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M-

Th~

SWlday-TU,,es Sentinel, ...Jte 17, 1973

Central Industries expanding
PT. PLEASA1'1'1' - Central
Industries Inc ., a local
company that grew out of the

Beat

imagination of two of its of·

ficers four years ago, will soon
be housed in a spacious new

• • •

Of the Bend ·--· .
B,~·

'

/Job 1/oeflich
'

POMEROY- Th e Rev. and Mrs. Char les Simons and
children of Middleport are looking forward to their move to Fort
Wayne, Ind., next month where the Rev. Mr. Simons has ac~
cepted a Baptist pastorate.
The Simons have purchased a 11)-year-&lt;&gt;ld home there and
will s pend part of coming vacation redecorating it. Undoubtedly
the Stm~ns w11I have some regrel in leaving Middleport and
many w1ll hate to see the Simons go.
MISS LUCY AMSBARY is a patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Lucy has under gone painful surger y and is expected to
be confined Wltil the middle of the week or so in case you'd like to
send a long a card.
,
THE' MEIGS COUNTY FAIR BOARD will act to insure that
all open class exhibits rernailt on the fairgrounds until 4 p.m . on
the final day of the 1973 fair.
This ha s been the ru le th past years but it was not enforced.
As a result people attending the fair on the final day missed
exhibits which had been moved. Premium checks will be held up
this year until the deadline to inspire obedience to the rule.

building on a 2~cre plot of
land near the Mason County
Fairgrounds.
Construction of Mason
County 's newest plant has been
started by Upton Construction
ltEPORT MADE
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
i Ohio
Foundation of Jn .
dependent Colleges, Inc .,
reported Thursday contributions this academic year
amounted to $1.7 million, an

increase of 4 per cent over the
previous year.
It was the second consecutive year the Foundation
recorded an increase in" funds .
The contributions were distributed to the Foundation's 36
member colleges to be used for
operating expenseS'.
Loc ale Change
Thoug h ve ry s moll in its
native habitat , the hills near
Monterey , Calif. , the Mon·
terey pine when planted in
the southern hemisphe re is
the fas test-g rowing timber
pine in the world .

Company of Leon . II is
scheduled for ocet~pancy by
mid-August, according w Dr.
Carl W. Thompson, Central
Industries president.
The building wiU contain
7,500 square feet. Central In·
dustries, which now employs
some 17 persons, is currently
housed in Lhe former carolina
Lumber Company building, 126
Highland Ave., Point Pleasant.
The company was conceived
in 1969 by Dr. Thompson and

John C. Musgrave, who is now
mayor of this city. It bega n
operation in the kitchen of the
Thompson home .
Less than a yea r la ter, in
August of 1970, the firm moved
into the former Caroli na
Lumber building and began
manufacturing ·wall plaques,
statuettes aM specialty jtems
on a mass basis. ·
The company is manufac·
turing approximately 300 items
wsupply an expanding market
primarily in the eastern half of
the United States.

__ _..,.._
•

BOW TO BOW,

~.... -,

en tine
•'

Devoted To . The lnterea,. Of The Meigi-Ma10n Area

CRAFTS EXHIBITED by senior citizens at the junior high
building in Pomeroy on Regatta Weekend cover a wide range of
ta lent. Much of it is for sale.

BY BOB HOEFLI CH
While it is wo early to fix the
financial suc cess of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce 's anpual Big Bend
Regatta, the event clearly was
among the most successful to
date, Gt:neral Cha irman Bill
Grueser said today.
The weather cooperated for
the annual weekend event.
Surrounding areas were
plagued by severe storms but
Meigs ColUlly came up with

During The'June Furniture Sale On The 3rd Floor.
Big Savings On Quality Made Nationally Know Furniture

!--

.·o:

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!

VIRGIL WALKER OF RACINE American Legion 602 was
elected Eighth District fin ance officer of the American Legion at
last Sunday 's district convention in Lfthopolis. Mrs. Walker,
active member of the a uxiliary unit of the Racine Post, is
chairma n of the district community service program .

idea l s kies.
Th e re were ove rflowin g
crowds for all even ts including
the fr og jumping contest ,
Heritage Day a nd boat raci ng.
The carn ival took in more
proceeds than last year.
Gr ueser judged this year's
parade as one of the best, and .
added that , , " Overall, the
entire weekend was conducted
on a higher plane than in
previous years. n

'PHONE gq2·2156

MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1973

was a good

Sale! Living Room Suites, Sofas, Love Seats, Sectionals

MRS. EVELYN STOWE OF Syracuse has been admitted to
Mount Ca rmel Hospital West, 7\13 West State St., Columbus,
where s he had tota l hip replacement. She will remain at the
hospitaJ for two weeks and wouJd love hearing from Meigs
Countians.

Picture by J , S"m Nichols III .

president, and Dr. Carl W. Thompson, president. Dr.
Thompson 's son, Kevin, looks on in the foreground. In the
background are employees of the · company including,
Brenda Browning, John Fowler, Debbie Thornton, Becky
Lynch, Frank Wheeler, Tim Daugherty, Howard Browning
and Harry Taylor. - PHOTO BY SAM NICHOLS lll .

GROUND BROKEN - An informa l ground breaking
cer emony for the new Central Industri es plant under con·
st:uction in the former TNT area, was held Friday afternoon
with employee s and principal officers of the firm taking part.
Turning dirt in the foreground are John C. Musgra ve, vice

VOL. XXV NO. 45

TWENTY.ONE SIXTH graders of the Harrisonville
Elementary School accompanied by eight adults left Saturday
morning for a weekend in CincirmatL
They have been busy a ll winter to raise funds for the trip,
collecting over $300. Satu rday , the school bus transporting the
group went to Kings Island where the youngsters were w camp
overn ight. They visited the amusement center ·fin Saturday and
today are to attend a doubleheader baseball game with the Pitts.·
burgh Pirates by the Reds, besides visiting points of interest in
Cincinnati. Gr eg McCall is their teacher.

high-powered boats race in front of Pomeroy.

Susie Thoma , Pomeroy,
whose frog jumped 16 feet and
five inches, was the fir st place
winner in the junior division at
the a nnual jump Sa turday. Sue
Lieving , Wes t Col umb ua,
whose frog jwnped 14 feet and
one inch , wa s fir s t place
winner in the sen ior division.
The first place winner in the
se nior division received a prize
of $300 and $100 went to Miss
Thoma .

Dale Warner, past gra nd
r the
croaker and cha"irma n O
jumps, said the jump cards had
the largest enQ'y list ever
carried with over 200 jumpers.
The largest crowd was also
in atlCndance.
Other winners were , junior
division, sec.;md place, Mark
Ludwig, Columbus, with a
jump of 14 fee l and one inch. '
and a prize of $50; third pla ce,
Beth Ludwig, also of Colum-

bus, with a jump of 1:1 fee l and 9
inches and a prize of $25.
Taking second and third
place in the senior division
res pective ly we re , Debbie
Bryant, Portland , with a jump
of 13 feel and 8 inches and a
prize of $100, and Bill Liechrnan , Hockingpor t, a jump of 13
feet &lt;Jnd six inches and a prize
of $50.
Les lie Fultz wus master of
ceremonies.

.

..._

NeigHBOr
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
· Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Avenue
Gallipoli s , Ohio

Phone 446-4290
Home 446 -4518

See him for all your family
insurance needs.
like A
Good Neighbor.
StafB farm

b TherB

UA H

FAIM

llill

~
I"SU IANCl

Stare fa rm Insurance Compam es
Home Ofl lces: Bloommgton . Ill inois

p 7302

missioners for the state 's share
of the Adena-Philcare flood
protection project there. Tbe
principal objecti ve of the
project is to prevent annual
fl ooding of the 90 homes in the
area and to correct drainage
problems in Frenchtown.
The area conta ins approximately 920 people and
2,355 acres. The county commissioners, · the city Qf
Chillicothe, the Ohio Historical
Society a nd the property
owners will also contribute to
the total cost of the project,
·estimated at $225,000, accord·
in g to Sen. Armstrong.
Also approved by the board ,
was a land purchase request
from the Department of
Natural Resources . Fu nd s
totaling $14,800 were released
to purchase 69 acres in Franklin Township in Ross CoWl ty,
whiCh will be added to the land
· area of the Scioto Trail State
Forest.

HONORARY GRAND CROAKERS - The newest Honorary Gra nd
Croakers of the Big Bend Regatta Saturday are , front , 1-r, Beulah Jones ,
Katie Crow , Bill Mayer, Bill Rohr , Steve Christense n, Emma Clatworthy,
Neacil Corsey, Sybil Ebersbach, Jack Kerr, Dr. Oscar Clark, Vincent

'

VOTE FOR AND
. SUPPORT

Early American . fv\odern
Spanis h . French Provincial.

ROLLAND (Plugger)
NEUTZLING
Financial Secretary Carpenters
Local Union 650
Election June 18, 1973
from 4 P.M. to 8 P.M• .
Union Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio
- PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

'

•

!

Bedroom Suites

L SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES
•

Use Our·

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

.

-~..._.._..._.~__.,

.

June Furniture Sale!

Sensible·

Dl METTE SETS

1 Woodt o n e or co lor finishes in

- Credit
Service

CHAIRS
Wood Rocke r s
Rock -0Loung e r s · Swivel Rockers · ,
Recliners · Waii · A- Way s
Occasional

I

3 piece, 5 piece,) piece an d 9
piece.

IL-----~~SALE PRICES .

[

1

-;:;;F~~;~~1
BRING SAVINGS ON

NURSERY F.URNITURE

Briefsl!l·

Ac cordin g to Mi"Jier, the
wake and backwash created by
vessels operaUng on the river
hi:lve contributed to the
wid esprea d problem of h~mk
erosion affecting property
ow ners and commuri iti es
loca ted on the Ohio River .
Miller is also a sponsor of a
mea sure which a uthorizes the
Corps of Eng in eers to build
bank protection works along
the same portion o£ the Ohio
River .· The ' ame ndment was
included in tile F lood Con trol
Act of 1973 which passed the
Sena te on Feb. 1 a nd is pending
before the House Public Works

Committee.
During Sunday 's m ee ting, it
w~ s decided that the Corps of
Eng in eers will atte mpt to
secure special a uthorization
for helpin g correc t th e
probl e ms of Pomeroy and
Middl eport. The Corps is
limi ted by law to an expenditure of $50,000 on any
pr ojec t. While it was felt that
the repair to the upper parking
lot i.n· Pomeroy could be made
with that amount, the sewage
lagoon re pairs .of Middleport
are expected to be far more
cos tly . Meig s Prosecutor
Berna rd Fultz accompanied
Cong . Miller to the oweting .

.UNIT CALLED
SEEK MORE MON EY .
The Middlepor t E-R squad
CANTON, Ohio (UP! )
Na s
ca lled
to
the
• United Stee lworker s Unio n
home of James Carsey, 89
Vice P resident John S. Johns
Ash St., for Conni e Carsey who
said here during the weekend
·tmd Wkcn an overdose of
his union will seek higher
medici ne. She was taken to
wages for its members next
Holzer Medica l Center . At 2:05
year because of the rise in the
p.m. Saturday the squad was
cost of li ving. The 6(J..(Jay price
ca ll ed to Long St., R utland , for
freeze , he said, •'comes
Mrs. Georgia John son who was
somewhat a little late" to help
having difficulty breathing.
workers.
She declined firs t a id.

Hundreds relived. Yesterdays

~ Fu~riilure Sale!

June Furniture Sale!

Business Representative &amp;

An on-the-scene inspec tion of
th e uppr par kin g lot in
P omer oy a'nd Middl e port 's
se wage lagoon was conducted
Sunday morntng by Co il g .
Cla rence Mi ll er with loca l
offici als.
Con gr ess man Mill er m e l
with Mayor _Don Collins of
Pomeroy, Mayor John Zerkle
Knight, and Hosni S. Saleh ; back row, Vick Allen, Bill Parker, Dave Green,
· of Middleport, represent.utives
Bill Laville , Sol Rosenbloom, Jed Mees, Paul Clifford , Bill Beaty a nd .lim.
nf the Corps Qf E ngineers and ·
Roush. Also included in the group were Gene R. Abercrombie, Donna Reece
the boards of public affairs of
and Dick Akers.
both towns to discuss erosion ·
f%::::::::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:· ;:;;·:::;.;:: .:=:::··::::;· :::::::;:;;·::::·:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::: :::::::::::;:·::::::::::::~=;:;.
damages of the Ohio River and
to inspect the village~owned
facili ties whhi c h apparently
have been dama ged unduly by
~·~
eros ion .
Ry United Pre~s International
Cong . Mille r said he ha ~
COLUMBUS - CAMPAIGNING FOR mock slate public introduced l egi~ l a tion "in the
offices topped today' s agenda for 1,245 teenaged gi• ls from House of Represe ntatives Lo
across Ohio ga thered at Capital Universi ty for the 27th onnual protec t land along the Ohio
session of Buckeye Girls' State.
Ri ver from erosion ~aused by
The exercise in citizenship and gove,rnmenl , sponsored by river traffi c.
the American Legion, cont inu e~ throu gh Sunt.lay. Mrs. Elizabeth
The bill direc l.s the comPaddock, mayor of Plymouth, Ohio, tonight wa s to swear in t,~rls mandant of the Coast Guard lo
elected SUnday as mayors of cities.
issue regulations govern ing the
. I
moveme nt and anchorage of
WASHINGTON - '11lE POS(I'AL SERVICE probably wi ll vesse ls and barges i~ the Ohio
raise first class mail rates from 6 cents to 10 cents next .Ja nuary River from Ciricinnati to New
to meet incr eased labor costs . Postmaster General Elmer T. Matamoras to protect la nd
Klassen said Sunday that " in all likelihood" the Postal Service structures and s hore areas.
(Continued on Page 10)

~New,-.; .. in

DARTS OPEN
BOSTON (UP!) - A corporation vice president from
the Philadelphia area, Bob
Thied e, will compete this
weekend for $1,500 in prize
money in the New England
open darts championship.

For'

FIRST PLACE WINNERS in the American Power Boat Association races Sunday a t the
Big Bend Regatta were front row, 1-r, Ron Burr, Class E, Jerry Hopkins, Class FG, and
Randy Min ch WhO won In Unrestricted Rand .Class G; ba ck row, Ke ith ·McClead , Spo•·t J,
Kenny Stevenson, Unlimitetl U, omd Mike Quayle, Unrestricted S. Tom Metzger, winner
Class F J , was not present when the picture was taken. The races were sponsored by the
Lorain Outboard Rac ing Club . Sec Page 4 for more sport pictures. Picture by .1. Sam
Nichols Ill .

all inspected

·. Ross County funded

COLUMBUS- State Senator
Harry · L. Armstrong ( R·
Logan) has annoWl~ed ap·proval by the State Con trolling
Board for two pr oje~ts of the
Department
of
Natural
Res ources in Ross County .
The board r eleased ~100,000
to the Ross County Com-

I

eekend

Flood control plan in
'

TEN CENTS

BOTII LEGS FRACTURED - Melvin Christensen's
highpowcred boat flipped Sunday in the Regatta races,
fraclurmg both his legs. Here he is being lifted ashore by
members of the Pomeroy E~R unit. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, then transferred to one in Akron. Picture
by J . Sam Nichols Ill .

BY BOB HOEFLI CH
MISS BRENDA TAYLOR, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Paul Taylor, Spring Ave., Pomeroy,
was crowned the 1973 Regatta qu.e en by Miss Leanne Sebo, 1972 reg atta queen following the,
Friday night talent show at Meigs Juni.or High School. L-r are Vernon Weber, who WiJS master
of ceremonies of the talent show and who announced winners of the queen contest ; Queen
Brenda, and Miss Sebo. The queen contesta nts were judged on poise, personality and appearance Thursday evening by Syracuse Mayor Herman London, Pomeroy Mayor Donald
Collins and Middleport Mayor John Zerkle.

Two weekend accidents in Pomeroy
Two accidents were reported
over the weekend by Pomeroy
: police.
Orville Jarrell , 43, Racine,
was travelling north on East
Main when Michael Salser, 16,
Racine , ran into the rear of
Jarrell 's car at 6 p.m . Saturday. Jarrell wa s taken to

Veterans · Memorial Hospital
with neck and back injuries.
There was medium damage to
I
both cars.
Salse r was ci ted to juve nile
court for failure to keep
assured clear distance .
At 8 :15p.m. a car driven by
George Pullins, 36, Pomeroy,
was s topped {or a car turning
into Crbw's Steak House on W.

Weathf'r
CALLED TO SAWMILL
Lows in the 60s tonight.
Tuesday variable cloudiness
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
and warm with cha~ce of called to the Allen Ball sawmill
thUndershowers. High in mid to .at 5:28p.m. Saturday where a
upper 80s.
person refused trea tment.

Main when another vehicle ,
driven by Paul Simpson , Jr, 28,
Pomeroy, hit his vehiCle in the
rear. There was medium
damage to both ca rs but no
injuries. Simpson was cited for
assured clear distance .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Turning colder. Hi ghs In
the 70s and .Jows In the 60s.
Cltance

of

showers

Wed-

nesday, and clea rJng Thurs·
day and Friday.
NOW YOU KNOW
Cla ms ran ge in weight from
a fraction of an ounce to more.
than 500 pound s.

Meigs residents and visitors
came to the Meigs Museum by
the hundreds Sunday to relive
·the yesterda ys, courtesy of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society's Heritage
Da y.
This was only the second
annual such observance to be
s taged by the society in conjunction with Big Bend Regatta
Weekend activities but the
turn out - far grea ter than last
ye ar - was ah indication of the
in te rest in the c ultural
traditions of the county.
This year's eve nt, headed
primari ly on behalf of the
society by Mrs. Elizabeth
Hilferty and her husband ,
Gerard , offered something for
everybody even vaguely in·
teresled in the old days.
Ann Grimes, noted American
folksin ger, was on hand for
regular afternoon appearances
providing her own dulcimer
rContinu ed on Page 6)

.~

J ,;

'

.~

MAX JONAS, Pomeroy, gets a lesson on weaving from
Pandy Reiser , Millfield, durin g heritage day .

.......

IJTTLE ANGELA COLIJNS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Collins, Long Bottom, was fascinated by the !\and
quil~ing of Sue Hoyt, Athens, dur:ng Heritage Day .

�2 - The Daily Sentu.el Middleport .-omeroy 0 June 18 197.'

Television Log

PUBL C NOT C E

P U B L C NO TICE

PUBLIC NOTICES

&amp; THINGS

Your R1ghl lo Know

News 3 4 8 0

The Bend 33

H the late Margaret M tchell could have seen what has
happened to the historical novel she probably would have saJd to
heck With t and quietly burned the manuscript ol 'Gone With the
Wnd
Since Miss Mitchells tour de Ioree m the Thirties we ve
come to accept a str ctured form for the historical novel - a
weaVlllg of generations property inhen tances unbreathed
scandal a healthy modicum of sex (cll'cumspectly told rn most
cases) and an all' of expectant tra gedy Nobility an&lt;k&gt;r suffer mg
permeate every page
Young tad es of both sexes have made mooey for 35 years
WT ling utter tr pe which follows the formula outlined a bove
Now comes a turning pornt I think rn the person of George
MacDonald Fraser a Br tish scholar historian and plagiarut of
the lowest deg ree
Fraser doesn t even pretend the origlllality of conJunng up
his own hero He steals the bullymg villam of Tom Brown s
School Days Harry F1ashman and follows him through a long
WIIdly-&lt;hsorganiZed but undeservedly successful life ( 1822-1905)
n a ser es of novels
He adds authentic hlStor cal figures and rnvolves them rn
some of the well'dest beliefs happenrngs a nd uaually-ehady
machinations conce vable -and who IS to say he IS wrong
Fraser apparently has wr tten three of these books with
F1ashman as the archtyp cal anti-hero and I mllst a dmit I ve
only read the latest one flash for Freedom which lS rn ts
tenth pape rback prrnting and covers the years roughly from

NOT 'E B Y
PU B L C A T ON

0
H E DEF EN DA N TS
s avd e G mm
and he
nknown
he s
de
sees
eo a ees
a dm n s a o s
exe u o s
an d a ss gns o
S a ud e
G mm
De eased w hose es dence a e
unkn ow n

COUR T OF
CO M MON P L E AS
ME G S COUNTY OH 0
PR:OBAT E D V S ON
R ha d
B
Ro w e
Ad
m n s a o o he Es a eo Ad a
a11e Ro we Dece ased
p an

S aud e

add ess

G mm
Unk nown e a
De en dan s

1843-1850

I won t rruss the next one and will go back ar&gt;:l try to p)ck up
the f rst two beca use Fraser lS a writer With l'Upact and an
enormous histor cal knowledge rn hlS background
Also I won t rruss reruns of the Enuny wrnrung Tom
Brown s School days on PBS and regret rrussrng 1t I may even
go back and read th e novel agam 1t s dimly remembered from
my own school days
F1ashman read ly adm Is rn h s own memo rs that he lS
thoroughly no good a coward scoundrel and libertme But
profane and prof! gate though he lS he s a fascrnat ng fellow to
follow along the trails of hiStory and accurate hiStory 11 seems
to be too
flash for Freedom descnbes the vast Afr can slave trade
st II flour shrng rn the 1840s even though outlawed by both
Br ta n ( n 1807 and America ( rn 1808)
We see the Br tish statesman DlSraeli calmly d ckerrng to
buy a safe seat rn Parhament for Flashman to please Flash s
fath er n law secretly deeply rnvolved in tbe slave traff c
We see the Krng of Dahomey Gew (a real person) nettrng an
easy $300 000 a year by callously selling hiS fellow blacks nto
slavery
We hear some startling VIews on slavery from young
Congressman Abe Lmcoln v ews which would warp the Great
Emanc pator s human tarum unage If 11 reallY happened
There s even a pass ng reference to Cass us Clay - a f ghting
Kentuckian who was Abe s muuster to Russia and never
changed hiS name
And at the climax we fmd F1ashman and a runawav slave
girl per ilously crossmg the Ohio R ver on the ce at Portsmouth
an adm tted steal from Uncle Tom s cabm and who should
be there to help flash get out of hlS dilemma old Honest Abe
aga n
!'he book Is full of womaruzrng and rather raunchy language
s 28 ncredulously edited where there IS d-&lt;1 or a h I they uae the
blanks)
But one suspects the sp ce sex and scatolog cal language are
put n Just to make the book more salable It really lS an
outrageous
attack on history and the traditional form of the
s
histor cal novel

n h and
Robe

Sh e

C H a enb a h

o Me g sCo
Pom e o

.9

18

.93

+AQ 03 2

RACINE

D V S ON
6

a 2s

2 9

6

Mr Alfred Crow and
daughter Becky spent a few
days n Atlanta Ga w th h s
son Rook a student n Georg a
Tech Rook accompan ed them
home for h s summer vacat on

Racine Social Events

s P

ed oee

t
EA STERN OCA
SC HOOL 0 S R C T OH 0

c
6

9 25

0 New and C e k
2 3 c

By Mn Francis Morris
The Vacat on B ble School of
F rst Bapt st Church held the
commencement at the church
Sunday even ng The theme
was We Look to Jesus The
drrector was Jan ce Salser
assiStant was Barbara Gheen
p1an st L II an Hayman Song
Leader Nancy Carnahan
Nursery
Libby Fisher
Primary L I Hart M1ddlers
Cora lee Cumm ns Jun ors
011 e Mae Cozart Youth Mr
and Mrs Denn s Manuel
Emma Adams n charge of
crafts and other helpers n all
classes
Rev and Mrs Howard
Shiveley and family visited
relat ves at W lm ngton for a
week and are attendmg the
annual conference at Lakes de
Vernon Weber and Curts
Johnson conducted church
serv ces Sunday n the absence
of Rev Sh veley
Rev and Mrs Frank
Cheesebrew attended con
ference at Lakes de
The Esther M sstOn'I!'Y
C rcle met w th Mrs Gretta
Simpson hostess at her home
Monday everung June 11 M ss
Vera Beegle opened meet ng
w th devol ons The group sang
More About Jesus
After
prayer Miss Beegle used The
Bible for her subject and read
scr pture from I! T mothy
!sa1ah James I Peter and
Psalms A med ta t on and a
poem My Old B ble A solo
by Young Mark Simpson who
sang Songs of Pra ses After
a bus1ness sess on conducted
by Mru Gretta S mpson 'a

Squa es 4 Traff c Cour1 0 Chan t"Se Way 20 Move Ma k
of he Go
a
J Ep sode Act on 33 Bobby Go dsboro 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke 8 0 Baseba P e Game Show 3 ~ S
Jacques Cousteau 6 R ctl a the Top 20 33

8 5
Baseba 3 4 5
-9 00 - He e s Luc y 8 0 N'vJv e Rog ue sGal e y 6

9 30 - Do s Dar 8 o Book Be a 20 33

o 00 -

00
JO -

Wo
00 -

2 00 3 00 -

6 00
6 5

Med ca C:en e 8 0 News 20 Pa u Nu ctl ms 33
News3 4 6 8 0 3 5
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 M ove 6 3 Mo e
d B Moll e A P ze o A m ~
0
Pe y Ma son 4 News 3
Focus on Co umbus 4
New s 4

3

Sec e

TUESDAY JUNE 9 91S
Sun s e Sem na 4 sac ed Hea t 0

Fa mt rne 0
6 25
Paul Ha ey 3
6 30
Co u mbus Today 4 B be An swe s 8 Conce n &amp; Com
men 0 Fa h F o Today 3
6 45
Co ncob Rep.1
3
6 55
Tak e F e o L fe S
7 00 Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Jef s Co e 3
7 30 Rom pe Room 6 Rock &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 0
B 00
Capt Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Re ue 3 Sesame S 33
L ass e 6
8 30
ack LaLan ne J New Zoo Re ue6
9 00
Pau l 0 xon 4 Concen a t on 6 F end y unc on 0
Me
G f n a A M 3 Ben casey 3
9 30
ToTe The T u h 3 Jeopardy 6 Ho ywood Ta k ng o
E ec Co 33
0 00
D nah Sho e 3 5 Co umbus 5 x Ca ng 6 oke s W d
8 o D ck Van Dyke 3 L as Yoga &amp; You 33
0 30 Ba fle 3 4 l s 0 000 Py am d a 0 Sp Se ond l
Zoom 33
00
Sa e o he Cen u y 3 5 Lo e Ame ca n S y e 6
Gamb a 0 Passwo d 3 T a e u e 33
30
Ho ywood Squa es 3 4 5 Sew hed 6 $ Love o L e
8 0 Ep sode Acton 33
55
CBS
News
8
Dan
me s Word
0
2 00 - Jeo oa d v 3 5 Bob B au n s 50 50 C ub 4 Passwo rl t.
News 0 3 Sesa m e S 3:1
2 30
3 W s 3 5 Sp Sec ond 6 Sea ch Fo To rno ow a 0
2 55
News 3 5
00 - News 3 A M y Ch d en 6 3 G een Ac es 0 No Fo
Women On y 5 t sYou Be 8 Ma nAgronskyJJ
20
F ash on n Sew ng 3
30
3 On A Ma ch 3 4 5 Le s Make A Dea 3 Bow ng 6
As he W o d T urns 8 10 Ho w Do You Ch d en G ow 33
2 00 - Days of Ou
es 3 4 5 New ywed Game 3 M ke
Doug ass 6 Gu d ng L gh a 0 Wom an 33
2 30 - Doct o s 3 4 5 Da ng Ga me 3 Edge o N gh 8 0
A s s n A m e ca 33
3 00 Ana her Wo d J 4 5 Ge ne a Hasp a 6 3 P ce s
R gh 8 0 Th y M nu es w th 20 G eat S eam boa Race

7 30

To Te The T u h 6 P ce s R gh 8 o Sea The Cock

3 Th s s You

8
8
9
9
0

l e3 C cus4 RFD20 Cha es Ba

s

Bet e Wo d 5 Chan ese Way 33
00 Mo e G and P x 3 4 s Maude 8 0 Robe a F ac k
The F st T me Eve
3 Ame can Ody ssey 20 33
30 Hawa F e Oa Mo e The He s 6 3
00
n e na ona
Pe o man ce
20
33
JO
V g n an 8 P ot F m s 0
00 - Ma cus We by M 0 6 3 News 20 NBC Repor s 3 4
5 Cance
L fe o Dea h 33
00
News
4 8 3 i 5
30
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 Ame can Bands and s 20th
A.nn v e sary 6 3 Move s T he Sp
8
Tak e One Fa se

3

00
2 00
2 30

y Ma son 4 News 3
You Hea th 4
News 4

program t tied
Chr st an
Crosses was presented by
Mrs Edna P ckens wh c h
closed w th group s ng ng
Beneath the Cross of Jesus
and The Lord s Prayer n
wuson Mrs S mpson served
lovely refreshments to the
group of twelve
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Bradford Rae ne and Mr and
Mrs Leon Jordan and lam ly
of Columbus a !tended the
p nn ng
ceremony
of
graduaJwn of their daughter
and s ster Mrs Brenda
(Bradford)
Weller
at
Graceland College D v s1on of
Nurs ng at Lavom Iowa
Isabel Sunpson attended the
high school graduation ser
v ces of her n ece Shelley
Beckwith at Parkersburg on
Tuesday even ng June 5
Mr and Mrs Kenneth
Turley and son Kenneth are
movmg nto the r home
recently purchased from
Franc s Morris
Mr and Mrs Jack Sharpnack vlS ted n Columbus at the
homes of their children They
were jomed by Mr and Mrs
W II am Sharpnack and fam ly
of Peru Ind for a family
d nner at the home of Mr and
Mrs Gary Sp res
Mr
and Mrs James
Ell ngton of Baltimore Md
VIS ted her brother Mr Colter
Hayman and called on other
relat ves and friends ove r
Memorial Weekend and also
attended the Alumn reun on
M s Ralph Badgley and
Mrs Steve Badgley and Kell
spent the weekend
n

WEST
.8 7653

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+K 9 4
.Ql06 4
SOUTH

EAST
.A2
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.A BS
Bo h vulne able
We t No th Ea..,t South
1•
Pas 4NT
5•
Pass 6111

Pass

••

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

J m
West was pretty
sure of two th ngs The first
thmg was that h s opponents
were probably go ng to make
a slam and w n a b g rubber
The second was that h s
partner a most s urely held
an ace
Oswald He could also be
su e tha t an attack ng lead
n e the r d amonds or clubs
was called fo What sort of
player was East
J m A very conservat ve
one
Oswa ld
In that case a
d amond lead was called for
East m ght well hold the ace
of d amonds and not have
do b ed North s five-d amond
bd

Mr and Mrs Roy Riffle
accompan ed by Melv n Riffle
Of Columbus vacat oned a week
at the Reddrngton Hotel rn St
Petersburg Fla
Mr and Mrs Ben Ph lson
spent several days m New
York C ty
Mr and Mrs A J Gould of
Mar etta spent Saturday June
9 w th Mrs Gould s parents
AR RY E SPEN CER
Mr and Mrs Franc s Moms
C ERK O F COU RT
M ss K m Taylor returned to
O F COMM O N PL EAS
M E GSC O U N Y O H 0 her home at Gllll polls after
P O M E R O Y OH 0
spend ng two weeks w th her
s
1
6 &lt;~
a
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Frank Cleland
Charleston w th Mr and Mrs
Ms
Bla nche Spencer
George S mpson
re turned l orne fr om a v s t n
Dr Ka thryn Ph lson of Grove City She was ac
Blacksburg Va s spend ng a compan ed ,j)y her grandson
week w th Mr and Mrs Scotty L ndsey who spent the
Thereon Johnson
weekend

NEWSPAPER

EN ERPR 5E A55N

L'Z:B; I:11!tkdk !l
The b dd ng has been

West

North

East

South

You Sou h hold
.AQ76 .QJ954 +A2 .63

Wha do y ou b d
A-8 d one hea t There was
a day when people would open

th s hand one spade but that
day has gone
TODAY'S QUESTION
You b d one heart and you
pa ne
es ponds o ne spade
Wha do you do now
Answer tomo row

The Da1~ Sent11el

II

CINCINNATI UP!
The
Crncmnati Reds showed s gns
durmg the weekend of com ng
out of an alarrrung slump
The Reds now only one haH
game out of th rd place n the
Nat anal League West won
three games of a four-game
weekend set w til the P Its
burgh Pira tes rncluding both
ends of a Sunday dou
bleheader
What must have satisf ed
Manager Sparky Anderson the
most a bout the weekend were
the performances of h1s p tch
ers wh~ last week were ba t
tered unmercifully by the St
LoUis Card nals On Sunday the
scores were 3-1 and 5 I
Jack B llingham went 5 I 3
rnn ngs n the f rst game
g vrng. up the sole P ttsburgh
run and ga rung h s n nth
victory m 12 dec s ons

ANNUAL FISH FRY
Meigs County Fish
&amp; Game Association
At The

Fraternal Order
Of Eagles
Club Rooms
Pome oy Oh o

June21 1973
Startmg 1 PM
0 nne Se 11ed F om

Stag

i
~

$35 000

Pirates twice

o

Pe

Players D VIS on put t this
way
I don t know that there ever
has been a greater f n sh
except perhaps Gene Sarazen s
great charge at Fresh Meadow
(L I ) n 1932 when he played
the last 28 holes n 100 shots
and won the Open by three )
M ller s f rush was really
unbel evable Del sa d
Set Oakmont Record
P J Boatwr ght execullve
d rector of the U S Golf
Assoc ation srud I st ll can t
bel eve t after M ller had
posted an e ght-under-par 63
Sunday to wrn the 73rd U S
Qpen champ onsh p at the Oak
mont Country Club and earn

Cincy bounces

33

3 30
Re u n o Peyton Pa ce 3 5 One L e o L e 6 3
Sec e S o m 0 Ph Dona.hue 4 Ho ywood Ta k ng 8 Chan
es e Way 20 T me Fo Tmo hy 33
4 00 - M s e Ca oon 3 o e Am e an S y e 3 Some set 5
Huck &amp; Yoo f. s.,.
&lt;:.
m a Sesa me S 33 M o e A
Tha Hea en A ows
0
4 30
Pett coat June on 3 W d W d Wes
3 My L t e
Ma g e S Me v G f n 4 F T oop 6 Abbot &amp; Cos e o 8
5 00 M
Roge s 20 33 And y G f h 5 Bona n a 3 Ha ze a
He e Com es The B des 6 M Rog e s 20 33
5 30 - Beve y H b es a E ec Co 33 Ga me Py e 3
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Dea h Va ey Days 5
5 55
Ea
N gh nga e 5
6 00
News 3 4 8 0 3 5 T u h o Con seq 6 Sesam eS
20 A ound he Bend 33
6 30 - Ne w s 3 4 6 a o s 0 eam o eann e 3 L as Yoga
&amp; Yo u 33
00
Wha s M y L ne 8
e Go A Se e 3 E ec Co 20 Sea
The C oc k 4 New s 6 0 Un amed Wo d 3 T u h a Conseq
3 L v ng 33 Lee T e no s Go fo Sw nge s 5

Step

the four of d amonds
It looks as f
Oswald
Wests lead worked out well
but for the wrong reason
South must have refused the
d amond finesse
knocked
out East s ace of spades and
tned unsuccessfully to get
two club d scards on dum
my s spades
J m Exactly so Aga nst
a club open ng South would
have been forced to w n the
tr ck take the d am on d
fine sse d scard the 10 of
spades on the d amond ace
lead the k ng of spades from
dummy for a ruff ng finesse
get back to dummy w th the
n ne of trumps and get one
club d scard on the spades
Oswald
A tough play
but the only one Aga nst a
qu et trump lead South would
JUSt draw trumps knock out
lhe a c e of spades and
clam

OAKMONT Pa (UP! ) _
They were still talkrng today
about
Johnny
Miller s
remarkable finish
They were sayrng t not only
ranked w th the grea test
finiShes rn the Us Open but
also a longs de some of the
other grea ones n sports
history
Bobbl \homson s nura cle
home run for the New York
G ants n 1951 Johnny Umtas
leading the Baltunore Colts to
VICtory n 1958 rn football s fli'SI
sudden death the 1972
Olymp c baske tball f nal
between Russia and the Un ted
States at Mun ch
Joe Dey comm ss1oner of
the
PGA s Tournament

0 C reus

Oh o

NORTH (D
.KQJ94

M A NN NG 0 WEB S TER
UOGE AND EX OFF C 0
C ER K O FT HE COMMON
PLEA S C OURT O F ME G S
COUN Y OH 0 PROBA E

T u th Of' Con seq 3 Bea the Clock 4 News. 6

3 What s My L ne 8 E ec Co 20 Ma In Ag onsky
Even ng Ed I on 33 Sa nt l Take F ve l
7 30 To Tel the Truth 6 Young 0 I( Ida e 8 Ho lywood

WIN AT BRIDGE

Complicated, but It Works

S A 8C News 3 Sesame St 20 A ound

6 30
ABC New s 6 CBS News 8 10
0 Nm of Jesnn e l
News J 4 5 How Do You Ch ldren G ow? 33

7 oo

June 18 1973

Great finish gives Miller crown

MONDAY JUN E 18 913
6 00

BY PAUL CRABTREE

3 - The Da ly Sentrnel M ddleport Pomeroy 0

ST
PM
NoM nos Sag

Advan ce T ckets $2 so
A Ooo $3 00

Helen Help
Us. • •

Tom Ha I who took over n
the stxth w th a runner on sec
ond struck out f ve and held
the Bucs h tless the f nal 3 2-3
nn ngs to ga n h s fourth save
of the season
The P rates scored the r run
n the f fth on s ngles by R ch e
Hebner and M It May and a
f elder s cho ce
The Reds grabbed a 2-0 ead
n the second nn ng on a walk
a double by Dave Concepc on
and a s ngle by rook e Da n
Dr essen They added an un
earned run n the sLXth nn ng
when Bobby Tolan doub ed
went to th1rd when W !he Star
ge II dropped Dr essen s fly ball
and scored on May s attempted
p ckoff throw which sa led nto
leftf eld for an error
In th e n ghtcap Ross Gr ns
ley went the route to get his
s xth VI ctory aga nst f ve loss
es B ll Plummer and Johnny
Bench proVIded f ery support
w th two run doubles
The doubles by Bench and
Plummer came dur ng a f ve
run th rd nn ng Rook e r ght
bander Tom Dettore makmg
his f rst rna jor league start
fa led to surVIve th e bombard
ment
The P rates only run came
n the f rst nn ng when Gene
Cl nes walked took th rd on a
s ng es by Renrue Stennett and
scored on AI 01 ver s double
play grounder
On Saturday the Pirates
were n command w nn ng 5..0
aga ns the Reds who were
held to ust four h ts all s n
gles

By Helen Bottel

Another Design for Living•
Dear Helenw
A ne ghbor family has solved the questwn What do we do
w th the children after divorce by continwng to live together
The husband and wife go their separate ways except to share
expenses child care etc This saves money and traumas for the
kids Often divorced people become good fr ends after the tenswn
IS off
My wife and I are cons1derrng divorce We can t make 11 as
partners but I think we might be cmlized enough to shll live
under one roof
Please tell me bow I can best persuade her that this s for the
common good - TOD
Dear Tod
Sorry you ll have to persuade her w thou! my help I suspect
unseparated divorce would try the temperaments of angels
A fr endly spht lSll t unusual but livmg under one roof w th
all those household and child care dec s ons• Not to speak of
dating and possible reSidual Jealousy and the problems tha t
broke you up m the fll'st place• Uh Uh It wouldn t last- unless
t ended rn remarr age
Why not ask the ne ghbors who are trymg the experunent
Maybe they II be more opturustic - H

+++

Dear Helen
Heres my rec1pe for happy mamage Be sure the person
you marry loves you more than you love the person you marry
DID IT
Dear D d It
That may have worked out for YOU so far but how about the
person youmarned' Perhaps he lS now looking for someone who
loves HIM more
H

+++

Dear Helen
You may have thought the mamed v rgm who wrote to you
was unsual but bel eve me 11 happens
My fll'st marriage ended n divorce because t was not
consummated Amazingly 11 lasted four mlSerble years
Perhaps 1! wasn t entirely my fault but I cons dered myseU
a freak and I wouldn t go to a doctor or psychiatriSt for help
because I was so deathly afraid they d say so too I was afrrud of
my husband and very much afrrud of sex due to my upbnngrng
My motlier scared me half to death (not del berately) and I
thought constantly of the pam and humil atwn So I ran from my
husband and of course be became mean
After the divorce I met a wonderful man whose gentleness
and understandmg erased my fear We re happily marr ed now I
can t believe I m the same penon I was fiVe years ago-Md 1m
not H1s love changed me
I hope Sexless Me reads thiS and realizes she lSn t
DIANE
hopeless

Next time you sec
someone polluting,
point it out.
lt s ltte
tl e~ t eets It ~ a
t h t LSI e ll s Its
e vhe e fi h
t b eat! e
Yo k o vh
H t
te c
t
S t l 1cxtt
io n t lose v
e ve t
F0 1 1t t
\\ te a l ett~
et h g
out to son eo ne vh
tb ) t t

People start pollution People can stop 1t

•

Keep Amenca Beautiful

fiJo

Miller conquered Oakmont rn
the ! nal round and broke the
all-tune Open and Oakmont IShote records m the process H s
five-under-par Z79 total for 72
holes was four strokes better
Ulan anyone ever had done
before a t Oakmont
In h!S record-shatterrng per
forrnon ce Miller 26 of San
Francisco had to pass Arnold
Palmer Jack N cklaus Gary
Player Jul us Boros a nd
others
He was s x s rakes off the
pace when be teed off for the
I nal round He then b rdied the
f rst four holes and I was sky
high and I sa d okay baby
lets go
M ller p eked up f ve more
b rd es and a bogey dur rn ~ his
phenomena l round then
wa ted in the c ubhouse while
Ute players on the course at
tempted to overtake h m
They never d d John Schlee
an astro logy bu ff who said his

horoscope told him he was rn
a lunar high porn! and would
do well n the Open had the
best chance but never qu te
made t
Palmer Expressed Shock
Schlee shot a f nal round 70
for a 280 tota l a nd second place
money of $18 000
Tom We skopf r n shed th rd
w th a 70 and a 281 total and
Joked after success ve back to
back w ns n the prev ous two
weeks that I m not used to
f n sh ng third
In a three-way t e for fourth
place at 282 were Palmer who
had a f nal round 72 Jack
N cklaus who had a 68 Sunday
and Lee Trevmo w th a 70
Boros Lanny Wadk ns a nd
Jerry Heard were another
stroke back at 283 match ng
the best preVIous 72-hole score
ever recorded at Oakmont The
total of n ne sub-par scores for
the tournament t ed the all
t ne Open record

Palmer shoollng for a
second Open champ1onsh p
said he was shocked w.hen he
stood on the tee at the 12th hole
and saw that M ller was f ve
shots under par and leading the
tournament
I had no Idea I thought I
was m complete corrunand
Palmer sa d I d dn t have the
slightest not on of what was
gong on
Palmer then proceeded to
bogey the next three holes to
blow h s chance
Miller Was Super Nervous
Nickla us came nto th s
tournament h ghly favored to
w n h s fourth Open champ on
sh p and a record break ng
14th major t tie But he came
up too late w th too little when
he knocked n bll'(lie putts at
the 16th and 17th holes
M ller s No 7 on tbe tour
nan ent money list for 1973 and
ha d f rushed in the top 10 in
e ght of the last 17 tour

naments But before Sunday
the closest he came to wrnn ng
a maJor champ onship was rn
the 1971 Masters
Miller adm tted that durrng
his round he had choked but
that he kept telling h mseU to
keep cool keep cool don t let
the gallery get yo u exc ted
Today I was so pumped up
1 was super nervous he sa d
I can honestly say I gagged on
those putts on seven and e ght
One th ng I kept n my head
outthere all day Don t shank
I was thmk ng I was th nk ng
that on almost every ron shot
I kn ow that s bad th nki ng but
I co uldn t help t
It was always up here n
my m nd
Gary Player who led t1 e
tournament after 36 holes shot
a 73 Sunday for a 287 total He
sa d be was go ng home to
South Africa and work on h s
golf game for a bout a month

Ma or Leag ue Stand nps
By Un ted P ess l ntern at anal
Nat onal le ag ue
East
wlpcfgb

Cn cag o

M.on ea

38 26
29 27

594
5 8

New Y o k
S Lou s

28 ?9
29 3

49
483

w

gb

Los Ange es
39 25
San F an c s o 40 27
36 30

'

34 29

car. home. Iife and
health insurance.
• •

•
Snowden
•

•

•

•

•

0

M nneso a
Kansas( y
Oak and
Ca fo n a

'

28 36

w

pet

32
32

56

36

33

3

2

483
3ll

4

2

gb

552
545
524
l 7

2
2

3

9

3 6

2

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2nd
2

2

•30
•

a

M

B JO p m

a

56

St

8 5p m
Oak and
Hm n
Kan sas C y L te 0 0

pm

a
8 30

on y games schedu ed
Tu esday s Gam es
Oak and a Kan sas C y n gh
Texa s a M nneso a n gh
Ca o n a a ( h ago n gh
Bas on a M w aukee 2 w
De o a C e e and w
Ba mo e a New Yo k n gh

three run hon er two doubles
and a s ngle to lead the !'hill es
to the v ctory that helped knock
the G ants out of f rst The
Phils collected 16 hits Dave
K ngman h t a grand slam
hon er n the los ng ca use for
the Gants off Steve carlton
who gave up e ght hits n 6 I 3
nn ngs to get thew nand even
his record a t 7 7
Rook e Ron Hodges f rst

maJor league home snapped a
0
1 1tie n the seventh nn ng and
the Mets went on to bea t San
D ego for their f ftl stra ght
w n George Stone went 7 I
oo ooo ooo- a
nn ngs to gel c edt for the
000 0 0 000
3 2
ohn o
VIctory B II Gre f took the loss
38 0
G ms c
Lee May h tt ng n his 17th
8 and M ay
LP De o
6
and Be n
stra ght game drove n three
9 3 LP
runs w1th three s ngles and
000 022 500 9
300 000 00(}- 3
1 ght h tt ng Roger Metzger
3 and Rudo p
wen\4 for-4 to spa k Houston to
Pa n he
Ame
ca
n
Lea
gu
e
Wood
Ch
the v ctory over St LoUIS
d Oa es LP
47
H o m an
Oak
5
'~-;,:;':'i'''''''''''''''''':&gt;::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;=:=f:::::'~'~'::::;;~&lt;;:::-&gt;~"~:=:&lt;::::::):;~:::i:'&gt;::::::::::i:':':';':''i:&gt;,::::::!;:[;;, Metzger had a perfect day for S nger Ca and Sp o
HRS Fa nzon
KC
8h
O
J
Cocman
De
0
6
&lt;:'! the f rst t me n his ca reer
Marty Perez s ngled home
~
M ke Lum w th the w nn ng run
~
D
n the eighth nrung as Atlanta
DRIVE IN
w
downedCh cagolnthesecond
'J:"'
Q
~ gan e of a doubleheader Dave
lly M 0 11 chma
Johnson hit a three run p n h
for
t
~
'll
homer
for
the
Braves
UPI Sports Ed to
ll
In the f rst game Carmon
GOOD FOOD
Fanzone anti Jose Cardenal
both h t two-run homers and
B
I
OAKMONT Pa UP!
Okay so Jol n YM lie the new US
Pat Borque had a two-run
ood
p
Open champ chokes
double in a f ve r n Cubs
B g deal
seventh to g ve Cl ago the
So does Hank Aaron W lbur Wood and R chard N xon f he tr umph
keeps stand ng over that putt too ong
Ma1or League Leade s
H a guy tells you he doesn t choke he s e ther ly ng or he has a
By Un ted P ess lnte nat anal
short memory sa d b g AI Ge berger who has been on the
lead ng Batte s
profess onal golf tour 13 years now and knows what t means to
Nat onal league
g ab r h pet
w none of I e b g ones hav ng aptured the 1966 PGA title
4th &amp; Locu st
992 5240
People ask us golfers f we ever get over be ng nervous
To ae SA L 52
34
Mo
4 62
3 29 62
-1
Ge berger goes on The answer s bas cally no All we do s learn Mdd&gt; SF 53 205 2 69 337
to play und er those c rcumstances The more conf dent you are
Gds
SF 55 204 8 68 333 ·~-....................................... .
Bonds S F 6 2 2 65 90 33
the ess nervous you become
W sn Hou 66 239 43 8 326
It s All Conllden&lt;e
Lopes LA l3 84 30 60 326
There n I es the story of how tall blond not so mu h upl ght Unse Ph 4 38 2 45 326
Rbn sn Ph 36 20 9 39 325
anymore Johnny M ller cracked the U S Open record !or 18 holes San o Ch l 9 23336 35
Fa y M
50 46 22 46 3 5
here Sunda y w th h s fantast c r ct on I ke 63
Arne can league
The em I es th P story of I fe tself Conf dence
9 ab
h pet
Why do you th nk Jack N cklaus w ns as often a he does
B mb g NY 44 27 23 l
402
H o on De 33
22 9 44 36
Conf dence
CaewMn 5 222 42 5 338
And laugh f you I ke but what do you th nk s 55-year-old D A en Ch S 20l 3 68 332
Bobby R ggs greatest a ly R ght aga n Conf den e
Ke y Ch
6 82 3 60 330
K
kp
k
K
C
Johnny M ller ceria nly had plenty of t Sunday
53 95 32 63 323
Sure he choked or gagged as he sa d while try ng to make Hnd sn Ch 36 35 2 42 3 1
60 244 35 4 303
putts on the seventh and e ghth holes wh ere he had a par an I a Ma y M
55 208 3 63 303
bogey but usua ly he was n su h complete command of his Fousk pBos
a ye s ed w h 302
emot ons he looked cooler than Ben Hogan out there
Home Runs
Nat anal League Aa o A I
Choking Is Relative
and Sa ge P t 8 Bonds SF
Actually I choked very I ttle he sa d when twas a over
7 Evan s A
s M on day Ch
The way I look at t chokrng s all relat ve to where your
4
Amer can League Ma ybe y
pressure porn! s Everybody has a chokrng point Jack N cklaua
KC 6 0 A en Ch 5 F sk
chokes on Grand Slams maybe My choking po nt keeps rlS ng Bas Sp kes C e an d a kson
Oak 3
you know what I mea n
Runs Batted n
Wha t Johnn y M ller means s he more cxpcr en e he gets the
Nat onal league Bench C n
ess he chokes and the less he hokes th e more conf dence he 53 Fe gu son LA 49 Bonds SF
45 S a g e
P
44 W am s
gets
Ch
42
Now you know how a k d from San Franc seQ I ke Johnny
Arner can League M ay be y
M ller who d regard people I ke Jack N cklaus and Arnold KC 59 Ja ckso n Oa k 54
Palmer w th undisgu sed awe only a short tune ago not only can Me on Ch 45 Mu ce NY 4
Yas zem sk Bas D A en Ch
play them on equal terms now but also heat them occas onally and
Da w n M nn 40
for the whole box of doughnuts the way he d d here even though
P tch ng
I
league
B yan SF
Nat
ona
he began th e r nal round six shots behind
3
B ngham
Cn 93
That brmgs up the quest on of what cons! lutes chokrng Many Os ee n L A and W se S L 8 3
who don t part c1pate n profess onal sporl&lt; ha ve no dea what t Reusc he Ch Su on A an d
1s but some duffers who play golf for as I ttle as a quarter or half Sea11e N Y S -4
dollar a hole do
-, - --..-..-----·~-~-~--··-···_.. .
----·---~----·-...·---~
......-.----~·--~-~·---- ------Chok ng says Arnold Palmer s when your mouth gets
dry your Ups get dry and you can t brea the That s when you
make t- f you re ever gonna make t -and obviously Mr
M ller did
Classic case
Perhaps the class c case of choking somewhat and then
overcoming t to produce a spectacular ach evement took place
In the 1956 World Ser es between the Yankees and Dodgers rn the
contest rn wh ch Don Larsen pitched h s perfect game
Larsen ret red the frrst 26 batters rn perfect order then worked
the count to one ball and two str kes on p nch-h tier Dale M t
chell
Suddenl y I had a premon ton that my next pitch would be the
most Important one of the ball game says Larsen now 17 years
later
Come nand tell Herman Grate what you need
I knew I d e ther get M tchell out w th it or he d rip It for a
for your love nest Hew II g ve you a
base hit I found that I d1dn t wanna throw the ball I just wanted
to hold on to 11 for a long long tune
F naily Larsen swallowed whatever it was clogging h s throat
and threw the ball
I knew I had to he sa d l couldn Ifant
1
IS
Johnny M ll er ~ ys he sn t sure he would ve won the U S Open
had he started Sunday s frnal round n fron t of the whole pack In
that case he th nks about the poss b I ty he m ght ve choked
more than he d d But as t was he put together one of the f nest
f n sh ng rounds ever a nd you know th e rest
HERMAN GRATE
MASON W VA
773 5592
He d dn t fa nt

Today's

s1nort rar,9/de

J

•

McCLURE'S

343 1-!:::::::::::::::::::::~J

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL

IN PT PLEASANT &amp; MIDDLEPORT
YOUR HEll DISTRIBUTOR PRESENTS

.

THE 1973
BIG BEND
REGATTA

HIGHLIGHTS
7 PM MONDAY
_.CABLE CHANNEL .5

r~·~~ - ~· -- - ~

w1th help for your

28 30
22 40
West

Ch cago

3-2 win over Montreal

Like a good
neighbor,
State F·~nn
is there.

33 30 l24
3 29 l 7

0

Boson
C e e a.nd

Los

Dodgers f rst place
In other Na tiona League
ga mes Atlanta beat Ch cago 85 but lost the second game 9-3
Houston downed St Lows 7 3
Ph ladelph a dumped San
Franc sco I I 7 New York
shaded San D ego 3- and
C nc nnat bea t P ttsburgh
tw ce 3-1 and 5-1
Hodges First Homer
W II e Montane' slammed a

more

o

Dodgers in first after
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
ca ut ous Walt Alston whos
been nvolved n more pennant
ra ces th a n he d l ke to
remember keepg t a 1 rn
perspect ve
A half game lead doesn t
make much d f!erence this
early n the season
the
conservative Los Angeles Dod
gers manager caut oned Sun
da y after h s surpr s ng
youngsters n oved nto f rst
place n the Na tional Leagues
Wes ter n D v s on w th an
exc t ng
3 2 )2 nn ng
mara thon aga ns the Montreal
Expos
Sure t s only a ha f game
lead over th e fad ng Sa n
Franc sco G ants who are
swoon ng--as usual m JW'\e
But that s enough to make
th e Dodge rs wh o weren t
expected to be a con tender
ta ke hemselves serous y
One of the exc ted players s
W 1 e Crawford whose only
exposure to the World Ser es
was a couple of p nch h tt ng
appearances ba k n 1965
Nobody w II catch us now
Crawford prom sed
We
ha ven t even started yet and
don t forget we have the best
f ve starters n the league and
best rei ef p tch ng
Lasorda Confident
Tommy Lasorda Los An
geles th rd base coach was
also qu te confident
We re where we re supposed to he first pace he
beamed
But the Dodgers needed the
help of an error by C yde
Mashore of he Expos o pull
out th e wrn W th the score t ed
n the 12th Von Joshua led off
w th a s ngle off M ke Marshall
and B 11 Russell followed w th
another single to r ght Ma
shore f red to th rd n an at
tempt to get Joshua but the ball
skipped nto the stands and
Joshua scored the w nn ng un
Jun Brewer wo ked 2 2-3
nn ngs of one h re ef for the
Dodgers to p ck up h s th rd
Vlctory aga rnt one loss
Don Sutton and M ke Toroez
p tched scoreless ball unt I
Montreal s Bob Ba ley s ngled
n the ga me s f rst run n the
e ghth Will e DaviS s ngled rn
the ty ng run n the n nth for
the Dodgers and each team
scored n the lOth befor e
Mashore s bad t hrow gave the

Ba

I

pet g b
5l0
30 26 536
w

33 27

M waukee

De

Wes t

Hous on
C nc n na
A an ta

Ent

N ew Yo k

5
6
7
9

P sbu gn
2l 32 439
Ph ade ph a 26 35 426

Ame can l eague

·~~

~

..

· - ~-

SALE
for June

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
This for Jnne Bndes Only !

MASON FURNITURE

�2 - The Daily Sentu.el Middleport .-omeroy 0 June 18 197.'

Television Log

PUBL C NOT C E

P U B L C NO TICE

PUBLIC NOTICES

&amp; THINGS

Your R1ghl lo Know

News 3 4 8 0

The Bend 33

H the late Margaret M tchell could have seen what has
happened to the historical novel she probably would have saJd to
heck With t and quietly burned the manuscript ol 'Gone With the
Wnd
Since Miss Mitchells tour de Ioree m the Thirties we ve
come to accept a str ctured form for the historical novel - a
weaVlllg of generations property inhen tances unbreathed
scandal a healthy modicum of sex (cll'cumspectly told rn most
cases) and an all' of expectant tra gedy Nobility an&lt;k&gt;r suffer mg
permeate every page
Young tad es of both sexes have made mooey for 35 years
WT ling utter tr pe which follows the formula outlined a bove
Now comes a turning pornt I think rn the person of George
MacDonald Fraser a Br tish scholar historian and plagiarut of
the lowest deg ree
Fraser doesn t even pretend the origlllality of conJunng up
his own hero He steals the bullymg villam of Tom Brown s
School Days Harry F1ashman and follows him through a long
WIIdly-&lt;hsorganiZed but undeservedly successful life ( 1822-1905)
n a ser es of novels
He adds authentic hlStor cal figures and rnvolves them rn
some of the well'dest beliefs happenrngs a nd uaually-ehady
machinations conce vable -and who IS to say he IS wrong
Fraser apparently has wr tten three of these books with
F1ashman as the archtyp cal anti-hero and I mllst a dmit I ve
only read the latest one flash for Freedom which lS rn ts
tenth pape rback prrnting and covers the years roughly from

NOT 'E B Y
PU B L C A T ON

0
H E DEF EN DA N TS
s avd e G mm
and he
nknown
he s
de
sees
eo a ees
a dm n s a o s
exe u o s
an d a ss gns o
S a ud e
G mm
De eased w hose es dence a e
unkn ow n

COUR T OF
CO M MON P L E AS
ME G S COUNTY OH 0
PR:OBAT E D V S ON
R ha d
B
Ro w e
Ad
m n s a o o he Es a eo Ad a
a11e Ro we Dece ased
p an

S aud e

add ess

G mm
Unk nown e a
De en dan s

1843-1850

I won t rruss the next one and will go back ar&gt;:l try to p)ck up
the f rst two beca use Fraser lS a writer With l'Upact and an
enormous histor cal knowledge rn hlS background
Also I won t rruss reruns of the Enuny wrnrung Tom
Brown s School days on PBS and regret rrussrng 1t I may even
go back and read th e novel agam 1t s dimly remembered from
my own school days
F1ashman read ly adm Is rn h s own memo rs that he lS
thoroughly no good a coward scoundrel and libertme But
profane and prof! gate though he lS he s a fascrnat ng fellow to
follow along the trails of hiStory and accurate hiStory 11 seems
to be too
flash for Freedom descnbes the vast Afr can slave trade
st II flour shrng rn the 1840s even though outlawed by both
Br ta n ( n 1807 and America ( rn 1808)
We see the Br tish statesman DlSraeli calmly d ckerrng to
buy a safe seat rn Parhament for Flashman to please Flash s
fath er n law secretly deeply rnvolved in tbe slave traff c
We see the Krng of Dahomey Gew (a real person) nettrng an
easy $300 000 a year by callously selling hiS fellow blacks nto
slavery
We hear some startling VIews on slavery from young
Congressman Abe Lmcoln v ews which would warp the Great
Emanc pator s human tarum unage If 11 reallY happened
There s even a pass ng reference to Cass us Clay - a f ghting
Kentuckian who was Abe s muuster to Russia and never
changed hiS name
And at the climax we fmd F1ashman and a runawav slave
girl per ilously crossmg the Ohio R ver on the ce at Portsmouth
an adm tted steal from Uncle Tom s cabm and who should
be there to help flash get out of hlS dilemma old Honest Abe
aga n
!'he book Is full of womaruzrng and rather raunchy language
s 28 ncredulously edited where there IS d-&lt;1 or a h I they uae the
blanks)
But one suspects the sp ce sex and scatolog cal language are
put n Just to make the book more salable It really lS an
outrageous
attack on history and the traditional form of the
s
histor cal novel

n h and
Robe

Sh e

C H a enb a h

o Me g sCo
Pom e o

.9

18

.93

+AQ 03 2

RACINE

D V S ON
6

a 2s

2 9

6

Mr Alfred Crow and
daughter Becky spent a few
days n Atlanta Ga w th h s
son Rook a student n Georg a
Tech Rook accompan ed them
home for h s summer vacat on

Racine Social Events

s P

ed oee

t
EA STERN OCA
SC HOOL 0 S R C T OH 0

c
6

9 25

0 New and C e k
2 3 c

By Mn Francis Morris
The Vacat on B ble School of
F rst Bapt st Church held the
commencement at the church
Sunday even ng The theme
was We Look to Jesus The
drrector was Jan ce Salser
assiStant was Barbara Gheen
p1an st L II an Hayman Song
Leader Nancy Carnahan
Nursery
Libby Fisher
Primary L I Hart M1ddlers
Cora lee Cumm ns Jun ors
011 e Mae Cozart Youth Mr
and Mrs Denn s Manuel
Emma Adams n charge of
crafts and other helpers n all
classes
Rev and Mrs Howard
Shiveley and family visited
relat ves at W lm ngton for a
week and are attendmg the
annual conference at Lakes de
Vernon Weber and Curts
Johnson conducted church
serv ces Sunday n the absence
of Rev Sh veley
Rev and Mrs Frank
Cheesebrew attended con
ference at Lakes de
The Esther M sstOn'I!'Y
C rcle met w th Mrs Gretta
Simpson hostess at her home
Monday everung June 11 M ss
Vera Beegle opened meet ng
w th devol ons The group sang
More About Jesus
After
prayer Miss Beegle used The
Bible for her subject and read
scr pture from I! T mothy
!sa1ah James I Peter and
Psalms A med ta t on and a
poem My Old B ble A solo
by Young Mark Simpson who
sang Songs of Pra ses After
a bus1ness sess on conducted
by Mru Gretta S mpson 'a

Squa es 4 Traff c Cour1 0 Chan t"Se Way 20 Move Ma k
of he Go
a
J Ep sode Act on 33 Bobby Go dsboro 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke 8 0 Baseba P e Game Show 3 ~ S
Jacques Cousteau 6 R ctl a the Top 20 33

8 5
Baseba 3 4 5
-9 00 - He e s Luc y 8 0 N'vJv e Rog ue sGal e y 6

9 30 - Do s Dar 8 o Book Be a 20 33

o 00 -

00
JO -

Wo
00 -

2 00 3 00 -

6 00
6 5

Med ca C:en e 8 0 News 20 Pa u Nu ctl ms 33
News3 4 6 8 0 3 5
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 M ove 6 3 Mo e
d B Moll e A P ze o A m ~
0
Pe y Ma son 4 News 3
Focus on Co umbus 4
New s 4

3

Sec e

TUESDAY JUNE 9 91S
Sun s e Sem na 4 sac ed Hea t 0

Fa mt rne 0
6 25
Paul Ha ey 3
6 30
Co u mbus Today 4 B be An swe s 8 Conce n &amp; Com
men 0 Fa h F o Today 3
6 45
Co ncob Rep.1
3
6 55
Tak e F e o L fe S
7 00 Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Jef s Co e 3
7 30 Rom pe Room 6 Rock &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 0
B 00
Capt Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Re ue 3 Sesame S 33
L ass e 6
8 30
ack LaLan ne J New Zoo Re ue6
9 00
Pau l 0 xon 4 Concen a t on 6 F end y unc on 0
Me
G f n a A M 3 Ben casey 3
9 30
ToTe The T u h 3 Jeopardy 6 Ho ywood Ta k ng o
E ec Co 33
0 00
D nah Sho e 3 5 Co umbus 5 x Ca ng 6 oke s W d
8 o D ck Van Dyke 3 L as Yoga &amp; You 33
0 30 Ba fle 3 4 l s 0 000 Py am d a 0 Sp Se ond l
Zoom 33
00
Sa e o he Cen u y 3 5 Lo e Ame ca n S y e 6
Gamb a 0 Passwo d 3 T a e u e 33
30
Ho ywood Squa es 3 4 5 Sew hed 6 $ Love o L e
8 0 Ep sode Acton 33
55
CBS
News
8
Dan
me s Word
0
2 00 - Jeo oa d v 3 5 Bob B au n s 50 50 C ub 4 Passwo rl t.
News 0 3 Sesa m e S 3:1
2 30
3 W s 3 5 Sp Sec ond 6 Sea ch Fo To rno ow a 0
2 55
News 3 5
00 - News 3 A M y Ch d en 6 3 G een Ac es 0 No Fo
Women On y 5 t sYou Be 8 Ma nAgronskyJJ
20
F ash on n Sew ng 3
30
3 On A Ma ch 3 4 5 Le s Make A Dea 3 Bow ng 6
As he W o d T urns 8 10 Ho w Do You Ch d en G ow 33
2 00 - Days of Ou
es 3 4 5 New ywed Game 3 M ke
Doug ass 6 Gu d ng L gh a 0 Wom an 33
2 30 - Doct o s 3 4 5 Da ng Ga me 3 Edge o N gh 8 0
A s s n A m e ca 33
3 00 Ana her Wo d J 4 5 Ge ne a Hasp a 6 3 P ce s
R gh 8 0 Th y M nu es w th 20 G eat S eam boa Race

7 30

To Te The T u h 6 P ce s R gh 8 o Sea The Cock

3 Th s s You

8
8
9
9
0

l e3 C cus4 RFD20 Cha es Ba

s

Bet e Wo d 5 Chan ese Way 33
00 Mo e G and P x 3 4 s Maude 8 0 Robe a F ac k
The F st T me Eve
3 Ame can Ody ssey 20 33
30 Hawa F e Oa Mo e The He s 6 3
00
n e na ona
Pe o man ce
20
33
JO
V g n an 8 P ot F m s 0
00 - Ma cus We by M 0 6 3 News 20 NBC Repor s 3 4
5 Cance
L fe o Dea h 33
00
News
4 8 3 i 5
30
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 Ame can Bands and s 20th
A.nn v e sary 6 3 Move s T he Sp
8
Tak e One Fa se

3

00
2 00
2 30

y Ma son 4 News 3
You Hea th 4
News 4

program t tied
Chr st an
Crosses was presented by
Mrs Edna P ckens wh c h
closed w th group s ng ng
Beneath the Cross of Jesus
and The Lord s Prayer n
wuson Mrs S mpson served
lovely refreshments to the
group of twelve
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Bradford Rae ne and Mr and
Mrs Leon Jordan and lam ly
of Columbus a !tended the
p nn ng
ceremony
of
graduaJwn of their daughter
and s ster Mrs Brenda
(Bradford)
Weller
at
Graceland College D v s1on of
Nurs ng at Lavom Iowa
Isabel Sunpson attended the
high school graduation ser
v ces of her n ece Shelley
Beckwith at Parkersburg on
Tuesday even ng June 5
Mr and Mrs Kenneth
Turley and son Kenneth are
movmg nto the r home
recently purchased from
Franc s Morris
Mr and Mrs Jack Sharpnack vlS ted n Columbus at the
homes of their children They
were jomed by Mr and Mrs
W II am Sharpnack and fam ly
of Peru Ind for a family
d nner at the home of Mr and
Mrs Gary Sp res
Mr
and Mrs James
Ell ngton of Baltimore Md
VIS ted her brother Mr Colter
Hayman and called on other
relat ves and friends ove r
Memorial Weekend and also
attended the Alumn reun on
M s Ralph Badgley and
Mrs Steve Badgley and Kell
spent the weekend
n

WEST
.8 7653

•s

+K 9 4
.Ql06 4
SOUTH

EAST
.A2
•7 6 2
+JB7 5
.KJ7 2

•to
.AKQJ 0843
+6
.A BS
Bo h vulne able
We t No th Ea..,t South
1•
Pas 4NT
5•
Pass 6111

Pass

••

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

J m
West was pretty
sure of two th ngs The first
thmg was that h s opponents
were probably go ng to make
a slam and w n a b g rubber
The second was that h s
partner a most s urely held
an ace
Oswald He could also be
su e tha t an attack ng lead
n e the r d amonds or clubs
was called fo What sort of
player was East
J m A very conservat ve
one
Oswa ld
In that case a
d amond lead was called for
East m ght well hold the ace
of d amonds and not have
do b ed North s five-d amond
bd

Mr and Mrs Roy Riffle
accompan ed by Melv n Riffle
Of Columbus vacat oned a week
at the Reddrngton Hotel rn St
Petersburg Fla
Mr and Mrs Ben Ph lson
spent several days m New
York C ty
Mr and Mrs A J Gould of
Mar etta spent Saturday June
9 w th Mrs Gould s parents
AR RY E SPEN CER
Mr and Mrs Franc s Moms
C ERK O F COU RT
M ss K m Taylor returned to
O F COMM O N PL EAS
M E GSC O U N Y O H 0 her home at Gllll polls after
P O M E R O Y OH 0
spend ng two weeks w th her
s
1
6 &lt;~
a
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Frank Cleland
Charleston w th Mr and Mrs
Ms
Bla nche Spencer
George S mpson
re turned l orne fr om a v s t n
Dr Ka thryn Ph lson of Grove City She was ac
Blacksburg Va s spend ng a compan ed ,j)y her grandson
week w th Mr and Mrs Scotty L ndsey who spent the
Thereon Johnson
weekend

NEWSPAPER

EN ERPR 5E A55N

L'Z:B; I:11!tkdk !l
The b dd ng has been

West

North

East

South

You Sou h hold
.AQ76 .QJ954 +A2 .63

Wha do y ou b d
A-8 d one hea t There was
a day when people would open

th s hand one spade but that
day has gone
TODAY'S QUESTION
You b d one heart and you
pa ne
es ponds o ne spade
Wha do you do now
Answer tomo row

The Da1~ Sent11el

II

CINCINNATI UP!
The
Crncmnati Reds showed s gns
durmg the weekend of com ng
out of an alarrrung slump
The Reds now only one haH
game out of th rd place n the
Nat anal League West won
three games of a four-game
weekend set w til the P Its
burgh Pira tes rncluding both
ends of a Sunday dou
bleheader
What must have satisf ed
Manager Sparky Anderson the
most a bout the weekend were
the performances of h1s p tch
ers wh~ last week were ba t
tered unmercifully by the St
LoUis Card nals On Sunday the
scores were 3-1 and 5 I
Jack B llingham went 5 I 3
rnn ngs n the f rst game
g vrng. up the sole P ttsburgh
run and ga rung h s n nth
victory m 12 dec s ons

ANNUAL FISH FRY
Meigs County Fish
&amp; Game Association
At The

Fraternal Order
Of Eagles
Club Rooms
Pome oy Oh o

June21 1973
Startmg 1 PM
0 nne Se 11ed F om

Stag

i
~

$35 000

Pirates twice

o

Pe

Players D VIS on put t this
way
I don t know that there ever
has been a greater f n sh
except perhaps Gene Sarazen s
great charge at Fresh Meadow
(L I ) n 1932 when he played
the last 28 holes n 100 shots
and won the Open by three )
M ller s f rush was really
unbel evable Del sa d
Set Oakmont Record
P J Boatwr ght execullve
d rector of the U S Golf
Assoc ation srud I st ll can t
bel eve t after M ller had
posted an e ght-under-par 63
Sunday to wrn the 73rd U S
Qpen champ onsh p at the Oak
mont Country Club and earn

Cincy bounces

33

3 30
Re u n o Peyton Pa ce 3 5 One L e o L e 6 3
Sec e S o m 0 Ph Dona.hue 4 Ho ywood Ta k ng 8 Chan
es e Way 20 T me Fo Tmo hy 33
4 00 - M s e Ca oon 3 o e Am e an S y e 3 Some set 5
Huck &amp; Yoo f. s.,.
&lt;:.
m a Sesa me S 33 M o e A
Tha Hea en A ows
0
4 30
Pett coat June on 3 W d W d Wes
3 My L t e
Ma g e S Me v G f n 4 F T oop 6 Abbot &amp; Cos e o 8
5 00 M
Roge s 20 33 And y G f h 5 Bona n a 3 Ha ze a
He e Com es The B des 6 M Rog e s 20 33
5 30 - Beve y H b es a E ec Co 33 Ga me Py e 3
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Dea h Va ey Days 5
5 55
Ea
N gh nga e 5
6 00
News 3 4 8 0 3 5 T u h o Con seq 6 Sesam eS
20 A ound he Bend 33
6 30 - Ne w s 3 4 6 a o s 0 eam o eann e 3 L as Yoga
&amp; Yo u 33
00
Wha s M y L ne 8
e Go A Se e 3 E ec Co 20 Sea
The C oc k 4 New s 6 0 Un amed Wo d 3 T u h a Conseq
3 L v ng 33 Lee T e no s Go fo Sw nge s 5

Step

the four of d amonds
It looks as f
Oswald
Wests lead worked out well
but for the wrong reason
South must have refused the
d amond finesse
knocked
out East s ace of spades and
tned unsuccessfully to get
two club d scards on dum
my s spades
J m Exactly so Aga nst
a club open ng South would
have been forced to w n the
tr ck take the d am on d
fine sse d scard the 10 of
spades on the d amond ace
lead the k ng of spades from
dummy for a ruff ng finesse
get back to dummy w th the
n ne of trumps and get one
club d scard on the spades
Oswald
A tough play
but the only one Aga nst a
qu et trump lead South would
JUSt draw trumps knock out
lhe a c e of spades and
clam

OAKMONT Pa (UP! ) _
They were still talkrng today
about
Johnny
Miller s
remarkable finish
They were sayrng t not only
ranked w th the grea test
finiShes rn the Us Open but
also a longs de some of the
other grea ones n sports
history
Bobbl \homson s nura cle
home run for the New York
G ants n 1951 Johnny Umtas
leading the Baltunore Colts to
VICtory n 1958 rn football s fli'SI
sudden death the 1972
Olymp c baske tball f nal
between Russia and the Un ted
States at Mun ch
Joe Dey comm ss1oner of
the
PGA s Tournament

0 C reus

Oh o

NORTH (D
.KQJ94

M A NN NG 0 WEB S TER
UOGE AND EX OFF C 0
C ER K O FT HE COMMON
PLEA S C OURT O F ME G S
COUN Y OH 0 PROBA E

T u th Of' Con seq 3 Bea the Clock 4 News. 6

3 What s My L ne 8 E ec Co 20 Ma In Ag onsky
Even ng Ed I on 33 Sa nt l Take F ve l
7 30 To Tel the Truth 6 Young 0 I( Ida e 8 Ho lywood

WIN AT BRIDGE

Complicated, but It Works

S A 8C News 3 Sesame St 20 A ound

6 30
ABC New s 6 CBS News 8 10
0 Nm of Jesnn e l
News J 4 5 How Do You Ch ldren G ow? 33

7 oo

June 18 1973

Great finish gives Miller crown

MONDAY JUN E 18 913
6 00

BY PAUL CRABTREE

3 - The Da ly Sentrnel M ddleport Pomeroy 0

ST
PM
NoM nos Sag

Advan ce T ckets $2 so
A Ooo $3 00

Helen Help
Us. • •

Tom Ha I who took over n
the stxth w th a runner on sec
ond struck out f ve and held
the Bucs h tless the f nal 3 2-3
nn ngs to ga n h s fourth save
of the season
The P rates scored the r run
n the f fth on s ngles by R ch e
Hebner and M It May and a
f elder s cho ce
The Reds grabbed a 2-0 ead
n the second nn ng on a walk
a double by Dave Concepc on
and a s ngle by rook e Da n
Dr essen They added an un
earned run n the sLXth nn ng
when Bobby Tolan doub ed
went to th1rd when W !he Star
ge II dropped Dr essen s fly ball
and scored on May s attempted
p ckoff throw which sa led nto
leftf eld for an error
In th e n ghtcap Ross Gr ns
ley went the route to get his
s xth VI ctory aga nst f ve loss
es B ll Plummer and Johnny
Bench proVIded f ery support
w th two run doubles
The doubles by Bench and
Plummer came dur ng a f ve
run th rd nn ng Rook e r ght
bander Tom Dettore makmg
his f rst rna jor league start
fa led to surVIve th e bombard
ment
The P rates only run came
n the f rst nn ng when Gene
Cl nes walked took th rd on a
s ng es by Renrue Stennett and
scored on AI 01 ver s double
play grounder
On Saturday the Pirates
were n command w nn ng 5..0
aga ns the Reds who were
held to ust four h ts all s n
gles

By Helen Bottel

Another Design for Living•
Dear Helenw
A ne ghbor family has solved the questwn What do we do
w th the children after divorce by continwng to live together
The husband and wife go their separate ways except to share
expenses child care etc This saves money and traumas for the
kids Often divorced people become good fr ends after the tenswn
IS off
My wife and I are cons1derrng divorce We can t make 11 as
partners but I think we might be cmlized enough to shll live
under one roof
Please tell me bow I can best persuade her that this s for the
common good - TOD
Dear Tod
Sorry you ll have to persuade her w thou! my help I suspect
unseparated divorce would try the temperaments of angels
A fr endly spht lSll t unusual but livmg under one roof w th
all those household and child care dec s ons• Not to speak of
dating and possible reSidual Jealousy and the problems tha t
broke you up m the fll'st place• Uh Uh It wouldn t last- unless
t ended rn remarr age
Why not ask the ne ghbors who are trymg the experunent
Maybe they II be more opturustic - H

+++

Dear Helen
Heres my rec1pe for happy mamage Be sure the person
you marry loves you more than you love the person you marry
DID IT
Dear D d It
That may have worked out for YOU so far but how about the
person youmarned' Perhaps he lS now looking for someone who
loves HIM more
H

+++

Dear Helen
You may have thought the mamed v rgm who wrote to you
was unsual but bel eve me 11 happens
My fll'st marriage ended n divorce because t was not
consummated Amazingly 11 lasted four mlSerble years
Perhaps 1! wasn t entirely my fault but I cons dered myseU
a freak and I wouldn t go to a doctor or psychiatriSt for help
because I was so deathly afraid they d say so too I was afrrud of
my husband and very much afrrud of sex due to my upbnngrng
My motlier scared me half to death (not del berately) and I
thought constantly of the pam and humil atwn So I ran from my
husband and of course be became mean
After the divorce I met a wonderful man whose gentleness
and understandmg erased my fear We re happily marr ed now I
can t believe I m the same penon I was fiVe years ago-Md 1m
not H1s love changed me
I hope Sexless Me reads thiS and realizes she lSn t
DIANE
hopeless

Next time you sec
someone polluting,
point it out.
lt s ltte
tl e~ t eets It ~ a
t h t LSI e ll s Its
e vhe e fi h
t b eat! e
Yo k o vh
H t
te c
t
S t l 1cxtt
io n t lose v
e ve t
F0 1 1t t
\\ te a l ett~
et h g
out to son eo ne vh
tb ) t t

People start pollution People can stop 1t

•

Keep Amenca Beautiful

fiJo

Miller conquered Oakmont rn
the ! nal round and broke the
all-tune Open and Oakmont IShote records m the process H s
five-under-par Z79 total for 72
holes was four strokes better
Ulan anyone ever had done
before a t Oakmont
In h!S record-shatterrng per
forrnon ce Miller 26 of San
Francisco had to pass Arnold
Palmer Jack N cklaus Gary
Player Jul us Boros a nd
others
He was s x s rakes off the
pace when be teed off for the
I nal round He then b rdied the
f rst four holes and I was sky
high and I sa d okay baby
lets go
M ller p eked up f ve more
b rd es and a bogey dur rn ~ his
phenomena l round then
wa ted in the c ubhouse while
Ute players on the course at
tempted to overtake h m
They never d d John Schlee
an astro logy bu ff who said his

horoscope told him he was rn
a lunar high porn! and would
do well n the Open had the
best chance but never qu te
made t
Palmer Expressed Shock
Schlee shot a f nal round 70
for a 280 tota l a nd second place
money of $18 000
Tom We skopf r n shed th rd
w th a 70 and a 281 total and
Joked after success ve back to
back w ns n the prev ous two
weeks that I m not used to
f n sh ng third
In a three-way t e for fourth
place at 282 were Palmer who
had a f nal round 72 Jack
N cklaus who had a 68 Sunday
and Lee Trevmo w th a 70
Boros Lanny Wadk ns a nd
Jerry Heard were another
stroke back at 283 match ng
the best preVIous 72-hole score
ever recorded at Oakmont The
total of n ne sub-par scores for
the tournament t ed the all
t ne Open record

Palmer shoollng for a
second Open champ1onsh p
said he was shocked w.hen he
stood on the tee at the 12th hole
and saw that M ller was f ve
shots under par and leading the
tournament
I had no Idea I thought I
was m complete corrunand
Palmer sa d I d dn t have the
slightest not on of what was
gong on
Palmer then proceeded to
bogey the next three holes to
blow h s chance
Miller Was Super Nervous
Nickla us came nto th s
tournament h ghly favored to
w n h s fourth Open champ on
sh p and a record break ng
14th major t tie But he came
up too late w th too little when
he knocked n bll'(lie putts at
the 16th and 17th holes
M ller s No 7 on tbe tour
nan ent money list for 1973 and
ha d f rushed in the top 10 in
e ght of the last 17 tour

naments But before Sunday
the closest he came to wrnn ng
a maJor champ onship was rn
the 1971 Masters
Miller adm tted that durrng
his round he had choked but
that he kept telling h mseU to
keep cool keep cool don t let
the gallery get yo u exc ted
Today I was so pumped up
1 was super nervous he sa d
I can honestly say I gagged on
those putts on seven and e ght
One th ng I kept n my head
outthere all day Don t shank
I was thmk ng I was th nk ng
that on almost every ron shot
I kn ow that s bad th nki ng but
I co uldn t help t
It was always up here n
my m nd
Gary Player who led t1 e
tournament after 36 holes shot
a 73 Sunday for a 287 total He
sa d be was go ng home to
South Africa and work on h s
golf game for a bout a month

Ma or Leag ue Stand nps
By Un ted P ess l ntern at anal
Nat onal le ag ue
East
wlpcfgb

Cn cag o

M.on ea

38 26
29 27

594
5 8

New Y o k
S Lou s

28 ?9
29 3

49
483

w

gb

Los Ange es
39 25
San F an c s o 40 27
36 30

'

34 29

car. home. Iife and
health insurance.
• •

•
Snowden
•

•

•

•

•

0

M nneso a
Kansas( y
Oak and
Ca fo n a

'

28 36

w

pet

32
32

56

36

33

3

2

483
3ll

4

2

gb

552
545
524
l 7

2
2

3

9

3 6

2

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2nd
2

2

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•

a

M

B JO p m

a

56

St

8 5p m
Oak and
Hm n
Kan sas C y L te 0 0

pm

a
8 30

on y games schedu ed
Tu esday s Gam es
Oak and a Kan sas C y n gh
Texa s a M nneso a n gh
Ca o n a a ( h ago n gh
Bas on a M w aukee 2 w
De o a C e e and w
Ba mo e a New Yo k n gh

three run hon er two doubles
and a s ngle to lead the !'hill es
to the v ctory that helped knock
the G ants out of f rst The
Phils collected 16 hits Dave
K ngman h t a grand slam
hon er n the los ng ca use for
the Gants off Steve carlton
who gave up e ght hits n 6 I 3
nn ngs to get thew nand even
his record a t 7 7
Rook e Ron Hodges f rst

maJor league home snapped a
0
1 1tie n the seventh nn ng and
the Mets went on to bea t San
D ego for their f ftl stra ght
w n George Stone went 7 I
oo ooo ooo- a
nn ngs to gel c edt for the
000 0 0 000
3 2
ohn o
VIctory B II Gre f took the loss
38 0
G ms c
Lee May h tt ng n his 17th
8 and M ay
LP De o
6
and Be n
stra ght game drove n three
9 3 LP
runs w1th three s ngles and
000 022 500 9
300 000 00(}- 3
1 ght h tt ng Roger Metzger
3 and Rudo p
wen\4 for-4 to spa k Houston to
Pa n he
Ame
ca
n
Lea
gu
e
Wood
Ch
the v ctory over St LoUIS
d Oa es LP
47
H o m an
Oak
5
'~-;,:;':'i'''''''''''''''''':&gt;::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;=:=f:::::'~'~'::::;;~&lt;;:::-&gt;~"~:=:&lt;::::::):;~:::i:'&gt;::::::::::i:':':';':''i:&gt;,::::::!;:[;;, Metzger had a perfect day for S nger Ca and Sp o
HRS Fa nzon
KC
8h
O
J
Cocman
De
0
6
&lt;:'! the f rst t me n his ca reer
Marty Perez s ngled home
~
M ke Lum w th the w nn ng run
~
D
n the eighth nrung as Atlanta
DRIVE IN
w
downedCh cagolnthesecond
'J:"'
Q
~ gan e of a doubleheader Dave
lly M 0 11 chma
Johnson hit a three run p n h
for
t
~
'll
homer
for
the
Braves
UPI Sports Ed to
ll
In the f rst game Carmon
GOOD FOOD
Fanzone anti Jose Cardenal
both h t two-run homers and
B
I
OAKMONT Pa UP!
Okay so Jol n YM lie the new US
Pat Borque had a two-run
ood
p
Open champ chokes
double in a f ve r n Cubs
B g deal
seventh to g ve Cl ago the
So does Hank Aaron W lbur Wood and R chard N xon f he tr umph
keeps stand ng over that putt too ong
Ma1or League Leade s
H a guy tells you he doesn t choke he s e ther ly ng or he has a
By Un ted P ess lnte nat anal
short memory sa d b g AI Ge berger who has been on the
lead ng Batte s
profess onal golf tour 13 years now and knows what t means to
Nat onal league
g ab r h pet
w none of I e b g ones hav ng aptured the 1966 PGA title
4th &amp; Locu st
992 5240
People ask us golfers f we ever get over be ng nervous
To ae SA L 52
34
Mo
4 62
3 29 62
-1
Ge berger goes on The answer s bas cally no All we do s learn Mdd&gt; SF 53 205 2 69 337
to play und er those c rcumstances The more conf dent you are
Gds
SF 55 204 8 68 333 ·~-....................................... .
Bonds S F 6 2 2 65 90 33
the ess nervous you become
W sn Hou 66 239 43 8 326
It s All Conllden&lt;e
Lopes LA l3 84 30 60 326
There n I es the story of how tall blond not so mu h upl ght Unse Ph 4 38 2 45 326
Rbn sn Ph 36 20 9 39 325
anymore Johnny M ller cracked the U S Open record !or 18 holes San o Ch l 9 23336 35
Fa y M
50 46 22 46 3 5
here Sunda y w th h s fantast c r ct on I ke 63
Arne can league
The em I es th P story of I fe tself Conf dence
9 ab
h pet
Why do you th nk Jack N cklaus w ns as often a he does
B mb g NY 44 27 23 l
402
H o on De 33
22 9 44 36
Conf dence
CaewMn 5 222 42 5 338
And laugh f you I ke but what do you th nk s 55-year-old D A en Ch S 20l 3 68 332
Bobby R ggs greatest a ly R ght aga n Conf den e
Ke y Ch
6 82 3 60 330
K
kp
k
K
C
Johnny M ller ceria nly had plenty of t Sunday
53 95 32 63 323
Sure he choked or gagged as he sa d while try ng to make Hnd sn Ch 36 35 2 42 3 1
60 244 35 4 303
putts on the seventh and e ghth holes wh ere he had a par an I a Ma y M
55 208 3 63 303
bogey but usua ly he was n su h complete command of his Fousk pBos
a ye s ed w h 302
emot ons he looked cooler than Ben Hogan out there
Home Runs
Nat anal League Aa o A I
Choking Is Relative
and Sa ge P t 8 Bonds SF
Actually I choked very I ttle he sa d when twas a over
7 Evan s A
s M on day Ch
The way I look at t chokrng s all relat ve to where your
4
Amer can League Ma ybe y
pressure porn! s Everybody has a chokrng point Jack N cklaua
KC 6 0 A en Ch 5 F sk
chokes on Grand Slams maybe My choking po nt keeps rlS ng Bas Sp kes C e an d a kson
Oak 3
you know what I mea n
Runs Batted n
Wha t Johnn y M ller means s he more cxpcr en e he gets the
Nat onal league Bench C n
ess he chokes and the less he hokes th e more conf dence he 53 Fe gu son LA 49 Bonds SF
45 S a g e
P
44 W am s
gets
Ch
42
Now you know how a k d from San Franc seQ I ke Johnny
Arner can League M ay be y
M ller who d regard people I ke Jack N cklaus and Arnold KC 59 Ja ckso n Oa k 54
Palmer w th undisgu sed awe only a short tune ago not only can Me on Ch 45 Mu ce NY 4
Yas zem sk Bas D A en Ch
play them on equal terms now but also heat them occas onally and
Da w n M nn 40
for the whole box of doughnuts the way he d d here even though
P tch ng
I
league
B yan SF
Nat
ona
he began th e r nal round six shots behind
3
B ngham
Cn 93
That brmgs up the quest on of what cons! lutes chokrng Many Os ee n L A and W se S L 8 3
who don t part c1pate n profess onal sporl&lt; ha ve no dea what t Reusc he Ch Su on A an d
1s but some duffers who play golf for as I ttle as a quarter or half Sea11e N Y S -4
dollar a hole do
-, - --..-..-----·~-~-~--··-···_.. .
----·---~----·-...·---~
......-.----~·--~-~·---- ------Chok ng says Arnold Palmer s when your mouth gets
dry your Ups get dry and you can t brea the That s when you
make t- f you re ever gonna make t -and obviously Mr
M ller did
Classic case
Perhaps the class c case of choking somewhat and then
overcoming t to produce a spectacular ach evement took place
In the 1956 World Ser es between the Yankees and Dodgers rn the
contest rn wh ch Don Larsen pitched h s perfect game
Larsen ret red the frrst 26 batters rn perfect order then worked
the count to one ball and two str kes on p nch-h tier Dale M t
chell
Suddenl y I had a premon ton that my next pitch would be the
most Important one of the ball game says Larsen now 17 years
later
Come nand tell Herman Grate what you need
I knew I d e ther get M tchell out w th it or he d rip It for a
for your love nest Hew II g ve you a
base hit I found that I d1dn t wanna throw the ball I just wanted
to hold on to 11 for a long long tune
F naily Larsen swallowed whatever it was clogging h s throat
and threw the ball
I knew I had to he sa d l couldn Ifant
1
IS
Johnny M ll er ~ ys he sn t sure he would ve won the U S Open
had he started Sunday s frnal round n fron t of the whole pack In
that case he th nks about the poss b I ty he m ght ve choked
more than he d d But as t was he put together one of the f nest
f n sh ng rounds ever a nd you know th e rest
HERMAN GRATE
MASON W VA
773 5592
He d dn t fa nt

Today's

s1nort rar,9/de

J

•

McCLURE'S

343 1-!:::::::::::::::::::::~J

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL

IN PT PLEASANT &amp; MIDDLEPORT
YOUR HEll DISTRIBUTOR PRESENTS

.

THE 1973
BIG BEND
REGATTA

HIGHLIGHTS
7 PM MONDAY
_.CABLE CHANNEL .5

r~·~~ - ~· -- - ~

w1th help for your

28 30
22 40
West

Ch cago

3-2 win over Montreal

Like a good
neighbor,
State F·~nn
is there.

33 30 l24
3 29 l 7

0

Boson
C e e a.nd

Los

Dodgers f rst place
In other Na tiona League
ga mes Atlanta beat Ch cago 85 but lost the second game 9-3
Houston downed St Lows 7 3
Ph ladelph a dumped San
Franc sco I I 7 New York
shaded San D ego 3- and
C nc nnat bea t P ttsburgh
tw ce 3-1 and 5-1
Hodges First Homer
W II e Montane' slammed a

more

o

Dodgers in first after
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
ca ut ous Walt Alston whos
been nvolved n more pennant
ra ces th a n he d l ke to
remember keepg t a 1 rn
perspect ve
A half game lead doesn t
make much d f!erence this
early n the season
the
conservative Los Angeles Dod
gers manager caut oned Sun
da y after h s surpr s ng
youngsters n oved nto f rst
place n the Na tional Leagues
Wes ter n D v s on w th an
exc t ng
3 2 )2 nn ng
mara thon aga ns the Montreal
Expos
Sure t s only a ha f game
lead over th e fad ng Sa n
Franc sco G ants who are
swoon ng--as usual m JW'\e
But that s enough to make
th e Dodge rs wh o weren t
expected to be a con tender
ta ke hemselves serous y
One of the exc ted players s
W 1 e Crawford whose only
exposure to the World Ser es
was a couple of p nch h tt ng
appearances ba k n 1965
Nobody w II catch us now
Crawford prom sed
We
ha ven t even started yet and
don t forget we have the best
f ve starters n the league and
best rei ef p tch ng
Lasorda Confident
Tommy Lasorda Los An
geles th rd base coach was
also qu te confident
We re where we re supposed to he first pace he
beamed
But the Dodgers needed the
help of an error by C yde
Mashore of he Expos o pull
out th e wrn W th the score t ed
n the 12th Von Joshua led off
w th a s ngle off M ke Marshall
and B 11 Russell followed w th
another single to r ght Ma
shore f red to th rd n an at
tempt to get Joshua but the ball
skipped nto the stands and
Joshua scored the w nn ng un
Jun Brewer wo ked 2 2-3
nn ngs of one h re ef for the
Dodgers to p ck up h s th rd
Vlctory aga rnt one loss
Don Sutton and M ke Toroez
p tched scoreless ball unt I
Montreal s Bob Ba ley s ngled
n the ga me s f rst run n the
e ghth Will e DaviS s ngled rn
the ty ng run n the n nth for
the Dodgers and each team
scored n the lOth befor e
Mashore s bad t hrow gave the

Ba

I

pet g b
5l0
30 26 536
w

33 27

M waukee

De

Wes t

Hous on
C nc n na
A an ta

Ent

N ew Yo k

5
6
7
9

P sbu gn
2l 32 439
Ph ade ph a 26 35 426

Ame can l eague

·~~

~

..

· - ~-

SALE
for June

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
This for Jnne Bndes Only !

MASON FURNITURE

�t -The Dally Sentlne., Middleport-1-omeroy, 0 ., June 18, 1973

· llm~l~~:~m~~;~~~~~l;~~~1~~~~~~~m~~~~1~I~Ii~~~;l~~~~~;~~:~:~~m~~~~m~=~;~:;;~~~!1:~m~~~~i~~~~l~;~i~~~~~~~~~;m1~i~1~~

·"'

Regatta Time is a
sporting hme zn
•

0

...

•

•
~

"'

•

'

•

~

"

.

.

•

• '•

d.

4'

J

New Presidential defense: 'I goofed'

•'

•

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~

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~

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1n

-

11
H

the bend area

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h
n

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10

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'•

'·
·.
['

TAKING PART in the aerial circus from Pittsburgh Saturday at Meigs Stadiwn were 1-r ,
Scott Winterbum, David Volk, and Billy Jarosz. A large crowd attended the performance of the
aerial show which was held for the first time at the Big Bend Regatta .

FIRST PLACE WINNER in the Frog category in the
second boat parade of the Big Bend Regatta was Bill Haptonstall with his "Haptonstall's Happy Hopper." Mrs. Paul
· Haptonstall, Middleport, made the d~cora live frog on the
., front of the boat of chicken wire and paper mache.

.

SUPPORTS STUDY
DAYTON (UP!) - Former
Supreme Court Justice Tom
Clark said he is in favor of religion being studied in public
schools, but still opposes
.school-sponsored religious
exercises. Clark said the 1963
Supreme Court ruling banned
religious services, but not the
study of religion .

Bringing laughs from the
crowd Saturday at the annual frog jump was a bull
fight. L-r are Ba-Lau (the
bull) and the matador,
Elchlco. Elchlco and the
"bull "
performed
beaulifut:y for the crowd
with Elchico landing the
llnal blow, naturally.

"

BY BIU. RICH
·UPI Sports Writer
Catcher Ellie Rodriguez, according to manager Del Crandall, Is the spark that keepa the
Milwaukee Brewers moving.
"In my opinion Rodriguez
. has been the big sparkplug on
;,!his team," says Crandall.
"Ellie bas been so great that.
(Darrell) Porter has not been
able~ to break in."
Pclrter got his chance Sunday
and made the most of it as he
and designated hitter Joe
Lahoud each slapped grand
slam homers in consecutive
Innings to lift the streaking

I
I
I

Past councilors meet

l

.Hurst nets 10 points

Wiseman' sSouth
team wins,85-83

J

1'1------------·I

Brewers to a 1&gt;-5 pounding run third. The hit gave Porter
I
over the Chicago White Sox. his first major league homer
1
Sitting atop the American and Jerry Bell, the Milwaukee
League East by one full game starter, his seventh triumph
over Baltimore, the victorious against six defeats. Bell
I
Brewers marked their 14th win departed after five innings and
in their last 15 games, their a 14-1 lead.
ninth in a row and six straight
In other American League
over the Chisox. In the sixth games, Kansas City won a
inning, Lahoud homered again, doubleheader from Cleveland
II
tying a .club record with 6 · 6-3, and 6-2, Boston trimmed
I
.
GREG REED, Reedsville, is jockeying his frog at the
ERIC LUDWIG'S FROG jumped 10 feet before the
RBI's in a single game.
Oakland 4-2, Detroit shutout
I Lou
·
annual frog jump Saturday at the Meigs football field .
largest crowd evcJ_' to witness the annual frog jwnp Saturday.
Righthander Stan Bahnsen, Minnesota 6-0, Baltimore
I
who threw the grandslam pitch nipped Texas 5-4 in 16 innings
to Porter in the second irming, and New York tripped Caliwas lifted after consecutive fornia 5-J in the second game
I
SEARS
singles by Don Money and but lost the first, 8-0.
Catalog Merchant
I-------~------------------~
Letters of opinion arc welcomed. They should be less
I
Dave May in Milwaukee's sixAmos Otis drove in three
I 220 E . Main
Pomeroy
than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the
I
New officers were elected at Frederick, Mrs. Betty Roush I
rWls with a two-rWl homer and 1 editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
PH.
992-2178
I a meeting of the Past Couna single and Dick Drago, 7-5, 1 Names may l.Je withheld upon publication. However, on
I cilors' Club of Chester Council and Mrs . Jean Summerfield.
hurled his seventh complete 1 request, names w;u be disclosed. Letters should be in good
Daughters of America,
game in his last 11 starts to I taste, ~ddressi : ~ Issues, not personalities.
1 323,
held
Wednesday at. the hall.
pace the Royals to a victory
I
I Mrs. Ada Van Meter ;md Mrs.
over Cleveland in the first
. EV~R'I'
Laura Mae Nice were
game of a doubleheader. Ken
Tll~SDA'(.W\6\\T
hostesses for the meeting,
Wright allowed three hits in 8 1- I
•••
:
I
IS ~1'\IL'( FoN NIGHT
.1".1"~.
I
Elected were Mrs. Dorothy
3 innings to boost his record to I
~~ BVRQ~Il, OIH! f---..v----.
I Lawson, president; Mrs. Ada
2-1 with the second game I
t
I
Van Meter, vice president;
victory. The two go. . .1e sweep
Mrs.
lnzy Newell, secretary ;
INCRED18liR61BLE!
moved the Royals to within one
Mrs. Opal Hollon, treasurer ;
MARION, Ohio (UPI)- This South squad, both on and off half game of first place in the
Subject of contention speaks up
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, senyear's edition of the Ohio high the practice court. The next Western Division.
tinel ; Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
school North-South All-Star day, Larry Bolden of Cleveland
Luis Tiant gave up just four
news reporter; and MrS. Erma
Basketball Classic, its luster East Tech left the North squad. hits, two of them homers by Dear Mr . Editor :
Cleland, flower committee
seemingly diminished by the
Attendance at Veterans Reggie Jackson, and Danny
As a senior citizen of Meigs Co . I would like to take this opsnubbing of two all-stars, Memorial Coliseum was an, Cater drove in two runs and portunity to express some views relative to the ordinance being chairwoman .
turned ouf to be a wild and nounced at 2,900.
Mts Ada Neutzling presided
rapped out four hits to give the bmught up against selling produce on the Main St. in Pomeroy as
at the meeting. Mrs. Dorothy
exciting exhibition here · Coaching the South were Bosox a Victory over the A's. my doing sO seems to be the main bone of contention.
Lawson and Mrs . Margaret
Saturday night.
Wayne Wiseman of Springfield Tlant was touched for Jack· I hbve lived in Meigs Co. all my life, as did my parents and
The South aU-stars, South, a native of Waterloo and son's 12tL and 13th homers in grandparents before me. My mother's peQple carne here from 'futtle were named hostesses
lacking the height of the former Rio Grande College the sixth and ninth innings. The Massachusetts imd were among the early pioneers to settle here. for the July meeting which will
North, hurried to a 71-49 lead great, Will Collins of Red Sox, snapping a four-game · Since a young man of 18 years, I have sold produce in Pomeroy be held at the Lawson home.
Special family meal prices alter 4 p.m.
Games were played under
at the end of three quarters, Bellefontaine and Stan Kirby pf losing streak, cracked II hits off and on and am selling to the children and grandchildren of
" but had to withstand a Pleasant. Heading the North off loser Ken Holtzman, 11-5, many of my first customers. Down through the years a greater · the direction of Mrs. Mae
For Adults
' furious last quarter rally by were Mike Rikey of Elyria, Joe with Cater stroking three part of my earnings have stayed in Pomeroy , handing it back to Spencer · and Mrs. Hattie
For Kids
with
prizes
being
Frederick
··the North to pull out an '85-83 Stalma of Rossford and Robert singles and a double.
Big Shef'
Funburgerrflo
business places for lhingJ we need in lhe home and on the farm
French
Fl
ies
awarded
to
the
winners.
The
French
Fries
victory.
Walsh of Lorain Clearview.
Mickey Lolich handed Min- which we didn't raise, so both parties involved benefitted by
Turnover
and
Small
Soft
Drink
door prize was won by Mrs.
Leading 40-37 at the half, the
Score by Quarters '
nesota only its second shutout those transactions.
Large
Soft
Drink
Lollipop
and
South outscored the North 31-12 South
16 40 71 05 of the season -with a 7-hitter
There has always been a living and still is for the person who Dorothy Myers.
North
14 37 49 83
Only
Others attending the meeting
Only
h\ the third period. Steve Grote
SOUTH-AI dridge 3-2-8; and AI )(_aline drove in two runs is willing to work. This is all the job I have and I'm not trying to
were Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs.
ofCinclnnattEiderscorediOof Foster 4-1 -9 ; Grote 9 -4-22; for the Tigers in victory over make rrioney, only trying to make an honest living .
50~
;his game-hiah 22 points in the Hubbard 4-0 -8; Hurst 4-2-10; the Twins before 52,622 bat day
lf anyone has a right to sell farm produce, shouldn't it be the Dorothy Myers, Mrs. Margaret
o
King 5-4- 14; McCoy 0-0 -0;
;quarter and Terry King of Thompson 0-0-0; Taylor 1-1-3; fans . Notrn Cash slammed his one who produces it? That's his only source of income. I don't Tuttle, Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs.
Marion Pleasant hit eight of his Wright 3-5-11 . TOTALS 33-19-85 seventh home run into the raise enough to make long hauls to distant markets, so why Ada Morris, Mrs. Ethel Orr,
NORTH - Banks 0-4-4 ;
14 points in that furious third Breece 0-4- 4 ; Buurma 6-2-14 ; upper deck in right leading off should a person be penalized for selling good fresh produce which Mrs. Zelda Weber, Miss Leda
Kraeuter,
Mrs.
Goldfe
!period.
Dilworth 3-1-7; Harris 8-1-17 ; the fourth inning.
people want and need in the county he is a citizen of and happy to
· .~ . The North rebOWlded from D. Hipsher 0-0-0; T. Hipsher 4 Oriole catcher Earl Williams contribute something to the peopl~ ahout me ?
0-8; Smith 4-0-8; Under man 7-3, Its 71-49third quarter deficit to 17 ; Saunders 2-0-4. TOTALS J4 - doubled home the winning run
Two alcoholic beverages
I only sell two or three days a week, and can't see why all this
GALLIPOLIS: 1503 EASTERN AVEI'tllE
':'come within two points with 15 -83.
in the last of-the 16th inning, off fuss now'when all my life farmers have sold products from off the are derived from rice. Sake,
" 1:05 to go in the game, but two
loser Don . Stanhouse, 1-6, farm. The ·farmer is the most extensive buyer of alJ consumers as the national drink of Japan ;
and Samshu, a C h i n e s e
l'ree throws by Chris Wright of
giving Baltimore a victory his needs are far ·more Varied.
drink.
Both are really types
· 'Meadowbrook gave the South a
over the Rangers. Williams
How long would business in Pomeroy or any town last if the of beer .
' four point advantage with nine
ended the four hour marathon country people failed to come in? Why can't we be neighborly
GAME
POSTPONED
seconds remaining. North's
after Bobby Grich smacked a and have love for each other? Look at. all the hate and mob
The Pony League game be- leadoff single.
''"Tommy Harris of Lorain
violence, the protestors, the turmoil everywhere.
' Admiral King, who pwnped in tween Middleport A and B
Isn't it about time we as fellow citizens begin to generate a
' 15 of his 17 points in the last scheduled Tuesday has been
spirit of helpfulness, brotherly love and kindness, rather than a
. ' period, hit the final basket at postponed. The new date will
spirit of hate, envy and covetousness ?
be announced.
" the game's end.
My customers extend up and down this valley from Gallipolis
TUPPERS PLAINS
The North had a chance to tie
to Athens, from Point Pleasant to Ravenswood. I have sold to
.."the game in the final minute,
people passing through from 18 states. Many , seeing my display,
KING RECALLED
but had to give up the ball when
Mrs. Effie Watson attended a parked, came to buy fruit to take along . While here they have
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The family get-together al the stopped \O eat, visited the stores, ana then went on their way.
'" ..B North coach jumped off the
~. bench to call time out and was Cincinnati Reds asked waivers home of her daughter, Wilma &amp;ores of people have come to me really angry ·against this ban
on catcher Bob Barton Sunday Guinther at Chester Sunday. on selling.
called for a technical foul.
Waverly's Ed Thompson · and announced they were Mrs. Guinther's ·children and
I believe every effort should be made to induce people to
did not score. Ken Hqrst of recalling catcher Hal King grandchildren and other come to Pomeroy, rather than stifle or hinder those who love
relatives were present.
:i South Point tallied 10 points from Indianapolis.
good things to eat. Truly I appreciate those who have stood by me
Barton has appeared in only
Recent guests of Mr. and through the y~ars and have offered words of encouragement and
~.. ' for the winners.
Each team was missing one three games with the Reds this Mrs. Fon Halsey were Mrs. appreciation.
Henrietta Van Meter of
of its much-heralded aU-stars. year and batted only once.
To you of the council I would kindly ask, wouldn't it be better ·
He indicat.ed he intends to Delaware, Berry Halsey of to keep the good will oi the multitudes who are the buying or
Last
Tuesday,
Brian
'Williams of Columbus South retire from baseball and return Cleveland, and his grand- purchasing power of Pomeroy, or listen to the few who think only
'Suddenly .left the South camp, to San Diego where he and Bob mother, Mrs. Clarice Medley of of self. I'd like to hear others speak up who feel as I do .
' E. Spencer
· apparenUy unhappy over the Miller, a Padre relief pitcher, Hockingport and Pv.. Ray
.
Dwight
regimented schedule uf the are in the investment business. Watson of Ft. Knox, Ky.

9~~
~L~

BEST

today.

The Washington Post said in
itsmorningeditlonsithad been
told by th ~ sources the
President no longer will broadly claim ooninvo!vement in the
case. Instead, the reports said,
Nixon will acknowledge misjudgments on his part and
indicate they resulted from
mislnfonnation and unauthorized action by former Chief of
Staff H.R. "Bob" Haldeman
and former domestic affairs
adviser Jobn D. Ehrlichman.
The Post story, written by
Pulitizer prize winners Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein,
said the strategy was designed
to counter charges by Jobn W.
Dean III, the former White
House counseL Dean reportedly is ready to testify that
Nixon, Haldeman and Ehrlicllman knowingly participated in
the coveru~ of Watergate and
other illegal intelligence
gathering operations.
In another development,
Martha Mitchell, wife of forNixon campaign director

I!!"'

John N. Mitchell, said today
that Nb:on "always !mew"
what was going on .
"I'll be damned if I'll let my
husband take the rap for Mr.
President," Mrs. Mitchell said
in an early morning telephone
call fr om her New York City
home to UPI's Helen Thomas
in Washington. "Between you
and me and the gatepo$1, Mr.
President always knew what
was going on."
Dean Testifies Tomorrow
Dean becomes a witness at
the televised Senate Watergate
Commlttee hearings when tbey
resume Tuesday morning. He
was interviewed for five hours
under oath by committee attorneys Saturday and was
expected to repeat his testlmt&gt;ny to a closed meeting of the
seven-member committee
today.
Sources close to the Senate
investigation told UPI Sunday
Dean had told the commi.ttee
staff be ''assumed" tbe President was aware of the
Watergate coverup within
weeks of the bugging because
he reported on It regularly to
Haldeman and Ehrlichman.
But the sources also said Dean
testified he himself did not
discuss aspects of the coverup
personally with Nixon until last
March.
Both Haldeman and Ehrlicllman resigned from the White

House April 30, the same day
Dean was fired~ That night,
Nixon in a televised address
described Haldeman and Ehrlichman as "two of the finest
public servants" he had ever
known.
The Post in its account said it
informed John J . Wilson, attorn ey for Haldeman and
Ehrlichman, of the President's
reported change of position,
and Wilson replied, "what's he
(the President) been doing for
us lately?" Wilson reasserted
the innocence of his clients and
said he had not heru:d of the
President's reported change in
position.
Bater Disputes, Agnew
The newspaper quoted one

:.J

,n

"

I

I.
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c

Maria Ginther, 14, Beverly,
daughter of a former Meigs
County resident, was electrocuted Saturday night while
baby sitting in a trailer home in
Beverly.
According to the report
received here, Miss Ginther
had gone outside the home
barefooted following a rain.
She. reentereq the trailer and
apparenUy touched the side of
the home and was elec-

Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated
five accidents , over the
weekend.
Saturday at 6:30a.m. on SR
248, east of Chester, Albert L.
Martin,
Pomeroy ,
was
traveling east when d~e to
slippery conditions of the highway his pickup truck slid off
the highway on the left into a
guardrail. There were no injuries or arrestS, and only
medium damage to the truck.
At 8:10 p.m. Saturday on
county road 26 , Chester
township, two tenths of a mile
east of SR 7, Vicki Spencer,
Pomeroy, and Donald R.
Palters on, Jr ., Marietta 1
trocuted . According to the collided in a·curve. There were
report, she was killed in- no personal injuries, mediwn
property damage and no
stanUy,
citation
issued.
She was the daughter of Mr.
At 8:15 p.m. Saturday on
and Mrs. William Ginther. Mr.
county
road 46, in Olive
Ginther is formerly of Meigs
County. Besides her parents, Township Marvin F . Taylor,
she is survived by several Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was traveling
brothers and sisters and a west when he met an oncoming
nwnber of relatives who live in car. To avoid a collision Taylor
pulled to the right, going off the
Meigs County .
Funeral services will be held highway into a ditch. Taylor
at 9 a. m. Tuesday at the was not injured. There was
me~ium damage to the car.
Catholic Church in Beverly.

~I
Sears II

VALUES

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I

j

I
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I

HIGH POINT WINNERS in the Big Bend Regatta baton twirling contest held Sunday under
the direction of Mrs. Judy Riggs were, front, Tawny Broadbent, East Liverpool, 0-6; Sherry
Belville Columbus 7-10· Cindy Patterson, Syracuse, right, 11-14, and at the rear, Phyllis Van
Arsdale: Columbus: J:i-20. '!'he travel trophies to contestants traveling the most distance to take
part went to Julie McClarty, COllegedale, Tenn., 470 rmles, and Sherry Hunt, Berrlen Sprmgs,
Mich.

'1

CHEF~

.

•.

White House source as saying,
" if the Dean charges are too
devastating and there is no
reason to think they won't be,
the President plans to come
forward and acknowledge
overwhelming negligence on
his part but will still deny
criminal knowledge ." The
account said charges by Dean
and others against Haldeman
and Ehrllchman have convinced the President that he
must abandon . support of
Haldeman ' and Ehrlichman.
In other Watergate develop.
ments :
-Sen. Barry M. Goldwater,
R-Ariz., said in a television
interview Sunday he does not
believe President Nixon was

involved in the Watergate
affair, but If it is proved he was
1
' thenl think resignation would
be the cheapest, easiest and
best way to do it." Goldwater
said he did not believe Nixon
·should be impeached "unless it
Is proved that he lied."
--Sen. Howard M. Baker Jr.,
Tenn., the ranking Republican.
on the Senate Watergate
Committee, said in a Sunday
television inf,erview he disagreed with Vi ce President
Spiro T. Agnew that the
hearings were perverting the
judicial process. He said he
believed both the hearings and
prosecutioM can be carried out
"efficiently and equitably."

I

Five auto accidents noted

L-----------.1

l

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Here's the Man 1
To See For • .. l

TME

WASHINGTON (UP!) _
President Nb:on Is expecled to
defend
himself
from
allegations of involvement in
the coverup of tbe Watergate
.,afl~lr by saying he was
"'IUSinformed by his former
chief deputies, news reports
attributed to White House and
~ other government sourt:es said

Teenager is electrocuted
r

Brewers pound White Sox

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., June 18, 1973

At II :30 a.m. Sunday on the
Bafl Run road , Barbara
Caruthers, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,
was traveling south when her
car went off the highway over
an embankment. There were
no injuries and medium
property damage.
Sunday at 6:50p.m. on SR 124
in Rutland township, three
tenths . of a mile east of

MR. AND MRS. FRED CROW, Jr., SJr.acuse, entertained Saturday with a barbecue
chicken dinner at their home with approxiii1ately 100 persons attending. Above., Mrs. Crow is
serving the Grand Croa ker and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworthy of Middleport.

Rutland, Doris E. Halfhill,
Middleport Rt. I, was
traveling east when due to a
slippery surface, went off the
road on the left into a field.
The Pomeroy ER was
summoned but the driver
refused treatment.
There was medium damage
WASHING'f0 N (UP! ) to the car. No ' citation was
Leonid I . Bre1Jmev's vil) it drew
issued.
protest reactions today from
musicians, dancers and hmdamentalist Christians only huurs
after 8,000 to 10,000 .Jews and
Ukranian exiles decried the
Soviet Communist terder .
Leaders of the American
Guild of Musical ArtisL• said
they would bring 5,000 persons
to the State Department to
protest the loss of jobs to.
· PITTSBURGH - Dravo companies reported revenues touring Russian companies.
The Rev. carl Mcintyre said
Corporation has announced of $15,165,403.
completion of the acquisition of
Union, founded in 1928, he would bring a "formidable
A. L. Mechling Barge Lines, owned a fleet of nine towboats following" to the Washington
Inc., Joliet, Ill., and the con- and about 400 barges . It Monument Lo denounce tra ~c
solidation of that firm with operated principally between agreements that Mcintyre said
Union Barge Line Corporation, the Ohio Valley and the Gulf would cost U.S. taxpayers $200
a subsidiary of Dravo. The Coast with full common carrier billion.
Sunday , while Brezhnev was
resulting new company will rights on certain tributary
operate as Union Mechling waterways, including the at Camp David preparing for
Corporation , a subsidiary of Arkansas Waterway . Union his visit with President Nixon,
Dravo, with headquartei-s in reported
revenues
of sympathetic congres s men
Pittsburgh.
$17,587,990 in 1972. Union's joined Jews and Ukra inian.":~ in
Terms of the.acquisition of A. sales oflices w~re in Pitts- a demonStration at the U.S.'
L. Mechling Barge Lines and burgh, Houston, Memphis, Capitol and the White House
related companies were New Orleans, New York City ellipse .
The keynote speaker was
$3,960,924 in cash and 165,514 and St. Louis.
Sen. Henry M. Ja~kson, Dshares of Dravo Cwnulative
Wash.. who is sponsoring 3
8
Convertible
Series
Marker
Rt•pnrl
measure to require the Soviet
Preference Stock.
Union to allow free emigra _tion
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO, .
The new firm has 536 emof
Jews in exohange foi- most
Saturday, June 16, 1973
ployees. Walker said the
. favored nation statu s in
SALF..S REPORT OF
consolidation would be carried
trading. with U1e United States.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
out smoothly and with no in"When we · talk of fr ee
!lOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 36.25
terruption
in
present
trade,"
Jackson said, 1'iet us
to 37; 220 to 250 ibs. 37 to 37.90;
operations .
also talk of free people.··
Combination of personnel, Light34.50to36; FatSows30to
Reps. Philip Burton, Dfloating equipment, terminals 33.75; Stags 28 Down; Boars 28
Calif., and Robert Drinan, Dand other facilities of both .to 31.25; Pigs 12.~0 to 24 ; Shoats
Mass., a Roman Cathulic
firms will result in better 25 to 32.
joined
Ja ckson .
CATTLE - Steers 42.50 to prie~t.
service to the shipping public,
Statements
were
read
from
he said, through improved 47.50; Heifers 36 to 46.25 ; Baby
utilization of equipmnt and Beef 48 to 62.50; Fat Cows 30 to
close·r
coordination
of 34.25; Canners 28.50 to 36.35;
Bull• 36 to 41.70; Milk Cows 300
schedules .
Mechling,
which · was to 497.50.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
established in 1920 had a fleet
68.80;
Seconds 64 to 65.75;
of eight towboats and tugs and
more than 260 barges . It · Mediwn 60 to 64.50; Com. &amp;
operated primarily between Hvs. 56.50 to 62; Culls 56.50
the Illinois area and the Gulf Down .
HAHY CALVES Baby
Coast, including Tampa, and
Calves
70
to
132.50.
with iull common carrier .
rights for immediate points
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
and certain tributary waterCattle : Choice Steers, 46ways and specific commodity
46
.80 ; Good, 42-45; Choice
rights to the West Coast.
Mechling also operated a Heifers, 44-44.60; Good, 4~ .5()public terminal and warehouse 43.40 ; Standard and good, 41in Chicago; terminal, repair 42.
Cows : Commercial, 35-36.50;
and drydock facilities in Joliet,
IlL; and barge painting and Utility, 32.7!i-34; Canners and
fleeting facilities in Lemont, Cutters, 29-30.25.
Bulls: Commercial, 40-44.10.
Ill. It also owned a 514-acre
Feeder Cattle : Steer Calves
area for industrial develop45-61;
Heifer Calves, 4:!48.80;
ment along · the Illinois
Waterway at Seneca, Ill. Sales Heavy Feeder Steers 42.7Qoffices were maintained in 49.50; Cows and Calves By the
Chicago. Houston, Joliet, New Head, 380-460.
Veal Calves : Choice, 70 ;
Orleans and Tampa.
In 1972 Mechling and related Good, 63-67.50.
Lambs : Choice, 37.50 ; Good,
37.
Hogs: 200-~. 38 ..75; No. I,
39; 22Q-240; 38.50 ; Sows, 3233.5Q; Boars, 31.90.

Protests against
Brezhnev mount

Dravo absorbs

Mechling Lines·

Sens. Jacob K . Javits, r-N .Y.,
Abra hmn

Ribi coff ,

D~Conn . '

and Ri chard Schweiker, R-Pa.

The Ukrainia ns said they
supported the free cmigmtion
of Jews, but claimed that
Ukrainians constitute 65 per
cent or all persons un dergoing
mass arres t s, sec ret and
' 'kanga roo" tr ials, illegal inca r ce ra tio ns irt psychi at ri c
prisons a nd oth er s e v c r e
puni$hmcnt in th e Sov ie t
Union.
Members of the militant
.Jewish Defense l..caguc occasionally interrupted the
SJ&gt;et..Chcs with chanting and
vowed " to ·do something" later
at the Soviet Embassy, a few
blocks north of the White
hlouse. The block around the
embassy , howeve r , was cordoned off a ud about 200 youn g
Jews who attempted to approacl) the embasr;y ;.u·en were
checked by rabbis.
Jacob Ste in ," head of ,a
coalition of more thHn 20
.Jewi.sh groups who arranged
the rally, referred to " the cry
o£ desoair of Jews in the Soviet
· Union " who must. pay H high
tax if they want to emigrate.
Police estimated Sunday's
t1'owd at 8,000 persons, but
organizers sc.d tl there were
10,000 or rnorc.

PRESIDENT NIXON
welcomes Soviet leader .
Leonid I. Brezhnev to the.
White House today for the
start of a summit conferen""
U, s ~ sources said could le•d
to the signing within IZ lo 18
months of a new treaty
limiting offensive nuelear
weapons.
The While !louse staff
urrunged a 21-gun salute amd
red carpet treatment for
llrezhnev's 10:30 a.m. EDT
arrival at the Executive·
~W•nslon from Camp Dovtd,
Md., where the Communist
party leader had rested slace
his Saturday arrival In the
United States from M01cow .
Nixon
complet~d
preparations for the summit
ut Key Biscayne, Fla., over
the weekend, retural.!lg to
Wnshington Sunday night.

-·.-

~---5e:-o:,
~
Summer Line
1

cit Mix &amp;

Skirls, Tops, Slacks &amp;
Shorls.

lOLA'S
Mai n at Sycamore

1~~~~--··~~--~
POMEROY

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFI CE HOUR's 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THUR S.) - EAST COURT n.,
POMEROY .

Ironton Tri.b
also goiU!f

•
'' -

I

GIRLS combined their talents .on skis Saturda_y during the
THREE MEN AND THRE.E I 'b hen they made a pyramid of people and skued down the
show by the Athens Boat and Ski C u w
·
river.

••,.

to

offset plant

Ironton Tribune Publisher
·Cliffard L. Waller announced
Sunday that the Tribune has
purchased 49,000 square feet of
. vacant property on Ashtabula
St., between South Fifth and
· South Sixth streets for the
location of a new offset printing
plant.
Construction of the new onestory building will begin shortly.
The Tribune is the latest
newspaper in southern Ohio to
switch to offset printing. The
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
Gallipolis - Pomeroy, was first
in 1967. Marietta, Jackson, and
Athens followed in that order.

SERIOUS BUSINESS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Lt.
Gov. John Brown told
. delegates to Buckeye Girls'
State during the weekend that
~king an oath of olftce Is
serious business. ~~When you
raise your hand to take the oath
you are making a solemn
promise," Brown said. "It is up
to you as an individual to
asswne the obligations of that
office to the best of your
ability."
$600 STOLEN
Approximately _ $600 was
reported stolen from the office
of the Elberfeld Department
Store as the result of a
breaking and entering over the
weekend. Pomeroy police were
· on the scene before the office
was opened for Monday's
business.

Mat~h

BAKER

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�t -The Dally Sentlne., Middleport-1-omeroy, 0 ., June 18, 1973

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Regatta Time is a
sporting hme zn
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New Presidential defense: 'I goofed'

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the bend area

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TAKING PART in the aerial circus from Pittsburgh Saturday at Meigs Stadiwn were 1-r ,
Scott Winterbum, David Volk, and Billy Jarosz. A large crowd attended the performance of the
aerial show which was held for the first time at the Big Bend Regatta .

FIRST PLACE WINNER in the Frog category in the
second boat parade of the Big Bend Regatta was Bill Haptonstall with his "Haptonstall's Happy Hopper." Mrs. Paul
· Haptonstall, Middleport, made the d~cora live frog on the
., front of the boat of chicken wire and paper mache.

.

SUPPORTS STUDY
DAYTON (UP!) - Former
Supreme Court Justice Tom
Clark said he is in favor of religion being studied in public
schools, but still opposes
.school-sponsored religious
exercises. Clark said the 1963
Supreme Court ruling banned
religious services, but not the
study of religion .

Bringing laughs from the
crowd Saturday at the annual frog jump was a bull
fight. L-r are Ba-Lau (the
bull) and the matador,
Elchlco. Elchlco and the
"bull "
performed
beaulifut:y for the crowd
with Elchico landing the
llnal blow, naturally.

"

BY BIU. RICH
·UPI Sports Writer
Catcher Ellie Rodriguez, according to manager Del Crandall, Is the spark that keepa the
Milwaukee Brewers moving.
"In my opinion Rodriguez
. has been the big sparkplug on
;,!his team," says Crandall.
"Ellie bas been so great that.
(Darrell) Porter has not been
able~ to break in."
Pclrter got his chance Sunday
and made the most of it as he
and designated hitter Joe
Lahoud each slapped grand
slam homers in consecutive
Innings to lift the streaking

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Past councilors meet

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.Hurst nets 10 points

Wiseman' sSouth
team wins,85-83

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Brewers to a 1&gt;-5 pounding run third. The hit gave Porter
I
over the Chicago White Sox. his first major league homer
1
Sitting atop the American and Jerry Bell, the Milwaukee
League East by one full game starter, his seventh triumph
over Baltimore, the victorious against six defeats. Bell
I
Brewers marked their 14th win departed after five innings and
in their last 15 games, their a 14-1 lead.
ninth in a row and six straight
In other American League
over the Chisox. In the sixth games, Kansas City won a
inning, Lahoud homered again, doubleheader from Cleveland
II
tying a .club record with 6 · 6-3, and 6-2, Boston trimmed
I
.
GREG REED, Reedsville, is jockeying his frog at the
ERIC LUDWIG'S FROG jumped 10 feet before the
RBI's in a single game.
Oakland 4-2, Detroit shutout
I Lou
·
annual frog jump Saturday at the Meigs football field .
largest crowd evcJ_' to witness the annual frog jwnp Saturday.
Righthander Stan Bahnsen, Minnesota 6-0, Baltimore
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who threw the grandslam pitch nipped Texas 5-4 in 16 innings
to Porter in the second irming, and New York tripped Caliwas lifted after consecutive fornia 5-J in the second game
I
SEARS
singles by Don Money and but lost the first, 8-0.
Catalog Merchant
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Letters of opinion arc welcomed. They should be less
I
Dave May in Milwaukee's sixAmos Otis drove in three
I 220 E . Main
Pomeroy
than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the
I
New officers were elected at Frederick, Mrs. Betty Roush I
rWls with a two-rWl homer and 1 editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
PH.
992-2178
I a meeting of the Past Couna single and Dick Drago, 7-5, 1 Names may l.Je withheld upon publication. However, on
I cilors' Club of Chester Council and Mrs . Jean Summerfield.
hurled his seventh complete 1 request, names w;u be disclosed. Letters should be in good
Daughters of America,
game in his last 11 starts to I taste, ~ddressi : ~ Issues, not personalities.
1 323,
held
Wednesday at. the hall.
pace the Royals to a victory
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I Mrs. Ada Van Meter ;md Mrs.
over Cleveland in the first
. EV~R'I'
Laura Mae Nice were
game of a doubleheader. Ken
Tll~SDA'(.W\6\\T
hostesses for the meeting,
Wright allowed three hits in 8 1- I
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IS ~1'\IL'( FoN NIGHT
.1".1"~.
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Elected were Mrs. Dorothy
3 innings to boost his record to I
~~ BVRQ~Il, OIH! f---..v----.
I Lawson, president; Mrs. Ada
2-1 with the second game I
t
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Van Meter, vice president;
victory. The two go. . .1e sweep
Mrs.
lnzy Newell, secretary ;
INCRED18liR61BLE!
moved the Royals to within one
Mrs. Opal Hollon, treasurer ;
MARION, Ohio (UPI)- This South squad, both on and off half game of first place in the
Subject of contention speaks up
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, senyear's edition of the Ohio high the practice court. The next Western Division.
tinel ; Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
school North-South All-Star day, Larry Bolden of Cleveland
Luis Tiant gave up just four
news reporter; and MrS. Erma
Basketball Classic, its luster East Tech left the North squad. hits, two of them homers by Dear Mr . Editor :
Cleland, flower committee
seemingly diminished by the
Attendance at Veterans Reggie Jackson, and Danny
As a senior citizen of Meigs Co . I would like to take this opsnubbing of two all-stars, Memorial Coliseum was an, Cater drove in two runs and portunity to express some views relative to the ordinance being chairwoman .
turned ouf to be a wild and nounced at 2,900.
Mts Ada Neutzling presided
rapped out four hits to give the bmught up against selling produce on the Main St. in Pomeroy as
at the meeting. Mrs. Dorothy
exciting exhibition here · Coaching the South were Bosox a Victory over the A's. my doing sO seems to be the main bone of contention.
Lawson and Mrs . Margaret
Saturday night.
Wayne Wiseman of Springfield Tlant was touched for Jack· I hbve lived in Meigs Co. all my life, as did my parents and
The South aU-stars, South, a native of Waterloo and son's 12tL and 13th homers in grandparents before me. My mother's peQple carne here from 'futtle were named hostesses
lacking the height of the former Rio Grande College the sixth and ninth innings. The Massachusetts imd were among the early pioneers to settle here. for the July meeting which will
North, hurried to a 71-49 lead great, Will Collins of Red Sox, snapping a four-game · Since a young man of 18 years, I have sold produce in Pomeroy be held at the Lawson home.
Special family meal prices alter 4 p.m.
Games were played under
at the end of three quarters, Bellefontaine and Stan Kirby pf losing streak, cracked II hits off and on and am selling to the children and grandchildren of
" but had to withstand a Pleasant. Heading the North off loser Ken Holtzman, 11-5, many of my first customers. Down through the years a greater · the direction of Mrs. Mae
For Adults
' furious last quarter rally by were Mike Rikey of Elyria, Joe with Cater stroking three part of my earnings have stayed in Pomeroy , handing it back to Spencer · and Mrs. Hattie
For Kids
with
prizes
being
Frederick
··the North to pull out an '85-83 Stalma of Rossford and Robert singles and a double.
Big Shef'
Funburgerrflo
business places for lhingJ we need in lhe home and on the farm
French
Fl
ies
awarded
to
the
winners.
The
French
Fries
victory.
Walsh of Lorain Clearview.
Mickey Lolich handed Min- which we didn't raise, so both parties involved benefitted by
Turnover
and
Small
Soft
Drink
door prize was won by Mrs.
Leading 40-37 at the half, the
Score by Quarters '
nesota only its second shutout those transactions.
Large
Soft
Drink
Lollipop
and
South outscored the North 31-12 South
16 40 71 05 of the season -with a 7-hitter
There has always been a living and still is for the person who Dorothy Myers.
North
14 37 49 83
Only
Others attending the meeting
Only
h\ the third period. Steve Grote
SOUTH-AI dridge 3-2-8; and AI )(_aline drove in two runs is willing to work. This is all the job I have and I'm not trying to
were Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs.
ofCinclnnattEiderscorediOof Foster 4-1 -9 ; Grote 9 -4-22; for the Tigers in victory over make rrioney, only trying to make an honest living .
50~
;his game-hiah 22 points in the Hubbard 4-0 -8; Hurst 4-2-10; the Twins before 52,622 bat day
lf anyone has a right to sell farm produce, shouldn't it be the Dorothy Myers, Mrs. Margaret
o
King 5-4- 14; McCoy 0-0 -0;
;quarter and Terry King of Thompson 0-0-0; Taylor 1-1-3; fans . Notrn Cash slammed his one who produces it? That's his only source of income. I don't Tuttle, Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs.
Marion Pleasant hit eight of his Wright 3-5-11 . TOTALS 33-19-85 seventh home run into the raise enough to make long hauls to distant markets, so why Ada Morris, Mrs. Ethel Orr,
NORTH - Banks 0-4-4 ;
14 points in that furious third Breece 0-4- 4 ; Buurma 6-2-14 ; upper deck in right leading off should a person be penalized for selling good fresh produce which Mrs. Zelda Weber, Miss Leda
Kraeuter,
Mrs.
Goldfe
!period.
Dilworth 3-1-7; Harris 8-1-17 ; the fourth inning.
people want and need in the county he is a citizen of and happy to
· .~ . The North rebOWlded from D. Hipsher 0-0-0; T. Hipsher 4 Oriole catcher Earl Williams contribute something to the peopl~ ahout me ?
0-8; Smith 4-0-8; Under man 7-3, Its 71-49third quarter deficit to 17 ; Saunders 2-0-4. TOTALS J4 - doubled home the winning run
Two alcoholic beverages
I only sell two or three days a week, and can't see why all this
GALLIPOLIS: 1503 EASTERN AVEI'tllE
':'come within two points with 15 -83.
in the last of-the 16th inning, off fuss now'when all my life farmers have sold products from off the are derived from rice. Sake,
" 1:05 to go in the game, but two
loser Don . Stanhouse, 1-6, farm. The ·farmer is the most extensive buyer of alJ consumers as the national drink of Japan ;
and Samshu, a C h i n e s e
l'ree throws by Chris Wright of
giving Baltimore a victory his needs are far ·more Varied.
drink.
Both are really types
· 'Meadowbrook gave the South a
over the Rangers. Williams
How long would business in Pomeroy or any town last if the of beer .
' four point advantage with nine
ended the four hour marathon country people failed to come in? Why can't we be neighborly
GAME
POSTPONED
seconds remaining. North's
after Bobby Grich smacked a and have love for each other? Look at. all the hate and mob
The Pony League game be- leadoff single.
''"Tommy Harris of Lorain
violence, the protestors, the turmoil everywhere.
' Admiral King, who pwnped in tween Middleport A and B
Isn't it about time we as fellow citizens begin to generate a
' 15 of his 17 points in the last scheduled Tuesday has been
spirit of helpfulness, brotherly love and kindness, rather than a
. ' period, hit the final basket at postponed. The new date will
spirit of hate, envy and covetousness ?
be announced.
" the game's end.
My customers extend up and down this valley from Gallipolis
TUPPERS PLAINS
The North had a chance to tie
to Athens, from Point Pleasant to Ravenswood. I have sold to
.."the game in the final minute,
people passing through from 18 states. Many , seeing my display,
KING RECALLED
but had to give up the ball when
Mrs. Effie Watson attended a parked, came to buy fruit to take along . While here they have
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The family get-together al the stopped \O eat, visited the stores, ana then went on their way.
'" ..B North coach jumped off the
~. bench to call time out and was Cincinnati Reds asked waivers home of her daughter, Wilma &amp;ores of people have come to me really angry ·against this ban
on catcher Bob Barton Sunday Guinther at Chester Sunday. on selling.
called for a technical foul.
Waverly's Ed Thompson · and announced they were Mrs. Guinther's ·children and
I believe every effort should be made to induce people to
did not score. Ken Hqrst of recalling catcher Hal King grandchildren and other come to Pomeroy, rather than stifle or hinder those who love
relatives were present.
:i South Point tallied 10 points from Indianapolis.
good things to eat. Truly I appreciate those who have stood by me
Barton has appeared in only
Recent guests of Mr. and through the y~ars and have offered words of encouragement and
~.. ' for the winners.
Each team was missing one three games with the Reds this Mrs. Fon Halsey were Mrs. appreciation.
Henrietta Van Meter of
of its much-heralded aU-stars. year and batted only once.
To you of the council I would kindly ask, wouldn't it be better ·
He indicat.ed he intends to Delaware, Berry Halsey of to keep the good will oi the multitudes who are the buying or
Last
Tuesday,
Brian
'Williams of Columbus South retire from baseball and return Cleveland, and his grand- purchasing power of Pomeroy, or listen to the few who think only
'Suddenly .left the South camp, to San Diego where he and Bob mother, Mrs. Clarice Medley of of self. I'd like to hear others speak up who feel as I do .
' E. Spencer
· apparenUy unhappy over the Miller, a Padre relief pitcher, Hockingport and Pv.. Ray
.
Dwight
regimented schedule uf the are in the investment business. Watson of Ft. Knox, Ky.

9~~
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BEST

today.

The Washington Post said in
itsmorningeditlonsithad been
told by th ~ sources the
President no longer will broadly claim ooninvo!vement in the
case. Instead, the reports said,
Nixon will acknowledge misjudgments on his part and
indicate they resulted from
mislnfonnation and unauthorized action by former Chief of
Staff H.R. "Bob" Haldeman
and former domestic affairs
adviser Jobn D. Ehrlichman.
The Post story, written by
Pulitizer prize winners Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein,
said the strategy was designed
to counter charges by Jobn W.
Dean III, the former White
House counseL Dean reportedly is ready to testify that
Nixon, Haldeman and Ehrlicllman knowingly participated in
the coveru~ of Watergate and
other illegal intelligence
gathering operations.
In another development,
Martha Mitchell, wife of forNixon campaign director

I!!"'

John N. Mitchell, said today
that Nb:on "always !mew"
what was going on .
"I'll be damned if I'll let my
husband take the rap for Mr.
President," Mrs. Mitchell said
in an early morning telephone
call fr om her New York City
home to UPI's Helen Thomas
in Washington. "Between you
and me and the gatepo$1, Mr.
President always knew what
was going on."
Dean Testifies Tomorrow
Dean becomes a witness at
the televised Senate Watergate
Commlttee hearings when tbey
resume Tuesday morning. He
was interviewed for five hours
under oath by committee attorneys Saturday and was
expected to repeat his testlmt&gt;ny to a closed meeting of the
seven-member committee
today.
Sources close to the Senate
investigation told UPI Sunday
Dean had told the commi.ttee
staff be ''assumed" tbe President was aware of the
Watergate coverup within
weeks of the bugging because
he reported on It regularly to
Haldeman and Ehrlichman.
But the sources also said Dean
testified he himself did not
discuss aspects of the coverup
personally with Nixon until last
March.
Both Haldeman and Ehrlicllman resigned from the White

House April 30, the same day
Dean was fired~ That night,
Nixon in a televised address
described Haldeman and Ehrlichman as "two of the finest
public servants" he had ever
known.
The Post in its account said it
informed John J . Wilson, attorn ey for Haldeman and
Ehrlichman, of the President's
reported change of position,
and Wilson replied, "what's he
(the President) been doing for
us lately?" Wilson reasserted
the innocence of his clients and
said he had not heru:d of the
President's reported change in
position.
Bater Disputes, Agnew
The newspaper quoted one

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Maria Ginther, 14, Beverly,
daughter of a former Meigs
County resident, was electrocuted Saturday night while
baby sitting in a trailer home in
Beverly.
According to the report
received here, Miss Ginther
had gone outside the home
barefooted following a rain.
She. reentereq the trailer and
apparenUy touched the side of
the home and was elec-

Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated
five accidents , over the
weekend.
Saturday at 6:30a.m. on SR
248, east of Chester, Albert L.
Martin,
Pomeroy ,
was
traveling east when d~e to
slippery conditions of the highway his pickup truck slid off
the highway on the left into a
guardrail. There were no injuries or arrestS, and only
medium damage to the truck.
At 8:10 p.m. Saturday on
county road 26 , Chester
township, two tenths of a mile
east of SR 7, Vicki Spencer,
Pomeroy, and Donald R.
Palters on, Jr ., Marietta 1
trocuted . According to the collided in a·curve. There were
report, she was killed in- no personal injuries, mediwn
property damage and no
stanUy,
citation
issued.
She was the daughter of Mr.
At 8:15 p.m. Saturday on
and Mrs. William Ginther. Mr.
county
road 46, in Olive
Ginther is formerly of Meigs
County. Besides her parents, Township Marvin F . Taylor,
she is survived by several Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was traveling
brothers and sisters and a west when he met an oncoming
nwnber of relatives who live in car. To avoid a collision Taylor
pulled to the right, going off the
Meigs County .
Funeral services will be held highway into a ditch. Taylor
at 9 a. m. Tuesday at the was not injured. There was
me~ium damage to the car.
Catholic Church in Beverly.

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Sears II

VALUES

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HIGH POINT WINNERS in the Big Bend Regatta baton twirling contest held Sunday under
the direction of Mrs. Judy Riggs were, front, Tawny Broadbent, East Liverpool, 0-6; Sherry
Belville Columbus 7-10· Cindy Patterson, Syracuse, right, 11-14, and at the rear, Phyllis Van
Arsdale: Columbus: J:i-20. '!'he travel trophies to contestants traveling the most distance to take
part went to Julie McClarty, COllegedale, Tenn., 470 rmles, and Sherry Hunt, Berrlen Sprmgs,
Mich.

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CHEF~

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White House source as saying,
" if the Dean charges are too
devastating and there is no
reason to think they won't be,
the President plans to come
forward and acknowledge
overwhelming negligence on
his part but will still deny
criminal knowledge ." The
account said charges by Dean
and others against Haldeman
and Ehrllchman have convinced the President that he
must abandon . support of
Haldeman ' and Ehrlichman.
In other Watergate develop.
ments :
-Sen. Barry M. Goldwater,
R-Ariz., said in a television
interview Sunday he does not
believe President Nixon was

involved in the Watergate
affair, but If it is proved he was
1
' thenl think resignation would
be the cheapest, easiest and
best way to do it." Goldwater
said he did not believe Nixon
·should be impeached "unless it
Is proved that he lied."
--Sen. Howard M. Baker Jr.,
Tenn., the ranking Republican.
on the Senate Watergate
Committee, said in a Sunday
television inf,erview he disagreed with Vi ce President
Spiro T. Agnew that the
hearings were perverting the
judicial process. He said he
believed both the hearings and
prosecutioM can be carried out
"efficiently and equitably."

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Five auto accidents noted

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To See For • .. l

TME

WASHINGTON (UP!) _
President Nb:on Is expecled to
defend
himself
from
allegations of involvement in
the coverup of tbe Watergate
.,afl~lr by saying he was
"'IUSinformed by his former
chief deputies, news reports
attributed to White House and
~ other government sourt:es said

Teenager is electrocuted
r

Brewers pound White Sox

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., June 18, 1973

At II :30 a.m. Sunday on the
Bafl Run road , Barbara
Caruthers, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,
was traveling south when her
car went off the highway over
an embankment. There were
no injuries and medium
property damage.
Sunday at 6:50p.m. on SR 124
in Rutland township, three
tenths . of a mile east of

MR. AND MRS. FRED CROW, Jr., SJr.acuse, entertained Saturday with a barbecue
chicken dinner at their home with approxiii1ately 100 persons attending. Above., Mrs. Crow is
serving the Grand Croa ker and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworthy of Middleport.

Rutland, Doris E. Halfhill,
Middleport Rt. I, was
traveling east when due to a
slippery surface, went off the
road on the left into a field.
The Pomeroy ER was
summoned but the driver
refused treatment.
There was medium damage
WASHING'f0 N (UP! ) to the car. No ' citation was
Leonid I . Bre1Jmev's vil) it drew
issued.
protest reactions today from
musicians, dancers and hmdamentalist Christians only huurs
after 8,000 to 10,000 .Jews and
Ukranian exiles decried the
Soviet Communist terder .
Leaders of the American
Guild of Musical ArtisL• said
they would bring 5,000 persons
to the State Department to
protest the loss of jobs to.
· PITTSBURGH - Dravo companies reported revenues touring Russian companies.
The Rev. carl Mcintyre said
Corporation has announced of $15,165,403.
completion of the acquisition of
Union, founded in 1928, he would bring a "formidable
A. L. Mechling Barge Lines, owned a fleet of nine towboats following" to the Washington
Inc., Joliet, Ill., and the con- and about 400 barges . It Monument Lo denounce tra ~c
solidation of that firm with operated principally between agreements that Mcintyre said
Union Barge Line Corporation, the Ohio Valley and the Gulf would cost U.S. taxpayers $200
a subsidiary of Dravo. The Coast with full common carrier billion.
Sunday , while Brezhnev was
resulting new company will rights on certain tributary
operate as Union Mechling waterways, including the at Camp David preparing for
Corporation , a subsidiary of Arkansas Waterway . Union his visit with President Nixon,
Dravo, with headquartei-s in reported
revenues
of sympathetic congres s men
Pittsburgh.
$17,587,990 in 1972. Union's joined Jews and Ukra inian.":~ in
Terms of the.acquisition of A. sales oflices w~re in Pitts- a demonStration at the U.S.'
L. Mechling Barge Lines and burgh, Houston, Memphis, Capitol and the White House
related companies were New Orleans, New York City ellipse .
The keynote speaker was
$3,960,924 in cash and 165,514 and St. Louis.
Sen. Henry M. Ja~kson, Dshares of Dravo Cwnulative
Wash.. who is sponsoring 3
8
Convertible
Series
Marker
Rt•pnrl
measure to require the Soviet
Preference Stock.
Union to allow free emigra _tion
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO, .
The new firm has 536 emof
Jews in exohange foi- most
Saturday, June 16, 1973
ployees. Walker said the
. favored nation statu s in
SALF..S REPORT OF
consolidation would be carried
trading. with U1e United States.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
out smoothly and with no in"When we · talk of fr ee
!lOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 36.25
terruption
in
present
trade,"
Jackson said, 1'iet us
to 37; 220 to 250 ibs. 37 to 37.90;
operations .
also talk of free people.··
Combination of personnel, Light34.50to36; FatSows30to
Reps. Philip Burton, Dfloating equipment, terminals 33.75; Stags 28 Down; Boars 28
Calif., and Robert Drinan, Dand other facilities of both .to 31.25; Pigs 12.~0 to 24 ; Shoats
Mass., a Roman Cathulic
firms will result in better 25 to 32.
joined
Ja ckson .
CATTLE - Steers 42.50 to prie~t.
service to the shipping public,
Statements
were
read
from
he said, through improved 47.50; Heifers 36 to 46.25 ; Baby
utilization of equipmnt and Beef 48 to 62.50; Fat Cows 30 to
close·r
coordination
of 34.25; Canners 28.50 to 36.35;
Bull• 36 to 41.70; Milk Cows 300
schedules .
Mechling,
which · was to 497.50.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
established in 1920 had a fleet
68.80;
Seconds 64 to 65.75;
of eight towboats and tugs and
more than 260 barges . It · Mediwn 60 to 64.50; Com. &amp;
operated primarily between Hvs. 56.50 to 62; Culls 56.50
the Illinois area and the Gulf Down .
HAHY CALVES Baby
Coast, including Tampa, and
Calves
70
to
132.50.
with iull common carrier .
rights for immediate points
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
and certain tributary waterCattle : Choice Steers, 46ways and specific commodity
46
.80 ; Good, 42-45; Choice
rights to the West Coast.
Mechling also operated a Heifers, 44-44.60; Good, 4~ .5()public terminal and warehouse 43.40 ; Standard and good, 41in Chicago; terminal, repair 42.
Cows : Commercial, 35-36.50;
and drydock facilities in Joliet,
IlL; and barge painting and Utility, 32.7!i-34; Canners and
fleeting facilities in Lemont, Cutters, 29-30.25.
Bulls: Commercial, 40-44.10.
Ill. It also owned a 514-acre
Feeder Cattle : Steer Calves
area for industrial develop45-61;
Heifer Calves, 4:!48.80;
ment along · the Illinois
Waterway at Seneca, Ill. Sales Heavy Feeder Steers 42.7Qoffices were maintained in 49.50; Cows and Calves By the
Chicago. Houston, Joliet, New Head, 380-460.
Veal Calves : Choice, 70 ;
Orleans and Tampa.
In 1972 Mechling and related Good, 63-67.50.
Lambs : Choice, 37.50 ; Good,
37.
Hogs: 200-~. 38 ..75; No. I,
39; 22Q-240; 38.50 ; Sows, 3233.5Q; Boars, 31.90.

Protests against
Brezhnev mount

Dravo absorbs

Mechling Lines·

Sens. Jacob K . Javits, r-N .Y.,
Abra hmn

Ribi coff ,

D~Conn . '

and Ri chard Schweiker, R-Pa.

The Ukrainia ns said they
supported the free cmigmtion
of Jews, but claimed that
Ukrainians constitute 65 per
cent or all persons un dergoing
mass arres t s, sec ret and
' 'kanga roo" tr ials, illegal inca r ce ra tio ns irt psychi at ri c
prisons a nd oth er s e v c r e
puni$hmcnt in th e Sov ie t
Union.
Members of the militant
.Jewish Defense l..caguc occasionally interrupted the
SJ&gt;et..Chcs with chanting and
vowed " to ·do something" later
at the Soviet Embassy, a few
blocks north of the White
hlouse. The block around the
embassy , howeve r , was cordoned off a ud about 200 youn g
Jews who attempted to approacl) the embasr;y ;.u·en were
checked by rabbis.
Jacob Ste in ," head of ,a
coalition of more thHn 20
.Jewi.sh groups who arranged
the rally, referred to " the cry
o£ desoair of Jews in the Soviet
· Union " who must. pay H high
tax if they want to emigrate.
Police estimated Sunday's
t1'owd at 8,000 persons, but
organizers sc.d tl there were
10,000 or rnorc.

PRESIDENT NIXON
welcomes Soviet leader .
Leonid I. Brezhnev to the.
White House today for the
start of a summit conferen""
U, s ~ sources said could le•d
to the signing within IZ lo 18
months of a new treaty
limiting offensive nuelear
weapons.
The While !louse staff
urrunged a 21-gun salute amd
red carpet treatment for
llrezhnev's 10:30 a.m. EDT
arrival at the Executive·
~W•nslon from Camp Dovtd,
Md., where the Communist
party leader had rested slace
his Saturday arrival In the
United States from M01cow .
Nixon
complet~d
preparations for the summit
ut Key Biscayne, Fla., over
the weekend, retural.!lg to
Wnshington Sunday night.

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~---5e:-o:,
~
Summer Line
1

cit Mix &amp;

Skirls, Tops, Slacks &amp;
Shorls.

lOLA'S
Mai n at Sycamore

1~~~~--··~~--~
POMEROY

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFI CE HOUR's 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THUR S.) - EAST COURT n.,
POMEROY .

Ironton Tri.b
also goiU!f

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GIRLS combined their talents .on skis Saturda_y during the
THREE MEN AND THRE.E I 'b hen they made a pyramid of people and skued down the
show by the Athens Boat and Ski C u w
·
river.

••,.

to

offset plant

Ironton Tribune Publisher
·Cliffard L. Waller announced
Sunday that the Tribune has
purchased 49,000 square feet of
. vacant property on Ashtabula
St., between South Fifth and
· South Sixth streets for the
location of a new offset printing
plant.
Construction of the new onestory building will begin shortly.
The Tribune is the latest
newspaper in southern Ohio to
switch to offset printing. The
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
Gallipolis - Pomeroy, was first
in 1967. Marietta, Jackson, and
Athens followed in that order.

SERIOUS BUSINESS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Lt.
Gov. John Brown told
. delegates to Buckeye Girls'
State during the weekend that
~king an oath of olftce Is
serious business. ~~When you
raise your hand to take the oath
you are making a solemn
promise," Brown said. "It is up
to you as an individual to
asswne the obligations of that
office to the best of your
ability."
$600 STOLEN
Approximately _ $600 was
reported stolen from the office
of the Elberfeld Department
Store as the result of a
breaking and entering over the
weekend. Pomeroy police were
· on the scene before the office
was opened for Monday's
business.

Mat~h

BAKER

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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6- '1'lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po...eroy,

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o., June

18, 1973

~~;~~~i~~~*~~~~}~!~l~l~~~~~~~f:~~ff;i:1l~l~lj~~;~ltts~~~

Friday· evening
acttvzties at
Regatta opening
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PICTURED, left to rl!Zht. as they viewed flower show
arrangements are Dr. and Mrs. Al~rt L()vejoy, Hosni SH.

FRANCIS ANDREW, Long Bottom, and his grandson, Brian Collins, Long Bottom, 8, were
among the stringed inatrurnent musicians present on Heritage Day. The tiny violin held by
Brian was once played by his mother, Mr. Andrew's daughter.
ENJOYING THE PARADE FRIDAY EVENING, left to right, were Rick Chancey , Billy
Rouah, Bobby Roush, Marie Amburger and Mike Chancey.

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-...',

Regatta hosts visitors from Egypt, West Germany

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AMONG THE BEAUTIES in Friday night's Big Bend
Regatta Parade were Margie Ehman, left, River Festival
Queen of.G allia County, and Jacinta Boyle, queen of the New
Straitsville Moonshine Festival.

CRIPPLED

fl

«.,,I
.,

CHILDREN'S.

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HOSP.JT~I

THEIR WORK WITH ihe Crippled Children's Hospital was emphasized by the Twin City
Shrinettes riding this float in Friday's regatta parade.

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HOWARD NOLAN, Syracuse, explains the polishing processes for stones to young ,,.'
Heritage D'!Y visitors.

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_Am_e_r-ic_a_n_a_r_ti_st_ J_am_e_s_M_o...,;
ni

the Yesterdays
'I · i '·/./. .,~ '' .
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(Continued from Page .1)
accompaniment for her vocal
numbers ; Myron Duffield of
Olmsted kept the hills ·or
Pomeroy alive with the sound
of his calliope throughout the
afternoon and evening, and a
local group, Francis Andrew,
his grandson, Brian Collins,
Glenn Baker and Richard
Boring pr ovided stringed

I

music.

MRS. MARY KAUFF 'of Condor St. , Pomeroy, was
disappointed Friday evening when her three wheel bicycle
was damaged while being transported to the Big Bend
Regatta Parade. Mrs. Kauff had carried out an effective
"Scarlett Ribbons for her hair" theme in her costume and
bike decorations.
f.;::•:•:•:•:~:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:::;:::~::::;:;:;:;~:::::.-:::::::::::::::-::~::::::::::;:::;:::::i:::;:;

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DE'AL ME
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. TROOP 249 IS A GREAT PLACE to be in 1973" was the theme of Boy Scouts with their
effective camp scene float in the Big Bend Regatta Parade Friday night.

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A display of antique autos
was featured ilear the ,museum
as was a sandstone cutting
demonstration
of
Fred
Tuckerman and Floyd Burney
of the Pomeroy area. A
refreshment stand operated by
the Chester Fire Deparlment
was a busy spot near the
museum and visitors attempied to secure relief from
the 90 degree temperature.
Women of the Pomeroy .
Middleport Branch of the
American Association of
University Women, dressed in
costwning of yesteryear, along
with society members, were on
hand to host the annual
Heritage Day.
rnsi~e the museum, visitors

gomery Flagg was born Jw:&gt;);

18, 1877.
..: :..~
On this day in history :
saw Pandy Reiser o!Millfield,
In 1812, the United Sta~
weaver on the four harness
declared war on Britain for the
loomi John KoJ;~klin of Gloustef'
second time in its brief history.
creatfng yarn from wool; Sue
In 1815, Napoleon was defeatHoyt of Athens, quilting by
ed ,at the llattle of waterloo·jn
band ; Larry Wolfe with his
Belgium. ..
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extensive Indian arrowhead
In 1953, Egypt was J!I'P·
collection; Mr. and Mrs.
claimed a republic by \II•
Howard Nolan with their
" Army Council of the Revolulapidary exhibit; a talking
tion."
1
book machine d-e monstration;
In 1972, in Britain's worst -~ir
riverboat pictures belonging to
disaster, a jeUiner crashed
J. W. Weaver; Ed Kaplan,
near London, killing all 118
.
I
Athens, creating pottery and a
aboard.
·
.
con.t inuous slide show of
familiar Meigs County scenes.
A thought for the . d'9' :
and events.
French writer Sebastian Cha.fn·
Mrs. June Ashley was on
fort said, "The most was)ed
hand to talk over family
day of all is that on which we
genealogies with visitors along have not laughed."
,,.
with Gerald Powell and one
room featured displays of
relics which have been given to
the musewn for use when it
opens on a regular ~asis.
NEW YORK
Visitors had been invited to
CLOTHING
wear peri ~X;~ costuming but due
to the heat of the day most of
HOUSE
them shied away from that
part of the most successful
Pomeroy,
observance.
is now the collecting agency
for Columbus &amp; Southern
The accompanying photos
Ohio Electric Company.
catch the day's mood.
You can pay your electric
bill at this store.

NOTICE!

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By JO ELLEN DIEHL
Meigs High Alumni are reminded that Friday, June 22 L• the
last day to purchase tickets for t he a lumni dance or to pay
membership dues. The dance will be held at Meigs High Sc,hool
gymnasiUm and will feature ' 'Wha1e," group from Co1umbus
· with aluninus Jim Wildermuth in it. Refreshments will also be
served at the dance .
Ticke~s are available to allimni and their guests at $2 each
and membership dues are $1. These can be obtained at New York
Clothing House, Pomeroy; Village Pharmacy or Quality Print
Shop, Middleport, or Miller Brothers, Rutland . Reservations can
also be made by sending the money in care of Jo Ellen Diehl,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

a

THI OO'IUNMII!NTOf
DEPMIT M CN! 0 ~ THE TREII SUR'r'
OfFIC E O F REVE NU E SH,'I.R IN G
19 00 PENN S YLVAfli iA AVE N W
WI\ SH IN GTO N , 0 C 2 0 226

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l&gt;.mcwtnQ rt"""•"' •~•• of VOYI i "'' ldo~I &gt;On

&gt;

LETART TOWNSHIp
Pl .t.NS TO EXPEND ITS REVENUE SHARING .t.UOCAT ION
FOR fH6. ENri TLEMHOl HRIOO U GI NNIN G

JAN .

1, 1973

IN HI{

,t,NDENDING

FO~LOWING MANN(~

ESTIMAUO TOTA L OF
AVOIO 0[81 II&lt; C'IEASE
U SS EN ~ EB II N C II ! .O. S E

VISITING WITH HER parents this month is Becky Card,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Beech St., Pomeroy .
'J ohn Citro, Becky 's husband, bas been stationed in Guam the
past 6 months, but Becky has been keeping bu,s y working with
retarded chil&lt;lren where they reside near Robbins Air Force
Base, Georgia. John will return home some\ime next month.
Avid Cincinnati fans, Becky and her parents took in the recent
Reds-cardinals games and also stopped at King's Island .

0

Will PA fV EN II NCRO.S t IN ,

fiA TE OF "M"JOA T"K

D
X

NO HF! CT

TOO SOON TO
• ~ PII H MCT EFFECT

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WILlAl PVC E ... III PU NT OF "-'ll

INCAlli S! Ill .. "1"-10 R T.t.)(
NO E&lt;F!CI Pf'I I .. Xl E'&lt;H S

JUNE JO , 1973

l..,:iEO UI'ON .. N

51,260

ACCOUNT NO
J6 l

053 005

LETART TOWNSHIP
TWP . CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
RAC"INE , OHIO 45771

ALSO VISITING WITH relatives this month is William B.
Ledlie, Langsville, home from his work with SEDCO oil on a rig
off the ~oast of Nigeria. The company is centrally located in Las
Palmas in the Canary Islands.

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SOAKING UP THE SUN are Rick Van Metre, Eddie Brown,
_and Mike Taylor. They are in Winter Park, Florida, for the
summer working at summer jobs.
MRS. JAMES NASH REPORTS that the family pet beagle
stirred up some excitement at their home in Happy Hollow
recently. The dog gave birth to one pup Tuesday. Mrs. Naah,
thinking that the dog had lost the other pups, didn't expect any
more. Then on the following Sunday night S more pups arrived!

•

HOSNI SH. Saleh, Cairo,
and
Margrethe ,
Egypt,
Hallermann, West Germany,
were among the visitors from
faraway places here for
Regatta Weekend.
Saleh and Miss Hallermann
are in the United States under
sponsorship of the Columqus
Area International Program,
and were accompanied to
Pomeroy by Dr. and Mrs.
Albert Lovejoy. Mrs. Lovejoy
is associated with the State
Library of Ohio and the four
came to Pomeroy on the invitation of Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja
of the Meigs Library Extension
Service.
Saleh is currently the
houseguest of the Lovejoys.
Both he and Miss Hallermann
are participating in an exchange program and spend
time in the offices Of the

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FOUR MEIGS COUNTY students have received letters of
acceptance from the All Ohio Youth Choir. They are David Miller
and Patty Glaze who will represent Meigs High School and Roma
Nease and Jill Warner who will represent Southern Hlgll School.
The choir. ls made up of students from all 88 Ohio counties and
·
performs yearly at the Ohio State Fair.

THE POMEROY GIRLS Softball Team got into the act of Friday's re gatta parade wearillj!,
their game uniforms.

.

Tuppers PI alliS
Society News
ByMril. EvelynBrfckles
Sunday School attendance at
the Methodist Church was 69
and offering $37.47. Worship
attendance was 26 and offering
was $26.85.
Mrs . . Neisel Weatherman
spent several days with her
brother, . Mr. and Mrs. Eldred
Grimes of Athens and attended

ch urch serv ices there.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Flanders were sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Spencer and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks
have rented the trailer lot of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Millhone
and moved their trailer there .
Monday evening whille helping
. to move the trailer, her son,
Tommy Watson , received a
hand injury · requiring 16

stitches.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack Stanley of
Athens called on her brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
Monday evening.
Mr . and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles had as dinner gqests
Tuesday evening, Rev . and
Mrs. Jacob Lehman.

Herbert L. S.yre .

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Herbert L.Sayr~~·~C~Ie~r~k~~~~~~~~~~========t:~~==~==~==~~

June 11, 1973
The Vietnam War was the
longest in l,I .S. history, dat·
ing back officially to Jan .. I,
1961.

Saleh and M~rgrethe HaUermann, wbo were guests of the
Meigs Library Extension Service during the regatta.

The Deily Senflnel

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various social agencies in
Franklin County .
After taking in the flower
show, the midway, the flea

market and the various other
Regatta activities, Saleh, Miss
Hallermann , and Dr . and Mrs.
Lovejoy were taken on a tour of

MISS REGATTA MAJORETTE QUEENS were selected
in severa l age brackets as a baton twirling contest held
Sunday at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport as a
part of the Big Bend Regatta . They Included : I tor, Tawny
Broadbent, East Liverpool, ()..6 years; Sherry Belville,
Columbus, 9-10; Cindy Patterson, Syracuse, 11·12; Michile

the Meigs Mine and the Gavin
Plant by John Reece , Ohio
Power Co. public relations
coordinator.

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

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I Social I

sWEEPSTAKES AWARD - Mrs. Hiram Fisher was the
winner or the sweepstakes award for accumulating the most
points for ribbons re~eived in the horticulture divisi~n.' M.t s.
· Fisher, a member of the Wildwond Garden Club, exhib•ted 15
speci mens of l'oses, lilies and iris.

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l·Calendad
.1\'IONDAY
· MIDDLEPORT · Garden
'Club, borne of .Mrs. Sibley
Slack, 7:30p.m. Amateur and
1Cheahlre Garden Club mem·
' bers invited.
' BEND 0' the River Garden
Club, 7:30p.m . at the home of
• Mrs. Ernest Wingett.

"BEST OF SHOW" - Mrs. Bert Grinun of the Bend 0' the River Garden Club was the
trophy winner lor the "best, of show" in the classes of arli.stic design. She was presented the
- trophy by the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs' judge, Mrs. L1yde Mitche ll, right, for her black
·
and white modern arrangement depicting "Southern Ohio on the Climb."

Veterans Memurlol Hospital
Discharges Saturday - Vera
Hayman, Ahlili White, Estella
Deem, OrvilJe Jones, Sharon
Warner , Betty Hawley, Samuel
McKinney Jr., Edward Willett
and Maude Connolly.
Discharges Sunday
Christi ne Freeman, Clifford
Jenkin s on, Grego r y Hay es,
Raymond Adams, William
Buckley, Grace Blue, Lydia
Ebers bae h , Jack Spires,
Timothy Ball and Effie Wa~
son.

0' the River ; Mrs. Pat Holter,
Chester.
"Tadpole to a Toadpole,"
fi gurine :
feat urin g frog
( Junior Division), Maria
Legar, blue : Elaine Barnhart,
red; Jay Carpenter, yellow ,
with white robbins bein g
Garden
Club ;
Mrs . awarded
to'
the
other
WOLFPEN
. Wil son Ca rpe nter, Bend exhibitors, Lori Ann WoOO,
O' the River : Mrs. Robert Linda Rosenbaum, Anna
Mrs . Nora Johnson of Grove
Lewis, Winding Trail ; Mrs. Pat Wiles, Shari Mitch and Sheila City return ed home afte r
Holter, Chester.
Sargent.
spending two weeks with Mrs. -'·
"NatW'e 's Wonder ," using
"Dish Gardens." juniors : He len J ohn s on and other
weathered or driftwond : Mrs. Maria Legar, Shari Mitch, re latives.
James Carpenter, Rutland Lori Ann Wood and Anna
Friendly ;
Mrs.
Robert Wiles.
Thompson, -Windin g _Trail;
Hortit•dture Division
Mrs. Ricard Coliins, Winding
Hybrid Tea Roses: Mrs. E toilt a Ca ss ell , Middl eport
· Trail; Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Robert Snowden, Hulland Garden Club, white .
Bend O' the River.
Friendly Gardeners, both bl ue
Large foli age plants: Mrs.
" Would You Believe," and red; Mrs. Hiram Fisher, Robert Thompson , Windin g
modern design: Mrs. Wilson Wildwond , both yellow and TraiL
Carpenter, Bend 0' the River ; white.
Three educa tiona l classes
Mr s. Robert Thompson,
Floribunda : Mrs . Hiram were included in the show.
Winding Trail; Mrs. James Fisher, blue ; Mrs . Rober t Vilma Pikkoja of the Meigs
Titus, Rutland ; Mrs. Robert Snowden, red , yellow and Bookmobile Service, displayed
Canaday, Rutland.
white.
books on gardeninl!: , flower
"Good Old _S ummer Time,"
Grandiflora : Mrs
Richard arranging and the area 's
traditional : Mrs. James Barton, Chester ; Mrs . Robert natural reso ur ces in an
Catpenter Rutland Friendly i -snow11en, red and ye llow; Mrs. education class called " In the
Mrs. RObert T~omp son , Win· Hiram Fisher, white,
Garden of Knowledge. ' '
ding Trail ; Mrs Robert Lewis,
Climber :
Mrs .
Hiram
Wea th er ed a nd driftwo ~ d
Winding Trail; Mrs. Robert Fisher, blue and red ; Mrs. were exhibited by Mrs Hornet
Snowden, Rutland .
Rose Ginther, Chester Garden Parker a nd Mrs . James
" Knee Deep," frog fi gurine Club, yellow; and Mrs . Howard Car pe'nter in a category,
in natural se tting : Mrs. Nolan, Pomeroy Club, while . ' 'Drifting on the Ohio,' ' and M.
Howard Nolan, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Iris : Mrs. Hiram Fisher, a nd R . Bargainland, Mid Earl Thoma, Winding Trail ; blue, red and white; Mrs. _ dleport, showed pest con trol
Mrs . James Titus, Rutland ; Richard Barton, yellow.
materials in " In A Pes t Free
Mrs. Ada Holter Chester.
Peruvian Daffodil: .Mrs . Garden" class .
"Pollution on the Ohio · Bar:ton, blue ; Mr s. Hir am
Particularly attra~tive for
Riv e r I J
dimensional Fisher, red yellow and white . the show were the class
arrangement : Mrs. Richard
Citrus Plants : ·Mrs. Richard · mark ers. Mad~ by Mrs.
Collins, Winding Trail; Mrs. Collins, blue ; Mr s. Loretta Margaret Ella Lewis, they
Wilson Carpenter, Bend 0' the Beegle, red ; Mrs. John Terrell, were ceramic lily pads holding
Ri ver; Mrs. Bert p-rimm, Bend Winding Trail, yellow ; Mrs. frog replic,as.

Mrs. Grimm, Mrs. Fisher
cop flower show honors

' BLOODMOBILE, 1 to 6 p.m.
' at Pomeroy Elementary
School. Donors welcome.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Orderof .
beMolay, 7:30 p.m. Regular
meeting and' initiation. of
Mrs. Bert Grimm, with an
~andidates; also mothers club exquisite arrangement
will meet in basement.
depicting "Southern Ohio on
MIDDLEPORT . Garden the Climb" and Mrs. Hiram
, ·Club, 8 p.m., at home of Mrs. Fisher with an array of
' Sibly Slack. Guests will ·he beautiful rose , iris and daffodil
; Cheshire Garden Club and specimensshared top honors at
, Middleport Amateur Garden the Regatta flower show staged
Club. Hostesses: Mrs. Slack, in the showroom of the
Mrs. Tom Cassell and Mrs. C. Pomeroy Motor Co.
0. Fisher.
Mrs. Clyde Mitchell, ZanesMEN'S FELLOWSHIP, ville, an accredited judge of the
Meigs County Churches of Ohio Association of Garden
Christ, will meet at 7:30p.m. at Clubs, described the· show as
Zion Church of Christ.
"one of the most outstanding as
imagination
and
VACATION Bible school to
starting Monday at Sutton creativeness" she had ever
United Methodist Church, 9:30 judges She commented on the
a.m . to 11 a .m . each day . setting - an air conditioned
. Children of community invited. showroom overlooking the
Beautiful Ohio - and was most
TUESDAY
GROUP
!1, . Women 's complimentary on the talents
Association, Middleport First of the arrangers .
Mrs. Grimm was the winner
United Presbyterian Church, 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ed- of the "Best of Show" entry in
the artistic designs entry and
ward Burkett.
CHESTER Council 323, was presented a trophy . Mrs.
Daughters of America, 8 p.m. Fisher with 15 entries in the
at the hall. Quarterly birthdays horticulture division acto be · observed. Potluck cwnulated more points for
ribbon awards than other
refreshments.
exhibitors and wa s the
FRIENDLY Circle of Trinity recipient of the sweepstakes
Church picnic, 6 p.m. at award .
roadside park on right on U. S.
Sponsored by the Mei gs
Rt. 33. Guest night to · be ob· County
Garden
Club
setved. Mrs. Albert Woodard Association , Mrs . Richard
will have vesper service.
Collins and Mrs . . Jack Hart
POMEROY Chapter 186 were c&lt;rehairpersons for the
OES 7:45 p.m., initiation of ahow which had a total of 78
two 'Cllndidates. Officers will entries in the horticulture,
wear gowns.
division , and 48 entries in the
WOMEN 'S Auxiliary of arrangement division .
Veterans Memoria[ Hospital,
Ribbon winners in the ar·
June meeting, 7•30 at the listie design division , listed
hospital.
blue for first, red for second ,
yellow for third and white for
WEDNESDAY
YOUNG WIVES Club 7:30 fourth , respectively, were as
,
p.m., at home of Karen Young. follows:
" In a Rose Garden," using
BOSWORTH Council 46,
roses: Mrs . Robert Snowden,
Royal and Select Masters,
·Rutland Friendly Gardeners;
assembly at 7:30p.m., Masomc
Mrs. Richard Collins, Winding
Temple, regular transaction of
Trail Gard~ n Club; Mrs .
bU!iness, election of officers,
Robert Lewis, Winding Trail;
and insta11ation . Pomeroy
Mrs . Robert Thompson,
Chapter R.A.M ., installation
Windin g Trail.
to he held following Bosworth
"Come Up and See Me Some
eoundl meeting . All rituals of
Time," using frog figurine in
Pomeroy
Chapter
and
modern arrangement : Mrs .
Bosworth Council to he on the
James
Titus.
Rutland ·
desk of the secretary.

Schibik, Charleroi, Pa., 13-14; Phyllis Ann Arsdale,
Columbus, 10-20, firs! runner-up in that age group. First
place in the latter group was won by Marvia Mosier, Celina,
and Cindy Hunter, Belpre, was first in the 7-3 age group. Mrs.
Judy Ri ggs was director of the Sunday contest.

ATCAPITALU
Paula Hauber, s tudent ~ t
Eastem High School, is attending Buckeye Girls' State a t
Capital University, Columbu s,
this week under sponsorship of
Feeney ~ Bennett Post 128,
America n Legion Auxiliary.
Mi ss Hauber was an &lt;Jiternatc
to Tony a Keebaugh, a delegate
who wa s Wlable to attend .

Wolfpen

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
merfleld and daughters of
'
lllinois, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mr . and Mrs. Ha ymond Russell, Mr. and Mrs . Steve
Allen s worth and family , Haggy of Akron and Mr . a~d
Jeilnnie , Rae Ann , and Joe of Mrs. Ronald Russell and
Grove port were the weekend Amanda of Fort Mead, Md. ,
guests of her mother, Mrs , were weekend v~i tors of Mr.
Lettie Roush.
and Mrs. Robert Russell .
Mr. and Mrs. Jed Russell of
Oregon
came to spend some
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe
and c hildr en, Tra cy and time wilh his parents, Mr. a nd
Steven, Columbus, spent the Mrs. Howard Russell and other
weekend here visiting her relatives.
Mrs . Walter Jordan of
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brad.
Galilpolis, Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
ford Mnag .
of Albany and Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow and Franklin Russell of Middleport
daughter, New Philadelphia, and Karim Gilkey, Albany,
spent the weekend in Syracuse visited with Mr. and Mrs.
with his parenl&lt;&gt;, Mr . and Mrs. Lincoln RusselL
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp
Rober t Crow .
Mr ~ and Mrs. Mike Hammer and family and Miss Jo Smith
and daugh ter, Kim, of spent a weekend with Mr. and
Columbus; and Mrs. Howard Mrs. Worley and family or
Nic.holson, Athen s , were Daniels, W. Va
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich .
Mr s. E lizabe th Cha se of
Dayton is the guest of her
sister, Mlss Helen Lochary,
and Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Lochary.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Beegle and
family of Worthington were
Rega tta weekend . gue~ l.&lt;l of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Crow, SYracuse, and Mrs .
Theodore Beegle, Pomeroy .

SUMMER
SANDALS
For the
'Entire .F11mily

heritage
house
Your thorn MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE
' I

e

ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
POWERFUL COMPACT

4,000 BTU OF COOLING UJMFORT

ALL MODELS ON SALE NOWI
Choose From 5,000 BTU's

BTU's In Stock

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

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6- '1'lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po...eroy,

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o., June

18, 1973

~~;~~~i~~~*~~~~}~!~l~l~~~~~~~f:~~ff;i:1l~l~lj~~;~ltts~~~

Friday· evening
acttvzties at
Regatta opening
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PICTURED, left to rl!Zht. as they viewed flower show
arrangements are Dr. and Mrs. Al~rt L()vejoy, Hosni SH.

FRANCIS ANDREW, Long Bottom, and his grandson, Brian Collins, Long Bottom, 8, were
among the stringed inatrurnent musicians present on Heritage Day. The tiny violin held by
Brian was once played by his mother, Mr. Andrew's daughter.
ENJOYING THE PARADE FRIDAY EVENING, left to right, were Rick Chancey , Billy
Rouah, Bobby Roush, Marie Amburger and Mike Chancey.

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Regatta hosts visitors from Egypt, West Germany

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AMONG THE BEAUTIES in Friday night's Big Bend
Regatta Parade were Margie Ehman, left, River Festival
Queen of.G allia County, and Jacinta Boyle, queen of the New
Straitsville Moonshine Festival.

CRIPPLED

fl

«.,,I
.,

CHILDREN'S.

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HOSP.JT~I

THEIR WORK WITH ihe Crippled Children's Hospital was emphasized by the Twin City
Shrinettes riding this float in Friday's regatta parade.

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HOWARD NOLAN, Syracuse, explains the polishing processes for stones to young ,,.'
Heritage D'!Y visitors.

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_Am_e_r-ic_a_n_a_r_ti_st_ J_am_e_s_M_o...,;
ni

the Yesterdays
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(Continued from Page .1)
accompaniment for her vocal
numbers ; Myron Duffield of
Olmsted kept the hills ·or
Pomeroy alive with the sound
of his calliope throughout the
afternoon and evening, and a
local group, Francis Andrew,
his grandson, Brian Collins,
Glenn Baker and Richard
Boring pr ovided stringed

I

music.

MRS. MARY KAUFF 'of Condor St. , Pomeroy, was
disappointed Friday evening when her three wheel bicycle
was damaged while being transported to the Big Bend
Regatta Parade. Mrs. Kauff had carried out an effective
"Scarlett Ribbons for her hair" theme in her costume and
bike decorations.
f.;::•:•:•:•:~:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:::;:::~::::;:;:;:;~:::::.-:::::::::::::::-::~::::::::::;:::;:::::i:::;:;

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DE'AL ME
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. TROOP 249 IS A GREAT PLACE to be in 1973" was the theme of Boy Scouts with their
effective camp scene float in the Big Bend Regatta Parade Friday night.

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A display of antique autos
was featured ilear the ,museum
as was a sandstone cutting
demonstration
of
Fred
Tuckerman and Floyd Burney
of the Pomeroy area. A
refreshment stand operated by
the Chester Fire Deparlment
was a busy spot near the
museum and visitors attempied to secure relief from
the 90 degree temperature.
Women of the Pomeroy .
Middleport Branch of the
American Association of
University Women, dressed in
costwning of yesteryear, along
with society members, were on
hand to host the annual
Heritage Day.
rnsi~e the museum, visitors

gomery Flagg was born Jw:&gt;);

18, 1877.
..: :..~
On this day in history :
saw Pandy Reiser o!Millfield,
In 1812, the United Sta~
weaver on the four harness
declared war on Britain for the
loomi John KoJ;~klin of Gloustef'
second time in its brief history.
creatfng yarn from wool; Sue
In 1815, Napoleon was defeatHoyt of Athens, quilting by
ed ,at the llattle of waterloo·jn
band ; Larry Wolfe with his
Belgium. ..
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extensive Indian arrowhead
In 1953, Egypt was J!I'P·
collection; Mr. and Mrs.
claimed a republic by \II•
Howard Nolan with their
" Army Council of the Revolulapidary exhibit; a talking
tion."
1
book machine d-e monstration;
In 1972, in Britain's worst -~ir
riverboat pictures belonging to
disaster, a jeUiner crashed
J. W. Weaver; Ed Kaplan,
near London, killing all 118
.
I
Athens, creating pottery and a
aboard.
·
.
con.t inuous slide show of
familiar Meigs County scenes.
A thought for the . d'9' :
and events.
French writer Sebastian Cha.fn·
Mrs. June Ashley was on
fort said, "The most was)ed
hand to talk over family
day of all is that on which we
genealogies with visitors along have not laughed."
,,.
with Gerald Powell and one
room featured displays of
relics which have been given to
the musewn for use when it
opens on a regular ~asis.
NEW YORK
Visitors had been invited to
CLOTHING
wear peri ~X;~ costuming but due
to the heat of the day most of
HOUSE
them shied away from that
part of the most successful
Pomeroy,
observance.
is now the collecting agency
for Columbus &amp; Southern
The accompanying photos
Ohio Electric Company.
catch the day's mood.
You can pay your electric
bill at this store.

NOTICE!

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By JO ELLEN DIEHL
Meigs High Alumni are reminded that Friday, June 22 L• the
last day to purchase tickets for t he a lumni dance or to pay
membership dues. The dance will be held at Meigs High Sc,hool
gymnasiUm and will feature ' 'Wha1e," group from Co1umbus
· with aluninus Jim Wildermuth in it. Refreshments will also be
served at the dance .
Ticke~s are available to allimni and their guests at $2 each
and membership dues are $1. These can be obtained at New York
Clothing House, Pomeroy; Village Pharmacy or Quality Print
Shop, Middleport, or Miller Brothers, Rutland . Reservations can
also be made by sending the money in care of Jo Ellen Diehl,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

a

THI OO'IUNMII!NTOf
DEPMIT M CN! 0 ~ THE TREII SUR'r'
OfFIC E O F REVE NU E SH,'I.R IN G
19 00 PENN S YLVAfli iA AVE N W
WI\ SH IN GTO N , 0 C 2 0 226

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l&gt;.mcwtnQ rt"""•"' •~•• of VOYI i "'' ldo~I &gt;On

&gt;

LETART TOWNSHIp
Pl .t.NS TO EXPEND ITS REVENUE SHARING .t.UOCAT ION
FOR fH6. ENri TLEMHOl HRIOO U GI NNIN G

JAN .

1, 1973

IN HI{

,t,NDENDING

FO~LOWING MANN(~

ESTIMAUO TOTA L OF
AVOIO 0[81 II&lt; C'IEASE
U SS EN ~ EB II N C II ! .O. S E

VISITING WITH HER parents this month is Becky Card,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Beech St., Pomeroy .
'J ohn Citro, Becky 's husband, bas been stationed in Guam the
past 6 months, but Becky has been keeping bu,s y working with
retarded chil&lt;lren where they reside near Robbins Air Force
Base, Georgia. John will return home some\ime next month.
Avid Cincinnati fans, Becky and her parents took in the recent
Reds-cardinals games and also stopped at King's Island .

0

Will PA fV EN II NCRO.S t IN ,

fiA TE OF "M"JOA T"K

D
X

NO HF! CT

TOO SOON TO
• ~ PII H MCT EFFECT

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WILlAl PVC E ... III PU NT OF "-'ll

INCAlli S! Ill .. "1"-10 R T.t.)(
NO E&lt;F!CI Pf'I I .. Xl E'&lt;H S

JUNE JO , 1973

l..,:iEO UI'ON .. N

51,260

ACCOUNT NO
J6 l

053 005

LETART TOWNSHIP
TWP . CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
RAC"INE , OHIO 45771

ALSO VISITING WITH relatives this month is William B.
Ledlie, Langsville, home from his work with SEDCO oil on a rig
off the ~oast of Nigeria. The company is centrally located in Las
Palmas in the Canary Islands.

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SOAKING UP THE SUN are Rick Van Metre, Eddie Brown,
_and Mike Taylor. They are in Winter Park, Florida, for the
summer working at summer jobs.
MRS. JAMES NASH REPORTS that the family pet beagle
stirred up some excitement at their home in Happy Hollow
recently. The dog gave birth to one pup Tuesday. Mrs. Naah,
thinking that the dog had lost the other pups, didn't expect any
more. Then on the following Sunday night S more pups arrived!

•

HOSNI SH. Saleh, Cairo,
and
Margrethe ,
Egypt,
Hallermann, West Germany,
were among the visitors from
faraway places here for
Regatta Weekend.
Saleh and Miss Hallermann
are in the United States under
sponsorship of the Columqus
Area International Program,
and were accompanied to
Pomeroy by Dr. and Mrs.
Albert Lovejoy. Mrs. Lovejoy
is associated with the State
Library of Ohio and the four
came to Pomeroy on the invitation of Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja
of the Meigs Library Extension
Service.
Saleh is currently the
houseguest of the Lovejoys.
Both he and Miss Hallermann
are participating in an exchange program and spend
time in the offices Of the

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FOUR MEIGS COUNTY students have received letters of
acceptance from the All Ohio Youth Choir. They are David Miller
and Patty Glaze who will represent Meigs High School and Roma
Nease and Jill Warner who will represent Southern Hlgll School.
The choir. ls made up of students from all 88 Ohio counties and
·
performs yearly at the Ohio State Fair.

THE POMEROY GIRLS Softball Team got into the act of Friday's re gatta parade wearillj!,
their game uniforms.

.

Tuppers PI alliS
Society News
ByMril. EvelynBrfckles
Sunday School attendance at
the Methodist Church was 69
and offering $37.47. Worship
attendance was 26 and offering
was $26.85.
Mrs . . Neisel Weatherman
spent several days with her
brother, . Mr. and Mrs. Eldred
Grimes of Athens and attended

ch urch serv ices there.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Flanders were sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Spencer and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks
have rented the trailer lot of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Millhone
and moved their trailer there .
Monday evening whille helping
. to move the trailer, her son,
Tommy Watson , received a
hand injury · requiring 16

stitches.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack Stanley of
Athens called on her brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
Monday evening.
Mr . and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles had as dinner gqests
Tuesday evening, Rev . and
Mrs. Jacob Lehman.

Herbert L. S.yre .

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Herbert L.Sayr~~·~C~Ie~r~k~~~~~~~~~~========t:~~==~==~==~~

June 11, 1973
The Vietnam War was the
longest in l,I .S. history, dat·
ing back officially to Jan .. I,
1961.

Saleh and M~rgrethe HaUermann, wbo were guests of the
Meigs Library Extension Service during the regatta.

The Deily Senflnel

,.

various social agencies in
Franklin County .
After taking in the flower
show, the midway, the flea

market and the various other
Regatta activities, Saleh, Miss
Hallermann , and Dr . and Mrs.
Lovejoy were taken on a tour of

MISS REGATTA MAJORETTE QUEENS were selected
in severa l age brackets as a baton twirling contest held
Sunday at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport as a
part of the Big Bend Regatta . They Included : I tor, Tawny
Broadbent, East Liverpool, ()..6 years; Sherry Belville,
Columbus, 9-10; Cindy Patterson, Syracuse, 11·12; Michile

the Meigs Mine and the Gavin
Plant by John Reece , Ohio
Power Co. public relations
coordinator.

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

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I Social I

sWEEPSTAKES AWARD - Mrs. Hiram Fisher was the
winner or the sweepstakes award for accumulating the most
points for ribbons re~eived in the horticulture divisi~n.' M.t s.
· Fisher, a member of the Wildwond Garden Club, exhib•ted 15
speci mens of l'oses, lilies and iris.

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l·Calendad
.1\'IONDAY
· MIDDLEPORT · Garden
'Club, borne of .Mrs. Sibley
Slack, 7:30p.m. Amateur and
1Cheahlre Garden Club mem·
' bers invited.
' BEND 0' the River Garden
Club, 7:30p.m . at the home of
• Mrs. Ernest Wingett.

"BEST OF SHOW" - Mrs. Bert Grinun of the Bend 0' the River Garden Club was the
trophy winner lor the "best, of show" in the classes of arli.stic design. She was presented the
- trophy by the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs' judge, Mrs. L1yde Mitche ll, right, for her black
·
and white modern arrangement depicting "Southern Ohio on the Climb."

Veterans Memurlol Hospital
Discharges Saturday - Vera
Hayman, Ahlili White, Estella
Deem, OrvilJe Jones, Sharon
Warner , Betty Hawley, Samuel
McKinney Jr., Edward Willett
and Maude Connolly.
Discharges Sunday
Christi ne Freeman, Clifford
Jenkin s on, Grego r y Hay es,
Raymond Adams, William
Buckley, Grace Blue, Lydia
Ebers bae h , Jack Spires,
Timothy Ball and Effie Wa~
son.

0' the River ; Mrs. Pat Holter,
Chester.
"Tadpole to a Toadpole,"
fi gurine :
feat urin g frog
( Junior Division), Maria
Legar, blue : Elaine Barnhart,
red; Jay Carpenter, yellow ,
with white robbins bein g
Garden
Club ;
Mrs . awarded
to'
the
other
WOLFPEN
. Wil son Ca rpe nter, Bend exhibitors, Lori Ann WoOO,
O' the River : Mrs. Robert Linda Rosenbaum, Anna
Mrs . Nora Johnson of Grove
Lewis, Winding Trail ; Mrs. Pat Wiles, Shari Mitch and Sheila City return ed home afte r
Holter, Chester.
Sargent.
spending two weeks with Mrs. -'·
"NatW'e 's Wonder ," using
"Dish Gardens." juniors : He len J ohn s on and other
weathered or driftwond : Mrs. Maria Legar, Shari Mitch, re latives.
James Carpenter, Rutland Lori Ann Wood and Anna
Friendly ;
Mrs.
Robert Wiles.
Thompson, -Windin g _Trail;
Hortit•dture Division
Mrs. Ricard Coliins, Winding
Hybrid Tea Roses: Mrs. E toilt a Ca ss ell , Middl eport
· Trail; Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Robert Snowden, Hulland Garden Club, white .
Bend O' the River.
Friendly Gardeners, both bl ue
Large foli age plants: Mrs.
" Would You Believe," and red; Mrs. Hiram Fisher, Robert Thompson , Windin g
modern design: Mrs. Wilson Wildwond , both yellow and TraiL
Carpenter, Bend 0' the River ; white.
Three educa tiona l classes
Mr s. Robert Thompson,
Floribunda : Mrs . Hiram were included in the show.
Winding Trail; Mrs. James Fisher, blue ; Mrs . Rober t Vilma Pikkoja of the Meigs
Titus, Rutland ; Mrs. Robert Snowden, red , yellow and Bookmobile Service, displayed
Canaday, Rutland.
white.
books on gardeninl!: , flower
"Good Old _S ummer Time,"
Grandiflora : Mrs
Richard arranging and the area 's
traditional : Mrs. James Barton, Chester ; Mrs . Robert natural reso ur ces in an
Catpenter Rutland Friendly i -snow11en, red and ye llow; Mrs. education class called " In the
Mrs. RObert T~omp son , Win· Hiram Fisher, white,
Garden of Knowledge. ' '
ding Trail ; Mrs Robert Lewis,
Climber :
Mrs .
Hiram
Wea th er ed a nd driftwo ~ d
Winding Trail; Mrs. Robert Fisher, blue and red ; Mrs. were exhibited by Mrs Hornet
Snowden, Rutland .
Rose Ginther, Chester Garden Parker a nd Mrs . James
" Knee Deep," frog fi gurine Club, yellow; and Mrs . Howard Car pe'nter in a category,
in natural se tting : Mrs. Nolan, Pomeroy Club, while . ' 'Drifting on the Ohio,' ' and M.
Howard Nolan, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Iris : Mrs. Hiram Fisher, a nd R . Bargainland, Mid Earl Thoma, Winding Trail ; blue, red and white; Mrs. _ dleport, showed pest con trol
Mrs . James Titus, Rutland ; Richard Barton, yellow.
materials in " In A Pes t Free
Mrs. Ada Holter Chester.
Peruvian Daffodil: .Mrs . Garden" class .
"Pollution on the Ohio · Bar:ton, blue ; Mr s. Hir am
Particularly attra~tive for
Riv e r I J
dimensional Fisher, red yellow and white . the show were the class
arrangement : Mrs. Richard
Citrus Plants : ·Mrs. Richard · mark ers. Mad~ by Mrs.
Collins, Winding Trail; Mrs. Collins, blue ; Mr s. Loretta Margaret Ella Lewis, they
Wilson Carpenter, Bend 0' the Beegle, red ; Mrs. John Terrell, were ceramic lily pads holding
Ri ver; Mrs. Bert p-rimm, Bend Winding Trail, yellow ; Mrs. frog replic,as.

Mrs. Grimm, Mrs. Fisher
cop flower show honors

' BLOODMOBILE, 1 to 6 p.m.
' at Pomeroy Elementary
School. Donors welcome.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Orderof .
beMolay, 7:30 p.m. Regular
meeting and' initiation. of
Mrs. Bert Grimm, with an
~andidates; also mothers club exquisite arrangement
will meet in basement.
depicting "Southern Ohio on
MIDDLEPORT . Garden the Climb" and Mrs. Hiram
, ·Club, 8 p.m., at home of Mrs. Fisher with an array of
' Sibly Slack. Guests will ·he beautiful rose , iris and daffodil
; Cheshire Garden Club and specimensshared top honors at
, Middleport Amateur Garden the Regatta flower show staged
Club. Hostesses: Mrs. Slack, in the showroom of the
Mrs. Tom Cassell and Mrs. C. Pomeroy Motor Co.
0. Fisher.
Mrs. Clyde Mitchell, ZanesMEN'S FELLOWSHIP, ville, an accredited judge of the
Meigs County Churches of Ohio Association of Garden
Christ, will meet at 7:30p.m. at Clubs, described the· show as
Zion Church of Christ.
"one of the most outstanding as
imagination
and
VACATION Bible school to
starting Monday at Sutton creativeness" she had ever
United Methodist Church, 9:30 judges She commented on the
a.m . to 11 a .m . each day . setting - an air conditioned
. Children of community invited. showroom overlooking the
Beautiful Ohio - and was most
TUESDAY
GROUP
!1, . Women 's complimentary on the talents
Association, Middleport First of the arrangers .
Mrs. Grimm was the winner
United Presbyterian Church, 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ed- of the "Best of Show" entry in
the artistic designs entry and
ward Burkett.
CHESTER Council 323, was presented a trophy . Mrs.
Daughters of America, 8 p.m. Fisher with 15 entries in the
at the hall. Quarterly birthdays horticulture division acto be · observed. Potluck cwnulated more points for
ribbon awards than other
refreshments.
exhibitors and wa s the
FRIENDLY Circle of Trinity recipient of the sweepstakes
Church picnic, 6 p.m. at award .
roadside park on right on U. S.
Sponsored by the Mei gs
Rt. 33. Guest night to · be ob· County
Garden
Club
setved. Mrs. Albert Woodard Association , Mrs . Richard
will have vesper service.
Collins and Mrs . . Jack Hart
POMEROY Chapter 186 were c&lt;rehairpersons for the
OES 7:45 p.m., initiation of ahow which had a total of 78
two 'Cllndidates. Officers will entries in the horticulture,
wear gowns.
division , and 48 entries in the
WOMEN 'S Auxiliary of arrangement division .
Veterans Memoria[ Hospital,
Ribbon winners in the ar·
June meeting, 7•30 at the listie design division , listed
hospital.
blue for first, red for second ,
yellow for third and white for
WEDNESDAY
YOUNG WIVES Club 7:30 fourth , respectively, were as
,
p.m., at home of Karen Young. follows:
" In a Rose Garden," using
BOSWORTH Council 46,
roses: Mrs . Robert Snowden,
Royal and Select Masters,
·Rutland Friendly Gardeners;
assembly at 7:30p.m., Masomc
Mrs. Richard Collins, Winding
Temple, regular transaction of
Trail Gard~ n Club; Mrs .
bU!iness, election of officers,
Robert Lewis, Winding Trail;
and insta11ation . Pomeroy
Mrs . Robert Thompson,
Chapter R.A.M ., installation
Windin g Trail.
to he held following Bosworth
"Come Up and See Me Some
eoundl meeting . All rituals of
Time," using frog figurine in
Pomeroy
Chapter
and
modern arrangement : Mrs .
Bosworth Council to he on the
James
Titus.
Rutland ·
desk of the secretary.

Schibik, Charleroi, Pa., 13-14; Phyllis Ann Arsdale,
Columbus, 10-20, firs! runner-up in that age group. First
place in the latter group was won by Marvia Mosier, Celina,
and Cindy Hunter, Belpre, was first in the 7-3 age group. Mrs.
Judy Ri ggs was director of the Sunday contest.

ATCAPITALU
Paula Hauber, s tudent ~ t
Eastem High School, is attending Buckeye Girls' State a t
Capital University, Columbu s,
this week under sponsorship of
Feeney ~ Bennett Post 128,
America n Legion Auxiliary.
Mi ss Hauber was an &lt;Jiternatc
to Tony a Keebaugh, a delegate
who wa s Wlable to attend .

Wolfpen

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
merfleld and daughters of
'
lllinois, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mr . and Mrs. Ha ymond Russell, Mr. and Mrs . Steve
Allen s worth and family , Haggy of Akron and Mr . a~d
Jeilnnie , Rae Ann , and Joe of Mrs. Ronald Russell and
Grove port were the weekend Amanda of Fort Mead, Md. ,
guests of her mother, Mrs , were weekend v~i tors of Mr.
Lettie Roush.
and Mrs. Robert Russell .
Mr. and Mrs. Jed Russell of
Oregon
came to spend some
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe
and c hildr en, Tra cy and time wilh his parents, Mr. a nd
Steven, Columbus, spent the Mrs. Howard Russell and other
weekend here visiting her relatives.
Mrs . Walter Jordan of
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brad.
Galilpolis, Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
ford Mnag .
of Albany and Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow and Franklin Russell of Middleport
daughter, New Philadelphia, and Karim Gilkey, Albany,
spent the weekend in Syracuse visited with Mr. and Mrs.
with his parenl&lt;&gt;, Mr . and Mrs. Lincoln RusselL
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp
Rober t Crow .
Mr ~ and Mrs. Mike Hammer and family and Miss Jo Smith
and daugh ter, Kim, of spent a weekend with Mr. and
Columbus; and Mrs. Howard Mrs. Worley and family or
Nic.holson, Athen s , were Daniels, W. Va
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich .
Mr s. E lizabe th Cha se of
Dayton is the guest of her
sister, Mlss Helen Lochary,
and Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Lochary.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Beegle and
family of Worthington were
Rega tta weekend . gue~ l.&lt;l of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Crow, SYracuse, and Mrs .
Theodore Beegle, Pomeroy .

SUMMER
SANDALS
For the
'Entire .F11mily

heritage
house
Your thorn MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE
' I

e

ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
POWERFUL COMPACT

4,000 BTU OF COOLING UJMFORT

ALL MODELS ON SALE NOWI
Choose From 5,000 BTU's

BTU's In Stock

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

'

�o

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Ge,t Res'ults!
Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET

S3895

Notice

- - - - -----,

Patronize
YOUR UNION
BARBER SHOPS

Caprice 4-door , new car t it le &amp; beige color with brown

Karr's Barber Shop

vinyl roof, ti nted glas$, factory air, front &amp; rear guards.
radio &amp; rear speaker , whi1e wall tires, nice and clean .

Pomeroy

Retails at $4860. Priced ·to move.
1972 BUICK SKYLARK350
$3195
4-door factory alr, automat ic fr~n~mi s~ ion ,. power
steering , custom Interior, dark green ftn •sh, t1res like new
and spare never used . Deluxe bumper, radio, and many
other extras. Less than 13,000 miles, tr uly sharp .
1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
$2995
4-wheel drive, auxiliary top, locking front hubs, V-8,
automatic transm iss ion, power steering &amp; brakes. local
low mileage , l -ear owner , rad io, spare never used .

Mayer&amp; Hill
Barber Shop
Pomeroy
Pa id For by Barbers'
Loca l No. 400.

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale

For sale

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
Th is machine darns, em broiders, O~Jercasts , button
ho.les . All
without
at tachments . Pay balance of
$38 .50 or pay SS per month.
Call 992 ·5331.
6· 10·tfC

I

-----FORD BALER - with motor,

BARNEY
I'LL BE WIF '&lt;E IN
TWO SHAKES Of A
SHEEP 'S TA I L,SNUFFY ··

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

------

COAL. Limestone, Excel,;.ior ·
Salt Work s, E . Ma in&gt; 51 .,
extra good condition . Contact
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Kenneth Hartley .• Phone 992·
4·12-tfc
6320 .
6· 1J.6k

Vn Most American Cars

Pels For Sale

- ~UARANTEEO­

REDUCE excess fluids with
Fluldex - Lose we ight with BEAUTIFUL male Bellas w ith
bowl. $1. 79. Showalter 's WetDex -A -Diet
capsules
at
Pet Shop.
Nelson Drugs.
6-17-6tc
6·18·31p

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy , 0 .

AMANA Air -Cond itioner , 15,000 CHARLIE - a young. frisky,
BTU, Used 2 months. Call 949border collie needs country
2934.
home. Call Athens 593-8155.
6-17·4tc
6-15·6tc

VETERANS

EXPERIENCED
Radiata

Service

1

From the taroest Truck or
Bulldoz.er Radiator to the
~ ma11est Heater Core .
'
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec.ialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
1-'h . 992-2174
Pomeroy
l. - - - - - --1

LET US HELP YOU

---

In Memory

AT HOME

-.

Auto Sales

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

For Your Mobile Homelando-No Down Payment

HOW ABOUT THe UNIVERSITIES
OF MASSACIIUSI:TTS OR
CONNECTICUT AS TRANSFER
POSSIBI LtTres, BIMO~

Qualify Today, Call

304-485-3809

ALL-WEATHER

NO WAY,

I J UST [)ON'T
T~INK

SI R.,!

WOOD TRUSSES

.. ~ .

,

Mobile Homes For Sale

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

W£ C:AN'T t;I.T A

GOING TO A SC~OOL
WHOSE NAME. I'D NEVER

I'D l=EEI..

QU ITe RIGHT. ..

lt.Ef(.llfNCf.

BE AB~E TO SPEL~
CORRECTt..Y

Choose your own t:ome from

fllOM

DUll. LAST E14PLo"ti!Jt

your AREA DEALER.

•• Hf."'S

SUff£~1rt~

fllOM A N£1tVOU.S

POMEROY
AUTO
HOME

BUAlti&gt;OWN

U 'L ABNER
. NATCHE.R~

FURNITURE

IT'S-UGH!-

THE. HEAD OF
HARvARD'S NEW
DEPARTMENT
OF HILL-BII..L'f
STUDIES ARRIVES

SOAP!!
AN' IT'S

., A -COM IN'

FuM YO'!!

Wanted To Buy

----~~~

MOM?

'I

BANK FINANCING

OFFICE SUPPLIES

- - -- --

~
~

GO RIGHT ON I N
AN' MAKE '&lt;ORESELF

Business Services

EXCELSIOR Sail Works, E .
Main St., Pomeroy . All kinds
oi salt water pellets, water
nuggets, block salt and own
Ohio River .Salt. Phone 992 ·
3891 ,
6-S·tfC

Man or Woman
Specialist
Reliable person from th is area GRAVE lots in T~:~ppers Plains ,
Wheel
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, S75
to service and collect from
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
Cheap . Boat, rnotor, trailer .
and $85. Also Siamese kittens,
automat
ic
dispensers.
No
ex
Alignment
Golden Bahr, Athen s, Ohio
POMEROY, OHIO
$10. Phone 1-256 -6247, Kennels
&amp;
oerlen c e needed - we. estab lish
Roofing - Roof Painting,
45701 .
of Calhoun.
-- - - - - -- -·-·
accounts
tor
you .
Ca r ,
Spouting
,
Plumbing,
11·6tp
6·
It Must
992-2094
references , an!:~ $995 .00 to
Remodeling , Complete
Be Right
\1 ,995 .00 c ash capital ' nee · 1964 4-DOOR Dodge sedan,
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Building, Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
or we will
ess ay . 4 tO l 'l nours weekly 1
PQOD•E puppies, Toy A.K.C .•
WANT ADS
automatic. 949-4761 .
Siding.
·
Malke il Right.
could net good pa'rt lime in ·
Show quality.
Chocolate INFORMATION
6- 17 ·Wc
come . Full lime more . Fo r local
DEADLINES
IN LOVING memory ol Mary
Phone 992-5443 .
write,
Incl ude 10 GALLON tank with all set-up
PHONE : 992 ·2550
5 ~ 23 . tfc
Eblin on today her birthday, S P .M . Day Before Publi cati on . inte rview ,
and
Mon't:Jay
Deadline
9
a.
m.
lelephone
number
r
June 18th :
pment,
only
S10
.
equ
i
Cancellation
Correct
ions
We cannot send a birthday card , Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
EAGLE INDUSTRIES
Showalter's Wet-Pet Shop.
8-4:30 Daily, 8-11 Sat.
your hand we cannot touch ,
·
6-17-6tc
Oepartmen1
BV
Day of Publ ic at ion
In the R. H. Rawling s Sons
Today there will be no giffs or
REGULATIONS
..
3931 Meadowbrook Road
1969 CHEVROLET truck with
Stop In and See Our
Building .
cake.
Th e Pub li sher reserves lhe St. Louis Park. Minnesofa 5S426 (2) Electrolux .Sweepers deluxe
N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, 0 .
cheater axle 14' dump
N.1ddleport,
0
.
992 -2101
Floor Display.
For the one we loved so much. r igh t to edit or reject any ads
body . Priced to sell. Call 992 model. Cornplete with all
objectional
The
For i n a graveside soft I y deemed
5951.
cleaning attachments and
pub lisher will not be respons ible
steeping,
6·12-61p
tor
more
than
one
incorre
ct
uses
paper
bags
.
Slightly
used
Where the flowers gently wave insert ion .
looks
like
new.
but
cleans
and
ASK US ABOU .T
WANTED - Used merchandise
Lies the one we love so dearly
.
RATES
Will sell for $37 .25 cash or 1972 FORD. Grand Torino, VInyl
- ior auction . We buy, we
Hav e your T.V. Picture Tube
But whom we could not save.
For Want Ad Service
top, Air Conditioned , V -8
terms avail.ilble . Fihone 992PRE. FABRICATED
God alone knows how much we 5 ce nts per Word one Insertion
se ll , whole houS:eful or single
Restored As Good As New
7755.
Engine, p.s. &amp; B. Call anv
Min imum Charge 75c
miss her,
pieces,
consignment
or
Righ1
In Your Home.
time - 949-5081.
6·1Htc
12 cents per word three
percentage . We will haul.
As He counts the tears we shed,
Guaranteed
for 6 Mo.
6· 14-12tc
Phone 992 ·3354. · Hayman ' s.
For He wh is pered . "She is only consecutive insertions .
lB
cents
per
word
si
x
co
n
.
ALMA
Ohlinqer
house
and
lot
sleeping,
6-5·30tc
secutive insertions.
on Lynn Pla ce, Middleport,
Color- $30.00
Your loved one is not dead."
25 Per Cent D iscount on paid
Ohio, will be sold to the 1969 CHEVROLET Chevelle.
24 HOUR SERVICE
So on this her birthday , Forgive ads and ads paid w ithin 10 days . OLD Furn i tu're, oak fables,
good
condition,
V-8
Engine.
Black
&amp; White-$15.00
highest bidder, Tuesday , June
Built to Your ' Spec s
us Lord, we pray ,
CARD OF THANKS
992-2572.
Phone
Wooden ice boxes , brass beds,
19, 1973 at 10: 00 a.m . at the
Delivered to Job Site
&amp; OBITUARY
Shs was so precious , why
or
complete
d is hes
6·15-3tc
office
of J . B. O'"Brien , At.
$1
.50
for
50
word
minimum
.
couldn't she have stayed .
h
ouseholds
;
Wr
ite
M
.
D
.
1
forney , 100 12 Court Street,
Each addit ional word 2c.
Sadly missed by loving
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
BLIND
ADS
Pomeroy, for not less than the
husband, Steve, children and
ca ll 992-6271.
Additional 25c Charge per
appraised value oi $2,500.00.
JOHN TUCKER
949-3151
grandchildren .
Advt&gt;rtisement .
5·13.tfc
Rt
. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
MATERIALS
CO.
For
further
information
call
T-,
6· 18· 1tc
OFFICE HOURS
Racine, Ohio
992-2720.
773 -5554
Mason, W. Va .
992-3954
8:30' a. m . to 5 .00 p.m . Dai l y,
Air
Conditioners
6-1
.4-4tc
8. 30 a· m . to...- 12:00 Noon NO. 1 Copper 54c, radiators,
Saturday .
28c; brass, 20c; batteries. 85c
Awnings
G&amp;t Appliance Repair . repair HOUSE and roo! Pa intinq; READY ·MIX
com·
each: clean dry roots, Gin - HANGING baskets;
CONCRETE
Underpinning
on a.ll laundry equipment,
HOURS for placing applications
interior and exterior, fr€-e
bination pots arid. fflled porch seng, ss2· lb.; yellow root 1 $4;
deliver ed right to your
refrigeration eqvipment and
in the Personnel Department.
es tim ates,· call 992-7008 or 992 boxes. white, pink, and red
mayapple, :t:l5c per lb.; M.A.
project. Fast and easy. Free
hpuse
wiring,
welding,
Holzer Medical Center are
2460
geraniums,
begonias , Comp let e mobile home
Hall, Reedsvil le, Ohio, 378·
es t ima tes . Phone '992 -32 84 .
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
service plus, gigantic
from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., 2:00 to KOSCOT SPECIALS for June
~etunias, Coleus, Zinnias,
6249,
5-21 ·301p
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .,
or after 4:30 p. m. call 992display
of
mobile
homes
4:00 p .m. on Tuesday,
Dianthus,
Snapdragons,
include Family Suntan Oil
Middl
eport, Ohio.
5·6-tfc
6050.
EXCAVATING . Dozers. larg e
Wedn esday, and Thursday .
Ageratium . Cleland Farm always available at .
Spray and Jr. Facial Mask.
6-30-lfc
5·24·30tp
and small ; Backhoes and·
and Greenhouse, E. Main,
6·14-Sic
Also with a purchase of either
l oa ders on track and tires;
Racine . Geraldine Cleland.
AfterShave or Electric PreSEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
WILKINSON Sm all Engine
Dump trucks lo -boy REASONABLE ra tes. Ph . 4466· 14·tfC
Shave by Koscot you receive a
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sales &amp; Ser\lice, 810 3rd St.,
service. Se ptic tanks in Kleansing Kream free . Phone MOBILE HOME space in
4782. Gallipolis, John Russell,
Middleport. Lawn mower
sta ll ed. George (Bill) Pullins ,
Syracuse . Phone 992 -6329 .
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
NOTICE TO
Owner
and Operator.
re pair . Free pi ck up and
phone 992-2478 or 992-7 402 .
6-I ·IIC CLOSE OUT on (41 New zig .zag
CONTRACTORS
6. 1.tfc
5·12-tfc
1210
Washington
Blvd.
delivery.
Phone
992-3092
.
Also
sewing machines. For sewing
STATE OF OHIO
2-9·tfc
423-7521
BELPRE,
0
.
- Briggs and Stratton and
DEPARTMENT OF
stretch fabrics, buttonholes,
NEW fish al Showalter's Wet PRIVATE meeting room for
Tecumcee parts .
TRANSPORTATION
fancy
·
design
s,
etc.
Pa
int
HARRI SON'S TV service and
Pet Shop.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
any organiz.at\on; phone 992 Colum .bus , Ohio
610-6tc
slightly
blemished.
Choice
of
service calls. Phone 992-2522.
Complete Service
J975.
6· 17-31c
June I, 1913
ca r rying case or sewin a 'CASH paid for al! makes and
2-9-tfc
--~~~~Phone 949-3821
Contract Sales Legal Copy
3·11 -tfc
models
of
mobile
home
s.
AU TO A IR conditioning. Serstand . $4; .80 cash Ol' terms
No. 13-545
WANTED - Someone to l l"'e in --~--Racine, Ohio ·
Phone area code 61 4-423.9531.
vice an d repair. Call 992-3802. O'DELL WHEEL .Alignment
·avai lable. Phone 992-7755 .'
UNIT PRI-CE CONT·RACT
Critt
Bradford
and care for elderly woman. TWO tra il er lots .in Middleport;
4· 13.tfc
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
Sealed proposals will be
5·24·301p
If interested ph'one 992-5264,
5·1-ttc
112 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
received at the office ' of the
now back to work. COmplete
any time.
Director of the Oh io Depart .
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
front end serv ice, tune up and
AU TOMOB ILE insurance been
6· 17-3tp
men!
of
T ransportation.
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
·
6"18-5tc
brake
se rvice. . Wh ee ls
ca ncelled?
Lost
your
Columb.us, Ohio, unm \0 :00
SE
WAGE
SYSTEMS
balanced electronicall y. All
operator's license? Call_ 992MODERN 6 room 1 floor plan
.A .M . , Eas.tern Da ylight Saving YARD SA LE - 18th and 19th.
UNIC020 CU. FT.
CLEANED,
REPAIRED .
2966.
work guaranteed . Reasonable
829 ' South 3rd Avenue, Mid - FURNISED 4 room apartment,
Time, Tuesay, June 26, 1973, tor
home
with
deta c hable
MILLER SANITATION,
improvem_ents in :
Mason .
Ph one
773-5147,
rates . Phon ~ 742-3232.
d(e,port back of Blue Tartan
garage. All newly painted .
6· 15.1fc
STE WART, OH 10. PH. 662·
Parts 1 to 4 inc lusive are
Reynolds Apartment.
2·18-tfc
located on nice level lot 50' x
6-17-2tc
3035.
offered as one contract and wiil ~-::-:-c--:-c---­
6· 12-0tp
120' ·at 619 Page St., M id·
be considered on th e basis of the SiX-FAMILY yard sale with a
10·4-ttc
PAINTERS . We wi ll pain.!
dleport, Ohio. For fUrther
total amount bid .
.
for
rent
near
Meigs
HOUSE
anything
inside
or
out.
949variety of clothing , furnitur e
details, contact David R.
Part l to4 inclusive
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
Mine No. 1. Married couple
2621.
and odds and ends. June 22 -23
Yates, 23 Grandview Road,
Hocking , Me igs and Vinton
ser vi c;e, all makes. 992 -2284.·
preferr
ed.
Ca11742"5986
after
5
All
other
sizes.
at
sale
6-17-3tc
9 a.m. to 5 p.m . look for sate
Cambridge, Ohio, 43725.
Count ies. Ohio , on roads and
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
p. m .
facil iti es,
HOC -MEG -VIN,
signs on Rt. 124 between
prices.
6-lS·tfC
Authorized Singer Sales anc'
HOcking H ills State Park, Lake
6· 17-Jtc
---'--~--'--Crossroads and Rt. i By-Pass .
Serv ice. We Sharpen Scissors.
Logan S tate Park , Forked Run
· :Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
6· 11·5tp
POMEROY
HOUSE for sa le by ow ner, J
State Park and Lake Hope State - - : - - ; - - - - 3·29·tfc
ALL
ELECTRIC
like
new
3
Broker
.
Y •. - Jack Carsey, Mgr.
bedrooms , new furna ce, roof,
Park, DEPARTMENT OF
rooms
with
large
b1th
.;
NATUR AL RESOURCES ,. in
6ldl
Phone 992-2181
and wiring . . Wall -to -wall
WILL TRIM or cut trees or
11 Mechanic Street '
Electric wall oven, ta~IE top
Benton. Fa lls, Olive and Brown
carpeting, large lot, ca rport.
shrubbery. Also paint roofs . .
~------------~
Po.m eroy,•Ohio 45769
Townships,
by
unif Ormly HOUS.EWORK by the day, will
range, larg e closet. located on
Phone 949-3221.
Look for iron fence in front
spreading and co mpa cting
E . Main st~. Pomerov . SPP In (31
also do house cleaning . Work
NEW
1973
ZIG
.
ZAG
and
pine
trees
in
side
yard.
NEW
LISTING
6· 13-30tc
aggregate In· part and by ap appreciate. Ph . Gallipolis
guaranteed. Ma xine Profitt
SE WING MACHINE S in
Contact Mr . 'Eldon Walburn , .162ACRES All
minerals.
plying a bituminous surface
Sellers, Rt . 1, Racine, Ohio,
446-9539 .
origi nal factory carton . ZJg .
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy ,
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
treat ment .
.,
Good , 2 bedroom home w ith
843·2712
.
5·29-lfc
Ohio. Phone 992·2805 .
Zag to make buttonholes. sew
Pavement Width - Varies .
and backhoe work; septic
ba
t
h,
drilled
well.
and
concrete
6· 17.3tc
Pro/·ect and Work Length on buttons, monograms, and
tank s ins t a ll~d ; dump trucks
6· 13 tic
Basem@'nt
barn
.
A
real
porch
.
8,489 · ee l or 1.61 miles .
fanc(
designs
with
just
and
to-boys for hire ; will haul
make
·,o8
buy at a little over $111.00 per
3 AND 4 ROOM f urn ished and
"T he date se t for complet io n
the
twist
o
a
sing
le-dial.
Left
!ill
dirt,
top soil, l imestone
HOUSEKEEPER
needed.
Fred
s
ROOM
house
with
bath
on
E.
MAIN._
_
_
_,
acre.
unfurnished
apartments .
of this work sha ll be as se t forth
in
la
y-a-way
and
never
been
gravel
; Call Bob or Roger
and
C.
Kesterson
.
Phone
992-6668
.
large
lot
in
upper
end
of
in the bidding proposal. "
Phone 992·S434.
NEW LISTING
used. Will se ll for only $47
POMEROY
s,
day
phone 992-7089 ;
Jeffer
attic,
out
Syracuse
.
Large
6·13·61p
Each bidder shall be required
4-12-tfc
170 ACRES - Minerals, free
cash. or terms available .
nigh t phone 992 ·3525 or 992 .
to t i le with his bid a cer t ified
buildings . $7,000. Call 949·2595
Electro Hygiene Co. Phone
5232.
check for an amount eQual to
OUT OF TOWN
befOre 2:30p.m. or any ftme gas, 25 acres of bottom in
2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
meadow. Balan ce pasture and
992 -2984.
five per cent of his bid , bul in no
Jl/ 2 acres.
Nice lay ing
2·11·tfc
on
weekends
.
cond it io ned . Racine area.
e\o'ent more than ten thousand
some timber . Gambrel roof
6-17-7tc
6-4·12tc
ground
.
4
bedroom
s.
Modern
dollar s, or a bond for ten per
Phone 992 ·6329.
bank barn , 36 x 50. Drilled well
SEE US FOR : Awn inqs, storm
bath . lots of base and upper
cent of his bid. payable to the
5·23·1fc E LE CTROL U X
vacuum
and
ni ce large stream. 3
doors and windows, carports,
Director.
kitchen
,
also
cabinets
in
the
cleaner. A-1 condition, uses RIVER frontage on Ohio River bedr Qom modern home in
marquees, aluminum siding ·
DELIVERY DRIVER
Bid ders · mu s·t app ly, on the
a range. Bar room. Storm
across from Pomeroy on West
paper bags, ha ~ cordwinder
and railing . A . Jacob, sa .les
Athens
County.
Ask
in
g
proper forms, for qualifications
doors &amp; windows . Home is 4
Virg ihia Side Right in Center
and many attachments. Also
at leas ! ten day s prior to the
r~presentative .
For free
$60,000.00.
years
old.
$16.900.00.
of Regatta, sail~y beach,
shampooer a.t tachment in ·
date se t tor ope ning bids ·in
1
estimates,
phone
Charles
HOOD'S AQ.UARIUMS: fish
NEW
LISTING
shade, water and electricity. I
MIDDLEPORT
accordance with Chap ter 5525
eluded. {On ly 4 available) at·
lisle,
Sy
ra
cuse,
V. V.
af'ld
supplies.
new
loca
tion,
RUTLAND
12
room
Home,
6
have two lots surveyed, 100ft.
Ohio Re\o'ised Code .
liv ing
room.
Kitchen .
$37.70
cas h
or
terms
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
Ash
Street,
Middte·port,
nea
r
Full or Part Time
Plans and specifications are
wide at low water level , 450ft. bedrooms,_bath , porch, carport
Dining Room . 2 bedrooms .
availabl e. Electro Hygiene
park,· Phone 992 -5443.
3·2-tfc
on file in !he Department ot
to ra ilroad tracks, 87ft. wide and excellent location with
Co.
Phone
992·2982.
Bath . 2nd floor unfinished
1.7.tfc
Transportation and the off ice ot
at
railroad
tracks
.
The
lots
larg
e
yard
.
Want
only
No experience necessary.
6-17-7tc
but ha s new stairway to lt . .EL NA and White Sewing
the District Deputy Director .
are all cleaned and mowed $12,000 .00.
Must have car and be
Storm windows. Lot 100x125.
Machines ... Service on all
The Director reserves the
GFo!OC E RY business for sa le .
PUBLIC AUCTION
off. Marion Reynolds, Maso'l,
NEW LISTING
willing to learn.
right to re ject any and all bids .
JUST ,$5,000.00.
m-akes. Reaso nable rates.
Building for sa le or lease. SATURDAY. June 23rd, 1L OO
W. Va. , 773·5147. Reynolds SYRACUSE - 6 room frame
J . PHILLIP RICH LEY
RACINE
The Sewing Center , M i d .
Flower Shop.
Phone 773-5618 fro.m 8: 30p.m.
01 RECTOR
house basement, garage with
dl eport, Ohio.
10
Acres
about
6
level.
Home
Rev . 9 -29 ·72.
Mon : thru Fri.
to 10 p .m . for appointment.
a.'r.have so ld my farm and ___ _ _ _ _ _ __6_·_13-6tp utility.. Level lot. All utilities.
11 · 16. Jtc
2 bedrooms . Bath. Full
3-20-tfc
Call9-8,
446-0677
will se ll the following per- NEW RANCH HOME - 1 acre Asking $5,000.00.
(6) 1 L JB, 2tc
base ment. Electric heat. Is
sonal property at th e farm
POMEROY
OOZE R and back hoe work,
MR. VANCE
about 12 years old . A BUY
located 21!:2 miles off Sta te
lot. City water . A well - 2 BEDROOMS - Bath , f ull
ponds and septic tanks, ditch KNAPP shoes, 10 pet. to 28 pet .
AT JUST $15,000.00.
Route 124. Leave Sta te Route
,designed house plan by W. G. basement with shower, gas
ing service ; top soil, fill dirt.,
off on 16 styles . Order now.
FURNISHED HOME
124lustwest of Rutland, Ohio,
Best Homes consisting· oi furnace , and ' porch . Lafge lot.
limestone; B&amp;K Excavatinq.
Supply limited. Phone 992·
N EED ' a lady to live in or work
A · large level lot 100x135. 1112
on County road 13 and follow large living room with dining Only $7500.00 .
5324.
Phone 99 2-5367 or' 992·3861.
by da y. Phone 992 -5585 .
'SLEEPING ROOM . Will give
story
frame . 2 bedrooms .
sale
signs.
l,
3
bedrooms
inCluding
9-1-tfc
5
:
30-tfc
6-17,3tc
NEAR
SHOPPING.
board if desired. Call 773-5341
1965 Dodge 4-Door. Dart
master bedroom with fUll
bath . Dining room . Kitchen
NICE
after 6 p.m.
2
BEDR'OOMS
Handy
with 6 wheels and tires.
bath, a large 32' x 11' com has late model G. E . Range,
baskets,
com6· 1B·3tp PART or FULL·TIME JOB, HANGING
kitchen, bath , gas furnace,
Excellent
condition
.
Tappan
binatlon
klt&lt;:hen-family
room
,
Ref. Dryer and Deep Freeze.
evenings ~ weekend . Call on
bination pots and fille d porch
Gas Range, Sunray Gas
and 2 full baths . Under main front and side concrete porch
Nice porch. Storm doors and
family
who
have
requested
boxes, white, pink and red
5 ROOM house. in Rac ine area.
Range,
Small
G. E .
floor is a full basement or with w rought iron posts. Just
$8,500.00 .
windows.
information
on
Encyclopedia
geraniums,
begonias,
992-6329 .
Refrigerator , Maytag Dryer,
lower level which can be $15,000 .00.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Britann
ica.
No
canvassing
.
petunias , coleus, z. inn la s,
6-18-tfc
Maytag Wri nger Washer ,
finished if desi red . To make
11S ACRES
Preset appointments up fo
like
new
1971
mobile
home. 3
dianthus, sn~pdragon s, an d
this a comp l ete ly quality HUNTING LAND All
Double rinse tubs, Sectiona l
$100 a week commiss ion or
bedrooms . Bath . Lovely
ageratium. Cleland Farm and
sofa and other li ving room
home a full 2-car garage is minerals, plenty of locust. 6
more for full time. For in kitchen and dining area.
Greenhouse, E. Main, Racine .
furni
ture,
J;~,
Bed
compl
ete,
included.
Financin g arranged room hou~e . barn and several
terview, ca ll Mr . Clift,
Gerald ine Cleland.
Large lot. in new addition.
Chest
of
Drawers,
Dressers,
with
tow
down
payment.
For
bui ldings. Asking $19,500.00
Parkersburg, 304-422 -3771 or
6·13.tf c
GOING
AT JUST $6,800.00.
Antiques Buffet, 2 Dinette
all detail s · and an ap Zanesvf lle, Ohio 453, 4337, be ·
NEW LISTING
CALL US FOR A QUICK
Se
t
s,
Venetian
Blinds
pointmen
t
to
see
home,
call
tween 10: 00 and 12:00 noon .
8 YEARS OLD - 2 bedrooms,
SA'LE
O.N
YOUR
Cur tains, Wheat Mine Lamp
992-5976 or Columbus cot . bath with shower . Full
6-17-6tc MOBILE Home for sale, .12 x 60
PROPERTY.
&amp;
Charger,
New
Traditional
teet
235-1996.
with expando, completely
HENRY E. CLELAND
furnished . carpeting, air Light Fi xture Antique Brass
6-1J.tfc basement . Nice living roorn .
COOK, waitress and carhop ;
with fireplace. l -ear garage.
BROKER .
conditioned,
50ft.
pat
io,
large
&amp;
iuf:ls
Finish,
Stone
_
jars
appi y in person , Crow's Steak
$18.500.00 .
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
lol, 592· 1753, Athens.
·
stands,
Baby
b
.
ed
,
High
cha1r,
992-2259
FARM
for
sale,
77
acres
of
land,
House.
NEWLIHING
6· 15·7tc · Battery radio. Picnic table,
No. Answer 992 -2568
Thotdson and family of
pasture, fruit trees, water tap
5· 10·1fc --~--145 ACRES - 15 in corn. Large
Gli der. Power Saw, Platform
paid,
necessary
farm
Cedarville, Mr. and Mrs .
barn
several outbuildings. 7
Scales. 2-wheel Trailer , Wood
buildings, 5 room house with
house, bath, basement,
r
oom
ho~:~se . Some fences in
saw with 3 belts, New Stiht
Raymond Snyder and Cecil of QUALIFIED refrigeration 5 ROOM
bath , carpeting and panelling.
gas heat. 21ots, S. D ~ Buskirk,
se rv iceman , industrial ,
Rutland Township. 122,500.00.
Chain Saw (020AVL 1 horse
Big Capacity
Call
992
·7
304.
Hysell
Run
Colwnbus yisited with Mr. and . commercia l. dom es tic , good
341' Page Street, M iddleport .
electr ic motor with grinder,
Maytag
Road.
Phone 992-5487.
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna and "T pay and working conditions.
severa l small motors, 3 Fen'ce
Automatic.s
VISIT
with
us
ahd
see
the
6·1
J.6tc
6-15·3tp
Mus t be experienced. Gallia
2 speed operat~on .
chargers, 2 hydraulic /'acks ,
Wavie
Circle a recent
.bargains . Where can you buy
Refrigeration Co., 611 3rd -----~C.h.oice
of water
80ft.
Wire
Cable,
a
lot
o
hand
SPACIOUS
early
American
land for only a little more than
weekend.
Ave ., Gal lipo hs, 446-4066.
temps
.
Auto .
'69 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill, P.S .,
tools &amp; ha rdware, Refrain for
Brick tor sale, family grown, $100 .00 an acre . WE HAVE
wat er
level
6-4·11
Mrs. Ruth Swepston and tivo
P.B .. Air , good tires. Only
1950 Ford Mower, deep welt
2 story, 4 bedroom , 11!2 bath , NEW HOMES FOR ONLY
co ntrol .
L i nt
$1 ,000. Phone 992-2042 after 3
hand pump, pitcher pump,
pantry,
Rec.
room,
2 116,000.00. WE HAVE FREE
children of Columbus and Mr.
Fil1er or · Power
p .m .
aluminum siding · roof ven .
fireplaces , weather seal ATLAS AT THE OFFICE FOR
Fi"' Agitator .
and Mrs. Michael' Leist and
6·14·61c
storm Windows and door s, 2 YOU.
1Hati0n, lot of -plastic water
Pertna -Press
family of Grove City spent
car garage, ma,ny other good
pipe, Fiber glass roofing , roof
Mavh•g
features , on 82x196 lot,
paint, 3 steel drums, Stock
Sunday with Ralph Lee and
.Halo of Heat
3 BEDROOM house, Salem
31
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD
rack for
11
ton truck ,
$32,500 . Contact,..owner, Edsel
D:ryers
Stree t , Rutland, modern
Mt. and Mrs. Robert Lee and
GORDON B. TEAFORD
whee
lbarrow,
lo
t
of
log
Wi
se,
Coolville,
Ohio
667
-3843.
:,urro.und
clo1hes
kitchen , wall -to-wall car chain s, sma II lot of leather
6 18 Jt
ASSOCIATES
family.
with gentle, even
peting in · front room , 114 of
harness &amp; collars, 20 bushels - - - - - -- - - - - - - P
'192-3325 992-:MIS
hea t. No hot spots,
acre of ground. Small barn in
Mr. and Mrs. William
of ear corn and other useful
n~
overdrying ,
back
of
lot
.
Phone
742
-4111.
articles not listed . W. R. 7 ROOM house with bath in
Carleton of Racine called at the
F me Mesh Lint
6-17-31c
Rutland, air conditioned,
Filter.
Hayes - owner . Terms home of Mr. and Mrs.' Arthur
carpeted, gas furnace, . dish·
cash. Not responsible for
We Specialize in
BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo .
E. Johnson and family and
washer, double oven , range, DUE to job transfer , must sell
accidents. The Bradford
MAYTAG
rad io tape combination , am ·
Auction Company . A. C.
double garage, lar ge carport,
home,
3
bedroom,
tot
a
l
Betty Van Meter on S1;nday
fm radio , 8 track tape deck.
Bradford. Manager. C. C.
4 acres cleared and fenced,
electric, large lot. F. H.A.
and Mr. and Mrs. fJOuglas
Balan-ce $104.53 or use our
Bradford. Auctioneer . Lunch
small
bwn and
other
approved , ~ Syracuse. Phond
budget terms . Ca II 992 -3965 .
ser\o'ed.
buildings . Phone 614-742-6834.
Johnson called on .'..aturday
992 ·7836.
6·17 ,6tc
741-4211
6-17-2 tc
5·30·1fc
Arnold Grate.
5·25·11&lt;
evening.
. Rutland

·-

I

'

8- The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-h..oneroy, 0 .. June 18, 1973

2 SIGNS

•

IT'S ALL WRONG !!•

NOW THAT

YOU'VE GOTTEN
RID OF THAT
OFF=ENSIVE
ODOR-IS THE
CLASSR=M
A~L P.tGHT?

NO PIGS!!- NO POTBELLI ED STOVE !!AN'·.sHuDoERf· IWIOK!O!!
NOTH IN'LL OESTRal
H ILL-BILL'/ CULTURE.
FASTER'N

T!-IE.M !!r

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

MODERN
SANITATION

JOH~SON'S

T.V.

atRDIE, I HAD NO /t:JEA

n&lt;AT 'Tl&lt;E NECKLACE,

FROM MANO MEANT

c

IT MEAN~ '&gt;01.1 LIKE
HIM AND ENCOURAGE
HIM 10 PUR~UE .--.&lt;1!"l

~UT, MANq ARE

'&gt;01.1 :;uRE Ml55
WINKLE. WILL GO

YOU.

01./T WI1H YCU f

ANY1l&lt;ING
11

5PECIAL'1•

Notice

Notice

WELL, HE

- - -- - For Rent

DIDN'T MISS

SWITCH·
SOARD! LOOK
A'T THIS/

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

- - - -- -

GASOUNE ALLEY

-,.,-- -- --

SUMMER SALE!

Well, Skeezix,
no weddinq!

'ii'HE UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL OF THE LAW
CONVINCES MAX THERE ARE SAFER PLACES
TO BE THAN T HE VICINITY OF DOCTOR 1
WON MUG 'S TIME - MACHINE LABORATORV.

Real Estate For sale

WHAT 00'/0V

CHEST FREEZER

Real Estate For Sale

Reg, 295.95-249.95

TEAFORD

------

w.

Wanted ..

1/EAA,I'M

Real Estate For Sa1e

o

WILL 00 A$ 1 INSTRUCT

UHD£R TH£

'·'

3.57 hour

TWO WE.EK6 FROM

fC.MC.RRO,W !

~

'

AND TELL

HIM THAT D.D.A. DAY IS

WATERS OF

YeolerdaJ'I C.yptoqaote: INCONSISTENCIES

liARBOR lS

U·239, U.NDER.
l'Hi!. COM!o!AHD.
or TH£ MAD
CRP'l' . BLin ~·
AND.STU.t.

- -----

-----------

WHE~tABOUTS

lliVRKIHC&lt;

------

Help Wanted

'fOti WILL· CALL UPO-t M'f
Kl~ Of CXJ~

&lt;1G.EMT, IHfOil•

by TI10MAS JOSEPH

FtG'H'l'lKG
~11/A!ut-·

------

•

''

DICK TRACY

By

BROAD NOSTRILS-

~ PEANUTSUTTER''!

1

1'1'

I

J

- -·

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

;

- - -- - -

or

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=··

medium

Zip

21. One of the
Berlins
2. Athenian

7. Neighbor
of Czech .

8. Sec 3 Down
(4 wds.)

9. Late

platform

23. ltunyon 's
" G~ys and

Un~cramble these four Jumble~t

I
Yesterday's Answer

16. Beetle

etc.
30. Choice

gloom

31. "Hoosier
Poet"
36. Sass
37. Vietnamese

22. Sousa
gr-;mp ·

23. Cotton
glutton ous

holic.Jay

Evans
;;n d

THE WA&lt;;t\ONTI1E L IN~ .
How MAN'( BLOuSE'S ARE. HERS-

r J

(.';1UVIN

I

10

IDULCET) [
I t) J

Jurnblet: VIXIN

"(I I I I I U"

fAVOR

A~••er t 8i~J mon~1-for

8ANNil lUINIP

a IOilfJ!-"fOI-TUNI"

whoop

I ~AVE THIS RASH OR
SOMETHING, AND IT MAKES N«
HEAP LOOK LIKE A 6ASEflALL ...

34. Sa mu el's
mentor
35. Magic ..
na me m

'

Now. llnll(e tile circled !etten
to to'nn the aurpriH aillwer, u
aunated by the ~e .:artoon.

Sat11rd•1'•

28. Bc;k
29. Trembl e
32. A nger

33. -

1

(AD.witn lo~rnw)

apex

MAN'{ ARE MINE 'i!

. .• .

I l'til .. I I llliiiiWIIItn

Margot
Fontcyn
26.' Corrupt
27. Volcano's

AMANDA IS HANGING

• ~,..=,coiwto · -

I I

back,
shoat~

25. Edith
AMANDA PANDA

REINIJ

27. Mutation
29. Hazar-

Bailey's
meal
19. Aura of

24. De

Gloomy

25.

12. Plays

fabrics

afternoon
in London

=

one lett~r to eac;:h ~quare, to
form four ordinary worda.

3. With 8 Down,
memo·

town

speaker's

WM.POtl39(l
ON YOUR DIAL

18. Artist's
20.

Jl&amp;MrnUJE;-~;::!!:! _,

marK
2. "Love,"
Italian
sty le

rable
statement ·
o! Mar. 2.1,
1775
4. Nigerian
city
5. Prance
6. Ethiopian

OPIN-

(@ 19'73 Klnr Fut.ures S7ndlc•te, 1ne.)

reading

I KNEW THAT,

EYEBROWS, A Sf.IORT

like a person.

the Day

1. Proof-

EIUT I ~
scythe
WANTED YOU TO FINO IT 17. Give OUT! I.IVE AND LEARN.
cha nce
(2 wds. )

BUT HE HAD f.IEAVY

We talk to you

------

I. Confine
5. Win all
tricks in
piquet

'with
11 . Venerated
3. Meander
14. OfT-col or
15. Be for e
rr-:-::~::-:-:-:::~::::-~~·16. Usc a

For Rent

Carmel News,

DOWN

10. Mingled

For Sale

- - - -- - -

ACROSS

OF

ION,ARISING FROM CHANGES OF CIRCUMSTANCES A1U1:
OrTEN JUSTWIABLE.-DANIEL WEBSTER
'

CamelOt

37 . Shadow
38. Appeasing

39. Feminine
s uffi x
40. Melville
novel
41. "Didn't

CAP!' AIN EASY

Believe Me "

OR

'IOU TO

GO AWAV:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A X Y D L B A 'A X R
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter

si~ply

WH't' AM I

THIS
..___

WEARtNe

SACK?

SOMEONE TRtED 1b
AUTOGRAPH Mr.( HEAD!

stands for another. In this sample A is

used for the three L's, X for the t wo O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
aPostrophes, the length and format~ on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
BPU

CHAKHXB,

BPXRTI.\ , · LHTPB

UJUR
BL

LS
QU

BPU
FMWG

QUKB
MRI

:BAM R 0 H X W . - F X F U A L

'•

,

�o

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Ge,t Res'ults!
Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET

S3895

Notice

- - - - -----,

Patronize
YOUR UNION
BARBER SHOPS

Caprice 4-door , new car t it le &amp; beige color with brown

Karr's Barber Shop

vinyl roof, ti nted glas$, factory air, front &amp; rear guards.
radio &amp; rear speaker , whi1e wall tires, nice and clean .

Pomeroy

Retails at $4860. Priced ·to move.
1972 BUICK SKYLARK350
$3195
4-door factory alr, automat ic fr~n~mi s~ ion ,. power
steering , custom Interior, dark green ftn •sh, t1res like new
and spare never used . Deluxe bumper, radio, and many
other extras. Less than 13,000 miles, tr uly sharp .
1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
$2995
4-wheel drive, auxiliary top, locking front hubs, V-8,
automatic transm iss ion, power steering &amp; brakes. local
low mileage , l -ear owner , rad io, spare never used .

Mayer&amp; Hill
Barber Shop
Pomeroy
Pa id For by Barbers'
Loca l No. 400.

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale

For sale

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
Th is machine darns, em broiders, O~Jercasts , button
ho.les . All
without
at tachments . Pay balance of
$38 .50 or pay SS per month.
Call 992 ·5331.
6· 10·tfC

I

-----FORD BALER - with motor,

BARNEY
I'LL BE WIF '&lt;E IN
TWO SHAKES Of A
SHEEP 'S TA I L,SNUFFY ··

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

------

COAL. Limestone, Excel,;.ior ·
Salt Work s, E . Ma in&gt; 51 .,
extra good condition . Contact
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Kenneth Hartley .• Phone 992·
4·12-tfc
6320 .
6· 1J.6k

Vn Most American Cars

Pels For Sale

- ~UARANTEEO­

REDUCE excess fluids with
Fluldex - Lose we ight with BEAUTIFUL male Bellas w ith
bowl. $1. 79. Showalter 's WetDex -A -Diet
capsules
at
Pet Shop.
Nelson Drugs.
6-17-6tc
6·18·31p

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy , 0 .

AMANA Air -Cond itioner , 15,000 CHARLIE - a young. frisky,
BTU, Used 2 months. Call 949border collie needs country
2934.
home. Call Athens 593-8155.
6-17·4tc
6-15·6tc

VETERANS

EXPERIENCED
Radiata

Service

1

From the taroest Truck or
Bulldoz.er Radiator to the
~ ma11est Heater Core .
'
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec.ialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
1-'h . 992-2174
Pomeroy
l. - - - - - --1

LET US HELP YOU

---

In Memory

AT HOME

-.

Auto Sales

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

For Your Mobile Homelando-No Down Payment

HOW ABOUT THe UNIVERSITIES
OF MASSACIIUSI:TTS OR
CONNECTICUT AS TRANSFER
POSSIBI LtTres, BIMO~

Qualify Today, Call

304-485-3809

ALL-WEATHER

NO WAY,

I J UST [)ON'T
T~INK

SI R.,!

WOOD TRUSSES

.. ~ .

,

Mobile Homes For Sale

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

W£ C:AN'T t;I.T A

GOING TO A SC~OOL
WHOSE NAME. I'D NEVER

I'D l=EEI..

QU ITe RIGHT. ..

lt.Ef(.llfNCf.

BE AB~E TO SPEL~
CORRECTt..Y

Choose your own t:ome from

fllOM

DUll. LAST E14PLo"ti!Jt

your AREA DEALER.

•• Hf."'S

SUff£~1rt~

fllOM A N£1tVOU.S

POMEROY
AUTO
HOME

BUAlti&gt;OWN

U 'L ABNER
. NATCHE.R~

FURNITURE

IT'S-UGH!-

THE. HEAD OF
HARvARD'S NEW
DEPARTMENT
OF HILL-BII..L'f
STUDIES ARRIVES

SOAP!!
AN' IT'S

., A -COM IN'

FuM YO'!!

Wanted To Buy

----~~~

MOM?

'I

BANK FINANCING

OFFICE SUPPLIES

- - -- --

~
~

GO RIGHT ON I N
AN' MAKE '&lt;ORESELF

Business Services

EXCELSIOR Sail Works, E .
Main St., Pomeroy . All kinds
oi salt water pellets, water
nuggets, block salt and own
Ohio River .Salt. Phone 992 ·
3891 ,
6-S·tfC

Man or Woman
Specialist
Reliable person from th is area GRAVE lots in T~:~ppers Plains ,
Wheel
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, S75
to service and collect from
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
Cheap . Boat, rnotor, trailer .
and $85. Also Siamese kittens,
automat
ic
dispensers.
No
ex
Alignment
Golden Bahr, Athen s, Ohio
POMEROY, OHIO
$10. Phone 1-256 -6247, Kennels
&amp;
oerlen c e needed - we. estab lish
Roofing - Roof Painting,
45701 .
of Calhoun.
-- - - - - -- -·-·
accounts
tor
you .
Ca r ,
Spouting
,
Plumbing,
11·6tp
6·
It Must
992-2094
references , an!:~ $995 .00 to
Remodeling , Complete
Be Right
\1 ,995 .00 c ash capital ' nee · 1964 4-DOOR Dodge sedan,
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Building, Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
or we will
ess ay . 4 tO l 'l nours weekly 1
PQOD•E puppies, Toy A.K.C .•
WANT ADS
automatic. 949-4761 .
Siding.
·
Malke il Right.
could net good pa'rt lime in ·
Show quality.
Chocolate INFORMATION
6- 17 ·Wc
come . Full lime more . Fo r local
DEADLINES
IN LOVING memory ol Mary
Phone 992-5443 .
write,
Incl ude 10 GALLON tank with all set-up
PHONE : 992 ·2550
5 ~ 23 . tfc
Eblin on today her birthday, S P .M . Day Before Publi cati on . inte rview ,
and
Mon't:Jay
Deadline
9
a.
m.
lelephone
number
r
June 18th :
pment,
only
S10
.
equ
i
Cancellation
Correct
ions
We cannot send a birthday card , Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
EAGLE INDUSTRIES
Showalter's Wet-Pet Shop.
8-4:30 Daily, 8-11 Sat.
your hand we cannot touch ,
·
6-17-6tc
Oepartmen1
BV
Day of Publ ic at ion
In the R. H. Rawling s Sons
Today there will be no giffs or
REGULATIONS
..
3931 Meadowbrook Road
1969 CHEVROLET truck with
Stop In and See Our
Building .
cake.
Th e Pub li sher reserves lhe St. Louis Park. Minnesofa 5S426 (2) Electrolux .Sweepers deluxe
N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, 0 .
cheater axle 14' dump
N.1ddleport,
0
.
992 -2101
Floor Display.
For the one we loved so much. r igh t to edit or reject any ads
body . Priced to sell. Call 992 model. Cornplete with all
objectional
The
For i n a graveside soft I y deemed
5951.
cleaning attachments and
pub lisher will not be respons ible
steeping,
6·12-61p
tor
more
than
one
incorre
ct
uses
paper
bags
.
Slightly
used
Where the flowers gently wave insert ion .
looks
like
new.
but
cleans
and
ASK US ABOU .T
WANTED - Used merchandise
Lies the one we love so dearly
.
RATES
Will sell for $37 .25 cash or 1972 FORD. Grand Torino, VInyl
- ior auction . We buy, we
Hav e your T.V. Picture Tube
But whom we could not save.
For Want Ad Service
top, Air Conditioned , V -8
terms avail.ilble . Fihone 992PRE. FABRICATED
God alone knows how much we 5 ce nts per Word one Insertion
se ll , whole houS:eful or single
Restored As Good As New
7755.
Engine, p.s. &amp; B. Call anv
Min imum Charge 75c
miss her,
pieces,
consignment
or
Righ1
In Your Home.
time - 949-5081.
6·1Htc
12 cents per word three
percentage . We will haul.
As He counts the tears we shed,
Guaranteed
for 6 Mo.
6· 14-12tc
Phone 992 ·3354. · Hayman ' s.
For He wh is pered . "She is only consecutive insertions .
lB
cents
per
word
si
x
co
n
.
ALMA
Ohlinqer
house
and
lot
sleeping,
6-5·30tc
secutive insertions.
on Lynn Pla ce, Middleport,
Color- $30.00
Your loved one is not dead."
25 Per Cent D iscount on paid
Ohio, will be sold to the 1969 CHEVROLET Chevelle.
24 HOUR SERVICE
So on this her birthday , Forgive ads and ads paid w ithin 10 days . OLD Furn i tu're, oak fables,
good
condition,
V-8
Engine.
Black
&amp; White-$15.00
highest bidder, Tuesday , June
Built to Your ' Spec s
us Lord, we pray ,
CARD OF THANKS
992-2572.
Phone
Wooden ice boxes , brass beds,
19, 1973 at 10: 00 a.m . at the
Delivered to Job Site
&amp; OBITUARY
Shs was so precious , why
or
complete
d is hes
6·15-3tc
office
of J . B. O'"Brien , At.
$1
.50
for
50
word
minimum
.
couldn't she have stayed .
h
ouseholds
;
Wr
ite
M
.
D
.
1
forney , 100 12 Court Street,
Each addit ional word 2c.
Sadly missed by loving
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
BLIND
ADS
Pomeroy, for not less than the
husband, Steve, children and
ca ll 992-6271.
Additional 25c Charge per
appraised value oi $2,500.00.
JOHN TUCKER
949-3151
grandchildren .
Advt&gt;rtisement .
5·13.tfc
Rt
. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
MATERIALS
CO.
For
further
information
call
T-,
6· 18· 1tc
OFFICE HOURS
Racine, Ohio
992-2720.
773 -5554
Mason, W. Va .
992-3954
8:30' a. m . to 5 .00 p.m . Dai l y,
Air
Conditioners
6-1
.4-4tc
8. 30 a· m . to...- 12:00 Noon NO. 1 Copper 54c, radiators,
Saturday .
28c; brass, 20c; batteries. 85c
Awnings
G&amp;t Appliance Repair . repair HOUSE and roo! Pa intinq; READY ·MIX
com·
each: clean dry roots, Gin - HANGING baskets;
CONCRETE
Underpinning
on a.ll laundry equipment,
HOURS for placing applications
interior and exterior, fr€-e
bination pots arid. fflled porch seng, ss2· lb.; yellow root 1 $4;
deliver ed right to your
refrigeration eqvipment and
in the Personnel Department.
es tim ates,· call 992-7008 or 992 boxes. white, pink, and red
mayapple, :t:l5c per lb.; M.A.
project. Fast and easy. Free
hpuse
wiring,
welding,
Holzer Medical Center are
2460
geraniums,
begonias , Comp let e mobile home
Hall, Reedsvil le, Ohio, 378·
es t ima tes . Phone '992 -32 84 .
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
service plus, gigantic
from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., 2:00 to KOSCOT SPECIALS for June
~etunias, Coleus, Zinnias,
6249,
5-21 ·301p
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .,
or after 4:30 p. m. call 992display
of
mobile
homes
4:00 p .m. on Tuesday,
Dianthus,
Snapdragons,
include Family Suntan Oil
Middl
eport, Ohio.
5·6-tfc
6050.
EXCAVATING . Dozers. larg e
Wedn esday, and Thursday .
Ageratium . Cleland Farm always available at .
Spray and Jr. Facial Mask.
6-30-lfc
5·24·30tp
and small ; Backhoes and·
and Greenhouse, E. Main,
6·14-Sic
Also with a purchase of either
l oa ders on track and tires;
Racine . Geraldine Cleland.
AfterShave or Electric PreSEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
WILKINSON Sm all Engine
Dump trucks lo -boy REASONABLE ra tes. Ph . 4466· 14·tfC
Shave by Koscot you receive a
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sales &amp; Ser\lice, 810 3rd St.,
service. Se ptic tanks in Kleansing Kream free . Phone MOBILE HOME space in
4782. Gallipolis, John Russell,
Middleport. Lawn mower
sta ll ed. George (Bill) Pullins ,
Syracuse . Phone 992 -6329 .
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
NOTICE TO
Owner
and Operator.
re pair . Free pi ck up and
phone 992-2478 or 992-7 402 .
6-I ·IIC CLOSE OUT on (41 New zig .zag
CONTRACTORS
6. 1.tfc
5·12-tfc
1210
Washington
Blvd.
delivery.
Phone
992-3092
.
Also
sewing machines. For sewing
STATE OF OHIO
2-9·tfc
423-7521
BELPRE,
0
.
- Briggs and Stratton and
DEPARTMENT OF
stretch fabrics, buttonholes,
NEW fish al Showalter's Wet PRIVATE meeting room for
Tecumcee parts .
TRANSPORTATION
fancy
·
design
s,
etc.
Pa
int
HARRI SON'S TV service and
Pet Shop.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
any organiz.at\on; phone 992 Colum .bus , Ohio
610-6tc
slightly
blemished.
Choice
of
service calls. Phone 992-2522.
Complete Service
J975.
6· 17-31c
June I, 1913
ca r rying case or sewin a 'CASH paid for al! makes and
2-9-tfc
--~~~~Phone 949-3821
Contract Sales Legal Copy
3·11 -tfc
models
of
mobile
home
s.
AU TO A IR conditioning. Serstand . $4; .80 cash Ol' terms
No. 13-545
WANTED - Someone to l l"'e in --~--Racine, Ohio ·
Phone area code 61 4-423.9531.
vice an d repair. Call 992-3802. O'DELL WHEEL .Alignment
·avai lable. Phone 992-7755 .'
UNIT PRI-CE CONT·RACT
Critt
Bradford
and care for elderly woman. TWO tra il er lots .in Middleport;
4· 13.tfc
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
Sealed proposals will be
5·24·301p
If interested ph'one 992-5264,
5·1-ttc
112 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
received at the office ' of the
now back to work. COmplete
any time.
Director of the Oh io Depart .
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
front end serv ice, tune up and
AU TOMOB ILE insurance been
6· 17-3tp
men!
of
T ransportation.
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
·
6"18-5tc
brake
se rvice. . Wh ee ls
ca ncelled?
Lost
your
Columb.us, Ohio, unm \0 :00
SE
WAGE
SYSTEMS
balanced electronicall y. All
operator's license? Call_ 992MODERN 6 room 1 floor plan
.A .M . , Eas.tern Da ylight Saving YARD SA LE - 18th and 19th.
UNIC020 CU. FT.
CLEANED,
REPAIRED .
2966.
work guaranteed . Reasonable
829 ' South 3rd Avenue, Mid - FURNISED 4 room apartment,
Time, Tuesay, June 26, 1973, tor
home
with
deta c hable
MILLER SANITATION,
improvem_ents in :
Mason .
Ph one
773-5147,
rates . Phon ~ 742-3232.
d(e,port back of Blue Tartan
garage. All newly painted .
6· 15.1fc
STE WART, OH 10. PH. 662·
Parts 1 to 4 inc lusive are
Reynolds Apartment.
2·18-tfc
located on nice level lot 50' x
6-17-2tc
3035.
offered as one contract and wiil ~-::-:-c--:-c---­
6· 12-0tp
120' ·at 619 Page St., M id·
be considered on th e basis of the SiX-FAMILY yard sale with a
10·4-ttc
PAINTERS . We wi ll pain.!
dleport, Ohio. For fUrther
total amount bid .
.
for
rent
near
Meigs
HOUSE
anything
inside
or
out.
949variety of clothing , furnitur e
details, contact David R.
Part l to4 inclusive
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
Mine No. 1. Married couple
2621.
and odds and ends. June 22 -23
Yates, 23 Grandview Road,
Hocking , Me igs and Vinton
ser vi c;e, all makes. 992 -2284.·
preferr
ed.
Ca11742"5986
after
5
All
other
sizes.
at
sale
6-17-3tc
9 a.m. to 5 p.m . look for sate
Cambridge, Ohio, 43725.
Count ies. Ohio , on roads and
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
p. m .
facil iti es,
HOC -MEG -VIN,
signs on Rt. 124 between
prices.
6-lS·tfC
Authorized Singer Sales anc'
HOcking H ills State Park, Lake
6· 17-Jtc
---'--~--'--Crossroads and Rt. i By-Pass .
Serv ice. We Sharpen Scissors.
Logan S tate Park , Forked Run
· :Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
6· 11·5tp
POMEROY
HOUSE for sa le by ow ner, J
State Park and Lake Hope State - - : - - ; - - - - 3·29·tfc
ALL
ELECTRIC
like
new
3
Broker
.
Y •. - Jack Carsey, Mgr.
bedrooms , new furna ce, roof,
Park, DEPARTMENT OF
rooms
with
large
b1th
.;
NATUR AL RESOURCES ,. in
6ldl
Phone 992-2181
and wiring . . Wall -to -wall
WILL TRIM or cut trees or
11 Mechanic Street '
Electric wall oven, ta~IE top
Benton. Fa lls, Olive and Brown
carpeting, large lot, ca rport.
shrubbery. Also paint roofs . .
~------------~
Po.m eroy,•Ohio 45769
Townships,
by
unif Ormly HOUS.EWORK by the day, will
range, larg e closet. located on
Phone 949-3221.
Look for iron fence in front
spreading and co mpa cting
E . Main st~. Pomerov . SPP In (31
also do house cleaning . Work
NEW
1973
ZIG
.
ZAG
and
pine
trees
in
side
yard.
NEW
LISTING
6· 13-30tc
aggregate In· part and by ap appreciate. Ph . Gallipolis
guaranteed. Ma xine Profitt
SE WING MACHINE S in
Contact Mr . 'Eldon Walburn , .162ACRES All
minerals.
plying a bituminous surface
Sellers, Rt . 1, Racine, Ohio,
446-9539 .
origi nal factory carton . ZJg .
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy ,
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
treat ment .
.,
Good , 2 bedroom home w ith
843·2712
.
5·29-lfc
Ohio. Phone 992·2805 .
Zag to make buttonholes. sew
Pavement Width - Varies .
and backhoe work; septic
ba
t
h,
drilled
well.
and
concrete
6· 17.3tc
Pro/·ect and Work Length on buttons, monograms, and
tank s ins t a ll~d ; dump trucks
6· 13 tic
Basem@'nt
barn
.
A
real
porch
.
8,489 · ee l or 1.61 miles .
fanc(
designs
with
just
and
to-boys for hire ; will haul
make
·,o8
buy at a little over $111.00 per
3 AND 4 ROOM f urn ished and
"T he date se t for complet io n
the
twist
o
a
sing
le-dial.
Left
!ill
dirt,
top soil, l imestone
HOUSEKEEPER
needed.
Fred
s
ROOM
house
with
bath
on
E.
MAIN._
_
_
_,
acre.
unfurnished
apartments .
of this work sha ll be as se t forth
in
la
y-a-way
and
never
been
gravel
; Call Bob or Roger
and
C.
Kesterson
.
Phone
992-6668
.
large
lot
in
upper
end
of
in the bidding proposal. "
Phone 992·S434.
NEW LISTING
used. Will se ll for only $47
POMEROY
s,
day
phone 992-7089 ;
Jeffer
attic,
out
Syracuse
.
Large
6·13·61p
Each bidder shall be required
4-12-tfc
170 ACRES - Minerals, free
cash. or terms available .
nigh t phone 992 ·3525 or 992 .
to t i le with his bid a cer t ified
buildings . $7,000. Call 949·2595
Electro Hygiene Co. Phone
5232.
check for an amount eQual to
OUT OF TOWN
befOre 2:30p.m. or any ftme gas, 25 acres of bottom in
2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
meadow. Balan ce pasture and
992 -2984.
five per cent of his bid , bul in no
Jl/ 2 acres.
Nice lay ing
2·11·tfc
on
weekends
.
cond it io ned . Racine area.
e\o'ent more than ten thousand
some timber . Gambrel roof
6-17-7tc
6-4·12tc
ground
.
4
bedroom
s.
Modern
dollar s, or a bond for ten per
Phone 992 ·6329.
bank barn , 36 x 50. Drilled well
SEE US FOR : Awn inqs, storm
bath . lots of base and upper
cent of his bid. payable to the
5·23·1fc E LE CTROL U X
vacuum
and
ni ce large stream. 3
doors and windows, carports,
Director.
kitchen
,
also
cabinets
in
the
cleaner. A-1 condition, uses RIVER frontage on Ohio River bedr Qom modern home in
marquees, aluminum siding ·
DELIVERY DRIVER
Bid ders · mu s·t app ly, on the
a range. Bar room. Storm
across from Pomeroy on West
paper bags, ha ~ cordwinder
and railing . A . Jacob, sa .les
Athens
County.
Ask
in
g
proper forms, for qualifications
doors &amp; windows . Home is 4
Virg ihia Side Right in Center
and many attachments. Also
at leas ! ten day s prior to the
r~presentative .
For free
$60,000.00.
years
old.
$16.900.00.
of Regatta, sail~y beach,
shampooer a.t tachment in ·
date se t tor ope ning bids ·in
1
estimates,
phone
Charles
HOOD'S AQ.UARIUMS: fish
NEW
LISTING
shade, water and electricity. I
MIDDLEPORT
accordance with Chap ter 5525
eluded. {On ly 4 available) at·
lisle,
Sy
ra
cuse,
V. V.
af'ld
supplies.
new
loca
tion,
RUTLAND
12
room
Home,
6
have two lots surveyed, 100ft.
Ohio Re\o'ised Code .
liv ing
room.
Kitchen .
$37.70
cas h
or
terms
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
Ash
Street,
Middte·port,
nea
r
Full or Part Time
Plans and specifications are
wide at low water level , 450ft. bedrooms,_bath , porch, carport
Dining Room . 2 bedrooms .
availabl e. Electro Hygiene
park,· Phone 992 -5443.
3·2-tfc
on file in !he Department ot
to ra ilroad tracks, 87ft. wide and excellent location with
Co.
Phone
992·2982.
Bath . 2nd floor unfinished
1.7.tfc
Transportation and the off ice ot
at
railroad
tracks
.
The
lots
larg
e
yard
.
Want
only
No experience necessary.
6-17-7tc
but ha s new stairway to lt . .EL NA and White Sewing
the District Deputy Director .
are all cleaned and mowed $12,000 .00.
Must have car and be
Storm windows. Lot 100x125.
Machines ... Service on all
The Director reserves the
GFo!OC E RY business for sa le .
PUBLIC AUCTION
off. Marion Reynolds, Maso'l,
NEW LISTING
willing to learn.
right to re ject any and all bids .
JUST ,$5,000.00.
m-akes. Reaso nable rates.
Building for sa le or lease. SATURDAY. June 23rd, 1L OO
W. Va. , 773·5147. Reynolds SYRACUSE - 6 room frame
J . PHILLIP RICH LEY
RACINE
The Sewing Center , M i d .
Flower Shop.
Phone 773-5618 fro.m 8: 30p.m.
01 RECTOR
house basement, garage with
dl eport, Ohio.
10
Acres
about
6
level.
Home
Rev . 9 -29 ·72.
Mon : thru Fri.
to 10 p .m . for appointment.
a.'r.have so ld my farm and ___ _ _ _ _ _ __6_·_13-6tp utility.. Level lot. All utilities.
11 · 16. Jtc
2 bedrooms . Bath. Full
3-20-tfc
Call9-8,
446-0677
will se ll the following per- NEW RANCH HOME - 1 acre Asking $5,000.00.
(6) 1 L JB, 2tc
base ment. Electric heat. Is
sonal property at th e farm
POMEROY
OOZE R and back hoe work,
MR. VANCE
about 12 years old . A BUY
located 21!:2 miles off Sta te
lot. City water . A well - 2 BEDROOMS - Bath , f ull
ponds and septic tanks, ditch KNAPP shoes, 10 pet. to 28 pet .
AT JUST $15,000.00.
Route 124. Leave Sta te Route
,designed house plan by W. G. basement with shower, gas
ing service ; top soil, fill dirt.,
off on 16 styles . Order now.
FURNISHED HOME
124lustwest of Rutland, Ohio,
Best Homes consisting· oi furnace , and ' porch . Lafge lot.
limestone; B&amp;K Excavatinq.
Supply limited. Phone 992·
N EED ' a lady to live in or work
A · large level lot 100x135. 1112
on County road 13 and follow large living room with dining Only $7500.00 .
5324.
Phone 99 2-5367 or' 992·3861.
by da y. Phone 992 -5585 .
'SLEEPING ROOM . Will give
story
frame . 2 bedrooms .
sale
signs.
l,
3
bedrooms
inCluding
9-1-tfc
5
:
30-tfc
6-17,3tc
NEAR
SHOPPING.
board if desired. Call 773-5341
1965 Dodge 4-Door. Dart
master bedroom with fUll
bath . Dining room . Kitchen
NICE
after 6 p.m.
2
BEDR'OOMS
Handy
with 6 wheels and tires.
bath, a large 32' x 11' com has late model G. E . Range,
baskets,
com6· 1B·3tp PART or FULL·TIME JOB, HANGING
kitchen, bath , gas furnace,
Excellent
condition
.
Tappan
binatlon
klt&lt;:hen-family
room
,
Ref. Dryer and Deep Freeze.
evenings ~ weekend . Call on
bination pots and fille d porch
Gas Range, Sunray Gas
and 2 full baths . Under main front and side concrete porch
Nice porch. Storm doors and
family
who
have
requested
boxes, white, pink and red
5 ROOM house. in Rac ine area.
Range,
Small
G. E .
floor is a full basement or with w rought iron posts. Just
$8,500.00 .
windows.
information
on
Encyclopedia
geraniums,
begonias,
992-6329 .
Refrigerator , Maytag Dryer,
lower level which can be $15,000 .00.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Britann
ica.
No
canvassing
.
petunias , coleus, z. inn la s,
6-18-tfc
Maytag Wri nger Washer ,
finished if desi red . To make
11S ACRES
Preset appointments up fo
like
new
1971
mobile
home. 3
dianthus, sn~pdragon s, an d
this a comp l ete ly quality HUNTING LAND All
Double rinse tubs, Sectiona l
$100 a week commiss ion or
bedrooms . Bath . Lovely
ageratium. Cleland Farm and
sofa and other li ving room
home a full 2-car garage is minerals, plenty of locust. 6
more for full time. For in kitchen and dining area.
Greenhouse, E. Main, Racine .
furni
ture,
J;~,
Bed
compl
ete,
included.
Financin g arranged room hou~e . barn and several
terview, ca ll Mr . Clift,
Gerald ine Cleland.
Large lot. in new addition.
Chest
of
Drawers,
Dressers,
with
tow
down
payment.
For
bui ldings. Asking $19,500.00
Parkersburg, 304-422 -3771 or
6·13.tf c
GOING
AT JUST $6,800.00.
Antiques Buffet, 2 Dinette
all detail s · and an ap Zanesvf lle, Ohio 453, 4337, be ·
NEW LISTING
CALL US FOR A QUICK
Se
t
s,
Venetian
Blinds
pointmen
t
to
see
home,
call
tween 10: 00 and 12:00 noon .
8 YEARS OLD - 2 bedrooms,
SA'LE
O.N
YOUR
Cur tains, Wheat Mine Lamp
992-5976 or Columbus cot . bath with shower . Full
6-17-6tc MOBILE Home for sale, .12 x 60
PROPERTY.
&amp;
Charger,
New
Traditional
teet
235-1996.
with expando, completely
HENRY E. CLELAND
furnished . carpeting, air Light Fi xture Antique Brass
6-1J.tfc basement . Nice living roorn .
COOK, waitress and carhop ;
with fireplace. l -ear garage.
BROKER .
conditioned,
50ft.
pat
io,
large
&amp;
iuf:ls
Finish,
Stone
_
jars
appi y in person , Crow's Steak
$18.500.00 .
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
lol, 592· 1753, Athens.
·
stands,
Baby
b
.
ed
,
High
cha1r,
992-2259
FARM
for
sale,
77
acres
of
land,
House.
NEWLIHING
6· 15·7tc · Battery radio. Picnic table,
No. Answer 992 -2568
Thotdson and family of
pasture, fruit trees, water tap
5· 10·1fc --~--145 ACRES - 15 in corn. Large
Gli der. Power Saw, Platform
paid,
necessary
farm
Cedarville, Mr. and Mrs .
barn
several outbuildings. 7
Scales. 2-wheel Trailer , Wood
buildings, 5 room house with
house, bath, basement,
r
oom
ho~:~se . Some fences in
saw with 3 belts, New Stiht
Raymond Snyder and Cecil of QUALIFIED refrigeration 5 ROOM
bath , carpeting and panelling.
gas heat. 21ots, S. D ~ Buskirk,
se rv iceman , industrial ,
Rutland Township. 122,500.00.
Chain Saw (020AVL 1 horse
Big Capacity
Call
992
·7
304.
Hysell
Run
Colwnbus yisited with Mr. and . commercia l. dom es tic , good
341' Page Street, M iddleport .
electr ic motor with grinder,
Maytag
Road.
Phone 992-5487.
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna and "T pay and working conditions.
severa l small motors, 3 Fen'ce
Automatic.s
VISIT
with
us
ahd
see
the
6·1
J.6tc
6-15·3tp
Mus t be experienced. Gallia
2 speed operat~on .
chargers, 2 hydraulic /'acks ,
Wavie
Circle a recent
.bargains . Where can you buy
Refrigeration Co., 611 3rd -----~C.h.oice
of water
80ft.
Wire
Cable,
a
lot
o
hand
SPACIOUS
early
American
land for only a little more than
weekend.
Ave ., Gal lipo hs, 446-4066.
temps
.
Auto .
'69 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill, P.S .,
tools &amp; ha rdware, Refrain for
Brick tor sale, family grown, $100 .00 an acre . WE HAVE
wat er
level
6-4·11
Mrs. Ruth Swepston and tivo
P.B .. Air , good tires. Only
1950 Ford Mower, deep welt
2 story, 4 bedroom , 11!2 bath , NEW HOMES FOR ONLY
co ntrol .
L i nt
$1 ,000. Phone 992-2042 after 3
hand pump, pitcher pump,
pantry,
Rec.
room,
2 116,000.00. WE HAVE FREE
children of Columbus and Mr.
Fil1er or · Power
p .m .
aluminum siding · roof ven .
fireplaces , weather seal ATLAS AT THE OFFICE FOR
Fi"' Agitator .
and Mrs. Michael' Leist and
6·14·61c
storm Windows and door s, 2 YOU.
1Hati0n, lot of -plastic water
Pertna -Press
family of Grove City spent
car garage, ma,ny other good
pipe, Fiber glass roofing , roof
Mavh•g
features , on 82x196 lot,
paint, 3 steel drums, Stock
Sunday with Ralph Lee and
.Halo of Heat
3 BEDROOM house, Salem
31
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD
rack for
11
ton truck ,
$32,500 . Contact,..owner, Edsel
D:ryers
Stree t , Rutland, modern
Mt. and Mrs. Robert Lee and
GORDON B. TEAFORD
whee
lbarrow,
lo
t
of
log
Wi
se,
Coolville,
Ohio
667
-3843.
:,urro.und
clo1hes
kitchen , wall -to-wall car chain s, sma II lot of leather
6 18 Jt
ASSOCIATES
family.
with gentle, even
peting in · front room , 114 of
harness &amp; collars, 20 bushels - - - - - -- - - - - - - P
'192-3325 992-:MIS
hea t. No hot spots,
acre of ground. Small barn in
Mr. and Mrs. William
of ear corn and other useful
n~
overdrying ,
back
of
lot
.
Phone
742
-4111.
articles not listed . W. R. 7 ROOM house with bath in
Carleton of Racine called at the
F me Mesh Lint
6-17-31c
Rutland, air conditioned,
Filter.
Hayes - owner . Terms home of Mr. and Mrs.' Arthur
carpeted, gas furnace, . dish·
cash. Not responsible for
We Specialize in
BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo .
E. Johnson and family and
washer, double oven , range, DUE to job transfer , must sell
accidents. The Bradford
MAYTAG
rad io tape combination , am ·
Auction Company . A. C.
double garage, lar ge carport,
home,
3
bedroom,
tot
a
l
Betty Van Meter on S1;nday
fm radio , 8 track tape deck.
Bradford. Manager. C. C.
4 acres cleared and fenced,
electric, large lot. F. H.A.
and Mr. and Mrs. fJOuglas
Balan-ce $104.53 or use our
Bradford. Auctioneer . Lunch
small
bwn and
other
approved , ~ Syracuse. Phond
budget terms . Ca II 992 -3965 .
ser\o'ed.
buildings . Phone 614-742-6834.
Johnson called on .'..aturday
992 ·7836.
6·17 ,6tc
741-4211
6-17-2 tc
5·30·1fc
Arnold Grate.
5·25·11&lt;
evening.
. Rutland

·-

I

'

8- The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-h..oneroy, 0 .. June 18, 1973

2 SIGNS

•

IT'S ALL WRONG !!•

NOW THAT

YOU'VE GOTTEN
RID OF THAT
OFF=ENSIVE
ODOR-IS THE
CLASSR=M
A~L P.tGHT?

NO PIGS!!- NO POTBELLI ED STOVE !!AN'·.sHuDoERf· IWIOK!O!!
NOTH IN'LL OESTRal
H ILL-BILL'/ CULTURE.
FASTER'N

T!-IE.M !!r

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

MODERN
SANITATION

JOH~SON'S

T.V.

atRDIE, I HAD NO /t:JEA

n&lt;AT 'Tl&lt;E NECKLACE,

FROM MANO MEANT

c

IT MEAN~ '&gt;01.1 LIKE
HIM AND ENCOURAGE
HIM 10 PUR~UE .--.&lt;1!"l

~UT, MANq ARE

'&gt;01.1 :;uRE Ml55
WINKLE. WILL GO

YOU.

01./T WI1H YCU f

ANY1l&lt;ING
11

5PECIAL'1•

Notice

Notice

WELL, HE

- - -- - For Rent

DIDN'T MISS

SWITCH·
SOARD! LOOK
A'T THIS/

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

- - - -- -

GASOUNE ALLEY

-,.,-- -- --

SUMMER SALE!

Well, Skeezix,
no weddinq!

'ii'HE UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL OF THE LAW
CONVINCES MAX THERE ARE SAFER PLACES
TO BE THAN T HE VICINITY OF DOCTOR 1
WON MUG 'S TIME - MACHINE LABORATORV.

Real Estate For sale

WHAT 00'/0V

CHEST FREEZER

Real Estate For Sale

Reg, 295.95-249.95

TEAFORD

------

w.

Wanted ..

1/EAA,I'M

Real Estate For Sa1e

o

WILL 00 A$ 1 INSTRUCT

UHD£R TH£

'·'

3.57 hour

TWO WE.EK6 FROM

fC.MC.RRO,W !

~

'

AND TELL

HIM THAT D.D.A. DAY IS

WATERS OF

YeolerdaJ'I C.yptoqaote: INCONSISTENCIES

liARBOR lS

U·239, U.NDER.
l'Hi!. COM!o!AHD.
or TH£ MAD
CRP'l' . BLin ~·
AND.STU.t.

- -----

-----------

WHE~tABOUTS

lliVRKIHC&lt;

------

Help Wanted

'fOti WILL· CALL UPO-t M'f
Kl~ Of CXJ~

&lt;1G.EMT, IHfOil•

by TI10MAS JOSEPH

FtG'H'l'lKG
~11/A!ut-·

------

•

''

DICK TRACY

By

BROAD NOSTRILS-

~ PEANUTSUTTER''!

1

1'1'

I

J

- -·

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

;

- - -- - -

or

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=··

medium

Zip

21. One of the
Berlins
2. Athenian

7. Neighbor
of Czech .

8. Sec 3 Down
(4 wds.)

9. Late

platform

23. ltunyon 's
" G~ys and

Un~cramble these four Jumble~t

I
Yesterday's Answer

16. Beetle

etc.
30. Choice

gloom

31. "Hoosier
Poet"
36. Sass
37. Vietnamese

22. Sousa
gr-;mp ·

23. Cotton
glutton ous

holic.Jay

Evans
;;n d

THE WA&lt;;t\ONTI1E L IN~ .
How MAN'( BLOuSE'S ARE. HERS-

r J

(.';1UVIN

I

10

IDULCET) [
I t) J

Jurnblet: VIXIN

"(I I I I I U"

fAVOR

A~••er t 8i~J mon~1-for

8ANNil lUINIP

a IOilfJ!-"fOI-TUNI"

whoop

I ~AVE THIS RASH OR
SOMETHING, AND IT MAKES N«
HEAP LOOK LIKE A 6ASEflALL ...

34. Sa mu el's
mentor
35. Magic ..
na me m

'

Now. llnll(e tile circled !etten
to to'nn the aurpriH aillwer, u
aunated by the ~e .:artoon.

Sat11rd•1'•

28. Bc;k
29. Trembl e
32. A nger

33. -

1

(AD.witn lo~rnw)

apex

MAN'{ ARE MINE 'i!

. .• .

I l'til .. I I llliiiiWIIItn

Margot
Fontcyn
26.' Corrupt
27. Volcano's

AMANDA IS HANGING

• ~,..=,coiwto · -

I I

back,
shoat~

25. Edith
AMANDA PANDA

REINIJ

27. Mutation
29. Hazar-

Bailey's
meal
19. Aura of

24. De

Gloomy

25.

12. Plays

fabrics

afternoon
in London

=

one lett~r to eac;:h ~quare, to
form four ordinary worda.

3. With 8 Down,
memo·

town

speaker's

WM.POtl39(l
ON YOUR DIAL

18. Artist's
20.

Jl&amp;MrnUJE;-~;::!!:! _,

marK
2. "Love,"
Italian
sty le

rable
statement ·
o! Mar. 2.1,
1775
4. Nigerian
city
5. Prance
6. Ethiopian

OPIN-

(@ 19'73 Klnr Fut.ures S7ndlc•te, 1ne.)

reading

I KNEW THAT,

EYEBROWS, A Sf.IORT

like a person.

the Day

1. Proof-

EIUT I ~
scythe
WANTED YOU TO FINO IT 17. Give OUT! I.IVE AND LEARN.
cha nce
(2 wds. )

BUT HE HAD f.IEAVY

We talk to you

------

I. Confine
5. Win all
tricks in
piquet

'with
11 . Venerated
3. Meander
14. OfT-col or
15. Be for e
rr-:-::~::-:-:-:::~::::-~~·16. Usc a

For Rent

Carmel News,

DOWN

10. Mingled

For Sale

- - - -- - -

ACROSS

OF

ION,ARISING FROM CHANGES OF CIRCUMSTANCES A1U1:
OrTEN JUSTWIABLE.-DANIEL WEBSTER
'

CamelOt

37 . Shadow
38. Appeasing

39. Feminine
s uffi x
40. Melville
novel
41. "Didn't

CAP!' AIN EASY

Believe Me "

OR

'IOU TO

GO AWAV:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A X Y D L B A 'A X R
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter

si~ply

WH't' AM I

THIS
..___

WEARtNe

SACK?

SOMEONE TRtED 1b
AUTOGRAPH Mr.( HEAD!

stands for another. In this sample A is

used for the three L's, X for the t wo O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
aPostrophes, the length and format~ on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
BPU

CHAKHXB,

BPXRTI.\ , · LHTPB

UJUR
BL

LS
QU

BPU
FMWG

QUKB
MRI

:BAM R 0 H X W . - F X F U A L

'•

,

�1 '

r

•

•

'
10 - The Daily Sentinel, l&gt;liddleport-Polloeroy, 0., June 18,1973

• •

Miller acts to protect river bank

News

Dollar in cns1s

•

• • • lR

Briefs

(Conlinued from Page 1)
the same portion of the Ohio
River. The amendment was
wiU ask the Postal Rate Commission in September for !be inincluded in the Flood Control · LONDON (UP! ) - With early trading today and lost America recenUy. Th~e is a
crease.
.. Kla
'd.
"I lhinlt we'll recommend a !kent stamp, .
.aa1
Act of 1973 which passed the conrem running high over the ground on other European general pessimism about the
Senate on February I and is Watergate scandal, the dollar markets. Gold prires surged American situation.''
''That's how we see the situation now." Klassen was interviewed
pending
before
the
House
Some bankers attributed the by U. S. News and World Report ma~.WOe.
. ,
slumped to record lows in ahead.
JUNE 18-21
The
increase
would
raise
an
add1tional
•1
billion
a year,
Public
Works
Committee.
doUar
woes
to
the
latest
Not Open
Frankfurt and Amsterdam in
In Frankfurt, the dollar
Klassen
said,
and
most
of
the
sum
would
go
to
cover
''very
dropped to 2.5550 marks by developments in the Watergate
Friday, Saturdc}y ,
substantial wage increilses" granted postal employes over the
mid·morning as compared case.
Sunday . June 22 -'23-2.4
The price of gold was pegged past few years. Klassen cooceded this wa~. "a great deal of
1776
with Friday's closing rate of
( Tech nlcolor)
at
$122 an ounre in the first of money ... but so is the cost of union proposals.
2.5700, the previous record low
By KI CK DU BROW
Wm . Daniels
Kuhek .
two daily prire settings on the
_
Howard D.:t Silv.:t
Footnote : A recent late..,ight there.
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
HOUSTON - SKYLAB'S ASTRONAUTS, in good health and
AdultS&lt; SUO
The dollar opened at 2.7200 big London bullion market, up
Notes
to
watch
television
by
:
ABC-TV
broadcast
that
feaChildren : 75c:
$1.75 from Friday's close of spirits, swept to a world's spare endurancj' record of 24
The Programs : On JW!e 28, tured Cosell-he · was roaslj!d guilders in Amsterdam, down
Show S1ads 7 P . M.
today and aimed toward the four-week mark w1th a Friday
$120.25.
CBS.TV will present an hour by show business. and sports 0.44 per cent from the previous
In Zurich, gold changed
documentary described by the relebrities at a testimonial low of 2.7320 guilders set at the hands at $121-$123 an ounce, up splashdown.
· Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz
1l:e!\Vork••as " a behind-the- dinner - clobbered cJm- close Friday. The dollar has from Friday's close of $119.00- established the new record at 3:22 a.m. EDT while the spare
scenes account of how televi- petition programming in the declined by 14.2• per rent
station crossed Africa on its 500ih orbit. The previous mark of 23
against the guilder since the ·$121.
sion news covered a breaking ratings.
days 18 hoW'S and 22 minutes was set two years ago by the three
The
dollar
declined
news story - the demonGuest commenlator for this Feb. 13 devaluation of the U.S. marginally in early trading on Sovi~t Soyus 11 cosmonauts who died when their ship suddenly
strations at the 1972 National Monday night's NBC-TC base- currency.
TO NIGH T
Britain's Barclays bank said other European currency lost cabin pressure just before re-entry because of a hatch leak.
Convention"
...
the
ball
game
(
catifornia
Angels
I
Republican
&amp; TUESDAY
exchanges.
title of the hour is "Anatomy of at Chicago White Sox) wjll be today's $2.5850 against Ute
JUNE 18. 19
In London, the dollar was
TEL AVID - GOLDA MEIR, WHO ONCE described ber job
a News Story, " and the Dave Dehusschere, who gave pound was one of the highest traded at $2.5850, down frac- as "impossible," ended months of suspense Sunday and relucCO NQUEST OF THE
producer reporter- ~irector up a rna jor league baseball rates for the pound against the tionally from Friday's close of tantly announced she would seek another four-year term as
PLANET OF
of the broadcast, John Sharnik, pitching career and became a dollar sinre the $2.60 rate
THE APES
$2.5800.
Israel's prime minister.
·
(Color)
says it is "a self examination, top pro basketball star, well established when the pound
On
the
Paris
financial
marWith
the
support
of
three-quarters
of
the
Israeli public,
Roddy M c:Dowa l t
which CBS News intends to do known by sports televiewers in was "floated" free of its fixed
according
.
to
a
rerent
poll,
the
75-year..,ld
Ukraruan-born,
ket,
used
by
speculators
and
PLUS
more of in the future. "
rece nt years as a member of exchange rate in JUne last
Uta Hagen
year. But it was still ab&lt;ve the tourists, t!le dollar opened at American-educated grandmother is virtually assured of reAnother CBS.TV June 28 the New York Knicks.
Diana Muld.:tur
4.22-4.23 francs, slightly down election.
THE OTHER
Stories by the distioguished record low of $2.5900 reached
doc umenta~y hour is described
measure which authorlzes the
from Friday's close 4.2256(Color)
by the network as "a look at author Isaac Bashevis Singer briefly last week.
'
Corps
of
Engineers
to
build
PITTSBURGH - FOUR UNIONS representing 68,000
PG
In Paris, where the dollar. 4.2550 francs.
are the basis for Sunday's oneproblems
of
Social
Security
bank protection works along
In
Zurich
the
dollar
changed
Westinghouse
Electric Corp. workers have agreed to a ne... 37recipients," and is entitled hour NBC-TV "Eternal Light" was weak, a dealer working for
hands at 3.0400-3.0490 Swiss month wage contract calling for a maximum increase of 88 cents
" You'll Get Yours When drama, "Zlateh the Goat," an American bank said he felt
francs,
down marginally frmn an buur and a cost-of-living Ndjusiment.
dollar's
continued
You 're 65" ... both this with the adaptation drawing on the
Friday's close of 3.0537.
TWO EVENINGS
The new contract offered by Westinghouse Friday was
program and "Anatomy of a the writer's memories of life in weakness was due "to a lack of
The
dollar
opened
in
identical to that negotiated last week by General Electric Co., the
any good news &lt;"Oming out of
News Story" are offerings of pre-World War I Poland.
EACH WEEK
Brussels- at 37.50 Belgian electrical manufacturing industry's pacesetter. The wage inthe longrunning, periodic "CBS
francs, 0.62 per cent under crease is in three segments with 15 cents an hour retroactive to
Reports" series.
Friday's close of 37.775 francs. last Monday, 16 rents an hour beginning next June 10 and another
Summer Program
16 cents on June 9, 1975.
On July 8, the 12-week
swnmer video program "CBS
TO MEET TUESDAY
KEY WEST, FU...-THE NAVY SENT a roving diving beD,
NewS Retrospective," a collecA meeting will he held on
360 feet deep into the Atlantic Orean early today in an e!Iort to
tion of past documentaries,
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Mt. free four men in a research submarine trapped in the hulk of a
begins with an hour reca lling
Carmel Church in Bidwell for sunken destroyer. " We have received alate report that all four
the showdowns between
senior citizens (persons SS
men are mentally and medically OK," said Lt. Cmdr. W' 'liam R.
Reporter.{;ommentator
Edyears of age or over). All
Smith shortly before 3 a.m. EDT. The designer of the Johnsonward R. Murrow and Sen.
persons interested in forming a
Sea-Link sub, Edwin A. Link, estinnated late Sunday that a
KEY WEST, Fla . (UPI) - state," and radio reports from·
Joseph R. Mccarthy on the
club for Bidwell, Porter,
television series "See It Now" Navy divers, using a roving the men in the front chamber, a Ewington, and surrounding chemical called barralime, which absorbs carbon dioxide to
MONDAY EVENING
prevent a buildup, might not last beyond noon today.
diving bell, failed today in a glass bubble, indicated the
in 1954.
areas are invited to attend.
The diving chsmher, carrying four divers, was flown in from
New York and Los Angeles second attempt to rescue four men were ''still breathing." Mrs. Dorothy Casey, Gallia
AND TUESDAY EVENING
San Diego, calif., aboard a cargo plane after two Navy divers
ratings for the live, televised men from a tiny research
field
planning
assistant
County
5 to 9: 3G-S2.~0 all you·can eat, (or AI a Cartel
descended to within 60 feet of the sub and said they woulq he
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Senate Watergate hearings submarine stuck in the hulk of
for Areawide Project on Aging unable to extricate it from the wreckage of the World War II
a
sunken
destroyer
360
feet
Distribution of the state
continue th ~s week to be
wiU be present, along with one Destroyer Fred T. Perry, scuttled by the Navy last year. The sub
deep
in
the
Atlantic.
A
naval
gasoline
excise t~x to
competitive with the ratings of
of the employees of the new
programs opposite them as official called the situation municipalities in Gallia County Senior Center now ' located in got caught Sunday in the old destroyer while studying a fishing
reef about 10 miles of! Sugar Loaf Key. Link's son, Clayton, 31,
has been made as follows:
NBC, CBS and ABC take turns "grave.''
Gallipolis.
Binghamton, N. Y., is one of the four crewmen aboard the sub,
Capt. Jess McVey, chief of Gallipolis, $3,990 ; Centerville
carrying the proceedings on
which does oceanographic research for Ute Smithsonian Instaff
of
the
Key
West
Naval
Village, $39; Cheshire Village,
different days.
stitution.
The Headliners: Marlon Base; said a strong current $219 ; Crown City Village, $229 ;
Although
earthquakes
are
The other crewmen are Archibald "Jock" t,lenzies, of Vero
Branda's publicized outing on kept rescuers fro111 reaching Rio Grande Village, $283 and more frequent in California
· . Dick Cavett's'· ABC-TV series the 21-foot subnnarine Johnson- Vinton Village, $253. Gasoline and Alaska , there have been Beach, Fla ., the pilot; Or. Robert Meek, 'll, .Santa Barbara,
this past Tuesday night Sea-Link and "nothing was taxes can he used only for damaging quakes in every Calif., an icythyologist; and AI Stover, 51, Juno Beach, Fla., a
diver.
street and roadway purposes. one of the 50 states.
brought the program potent accomplished .''
McVey said another attempt
ratings in the spot 'overnight
Drinks 'and
Wide Menu
would
he made later this
statistics for Los Angeles and
D~s~erl Extra .
Choice
New York, beating out NBC- morning on "a slack tide"
when · the current wasn't as
TV 's Tonight show.
Order our regular menu every night 5 to 10.
strong .
Cosell to Guest
Roger A. .Taylor, 20, Rt. I, There was moderate damage where Thomas M. Drake, 21; Hoover, Lawson, 44, WinstonThe designer of the sub,
Sportsnaster Howard Cosell,
Crown City, sustained minor to the car. The juvenile was New Haven,. lost control of his Salem, N. C. Belva Edna
who usually does his stuff for Edwin A. Link, whose son is injuries in a single car accident
car which left Ute . highway Smith, 66, Gallipolis, a
charged with auto larceny.
ABC-TV, will be the guest aboard ll)e vessel, estinnated at 12:45 a.m. today on Rt. 7 at
Another single car accident strikinganembankment: There passenger in tl'oe Stewart atuo,
commentator for NBC-TV 's Sunday the deadline for freeing Clay Elementary School.
occurred at 6:35 a .m. Sunday was heavy damage to his car. suffered minor injuries.
Monday Night Baseball Ga'"e the men from their underwater
The Gallia-Meigs Post State on Wood's Mill Rd. one and six Terry Esther Stewart, 69, . Another accident occurred in
of June 25 (Detroit Tigers at prison was about noon today Highway Patrol said Taylor
tenths miles north of Rt. 554 Ga llipolis, was cited to Meigs County at 5:15 p.m.
POMEROY
·PH. 992-3629
Boston Red Sox), joining when a chemical that absorbs lost Control of his car which ran
where Dorina K. Pugh, 28, Rt. Municipal Court for !allure to Saturday on Rt. 681, one and
""',....,....,_.,_,__,....,__ _ _ _,_,...,_....,.,......._~ •egulars Curt Gowdy and Tony carbon dioxide would be exoff the ri ght side of the highway 2, Bidwell, lost control of her slop within the assured clear six tenths miles west of Rt. 7
hausted.
· McVey described the situa- into a ditch striking a fence. car which ran off the ,road into distance following an accident where Richard Buckley, 19, Rt.
tion as "grave ," but said "as There was heavy damage to his a ditch. There was minor at 7:45p.m. Saturday on Rt. 35 2, CoolviUe, lost control of his
car which ran off t~e right side
far as I know, all of the men are car . No one was injured in damage and no one· was in· at Maple Dr.
three
Sunday
traffic
acci~ents .
jured.
The patrol said the Stewart of the highway striking an
alive." There had been earlier
The
first
accident
occurred
County
mishap
A
Meigs
car
slid into the 'left side of a embankment. There was
reports !ha.t the two crewmen
at
4:30p.m.
onTycoon
Rd
two
occurred on County Road 75 semi opLrated by Howard moderate damage.
in the rear compartment of the
an~ four tenths miles north of
suP were unconscious.
McVey couldn't confirm this, Rt. 554 where a 12-year old
but said if this were true, the juvenile from Bidwell, lost
Wl consciousness waS caused conttol of a car owned by
by too much carbon dioxide. Samuel Morris of Bidwell.
Rear Adm. John H. Maurer,
the base commandant, said
SHOP WEEK DAYS 9:30 TO 5 PM
earlier the two ineu in the·rear
"may already be in a comatose
WASH! N GTON

MEIGS THEATRE

Congressman Clarence E .
Miller
has
introduced
legislation in the House of
Representatives to protect
land along the Ohio River from
erosion caused by river traffic.
The bill directS the Commandant ol the Coast Guard to
issue regulations governing the
movement and an chorage of
vessels and barges in the Ohio
River from Cincinnati to New
Matamoras for the purpose of
protecting land structures and
shore areas.
According to Rep. Miller, the
wake and backwash created by
vessels operating on Ole river
have contributed to the
widespread problem of bank
erosion affecting property
owners and communities
located on the Ohio River.
.. Regulating river traffic
must be part of a com·
prehensive plan to control and
reduce the serious property
damage caused by river-bank
erosion and slippage," Miller
stated.
Miller is also a sponsor of a

ssen

TV... in Review

'!"ys

NOW

Outlook bleak

BUFFET
DINING

for sunken sub

Five weekend mishaps probed by Ohio Patrol

The MEIGS INN

Vacation
on Your .Mind?

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Bourassa has
one stroke

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Make 49 Deposits.

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smiling · let your
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l

FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System - S20,000 Ma ximum Insuran ce For Each Depositor .

OPEN BOTH FRIOAY &amp; SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

"Keep

in the mouth."

You wi ll always find
sm i ling fa ces on the people
who do business with the
Pom eroy Cement Block
Company .
Our
" FRIENDLY ONES "
wouldn't have it any other

MONTREAL (UP!) - Jocelyne Bourassa, hoping to win
her fir..st professional golf
tourilament, carries a on'e
stroke lead today into the third
and final round of the $50,000
La Ciinadienne Golf Championship,
Miss Bourassa, who shot an
even par 73 Sunday to give her
a two day total of 141, has a one
stroke advantage over Judy
Rankin, wbo carded her second
71.
In third place with two round
totals of 143 are Carol Marin
and Jane Blalock, followed by
Betsy Rawls with 144, and
Sandry Haynie and Betty
Burfeind! with 145 and 146 respectively' Miss Burfeind! set
a course r~ord Sunday when
she fired a six und~ par 67.
Miss Bourassa, who 111issed
seven of the first LPGA
tournaments this year, said,
"I'm starting to get my tempo
back now and I'm ready for the
final round. I want to win thi,s
one."
If rain should w~sh out
today's third round, as it did
Saturday's second round, Miss
Bourassa stands to win anyway
since the . $10,000 first prize
money goes to the player with
the best 36--hole· score.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II·· a.m.
Monday was 78 degrees under
cloudy skies.

NEW SHIPMENT

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Blue and Wh ite Durable Press Cover of
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Four good sizes to fit cha irs.
ras,
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Choose the size you need and protect
your furniture .

.. Jock" Menzies, Vera Beach,
Fla., and Or. Robert Meek, 24,
an ichthyologist from Santa
Barbara, calif.
The men were left in the aft
chamber of the 2!-foot Johnson-Sea Link sub when it was
jerked from its trap in the hulk
The announcement" was
of
an old destroyer by a
made by U . Cmdr. Wilfulm R.
mechanical arm Monday afSmith, Navy public relations
ternoon and hauled 360 feet up
officer, while the minisub
to the deck of its mother ship,
mother ship, Sea Diver, was
enroute to port with the sub- the Seadiver. The sub had
gotten tangled in a " spaghetti"
marine aboard.
of ca bles, lines and antennae
Two other men aboard the
Sunday while the researchers
vessel were removed from the
were studying fish life for the
submarine alive when the tiny
Smithsonian Institution.
submersible was brought to the
The men in the forward
surface at 4:55 p.m. EDT
cabin, Archibald &lt;~Jock '' MenMonday.
zies, VerO Beach, Fla., and Dr.
The sub became ensnared
Robert Meek, 24, an ichthyolo360 feet below the surface ol the
gist from Santa Barbara,
Atlantic in the wreckage of a
Calif., were conscious when the
scuttled destroyer wllile diving
sub was placed aboard the
off Key West Sunday morning.
Seadiver &lt;J.nd, after an hour's
The victims of the mishap
decorr.pression, were
were AI Stover, 51, of Juno
pronounc..?d in
'~ perfect
Beach, Fla ., and Clayton link,
physical condition ."
31, of Binghamton, N.Y., son of
But the otQer two crewmen,
the designer-builder pf the mini
AI Stover, 51, Juno.Beach, Fla.,
sub.
·
and Clayton Link, 31,
The two who SlJTvived the
Binghamton, N.Y., son of the
accident were Archibald
designer-bJ,lilder of the sub,

O'Grady here for
Democrat event
Eugene
P.
O'Grady,
Columbus, former executive
dir ector of
the
State
Demo cratic Executive
Committee will he the gues t
speaker at a meeting of Meigs
County Democ ratic Central
Committee Thursday at 8 p.m.
at the Episcopal Parish House
E. A. Wingett, chairman of th;
central committee, announced
today.
Lenore Siekels, Athens
County Centra l Committee
chairman, Bill Abdella and
Basil Jeffers of Division 10 of
the Department of Transportation will also he presen t.
Mrs. Siekels will discuss
women's role in the ~mocrat
Party and Abdella and Jeffers
will discuss highway problems
in the field.
O'Grady was Director or
Commerce for Ohio in 1962,
direc tor, Savings Bonds
Division, Ohio U. S. Treas ury
1965-66 ; exec utive director ,
State Democra tic Executive
·committee, 1966-68; chairman,
State Democratic Executive
Committee, 1968-71, and
Director, Ohjo Department
Highway Safety 1971.
A Catholic, O'Grady is . a
lawyer. fie graduated from

Edwin A. Link~ were not
removed. Decompression and
detoxification treatments were
begun immediately on the
unconscious men without
opening the aft cabin . .
All Alive Abou18 p.m.
Cmdr. Don Disney, commander of the Submarine
Research and Development
crew from' San Diego, Gall!.,
said at the time that "all four
are aUve." He later confirmed
Ulat all four men were alive
when he left the Seadiver about
8 p.m. EDT Monday night.
But other naval spokesmen
said they couldn't confirm the
safety of all of the crewmen.
Disney said that Edwin Link,
;llso the inventor of the link

flight trainer, was " quite
relieved that his son was
brought to the surfare and was
getting treabnent. "
The sub was rescued by the
research ship A. B. Wood in a
" last-ditch attempt before the
salvage ships left the scene,"
off Sugar Loaf Key about 20
miles east of Key West.
Five Attempts Fall
Five other attempts- two by
divers in pressurized suits, one
by scuba divers, and two by a
roving diving bell nown in from
San Diego-had failed.
The Wood was called upon
for aid because it has a 4()()..foot
mechanicaJ arm with tongs on
the end . .~ Wood lowered a
remote television camera to

•

study the sub's plight and then
used the arm to pluck the small
vessel from its prison in the
debris of the World War 11
destroyer Fred T. Perry,
scuttled by the Navy last year.
Edwin Link had said late
Sunday that the men probably
co uldn't Iive beyond n'oon
Monday because a chemical
called barralime !hal absorbs
carbon dioxide would be ex..
hausted then. The men lasted
beyond the predicted survival
deadline, but how·rnuch longer
they co uld have held on was

t

uncertain.

_

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.:

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John Carroll University in 1949
and from Cleveland Marshall
Law School in 21'. ye~rs. He
and his wife, Patricia, have
rive sons and seven daughters.
Wingett asks all committeemen and members of the
democrat party to attend the
all
import a nt meeting.
Refreshments will be served.

INews .. in Briefs!j·

I

1~,'1

John H. Maurer, the base
commandant

:"\

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FIRST PLACE HONORS in the non-eommercial category of Friday's Big Bend Regatt;•
Parade went lo th1s float created by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter ol Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. Riding
othne!hl9e7!13oat•'ttlearTheMe•ss Leatnnbe Seiltbo!h, thfle 11972dRcgatta Queen, seated, and the eight candidlltes for
.
soron Y u
e oa an wasmchargeoflhequecncontest.

•

at y
J

VOL. XXV

NO. 46

en tine

Devoted To The Interest. OJ The Meigs-MtJJJOn Area

POMEROY-M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1973

TilE Teaford Realty Co . won first place in the Commercial Division with this float which cetrrie&lt;J out the rega lti.J

theme, "A Good Place To Be In '73"

--

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - ACCUSATIONS BY BOTH environmental
and energy interests that the other is to blame lor the country's
energy problems are "absurd and unwarra nted," '· Interior
Secretary Rogers. C. B. Morton said Monday.
Morton urged bolh sides to stop fighting and instead work
together to solve th e problems. "If we must assign culpability and you can bet that with a full blown energy crisis there will be
enough to go around - let 's not lose sight of the fa ct that half
truths and political seH.interest are not likely to result in long.
term solutions," Morton said in a luncheon address to the
National Coal Association.

SAIGON - PRESIDENT NGUYEN VAN THIEU today
warned the world nol to be lulled by Communist appeals for
peace and charged "the Communist scheme is still to take over
South Vietnam by for ce." Speaking at annual Armed Forces Day
festivities, Thieu told an estimated 50,000 onlookers in downtown
Saigon: " In Ute past 18 years it was not because of their peace
and good will and national love that the Communists spoke of
stopping the fighting. And they will never give up their scheme to
reinvade our South ."
·
At Ute end of his nine-minute speech, dozens of South Vietnamese
helicopters,
cargo planes,
and
fighterbombers swept over. the city. The fly-over was followed by a
parade featuring about 20,000 members of the armed forces who
marched past Thieu, cabinet officials and foreign diplomats on
(Continued on Page 8)

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·~ J'

!'UGENE .O'GRADY

-~-=;m::;;;;:;:;;~:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::.: :::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

ELBER~ELDS IN POMEROY

.

" It was entirely too close for
any of us," said Rear Adm.

':~::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::=::::~::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:::::;:;:;:;:;~:;:;::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

\.~.!.:

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PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

U .S.-Soviet
educational
pact signed

WASHINGTON - ATTORNEYS ATIEMPTING to overturn
the conviction of Lt. William L. Galley Jr. have asked a military
court to probe the role the White House played in investigating
the My Lai massacre. The attorneys filed a motion Monday with
the U. S.· Court of Military Appeals asking it to order the
production of interviews, Wireta ps, logs and other records .
collected by two former White House aides ' who have been
mentioned in the Watergate case.
·The lawyers cited published reports that former New York
polireman John J . Gaullield and an associate, Anthony F.
Ulasewicz, interviewed My Lai participants on behalf of the
White House. Caulfield and Ulasewic;l worked on undercover
projects for the White House for three years beginning the spring
of 1969, Jl)'incipally under the supervision of John D. Ehrlichman,
one of President Nixon'S chief aides.

65% Po~ester/35% Colton.

JUST RECEIVED

KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) Two men trapped since Sunday
in a midget submarine were
found dead today when officials completed decompressing the vessel and opened
the hatch.

,•

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,.'~

.!'

WASHINGTON (UP I) - The United States and the Soviet
Union today ~ig n ed agreements designed to increase the flow of
artists and scholars between the two countriE:-s and to promote
joint research of the oceans, fai-ming and transportation.
With President Nixon and Soviet party Chairman Leonid I.
Brezhnev looking on, Secretary of State William P. Roger. and
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko signed the agreements
during u brief State Deparbnent ceremony.
The pacts were tlle first concrete achievement of the current
Nixon·Brczhncv summJt talks, now jn their se(.'Ond dl:ly. Both
leaders have predicted t.he talks will broadly expand trade between the two former Cold War rivnls and reduce the threat of
nu.clear war.
in extremely cold weatcr, ar,d
One aspect of such culturnJ the Rus.shms are interested in
exchanges WHS the subjec t of a U.S. methods for packaging
mild a nd orderly demon- and t'Omputerizing Products in
stration Monday, which neither tran.sit.
Brezhnev nor NixQ n sa w.
Nixon and Brezhnev, who
Dancers and other performers met for almost four hours of .
in colorful costumes paraded in ''philOSophical discussions'' in
front of the State Department the fir st session or their
.to protest Soviet performers swnmit Monday, turned their
taking jobs from them.
attention today to the tougher
The other agreements ore all problems of trade and disarfive.yea r pacts establishi ng mament.
U .S.-Soviet committees to
Spokesmen for both leaders
mee t a nnu all y on specific said they hoped to establish a
areas £or joint research and framework in which current
information etch.inge in each nuclear disarmament negotia- ·
of the three fields.
lions can proceed quickly.
·The
ocea nographic · But before that subject Ca me
agreement basically extends up this afternoon, Brezhnev
previ(JUS working agreements invited members of lhe Senate
which have developed between Foreign Relations Committee
the two countries.1n the field of and other key senators ta lunch
transportation th e United to try to persuade them to
States is interested in Soviet grant his nat ion trade conresmethods for coping with travel sions.

Thieves break
into Elherfelds

ASHLAND, OHIO - GOV. JOHN J . GILLIGAN told
delegates to Buckeye Boys State.Monday night that Americans
could react to the Watergate affair by either becoming cynical or
by doing something to impro ve the government.
In his brief address to the 1,350 boys, Gilligan said some feel
because of Watergate that the political system is outdated. But
he recommended it is better to seek change and dedicate oneself
to malting the system work .

1

$6 · 95 "Serene 1 '

ea rescue too ate

•

CHILDREN AND THEIR DOG - Wendy Wolfe , 3%, and
her sister Tricia, 1. pretty daughters of Southern High School
head basketball coach and Mrs. carl Wolfe have Monty, their
poodle, in th~ir swing on a warm spring day at their present

home on South Third St., Middleport. Mrs. Wolfe is the former Suzanne Br::tdbury. The Wolfes expect ta sh1rt bUilding a
new home in Racine soon, Picture by J . Sam Nichols IlL

Vendor rules -a pproved
The third required reading of matter should be brought
an ordinance to limit and before co uncil, he will so adregulate vendors from side- vise.
Council also looked at a
walks , streets and parking
area&amp;
in
Porn- p~oposal to accept sealed bids
eroy. with one minor ·for a new police cruiser and to
amendment, was approved by . s.ell the present cruiser. The
Pomeroy Village Council matter will be given further
Monday nig ht.
study.
The change was that a citizen
Council discussed the
m;~y obtain permission to have possibility of purchasing an air
'~tag days" or 11Sales" by conditioner for· the office of the
asking the mayor instead of police wllich Jed to a suggestion
w:aiting until couricil met. to remodel the present town
Requests may be gran ted upon hall, or buying a not her
the mayor's discretion. If a building, or building a new one.
mayor shouid feel that the The building that housed Weed ·

and Son Wholesale business for
many years, which is for sale,
was discussed as a possible site
of city hall .
Meeting with council was
Edison Hobstetter, president of
\he Pomeroy National Bank, in
regard to the bank's plan of
erecting a drive-up depository
on the lot purchased by the
ban k formerly owned by the
late Mr. and Mrs. P. K. Smith.
Hobstetter explained that
present plans call for the. bank
to erect a drive-up facility, but
he adde.d if this could not be
accomplished, the area would

a parking area .
Hobstetter asked council to
co nsider, if the drive-up
facility is followed through,
that the three meters be
removed in front of the lot so
access to the property could be
made. He added that if the
servi$!e. is accomplished, the
present drive up facility along
side of the baOjk on second
Street would be discontinued
and meters along side the bank
could be restore&lt;\. Council took
the matter under advisement.
Mayor Do nald Collins
(Continued on .Page 8)

bC used as

Thieves broke into the closet. It is believed the winElberfeld Department store on doW was reached from an
Main Street late Sunday af- areaway behind a bakery on
ternoon or night and made off .Court St. ·
with approximately $800 in
Anderson sa id it would be
c•sh. A late night deposit .had some time before the precise
been made after the close of loss could be determined but he
busi ness Saturday or the loss was much ·more concerned
could have been greater.
about damage to two lire-proof
According to William An- safes which were jimmied
derson, manager of the store, open.
entry was made through a
Apparently the thieves - if
small window into a broom there was more than one also made off with several
pieces of luggage and a con.siderable number of watches
scooped up from a cour. ter on
the main floor,
Hundreds of out~f-towners
Warm today with variable were in Pomeroy over the
cloudiness and . c hance ilf weekend for the annual, rega tta
' thu nde rshow ers west while and Frog Ball. Officials are
partly cloudy central and east. alwa ys co ncerned at such
High mid to upper 80s . limes because such events
v'a riable clo udin ess with attract members o( the
chance of showers and thWl· criminal element. However, at
&lt;jers howers tonigh ~ ' and. this stage ofthe investigation it
Wednesday and little change in , was unknown whether police
temperature. Low tonight 65 to had any leads or whether it was
70. High Wednesday in the a · local or ou t-of-town
operation.
middle to upper 80s.

Weather

•

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