come back here
I m not sure what All I know ts I made two lrtps
Thts place tsn t that btg for repeat vtstls
There was a lime that once you came here, you never left
Even now the ma]onty of those who see Dachau once generally
leave 11 at that
I came back for a ntunber of reasons, I suppose
Maybe I couldn t belteve what I had seen the ftrst tune
Maybe the thought occurred to me had tl not been for a matter
of geography, an acctdent of birth perhaps you'd call 11 I
mtght've wound up here myself
Or maybe thts really IS all lied m wtlh the Olymp1cs and the
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
a 16-6 record at this stage a
growmg ractal tssue which now threatens Saturday's openmg
UPI Sports Wrtter
year ago The btg difference
ceremony m Muntch, only stx mtles down the road from here
It obVIonsly takes more than IS runs Our p1tching has been
That could have somethmg to do wtth my commg back also
the four top starling pttchers m equal to Ute challenge all
Gettmg Here No Trouble
baseball and the best defenstve season We've scored 150 runs
Gettmg here was no trouble at all It never has been down hneup m the majors to lead the less this season than last,' he
through the years
Amencan League's Eastern added
I took that ftrst r1ght outstde the Olymptc Y1llage, the one diVISIOn
Dobson won only hts second
Boog Powell's 17th home run game m stx dectstons smce the
leading mto Dachauer Strasse kept gomg nme kilometers until I
came up agamst a high barbed wtre fence and a sudden dryness m the fifth mmng backed Pat All.Star break He struck out
Dobson's three-htt pttching as ftve and walked two whtle
m my mouth and there I was m a completely dtfferent world
You don t have to be Jewtsh to feel your skin crawl when you the Baltunore Ortoles topped strandmg three Angels
the Cahforma Angels, 3-1,
The vtctory was only Balli
walk through the gate
Nor do you need any emottonal attachment to sense the general Monday mght The vtctory, more s th1rd tn tts past rune
feeltng of death and despatr wh1ch sttll pervades the memortal combmed wtth Detrott's loss to outmgs
Oakland, leftthe Orwles a ball·
In other Amertcan League
Stte concentratiOn camp here 30 years later
I game behtnd the dtVISIOn · games Oakland whipped Del'he abject m1sery of Dachau s quarter of a 1111llion vtctuns htts
leading T1gers
troll, 5-1, and Cleveland defeat·
)OU urunedtately when you walk mto the barracks and see those
Powell shattered a 1-1 tie ed Mmnesota, 10-3, m the only
ptltfully small, msufferably crowded trtple-ltered parltllons
With a two-run shot off losmg games scheduled
which served as 'beds ' and generalltvmg quarters for those
pitcher Andy Messersmtth ~.
In the Natwnal League
unfortunates unprtsoned by Adolf Hitler
after Tommy DaVIS had Cmcmnat• beat Montreal, 4-1,
Part of An Inscription
walked wtth two out
New York downed Houston, 4On the wall of one of the barracks IS part of an mscr~pllon taken
The Ortoles mam problem 2, Atlanta edged Phtladelphta
from a diary kept by one of Dachau's mmates
thiS season has been hittmg- and Steve Carlton, 2-1, tn 11
He talks about the Blockfuhrers, those who contmually or rather the lack of 11
mnmgs and San Htego edged
harassed the prlS(&gt;ners
The Btg Difference
Chicago, 6-5
Frequently they come and np the beds apart, flmgmg the
I've pitched much better
A's Back In First Pluce
beddmg maU directtons•lt needs one of them only to bema vtle thts season than last " satd
Jtm Hunter and Rothe
rage orJl! 4runken temper If he ftnds a bunk badly made, the Dobson, now 14-t2 compared to
culprtt s nwnber ts taken and reported, hts pumshment bemg an
hour 's hangmg at the stake by the wrtsts !ted together hehmd the

Probably lhe most memorable game
tn the secttonal ftna ls was when
Pomeroy edged Manetta 1·0
Manetta s Sptndler and Wtlson dueled
un the mound the entire seven mmngs
wtth Spmdler allowmg ftve h1ts and
Wtlson but two
In the dlslncl Pomeroy defeated
South Pomt 6-2 at Athens A day later
Wilson no hi I Mtnford tn the d1strtct
ftnals 3~ and the Panthers started
pack•ng for both the Washtngton IJ C
trtp and the regiOnal tournament
Wtlson also a great football player
for the Panthers signed a scholarship
wtth Marshall to play on the grtdtron
for the Thundertng Herd He made the
freshman team but dunng the season
hurt h1s arm the begmmng of a score of
a rm and shoulder problems He
dropped out or Marshall as hts football
career ended wtth the tn]ury
On to baseball was the path for
Wilson He worked hts way fr om mtnor
leag ue baseball onto the Philhes by
1969 Havtng gone up and down wtlh
arm and shoulder opero twns Wtlson ts
now en]oymg h1s fmest year C\ en
though he missed the enl1re ftrst half of
the season because of - yes you re
nght - another of many shoulder
surgery operahons

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Orioles Trail lf2 Game

back

Reds Fatten Lead

''

There was no such thmg as escape You can see why, too
First , there's thts deep ditch etght feet wtde whtch fronts an
electrically charged barbedwtre fence
Even tf you re Superman and make the fence though, there's
another one 111 front of that and there's barbed wtre on top of tl
also
No One Makes II
No one makes that ftrst fence though
If a prtsoner even so much as steps on the strtp of grass tn front
of the dttch, never mmd the fence, the SS guards Stmply shoot
him dead wtthout warrung
Dachau was the f1rst of 22concentratton camps Httler had butlt
tn Germany
For the opernng of the Olympics Saturday, there wtll be a gala
ceremony In nearby Muruch
lnternaftonal League Standmgs
For the operung of Dachau, Sttuated on the grounds of a one·
By Untied Press International
W L Pel GB time muntttons factory, there was merely a bnef announcement
Charleston
72 54 571 m a Muntch newspaper
l OUISV Ille
73 57 562 1
IUmmler Signed Notice
Rochester
68 62 523 6
"On
Wednesday,
March 22 1933," 11 sa1d, the ftrst conTtdewater
68 62 523 6
Toledo
66 64 508 a
centratiOn camp wtll be opened m the vtcmtty of Dachau It can
Syr acuse
61 69 469 13
Rtchrnond
59 70 457 1.4 !2 accommodate 5,000 people We have adopted this measure,
undeterred by paltry scruples, m the convtctton that our actton
Pentnsu la
49 78 386 23 n
Monday s Results
wtll help to restore the calm to our country and IS m Ute best
Syr acu se J Loutsv lie 1
mterests of our people "
Rochester 6 Toledo .4
Pe nsula 5 Tidewater 4
The announcement was stgned by Muntch 's Commtsstoner of
(on ly games schedul ed)
Poltce-Hemrtch Hurunler
Dachau stands today pretty much as tt did when Httler used 1t
as one of hiS chambers of horrors from 1933 until1945
There ts a museum here now and to get to 1t you have to walk on
the same hard crnshed rock tis vtctuns d1d and you see the same
32 huge burtal pits they did except when they saw them they were
open and not covered over by asphalt as they are now
One Happy Scene
One of the ptctures m the museum stays wtth you a long time
It shows a mother leading three of her small ch1ldren along
w1th her to their execution, and bne of the children crymg, trymg
1o keep from bemg carrted and obvtously not wantmg to go
There's another photograph, blown up liJe..stze
Thts one shows the head of a vtctun on a blood..soaked choppmg
block The scalp has been lrud open The brams stare nght out at
you
And sttll another ptcture, by far the happtest one m the place
It looks ltke one of those pennant-dmchmg scenes, wtth
everyone laughing, and was taken on April 29, 1945 when the
Amencans liberated the camp
Outside the muse tun, you see the grisly oveps where the bodies
were burned More than 30,000 cUed 111 D.acllau. For SOllie, the
STIHL has more than 40 valuab e years of
expertence m the destgn and product on of
name of the ctty stlllts synonymous WJth death Willi~.
powerchatn saws gutde bars and saw ct1atn
•
Athletes VIlli Stte
All of STIHL s saws have the same degree of
"It ts a shame so many people still think the people of Dachau
excellence and of untformtty In des gn and
are bad," one locallte satd to me "We are Bavartan people,
manufacture In conjunction with these STIHL s
frtendly people, who have worked hard all our lives We were
own bars and cham operate so elf c ently and
never told what really went on m the concentration camp, only
well that they have earned world w1d0
that bad people were put m there, people who drank and dtdn't
recognition lor outstandmg performance w1\h
want to work When we'd see the prtsoners marching to work we
m1nlma1 maintenance
would put tread and potatoes on the wmdow sill for them. Most of
the people here in Dachau don't want this place (the concentra·
tlon camp memorial site) because they feel many of those
coming to Munich for Ute Olymptcs al.!o will come here to see this
and not understand we had nothing to do with it."
Some of Ute Olymptc competitors already have made Ute six·
mUe trip from Munich to Utlumall paper.mm town.
They go through the camp, never saying muc~ but most look
at a memonal stone near the exit which, m four different
languages, says "Never Again "
For most Olympic VISitors, one tr1p generally does It
But somethmg made me come back here

Standings

Wilson, Fine Hurler on a Fine Team

MONTREAL I UPI) - The
clnps keep falhng m the rtght
places for the Ctnctnnalt Reds,
who picked up a whole game
un the Houston Astros Monday
mgh l
The Reds ran thetr lead tn
the Natwnal League West to
7' . games by defeatmg Montreal 4 I whtle Houston was
lustng to New York 4-2
Ross Gnmsley ( !!Hi) IS
scheduled to pttch for the Reds
tomght agamst Carl Morton (5101 tn the second game of the
th1ee game senes
Jtm McGiothltn ptcked up h1s
se\Onth vtctory tn 12 deciSIOns
Munday mght, slrtktng out two,
1ssumg etght htts and walkmg
no one The sole Expo run was
the mnth tnmng homer by
M1ke Jorgenson

I

The loss put Montreal 19
games out of first place m the
Nahonal League East
Joe Morgan slammed htS 15th
homer of the season for the
Reds m the first mnmg Re·
serve catcher Bill Plummer
drove tn two runs tn the, ftflh
w1th a stngle The four th run
was scored 1{1 the saxth on
Tony Perez' double and Dems
Menke's smgle
Plummer was ftlltng tn for
Johnny Bench hehtnd the plate
Bench was out wtth an tnjured
finger
After the senes ends here
Wednesday mght, the Reds re·
turn home to Riverfront Sta·
dtum They wtll host a three
game weekend set wtth Phtladelphta beg tnmng Frtday mght

Fmgers pitched Oakland back
mto ftrst place m the Amertcan
League West wtth a vtctory
over Detrmt The A'sare now a
ball-game m front of tdle
Chtcago The Athlettcs JUmped
on Woody Fryman for three
runs m the ftrst mnmg wtth
Fryman suffermg hts ftrst
Amencan league loss after
three consecutive VICtortes
Alex Johnson drove m three
runs wtth a two-run smgle and

Jack Brohamer dr1lled a tworun homer to power Cleveland
past Muutesota
Johnson, who has banged out
rune hits m 14-at bats good for
seven RBis smce hemg reInserted m the startmg lineup
last Saturday, erased a 1~
Twms lead m the ftrst wtth a
line smgle and drtlled his
eighth homer m the fourth
after Buddy Bell hit his sixth
homer to open the mmng

Brown Shook Up

With Slow Start
CINC INNATI !UP!)
Cmcmnal1 Bengals coach Paul
Brown, dlsappomted after hts
l€am's 35-17 loss to the Mtamt
Dolphtns here Saturday mght,
says he may approach the rest
of the ex h1bt It on sc hedule
dtfferenlly
The Bengals went un defeated tn pre season games
last year, but then faltered
badly 1n regular season So
Brown slarled thiS year a ltttle
slo\\er
But thtstsawfully slow, 'he
satd after th e loss to the
Dolphtns whtch dropped the
Bengals record to 1·2 w1th
three ex htbllton games
remammg
The answer may be to brmg
together the team that s gomg
to be ~laymg (regularly ),'
Brown satd We're arrtvmg at
the stage where we d better
hegm to mold 11 a ltttle btl
The Bengals next meet the
Eagles m Phtladelphla Monday
mght and then play the mtrastate rtval Cleveland
Browns Sept 3 In Columbus

Brown sa1d hts players "ere
nut up fur the Dolphms
One of the early things
these )OUng players have to
tearn ts to get themselves
ready,' Brown satd "That. has
to come from wtlhm and we
were not ready '
Quarterback V1rgtl Carter
agreed
We can 1affot d to get f1red
up on ly every other game ' he
sa1d We wet e flat at Green
Bay and we were flat against
M1arn1 '

Cart er played the hrsl half
and ran 1nto problems
throwmg one mterceplion
be1ng tackled thr ee ttmes
lrytng to pass and losmg the
ball once on a fumble
Second year quarterback
Kenny Anderson played the
second half and was fa irly
ImpresSive
'That probably was the best
thmg that happened to us
Brown sa 1d "Kenny sttll
looked ltke he can play quar
terback

lohnson Sharp

J

I

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Alex
Johnson IS "back on the beam '
after bemg Sidelined wtth a
sore ankle and ts htttmg like
crazy
Johnson drove m three runs
wtth a two-run smgle and a
home run Monday night as the
Cleveland Indians whipped the
Mmnesota Twms 10-3 It was
only hts sixth start since the
AII.Star break In July
He drove m three runs wtth a
double and a homer Saturday
and doubled home a run
Sunday agamst the Oakland
A's
"The big spark m our ~~tree­
game wmfllN! str~•k ~s been
th~ hltimg of Alex Johnson,"
.Manager 'Ken Aspromonte
sAid. "He's back on the beam
ahd sl\oul~ con\lnue to ltlt
"He's got that oid aggreastve
swmg back and doesn't swmg
at many bad pitches," Aspromonte added
Perry Tries AgaiD
Johnson's amazing record
smce Saturday, when he was
re-mserted tnla the starting
llneupagam,hasbeen nine htts
in 14 at-bats for seven RBI's
The loss Monday night went
to Jim Perry, now 11·12. Tonight, Jim's kid brother, Gaylord, will try for hiB 19th wm of
the season as he starts for the
Indtans It will be Perry's fifth
try for No 19

The Indtans, who have been
down on their luck lately and
hope to fmlsh the season at the
500 mark, were gt.ven a standmg ovation by the fans after
the game Aspromonte S8ld 11
was hts "btggest thrill "
The Indians scored twice In
each of the first four uutmgs
Jack Brohamer brought two
runs home tn the second on his
homer Ray Fosse smgled
home a thtrd run and Frank
Duffy doubled home another m
the thtrd inning
Wilcox Gets WID
Johnson singled horne the
Indians' llr$1 two runs in the
first lmlng and drilled his
eighth homer of the seaaon
over the left field fence In the
fourth Buddy Bell opened the
fourth with his sixth horner
The Tribe got ano\her run m
the fifth on a throwi!1g error by
catcher Glenn Borgmam and
Gralg Nettles homered In the
sixth to conclude Cleveland's
scormg
Mmnesota scored tis three
runs ol.f starter MUI Wilcox,
who was Ufted for a plnc!Htltter alter five Innings. Bobby
Darwin singled horne a run In
the flrlllnnln&amp; and BorgmaM
homered with one on base In
llle fourth
o:\!promonte S8ld he luld
"llllnd emotions" about WU·
cox' p1tchlnj! ,

Our Full-Service Means:
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�•

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·'

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; a•~~:'hi~ ;:: :;da~d !o~o:.U~u:a~~~! ~n~v~~s·V~o0~l!~~rs~p;~ J~;i~ ~~-~ ;~

ap~entl&gt;' .~f;~:·~~qnQ~; ~e
Colt$, 'lfbo \ferehl&amp;~.!ldled m
llielr fu'st _t\VO gltm~,'al)d'tliey
went bll to ijJ5Set_!1Je· &amp;ln$88
City Chiefs·, 23,~7~ ill. National

.

.

.

.

··• BEST PHOTo WININ·,s:,ri,~:~
eooi'
!iilii,iobk Ii~e ui

~ aj~i~lnst Bob Brown of Sat!JiS. wlnn!ng 3-2 ori a $·
hitte~. Above; fr\)llt row, l'i", Miw~ W,!!\:lpn, .Ken Wa~n.

Pit$ ~PJonslilp !'ith uree'

w.~-los(t~cno !Band Ul.' .
,Oi.stdW '*~; ¥ ;beat the

. of tbc!

· Ball Club
1'0. The
se(ciild-li-alip41glleiJ,b)'erroraon the pari of·the loslilg
tearti frphl Sfra'clise.Bcith tearits had 6hilS; bili i3e$t won 11·
4. Tlie championship game had Dale Harrison. of ·!lest pit·

.Wold.)lor)n!1\te; K;en Britto~t; l!C~I)' :r;mr.e, Jacli: Dodd,
Steve R!Jil)sey, Ru8s Cowan; bacli: fo'\V. ~•!'Dey Poole, Jim
Schott, Pat Morris, Ronnie Ru6Se1J; ll!l11-Mmer,JUck'Gibbs,
Larry Shears, Steve Adams. Dale HarrisOn, Don Gar~lson
and Dick Treadway are rnls.!ing in the piclute.
•

.BASEBAL_L st.ANDING.s~ .
·

. . . .·•· .

.

Major League Stondlnps
By United Pross tnternatconal
National. League
Eut
w. I. pet. g.b.
Pittsburgh
72 42 .632
New York
60 63 . ~31 1l'h
Chicago
61 56 .521 12'1&gt;
St. Louis
56 58 ,491 16
Montreal
53 61 .465 19
Philo.
43 72 .374 29'12

. · ..

lEADING ..•. ..~~
&lt;&gt; ~'\ BATTERS ~\I

Leag~e

American League

Detroit
Ball.
New York
Boston
Cleveland
Milwaukee

East
w. I. pel,
63 54 .538
~2 54 .530
60 54 .526
58 56 ,509
55 61 ,474
45 70 .391

g.b.

-· Major
Leaders
By United Press International
leadmg Batters

National league

Skorich

. •
Asking

F r TI me
0
8

'h
g. ab r. h. per.
.
1'12 Cdeno, Hou 104 416 66 145 .347
Jih Wilms, Chi 115 446 70149 .334
7'h Mota, LA
67 279 43 91 .326 CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
17
Baker, All
92 314 38 102 .325 Cleveland Browns haven't won
West
~~~~.·;,,LA
1 ~ ~~i ~~ 1 ;~ ;~~i an exhibition gam~ this sumw. I. pet. g.b.
Oakland
68 48 .586
Sngulln, Pit 105 404 48 128 .317 mer,.~~~ Coa~h NI~ Skor1ch
West
Chicago
67 48 .5a3 '12 Hbner, Pit
86 293 49 93 .317 says 1t s unfair to JUdge us at
w, I. pd. g.b. Minn.
60
.
53 .531 6'12 Alou, St.L
103
3l!8 43 121 312 this time"
Cincinnati
72 4l .626
Kan. City
., , ' ,
.
,
55 58 .487 11'12 Oliver. Pit 110 4A2 66 137 :310
Houston
66 52 .559 7'12 Calli.
51
65 .440 17
American
League
We
re
still
exper1menllng
Los Atlg ,
60 5~ .526 ll'h Texas
•Jj liO
400 211/2
g. ab r. h. pet. with young people," Skorich
A!lanta
53 66 .445 21
Rudi,
Oak
112 460 75 147 .320 said Monday after rev1ewmg
San Fran.
52 66 .441 21'12
Monday's Results
Shblm,KC
98 327 43 103 .315 th B
• "7 1 to lh
~n Diego
45 70 .391 27
Oakland 5 Detroit 1
Carew, Min 104 402 50 126 .313 , e rowns ,.. oss
e
..
Cleveland 10 M inriesola 3
Allen, Chi
11 5 390 74 122 313 1 Detroit lions Sunday at Ann
Monday's Results
Baltimore 3 California 1
Atla 2 Phlla' l, 11 inns
(Oniygames scheduled)
~;~~~-c~I 1 ~~~ ~~ 1 ~6 :~6~ ArSkbor,Mhich:,h k
h
New York 4 Houston 2
Today &lt;$ Probable Pitchers
Braun , Min a2 278 31 a4 .302
one sal.,. . e nows w ere
Cinclnna'ti 4 Montreal 1
(All Time&amp; EDTI
May, Chi
113 401 10 120 .299. the problems w~re. "We
St Louis 4 Los t.lng 0
Bo&gt;lon (Pattin 11 ~ 121 at Otis, KC
105 3'12 53117 .298 play.edaverypoorgameallthe
SanIOntygahies
l;llego 6 Chicago
5
Kansas Cit·YIH edl un d 4.5) ' a' 30
scheduled)
FJSk, Bas
93 326 55 97 .29a way aroiUld," he sa)d.
Home Runs
"I' . . . """ · . led .
Today's Prob;lble Pitchers
P- 't:l~w York (Peterson 13-12) at
National League: Colbert, so . m very ~P~lln . .m
tAll Times EDTJ
Chicago (Bahnsen 16-lJJ, 9 p.m. 34; Stargell , Pitt 2a; Bench, &lt;:in our work offenslV~. and peClncjnnatl (G(Imsley 10·6) at
Oa~land (Odpm 10-4) at
27 · Willi~ms,
May Hou 26· Aaron All f · 1· 1y" h · · 1'd """' · 11
· Montreal' !Morton 5-!0i .- .8.:05 Detr.oi1 (lolich 19,91. 9 p.1r1.
and
Chi 2s.
'
en,s ve • ~ :1!11 ·. ~.,rp
P..m. . .: . . ·. ·,. ·
. · . · · Minnesota · ·1{\oltt HI at · American League : Allen, Chi. destroyed our ·rum:Uilg· game.
Hous!Qij._ '(~o.i!e.ts . '10·51· · aj: Cleveland. '1Perry:'•l8-t2 J, 7:3e 30 ; Cash, .Del 22; . M~rcer, NY, "Our coverage _ mi&gt;ta~e~
N,ew.Yort&lt;. t$eave~ · !MI. 8:0! .p,m:· ·.·.
· · . · · · . .. · ·
03k· 21.
gave them
p.m·. . ..
· , · ·
· · t~ t i fi&gt;i:oia · ( Rya~ 12-m at Epstein and
RunsJackson,.
Batted 1~
· · : SQille
.. ·, ell$)'
· t ,·touch·
·Aitant.a : l~eed .. 10-12) at Baltimore ·IMcNally 12·11L 7::lCJ .NationaJ.' League: stargell, doll'llS ·a.nd -~~ ..duln,' . ha~: :a
· Phila,~IPH!a .J Brao ~cn SCSI. . p.m. ·. . . ·
·
.
· Pitt ~4; Colbert, SO 89 ; Bench, decent P~ ,rush·!lll. day, he
7
: ~t t~~~~fWJ.~·. 11;i~J, :;., t.qs ~~~et:/;~:~~ f).~)li~~o~H~~uk· Cm 88; Will iams, Chi a4; May, said. ~·~e .b)elf livo· Or three
Af1gel~ ,(·t;l9Wni~g 1&gt;:~)', ! 1
·Wedne~ay's · Games
H~;;;:~ican League: Allen, Chi . scoring Ch,al\ce~ with .4ropped
· ·.Chlc~~o : .1-~·~~lns 17~1.Q :•1: :Boston · ~-' :kan ' tty, night
87 , Murcer, NY 70; scott, Mil passes aild those mne penalties
Sao . Di!!9b JArlm. a, 15). 10.30 · New York at 'Chicago
65 ; Darwin, Minn and Jackson , for 126 yards hurt us badly."
p.- m.- '
,
Oakland at Detroit, night
Oak 61 · Pitching
Sk or1c
' h sal'd some ~
' tak ~s
Pittsburgh (Bnles 11 -SJ at Minna! Cleveland night
San Francisco (Marichal 5- JJ), Calif at Baltimore: night
National League: Carlton, can he expected of mexperl·
11 p.m.
Texas at Milw, night
Phil
20-7; Jenkins, Chi 17-10; enced players, "but we had far
Wednesday's Games
Blass,
• Rift -14~;
St. L ·too many even lor that."
~ •¢1iltt ill Montreat. night
"'. :" • l~ ..
14-7; Seaver,
NY Gibson,
14~ 9 . · "
., Houston at New York
American League : Wood, Chi
Detroit quarterback Greg
'J Atla at Phi Ia, night
21
-11
;
lolich,
Det
1
9-9;
Perry
,
Landr1,
taking advantage of
St. Louis at Los Ang, night
Chicago at San Diego, night
~~~~te;~ b:,'k ~:~~'fl~h~:~~- Cnh1 holes m the Cl~veland second·
Pittsburgh at San Fran
16-13.
ary, threw scormg passes of 24
yards and six yards.
"It was a breakdown in
communication," said Browns
SCIOTO DOWNS
free safety Mike Howell. "They
COLUMBUS (UPI)
By United PreSs International
Licking Valley won the came up with some formations
Nationa I League
teams usually don't throw at us
featured $1,000 pace at Scioto
( 11 innings}
Atlanta 001 QOO QOO 01- 2 7 1
Downs Monday to pay $19.80, wttil the regular season."
After tl]ose two touchdowns
Phil a
000 QOO 010 oo- 1 9 1
$4.60and$4 for the 2:04 2&lt;i win. scored, Howell said, "we got
Niekro \1 2· 10) and Williams;
Eileen Strong was second and things ironed out ... but those
Carlton 120-71 and Bateman .
Virgie R Burford to Rachel Scarlet Miss third. The comtwo TDs made a big difference
Houston
000 001 OlD- 2 7 1 Hutton , 2 Acres, Rutland.
bination of Charger Lobell and in the way the game went."
New York 001 000 102- 4 4 2 Ethel Grueser to William Palm Girl, f&gt;-3, paid $98.80 in
The Browns' next opponent Is
Reuss, Ray '(8) and Howard ;
Mallatk (11 -7) and Dyer. LP- Waid Radford, Louise Radford, the nightly double.
Minnesota. The game will be
Ray (10-6). HRs - Cedeno 3.37 Acres, Salisbury.
Attendance was 5,302 and the played Saturday at Cleveland
(19th), Beauchamp, 2 I lsi &amp; Earl S, Shaffer, Gathel L. handie was $238,136.
Stadium.
2nd) .
Shaffer to Herbert Norman,
Cincinnati 100 021 ooo- 4 6 0 Orvin Norman, Sutton-MinersMontreal
000 000 001- 1 8 0 ville.
McGlothlin (7-5) and Plum - Norma L. Hecox to E, M.
mer ; Torrez, Strohmayer (9)
and McCarver . LP- Torrez (1J. Harris, Janet H. Harris, Lot
9) . HRs- Morgan (15th). Jor- 170, Jones 3rd Add., Mid·
gensen 19th) .
dleport.
VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) - San Jose, Calif.; Hugh Driggs,
Chicago
QOO 200 003- 5 9 1 Delila Mulford to Ohio Power
Lois
Becker of Godfrey, ru., Palmyra,
Mich.;
and
San Diego 000 000 204- 6 15 1 Co., Parcels, Salisbury,
Monday became the first Raymond Fryman, Ewing, Ky.
Hands, Bonham 17), Aker (9)
and Hendricks; Kirby, Ross Roderich Elmer Grimm, woman in the history of the
Nadine Ljutic of Yakima,
\9), Schaeffer (9 ), Corkins (9) Marjorie Virginia Grimm to Grand American Trapshooting
Wash.,
was women's winner
and Kendall. WP- Corkins (4- Richard B. Rowe, .11 Acre ,
Tournament to break 200 and Robert Mieczkowski of
7). LP- Aker (4-5) . HRs- Santo Sutton.
(12th) , Pepitone (8th) , Williams
straight
targets.
WintersvUle, Ohio, was jiUlior
Evelyn Thoma, Howard W.
(25th). Jeter (6th ).
Mrs.
Becker,
a
4().year-old
winner in a special event for
Thoma, Sr. to Howard W.
St . Louis
100 100 011 - 4 6 1 Th'onia, Sr., Evelyn M. Thoma, secre\Sry, won the Class A state champions. The men's
Los Ang
QOO 000 ooo- o 7 o
women's title during the first title was to he deci~ed today by
Gibson I14-7) and Simmons; 20 Acres, Salisbury.
dsy
of the 73rd annual event 12 shooters who · broke 100
Sutton. Richert (9) and Yeager, Albert Hill, Jr. , Ora E. Hill to here.
targets apiece.
Cannizzaro (9), LP-Sutton ( 13~ Roger Eugene Hill, Jane Anh
8). HR- Carbo (4th).
Twenty
shooters
in
Class
AA
Hill, .86 Acre, Sutton,
Events scheduled for today
had scores of 200. Five were
(Only games scheduled)
Russell Priddy, Alice Priddy
also
included the Ohio Handi·
American League
to Howard Long, Jennie Long, still lied when the shootoff was
cap, Class Day Doubles and
halted Monday night.
California 000 100 ooo- 1 3 0 'k Acre, Rutland.
Balf
010 020 OOx- 3 5 o
The shootoff will be conclucJ. International Cbampionshlp of
Messersmith, Sells (6) and Edgar
Allen
Arnott, ed today by Philip Wright, America.
Torborg, Stephenson (8) ; Dob- Margaret Elizabeth Arnott to
The tournament runs
son I 14-12) and Oates. LP- Delila Mulford Lot Mid· Hudson, N.H.; Ray Stafford,
Messersmith (J.B) , HRs- Pin'
'
Thornton, Colo.; Dan Bomillas, through Saturday.
son (7th) , Powell (17th) .
dleport.

i!

r·fll·'. , ·

Meigs

Linescores

Property

Transfers

FootbaU Lea,g~~e action:
May's tOuc,hc!OW!i came after
Baltimore took a 9-.1lead -on
two field SQab by Jim O'Bi'ien
and one liy ' Boris Shlilpak.
Norm Bl!liach pluilged . two
yards for another, sctire.ila.le·ln
the game ~Iter Marty Ii'oiilres
set it up with.a 4Hard.pass to
running .he~ Don. McCauley.
Both !Ul~Sli!i. City touchoowns. came in tl]e last four

~(leCWd to be ready lor the The Saints also reiJOrted that

Dallas Cowboys' Saturday
night game against the New
York Jets. HIU suffered a
bruised elbow and Truax a
bruised knee in Saturday '
night's victory over New
Orlearul.
· Jets' Coach Weeb Ewbank
pl!!ns to realign his defensive
secondary after struggling to a
31-31 tie with the New York
Giants Swtday. A four-way
battle for the two safety spots
is expected between W.K.
Hicks, Gus Hollomon, Chris
Farasopoulos and Phil Wise.

Aminutfesnof
: .lcay
·, anJ
.ohn HuaNrteaTthei·oL
.osnAnsgeles Rams

F• m
.....

-LL

vs

Rh

,
MUNICH (UP!) -ItS
Rhodesia vs. the African
continent today in the first
phase of ihe 20th Olympic
Games: And th~ Internalion~
OlympiC ComnuUee (IOC) Is
lki
I' ht
he~
wa ng ~ 18 rope ,.. een
the two Sides.
Thetightropeiswearing thin
and the politicians,and athletic
ff' ·
bou
mak
o IC!als are a I to
e a
move which will determine
whether the Rhodesians. or
whether 32 to 35 other Afrtcan
countries _will _compete in the
gameswhii;l]openSaturday,
The sUpreme. Council for
,
.
Afnca Sports (SCAS) decided
Monday il.'i :JOi&gt;lus m~mhers
· go ·home if Rhod
" es1a
· lS
· not
Wlll
· exp~ll11&lt;1,
according · to
Abraluim ·.~4ia of Nigeria,
prelldenj:of the
. . council
. . ·
· '.'II'~W!!IIl _orus," Ordia told
the JOC·.. · .
The·sjtu'atiliri, siminering for
more than a week, is'now past
the point of compromise,
African passions are too high.
No Compromise
"There can be no compromise on this issue," Jean-Claude
Ganga of The Congo said. He is
secretary general of the
National Olympic Collliilittee
of Africa (NOCA). ,
After the IOC received the
African ultimatum, they called
in the Rhod~ians, The chief ?f
the Rhodesian team, Oss1e
Plasket, returned to hi.s apartment and promised to do
anything the IOC wanted, even
leave.
"It's in their hands," a

0 de s 1•a

harried Plasket said from an
18th floor apartment in the
Olympic Village "We'll abide
by whatever the IOC say&gt;.
We've always gone by every
little rule"
,
The IOC, after almost 24
oours .of nonstop discussions
ending early today, resumed
its deliberations at mid·
morning in a downtown hotel
with the Rhodesians in at·
tendance again.
"Wewantto talk to them and
gain clarification on a few
points" an IOC spokesman
id '
sa ·
The IOC executive com·
mittee was asked Monday to
·
draw a resolution
on the
situation which co~ld be
· presented to the IOC Congress
for avo
· 1e tod ay. But 1't d'dn'l
1 ,
A Long Day
"Gentlemen I'm tired" one
committee m~ber said: "It's
been a long day, We have an
early start. we were unable to
agree among ourselves."
Ahigh IOC source said if the
Africans win, politics will have
entered the~amea. l"'ntrary to
•olym"lc
po ·t.
.. !• ·
'
~
~'
"It will be sad ·but it will be a
fact," he said. '
The major problem is the
Rhodesian travel document, an
identification card issued by
the organizing committee. The
Africans insist the Rhodesians
did not ·furnish proof of their
identity in the form of a British
passport and thus broke the
agreement reached last year in
Luxemburg.

cornerback Dee Martin and
kicker Charlie Durkee worked
out for the first time in two
weeks Monday.
Defensive tackle Mike
McCoy suffered a broken bone
inhisfootandwillbelosttoihe
Green Bay . Packers in·
definitely. The Packers

·,

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l•

1972

ttto~,~-·;~~;,~bi;'~.

trim!ned three
includ: ~1.$~
. · &gt;;".'-~ :
.•101' ;:~~ first ~ wlih 3;52 ing veteranq~Mi!.rblck Jerry . lncl]l~~?.. &gt; =
: ~. ·.t,l!!!'~ll!a..
_ l~t
,~- ¥1\Y !'1-i.iallf brol!." -~ rel!l&amp;ining.'il!d J1m Otis dove !!,home. Rht!.me, an eighl·yellt ~~- "''' -. ..,."\ii,:;::L"f'o
:~~i14·\hei;• jf~: nll ~P.Il\8 .pver.wlth ~- ~hd left alter a veteran, became e~nda!lle and. , . , ;~ , ~d~it•
tl!e;~~~C':O~Is:a«!!l'tlilit, ' 26:~ard. pa_ss lnte~ference whenthe~P!cked~p .Pete 8-(~t:i•. ~ -~ .Vt
~; a,. li!)~~~·:: S\l~ 'PilM.liY put the ball on the Beatl)ai-d · over the weekend ~= ~ - ~\'t?. ··: ,.i ~
IJI!~~!J!'~·~~~~~u~..lll Baltl,more one.
.
fromCurtStw.Loatsouisn', Nem "-lean.•
The ·~w F~:;_Jalt
111\'
In .-ws
v•. ·~ ~li*J""~
.··· ·... .. "" -"''"~
· ...,lii:
' ee . P_ ~e-ae.~ta&lt;m
.. · ~o1 · .. games
.
'"' . from the camps,
...r.-.......
M~!li!~~l£1f.:W i~'-~ .sco0~d ~lfing: tia~ Calvin HUI and sixth-round pick from Ute fr ·..:.~ cltl ~1:·
i:&amp;-

.·.· &gt; .
:

·. .

~yers,

•

..... '

;~QltS
DUlnp
KC Chiefs, ·2$~l~;~,..
:::;
l&gt;ui~ ~i;I:Nl~ttti '~ - ~· 52 yards to J!!ff·KJnqey

'

back,~on:~:~::~'!it. illld
~ the ·iWP ~ Pftseaaon &amp;11!1\es With a· knee
injury. ,

.. '

'

·~ ~)

N .,'

Walik fractured tw9 rlba and
will he out for a mmth .

SUPER

•:q,,
~-

.

Lee Bou~es• a\llfere&lt;,l a
sprain~ ~ .I\Jid wjl) -l!e lost
to Philad~ ftir 1\ii'o ""b
and retUrn ~u.t BUly

USDA

''1', •

PHONE: 992·3480

~

cl

Corner Mill and Second Sis.

):1.;
;;\'t

" Wo

Reserve Tho Rioht To l. imit Ouonfifles'
'

'lliDOLE?ORT. 0..:• '

\.'1~·
~1 ..

GROUND CHUCK

Drug Traces in

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Lean, Fresh
Beef

R ·Ridge Blood
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. the results of U)e ~.,,,
(UPI)-Was Kentucky Derby
Rlva lUdgeta racjli8 n!\'Ofd
winner Riva Ridge drugged luis puzz)ed raclrl8 Dl&gt;aerven
wben he came in fourth In a this year. {n 818111. ~. be
recent New Jersey race?
luis ellher :Wcl\.:or !Jt:iirileil.Dirt
The owner of the horse, Mrs. of the money-fl~ ·nr.tB and
Helen Tweedy, told newsmen three fourthS. · ·
at her home in Saratoga
The race at M()lllllomth was
Springs that tests she had won by Fr~l, o\Jiled by the
ordered for the horse after his Stavola family. of Middletown,
fourth-place finish in the N.J. King's Bllhgp, owned· by
$100,000 Monmouth In· Craig. F. Culliiil!n Jr. was
vitational Handicap at Mon· second and , Cloudy Dawn,
mouth Park Aug. 5 turned up owned by Wlllla!n atld Thol1188
traces of a tranquilizer known Bancroft, flnilh.ed · 'lhlfd. Nil'·
as phenothiazine.
mally,Onty~h~o· ~
She said a blood test taken . in a race -~· ·tetted. Rlva
the morning after the race, and Ridge was thti S:li) fa~ottlii In
a urine test taken one day later the Monmouth .. race but
both turned up traces of the Freetu paid P4,46:to Win.
drug . She added it was
In ·teatimoi)y l!ist: ·.JUJl!! In
"outrageous lhst anyone could Washington bet.~ :tile- Houle
and would get to the horse" Crime · Committee, ·admitted
before the race.
horse race f(Jer. BobllY· B.JI'De
Mrs. Tweedy said the FBI, explained how he kloll: lidY&amp;nthe New Jersey State Police tage of the fact thi.l only .lfle
and the Thoroughbred Racing first two flnllhers are ~by
Protective Association were drugging the favorite to let a
taking part in an inveStigation slower·. ·hors~ ·. · il'~n. He
of the situation. In June, an specil!cally !llenlilllled ..R!va
admitted fixer testified before Ridge. ,
,
.. ,
a House committee in
"I could take a wagon borse
Washington tbat he fixed races today J1U)ling a wqon and
by drugging the favorite and administer this drug to Rlva
enabling a normally slower Ridge and this wagon horse
horse to win .
would heat Rlva Ridge on any
Hugh L. Mchorter, chairman given day with this drug,"
of the New Jersey RaCing Byrne told }he committee,,
Commission and Keene ·DatnRlva-lWije left SaratO(! a by
gerfield, New Jersey Racing Vlln for the Monmouih race. on
Steward, confirmed in Trenton Thursday, Aug, 3. II takes
that an Investigation was under approximately five · houn to
way by the special racing make the drive. The horae was
squad of the New Jersey State retUrned here on the Sunday
Police.
after theraceandMrs. Tweedy
Mrs. Tweedy said she re- said she preswned the horse
quested the tests because she was under guard while It was
was worried the horse might be at Monmouih. The testa Insick because of his lethargic dicated ihe drug wu adperformance. The owner said ministered from eight to 48
she was "astonished" to Jearn hours before the race.

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Colt$, 'lfbo \ferehl&amp;~.!ldled m
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eooi'
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~ aj~i~lnst Bob Brown of Sat!JiS. wlnn!ng 3-2 ori a $·
hitte~. Above; fr\)llt row, l'i", Miw~ W,!!\:lpn, .Ken Wa~n.

Pit$ ~PJonslilp !'ith uree'

w.~-los(t~cno !Band Ul.' .
,Oi.stdW '*~; ¥ ;beat the

. of tbc!

· Ball Club
1'0. The
se(ciild-li-alip41glleiJ,b)'erroraon the pari of·the loslilg
tearti frphl Sfra'clise.Bcith tearits had 6hilS; bili i3e$t won 11·
4. Tlie championship game had Dale Harrison. of ·!lest pit·

.Wold.)lor)n!1\te; K;en Britto~t; l!C~I)' :r;mr.e, Jacli: Dodd,
Steve R!Jil)sey, Ru8s Cowan; bacli: fo'\V. ~•!'Dey Poole, Jim
Schott, Pat Morris, Ronnie Ru6Se1J; ll!l11-Mmer,JUck'Gibbs,
Larry Shears, Steve Adams. Dale HarrisOn, Don Gar~lson
and Dick Treadway are rnls.!ing in the piclute.
•

.BASEBAL_L st.ANDING.s~ .
·

. . . .·•· .

.

Major League Stondlnps
By United Pross tnternatconal
National. League
Eut
w. I. pet. g.b.
Pittsburgh
72 42 .632
New York
60 63 . ~31 1l'h
Chicago
61 56 .521 12'1&gt;
St. Louis
56 58 ,491 16
Montreal
53 61 .465 19
Philo.
43 72 .374 29'12

. · ..

lEADING ..•. ..~~
&lt;&gt; ~'\ BATTERS ~\I

Leag~e

American League

Detroit
Ball.
New York
Boston
Cleveland
Milwaukee

East
w. I. pel,
63 54 .538
~2 54 .530
60 54 .526
58 56 ,509
55 61 ,474
45 70 .391

g.b.

-· Major
Leaders
By United Press International
leadmg Batters

National league

Skorich

. •
Asking

F r TI me
0
8

'h
g. ab r. h. per.
.
1'12 Cdeno, Hou 104 416 66 145 .347
Jih Wilms, Chi 115 446 70149 .334
7'h Mota, LA
67 279 43 91 .326 CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
17
Baker, All
92 314 38 102 .325 Cleveland Browns haven't won
West
~~~~.·;,,LA
1 ~ ~~i ~~ 1 ;~ ;~~i an exhibition gam~ this sumw. I. pet. g.b.
Oakland
68 48 .586
Sngulln, Pit 105 404 48 128 .317 mer,.~~~ Coa~h NI~ Skor1ch
West
Chicago
67 48 .5a3 '12 Hbner, Pit
86 293 49 93 .317 says 1t s unfair to JUdge us at
w, I. pd. g.b. Minn.
60
.
53 .531 6'12 Alou, St.L
103
3l!8 43 121 312 this time"
Cincinnati
72 4l .626
Kan. City
., , ' ,
.
,
55 58 .487 11'12 Oliver. Pit 110 4A2 66 137 :310
Houston
66 52 .559 7'12 Calli.
51
65 .440 17
American
League
We
re
still
exper1menllng
Los Atlg ,
60 5~ .526 ll'h Texas
•Jj liO
400 211/2
g. ab r. h. pet. with young people," Skorich
A!lanta
53 66 .445 21
Rudi,
Oak
112 460 75 147 .320 said Monday after rev1ewmg
San Fran.
52 66 .441 21'12
Monday's Results
Shblm,KC
98 327 43 103 .315 th B
• "7 1 to lh
~n Diego
45 70 .391 27
Oakland 5 Detroit 1
Carew, Min 104 402 50 126 .313 , e rowns ,.. oss
e
..
Cleveland 10 M inriesola 3
Allen, Chi
11 5 390 74 122 313 1 Detroit lions Sunday at Ann
Monday's Results
Baltimore 3 California 1
Atla 2 Phlla' l, 11 inns
(Oniygames scheduled)
~;~~~-c~I 1 ~~~ ~~ 1 ~6 :~6~ ArSkbor,Mhich:,h k
h
New York 4 Houston 2
Today &lt;$ Probable Pitchers
Braun , Min a2 278 31 a4 .302
one sal.,. . e nows w ere
Cinclnna'ti 4 Montreal 1
(All Time&amp; EDTI
May, Chi
113 401 10 120 .299. the problems w~re. "We
St Louis 4 Los t.lng 0
Bo&gt;lon (Pattin 11 ~ 121 at Otis, KC
105 3'12 53117 .298 play.edaverypoorgameallthe
SanIOntygahies
l;llego 6 Chicago
5
Kansas Cit·YIH edl un d 4.5) ' a' 30
scheduled)
FJSk, Bas
93 326 55 97 .29a way aroiUld," he sa)d.
Home Runs
"I' . . . """ · . led .
Today's Prob;lble Pitchers
P- 't:l~w York (Peterson 13-12) at
National League: Colbert, so . m very ~P~lln . .m
tAll Times EDTJ
Chicago (Bahnsen 16-lJJ, 9 p.m. 34; Stargell , Pitt 2a; Bench, &lt;:in our work offenslV~. and peClncjnnatl (G(Imsley 10·6) at
Oa~land (Odpm 10-4) at
27 · Willi~ms,
May Hou 26· Aaron All f · 1· 1y" h · · 1'd """' · 11
· Montreal' !Morton 5-!0i .- .8.:05 Detr.oi1 (lolich 19,91. 9 p.1r1.
and
Chi 2s.
'
en,s ve • ~ :1!11 ·. ~.,rp
P..m. . .: . . ·. ·,. ·
. · . · · Minnesota · ·1{\oltt HI at · American League : Allen, Chi. destroyed our ·rum:Uilg· game.
Hous!Qij._ '(~o.i!e.ts . '10·51· · aj: Cleveland. '1Perry:'•l8-t2 J, 7:3e 30 ; Cash, .Del 22; . M~rcer, NY, "Our coverage _ mi&gt;ta~e~
N,ew.Yort&lt;. t$eave~ · !MI. 8:0! .p,m:· ·.·.
· · . · · · . .. · ·
03k· 21.
gave them
p.m·. . ..
· , · ·
· · t~ t i fi&gt;i:oia · ( Rya~ 12-m at Epstein and
RunsJackson,.
Batted 1~
· · : SQille
.. ·, ell$)'
· t ,·touch·
·Aitant.a : l~eed .. 10-12) at Baltimore ·IMcNally 12·11L 7::lCJ .NationaJ.' League: stargell, doll'llS ·a.nd -~~ ..duln,' . ha~: :a
· Phila,~IPH!a .J Brao ~cn SCSI. . p.m. ·. . . ·
·
.
· Pitt ~4; Colbert, SO 89 ; Bench, decent P~ ,rush·!lll. day, he
7
: ~t t~~~~fWJ.~·. 11;i~J, :;., t.qs ~~~et:/;~:~~ f).~)li~~o~H~~uk· Cm 88; Will iams, Chi a4; May, said. ~·~e .b)elf livo· Or three
Af1gel~ ,(·t;l9Wni~g 1&gt;:~)', ! 1
·Wedne~ay's · Games
H~;;;:~ican League: Allen, Chi . scoring Ch,al\ce~ with .4ropped
· ·.Chlc~~o : .1-~·~~lns 17~1.Q :•1: :Boston · ~-' :kan ' tty, night
87 , Murcer, NY 70; scott, Mil passes aild those mne penalties
Sao . Di!!9b JArlm. a, 15). 10.30 · New York at 'Chicago
65 ; Darwin, Minn and Jackson , for 126 yards hurt us badly."
p.- m.- '
,
Oakland at Detroit, night
Oak 61 · Pitching
Sk or1c
' h sal'd some ~
' tak ~s
Pittsburgh (Bnles 11 -SJ at Minna! Cleveland night
San Francisco (Marichal 5- JJ), Calif at Baltimore: night
National League: Carlton, can he expected of mexperl·
11 p.m.
Texas at Milw, night
Phil
20-7; Jenkins, Chi 17-10; enced players, "but we had far
Wednesday's Games
Blass,
• Rift -14~;
St. L ·too many even lor that."
~ •¢1iltt ill Montreat. night
"'. :" • l~ ..
14-7; Seaver,
NY Gibson,
14~ 9 . · "
., Houston at New York
American League : Wood, Chi
Detroit quarterback Greg
'J Atla at Phi Ia, night
21
-11
;
lolich,
Det
1
9-9;
Perry
,
Landr1,
taking advantage of
St. Louis at Los Ang, night
Chicago at San Diego, night
~~~~te;~ b:,'k ~:~~'fl~h~:~~- Cnh1 holes m the Cl~veland second·
Pittsburgh at San Fran
16-13.
ary, threw scormg passes of 24
yards and six yards.
"It was a breakdown in
communication," said Browns
SCIOTO DOWNS
free safety Mike Howell. "They
COLUMBUS (UPI)
By United PreSs International
Licking Valley won the came up with some formations
Nationa I League
teams usually don't throw at us
featured $1,000 pace at Scioto
( 11 innings}
Atlanta 001 QOO QOO 01- 2 7 1
Downs Monday to pay $19.80, wttil the regular season."
After tl]ose two touchdowns
Phil a
000 QOO 010 oo- 1 9 1
$4.60and$4 for the 2:04 2&lt;i win. scored, Howell said, "we got
Niekro \1 2· 10) and Williams;
Eileen Strong was second and things ironed out ... but those
Carlton 120-71 and Bateman .
Virgie R Burford to Rachel Scarlet Miss third. The comtwo TDs made a big difference
Houston
000 001 OlD- 2 7 1 Hutton , 2 Acres, Rutland.
bination of Charger Lobell and in the way the game went."
New York 001 000 102- 4 4 2 Ethel Grueser to William Palm Girl, f&gt;-3, paid $98.80 in
The Browns' next opponent Is
Reuss, Ray '(8) and Howard ;
Mallatk (11 -7) and Dyer. LP- Waid Radford, Louise Radford, the nightly double.
Minnesota. The game will be
Ray (10-6). HRs - Cedeno 3.37 Acres, Salisbury.
Attendance was 5,302 and the played Saturday at Cleveland
(19th), Beauchamp, 2 I lsi &amp; Earl S, Shaffer, Gathel L. handie was $238,136.
Stadium.
2nd) .
Shaffer to Herbert Norman,
Cincinnati 100 021 ooo- 4 6 0 Orvin Norman, Sutton-MinersMontreal
000 000 001- 1 8 0 ville.
McGlothlin (7-5) and Plum - Norma L. Hecox to E, M.
mer ; Torrez, Strohmayer (9)
and McCarver . LP- Torrez (1J. Harris, Janet H. Harris, Lot
9) . HRs- Morgan (15th). Jor- 170, Jones 3rd Add., Mid·
gensen 19th) .
dleport.
VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) - San Jose, Calif.; Hugh Driggs,
Chicago
QOO 200 003- 5 9 1 Delila Mulford to Ohio Power
Lois
Becker of Godfrey, ru., Palmyra,
Mich.;
and
San Diego 000 000 204- 6 15 1 Co., Parcels, Salisbury,
Monday became the first Raymond Fryman, Ewing, Ky.
Hands, Bonham 17), Aker (9)
and Hendricks; Kirby, Ross Roderich Elmer Grimm, woman in the history of the
Nadine Ljutic of Yakima,
\9), Schaeffer (9 ), Corkins (9) Marjorie Virginia Grimm to Grand American Trapshooting
Wash.,
was women's winner
and Kendall. WP- Corkins (4- Richard B. Rowe, .11 Acre ,
Tournament to break 200 and Robert Mieczkowski of
7). LP- Aker (4-5) . HRs- Santo Sutton.
(12th) , Pepitone (8th) , Williams
straight
targets.
WintersvUle, Ohio, was jiUlior
Evelyn Thoma, Howard W.
(25th). Jeter (6th ).
Mrs.
Becker,
a
4().year-old
winner in a special event for
Thoma, Sr. to Howard W.
St . Louis
100 100 011 - 4 6 1 Th'onia, Sr., Evelyn M. Thoma, secre\Sry, won the Class A state champions. The men's
Los Ang
QOO 000 ooo- o 7 o
women's title during the first title was to he deci~ed today by
Gibson I14-7) and Simmons; 20 Acres, Salisbury.
dsy
of the 73rd annual event 12 shooters who · broke 100
Sutton. Richert (9) and Yeager, Albert Hill, Jr. , Ora E. Hill to here.
targets apiece.
Cannizzaro (9), LP-Sutton ( 13~ Roger Eugene Hill, Jane Anh
8). HR- Carbo (4th).
Twenty
shooters
in
Class
AA
Hill, .86 Acre, Sutton,
Events scheduled for today
had scores of 200. Five were
(Only games scheduled)
Russell Priddy, Alice Priddy
also
included the Ohio Handi·
American League
to Howard Long, Jennie Long, still lied when the shootoff was
cap, Class Day Doubles and
halted Monday night.
California 000 100 ooo- 1 3 0 'k Acre, Rutland.
Balf
010 020 OOx- 3 5 o
The shootoff will be conclucJ. International Cbampionshlp of
Messersmith, Sells (6) and Edgar
Allen
Arnott, ed today by Philip Wright, America.
Torborg, Stephenson (8) ; Dob- Margaret Elizabeth Arnott to
The tournament runs
son I 14-12) and Oates. LP- Delila Mulford Lot Mid· Hudson, N.H.; Ray Stafford,
Messersmith (J.B) , HRs- Pin'
'
Thornton, Colo.; Dan Bomillas, through Saturday.
son (7th) , Powell (17th) .
dleport.

i!

r·fll·'. , ·

Meigs

Linescores

Property

Transfers

FootbaU Lea,g~~e action:
May's tOuc,hc!OW!i came after
Baltimore took a 9-.1lead -on
two field SQab by Jim O'Bi'ien
and one liy ' Boris Shlilpak.
Norm Bl!liach pluilged . two
yards for another, sctire.ila.le·ln
the game ~Iter Marty Ii'oiilres
set it up with.a 4Hard.pass to
running .he~ Don. McCauley.
Both !Ul~Sli!i. City touchoowns. came in tl]e last four

~(leCWd to be ready lor the The Saints also reiJOrted that

Dallas Cowboys' Saturday
night game against the New
York Jets. HIU suffered a
bruised elbow and Truax a
bruised knee in Saturday '
night's victory over New
Orlearul.
· Jets' Coach Weeb Ewbank
pl!!ns to realign his defensive
secondary after struggling to a
31-31 tie with the New York
Giants Swtday. A four-way
battle for the two safety spots
is expected between W.K.
Hicks, Gus Hollomon, Chris
Farasopoulos and Phil Wise.

Aminutfesnof
: .lcay
·, anJ
.ohn HuaNrteaTthei·oL
.osnAnsgeles Rams

F• m
.....

-LL

vs

Rh

,
MUNICH (UP!) -ItS
Rhodesia vs. the African
continent today in the first
phase of ihe 20th Olympic
Games: And th~ Internalion~
OlympiC ComnuUee (IOC) Is
lki
I' ht
he~
wa ng ~ 18 rope ,.. een
the two Sides.
Thetightropeiswearing thin
and the politicians,and athletic
ff' ·
bou
mak
o IC!als are a I to
e a
move which will determine
whether the Rhodesians. or
whether 32 to 35 other Afrtcan
countries _will _compete in the
gameswhii;l]openSaturday,
The sUpreme. Council for
,
.
Afnca Sports (SCAS) decided
Monday il.'i :JOi&gt;lus m~mhers
· go ·home if Rhod
" es1a
· lS
· not
Wlll
· exp~ll11&lt;1,
according · to
Abraluim ·.~4ia of Nigeria,
prelldenj:of the
. . council
. . ·
· '.'II'~W!!IIl _orus," Ordia told
the JOC·.. · .
The·sjtu'atiliri, siminering for
more than a week, is'now past
the point of compromise,
African passions are too high.
No Compromise
"There can be no compromise on this issue," Jean-Claude
Ganga of The Congo said. He is
secretary general of the
National Olympic Collliilittee
of Africa (NOCA). ,
After the IOC received the
African ultimatum, they called
in the Rhod~ians, The chief ?f
the Rhodesian team, Oss1e
Plasket, returned to hi.s apartment and promised to do
anything the IOC wanted, even
leave.
"It's in their hands," a

0 de s 1•a

harried Plasket said from an
18th floor apartment in the
Olympic Village "We'll abide
by whatever the IOC say&gt;.
We've always gone by every
little rule"
,
The IOC, after almost 24
oours .of nonstop discussions
ending early today, resumed
its deliberations at mid·
morning in a downtown hotel
with the Rhodesians in at·
tendance again.
"Wewantto talk to them and
gain clarification on a few
points" an IOC spokesman
id '
sa ·
The IOC executive com·
mittee was asked Monday to
·
draw a resolution
on the
situation which co~ld be
· presented to the IOC Congress
for avo
· 1e tod ay. But 1't d'dn'l
1 ,
A Long Day
"Gentlemen I'm tired" one
committee m~ber said: "It's
been a long day, We have an
early start. we were unable to
agree among ourselves."
Ahigh IOC source said if the
Africans win, politics will have
entered the~amea. l"'ntrary to
•olym"lc
po ·t.
.. !• ·
'
~
~'
"It will be sad ·but it will be a
fact," he said. '
The major problem is the
Rhodesian travel document, an
identification card issued by
the organizing committee. The
Africans insist the Rhodesians
did not ·furnish proof of their
identity in the form of a British
passport and thus broke the
agreement reached last year in
Luxemburg.

cornerback Dee Martin and
kicker Charlie Durkee worked
out for the first time in two
weeks Monday.
Defensive tackle Mike
McCoy suffered a broken bone
inhisfootandwillbelosttoihe
Green Bay . Packers in·
definitely. The Packers

·,

•

.f

•

,

,•

•

;,•

I

;

'

•. •

.

.'
l•

1972

ttto~,~-·;~~;,~bi;'~.

trim!ned three
includ: ~1.$~
. · &gt;;".'-~ :
.•101' ;:~~ first ~ wlih 3;52 ing veteranq~Mi!.rblck Jerry . lncl]l~~?.. &gt; =
: ~. ·.t,l!!!'~ll!a..
_ l~t
,~- ¥1\Y !'1-i.iallf brol!." -~ rel!l&amp;ining.'il!d J1m Otis dove !!,home. Rht!.me, an eighl·yellt ~~- "''' -. ..,."\ii,:;::L"f'o
:~~i14·\hei;• jf~: nll ~P.Il\8 .pver.wlth ~- ~hd left alter a veteran, became e~nda!lle and. , . , ;~ , ~d~it•
tl!e;~~~C':O~Is:a«!!l'tlilit, ' 26:~ard. pa_ss lnte~ference whenthe~P!cked~p .Pete 8-(~t:i•. ~ -~ .Vt
~; a,. li!)~~~·:: S\l~ 'PilM.liY put the ball on the Beatl)ai-d · over the weekend ~= ~ - ~\'t?. ··: ,.i ~
IJI!~~!J!'~·~~~~~u~..lll Baltl,more one.
.
fromCurtStw.Loatsouisn', Nem "-lean.•
The ·~w F~:;_Jalt
111\'
In .-ws
v•. ·~ ~li*J""~
.··· ·... .. "" -"''"~
· ...,lii:
' ee . P_ ~e-ae.~ta&lt;m
.. · ~o1 · .. games
.
'"' . from the camps,
...r.-.......
M~!li!~~l£1f.:W i~'-~ .sco0~d ~lfing: tia~ Calvin HUI and sixth-round pick from Ute fr ·..:.~ cltl ~1:·
i:&amp;-

.·.· &gt; .
:

·. .

~yers,

•

..... '

;~QltS
DUlnp
KC Chiefs, ·2$~l~;~,..
:::;
l&gt;ui~ ~i;I:Nl~ttti '~ - ~· 52 yards to J!!ff·KJnqey

'

back,~on:~:~::~'!it. illld
~ the ·iWP ~ Pftseaaon &amp;11!1\es With a· knee
injury. ,

.. '

'

·~ ~)

N .,'

Walik fractured tw9 rlba and
will he out for a mmth .

SUPER

•:q,,
~-

.

Lee Bou~es• a\llfere&lt;,l a
sprain~ ~ .I\Jid wjl) -l!e lost
to Philad~ ftir 1\ii'o ""b
and retUrn ~u.t BUly

USDA

''1', •

PHONE: 992·3480

~

cl

Corner Mill and Second Sis.

):1.;
;;\'t

" Wo

Reserve Tho Rioht To l. imit Ouonfifles'
'

'lliDOLE?ORT. 0..:• '

\.'1~·
~1 ..

GROUND CHUCK

Drug Traces in

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Lean, Fresh
Beef

R ·Ridge Blood
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. the results of U)e ~.,,,
(UPI)-Was Kentucky Derby
Rlva lUdgeta racjli8 n!\'Ofd
winner Riva Ridge drugged luis puzz)ed raclrl8 Dl&gt;aerven
wben he came in fourth In a this year. {n 818111. ~. be
recent New Jersey race?
luis ellher :Wcl\.:or !Jt:iirileil.Dirt
The owner of the horse, Mrs. of the money-fl~ ·nr.tB and
Helen Tweedy, told newsmen three fourthS. · ·
at her home in Saratoga
The race at M()lllllomth was
Springs that tests she had won by Fr~l, o\Jiled by the
ordered for the horse after his Stavola family. of Middletown,
fourth-place finish in the N.J. King's Bllhgp, owned· by
$100,000 Monmouth In· Craig. F. Culliiil!n Jr. was
vitational Handicap at Mon· second and , Cloudy Dawn,
mouth Park Aug. 5 turned up owned by Wlllla!n atld Thol1188
traces of a tranquilizer known Bancroft, flnilh.ed · 'lhlfd. Nil'·
as phenothiazine.
mally,Onty~h~o· ~
She said a blood test taken . in a race -~· ·tetted. Rlva
the morning after the race, and Ridge was thti S:li) fa~ottlii In
a urine test taken one day later the Monmouth .. race but
both turned up traces of the Freetu paid P4,46:to Win.
drug . She added it was
In ·teatimoi)y l!ist: ·.JUJl!! In
"outrageous lhst anyone could Washington bet.~ :tile- Houle
and would get to the horse" Crime · Committee, ·admitted
before the race.
horse race f(Jer. BobllY· B.JI'De
Mrs. Tweedy said the FBI, explained how he kloll: lidY&amp;nthe New Jersey State Police tage of the fact thi.l only .lfle
and the Thoroughbred Racing first two flnllhers are ~by
Protective Association were drugging the favorite to let a
taking part in an inveStigation slower·. ·hors~ ·. · il'~n. He
of the situation. In June, an specil!cally !llenlilllled ..R!va
admitted fixer testified before Ridge. ,
,
.. ,
a House committee in
"I could take a wagon borse
Washington tbat he fixed races today J1U)ling a wqon and
by drugging the favorite and administer this drug to Rlva
enabling a normally slower Ridge and this wagon horse
horse to win .
would heat Rlva Ridge on any
Hugh L. Mchorter, chairman given day with this drug,"
of the New Jersey RaCing Byrne told }he committee,,
Commission and Keene ·DatnRlva-lWije left SaratO(! a by
gerfield, New Jersey Racing Vlln for the Monmouih race. on
Steward, confirmed in Trenton Thursday, Aug, 3. II takes
that an Investigation was under approximately five · houn to
way by the special racing make the drive. The horae was
squad of the New Jersey State retUrned here on the Sunday
Police.
after theraceandMrs. Tweedy
Mrs. Tweedy said she re- said she preswned the horse
quested the tests because she was under guard while It was
was worried the horse might be at Monmouih. The testa Insick because of his lethargic dicated ihe drug wu adperformance. The owner said ministered from eight to 48
she was "astonished" to Jearn hours before the race.

MARKEIWe: .O_pen
Daily ~ _
toJO • Sun. 10 to l
Accept Federal Food Stamps

U.

s, GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

TEA

BOILED HAM
LDw Pri$
·
39
..,

,.

,;

.,.

POLISH

' ,,
.,,

SAUSAGE

.,
'"

1

lb.

r

OR

REGULAR

16 oz.

,6 9e

pak
16 oz.
bots.

WITH A 13.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

16 OL
bots.

PRINGLE

It's Mark V For Frozen Foods

POTATO
CHIPS

SCOTLAD
ICE CREAM
'NORTH STAR ICE CREAM

SANDWICHES

2

pk.

on~

SUGAR

69· ~

5 lb.

6 pak

bag

FROZEN
TWIN POPS

Illinois Woman Hits 200

With Purchase of 4 Light Bulbs

NORTH STAR
FUDGE BARS
Say hello to an olc;l friend.

Macaroni
and
Spaghetti

BANANA~

10 lb. bag

2 lb.
box

tfii:t

GEnERAl TElEPHOnE

Sale!

ur oFF

HUNrs

RED CROSS

POTATOES

Its heyday was in the Roaring Twenties
and now it's making a comeback.
General Telephone has just added this
Candlestick phone to its decorator line.
You can get it in black or red or white.
And you can get it simply by calling .
our business office.
Just tell them you want to talk to an
old friend.

Be~r

8 Pak-

SPRITE

. 89'

bois.

, I

lb.

Dad's Root

DOUBLE

COCA-COLA

R COLA
8

"

SIRLOIN
TIP STEAK
Fine Flavor Beef

THURSDAY QNLY!

'

USDA Choice U. S. Government Inspected

EATWELL

POR.K

CANNED

and

BEANS.

39~ s~:sl

NESJEA

'Liquid

PLA'tlq

WITH LEMON

Detergent ·
Giant
Size

4

oz.

Jar .

RU~BER, GLOVES

Wltll 1 Frtt, Extro Right Hond
oro
.. FrH. g· ,.
.
R11.
1' With
.1.49
Cou,:l'

59~:-,...

7-··

GOod AI Mlrk V Only

AT MARK V STORE

.EXPIRES :' Sarure!Ay_

CRACKERS

MACKEREL

4

Hb.

cans
for

r .----I

Ill

HI·HO

box

39~

-------.-----,
I

I
I

I
I

I
1
1

I

:

WITH THIS CQYPON WHEN
YOU BUY A, 14l0Z. JAR OF

1·

l

INSTANT ·-

1

·

MAxWELL ~·COFFEl!

.I'
~

AT-MARK V STORE

I

1
:·
OZ.
JAR
ONLY'
$l69
·::=..;
.
.
l
L. --- -------------- .!·!':!L.__ _....- .:.J..
v -STORE eouiiON--- -- '--- 1
SPECIAL COUPON DEAL!
I

1 Coupon Per Custoinor-Expirn 1-2,·72'

'. ·.....
'·.

~--------------~-------,
'

.

I
I

WlNS NIN'I1I
NORTHFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Irish · Donna won the
featu•ed nlnih race at North·
fleld Park Mon&lt;lay night,
covering the mile in 2:05 U to
pay f/ .II, $UO and $3. Able
Cleo was second with Robert
Devkl third.

1

Reg. 99'

10 pak

I
I
•

I.

NESTEA '

J

'

\

.

69-~

Mtb Coutioll

I
!
1

I
· I

l._____:_______~~----___j
~·

r---~-

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUYA .1 0 .OZ. JAR Of
Ua...J:.STANT

•

IIIMII~LL ..... COFFEE

I,
I
I

I
I

I
I
I

r
I
I

You can Redeem
on 3 lb. can Of GJ1UUt

,·

MAXWELL ·HOUSE ·COFFEE

3

-

II. can S
Willi
Coupon. .•
.

2 e39'
~·

�..
'

·,·,:~·;;;;:;=~===:=;:::::=:~,:•.:::cE~s~======;;~;;:.;;;;;~~~.t::~.~O~:mt-:·~·~=~Y~LI~TI=LE~ST:O~R~E:S~FI=B=R=E=B=O=AR:D::ST=O=R=A=G=E=C=H=E=.S: :T. .:S·~~'fh=e:=:i:===.~=..
A DISCOUNT
..

': v.E'J..L SAVE YOU MONEY- COME!!

ARE
IN
EFFECT

.

Chest style is s ize 24"xlllh"x11" or select the
model for closet shelfs or under the bed .
Added storage space for home or college.

WEDNESDAY

DEPARTMENT STORE

·.

~

9:30A.M.
BE HEREI

POINT·PLEASANT OR MASON

REGULAR $1.19 VALUE! 64 CRAYONS

R

SUPER SPECIAL! .

¢

All The Colors
They!ll Ever Need!

1&lt;

DUPONT NYLON BRISUES!

TEENS AND LADIES

Plastic
Handle!
Full Size10 Ribs-

· Styrene Plastic
Case
Easy To Read

~

3

FOR

8

¢

.

$ 87

FAMOUS
"MR.
LEGGS"
BRAND
6 inch METAL

·MEN'S ORLON
DRESS SOCKS
' ONE SIZE
.

Fit~ io .to 13
Match His

·

·

· "6 ·7·. ¢.

Pants From Our
Wide Selection!

FOR YOUR MANY USES
FAVORITE 'DERBY' BRAND!

BOYS WHITE COTTON

PRESSED MASONITE

CLIP BOARD
FIRM
~
METAL

THEME
COVERS

Size 72x90 • Fits Full or Twin Size
Fully Washable • Will Not Mildew

.4 •o•99~

F?:o;hion Mate Plaid Ensemble

Typewriter

$ 44

Matching 6"x9"
Notebook

..-.-..------'"'!1 ,.__"Bic". .____
School Special·

~nop

BRAND-REGULAR $2.47

87• EVERYDAY PRICE
40 HOUR TYPE
For
Your
Sleepy
Heads!

IT'

$ 99

2-" Bic" Ba II
Point Pensand
1-Fine Line
Accountants Pen
. While They Last!

FOR GIRLS

GIRLS
PANTIES

KNEE Hl
SObK.S

AND TEENS

'

.

Novelty

.

.
.
57

Siz~s· .

.
6-8'1,:! •

BOYS'

REGULAR OR SLIMS.,..:S·I IE. 6 To 18
1

$ 87

•

•

VL.'SI•T•S•H·O·P.·'P~'ERS MAR:F•lflRST!

ORNAMENTAL BRASS FINISH

MAGAZINE RACK
..

For homo or college- one
of fhOM hlndsomo rocko
will occumulote tho
mogozine clutter.

$ 22

· eWITH ZIP

And

SIDES

19c
:

....

VE - VISIT .YOUR NEAR[ST

44~

.1

"BIG" PEIIS·.···
.

PR.

Click Pen .

,' • .

'

. 15

.

cer1t,

changer or maitual changer.
Separate volume and tone
controls.
Stylene
plastic
carrying case. operates on 6
batteries, not included .

Complete
With
Ear· Piugs

$2 9
·

Dozens of School Items
Not Advertised!
F.irst Choice For All Grades!

GIRLS FALL
PANTS
For

. wtton

Slips
Size
4
To
14

7¢

See Thru

Vin~

BUBBLE
TOP

If its new - we have it . Come see all
the new color tones which make this

fall shoe season very exciting. A
shoe for every age .

........~~-IJ:;ED TO SAVE YOU CASH!

STARTS
WEDNESDAY

I

4 ' : ;:

ERS

' COMPLETE NEW SELECT,ION

Vacuum Oeaner Ba2s
3 Pack and 4 Pack
To fit most any sweeper!
Disposable bags in 3.
or 5 packs. 16 diflertnt styles to fit
4

Etectrolux, EUreka,
GE, Hoover, Lewyt,
Singer. Sunbeam, or

Wnflnghouse
SwHpars.

FOR THIS SAV.I

9:30
AM

school, for play / for watching TV or

OPEN SUNDAY

1 PM TO 6 PM

UMBREllAS

r-&lt;.:

WHAT BUYS
FOR BOYS!
Entire Stock Reduced!

'411 ..

eVIVIDJIOT COLORS
•BLUE INK:
.REG:

~

boats, etc. Automatic program

$894

$394

NEW
LOW
PRICE!

Oxfords • Slipons _
Loafers • Klunks

Girls

. i-~~.J AS SEEN ON TV!

"Bi~~:

./tl

Mart , Specially priced for back.to·schooi
budgets. Sizes 3 to 14.

HEELS! BUMP ·TOES!

1

, U

o~ ·\na.on or-"!C~Utdoon,

gabbing with her best friend . She lives in
pants, so get her new wardrobe at Shoppers

WOMEN'
SHOES

SCARLET- For
Pl. Pleasant or Wahama ·.

Oenims go lore in oil fhe newest foshion '
colors ond looks. Visit Shoppers· Mart,
you'll want severol pair.
~· I

s

Shrink Vests come in tlnorted jacquard
patterns . Sires small, medium and
Ia rge. Add seve ra I to your wardrobe.

I

is Expensive

11
.......
.•

BROWN OR WHITE
•SMOOTH OR

School gals love 'them. Orion Acrylic

.

and tumble are now in DUr store. '

DRESSY BOOTS

AND MEN

Coffe~dUtlgs

school pants he'll need lor rough :•;

TO

Only the Look

SELECT FROM A WIDE A'RRA~ OF STYLES

The

$244

ORLON ''SHRINK" VESTS

Built Up_jhoijlder

MEN'S

AND

'

' While or Black

.PR.

18

THIS FALL'S HIT!

i;, browns, blacks or new

camblnalians. Wanted cap taos, moe
toes, wing tips In siipon or oxford styles.
Wt have the Shots he'll WOnt, priced to
save you just a iittlt .mare.
..

For Girls, Misses, Teens, liidies

$1

FOR BOYS

1

Bold Bright
Colors, .Inscribed
.
"The Whole Thing"
"Try It, You'll Uke It"
"I Needed That" • "Smile"
"It's The Real Thing"
"The Devil Made Me Do It"

414

KRINKL£ VINYLS

-

built for action!

I
and we've got th.e most!

:~~;

PORTABLE S-TRACK
STEREO TAPE
PLAYER

Solids · Stripes!

,g~~::~~:c~ .$2~, ,. ~·. '.$3~

32 To 38

FAMOUS TV SAYINGS~!

DRESS SHOES
FOR
YS' AND MEN

Paper

White
Navy . Denim
SIZES
4 to 1o
.

White ;nd Colors

9-11 ·. ·.

Last!_· - - - - S - E T..· 1-··-·_ _ __....__ _ _~..TO,...'B".-.T0_$_11_

~~

GIRLS ·NYLON

"TO SAVE
YOU
AWEE
BIT
MORE"

1

l:.--.....

Screen Prints!

SIZES 4 TO 14

and ~. ~·

77~

100 Count

Th~e Book

s~yl••·

All the looks in pants are here. Cboose from corduroys, denims,
cotton, nylon, polyester or crushed velvets. A wide selection of
patterns in falls' news I shades . Dozens to selct from .

"Heads Up"

· · Very Special Buy- Regular,$2.98

Matching 8110

new Fail

Skinny Rib Nylons! Flame Tunics!

PAPER
· BACK
BOOKS

"Acele" Acetate
Tricot

Straps galore

·

are priced to save you

VALUES TO 7Sc

you money .

A Sl.OO Value!

3 Ring Notebook Binder

our shoes

$

our fabulous array now - we'll save

THEME BOOKS
36 Sheets In Each Book
Wire Bound-

terrific t0pS

ORGANIZE
YOUR
LITTLE ONES
ITEMS!

FOR
SCHOOL WEAR

COVERLESS

for college or high school girls, an

added must tor tne wor1e1ng 91r1S.

Binder
and
Paper

$1.50 Value

CIGAR STYLE SOIOOL BOX

before our stock is depleated .

collection of acrvlic oant sets. A delight

FTIJ.ED
BINDERS

"Beacon" Blend Blanket

The captains coat, the pant coat, the ring-a-ding coat we have them all. Priced to help your strained budget.
Sizes 8 to 18 or 40 to 44 .

money . Select theirs
now from a rainbow of

Acrylic or Bonded styles. Select her's now -

PLASTIC
RULER

Corduroys! Vinyl Suedes! Wool Plaids!
Tapestries. The Wanted Styles!

TREMENOUS SELECTION!

SCHOOL
Gets Them

As usual -

..

Bursling into fall wifh • duzilng·

ea~!~ _$ 27

GO" BACK TO SCHOOL

SEVERAL COLORS
AND
DESIGNS!

FALL
·PANTSETS

3 Fasteners
8 Colors

12 INCH SIZE-WET LOOK VINYL

~&lt;egular

'

9~

CLASP

:FULL 2'12 LB.-VERY SPECIAL!

GIRLS TWO PIECE·.
PANT SETS

4~
,.

Why
Pay
More?

Protractor

¢

PR.

fOR BOYS &amp;GIRlS
School-Time
or
Dress Styles

SCHOOL TIMERS' FAVOR IT ESf

Sharpeners

7 IN ONE

'

Regular 1$C'
Erasers 13c

'

'

Girl or Teacher approved - As the wanted
clothes for claS5 room wearing . Sins 4 to 14 In

ERASERS
For Ink . Penci I
Pencil Top!

'

EA.

EA.

-

-

VINYL
PLACE
MATS

BACK·
TO· SCHOOL

t,

.

25~

10 Colors

4

, Plastic Pencil

COMPASS
PR.

s~

'

__
1

PR.

CAR COATS

SUNDAY 1 PM
TO 6 PM

: ·1:·14

Cinnamon. A 89c Value.

_WE RESERVE .THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES - NONE SOW TO DEALERS

FOAM BACK

. $ 87

AND

HANDY
STA.Pl.ER

$ 99

If-

,

Color tones of Beige, Taupe or

$394 '------~

OPEN 6 NIGHTS
'TIL 9 PM

WITH· h' S_TAPLES

ERASER
PENCILS

colors, tweed etfects, cartoon pockets
- A varied selection. Sizes 29 Ia 31.

'Side Coil Bound
Jumbo 150 Pages -

'Perfect Quality -

JUMBOS~

Long wearing fashionable jeans for the

AND

39

The crushable style. One size fits

ail women from 90 lbs . to 150 lbs.

FULL BED SIZE

-

high .schooler or co11011e man. Solid

Punched To Fit
Your Binders -

$294

Includes dress shirls, too.
Every summer shirf in our
stock goes at this low, low
sale price.

Sheer Seamless Nylons

Everything
that's
new
is
represented in our stock . Tri~med
or basics in a host of fabncs &amp;
colors. Sizes 32 to 44 .

Plaid, Green Plaid. Blue l'la1dl

SPORT
SHIRTS

SPECIAL VALUES

BLOUSES

BEDSPREADS

With Fashion Flare Legs

5 SUBJECT NOTEBOOK
s Hole

$
WOVEN PLAID

Jeans

REGULAR 98c VALUE!

PANTYHOSE

WOMEN'S PANTIES

Smart

~

SHORT SLEEVE

'Acele' Acetate Tricot

Dial

PENCILS
Assorted
Colors!

"LUX" QUALITY"~ :lEG. '3.98

ELECfRIC ALARNiO..OCK

THEY'LL NEED PLENTY!

HAIR
BRUSHES

MEN'S

Colorful Vinyl Prints

WITH BUILT-IN SHARPENER
64 DIFFERENT
COLORs-

VALUES
TO
$3.98

GREAT PRICE FOR SCHOOL, TIMERS!

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

Half Round Brush
Ladies' Tease Brush
Hole Purse
Brush
· 80 Hole
Hair Brush
Pack of
EA.
2 Tease Brushes

UNDER THE BED OR CHEST STYLE!

STOP THOSE MESSY SPILLS!

IWf-Gallon Carton

BOYS SPORT SHIRTS
,All Short Sleeve Styles
Every shirt reduced at this one low

price. Styles he'll wear neor ytar

Styrene Plastic fits

round.

Snugly Around

Mi:::! 64'
: Quart Holder 54'

I
I

�~""

'' r' f

r ,. f

r( •'

.jJ

'

r ' ,. '

rI

.-

J

'

I

. I .

I

"

.....~thi t~so~~.J•~Ii9f~p(i~y. o. Auglllt 22. m2
o- l'he Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 22, 1972

Congo-Sayre Vows Taken
On June. 17th at Portland

.,

.

,•

•

...

POR'n;AND - BackgroWJd
arrangements of tinted pink,
yellow and blue carnations and
dillsles provided the setting for
the wedding of Miss Shirley
SUe Congo, daughter of Mr. and
IItts. Gerie Congo of Long
BottOm, and Mr. Aaron Lee
Sart:e, son of Mrs. Doros Sayre
and the late Oliver Sayre, Sr.,
Pot!Jand.
The wedding was an event of
June 17 at seven o'clock at the
Portland Methodist amrch,
the Rev. Edward J. Griffith,
Loilg Bottom, officiating, using
the double ring ceremony.
Providing organ numbers was
Mrs. Ruth Ebersbach of Portland, which were, "I Love You
Truly," Hfhine Alone,"
11
1.m'd 's Prayer," theme from
"Love Story," "Romeo and
Juliet," 8Jld 14Because."

.'.,.
...
.. .:ti

:

.... BETTY CANARY

,.'

..•.

"'~

••
~
~

••

..••
~

••'

,
•

••

••
•

••

.

Given m marrtage by her
father, Mr. Gene Congo, the
bride wore a gown of white
satm wtth lace overlay with
long lace sleeves and matching
floor length veil. She carrted a
bouquet of whtte roses, daistes
and baby's breath on a white
Bible Her only jewelry was an
antique locket loaned by
her aiDlt, Mrs. Eileen
Polk, Portland. Her matd
of honor was her sister, Miss Sharon Congo,
of Long Bottom, bndesmatds,
Miss Loretta Middleswart and
Miss Vickie Johnston, Portland; Miss Brenda Skmner and
Miss· Debra Shroyer of
Columbus, flower girl Moss
Teresa Brace, niece of the
groom, Racme
All wore long dotted Swtss

Managerial Trait
May Be Overcome

My husband says I have a managenal personaillv
That's what he says when he's bemg pohte At othe1
hmes he says, "You're always checkmg up on people' ·
I adm1t to th1s flaw m my character I am the sort of
person who says, "Would you please see that the lawn
mower IS put m the ~arage'" Then, as he returns from
the garage I ask, "Dtd you put away the lawn mowe1 , ..
The bad habtt has been brought about by loo many
years of checkmg up on too many children
No woman in her nght rnmd believes a chtld goes to
lhe garage to put away the lawn mower. He starts for
the garage to put away the lawn mower Along the way
he dtgs lor llshmg worms, tr~es out a neighbor's new
catcher's mttt, and ftxes the back wheel of h1s b1ke
Three days later the police brmg your mower to the
front door, tell you 1t had been stolen and abandoned m
a state park , and you learn your son never got to the
garage.
And, as I pomt out to my husband, my bad habtt 1s
restrained to the pomt of only checkmg up on simple,
ordmary, around-the-house type questiOns .
I have 9ever, for example, called h1m at work and
asked, "Dtd you gel out thai order for General Motors? "
I have promised to make a dthgent attempt at break·
mg th1s habit of mine and he 1s domg hts best to help
me. I am not sure l approve of hts methods, but sarcasm
can work wonders.
The other day-three minutes after askmg htm to
please roll up the car wmdows-1 asked, "Dtd you roll
up the wmdows?"
"No," he replied patiently. I've been busy hackmg the
·
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children to pteces "

Second Picnic Of Family Held
The second Badgley picnic or
the summer was held Sunday,
Aug 20, at Forked Run Lake
There was a basket lunch,
!lshmg and swliiUIIing.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clolsl Badgley, Mr and Mrs
Vernon Donahue, Mr and Mrs
Ralph Badgley, Mr. and Mrs
Steven Badgley and daughter,

Kelll, Mr Hershel Badgley, and Mrs
Lenna
Brinker of Racme, Mr
and Mrs. Arnold Anderson
and daughters, Brenda and
Lori Ann, Mr and Mrs Ted
Willford and daughters, Ltsa
and Ktmberly, of Long Bottom, Mr and Mrs Raymond
Teaford and daughter, Suste,
and son, Clmsl, of Mmersvtlle

Smith-Stobart Reunion Held
The Smi•h-Stobart !amtly
reumon was held at Brady's
Run Park m Rochester, Pa. on
TWO INDUCTED
James L. Mash, Jr , son of
Mr and Mrs James Mash,
Mtddleporl, Rl. I, and Sktppy
Ray Moore, son of Mr and
Mrs. Glenn Moore, Langsville,
Rl I, were inducted mlo lhe U
S. Navy Monday They wtll
lake lhetr baste trammg at
Great Lakes, Ill

- The third annual Cleland Hines, uoon't You Qutt.'' and
famtly reumon was ~eld several readmgs were given
Sunday, Aug. 13, at Forest wntten by Claire Dale Stans·
Acres Park wtth 135 in at- bury.
tendance. Flora McClure, who
Gtfts were presented to
presided over the busmess Manon McClure, oldest; Laura
sesswn, read the mmutes of the Rose Cleland, youngest, Leroy
1911 reunwn. Janice Hampton Bowman, farthest distance
wa:; elected secretary, and traveled, and Floyd Cleland,
Aundene Wheeler, treasurer most children present, (nine).
The next reumon wlll be held
Unable to attend were Mrs
the second Sunday m August at Frances Coltertll of Columbus,
Forest Acres park
who bad recenUy sustained a
Amustcal program followed, bram concusswn from a fall,
!ealurmg Claire D. Stansbury and Weyland Cleland of
on g01tar, Frank Cleland, Angola, N V , although mne or
vwlm, and Floyd Hendncks hts chtldren dtd attend.
gwtar. Recttattons were preAltendmg were Mr and Mrs
sen~d by Dtana McClure, "I'm
Harold Oxley, Ml' and Mrs
Just Fme," and by Karen Dale Stansbury, R. D. 3,

Katie's Korner ,
By Katie Crow
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sayre
Mr and Mrs Waller Walsh,
Pamela, Gary and Thomas,
Mr and Mrs Clarence Nutter,
Sr. of Akron, Mrs. Rose
Pelfrey, Davtd and Jeffrey,
Doylestown, Ohio, Mr and
Mrs Clarence Nutter, Jr and
chtldren of Canton, Mr and
Mrs Dale Tnbble, daughter
Sue of Buffalo, W Va , Brenda
Skmner and Debra Shroyer of
Columbus, Mr and Mrs
James Oliver and son, Mike, of
Rto Grande, and Mr. and Mrs
Ronald Swam of Reedsvtlle

POLLY'S POINTERS
Use Comslareh lo Clean
Buckskin Coal Collal'
B) POLLY CR \M ER

DEAR POLL Y- LOJ na B co uld genet ously sp11nkle the
collar on he1 buckskm coal wtth DRY co1 nsta1ch Rub m
gently wtth the fmgers and leave on for 24 hout s so the
co1 n s~atc h has tune to absmb body otis Gently btush
away and then tepeal 11 some slams 1em am Th1s ts also
good fo1 temovmg grease !1om cement. but allow 1l to
1emam for a week befot e sweepm g tl up Also 1epeat tf
necessa1 v-MRS E Z
DEAR POLLY-J suggest that Lot na B uses an a1t
gum ez aser lo erase the marks It om the collar of her
buckskm eoat that cannot be ~rv cleaned She should have
a clean collar afler ustn g th1s alo ng wtth a bit of elbow
grease A frtend who used to work w1th leather told me
th1s years ago and I clean my suede apparel and pu1 ses
thts wa y all the ttm e - GEORGJA

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Polly's Problem

,, DEAR POLLY-I am a seamstress and as re' cychng of rnatenals seems so 1mportant today I
wonder what use can be made of wooden thread
spools Also, 1 am completely d1 sg usted w1th the
compames who are puttmg thr ead on plastic spools
whtch. as far as l know are unusa ble man y way f
,, would app1 ectale hearmg from so meone - EMMA
,!if ~~ ":"H . . "
•:m: i.l; ~ ..., ~ ¢1

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve 1s wtth those people who
Aug 12 wtth 147 persons atstop
m the atsle at the supermarket to have a long vtstl
tending
and
thetr
carts block the a1sle so no one else can gel
From th1s area were Mr. and
thtough.-MARY
B
Mrs George Stobart, Sr ,
George Stobarl, Jr and
DEAR POLLY- To keep double kml fabttcs from
Buddy, Mr and Mrs John stt·etchmg when shorlemng sktrt s or slacks I z1gzag st1leh
Stobarl, Shawn and Shanon; hrst, cut off lhe excess and hem - MRS G B
Mr and Mrs. Roger Stobart
DEAR GIRLS-This will also prevent anv tcndencv
and Shelhe, Mr and Mrs Cectl toward raveling, as knits do not take well to being turned
Rtce , Donna, Teme , Btll , under at the top of the hem. The greatest tr1ck ever when
Ron me and Joey, Mr and Mrs putting in such a hem by hand Is to hold the edge of the
John E Hunnell, Tarrume, hem down !rom 14- tu 1h -ineh as you sew . then catch the
Debbie, and Behnda Rabren of thread through the back or the hem and then to the back
Tampa, Fla Next year's o! the garment. When the hem Is In, lnrn the edge back
up, press It In place and have no di sfigunnl( line ~&gt;here
reumon wtll be In Ohw
the stitching Is -POLL V

WKTISCHIIL
Headquarters
fOr

Bulova
Anytime is the right
ume !or a beauuful
new Bulova watch.
And the nght place
1s nght here.
We have an aclmirable
selection of a 11 kmds
of Bulova watches.
In pnce ranges 10
please every person,
every purse
lllustm ted: Two new 17 Jewel
models. modestly priced at
$40 each

GOESSLER
JIWILIY STORE
COURTST.

gowns With yellow and white
accessories and camed whtle
datsy bouquets wtlh whtle
streamers Michael Brace,
nephew of the groom of Racine,
was rmgbearer. Russell Gest
was best man, Carl Gest,
Denrus Supe, Rick Keehner
and Torn Lehmer, ushers,
Delta Theta Sigma, fratarmty
brothers of the groom.
The bnde's mother wore a
navy blue sleeveless dress wlth
whtte accessories and the
groom's mother wore a hght
blue dress wtth white accessories and corsages of bluetmted carnations
A receptiOn was held in the
church basement followmg the
ceremony. White carnations
and tmted da1s1es formed the
centerpiece on the bride's
table. The three tiered weddmg
cake was topped wtth
rntmature brtde and groom.
MISS Lola Greer or Long
l!ottom and MISs Mary Congo,
Portland, prestded atlhe table,
and Miss Carolyn Rhodes,
Portland, regtstered guests
For her travelmg costume
the new Mrs Sayre wore an
orchtd sleeveless dress with
sage !rom her bridal bouquet
They restde at 164\2 Brehl
Avenue, CIJlumbu•
Mrs. Sayre IS a 1971 graduate
of Southern High School, and
1972graduate of the Ohw State
School of Cosmetology at
Colwnbus. Mr. Sayre 1s a 1969
graduate or Southern High
&amp;hoot and 1s a Juntor at Ohw
State Uruverstty. He 1s a
member of Delta Theta Stgrna
fratermty, the Ag-Ed Soctety
and the Pre-Vet Club,
CIJlwnbus
Guests at the wedding were

POMEROY

does I)Ot carry the state.
''I lllbik we have an obligation -to P!'otect tbe Interest of
Ohib II) ter!JlS of su{JIIl)rtl.ll8 the
PQsitlon which will msure that
Ob10 wUI have the largest
f19SSible delegation m future
convenUons," said Oluo ChBlr·
man John S. Andrews in a
statement Mondav.

·o j Cleland Family on Aug. 13th

white accessories and a cor-

By BETTY CANARY

7!'elegation ,in No Mood for Convention Floor Fight ,

135_Attend Annual Reunion

DEAR POLLY- Metal showe1 cwl am 11ngs a1 t&gt; mosl
helpful when mcluded m
the campmg eq111pment 111
our camper tratler I use
such a hook to hold my
measurmg spoons and cups
to g e the r Another holds
sc1ssors, plastic tape and a
pen kmle We also use them
lo hold safety pms. bobby
pms , paper chps , rubber
bands and two sewmg
machine bobbms- one !tiled
w1lh black thread and the
other wtlh whtte that may be needed for mendmg. All
these are put m one box Anolhet such hook holds spare
trader, house and car keys m case those bem g used are
lost or nusplaced - TERESA

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~~&amp;."":::&amp;.'-"'&amp;:.O:~..:·::~·=·:·:·:s. :·:·:·:·~

Social f
:::
Calendad
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TUESQAY
SOTHEI\N LOCAL Band
Boosters, 7 p rn Tuesday at the
school Important bus~ness lo
be transacted and membership
urged to attend
RACINE AMERICAN
Legwn Auxiliary, ptcmc,
Tuesday evemng at the Racme
Park Junwrs lnVlled
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
Amencan Legwn Auxthary,
Tuesday, 7 30 p.m al Legwn
Hall Convention reports to be
heard The JuniOrs wtll present
the Rev Frank Chtasebrew
w1th an AmeriCan Flag to be
used al Umted Methodtst Camp
Francts Asbury, Rio Grande
PROGRAM
planntng
commtltee of Chesler PTA,
1 30 p m Tuesday at schooL
HEATH Melhodtst Church,
lamlly dmner honormg Mr
and Mrs Gene Harris and
farruly who wtll be rnovmg to
New Orleans later th1s month
All congregatiOn mvtled, take
covered dtsh and own table
servtce Meat and beverage
wtll be furmshed
JUNIOR AMERJCAN Legwn
Auxthary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128. 1p m Tuesday at the
halL
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Aux1i1ary , Feeney-Bennett
Pos t 128,1 30Wednesday at the
hall
DISTRICT Governor of 13-K
Russell Williams, w1ll be guest
speaker at a luncheon to be
held at noon Wednesday at the
Metgs Inn. All Lions urged to
attend
WSCS OF Wesleyan Umted
Method1st Church, Racme,
annual ptcmc, 6 p.m Wednesday at summer home of Mr
and Mrs Gordon West All
women of church and famtbes
InVIted. Take covered dtsh and
Ia ble serVIce
WOMEN'S Bowling Assn.
Wednesday,
7 30
p rn
Pomeroy Bowlmg Lanes. Ftrst
meeting, all women mvtted

Accordmg to Mrs Marvm King, Metgs County Fair Board
Secretary, the attendance at the gate this year at the fair was up
from last year Mrs. King, who has been busy w1th records, will
have attendance figures wtthin the week
SPEAKING OF THE FAIR, 11 certainly was a nice gesture
on the part of the Pomeroy National Bank to be the f1rst to buy an
animal at the Jwlior FBlr Steer Sale Friday mghl and gtve 11
back to the fall' to be sold again. Proceeds from the second sale
went mto the jwuor fair building fund
Followmg swt was the Citizens National Bank, Middleport, and
Page Olevrolet, Athens.
The Pomeroy National Bank purchased a steer belonging to
Celia McCoy and patd 57 cents a pound for the animal, not $2.21
as was announced earlier. The steer weighed 910 poWldS.
Alter paymg Miss McCoy for her prize animal, the bank gave
the steer back to the junior fair and the animal was sold on the
second roWJd to City lee and Fuel for 61 cents a pound, makmg a
total of $551.10 gomg into the junior fair building fund.
The Citizens National Bank purchased a pig !rom Mike Salser
for $3 a pound. The bank In turn gave the animal back to the
jwuor fall' and 1t was sold on the second ro\Dld to Marion Riggs
Ford, Logan, for $1.45 making a total of $313.20 going into the
building fund
Randy Johnson's lamb was purchased by Page Chewolet,
Athens, ~or $110 a pound. Page Olevrolet after purchasmg the
animal gave it back to the jWlior fair and 1t was sold on the
second round to Royal Oak Farms for $1 a poWld, making a total
of $85 gomg Into the building fWld.
Quite a gesture on the part of the three flrllls to help a very
worthwhlle•pi-ogram.

GO TO WEDDING
Mrs Davtd Entsmmger,
Mtddte6orl, accompamed Mr
and Mrs Charles Entsrnmger
and Mr and Mrs. R. G. Zahns,
both of South Charleston, to
T1mberv1lle, Va., for the Aug. 5
weddmg of Steven Zahns to
Mtss Linda Sptlzer Steven
Zahns IS the grandson of Mrs
Entsminger Mrs. Entsrnmger
VISited a week with Mr and
Mrs Zahns Mr. and Mrs
Sleven Zahns are restdmg m
Morgantown, W Va , where
Mr Zahns 1s attending
graduate school at West
V1rgm1a Umverstly

RETURN HOME
Sherry and Tem Gtlllam of
Fort Worth, Texas were
returned lo their home after
spendmg the summer al the
home of thetr grandmother,
Mrs. Goldte Wyant, Pomeroy,
R D 4 They were accompamed by Mrs Wyant and
Mrs Barbara Sayre and
daughter, Ltsa, of Mtllfleld.
Enroute home they vistted Hot
Spnngs, Ark , and attended
Grand Ole Opry and vtstted
Opry Ctly, home of the stars
also Mammoth Cave, Ky.
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2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

DAY CORRECTED
Mrs
Gtlbert (Mane)
Donovan, 51, Weilsvllle, dted
SOCIAL PLANNED
There w1ll be an old Thursday, not Tuesday, as was
fashtoned Ice cream soc1al at reported
Columbia Chapel Church,
Pomt Rock, on route 689,
Saturday, begtnmng at 5 p rn.
There wtll also be sandwtches,
pte, ca ke and soft drmks.
Proceeds wtll be used lor the
butldmg fund

SUPPER PLANNED
Acovered diSh supper w1ll be
held at the Pomeroy Church of
Chnst Wednesday, Aug 30, al
6·30 p.m, followed by elecUon
THURSDAY
fWIN -CITY Shrmettes, 1 30 of church ofhcers, prayer
Thursday, Columbus and meetmg and Btble study. All
Southern OhiO Eleclnc Co members are asked to attend
Plans to be made !or September VISit of h1gh priestess
GET-ACQUAINTED party
SERVICE CANCELLED
for chlldren and parents or
Wednesday evenmg serv~ces
Eastern Local &amp;hoot D1str1ct al the Pomeroy Church of
kmdergarten, 1 to 3 p m Chmt wtll not be held thiS
Thursday,
al
Chesler week Members Will be atelementary school Refresh- tendmg revtval servtces at
ments
Bradford.

Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Stansbury and Benjamin,
Reynoldsburg i Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Cleland, Gahanna;
Mr and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury,
Reba and Aaron, Albany, R.D.
3; Mr and Mrs Floyd Cleland,
R.D 1, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs,
Ernest J. Dawson, Brenda and
Cathy, and Sherry Lynn
Witcher, CorUand, Ohio; Floyd
Hendrtcks and Frank Cleland,
Ractne; Mrs. Helen Rtggs and
Davtd, Miss Wanda Cardillo,
Mr. and Mrs Robert Lambert,
Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. Hurley
Rtfe, Karen, Shirley, Ray, Joe
and Ed, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Rile, Wellston; Debbie and
Pamela Davos, Minersville;
Mr and Mrs Merle Davts, Mr.
and Mrs Bruce Davis, Davtd
and Danny, Henson Cleland,
Rutland, Mr and Mrs. HersII
Wheeler, Robert and Debbie;
Mr . and Mrs Darrell Wheeler,
Guysvtlle
Mr and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland
and Jeff, Mr and Mrs. Leroy
Ervm and Janme; Mr and
Mrs. Steven McLaughlin, Mr
and Mrs. Bernard Wtlhs and
Tina Marte, Mr and Mrs.
Bernard Wtllts, Sr~olly and
He1d1; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Hmes, Wayne, Karen and
Donna, Mr and Mrs Roy V
Reddy and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale H Bowman, Lancaster;
Mr and Mrs. Claire D. Stansbury, Jul1a, Clara, Bobble,
Groveport; Mr and Mrs Paul
Taylor, Barberton ; Mr and
Mrs Delbert Redman, Mr and
Mrs Louts Parsons, Dav1d and
Ralph, Mr and Mrs. Joe
Redman, Mark, Sharon and
Tommte, Ronald Watkins and
Kunoerly Mtller, Dun bar, W.
Va .; Mrs. Ntda McClure and
Dtane, Albany; Mr and Mrs.
Wtlharn E McClure and An·
drea and Christopher, Athens,
Mr and Mrs Leonard Peoples,
Jerry, Terry and Joe, Parkersburg, Mr and Mrs Joe
Bohner, Columbus; Mr and
Mrs Clyde Hampton, Bud
Hampton, and Shame, Mr and
Mrs Wayne Cleland, Ann,
Laura Rose, Tomrnte of Langsville, Mr and Mrs. Joe Shuler,
Cheshire, Mr and Mrs Sylvan
Cloland, , Sr,, Mr. and Mrs
Archte Wileeler, Kenneth ,
Karen and Dtan; Mr and Mrs.
Manon McClure, Dexter, R S
Turner, Albany; Mtss Sonja
Ohlinger, Middleport; Mr and
Mrs Roger Ughtrool, Belinda,
Mehssa and Shelby, Pataskala,
Ohto; Mr and Mrs Cecil
Carpenter, and Mr. and Mrs
Leroy Row land of Spnngheld
Mr and Mrs. Seth F
Nicholson, Rutland, were
afternoon callers.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

Se!!!!rlty forces spokesmen
sa_id ~be boJ;nbing of the Green
Hillacusto!I)S poSt near Nem,
32 miles ~uth of Belfast, was
the second gul!rrUJa bomb
attempt to go wrong in two
w~. As m the earller case In
Belfast, the bomb exploded
pre(llaturely, seconds after
being Pillnted.
It killed the two gunmen
trying to plant 1t, three
customs officers and two other
peri!Qns.
Security forces spokesmen
said tbe two men lugged the
latge bomb Into tbe customs
clearance station on the road to
Dublin. The bomb blew up
within live seconds, the
spokesmen said
"I wish to God It was all
~,~~~ over," S8ld a young man who
§l worked at the red brick
&amp; customs post. "It doesn't really
~ mean much when you read

r

i

Personal Notes ~ ~~~~t ~y';::~~~~t. But these
*' The young man, who would
Mr. and Mrs William

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Kenpedy had as recent
weekend gueslll Mr. and Mrs
Joe Kennedy and Gmger of
Memphl.s,l!'enn.;Mr. arid Mrs.
Jack Kenne~y and Tom of
Mudvllle, Tenn. Jo10ing them
lor an dutlng •t forked Run
Lake were Mr, and Mrs. Ed·
Y!ar~
·K,ennedY,,' l)ebbte,
Cheryl, Chuck, !&gt;ave and Mike
of PomeroY.; Mrs Allee
Robson, Middleport; Mi'. and
Mrs. Gat:Y Bamr!z, Carol,
Mary,ElbenahdAml or Belpre.
Other rece'!lt tuesls , at the
Kt)l1!11ily ~•nne we're Mrs ,
H•t.old ~~•ariz of Mason ;
Ml!rtlyn H~lzer and son Tod of
Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs. Lee Swtft and
famlly and Mr and Mrs
Wdbam Swtfl and famtly of
Bellatre were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs '•Dana •Swift and
other relaltves
Mrs . Fred Smtih returned
Sunday from Concord, Ky
where she spent a week vtsitmg
relallves.
Mr. and Mr~ Tim Prtddy,
Vtckl and Bryan, and Mr and
Mrs Stephen Jacobs, Tern and
Jeff, all of Columbus, were
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Dale Jacobs Mr and
Mrs Priddy tell Monday for
Htllsboro, W. Va. to spend
several days wtth Mrs Edtth
Lingerfelt at Denrnar hospttal
Debbie Hunnell and Behnda
Rabren are spendmg two
weeks wtlh Mr. and Mrs. John
E Hunnell and famlly and
other relallves and friends.
Mr. and Mrs Stdney Russell
spent the weekend m Wellston
with Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Haylh and family. They were
accompanied home by thetr
grandson, Robb1e, who wtll
spend a week here

Finish first ...

He gestured, hands shaking,
at the rubble whiCh was all that
. remained of the three-year-Gld
brttk CU$lonJs post, where
about 30 liC!))lle worked. It had
r~lveil many bomb threatscustoms posts are a favortle
Irish Republican Army (IRA)
target. Two months ago a car
carrying explostves was mtentionally detonated outside by
security forces, hurting no one.
Today three gunmen pulled
up m a car. Two jumped out
and heaved the bomb li!Stde
They started to shout a warning but the bomb explosion
stilled their vo1ces
In Belfast four masked
gunmen mvaded the home of a
police inspector investigating a
wave of 11 thrill" murders and
shot him in both legs, police

.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - The
37th a!IIlual Parker reunion at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary School August 13, began
with a basket dinner at noon,
Ethel Stout asking the blessmg
The busmess meeting was in
charge of Franklin Parker,
president
Prizes were
awarded the following : oldest
man, Leon Hecox; oldest

BIS. 2 DOOR

Kin: &amp; v.-n Zandt

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the fine finish for fine woods
by PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
llllrt with PaL Tonetlc
Wood Stain lor dark
IMdlum or PIIWI tinta
finleh with "38" Pale Trim
Vamllh, glo... utln, dull
or nat tor paneling door.
or trim
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1JcMnln14:1iilds Aiency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Authorized Dealer

MASON
FURNITURE

Mei&amp;s County's Oldest and largest
Insurance Agency

always

Horm1n Grato

777-5592

MISdn, w. V•.

'

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store C»f Building
Since 1915.
•

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~lVe

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Oullook,
Thursday through Saturday:
Cloudy with a chance of
thundershowers Thursday.
Vartable cloudiness Friday
with a chance of showers
northeast portion. Fair on
Saturday, becommg cooler.
High temperatures Thurs·
day in the 70s northeast and
upper 70s to lower 80s
else~&gt; here. Highs Friday and
Saturday in the 70s north and
lo~&gt; er 80s south. Lows at
mght from the mid 50s to the
mtd 60s

sources satd The gunmen told
the officer they would execute
him Wliess he left hos Protestant neighborhood
A 19-year-old Roman
Catholic gtrl was tarred and
feathered as an lrosh
Republican Army (IRA)
punishment
Until the Newry blast, two
days had passed wtthout a
death m the ProtestantCathollc violence whtch has
wracked Northern Ireland for
three years.
Newry, 32 miles south of
Belfast, IS a major border pomt
between Ulster and the Republic of Ireland. Britosh customs
Btrtbs - Aug 18 - Mrs
posts along the border repea- Ronald Hester, daughter, New
tedly have been targets of Haven; Mrs Ralph Mathews,
extrellllSt attacks.
daughter, Coalton, Mrs Gary
Basham, daughter, Coolvllle,
Mrs
Charles Stratght,
DELEGATES STRANDED
daughter, Ripley, and Mrs
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP!) Gerald Garlic, daughter,
-Some 200 Ohio delegates and Galhpohs
guests to the )lepubllcan
Aug 19 - Mrs Allen Perry,
Nahpnal Convention were son, Radchff and Mrs Dee
stranded m the ram at the Caudtll, daughter , McArthur
Dtplomat Hotel Monday mght
Aug 20 - Mrs Eldon
because of a breakdown m the Sowers, daughter, Jackson;
conventiOn bus system The Mrs John Conley, son,
delegates !wally made the 22- Jackson ; Mrs
Leonard
mtle tnp to the convention ball Crabtree, daughter, Oak H1ll,
by cab at a cost of $12 50 per and Mrs Mtchael Wnght, son,
cab
Middleport
FOUR DEFECT
Aug 21 - Mrs Danny
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohw (UPI) Thaxton, son, Gnmms Lan- Four Staff members of _ dmg, Mrs Roger Puckett,
Dtstrtct 26 of the Umted Steel daughter,OakHtll, Mrs Ralph
Workers qnwn have broken Elhott, son, Galhpohs, and
wtth USW President I W Abel ~~~~eiiRetd Johnson, son,
to JOin other area labor leaders
Dl h
lo work for the elechon of Ra sc arwgesll D EunMice
y 1s avts,
rs
Demucrat1c prestdenllal K mey,th Wh
d
enne
1te an
son,
nommee George McGovern ' 1t Cl au d1a Trom bl y, Harry
was announced today They M t Alb t K h G
are Frank Tram or' USW
ar m,
er u n, eorge
subdtslnct dtreclor
at Brandau, Fred Gtll, Jr ' Ethel
Ashtab 1 T A t
. d Bean , lm s Cook, Shelby
u a, ony n onucct an Troyer Eleanor Stotts
Marvm Wemstock, staff Delores' S tlzl Mont Sm 1th'
repre•entallves here and
P '
•
Frank Leon, prestdent of USW Datsy Roush, Mtchael NeutzLocal 3253.
ling, Anna Morns, Roy Jones,
Lula Jones, Naom1 Howell,

about those we do not agree
with," he said
Hurt by Compromise
But he also satd he believes
states should be encouraged
and rewarded " that wm
campaigns m depth "
Rep. Donald D Clancy of
Cincmnati disagreed, saymg
the prestdenllal election should

.

30 ARRESTED
AKRON, Ohto (UPI)
Thtrly youths were arrested
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and four Akron policemen
Discharges:
Corda Stutler,
shghtly lDJured w scuffles wtlh
pohce Monday mght at a rock Leon; Clara Lowther, Ashton;
concert by the Jefferson Wtlham Longstaff, Kanauga;
Mtchael Pollack, Galhpohs,
Airplane here
Mrs. Ronald Fry, 1 son,
Pomeroy; Tma Btrchfteld,
Maso n, George Calandros,
Potnt Pleasant, and Mrs Erntl
Martin, Pomt Pleasant
Btrth - August 21, a son to
mentioned were Mr. and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Wtlliam Stewart,
Douglas J. Mtlls, Ehzabeth, W. Pmnl Pleasant
Va .; Bob Hecox, Love's Park,
Iowa ; Scott McDonald, Sharon,
QUEEN FOR A DAY
Pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Delmas
SACRAMENTO,
Calif
Smitil and Doliila, Mrs. Lotta
Parker, Smithville, W. Va.; (UPI) - Slate Sen James R
Jerrold and Mark Parker, Mtlls says that servmg as
Parkersburg; Willlllm Wh1te Cahforma's chtef execultve
and Diallll; Ralph, Lester, while Gov. Ronald Reagan IS 1n
Jackte and Carl Parker; Mr. M1am1 Beach is hke bemg
and Mrs. Wilber Parker and uqueen for a day " Mills, a
Ed; David Watson, Joseph, Democrat from San Otego,
Rinee, Lisa, and Theresa satd Monday that he II'Ws the
Watson, all of Pomeroy Rt. 3; role of actmg governor so
Lola Griffin and Jenny Clme, much that he might make a btd
Reedsville Rt. 1; Mr and Mrs. to become the "real" governor
Elmer Mason, Akron; Orland In 1975
F. Branch, Belpre, and Mrs.
Carol Jones and Mrs. Leo D
GUESTS COME
Keith, Marion.
Mr and Mrs Wilham
The reuruon will be at the Peeples of Lexington were
same place, the second Sunday weekend guests of Mr. and
m August, 1973.
Mrs. Ollo Lohn, Pomeroy

U.S. Ships Close Upon
Morrocan Coup Attempt
RABAT (UPI)
A
newspaper ratsed the question
Monday whether the United
Stales was Involved in the
attempt JBst Wednesday to kill
King Hassan and ~ize power.
L'Opmion, newspaper of the
opposition party lstiqlal, asked
if 11 was coincidence that on the
day of the attempt two
American destroyers, the USS
Ingram and the USS Stribling,
were in port at Casablanca.
On the day of the July 10,
1971, bloody army uprtslng, the
American Destroyer USS San
Otego was m the port at
Tangter, lhe newspaper sa1d.
"When one knows thalthe F5
fighters look off from the
mihtary a1r base at Kemtra to
try to shoot down the klng's
alrp'Jane where there are 430
Amenean training officers and
mstallations of ultramodern

\I

transm1ss1on, one wonders 1!
the presence m Moroccan ports
of Amencan dest~oyers the
same day of the two mthtary
movements was only by
chance."
The CornmWJtsl newspaper
l'Hwnamte m Pans and the
Betrut newspaper, l'Onent-le
Jour, accused the Umted States
of unpbcatwn m the Moroccan
affair
An AmeriCan Embassy
spokesman has said that
charges of U. S. mvolvemenl m
the Aug. 16 coup attempt were
"a
product
of
the
tmagl!llltlon "
AmeriCan personnel at the
Kenitra base told UPI they
were ordered by rebel
Moroccan a1r force offtcers to
stay inside their homes and
clubhouse during the coup
attempt.

be the key one
"We are here to nommate a
President, not a governor or a

posttion where MISS~~ or
(Joorgia .. are more reprtse~~&gt;
tative of the Republican party
than Ohto," Hughes si!id;
Ohio dtd not carry f~r Ute
Republican nomml!!! ih 1964,
when Bsrry Goldwater was
soundly defeated by Lyndon
Johnson

senator/' Clancy sa1d

Robert E. Hughes, GOP
chaU'IIlan of Cuyahoga County,
even sa1d he !ayored a floor
ftght if Ohio was gomg to get
hurt by a compromise
"We don't want to get into a

Daley, Connolly Agree on Election
half mllllon voters were e~­
pected ~ tum oqt. Stneen
' the
candtdates wer.e seekmg
Senate seat vacated by Derilocratlc Sen Fred R. HaftlS who
choose not to seek r~lection
In Wyoming, the clQ!iest race
will be between two
Republican congresSIOnal
candtdates who strongly
support Prestdent Nixon's
pohctes. State Sen. John
Patton, 41, and stockbrol&lt;er
BtU Kidd, 28, were vymg to
oppose Democrat Teno Rolli
callo, who is unopposed in his
party's prunary. Foot candidates were runrung for the
Democratic Senate nommation
to oppose Repu bbcan Sen Cliff
Hansen.

By United Press lnternatiooal for Nixon, satd that desp1te
Former Treasury Secretary Nuon's large lead m the polls
John B. Connally and Chicago many people wtll be surpnsed
Mayor Richard J. Daley, at the closeness of the
supporters of different pres- ballotmg
Idential candidates although
"!think that before 1t's over
both are Democrats, have people who thmk he's (NIXon)
predtcted that George S a shoo-in are gomg to be
McGovern wtll giVe Prestdent shakmg their heads and
Nixon a close race m the wonder1ng what happened,"
November election
Connally said.
Speakmg at a news conferDaley told reporters m
ence at the Natwnal Veterans Oltcago that McGovern's camof Foretgn Wars convenllon m
Mmneapolls Monday, Connally, who heads Democrats

paign 1S "domg fme." He
predicted the South Dakotan
will be "coming from behind on
that great last spurt "
Daley, who will meet wtlh
McGovern later this week
when the Democratic hopeful
comes to Oltcago to address
the Legwnnatres, rated
McGovern's campaign as
bemg farther advanced than
was Sen Hubert H. Humphrey's at this point m 1968.
Ntxon
returned
to
Washmgton from two weeks m
secluston at his Camp Davtd,
Md., moun tam retreat Monday
He will f)y to M1am1 Beach
PORTER TIME
today
to accept the Repubhcan
Mtss Mary Dorothy Porter,
Wesl Hyattsville, Md ., 1s nomination for re-election.
McGovern moved his camv1s1 tmg her brother and Slslerpaign
to Wtlkes-Barre, Pa , to
m-law , Mr and Mrs J
tour
the
regwn devastated by
Sherman Porter
Other
troptcal storm Agnes m late
11eeken~ guests of the Porters
He talked wtth scores of
June
~&gt;ere Mr and Mrs James S
Porter Ill and son of Colum- restdents who crttictzed the
Admmtstration for 1ts handlmg
bus Cap tam and Mrs Dav1d!.
of
disaster rud.
Porter and daughter of Fl
Two states, Oklahoma and
Worth, Texas, are vtstlmg wtth
Wyommg,
hold prtmanes
Mr and Mrs . Woodrow
today.
Saunders of Cheslure
In Oklahoma, more tban a

HOSPITAL NEWS

•1295

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

you've

chair

dreamed of at our low
prices.

caucus.
HIS plan would

delegates on the basts of voting
strength in congressional and
other off-year contests.
Both Andrews and former
Repubhcan National Chairman
Ray Bliss favor Rockefeller's
plan
Bliss warned of creating a
controversy about the 1ssue
bonus "Be careful m what we say

Hold Annual Reunion

69 DfEV.

Now you can buy that
comfortable
Lo·Z-Boy
1

this/'

daughter of Dorothy and Albert
Parker;youngestboy,Frances
Parker, son of Dorothy and
Albert Parker; yoW!gest g.u-1,
Mary Parker, daughter ol
Dorothy and Albert Parker;
'
family, Albert Parker,
largest
USED CARS
and traveled farthest, Leon
Hecox, from Burlington, Iowa,
550 miles.
Officers elected for next year
were Franklin Parker,
president; Gladys Parker,
Six CYI·• 'td jr~ns , radio &amp; sel:retary, and Ruth Witt,
w.~w tires
· ·
. a.i.l\iti!rlt s~tary. ~- Roy
l!a~ker and Mr$. William
Wlifte were-·appolnted to the
table cOiiU!ilttee.
. AU ·tx'ell!l!lt were asked to
c~eck " famlly records and
hlslll!J'. Mrs. Eleanor B.
"Ytu II ~lk' our Quality
lkiWII!llll and Mrs. Clllra Belle
Wa~ Of Dotng Buslne .. "
B\lrnr, A\llens, displayed a
GMAC FINANCING
ft2·5~4t.a.
'
,Pomeroy billfold diting !rom tbe mitldle
1fl!llls wl)lch belonged to their
. ·, o.-.rl.e:'dlnings 'Tile: 00
~eat.grandfatner ,
·
'flU P.M, J61i
Present. besides those
•

CHAIRS

not give hts name, was in the
town of Newry when the
bombers came to his customs
post on the Dublin road In the
rolling green htlls of County
Down.
"We tried to teiephone the
post," said the shaken young
man. "We couldn't get through
and J ealized something must
be
wroog.
we
came
straightaway- and found

This Week's Spectal

'

LA·Z-BOV

MI-ddleport

Savllla
1- - - - - - - - - - woman,
newest arrival,
MaryKmcatd;
Parker,

(NEWSPAPER ENH"RPRI SE ASSH 1

You wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Pollv's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly in care of this new,spaper.

Bomb ~Misfires, 7 Died

Encourage 'states
"In a nutshell, the dosput• os
between smaller states and the
larger states."
New York Gov Nelson Rockefeller has a different plan,
which he explamed to the Ohto
delegates durmg a breakfast

Besste Boyer, Dawn Ha!fell,
Loutse Haws, Wtlllam Stone,
Mrs Robert Gardner, and son,
Frances Kent, Ira Mulford,
Oather Helm, Caryl Bauer,
Kathenne Buchanan, Btlh
Trace, Charmame Fuller, Mrs
Wtlllam McGtnms and
daughter, Carohne Hall, Pearl
Ward, Randy Thomas, Tracy
ICade, Donald Whttley, Melvma
Wtckcr, Amy Tetry, Laura
Sparks, Mrs Samuel Morns
and daughter, Asa Milhoan,
Clatr Martm, Davtd Laufer,
Mrs Paul Knox and son, mfanl
daughter or Mr and Mrs
Artha Hornsby, Mary Hatley,
Wmme Guthne, Natda Frye,
Htlda Davts, Paul Caudtll,
Ilene
Bosttck,
Came
Alexander, Leon Parker,
Sandra Pyles, John Scurlock,
Charles Stevenson, Vallnna
Kanmard, Krtslle Boggs,
Dorothy Lavender, Mrs.
Robert Peoples and son, Irene
Wellman , Florence Hutchmson, Florence Wtcklme,
Sandra Taylor, Dale Saunders,
Evelyn Pugh, Mrs Glenn
Montgomery and daughter,
Melva Halley, Ralph Jeffers,
Jaom1 Brandeberry, James
Ball, Young Ktm, Mrs. Ronald
Hester and daughter, James
R1ggs, Julie Plunkett, Rtcky

The 17 members of the
Chester Ftre Dept are
begmmng an orgamzed course
o! mstruelwn to 1mprove local
!1re protechon
Through the efforts of Ftre
Clue! Ross Cleland, a !tre
set vtce tratmng mstructor has
been oblamed to g1ve the mstrucllon The mstructor, Joe
Struble, Pomeroy Ftre Dept,
wtll conduct weekly sesstons
Cerl1l1cates w11l be awarded to
the men who successfully
complete the course of mstru ctton
The servtces of the instructor
are made available by the
Trade
and
lndustnal
Vocatwnal EducatiOn Servtce
ol the Slate Department of
Educatwn as a part of the
publtc service trammg
program The traming IS of.
lered to Improve llre protec- ,
hun and f~re prevenhon m
comrnumttes throughout the
state. The value ol the trammg
IS recogmzed and recommended by the DiviSIOn of
State F~re Marshal, the Ohto
Jnspectwn Bureau, and
representatives of state fire
ftghtmg orgamzations
The trammg wtll consist of

Walters, Maude Ohver, Mrs

~
...~~·...,;..;oooo
~-~~~--~'"'"'··-.w.·.··~­

i Soct'al t'i·
...
;;&gt;

EVANGELIST HERE
MASON - The Bachtel
Umted Methodist Church
welcomed
Rev.
Bobby
Osborne, evangehst of Fort
Gay, W. Va., to bring the
messages that began Aug 20
and wtll continue through Aug.
'!1. Rev. Milton Bartram 1s the
pastor. Olurches involved are,
Letart, Graham, Broad RWl
and BachteL The servtces
begin eacll evening at 8 There
wtll be specud gospel singing
by these groups, Aug 26,
"Christian Harvesters;" Aug.
25, "Gospel Lights," and "Fort
Gay Gospel Radto Ololr," and
on Aug. 22, "Voices of Victory." Everyone welcome

Take a "RED CARPET
HOLIDAY" at the

RED CARPET INN
Pl . Pleasant, W.Va.
Labor Day Weekend

Sept. I thru 4th
Lu xu r1ous accommodations

Chester Firemen
Take Instruction

Dwame Jordan , Eva Johnson,

Ronald Hatten and son, Carne
Johnson, Jerald Scott, Mrs
James Ousley and son, Rodney
Shepherd, Thomas Walls,
Mary Smtih, Mrs Ralph
Mathews and daughter, Conme
Brannon , Velma Douglas, Mrs
James Dovenbarger and
daughter, Lona Fellure,
Eugene Adkms, Louise
Zickefoose, Lorren Wolfe,
Helen Walker, Andy Tredway,
Esther Ntberl, Pauhne McKey,
Mrs. Charles Stratght and
daughter, Weallhy Scharhger,
Carolyn Lawson , Floss1e
Gothard, Altme Cnst, Mrs
Wtlllam Colher and daughter,
Phylhs Batrd and Mrs Chi!
Barrows and son

.

I

•

Ill

Calendad

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
Thursday, 7 30 p.m

Sw•mmmg &amp; Tenn15
Superb dm •ng room
Lounge
Planned actn11t1es

CocktailS on arnval

Great enterta1nmen t

Swim Show

tnstrucllon m ftre hghhng
sk 1lls and techmcal tnformalton Some of the typtcal
um ts covered are commum ty
ftre defense, Inc pumps and
care or apparatus, fire !tghtmg
appliances, use of hose and
rope,gases and gas masks, and
hre f1ghtmg taches Wnlten
mstruction malenals are made
available to the mstructor and
to each llre fighter by the
Dtvtston
of
Vocallonal
Educatwn The Eastern Local
Board of Education is
coopera ling m the program

WINNERS NAMED
Wmners at the booth of
Ridenour 's T V &amp; Apphances
at the !a1r were Barbara Fry
and Sherry Vaughn, Pomeroy,
Mrs Carl Gheen and Mary Lou
!hie, Racme, Suzy Carpenter,
Coolville, and Jame Congo,
Portland

AU FOR AS LITTLE
As $30.00 per person
Plus accommodations Call
or wnte now for re'Servallons , Red Carpet Inn,
Ohto Rtver Rd , PI
Pleasa~l . W. Va
phone 304-675-5007

as a Wmk
on the move here there and

le,eM•here I Needs a perpetual
mot1on shoe - to lake 1t keep 11s
shape and good looks,
g1ve h1m ft1 plus support
A Poll Parrot

VISIT IN FLORIDA
CLIFTON - Mrs Thelma
Henry accompamed Mr and
Mrs Don Quisenberry and
chtldren of South Charleston to
Bradenton, Fla., where they
vtstted Mr Qutsenberry's
mother, Mrs. Oa Bowen and
pomts o! mteresl at DISney's
World of Orlando and Busch's
Garden al Tampa
VISIT MOTHER
Mrs. Martha Coleman and
chtldren of Columbus spent
Sunday wtth the former 's
mother, Mrs Thelma Henry.

VISITED HERE
ALL GIRLS mterested m
Mr Frank Crew of Warren
JOlmng or !ormmg a team, be and Bud Hams of Bloomallhe Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes mgdale, Ohw were recent
Thursday, August 24, at 12 guests of their mother and
noon
sister, Mrs Myrtle Durst.

WIN A BICYCLE
Nothing

Brand New

to

Buy.

Reg1ster•

FRIDAY
VESPER MEETING Fnday,
7 p m , home of Floyd Noms,
East Letart, followed by
wtener roast Pubhc mvtted.
Br~ng lawn chatrs .

Notice
I WILL NOT be responsible f~
any debts contracted b
anyone other than mysel
Signed, Donald E Whaley,
Rt. 1, Shade, Oh10
8-22 Jlp

PDR

Your Thom MeA~ Shoe Store.
Mtddleport, Ohio ,

TRDUBLEfREE
DRIVING•••

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

$17 95
•

8Includes
CYLINDER
Parts

and labor

Is yOIJr car acting up&gt; Has the
summer been hard on your auto,
Now's the It me to have a tune up. We
can have your car running smoothly

In no lime. Save money at Moore's.

Expertly Install:
SHOCKS
BRAKES
MUFFLERS
TAiL PIPES

Jus!

heritage house

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

Moore's Sellice Center

~5lSO,

MOORE'S
Service Center
124 W. Main
Pomeroy
PH. 992-2848

'

�~""

'' r' f

r ,. f

r( •'

.jJ

'

r ' ,. '

rI

.-

J

'

I

. I .

I

"

.....~thi t~so~~.J•~Ii9f~p(i~y. o. Auglllt 22. m2
o- l'he Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 22, 1972

Congo-Sayre Vows Taken
On June. 17th at Portland

.,

.

,•

•

...

POR'n;AND - BackgroWJd
arrangements of tinted pink,
yellow and blue carnations and
dillsles provided the setting for
the wedding of Miss Shirley
SUe Congo, daughter of Mr. and
IItts. Gerie Congo of Long
BottOm, and Mr. Aaron Lee
Sart:e, son of Mrs. Doros Sayre
and the late Oliver Sayre, Sr.,
Pot!Jand.
The wedding was an event of
June 17 at seven o'clock at the
Portland Methodist amrch,
the Rev. Edward J. Griffith,
Loilg Bottom, officiating, using
the double ring ceremony.
Providing organ numbers was
Mrs. Ruth Ebersbach of Portland, which were, "I Love You
Truly," Hfhine Alone,"
11
1.m'd 's Prayer," theme from
"Love Story," "Romeo and
Juliet," 8Jld 14Because."

.'.,.
...
.. .:ti

:

.... BETTY CANARY

,.'

..•.

"'~

••
~
~

••

..••
~

••'

,
•

••

••
•

••

.

Given m marrtage by her
father, Mr. Gene Congo, the
bride wore a gown of white
satm wtth lace overlay with
long lace sleeves and matching
floor length veil. She carrted a
bouquet of whtte roses, daistes
and baby's breath on a white
Bible Her only jewelry was an
antique locket loaned by
her aiDlt, Mrs. Eileen
Polk, Portland. Her matd
of honor was her sister, Miss Sharon Congo,
of Long Bottom, bndesmatds,
Miss Loretta Middleswart and
Miss Vickie Johnston, Portland; Miss Brenda Skmner and
Miss· Debra Shroyer of
Columbus, flower girl Moss
Teresa Brace, niece of the
groom, Racme
All wore long dotted Swtss

Managerial Trait
May Be Overcome

My husband says I have a managenal personaillv
That's what he says when he's bemg pohte At othe1
hmes he says, "You're always checkmg up on people' ·
I adm1t to th1s flaw m my character I am the sort of
person who says, "Would you please see that the lawn
mower IS put m the ~arage'" Then, as he returns from
the garage I ask, "Dtd you put away the lawn mowe1 , ..
The bad habtt has been brought about by loo many
years of checkmg up on too many children
No woman in her nght rnmd believes a chtld goes to
lhe garage to put away the lawn mower. He starts for
the garage to put away the lawn mower Along the way
he dtgs lor llshmg worms, tr~es out a neighbor's new
catcher's mttt, and ftxes the back wheel of h1s b1ke
Three days later the police brmg your mower to the
front door, tell you 1t had been stolen and abandoned m
a state park , and you learn your son never got to the
garage.
And, as I pomt out to my husband, my bad habtt 1s
restrained to the pomt of only checkmg up on simple,
ordmary, around-the-house type questiOns .
I have 9ever, for example, called h1m at work and
asked, "Dtd you gel out thai order for General Motors? "
I have promised to make a dthgent attempt at break·
mg th1s habit of mine and he 1s domg hts best to help
me. I am not sure l approve of hts methods, but sarcasm
can work wonders.
The other day-three minutes after askmg htm to
please roll up the car wmdows-1 asked, "Dtd you roll
up the wmdows?"
"No," he replied patiently. I've been busy hackmg the
·
'
children to pteces "

Second Picnic Of Family Held
The second Badgley picnic or
the summer was held Sunday,
Aug 20, at Forked Run Lake
There was a basket lunch,
!lshmg and swliiUIIing.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clolsl Badgley, Mr and Mrs
Vernon Donahue, Mr and Mrs
Ralph Badgley, Mr. and Mrs
Steven Badgley and daughter,

Kelll, Mr Hershel Badgley, and Mrs
Lenna
Brinker of Racme, Mr
and Mrs. Arnold Anderson
and daughters, Brenda and
Lori Ann, Mr and Mrs Ted
Willford and daughters, Ltsa
and Ktmberly, of Long Bottom, Mr and Mrs Raymond
Teaford and daughter, Suste,
and son, Clmsl, of Mmersvtlle

Smith-Stobart Reunion Held
The Smi•h-Stobart !amtly
reumon was held at Brady's
Run Park m Rochester, Pa. on
TWO INDUCTED
James L. Mash, Jr , son of
Mr and Mrs James Mash,
Mtddleporl, Rl. I, and Sktppy
Ray Moore, son of Mr and
Mrs. Glenn Moore, Langsville,
Rl I, were inducted mlo lhe U
S. Navy Monday They wtll
lake lhetr baste trammg at
Great Lakes, Ill

- The third annual Cleland Hines, uoon't You Qutt.'' and
famtly reumon was ~eld several readmgs were given
Sunday, Aug. 13, at Forest wntten by Claire Dale Stans·
Acres Park wtth 135 in at- bury.
tendance. Flora McClure, who
Gtfts were presented to
presided over the busmess Manon McClure, oldest; Laura
sesswn, read the mmutes of the Rose Cleland, youngest, Leroy
1911 reunwn. Janice Hampton Bowman, farthest distance
wa:; elected secretary, and traveled, and Floyd Cleland,
Aundene Wheeler, treasurer most children present, (nine).
The next reumon wlll be held
Unable to attend were Mrs
the second Sunday m August at Frances Coltertll of Columbus,
Forest Acres park
who bad recenUy sustained a
Amustcal program followed, bram concusswn from a fall,
!ealurmg Claire D. Stansbury and Weyland Cleland of
on g01tar, Frank Cleland, Angola, N V , although mne or
vwlm, and Floyd Hendncks hts chtldren dtd attend.
gwtar. Recttattons were preAltendmg were Mr and Mrs
sen~d by Dtana McClure, "I'm
Harold Oxley, Ml' and Mrs
Just Fme," and by Karen Dale Stansbury, R. D. 3,

Katie's Korner ,
By Katie Crow
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sayre
Mr and Mrs Waller Walsh,
Pamela, Gary and Thomas,
Mr and Mrs Clarence Nutter,
Sr. of Akron, Mrs. Rose
Pelfrey, Davtd and Jeffrey,
Doylestown, Ohio, Mr and
Mrs Clarence Nutter, Jr and
chtldren of Canton, Mr and
Mrs Dale Tnbble, daughter
Sue of Buffalo, W Va , Brenda
Skmner and Debra Shroyer of
Columbus, Mr and Mrs
James Oliver and son, Mike, of
Rto Grande, and Mr. and Mrs
Ronald Swam of Reedsvtlle

POLLY'S POINTERS
Use Comslareh lo Clean
Buckskin Coal Collal'
B) POLLY CR \M ER

DEAR POLL Y- LOJ na B co uld genet ously sp11nkle the
collar on he1 buckskm coal wtth DRY co1 nsta1ch Rub m
gently wtth the fmgers and leave on for 24 hout s so the
co1 n s~atc h has tune to absmb body otis Gently btush
away and then tepeal 11 some slams 1em am Th1s ts also
good fo1 temovmg grease !1om cement. but allow 1l to
1emam for a week befot e sweepm g tl up Also 1epeat tf
necessa1 v-MRS E Z
DEAR POLLY-J suggest that Lot na B uses an a1t
gum ez aser lo erase the marks It om the collar of her
buckskm eoat that cannot be ~rv cleaned She should have
a clean collar afler ustn g th1s alo ng wtth a bit of elbow
grease A frtend who used to work w1th leather told me
th1s years ago and I clean my suede apparel and pu1 ses
thts wa y all the ttm e - GEORGJA

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Polly's Problem

,, DEAR POLLY-I am a seamstress and as re' cychng of rnatenals seems so 1mportant today I
wonder what use can be made of wooden thread
spools Also, 1 am completely d1 sg usted w1th the
compames who are puttmg thr ead on plastic spools
whtch. as far as l know are unusa ble man y way f
,, would app1 ectale hearmg from so meone - EMMA
,!if ~~ ":"H . . "
•:m: i.l; ~ ..., ~ ¢1

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve 1s wtth those people who
Aug 12 wtth 147 persons atstop
m the atsle at the supermarket to have a long vtstl
tending
and
thetr
carts block the a1sle so no one else can gel
From th1s area were Mr. and
thtough.-MARY
B
Mrs George Stobart, Sr ,
George Stobarl, Jr and
DEAR POLLY- To keep double kml fabttcs from
Buddy, Mr and Mrs John stt·etchmg when shorlemng sktrt s or slacks I z1gzag st1leh
Stobarl, Shawn and Shanon; hrst, cut off lhe excess and hem - MRS G B
Mr and Mrs. Roger Stobart
DEAR GIRLS-This will also prevent anv tcndencv
and Shelhe, Mr and Mrs Cectl toward raveling, as knits do not take well to being turned
Rtce , Donna, Teme , Btll , under at the top of the hem. The greatest tr1ck ever when
Ron me and Joey, Mr and Mrs putting in such a hem by hand Is to hold the edge of the
John E Hunnell, Tarrume, hem down !rom 14- tu 1h -ineh as you sew . then catch the
Debbie, and Behnda Rabren of thread through the back or the hem and then to the back
Tampa, Fla Next year's o! the garment. When the hem Is In, lnrn the edge back
up, press It In place and have no di sfigunnl( line ~&gt;here
reumon wtll be In Ohw
the stitching Is -POLL V

WKTISCHIIL
Headquarters
fOr

Bulova
Anytime is the right
ume !or a beauuful
new Bulova watch.
And the nght place
1s nght here.
We have an aclmirable
selection of a 11 kmds
of Bulova watches.
In pnce ranges 10
please every person,
every purse
lllustm ted: Two new 17 Jewel
models. modestly priced at
$40 each

GOESSLER
JIWILIY STORE
COURTST.

gowns With yellow and white
accessories and camed whtle
datsy bouquets wtlh whtle
streamers Michael Brace,
nephew of the groom of Racine,
was rmgbearer. Russell Gest
was best man, Carl Gest,
Denrus Supe, Rick Keehner
and Torn Lehmer, ushers,
Delta Theta Sigma, fratarmty
brothers of the groom.
The bnde's mother wore a
navy blue sleeveless dress wlth
whtte accessories and the
groom's mother wore a hght
blue dress wtth white accessories and corsages of bluetmted carnations
A receptiOn was held in the
church basement followmg the
ceremony. White carnations
and tmted da1s1es formed the
centerpiece on the bride's
table. The three tiered weddmg
cake was topped wtth
rntmature brtde and groom.
MISS Lola Greer or Long
l!ottom and MISs Mary Congo,
Portland, prestded atlhe table,
and Miss Carolyn Rhodes,
Portland, regtstered guests
For her travelmg costume
the new Mrs Sayre wore an
orchtd sleeveless dress with
sage !rom her bridal bouquet
They restde at 164\2 Brehl
Avenue, CIJlumbu•
Mrs. Sayre IS a 1971 graduate
of Southern High School, and
1972graduate of the Ohw State
School of Cosmetology at
Colwnbus. Mr. Sayre 1s a 1969
graduate or Southern High
&amp;hoot and 1s a Juntor at Ohw
State Uruverstty. He 1s a
member of Delta Theta Stgrna
fratermty, the Ag-Ed Soctety
and the Pre-Vet Club,
CIJlwnbus
Guests at the wedding were

POMEROY

does I)Ot carry the state.
''I lllbik we have an obligation -to P!'otect tbe Interest of
Ohib II) ter!JlS of su{JIIl)rtl.ll8 the
PQsitlon which will msure that
Ob10 wUI have the largest
f19SSible delegation m future
convenUons," said Oluo ChBlr·
man John S. Andrews in a
statement Mondav.

·o j Cleland Family on Aug. 13th

white accessories and a cor-

By BETTY CANARY

7!'elegation ,in No Mood for Convention Floor Fight ,

135_Attend Annual Reunion

DEAR POLLY- Metal showe1 cwl am 11ngs a1 t&gt; mosl
helpful when mcluded m
the campmg eq111pment 111
our camper tratler I use
such a hook to hold my
measurmg spoons and cups
to g e the r Another holds
sc1ssors, plastic tape and a
pen kmle We also use them
lo hold safety pms. bobby
pms , paper chps , rubber
bands and two sewmg
machine bobbms- one !tiled
w1lh black thread and the
other wtlh whtte that may be needed for mendmg. All
these are put m one box Anolhet such hook holds spare
trader, house and car keys m case those bem g used are
lost or nusplaced - TERESA

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~~&amp;."":::&amp;.'-"'&amp;:.O:~..:·::~·=·:·:·:s. :·:·:·:·~

Social f
:::
Calendad
:11

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:!,

TUESQAY
SOTHEI\N LOCAL Band
Boosters, 7 p rn Tuesday at the
school Important bus~ness lo
be transacted and membership
urged to attend
RACINE AMERICAN
Legwn Auxiliary, ptcmc,
Tuesday evemng at the Racme
Park Junwrs lnVlled
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
Amencan Legwn Auxthary,
Tuesday, 7 30 p.m al Legwn
Hall Convention reports to be
heard The JuniOrs wtll present
the Rev Frank Chtasebrew
w1th an AmeriCan Flag to be
used al Umted Methodtst Camp
Francts Asbury, Rio Grande
PROGRAM
planntng
commtltee of Chesler PTA,
1 30 p m Tuesday at schooL
HEATH Melhodtst Church,
lamlly dmner honormg Mr
and Mrs Gene Harris and
farruly who wtll be rnovmg to
New Orleans later th1s month
All congregatiOn mvtled, take
covered dtsh and own table
servtce Meat and beverage
wtll be furmshed
JUNIOR AMERJCAN Legwn
Auxthary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128. 1p m Tuesday at the
halL
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Aux1i1ary , Feeney-Bennett
Pos t 128,1 30Wednesday at the
hall
DISTRICT Governor of 13-K
Russell Williams, w1ll be guest
speaker at a luncheon to be
held at noon Wednesday at the
Metgs Inn. All Lions urged to
attend
WSCS OF Wesleyan Umted
Method1st Church, Racme,
annual ptcmc, 6 p.m Wednesday at summer home of Mr
and Mrs Gordon West All
women of church and famtbes
InVIted. Take covered dtsh and
Ia ble serVIce
WOMEN'S Bowling Assn.
Wednesday,
7 30
p rn
Pomeroy Bowlmg Lanes. Ftrst
meeting, all women mvtted

Accordmg to Mrs Marvm King, Metgs County Fair Board
Secretary, the attendance at the gate this year at the fair was up
from last year Mrs. King, who has been busy w1th records, will
have attendance figures wtthin the week
SPEAKING OF THE FAIR, 11 certainly was a nice gesture
on the part of the Pomeroy National Bank to be the f1rst to buy an
animal at the Jwlior FBlr Steer Sale Friday mghl and gtve 11
back to the fall' to be sold again. Proceeds from the second sale
went mto the jwuor fair building fund
Followmg swt was the Citizens National Bank, Middleport, and
Page Olevrolet, Athens.
The Pomeroy National Bank purchased a steer belonging to
Celia McCoy and patd 57 cents a pound for the animal, not $2.21
as was announced earlier. The steer weighed 910 poWldS.
Alter paymg Miss McCoy for her prize animal, the bank gave
the steer back to the junior fair and the animal was sold on the
second roWJd to City lee and Fuel for 61 cents a pound, makmg a
total of $551.10 gomg into the junior fair building fund.
The Citizens National Bank purchased a pig !rom Mike Salser
for $3 a pound. The bank In turn gave the animal back to the
jwuor fall' and 1t was sold on the second ro\Dld to Marion Riggs
Ford, Logan, for $1.45 making a total of $313.20 going into the
building fund
Randy Johnson's lamb was purchased by Page Chewolet,
Athens, ~or $110 a pound. Page Olevrolet after purchasmg the
animal gave it back to the jWlior fair and 1t was sold on the
second round to Royal Oak Farms for $1 a poWld, making a total
of $85 gomg Into the building fWld.
Quite a gesture on the part of the three flrllls to help a very
worthwhlle•pi-ogram.

GO TO WEDDING
Mrs Davtd Entsmmger,
Mtddte6orl, accompamed Mr
and Mrs Charles Entsrnmger
and Mr and Mrs. R. G. Zahns,
both of South Charleston, to
T1mberv1lle, Va., for the Aug. 5
weddmg of Steven Zahns to
Mtss Linda Sptlzer Steven
Zahns IS the grandson of Mrs
Entsminger Mrs. Entsrnmger
VISited a week with Mr and
Mrs Zahns Mr. and Mrs
Sleven Zahns are restdmg m
Morgantown, W Va , where
Mr Zahns 1s attending
graduate school at West
V1rgm1a Umverstly

RETURN HOME
Sherry and Tem Gtlllam of
Fort Worth, Texas were
returned lo their home after
spendmg the summer al the
home of thetr grandmother,
Mrs. Goldte Wyant, Pomeroy,
R D 4 They were accompamed by Mrs Wyant and
Mrs Barbara Sayre and
daughter, Ltsa, of Mtllfleld.
Enroute home they vistted Hot
Spnngs, Ark , and attended
Grand Ole Opry and vtstted
Opry Ctly, home of the stars
also Mammoth Cave, Ky.
'

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

DAY CORRECTED
Mrs
Gtlbert (Mane)
Donovan, 51, Weilsvllle, dted
SOCIAL PLANNED
There w1ll be an old Thursday, not Tuesday, as was
fashtoned Ice cream soc1al at reported
Columbia Chapel Church,
Pomt Rock, on route 689,
Saturday, begtnmng at 5 p rn.
There wtll also be sandwtches,
pte, ca ke and soft drmks.
Proceeds wtll be used lor the
butldmg fund

SUPPER PLANNED
Acovered diSh supper w1ll be
held at the Pomeroy Church of
Chnst Wednesday, Aug 30, al
6·30 p.m, followed by elecUon
THURSDAY
fWIN -CITY Shrmettes, 1 30 of church ofhcers, prayer
Thursday, Columbus and meetmg and Btble study. All
Southern OhiO Eleclnc Co members are asked to attend
Plans to be made !or September VISit of h1gh priestess
GET-ACQUAINTED party
SERVICE CANCELLED
for chlldren and parents or
Wednesday evenmg serv~ces
Eastern Local &amp;hoot D1str1ct al the Pomeroy Church of
kmdergarten, 1 to 3 p m Chmt wtll not be held thiS
Thursday,
al
Chesler week Members Will be atelementary school Refresh- tendmg revtval servtces at
ments
Bradford.

Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Stansbury and Benjamin,
Reynoldsburg i Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Cleland, Gahanna;
Mr and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury,
Reba and Aaron, Albany, R.D.
3; Mr and Mrs Floyd Cleland,
R.D 1, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs,
Ernest J. Dawson, Brenda and
Cathy, and Sherry Lynn
Witcher, CorUand, Ohio; Floyd
Hendrtcks and Frank Cleland,
Ractne; Mrs. Helen Rtggs and
Davtd, Miss Wanda Cardillo,
Mr. and Mrs Robert Lambert,
Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. Hurley
Rtfe, Karen, Shirley, Ray, Joe
and Ed, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Rile, Wellston; Debbie and
Pamela Davos, Minersville;
Mr and Mrs Merle Davts, Mr.
and Mrs Bruce Davis, Davtd
and Danny, Henson Cleland,
Rutland, Mr and Mrs. HersII
Wheeler, Robert and Debbie;
Mr . and Mrs Darrell Wheeler,
Guysvtlle
Mr and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland
and Jeff, Mr and Mrs. Leroy
Ervm and Janme; Mr and
Mrs. Steven McLaughlin, Mr
and Mrs. Bernard Wtlhs and
Tina Marte, Mr and Mrs.
Bernard Wtllts, Sr~olly and
He1d1; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Hmes, Wayne, Karen and
Donna, Mr and Mrs Roy V
Reddy and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale H Bowman, Lancaster;
Mr and Mrs. Claire D. Stansbury, Jul1a, Clara, Bobble,
Groveport; Mr and Mrs Paul
Taylor, Barberton ; Mr and
Mrs Delbert Redman, Mr and
Mrs Louts Parsons, Dav1d and
Ralph, Mr and Mrs. Joe
Redman, Mark, Sharon and
Tommte, Ronald Watkins and
Kunoerly Mtller, Dun bar, W.
Va .; Mrs. Ntda McClure and
Dtane, Albany; Mr and Mrs.
Wtlharn E McClure and An·
drea and Christopher, Athens,
Mr and Mrs Leonard Peoples,
Jerry, Terry and Joe, Parkersburg, Mr and Mrs Joe
Bohner, Columbus; Mr and
Mrs Clyde Hampton, Bud
Hampton, and Shame, Mr and
Mrs Wayne Cleland, Ann,
Laura Rose, Tomrnte of Langsville, Mr and Mrs. Joe Shuler,
Cheshire, Mr and Mrs Sylvan
Cloland, , Sr,, Mr. and Mrs
Archte Wileeler, Kenneth ,
Karen and Dtan; Mr and Mrs.
Manon McClure, Dexter, R S
Turner, Albany; Mtss Sonja
Ohlinger, Middleport; Mr and
Mrs Roger Ughtrool, Belinda,
Mehssa and Shelby, Pataskala,
Ohto; Mr and Mrs Cecil
Carpenter, and Mr. and Mrs
Leroy Row land of Spnngheld
Mr and Mrs. Seth F
Nicholson, Rutland, were
afternoon callers.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

Se!!!!rlty forces spokesmen
sa_id ~be boJ;nbing of the Green
Hillacusto!I)S poSt near Nem,
32 miles ~uth of Belfast, was
the second gul!rrUJa bomb
attempt to go wrong in two
w~. As m the earller case In
Belfast, the bomb exploded
pre(llaturely, seconds after
being Pillnted.
It killed the two gunmen
trying to plant 1t, three
customs officers and two other
peri!Qns.
Security forces spokesmen
said tbe two men lugged the
latge bomb Into tbe customs
clearance station on the road to
Dublin. The bomb blew up
within live seconds, the
spokesmen said
"I wish to God It was all
~,~~~ over," S8ld a young man who
§l worked at the red brick
&amp; customs post. "It doesn't really
~ mean much when you read

r

i

Personal Notes ~ ~~~~t ~y';::~~~~t. But these
*' The young man, who would
Mr. and Mrs William

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Kenpedy had as recent
weekend gueslll Mr. and Mrs
Joe Kennedy and Gmger of
Memphl.s,l!'enn.;Mr. arid Mrs.
Jack Kenne~y and Tom of
Mudvllle, Tenn. Jo10ing them
lor an dutlng •t forked Run
Lake were Mr, and Mrs. Ed·
Y!ar~
·K,ennedY,,' l)ebbte,
Cheryl, Chuck, !&gt;ave and Mike
of PomeroY.; Mrs Allee
Robson, Middleport; Mi'. and
Mrs. Gat:Y Bamr!z, Carol,
Mary,ElbenahdAml or Belpre.
Other rece'!lt tuesls , at the
Kt)l1!11ily ~•nne we're Mrs ,
H•t.old ~~•ariz of Mason ;
Ml!rtlyn H~lzer and son Tod of
Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs. Lee Swtft and
famlly and Mr and Mrs
Wdbam Swtfl and famtly of
Bellatre were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs '•Dana •Swift and
other relaltves
Mrs . Fred Smtih returned
Sunday from Concord, Ky
where she spent a week vtsitmg
relallves.
Mr. and Mr~ Tim Prtddy,
Vtckl and Bryan, and Mr and
Mrs Stephen Jacobs, Tern and
Jeff, all of Columbus, were
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Dale Jacobs Mr and
Mrs Priddy tell Monday for
Htllsboro, W. Va. to spend
several days wtth Mrs Edtth
Lingerfelt at Denrnar hospttal
Debbie Hunnell and Behnda
Rabren are spendmg two
weeks wtlh Mr. and Mrs. John
E Hunnell and famlly and
other relallves and friends.
Mr. and Mrs Stdney Russell
spent the weekend m Wellston
with Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Haylh and family. They were
accompanied home by thetr
grandson, Robb1e, who wtll
spend a week here

Finish first ...

He gestured, hands shaking,
at the rubble whiCh was all that
. remained of the three-year-Gld
brttk CU$lonJs post, where
about 30 liC!))lle worked. It had
r~lveil many bomb threatscustoms posts are a favortle
Irish Republican Army (IRA)
target. Two months ago a car
carrying explostves was mtentionally detonated outside by
security forces, hurting no one.
Today three gunmen pulled
up m a car. Two jumped out
and heaved the bomb li!Stde
They started to shout a warning but the bomb explosion
stilled their vo1ces
In Belfast four masked
gunmen mvaded the home of a
police inspector investigating a
wave of 11 thrill" murders and
shot him in both legs, police

.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - The
37th a!IIlual Parker reunion at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary School August 13, began
with a basket dinner at noon,
Ethel Stout asking the blessmg
The busmess meeting was in
charge of Franklin Parker,
president
Prizes were
awarded the following : oldest
man, Leon Hecox; oldest

BIS. 2 DOOR

Kin: &amp; v.-n Zandt

•

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•

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• •

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the fine finish for fine woods
by PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
llllrt with PaL Tonetlc
Wood Stain lor dark
IMdlum or PIIWI tinta
finleh with "38" Pale Trim
Vamllh, glo... utln, dull
or nat tor paneling door.
or trim
'

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1JcMnln14:1iilds Aiency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Authorized Dealer

MASON
FURNITURE

Mei&amp;s County's Oldest and largest
Insurance Agency

always

Horm1n Grato

777-5592

MISdn, w. V•.

'

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store C»f Building
Since 1915.
•

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~lVe

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Oullook,
Thursday through Saturday:
Cloudy with a chance of
thundershowers Thursday.
Vartable cloudiness Friday
with a chance of showers
northeast portion. Fair on
Saturday, becommg cooler.
High temperatures Thurs·
day in the 70s northeast and
upper 70s to lower 80s
else~&gt; here. Highs Friday and
Saturday in the 70s north and
lo~&gt; er 80s south. Lows at
mght from the mid 50s to the
mtd 60s

sources satd The gunmen told
the officer they would execute
him Wliess he left hos Protestant neighborhood
A 19-year-old Roman
Catholic gtrl was tarred and
feathered as an lrosh
Republican Army (IRA)
punishment
Until the Newry blast, two
days had passed wtthout a
death m the ProtestantCathollc violence whtch has
wracked Northern Ireland for
three years.
Newry, 32 miles south of
Belfast, IS a major border pomt
between Ulster and the Republic of Ireland. Britosh customs
Btrtbs - Aug 18 - Mrs
posts along the border repea- Ronald Hester, daughter, New
tedly have been targets of Haven; Mrs Ralph Mathews,
extrellllSt attacks.
daughter, Coalton, Mrs Gary
Basham, daughter, Coolvllle,
Mrs
Charles Stratght,
DELEGATES STRANDED
daughter, Ripley, and Mrs
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP!) Gerald Garlic, daughter,
-Some 200 Ohio delegates and Galhpohs
guests to the )lepubllcan
Aug 19 - Mrs Allen Perry,
Nahpnal Convention were son, Radchff and Mrs Dee
stranded m the ram at the Caudtll, daughter , McArthur
Dtplomat Hotel Monday mght
Aug 20 - Mrs Eldon
because of a breakdown m the Sowers, daughter, Jackson;
conventiOn bus system The Mrs John Conley, son,
delegates !wally made the 22- Jackson ; Mrs
Leonard
mtle tnp to the convention ball Crabtree, daughter, Oak H1ll,
by cab at a cost of $12 50 per and Mrs Mtchael Wnght, son,
cab
Middleport
FOUR DEFECT
Aug 21 - Mrs Danny
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohw (UPI) Thaxton, son, Gnmms Lan- Four Staff members of _ dmg, Mrs Roger Puckett,
Dtstrtct 26 of the Umted Steel daughter,OakHtll, Mrs Ralph
Workers qnwn have broken Elhott, son, Galhpohs, and
wtth USW President I W Abel ~~~~eiiRetd Johnson, son,
to JOin other area labor leaders
Dl h
lo work for the elechon of Ra sc arwgesll D EunMice
y 1s avts,
rs
Demucrat1c prestdenllal K mey,th Wh
d
enne
1te an
son,
nommee George McGovern ' 1t Cl au d1a Trom bl y, Harry
was announced today They M t Alb t K h G
are Frank Tram or' USW
ar m,
er u n, eorge
subdtslnct dtreclor
at Brandau, Fred Gtll, Jr ' Ethel
Ashtab 1 T A t
. d Bean , lm s Cook, Shelby
u a, ony n onucct an Troyer Eleanor Stotts
Marvm Wemstock, staff Delores' S tlzl Mont Sm 1th'
repre•entallves here and
P '
•
Frank Leon, prestdent of USW Datsy Roush, Mtchael NeutzLocal 3253.
ling, Anna Morns, Roy Jones,
Lula Jones, Naom1 Howell,

about those we do not agree
with," he said
Hurt by Compromise
But he also satd he believes
states should be encouraged
and rewarded " that wm
campaigns m depth "
Rep. Donald D Clancy of
Cincmnati disagreed, saymg
the prestdenllal election should

.

30 ARRESTED
AKRON, Ohto (UPI)
Thtrly youths were arrested
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and four Akron policemen
Discharges:
Corda Stutler,
shghtly lDJured w scuffles wtlh
pohce Monday mght at a rock Leon; Clara Lowther, Ashton;
concert by the Jefferson Wtlham Longstaff, Kanauga;
Mtchael Pollack, Galhpohs,
Airplane here
Mrs. Ronald Fry, 1 son,
Pomeroy; Tma Btrchfteld,
Maso n, George Calandros,
Potnt Pleasant, and Mrs Erntl
Martin, Pomt Pleasant
Btrth - August 21, a son to
mentioned were Mr. and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Wtlliam Stewart,
Douglas J. Mtlls, Ehzabeth, W. Pmnl Pleasant
Va .; Bob Hecox, Love's Park,
Iowa ; Scott McDonald, Sharon,
QUEEN FOR A DAY
Pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Delmas
SACRAMENTO,
Calif
Smitil and Doliila, Mrs. Lotta
Parker, Smithville, W. Va.; (UPI) - Slate Sen James R
Jerrold and Mark Parker, Mtlls says that servmg as
Parkersburg; Willlllm Wh1te Cahforma's chtef execultve
and Diallll; Ralph, Lester, while Gov. Ronald Reagan IS 1n
Jackte and Carl Parker; Mr. M1am1 Beach is hke bemg
and Mrs. Wilber Parker and uqueen for a day " Mills, a
Ed; David Watson, Joseph, Democrat from San Otego,
Rinee, Lisa, and Theresa satd Monday that he II'Ws the
Watson, all of Pomeroy Rt. 3; role of actmg governor so
Lola Griffin and Jenny Clme, much that he might make a btd
Reedsville Rt. 1; Mr and Mrs. to become the "real" governor
Elmer Mason, Akron; Orland In 1975
F. Branch, Belpre, and Mrs.
Carol Jones and Mrs. Leo D
GUESTS COME
Keith, Marion.
Mr and Mrs Wilham
The reuruon will be at the Peeples of Lexington were
same place, the second Sunday weekend guests of Mr. and
m August, 1973.
Mrs. Ollo Lohn, Pomeroy

U.S. Ships Close Upon
Morrocan Coup Attempt
RABAT (UPI)
A
newspaper ratsed the question
Monday whether the United
Stales was Involved in the
attempt JBst Wednesday to kill
King Hassan and ~ize power.
L'Opmion, newspaper of the
opposition party lstiqlal, asked
if 11 was coincidence that on the
day of the attempt two
American destroyers, the USS
Ingram and the USS Stribling,
were in port at Casablanca.
On the day of the July 10,
1971, bloody army uprtslng, the
American Destroyer USS San
Otego was m the port at
Tangter, lhe newspaper sa1d.
"When one knows thalthe F5
fighters look off from the
mihtary a1r base at Kemtra to
try to shoot down the klng's
alrp'Jane where there are 430
Amenean training officers and
mstallations of ultramodern

\I

transm1ss1on, one wonders 1!
the presence m Moroccan ports
of Amencan dest~oyers the
same day of the two mthtary
movements was only by
chance."
The CornmWJtsl newspaper
l'Hwnamte m Pans and the
Betrut newspaper, l'Onent-le
Jour, accused the Umted States
of unpbcatwn m the Moroccan
affair
An AmeriCan Embassy
spokesman has said that
charges of U. S. mvolvemenl m
the Aug. 16 coup attempt were
"a
product
of
the
tmagl!llltlon "
AmeriCan personnel at the
Kenitra base told UPI they
were ordered by rebel
Moroccan a1r force offtcers to
stay inside their homes and
clubhouse during the coup
attempt.

be the key one
"We are here to nommate a
President, not a governor or a

posttion where MISS~~ or
(Joorgia .. are more reprtse~~&gt;
tative of the Republican party
than Ohto," Hughes si!id;
Ohio dtd not carry f~r Ute
Republican nomml!!! ih 1964,
when Bsrry Goldwater was
soundly defeated by Lyndon
Johnson

senator/' Clancy sa1d

Robert E. Hughes, GOP
chaU'IIlan of Cuyahoga County,
even sa1d he !ayored a floor
ftght if Ohio was gomg to get
hurt by a compromise
"We don't want to get into a

Daley, Connolly Agree on Election
half mllllon voters were e~­
pected ~ tum oqt. Stneen
' the
candtdates wer.e seekmg
Senate seat vacated by Derilocratlc Sen Fred R. HaftlS who
choose not to seek r~lection
In Wyoming, the clQ!iest race
will be between two
Republican congresSIOnal
candtdates who strongly
support Prestdent Nixon's
pohctes. State Sen. John
Patton, 41, and stockbrol&lt;er
BtU Kidd, 28, were vymg to
oppose Democrat Teno Rolli
callo, who is unopposed in his
party's prunary. Foot candidates were runrung for the
Democratic Senate nommation
to oppose Repu bbcan Sen Cliff
Hansen.

By United Press lnternatiooal for Nixon, satd that desp1te
Former Treasury Secretary Nuon's large lead m the polls
John B. Connally and Chicago many people wtll be surpnsed
Mayor Richard J. Daley, at the closeness of the
supporters of different pres- ballotmg
Idential candidates although
"!think that before 1t's over
both are Democrats, have people who thmk he's (NIXon)
predtcted that George S a shoo-in are gomg to be
McGovern wtll giVe Prestdent shakmg their heads and
Nixon a close race m the wonder1ng what happened,"
November election
Connally said.
Speakmg at a news conferDaley told reporters m
ence at the Natwnal Veterans Oltcago that McGovern's camof Foretgn Wars convenllon m
Mmneapolls Monday, Connally, who heads Democrats

paign 1S "domg fme." He
predicted the South Dakotan
will be "coming from behind on
that great last spurt "
Daley, who will meet wtlh
McGovern later this week
when the Democratic hopeful
comes to Oltcago to address
the Legwnnatres, rated
McGovern's campaign as
bemg farther advanced than
was Sen Hubert H. Humphrey's at this point m 1968.
Ntxon
returned
to
Washmgton from two weeks m
secluston at his Camp Davtd,
Md., moun tam retreat Monday
He will f)y to M1am1 Beach
PORTER TIME
today
to accept the Repubhcan
Mtss Mary Dorothy Porter,
Wesl Hyattsville, Md ., 1s nomination for re-election.
McGovern moved his camv1s1 tmg her brother and Slslerpaign
to Wtlkes-Barre, Pa , to
m-law , Mr and Mrs J
tour
the
regwn devastated by
Sherman Porter
Other
troptcal storm Agnes m late
11eeken~ guests of the Porters
He talked wtth scores of
June
~&gt;ere Mr and Mrs James S
Porter Ill and son of Colum- restdents who crttictzed the
Admmtstration for 1ts handlmg
bus Cap tam and Mrs Dav1d!.
of
disaster rud.
Porter and daughter of Fl
Two states, Oklahoma and
Worth, Texas, are vtstlmg wtth
Wyommg,
hold prtmanes
Mr and Mrs . Woodrow
today.
Saunders of Cheslure
In Oklahoma, more tban a

HOSPITAL NEWS

•1295

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

you've

chair

dreamed of at our low
prices.

caucus.
HIS plan would

delegates on the basts of voting
strength in congressional and
other off-year contests.
Both Andrews and former
Repubhcan National Chairman
Ray Bliss favor Rockefeller's
plan
Bliss warned of creating a
controversy about the 1ssue
bonus "Be careful m what we say

Hold Annual Reunion

69 DfEV.

Now you can buy that
comfortable
Lo·Z-Boy
1

this/'

daughter of Dorothy and Albert
Parker;youngestboy,Frances
Parker, son of Dorothy and
Albert Parker; yoW!gest g.u-1,
Mary Parker, daughter ol
Dorothy and Albert Parker;
'
family, Albert Parker,
largest
USED CARS
and traveled farthest, Leon
Hecox, from Burlington, Iowa,
550 miles.
Officers elected for next year
were Franklin Parker,
president; Gladys Parker,
Six CYI·• 'td jr~ns , radio &amp; sel:retary, and Ruth Witt,
w.~w tires
· ·
. a.i.l\iti!rlt s~tary. ~- Roy
l!a~ker and Mr$. William
Wlifte were-·appolnted to the
table cOiiU!ilttee.
. AU ·tx'ell!l!lt were asked to
c~eck " famlly records and
hlslll!J'. Mrs. Eleanor B.
"Ytu II ~lk' our Quality
lkiWII!llll and Mrs. Clllra Belle
Wa~ Of Dotng Buslne .. "
B\lrnr, A\llens, displayed a
GMAC FINANCING
ft2·5~4t.a.
'
,Pomeroy billfold diting !rom tbe mitldle
1fl!llls wl)lch belonged to their
. ·, o.-.rl.e:'dlnings 'Tile: 00
~eat.grandfatner ,
·
'flU P.M, J61i
Present. besides those
•

CHAIRS

not give hts name, was in the
town of Newry when the
bombers came to his customs
post on the Dublin road In the
rolling green htlls of County
Down.
"We tried to teiephone the
post," said the shaken young
man. "We couldn't get through
and J ealized something must
be
wroog.
we
came
straightaway- and found

This Week's Spectal

'

LA·Z-BOV

MI-ddleport

Savllla
1- - - - - - - - - - woman,
newest arrival,
MaryKmcatd;
Parker,

(NEWSPAPER ENH"RPRI SE ASSH 1

You wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Pollv's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly in care of this new,spaper.

Bomb ~Misfires, 7 Died

Encourage 'states
"In a nutshell, the dosput• os
between smaller states and the
larger states."
New York Gov Nelson Rockefeller has a different plan,
which he explamed to the Ohto
delegates durmg a breakfast

Besste Boyer, Dawn Ha!fell,
Loutse Haws, Wtlllam Stone,
Mrs Robert Gardner, and son,
Frances Kent, Ira Mulford,
Oather Helm, Caryl Bauer,
Kathenne Buchanan, Btlh
Trace, Charmame Fuller, Mrs
Wtlllam McGtnms and
daughter, Carohne Hall, Pearl
Ward, Randy Thomas, Tracy
ICade, Donald Whttley, Melvma
Wtckcr, Amy Tetry, Laura
Sparks, Mrs Samuel Morns
and daughter, Asa Milhoan,
Clatr Martm, Davtd Laufer,
Mrs Paul Knox and son, mfanl
daughter or Mr and Mrs
Artha Hornsby, Mary Hatley,
Wmme Guthne, Natda Frye,
Htlda Davts, Paul Caudtll,
Ilene
Bosttck,
Came
Alexander, Leon Parker,
Sandra Pyles, John Scurlock,
Charles Stevenson, Vallnna
Kanmard, Krtslle Boggs,
Dorothy Lavender, Mrs.
Robert Peoples and son, Irene
Wellman , Florence Hutchmson, Florence Wtcklme,
Sandra Taylor, Dale Saunders,
Evelyn Pugh, Mrs Glenn
Montgomery and daughter,
Melva Halley, Ralph Jeffers,
Jaom1 Brandeberry, James
Ball, Young Ktm, Mrs. Ronald
Hester and daughter, James
R1ggs, Julie Plunkett, Rtcky

The 17 members of the
Chester Ftre Dept are
begmmng an orgamzed course
o! mstruelwn to 1mprove local
!1re protechon
Through the efforts of Ftre
Clue! Ross Cleland, a !tre
set vtce tratmng mstructor has
been oblamed to g1ve the mstrucllon The mstructor, Joe
Struble, Pomeroy Ftre Dept,
wtll conduct weekly sesstons
Cerl1l1cates w11l be awarded to
the men who successfully
complete the course of mstru ctton
The servtces of the instructor
are made available by the
Trade
and
lndustnal
Vocatwnal EducatiOn Servtce
ol the Slate Department of
Educatwn as a part of the
publtc service trammg
program The traming IS of.
lered to Improve llre protec- ,
hun and f~re prevenhon m
comrnumttes throughout the
state. The value ol the trammg
IS recogmzed and recommended by the DiviSIOn of
State F~re Marshal, the Ohto
Jnspectwn Bureau, and
representatives of state fire
ftghtmg orgamzations
The trammg wtll consist of

Walters, Maude Ohver, Mrs

~
...~~·...,;..;oooo
~-~~~--~'"'"'··-.w.·.··~­

i Soct'al t'i·
...
;;&gt;

EVANGELIST HERE
MASON - The Bachtel
Umted Methodist Church
welcomed
Rev.
Bobby
Osborne, evangehst of Fort
Gay, W. Va., to bring the
messages that began Aug 20
and wtll continue through Aug.
'!1. Rev. Milton Bartram 1s the
pastor. Olurches involved are,
Letart, Graham, Broad RWl
and BachteL The servtces
begin eacll evening at 8 There
wtll be specud gospel singing
by these groups, Aug 26,
"Christian Harvesters;" Aug.
25, "Gospel Lights," and "Fort
Gay Gospel Radto Ololr," and
on Aug. 22, "Voices of Victory." Everyone welcome

Take a "RED CARPET
HOLIDAY" at the

RED CARPET INN
Pl . Pleasant, W.Va.
Labor Day Weekend

Sept. I thru 4th
Lu xu r1ous accommodations

Chester Firemen
Take Instruction

Dwame Jordan , Eva Johnson,

Ronald Hatten and son, Carne
Johnson, Jerald Scott, Mrs
James Ousley and son, Rodney
Shepherd, Thomas Walls,
Mary Smtih, Mrs Ralph
Mathews and daughter, Conme
Brannon , Velma Douglas, Mrs
James Dovenbarger and
daughter, Lona Fellure,
Eugene Adkms, Louise
Zickefoose, Lorren Wolfe,
Helen Walker, Andy Tredway,
Esther Ntberl, Pauhne McKey,
Mrs. Charles Stratght and
daughter, Weallhy Scharhger,
Carolyn Lawson , Floss1e
Gothard, Altme Cnst, Mrs
Wtlllam Colher and daughter,
Phylhs Batrd and Mrs Chi!
Barrows and son

.

I

•

Ill

Calendad

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
Thursday, 7 30 p.m

Sw•mmmg &amp; Tenn15
Superb dm •ng room
Lounge
Planned actn11t1es

CocktailS on arnval

Great enterta1nmen t

Swim Show

tnstrucllon m ftre hghhng
sk 1lls and techmcal tnformalton Some of the typtcal
um ts covered are commum ty
ftre defense, Inc pumps and
care or apparatus, fire !tghtmg
appliances, use of hose and
rope,gases and gas masks, and
hre f1ghtmg taches Wnlten
mstruction malenals are made
available to the mstructor and
to each llre fighter by the
Dtvtston
of
Vocallonal
Educatwn The Eastern Local
Board of Education is
coopera ling m the program

WINNERS NAMED
Wmners at the booth of
Ridenour 's T V &amp; Apphances
at the !a1r were Barbara Fry
and Sherry Vaughn, Pomeroy,
Mrs Carl Gheen and Mary Lou
!hie, Racme, Suzy Carpenter,
Coolville, and Jame Congo,
Portland

AU FOR AS LITTLE
As $30.00 per person
Plus accommodations Call
or wnte now for re'Servallons , Red Carpet Inn,
Ohto Rtver Rd , PI
Pleasa~l . W. Va
phone 304-675-5007

as a Wmk
on the move here there and

le,eM•here I Needs a perpetual
mot1on shoe - to lake 1t keep 11s
shape and good looks,
g1ve h1m ft1 plus support
A Poll Parrot

VISIT IN FLORIDA
CLIFTON - Mrs Thelma
Henry accompamed Mr and
Mrs Don Quisenberry and
chtldren of South Charleston to
Bradenton, Fla., where they
vtstted Mr Qutsenberry's
mother, Mrs. Oa Bowen and
pomts o! mteresl at DISney's
World of Orlando and Busch's
Garden al Tampa
VISIT MOTHER
Mrs. Martha Coleman and
chtldren of Columbus spent
Sunday wtth the former 's
mother, Mrs Thelma Henry.

VISITED HERE
ALL GIRLS mterested m
Mr Frank Crew of Warren
JOlmng or !ormmg a team, be and Bud Hams of Bloomallhe Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes mgdale, Ohw were recent
Thursday, August 24, at 12 guests of their mother and
noon
sister, Mrs Myrtle Durst.

WIN A BICYCLE
Nothing

Brand New

to

Buy.

Reg1ster•

FRIDAY
VESPER MEETING Fnday,
7 p m , home of Floyd Noms,
East Letart, followed by
wtener roast Pubhc mvtted.
Br~ng lawn chatrs .

Notice
I WILL NOT be responsible f~
any debts contracted b
anyone other than mysel
Signed, Donald E Whaley,
Rt. 1, Shade, Oh10
8-22 Jlp

PDR

Your Thom MeA~ Shoe Store.
Mtddleport, Ohio ,

TRDUBLEfREE
DRIVING•••

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

$17 95
•

8Includes
CYLINDER
Parts

and labor

Is yOIJr car acting up&gt; Has the
summer been hard on your auto,
Now's the It me to have a tune up. We
can have your car running smoothly

In no lime. Save money at Moore's.

Expertly Install:
SHOCKS
BRAKES
MUFFLERS
TAiL PIPES

Jus!

heritage house

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

Moore's Sellice Center

~5lSO,

MOORE'S
Service Center
124 W. Main
Pomeroy
PH. 992-2848

'

�' ' ,. ' I (I r { ',.,- , ., , I f' r t' r r r I I .

I

I. (

'

,,. J

I

'

' . I

'

1

I

I I

I

.,

,'

I" ( I I , ' ,

I

I

,

.,

••- n-.e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 22, 1972

.

.

'I

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
I
•
OEAD\.INES
.~ P.M. Day Before Publlcatlort.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
CallCe llation - Correct ions
Will be-accepted un t il9 a .m . for.
Day of Publication

Notice

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

ZSICIS
THE OFFICE

. Of

OF

DUALITY

REGULATIONS

Th • Publ isher reserves the
rlgt1t to edit or re ject any ads._
deemed
objecti onal .
The
publist1~ will not be responsibl e.
for mollto tha.n one , incorrect
Insert ion .
(), fiJI. T E 5
_.For .~anl Ad Ser vice
Wi II be clo sed from Noon on
5 cents per Word one lnservon
Aug . 23 until Friday, Sept. 1
Minimum Ct1arge 75c
when
it will open for regular
12 cents per word three
offi(e hours.
C0!'1Secu t ive inse-rt ibri's .
18 cen1s per ·word sr-x con
secutive inse rtions. 1
·-===========i
25 Per Cent Discount on p~Jd r
aas and ads paid within 10 daYs.

DR. JOHN RIDGWAY
IN POMEROY

.,

BLIND

~OS

OFFICE HOIIR~.

,.. 8 :30a.m, IQ S:OO.p.m" Daily,,
a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Card of Thanks

( •

Esther

AND SAVE$$

WE sincere ly wish to thank all
the fr ie nds and r elat ives. who
donated flowers and food
during the dea th of our dear
daughter and sis ter , Jean
Will iams Jones; also the Rev .

!l.o Job Too Large
Or Too Small

Commercial
Residential
Exterior
Interior
Sandblasting
Brush - Roller
Air - Air less
Spray

Dwight Zavitz. the minister
and the Ewing Funeral Home,
The Lad ies Auxiliary , of
Syracuse Fire Departm en t
for the lovely food donation
and cards from our dear
frien ds ; Ma y God bless you

al l.

·',

C.

Mrs .

H.

Wi lliam s, and family and Mr.
Mil lard C. Jones.

GHEEN BROTHERS
PAINT CONTRACTORS

8-22 -ltp

------Lost

(all 949-3295 - 949-4651
Aller 6

WOMAN 'S
eyeglasses
in
vicinity of Veterans Hospital,

"HEll"

------

Business Opportunities

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

BUSINESS

Window
Air Conditior..,rs

OPPORTUNiTY

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Man ·or Woman

ARNOLD

Reliable person from th is
area to serv ice and collect
from automatic dispenser s.
No experience need.ed - we

esta blish a~ccounts lor you .
Car, references, and $995.00

to $1,995.00 cash ca pita l
necessary. 4 to 12 hours
weekl y could net good part
time income. Full tim e
more. For local interview ,
write, Include telephone
number:

EAGLE INDUSTRIES
Department BV
3938 Meadowbrook Road
St. Louis Park, Minnesota

55426

.'

BR,ql~4~~
Pomeroy,

o."

YARD Sale, 203 Bu1ternut Ave .•
Pomeroy. Oh io; " A few an tiques. antique bottles , an d
misce ll aneous
items ,"

Saturday, August 26th and
Sunday, August 27th.
8-21-2tp

-------

5595

Pomeroy Motor_Co.
OPEN EVES.

B:OO P.M.

f'PMEROY, OHIO

Notice
REWARD, for shop ping at
Showa lter 's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester. Ohi o: 10 per cent of
your tota l purchase may be
app lied to the purchase of any
ceramic items .
'

8-1-30tp
MEIGS SE NI ORS -

Call now

for appointmen t to have your

SE NIOR PORTRAIT taken.

8-16-6tc

-----8 TRACK stereo

End loader work·,
basement , landWe have 2 size
site lolllders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also':

a month ; cal l 992-5331.
8·16-6tc

-------,--

haut fill dirt, top suii. Dump 1

MOBILE Hom e oi l furnace,

trucks and low-bOy for hire .

etc .; phone 992-5247.
8·22-6tp

See Bob or Roger Jolters,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 ·
: a her 7 p.m. or phone ' _992-'

AKC reg is tered miniature
Schnauzers . Ph . 446-2497.

. 5232.

8-22-11tc

1

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU'liNG
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

$250;

8-21-6tc
FORCED ai r turnace , ·com plete, stoker fi red, all controls

-OP')n 8Til5

.-

'

.
Monda.¥ lhru Saturday
606
,~
··- ...E. Main,
. ·---Po~n~~roy
. ..... ,,_ ""

TeNNIS

day; ph one 992-6187.

8-16-6tc

Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED

carpenter.

Phone 992-3918

PAINTER to paint barn and
house roof as soon as possibl e
before cold weather . Paul
Sayre, 843-2286, 1 m il e below
Ravenswood Landi ng, Rt. 338.

8-10-3tc

Last chance to hop aboard the
success. We' re selling toys
and booking parties , havmg
fun and getting paid. As a
demo I have no delivering , no
col lect ion, and I do not need
any ex per ience . I get free
training . Final deadl ine for
hiring is Sept . 25, ca!tme now ,
don 't wait; M arga r et Fortune,
94q-54 14 or Barbara Lambert ,
446-3411 .

8-21-tfc
FULL TIME ba rtender ; apply
i n person at the Meig s Inn.

8·6-llc

Wanted To Buy

Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ot1io. Call 991-6271.
6-28-tfc
TIN TAGS oil plug chewing
tobacco, suc h as :

Brown

ser v.ice 'd isplay of mobile home~ . ·
always available at .. .

work ; 104 Ga l ion Grader S N
GMP 20796, good condition,
rea dy to work. Inquire by
dialing
J . W. Ashton,
Col umbus (61 4} 486-9546 days

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

m odels of mob ile homes.

Phqne area code 614-423-9531.
4-13-tfc

1n tenslty control, m eta l case ,
$195 ;
CHOPPER ,
1969
Harley -Davidson ,
"C us tom
Springer," "E l ectric Start,"
" Polis hed Cases," " Drag
Exhausts ," extensive
chrome ,
many
cus tom
goodies , $2,795; call Eric

GUNS
222 CALIBRE rif le with scope,

7 ROOM house and bath , newly
painted ,
lf~ion
Ave .,
Pom eroy, phone 992-5641 .

8-21-6tp
AL L-ELECTRIC

·

barrel .

bedrooms, full basem ent and
garage , with lak e frontage ;
at Five Po ints area .

-

'.

1

1
&gt;-t2-lfc

~-EE ' US -~hR:

··;W!u ngs , tmn 111 .
doors and windows~ c&amp;rPorts. /
marquees, aluminum ...siding
and rai li ng . ·A . Jacob, sa les:
representative . For freej
~estim ate s, phone Charlesll

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

.I ASSURE YOU
51-jFS A~L RIGI-rr, auT
SHES TOO EXHAUSTED
· FOR AN INTERVIEW!

WE .JU5T AGREED 1D
SOME/ON~ OVER·
PV£ REFOI?MS;

GENTLEMEN!

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc. ·

·

8·22 -3tc

- - - - --

ap ·

proximately 1 acre of ground .

Phone 949-3633.

8·17-6tc

H. P. SCOTT outboard.

compl ete con trol s, tan ks and HOUSE in Long Bottom, pnont:
985 -3529.
spare propeller ; French
6-11 -tf c
provincial you th bed with

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake
Conc has, New M exico. $2,975 .
No Down . No Interest . $25 mo .
for 11 9 mos.
Vacation
Paradise . Free Brochure .
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box

8-10-4tp

FARM TOOLS
AND MtSC.

Dick Karr , Jr .

·

1

5·21 -tf&lt;;

-------;;-

O'bELL WH ttL alignm ent
localed at Crossroads, Rl . 124.

Ironica lly .

frame house, six rooms and

All

work .

R P;Hnn;:~~hl~ .

rates . Phone 742 ·3232 or

FOR SALE by owner . Yellow

992-32 13.

1-'li -TTC

bath . Large lot . Located In READY -MI X

Syracuse on Rt. 12~. Second
houst, on left going north
Ins ide corporation line. ·

7-27-tl

CONCRETE !
to y.our1
easy. Free,
est moles . Phone 992-3284.:
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,J
Middleport, Ohio.
j
6·30-tfc
dellv~red ri gh t
pro,ec'l. , ~ost and

I JUST IDl~'V
'IOO'D ~II&lt;.S TO
KNOW 'JII.Io,T I
HA'J~ t:OIHIIJ/o
TO.CCMPIAIIJ

St:'WI"" MA~HINES . l&lt;epalr:

8·22·6tp

-5 -----..,..ROOMS and bath,

ponds and septic tan k s; B &amp; K

guaranteed .

serv lc.e, all makes . 992-2284.

The Fabr ic · Shop, Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer Sales and /

,Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

•

3·29-tfc .
~I!'T WORRY, Alli!U: ... TKEY'LL

80 ACRE~
1lf2 story frame home, 7

room s, bath, barn 38 &lt;50,
Implement building, chicken

COl(~

CLOSE TO NEW MINE .
.
20 ACRES
Moden home. 3 bedroo m s,

bath, carpeted. fu rnished,
ALSO Inco me property, 2
bedrooms, bath, furnished

WMP0/1390·

1

~----------~--~----~

·

NOTICE 0~
APPOINTMENT :
Case No . 20,722

Estate ot Haro ld E . Sm ith
Decel!sed .
Not ice is t1ereby given that
Alma
Eve l yn
Smith
of
Sy ra cuse , Meigs County , Oh io, .
has been duly appo inted
Executr ix of the Estate of
Harold E . Smith, deceased , tale
ot Syracuse, Me igs County ,
Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f iduciary
within four months .
Dated tt1is lllh day of August

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BARGAIN ... ANYTHING A CUSTOMER THINKS A STORE IS LOSING MONEY DN ,....,
lfUBBARD
.-..•n
ACROSS
1. Priest
5. Gather
10. Type of
chees~

His tomb
is in

1972 .

Judge
Court of Common Preas,
Probate Divis ion
(8J 15, 22, 19, ltc

CAN STARr ALL
OVER .II.ClAIN.-

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. ~OHI

Estate of Vernon
Dar st
Deceased .
N.otice Is hereby given thai
El l 1son Darst of 6625 Slate Line
Road, East Ridge, Tenn essee
hu been du ly appointed
EKecutor ot the Estate of
Vernon Darst, deceased, la te of
Middleport , Me igs County
Ot1i O.
'
C_reditors are requ ired to lile
the1r. claims with said fidu ciary
wlth1n four montt1s .
Dated tt11 s 11th day of AugUst

181

NOTICE ON FILIIH•
OF INVENTORY

AND APPRAISEMENT

The

State of Ohio , Meigs
Countv . Probate Court.
To the Executor of Ad -

ministrator of the' es tat&lt;' . to
such Of the fo ltowlbg .- ~$'are
~esjdents or th e State ·oJ •.O"hto.
vi~: - th e S!Jrv lvlng spou&amp;f&gt;HtJt
next of k in, th e benetlcJar 1es·
under lh e w il l; an d to ttie at torney
or
attorneys
represent ing any or
the
aforementioned persons :
Ethel
Chevalier,
Ol ive
Township, Me igs County Oh to
No . 20697 .
'
'
You are her eby notified that
the
Inven to ry
and
Ap praisement of tt1e estate of tne
aforementioned , deceased, late
of said Coun ty, was filed In th is
cou rt . S&amp;ld tnventorv and
App,rlllsement w i ll be tor
hear ing before th is court on the
1st day Of September, · 1972 it

10 :00 O'clock A.M.

'

Any person des iri ng to file
exceptions theret , must flie
them at least tlve · ... ,. 1 prior to
the date tel for hhr 'i ng
• ·
Gl¥en Under my nand arid

••• 1of ,. ld Court, this 12tH d•y
of August 1972 ·
~
·

Maiming o . weo st;r
JUdge end ex ·OiftcJo
Clerk of sa id Court

Jentt t! . Morris
!II ,, . 12. 21 C~ ltf Deputy Clo~k
By

ce 1972 Kine Feature• Syndicate, Ine.)

was one
DOWN

~WIWIDM;;-"-'

1. Concern-

Ing
(2 wds.)
2. Less
13.Store
hairy
employee
3.
Steve
15. Singular
of
16. Hammar"diving''
skjold
lame
n.lmitate
4.
Taro root
18. Portu5. Maxim
guese
6. - de mer
coin
1. Turkish
19. Ripen
oity
20. Santo
8. -it!
of
(hurry)
baseball
(2wds.)
21. Varnish
ingredient 9. Tranquil
11. Pre23. Sensible
destine
24. Sluggish
26. Free

WHAT'fi mr-, lllOlli'E 10 HAVE
l1IIJ -o.~lfR

IMfEPourr

NO I'OiiTIClA~ fii'A51!S A ~11£
llfmft: ELEC110N

..

.-&amp;'J....J , _

loyi !I NIIII\IIN(H!)

""l!liJI!III

Unaeramble these four Jumble1,

one letter to ea•h aqulll'l!, to

form four ordinary worda.

I ORDOB

Teoterday's Auwer
14. Of a.
German
composer
22. You
(Ger.)
23. R. R.25. Abandon;
forsake
26. Become
furious

(2 wds.)
27. Refer

• :!!.'l~.~~ · ....

I I

28. Fastening
device
31~ Luzon
suport
31. Unjustly
obtained
33. Gratings
35. - Gide
40. Edward·

ZVFYZ

II I I

I
I I I [J

VEWERS

ian aou·

briquet
U. Married

WHA1''S NEEDED ~
A 51'AR'T IN
FAR eA5'TE~N T~VEL'?'

~
Now URI)rtlhe cln:led lotte..
I
I
I
to
foftll the ourpriH liiiWer, u
I~=t&gt;.:::.A~;:;~~-~~-;;~·-;;•u~r~ce:lled:;
br the abon oartoon.

from

1972.

s - Manning D. Webster
Probate Judge
ofsaidCounly
15 , 22, 29. Jtc

45. Hans
Andersen

Ravenna

s . Manning D. Webs ter

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

We talk to you
like person.

A· RUtii!IN'!"--·•

LEGAL NOTICE

hous e, 40 tillabl e acres ,

rented. 4 bedrooms, some
PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig -Zag
trip to the New England States
7433 or write John R. Veith, AIR compressor , electri c and
paneling. FREE GAS TO
sew ing machines . St ill in
ace t ylene welders , elec .
Cheshire, Ohio.
origina l ca rt ons . No at ALL OF THE ABOVE .
and into Nova Scotia .
200100. Alameda, Californ ia
power .drills, 18 in . Haffeo
tachments needed as our
8·16-6tp
IOACRES
Mrs . Virginia Townsend and
94501.
chain saw, Black and Decker
con trols are built ·in . Sews
3
bedroom
home, dining
8·6-30tp
Pau1 Henry, Columbus, were
power saw, bl acksmith tools ,
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
room,
bath,
full
basement,
(anv i l, vise, e tc . } disc.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
overnight guests of her uncles, For Rent
porches.
2
small
buildings.
SMALL
ACREAGE
with
trai
ler
grinder, cattle dehorners ,
monograms, and blind hem
Pa ul and W. C. Peck. Mrs. 4 ROOM unfurnished apartment
hooku
p.
wat
er
tap
pa
id.
ON
GOOD
BLA
CKTO P
emascul ator s, elec. wire and
sti tch . Full cash price, $38.50
and bath, upstairs ove ~
Located on Rt . 143. Wi ll se ll
Townsend then accompan ied
ROAD.
cable,
barb
and
woven
wire,
or
budget
pl
an
ava
ilable
.
double garage ; locat ed in
cheap . Phone 742 -3187 .
pip e and bo ll dies, hydraulic
3.05 ACRES
Phone 992-5641.
her cousins. Mr ..and Mrs. Cecil
Pomeroy ,
reference s
8-2Hic
jacks,
grease
guns.
electri
c
3 bedrooms, bath, utility
8·18-61c
required . Phone 992-5293.
Blackwood on a plane trip to
motors, butcher ing equip room , large patio, garage,
8-IWc
Dnlham, Ala ., a nd on to
men t, log and tra ctor chains, VACUU M Cleaner new 1972 CHE SHIRE, 5 rocms &amp; bath,
fruit storage, fru it trees,
wheel barrow, platform
model. Complete wi th all
Florida fo r a sightseeing trip .
basement.
PI•
Acre
,
10
grapes
, berr ies, chicken
DOWNSTAIRS unfurnished
scales, elec. fen ce charger ,
cleaning tools . Sma ll paint
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
minutes from Gavi n; storm
house,
pony pen , ALL IN
apartment , bath , basement
turn buckles, 2 oil barre ls
damage in shipping . Will ta ke
windoWS 1 newly remodeled;
and furnace, no pets ,· Upand family visited her brotherGRASS
EXCEPT GARDEN
with pumps , step and ext .
$27 cash or budget plan
carpeted dining area, large
stai rs furnished apa rtm ent, 3
SPACE.
in-law and sister , Mr . and Mrs.
ladders, harness, 1 lot fer avai lable. Phone 992·5641 .
l ivi ng room ; ca ll aft er 5:30
rooms. bath , and half, wace
8-18 -6tc
ti lizer , culvert and m isc. pipe ,
INSPECT
THE SE
Carl M~rnin g at Elyria were at
weekda ys,
Saturda y &amp;
heaters, no pe ls; ca ll 992-3056.
aluminum eaves t r oughs , -==== = ====:Sunday , 367 7114.
PROPERTIES BEFORE
the Cleveland Zoo and the
8·16-6tc
tank sprayer, tree pruners, r
8~ 18- IOt c
SCHOOL STARTS.
Cedar Point Amusement Park.
lawn mower, socket sets, and
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
Price
Smash!
frai ler on large lot
other hand and smal l tools lao '
The Busy Bee Society of the 3 BEDROOM
5
ROOM
house
on
50'
•
100'
lot;
REALTOR
in Shade ; phone 696-1 283 .
numerous to men tion .
Carpenter Baptist Church met
ca
ll
992-5786.
992-2259
8-18-61p THI S is a very large sa le,
PANTS &amp; JtANS
8·18-6tc
with Mrs . Rex Chead le. Emma
some th ing for eve ryone.
II no answer 992-2568
SLEEP ING room w ith private HOUSEHOLD, an tiques, guns
Whittington led devotions .
SALE!
_________:.________.:.___ __
and other Items to se ll on Aug .
bath fa cil i1ies ; phone 992r
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
1
26, cattle, maChinery and feed
5786.
Buy 2 Pairs and
have re turned from a vacation
to se ll Sept . 1.
8-18-6tc
GET I PAIR FRF~
LUNCH served.
u·ip . They attended the Grand - - - - Mrs. John Epple, Adm . Al l kind s, all size ror men ,
Ole Opry in Nashville, River 3 ROOM apartment, un ~
I. 0 . " Mac" M cCoy, au ctioneer women, young men, boys
furn is hed, 408 Spring Ave.,
Ranch and Disney World in
8·20-3tc and girls. Hurry to ...
Pomeroy .
110 Mechanic Street
Fl orida and visi ted her
8·10-tfc
POMEROY
19 FT HOLIDAY Rambler
cousins, Mr . and Mrs. J. F. - - - - - 'P._ Jack W. Carsey . Mgr
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tra vel
Trailer .
se lf "j
AND
4
RDUM
furnished
an'l!
·
BosU!ph in Orlando and several
.
«~!it~
'
Ph&lt;&gt;ne
992-218t
·,
con
tained.
sleeps
six,
ex
unfur P'I ished, apartments .
other points of interest.
cellent con d ition; phone 667·
=&gt;hone 992 -5434 .
... ,
RENOVATEO
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Price
3400.
COAL Limestone, ExcelsiOr .
4-12-tfc 1
3
BEDROOMS
Bath
, charming break fast nook. Utility
8-20-6tc
.
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
.
visilecj their son-in-law and
-:-:"C"C"---Pomeroy
,
Phone
992-3891.
rocm
and
nice
kitchen
. All caq:~eted . Lovely concrete
daughter, Mr . and Mrs . Auto Sales
APPLE S Fi tzpatrick Orchards
4-12-tfc
front .por ch. VInyl siding for little Maintenance. Mid·
Throckmorton and Leslie at
Slale Route 689 . P hon~ ·
dleport.
CHEVELLE Malibu, $495;
Wilkesvill e 669-3785 .
CO NTEMPORARY Console
Oxford. The Throckmortons 1965
DOWNTOWN
1969 Oldsmob ile, $1.895 ;
~~~-=-----:----=-8·_1_:_7·.::..
1 0tc slereo. AM-FM radio. 4 speed
arc moving soon to Bainbridge,
3
BEDROOMS
~ath, fireplace wlln bookshelves at ea ch
phone 992-5786.
n changer, 4 speaker sound
end, and bu ilt-in stereo. Gas forced air furnace. Full
8-20-6tc ~ACIN" cc 6 room house, bath' sys tem. Walnut veneer
Maryland .
ba serTJent with garage and 3 rooms . Block garage on extra
uti l ity r oom , garage , $10,000;
c:rabinet. Balance $67 .32. Use
Mr . and Mrs. J erry Stans1969 PLYMOUTH GTX, good
lot. Asking only $21 ,000.00. .
'.hone 949-4195.
' ' our budget plan. Call 992·7085.
bury, Reva and Aaron, local,
condition ; phone 992· 7624.
OPPORTUNITY
8-IB-61c
3-31-tf c
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
8·22-3tp - - - - , - . ---cc--- BUSINESS BUILDING - and a modern 3 bedroom air
Hu tchi nson, Chillicothe, enMAPLE stereo -radio com conditioned home. Wood burning fireplace In living. All
PLYMOUTH GTX 2 dr.
rooms paneled. Young pine trees and ni ce view ol the Ohio
joyed a vacation trip to '69Hardtop
..--~-..,-----:-------1"1
bination,
AM-FM
radio
,
4
with automatic I '
' speed changer, 4 speaker
River. A real good buy. 125,000.00.
Dearborn, Mich., where they
transm ission, v inyl top, all·
sound system. Balance $72 .55.
OVER7ACRES
t inted glass, fa ctory Stereo
viewed the sights at Ford
Use our budget terms. Call
ON
ROUTE
7
With
plains water tap. Mostly cleared and
tape player and other e)C tra s,
992 -7085.
Museum and Greenfield
ready
for
house
construction.
Asking $10,000.00.
gocd conditi on; ph one 949·
8·1B-61c
Village .
4141 or see Benny Wilson ,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Main St., Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
NICE - 3 bedroom home with large closets, Large living
SUMMER clearance of pattern
~
8·22-6tc
and
kitchen, plus utility. Concrete front porch. Nearly an
took Mrs. Otto Wiseman to the
books and imported yarns.
:----c:c----:-:-:----=--:acre
of nice laying land. Want $16,000.00.
Needlecrafl
Shop,
Rt.
124
Wellston Nursing Home where '66
Chevy Pickup Truck, V-8,
East, Syracuse. 10 a.m . to 7
183 bored, Richard Garten ,
they attended a IOOth birthday
p.m. daily except Sunday.
NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL US TO LIST. PRICES ARE&lt;
Ra ci ne.
ce lebra tion
for
Mrs .
8-10-lfc
GOOD
AND THE DEMAND tS INCREASING. WE WILL
8-20·3tc
Wi sema n's aun t, Eliza·beth L--:--:-:--:-:--TREAT YOUR PROPERTY AS IF IT WERE OURS.
1. ~oooc~ puppies. ~11ver 1oy.
(Aunt Lizza) McCumber. The 19 70 OLDSMDBI L E 98, ex cellent
condition·,
I
lady
.Parkv1ew Kennels, Phone 992-.
HELEN L. TEA FORO, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
honored guest received many
lJN TOUR DIAL
owner. Phone 247-2844.
544.1.
. ..
cards, gifts and visits from
8-20-6tp
: 8-15-ttc
friends a nd relatives.

Mule, Star, etc. Phone 367·

S..'SC".

Complete front end serv ice,
tune up and brake serv ice .
Wheels
balanced
elec ·

gas and electr ic, phone 992-

8-17-tfc

p.m.

'

AN'r't111Nb

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine', Ohio
'Crltt Bradford
5·1-t

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

2601.

sheets; phooe 992-7201 after 5

-so AH'L~ I..EAV£ rMs
$100.000 THEY PAl()
ME' FO'MAJ.I SKULL -·

SEPTIC TANKS CLEIINED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4781. Galll~olis , John Russell,,
ONner &amp; Operator .

I ... CAN'r

1lirNK'a=

E.cavating . Phone 992-5367.

8 ROOM house. bath. larg e lot,

Furnace . $25.

U'L ABNER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992 -2174
Pomeroy

2 New Homes, all electr ic, 3

2

~~one 8\}3~ ¥,1 ~Ito, W.

Phone 991-3975.

'

Radiator Specialist

992-2789 aft er 5 p.m. week·
days .
8-6-JOtc

- 10 room houS&lt;! ~
Chambers 992-5386 afler 5 RACINE
bath , basement , garage , two
p.m.
.l ots. Phone 949-43 13.
··
8·18-6tp
4-5-ttp:

shot, Anti que 12 gaug e double

buffet, 2 trunks , ch in a closet,
8-day clock, oil lamp, cedar
chest, lard press , shoe la st.
stone jars , and jugs, burnside
stove, 60 gal. copper keHie,
cream · separator .

home ,

bedroom , uti l.ity room, k it chen , dining area, bath, large
living room with wall -to-wal l
carpeting.
air -condit ioning,
garage , pl enty of water,
draperi es and rods included ;
Stucco and Permastone
outside ; S m iles South of
Kaiser Aluminum on Rt . 2;

~pots. 1ndiv1dual adjustment,

22-410 over under, 12 gauge
pump gun , Browning 12 gauge
automat ic, 12 gauge single· COAL FLOOR

...

No than Biggs

NEW HOMES
3 BEBROOMS

Real Estate For Sale

lOA with Sulky , Ro tary tiller ,
microphones with cases, $40
30 in. Rota ry mower .
each plus stands and boom;
FEED
Goya
guitar.
st =mdard ,
LOT barley, approx . 1200
sunburst f ini sh . w ith case,
ba les hay. approx . 50 bal es $125 : Custom Built Teardrop
bass { Fender styl e neck)
straw.

cabi net. 2 bed s, dr esser,
Daveno bed, 2 r ecliner chairs,
platform ro ckers, odd chairs,
wr i nger washer · 2 sets
laundry t ubs. trea dle sew ing
machine, kitchen utens i ls,
and many other household
items.

building lots at R o~k Springs,
close to Hig h School &amp; Fair·
Ground ; call or see Bi ll Witte,

·~

3-2·1111
..----::-----•
r-Ut( • nt:: 13EST deal in a new~=========--,
SE
PT
-h
...
tanks
c1eaneo.
M
ill
er
or used mobile home, try
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio . Pn .',
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
662-3035.
I
Kanauga, Oh io.
2·12-tfc
7-16-3otc
uvo~...:K and back hoe wOrk,'

covers, $575 ; Two Shure

"Captain Amer ica" fini sh
with case, $140 ; Light system.
2 black l1~hl s, 4-150 watt

home ; phooe 992-5331.
8-11 -30tc

CONVENIENT but secluded

"CAS tj Paid for alt makes ana

- -- - - -- - - -

HOUSEHOLD
FROST-FR EE refrigerato r .
(Gibson), Rover Gas range, 7
*· pc . dinette , set, kitchen

clean , oll. adjust, S399, in your

Real Estate For Sale

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

baler. (l ike new) 2 four -wheel far m wagons, 3 smoothin g FENDER P. A. Sys tem, 100
harrows, 8 ft . disc harrow,
wa tts RMS, 2 columns , 8-10"
'1950 Chevrolet flat -bed dumpspeakers wi th covers, $595;
tru ck, 1963 lntern at ional1;2 T.
Fender Showman amp. 15" D
pick -up , Letz Burr feed mill ,
140 JBL speaker w ith covers,
po_wer ta ke -off grass seeder,
5450 ; Fender Bandmaster
tra c t or - mounted
crop
Amp . 2-23"
0120 JBL
sprayer .
speakers. with reverb, with

ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENR OL L BY SEPT. 251h . 1968 GRAVE LY tractor Model
PLAY HOU SE TOY train to

"c omplete

with winch , 1 M odel 620 John
Deere tractor. 2 Model 8 John
Deere Tractors . 1 Oliver 77 1969 HONDA 70cc, excellent
tractor, I an t iq ue trac tor
condition , pool ta ble , 7 ft .
( 1924 John Deere) .
tong , 4 ft . wide. 6 pc . Dinette
JOHN Deere equipment: Front- Set. Phone 742~ 56.41.
end loader , 7 ft . semi-mo unt
V
8·20 ·61c
mower , si de·rake, 6ft. brush - - - - - - - - - hog , rotary hoe , manure CA NNIN G - tomatoes. Sl. 25
spr eader , 36 ft . elevat or, t wo - picked . Mangoes, Raymond
bottom 3-point hi tch plow, 2· Rowe, Yellow Bu sh Rd .,
row corn planter, 61/:1 ft.
Racine. Phone 949 -37 46.
combine, 13-di sc grain dr i ll.
8-17-otc

WOMAN wanted t o l ive in with
elderly lady; phone 949-4904
or 667-3319.
8-20-3tc MODEL 12 Ma ssey -Ferguson

IBHtl Pullins. Phone 991)47ij ~
·
· ·4-25-tfc
mobile home' · ~-----:-=c::--­
plus gigantic
SEWING Mach ine Serv ice,

BAU. ~

' '.
'' '1.
' .

P·ro·m the largest
Bulldozer Radiatar to
Sma lle!t Heater Core.

and

Se pt ic tanks instal led . Geon::~e ;

· • Underpinni~g

BOWLiNG~

.'. '•'

Sttrvlce

electrical; phone 742-4186.
B-16-30tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER wort&lt;::

... ~ES INVITSO
CONNALLY TO GO

~ ~.

CONSTRUCTION,
repair

lHE PROBLEM WAS "THAT
fiNALLY MET THE GIRL
OF Ml{ DREAMS... .

....

'.

Route 1, Shade, Ohio 992-6547,
next to Whaley's Paint Shop.
8-20-12tc
roofing , porch

LAFF, TOO -·SPECIAL

S.YLV/ A SWEATY Fll.l.MS I
1/JHEI..I DID YOU GET
15f\CK IIJ IOIAJIJ 1

WHEN SHE WEAR~ '
ThAT OSTR ICfl
PLUME HAT OF
HER'N TO CHOIR
PRACTICE

A BAREBACK
INTH'

REMEMBER TilE TIME
AfiNEW ZAPPeD SOME
DIJOE WI~ A GO~F BALL~
AN~ W~EN ~E IJONKEP
HIS PARTNER Wt~ A

'?omei'!JY Ho.rnl_
' l Auto

ather auto work . Very
reasonable rates. Wain es
Auto Service, school trained .

PRICE

-.Air Conditioners
• Awnings

8 , SN IOS 1756 Hyd . fu l l U
blade SN 6381, 21 ,000 Mark II
engine. enclosed All en canopy

or (614) 457 ~ 0659 eveni ngs and
weekends .
8·12-6tc

15-tfc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Southeas t of Hem lock Grove, 1970 ALLIS -CHALMERS HD.21

MACHINERY
04 CATE RPILLAR bulldozer

Pomeroy .Mason
8~

A. Eastman farm , on East Honeymoo n tread le, T AP.
man Ridge road, 1 m i le East
sews good , phone 742-5735.
of Old Rt . 33, 6 miles North
8·22·3ic
of Pom eroy, 2•11 miles ----..,------:-:-::-::-::--::
will sel l the personal pr operty
of the late M r . Eastman as
follows :

the

Bridge; phon e 773-5308.

ESTATE AUCTION
and piping ; phone 881·3182.
TWO-DAY estate auction Sat .,
8·22-3tp
Auoust 26and Seat. 2, at 10:00 - - - - - - - - - - : a. m. each day at the George ANT IQUE sewing machine,

cab. Good condit ion, ready to

WILL care fo r pre -sc hool
chi ldren in my home, $3 a

Bob's Market, Mason, W. Va .,
above

~
~

SHE'S GOOD AT
MAK IN ' FOLKS

CIRCUS

phone 992-

through ea rly September ;

LIKE J; WUZ FIXIN' TO 5AY- 5AtRV'5 GOTTH ' GOODEST
PAIR OF LAIGS I EVER SEEN -THEI/'0 BE GOOD FER
HQLDIN' ON IF SHE WUZ

CLA'ITER

.AUTOMOBILE insurance betiri:
\ cancelled?
Lost
your
9981.
operator's license? Call 992·
8·22 -Jtc For Sal.e
2966.
6-15-ttc i
VERAL varieties of lop c.~. ......,c:.......~.,...-,.----.,-YAMAHA 150 Enduro, 8 months SEquality,
- ·•
tree ripened, canning
old , Norg e electric range, like
TUNE
-UPS.
brake
jobs
and
·
peac hes;
now available

ANTIQUES AND
COLLECTIBLES
organs, dishes, clocks. brass ROCKERS, 3 chests of drawers, 60

Kn oxville, Tenn., on a vacation

Dozer &amp;
p.ond s,
sca ping .
dozers, 2

in lovely

Portraits will be taken
LIVE STOCK
Wednesday , Aug. 23rd thru 8 STOCK cows with calves a t
Sal ., Aug . 26t h . Gr over's
side, 1 springer cow , 1 2-yr .
Stu di o.
phone
992 -2475,
old Here ford steer , 2 year ling
Middleport. Ohio.
Charolai s
hei fers,
:JS
8·16-9tc
ch ickens.

beds, or com plete households .

Murl Galaway accompanied
Martha May s to Jenkins
Memor ial Health Facility
where they visited with Floyd
King.
Mr . and Mrs. Albert Quivey,
Dover, ~ere at Royal Oa ki
Ieake this part week. Robert
Parker and Cindy, Middlepor t,
spent a night with them and
Mar tha Mays and Kenneth
Erickson visited them on
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
allendcd a 40 year ce~brati on
of Sugar Creek Grang{held In
the Legion Hall a t Dalton,
Ohio, in Wayne County . Mr.
SU!rkey was guest speaker.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gillogly
and children ·spent a weekend
at Cedar Point Amusemen t
Park nea r Lake Erie.
Mr . and Mrs . Mendal Jordan
and Bryan and Keith Jordan
look Rolland Shell of
Steubenville to Marietta where
U1ey met Mrs . Ethel Shell and
Linda at Linda 's apartment
there. Rolland had been a gues t
in the Jordan home for the past
two weeks and accompanied
his mother and sister back to
their home in Stuebenville.
Linda Shell, a 1972 graduate of
Ohio University, will teach at
Warren Loca l Elementary
School and has secured an
apartment in Marietta to be
near her employment.
Mr . and Mrs . Newton Ice are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Tracey Lee , on
August 5 at Holzer Medi cal
Center. The baby weighed 8 lb.
I oz. Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Scott McComas, local,
and Mr. and Mrs. Darrell fee,
Manchester. Elza McComas is
a great-grandfather. The little
onQ' ts two sisters, Alma and
1\. · ·ca, and on ~ brother,
Ne• .on, Jr.
Mrs. Esther Dailey accompanied her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
David Dailey and Mrs. Borden,

EARTH MOVING

new . Phone 992 -7109.

For Sale

KOSCOT KOSMETICS an d HOR SE draWn dirt scoop ;
wigs , more new products
phone 742 ·5113 .
comi ng soon . For free
8-20-3tc
demonstration , phone 992 51 13.
8-17-tfc OLD Furniture , oak tables.

Carpenter News, Event

.Business Services

SINGER Sewing Machine, will
sell forsmall balance of 131 .20
5331.

DON'T SAY NOTHIN'
AT ALL

BOAT, motor. trailer and ac-

r---~~·~·~·"'----~-1

8-22-3tp

and
B-16-tfc

ta~k ,

8-17-6tc

If found ca ll 992-7791 alter 4
p.m .

Pomeroy

CALL US FIRST

8-22 -ltp

and

'

Blrbers' Loul •oo.AFL · CIO

-------

Mr .

1

Lynn St. 992·2367

nurses, Mr s. Russe ll and the
ones who sen t flowers, cards
and gifts to me while I wa s
hospitalized at Veteran s

Dailey .

1966 CHEV. 2 TON
51595
84" cab to axle, good 825x20-IO ply tires, 292 engine. 15000
lb. 2 speed axle. Solld.cab, ·ready to hau l.

I

Do vou h1ve curly or hard to
m1n1ge ha ir?
Stop In and t1ave M ic k or
Fred relax vour hair for a
more ma nageable ha ir .

tomatoes

mangoes . Geraldine 'Cleland,
Racine, Ohio .

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

I WISH to thank Dr. Pickens,

Hospital.

CA NNIN G

cessories,

o

8: 30

Memori al

"'",._,. •'l~

Ct1arge per

ABOOT SOMEBODY--

ha ndrubbed co n so l e, pay
balance of $96.41 or pay $7.25

6 cylinder, standa rd transmission, radio. More car than
th e price shows.

Each addjtionat word 2c .

Addi l iC:Inal He
Adver tiSement.

11469

1966 MU STANG HDTP. COUPE.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .5() for SO word minimum .

••

1968 CHEVROLET ~. TON

IF 'IE CAN'T SAV
SOMETHIN' GOOD

For Sali.

or pay $5 a month i call 992-

8 foot Stepside, good heavy duty tires, V-8 engine, J-speed
transmi ssion, solid cab, local 1-owner truck .

'IEP•• HE SAtD

GROAN}

damage
29. Paper
quantities
;;;;;:-v;-;:;:;;;;:;-;;;;;;-::;:;-,=~ 32. Building
SO THE EA5Y WAY OUT 1'!1 TO TRY
extension
TO 1!1/II.P A CAff AGIIINST JIM
33. Card
JUS11N. 15 "!HAT WHAT )OIJ
game
IN MINP, lifUTE~T
M. "One · time
(2 wds.)

V 'I

IL..___;frill.:.:":.=
..:..:•::.:•=-=AIISWII~Iten~_l

"(II I )"

(A.wen lamorrew'

. \'e•lenlar"•

J_...., IOOTT ILANK AMULET HANGAR
"-WIH'I

~E~s6.0ld
note

lrhat Me 11Jid Klh~n lhl'! Ka• lycoon

propou·d-"TANKS A LOTI"

Scottish
explorer
Sine
quaBeing
unruly
(2 wds.)
U.Moved
gradually
IS. Lamprey
catcher
4f.Feats

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXJ.
II L 0 N G F B L L 0 W
Otle letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'•, etc, Stn1le lotte ..,
apostrophes, the lenllh and fol'Dlatlon of the words are all
hints. Eaoh ~ay the code lettero are dilferent.
B

CRYPTOQUOTBS
SE
GH R GXE

QBWM

QFCWH

NMRK

RKG _ HSONE
JCHNFK

QRKN

FZ

ZFH

tiOV

KNOW WJ.lAT A

I ~~~~15, DON'T'IOU?

!-

WELL, Tfll~ I~ A PICTVRE
OF A RACCOON MLEEP IN
f415 RACCOCOON !

)[ F ·

ZCBHKGW

ODCWH • .,KBTIIFXRW
I

'
I

'

,.

�' ' ,. ' I (I r { ',.,- , ., , I f' r t' r r r I I .

I

I. (

'

,,. J

I

'

' . I

'

1

I

I I

I

.,

,'

I" ( I I , ' ,

I

I

,

.,

••- n-.e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 22, 1972

.

.

'I

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
I
•
OEAD\.INES
.~ P.M. Day Before Publlcatlort.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
CallCe llation - Correct ions
Will be-accepted un t il9 a .m . for.
Day of Publication

Notice

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

ZSICIS
THE OFFICE

. Of

OF

DUALITY

REGULATIONS

Th • Publ isher reserves the
rlgt1t to edit or re ject any ads._
deemed
objecti onal .
The
publist1~ will not be responsibl e.
for mollto tha.n one , incorrect
Insert ion .
(), fiJI. T E 5
_.For .~anl Ad Ser vice
Wi II be clo sed from Noon on
5 cents per Word one lnservon
Aug . 23 until Friday, Sept. 1
Minimum Ct1arge 75c
when
it will open for regular
12 cents per word three
offi(e hours.
C0!'1Secu t ive inse-rt ibri's .
18 cen1s per ·word sr-x con
secutive inse rtions. 1
·-===========i
25 Per Cent Discount on p~Jd r
aas and ads paid within 10 daYs.

DR. JOHN RIDGWAY
IN POMEROY

.,

BLIND

~OS

OFFICE HOIIR~.

,.. 8 :30a.m, IQ S:OO.p.m" Daily,,
a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Card of Thanks

( •

Esther

AND SAVE$$

WE sincere ly wish to thank all
the fr ie nds and r elat ives. who
donated flowers and food
during the dea th of our dear
daughter and sis ter , Jean
Will iams Jones; also the Rev .

!l.o Job Too Large
Or Too Small

Commercial
Residential
Exterior
Interior
Sandblasting
Brush - Roller
Air - Air less
Spray

Dwight Zavitz. the minister
and the Ewing Funeral Home,
The Lad ies Auxiliary , of
Syracuse Fire Departm en t
for the lovely food donation
and cards from our dear
frien ds ; Ma y God bless you

al l.

·',

C.

Mrs .

H.

Wi lliam s, and family and Mr.
Mil lard C. Jones.

GHEEN BROTHERS
PAINT CONTRACTORS

8-22 -ltp

------Lost

(all 949-3295 - 949-4651
Aller 6

WOMAN 'S
eyeglasses
in
vicinity of Veterans Hospital,

"HEll"

------

Business Opportunities

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

BUSINESS

Window
Air Conditior..,rs

OPPORTUNiTY

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Man ·or Woman

ARNOLD

Reliable person from th is
area to serv ice and collect
from automatic dispenser s.
No experience need.ed - we

esta blish a~ccounts lor you .
Car, references, and $995.00

to $1,995.00 cash ca pita l
necessary. 4 to 12 hours
weekl y could net good part
time income. Full tim e
more. For local interview ,
write, Include telephone
number:

EAGLE INDUSTRIES
Department BV
3938 Meadowbrook Road
St. Louis Park, Minnesota

55426

.'

BR,ql~4~~
Pomeroy,

o."

YARD Sale, 203 Bu1ternut Ave .•
Pomeroy. Oh io; " A few an tiques. antique bottles , an d
misce ll aneous
items ,"

Saturday, August 26th and
Sunday, August 27th.
8-21-2tp

-------

5595

Pomeroy Motor_Co.
OPEN EVES.

B:OO P.M.

f'PMEROY, OHIO

Notice
REWARD, for shop ping at
Showa lter 's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester. Ohi o: 10 per cent of
your tota l purchase may be
app lied to the purchase of any
ceramic items .
'

8-1-30tp
MEIGS SE NI ORS -

Call now

for appointmen t to have your

SE NIOR PORTRAIT taken.

8-16-6tc

-----8 TRACK stereo

End loader work·,
basement , landWe have 2 size
site lolllders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also':

a month ; cal l 992-5331.
8·16-6tc

-------,--

haut fill dirt, top suii. Dump 1

MOBILE Hom e oi l furnace,

trucks and low-bOy for hire .

etc .; phone 992-5247.
8·22-6tp

See Bob or Roger Jolters,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 ·
: a her 7 p.m. or phone ' _992-'

AKC reg is tered miniature
Schnauzers . Ph . 446-2497.

. 5232.

8-22-11tc

1

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU'liNG
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

$250;

8-21-6tc
FORCED ai r turnace , ·com plete, stoker fi red, all controls

-OP')n 8Til5

.-

'

.
Monda.¥ lhru Saturday
606
,~
··- ...E. Main,
. ·---Po~n~~roy
. ..... ,,_ ""

TeNNIS

day; ph one 992-6187.

8-16-6tc

Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED

carpenter.

Phone 992-3918

PAINTER to paint barn and
house roof as soon as possibl e
before cold weather . Paul
Sayre, 843-2286, 1 m il e below
Ravenswood Landi ng, Rt. 338.

8-10-3tc

Last chance to hop aboard the
success. We' re selling toys
and booking parties , havmg
fun and getting paid. As a
demo I have no delivering , no
col lect ion, and I do not need
any ex per ience . I get free
training . Final deadl ine for
hiring is Sept . 25, ca!tme now ,
don 't wait; M arga r et Fortune,
94q-54 14 or Barbara Lambert ,
446-3411 .

8-21-tfc
FULL TIME ba rtender ; apply
i n person at the Meig s Inn.

8·6-llc

Wanted To Buy

Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ot1io. Call 991-6271.
6-28-tfc
TIN TAGS oil plug chewing
tobacco, suc h as :

Brown

ser v.ice 'd isplay of mobile home~ . ·
always available at .. .

work ; 104 Ga l ion Grader S N
GMP 20796, good condition,
rea dy to work. Inquire by
dialing
J . W. Ashton,
Col umbus (61 4} 486-9546 days

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

m odels of mob ile homes.

Phqne area code 614-423-9531.
4-13-tfc

1n tenslty control, m eta l case ,
$195 ;
CHOPPER ,
1969
Harley -Davidson ,
"C us tom
Springer," "E l ectric Start,"
" Polis hed Cases," " Drag
Exhausts ," extensive
chrome ,
many
cus tom
goodies , $2,795; call Eric

GUNS
222 CALIBRE rif le with scope,

7 ROOM house and bath , newly
painted ,
lf~ion
Ave .,
Pom eroy, phone 992-5641 .

8-21-6tp
AL L-ELECTRIC

·

barrel .

bedrooms, full basem ent and
garage , with lak e frontage ;
at Five Po ints area .

-

'.

1

1
&gt;-t2-lfc

~-EE ' US -~hR:

··;W!u ngs , tmn 111 .
doors and windows~ c&amp;rPorts. /
marquees, aluminum ...siding
and rai li ng . ·A . Jacob, sa les:
representative . For freej
~estim ate s, phone Charlesll

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

.I ASSURE YOU
51-jFS A~L RIGI-rr, auT
SHES TOO EXHAUSTED
· FOR AN INTERVIEW!

WE .JU5T AGREED 1D
SOME/ON~ OVER·
PV£ REFOI?MS;

GENTLEMEN!

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc. ·

·

8·22 -3tc

- - - - --

ap ·

proximately 1 acre of ground .

Phone 949-3633.

8·17-6tc

H. P. SCOTT outboard.

compl ete con trol s, tan ks and HOUSE in Long Bottom, pnont:
985 -3529.
spare propeller ; French
6-11 -tf c
provincial you th bed with

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake
Conc has, New M exico. $2,975 .
No Down . No Interest . $25 mo .
for 11 9 mos.
Vacation
Paradise . Free Brochure .
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box

8-10-4tp

FARM TOOLS
AND MtSC.

Dick Karr , Jr .

·

1

5·21 -tf&lt;;

-------;;-

O'bELL WH ttL alignm ent
localed at Crossroads, Rl . 124.

Ironica lly .

frame house, six rooms and

All

work .

R P;Hnn;:~~hl~ .

rates . Phone 742 ·3232 or

FOR SALE by owner . Yellow

992-32 13.

1-'li -TTC

bath . Large lot . Located In READY -MI X

Syracuse on Rt. 12~. Second
houst, on left going north
Ins ide corporation line. ·

7-27-tl

CONCRETE !
to y.our1
easy. Free,
est moles . Phone 992-3284.:
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,J
Middleport, Ohio.
j
6·30-tfc
dellv~red ri gh t
pro,ec'l. , ~ost and

I JUST IDl~'V
'IOO'D ~II&lt;.S TO
KNOW 'JII.Io,T I
HA'J~ t:OIHIIJ/o
TO.CCMPIAIIJ

St:'WI"" MA~HINES . l&lt;epalr:

8·22·6tp

-5 -----..,..ROOMS and bath,

ponds and septic tan k s; B &amp; K

guaranteed .

serv lc.e, all makes . 992-2284.

The Fabr ic · Shop, Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer Sales and /

,Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

•

3·29-tfc .
~I!'T WORRY, Alli!U: ... TKEY'LL

80 ACRE~
1lf2 story frame home, 7

room s, bath, barn 38 &lt;50,
Implement building, chicken

COl(~

CLOSE TO NEW MINE .
.
20 ACRES
Moden home. 3 bedroo m s,

bath, carpeted. fu rnished,
ALSO Inco me property, 2
bedrooms, bath, furnished

WMP0/1390·

1

~----------~--~----~

·

NOTICE 0~
APPOINTMENT :
Case No . 20,722

Estate ot Haro ld E . Sm ith
Decel!sed .
Not ice is t1ereby given that
Alma
Eve l yn
Smith
of
Sy ra cuse , Meigs County , Oh io, .
has been duly appo inted
Executr ix of the Estate of
Harold E . Smith, deceased , tale
ot Syracuse, Me igs County ,
Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said f iduciary
within four months .
Dated tt1is lllh day of August

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BARGAIN ... ANYTHING A CUSTOMER THINKS A STORE IS LOSING MONEY DN ,....,
lfUBBARD
.-..•n
ACROSS
1. Priest
5. Gather
10. Type of
chees~

His tomb
is in

1972 .

Judge
Court of Common Preas,
Probate Divis ion
(8J 15, 22, 19, ltc

CAN STARr ALL
OVER .II.ClAIN.-

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. ~OHI

Estate of Vernon
Dar st
Deceased .
N.otice Is hereby given thai
El l 1son Darst of 6625 Slate Line
Road, East Ridge, Tenn essee
hu been du ly appointed
EKecutor ot the Estate of
Vernon Darst, deceased, la te of
Middleport , Me igs County
Ot1i O.
'
C_reditors are requ ired to lile
the1r. claims with said fidu ciary
wlth1n four montt1s .
Dated tt11 s 11th day of AugUst

181

NOTICE ON FILIIH•
OF INVENTORY

AND APPRAISEMENT

The

State of Ohio , Meigs
Countv . Probate Court.
To the Executor of Ad -

ministrator of the' es tat&lt;' . to
such Of the fo ltowlbg .- ~$'are
~esjdents or th e State ·oJ •.O"hto.
vi~: - th e S!Jrv lvlng spou&amp;f&gt;HtJt
next of k in, th e benetlcJar 1es·
under lh e w il l; an d to ttie at torney
or
attorneys
represent ing any or
the
aforementioned persons :
Ethel
Chevalier,
Ol ive
Township, Me igs County Oh to
No . 20697 .
'
'
You are her eby notified that
the
Inven to ry
and
Ap praisement of tt1e estate of tne
aforementioned , deceased, late
of said Coun ty, was filed In th is
cou rt . S&amp;ld tnventorv and
App,rlllsement w i ll be tor
hear ing before th is court on the
1st day Of September, · 1972 it

10 :00 O'clock A.M.

'

Any person des iri ng to file
exceptions theret , must flie
them at least tlve · ... ,. 1 prior to
the date tel for hhr 'i ng
• ·
Gl¥en Under my nand arid

••• 1of ,. ld Court, this 12tH d•y
of August 1972 ·
~
·

Maiming o . weo st;r
JUdge end ex ·OiftcJo
Clerk of sa id Court

Jentt t! . Morris
!II ,, . 12. 21 C~ ltf Deputy Clo~k
By

ce 1972 Kine Feature• Syndicate, Ine.)

was one
DOWN

~WIWIDM;;-"-'

1. Concern-

Ing
(2 wds.)
2. Less
13.Store
hairy
employee
3.
Steve
15. Singular
of
16. Hammar"diving''
skjold
lame
n.lmitate
4.
Taro root
18. Portu5. Maxim
guese
6. - de mer
coin
1. Turkish
19. Ripen
oity
20. Santo
8. -it!
of
(hurry)
baseball
(2wds.)
21. Varnish
ingredient 9. Tranquil
11. Pre23. Sensible
destine
24. Sluggish
26. Free

WHAT'fi mr-, lllOlli'E 10 HAVE
l1IIJ -o.~lfR

IMfEPourr

NO I'OiiTIClA~ fii'A51!S A ~11£
llfmft: ELEC110N

..

.-&amp;'J....J , _

loyi !I NIIII\IIN(H!)

""l!liJI!III

Unaeramble these four Jumble1,

one letter to ea•h aqulll'l!, to

form four ordinary worda.

I ORDOB

Teoterday's Auwer
14. Of a.
German
composer
22. You
(Ger.)
23. R. R.25. Abandon;
forsake
26. Become
furious

(2 wds.)
27. Refer

• :!!.'l~.~~ · ....

I I

28. Fastening
device
31~ Luzon
suport
31. Unjustly
obtained
33. Gratings
35. - Gide
40. Edward·

ZVFYZ

II I I

I
I I I [J

VEWERS

ian aou·

briquet
U. Married

WHA1''S NEEDED ~
A 51'AR'T IN
FAR eA5'TE~N T~VEL'?'

~
Now URI)rtlhe cln:led lotte..
I
I
I
to
foftll the ourpriH liiiWer, u
I~=t&gt;.:::.A~;:;~~-~~-;;~·-;;•u~r~ce:lled:;
br the abon oartoon.

from

1972.

s - Manning D. Webster
Probate Judge
ofsaidCounly
15 , 22, 29. Jtc

45. Hans
Andersen

Ravenna

s . Manning D. Webs ter

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

We talk to you
like person.

A· RUtii!IN'!"--·•

LEGAL NOTICE

hous e, 40 tillabl e acres ,

rented. 4 bedrooms, some
PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig -Zag
trip to the New England States
7433 or write John R. Veith, AIR compressor , electri c and
paneling. FREE GAS TO
sew ing machines . St ill in
ace t ylene welders , elec .
Cheshire, Ohio.
origina l ca rt ons . No at ALL OF THE ABOVE .
and into Nova Scotia .
200100. Alameda, Californ ia
power .drills, 18 in . Haffeo
tachments needed as our
8·16-6tp
IOACRES
Mrs . Virginia Townsend and
94501.
chain saw, Black and Decker
con trols are built ·in . Sews
3
bedroom
home, dining
8·6-30tp
Pau1 Henry, Columbus, were
power saw, bl acksmith tools ,
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
room,
bath,
full
basement,
(anv i l, vise, e tc . } disc.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
overnight guests of her uncles, For Rent
porches.
2
small
buildings.
SMALL
ACREAGE
with
trai
ler
grinder, cattle dehorners ,
monograms, and blind hem
Pa ul and W. C. Peck. Mrs. 4 ROOM unfurnished apartment
hooku
p.
wat
er
tap
pa
id.
ON
GOOD
BLA
CKTO P
emascul ator s, elec. wire and
sti tch . Full cash price, $38.50
and bath, upstairs ove ~
Located on Rt . 143. Wi ll se ll
Townsend then accompan ied
ROAD.
cable,
barb
and
woven
wire,
or
budget
pl
an
ava
ilable
.
double garage ; locat ed in
cheap . Phone 742 -3187 .
pip e and bo ll dies, hydraulic
3.05 ACRES
Phone 992-5641.
her cousins. Mr ..and Mrs. Cecil
Pomeroy ,
reference s
8-2Hic
jacks,
grease
guns.
electri
c
3 bedrooms, bath, utility
8·18-61c
required . Phone 992-5293.
Blackwood on a plane trip to
motors, butcher ing equip room , large patio, garage,
8-IWc
Dnlham, Ala ., a nd on to
men t, log and tra ctor chains, VACUU M Cleaner new 1972 CHE SHIRE, 5 rocms &amp; bath,
fruit storage, fru it trees,
wheel barrow, platform
model. Complete wi th all
Florida fo r a sightseeing trip .
basement.
PI•
Acre
,
10
grapes
, berr ies, chicken
DOWNSTAIRS unfurnished
scales, elec. fen ce charger ,
cleaning tools . Sma ll paint
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
minutes from Gavi n; storm
house,
pony pen , ALL IN
apartment , bath , basement
turn buckles, 2 oil barre ls
damage in shipping . Will ta ke
windoWS 1 newly remodeled;
and furnace, no pets ,· Upand family visited her brotherGRASS
EXCEPT GARDEN
with pumps , step and ext .
$27 cash or budget plan
carpeted dining area, large
stai rs furnished apa rtm ent, 3
SPACE.
in-law and sister , Mr . and Mrs.
ladders, harness, 1 lot fer avai lable. Phone 992·5641 .
l ivi ng room ; ca ll aft er 5:30
rooms. bath , and half, wace
8-18 -6tc
ti lizer , culvert and m isc. pipe ,
INSPECT
THE SE
Carl M~rnin g at Elyria were at
weekda ys,
Saturda y &amp;
heaters, no pe ls; ca ll 992-3056.
aluminum eaves t r oughs , -==== = ====:Sunday , 367 7114.
PROPERTIES BEFORE
the Cleveland Zoo and the
8·16-6tc
tank sprayer, tree pruners, r
8~ 18- IOt c
SCHOOL STARTS.
Cedar Point Amusement Park.
lawn mower, socket sets, and
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
Price
Smash!
frai ler on large lot
other hand and smal l tools lao '
The Busy Bee Society of the 3 BEDROOM
5
ROOM
house
on
50'
•
100'
lot;
REALTOR
in Shade ; phone 696-1 283 .
numerous to men tion .
Carpenter Baptist Church met
ca
ll
992-5786.
992-2259
8-18-61p THI S is a very large sa le,
PANTS &amp; JtANS
8·18-6tc
with Mrs . Rex Chead le. Emma
some th ing for eve ryone.
II no answer 992-2568
SLEEP ING room w ith private HOUSEHOLD, an tiques, guns
Whittington led devotions .
SALE!
_________:.________.:.___ __
and other Items to se ll on Aug .
bath fa cil i1ies ; phone 992r
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
1
26, cattle, maChinery and feed
5786.
Buy 2 Pairs and
have re turned from a vacation
to se ll Sept . 1.
8-18-6tc
GET I PAIR FRF~
LUNCH served.
u·ip . They attended the Grand - - - - Mrs. John Epple, Adm . Al l kind s, all size ror men ,
Ole Opry in Nashville, River 3 ROOM apartment, un ~
I. 0 . " Mac" M cCoy, au ctioneer women, young men, boys
furn is hed, 408 Spring Ave.,
Ranch and Disney World in
8·20-3tc and girls. Hurry to ...
Pomeroy .
110 Mechanic Street
Fl orida and visi ted her
8·10-tfc
POMEROY
19 FT HOLIDAY Rambler
cousins, Mr . and Mrs. J. F. - - - - - 'P._ Jack W. Carsey . Mgr
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tra vel
Trailer .
se lf "j
AND
4
RDUM
furnished
an'l!
·
BosU!ph in Orlando and several
.
«~!it~
'
Ph&lt;&gt;ne
992-218t
·,
con
tained.
sleeps
six,
ex
unfur P'I ished, apartments .
other points of interest.
cellent con d ition; phone 667·
=&gt;hone 992 -5434 .
... ,
RENOVATEO
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Price
3400.
COAL Limestone, ExcelsiOr .
4-12-tfc 1
3
BEDROOMS
Bath
, charming break fast nook. Utility
8-20-6tc
.
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
.
visilecj their son-in-law and
-:-:"C"C"---Pomeroy
,
Phone
992-3891.
rocm
and
nice
kitchen
. All caq:~eted . Lovely concrete
daughter, Mr . and Mrs . Auto Sales
APPLE S Fi tzpatrick Orchards
4-12-tfc
front .por ch. VInyl siding for little Maintenance. Mid·
Throckmorton and Leslie at
Slale Route 689 . P hon~ ·
dleport.
CHEVELLE Malibu, $495;
Wilkesvill e 669-3785 .
CO NTEMPORARY Console
Oxford. The Throckmortons 1965
DOWNTOWN
1969 Oldsmob ile, $1.895 ;
~~~-=-----:----=-8·_1_:_7·.::..
1 0tc slereo. AM-FM radio. 4 speed
arc moving soon to Bainbridge,
3
BEDROOMS
~ath, fireplace wlln bookshelves at ea ch
phone 992-5786.
n changer, 4 speaker sound
end, and bu ilt-in stereo. Gas forced air furnace. Full
8-20-6tc ~ACIN" cc 6 room house, bath' sys tem. Walnut veneer
Maryland .
ba serTJent with garage and 3 rooms . Block garage on extra
uti l ity r oom , garage , $10,000;
c:rabinet. Balance $67 .32. Use
Mr . and Mrs. J erry Stans1969 PLYMOUTH GTX, good
lot. Asking only $21 ,000.00. .
'.hone 949-4195.
' ' our budget plan. Call 992·7085.
bury, Reva and Aaron, local,
condition ; phone 992· 7624.
OPPORTUNITY
8-IB-61c
3-31-tf c
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
8·22-3tp - - - - , - . ---cc--- BUSINESS BUILDING - and a modern 3 bedroom air
Hu tchi nson, Chillicothe, enMAPLE stereo -radio com conditioned home. Wood burning fireplace In living. All
PLYMOUTH GTX 2 dr.
rooms paneled. Young pine trees and ni ce view ol the Ohio
joyed a vacation trip to '69Hardtop
..--~-..,-----:-------1"1
bination,
AM-FM
radio
,
4
with automatic I '
' speed changer, 4 speaker
River. A real good buy. 125,000.00.
Dearborn, Mich., where they
transm ission, v inyl top, all·
sound system. Balance $72 .55.
OVER7ACRES
t inted glass, fa ctory Stereo
viewed the sights at Ford
Use our budget terms. Call
ON
ROUTE
7
With
plains water tap. Mostly cleared and
tape player and other e)C tra s,
992 -7085.
Museum and Greenfield
ready
for
house
construction.
Asking $10,000.00.
gocd conditi on; ph one 949·
8·1B-61c
Village .
4141 or see Benny Wilson ,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Main St., Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
NICE - 3 bedroom home with large closets, Large living
SUMMER clearance of pattern
~
8·22-6tc
and
kitchen, plus utility. Concrete front porch. Nearly an
took Mrs. Otto Wiseman to the
books and imported yarns.
:----c:c----:-:-:----=--:acre
of nice laying land. Want $16,000.00.
Needlecrafl
Shop,
Rt.
124
Wellston Nursing Home where '66
Chevy Pickup Truck, V-8,
East, Syracuse. 10 a.m . to 7
183 bored, Richard Garten ,
they attended a IOOth birthday
p.m. daily except Sunday.
NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL US TO LIST. PRICES ARE&lt;
Ra ci ne.
ce lebra tion
for
Mrs .
8-10-lfc
GOOD
AND THE DEMAND tS INCREASING. WE WILL
8-20·3tc
Wi sema n's aun t, Eliza·beth L--:--:-:--:-:--TREAT YOUR PROPERTY AS IF IT WERE OURS.
1. ~oooc~ puppies. ~11ver 1oy.
(Aunt Lizza) McCumber. The 19 70 OLDSMDBI L E 98, ex cellent
condition·,
I
lady
.Parkv1ew Kennels, Phone 992-.
HELEN L. TEA FORO, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
honored guest received many
lJN TOUR DIAL
owner. Phone 247-2844.
544.1.
. ..
cards, gifts and visits from
8-20-6tp
: 8-15-ttc
friends a nd relatives.

Mule, Star, etc. Phone 367·

S..'SC".

Complete front end serv ice,
tune up and brake serv ice .
Wheels
balanced
elec ·

gas and electr ic, phone 992-

8-17-tfc

p.m.

'

AN'r't111Nb

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine', Ohio
'Crltt Bradford
5·1-t

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

2601.

sheets; phooe 992-7201 after 5

-so AH'L~ I..EAV£ rMs
$100.000 THEY PAl()
ME' FO'MAJ.I SKULL -·

SEPTIC TANKS CLEIINED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4781. Galll~olis , John Russell,,
ONner &amp; Operator .

I ... CAN'r

1lirNK'a=

E.cavating . Phone 992-5367.

8 ROOM house. bath. larg e lot,

Furnace . $25.

U'L ABNER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992 -2174
Pomeroy

2 New Homes, all electr ic, 3

2

~~one 8\}3~ ¥,1 ~Ito, W.

Phone 991-3975.

'

Radiator Specialist

992-2789 aft er 5 p.m. week·
days .
8-6-JOtc

- 10 room houS&lt;! ~
Chambers 992-5386 afler 5 RACINE
bath , basement , garage , two
p.m.
.l ots. Phone 949-43 13.
··
8·18-6tp
4-5-ttp:

shot, Anti que 12 gaug e double

buffet, 2 trunks , ch in a closet,
8-day clock, oil lamp, cedar
chest, lard press , shoe la st.
stone jars , and jugs, burnside
stove, 60 gal. copper keHie,
cream · separator .

home ,

bedroom , uti l.ity room, k it chen , dining area, bath, large
living room with wall -to-wal l
carpeting.
air -condit ioning,
garage , pl enty of water,
draperi es and rods included ;
Stucco and Permastone
outside ; S m iles South of
Kaiser Aluminum on Rt . 2;

~pots. 1ndiv1dual adjustment,

22-410 over under, 12 gauge
pump gun , Browning 12 gauge
automat ic, 12 gauge single· COAL FLOOR

...

No than Biggs

NEW HOMES
3 BEBROOMS

Real Estate For Sale

lOA with Sulky , Ro tary tiller ,
microphones with cases, $40
30 in. Rota ry mower .
each plus stands and boom;
FEED
Goya
guitar.
st =mdard ,
LOT barley, approx . 1200
sunburst f ini sh . w ith case,
ba les hay. approx . 50 bal es $125 : Custom Built Teardrop
bass { Fender styl e neck)
straw.

cabi net. 2 bed s, dr esser,
Daveno bed, 2 r ecliner chairs,
platform ro ckers, odd chairs,
wr i nger washer · 2 sets
laundry t ubs. trea dle sew ing
machine, kitchen utens i ls,
and many other household
items.

building lots at R o~k Springs,
close to Hig h School &amp; Fair·
Ground ; call or see Bi ll Witte,

·~

3-2·1111
..----::-----•
r-Ut( • nt:: 13EST deal in a new~=========--,
SE
PT
-h
...
tanks
c1eaneo.
M
ill
er
or used mobile home, try
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio . Pn .',
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
662-3035.
I
Kanauga, Oh io.
2·12-tfc
7-16-3otc
uvo~...:K and back hoe wOrk,'

covers, $575 ; Two Shure

"Captain Amer ica" fini sh
with case, $140 ; Light system.
2 black l1~hl s, 4-150 watt

home ; phooe 992-5331.
8-11 -30tc

CONVENIENT but secluded

"CAS tj Paid for alt makes ana

- -- - - -- - - -

HOUSEHOLD
FROST-FR EE refrigerato r .
(Gibson), Rover Gas range, 7
*· pc . dinette , set, kitchen

clean , oll. adjust, S399, in your

Real Estate For Sale

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

baler. (l ike new) 2 four -wheel far m wagons, 3 smoothin g FENDER P. A. Sys tem, 100
harrows, 8 ft . disc harrow,
wa tts RMS, 2 columns , 8-10"
'1950 Chevrolet flat -bed dumpspeakers wi th covers, $595;
tru ck, 1963 lntern at ional1;2 T.
Fender Showman amp. 15" D
pick -up , Letz Burr feed mill ,
140 JBL speaker w ith covers,
po_wer ta ke -off grass seeder,
5450 ; Fender Bandmaster
tra c t or - mounted
crop
Amp . 2-23"
0120 JBL
sprayer .
speakers. with reverb, with

ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENR OL L BY SEPT. 251h . 1968 GRAVE LY tractor Model
PLAY HOU SE TOY train to

"c omplete

with winch , 1 M odel 620 John
Deere tractor. 2 Model 8 John
Deere Tractors . 1 Oliver 77 1969 HONDA 70cc, excellent
tractor, I an t iq ue trac tor
condition , pool ta ble , 7 ft .
( 1924 John Deere) .
tong , 4 ft . wide. 6 pc . Dinette
JOHN Deere equipment: Front- Set. Phone 742~ 56.41.
end loader , 7 ft . semi-mo unt
V
8·20 ·61c
mower , si de·rake, 6ft. brush - - - - - - - - - hog , rotary hoe , manure CA NNIN G - tomatoes. Sl. 25
spr eader , 36 ft . elevat or, t wo - picked . Mangoes, Raymond
bottom 3-point hi tch plow, 2· Rowe, Yellow Bu sh Rd .,
row corn planter, 61/:1 ft.
Racine. Phone 949 -37 46.
combine, 13-di sc grain dr i ll.
8-17-otc

WOMAN wanted t o l ive in with
elderly lady; phone 949-4904
or 667-3319.
8-20-3tc MODEL 12 Ma ssey -Ferguson

IBHtl Pullins. Phone 991)47ij ~
·
· ·4-25-tfc
mobile home' · ~-----:-=c::--­
plus gigantic
SEWING Mach ine Serv ice,

BAU. ~

' '.
'' '1.
' .

P·ro·m the largest
Bulldozer Radiatar to
Sma lle!t Heater Core.

and

Se pt ic tanks instal led . Geon::~e ;

· • Underpinni~g

BOWLiNG~

.'. '•'

Sttrvlce

electrical; phone 742-4186.
B-16-30tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER wort&lt;::

... ~ES INVITSO
CONNALLY TO GO

~ ~.

CONSTRUCTION,
repair

lHE PROBLEM WAS "THAT
fiNALLY MET THE GIRL
OF Ml{ DREAMS... .

....

'.

Route 1, Shade, Ohio 992-6547,
next to Whaley's Paint Shop.
8-20-12tc
roofing , porch

LAFF, TOO -·SPECIAL

S.YLV/ A SWEATY Fll.l.MS I
1/JHEI..I DID YOU GET
15f\CK IIJ IOIAJIJ 1

WHEN SHE WEAR~ '
ThAT OSTR ICfl
PLUME HAT OF
HER'N TO CHOIR
PRACTICE

A BAREBACK
INTH'

REMEMBER TilE TIME
AfiNEW ZAPPeD SOME
DIJOE WI~ A GO~F BALL~
AN~ W~EN ~E IJONKEP
HIS PARTNER Wt~ A

'?omei'!JY Ho.rnl_
' l Auto

ather auto work . Very
reasonable rates. Wain es
Auto Service, school trained .

PRICE

-.Air Conditioners
• Awnings

8 , SN IOS 1756 Hyd . fu l l U
blade SN 6381, 21 ,000 Mark II
engine. enclosed All en canopy

or (614) 457 ~ 0659 eveni ngs and
weekends .
8·12-6tc

15-tfc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Southeas t of Hem lock Grove, 1970 ALLIS -CHALMERS HD.21

MACHINERY
04 CATE RPILLAR bulldozer

Pomeroy .Mason
8~

A. Eastman farm , on East Honeymoo n tread le, T AP.
man Ridge road, 1 m i le East
sews good , phone 742-5735.
of Old Rt . 33, 6 miles North
8·22·3ic
of Pom eroy, 2•11 miles ----..,------:-:-::-::-::--::
will sel l the personal pr operty
of the late M r . Eastman as
follows :

the

Bridge; phon e 773-5308.

ESTATE AUCTION
and piping ; phone 881·3182.
TWO-DAY estate auction Sat .,
8·22-3tp
Auoust 26and Seat. 2, at 10:00 - - - - - - - - - - : a. m. each day at the George ANT IQUE sewing machine,

cab. Good condit ion, ready to

WILL care fo r pre -sc hool
chi ldren in my home, $3 a

Bob's Market, Mason, W. Va .,
above

~
~

SHE'S GOOD AT
MAK IN ' FOLKS

CIRCUS

phone 992-

through ea rly September ;

LIKE J; WUZ FIXIN' TO 5AY- 5AtRV'5 GOTTH ' GOODEST
PAIR OF LAIGS I EVER SEEN -THEI/'0 BE GOOD FER
HQLDIN' ON IF SHE WUZ

CLA'ITER

.AUTOMOBILE insurance betiri:
\ cancelled?
Lost
your
9981.
operator's license? Call 992·
8·22 -Jtc For Sal.e
2966.
6-15-ttc i
VERAL varieties of lop c.~. ......,c:.......~.,...-,.----.,-YAMAHA 150 Enduro, 8 months SEquality,
- ·•
tree ripened, canning
old , Norg e electric range, like
TUNE
-UPS.
brake
jobs
and
·
peac hes;
now available

ANTIQUES AND
COLLECTIBLES
organs, dishes, clocks. brass ROCKERS, 3 chests of drawers, 60

Kn oxville, Tenn., on a vacation

Dozer &amp;
p.ond s,
sca ping .
dozers, 2

in lovely

Portraits will be taken
LIVE STOCK
Wednesday , Aug. 23rd thru 8 STOCK cows with calves a t
Sal ., Aug . 26t h . Gr over's
side, 1 springer cow , 1 2-yr .
Stu di o.
phone
992 -2475,
old Here ford steer , 2 year ling
Middleport. Ohio.
Charolai s
hei fers,
:JS
8·16-9tc
ch ickens.

beds, or com plete households .

Murl Galaway accompanied
Martha May s to Jenkins
Memor ial Health Facility
where they visited with Floyd
King.
Mr . and Mrs. Albert Quivey,
Dover, ~ere at Royal Oa ki
Ieake this part week. Robert
Parker and Cindy, Middlepor t,
spent a night with them and
Mar tha Mays and Kenneth
Erickson visited them on
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
allendcd a 40 year ce~brati on
of Sugar Creek Grang{held In
the Legion Hall a t Dalton,
Ohio, in Wayne County . Mr.
SU!rkey was guest speaker.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gillogly
and children ·spent a weekend
at Cedar Point Amusemen t
Park nea r Lake Erie.
Mr . and Mrs . Mendal Jordan
and Bryan and Keith Jordan
look Rolland Shell of
Steubenville to Marietta where
U1ey met Mrs . Ethel Shell and
Linda at Linda 's apartment
there. Rolland had been a gues t
in the Jordan home for the past
two weeks and accompanied
his mother and sister back to
their home in Stuebenville.
Linda Shell, a 1972 graduate of
Ohio University, will teach at
Warren Loca l Elementary
School and has secured an
apartment in Marietta to be
near her employment.
Mr . and Mrs . Newton Ice are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Tracey Lee , on
August 5 at Holzer Medi cal
Center. The baby weighed 8 lb.
I oz. Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Scott McComas, local,
and Mr. and Mrs. Darrell fee,
Manchester. Elza McComas is
a great-grandfather. The little
onQ' ts two sisters, Alma and
1\. · ·ca, and on ~ brother,
Ne• .on, Jr.
Mrs. Esther Dailey accompanied her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
David Dailey and Mrs. Borden,

EARTH MOVING

new . Phone 992 -7109.

For Sale

KOSCOT KOSMETICS an d HOR SE draWn dirt scoop ;
wigs , more new products
phone 742 ·5113 .
comi ng soon . For free
8-20-3tc
demonstration , phone 992 51 13.
8-17-tfc OLD Furniture , oak tables.

Carpenter News, Event

.Business Services

SINGER Sewing Machine, will
sell forsmall balance of 131 .20
5331.

DON'T SAY NOTHIN'
AT ALL

BOAT, motor. trailer and ac-

r---~~·~·~·"'----~-1

8-22-3tp

and
B-16-tfc

ta~k ,

8-17-6tc

If found ca ll 992-7791 alter 4
p.m .

Pomeroy

CALL US FIRST

8-22 -ltp

and

'

Blrbers' Loul •oo.AFL · CIO

-------

Mr .

1

Lynn St. 992·2367

nurses, Mr s. Russe ll and the
ones who sen t flowers, cards
and gifts to me while I wa s
hospitalized at Veteran s

Dailey .

1966 CHEV. 2 TON
51595
84" cab to axle, good 825x20-IO ply tires, 292 engine. 15000
lb. 2 speed axle. Solld.cab, ·ready to hau l.

I

Do vou h1ve curly or hard to
m1n1ge ha ir?
Stop In and t1ave M ic k or
Fred relax vour hair for a
more ma nageable ha ir .

tomatoes

mangoes . Geraldine 'Cleland,
Racine, Ohio .

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

I WISH to thank Dr. Pickens,

Hospital.

CA NNIN G

cessories,

o

8: 30

Memori al

"'",._,. •'l~

Ct1arge per

ABOOT SOMEBODY--

ha ndrubbed co n so l e, pay
balance of $96.41 or pay $7.25

6 cylinder, standa rd transmission, radio. More car than
th e price shows.

Each addjtionat word 2c .

Addi l iC:Inal He
Adver tiSement.

11469

1966 MU STANG HDTP. COUPE.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .5() for SO word minimum .

••

1968 CHEVROLET ~. TON

IF 'IE CAN'T SAV
SOMETHIN' GOOD

For Sali.

or pay $5 a month i call 992-

8 foot Stepside, good heavy duty tires, V-8 engine, J-speed
transmi ssion, solid cab, local 1-owner truck .

'IEP•• HE SAtD

GROAN}

damage
29. Paper
quantities
;;;;;:-v;-;:;:;;;;:;-;;;;;;-::;:;-,=~ 32. Building
SO THE EA5Y WAY OUT 1'!1 TO TRY
extension
TO 1!1/II.P A CAff AGIIINST JIM
33. Card
JUS11N. 15 "!HAT WHAT )OIJ
game
IN MINP, lifUTE~T
M. "One · time
(2 wds.)

V 'I

IL..___;frill.:.:":.=
..:..:•::.:•=-=AIISWII~Iten~_l

"(II I )"

(A.wen lamorrew'

. \'e•lenlar"•

J_...., IOOTT ILANK AMULET HANGAR
"-WIH'I

~E~s6.0ld
note

lrhat Me 11Jid Klh~n lhl'! Ka• lycoon

propou·d-"TANKS A LOTI"

Scottish
explorer
Sine
quaBeing
unruly
(2 wds.)
U.Moved
gradually
IS. Lamprey
catcher
4f.Feats

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXJ.
II L 0 N G F B L L 0 W
Otle letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'•, etc, Stn1le lotte ..,
apostrophes, the lenllh and fol'Dlatlon of the words are all
hints. Eaoh ~ay the code lettero are dilferent.
B

CRYPTOQUOTBS
SE
GH R GXE

QBWM

QFCWH

NMRK

RKG _ HSONE
JCHNFK

QRKN

FZ

ZFH

tiOV

KNOW WJ.lAT A

I ~~~~15, DON'T'IOU?

!-

WELL, Tfll~ I~ A PICTVRE
OF A RACCOON MLEEP IN
f415 RACCOCOON !

)[ F ·

ZCBHKGW

ODCWH • .,KBTIIFXRW
I

'
I

'

,.

�••-, "'' ""'")' Ot!RLmel, MlaGieport-t•omeroy, 0.,

August22, 1972
•

NowYouk.,w

Fischer Issues lntimatum Today
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-U.S. challenger Bobby Fischer issued an ultimatum
today saying he would quit the
world chess championship if
the games were not moved Into
a private room or if conditions
in the main hall were riot
a&lt;lapted to his demands.
In a letter to German arbiter
Lothar Schmid, Fischer said if
his demands were not met and

another forfeit took place he
would "consider the match
summarily terminated and
there will be no further play
Wlder any coriditions."
Fischer has fought a threeweek battle to force what he
would consider improvements
in conditions in the 3,000 seat
exhibition hall. He said he
could hear people coughing,
laughing, whispering, unwrapping candy and children
running around.

VOL XXIV NO. 9!

PROMOTED - Ptl. Roger Hyden, right, has been.
promoted to sergeant according to an aMouncement today
by the Ohio State Highway Patrol. Hyden, a member of the
Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway Patrol Post for the past
three years, has been transferred to the Jackson Post State
Highway Patrol. Sgt. Hyden, a native of Jackson ColUlty, has
been with the patrol the past six and one baH years. Prior to
that, he played minor league baseball in the CinciMati Reds

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Farm System. Ptl. Richard Taff, left, a 1969 graduate of the
Ohio Highway Patrol Academy, and native of Lewislield,
Ohio, has been transferred to Gallipolis. He will replace
Hyden. Tall has been at Canfield, Ohio the past three years.
He attended Kent State University one year and spent two
months in the United States Army. They are flanked by Lt.
Ernest Wigglesworth, Commander of the Gallia-Meigs Post.

HEADQUARTERS FOR LEE WORK CLOJlfES

nephews.

.,

Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Hom e any time .
Burial will be in Rock Springs
Cemetery.

You should see the fine
selection of Lee Work
Clothes in the busy
Men's Department at
Elberfelds. Bib overalls
in carpenters, painters
or plain blue denim
styles. Lee Tech Twill
matched work sets, Lee
work caps in your
favorite style Lee
dungarees of blue
denim - lee coveralls
In shorts, regulars and
longs - lee blue denim
overall jackets, lined or
unlined , zipper front
style or longer length
lee
button front nylon quilted work
jackets - Lee Rider
denim dungarees - lee
Rider western denim
jackets. And you'll find
your. correct size, too,
from the smallest to the
extra, extra large.

Kroger Building New Plaza Super Store
Kroger Food Stores today
formally announced a new
27,104 square foot super store,
under construction in the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza. The
new shopping plaza is located
at Ohio State Route 7 and U.S.·
Route 35 in Gallipolis Township, Ohio.
B. G. Beaty, Charleston

division vice president, said

the new store will contain over
twice the square footage of a
normal supermarket.
Beaty said the new Silver
Bridge Super Store will have a
new look starting with the
exterior decor, which will
include un arch ca nopy sup.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HAS FROST COOLED IT
.
WITH DIAHANN?
NEW YORK (KFS)
Showbiz
osychologists think Diahann Carroll's dates
with a record exec mean the David Frost idyll
defrosted .. . Danny WoHe's desperate attempts
to reconcile with Aliza Kashi fell on deaf shelllike ears ... In "21" NBC's Girl for Today,
Barbara Walters, recently separated, dined
with RCA Chairman Bob Sarnoff ... Chicago
billionaire Clement Stone, who gave the '68
Nixon campaign a full million-dollar push, is ·
being mentioned as our next ambassador to
England; he could have had it last time but
refused all ·political plwns.
As a TV guest, Bette Davis is tough, wise
and gracious ... Has a kirid of free..swinging
candor that reminds us of Eleanor Holm ...
Years ago we dined with Eleanor and Billy
Rose, the guests also including Bennett Cerf,
Oscar Hammersteln :&gt;nd, the Dewitt(Reader's
Digest) Wallaces, the composer Chester Conns,
and everyone commented on the great grub ...
Billy stuffily ordered the butler to "give my
regards to the chef;" which momentary embarrassment at the pretentiousness among the
guests was alleviated by Eleanor advising
Billy : "Ah, shaddup! " .. . One dinnertime
Eleanor was extremely gracious to playwright
Ferenc Molnar, and because of his heavy accent
was pronouncing each word with precise
slowness ... Molnar smiled: "But my dear
Eleanor, you are talking to me as if I am a
puppy." ... The most civilized part of Rose's life
was his decade wed to Eleanor.
Actress Carol Lynley and her ex-husband
Mike Selaman have a hassle over alimony ...
Woody Allen didn't like it too much when Steve
Allen hogged the piano ' for 20 minutes at
Michael's Pub where Woody's clarinet is the
once-a -weekly come-on .. . Big band virtuosi

por ted by brick columns. Once
inside the customer will find an
expanded delicatessen, high·
lighted with a wood-shingle
roof and acce nted with gold
bittersweet colored ligh ted
panels. The deli ca tessen will
offer a wide variety of items
includ ing fresh baked pies and
doughnuts. ·

Peewee Irwin and Chris Griffin daylight running a music school in northern New Jersey; let
their pupils knoiv - they know, they know ! ...
Arlene Dahl, wh o has the proper
pulchritudinous credentials, says "American
women are crazy . They shower so much their
skins dry out." Arlene's cleaning up as Sears'
beauty expert. But Sears also sells showers,
Arlene .
Why does Andy Warhol love Jackie's sister
"Princess" Lee Radziwill. Because she rented
his Long Island estate at a nifty price ... The Leo
Durochers at Top of the Park resta urant said
they're looking for a home in Palm Springs ...
Leo's baseball -' pension is one of the biggest in
baseball history ... Backgrunmon champ Tim
Holland (he once, which was enough, was wed to
Jobany Carson 's new no doubt eternal flame
Joanna Holland ) formed the lnt'l Backgammon
Ass'n with Serge Obolensky and Hugh Hefner ...
It's hotter than chess in most places : London's
Clermont Club bas games at $2,500 a point and stakes double and redouble.
"Badge 373" unreels a dope raid here which
turns into a million-dollar gun smuggling
racket. It's based on fact, but names were
changed to protect the federal undercover man
.. . The Tall Texan legend suffered a trifle in
Ireland: the John Barleycorn pub owner here,
Terry O'Neill, also owns one in Cork and has a
Texas-born bartender there, name of Courtney
- who is just four-eleven ... The French interior
director Zsa Zsa hired as secretary was mentioned as being merely Zsa's male escort, so she
solved that one : fired him ... Redheaded Jill St.
John bought a couple of incognitos at Michel
Kazan's - a blonde and a brunette wig ...
Famous young stage..screen actress at Jimmy
Weston's had a plate of steak thumbits for
openers, a T-bone for her entree and a filet
mignon as dessert. Her musician mate almost
clinkered.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Ri chard
Freeman, Pomeroy; Franklin
Roush, Minersv ille; Floyd
Brewer, Rutland; Phyllis
Spear,, Syra cuse: Sue Seelig,
Pomeroy: Kathy Newe ll ,
Ches ter, and Mark Ballengee,
Cl1arleston.
DISCHAHGES - Clarence
Wi ckline, Clyde Brookov er.
Joseph Rudolph, Hilda War th
and Lena Markins.

"The pale pastels whi ch have warm, vibrant brick-red.
been fea tured in most food
·'Tile same imaginative
stores during the past 20 years efforts have been applied to
are no longer in tune with t.he every section of the store," Mr.
mood of the 1970s," he said. Beaty explained . Vari ous
This store wilt be gi ven a new see tions of the store will be
cheerful look, which he departmenl&lt;tlized through the
described as "earth-keyed," use of distinctive colors, which
witl1 tones ran ging from a will cany through even to the
sofll y·rich golden shade to a fl ooring, he noted .
New specialty departments
will be featured, such as,
OEMS TO MEET
Mexican , Chinese,. Japanese,
Norman Will, chairman of Kosher and Dietetic Foods.
the Democrat Central Com- Also included in the specialty
mittee, . announ ced today a departments is a Health Food
meeting of the committee only Section, which is the first such
will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. departments for Kroger in this
at the Episcopal Parish House area.
in Pomer oy. End orse men t!:!
After completion , the Silver
and general business will be Bridge Super Store will be the
cunducted in preparation for area 's largest and most
the fall campaign.
modern supermarket.
The Kroger Charleston
Division currently operates 49
supe rm arkets
in
West
Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio
Mrs. Judy Lloyd and boys, from headquarters and
David and Cilris, of Tampa, distribution center located at
Fla ., spenl a vacation here 6313 McCorkle Avenue in
with her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Charleston, West Virginia .
Bruce Morris and fami ly. Mr.

Langsville

Lloyd,in to
whoColumbus
is in the Air
new
andForce,
came
to Langsv ille to spend a few
days with his family . Mr. and
Mrs. Morri s took Mrs . Lloyd
and boys back to their horne at

the

THE HOSPITAL
!Technicolor)
Georg e Scott

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

700 W. Main · Pomeroy
9 to 9 Daily-Sunday t -9

I

I

Dia nna Rigg

IG PI

Cartoons :

No Space Like Home
Wind Bag
The Duster
Show Starts 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
August 23·24
NOT OPEN

t

•

•

{jv

Neh;on of Mari on and Theron

Devoted To The lnter~ts Of The Me~s-Ma8on Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

... ' "'' 1,\

1'hey cursed and jeered at Nixon stressed youth's new and
delegates and dignitaries untested political muscle when
Tuesday night, pounding on he arrived here Tuesday and
arriving cars, ripping down again at a Miami stadium rock
posters and breaking a few concert where he delivered
windows.
what amounted to an WJOfficial
Nixon, In a speech he drafted acceptance speech in the
on 12 pads of yellow legal..slzed embrace of black entertainer
pages, will make his carefully Sanuny Davis Jr.
considered appeal to blacks
"We've got just as good a
and minorities after the ron- shot at it (the youth vote) as
ventlon ratifies hiii selection of the other side," he llllid.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
At the convention hall,
for another term.
delegates watched Nixon's appearance before the young on
Allends Roek Concert
huge televiiiion screens.
To chants of "Four more
Minutes before, balloons had
years, four more years!" showered upon them as the
results of their balloting were
announced - Nixon's re ..
nomination by a voU. of 1,347
to!.
The single vote of dissent
By United PreuiDtematlonal
COLUMBUS -BACKERS OF A MOVE TO repeal the state was reluctantly cast by New
income tax apparently will need at least another 12,000 valid Mexico for anti-Vietnam Rep.
signatures to qualify the proposal for the November ballot. Lee Paul N. McCloskey of
Woroter, assistant elections colUlsel In the secretary of state's California on the basts of his
office, said Tuesday of 72,635 signatures on petitions checked so showing in that state's primary
last spring.
far by local election boards, 10,463had been Invalidated.
The convention accepted a
Worster said if the 14.4 per ceni Invalid rate continued, the
Nlxonian platform defending
Citizens to Repeal the Slate Income Tax would fall short about
his
Vietnam
policies,
12,000 signatures of the necessary 318,414. The group, however,
denouncing marijuarui, racial
would bave 10 days to secure more signatures.
busing and gun controls and
amended only to speak more
MIAMI BEACH -FORMER GOVERNOR James A. Rhodes clearly on behalf of the seHsaid, here Tuesday he would make "no decisions on 1974 until 11174 determination rights of
gets here" when asked if he would run for governor or senator. American Indians.
Rhodes made the statement at a news conference he called to
Reforms Scorned
emphasize the importance of more vocational education In high
The delegates scorned reschools.
forms proposed by liberals
"Govern~~:, are you running for sovernor in 1974," a
which could have hampered
new1111an asked. "I'm lnteretlted In electing a president In 1972," Agnew In a bid next time for
replied Rhodes. "We'll talk about 1974 in 1974."
the presidential nomination.
Sen. Charles H. Percy of
Illinoiii,
a leader earlier in the
FREMONT, OHIO -ONE CHILD WAS INJURED seriously
and 15 others injured slishtly when a church bus overturned week of the fight to alter the
delegate selection formula for
Tuesday night on stale route 19, north of here.
1976,
sat silent while others
The bus, owned by the Fremont Baptist Temple, overturned
when the driver, Doyle PhiWps of GipsonbW'g, lost control on a carried the battle to the consoft shoulder In a construction area, the Slate Highway Patrol vention floor at Tuesday afsaid . Phllllpa was taking 34 children home from vacation bible ternoon's session. Conservatives had claimed that Percy's
achool at the church.
efforts were seH..erving.
The refonners wanted to
CAIRO -A SOUTH YEMJNI AIIUJNER hijacked Tuesday
change the system which
over the Mediterranean Sea and flown to Ubya, landed at Cairo awards extra delegates to
today, the Middle East News Agency said.
stalwartly Republican states,
The three hijackers - two men and a woman - remained uually rural, small and
behind In Benghazi as did thrae other passengers among the 61 con!lerVatlve, at the expense of
persons aboard the AI Yemda DC6 airliner, the agency said. It ltg states where moderate and
quoted !lie passengers who arrived in Cairo as saying: "The liberal Republicans come
three hijackers surrendered with their weapons to Ubyan from. But they were defeated
authorities when the plane landed In Benghaz" Tuesday night. by a vote of 910 to 434.
New York Gov. Nelaon A.
Rockefeller, often a Nixon foe .
Mrs. Haggerty Hosts Democrats
in the past and three Urnes a
candidate !or the party's
The Meigs CoWJty Women's date set for October 7. Tickets pre1identlal nomination,
Democrat club met Monday will be sold for the event.
placed Nixon in nominationevening at the home of Mrs.
wu followed by II
and
A delicious dessert was
Robert Haggerty in Mid· served by Mrs, Haggerty. The seconding speeches, Including
dleport. Plans were made for a next meeting will be Sept. 15 at three Democrats, a teen-eged
flUld raising dinner and a 7:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. black girl from Nevada and a
"meet the candidates" night to Lee Enoch of Syracuse. All fired Nixon administration
be in the masonic building in ladles who would be Interested Ca!Met officer, !ormer InMiddleport with the tentative in joining are invited.
terior Secretary Walter Hickel.

v'

Tonight. Aug. 22
" DIAMONDS ARE
FOREVER"

IGPI

THE ORGANIZATION
I Color)
Si dn ey Poi tier
Barbara McNa ir

---

IGPI

Wed.·Thur.-Fri.
Augusi2J.24-2S

Superbly Upholstered
and oualitv-built by FLEXSTEE~

Jill St. John
(Co lor)

·

Double Feature Program

"GROUP MARRIAGE"
Plus
THE MARRIAGE
OF A
YOUNGSfOCKBROKER
I Color)
Richard Benjamin
Joanna Shimkus
( R)

Enhance your living with beautiful Traditional! This 87' sofa
is designed for sumptuous comfort wilh a plu111p loose pillow·
bock and reversible T·cushion seatl Companion lounge choirs
feature biscuit tufted backs and channel tufted, reversible seat
cushions. Each boosts famous Flexsteel ~ construction with
patented Flexsteel ~ blue steel spring, finest cushioning ma•
teriols, a solid hardwood frame and quality decorator fabrics ...
most protected against soil and stains.

.l(,
..

OHIIIIItll..,..
..... 11'1.,1111

.__..__ _...__MIDDLEPORT, OHIO-~---~
I

I

TEN CENTS

l'''i{==:~d;:::::;:1\\1 54

• FairFirst:;:;•
~

.

M

has two one-Inch reels of hose 150 feet long.
Above from left to right, are Rutland volunteer firemen Archie McKinney,
Jim Quillen, Jim Thomas, Dick Foley, Raymond Wilcox, and Eugene
Thompson, The department will sponsor a carnival September 6, 7, 8, and 9
at the Rutland football field. Proceeds will go to buy more hose for the truck.
The Stimson Amusement Co. of Pataskala will provide rides. Tickets may be
purchased from any fireman.

Pints of Blood are Taken

(:la

Fifty-four pints of blood were LPN, Mary Arms, LPN ,
;:;: received fr om 66 prospective Frances Brewington, RN, and
donors who turned out at the Barbara Van Meter, RN .
Tony Kennedy, son of Mr. Bloodmobile in Pomeroy Doctors serving were John
and Mrs. Junior Kennedy, and Elementary School Monday. Ridgway, D.O.; Raymond
· M. D.; L. D. Te11e, M.
a member of the Meigs County Thirty-two pints of the 54 were Bmce,
Saddle Sitters 4-H Club, wi II be given in replacement. .There . o., an d Aar om Boonsue, M..
D
the first Meigs County were nine first time donors .
The canteen was served by
representative to participate in
Gallon donors were Larry the American Legion Post No.
the 1972 Ohio StaU. Fair .
May and Donna Davidson; two 39, Pomeroy , Mrs . Grace
Even though the State Fair ga ll on donors were Leafy Prat t, President. Loading and
does not open officially until Chasteen
and
Dorothy un loading was done by Boy
Thursday. Tony and his Badgley, a three gallon donor Scout Troop No. 249, Tom
parents left on Tuesday for was Joseph Gloeckner, four Cassell, Scoutmaster.
Columbus so that Tony would ga llon donors were Grant
Clerical work was performed
be ready for his first ap- Smith and Harlan Wehrung, by Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
pearance in the Ohio State and Robert Vaughan was a Joyce Hoback, Grace Drake,
Junior Fair Horse Show , five -ga llon donor . Richard Jean Sayre, Juanita Sayre,
starting 9:30a.m. Wednesday Barton donated his 12th gallon. Eloise White, Dorothy Smith,
and concluding Thursday .
Nurses were Naomi London, Elva
Dailey,
Jeanette
Tony will compete in the
showmanship class for
WesU.rn ponies (48" and under) members 9 years or third
grade through 18 inclusive, and
also in the Western Horsemanship Ponies ( 48;; and
The Eastern Local School aides in the elementary
lUlder).
board
Tuesday discussed how schools. Application to these
Meigs County has been en·
titled to only one represen- to fill the position of high school 'jobs will he received until Sept.
l&lt;ttives in the Ohio 4-H Horse principal, vacated since the 4. Applicants must have
Show because enrollment was resignation of Bobby Ord.
proficiency in office skills
An application for the including competency in typing
under 5(1, Hopefully in 1973
Meigs County may be entitled position has been received by and math. The work pays $1.60
the board, but before the
to two entries.
Selection of Tony to person can be hired he must be
represent Meigs County was released from his present
made by AI Weygandt the school district, Supt. John
judge at the Meigs County 4-H Riebel said.
In other busines the hoard
Horse Show held at the Meigs
adopted
a school lunch policy.
A concert will be presented
ColUlty Fair last Saturday.
Lunches in the elementary this evening at the Pomeroy
schools will cost 25 cents per Junior High School from 8p. m.
dsy,high schoolllUlches will be till midnight sponsored by the
$1.25 for a weekly lunch ticket, Coffee House Committee.
and 30 cents if paid by the day.
To be featured are "Allan·
For the first time the board tis", "Lost John and Zeke",
created positions for office "Eric Chambers" and "Hoff-

MRS. J. M. 'l'HORN'IQN, 1111, toall kip IJonon at tbe "-'lean Lelion Aullllary Convutlon held at Clnclrfllltlln JUly, Mrll. Thorntctn, !or her legillatlon report, won lint place In
!be Eilblh llillrlctand third In !he State. Pr.a!iinc Mrs. Thol'lllon with her dtetlon and gift of'
IIIGIIe)' Ia Mrs. Vediillivil wbo IICcepted the nudut'tbe convention in tbe abeence of Mrs•.
'l'IKnltm. Mrl. 1bornton II put )lnlldtllt ol Dmr Welljbt Abllllii'$' Unit 88 and leglalatlve,
dlllrmu. Mrl. Dl'fll II hunoedlllte pUt )lnlldenl.
'

AI

Lawrence, Martha Lou Beegle,
Clara Mcintyre, Beulah
Strauss, Becky Anderson,
Donna Nelson, Edith Sisson,
Vernon Nease, Mickey Wolfe,
Pauline Collins.
Donations were by Quality
Print Shop, Meigs Local
Schools, Daily Sentinel, Athens
Messenger, WMPO Radio
Station, Ewing FlUleral Home,
VeU.rans Memorial Hospital,
Krogers, A&amp;P, Simon 's
Market, Elberfelds, Dorothy
Douglas and Valley Belly
Dairy.

:;:;
..

Hick s,

James

Gilmore,

William Radford, Mrs. Evelyn
Clark, Harlan H. Wehrong,
Kenneth Scttes, Larry E. May,
Dwight Goins, Howard Logan,
Patty Barton, Robert Couch,
Robert L. Shook, Demaree
Sexson, Gary Smith, Martin

McAngus, Norb.ert Neutzllng,
Sr.. Cliflord Young, Larry
Parsons.

.

Racine - Martha Dudding,

Emma

Adams.

Lawrence,

John

Jeanette
Stobart,

Dorothv Badg ley, Ralph
Badgley, Floyd E. Hendricks,

Michael Brown, Ronald Salser.

Howard Ervin, Dorothy Glenn.

Middleport -

Robert King,

Mr . Edward Durst, Mrs.·
Norma G. Wilcox, Mrs. Sarah

J. Fowler, C. Robert Fisher,
Mr . Selwyn Smith. Paul
Haptonstalt , Louis Lon~. Mr .
(Continued on page 10)

Donors were:
Pomeroy - Barbara J .
White, Robert W. Vaughan.
Joseph Gloeckner. George H.

Eastern Still Needs Administrator
per hour.
The board agreed to have
county engineer Theodore
Beegle check a slip on the
Silver Ridge road to ascertain
if it is safe for a school bus to
travel.

Benefit Concert Coming.

Majorettes

Will Wear

ner and St.one" and others.
Also to be presented Is an
"incredible fire act" by Jamie.
Admission is $1.50 per person.
Proceeds will be used toward
the opening of a "Coffee
House" (youth center) in
Pomeroy.

New Outfits

WREN GOES PRO
Bob Wren, who piloted Ohio
Un!versity Bobcat baseball
squads through 24 consecutive
winning ieasons, lias accepted
a poet with the Philadelphia
Phillies as special assignment
instructor and scout. Wren
resigned from hls Ohio
University P011t July I.

A meeting of all kindergarten students and parents
will be held Thursday at
Chester Elementary from I to 3
p.m.
A teachers meeting will be
held Friday at 10:30 a.m.
Students will report for
achool on Monday for full day
of classes. Bus rlUls are the
same as last year, Riebel
reported.

Six Fined

By Court
Six defendants were fined ,
Uu:ee others forfeited boMs
and one was assessed cosLs
only in Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle's court Tuesday night.
Fined were Roy Newell, 42,
Middlepor t, $25 and costs,
assault and battery; James
Wisecup, Pomeroy, $15 and

costs,

.\
"

•

intoxication; Larry L.

Fox, 33, Middleport, $100 and
costs, three days confinement,
driving while intoxicated;
Marie Smith, 54, Middleport,
$25 and cosLs, disturbing the
peace; Vickie K. Deem, 22,
Pomeroy, costs only, rlUlning a
red light; Fred Older , 23,
Racine, and Woodrow Hall , 19,
Racine, $15 and costs each,
lnt.oxication.
Forlei ling bonds were Jenny
Whittington, no address
recorded, $.10 bond, disturbing
the peace; James Hall, 25,
Middleport,
$25
bond,
disturbing the peace, &lt;he Virgil
L. Hill, 30, Racine, $25 bond,
blocking an alley.

-~

'

'

BAKER FURNITURE

PHONE 992·2156

NEW FIRE TRUCK - Rutland has purchased and paid for a new 1972
International Fire Truck costing $20,400. The truck, converted by the
Stephens Co. of Columbus into a lire truck, will go on all rural Rutland
township and village fires. The $20,400 was raised by donations, the fire levy,
ladies auxiliary, and the vollUlteer firemen.
The truck holds GOO gallons of water, will pump 750 gallon per minute, and

The Meigs Band Boosters
approved the purchase of new
uniforms for the band's
majorettes Monday night with
Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin,
· president, presiding.
Dwight Goins, band director,
explained that a sequin
Wliform for the majorettes,
since they will do fire baton
routines, would definitely add
to their safety .
The Boosters, In other
business, voted to treat band
meinbers at aU home games.
The minutes were read by Mrs.
Jim O'Brien and Mrs. AHred
Rusche! gave a report on the
two tag days conducted by
band members.
The Boosters will meet at the
football field in Pomeroy on
Sept. 5 at 7 p.m. to clean the
two dressing rooms. On Thursday, Sept. 7, at 6:30p.m. the
band will take part in meet the
learn and meet the band night.

1\ c.ulr!l\11 NHrhrlv

Double Feature Program

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1972

MIAMI BEACH · (UPI)President Nixon pllUlges Into
his fifth campaign for national
office tonight in pursuit of a
life's dream-a landslide.
The candidate for re-election
of a conservative platform and
convention, he III pitching his
appeal to the two big blocs of
voters where polls give Democratic rival George S. McGovern the edge-the blacks
and the yolUlg.
Youth violently against
Nixon vowed to lay siege to
Convention Hall to keep It baH
empty when he appears
tonight .

MASON DRIVE-IN ·

Plus

Tonight, Aug. 22

p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..

Morr is and Emma Ledlie.
Mr. and Mrs. Gorden Carter
of Poto,key, Mi ch., spent a
weekend with Iter sis ter, Mrs.
Emma Ledlie. On Sunday they
all attended a reun ion at Point
Pleasa nt.
Mrs. Sharon Barr and
r hildren called on her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Howar d Thoma
Monday night.
Mrs. Dena Hoffman spent a
few da ys with her daughter-inlaw, Mrs. Patty Hoffman , and
boys at Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby
called on Alpha Barr Tuesday
evening.

Sean Conn ery

MEIGS THEATRE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Tampa and spe nl a week in
Florida .

Mr . and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn, Oak Hill, and
Kev in Derkin of Columbus
spent Mnnday at the home of
Duane's parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Alpha Barr. Other .callers at
the Barr horne was Eugene
Musser, Mr . and Mrs. Clair

en tine

ew";.J"n n;i~/~

Stop in right away, look
around, find what you
like and stock up on
vour Lee Work Clothes at Elberfelds.

Cloudy, mild through
Thursday, chance of thundershowers continuing
t.onight and Thursday. Highs
Thursday will be in the 80s
again .

Nixon Aiming
For Landslide
•
November zn

Mildred Roush
Died
on Monday Band Opens Camp At Southside
Funeral services for Mildred
Eloise Roush, 43, Wright St.,
MASON - Wahama Band
Pomeroy, who died at her members began their annual
residence Monday morning, band camp at Southside 4-H
will be held Wednesday at 1 Ca mp in Mason County Sunp.m. at Ewing Chapel with the day. The marching band will
Rev . Robert Kuhn officiating. spend 10 days there to prepare
Mrs. Roush is survived by for the year's activ ities.
her husband, Earl, and these
Gerald Simmons and Charles
children Mrs. Barbara Burke Yeag o, co-directors, are in
Valley Forge, Pa .; Cheste; charge of the camp. Parents
Louis Roush, Washington, o. · ass isting are Mrs . Oak
C.; Patricia' Ann Roush ,
Pomeroy ; her parents, Lewis
J. and Emma E. Dailey Fox,
Pomeroy; two sisters, lola
Howell , Pomeroy , and Ruth
Douglas , Dyesvillc: one
grandson , Robert Christopher
Burke, and several nieces and

•

Henry G. Davis of West
•Virginia was 80 years old when
he ran for the vice presidency
on the Democratic ticket in
1904.

Today's game was sch~uled tenniii room where the third
for I p.m. EDT with Russian game was held. At the time
world champion Boris Spassky Schmid said there was no real
playing white and moving fir$. · di.stll!'hance even lho1J8h condiFischer has a 9~ to 6~ point tions were not perfect.
lead in· the $250,000 match.
When Informed of FIBcher's
Fischer needs only three more letter, sCtunid, a 44-year~Id
points to win the world chess grandmuter and publlaher,
title. Spassky needs 5~ points said, "I shall read Fischer's
to retain the title.
letter very carefully and make
Schmid has refused all of up my mind. I'm not for
Fischer's protests-there were Fischer, noi for Spasaky. I am
three demands to move SlUl· neutral and trying very hard to
day's 16th game into the table divide SWI and wind correctly."
R~'slan
sources said
Spasiky would not accept a
change of location to small
How~rd, Jr., Mrs. Fl.o~ene room where he lost the third
Fmmcum, cooks; Mrs. Wtlham game. after Fischer forfeited
Russell, camp manager, and the second In protest of
Mrs. Jack Needs, Mrs. television cameras In the main
Maryanne Gorrell and Mr. and han. ·
Mrs. James Hart, chaperones.
The Russian had the fourth
SlUlday, Aug. 27, the band game moved back Into the
wtll present a concert at 1:30 main hall because he said he
p.m. All parents and friends could hear automobiles and
are invited. Camp will close on children playing In the other
Wednesday at 5 p.m.
room.

Weather

' •

.
,;,

•

·-

.•

RI!'.IIERVE CIL\MPI(lll ol the Melp Coant,y 4-H bane lbolr SlturdiJ It tblllelfl County
Fair '11'1111 Mary Weyeramtiter, da1J8hter of Mr. and Mra. James E. Weyel'lllliller Iii Pomeroy ..
In addition to reeerve champion honors Mary won· 1st place ln western plealllll't bone IIIIi,
other awards. She received aU A's In h?E;jects with her registered quatier bone "Budtqe
Wimpy." Mary has been a ~H mem
year. She III a member of Mellis County Saddle
Sitters, and her advisors are Bill Cole and . R. KeMedy. Judging SaturdaY's show was AI
·
'Weygandt of WOOiter.

Velenns Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Donna
Jones, Pomeroy; Alice
Coleman, Albany; Michael
Martin, Pomeroy, and Jennie
Newmyer, Wilkesville.
DISCHARGES - Bernice
Lavalley, Michael Dawson,
Janice
Young,
Mark
Ballimgee, Edith McKenzie,
Aries Simpson, Allee RuaseU
and Eleanor Faulll.

.

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