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M_

Thi!SUndayTlmes-Sentlnel ,Sw•~ay, July 8,1973

I

_

Ffues ordered in 18 cases
POMEROY - County Court of 16 othen Friday.
Judge Frank W, Porter fined 18 Fined were Larry Patterson,
!lefendonll and took up bonds Parkersburg, Richard ·A.
Lewis, Fombell, Pa., and Allee
A. Kitchen, R.I. l, Middleport,
$10 and coslll each, speeding;
Michael S. Baker, Belpre;
Charles A. Eshenbrenner, Jr.,
Rt. 1, Galllpolls; Van Ray
Campbell, Ashland, Ky., and
Floyd Mlllhoas, Belpre, ~and
costa, speeding ; Richard A.
Abbott, Cedar Springs, Mich.,
$10, passing at an intersection ;
Gerald Arnold, Pomeroy, $150
and costs•. 3 days. in jail, and'
Ucense suspended for 6 months, OWl, and $25 and cos !.'I, no
valid operator's license ; Roy
H. Kesoorson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
and David Goble, Jr.,
Columbits, $150 and costs, 3
days in jall, and license
suspended for 6 months, each
DWI; Clarence · DeWeese,
Middleport, $10 and costs,
Rotlromont con be tho bnt
failure to yield right of way;
limo of your lifo. And to htlp
mtkt IUrl you ..... IOOUih
Marvin Ours, Gallipolis, and
money ·to do tho thlnas you
Gerald
Taylor, Rt. 4, Jackson,
went, Stote Fonn life hos 1
policy modo to ~or lor your
$25 and costs, with $10
rotlrtmont yNrt. Stole Fonn
suspended each, overload;
and I ein htlp you pt what
you Wllnl out of life. Let ma
Warren D. Black, Rt. I, Mid·
ohc&gt;w you haw.
dleport, $14 and costs,
speed.ing ; Harold Skaggs,
CARROL K. SIIOWDEN
Parte Ctntral Hotel Blclg.
Gallipolis, $150 and costs, 3
Second AYt .. Gallipolis
days in jail, restricted license
I'll. 446-4210, Homo 446-051•
suspension lor 6 months, DWI;
Uh • ,.e4 Mleftbor, lftftl ,.,,. /1 tf!ltN.
Joseph Ooten, Buffalo Creek,
STATE FA'RM LIFE W. Va., 7 days confinsment,
tNIURANC[ COMP'ANY intoxication,
and Elmer
Homt Olfic• · Bitamln•lft" 111 ~~ ~~
Parsons, Rt. 2, Racine, $)0 and.
p 7347

Plan

for retirement

..... .....
~

A

1

custs, !allure to drive on right
side of road .
.
Forfeiting botlds were Peter
Ferguson, Zanesville, $157.50,
drl ving under suspension, ~nd
1357.50, pWI; John Wolford,
Rt. 4, Marietta; Raymond
Mahoney, Rl. 2, Marietta ; Ray
Sammons, Rt. 1, Rush, Ky.;
Henry Stiles, Glen Dale, .W.
Va. ; James Wilson, Rittman,
Ohio; Paul Krizo, Cuyoh~a
Falls ; Ross Snyder, Rt. 1,
Langsville, and Richard G.
Young, Rt. I, Weelsville, Ohio,
$27 .50 each, speeding; Ruth N.
.Taylor, Coolville, $357.50,
DWI; Dwayne Sidders, RD,
Shade , $25, disturbing the
peace ; JJimes J;::. Spoun, Rt. 2,
Racine; Charles W. Holcomb,
Ulhopolls, and Leslie F. Gibbs,
Delaware, $34.55 each, fishing
wilhout a license ; Robert L.
While, Racine, $27 .50, Intoxication, and Joseph H.
Simpson, Jackson, $27.GO,,
passing on a yellow line.

New programs
addt:d fo find
lung diseases

Mlrllford promote.d
· CHESHIRE - F. Dennis
Mulford, a native of this
community, has been named
Manager, Management
Programs for the General
Electric lnformallon Services
Bus In e s s
D I v Is Io n
headquartered In Bethesda,

w:.a ..:8~m;:;:~~~:s:'8'8·~-..J;0.~ii!IIIIM'l::l!.-• • • • • •

~ DEAL ME

IN, too

WASHINGTON D. C. Three new programs to aid in
..... ..:1
lhe treatment and deteclion of
BY JO &amp;LLEN DIEHL
black lung and other
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Allen Eichinger Pomeroy, had
r~spiratory dise~~;~es were tdd.
quite a surprise last week when !heir granddaughter, Darla
approved today acCQrdlng to
Mulford will be responsible
Kelly, suddenly popped in for a visit. That wouldn't be much of a
Congressman Clarence Miller. for Division market research
sur~rise to some people, but Darla came aU the way from her
Through an application flied and analysis, competitive
home In F'lorlda to "drop In" on her grandparent~. Darlll' I• lhe
by the Ohio Department of analysis and lhe development
daughter
or Gerald and BoMie Kelly.
Health, the Appalachian of marketing plans . , The
Regional Commission in . Division operate$ a computer
KATHY KING AND Unda Sauvage packed up arid new orr to
Washington has provided services network serving
Cincinnati for a two week. vacation. They will be slaying with
$199,54a for the -es!abiishment nearly 300 cities throughout the
some of Linda 's relallves while they are there.
of an Ohio Coal Workers U. S., Canada, Japan and
Respiratory 018\!ase program Western Europe.
·
IN MY ATI'EMPTS TO KEEP busy !his summer, I finally
in Zanesville, Gallipolis, and . Since joining GE In 1967,
persuaded my dad to take me golfing wilh hlm. (After slx years
Bellaire. The centers which Mulford has served in a variety
of pleading be had to break down some ttme.) An avid gol{er, he
will service approximately of engineering, sales agd
F. DENNIS MULFORD
was somewhat embarrassed at my _feeble attempts at driving,
9,500 miners from lhe South- marketing functions. The
putting, chipping, and my final score of 81 for nine holes. I keep
eastern area and will be set up Gallla County native received
in conjunction with the existing a BS from Rio Grande College wife is lhe daughter of Mr. and trying to tell myself !hat an average of nine strokes per hole Isn't
heallh centers in lhe com- in 1960. He is a member of lhe Mrs. Huber, Fulton, also of too bad f9r a beginner!
Thanks to Jane Walton for tbe use of her clubs, but I'm
munities mentioned.
Association · for Computing Cheshire. He was an · outbeginning to wonder If I'll be able to use lhem again. Dad might
The toll!! cost of the project is ·Mac hinery an d has been ac ti ve . stanqing athlete with the
not
want to take me_along again.
$25(485. The Bureau of Mines In lhe Jaycees, both In Ohio and Ky~er Cteek Bobcats. Mr. imd
will fund the balance of $57,940. Maryland.
Mrs. Mulford are both
WHILE I'M SPEAKING of my family I might as welt' say
He currently resides at 24305 graduates of Kyger Creek High
my sister and brolher~n-law , Charlene and Ron Rutherford,
Ka kae Dr., Damascus, Md., School and Rio Grande College. that ed
· to lh err
· new home in Grosse p om
· t Shores, M.tch., Iast
He's Lieutenant Blessing now
Mrs.
Mulford
is
a
part-time
mov
m
with his wife Margaret and
children, Lisa and Christopher. ooacher in the Cumberland week. Now they're busy painting and decorating the house to suit
PT. PLEASANT - Michael Blessing also received his
Mulford is lhe son of Mrs. County Public Schools in ' lhemselves.
A. Blessing, son of Mr. and master's degree in chemical
Philip Bailey, Cheshire. His Maryland .
Mrs. Manford A. Blessing, Rt. engineering. He is a member of
, HAVE YOU NOTICED the sudden appearance of bicycles
I, has been commissioned a Tau Beta Pi, Omega Chi Epabout town ? Since in 1972 the total nUII)ber of bicycles sold exsecond lieutenant upon com- silon and Phi Lambda Upsilon.
ceeded the number of automobiles sold in the U.S. Not just kids
pletion of the U. S. Air Force
The lieutenant is a 1967
are riding the bikes, either. People of all ages aild whole families
Reserve Officers Training gradLJte of Point Pleasant
can be seen riding around town. One favorite place Is on lhe new
CorpsprograinatW. Va. U. Lt. High School. His wife, Sally, is
HUNTINGTON
The festival organizers stress, part of Rl. 7.in back of.Pomeroy that hasn't been open to traffic
lhe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Huntington Square and Round bowever that participation in yet.
Harold D. Burges.~, Ponce, P. Dance Festival will be lhe . lhe dancing is restricted to
I guess people are finally realizing lhat bicycling is great
R.
major attraction here in this individuals who know how to do .exercise and it saves gas for small errands downtown, too. Would
there be any interest in forming a club in the area?
Ohio R[ver city July 27-29 as !1.
Registration for dancers
couples and dancing club
members from throughout the wanting to get in the festival
tri-atate region arrive by the opens at 3' p.m., Friday, July
hundreds lor a full slate of toe- 27 with the first dance
tapping, foot-atomping dances starting
aI
8
p.m.
and dance workshop programs Workshops in both round
MASON - Wayne (Andy) said lhe accident, still under
WASHINGTON - The U. S. in Memorial Fieldhouse.
and square dancing will Stewart, 16, Mason, ·remains a Investigation, occurred about
Departr;nenl of Agriculture
Sponsored by the City of be held at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. patient in Veterans Memorial 3:15 p.m. when Margaret
(USDA) announced today .that Huntington, this unique Saturday and at 10 a.m. Sun." Hospital in Pomeroy where he Thompson, Rl. l, Letart,
the national ave~age payment festival will offer six nationally . day. Tbe actual dan.ces ·will was removed by the New headed east, turned into Lone
from general cash-for-food prominent square dance start Saturday at 12:30 p.m. Haven ambulance following a Street and into the path ollhe
assistance funds for school callers and provide par- and 8 p.m. and. Sunday at 1 motorcycle-car accident motorcycle driven by Stewart
lunches .served in fiscal year ticipants with a chance to. p.m. Jnforma'tiori may be . Friday afternoon in New headed west . The impact,
1974 (which begins July i) will lmprove their abilities in both · obtained by contacting Sonny Haven. His condition was Parsons said, lhrew Stewart
off lhe motorcycle. He comround and square dancing Bess at 304-52!1-4522 or by reported not setiotls.
remain at 8 cents per lunch.
Chief of Police Tom Parsons plained of ground bur .s and
USDA also announced that through a series of lhree phoning Huntington City Hall
back Injuries.
national average payments special work.~hops . While lhe a.t 304-696-5580.
under the school breakfast

Toe-tapping festival set

-

THE BIG

Lunch subsidy

NEW

T

h

·

1

eenager urt on motorcyc e

still 8 cents

'73 PONTIAC
.$AVE $$$ NOW.

'

On All .New Pontiacs
In Stock. Choose
· Yours While Selections are Great.

• TREMENDOUS
DISCOUNTS

•

••••••
STOCK NO.

OON'TMISS .
IT!!!

VENTURA 4 DR. SEDAN

73-69

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

3866.70
5371.70

5

Florentine Red-While Cordova Top, soft ray FACTORY STICKER PRICE
glass (aiiJ , front and rear floor mats, custom
BOB REES PONTIAC
air condllloning, 2 BBL 350 engine, power
DISCO\) NT
steering, dual liorns. AM radio, front body
guards, · door edge guards, body Side
moldings, dual side mirrors (bodY, color),
Turbo hydramatlc tr~nsr:nlssi on , E78x14 W-W

weekly schedule

4255.60
$560.60

,5

FACTORY STICKER PRICE

glass (all). front and rear floor mats, custom
air conditioning, power disc brakes, turbo

hydramatlc transmission. G7Bxl4 w.w tires,

dual horn$. rear seat speaker, remote control
mirror, 2 BBL 350 engl,ne, power steering,
deluxe wheel covers, AM radio, door edge

BOB REES POiHIA~.
DISCOUNT

guards, vinyl body side moldings, protective

SALE PRICE

rubber bumpe.r strips.

~

$3695'
'

STOCK NO.
73-53

CATALINA HT COUPE
FACTORY STICKER PRICE

Burma Brown-Cameo White Top, soft ray
glass tall), front ~nd rear floor mats, 2 BBL
..00 Eng ., deluxe wheel covers. door edge.
guards, body side moldings, vinyl, front and
rear bumper guards, protective rubber
bumper
I
custom air conditioning,

H78xt5

4775.90
'780.90

5

BOB RE ES PONTIAC
DISCOUNT

AM

ST~~~BNO. GRANDVILLE

S~LE

PRICE

2 DR. HT CPE.

Mesa Tan-White Cordova Top. &gt;oft ray glass FACTORY STICKER PRICE
lalll, custom olr conditioning, H78&gt;15 W-W
tires. front and rear custom seat belts, front
BOB REES PONTIAC
shoulder strap. custom front and rear seat,
DISCOUNT

'5480.05
5
935.05

re'r passenger assist strap5, remote control
mirror, AM radio, door edge guards, stainless

steel body side mold ings, front and· rear
bumper guards, protective ru bber bumper

VENTURA 4 DR. SEDAN

STOCK NO
73-72

Por ce lain Blue, Whil e Cordo_va top.

SALE PRICE
Faclory Slicker Price SJJ27.70
Bob Rees Ponlla c Olscounl s

SALE PRICE
NO.

CATALINA HT COUPE

73 -62

Florentine Red-Burgundy top, custom

olr conditioning . fully equipped.

SALE PRICE

leMANS 4 DR• HT

STOCK NO.
73-67

Burma Brown·Whlte Top, custom air

conditioning, fully equ ipped.

s~~;K No.

'

POMEROY
Senior
Citizens Center activities here
!his week :
July 9, Decoupage 1-3; bring
Item to be decorated.
July 10, Rug Hooking 9-11;
Cards and Games 1-4; Long
Bottom Sr. Citizens Club meets
at 10 a.m. at the home of Marie
Swan.
July 11, Ctocheting, Mae
Weber instructor, 9-11; bring
yarn and hook; shuffleboard I·
3; Lebanon Golden Age Club,
10 a.m. at Latter Day Suints
Church.
July 12, Ctaflll 9-ll; Crewel
embroidery, Mrs . Viltna
Pikkoja, Instructor, 2-3: 30;
cards and games H .
July 13, Rug Hooking 9-ll.
Quilling, games, shuf·
fleboard, cards, rug hooking
almost any ttm~ you like. The
CQffee is better than ever, we
have a nice selection of book.!
and magazines to browse
through, a really great era(!
,sales table, and lots of conversation . Come on In and visit, "---:---·
and don't let that Friday lhe .
13th fool you! It's going to be a
GREAT day.
The bus will swrt operation
the 16th; schedules will be
posted In each town, Call lhe
center, 992-7886, if you are
interesood in riding lhe·bus.-

'GRAND PRIX HT COUPE
Atcot Sliver-Black Cordova top. cuslofl'l
olr conditioning, tull

SAL:E PRICE $

..

COMf SEE US AT •••

BOB REES PONTIAC, INC.
Phone 446-1513

Gallipolis, Ohio

COURSE COMPLETED
RACINE - Bob E. Roy of
Racine, an lrtslllller repairman , has received a certificate
for completing a special course
at General Telephone Co. of
Ohio 's Technical Training
School at Murt on. Roy 9ludled
lnsl&lt;lilatiou, test and repair
aspects of lhe sy!lem. He has
bee~ with the company 191'.
years. He works In area ex·
change! ln lhe company's
Athens district.

'

~t~

E~-subteen drunkards common

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Ronnie P. WaJ first arreat.ed
for public drunkemellf when
he was 15.
" My parenta had to come
and get me," he said. "They
laughed It off. I was just
another drunk ldd."

Sunday Ronnie smiled pnd
Sllld, "Uie aure is beautiful."
He hadn't hod a drink of liquor
f9r tG monlhs.
AlcohotiCII Anonymous orrlclals say Ule public may be
shocked at reports of yoong.
sters drinking liquor at such an
early age, bul the AA lsn'l
surprised.
•,
"Sixteen and 18 year olds
have been common to AA for
many years," said Norman .W.,
spokesman at the 16th lnternatlonal conference of Youog
People In AA, which ended 11.'1
lhree-day meeting Sunday.
Ronnie . was one of 1,400
qelegates from throughout lhe

United Sillies and Canada at
lhe annual meeting where the
slogan was, "Get your ·sobriety
together."
"1 haven't had a fight with .
Ule wife -since I stopped," said
Ronnie. "We used to fight a lot.
I waa a lhrower."
''Once I even tried to kill a
Ronnie was already drinking
man with a strolgun. My wife
a lot when he was 12. He used to
didn't think much of that."
hang around pool halls in his
AA estimates that In th.e
hometown of Ft. Worth,' Tex.,
United Slates lllone there are
and winos would buy hlm
nine million alcoholics, of
alcohol for ,an extra dime .
which 650,000 are "sober"
He had eight liquor-related
members of AA.
auto accidents. He was jailed
"The lmporliint. thing t~
17 llrnes for rowdy behavior
remember is that only four per
while drunk .
t-ent (of the nation's alcoholics)
are on skid row," said John B.
of Indianapolis. ·
An estimated 30 per cent of
the alcoholics in AA have
professional or basiness jobs,
20 per cent are salesmen, 2ii
per cent are skilled and·trades
workers, !G· per cent are. unBy United Press International
skilled
laborers and 10 per cent
WASI-DNGTON - FORMER ATI'ORNEY General John N.
Mitchell was interviewed by staff lawyers for the Senate are in 11 0ther" categories.
Chuck R., a 26-year-old
Watergate committee today in preparation lor his long..awaited
public testimony starting Tuesday. Mitchell, who was President · mailman from Indianapolis,
Nixon's re-&lt;!lection campaign manager until two weeks after the was delighted at the selection
Watergate bugging arrests June 17, 1972, appeared at midmorning at lhe office of Fred D. Thompson, the committee's
Republican counsel.
He·appeared In good spirits and chatted freely with reporters, although he said little of substance. Asked if his wife Martha
WO\lld acCQmpany him to the hearings Tuesd~y, Mitchell replied,
"Well, we'll have to wait and see."

. CHARLESTON, W . VA.~ A YOiJNGGIRLwaskilled today
and-four otber persom were injured when a predawn thun•
derstorm struck wilhout.warning, causing a nash flood in the
upper Donnally Hollow section of east Charleston , Rescue
workers were hindered in digging through the remains of one
house where two _boys may be buried un!ler mud and water.
Workers said escaping gus prevented a search for lhe youths.
There also were reports that water from an abandoned mine
on a -hillside may have contributed to lhe damage. However,
there was no official confirmation of a mine being located on the
hillside and ~ome residents felt the rain had simply was)led down
with such force that vegetation was stripped away. The victim
was identified by a spokesman for Charleston Memorial Hospital
as Anetta Hunter 9. Her sister, Veronica, 10, was one of the in·
jured.

.

VOL XXV NO. 59

.. ---·--·- ----~--~-------IDEAL FOR DEN OR FAMILY ROOMS. SUPPORTED VINYL
OR CLOTH COVERS. LARGE SEL~CTION OF COLORS.
REGULAR "129.00

Sale /•99.00
.Furniture Department, Third Floor

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ON SEOOND STREET AND AT ELBERFEloS
MECHANIC·STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
"

Five accidents were in·
vesligated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department over the
weekend.
Reported to the sheriff's
department Saturday was an
accident in which the driver
failed to slop. At 5:30p.m. on
SR 243 in Chester Township,
Erne•t G. Newlun, Long
Bottom, driving east In a
pickup truck, went off the highway into a ditch striking a
fence belonging to Carl Ritchie. He got back onto the highway and continued on wilhout
stOpping. The accident Is still
under lnvestigallon.
Saturday at 5:55p.m. on S.R
124 In Racine, James E.
Millihin, Racine, Rl. 2, was
traveling east as was Elmer L.
Pickens, Racine, Rt. 2. Pickens
pulled off the )rlghway and
Milliron went partially off the
highway and slruck the
Pickens truck In the rear .
Milliron was cited to court on
charges of speedlrlg, There
were no personal injuries.
There was medium properly
damage.
Al3 :15 p.m. , Saturday .on SR
\24 just south of Racin e
Gregory Donohew, Haclne, Rt.
.2, was traveling south. The
Donohew vehicle went off the
road on the right, struck lo05e
gravel, went out,of control, and
struck and broke orr a
lelephone pale. Tbere were no

'

MECHANICSBURG, Ohio
( UP~) - Sen. William Saxbe,
It-Ohio, reportedly on a White
House blacklist of Hepubllcan
se.na tors who opposed the
Nixon . administration, said
today. he's not surprised and
has suspected such "Nazi"
tactics for three years.

humiliation

to

political

rcprl.si!lS .''
1
' l 'rn not s·
urprised/' Sax-be

said irom his home here. "I
called Haldeman and former..
pr eside ntial advtslrr'· John ·
l!:ru·trclunan Nazis three years .
ago, and they're the ones w~o
made the list as I understand
it. "

Syndicated columnist Jack
Anderson reported today the
list had been compiled by
former White House Chief of
Staff H. R. Haldeman and was
separate from the so-&lt;:alled
"enemies list" which emerged
during Senate Waterga te
Corrunittee heariilgs .
Anderson said lhe senators
on the list, including Saxbe,
were subject to "retuliation,
which ranged !rom petty

Saxbe, who criticized President Nixon's handling of the
Vielllarn War and was one of
the strongest opponents of the
Christmas bombing of Hanoi,
said he .knew of no attempt• ai
political reprisals.
·
However, Saxbe said he
never attend ed any While
House diruters or· other social
ev~nts .

"I was never invited to the
White Boase," he said .

.

'

HIZZONER, COMMON PLEAS JUDGE John C. Bacon of Antiquity drives his sleek tw&lt;&gt;- .
wheeler to the courlhouse in Pomeroy .and to other appointmenl.'l about the county. Above, the
judge prepares to mount for the ride home following the regular meeting of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club, or which he is a recent past president.

POMERO_Y-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, JULY 9, 1973

' SEA~·rLE (UPI) -· John
Ehrliclnnan, former domestic
affairs advisor . to Presiderlt
Nixon , says \he President
discussed but dismissed lhe
qu estion of executive clemency
for· the Watergate burglars, the
Seattle Post-Jntelligencer reported Sunday.
In an interview with the
newspaper, Ehrlichman also
said the testimony or former
While House counsel John W.
Dean Ill concerning his ~lleged
involvement in Watergate was
"contriv ed,; and "180" degrees
from the truth.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

the matter of convi9ted Watergate burglars,
clemency with ·the ·President and that the President had told
for all Ure Watergate defen- /Um It would be "no problem"
dants in July," Ehrlichrnun to raise $1 mlllion lo pay the ·
said. " I said, 'sooner or later'· Watergate conspirators for
·
you're going to be confronted their silence,
with a suggestion by somebody
that these fellows be given
Ehrlichrnan said Dean's tesclemency."
timony before the Senate
"1 said, "The ~'ac t that you' Watergate Committee related
would entertain a conversation "was a deliberate and studied
CERTIFICATES PRESENTED PRESS - The Gallia-Meigs Ohio Slate Patrol Post
on the subjeCt could be argued effort...lo soin· a web around
Commander Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth, on behalf of Col. Robert M. Chairamont.e, Ohio State
to be some kind of ratification former White House. advisor
Patrol Superintendent, Saturday presented Hobart Wilson, J~ .. left, editor of the Daily
or approval of their acts. It's · H. R. Haldeman and me."
Tribune, and Chester Tannehill, editor of lhe Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times-Sentinel ceran _ ~xtremely dangerous
Because of "lack of total
tificates of appreciation lor the ohio Valley Publishing Company's cooperation and support of
subject for you to ever get commitment by the ·FBIOhio Stale HighWay Patrol activities.
into.'
Hoover had a hangup-"
"He agreed·," Ehrlichman Ehrlichinan said he "reluccontinued . "He said, 'Let's tantly ' ' authori zed an in·
agree now this is a subject vesligation of Daniel Ellsberg.
we'll never discuss.'
However , Ehrlichman said
"I adhered to that. It was he was "shocked" when he
never discussed."
learned that the White House
LONDON (UP!) - World Zurich and Paris but rose on ments - to halt the dollar rate inched upward in some
Dean told the Senate Water- "plumbers" had broken into
money markets reacted nerv- some other European currency slide .
markets,_reversing we~ks of . gale committee that Nixon had the office of Ellsberg's
ously today to weekend reports exchanges.
Th~ dollar closed in Tokyo at
downward slides.
, approved executive clemency psychiatrist and he ordered
from Basel, Switzerland that
Gold, which asually rides the 254 yen today, the first time
In Ffankfurt the dollar for .E. Howard Hunt, one of lhe their operations saspended .
world bankers may move to olher.end of the dollar seesaw ' ever il had been below 260 yen. opened higher but soon fell
defend lhe U.S. dollar and to slipped back in price on Lon- The closing price was eight yen back in very light tradi ng. It
hints the United States may don's big bullion market as the below Friday's close. The dropped to 2.29 marks after
intervene in the markets to halt dollar climbed In Europe. 1111 dollar also dropped in Hong opwing at 2.:1250. Both were
tire dollar's slide.
price was fixed at $126 an Kong and Singapore. But in above ~' rida y's . record closing
The American currency ounce at the morning session, Europe the dollar:s exchange price of 2.26 mar·ks.
.Resiglllllions accepted were
The resignations of four
plunged to all-tim~ record lows down $1 an ounce from
Southern Local School District from Joan Honkala, who haS
In Tokyo and Hong Kong today, Friday's fixed price.
teachers were accepted when been an elementary teacher,
dropped in Singapore, Londo~,
Bankers from lhe United
the district's Board of Mr. and Mrs . Gordon' Fisher,
Stales, Carada, Japan and 16
Educa tion mel in specia l who have not taught in the
district but had been hired for
other non-Communist counsession Friday night.
the next school year, and
tries met in Basel this weekend
'
Duane
Wolfe,
Racine
and said that necessa ry
consumers
~
this
is
news
to
us.
I'
CLEVELAND
(UP!
)
The
Elementary
teacher.
teclmical arrangements were
"Our object is no! to make
Employed by the board were
in place to cool the dollar fever Stahdard Oil Compan)' o[ Ohio
more
money
,
but
to
make
more
Sleven Wagner, Springfield, to
and thallhls may be the time to (Sohio) lias lowered the octanes of gasolincs to produce gas, and we can do that by
ca'rry !hem oul.
leach French and Biology In
cr·eating
the
capability
to
gel
more fuel !J·om crude oil, but
the high school; Mr. and Mrs.
mm·e
gas
·out
of
a
barrel
of
Ted Trotter of Gallipolis, to
The announcement followed customers wei·e not told of the
crude
oil,"
Pa1
•lridge
said
.
change.
leach in lhe elementary
Two mine training programs the regular monthly meeting of
Sohio
will
be
able
to
produce
up
Jo
·
L.
Enevoldsen,
16,
of
A Sohio spokesman, Chai'Ies
schools.
the Bank for International
designed to assislln providing
to
2pct.
more
gasoline,
he
said.
Reedsville
is
a
patient
in
lhe
W. Partridge, confirme d
ll was reported that two new
men with needed job skills as Setllements. There have been
He
said
producing
lowe
r
intensive
care
section
of
St.
Sunday
octane
ratings_
lor
cla
sses for the ed uca ble
demands that the United States
. polentlal employes of the new
octnnc
.
gas
is
cheuper,
but
Joseph's
·Hospital
in
Parkersmentally retarded have been
support .the dollar in the premiwn· gasoline have been"
Meigs Mine complex have been cur-rency market si,n'ce its red uced £rom lOUlo 09 m· !18, lher~ is no savings In overa ll burg, it was learned today,
approved by the state. The
funded by the Appalachian steady dt'Cline hurts European imd regular from \H to 93.
refinery operations·.
She was admitted there district now has one class. The
Regional Commission.
Partridge ,said Sohio did not fo ll owing a motorcycle-car two new classes will be on the
exporl~ . .
Congressman Clar enc e
Partridge, associate director publicly announce the octane accident Friday on Rl. 124, two elementary and junior high .
Miller has anhOanced the
11Iis c-ould be done either by of Solrio public relations here, red uctions because it is " not oo nths of a mile east of Rl. 681 level. Larry Beyer, Shade, was
upproval of ARC grant s selling gold from Fort Knox or said the company was goi ng to have an)' impact of in eastern Meigs Coun ty.
employed to teach orie of lhe
totaling over $138,000 for two borrowing from other coun- following the lead '"t b)' three · any considera tion. We could
Miss Enevoldsen was a classes and one more EMR
mining courses to be held at triei to buy back the dollars other oil cornpa,nies , Gulf, have given a long discourse on passenger on a motorcycle · teacher is needed In th e
Southeastern Ohio schools.
which have _flooded the Mobile and Sumdard Oil o£ ocuine, but we don't think the driven by Dale E. Wilfong, 15, distrlel. The sewage system at
Approval of a $123,37&amp; grant Europenn currency c~changc'S, California. He said all Sohio public would give a damn," he of Reedsville. Their cycle was the high school was discussed.
to Tri-County Vocallonal es peduli y West Germany dealers "should be aware or suid .
struck by an auto driven by
Board members attending
School was 'announc~d lor the which recently revalued the the reductions."
Only about 2 pel. of the cars Russell B. Handolph, 48, of wer·e Char,l ~s Pyles, David ·
purpose of Initiating a variety · mark 5.5 per cent upward to try
''Arter· the fir st two or three on the road will bO affected ·uy Heedsvllle . Wilfong was N~a se, Junior Salser and
or tralrt,lng progr·ams ror .deep lo hull tho dollar selling.
lmd done it, it 1vns just old tho lower oc!&lt;Jne, he said, cars niported slightly injured, and Dennie Hill . Both Hal ph Sayre,
co~l mining.
·
TI1o United States has re- hut, " Partridge snid.
more than eight years oid. He did not. require immediate who Is leaving the district a~
A second p'rogram of mine !rained from any CQmnrltment . However the QKC Cu ifve said they will probably pick up medical allention .
superintendent, and Bob Ord,
malnlenonce was awarded un to Intervene In support of the director of the North~rn Ohio . "a slight ping" when ac- . Randolph, according to the lhe new superintendent, also
ARC · grant of $14,991 . This . dollur an~ West German bank p e t r· 0 1e urn
He t a il I ng celerating ilr going uphill.
Stote Highway Patrol, was attended.
course will be conducood at the sources said John Coombs of Assoclutlon Slllcl he had not , Newer ct~rs can run on cited for failure lo yield right of
CUTHYGLASS
Meigs High School. Project lhe F'edcrnl Reserve Bunk been notified of U1c. oci&lt;mc ~" solinc as low 11s Ot octane way, Wilfong for driving
The Middleport E·R squad
plans call fQr the construction hjected the Idea Sunday . cutbacks.
·
without uny cfft•ct. he said .·
without " license, and the
was
called to Ure Middleport
ol n simulated mine above However rep6rts persisted the
" We have never been in·
Partridge said occas iona l owner ef the cycle, Calvin W.
ground In order to . acquaint li~ilcd States nruy lruve to formed, " sn id James V. kr1ocking will have no effect on Ruble, for permitting an levee at 2:44 p.m. SUQd&amp;y to
new miners· wllh deep mining Intervene - possibly in COD· Cresenle or Clcve llllld .. "Not the
perionna ncc
of unlicensed drlver to operute assist Claro Hall, 17, who had
cut herJoot on a piece of Klau.
operations.
junrtion with otlwr govern- ~ryly 11118 Soltio ne1•c~ told lhe aUI!HHObiles. ,
.his cycle.
"L

r~lsed ,

Dollar markets worried

1

w~ather
Conllnued warm today,
tonight and Tuesday. Chance of
lhundershowers south today
and over the state tonight and
Tuesday . Highs Tuesday..in the
low 90s south. Lows tonight in
lower 70s.
NOW YOU KNOW
Tattooing has been condemned aB immoral for Jews In
the Old Testament, for
MUSlims ln lhe Koran, and for
Cliristians by a church coun~11
In 787 A.D.

.· .

Blacklist no surprise ·

'

Injuries or arrests.
At 5:51 p.nl. Sunday Basil
Haynes, Middleport, Rl. I,
backed Iris truck up and struck
a pa[ked vehicle on the parking
lot al Jack Ward's. Owner of
. the parked track was not
identified.
AI 10:26 Haynes wa$ involved in anolher accident on
Counly R'llld 32. Haynes went
off the highway through a fence
over a 10-fool embankment.
Hayn es was arrested on
charges of driving while intoxicated. Hc ~was not ~njured .

-UNIT CAU.ED
·The Pomeroy t-R unit went
to the f~ag lcs Club at 2:16a.m.
Sunday for Terry Phalln
sufferl~g a head Injury . !Je was
takM IQ Veterans Memorial
HOI!pltal ant! admitted .

uvoragc t8 beer·s on a
working day- when he was
working. He sold on his days
off he put away at least a case
"nd " half of beer- 36 bottles .
1

Ill

Aide.says Nixon
.
agreed clemency
strictly a no-no

NAIROBI, KENYA - PRESIDENT ID! AMIN of Uganda
today gave 114 American Peace Corps volunteers clearance· to
leave the country, apparently convinced they were really
members.olthe (:orps and not U.S. mercenaries en route to fight
in an African civil war.
Amin's action in lhe Uganda capital of Kampala was an·
nounccd here l&gt;Y U.S. embassy spokesman Gary Morley . U. S.
diplomata and the Stale Department h.ad interceded In their
behalf since the mercurial Amin forced them tOiiiiid'Tri Kampala
on Sunday. "They do have clearance.to leave,'' .Morley said. "It
came through around 3 p.m. They are now looking for transport.
They don't know where they're going and Won't know until the
transport is confirmed."
NEW YORK - JUSTICE DEPARTMENT officials
overruled an Investigation of the pricing practices of a company
ownedby a millionaire friend of President Nixon, two New York
newspapers reported today. Rep. Bertram L. Podell, 0-N. Y.,
told The New York Ttmes and the Daily News h~ had documenl.'l
on the case involving Precision Valve Corp., owned by Robert H.
Abplanalp, which he planned to turn over to Archibald Cox, lhe
special Watergate prosecUtor.
Abplanalp ln !969lent Nixon money to buy his San Clemente,
Calif., home. The White House disclosed this In May. Rodell said
he had an undated memorandum, which is not in the department's files on the case, written by Riubard W..McLaren, then
assistant attorney general in charge ollhe Antitrust Division, to
then Attorney General John N. Mitchell proposing that a civil
investigative demand, a. document to initiate an inquiry, be
issued to Precision, lhe Times reported. No investigation ever
was begun. Podell said he would ask Cox to determine why an
investigation "once approved, was thereafter killed, and what
· was the considers lion, If any," The Times· said. ·

of hill city for the group's next
convention, beginnin~ .July 5,
1974. '
.
· "Wo have a good progr•m
!here," sold (,1ruck, who aseu--

ii.

Devoted To The lnteretu Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

Five' .w eekend
mishaps logged

SALE PRICE
Factory Sticker Price mouo
Beb Roes Ponll•c o~S!!!~L:

Co!'lllr 'hllrd &amp; Court St.

JUST ARRIVED!

Senior Citizens

leMANS 2 DR. HT

Ascot Sliver-Black Cordova Top, soft ray

Open Weekdays 9:30~ fo 5 p.m.
Shop Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

SALE PRICE

tires, electric clock, rear seat speaker,
bumper strips.

ST~~-~,NO.

program in the coming year r------------~----------.------------~----.
will remain at 5 cents, 15 cents
and 20 cents, respectively, for
each paid, reduced pric~. and ·
free breakfast served.
Recent amendments to the
National School Lunch and
Child Nutrition Acts require
USDA's Food and Nutrition
'Service to prescribe these
national rates of assistance
annually. These rate notices
·are scheduled to be published
, in the Federal Register
Monday, July 2, 1973.

.

~~:. .:-i;ii&amp;'fM'M1B1~I*WID~~j:JjJfi~*.ill~&amp;:r?;~1~:~Jr~ili~~~~~;~~~~~t;~a~;~~~::~~;J:1~;~~;:~:~~~:;:~:;~~J.;im~m~~~~~~m~~t~lm~~~~i~~~§*~;~i~t:~~~=l:~~:~:l:~*~l:~:l~~:::f:~~~:~~:ili:ili:3?:t~i~1~~~~?r:i1!:1*~

Teachers resign

Two classes
funded for
new mm"ers

Sohio, others are
reducing .o ctane .

Teenager under
intensive care

in St. Joseph

\.

,,.

�\

\

'

S =1'heLIIUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 July t 1973

Aaron within 18 of Babe's mark

2- The Dilly Sentinel o&gt;fiddleport Po. eroy 0 July 9 1973

I Voi~; ~y;;;g-n-;;w~y··
BY JACK 0 !IRIAN
AN ENLARGEMENT ON
SNOWDON S JOB
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Lord Snowdon s
luncheons with most-beautiful actress Gayle
Hunmcuttdoubtless are just for photographable
reasons Doubtless
Most famous showbiz
center The Brdl Bldg (Jack Dempsey s
restaurant on the ground floor collects the
songwrtting Damon Runyand guys &amp; dolls
Unday s lost) Is In deep liscal trouble All
tenants got diSpossess not1ces none understand
Ingnd Bergman s son Roberto Rossellm
Jr like his pop loves actresses Jr s new one Is
Barbara Bouche! Rocky Graz ano told us at
the Umcorn he s been offered swruner stock
stardom m 0 Ne1ll s The Hairy Ape
I can
play It witout makeup Sr Rockwell bragged
Leonard Katz biography of Frank Costello
w1ll be IIUed Uncle Frank Tony Qumn Will
play the lucky old cnme statesman (he died m
bed)

Merle Oberon s estranged husband Bruno
Pagllai lsn t torchmg He s datmg a ser1es of
cuties such as Dorothy Towne Webb Jack
Webb s ex George Plimpton s next book and
TV special as a Renaissance Hack will have him
jommg the Rolling Stones as an mstrumentallst
- with a tambourme The jetset bet s actress
Sandre Payne 28 will be the next Mrs Alan Jay
Lerner Fatr Lady WIVes are r ve so far
Candy Bergen donned a $75 000 Van Cleef
diamond necklace for a Four Seasons
restaurant fashion slink and snorted she 1sn I
unpressed With such baubles Less c vil zed
and more earthy gems are her relevant bag
Famed pianiSt Arlur Rubmstem s son John
(starring m the h1t musical Pippm ) composes
songs tho he s never had a lesson John tells us
his dad conSiders h1s music tasteful but not
great
Elvts Presley s old Mercedes Benz
was dear to his heart so when 1t just got too old
for h1s use he burled the worn-out relic on hts
\ Memphis grounds and gave 1t a tombstone
Status symbol Dublin-born pop smger
Gilbert 0 Sullivan now has h1s own execullve Jet
Inflation FBI Crtme Index offenses dropped
Larceny $50
larceny theft 1s the new
minimum-crime descnpt10n FBI agents are
delighted lhetr new boss 1s ex-G-man Kelley
Morale shot up the moment he was announced
The Dtana Dors ntck Roste 1s m fmanctal
embarrassment actors-wuon reps are there
every day to see members get paid - daily
Sammy Davis at the Concord for a week
reserved SIX rooms one just for hiS golf clubs
Super Cops dtrector Btll Belasco wants
Mayor John tindsay for another N Y (timed
fhck Thmks Jawn has a future actmg Better
than his mayormg
PlaybOy mag must be
fnghtened 11 s usmg the ftlthy language and
p1ctures once found only m underground-sewer

mags And Out mag is worse
Penthouse
mag ia.tbe dregs Dun Dalley and Gig Young
both snubbed offers to star In Mel Brooks
Black Bart film l'he sophisticated lads satd
they won t mouth such dlalogtc smut
Actor Peter Boyle gets the star-crossed title
role m the Crazy Joe Gallo gangster bioflim
Czech dtrector Ivan Rene s Prtson Guard
111m was banned In Czechoslovak IS because the
star wore a cap while brutahzmg prtsoners and
looked just like Stalin well • D dn t he•
There s more money in the bar at The Latr
Restaurant than on it Its custom-made
mahogany hand-carved in Jamaica in 1745
Owners Bob Roberts and Jerry Zelun turned
down $15 000 for the 12 footer Terry 0 Netll
and JeM'y Toner are a brace of Irish 1m
m1grants who have added three more
Manhattan bars to their ortgmal John
Barleycorn pub They II open two more - in Ft
Lauderdale and Boston
Tow truck plying the East Stde Drtve has its
Side emblazoned 'The Happy Hooker
Ex
Mtami Beach ctly manager Jack Duffield s at
the Ocala Memorial Hosp1tal after a series of
strokes Our old home town of Buffalo has a
welterweight challenger Denms lrtsh Rocky
Cudney Buffalo sent some tough lads to
championshiPS
Jimmy Slattery Rocky
Kansas Junmy Goodrtch
Small world Bmg Crosby and Rhonda
Flellllng hadn t seen each other m years (they
co-starred m Connecticut Yankee ) and had a
btg kiss kiss reuniOn m front of the St Regis
AmeriCan-Greek arltsl-colwnmst Val Arms and
Amertcan Chilean beauty Carmn Ferrer ate
Amertcan Italian grub at Mons1gnore while the
AmeriCan fiddlers got Mozart strung out
Women sUb will look kindlier on TV s The
FBI -It w11l feature the first gU"I agent acted
by Betty Ann Rees Vera liruba Ralston s tcy
achng was fodder for com1c japes a couple of
celluloid generallons ago Wtdow of Repubbc
Pictures boss Herbert Yates Veras ready for
a comeback Altogether now From what•
First Artists (owned by Stretsand Newman
Pottier Hoffman McQueen) want Branda for
a film Chad Everett 1s wed but not to Shetla
Scott who swears he fathered her son she s JUSI
tagged Dale Andre Lee Evere!t The late B11l
Inge a smctde - left pamtmgs worth more
than a mtllion We d known h1m s nee he was a
St Lou s drama cr t1c 30 years ago - and he
was a tortured soul even then tembly
emollonal fearful then even of h1s cr~tictsm
whtch was sens111ve perceptive and sym
pathetically complicated he seemed to find
mertt In the worst plays and delivered hts
negative dec1s1on w th smcere regret He
s1mply never could cope The similarly tortured
Tennessee Williams seems confidently secure m
comparison

DR LAWRENCE E LAMB
WON'T ALWAYS WORK

Sour Cream Aids Sore Tongue
By Lawrence E Lamb MD

to var ous v tamms mouth
• washes throat lozenges and
Dear Dr Lamb Some JUSt about as w de a vanety of
lime ago I read your column suggesllons as the number of
on the sore tongue I used to letters recetved I m a ways
have hts problem and a spe happy to have readers
c allst recommended to me suggeslwns and somet mes t
that I take a mouthful of sour helps me to understand the
cream and ho d 1t m mv confus on people have about
mouth for some t me Repea.t medtcal problems
The truth IS there 1s no
th1s regularly even as often
known
treatment for geo
as every hour It work ed for
graph
c
tongue The problem
me and I d I ke to pa ss on
IS
not
a
sore tongues are
th1s recommendallon to other
geograph c tongues The
people
Dear Reader - I d d w 1te tongue s a very good md ca
a co lumn about geograph c tor o! man y med ca l d so r
tongue I hts problem causes ders Th s s why the do ctor
ra1sed spots on the tongu e asks a pat ent to st ck out the
same soreness and 11 may tongue and takes a good look
chang e dram atica ll y ove r at t dur ng a med cal exam
ntght f wa su pr sed to re nat on You can see ev dence
ce ve a large volume of rna I of some v tam n del c enc1es
concern ng th1s prob em and !rom the tongue you can f nd
most of the lett ers as ured cv dences of anem a and
me that th s cond t10n cou d there are many other 1m por
be cured The var ous reme tant th n~s to observe dur ng
d es that have bee n r ecom the exam nat on of the tongue
WI ei he or not you ca n do
mended for cur ng t h• ve n
someth
ng about a sore tongue
eluded the gamul on hold
del
end
n what s cans ng t
ng sour c.: rean In the moutl
Jf t s due to a vttam n del

BfRRr'S WORLD

c ency then of course th s
problem can be corrected If
t s the changes of the tongue
assoc ated w1th ce rtam ane
m1as correct on of th1s undeF
ly ng problem w II change the
character of the tongue The
po nt I would I ke to make to
the arge number of you who
sent n letters of tr.eatment
for geograph c tongue s that
yo u re probably all correct n
the pont that many of th ese
form s of treatment are help
lui for certa n sore tongues
but not for all sore tongu es
wh ch gets me bac k to my
or gma statement not ever)
so re tongu e s a geog raphic
tongue
To emphas tze th e po nt a
little more not all sk1n rashes
are meas le s A skm ra sh
cou d be ch cken pox sca rlet
fever or eve c seco ndary sy
ph s or such exot c Illnesses
as Rock y Mounta n Spotted
Fever fh e trea tm ent of the
sk1n ra sh depend s on what
causes I The sa me appl es to
cha gcs n th e longue The
rea tment at the probl em r
th e tongue nc ud ng sore
tongues depend s on what s
cans ng I
For tho se changes n the
tongue tl at are ea ll y get
graph c longue I am sorry to
say that we really do not have
a spec f c treatment at th s
t me For those who have
changes n the r tortgu e asso
c a ted w th v tamm delle en

"Fnend or Political Enemy?' ~

National Ltaguo
Eut

BY PAUL CRABTREE

PUBL C NOT CE

TO

NOT CE BY
PUBL CATION
THE DEFENDAN S

Straude Gr mm J
and he
unknown
he s
dev sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
execu o

S

an d

aude

G

D eceased whos e
unknown

ass gns

mm
es dence a e

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
ME GS COUNTY OH 0
PROBATED V 5 ON R Chil d

B

Rowe

I

--

-ii) IIIN!A

he E s

a

'

'J

••

Ad

eo Ada

•

+++

ghls

DEAR HELEN
Several books have been wn(ten about the benefits of young
men chaos ng older women as theU" mates An older woman 1s
less demand ng more expenenced more stable and un
derstandmg and bes des she s grateful
On the other hand young g~rls do better with more mature
mates who can act as father ftgures and take care of them until
they mature mentally
So
th1s suggesllon In our brave new world of the future
1t should be mandatory that young men marry women nearing
50 and young g1rls marry men who have reached the mertdian the first tune around Mter they stay w1th these mates for no
more than five to ten years they d be ready to choose mates llljBr
lhetr own ages w1th whom to have chtldren Then when the
ch ildren are grown they could divorce agam and start a new
cycle of marrymg people younger than themselves while the
divorced older people nearmg retirement age would whoop 11 up
at Golden Age villas
Th1s was brought up for diSCUSSion around the pool (at our
Singles Complex) and I present 11 for your readers con
stderahon - J A
DEAR J
Poolside Sk nnertsms leave me a bit cold but maybe a few of
my readers Will warm up to your suggestions (But don t hold
yow breath ) - H

+++

MANN NG 0 WEBSTER
UDG E AND EX O~F C 0
CLERK OF THE COMMO N
PLEAS COURT OF ME GS
COU NTY OH 0 PROBAn
D V SO N

6 4 I

I 15

2 9

6 1

c

On ce up on ti t n c t w ~
ha d t s yu
c)
~
d file It Ju st to s lu v ~rok
w tl uut go g n u lcbt
Pcrh ops 1 0; 1 vun 1 heard
Those born on th1s date are
obOIIt the m n "" 0 c •lied s 1
under the sign of Cancer
t r 1nmco s t.;l 11u •n phone
Elias Howe inventor of the
exchange tnl g 1
Wu g
sewmg machme was born July nun Icr
9 1819
On this day in history
In 1900 Australia entered the
federal Bntlsh commonweallh
In 1943 American canadtan
and British forces mvaded

We ctn I alford any more home lmprovem11nts Whit do you think thlt Ia the Western White
Hou,.?
-~--.:.__-;:---;:---------:---- SicilY dunng World War II

Us.

By Helen Bottel

New Approach to Marrlage•
DEAR
HELEN
ane R ow e Dece as ed
P an f
My ~ ife and I have a great rna mage The reason' We are
VS
S aude G mm
add ess together no more than three evemngs a week thus we don I get
unknown e a
tired of each other
Oefendan s
No 20955
We both work are bOth mvolved m many act!VIIIes I don t
- NOT CE
P an f
has b ou gh
h s expect Candtce to tag along when she would be bored and she
a on nam ng you he De end
pays me the same favor We trust each other we come back to
'TIEd our
each other That s enough
We don t feel that we MUST appear as a couple JUSt for the
hs sake of provmg we are She often attends parties alone or w1th
another escort I do the same although we each have fU"st nght
of refusal When we go places together 11 s because we are both
equally mterested m the events so netther feels self-68cnftcmg or
used
Our evenmgs together are often spent at home getting to
know each other agam We do not plan to have children It s like a
long close undemanding frtendsh!p - w1th love
m1ght add our outstde frtendshtps are just that - we
1emam true to each other sexually perhapJ because we don t
feel constramed to do so
The trouble w1th most marnages IS that they become two
aga nst the world and who ever heard of celhnates
remammg fr emily•
The key to a happy marriage IS
separation not
togetherness - TRIED IT AND UKED IT
DEAR TIALI
Open marnages are great only 1f you are lucky enough to
choose the r1ght (equally open) partner You have
Congratulallons - H
n n s a oro

NEWSPAPER Eti EAPR SE ASSN

Send you qurst ons lo D LamLJ
n co e of h J new1popeo P 0 Bot
55 Rodo C ly Slot'" New Yo l
N Y 10019 Fo a copr ol D Lambs
new booA e on ('Onst pot on nnd SO
ctnt o h.r o c orJd eu onJ tJ k
o Con pol on book e

Helen Help

o

c es or pern c1ous anem a

there are suttable treatments
for these dtsarders A symp
tom s a symptom I s not
diagnos s a nd th s ts Nh y a
doct r has to take Jalrly com
plete h s(ory and an exa m na
t on to f nd out what t s
that s caus ng the sym pto n
then t eat th s problem nd
not the symptom tsdf

&amp; THINGS

DEAR HELEN
My husband and I are the town s perfect couple We re
po nted out as an example of what maM'iage should be - sue
cessful m busmess and socialltfe two lovely children no dtscord
beautiful people m every way We re rapidly becoming
everybody s tdeal
And I m a fraud Etght years ago I thought! was in love with
Jerry but actually we were only pushed together by friends who
just knew the clas.q prestdent and the most popular glrlln our
small college should get marned
For two years I vc been having a secret affair with the man I
should have married On!}' reason we arcn t found out is that
poople thmk I m above reprooch
Jerry acts loving when we re in company but at home he s
well nothing His business Is all that matters
Should I ask for a divorce and upset the whole town or just
keep living a lie• - NATM..IE
DEAR NATAl IE
Which Is more important - your future or what the town
thmks ? Or is It porhaps that you like your life except lor oc
cas onal guilt pangs?
However there sa third choice Uyou and Jerry would stop
seeing younelvcs as a living legend and face what you ve
become ( perfectly bored with each other) you might still
break out or that trap - together You could even fall In love
again
Tryhonesty thoughltmayleadtoascreamlngflghl (Andlf
you can t work up u fight - well maybe there illrll anything
J~fl l - H

Sentences
Public broadcasting still caught In a lund., squeeze and an
Ideological argument over programming and program content
Is reaching way back for material to rerun this summer Some
of PBS offerings go back to 1970 and late Sixties which lsn t
bad for this area since PBS programming generally wasn t
available here then
Individual Beatles conUnue to do quite
well since tfu!tr breakup with George Harrison IHld Paul Me
Cartoey running one-two at the top of the pop music charts with
Give Me L&lt;ne (Give Me Peace on Earth) and My Love
respectively
The Watergate witnesses have totally worn out a phrase that
wall hackneyed and not very good English to begin with at
that point In time Why use such a mouthful when It s just a
clear to say at that time • I feel absolutely no compulsiop to
go out and buy a new t.P recording by TV s Odd Couple fony
Randall and Jack Klugman But I ll admit I m fascinated by
one of the songs on the album When Banana Skins Are Falling
I U Come Slldlng Back to You
Speaking of records there are some song titles out now
which are absolutely 1!9mograph1c but are bemg sold right out
on the open market The National Weather SerVIce which I ve
criticized bitterly in the past is doing a good job on radio and TV
tlus summer w1th their tornado watch and tornado warning
announcements They rea valuable service and not calculated
to scare the bejeebers out of you without good and urgent reason
The gasoline,shortage has knocked the dayltghts out of attend
ance at country music and rock festivals throughout the country
Hardest-hit Is Wheelmg s WWV A Jamboree with attend
ance off by as much as four fifths and even the Grand Ole Opry
drawmg reduced crowds
Ill admit I m prejudiced against many TV game shows but
a recent stunt on Beat the Clock was the stuptdest thmg I ve
seen In years A young couple w1th mnertubes strapped to their
derrieres bumpmg and grtndmg as they tr1ed to capture a
volleyball mstde the mnertubes
Volleyball incidentally IS
getting along hard look as a TV attractiOn and I cant see why
not It s fast-paced full of actwn and emmently su1ted to easy
televtsmg I d take It over an auto race or the Roller Derby any
time

My thirst for baseball broadcasts 1s almost tnsallable but
the Reds Dogers sertes that ushered m July was almost too
much 32 1nnmgs of baseball m about 'l:l hours Wow
You
llllghl add the great American hall-dollar to the growmg list of
endangered species because they are getting very rare and
prime material for collectors for some reason whtch seems a
shame smce they re tdeal for com machme use at today s
prJces
Dtd you know that Prestdent Uncoln once appeared before a
Congressional committee to g1ve tllem assurances on a delicate
subject? He had to attest that hts wife was not a Confederate spy
which makes the current brouhaha over Prestdent Ntxon s appearance pale by comparison The cap1tal ctties of the two
States bordermg the nver here liave mammoth traffic problems
of different natures both very frustrating Ftgurlng out the
twists and turns of the outerbeltway lnnerbeltway roads m
Columbus requires an over-average sense of navigation And
Charleston was literally paralyzed m the pre Fourth wee¥end by
people buymg license plates travelers takmg a long long
weekend and the appearance of folk smger John ( Almo.st
Heavep ) Denver

WIN AT BRIDGE

Poor, hard
luck Jacoby
NORTH
• 42
.1074
t1632
+QB54
WEST

EAST

+KQJ9
.A&amp;
tQJ051

+1073
• 9532
t KJ9

+g13

+A 12
SOUTH Dl
+A865
.KQJB
tAB
+K 106
No In South vulnerable
West
Nortn East Soulh
INT.
Pass 2+
Pa ss

Pass

Pass

Pass

2.

Opening lead +K
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

PUBLIC NOTICE
Wr
en
offe s w 1 b~
re ce ved a he o ces of Crov:
C ow &amp; Po er n Pome oy
Oh o vnt 10 00 AM on July
2 1973 for a of the real estate
owned by the late Edd e Lou
Howe ·y except fo
the un
d v ded one ha f nte es of what
s known as he Gask I fa m
be ng descr bed
n Deed
Recorded n Vo ume 235 Page
933 of t he Deed Reco ds of
Me gs Coun y
Oh o
The
proper y be ng ollered for sa e
s genera y descr bed as
follows
Hom e Place 23 ac es n
Co umb a Townsh p
Deed
Record 2 5 Page 2.)
Sharp Fa m - 75 acres n
Co umb a TOWilSh D
Qppri
Record 2 6 PaQe 23
wa Ke Place ...... 23 acres In
Co lumb a Town sh p
Deed
Record 2 6 Page 23
Fo lden Place - 39 acres n
Columba Townsh p
Deed
Record 216 Page 23
Tract nea Ceme en
3
acres and 53 rods n Co um b a
Town sh p Deed Record 2 6

Ch cago
Sl Louis
Moolreol
Philadelphia
P llsburgh
New York

wlpctgb
49 37 570
43 &lt;40 518 412
40 41 494 6 1
38 45 458 9 ,
37 44 457 9 '
34 4d 425 12
Wnt

Amerlcon League
Eotl
w I pet gb
New York
48 39 m
Boston
43 38 531 2
Baltimore
4\ 37 526 2 1
Det,oll
43 41 512 3 ,
M!waukee
42 41 506 4
C aveland
29 56 341 \8
West
w I pet gb
Ollkland
48 38 558
Cal lorn a
44 38 537 2
Kansas C ty 47 41 534 2
M nnesoto
43 38 531 2 1
Chlcag""'
0 40 SIB 3 ,
Texas
29 53 35~ 7
Saturday $ Result$
M nn 9 New York 1
M nn6NewYork 2
Bo•ton 7 Ch cago 3
M lwoukee 17 Texas 2
CaUl 3 Cleve 1
Ollkland 5 Bait 4
Kan City S Detro t 2
Sunday s Resulls
Detrolt 3 Kan C ty 0
New York 7 Mlnn 0
Chl6 Boston 1$1
Bos Jon II Ch 1 2nd 0 nn
M lw 6 Texas 4 lsi
M lw 7 Texas 3 2nd
Cal I 10 Cleve 4 1st
Cal I 5 Cleve 31 2nd 10 Inn
Oakland 6 Ba Te 5 10 Inn
Today s Probable Pitchers
All Tl mes EDT
Boston (lee 10 3) at M n
nesota (Decker 3 3) 9 p m
New York (Med ch 6 4) at
Chicago (Wood 15 12) 9 p m
Kansas C ty (Splltlorff II 5)
at Milwaukee (Short 3 I) 9 30

wlpctgb
LosAngeles 54 33 621
Son Franc sco 49 39 557 s 1
C nclnnall
47 38 553 6
Houston
47 42 528 B
Allanlo
39 49 443 5 ,
San 0 ego
31 54 365 22
Saturdays Results
Allan Ia 9 New York 8
St Lou s 6 San Fran
Clncl l Phi Ia 4
Monlreal6 Houston 1
Son D ego 4 Chicago 3
l A 8 Plltsbgh 6
MONTREAL (UPI) - fhe
Sunday s Cames
Cmcmna 11 Reds fresh from
Houston 9 Monlreal 7
Allanta 4 New York 2
thetr ftrst three-game series
Cine 4 Ph Ia o
sweep of the season Sunday
l A 3 P ttsb9h 2 12 nns
San D ego 4 Chicago 2
over the Philadelphia Phtllles
San Fran 5 St louis 4
w11l send Tommy Hall to the
Today s Probable Pitchers
mound tomght against the
All Times EDT
Cine nnatl (Hall 5 4) at
Montreal Expos in a nationally
Monlrea (Stoneman 3 S) s IS
teleVISed game
pm
Jack Billingham battling 00
Houston (W lson 6 9) at New
York (Seave 9 4) 8 p m
degree temperatur~s con
Atont11 (Harrson 42) at
tmued the Reds early July
Ph !adelphia (Carlton &amp; 9) 7 30
success story which has seen
om
(Only games scheduled)
them wm etghl of their ftrst
Tuesday s Games
mne games and move to w1thm
Cine at Monlreo n ght
pm
Houston at N Y n ghl
six
games of fust place Los
Texas (Dunn ng 0 5) at
Atlanta al Ph Ia night
Angeles
Detro t ( lollch 9 8) 8 15 p m
St louis at L A night
Callforn
a
IWr
ght
7
10)
at
Billingham now 12-5 on the
P ttsbgh al S 0 n ght
Baltimore (Palmer 8 6) 7 30 year had little trouble w1th the
Ch cago at San Fran n ght
pm
(Only games scheduled)
Ph lhes after the bases
fuesday s Games
loaded s1tuation m the second
Boston at M nn night
N Y at Chicago n1ght
Kan City at Mllw n ght
Texas at Detro t n ght
Cal I at Bait n ght
Oakland at C:leve tw
Stevie Call pitched h1s
second no hitter of the season EXPOS BUYING LINTZ
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
as he led the Yankees to a 13-0
The Metgs Amencan Leg10n
VIctory over Rutland B Dugan Montreal Expos Sunday an
nounced
they
were
purchasmg
baseball team took 3 out of 4
was the losmg p1tcher for
the
contract
of
Larry
Untz
games
over the weekend to
Rutland
Yankee hitters were Stev1e from Peninsula of the lnterna ra1se tis record to 12-8 gomg
CaU 2 singles Stev1e J,Jttle a tiona! League to f11l m for m mto the fmal week of regular
season play
smgle Tom Hawley a stngle JUred Tun Foh
Untz a shortstop leads the
Me1gs swept a doubleheader
and a double Chris Taylor a
IL
m
stolen
bases
w1th
47
and
1s
from Lt!hopohs on Saturday
single Tom Owens two
to
report
m
tune
for
Monday
11.0 and 2-0 and spill at Lan
smgles and Pat Owens and
Tun Faulk w1th one single mght s game agamst the caster Sunday losmg the ftrst
each The Yankees are now 8 Houston Astros He. IS bemg game 18-3 whtle commg back
brought up to replace Foil who to wm the mghtcap 5-I
and 3 for the season
fractured
his jaw m a collision
The wnptres at Lancaster let
Rutland
000 0-- 0
with
the
Astros
Bob
Watson
m
the games get out of control
Yankees
526 x-13
Sunday s 9-7 Expos loss
wtth pitchers ftrtng at batters
A Montreal spokesman said and catcher Mtck Ash suffering
the deciSIOn to place Foll on the a blow on a play at the plate
disabled list w1ll not be made that cost htm 5 slltches above
I 1st Game)
unlit after consultation w1th the left eye Second baseman
Texas
000 200 02o- 4 0 0 doctOrs on Monday and if Fob
Tom Cooke was h1t by a ball
Mllw
310 020 OOx- 6 6
B bb Paul (8) and Po ter Is not disabled the Expos w1ll leadmg off the second game
~ alon L nzy
81 and Porter create roster space for Untz by giVIng h1rn a welt on the back
WP Slalon (6 6) LP Bibby r~movmg somebody else
the size of 2 baseballs
(2 3) HRS- Brlggs (IOih) May
(14th)
AshiS inJury appearmgvery
(2nd game)
Oakland
000
110
003
1
6
1
del
berate occurred m the
Texas
010 200 ooo- 3 9
Ball
400
000
00
o5
0
1
second
mnmg when the Lan
Mllw
401 020 oox- 7 9 o Ham lion P na (5) L ndblad
Kremmel G~o ewsk (I) (7) Fingers (9) and Fosse caster shortstop Amoto
AI en (6) and B Ilings Short Jefferson Wall (71 Jackson banged a tr1ple over left ftelder
lockwood (4) and Rodriguez
Reyno ds (9) and WI Iiams John Roush s head Amoto
WP- Lockwood (4 4) LP- (9)
Hendr cks (10) WP-F nger (1
Kremmel {0 2) HRs
May 51 LP-Reynolds (54) HRs- '1. rounded thtrd and steamed for
(15lh) Scott ( lth)
Baylor (4th) Sando ( 6th) home arnvmg at the same

2nd no-hitter

Tenace I14th)

65

campbe
t'face 168 99
acres In Co um b a Townsh p
Deed Reco d 68 Page 53 1
Harmon P ace
63 acres n
Cotumb a Town sh p
Deed
Reco d 64 Page 613
McComas Pa ce
54 acres
n Co um b a Townsh p Deed
Reco d 60 Page 466
Sc p o P ace
I S acres n
Sc p o Townsh p Deed Record

s
re
n
•

lime as the throw from left
field The umptre s1gnaled out
and then safe as Ash dropped
the ball at the same t1me as he
got an elbow from Arnoto JUSt
above the left eye Ash was
taken to a Lancaster hospital
by h1s father and Don Hunnel
Leg10n busmess manager
where the wound was closed
Metgs got fme pttchmg m the
3 w ns w1th John Batrd fmng a
3-httter m the f1rs Ltthopohs
game Steve Lee I h1ttmg the
oppos lion m the second game
and Perk Ault 3 htltmg Lan
caster m the f nale
Two nms brought home on a
single by Kevm Sheets m the
f rst game agamst Lithopolis
startOJi the weekend off on a
good note Me1gs added 5 more
m the second on a smgle by Lou
McKmney smgle by Dave
Wolfe double by Rtck Stobart
walk to Cooke samf ce fly to
center by Ash an error and
smgles by Batrd and Steels
Meigs added 3 m the fourth
on a single by Ash sacnflce
bunt by Roush walk to Bard
an error and a 2-run scoring
s ngle by Ault Another run
came home in the s1xth on J
stratght smgles by Chari e
Marshall Wolfe and Gary
George
Me1gs rapped 12 h Is off
I II opolis p1tchmg and was
aided by 6errors wlule leaving
8 r nners stranded
Batrd allowed only 3 hits 2
walks and struck out 7 n
picking up hiS third win of the
year
In Saturdays second game

ng

rZaB:W•AMXMU
The blddlng has been
North
EAII

Wtt~

Pass
Pass

p.,,

I+
4+

••

Pas~

Pan
I au

.

DCII¥0 od by ca er where
avn Abo ss c:e nl!l per week
fly Motor Rou e where carr er
serv ce not evalleb c One

man 12 sv m~ I n Oh o ond
w Va One veer I 61 S x
South mon
hs non hs ss so Three
monlhsf 15 50 S sewhtrt Ill
Yot
I &gt; month! 19 lQ lhree
3t
monfhs 16 Subscrlpl on
4t
o Ice Includes Sunday tmu
Sttnllno
S+

Ia..
&amp;+
Pau
e•
Pass
&amp;+
I au
1
In 1970 Maj Gen George You South hn d
Casey and six others were .A Q 71 •11 Q I! 6 tA I +13
TOIJA V S Ql f ST!ON
killed In a helicopter cruh
What do you do now1
ln•lcad or re•pondl 8 nne sp lc
Casey was the seventh Amerl
A- Pau Rool111-o lonlplolion your partner I •• bid lwo J: ltbs
to
btd oevon Your porlnor moy no1 Whlll I you do now?
can general lo be killed In
hovolllo
kin&amp; or lpidtl
Vietnam
An1wer lamyrrnw
1

total of exactly 715
A crowd of 33 017 at New
York seeing Aaron for the last
time this season cheered as he
t"Onnected f&lt;Jr a solo horner in
tile fourth Inning and a two-run
shot which gave the Braves a 4
I lead In the sixth Both homers
were off former Atlanta team
n ate George Stone and both

salted about 350 feet over a 30foot-high fence
Western clubs scored a clean
'!,Weep over Eastern teams as
Los Angeles defeated Pttls
burgh J-2 In 12 inmngs San
Franclllt'O shaded St IAiuls 5-I
Houston heat Montreal !1-7 San
D ego topped Chicago 4-2 and
Ctnctnnatt
blanked
Philadelphia 4.0

liming He allowed only four every wning
Billingham
hits in pitching his fifth shutout sa1d f went out to the mound
of the. season tops m the completely refreshed
Nat10nal League
Manager Sparky Anderson
The Reds scored the only two who hmls that his leadmg
nms they needed to wm m the JlllCher rnay tend to be a btl
thtrd mnlng after a dtsputed lazy thinks Billqham should
call at second base m which be an easy 20-game wmner this
Joe Morgan was ftrst called out season
and then safe
If Jack drives hunself he
Johnny Bench followed w1th should w nd up w1th more than
a two-run smgle to g1ve the 20 Anderson said If he ex
Reds a 2-j) lead Btllmgham had erctsed the same self-discipline
httle trouble makmg 11 stand as a ptlcher that Pete Rose
up
does as a hitter he d win 20
The btg r~ghthander gave games every year
much of the cred1t for his
Billingham who was the
success to Reds tramer Larry Reds best p1tcher the !mal half
Starr
of last season agrees w1th his
He mopped my neck face manager
and arms w1th 1ce water after I guess what SparkY means IS

that I should concentrate more
on the job at hand sa1d the Jl.
5 215-pound righthander I
gotta admit he might have
something
Anderson sa1d he brought
pttchtng coach Larry Shepard
into tqe dugout early In Sun
day s game so he could prod
Jack a little
Jack has a good slnkmg fast
ha II and a good curve too
Anderson sa1d But at times
he s lazy with 1t I wanted Shep
to trot out to the mound and
prod Jack a little after those
r~rst couple of mmngs
Opposmg Hall (5-4) m tomght s f1rst game of a threegame set with the Expos w1U be
B1ll Stoneman (3-5)

Legion wins t-.ree times

Foley Pace
28 ac es n
Sc Po Townsh r'l nPPrl Reco d

Oswald
I played m the
Goldman Patrs agam th1s year
The hands were most nterest
mg and Malcolm Brachman
and I were nght ur, w th the 95 Page 19
leaders until the fol owmg bad Offers may be subm ed on
or mo e pa eels or may be
luck ha d gave us the f rst of one
subm tied or al l of he property
several d scores
offe ed for sa e A I bldde s are
J1m
orth s Stayman two encou ag ed o exam ntt he I lie
proper y upon wh ch they
club resp se had tO' be pure bo d he
for he conveyance w II be
whtmsy I e he was lucky only he nlerest o the decedent
enough to f1
a riner w th and w II be conveyed by a
four good h rts
that the f duel a y deed tmder the fe ms
a W
The p operty w 1 be
!mal contract as m that su t of
so d subf ec o he ens for real
Oswald Ma aim opened es a e ta xes for 973 and the
fe ms of th e sa e a e cash uron
the ktng of s ades Who de
y Of deed The r gh
s
wouldn t? He was allowed to eseveved
p e ec any and a I
hold the tr ck and sh !ted to ace off e s
Cia a E Howe y E)(ecutr x
and another heart South
o he Las1 W 1 and
dropped the J&amp;Ck under the ace
Tes amen! of Edd e Lou
so as to wm the second heart n Howe ry
Deceased
dummy
7!9 16 2 c
J1m I assume that the next
play was a low club That gave
you the chance to nse w th the
The Da1~ Sent11el
ace and lead a lhtrd heart but
DEVOTED tO THE
South would w nd up with three
NJEREST OF
hearts three clubs and two
MEIGS MASON AREA
aces
CHESTER L TANNEH LL
E uc Ed
Oswald I coul\:1 see th at
ROBERT HOEFLICH
happentng so I ducked qutckly
C ty Ett for
Pu bl shed da ly e~&lt;ce pt
South had no probl em about
urday by The Oh o Va ey
what to do next He finess ed Sa
Pub sh n g Co mpany
1
the 10 spot 1 hen he cashed hts Cou rt S
Pon e ov
Oh o
45769 Bus ne ss Olf ce Phon e
spade ace and ruffed a spade 99
2 2156 Ed tor a Phone 991
and came to the same etght 2 57
trtcks wtth three of h1s trumps
Secqnd class pas age p&amp; d at
ov Oh o
ace of spades and a spade ruU Pomc
Nal
ona adverl s
two cl ubs and the ace of dia rep esen
a vc
l o I net 1
Ga oghc In c 2 Ea s 42nd
monds
s New York~ IV N e ~~J,York
NEW8P .. Pii~ I!NTERPR BE ASS N
Subsc p on
rnl es I

would fin lllh thl.! season with
about 705 homers and would
!Alp Babe Ruth s &lt;&amp;reer mark
ol 714 early next year
But Aaron s two homers in a
4 2 victory over the New York
Mets Sunday g~ve him a total
of 23ln Atlanta s 88 games and
a"Career total of 696 The same
pace during the remainder of
the season would giVe Hank 19
more homers and a career

Hall taking on Montreal

Call twirls

Page 23
2 2 Page

BY FRED DOWN
Ul I Sporll Writer
And so at last Hank Aaron
has hammered down the once
seemingly Insurmountable
odds and Is on a f)llt;e that
would carry him to an all-time
record of 716 home runs this
season
The Atlanta Braves slugger
and mo.st baseball experl.s
have been figuring that he

~cNOTICI
PUI~IC

OF

HEAR lNG
OFTHI
SALIM TOWNSHIP
TRUStiiS IUDGET

Not ct therebY gl¥tn that on
tht 16th diV 0 Jv)v 913 I 8 ()0
o cock. P M 11 l)ub t hee no
w
be held on he Budge
prepared
by
he
Sa em
Townth
Trua " ' of Me ;1
County hlo for I he"'"'' r sea

thed

~bor.

g

vur 1ndlng D1cembtr J l""
Such hter ng w I be htld a

tht

The American Red Croaa

A!dwt s nt coni lluttd fo ht puDI c JOOd n coopt • on w

U

mttf no pace tor

A maE Sm h

~

1'1

Tht i\dwt I aln&amp; Coune llld lht n t nil on• Ntw•P•Pt AIM, I i AI J ltC:I.I

~-··

reou •

h tm lownsh p T us et1 et ht
S. tm Ctn er Schoo

'

6

c

c erk.

Me gs managed only 2 h1ts a
single and a double by Cooke
Both runs scored m the ftrst
mntng on an error and 4 walks
Lee went the route m wmmng
h s third gan e of the season
stnkmg out 9 walkmg 3 and
g1v ng up JUSt I h1t a s ngle m
the second
Ltthopohs commttled 5 more
errors m the second game for a
grand total of 11 on the day
DRASTIC TURN
Th ngs took a drasllc turn for
the worse m the ftrst game
Sunday Me1gs touched Lan
caster pitchmg for 3 runs m the
lust on walks to Cooke and

Roush s ngle by Baird
another walk and a passed ball
But that was about 11 for
Metgs m that first game Only 3
more batters reached safely
as the game was stopped m the
top of the s1xth due to the 1~ run
Lancaster lead
Lancaster dtdn t waste any
time 1umpmg on Me1gs starter
Bill Chaney They overcame
Me1gs 3-run lead m the bottom
of the first touchmg Chaney
for 4 runs on 2 walks a h1t
batter an error and a double
They added 3 more m the
second on a double smgle
error and Amoto s triple

Mrs. K•mg tnp
• Ie

d
•
wm.ner secon time
1

•

WIMBLEDON
England
(UP!)
It began m turm01l
and controversy It lacked
sparkle bke Oat champagne
It ran overt me and ended m
ant -climax
Wmbled on 1973 pulled
near record crowds as 1f
nothlrig were 1m1Ss But by the
t1me Billie Jean Kmg served
the !mal pomt Sunday the
word for the 87th All England
Lawn Tenn1s champiOnships
was strange
But not for Btllle Jean Kmg
She made the tournament her
own
That last hall the 29-year-old
champion from Hilton Head
S C served was a wmner It
brought her her th rd IItle a
triple she also pulled off m 1967
She won her fifth women s
singles title Saturday m
straight sets over Chns Evert
the IS-year-old tenrus whiz
from Fort Lauderdale Fla m
the ftrst AU American W1m
bledon !mal smce 1957
9th Time Winner
She won the women s doubles
for the ninth time teammg as
four limes before w1th Rose
mary Casals of San Francisco
and downing the woman she
partnered to last year s VIC
tory Betty Stove of Holland
who played th1s year w1th
Frances soft touch artist
Franc01se Durr
Then Mrs King wrapped up
the nuxed doubles t tie for the
thtrd bme pmred as m 1967
and 1971 w th Owen Davtdson
of Arstraha
What made this Wtmbledon
strange was not the women
whose top names and well
matched play helped run
tournament atlendance figures
to the second htghesl ever
299 742
II was the pre tom nament
boytolt announcement by 73
members of the Association of
Tennis Professionals the
gan e s top men whlch turned
Wimbledon into the ghost
tournament which ended m
uhostly fashion Sunday
Despite the thronging
crowds despite the patrtotlc
cheers for third-seeded Roger
Taylor and the teen-age hearts
throbbing for the 17 year-old
Swedish ser sa lion Iljoern
llorg and for Romama s Ihe

Nastase the absence of the
btggest names m tenniS took
the tournament s backbone
away
Excitement Missing
Borg and Nastase alone gave
this year s tournament what 11
lacked throughout-glamor
Outstde of Borg there were
no new sensations among all
the new faces The tournament
produced too few upsels and
too much bafflement at the un
fam1llar names The fallllliar
ztp and tmgle of exCitement
was mlssmg too often
Nastase top-seeded when his
fellow ATP members pulled
out was bounced at the end of
the tournaments ftrsl week by
Alex-Ma'~ an unseeded and
unheralded Amencan from
Mount Freedom N J
Jan Kodes of Czechoslovakia
and Alex Metrevell of Russ1a
plodded methodically and un
sensationally through the rest
of the fteld settmg up the ftrst
all Iron Curiam fmal m Wun
bledon s history The cham
p onsh1p match was an ant1
chmax w1th Kodes w nn ng
over a d1sp1rted looking
Metreveh m straight sets
Nastase patred w th Jmuny
Connors of Bellev lie Ill to
win the men s doubles m a five
set gr~nd agatnst John Cooper
and :19 year-old Neale Fraser
of Australia
Two young An1er1cans won
the jumor singles lltles Billy
Martm 16 of PaiQil Verdes
Ca liforma and Ann K yomura
of San Mateo Calli

MCLAIN MA \' SWITCH
DES MOINES Iowa (UPI)
- Iowa Oaks manager Joe
Sparks said Sunday he expects
former Cy Young Award
winner Demy McLain to leave
for Shreveport of the Texas
League Monday
McLam reportedly has
talked with Oaks owner Ray
Johnston who also owns the
Class Meam at Shreveport
about going there for mo e
work The 29-year old McLam
Is 1-1 with Iowa of the
American Association w1th a
7 55 earned run average m 31
inn inKs

American League scores
were California over Cleveland
19-4 and 5-3 Milwaukee over
Texas &amp;-4 and 7-3 Detroit 3
Kansas City 0 New York 1
Minnesota 0 Boston over
Chicago 11 2 after a Jl.l loss
and Oakland 6 Baltimore ~
Phtl Niekro pitched an eighthitter for Atlanta to ratse his
record to 9-4 Dusty Baker also
homered for the Braves who
dealt Stone his fourth loss
against four wms
The Dodgers swept thetr
three game series with the
Pirates when Withe Dav1s
homered off reliever Dave
Giusll In the 12th after Pittsburgh lied the score In the
runth on Manny Sangmllen s
sacrifice fly Pete Richert wh&lt;r
pitched one hitless mnnmg

Huffman, Riffle
pitch Racine
to Pony win
RUTLAND - In Pony
League achon Fr day at
Rutland Racme downed
Rutland 25 to I Brady Huff
man the wmner pilched the
ftrst five Innings striking out 9
walking 8 and hitting 2 Riffle
fimshed with 6 strikeouts m two
mnlngs
!{titers for Racme were Jun
Rtffle w1th three doubles and
two smgles Greg Dunmng had
two long home runs and a
sln_gle J F Young two smgles
and a double Perry Hill three
smgles Scott Wolfe Steve Hill
and Eric Dunnmg two smgles
each and Tim Wolfe a smgle
Rutland had only two h1ts
one by Floyd Fitzpatrick the
other by Bob Cox Bob
Williamson Terry Whitlatch
and Mtke Ttlhs did the pitching
for Rutland
Racme
432 253 li-25 21
Rutland
000 000 1- I 2

won his second game while
Giusti suffered his first loss
The Giants snapped a threegame losing streak when
plnchhitter Chris Arnold
delivered a sacrtfice fly in the
seventh 1nmng after first
baseman T1m McCa rver
dropped his foul popup 1om
Bradley allowed eight htl• and
four runs m seven mmngs but
won h1s mghth game With the
relief Bid of Elias Sosa Wayne
Granger was the loser for the
Cordinals
Tommy Heln s two run sm
gle capped a three run n n\h
tnnmg outburst whtcl} hlwd the
Astros over the Expos Houston
tied the score on smgles by
Roger Metzger Cesar Cedeno
and Bob Watson Jerry Reuss
picked up his II th wm n rei ef
while Mtke Marshall Montreal s ace reliever who IS
ha v1ng something of an in and
out season suffered h1s s1xtt
setback
Dave Roberts st'Ored the I e
bt'eaktng run m the runth m
mng at San Otego when Dwam
Anderson laid down a twostr ke
squeeze bunt The rtm batted m
was the ftrst of the year for
Anderson la1d down a two
stnke squeeze bunt The run
batted m was the ftrst of the
year for Anderson who en
tered the game as an mfteld
substitute Randy Jones p1t
ched a four httter for the
second VIctory whtle Burt
Hooton lost h1s seventh game
for the Cubs
Jack Billingham p tched a
four-h1tter for his 12th v ctory
for the Reds who dealt Wayne
Twitchell hiS third loss Johnny
Bench delivered the key blow
for Cmcmnah a two run s ngle
m the thtrd mnmg

A walk double smgle wild
p1tch and another double
brought 3 more runners home
m the third before Lou
McKinney replaced Chaney on
the mound The last double was
actually off McKinney but the
run 15 charged to Chaney
STATE FARM
A walk smgle double
another walk and sacrifice fly
brought home 4 more m th
fourth brmgmg Cooke to the
mound He was touched for 4
runs m the ftfth on a smgle
walk error ftelder s cho1ce1
INSURANCE
International
h1t batter and a smgle
®
league Standings
Chaney lasted 2 and two- By United Press International
American Division
thtrds mmngs walkmg 4
WLPctGB
FOR INSURANCE CALL
strtkmg out I and giVIng up 7 Rochester
&lt;IS 36 57
Stephen C Snowden
40 41 494 6 '
h ts MoKmney pitched only a Pawtucket
Syracuse
40
42
488
7
th rd of an mmng walkmg 2 To edo
iJ6 46 ~39 11
&lt;55 3 Russe St
striking out I and giving up 3
National Divis an
Grave H 1
Mddepo
Oho
WLPctGB
h1ts m hts first appearance of
PH 9!2 7155
Charleston
53 34 609
the season Cooke appeared for T dewater
46 38 548 5 ,
2 mmngs walking 4 str1kmg Penlnsu a
42 41 506 9
Richmond
29 56 341 23
out I and allowmg 2 h1ts
Sun:lay s Results
Chaney was charged With 5 Pen nsula 6 R chmond 5
STATE FARM
INSU RANCE COMPAN ES
earned runs while McKinney Syracuse 7 Rochester 5
Home 0 es Boon ng o
Cha
lesion
8
Tldewale
4
had 4 and Cooke 2
""
Toledo 6 Pawtucket
The mghtcap was sparked by
the fme p1tchmg of IJI.year-old r·----:--:::==::::~-----------..
rtght-hander Perk Ault Gomg
EV~RY
the distance to wm his second
'TU~SOA'(
W\6\'\T
deCISIOn of the year Ault
\!I fi..I'\IL'( FIJW NIGHT
struck out 4 walked only 2 and
~~ ev~&amp;t~ t.tltF 1;----....__ _
gave up just 3 htls
Me1gs fell behmd m the first
INCREPIBURGIBLEI
mmng on a smgle walk and 2
fielder s ch01ces But that was
all for Lancaster
Me1gs took the lead m the
second w1th a walk smgle by
Stobart 2 more walks and a
fielder s ~h01ce F~ur walks
and a smgle by Rousb brought
home 2 more In the thtrd and a
triple by Wolfe and smgle by
Gary George scored the last
run m the fourth
W1th the DtstriCI 8 tour
Speciallamtly meal prtces alter 4 p m
narnen I less than 2 weeks
For Adults
awaJ Athens a possible
For Ktds
second round opponent comes
Big Shet•
Funburger "
to town Wednesday for a smgle
French Frtes
Frllnch Fries
Turnover and
Small Soft Drink
game s tarling at 5 30 at
Large
Soft
Dr
nk
and Loll pop
Syracuse
Only
Only
lth
000 000 o- 0 3 6
Me gs
250 301 x l 12 1
50~
Dulko and Bl~ck Ba d {WI
and Ash Nesselroad (5)
Lith
ooo ooo o- o 1 s
M gs
200 000 o-2 2 3
McQuade Baas 5) and
Colman lee (W) and Ash

$1

Megs
300 00-3 3 4
lan
433 4 4 18 2 I
Chaney L McK nney Ill
Cooke (4) and Ash Nesse road
(2)

Shupe (W) and C a k
Me ~ s
002 100 o-5 5 3
Lan
100 000 o-1 3 2
Aull (W) and Stobart Gary
and W ghl

•

1503 EASTERN AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OURGEA C E

SA

') 3 B go C e 5 s m
AAO(MAR K 0 BU GEA CHEF SYS E 5 NC

•

�\

\

'

S =1'heLIIUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 July t 1973

Aaron within 18 of Babe's mark

2- The Dilly Sentinel o&gt;fiddleport Po. eroy 0 July 9 1973

I Voi~; ~y;;;g-n-;;w~y··
BY JACK 0 !IRIAN
AN ENLARGEMENT ON
SNOWDON S JOB
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Lord Snowdon s
luncheons with most-beautiful actress Gayle
Hunmcuttdoubtless are just for photographable
reasons Doubtless
Most famous showbiz
center The Brdl Bldg (Jack Dempsey s
restaurant on the ground floor collects the
songwrtting Damon Runyand guys &amp; dolls
Unday s lost) Is In deep liscal trouble All
tenants got diSpossess not1ces none understand
Ingnd Bergman s son Roberto Rossellm
Jr like his pop loves actresses Jr s new one Is
Barbara Bouche! Rocky Graz ano told us at
the Umcorn he s been offered swruner stock
stardom m 0 Ne1ll s The Hairy Ape
I can
play It witout makeup Sr Rockwell bragged
Leonard Katz biography of Frank Costello
w1ll be IIUed Uncle Frank Tony Qumn Will
play the lucky old cnme statesman (he died m
bed)

Merle Oberon s estranged husband Bruno
Pagllai lsn t torchmg He s datmg a ser1es of
cuties such as Dorothy Towne Webb Jack
Webb s ex George Plimpton s next book and
TV special as a Renaissance Hack will have him
jommg the Rolling Stones as an mstrumentallst
- with a tambourme The jetset bet s actress
Sandre Payne 28 will be the next Mrs Alan Jay
Lerner Fatr Lady WIVes are r ve so far
Candy Bergen donned a $75 000 Van Cleef
diamond necklace for a Four Seasons
restaurant fashion slink and snorted she 1sn I
unpressed With such baubles Less c vil zed
and more earthy gems are her relevant bag
Famed pianiSt Arlur Rubmstem s son John
(starring m the h1t musical Pippm ) composes
songs tho he s never had a lesson John tells us
his dad conSiders h1s music tasteful but not
great
Elvts Presley s old Mercedes Benz
was dear to his heart so when 1t just got too old
for h1s use he burled the worn-out relic on hts
\ Memphis grounds and gave 1t a tombstone
Status symbol Dublin-born pop smger
Gilbert 0 Sullivan now has h1s own execullve Jet
Inflation FBI Crtme Index offenses dropped
Larceny $50
larceny theft 1s the new
minimum-crime descnpt10n FBI agents are
delighted lhetr new boss 1s ex-G-man Kelley
Morale shot up the moment he was announced
The Dtana Dors ntck Roste 1s m fmanctal
embarrassment actors-wuon reps are there
every day to see members get paid - daily
Sammy Davis at the Concord for a week
reserved SIX rooms one just for hiS golf clubs
Super Cops dtrector Btll Belasco wants
Mayor John tindsay for another N Y (timed
fhck Thmks Jawn has a future actmg Better
than his mayormg
PlaybOy mag must be
fnghtened 11 s usmg the ftlthy language and
p1ctures once found only m underground-sewer

mags And Out mag is worse
Penthouse
mag ia.tbe dregs Dun Dalley and Gig Young
both snubbed offers to star In Mel Brooks
Black Bart film l'he sophisticated lads satd
they won t mouth such dlalogtc smut
Actor Peter Boyle gets the star-crossed title
role m the Crazy Joe Gallo gangster bioflim
Czech dtrector Ivan Rene s Prtson Guard
111m was banned In Czechoslovak IS because the
star wore a cap while brutahzmg prtsoners and
looked just like Stalin well • D dn t he•
There s more money in the bar at The Latr
Restaurant than on it Its custom-made
mahogany hand-carved in Jamaica in 1745
Owners Bob Roberts and Jerry Zelun turned
down $15 000 for the 12 footer Terry 0 Netll
and JeM'y Toner are a brace of Irish 1m
m1grants who have added three more
Manhattan bars to their ortgmal John
Barleycorn pub They II open two more - in Ft
Lauderdale and Boston
Tow truck plying the East Stde Drtve has its
Side emblazoned 'The Happy Hooker
Ex
Mtami Beach ctly manager Jack Duffield s at
the Ocala Memorial Hosp1tal after a series of
strokes Our old home town of Buffalo has a
welterweight challenger Denms lrtsh Rocky
Cudney Buffalo sent some tough lads to
championshiPS
Jimmy Slattery Rocky
Kansas Junmy Goodrtch
Small world Bmg Crosby and Rhonda
Flellllng hadn t seen each other m years (they
co-starred m Connecticut Yankee ) and had a
btg kiss kiss reuniOn m front of the St Regis
AmeriCan-Greek arltsl-colwnmst Val Arms and
Amertcan Chilean beauty Carmn Ferrer ate
Amertcan Italian grub at Mons1gnore while the
AmeriCan fiddlers got Mozart strung out
Women sUb will look kindlier on TV s The
FBI -It w11l feature the first gU"I agent acted
by Betty Ann Rees Vera liruba Ralston s tcy
achng was fodder for com1c japes a couple of
celluloid generallons ago Wtdow of Repubbc
Pictures boss Herbert Yates Veras ready for
a comeback Altogether now From what•
First Artists (owned by Stretsand Newman
Pottier Hoffman McQueen) want Branda for
a film Chad Everett 1s wed but not to Shetla
Scott who swears he fathered her son she s JUSI
tagged Dale Andre Lee Evere!t The late B11l
Inge a smctde - left pamtmgs worth more
than a mtllion We d known h1m s nee he was a
St Lou s drama cr t1c 30 years ago - and he
was a tortured soul even then tembly
emollonal fearful then even of h1s cr~tictsm
whtch was sens111ve perceptive and sym
pathetically complicated he seemed to find
mertt In the worst plays and delivered hts
negative dec1s1on w th smcere regret He
s1mply never could cope The similarly tortured
Tennessee Williams seems confidently secure m
comparison

DR LAWRENCE E LAMB
WON'T ALWAYS WORK

Sour Cream Aids Sore Tongue
By Lawrence E Lamb MD

to var ous v tamms mouth
• washes throat lozenges and
Dear Dr Lamb Some JUSt about as w de a vanety of
lime ago I read your column suggesllons as the number of
on the sore tongue I used to letters recetved I m a ways
have hts problem and a spe happy to have readers
c allst recommended to me suggeslwns and somet mes t
that I take a mouthful of sour helps me to understand the
cream and ho d 1t m mv confus on people have about
mouth for some t me Repea.t medtcal problems
The truth IS there 1s no
th1s regularly even as often
known
treatment for geo
as every hour It work ed for
graph
c
tongue The problem
me and I d I ke to pa ss on
IS
not
a
sore tongues are
th1s recommendallon to other
geograph c tongues The
people
Dear Reader - I d d w 1te tongue s a very good md ca
a co lumn about geograph c tor o! man y med ca l d so r
tongue I hts problem causes ders Th s s why the do ctor
ra1sed spots on the tongu e asks a pat ent to st ck out the
same soreness and 11 may tongue and takes a good look
chang e dram atica ll y ove r at t dur ng a med cal exam
ntght f wa su pr sed to re nat on You can see ev dence
ce ve a large volume of rna I of some v tam n del c enc1es
concern ng th1s prob em and !rom the tongue you can f nd
most of the lett ers as ured cv dences of anem a and
me that th s cond t10n cou d there are many other 1m por
be cured The var ous reme tant th n~s to observe dur ng
d es that have bee n r ecom the exam nat on of the tongue
WI ei he or not you ca n do
mended for cur ng t h• ve n
someth
ng about a sore tongue
eluded the gamul on hold
del
end
n what s cans ng t
ng sour c.: rean In the moutl
Jf t s due to a vttam n del

BfRRr'S WORLD

c ency then of course th s
problem can be corrected If
t s the changes of the tongue
assoc ated w1th ce rtam ane
m1as correct on of th1s undeF
ly ng problem w II change the
character of the tongue The
po nt I would I ke to make to
the arge number of you who
sent n letters of tr.eatment
for geograph c tongue s that
yo u re probably all correct n
the pont that many of th ese
form s of treatment are help
lui for certa n sore tongues
but not for all sore tongu es
wh ch gets me bac k to my
or gma statement not ever)
so re tongu e s a geog raphic
tongue
To emphas tze th e po nt a
little more not all sk1n rashes
are meas le s A skm ra sh
cou d be ch cken pox sca rlet
fever or eve c seco ndary sy
ph s or such exot c Illnesses
as Rock y Mounta n Spotted
Fever fh e trea tm ent of the
sk1n ra sh depend s on what
causes I The sa me appl es to
cha gcs n th e longue The
rea tment at the probl em r
th e tongue nc ud ng sore
tongues depend s on what s
cans ng I
For tho se changes n the
tongue tl at are ea ll y get
graph c longue I am sorry to
say that we really do not have
a spec f c treatment at th s
t me For those who have
changes n the r tortgu e asso
c a ted w th v tamm delle en

"Fnend or Political Enemy?' ~

National Ltaguo
Eut

BY PAUL CRABTREE

PUBL C NOT CE

TO

NOT CE BY
PUBL CATION
THE DEFENDAN S

Straude Gr mm J
and he
unknown
he s
dev sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
execu o

S

an d

aude

G

D eceased whos e
unknown

ass gns

mm
es dence a e

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
ME GS COUNTY OH 0
PROBATED V 5 ON R Chil d

B

Rowe

I

--

-ii) IIIN!A

he E s

a

'

'J

••

Ad

eo Ada

•

+++

ghls

DEAR HELEN
Several books have been wn(ten about the benefits of young
men chaos ng older women as theU" mates An older woman 1s
less demand ng more expenenced more stable and un
derstandmg and bes des she s grateful
On the other hand young g~rls do better with more mature
mates who can act as father ftgures and take care of them until
they mature mentally
So
th1s suggesllon In our brave new world of the future
1t should be mandatory that young men marry women nearing
50 and young g1rls marry men who have reached the mertdian the first tune around Mter they stay w1th these mates for no
more than five to ten years they d be ready to choose mates llljBr
lhetr own ages w1th whom to have chtldren Then when the
ch ildren are grown they could divorce agam and start a new
cycle of marrymg people younger than themselves while the
divorced older people nearmg retirement age would whoop 11 up
at Golden Age villas
Th1s was brought up for diSCUSSion around the pool (at our
Singles Complex) and I present 11 for your readers con
stderahon - J A
DEAR J
Poolside Sk nnertsms leave me a bit cold but maybe a few of
my readers Will warm up to your suggestions (But don t hold
yow breath ) - H

+++

MANN NG 0 WEBSTER
UDG E AND EX O~F C 0
CLERK OF THE COMMO N
PLEAS COURT OF ME GS
COU NTY OH 0 PROBAn
D V SO N

6 4 I

I 15

2 9

6 1

c

On ce up on ti t n c t w ~
ha d t s yu
c)
~
d file It Ju st to s lu v ~rok
w tl uut go g n u lcbt
Pcrh ops 1 0; 1 vun 1 heard
Those born on th1s date are
obOIIt the m n "" 0 c •lied s 1
under the sign of Cancer
t r 1nmco s t.;l 11u •n phone
Elias Howe inventor of the
exchange tnl g 1
Wu g
sewmg machme was born July nun Icr
9 1819
On this day in history
In 1900 Australia entered the
federal Bntlsh commonweallh
In 1943 American canadtan
and British forces mvaded

We ctn I alford any more home lmprovem11nts Whit do you think thlt Ia the Western White
Hou,.?
-~--.:.__-;:---;:---------:---- SicilY dunng World War II

Us.

By Helen Bottel

New Approach to Marrlage•
DEAR
HELEN
ane R ow e Dece as ed
P an f
My ~ ife and I have a great rna mage The reason' We are
VS
S aude G mm
add ess together no more than three evemngs a week thus we don I get
unknown e a
tired of each other
Oefendan s
No 20955
We both work are bOth mvolved m many act!VIIIes I don t
- NOT CE
P an f
has b ou gh
h s expect Candtce to tag along when she would be bored and she
a on nam ng you he De end
pays me the same favor We trust each other we come back to
'TIEd our
each other That s enough
We don t feel that we MUST appear as a couple JUSt for the
hs sake of provmg we are She often attends parties alone or w1th
another escort I do the same although we each have fU"st nght
of refusal When we go places together 11 s because we are both
equally mterested m the events so netther feels self-68cnftcmg or
used
Our evenmgs together are often spent at home getting to
know each other agam We do not plan to have children It s like a
long close undemanding frtendsh!p - w1th love
m1ght add our outstde frtendshtps are just that - we
1emam true to each other sexually perhapJ because we don t
feel constramed to do so
The trouble w1th most marnages IS that they become two
aga nst the world and who ever heard of celhnates
remammg fr emily•
The key to a happy marriage IS
separation not
togetherness - TRIED IT AND UKED IT
DEAR TIALI
Open marnages are great only 1f you are lucky enough to
choose the r1ght (equally open) partner You have
Congratulallons - H
n n s a oro

NEWSPAPER Eti EAPR SE ASSN

Send you qurst ons lo D LamLJ
n co e of h J new1popeo P 0 Bot
55 Rodo C ly Slot'" New Yo l
N Y 10019 Fo a copr ol D Lambs
new booA e on ('Onst pot on nnd SO
ctnt o h.r o c orJd eu onJ tJ k
o Con pol on book e

Helen Help

o

c es or pern c1ous anem a

there are suttable treatments
for these dtsarders A symp
tom s a symptom I s not
diagnos s a nd th s ts Nh y a
doct r has to take Jalrly com
plete h s(ory and an exa m na
t on to f nd out what t s
that s caus ng the sym pto n
then t eat th s problem nd
not the symptom tsdf

&amp; THINGS

DEAR HELEN
My husband and I are the town s perfect couple We re
po nted out as an example of what maM'iage should be - sue
cessful m busmess and socialltfe two lovely children no dtscord
beautiful people m every way We re rapidly becoming
everybody s tdeal
And I m a fraud Etght years ago I thought! was in love with
Jerry but actually we were only pushed together by friends who
just knew the clas.q prestdent and the most popular glrlln our
small college should get marned
For two years I vc been having a secret affair with the man I
should have married On!}' reason we arcn t found out is that
poople thmk I m above reprooch
Jerry acts loving when we re in company but at home he s
well nothing His business Is all that matters
Should I ask for a divorce and upset the whole town or just
keep living a lie• - NATM..IE
DEAR NATAl IE
Which Is more important - your future or what the town
thmks ? Or is It porhaps that you like your life except lor oc
cas onal guilt pangs?
However there sa third choice Uyou and Jerry would stop
seeing younelvcs as a living legend and face what you ve
become ( perfectly bored with each other) you might still
break out or that trap - together You could even fall In love
again
Tryhonesty thoughltmayleadtoascreamlngflghl (Andlf
you can t work up u fight - well maybe there illrll anything
J~fl l - H

Sentences
Public broadcasting still caught In a lund., squeeze and an
Ideological argument over programming and program content
Is reaching way back for material to rerun this summer Some
of PBS offerings go back to 1970 and late Sixties which lsn t
bad for this area since PBS programming generally wasn t
available here then
Individual Beatles conUnue to do quite
well since tfu!tr breakup with George Harrison IHld Paul Me
Cartoey running one-two at the top of the pop music charts with
Give Me L&lt;ne (Give Me Peace on Earth) and My Love
respectively
The Watergate witnesses have totally worn out a phrase that
wall hackneyed and not very good English to begin with at
that point In time Why use such a mouthful when It s just a
clear to say at that time • I feel absolutely no compulsiop to
go out and buy a new t.P recording by TV s Odd Couple fony
Randall and Jack Klugman But I ll admit I m fascinated by
one of the songs on the album When Banana Skins Are Falling
I U Come Slldlng Back to You
Speaking of records there are some song titles out now
which are absolutely 1!9mograph1c but are bemg sold right out
on the open market The National Weather SerVIce which I ve
criticized bitterly in the past is doing a good job on radio and TV
tlus summer w1th their tornado watch and tornado warning
announcements They rea valuable service and not calculated
to scare the bejeebers out of you without good and urgent reason
The gasoline,shortage has knocked the dayltghts out of attend
ance at country music and rock festivals throughout the country
Hardest-hit Is Wheelmg s WWV A Jamboree with attend
ance off by as much as four fifths and even the Grand Ole Opry
drawmg reduced crowds
Ill admit I m prejudiced against many TV game shows but
a recent stunt on Beat the Clock was the stuptdest thmg I ve
seen In years A young couple w1th mnertubes strapped to their
derrieres bumpmg and grtndmg as they tr1ed to capture a
volleyball mstde the mnertubes
Volleyball incidentally IS
getting along hard look as a TV attractiOn and I cant see why
not It s fast-paced full of actwn and emmently su1ted to easy
televtsmg I d take It over an auto race or the Roller Derby any
time

My thirst for baseball broadcasts 1s almost tnsallable but
the Reds Dogers sertes that ushered m July was almost too
much 32 1nnmgs of baseball m about 'l:l hours Wow
You
llllghl add the great American hall-dollar to the growmg list of
endangered species because they are getting very rare and
prime material for collectors for some reason whtch seems a
shame smce they re tdeal for com machme use at today s
prJces
Dtd you know that Prestdent Uncoln once appeared before a
Congressional committee to g1ve tllem assurances on a delicate
subject? He had to attest that hts wife was not a Confederate spy
which makes the current brouhaha over Prestdent Ntxon s appearance pale by comparison The cap1tal ctties of the two
States bordermg the nver here liave mammoth traffic problems
of different natures both very frustrating Ftgurlng out the
twists and turns of the outerbeltway lnnerbeltway roads m
Columbus requires an over-average sense of navigation And
Charleston was literally paralyzed m the pre Fourth wee¥end by
people buymg license plates travelers takmg a long long
weekend and the appearance of folk smger John ( Almo.st
Heavep ) Denver

WIN AT BRIDGE

Poor, hard
luck Jacoby
NORTH
• 42
.1074
t1632
+QB54
WEST

EAST

+KQJ9
.A&amp;
tQJ051

+1073
• 9532
t KJ9

+g13

+A 12
SOUTH Dl
+A865
.KQJB
tAB
+K 106
No In South vulnerable
West
Nortn East Soulh
INT.
Pass 2+
Pa ss

Pass

Pass

Pass

2.

Opening lead +K
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

PUBLIC NOTICE
Wr
en
offe s w 1 b~
re ce ved a he o ces of Crov:
C ow &amp; Po er n Pome oy
Oh o vnt 10 00 AM on July
2 1973 for a of the real estate
owned by the late Edd e Lou
Howe ·y except fo
the un
d v ded one ha f nte es of what
s known as he Gask I fa m
be ng descr bed
n Deed
Recorded n Vo ume 235 Page
933 of t he Deed Reco ds of
Me gs Coun y
Oh o
The
proper y be ng ollered for sa e
s genera y descr bed as
follows
Hom e Place 23 ac es n
Co umb a Townsh p
Deed
Record 2 5 Page 2.)
Sharp Fa m - 75 acres n
Co umb a TOWilSh D
Qppri
Record 2 6 PaQe 23
wa Ke Place ...... 23 acres In
Co lumb a Town sh p
Deed
Record 2 6 Page 23
Fo lden Place - 39 acres n
Columba Townsh p
Deed
Record 216 Page 23
Tract nea Ceme en
3
acres and 53 rods n Co um b a
Town sh p Deed Record 2 6

Ch cago
Sl Louis
Moolreol
Philadelphia
P llsburgh
New York

wlpctgb
49 37 570
43 &lt;40 518 412
40 41 494 6 1
38 45 458 9 ,
37 44 457 9 '
34 4d 425 12
Wnt

Amerlcon League
Eotl
w I pet gb
New York
48 39 m
Boston
43 38 531 2
Baltimore
4\ 37 526 2 1
Det,oll
43 41 512 3 ,
M!waukee
42 41 506 4
C aveland
29 56 341 \8
West
w I pet gb
Ollkland
48 38 558
Cal lorn a
44 38 537 2
Kansas C ty 47 41 534 2
M nnesoto
43 38 531 2 1
Chlcag""'
0 40 SIB 3 ,
Texas
29 53 35~ 7
Saturday $ Result$
M nn 9 New York 1
M nn6NewYork 2
Bo•ton 7 Ch cago 3
M lwoukee 17 Texas 2
CaUl 3 Cleve 1
Ollkland 5 Bait 4
Kan City S Detro t 2
Sunday s Resulls
Detrolt 3 Kan C ty 0
New York 7 Mlnn 0
Chl6 Boston 1$1
Bos Jon II Ch 1 2nd 0 nn
M lw 6 Texas 4 lsi
M lw 7 Texas 3 2nd
Cal I 10 Cleve 4 1st
Cal I 5 Cleve 31 2nd 10 Inn
Oakland 6 Ba Te 5 10 Inn
Today s Probable Pitchers
All Tl mes EDT
Boston (lee 10 3) at M n
nesota (Decker 3 3) 9 p m
New York (Med ch 6 4) at
Chicago (Wood 15 12) 9 p m
Kansas C ty (Splltlorff II 5)
at Milwaukee (Short 3 I) 9 30

wlpctgb
LosAngeles 54 33 621
Son Franc sco 49 39 557 s 1
C nclnnall
47 38 553 6
Houston
47 42 528 B
Allanlo
39 49 443 5 ,
San 0 ego
31 54 365 22
Saturdays Results
Allan Ia 9 New York 8
St Lou s 6 San Fran
Clncl l Phi Ia 4
Monlreal6 Houston 1
Son D ego 4 Chicago 3
l A 8 Plltsbgh 6
MONTREAL (UPI) - fhe
Sunday s Cames
Cmcmna 11 Reds fresh from
Houston 9 Monlreal 7
Allanta 4 New York 2
thetr ftrst three-game series
Cine 4 Ph Ia o
sweep of the season Sunday
l A 3 P ttsb9h 2 12 nns
San D ego 4 Chicago 2
over the Philadelphia Phtllles
San Fran 5 St louis 4
w11l send Tommy Hall to the
Today s Probable Pitchers
mound tomght against the
All Times EDT
Cine nnatl (Hall 5 4) at
Montreal Expos in a nationally
Monlrea (Stoneman 3 S) s IS
teleVISed game
pm
Jack Billingham battling 00
Houston (W lson 6 9) at New
York (Seave 9 4) 8 p m
degree temperatur~s con
Atont11 (Harrson 42) at
tmued the Reds early July
Ph !adelphia (Carlton &amp; 9) 7 30
success story which has seen
om
(Only games scheduled)
them wm etghl of their ftrst
Tuesday s Games
mne games and move to w1thm
Cine at Monlreo n ght
pm
Houston at N Y n ghl
six
games of fust place Los
Texas (Dunn ng 0 5) at
Atlanta al Ph Ia night
Angeles
Detro t ( lollch 9 8) 8 15 p m
St louis at L A night
Callforn
a
IWr
ght
7
10)
at
Billingham now 12-5 on the
P ttsbgh al S 0 n ght
Baltimore (Palmer 8 6) 7 30 year had little trouble w1th the
Ch cago at San Fran n ght
pm
(Only games scheduled)
Ph lhes after the bases
fuesday s Games
loaded s1tuation m the second
Boston at M nn night
N Y at Chicago n1ght
Kan City at Mllw n ght
Texas at Detro t n ght
Cal I at Bait n ght
Oakland at C:leve tw
Stevie Call pitched h1s
second no hitter of the season EXPOS BUYING LINTZ
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
as he led the Yankees to a 13-0
The Metgs Amencan Leg10n
VIctory over Rutland B Dugan Montreal Expos Sunday an
nounced
they
were
purchasmg
baseball team took 3 out of 4
was the losmg p1tcher for
the
contract
of
Larry
Untz
games
over the weekend to
Rutland
Yankee hitters were Stev1e from Peninsula of the lnterna ra1se tis record to 12-8 gomg
CaU 2 singles Stev1e J,Jttle a tiona! League to f11l m for m mto the fmal week of regular
season play
smgle Tom Hawley a stngle JUred Tun Foh
Untz a shortstop leads the
Me1gs swept a doubleheader
and a double Chris Taylor a
IL
m
stolen
bases
w1th
47
and
1s
from Lt!hopohs on Saturday
single Tom Owens two
to
report
m
tune
for
Monday
11.0 and 2-0 and spill at Lan
smgles and Pat Owens and
Tun Faulk w1th one single mght s game agamst the caster Sunday losmg the ftrst
each The Yankees are now 8 Houston Astros He. IS bemg game 18-3 whtle commg back
brought up to replace Foil who to wm the mghtcap 5-I
and 3 for the season
fractured
his jaw m a collision
The wnptres at Lancaster let
Rutland
000 0-- 0
with
the
Astros
Bob
Watson
m
the games get out of control
Yankees
526 x-13
Sunday s 9-7 Expos loss
wtth pitchers ftrtng at batters
A Montreal spokesman said and catcher Mtck Ash suffering
the deciSIOn to place Foll on the a blow on a play at the plate
disabled list w1ll not be made that cost htm 5 slltches above
I 1st Game)
unlit after consultation w1th the left eye Second baseman
Texas
000 200 02o- 4 0 0 doctOrs on Monday and if Fob
Tom Cooke was h1t by a ball
Mllw
310 020 OOx- 6 6
B bb Paul (8) and Po ter Is not disabled the Expos w1ll leadmg off the second game
~ alon L nzy
81 and Porter create roster space for Untz by giVIng h1rn a welt on the back
WP Slalon (6 6) LP Bibby r~movmg somebody else
the size of 2 baseballs
(2 3) HRS- Brlggs (IOih) May
(14th)
AshiS inJury appearmgvery
(2nd game)
Oakland
000
110
003
1
6
1
del
berate occurred m the
Texas
010 200 ooo- 3 9
Ball
400
000
00
o5
0
1
second
mnmg when the Lan
Mllw
401 020 oox- 7 9 o Ham lion P na (5) L ndblad
Kremmel G~o ewsk (I) (7) Fingers (9) and Fosse caster shortstop Amoto
AI en (6) and B Ilings Short Jefferson Wall (71 Jackson banged a tr1ple over left ftelder
lockwood (4) and Rodriguez
Reyno ds (9) and WI Iiams John Roush s head Amoto
WP- Lockwood (4 4) LP- (9)
Hendr cks (10) WP-F nger (1
Kremmel {0 2) HRs
May 51 LP-Reynolds (54) HRs- '1. rounded thtrd and steamed for
(15lh) Scott ( lth)
Baylor (4th) Sando ( 6th) home arnvmg at the same

2nd no-hitter

Tenace I14th)

65

campbe
t'face 168 99
acres In Co um b a Townsh p
Deed Reco d 68 Page 53 1
Harmon P ace
63 acres n
Cotumb a Town sh p
Deed
Reco d 64 Page 613
McComas Pa ce
54 acres
n Co um b a Townsh p Deed
Reco d 60 Page 466
Sc p o P ace
I S acres n
Sc p o Townsh p Deed Record

s
re
n
•

lime as the throw from left
field The umptre s1gnaled out
and then safe as Ash dropped
the ball at the same t1me as he
got an elbow from Arnoto JUSt
above the left eye Ash was
taken to a Lancaster hospital
by h1s father and Don Hunnel
Leg10n busmess manager
where the wound was closed
Metgs got fme pttchmg m the
3 w ns w1th John Batrd fmng a
3-httter m the f1rs Ltthopohs
game Steve Lee I h1ttmg the
oppos lion m the second game
and Perk Ault 3 htltmg Lan
caster m the f nale
Two nms brought home on a
single by Kevm Sheets m the
f rst game agamst Lithopolis
startOJi the weekend off on a
good note Me1gs added 5 more
m the second on a smgle by Lou
McKmney smgle by Dave
Wolfe double by Rtck Stobart
walk to Cooke samf ce fly to
center by Ash an error and
smgles by Batrd and Steels
Meigs added 3 m the fourth
on a single by Ash sacnflce
bunt by Roush walk to Bard
an error and a 2-run scoring
s ngle by Ault Another run
came home in the s1xth on J
stratght smgles by Chari e
Marshall Wolfe and Gary
George
Me1gs rapped 12 h Is off
I II opolis p1tchmg and was
aided by 6errors wlule leaving
8 r nners stranded
Batrd allowed only 3 hits 2
walks and struck out 7 n
picking up hiS third win of the
year
In Saturdays second game

ng

rZaB:W•AMXMU
The blddlng has been
North
EAII

Wtt~

Pass
Pass

p.,,

I+
4+

••

Pas~

Pan
I au

.

DCII¥0 od by ca er where
avn Abo ss c:e nl!l per week
fly Motor Rou e where carr er
serv ce not evalleb c One

man 12 sv m~ I n Oh o ond
w Va One veer I 61 S x
South mon
hs non hs ss so Three
monlhsf 15 50 S sewhtrt Ill
Yot
I &gt; month! 19 lQ lhree
3t
monfhs 16 Subscrlpl on
4t
o Ice Includes Sunday tmu
Sttnllno
S+

Ia..
&amp;+
Pau
e•
Pass
&amp;+
I au
1
In 1970 Maj Gen George You South hn d
Casey and six others were .A Q 71 •11 Q I! 6 tA I +13
TOIJA V S Ql f ST!ON
killed In a helicopter cruh
What do you do now1
ln•lcad or re•pondl 8 nne sp lc
Casey was the seventh Amerl
A- Pau Rool111-o lonlplolion your partner I •• bid lwo J: ltbs
to
btd oevon Your porlnor moy no1 Whlll I you do now?
can general lo be killed In
hovolllo
kin&amp; or lpidtl
Vietnam
An1wer lamyrrnw
1

total of exactly 715
A crowd of 33 017 at New
York seeing Aaron for the last
time this season cheered as he
t"Onnected f&lt;Jr a solo horner in
tile fourth Inning and a two-run
shot which gave the Braves a 4
I lead In the sixth Both homers
were off former Atlanta team
n ate George Stone and both

salted about 350 feet over a 30foot-high fence
Western clubs scored a clean
'!,Weep over Eastern teams as
Los Angeles defeated Pttls
burgh J-2 In 12 inmngs San
Franclllt'O shaded St IAiuls 5-I
Houston heat Montreal !1-7 San
D ego topped Chicago 4-2 and
Ctnctnnatt
blanked
Philadelphia 4.0

liming He allowed only four every wning
Billingham
hits in pitching his fifth shutout sa1d f went out to the mound
of the. season tops m the completely refreshed
Nat10nal League
Manager Sparky Anderson
The Reds scored the only two who hmls that his leadmg
nms they needed to wm m the JlllCher rnay tend to be a btl
thtrd mnlng after a dtsputed lazy thinks Billqham should
call at second base m which be an easy 20-game wmner this
Joe Morgan was ftrst called out season
and then safe
If Jack drives hunself he
Johnny Bench followed w1th should w nd up w1th more than
a two-run smgle to g1ve the 20 Anderson said If he ex
Reds a 2-j) lead Btllmgham had erctsed the same self-discipline
httle trouble makmg 11 stand as a ptlcher that Pete Rose
up
does as a hitter he d win 20
The btg r~ghthander gave games every year
much of the cred1t for his
Billingham who was the
success to Reds tramer Larry Reds best p1tcher the !mal half
Starr
of last season agrees w1th his
He mopped my neck face manager
and arms w1th 1ce water after I guess what SparkY means IS

that I should concentrate more
on the job at hand sa1d the Jl.
5 215-pound righthander I
gotta admit he might have
something
Anderson sa1d he brought
pttchtng coach Larry Shepard
into tqe dugout early In Sun
day s game so he could prod
Jack a little
Jack has a good slnkmg fast
ha II and a good curve too
Anderson sa1d But at times
he s lazy with 1t I wanted Shep
to trot out to the mound and
prod Jack a little after those
r~rst couple of mmngs
Opposmg Hall (5-4) m tomght s f1rst game of a threegame set with the Expos w1U be
B1ll Stoneman (3-5)

Legion wins t-.ree times

Foley Pace
28 ac es n
Sc Po Townsh r'l nPPrl Reco d

Oswald
I played m the
Goldman Patrs agam th1s year
The hands were most nterest
mg and Malcolm Brachman
and I were nght ur, w th the 95 Page 19
leaders until the fol owmg bad Offers may be subm ed on
or mo e pa eels or may be
luck ha d gave us the f rst of one
subm tied or al l of he property
several d scores
offe ed for sa e A I bldde s are
J1m
orth s Stayman two encou ag ed o exam ntt he I lie
proper y upon wh ch they
club resp se had tO' be pure bo d he
for he conveyance w II be
whtmsy I e he was lucky only he nlerest o the decedent
enough to f1
a riner w th and w II be conveyed by a
four good h rts
that the f duel a y deed tmder the fe ms
a W
The p operty w 1 be
!mal contract as m that su t of
so d subf ec o he ens for real
Oswald Ma aim opened es a e ta xes for 973 and the
fe ms of th e sa e a e cash uron
the ktng of s ades Who de
y Of deed The r gh
s
wouldn t? He was allowed to eseveved
p e ec any and a I
hold the tr ck and sh !ted to ace off e s
Cia a E Howe y E)(ecutr x
and another heart South
o he Las1 W 1 and
dropped the J&amp;Ck under the ace
Tes amen! of Edd e Lou
so as to wm the second heart n Howe ry
Deceased
dummy
7!9 16 2 c
J1m I assume that the next
play was a low club That gave
you the chance to nse w th the
The Da1~ Sent11el
ace and lead a lhtrd heart but
DEVOTED tO THE
South would w nd up with three
NJEREST OF
hearts three clubs and two
MEIGS MASON AREA
aces
CHESTER L TANNEH LL
E uc Ed
Oswald I coul\:1 see th at
ROBERT HOEFLICH
happentng so I ducked qutckly
C ty Ett for
Pu bl shed da ly e~&lt;ce pt
South had no probl em about
urday by The Oh o Va ey
what to do next He finess ed Sa
Pub sh n g Co mpany
1
the 10 spot 1 hen he cashed hts Cou rt S
Pon e ov
Oh o
45769 Bus ne ss Olf ce Phon e
spade ace and ruffed a spade 99
2 2156 Ed tor a Phone 991
and came to the same etght 2 57
trtcks wtth three of h1s trumps
Secqnd class pas age p&amp; d at
ov Oh o
ace of spades and a spade ruU Pomc
Nal
ona adverl s
two cl ubs and the ace of dia rep esen
a vc
l o I net 1
Ga oghc In c 2 Ea s 42nd
monds
s New York~ IV N e ~~J,York
NEW8P .. Pii~ I!NTERPR BE ASS N
Subsc p on
rnl es I

would fin lllh thl.! season with
about 705 homers and would
!Alp Babe Ruth s &lt;&amp;reer mark
ol 714 early next year
But Aaron s two homers in a
4 2 victory over the New York
Mets Sunday g~ve him a total
of 23ln Atlanta s 88 games and
a"Career total of 696 The same
pace during the remainder of
the season would giVe Hank 19
more homers and a career

Hall taking on Montreal

Call twirls

Page 23
2 2 Page

BY FRED DOWN
Ul I Sporll Writer
And so at last Hank Aaron
has hammered down the once
seemingly Insurmountable
odds and Is on a f)llt;e that
would carry him to an all-time
record of 716 home runs this
season
The Atlanta Braves slugger
and mo.st baseball experl.s
have been figuring that he

~cNOTICI
PUI~IC

OF

HEAR lNG
OFTHI
SALIM TOWNSHIP
TRUStiiS IUDGET

Not ct therebY gl¥tn that on
tht 16th diV 0 Jv)v 913 I 8 ()0
o cock. P M 11 l)ub t hee no
w
be held on he Budge
prepared
by
he
Sa em
Townth
Trua " ' of Me ;1
County hlo for I he"'"'' r sea

thed

~bor.

g

vur 1ndlng D1cembtr J l""
Such hter ng w I be htld a

tht

The American Red Croaa

A!dwt s nt coni lluttd fo ht puDI c JOOd n coopt • on w

U

mttf no pace tor

A maE Sm h

~

1'1

Tht i\dwt I aln&amp; Coune llld lht n t nil on• Ntw•P•Pt AIM, I i AI J ltC:I.I

~-··

reou •

h tm lownsh p T us et1 et ht
S. tm Ctn er Schoo

'

6

c

c erk.

Me gs managed only 2 h1ts a
single and a double by Cooke
Both runs scored m the ftrst
mntng on an error and 4 walks
Lee went the route m wmmng
h s third gan e of the season
stnkmg out 9 walkmg 3 and
g1v ng up JUSt I h1t a s ngle m
the second
Ltthopohs commttled 5 more
errors m the second game for a
grand total of 11 on the day
DRASTIC TURN
Th ngs took a drasllc turn for
the worse m the ftrst game
Sunday Me1gs touched Lan
caster pitchmg for 3 runs m the
lust on walks to Cooke and

Roush s ngle by Baird
another walk and a passed ball
But that was about 11 for
Metgs m that first game Only 3
more batters reached safely
as the game was stopped m the
top of the s1xth due to the 1~ run
Lancaster lead
Lancaster dtdn t waste any
time 1umpmg on Me1gs starter
Bill Chaney They overcame
Me1gs 3-run lead m the bottom
of the first touchmg Chaney
for 4 runs on 2 walks a h1t
batter an error and a double
They added 3 more m the
second on a double smgle
error and Amoto s triple

Mrs. K•mg tnp
• Ie

d
•
wm.ner secon time
1

•

WIMBLEDON
England
(UP!)
It began m turm01l
and controversy It lacked
sparkle bke Oat champagne
It ran overt me and ended m
ant -climax
Wmbled on 1973 pulled
near record crowds as 1f
nothlrig were 1m1Ss But by the
t1me Billie Jean Kmg served
the !mal pomt Sunday the
word for the 87th All England
Lawn Tenn1s champiOnships
was strange
But not for Btllle Jean Kmg
She made the tournament her
own
That last hall the 29-year-old
champion from Hilton Head
S C served was a wmner It
brought her her th rd IItle a
triple she also pulled off m 1967
She won her fifth women s
singles title Saturday m
straight sets over Chns Evert
the IS-year-old tenrus whiz
from Fort Lauderdale Fla m
the ftrst AU American W1m
bledon !mal smce 1957
9th Time Winner
She won the women s doubles
for the ninth time teammg as
four limes before w1th Rose
mary Casals of San Francisco
and downing the woman she
partnered to last year s VIC
tory Betty Stove of Holland
who played th1s year w1th
Frances soft touch artist
Franc01se Durr
Then Mrs King wrapped up
the nuxed doubles t tie for the
thtrd bme pmred as m 1967
and 1971 w th Owen Davtdson
of Arstraha
What made this Wtmbledon
strange was not the women
whose top names and well
matched play helped run
tournament atlendance figures
to the second htghesl ever
299 742
II was the pre tom nament
boytolt announcement by 73
members of the Association of
Tennis Professionals the
gan e s top men whlch turned
Wimbledon into the ghost
tournament which ended m
uhostly fashion Sunday
Despite the thronging
crowds despite the patrtotlc
cheers for third-seeded Roger
Taylor and the teen-age hearts
throbbing for the 17 year-old
Swedish ser sa lion Iljoern
llorg and for Romama s Ihe

Nastase the absence of the
btggest names m tenniS took
the tournament s backbone
away
Excitement Missing
Borg and Nastase alone gave
this year s tournament what 11
lacked throughout-glamor
Outstde of Borg there were
no new sensations among all
the new faces The tournament
produced too few upsels and
too much bafflement at the un
fam1llar names The fallllliar
ztp and tmgle of exCitement
was mlssmg too often
Nastase top-seeded when his
fellow ATP members pulled
out was bounced at the end of
the tournaments ftrsl week by
Alex-Ma'~ an unseeded and
unheralded Amencan from
Mount Freedom N J
Jan Kodes of Czechoslovakia
and Alex Metrevell of Russ1a
plodded methodically and un
sensationally through the rest
of the fteld settmg up the ftrst
all Iron Curiam fmal m Wun
bledon s history The cham
p onsh1p match was an ant1
chmax w1th Kodes w nn ng
over a d1sp1rted looking
Metreveh m straight sets
Nastase patred w th Jmuny
Connors of Bellev lie Ill to
win the men s doubles m a five
set gr~nd agatnst John Cooper
and :19 year-old Neale Fraser
of Australia
Two young An1er1cans won
the jumor singles lltles Billy
Martm 16 of PaiQil Verdes
Ca liforma and Ann K yomura
of San Mateo Calli

MCLAIN MA \' SWITCH
DES MOINES Iowa (UPI)
- Iowa Oaks manager Joe
Sparks said Sunday he expects
former Cy Young Award
winner Demy McLain to leave
for Shreveport of the Texas
League Monday
McLam reportedly has
talked with Oaks owner Ray
Johnston who also owns the
Class Meam at Shreveport
about going there for mo e
work The 29-year old McLam
Is 1-1 with Iowa of the
American Association w1th a
7 55 earned run average m 31
inn inKs

American League scores
were California over Cleveland
19-4 and 5-3 Milwaukee over
Texas &amp;-4 and 7-3 Detroit 3
Kansas City 0 New York 1
Minnesota 0 Boston over
Chicago 11 2 after a Jl.l loss
and Oakland 6 Baltimore ~
Phtl Niekro pitched an eighthitter for Atlanta to ratse his
record to 9-4 Dusty Baker also
homered for the Braves who
dealt Stone his fourth loss
against four wms
The Dodgers swept thetr
three game series with the
Pirates when Withe Dav1s
homered off reliever Dave
Giusll In the 12th after Pittsburgh lied the score In the
runth on Manny Sangmllen s
sacrifice fly Pete Richert wh&lt;r
pitched one hitless mnnmg

Huffman, Riffle
pitch Racine
to Pony win
RUTLAND - In Pony
League achon Fr day at
Rutland Racme downed
Rutland 25 to I Brady Huff
man the wmner pilched the
ftrst five Innings striking out 9
walking 8 and hitting 2 Riffle
fimshed with 6 strikeouts m two
mnlngs
!{titers for Racme were Jun
Rtffle w1th three doubles and
two smgles Greg Dunmng had
two long home runs and a
sln_gle J F Young two smgles
and a double Perry Hill three
smgles Scott Wolfe Steve Hill
and Eric Dunnmg two smgles
each and Tim Wolfe a smgle
Rutland had only two h1ts
one by Floyd Fitzpatrick the
other by Bob Cox Bob
Williamson Terry Whitlatch
and Mtke Ttlhs did the pitching
for Rutland
Racme
432 253 li-25 21
Rutland
000 000 1- I 2

won his second game while
Giusti suffered his first loss
The Giants snapped a threegame losing streak when
plnchhitter Chris Arnold
delivered a sacrtfice fly in the
seventh 1nmng after first
baseman T1m McCa rver
dropped his foul popup 1om
Bradley allowed eight htl• and
four runs m seven mmngs but
won h1s mghth game With the
relief Bid of Elias Sosa Wayne
Granger was the loser for the
Cordinals
Tommy Heln s two run sm
gle capped a three run n n\h
tnnmg outburst whtcl} hlwd the
Astros over the Expos Houston
tied the score on smgles by
Roger Metzger Cesar Cedeno
and Bob Watson Jerry Reuss
picked up his II th wm n rei ef
while Mtke Marshall Montreal s ace reliever who IS
ha v1ng something of an in and
out season suffered h1s s1xtt
setback
Dave Roberts st'Ored the I e
bt'eaktng run m the runth m
mng at San Otego when Dwam
Anderson laid down a twostr ke
squeeze bunt The rtm batted m
was the ftrst of the year for
Anderson la1d down a two
stnke squeeze bunt The run
batted m was the ftrst of the
year for Anderson who en
tered the game as an mfteld
substitute Randy Jones p1t
ched a four httter for the
second VIctory whtle Burt
Hooton lost h1s seventh game
for the Cubs
Jack Billingham p tched a
four-h1tter for his 12th v ctory
for the Reds who dealt Wayne
Twitchell hiS third loss Johnny
Bench delivered the key blow
for Cmcmnah a two run s ngle
m the thtrd mnmg

A walk double smgle wild
p1tch and another double
brought 3 more runners home
m the third before Lou
McKinney replaced Chaney on
the mound The last double was
actually off McKinney but the
run 15 charged to Chaney
STATE FARM
A walk smgle double
another walk and sacrifice fly
brought home 4 more m th
fourth brmgmg Cooke to the
mound He was touched for 4
runs m the ftfth on a smgle
walk error ftelder s cho1ce1
INSURANCE
International
h1t batter and a smgle
®
league Standings
Chaney lasted 2 and two- By United Press International
American Division
thtrds mmngs walkmg 4
WLPctGB
FOR INSURANCE CALL
strtkmg out I and giVIng up 7 Rochester
&lt;IS 36 57
Stephen C Snowden
40 41 494 6 '
h ts MoKmney pitched only a Pawtucket
Syracuse
40
42
488
7
th rd of an mmng walkmg 2 To edo
iJ6 46 ~39 11
&lt;55 3 Russe St
striking out I and giving up 3
National Divis an
Grave H 1
Mddepo
Oho
WLPctGB
h1ts m hts first appearance of
PH 9!2 7155
Charleston
53 34 609
the season Cooke appeared for T dewater
46 38 548 5 ,
2 mmngs walking 4 str1kmg Penlnsu a
42 41 506 9
Richmond
29 56 341 23
out I and allowmg 2 h1ts
Sun:lay s Results
Chaney was charged With 5 Pen nsula 6 R chmond 5
STATE FARM
INSU RANCE COMPAN ES
earned runs while McKinney Syracuse 7 Rochester 5
Home 0 es Boon ng o
Cha
lesion
8
Tldewale
4
had 4 and Cooke 2
""
Toledo 6 Pawtucket
The mghtcap was sparked by
the fme p1tchmg of IJI.year-old r·----:--:::==::::~-----------..
rtght-hander Perk Ault Gomg
EV~RY
the distance to wm his second
'TU~SOA'(
W\6\'\T
deCISIOn of the year Ault
\!I fi..I'\IL'( FIJW NIGHT
struck out 4 walked only 2 and
~~ ev~&amp;t~ t.tltF 1;----....__ _
gave up just 3 htls
Me1gs fell behmd m the first
INCREPIBURGIBLEI
mmng on a smgle walk and 2
fielder s ch01ces But that was
all for Lancaster
Me1gs took the lead m the
second w1th a walk smgle by
Stobart 2 more walks and a
fielder s ~h01ce F~ur walks
and a smgle by Rousb brought
home 2 more In the thtrd and a
triple by Wolfe and smgle by
Gary George scored the last
run m the fourth
W1th the DtstriCI 8 tour
Speciallamtly meal prtces alter 4 p m
narnen I less than 2 weeks
For Adults
awaJ Athens a possible
For Ktds
second round opponent comes
Big Shet•
Funburger "
to town Wednesday for a smgle
French Frtes
Frllnch Fries
Turnover and
Small Soft Drink
game s tarling at 5 30 at
Large
Soft
Dr
nk
and Loll pop
Syracuse
Only
Only
lth
000 000 o- 0 3 6
Me gs
250 301 x l 12 1
50~
Dulko and Bl~ck Ba d {WI
and Ash Nesselroad (5)
Lith
ooo ooo o- o 1 s
M gs
200 000 o-2 2 3
McQuade Baas 5) and
Colman lee (W) and Ash

$1

Megs
300 00-3 3 4
lan
433 4 4 18 2 I
Chaney L McK nney Ill
Cooke (4) and Ash Nesse road
(2)

Shupe (W) and C a k
Me ~ s
002 100 o-5 5 3
Lan
100 000 o-1 3 2
Aull (W) and Stobart Gary
and W ghl

•

1503 EASTERN AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OURGEA C E

SA

') 3 B go C e 5 s m
AAO(MAR K 0 BU GEA CHEF SYS E 5 NC

•

�4 _ '!'he O.lly Sentinel, :.uddfeport·P?&lt;·· Jroy ,_
o., Julr,.s•.1973 . .

Parson:;, ·

. . •.
1k.:.

Todav's

Chevrolet

Sport Parade

Singer wins 14th for· CalifornitJ ;nine.

BY N•;u. u•:KSHBERG
The past two seasons have California 10 within two gMmes · Aaron hlttina two home runa, defeated Chicago In the ~eeond
. . UP I Spurlli Writer
been a disaster for Sl11iJer, who of the dlvtslon-leadins Oakl•nd
Los Angele~ defeated Pill!· .game after dropplns the the
•
. 11 change or scenery and a won 20 gumes with the DOdgers A's In the AL Weet. Riehle
burgh 3-2 in 12 innings; San opener to Steve Slone.
lly Milton Rirhmau
·
of psce has
Bill · 1969. Singer was primarily a
ln the first same, Slone hid a
; .Singer one of baseball's win- fastball pitcher but after Schelnblum drilled ' twl&gt;&lt;'un Francisco shaded St. Louis~.
~
Ufl Sports Edi111r
~lead
In the openl~e on
homer In the lOth Inning, giving
BRISTOL, Tenn. (UPI)
;::: "
·
ningest' pilchers and has kept developiJ11l several physical the Angels a 5-3 victory in the Houston nipped Montreal &amp;-7, Carlos May's elah~ run.
San Diego 'wpped Chicago 4-2
Benny Parsons and Chevrolet
NEW YORK (UP[) - It 's 4 in the morning, a tinl.e when most the Cali!Qrnia Angels within aliments - Including hepatitis,
nd
game
and
a
seco
and ClnclnnaU blanked Phlla- The White Sox lncnaled the
were the big winners in Sun- people are sound asleep, and Hank AHroo ahould be also, but he's striking distance of first place pulled muscles and two broken
lead 10 3-0 In the fourth on
doubleheader sweep. Bob
day's Volunteer SOO stock car not .
'
In the American League West. fingers (the latter of which Oliver's threerun homer de lphl~' 4-0,
George Scott collected three Buddy Bradford's third homer
race at Bristol International
He's up, wide awake .
Singe,·, who came to the . required an operation that
sparked the Angels in the hits, Including a home run, and and then scored three more
Speedway.
.He lies there motionless in bed, listeni•Jg to the soft monotonous Angels from the Los Angeles ahortened the first finger on his
drove in two runs in' the 11111s in the fifth on a runscorlnll
Parsons scored an easy hum' of the air condl.tioner in his hot~! room because there really Dodgers in the Frank RobtllS!&gt;n throwing arm)-he slumped to oflener.
Scott's Tbree Hila
nightcap as Milwaukee swept double by May and another on
seven-lap victory and collected isn't anything else for him to do.
deal during the off-season, has . consecutive 10-17 and 6·16
In
oilier
American
League
Texas In their doubleheader. a double by Ken Henderson.
$6,500, while the first five
This doesn't happen to Hank Aaron every night, but it happens adapted quite readily to the seasons.with the Dodgers.
·games Milwaukee swept . a The Brewers took the opener
Oakla.nd's Gene Tenace
finishers all drove Chevrolets. to him enough and what makes it seem more often is that it never · (\n)erican League. He was the
But after lUting weights and
·
dOubleheader
from
Texas
ll.f
slammed
a tie-breaking homer
on a three-run homer by John
The victory alsq ~as the fifth used to happen to him .at all. He'd put. his head on the pillow and winning pitcher in a 10-4 first heavy running, Singer happily
and 7-3, New York shut out Briggs in the first inning and a In th~ lOth inning, hla 14th, at1
straight at Bristol for Chev- in five minutes he'd be sleeping like a baby.
game victory over the Clevti- repofts fils fastball is back . 13J1t
Minnesota 7-o, Detroit blanked
the A's came from behind 10
rolet. ·
That was before Babe Ruth.
land Iridlans in a doubleheader the -2!hyear old right-hander Kansas CitY 3-0, Boston ripped two-run blast by Dave May.
beat Baltimore. Reliever
L.D. Ottinger of Newport,
Thai was before he was getting t!Je pressure from all sides the sweep Sunday and his 14 vic- also claims to have added a
Mel Stottlemyte hurled a
Tenn., finished second, way he's getting it now. Most of the pressure comes l!lhen he's off torie~ against only four defeats change-up, a pitch his oppo- Chicago 11·2 aner losing 6-1 four-hitter and Roy White and Rollle ·Fingers earned hla lint
and Oakland nipped Baltimore
victory against five louea for 1
followed by Cecil Gordon or the field. Playing the game often is the eaSiest part of it.
are second only to Wilb\lf Wood nents charge destrlbe ws a
Thurman Mumon eaclt hit
IN in 10 innings.
'
1-3 l~nings of relief work.
Horse Shoe, N.C., Lennie Pond
home runs as the Yankees
Pays Price Emotionally
for the major league lead in spiller.
In the National league Atlanof PetersbUrg, Va., and J.D.
The demands made on Hank Aaron these days, particularly victories.
The double victory moved
defeated Minnesota . Stoltta
beat New York 4·2 with Hank
when tiM) Atlanta Braves visit such cities as.. .~ Angeles,
McDuffie of Sanford, N.C.
lemyre . picked up his 11th
JULY SALE
Parsons, or Ellerbe, N.C., Chicago and this one, are the type some might describe as subtle.
victory ln. 18 ,decisions as be
CONTINUES
started _in the outside pole No ma.tter what they. are, these pressures have a way of
beat the Twins for the third
Men's &amp; Women's
position and ran in the top five becoming so heavy, so mind-blurring and body-fatiguing, that no
lime this season.
throughout the race, averaging human can possibly be subjec ted to them constanUy and still
Aurelio Rodriguez, Willie
GAINESVILLE, Ga. (UP!) .che early 'n the race gave last year and also took the 1972
91.713 miles per hour on the keep his composure.
- George Follmer would have Foltmer more . than a ·one lap . series, said he was worried Horton and Mickey 8ftinley
Babe Ruth couldn 't.
.533:ffiile oval. He.took control
been glad to see Mark Donohue lead and Donohue never quite about Donohue at first when delivered run-scoring hits as
SALE '3,99
Roger Maris didn't
·
of the race after 347 laps when
the
Tigers
blanked
Kan11115
enter
the
pits
once,
but
two
made up the lost time.
the sandy-haired PennHank Aaron has, so 1ar, but he has paid the price emotionally.
Bobby Allison of Hueytown,
City.
limes
was
more
than
Follmer
won
with
an
average
sylvanian
whizzed past Hobbs
Follmer
Ala., and Cale Yarborough of Now that he 's within 19 home runs of shattering Ruth's golden
.
Bob Montgomery smashed a
speed of 117.05 miles an hour in and then Scheckter in a frantic
Timmonsville, S.C., wrecked all-time record - he smaahed his 695th and 696th homers in a 4-2 could hope for.
the Porsche 917 owned by effort to make up for the time grand slam home fl!llln the top
their Chevrolets.
win against the Mets Sunday - Aaron finds the price is going up.
Your Thom MeAn Slort
of the lOth, highlighting a nineYet that 's what happened to BObby Rinzler of ·Atlanta- · lost.
MIDDLEPORT
"I can imagine what it'll be later on," he says.
·' Allison was running second
run uprising as the Red Sox
a bitterly disappointed more than 50 seconds ahead of
Donohue had finished first in
It is bad enough now.
following a routine pit stop
Donohue in the deciding second Donohue .
· the 41J..Iap, first heat Saturday
when ·he lost control going into
Hounded By Fans
heat Sunday of the $75,000
Jody
Scheckter
finished
third
with Follmer second, and the
the · th:rd turn of the highEverybody wants a crack at the Braves ' eve!Hiispositioned Canad'an American Challenge
banked track. He crashed into slugger , The newspaper ·people want to talk with him ; the Cup series race at Road in a Porsche and David Hobbs, two leaders thus began Sundriving a McLaren, was fourth day's rae~: one lap ahead in the
a guardrail and was hit by the magazine people ; the TV people and the radio people, not to
Atlanta.
in the second race this year of 16-car field for .the remaining
trailing Yarborough. Yar- mention all the kids and adu lts who want the signature of the
The two pit stops to fix a the Canadian-American Chal- 50 laps. Donohue finally closed
borough had been out front for man who's on his way to wiping out baseball's most notable
leaky gas cap in the coekpil of lenge Cup series.
Follmer's lead to one lap with
·
·
100 laps and Allison for 81. . record.
Donohue's .lager Penske PorsFollmer, who won this race only a few minutes remaining,
Bobby Isaac, driving a Ford,
Flank Aaron oblig'es ffiem all.
but Follmer said afterward
ran in the'top five until he had
· How bad has it got'
that
by the beginning of the
mechanical difficulties and
This is how bad:
.
final goround he was no longer
was forced from 'the race.
Rival ballplayers and groundskeepers around the league now
worried.
Richard Petty, driving a want their pictures taken with Atlanta's 39-year-old superstar.
"I didn't bother to race that
Dodge, never was a factor in . Complete strangers come up to him, throiv an arm around his
last lap,'' the Arcadia, Calif.,
the race. He lost four laps with shoulder and tell an accomplice, "Okay, go ahead and shoot' "
driver said. "I just slowed to
a nat tire early in the race a,nd
So what, you say. It only takes a minute.
conserve
fuel. Mark is a strong
was forced from competition
Can't Say No
competitor aU the way- exwhen other problems develoBut multiply these minutes and they start adding up. The worst .
tremely fast-but I felt comped. He later drove about 75 part of it is that a fellow like Hank Aaron never really learned
MILWAUKEE
(UP!
)
earnjngs
10
$75,727
this
yet¥",
laps in rellel of Gordon.
fortable
toward the end. My
how to say no. That's why he's wide awake sometimes, simply
Dave
Stockton
believes
when
surpassing
the
$66,342
he
won
car rari beautifully, cool and ·
Parsons was relieved at the lying there in bed at 3 or4in the morning.
you're
hot,
your're
hot,
and
for
all
of
1972.
He
hadn't
won
a
wheel during the hot, muggy
nice, but it's a little harder·for
"What causes tbat?" says Hank Aaron, trying to furnish a
. Jul)' Buy!
that's
why
after
his
$26,000
tournament
since
August,
1971
.llfternoon by John Utsman of reason why he can't always sleep through the night the way he
the driver here in Atlan\l!,'' he
Bluff City, Tenn. Utsman drove once dld. ''I don 't know. Maybe it's because you're constantly Greater Milwaukee Open in Massachusetts and his best said, referring to the !Hklegree
about 180 laps.
·
getting bugged. It 's hard to say what's it due to. All I know is that victory Sunday he said he finish this year ·was second at heat.
expects
to
win
ano\her
golf
Houston,
one
stroke
behind
The victory was only the you get up, you don 't know'what time it is, and all you do is lay
Obviously glad abo~! DonQ'..
tourney
"very
shortly."
leadlng
money
winner
Bruce·
second NASCAR Grand there and stare at the ceiling."
hue's two forced stops, Follmer
"!
knew
what
I
wanted
to
do
Crampton.
National win for Parsons. His
said,
"I hadn 't really counted
Is the whole thing worth it?
SQUARE
loday,"
the
31-year-old
BerThe
check
moved
him
from
other victory came during the
on two of th('IIl."
Hank Aaron mulls that one ove r a moment.
. YARD
1970 season at South Boston,
Follmer , who collected
''!really don 't know," he says. ''If I go to bed half berserk,it's nardino, Calif., golfer said. " I 29th to 13th place on the pro
wanted to go out there and blow tour money list. None ol the top $15,000 for his first place finish,
Va.
not."
13 mcney winners was entered now goes to the ne~ comSEVERAL COLORS
Basically, Hank Aaron is a loner. Occasionally you'll find him 'em off the map." - .
It wasn't quite that·easy as here . Most of them chose to petitiob in Watkins Glen li~
TO CHOOSE
yakking in the clubhouse with someone like Ralph Garr or Dusty
Homero
Blancas
and
Hubie
.
take
the
week
off
to
prepare
for
with teammate Charlie Kemp
Baker, but they are considerably younger, and he does not run
Green
mad~
a
•
d
etermined
the
more
prestigious
Ili'itiah
at 20 points . in the Can-Am
with them off the ball field . Aaron doesn't really run with
effort
in
the
(inall8
to
catch
up
.
Open
in
Scotland
this
·week.
series.
"
anybody after working hours. On the road, he usually goes back
before
fa
lling
short
by
one
Blancas
and
Green
received
Doo~hue , who posted the
to his hotel room, orders up a bite to eat, watches TV a little, then
stroke
apiece
.
$12,025
apiece
from
$130,000
fastest lap with 122.74 m.p.h.,
botts·the door and goes to sleep. Or tries to, anyway.
Stockton
shot
a
73-his
only
purse.
Blancas'
check
moved
earned 15 points for his first
Dislikes Daily Drudgery
round
over
par
in
the
tourney
him
into
15th
place
on
the
list
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
start at Road Atlanta, giving .
What really wears down Hank Aaron now in his 20th season
Ill
finish
at
276,
12
under
par.
with
a
$72,207
total.
992
-2635
, ..
MIDDLEPORT
him a series total so far of 19.
with the Braves, is the drudgery of the day-to-day routine, none
of which is alleviated by his assault on Ruth 's record. If anything Most of his subpar golf came in "I expected to win and I ,.-----'-----.:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the second rounf when he fired played that way," said Stock- r ·
In Peewee action Friday at it has become more pronounced, and with the medla constantly
0
a sizzling nine under 63 for a ton . " I played too conPomeray the Pomeroy Angels, seeking him out as was the case with Roger Maris, the continued
course record and the second servatively Saturday so today I
behind the pitching of Todd attention becomes increasingly difficult to endure.
Fife, defeated Middleport Cubs
"Every day, every day, the same thing," says Aaron, not · lowest card on the tour this decided not to play safe . · I
wanted to go out there and get
year.
16-(J. Fife gave up 6 walks and ... angrily or resentfully but somewhat r~signedly. "I could put it on
Blancas
and
Green
each
the
job done , not have
only I hit and fanned 12 batters. · tape and hand it out. I know wha\ the questions are." .
So does Eddie Mathews, the Braves' manager who played with closed with 68 fo( an 11 under somebody do it for me. It didn 't
277 . Bob Goalby, who led the exactly work that way but I
Milan was the losing pitcher Aaron for 13 years. Says Math&lt;)ws:
first
round with a 65 and trailed honestly thought 1 would shoot
"I'm gonna have cards printed up -'no, I do not see any
for the Cubs, givin_g up 12 walks
Stockton by only two strokes in the 60s."
and 7 hits. He fanned 5. The change in Hank Aaron.'"
going into the final round, blew
With it all, Aaron is not complaining.
only hit lor the Cubs was a
his chance with a triple bogey
His mail, which included some racial abuse earlier this season,
single by David Hoffman.
and finished at 279.
has been better, and he wishes his .240 batting average was, also.
National League
"This was a very big win for
What about his life in general?
02 innings)
Hitting for the Angels were
me:: Stockton said. "And you Pillsbgh 100 000 001 QOO- 2 B I
"It's all right, I guess," he says. "If I could just relax a little
Ricky Smith, a three run home
can expect another one very L. A
010 100 000 001- 3 10 o
run, J . R. Wamsley and Shawn bit.lfl could just getaway one day and go fishing. You know how shortly because when I get Ellis, Giusti (B ) and Sanguil·
Gilmore, a triple, John Beaver it is being in this position : you're happy to be in it, but you're going, I keep going for a len; John, Brewer (9), Ri chert
112) and Yeager . WP- Richert
a triple and single, Todd Fife, constantly reminded. The telephone rings, rings and rings. If you while ."
·
!2·1) . LP- Giusti (5·1) . HRRandy Murray each a sinvle . cut if off, it could be the kids (Aaron's four children). You never ' The top prize raised his Davis (1 2th).
The game was called after , know. So you leave it on, and all it does alt the time is ring, ring,
Atlanta
010 102 ooo- 4 9 1
ring ..... "
·
fo ur innings.
N. Y.
000 010 lOQ- 2 8 0
Niekro
(9.4)
and Oates ;
Major·. league Loaders
By United Press lntornationat Stone, McAndrew (8) and
Hodges . LP-Stone (4-3) . HRS· Leading Bailors
Baker (llh) , Aaron 2 (22nd &amp;
National League
g. ab. r. h. pcI . 2Jrc' I.
Mota. LA 58 196 24 67
010 103 013- 9 14 2
Unser, Phil 66 210 3d 11 .342 Houston
021 100 30Q- 7 11 3
Watson. Ho 89 330 65 Ill .338 Montreal
Rbnsn, Phil 48 166 26 54 ·~~~ Forsch, Richard (7) , York
(7) , Reuss (8) and Jutze;
.Gdsn, SF 75 2.\ld 28 92 ·
McAnally, Jarvis (I) ,' Marshall
Maddox, SF 74 291 38 94
Mtt hws. SF 78 267 36 86 ·322 (8) and Boccabella. WP- Reuss
Over 3 million disabled . for atleast 51k years -and five
(11 .5). LP- Marshall (7.6). HRS
A
worker
between
the
ages
of
Cedeno,
He 11 274 52 87 ·
.workers and their .families are ;' years of work must have been 24 and ·at needs credit for Crdn l, Chi so 284 48 90 · i~~ - Rader (131h ), Bailey (17th) ,
ge tting monthly social security during the 10 years before his
Rose, Cin 84 342 57 108 ;316 Cedeno 2 (14/f&gt; &amp; 15th).
having
worked
under
soctal
Amorlcan Leaguo
payments as the social security dlsability began..
.. ..
Clnci
002 000 llQ- 4 9 0
security . half the period heg. ab. r. h.
Pel.
Phi
la
000
000 ooo- 0 4 I
disability program begins its
.
h he
In [!lOSt cases, the State . t
21 Blr'1brg , NY 55 161 29 61
the ttme
.379
Bill
ingham
(12.51
and Bench;
ween
e
came
Carew,
Min
76
289
52
99
16th year this month.
agency can make the deter- and the time he became . Horton. Del 52 193 25 66 .343 Twitchell , Scarce (B), Wilson
When social
security mination on the basis of
3d2 (9) and Boone. LP- Twitchell
disabled. Before age 24, the Murcer, NY 87 342 48 101 .313
(6.3).
disability payments were first medica l evidence from the worker needs credit for 1'/z Ma y. Mil
82 334 52 104 .311
Bla ir. Bat 74 245 36 76
· paid in July 1957, only disabled applicant's own physician. If
200 000 20Q- 4 to 1
years of work in the three-year D. Allen, Chi69 245 39 76 .310 St. Louis
workers between 50 and 65 additional evidence is needed,
.310
San
Fran
000
013 lOx- 5 15 3
period before his disability Braun . Min 7J 252 35 77
.306
W
ise.
Hrabosky
(6 ), Granger
were eligible for ~ayments.
began.
Krkptrck,
KC
further medical tests may be
(7),
Folkers
(7), Segul (8) and
11 246 41 75 .305
Today, severely disabled required at the Government's
When a worker applies for Terrell, Min 57 195 15 59 .303 Simmons ; Bradley, Sosa (8)
l'(orkers of any age under 65 expense.
and Rader. WP- Bradley (8.7) .
dlsability .payments, he subHome Runs
LP- Granger (2·3),
and ·certain members· of their 'In selected cases, social mils me dical evidence tc
National Leaguo : Stergell ,
Pill and Bonds, SF 2d; Aaron
· families can get dis~bility securit y helps pay for
000 020 000- 2 4 0
establish his disability. Xhen, and Evan&gt;, .\II ~' : Johnson. All Chlcapo
payments. And starting this vocational rehabilitation physicians and oth.er disability• and Monday, Chl 21.
Sa.n D1ego 000 010 12x- 4 13 2
month, dlsabled people who services. Rehabilitation ca n
American league : Mayberry, Hoolon, Bonham 18) and
experls
in
a
State
agency
.
KC
w: Fisk, Sos and Jac kson, Hundley ; Jones 12·2) and
have been entitled to social include job training , physical
usually the 'Stalj!'s vocational ·Oak 17: D. Allen, Chi and Kenda ll . LP- Hoolon IB·II . HR
Grubb fJih ).
security · paYments for two therapy, and similar services. rehabilitation agency- decide Bando, Oak 16 ·
Runs Balled In
years or . more can get
American l eague
Nearly two million disabled whethr the worker is disabled
Nallonal League : Bech, · Cln li st Gamel
Medicare prot~ctlon .
workers get monthly checlls under th&lt; social security law. 65 ; Stargell , Pitt 61 ; Bonds, SF. Calli
104 050 000-10 10 2
To be eligible for social averaging Sl79 and a~?o ut 1.7
60 : Watson. Hou 59; Perez, Cln Cleve
030 010 000- 4 8 0
58.
Si'lller
I
14·4)
and Torborg ;
securitx disability payments, a million social
security' N. Y.
003 003 001- 7 15 0 American League : Mayberry , Wilcox, Timmerman
Koworker must be · severely disability beneficiaries will get Minn
·OOOOOOOOD-D 43 KC 78; Jackson, Oak 65 ; klch 151 and Elil~. LP-lSI.
WII
co•
Slolllemyre 111 ·71 and Mu~ · Murcer, NY 58: Darwin, Mlnn 15·4) . HRS- Pinson (llhl. Ollv·
disabled and unable to work for Medicare coverage starting
son ; Bane, Goltz (4), Sanders 56; Melton, Chi 54.
er (9th) , Chombllos (4th) .
a year or more. Payment July I.
(71 and Mllterwald. LP- Bane
Pitching
I2nd game)
begins fpr the sixth month of
IO·I·l. HRS- Whlle (10th) , Mun · National Lugue: Bryan t, SF Calli
Young workers, however, son
010 100 001 2- 5 12 o
ll2th) .
tll18bllity.
13·5; Bil lingham. Cin 12.5: Cleve
002 00 I 000 o- 3 7 1
may be eligible for disability
Reuss, r Hou 11·5: Os teen, LA
Lange,
Borber,
Sells I10) ond
Generally, a worker 'who payments with as little as l'h Detroit
000 100 11o- 3 12 o and Wise, ST .L 10·41 Su lton, LA Slevenson. Tor.borg
17), Kusn.
000 000 000- 0 .9 0 and Cleveland, S'r.L 10·5.
become• disabled in 1973 must years of covered work, depend- Kan CH(.
yer
19!
;
Bnsmon,
Hilgendorf.
Strah er, . 'Hil ler (7) and
Amoriun League : Wood, Chi !71. Johnson {9) and Ashby.
lllve worked In employmeljt Ing on their age and when they Freehan
; Dra~o , Dal Canlon 15·12; Singer, Cafl4.4; Hunter, WP11. 11. LP- Johnson
COYered Wider social security become disabled.
(Bl and Healy. WP- Strahler Oak lJ.3 ; Holt!eman. O..k lJ.S ; (4-5) . Barber
·¢1 ' '1 .111 ,.,,,,,.... ~.~ •• ,,~ .,,, ,., . ....... ~"'"
HRsGamblw ( IJihl.
II
(3·2) . LP- Drago (9.8) ,
Coleman, Det 12·8.
,, ....,., ';• r r·••· ,, 1 ' ' ' ' of .,
Schelnblum (2nd) .

Wlnners .

~

1- The O.UySintloel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0~1 July9, 1973

.

~.~-,;,;,~:}.~~-~...~'~"&gt;¥&gt;-~

~hange

~de

Auxiliary ·plans projects,"
elects, installs officers

I~

Follmer claims ·Canam

II

Projecte to~ the year were
adopted •nd new Ofl!cera were
elect.ecl •nd inltalled when the
Junior American Legion
Au.lllary of Feeney-Bennett
P01t 121 met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Kessinger.
!lira. Keaalnger Ia the advisor
for the junior auxiliary ·
members.
As Ia customary for the
junior unit, a aenior citizen and
a handicapped child were
"~dopted" for rememill'ances
during the coming year. The
aenlor citizen is Mrs. Leona
Eberabach, Racine, a member
of the Middleport unit. Max
Blake, Middleport, is the
handicapped child.
the Juniors also voted to

CANVAS

Spice brings ·but fruit pie ftavor

Stockton grabs

·SHAG ·CARPET WITH
FOAM BACK

$ 99

AnMels take ·

Ingels Furniture

AILEEN CLAIRE

8p.m.,
nolds. home of Mrs . T. E. ReyCHESTER GARDEN CLUB,
8 p.m., at the Chester United
Methodist Church. . Mrs .
Thomas Stewart, Rutland, will
he the guest demonslrator
using the Meigs County Fair
flower school as her theme.

NEA Food Editor

Americans love their fr uit
pies. One of the favorite~ in·
spired th e song of long ago ,
"Ca il she bake a cherry pie,
Billy Boy. Billy Boy?"
Spices are important in
bringing out the s pecial fla vors of fruit pies. For example , mace or nutmeg add their
subtleties to rhubarb . lemon,
blueberry. pineapple , banana
or berry pi es Both spices .
come from · the same peachlike fruit of a tropi ca l ever·
The annual ptcmc ·of the
green tree. Mace is the fi .
Hysell Run Free Methodist
brous network that surrountis
Church was held recently at
the pit or seed of the fruit we
the church park with a picnic
call nutmeg.
dinner and games.
NUTMEG CHERRY PIE
Attending were the Rev. and
1· cari
(f.lb.)
red
tart
pitied
Mrs.
Ronald Wells, Corrie
cherrl.., pecked In
water ·
Moore, Mrs. Dwight Kennedy,
V. cup luger
Mrs. ·Audrey Patterson, Mr.
2 tebl..poone cornttarch
and Mrs. Raymond Keesee,
1 teatpoon lemon juice
Bill Haley, ' Emerson Hysell,
Vz teatpoon ground nutmeg
Mr. and Mrs . Tonie May, Mr :
'Ia 1111poon 1111
and Mrs. Harold Dewhurst,
1 llltpoon
Robin, Kim, Jay and Penny,d
margarinebutter or
1 teatpoon pure vanilla
Mr. and Mrs. I.Joyd Dugan an
eXtract
Marty, Mr . and Mrs. Milo
1 8-lnch biked· p81try shell
Hutchison, Julie, Joyce and
'lz cup heavy cream,
Jayne, Mr. and Mr~. Pat
whipped
'
Patterson, Roxie, Jeff, Ray
Drain cherries. reserving
_ and Stevie, Todd Eads, Mike
1 \IJ!iee, ,
J
(appro~&lt;ll'hl&gt;
, .,
Spice adds its subtle flavor to Nutmeg Cherry P1e .
Roush- Pauline Tillis an~
a •,••ter.'•"u"l
q·llice
, : ~ ~~~-~""'ttt •es.t:,'!."
-~"'~'''
~ 'J' · ·• • .. ,..
1
·~·'·
'
,
•
!I
'•
'
"
"
!:''
'"":"'
'
1
·
'
·
'
·
.....
.
h
.
Timmy,
Mrs
a~ ide . 'ln. a s ·•l saucepan well . Cook, st1ring constantly . into p1e shell. Chill unt1l f1rm me p1e.
. dd
R .· Bobd Dugan,
p tt
combme cherry JUi ce w1th until mixture thi ckens. St1r m Garnish with whipped crea m
Spice adds its sub tle flavor Bu y, onn~e an
a y,
-sugar , cornstarch. lemon butter , vanilla extract and sprinkled with additional nut· to Nutmeg Cherry Pie.
Paul, Doug, Mtchael, Jeff and
juice: nutmeg and salt. Blend reserved cherries; cool. Turn meg. if desired . Makes one 8·
&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN,
Susie Tillis and Debbie Roush.

Picnic held

.vacations.

Line:&gt;scores

... about your

Social Security

·il;

Do you spend a lot of time thinking
about that special vacation trip
you'd love to take but can't afford?
Stop thinking. And start buying
U.S. Savings Bonds. Now that
Bonds mature in less than six years,
· they can make that getaway plan
a t,eality. U.S. Savings Bonds ...
they'll get you going.

0

....

· ·~ ·

··

The lOth birthday of Dale Lee
Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Connolly, Long
Bottom, was celebrated wilh a
cookout recently at the home of

SHIRT

~INISHING :

Robinson's (;leaners

N. W

0 ·•0

•••••••llllll••••••••••••••••·~~--­

AT THE

"FRI

LV
GB
VINYL·GARD
FENCE POSTS
5 FOOT REG. 1 .09

77~
8 FOOT REG . 1 .29

aa~

VINYL COATED
FENCE ALSO AVAILABLE

48"

X

1 00'
Spedo f

Easy - to - install fencing r equi res no st retthlng, Con be

used anywhere . 16 go, 2"
~ ·2-5/ &amp;" mesh.

square

t l'la nne l conslriJt·
l1on giveS post moa·
imum strefl91h.

·

'j

peewee play

Sands are for

hisgrandpareni.!J, Mr. a~d Mrs. Mr . an4 Mrs, Jerry GriQI,
Chester Foutty, Reedsville.
Ronnie,Gary,~!keandKevln,
Attending were Mrs. Mabel Reedsvllle ; Jimmy and
Sanderson, Reed~ville; Mrs. TQIIlllly Harris, Long Botlo!n,
June Mullen, Sandra Mullen, . Sending glfla .were Mr. and
Piggy Mullen, Coolville; Steve Mrs. Glen Deeter, Long Bot.
NAME OMITTED
Mullen, Parkersburg, W. Va .; tom, and Mr. and Mrs. John
POMEROY _ The name of Mr. and Mrs .. George Mullen Johnson, Fort Myers, Fla. The
Mrs. Glenn Lee was unin- . Ill and Angle, Uttle Hocking ; afternoon wasspent swlrnmlng
tentlonally omitted as having Mrs. Erma C~n nolly and Erma and playing baseball.
attended a bridal shower for Jean, Reedsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Carla Beal.
Richard Hunt, Betty Jo and
Richard, Long Bottom; Mr.
DAUGHTER BORN
and Mrs. Robert Barber, Steve
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Pullen and Kevin, Reedsville; Mr:and
of Brownell Ave ., Middleport, Mrs . Theodore Connolly,
SAfV!E .DAY
are announcing the birth of a Debbie, Arlene and Mike ,
. SERVICE
daughter, July 2, at the Holzer . !teedsville.
In
At 9- 0ut At 5
Medical Center. The seven
Mr. and Mrs .. Dale Connolly,
pound, one ounce infant has Sr., Johnny, Diana and Deena,
been
named
Heather Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs.
·Elizabeth. Grandparents are Warren Connolly and Amy,
Mrs . Guy Cowan and Mr. and Long Bottom ; Mr . . and Mrs.
Mrs. William Walters, Mid- Chester Foutty, ~eedsville;
dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Charles . .--~!-~~""!!~'!l!!!l!!''!!!'!l!!~~!'l"lllll!~lilill-..
VanCooney,Mrs.A. R.Pullen,
COMP~ON
MiddlepQrt, and Mts . Guy
• · •
_ I'
,
•
• ~
Walters, Columbus, are the
.OPTOMETRIST
great-grandparents; and Mrs,
OFFICE HOUR.S 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (C!-OSt
Sarah Mo!ley, Middleport, and
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT FT.,
Mrs. Edward Raines, Vinton,
POMEROY .
WEDNESDAY
are
great-great-grandmothers.
AMATEUR Gardeners Club

.

heritage

8~·

a en
J

~
Mrs . Robert Lewis will again ~
ar ~
serve as cha lrperson of the &amp;
~
~
domestic arts department at
tr~asurer; !!herrle Bar~hart, the Melp County Fair, Aug. J4.
MONDAY
.
chaplain ; Kenda Mohler, 18.
. MEIGS Chapter ~3 ol D.A.V.
sergeant at ar1111; Christy
While the IIChedule has not 7:30p.m., at the chapter home
, Smith and Sht!rrie Roush, color heen approved as yet, Mrs. on Butternut Ave. Refreah· bearers; Sherrie Fo~. Uttle · Lewis reports that the classes . ments will be served.
Miss Poppy, and Sandra Might, are e~~sentially the same with
MEETING OF -the . Southhistorian . .
·
&lt;;ategorlea for hobbies and ens tern
Ohio
. Bospei
, F'ollowlng the meeting a crafts. ' Entries must be
Music
Association
at
Allen
picnic was held and homo.rnade registered at the Melp County
Ice cream was served. At. Fair Board office on the ROck Hall, Rio Grande College, 7:30
p.m.
tending were Becky Roush, Sprinp fairgrounds Thursday
POMEROY Chamber of
Kim and Lois Roush, Sherrie and Friday, Aug. 9 and 10
Commerce Monday at noon at
Roush, Christina Smith, Kenda be lor~ 4 p.m. each day.
Meigs Inn.
Mohler, Sherrie, Shelly and
Mrs . James Carpenter,
TUESDAY ·
Terri Fox, Kathy and Sonja Coolville, will serve as judge. A
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Clonch, Sherrie Barnhart, Mrs. home economics teacher at
Shaula Roush, Mrs. Joy Roush, Meigs High School last year, Lodge No. 363,-F&amp;AM, SPecial
Mrs. Carolyn Clonch and Mr. Mrs. Carpenter was the top meeting, 7:30p.m. Work In the
and Mrs. KeSBinger. The next blue ribbon winner in the EA Degree. All Master Masons
Invited.
meeting will he held on the domestic arts department at
ANNUAL picnic, Pomeroy
fourth Tuesday of August.
the 1972 fair.
Garden · Club, 6 p.m. roadside'
park, Route 33, on right going
north towards A\hens.
CLOTHING Bank of the
Middleport Church of Christ, 9
a.m.-12 noon.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

SHAG

Cubs 16-0 in

.L

,.

BOAT SHOES

house

Milwaukee title

make donations to the various
public fund. ral~ing drlvea and
to give ~ lor each dlslrlct
party held for the veterans at
the Athens Mental Health
Center, and $10 for each party
to be held at the Chillicothe
Veterans Hoapltal.
It was alao decided during
the meeting that juniors must
attend the. regulsr meetings
and all work sessions In order
Ill have their dues paid by the
unit and to be eligible to attend
the district and department
conferences,
Elected and installed by Mrs.
K~lnger were Becky Roush,
junior president; Kim Roush,
vice president ; Terri Fox,
secretary;
Lois· Roush,

f'SoCiarl
Party honors Dale Connolly
c d

Mrs. fewis to
be chairperson

PALLBEARERS NOTED
Pallbearers for ihe funeral of

POLL. Y'S POINTERS

Lingerie Sizes Vary,
She Wants Uniformity·
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers
of ladies' lingerie who so often' label things as petite , small ,
large, X-large, etc., but without any sort of size gauge. Some
large sizes lit me, some X-large - but there are limes when
X-large is not big enough. Marking size gauges such as a
medium girdle , say 24-26 wai st. wou ld be a great help to
shoppers. - MRS . R. K.

---~~~~~· Polly's

Pr.oblem

Jl'-·,.lil
DEAR POLLY - The while satin high-heel pumps I
wore for my wedding two years ago now need cleaoing . I hoee someone ca n tell me how to do this . MRS. D .
.

Roy C. Russell, 85, who died
une~pectedly at his home after
a lingering illness July 1 were
h.is grandson, James c.
Russell , Port Clinton; his
brother-in-law, calvin Lane;
Middleport, and nephews Don
Lynch, Toledo; Tommy Lane,
Pomeroy RD, and Hubert
Pullins and · Wallace Russell,
both of Middleport. His wife,
Nellie Lane Russell, was at his
bedSide wh.en. death came.
Burial services were at
Rawlings Coats Fu.,eral Home
Tuesday, July 3, with burial in
Riverview Cemetery;

ATIENDING WIG SHOW
Mrs. Polly Hysell, instructor
of cosmetology at Meigs High
School and Mrs . JoAnn White,
a · substitute instructor and
owner and operator · of
Beverly's Home of Beauty In
Middl~port, were in Parkersburg Sunday for a showing of
Eva Gabor wigs and hairpieces
at the Holiday Inn. Plans were
made for another showing to be
held in the PomeroyMiddleport area in the near
future .

SALE PLANNED
HARRISONVILLE - A
bakeless bake sale will be held
at the regular meeting . of
Harrisonville Order of Easll!rn
Star, Tuesday at 8 p.m. All
members and visitors are
invited.

FRAME
..

--

July Sale! .

17' FLAG POLE
ANDFLAG KIT

'

REG. 24.95

ladies'
Swim Suits

1h price
lOLA'S

LUMBER
NI)TINCLUDED
Rigid blad flnlsll steel frame wllh omo·

RECOMMEND EO

mental scrolls. Walk in from eit her end of

FOR 6' x 3' TABLE

t(Jble Folds up flat, store$ easily .

MANY

Includes 3-sec!ion while-1m·
1sh steel pole. 3' x 5' flog,
eagle, pulley, ny lo n rope

ond c:leot, ground socket and
' cop.

Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

----

QUALITY YOU CAN
BELIEVE IN!

PLAN COACHES' NIGHT
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
sponsor "Parents Meet the .
Coaches Night" at 8 p.m.
Thursday ~t Eastern ( High·
• School. Emphasis will be on the
fall football program but all
coaches will be present. Both
junior and se)lior high schooi
parents are asked to attend.

PICNIC TABLE

JACK POSr

I=IDPEA

MORE

WOOD.EN
SCREEN
DOOR
2'8"

VALUES

8'9"

X

REG. 19.95

5
PORCH SWING

~:~5 22~t .
Sol1d ook swing with ahoped $101,
Chains and hooh Included. (Len

!rome ).

.'

ORNAMENTAL

WROUGHT
IRON
RAILING

SCHUMACHER

WHEELBARROW

l

•

: : il: dt luxt

dMP·

•
_ ... t

clock

btck .,.,.,

INDEPENDENT l OCK

JIMMY-PROOF
LOCK

· The mate silkworm mo th or ond fout.fiour tlmtr
Emperor moth ca n detec t ·
0
a temalc mot h up to a li1 s- l .c:oolktop 1111, Ullond ott
lance of S.!t miles. ·
thorough cllonlng
th~

8' SECTION
Brigt.l sfKimleu stee l tr r y. Our·
able, hgh lw'!'lgtll f ba lanced. for
garden use.

588

INDE PENDENT LOCK

t 'o p front contrott
•wlv from hlet ind

THOMAS

~-

aooklng utensil•

•
rtmoveblt own

]88
SALE PRICE

REG.
4.69

•

4 ' SECTION
SALE PRICE

door

COACH

with piMting dttp .. hldt

n.p, bottom, beck 111d door lnterlor h• continuout·
111ton

tt

rf8Uitt btklno

ttmptrt·

IICrW - outomotlc»lly

~

right on!

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

ass

LESS
BUlB

REG. 11 .19

$27995

BAKER FURNITURE

110. 2.••

LIGHT

Hll'l't tht ..." 1C.n• - llbtr11• vou from ttit messiest task
In lht k~chon. SpOclolly&lt;ll\ltiOIIfd rltl:'t-on llnish on o!'Jn
twit. The lind of own la'JPI, 100ur lnd

@

PORCH

(Model 13321

ct~tnine

THOMAS

LANTERN

window

1kMI,

®
J49
. Flvled crystal c;,lou with •moolh
bloc~ lir1 l1f-l l101der . 8" long. (lus

b,lb j.

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO......
.... ..... ¥-

The Depart.ment Store of Building Since 1915
~•11

vMIIC'.

~

.'

•I

�4 _ '!'he O.lly Sentinel, :.uddfeport·P?&lt;·· Jroy ,_
o., Julr,.s•.1973 . .

Parson:;, ·

. . •.
1k.:.

Todav's

Chevrolet

Sport Parade

Singer wins 14th for· CalifornitJ ;nine.

BY N•;u. u•:KSHBERG
The past two seasons have California 10 within two gMmes · Aaron hlttina two home runa, defeated Chicago In the ~eeond
. . UP I Spurlli Writer
been a disaster for Sl11iJer, who of the dlvtslon-leadins Oakl•nd
Los Angele~ defeated Pill!· .game after dropplns the the
•
. 11 change or scenery and a won 20 gumes with the DOdgers A's In the AL Weet. Riehle
burgh 3-2 in 12 innings; San opener to Steve Slone.
lly Milton Rirhmau
·
of psce has
Bill · 1969. Singer was primarily a
ln the first same, Slone hid a
; .Singer one of baseball's win- fastball pitcher but after Schelnblum drilled ' twl&gt;&lt;'un Francisco shaded St. Louis~.
~
Ufl Sports Edi111r
~lead
In the openl~e on
homer In the lOth Inning, giving
BRISTOL, Tenn. (UPI)
;::: "
·
ningest' pilchers and has kept developiJ11l several physical the Angels a 5-3 victory in the Houston nipped Montreal &amp;-7, Carlos May's elah~ run.
San Diego 'wpped Chicago 4-2
Benny Parsons and Chevrolet
NEW YORK (UP[) - It 's 4 in the morning, a tinl.e when most the Cali!Qrnia Angels within aliments - Including hepatitis,
nd
game
and
a
seco
and ClnclnnaU blanked Phlla- The White Sox lncnaled the
were the big winners in Sun- people are sound asleep, and Hank AHroo ahould be also, but he's striking distance of first place pulled muscles and two broken
lead 10 3-0 In the fourth on
doubleheader sweep. Bob
day's Volunteer SOO stock car not .
'
In the American League West. fingers (the latter of which Oliver's threerun homer de lphl~' 4-0,
George Scott collected three Buddy Bradford's third homer
race at Bristol International
He's up, wide awake .
Singe,·, who came to the . required an operation that
sparked the Angels in the hits, Including a home run, and and then scored three more
Speedway.
.He lies there motionless in bed, listeni•Jg to the soft monotonous Angels from the Los Angeles ahortened the first finger on his
drove in two runs in' the 11111s in the fifth on a runscorlnll
Parsons scored an easy hum' of the air condl.tioner in his hot~! room because there really Dodgers in the Frank RobtllS!&gt;n throwing arm)-he slumped to oflener.
Scott's Tbree Hila
nightcap as Milwaukee swept double by May and another on
seven-lap victory and collected isn't anything else for him to do.
deal during the off-season, has . consecutive 10-17 and 6·16
In
oilier
American
League
Texas In their doubleheader. a double by Ken Henderson.
$6,500, while the first five
This doesn't happen to Hank Aaron every night, but it happens adapted quite readily to the seasons.with the Dodgers.
·games Milwaukee swept . a The Brewers took the opener
Oakla.nd's Gene Tenace
finishers all drove Chevrolets. to him enough and what makes it seem more often is that it never · (\n)erican League. He was the
But after lUting weights and
·
dOubleheader
from
Texas
ll.f
slammed
a tie-breaking homer
on a three-run homer by John
The victory alsq ~as the fifth used to happen to him .at all. He'd put. his head on the pillow and winning pitcher in a 10-4 first heavy running, Singer happily
and 7-3, New York shut out Briggs in the first inning and a In th~ lOth inning, hla 14th, at1
straight at Bristol for Chev- in five minutes he'd be sleeping like a baby.
game victory over the Clevti- repofts fils fastball is back . 13J1t
Minnesota 7-o, Detroit blanked
the A's came from behind 10
rolet. ·
That was before Babe Ruth.
land Iridlans in a doubleheader the -2!hyear old right-hander Kansas CitY 3-0, Boston ripped two-run blast by Dave May.
beat Baltimore. Reliever
L.D. Ottinger of Newport,
Thai was before he was getting t!Je pressure from all sides the sweep Sunday and his 14 vic- also claims to have added a
Mel Stottlemyte hurled a
Tenn., finished second, way he's getting it now. Most of the pressure comes l!lhen he's off torie~ against only four defeats change-up, a pitch his oppo- Chicago 11·2 aner losing 6-1 four-hitter and Roy White and Rollle ·Fingers earned hla lint
and Oakland nipped Baltimore
victory against five louea for 1
followed by Cecil Gordon or the field. Playing the game often is the eaSiest part of it.
are second only to Wilb\lf Wood nents charge destrlbe ws a
Thurman Mumon eaclt hit
IN in 10 innings.
'
1-3 l~nings of relief work.
Horse Shoe, N.C., Lennie Pond
home runs as the Yankees
Pays Price Emotionally
for the major league lead in spiller.
In the National league Atlanof PetersbUrg, Va., and J.D.
The demands made on Hank Aaron these days, particularly victories.
The double victory moved
defeated Minnesota . Stoltta
beat New York 4·2 with Hank
when tiM) Atlanta Braves visit such cities as.. .~ Angeles,
McDuffie of Sanford, N.C.
lemyre . picked up his 11th
JULY SALE
Parsons, or Ellerbe, N.C., Chicago and this one, are the type some might describe as subtle.
victory ln. 18 ,decisions as be
CONTINUES
started _in the outside pole No ma.tter what they. are, these pressures have a way of
beat the Twins for the third
Men's &amp; Women's
position and ran in the top five becoming so heavy, so mind-blurring and body-fatiguing, that no
lime this season.
throughout the race, averaging human can possibly be subjec ted to them constanUy and still
Aurelio Rodriguez, Willie
GAINESVILLE, Ga. (UP!) .che early 'n the race gave last year and also took the 1972
91.713 miles per hour on the keep his composure.
- George Follmer would have Foltmer more . than a ·one lap . series, said he was worried Horton and Mickey 8ftinley
Babe Ruth couldn 't.
.533:ffiile oval. He.took control
been glad to see Mark Donohue lead and Donohue never quite about Donohue at first when delivered run-scoring hits as
SALE '3,99
Roger Maris didn't
·
of the race after 347 laps when
the
Tigers
blanked
Kan11115
enter
the
pits
once,
but
two
made up the lost time.
the sandy-haired PennHank Aaron has, so 1ar, but he has paid the price emotionally.
Bobby Allison of Hueytown,
City.
limes
was
more
than
Follmer
won
with
an
average
sylvanian
whizzed past Hobbs
Follmer
Ala., and Cale Yarborough of Now that he 's within 19 home runs of shattering Ruth's golden
.
Bob Montgomery smashed a
speed of 117.05 miles an hour in and then Scheckter in a frantic
Timmonsville, S.C., wrecked all-time record - he smaahed his 695th and 696th homers in a 4-2 could hope for.
the Porsche 917 owned by effort to make up for the time grand slam home fl!llln the top
their Chevrolets.
win against the Mets Sunday - Aaron finds the price is going up.
Your Thom MeAn Slort
of the lOth, highlighting a nineYet that 's what happened to BObby Rinzler of ·Atlanta- · lost.
MIDDLEPORT
"I can imagine what it'll be later on," he says.
·' Allison was running second
run uprising as the Red Sox
a bitterly disappointed more than 50 seconds ahead of
Donohue had finished first in
It is bad enough now.
following a routine pit stop
Donohue in the deciding second Donohue .
· the 41J..Iap, first heat Saturday
when ·he lost control going into
Hounded By Fans
heat Sunday of the $75,000
Jody
Scheckter
finished
third
with Follmer second, and the
the · th:rd turn of the highEverybody wants a crack at the Braves ' eve!Hiispositioned Canad'an American Challenge
banked track. He crashed into slugger , The newspaper ·people want to talk with him ; the Cup series race at Road in a Porsche and David Hobbs, two leaders thus began Sundriving a McLaren, was fourth day's rae~: one lap ahead in the
a guardrail and was hit by the magazine people ; the TV people and the radio people, not to
Atlanta.
in the second race this year of 16-car field for .the remaining
trailing Yarborough. Yar- mention all the kids and adu lts who want the signature of the
The two pit stops to fix a the Canadian-American Chal- 50 laps. Donohue finally closed
borough had been out front for man who's on his way to wiping out baseball's most notable
leaky gas cap in the coekpil of lenge Cup series.
Follmer's lead to one lap with
·
·
100 laps and Allison for 81. . record.
Donohue's .lager Penske PorsFollmer, who won this race only a few minutes remaining,
Bobby Isaac, driving a Ford,
Flank Aaron oblig'es ffiem all.
but Follmer said afterward
ran in the'top five until he had
· How bad has it got'
that
by the beginning of the
mechanical difficulties and
This is how bad:
.
final goround he was no longer
was forced from 'the race.
Rival ballplayers and groundskeepers around the league now
worried.
Richard Petty, driving a want their pictures taken with Atlanta's 39-year-old superstar.
"I didn't bother to race that
Dodge, never was a factor in . Complete strangers come up to him, throiv an arm around his
last lap,'' the Arcadia, Calif.,
the race. He lost four laps with shoulder and tell an accomplice, "Okay, go ahead and shoot' "
driver said. "I just slowed to
a nat tire early in the race a,nd
So what, you say. It only takes a minute.
conserve
fuel. Mark is a strong
was forced from competition
Can't Say No
competitor aU the way- exwhen other problems develoBut multiply these minutes and they start adding up. The worst .
tremely fast-but I felt comped. He later drove about 75 part of it is that a fellow like Hank Aaron never really learned
MILWAUKEE
(UP!
)
earnjngs
10
$75,727
this
yet¥",
laps in rellel of Gordon.
fortable
toward the end. My
how to say no. That's why he's wide awake sometimes, simply
Dave
Stockton
believes
when
surpassing
the
$66,342
he
won
car rari beautifully, cool and ·
Parsons was relieved at the lying there in bed at 3 or4in the morning.
you're
hot,
your're
hot,
and
for
all
of
1972.
He
hadn't
won
a
wheel during the hot, muggy
nice, but it's a little harder·for
"What causes tbat?" says Hank Aaron, trying to furnish a
. Jul)' Buy!
that's
why
after
his
$26,000
tournament
since
August,
1971
.llfternoon by John Utsman of reason why he can't always sleep through the night the way he
the driver here in Atlan\l!,'' he
Bluff City, Tenn. Utsman drove once dld. ''I don 't know. Maybe it's because you're constantly Greater Milwaukee Open in Massachusetts and his best said, referring to the !Hklegree
about 180 laps.
·
getting bugged. It 's hard to say what's it due to. All I know is that victory Sunday he said he finish this year ·was second at heat.
expects
to
win
ano\her
golf
Houston,
one
stroke
behind
The victory was only the you get up, you don 't know'what time it is, and all you do is lay
Obviously glad abo~! DonQ'..
tourney
"very
shortly."
leadlng
money
winner
Bruce·
second NASCAR Grand there and stare at the ceiling."
hue's two forced stops, Follmer
"!
knew
what
I
wanted
to
do
Crampton.
National win for Parsons. His
said,
"I hadn 't really counted
Is the whole thing worth it?
SQUARE
loday,"
the
31-year-old
BerThe
check
moved
him
from
other victory came during the
on two of th('IIl."
Hank Aaron mulls that one ove r a moment.
. YARD
1970 season at South Boston,
Follmer , who collected
''!really don 't know," he says. ''If I go to bed half berserk,it's nardino, Calif., golfer said. " I 29th to 13th place on the pro
wanted to go out there and blow tour money list. None ol the top $15,000 for his first place finish,
Va.
not."
13 mcney winners was entered now goes to the ne~ comSEVERAL COLORS
Basically, Hank Aaron is a loner. Occasionally you'll find him 'em off the map." - .
It wasn't quite that·easy as here . Most of them chose to petitiob in Watkins Glen li~
TO CHOOSE
yakking in the clubhouse with someone like Ralph Garr or Dusty
Homero
Blancas
and
Hubie
.
take
the
week
off
to
prepare
for
with teammate Charlie Kemp
Baker, but they are considerably younger, and he does not run
Green
mad~
a
•
d
etermined
the
more
prestigious
Ili'itiah
at 20 points . in the Can-Am
with them off the ball field . Aaron doesn't really run with
effort
in
the
(inall8
to
catch
up
.
Open
in
Scotland
this
·week.
series.
"
anybody after working hours. On the road, he usually goes back
before
fa
lling
short
by
one
Blancas
and
Green
received
Doo~hue , who posted the
to his hotel room, orders up a bite to eat, watches TV a little, then
stroke
apiece
.
$12,025
apiece
from
$130,000
fastest lap with 122.74 m.p.h.,
botts·the door and goes to sleep. Or tries to, anyway.
Stockton
shot
a
73-his
only
purse.
Blancas'
check
moved
earned 15 points for his first
Dislikes Daily Drudgery
round
over
par
in
the
tourney
him
into
15th
place
on
the
list
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
start at Road Atlanta, giving .
What really wears down Hank Aaron now in his 20th season
Ill
finish
at
276,
12
under
par.
with
a
$72,207
total.
992
-2635
, ..
MIDDLEPORT
him a series total so far of 19.
with the Braves, is the drudgery of the day-to-day routine, none
of which is alleviated by his assault on Ruth 's record. If anything Most of his subpar golf came in "I expected to win and I ,.-----'-----.:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the second rounf when he fired played that way," said Stock- r ·
In Peewee action Friday at it has become more pronounced, and with the medla constantly
0
a sizzling nine under 63 for a ton . " I played too conPomeray the Pomeroy Angels, seeking him out as was the case with Roger Maris, the continued
course record and the second servatively Saturday so today I
behind the pitching of Todd attention becomes increasingly difficult to endure.
Fife, defeated Middleport Cubs
"Every day, every day, the same thing," says Aaron, not · lowest card on the tour this decided not to play safe . · I
wanted to go out there and get
year.
16-(J. Fife gave up 6 walks and ... angrily or resentfully but somewhat r~signedly. "I could put it on
Blancas
and
Green
each
the
job done , not have
only I hit and fanned 12 batters. · tape and hand it out. I know wha\ the questions are." .
So does Eddie Mathews, the Braves' manager who played with closed with 68 fo( an 11 under somebody do it for me. It didn 't
277 . Bob Goalby, who led the exactly work that way but I
Milan was the losing pitcher Aaron for 13 years. Says Math&lt;)ws:
first
round with a 65 and trailed honestly thought 1 would shoot
"I'm gonna have cards printed up -'no, I do not see any
for the Cubs, givin_g up 12 walks
Stockton by only two strokes in the 60s."
and 7 hits. He fanned 5. The change in Hank Aaron.'"
going into the final round, blew
With it all, Aaron is not complaining.
only hit lor the Cubs was a
his chance with a triple bogey
His mail, which included some racial abuse earlier this season,
single by David Hoffman.
and finished at 279.
has been better, and he wishes his .240 batting average was, also.
National League
"This was a very big win for
What about his life in general?
02 innings)
Hitting for the Angels were
me:: Stockton said. "And you Pillsbgh 100 000 001 QOO- 2 B I
"It's all right, I guess," he says. "If I could just relax a little
Ricky Smith, a three run home
can expect another one very L. A
010 100 000 001- 3 10 o
run, J . R. Wamsley and Shawn bit.lfl could just getaway one day and go fishing. You know how shortly because when I get Ellis, Giusti (B ) and Sanguil·
Gilmore, a triple, John Beaver it is being in this position : you're happy to be in it, but you're going, I keep going for a len; John, Brewer (9), Ri chert
112) and Yeager . WP- Richert
a triple and single, Todd Fife, constantly reminded. The telephone rings, rings and rings. If you while ."
·
!2·1) . LP- Giusti (5·1) . HRRandy Murray each a sinvle . cut if off, it could be the kids (Aaron's four children). You never ' The top prize raised his Davis (1 2th).
The game was called after , know. So you leave it on, and all it does alt the time is ring, ring,
Atlanta
010 102 ooo- 4 9 1
ring ..... "
·
fo ur innings.
N. Y.
000 010 lOQ- 2 8 0
Niekro
(9.4)
and Oates ;
Major·. league Loaders
By United Press lntornationat Stone, McAndrew (8) and
Hodges . LP-Stone (4-3) . HRS· Leading Bailors
Baker (llh) , Aaron 2 (22nd &amp;
National League
g. ab. r. h. pcI . 2Jrc' I.
Mota. LA 58 196 24 67
010 103 013- 9 14 2
Unser, Phil 66 210 3d 11 .342 Houston
021 100 30Q- 7 11 3
Watson. Ho 89 330 65 Ill .338 Montreal
Rbnsn, Phil 48 166 26 54 ·~~~ Forsch, Richard (7) , York
(7) , Reuss (8) and Jutze;
.Gdsn, SF 75 2.\ld 28 92 ·
McAnally, Jarvis (I) ,' Marshall
Maddox, SF 74 291 38 94
Mtt hws. SF 78 267 36 86 ·322 (8) and Boccabella. WP- Reuss
Over 3 million disabled . for atleast 51k years -and five
(11 .5). LP- Marshall (7.6). HRS
A
worker
between
the
ages
of
Cedeno,
He 11 274 52 87 ·
.workers and their .families are ;' years of work must have been 24 and ·at needs credit for Crdn l, Chi so 284 48 90 · i~~ - Rader (131h ), Bailey (17th) ,
ge tting monthly social security during the 10 years before his
Rose, Cin 84 342 57 108 ;316 Cedeno 2 (14/f&gt; &amp; 15th).
having
worked
under
soctal
Amorlcan Leaguo
payments as the social security dlsability began..
.. ..
Clnci
002 000 llQ- 4 9 0
security . half the period heg. ab. r. h.
Pel.
Phi
la
000
000 ooo- 0 4 I
disability program begins its
.
h he
In [!lOSt cases, the State . t
21 Blr'1brg , NY 55 161 29 61
the ttme
.379
Bill
ingham
(12.51
and Bench;
ween
e
came
Carew,
Min
76
289
52
99
16th year this month.
agency can make the deter- and the time he became . Horton. Del 52 193 25 66 .343 Twitchell , Scarce (B), Wilson
When social
security mination on the basis of
3d2 (9) and Boone. LP- Twitchell
disabled. Before age 24, the Murcer, NY 87 342 48 101 .313
(6.3).
disability payments were first medica l evidence from the worker needs credit for 1'/z Ma y. Mil
82 334 52 104 .311
Bla ir. Bat 74 245 36 76
· paid in July 1957, only disabled applicant's own physician. If
200 000 20Q- 4 to 1
years of work in the three-year D. Allen, Chi69 245 39 76 .310 St. Louis
workers between 50 and 65 additional evidence is needed,
.310
San
Fran
000
013 lOx- 5 15 3
period before his disability Braun . Min 7J 252 35 77
.306
W
ise.
Hrabosky
(6 ), Granger
were eligible for ~ayments.
began.
Krkptrck,
KC
further medical tests may be
(7),
Folkers
(7), Segul (8) and
11 246 41 75 .305
Today, severely disabled required at the Government's
When a worker applies for Terrell, Min 57 195 15 59 .303 Simmons ; Bradley, Sosa (8)
l'(orkers of any age under 65 expense.
and Rader. WP- Bradley (8.7) .
dlsability .payments, he subHome Runs
LP- Granger (2·3),
and ·certain members· of their 'In selected cases, social mils me dical evidence tc
National Leaguo : Stergell ,
Pill and Bonds, SF 2d; Aaron
· families can get dis~bility securit y helps pay for
000 020 000- 2 4 0
establish his disability. Xhen, and Evan&gt;, .\II ~' : Johnson. All Chlcapo
payments. And starting this vocational rehabilitation physicians and oth.er disability• and Monday, Chl 21.
Sa.n D1ego 000 010 12x- 4 13 2
month, dlsabled people who services. Rehabilitation ca n
American league : Mayberry, Hoolon, Bonham 18) and
experls
in
a
State
agency
.
KC
w: Fisk, Sos and Jac kson, Hundley ; Jones 12·2) and
have been entitled to social include job training , physical
usually the 'Stalj!'s vocational ·Oak 17: D. Allen, Chi and Kenda ll . LP- Hoolon IB·II . HR
Grubb fJih ).
security · paYments for two therapy, and similar services. rehabilitation agency- decide Bando, Oak 16 ·
Runs Balled In
years or . more can get
American l eague
Nearly two million disabled whethr the worker is disabled
Nallonal League : Bech, · Cln li st Gamel
Medicare prot~ctlon .
workers get monthly checlls under th&lt; social security law. 65 ; Stargell , Pitt 61 ; Bonds, SF. Calli
104 050 000-10 10 2
To be eligible for social averaging Sl79 and a~?o ut 1.7
60 : Watson. Hou 59; Perez, Cln Cleve
030 010 000- 4 8 0
58.
Si'lller
I
14·4)
and Torborg ;
securitx disability payments, a million social
security' N. Y.
003 003 001- 7 15 0 American League : Mayberry , Wilcox, Timmerman
Koworker must be · severely disability beneficiaries will get Minn
·OOOOOOOOD-D 43 KC 78; Jackson, Oak 65 ; klch 151 and Elil~. LP-lSI.
WII
co•
Slolllemyre 111 ·71 and Mu~ · Murcer, NY 58: Darwin, Mlnn 15·4) . HRS- Pinson (llhl. Ollv·
disabled and unable to work for Medicare coverage starting
son ; Bane, Goltz (4), Sanders 56; Melton, Chi 54.
er (9th) , Chombllos (4th) .
a year or more. Payment July I.
(71 and Mllterwald. LP- Bane
Pitching
I2nd game)
begins fpr the sixth month of
IO·I·l. HRS- Whlle (10th) , Mun · National Lugue: Bryan t, SF Calli
Young workers, however, son
010 100 001 2- 5 12 o
ll2th) .
tll18bllity.
13·5; Bil lingham. Cin 12.5: Cleve
002 00 I 000 o- 3 7 1
may be eligible for disability
Reuss, r Hou 11·5: Os teen, LA
Lange,
Borber,
Sells I10) ond
Generally, a worker 'who payments with as little as l'h Detroit
000 100 11o- 3 12 o and Wise, ST .L 10·41 Su lton, LA Slevenson. Tor.borg
17), Kusn.
000 000 000- 0 .9 0 and Cleveland, S'r.L 10·5.
become• disabled in 1973 must years of covered work, depend- Kan CH(.
yer
19!
;
Bnsmon,
Hilgendorf.
Strah er, . 'Hil ler (7) and
Amoriun League : Wood, Chi !71. Johnson {9) and Ashby.
lllve worked In employmeljt Ing on their age and when they Freehan
; Dra~o , Dal Canlon 15·12; Singer, Cafl4.4; Hunter, WP11. 11. LP- Johnson
COYered Wider social security become disabled.
(Bl and Healy. WP- Strahler Oak lJ.3 ; Holt!eman. O..k lJ.S ; (4-5) . Barber
·¢1 ' '1 .111 ,.,,,,,.... ~.~ •• ,,~ .,,, ,., . ....... ~"'"
HRsGamblw ( IJihl.
II
(3·2) . LP- Drago (9.8) ,
Coleman, Det 12·8.
,, ....,., ';• r r·••· ,, 1 ' ' ' ' of .,
Schelnblum (2nd) .

Wlnners .

~

1- The O.UySintloel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0~1 July9, 1973

.

~.~-,;,;,~:}.~~-~...~'~"&gt;¥&gt;-~

~hange

~de

Auxiliary ·plans projects,"
elects, installs officers

I~

Follmer claims ·Canam

II

Projecte to~ the year were
adopted •nd new Ofl!cera were
elect.ecl •nd inltalled when the
Junior American Legion
Au.lllary of Feeney-Bennett
P01t 121 met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Kessinger.
!lira. Keaalnger Ia the advisor
for the junior auxiliary ·
members.
As Ia customary for the
junior unit, a aenior citizen and
a handicapped child were
"~dopted" for rememill'ances
during the coming year. The
aenlor citizen is Mrs. Leona
Eberabach, Racine, a member
of the Middleport unit. Max
Blake, Middleport, is the
handicapped child.
the Juniors also voted to

CANVAS

Spice brings ·but fruit pie ftavor

Stockton grabs

·SHAG ·CARPET WITH
FOAM BACK

$ 99

AnMels take ·

Ingels Furniture

AILEEN CLAIRE

8p.m.,
nolds. home of Mrs . T. E. ReyCHESTER GARDEN CLUB,
8 p.m., at the Chester United
Methodist Church. . Mrs .
Thomas Stewart, Rutland, will
he the guest demonslrator
using the Meigs County Fair
flower school as her theme.

NEA Food Editor

Americans love their fr uit
pies. One of the favorite~ in·
spired th e song of long ago ,
"Ca il she bake a cherry pie,
Billy Boy. Billy Boy?"
Spices are important in
bringing out the s pecial fla vors of fruit pies. For example , mace or nutmeg add their
subtleties to rhubarb . lemon,
blueberry. pineapple , banana
or berry pi es Both spices .
come from · the same peachlike fruit of a tropi ca l ever·
The annual ptcmc ·of the
green tree. Mace is the fi .
Hysell Run Free Methodist
brous network that surrountis
Church was held recently at
the pit or seed of the fruit we
the church park with a picnic
call nutmeg.
dinner and games.
NUTMEG CHERRY PIE
Attending were the Rev. and
1· cari
(f.lb.)
red
tart
pitied
Mrs.
Ronald Wells, Corrie
cherrl.., pecked In
water ·
Moore, Mrs. Dwight Kennedy,
V. cup luger
Mrs. ·Audrey Patterson, Mr.
2 tebl..poone cornttarch
and Mrs. Raymond Keesee,
1 teatpoon lemon juice
Bill Haley, ' Emerson Hysell,
Vz teatpoon ground nutmeg
Mr. and Mrs . Tonie May, Mr :
'Ia 1111poon 1111
and Mrs. Harold Dewhurst,
1 llltpoon
Robin, Kim, Jay and Penny,d
margarinebutter or
1 teatpoon pure vanilla
Mr. and Mrs. I.Joyd Dugan an
eXtract
Marty, Mr . and Mrs. Milo
1 8-lnch biked· p81try shell
Hutchison, Julie, Joyce and
'lz cup heavy cream,
Jayne, Mr. and Mr~. Pat
whipped
'
Patterson, Roxie, Jeff, Ray
Drain cherries. reserving
_ and Stevie, Todd Eads, Mike
1 \IJ!iee, ,
J
(appro~&lt;ll'hl&gt;
, .,
Spice adds its subtle flavor to Nutmeg Cherry P1e .
Roush- Pauline Tillis an~
a •,••ter.'•"u"l
q·llice
, : ~ ~~~-~""'ttt •es.t:,'!."
-~"'~'''
~ 'J' · ·• • .. ,..
1
·~·'·
'
,
•
!I
'•
'
"
"
!:''
'"":"'
'
1
·
'
·
'
·
.....
.
h
.
Timmy,
Mrs
a~ ide . 'ln. a s ·•l saucepan well . Cook, st1ring constantly . into p1e shell. Chill unt1l f1rm me p1e.
. dd
R .· Bobd Dugan,
p tt
combme cherry JUi ce w1th until mixture thi ckens. St1r m Garnish with whipped crea m
Spice adds its sub tle flavor Bu y, onn~e an
a y,
-sugar , cornstarch. lemon butter , vanilla extract and sprinkled with additional nut· to Nutmeg Cherry Pie.
Paul, Doug, Mtchael, Jeff and
juice: nutmeg and salt. Blend reserved cherries; cool. Turn meg. if desired . Makes one 8·
&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN,
Susie Tillis and Debbie Roush.

Picnic held

.vacations.

Line:&gt;scores

... about your

Social Security

·il;

Do you spend a lot of time thinking
about that special vacation trip
you'd love to take but can't afford?
Stop thinking. And start buying
U.S. Savings Bonds. Now that
Bonds mature in less than six years,
· they can make that getaway plan
a t,eality. U.S. Savings Bonds ...
they'll get you going.

0

....

· ·~ ·

··

The lOth birthday of Dale Lee
Connolly, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Connolly, Long
Bottom, was celebrated wilh a
cookout recently at the home of

SHIRT

~INISHING :

Robinson's (;leaners

N. W

0 ·•0

•••••••llllll••••••••••••••••·~~--­

AT THE

"FRI

LV
GB
VINYL·GARD
FENCE POSTS
5 FOOT REG. 1 .09

77~
8 FOOT REG . 1 .29

aa~

VINYL COATED
FENCE ALSO AVAILABLE

48"

X

1 00'
Spedo f

Easy - to - install fencing r equi res no st retthlng, Con be

used anywhere . 16 go, 2"
~ ·2-5/ &amp;" mesh.

square

t l'la nne l conslriJt·
l1on giveS post moa·
imum strefl91h.

·

'j

peewee play

Sands are for

hisgrandpareni.!J, Mr. a~d Mrs. Mr . an4 Mrs, Jerry GriQI,
Chester Foutty, Reedsville.
Ronnie,Gary,~!keandKevln,
Attending were Mrs. Mabel Reedsvllle ; Jimmy and
Sanderson, Reed~ville; Mrs. TQIIlllly Harris, Long Botlo!n,
June Mullen, Sandra Mullen, . Sending glfla .were Mr. and
Piggy Mullen, Coolville; Steve Mrs. Glen Deeter, Long Bot.
NAME OMITTED
Mullen, Parkersburg, W. Va .; tom, and Mr. and Mrs. John
POMEROY _ The name of Mr. and Mrs .. George Mullen Johnson, Fort Myers, Fla. The
Mrs. Glenn Lee was unin- . Ill and Angle, Uttle Hocking ; afternoon wasspent swlrnmlng
tentlonally omitted as having Mrs. Erma C~n nolly and Erma and playing baseball.
attended a bridal shower for Jean, Reedsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Carla Beal.
Richard Hunt, Betty Jo and
Richard, Long Bottom; Mr.
DAUGHTER BORN
and Mrs. Robert Barber, Steve
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Pullen and Kevin, Reedsville; Mr:and
of Brownell Ave ., Middleport, Mrs . Theodore Connolly,
SAfV!E .DAY
are announcing the birth of a Debbie, Arlene and Mike ,
. SERVICE
daughter, July 2, at the Holzer . !teedsville.
In
At 9- 0ut At 5
Medical Center. The seven
Mr. and Mrs .. Dale Connolly,
pound, one ounce infant has Sr., Johnny, Diana and Deena,
been
named
Heather Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs.
·Elizabeth. Grandparents are Warren Connolly and Amy,
Mrs . Guy Cowan and Mr. and Long Bottom ; Mr . . and Mrs.
Mrs. William Walters, Mid- Chester Foutty, ~eedsville;
dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Charles . .--~!-~~""!!~'!l!!!l!!''!!!'!l!!~~!'l"lllll!~lilill-..
VanCooney,Mrs.A. R.Pullen,
COMP~ON
MiddlepQrt, and Mts . Guy
• · •
_ I'
,
•
• ~
Walters, Columbus, are the
.OPTOMETRIST
great-grandparents; and Mrs,
OFFICE HOUR.S 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (C!-OSt
Sarah Mo!ley, Middleport, and
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT FT.,
Mrs. Edward Raines, Vinton,
POMEROY .
WEDNESDAY
are
great-great-grandmothers.
AMATEUR Gardeners Club

.

heritage

8~·

a en
J

~
Mrs . Robert Lewis will again ~
ar ~
serve as cha lrperson of the &amp;
~
~
domestic arts department at
tr~asurer; !!herrle Bar~hart, the Melp County Fair, Aug. J4.
MONDAY
.
chaplain ; Kenda Mohler, 18.
. MEIGS Chapter ~3 ol D.A.V.
sergeant at ar1111; Christy
While the IIChedule has not 7:30p.m., at the chapter home
, Smith and Sht!rrie Roush, color heen approved as yet, Mrs. on Butternut Ave. Refreah· bearers; Sherrie Fo~. Uttle · Lewis reports that the classes . ments will be served.
Miss Poppy, and Sandra Might, are e~~sentially the same with
MEETING OF -the . Southhistorian . .
·
&lt;;ategorlea for hobbies and ens tern
Ohio
. Bospei
, F'ollowlng the meeting a crafts. ' Entries must be
Music
Association
at
Allen
picnic was held and homo.rnade registered at the Melp County
Ice cream was served. At. Fair Board office on the ROck Hall, Rio Grande College, 7:30
p.m.
tending were Becky Roush, Sprinp fairgrounds Thursday
POMEROY Chamber of
Kim and Lois Roush, Sherrie and Friday, Aug. 9 and 10
Commerce Monday at noon at
Roush, Christina Smith, Kenda be lor~ 4 p.m. each day.
Meigs Inn.
Mohler, Sherrie, Shelly and
Mrs . James Carpenter,
TUESDAY ·
Terri Fox, Kathy and Sonja Coolville, will serve as judge. A
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Clonch, Sherrie Barnhart, Mrs. home economics teacher at
Shaula Roush, Mrs. Joy Roush, Meigs High School last year, Lodge No. 363,-F&amp;AM, SPecial
Mrs. Carolyn Clonch and Mr. Mrs. Carpenter was the top meeting, 7:30p.m. Work In the
and Mrs. KeSBinger. The next blue ribbon winner in the EA Degree. All Master Masons
Invited.
meeting will he held on the domestic arts department at
ANNUAL picnic, Pomeroy
fourth Tuesday of August.
the 1972 fair.
Garden · Club, 6 p.m. roadside'
park, Route 33, on right going
north towards A\hens.
CLOTHING Bank of the
Middleport Church of Christ, 9
a.m.-12 noon.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

SHAG

Cubs 16-0 in

.L

,.

BOAT SHOES

house

Milwaukee title

make donations to the various
public fund. ral~ing drlvea and
to give ~ lor each dlslrlct
party held for the veterans at
the Athens Mental Health
Center, and $10 for each party
to be held at the Chillicothe
Veterans Hoapltal.
It was alao decided during
the meeting that juniors must
attend the. regulsr meetings
and all work sessions In order
Ill have their dues paid by the
unit and to be eligible to attend
the district and department
conferences,
Elected and installed by Mrs.
K~lnger were Becky Roush,
junior president; Kim Roush,
vice president ; Terri Fox,
secretary;
Lois· Roush,

f'SoCiarl
Party honors Dale Connolly
c d

Mrs. fewis to
be chairperson

PALLBEARERS NOTED
Pallbearers for ihe funeral of

POLL. Y'S POINTERS

Lingerie Sizes Vary,
She Wants Uniformity·
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers
of ladies' lingerie who so often' label things as petite , small ,
large, X-large, etc., but without any sort of size gauge. Some
large sizes lit me, some X-large - but there are limes when
X-large is not big enough. Marking size gauges such as a
medium girdle , say 24-26 wai st. wou ld be a great help to
shoppers. - MRS . R. K.

---~~~~~· Polly's

Pr.oblem

Jl'-·,.lil
DEAR POLLY - The while satin high-heel pumps I
wore for my wedding two years ago now need cleaoing . I hoee someone ca n tell me how to do this . MRS. D .
.

Roy C. Russell, 85, who died
une~pectedly at his home after
a lingering illness July 1 were
h.is grandson, James c.
Russell , Port Clinton; his
brother-in-law, calvin Lane;
Middleport, and nephews Don
Lynch, Toledo; Tommy Lane,
Pomeroy RD, and Hubert
Pullins and · Wallace Russell,
both of Middleport. His wife,
Nellie Lane Russell, was at his
bedSide wh.en. death came.
Burial services were at
Rawlings Coats Fu.,eral Home
Tuesday, July 3, with burial in
Riverview Cemetery;

ATIENDING WIG SHOW
Mrs. Polly Hysell, instructor
of cosmetology at Meigs High
School and Mrs . JoAnn White,
a · substitute instructor and
owner and operator · of
Beverly's Home of Beauty In
Middl~port, were in Parkersburg Sunday for a showing of
Eva Gabor wigs and hairpieces
at the Holiday Inn. Plans were
made for another showing to be
held in the PomeroyMiddleport area in the near
future .

SALE PLANNED
HARRISONVILLE - A
bakeless bake sale will be held
at the regular meeting . of
Harrisonville Order of Easll!rn
Star, Tuesday at 8 p.m. All
members and visitors are
invited.

FRAME
..

--

July Sale! .

17' FLAG POLE
ANDFLAG KIT

'

REG. 24.95

ladies'
Swim Suits

1h price
lOLA'S

LUMBER
NI)TINCLUDED
Rigid blad flnlsll steel frame wllh omo·

RECOMMEND EO

mental scrolls. Walk in from eit her end of

FOR 6' x 3' TABLE

t(Jble Folds up flat, store$ easily .

MANY

Includes 3-sec!ion while-1m·
1sh steel pole. 3' x 5' flog,
eagle, pulley, ny lo n rope

ond c:leot, ground socket and
' cop.

Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

----

QUALITY YOU CAN
BELIEVE IN!

PLAN COACHES' NIGHT
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
sponsor "Parents Meet the .
Coaches Night" at 8 p.m.
Thursday ~t Eastern ( High·
• School. Emphasis will be on the
fall football program but all
coaches will be present. Both
junior and se)lior high schooi
parents are asked to attend.

PICNIC TABLE

JACK POSr

I=IDPEA

MORE

WOOD.EN
SCREEN
DOOR
2'8"

VALUES

8'9"

X

REG. 19.95

5
PORCH SWING

~:~5 22~t .
Sol1d ook swing with ahoped $101,
Chains and hooh Included. (Len

!rome ).

.'

ORNAMENTAL

WROUGHT
IRON
RAILING

SCHUMACHER

WHEELBARROW

l

•

: : il: dt luxt

dMP·

•
_ ... t

clock

btck .,.,.,

INDEPENDENT l OCK

JIMMY-PROOF
LOCK

· The mate silkworm mo th or ond fout.fiour tlmtr
Emperor moth ca n detec t ·
0
a temalc mot h up to a li1 s- l .c:oolktop 1111, Ullond ott
lance of S.!t miles. ·
thorough cllonlng
th~

8' SECTION
Brigt.l sfKimleu stee l tr r y. Our·
able, hgh lw'!'lgtll f ba lanced. for
garden use.

588

INDE PENDENT LOCK

t 'o p front contrott
•wlv from hlet ind

THOMAS

~-

aooklng utensil•

•
rtmoveblt own

]88
SALE PRICE

REG.
4.69

•

4 ' SECTION
SALE PRICE

door

COACH

with piMting dttp .. hldt

n.p, bottom, beck 111d door lnterlor h• continuout·
111ton

tt

rf8Uitt btklno

ttmptrt·

IICrW - outomotlc»lly

~

right on!

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

ass

LESS
BUlB

REG. 11 .19

$27995

BAKER FURNITURE

110. 2.••

LIGHT

Hll'l't tht ..." 1C.n• - llbtr11• vou from ttit messiest task
In lht k~chon. SpOclolly&lt;ll\ltiOIIfd rltl:'t-on llnish on o!'Jn
twit. The lind of own la'JPI, 100ur lnd

@

PORCH

(Model 13321

ct~tnine

THOMAS

LANTERN

window

1kMI,

®
J49
. Flvled crystal c;,lou with •moolh
bloc~ lir1 l1f-l l101der . 8" long. (lus

b,lb j.

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO......
.... ..... ¥-

The Depart.ment Store of Building Since 1915
~•11

vMIIC'.

~

.'

•I

�''

•
7 - Tile Dillly Sentlnei,Middleport.Pmieroy,

6- 'f be 011111 Senllne•, Mlddleport-1:-vmeroy, 0 .•July~: 1973

.

Pressure mounting on Nixon to clear. himself
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Fla ., members of the
new, bipartisan effort Is uooer· · Watergate committee ; Sen.
way to convince Pr!!Sident Robert D. Byrd of West
Nixon that he must publicly Virginia, the assistant
Democratic leader and Gov.
~disclose-either at a news
co nference or before the Daniel Evans of Washington, a
Senate Watergate . committee · llepublic-~n who is chairman of
- his knowledge of the bugging the executive committee of U1e
National · Governors Con·
scandal,
The list of proll'\lnent p&lt;&gt;liU· terence.
The Watergate panel will
cans-both Republicans and
Democral8-call!ng for a resume its televised hearings
presidential s~tement on !lie Tuesday . Former Attorney
· subject was Increased Suooay General John N. Mitchell is the
by Sens.Hennan Talrrladge, D- ll•st snheduled witness.
Talmadge urged that Nixon
Ga . and Edward Gurney, R·

appear before the investigating
committee to dispel "this cloud
that's hanging over the White
House.''
" If he has nothing to hide,
why docs he refuse to appear?"
Talmadge said In referei)Ce to
Nixon's letter to the committee
Salurd~y declaring he would
oot appear personally "under
any circumstances" and wQuld
not permit inspcctioo of any
presidential papers,
· Talmadge Cites Polls
Talmadge said that the latest

.

publir· opinion polls show th~re
is •·a serious e1·osion of confidence IJ1 lhl: Presitl&lt;•iil. of the
Unitr&lt;l Stutes. I think he needs
lo luke smnc direct, positive,
uffinnaliv&lt;' action of serite type
lo erode this cloud that's
hanging over tile White House
and the erosion of confidcnee."
Gurney, Byrd and Evans
agreed !hat n p11blir report to
lhe nation is net·cssm·y but said
the ·rn·sidcnt's should nsc a
news conference format,
"1 do think that at an up.
p1·opt'iale lime, when we hear

Economist prefers food rationing
to Nixon's export cQntrols plan
W-AsHINGTON (UP! ) - An · 1966 'to !969, described the
expert on world food export controls as a "serious
production believes Americans mistake."
soon may be forced to ration
He also · predicted that
the food ·they eat In order to domestic food prices will never
maintain exports and the value return to the low levels of the
of the dollar abroad.
1961k He Said food would he In
Lester R.. Brown, an econo- short. supply around the world
mist for the nonprofit Overseas for the next year .
Development Council, said
"Beyond that, we may he
Sunday
.domestic
food faced with chronic global food
rationing would be a better scarcity for the foreseeable
alternative to President future," he said.
Nixon's · projiosed controls on
Brown made his conunenls
exports.
in an interview published by
Brown, who directed in· U.S, News and World Report
ternational agriculture magazine,
development
for
the
He was critical of Nixon's
Agriculture J?ePll\'lment from order llmiUng soybean exports
,.

..

and the President's request to
Congress for au thority to
impose broad controls on other
U.S, fa rm exports.
"Those exports are keeping
this nation economically afloat
in a very rea I sense,'' Brown
said. "A limit on U.S. farm
exporls would further weaken
the dollar.
"It would certainly limit ow·
·ability to import the vast
quantities of petroleum that we
must have from abroad to keep
U.S. business and industry
going."
He said that as a result It
may be necessary to ration
food in the United States "in
one form or another."

"We can't hold down fann
expllrL~ without endangering
UIC dollar or triggering serious
energy short11ges," Br-own
said. "In such c.ircumslances,
It muy very well be that
Amer.icaiiS will have to limit
U1c intake of certain types of
food, as some other &lt;:ouritries
arc doing, in order lo export
~gricultura l commodities ."
Bt·own said the administration should not impose price
ceilings on beef; pork, poultry
or e~gs under Phase IV or the
economic program. He said
retail . price ceilings coupled
with the high price of feed
would force many producer3
out of business,

.'
most of the kfy witnessrs, the
l'residcnl ought to mnkc omc
slntcment," Gurney litlid .
WhcU1cr It's helure the com·
mit tee m· in a . frce·whccling,
swinging news conferenw is
something else 11gain.
"But [do U1lnk he ought to go
before Ute American people
and · subject himself to
questions fr om the news 111t~lia
perh11psand lollallabout whut
he knows, "
Byrd said Nixon had "con·
tributed lo doubts" about his
crcilibilily by 1·elusin g to
p1·ovide Uw Watergate committce with White House docu·
menIs concerning the scandal.
Urges l'ress Mcetl~g
He said tlutt a news confcrcncc would be the best
forum to respond to the
damaging !tllegatfons'made by
former White Hot~ Counsel
John W. Dean rn.
"I don't think press releases
or televised appem·ances will
convince the people," he su id,
addi ng that Nixon should •·si.Op
isolating himself !rout the
pu blic."
Talmadge and Gt.rney were
interviewed toge ther on televisian Sunday (Issues and An·
swers - ABC) and Byrd appearcd on another program
(Face the Nation- CBS )
·In Rapid City, S.D., Evans
said he also felt that a news
conference, -with its "by-play
and responses to· questions"
was the best way for Nixon to
tell his side of the story.

personal lawyer and lhe next vtser John 0. l•:hrlkhnwn 0!1
scheduled wltness after Mitch- . thOfte , who 1utd hlrn urraoge
ell, Is ready to name Mltchell , cash payrnfnts to lh ~ WuwrDean, former pre identlal ad· gnte su~pects ,

"I don't think that until SUI!h

u conference is llllld can full
eonfidence of the 1&gt;coplc In the
President be restored," Evans.
s11ld. "He should clarify his
role and let national attention
move bttck to the major Issues
before us,"
McCormack Backs Nixon
Evans WI\S in Rapid City for
a meeting of the executive
committee held in conjuncUon
willt the 12th annual Midwest·
ern Governors Conference.
In other developments :
- Time magazine reported
that .former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell will tell the
Senate committee he did not
app1·ove the Watergate wiretap
operation and will " insist
adamantly" that Nixon knew
nothing or the plans or the
subsequent cover-up until last
March '21 , when the President.
.has said he learned or new
developmenls and decided to
order a new investigation.
~John W. McCormack, former Speaker of the House, said
in Boston he believes Nixon is
justified in his refusal to appear before tne committee
" because ours is a constitutional form of govern·
menl." Nixon will "tell his side
of the story at the right time,"
McCormack said. "What way,
short of appearing before a
committee- that's up to him to
determine."
- The Washington Star-News
quoted its sources as saying
Herbert W. Kalmbach, Nixon's
".

o:,'July t, 1m

NOW

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET
DINING
MONDAY EVENIN(7
AND TUESDAY EVENING
s to 9: 3~11 . 50 all you can eat, Ior AI a .&lt;art e).

TO
MIDDLEPORT MARINA
Wi de

Menu

Choice

BOAT AND RECREATIONAL

Drink s and

Order our regu lar m enu every night 5 fo 10.

-

I

..

The MEIGS INN
•

PH. 992·3629

POMEROY

\\'~
,.,....,.&gt;

Oil ·p roducts rollback

-~
,L_ oOL~I'I~I!~-----'
_.:.::=-----,
/1 cJ L ~;:::::=:=~

GYOI 111M

may come in Phase IV
WASHINGTON: (UPI)- The said the oil and food industries, Mo., who sponsored a bill
admir\lstration'sl'hase IV eco- where priCe&amp; have been rising giving Nixon the authority to
nomic program may Include a the faStest In the economy, order fuel supplies to energyrollback in prices ·for gasoline would be the first Industries short. areas, charged .Sunday
and other petroleum products, singled out for Phase IV that the administration's
voluntary program is a
administration sourci!S report. coverage.
The sources said Sunday
"There will be a number of "colossal bust. "
administration officials are announcemenls in the next 10
Nixon should have used the
considering the rollback as days or two weeks," one of· authority to force allocation of
they draft the program that · ficial said.
fuels, Eagleton said. Instead,
will follow the price freeze
Sen, Thomas F. Eagleton, D- Eagleton said, the administraPresidcnt Nixon imposed June
tion had "fiddled around with
13 and said would not continue
ils so-called 'voluntary' promore than 60 days,
Veteraos Memorial Hospital
gram which has been a colossal.
Should the rollback be or·
Ad'!'lsslo~s Saturday bust. " He said a mandatory
dcred, it would drop the price Vanessa Petit, Pomeroy ; program was necessary .
of gll!lollne at service stations Clara Grueser, Minersville;
Eagleton said independent
in many parts of the country, It William Graham, Pomeroy; fuel distributors had not realso would cover such productS Audrea Arnold, Pomeroy, and ceived a · fair share of the
as home heating, .diesel and Robert Bryan, Athens.
available products. He said
aviation fuels.
Discharges - Eclmund both farmers and trucking
Thegasolinepricerollbackis Arrington, Opal Barr, Rose companies continued to have
among a number of options Roseberry, Betty Mae Brown, problems getting necessary
being considered by the ad- Phillip Baldwin, Mamie fuel.
ministration all it puts together Buchanan, Joe Weyersmiller,
On Saturday, Sen . . James
Phase IV, "said a Treasury William Bilcher, Vanessa.. Abourezk, D-S.D., and Rep.
Department official close to Petit, Terry Little and ~udrea Les. Aslpin, D-Wis., issued a
the government energy policy Arnold.
statement actising the major
planning.
.
Sunday Admissions - Jack oil firms of deliberately
Like other prices, gasoline Ginther. Chester;. Terry creaUng a gasoline shortage to
prices are fr&lt;izen at tile level of Phalin, Pomeroy; Lucille drive prices up and inthe first week in June. A Braley • Pomeroy : Geneva depcndenls out of business.
rollback would force com- Clark, Racine; Stephen Valley, They proposed legislation "to
panies to reduce prices below Racine; Hazel Mae Lynch, break the back of the big oil's
currentlevelsaoo,if a freeze is Athens; Richard Rathburn, monopoly power."
add~!!~, hold them there.
Middleport; Rhonda Smtih,
The Washington Star-News Racine; John Mayes, New
reported Sunday that it new . Haven; Edith Sauer, Mid· (lsi Gamel
000 000 01 ~ 1 52
fre~ze . on petroleum products dleport;
Ancil
Harris, Boston
. Chicago
200 130 oo~ - 6 10 o
would be established at the Sciotoville; Philip Meinhart, Paitin, Newhauser 15 1 and
prices that prevailed on May Pomeroy, and Benjamin Fisk; Slone, Acos la (81 and
Herrmann. WP- Stone (4-4) .
15. Administration officials, Moore, Bidwell.
LP- Pallln (8·11) . HRS- May
however, termed this date
Discharges - Marvin Darst, (8th ), Bradford (3rdl .
"very speculative,"
Truenda Bragg, Milton Bailey !2nd Game)
Boston
020 000 000 9- 11 16 0
The administration sources and Raymond Bragg.
ChicaQo. 000 .002 000 ~ 2 • 1

'"

.

'

Desser t Extra .

To have a,
cleaner house,
should ·we throw out
the broom? · ,.

SUNDAY,
JULY 15

/

51
UU0

'

t

I'

AIM

· PARK

....

BOATING
AND CAMPING
EQUIPMENT
ON DISPLAY

lOver the Blue &amp; Grey Restaurantj ,

..

I

We often hear, "To reduce pol lu tion, generation of
eleclrl c power should be reduced." Ca rrying !hat
theo ry lo extremes, imagine hpw • c lean a house
would be If we lhrew out the broom .. . or th e e lec tri c
sweeper!
·
Elec tri city .... more of It, not less, Is the ke y to solving
many pollu lion problems . Milli ons of kilowa tts of
elec tri city are required to operate sewage lrealm ~n t
plants. Electric pumps a re ne cessary for purlficalion
of drin king wa ter. Eleclrl clty runs the air filters that '
remove soo t 'from thousands of fac tory and commercia l smokestacks before It can foul the ai r. And,

electricity powers machines that recycle cans, glass
.
and pape r Into reusa ble raw malerials.

l

Refreshments .Sold
At The Show

We've invested millions of dollars In air a nd water
pollution control systems at our powe r plants a nd
we're Investing more and more as Improved equipment Is perfec ted. MorP electric powe r, no t less, Is
needed to continue Improving ·th e e nvironmen t

Sponsored By
OHIO POWER COMPANY

MIDDLEPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

LORENZO D. DAVIS

I.

'

I

•

· PHONE 992·5120

.I~

I

r,'

100 1;2 E. Main St., Pomeroy

•

I •.

'

Mr. Davis Is Opening An Office At

We are in a position to service your insurance needs. It
will not be necessary for you to sign any stateml!nt mailed or
given to you to have the same protection on your car or
property. We will give you honest and efficient servi"e.
Please stop ~Y or call as to the reason of the division of the
Davis-Warner Insurance Agency.
..

...
z
u

,,

FORMER DAVJS.WARNER INS. SERVICE

On July 2.

•

II'

·!,...

LOCUST

__,

.,
. Ill

NOTICE TO All Cll ENTS OF THE

Under The Name of Davis Insurance Service

LAUIII!L

..

..

'

FREE ENJERTAINMENT
1r

BY

tEX HARRISON
AND
THE VALLEY BOYS

·NOON
UNTIL
DARK·.

�''

•
7 - Tile Dillly Sentlnei,Middleport.Pmieroy,

6- 'f be 011111 Senllne•, Mlddleport-1:-vmeroy, 0 .•July~: 1973

.

Pressure mounting on Nixon to clear. himself
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Fla ., members of the
new, bipartisan effort Is uooer· · Watergate committee ; Sen.
way to convince Pr!!Sident Robert D. Byrd of West
Nixon that he must publicly Virginia, the assistant
Democratic leader and Gov.
~disclose-either at a news
co nference or before the Daniel Evans of Washington, a
Senate Watergate . committee · llepublic-~n who is chairman of
- his knowledge of the bugging the executive committee of U1e
National · Governors Con·
scandal,
The list of proll'\lnent p&lt;&gt;liU· terence.
The Watergate panel will
cans-both Republicans and
Democral8-call!ng for a resume its televised hearings
presidential s~tement on !lie Tuesday . Former Attorney
· subject was Increased Suooay General John N. Mitchell is the
by Sens.Hennan Talrrladge, D- ll•st snheduled witness.
Talmadge urged that Nixon
Ga . and Edward Gurney, R·

appear before the investigating
committee to dispel "this cloud
that's hanging over the White
House.''
" If he has nothing to hide,
why docs he refuse to appear?"
Talmadge said In referei)Ce to
Nixon's letter to the committee
Salurd~y declaring he would
oot appear personally "under
any circumstances" and wQuld
not permit inspcctioo of any
presidential papers,
· Talmadge Cites Polls
Talmadge said that the latest

.

publir· opinion polls show th~re
is •·a serious e1·osion of confidence IJ1 lhl: Presitl&lt;•iil. of the
Unitr&lt;l Stutes. I think he needs
lo luke smnc direct, positive,
uffinnaliv&lt;' action of serite type
lo erode this cloud that's
hanging over tile White House
and the erosion of confidcnee."
Gurney, Byrd and Evans
agreed !hat n p11blir report to
lhe nation is net·cssm·y but said
the ·rn·sidcnt's should nsc a
news conference format,
"1 do think that at an up.
p1·opt'iale lime, when we hear

Economist prefers food rationing
to Nixon's export cQntrols plan
W-AsHINGTON (UP! ) - An · 1966 'to !969, described the
expert on world food export controls as a "serious
production believes Americans mistake."
soon may be forced to ration
He also · predicted that
the food ·they eat In order to domestic food prices will never
maintain exports and the value return to the low levels of the
of the dollar abroad.
1961k He Said food would he In
Lester R.. Brown, an econo- short. supply around the world
mist for the nonprofit Overseas for the next year .
Development Council, said
"Beyond that, we may he
Sunday
.domestic
food faced with chronic global food
rationing would be a better scarcity for the foreseeable
alternative to President future," he said.
Nixon's · projiosed controls on
Brown made his conunenls
exports.
in an interview published by
Brown, who directed in· U.S, News and World Report
ternational agriculture magazine,
development
for
the
He was critical of Nixon's
Agriculture J?ePll\'lment from order llmiUng soybean exports
,.

..

and the President's request to
Congress for au thority to
impose broad controls on other
U.S, fa rm exports.
"Those exports are keeping
this nation economically afloat
in a very rea I sense,'' Brown
said. "A limit on U.S. farm
exporls would further weaken
the dollar.
"It would certainly limit ow·
·ability to import the vast
quantities of petroleum that we
must have from abroad to keep
U.S. business and industry
going."
He said that as a result It
may be necessary to ration
food in the United States "in
one form or another."

"We can't hold down fann
expllrL~ without endangering
UIC dollar or triggering serious
energy short11ges," Br-own
said. "In such c.ircumslances,
It muy very well be that
Amer.icaiiS will have to limit
U1c intake of certain types of
food, as some other &lt;:ouritries
arc doing, in order lo export
~gricultura l commodities ."
Bt·own said the administration should not impose price
ceilings on beef; pork, poultry
or e~gs under Phase IV or the
economic program. He said
retail . price ceilings coupled
with the high price of feed
would force many producer3
out of business,

.'
most of the kfy witnessrs, the
l'residcnl ought to mnkc omc
slntcment," Gurney litlid .
WhcU1cr It's helure the com·
mit tee m· in a . frce·whccling,
swinging news conferenw is
something else 11gain.
"But [do U1lnk he ought to go
before Ute American people
and · subject himself to
questions fr om the news 111t~lia
perh11psand lollallabout whut
he knows, "
Byrd said Nixon had "con·
tributed lo doubts" about his
crcilibilily by 1·elusin g to
p1·ovide Uw Watergate committce with White House docu·
menIs concerning the scandal.
Urges l'ress Mcetl~g
He said tlutt a news confcrcncc would be the best
forum to respond to the
damaging !tllegatfons'made by
former White Hot~ Counsel
John W. Dean rn.
"I don't think press releases
or televised appem·ances will
convince the people," he su id,
addi ng that Nixon should •·si.Op
isolating himself !rout the
pu blic."
Talmadge and Gt.rney were
interviewed toge ther on televisian Sunday (Issues and An·
swers - ABC) and Byrd appearcd on another program
(Face the Nation- CBS )
·In Rapid City, S.D., Evans
said he also felt that a news
conference, -with its "by-play
and responses to· questions"
was the best way for Nixon to
tell his side of the story.

personal lawyer and lhe next vtser John 0. l•:hrlkhnwn 0!1
scheduled wltness after Mitch- . thOfte , who 1utd hlrn urraoge
ell, Is ready to name Mltchell , cash payrnfnts to lh ~ WuwrDean, former pre identlal ad· gnte su~pects ,

"I don't think that until SUI!h

u conference is llllld can full
eonfidence of the 1&gt;coplc In the
President be restored," Evans.
s11ld. "He should clarify his
role and let national attention
move bttck to the major Issues
before us,"
McCormack Backs Nixon
Evans WI\S in Rapid City for
a meeting of the executive
committee held in conjuncUon
willt the 12th annual Midwest·
ern Governors Conference.
In other developments :
- Time magazine reported
that .former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell will tell the
Senate committee he did not
app1·ove the Watergate wiretap
operation and will " insist
adamantly" that Nixon knew
nothing or the plans or the
subsequent cover-up until last
March '21 , when the President.
.has said he learned or new
developmenls and decided to
order a new investigation.
~John W. McCormack, former Speaker of the House, said
in Boston he believes Nixon is
justified in his refusal to appear before tne committee
" because ours is a constitutional form of govern·
menl." Nixon will "tell his side
of the story at the right time,"
McCormack said. "What way,
short of appearing before a
committee- that's up to him to
determine."
- The Washington Star-News
quoted its sources as saying
Herbert W. Kalmbach, Nixon's
".

o:,'July t, 1m

NOW

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET
DINING
MONDAY EVENIN(7
AND TUESDAY EVENING
s to 9: 3~11 . 50 all you can eat, Ior AI a .&lt;art e).

TO
MIDDLEPORT MARINA
Wi de

Menu

Choice

BOAT AND RECREATIONAL

Drink s and

Order our regu lar m enu every night 5 fo 10.

-

I

..

The MEIGS INN
•

PH. 992·3629

POMEROY

\\'~
,.,....,.&gt;

Oil ·p roducts rollback

-~
,L_ oOL~I'I~I!~-----'
_.:.::=-----,
/1 cJ L ~;:::::=:=~

GYOI 111M

may come in Phase IV
WASHINGTON: (UPI)- The said the oil and food industries, Mo., who sponsored a bill
admir\lstration'sl'hase IV eco- where priCe&amp; have been rising giving Nixon the authority to
nomic program may Include a the faStest In the economy, order fuel supplies to energyrollback in prices ·for gasoline would be the first Industries short. areas, charged .Sunday
and other petroleum products, singled out for Phase IV that the administration's
voluntary program is a
administration sourci!S report. coverage.
The sources said Sunday
"There will be a number of "colossal bust. "
administration officials are announcemenls in the next 10
Nixon should have used the
considering the rollback as days or two weeks," one of· authority to force allocation of
they draft the program that · ficial said.
fuels, Eagleton said. Instead,
will follow the price freeze
Sen, Thomas F. Eagleton, D- Eagleton said, the administraPresidcnt Nixon imposed June
tion had "fiddled around with
13 and said would not continue
ils so-called 'voluntary' promore than 60 days,
Veteraos Memorial Hospital
gram which has been a colossal.
Should the rollback be or·
Ad'!'lsslo~s Saturday bust. " He said a mandatory
dcred, it would drop the price Vanessa Petit, Pomeroy ; program was necessary .
of gll!lollne at service stations Clara Grueser, Minersville;
Eagleton said independent
in many parts of the country, It William Graham, Pomeroy; fuel distributors had not realso would cover such productS Audrea Arnold, Pomeroy, and ceived a · fair share of the
as home heating, .diesel and Robert Bryan, Athens.
available products. He said
aviation fuels.
Discharges - Eclmund both farmers and trucking
Thegasolinepricerollbackis Arrington, Opal Barr, Rose companies continued to have
among a number of options Roseberry, Betty Mae Brown, problems getting necessary
being considered by the ad- Phillip Baldwin, Mamie fuel.
ministration all it puts together Buchanan, Joe Weyersmiller,
On Saturday, Sen . . James
Phase IV, "said a Treasury William Bilcher, Vanessa.. Abourezk, D-S.D., and Rep.
Department official close to Petit, Terry Little and ~udrea Les. Aslpin, D-Wis., issued a
the government energy policy Arnold.
statement actising the major
planning.
.
Sunday Admissions - Jack oil firms of deliberately
Like other prices, gasoline Ginther. Chester;. Terry creaUng a gasoline shortage to
prices are fr&lt;izen at tile level of Phalin, Pomeroy; Lucille drive prices up and inthe first week in June. A Braley • Pomeroy : Geneva depcndenls out of business.
rollback would force com- Clark, Racine; Stephen Valley, They proposed legislation "to
panies to reduce prices below Racine; Hazel Mae Lynch, break the back of the big oil's
currentlevelsaoo,if a freeze is Athens; Richard Rathburn, monopoly power."
add~!!~, hold them there.
Middleport; Rhonda Smtih,
The Washington Star-News Racine; John Mayes, New
reported Sunday that it new . Haven; Edith Sauer, Mid· (lsi Gamel
000 000 01 ~ 1 52
fre~ze . on petroleum products dleport;
Ancil
Harris, Boston
. Chicago
200 130 oo~ - 6 10 o
would be established at the Sciotoville; Philip Meinhart, Paitin, Newhauser 15 1 and
prices that prevailed on May Pomeroy, and Benjamin Fisk; Slone, Acos la (81 and
Herrmann. WP- Stone (4-4) .
15. Administration officials, Moore, Bidwell.
LP- Pallln (8·11) . HRS- May
however, termed this date
Discharges - Marvin Darst, (8th ), Bradford (3rdl .
"very speculative,"
Truenda Bragg, Milton Bailey !2nd Game)
Boston
020 000 000 9- 11 16 0
The administration sources and Raymond Bragg.
ChicaQo. 000 .002 000 ~ 2 • 1

'"

.

'

Desser t Extra .

To have a,
cleaner house,
should ·we throw out
the broom? · ,.

SUNDAY,
JULY 15

/

51
UU0

'

t

I'

AIM

· PARK

....

BOATING
AND CAMPING
EQUIPMENT
ON DISPLAY

lOver the Blue &amp; Grey Restaurantj ,

..

I

We often hear, "To reduce pol lu tion, generation of
eleclrl c power should be reduced." Ca rrying !hat
theo ry lo extremes, imagine hpw • c lean a house
would be If we lhrew out the broom .. . or th e e lec tri c
sweeper!
·
Elec tri city .... more of It, not less, Is the ke y to solving
many pollu lion problems . Milli ons of kilowa tts of
elec tri city are required to operate sewage lrealm ~n t
plants. Electric pumps a re ne cessary for purlficalion
of drin king wa ter. Eleclrl clty runs the air filters that '
remove soo t 'from thousands of fac tory and commercia l smokestacks before It can foul the ai r. And,

electricity powers machines that recycle cans, glass
.
and pape r Into reusa ble raw malerials.

l

Refreshments .Sold
At The Show

We've invested millions of dollars In air a nd water
pollution control systems at our powe r plants a nd
we're Investing more and more as Improved equipment Is perfec ted. MorP electric powe r, no t less, Is
needed to continue Improving ·th e e nvironmen t

Sponsored By
OHIO POWER COMPANY

MIDDLEPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

LORENZO D. DAVIS

I.

'

I

•

· PHONE 992·5120

.I~

I

r,'

100 1;2 E. Main St., Pomeroy

•

I •.

'

Mr. Davis Is Opening An Office At

We are in a position to service your insurance needs. It
will not be necessary for you to sign any stateml!nt mailed or
given to you to have the same protection on your car or
property. We will give you honest and efficient servi"e.
Please stop ~Y or call as to the reason of the division of the
Davis-Warner Insurance Agency.
..

...
z
u

,,

FORMER DAVJS.WARNER INS. SERVICE

On July 2.

•

II'

·!,...

LOCUST

__,

.,
. Ill

NOTICE TO All Cll ENTS OF THE

Under The Name of Davis Insurance Service

LAUIII!L

..

..

'

FREE ENJERTAINMENT
1r

BY

tEX HARRISON
AND
THE VALLEY BOYS

·NOON
UNTIL
DARK·.

�Sentin'el Classified$ _Get A~tion! _S entinel Classifieds Get Results!
2SIGIS

Pomeroy

OF
QUALITY

Motor Co.

For S.lt

Wan led

MEAT CUTTER, No phone 1973 - Ztg Zag sewl!)Q machine.
coils. 0 &amp; 0 Meats, Pomeroy. This machine - darns, em ·
o.
. ·
_ broiders, .overcasts. button
· 7.J,6fc holes . All without a t- - - - - - - - - - ~ tachmenls. Poy balance of
$38.50 or pay S5 per monlh.
Coli 11'12·533 I.
For Rent
6-10-llc
HOUSE . 3 bedroom un . - - - - - - - - - furnished. porch and yard. REDUC E exQlss flu ids with
Call 992-2780 or 11'12-3132 .
Fluldex, Lose weight with
..:.,.__
7-8-tlc
Dex-A-Dief capsu les al
Nelson
Drvgs.
3 BEDROOM p,, blllh mobile
J.9-3tp
home , 308 P~ge Street, 11'12·

LADIES
11 lo 15 hours per week . You
chooie hou rs . Ple-a·sa nt,
profilable customer servicenear home. Write Personal

S1lt5
1912 NOVA " 6"
•·door. local !-owner •.light green finish. good !ires.
automatic transmission , power steering , radio, real
e.:onomy.

_____

SMpper Oep•rtmenl, Box
10. Watkin&gt; Product$, Inc.,
Winona, Minnesota 55981.

1971 FORO
S20t5
Torino 500 H.J . Cpe,, 1 owner car less than 33,000 miles.
brown fini sh with mat~hi ng vlnyl roof &amp; vinyl In terior, 302
V-8 engine. std. trans .• power steering &amp; brakes, radio,

---------7-8-lfc

3509.

YARD SALE - 10-lnch table
saw. Craftsman Gig Saw, 7'1&gt;
horsepower , Scott Atwater
Outboard Motor . S gas

rftdlo, clean interior .

other Items too numerous to
menlon. July 13 and 14, 8 a.m.
1111 dark . Lin Hart's Trailer.
Vine Street, R.aclne.
7-6-6tc

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

any organization ; phone 992-

PUBLIC NOnCES
Your Right to Know
and Ue informed of the fun c f ion$'10f yoUr gove rnm ent are
embodied In publ ic noric_es . In,
1th-al s~lf - go vernmen_ t chA rg es
all ci t izens to be 1n form ed :
this new~paper wges every
1
Ci tl zen to read ancf$fU: dY the se
•nOtices.' We strorrg ly ad vise
those ci tt~ ns , seeking further
information , to exercise tMir
:r ight ol access to pu bli c
•re. ~:; ords and pub lic me_etings .

· Found

5 P.M.__Day Before Publlcallon . GIRL'S 1971 High School class
rlng,ldentlly by Initial. Found
Monnay Dead line 9 a. m .
Cancell at ion Correction s
In Middleport. Phone 992-5524.
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
7-8-Jtc
·Da"jl of Publication

REGULATIONS

3·11 -tfc ' COBBLER pota toes. · Clara
Boso. Great Bend . Ph one 843·
24 4
S\~o~:t,~GP~:~~:eR~~:;:'~~:
9.
, requi red. Ca ll 992 .5293 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7__:·8·31 P
7-6-tlc 5 ROOM house. bath and
basement. gas heat. 2 lois. S.
MOBILE home space In D. Buski rk, Middleport .
Syracuse. Phone 992-6329.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7·_8-3tp
6-21-tlc
STARCRAFT ca mper , sleeps~.

--------~

---------

The. Publish-er res erves the
right to edi t or reject any ads
deemed
obiec tionllt.
The
publ isher w ill not be responsib le
tor more than one incor r ect WANT EO TO bu y old fur niture .
insertion .
6·29·12tc .

Want11t1 To Buy

JOHN TUCKER
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
. 992-3954

Ph.'9Y2-2174

Pomeroy

laid-down ,

stove,

refrioeralor

Pets

.

- - - -----

$3.57 hour

sr:.-

------

- - -- --

The

Daily

992-2156

For

We talk

_____

757, and Volume 236, Page 759,
Deed . Re cords , Meigs Cou nty, 1966 OLDSMOBILE st atio n
Ohio
wagon in good condition .
Appraised \la rue is S6,000 .00 .
Phone 992-2936.
Te-rms of sale : Cash In hand
- 7-9-Jtc
upon deli very ot deed .
Robert C. H.artenbach,
Sheri ff of. Meigs County,
Pom eroy, Oh io.

161 II . )8. 25 171 2. 9, 5tc

Real Estate· For Sille
TWO YEAR-OLD ranch type
h~me, 3 bedrooms, lot~ of
closets, nice bath and kitchen
with electric stOve. new
c~rpet.

3679.

100x100 lot . Call 9927-9-Stc
I

The Almanac

WANTED
Syracuse Carrier

1961 MERCURY good except
needs m otor . $95 . Sec at
Sawmill on Road 19 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_::·6·31&lt;
ONE 7200 acre lot lor sa le. 60 AC
a ll -cr op

Har ves t er.

also .

Phone 742 -3656.

NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION

T o Dinah Jean Welctt :
You are hereby notified .that
on the 22nd day of June, 1973,
Fle tcf'l er R . Welch and Anna
Bell Wel ch, address ! Bo~~:· 101,
Rutli!lnd , Ohio , f i l ed th ei r
pet itioJl In t he Court of Common
Pl eas, Prob ate Div ision, Me igs
CotJnty, Ohio, for leave to adopt
Tony Leon Wel ch, a minor . an d
atreg lng that said Dinah Jean
Welc h, th e mother of said ch il d,
haS willfully fa i led to properly .
support and ma lnt.s in said chil d
tor a p eri od Of more than two
year s immediately preceding
th e filing of thi s petit ion : and
that th e hearing of nld petit ion
and examination . under oalh, of
all the parties In In tere st who
may be present, will be had
before sa id Cour t on the lOth
day of Augu$f, 19?3, at 10 o'clock.

By Uniled'Preos Inlernallonal
Today Is Monday, July 9, the
-!90th day of 1973 with 175 .to
. follow .
The moon is between.its first
A.M.
.
quarter and full phase.
MANNING D. WEB STER ,
· The morning stars are Mars,
Judg e,
Jupiter and Saturn.
· Co mmon Pleas Court.
Proba t e Div ision,
The evening stars are MerMeigs Cou nty , Ohio .
cury and Venus.
161 25 Ill 2; 9, lie

The

Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2156

7-6·241p
ONE 3 year old Regi stered
Black Angus Bull. Ca ll 7426675.
7-6-6tc

-..,------

1972 HONDA SL70, good condillon . S250. Phone 742-6878.
- - - - - - - - - - 7-6-Jip

Dick's Haard House
-"STRIPPERS"
We Strip Paint, Varnishes, Etc. From Furniture.
. ANTIQUES-MODERN-METALS
No Ruinous Lyes or Caustics Used
PICK-UP SERVICE AVAILABLE
Dick Sey ler-Owner

K·err Sl r~pt

Phon e 992-2798

Pomeroy, Ohio

&amp; rang e. Large din ing area .
Storm doors and windows .

$16,900.00.
NEE OS SOME WORK
MiQdl eport . 3 bedroom s.

Balh . Utllily room . On a
good st reel. Lots of work
been done on th is proper ly .
WANTED
1 story . 3 bed room hom es.
Not too old. From $17, 000.00
up . INO MODULAR S OR
PRE-CUTS!
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
912-1259
,____"_n_o_• ..n_s_w
_e_r_9_92-·2_S_6_8_..J

to you

like perS«m.

THE SALES FORC E HAS
BEEN SO ACTIVE LATELY,
THAT WE ARE IN NEED OF
LI ST IN GS,
OF
GOOD
HOU SES AND FARMS . 100
ACRES OR MORE . CAL L OR
COME IN AND WE'LL BE
HAPPY' TO TALK ABOUT
SE LLING YOUR PROPERTIES. WHA T WE WILL DO,
AND WHA T IT WILL COST
YO U..

"1

.

LET US HELP YOU
.Roofing .

AN'ASFO'

\Nil= SI&lt;DNK
HOLLDWERS!! .

Roof Painting,

Spouting ,

/"Plumbing ,

MANGL.IN' IS

Re modeling. Complete
Building, Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

M~LIKEtT-

cu;_T'UP.E COMPAAED

TO THEM
EV!:'i-.1
15 .

WE

CULTUP.ED.('

Siding.

PHONE : 991-2550

ALL-WEATHER
·N. 1nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 .

FURNITURE Stripping and
Refinishing . Abraham 's
Antiques, 132 Fayette Street,
Nelsonv ille, Ohio. Phone 753-

1302.

WINNI)': WINKLE

.

MIINO! WILt.

7-3·30tc

NOT UNTil. YOU
CONSENT lOGO
Ol!T WIT11 ME .

YOU PLeASE.

LEAVE. ME.
ALONE?

EXCAVA"I lr'i u , dozer , 1oader
and backh oe work ; sept ic
tanks installed ; dump tr ucks

HMM ... I THINK I!VE. FINALLY
HIT ON A OCHEME. TO GET
RID OF 'TH IS V/OULJ? ·BE -c.-"-'4"'
CA&amp;ANO\IA ONCE:

AND FOR ALL.

and to-boys lor hire ; will haul
fill dirt. top soi l. limes tone
and grave.l i Ca.ll Bob··or Roger
Jeffe rs, day phone 992-7089 ;
nigh! phone 992·3525 or 9925232.

.

2-11-ttc-

·WMPO!l390
ON YOUR DIAL

READY -MIX .

ww•.w!

CONC 1ETE .

de livered r i gh t to your
pr oject. Fast and easy. Free

estima tes. Phon e 992-3284.
Goeglein Rea dy -Mi x Co .•
M iddleport, Ohio.

6-30-ll c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Ru ssell.

Fracas
. and
On Fuddle
were
fiqhtin£l

Owner and Opera lor .

5-12-ll c
C. BRADFORD, Avcliorreer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine. Ohio
Crill Bradford
5:1 -tlc

over

v-·. _

front end service , tune up and

·;

------

AND IF YE DID, IT WoUlDii'T
V/Of/RY YE A BIT, PAUL
REVERE! WELL,COME ll'i
BEFoRE THE HIGHT CHILlS
SfHDS US All TO BED
WITH THE AGUE!

..J()HMN'1 ADAW~o! HE'S A

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYST EM S
CLEANED,
REPAIRED .
MILLER SANITATION ,
STEWART. OHIO. PH . 6623035.

FIH~ 'TRU5T~Y MAM, AHD
ACQOAI~TfD WITH THE LAW! A

SIT TESTY PtiRHAPS, BUT

UHDERMEATH A KIND

100!

~

1 0 - ~· tlc

ACllOSS
1. Undeniable
5. Instruct
En-•
groued
U.Somewhat
lS. Theater
group
•If, Raiment
15. Aviary
sound
16. Original
sinner

Service. We Sharpen Scissors .

3-29-tl c
WILL TRIM or cui )rees or
shrubbery. Also pdrnl roofs .
:
Phone 949-3221.
6-13-JOtc
WILKINSON Small · Eng ine
Sales and Servl.ce, 8iO 3rd St.,
Middl eport. Lawn mowe r and

RECOGNIZE YOU
FRIENO?

chain saw repair . Free pickup

and dell verv . Phone 992-3092.
Also Briggs and Stratton and
Tecumseh parts.

17.-

Chaney
18. Board a
sleeper
20. Perfanned
21. - de
combat
22. English

6-21 -30tc
FOR FREE estimates on
alum inum siding . Storn Doors
and Windows , Carport!, ,
Marquees and Railing , Phone

Chades lisle, Syracuse, Ohio .
Carl Ja cob. Sales Rep resentative . V. V. Johnson
and Son, ·lnc .
6-22-llc
OPEN = - eR&lt;rger Hysell' s
Garage near ~ rossroads on 51.
Rt. 124 ; all mec hani cal' work
Incl uding
aut .
tran smission . Monday -Friday,
8:30a.m . to 5 p.m. Sat urda)
- 8:30to 12 noon - unless b)
appointment . Phone 992 -568:
or 992-7121.
6-27-30!1 .

composer

23.Coneh

L..________
AMANDA PANDA

r-·----.,

- ATORTOI~£

. .------....,__,,.

It? A TuRTLE.
THAi L.IVtS ON

Ti-le LANO'......_&gt;

LOOK !

. ':::'
1-ttR~S
A 60PH£R TOf\TOiSE
V'I661NG IN THE
&lt;t;AN!:'-'

:0-:.
.

Automatl&lt;:s
2 speed pperallon .
Choice · of w"ater
tern ps .
Au to .
water
l eve r
con t ro l ,
Li nt
F II fer or · Pow er
Fi n Agitator .
Pertna: Pr•n
Maytag
HIIO ol Hill

,. '

Dryer&amp;

1

Surround cloth es
~flh genfla, evan
h. eat . No hOI SpO fi ,
no
overdr'Ying .

r.t ne

Mesh

CAPTAIN Et.SY

.

.

\

i

length
(2 wds.)
3. Fashionable
(hyph.
wd.)
t , Greek
letter
5.Aiamo

Jlt!lJM®~;-~:::~.-~c
loviiiNIII/\I'NIIIl&gt;

FURNITURE~~~~.!;:·'

com-

Yesterday's Answer
19. Function
29. Greek
22. One of
island
Athena's
30. Un·
titles
earthly
23. !..adder
31. Lynn
or
like
24. llalai
Dora
Lama,
36. - Holm
for one
("I, a
(2 wda.)
Woman"
25. 14 DOgs"
' author)
27. Fllm clas- 31. "In the
sic,"spring,

mander
6. Con·
sumed
7. Bar figure
(abbr.)
8. Hellman's
play;
"The - "
(2 wds. )
9.Female
lead
1.2. Give
payment
16. British
title

Horn"

IJASSY

~

] () .[J

- 1a ... ."

I

· ONAIJIJO .

I

MO'ST OF ~li MONEY
iAKEiN IN A"T THE
C.I~U~ WA'5 iH16.

Now U'l'allft I he t In led Ietten

v-'1 I to form the aurprlu anowtr, u
~;;=l;.A~::;-L._;UD..;;;;~_,:·u~n::"lod b7the abcn-t cortoon.

,.......+--+---1

V '\I

.I ~.::a-::' I THE bI 1 I )' D t l I I X )
(Aoowen tota•_,•,.•·•)

Ju.,hlc" SIEGE MUSIC DAINTY fLIMST
S•lurdlf•

Anow"' May helppromalepodfeellnf-MID1CINI

DOWN
1. Vest11e

,.

h.----.-----------------',~----------~~~~~~

' " I !I &lt;Ofll l f

Unscramble theae four Jumblea,
one letter to ·uch square, to
form four ordinary words.

to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
It I.ONGFELLOW
'
One letter simply stands lor .another. In this sample A is
. used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes , the length and formation of ·the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters arc different.

MAYTAO

Rutland

.

I

25.Scotr
26. Arrive
27. Ado:
lescent
28. MacGraw
29, Folded
32. Waterfall
(Scot.)
33. Hairpiece
34. Hawaiian
game
35. Enter- ·
tal ned
37. Law of
Moseo
38•. Ostrich or
ernu ,
31. Destruc·
tlon ·
to. Not on
your
llfel
U . Length x
width -

2. Spoke"'

• DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

Llh l

Fi ller .
·
Wo Spec lallu In

Arnold Grate.

Ye1ler4Q'1 Ceyploquote: EVERYTHING IN THE PAST
DIED YESTERDAY; EVEJ\YTHING IN THE FUTURE WAS : .
, BORN TODAY.-CHINmll PROVBRB
·
. ·' · :
(C) 1171 Klncl'ealll,.. SJndl&lt;~to, Joe.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SE WiNG MACHINES. Repair
se rvice. all makes. 992 -2284. ,
The Fabric Shop. Pom eroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales and

Maytag

741 -4~11

~

brake service.
Wheel o
balanced electronically . All
work guaranteed. Reasonable
rales . Phone 742-3232.
2-18-lfc

Big Capo city

RUTLAND

, _9

O'DELl WHEEL Alignment
loca led at Crossroads. Rt . 12~.
now back to work. Complete

Gro_cery Store, on Mulberry Ave ., doing a fine
bustness, for lease . Ideal for young couple who
want to go into business for themselves.
Contact if interested ;
.
·
.

Real Estate Broker
Bu 101 - Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 98$-4186

EVIDENCe NSAIN&lt;;J'
TliE GOOfA'l\lE~ 7

Phone 742-6271

r

S•.HOBSTETTER JR.

HE JUST IIIN11i:17 NE.
HCliiiC '10 MEET 1116
~I.'I.

• Estimates
For

· REAl. ESTATE

GEOR~E

GETTI~
w~pm= .

'ABJ..E '10 GET niE

GOING, PE'fi&gt;Cn\IE
AAZARc:&gt;

1-lE.'S Lt V£D
WIT~ ONE: !=OR
YEARS!

HE'S

t!EEN

.

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
$99.95

· WANTED .
Pomeroy Carrier

.- CAMPUS CLATIER

'ISS, BUT I jHINK
HillE, ...a.!

Roofing, ·spouting,
Home Remodeling

core,

SMITH NELSON
.MfJTORS. INC.

w::NI 115 'IW ll
UN()EIZCOVER
A%10NMENT

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

Nathan BiQ!IS
Radi.-tor Speciaiisl

For Sale
Spe~i•list
an d sink, family room . Call
RATES
---------------AKC
Toy
Poodl
e
puppies,
$75
Wheel
99B790.
For Want Ad Service
7-8-Jtc
aod $85. Also Siamese kittens
5 ce nts per Word one in$ertion NO. 1 Copper 54&lt;. radiators. NEW MOD ER N. 2-plece liv ing
Alignment
$10. Ph on~ 1-256-6247, Kennels
room suite. Choice of nylon or - - - ' - - - - - - - 28c; brass, 20c ; batteries, 85c
M lnl.rnum C "~rge 75c
of Calhoun .
12 cents per wor d th.r ee
herculon while they last . Only · GAS furna ce with blower .
eacn; d ean drY roo ts, G!n·
It Must
consec utive inser tions. .
Sl54 .95 Cash &amp; Carry.
e lectric cou nter -top range.
6-24-JOtc
seng, SS2 lb.; yellow root. S~ ;
18 cents per ·word six · con ·
Be
Right
Pomeroy
Recovery,
622
E.
and
oven.
Ca
ll
992-2377.
.
mayapple, 4Sc per ·tb. ; M. A.
secut ive inser t io ns .
POODLE puppies. Toy A.K.C .,
or we will
Ma
in
Street.
Phone
992-7554.
7-8-3tc
Hall,
Reedsville
,
Ohio,
378NOTICE OF
25 Per Cent Dis co unt on paid
Chocolat e - Show quality.
7-S-6tc
M•ke It Right.
SHERIFF'S SALE
6249.
ads and ads pa id within 10 days .
In pursuance w ith an Order-of
Phone 992 · 5 ~43 .
250 GALLON fuel oil tank with
5·6-llc
CARD OF THANKS .
Sitt·e On Partit ion issued out Of
3 BEDROOM house, lull
5·23-llc'
approximately 50 gallons of
&amp; OBITUARY
-----------the Court of Common Pleas ol
basement. Mason . Ca ll 773· oil in it. On stand, for $35. 1966
S1 .50 tor 50 wo~d minimum .
Meigs County , Oh io, in the case
KEWPIE dolls and anything
Each add itional word 2c .
5489.
Oldsmobile Delta -88, A· l Mobile Homes For 'Sale
of James H. Smith, Plaintiff , vs .
else related to Kewples. Al so,
8. 4:30 Daily, 8-11 Sat.
BLIND
ADS
7-5-6tc
condition
. Call 9~9 - 2951.
George L . Smith, et al.,
Additiona l 25c Chargt- per
old
postcards
in
good
conIn
lhe
R. H. Rawlings Sons
7-8-Jtc 55 x 10 3 BE DROOM. 308 Page
Defendants, being Case No. Advert isement.
dillon , write and describe
Building .
15 .1 82 in said Court , I w i ll offer
Slree
t,
·992-3509.
.
OFFICE HOURS
Items a lso pr ice wanted . NOW OPEN . P. and J . Odds and ONE MAYTAG wringer washer
at public auction at the front
Middleport. D.
7-6-tlc 991-2101
8: 30a . m. to 5:00p.m . Dally ,
Alyce Schneider, 145 South
door . of the Court House of 8 :30 tt . m . to 12 :00 Noon
Ends , Gl.orll ied junk , ap .
good
cond
ition.
$20.
One
in
Kanawha , Buckhannon , W.
Meigs County . Pomeroy . Ohio , Saturday .
pliances, furniture . 215 North
REFRIGERATOR Repair, Alrblack and white fabl e model
on the 12th day of July•at 10 :00
Air Conditioners
Va . 26201.
·conditioning,
Second,'
Middleport.
Heating ,
TV
in
good
con
dition,
$25
.
One
a .m. the fo llowing described
7-8·301p
6-29-JOtc
Awnings
Electrical
Repair ,
coal heater S20. Mrs. E. E.
real estate , to -wit :
Resi dential or commercial.
Planlz, Storys Run Roa d,
Situated in the Township of In Memorv
Underpinning
WANTEO - Used merchandise STARCRAFT 18 11 . 7 in. lhru 24
a
uto air-conditioning, 266 Mill
Orange, Cl;)unty of Meigs and
Cheshire, Ohio. Phone 992·
- lor auction . W~ buy, We
'
State of Ohio :
Slreet 992-3509.
IN LOVING memory of our
6586
Comp
lete
mobil
e
home
II. 7 in. !ravel frailer. self.
·
Being part of Fractions Nos.
sell , whole houseful or single
6-29 -30tc
1.8.61 p serv i ce - plu s g igantic
dear husband. lather and
33, 3A, and 24, Sections 27 and 28 ,
contained
from
$825
.00
lo
pieces
,
cons
ignm
ent
or
Grandfather,
James
0
.
Clark,
Township 4 and Range 12 of the
percentage. We wil l haul.
$1,050.00 discount. Fold-down . CO BBLER potatoes . Clar.a display ol mobi le homes
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
who passed away July 9. 1972 .
Ohio Company's Purcl'1ase , in
always availa bl e at ..
Phone
992-3354.
Hayman's.
campers.
also
.
II
will
pay
you
Boso.
Great
Bend.
Phone
843·
and small ; Backhoes and
Although he may be gone.
Orange
Township ,
Meigs
lo check our prices at CAMP
6-5-30ic
loa ders on track and tires;
2494 .
Cotlnty , Ohio, beginn ing at the
many a silent heartache and
CONLEY
STARCRAFT
MILLER
Dump truc ks Lo -boy
northeast corne r of FractiOn
7-8-Jip
often a hidden tear. But
SA
LES,
Route
62, N. of Point
No . 33, and running thence
se
rv
ice.
Septic
t
ank
S" in OLD
furniture,
oak
tables
,
always a beautiful memory of
-------Pleasant, behind Red Carpet sou th 23 rods ; then·c;:e west 16
stalled . George (Bill) Pullins,
1971
3-QUARTE
R
ton
pickup
v.
MOBILE
HOMES
clocks.
Ice
boxes.
brass
beds,
one we loved so dear. Sadly
rods ; thence south lS:Jf• rod s;
Inn . Phooe 675 -5384.
phone 992-2478 or 992-7402.
dishes
or
complete
8 with a 1;71 truck camper or
missed by wile Ethel. son and
thence south 62 degr.ees west
7-S-4tc
1220
Washington
Blyd.
2·9· tic
hou
seholds
.
Wrlle
M.
D.
I
will
se
ll
separate.
Phone
992daughter and step-davgbters .
J7 ·3/4 rods '; thence south 66
Miller, Rl. 4; Pomer oy. Oh io.
.
7-9-1tp
5544, 1 Richard
Jar vis, -- 423-7511
BELPRE, 0 .
degrees west 16 rods; thence
HARRISON'S TV service and
north 2 rods : thence west 48
Syra cuse,
'
call 992·6271.
rods to the center of the creek ;
5-JJ .tfc
JUST ARRIV .ED
7-8·3lc 'CASH paid lor. all makes and· se rvice calls . Phone 992 -25n.
th ence north 62 degrees east u·p Notice
2-9- tlc
NEW
SHIPMENT
mode ls of m obil e home s.
sa ld creek 51 rods ; thence north PORCH Sale, 5th Street,
HAY
for
sale
.
Call
843-2963.
10 degrees west along sa id
Phone area code 614-423,9531. · DOZER' and ba ck hge wo;k,
Racine, across from Baptist Wanted
7-8-Jtc
creek 16 rods ; thence north 70
_ _ _ _ _ _'7"_
_.!;4·_!;13!.::~t!!fsc
ponds and septic lanks, ditchChurch
from
J
uly
9
to
the
------·-----degre~ s west follow i ng the
ing
serv ice ; top soiL fill dirt,
13th. Lots of clothing some A RIDE to Gallipolis between 6
STE R~O - radio ta pe com·
creek 21 rods ; thence north 42
l
imestone
i B&amp;K Excavatina .
rods to the road ; thence n·o rth 59
new . Ivan Powell Residence.
bi
nation
l
am
-fm
r
ad
io,
8
track
a .m. and leave around 4:30. II
Real Estate For 5ale
degrees east following the road
Phone
992-5367
or 992-3861.
tape
Monda y thr u Friday.
player/
4
way
speaker
going that way, please call
As Low As
22 rods ; thence north 27 d·egrees
so und
7-8-Jtc
sys tem .
Balance NEW 3 bedroom, all -electric
992-2868
anytime
.
9cftfc
west 47 rod s to what was for·$109.59,
or
use
Dur
budge!
home
w
ith
one
car
garage
and
,7-6-Jtp
merly Fox es l ine ; thenc;eeast 32
Other sizes also available.
terms. Call 992-3965 .
one acre of ground, on · ELN·A and Wh ile Sewi ng
rods ; then..c e south 39 degrees THE OPENING date lor the - - -- - See them today .
7-8-6ft
Flatwoods road. Phone 992·
Machines .. . Service on all
east 57 rods aJong what was
Village Fabric Shop will be
formerly Foxes tine ; thence
-----Monday, Jvly 9. Completely Help Wanted
2735.
inakes . Reasonable rates.
north 42 degrees east 20 rod s;
10 H.P. ALLIS Chalmers lrador
7-3-6tp
he Sewin g Center , Mid ·
remodeled and a wide BABYSITTER 'In my home
'1'. _
POMEROY
thehce .n orth 12 rods ; thence
with law nmower and b lade . ---~-----eport, Ohio.
·
selection
of
Fabrics
and
lf!!iilll
Ja~k
W.
Carsey,
Mgr
.
.
from
6
a.m.
to~
p.m.
Monday
r'!O( ttJ 3'1 degrees east 32 rods ;
Contact
Marvin
Keebaugh,
11· 16·1k
accessories,
is
located
riexf
Phctne
992-2181
th ence north 7 degrees ·east 56
through Friday. Live In or
days 992-5342 ~ after 7 p.m .
door to the post Qftice In
rods ; the nce north 45 V~ degrees
402 W. Main, Apt. J.
985-3913.
RON SHEPARD. Floor ; Wall
Tuooers Pla ins. Owned and · out.
east 21 rods; then ce north 38
Pomeroy , Oh io.
1964 4-wheel drive. '.io ton pick·
Remodeling , Ceramic tile
7-8-Jtc
operated b~ Mr . and Mrs . _ _ _ _ __ _ _
degrees east lO rods ; thence
7-3-6tp
up , good tires. Mechani.cally
baths. Box..28 D, Rutland 742·
north 65 degrees east 5 1h rods :
Ralph Brooks.
good . $895.0(1. Phone 985-3554,
3664.
thence south 50 rods to,the nortl'l
7-6-3tp
line of Fraction 24; tt1ence east 5 - - - - - ' - - -- Harold Brewer , Long Bottom.
6-26-tlc
rods ; thence south 135 rods to
Oh io.
DELIVERY DRIVER
TOMATOES, cucumbers. green
the south tine of said Fraction DEAD STOCK, horses, cattle.
6-29-llc . pe ppers . Cleland Farms.
hogs , sheep, reasonable
AUTOMOBILE insurance be~n ·
24 ; then ce west 19 rods ; thence
charge. Call 245·5514.
Geraldine
Cleland,
Racine
.
north 32 degrees ·west 20 rods ;
cance lled?
L os t
your
101h FT. Nimr od True~ Cam thence north 67 degrees west
6-26-30tc
operator's ·license. Call 992·
7-8·11&lt;
per. Sell -conta ined Intercom ,
l 6 lf'l rvds ,- th ence "south 23 rods
7428.
nice condition,d' acks and hold
to the place of beginning , YARD Sale, Thursday, Friday,
Full
or
Part
Time
6-15· ~~ ~
Real Estate For Sale
containing 115 a cres, more or
NEW LISTING
downs in cl u ed . $995 .00 .
and
SaturdaX•
9
a.m.
till
S
less , except ing the following
Phon e 975-3 554 , Harold MODERN 6 roo m 1 floor plan SYRACUSE Modern 3 CONCRETE
WORK:
p.m. 297 Mrll Street, Mid·
No experience necessary.
parts thereof : Beginn ing at th e
Brewer.
Long
Bottom,
Ohio.
bedroom
home.
with
large
home
with
detachable
driveways,
sidewalks,
steps,·
dleport
.
Must
have
car
and
be
willing
.
northwest corne r of land deeded
6-2Hfc garage. All newly pal~ted . closets. Nice bath, ki tchen with
etc . Call 992,3453.
·
·
7-9-Jtc
to Michal Wody by John A .
to learn.
Located on nice level lot 50' x stove and refrigerator . Asking
Smith and running in· a south ·
6-28
-12tcp
1
1968 FORD / 2 ton pick -up . 6 120' at 619 Page
.
westerly dl r'ec t ion along Isaac
Mid· $17,500.00.
cyli
nder
.
3
speed.
1795.00.
Keebaugh's east line 15th rods
~rd of Thanks
dleport,
Ohio.
For
furth
er
NEW
LISTING
Mon. thru Fri .
to a pos t in the road ; thence jn a
Harold Brewer . Phone 985- details, contact Dav id R. LOOK AT THIS - Nearly new
Real Estate For Sale
southeastertv direction 14 rods TO YOU who remembered us on
Ca II 9-8, 446-0677
355~. Long Boltom, Ohio .
Yates , 23 Grandview Road, .2 bedroom home. Ni ce bath,
to a post on Wody 's west line 19
our golden wedding an ·
6-29-lfc
Cambridge; Ohio, 43725 or re frig erator , stove and most of 4 BEDROOM house, 2 baths,
MR. VANCE
rods south from the place of
river frontage , Syracuse.
niversary
with
gilts
and
Phone 992-3904.
beginning ; thence north 19 rods
the furniture . Carport and
Phone 992-2360.
cards,
we
extend
our
sincere
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
t o the pla ce of beginn i ng ,
-=========6=
·=
1
5=t
:..
fc.,
large
river
front
lot
.
At
only
6-27-tlc
thanks
for
makina
this
tim
e
in
containing 130 rods, more or
Name Brand Wigs . Special ,·
$10,500.00.
our Jives so very special. Mr . PART-TIME waitress wanted.
less, being a part of Fraction
sale prices during month of
Blue Tartaln. Day and night
INVESTMENT
and Mr s. t-~hil Meinhart,
No . 34, convey ed by Hugh Wiley
7 ROOM house with bath lri
July . Phone Hel en Jane
shift. Call \1'12 -9941.
3
RENTALS
- Income $193.00
and Hul dah Wiley , his wife, to
Pomeroy .
Rutland, air conditioned ,
Brown
,
992-5113.
7-6-3tc
Michael Wody by deed dated
a
month
.
One
Apartment
7-9-llc
carpeted,
gas furnace, dish6-29-tlc
Au.gust 12, 185l.and recorded in
fu rnished. Want just $10,000. 00
washer, double oven, range,
Book 15, Page 155, of the De~d
lor this bargain.
double garage, large carport,
Records of Meigs County, Ohio ,
12,000
BTU
Air-Condilioner
for
Notice
BUILDING ACREAGE
4 acres cleared and fenced,
also beg inn ing at the .n orthwest
sale. Jus! a year old. Ph one
117 ACRES small barn and other
corner of George Gaul ' s farm to SALE AT log Cabin, Bigley.
2
Ready
lor
247-2684.
the m lddl e of Sh ade Creek ;
·,o8
buildings. Phone 614-742-6834.
building . About . one hall
Ridge Road from Keno to
7-3-tfc
thence north 89 degrees eaSt 39
5-30-tfc
E.
MAIN._
_
_
_,
Long
Bottom,
signs
at
248
and
cleared.
Asking
only
$5,000.00.
rods and 17 l in ks; the nce north
- - - - - - -Long
Bottom
.
Some
antiques.
POMEROY
85 degrees east 16 rods and 10
POMEROY
10 x50 RITZ -CRAFT Mobile
bottles, dishes. clothes.
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas HOUSE for sale by owner, 3
link s to a stone ; thence nort-h 63
Home, 1965. $2,395. Ph . 8~3radios, lewelry.
degrees east 12 rod s and 3 links
furnace, full basement and
bedrooms, new furnace roof
SYRACUSE
2158.
7-9-41p
to
James
and
Nancy
and
wiring . Wall - t~ - wad
porch
.
large
lot
lor
on
ly
Ni ce 1'h story fram e. 3
Keebaugl'1's land ; thence north - - -- - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_::
1·3-6tc bedrooms',
carpeting, large lot, carport.
$7500.00.
ba
th
,
fu
ll
J8 1f,, degrees west 26 rods to the YARD SALE. 692 Plum St.,
look for. iron fence In front
POMEROY
mldd(e or Shade Creek ; then ce
basement with new forced
across from Middleport
and
pine trees In side yard.
GROCERY
business
lor
sa
le.
2 ' BEDROOMS - Nic e older
down Shade Creek to the pla ce
Sentinel
a ir gas furna ce. Larg e
Swimming Pool, Tuesday, .
Contact Mr . Eldon Walburn
of beg inn ing, containing 5112
Build ing for sal e or lease .
home. has nice k itc hen, side
Wednesday and Thursday.
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy'
acres, in Fraction No . 33,
Phone 773-56181rom 8:30p.m.' fen ced lot . Good ne igh - and front porch , Aluminum
6-9-21c
borhood. JUST $5,800.00.
conveyed by A fbert Dean and
Oh
io. Phone 992-2805.
'
lo 10 p.m . lor appolnlmenl.
si ding . Ba sement, gas furn act .
Ella Dean to George Gaul by
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
6-13-tlc
3-20-tfc
Asking $15,000.00.
deed dated January 22, 1901,
A nice building lot or mobile
SYRACUSE
and recorded In Book 87 , al
home space. About 70x90. ON 124 - 2 bedrooms. bath,
Page 313, of t.he Deed Records
HANGING
Baskets,
gera
niums,
_
Sale
of Meigs County , Oh io, and
Lot s of trees, good neighMALE or female. pari-time, $84
ni ce kil chen. front and back.
begonias. double petun ias,
except also the graveyard lot,
borhood . $2,000.00 . .
a
week,
lull
-time,
SUO
a
week
.
.
porches. f ull basement and
pots
.
Cleland
combination
l eaving 1.07 .1 6 ' acres. more or FOR SALE, 17,000 BTU air
RUTLAND
Must have ca r . Phone
nice lot. $9,500.00.
Farm and Greenhouse. E.
l ess, befng 80 .5 0 acres in
cond it ioner, used one month
Monday lhrough Friday 10
1 m lie out . 1111 acre . Hou se 4 OUR M06EL HOME IS OPEN
Fr ac tloh 24, 22.50 acres in
Ma in, Rac ine. Geraldine
only . Call 742-4833 .
a .m. till 9 p.m. ~46- 0677,
Fra ction 33, and 4.16 acres In
Cleland .
years old . 4 bedrooms . Bath . EACH SAT URDAY AND
___:_
Fra ction 34
7-9-6tc
7-9-5tc
6-27-lfc
Nice kilchen. lots of cablnels SUNDAY FROM 1 to 5 P.M.
~
Referen ce : Volume 236, Page
For Sale

Stop In and See Our
Floor l?isp!ay .

Bulldorer Radl81or to the

MODERN
SANITATION

(

FURNITURE

From the iaroest Truck or
:;,manesr Heater

..-·f\ ( J'

and

EXPERIENCED
Jladlato
·Service

24 HOUR SERVICE

'(

DrfiCE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

SEPTIC tANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

I'D RUTHER
RECYCLE
MINE

992 -2094
Main Pomero_y

E.

606

Most Amorlcon Car•·

Open 8TIIS
Monday lhru Saturday
• 606 E. Ma in; Pomeroy. 0 .

FIDDLE·
DEE·DEE

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2094

949-3151
Racine, Ohio

J975.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

· On

1

JOHNSON'S T.V.

------

heaters . furniture , bottles ,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Color- $30.00
Black &amp; While - S1S.OO

EXCELS IOR Salt Works, E.
Main St.. Pomeroy. All kinds
TRA ILER. Brown ' s Trailer
of sa,tt water pellets, water
Park. Minersv ille. Ohio. 11'12·
nuggets, block salt and own
3324.
.
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992·
7-8-tlc
3891 .
3 AND· 4 ROOM f\Jrnlshed Md -~-------6~
- S-tlc
unlumished apar lm en ls. AKC Goldeo Retriever pup pies.
Phon~ 992·5•3•.
·
s~o , and one 7-monlh
4-12-llc Wel marn er pup SSO. (614) 742·
6834.
PRIVATE meeling room lor
6-21-tfc

Notice

EXPERT'
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Re tored AI Good As New
Right 4•t Your Home .
GuorAnleed lor 6 Mo.

--------

really sharp.
1910 PONTIAC
Sl19S
Flreblrd Esprit, local 1-owner car. l50 V·S engine, power
steering &amp; automatic tran smission . AM-FM radio , like
new whiteletlered !ires, 307 V-8, power steering &amp; brakes.

Business· Services
Ha•e your T.l/ . Picture Tu.,.

•

. SAIUIEY

CRYPTOQUOTES
DX

A Z.ll

.

YPFQS

CH

Z

REFOV

E W J EX C 0 V S X .

A.ZB ' UX CP JWO U
, - MXJE

XQRW

YFOO~' QS.I

FQ

D P Z GW 0
FQ

z·

DEW

D·E Z D

AEt'OW· .

'T~AT POOR C~ICKEN GAVE
~IS LIFE FOR. NOTHJN6! .

�Sentin'el Classified$ _Get A~tion! _S entinel Classifieds Get Results!
2SIGIS

Pomeroy

OF
QUALITY

Motor Co.

For S.lt

Wan led

MEAT CUTTER, No phone 1973 - Ztg Zag sewl!)Q machine.
coils. 0 &amp; 0 Meats, Pomeroy. This machine - darns, em ·
o.
. ·
_ broiders, .overcasts. button
· 7.J,6fc holes . All without a t- - - - - - - - - - ~ tachmenls. Poy balance of
$38.50 or pay S5 per monlh.
Coli 11'12·533 I.
For Rent
6-10-llc
HOUSE . 3 bedroom un . - - - - - - - - - furnished. porch and yard. REDUC E exQlss flu ids with
Call 992-2780 or 11'12-3132 .
Fluldex, Lose weight with
..:.,.__
7-8-tlc
Dex-A-Dief capsu les al
Nelson
Drvgs.
3 BEDROOM p,, blllh mobile
J.9-3tp
home , 308 P~ge Street, 11'12·

LADIES
11 lo 15 hours per week . You
chooie hou rs . Ple-a·sa nt,
profilable customer servicenear home. Write Personal

S1lt5
1912 NOVA " 6"
•·door. local !-owner •.light green finish. good !ires.
automatic transmission , power steering , radio, real
e.:onomy.

_____

SMpper Oep•rtmenl, Box
10. Watkin&gt; Product$, Inc.,
Winona, Minnesota 55981.

1971 FORO
S20t5
Torino 500 H.J . Cpe,, 1 owner car less than 33,000 miles.
brown fini sh with mat~hi ng vlnyl roof &amp; vinyl In terior, 302
V-8 engine. std. trans .• power steering &amp; brakes, radio,

---------7-8-lfc

3509.

YARD SALE - 10-lnch table
saw. Craftsman Gig Saw, 7'1&gt;
horsepower , Scott Atwater
Outboard Motor . S gas

rftdlo, clean interior .

other Items too numerous to
menlon. July 13 and 14, 8 a.m.
1111 dark . Lin Hart's Trailer.
Vine Street, R.aclne.
7-6-6tc

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

any organization ; phone 992-

PUBLIC NOnCES
Your Right to Know
and Ue informed of the fun c f ion$'10f yoUr gove rnm ent are
embodied In publ ic noric_es . In,
1th-al s~lf - go vernmen_ t chA rg es
all ci t izens to be 1n form ed :
this new~paper wges every
1
Ci tl zen to read ancf$fU: dY the se
•nOtices.' We strorrg ly ad vise
those ci tt~ ns , seeking further
information , to exercise tMir
:r ight ol access to pu bli c
•re. ~:; ords and pub lic me_etings .

· Found

5 P.M.__Day Before Publlcallon . GIRL'S 1971 High School class
rlng,ldentlly by Initial. Found
Monnay Dead line 9 a. m .
Cancell at ion Correction s
In Middleport. Phone 992-5524.
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
7-8-Jtc
·Da"jl of Publication

REGULATIONS

3·11 -tfc ' COBBLER pota toes. · Clara
Boso. Great Bend . Ph one 843·
24 4
S\~o~:t,~GP~:~~:eR~~:;:'~~:
9.
, requi red. Ca ll 992 .5293 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7__:·8·31 P
7-6-tlc 5 ROOM house. bath and
basement. gas heat. 2 lois. S.
MOBILE home space In D. Buski rk, Middleport .
Syracuse. Phone 992-6329.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7·_8-3tp
6-21-tlc
STARCRAFT ca mper , sleeps~.

--------~

---------

The. Publish-er res erves the
right to edi t or reject any ads
deemed
obiec tionllt.
The
publ isher w ill not be responsib le
tor more than one incor r ect WANT EO TO bu y old fur niture .
insertion .
6·29·12tc .

Want11t1 To Buy

JOHN TUCKER
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
. 992-3954

Ph.'9Y2-2174

Pomeroy

laid-down ,

stove,

refrioeralor

Pets

.

- - - -----

$3.57 hour

sr:.-

------

- - -- --

The

Daily

992-2156

For

We talk

_____

757, and Volume 236, Page 759,
Deed . Re cords , Meigs Cou nty, 1966 OLDSMOBILE st atio n
Ohio
wagon in good condition .
Appraised \la rue is S6,000 .00 .
Phone 992-2936.
Te-rms of sale : Cash In hand
- 7-9-Jtc
upon deli very ot deed .
Robert C. H.artenbach,
Sheri ff of. Meigs County,
Pom eroy, Oh io.

161 II . )8. 25 171 2. 9, 5tc

Real Estate· For Sille
TWO YEAR-OLD ranch type
h~me, 3 bedrooms, lot~ of
closets, nice bath and kitchen
with electric stOve. new
c~rpet.

3679.

100x100 lot . Call 9927-9-Stc
I

The Almanac

WANTED
Syracuse Carrier

1961 MERCURY good except
needs m otor . $95 . Sec at
Sawmill on Road 19 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_::·6·31&lt;
ONE 7200 acre lot lor sa le. 60 AC
a ll -cr op

Har ves t er.

also .

Phone 742 -3656.

NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION

T o Dinah Jean Welctt :
You are hereby notified .that
on the 22nd day of June, 1973,
Fle tcf'l er R . Welch and Anna
Bell Wel ch, address ! Bo~~:· 101,
Rutli!lnd , Ohio , f i l ed th ei r
pet itioJl In t he Court of Common
Pl eas, Prob ate Div ision, Me igs
CotJnty, Ohio, for leave to adopt
Tony Leon Wel ch, a minor . an d
atreg lng that said Dinah Jean
Welc h, th e mother of said ch il d,
haS willfully fa i led to properly .
support and ma lnt.s in said chil d
tor a p eri od Of more than two
year s immediately preceding
th e filing of thi s petit ion : and
that th e hearing of nld petit ion
and examination . under oalh, of
all the parties In In tere st who
may be present, will be had
before sa id Cour t on the lOth
day of Augu$f, 19?3, at 10 o'clock.

By Uniled'Preos Inlernallonal
Today Is Monday, July 9, the
-!90th day of 1973 with 175 .to
. follow .
The moon is between.its first
A.M.
.
quarter and full phase.
MANNING D. WEB STER ,
· The morning stars are Mars,
Judg e,
Jupiter and Saturn.
· Co mmon Pleas Court.
Proba t e Div ision,
The evening stars are MerMeigs Cou nty , Ohio .
cury and Venus.
161 25 Ill 2; 9, lie

The

Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2156

7-6·241p
ONE 3 year old Regi stered
Black Angus Bull. Ca ll 7426675.
7-6-6tc

-..,------

1972 HONDA SL70, good condillon . S250. Phone 742-6878.
- - - - - - - - - - 7-6-Jip

Dick's Haard House
-"STRIPPERS"
We Strip Paint, Varnishes, Etc. From Furniture.
. ANTIQUES-MODERN-METALS
No Ruinous Lyes or Caustics Used
PICK-UP SERVICE AVAILABLE
Dick Sey ler-Owner

K·err Sl r~pt

Phon e 992-2798

Pomeroy, Ohio

&amp; rang e. Large din ing area .
Storm doors and windows .

$16,900.00.
NEE OS SOME WORK
MiQdl eport . 3 bedroom s.

Balh . Utllily room . On a
good st reel. Lots of work
been done on th is proper ly .
WANTED
1 story . 3 bed room hom es.
Not too old. From $17, 000.00
up . INO MODULAR S OR
PRE-CUTS!
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
912-1259
,____"_n_o_• ..n_s_w
_e_r_9_92-·2_S_6_8_..J

to you

like perS«m.

THE SALES FORC E HAS
BEEN SO ACTIVE LATELY,
THAT WE ARE IN NEED OF
LI ST IN GS,
OF
GOOD
HOU SES AND FARMS . 100
ACRES OR MORE . CAL L OR
COME IN AND WE'LL BE
HAPPY' TO TALK ABOUT
SE LLING YOUR PROPERTIES. WHA T WE WILL DO,
AND WHA T IT WILL COST
YO U..

"1

.

LET US HELP YOU
.Roofing .

AN'ASFO'

\Nil= SI&lt;DNK
HOLLDWERS!! .

Roof Painting,

Spouting ,

/"Plumbing ,

MANGL.IN' IS

Re modeling. Complete
Building, Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

M~LIKEtT-

cu;_T'UP.E COMPAAED

TO THEM
EV!:'i-.1
15 .

WE

CULTUP.ED.('

Siding.

PHONE : 991-2550

ALL-WEATHER
·N. 1nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 .

FURNITURE Stripping and
Refinishing . Abraham 's
Antiques, 132 Fayette Street,
Nelsonv ille, Ohio. Phone 753-

1302.

WINNI)': WINKLE

.

MIINO! WILt.

7-3·30tc

NOT UNTil. YOU
CONSENT lOGO
Ol!T WIT11 ME .

YOU PLeASE.

LEAVE. ME.
ALONE?

EXCAVA"I lr'i u , dozer , 1oader
and backh oe work ; sept ic
tanks installed ; dump tr ucks

HMM ... I THINK I!VE. FINALLY
HIT ON A OCHEME. TO GET
RID OF 'TH IS V/OULJ? ·BE -c.-"-'4"'
CA&amp;ANO\IA ONCE:

AND FOR ALL.

and to-boys lor hire ; will haul
fill dirt. top soi l. limes tone
and grave.l i Ca.ll Bob··or Roger
Jeffe rs, day phone 992-7089 ;
nigh! phone 992·3525 or 9925232.

.

2-11-ttc-

·WMPO!l390
ON YOUR DIAL

READY -MIX .

ww•.w!

CONC 1ETE .

de livered r i gh t to your
pr oject. Fast and easy. Free

estima tes. Phon e 992-3284.
Goeglein Rea dy -Mi x Co .•
M iddleport, Ohio.

6-30-ll c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Ru ssell.

Fracas
. and
On Fuddle
were
fiqhtin£l

Owner and Opera lor .

5-12-ll c
C. BRADFORD, Avcliorreer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine. Ohio
Crill Bradford
5:1 -tlc

over

v-·. _

front end service , tune up and

·;

------

AND IF YE DID, IT WoUlDii'T
V/Of/RY YE A BIT, PAUL
REVERE! WELL,COME ll'i
BEFoRE THE HIGHT CHILlS
SfHDS US All TO BED
WITH THE AGUE!

..J()HMN'1 ADAW~o! HE'S A

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYST EM S
CLEANED,
REPAIRED .
MILLER SANITATION ,
STEWART. OHIO. PH . 6623035.

FIH~ 'TRU5T~Y MAM, AHD
ACQOAI~TfD WITH THE LAW! A

SIT TESTY PtiRHAPS, BUT

UHDERMEATH A KIND

100!

~

1 0 - ~· tlc

ACllOSS
1. Undeniable
5. Instruct
En-•
groued
U.Somewhat
lS. Theater
group
•If, Raiment
15. Aviary
sound
16. Original
sinner

Service. We Sharpen Scissors .

3-29-tl c
WILL TRIM or cui )rees or
shrubbery. Also pdrnl roofs .
:
Phone 949-3221.
6-13-JOtc
WILKINSON Small · Eng ine
Sales and Servl.ce, 8iO 3rd St.,
Middl eport. Lawn mowe r and

RECOGNIZE YOU
FRIENO?

chain saw repair . Free pickup

and dell verv . Phone 992-3092.
Also Briggs and Stratton and
Tecumseh parts.

17.-

Chaney
18. Board a
sleeper
20. Perfanned
21. - de
combat
22. English

6-21 -30tc
FOR FREE estimates on
alum inum siding . Storn Doors
and Windows , Carport!, ,
Marquees and Railing , Phone

Chades lisle, Syracuse, Ohio .
Carl Ja cob. Sales Rep resentative . V. V. Johnson
and Son, ·lnc .
6-22-llc
OPEN = - eR&lt;rger Hysell' s
Garage near ~ rossroads on 51.
Rt. 124 ; all mec hani cal' work
Incl uding
aut .
tran smission . Monday -Friday,
8:30a.m . to 5 p.m. Sat urda)
- 8:30to 12 noon - unless b)
appointment . Phone 992 -568:
or 992-7121.
6-27-30!1 .

composer

23.Coneh

L..________
AMANDA PANDA

r-·----.,

- ATORTOI~£

. .------....,__,,.

It? A TuRTLE.
THAi L.IVtS ON

Ti-le LANO'......_&gt;

LOOK !

. ':::'
1-ttR~S
A 60PH£R TOf\TOiSE
V'I661NG IN THE
&lt;t;AN!:'-'

:0-:.
.

Automatl&lt;:s
2 speed pperallon .
Choice · of w"ater
tern ps .
Au to .
water
l eve r
con t ro l ,
Li nt
F II fer or · Pow er
Fi n Agitator .
Pertna: Pr•n
Maytag
HIIO ol Hill

,. '

Dryer&amp;

1

Surround cloth es
~flh genfla, evan
h. eat . No hOI SpO fi ,
no
overdr'Ying .

r.t ne

Mesh

CAPTAIN Et.SY

.

.

\

i

length
(2 wds.)
3. Fashionable
(hyph.
wd.)
t , Greek
letter
5.Aiamo

Jlt!lJM®~;-~:::~.-~c
loviiiNIII/\I'NIIIl&gt;

FURNITURE~~~~.!;:·'

com-

Yesterday's Answer
19. Function
29. Greek
22. One of
island
Athena's
30. Un·
titles
earthly
23. !..adder
31. Lynn
or
like
24. llalai
Dora
Lama,
36. - Holm
for one
("I, a
(2 wda.)
Woman"
25. 14 DOgs"
' author)
27. Fllm clas- 31. "In the
sic,"spring,

mander
6. Con·
sumed
7. Bar figure
(abbr.)
8. Hellman's
play;
"The - "
(2 wds. )
9.Female
lead
1.2. Give
payment
16. British
title

Horn"

IJASSY

~

] () .[J

- 1a ... ."

I

· ONAIJIJO .

I

MO'ST OF ~li MONEY
iAKEiN IN A"T THE
C.I~U~ WA'5 iH16.

Now U'l'allft I he t In led Ietten

v-'1 I to form the aurprlu anowtr, u
~;;=l;.A~::;-L._;UD..;;;;~_,:·u~n::"lod b7the abcn-t cortoon.

,.......+--+---1

V '\I

.I ~.::a-::' I THE bI 1 I )' D t l I I X )
(Aoowen tota•_,•,.•·•)

Ju.,hlc" SIEGE MUSIC DAINTY fLIMST
S•lurdlf•

Anow"' May helppromalepodfeellnf-MID1CINI

DOWN
1. Vest11e

,.

h.----.-----------------',~----------~~~~~~

' " I !I &lt;Ofll l f

Unscramble theae four Jumblea,
one letter to ·uch square, to
form four ordinary words.

to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
It I.ONGFELLOW
'
One letter simply stands lor .another. In this sample A is
. used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes , the length and formation of ·the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters arc different.

MAYTAO

Rutland

.

I

25.Scotr
26. Arrive
27. Ado:
lescent
28. MacGraw
29, Folded
32. Waterfall
(Scot.)
33. Hairpiece
34. Hawaiian
game
35. Enter- ·
tal ned
37. Law of
Moseo
38•. Ostrich or
ernu ,
31. Destruc·
tlon ·
to. Not on
your
llfel
U . Length x
width -

2. Spoke"'

• DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

Llh l

Fi ller .
·
Wo Spec lallu In

Arnold Grate.

Ye1ler4Q'1 Ceyploquote: EVERYTHING IN THE PAST
DIED YESTERDAY; EVEJ\YTHING IN THE FUTURE WAS : .
, BORN TODAY.-CHINmll PROVBRB
·
. ·' · :
(C) 1171 Klncl'ealll,.. SJndl&lt;~to, Joe.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SE WiNG MACHINES. Repair
se rvice. all makes. 992 -2284. ,
The Fabric Shop. Pom eroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales and

Maytag

741 -4~11

~

brake service.
Wheel o
balanced electronically . All
work guaranteed. Reasonable
rales . Phone 742-3232.
2-18-lfc

Big Capo city

RUTLAND

, _9

O'DELl WHEEL Alignment
loca led at Crossroads. Rt . 12~.
now back to work. Complete

Gro_cery Store, on Mulberry Ave ., doing a fine
bustness, for lease . Ideal for young couple who
want to go into business for themselves.
Contact if interested ;
.
·
.

Real Estate Broker
Bu 101 - Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 98$-4186

EVIDENCe NSAIN&lt;;J'
TliE GOOfA'l\lE~ 7

Phone 742-6271

r

S•.HOBSTETTER JR.

HE JUST IIIN11i:17 NE.
HCliiiC '10 MEET 1116
~I.'I.

• Estimates
For

· REAl. ESTATE

GEOR~E

GETTI~
w~pm= .

'ABJ..E '10 GET niE

GOING, PE'fi&gt;Cn\IE
AAZARc:&gt;

1-lE.'S Lt V£D
WIT~ ONE: !=OR
YEARS!

HE'S

t!EEN

.

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
$99.95

· WANTED .
Pomeroy Carrier

.- CAMPUS CLATIER

'ISS, BUT I jHINK
HillE, ...a.!

Roofing, ·spouting,
Home Remodeling

core,

SMITH NELSON
.MfJTORS. INC.

w::NI 115 'IW ll
UN()EIZCOVER
A%10NMENT

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

Nathan BiQ!IS
Radi.-tor Speciaiisl

For Sale
Spe~i•list
an d sink, family room . Call
RATES
---------------AKC
Toy
Poodl
e
puppies,
$75
Wheel
99B790.
For Want Ad Service
7-8-Jtc
aod $85. Also Siamese kittens
5 ce nts per Word one in$ertion NO. 1 Copper 54&lt;. radiators. NEW MOD ER N. 2-plece liv ing
Alignment
$10. Ph on~ 1-256-6247, Kennels
room suite. Choice of nylon or - - - ' - - - - - - - 28c; brass, 20c ; batteries, 85c
M lnl.rnum C "~rge 75c
of Calhoun .
12 cents per wor d th.r ee
herculon while they last . Only · GAS furna ce with blower .
eacn; d ean drY roo ts, G!n·
It Must
consec utive inser tions. .
Sl54 .95 Cash &amp; Carry.
e lectric cou nter -top range.
6-24-JOtc
seng, SS2 lb.; yellow root. S~ ;
18 cents per ·word six · con ·
Be
Right
Pomeroy
Recovery,
622
E.
and
oven.
Ca
ll
992-2377.
.
mayapple, 4Sc per ·tb. ; M. A.
secut ive inser t io ns .
POODLE puppies. Toy A.K.C .,
or we will
Ma
in
Street.
Phone
992-7554.
7-8-3tc
Hall,
Reedsville
,
Ohio,
378NOTICE OF
25 Per Cent Dis co unt on paid
Chocolat e - Show quality.
7-S-6tc
M•ke It Right.
SHERIFF'S SALE
6249.
ads and ads pa id within 10 days .
In pursuance w ith an Order-of
Phone 992 · 5 ~43 .
250 GALLON fuel oil tank with
5·6-llc
CARD OF THANKS .
Sitt·e On Partit ion issued out Of
3 BEDROOM house, lull
5·23-llc'
approximately 50 gallons of
&amp; OBITUARY
-----------the Court of Common Pleas ol
basement. Mason . Ca ll 773· oil in it. On stand, for $35. 1966
S1 .50 tor 50 wo~d minimum .
Meigs County , Oh io, in the case
KEWPIE dolls and anything
Each add itional word 2c .
5489.
Oldsmobile Delta -88, A· l Mobile Homes For 'Sale
of James H. Smith, Plaintiff , vs .
else related to Kewples. Al so,
8. 4:30 Daily, 8-11 Sat.
BLIND
ADS
7-5-6tc
condition
. Call 9~9 - 2951.
George L . Smith, et al.,
Additiona l 25c Chargt- per
old
postcards
in
good
conIn
lhe
R. H. Rawlings Sons
7-8-Jtc 55 x 10 3 BE DROOM. 308 Page
Defendants, being Case No. Advert isement.
dillon , write and describe
Building .
15 .1 82 in said Court , I w i ll offer
Slree
t,
·992-3509.
.
OFFICE HOURS
Items a lso pr ice wanted . NOW OPEN . P. and J . Odds and ONE MAYTAG wringer washer
at public auction at the front
Middleport. D.
7-6-tlc 991-2101
8: 30a . m. to 5:00p.m . Dally ,
Alyce Schneider, 145 South
door . of the Court House of 8 :30 tt . m . to 12 :00 Noon
Ends , Gl.orll ied junk , ap .
good
cond
ition.
$20.
One
in
Kanawha , Buckhannon , W.
Meigs County . Pomeroy . Ohio , Saturday .
pliances, furniture . 215 North
REFRIGERATOR Repair, Alrblack and white fabl e model
on the 12th day of July•at 10 :00
Air Conditioners
Va . 26201.
·conditioning,
Second,'
Middleport.
Heating ,
TV
in
good
con
dition,
$25
.
One
a .m. the fo llowing described
7-8·301p
6-29-JOtc
Awnings
Electrical
Repair ,
coal heater S20. Mrs. E. E.
real estate , to -wit :
Resi dential or commercial.
Planlz, Storys Run Roa d,
Situated in the Township of In Memorv
Underpinning
WANTEO - Used merchandise STARCRAFT 18 11 . 7 in. lhru 24
a
uto air-conditioning, 266 Mill
Orange, Cl;)unty of Meigs and
Cheshire, Ohio. Phone 992·
- lor auction . W~ buy, We
'
State of Ohio :
Slreet 992-3509.
IN LOVING memory of our
6586
Comp
lete
mobil
e
home
II. 7 in. !ravel frailer. self.
·
Being part of Fractions Nos.
sell , whole houseful or single
6-29 -30tc
1.8.61 p serv i ce - plu s g igantic
dear husband. lather and
33, 3A, and 24, Sections 27 and 28 ,
contained
from
$825
.00
lo
pieces
,
cons
ignm
ent
or
Grandfather,
James
0
.
Clark,
Township 4 and Range 12 of the
percentage. We wil l haul.
$1,050.00 discount. Fold-down . CO BBLER potatoes . Clar.a display ol mobi le homes
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
who passed away July 9. 1972 .
Ohio Company's Purcl'1ase , in
always availa bl e at ..
Phone
992-3354.
Hayman's.
campers.
also
.
II
will
pay
you
Boso.
Great
Bend.
Phone
843·
and small ; Backhoes and
Although he may be gone.
Orange
Township ,
Meigs
lo check our prices at CAMP
6-5-30ic
loa ders on track and tires;
2494 .
Cotlnty , Ohio, beginn ing at the
many a silent heartache and
CONLEY
STARCRAFT
MILLER
Dump truc ks Lo -boy
northeast corne r of FractiOn
7-8-Jip
often a hidden tear. But
SA
LES,
Route
62, N. of Point
No . 33, and running thence
se
rv
ice.
Septic
t
ank
S" in OLD
furniture,
oak
tables
,
always a beautiful memory of
-------Pleasant, behind Red Carpet sou th 23 rods ; then·c;:e west 16
stalled . George (Bill) Pullins,
1971
3-QUARTE
R
ton
pickup
v.
MOBILE
HOMES
clocks.
Ice
boxes.
brass
beds,
one we loved so dear. Sadly
rods ; thence south lS:Jf• rod s;
Inn . Phooe 675 -5384.
phone 992-2478 or 992-7402.
dishes
or
complete
8 with a 1;71 truck camper or
missed by wile Ethel. son and
thence south 62 degr.ees west
7-S-4tc
1220
Washington
Blyd.
2·9· tic
hou
seholds
.
Wrlle
M.
D.
I
will
se
ll
separate.
Phone
992daughter and step-davgbters .
J7 ·3/4 rods '; thence south 66
Miller, Rl. 4; Pomer oy. Oh io.
.
7-9-1tp
5544, 1 Richard
Jar vis, -- 423-7511
BELPRE, 0 .
degrees west 16 rods; thence
HARRISON'S TV service and
north 2 rods : thence west 48
Syra cuse,
'
call 992·6271.
rods to the center of the creek ;
5-JJ .tfc
JUST ARRIV .ED
7-8·3lc 'CASH paid lor. all makes and· se rvice calls . Phone 992 -25n.
th ence north 62 degrees east u·p Notice
2-9- tlc
NEW
SHIPMENT
mode ls of m obil e home s.
sa ld creek 51 rods ; thence north PORCH Sale, 5th Street,
HAY
for
sale
.
Call
843-2963.
10 degrees west along sa id
Phone area code 614-423,9531. · DOZER' and ba ck hge wo;k,
Racine, across from Baptist Wanted
7-8-Jtc
creek 16 rods ; thence north 70
_ _ _ _ _ _'7"_
_.!;4·_!;13!.::~t!!fsc
ponds and septic lanks, ditchChurch
from
J
uly
9
to
the
------·-----degre~ s west follow i ng the
ing
serv ice ; top soiL fill dirt,
13th. Lots of clothing some A RIDE to Gallipolis between 6
STE R~O - radio ta pe com·
creek 21 rods ; thence north 42
l
imestone
i B&amp;K Excavatina .
rods to the road ; thence n·o rth 59
new . Ivan Powell Residence.
bi
nation
l
am
-fm
r
ad
io,
8
track
a .m. and leave around 4:30. II
Real Estate For 5ale
degrees east following the road
Phone
992-5367
or 992-3861.
tape
Monda y thr u Friday.
player/
4
way
speaker
going that way, please call
As Low As
22 rods ; thence north 27 d·egrees
so und
7-8-Jtc
sys tem .
Balance NEW 3 bedroom, all -electric
992-2868
anytime
.
9cftfc
west 47 rod s to what was for·$109.59,
or
use
Dur
budge!
home
w
ith
one
car
garage
and
,7-6-Jtp
merly Fox es l ine ; thenc;eeast 32
Other sizes also available.
terms. Call 992-3965 .
one acre of ground, on · ELN·A and Wh ile Sewi ng
rods ; then..c e south 39 degrees THE OPENING date lor the - - -- - See them today .
7-8-6ft
Flatwoods road. Phone 992·
Machines .. . Service on all
east 57 rods aJong what was
Village Fabric Shop will be
formerly Foxes tine ; thence
-----Monday, Jvly 9. Completely Help Wanted
2735.
inakes . Reasonable rates.
north 42 degrees east 20 rod s;
10 H.P. ALLIS Chalmers lrador
7-3-6tp
he Sewin g Center , Mid ·
remodeled and a wide BABYSITTER 'In my home
'1'. _
POMEROY
thehce .n orth 12 rods ; thence
with law nmower and b lade . ---~-----eport, Ohio.
·
selection
of
Fabrics
and
lf!!iilll
Ja~k
W.
Carsey,
Mgr
.
.
from
6
a.m.
to~
p.m.
Monday
r'!O( ttJ 3'1 degrees east 32 rods ;
Contact
Marvin
Keebaugh,
11· 16·1k
accessories,
is
located
riexf
Phctne
992-2181
th ence north 7 degrees ·east 56
through Friday. Live In or
days 992-5342 ~ after 7 p.m .
door to the post Qftice In
rods ; the nce north 45 V~ degrees
402 W. Main, Apt. J.
985-3913.
RON SHEPARD. Floor ; Wall
Tuooers Pla ins. Owned and · out.
east 21 rods; then ce north 38
Pomeroy , Oh io.
1964 4-wheel drive. '.io ton pick·
Remodeling , Ceramic tile
7-8-Jtc
operated b~ Mr . and Mrs . _ _ _ _ __ _ _
degrees east lO rods ; thence
7-3-6tp
up , good tires. Mechani.cally
baths. Box..28 D, Rutland 742·
north 65 degrees east 5 1h rods :
Ralph Brooks.
good . $895.0(1. Phone 985-3554,
3664.
thence south 50 rods to,the nortl'l
7-6-3tp
line of Fraction 24; tt1ence east 5 - - - - - ' - - -- Harold Brewer , Long Bottom.
6-26-tlc
rods ; thence south 135 rods to
Oh io.
DELIVERY DRIVER
TOMATOES, cucumbers. green
the south tine of said Fraction DEAD STOCK, horses, cattle.
6-29-llc . pe ppers . Cleland Farms.
hogs , sheep, reasonable
AUTOMOBILE insurance be~n ·
24 ; then ce west 19 rods ; thence
charge. Call 245·5514.
Geraldine
Cleland,
Racine
.
north 32 degrees ·west 20 rods ;
cance lled?
L os t
your
101h FT. Nimr od True~ Cam thence north 67 degrees west
6-26-30tc
operator's ·license. Call 992·
7-8·11&lt;
per. Sell -conta ined Intercom ,
l 6 lf'l rvds ,- th ence "south 23 rods
7428.
nice condition,d' acks and hold
to the place of beginning , YARD Sale, Thursday, Friday,
Full
or
Part
Time
6-15· ~~ ~
Real Estate For Sale
containing 115 a cres, more or
NEW LISTING
downs in cl u ed . $995 .00 .
and
SaturdaX•
9
a.m.
till
S
less , except ing the following
Phon e 975-3 554 , Harold MODERN 6 roo m 1 floor plan SYRACUSE Modern 3 CONCRETE
WORK:
p.m. 297 Mrll Street, Mid·
No experience necessary.
parts thereof : Beginn ing at th e
Brewer.
Long
Bottom,
Ohio.
bedroom
home.
with
large
home
with
detachable
driveways,
sidewalks,
steps,·
dleport
.
Must
have
car
and
be
willing
.
northwest corne r of land deeded
6-2Hfc garage. All newly pal~ted . closets. Nice bath, ki tchen with
etc . Call 992,3453.
·
·
7-9-Jtc
to Michal Wody by John A .
to learn.
Located on nice level lot 50' x stove and refrigerator . Asking
Smith and running in· a south ·
6-28
-12tcp
1
1968 FORD / 2 ton pick -up . 6 120' at 619 Page
.
westerly dl r'ec t ion along Isaac
Mid· $17,500.00.
cyli
nder
.
3
speed.
1795.00.
Keebaugh's east line 15th rods
~rd of Thanks
dleport,
Ohio.
For
furth
er
NEW
LISTING
Mon. thru Fri .
to a pos t in the road ; thence jn a
Harold Brewer . Phone 985- details, contact Dav id R. LOOK AT THIS - Nearly new
Real Estate For Sale
southeastertv direction 14 rods TO YOU who remembered us on
Ca II 9-8, 446-0677
355~. Long Boltom, Ohio .
Yates , 23 Grandview Road, .2 bedroom home. Ni ce bath,
to a post on Wody 's west line 19
our golden wedding an ·
6-29-lfc
Cambridge; Ohio, 43725 or re frig erator , stove and most of 4 BEDROOM house, 2 baths,
MR. VANCE
rods south from the place of
river frontage , Syracuse.
niversary
with
gilts
and
Phone 992-3904.
beginning ; thence north 19 rods
the furniture . Carport and
Phone 992-2360.
cards,
we
extend
our
sincere
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
t o the pla ce of beginn i ng ,
-=========6=
·=
1
5=t
:..
fc.,
large
river
front
lot
.
At
only
6-27-tlc
thanks
for
makina
this
tim
e
in
containing 130 rods, more or
Name Brand Wigs . Special ,·
$10,500.00.
our Jives so very special. Mr . PART-TIME waitress wanted.
less, being a part of Fraction
sale prices during month of
Blue Tartaln. Day and night
INVESTMENT
and Mr s. t-~hil Meinhart,
No . 34, convey ed by Hugh Wiley
7 ROOM house with bath lri
July . Phone Hel en Jane
shift. Call \1'12 -9941.
3
RENTALS
- Income $193.00
and Hul dah Wiley , his wife, to
Pomeroy .
Rutland, air conditioned ,
Brown
,
992-5113.
7-6-3tc
Michael Wody by deed dated
a
month
.
One
Apartment
7-9-llc
carpeted,
gas furnace, dish6-29-tlc
Au.gust 12, 185l.and recorded in
fu rnished. Want just $10,000. 00
washer, double oven, range,
Book 15, Page 155, of the De~d
lor this bargain.
double garage, large carport,
Records of Meigs County, Ohio ,
12,000
BTU
Air-Condilioner
for
Notice
BUILDING ACREAGE
4 acres cleared and fenced,
also beg inn ing at the .n orthwest
sale. Jus! a year old. Ph one
117 ACRES small barn and other
corner of George Gaul ' s farm to SALE AT log Cabin, Bigley.
2
Ready
lor
247-2684.
the m lddl e of Sh ade Creek ;
·,o8
buildings. Phone 614-742-6834.
building . About . one hall
Ridge Road from Keno to
7-3-tfc
thence north 89 degrees eaSt 39
5-30-tfc
E.
MAIN._
_
_
_,
Long
Bottom,
signs
at
248
and
cleared.
Asking
only
$5,000.00.
rods and 17 l in ks; the nce north
- - - - - - -Long
Bottom
.
Some
antiques.
POMEROY
85 degrees east 16 rods and 10
POMEROY
10 x50 RITZ -CRAFT Mobile
bottles, dishes. clothes.
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas HOUSE for sale by owner, 3
link s to a stone ; thence nort-h 63
Home, 1965. $2,395. Ph . 8~3radios, lewelry.
degrees east 12 rod s and 3 links
furnace, full basement and
bedrooms, new furnace roof
SYRACUSE
2158.
7-9-41p
to
James
and
Nancy
and
wiring . Wall - t~ - wad
porch
.
large
lot
lor
on
ly
Ni ce 1'h story fram e. 3
Keebaugl'1's land ; thence north - - -- - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_::
1·3-6tc bedrooms',
carpeting, large lot, carport.
$7500.00.
ba
th
,
fu
ll
J8 1f,, degrees west 26 rods to the YARD SALE. 692 Plum St.,
look for. iron fence In front
POMEROY
mldd(e or Shade Creek ; then ce
basement with new forced
across from Middleport
and
pine trees In side yard.
GROCERY
business
lor
sa
le.
2 ' BEDROOMS - Nic e older
down Shade Creek to the pla ce
Sentinel
a ir gas furna ce. Larg e
Swimming Pool, Tuesday, .
Contact Mr . Eldon Walburn
of beg inn ing, containing 5112
Build ing for sal e or lease .
home. has nice k itc hen, side
Wednesday and Thursday.
230 Union Avenue, Pomeroy'
acres, in Fraction No . 33,
Phone 773-56181rom 8:30p.m.' fen ced lot . Good ne igh - and front porch , Aluminum
6-9-21c
borhood. JUST $5,800.00.
conveyed by A fbert Dean and
Oh
io. Phone 992-2805.
'
lo 10 p.m . lor appolnlmenl.
si ding . Ba sement, gas furn act .
Ella Dean to George Gaul by
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
6-13-tlc
3-20-tfc
Asking $15,000.00.
deed dated January 22, 1901,
A nice building lot or mobile
SYRACUSE
and recorded In Book 87 , al
home space. About 70x90. ON 124 - 2 bedrooms. bath,
Page 313, of t.he Deed Records
HANGING
Baskets,
gera
niums,
_
Sale
of Meigs County , Oh io, and
Lot s of trees, good neighMALE or female. pari-time, $84
ni ce kil chen. front and back.
begonias. double petun ias,
except also the graveyard lot,
borhood . $2,000.00 . .
a
week,
lull
-time,
SUO
a
week
.
.
porches. f ull basement and
pots
.
Cleland
combination
l eaving 1.07 .1 6 ' acres. more or FOR SALE, 17,000 BTU air
RUTLAND
Must have ca r . Phone
nice lot. $9,500.00.
Farm and Greenhouse. E.
l ess, befng 80 .5 0 acres in
cond it ioner, used one month
Monday lhrough Friday 10
1 m lie out . 1111 acre . Hou se 4 OUR M06EL HOME IS OPEN
Fr ac tloh 24, 22.50 acres in
Ma in, Rac ine. Geraldine
only . Call 742-4833 .
a .m. till 9 p.m. ~46- 0677,
Fra ction 33, and 4.16 acres In
Cleland .
years old . 4 bedrooms . Bath . EACH SAT URDAY AND
___:_
Fra ction 34
7-9-6tc
7-9-5tc
6-27-lfc
Nice kilchen. lots of cablnels SUNDAY FROM 1 to 5 P.M.
~
Referen ce : Volume 236, Page
For Sale

Stop In and See Our
Floor l?isp!ay .

Bulldorer Radl81or to the

MODERN
SANITATION

(

FURNITURE

From the iaroest Truck or
:;,manesr Heater

..-·f\ ( J'

and

EXPERIENCED
Jladlato
·Service

24 HOUR SERVICE

'(

DrfiCE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

SEPTIC tANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

I'D RUTHER
RECYCLE
MINE

992 -2094
Main Pomero_y

E.

606

Most Amorlcon Car•·

Open 8TIIS
Monday lhru Saturday
• 606 E. Ma in; Pomeroy. 0 .

FIDDLE·
DEE·DEE

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2094

949-3151
Racine, Ohio

J975.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

· On

1

JOHNSON'S T.V.

------

heaters . furniture , bottles ,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Color- $30.00
Black &amp; While - S1S.OO

EXCELS IOR Salt Works, E.
Main St.. Pomeroy. All kinds
TRA ILER. Brown ' s Trailer
of sa,tt water pellets, water
Park. Minersv ille. Ohio. 11'12·
nuggets, block salt and own
3324.
.
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992·
7-8-tlc
3891 .
3 AND· 4 ROOM f\Jrnlshed Md -~-------6~
- S-tlc
unlumished apar lm en ls. AKC Goldeo Retriever pup pies.
Phon~ 992·5•3•.
·
s~o , and one 7-monlh
4-12-llc Wel marn er pup SSO. (614) 742·
6834.
PRIVATE meeling room lor
6-21-tfc

Notice

EXPERT'
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Re tored AI Good As New
Right 4•t Your Home .
GuorAnleed lor 6 Mo.

--------

really sharp.
1910 PONTIAC
Sl19S
Flreblrd Esprit, local 1-owner car. l50 V·S engine, power
steering &amp; automatic tran smission . AM-FM radio , like
new whiteletlered !ires, 307 V-8, power steering &amp; brakes.

Business· Services
Ha•e your T.l/ . Picture Tu.,.

•

. SAIUIEY

CRYPTOQUOTES
DX

A Z.ll

.

YPFQS

CH

Z

REFOV

E W J EX C 0 V S X .

A.ZB ' UX CP JWO U
, - MXJE

XQRW

YFOO~' QS.I

FQ

D P Z GW 0
FQ

z·

DEW

D·E Z D

AEt'OW· .

'T~AT POOR C~ICKEN GAVE
~IS LIFE FOR. NOTHJN6! .

�;

Herd, Cajuns win
•
m

summer cage
Morris and St.Jve Dw•fee were
the top rebounders.
Luigi's, missing the efforls of

Former Middleport star
George "Sweet" Sauer was
the big stOry for Mark V
Thundering Herd, as the Herd
topped the 69ers ~7-44 In
MlddleJlort summer cage
action Monday night.
Sauer ran the Herd offense
and fast break with outstanding ball handling and
passes and limited the 69ers'
guard to 7 points.
Mark Kiesling was the
leading scorer for Mark V,
pouring In 16 points. Fatty
Walters and Dave Fife added
15 and 14 respectively. Game
high scorer was 6-4 Joe Myers
with 18 followed by former
Ohio State freshman star Mike
Fenderbosch with 13.
I&gt;!Yer and Walters were the
leading rebounders.
Mark V (57) - Walters S-315, Sauer 2-U, Kiesling 6-4-16,
!hie 2~. Hensler 1-6-2, Fife 62-14.
69ers (44) - Bailey 2-1-5,
' Myers 9+18, Pearch 4-6-8,
Fenderbosch &amp;.J-13, Wise 1-6-2.
The Herd is now 2-I and the
69ers stand at 1-2. No league
team has won 2games in a row
except the Eagles who gained 2
wins by forfeit.
In other action Sunday, the
Rajun Cl!Juns pulled away
!rom a 7 point lead at the half
1ehtnd the hot· second half
shooting of Bob Ford and Gray
Eubank who totaled 34 points,
to whip Luigi's, 86-54. Eubank
was ga'!le_high scorer with 26
followed by Ford with 23. Jeff

ace

•'

'.

Fails City wins

doubleheader
Falls Cily swept a
doubleh eader Sunday,
defeating Laurelville, 4--2 and
12-1, in softball action at
Laurelville.
Dale Harrison and Bub
Cundiff were the winning
pitchers for Falls City, while F .
Brown and D. Wolfe were the
losers.
Harrison pitched a perfect
game for the first 61nnlngs, but
ln.the bottom of the seventh he
gave up 2 runs and 2 hits. He
retired the first 18 batt.Jrs he
faced.
In the second game, Cundiff
was in control all the way as his
teammates banged out 16 hits
to win handily.
Falls City 's record now
stands at 12 wins and 5 defeats.
Next Sunday they take on the
Logan
Eagles
In
a
doubleheader at Syracuse
starting at 2 p.m.
The Eagles are currently in
first place in the Hocking
Valley league.

I

·~ (. '! ,,.~ N~t i llfh

Tonight I Tuesday
July 9-10
Double Feature Program
SOLDIER BLUE
I Color)
Candice Bergen •
Peter Strauss
Donald Pleasence
IR)
- PlusC. C. AND .
COMPANY
I Color)
Joe Namath
Ann-Ma• gret
I Rl

TOURNEY PLANNED
AppUcations are still bemg
accepted for the annual Kera
Open Slow · Pilch Softball
Tournament.
The tourney is slated July 14-15, and 21-22, at Kera, Rt. 2,
Ravenswood. Admission fee is
$35. It will be a double
elimination tournament. For
further information contact
Hoy Kasto, 204 Walter St..
Ripley (372-6695) or Harold
Dorton, 435 Second Ave.,
Ripley (372-8801).

· Tonlg~llh~ Thursday
July9- 0-11-12
NOT PEN
Fri~ - sa't .- Sun.

Whal Z'at7

.

Rough Riders
Thrill Spill
Show Starts 1 p.m.

Middleport A's

Icie Wootton

claimed at 73

U'ITLE HOCKING - Mrs.
lcle M. Wootton, a resident of
Uttle Hocking for 40 years,
died Sunday morning at the
Turtle Creek Convalescent
Center, Parkersburg, W. Va.
She was 73.
She was born In Athens
County to the late Fiesco and
Emma Burke Cole. Preceding
her in dea th were six brothers,
two sisters, her husband ,
Frank, and a son, Clyde.
Surviving her are one son,
Harold ~·- Wootton, Little
Hocking, one brother, Dean
Cole, Athens, lwo grandsons,
Clyde of Colwnbus and Dale of
Uttle Hocking, and several
nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Wootton was a member
of the FJrst United Methodist
Church, Utile Hocking, and the
Amerll)lln Beauty . Council
Daughters of America.
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the First
United Methodist Church in
Uttle Hocking with the Rev.
Roy Rose officiating. Burial
wlll be at the Rockland
Cemetery.
Friends may call at any time
al the White Funeral Home;
Coolville .

Thomas, 27, dies
Michael Thomas, '1:1, son of a
former Minersville resident,
died Sunday afternoon at the
McConnellsville Nursing Home
as the result of injuries
received in an auto accident in·
January, 1971.
Thomas, the son of Walter
"Drag" and Ulllan Thomas
never regained consciousness.
The elder Mr. Thomas is
formerly of Minersville.
Surviving besides his
parents, are his wile, a son,
four sist.Jrs and three brothers.

LODGE TO MEET .
PLEASANT VALLEY
Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
DISCHARGES:
Barbara
will hold a special meeting
Friday at 7:30p.m. to confer Gordon , Letart; Hartley
the Master Mason degree . on Perego, Huntington ; David
one candidate. All master Salem, Leon; Bust.Jr Barnell,
masons are Invited. Refresh· Rutland ; Mrs. Clarence
Adkins, Letart; Jack Wheeler,
ments will be served.
Point Pleasant; Jack Ca11,
Clifton; Cheryle Edler, Point
Pleasant; John Litchfield, New
Haven; James Ball, Pliny ; Ora
Higgins, Point Pleasant; Jay
Young, Long Bottom, 0 .;
David Schwartz, Mrs. Paul
Childers, Ripley; Mrs . Clayton
Hager, . Albany ; 0 ., and
Theordore Smith, Leon.

Get hardboiled about your
diAtr(\ctlo nt~

suth aa aure-ftre , money-mak ln~r ~theme!! and once-in· n·
lifetime opportunitle1.
Out of every week's pRy, th~
ftnllhlng- to do l.s make a depoalt In A wide-awake hank

1!1&amp;\'lngR ,• crount . Berausc the

wldt-flwake bank has a fl tcal
1\tnetfl pla.n you can count &lt;:Un.
So, In the futu re, you ean
rially enjoy yourBelf' when
you take a flyer.

'7ftt widt·OUIOU

sovirtgr account
mohs 11c:;::;--....;all so en.~t

The paradise which most
people are lookmg lor Is not
a locaUtv - it 1s merely a

Been looking for some thing
speclo l? Chances are you' ll
bl! able lo lind It at the
Pomeroy Ce ment Block

Co.

IOMIROY, OHIO

Company , the home of the
" FRI~ NDLY
ONES ."
Beiny members ol HWI
gives you !he benefit ot
over.
30 ,000
il e m ~
wa r ehous ed
conv enience

for

your

Member of Federal Re~crve Systcrn

Ooi"Frldoys Our Drive-In Window Is Open 9 • ·'" · lo 1 p.m.
I Continuously) .
·
120,100 Mexfmum lnsunnce lor Each Oepo5ttor
• • ,.,., ................. 1.

•

Two-price_system
draw-s ·c riticism

WASHINGTON (UP)) Sen. Gaylord Nelaon, O-Wls.,
said today he finds unsailsfactory lhe drug In·
dustry's "glib explanations" as
to why It · sellS some drugs
overseas for half the price
charged Americans.
Nelson said his view Is
sU))ported by a decision by U.S.
District COurt Judge Sylvester
E. Ryan finding the practice of
the drug firms In enforcing Its
two--price system a violation of
the antitrust laws.
As chairman of the monopoly
subcommittee of the Senate
Select Committee on Small
Business , Nelson has conSCIOTO LIVESTOCK
6:(10-Sunrlse Seminar 4; S~cred Heart 10.
duct~d hearings on drug
6· ts- Farmtlme 10.
·
CA'ITLE - Choice st.Jers
pricing practices over a period
6:25---Fa rm Report 13 .
46.20-46.90; good, 44.50-45.80;
of flve.year&amp;.
6:25---Paul Harvey 13.
6 JQ-Co lumbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concern &amp; Comment standard 40-43.10.
When on Sept. ~29, 1972, he
HEIFERS - Choice, 44F lth For Today 13.
attacked the twoilf'ice system,
6:4
cob Report 13.
45.50; good, 4142·75·
hesald,EiiUlly&amp;Co.,issued a
6:55 a Five For Life 15.
COWS -.Commercial, 35.1(}. statement which cited varia7:1l0-Today 3,4,1S ; CBS News 8,10 ; News 6; Jeff's Collie 13.
36.50;
ut11ity. 31.85-34 .50 ;~- lions in "wage rates, disttibu7:3Q- Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle 13; Popeye 10.
8.1l0-Capt Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13 ; Sesame St. 33 ; canner and cutter 27.50-30.50. lion c~, price and wage
·
Lassie 6.
BULLS - Commercial, controls, taxes, Import duties,
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13 ; New Zoo Revue 6.
4
revaluations of currency and
9:00- f'aui- DIXon 4; Concentration 6 ; Friendly Junction 10, 311.75-4 .50FEEDER
CA
1
fLE
Steer
sources
of raw materials" as
Merv Griffin 8; A.M. 3; Peyton Place 13; Let's Make A Deal
6; Phi l Donahue 1S; Secondary Developmental Reading 33. calves 4~4.50; hetfer calves, justifying different prices
9·25- Malhema 33.
.
40-52.75; ~eavy feeder steers, ,1rom one marketplace to
9:3Q-To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hollywood Talking 10;
40-4S.50.
another."
Peyton Plate 13; Elec. Co. 33
VEAL
CALVES
Choice,
But that explanation does not
9·4Q-Physics Demonstrations 33.
50
hold up in light of a Justice
lO:IlO-Dinah Shore 3,15; Columbus 51~ Calling 6; Joker's Wild 67.50; good, ~- ·
7
a,.O; Dick Van Dyke 13; L1llas, Yoga &amp; You 33.
LAMBS - Chmce 3 ; feeder Department study, Nelson
10. 30- Baflle 3,4, IS; SIO,OOOPyramld 8,10; Split Second 13; loom lambs, S0.85.
said.
33 ..
HOGS- 2110-230, 40.50; No. I,
It found that "many Ameri11 · 00- Sale of the Century 3, IS ; Love, American Style 6;
40.75;
23(}.240,
4.
0
.25.
can
drug companies sell drugs
Gambit 8, 10; Password 13; Password 13; Why 33.
11 · 15- P"yslcs Demonstrations 33.
SOWS - 35.30-36.00.
to domestic wholesalers at
11 3D- Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Bewitched 6,13 ; Love of Life
BOARS - 33.10.
different prices depending llll
8,10.
where the drug is to be used,"
11 · 55- CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
Form er President Harrv S. he said. "If the domestic
12:00- Jeopardy 3,15; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Password
Truman worked tor 15 years wholesaler states that the drug
6;News 10,13; Sesame Sl. 33.
to pay off the store debts ot a
12.0Q-J W's 3, 1S; Split Second 6; Search For Tomorrow 8,10
will be shipped overseas, his
busmess failure
12:55- News 3,15.
price may be a third to a half
1 llO-Ne.ws 3; All My Children 6,13; Green Acres 10; Not For
Women Only 15; It's Your Bet 8; Marlin Agr0 nsky 33.
1: 20----F ash ion in Sewing 3.
t · 30- 3 On A Match 3,4,1S; let's Make A Deal1]; Bowling 6; As 6 Jo-News 3,4,6,8,10,15; I Dream ol Jeannie 13; Lilias, Yoga 8,
.You 33 . .
The World Turns 8,10; How Do Your Children Grow? 33.
7
oo-whal's
My Line 8; I've Got ASecret 13; Elec. Co. 20, Beat
2 oo-Days ol our Lives 3,4,15; Newlywed Game 13 ; Mike
'fhe
Clock
4; News 6,10 ; Untamed World 13, Truth or ConDouglass 6, Guiding Light 8,10; Woman 33.,
seq.
3;
Lee
Trevino's Golf 15; Living 33.
.2:3o-Doctdrs 3,4,15; Dating Game 13, Edge ol Night 8,10;
7:3o-Te
Tell
The
Truth 6; Price Is Right 8,10 ; Beal The Clock
Artists In America 33 ..
13;
This
Is
Your
Life 3; Circus 4; RFD 20; Charles Blair's
3 oo-Anot~er World J,4,1S, General Hospital 6,13; Price Is
Betteer
World
15;
Cancer: Life or Death !3.
Rlghl8,10; Thirty Minutes With 20; Great Steamboat Race
33.
3 Jo-M•sler Cartoon 3; Love, American Style 13; Somerset 8.00- Temperatures Rising 6,13 ; Maude 8,10; Movie " Incident
Storm 10; Phil Donahue 4; Hollywood Talking 8; Chan-ese · On A Dark Street" 3,4,15 ; American Vision 33 ; Ohio This
Week 20; Mona meets John Davidson 10.
Way 20 ; Time For Timothy 33.
8
JQ-Movie
"Lieutenant Schuster's w1fe" 6,13 ; Hawaii Flve-0
4:00- Mister Cartoon 3; Love, American Style 13; Somerset 15;
8,10;
Changing
Music 20.
Huck &amp; Yogi 6; Secret Storm 8; Sesame St. 33; Movie
9
oo-lnternational
Performance 2D,33.
"Abandon Sh1p" 10.
9
3Q-VIrginian
8;
Movie
"Call to Danger" 10.
4 30- Pettlcoat Junction 3; Wild, Wild West 13; My Lillie
10·oo-Marcus
Welby,
M.D.
6,131 NewslO; NBC Reports 3,4, 1S;
Marg•e 15 ; Merv Griffin 4; F Troop 6; Abbott &amp; Costello 8.
Garno;
Ted
Armstrong
13; Chan-Ese Way 33.
5 OD-'-Mr. Rogers 20,33 ; Andy Grlfllth 15; Bonanza 3,4; Hazel8;
3,4,8,13,
IS.
ll:oo-News
Here Comes The Brides 6; Mr. Rogers 20,33.
5·Jo-Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec. Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13; 11 : 3Q-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Dick Cavett 6, 13; Movies "On The
Town" 8; 11 Kiss of Death" 10.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
1:oo-Perry Mason 4, News 13.
5 55- Earl Nightingale 1S.
6·00- News 3,4,8,10,15,13, Truth or Conseq. 6; Sesame St. 20 , 2:00- Your Health 4.
2·Jo-News 4.
Around The Bend 33.

•

- ,J •

Mrs. Gilmore
dead at 73
Fern T. Gilmore, a former
Meigs County resident, died
Saturday evening at Riverside
Hospital . in Columbus at the
age of 73. She was preceded In
death by her parents, Thomas
and Antonia Theiss Wolfe, and
her husband, Ralph, In 1968.
Survivors include two
daught.Jrs, Mrs. Vernon Bobb,
Columbus, and Mrs. John
Parsons, Toledo, lwo sislers,
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan, Racine,
and Mrs . Lowe Tisdale,
Buckeye Lake, one brother,
Price Wolfe, Lexington, Ohio,
and four grandchildren.
Mrs. Gilmore was a member
of the Pomeroy United ·
Methodist Church where she
wa a member of the J .O.F
class. She was also a member
of Racine East.Jrn Star Order
134, and Order of Whlt.J Shrine
37.She was a member and past
president of the American
Legion Auxiliary .
Racine Ea.stern Stars will
hold services for Mrs. Gilmore
at 8 p.m. tonight at Ewing
Funera I Home.
~uneral services will·j)e held
Tuesday at I p.m. in the Ewing
Chapel with Rev. Frank
Cheesebrew oHiciaUng. Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home between 2 and 4
and 7' and 9 on Monday.

to crac

lower than If he were to seU It
' IQ domestIc IISOr&amp;. "
In view of that, he uked,
''what happeru1 to the dfl!g
Industry's glib eiJ)Ianatlolll as
to why they charge American
consumers up to two or more
times the prices they charge
foreign consumers, In spite of
the added transportation COII!a
to ship dfllllll overseas?"
Nelson's statement was
made In a speech prepared for
delivery to the Senate. It was
accompanied by a chart of
domestic and foreign prices for
drugs manufactured by 13 U.S.
firms . In each Instance, the
overseas price was lower.
Bristol Myers' Salutenstn
tabs, for example, sold for $35
per 1,000 overseas and $66.16 at
home, Nelson's chart showed.
He said that when drugs are
shipped overseas the drug
firms use the threat of lawsuits
to prevent wholesalers and
potential Importers from
buying them back and selling
them at less than the domest!c
price.
That practice has been found
illegal in the U.S. District
Court in New York, he said.

FRIENDSHIP GEsTURE
HALES, Alaska (UP!) - A
California man sailed a
bathtub five miles Into the
Bering Sea today and released
1,000 letters of friendship from
the American to the Russian
people . The letters were
released In an inner tube and
wrapped In watertight plastic.
Leonard Moore, 48, of Oakland t~ald he got as close as he
could "under the weather
conditions" to the International Dateline during the
hour and a half voyage.
He said he battled rain and
waves six feet high during the
trip in the $15 used bathtub.
Moore originally said he intended to go to ~ berla .
However, Soviet auti10rtties
did not give him pennlssion to
enter Russia.
BELLING 81!:1' .,
There will be a belling ,and
shower honoring Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Abbott Saturday at 7:30
p.m. at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall. Everyone Is
invited.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
DARTERS FOR

Jane Colby._

(A)

POMEROY CEMUH
!HOCK CO

GRIVAS REPORTED ILL
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPII
Gen . George Grivas, the
vewran guerrilla leader who is
trying to overthrow President
Archbishop Makarlos and unite
Cyprus with Greece, is seriously Ill in a clinic, the Englishlanguage newspaper Cyprus
Mall said today .
The newspaper said Grlvaa,
who has been In hiding since
his return to t'yprus from
Greece two years ago, was In a
private clinic tn Umassol
recovering from a serious
heart attack he suffered about
two months ago.
.
The newspaper said II could
not confirm rumors that Grivas, 75, recently underwent
major sur~cry In Nicosia .

T.he first step toward a local council set up standards to
crackdown on alleged ob- regulate what mal(nzlnes con
IICenlty and pornography was be sold , cha rging that
taken hy Middleport councll4n magazines containing nudity
a regular session Mo11day are being. sold 10 the com.
night.
munity . He recommended that
Councilman Fred Hoffman council draw up an ordinance
pointed out thai the recent which would set up the standSupreme Court decision leaves ards on which obscenity is to be
the control of obscenity and judged.
pornog raphy up to lhe local
He Indicated he belteves a
community. He suggested
crackdown should come, and

(B)

8,

Jane Colby glv11 you that tlly, rtlued, wall coordinated look . Thty 9o togett~er or go their separate
w.ays, whtlhtr lt'slhe mini ril!bed long slteved turtle .. ck, tht Ill art sleeved houndttooth check shirt
jocket or tht solid twill ponts. They're 111 wuhabl• and trove! onrwhtrt. anytime . Top ond shirt
iacketln sizes S. M, L. Pants In shes 7-17, t-11. ·

Shoj) Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m. - Open Both Friday end Saturday 9:30 to 9.p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMERO·Y
.

.

"•

this i&lt;wnmm· lor the $10,000 the ruther lh:tn huve IL hrnught to
· vill~gc has to spend r.. ,. thut vo ters lhrrJugh rcrcreudmn .
rmrp(J.'iC . The c:ommiltce WU 5 Co unci hnnn Ohli nger wtll
Middleport
directed to re ·ommend which contact the
RtrccL~ nave priority.
Ch;unbcr of Commerce to sec tf
Coun cll also discussed the S~ that group will be agreeable to
IJCrmi:uuvc auto license tax taking a~ inllialive action for
which has failed twice m pi;Jd ng tile $~auto license lax
rcrercnd ur)l m:tJ Om; It Wus proposal herore voters .
suggested that a bette•· plan
Wilbur Theobald oi the Oh10
',
might be to place the Issue Valley Lumber Co. dlseusscd
before voters in the first place, steps to be followed m vacating

VOl. XXV

NO. 60

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
-t"'P'~

,....

;

..

. i

.'·~

,
'

,.

•.
•

•

_j

...

.... f

PHONE 992-2156

The first published cookbook
written by a woman was "The
Art of Cookery Made Easy, "
written m 1747 by Mrs. Hanna
Glasse.

TEN CE NTS

•

• • ,. • • r,. ... . ,.
,. ~

-1

•

By United Press International
CHICAGO - TfiE PRESIDENT of the American Farm
Bureau Federation said Monday that the price freeze is
jeopardtzlng "farm productiOn" and will cause a food shortage il
it isn't removed. In a letter to President Nixon, William J . Kuhfuss said, "Your actions tampering _!J'ith the market system are
regrettable. To jeopardize farm prixluction and business expansion with politically set ceilings to placate uninformed
. mexcusa ble ."
consum~rs 1s
He said confumers would face food shortages under the price
freeze because, "under the retatl-wholesale price freeze, many
farmers are being forced to sell at a loss a~ many ceilmg prtees
are below production costs." He satd producers of livestock,
eggs, poultry and dairy products are cutting back output m an
effort to ·avert losses.
THE SUPREME COURT DECISION on obscenity has
prompted Playboy, a favorite magazine of V1ce President Spiro
T. Agnew, to consider making "editorial adjustments" in its
photography . But its rival Penthouse, arguing that lhe human
body is not obscene, says it has no mtention of changing its
pictures.
Both magazines said they regretted the high -court ruling,
which gave power to local officials to judge what is obscene on
the basis of "community standards" rather than national tastes.
The ruling has resulted in both publications being taken off the
stands in many towns, particularly in the South. Bob Guccione,
founder and publisher of Penthouse, which has cut into the older
Playboy market with its total nudity and provocative feature
articles, said the magazine might constder some minor nonphotographic changes.

'

Now You Know
.

Mitchell
opposed
burglary

.

•• .· ...

'

Devoted To 1M lntere.t. Of The Meiga.-Ma&amp;On Area
TUESDAY, JlfLY 10, 1973

by the village of!tcia ls to
provide penalties for tam·
pering with water II_nes and
water meters is unnecessary,
according to Solicitor Pultz,
beca-use such infractions are
covered by lhe sta te code. •
Grate report~d receipls of
$l,149 fr om the town's most
recent revenue sharing
distrtbution and indlcatCjj lhat
(COntinued on Page 8)

' I

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... ,, •
: .

•

an alley between Mulberry and
Ash SL&lt;. near the company so
thai it can carry out planned
s tructura l improvements.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported that a workmen's
cmnpensation decisiOn denying
Raymond Frazier benefits
from lhe village has been
appealed to R regwnal level by
Frazier. Grate also reported
that recent le~islalion started

enttne

Walla ce Ebersbach, 51 ,
formerly of Pomeroy, died late
Monday night ut the home of
his parents, Mr and Mrs.
Edga r Ebersba ch, in Osprey,
Fla ., where lie nnd his wtfc
resided.
The Ebersbach fmnil y
operated the Marlin Hotel , now
the Meigs Inn, in Pomeroy for
many years . .
The death of Mr . Ebersbuch
was caused by u massive occlusion .
Surviving besides his wife
and parents, urc three
brothers, Martin, Dor, und Bill,
and a, sister, Kathleen.
Funeral serv ices will be held
In Florida .
·

•

pomo~rophy

jud ~ed .

orno

•

Hwnid with thunderstorms
today endmg In the southeast
half tonight. Clea rin g and
cooler tomght, lows in the 60s.
Wednesday sunny, mild and
less hwnid. Highs in the mid
80s south.

MONTEVIDEO, URUGUAY - ARMY TROOPS and police
used machine guns, swords, tear gas and tanks Monday nighlto
disperse tens of thousands of demonstrators mjrching on the
office of President Juan Maria Borda berry and shouting, "'Down
with the dictatorship."
Police sources sa id at least three persons died in the crashes.
Hospitals said at least 30persons were treated for injuries. It was
the largest such demonstration since Bordaberry dissolved
congress on June 27 and aru10unced he would run this South
American country by decree. Witnesses said mounted troops
· used swords to beat away demonstrators, some of them elderly
persons, wo men and rnen.

Swine in tho .. w fashion seaso~ in this ucltlne outfit loomed of 100 pet. polynler. The solid pllsse'
man tailored shirt Is delig~tfully occentedby the solid V-neck.vest to give you !hoi layered look . The
mini check pull-on pants add a distinctive touch to thl• talented Irio. All are washoble, of course . Shirt
andvestin slles S, M, L, Pants In sizes 7·17,1-18.

ar · to h~
Chief ,,r Police J. J .
Cremeans suggested lf•al the
committee provtd · sumplcs of
ubsccn i ty.
S1'1tEET IIEPAIHS
The street commitlt'&lt;.l was
advised to meet w1th a
representative .of U1c Shelly
Cmppany to determine a;l·
pruximateiy how much street
resurfacing can be carried oul

and

Weather

Ebersbaci-J, 51,
dies in Florida
A.

was bucked hy Counrtlmuw
Rlchurd Vaughan who said
he 11 "ready at uny lime to
back an or~lnancc to ··urtall
th e sale of such magazine•"
in Middleport.
Vaughan, Lawrence Stewart
and David Ohlinger were
named to confer with solici tor
Bernard Fultz on an ordinance
which would setlfi&gt; community
Standards on which o~scenity

own on

'

LONDON - TilE DOLLAR GAINED in Europe and Asta
today and some bankers said the reeovery was brought on by
reports that the U. S. government would intervene to stop the
currency's downward slide. The dollar, which first showed signs
of Improvement Monday, opened higher today in Tokyo, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdal_ll and London.
"Last night we heard that Washington might support the
dollar on foreign exchange markets," a bank official said in
Paris. "Well, by this morning the United States had made no
move," he said. ''But there is still that chance of intervention, so
it has helped the dollar. "
The U. S. currency climbed back over the 4-franc level in
Paris, gained 8 yen to 262 yen in Tokyo, climbed .68 pet. in Am·
sterdam to 2.58 gutlders and rose marginally in London.

0

state of m in d "

·Farmers Bank &amp;

Mnrkt:t K cpor1

whip Americans

Feather
your own
nestfirst
ne&amp;teJur . Avoid

Television Log

MONDAY, JUI.Y B
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
~ - 00- N r.ws 3.4.8. 10,15; ABC News ll ; Sesame St. 20; Travelure
Slturdlly1July -11 Jf73
!3 .
SALES REPORT 01'
6:30 ABC N•ws 6 ; CBS News 8,10; I Dream ot Jeannie 13;
Ohio Valley Uvealock Co.
News 3,4, U ; How Do Your Children Grow? 33.
The Middleport A's defeated
HOGS
- 17~ to 220 lbs. 311 to
the Middleport Americans, 5-0, 7.00- Truth or Cons~~q . 3; Beat the. Cl ock~~ News 6,10; Circus
13; What's My Llnet; Elec. Co.lO; Discover Flying 33; Saint 40.20; 220 lo 250 lbs. 39.50 to
in Meigs pony league action
15.
•
40.40; Ught 38 Down; Fat Sows
Saturday.
7:30--To Tell the Truth 6 1 Young Or. Kildare I ; Hollywood 34 to 37; Stags 30 Down ; Boars
Mike Magnotta went the
Squares ~ ~ Traffic Court 10; Chan-ese Way 20 ; Episode:
Acllon 33 ; Bobby Gollfsboro 3; Movie "That Tennessee 29 to 31.70; Pigs 12.50 to 22;
route for the A's, allowing 5
Beat " 13.
Shoata U- to 42.50.
hits and walking 3. Mike May
8·00- Baseball World ol Joe Garaglola !,4,15; Rookies 6;
CA17LE -Steers - 39.60 to
was the losing pitcher. -·
Gunsmoke 8, IS.
47.75; Heifers 38 to 45.60; Baby
Mark Haggerty rapped a 3· &amp;· IS- Baseball 3,4,15.
run homer for the A,'s in the 9:(10-Here·s Lucy 8, 10; 1\Aovle "Sailor Beware" 6,1S; Alexis Beef 44.50 to 70; Fal Cows 31.50
to 34 ; Canners 28 to :!5.10; Bulls
Welssenl)erg-The Plano 20,33.
bottom of the sixth inning . John
9:3Q-Dorls Day 8,10, Book Beat 20,33.
39.50 to 42.50; Milk Cows 31b to
Pat Riley added 2 hits to aid the IO.IlO-Medlcal Center 1,10; News 20 ; Paul Nu chlms 33.
525.
1
A's attack.
1o·15- The Si len t Years 20.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 66to
11 oo-- News 3.4 ,6,8, 10, 11, lS ......
68;
· Seconds 60 to 64.50;
11:JQ-Johnn y Cason 3,4, 1S; Dick Cavett 6,13; Movies " Eve" tO ;
Movies "An American In Paris" -8.
Medlwn 54 to 70; Com. &amp; Hvs.
1·1l0-Perry Mason 4 ; News 13.
54 to 65 ; Culls 60 Down.
2 oo- Focus on Columbus 4.
BABY CALVES - 55 to
3. oo-News 4.
107.50.
TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1973
,...

from auto injuries

MFIGS ·THEATRE

July 13-14-lS
THE LAST
AMERICAN HERO
ITechn1colorl
Jell Bridges
Valarle Perrine
IPGI
Color cartoon$:

" Twoadoor"

Ferguson, placed only 2men in
double figures, "Four-&lt;loor"
Ferguson and Tony Vaughan .
V1mghan was the lending
rebounder for the losers.
Rajun Cajuns (86 ) - Morris
6-2-14, Dunfee 6-2-H, Harris 3-66, r.'ord 11)..3..23, Eubank 12-!1.-26,
Hubbard 2-6-4.
Luigi's Anchovies (54) - T
Vaughan 8-J.I7, Johnson 3-0--6:
Ferguson 9-1-19, Douglas 3-0--6,
Bremlnt 1.(1.2, Wallbrown 2.().4.
The ·third game went to the
Eagles, as the Gianls forfeited.

MASON
DRIVE-IN
.
.
'

guard

·-

•

• 10 - The J)aUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Po.neroy, 0 ., July 9, 1973

IMPROVEMENT PROJECT - Construction of a ftve·
foot retaining wall is under way on Pomeroy's East
Second St. on a lot between the Pomeroy Ltbrary and the
• Umted Method1st Church. According to present plans a new
drive-in banking facility will be constructed on the stte by the
Pomeroy National Bank. Plans and spectftca tions for the
structure are in the process of bemg completed .

By MIK E FEINSILBER
WASHIN GTON (UP I)
John N. Mitchell told the
Senate Waterga te committee
today he opposed a White
House intelligence-galhermg
pla n which. sanctioned
burglaries in lhe name ol internal secunty.
The former attorney general
sa•d tha t not untti recently dtd
he know th at President Ntxon
had ordered the plan put mto
effect for five days before
bowing to objections from J .
Edgar Hoover, late dn·ector of
the FBI.
For his long-awaited a p~ ar­
ance at the nationally televised
heanngs, Mttchell was not
(Continued on Page 8)

LAWRENCE (Panzo) Bastiani, center, Gallipolis, purchased the first basket of tomatoes
from Wayne Swisher's new 84-acre tomato farm in Letart Falls in Meigs County Monday
evening . Bastiam had promised Swisher he would "purchase the first basket of tomatoes for
$20" last March. Swisher, left, accepts check while Ted Reed, president of The Fanners Bank
and Savings Co , Pomeroy , looks on.

Chamber directors nominated
By KATIE CROW
A list of II names from which
six directors will .be elected
was present.Jd to th e Pomeroy
Chamber of Co mmerce
Monday at its noon luncheon
meet10g at the Meigs Inn .
A copy of the hst, prepared
by Earl Ingels, will be provtded
each member who wtll vote for
stx directors and return them
at once.
Nominees are Jack Carsey,
Bill Grueser, Earl F. Ingels,
Jr ., Wendell Hoover, Marjorie
Hoffner, Fennan Moore, Katie
Cr ow, Ralph Graves, Bill
Anderson, Kerm1t Walton and
Vtrgil Teaford . Carry-over
dtrectors are Dennis Keney,
Ted Reed, Fred Crow, Fred
Morrow, D. H. Diener, ··Jack
Kerr and Dale Warner .
There wtll be a meeting of
CORN CREDIT
Orion W. Roush, chairman
of t e Meigs County ASC
County Committee today
announced that farm ers in
Meigs
County
will
automatically receive
"history credll" for corn as
' long as they have planted
corn In either 1971 or 1972.
This measure, taken because
of the wet weather eondltlons, Insures that a farme
who usually produces corn
will not have his base
reduced because of con·
dltlons beyond his control.
Roush also re called
Friday, July 13 Is the final
dale to certify even II far·
mers plan to forfeit
payment.

Ule directors July 16 at 12 ·30
p.m. at the Metgs Inn to elect
offi cers for the coming year
Carolyn Thomas, secretary,
reported II memberships have
been patd thus far Dues have
been increased from $25 to $35
to cover the ·expense of the
chamber offi ce .
Fred Crow reported that the
Ohw Society for the PromotiOn

of the Bull Frog Inc., lost
money on th1s year's activities,
even though receipts were
larger. Crow attributed the loss
to the facl that larger pmes
to taling $625 were given at the
frog jwnp, and beca use lhe
new fr og art contes t also
camed prize money .
The name of Sharon R1ffle ,
M1ddleporl, was selected in

conjun ction wtth the Cancer
Society as part of the Oh10
Socie ty for the Promotion o!
the Bull Frog 's an nual conIn but10n of a $500 bond . 1
Btil Orueser reported that
proftt from the ndes at the
llegatla totaled $1,670 an mcrease or $85 over last year .
Jack Carsey reported that the
boa t races went "very well,"
but more entries would have
1m proved the event. It was also
suggested that next year's
Regatta be held a week later m
June, a matter to be studied .
Attendmg were Jack Kerr ,
president, Btll Grueser, Vtrgil
Tea ford, Richard Chambers,
national law en forcement
Jtm lloush, Ralph Werry, John
agency in the world is the
Koebel, Wendell Hoover, Bob
Federal Bureau of In Jacobs, Fred Crow , Ted Reed,
vest1ga tion," N ixo~ said .
Jack Carsey, Carolyn Thomas,
" It is still th e bes t. And
Beulah Jones and Katie Crow.

Ho-stility shown
President Nixon

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ntxon saw evidence
of a drop m his popularity
ca used by lhe Wate rga te
sca ndal Monday when he
stopped 111 Kansas City, Mo., en
route back to the White House
from Cahlorma.
Hostile signs appeared 10 the
crow d when he swore 111
Clarence M Kelley, th e By Unlled Press lnlernatioual
Oflictals of the Ohto EnvironKansas C1ty pollee chtef, as
mental Protection Agency satd
new dtrector of the FBI.
they hoped they could
Sorne 0 I the Slgns satd ·. today
II 0 flU
. II t ' 1 I"
'' lmpeachffient w1th Honor," ~ ca
lealrpo u 10.n 'a er
"Consptra tor or umn formed soon , s10ce the
. polluhon levels
Fool ?" " Impeach Adolf began dr?pptn g Monday m the
Ntxon," "Honesty, Now More Steubenville area.
The "alert" was issued Sa tThan Ever ."
About 12,000 persons turned urd ay for Belmont, Monroe
out lor the ceremony staged 10 and Jefferson counties
Readings Monday allernoon
fr on t of the federal btuldmg
where l)lixon, m off-the-cuff showed a level below" the 200
•·cquu·ed to post an
•·emarks, sought to •·eassure mark
41
11
•
th e nation lha t Watergate alcrl.
Levels early Monda y were
&lt;IISciosures involvmg the FBI
just
19 poinls from the next
had not shattered the FBI.
stage, issuing a warmng, bu t
" l have often said, and l have
·v1s1ted most of the counlrtes ol by Mond ay aft ern oon, the
th e world , that th e best mdex had dropped to 161and u

24-hour count showed 187.
DUring the " a l ert ,'~ mdustnes and other activihes which
gave off heavy em1ss1ons were
asked to cu•·tail operations.
The tla ti onal Weather
Service satd an air sta gnatiOn
advism·y contmued in effect lor
II other southeastern Ohto
counties - Noble, .Washington,
Morgan,
Meigs ,
Vinton.
.la ckson, Ga lti a, Lawrence,
lllhens, Scioto and Ptke.
~-The Na ti onal Wea ther
Se rv;ce smd th e poor dtspcrston conct1l1ons were, expected
lo worsen early today, but

some improvement was expeeled by afternoon .

'

LOUGE TO MEET
The reg ular meeting Of
Shade River Lodge 45~ will be
held Thursday at 8 p.m, at the
hull In Chc.s tcr. All Master
Masons ore invited

,

TEX HARRI1iON and the Vnllcy Rnys will entertain I rom
2 lo 4 p.m. Sund uy when an outd oor re{Tea tion aM I~J:IIing

The games committee will
meet July 24 at 4 p.m. , also at
the fairgrounds, and the style
revue comrniltee will mfet
July 16, 6 p.m. in the county
extension offtce.
The Junior Fair building will
be cleaned followmg the next
meeting of the board at the
Junior Fair building al 7·30
p m., Aug. 10.
Committees and th etr
chairm en
are
Home
Economics, Ingrid Hawley;
Food and Nutrition, Niese!
Duvall ; Rabbits and Poultry,
Ronnie Wood ; Shop and Crops,
Lest.Jr _Jeffers, ...Rocky Hupp;
Beef, Joel Maue, Mandy Rose;
Sheep, Randy Johnson; Swine,
Rocky Hupp_;_ D9g Show ,
Bobbie ,'\"rcher ; Tractor
Operators and Contes t, Eddie
Kenn e dy;
Demon s trations, Jan Hol ter;· Horses
and Games, Aimee Huston; Coordinalin g, Marcia Carr ;
Jumor Fa1r Revue, J ane
Congressma n Cla ren ce Whitehe'il d; Parade , Jyl
Mtiler's office this week an· Beaver, Steven Stanley; Junior
nounced approval of a $495,000 Fair Night , Lola Walker ;
gran t fr om the health service's Style Revue, Marcia Carr,
mental health administration AND
Junior
Fair
to be used for a new com- building com rmttee, Lee
pr ehensive mental health Hysell.
eenter lhat will serve three
counties in Southeastern Ohio,
including Meigs County.
When co mpleted , it wtll
provide Metgs, Galha, and
.Jackson counties,
with
comprehensive out-patient and
partial hospitalization care. In
Committee chairmen for the
add ttton , il w1II provide
emergency services and a 10 1973-74 year have been named
bed hosp1tal umt in conjunction by the Meigs County Jaycees.
'fhey are Victor Gaul,
wtUI the Athens Mental Health
Center Last week an earher cha pt er deve lopment and
announcement of the same mcmbcrslup, Vtncent Knight,
grant listed Athens County, not or ientation and ac:ivatlon ,
Meigs, as one of the three to be llichard Collins and Carson
Crow, ways and means, Rolph
served
Construction of a new Werry , religious activities and
building will take place 111 public relations, Barry McCoy,
Galli polis wtlh satellite youth wtd sporls , Earl Ingels,
branches to serve 10 two ad- commwtity developmenl, and
ditional Jbca ti ons. Anticipated Robqrt Sylvester, hea lth and
compl!lion of the structure is safely.
Ingels and Gaul were name~
projected at 21h years. Speclltc
site or the project is not yet co-&lt;;hairmen of a year IQng
dctcrnuned . Its total cost will membership driv e lhrouwh
which youn g men b&lt;ltwccn the
be $550,000
ages of 18 und J5 will be en·
coura ged lo
join
th e
organizations .
Planned projcd_, for the
TWO DI E
coming
year will indudc the
VALENCIA,. Spain (UP I) Two work"rs dit'll nnd a third "haunted house ", llt~l Ball,
suffered ser·tous injuries Moll- and Christmas baskets,
da y when an emergency narc · The Kroup will next mc~l ale
trigMcn~l an explosion and fire p.n •. Wcdnellday at ·Pomeroy
in a sn•nll Fireworks fa el.dry. · Villngel Hall.

Meigs is
Pollution eased off included

EXTENDED OUTLOOK .
Fair and mild Thursday
and a chance of showers
Frldoy and Saturday. Hlch•
In the 80s and lows In the 60s.

SQUAD AIDS MAN
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad assisted Robert Davis at
2:24 a.m. Tuesday In fron t of
city hall . Duvie was suffering
front chest pains and was tak&lt;•n
lu Pleasant ~alley Hospital.

Four Junior Fair Board
committees have scheduled
ea rly meetin gs to prepare for
tl1e 1973 Fatr.
Secretary Joel Maue acted
as chairr.1an, and Rick
Macomber se rved as acting
seerel.ary of a boat~ meetmg
recently at Meigs Higi1 when
U1e committees reported.
The livestock commillee will
meet on July 24 at I p.m. on the
fan·grounds to build gates and
pens w•th material bemg
provtd ed by the Senior Fair
Board .

~how Is staged at Ihe Middleport Mul'inu by the Middleport
t'hnmbcr of Commerce. The show, l•·ec of eharge to the
puhli&lt;" . will begin ut nuon ;md c los~ at ctnrk .

'

•

m grant

Meigs JCs

plan year

•r

••

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