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'
16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pu.. lrroy, 0 ., June 13, 1973

Nation's wheels turning slower
By JAMES R. KING
energy gathering devices in·
United Press loternallooal
stalled in space could transmit
A former White House energy to earth by laser beams.
econom ist says the nation's
"Only a small fraction of the
energy shortage could be eased sun 's energy gets to earth
if gasoli ne prices were jacke&lt;l because the atmosphere acts as
so high that indiscriminate use a screen," the former astronaut
of automobiles would be dis· said.
couraged.
The Justice Department,
An Apollo astronaut says the meanwhile, filed an antitrust
country should try to harness suit against Texaco and Coastal
the sun's power to solve its fuel States Gas Producing Co.,
crisis.
saying the two firms have an
And in Washington , where agreement that in effect re·
some government office build· stricts gasoline supp lies to
ings dimmed lights Tuesday to independent retailers.
conserve power, the White
In the Southwest
House announced President
In the Southwest, one of those
Nixon will soon announce the

independent retapers, Young
Oil Co., which sells nearly a
half bilUon gallons of gasoline a
year in Oklahoma, announced it
will be forced to close all but
two or three of its 10 stations
by the end of June. soaring
costs and sharp reductions in
available gasoline have already
closed three stations belonging
to the £irm.
The Texas Railroad Commission ca lled a hearing today to
discuss a proposed natural gas
curtailment plan that would
allow a gas company to
allocate reserves in southern
Texas according to a priority

system . The system would give
first priority to domestic users
s uch as schools, churches and
hospitals , and lower priority to
industry .
And in Florida, Gov. Reubin
Askew called lor reducing tbe
state's 70 mile an hour speed
liJ'Iit to as low as :;o to
cOnserve gasoline. He said he
didn ' t know if the fuel crisis
was based on a genuine
shortage or created by oil
companies to drive prices up,
but he said the fact remains
some service stations are
running out of supplies and it is
only prudent to conserve it.

·Natural Resources .''
Despite sugge~ted solutions to

1--

the

..

problem, · the

nation 's

Just·Highest

Interest Rates
In The Area

5%

~;!t~;

..

"~ man

~ BRANCH

GIFTS FOR DAD
Father's Day Cards, Billfolds,
Jewelry, Socks, Hankies, Shoe
Shine Kits, House Slippers,
Tools. Box Candy, and Many
Other Gill Ideas.

SUMMER

TOYS
ssst•ss••~

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

'!~!"~F~~~ ~~!,~
992 -3498

l

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN PIIID.f!.Y .lti.\TIJIIDAY NIOII'n TD.I

••

"Did he mention the names
of others he believed would be
indicted?" .asked Sen . Edward
Guerney, R-Fla.
" Yes," Porter said. "He
mentioned Mr. Mitchell, Mr.
LaRue , Mr . Mardian, Mr.
Haldeman , Mr. Strachan, Mr.
Dean and Mr. Colson ."
Mitchell resigned as Nixon
campaign director July I;
. Frederick LaRue and Robert
Mardian were two of Mitchell's
principal deputies i H. R.
· Haldeman was White HQuse
chief of staff; Gordon Strachan
was his political deputy;
Charles Colson was special
counsel to Nixon .
Edmisten Introduces Memo
Rufus L. Edmisten, a North
Carolina lawyer who worked
(or Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D·N.C.,
on another Senate committee
before he was attached to the
·

•

Watergate panel, introduced
the
surprise
Magruder
memorandum.
Read one way, it could be
interpreted as a suggestion
that $1 milUon of Commerce
Department
fund s
be
legitimately spent to engage in
activities likely to reflec t
credit on Nixon and thus
enhance
his
re-election
chances. Read another way, it
carried a more sinister suggestion: The federal , money had
been diverted to partisan
purposes.
Edmisten was asked by
reporters if the $1 million was
feder"al money.
" I wouldn 't want to leave
that impression," he said. " It
was just money lying around. "
He would not elaborate.
Re~ds S.Page Statement
In an eight-page statement
which he read at the start of his
testimony, Stans denied any
illegal behavior, dismissed the
General Accounting Office's
charges of violations of the
campaign finance law as
" technical violations" atid contended he was too busy to look
backward.
"When I joined the commit·
tee the bank balance was $3
million, and there was still $30
million or $40 million or more
to be raised," Stans said.
11
1 did not review what had ·
happened before but began to
work with the problem at hand
... . It was not a period of time in
which I could spend hours on
detail."
Stans and Mitchell are under
indictment by a New York
gra nd jury which charged
them with lying, and obstructing justice by interfering
with the Securities and Ex·
change
Commission
investigation of fugitive finan~
cier Robert L. Vesco: If convic ted of all charges, Stans and
Mitchell would each face
potential prison terms of 50
years.

Marijuana cookies prove
glaucoma fr ea fm en f al"d
.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla .
(UP!) - Dr. Frederick Blan·
ton , an opthalmologist, is
treating some of his glaucoma
patients with brownies- filled
with marijuana-despite the
illegality of the weed, because
of its successful results:
·
Blanton cannot obtain the
drug legally but the U.S.
Division of Dangerous Drugs is
"looking into" his application to
acquire ma~ijuana through
government research agencies.
Blanton, 42, told the Fort
Lauderdale News Monday he
was using the brownies to treat
about 50 volunteer patients,
following a precedent set by
University of · California-Los
Angeles (UCLA) researchers in
1970.
Head of an eye surgery clinic
here, Blanton said he conducted
his own research and presented
a paper on the subject at Johns
Hopkins University
timore in April.

in

MENS KNIT SLACKS
Sizes 2&lt;l to 42 waist . Solid colors, Plaids, Stripes, Neat
Patterns .

Mens 9.95 Knit Slacks - - - - - Sale 6.99
Mens 10.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 7.49
Mens 11.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 7.99
Mens 12.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 8.49
Mens 13.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 8.99
Mens 14.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 9.49
Mens 15.95 Knit Slacks
Sale 9.99
Mens 1
Knit Slacks
10.49

He said it is.illegal for hiin to
use ll)e marijuana, but he
"acquires " it nonetheless ,
blending the leaves into powder
and baking them into a ready:
made brownie mix.
He said that within an hour of

MEIGS THEATRE
June 13-21

THEY'RE UTERAL .
SACRAMENTO ,
Calif .
(UP!) - Alan H. Borden, 21,
and his teen ..ge bride want to
literally become one.
They were married in Reno
in March. This month Borden
and his 1!1-year-old wife told
Superior Court Judge B. Abbott

"We mutually want to add
something new and beautiful to
. our marriage by adopting the
name Unwn, the Latin word
for 'one', which would sym.
bolize our relationship," they
said at their name-changing
hearing Tuesday.

MASON DR IN

"Evel Knievel"

Fri .· Sat.- Sun.
June 22 -23 ·24

Rated PG

1776

(Technico lorl

also

Wm . Dan iels
Howard DaSilva

(Gl
Adults : $1.50

eating a marijuana cookie the
pressure of eye fluid within the
eye of glaucoma sufferers
drops 25 to 35 per cent. These
results last for several hours
without affecting vision he said.
Pressure of the eye fluid on
the optic nerve is the cause or
glaucoma, a disease which can
cause blindness and death.
Blanton said legal or not he
feels he must go on with his
marijuana-brownie trealment, .
" while I have patients dying of
glaucoma .''

WED Thru FRI

NOT OPE'N

Children : 75c
Show Starts 7 p.m.

Mens and Boys

MEN'S $1.98

Summer Weight

T-SHIRTS WITH POCKET

JACKETS
Our Entire

FLARE LEG SLACKS

'
Denim s. Corduroy, Cotton and Polyester Blends.
all Cotton Twills . Sizes 29 to 38 waist . Entire
stock included .

"The loners"
Rated PG

69

TilRILL RIDE - The Paratrooper, of which a few
whirling seats are caught by the calDera , above, is at the
Regatta amusement shows for the first time opening tonight
back of the Pomeroy Junior High School tiuildilll! bv Nolan
Amusements of Zanesville. Dollar Days will be observed
Thursday evening beginning at 6 p. m. and Saturday af.
ternoon beginning at 12p. m. One dollar will be price to get on
all rides for the remainder of the day . The rides have been
moving in and setting up all week preparing to open tonight.

Sale Prices

SALE PRICES!
FATHER'S DAY SALE

Mens Sport and Dress Shirts

Quality talent.
certain in show

Regular Prices $2.95 to $8.95 .
Sizes Smatl (14-14'12), Medium (15 15112 ), Large (16·16'12 ). Extra Large
(17 -17'12&gt;. Solid Colors, White . Plaids
and excellent patterns.

Sizes 36 to 50 in s horts. regulars and longs .
Fisher stripe grey and green herringbon e .
SPECIAL SALE

Qualiiy entertainment will
be presented ~t the first annual
talent show Friday night at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport at 9 p.m.
The show is another headline
entertainment spo~sored by
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce during Regatta
Weekend.
Taking p'art in the children's
division of the show are Cindy
Patterson, Syracuse, doing a
jazz dance ; Beverly Grate,
Rutland, playing drums; Beth
Cassell, Middleport, sin ging
"Raindrops"; Kim Batey,
Middleport, · singing .and
playing a guitar, and an
Acrobatic number by Barbara
Grueser , Sharon Griffin and
Andrea Batey.
Al.~o participating in the
younger division will be Julie
Gibbs Mason.
In the adult group the Grate
·Quartet, Rutland, of Wendell,
Donna,
Bonnie,
Jennie,
Beverly and David ; Sharon
Wilson and David Miller in a
vocal duet; Fred Burney doing
a vocal solo, "Sun Down";

Sale
Prices

Sale Prices Now for Father's Day

Mens lee 13.49 Coveralls

•

Lee Tech Twill Work Uniforms

Pants in sizes 29 to 44 waist . Shirts that match in
sizes 14 112 to 17 112. Army Tan, Spruce Green. Dark
Olive. Charcoal.

Sale Prices!
SPECIAL SALE

Mens Casual Knit Shirts

Mens Neckties

This · group includes
knit
shirts
with
collars in white, solid
colors.
patterns.
Pl~nty of tank tops in
solid
colors
and
stripes. Sizes Samll,
Medium , Large and
Extra Large .

Bells ring
•

August 28

SALE PRICES

Another Big Shipment

1-----~-~--~-F-'.~•..:•wG:;,:i;l;t_s~.o:;,:x~w,;;it,;,;h..;.;~~"--~·~·--"'i

Mens Summer Caps, Hats

Mens

SWIM

Boys

Classes will resume in Meigs
County schools August 28 .under
the calendar adopted recently
by the county and local boa rds
of education.
The calendar provides for
teachers 1 meetings on Monday,
Aug. 27; the first day of classes
on Aug. 28 and the observance
of Labor Day on Monday, Sept.
3. The first six weeks period
will end Oct, 5.
Students will have a holiday
on Oct. 26 when a teacher s
meeting is held during the
second six weeks which end on
Nov. 16. The third six weeks
period will bring Thanksgiving
and the long holiday weekend
running from Nov. 22 through
Nov. 25.
The final day of classes
before the Christmas v~cation
falls on Dec. 21 in the third six
weeks pe'riod with cla sses
reswning on Jan. 2. The third
six weeks ends on Jan . 11. ·
The fourth and fifth six
weeks periods, Jan. 14-Feb. 22
and Feb. 25-April5, are without
holidays. The final six weeks
bring a lon g holiday weekend
from Good Friday, April 12,
through the following Monday ,
April 15, with the final day of
school on May 23.

An excellent selection of roll up hats. Polka Dot
Caps, Fancy Caps.

SWIM

TRUNKS

TRUNKS

Sizes 28 to extra .
large. Solid co lors
and patterns .

Sizes 6 through 18.
Good style selection.

SALE PRICES!
FAMOUS MAKE

MENS DRESS BELTS
Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Good selection ~f
widths. White, black, brown and fashion
·colors.

¥2 price lf2 price
ELBERFELD$ IN

ME

Marilyn Fought, singing and
playing her guitar to her own
composition ''A Tune for
You" ; Jill Warner, . Southern
High SChool, doing a vocal;
Teresa Ellis, a piano solo;
Kathy Williams of Athens,
singing and playing ber guitar;
Karen Griffith, a veteran of the
Big Bend Minstrel Association,
playing ·h er trump et ac·
companied by Mrs . Olive
Weber and Mike Corder an
· organ solo.
The talent s how will open at
8 :30 with Mrs . Christine
Guthrie: Meigs High Vocal
· Music instructor, presenting
organ se lections. The Lowery
organ being used is through the
courtesy of John Brunlcardi of
the House of Music, Gallipolis
and Atltens.
Highlighting the talent show
will be the crowning of the
rega tta queen to be named
following the numbers in the
adult division. The winners of
the contest will be named
following the crowning of the
queen:
Vernon Weber is chairman of
the show. He will also serve as
(Continued on Page 8)

•
agam
on

SALE
PRICES!
A tremendous selection of ready tied ties and tie your own
t ies. Soli d colors, white, neat patterns,. S,elect one or two for
your Dad on hi s day next Sunday.

tho Watergate to the time of
trying to keep it from the
public view" did Nixon have
any knowledge of the plot.
He said he had routinely sent
a copy of the approval proposal
to Gordon Strachan, special
assistant to White House Chief
of Staff H. R. Ha ldema n - and
Haldeman's liaison man at the

THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1973

campaign.
Mitchell has repeated ly
denied ever approving any
electronic surveiUance against
Democrats. He told the
Watergate grand jury April 20
he had sat in on three meetings
early in 1972 where such plans
were discussed, but that he
rejected them each llme.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Perlod1 of raln likely
Saturday aod Suoday, eod·
tile period wlth highs In the
the period with h ghs ln the
iDs , lows ln upper 60s and
lower 70s.

y
'

Weber, Sayre
have degrees
at Ohio State

Today is flag day when the
red, white and blue is flying
from every home and business
that
hou ses
pa triotjc
Ameri cans .
The Day is a time for warda
created images of brave men
and women sacrificing even
their lives for a cause, an idea,
ur a hope. They are the s tuff of
prayers and verses.
The first of three verses
below were composed this
week
by
a
man
of
Gallipolis of proven pa·
triotism now retired. He
desires to remain anqnymous.
The second was written 12
years ago by a Middleport boy
nine years old at the time. The
third is by Mildred A. Evans of
Gallipolis, who wrote it "years
ago, when r 'was a girl in
school."
Each suggests our Flag is
representative of what is noble
in the American dream .
FLAG DAY SALUTE
Oh, noble emblem of our land
With heritage so .proud and
grand,
We praise your glorious history
In staunch defense of liberty.
You merit well our great
esteem.
Our heads held high, our eyes
agleam,
We honor yuu on this Flag Day.
With thankful hearts for you we
pray.

MANNING THE FREEZERS preparing homemade ice
cream for the Big Bend 'Regatta Weckeru( at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church Wednesday night were , 1 to r, Mickey
William~. Trell Schoenleb and Chi..tl'les Ev&lt;:~ns. 'l'l1e ice t:l'Ca ll l
is traditionally m~de by the .;,: hurch la ymen for a lwo day icc
cream social in conjunction with Regatta Wcekcud activities.

I

WASHlNy'l'ON ( UPI ) President Nixon froze all
consumer prices for 60 days,
beginning today, in a tacit
admission that his vo luntary
ecouom ic controls had failed to
halt the couutry's worst round
of inflation in a generation.
Wages , for the lime being,
remained unfrozen.
Nixon said the freeze would
be followed, p•·obab ly in early
Au gust , by ') J new and more
effective system of controls,"
- Phase lV- that will be bigger
and tougher than the mostly
volm1tary Phase 111 stabili7.ation program.
The President announced his
lat est
ex perim ent
with
el'Onomic controls, hi s fourth in
two years, in a nationally
televised speec h Wednesday
'night tlwt followed seve ral
da ys of debate at the White

House over the nation 's
economic plight.
These were the main points
of the new Nixon program :
.June 1-8 Prices the Staodard
- For the duration of the
frCeze, a maximum of 60 days,
sellers may not charge more
than the highest price at which
items or services were sold
between June I and June 8.
- Wages will not be frozen so
long as pay increases "continue to be responsible and
noninflationary .''
- Raw farm products (such
as raw potatoes or 0:1 head of
lettuce) arc exempt from the
freeze at the first sale but are
covered when they hit the
grocery stores.
- Rents, which have been
increasing at a slower rate in
recent months, are also free of
the freeze.

- Dividends a nd interest
rates remain subject to volun.
tary regulation .
- A beefed-up Internal Revenue Service will conduct a
" profit sweep" to determine if
price increases since January
have violated Phase Ill
guidelines.
Congress Asked for AulhorUy
- Congress will be asked to
give the President new
authority to limit exports of
feed gra ins and ce rtain other
agricultural commoditieS in
short supply that have helped
drive up the domestic cost of
food .
Since neither wages nor
interest rates were frozen, and
since both a'rfect the cost of
hou s ing, it was not immediately clear what impact
th~ new measures would have
on that aspect of the economy.

LONDON ( UP!) - Dealers
called President Nixon's 61),
Wiy price freeze "too little too
late" today anct selling
pressure mounted Hgainst the
dollar on money Jn(Jrkets
throughout Europe.
Gold prices in L&lt;mdon, home
of U1 e world's most Important
bullion morket, opened slight ly
lower, then at midday spurt~d
rapidly forward to $J16 an
ounce- up from Wedn esday's

$115.50 close.
and its value began to droop.
"The reaction to President
"Nixon's freeze was too llttle
too late," one London gold Nixon's economic measures ,
dealer said. "And, there is still quite simply , Is that tile dollar
Walergite and the question feJl back, " a European dea ler
whether he has the long-term representing a mftjor U.S.
authority to set the American bank said . "That tells this
morning 's story. The reaction
economy straight.''
Bankers said the dollar is negative."
ln Frankfurt, the dollar
opened fairly strong on most
major markets, but that opened a bit higher but by mid·
morning retreated to 2.6185
skepticism over Nixon's
West German marks-down
measures quickly developed
from Wednesday 's close of
2.6240.
The dollar also slid back on
the Zurich exchange where it
opened ai 3.090 Swiss francs,
down from 3.0930 francs Wedlevels will not do anything. It 's nesday.
jus t delaying meeting the
· " Dealers are not optimistic
problem.''
at all," one bank source said.
But Phillip G. Barach,
In London, the pound under
president of U. S. Shoe Corp., pressure from its own balance
Cincinnati, looked at the of trade dericit criSis initially
measures as "psychologically declined against the dollar. but
quickly regained most of the
.. . a good move ."
' 'I. 'think Ws probably an lost ground. By mid-morning it
e ffectiv e
temporary was selling lor $2.57325, up
from $2.5690 at the opening but
measure," Barach said.
Ralph Lazarus, president of still down slightly from Wed·
.
Federated Department Stores, nesday's $2.5740.
The financial dollar used by
lnc. , Cincinnati, said it was too
soon to tell if the controls would tourists and sp·eculators
opened steady in Paris, but
work.
" ll is hard for me to tell from declined by mid-morning to
what the President said what 4.2825 French francs from
the results will be,'' Lazarus Wednesday's 4.3050 close.
The dollar showed some
said. "I must withhold im·
strength
in Hong Kong, whose
mediate judgment but I do
know lf we get in much market doses before European
material wlth higher prices markets open because of the
during the next 60 days, we will ·time difference ,' and gold ·
prices dipped from Wed·
be in trouble."
A spokesman lor the Kroger nesday's close.
Gold fell to $104 an ounce,
Co. supermarket chain, based
in Cincinnati, said he hoped down from Wednesday 's
"everyone will cooperation $106.80 close, while the dollar
"with the President's program ' rose to 5.1037 Hong Kong
to pull out of the crisis. Our dollars, up from 5.08 Hong
customers don't like the · Kong dollars Wednesday.
rapid ly ri sing prices and
neither do we ."

Reactions mixed

WOMEN OF ST. PAUL Luther~n Church in Pomeroy
spent two evenings this week mixing more than 115 ga llons of
ice crearri for Rega lta Weekend activ iti es at the church. The
ice cream will he served with IWlt:hcs from 11 a .m. to 9 p.m.
in the ~'ellowship Ha ll Friday and Saturday . Ldllu right are
Vicky Cleland, C'harlotle ~':wins and Arm Hytlicr.

Egyptian
social worker in
.

Two Meigs County s tudents
- Anonymous, Gallipolis,
were among Ulose receiving
Ohio, June 14, 1973.
degrees at commencement
exerc ises at Ohio State
OUR COLORS
University June 8.
Red • white and blue the colors
Dean Weber , Rutland,
ny
rec eived hi s · Bachelor of when ·bands and heroe s hurry
Science
and
Natural
by ;
Res ou rces. l\ttending the T'm too small to do
exercises at the OSU stadium lhe deeds those banners call
were his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
me to.
Vernon Weber ; his sis ter,
Donna: his brothers, Dallas But in my heart the colors ·
a nd Wayne, and his grandwave,
mother, Mr s . Lawrence I think lhe crimson makes me
Milhoan.
brave .
Aaron Sayre, son of Doris And 1 would never say a word
Bailey, Rt . I, Por tla nd, That turns the white to gray.
received hi s B. S. degree in
Agri culture Educa tion . He Best is the blue - a piece of sky
plans to teach Production With every star a shining eye.
Agr icul ture a t Meigs High A child is proud and set apart
School · and Eastern High Who carries stars within his
School. While at Ohio Slate
heart.
University Mr. Sayre was a
By John Tannehill,
member of the Pre-Vet Club,
Middleport, Ohio,
Agriculture Education Society,
April, 19£2, at age 9.
and Delta Theta Sigma
Fraternity.
OUR FLAG
His wife , Shirleyi his mother
and step-father, Mr. and Mrs. ~ur nag is the flag that is
\ honored,
Charles Bailey ; a brother ,
She
is· as pure as pure can be
John Sayre of Racine, and an
•
And we are all very glad to
uncle, Jack Branch, Columbus,
01ltended the ceremony .
I Continued on Page 'a)

\

TEN CENTS

Dollars still failing

We pray that you will ever be
A champion of liberty,
Of freedom, justice, truth and
light,
Choosing always what is right.
May all who look upon you see
The promise of our destinyTo grow in stature with this
prayer
In which our people all will
share.
The beauty of your stripes so
red, •
.
Enshrines our loved , heroic
dead .
Your stars and stripes so pure
and white
Are symbols of our honor
bright.
The starry field of loyal blue
Depicts our courage, tried and
true .
Old Glory , nobl~, resolute , .
We proudly g1ve you thiS
salute.

PHONE 992-2156

Prices frozen

Flag Day

Ideal Father's Day gift. Sizes A, B. C. and D.
Two piece styles: Regular style with long sleeve
top. long legs, or shorter with short sleeve top.
knee length. Solid colors and neat patterns.

FOR FATHER'S DAY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Verses
tell of

MENS PAJAMAS

•

zxon no

Devoted To 17uJ lnterwu Of 17ae Meigs-MtUOn Area

Stock Included

lf2 Price

testimony to date in Ute ScniJte campaig n manager ~ at a
Watergate hearings, Magruder - mectmg wiU1 Magruder in Key
said planning for the espionage Biscayne, Fla.
operation began under Mit·
" Mr . Mitche ll a~rt!ed to
chell's guidance while Mitchell approve the plan,'' Magruder
still was atto rney geueral.
testified .
Final approval ~ame on
ln hi!'i OJX'nint,: s tatement,
March 30, 1972, he said - after Magructer stressed that as fa r
Mitchell had left the Justice as he knew, "a t nu point ...
Department to become Nixon 's · from the time of the planning of

VOL. XXV NO. 43

Sale Price '1

yes,

•

en tine

Sizes Small (34 -36), Medium (38.40). Large (42 44) and Extra Large (46-48) . Raglan shoulders.
comfortable f it. 100 pet. cotton . Big seieclion,
white and solid colors.

.

Bal· Goldberg they ·wanted to
change their name to ''Unum.''

pililiiliiiiiioiiiliilii.iiiiiiiioiiii.iiiiiii""i.

Sand Pails , Garden Tools ,
Swimming Toys , Wading Pools ,
Beach Balls, Inflation Rings, Ear
Plugs , Nose Plugs . Prices to suit
your budget here.
~cacssas

Nextw'ill come John W. Dean
Ill, former presidential
counsel, and then Kalmbach.
Dean, court sources say,
repeatedly invoked the 5th
Amendment on his lawyer's
advice when he appeared
before the Watergate grand
jury Tuesday alter Judge John
J. · Sirica turned down his
request for total immunity in
exchange for his testimony .
Archibald Cox, the special
Watergate prosecutor, said
he
would
not
appeal
Sirica's ruling rejecting Cox:'s
request that radio and
television be banned when
Dean and Magruder testify.
Porter Returns
. Herbert L. Porte.r, the youth·
ful scheduling officer at the
Committee to Re-&lt;!lect the
President, returned to the
Senate witness table Tuesday
to tell of a chance encounter
with Magruder across the
street from the White House
this spr ing. The glum
Magruder, 38, told Porter he
expected to be indiCted for his
role in· the Watergate coverup.

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Jeb
Stuart Magruder testified
today that John N. Mitchell,
the former attorney general,
persona1ly approved the
Watergate bugging. But he
said he believes President
Nixon knew nothing about
Watergate in advance.
In the most explosive

Special! Father's Day Sale

Stans denies key memo

limited supply of energy was By MIKE F'EIN~n.BER
uncomfortably apparent to mil·
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
lions of Americans, especially Maurice H. Stans, a self·
on the crowded Eastern Sea- described
" stickler
for
board where electrical power details," says he can provide
was cut back for a second day no details about the $1 milUon
in a row during a record heat fund which a secret memo
wave.
claimed he was amassing at
Eight of 10 Closed
the Commerce Department In
In Oklahoma a firm an· 1971 to help President Nixon's
nounced eight of its 10 services re-&lt;!lection.
stations have been forced to
The former Cabinet officer,
close for lack of enough noticeably older and grayer
gasoline, In Texas rationing of than a few months ago,
natural gas was being con· brushed
off
reporters '
sidered, and in Washington the questions Tuesday about the
American Automobile Associa· memo-a surprise piece of
tion reported the number of evidence at the Senate
gasoline stations in the nation Watergate hearing.
with normal operations dropped . It went to John N. Mitchell,
from 75 per cent la:St week to 64 then attorney general, and
per cent this week.
came from Jeb Stuart MaOne solution to the gasoline gruder, a former White House
shortage, advanced by the aide who wa~ then organizing
former chairman of the Presi· Nixon's re-election drive.
dent's Council of Economic
Stans swore he never saw it
Advisors, Paul W. McCracken, and didn't know what
was a 10-cent-per-gallon gaso- Magruder was talking about
line price increase now, and an when he wrote that Stans "has
equally large price hike next built up a discretionary fund at
year.
Commerce that will total
"The tax on gasoline should approxtrnately $1,000,000. He is
be increased • by 10 cents a using this fund for conference,
gallon immediately, and by hiring and other activities that
another 10 cents next year, in will be beneficial to · the
order to dampen the demand Preliident's reelection."
and curtail consumption," said.
Suggestion Made
McCracken, who is now a
"If you feel it is appropriate,
faculty member at the Univer· Secretary Stans might discuss
sity of Michigan .
this concept with other Cabinet
(\ quite different solution, officers to see if they can
suggested by CoL Walter develop the same kind of fund
CunninghamJ a member of th~ within their own depart ~
first Apollo spaceflight crew, is ments."
to harness the sun's power.
In addition, Stans swore he
Cunningham said large solar knew nothing about break-ins,
espionage sabotage and cover ~
ups . He said he ·concentrated
No gam es, No gimmicks
on raising money - the $50
million h~ collected is a
political record -and fretted
about waste and "overkill,"
but left to the political
operatives the decisions on how
the money was to be spent.
But he did acknowledge
providing $75,000 in cash on the
urgent request of Herbert
Kalmbach, Nixon's personal
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
•nd
of inJ
s per cent per year paid on
Regular Pa ss book Sa,vings.
The General Accounting Of·
No Mintmum . Interest
lice, watchdog arm of Con·
!rom date of deposit to date
gress, says that money was
of Withdrawal. Interest
used to pay off the Watergate
cu mpounded quarterly.
wiretappers a~ter their arrests.
Stans said after Kalmbach
assured him the money .was
4JMEIGS
1
vital for "a special White
House project" and cleared by
The Athens County
"higher authorities," he furSavinqs li. Loan Co.
nished it forthwith.
296 Second St.
Magruder Next to be Called
Pomeroy, Ohio
Magruder, granted imAll Accounts In sured To
munity by the committee from
&gt;20,000 b y FSLIC.
prosecutions arising from his
testimony, is the next major
Nixon campaign figure to be
called, possibly late todav.

ztc e

Father's Day Is Sunday, June 17

creation of a new Cabinet-level
" Department of Energy and

•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Pomeroy this weekend
The Regatta Weekend Frog
Jumps, as their counterpart in
Ca la veras County, Calif., are
usually expected to attract
UflU sual visitors ,
Last year there wa s th.e
gentleman from Libya with the
halitosis frog .
This year , visiting the Big
Bend Regatta Saturday will be
Hosni Shoukry Saleh of Cai ro,
Egypt. Saleh, a guest in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
LoVejoy in Columbus, is one of
a group of 20 or so social
workers and youth leaders
ove r the world in
from
Columbus for four months
work experie nce in local
agencies. Hosni is working in
the justice division of the
Deve lopment Deparirnent.
He will be at the fl ower show
at noon Saturday at th e
Pomeroy Motor Co. showroom
with Mr. and Mrs. Lovejoy .
Saleh taught gymnastics and
sports before becomin g an
inspecto r
ror
ph ysical
education in Cairo. In 1964, he
went to work foi- the min istry of
youth, first as director of :rura l
youth centers aild then as an

au·

eva luator ~n d s upervi so r. He
ha s tnJ d speci al tr.:.tini ng in
planning , ev aluation, admini!llration and supervis ion .
He is pr~sc ntly techni ca l
di rec tor for UNESCO in !egy pt,
a bo.ar9 mem ber o[ the
Egyptian Youth Hoste ls Assn.,
and a lea der· of the Youth
Tra ve l Bureau. He ha s'
tr(lvelcd in [..lbia , Gera mny ,
Ita ly, Turk ey, Bulgaria,
Pola nd, England and the
United States.
BUDGETS OUE SOON
School di str icts, townships .
m unicipaliti es and county
government departmen ts have
unti l July 20 to get their
budgets completed and to the
offi ce of Mei gs Coun ty Auditor
Gord on Ca ld well at· the
courthou se. The cou nty bud ge t
comm ission will rev iew the
hud gets submitted on Monday,
Aug. 6.
LOCAL TEMPS
The !emperature in Llowntow n Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Th ursday was 76 degrees under
sunny skies.

.

\

By United Pres. loternallonal
One Ohio housewire sa id s he
believes President Nixon is
"off his rocker" to introduce
new. economic controls, and the
head of a statewide lC:Jbor
organ izati on said they only
dela yed meeting the problem .
Mrs . Frank Smolen of Painesville told UPI she foresees little
good res ulting from the price
freeze .
" ! think Nixon is off his
rocker," she said. " Look at the
thousan ds of thou sa nds of
peop le livin g on Social
Security . They can't afford to
buy anything and he freezes
prices at la st week's levels.
Prices were horrible la s t
week. ' '
Ano ther critic was Frank
King, · president of the Ohio
AFL-CIO, whu said the freeze
" will make some people a little
less angry, ~ut will nul do
anything to fi ght inflation. "
1
' Tf there is hollering about
so me thin g, the government
always pretends it is doing,
something, " he said . " It seems
food prices arc in the center of
the hottest plu ce of inflation,
but to fr eeze them at highest
•

School positions filled

New site for
contest needed

·A committee to seek a new
Nancy Arnold was hired for appointed fiscal officer tur the location for the annual hole-in~
one year as a Math teacher and building program. The Tri· ~ne contest was named by the
Beatrice Douglas, first grade County Bank was designated · Pomeroy Lions Club when they
teac her,
was ' appointed as Depository No. 2 for two met Wednesday for a noon
luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
principal of Tuppers Plains at years.
Named to the committee
In other action, permission
the .rune meeting of the board
of education of Eastern Local was granted to the pony during the meeting presided
by
Don
Pearch
baseball team to use the over
School District.
A res olution authorizing an school's baseball field and the were Ralph Graves, Karl
Krautter
and
Pearch.
i~sue or b~~ds was approved. lab fee for art students was set
The annual contest has
Bids for bonds will be accepted at $2 per year.
Attending the meeting were traditionally beim held at the
on July 10 when bids for fuel
oi l, gasoline, dairy products, board members Howard Rock Springs Fairgrounds but
bakery products, tires and bus Caldwe.ll, Jr ., Roger Epple, carmot be held there this year
insurance also will be· ' ac· Clyde Kuhn; I. 0. McCoy, because of highway im·
Horace Smith, John Reibel, provement nearby, the cencepled .
Charles terfield being torn up.
K .::~ y Ha il ey, Pi.ltl'icia Life superintendent,
A guest lor \he meeting was
and Kathy Dill were appointed Swogger, principal, and C. 0.
A' Leonard,
past president
ornce aides in the elementary Newland, clerk.
now living in Athens.
sc hools and C. 0 . Newland was

a

I

�'

3 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

•

I

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Maybe, JUst ma~be. J am changlng my position regard1ng
str1p muting, wh•ch cerunnly has been a oot topic in the news in
ooth Ohio and West V~rg~rua fer the past several years
I have been anb ..trlppiiig for a long tune. But ma)'be there
really lS a way to eliminate most of the excesses that cause me to
be so &gt;1gorous!) opposed to thiS massae rape of our beautiful hill
country.
First, let me toll lou ooe reason why J lu!ve. been so
ITllhtantlyopposed to strlppmg 111 the past . When 1 was a k1d , between military serv1ce and eollege, J ~or ked in the mmes around
Me1gs and Gallia counties awhile , and J was astonished by the
total diSregard of the surface llJlii•rs 111 those days for the havoc
lhey were caus111g
Being on!} about 18 or 19, 1t didn't ~orry me so much then, of
course, but the ecological and esthetic damage ~·as awesome
Old Fredd1e Clark and l were a drilling and dynarrute cr~·.
working III e1ght or nme rrunes III the l'ri-C&lt;&gt;unty, alternately. It
• was hard, back-breakmg work -and Hry, ..-ery destructiVe
Basically what we did "as thiS
We'd head out each day III a truck ~ 1th a horiZOntal drill on
the back, drive to the mme wh1ch needed blasting, and ram the
rear end of the truck up as close to the high wall as possible
Then we'd drill b1g, SIX-inch holes mto the face of the wall, a
little above the coal seam We used b1g w:-foot, SIJHnch augers
that were attached and removed as holes '"'ere rammed mto the
hillside- from depths ranging from 4ll to 120 feet My JOb was to
put the augers on and off, and they weighed almost as much as 1
did fFreddie, though no older than l, ~as semor man, because
he knew how to r1111 the dr1ll )
Then the dynamite truck would arr~ve, and we'd Jam as
much as a ton and a hall of the stuff back to the base of the holes
A ton and a half of dynamlte 1s a considerable amount, by any
deftmtton
Then we'd tamp the holes light, using great long sectiOnal
poles, and wtre the whole ,thing together WJth detonating cord,
and then run Wll'es to an electncal detonator Finally, we 'd yell
"Frre m the hole! 11 so that people a round the mme could take
she lter ~ crawl Wlder a bulldozer or shovel, and push the plunger
And what happened' Not much, VISibly The overburden
~ould lift and shrug, there would be a great rumble, a cloud of
dust, and then It would JUSt settle do~n agam Another beautiful
Southeastern Ohio hilltop had been softened up for removal Into
muddy clods by dozers, shovels and earth-movers.
ThiS actiOn, reproduCl'(l thousands of tunes on thousands of
hills, however, created a monstrous senes of scars across the
land Today, an a~rplane flight from Cha rleston to Clarksburg
shows the extent of our savagtng of the land, wtth long mme scars
' constantly VISible
It's little wonder I am opposed to such ravagmg of our
beauty
, But now a few of the coal compames are \\ak rn.g up, and
making honest efforts of recla1mmg and re\oegetatmg the
' disturbed, outraged earth The most prozmsmg method IS now
bemg tned III Pennsylvama , OhiO and West V1rg1ma.
It's called '·control placement, " or box cuttmg, and 1t's
. elementary m theory elimmate the spoilbank that denudes the
. landscape and fills the valleys full of dangerous, ugly, siltaUon
Basically, the mme operatJon of cuttrng out a p1e-sectwn "A"
and pushing It up or around the hill, mstead of over It Then
: section "B" replaces ''A" and " C" fills 111 the land left open b)
.:· B" and so oo.
:
I'm oot fully convmced, but It 's a start- and ma)be, JUst
:m..)'be, rn shift posltions 00 thiS most-destructiVe n.unauon of
::our land.

- Television Log
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THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1973
6 00- N~ws J . 4, a, 10, 15 , Truth or Con seq 13 Around the Bend
33 Sesame Sf 20
6 JO-N BC News 4, 15, ABC News 8, 10 , I Dream of Jeannte 13 ,
Des tgn tng Women 33
7 oo-- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 Course ol Our
T1mes. 33 Dtck Van Dyke 4 What's My Line 8 Btg Red
Jubtlee 15 News 6, Elec Co 20. Let 's Make A Deal 13 ,
Course ol Our T1mes 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3. To Tell the Truth 6 Wild Kmgdom
10 I !I See You tn Court&lt;! , Lasste 8, Zoom 20 , Beat I he Clock
13. Help Wanted 33
.. 8 00 - Mod Squad 6, 13, The Waltons 8 10 , lronstde 3, &lt;1, 15.
;
Playhouse New York 8tog raph y 20 33
"' 9 00 - Kung Fu6, 13 M ov1es "That Cerlam Fe elt ng ' 8 "Sec ret
;
World ' 10
10 DO - J ust Ja zz 20, 33
"10 30- Dean Marlm 3, 4, 15. Streets of San Franc tsco 6, 13 , World
:
Press 33, News 20
... 11 00 - News3,4, 6 8. 13,15
::,n 30 - Johnny Ca r son 3, 4, 15, Dtck Cavetl6, 13 , Mo vtes £'Love
•
Is Bett er Than Ever ' 8, " All theK tng's Men ' 10
,.. 1 00 - Perry Mason 4. News 13
, '100 - News4

FRIDAY , JUNE 15,1 913

:: 6 00 -

Sunrtse Semt nar 4, Sacred Heart 10
.. 6 15 - FarmhmelO Farm Reporll3 Engl lsh3
,... 6 25 .,..... Paul Harvey 13
"' 6 30 - Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers 6. R1ght On 10 , Blue
•
Rtdge Quartet 13
11. l 00- Today3 4, 15 , News6 . 8 10. F l1 nfstones 13
.. 7 SO - Romper Room 6, Popeye 10. Rocky &amp; Bullwtnk le 13
": B 00- Capt Kangaroo 10 N ew Zoo Re vue 13 , Sesame Sl 33 .
Lasste 6
~8 30 - Jack Lil l a nne 13, New Zoo Revue6
- 9 00- Pa ul Otxon 4, Ph rl Donohue 15. AM3 , Let's Make A Deal
'"
6, Capt KangarooS . Mr Rogers 33. Peyton Place 13
~ 9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3. Jeopardy 6, Hollywood 's Ta l ktng
... 10, Peyton Place IJ
jo 00_.- Dmah Shore J , 15, Phd Donahue 4, Spltt Second 13 F'r tce
rs R1ght e. 10
30- Baffle 3 4 15, 5. 10,000 Pyramtd 8, 10, Spllf Second 13
11 00 - Love Amer 1can Style 6. Sale of the Century J, 4, 15 ,
,... Gambtt 8 10 Elec Co 20
, , 1 30 - Hol l ywood Squa r es 3 A, 15, Bewtfched 6, 13 , Love of Life
B. 10 . Sesame Sl 20
;j 1 55 - CBS News e. Dan I mel's World 10
- ~2 00- 3 W's Game 3, 15 Sea r ch for Tomorrow 8, 10, Spld
·~
Secon d 6
·-12 55 - ABC News 3, 15
'"' 1 00 - News 3 A !I My Chtldren 6, 13 Green Acres 10 , Secret
..
Stor m 8, Not For Women Only 15
" 1 30- 3 On a Match 3, ~. 15 , Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The
'
World Turns 8, 10
? 00 - Days of Our L1 ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13. Mtk e
Douglass 6 Gu1dtng L1ght 8, 10
2 30- Doctors 3 4,15 General Hosp1tal6 13, Pnce IS Rtght 8,
10 EconomiC Educalton 20
'
3 00 - Return to Peyton P lace 3, ~ ~ 15 1 One Ltfe to Ltve 6, 13 ,
Secret Stor m 10 Book Bea t 10
4 00 ~ Mtsler Ca r toon J , Somerset 15, Sesame St 33 . Fltnt
stones 6 , Love Amencan Style 13 , IWJvJe " Desert Hell" 10
4 30 - I Lave Lucy 6, Pettt coat Junct1on 3 Merv Gr1ff1n 4,
Abbott &amp; Costello 8, Marshall Dtllon 15. Wild. Wdd West 13
.. 5 00 - Mt ste r Rogers 20. 33 . Bonanza 3, Hazel 8, Andy Gnff1 fh
13 B1q Valley 6
,. 5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Py le 13. Death Valley Days 15 ,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Htllbdltes 8
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 . NBC News 13 . Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20 Round the Bend 33
6 30 - NB C News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6, CBS News -8 , 10 , I
Dream of Jeannte 13, Let 's Travel 33
• 7 00 - What s My Lme 8, Truth or ConseR. J , Beat t he Clock &lt;1 ,
News 6, 10 . Satnt 15 Elec Co 20, -Folk Guitar 33 , Wil d
Ktngdom 13
.: 7 :Jo - To T ell the Truth 6, Parent Game 10 , Beat #he Clock 13 )
Porter Wagoner 3, Young Or Kt!dare 4, Pr otectors 8 Wall
Street Thts Week 20 Wor'ld Press 33
:. ~0 - Sanfor d &amp; Son 3, 4 15 , Brady Bunch 6, 13, Mov tes
..
"G oodbye, M r ChipS " 8,' Is Par1s Burmng " 10, Wash tngton
Week m Re v te w 20, 33

,a

!:

: 8 30 - Lt t1 1e People 3. 4, Odd Couple 6r 13 , Naturali sts 33 ,
.,
Wor ld Press '10
•• 9 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 33 , Room 22,2 6, 13 C1rcle of Fear 3,
&lt;1. 15, Homewood 20
... 9 30 - Love Thy Ne tghbor 6, 13
' H'O 00 - News 20, What About Tomorrow ' 6, 13 , Handful of
''
Ashes 33, Bold Ones 3, 4, 15
l1 00 - News3 4.6,8, 10,13, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, D1ck Cavell 6. Movtes
::_ " Operahon Dtsaster" 8. "Ote. Mon sfer, Dte" 10, ' Oavtd &amp;
Bathsheda " 13
J· OO ....._ M1dn tght Spec1a l 3, 4, 15 Mov te 'Cast a Dark Sh adow"
IJ
00 - New s 4 Mo111e ''The Da y the Earth Caught F1re " 10

•

Finley to keep Hockey

Professor Is Easy on Partner

.K
'-'ORlll

Jun H tJHIII I ll h.!ll~"t Y1 hul l,t
dill Th• hu tl .. had Hu\1. 11

II

Y A J !11'11
• J :12
.. AQ ltl&amp;

( ·uuld I ha\ •· fl'fi d (ha
rn•md &lt;jJlf1 nunlt- 1h·· t:t,n
11 at I
ht• d'\kt'd

\\ t;:.;'T

F.\!'-!. T

6 J2

. IOt!:a
¥ 2

'V QSi~1:l

+ K 9fi

t AQJ fJ,II j

4 i~.l

4 KJ9~

sut.:Tn rn J
• AQ!l8 7-LI

• K4
• i 4

+ 62
Both . .- ulnerab!e
'~orth

Pd s,.&lt;:
Pa.~

4.

E:a ~ t

OJXnmg lead- ¥ 5

lh Os~ald &amp; James Jaroh.'
The Professor' s only prob
lt-m after h1s partner opened

"1th three spades v.a s to de \_ 1de 1f game would he a

In th at ~ case he
to b1d the game If
rhere were to be a problem
1n the pla y, he Y.anted to
~ ~ op at a part score s mcc h1s
partner pla)ed the dumm:
1ather badl y Finally the
P1 ofessor ra1sed to ~g ame
Dummy's Jack of hearts
held the f1rst tnck Sou t h
c mch

'~ anted

rhoughl a while

or at least
looked at dumm y a \l.hJ ]c

be

team in Oakland area

'\.IJ .~IJII L•JUJdn t .. I(•JIIH•d

the P1 oft•:);,t)J"

r0 r ~

cashm g dumm v s
of spades and then
leadmg a heart to'Ward h1s
l&lt;~n g

kmg

East ruffed and led a low
diamond West Y. on w1th the

king and sh1fted to a cl ub
South thought some more

S1;mt-- ltmc late1 ~hen the
:.,amt-.· v.ac;. 0\er th~ sludcnl
MONTREAL t UPJ J
"hu harl b f' l' n ""atchtng
Charles
0 . Finley will keep his
a sked the P1 tJff'ssor v. h'i ht
harl not tltld h1s partnf;.'r ·hvv. Nat1ooal Hockey League franthr hand could have been chiSe m Oakland, the board of
made
go vernors ruled Wednesday
The JJt ofessor's rep I~ rught m one of the !mal
should ~ crvc as a warm ng
to those pla)ers wh o !1ke to deCISions of the three-day NHL
meeting
pflntJ flcate at the table
Finley's first proposal
He sa1d ·of course he
coul d have overtaken dum- Wednesday was to move his
my skin£: of spades w1th h1s club to an undisclosed locanon,
acC' c-ashed the queen of but Finley later requested the
!rumps led the k•ng of motion be wtthdr-a wn
hearts and made the conNHL President Clarence
tT act but wh y upset htm '&gt;
campbell
said the ISSUe COuld
He wa s still rnv partner.'
be brought up agam at the
NEWSPAPER £NHR.PIU~[ A.S5N J
league's serru-annual meeting
m Toronto Aug. 23 For the
present, ho"ever, campbell
The htddtn~ has heen
said the franchiSe will remam
\\ co;t
.'imth
F.ast
III Oakland .
1 "Pa ~s
In other deCISions, the board
2+
2•
Pass
of governors passed a regulaPa~s
3 V
Pass
'
tion, which went undecided by
You South hold
. ,\ Q 91i5 ¥ 51 tK 4 ... A Q 11}8 the ruJes corruruttee, concernWhat do you do now.,
Ing the width of goaltenders
A- \\ c -, ttll ha\c problems. pads
\\ e .., UJ!I!' C~t tmJdmg four clubo;
The rrunor penalties which
to o;cc \\hat \HJI happen
were brought agarnst a netTODo\ \ ' S QUES'fl0'
mmder
sportmg illegal pads 1n
You 1-.lld four duhs iind your
paJt~&gt;~r b1ds four s pades Wh&lt;~t the past have been eliminated
and there Will be no more
do you do no•J. 1

DE VOTE D TO THE
INTEREST OF

ME IGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHI LL ,
E xec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Edtfor

ST LOUIS, Mo (UP[) John Rathwell, who scored 30
goals for the Cmc~nnati Swords
of the Amencan Hockey
League last season, was obtained Wednesday by the St.
Louis Blues m a swap that sent
defenseman Paul Curtis to

Publ i Shed da11y except
Salurdi'ly by The m 11o VaHey
PubJ JS.hmg Company
111
Courl Sl
Pomeroy
Dh10
45769 Bus..ness Of l •ce Phone
992 2156 Ed donal Phone 992

1157

Second cl ass postage paid at
Pomeroy Oh JO
Na1 10n a l aoverh.&lt;. •n g
representat . ve
9 0ff l nellt
Gallaghe r , I nc 1? Easl J2nd
St, NPw York C1ly NeW York
Su bscr r pt•on
r8t es.
Oe1 1vereo by carr .er wl1ere
a ... a 1l able SS cents per wee~ .
By Molor Route where ca rr .er
serv .ce not available
One
monttl i2 By mall lf"l Oh 10 and
w va One year S16 S1:&lt;
months. , mo nt hs, S!l 50 Three
months . SS so, E'Jsewhere S18
year Stx months S9 50 , lhree
montns
S6
51:1bSc r 1p t10n
pnce mcludes Sund ay T1mes
Sen l •nel

·f
~!,,

Rap

and Mrs. Ralph E. Warner of
Sandy Heights,
Point
Pleasant has accePted a
position as manufacturing
supervisor with the E. I.

DuPont deNemours Com·
pan) at Its plant ln Rich·
mond, Va. Mr. Warner, a
graduate of Wahama High
School, received a BS degree
in Chemical Engineering

DAVIDM WARNER
ACCEPTS POSITIO N
oa,id M . Warner, son of Mr
. -· ·.. : ·:. ·: .....;.;.;...: ~=:;-..:·:·:-:·:·:·:·: ;..-:.;;

Generation. Rap
lh Heh·n and Su(' Hottel

from

:;:

Winner Take Nothing?

A shopping center had a drawing for a new ca r but only
people over 18 could enter their names
l happened by the entr) box and filled a coupon out In my
mother's name Then I made her go to the drawmg - and surpnse, she won 1
My Dad patd for the license, tax, lTlSurance, etc. The car ISm
m)' mother's name l have It for my personal use They buy most
of the gas
My qu estiOn IS Who does It really belong to ' Should my folks
"let me dnve It," or should J let them ' - 16-YEAR OLD
"OWNER" WHO ISN'T

Leahy Awards fete tonight
CHICAGO (UP!) - Awards
will be prese nted to four pro
athletes, two owners, and one
w1ll
be
deSignated
posthumously to the Pittsburgh
Pirates' Roberto Clemente
tomght at the hrst Frank
Leah)' Awards banquet
Owners to be honored will be
Arthur M Rooney of Pittsburgh Steelers, with the All·
American award, and Charles
0. Finley of the Oakland

Dear 16
As long as you drtve the car , does 1t really matter v. ho owns
It' Seems to me thiS 1s a techmcahty that could be solved by

mutual trust. - HELEN

+++

Dear 16·
Seems to rpe }Our father h,as put a lot more money m the car
than you have So long as he pays for the hcense, Insura nce, gas,
etc., you'd better leave well enough alone - SUE

+++

Searching
Maybe Larry IS LEADING you on. Whan he gets the nerve,
he'll probably confess "Mr ?" was a shy guy's way of say mg
he 's rather have a g~r l fnend not a pal - SUE

+++
Rap .

r get weary of people who say you should "confess all" to
your new boyfnend or grrlfnend, or tell your steady about the
lime you stepped out on her when you were away at college , etc ,
etc. These people think total honesty IS the only way to go
Baloney 1
If you feel a compulsiOn to talk about past dates or affairs, It
mezns you're still mteresteP m the people you went with H the
past IS really "past," you wouldn't thmk about 1t When
somethmg Isn't Important, why mention 1t 1 Why make the
present girl or boylmnd unhappy '
And if he or she asks, that's all the more reason not to go mto
detail about the past The cunous are usually jealous types who
don't really want to HEAR - they just want to be reassured no
one else really mattered to you. - KNOWS

Virginia

U01versity
"'here
he
graduated last month. He Is
married to the former
Cheryl Kay Niday, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell
Niday of Galllpolls, 0 . They
are the parents of a three
year old son, David Michael
II, and make their home at
3274 Meadowdale Blvd .,
Richmond, Va. 23234.

r

Dear Sue and Helen
There's flus boy, Larry, who has hved near me for a long
time Recently, Larry told me a boy he knew hked me, and this
''Mr ?'' was a Jumor at our local htgh school and his name was
"Roy C "
1 looked through the school regiStration f1les and there was
no 11th grader by thiS name
When !told Larry thiS, he smd Mr ' was really in our eighth
grade class, but l checked thiS out too, and then he said he was
really w1th us m fifth and SIXth grades, but then moved to another
school. 1 don't remember any Roy C 1
So I asked another fnend of mme who goes to the school Roy
C. ts supposedly gomg now, and she said "No such person there."
Next Larry told me hiS name wasn't really "Roy C." I was
dymg of curiosity by thiS tune, so Larry said Mr ? would be w1th
him at the movies that rught.lt turned out Larry was there alone,
although he said later Mr.' was m the balcony and left ea rly.
Wheneverlamnear'Larry'shouse,Mr ? ha s "been there but
JUSt left " Larry says he's "too shy" to meet me, though he wants
to
Larry has been a good pal of mme a ll through grade school
Would he be putting me on' - SEARCHING FOR MR '

West

Athletics and Califorrua Seals, be based on his humamtanarusm He was killed III a plane
as Owner of the Year.
crash
New Year's Eve wh1le
Players to receive plaques
wrll be DICk Butkus of the carrymg rehef suppltes to
Chicago Bears for football, Bob Nicaragua.
The other troph1es are based
U&gt;ve of the Chicago Bulls for
on
the mdividual's contribution
basketball, Stan Mikita of the
Ch1cago Black Hawks lor to hiS sport and hiS
hockey, and Chuck Tanner, humarutar1amsm.
Leahy will be unable to atmanager of the Ch1cago White
tend the banquet because of
Sox, for baseball.
lllness
The award to Clemente will

z·n Oil z·o
Career educa -hon
I
I,

:.:
.

:f: leading all other states
,.,.
:,.:,,:_._!

·,•,

t
·,
,f_:.',f
,

i_j=_;

jj

:;:

By Prof, Ed (Doc)Wallen
RIO GRANDE - The newest
phenome non m educatiOn III Ohto IS
"career education". In fact, a recent
evaluation of such programs on a
nationwide basis indicated that Ohio

.',!',:·
,f

:::
:)

combmed
Also, there are 23 teachers from
Galha, Meigs. Jackson and Vmton

educatiOn

~·

J§:
::::

~:_ ~. -

:~

some rational process whereby you
matched the requirements of the JOb
to those special abil1t1es which· you
possess? Or, did you fall mto the :.;;.
career you are pursuing by accident? ,.,.

bu~ a~u~:strfn~c!~ee!~l:_~r~ss;~~t ~~::~
of

The same

type

cf

and new ones' are created to flourish ....
and then they in turn fade from the \[
scene.
:.:-

the large number of people who are

It IS estimated that many of our jl(
young people Will have to change ,.,
careers as many as three or four ~~

:::::'t!~o~~~e;:;;::~~~r~t~:Pe~ !:i~ydu~~: ~~~sl~;::a~o~~;~

What is career educatwn' Why IS it
necessary ' Is it JUSt another fad '
These and other questiOns come to

that career education programs can
help motivate and prepare young
people to contribute to
rather

are many ideas as to what
constitutes career educatiOn. To me,
11 IS that educational program
deSigned to prepare students to
ultunately make effective career
ch01ces. To meet this end, the Ohio
plan of career educatiOn IS deSigned to
proVlde career motivation for those
students from kindergarten through

involves the way
most of us (adults) made our career
choice. Think back, how d1d you
finally end up III the job you now
have? D1d you choose 1t by companng
1t to the over 411,000 other job titles
listed m the Dictionary of Qc.
cupationa1 Titles?
Did you choose your present Job by

th:IO~~n~a~~~t.

soc~ety

l

calls for a greater understanding of :~
the world of work and the skiUs :,.
needed to become a part of ti.

~

ed~=t~~yiSc:~~~':n~~::/~~~a;tee~~~

"education". The schools should not
become the one to dec1de on whtch
careers fit which youngsters. The
right to choose a career must remam
With the student and his parents.
~
It IS just the fact that most of us :::!
make better choices when we have ~
information to base our ch01ces on , j~

i

~

·.;•.:.:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::;:::~::::~·::~:·:.:..:::·:·:•:;:•:·:::::;:;:.-:;:::::~::::::::;:;:::::.:.! :·:-:::·:·!·:&gt;:-:·:-:·:·:·:•:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:o::::::::::;::::::::::::::::!!".!!:!$!!X~:'::O&gt;.::::~~::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;::::~::::::::::::::~~·
y

\

three wins 111 his last [our
tournaments and some thought
he might be the favorite, but
nobody really knew how
hungry Nicklaus was to
achieve his 14th major title-

more than any other man in
golfmg hiStory
Nicklaus has taken pams to
let people know he wants this
one, and because he has, he,
and not WeiSkopf, his

fell~

Del Crandall, a former
catcher for the ~ilwaukee
Reaves' championship teams
durmg the late 1950s and now
the manager of the Milwaukee
Brewers, lS e'cstatic over his
team's tremendous improvement thiS season and believes
the club can be a contender III
the AmeriCan League East.
So far, It's hard to argue the
pomt.
The Brewers came from
behind on a two-run homer by
Jolm Briggs m the eighth in·
rung Wednesday night to defea)
the Jl!innesota Twins, 4-3, for
the1r Sixth consecuhve
trmmph, The v1ctory left the
Brewers tied with DetrOit for
second place III the American
League East, only a half-game
behind the New York Yankees.
"I'm excited about this
club," srud Crandall. "I really
am A team can't play any
better than we are now, I left
spnng training feehng optimiStic but really didn't enVJston a streak like this .. ''
The Yankees took over f~rst
place m the topsy-turvy East
by whipping Oakland, 11-3, In
other AL games, ChiCago
pounded Detrmt, 1().2, Kansas
City blanked Baltimore, ~.
Caltfornia beat Boston, Hi, and
Texas edged Cleveland, 4-2.
Atlanta routed Pittsburgh,
16-3, Pluladelphia clobbered
Los Angeles, 16-3, St Lows
blanked Ctncmnati, 8-0,
Houston defeated Ch1cago, 6-1,
Montreal edged San D~ego , 3-2,
and New York beat San

Nelson placed
on disabled shelf
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Roger Nelson, Cmcinnati Reds
righthanded pitcher, was
placed on the 21-day disabled
list Wednesday with a sore
right elbow Nelson, 29, has
pttched only one inning smce
May 11 when he went four
mmng~ against Houston.
A team spokesman sa1d the
problem had been diagnosed as
a stram of the med1al Side of
the elbow which led to
1rr1tation of the ulner nerve.
Nelson was acquired by the
Reds during the off-season
from the Kansas C1ty Royals
He bad an 11~ record last year.

Ohtoan, IS going off as the
favonte in the 15!Hnan field
which began competition today
over Oakmont's legendary
6,921-yard, par-71 course domlnated by 187 Ira!" and 18
hghtnmg fast greens
The first threesome went off

Milwaukee halfgame out

at 7 30 a m EDT Nicklaus
teed off at 10 04 With amateur
Marvin Giles and former
Masters champiOn Bob Goalby
as hts partn~ers.
The ram that htt the l'ourse
Tuesday softened the greens a
bit but a hot sun and a hght
breeze dned them suf[Idently
to put them back to thell' former slick condition. The
weatherman says It will be £air
and warm today with litUe
chance or any more rain.
Lee Trevmo , a tw o-time
Open winner, constders Oakmont an " ideal" course for his
low ball game.
" I 'm playmg very well
here, •• he says.
Tommy Aaron, the Mastet·s
champlQn who IS not particularly fond of fast greens,
has been hoptng £or more rain
to "make them hold a little

better." Others echo his hopes
Arnold Palmer, an old hand
at Oakmont, is the sentimental
favortle on thts COLU'se where
he became a member only a
few days ago Palmer knows
Oakmont better than any pro
on the tour •
"What does thiS one mean to
me especmlly ''" asked Nicklaus, the 33-year~ld Columbus
oomber, who won Ius f1rst U.S
Open on th1s same course in
1962. " It means a number of
thmgs to me First of all,
naturally, I'd hke to w1n my
fourth one.l'dalso hke to come
back and WIII the Open where 1
won my fust one .. And of
course 1 want to wm as many
as I can."
Only three other golfers ever
have won lour Open titles
Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan and
Anderson -and now Nicklaus
IS bidding to Join them
Followmg the first 36 holes
Thursday and Fnday, the field
will be tnnuned to the low 60
scorers and ties ror the
Saturday's and Sunday's !mal
rounds which will be televised
by ABC

Francisco, 3-1, in Nat1ooal r1111s to spark the Rangers ' the seventh as the Rangers
League games.
victory over the tnd1ans. beat Gaylord Perry. Toby
The Yankees collected 18 Spencer knocked in a run m the Harrah also homered for Texas
hits, includmg three each by first Inning with an mfield out while Buddy Bell hit a solo shot
Horace Clarke, Bobb)' Murcer and drilled a two-&lt;un homer III for Cleveland.
an d Thurman Munson, to ....... .
;. '
···-. ····,·.:.·.·
.,......~
~·~ ............ '-"''
. ...;;
wallop the A's. Ken Holtzman, ;,;'§:;•,:.•.·.·.:··· .·,c&gt;·:-:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:•.•.-.·................... ;o.:,_,·.·.-...:;;o:-:o;•.•,•.•,O:•:O.·..:·:~·:o:·:·.•:•...•...-:•,·.-.-.•:·:-!-.-:·i
~
an ll·game wmner , was ~::
touched for 11 smgles III four
Uiniiigs while suffering his
worst beatmg of the yea r. Fritz
Peterson went seven mrungs to
even hiS record at l&gt;&lt;i.
The Wh1te Sox unloaded »
::0:
tsy MilLon Richman
~~i
UPl Sports Edllor
·:~
homers by John Jeter, ca rlos ::::
.:-··
May, Bill Melton and Rick I
Reichardt to whip the Tigers
OA KMONT, Pa (UP!) - A man, any man, wms the US Open
Stan Bahnsen went the in hiS lifetune, and he dies happy.
distan ce for Chicago to regiSter
That goes for most an)' man you ca n th1nk of.
his seventh wm m 12 decisiOns
It goes for Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer or Lee Trevino the
wh1J e Mickey Lohch was same way it does for utterly determined ll!Ue Bennie Beerbelly,
tagged with hiS Slltth losS the fellow who rounds out that fnendly foursome of yours every
agamst SlX victortes
SUnday morrung
Dick Drago scattered eight
Winnmg the US Open means everythmg to any golfer who
hits as the Royals blanked the ever has swung a club.
Orioles L&lt;lu Pimella doubled
It's the equivalent of chmbmg Mt Everest, wmning the World
home both r1111s with two outs 1n Senes and h1ttm g the sweepstakes all rolled mto one In short,
Amencan League
the mghth for Kansas C1ty, It's the dream of a hfetune come true.
Ma tor League Stand~nps
East
which dealt Baltimore Its nmth
Let's take one of the golfers m this U S Open, which gets under
By Untted Press lnt&amp;rnattonal
w I pet gb
New York
way today
shutout of the season.
Nat1onat League
31 27 53&lt;
Detro1 t
East
1/ :o
30 27 526
Frank Robinson doubled
Let's take Chi Ch1 Rodr1guez
w. I. pet. g b. M ilwaukee
30 27 526
1f7
home two runs during a fourHe's Lost Count
Boston
Chtcago
3S 24 593
27 21 500 2
27 25 519 4lf2 Baltimore
26 26 500 2
run second mnmg to pace the
Chi Chi has lost count which Open this IS for him He f•gures it's Montreal
Cleve land
LOUIS
28 29 491 6
22 36 319 9
Angels over the Red Sox. somewhere around his lOth, but he hasn't lost count as to what St
New York
25 29 463 7112
West
Robmson also had another the Open means to him
Pd fsburgh
24 29 453 8
w I pet g.b
Ph1ladelph 1a 24 34 414 10112 Chtcago
32 22 593
double m the game to move
What would he gJVe to wm It'
Minneso ta
30 25 S45 2112
West
mto the 36th spot on lhe alltrn\e
Not much
32 29 S25 J lf~
w. 1. pet. g .b. Kansas Cl ty
list Clyde Wnght went 7 1-3
Sa n Fran
39 24 609
Ca ltfornt a
28 27 509 4tl2
Only a hunk of his heart and a p1ece of his soul
Los Angeles
37 24 607
~'1
Oakland
30 29 508 41fl
mmngs to gam the v1ctory
Chi Chi Rodnguez w11l readily tell you that
Houston
34 28 548 4
Texas
19 35 352 13
Dwight Evans had a solo
He'll tell you somethmg else, too.
Wednesday 's Results
Ctnctnnatl
31 28 525 51!7
Te~as 4 Cleveland 2
26 34 433 11
horner and Carl Yac;trzemskJ a
''No matter who wins or loses,'' he'll tell you, ''It's beautiful to At lanta
M ilwau kee 4 Minnesota 3
Sa
n
D1ego
20
41
328
lN1
threerun shot for the Red Sox. get up m the mormng, look out the w~ndow and reahze not only
Chtcago TO Detroit 2
Wednesday's Results
Jun Spence r drove m two are you m the best cotmtry m the world, but also you're a Citize n Montreal 3 San Ot ego 2
Kan City 2 Baltimore 0
New York 8 Oakland 3
of It To me, that IS worth more. than wmrung 100,000 U.S New York 3 San Franc1sco 1
Ca llfor nta 7 Boston 5
Phtladelphta 16 Los Ang 3
TIGERS SIGN TRUDO
Opens."
Atlanta 18 Pl1tsbu r gh 3
Taday 's Probable P1tchers
DETROIT (UP! ) - The
tAll Times EDT)
Chi Chi Rodriguez was born m Puerto R1co That makes h~rn as 5t Loui s 8 Ctnctnnalt 0
Detrmt Tigers announced much of an Amencan as Ja ck Ntcklaus, born m Columbus, Ohto, Hpuston 6 Chtcago 1
New York (Medlch 52) at
Oakland ( Hunter 8·3), 11 p m
Today's Probable Pitch er s
lo\lay they had Signed Bob and 1! there are a few of you out there who think maybe he 's
IAll tomes EDT)
Boston (Curtis J 6) at Call
Trudo of Masury, Ohw , their gettmg earned away a httle, l don 't
San Di ego (Grei f 4 7) at lorn1a (May 4 61. 1 I p m
Kansa s City iSplittorff 9 J) at
Montreal I Renko 4-3), 8 p m
No 4 chmce tn the recent free
Climb on a Soapbox
BalfJmor e (Alexander 5 1). 7 30
Ch1cago
(Jenktn
s
6•4)
at
agent draft, to a contract
pm
Climb up &lt;m a soapbox, begm telling everyone what a great Housfon { Reuss 7 4), 8 30 p m
Trudo, 17, played outf~eld country yours is, how it's better than any other one in the world,
(Only g.a mes sc heduled)
{Only ga m es schedul ed)
Fnday's Games
Fndav's Games
and first base a I Brookfield and you can get to be a b1tof a zealot.
Boston at Oakland, night
Los Ang at Montreal. night
High School The 6-3, 200..
New Yor~ at Calli, night
There's nothing really wrong though w1th taking a mmute once San Ot ego at New York, , night
pounder hits nghthanded
Milwaukee
at Chicago, night
San
Fran
a
t
Phlla,
n1ght
In awhile to voice your feehngs, yes, maybe even some apMmnesota at Detro it, night
Chicago at Atlanta , ntghr
preciation, for the country you come from, the one that, no Pittsbu rgh at Cfncl , n tgh l
HUNTERTOWU
Kan Ctty at Cleveland, nlght
Texas at Balt imore, n igh t Sl Lou1 s a t Hous ton, n1ght
SPRINGFIELD, OHw (UP! ) matter what else 1s wrong wtth It, does giVe you a chance.
To that, Arnold Palmer says hear, hear!
- Larry Hunter, 23, assistant
Palmer makes a special pmnt of saymg he can't possibly agree
basketball coach at Manetta
with
Rodri guez more.
College for the past two years,
"He's absolutely nght m what he says," Palmer pomts out
has been named to a Similar
"I've
said It so much myself, I thmk sometimes maybe I'Ve
poSitiOn
at
Wittenberg
oversa1d 1t. It 's great simply to be here. I have to say the same
Umverstty.
Hunter, a 1971 graduate of thmg for the fact that there even is such an event as the U.S.
Ohio UmverSity, succeeds Bob Open , and that so many of us ca n make a hvmg at a sport like
Van Poppe!, who accepted a professional golf."
N3 for the US Open proper, Rodriguez says he doesn't want to
poSlllon at the UmverSlty of
Akron, where he Will teach get 1nto any argument with Sam Snead, but he thinks luck plays
phySical education apd coach only a very mmor part m determmmg the eventual WiQiler
Snead clatms a guy with a couple of horseshoes m hts pocket ca n
the varsity soccer team.
wm the Open

........

................... ......

..........

....

·i,,, Today's
·r~=~,~

Sport Parade

i~

tI

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DISCONTINUED STYLES ·

i~

concept of career education into the
var1ous subjects berng taught.
The need for such a program is

::~ ::::~.:~-:~~~to~s~.~~: ~

OAKMONT, Pa. (UP! ) right there you know woo is the
Jack Nicklaus, already a favorite m thiS 73rd renewal of
three-time US. Open Wtnner America's foremost golf event.
and now only one chamTom Weiskopf amved here
pionshtp away from golfiiig fresh from an ImpressiVe palr
immortaUty, says he wants "to of back-to-back victories and
win as many as l can," and

us were rather
haphazard III the selectiOn of our ::::
careers Often the "luck" of the
moment influenced our "coo1ce".
'$
Well, the problem IS even more )i
complicated for today 's youngster, j![
First of all, the industrialized, ;:i
technological, space age m wh1ch we ::,
proportion

1973

Nicklaus big Open favorite

I never think of t he future
It comes soon enoug h- AIbeJ t E1nstem

~~~k:~o~!a;;:r~ee; ~!ds~~t:.rn be

~',:·;._~ m~ere
....!'.

grade SIX The emphasis is on an
onentation to major career areas m
grades seven and eight followed by an
exploration of specific JOb opporturu!les in grades nine and ten.
career education begins III the

by clubbing Oakland, 8-3,
Kan sas
C1ty
blanked
Baltimore , 2-0, Mtlwaukee
tnrnmed Mmnesota, 4·3,
califorma topped Boston, 6-0,
Chicago trounced Detrott, 1().2,
and Texas tnpped Cleveland,
4-2.
Del Unser, one of the few
displaced American Leaguers
to make good m the National
League , contmued his hot
hittmg with two hits and four
RB! s as the Phill~es spoiled the
Dodgers chances of gaming
flrst place m the NL West.
Unser was JOined on the offense
by Willie Montanez' 3-lor-3
With two RB!s and Mike Anderson 's two-rWl homer m the
[)rst as Ken Brett coasted to his
fifth win in seven deciSions.
Atlanla had a hitting f1eld
day aga1nst the P~rates as
Darrell Evans contiiiued his
OOt bat Streak With a pair Of
hits mcluding a grand slam
home run III the fourth innmg.
Evans, in 17 consecutive at
bats, collected JJ walks, two
homers and four smgles
Felix Millan slugged his fll'st
home run of the year m addition to a double and a smgle
as the Mets provtded Tom
Seaver with hiS eJghth VIctory
against four losses. M1Uan,
now the leadmg Mets' batter at
287, belted his homer off loser
Tom Bradley m the first.
Mike Jorgensen's three..-un
homer m the hrst mmng
provided the margin of VIctory
for Montrealleft-hander Balor
Moore, who needed three III·
rungs of rehef help from Mike
Marshall and Cesar Cedeno
slugged a two-&lt;un homer to
h1ghhght Houston 's victory
over ChiCago. Don Wilson (5-6 )
p1cked up the wm for the Astros
With two 1nmngs of rehef help
from Jim Ray .

~=~e:~Ju:."t~~; ti:P~~ ~~~~:til~ ~:~:~·~r~':::;~o';;,. ~~:~~=~: ~~~ ~::r:.':';,t~~~Jefo:~Y:!u~"~~~~:~ ;_j~:j

~ ~:a~~:s ~tl~;g":~~u:~gks~~p ::r=-.:~
-;~
~~

Hall of Fame. Sen. Hartland
Molson, a fanner owner of the
Montreal Canadiens, and former referee Frank Udvan,
were selected 111 the builders
category.
Doug Harvey, Chuck Rayner
and Tommy Smith were fliCked
bY the selectton committee m
the players sectioo.
The NHL reverse draft, to
benefit American and Western
Hockey League clubs, saw 28
players selected from special
NHL "unprotected lists" at
$15,000 each and a second
phase saw four players change
clubs at $7,500 apiece.
Charlie Burns, Bob Nevin
and Jacques Caron were the
only players with NHL expenence involved m the deals.

Wise would
like respect

Rathwell traded to
Blues by Cincinnati

The Dai~ Sentinel

i··:·.:;·::;·:·;., :::-:::·:· ·=··:· •. :: .., ::

have no bearmg on the outcome. Most clubs meet each
other f1ve times III a season.
The league pens1on plan, new
standards for helmets and drug
abuse were also diSCUssed by
the league leaders. Campbell
garne tn any way."
ind1cated an audit procedure
The governors announced on all drugs dispersed by club
also t)ley have abolished, for trainers or doctors will be
secunty purposes, the past discussed at the next meetiiig
practice of players skating No Knowledge of Abuse
around the 1ce at the end of
"There is no knowledge of
each penod.
drug abuse in the NHL but
campbell also set Jan 29 in there have been instances in
Ch1cago as the date and other sports where the question
locauon for next year's ~­ has come up ," the NHL
Star game between the East J&gt;'eSident said
and West divisions.
In other developments on the
The governors wound up the fiiial day of the NHL meetings :
three-day annual meeting
Five new members were
Wednesday rught With discus- admitted to the NHL Hockey
SIOns on a nwnber of ISSUes.
includmg a new tie-breaking
procedure to decide which
team makes 1t to the playoffs.
campbell said if two teams
have Idenhcal records then the
series between the two clubs
will be the dec1d1ng factor In
the case of an unbahmced
schedule, the odd game will
By BilL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Rlck WISe, traded to St
!.&lt;luiS in February of 1972 for
Steve Carlton (who became a
27-game wmner wtth the place
Phillies), came withm two outs
of p1tchmg the second no-hitter
Buffalo
of hiS career agatnst the
Rathwell , 25, also had 50 Cincinnati Reds Wednesday
assiSts for 80 pomts for the rught and, If nothing else, he 'd
Swords.
hke some respect- just Uke
The :;.n, 185-pounder has no Rodney Dangerfield.
National Hockey League ex''l hope thln!fS hke this will
perience
warrant some ment for me on
CurtiS, also 25, had one goal what I'm doing now
" sa1d
and three assiSts In 28 games WISe who upped h\5 record to 11for the Blues last season. He 3 with the IHl victory. The fact
was obtamed at the begmning that the Reds' Joe Morgan
of the season 1n a trade that spoiled his b1d With a on~ut
sent Frank St. Marseille to Los runth inmng Single d1dn't seem
Angeles
to matter
· WISe, who retired 14 conFIND LOADED DICE
secutive batters rn one stretch,
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP! ) got all the h1ttmg support he
- Police S3ld Tuesday 200 pa1r needed In the third when the
of altered diCe, valued between Cards scored seven runs,
$10,000 and '$15,000, were climaxed by LUis Melendez'
confiscated from the car of grand slam home run.
Toby Gibson, 39, a professiOnal
In other games, Philadelphia
gambler who was shot to death oombed Los Angeles, 16-3, ,
Jun e 4 as he left his home III Houston crushed Pittsburgh,
nearby Austmtown Township
11h1, Atlanta edged the New
Pollee descnbed G1bson as a York Mets , 3·1, Montreal
"mecharuc who made .and rupped San D1ego, 3-2, and
ngged dice," and a profes- Houston breezed past the
siOnal gambler who attended Ch1cago Cubs, 6-1.
conventions and stag parties III
In the AmeriCan League, the
several dtles between Chicago New York Yankees moved
and Pittsburgh.
back mto f~rst place m the East
measuremetJt of the pads by
officials
Pads Do Not Change Game
..The governors felt that this
ruliJlg does not accomplish
anything," Campbell said .
'"Wider pads do not change the

0., June 14

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"I don't see It that way at all," Rodriguez says "What's so
beautiful about the Open 1s no •fluke' ever wms To wm, you
really have to play good J..ook at the last 10 wmners Jack twice
Trevmo twtce .. Boros .. Casper , Player . Jacklm ..
Venturi . and Moody. Everybody says Orville Moody was a
fluke Orvtlle was not a fluke. He was the f~nest dnver of th e golf
ball the year he won "
How about thiS one though ? Who does Rodngu ez like to wm this
time?
"Nicklaus, Weiskopf, Palmer, TreVIno, Player," he scud,
ratthng off the five names nonstop .
"That's hke p1ck1ng Secretariat," laughed the little longballer.
"With all the hea t and humidity here, thiS 1s no fat man's
wea ther Notice those I mentioned? Which of the ones I named is

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up to

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3 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

•

I

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Maybe, JUst ma~be. J am changlng my position regard1ng
str1p muting, wh•ch cerunnly has been a oot topic in the news in
ooth Ohio and West V~rg~rua fer the past several years
I have been anb ..trlppiiig for a long tune. But ma)'be there
really lS a way to eliminate most of the excesses that cause me to
be so &gt;1gorous!) opposed to thiS massae rape of our beautiful hill
country.
First, let me toll lou ooe reason why J lu!ve. been so
ITllhtantlyopposed to strlppmg 111 the past . When 1 was a k1d , between military serv1ce and eollege, J ~or ked in the mmes around
Me1gs and Gallia counties awhile , and J was astonished by the
total diSregard of the surface llJlii•rs 111 those days for the havoc
lhey were caus111g
Being on!} about 18 or 19, 1t didn't ~orry me so much then, of
course, but the ecological and esthetic damage ~·as awesome
Old Fredd1e Clark and l were a drilling and dynarrute cr~·.
working III e1ght or nme rrunes III the l'ri-C&lt;&gt;unty, alternately. It
• was hard, back-breakmg work -and Hry, ..-ery destructiVe
Basically what we did "as thiS
We'd head out each day III a truck ~ 1th a horiZOntal drill on
the back, drive to the mme wh1ch needed blasting, and ram the
rear end of the truck up as close to the high wall as possible
Then we'd drill b1g, SIX-inch holes mto the face of the wall, a
little above the coal seam We used b1g w:-foot, SIJHnch augers
that were attached and removed as holes '"'ere rammed mto the
hillside- from depths ranging from 4ll to 120 feet My JOb was to
put the augers on and off, and they weighed almost as much as 1
did fFreddie, though no older than l, ~as semor man, because
he knew how to r1111 the dr1ll )
Then the dynamite truck would arr~ve, and we'd Jam as
much as a ton and a hall of the stuff back to the base of the holes
A ton and a half of dynamlte 1s a considerable amount, by any
deftmtton
Then we'd tamp the holes light, using great long sectiOnal
poles, and wtre the whole ,thing together WJth detonating cord,
and then run Wll'es to an electncal detonator Finally, we 'd yell
"Frre m the hole! 11 so that people a round the mme could take
she lter ~ crawl Wlder a bulldozer or shovel, and push the plunger
And what happened' Not much, VISibly The overburden
~ould lift and shrug, there would be a great rumble, a cloud of
dust, and then It would JUSt settle do~n agam Another beautiful
Southeastern Ohio hilltop had been softened up for removal Into
muddy clods by dozers, shovels and earth-movers.
ThiS actiOn, reproduCl'(l thousands of tunes on thousands of
hills, however, created a monstrous senes of scars across the
land Today, an a~rplane flight from Cha rleston to Clarksburg
shows the extent of our savagtng of the land, wtth long mme scars
' constantly VISible
It's little wonder I am opposed to such ravagmg of our
beauty
, But now a few of the coal compames are \\ak rn.g up, and
making honest efforts of recla1mmg and re\oegetatmg the
' disturbed, outraged earth The most prozmsmg method IS now
bemg tned III Pennsylvama , OhiO and West V1rg1ma.
It's called '·control placement, " or box cuttmg, and 1t's
. elementary m theory elimmate the spoilbank that denudes the
. landscape and fills the valleys full of dangerous, ugly, siltaUon
Basically, the mme operatJon of cuttrng out a p1e-sectwn "A"
and pushing It up or around the hill, mstead of over It Then
: section "B" replaces ''A" and " C" fills 111 the land left open b)
.:· B" and so oo.
:
I'm oot fully convmced, but It 's a start- and ma)be, JUst
:m..)'be, rn shift posltions 00 thiS most-destructiVe n.unauon of
::our land.

- Television Log
~

:
...
:
•
..
:
•
..
..,
..
:

THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1973
6 00- N~ws J . 4, a, 10, 15 , Truth or Con seq 13 Around the Bend
33 Sesame Sf 20
6 JO-N BC News 4, 15, ABC News 8, 10 , I Dream of Jeannte 13 ,
Des tgn tng Women 33
7 oo-- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 Course ol Our
T1mes. 33 Dtck Van Dyke 4 What's My Line 8 Btg Red
Jubtlee 15 News 6, Elec Co 20. Let 's Make A Deal 13 ,
Course ol Our T1mes 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3. To Tell the Truth 6 Wild Kmgdom
10 I !I See You tn Court&lt;! , Lasste 8, Zoom 20 , Beat I he Clock
13. Help Wanted 33
.. 8 00 - Mod Squad 6, 13, The Waltons 8 10 , lronstde 3, &lt;1, 15.
;
Playhouse New York 8tog raph y 20 33
"' 9 00 - Kung Fu6, 13 M ov1es "That Cerlam Fe elt ng ' 8 "Sec ret
;
World ' 10
10 DO - J ust Ja zz 20, 33
"10 30- Dean Marlm 3, 4, 15. Streets of San Franc tsco 6, 13 , World
:
Press 33, News 20
... 11 00 - News3,4, 6 8. 13,15
::,n 30 - Johnny Ca r son 3, 4, 15, Dtck Cavetl6, 13 , Mo vtes £'Love
•
Is Bett er Than Ever ' 8, " All theK tng's Men ' 10
,.. 1 00 - Perry Mason 4. News 13
, '100 - News4

FRIDAY , JUNE 15,1 913

:: 6 00 -

Sunrtse Semt nar 4, Sacred Heart 10
.. 6 15 - FarmhmelO Farm Reporll3 Engl lsh3
,... 6 25 .,..... Paul Harvey 13
"' 6 30 - Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers 6. R1ght On 10 , Blue
•
Rtdge Quartet 13
11. l 00- Today3 4, 15 , News6 . 8 10. F l1 nfstones 13
.. 7 SO - Romper Room 6, Popeye 10. Rocky &amp; Bullwtnk le 13
": B 00- Capt Kangaroo 10 N ew Zoo Re vue 13 , Sesame Sl 33 .
Lasste 6
~8 30 - Jack Lil l a nne 13, New Zoo Revue6
- 9 00- Pa ul Otxon 4, Ph rl Donohue 15. AM3 , Let's Make A Deal
'"
6, Capt KangarooS . Mr Rogers 33. Peyton Place 13
~ 9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3. Jeopardy 6, Hollywood 's Ta l ktng
... 10, Peyton Place IJ
jo 00_.- Dmah Shore J , 15, Phd Donahue 4, Spltt Second 13 F'r tce
rs R1ght e. 10
30- Baffle 3 4 15, 5. 10,000 Pyramtd 8, 10, Spllf Second 13
11 00 - Love Amer 1can Style 6. Sale of the Century J, 4, 15 ,
,... Gambtt 8 10 Elec Co 20
, , 1 30 - Hol l ywood Squa r es 3 A, 15, Bewtfched 6, 13 , Love of Life
B. 10 . Sesame Sl 20
;j 1 55 - CBS News e. Dan I mel's World 10
- ~2 00- 3 W's Game 3, 15 Sea r ch for Tomorrow 8, 10, Spld
·~
Secon d 6
·-12 55 - ABC News 3, 15
'"' 1 00 - News 3 A !I My Chtldren 6, 13 Green Acres 10 , Secret
..
Stor m 8, Not For Women Only 15
" 1 30- 3 On a Match 3, ~. 15 , Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The
'
World Turns 8, 10
? 00 - Days of Our L1 ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13. Mtk e
Douglass 6 Gu1dtng L1ght 8, 10
2 30- Doctors 3 4,15 General Hosp1tal6 13, Pnce IS Rtght 8,
10 EconomiC Educalton 20
'
3 00 - Return to Peyton P lace 3, ~ ~ 15 1 One Ltfe to Ltve 6, 13 ,
Secret Stor m 10 Book Bea t 10
4 00 ~ Mtsler Ca r toon J , Somerset 15, Sesame St 33 . Fltnt
stones 6 , Love Amencan Style 13 , IWJvJe " Desert Hell" 10
4 30 - I Lave Lucy 6, Pettt coat Junct1on 3 Merv Gr1ff1n 4,
Abbott &amp; Costello 8, Marshall Dtllon 15. Wild. Wdd West 13
.. 5 00 - Mt ste r Rogers 20. 33 . Bonanza 3, Hazel 8, Andy Gnff1 fh
13 B1q Valley 6
,. 5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Py le 13. Death Valley Days 15 ,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Htllbdltes 8
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 . NBC News 13 . Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20 Round the Bend 33
6 30 - NB C News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6, CBS News -8 , 10 , I
Dream of Jeannte 13, Let 's Travel 33
• 7 00 - What s My Lme 8, Truth or ConseR. J , Beat t he Clock &lt;1 ,
News 6, 10 . Satnt 15 Elec Co 20, -Folk Guitar 33 , Wil d
Ktngdom 13
.: 7 :Jo - To T ell the Truth 6, Parent Game 10 , Beat #he Clock 13 )
Porter Wagoner 3, Young Or Kt!dare 4, Pr otectors 8 Wall
Street Thts Week 20 Wor'ld Press 33
:. ~0 - Sanfor d &amp; Son 3, 4 15 , Brady Bunch 6, 13, Mov tes
..
"G oodbye, M r ChipS " 8,' Is Par1s Burmng " 10, Wash tngton
Week m Re v te w 20, 33

,a

!:

: 8 30 - Lt t1 1e People 3. 4, Odd Couple 6r 13 , Naturali sts 33 ,
.,
Wor ld Press '10
•• 9 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 33 , Room 22,2 6, 13 C1rcle of Fear 3,
&lt;1. 15, Homewood 20
... 9 30 - Love Thy Ne tghbor 6, 13
' H'O 00 - News 20, What About Tomorrow ' 6, 13 , Handful of
''
Ashes 33, Bold Ones 3, 4, 15
l1 00 - News3 4.6,8, 10,13, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, D1ck Cavell 6. Movtes
::_ " Operahon Dtsaster" 8. "Ote. Mon sfer, Dte" 10, ' Oavtd &amp;
Bathsheda " 13
J· OO ....._ M1dn tght Spec1a l 3, 4, 15 Mov te 'Cast a Dark Sh adow"
IJ
00 - New s 4 Mo111e ''The Da y the Earth Caught F1re " 10

•

Finley to keep Hockey

Professor Is Easy on Partner

.K
'-'ORlll

Jun H tJHIII I ll h.!ll~"t Y1 hul l,t
dill Th• hu tl .. had Hu\1. 11

II

Y A J !11'11
• J :12
.. AQ ltl&amp;

( ·uuld I ha\ •· fl'fi d (ha
rn•md &lt;jJlf1 nunlt- 1h·· t:t,n
11 at I
ht• d'\kt'd

\\ t;:.;'T

F.\!'-!. T

6 J2

. IOt!:a
¥ 2

'V QSi~1:l

+ K 9fi

t AQJ fJ,II j

4 i~.l

4 KJ9~

sut.:Tn rn J
• AQ!l8 7-LI

• K4
• i 4

+ 62
Both . .- ulnerab!e
'~orth

Pd s,.&lt;:
Pa.~

4.

E:a ~ t

OJXnmg lead- ¥ 5

lh Os~ald &amp; James Jaroh.'
The Professor' s only prob
lt-m after h1s partner opened

"1th three spades v.a s to de \_ 1de 1f game would he a

In th at ~ case he
to b1d the game If
rhere were to be a problem
1n the pla y, he Y.anted to
~ ~ op at a part score s mcc h1s
partner pla)ed the dumm:
1ather badl y Finally the
P1 ofessor ra1sed to ~g ame
Dummy's Jack of hearts
held the f1rst tnck Sou t h
c mch

'~ anted

rhoughl a while

or at least
looked at dumm y a \l.hJ ]c

be

team in Oakland area

'\.IJ .~IJII L•JUJdn t .. I(•JIIH•d

the P1 oft•:);,t)J"

r0 r ~

cashm g dumm v s
of spades and then
leadmg a heart to'Ward h1s
l&lt;~n g

kmg

East ruffed and led a low
diamond West Y. on w1th the

king and sh1fted to a cl ub
South thought some more

S1;mt-- ltmc late1 ~hen the
:.,amt-.· v.ac;. 0\er th~ sludcnl
MONTREAL t UPJ J
"hu harl b f' l' n ""atchtng
Charles
0 . Finley will keep his
a sked the P1 tJff'ssor v. h'i ht
harl not tltld h1s partnf;.'r ·hvv. Nat1ooal Hockey League franthr hand could have been chiSe m Oakland, the board of
made
go vernors ruled Wednesday
The JJt ofessor's rep I~ rught m one of the !mal
should ~ crvc as a warm ng
to those pla)ers wh o !1ke to deCISions of the three-day NHL
meeting
pflntJ flcate at the table
Finley's first proposal
He sa1d ·of course he
coul d have overtaken dum- Wednesday was to move his
my skin£: of spades w1th h1s club to an undisclosed locanon,
acC' c-ashed the queen of but Finley later requested the
!rumps led the k•ng of motion be wtthdr-a wn
hearts and made the conNHL President Clarence
tT act but wh y upset htm '&gt;
campbell
said the ISSUe COuld
He wa s still rnv partner.'
be brought up agam at the
NEWSPAPER £NHR.PIU~[ A.S5N J
league's serru-annual meeting
m Toronto Aug. 23 For the
present, ho"ever, campbell
The htddtn~ has heen
said the franchiSe will remam
\\ co;t
.'imth
F.ast
III Oakland .
1 "Pa ~s
In other deCISions, the board
2+
2•
Pass
of governors passed a regulaPa~s
3 V
Pass
'
tion, which went undecided by
You South hold
. ,\ Q 91i5 ¥ 51 tK 4 ... A Q 11}8 the ruJes corruruttee, concernWhat do you do now.,
Ing the width of goaltenders
A- \\ c -, ttll ha\c problems. pads
\\ e .., UJ!I!' C~t tmJdmg four clubo;
The rrunor penalties which
to o;cc \\hat \HJI happen
were brought agarnst a netTODo\ \ ' S QUES'fl0'
mmder
sportmg illegal pads 1n
You 1-.lld four duhs iind your
paJt~&gt;~r b1ds four s pades Wh&lt;~t the past have been eliminated
and there Will be no more
do you do no•J. 1

DE VOTE D TO THE
INTEREST OF

ME IGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHI LL ,
E xec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Edtfor

ST LOUIS, Mo (UP[) John Rathwell, who scored 30
goals for the Cmc~nnati Swords
of the Amencan Hockey
League last season, was obtained Wednesday by the St.
Louis Blues m a swap that sent
defenseman Paul Curtis to

Publ i Shed da11y except
Salurdi'ly by The m 11o VaHey
PubJ JS.hmg Company
111
Courl Sl
Pomeroy
Dh10
45769 Bus..ness Of l •ce Phone
992 2156 Ed donal Phone 992

1157

Second cl ass postage paid at
Pomeroy Oh JO
Na1 10n a l aoverh.&lt;. •n g
representat . ve
9 0ff l nellt
Gallaghe r , I nc 1? Easl J2nd
St, NPw York C1ly NeW York
Su bscr r pt•on
r8t es.
Oe1 1vereo by carr .er wl1ere
a ... a 1l able SS cents per wee~ .
By Molor Route where ca rr .er
serv .ce not available
One
monttl i2 By mall lf"l Oh 10 and
w va One year S16 S1:&lt;
months. , mo nt hs, S!l 50 Three
months . SS so, E'Jsewhere S18
year Stx months S9 50 , lhree
montns
S6
51:1bSc r 1p t10n
pnce mcludes Sund ay T1mes
Sen l •nel

·f
~!,,

Rap

and Mrs. Ralph E. Warner of
Sandy Heights,
Point
Pleasant has accePted a
position as manufacturing
supervisor with the E. I.

DuPont deNemours Com·
pan) at Its plant ln Rich·
mond, Va. Mr. Warner, a
graduate of Wahama High
School, received a BS degree
in Chemical Engineering

DAVIDM WARNER
ACCEPTS POSITIO N
oa,id M . Warner, son of Mr
. -· ·.. : ·:. ·: .....;.;.;...: ~=:;-..:·:·:-:·:·:·:·: ;..-:.;;

Generation. Rap
lh Heh·n and Su(' Hottel

from

:;:

Winner Take Nothing?

A shopping center had a drawing for a new ca r but only
people over 18 could enter their names
l happened by the entr) box and filled a coupon out In my
mother's name Then I made her go to the drawmg - and surpnse, she won 1
My Dad patd for the license, tax, lTlSurance, etc. The car ISm
m)' mother's name l have It for my personal use They buy most
of the gas
My qu estiOn IS Who does It really belong to ' Should my folks
"let me dnve It," or should J let them ' - 16-YEAR OLD
"OWNER" WHO ISN'T

Leahy Awards fete tonight
CHICAGO (UP!) - Awards
will be prese nted to four pro
athletes, two owners, and one
w1ll
be
deSignated
posthumously to the Pittsburgh
Pirates' Roberto Clemente
tomght at the hrst Frank
Leah)' Awards banquet
Owners to be honored will be
Arthur M Rooney of Pittsburgh Steelers, with the All·
American award, and Charles
0. Finley of the Oakland

Dear 16
As long as you drtve the car , does 1t really matter v. ho owns
It' Seems to me thiS 1s a techmcahty that could be solved by

mutual trust. - HELEN

+++

Dear 16·
Seems to rpe }Our father h,as put a lot more money m the car
than you have So long as he pays for the hcense, Insura nce, gas,
etc., you'd better leave well enough alone - SUE

+++

Searching
Maybe Larry IS LEADING you on. Whan he gets the nerve,
he'll probably confess "Mr ?" was a shy guy's way of say mg
he 's rather have a g~r l fnend not a pal - SUE

+++
Rap .

r get weary of people who say you should "confess all" to
your new boyfnend or grrlfnend, or tell your steady about the
lime you stepped out on her when you were away at college , etc ,
etc. These people think total honesty IS the only way to go
Baloney 1
If you feel a compulsiOn to talk about past dates or affairs, It
mezns you're still mteresteP m the people you went with H the
past IS really "past," you wouldn't thmk about 1t When
somethmg Isn't Important, why mention 1t 1 Why make the
present girl or boylmnd unhappy '
And if he or she asks, that's all the more reason not to go mto
detail about the past The cunous are usually jealous types who
don't really want to HEAR - they just want to be reassured no
one else really mattered to you. - KNOWS

Virginia

U01versity
"'here
he
graduated last month. He Is
married to the former
Cheryl Kay Niday, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell
Niday of Galllpolls, 0 . They
are the parents of a three
year old son, David Michael
II, and make their home at
3274 Meadowdale Blvd .,
Richmond, Va. 23234.

r

Dear Sue and Helen
There's flus boy, Larry, who has hved near me for a long
time Recently, Larry told me a boy he knew hked me, and this
''Mr ?'' was a Jumor at our local htgh school and his name was
"Roy C "
1 looked through the school regiStration f1les and there was
no 11th grader by thiS name
When !told Larry thiS, he smd Mr ' was really in our eighth
grade class, but l checked thiS out too, and then he said he was
really w1th us m fifth and SIXth grades, but then moved to another
school. 1 don't remember any Roy C 1
So I asked another fnend of mme who goes to the school Roy
C. ts supposedly gomg now, and she said "No such person there."
Next Larry told me hiS name wasn't really "Roy C." I was
dymg of curiosity by thiS tune, so Larry said Mr ? would be w1th
him at the movies that rught.lt turned out Larry was there alone,
although he said later Mr.' was m the balcony and left ea rly.
Wheneverlamnear'Larry'shouse,Mr ? ha s "been there but
JUSt left " Larry says he's "too shy" to meet me, though he wants
to
Larry has been a good pal of mme a ll through grade school
Would he be putting me on' - SEARCHING FOR MR '

West

Athletics and Califorrua Seals, be based on his humamtanarusm He was killed III a plane
as Owner of the Year.
crash
New Year's Eve wh1le
Players to receive plaques
wrll be DICk Butkus of the carrymg rehef suppltes to
Chicago Bears for football, Bob Nicaragua.
The other troph1es are based
U&gt;ve of the Chicago Bulls for
on
the mdividual's contribution
basketball, Stan Mikita of the
Ch1cago Black Hawks lor to hiS sport and hiS
hockey, and Chuck Tanner, humarutar1amsm.
Leahy will be unable to atmanager of the Ch1cago White
tend the banquet because of
Sox, for baseball.
lllness
The award to Clemente will

z·n Oil z·o
Career educa -hon
I
I,

:.:
.

:f: leading all other states
,.,.
:,.:,,:_._!

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:;:

By Prof, Ed (Doc)Wallen
RIO GRANDE - The newest
phenome non m educatiOn III Ohto IS
"career education". In fact, a recent
evaluation of such programs on a
nationwide basis indicated that Ohio

.',!',:·
,f

:::
:)

combmed
Also, there are 23 teachers from
Galha, Meigs. Jackson and Vmton

educatiOn

~·

J§:
::::

~:_ ~. -

:~

some rational process whereby you
matched the requirements of the JOb
to those special abil1t1es which· you
possess? Or, did you fall mto the :.;;.
career you are pursuing by accident? ,.,.

bu~ a~u~:strfn~c!~ee!~l:_~r~ss;~~t ~~::~
of

The same

type

cf

and new ones' are created to flourish ....
and then they in turn fade from the \[
scene.
:.:-

the large number of people who are

It IS estimated that many of our jl(
young people Will have to change ,.,
careers as many as three or four ~~

:::::'t!~o~~~e;:;;::~~~r~t~:Pe~ !:i~ydu~~: ~~~sl~;::a~o~~;~

What is career educatwn' Why IS it
necessary ' Is it JUSt another fad '
These and other questiOns come to

that career education programs can
help motivate and prepare young
people to contribute to
rather

are many ideas as to what
constitutes career educatiOn. To me,
11 IS that educational program
deSigned to prepare students to
ultunately make effective career
ch01ces. To meet this end, the Ohio
plan of career educatiOn IS deSigned to
proVlde career motivation for those
students from kindergarten through

involves the way
most of us (adults) made our career
choice. Think back, how d1d you
finally end up III the job you now
have? D1d you choose 1t by companng
1t to the over 411,000 other job titles
listed m the Dictionary of Qc.
cupationa1 Titles?
Did you choose your present Job by

th:IO~~n~a~~~t.

soc~ety

l

calls for a greater understanding of :~
the world of work and the skiUs :,.
needed to become a part of ti.

~

ed~=t~~yiSc:~~~':n~~::/~~~a;tee~~~

"education". The schools should not
become the one to dec1de on whtch
careers fit which youngsters. The
right to choose a career must remam
With the student and his parents.
~
It IS just the fact that most of us :::!
make better choices when we have ~
information to base our ch01ces on , j~

i

~

·.;•.:.:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::;:::~::::~·::~:·:.:..:::·:·:•:;:•:·:::::;:;:.-:;:::::~::::::::;:;:::::.:.! :·:-:::·:·!·:&gt;:-:·:-:·:·:·:•:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:o::::::::::;::::::::::::::::!!".!!:!$!!X~:'::O&gt;.::::~~::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;::::~::::::::::::::~~·
y

\

three wins 111 his last [our
tournaments and some thought
he might be the favorite, but
nobody really knew how
hungry Nicklaus was to
achieve his 14th major title-

more than any other man in
golfmg hiStory
Nicklaus has taken pams to
let people know he wants this
one, and because he has, he,
and not WeiSkopf, his

fell~

Del Crandall, a former
catcher for the ~ilwaukee
Reaves' championship teams
durmg the late 1950s and now
the manager of the Milwaukee
Brewers, lS e'cstatic over his
team's tremendous improvement thiS season and believes
the club can be a contender III
the AmeriCan League East.
So far, It's hard to argue the
pomt.
The Brewers came from
behind on a two-run homer by
Jolm Briggs m the eighth in·
rung Wednesday night to defea)
the Jl!innesota Twins, 4-3, for
the1r Sixth consecuhve
trmmph, The v1ctory left the
Brewers tied with DetrOit for
second place III the American
League East, only a half-game
behind the New York Yankees.
"I'm excited about this
club," srud Crandall. "I really
am A team can't play any
better than we are now, I left
spnng training feehng optimiStic but really didn't enVJston a streak like this .. ''
The Yankees took over f~rst
place m the topsy-turvy East
by whipping Oakland, 11-3, In
other AL games, ChiCago
pounded Detrmt, 1().2, Kansas
City blanked Baltimore, ~.
Caltfornia beat Boston, Hi, and
Texas edged Cleveland, 4-2.
Atlanta routed Pittsburgh,
16-3, Pluladelphia clobbered
Los Angeles, 16-3, St Lows
blanked Ctncmnati, 8-0,
Houston defeated Ch1cago, 6-1,
Montreal edged San D~ego , 3-2,
and New York beat San

Nelson placed
on disabled shelf
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Roger Nelson, Cmcinnati Reds
righthanded pitcher, was
placed on the 21-day disabled
list Wednesday with a sore
right elbow Nelson, 29, has
pttched only one inning smce
May 11 when he went four
mmng~ against Houston.
A team spokesman sa1d the
problem had been diagnosed as
a stram of the med1al Side of
the elbow which led to
1rr1tation of the ulner nerve.
Nelson was acquired by the
Reds during the off-season
from the Kansas C1ty Royals
He bad an 11~ record last year.

Ohtoan, IS going off as the
favonte in the 15!Hnan field
which began competition today
over Oakmont's legendary
6,921-yard, par-71 course domlnated by 187 Ira!" and 18
hghtnmg fast greens
The first threesome went off

Milwaukee halfgame out

at 7 30 a m EDT Nicklaus
teed off at 10 04 With amateur
Marvin Giles and former
Masters champiOn Bob Goalby
as hts partn~ers.
The ram that htt the l'ourse
Tuesday softened the greens a
bit but a hot sun and a hght
breeze dned them suf[Idently
to put them back to thell' former slick condition. The
weatherman says It will be £air
and warm today with litUe
chance or any more rain.
Lee Trevmo , a tw o-time
Open winner, constders Oakmont an " ideal" course for his
low ball game.
" I 'm playmg very well
here, •• he says.
Tommy Aaron, the Mastet·s
champlQn who IS not particularly fond of fast greens,
has been hoptng £or more rain
to "make them hold a little

better." Others echo his hopes
Arnold Palmer, an old hand
at Oakmont, is the sentimental
favortle on thts COLU'se where
he became a member only a
few days ago Palmer knows
Oakmont better than any pro
on the tour •
"What does thiS one mean to
me especmlly ''" asked Nicklaus, the 33-year~ld Columbus
oomber, who won Ius f1rst U.S
Open on th1s same course in
1962. " It means a number of
thmgs to me First of all,
naturally, I'd hke to w1n my
fourth one.l'dalso hke to come
back and WIII the Open where 1
won my fust one .. And of
course 1 want to wm as many
as I can."
Only three other golfers ever
have won lour Open titles
Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan and
Anderson -and now Nicklaus
IS bidding to Join them
Followmg the first 36 holes
Thursday and Fnday, the field
will be tnnuned to the low 60
scorers and ties ror the
Saturday's and Sunday's !mal
rounds which will be televised
by ABC

Francisco, 3-1, in Nat1ooal r1111s to spark the Rangers ' the seventh as the Rangers
League games.
victory over the tnd1ans. beat Gaylord Perry. Toby
The Yankees collected 18 Spencer knocked in a run m the Harrah also homered for Texas
hits, includmg three each by first Inning with an mfield out while Buddy Bell hit a solo shot
Horace Clarke, Bobb)' Murcer and drilled a two-&lt;un homer III for Cleveland.
an d Thurman Munson, to ....... .
;. '
···-. ····,·.:.·.·
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~·~ ............ '-"''
. ...;;
wallop the A's. Ken Holtzman, ;,;'§:;•,:.•.·.·.:··· .·,c&gt;·:-:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:•.•.-.·................... ;o.:,_,·.·.-...:;;o:-:o;•.•,•.•,O:•:O.·..:·:~·:o:·:·.•:•...•...-:•,·.-.-.•:·:-!-.-:·i
~
an ll·game wmner , was ~::
touched for 11 smgles III four
Uiniiigs while suffering his
worst beatmg of the yea r. Fritz
Peterson went seven mrungs to
even hiS record at l&gt;&lt;i.
The Wh1te Sox unloaded »
::0:
tsy MilLon Richman
~~i
UPl Sports Edllor
·:~
homers by John Jeter, ca rlos ::::
.:-··
May, Bill Melton and Rick I
Reichardt to whip the Tigers
OA KMONT, Pa (UP!) - A man, any man, wms the US Open
Stan Bahnsen went the in hiS lifetune, and he dies happy.
distan ce for Chicago to regiSter
That goes for most an)' man you ca n th1nk of.
his seventh wm m 12 decisiOns
It goes for Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer or Lee Trevino the
wh1J e Mickey Lohch was same way it does for utterly determined ll!Ue Bennie Beerbelly,
tagged with hiS Slltth losS the fellow who rounds out that fnendly foursome of yours every
agamst SlX victortes
SUnday morrung
Dick Drago scattered eight
Winnmg the US Open means everythmg to any golfer who
hits as the Royals blanked the ever has swung a club.
Orioles L&lt;lu Pimella doubled
It's the equivalent of chmbmg Mt Everest, wmning the World
home both r1111s with two outs 1n Senes and h1ttm g the sweepstakes all rolled mto one In short,
Amencan League
the mghth for Kansas C1ty, It's the dream of a hfetune come true.
Ma tor League Stand~nps
East
which dealt Baltimore Its nmth
Let's take one of the golfers m this U S Open, which gets under
By Untted Press lnt&amp;rnattonal
w I pet gb
New York
way today
shutout of the season.
Nat1onat League
31 27 53&lt;
Detro1 t
East
1/ :o
30 27 526
Frank Robinson doubled
Let's take Chi Ch1 Rodr1guez
w. I. pet. g b. M ilwaukee
30 27 526
1f7
home two runs during a fourHe's Lost Count
Boston
Chtcago
3S 24 593
27 21 500 2
27 25 519 4lf2 Baltimore
26 26 500 2
run second mnmg to pace the
Chi Chi has lost count which Open this IS for him He f•gures it's Montreal
Cleve land
LOUIS
28 29 491 6
22 36 319 9
Angels over the Red Sox. somewhere around his lOth, but he hasn't lost count as to what St
New York
25 29 463 7112
West
Robmson also had another the Open means to him
Pd fsburgh
24 29 453 8
w I pet g.b
Ph1ladelph 1a 24 34 414 10112 Chtcago
32 22 593
double m the game to move
What would he gJVe to wm It'
Minneso ta
30 25 S45 2112
West
mto the 36th spot on lhe alltrn\e
Not much
32 29 S25 J lf~
w. 1. pet. g .b. Kansas Cl ty
list Clyde Wnght went 7 1-3
Sa n Fran
39 24 609
Ca ltfornt a
28 27 509 4tl2
Only a hunk of his heart and a p1ece of his soul
Los Angeles
37 24 607
~'1
Oakland
30 29 508 41fl
mmngs to gam the v1ctory
Chi Chi Rodnguez w11l readily tell you that
Houston
34 28 548 4
Texas
19 35 352 13
Dwight Evans had a solo
He'll tell you somethmg else, too.
Wednesday 's Results
Ctnctnnatl
31 28 525 51!7
Te~as 4 Cleveland 2
26 34 433 11
horner and Carl Yac;trzemskJ a
''No matter who wins or loses,'' he'll tell you, ''It's beautiful to At lanta
M ilwau kee 4 Minnesota 3
Sa
n
D1ego
20
41
328
lN1
threerun shot for the Red Sox. get up m the mormng, look out the w~ndow and reahze not only
Chtcago TO Detroit 2
Wednesday's Results
Jun Spence r drove m two are you m the best cotmtry m the world, but also you're a Citize n Montreal 3 San Ot ego 2
Kan City 2 Baltimore 0
New York 8 Oakland 3
of It To me, that IS worth more. than wmrung 100,000 U.S New York 3 San Franc1sco 1
Ca llfor nta 7 Boston 5
Phtladelphta 16 Los Ang 3
TIGERS SIGN TRUDO
Opens."
Atlanta 18 Pl1tsbu r gh 3
Taday 's Probable P1tchers
DETROIT (UP! ) - The
tAll Times EDT)
Chi Chi Rodriguez was born m Puerto R1co That makes h~rn as 5t Loui s 8 Ctnctnnalt 0
Detrmt Tigers announced much of an Amencan as Ja ck Ntcklaus, born m Columbus, Ohto, Hpuston 6 Chtcago 1
New York (Medlch 52) at
Oakland ( Hunter 8·3), 11 p m
Today's Probable Pitch er s
lo\lay they had Signed Bob and 1! there are a few of you out there who think maybe he 's
IAll tomes EDT)
Boston (Curtis J 6) at Call
Trudo of Masury, Ohw , their gettmg earned away a httle, l don 't
San Di ego (Grei f 4 7) at lorn1a (May 4 61. 1 I p m
Kansa s City iSplittorff 9 J) at
Montreal I Renko 4-3), 8 p m
No 4 chmce tn the recent free
Climb on a Soapbox
BalfJmor e (Alexander 5 1). 7 30
Ch1cago
(Jenktn
s
6•4)
at
agent draft, to a contract
pm
Climb up &lt;m a soapbox, begm telling everyone what a great Housfon { Reuss 7 4), 8 30 p m
Trudo, 17, played outf~eld country yours is, how it's better than any other one in the world,
(Only g.a mes sc heduled)
{Only ga m es schedul ed)
Fnday's Games
Fndav's Games
and first base a I Brookfield and you can get to be a b1tof a zealot.
Boston at Oakland, night
Los Ang at Montreal. night
High School The 6-3, 200..
New Yor~ at Calli, night
There's nothing really wrong though w1th taking a mmute once San Ot ego at New York, , night
pounder hits nghthanded
Milwaukee
at Chicago, night
San
Fran
a
t
Phlla,
n1ght
In awhile to voice your feehngs, yes, maybe even some apMmnesota at Detro it, night
Chicago at Atlanta , ntghr
preciation, for the country you come from, the one that, no Pittsbu rgh at Cfncl , n tgh l
HUNTERTOWU
Kan Ctty at Cleveland, nlght
Texas at Balt imore, n igh t Sl Lou1 s a t Hous ton, n1ght
SPRINGFIELD, OHw (UP! ) matter what else 1s wrong wtth It, does giVe you a chance.
To that, Arnold Palmer says hear, hear!
- Larry Hunter, 23, assistant
Palmer makes a special pmnt of saymg he can't possibly agree
basketball coach at Manetta
with
Rodri guez more.
College for the past two years,
"He's absolutely nght m what he says," Palmer pomts out
has been named to a Similar
"I've
said It so much myself, I thmk sometimes maybe I'Ve
poSitiOn
at
Wittenberg
oversa1d 1t. It 's great simply to be here. I have to say the same
Umverstty.
Hunter, a 1971 graduate of thmg for the fact that there even is such an event as the U.S.
Ohio UmverSity, succeeds Bob Open , and that so many of us ca n make a hvmg at a sport like
Van Poppe!, who accepted a professional golf."
N3 for the US Open proper, Rodriguez says he doesn't want to
poSlllon at the UmverSlty of
Akron, where he Will teach get 1nto any argument with Sam Snead, but he thinks luck plays
phySical education apd coach only a very mmor part m determmmg the eventual WiQiler
Snead clatms a guy with a couple of horseshoes m hts pocket ca n
the varsity soccer team.
wm the Open

........

................... ......

..........

....

·i,,, Today's
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i~

tI

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DISCONTINUED STYLES ·

i~

concept of career education into the
var1ous subjects berng taught.
The need for such a program is

::~ ::::~.:~-:~~~to~s~.~~: ~

OAKMONT, Pa. (UP! ) right there you know woo is the
Jack Nicklaus, already a favorite m thiS 73rd renewal of
three-time US. Open Wtnner America's foremost golf event.
and now only one chamTom Weiskopf amved here
pionshtp away from golfiiig fresh from an ImpressiVe palr
immortaUty, says he wants "to of back-to-back victories and
win as many as l can," and

us were rather
haphazard III the selectiOn of our ::::
careers Often the "luck" of the
moment influenced our "coo1ce".
'$
Well, the problem IS even more )i
complicated for today 's youngster, j![
First of all, the industrialized, ;:i
technological, space age m wh1ch we ::,
proportion

1973

Nicklaus big Open favorite

I never think of t he future
It comes soon enoug h- AIbeJ t E1nstem

~~~k:~o~!a;;:r~ee; ~!ds~~t:.rn be

~',:·;._~ m~ere
....!'.

grade SIX The emphasis is on an
onentation to major career areas m
grades seven and eight followed by an
exploration of specific JOb opporturu!les in grades nine and ten.
career education begins III the

by clubbing Oakland, 8-3,
Kan sas
C1ty
blanked
Baltimore , 2-0, Mtlwaukee
tnrnmed Mmnesota, 4·3,
califorma topped Boston, 6-0,
Chicago trounced Detrott, 1().2,
and Texas tnpped Cleveland,
4-2.
Del Unser, one of the few
displaced American Leaguers
to make good m the National
League , contmued his hot
hittmg with two hits and four
RB! s as the Phill~es spoiled the
Dodgers chances of gaming
flrst place m the NL West.
Unser was JOined on the offense
by Willie Montanez' 3-lor-3
With two RB!s and Mike Anderson 's two-rWl homer m the
[)rst as Ken Brett coasted to his
fifth win in seven deciSions.
Atlanla had a hitting f1eld
day aga1nst the P~rates as
Darrell Evans contiiiued his
OOt bat Streak With a pair Of
hits mcluding a grand slam
home run III the fourth innmg.
Evans, in 17 consecutive at
bats, collected JJ walks, two
homers and four smgles
Felix Millan slugged his fll'st
home run of the year m addition to a double and a smgle
as the Mets provtded Tom
Seaver with hiS eJghth VIctory
against four losses. M1Uan,
now the leadmg Mets' batter at
287, belted his homer off loser
Tom Bradley m the first.
Mike Jorgensen's three..-un
homer m the hrst mmng
provided the margin of VIctory
for Montrealleft-hander Balor
Moore, who needed three III·
rungs of rehef help from Mike
Marshall and Cesar Cedeno
slugged a two-&lt;un homer to
h1ghhght Houston 's victory
over ChiCago. Don Wilson (5-6 )
p1cked up the wm for the Astros
With two 1nmngs of rehef help
from Jim Ray .

~=~e:~Ju:."t~~; ti:P~~ ~~~~:til~ ~:~:~·~r~':::;~o';;,. ~~:~~=~: ~~~ ~::r:.':';,t~~~Jefo:~Y:!u~"~~~~:~ ;_j~:j

~ ~:a~~:s ~tl~;g":~~u:~gks~~p ::r=-.:~
-;~
~~

Hall of Fame. Sen. Hartland
Molson, a fanner owner of the
Montreal Canadiens, and former referee Frank Udvan,
were selected 111 the builders
category.
Doug Harvey, Chuck Rayner
and Tommy Smith were fliCked
bY the selectton committee m
the players sectioo.
The NHL reverse draft, to
benefit American and Western
Hockey League clubs, saw 28
players selected from special
NHL "unprotected lists" at
$15,000 each and a second
phase saw four players change
clubs at $7,500 apiece.
Charlie Burns, Bob Nevin
and Jacques Caron were the
only players with NHL expenence involved m the deals.

Wise would
like respect

Rathwell traded to
Blues by Cincinnati

The Dai~ Sentinel

i··:·.:;·::;·:·;., :::-:::·:· ·=··:· •. :: .., ::

have no bearmg on the outcome. Most clubs meet each
other f1ve times III a season.
The league pens1on plan, new
standards for helmets and drug
abuse were also diSCUssed by
the league leaders. Campbell
garne tn any way."
ind1cated an audit procedure
The governors announced on all drugs dispersed by club
also t)ley have abolished, for trainers or doctors will be
secunty purposes, the past discussed at the next meetiiig
practice of players skating No Knowledge of Abuse
around the 1ce at the end of
"There is no knowledge of
each penod.
drug abuse in the NHL but
campbell also set Jan 29 in there have been instances in
Ch1cago as the date and other sports where the question
locauon for next year's ~­ has come up ," the NHL
Star game between the East J&gt;'eSident said
and West divisions.
In other developments on the
The governors wound up the fiiial day of the NHL meetings :
three-day annual meeting
Five new members were
Wednesday rught With discus- admitted to the NHL Hockey
SIOns on a nwnber of ISSUes.
includmg a new tie-breaking
procedure to decide which
team makes 1t to the playoffs.
campbell said if two teams
have Idenhcal records then the
series between the two clubs
will be the dec1d1ng factor In
the case of an unbahmced
schedule, the odd game will
By BilL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Rlck WISe, traded to St
!.&lt;luiS in February of 1972 for
Steve Carlton (who became a
27-game wmner wtth the place
Phillies), came withm two outs
of p1tchmg the second no-hitter
Buffalo
of hiS career agatnst the
Rathwell , 25, also had 50 Cincinnati Reds Wednesday
assiSts for 80 pomts for the rught and, If nothing else, he 'd
Swords.
hke some respect- just Uke
The :;.n, 185-pounder has no Rodney Dangerfield.
National Hockey League ex''l hope thln!fS hke this will
perience
warrant some ment for me on
CurtiS, also 25, had one goal what I'm doing now
" sa1d
and three assiSts In 28 games WISe who upped h\5 record to 11for the Blues last season. He 3 with the IHl victory. The fact
was obtamed at the begmning that the Reds' Joe Morgan
of the season 1n a trade that spoiled his b1d With a on~ut
sent Frank St. Marseille to Los runth inmng Single d1dn't seem
Angeles
to matter
· WISe, who retired 14 conFIND LOADED DICE
secutive batters rn one stretch,
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP! ) got all the h1ttmg support he
- Police S3ld Tuesday 200 pa1r needed In the third when the
of altered diCe, valued between Cards scored seven runs,
$10,000 and '$15,000, were climaxed by LUis Melendez'
confiscated from the car of grand slam home run.
Toby Gibson, 39, a professiOnal
In other games, Philadelphia
gambler who was shot to death oombed Los Angeles, 16-3, ,
Jun e 4 as he left his home III Houston crushed Pittsburgh,
nearby Austmtown Township
11h1, Atlanta edged the New
Pollee descnbed G1bson as a York Mets , 3·1, Montreal
"mecharuc who made .and rupped San D1ego, 3-2, and
ngged dice," and a profes- Houston breezed past the
siOnal gambler who attended Ch1cago Cubs, 6-1.
conventions and stag parties III
In the AmeriCan League, the
several dtles between Chicago New York Yankees moved
and Pittsburgh.
back mto f~rst place m the East
measuremetJt of the pads by
officials
Pads Do Not Change Game
..The governors felt that this
ruliJlg does not accomplish
anything," Campbell said .
'"Wider pads do not change the

0., June 14

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"I don't see It that way at all," Rodriguez says "What's so
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How about thiS one though ? Who does Rodngu ez like to wm this
time?
"Nicklaus, Weiskopf, Palmer, TreVIno, Player," he scud,
ratthng off the five names nonstop .
"That's hke p1ck1ng Secretariat," laughed the little longballer.
"With all the hea t and humidity here, thiS 1s no fat man's
wea ther Notice those I mentioned? Which of the ones I named is

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�•

~ - The Daily Sentinel,lliiddleport-h••&gt;eroy, 0 .• June It, 1973

Rick Wise one-hits Reds, 8-0
CINCINNATI (UP!) - They
say lightning never strikes the
same place twice, but until Joe
Morgan singled with one out in
the ninth inning Wednesday
night you might have had a

hard time convincing the
Cincinnati Reds .
Morgan 's single, a line shot

to center, was the only hit
yielded by Rick Wise as the St.
Louis Cardinal right-llander
blanked the Reds ~ for a
sweep of a lhree-eame series.
This is the same Wise who, as
a Philly pitched a 4.0 no-hitter
against the Reds on June 23,
1971 1 and hit two home runs

Sunday horse
racing okeyed
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Responding to a charge that
racing enthusiasts are usecond

class citizens,' ' the Ohio House

Ohioans will be •able to buy
lottery tickets on SUnday when
the slate lottery is implemented, Wilkowski said, "and r. belieV'I! this is as it should t.!."
Observance of Sunday as a
religious holiday must be
.voluntary, he said. "It cannot
be mandated by a public lawmaking body.
"There's no danger that

approved legislation Wednesday authorizing Sunday
horse racing.
'I11e bill, approved by a 63-3ll
vote, lifts the restriction
against sunday competition,
but does not increase Ule
overall number of racing days Christianity will not survive
allowed tracks. The measure without the assistance of the
now goes to the Senate.
legislature," he said.
Under the bill, race tracks
Thirteen other states and
.could schedule Sunday compe- several Canadian provln(.'es
tition as part of their 50 days have already authorized
each racing meeting by filing a Sunday racing, said Rep. Josrequest with the Ohio Racing eph P . TutUey, R·Willoughby.
Commission. No track would
Horse racing bas beeri the
be required to schedule Sunday No. I spectator sport in the U.S.
racing .
for the li&gt;st 20 years, Tulley
"To break with custom and said, and yet it is the only sport
tradition is not an easy task, 11 banned on Sundays in many
said Rep. Arthur Wilkowski, D- states.
Toledo, chief sponsor of the
"How long will Ohio relegate
bill, "but the restriction is nei- racing enthusiasts to the .s tatus
ther suitable to our time nor of second class citizens," he
any longer justifiable on any asked..
scale of fairness ."
Wilkowski said horse racing
is a legal business in the state
'' Who among all these
along with professional footdoes
not know that the hand of
ball, baseball and basketball.
the Lord has done this'! In his
" But unlike these other busi- hand is the life of every living
nesses, it is a no-no on Sun- thing and the breath of all
mankind ." - Job 12 :9, JO .
ili:Jy, '' he said.

along the way.
Wise, who's now 8-3 lor ffie
season , always helps himself
with his bat. In fact, it was his
infield hit which touched off a
seven-run
third
inning
climaxed by Luis Melendez'
grand slam. homer off loser
Jack Billingham.
The heartache one experiences when he comes within
one pitch of a no-hitter is
nothing new for Wise. He had
another one-hitter against the
los Angeles Dodgers in 1968.
''Hammers For Hands"
"The only hit of the game
was a two-hopper Jell Torborg
hit.'' recaUed Wise. "The ball
bounced off Roberto Pena's
glove and the scorer ruled it a
hit."
Wise thought it should have
been an error. So did a lot ol

other witnesses of the pl;&gt;y, he
said .
-Reds' pitching coach Larry
Shepard wasn't there when
Torborg 's bollllCer was ruled a
hit. "But l know Pena," said
Sl•epard, "and he has ham·

Results

By Uni ed Prtss Intern• tiona I
NatiOno~t Lea_gue

010 000 100-- 2 6 0 {2nd).
Mon treal
300 000 OOx- 3 • 1 St. louis
007 000 001- 8 11 0
Grei f, ROf"''\o (7J a nd Ke nda ll ; Ci ncinnati 000 000 ooo- 0 t I
Moore. Marshall (11 a nd
Wise (8-J) a nd Si mmons ;

McCa rver gathered in on the
short hop in the fifth inning was
the closest the Reds came to Boccabella . WP- Moore ("-5).
LP- Grelf (.4-8 ) . HR s- Jorgens·
spoiling Wise's no-hit bid.
en {5th) , Kendall (3rd l.
After the seventh inning,
000-- 3 10 1
Wise went stricUy with fast- Plttsbgh
A1Janta
200 616 OOx- 18 17 0
balls.
Elli s , Hernandez {4), Blass
rners for hands."
" Rick didn 't want to come in (5), JohnsOI'I {6) and May ;
Reds Manager Sparky An- here and shoot himself if Reed (4-7) andO&amp;tes, Casanov a
(7) . LP- EIIi s 15-71. HRs derson knows Pena too .
someone got a nubber or a flare Hebner (6t h), Evans (1 4t hJ .
"His range," qulpped Ander- hit orr a ehangeup or a slow
00000001()- l 6 2
son, " is two feet ... one right curve," ~d Simmons. "He Chi cano
HoustOn
002 111 0\ x- 6 122
and the other ]eft."
wanted to challenge them with
Pappas, Hooton (6), Aker 181
" Rick normally has an his best pitch."
and Rudolph ; Wil son. Ray (8 )
and Jutte. WP- Wilson (S-6) .
abovellverage fastball, " said
P
13 Sl HR C d no
- Pappas · ·
- e e
Cardinal catcher Ted Sim·
Simmons helped out by ILlOth
).
mons. "Tonight, he was ex· rapping four hits, giving him 8Fran
000 000 001- I 9 0
ceptionally last and he was for-15 in the three-game set. San
N.Y.
2000000 1x- 3 100
hitting the corners conBradley, Morrif, (8) and
The victory was the Cards'
Rader
; Seaver ( 8-.4 ) and
sistently."
fifth in six games this season
Hodges. LP- Bradley 15·41. HR
Slrlctly FastbaUs
with the Reds; who play their - Millan ( 1st ).
Until Morgan's single, a Indianapolis farm club tonight
000 200 001 - 3 52
smash by Dan Driessen which before opening a four.game Los Ang
Phil a
660 013 OOx-1 6 12 1
Cardinal first baseman Tim series with Pittsburgh Friday.

OiiOJOo

the

ninth

t~at

drove

in

had singles.
winning .-un against Anderson,
For the winners, Davenport
the third Rutli&gt;nd pitcher, who started, fanned two, walked
was ~ba rge~ with the loss. two, and May fanned nine and
May, who pitched from the walked I.
fourth inning, got credit lor the Rutland
000 002 000-2 3
win.
000 101 001- 3 4
Midd. Am.
Rutland hitters were AnWilliamson, Tillis (7), Andersm. a triple and the twins, derson (9), (LP), and Dugan.
. Randy and Rick George, who Davenport, May (4), and May,
SCIOTO RESULTS
both singled. For Middleport Davenport (4).
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Mary Mick
Davenport,
Steve
Pat Hill won the featured Bachner and Ken Thomas also
eighth race, a $1,500 pace, by
7:Y• lengths Wednesday night at
Scioto Downs. Reportrix was
WASHINGTON ( UP!)- The
second and Principal third.
Capital Bullets' new general
Time ol the mile was 2:04.
manager 1 Bob Ferry, thinks
Mary Pat Hill returned $8,
team's coaching vacancy
the
$4.20 and $2.60.
will be filled "as soon as
Lusty lsotta won the first
possible."
race and Adio Jim took the
Ferry, a former National
second, a 7-2 combination
Basketball
Association player
worth $16.60 in the nighUy
The Pomeroy B pony associated with the Bullet
double.
baseball
team, largely 13-year- franchise lor the last nine
Attendance was 5,452 and the
olders just out of little league, years, said after his appointhandle was $256,742.
to the surprise of about ment as gene ral manager
everybody is out on top of the Wednesday, " I assume a
Meigs County Pony League decision has been made" on a
replacement for the recently
with a 3-0 record.
T!)e team is trailed by the departed Gene Shue.
ve~ran Pomeroy Phillies who
Bullet owner Abe Pullin said
also are undefeated , but who Ferry ~&lt; will coordinate with the
have pwyed only two games. head coach on all personnel
Tomorrow evening there will matters, trades, scouting and
.,
be a mornent .of decision ·a s the the draft or' players."
CINCINNATI
(U PI) two undefeateds tangle .
The selection of Ferry as
"Hope and Pray"
are righthanders Gary Nolan
Cincinnati Reds Manager
Wednesday evening in a general manager came after a
We're too good a team to play and Roger Nelson .
Sparky Anderson isn't ready to this way," Anderson lnsisted.
make-up
game the B club successful stint as the club's
Nolan has spent the season so
push the panic button yet, but
"We'll come out ol It, and I far in florida attempting to · defeated Middleport A 15-10, chief scout. Amon~ those
he hopes something happens to hope and pray that it'll be soon. overcome a shoulder problem.
putting the game out of reach recruited for action in a Bullet
the defending National ~ague
in the fourth inni ng with. rive .unifortn ~y Ferry were center
'
In an effort to bolster the
Nelson was put on the 21-&lt;lay
champions pretty soon. ·
runs
lor a 13-3 lead. In that Wes Unseld, and forWard Phil
· sagging mound corps, the Reds disabled list Wednesday bethe Reds dropped into fourth traded rookie Gene Locklear cause ol a sore right elbow.
inning, Pomeroy B pitcher Chenier.
place .in the National League and a minor leaguer to San
Greg Smith hit a grand slam
Up until his appoinbment
"What can I say about Nolan
West and right now things Diego for lefthanded Fred Nor- and Nelson," Sparky asked in
homer.
Wednesday, Ferry headed a
aren't too promising for a re. man, who is currently sporting answer to a question.
Brian Hamilton had four list · of prospective Bullet
covery.
singles
in the game. Other . coaches .. But he indicated he
an unimpreSsive 1·7 record.
"They tell me Nolan is
" I'm not panicking/' AnderPomeroy hitters wer:e Smith, was not Interested. "I have no
What else can Anderson do to throwing batting practice in
son said. "What good would it tum things around for the Fiorida, but I have no immedi- who had a triple besides his .. coaching aspirations at all. I
do to panic? You might say Reds?
ate hopes of getting him back," homer, and Snyder, Ken Hood, wanted to stay with the
right now I'm just waiting. I'm
Carl Carmichael Rick Johnson organization. They know what
"Well, there really isn't too he said.
in limbo."
much you can do/' he said,
'' I just don't know about and Dale Brow~ing, each a I'm best suited for," he said.
The key issue seems to be the "except to wait lor a slump of Roger," he co"ntinued. "He single.
Personnel problems have
Reds' pitching - or the lack of this type to run its course.
·
For
Middleport,
Joh~
Pat
been
blamed for the Bulleis'
· tells me he has severe pain in
it.
1
' Sure, we•v·e added Norman. his right hand and elbow. But I Riley singled, Mike Magnotta poor showmg m recent playoff
[n the last seven gaines, five ". to our roster, but he's just one
think he'll be OK. He has to be, doubled and singled twice , encounters . One of Shue's
of which the Reds lost, the man," he sald. "The other and so does Gary, because we Dave Miller, Mark Haggerty, frustrations th~t reportedly!~
Cincinnati pitching staff has pitchers are going to have to need them both badly." .
Tim Ebersbach and Johnson to his res1gnat10n , was Pollm s
given Up no fewer than 55 runs. turn themselves around and
Sparky plans no changes in had a sjngle each; Greg interference in salary negotiaThat includes 6-5 and 9-71oss- start getting men out. It's that the lineup, since his big guns Walburn a double, and
es to Chicago and 12-4, 11-5 and simple."
have finally found the range Ebersbach a homer with his
8-0 trouncings at the hands of
Needs Pitchers
and have produced 35 runs in single.
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Regatta Week Specia ts
Smith, pitching the distance
The two big question marks the last seven games.
Thurs .- F r i. -Sat.
for Pomeroy 1 fanned nine and
walked 7. Middleport's pitTHI GOYUINMINTOf
chers, Ebersbach, R. Casci and
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
DE~ARTMfNT OF THE TREASURY
Berry fanned six, walked 13.
OFFICE OF REVENUE SHAI'IING
11100 !&gt;ENN5YI..VANIA AVE. N.W.
Pomeroy B 233 520 0-15 11 2
l'lAHS TO lJCPfND 11'8 ~EVI~Ui SH"-IIIHG ALLOCATION
FO~ OlliNTITLEMEHTI'!IIIOO ltGIHHING
210 124 0-10 12 3
Midd A
f
Jlft, 1, 1973 AHOENOING June ,0, 1913
Smith and Hamilton, Mch bol-11\8I IOQ~
!he IWiol-lly ol r.-.u•
IN Tttt FO~LOWING M"-NNUI IAilD U~N AH
..menla QJ 1'1&gt;'1' [llli odii:!!Ofl?
Clure (6). Ebersbach ( LP), R.
EmMATiD TOTMO, $3,821.00
'Main at Sycamore
Casci ( 3), Berry I 5), and
POMEROY,
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OHIO
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~OIFHCT

Pomeroy B

101 1140 3/ll--10 131

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Kan C!fy

Baltimore

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000 000 020-- 2 6 0

I

11.t

~~~~W~A~SH~ON~O~TO~N~.O~.C~·~20~22~~~~~~~

HR: ~Melendez

llst).

~~~~k

American League

(1nd ).

Boston

Milw

001000040--5 •• ,
14000101x-7102

00200002G- 4120 Qt li f

Minn
020.-010 ooo- 3 8 3
Culp, Morel (21 , Newhauser
Colborn (8-1) and Rodr iguez: {8) and Fisk ; Wri~l . Sells (8) 1
Dec ker. Corbin (8 ) and Mltter -

andTorborg. WP- right (_..J) . •

wald. LP- Corbio {1-2) . HRs- LP- Culp (0-ll . HRs-Pinson
( hi {5th), E" ans (3rdl. Yastnem.
Garc ia {6th), Carew 51 ' ski ( 9th)~

:;r~ig~g~s~l5~t~h)~.. . . . . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~~~. .. ,

Father's Day
Gift Suggestions

FASTER MILE
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
fastest time for the mile and 70
yards during the c11rrent meet
at River Downs was recorded
Wednesday wher. Port 0 Fleet
won the $5,000 Ohio AlloY(ance
in 1:43, paying $14.60, $5 and
$3.20.
Quiet Road was a length and
one-hall back, followed by Sir
Woodley.
A 2-2 daily double pairing of
Late Royal and Ali Scorp paid
$152.60.

D

LESSEN CUT

IHC~t...SE

IN

~..-..

D
0

Wi h RI DIJCIAMOIJN'T Of Mil
tN'CRU.II 014 IMJOI't t AX.
NO

lf~ICT ON TIUI LfV~LI

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TytP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
R. R. 1

ROMEO
SLIPPERS

.·
•,

and Other
Slippers

tions with the players.
Ferry said he will handle all
salary negotiating, · and promised to re--examine the status
of highly paid guard Archie
Clark. Before his resignation,
Shue indicated tha t Clark
would not be with the Bullets
next year , but Ferry would say
only that "the situation will be
looked over very closely."
Ferry said he will concentrate with the coach on
developing players adaptable
to th e coach's winning
philosophy. "Then I'll try to get
his kind or players."

'

High ·c ourt
reverses

decision

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southwest portion. low from
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vortable eloudlneu and chance
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Friends may call at the funeral
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areas of mental health, corrections and 1environmenta)
protection.
The governor. twice meeting
privately with Senate Democrats since TUesday night, was
reported incensed over Ute cut5
and prepared to cajl for a firm
stand on the noor even if
negotiations are pushed
beyond June 30 and an interim
budget is needed to start the
new fiscal period.
''Ruin " Programs
Senate Democratic leaders
privately shook their heads and
said an interim budget could be
avoided by going along with
package and getting a quick
conference corru:nittee into ac-

10 per cent income tax credit
for aU persons filin g joint returns.
" ThtS budget will not control
• PJ. Ayers
or t'urtail our programs, it will
ruin th e m ," sa id Willia m
Chavanne, the governor's legi slative aide who was hard at
work trying to win over Democratic senators Wednesday.
ears.
EMPLOYMENT POINT -Jobs for Veterans ( JFV ) special aaslatant WIUJam Ayres (left)
He was joined by a corps of
Several
Senate
Democrats
points out during a recent Capitol Hill Veterans Conference tbat hiring Vietnam-era veterans is
cabinet-level officials and their
indicated Wednesday they plan
a good bosiness investment. In full agreement Is Rep. Clarence Miller (right), who joined his
aides, who button-holed senato
support
the
latest
version
or
former House of Representatives colleague for an assessment of the current veteran emtors near the Senate floor while
Sandals by:
the $9.9 billion budget for fiscal
plo)'lllent picture, The latest federal labor Sli&gt;tistics show the unemplo)'lllent rate among
debate proceeded on other
1973-75, and get it into a conveterans age 2().29.hu decreased the past eight months. The Department of Labor reports that
matters.
e Poll P ~1r0t
ference comnilttee where
4.1 rnllllon veterans who served In tlie military during the period 1964-1972 are presently em·
Dr. Ira L. Whitman, director
differences between the Senate
ployed. Rep, Miller commented that the figures "show an encouraging trend, but the comof the Environmental Protecand House can be worked out.
mibment to belp these men help themselves must remain strong."
tion Agency which was cut by
The Senate Finance Commit$16 million, sent each senator a
tee was to start moving the tion.
packet of material explaining
giant appropriations bill
Of the $110 million in cuts, what would happen to his agentoward a floor vote, possibly the Republicans sent $81.2 mil- cy if the cuts were performed.
Mrs . ·Vista Frank, 95, sister, Mrs. Lenora Hoskins,
~ Friday, with a 9: 30 a.m. lion Into favorite projects of
He said half the 550 employes
Pomeroy Route 3, died Palatka, Fla., and several
meeting today.
their own. They combined the' would have to be dismissed.
Thursday morning at Veterans nieces and nephews.
Gilligan caleda 10 a.m. news other $28.8 million with $49.4
Whitman spent all afternoon
Memorial Hospital.
conference, apparently to re- million in anticipated excess outside the Senate rail, collarFuneral services will be held
Mrs. Frank was preceded In at l p. m . Saturday at the
peat his displeasure at the revenues for use in granting a ing Republican leade1·s and Fideath by her parents, William Ewing Funeral Home with the
GOP's proposed cuts in the
nance Committee members.
B. and Ida Roush; her Rev. Freeland Norris ofTaking Firm Stand
husban&lt;\, James B. Frank, In ficiating. Burial wlll be In the
A · verdict by the Meigs
Gilligan
had
been
1941; a sister and two brothers. Sutton Methodist Church County Common Pleas Court
represented as late as Monday
"
She was a member of the Cemetery. Friends maY call at and the District Court of Apas seeking to avoid an interim
"Your
Store .
Carroel Church.
••
the funeral home at 7 this peals in a fatal auto accident in
budget, even if it meant giving
Surviving are a son, RalphS. evening.
225
N.
2nd
Ave
.
Midciieport,
Ohio
Meigs County four years ago
ln on some points lo secure
By United Press International
Frank, Pomeroy Route 3; a
bas been reversed by the Ohio
quick
Senate passage.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON begins sununlt
Supreme Court.
"
talks with Soviet Party Leader Leonid l. Brezhn:ev which he
The Meigs County Conunon
predicts wiil r~sult ln "major new progress" on disarmament
Pleas Court ruled In favor ol
and world peace. Nixon was expected to discuss arrangements
Russell Bailey, administrator
lor the sununit today with foreign affairs adviser Henry A.
ol Barbara Jean Bailey, who
Mrs. Edith Mary Jane Clark, brothers, Clinton Hudnall and was killed in an auto accident Kissinger, who successfully concluded an agreement with North
57, Athens, former Meigs Clarence Hudnall, both of May 26, 1969. The late Miss Vietnam Wednesday in Paris for strict enforcement of the
County resident, died Wed- Springfield; 29 grandehildren, Baiiey and Patti Sexson, Vietnam cease-fire.
, ,.
Brezhnev officially will begin his visit Monday with a red
. nesday at the O'Bleness end one grea~andchild .
members ol the graduating
' · ' 11
.' :'. .~
r
1
0 ·1 i~{·.~-- ,'(, ,·
Hospital there following an
Funeral services will be held cwss ol Eastern High School carpet welcome on the south lawn of the White House alter an
/
L~
=i:ffl·
:
f.·N:·
·t-::rtf:.·
.
·:...-:~·
:::::·=· !· ~ ....
illness of several months.
at 3 p.m. Friday at the Hughes that spring, were enroute to a overnight stay at Camp David, the presidential retreat in nearby
·~~··
. ........
.'1.')
• • •' ••
,.. ...~.
. •;.·
• ·• · ··• • -:; • •·••••·••••• •~ ·.·.·:.·
•• •
•.• '!)-!'
' ,... .. ..... ••
• ' . ....'.:!.l!/,'1!('
Preceded in death by her Funeral Home in Athens where post graduation party in an Maryland. Nixon turned to foreign affairs alter announcing a
; ;·,,:; :
.:::.;,?: ,
husband, Herbert, Mrs. Clark friends mey call. Burial will be auto driven by Harry G. move Wednesday night to place a new 61klay fr eeze on all
e-:.:.~
is survived by four daughters, In Wells Cemetery at Brown, 16, at the time or the wholesale and reli&gt;ll prices to combat inflation . In a televised
:~'ifw:
.~.,..
to
the
nation,
he
digressed
a
bit
to
forecast
a
successful
address
Mrs. ~stet Henderson and Pagetown.
accident. The . Brown vehicle meeting with Brezhnev because of extensive preparatory work
:;:..- -,-:.~
Mrs. Tom Sayre, Debary, Fla.;
collided ·with an oncoming car already done.
•
·.·· __
Mrs. Kenneth Sickles and Mrs.
VeteraD8 Memorial H,.pltal
while making a left turn and
...r.·.-. ~· _ . .
Paul Sickles, both or Athens;
Discharges- DareD Jenko, Miss Bailey's death resulted
··;.:;.:..--~ .
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE passed legislation
... .....
four sons, Harry, Pomeroy; Lilly Dyke, Samuel Eblin, and Miss Sexson was ·injured.
~~·
Harold of Naples, Fla.; Mary . Jones, ~onard Lyons, The Meigs County Common Wednesday requiring door-to-&lt;loor salesmen to tell their
~·=·=
""-;r-:
·'i- :.
customers both in writing ·and orally of the thrce-&lt;lay "cooling
Howard of Newark, and Homer Connie Knapp, JeSsie White, Pleas Court returned a $10,000
.......
'
•
..
...... , '-"··
In cooperation with the Regatta Parade
of Colwnbus; a sister, · Mrs. Mary Wallace and Alice : verdict in favor of Russell off" period in state consumer protection law.
-, . :.~~. . ....
The legislation, which now goes to the Senate, is an effort to
Ray Haning of Pomeroy; two Spencer.
Bailey and this decision was tighten up the consumer law which took effect the first of this
Committee and. in the interest of safety we
"•
upheld by the District Court o! year. Under the law, consumers who purchase goods or ~:~ervices
Appeals.
·
in their homes can cancel the sale within. three business days and
However, the law linn ol get their money refunded . The law does not apply to insurance or
wi 11 not transact business Friday evening_,
Walker, Mollica and Gall, real estate ·sales.
Athens, has informed Mr. and
June 15th at our Auto Teller Window.
. Mrs. Brown that the Ohio
WASHINGTON - FEARFUL THAT A long-time oil com·
Supreme Court reversed the pany lawyer might turn his back on the consumer , the Senate
decision and entered final refused Wednesday to conllrm the nomination of Robert H.
judgment . in favor of the Morris to the Federal Power Commission ( FPC).
Browns~
It was the first time that the Senate. has rejected an apDue to the decision , theflrm pointment by President Nixon to a regulatory agency. 'I11e
also has indicated that a Senate voted, 49-44, to return the nomination to the Conunerce
companion case, Sexson versus Committee, and even Morris 1 staunchest backers conceded it
bas been dismissed as killed the San Francisco lawyer's cha nces of becoming a
FOR OUR NEW STORE IN POMEROY aBrown,
result of the Supreme Cowt member of the FPC.
· Applicants should be neat in appearance,
decision.
friendly personality and have ability tn basic ·
SUPPORT ASKED
·
. mathematics.
Me.i~s County residenl'll are
Pleasant Valley Hospital
being asked to s upport a
Discharges
:
Mrs.
Bruce
STARTING RATE: $1.85 Per Hour
bloodmobile which will be at
Smith, New Haven; Harroon
Approximately: lSto 30 Hours Per
MIDDLEPORT, OfliO
the Pomeroy ElementarY
Casto, Lisa Casto, Point
Week
Pleasant; Elza Conley, Point
Rusty Ray Fraley, 5, Cur- School from I to .6 p.m. Mon-Member Federal Deposit Insurance COrporation
Pleasanti Bryant Harmon, . penter, PonierOy Route 4, was day ~Walk-in donors ~ill be
APPLY: Oiuo Bureau of Employment Service
Gallipolis; Olga Roush, Letart; killed Tuesday afternoon in a welCome at the un it.
443 2nd Ave., Gallipolis,
Franklin Thomas, Leoni lawn mower' accident which
Lawrence Harper, Tuppers occurred near Belpre where
Employer
An
Plains, 0 ., and Carl McDade, the child was visiting.
Rusty was taken to the
Point Pleasant.
Camden-Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg by the Belpre E·R
squad but was dead upon
THI OOVIfiiNMINT 0'
arrival. It was reported that
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
the child had been struck by
~ l .NS 1'0 lK,ENO tTS "lV(NtJE SHAIII~G ALLOCAfiON
FQII: TH( ENTITLEMENT '!~1 00 llGI~NI~G
the mower.
JAN . I, 1973AHO ENDIN'(i JUNE 30, 1973
Surviving are · his parents,
IN 11-!l
I,AStD \.II"'tt AN
Clifton and Carolyn Greenlees
ESTIMA TtO TOULOf $1 ,1S3
Fraley; a brothr, Roger, at
home; grandparents, Mr. and
• CCOtJNT NO
NO lHECT
36 3 OSJ '004
Mrs.
Clifton Fraley, Sr., and
TOO SOON H )
OEBII NCR [ .. Sf.
P'II!OIC'I
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees;
t•-X£5 1~ ;h~~ -~,--;-_;:; 'ioii,_.:, .,
:c;.:·~:="~
:::-:,C:,C:,::,_::,..:;o;,;. :,~
great-grandparents,
Mr. and
.. .,1111&gt;~•1 ' o1 ~ • .,.....,. Sh01 i n~ ~•&lt;II will ti'Pic:• 11\e Ill

11 ~~

GOLF
SHOES

JACK GETS TROPHY
OAKMONT, Pa. (UP! )
Jack Nicklaus was presented
with a $10,000 crystal sculpture
trophy Wednesday as the 1972
Dunlop Athlete ol the Year.
The award was the first by ~
the Dunlop Tire and Rubber
Corp. ·
NicklaUs was horlored officially at a banquet in Buffalo,
N.Y., last January.

Girls Sleeveless
Penna-Press

REGATTA

-

·1I COUPON SPECIAL II

RACINE, OHIO 45771

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan today planned
to make a last-minute appeal
for resisli&gt;nC. to Senate Republicans' troposal to chop
$110 million from his Housepassed budget and divert it
toward tax relief and programs
of their own.
The appeal may fall on deaf

Vista Frank dies Thursday

SANDALS-TENNIS SHOES

·---------------,

lOON TO
l.-J TOO
MU:IICT EfFECT

BE NICE TO YOUR FEET
'DURING THE BIG BEND

GOP budget act

~~ ~ ::--- ~ 1: ~

70
Tex a $
100 000 l Ol- 4
Peterson, lyle (8) an""
1
1
Cle'&lt;'eland 000 010 oo- 1 6 d0 Munson ; Holtzman. Pil'la {S)v,
Broberg Stanhouse 17 an
(
Fl
)
Suare z : Perr y (6-8) and Ell is . Li ndblad .5 1.
ngen 16 and
WP- Broberg (3-Sl . HR ~- Bell Fosse. WP- Pelerson (6-6) . LP
c2ndL Spencer (Jrdl. Harr ah - Holtzman (11 ._.). ·

lOLA'S

0

ao

000 000 ooo-- o

Sol-bon (91 and
Or ago !6-5) and Heoiy ;
...
h
(8 31 McNally, Jacksoo (II and
Bench. LP- Billing am
- · Wil liams . LP- McNallr (S-8).

.-- -·SALE!
1
All Sportswear
and Swim Suits

I

Gilligan to ·resist

HRs- Jeter (7ndl, !Niy t7th) ,
Melton ( 11th!. Reichardt tlrd l.

Bullets name Ferry GM

Not ready to push panic
button yet, Sparky says

I

~~· or Leo~gue

Chi&lt;090
Oetr~t

001000001- 2 9,
Brett (S-2) and Boone. lPBahnsen ( 7-SJ and Herrm&lt;~nn ;
John (S-3) . HRs- AndN"son Lot lch. LaGrow ISL Schetrnan
(3rdJ. Brett ( 2nd ), Russell ( 8) and Slm1. lP- loUch (6-6) ,

San Diego

Americans in 3-2 pony win
The Middleport Americans
inade their pony record 2-1
Wednesday in a make-up game
with a ligbt 3-2 victory in nine
innings over Rutland which is
now 0-3.
It was big red-haired Mike
May's double in the bottom of

Joho Hough (7), Culver ( 6 )
and· Y~ager. ca.nni uaro (" ;

Lint"SCOreS

I

had to be made for the
1689. A duplicate set of regalia
coronation.

Admiral is building llmlt.e d quantities o! nel'( 1973 retrigerat~rs
to sell at surprisingly low prices. When they re gone ... they re
gone. So don 't miss out on th ese extra-special values - hurry
In now!

Admiral

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REFRIGERATOR/ FREEZER
Kiss the "Oetroot Bluto" goodbyol And
ny hello to 1 grtat Admiral value. Deluxe ftaturea lncludl Euy Cubl lc~
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trays. two glide-out crispers, dllp-pro·

NO 2038
hel')'thlng yay always wanted In a
freezer/ refrlg•rator - but were
afraid you couldn't offord. Ofant
capacity, no t:lefrosfln·g - yoy name
It oJMl thlt Admintl olimllno beauty
hat It, At eur 1peclal "ltlc• 'n
Purcha .. '' prl~•, Jt't lh• huy =~ ·~­
yecirl

lilt door shotves. 14.6 c u. ll capacity.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE EXCELLENT
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R
E
BAKE·R F.URN1.1U
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~~=====~=~~::::_~--~=============~::::::J

..

f

'

..

...

�•

~ - The Daily Sentinel,lliiddleport-h••&gt;eroy, 0 .• June It, 1973

Rick Wise one-hits Reds, 8-0
CINCINNATI (UP!) - They
say lightning never strikes the
same place twice, but until Joe
Morgan singled with one out in
the ninth inning Wednesday
night you might have had a

hard time convincing the
Cincinnati Reds .
Morgan 's single, a line shot

to center, was the only hit
yielded by Rick Wise as the St.
Louis Cardinal right-llander
blanked the Reds ~ for a
sweep of a lhree-eame series.
This is the same Wise who, as
a Philly pitched a 4.0 no-hitter
against the Reds on June 23,
1971 1 and hit two home runs

Sunday horse
racing okeyed
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Responding to a charge that
racing enthusiasts are usecond

class citizens,' ' the Ohio House

Ohioans will be •able to buy
lottery tickets on SUnday when
the slate lottery is implemented, Wilkowski said, "and r. belieV'I! this is as it should t.!."
Observance of Sunday as a
religious holiday must be
.voluntary, he said. "It cannot
be mandated by a public lawmaking body.
"There's no danger that

approved legislation Wednesday authorizing Sunday
horse racing.
'I11e bill, approved by a 63-3ll
vote, lifts the restriction
against sunday competition,
but does not increase Ule
overall number of racing days Christianity will not survive
allowed tracks. The measure without the assistance of the
now goes to the Senate.
legislature," he said.
Under the bill, race tracks
Thirteen other states and
.could schedule Sunday compe- several Canadian provln(.'es
tition as part of their 50 days have already authorized
each racing meeting by filing a Sunday racing, said Rep. Josrequest with the Ohio Racing eph P . TutUey, R·Willoughby.
Commission. No track would
Horse racing bas beeri the
be required to schedule Sunday No. I spectator sport in the U.S.
racing .
for the li&gt;st 20 years, Tulley
"To break with custom and said, and yet it is the only sport
tradition is not an easy task, 11 banned on Sundays in many
said Rep. Arthur Wilkowski, D- states.
Toledo, chief sponsor of the
"How long will Ohio relegate
bill, "but the restriction is nei- racing enthusiasts to the .s tatus
ther suitable to our time nor of second class citizens," he
any longer justifiable on any asked..
scale of fairness ."
Wilkowski said horse racing
is a legal business in the state
'' Who among all these
along with professional footdoes
not know that the hand of
ball, baseball and basketball.
the Lord has done this'! In his
" But unlike these other busi- hand is the life of every living
nesses, it is a no-no on Sun- thing and the breath of all
mankind ." - Job 12 :9, JO .
ili:Jy, '' he said.

along the way.
Wise, who's now 8-3 lor ffie
season , always helps himself
with his bat. In fact, it was his
infield hit which touched off a
seven-run
third
inning
climaxed by Luis Melendez'
grand slam. homer off loser
Jack Billingham.
The heartache one experiences when he comes within
one pitch of a no-hitter is
nothing new for Wise. He had
another one-hitter against the
los Angeles Dodgers in 1968.
''Hammers For Hands"
"The only hit of the game
was a two-hopper Jell Torborg
hit.'' recaUed Wise. "The ball
bounced off Roberto Pena's
glove and the scorer ruled it a
hit."
Wise thought it should have
been an error. So did a lot ol

other witnesses of the pl;&gt;y, he
said .
-Reds' pitching coach Larry
Shepard wasn't there when
Torborg 's bollllCer was ruled a
hit. "But l know Pena," said
Sl•epard, "and he has ham·

Results

By Uni ed Prtss Intern• tiona I
NatiOno~t Lea_gue

010 000 100-- 2 6 0 {2nd).
Mon treal
300 000 OOx- 3 • 1 St. louis
007 000 001- 8 11 0
Grei f, ROf"''\o (7J a nd Ke nda ll ; Ci ncinnati 000 000 ooo- 0 t I
Moore. Marshall (11 a nd
Wise (8-J) a nd Si mmons ;

McCa rver gathered in on the
short hop in the fifth inning was
the closest the Reds came to Boccabella . WP- Moore ("-5).
LP- Grelf (.4-8 ) . HR s- Jorgens·
spoiling Wise's no-hit bid.
en {5th) , Kendall (3rd l.
After the seventh inning,
000-- 3 10 1
Wise went stricUy with fast- Plttsbgh
A1Janta
200 616 OOx- 18 17 0
balls.
Elli s , Hernandez {4), Blass
rners for hands."
" Rick didn 't want to come in (5), JohnsOI'I {6) and May ;
Reds Manager Sparky An- here and shoot himself if Reed (4-7) andO&amp;tes, Casanov a
(7) . LP- EIIi s 15-71. HRs derson knows Pena too .
someone got a nubber or a flare Hebner (6t h), Evans (1 4t hJ .
"His range," qulpped Ander- hit orr a ehangeup or a slow
00000001()- l 6 2
son, " is two feet ... one right curve," ~d Simmons. "He Chi cano
HoustOn
002 111 0\ x- 6 122
and the other ]eft."
wanted to challenge them with
Pappas, Hooton (6), Aker 181
" Rick normally has an his best pitch."
and Rudolph ; Wil son. Ray (8 )
and Jutte. WP- Wilson (S-6) .
abovellverage fastball, " said
P
13 Sl HR C d no
- Pappas · ·
- e e
Cardinal catcher Ted Sim·
Simmons helped out by ILlOth
).
mons. "Tonight, he was ex· rapping four hits, giving him 8Fran
000 000 001- I 9 0
ceptionally last and he was for-15 in the three-game set. San
N.Y.
2000000 1x- 3 100
hitting the corners conBradley, Morrif, (8) and
The victory was the Cards'
Rader
; Seaver ( 8-.4 ) and
sistently."
fifth in six games this season
Hodges. LP- Bradley 15·41. HR
Slrlctly FastbaUs
with the Reds; who play their - Millan ( 1st ).
Until Morgan's single, a Indianapolis farm club tonight
000 200 001 - 3 52
smash by Dan Driessen which before opening a four.game Los Ang
Phil a
660 013 OOx-1 6 12 1
Cardinal first baseman Tim series with Pittsburgh Friday.

OiiOJOo

the

ninth

t~at

drove

in

had singles.
winning .-un against Anderson,
For the winners, Davenport
the third Rutli&gt;nd pitcher, who started, fanned two, walked
was ~ba rge~ with the loss. two, and May fanned nine and
May, who pitched from the walked I.
fourth inning, got credit lor the Rutland
000 002 000-2 3
win.
000 101 001- 3 4
Midd. Am.
Rutland hitters were AnWilliamson, Tillis (7), Andersm. a triple and the twins, derson (9), (LP), and Dugan.
. Randy and Rick George, who Davenport, May (4), and May,
SCIOTO RESULTS
both singled. For Middleport Davenport (4).
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Mary Mick
Davenport,
Steve
Pat Hill won the featured Bachner and Ken Thomas also
eighth race, a $1,500 pace, by
7:Y• lengths Wednesday night at
Scioto Downs. Reportrix was
WASHINGTON ( UP!)- The
second and Principal third.
Capital Bullets' new general
Time ol the mile was 2:04.
manager 1 Bob Ferry, thinks
Mary Pat Hill returned $8,
team's coaching vacancy
the
$4.20 and $2.60.
will be filled "as soon as
Lusty lsotta won the first
possible."
race and Adio Jim took the
Ferry, a former National
second, a 7-2 combination
Basketball
Association player
worth $16.60 in the nighUy
The Pomeroy B pony associated with the Bullet
double.
baseball
team, largely 13-year- franchise lor the last nine
Attendance was 5,452 and the
olders just out of little league, years, said after his appointhandle was $256,742.
to the surprise of about ment as gene ral manager
everybody is out on top of the Wednesday, " I assume a
Meigs County Pony League decision has been made" on a
replacement for the recently
with a 3-0 record.
T!)e team is trailed by the departed Gene Shue.
ve~ran Pomeroy Phillies who
Bullet owner Abe Pullin said
also are undefeated , but who Ferry ~&lt; will coordinate with the
have pwyed only two games. head coach on all personnel
Tomorrow evening there will matters, trades, scouting and
.,
be a mornent .of decision ·a s the the draft or' players."
CINCINNATI
(U PI) two undefeateds tangle .
The selection of Ferry as
"Hope and Pray"
are righthanders Gary Nolan
Cincinnati Reds Manager
Wednesday evening in a general manager came after a
We're too good a team to play and Roger Nelson .
Sparky Anderson isn't ready to this way," Anderson lnsisted.
make-up
game the B club successful stint as the club's
Nolan has spent the season so
push the panic button yet, but
"We'll come out ol It, and I far in florida attempting to · defeated Middleport A 15-10, chief scout. Amon~ those
he hopes something happens to hope and pray that it'll be soon. overcome a shoulder problem.
putting the game out of reach recruited for action in a Bullet
the defending National ~ague
in the fourth inni ng with. rive .unifortn ~y Ferry were center
'
In an effort to bolster the
Nelson was put on the 21-&lt;lay
champions pretty soon. ·
runs
lor a 13-3 lead. In that Wes Unseld, and forWard Phil
· sagging mound corps, the Reds disabled list Wednesday bethe Reds dropped into fourth traded rookie Gene Locklear cause ol a sore right elbow.
inning, Pomeroy B pitcher Chenier.
place .in the National League and a minor leaguer to San
Greg Smith hit a grand slam
Up until his appoinbment
"What can I say about Nolan
West and right now things Diego for lefthanded Fred Nor- and Nelson," Sparky asked in
homer.
Wednesday, Ferry headed a
aren't too promising for a re. man, who is currently sporting answer to a question.
Brian Hamilton had four list · of prospective Bullet
covery.
singles
in the game. Other . coaches .. But he indicated he
an unimpreSsive 1·7 record.
"They tell me Nolan is
" I'm not panicking/' AnderPomeroy hitters wer:e Smith, was not Interested. "I have no
What else can Anderson do to throwing batting practice in
son said. "What good would it tum things around for the Fiorida, but I have no immedi- who had a triple besides his .. coaching aspirations at all. I
do to panic? You might say Reds?
ate hopes of getting him back," homer, and Snyder, Ken Hood, wanted to stay with the
right now I'm just waiting. I'm
Carl Carmichael Rick Johnson organization. They know what
"Well, there really isn't too he said.
in limbo."
much you can do/' he said,
'' I just don't know about and Dale Brow~ing, each a I'm best suited for," he said.
The key issue seems to be the "except to wait lor a slump of Roger," he co"ntinued. "He single.
Personnel problems have
Reds' pitching - or the lack of this type to run its course.
·
For
Middleport,
Joh~
Pat
been
blamed for the Bulleis'
· tells me he has severe pain in
it.
1
' Sure, we•v·e added Norman. his right hand and elbow. But I Riley singled, Mike Magnotta poor showmg m recent playoff
[n the last seven gaines, five ". to our roster, but he's just one
think he'll be OK. He has to be, doubled and singled twice , encounters . One of Shue's
of which the Reds lost, the man," he sald. "The other and so does Gary, because we Dave Miller, Mark Haggerty, frustrations th~t reportedly!~
Cincinnati pitching staff has pitchers are going to have to need them both badly." .
Tim Ebersbach and Johnson to his res1gnat10n , was Pollm s
given Up no fewer than 55 runs. turn themselves around and
Sparky plans no changes in had a sjngle each; Greg interference in salary negotiaThat includes 6-5 and 9-71oss- start getting men out. It's that the lineup, since his big guns Walburn a double, and
es to Chicago and 12-4, 11-5 and simple."
have finally found the range Ebersbach a homer with his
8-0 trouncings at the hands of
Needs Pitchers
and have produced 35 runs in single.
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Regatta Week Specia ts
Smith, pitching the distance
The two big question marks the last seven games.
Thurs .- F r i. -Sat.
for Pomeroy 1 fanned nine and
walked 7. Middleport's pitTHI GOYUINMINTOf
chers, Ebersbach, R. Casci and
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
DE~ARTMfNT OF THE TREASURY
Berry fanned six, walked 13.
OFFICE OF REVENUE SHAI'IING
11100 !&gt;ENN5YI..VANIA AVE. N.W.
Pomeroy B 233 520 0-15 11 2
l'lAHS TO lJCPfND 11'8 ~EVI~Ui SH"-IIIHG ALLOCATION
FO~ OlliNTITLEMEHTI'!IIIOO ltGIHHING
210 124 0-10 12 3
Midd A
f
Jlft, 1, 1973 AHOENOING June ,0, 1913
Smith and Hamilton, Mch bol-11\8I IOQ~
!he IWiol-lly ol r.-.u•
IN Tttt FO~LOWING M"-NNUI IAilD U~N AH
..menla QJ 1'1&gt;'1' [llli odii:!!Ofl?
Clure (6). Ebersbach ( LP), R.
EmMATiD TOTMO, $3,821.00
'Main at Sycamore
Casci ( 3), Berry I 5), and
POMEROY,
.;......_,
OHIO
AetoUNT PKI
Miller.
~ AVOID DEal IH CIIUSE
~OIFHCT

Pomeroy B

101 1140 3/ll--10 131

B illi ~ h a m,

leads pony
loop at 3-0

Kan C!fy

Baltimore

-

000 000 020-- 2 6 0

I

11.t

~~~~W~A~SH~ON~O~TO~N~.O~.C~·~20~22~~~~~~~

HR: ~Melendez

llst).

~~~~k

American League

(1nd ).

Boston

Milw

001000040--5 •• ,
14000101x-7102

00200002G- 4120 Qt li f

Minn
020.-010 ooo- 3 8 3
Culp, Morel (21 , Newhauser
Colborn (8-1) and Rodr iguez: {8) and Fisk ; Wri~l . Sells (8) 1
Dec ker. Corbin (8 ) and Mltter -

andTorborg. WP- right (_..J) . •

wald. LP- Corbio {1-2) . HRs- LP- Culp (0-ll . HRs-Pinson
( hi {5th), E" ans (3rdl. Yastnem.
Garc ia {6th), Carew 51 ' ski ( 9th)~

:;r~ig~g~s~l5~t~h)~.. . . . . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~~~. .. ,

Father's Day
Gift Suggestions

FASTER MILE
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
fastest time for the mile and 70
yards during the c11rrent meet
at River Downs was recorded
Wednesday wher. Port 0 Fleet
won the $5,000 Ohio AlloY(ance
in 1:43, paying $14.60, $5 and
$3.20.
Quiet Road was a length and
one-hall back, followed by Sir
Woodley.
A 2-2 daily double pairing of
Late Royal and Ali Scorp paid
$152.60.

D

LESSEN CUT

IHC~t...SE

IN

~..-..

D
0

Wi h RI DIJCIAMOIJN'T Of Mil
tN'CRU.II 014 IMJOI't t AX.
NO

lf~ICT ON TIUI LfV~LI

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TytP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
R. R. 1

ROMEO
SLIPPERS

.·
•,

and Other
Slippers

tions with the players.
Ferry said he will handle all
salary negotiating, · and promised to re--examine the status
of highly paid guard Archie
Clark. Before his resignation,
Shue indicated tha t Clark
would not be with the Bullets
next year , but Ferry would say
only that "the situation will be
looked over very closely."
Ferry said he will concentrate with the coach on
developing players adaptable
to th e coach's winning
philosophy. "Then I'll try to get
his kind or players."

'

High ·c ourt
reverses

decision

m;;;;:::,::, ,r;,,~,, ,B;i~;l;i

GIVE DAD A GIFI'
CERTIFICATE FROM ••• •

101
Our Shoes are Stifi ·Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

•.

'.'

•,'.·
'·

'
,.'

•

t•

No Frost re frigerators use more eleclrlc-

lly than any . other appliance In the
home, but the new Philob Side-by-Side

aavet electricity. Every day you use 11.

So economical It runs leu
than hall the lime,

Whil~ competitive makes usa electricity
~Onlmuai!Y 1 the new Philco, refrigerator
•s so eiiiCient, that it uses electricity

less. ,than hall
layer ~arrier

I

of

..

the time. Cold Guard

I'OUOWI ~G MAN NE ~

L (SS(~

HH~I

le. e ll D! "'' " JVIild0crionl t hKII H "'11"'1 H lOIIi';

0

against cold toss. Save•

WI LL ~IOVC:I 4MOIJNT D, ""TI
PNCI!i.IIIID,A MAJOII T411.

LEBANON. TOWNSHIP
TWP . CLERIC
MEIGS COUNTY
POR'rLAND, OHIO •sno

Mrs. Dennis Fraley, all of

Carpenter, afld a

'"

keeps •ts cold longer in the event of
powe.r failure - t han any competitive
. make tested. And

that !!laves foodl

See all these saving faatureo.

Hugelrtezlr section holdl ·
230 lbt. of frozen tooct.
• No Frost system eliminates defrosting

.-ONLY 30"WIDE-.

• 5 futl-widt_h glass shelves, plull

-

riTIIN THE (~OOIISI'ACE DF YOIJR OW IIEHIIGEI'I A.TOR

"

...

storage tr1vet
• Optional Automat ic Ice Maker

P ~ ll co s;,:l• · by·S•&lt;.!e

Re lrigeralo• Coal SI'VIngt

s.,.lng! ...
A ~ I)&lt;O • .
~~ ~i~o·Fm ~
So•ln~ "' · MI/Or
C om~t• l c r~. "vt~ • •ae 'Cu.Ft
P• rtent
A,.;,&lt;t g~
L·• lmt s .. lng•
Copt clly
s........ Comp.'iiiOII.
Lllehme St • lng1
1410

"
"
"

"'
'"

~

Teblt baud on lUis In tended 10 !lm ul tle heme us

...'"
~-

""
~·
"'

'"

Weather

• 4 deep storage shelves In freezer door
Big CIPI'cltJ r.frfgen.tor hill 3

full-width ldjustlble cantltner lheiYH
• Adjustable cold canlreils in both

refrigerator and free.ter sections
• New Quick Cold control for faster
cooldown
• 4 deep storage shelves, Stay-Open
buller keeper
' Phllco Mod$1 FIT17811

William F .

'1,00 Off With This Coupon

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

"
"
"

COLD GUARD. One Idea Beller from PHILCO-FORD

.

·-··- tlrxm~un~:lf:!~~r~:!~:L~,kFHA~
-

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

"

'""""'-·
'

Mostly •unny and . mUd
today, high from mid 70. to low
80s. Partly cloudy tonight with
chance or showers late tonight
southwest portion. low from
mid liOIJ to low 60.. Friday,
vortable eloudlneu and chance
of sliowers or thundershowers, ·
high in the 80s.

NOW YOU KNOW
The only
jointwere
sovereigns
in
British
history
Mary II
and her husband, William of
Orange, who were crowned in

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

great.

grandmother, Mrs . Sylvia
Hutton, Charleston, W. Va .
Services will be held at l
p.m. Friday at the Hughes
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Earl Nichols officiating, Burial
will be in Temple Cemeterj
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 tonight.

Tests p_rove that a Ph itco Side-by-Side

Red , white, navy, blue, yellow, lilac.

.. --...

...----------------,
Adfttlral

o.

Keeps Its cool, too.

EX~EN OITURU

"'
••
,,.

....:'tr·:.
•·...
. ..

by mower

ope ratmg costs, saves money.

"
""

1

Lad killed

bottom , back, Bides, doon1- a multi~

sa''""'

.·.!1:0~~

GROCERY - PRODUCE

des•on makes !he entire cablnet...:...top

Ctpt cll)'

:·:_., ,

Adn.lrol

YOU SAVE EVERYDAY
YOU OWN A PHILCOl

__ __

7-14 by Shirt Talk.

. · ~'!./',

TIME
CLERK POSITIONS

,_._N'NED

"'

-n;e...-.,--...

...

''

"''i"'

•'•

.... ..
.......

..'.

"-l(:tnl

heritage house

,..."-·....

'.

"£::'0~.
.Ft.

..

..
... . . .

'

or "

refrigeratorand save$410 inthe

Pn l l~o- Fo•~

• Connie

'MI:.f.J.t,.~J!rJHJ.. .,

Howtob~a

*COMPARE AND SAVE

• Converse

Edith Oark of Athens is dead

KEDS-HUSH PUPPIES-PEDWIN
AND OTHER BRAND NAMES

off

Blouses

areas of mental health, corrections and 1environmenta)
protection.
The governor. twice meeting
privately with Senate Democrats since TUesday night, was
reported incensed over Ute cut5
and prepared to cajl for a firm
stand on the noor even if
negotiations are pushed
beyond June 30 and an interim
budget is needed to start the
new fiscal period.
''Ruin " Programs
Senate Democratic leaders
privately shook their heads and
said an interim budget could be
avoided by going along with
package and getting a quick
conference corru:nittee into ac-

10 per cent income tax credit
for aU persons filin g joint returns.
" ThtS budget will not control
• PJ. Ayers
or t'urtail our programs, it will
ruin th e m ," sa id Willia m
Chavanne, the governor's legi slative aide who was hard at
work trying to win over Democratic senators Wednesday.
ears.
EMPLOYMENT POINT -Jobs for Veterans ( JFV ) special aaslatant WIUJam Ayres (left)
He was joined by a corps of
Several
Senate
Democrats
points out during a recent Capitol Hill Veterans Conference tbat hiring Vietnam-era veterans is
cabinet-level officials and their
indicated Wednesday they plan
a good bosiness investment. In full agreement Is Rep. Clarence Miller (right), who joined his
aides, who button-holed senato
support
the
latest
version
or
former House of Representatives colleague for an assessment of the current veteran emtors near the Senate floor while
Sandals by:
the $9.9 billion budget for fiscal
plo)'lllent picture, The latest federal labor Sli&gt;tistics show the unemplo)'lllent rate among
debate proceeded on other
1973-75, and get it into a conveterans age 2().29.hu decreased the past eight months. The Department of Labor reports that
matters.
e Poll P ~1r0t
ference comnilttee where
4.1 rnllllon veterans who served In tlie military during the period 1964-1972 are presently em·
Dr. Ira L. Whitman, director
differences between the Senate
ployed. Rep, Miller commented that the figures "show an encouraging trend, but the comof the Environmental Protecand House can be worked out.
mibment to belp these men help themselves must remain strong."
tion Agency which was cut by
The Senate Finance Commit$16 million, sent each senator a
tee was to start moving the tion.
packet of material explaining
giant appropriations bill
Of the $110 million in cuts, what would happen to his agentoward a floor vote, possibly the Republicans sent $81.2 mil- cy if the cuts were performed.
Mrs . ·Vista Frank, 95, sister, Mrs. Lenora Hoskins,
~ Friday, with a 9: 30 a.m. lion Into favorite projects of
He said half the 550 employes
Pomeroy Route 3, died Palatka, Fla., and several
meeting today.
their own. They combined the' would have to be dismissed.
Thursday morning at Veterans nieces and nephews.
Gilligan caleda 10 a.m. news other $28.8 million with $49.4
Whitman spent all afternoon
Memorial Hospital.
conference, apparently to re- million in anticipated excess outside the Senate rail, collarFuneral services will be held
Mrs. Frank was preceded In at l p. m . Saturday at the
peat his displeasure at the revenues for use in granting a ing Republican leade1·s and Fideath by her parents, William Ewing Funeral Home with the
GOP's proposed cuts in the
nance Committee members.
B. and Ida Roush; her Rev. Freeland Norris ofTaking Firm Stand
husban&lt;\, James B. Frank, In ficiating. Burial wlll be In the
A · verdict by the Meigs
Gilligan
had
been
1941; a sister and two brothers. Sutton Methodist Church County Common Pleas Court
represented as late as Monday
"
She was a member of the Cemetery. Friends maY call at and the District Court of Apas seeking to avoid an interim
"Your
Store .
Carroel Church.
••
the funeral home at 7 this peals in a fatal auto accident in
budget, even if it meant giving
Surviving are a son, RalphS. evening.
225
N.
2nd
Ave
.
Midciieport,
Ohio
Meigs County four years ago
ln on some points lo secure
By United Press International
Frank, Pomeroy Route 3; a
bas been reversed by the Ohio
quick
Senate passage.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON begins sununlt
Supreme Court.
"
talks with Soviet Party Leader Leonid l. Brezhn:ev which he
The Meigs County Conunon
predicts wiil r~sult ln "major new progress" on disarmament
Pleas Court ruled In favor ol
and world peace. Nixon was expected to discuss arrangements
Russell Bailey, administrator
lor the sununit today with foreign affairs adviser Henry A.
ol Barbara Jean Bailey, who
Mrs. Edith Mary Jane Clark, brothers, Clinton Hudnall and was killed in an auto accident Kissinger, who successfully concluded an agreement with North
57, Athens, former Meigs Clarence Hudnall, both of May 26, 1969. The late Miss Vietnam Wednesday in Paris for strict enforcement of the
County resident, died Wed- Springfield; 29 grandehildren, Baiiey and Patti Sexson, Vietnam cease-fire.
, ,.
Brezhnev officially will begin his visit Monday with a red
. nesday at the O'Bleness end one grea~andchild .
members ol the graduating
' · ' 11
.' :'. .~
r
1
0 ·1 i~{·.~-- ,'(, ,·
Hospital there following an
Funeral services will be held cwss ol Eastern High School carpet welcome on the south lawn of the White House alter an
/
L~
=i:ffl·
:
f.·N:·
·t-::rtf:.·
.
·:...-:~·
:::::·=· !· ~ ....
illness of several months.
at 3 p.m. Friday at the Hughes that spring, were enroute to a overnight stay at Camp David, the presidential retreat in nearby
·~~··
. ........
.'1.')
• • •' ••
,.. ...~.
. •;.·
• ·• · ··• • -:; • •·••••·••••• •~ ·.·.·:.·
•• •
•.• '!)-!'
' ,... .. ..... ••
• ' . ....'.:!.l!/,'1!('
Preceded in death by her Funeral Home in Athens where post graduation party in an Maryland. Nixon turned to foreign affairs alter announcing a
; ;·,,:; :
.:::.;,?: ,
husband, Herbert, Mrs. Clark friends mey call. Burial will be auto driven by Harry G. move Wednesday night to place a new 61klay fr eeze on all
e-:.:.~
is survived by four daughters, In Wells Cemetery at Brown, 16, at the time or the wholesale and reli&gt;ll prices to combat inflation . In a televised
:~'ifw:
.~.,..
to
the
nation,
he
digressed
a
bit
to
forecast
a
successful
address
Mrs. ~stet Henderson and Pagetown.
accident. The . Brown vehicle meeting with Brezhnev because of extensive preparatory work
:;:..- -,-:.~
Mrs. Tom Sayre, Debary, Fla.;
collided ·with an oncoming car already done.
•
·.·· __
Mrs. Kenneth Sickles and Mrs.
VeteraD8 Memorial H,.pltal
while making a left turn and
...r.·.-. ~· _ . .
Paul Sickles, both or Athens;
Discharges- DareD Jenko, Miss Bailey's death resulted
··;.:;.:..--~ .
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE passed legislation
... .....
four sons, Harry, Pomeroy; Lilly Dyke, Samuel Eblin, and Miss Sexson was ·injured.
~~·
Harold of Naples, Fla.; Mary . Jones, ~onard Lyons, The Meigs County Common Wednesday requiring door-to-&lt;loor salesmen to tell their
~·=·=
""-;r-:
·'i- :.
customers both in writing ·and orally of the thrce-&lt;lay "cooling
Howard of Newark, and Homer Connie Knapp, JeSsie White, Pleas Court returned a $10,000
.......
'
•
..
...... , '-"··
In cooperation with the Regatta Parade
of Colwnbus; a sister, · Mrs. Mary Wallace and Alice : verdict in favor of Russell off" period in state consumer protection law.
-, . :.~~. . ....
The legislation, which now goes to the Senate, is an effort to
Ray Haning of Pomeroy; two Spencer.
Bailey and this decision was tighten up the consumer law which took effect the first of this
Committee and. in the interest of safety we
"•
upheld by the District Court o! year. Under the law, consumers who purchase goods or ~:~ervices
Appeals.
·
in their homes can cancel the sale within. three business days and
However, the law linn ol get their money refunded . The law does not apply to insurance or
wi 11 not transact business Friday evening_,
Walker, Mollica and Gall, real estate ·sales.
Athens, has informed Mr. and
June 15th at our Auto Teller Window.
. Mrs. Brown that the Ohio
WASHINGTON - FEARFUL THAT A long-time oil com·
Supreme Court reversed the pany lawyer might turn his back on the consumer , the Senate
decision and entered final refused Wednesday to conllrm the nomination of Robert H.
judgment . in favor of the Morris to the Federal Power Commission ( FPC).
Browns~
It was the first time that the Senate. has rejected an apDue to the decision , theflrm pointment by President Nixon to a regulatory agency. 'I11e
also has indicated that a Senate voted, 49-44, to return the nomination to the Conunerce
companion case, Sexson versus Committee, and even Morris 1 staunchest backers conceded it
bas been dismissed as killed the San Francisco lawyer's cha nces of becoming a
FOR OUR NEW STORE IN POMEROY aBrown,
result of the Supreme Cowt member of the FPC.
· Applicants should be neat in appearance,
decision.
friendly personality and have ability tn basic ·
SUPPORT ASKED
·
. mathematics.
Me.i~s County residenl'll are
Pleasant Valley Hospital
being asked to s upport a
Discharges
:
Mrs.
Bruce
STARTING RATE: $1.85 Per Hour
bloodmobile which will be at
Smith, New Haven; Harroon
Approximately: lSto 30 Hours Per
MIDDLEPORT, OfliO
the Pomeroy ElementarY
Casto, Lisa Casto, Point
Week
Pleasant; Elza Conley, Point
Rusty Ray Fraley, 5, Cur- School from I to .6 p.m. Mon-Member Federal Deposit Insurance COrporation
Pleasanti Bryant Harmon, . penter, PonierOy Route 4, was day ~Walk-in donors ~ill be
APPLY: Oiuo Bureau of Employment Service
Gallipolis; Olga Roush, Letart; killed Tuesday afternoon in a welCome at the un it.
443 2nd Ave., Gallipolis,
Franklin Thomas, Leoni lawn mower' accident which
Lawrence Harper, Tuppers occurred near Belpre where
Employer
An
Plains, 0 ., and Carl McDade, the child was visiting.
Rusty was taken to the
Point Pleasant.
Camden-Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg by the Belpre E·R
squad but was dead upon
THI OOVIfiiNMINT 0'
arrival. It was reported that
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
the child had been struck by
~ l .NS 1'0 lK,ENO tTS "lV(NtJE SHAIII~G ALLOCAfiON
FQII: TH( ENTITLEMENT '!~1 00 llGI~NI~G
the mower.
JAN . I, 1973AHO ENDIN'(i JUNE 30, 1973
Surviving are · his parents,
IN 11-!l
I,AStD \.II"'tt AN
Clifton and Carolyn Greenlees
ESTIMA TtO TOULOf $1 ,1S3
Fraley; a brothr, Roger, at
home; grandparents, Mr. and
• CCOtJNT NO
NO lHECT
36 3 OSJ '004
Mrs.
Clifton Fraley, Sr., and
TOO SOON H )
OEBII NCR [ .. Sf.
P'II!OIC'I
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees;
t•-X£5 1~ ;h~~ -~,--;-_;:; 'ioii,_.:, .,
:c;.:·~:="~
:::-:,C:,C:,::,_::,..:;o;,;. :,~
great-grandparents,
Mr. and
.. .,1111&gt;~•1 ' o1 ~ • .,.....,. Sh01 i n~ ~•&lt;II will ti'Pic:• 11\e Ill

11 ~~

GOLF
SHOES

JACK GETS TROPHY
OAKMONT, Pa. (UP! )
Jack Nicklaus was presented
with a $10,000 crystal sculpture
trophy Wednesday as the 1972
Dunlop Athlete ol the Year.
The award was the first by ~
the Dunlop Tire and Rubber
Corp. ·
NicklaUs was horlored officially at a banquet in Buffalo,
N.Y., last January.

Girls Sleeveless
Penna-Press

REGATTA

-

·1I COUPON SPECIAL II

RACINE, OHIO 45771

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan today planned
to make a last-minute appeal
for resisli&gt;nC. to Senate Republicans' troposal to chop
$110 million from his Housepassed budget and divert it
toward tax relief and programs
of their own.
The appeal may fall on deaf

Vista Frank dies Thursday

SANDALS-TENNIS SHOES

·---------------,

lOON TO
l.-J TOO
MU:IICT EfFECT

BE NICE TO YOUR FEET
'DURING THE BIG BEND

GOP budget act

~~ ~ ::--- ~ 1: ~

70
Tex a $
100 000 l Ol- 4
Peterson, lyle (8) an""
1
1
Cle'&lt;'eland 000 010 oo- 1 6 d0 Munson ; Holtzman. Pil'la {S)v,
Broberg Stanhouse 17 an
(
Fl
)
Suare z : Perr y (6-8) and Ell is . Li ndblad .5 1.
ngen 16 and
WP- Broberg (3-Sl . HR ~- Bell Fosse. WP- Pelerson (6-6) . LP
c2ndL Spencer (Jrdl. Harr ah - Holtzman (11 ._.). ·

lOLA'S

0

ao

000 000 ooo-- o

Sol-bon (91 and
Or ago !6-5) and Heoiy ;
...
h
(8 31 McNally, Jacksoo (II and
Bench. LP- Billing am
- · Wil liams . LP- McNallr (S-8).

.-- -·SALE!
1
All Sportswear
and Swim Suits

I

Gilligan to ·resist

HRs- Jeter (7ndl, !Niy t7th) ,
Melton ( 11th!. Reichardt tlrd l.

Bullets name Ferry GM

Not ready to push panic
button yet, Sparky says

I

~~· or Leo~gue

Chi&lt;090
Oetr~t

001000001- 2 9,
Brett (S-2) and Boone. lPBahnsen ( 7-SJ and Herrm&lt;~nn ;
John (S-3) . HRs- AndN"son Lot lch. LaGrow ISL Schetrnan
(3rdJ. Brett ( 2nd ), Russell ( 8) and Slm1. lP- loUch (6-6) ,

San Diego

Americans in 3-2 pony win
The Middleport Americans
inade their pony record 2-1
Wednesday in a make-up game
with a ligbt 3-2 victory in nine
innings over Rutland which is
now 0-3.
It was big red-haired Mike
May's double in the bottom of

Joho Hough (7), Culver ( 6 )
and· Y~ager. ca.nni uaro (" ;

Lint"SCOreS

I

had to be made for the
1689. A duplicate set of regalia
coronation.

Admiral is building llmlt.e d quantities o! nel'( 1973 retrigerat~rs
to sell at surprisingly low prices. When they re gone ... they re
gone. So don 't miss out on th ese extra-special values - hurry
In now!

Admiral

NO-DEFROSTING DUAL-TEMP®
REFRIGERATOR/ FREEZER
Kiss the "Oetroot Bluto" goodbyol And
ny hello to 1 grtat Admiral value. Deluxe ftaturea lncludl Euy Cubl lc~
bucket wlth automatic " twlat-eject
trays. two glide-out crispers, dllp-pro·

NO 2038
hel')'thlng yay always wanted In a
freezer/ refrlg•rator - but were
afraid you couldn't offord. Ofant
capacity, no t:lefrosfln·g - yoy name
It oJMl thlt Admintl olimllno beauty
hat It, At eur 1peclal "ltlc• 'n
Purcha .. '' prl~•, Jt't lh• huy =~ ·~­
yecirl

lilt door shotves. 14.6 c u. ll capacity.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE EXCELLENT
PRICES DURING OUR ADMIRAL SPECIALS

R
E
BAKE·R F.URN1.1U
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~~=====~=~~::::_~--~=============~::::::J

..

f

'

..

...

�•
8 - 1be Daily Stnlinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Juoe 14, 1973

,

r~~S~cr;r'''J Picnic given

Seven Meigs countians to
·participate in Girls State
Stven Meigs Coun ty girls population of ea ch city wiUt a
will be among the 1,250 who city government advisor and a
will converge on Ute ca mpus of counselor, It is he re Utat Ute
Capital University, Columbus, governmentfunctioning begins
Saturday when the 27th Annual and is carried out to each
Session of Buckeye Girls' State citizen's pa rti cipati on in
county a nd s tate government
officially opens. '
The Amer ica n Legion activities which are guided by
A-uxiliary
s ponsors
th e numerous staff me mber s.
The staff members are well .
mythical state which began in
the late forties wi t!l 304 ci tizens qualified an d h igh cal iber
and has now grown to the 1,250 wome n, some hig hly trained in
ex~ted this yea r.
their fi elds, some civic leaders
Glrls from all parts or Ohio - in the ir cOmm uniti es and
participate in the seven-day others ac tive in government ,
''gove rrunent • in • a ction"
holding elective or appointive
workshop. Going from here offi ces on local, county and
will be Barbara Jean Anthony 1 sta te levels.
Middleport 1 Donna Mar ie
Mrs. Louise Stewa rt, Athens,
Bo,d, Middle port , .Ingri d • a member of the Racine
Darlene Ha wley , Pomer oy , Ame r ica n Leg ion Auxiliary
Meigs High School students ; 602, is on the staff of Buckeye
Tonya Elaine Keebaugh and Gir ls ' State.
Nancy J ean · Miller Rt. 3,
The hub of activiti es through
Pomeroy, and Jane Danell the week includes Ute Campus
Whifehead , Reedsv.ille , Center Dining Room, where
Eastern High School students ; 1,400 Girls ' Stater.s and staff
and Roma Lynn Nea se, a re fed in an hour three times a
Minersville, Southern Lora I d ay; the workshop, where
High School student.
innovative campaign and city
Each of the girls has just signs are qJade; the Pos t Office
completed her junior year in in Campus Center ; the Girls'
high school and is being State Bank, in which the girls
sponsored by local American may deposit and withdraw
Legion Auxiliary units or by their money ; and, of course,
other
jnterested groups the many meeting rooms in
working through an Auxiliary which the actual governmenlal
unit.
func tioning takes place.
The aim of Buckeye Girls'
There are programs emState is · ~ to inculcate a.sense of phasizing the various phEjses of
· indiv idual responsibility to government beginning imcommuniy, state and nation." mediately upon arrival of the
With this objective ea ch girl girls:
is assigned a party 1 either a
~ Sa turday afternoon, an
Nationalist or Federalist, to orie ntation and di scussion of
one of the 25 cities which are political party organization
named for famous Ohio.born will · be offered , and that
women, and one of the five evening the formal opening
counties which are named for will feature Lt. Governor John
Past Department presidents of W. Brown as the keynote
· the Ohio American Legion speaker.
Auxiliary. Approximately fifty
- On Sunday, the citizens
girls will make up th e will determine their party's

•

,,

XL2
MAKES CUITING
.'WICE ·AS-EASY

candida tes al the city, county
and s tale caucuses. Sunday
evening, city elections will be
he ld . To highlight city
gove rnment, on Monday
eve nin g, Miss Olive H. Huston,
former mayor of Xenia , will be
the guest speaker.
- The primary election will
take place on Tuesday mor·
ning, wiUt the general election
be ing held that afternoon.
Results will be announced later
in the day, and on Wednesday
all phases of government swing
into a c tion.
- The inaugural banquet
and inauguration _ceremonies,
a lways a lovely, formal affair,
will feature many highlights.
The Honorable C. William
O'Neill, Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court, will give the
oath of office to Ute elected
state officials. The Honorable
John J . ' Gilligan, Governor,
State of Ohio, will deliver the
main address of the evening.
Also present for remarks will
be dignitaries of Ute Ohio
American Legion Auxiliary,
The American Legion and the
, ,
F orty and Eight.
- Thursday, a bus tour will
•nclude points of interest in
Columbus and a visit to the
S tate . Cap1' t o1 w here G'1r 1s , ·
State officials will meet with
their · counterparts. That
evening, following a picnic at
Bernlohr Field, Miss Nodine
Cook, Ombudsman, City of
Columbus, will discuss Ute
educated woman arid her roles.
Friday
mornin g,
Honorable Alba L. Whi teside ,

I

2

:lose o(

mee tin~ .

LAURE L CLIFF Be tter
HealUtClub, 7: 30p.m
at the .
home 11 Mrs. Ernes t Powell.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m . at the grange hall. InspecUon to be held..
MEIGS County Humane
Society, 7:30 p.m . at Middlepor t village hall.
FRIDAY
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Social, 11 a . m. -7 p. m . Friday
and Saturday, at air conditi oned fellowship hall , St.
Paul
Lutheran
Churc h,
P omeroy. Homemade ice
cream , desserts and lunches.
Phone in orders anytime at
2010.

X! GAMMA Mu, concession
starid, on lot between Pomeroy
Motor and Meigs Theater. All
three days of R egatta
weekend .
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM
Social, 11 a. m.-7 p.m. at air
conditioned fellowship hall, St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy . Homemade ice
cream, desserts and lunches.
RE~ATTA

Spo nsored
by
Rutland
American Legion Post 467.

Jenkins , Judge, Franklin
County Municipal Court, will
present a program on the Ohio
MON.DAY
court system. The sta tus of
MIDDLEPORT Garden
women in government will be · Club, home of Mrs. Sibley
the topic of discussion Friday Slack, 7:30p.m . Amateur a nd
evening when Miss Martha .Cheshire Garden Cl ub memWheeler, superintendent, Ohio bers invited.
'Reformato ry for , Women,
BEND 0' the River Garden
Honorable E thel G. Swanbeck, Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of
representative and Honorable . Mrs. E rnest Wingett .
Gertrude W. Donahey, Ohio
State Treasurer, will appear on
the program .
. .
Fred J · . Mllhgan ,

f~l'~n °~o!'!it~~o

aw .

MeJgS
• , ·.

win; ,

Ute Ohio Cons titution
on Saturday mornmg . . The
climax of the en lire week 18 the
last Saturday evening, . when

·-''';

,

Dr. Nicholas Nyaradl, di: rector • . , Institute
of
· InternatiOnal Stud1es Bradfor·
ley University and

TranS£e~"'
...
1' 1 ""

Grant us brotherhood , not
onl y fo r thi s day but for a ll
our years - a brotherhood not
o f word s but of act s and
de eds. - Stephen Vince nt
Benet, American poet.

Miss Milisa Rizer has been
invited to serve as advisor to
the governor during the 27Ut
annual session of the Ohio
American Legion Auxiliary's
Buckeye Girls. State.
.
The seven day government
workshop is to he held on the
cam pus of Capital University,
Columbus, beginning Saturday, June 16, through Sunday,
June 24.
Miss Rizer 's appointment
was made by the Girls' State
Board of Directors in its spring
staff of ap-

FATHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 17

Give Him ...

CANOE

I

Miss Rizer , daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin M. Rizer,

738 East Main St., Pomeroy, is
a nursing student at Ohio State
University where she is active
in Angel F light, is on the drill
team, serves as a flight
hostess, and as assistant ad·
ministrative officer. She
belongs to Alpha Lambda
Delta, a freshmen women's
honor society, and Ad Lucem,
her dormitory honorary . She
also participates in Scarlet and
Gray,· a service organization.
In

~e ';-t~•~ted to ttw

::,r;.·~;;;~Jita~~u:a7;;::~~ ~:~~s stet~~~iellJ:f.uc;:~

were formul ated ~ These
women from all over Ute state
will dir~ct and assist the l ,:zsO

Heath

,.

"
', l v,"

1.. ;·· . •

,

•

.I' . .

ff.

'J

aman's after
after
cologne
made, bottled, sealed in France;.. 13 and 15
.

United

."

~

wscs meets with

·

SWISHER.,oLOHSE

Class 12 for potluck

Couil/e han.ored

s.

On annzversary .

Pomeroy Landmark

FOUR.INCH

-.. .--..-.-. -. . _. . .-. .-.._._._.,_. .-.-. -.-. -.-----..-...._.._. _._._.l
.
.I

four gallon, or more, of fine quality

VANGUARD EXT.ERIOR HOUSE PAINTS

a . . ..

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
This is for June Brides Only!!

MASON FURNITURE
773·5592

HERMAN GRATE

BRUSH

· 'FRJ;E .. with each:purchase of

SALE
lor June

MASON, W. VA.

. '* ,.... ""-.

HOUSE PAINT PRIMERS

America would jump to Ut e
National Football League.
People who make a li v~ng
Stillwagon, 24, was rumored
doing what they don't enJOY
to
be heaqed for the Green Bay
wou ldn't even be happy
Packers up until a few days
with a one-day workweek.
- Duke Elfingto n.
ago.

Everything In Hardware

POMEROY

'

•

•

•

RACINE - Progress on the
new kitcben at the firehouse
was noted and fund raising
projects were discussed during
Ute Tuesday night meeting of
the
Racine
Firemen's
Auxiliary,
It was reported during the
meeting conducted by Mae
Cleland, president, Utat the
floor
has
been
completed In the new kitchen with Racine Village
assisting wiUt the cost,
A rummage sale was
planned for Ute first week in
August and residents are being
asked to donate items for the
sale, Items can be left at the

c.

fire house or for pickup
residents may telephone 9493293 or IM9-3471.
Plans were alao made to
make homemade Ice cream for
Ute July 4 celebraUon to be
served wiUt the chicken bar·
e
becue at the Racine flrehouae ,
Donations of canned milk,
instant pudding, sugar, whole
milk, vanilla and lemon .
flavoring, bananas,
strawberries and canned
crushed pineapple are needed. ·
Officers reports were given.
A special meeting was set lor
June 22. Attending were lillie
Cleland, Mrs. Jean Cleland,
Mrs, Gene Lyo!lll, Mrs. Enuna
Lyo!lll, Mrs, Grace Roush, Mrs.
Judy Bird and Harold,

in Columbus honoring Miss /"'
00
Rhonda Lee Ervin, brid&lt;Hllect
of Steve Richard Dailey,
Past Matrons and Past
Miss · BeUt Luc, Miss Ann
Bundy and Miss Ervin's sister, . Patrons
of
Evangeline
Sharon, enterta~ 'J!lth '!. .!J!la~r. Middlepcrt; Order of,
s\rrpr1se shower at the dor- Eastern Stars, were honored at
mltory. Approximately 250hio the regular meeting, with
State University classmates of special recognition give Grace
Ute brid&lt;Hllect attended the French. W011thy Matron Helen
shower,
Milhoan and WorUty Patron
A yellow and blue color Harry Chesher presided and
scheme was carried oui in the welcomed members and
decoratio!lll. Among the guests visitors.
was Miss Beverly Ervin,
Worthy Matron Helen
visiting with 'her sisters, Milhoan recalled Utat Grace
Rhooda and Sharon, at the Townsend French was Initiated
time.
into Ute Order on October 4,
A second shower was given · 1918, and has held these
by Mrs. Terry HiD. Most of the stations, 1919-t92G-1921, Ruth;
guests were members of the 1922, Associate Conductress;
family. Going from here were 1923-24, Conductress; 1925-26,
Mrs. Howard Ervin, Teresa Ruth; 1928 Worthy · Matron;
and Tammy and Mrs. Floyd 1933 Chaplain; 1948-49, Either,
Dailey.
and served the Grand Chapter
of · Ohio as Deputy Grand
Matron in 1935.
She was presented a yellow
carnation corsage from the
worUty matron and a gift from
the chapter of a yellow robe,
PHILLIPS HOST GUESTS
and money tree from members
Mrs. Bob Grimm and and visitors. 1!4rry Chesher
daughter, Amy, Columbus, observed Utat Grace had prospent a week here visiting Mr. temed all staUo!lll a sister
and Mrs. Dayton Phillips and could fill except organist and
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grjmm, was commended for her
Letart Falls. Bob Grimm, a diligent work and Interest In
major in Ute U. S. Army Ute Eastern Star,
Reserves, is attending summer
Evelyn Lewis reported the
camp in Pimnsylvanla, The following members sick : Essie
couple's daughter, Christy, is Russell, Jessie Houdas]lelt and
on a two week trip to Bermuda Edna Ruaell.
with high school classmates
A committee was appointed
and teachers.
to meet w!Ut 1M Masons and
make arrangements for the
annual Masdn and Eastern
Star family picnic and the
ENJOYS VISIT
Father and Son Banquet.
Mrs. Gladys Mowery left
DeMolay Meigs Chapter
Wednesday for her home in installation was announced for
Monrovia, calif., after a thrOI' June 22 wiUt members and
week visit here with friends friends of Evangeline Chapter
, and relatives. She also spent invited.
time in Point Pleasant wiUt her
Visitors
were
Mabel
son, Milford Mowery, and his Goegleln and Mable Moore,
family . She was the guest of Pomeroy, and Mary Hughes,
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight Cheshire Chapter. Refresh· ·
and Forty, for a dinner at the ments were served by KaUty
Holiday Inn.
King and Jelsle and Harry
Chesher.

;

lo the 52 children enrolled In
the Laurel CUff Free Methodist
Church clally vac:aUon Bible
Khool at the cloelng program
Sunday night,
Sharon Folmer WN 110118
leader for the program
directed by Mrl Wanda Eblin.
Kathy Pullins was at the plaDo
and 1M Rev. Robert Buckley
had the ~erlpture and prayer.
1be llUI'Itry c!uo Wtder 1M
direction of Betty Lane,
teacher, and Sherr! Clark,
aalat.ilt, sang "Jesus Loves
Me," uSing the Qoucil Away,"
"God Gam" and ' 'God C.. Do
Anyihln&amp; But Fall."
Bible v . - were recited by
the primary department
laUIIht by Mrl. Iva Powell and
Martha Michael, and the
mlddler boys claa sang a ...,g
and told of their Ieaon work,
AKEGUESI'S
Mrs.· Irene Kline was teacher
Mrs. D'ary Davis, Jr. and
of that cluo,
daughter,
Toledo, are In
An Imaginary T.V. ihow wao
p.--nted by 1M teenage boys Middleport to visit Mrs, Crary
class taught by Cbaries Diehl Davis, Sr.

Jlti1iii'

'

CARPET-LAND, INC.

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialist&amp;
116 W. MAIN .

POMEROY

Free

Estimates PH. 992-7590
Open Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5.
Friday Ni&amp;ht 8:00
Budget Terms or BlniiAinericlnl

r•

birthdays rt their dall8~.
Mary Ellen and their son-Inlaw, Larry Collins,
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Collins and family, Mary
Ellen and Marcia Grinun,
Pittsburgh, Pa. Sunday af·
ternoon callers were Mrs.
Joseph Wippel and Victor
Wippel, Pomeroy, The afternoon was spent playing
music.
An anniversary cake with·
·yellow and green decoratlo!lll
was presented to Mr. and Mrs.

The Rev: Kenneth Gore;
West Virginia, will be speaker
at speclal services Friday and
Saturday evenings at 7:30p.m.
at Ute Rutland dlurcb of God.
The host minister, the Rev.
Bertha Kingrey, invites the
public.

Andrew by their dall8htera,
Teresa and Mary Ellen, and
was served Sunday afternoon
with h&lt;lmemlde Ice cream.
Another daughter, Cathy,
who resides at Gulfport, Mila.,
telephoned her congratulations
and on Saturday the couple
received a letter from their
son, Frank, advising Utat he
wiU be home for a visit, hb fiJ'llt
In tWo years, before leaving on
July I for Saigon.

BANOTOMEEr

RACINE - All membera rt·
1M Solllhfrn 111gb School Bind

on to ow« at 1M hiCh odlool,

Racine, at 7 thia evening to
reheane for tholr appeannce
In Friday'a B1c !!end Reptta
parade.
ENTERTAINS
Mrs. Isabelle Slmpaon enterlalned Sunday with a dinner ·
at the. Burr Oak Lodge
hon&lt;Jring Mr. and Mrl. Bert
Grimm and Mrs. Gretta
Simpson on their birthday
anniversaries.

BICYCLES

LOSE UGLY FAT

Complete Line
FOR ALL AGES

start losing weight todav OR

MONEY BACk . MONA DEX ts
111nr tablet that will help curb
your duire for ••cen toot~.
il:.•t less·wetgtt ten. Contains
no danttrout drugs and wltl
not make you nervous. No
stre111uous ••trclu. Change
your life , • , 111rt today .
MONADEX COifl S3 ,tt·tor a 21

20" -

day supply and U .H for t•lce
thf' amoun1. Lou ugly f•t or
yot,Jr money will be refuncltd
w lth no QvtS11vns estled by :
swisher &amp; Lohu Drug , 1n E .
Meln, Pom eroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store, Mlddltpor1. M a ll Orders
Filled.

~

24"

,•. ..........

26"

........,

.......: 7e . .... .. S: M•·"'· DMiy
~

- Adv .

~,.

MA-. W. VA,

/f&gt;METttiNG fPRIAL
for
-MENS
AMERICAN

BLACK NYLON COMBS
Reg. 10'

GREETING CARDS
for
FATHER'S DAY

ONLY

COMPLETE
ASSORTMENT
OF PIPES

•

.

PIPES, PI"E

COTY

·RACKS, ETC.

Bacchus For Men
After Shave &amp;Cologne
GIFT SETS
~

Come In

PRICE

And Browse
In Our

Amity
MEN'S
BILLFOLDS

NOYMER
REAL LEATHER

Gift Collection

The
MANE-TAMER
STYLER-DRYER

NAIL
CLIPPERS

Reg,

17.95

5

ONLY

BILLFOLDS
and
MANICURE
SETS

ONLY

10~

Before You Bur fou Should· Try,

.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110W. MAIN

w.

Two showers have been held

mer
Minister
of
FiSummerfield to
nance of the Hungarian Joseph D. Sayre, ElizabeUt A.
Republic, electrifies his Sayre, · Lot I , Riggscrest,
listeners
to an awareness of the Orange.
For easier control in
Makes faster work
blessing,
security
and
Raymond J . Smith, Lydia
close quarters and
of cutting firewood
?.,,off DRUGS
privileges of United States ' Smith to William J. Smith,
.. :cky angles.
or lumber.
111ffi1UIHJJ ;;,,;"',;('f,\h,,;, UllJI'IHflH-1
The annual June potluck of
Hostesses for the potluck
citizenship.
Barbara 1. Smith, Parcels,
112 ~ MAIN ST.
1-'0MI F-10~·. OHIO
All . Buckeye Girls ' State Rutland.
t h e Women' s Society of were Mrs. Bechtle, Mrs. Earl
activities are supervised by a
Edison Hobstetter, Marcia Christian Service and Class 12 Davenport, Mrs. Kenneth
Pr•scrlption S~nictt-4 Registertd Phermacisb to Serve
ten-member Board of Direc- Hobste tter
to
Pomeroy was held Monday night · at Cook, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, Mrs.
You I Open Dally 8:00a.m. 1o t p. m.-Sunday .10: 30 a.m . to
12 : 30 p.m. &amp; S to 9 p.m.
rors from the Ohio American Nationa l Bank, Lots, Pomeroy. Heath United Methodist Perry Mitch and Mrs. David
Entsminger.
Legion Auxiliary. Serving on
Harry N. Lodwick, Juanila Church.
this board are : Mrs. Lester M. G. Lodwick, John E. Lodwick,
Mrs. Jack Bechtle gave
Merritt, Columbus, director ; Eloise M. Lodwick to Lula grace preceding the diilner
Mrs. James E. Warner, Akron , Lodwick, 16.5 Acres, Chester. from tabl es ce ntered with
assistant director; Mrs Donald
Lulu c. Lodwick to Harry N. arrangements of roses from
G.
Miller,
d epartment Lodwick, Juanita Lodwick, l6.5 the garden of John WiD.
president of the Ohio American Acres, Chester.
Bo th groups voted to provide
Legion Au xiliary; Mrs. George
Warr en D. Cla y, Phyllis J . flowers for the a1tar on two
E. Sallot, Parma, department Clay to Cletis Dalton, Iva J . Sundays of each year. Ne~t
first viCe president of the Dalton, Lots, Pageville.
meeti ng of the groups will be in
American Legion Auxiliary;
John w. Brown, Myrville S. September.
Miss Anne Eshelmann, Zanes· Brown to Merlin M. Mitchell,
vil le , secre tary-treasurer; Linda L. Mitchell, 2.14 Acres,
Mr s. Edward
Ullum, Rutland.
. Lebanon, director of govern.John R. Murphy, Ida M.
Y
TM Trademark of H om etite , a d ivision of te~~:tron Inc.
M.:J..
ment; Mrs, ArUtur F. Hrabak, Murphy to Leading Creek
•
Serving Meigs, Ga lli a &amp; Mason Counties
J~
Maynard, director of coun- Conservancy Dist., 0.09 Acre,
•
se lors; Mrs. Andrew Garcia, Rutland,
p~
For a limited time ~ give
Conneaut, director of music
Vincent Broderick, Emma
,qp~!
.,::;...,.,.
A party was held Saturda:,:,.,
a nd recreation; Mrs. Henry F · Gertrude Broderick to Vincent
you , absolutely free, a
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .
Patro, R. N., Toledo, director Broderick, Emma Gertrude June 9, honoring Mr. a nd Mrs.
Open Mon .• Sa1. 8 to 6
of health ; and Mrs. Homher B. Broderick,_Parcels, Salisbury. Harry M. Davis of Canton,
Pomeroy , Ohio
SJTlith,
Mc Co nnel s vill e,
formerly of Pomeroy, on Ute
Dana
Robert Russell,
director of public relations.
Maxine E. Russell to Thomas occasion of their lOth wedding
McClWlg, Madeline McClung, anniversary . Mr. Davis and the
former Brittia Weeks were
,.,::;:::::::;
. .
.
Lot, Pomeroy.
married in Columbus on June
9, 1933 by Ute · Rev, Abby
'
Pleasure Riders
·
Grueser.
The par ty was given jointly .
will catch frogs
by the couple's daughter, Mrs.
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Herb (Jean) Hamilton, and
Riders met the evening of.June son, Don Davis, Also attending
7 at the home of E. J. Hill, were six grandchildren, Mrs.
Flatwoods.
John (Phyllis) Friel, sister of
pr. A. P. Smith , V.M., talked Mfs. Davis, aOd seven nieces
to the group on common horse and nephews.
'diseases
and
answered
'k//,;4 ,...J " ~
· e~~
questions.
STILLWAGON SIGNS
The club planned to catch
TORONTO (UP!)
The
··~olcok..
WEATHER-CiUARD
Come in and lei I Herman Grate w hat you need
frogs for the Regatta on Thurs- Toronto Argonau ts of the
OIL BASE HOUSE PAINTS
for your love nest. He will give you
.,.;J). wlucJ. l.o
day and Friday at. the Bill Ca nadian Football League
Downie residence. There will signed star defensive tackle
ACRIL·ITE
~
be a practice session June 20 Jim Stillwagon to a five-year
LATEX
HOUSE
PAINTS
at 6 p.m. at Ute Rock Springs contract, ending speculation
fa irgrounds. - Beverly Hart. that the former Ohio Staie All
ACT NOW!

REAR
TRIGGER

fanner cluamates and friends
who once resided in the Shiloh
community was held at the
Shiloh Church near Leon,
Va., Sunday.
A dinner was held at noon
and the group then enjoyed a
hymn olng and service.
Attending were Mrs. Iva Hill
Turner, l\llddleport; Mr. and
Mrs. John Jenkins, WealUta
Bircher, Parkersburg; Henry
and Mary Matheny, Leon, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Porter
Nicholl, Baden Ridge, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sclnes,
Mrs. Richard Stealey, Carolyn
·and Susan, Mrs. EUzabeth
Hanger DePue, Mrs, Jeannie
Gray and daUjjhter, Karen, Mr.

Celebrate 36th anniversary

LONG BO'M'OM - A family
dinner was held Saturday at
the horne of Mr. and Mrs.
and 1M Rev, Mr, Buckley, and Frall&lt;:is Andrew, Long Bottom,
the gtrla c!uo, whoee teacher In observance of their 36Ut
wu Mrl. Donna Gilmore, sang wedding anniversary and the
a medley of sortg1 with accompaniment by Steve
WSICSET
on the guitar, ___.;/ .
Certificates were also
PT. PLEASANT - There
presented to the 23 adults on will be a Water Safety Inthe teachlnc al!of!. Parents and strucfAlr Course, Part I and
frlenda viewed the craft wcrk Part IT at the Shawnee Pool In
precedlns the pn111'8111.
Point Pleasant from July 9, to
July 20. A parUclpant In the
class must be 17 years of age
and hold a current American
HERE FROM FLORIDA
Red Cross Senior Life Saving
Mr. andMrs. Robert DeWees Certificate. The class will be
and three oons, Vero Beach, from 9:30a.m. to noon Monday
Fla., were Tuesday evening through Friday. 1bere will be a
dinner gueots of Mrs, Iva' ~ charge per member for the .
·
Turner, The family b here use of the pool.
vlsltlng her father, Burdell
Black, and other relaUves.
SERVICES SET

Certificates were 'Prelented

and Mrs . Guy
Stelle,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mra .
Charles Fogelaong, Point
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrl. J .
Burke,
Nitro;
Dwight
Greenlee, .Leon, W. Va,; 1\11'.
and Mrs. Cleon Cadle, Blonda
Leduc, Parkersburg; Bridgett
Blake, M. L. Greenlee and
grandson, Scott, Shiloh community; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Dunham, Robert and Ethel
eoo1, st. Cbartes, ru.; David
and VifBinla Jaques, Clara
Bailey PO'!' ell, Parkerllburg;
Ruth Atklnaon Rowe Shannon,
Charleston, W. va.; Henry
Custer, Nitro, W.Va.; and Mr.
and Mrl. Orville Cadle and Mr,
and Mrs , Steven Cadle and
family.

Showers fete
Miss Eroin OE5 honors ·
••'(lee l l1f1
n·ch
lJ'fj
'I "'

Honored Queen of Bethel No. 62
International Order of Job's
Daughters and a member of

~yra~use
As bury
MeUtodist Church.

LEON, W. Va.-Areunlonof

Laurel Cliff Methodist
has VBS closing session

Racine firemen 's
auxiliary meets

girls officers

citizens, who are girls in their
Martha Elizabe th Burns to junior year in high school.
Elmer F , Burns, Pt. Lot 43,
ddl

~~er::\,.

Holly John, Lori Tanner,
William Erb, KenneUt Friend,
NOI'IIlar) Friend, George Gibbs,
Charles Hargraves, Jeffrey
Hoffman, Robert Zerkle,
Tammy Casto, Valerie Cole,
April Cundiff, Kimberly
Durbin, Deidra Fields, Cheryl
Fields, Valerie Hickman, Terri
Hurlow, Lesa Jones, Wendy
Knapp, Karen Lewis, Cheryl
Lewis, Sharon Lewis, Russell
Edwards, Jason Fields, Ralph
Green, Jeffrey Hawk, Dwayne
Weaver. Unable to attend were
LaOoi&gt;na Bennett and Misti
Gibbs.
Guests and school personnel
wet:e1Mrs. Olll!ar Casto, Mrs.
Dannie Harbour, Mitchell and
Michael, Mrs. Larry Hesson,
Mrs. HUjjo Jahn and children,
Mrs. James Hurlow and
Pamela, Mrs, Robert Hickle,
Misses Cathy and Carol
Frieod, Mrs. Harold Johnson,
Mrs. Clyde Clark, Mrs. Ronald
·Zerkle, Miss Brenda Fields,
Mrs. Harold Zerkle, Sr., Mrs,
Robert Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Roney and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Zuspan, Mrs. Betty Young and
Patty, Mrs. Emory Roush,
Mrs . Billy Ohlinger, Mrs,
Ge~ald Arnold, Mrs . Cecil
Roush and son, Timmy,

Hospital and then drove to the
Hocking Hills State Park
Lodge for the regular meeting
and luncheon.
Speaker was Clint Shepherd,
regional naturalist of Northwest Ohio. He showed slides
and spoke on the various parks
in Southeastern Ohio.

Six representatives . of
veterans Memorial . Hospital
were at Logan Wednesday for
the spring meeting of Ute
Central District of Ute Hospital
Auxiliary of the Ohio Hospital
Association.
.
Going from here were Miss
Erma Smj th, dire c tor of
volunteers , Mrs. Janice
Daniels, Mrs. Mildred Mitch,
Mrs . Louise Bearhs, Mrs.
Delores Cleland and Mrs.
Louise McElhinny.
The group toured the
Hocking valley Community

Shilo reunzon
held at Leon
•'

Miss Rizer assists

lfi.~''"-" ·. -.v.,.,1?,~~.'!.~!!, a

_...~~Ji-Operty

~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~ ,
FRONT
TRIGGER

THURSDAY
PAST OFFICERS ' Club ,
Racine Chapter, O.E .S., 8 p. m ,
ot Ute Shrine Club house.
::Overed dish refreshments at

Phone. n orders any lime at
99 2-20IO.
FISHING DERBY Saturday
and Sunday at Rutland Legion
Farm on Beech Grove Road
beginning at 5 a . m. each day .
Tro u t, bass and catfis h.

Judge, lOth District Court of
Appeals, and Honorable Bruce

Auxiliary members
attend meeting

at
ICalendarl Racine dam site
NEW HAVEN Ap·
proximately 90 persons at.
tended a picnic for the Broad
Early
Childhood
Run
Education group at the Racine
Loc ks on Tuesday . The
children were taken to Ute
observation tower to watch Ute
boats go Utrough the locks.
Childr en attending from
Miss
Elizabeth
Ord's
class
were
Jason
Hysell, Timmy Roach , Bill
Roach, James Sayre, Bar·
ry Taylor, Allen Warth,
Jamie Vester, Freddie Zuspan,
Bobby Jewell, David Knapp,
Shane MacKnight, Marion
Ohlinger, Aaron Scarberry,
Michael Taylor, Pete Young,
Angela Hood, Lori Lanham,
Allyson Marko, Ruby Ohlinger,
Carla Snyder, Usa WarUt,
Kathie Wright, Lisa Young,
Donna Ihle, Kelly Javins ,
Nancy Kearns, Sabrina Roney ,
Roselyn Roush, Sherry Roush,
Amanda Smith, Marcia Thorne
and Vicki Yoho.
Attending from Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds ' class were Mandy
Capehart, Kimberly Casto ,
Stephany Clarke , Cheryl
Clutter, Kimberly Elliott,
Wendy Harbour 1 Stephanie
Harrell , Deborah Hesson ,

1- The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;ldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 14

271 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

stock:

Brut
English Leather
British Sterling
Black Belt
Trouble
Old Spice
Kolnisch Wasser
tfrom t;;ennany)
Plus Many
Others

•

Phone 992.5759

we •

litll'
armnrg
"The Creator of

"COUPON"

•3 00 oH
WITH OOUPOII

ON ANY MAN'S

WATCH IN STOCk

RMsonable Drug Prices"

'1

�•
8 - 1be Daily Stnlinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Juoe 14, 1973

,

r~~S~cr;r'''J Picnic given

Seven Meigs countians to
·participate in Girls State
Stven Meigs Coun ty girls population of ea ch city wiUt a
will be among the 1,250 who city government advisor and a
will converge on Ute ca mpus of counselor, It is he re Utat Ute
Capital University, Columbus, governmentfunctioning begins
Saturday when the 27th Annual and is carried out to each
Session of Buckeye Girls' State citizen's pa rti cipati on in
county a nd s tate government
officially opens. '
The Amer ica n Legion activities which are guided by
A-uxiliary
s ponsors
th e numerous staff me mber s.
The staff members are well .
mythical state which began in
the late forties wi t!l 304 ci tizens qualified an d h igh cal iber
and has now grown to the 1,250 wome n, some hig hly trained in
ex~ted this yea r.
their fi elds, some civic leaders
Glrls from all parts or Ohio - in the ir cOmm uniti es and
participate in the seven-day others ac tive in government ,
''gove rrunent • in • a ction"
holding elective or appointive
workshop. Going from here offi ces on local, county and
will be Barbara Jean Anthony 1 sta te levels.
Middleport 1 Donna Mar ie
Mrs. Louise Stewa rt, Athens,
Bo,d, Middle port , .Ingri d • a member of the Racine
Darlene Ha wley , Pomer oy , Ame r ica n Leg ion Auxiliary
Meigs High School students ; 602, is on the staff of Buckeye
Tonya Elaine Keebaugh and Gir ls ' State.
Nancy J ean · Miller Rt. 3,
The hub of activiti es through
Pomeroy, and Jane Danell the week includes Ute Campus
Whifehead , Reedsv.ille , Center Dining Room, where
Eastern High School students ; 1,400 Girls ' Stater.s and staff
and Roma Lynn Nea se, a re fed in an hour three times a
Minersville, Southern Lora I d ay; the workshop, where
High School student.
innovative campaign and city
Each of the girls has just signs are qJade; the Pos t Office
completed her junior year in in Campus Center ; the Girls'
high school and is being State Bank, in which the girls
sponsored by local American may deposit and withdraw
Legion Auxiliary units or by their money ; and, of course,
other
jnterested groups the many meeting rooms in
working through an Auxiliary which the actual governmenlal
unit.
func tioning takes place.
The aim of Buckeye Girls'
There are programs emState is · ~ to inculcate a.sense of phasizing the various phEjses of
· indiv idual responsibility to government beginning imcommuniy, state and nation." mediately upon arrival of the
With this objective ea ch girl girls:
is assigned a party 1 either a
~ Sa turday afternoon, an
Nationalist or Federalist, to orie ntation and di scussion of
one of the 25 cities which are political party organization
named for famous Ohio.born will · be offered , and that
women, and one of the five evening the formal opening
counties which are named for will feature Lt. Governor John
Past Department presidents of W. Brown as the keynote
· the Ohio American Legion speaker.
Auxiliary. Approximately fifty
- On Sunday, the citizens
girls will make up th e will determine their party's

•

,,

XL2
MAKES CUITING
.'WICE ·AS-EASY

candida tes al the city, county
and s tale caucuses. Sunday
evening, city elections will be
he ld . To highlight city
gove rnment, on Monday
eve nin g, Miss Olive H. Huston,
former mayor of Xenia , will be
the guest speaker.
- The primary election will
take place on Tuesday mor·
ning, wiUt the general election
be ing held that afternoon.
Results will be announced later
in the day, and on Wednesday
all phases of government swing
into a c tion.
- The inaugural banquet
and inauguration _ceremonies,
a lways a lovely, formal affair,
will feature many highlights.
The Honorable C. William
O'Neill, Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court, will give the
oath of office to Ute elected
state officials. The Honorable
John J . ' Gilligan, Governor,
State of Ohio, will deliver the
main address of the evening.
Also present for remarks will
be dignitaries of Ute Ohio
American Legion Auxiliary,
The American Legion and the
, ,
F orty and Eight.
- Thursday, a bus tour will
•nclude points of interest in
Columbus and a visit to the
S tate . Cap1' t o1 w here G'1r 1s , ·
State officials will meet with
their · counterparts. That
evening, following a picnic at
Bernlohr Field, Miss Nodine
Cook, Ombudsman, City of
Columbus, will discuss Ute
educated woman arid her roles.
Friday
mornin g,
Honorable Alba L. Whi teside ,

I

2

:lose o(

mee tin~ .

LAURE L CLIFF Be tter
HealUtClub, 7: 30p.m
at the .
home 11 Mrs. Ernes t Powell.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m . at the grange hall. InspecUon to be held..
MEIGS County Humane
Society, 7:30 p.m . at Middlepor t village hall.
FRIDAY
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Social, 11 a . m. -7 p. m . Friday
and Saturday, at air conditi oned fellowship hall , St.
Paul
Lutheran
Churc h,
P omeroy. Homemade ice
cream , desserts and lunches.
Phone in orders anytime at
2010.

X! GAMMA Mu, concession
starid, on lot between Pomeroy
Motor and Meigs Theater. All
three days of R egatta
weekend .
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM
Social, 11 a. m.-7 p.m. at air
conditioned fellowship hall, St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy . Homemade ice
cream, desserts and lunches.
RE~ATTA

Spo nsored
by
Rutland
American Legion Post 467.

Jenkins , Judge, Franklin
County Municipal Court, will
present a program on the Ohio
MON.DAY
court system. The sta tus of
MIDDLEPORT Garden
women in government will be · Club, home of Mrs. Sibley
the topic of discussion Friday Slack, 7:30p.m . Amateur a nd
evening when Miss Martha .Cheshire Garden Cl ub memWheeler, superintendent, Ohio bers invited.
'Reformato ry for , Women,
BEND 0' the River Garden
Honorable E thel G. Swanbeck, Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of
representative and Honorable . Mrs. E rnest Wingett .
Gertrude W. Donahey, Ohio
State Treasurer, will appear on
the program .
. .
Fred J · . Mllhgan ,

f~l'~n °~o!'!it~~o

aw .

MeJgS
• , ·.

win; ,

Ute Ohio Cons titution
on Saturday mornmg . . The
climax of the en lire week 18 the
last Saturday evening, . when

·-''';

,

Dr. Nicholas Nyaradl, di: rector • . , Institute
of
· InternatiOnal Stud1es Bradfor·
ley University and

TranS£e~"'
...
1' 1 ""

Grant us brotherhood , not
onl y fo r thi s day but for a ll
our years - a brotherhood not
o f word s but of act s and
de eds. - Stephen Vince nt
Benet, American poet.

Miss Milisa Rizer has been
invited to serve as advisor to
the governor during the 27Ut
annual session of the Ohio
American Legion Auxiliary's
Buckeye Girls. State.
.
The seven day government
workshop is to he held on the
cam pus of Capital University,
Columbus, beginning Saturday, June 16, through Sunday,
June 24.
Miss Rizer 's appointment
was made by the Girls' State
Board of Directors in its spring
staff of ap-

FATHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 17

Give Him ...

CANOE

I

Miss Rizer , daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin M. Rizer,

738 East Main St., Pomeroy, is
a nursing student at Ohio State
University where she is active
in Angel F light, is on the drill
team, serves as a flight
hostess, and as assistant ad·
ministrative officer. She
belongs to Alpha Lambda
Delta, a freshmen women's
honor society, and Ad Lucem,
her dormitory honorary . She
also participates in Scarlet and
Gray,· a service organization.
In

~e ';-t~•~ted to ttw

::,r;.·~;;;~Jita~~u:a7;;::~~ ~:~~s stet~~~iellJ:f.uc;:~

were formul ated ~ These
women from all over Ute state
will dir~ct and assist the l ,:zsO

Heath

,.

"
', l v,"

1.. ;·· . •

,

•

.I' . .

ff.

'J

aman's after
after
cologne
made, bottled, sealed in France;.. 13 and 15
.

United

."

~

wscs meets with

·

SWISHER.,oLOHSE

Class 12 for potluck

Couil/e han.ored

s.

On annzversary .

Pomeroy Landmark

FOUR.INCH

-.. .--..-.-. -. . _. . .-. .-.._._._.,_. .-.-. -.-. -.-----..-...._.._. _._._.l
.
.I

four gallon, or more, of fine quality

VANGUARD EXT.ERIOR HOUSE PAINTS

a . . ..

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
This is for June Brides Only!!

MASON FURNITURE
773·5592

HERMAN GRATE

BRUSH

· 'FRJ;E .. with each:purchase of

SALE
lor June

MASON, W. VA.

. '* ,.... ""-.

HOUSE PAINT PRIMERS

America would jump to Ut e
National Football League.
People who make a li v~ng
Stillwagon, 24, was rumored
doing what they don't enJOY
to
be heaqed for the Green Bay
wou ldn't even be happy
Packers up until a few days
with a one-day workweek.
- Duke Elfingto n.
ago.

Everything In Hardware

POMEROY

'

•

•

•

RACINE - Progress on the
new kitcben at the firehouse
was noted and fund raising
projects were discussed during
Ute Tuesday night meeting of
the
Racine
Firemen's
Auxiliary,
It was reported during the
meeting conducted by Mae
Cleland, president, Utat the
floor
has
been
completed In the new kitchen with Racine Village
assisting wiUt the cost,
A rummage sale was
planned for Ute first week in
August and residents are being
asked to donate items for the
sale, Items can be left at the

c.

fire house or for pickup
residents may telephone 9493293 or IM9-3471.
Plans were alao made to
make homemade Ice cream for
Ute July 4 celebraUon to be
served wiUt the chicken bar·
e
becue at the Racine flrehouae ,
Donations of canned milk,
instant pudding, sugar, whole
milk, vanilla and lemon .
flavoring, bananas,
strawberries and canned
crushed pineapple are needed. ·
Officers reports were given.
A special meeting was set lor
June 22. Attending were lillie
Cleland, Mrs. Jean Cleland,
Mrs, Gene Lyo!lll, Mrs. Enuna
Lyo!lll, Mrs, Grace Roush, Mrs.
Judy Bird and Harold,

in Columbus honoring Miss /"'
00
Rhonda Lee Ervin, brid&lt;Hllect
of Steve Richard Dailey,
Past Matrons and Past
Miss · BeUt Luc, Miss Ann
Bundy and Miss Ervin's sister, . Patrons
of
Evangeline
Sharon, enterta~ 'J!lth '!. .!J!la~r. Middlepcrt; Order of,
s\rrpr1se shower at the dor- Eastern Stars, were honored at
mltory. Approximately 250hio the regular meeting, with
State University classmates of special recognition give Grace
Ute brid&lt;Hllect attended the French. W011thy Matron Helen
shower,
Milhoan and WorUty Patron
A yellow and blue color Harry Chesher presided and
scheme was carried oui in the welcomed members and
decoratio!lll. Among the guests visitors.
was Miss Beverly Ervin,
Worthy Matron Helen
visiting with 'her sisters, Milhoan recalled Utat Grace
Rhooda and Sharon, at the Townsend French was Initiated
time.
into Ute Order on October 4,
A second shower was given · 1918, and has held these
by Mrs. Terry HiD. Most of the stations, 1919-t92G-1921, Ruth;
guests were members of the 1922, Associate Conductress;
family. Going from here were 1923-24, Conductress; 1925-26,
Mrs. Howard Ervin, Teresa Ruth; 1928 Worthy · Matron;
and Tammy and Mrs. Floyd 1933 Chaplain; 1948-49, Either,
Dailey.
and served the Grand Chapter
of · Ohio as Deputy Grand
Matron in 1935.
She was presented a yellow
carnation corsage from the
worUty matron and a gift from
the chapter of a yellow robe,
PHILLIPS HOST GUESTS
and money tree from members
Mrs. Bob Grimm and and visitors. 1!4rry Chesher
daughter, Amy, Columbus, observed Utat Grace had prospent a week here visiting Mr. temed all staUo!lll a sister
and Mrs. Dayton Phillips and could fill except organist and
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grjmm, was commended for her
Letart Falls. Bob Grimm, a diligent work and Interest In
major in Ute U. S. Army Ute Eastern Star,
Reserves, is attending summer
Evelyn Lewis reported the
camp in Pimnsylvanla, The following members sick : Essie
couple's daughter, Christy, is Russell, Jessie Houdas]lelt and
on a two week trip to Bermuda Edna Ruaell.
with high school classmates
A committee was appointed
and teachers.
to meet w!Ut 1M Masons and
make arrangements for the
annual Masdn and Eastern
Star family picnic and the
ENJOYS VISIT
Father and Son Banquet.
Mrs. Gladys Mowery left
DeMolay Meigs Chapter
Wednesday for her home in installation was announced for
Monrovia, calif., after a thrOI' June 22 wiUt members and
week visit here with friends friends of Evangeline Chapter
, and relatives. She also spent invited.
time in Point Pleasant wiUt her
Visitors
were
Mabel
son, Milford Mowery, and his Goegleln and Mable Moore,
family . She was the guest of Pomeroy, and Mary Hughes,
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight Cheshire Chapter. Refresh· ·
and Forty, for a dinner at the ments were served by KaUty
Holiday Inn.
King and Jelsle and Harry
Chesher.

;

lo the 52 children enrolled In
the Laurel CUff Free Methodist
Church clally vac:aUon Bible
Khool at the cloelng program
Sunday night,
Sharon Folmer WN 110118
leader for the program
directed by Mrl Wanda Eblin.
Kathy Pullins was at the plaDo
and 1M Rev. Robert Buckley
had the ~erlpture and prayer.
1be llUI'Itry c!uo Wtder 1M
direction of Betty Lane,
teacher, and Sherr! Clark,
aalat.ilt, sang "Jesus Loves
Me," uSing the Qoucil Away,"
"God Gam" and ' 'God C.. Do
Anyihln&amp; But Fall."
Bible v . - were recited by
the primary department
laUIIht by Mrl. Iva Powell and
Martha Michael, and the
mlddler boys claa sang a ...,g
and told of their Ieaon work,
AKEGUESI'S
Mrs.· Irene Kline was teacher
Mrs. D'ary Davis, Jr. and
of that cluo,
daughter,
Toledo, are In
An Imaginary T.V. ihow wao
p.--nted by 1M teenage boys Middleport to visit Mrs, Crary
class taught by Cbaries Diehl Davis, Sr.

Jlti1iii'

'

CARPET-LAND, INC.

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialist&amp;
116 W. MAIN .

POMEROY

Free

Estimates PH. 992-7590
Open Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5.
Friday Ni&amp;ht 8:00
Budget Terms or BlniiAinericlnl

r•

birthdays rt their dall8~.
Mary Ellen and their son-Inlaw, Larry Collins,
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Collins and family, Mary
Ellen and Marcia Grinun,
Pittsburgh, Pa. Sunday af·
ternoon callers were Mrs.
Joseph Wippel and Victor
Wippel, Pomeroy, The afternoon was spent playing
music.
An anniversary cake with·
·yellow and green decoratlo!lll
was presented to Mr. and Mrs.

The Rev: Kenneth Gore;
West Virginia, will be speaker
at speclal services Friday and
Saturday evenings at 7:30p.m.
at Ute Rutland dlurcb of God.
The host minister, the Rev.
Bertha Kingrey, invites the
public.

Andrew by their dall8htera,
Teresa and Mary Ellen, and
was served Sunday afternoon
with h&lt;lmemlde Ice cream.
Another daughter, Cathy,
who resides at Gulfport, Mila.,
telephoned her congratulations
and on Saturday the couple
received a letter from their
son, Frank, advising Utat he
wiU be home for a visit, hb fiJ'llt
In tWo years, before leaving on
July I for Saigon.

BANOTOMEEr

RACINE - All membera rt·
1M Solllhfrn 111gb School Bind

on to ow« at 1M hiCh odlool,

Racine, at 7 thia evening to
reheane for tholr appeannce
In Friday'a B1c !!end Reptta
parade.
ENTERTAINS
Mrs. Isabelle Slmpaon enterlalned Sunday with a dinner ·
at the. Burr Oak Lodge
hon&lt;Jring Mr. and Mrl. Bert
Grimm and Mrs. Gretta
Simpson on their birthday
anniversaries.

BICYCLES

LOSE UGLY FAT

Complete Line
FOR ALL AGES

start losing weight todav OR

MONEY BACk . MONA DEX ts
111nr tablet that will help curb
your duire for ••cen toot~.
il:.•t less·wetgtt ten. Contains
no danttrout drugs and wltl
not make you nervous. No
stre111uous ••trclu. Change
your life , • , 111rt today .
MONADEX COifl S3 ,tt·tor a 21

20" -

day supply and U .H for t•lce
thf' amoun1. Lou ugly f•t or
yot,Jr money will be refuncltd
w lth no QvtS11vns estled by :
swisher &amp; Lohu Drug , 1n E .
Meln, Pom eroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store, Mlddltpor1. M a ll Orders
Filled.

~

24"

,•. ..........

26"

........,

.......: 7e . .... .. S: M•·"'· DMiy
~

- Adv .

~,.

MA-. W. VA,

/f&gt;METttiNG fPRIAL
for
-MENS
AMERICAN

BLACK NYLON COMBS
Reg. 10'

GREETING CARDS
for
FATHER'S DAY

ONLY

COMPLETE
ASSORTMENT
OF PIPES

•

.

PIPES, PI"E

COTY

·RACKS, ETC.

Bacchus For Men
After Shave &amp;Cologne
GIFT SETS
~

Come In

PRICE

And Browse
In Our

Amity
MEN'S
BILLFOLDS

NOYMER
REAL LEATHER

Gift Collection

The
MANE-TAMER
STYLER-DRYER

NAIL
CLIPPERS

Reg,

17.95

5

ONLY

BILLFOLDS
and
MANICURE
SETS

ONLY

10~

Before You Bur fou Should· Try,

.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110W. MAIN

w.

Two showers have been held

mer
Minister
of
FiSummerfield to
nance of the Hungarian Joseph D. Sayre, ElizabeUt A.
Republic, electrifies his Sayre, · Lot I , Riggscrest,
listeners
to an awareness of the Orange.
For easier control in
Makes faster work
blessing,
security
and
Raymond J . Smith, Lydia
close quarters and
of cutting firewood
?.,,off DRUGS
privileges of United States ' Smith to William J. Smith,
.. :cky angles.
or lumber.
111ffi1UIHJJ ;;,,;"',;('f,\h,,;, UllJI'IHflH-1
The annual June potluck of
Hostesses for the potluck
citizenship.
Barbara 1. Smith, Parcels,
112 ~ MAIN ST.
1-'0MI F-10~·. OHIO
All . Buckeye Girls ' State Rutland.
t h e Women' s Society of were Mrs. Bechtle, Mrs. Earl
activities are supervised by a
Edison Hobstetter, Marcia Christian Service and Class 12 Davenport, Mrs. Kenneth
Pr•scrlption S~nictt-4 Registertd Phermacisb to Serve
ten-member Board of Direc- Hobste tter
to
Pomeroy was held Monday night · at Cook, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, Mrs.
You I Open Dally 8:00a.m. 1o t p. m.-Sunday .10: 30 a.m . to
12 : 30 p.m. &amp; S to 9 p.m.
rors from the Ohio American Nationa l Bank, Lots, Pomeroy. Heath United Methodist Perry Mitch and Mrs. David
Entsminger.
Legion Auxiliary. Serving on
Harry N. Lodwick, Juanila Church.
this board are : Mrs. Lester M. G. Lodwick, John E. Lodwick,
Mrs. Jack Bechtle gave
Merritt, Columbus, director ; Eloise M. Lodwick to Lula grace preceding the diilner
Mrs. James E. Warner, Akron , Lodwick, 16.5 Acres, Chester. from tabl es ce ntered with
assistant director; Mrs Donald
Lulu c. Lodwick to Harry N. arrangements of roses from
G.
Miller,
d epartment Lodwick, Juanita Lodwick, l6.5 the garden of John WiD.
president of the Ohio American Acres, Chester.
Bo th groups voted to provide
Legion Au xiliary; Mrs. George
Warr en D. Cla y, Phyllis J . flowers for the a1tar on two
E. Sallot, Parma, department Clay to Cletis Dalton, Iva J . Sundays of each year. Ne~t
first viCe president of the Dalton, Lots, Pageville.
meeti ng of the groups will be in
American Legion Auxiliary;
John w. Brown, Myrville S. September.
Miss Anne Eshelmann, Zanes· Brown to Merlin M. Mitchell,
vil le , secre tary-treasurer; Linda L. Mitchell, 2.14 Acres,
Mr s. Edward
Ullum, Rutland.
. Lebanon, director of govern.John R. Murphy, Ida M.
Y
TM Trademark of H om etite , a d ivision of te~~:tron Inc.
M.:J..
ment; Mrs, ArUtur F. Hrabak, Murphy to Leading Creek
•
Serving Meigs, Ga lli a &amp; Mason Counties
J~
Maynard, director of coun- Conservancy Dist., 0.09 Acre,
•
se lors; Mrs. Andrew Garcia, Rutland,
p~
For a limited time ~ give
Conneaut, director of music
Vincent Broderick, Emma
,qp~!
.,::;...,.,.
A party was held Saturda:,:,.,
a nd recreation; Mrs. Henry F · Gertrude Broderick to Vincent
you , absolutely free, a
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .
Patro, R. N., Toledo, director Broderick, Emma Gertrude June 9, honoring Mr. a nd Mrs.
Open Mon .• Sa1. 8 to 6
of health ; and Mrs. Homher B. Broderick,_Parcels, Salisbury. Harry M. Davis of Canton,
Pomeroy , Ohio
SJTlith,
Mc Co nnel s vill e,
formerly of Pomeroy, on Ute
Dana
Robert Russell,
director of public relations.
Maxine E. Russell to Thomas occasion of their lOth wedding
McClWlg, Madeline McClung, anniversary . Mr. Davis and the
former Brittia Weeks were
,.,::;:::::::;
. .
.
Lot, Pomeroy.
married in Columbus on June
9, 1933 by Ute · Rev, Abby
'
Pleasure Riders
·
Grueser.
The par ty was given jointly .
will catch frogs
by the couple's daughter, Mrs.
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Herb (Jean) Hamilton, and
Riders met the evening of.June son, Don Davis, Also attending
7 at the home of E. J. Hill, were six grandchildren, Mrs.
Flatwoods.
John (Phyllis) Friel, sister of
pr. A. P. Smith , V.M., talked Mfs. Davis, aOd seven nieces
to the group on common horse and nephews.
'diseases
and
answered
'k//,;4 ,...J " ~
· e~~
questions.
STILLWAGON SIGNS
The club planned to catch
TORONTO (UP!)
The
··~olcok..
WEATHER-CiUARD
Come in and lei I Herman Grate w hat you need
frogs for the Regatta on Thurs- Toronto Argonau ts of the
OIL BASE HOUSE PAINTS
for your love nest. He will give you
.,.;J). wlucJ. l.o
day and Friday at. the Bill Ca nadian Football League
Downie residence. There will signed star defensive tackle
ACRIL·ITE
~
be a practice session June 20 Jim Stillwagon to a five-year
LATEX
HOUSE
PAINTS
at 6 p.m. at Ute Rock Springs contract, ending speculation
fa irgrounds. - Beverly Hart. that the former Ohio Staie All
ACT NOW!

REAR
TRIGGER

fanner cluamates and friends
who once resided in the Shiloh
community was held at the
Shiloh Church near Leon,
Va., Sunday.
A dinner was held at noon
and the group then enjoyed a
hymn olng and service.
Attending were Mrs. Iva Hill
Turner, l\llddleport; Mr. and
Mrs. John Jenkins, WealUta
Bircher, Parkersburg; Henry
and Mary Matheny, Leon, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Porter
Nicholl, Baden Ridge, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sclnes,
Mrs. Richard Stealey, Carolyn
·and Susan, Mrs. EUzabeth
Hanger DePue, Mrs, Jeannie
Gray and daUjjhter, Karen, Mr.

Celebrate 36th anniversary

LONG BO'M'OM - A family
dinner was held Saturday at
the horne of Mr. and Mrs.
and 1M Rev, Mr, Buckley, and Frall&lt;:is Andrew, Long Bottom,
the gtrla c!uo, whoee teacher In observance of their 36Ut
wu Mrl. Donna Gilmore, sang wedding anniversary and the
a medley of sortg1 with accompaniment by Steve
WSICSET
on the guitar, ___.;/ .
Certificates were also
PT. PLEASANT - There
presented to the 23 adults on will be a Water Safety Inthe teachlnc al!of!. Parents and strucfAlr Course, Part I and
frlenda viewed the craft wcrk Part IT at the Shawnee Pool In
precedlns the pn111'8111.
Point Pleasant from July 9, to
July 20. A parUclpant In the
class must be 17 years of age
and hold a current American
HERE FROM FLORIDA
Red Cross Senior Life Saving
Mr. andMrs. Robert DeWees Certificate. The class will be
and three oons, Vero Beach, from 9:30a.m. to noon Monday
Fla., were Tuesday evening through Friday. 1bere will be a
dinner gueots of Mrs, Iva' ~ charge per member for the .
·
Turner, The family b here use of the pool.
vlsltlng her father, Burdell
Black, and other relaUves.
SERVICES SET

Certificates were 'Prelented

and Mrs . Guy
Stelle,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mra .
Charles Fogelaong, Point
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrl. J .
Burke,
Nitro;
Dwight
Greenlee, .Leon, W. Va,; 1\11'.
and Mrs. Cleon Cadle, Blonda
Leduc, Parkersburg; Bridgett
Blake, M. L. Greenlee and
grandson, Scott, Shiloh community; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Dunham, Robert and Ethel
eoo1, st. Cbartes, ru.; David
and VifBinla Jaques, Clara
Bailey PO'!' ell, Parkerllburg;
Ruth Atklnaon Rowe Shannon,
Charleston, W. va.; Henry
Custer, Nitro, W.Va.; and Mr.
and Mrl. Orville Cadle and Mr,
and Mrs , Steven Cadle and
family.

Showers fete
Miss Eroin OE5 honors ·
••'(lee l l1f1
n·ch
lJ'fj
'I "'

Honored Queen of Bethel No. 62
International Order of Job's
Daughters and a member of

~yra~use
As bury
MeUtodist Church.

LEON, W. Va.-Areunlonof

Laurel Cliff Methodist
has VBS closing session

Racine firemen 's
auxiliary meets

girls officers

citizens, who are girls in their
Martha Elizabe th Burns to junior year in high school.
Elmer F , Burns, Pt. Lot 43,
ddl

~~er::\,.

Holly John, Lori Tanner,
William Erb, KenneUt Friend,
NOI'IIlar) Friend, George Gibbs,
Charles Hargraves, Jeffrey
Hoffman, Robert Zerkle,
Tammy Casto, Valerie Cole,
April Cundiff, Kimberly
Durbin, Deidra Fields, Cheryl
Fields, Valerie Hickman, Terri
Hurlow, Lesa Jones, Wendy
Knapp, Karen Lewis, Cheryl
Lewis, Sharon Lewis, Russell
Edwards, Jason Fields, Ralph
Green, Jeffrey Hawk, Dwayne
Weaver. Unable to attend were
LaOoi&gt;na Bennett and Misti
Gibbs.
Guests and school personnel
wet:e1Mrs. Olll!ar Casto, Mrs.
Dannie Harbour, Mitchell and
Michael, Mrs. Larry Hesson,
Mrs. HUjjo Jahn and children,
Mrs. James Hurlow and
Pamela, Mrs, Robert Hickle,
Misses Cathy and Carol
Frieod, Mrs. Harold Johnson,
Mrs. Clyde Clark, Mrs. Ronald
·Zerkle, Miss Brenda Fields,
Mrs. Harold Zerkle, Sr., Mrs,
Robert Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Roney and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Zuspan, Mrs. Betty Young and
Patty, Mrs. Emory Roush,
Mrs . Billy Ohlinger, Mrs,
Ge~ald Arnold, Mrs . Cecil
Roush and son, Timmy,

Hospital and then drove to the
Hocking Hills State Park
Lodge for the regular meeting
and luncheon.
Speaker was Clint Shepherd,
regional naturalist of Northwest Ohio. He showed slides
and spoke on the various parks
in Southeastern Ohio.

Six representatives . of
veterans Memorial . Hospital
were at Logan Wednesday for
the spring meeting of Ute
Central District of Ute Hospital
Auxiliary of the Ohio Hospital
Association.
.
Going from here were Miss
Erma Smj th, dire c tor of
volunteers , Mrs. Janice
Daniels, Mrs. Mildred Mitch,
Mrs . Louise Bearhs, Mrs.
Delores Cleland and Mrs.
Louise McElhinny.
The group toured the
Hocking valley Community

Shilo reunzon
held at Leon
•'

Miss Rizer assists

lfi.~''"-" ·. -.v.,.,1?,~~.'!.~!!, a

_...~~Ji-Operty

~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~ ,
FRONT
TRIGGER

THURSDAY
PAST OFFICERS ' Club ,
Racine Chapter, O.E .S., 8 p. m ,
ot Ute Shrine Club house.
::Overed dish refreshments at

Phone. n orders any lime at
99 2-20IO.
FISHING DERBY Saturday
and Sunday at Rutland Legion
Farm on Beech Grove Road
beginning at 5 a . m. each day .
Tro u t, bass and catfis h.

Judge, lOth District Court of
Appeals, and Honorable Bruce

Auxiliary members
attend meeting

at
ICalendarl Racine dam site
NEW HAVEN Ap·
proximately 90 persons at.
tended a picnic for the Broad
Early
Childhood
Run
Education group at the Racine
Loc ks on Tuesday . The
children were taken to Ute
observation tower to watch Ute
boats go Utrough the locks.
Childr en attending from
Miss
Elizabeth
Ord's
class
were
Jason
Hysell, Timmy Roach , Bill
Roach, James Sayre, Bar·
ry Taylor, Allen Warth,
Jamie Vester, Freddie Zuspan,
Bobby Jewell, David Knapp,
Shane MacKnight, Marion
Ohlinger, Aaron Scarberry,
Michael Taylor, Pete Young,
Angela Hood, Lori Lanham,
Allyson Marko, Ruby Ohlinger,
Carla Snyder, Usa WarUt,
Kathie Wright, Lisa Young,
Donna Ihle, Kelly Javins ,
Nancy Kearns, Sabrina Roney ,
Roselyn Roush, Sherry Roush,
Amanda Smith, Marcia Thorne
and Vicki Yoho.
Attending from Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds ' class were Mandy
Capehart, Kimberly Casto ,
Stephany Clarke , Cheryl
Clutter, Kimberly Elliott,
Wendy Harbour 1 Stephanie
Harrell , Deborah Hesson ,

1- The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;ldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 14

271 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

stock:

Brut
English Leather
British Sterling
Black Belt
Trouble
Old Spice
Kolnisch Wasser
tfrom t;;ennany)
Plus Many
Others

•

Phone 992.5759

we •

litll'
armnrg
"The Creator of

"COUPON"

•3 00 oH
WITH OOUPOII

ON ANY MAN'S

WATCH IN STOCk

RMsonable Drug Prices"

'1

�9- ~ Dlllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 14 19'13

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 14. 1973

Guidance seminar opens at Rio Grande College
ff'N I'l!ll

•

,..

•

Martha Vemar\, Betty WUmoth, John Redovian , Gary
Minton, Bill Nortllup, Leah Ord, Deanna W. Cook, Allred
Scarberry, Hazel Carico, Keilll Brown, J oh n Longley, Anthony C. Riccio, Ohio State University; Laura Baker , Roger
Brumfield a nd Betty Finney.

SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS - Gallla and Meigs
Counties are well represented in llle Vocational Gulda nce .
Seminar sponsored by llle GaUia.JackSl)n-Vinton JVS at Rio
Grande College. Taking time out from their studies Tuesday
were len to r ight, J . Melvin Witmer of Ohio University ,

More than $414,000 in government money has bOOn 'spent on
President Nixon's Pacific
Coast estate-more than 10
times what llle White House
originally
said- the Santa Ana
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612, Register reported Wednesday.
On May 26, the White House,
Letart Falls, will meet at llle
hall at 8 tonight. Refreshments in response to questions generated by Register stories about
will be provided.
llle estate, told The New York
Times lllat government-paid

I,
'

Verses
(Continued !rom Page 1)
salute her,
The flag of the brave and the
free .
This flag waves o'er our
Churches and Schools,
Where we are trying to do our
best,
And while we lay in llle darkest
· of night,
She will protect us while at
rest.

with
beautiful

~·Silt
VINYL PLASTIC FLAT
Choose from over a thousand

decorcltor colors, and revitalize
your home with Gray -Seal's
fabulous Vinyl Plastic Flat
interior paint!.! Paint is your
least expensive decorator and

The flag is the flag o! llle
nation,
That waves o'er the homes or
llle free ,
The one . whose colors shall

never run,

Vinyl Plastic Flilt will provide
your furnishings with a But the flag of liberty.
beautiful new . background of

color that shows them oH to
best adva.ntage.

.

You may go to the country of
Europe,
Willi all of her beauties com-1'
plete,
But you will soon return home,
The American-flag to greet.

It dr"ies in only JO minutes to a
beautiful soft finish without lap
or' brush marks and is sur·
pri~ingly tough and easy to
clean! Cl eem Up spatters and
equipment with plain water .
in
You can paint and
the same room all i
! The flag of our great nation

Reg . $7

Has waved o'er many battle
fought,
The one tllat has been carried
for miles,
Through the very lllickest of
shot.

.so

SALE$651

So be Uke the !lag of our

country,

SAYRE
HARDWARE

And with all of your evils away
And be as pure as llle flag
That waves o'er OW' Nation
today.
Copyright- Mildred A.
Evans, June 1973

992-2525

NEW HAVEN

Twenty-three instruc tors Career Educatlon Model; to
Deanna Cook , Rio Grande;
Wilfar d Copley , Thurman ;
from four counties are par- experience and evaluate .lhe
Mrs. Beatr ice M . Eubanks.
ticipating this week In a vocational and ~ industrial
Jackson ; Mrs. Betty Finney,
Vocational Guldance Seminar experiences available to
Gall ipolis ; Robert Hootman,
Jack son ; Mrs. Alma Lemon,
students in schools served by
at Rlo Grande College.
Oak H;ll ; John R. Longley.
The seminar, approved by seminar participants: to
Gallipolis ; Gary P. Minton,
Poi nt Pleasant ; William 0 .
llle State Departmnt of · develop skills in working with
Northup, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Leah
Educa lion, is sponsored by tlle other professional personnel
Jeiln Ord, Syracuse ; Thomas
Gallia.Jackson-Vinton
Joint whose cooperaiion is essential
J. Perry . Ja ck son ; John
Redovi an , Pomeroy : Alfred
Vocationa l School.
for the effective introduction of
Scarberry . Thurman ; M rs .
According to William 0 . a program of career education
Mar ion Sherwood, McAr thur ;
Attending are the f ollowi ng
Northup, Gallta County Guid· and to gain an a ppreciation of teachers ~
Robert Staggs, Wellston ; M rs .
ance Supervisor, the seminar llle developments likely to
Fred Altherr , .Ja ckson ; Mrs. Martha Ve nnar i, Pomer oy ;
Laura Saker, Gall ipoli s; Keith M rs . Betty L. Wilmoth ,
is designed to assist teachers to shape llle economy of the Brown,
Gal lipolis ;
and
Roger
Gallipol is; Mrs. Hazel
deve lo p skills r equ ired to immediate and distant futu re. Carico. Gall ipolis ; M iss Mabel Brumf ield, Gall ipolis.
prepare local guides to OC·
Teachers may ge t four
cupa tional opportunities for quar ter hours of credit from
students leaving or gradua ting Ohio University upon seminar
from high school; to assist in participa tion.
llle developme nt of skills to use
Four universities, Ohio State
mater ials necessary in the University , Ohio University,
FATHEit:l'S DAY, JUNE 1
implementation of llle Ohio the University of Cincinnati
and Rio Grande College a re
furnishing resource personnel.
Huntington man
Dr . Riccio of Ohio State
Unive r sity addressed the
dies after wreck
seminar Monday. Tuesday's
A Hun tington , W. Va., man resource persormel were Jim
died at Veterans Memorial Diehl , principal at Meigs High
Hospital Wednesday afte rnoon School ; Gary Walke r a nd
The heart of an Acc utron watch is
a!le r a ppare ntly suffering a Hager S pudock of the Scioto
a tiny, tu ning fork th ~ t splits a second
hear t a ttack driving on West Co unty Joint Voc ational
into 360 equa l intei"Vals .
School ; Gary Price, supervisor
Main St.
The victim , Lee Bumgard- of the Scioto T&amp;l School, and
Ac cutron t ime is so nearl y perfect
that Bu Iova gu a ranteeS monthly
ner , 53, was drivin_g west on Dr . Alberta Lulller , Supervisor
accu-racy to withi n 60 second s. •
West Main St. when he suffered of Vocational Education, Scioto
Se e our fine selection of Acc ul ran
the apparent attack and struck County JVS. Rodney Durgin,
wa tch.,s toda ~ . From $100.
a utility pole. The Pomer oy E- Ohio Career Model School, was
R s quad tran s ported Mr . scheduled at today's session.
Bumg ardner to Veter a ns
Other speakers this week will, .
Memorial Hospital at I :08 p.m. be Rio Gra nd e College's
He died there at about I :30 Herman Koby; Dr. George
p.m.. A Huntington funeral Parsons of llle University of
home has returned the body to Cincinnati ; Dr. ,Wayne Kerns,
Huntington where services will Hocking Valley Technical Colhe he ld . There were moderate lege ; and Mark Abels, Ohio
damages loUie front end of Mr. Employment Services. Local
school superintendents of llle
Bumgardner 's car .
OAT£ J.ND
ACCUTRON
DJ.Y "111"
Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and
"42T" 24·hour
Gold·l cne d

improvements to the Western ; outside the esta te.
Th e Regi s ter ~a id oth er
White House cost $39,525.
The Register said building projects billed to llle governpermits on file at San ment included :
- $1!,000 !or a 272-!oot sewer
Clemente, where llle IOi'oom
villa overlooking llle Pacific is connection ;
-$~.400 fo r septic ta nk
located, indicate the President
paid $!0,950 out of his own repairs ;
pocket
for
home
im- $3,990for work on the roof;
provements.
- $10,61 2 for ro a dwa ys,
The White House has said driveways and a parking area i
previously lllat work billed to
- $2,800 for work on the
th e government had bee n swimming pool;
ordered by llle Secret Service
. - $3,360for work on a storage
to protect llle President.
shed.
That included llle $184,174
Deputy White House Press
worlll of electrical work, which Secretary Gerald L. Warren
the While House said was said he had not intended, when
needed to power security he gave out the $39,525 figure
devices, and $76,000 for land- less lllan three weeks ago, to
scaping work, to plant shrubs give the impression that it was
blocking lines of vision from the total amount .

AN D EN DIN G

JUNE 30 , 1973

IN n H FO l lOWING lr,l.a.NNEII 8ASEO UPON AN
ESli MATEDTOTALOF

0
'

NO EH~C:l
TOO Si. OON TO
P~E OiC:T

HH CT

.. ~ ,.,.:
... Ill

"'" H0' """~o....oc •u-~

'MH ,~ rvti ~T &lt; II C ~U51
11• • 1 01 • '« .10 ~ t u
Wil l ,~NlN I I.NA t TIII(,
.I.IH 'N MAJOft T.t.ll

·~ln.

•"*"' '"' ,..

D
'-"·11..
D IIOlfi!CTO~ I AJIUVH5

'M~ l 'llOVC:I A...O IJII I 0' Ml f
l lri t • l...'$ 1 0 ' " """"""~

...... l l ." " l l ! ·· ~l'C;i &gt;t(i
I~

363 , 053 011

ACCOUNT NO

SCIPIO TWP.
COUNTY 'TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
RO 2
ALBANY , OHIO 45710

NEW HOURS

I

For the convenh;mce or

lQO SOON 10 PliltOICT I"Kl

farmers who participated in
llle 1973 Feed Grain program
and are unable to get into the
office Monday thr9ugh Friday,
the Meigs County ASCS office .
will be ope n until noon
Saturday on June 16 and June

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the home of
George McDaniel in Mid·
dleport at 10 : 21 p. m . Wed·
nesday . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.......

{

BELPR E, 0 .

•
KeLI/•n.ator

Columbus, spent a wee kend at
the ()pal Eichinger home. Opal
is still confined to the St.
J os eph hos iita l in Pa rkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Newell
and sons , Columbus , were

AIR
CONDITIONERS
6,000 to

- ---- - ITCtiY,

24,000 BTU

BURN ING TOES!
EASE F IERY PA I N

Ha\l e coo l clean air
ton i ghl. Tot a l ven
titalion .

I N ONE HO UR or your 59C
b a c lc Apply qu ick ·dr y ing T . .t

L . strong fun q ic ide. to qu iet
ifc h , burn in M I NUTE S Also
fine fo r sweaty , odorous t eeT. ·
Tr y lt for ha pp y rellel l NOW at
Sw isher &amp; Lohse Dr ugs ;
Nelson Dr ug Slor e, Pome roy .
- Adv

Mason Furniture

STRETCH
YOUR DOLLAR

for Sale
I - BEAGLE purebred fe male
pup. Phone 985-3565.
6-13-2tp
IMITATION

leat her

ba by

shoes, hand sewn . Size 1, 2, &amp;

3. Phone 773-5313.

6-13-3tp
14 F&lt;&gt;gT wood Wa /nerine boat
steering
wheel.
pa r t ial
controls , 3 sea ts, SIOO Call

773-5640.

.
6·13-3tp

FORD BALER - with motor
extra good condi ti on . Contaci
Kenneth Har tley. Ph one 992·

6320.

6·13-6tc
1970 HONDA 350 Motorcycle.

ALKA SELlZER
Alka
Seltzer

......

of' ' ' •RI • • H

'

$1.25

GERITOL
TABS

Value

9 oz .
Reg . or

40's

.

Unscented

$2.98

$ 1.75 Value

Va lue

Milk of
Magnesia
_,..

__

HOLD, HOLD
&amp; HOLD
SPRAY

Plai n &amp; M i nt
Reg . SI .S9

8 o z.
$3.00 Valu e

_ __ __ __ __:
6·.:.:
13-31c
DRIVE A LITTLE: SAVE A
LOT!!! Refr i gerators, sq .
door, late models ; others
from $19.95 ; auto. washers,
$45 ; elect., gas dryer s S35;
gas, elec . ranges ; clothes
closets ; dinettes, maple, oak,

chrome ; "ROUND
OAK
TABLES, 3, 4, 5 pc. bedroom
suites ; old chest of drawer s,

dressing tables . SPECIAL
FOR DAD - vinyl recliners,
fabric swivel rockers $65.
(Cash only at this price! no
sets $16 .95 ; 9

6·10-6tc

'

REGISTERED 3 year old
Tennessee Walker -

stall ion .

992·3518.

- - -- - --

SHOWALTER 's

6-I0-6tc

We1

Pet ,

y

Chester ,
Oh i o; summer
clearance, five tanks of
assorted fish at 5 for Sl while
· they last. Will be open days 9
a . m . to 9 p . m . except on
Thursday and Friday , -4 p.m .

·
6-4-11tp

SCHICK SAMSON

SUPER MAX

jumper.
walker . Phone 992·7288 .
.
' 6-12."3fc

STYLING DRYER FOR

by GIUETTE

to 9:30p. m.

CRIB mattress and

2 USED chain saws, Pomeroy
Home &amp; .. Auto, E . Main,
Pomeroy, phone 992·209-4. ·
6-12.Jtc

-~

GUYS ON THE MOVE.

'

1964 HARLEY Davidson , full

'l'he New

dress - 74 - A· l condition,
$1,150.00 . Phone 985-3912 aft~r
·-4 : 30 p.m.

REMINGTONfl
IU t\ICK Ill'"

6-12-Jfp

It' s t.lte dc•l11xt• eord

GROCERY business for sale.
Building for sale or leaSe.
Phone 773-5618 from 8 : 30p .m. :
to 10 p .m . for appoi.ntment.

N lun· •~r •h.~:•t •nukes
• ht• c•lct~e slu•ve
t~ tl&lt;m [ort nhle.

3·20-lfc

'25.98
Value

PUBLIC NOT1CES
Your Right to Know

Reg. s36.59

NORELCO MEN'S
TRI

an d 'b e informed of the tun c.
t loMS ot you r go . . ernmenl · are
em bodied in public nol ic.es . In
th at- .se lf .govern menl charg es
alt citizens to be inform ed.:
th is newspap er urges every
ci t izen to read an d study t hese
·nol ices . w e slrongty ad v ise
thos e ci tl!en s, se eking furth er
infor m ati on , to exerci se the ir
' r ig ht of access to public
•r ec ord s and public meet ing s.

$2 9 27
•

FIVE ATTACHMENTS
REG.
'23.99
Introducing
'fhe New
REMINGTONt~

New REMir\IG"rori

Mt\IIK IV'"

600 Deluxe llalr
Dryer for Men.

~'\E~- $1838

NOTICE

New Gas Range

.

If you're thinking or repleclng y..,.r old
gas range now, remember th11 yOu
needn'l worry about your home gat
1Supply. A new. modern gal range help•
.. conMrva gas becaute It'• more tffl ·
Pre-hea t your oven only
when it's . necessa ry. At1 d
when you do. live or ten
minutes Is all lt takes. Set·
ting the temperature hi gher
than you wa nt won't prehe ~ t the oven any taster.

clent. It' offere autom111c: controle, bet~
ter lnsulallon and other Qll•tavlng
fealures.
·
\

il

I

I

ill I II/

r-rr====~ ~

The instant-on . instantoff control of you r g ~s
range means l ess
wasted heat betore and
afte r cooking, an d just
natura lly .saves gas an d
mon ey . Cook in g. sel·
dam requ ires a high
flame for very long. Uae
1 low one when it will
do just as well.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO

e9 CLOSENESS COMFORT
SETTINGS
ePOP OUT TRIMMER
Reg.
'39.95

In the Matter ot the Peli tion of
George P . Baker, Ric hard C .
Bond , and Jerv iS Langdon , J r .,
Tr ustees of the Propert y of
Penn Centra l Transporta t ion
Company , Debtor, with r es pec t
to d iscont in uan ce of the regular
'hours of agents at ce rta in
stat ions and the su bst itut ions of
an ot her method of ser vic e.
. Case No. 73 ·30I ·R
The Truste es of Penn Central
Tr an sportation Com pany have
fi led lhe abOv e App.Ji cat ion with
the Public Ut il ities Comm ission
Of Ohio.
The
Com mi ss ion
has
sc heduled: ~ publi c hear inQ on
lhe appli cat ion tor Jul y 10, 1973
at 9:00 a. m . E.S.T. at the of .
f ic es of the Comm ission , ll l
Nor th High Slreet, Colu mbu s.
Ohio .
T h e Comm i ss ion furt he r
ord ered that each and ever y
copy of lhe notice :so se r ved,
posted , or published pursuant to
th is entry , ~ha l l requ ire each
and every ind i \iidual. p~rt ·
nersh i p,
or
c orpora t ion
protes llng or interven ing in this
matter to f ile a statem ent of
lh~ir interest here in w ith the
DocktH lng Oepai-t ment of the
Com m tss lon not tess than ten
(.10 ) de ys pr ior lo the da t e of
near.ng .

$2497

HOT LATHER
MACHINE

~MBIAGA.

Gas is precious . .. pure eri1rgy •• , u1e It

.

.

wle•IV.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The follow ing docu m enl( sJ
were rece i ved by tt1e Ohio
Env i ronmental
Prote cfl on
Agency . -450 East Town Str eet,
Columbus . Ohio , -43 21 6, dur ing
the week of June 3. 1973. Anyone
Who may be aggr ieved or ad ·
versety affected by · issuance of
any permif(sJ may r e-quest an
ad l ud ica t ion hear ing In accord ·
ance with Sec·
3745 .07. Ohio
Rev i sed Code , by written
r equesl to the . above addreSs .
Appl ication for .var i ance or
operating perm it - A ir , E X·
Cels lor Salt Works , In c .• BOx
267, Pomeroy. ,

MORE COMFORTABLE
SHAVES BECAUSE HEAD
IS FLEXIBLE
1

34.95
Value

Pine
Sol

REFILLS AVAILABLE IN
REGULAR, MENTHOL,
. LEMON AND LIME
'19.95
Value

'26
ffi{l~

41.95

1

SNEAKERS

Featuring SNOOPY, CHARliE
BROWN and all the lovable
•• PEANUTS"

$2,39

REMINGTON MIST
AIR HOT COMB
NO. HW-4

S1366

~"""'
"
1 ALADDIN QT.

(5 ) 3 1; ( 61 ], 13, 18, 41 C

~

THERMOS
With
Th is
Coupon

POLAROID FILM
108

TRAC II RAZOR
Reg_

'2.95

'3.35 Value

'5.75 388
Value $

( 6 ) 14·, ltC

'

'

••

PH. 773-5592
MASON . W. VA.

FOR

SURE
DEODORANT

Call 985 ·4240 after 5 p .m .

___:

Good maintenance, including periodic
cleani ng, assures more economical and
efficient operation. Proper adjustment of
burners lo a blue llama is an important
maintenance check. Clean burner poTts is
anothe r. Your gas range manual has com~
plete instructio ns.

Mrs. Hobart Newell .

1220 Washington Blvd.

423-7521

MONDAY.

c

,

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Fath!!r's. Day Speci al. New
swtvel roc kers in velvet _ 4
large recliners in vi ny l. Onl y
$69 .96 , cash and carry ,
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
N\ain St. Phone 992 .755-4.
·
6·7-8tc

__ ____

30.
PARKING BAN
Middleport police ha ve
announced there will be no
parking from n oon until 6 p.m.
Friday !rom Rawlings Garage
to Custer St. on South 2nd Ave.
and from South Jrd to South
2nd on Locust St.

Complete mobile home
service - plus gigantic
d isplay of mobile homes
always available af ...

af'! d su pplies. ne w l o~a tl on
Ash Stree t, Middleport, nea;
park ; Phone 992·5443 .
1·7-tf c

weekend guests of Mr. a nd

BEFORE

.,

Conservation is important today, as .
the nation faces an e n~rgy c risis. Help
tight waste ol ou r vita l resource s right
in your pw n kitc he n by usi ng these
gas-sa\ling cQok ing tips . . . and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now to do you r sha re.n

Ai r Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning

HOOD' S AQU ARIUMS· fish

Robert · Allen a nd M. H.
Allen.
Mr . and Mrs. Cha rl es
Ei c hinge r and da ughter ,

$49.95 ; 9 x 12 Thriftex
l.lnoleums
$6 .98 .
Ki.Jhl ' s
Bargain Center "at caution
light"; Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains .
Open everyday EXCEPT

RUTLAND FURNITURE

ATTEND EXERCISE
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lee attended Ohio State University
gr~duation exercises for their
daughter.Jn-law, Mrs. Jerry
Lee, who graduated cum laude.
Mrs. Lee will be teaching
Business Education in the
Upper Arlington High School,
Columbus.
·

6·10-6tc

6-1 1·4tc

By Clarice Allen
wh er e they attended the
Mr . a nd Mrs . Ve rn on gra dua tion of their son, Billy
Cleland, Columbus, spent a Rober t ,
fr om
.Lehi gh
re&lt;.-ent weekend with Mr . a nd Univer sity on May '1:1. Bill)•
Mrs. Ross Clela nd .
receiced his Master of Science
Mr. and MJ'S. Arlllur Orr Deg ree
in
Che mi ca l
spent a lew days willl Mr. and Engineering.
Mrs. Ed Neuman and famMr . and Mr s. Spence
ily, Galion. They went to at. Ted e ri ck, Old Was hington,
tend llle gra duation of llleir were recent visilors of Mr. und
g r a ndd a u g ht e r ,
Linda Mrs. J ohn Wickham.
Neuman. They also visited
Mr. and Mrs . Ross Cleland
willl Mr. a nd Mrs. Edwa rd spent a few days in Columbus
Theiss, Pataska la, and with with Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Mrs. Edilll McElfresh.
Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen · Recent visitors of Denzil
1'·e re houseguests of Mrs. G.W. Cleland have been Da rr el
Les lie in Bethlehem, Pa ., Cleland, Co lun1bus, Mrs . Karl

Klocs, Syracu.~ . Mr. and Mrs.
George Abbot t, Mt. Hermon,
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Audrey
Howan, Mrs. lle len Lorentz
and Mrs. Lydia Berry , a ll of
Belpre .
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Grueser
and fHmily, Logan, spe nl a
recent weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ar tllur Orr.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Char les
Kn ight, Columbus, and Mr . a nd
Mrs. Ra lph Knight , Buffalo, N.
Y., were r ecent vis it ors of Mr .
and Mrs. Howard Knight.
Bill y Allen, Bethlehem, Pa.,
spent a wee k with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen. On Sunday they
vis ited in Ashland , Ky., with
Mr . and Mrs. D. B. Martin.

x 1:2 sha!:ll . ~ ::~ s , oval, fringed

2 ROOMS AND HALL

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP

17.500.00. Phone 773-5&lt;165.

·c ASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobi l e homes
Phone area COde 614 . ~23. 953 1 :
4-IJ.Hc

Chester ~ews Notes

'

1969 Venclale m obile home, 2 AM· ~~ s1ere&lt;~ received with
bed room~. porch. awn ing and
bUII1·•n 8 track tape- player 4
ste ps. Alum inum
under
speaker
sound
syste,;, .
pinning, I ft . edenslon air'
Balance $106.99 or use our
cond itioned and dlshw4sher
budget ter m s. Ca ll 992 . 3965.

SlJ9 ~95ut'\ · +"' "I "'

Court St.

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CON.SERVE
ENERGY
AND SAVE
MONEY.
.

For Sale.

layaways) . NEW FUR.
NlTURE - living room suites

·.CARPET SPECIAL

Pl.t.."-1$ ~0 EXPtNO tl$ REVENUE SHAAING ALLOCA.~ I ON
"DR ~H E !NTil l U.IfNT PE~I O O 8f GI"'NIN(i

~~~-~~~:~: PRb~At-ci.c~ .... ~. ,, Ihit,.."~..,~""

cas e and
band, $280.

Goessler's ·Jewelry Store

Marietta Times
•
zn Gannett fold

THI OOVII\NMlNTOII

JAN . I. 1973

dial. Railroad

Approwed. $125 .

FOUR CASES HEARD
DIVORCE GRANTED
Four c;ases in Pomeroy
Rand"all R. Proffitt has been
Mayor 's Court Wednesday
·granted
a divorce in Meigs
night with Mayor Don Collins
Pomeroy
presiding resulted in Mark County Common Pleas Court
•we wlllldjust t o th is tolerance, If necessary. Cuarantei Is for One )'eu.
Haley being charged only costs from Candy Profitt.
lor assault, and bonds forfeited
by Everett Sc huler , Middleport, $25, squealing tires ;
Co. and 5 KW s tock lor Gannett Erma Connoley, Reedsville 1
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP!) require s
F e deral $25, improper backing, and
The Times Co., owner of the stock
Ronald
Euge ne
Gr ate ,
Marietta Daily Times and .the. Communications Commission
Rutland, $23.70, speeding.
company's affiliate 5 KW Inc., approval because of th e
owner of radio stations WBRJ, broadcasting interests of 5 KW.
In
announcin g
the
Marietta and WMWM in
MR. CALKINS DIED
Wilmington, Ohio, have joined agreement, McKinney said,
SYRACUSE
Charles
Gannett Co., Inc., owner of 54 '~ this agreement will enable
newspapers in 17 states and shareholders a! the Times Co. Calkins , husband of Eulah
Guam, it was announced today. and ~ KW to bring to Marietta Johnson · Calkins, formerly of
COMPL ET ELY IN STALLED
The transaction. was toin- probably the most dynamic Syracuse , died Wednesday at
WALL TO WALL
.Wi th Heavy Foa m Rubber Pad
pleted Wednesday and was newspaper leadership in the Grant Hospital, Columbus. In
addition to his wife, he is
announced jointly by William cowttry today ."
Includes· .12'xl5' Living Rm
The Gannett Co. statement survived by a daughter, Mary
F . McKinney, Times Co.
· 9' x 12' Bedroom
Graham,
and
two
grandpresident and by Paul Miller, said in part, " it is a long
3'x 12' Hall
chairman and chief executive es tablished policy of the daughters. Memorial services
of . Gannett · and Allen H. Gannett newspapers to operate will be held Sunday at 4 p.m . at
Qua lit y 501 nylon ca rpet ing w i t h heavy ·foam rubber pad , ex pert ta ck less
insl a llation. Choice oi color s. A ll work guaranteed . See Wendell Gra te f or
Neuharlll, president of ·Gan- with local autonomy and there llle United Methodist Church at
thi s buy, or fr ee esti mate on a ny carpet in stallation
Pataskala
.
will be no changes in personnel
nett.
The final exchange of Times or policy at "the Times or its
radio stations ."
Marriage License
McKinney has agreed to stay
RUTLAND, 0.
WENDELL GRATE
PH . 74'2 -4211
Harry
David Slawter, 21,
with llle Times as publisher,
Middleport, and Rhea Jeanllle statement said.
nette Mora , I9, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
RIGiff UPHELD
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UP!)
- The Nevada Supreme Court
BURIED WEDNESDAY
Wednesday upheld llle right of
Funeral services lor Andy
.a woman to ·sue her: husband Gloeckner,
When cooki ng vegetables, use as little
formerly
&lt;ff
lor an auto-accident injury Pomeroy, were held Wedwater as possible and cover lhe pan to
speed cooking.
which occurred before llleir nesday with burial in Salem,
marriage.
W. Va . Local relatives who
survive are Marie Dalley and
Mrs. Grace Gloeckner .

DE i' .a. "l',U ~ T 0~ TH f l REAS U RV
OFFICE 0 ~ REVE '- UE S H A~ I N(;
19 00 PEPI: "' SYLVA"' I A A\I~ "'W
WASHINGTO"' . 0 C 20 226

~JOMfllfiN6 .JPKIAL~
~for that fXTRA SPECIAL GUY! I@'

Bulova
Accutron®

tops $414,000 says paper.
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!) -

Mrs .

For split -second timing

Quality Western White House bill
(Continued !rom Page 1)
master of ceremonies. Also
taking part in llle show will be
Ohio University Players.
Admission is 50 cents for
adults and children. Audience
participation and a panel of
judges will determine the
winners of the talent show

Conley. Oak Hill;

L.

Vinton County area and high
school principals will be guest
participants in a survey on llle
Joint
J ackson-Gallia-Vinton
Vocational School.
Seminar pa rticipants are
conducting a survey of employers in llle fou r county area
tllat employs 10 or more individuals.

Mobile Homes For S.

I

CONTAC
CAPSULES

IO's
$1.79 Val ue

�9- ~ Dlllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 14 19'13

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 14. 1973

Guidance seminar opens at Rio Grande College
ff'N I'l!ll

•

,..

•

Martha Vemar\, Betty WUmoth, John Redovian , Gary
Minton, Bill Nortllup, Leah Ord, Deanna W. Cook, Allred
Scarberry, Hazel Carico, Keilll Brown, J oh n Longley, Anthony C. Riccio, Ohio State University; Laura Baker , Roger
Brumfield a nd Betty Finney.

SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS - Gallla and Meigs
Counties are well represented in llle Vocational Gulda nce .
Seminar sponsored by llle GaUia.JackSl)n-Vinton JVS at Rio
Grande College. Taking time out from their studies Tuesday
were len to r ight, J . Melvin Witmer of Ohio University ,

More than $414,000 in government money has bOOn 'spent on
President Nixon's Pacific
Coast estate-more than 10
times what llle White House
originally
said- the Santa Ana
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612, Register reported Wednesday.
On May 26, the White House,
Letart Falls, will meet at llle
hall at 8 tonight. Refreshments in response to questions generated by Register stories about
will be provided.
llle estate, told The New York
Times lllat government-paid

I,
'

Verses
(Continued !rom Page 1)
salute her,
The flag of the brave and the
free .
This flag waves o'er our
Churches and Schools,
Where we are trying to do our
best,
And while we lay in llle darkest
· of night,
She will protect us while at
rest.

with
beautiful

~·Silt
VINYL PLASTIC FLAT
Choose from over a thousand

decorcltor colors, and revitalize
your home with Gray -Seal's
fabulous Vinyl Plastic Flat
interior paint!.! Paint is your
least expensive decorator and

The flag is the flag o! llle
nation,
That waves o'er the homes or
llle free ,
The one . whose colors shall

never run,

Vinyl Plastic Flilt will provide
your furnishings with a But the flag of liberty.
beautiful new . background of

color that shows them oH to
best adva.ntage.

.

You may go to the country of
Europe,
Willi all of her beauties com-1'
plete,
But you will soon return home,
The American-flag to greet.

It dr"ies in only JO minutes to a
beautiful soft finish without lap
or' brush marks and is sur·
pri~ingly tough and easy to
clean! Cl eem Up spatters and
equipment with plain water .
in
You can paint and
the same room all i
! The flag of our great nation

Reg . $7

Has waved o'er many battle
fought,
The one tllat has been carried
for miles,
Through the very lllickest of
shot.

.so

SALE$651

So be Uke the !lag of our

country,

SAYRE
HARDWARE

And with all of your evils away
And be as pure as llle flag
That waves o'er OW' Nation
today.
Copyright- Mildred A.
Evans, June 1973

992-2525

NEW HAVEN

Twenty-three instruc tors Career Educatlon Model; to
Deanna Cook , Rio Grande;
Wilfar d Copley , Thurman ;
from four counties are par- experience and evaluate .lhe
Mrs. Beatr ice M . Eubanks.
ticipating this week In a vocational and ~ industrial
Jackson ; Mrs. Betty Finney,
Vocational Guldance Seminar experiences available to
Gall ipolis ; Robert Hootman,
Jack son ; Mrs. Alma Lemon,
students in schools served by
at Rlo Grande College.
Oak H;ll ; John R. Longley.
The seminar, approved by seminar participants: to
Gallipolis ; Gary P. Minton,
Poi nt Pleasant ; William 0 .
llle State Departmnt of · develop skills in working with
Northup, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Leah
Educa lion, is sponsored by tlle other professional personnel
Jeiln Ord, Syracuse ; Thomas
Gallia.Jackson-Vinton
Joint whose cooperaiion is essential
J. Perry . Ja ck son ; John
Redovi an , Pomeroy : Alfred
Vocationa l School.
for the effective introduction of
Scarberry . Thurman ; M rs .
According to William 0 . a program of career education
Mar ion Sherwood, McAr thur ;
Attending are the f ollowi ng
Northup, Gallta County Guid· and to gain an a ppreciation of teachers ~
Robert Staggs, Wellston ; M rs .
ance Supervisor, the seminar llle developments likely to
Fred Altherr , .Ja ckson ; Mrs. Martha Ve nnar i, Pomer oy ;
Laura Saker, Gall ipoli s; Keith M rs . Betty L. Wilmoth ,
is designed to assist teachers to shape llle economy of the Brown,
Gal lipolis ;
and
Roger
Gallipol is; Mrs. Hazel
deve lo p skills r equ ired to immediate and distant futu re. Carico. Gall ipolis ; M iss Mabel Brumf ield, Gall ipolis.
prepare local guides to OC·
Teachers may ge t four
cupa tional opportunities for quar ter hours of credit from
students leaving or gradua ting Ohio University upon seminar
from high school; to assist in participa tion.
llle developme nt of skills to use
Four universities, Ohio State
mater ials necessary in the University , Ohio University,
FATHEit:l'S DAY, JUNE 1
implementation of llle Ohio the University of Cincinnati
and Rio Grande College a re
furnishing resource personnel.
Huntington man
Dr . Riccio of Ohio State
Unive r sity addressed the
dies after wreck
seminar Monday. Tuesday's
A Hun tington , W. Va., man resource persormel were Jim
died at Veterans Memorial Diehl , principal at Meigs High
Hospital Wednesday afte rnoon School ; Gary Walke r a nd
The heart of an Acc utron watch is
a!le r a ppare ntly suffering a Hager S pudock of the Scioto
a tiny, tu ning fork th ~ t splits a second
hear t a ttack driving on West Co unty Joint Voc ational
into 360 equa l intei"Vals .
School ; Gary Price, supervisor
Main St.
The victim , Lee Bumgard- of the Scioto T&amp;l School, and
Ac cutron t ime is so nearl y perfect
that Bu Iova gu a ranteeS monthly
ner , 53, was drivin_g west on Dr . Alberta Lulller , Supervisor
accu-racy to withi n 60 second s. •
West Main St. when he suffered of Vocational Education, Scioto
Se e our fine selection of Acc ul ran
the apparent attack and struck County JVS. Rodney Durgin,
wa tch.,s toda ~ . From $100.
a utility pole. The Pomer oy E- Ohio Career Model School, was
R s quad tran s ported Mr . scheduled at today's session.
Bumg ardner to Veter a ns
Other speakers this week will, .
Memorial Hospital at I :08 p.m. be Rio Gra nd e College's
He died there at about I :30 Herman Koby; Dr. George
p.m.. A Huntington funeral Parsons of llle University of
home has returned the body to Cincinnati ; Dr. ,Wayne Kerns,
Huntington where services will Hocking Valley Technical Colhe he ld . There were moderate lege ; and Mark Abels, Ohio
damages loUie front end of Mr. Employment Services. Local
school superintendents of llle
Bumgardner 's car .
OAT£ J.ND
ACCUTRON
DJ.Y "111"
Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and
"42T" 24·hour
Gold·l cne d

improvements to the Western ; outside the esta te.
Th e Regi s ter ~a id oth er
White House cost $39,525.
The Register said building projects billed to llle governpermits on file at San ment included :
- $1!,000 !or a 272-!oot sewer
Clemente, where llle IOi'oom
villa overlooking llle Pacific is connection ;
-$~.400 fo r septic ta nk
located, indicate the President
paid $!0,950 out of his own repairs ;
pocket
for
home
im- $3,990for work on the roof;
provements.
- $10,61 2 for ro a dwa ys,
The White House has said driveways and a parking area i
previously lllat work billed to
- $2,800 for work on the
th e government had bee n swimming pool;
ordered by llle Secret Service
. - $3,360for work on a storage
to protect llle President.
shed.
That included llle $184,174
Deputy White House Press
worlll of electrical work, which Secretary Gerald L. Warren
the While House said was said he had not intended, when
needed to power security he gave out the $39,525 figure
devices, and $76,000 for land- less lllan three weeks ago, to
scaping work, to plant shrubs give the impression that it was
blocking lines of vision from the total amount .

AN D EN DIN G

JUNE 30 , 1973

IN n H FO l lOWING lr,l.a.NNEII 8ASEO UPON AN
ESli MATEDTOTALOF

0
'

NO EH~C:l
TOO Si. OON TO
P~E OiC:T

HH CT

.. ~ ,.,.:
... Ill

"'" H0' """~o....oc •u-~

'MH ,~ rvti ~T &lt; II C ~U51
11• • 1 01 • '« .10 ~ t u
Wil l ,~NlN I I.NA t TIII(,
.I.IH 'N MAJOft T.t.ll

·~ln.

•"*"' '"' ,..

D
'-"·11..
D IIOlfi!CTO~ I AJIUVH5

'M~ l 'llOVC:I A...O IJII I 0' Ml f
l lri t • l...'$ 1 0 ' " """"""~

...... l l ." " l l ! ·· ~l'C;i &gt;t(i
I~

363 , 053 011

ACCOUNT NO

SCIPIO TWP.
COUNTY 'TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
RO 2
ALBANY , OHIO 45710

NEW HOURS

I

For the convenh;mce or

lQO SOON 10 PliltOICT I"Kl

farmers who participated in
llle 1973 Feed Grain program
and are unable to get into the
office Monday thr9ugh Friday,
the Meigs County ASCS office .
will be ope n until noon
Saturday on June 16 and June

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the home of
George McDaniel in Mid·
dleport at 10 : 21 p. m . Wed·
nesday . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.......

{

BELPR E, 0 .

•
KeLI/•n.ator

Columbus, spent a wee kend at
the ()pal Eichinger home. Opal
is still confined to the St.
J os eph hos iita l in Pa rkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Newell
and sons , Columbus , were

AIR
CONDITIONERS
6,000 to

- ---- - ITCtiY,

24,000 BTU

BURN ING TOES!
EASE F IERY PA I N

Ha\l e coo l clean air
ton i ghl. Tot a l ven
titalion .

I N ONE HO UR or your 59C
b a c lc Apply qu ick ·dr y ing T . .t

L . strong fun q ic ide. to qu iet
ifc h , burn in M I NUTE S Also
fine fo r sweaty , odorous t eeT. ·
Tr y lt for ha pp y rellel l NOW at
Sw isher &amp; Lohse Dr ugs ;
Nelson Dr ug Slor e, Pome roy .
- Adv

Mason Furniture

STRETCH
YOUR DOLLAR

for Sale
I - BEAGLE purebred fe male
pup. Phone 985-3565.
6-13-2tp
IMITATION

leat her

ba by

shoes, hand sewn . Size 1, 2, &amp;

3. Phone 773-5313.

6-13-3tp
14 F&lt;&gt;gT wood Wa /nerine boat
steering
wheel.
pa r t ial
controls , 3 sea ts, SIOO Call

773-5640.

.
6·13-3tp

FORD BALER - with motor
extra good condi ti on . Contaci
Kenneth Har tley. Ph one 992·

6320.

6·13-6tc
1970 HONDA 350 Motorcycle.

ALKA SELlZER
Alka
Seltzer

......

of' ' ' •RI • • H

'

$1.25

GERITOL
TABS

Value

9 oz .
Reg . or

40's

.

Unscented

$2.98

$ 1.75 Value

Va lue

Milk of
Magnesia
_,..

__

HOLD, HOLD
&amp; HOLD
SPRAY

Plai n &amp; M i nt
Reg . SI .S9

8 o z.
$3.00 Valu e

_ __ __ __ __:
6·.:.:
13-31c
DRIVE A LITTLE: SAVE A
LOT!!! Refr i gerators, sq .
door, late models ; others
from $19.95 ; auto. washers,
$45 ; elect., gas dryer s S35;
gas, elec . ranges ; clothes
closets ; dinettes, maple, oak,

chrome ; "ROUND
OAK
TABLES, 3, 4, 5 pc. bedroom
suites ; old chest of drawer s,

dressing tables . SPECIAL
FOR DAD - vinyl recliners,
fabric swivel rockers $65.
(Cash only at this price! no
sets $16 .95 ; 9

6·10-6tc

'

REGISTERED 3 year old
Tennessee Walker -

stall ion .

992·3518.

- - -- - --

SHOWALTER 's

6-I0-6tc

We1

Pet ,

y

Chester ,
Oh i o; summer
clearance, five tanks of
assorted fish at 5 for Sl while
· they last. Will be open days 9
a . m . to 9 p . m . except on
Thursday and Friday , -4 p.m .

·
6-4-11tp

SCHICK SAMSON

SUPER MAX

jumper.
walker . Phone 992·7288 .
.
' 6-12."3fc

STYLING DRYER FOR

by GIUETTE

to 9:30p. m.

CRIB mattress and

2 USED chain saws, Pomeroy
Home &amp; .. Auto, E . Main,
Pomeroy, phone 992·209-4. ·
6-12.Jtc

-~

GUYS ON THE MOVE.

'

1964 HARLEY Davidson , full

'l'he New

dress - 74 - A· l condition,
$1,150.00 . Phone 985-3912 aft~r
·-4 : 30 p.m.

REMINGTONfl
IU t\ICK Ill'"

6-12-Jfp

It' s t.lte dc•l11xt• eord

GROCERY business for sale.
Building for sale or leaSe.
Phone 773-5618 from 8 : 30p .m. :
to 10 p .m . for appoi.ntment.

N lun· •~r •h.~:•t •nukes
• ht• c•lct~e slu•ve
t~ tl&lt;m [ort nhle.

3·20-lfc

'25.98
Value

PUBLIC NOT1CES
Your Right to Know

Reg. s36.59

NORELCO MEN'S
TRI

an d 'b e informed of the tun c.
t loMS ot you r go . . ernmenl · are
em bodied in public nol ic.es . In
th at- .se lf .govern menl charg es
alt citizens to be inform ed.:
th is newspap er urges every
ci t izen to read an d study t hese
·nol ices . w e slrongty ad v ise
thos e ci tl!en s, se eking furth er
infor m ati on , to exerci se the ir
' r ig ht of access to public
•r ec ord s and public meet ing s.

$2 9 27
•

FIVE ATTACHMENTS
REG.
'23.99
Introducing
'fhe New
REMINGTONt~

New REMir\IG"rori

Mt\IIK IV'"

600 Deluxe llalr
Dryer for Men.

~'\E~- $1838

NOTICE

New Gas Range

.

If you're thinking or repleclng y..,.r old
gas range now, remember th11 yOu
needn'l worry about your home gat
1Supply. A new. modern gal range help•
.. conMrva gas becaute It'• more tffl ·
Pre-hea t your oven only
when it's . necessa ry. At1 d
when you do. live or ten
minutes Is all lt takes. Set·
ting the temperature hi gher
than you wa nt won't prehe ~ t the oven any taster.

clent. It' offere autom111c: controle, bet~
ter lnsulallon and other Qll•tavlng
fealures.
·
\

il

I

I

ill I II/

r-rr====~ ~

The instant-on . instantoff control of you r g ~s
range means l ess
wasted heat betore and
afte r cooking, an d just
natura lly .saves gas an d
mon ey . Cook in g. sel·
dam requ ires a high
flame for very long. Uae
1 low one when it will
do just as well.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO

e9 CLOSENESS COMFORT
SETTINGS
ePOP OUT TRIMMER
Reg.
'39.95

In the Matter ot the Peli tion of
George P . Baker, Ric hard C .
Bond , and Jerv iS Langdon , J r .,
Tr ustees of the Propert y of
Penn Centra l Transporta t ion
Company , Debtor, with r es pec t
to d iscont in uan ce of the regular
'hours of agents at ce rta in
stat ions and the su bst itut ions of
an ot her method of ser vic e.
. Case No. 73 ·30I ·R
The Truste es of Penn Central
Tr an sportation Com pany have
fi led lhe abOv e App.Ji cat ion with
the Public Ut il ities Comm ission
Of Ohio.
The
Com mi ss ion
has
sc heduled: ~ publi c hear inQ on
lhe appli cat ion tor Jul y 10, 1973
at 9:00 a. m . E.S.T. at the of .
f ic es of the Comm ission , ll l
Nor th High Slreet, Colu mbu s.
Ohio .
T h e Comm i ss ion furt he r
ord ered that each and ever y
copy of lhe notice :so se r ved,
posted , or published pursuant to
th is entry , ~ha l l requ ire each
and every ind i \iidual. p~rt ·
nersh i p,
or
c orpora t ion
protes llng or interven ing in this
matter to f ile a statem ent of
lh~ir interest here in w ith the
DocktH lng Oepai-t ment of the
Com m tss lon not tess than ten
(.10 ) de ys pr ior lo the da t e of
near.ng .

$2497

HOT LATHER
MACHINE

~MBIAGA.

Gas is precious . .. pure eri1rgy •• , u1e It

.

.

wle•IV.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The follow ing docu m enl( sJ
were rece i ved by tt1e Ohio
Env i ronmental
Prote cfl on
Agency . -450 East Town Str eet,
Columbus . Ohio , -43 21 6, dur ing
the week of June 3. 1973. Anyone
Who may be aggr ieved or ad ·
versety affected by · issuance of
any permif(sJ may r e-quest an
ad l ud ica t ion hear ing In accord ·
ance with Sec·
3745 .07. Ohio
Rev i sed Code , by written
r equesl to the . above addreSs .
Appl ication for .var i ance or
operating perm it - A ir , E X·
Cels lor Salt Works , In c .• BOx
267, Pomeroy. ,

MORE COMFORTABLE
SHAVES BECAUSE HEAD
IS FLEXIBLE
1

34.95
Value

Pine
Sol

REFILLS AVAILABLE IN
REGULAR, MENTHOL,
. LEMON AND LIME
'19.95
Value

'26
ffi{l~

41.95

1

SNEAKERS

Featuring SNOOPY, CHARliE
BROWN and all the lovable
•• PEANUTS"

$2,39

REMINGTON MIST
AIR HOT COMB
NO. HW-4

S1366

~"""'
"
1 ALADDIN QT.

(5 ) 3 1; ( 61 ], 13, 18, 41 C

~

THERMOS
With
Th is
Coupon

POLAROID FILM
108

TRAC II RAZOR
Reg_

'2.95

'3.35 Value

'5.75 388
Value $

( 6 ) 14·, ltC

'

'

••

PH. 773-5592
MASON . W. VA.

FOR

SURE
DEODORANT

Call 985 ·4240 after 5 p .m .

___:

Good maintenance, including periodic
cleani ng, assures more economical and
efficient operation. Proper adjustment of
burners lo a blue llama is an important
maintenance check. Clean burner poTts is
anothe r. Your gas range manual has com~
plete instructio ns.

Mrs. Hobart Newell .

1220 Washington Blvd.

423-7521

MONDAY.

c

,

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Fath!!r's. Day Speci al. New
swtvel roc kers in velvet _ 4
large recliners in vi ny l. Onl y
$69 .96 , cash and carry ,
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
N\ain St. Phone 992 .755-4.
·
6·7-8tc

__ ____

30.
PARKING BAN
Middleport police ha ve
announced there will be no
parking from n oon until 6 p.m.
Friday !rom Rawlings Garage
to Custer St. on South 2nd Ave.
and from South Jrd to South
2nd on Locust St.

Complete mobile home
service - plus gigantic
d isplay of mobile homes
always available af ...

af'! d su pplies. ne w l o~a tl on
Ash Stree t, Middleport, nea;
park ; Phone 992·5443 .
1·7-tf c

weekend guests of Mr. a nd

BEFORE

.,

Conservation is important today, as .
the nation faces an e n~rgy c risis. Help
tight waste ol ou r vita l resource s right
in your pw n kitc he n by usi ng these
gas-sa\ling cQok ing tips . . . and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now to do you r sha re.n

Ai r Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning

HOOD' S AQU ARIUMS· fish

Robert · Allen a nd M. H.
Allen.
Mr . and Mrs. Cha rl es
Ei c hinge r and da ughter ,

$49.95 ; 9 x 12 Thriftex
l.lnoleums
$6 .98 .
Ki.Jhl ' s
Bargain Center "at caution
light"; Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains .
Open everyday EXCEPT

RUTLAND FURNITURE

ATTEND EXERCISE
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lee attended Ohio State University
gr~duation exercises for their
daughter.Jn-law, Mrs. Jerry
Lee, who graduated cum laude.
Mrs. Lee will be teaching
Business Education in the
Upper Arlington High School,
Columbus.
·

6·10-6tc

6-1 1·4tc

By Clarice Allen
wh er e they attended the
Mr . a nd Mrs . Ve rn on gra dua tion of their son, Billy
Cleland, Columbus, spent a Rober t ,
fr om
.Lehi gh
re&lt;.-ent weekend with Mr . a nd Univer sity on May '1:1. Bill)•
Mrs. Ross Clela nd .
receiced his Master of Science
Mr. and MJ'S. Arlllur Orr Deg ree
in
Che mi ca l
spent a lew days willl Mr. and Engineering.
Mrs. Ed Neuman and famMr . and Mr s. Spence
ily, Galion. They went to at. Ted e ri ck, Old Was hington,
tend llle gra duation of llleir were recent visilors of Mr. und
g r a ndd a u g ht e r ,
Linda Mrs. J ohn Wickham.
Neuman. They also visited
Mr. and Mrs . Ross Cleland
willl Mr. a nd Mrs. Edwa rd spent a few days in Columbus
Theiss, Pataska la, and with with Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Mrs. Edilll McElfresh.
Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen · Recent visitors of Denzil
1'·e re houseguests of Mrs. G.W. Cleland have been Da rr el
Les lie in Bethlehem, Pa ., Cleland, Co lun1bus, Mrs . Karl

Klocs, Syracu.~ . Mr. and Mrs.
George Abbot t, Mt. Hermon,
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Audrey
Howan, Mrs. lle len Lorentz
and Mrs. Lydia Berry , a ll of
Belpre .
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Grueser
and fHmily, Logan, spe nl a
recent weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ar tllur Orr.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Char les
Kn ight, Columbus, and Mr . a nd
Mrs. Ra lph Knight , Buffalo, N.
Y., were r ecent vis it ors of Mr .
and Mrs. Howard Knight.
Bill y Allen, Bethlehem, Pa.,
spent a wee k with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen. On Sunday they
vis ited in Ashland , Ky., with
Mr . and Mrs. D. B. Martin.

x 1:2 sha!:ll . ~ ::~ s , oval, fringed

2 ROOMS AND HALL

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP

17.500.00. Phone 773-5&lt;165.

·c ASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobi l e homes
Phone area COde 614 . ~23. 953 1 :
4-IJ.Hc

Chester ~ews Notes

'

1969 Venclale m obile home, 2 AM· ~~ s1ere&lt;~ received with
bed room~. porch. awn ing and
bUII1·•n 8 track tape- player 4
ste ps. Alum inum
under
speaker
sound
syste,;, .
pinning, I ft . edenslon air'
Balance $106.99 or use our
cond itioned and dlshw4sher
budget ter m s. Ca ll 992 . 3965.

SlJ9 ~95ut'\ · +"' "I "'

Court St.

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CON.SERVE
ENERGY
AND SAVE
MONEY.
.

For Sale.

layaways) . NEW FUR.
NlTURE - living room suites

·.CARPET SPECIAL

Pl.t.."-1$ ~0 EXPtNO tl$ REVENUE SHAAING ALLOCA.~ I ON
"DR ~H E !NTil l U.IfNT PE~I O O 8f GI"'NIN(i

~~~-~~~:~: PRb~At-ci.c~ .... ~. ,, Ihit,.."~..,~""

cas e and
band, $280.

Goessler's ·Jewelry Store

Marietta Times
•
zn Gannett fold

THI OOVII\NMlNTOII

JAN . I. 1973

dial. Railroad

Approwed. $125 .

FOUR CASES HEARD
DIVORCE GRANTED
Four c;ases in Pomeroy
Rand"all R. Proffitt has been
Mayor 's Court Wednesday
·granted
a divorce in Meigs
night with Mayor Don Collins
Pomeroy
presiding resulted in Mark County Common Pleas Court
•we wlllldjust t o th is tolerance, If necessary. Cuarantei Is for One )'eu.
Haley being charged only costs from Candy Profitt.
lor assault, and bonds forfeited
by Everett Sc huler , Middleport, $25, squealing tires ;
Co. and 5 KW s tock lor Gannett Erma Connoley, Reedsville 1
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP!) require s
F e deral $25, improper backing, and
The Times Co., owner of the stock
Ronald
Euge ne
Gr ate ,
Marietta Daily Times and .the. Communications Commission
Rutland, $23.70, speeding.
company's affiliate 5 KW Inc., approval because of th e
owner of radio stations WBRJ, broadcasting interests of 5 KW.
In
announcin g
the
Marietta and WMWM in
MR. CALKINS DIED
Wilmington, Ohio, have joined agreement, McKinney said,
SYRACUSE
Charles
Gannett Co., Inc., owner of 54 '~ this agreement will enable
newspapers in 17 states and shareholders a! the Times Co. Calkins , husband of Eulah
Guam, it was announced today. and ~ KW to bring to Marietta Johnson · Calkins, formerly of
COMPL ET ELY IN STALLED
The transaction. was toin- probably the most dynamic Syracuse , died Wednesday at
WALL TO WALL
.Wi th Heavy Foa m Rubber Pad
pleted Wednesday and was newspaper leadership in the Grant Hospital, Columbus. In
addition to his wife, he is
announced jointly by William cowttry today ."
Includes· .12'xl5' Living Rm
The Gannett Co. statement survived by a daughter, Mary
F . McKinney, Times Co.
· 9' x 12' Bedroom
Graham,
and
two
grandpresident and by Paul Miller, said in part, " it is a long
3'x 12' Hall
chairman and chief executive es tablished policy of the daughters. Memorial services
of . Gannett · and Allen H. Gannett newspapers to operate will be held Sunday at 4 p.m . at
Qua lit y 501 nylon ca rpet ing w i t h heavy ·foam rubber pad , ex pert ta ck less
insl a llation. Choice oi color s. A ll work guaranteed . See Wendell Gra te f or
Neuharlll, president of ·Gan- with local autonomy and there llle United Methodist Church at
thi s buy, or fr ee esti mate on a ny carpet in stallation
Pataskala
.
will be no changes in personnel
nett.
The final exchange of Times or policy at "the Times or its
radio stations ."
Marriage License
McKinney has agreed to stay
RUTLAND, 0.
WENDELL GRATE
PH . 74'2 -4211
Harry
David Slawter, 21,
with llle Times as publisher,
Middleport, and Rhea Jeanllle statement said.
nette Mora , I9, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
RIGiff UPHELD
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UP!)
- The Nevada Supreme Court
BURIED WEDNESDAY
Wednesday upheld llle right of
Funeral services lor Andy
.a woman to ·sue her: husband Gloeckner,
When cooki ng vegetables, use as little
formerly
&lt;ff
lor an auto-accident injury Pomeroy, were held Wedwater as possible and cover lhe pan to
speed cooking.
which occurred before llleir nesday with burial in Salem,
marriage.
W. Va . Local relatives who
survive are Marie Dalley and
Mrs. Grace Gloeckner .

DE i' .a. "l',U ~ T 0~ TH f l REAS U RV
OFFICE 0 ~ REVE '- UE S H A~ I N(;
19 00 PEPI: "' SYLVA"' I A A\I~ "'W
WASHINGTO"' . 0 C 20 226

~JOMfllfiN6 .JPKIAL~
~for that fXTRA SPECIAL GUY! I@'

Bulova
Accutron®

tops $414,000 says paper.
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!) -

Mrs .

For split -second timing

Quality Western White House bill
(Continued !rom Page 1)
master of ceremonies. Also
taking part in llle show will be
Ohio University Players.
Admission is 50 cents for
adults and children. Audience
participation and a panel of
judges will determine the
winners of the talent show

Conley. Oak Hill;

L.

Vinton County area and high
school principals will be guest
participants in a survey on llle
Joint
J ackson-Gallia-Vinton
Vocational School.
Seminar pa rticipants are
conducting a survey of employers in llle fou r county area
tllat employs 10 or more individuals.

Mobile Homes For S.

I

CONTAC
CAPSULES

IO's
$1.79 Val ue

�'

.

,, ,, ,,,.,,

t '

'

'

•

I

10- The Dally Sentir..i, Middleport-~JIIleroy,O., June 14, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ~ Classifieds Get Results!
wANT ADs
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

5 PM . Day Before Publicanon .

Mon'&amp;av Deadline 9 a . m.
Cancellation Correction!.

®
OK.

Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Dav ot Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

rom. eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

B

Of

QUALITY

CLOSE OUT on !41 New zig zag
sewing machines. For sewing
stretch fabrics , buttonholes,

slightly blemished. Choice of
carr',ling case or sewing

(2) Eledrolux Sweepers deluKe

110 Mechanic St:reet

lor more trtan one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents
per Word one Insertion
1
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cen ts per word three
consecut ive insertions .
18 cents per word six con secut ivc insert ions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 'lc .
BLIND ADS
Add itional 2Sc Charge pe.r
Ad verI isetn en!.
OFFICE HOURS
· 8 : 30a . m . to 5:00pm . Dally ,
8 : 30 a . m . to
12 : 00 Noon

stand. S4 ;.80 cash or 1erms
available . Phone 992-1755 ."
1970 PONTIAC

OUR 1hanks to tnose who gave
us shower gifts. A special
thanks to Mrs. Robert Man lev
hostess
of
the
sho'w er.
Mr . and Mrs. Butch Brinker.
6-14-ltC

lost
LOST In vicinity of Maplewood
Lake .
Pair
of
black
·prescription
sunglasses .
Reward . Phone 446-2514.
6-12-Jtc

ONE new truck tire, 900 x 20,
Goodyear
Steelguard
roughtred . Lost on Rt . 7 north
of Ch eshire. Reward .
6-14-3tc

Notice
GUN Shoot, Factory chdked &amp;
hand choked gun s, Forked
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
June 17, 12 noon .
6-14-3tc
HOURS for placing applications
in the Per sonnel Department,
Holzer Medical Center are
from 9: 00to 11 : 00a .m ., 2:00to
4: 00 p.m . on Tuesday ,
Wednesday, and Th ursday.
6-14-5tc
NEW YORK Clothing House
will be colleding Columbus &amp;
Southern Electr ic Company
bi li s.
6-14-3t c
4 FAMILY r ummage sa le at the
Millard Swartz residen ce, on
Rt . 143 June 13 through 16,
behind the Wesleyan Holine ss
Chur ch.
6-12-3tc

IV7D DODGE POLARA
11695
4-door. fac tory air, V-8 engine, automatic trillnsmiss ion,
~wer steering &amp; b~akes , good whitewall tires, white
fmlsh. vinyl top, rad10, clean inside.

1967 DODGE CORONET 4&lt;0
189S
4-door, blue finish , good tires , facto~y air, automatic.
power steering , V-8, radio .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

-

PUBLIC AUCTION, June 16,
1973, 1: 00 p.m. , Hayward
Bissel l Farm, Ba shan Keno
Rd .• 2 miles fro'm Rt . 248 on
County Rd. 28. Signs posted on
day of sale . Hand Tools,
Power toors, electric fans,
electr ic lights, power mower,
medicine cabinets, Christma s
decorat ions, sink wlth cabine t
co m.partments ,' electric
refrigerato r , gas range ,.
Liverpool.
double
bar rel
12 gauge shot gun .
larQe
l of,
new
lad i es
shoes old atka -se ltzer Bot ll ewood, old bot11es, di shes,
vases, electric skil lets, metal
bed , t.v . set, diamond stick
pin , and many other Items too
numerous to mention. Ow-ner,
Ha yward Bi ssell. Terms :
Cash, not responsible for
accidents . Auctioneer Roger Hayman. Phone, 949·
2828.
6-13-3tp
GUN 5Hu0·1, Friday, 7:30
p.m. ; Factory choked gun s
Assorted
meats.
only .
Refres hmen ts se r ved . Racine
Gun Club.
6-13-3tc

Wanted

SOMEONE TO till and sod si &lt;
sunken
graves,
Well s
Cemetery ,
North
of
Harrison vi lle .
Must
guuarantee work . Write
Marion (Welch) Hayman,
1889 Case Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43224.
6-10-6fp
~--~---

HOUSEKEEPER needed. Fred
C. Kesterson. Phone 992 -6668 ,
6-13-6tp

I WILL do housecleaning in th e
area of Middlepor t, Pomeroy
and Chester . Call 992-7202 or
985-4146.
6-8-6tc

in the Area

It's

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE
882 -2817

Notice

Employmenl Wanted

For the Lowest
· Tire Prices

New H·aven , W.Va .

JEWELL
IJry
II
f i nishing , paper hanging .
int erior and ex terior pai nt ing . Phon 698-5341 or 669 3764.
6-1-12tc
KOSCOT SPECIALS for June
include Family Suntan Oil
Spray and Jr . Fa cial Mask.
Al so with a purchase of ei ther
AfterShave or Electric PreShave by Koscot you receive a
Kleansing Kream iree. Phone
Helen Jane Brown , 992-5113 .
6-1-lfc
cs""'P~E-Cc-1-cA_L_Y
_a_r_d-:S~a-le_o_n_con ­

Pels For Sale
AKC Toy POod le pupp1es., S75
and $85 . Also Siamese k i1tens,
· S10. Ph one .1-256-6247, Kennel s
of Ca lh oun.
5-20-301 c
POODLE pupp ies, Toy A.K.C ..
Chocolate - Show quality .
Phone 992-5443 .
5-23-lft

YARD SALE at· 692 Plum
Street, atross from Mid dleport . Sw i mming Pool.
Clothes, antic rocker chair,
antic library tab le etc.
6-13-2tc
--~--,---

FABRIC INN, Hundred s of
yards of polyester double
knits, lowest prices , pass
school at Tuppers Pla ins go 4
Miles, turn left onto county
rd . 50, then 1 mile. Phone 378·
6276.
6-13-3tp

---c---

I

MOBILE HOME s pace in
Syracuse . Phone 992 -6329 .
6-7-lfc
SLEEPING room over Wine
Store, Pomeroy . References
required. Phone 992-5293 .
6-5-tfc

-----PR IVATE meeting room for

any organization; phone 992J975.
J.Jl .tf c
.,-------~
LARGE 3rd floor apa rtment,
newly renovated, Main St.
ove rl ooking
river,
un furnished or can be furnished .
Call after 5 p .m. 992- 2789 .
6-13-ltc
5

ROOM house in Racine area .
Call 992-6329.
6-13.3tc

AIR Cond i tioned sleeping room .
Twin beds available M on da y.
Phone 992 -5440.
6-14-3fp
2 MOBILE homes with gas and
air coditioning and patio:
Albert Hlll. Ra ci ne, phone
949-2261. .
6-12-6tc

SPRING SPECIALS

SABRE TILLER
3% HP 1129.95
l-n

TRA ILER , Brown' s Trailer
Park , Minersv ille. Phone 9923324.
6-12-tfc

Ct~rto n •

Set Up, 134.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP 14~.95

FURNI SED 4 room apartment,
Mason .
Phone
773 -5147,
Reynolds Apartm en.t .
6-12-6tp

In Carton

Set up. $54.95
POMEROY
9,._ JackW. Carsey , Mgr.
~
Phone 992 -2181

TWO trailer l ots in Mi ddleport ; ~
lf2 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
before 6 p .m. 992-5693.
6-11-Sfc HANGING
baske t s,
co m bination pots an d fill ed porch
boxes, wh ite, pi nk and red
ALL ELECTRIC - lik e new 3
geraniums,
begon i as,
rooms with larg e b1th :
petunias , co leus, zi nnias,
Electric wall oven. tabl E top
dianthus, snapdragons, and
range, large closet located on
ageratium . Cleland Farm and
E. Main 51., Pom er ov . SPP '"
appreciate . Ph . Gallipo l is
Gree nhouse, E. Main, Rac ine .
446-9539.
Geraldine Cleland.
6-13-tt c
5-29-tfc

------

-----~~-

3 AND 4 ROOM fu rnished and
unfurnished ~

apartmen t s.

Phone 992 -5434.
4-12-lfc

FOR LEASE

2 BEDROOM mobil e home, air
co nditiuned , Ra c ine ar ea.
Ph one 992-6329.
5-23-fl c

A high volume Ashland
Service Sta . located in
Middleport , o. Paid
training, excellent opp .
to become your own
boss.

Wanted To Buy

1969 CHEVROLET lru ck with OLD Furnitu.re, oak tables,
cheater axle 14' r;turhp
Wooden ice boxes, brass beds.
body . Pri ced to sell. Cal l 992di sh es
or
com p lel e
595 1.
househol ds; Writ e M. D.
6-12·6fp
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
ca ll 992-6271.
s.lJ.Ifc

- - ------

WANTED - ·Used merchandise
- far auction . We buy, we
_se ll. whole houseful or si ngle
pieces , ConSignmen t or
percentage. We w ill hau l.
Phone 992-3354. Ha.y man 's.
6-5-JOtc
ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
OR MIDDLEPORT WITH OR
WITHOUT HOUSE . PLEASE
WRITE Box 729-F, c-o The
Daily
Sentiriel ,
s tat ing
description and lowest selli ng
price.
=----,----,-----:----6--5-6tp
NO. 1 CoPper 54c, radiators,
28c; brass. 20c; batteries , 85c
each ; clean dry roots, Gin seng, S52 lb. ; yell ow root, S4 ;
mayapple, 4.\c per lb.; M . A.
Hall , Reedsville , Ohio, 3786249 .
5·6-tfc
_____;

_____

PH. 992·5221
8 a.m. til 5 p.m .

F ··n oings Ph . 742-5979

Real Estate For Sale
DUE to job lran ~fe r, m us t se ll
home, 3 bedroom , total
electric , large iot . F. H.A .
approved, Syracuse . Phond
992 -7836.
5-25-tfc
FARM for sale, 77 acres of land
pasture , fruit trees , water taP
pa i d,
necessary
farm
buildings, 5 room house with
batt), carpeting and panelling.
Ca ll 992 -7304 , Hysell Run
Road .
6-13-6fc
RIVER frontage on Ohio River
across from Pomeroy on West
Virginia Side Right in center
of Regatta , sandy beach ,
shade, water and electri city . I
have two lots surveyed, 100ft.
wide at low water le vel. 450ft.
to ra i Iroad tracks, 87 ft . w ide
at railroad tracks . The lots
are all cleaned and mowed
off. Marion Reynolds, Mason,
W. Va. , 773-5147. Reynolds
Flower Shop.
6-13-6tp

Young catt le. 742· NEW RANCH HOME - 1 acre
lot. City water . A well 6-12-3tc
designed house plan by W. G.
Best Homes consisttn~ of
large Hyi ng room with dmlng
room. 3 bedrooms including
--,-~--~KNAPP shoes, 10 pet. to 28 pet. . master bedroom with fu ll
EX'PERIENCED
waitress
off an 16 styles . Order 110w.
bath , a large 32' x 11 ' com wanted . ·Apply in person ,
.Supply limited . Phone 992"
binat
ion kitchen :taroily room ,
King's Arms Knight Club.
5324 .
and 2 fuH baths . Under main
. 6-11-3tp
5-30-tfc
fl oor is a full basement or
lower level wh ich ca n be
EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works, E.
f i ni shed if desired. To make
Main St ., Pomeroy. All kind s
this a completely qualit y
of sa lt water pellets , water
home a full 2-car garage i's
nu~gets , block salt and own
included . Financing arranged
Oh1o River Salt. Phone 992with low down payment. For
3891.
all deta ils and an ap 6·5-tfc
pointment to see home, call
992-5976 or Col. collecf 235,
1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
1996.
This machine darns, em 6-13-tfc
broiders, overcasts, buiton
holes.
All
without
attachments . Pay balance of
$38.50 or pay $5 per month .
Call 992-5331.
6-10-tfc

WANTED 5387 .

For Sale

WANTED CARRIER
IN
- - - - -MASON, W. VA.
THE
DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE: 992·2156

We talk to you

JUST taken in 1973 stereo-radio
. comb. with 8 track ta·pe. Take
over payments of S7 .55 per
month or pay balance of
$99.50. Call 992-5331.
6-10-6tc

THE RUTLAND American
Legion Post 467 will Sponsor a
fishing derby - trout , bass ,
catfish, Saturday and Sunday,
June 16-17, beginning at 5 TRACTOR type ri ding mower,
32 in . cut. 8 h.p. like new . Wi ll
a.m. each day at the Rutland
COAL. Limestone, Exc e l ~ior·
legion- Farm , Beech Grove . · trade for Gravely . Phone 985Sail Works, E. Main St.,
3912
after
4:
30p.
m.
Road .
Pomeroy
. Phone 992.-3891.
6-12-3tp
6-13-3tp

For Trade

-----'----

-

like a person.
I

I

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

ROO

,o8
E. M A I N t.,;,;,;;.;;,;,;.;,...
POMEROY
NOW SEE THtS
Lik e new. k iichen hds lots of
cabi nets and range . 2 nice
bedr ooms, lots of closet s,
dining room, ba th , full
ba semenf. har dwood floors.
lots of stone and awning s. 2
cat ga r age. JUST $14.000.00.
A LOT FOR
A LITTLE
5 room fr ame. 3 bed r ooms.
Bath. Lots of · t ile a nd
pane l ing.
Som e
new
plumbing wit h n~w hot wa ter
tank . Ut ility room. Porches.
Leve l lot in good locat ion .
$5,000.00.
BUSINESS ROOM
In good loca tion . Lovely 3
bedroom apartmen t over .
lV2 bath s. Dii1ing room .
KitChen with 20 f t. of cabinet
.space. Ha rdwood f loor s all
ca r pe ted. Cen tral hot water
heat and air cond. A lmost
new. PL EASE NO PHONE
CALLS ON T HI S ONE.
$30,000.00.
.
FAMILY HOME
5 bedrooms. Din in g roam ,
lot s of cabinets. Ph• baths.
Kitchen ha s about 30 ft .
cabinet s, doubl e sta in.l ess
st eel .sink. Very large livinQ
room . 2 large glassed porches. All stor m doors and
wi ndows. Garag e &amp; carport .
$12,800 .00 .

2 YEARS OLD
Wonderful locat ion. 3 large
bedrooms, wa lk -in double
closet s. Bath with shower
tile et c. The ki t chen is a
house wife's dr eam. Range,
2 ovens, 30 ft. of cabinets,
ref. Dining room , double
glass door s to conc_rete patio.
Large . li vi ng room with
fir e pla ce . Utility room .
Ba sement. Level lot 100xl 20.
$23,000. 00.
HAVE YOU OR OTHERS
TRIED TO SEL L YOUR
PROPERTY ? CA N' T! JU ST
YOIJ GIVE US A TRY . NO
SA LE , NO CHAR GE.
HENRY R. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259
If no answer 992 -2568

.
HOWDAST'IE

Business Services
r---------------------,
EXPERIENCED
Radiata

Pomeroy, Ohio

WANTEO - ·oLO UPRIGHT
PIANOS . Any condition.
1972 FORD Grand Torino, VIny l
Paying $10 each . First fl oor
lop, Air Conditioned , V-8
onl y . Write giving directions .
Engine, p .s. &amp; B. Call anv
Pianos , P. 0. Box Box 188,
time - 949·5081.
Sar di s; Ohio, 43946.
' 6-1.4-12tc
6· 10-6tp

struct ion equipment - 1 . 1750
wat1 portable generator, 1 . 10
in. sa bre saw; 1 transit -·new
set of 20 ft . aluminum ex - EXCELLENt opportunity in
local retail sales open for
tension ladders, screw jacks
right man . Prefer mature
and hydraulic jacks, dry wall
person - 30-40 years of age
tools , ceramic tools , pipe
dyes, approxima t ely 100 ' with some background in
retailing but will consider
pieces sma ll hand tools. All
Veteran with
in -service
sales w i ll be cash . Earl R.
c leri cal. storekeepl ng or
Werner residence. Bradbury,
warehousing
experience.
1 to 6 p.m . Saturday, June 16.
Reply
In
confidence
to Box
6-10-6tc
729-C, c-o The Dail.y Sentinel .
Pomeroy, Ohio . .
6-14-3tp
YARD SALE - New hot water
tank , $40 ; Large heater stove;
$30 ; Electric hot plaie, S5; COOK ; waitress and Ca rhop ; ·
app ly in person , Craw 's Steak
Good privy, make offer, other
Hou se .
things . 2nd house below junk
5-10-ttc
yard in Minersville .
6-13-2tp
QUALIFIED
refrigeration
se
rvi
ce
man
,
indu strial ,
YARD SA L E . Many useful
commercial , domestic, good
· items . Fran ces
Morr is,
pay and working conditions .
Racine, Ohio.
Must be experienced . Ga llla
6-13-3fp
Refrigeration Co., 611 3rd
Ave
.• Ga ll ipolis, 446-4066.
DANCE friday &amp; ·Sat . nights, 10
6-4-tf
p.m . till 2 p.m . Shenang
Springs . Music by Guy BAR MAl D, applv in person . HiThoma, Toby Young and
He Bar, M iddleport. Equal
Larry Hubbard.
·
oppor tunity employer.
6-14-3tc
6-6·6fc
RUMMAGE
sale,
Coat s
Building, Middleport, Thurs day, Fr iday, and Sat., June
14, 15 .a nd 16 . Women 's
Auxiliarr
of
Veterans
Mem oria HasP.Ita l.
6-13-3tp

For Rent

modeL Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags. Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new.
RIVER LOT
Will sell for S37.25 cash or
4 BEDROOMS Large kitterms available. Phone 992 ·
chen,
dining.
gas
forced
air
7755.
'
furnace,
and
full
basement,
6-14-6fc
Large lots, one on the river .
ALMA OhlinQer house and lot Asking SlO,SOO .OO . Want to look
on Lynn Place, Middleport. and make us an offer.
Ohio, wi II be sold to the
MOBtLE HOME
highest bidder , Tuesday , June 3 BEDROOMS - Master has
19, 1973 at 10:00 a .m . at the
office of J . B. O'Brien, At- nice built-in vanity wlth lots of
torney, 100'12 Court St(eet, drawers. Nice modern front
Pomeroy , for not less fhan the kitchen with spacious cupappra ised va lue of $2,500.00. boards . Oil ·furnace . Want
For further information call $6,000.00 .
992-2720.
80 ACRES
Large
6-14-4tc ALL · MINERALS _H_A_N
_ G_I_N_G__b_a_s_k_e_t_s_
; -c-om - barn and several outbuil dings.
binati on pots and f illed porch 7 room farm home, with bath.
bQ)(eS, white, pink, and red Some bottom land. Ask ing
geraniums,
begon ias, $21.500.00.
petun ias , Coleus, Zihnia s.
INVESTMENT
Dianth .u s, Snapdragons , LARGE BRICK - In town. lots
Ageratium . Cleland Farm of large room s, city wa ter,
and Greenhouse, E . Mai n, steam heating, and parking
Rac ine. Geraldine Cle land. area. 0 n1y S32 •500 .oo .
6· 14·tfc
7ACRES
5 BEDROOMS - On ly about 3
N EW Huffy Riding N'tower 8
h .p., 26'' . Never used . Pri ce years old. 11!2 baths, oak floors ,
.SJOO. Used Huffy R i din g basement and lots of cupboard
Mower 7 h.p. 26" Price $200. space. A nice designed hom e.
Either one to se ll. Telephone in an excellent location. 5 acres
742-5162.
of bottom . Asking $30,000.00.
6· U -3tp 00 YOU HAVE AN IN DU STR IAL SITE, ACR EAGE,
'69 PI .YMOUTH Fury Ill, P.S .. SEVE R A L
HUNORED
P.B., Air , good t ires . Only
ACRES,
OR
SEVERA L
51,000. Phone 992-2042 after 3
HOUSE S. CALL US, WE ARE
p.m .
IN THE NEEO OF GOOO
PROPERTIE S FOR OUR
1966
9-PASSE NG ER
Olds- CLIE NTS.
mobile Vista-Cruiser, 69,0001 HELEN l . TEAFORD?n-3325
actual miles, air. radio , etc.
GORDON 8 . TEAFORD
992-2936.
992-361S ·
6-14-3tc
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAYS PLEASE

Auto Sales

Help Wanted

'

$2195

Firebird Esprit, loca11 -owner ca r , 350 V-8 engine, power
steering &amp; automatic transmission, AM-FM radio , like
new white lettered tires. 307 v.a, power steering &amp; brakes
radio, clean interior .
'

.Sa1urday .

Card of Thanks

des igns , etc. Paint

.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

fancy

right to edit or re iect any ads

deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be respons i ble

Real Estate For Sale

.

For Sale

Service
Fr'otn the laraest 1'ruck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
!&gt;mauesr Healer Lore .
Nathan Biggs
R~diator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pti. 992-2174

Pomeroy

LET US HELP YOU
Roofin-g . Roof Painting,
Spouting ,
Plumbing ,
Re modeling , Complete
Building , Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding.
PHONE : 992 -2550

AU.·WEATHER
N . 2nd Ave.

Middleport , O.

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED .
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVtCE

MODERN
SANITATION
JOHN TUCKER
Rt. 4, Pomeroy , O.
992-3954

WILL TRIM or cut trees or
sHrubbery . Also paint roofs .
Phon e 949-3221 .
6-13-30tc
WILKINSON Small Engine
Sales &amp; Servke, 810 3rd St.,
Middl~port . Lawn mower
repair . Free pickup and
delivery . Phone 992-3092. Also
- Briggs and Stratton and
Tecumcee parts.
6-!0-6tc
DOZER and back hoe work ;
ponds and septi c tank s, d.ilchlng se rv ice ; top soil, fill did,
limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavatinQ .
Ph one 992 -5367 or 992 -3861.
9-1-tfc
SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC
S.EWAGE
SYS TEM S
CLEA NED,
REPAIRED .
M I LLER SANITAT IO N ,
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662)035 .
l0-4· 1fc
SE WING MACHINE S. Repair
service. all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc
AUTOM OBILE insura nce been
cancelled?
lost
your
operator's li cense? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc
G&amp;t:: Appliance Repair . repair
on all laundry eq uipment,
refrigerat ion equipment and
wiring,
welding,
house
electr ic and gas. Call 992-3802
or aft.e r 4: 30 p . m . ca ll 9926050 .
5-24-JOtp

Real Estate For Sale
·s

ROOM and Path house on
large lot in upper end of
Syra cuse. Large attic oUt buildings. $7,000. Cal l 949-2595
before: 2:30 p .m . or any time
on weekends .
6-4-12tc

- - -- - -

7 ROOM house with bath In
Rutland , air conditioned .
carpeted , gas furnace, di sh washer:, double oven, range,
do'uble garage, large carport,
4 acr~s cleared and fenced,
small
barn
and
oth er
buildings . Phone 614-742,6834.
5-30-tfc

BARNEY

FOUR
OOLLERS!!

STAVOUT PliWIN'

CRRDS TH' WHOLE
BLESSET NIGHT
Speetallst
Wheel

VETERANS

Alignment

BANK FINANCING
12 Years - 10.75 A. P. R.
for Your

tt Must
Be Right
or we will
Make it Right .

For Your Mobile Home-Land-No Down Payment
Qualify Today, Call

. 304-485-3809
Choose your own hom~ from
your AREA DEALER.

·POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992 -2094
606 E. Main Pomero_y

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

8-4: 30 Oaily , &amp;-12 Sat.
In the R. H. Rawtlngs Son s
Building .
Middleport, 0 .
992 -2101

I'M TAKING NUME~OLOGY.

Have your T.V. Picture Tube
Restored A s Good As Ne'llf
Right In Your
Home .
Guaranteed for 6 Mo.

PRE-FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

,. ~
....
Built to Your ' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-SSSlf
MaSon, W.Va .
EXCAVATING. Dozers, lacg e
and small; Back hoes and
loader s on track arid fires ;
Lo ·boy
Du mp tru c ks se rvi ce. Se pti c tanks in sta lled. George t Billl Pullins ,
phone 992-2478 or . 992-7 402.
2-9-tfc
HARRISON'S TV service and
service calls. Phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
.2 DAY ANTIQUE SALE
Friday, June 22 at IO :OO_A.m. Sharp
Saturday, June23at 10:00 A. M. Sharp
Reinersvi lle, .Ohio
On Si. Rt. 78 between McConnelsville and Caldwell, Ohio
in Reinersvitle . Due to the death of my husband, H!ra m
Henderson , will sell the compl&amp;te contents of our 10 room
museum home.
Wi II se ll on Friday, June 22: Glassware, dishes, old bra ss,
oi t lamps, churns, clocks , picture frames, primitives,
china , pottery , bells, and hundreds of oth&amp;r smallit&amp;ms.
Will se ll until late eveni ng.
Wi ll try to se ll all sma ll item s on Fr ida y. Will start
Saturday, June 23 at 10:00 A.M . sett ing any small items
left from Friday and household f urni ture~ This is a life
time's col lection of ant iq ues . Man y of which have been ·
handed down for several generations. Sa le will be held
ou tsi de rain or shine . Some shade. Bring your lawn chair
and plan to stay for 2 days - Motels at McConnellsv ille,
Ca ldwell, Cambridge, and Marietta. Most items are in
good condition and many · are very valuable and rare
pieces . W.l1Ch thiS paper June 15th and June 20th for
comptere usttng.
Lunch on premises. Terms - Cash . Positive 10.
Not r es ponsible for acci dents.
Nothing shown before day of sa Ie.
OWner- Mrs. Bernice Henderson
Auctioneer- Bill Jan&amp;s,
Phone ?62-4333 or 557-3411

DO NOfl£. lHAN Clf'E-

SHOUlDN'T
ASK HIS MEN
10 DO NOfl£.

1\Nt&gt;-A-HALF PIJ!;H-W'5.

0

Color-530.00
Black &amp; White-515.00

0
0

f!i

'#lW )\sIT; lHATSO\\t== ·a&gt; Yel2'ess! !INS ARe OEffelTNb lO lRE-

&gt;

949-3151
Racine, Ohio

Stop In and See Our
Floor- Display .
ASK US ABOUT

A CHII!F

1HAN HE
D!JI"S !

JOHNSON'S T.V.

FURNITURE

cotoN~. 1/&gt;kJr c::l:l'lRe AM1321CANS
A~ lHAT Wf; CA:;;\'J'T

!;j

ONE.O'THAR
GRANDEST
CULTURAL
TRADITIO&gt;JS 15

THE ONL'I RE.A50'-J
HARVARD HASN'T A
DEPARTMENT OF HILl:
BI~L'I Cll~TURE IS,
WE. DIDN'T THINK

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

f'

~

12

NOT R.EADit-r--

~·

THE'i 14AD AN'i !!

~

•5.55
On Most American Cars

- GUARANTEEI&gt;Phone 992-2094

CLYPE WOUL.P BE L.O"r"o;; 0'
FER YA ,., Hli'S
A G~EA'T 'TALKER j

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

COMPA~

OpenS Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
1 KNOW, f3UT NOW

YE5,eUTYOU
SHOULDN'T HAVE:
ACCEPTED IT.

O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
located at Cross roads, Rt . 124, ·
now back to wor k. Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
service.
Wheels
balanced electronica lly. All
work guaranteed. Reasonable
rates . Phone 742-3232.
2-18-tfc

MANO "THINKS "Tl'CREf5
AN "UNDERSTANDING II

:_EASHEL~

·BElWEEN YOJ

--,~-----

REAOY -MIX
CONCRETE
deliv ered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
estima t es. Phone 992 -3284·.
and backhoe work; sep tic
Goeglein Ready -Mi )( Co .,
tanks ins talled ; dump truck s
Middleport , · Ot1io.
and to-boys for hire; will haul
6-30-tfc
f ill dirt, t op soil, limestone
and grave l ; Ca ll Bob or Roger
SEPTtC TANKS CLEANED
Jeffer s, day phone 992-7089; REASONABLE rates . Ph . 4&lt;16night phone 992-3525 or 9924782, Gallipolis, John Russe lL
5232.
Owner and Operator .
2- 11 -tfc
5-12-tfc

IF THAT HOOD MA&gt;C II
AROUND HERE, HE'5 KEEP-

ING HIMSELF WELL- HIDDEN'
I ..... HEY! WHAT'$ THAT ?!

,, THERE'S A
IN ll1E TREES OVER
GADFRY! IF THAT'S WHAT
I THINK IT 15 .... ?!!

p..

8

GASOLINE ALLEY

It'G jue;t that

~

we've di~appolntect

man4 people! I feel Gorr4
for Mom !

SEE US FOR : Awninqs , storm
doors and windows, ca rports,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneel"
marquees. aluminum sid ing
Complete Service
and railing . A. Ja cob, sales
Phone 949-3821
representative . Fbr free
Racine, Ohio
est ima tes. phone Charles·
Critt Bradford
V. V.
Lis le, Syracuse,
5-1-tfc
Johnson and Son , Inc. ,
3-2-tfc AUTO AIR .conditioning. Ser vice and repair. Call 992-3802.
5-24-JOf p
- £LNA and Whit e Sew ing
Ma cbi nes ... Service on al l
H&lt;;&gt;US ~ and root Painting ;
makes . Reaso nable rates .
1n lenor and ex teria·r , free
The Sewing Center. Mid estimates;
call 992-7008or 992dleport , Ohio.
2460.
.11 -16-ltc
5-21 -30tp

ll€Y, G£RAAD, 1HIS ·
1HI&gt; lA7T 11IJ,I; I'M ASI&lt;.IIJ(? 1KJu FOR Ml Fi'J!i

. l 'IHIIJK I'VE Jvsr
SSf;IJ

~

i

"· RAVAGE OUR SHIPPitiGt
"' WE WILL BIDE OUR. TIME.
UNTIL FURTHi:R. EYtiJE~CE

1F WE 'RE HEADI N'

BEC'OMES AVAI L A BLE~
. PRI!iCESS 1

FoR HEW EHq LAHO,
WHAT D' YA i'I-IINK
OL' C~Pf. BLI TZ
HAS G01 IN MIND,
~"PUNJAB~

YARD SALE

;
'
§

AHD OriCE. IT
BECOMES
AVAILABI.~ L WtiAT
WILL YOU VO
WITH IT, 'fQ!J ~

•
•-r+

H ElPLESS~?

~

Yeolerday'• CryptoquQie: A TALE WITHOUT LOVE IS
LIKE BEE~ WITHOUT MUSTARD.-ANATOLE FRANCE

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Portu·
guesc folk
tun e

On construction equipment - I - 1750 Watt
portable generator, I - 10 in. Sabre saw; 1
transit - new set of 20 ft. aluminum extension
ladder~. screw jacks and hydraulic jacks, dry
wall tools, ceramic tools, pipe dyes, approximately 100 pieces small hand tools. All
sales will be cash. Earl R. Werner residence,
Bradbury , I t'!,6 p.m. Saturday, June 16.

5. Overelegant
11. Graven

DICK TRAr.Y

17. Initialed
(poet.)
18. Cross out
20. Egyptian

Bill's Army

gitl
::==~~-----1 Zl. "dancing
L' -

Navy Sale
AMANDA PANDA

'--~n ··~£61NS
SoM~IH tNG
&lt;;tT \N-'

Father's Week End

CHAIR.
I

IT ALSO B£GINS

IH£ woRO CHIN 1

(@ 1973 Kine Feature• Syndicate. Inc:.) .

40. The slot h·
ful way·

rDll1WID'i1rn•!:'..::!!::!-::.;:.

UOWN

1. " Bounced "

UnacramblothoM fcaar lumblot,
one letter to each equare. to

2. Sun -dried
brick
3. Like so me
acrobats

Humbert's
pass ion
YOU REALlY
ANO
WANT TO NOTJ.IINC'S 13. Debac le
14. First of a
CROW, DON'T GOING TO
series
'fOil l.!TTLE STOP ME!
15.
Subside
GUY?
'---~'116. - you
~ ·,.;:..;.·i-·
...,,;;:.:.:r~:r.:·:~
th er e?

"'~:,''(.,_ ~
·
•

85 N. Court Street
Athens, Ohio

1!\

J

LITTLE ORPHAN• ANNIE

SPECIAL

fo'm four ordinarr word1.

(hyph.
wd . )
4. Danube
tributary
5. Small
flower

6. Gail
7. Vi ctory
cry
8. Sincere;
loyal

( hyph.
wd .)
9. Sidewheeler

Veslerday's Answer
25. Overwhe lm
26. Column
29. Aliment ary, for
One
30. Mournful
32. A ssistant
35. Moreovet
36. Fami li ar
name at
Yale

10. Told
tall
tales
16. F l owe r
extract
19. 1tussian
stockade
20. Conform
23. Orchestratc
24. Kind or
wolf

c'est moi"
22. Feat
23. Not in
harmony
' - - - - - - - - - -- ----- 24. Bcrl 25. Trick l e
26. Primate
of llaly
27. Oldc•t
''

tJ1vrmwl
IJ

....

·I I

THI5 KINP' OF CRJ\F'T

I
0
I I

=·--

HEL.f'S ONE

'10 'SAVE.

Now ..,.....the elrdod
io
form the II1U'JIIiM &amp;Mwer. •

~~~~~-~~-~ •unooted b)' the olioYecadoon.
~_Pritl ..
1A
Jumble" LUST1'

American

ax:mm

(AMwen .....,._,.

HAND1'

LACING

'INMAI(

a10rltbw U. 1he nlfriery ..a1 /or
1he &amp;"ankner....o"CHILO'I PLAY

An•werl Jrlud

canal
28, Whol e ·
31. Kind of

mail
32. Kin
to
porter
33. Carme n

Specials

II
MEOHD
_UN

TI&lt;AT WO ~l.D ~E VERI/

NICE , THANK. '{OU ..

Mc -

34. Require
36. Spirit

St ove and lantern fu·el, 89c gal ; 2 man ra f t , $39,95 ; Reg .
49 .95 ; Wrig ht socket wrench set, 1;2 drive 20 pc. or lf•-l!a
dri ve 32 pes . Reg . $29.95 - Now $24.95 ; 8 tra ck tapes Reg .
$6.9$, Now $1.98 ; Lincoln Weld.ers, 225 amp., 592 .50
complete ; Khaki tu toff shorts ~9c ; Decorator lamps,
Values to $30, Your Choi ce $10.88 ;

lamp
37. Proceed-

CAPTAIN EASY

ings
38. King of
tragedy
39. Farm
machine
.~

LADtES
Double Kn it slacks Reg . $~1.98; Now $6 .95 ; Body Suits Reg .
$7 .97 Now $4.95 ; Famous Label s blouses and knit tops
Reg . S6.95 to $8 .95, Our Pri ce S3.95 -SS.95 .

DAILY CRYl'TOQUOTE- Here's hQw to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

L 0

~

G FE L · L 0 W

One l etter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the th ree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

OPEN 9:00-5:30 DAILY
EXCEPT MONDAY&amp; FRIDAY TIL9

CRYPTOQUOTES

OPEN SUNDAY 12 'TIL 5:30

FCP

XQVEF

C JUUQWPEE

--------------~4-~12~-t~f- L-~---------------- ·

FCP

ZBWMQFQBW
JWM

EPWEP

S QXP . - PMTJVM

BX

EBZQJS

UVBEUPVQFK
BX

FCP

HRE~

ZB HHBW

ZJVUPWFI'V
I

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tl,l.D.I,~

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OP

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PATIQ..IMN

SHOI.l~t&gt; BE ABlE 10

AJ:&gt;VISU " CONNED
Me INTO TWO OTHEI!.
COURSeS WITH A
PRACTICA~ VA "UE
0~ ZILCH!

~=--,----­

HOUSE for sa le by owner, 3
bedrooms, new furnace, roof,
and w i ring . Wall -to -wall
carpeting, large lot, carport.
Look for iron fence in front
and p ine trees in side yard.
Contac t Mr . Eldon Walburn,
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Phone 992-2805.
6-13-tfc

A SSAT

~EAH ... 8UT MY

ASii?OLOGY, ii&lt;E OCCULT ANI&gt;
TI?ANSC'ENDENTALISM

\

•

�'

.

,, ,, ,,,.,,

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I

10- The Dally Sentir..i, Middleport-~JIIleroy,O., June 14, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ~ Classifieds Get Results!
wANT ADs
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

5 PM . Day Before Publicanon .

Mon'&amp;av Deadline 9 a . m.
Cancellation Correction!.

®
OK.

Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Dav ot Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

rom. eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

B

Of

QUALITY

CLOSE OUT on !41 New zig zag
sewing machines. For sewing
stretch fabrics , buttonholes,

slightly blemished. Choice of
carr',ling case or sewing

(2) Eledrolux Sweepers deluKe

110 Mechanic St:reet

lor more trtan one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents
per Word one Insertion
1
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cen ts per word three
consecut ive insertions .
18 cents per word six con secut ivc insert ions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 'lc .
BLIND ADS
Add itional 2Sc Charge pe.r
Ad verI isetn en!.
OFFICE HOURS
· 8 : 30a . m . to 5:00pm . Dally ,
8 : 30 a . m . to
12 : 00 Noon

stand. S4 ;.80 cash or 1erms
available . Phone 992-1755 ."
1970 PONTIAC

OUR 1hanks to tnose who gave
us shower gifts. A special
thanks to Mrs. Robert Man lev
hostess
of
the
sho'w er.
Mr . and Mrs. Butch Brinker.
6-14-ltC

lost
LOST In vicinity of Maplewood
Lake .
Pair
of
black
·prescription
sunglasses .
Reward . Phone 446-2514.
6-12-Jtc

ONE new truck tire, 900 x 20,
Goodyear
Steelguard
roughtred . Lost on Rt . 7 north
of Ch eshire. Reward .
6-14-3tc

Notice
GUN Shoot, Factory chdked &amp;
hand choked gun s, Forked
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
June 17, 12 noon .
6-14-3tc
HOURS for placing applications
in the Per sonnel Department,
Holzer Medical Center are
from 9: 00to 11 : 00a .m ., 2:00to
4: 00 p.m . on Tuesday ,
Wednesday, and Th ursday.
6-14-5tc
NEW YORK Clothing House
will be colleding Columbus &amp;
Southern Electr ic Company
bi li s.
6-14-3t c
4 FAMILY r ummage sa le at the
Millard Swartz residen ce, on
Rt . 143 June 13 through 16,
behind the Wesleyan Holine ss
Chur ch.
6-12-3tc

IV7D DODGE POLARA
11695
4-door. fac tory air, V-8 engine, automatic trillnsmiss ion,
~wer steering &amp; b~akes , good whitewall tires, white
fmlsh. vinyl top, rad10, clean inside.

1967 DODGE CORONET 4&lt;0
189S
4-door, blue finish , good tires , facto~y air, automatic.
power steering , V-8, radio .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

-

PUBLIC AUCTION, June 16,
1973, 1: 00 p.m. , Hayward
Bissel l Farm, Ba shan Keno
Rd .• 2 miles fro'm Rt . 248 on
County Rd. 28. Signs posted on
day of sale . Hand Tools,
Power toors, electric fans,
electr ic lights, power mower,
medicine cabinets, Christma s
decorat ions, sink wlth cabine t
co m.partments ,' electric
refrigerato r , gas range ,.
Liverpool.
double
bar rel
12 gauge shot gun .
larQe
l of,
new
lad i es
shoes old atka -se ltzer Bot ll ewood, old bot11es, di shes,
vases, electric skil lets, metal
bed , t.v . set, diamond stick
pin , and many other Items too
numerous to mention. Ow-ner,
Ha yward Bi ssell. Terms :
Cash, not responsible for
accidents . Auctioneer Roger Hayman. Phone, 949·
2828.
6-13-3tp
GUN 5Hu0·1, Friday, 7:30
p.m. ; Factory choked gun s
Assorted
meats.
only .
Refres hmen ts se r ved . Racine
Gun Club.
6-13-3tc

Wanted

SOMEONE TO till and sod si &lt;
sunken
graves,
Well s
Cemetery ,
North
of
Harrison vi lle .
Must
guuarantee work . Write
Marion (Welch) Hayman,
1889 Case Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43224.
6-10-6fp
~--~---

HOUSEKEEPER needed. Fred
C. Kesterson. Phone 992 -6668 ,
6-13-6tp

I WILL do housecleaning in th e
area of Middlepor t, Pomeroy
and Chester . Call 992-7202 or
985-4146.
6-8-6tc

in the Area

It's

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE
882 -2817

Notice

Employmenl Wanted

For the Lowest
· Tire Prices

New H·aven , W.Va .

JEWELL
IJry
II
f i nishing , paper hanging .
int erior and ex terior pai nt ing . Phon 698-5341 or 669 3764.
6-1-12tc
KOSCOT SPECIALS for June
include Family Suntan Oil
Spray and Jr . Fa cial Mask.
Al so with a purchase of ei ther
AfterShave or Electric PreShave by Koscot you receive a
Kleansing Kream iree. Phone
Helen Jane Brown , 992-5113 .
6-1-lfc
cs""'P~E-Cc-1-cA_L_Y
_a_r_d-:S~a-le_o_n_con ­

Pels For Sale
AKC Toy POod le pupp1es., S75
and $85 . Also Siamese k i1tens,
· S10. Ph one .1-256-6247, Kennel s
of Ca lh oun.
5-20-301 c
POODLE pupp ies, Toy A.K.C ..
Chocolate - Show quality .
Phone 992-5443 .
5-23-lft

YARD SALE at· 692 Plum
Street, atross from Mid dleport . Sw i mming Pool.
Clothes, antic rocker chair,
antic library tab le etc.
6-13-2tc
--~--,---

FABRIC INN, Hundred s of
yards of polyester double
knits, lowest prices , pass
school at Tuppers Pla ins go 4
Miles, turn left onto county
rd . 50, then 1 mile. Phone 378·
6276.
6-13-3tp

---c---

I

MOBILE HOME s pace in
Syracuse . Phone 992 -6329 .
6-7-lfc
SLEEPING room over Wine
Store, Pomeroy . References
required. Phone 992-5293 .
6-5-tfc

-----PR IVATE meeting room for

any organization; phone 992J975.
J.Jl .tf c
.,-------~
LARGE 3rd floor apa rtment,
newly renovated, Main St.
ove rl ooking
river,
un furnished or can be furnished .
Call after 5 p .m. 992- 2789 .
6-13-ltc
5

ROOM house in Racine area .
Call 992-6329.
6-13.3tc

AIR Cond i tioned sleeping room .
Twin beds available M on da y.
Phone 992 -5440.
6-14-3fp
2 MOBILE homes with gas and
air coditioning and patio:
Albert Hlll. Ra ci ne, phone
949-2261. .
6-12-6tc

SPRING SPECIALS

SABRE TILLER
3% HP 1129.95
l-n

TRA ILER , Brown' s Trailer
Park , Minersv ille. Phone 9923324.
6-12-tfc

Ct~rto n •

Set Up, 134.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP 14~.95

FURNI SED 4 room apartment,
Mason .
Phone
773 -5147,
Reynolds Apartm en.t .
6-12-6tp

In Carton

Set up. $54.95
POMEROY
9,._ JackW. Carsey , Mgr.
~
Phone 992 -2181

TWO trailer l ots in Mi ddleport ; ~
lf2 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
before 6 p .m. 992-5693.
6-11-Sfc HANGING
baske t s,
co m bination pots an d fill ed porch
boxes, wh ite, pi nk and red
ALL ELECTRIC - lik e new 3
geraniums,
begon i as,
rooms with larg e b1th :
petunias , co leus, zi nnias,
Electric wall oven. tabl E top
dianthus, snapdragons, and
range, large closet located on
ageratium . Cleland Farm and
E. Main 51., Pom er ov . SPP '"
appreciate . Ph . Gallipo l is
Gree nhouse, E. Main, Rac ine .
446-9539.
Geraldine Cleland.
6-13-tt c
5-29-tfc

------

-----~~-

3 AND 4 ROOM fu rnished and
unfurnished ~

apartmen t s.

Phone 992 -5434.
4-12-lfc

FOR LEASE

2 BEDROOM mobil e home, air
co nditiuned , Ra c ine ar ea.
Ph one 992-6329.
5-23-fl c

A high volume Ashland
Service Sta . located in
Middleport , o. Paid
training, excellent opp .
to become your own
boss.

Wanted To Buy

1969 CHEVROLET lru ck with OLD Furnitu.re, oak tables,
cheater axle 14' r;turhp
Wooden ice boxes, brass beds.
body . Pri ced to sell. Cal l 992di sh es
or
com p lel e
595 1.
househol ds; Writ e M. D.
6-12·6fp
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
ca ll 992-6271.
s.lJ.Ifc

- - ------

WANTED - ·Used merchandise
- far auction . We buy, we
_se ll. whole houseful or si ngle
pieces , ConSignmen t or
percentage. We w ill hau l.
Phone 992-3354. Ha.y man 's.
6-5-JOtc
ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
OR MIDDLEPORT WITH OR
WITHOUT HOUSE . PLEASE
WRITE Box 729-F, c-o The
Daily
Sentiriel ,
s tat ing
description and lowest selli ng
price.
=----,----,-----:----6--5-6tp
NO. 1 CoPper 54c, radiators,
28c; brass. 20c; batteries , 85c
each ; clean dry roots, Gin seng, S52 lb. ; yell ow root, S4 ;
mayapple, 4.\c per lb.; M . A.
Hall , Reedsville , Ohio, 3786249 .
5·6-tfc
_____;

_____

PH. 992·5221
8 a.m. til 5 p.m .

F ··n oings Ph . 742-5979

Real Estate For Sale
DUE to job lran ~fe r, m us t se ll
home, 3 bedroom , total
electric , large iot . F. H.A .
approved, Syracuse . Phond
992 -7836.
5-25-tfc
FARM for sale, 77 acres of land
pasture , fruit trees , water taP
pa i d,
necessary
farm
buildings, 5 room house with
batt), carpeting and panelling.
Ca ll 992 -7304 , Hysell Run
Road .
6-13-6fc
RIVER frontage on Ohio River
across from Pomeroy on West
Virginia Side Right in center
of Regatta , sandy beach ,
shade, water and electri city . I
have two lots surveyed, 100ft.
wide at low water le vel. 450ft.
to ra i Iroad tracks, 87 ft . w ide
at railroad tracks . The lots
are all cleaned and mowed
off. Marion Reynolds, Mason,
W. Va. , 773-5147. Reynolds
Flower Shop.
6-13-6tp

Young catt le. 742· NEW RANCH HOME - 1 acre
lot. City water . A well 6-12-3tc
designed house plan by W. G.
Best Homes consisttn~ of
large Hyi ng room with dmlng
room. 3 bedrooms including
--,-~--~KNAPP shoes, 10 pet. to 28 pet. . master bedroom with fu ll
EX'PERIENCED
waitress
off an 16 styles . Order 110w.
bath , a large 32' x 11 ' com wanted . ·Apply in person ,
.Supply limited . Phone 992"
binat
ion kitchen :taroily room ,
King's Arms Knight Club.
5324 .
and 2 fuH baths . Under main
. 6-11-3tp
5-30-tfc
fl oor is a full basement or
lower level wh ich ca n be
EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works, E.
f i ni shed if desired. To make
Main St ., Pomeroy. All kind s
this a completely qualit y
of sa lt water pellets , water
home a full 2-car garage i's
nu~gets , block salt and own
included . Financing arranged
Oh1o River Salt. Phone 992with low down payment. For
3891.
all deta ils and an ap 6·5-tfc
pointment to see home, call
992-5976 or Col. collecf 235,
1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
1996.
This machine darns, em 6-13-tfc
broiders, overcasts, buiton
holes.
All
without
attachments . Pay balance of
$38.50 or pay $5 per month .
Call 992-5331.
6-10-tfc

WANTED 5387 .

For Sale

WANTED CARRIER
IN
- - - - -MASON, W. VA.
THE
DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE: 992·2156

We talk to you

JUST taken in 1973 stereo-radio
. comb. with 8 track ta·pe. Take
over payments of S7 .55 per
month or pay balance of
$99.50. Call 992-5331.
6-10-6tc

THE RUTLAND American
Legion Post 467 will Sponsor a
fishing derby - trout , bass ,
catfish, Saturday and Sunday,
June 16-17, beginning at 5 TRACTOR type ri ding mower,
32 in . cut. 8 h.p. like new . Wi ll
a.m. each day at the Rutland
COAL. Limestone, Exc e l ~ior·
legion- Farm , Beech Grove . · trade for Gravely . Phone 985Sail Works, E. Main St.,
3912
after
4:
30p.
m.
Road .
Pomeroy
. Phone 992.-3891.
6-12-3tp
6-13-3tp

For Trade

-----'----

-

like a person.
I

I

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

ROO

,o8
E. M A I N t.,;,;,;;.;;,;,;.;,...
POMEROY
NOW SEE THtS
Lik e new. k iichen hds lots of
cabi nets and range . 2 nice
bedr ooms, lots of closet s,
dining room, ba th , full
ba semenf. har dwood floors.
lots of stone and awning s. 2
cat ga r age. JUST $14.000.00.
A LOT FOR
A LITTLE
5 room fr ame. 3 bed r ooms.
Bath. Lots of · t ile a nd
pane l ing.
Som e
new
plumbing wit h n~w hot wa ter
tank . Ut ility room. Porches.
Leve l lot in good locat ion .
$5,000.00.
BUSINESS ROOM
In good loca tion . Lovely 3
bedroom apartmen t over .
lV2 bath s. Dii1ing room .
KitChen with 20 f t. of cabinet
.space. Ha rdwood f loor s all
ca r pe ted. Cen tral hot water
heat and air cond. A lmost
new. PL EASE NO PHONE
CALLS ON T HI S ONE.
$30,000.00.
.
FAMILY HOME
5 bedrooms. Din in g roam ,
lot s of cabinets. Ph• baths.
Kitchen ha s about 30 ft .
cabinet s, doubl e sta in.l ess
st eel .sink. Very large livinQ
room . 2 large glassed porches. All stor m doors and
wi ndows. Garag e &amp; carport .
$12,800 .00 .

2 YEARS OLD
Wonderful locat ion. 3 large
bedrooms, wa lk -in double
closet s. Bath with shower
tile et c. The ki t chen is a
house wife's dr eam. Range,
2 ovens, 30 ft. of cabinets,
ref. Dining room , double
glass door s to conc_rete patio.
Large . li vi ng room with
fir e pla ce . Utility room .
Ba sement. Level lot 100xl 20.
$23,000. 00.
HAVE YOU OR OTHERS
TRIED TO SEL L YOUR
PROPERTY ? CA N' T! JU ST
YOIJ GIVE US A TRY . NO
SA LE , NO CHAR GE.
HENRY R. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259
If no answer 992 -2568

.
HOWDAST'IE

Business Services
r---------------------,
EXPERIENCED
Radiata

Pomeroy, Ohio

WANTEO - ·oLO UPRIGHT
PIANOS . Any condition.
1972 FORD Grand Torino, VIny l
Paying $10 each . First fl oor
lop, Air Conditioned , V-8
onl y . Write giving directions .
Engine, p .s. &amp; B. Call anv
Pianos , P. 0. Box Box 188,
time - 949·5081.
Sar di s; Ohio, 43946.
' 6-1.4-12tc
6· 10-6tp

struct ion equipment - 1 . 1750
wat1 portable generator, 1 . 10
in. sa bre saw; 1 transit -·new
set of 20 ft . aluminum ex - EXCELLENt opportunity in
local retail sales open for
tension ladders, screw jacks
right man . Prefer mature
and hydraulic jacks, dry wall
person - 30-40 years of age
tools , ceramic tools , pipe
dyes, approxima t ely 100 ' with some background in
retailing but will consider
pieces sma ll hand tools. All
Veteran with
in -service
sales w i ll be cash . Earl R.
c leri cal. storekeepl ng or
Werner residence. Bradbury,
warehousing
experience.
1 to 6 p.m . Saturday, June 16.
Reply
In
confidence
to Box
6-10-6tc
729-C, c-o The Dail.y Sentinel .
Pomeroy, Ohio . .
6-14-3tp
YARD SALE - New hot water
tank , $40 ; Large heater stove;
$30 ; Electric hot plaie, S5; COOK ; waitress and Ca rhop ; ·
app ly in person , Craw 's Steak
Good privy, make offer, other
Hou se .
things . 2nd house below junk
5-10-ttc
yard in Minersville .
6-13-2tp
QUALIFIED
refrigeration
se
rvi
ce
man
,
indu strial ,
YARD SA L E . Many useful
commercial , domestic, good
· items . Fran ces
Morr is,
pay and working conditions .
Racine, Ohio.
Must be experienced . Ga llla
6-13-3fp
Refrigeration Co., 611 3rd
Ave
.• Ga ll ipolis, 446-4066.
DANCE friday &amp; ·Sat . nights, 10
6-4-tf
p.m . till 2 p.m . Shenang
Springs . Music by Guy BAR MAl D, applv in person . HiThoma, Toby Young and
He Bar, M iddleport. Equal
Larry Hubbard.
·
oppor tunity employer.
6-14-3tc
6-6·6fc
RUMMAGE
sale,
Coat s
Building, Middleport, Thurs day, Fr iday, and Sat., June
14, 15 .a nd 16 . Women 's
Auxiliarr
of
Veterans
Mem oria HasP.Ita l.
6-13-3tp

For Rent

modeL Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags. Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new.
RIVER LOT
Will sell for S37.25 cash or
4 BEDROOMS Large kitterms available. Phone 992 ·
chen,
dining.
gas
forced
air
7755.
'
furnace,
and
full
basement,
6-14-6fc
Large lots, one on the river .
ALMA OhlinQer house and lot Asking SlO,SOO .OO . Want to look
on Lynn Place, Middleport. and make us an offer.
Ohio, wi II be sold to the
MOBtLE HOME
highest bidder , Tuesday , June 3 BEDROOMS - Master has
19, 1973 at 10:00 a .m . at the
office of J . B. O'Brien, At- nice built-in vanity wlth lots of
torney, 100'12 Court St(eet, drawers. Nice modern front
Pomeroy , for not less fhan the kitchen with spacious cupappra ised va lue of $2,500.00. boards . Oil ·furnace . Want
For further information call $6,000.00 .
992-2720.
80 ACRES
Large
6-14-4tc ALL · MINERALS _H_A_N
_ G_I_N_G__b_a_s_k_e_t_s_
; -c-om - barn and several outbuil dings.
binati on pots and f illed porch 7 room farm home, with bath.
bQ)(eS, white, pink, and red Some bottom land. Ask ing
geraniums,
begon ias, $21.500.00.
petun ias , Coleus, Zihnia s.
INVESTMENT
Dianth .u s, Snapdragons , LARGE BRICK - In town. lots
Ageratium . Cleland Farm of large room s, city wa ter,
and Greenhouse, E . Mai n, steam heating, and parking
Rac ine. Geraldine Cle land. area. 0 n1y S32 •500 .oo .
6· 14·tfc
7ACRES
5 BEDROOMS - On ly about 3
N EW Huffy Riding N'tower 8
h .p., 26'' . Never used . Pri ce years old. 11!2 baths, oak floors ,
.SJOO. Used Huffy R i din g basement and lots of cupboard
Mower 7 h.p. 26" Price $200. space. A nice designed hom e.
Either one to se ll. Telephone in an excellent location. 5 acres
742-5162.
of bottom . Asking $30,000.00.
6· U -3tp 00 YOU HAVE AN IN DU STR IAL SITE, ACR EAGE,
'69 PI .YMOUTH Fury Ill, P.S .. SEVE R A L
HUNORED
P.B., Air , good t ires . Only
ACRES,
OR
SEVERA L
51,000. Phone 992-2042 after 3
HOUSE S. CALL US, WE ARE
p.m .
IN THE NEEO OF GOOO
PROPERTIE S FOR OUR
1966
9-PASSE NG ER
Olds- CLIE NTS.
mobile Vista-Cruiser, 69,0001 HELEN l . TEAFORD?n-3325
actual miles, air. radio , etc.
GORDON 8 . TEAFORD
992-2936.
992-361S ·
6-14-3tc
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAYS PLEASE

Auto Sales

Help Wanted

'

$2195

Firebird Esprit, loca11 -owner ca r , 350 V-8 engine, power
steering &amp; automatic transmission, AM-FM radio , like
new white lettered tires. 307 v.a, power steering &amp; brakes
radio, clean interior .
'

.Sa1urday .

Card of Thanks

des igns , etc. Paint

.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

fancy

right to edit or re iect any ads

deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be respons i ble

Real Estate For Sale

.

For Sale

Service
Fr'otn the laraest 1'ruck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
!&gt;mauesr Healer Lore .
Nathan Biggs
R~diator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pti. 992-2174

Pomeroy

LET US HELP YOU
Roofin-g . Roof Painting,
Spouting ,
Plumbing ,
Re modeling , Complete
Building , Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding.
PHONE : 992 -2550

AU.·WEATHER
N . 2nd Ave.

Middleport , O.

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED .
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVtCE

MODERN
SANITATION
JOHN TUCKER
Rt. 4, Pomeroy , O.
992-3954

WILL TRIM or cut trees or
sHrubbery . Also paint roofs .
Phon e 949-3221 .
6-13-30tc
WILKINSON Small Engine
Sales &amp; Servke, 810 3rd St.,
Middl~port . Lawn mower
repair . Free pickup and
delivery . Phone 992-3092. Also
- Briggs and Stratton and
Tecumcee parts.
6-!0-6tc
DOZER and back hoe work ;
ponds and septi c tank s, d.ilchlng se rv ice ; top soil, fill did,
limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavatinQ .
Ph one 992 -5367 or 992 -3861.
9-1-tfc
SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC
S.EWAGE
SYS TEM S
CLEA NED,
REPAIRED .
M I LLER SANITAT IO N ,
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662)035 .
l0-4· 1fc
SE WING MACHINE S. Repair
service. all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc
AUTOM OBILE insura nce been
cancelled?
lost
your
operator's li cense? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc
G&amp;t:: Appliance Repair . repair
on all laundry eq uipment,
refrigerat ion equipment and
wiring,
welding,
house
electr ic and gas. Call 992-3802
or aft.e r 4: 30 p . m . ca ll 9926050 .
5-24-JOtp

Real Estate For Sale
·s

ROOM and Path house on
large lot in upper end of
Syra cuse. Large attic oUt buildings. $7,000. Cal l 949-2595
before: 2:30 p .m . or any time
on weekends .
6-4-12tc

- - -- - -

7 ROOM house with bath In
Rutland , air conditioned .
carpeted , gas furnace, di sh washer:, double oven, range,
do'uble garage, large carport,
4 acr~s cleared and fenced,
small
barn
and
oth er
buildings . Phone 614-742,6834.
5-30-tfc

BARNEY

FOUR
OOLLERS!!

STAVOUT PliWIN'

CRRDS TH' WHOLE
BLESSET NIGHT
Speetallst
Wheel

VETERANS

Alignment

BANK FINANCING
12 Years - 10.75 A. P. R.
for Your

tt Must
Be Right
or we will
Make it Right .

For Your Mobile Home-Land-No Down Payment
Qualify Today, Call

. 304-485-3809
Choose your own hom~ from
your AREA DEALER.

·POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992 -2094
606 E. Main Pomero_y

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

8-4: 30 Oaily , &amp;-12 Sat.
In the R. H. Rawtlngs Son s
Building .
Middleport, 0 .
992 -2101

I'M TAKING NUME~OLOGY.

Have your T.V. Picture Tube
Restored A s Good As Ne'llf
Right In Your
Home .
Guaranteed for 6 Mo.

PRE-FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

,. ~
....
Built to Your ' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-SSSlf
MaSon, W.Va .
EXCAVATING. Dozers, lacg e
and small; Back hoes and
loader s on track arid fires ;
Lo ·boy
Du mp tru c ks se rvi ce. Se pti c tanks in sta lled. George t Billl Pullins ,
phone 992-2478 or . 992-7 402.
2-9-tfc
HARRISON'S TV service and
service calls. Phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
.2 DAY ANTIQUE SALE
Friday, June 22 at IO :OO_A.m. Sharp
Saturday, June23at 10:00 A. M. Sharp
Reinersvi lle, .Ohio
On Si. Rt. 78 between McConnelsville and Caldwell, Ohio
in Reinersvitle . Due to the death of my husband, H!ra m
Henderson , will sell the compl&amp;te contents of our 10 room
museum home.
Wi II se ll on Friday, June 22: Glassware, dishes, old bra ss,
oi t lamps, churns, clocks , picture frames, primitives,
china , pottery , bells, and hundreds of oth&amp;r smallit&amp;ms.
Will se ll until late eveni ng.
Wi ll try to se ll all sma ll item s on Fr ida y. Will start
Saturday, June 23 at 10:00 A.M . sett ing any small items
left from Friday and household f urni ture~ This is a life
time's col lection of ant iq ues . Man y of which have been ·
handed down for several generations. Sa le will be held
ou tsi de rain or shine . Some shade. Bring your lawn chair
and plan to stay for 2 days - Motels at McConnellsv ille,
Ca ldwell, Cambridge, and Marietta. Most items are in
good condition and many · are very valuable and rare
pieces . W.l1Ch thiS paper June 15th and June 20th for
comptere usttng.
Lunch on premises. Terms - Cash . Positive 10.
Not r es ponsible for acci dents.
Nothing shown before day of sa Ie.
OWner- Mrs. Bernice Henderson
Auctioneer- Bill Jan&amp;s,
Phone ?62-4333 or 557-3411

DO NOfl£. lHAN Clf'E-

SHOUlDN'T
ASK HIS MEN
10 DO NOfl£.

1\Nt&gt;-A-HALF PIJ!;H-W'5.

0

Color-530.00
Black &amp; White-515.00

0
0

f!i

'#lW )\sIT; lHATSO\\t== ·a&gt; Yel2'ess! !INS ARe OEffelTNb lO lRE-

&gt;

949-3151
Racine, Ohio

Stop In and See Our
Floor- Display .
ASK US ABOUT

A CHII!F

1HAN HE
D!JI"S !

JOHNSON'S T.V.

FURNITURE

cotoN~. 1/&gt;kJr c::l:l'lRe AM1321CANS
A~ lHAT Wf; CA:;;\'J'T

!;j

ONE.O'THAR
GRANDEST
CULTURAL
TRADITIO&gt;JS 15

THE ONL'I RE.A50'-J
HARVARD HASN'T A
DEPARTMENT OF HILl:
BI~L'I Cll~TURE IS,
WE. DIDN'T THINK

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

f'

~

12

NOT R.EADit-r--

~·

THE'i 14AD AN'i !!

~

•5.55
On Most American Cars

- GUARANTEEI&gt;Phone 992-2094

CLYPE WOUL.P BE L.O"r"o;; 0'
FER YA ,., Hli'S
A G~EA'T 'TALKER j

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

COMPA~

OpenS Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
1 KNOW, f3UT NOW

YE5,eUTYOU
SHOULDN'T HAVE:
ACCEPTED IT.

O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
located at Cross roads, Rt . 124, ·
now back to wor k. Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
service.
Wheels
balanced electronica lly. All
work guaranteed. Reasonable
rates . Phone 742-3232.
2-18-tfc

MANO "THINKS "Tl'CREf5
AN "UNDERSTANDING II

:_EASHEL~

·BElWEEN YOJ

--,~-----

REAOY -MIX
CONCRETE
deliv ered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
estima t es. Phone 992 -3284·.
and backhoe work; sep tic
Goeglein Ready -Mi )( Co .,
tanks ins talled ; dump truck s
Middleport , · Ot1io.
and to-boys for hire; will haul
6-30-tfc
f ill dirt, t op soil, limestone
and grave l ; Ca ll Bob or Roger
SEPTtC TANKS CLEANED
Jeffer s, day phone 992-7089; REASONABLE rates . Ph . 4&lt;16night phone 992-3525 or 9924782, Gallipolis, John Russe lL
5232.
Owner and Operator .
2- 11 -tfc
5-12-tfc

IF THAT HOOD MA&gt;C II
AROUND HERE, HE'5 KEEP-

ING HIMSELF WELL- HIDDEN'
I ..... HEY! WHAT'$ THAT ?!

,, THERE'S A
IN ll1E TREES OVER
GADFRY! IF THAT'S WHAT
I THINK IT 15 .... ?!!

p..

8

GASOLINE ALLEY

It'G jue;t that

~

we've di~appolntect

man4 people! I feel Gorr4
for Mom !

SEE US FOR : Awninqs , storm
doors and windows, ca rports,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneel"
marquees. aluminum sid ing
Complete Service
and railing . A. Ja cob, sales
Phone 949-3821
representative . Fbr free
Racine, Ohio
est ima tes. phone Charles·
Critt Bradford
V. V.
Lis le, Syracuse,
5-1-tfc
Johnson and Son , Inc. ,
3-2-tfc AUTO AIR .conditioning. Ser vice and repair. Call 992-3802.
5-24-JOf p
- £LNA and Whit e Sew ing
Ma cbi nes ... Service on al l
H&lt;;&gt;US ~ and root Painting ;
makes . Reaso nable rates .
1n lenor and ex teria·r , free
The Sewing Center. Mid estimates;
call 992-7008or 992dleport , Ohio.
2460.
.11 -16-ltc
5-21 -30tp

ll€Y, G£RAAD, 1HIS ·
1HI&gt; lA7T 11IJ,I; I'M ASI&lt;.IIJ(? 1KJu FOR Ml Fi'J!i

. l 'IHIIJK I'VE Jvsr
SSf;IJ

~

i

"· RAVAGE OUR SHIPPitiGt
"' WE WILL BIDE OUR. TIME.
UNTIL FURTHi:R. EYtiJE~CE

1F WE 'RE HEADI N'

BEC'OMES AVAI L A BLE~
. PRI!iCESS 1

FoR HEW EHq LAHO,
WHAT D' YA i'I-IINK
OL' C~Pf. BLI TZ
HAS G01 IN MIND,
~"PUNJAB~

YARD SALE

;
'
§

AHD OriCE. IT
BECOMES
AVAILABI.~ L WtiAT
WILL YOU VO
WITH IT, 'fQ!J ~

•
•-r+

H ElPLESS~?

~

Yeolerday'• CryptoquQie: A TALE WITHOUT LOVE IS
LIKE BEE~ WITHOUT MUSTARD.-ANATOLE FRANCE

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Portu·
guesc folk
tun e

On construction equipment - I - 1750 Watt
portable generator, I - 10 in. Sabre saw; 1
transit - new set of 20 ft. aluminum extension
ladder~. screw jacks and hydraulic jacks, dry
wall tools, ceramic tools, pipe dyes, approximately 100 pieces small hand tools. All
sales will be cash. Earl R. Werner residence,
Bradbury , I t'!,6 p.m. Saturday, June 16.

5. Overelegant
11. Graven

DICK TRAr.Y

17. Initialed
(poet.)
18. Cross out
20. Egyptian

Bill's Army

gitl
::==~~-----1 Zl. "dancing
L' -

Navy Sale
AMANDA PANDA

'--~n ··~£61NS
SoM~IH tNG
&lt;;tT \N-'

Father's Week End

CHAIR.
I

IT ALSO B£GINS

IH£ woRO CHIN 1

(@ 1973 Kine Feature• Syndicate. Inc:.) .

40. The slot h·
ful way·

rDll1WID'i1rn•!:'..::!!::!-::.;:.

UOWN

1. " Bounced "

UnacramblothoM fcaar lumblot,
one letter to each equare. to

2. Sun -dried
brick
3. Like so me
acrobats

Humbert's
pass ion
YOU REALlY
ANO
WANT TO NOTJ.IINC'S 13. Debac le
14. First of a
CROW, DON'T GOING TO
series
'fOil l.!TTLE STOP ME!
15.
Subside
GUY?
'---~'116. - you
~ ·,.;:..;.·i-·
...,,;;:.:.:r~:r.:·:~
th er e?

"'~:,''(.,_ ~
·
•

85 N. Court Street
Athens, Ohio

1!\

J

LITTLE ORPHAN• ANNIE

SPECIAL

fo'm four ordinarr word1.

(hyph.
wd . )
4. Danube
tributary
5. Small
flower

6. Gail
7. Vi ctory
cry
8. Sincere;
loyal

( hyph.
wd .)
9. Sidewheeler

Veslerday's Answer
25. Overwhe lm
26. Column
29. Aliment ary, for
One
30. Mournful
32. A ssistant
35. Moreovet
36. Fami li ar
name at
Yale

10. Told
tall
tales
16. F l owe r
extract
19. 1tussian
stockade
20. Conform
23. Orchestratc
24. Kind or
wolf

c'est moi"
22. Feat
23. Not in
harmony
' - - - - - - - - - -- ----- 24. Bcrl 25. Trick l e
26. Primate
of llaly
27. Oldc•t
''

tJ1vrmwl
IJ

....

·I I

THI5 KINP' OF CRJ\F'T

I
0
I I

=·--

HEL.f'S ONE

'10 'SAVE.

Now ..,.....the elrdod
io
form the II1U'JIIiM &amp;Mwer. •

~~~~~-~~-~ •unooted b)' the olioYecadoon.
~_Pritl ..
1A
Jumble" LUST1'

American

ax:mm

(AMwen .....,._,.

HAND1'

LACING

'INMAI(

a10rltbw U. 1he nlfriery ..a1 /or
1he &amp;"ankner....o"CHILO'I PLAY

An•werl Jrlud

canal
28, Whol e ·
31. Kind of

mail
32. Kin
to
porter
33. Carme n

Specials

II
MEOHD
_UN

TI&lt;AT WO ~l.D ~E VERI/

NICE , THANK. '{OU ..

Mc -

34. Require
36. Spirit

St ove and lantern fu·el, 89c gal ; 2 man ra f t , $39,95 ; Reg .
49 .95 ; Wrig ht socket wrench set, 1;2 drive 20 pc. or lf•-l!a
dri ve 32 pes . Reg . $29.95 - Now $24.95 ; 8 tra ck tapes Reg .
$6.9$, Now $1.98 ; Lincoln Weld.ers, 225 amp., 592 .50
complete ; Khaki tu toff shorts ~9c ; Decorator lamps,
Values to $30, Your Choi ce $10.88 ;

lamp
37. Proceed-

CAPTAIN EASY

ings
38. King of
tragedy
39. Farm
machine
.~

LADtES
Double Kn it slacks Reg . $~1.98; Now $6 .95 ; Body Suits Reg .
$7 .97 Now $4.95 ; Famous Label s blouses and knit tops
Reg . S6.95 to $8 .95, Our Pri ce S3.95 -SS.95 .

DAILY CRYl'TOQUOTE- Here's hQw to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

L 0

~

G FE L · L 0 W

One l etter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the th ree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

OPEN 9:00-5:30 DAILY
EXCEPT MONDAY&amp; FRIDAY TIL9

CRYPTOQUOTES

OPEN SUNDAY 12 'TIL 5:30

FCP

XQVEF

C JUUQWPEE

--------------~4-~12~-t~f- L-~---------------- ·

FCP

ZBWMQFQBW
JWM

EPWEP

S QXP . - PMTJVM

BX

EBZQJS

UVBEUPVQFK
BX

FCP

HRE~

ZB HHBW

ZJVUPWFI'V
I

I

tl,l.D.I,~

I

.,l

OP

I

PATIQ..IMN

SHOI.l~t&gt; BE ABlE 10

AJ:&gt;VISU " CONNED
Me INTO TWO OTHEI!.
COURSeS WITH A
PRACTICA~ VA "UE
0~ ZILCH!

~=--,----­

HOUSE for sa le by owner, 3
bedrooms, new furnace, roof,
and w i ring . Wall -to -wall
carpeting, large lot, carport.
Look for iron fence in front
and p ine trees in side yard.
Contac t Mr . Eldon Walburn,
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Phone 992-2805.
6-13-tfc

A SSAT

~EAH ... 8UT MY

ASii?OLOGY, ii&lt;E OCCULT ANI&gt;
TI?ANSC'ENDENTALISM

\

•

�\

'

I I

,,, r

'

I

\ '

Etght Meigs Cou nty 4-H
clubbers - si x of them
delegates - are in Columbus
this week par ti cipating in the
1973 Ohio 1-H Congress.
Delegates fr om Meigs
County &lt;Jre Mandie Rose,
daught.!r of Mr. and Mrs. John
J . Rose of Long Bottom;
Virginia. Jordan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan of
Carpenter; Aimee Huston,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Huston of Syracuse; Lester
Jeffers , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jeffers or Al~any; Randy
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. ·
Gay Johnson of Carpent.!r, and
Niese! Duvall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James Duvall of

\

'

'

1

keynote speaker is Kirby legislative session will be the
Brumfield ,' KATV TV per- equal righl'l amendment.
sonality from Porltand, Ore.
Appoint.!d key legislator lor
On Friday s special Govern~
ment Day program will he held the Meigs County group was
and the guest speaker will he Randy Johnson. The delegates
left for Columbus Wednesday
Governor John J . Gilligan.
The delegates had a pre· morning and will return home
conference session with former Saturday . Providing trans ..
Representative Ralph Welker ~tation were Mary Rose.
in preparation for the mock Martha Jeffers, Mfs. Gay
legislative session. The bill to Johnson, Mrs. James Duvall
be discussed in the mock and Dorsey Jordan,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. -----------~
I
Letlen of opinion are welcomed. They •hould be leu
I
than 300 words long (or he •ubject to nduction by the
I
1 editor) and must he Blgned with the signee's address.
1 Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on I
I request, names will be dlscl01ed. Let ten Bhould beln good 1
I taste, addressing l.ssues, not personaUtJes.
1

I

I

Open both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m. Shop in air conditioned comfort on all three floors and at Elberfelds Mechanic
Street Warehouse.

WOMENS
SPORTSWEAR

Sportswear

Sale

I
l

Shop
this
weekend
and
save on
Misses and
Womens
Sportswear.

post commander

MEIGS THEATRE
June 14· 21
NOT OPEN
Fri. . Sat. -Sun.
June 22-23-24
1716
I Technicolor)
Wm . Daniels
Howard DaSilva

I G)
Adul ts: $1 .50
Chi ldren : 75c
Show Sf arts 7 p.m.

son, Earl Spurlock, Mary
· Stewart, Alice Sanders, Roger
Riggs, .Hillis Pinkerrrian,
Virginia Pennington, Shirley
King, Dorothy Jenkins, Mary
Keller, Rose Hysell, Andrew
Hoover,
David
Holter
Lawrence Harrison; Charles
Hampton , Cora Dehney t
Thomas Cooper, Haroid
Carter, Hattie Bennett, lliyrtie
Brumfield and Clint Birch.
!Birth)
Mrs. Marlyn Gorrell, a
daughter, Ravenswood.

Sale Prices on

Imagine: palm trees, sunny skies. an ocean
cruise, foreign countries. Vacation dreams
become realities when you join our popular
vaca tion club. Come in and get the pleasing
de tail s. They jusl may set you planning.

JOIN OUR 1974
VACATION CLUB
,,

e Shirts
• Pants
• Blazers

We Pay the 50th

Sale 1f2 Price
Knit Tops
SALE

White seersucker in !&gt;izes 8
to 16.

Womens Shorts

Our entire stock of Bermudas .
Jam a icas - Short-Shorts and
Short Sets is included in th is
sale .

Misses and Juniors

JEANS
Selected From Stock

A prize for everyone is
promised in a casting derby for
YOWlg people SatW'day morning as a part of the Big Bend
Regatta. There is no entry fee .
The event will get underway
at 10 a. m. with Ted Dean,
hunting and fishing instructor,
Athens, Ohio, Division of
Wildlife, in charge. The conl~stants, through the age of 15
years old only, are to meet at
the parish house of Grace
Episcopal Church where they
will be shown a short film on
the proper care of fishing
equipment followed by a

Sale 112 Price
Special Fathers Day Sale
Prices Mens Department

SALE!

Sizes 3 to 6 and 8 +n' ., •
Regular Shorts and
Otis. Includes entire
stock.

Price

112

On The lst Aoor
Men 's Double Knit Dress Stacks · - . , . . Sale Prices
Men's Casual Knit and Tank Top Shirts - - . . Sate Prices
Men 's and Young Men's Flare Leg Stacks . .. Sl!le Prices
Special Sale Famous Make Dress Belts - - .. Sale Prices

Big Sale Men 's Neckties . . . - - - • - . . . - Sale Prices

Inflatable Pools

4.88

Men's Pajamas-Regular and Shorties. ----. Sale Prices
Men's Summer Weight Caps and Hats - . . . Sale Prices

Our entire stock of Girls 3 to 6X. 7 to 14, and
Preteen Sportswear is included in this sale.
Pants - Blazers - Shirts - Shorts - Skirt.s - Jea·ns .
Coordinates.

_Installs over rear fender

jNews •. tn ·Brzefsli!

-Vz Price

-

Men's 1.98 T- Shirt With Pocket - . . . . . . . - . Sale

Bicycle
Baby Seats

1.''

,Men 's Lee 13.49 Coveralls - · · · - - - ·, .. - .. - Sale 9.;5

.

Men 's and Boys Swim Trunks - · - · - Sale

v2

Price

SALE! BICYCLES
Another big shi.Pment of boys ahd girls 10 speed · bikes Re~ular 26 inch bicycles - 20 inctl Convertible Bikes with
t~amer ~heels. - 10 and 16 inch Sidewa l k Bikes and boys and
g1rls 20 rnch btkes with banana seat and hi -r ise handlebars.

8.88

Chilcdren's Department, Second Floor

-

REG. $2.95

Front Mount
Bicycle Baskets

Stop in right away- Select the bicycle you want
and really save during this sale. ·

Sale 2.48
SALES 3.95

~le

Trainer Wheels
For 1611 , 20", 24" and
?6" Bicycles. Easy to
. ~stall .

3.48

$2.98 CAN

Tennis Balls
Jlong life.tennis bal.is inpressurized
can.
Yellow.

Lingerie Dept., First
Floor

:::,
~:~:

::::
.:;:;::::

~:~

Sale 2.29 can

Weather

at y

ning at noon traveling fr om
Middleport to Pomeroy; 12:30
to 2:30 ~ ski show; 2 to 4 p.m.
an aerial circus at the Meigs
Football field in Pomeroy, and
al4 p.m. the frog jumps also to
be held at the football field ; at
10 p.m. the annual "Frog Ball "
featuring the "Water Wheels"
orchestra, and at 9:30 p.m.
another teenage dance .
Sunday beginning at 11:30 to
5:30 carnival rides, flower
show and ·the national baton
twirling contest to he held al
Meigs Junior High in Middleport.
From 12:30 to 6 p.m. the flea
market and the power boot
race program ' and Heritage
Sunday al the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
Musewn located on Butternut
Ave ., conclude Regatta
Weekend.

en tine

Devoted To The lntere.t. Of The Mejg.-MfUOn Area
VOL. XXV NO. 44

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1973

Nixon plan~
1nore talks

PHONE 992-2156

Minister
changes
are made

i

WASHINGTON &lt;UP I&gt;
President Nixon
plans to meet regularly with the leaders of the Soviet
Union in the coming year, possibly changing the
status of summit meetings .from infrequent
diplomatic spec ta culars to periodic working
sess10ns.
"We expeCt that these meetings will become
more regular features of international diplomacy,"
Whtte House adviser Henry A. Kissinger said Thursday in outlining plans for Nixon's week-long series of
meetings with Soviet Communist party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev, which begins here. Monday.

TEN CENTS

I

LAKESIDE, Ohio "(UP!)
Appointments of ministers to
the 1,444 local United
Methodist Churches in the 14
districts of the We•t Ohio
Conference, i~cluding 255 new
assignments, were announced
here today by Bishop F. Gerald
Ensley, episcopal leader of the
conference.
Announcement of the appoinlmenl'l concluded the 1973
meetings of the United _
· .Methodist's larges t annual
. conference which began last
Sunday.
FollowTng are changes in the
Athens District:
· Athens District

•

By United Press International
•
WASHINGTON - AN ADMINISTRATION spokesman says .
the new economic program President Nixon announced Wed•
nesday night may lead to rollbacks in prices in some major industries.
James T. McLane, who heads a new ''special freeze group"
· -~··-"""!';:~....,.. "
.•
•
within the cost of Living Council, said Thursday the Internal
Revenue Service plans to audit the hooks of all companies that
.~•
raised -their prices by more than 1.5 pet. since January . McLane ·
Kissinger also said the
said there were eight or nine major industries that might have
Nixon8re2;hnev
talks·- " may Brezhnev also would discuss
JOCKEYS GREETED - A window disp!By In Elberfelds Toy Store by members of Eight
eXceeded price and pro£it standards, but he specifically named
and
Forty, Meigs County Salon No. 710 welcomes frog jockeys to the county nnd shows the
lead to a turning point" in the mutual and balanced reduction
onlY the electrical equipment and chemiCal industri~s.
many trophies won by the Meigs County group. 'I'he trophieS are from the year 1971~72 when
arms control talks now under of forces in E.urope, trade, and
Mary
A. Martin, right, was. Departmental Chapeau, and Ca therine Welsh, ieft, was Meigs
HOUSTON - SKYLAB'S ASTRONAUTS, praised by the way in Geneva. H~ said, the overall international si tua·
County Petit 01apeau. The gi_rls of the group are to prevent Bnd control tuberculosis and cys tiC
the
SALT lion.
neXt crew for an "incredible " performance , planned to start however,
fibrosis
in children.
Brezhnev will arrive in the
their final week of flight today by testing the AIXlllO command negotiations were at a complex
Athens Central : Joseph E .
stage and "we will not force the United States Saturday and
Blshman from Summit Station ,
ship that will return them to earth next Friday.
succeeding Harold Braley who
ll was the first operation aimed specifically at ending the pace of any negotiation to fit a will go directly to Nixon's
moved to Camp Miam i, GerCamp David, Md. retreat to
mantown .
record 28-&lt;lay earth orbital research voyage of Charles " Pete" schedule.''
Athens First (Associate) : R.
In
Moscow
Thursday
·
night,
rest
Saturday
night
and
SunConrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz. The Apollo, which
Thomas stack from Boston Uni·
Brezhnev
said
at
a
meeting
day .
has been docked lo Sky lab since May 25, has already spent more
versify School of Theology, suC.
with
American
newsmen
th8t
The Soviet leader will be
ceedlng Todd E. Frail who goes
time in space than any of its moonship predecessors. Engineers
PEKIN, Ill. ( UPI )
some aspects of Lhc system people into it. Everett Dirksen
Whlfehouse Zion.
wanted to check all flight systems to be sure they are ready for he was not going to the United formally welcomed by Nixon at President Nixon said today it turn into despalr with the would tell the cynics of the day to Barlow:
Ralph S. Mal comb
the Critical undoCking and re-entry in(o the atmosphere next States with any intention of the White House Monday. The would be "a tragedy if we system as a whole .
from
Tarlton-South
Perry, sucnot to shun the syst.!m - but to ceeding James Morrison
· bringing pressure to bear on two men will confer at ·. the allowed the mistakes of iJ few
who
week.
share
in
it,
loenwr
the
political
·
''The
system
is
working.
retires
to
West
Virgin
ia.
Nixon because of his troubles White House Monday and to obscure the virtue~ of most"
Buchtel : Charles R. Price,
over
the Watergate case . Tuesd~y . They then will go to in the. American political The way to make it work arena and to fight for their lay speaker.
WHEAT FARMERS IN KANSAS and county officials in
belwr is to bring more good ideals."
Coolville /Associate) : Wendefl
southern New Jersey say they need more fuel than they are now ·Brezhnev said it would be Camp David ·for mOre talks system .
Vermillion
from Fdirvlew Dale .
getting and blamed the big oil companies for the shorlage Thurs- . "completely indecent" to refer Wednesday and Thursday
Without mentioning the
succeeding John Harra, student
before returning to Washington Watergate scandal , the
at Methodist Theological School
day . American Automobile Association bureaLL') in California and to the Watergate affair.
in Ohio.
Kissinger did not say how Thursday night.
Iowa said about half of the gasoline stations in those two states
President expressed his
Fairview Dale : To be ap.
On Friday Nixon and Brezh- confidence in ·the system ~
· pointed.
·
were cutting back on their operating ~ours because of the Irick of. frequently he believes the
against
repeal
of
the
·stale
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
The
summit
meetings
would
be
Gallipolis
Grace
(Associate)
:
nev
will
fly
to
San
Clemente.
enough fuel.
saying it is working - in a
Timothy
L.
Heaton
from
Un
ited
Ohio
Environmental
Protec~
income
tax,"
the
EPA
handheld
but
it
appeared
unlikely
They will talk on the plane and pre.pared speech &lt;~t dedication
Meanwhile, the canadian government announced it will stop
Seminary, Dayton. succeeding
the
leaders
would
get
together
again
Saturday at San C.1emen- of a new research center tion Agency, in a political · book said.
James Brunner who was ap.
ex!X'rts of gasoline and healing oil to the United States as of
The Lake Erie region and pointed to Minister of Edu midnight tonight. 1n 11linois and Alabama, two oil companies much more often than once a le. Brezhnev will return to named for the lute Senare handbook drawn up to aid Gov.
ion, Milford Tr inity .
Washington Sunday and spend Republican Leader Everett M. Johh J . Gilligan in his re- Akron are the prime targets for catGreen
indicated they are working Overtime trying to meet the growing year.
Charge:. Daryl G.
election bid, has written off Gi lligan exposure to voters not Fourman from United Semina Brezhnev's trip repays the night at Camp David Dirk5en.
energy demand .
southeastern Ohio because "it only as "the most environmen- ry, succeeding Edward G. Wal Nixon's visit to Moscow last Sunday night, returning to the
Nixon said l:l granite cor- has few pollution probl~ms and tally conscious area "but also len who moves to Etna, NewMay.
The
last
previous
SovietSoviet Union on Monday .
SAIGON - A SECOND VIETNAM cease-fire went into force
nerstone for the center in this i&lt; loo sparsely populated to be because this is the "region of ark District.
American
summit
was
in.
1967
Junction City : William G.
today at noon, but Saigon authorities reported more bloody
prairie town where Dirksen · politically useful," it was population density and strong Beougher
from Laurel Hljls,
when
Soviet
Premier
Alexei
JUDGMENT ASKED
fighting afrer the truce deadline. Military authorities said there
lived , after flying fr om report.!d today .
succeeding
Williamson
density and strong democratic who goes on Lewis
A suit for money has been
disability
lea ve .
were 21 CommWlist truce violations in the first three hours Kosygin met with former
Washington aboard the "Spirit
Youngstown and Steuben- support," the EPA said.
Laur~l Hills: Betty Winter ·
President
Lyndon
B.
Johnson
filed
in
Meigs
County
Common
after the new agreement came into elf~t and at least three South
of
'76"
with
several ville are ''full of envirQnrnental
mute from Seven Church
Pleas Court by the Citizens
Vietnamese soldiers were killed and another four were wounded. at Glassboro, N.J .
congressional critics of the problems" but witll few votes
The Dayton area is also an Charge, Logan , succeeding Wil·
Kissinger said the two lead- National Bank, Middleport,
llam G. Beougher who goes to
There was no report. of Communist casualties since the
Watergate affair.
envirorunentally
aware
area
to
be
gained
because
residents
Junction City.
ers
will
sign
a
series
or
against Basharat A. Munir and
cease-fire, but Saigon said only hours before the truce that il~
"We live in a time when "fear possible plant closings and EPA believes "it could
Laurelville: Jacob M . Leh·
troop killed 61 Communists in one big battle in the Mekong Delta. agreements on oceanography, Arrieena Munir, et al, Athens, many peopje are cynical about
man from Northeast Cluster,
1
well be a sWi~g city' in the succeeding Wiley Baker, who
~nd potential unemployment."
Though the 21 all~_ged truce violations were reported all over transportation, agricultW'e arid in· the amount or $11,576.
politicians,"
Nixon
politics
and
Scripps Howard Newspapers gubernatorial campaign," ·said retires.
South Vietnam.- six of .them· were reportedly concentrated in the exchange of scientists. But he
said.
"In
this
profession
as
Marietta Christ : Dale R.
the newspapers.
reported.
PHONE CHANGED
Beiltel from Springfield Cen single Mekong Delta province of Chuong Thien, 100 miles south- said those pacts have been
in any - there is much that
The EPA booklet also said tral, succeeding John L. DunThe EPA said Cincinnati "is
agreed to in advance.
Gary Dill, Meigs Co•nly dog
west of Saigon.
could be improved But there is just too conservative to form a Gilligan would drink a cup of ham who moves to first
In addition to discussion of warden, said tO!;fay his ph&lt;?ne
In Saigon, people look lillie notice of the new truce. In the
also much to admire . It would groundswell of support for en- · Witter from Lake Erie at To- Church, Bowli'n~ Green.
ways
to limit strategic wea- number has been changed to
Marietta Pansh : Allen V.
field, at least some troops had not been notified of it.
he a tragedy if we allowed the virorunental protection," said ledo and Cleveland in Septem- Sutton
from Millville, succeed pons, Kissinger said Nixon and 985-4274 Chesrer.
mistakes of a few to obscure the newspapers.
ber, 1974 to dramatize the ing D. William s'ydenstricker
LONDON - THE DOLLAR PLUNGED to a re cord low today
the virtues of most - or if we· 1 'Cincinn&lt;Jti environmental cleanup of the lake and the . who goes to Rock Springs.
Meigs Cooperative Par ish :
in Amsterdam, dipped sharply in Paris and declined slightly in
let our disappointment with groups ,even declined W vote work of the EPA.
Robert T. Bumgarner, director.
other European capitals . At the same time, gold prices surged up
New Plymouth: Wilbur C.
-~::::::;:::::;:::::::~~::::::-.:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::i:!:i:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::i:i:::::::::;;;;;;:;;;;;:;::::::::::::::::::;:::::!!:::::::~r.~::::::::::~::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::$,:.
Hilt from East Ohio, succeed·
ag·ain. Bankers said the reaction indicated European money
~
~ ing Jeffrey Gerber , student,
experts do not reel a new economic move by President Nixon io
Ohio University .
\_,(_!
f_:i.!
cOmbat inflation goes far enough . They ttlso said latest
Northeast Cluster : Rober1 L.
Meece
from Bethel, Ohio, sucWatergate developments hurt confidence in the dollar .
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Senare has voted lo forbid any further. U. S. In....
......
•.•. ceeding Jacob M. Lehman who
volvement ln Indochina, aflrl President Nixon's most important Senate backer,
::;: goes to Laurelville Trinity &amp;
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov. cording to the assumption that ::::
:~:
Republican leader Hugh Sco•~. says he will &lt;upport the bombing of Cambodia for only
~:: Adelphia .
John J . Gilligan, citing predic- the standards could be met.
Pomeroy -Chester : Carl E.
tions of clean fuel shortages,
•'We have begun the enforce- ,: ~:j:~
two more weeks. The Senate measure, invoking the power of the purse to de._y funds for
,r.~,l:~ Hicks
from South Zanesville,
us~ or U. S. miJitary forces in or over Southeast Asia, was passed 67 to 15 wJthout a
Thursday asked the U. S. Envi- rnent pro~ess by requiring that
succeeding Robert R. Card who
Plans to send represen- Zerkle .
Plans were completed for ronmenllll Protection ·Agency utility. companies and other ::;: · whis:per of deb"!te Thursday.
r::: goes to Lima St. Marks.
tatives to a meeting of the
Rio Grande: Robert W. Dam .•.•
·=··
Meanwhile, Sen . Scott, R·Pa., who has been an administration stalwart on the war,
~;:
Southeastern Ohio · Humane junjor members to operate a for a two-year extensioh of the sources of sulfur dioXide emis- ·:··
schcroeder from United Semi .
announced he would give the White House until June 30 Jj) make certain all parties will
~ nary, Dayton, succeding Ed·
Society in Athens Saturday lemonade sf.and Saturday and· J97o deadline for sulfur dioxide sions submit . compliance
G. Wallen who goes lo
schedules,
~
and
by
issuing
1~~
adhere
to
the
new
cease-fire
agreement
worked
out
ln
Paris.
"Thereafter/'
Scott
said,
t~. ward
were made by the Meigs Sunday at the Pomeroy Junior standards.
Etna , Newark District.
-.
" my personal decision WIIJ have to be that I ca n no long~r support U.S. bombing of . !~
The governor said the exten- compliance schedules to those · .f:~l
Rock Springs - Enterprise .
County Humane Society al High School in conjunction with
D.
Wil ·
::~
Cambodia or in or over any of the nations of Indochina. We have kept our oatU:mal
:~ Flatwoods :
Middleport town hall Thursday the Big Bend Regatta . A. sion also was necesSary which did not," he-said.
liam
Sydenslricker
from
11 But it is becoming apparent
-~.:[,:_.
commitments. We have met our obligations. Try as I may, I cannot bring myseU to agree
;~:~
Charter Day Luncheon to be because of the limited
night.
Marielta Parish, succeeding F.
.
that
attainment
of
the
stand.:.
that
continued
U.S.
bombing
will
aid
In
bringing
peace
to
this
hattle
..
carred
country,"
•
Counties· making up the held July 12 at the American availability of sulfur dioxide
· Stanten Smith who moved to
M
•
Lancaster Camp Grounds dlrecdistrict SOC'iety are Athens, Legion Hall in Pomeroy was control equipment,
0
,
tor
.
he
ma4e
the
announcement
after
attending
an
hour-long
briefing
for
senators
by
.
.
"Ohio's Air Quality Control
Fairfield, Hocking, Gallia, planned . Gary Dill, humane
Seven Church Charge: Har Henry A. Kissinger, the President's national security adviser. Kissinger held a similar
:~ old and Golda Kochersperger
Vinton, Washington, Licking officer, reported recent animal Implementation Plan was a~ 1975 will be difficull, if not ~
briefing for members of the House. Sources said he gave little assurance the bombing
~ from Lakeview Trinity, sucand Meigs. Atte11ding from the investigations . Plans were proved with the specific as- imJXlssible, due to shortages in ~
co•ld be eoded soon. The Senate vole Climaxed a four-year .antlwar effort lhal began
:~ aeeding Fred (on disability
local unit will be Mrs. Carl begun for a yard sale to be held ,sumption that clean fuels and both low-sulfur fuels and stack _ 1::
leave), and Betty Wintermute
~ who goes to Laurel Hills.
Will, Mrs. Clinton Fisher, Mrs. soon to raise funds for the. stack gas c!ea nin g equipment gas control equipment,' ' :~: ·when a freshman se nator named Charles Goodell, R~N.Y .,lntroduced ~e ''Vietnam
&gt;outhern Cluster : Larry Po/.
i:i: Disengagement Act" in the winter of 19&amp;.1 and was turned out ol office the lollowlog year.
~l
Franklin Lewis, Carolyn Smith proposed animal shelter. Mrs. would be aVailable," Gilligan Gilligan said .
(Continued on Page 12)
.;.;•;•~•;•;•,•:•;•:•:•
;•:•:, ;•:•:• :•:•:~····•:•:•;•:•:•···· ···············•;o:•;•;O:•:•;•;•;o;•;•;o;o;o;.;•:O;o;o;o:o~t"t'•"'"•"•'•'•'•'•'o"t'•••••••••;&gt;:•:•!•:•!•!•:•;.:O:•:•'•:•".'o'•'•'•"•"•"•'•'~•;•;o',&lt;;•!•!•!•:•:•;.-,~
..:.;o;~.:.
said. "Ohio has proceeded ac• • ' ·' ·'·' . •
.••• •-...... .-........•.•.•.•.•.•.-.•.•.·.•................... -•••••••.•.•.•.o;.o;.•.•;o••••••• •·••• •• ' ••~v.-.-.
•..
and .Middleport Mayor John Carl Will presided.

System is working

June Furniture Sale

Fits on handle bars over
front wheel

discussion led by Dean . The
group will then move to the
tennis courts where the casting
contest will be held.
The casting rod and reel for
the contest will be provided . All
entries are competing against
each other, regardless of ~ex or
age. Major prizes, all in fishing
gear, will be awarded to the top
eight contestants, N. W.
Corn p t o n , Po m e r o y
businessman, is providing the
prizes with each contestant to
receive at least a small prize.
All young people are cordially invited to take part.

r~·=•:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;r:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::··:::::~~~ '

Sale Men's Sport and Dress Shirts; Includes Entlfe Stock

Sale Prices Lee Tech Twill Work Uniforms

SALE! 10.95 DELUXE

Our entire stock of
Bodyshirts
is
reduced for this sale
including
a
big
shipment of sty les
for early fall :

1~~

will present organ selectiorn
Saturday carnival rides will
for one-hall hour before the be on lhe grounds behind the
talent show gels under-way at junior high building. From 12
9.
to I : 30 p.m. a flower show will
Highlighting that show will be held in the Pomeroy Motor
be the crownin g of the Regatta Company showroom. Also
queen.
there is a boat parade beginAlso this evening will be the
" Regatta Ball" at the Pomeroy
Junior High School al 10 p.m.
feat•ri!lg Dick Hawkins and
"'That Bunch." Also a !&lt;!en
High today in upper 70s to
dance on the Pomeroy tennis ·
mid 80s. Variable cloudiness
court is scheduled for · 9 p.m.
warm and more humid tonight
Saturday al 10 a.m. will be
&amp;nd
Saturday with scattered
the children's casting derby
thundershowers. Low tonight
with orientation to be held at
60 to 70. High Saturday in the
tlle Episcopal Parish House.
80s.
The casting derby will be held
at the Pomeroy tennis courts
LOCAL TEMPS
followin~ the orientation.
Temperature In downtown
From9a .m. to6p.rn the flea
Pomeroy
Friday at 11 a. m,
market and crafts fair will be
held at the Pomeroy Junior was 77 degrees under sunny
skies.
High.

•

Young anglers
cast Saturday

Men 's and Boys Summer Weight Jackets

Shirt
Sale

)j:

==:i=========:========:=:::===:~======::;:;:;:;::====·=·===·=·=;=;=;=;=;=·=·=·=== ·=:=:=== ================·=======================:====:i=·==~:===:=-~~~r

Size 72 Inches diameter 15" deep.

Girls Sportswear Sale

Jim Mees, c~hairman of It, located at the intersecti on of
the Big Bend Regatt~t parade SR 7 and U. S. 33, the Rt. 7
which will kick-&lt;&gt;ff the Big bypass at Hobson and at the
Be~d Regatta. this evening, int.!rsection of SR 7 and U. s . 33
sa1d appro&lt;~malely 2,000 bypass.
people will be in .the line of
The parade will leave
march.
Middleport at 6 p.m. traveling
The parade promises to be non-stop to Pomeroy. Parade
the largest ever lo he held in entdes will be judged prior to
the Pomeroy - Middleport the parade with the winners to
area, according to Mees. There be announced at its conclusion.
are 50 Oools ent.!red and 10
Beginning at 8:30p.m. at the
bands .
Meigs Junior High in MidThere will be signs directing dleport, a talent show will be
traffic to the parade or around held . . Mrs. Christine Guthrie
~~::::::.:··~~:::;:,·· · ,,.,.,. . . .., ..
•
.... • . -·~6. .:.:-::«::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::i:::::::;:~i::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:·

PRIZES CHECKED - At left, Dr. N. IV. Compton
representing one ?f.~e sponsors, Goessler's Jewelry Store',
and Ted Dean, DiVISIOn of Wildlife hunting and fishin g instructor, Lnspect prizes to be given away at a casting derby 10
a.m_. Saturday . Boys and girls up lhrQugh the age Qf 15 are
ebg1ble; everyone who enters will receive a prize . Other
sponsors are R. C. Botiling Co. and Moore's Store in
Pomeroy .

MI!'; Ses
and
Women's
Summer Tops . Tanks ·
Halters . Midriffs. Our entire
stock Is included .

and Short Sets

SALE 5.95

• Blouses

•

Misses - Jl!niors - Half Sizes.
Our entire stock Included in this sale.

BLAZERSPANTS - SHORTS

• Smocks

SWIMWEAR
SALE

Make 49 Deposits

DRESSIES

Bovs Walk Shorts ·

Body-

Vacation
·on Your ind?

SPRING AND SUMMER

Sale 1fz Price

Reedsville .
0
Attending in addition to the I
I
delegates are Jean Whitehead, I
~L
•
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 1 • • • rFV{..,.
•
Ernes t \Vhirehead of Reeds- 1
..J...,.oa
1
ville, and Ed Cross, son of Mr. I
!
and Mrs. Andrew Cross of F elllhers in his hill
Racine . Miss Whitehead and
June 11, 1973
Mr. Cross a,re counselors in Deard Sir:
this y~~a r ' s Co ngress.
Your recent article about Mr. Doyle Smales manager of
The n1e for the congress is, Meigs County 's Forked Run State Park this year. Brings me to
''J' m OK, You're OK", and the remember two very im(Xlrtant events one was "Forked Run and
the Other the Pomeroy-)llason Bridge.
When I was Meigs County's Representative to the Ohio
House of Representatives. Mr. Tom Mays of Middleport who was
President of the local Electric Company.
· Mr. Mays told me that it would be a leather in my hat if 1
could get a bill passed in the State Legislature lo abolish the toll
.
·
and free the bridge . I at once introduced a bill that did just that, 3
loll collectors from Pomeroy lost their jobs. but il proved to be an
The Meigs County Chapter of
asset to me politically .
Disabled American Veterans
Astranger whom I never knew Mr. Jim Wells of Logan Ohio,
Mond a y evemng elected
came to me at Columbus and told me that he was President of the
Char les D. Hauber, comState Foresty Division, and that forked run in Meigs County was
man der ; Marvin L. Kelly,
an excelent place and could he developed intO a recreational
adjutan t treasurer; John C.
center cheaply because of its natural suroundings. Thai if 1.
Bac on, senior vice comwould introduce a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives for a
mander ; Harold Frecker, .
hundered thousand and bave it become law it would accomplish a
junior vi ce commander; Edgar nice Lake and recreation facilities.
D. Si sson, chaplain, and
I promptly introduced such a bill and it passed the house and
Sta nl e y Searls, sergeant-at- I went over to the Senate and ask old Friend and Wartimearms.
Army Captian Tom W. Jones lo inlroduce it in the Senate, and I
There are 200 members of went before the Senate Committee of which Tom W. Jones was a
the D.A.V . in Meigs County but member and It passed the Senate and became law. So you may
ma ny more who receive
know that somebody had to do something to get these two items
benefits as . veterans. Every accomplished. and that somebody was a man that wears my
disa bled American veteran is name.
urged to participate in activities to legislare for bett.!r
Benjamin F. Turner
benefits for the veteran and his
· family.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges)
Tamara · •Williamson, Mrs.
Randell Westfall and twin sons,
Ora Roberts, Carol Olliver,
Ora Jividen, Elizabeth Spires,
Julia Plunkett, Molly Parry,
Virginia Miiler, · MrS. George
McCarty and daughter, Alene
Head, Aleta Gilliland, Ira
Exline, Floyd Exline, · Peggy
Elkins, Jessie Edinger, Hazel
DeLong, Gladys Cooper, Eric
Brown, Paula Barnhart, Mary
Williams, Mrs. Mark Tillis and

'

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE

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p'.ea-t:Fdi/h

.
. oats In para e

·ELBERFELD$ IN ·POMEROY

Hauber elected

'

. '' '.

12- The Daily Sentinel, Midtlle~X~rt-Pomeroy, Q,, June 14, 1973

Eight at 4-H Congress

I,

'

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Shop our Third Floor Furniture
Department and save during our Big
June Furniture Sale.

Tremendous Sav.l ngs on
e LIVING ROOM FURNITURE
e DINETTE SETS
•CHAIRS
e BEDROOM SUITES
e NURSERY FURNITURE
eMAnRESSES

SEO written off

-------------------------Lawn; Porch and Patio Furniture. Sale

prices on our entire stock. Elberfelds
Mechanic Street Warehouse.

SPECIAL SALE LUGGAGE

Our entire stock of
Women's and Girls'
Swimwear is included in
this Two- Day Sale.

.

Extension asked
on air standards

One and two piece
Bathing Suits i n
Misses'; , Women's,
Preteens and Girls
3 to 14 Sizes.

Senate· turned full circle on war

District US will meet

CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

BATH ENSEMBLES
Solid color velura with schiffli embroidered trim .

·FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System - $20,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Deposito'r .

REG. 2.50 BATH "TOWELS-- ,-- - SALE 1.47
REG. 1.59 HAND TOWELS ----· - SALE '87c
REG. 69c WASH CLOTHS - ·- ·-- SALE 37c

Reg. 19.98-24" Jr. Pullman
Reg. 18.98-21" Weekender
Reg. '6.98-Traincase
A Regular 125.94-J.Piece Set

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Sal.e 17~

(

~;:~ali~~~ b:o:~lh so~~ces ~~ ::~

Free Customer Parking on Second Street and at Elberfelds Mechanic Street Warehouse

ELBERFE.LDS IN POMEROY

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~

•
I

•

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