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Devvted To The

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enttne

lnter~l3

Of The Meig•-MaMJn Area

' VOL. XXI NO. 77

FIVE CENTS·

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B} Unltod p~,. lflternatlonal
Civilian plldt Eugene Ely new
the Orst plane ott a ohlp InN&lt;&gt;- ·
vember, 1910 1 'when he took off
rr... a lpeclolly built platform on
the deck ot the cruiser Binning·
· ham II !llnwton Hoods, VL

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LOS ANGELES (UPO - P&lt;&gt;- direction of the park, tho foeal
llco battled anlpers In Watts for point of the trouble.
Scattered Looting
two hours early IA&gt;da,v dlrlng a
Tbore was scattered lootlni
ma.jor disturbance that lett two
persons dead and more than 40 end clt;y ftremon roiJI(IIIded to
injured on tho third ihnlvorsary tour small tlrea. But ,.;
was put Into elleet.
of tho blool(y 1965 riot.
A helicopter with ,....CII
Plolleo chief Tom Reddin said
at 7 a.m. EDT that '"things are llghla hovered over tho ar8!l u

curfew

~:~LEFT,

HI

AND BILL KNIGHT, right, toro OC.Me11o Councy's l'ew 'Eagle Scouts eonWerner who Sunday night received tile highest rank In ocrutiJ¥.

Mil. ANl1 MilS. PAUL WERNER RECEIVED !lifts signifying their son, Richard (Rick), pic·
lured with !hom, has lhlt hlghoot rank In Boy Scouting SUnday nlghl at tho United Church of Chrlat
In Pomero,y.

Rick Werner of Pomeroy

Maddox
May Get

Awarded Eagle Scout Rank
The higbelll rank In tho AJnor. tor that earned a total ot 21 merlcao Boy Scout Jll'OIIl'&amp;lll- Eagle It badgeo which are r"'JJIred tor
Scout - was oontorred !llhda,y lila rank ot Eagle.
nlllht upon Richard ()lick) WerHe has
a11latar~ patrol
nor, ..., ot Mr. end Mrs. Paul leader, patrol leader aod lo now
Werner, at Trlnlil'l/l,lltedChlorch a junior asslotant scoutmaster of
Cf Christ.
·
Boy. Scout Troop 248 which last
HeretllpreeenttheEagteScaut night held tho Court o! Honor.
award to young_Werner was hit
Adllts In the Court o! Honor
flrat • a~ster, Dr. JOhn Included Dr. Moore, OJy Nash,
Moore ot GriiiVIIIe, formerly ot · former MGM District execuMelp. Cotlley.
tlve; Harvey Vao Vranken, Bill ·
Womer joined lhlt Cub Scouts &amp;louller, Ra,vGiazeendTomCasln 1981 alid Ia .198t became a soU, troop OOilllnlttoe members
SJar &amp;lOUl He beCII!&gt;e a Lito end Cbaddo HaJJ, MGM Dlatrlct
SCout 011 Ma,y 17, 1986, end at: exoeutlvo. Werner's father Ia

been

-AND

pj&gt;..'i l

M"/1
TilE
pected·lo
Brown, m
at least l 1

WI
PEl

scoutmaster ot Troop 248. Tho
Rev. Bill Perrin, pastor ot the
Trlnlcy United Church of Chflot
wldch Richard attends delivered
tho charge. Escorting tho cendi·
date wore Bob Buck, Pomeroy,
and WUUam Knight, Pl. Ploasao~ formerl.Y of Plomoroy, who

In Race
ATLANTA (UP0- Gov. Lester Meddox said SUnday night
he may have to '~save" the
national Democratic Part)' by
runnlng tor president
Maddox admitted in an
exclusive interview with UPI
that his chances of winning the
Democratic presidential oominalion were ''not much, but you
never can tell what might
hiiJpen In Chicago," site ot tho

are also Eagle &amp;puts.
Werner presented his S!On with
the Eagle Scout certificate trom
lhlt National Cuurt of Honor and
during the ceremonies young
Werner presented his mother
with a miniature Ea8Ie pin and
his fatllor with a lcouting I I e
clasp.

Mrs. Ben NeutzUng was or-

I

·NtrW$··· in Briefs

groua:ls ... F
Gobia Colalt;

By United Preos We:rnaUOIIII

CIDCAGO - F1Vt YiJUTIIS WERE AHJIESTED for curlew vlo-

la!fon 5umay night asl&gt;olleo P.ltrolled suburban Chicago Heights aod

PISGAACEf'UL.
CONDUCT... AT
!.EAST ON KING

bqj-eaiiiJW ""'

Etat Chicago Height's. Pollee also picked "' two youths suspected
olaraon lnalxflroswhlehbrokeootearly Surxley In lxth suburbs, one
of which destroyed a $100,000 worehcute containing $300,000 In
gooda, much ot it Otrtstmaa decoratlons.
A policeman. shot In earlier trouble. was in good concUtion

GU1.'S AART!

IIUJpriaed.

POllee h1arned teen-agers ror shootings, arsoo all:l beatings. "It

NEWChrl
CIIY aecordlna

Too hot, tool

presentaUons were made by Bill

GOTaiMlle

NEW YORK - AN INDEPENDENT POLL INDICATED SUnday 81oufter.
thlt Rlclwd M. Nlxi&gt;n's p..,Warlcy has soared since he won the RoLighting for the ceremonies
publlcan nomi..Uoo for president and he oow hasa e&lt;mmandlng lead was by Pat Woods.
over any likely Democratic pm~l, More than half oftheRopubllcsnapollodbySindllnger and Co., Inc.,
NFO TO MEEI'
Aid lhoy lgreed with Nixon's choice of Maryland Gov. ~fro T. As·
The National Farmers Organ- ao lila runlilng mate tle!Qllte crltlclam fr&lt;BII aome GOP looders. Ization will moot Tuesday at 8
p.m. at lhlt Middleport H I g h
COLOMBIJS - 'niE 0100 DELEGATION to tho Demoera!le Na- School. The purpose of lito mootllonal Conventloll waa to meet tonight with former Poatm.aster Ge~&gt;o Ing Ia to explain oolloctlvo barera! Lawre~''I,YBrlen,. tl&lt;tl' natlnnai campaign coordinator for VIce gaining, All farmers In tbo area
Prealdent Hubert II. HU111Phfoy,
·
Ire Invited.

tor. statlag tl1al
.. "1o attem an old-.
... SUDioy, sept,
Rsaervatloos (th
dol. Aug. 16.

SURE would
llurtag last week
session o! the Gl
work unit conser·
.. l

lhlt cRy county h
lake.

OOP Slt.ID

'ltlJ WERE
100 FA.T?

IMAGINE TH' I\IERVE OF
THAT GUY, SAVIN' A.
ll41NS LIKE TI-IA.T

... A GIUV
COULD STAIM:

ABOUT HIS KING!

lODEATH

UNDERSTAND

Bride· Survives Surprise

AROUND HERE!

prolesaioaal WotnaJ
a Hol1c1ay Inn will b
wbere In Kanauga..

I-IOLYCOW!

&amp;he aew replaceme
J ....,1989.

OAKLAND, ·Callt .(UP!)- "He hushand, she . said, so aho I hurt so bod. God I hurt. I was
told me he had a aurprlse for agreed to lie down. It was then sure I was d)'lng. but l clldn't
me.•,
she ns hlt wltb 1 club IDd want to be burned to a crisp •., ·
The pratt;y brqnelte new- blacked out. When she recov- she said.
Jywotl, lying bridled In her ered, she wao hli again ·~
'She. mlllli&amp;Od 1o struggled out
hoapllal botl, Aid the surprise oeelng her huobend end .otio 0&lt; of the burning auto aod work
her husband pr&lt;liDIJed was to two other unldontlil.ed men her wiy up tho ellf! whore sho
1
·
ha.. liooa cleo,tb.
: '
pouring aomathlg on the rtar ot •temmed., a b!eldt!W head
,I · Barbara •,Carmack, , 20, said the car.
wOIIbd With
tllldotprmoDI,
\
her butbend.ilt .... month, Billy
"Wiien thli ear irtarted going . Three ~ed ·Youths
Ray, • 26, ,· cirO.. hor · lilrty. over tho cllll, I aort of.,_ to. PLdliV In lhlt arei foutlll her
Saa.rdi¥ mornl!V to· 1 lovero'
.and took her to the hospitaL ·
lane ebovo the Son Leitndro
~es. . ring
Her hoabend wu arrested a
rooervolr.
.
•
', rew houri later and tako!a to
· 0... th!ore, she oald, he boat
Alameda' COlin()' ~ tor lnvestl.
' ' her and set are 1o 'their late
ptlon ol al&amp;aull ,' to ocmmlt
I1 · mwe1 automobile and ..nt II
I
mlll'tler and arson.
, ,.
ow 1 50'tOo! elrtr. with her ·'"""-·' tJI; !lotllll, 17, · died . llsputlso ·•
a . lkond
!nolde. She .tid hsdiJI It 111 . ~ 't'l;~. ln V'!~;Me· aulpect, lde!\11.!1"' lio Tbomas
c!llleel ~OOtflll ~~, !Jiauren£11- ' ~~llp,\ljll, 14i'·'-'I'OI IVII ·'~ Sinos; h~· ~ thfoqgb hlo
. . ·Tho ~~~ bad' dri~n ljl '!"! • ~..; '( lhe ~lh Allllrl·. .faltomoy 1o ouiTeiitler 1~ ~.
'lonely pJAoe atteri~...... ~ ,eanWer.'•
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bY. h\~
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GAllS Prlncl!&gt;ll
orda in his omce,
I , . . . ago. During (
lho obldenta who gn

an

TWENTY YEAR
lhlt weekly Gallia TL
Ia Ctdo River here...
llolar7 Club scocebol
2L .. Pt. Plealllll aw
...-)J three mlnuteo
biM powertul runnbv
lied with two bsoebaL
Beeo... Gerald Hamill

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Dies Sunuay
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otalt

lmmunizati(

·w...,..

PT. PLEASANT
~

Health 1111.
liU raleued on aetlvll
. llliolillll 2t6

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WUII~ttl(9hl· ,;·~~·~
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«t In •arioua COIIIIIl cl

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Harold Sluon, Tom Reed, J o o
Roaenbaum, seCODd class, presented by Van Vrankon; T I m
Glaze, hiking end ftrst aid mor.lt badRes; Richard Werner, rorestry badge, presented by Nashi
Tim Glaze, Star Renk, preoented
by Cassell: with warrants going
to Demla Glaze, Morton Barnes,
Tom caaaell, patrol leaders; David Hiles. senior patrol Ieeder:

wtis all planned," said East Chicago Heights Police Chief Robert
"We knew about It a week ago. There was nothiJW racial Dana &amp;loufter, Tim Glaze and
aliout it Someone had a grudge aplnst cerlllln members of the Richard Werner, junior assistpOlice dfl)lrtment. n
ant scoutmaster ratings, These

Slfne·

c!ooontlllg d.

..,

Ice. Other members oltho troop
presented •11arda ~ring the corempnlos Included Paul Pearson,.
'Allan llreLaugblln, .tenderfoot awaftls, pre:aented by Werner;

first llllllOill
Tuosda,y, Alta
No doubt Kelt
,:ontest at tht
last Tuosda,v
lair In 1957..
IIIII wheo Jael

eWJI posstbilltles

ganist for the impressive serv-

letallus, '
1111aflpor, j!OIIo,•.

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DR. JOHN MOORE, FOHMERLY OF Star Route, Pomeroy,
now,ot .Gra...We; P!'t•entalt tl&gt;e..t'J.IlllO~~~Jll!lto .Richard
(Rick) Worner &amp;Jnda)' night In ceremonies at the Trinl\Y United Church of Cllrlst . Dr. Moore was Werner's ftrot ICOIItmaster.

Heavy Raid May Mark
Complete Bomb Pause

pollee end anlpero exebaQ..,.
very quiet oo the street."
The racial violence apparently shots.
Reddin laid, Utbere ftl
was triggered by tho arrest ot a
woman at the third annual massive response b7 pollee.
Watts &amp;immer Festival at Wtu They (lho pollee) were flroil
- . There will .b e those wllo
Rogers Park.
"We were O.sbUng for our said we overreaeted, bat lt'a
lives and we th«lght we were better 1o ·overreaCt end - . . I
going to loose tbe whole thing," It In this c!se, we did react
said Lt. Loo Ritter o! tho Los masslve)Jr."

Angeles Plollce Department.
Fired on &amp;bststlno
During tho vlolonee, the pollee
substation ln Watts came under
fire. Patrol cars were shot at.
There

were

25

gunshot

victims, !oor of them j!OIIco·
men. None of the oflicers wa"
conaf.dered In serious condition.
Reddin said tho pollee depart.
menl was placed on a tactical
alert and more than 2,000
otncers were on l1rty around
the ell)'. The Natlooal Guard
was alerted but was oot

southern Democratic official~
even In his' oWn state.

Could Create ~lit
"I'm as shocked as anybody,"'

Slid Georgia Democratic Part)'
Secretary Joe Sports. He said
Georgia Chainnan James Gray

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wa,y end struck a barn owntil by

Mrs. Orville Bnnm.
There was moderate damagle
1o the 3-4 l.on truck driven by
Elk, end oo InJuries or arrest.
The other accident occurred

a com field.

Three defendants were fined
Saturda,y night In the coort ol

There was minordamaptothe
auto but the driver reportedly

oustalnod on IDjured r1llht wrist.

Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar.
They were Herbert Miller, Ra.
cine, $5 and costs, assured clear
distance; William Ours, Racine,
$5 and costs, squealing tires,

No arrest wa1 reported.

le under control.

DWI.

Tho Sllerlll'a department also
reported the arrest ol Aanxt
Hysell, 37, Coodor St., Plomo-

roy, on a grand larceny thar:~e
and Jerry Arnold, Pomeroy, $10 and RandeU Lonnie Denny, I£
and costs, failure to have vehic- Rt. I, Vinton, 011 a charge o(

Ro.br'nson rnarts wr'th Goln
'C"
I

Nixon Just

River Gauges

---~·-~--~''· ~

at 7:110 p.m. iilllday In lllnorsvllle, a mllo northweot Cf the
driven by Robert G. Elk, 51, ~racuae rosdalde park. IllerHuntington, traveling west, went Iff Robert c. HartoD&gt;ach said a
out ot control on tho wet high- car driven by Agnoa LucUJeBog.
gess, 23, Rt. 2, Racine, went out
ot control wheo ·a tire blew out
Legar Orders F'mes end lhlt vehicle tumecl over In

Rockefeller's ·staff to stetport
the Democrats in November
because he says Richard M.

'

..,..t

6:45 p.m. Saturday four mUes
east or Chester when a truck

Hanoi Sees

Geo. Keniledy

Negro woman, wl1o was •tial·
ldontl!led. (11 a cbarge of beln(
drunk end plaood bor In a
patrol .,..,
''Peciple galbered ""'"""' tile
car. Tboa more &lt;lUIIe lilt it tho
park and started tiu'OWinll.....,.
and bottle• at us, •• be said. '"We
came Wlder gun!lro. We deeldad
to meko a sweep ot the park."
A•
100 omcera belli!
going ln1o tho park, Ritter uld,

Barn Struck by Truck

NEW YORK (UPI) - Jackie
Robinson, the first Negro to
crack the .. color line" In major
league bueball, said he will

ard:

said tho llol0111co

some 1,000 people cbarpd
activated.
At 4 a.m., there were 200 toward lhltm. AI ebout thlo
policemen patrolling the area point, lhlt pollee aubstatlon
extending a mile in each came under fire.

1968 convention.
''There's a wave or patri~
tism and conservatism sweeping
the country," Maddox said.
"l'·ve ,.....,-thi.......,_.)lettra.-u.-...._.,.,._ .
...... ~ . • , • . . ··-·
He said he wOJJ(d waJt several
One per !lOR was Jnjured in two
dayo to 811120 the public's alngle-voldclo accl-s reportreactloo to his poaslble candida- ed by Melga CouniY !ilerlf! Robey before actually seeking tho ert c. Hartomacb's department
I'KitlinatioJL
over the weekend.
Maddox's statement stumed
The tlrst mbhap occurred at

SAIGON (UP0- Tho United was a final thrust in anttdpa- rtas out of state and "knows
States IA&gt;da,y struck North Uon or 11n order halting all nothing about" Maddox's plans.
VIetnam's invasion bases with bomblng or North Vietnam. 1krt Sports said Maddox's candidacy
Its heaviest bombers In what U.S. state Department mission could "split up" the Georgia
American sources said could be sources said the White Hoose is delegation to the national
a prelude to a oomp)ete under considerable "pressure" · convention "about even."
bombing pause against the to halt the air raids tn return
South C&amp;rolina's Democratic
Cumrnunlst natloo.
for what BOrne d&gt;servers call a NatJooal committeema.n, Edgar
Military spokesmen said at relaUvo lull In Communist A. Brown, said In Columbia,
least 15 ~the B52 Stratotortres- ground Oghtlng In South Viet- S.C.. that he figured Maddox u
ses poonded the targets !lmday nam.
a close jiOIIUcal ally of third
night and early today despite
Presldenl Johnson on March PII'IY presidential caodldato
North Vietnamese missile fire. 31 llmttod U.S. bombing of the George Wallece o! AlabamL
11
In Sa111011, the u.s. military North to the southern panhandle
1'm sort oC amazed becaulie
command declined to comment
,j North VIetnam. A holt 1o all they're prott;y well down the
oo speculation lhlt 852 raiding bombing of the North has been same alley," Brown said. "My
a key North Vietnam demend In thinking Is tllet l! Governor
Paris talks with tho United Maddox splits IIIJ'body's vote, it
Stites on cooling down the war. would be the Wallace vote."'
There was nO conunent oo a · Brown said there was little
bombing pause from u.s. poaslbiii\Y of the south rallying
mllltary spokesmen,
behind Maddox.
None ol the Stratofortressoo
was hit by tho mlssUes aod they
dropped almost
a miiUon
pounds ol explosives on lnvaaloo
bases, troop eentors, supply
GAUGE&lt;:- Galll,polls, 12.4 end
dumps and gun pnaltlons just
18.9
running 19 feet of rollers:
above the Demllltartzed Zooo
PAR~ (IJPI) North Vlet- (DMZ) dlvldlng oorth and South Pt. .Plealllnt, 2«.60: Plomeroy •
llllll today. condemned Bopubll- Vietnam,
Maaon, 20.90; Rhtton, 0.90 stat.;
cao proaldondal eondl.d§le RichIWoawl&gt;a Falla, 7.00 falling;
¥. !lllmo's VietMm pi&gt;llc:y
Charleston, 19.30 falling. Lonand aeeu~himol"lmpudence,.,
don end Marmet, running 3 feet
.H- apoke.,ati N&amp;l\ven Than
ot rollers aod Winfield, l'llll1ing
Le atiO ~ld a newl eonteronco
8 feet.
that :-'lee ProaldOnt Hilbert H.
H~o reoent statement
that ' P!!lloe In .vi-.. was closer 'titW' ever ·-a...inex.~.'·
!.!! '~, proas ~ip)rta !rom
.· M'lo GOP ' CQIIYontlllt1 In
hid

Impudent

Ritter

started about 1:30 L111. EDT
SUDioy oftor omeert arro- a

resign

Croot Gov. Nebon A.

Nixon has ••sold himself oot to

the bigots in the south."
Robinson dennounced the Ropubll ron ticket ol Nixon and
Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of
Maryland as "'racist" in an

lppeerance on a local television
program (WNBC's "searchlight") Sunday •.
Robinson s11d he would llfvo
his soq&gt;ort to lhlt Democratic

~. no matter whether ho

lo Vice Prealtlent Hubert 11.
Humphrey, Sen. EUpM . J.
McCarthy of Mbqsota or Sen.
George S. McGovern of Soutll
Dakota.
" And I Intend to 110 o,.,, l!
the Democrata would havti me
.'
now, end auwort lhlt ~
cutlc nominee 1o lhlt bill ot
my abUicy In 1968, and If~ to
God that eVOJ')I blac:k .... IIIII
every mloarlcy lo this ~
does the same,.. Roblnaon said.
uBeeause lf we 4on't. we•~ ln
very, very seriwa trouble ln

this countcy II Richard Nlmt Ia
lhlt ••• Prealdent of the• llnited
Stales In 196&amp;."

·~-''

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1961l~s

AMERIC.IN LEAGUE
W, L. PeL GB
l)etro!t
7l 42 •638
· Ba!t)iitore •• , 66. t8 •588 7
. Booton ...... 62 54 .534 12
· Cleveland , • , • 63 56 .529 1 1;
QaklarKI ...... 60 55 .522 13'2
Minnesota, •• 51 59 ,478 IW,
New York ..... 51 60 .!59 201,
CaliforRia •.• 53 63 .457 21
Chicago , , •• 48 65 .425 2~. ,

I

,

Waslllfl8(0n at Minnesota, night
Detroit at Cleveland, night
Chicago at Boston, night

Washin&amp;ton ••• 42 71 .372 3{)1 ~
Sutmy's Results
California 11 Baltimore 1

NATIONAL 1 LF.AGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
SL Louis,,. ,76 41 .650
Chicago • , • , 62 55 ,530 II
san Francisco 60 56 .517 19.\
Cincinnati •• ,57 55 ,514 1~,\
Atlan!a' •.. , , 60 57 .513 6
Plttsllu!Jh • , .56 61 , 479 20
Philadelphia .. 53 61 ,465 21'.\
Los Angeles •• 53 64 .453 23
New York .... 54 56 .450 2~. ,

Minnesota 11 New York 2

Houston •••• 51 66 .436

Detroit 5 Boston .J, 1st, 14 inngs,
Detroit 6 Boston 5, 2nd
Cleveland 6 Chicago 1, 1st

Cleveland 2 Chicago 1, 200
Qaklarwl 8 Washington 3
Today's Probably Pitchers
(.\11 Times EDT)
Baltimore (Phoebus 13·10) at
Oaklarw;t O';rausse 8-8), 11 p.m.

New York (Peterson 6..S}at CaJ~
ifornia (Brunet 12~1 t), 11 p. rn.

Washington (Pascual 10-6) at
Minnesota O&lt;att 8-8), 4 p. m.
Detroit (McLain 23-J)al Cleve-land (Romo 1-2), 7:30 p, m.
Cicago (Fisher 5~7} at Boston
(Culp 8-4), 7:30 p, m.
Tuesday's Games
Baltimore at oakland, night
New York at california, night

23

SUnday's Results
San Fral\. 2 New York 1
san Fran. 5 New York 0, 200
Los Angeles 1 Phlladel,phia 0

Atlanta 5 st. Louis 3
Houston 5 Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 8 andnnall 5, 15 inns.
Today's Probably Pitchers

(All Times EDT)

st. Louis (Jaster 8-7) at Chicago (Harwls IZ-6), 2:30 p.m.
Atlanta (Stone 2-1) at Cincinnati (Culver 9-11), 8 p. m.
Only games scheduled.

Tuesday's GameS
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at Cincinnati, nighl
Houston at Phlla., 2, twi-night
San Fran. at Pittsburgh, night
Los .'\ngeles at New York, night

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Williams' Homer

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DoByWJOEGRERGSEN

overpowered Washington 8-J
UP( Sports Writer
and Minnesota mauled New
Billy WUJiaJTis finally tore York ll-2.
himself away from Crosley
Snaps Tie
.eld
but
not
be!ore
tearing
Fl
Williams, who has hit 11
.part the Cincl·nnati Reds,
homers since the All ..star break,
Williams, the slender slugger
ped
22 . I
of the Chirago Cubs, bid a foOO ~:er
the tt:i~~h :u~~~~
Ia re11o·ell for 1968 to the co2y Bench tied the score 5-5 with a
Cincinnati ballpark Sunday with two-run homer in the eighth (or
a demolition job on the Reds' the Reds. It stayed that way
pitching staff as he drove in until the 15th when Don
•ve
.
u runs Wl'th a pa•·r of ILomers. unessmger,
who ha d r.llVe h.Its,
The secoo:l. blast, a three-run . and Glenn Beckert sh)Rled wiUt
shot ,·n the 15th two-out against Jay Ruchie
·
l'nslde-the~ark
~
an::l
inning, pro·"•ed
CILic••o
with
Will'
~ JU
'"""
1ams 1aced a curving line
. to rigtlt on which Lee May
a n 8-5 Vl'ctor&gt;· and sent the Cubs dr1ve
into their crucial lour-~e
!ailed to make a diving catch.
e.~··
the
st.
Louis
series am~inst
ePhil Regan, the Cubs' amaz~
cardinals 14 games behind the
N 'onal
ing comeback reHever, pitched
. ati
If~epaeesetters.
1 2-3 innings, hls lolest s_tln~
"It's t1il ......
n"'...., t Jt'ke," sa1·• a
:n~...
.-.
"' ·siriCe tie s~ted and oinpl~r:u:u
•istful
WlJIILJ
wL--e · telftl
,
5
~
am
uua
a game !'Or'1he Tigers ln 1965,
t!tfias completed " Its n[no:l...&lt;NI-.a to gain credit for his lOth
stand C1"08ley, "oot the pitch.
.
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victory In 12 eels 1ons.
e
~-eo
allowed four hits arx:l Bench's
Collects 19 Runs
twl)orun homer.
Whatever It is, the Reds hope
Felix Millan collected five hits
Williams has had his fill. The and doubled in the tie-breaking
Chicago outfielder has bashed run during a nve-run fourth
six" of his 19 homers in Jrurlng as the Braves beat the
Cincinnati and has collected 19 Cards lor only the third time ln
runs batted in against the Reds 15 meetings this season. Deron
along with a .327 batting. The Johnson's tw~run single was
Atlanta Baves snapped the the big blow of the uprisil'(
cards' four~ game w i n n i n g against Steve carlton (11-7J.
streak with a 5-3 triumph while
Roommates Ray S&amp;decki an:!.
san Francisco swept a doubl~ Mike McCormick throttled the
- header from New York 2-1 and Mets, Hfting the Giant.&amp; into
5-0, Los ~eles edged Philadel· third place. sadecki pitched a
phla 1..0 aOO Houston tt1)ped four-hitter and struck out 13 in
Philadelphia 5-l.
the first game in outdueling
The Detroit Tigers ran their Tom seaver arxt McCormick set
American League lead to seven down the Mets on five hits ••.U
games by beating Boston twice, hit a two-run homer In the
5-4 in I~ IM1JWs and 6-5, while uightcap.
California b atmced Baltimore
Don Drysdale hurled a four11-1. Clavelatll won a pair from hitter and drove in the Dodgers'
Chicago, 6-I and 2-1, Oaklani only run with a fourth-inn!~
single for his fourth victory this
season by a 1-0 margin. The big
right-hander struck out eight
and didn't walk a batter ln
breaking a personal four-game
losing streak and hiking his
record to 13-LO.
Denis Menke socked a tw~run
double, jn the sixth lnnlng as the
Astros '·' defeated the Pirates
behind the C(I'Jibined seven-hit
pitching or Larry Dierker all:l
Dave GiustL The latter relieved
Any electrlcla1
Dierker with two on an:l one out
who
wllat'l
in the seventh and pitched
scoreless baU the rest of the
wlttlsllltbe
way, yielding two hits.

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LUTIIIER WINS
DEAUVILLE, France (UPI)
- Luthier, ridden by .J. DeForge
and owned by the Baron Guy de
Rothschild, won lhe $30,000 Prix
Jacques de Mrlos horse race by
£our lengths over I.ocris. Agy
was third in the field or 11.

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surprised, Green ~ til-14. and
UPI ~rts Writer
1.'
Bal~e ·•hutou&lt;
. ' .. Chicago
., . 1~
The Philadelphia Eagles were
In the . American r0911ion '
suf!erirc toda3 from a lost Loagile, l)enver !OjiQOd Clnclnw..kend. They lost money !rom · nat) ;15-13.'fn( ~kland'!'all~·
A potential turnawa,y crowd; ol Sin lUegii 3M.·J.&lt;
...1,·
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100,000 for a cancelled game at
' ~Jar~ Ide~ II~ ~ ·'Jl; ~6
Me,lco City, lost the sei(JJ.cel ,o f
...WI '.32 1
quarterback Norm Snaod, p8..,. liot
'.two lif 'thli · ~ :~ud
haps for the season, and 10{11·
~V.r-~'"''!4-iO
I'l!¥illtheir exhlbltion opener to· tiLe !"' ,leacL. TILe ' Cqw~s loj&gt;o TP
11etrol\ Lions.
t.'PJe oq 1Les Shy•I Qrie:.yard
&amp;aeld was tmrt on the ft.rst plunge tbat , ~IPped .: 9~
play of a 5unday game that was drl"''• Tho Fori3'-Niners ;gal on
rescheduled lor ·Philadelphia tiLe
scoreboard wllb
Il&lt;Ug
after officials declded list Cunningham's 24 yard run and
Frida,y tiLe climate of student George Mira's five yard .PISS to
uiU"est in . Mexico City was Sonny lilndle.
.
unsuitable alongslde tiLe usual
Circus catch
excitement generated by i
All America Larry ,Caonkl~s
professional football game,
etrcus catch of a Bob Gr.lese••
only 12,176 showed IQl at six...yard pass in the ..., \
Franklin Field for the pre- enabled Miami to d~ock
season curtain raiser £or both Bu!Jalo with 3:10 remainll~Ko
teams.
Griese and rival quarterback· '
Hopes Crumble
Jack Kemp each scored . on•
They saw Philadelphia's title keepers to heighten the action. '
hq&gt;es crwnble before the
Jan Stenrud's 15-yani !leld ·
season even starts as Snead goal with 47 seconds lor to pqj.
suffered a broken ankle whlle providled Kansas City with lts
attempting to stop Lem Barney victnry margin over 'Mirmesota;
from returni~ an intercepted newly acquired Dave Parks
pass for a touchdown.
latched onto a 33 yard pass
Two questions immediately from Bill Kilmer to start the
arose in the mi0011 of obser- New Orlf&amp;!ls Saints' victory
vers:
march; Washington nipped At~ ,
Would the Eagles have lanta on Charlie Gogolak's 4S.. '
decided ~on such a play in the yard threeojiCinter with 16
rarified air of Mexico Cit.J.1 seconds to go; Fran TarkenAnd, could Barne~, weighted ton's three-yard m toss to Joe
down with football equipment Morrison in the last 15 seconcls
have scampered 46 yards at lhe
7,000-loot altitude of the Mexi-

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
OtllY $'299

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§ah

uaders

dereat

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Pomeroy Wins Pony Tournflme~t -~:8
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roy oil rljJIIihander Jlm Hub· Ables:
..·" •·•
bofd, Wllo went ,tho dfstanee for ellmpl,r es ,'-. . Gei&gt;rao Ill•~'"!·
~··use, waa ,a !Uth lmlns •In· rood, Jr., ptate, ead Jim StiiiJs.
llle from Derlnls Glaze. J!Ubb8rd
' · ) ;'
fanned iLeven and Walked ~
In going tile cllstance and WUJ
struck out nine and ls$1od three
bases m balls.
~racuso's fourth lmlng nma
came When Rick Asb was IIIlo nn
a fielder's choice after steve
Jenldna came thrcu!lh with a
lead.o!f alniJe and Allen 'Pugh
and Kevin stullor also rapped
stnllee
In tile aeventh, steve Winebrenner ocorod after being IIIlo
m a fielder's eholce, Jenkins
sot on tbrouJh an error. andRiek
·Ash singled. Oilier hits for tile
bostl were a alnile by Ash Ia
tile sixth and a third IMini base
HlilY tiplfliDr
11
lll~by n-..d.
I
'httti·IKltii·IOiflp:.]ilf
Pomeroy
120 102 1 - 7 3 2
JJChool ar colltli tltldeltt, YGit'~
~Tacust
000 200 1 - 36 S
msy qualify 111111dnp 'ah
Wlll and Dixon. Hubbard and
JGUr Automobllt lnauranca; · ,,.

or ,. ar

baseman George Scott's ootstrctched glove for the game
winning single.
In other A. L. action Cleveland
swept a double header fromChi·
cago 6-1 and 2-1, Oakland drubbed Washington 8-3, GaliCornia
mauled Baltimore 11-1 arwl Mi.,.
nesota trounced New York 11-2,
Mlckey. Lollch picked up his
third straight victory in relief
for the Tigers in the nrsl game,
raising his record to 10..7. ne
entered the game in the lOth 1,.
ning and survivicd two jams, one
a bases-filled two-out threat in
the 13th J~hen he retired Rico
Petrocelli to end the inning. John
Warden won the nightcap for Detroit raising his r'cord to 4-1.
Reggie Smith homered twice in
Boston's losliU!: cause,
Cleveland belt Chicago in the
flrst game on pinch hitter Russ
Snyder's bases loaded single ln
the second lnnillll to hlgllllght a
three run rally. Indian relief
specialist Eddie Fisher pitched
1 2-3 scoreless innings or winning ball In the second game,
after being honored by his former White Sox teammates between
games.
Tony Oliva knocked in four
runs with a home run and a single and Rod Carew got tour hits
in becoming lile only .300 hitter
in the American League, as the
Twins routed the Yankees, Dean

Brown, hitting a sizzling .593
a~ a pinch hitter, smacked a
pidfh homer in the 14th inning
to ·¢ ve Detroit a 5-4 opening
galne victory over the Boston
Red Sox Surwl,cy and then, in a
starting role, singled wlth one
out in the ninth IMing of the
nightcap to cap the Tigers 6-5
come - Crom - behind victory and
Increase their American League
lead to seven games.
Brown is fairly well adjusted
to pinch-hitting. "I'm square as
an lee cube, .. he maintains, "and
twice as cool. ••
Brown, who homered as a pinch
hitter in a Friday night los~
tagged Lee stange for the game
winning homer in the opener.
Hitting Red Sox pitching is
nothing new ror Brown. He blasted a home run against Boston
as a pinch hitter in his nrst
major · league at bat ln 1963.
Pinch hitting earlier this year
he homered in the ninth tMtng
ofi .John Wyatt, then with Boston,
to give the Tigers a 4-3 win over
the Sox.
In Ute secorkl game Brown
came to bat in the ninth Inning
with rurmers on first and third,
one man out and the score tled c~~~,~~~~Uowed on1,y four hits In
~t~t 5-5, He hit reliever ~ark;y P«
Uth wi~
Lyle's second pitch past first

in the American Golf Classic,
1n probably the most tensi~
packed tounament In several
years, Nicklaus won hls second

holes ow:r the torturoua fl111l:
three holes o! the Firestone

Country Clli&gt; eourae.
Beard 1111 tiLe lint
drq&gt;
first place ln as many weeks out when he parrnd tho
the hard Wll)' Sunday, comlllll monoterous 625-yard 16th hole
from behirwl to larwl in a· thre&amp;o arwl Nlcklaus and Elder snbbed
way tie with Negro rookie Lee birdies. on the 17til green,
Elder arwl Frank Beard. TILe Elder was wlthln ave feet of
playoff was a test or nerves and the &lt;14' and Nicklaus wos In a
skill as Nicklaus and Elder bunker, but a 20.foot putt kopt
bat~ed held to head for ave the burly goltlen bear fr&lt;lm
Columbus, Ohio, ~lve.
·
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Break In 17th
By United Press lnteroatlonal
WIIIL the
IUglng
W, L. PeL GB on every sho4 tho two players
Toledo ....... 68 50 ,576
tiLe rleh alii famoua Nicklaus
Columbus. , ,60 53 .531 ~h arwl the little known roolde,
Rochester, , • 61 54 .530 ~h played head.toobead. The breal&lt;
JacksonviUe , .58 56 ,509 8
came on tiLe steond 11n1e
Syracuse •••• 54 58 .482 11
orounJ at tiLe 17th.
(,oulsviUe • , ,54 61 ,470 12'/,
Both playera put their second
Buffalo •••.• 54 63 ,462 I:W. shots on !he green of thO parRichmorwl , , 50 64 .439 16
fourholo, Elder 15 feet a"'Y
Sunday's ReBU!ts
arwl Nicklaus lllout eight teet.
ruchmorwlll Buffalo 2, lsi
Elller' o putt grazed tiLe llp o1
Buffalo 5 Richmond 2, 2nd, 7lms. · the CIQI and oUed a few Inches
Columbus 6 Syracuse 5J tat, post the hole,
15 lnniq(s
"I played tbO
st I know
Syracuse 7 ColumbUs, 0, 21'11, how," aald tJae 33-y
Elder
7.1nniLWS
who onb three rears .aao waa a
Loulovllle 3 Rochester 2
eaddy lor BUly
eU.
Toledo 5 Jacksonville 0

to

tournament

10

LOAF

ilirls &amp;,Ladies

SEE US FOI YOUR
FIRE AND ~UTO
INSURANCE

.99
-------------------------------~!~~-·--·--·--·

20 Per Cent Deviation. Our
Rates Do Not Raise After
· HavlnK A Claim As Some
CoQantesllo

V. D,

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W!erd Tournament
a wlerd ~ent
from start to nnlsh. The fourth
1'011111! ' bopn Sunday wllll a
record IIDTiber .of players under
par on this lorw and tough 7,1SO.
yard course. A record. 64 was
shot b)' Seattle club pro Don
Blel In tiLe third rounl, and
amateur Bill Compbell waO'Btl)l
In contenUon aller leading the
pack at tiLe half-wo,y mark.
For Elder, the second place
po,yo!!, which he shared wltil
a-d was $!2,187, nearbo ·
matehlrw what he had won on
tiLe tour prevlouab this year.

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( ~Familr Now·'Colonel'
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port bualhos-, !llnda,y be-

eiiiiJP .. the thlid · matnber
~ family

c1 hlo

to· be named

a Kentuc!Qo Colonel,
· I!Ooro was cotiUntsstoned by
IJOY, Louie B. Num o1 tile eom.
.IIOIIW8llth o! Kentuc!Qo. Hl• ·fon,
d .tarry $. Moore, Jr., also a
·: llentuc!Qo Coloool, brought I h e

J·:.

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PIMnt 992QN6 ·~ '
114 Cellfl St. ,,.._~-

Ma..

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·2:.·Hour .

Ml-

DRY CLONING

. SERVIa

IIJPON REQUESTI
Ovr UoQol GOOd Clttnlng

MallOI1lc

CLOSING OUT SAlE

~~~.."'!·s..~ ar• oDiploy.

0/

5010

pari:

"II II in1 dlstlnet Plivllege
. to eol))mlasloq you a Kentucky

~ •. Thl• · ~salon Ia
tll'aale4 for 10111' outstanding •·
.~menlo ·and .lqter~stln ,11UbU~ service bolh

1oeaJ4o and na-

lionany."

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Qll_MORE OFF ON
'~LL GifTS &amp;FOODS
STORE HOURS: 9 TIL 6 EVERY DAY

. J,E,RY ,.I~LER'S
"COUNTRY .FAIR

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l,IONEW

TAU A VACATION
'

YORK CUPO- The
York Yankeea , ~~· fOC"!Jed . •
lefthanded pltclier · AI Dowlilrw
tram Bqhamton of tiLe.. ,!laft- : '
League and ielj. 'rlifi!!lt"'
der Thad TQiotsoo ,to Syra®ae
the Jnteri!IUonal l.iattue

ern
:or

on
24-hour ceealL : ·~ ~ ·'•'.:J l~.;
·; 1Joo11nlrw; lfl]o ,a,ulier"'! 'rroiftf'
..re arm earl!1'f )!U.J aeaaotl,, Ia'.

t.e&lt;led

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to join U.O V•lll&lt;ee•ln
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lilkland Ofl Thurodo,y,
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GIANT
SIZE

cr

.•ox

$ O HOLSUM
(,AN NED POP_!~~!__
&amp;·READ------~-CUSTOM

· 8 BOTTLES, 16 OZ. ·

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$

larae
loaves

C

arton

PE PSI·---------~~~t~

CUCUMBERS
EA.

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. ,HEAR
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BANANAS

.~ow.

illgh~~:ci~~!u~·

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OXYDOL

20

U.S. 35 West, Gallipolis, Ohio

;lnes•

!1ENVENUTI .. MIDDLEWEIGHT
/ Gi!AIJO, ltai, (IJPO- Worlll
..mlddlewel&amp;hl chamJ,too Nloo
:J!envenutl has 'a&lt;~hod r"'''ri•
:that he wanla to move ~;~ In
;class and challenge Boll Foator
;ot Washlll,llon, D.c., lor the

TIDE
NUS
BREEZE

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land;:and~b~el;OIIIl:~:to;olber;,:Ma:oon;:~========~~

A lo!lor trom tile Governor
•
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to the seriior
MK~re, accompany~
lllll tiLe COIIUIII&amp;alon, aa,yo In

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where he serves ao president o!
-~e Reyal Crown BottUng Co.,
Mr. 140ore was engaged In tiLe
ioli drink bualneoa In ·lluntlng.
ton, W. Va • .
It past senior )l'&amp;rden of the
Grace ~ocopal Chilrch In Pomeroy; Moore le a .member of the
l'l&gt;age
Lodge a1 Asii-

to present

.

Jl. Bos-

In Huntington ancf Ashland for
32 years.
Mrs. Moo~e Is the former Jean
of Middleport.

IOiL, hero
Wlllt,m N. Moore,
,.•-COLilmlaaloq
lt. lc bodles,lncludlng£1 Nasa Tem·
also holds a Kleluc!Qo Colonel
Oomlnlta!on. IMS llve In

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C\oan ~p ~ . ·
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-~17~'~· ~~~i.,'~dle. . ~ore ~~ni

Born and reared In Kontuck1,
tile senior · Moore stlen!lod tiLe
Unlver~ of lletltuck1 at 1.4xlllaton. He wao·ln themllllngbuaID Aihlanil for 20·1Url.

'

pie Shrine. He ~eiongs

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OOfe· worih
CouneilatPomeroy;M!10re _
was a member or .the Rotary Club

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I .3rd ·Memher of M

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HARRY S. MOORE, SR., ~ORT, right, president of the Reyal Crown Bottl~qt.€.._, '!
recol~s
his eomml"lon as a 1\eiitucky Colonel ~ fl:om his soo, Harry S. MooreI Jr. J Ash1.-.-.3 .
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S1111 Aulo. Mutual olfalt 1·
IOOD StUDENT DISCOUNT

linalna up 10. 2&amp;".

oz.

.$
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Nicklaus Wins Dramatic Playoff
Tigers Jolt Red Sox Twice

cur "01)1 orr the hliJilwa,y a n d
t!Lo potrol "'ld thot James and went oil tilp 1'II ~Jio o1 tile
~ruck mail bOxes owned by M. ~· Jlamey, 22, &lt;.glilrilbus, head- hll!hw;,y tD avoid a col II Ilion wtth
II, M•rUn an~.; f.oren II. Neal. ed. WeSt, came. over. a hUJ crct;t an Llrli_dmtitJod · t~r. JUs ~ar
N~ one was in.ilfr«&lt;.
Mrs. Jlrummon&lt;~ was cited to
\Jiu\\fdpal court Aug. 12 op a
Char go qf spieod ln.exceas for road
conditions.
..
1 A~ u~ldentlfled vpblcie w • e
Fur
olaniocJ,,o!or an acclllent at 3 p.m.
!llrida,y 91&gt; Chem: ; Ridge Rd.,
nlne.tenths o! a mile east 0( Mi.
Tabor Rd. No one was _
injured.

COFFEE

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ABRON, Ohio (IJPO- When Nicklaus, who added another
that cold cash is on the line, $25,000 to his alread,y !at bank
there's nobody the peer of Jack account wltll a dramatic playoff

. !

NESCAFE lf6TANT

win tiLe ~acua~
' r...&amp;ue
Tournament champl0111hlj). Recolvllllll!idlvldualtrq&gt;hlu from
Tourney Director Bob Wingett w~re, front row, lolltD right,
Roger Dlxoo, Eddie Yoimtl, Phl11doon, l)ennls GlUe, DamQo

umph over

run

gals a pennant.

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Pomeroy tQok an early lead ly.
Major League Leaders
Philadlephia 20-3 as Barney,
Roser Dlxm scol'Gd Pomeroy's
B.Y United Preu InternaUonaJ and went on to a 7-3 vletory
who grabbed 10 interceptions as
&amp;lllda,y
afte..,_,
over
-~acuse
first
when he Walked with
National League
a rookie last year, snared two
In
tho
champlooshlp
game
o!
the
,...
out,
stole
seeond ami lhlrd,
Eagle passes that set up Lion
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Alou, Pit 105 384 39 126 .328 !lrraeuoo Municipal Park pony and sot home m a SJ'&lt;)UliCioUI by
scores~
Jed Wlll, moundoman for t h e
Rose,
Cin 105 432 59 !39 ,322 league ~ent.
On the nrst, the Snead injury,
Getting
Its
runs
vla
walks,
whmon.
Mel Farr followed with a tw~ Aloo, Ada 116 476 49 147 .309
yard touchdown dive. Detroit Heims, Cln 100 406 29 124 ,305 passed balls and errors, Porn.
In tiLe second, Burnq walktallied Its other points on a 24 Flood, SI.L. 113 474 63 142 .300 eroy held a 3.j) advantap aller od, otole seeond, and Chuck Faulk
yard pass from Greg Barton to McCovy, SF 101 355 59 106 .299 two lnnlngs and was M after was IIIlo oo an lntleld alniJe with
one oot. Both rumors later scorBill Malinehak and field goals May, Cln 107 414 55 121 .292 Its half of the fourth.
~racuae, managed by Paul
ocJ em Infield outs and errors. ·
of 33 and 31 yards by rookie Millan, Atl 105 394 22 115 .292
Kloes.
came
alive
In
tiLe
last
The fourth lmlng run by Pom.
Staub,
Hou
ll6
434
41
126
.290
kicking specialist Jerry Depoys~
half
or
the
fourth
and
cloaocl
the
eroy
was talllocl by Roger Ab·
American League
ter of Wyoming.
G, AB R. H. Pet. gap to 4..2 but Pomeroy seored bolt who loci oil with a walk and
In oUter Sunday games, Mike
Clark kicked three field goals as Carew, Min. 83 308 35 94 ,305 twice in the slxth and onee In scored after Burney singled and
Dallas edged San Francisco 16- Oliva, Min 105 385 47 113 .294 the eeventh to leo tiLe victory, Dann,y Stone walked.
Throe bases on balls, a lleld·
14 and Miami tied Buffalo 28-28. Mnday, Oak 102 343 42 101 .294 ~racuse managed on1,y ooe run
On Saturday, Kansas City !larrlsn, Bos 104 366 51 107.292 during a rally Jn the bottom of er's ehotce and two erron re~
defeated Minnesota 13-10 ard Yh1ndr, Min 112 438 43 126.288 tho oeventh.
111lted In Stone and Faulk oeor.
,,
ThfLlil'ra~e
~ultAw!JiPL~
.}nl··-rlllls-for; tl!e WlpAndrws,
8os
_11!2
367
52
103
.2n
New 0..tleans stopped Boston 190 in· inter-league pla}·. In Cmpns, dak tl2 45957128.279 ed lnto the finals of tiLe toun"j!',.ners !') ~ alxlh 'and llpl.,&amp;"'!f·
National Football League exht4 White, NY
110 403 63112.278 with two upset· vletories, ~ ·. od lilt .. ~[nm In tiLe ~~
bJtions that night, Washington F. Hwd, Was 110 41354114.276 six hlts eomparod to on1,y three aller he loci o!f being sate m
beat AUanta 1S..14, New York Cater, Oak
10032231 89.276 for the winners but tiLe walks an error.
and otbor mistakes proved costTILe on1,y other hit by Poll!'·

By United Press International
Cates Brown doesn't mind the
hard wood or the Detroit Tiger's
bench as lo~ as the good woo:l
of his bat helps bring the Ben-

MlddlePm·t-Pomero:r, 0,, Aug. U, U.ltiM

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Reds, 8-5 ca:e:::~!:~··.~oto

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t'ivo peroon- were ll\lllred In mllca west of !)t, 160. Bothewas a peas"l''l"r' ilL a car lavUie-Portcr ltd., one m I e
the collision between n car' and hlcleo were clomollohed.
driven by Ueyari ll, SWain; 18, north or Rt. 35. No one"·;,as '
'
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I plclLUp truck at 7t05 p.m. Sat· . llotl\ 'ctnvero wero cited to Galllpollo. The" 1964 Vehicle, ln(ured: .
The
patrol
reported
U.Bt;
.,.ck·
unla,y, according to the Slate Gallli&gt;Ohs ·Mun!elpal Court oh whlcb wasdemol!obedWilii\OI!Iho
soil
backed
oot
of
a
prlvllje
drive
lllghwar ·Pat'!!!.
, . ..&lt; &lt;haj'&amp;O•.of fldlut,c ·lo yield one- /ilghwa,y and struck an eml&gt;ankand
his
car
struck
the
.
J
On
olde
Three were . .,.mlttocl to IJoi· Mil of tbO (&lt;)adwa,y; McCarQ- menl
·• No eharjjt was tlJ •
o1 the southbound Bo~ner .
zer Hoapjtal, .lnolucllllll: E1111or to appea• Au"g, IG, and Sn!l!h, , · ed
' •,
r.
I
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car.
There wa5 moderate cbdh~
R. Mcl'ai'Q', 48, Colul!lbus, drlv- _Aug, 14. ... I' •
.
AI 12:a0 a.m. !llnda,y, car•
age
to
both cars.
.
,
er of 'the car, with'
iL laceration
•'
., ' ·' ...i The patrol im'eotlveted slxoth· · driven by -Wllilam R. POling, Jr:,
Jackoon
was
cited
to
mtinlclpal
cl tbe chin and brulaod rlbo; , ~ aocldento ~·r the w~ekand 20, Gajllpolls, and Edward M.
~ peaHIIser In the ear, 1\nthony~· JitolW!l'lB_~ 'atll »,m. Friday Blake, 53, Middleporl, were In· couri Aug, 12 on a chai'ge."of
. ' .
Hout, 17, ColunbuJI', a lacera- ~ the c. H.~ D, Rd., two and volVed in a ·minor ~~cldent on !allure to yteld the right ·q~ W8)'
lion on the forehead; and Wll- ono:tenth .mllea ilo\ltlio! Rt. 233. Rt 7, two and nlne:teritha mllea when backing from · a private
drive.
.
!lam ll, Smltil, 40, Davin,
' ,.; .oar ·4rt"'Oii''!ir, HermaiL, She!- north of Gallipolis.
There was no damage io a cai'
Va., driver of the truck, with ton, , 25, Oak Hill, went off the
TILe patrol said that Blake was
'1,,
a froeturod rigbt arm. o\11 tht~"' hli:hwir ~a creek. There was backing from a parking iot onto drlvon by Evel)'ll J. DrummOnd,
are reported In good conditiOn. minor damage to the car.
Rt. 7 and Poling was pulling · 25; Adcll.oc&gt;~~, ill a ooo' car mls.
11 1 Treated and.. relealed~ at the . ·Sieltot, was clted 10 munlcl- into the lot. There Wai Jblnor hap at 4:15 p.m. Saturday OLI
boaplta~ were: Billy J. McCar- pal ..Ui1 Aug. 16 on a .charftlj o! damage to both cars. No Oft!' Rt; ~60, fiv~s •of a Jl'!lle
south of Rt. $54.
t' . - ·1
! tr. 9, coiuf$u·a, a passenger · no ope:rator'sltcenae:' I4eWasnot w.as~n.ltred.
The
patrol
said
th~
~
• lnjurold. '
· ,
Blake· was cited to. munldpal
i . In the ear, minor cuts; and ""rl
~
.
'.
H.· Qnlth1 42,- Davi!L, W: Vil.,
Gacy jl. ill!a!n, 9, Gallipolis, cwrt Aug, .2 on a charge of
euta &lt;in tho nose and forehead. had a minor InJurY, but was not ·lfuproper bacldnt.
.
- The patrol said the westbound . treated, in a one car accident '\. Cafa drheftby Ramon.IL.BomMcCarty car and tile eastbound at .4:15 p.m. !lnxla,y on theller- (llll'dner, 2i, Vlema, apll Wll·,
Davia tr\lck eoUided oo the AI. man North~ 'lld., three • \tnUis !lain p, Jackson, ~:~~ 1at ·
lee 114.. two lild •of a mlle ·o! Rt. I at. 12115
p.m. Sollirdo,y '
BL·
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BJ: GABY KALE

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Five P~rsons :Injured i~ Cdllision

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BJ: U'l!teci, ~''11•

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1961l~s

AMERIC.IN LEAGUE
W, L. PeL GB
l)etro!t
7l 42 •638
· Ba!t)iitore •• , 66. t8 •588 7
. Booton ...... 62 54 .534 12
· Cleveland , • , • 63 56 .529 1 1;
QaklarKI ...... 60 55 .522 13'2
Minnesota, •• 51 59 ,478 IW,
New York ..... 51 60 .!59 201,
CaliforRia •.• 53 63 .457 21
Chicago , , •• 48 65 .425 2~. ,

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Waslllfl8(0n at Minnesota, night
Detroit at Cleveland, night
Chicago at Boston, night

Washin&amp;ton ••• 42 71 .372 3{)1 ~
Sutmy's Results
California 11 Baltimore 1

NATIONAL 1 LF.AGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
SL Louis,,. ,76 41 .650
Chicago • , • , 62 55 ,530 II
san Francisco 60 56 .517 19.\
Cincinnati •• ,57 55 ,514 1~,\
Atlan!a' •.. , , 60 57 .513 6
Plttsllu!Jh • , .56 61 , 479 20
Philadelphia .. 53 61 ,465 21'.\
Los Angeles •• 53 64 .453 23
New York .... 54 56 .450 2~. ,

Minnesota 11 New York 2

Houston •••• 51 66 .436

Detroit 5 Boston .J, 1st, 14 inngs,
Detroit 6 Boston 5, 2nd
Cleveland 6 Chicago 1, 1st

Cleveland 2 Chicago 1, 200
Qaklarwl 8 Washington 3
Today's Probably Pitchers
(.\11 Times EDT)
Baltimore (Phoebus 13·10) at
Oaklarw;t O';rausse 8-8), 11 p.m.

New York (Peterson 6..S}at CaJ~
ifornia (Brunet 12~1 t), 11 p. rn.

Washington (Pascual 10-6) at
Minnesota O&lt;att 8-8), 4 p. m.
Detroit (McLain 23-J)al Cleve-land (Romo 1-2), 7:30 p, m.
Cicago (Fisher 5~7} at Boston
(Culp 8-4), 7:30 p, m.
Tuesday's Games
Baltimore at oakland, night
New York at california, night

23

SUnday's Results
San Fral\. 2 New York 1
san Fran. 5 New York 0, 200
Los Angeles 1 Phlladel,phia 0

Atlanta 5 st. Louis 3
Houston 5 Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 8 andnnall 5, 15 inns.
Today's Probably Pitchers

(All Times EDT)

st. Louis (Jaster 8-7) at Chicago (Harwls IZ-6), 2:30 p.m.
Atlanta (Stone 2-1) at Cincinnati (Culver 9-11), 8 p. m.
Only games scheduled.

Tuesday's GameS
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at Cincinnati, nighl
Houston at Phlla., 2, twi-night
San Fran. at Pittsburgh, night
Los .'\ngeles at New York, night

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Williams' Homer

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DoByWJOEGRERGSEN

overpowered Washington 8-J
UP( Sports Writer
and Minnesota mauled New
Billy WUJiaJTis finally tore York ll-2.
himself away from Crosley
Snaps Tie
.eld
but
not
be!ore
tearing
Fl
Williams, who has hit 11
.part the Cincl·nnati Reds,
homers since the All ..star break,
Williams, the slender slugger
ped
22 . I
of the Chirago Cubs, bid a foOO ~:er
the tt:i~~h :u~~~~
Ia re11o·ell for 1968 to the co2y Bench tied the score 5-5 with a
Cincinnati ballpark Sunday with two-run homer in the eighth (or
a demolition job on the Reds' the Reds. It stayed that way
pitching staff as he drove in until the 15th when Don
•ve
.
u runs Wl'th a pa•·r of ILomers. unessmger,
who ha d r.llVe h.Its,
The secoo:l. blast, a three-run . and Glenn Beckert sh)Rled wiUt
shot ,·n the 15th two-out against Jay Ruchie
·
l'nslde-the~ark
~
an::l
inning, pro·"•ed
CILic••o
with
Will'
~ JU
'"""
1ams 1aced a curving line
. to rigtlt on which Lee May
a n 8-5 Vl'ctor&gt;· and sent the Cubs dr1ve
into their crucial lour-~e
!ailed to make a diving catch.
e.~··
the
st.
Louis
series am~inst
ePhil Regan, the Cubs' amaz~
cardinals 14 games behind the
N 'onal
ing comeback reHever, pitched
. ati
If~epaeesetters.
1 2-3 innings, hls lolest s_tln~
"It's t1il ......
n"'...., t Jt'ke," sa1·• a
:n~...
.-.
"' ·siriCe tie s~ted and oinpl~r:u:u
•istful
WlJIILJ
wL--e · telftl
,
5
~
am
uua
a game !'Or'1he Tigers ln 1965,
t!tfias completed " Its n[no:l...&lt;NI-.a to gain credit for his lOth
stand C1"08ley, "oot the pitch.
.
d .
H
'"""
victory In 12 eels 1ons.
e
~-eo
allowed four hits arx:l Bench's
Collects 19 Runs
twl)orun homer.
Whatever It is, the Reds hope
Felix Millan collected five hits
Williams has had his fill. The and doubled in the tie-breaking
Chicago outfielder has bashed run during a nve-run fourth
six" of his 19 homers in Jrurlng as the Braves beat the
Cincinnati and has collected 19 Cards lor only the third time ln
runs batted in against the Reds 15 meetings this season. Deron
along with a .327 batting. The Johnson's tw~run single was
Atlanta Baves snapped the the big blow of the uprisil'(
cards' four~ game w i n n i n g against Steve carlton (11-7J.
streak with a 5-3 triumph while
Roommates Ray S&amp;decki an:!.
san Francisco swept a doubl~ Mike McCormick throttled the
- header from New York 2-1 and Mets, Hfting the Giant.&amp; into
5-0, Los ~eles edged Philadel· third place. sadecki pitched a
phla 1..0 aOO Houston tt1)ped four-hitter and struck out 13 in
Philadelphia 5-l.
the first game in outdueling
The Detroit Tigers ran their Tom seaver arxt McCormick set
American League lead to seven down the Mets on five hits ••.U
games by beating Boston twice, hit a two-run homer In the
5-4 in I~ IM1JWs and 6-5, while uightcap.
California b atmced Baltimore
Don Drysdale hurled a four11-1. Clavelatll won a pair from hitter and drove in the Dodgers'
Chicago, 6-I and 2-1, Oaklani only run with a fourth-inn!~
single for his fourth victory this
season by a 1-0 margin. The big
right-hander struck out eight
and didn't walk a batter ln
breaking a personal four-game
losing streak and hiking his
record to 13-LO.
Denis Menke socked a tw~run
double, jn the sixth lnnlng as the
Astros '·' defeated the Pirates
behind the C(I'Jibined seven-hit
pitching or Larry Dierker all:l
Dave GiustL The latter relieved
Any electrlcla1
Dierker with two on an:l one out
who
wllat'l
in the seventh and pitched
scoreless baU the rest of the
wlttlsllltbe
way, yielding two hits.

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knows

LUTIIIER WINS
DEAUVILLE, France (UPI)
- Luthier, ridden by .J. DeForge
and owned by the Baron Guy de
Rothschild, won lhe $30,000 Prix
Jacques de Mrlos horse race by
£our lengths over I.ocris. Agy
was third in the field or 11.

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surprised, Green ~ til-14. and
UPI ~rts Writer
1.'
Bal~e ·•hutou&lt;
. ' .. Chicago
., . 1~
The Philadelphia Eagles were
In the . American r0911ion '
suf!erirc toda3 from a lost Loagile, l)enver !OjiQOd Clnclnw..kend. They lost money !rom · nat) ;15-13.'fn( ~kland'!'all~·
A potential turnawa,y crowd; ol Sin lUegii 3M.·J.&lt;
...1,·
',
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!·
I
100,000 for a cancelled game at
' ~Jar~ Ide~ II~ ~ ·'Jl; ~6
Me,lco City, lost the sei(JJ.cel ,o f
...WI '.32 1
quarterback Norm Snaod, p8..,. liot
'.two lif 'thli · ~ :~ud
haps for the season, and 10{11·
~V.r-~'"''!4-iO
I'l!¥illtheir exhlbltion opener to· tiLe !"' ,leacL. TILe ' Cqw~s loj&gt;o TP
11etrol\ Lions.
t.'PJe oq 1Les Shy•I Qrie:.yard
&amp;aeld was tmrt on the ft.rst plunge tbat , ~IPped .: 9~
play of a 5unday game that was drl"''• Tho Fori3'-Niners ;gal on
rescheduled lor ·Philadelphia tiLe
scoreboard wllb
Il&lt;Ug
after officials declded list Cunningham's 24 yard run and
Frida,y tiLe climate of student George Mira's five yard .PISS to
uiU"est in . Mexico City was Sonny lilndle.
.
unsuitable alongslde tiLe usual
Circus catch
excitement generated by i
All America Larry ,Caonkl~s
professional football game,
etrcus catch of a Bob Gr.lese••
only 12,176 showed IQl at six...yard pass in the ..., \
Franklin Field for the pre- enabled Miami to d~ock
season curtain raiser £or both Bu!Jalo with 3:10 remainll~Ko
teams.
Griese and rival quarterback· '
Hopes Crumble
Jack Kemp each scored . on•
They saw Philadelphia's title keepers to heighten the action. '
hq&gt;es crwnble before the
Jan Stenrud's 15-yani !leld ·
season even starts as Snead goal with 47 seconds lor to pqj.
suffered a broken ankle whlle providled Kansas City with lts
attempting to stop Lem Barney victnry margin over 'Mirmesota;
from returni~ an intercepted newly acquired Dave Parks
pass for a touchdown.
latched onto a 33 yard pass
Two questions immediately from Bill Kilmer to start the
arose in the mi0011 of obser- New Orlf&amp;!ls Saints' victory
vers:
march; Washington nipped At~ ,
Would the Eagles have lanta on Charlie Gogolak's 4S.. '
decided ~on such a play in the yard threeojiCinter with 16
rarified air of Mexico Cit.J.1 seconds to go; Fran TarkenAnd, could Barne~, weighted ton's three-yard m toss to Joe
down with football equipment Morrison in the last 15 seconcls
have scampered 46 yards at lhe
7,000-loot altitude of the Mexi-

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
OtllY $'299

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§ah

uaders

dereat

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Pomeroy Wins Pony Tournflme~t -~:8
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,.........,
roy oil rljJIIihander Jlm Hub· Ables:
..·" •·•
bofd, Wllo went ,tho dfstanee for ellmpl,r es ,'-. . Gei&gt;rao Ill•~'"!·
~··use, waa ,a !Uth lmlns •In· rood, Jr., ptate, ead Jim StiiiJs.
llle from Derlnls Glaze. J!Ubb8rd
' · ) ;'
fanned iLeven and Walked ~
In going tile cllstance and WUJ
struck out nine and ls$1od three
bases m balls.
~racuso's fourth lmlng nma
came When Rick Asb was IIIlo nn
a fielder's choice after steve
Jenldna came thrcu!lh with a
lead.o!f alniJe and Allen 'Pugh
and Kevin stullor also rapped
stnllee
In tile aeventh, steve Winebrenner ocorod after being IIIlo
m a fielder's eholce, Jenkins
sot on tbrouJh an error. andRiek
·Ash singled. Oilier hits for tile
bostl were a alnile by Ash Ia
tile sixth and a third IMini base
HlilY tiplfliDr
11
lll~by n-..d.
I
'httti·IKltii·IOiflp:.]ilf
Pomeroy
120 102 1 - 7 3 2
JJChool ar colltli tltldeltt, YGit'~
~Tacust
000 200 1 - 36 S
msy qualify 111111dnp 'ah
Wlll and Dixon. Hubbard and
JGUr Automobllt lnauranca; · ,,.

or ,. ar

baseman George Scott's ootstrctched glove for the game
winning single.
In other A. L. action Cleveland
swept a double header fromChi·
cago 6-1 and 2-1, Oakland drubbed Washington 8-3, GaliCornia
mauled Baltimore 11-1 arwl Mi.,.
nesota trounced New York 11-2,
Mlckey. Lollch picked up his
third straight victory in relief
for the Tigers in the nrsl game,
raising his record to 10..7. ne
entered the game in the lOth 1,.
ning and survivicd two jams, one
a bases-filled two-out threat in
the 13th J~hen he retired Rico
Petrocelli to end the inning. John
Warden won the nightcap for Detroit raising his r'cord to 4-1.
Reggie Smith homered twice in
Boston's losliU!: cause,
Cleveland belt Chicago in the
flrst game on pinch hitter Russ
Snyder's bases loaded single ln
the second lnnillll to hlgllllght a
three run rally. Indian relief
specialist Eddie Fisher pitched
1 2-3 scoreless innings or winning ball In the second game,
after being honored by his former White Sox teammates between
games.
Tony Oliva knocked in four
runs with a home run and a single and Rod Carew got tour hits
in becoming lile only .300 hitter
in the American League, as the
Twins routed the Yankees, Dean

Brown, hitting a sizzling .593
a~ a pinch hitter, smacked a
pidfh homer in the 14th inning
to ·¢ ve Detroit a 5-4 opening
galne victory over the Boston
Red Sox Surwl,cy and then, in a
starting role, singled wlth one
out in the ninth IMing of the
nightcap to cap the Tigers 6-5
come - Crom - behind victory and
Increase their American League
lead to seven games.
Brown is fairly well adjusted
to pinch-hitting. "I'm square as
an lee cube, .. he maintains, "and
twice as cool. ••
Brown, who homered as a pinch
hitter in a Friday night los~
tagged Lee stange for the game
winning homer in the opener.
Hitting Red Sox pitching is
nothing new ror Brown. He blasted a home run against Boston
as a pinch hitter in his nrst
major · league at bat ln 1963.
Pinch hitting earlier this year
he homered in the ninth tMtng
ofi .John Wyatt, then with Boston,
to give the Tigers a 4-3 win over
the Sox.
In Ute secorkl game Brown
came to bat in the ninth Inning
with rurmers on first and third,
one man out and the score tled c~~~,~~~~Uowed on1,y four hits In
~t~t 5-5, He hit reliever ~ark;y P«
Uth wi~
Lyle's second pitch past first

in the American Golf Classic,
1n probably the most tensi~
packed tounament In several
years, Nicklaus won hls second

holes ow:r the torturoua fl111l:
three holes o! the Firestone

Country Clli&gt; eourae.
Beard 1111 tiLe lint
drq&gt;
first place ln as many weeks out when he parrnd tho
the hard Wll)' Sunday, comlllll monoterous 625-yard 16th hole
from behirwl to larwl in a· thre&amp;o arwl Nlcklaus and Elder snbbed
way tie with Negro rookie Lee birdies. on the 17til green,
Elder arwl Frank Beard. TILe Elder was wlthln ave feet of
playoff was a test or nerves and the &lt;14' and Nicklaus wos In a
skill as Nicklaus and Elder bunker, but a 20.foot putt kopt
bat~ed held to head for ave the burly goltlen bear fr&lt;lm
Columbus, Ohio, ~lve.
·
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Break In 17th
By United Press lnteroatlonal
WIIIL the
IUglng
W, L. PeL GB on every sho4 tho two players
Toledo ....... 68 50 ,576
tiLe rleh alii famoua Nicklaus
Columbus. , ,60 53 .531 ~h arwl the little known roolde,
Rochester, , • 61 54 .530 ~h played head.toobead. The breal&lt;
JacksonviUe , .58 56 ,509 8
came on tiLe steond 11n1e
Syracuse •••• 54 58 .482 11
orounJ at tiLe 17th.
(,oulsviUe • , ,54 61 ,470 12'/,
Both playera put their second
Buffalo •••.• 54 63 ,462 I:W. shots on !he green of thO parRichmorwl , , 50 64 .439 16
fourholo, Elder 15 feet a"'Y
Sunday's ReBU!ts
arwl Nicklaus lllout eight teet.
ruchmorwlll Buffalo 2, lsi
Elller' o putt grazed tiLe llp o1
Buffalo 5 Richmond 2, 2nd, 7lms. · the CIQI and oUed a few Inches
Columbus 6 Syracuse 5J tat, post the hole,
15 lnniq(s
"I played tbO
st I know
Syracuse 7 ColumbUs, 0, 21'11, how," aald tJae 33-y
Elder
7.1nniLWS
who onb three rears .aao waa a
Loulovllle 3 Rochester 2
eaddy lor BUly
eU.
Toledo 5 Jacksonville 0

to

tournament

10

LOAF

ilirls &amp;,Ladies

SEE US FOI YOUR
FIRE AND ~UTO
INSURANCE

.99
-------------------------------~!~~-·--·--·--·

20 Per Cent Deviation. Our
Rates Do Not Raise After
· HavlnK A Claim As Some
CoQantesllo

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W!erd Tournament
a wlerd ~ent
from start to nnlsh. The fourth
1'011111! ' bopn Sunday wllll a
record IIDTiber .of players under
par on this lorw and tough 7,1SO.
yard course. A record. 64 was
shot b)' Seattle club pro Don
Blel In tiLe third rounl, and
amateur Bill Compbell waO'Btl)l
In contenUon aller leading the
pack at tiLe half-wo,y mark.
For Elder, the second place
po,yo!!, which he shared wltil
a-d was $!2,187, nearbo ·
matehlrw what he had won on
tiLe tour prevlouab this year.

n wu

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( ~Familr Now·'Colonel'
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port bualhos-, !llnda,y be-

eiiiiJP .. the thlid · matnber
~ family

c1 hlo

to· be named

a Kentuc!Qo Colonel,
· I!Ooro was cotiUntsstoned by
IJOY, Louie B. Num o1 tile eom.
.IIOIIW8llth o! Kentuc!Qo. Hl• ·fon,
d .tarry $. Moore, Jr., also a
·: llentuc!Qo Coloool, brought I h e

J·:.

~~~~~··

PIMnt 992QN6 ·~ '
114 Cellfl St. ,,.._~-

Ma..

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·2:.·Hour .

Ml-

DRY CLONING

. SERVIa

IIJPON REQUESTI
Ovr UoQol GOOd Clttnlng

MallOI1lc

CLOSING OUT SAlE

~~~.."'!·s..~ ar• oDiploy.

0/

5010

pari:

"II II in1 dlstlnet Plivllege
. to eol))mlasloq you a Kentucky

~ •. Thl• · ~salon Ia
tll'aale4 for 10111' outstanding •·
.~menlo ·and .lqter~stln ,11UbU~ service bolh

1oeaJ4o and na-

lionany."

-.
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Qll_MORE OFF ON
'~LL GifTS &amp;FOODS
STORE HOURS: 9 TIL 6 EVERY DAY

. J,E,RY ,.I~LER'S
"COUNTRY .FAIR

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l,IONEW

TAU A VACATION
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YORK CUPO- The
York Yankeea , ~~· fOC"!Jed . •
lefthanded pltclier · AI Dowlilrw
tram Bqhamton of tiLe.. ,!laft- : '
League and ielj. 'rlifi!!lt"'
der Thad TQiotsoo ,to Syra®ae
the Jnteri!IUonal l.iattue

ern
:or

on
24-hour ceealL : ·~ ~ ·'•'.:J l~.;
·; 1Joo11nlrw; lfl]o ,a,ulier"'! 'rroiftf'
..re arm earl!1'f )!U.J aeaaotl,, Ia'.

t.e&lt;led

.

to join U.O V•lll&lt;ee•ln
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lilkland Ofl Thurodo,y,
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GIANT
SIZE

cr

.•ox

$ O HOLSUM
(,AN NED POP_!~~!__
&amp;·READ------~-CUSTOM

· 8 BOTTLES, 16 OZ. ·

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$

larae
loaves

C

arton

PE PSI·---------~~~t~

CUCUMBERS
EA.

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. ,HEAR
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PEPP

BANANAS

.~ow.

illgh~~:ci~~!u~·

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OXYDOL

20

U.S. 35 West, Gallipolis, Ohio

;lnes•

!1ENVENUTI .. MIDDLEWEIGHT
/ Gi!AIJO, ltai, (IJPO- Worlll
..mlddlewel&amp;hl chamJ,too Nloo
:J!envenutl has 'a&lt;~hod r"'''ri•
:that he wanla to move ~;~ In
;class and challenge Boll Foator
;ot Washlll,llon, D.c., lor the

TIDE
NUS
BREEZE

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land;:and~b~el;OIIIl:~:to;olber;,:Ma:oon;:~========~~

A lo!lor trom tile Governor
•
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to the seriior
MK~re, accompany~
lllll tiLe COIIUIII&amp;alon, aa,yo In

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where he serves ao president o!
-~e Reyal Crown BottUng Co.,
Mr. 140ore was engaged In tiLe
ioli drink bualneoa In ·lluntlng.
ton, W. Va • .
It past senior )l'&amp;rden of the
Grace ~ocopal Chilrch In Pomeroy; Moore le a .member of the
l'l&gt;age
Lodge a1 Asii-

to present

.

Jl. Bos-

In Huntington ancf Ashland for
32 years.
Mrs. Moo~e Is the former Jean
of Middleport.

IOiL, hero
Wlllt,m N. Moore,
,.•-COLilmlaaloq
lt. lc bodles,lncludlng£1 Nasa Tem·
also holds a Kleluc!Qo Colonel
Oomlnlta!on. IMS llve In

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C\oan ~p ~ . ·
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-~17~'~· ~~~i.,'~dle. . ~ore ~~ni

Born and reared In Kontuck1,
tile senior · Moore stlen!lod tiLe
Unlver~ of lletltuck1 at 1.4xlllaton. He wao·ln themllllngbuaID Aihlanil for 20·1Url.

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pie Shrine. He ~eiongs

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OOfe· worih
CouneilatPomeroy;M!10re _
was a member or .the Rotary Club

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I .3rd ·Memher of M

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HARRY S. MOORE, SR., ~ORT, right, president of the Reyal Crown Bottl~qt.€.._, '!
recol~s
his eomml"lon as a 1\eiitucky Colonel ~ fl:om his soo, Harry S. MooreI Jr. J Ash1.-.-.3 .
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S1111 Aulo. Mutual olfalt 1·
IOOD StUDENT DISCOUNT

linalna up 10. 2&amp;".

oz.

.$
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Nicklaus Wins Dramatic Playoff
Tigers Jolt Red Sox Twice

cur "01)1 orr the hliJilwa,y a n d
t!Lo potrol "'ld thot James and went oil tilp 1'II ~Jio o1 tile
~ruck mail bOxes owned by M. ~· Jlamey, 22, &lt;.glilrilbus, head- hll!hw;,y tD avoid a col II Ilion wtth
II, M•rUn an~.; f.oren II. Neal. ed. WeSt, came. over. a hUJ crct;t an Llrli_dmtitJod · t~r. JUs ~ar
N~ one was in.ilfr«&lt;.
Mrs. Jlrummon&lt;~ was cited to
\Jiu\\fdpal court Aug. 12 op a
Char go qf spieod ln.exceas for road
conditions.
..
1 A~ u~ldentlfled vpblcie w • e
Fur
olaniocJ,,o!or an acclllent at 3 p.m.
!llrida,y 91&gt; Chem: ; Ridge Rd.,
nlne.tenths o! a mile east 0( Mi.
Tabor Rd. No one was _
injured.

COFFEE

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ABRON, Ohio (IJPO- When Nicklaus, who added another
that cold cash is on the line, $25,000 to his alread,y !at bank
there's nobody the peer of Jack account wltll a dramatic playoff

. !

NESCAFE lf6TANT

win tiLe ~acua~
' r...&amp;ue
Tournament champl0111hlj). Recolvllllll!idlvldualtrq&gt;hlu from
Tourney Director Bob Wingett w~re, front row, lolltD right,
Roger Dlxoo, Eddie Yoimtl, Phl11doon, l)ennls GlUe, DamQo

umph over

run

gals a pennant.

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Pomeroy tQok an early lead ly.
Major League Leaders
Philadlephia 20-3 as Barney,
Roser Dlxm scol'Gd Pomeroy's
B.Y United Preu InternaUonaJ and went on to a 7-3 vletory
who grabbed 10 interceptions as
&amp;lllda,y
afte..,_,
over
-~acuse
first
when he Walked with
National League
a rookie last year, snared two
In
tho
champlooshlp
game
o!
the
,...
out,
stole
seeond ami lhlrd,
Eagle passes that set up Lion
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Alou, Pit 105 384 39 126 .328 !lrraeuoo Municipal Park pony and sot home m a SJ'&lt;)UliCioUI by
scores~
Jed Wlll, moundoman for t h e
Rose,
Cin 105 432 59 !39 ,322 league ~ent.
On the nrst, the Snead injury,
Getting
Its
runs
vla
walks,
whmon.
Mel Farr followed with a tw~ Aloo, Ada 116 476 49 147 .309
yard touchdown dive. Detroit Heims, Cln 100 406 29 124 ,305 passed balls and errors, Porn.
In tiLe second, Burnq walktallied Its other points on a 24 Flood, SI.L. 113 474 63 142 .300 eroy held a 3.j) advantap aller od, otole seeond, and Chuck Faulk
yard pass from Greg Barton to McCovy, SF 101 355 59 106 .299 two lnnlngs and was M after was IIIlo oo an lntleld alniJe with
one oot. Both rumors later scorBill Malinehak and field goals May, Cln 107 414 55 121 .292 Its half of the fourth.
~racuae, managed by Paul
ocJ em Infield outs and errors. ·
of 33 and 31 yards by rookie Millan, Atl 105 394 22 115 .292
Kloes.
came
alive
In
tiLe
last
The fourth lmlng run by Pom.
Staub,
Hou
ll6
434
41
126
.290
kicking specialist Jerry Depoys~
half
or
the
fourth
and
cloaocl
the
eroy
was talllocl by Roger Ab·
American League
ter of Wyoming.
G, AB R. H. Pet. gap to 4..2 but Pomeroy seored bolt who loci oil with a walk and
In oUter Sunday games, Mike
Clark kicked three field goals as Carew, Min. 83 308 35 94 ,305 twice in the slxth and onee In scored after Burney singled and
Dallas edged San Francisco 16- Oliva, Min 105 385 47 113 .294 the eeventh to leo tiLe victory, Dann,y Stone walked.
Throe bases on balls, a lleld·
14 and Miami tied Buffalo 28-28. Mnday, Oak 102 343 42 101 .294 ~racuse managed on1,y ooe run
On Saturday, Kansas City !larrlsn, Bos 104 366 51 107.292 during a rally Jn the bottom of er's ehotce and two erron re~
defeated Minnesota 13-10 ard Yh1ndr, Min 112 438 43 126.288 tho oeventh.
111lted In Stone and Faulk oeor.
,,
ThfLlil'ra~e
~ultAw!JiPL~
.}nl··-rlllls-for; tl!e WlpAndrws,
8os
_11!2
367
52
103
.2n
New 0..tleans stopped Boston 190 in· inter-league pla}·. In Cmpns, dak tl2 45957128.279 ed lnto the finals of tiLe toun"j!',.ners !') ~ alxlh 'and llpl.,&amp;"'!f·
National Football League exht4 White, NY
110 403 63112.278 with two upset· vletories, ~ ·. od lilt .. ~[nm In tiLe ~~
bJtions that night, Washington F. Hwd, Was 110 41354114.276 six hlts eomparod to on1,y three aller he loci o!f being sate m
beat AUanta 1S..14, New York Cater, Oak
10032231 89.276 for the winners but tiLe walks an error.
and otbor mistakes proved costTILe on1,y other hit by Poll!'·

By United Press International
Cates Brown doesn't mind the
hard wood or the Detroit Tiger's
bench as lo~ as the good woo:l
of his bat helps bring the Ben-

MlddlePm·t-Pomero:r, 0,, Aug. U, U.ltiM

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zone

Reds, 8-5 ca:e:::~!:~··.~oto

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t'ivo peroon- were ll\lllred In mllca west of !)t, 160. Bothewas a peas"l''l"r' ilL a car lavUie-Portcr ltd., one m I e
the collision between n car' and hlcleo were clomollohed.
driven by Ueyari ll, SWain; 18, north or Rt. 35. No one"·;,as '
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I plclLUp truck at 7t05 p.m. Sat· . llotl\ 'ctnvero wero cited to Galllpollo. The" 1964 Vehicle, ln(ured: .
The
patrol
reported
U.Bt;
.,.ck·
unla,y, according to the Slate Gallli&gt;Ohs ·Mun!elpal Court oh whlcb wasdemol!obedWilii\OI!Iho
soil
backed
oot
of
a
prlvllje
drive
lllghwar ·Pat'!!!.
, . ..&lt; &lt;haj'&amp;O•.of fldlut,c ·lo yield one- /ilghwa,y and struck an eml&gt;ankand
his
car
struck
the
.
J
On
olde
Three were . .,.mlttocl to IJoi· Mil of tbO (&lt;)adwa,y; McCarQ- menl
·• No eharjjt was tlJ •
o1 the southbound Bo~ner .
zer Hoapjtal, .lnolucllllll: E1111or to appea• Au"g, IG, and Sn!l!h, , · ed
' •,
r.
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car.
There wa5 moderate cbdh~
R. Mcl'ai'Q', 48, Colul!lbus, drlv- _Aug, 14. ... I' •
.
AI 12:a0 a.m. !llnda,y, car•
age
to
both cars.
.
,
er of 'the car, with'
iL laceration
•'
., ' ·' ...i The patrol im'eotlveted slxoth· · driven by -Wllilam R. POling, Jr:,
Jackoon
was
cited
to
mtinlclpal
cl tbe chin and brulaod rlbo; , ~ aocldento ~·r the w~ekand 20, Gajllpolls, and Edward M.
~ peaHIIser In the ear, 1\nthony~· JitolW!l'lB_~ 'atll »,m. Friday Blake, 53, Middleporl, were In· couri Aug, 12 on a chai'ge."of
. ' .
Hout, 17, ColunbuJI', a lacera- ~ the c. H.~ D, Rd., two and volVed in a ·minor ~~cldent on !allure to yteld the right ·q~ W8)'
lion on the forehead; and Wll- ono:tenth .mllea ilo\ltlio! Rt. 233. Rt 7, two and nlne:teritha mllea when backing from · a private
drive.
.
!lam ll, Smltil, 40, Davin,
' ,.; .oar ·4rt"'Oii''!ir, HermaiL, She!- north of Gallipolis.
There was no damage io a cai'
Va., driver of the truck, with ton, , 25, Oak Hill, went off the
TILe patrol said that Blake was
'1,,
a froeturod rigbt arm. o\11 tht~"' hli:hwir ~a creek. There was backing from a parking iot onto drlvon by Evel)'ll J. DrummOnd,
are reported In good conditiOn. minor damage to the car.
Rt. 7 and Poling was pulling · 25; Adcll.oc&gt;~~, ill a ooo' car mls.
11 1 Treated and.. relealed~ at the . ·Sieltot, was clted 10 munlcl- into the lot. There Wai Jblnor hap at 4:15 p.m. Saturday OLI
boaplta~ were: Billy J. McCar- pal ..Ui1 Aug. 16 on a .charftlj o! damage to both cars. No Oft!' Rt; ~60, fiv~s •of a Jl'!lle
south of Rt. $54.
t' . - ·1
! tr. 9, coiuf$u·a, a passenger · no ope:rator'sltcenae:' I4eWasnot w.as~n.ltred.
The
patrol
said
th~
~
• lnjurold. '
· ,
Blake· was cited to. munldpal
i . In the ear, minor cuts; and ""rl
~
.
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H.· Qnlth1 42,- Davi!L, W: Vil.,
Gacy jl. ill!a!n, 9, Gallipolis, cwrt Aug, .2 on a charge of
euta &lt;in tho nose and forehead. had a minor InJurY, but was not ·lfuproper bacldnt.
.
- The patrol said the westbound . treated, in a one car accident '\. Cafa drheftby Ramon.IL.BomMcCarty car and tile eastbound at .4:15 p.m. !lnxla,y on theller- (llll'dner, 2i, Vlema, apll Wll·,
Davia tr\lck eoUided oo the AI. man North~ 'lld., three • \tnUis !lain p, Jackson, ~:~~ 1at ·
lee 114.. two lild •of a mlle ·o! Rt. I at. 12115
p.m. Sollirdo,y '
BL·
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BJ: GABY KALE

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Five P~rsons :Injured i~ Cdllision

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BJ: U'l!teci, ~''11•

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The Dally SCntiJad,

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2 Yeor Old PI" .... . . . . )r .. . . ...... , . • · · · · · · .. · .. .. ·: . -L,,$2lii!O. .
3 Year Olcl Trot .. .. .. .. .. . . . • .. .. . .. . .. . . .. .. . .. . . .. . !DII; ~
Pa&lt;e-Non-W'...... of $3000.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . fS00-00 ~
(Non-Winnen of $7110.00 in 11H18 eligible)
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TlimtsDAY, AOOVST US, DIIS, 5:00 P.lt. ;

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W.m. I. .DownJt, Prod ·oNelolft, WaiiiCt li!nodfonl In clll...

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POMtROY-MIDDI.EPORT, OHIO

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.MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 19b8

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SATUIUlAY. AUGUST 17, lll68, 2:00 Ul.

OlllLLCO !'lee - Noo-wiDileroof $10.000.00 . . . . . . . . . . . $700.00 P11raet
Trot-Nor&gt;Winnero of $10,000. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $500.00 P11raet
(Non·W- of ~.00 in 1ll68 eU!Pble)
Pace-N011-WiDDers of $11100 . .. .... . .... . .. . ........ SSJO,OO Purl8

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It's ::~~n

CONDITIONS

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Hilarious
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USTA rules to pvern events. DUrance fee S% of purs_~. except&gt;
the Oblo Colt stake&amp; entrance fee is u advertised. Money ilvJsion 'I.
2~ 15, 10, 5% . Five to slart Tile rlllht II reoerved to change order of
proaram or to declare off any race if Wlavoidable condttloDJ&gt; prevail.
Two heat plan. Every heat 1t race.
.
U-'--tlon ·
Jn ease eleven or JQQre horses declare ID any event, e UllWo
h..ts wtll be raced.
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•All ent:tes must be declared In, on or before 10:00 A.-. the -~
before the race.
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Colt staket to be raeed under USTA end Ohio Fair Fund aw.

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'i.Exczttng;
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and mules fill' loog and ,.vere &lt;lr.ofl WO!i. . •.

oocoura1e l(oraonlanlblp In llt:!inll bor,.. ond I!' ..-!!~
deJIIDilBirale tile mulmum pulling eapaelty _'£;~
"'!'I

(e)
....Jd1

Wm B. Downie
Fred Geelloio
Wallace Bradford
• . DON RElJTER, Secretary
PDmHOy, Oblo 457119

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Pony Harne" Rflt)r.•
THURSDAY, AUGUST IIITK, 2:00 .P.M .
one beat - 46" and under . . . . . . . . .
Purwe $30
Trot - One belt - Over 46" to 50" lnchllive ·
Purse $30
FRIDAY, AUGUST 18TH.. 2:30 P.M.
Trot - one beat - 46" and under
.
. . . . . . Purse $30
Trot - One b81t - OYer 46" to 50" inclUJive
· · · · Pune flO
CONDITIONS
Drlvera muat be in eolors.
Entries closed 12 noon day before race.
Directors in charge reserve right to call off or reclasaify clastes. ,
Each entry to be measured at the concrete block drain In the een ter~thl
Defore the raC'e at the convenience or the directors Jn cllargp.
Eotry fee $2.00 •dded.

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~GIBILrrY· OPEN TO THE WORLD. IJOrseo a~·

'f.rot -

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owDect.

less Of Wbere
are eligible to enter tbb conteat: ,
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CONDmONs·
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A lllono boat loaded wltb eemenf bloekt will ~e u...t. ,
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All leii!DI nmot be wolllhed on tbe dar "' the eolilelt betweell IJtOO

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s~·E -~'00'
·. Al T~l:;.
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Wm. 1. Downlt. Fred Goftlaln and Tom R. Reuter In chars•

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The eomlillttee IIIIU hl¥e fuU jurlodldloa over a1 ~I 111 .,...,. iD .
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decide \Ill qUOJUODI l!iiJiag In ,c&lt;iqneetlon witb the eonleat nbjoct to .• , , '\
tbe rules tnd 'll1lm!nlalrttlon ti .,.,.,ldl!d. They aha I) determine tho . ·• . 4
winners aDd •word pr1tea In ....,dance witb tbe rulei. iiF~Ilur!l to ., . .
comply promptly wltb tbe d&amp;e.Uons of the committee f!ba relldt ii!i .;1.• ·.
IIIDIIedlale dilqnoiWc:&amp;Uoa of • centestsnt. Th~ decision of !he ."!IIJO&lt;Itl' ·
ol tbe ..,.millee 0011cernli11 IIJ1 matle&lt; arl11ng in eoJllle&lt;!ioo- tbe, ~
. , . . aball ·be final Horsea' or driver may be diBqullifill•f iL ut:;'!,,.• .
limo by tbe ~ltee eitber for tbe violation of one ·or
,tllil''"· ·
eond!tloao of tbe &lt;DIIIeat or beeauae lhe eonteoUo~ team's. •
It · ,
ouell u to render It eruel or lnadviaabte to W'm!t tbe lei···~ • . • ·· •

MOBILE STARTING GATE
PHOTO FINISH·
Blacksmitb aDd VeteriDarian on tbe lfOIIIIdl
Member of the Hocking V&gt;Uer Colt Circuit

Money division

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tbo oalue ol 17Pe !alUI .proper brt!odiD&amp;, Ia ·~ · ,
mutes intended for loai aM IIGuoUI' ~. wi!l'k c ·-.
IDd jle!DQDB!rale tbe ~r moiiJ,Od Or li'aipllljl jl4 ,,;

SPEED COM.!rflTI'EE

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IIOOD aDd •:oo P.M. ot a local scalee aod a wl!._.,t eerdfl&lt;jlle . ~ ae•

if

cempanr entry.

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Ownen will furniah their OWD Jeed.. •·
Rulu of lho Buck..,. HoriO Pulll111 Atsocfttlon of j)hlo ,
1. The di.tance for e"'b pull llhall 'be 2'1 feet, but ~ of

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lhtn 2'1 feet will bo used to cletormlne winner or pl...m"'!l ot !lad .of. ·

tbe contst.

45-2e-15-1~% .

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lhart &amp;hid...

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IIJ to _the HilliS Cotriy Fair. Evii!J~ :wlll_'ifil'
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'joy till' inany :~lsplays, contests, races,~

NEW YoiUt &lt;OPI)-A ma-

Jor advance. in

and

dtacnoale or cardiac atlments
is the use of •·rar ~evillon
and vtdeotape. to ..., tho human heart. TO cope With the
problem or coron&amp;r1 diaea.lo in

Tho Rock Springs Fairgrounds
are swlnt!ID' and '!'• "beat• will
w&gt; on all week. .,
·
'' ·;· · YeP - on&amp; more it's Meigs
•·
COuni;Y Fair tlmo. The annual
ovoilt 11111 open tontght at 7:30
p.na. with annual aentc:ea 1 by
the Mali• Cciunt,y Ministerial Assoclatlon, ~ will be Gerald Koller, formerly of Meigs
Cciunt,y.
S.,nday and loda,v tbe I at r IIJ'O!Ind• were all•• wllh actlvi~
~!-• attractions moved onto t h e
PneraiJy quiet ii'OUndl and began Betting up IDr tbe IOStb
fair.
Relldem1 maldn&amp;' t1te scene

lhls
will find a variecy of
entertatnntent on ltand: - some.
thins tor everyone- aoto apeak,
A4mlosioo to the grounds will
be charged lor the first t 1 m e
Tueada:J morning. Tuelday night,
the annual J101iY J]UIIing eonlest
will be held as tllo ll!'andstand
attraction with lhe horae J&gt;Ulling
ecxllest to be Wedneada:J evening.
On Thurada:J and Saturday
nights, the 13th annual summer
musleai ol the Big Bend Minstrel ASBII., will be tile ll!'and-

week not to mention• the Uve ~
stock to be shOwn and lhe horses
and ponies to be raced.-

The Dine Amusement Co. or
Canton will bo on the mldwa:J
with 11 rides Including tWo new
ones this year. From 10 a.m.
to "4 p.m.t Wednesday, the price
ot ride• will be reWced aa kid-

die day Is observed.
Vood booths ot tile Chester
Fire Depa11rnent and the Meigs

disnlay buildin.ghas,been converted into a restaurant. Patrons
wUI be seated a( table~~:. The establishment can sAat about 80 customen.
Raymond Hocc and Uerbert
Hoover, electricians, were put.
ting in long hours at the grounds
ironing out last minute pr&lt;Jb.
lems or lighting in various spots.
Tents to be used lor the [air

dogs while anOther will sell only
variousldnds of ruts. The SOUth-

ern Local School District Ath-

letic Boosters will sell sno-oon.es
and popcorn only while the Meigs
&lt;.:ount)' Riding Club to be located near the grandstand will tealure only cold snacks.

Celebrities for the week, or
course, will be the junior lair
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queen and ldng - Dawn
Carper

arrived &amp;mda.Y night. These wiU and Walter Jordan. Miss Carper
Local SChool District Athletic include lwp which wUI house is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Boosters were operating SUnday. the overflow or horses and pon. George Carper oC near ~
stand event and on Friday night Those of the 9.ltton M. E. Church, ies, a tent for junior Calr ex- and Wa1ter is the son of Mr. and
the old time fiddlers' contest the Little Family of Rutland and hibits and an automobile com- Mn. Mendal Jordan or the Car- offering the Ohio champlon- the · Ealltern Athletic Boosters mercial tent for occupancy by penter area. They will reign over
lh!p - plus $GOO in cash priz- were getting thie final treatment lhe Ra:J Riggs Co.
the fair and will be introduced to
es will be held.
before operations began. T h e
There will be some novelty audiences at grandstand events
. There win be hundreds ot ex~ Meigs Athletic Boosters food
~ands on the grounds one each evening.
hibits on display thNlUghout tile. stand is an innovation. A former
U feature only loot-long hot
Following tradltlon, only tour

Jam

SP E CIA L IIARNE8S cle•
v1&lt;e help1 allnua•l Joe H.
Ealle almolato de1eeot b 1

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

-'

year. They are Rock ~rings,
Laurel, Ohio Valley and HarriSOII\'ille. Their attractive booths
will be in the senior Cair buUding.
The commercial exhibit area
- the Rock ~rings Grange Hall
and the new addition to Jt ls full . An innovation this year
\ n thai area will be a piano dlspla,y by Elberfeld's in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Margaret Neuman will be
at the exhibit to play request
numbers ol persons passing by
tbe dlspta:J. Th!o Is the type of
piano work Mrs. Neuman enjoys
more than any other and she ts
among numerous lair workers
looking forward to the busy week.
Another iMOvation for the fair

to the ratr board and elerltal
workel'l!i attemp:lng to compl«e

records will be a paging service
and a loot and found department
ThJs will be qM~rated by B o y
Scouts and Girl Scoots with Mrs.

WIUiam Ohlinger in charge. Tho
operation will take auch service '
out of the !air board om ee and at
the same time provide a raster
facUlty Cor the public. A tent
housing the- operatiOn Will be
located just in front ot t h e
secretary'~ office on the midWa:J .
Fair board members were everywhere on the grounds &amp;mday
completing details to help make
the Meigs Fair, bigger and bet-

ter than ever.
·See you th~~n?

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paraehlle darlat 1 tralrllll1
exerdle Ia Tenl. 1'1111
lrailllq 11 Ia prer,arodoa
lor paraehule ejed •• from
alr&lt;raft.

Mrs. Millard VanMallr
Pomeroy

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Inc-

SAO PAULO, B....U &lt;UPD-

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world. The ciQ''a tramc de-

partment -l&amp;)'s there are alllbtIJ more lban 800,01)0 vehicles
lor a populiltlon of 1,1110,000.

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TB11 HAGUE &lt;OPII-Traf·
lie accident&amp; killed 2,757 per·
10111 in Bolland in 11117. com·

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HAVE AGOOD TIME an• THEN···

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S BiG -DAYt~·
AND 'NIGHTS

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AIR CONDITIONED SHOP.

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lNG PLEASURE. SEE YOU AT TIE FAIR! AND THEN-SEE YOU IN OUR

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THIS DANCE LINE IN ·SEQUINED COSTUMES wiU open
, thO,~ 131h an.arloJ summer musical ol the Big Bend Minstrel
· .olsocit;latlon at the Meigs County Fair Thursday olll Friday
. nigh~ Left to ript are Nancy Harris, Mary Bradbury, cathy

MONDAY, AUGUST 12., 1967

8:00"P.M.-ReliiiOWI Servitei-'-Meigs Couoty ilintsieriol Assn.

11:00 A.M.-Jl::l.t):" Jo'ait .
·'Jl,ldJang,_

.'

1:00 P.M.-IIDne tlbow

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For Junior Fair
cs.{~t to Revision)

l'c.u!t;·y i1Qd Rabbits - ' Sht w~nship and
· ._;.
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 13

Morning, FHA; . Afternoon, Boy Scouts

.

12:QO ,Noon, Tcactor Operators- Contest

~:=
~::~==~:~~Pet~·\ (;I~· ' . ' . . . ...
2:00 P.II ..-J~ . Fair. -, N~trl!iQII Conte-. and 'l'oed DemonitratloiU
.,.

u tcb~tdt!$1 -1' . , 1· 1,.. \
. 3~ I'.M.-'JUdJIIni. tlbeep aild Swtno:.-.op.n CW.
•7:30. P.ll.-110rse Pullilli Co~test :·
' ·
10:00 i&gt;.M:'o-FlreWoi:kt ·
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.ll.u,ust

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BaUey. Pam Neutzlirw;, Nancy Thompson, Kay McGowan, Ken-da Chaney, Clthy Fultz., Debbie Grueser, Bette Jear• Hobstet.
ter aM Debbie Crow.

Tentative Schedule

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105TH AflfUAI:. MEIGS tO.

CLOSED WED. &amp;THURS. TO DECORATE AND PLAN FOR YOUR SHOP·

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Fair PrQgram

TUISbAY, AUGUST 13th '
10:00 A.M.-Adinii&amp;lctt'"Will be charged ~l gat~ .
)O:Ctu A.M.-Judalna Domestic Arts
· 10:00 A.M.-l' JU. Demoostratlooa
·
1~:00 Noon fb 2;00 P.M.-Ju'iliOr t'Alr Tr..ctor OPErators Cvnteat
l;(ltt i'.M.-.80)' ~ul Demonitlations
~1f•?:30 ,P.M.-Pon, PuUi~ t.;unte.L .
.
WIDNISDAY, AUGUST 14th
.. 8:QCI A.M.-Poultry Juqj,g- Open CW.
.
1:00 A.M.-JudilnJ Junlo~' Fair- Beet and ShoWIIWIIhip
Fo!fow:-d by Shee" .1nr! Swine
·
IIJ:OO A.:M.- .t·ooas uuerv~w _
10:00 ·A.M. to 4:00P.M. -- Kiddies Day - All Rideo lOt
· lO:OCJ'" A.II.-Contormation Sbow - Hones and Poole•

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SELECTION OF WOOLS, WASHABLE$ AND FALL COTTbNS. lf:'LL BE

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COUNTY
tHE
. AND. 1lf AL('WHO ..DE
.
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DROP IN THE SEWING t;ENTER IN MIDDLEPORT AND SE~JIR 81G

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- leleellon
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....,. 11 ••elntJor.
• The
1111rlltso Wool of lH8, cbolen

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AT OH.IO Y~Ll~Y INDU$TR.IES
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SAN t\NOBLO,

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Et..l: · - . t!l .

in sao Paulo bu
509
"'r cer.t lQ the paat 18 ?ears,
clon1nK the narrow atreeta of
tbla etrhth lupst city in tlle

with

·lt~:niO.r and Senior

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The number oJ cars 1nd tr:ucU

pore~~

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pmes,.'leiCJI' fa~idr!fiiiw, ~lut Rlbllon ~~~~.
.and
.t'atlilril
'alll!llemeilts
promise. a .,'~t''"j of. •,
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1•
Morningr Girl -Scouts and Campfire Girls
Aftemoon-FFA .DemoostraUans
9:00 A.M.-Dccorama. This activity is Limited to 4-H gli'ls ·IU BoDle
FIU'llil!lbings projf'!cta Projects will be judged on their accomplisbment!t throu.&amp;h the year. Pbotographa arid •llliltl
may be used State Fair pMticipation will be d!termlDed iii.
·. .
this ac::tivicy. Pre-regi:ttralion must be done by Allfll)t 9th.
&lt;- $:00 A.M.-Junior Fair Beef Showmanllaip and ~ulg:Lng, fo~ by
ih~· abd .fWine.
ll.i._OO A.ll--Po~tltl')" lnd Rabbit Showmanship nfid
2~ J'.M.-N~trlliOn Coolest (Open to all routb in
-~- ·
eontest on fOods and nutrition consJa-ts
foods from exblbit5. There .are three
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11'\3 .
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18 ~
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granges will be exhibiting this and one that sbouJd be a relief

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medicr,Jpurpooea.

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

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Medical Dlvtslon, mJiltif8ca
turer ol x-ray equipment for

FOR EVERY
FAMILY ISTHE

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to &amp; apokwnao for 'North
Amerlean Ph11lpr; Company,

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Plctuhr. and captions
lh This Se&lt;llon
By Bob lloent&lt;h

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. The COrilptO!!$ lilt JOU to brlril the Wllo.lt ~ll". • . ·

the unitod .atJ~ todaY. ouch
studttl or about. ilo.OOO patlent&amp;
are required dOU1. icoordlna

B'*tmll &amp; Main

rt;:•·h
p·
•
~ .t,t·· · reparatzons or Big 105th Show

· '\

PHONE
992-2039

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2. Tile dlotooce between side boundaries oball be 14,feet ui4 ltiDII
and loads muat atay within said boundaries while pulling. · ~ ~; .

• ANNIVERSARIES
•WEDDIN(;S
•BIRTHDAYS
•FUNERALS '
•BASKETS
•SPRAYS
•POTTERY

FOR EVERY
OCCASION

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ilre Swingin'

3 Yeor Old Pace . . .. . . . . . .. . .. . . . . .. .. ..

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 19611, 5:00 P.!rf.
2 Yeor Old Trot .. . . . .. . . .. .. ........ .. ... · .. · · · .. .. · .. llll. ~.
.. . .. .. . . . . . lllol liOIIO.
Trot-NOD·W'IIIIWI ol. $USOO.OO .. . .. .. .. . ....... . · · • . $500.00 Puno

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~··BoyaDemun11tr1Uolla
THI.!tiSI!A)', AUGUST
.
.l),em~n&amp;tratioll.l

JS,

Fair Olley Jud&amp;ini. aod Shc•lvDOutl
1

' FR10AY1

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