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&gt;unday, May 23,,1971

I

Steps to Better World

PLASTIC SEWER AND DRAI.N~ PIPE
AND FITTINGS

A plart of action leading to a draft law and establishing a
betterworldwasoutlined)ly Dr. mand&lt;&gt;tory two year service
Alphus R.' Christensen, · program for all persons at the
president of Rio- Grande ·age of 18, Dr. Christensen sald
College, when he addressed the young people could work \in
50 seniors of Eastern High various services, not only the
School at annual com- armed forces, but In the job
mencement exercises Sunday corps, peace corps, or with
night.
handicapped
and
unHe suggested four steps to his derprivileged. He held that
plan of acf4'on, working together freedoms Americans enjoy
of young people to ·make a today are not their birthright,
better country, particularly but must be re-earned by each
through exercising their right to generation.
vote; seeing that schools are
" Too many generations
required to teach a course on through the years gone by have
the weaknesses and strong had to make the supreme
points of all governments; sacrifice for the freedoms we
working individually and enjoy today," the 'ruo Grande
collectively to increase op· College president said in
portunity' and insure equal stressing the duty ·of each
opportunity for all persons, and person to serve the nation.
repealing of the draft laws, but
Dr. Christensen warned
requiring that every person - against judging the character of
male or female - give two the individual by the length of
years in some field of public his hair or his manner of dress.
service to their country.
Youth of today lack two
"Enlarging upon repeal of the important qualities, education

SFWEA PIPE

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'

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• ~- .... "'&lt;:•.

1000 LB. CRUSH

SOLDER GUN

WE HAVE 15,000 FEET TO SELL
SO NOW IS THE TIME
TO BUY YOURS

STEEL SHELVING

JENNIFER GOBLE

%"100 FT. '

99

LU ANN FRENCH

ONLY

roll

SAW BLADES
SHOP TORCH

Ifacts relevant to reality) and
experience - he said. Young
people must develop a skill, or
talent, fo" some time they will
have to make a living. On experience, the college president,
said age will not necessarily
give one wisdom.
•
Ill
"Events only provide op·
portunity for experience and
wisdom,".he observed.
Principal Boli Ord introduced
the top 10 students of this year's
graduating class. They are
Nancy Kay Baum, valedic·
torian; Thomas Wesley Karr,
salutatorian; Brenda Kay
Boring, Michael Grant Boring,
Kimberly Lynn Fick, Debra
Ann Fitch, Carolyn Kay Griffin,
Robyn Marlene Mills, Jean
Denise Whitehead and Deborah
Kay Wood.
The hand, directed by Frank
NANCY BAUM, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Bawn, Chester, was valedictorian,
Wooters, presented "Pomp and
and Thomas Wesley Karr , son of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Karr, Pomeroy Route 4, was
Circumstance" for · the 50
salutatorian Sunday evening at the annual Eastern High School commencement. Both were
seniors in green and white caps
presented trophies. Miss Baum will continue her studies at Marietta College, Mr . Karr at Ohio
(Continued on Page 4)
State University.

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CHISEL

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Devoted To The lntere~~b Of The Meigs~MaMJn Area

PEGGY STORY

FLUORESCENT BUlBS

NO. XXIV
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TOOL BOX

LEVEL

RENEE BtJRKE

TOILET OUTFIT

CLAMP

ONLY
9x12

TOILET SEAT

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SANDY SAYRE

Seven Want
ueen

SAIGON IUPI)-Communist
commandos blew up 1.5 million
gallons of aviation fuel in a raid
on the U.S. base at Cam Ranh
Bay Sunday night, then shelled
the base with mortars while
firemen battled the flames,
military spokesmen said today.
There were no injuries in the
fire or the shelling, but military
spokesmen said the fuel loss
was believed to be the worst of
, the Vietnam War.

The fuel blaze at the base 185
miles northeast of Saigon was
not brought under control until
this morning . Nearly 30 rounds
of 82mm mortar shells were
fired into the base while the
fire was being fought.
In the Central Highlands, a
Communist mortar shell de·
stroyed U. s.. Army UH1 Huey
helicopter on the ground at Fire
Support Base No. 5, killing at
least one American and three

South Vietnamese, a field
spokesman said. Another American was wounded. The base
was hit by tear gas, as well as
high explosive shells, the
spokesmen said.
Further north on the southeast end of the A Shau Valley,
South Vietnamese infantrymen
reported killing 54 Communists
in a drive along a narrow ridge.
Government casualties were
termed light.

pressing a search this morning Shake Shoppe located at the type mask, a yellow-green
for a masked man, armed with corner of Second Ave. and Olive · sweater and green trousers. He
.
st. at 11 :45 p.m. Sunday.
told Snedaker to hand over the
Seven Meigs County girls are Teac her s, Candystriper,
For~ei"l According to officers, over money or, •:nt kill you."
candidates for the Big Bend Student Councll, Spanish Club,
GffiLSCOUTFLY·UP - Mlddleport'sfive girl5CIJI!t troops staged a joint fly-up ceremony
Homeco~ing
attendant,
G.A.A.
1'
$950 was taken in the stick-up. After gettmg the money, the
Regatta Queen, sponsored by
SUnday on the lawn of the Scout House . Advanced from Brownies into junior units were, left to
intruder forced Snedaker and
Ohio Chapter of Beta Sigma and chOir.
right, first row, Debbie Lambert, Judy Rudolph and Lori Kloes, and second row, Janelle Kelly,
Bernadette He nn~ssy, 17,
Early investigation showed a Bl¥nche Steele, an employee, to
Phi.
Laurel Spencer, Melinda Demoskey, Sara Diddle and Margo Martin. Going from junior units
man described as being 5-ll and 1walk to the basement where he
The queen candidates will senior at. Meigs Hlg~ w.11l
into
the Qidette troop were, third row, Kathy Haley, Kathy Manley, Brenda Husen, and Mary
of medium build entered the told them to ,stay for at least a
ride on the Queen Float in the attend Ohio State · :umver~Ity
Boggs, and fourth row, Kathy Meadows and Cindy Triplett. Parents were guests for the fly-up
Regatta Parade Friday, June this fall and ~~jor m nurs.mg. Four defendants forfeited ·shakeShoppe'sreardoorwhere half hour .
ceremony. Refreshments were served.
18, leaving Middleport at 6:30 She IS 5 ft. 7 tal~. She IS a bonds and three others were Jeff Soedaker was counting the He again threatened to shoot
p.m. traveling non-stop to me~ber of the NatiOnal Honor fined Saturday night in the day's receipts.
IContinued on Page 8)
"N.VJ!.Y.l'..O,.'' • • '•'I'' • • • • • '.,. •' .,••. •
Pomeroy. Rhea Mora, one of Society, F.T.A., G.A.A. court of Pomeroy Mayor
,_-.,;o;o,o;.o,•.-.w:•:•:•:&gt;,-.·:•Xo!•!O:•:{•;o!•!•!•!•.V:•!•!•.-.•,{ ,
the seven, is not pictured above. pre.sident, Danforth winner, Charles Legar.
'
Persons attending
the parade maJorette, and newspaper staff. Forfeiting bonds were Benny
may vote for the candidate of
Franklin Untanlan, 23, West
•
their choice at the Pomeroy Renee Burke, 17, a junior at Columbia, $50, posted on a
Eastern High takes its red
Junior High auditorium where Southern Righ School hopes to disturbing the peace charge;
RACINE - "Commencement all agenda and we need Clarence Lawrence, Denie Hill, hot 1971 baseball team to
space will be provided. The attend Vogue Career College Alwinda Wirth, P01ueroy, $15, means the start of adult life," vocational education in Gene Yost, and David Nease
Newark Thursday for the
queen will be announced at the in the fall of 1972 to become a stop sign violation ; Artician D. Oakley C. Collins, state senator, Southern Ohio as well as doc- and Clerk Charles Norris.
first
regional showdown for o
Char·les
Pyles, board
Frog Ball Saturday night.
fashion model. Miss Burke is Staats, Middleport, $15, told the 72 graduating seniors of tors."
ticket to the state finals in
Two accidents were ln·
Candidates ar e Jennifer five loot seven and weighs 125 squealing tires, and Kenneth Southern High School Sunday
Collins recognized the parents president, presented diplomas. Columbus later.
vestigated by the Meigs County
Goble, 17, a senior at Meigs pounds. She was treasurer of Reynolds, Long Bottom, $23.70, night in graduation exercises at of the graduates, the grand· The invocation was given by
The
Eagles,
come-fromSheriff
's Dept. Friday and
High School who plans to attend Student Council, freshman speeding.
parents and other relatives and Pamela Kay Buck, the behind winner over Adena
the high school here.
Ohio State University this fall homecoming attendant, vice- Fined were John V. Martin,
"Know what you're doing, friends and extended his salutatory address by Karen Saturday at Chlillcothe, 1-3, Saturday.
Friday at 7:35p. m. on SR 124
and major in Education.
president of student council this Pomeroy, · $100 and costs and love what you're doing, and congratulations
to
the Sayre, and valedictory address in the district final, rnns Into
in
front of Eber's Gulf Service
Miss Goble is 5 foot 7 inches year, Belpre tomato Queen in three days in jail on a charge of believe in what you're doing," graduates and Southern Local by Keith Ashley .
Fairbanks,
5
p.m.
Thurs·
Station in Racine , Anthony
Two
selections
were
tall and weighs 127 lbs. She was '69, member of choir, girls glee driving while Intoxicated ; Collins told the seniors and the School Board.
day
at
Newark.
The
winner
head majorette, homecoming club , band, Tri-M, girls William Reeves, Pomeroy, $25 capacity crowd.
Ralph Sayre, superintendent, pnisented by the high school returns Saturday at noon. The Bradford, 16, Racine, Rt. 2,
attendant, member of Job's basketball, College Club, and costs, intoxication, and
Collins said three points "to introduced school board band. Patricia Louise !hie gave other regional bracket teams pulled from the station into the
path of a car traveling east
Daughters, Student Council, French Club, Grange, alternate Duane Sidders, A,shley, Ohio, consider in life are respect, members, Charles Pyles, the benediction.
are Licking Heights verses driven by David A. Crow, 17,
F.T.A., G.G., Band, Latin Club, for Girls State, head majorette, $10 and costs, reckless expect, and protect. Respect
Portsmouth East. !James will Racine .
Future Nurses, arts and crafts. Queen of Hearts Candidate.
your parents and your flag ,
LOCAL
TEMPS
operation charge.
be played on Edwards Field.
'
There were heavy damages to
Lu Ann French, 17, senior, Sandy Sayre, 17, a senior at
expect great things, and protect
Temperature in do wntown
both
vehicles, no injuries or
Meigs High School who plans to Southern High School, will
our laws and enforcement Mostly cloudy and mild with Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
CALL ANSWERED
arrests.
study nursing at Ohio State attend Ohio University this fall.
showers or th undershowers was 66 degrees under cloudy
agencies.
ALUMNI TO MEET
saturday at 5:30 p. m. on
"The Labor Department likely today and tonight. Highs skies.
University this fall . Miss Miss Sayre is five feet four The }'omeroy E·R unit an·
The Pomeroy High School County Road 18, six miles north
swered
a
call
to
the
Leonard
.
French is five foot one inch tall inches tall and weighs 120 Lunsford home in the lloek esl!mated the value of a today in the 70s and low 80s.
Alumni Assn. will meet at 7 of Pomeroy, Mary L. King, 17,
and weighs 107pounds. She was pounds. She plans to major in
Lows
tonight
in
the
50s
and
low
.
t
p
'
m
diploma
at
$100,000
several
tonight
at the junior high Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was traveHng
Sprmgs area a 9:10 . ·
d ·th · fl t· ·1 60s. Variable cloudiness with a
a member of the band, Future education. High school ac- Saturday.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
. building in Pomeroy to prepare east and a car driven by David
Lunsford was taken years ago, an WI m.. a wn, I
. Nurses, G.A.A., class officer, tivities include, cheerleader,
of
showers
rrjainly
in
the
chance
Robert
Ewing
Buck,
25,
for the annual reunion dance to
to Veterans Memorial Hospital Is much higher ?.ow • C?lll~s
Loring Bacon , 22, Cincinnati,
Frencm Club, candtstriper, senior class officer, Girls Glee
east Tuesday, highs mostly in Pomeroy, and Debra Denise be held at 9 p.m. Saturday .
'tted
as
a
noted.
He
added,
Educal!on
Is
dm
h
was traveling west. King's auto,
th e num ber one 1·tem m
· Oh'10 on the 70s.
Keebaugh, 19, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
choir and fob's Daughters.
Club, Mixed Chorus, home- where
. ta 1
. 1e was
1
ed
apparently
traveling too fast,
Peggy Story, 17, a senior at coming attendant, Tri •. M, m 1ca pa 1en .
skidded into Bacon's.
Meigs High will attend Ohio Nahon.al Honor Socie,ty,
TWO ASK DIVORCE
Michael Lynn Adams, a
· state University this fall. Miss Historian , Band, Society
Two divorce actions have passenger in the Bacon car
Story is five foot seven inches treasurer, College Club
been filed in Meigs County sustained a skin wound of his
tall and weighs 128 p~unds. She treasurer ,
Latin
Club,
Common Pleas Court, each head but was not immediately
was a member of 'the band, Chemistry Club, 4-H, G.A.A.,
charging gross neglect of duty treated . The Bacon car wu
Future
Nurses, Future and girls basketball team.
and extreme cruelty . Yvonne demolished and tl1e King car
The American Cancer Society Union and the Confedera,te and his own marne and address. Cancer Society on Mettlorial
Moore, Middleport, and June A.
----------------------~ will renew the original spirit of forces ceased, a 'group of The Unlt will then send Day, you are providing a gHt of Stanley, Albany, Rt. 2, from J. had minor damage . No citations
were issued.
hope in which Memorial Day Southern families decorated the acknowledgements to all . hoJ* that some day soon, death
Frederick
Stanley,
Albany,
Rt.
was founded.
graves not only of their fallen concerned. The family of the from this insidious disease will
"We 'have dealgnated this soldiers but those of the Nor· person being honored never be put to an end," Mr. Black- 2. Wayne E. Chappelear was
PARENTS TO MEET
I usually somber occasion to a thern dead also. The news of the learns of the amount of the gift. wood said. "Every gift large or appointed special deputy sheriff
Parents
of boys playing
By United Press lnternaUonal
smiill, goes directly into the according to a journal entry.
time of provision for the future tribute soon spread through the
baseball in Racine are asked to
Regardless of whether the gHt fight against cancer," he
and a day free from Cllllcer," Northandbecamearayofhope
Mars Launch Hopefully Saturday
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
meet at the field at 6:30 thla
Blackwood, for an end. to needless deaths is given as a memorial 'tribute continued.
said Lloyd
Rather
cool
Wednesday
evening,for
a meeting and work
CAPE KENNEDY - THE ROCKET problems have been
president of the Meigli County and the strengthening of the tD a special person or .generally Contributions may be sent to through Friday wlth a chance party.
!IJ;ed and engineers are airning,toward SaiUrday for the launch of
as a gift of iHe, the money will Meigs County Unit of the
Unit. The ACS is planning a bonds of brotherhood.
the second and last Mariner television satellite toward Mars. special way to commemorate
be used to support cancer American Cancer Society, 127 of showers east portions
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
· "We're ·ln good shape," a Space Agency spokesman reported ·Memorial Day ln Meigs County W)Jen a memorial gHI is made research, save lives throUgh Coal Street, Middleport, Ohio, W,ednesct.ay. Daytime highs In
Saturday night aftet' the lall!lch team successfully con~pleted a )ly providing an opportunity to the donor provldea the name of education, and provide service 45760. Anrone who wishes more the upper 60s north and lower . The Middleport E·R squad
70s south. Lows at night in the was called to the Hilton c.dle
. day-long flight acceptance teilt on the Atlas-Centaur rocket and Us give a gHt of life. ·
· the person l,n whose memory the· w cancer patients and their informati,on on ,the Society's glft 50s by Wednesday morning, home in Harrisohville ,at 1:3f
1 of life efforts is invited to
. 2,201Ji)ound Mariner ~pacecraft.
· ·
.
Historically, Memorial Day gift is made, the name and familieS.
p,m. Saturday. Cadle wu taker
. Engineers set Saturday night as the earliest possible launch had its birth ln the old South. address of the person who
"By making an additional contact this office or call 992- dropping to the low and mld to Holzer M&lt;ldical Center.
lOs by F'rlday morning.
,
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(Continued on Page 8)
After hostilities .between the should be notlfied of the gift, conlribution to the American 2688.

CollinS Addresses Seniors

WRENCH

VANITY ·LAVATORY
'

AS LOW

4 ft. X ft.
AS
RE.
G
.
•·1 .29
METAL
GRASS RAKES

•

FOlDING RULER

SHEET

Weather

HAMMER

Memorial Day: To Give a Life

r-----

l News ..• in
l ·

UN OlEUM

WALLCOVERINGS

MOSAIC litE

ALUMINUM GUTTERING

ADJUST ABLE WRENCH

INTERIOR WIRE

WOOD MOLDINGS

tEN CENTS

Four
Courl BondS

C·

STEEL RULE

PHONE 992-2156

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Comm,a ndo Strike
War·'s Worst Loss

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MONDAY, MAY 24, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

NO. 28..

..

Briefs l

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·~y_'

In Regional

A .d

ents.
Reported
CCI

�I
3- The Da1ly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 May 24 1971

2- The Dally Sentmel M!ddleport..Pmneroy, 0 May 24 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

''Don't Me an' My Buddy
Make a Great Team'"

EDITORIALS

fast Donates !Helen Help
By Helen Bottel
to Charity !

CARE for People
Who Really Care
On Mav ll 1946 a package arnved m Le Havre
France-the small begmnmg of an operahon destmed
to mvolve every contment on the globe touch the hves
of hundreds of nulhons and a quarter century later still
be engaged m a never flmshed mission
It began JUst s1x months after V E Day The devasta
hon of Europe was tremendous Mllhons of people were
refugees Houses factories en,hre cJbes were destroyed
The task facmg governments was a tremendous one and
the U S government was to play a maJor role m the re
bUIIdmg of Europe
But Ame11cans and Canad&lt;ans wanted a way to send
d1rect a1d to fnends and relatives and to needy people m
general CARE was their answer
CARE was mcorporated m November 1945 by 22 ma
JOr Amertcan voluntary service agencies Ohe of J!s Hrst
ads was to purchase 2 8 m1lhon 10-m one packs from the
US Army Each contamed enough food to feed one sol
d1er for 10 days or 10 soldiers for one day
For $15 donors could buy a pack des1gnate the person
to whom 1! was to be sent and obtam a rece1pt from h1m
As the supply of 10m ones dwmdled m a flood of re
quests CARE began des1gnmg and producmg 1ts own
food parcels creahng special packages for the d1ffermg
na!Jon~hhes of Europe as well as packages of clothmg
and household arl!cles
Today, the CARE m1ssJon m Greece JS the only one re
mammg m Europe But CARE contmues to feed people
Th1s year alone 1! w1ll send enough food overseas to feed
25 mJihon people each day
Through 1ts Self Help program the orgamzahon IS
helpmg East Pak1stams rebuild 10 000 homes destroyed
by last fall s monsoon and domg the same for 600 000
Peruv1ans left homeless after the disastrous earthquake
of May 1970
Under another serv1ce called MEDICO vJsJting volun
leer specahsts from the Umted States and Canada spend
one month tours of duty abroad teachmg and treatmg
m the1r special!Jes
In 1ts 25 years of operation CARE has fed more than
half a b1lhon men women and children The value of
goods sh1pped to all 1ts missions smce they were opened
totals $1 2 b1lhon

New Forests---Quicker

Ji

Goad 'em to Label It Goat

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Lib Myth

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Bra burmng the symbolic act associated with the
women s liberatwn movement 1s JUSt a myth kept alive
by the news media that never happened anywhere
says Alleen Hernandez president of the Natwnal Orgam
zallon for Women (NOW)
A few years ago she explams protesters at a M1ss
Amenca pageant m Atlantic C1ty threatened such an act
But they called 11 off when f1re officials sa1d 1! would be
a hazard to the Boardwalk
The symbol stuck however even though the event
never took place
The record stands corrected If not exactly uphfted

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••

BEARY'S WORlD

•',•
·:
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••••

!•
~:

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.,.•'•'•

jl••

f

tf!' 1971

•r NEA

I~

"There's a nosty rumor gomg around the club, F_rguson,
that you potil toresl'

Pass
Pass

North
1•
Pass

East Soulh
1¥
Pass 4¥

Pass
Openmg lead-.t. K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald One of the tough
est JObs m bndge IS that un
dertaken by Alfred Dormer
Tannah Hirsch Tom Sm1th
and Steve Becker They at
tempt to analyze what will
happen when a 100 000 pa1rs
play the hands m the contin
en! WJde chanty game
J1m It JS tough enough
to guess what wlll happen
" hen a hand 1s played Just
tw1ce m a team game Let s
show some of the hands m
the column placmg declare'
m the South
Oswald The panel takes
a rather safe stand With to
day s hand and suggests that
p
r a c tic a 11 y every South
II
player WJJI wmd up m hearts
The bJddmg m the box 1s
IS JUS! an actor m The Gang That Couldn 'I Shoot fairly normal
Strmght
S10bhan McKenna snooted $100,000
J1m West will open the
for a TV commercial, but aot siSter Ir1sher
kmg of clubs and probably
Geraldine Fitzgerald Who signed wtth VoJghts shlft to the four of spades
&amp; Fields, who made Alice Playten a national South w1ll take h1s ace and
favonte
Lana Turner's June 8 Maryland go after trumps East Will
prem1ere m '40 carats' In Agnew country get m With the kmg cash a
already has Kissmger and K~ reservations h1gh spade and lead another
wnereupon South w1ll
TriVIa Columb!8 Pictures Statue of Uberty one
make the rest of the tncks
signature on 1ts old Late Late TV movies have a
Oswald It 1s one of those
vaguely fam1bar face for you? You're old' Its automatic s que e z e s1tua
Delores Costello, an earlier John Barrymore lions He runs all h1s trumps
wife
to come down to three d1a
Renata Adler was JUSt keepmg Pete Hamill s moods wh1le dummy holds
hands warm no doubt for Shrrley MacLalne at two diamonds and the queen
, of clubs and West holds a
the Kitty Hawk, the staff there wh1SJ)ered
hve rattlesnake
Henry Fonda who started out m stock with the
JJm The panel pmnts out
Uruvers1ty Players, wms this years Strawhat that East can break up the
Achievement Award, last year's Faberge laurel squeeze, but I doubt 1f any
went to Bette DaviS
Harr stylist Pippo of one d1d 1! The break up play
Rome researched that ancient Greeks when IS for East to lead a diamond
they grew to manhood, cut off their long tresses before cashmg e v e n one
spade T h a t leaves West
and dedicated same to a god
w1th one extra card and pulls
The late Herald Tnb's ed1tonal wnter Geoff the f a n g s of the rattle
Parsons grandk1d Sheila Long weds Andrew snake
Munster shorUy
Remember vaudevilles
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
Dave Apollon? You're old, too Anyway Daves
had many months of phySical agonies, but he s
recuperating rucely Dave's act was a muSical
The b1ddmg has been
Laugh-In a thick-accented RUSSian Dave led a
large band of marvelously unpertlnent Fillpmos Wesl North East Soulh
I¥
Dble
Pass 2"'
Sticklers for Old Church Tradlllon tune m Pass
?
2NT
Pass
Westchester station WVOX to hear the old, the
You South hold
ongmal, the real Latin Mass Sun mornings at .KH ¥6543 t32 AID875
8 30
You d be amazed, the Pope too, at the
What do you do now'
percenfage of catholics who miss the mystical
A-Pass Y o JJ don 1 have
enough to ra~se and no sutt to
Latin grandeur
'Ryans Daughter ' star Sarah Miles met bid
scads of b1g hhn stars but her biggest H'wood
treat was hOWJa domg L,illian Gish
Q-How did the pratne
Diplomatic range Hugh GriH1th played an Arab
schooners recezve thetr
m Exodus ' a Jew m 'Dr Phibes" Tel AVIV name•
has a new cafe, ' Tiffany'S", Of course It's ex
A-They were called by
pensive
David Frost may have chilled the that name because at a dts
suburban set at Westbury, but he's domg fine as tance the wh1te awnings that
a c1ty lad he's been dubbed "N Y Oty's '71 covered the wagons looked
like a fleet of sailmg ships
Summer Festival Host '
With all canvas spread

r-----------------------------------------1 Voice along Broadway i
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Exertion .May Be Cause

t883

s1r
Two other condJ!JOns that
would cause recurrent prob
!ems of the type you de
scnbe are a spasm or
crampmg m the esophagus
and sometimes art h r 1t 1s
Some people With a herma
of the upper part of the
stomach through the d1a
phragm Wlll have difficulbes
when they have been stoop
mg over pullmg weeds Th1s
may cause the esophagus to
have spasms or cause s1m1
Jar difficulties In severe de
grees th1s can also cause
1eferred pam to the arm
If you s1mply can t afford
to se~ a doctor- and I really
can t see how you can afford
NOT to see one - the only
general advice I could g1ve
) ou Without knowmg more
about your problem would
be to reduce your weight If
you should be overweight
hm1t your fats and choles
terol along the lines I have
discussed frequently m m'
column and JUSt m case
your problem IS related to a
h1atal he r n 1a eat small
meals frequently rather than
large ones
And don t mvolve yourselt
m achv1t1es t h a t require
bending or stooping over In
fact you could try a little
test on yourself to see if you
can tole1 ate about the same

as you stay upnght without
developmg the problem that
you have descnbed If you
can th1s suggests a hiatal
herma There JS no substJ
lute though for seemg your
doctor
•
Dear Dr Lamb-Is there
any way to prevent prostate
gland trouble m men afte1
65?
Dear Reader- It would be
poss1ble to prevent 1t by cas
trat10n and takmg female
hormones, but most men
aren t older
mterested
t h 1s
Some
men mescape

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
U there s one thmg Ray
Sadeckl has learned durmg h1s
14 years m professwnal base
ball 11 would have to be
patience
It takes a good deal of
patience for a man particularly
one who once was the age of a
world champiOnship team to
s1t on a bench and wa1t for a
call It takes somethmg else to
make good use of the lnfre
quent opportumties
Sadeck1 who won 20 games
for the world champ10n St
Lou1s Cardmals m 1964, re
ce1ved a chance for h1s second
start of the season Sunday and
he allowed hard·hlttlng Atlanta
only f1ve h1ts as the New York
Mets downed the Braves, 4-0
Sadeck1 walked only one batter
and struck out s1x as a crowd
of 50 999 watched the contest at
Shea Stadium
I ve only pitched 152-3
mmngs Sadeckl sa1d after hiS
fme tnumph But I understand
the situatiOn on th1s club and I

~DIN5

IN CROSS COUNTIN,
INDOOR AND OUTDOOR TRACK

I,~~~r:~~~~i--;~----::1

ATHENS Oh10 (UP!) -West
ern MJChJgan Ohio Umvers1ty
and the Umvers1ty of Toledo
all favored to wtn titles m Mid
AmeriCan Conference sprmg
competition here over the week
end, d1d JUS! that
Western Michigan picked up
Jts 13th track and field title m
14 years while OU won the golf
champ10nsh1p and Toledo cap·
lured its s1xth consecutive ten
ms tttle
The Broncos compiled 158
pomts to easily outdiStance OU
which wound up w1th 119 pomts
and second place followed by
Muum, 113 Kent State, 112
Bowling Green, 66 and Toledo
52
AI Schoterman of Kent State
broke the MAC hammer throw
mark and R1ch Bowswell of OU
broke the record for the Javelm
toss
Sohoterman tossed
the
hammer 215-feet 7 to eclipse the
record 184 feet 7 toss made by
Warren Converse of Western
Michigan last year
Dowswell tossed the Javehn
252-feet-li to break the old mark

FACn.

Dr Samuel Howe was an
Amencan reformer and
p lone e r m educatmg the
bhnd In 1832 Howe headed
the New England Asylum
for the B II n d the first
school for the blind m the
U SA The World Almanac
recalls Dr Howe also pro
mated care of the msane
educatwnal and pnson re
form aboht10n of slavery
and women suffrage

Get SI Nine

Valuable Wood
Very hard and havmg a
close gram wood of the holly
tree IS valuable for mus1cal
mstruments furmture and
mtenor decorabon The m
ner bark y1elds the sbcky
matenal called birdlime
The th1gh bone or femur
IS the longest bone m the
bojly
overhwehn Jt If 1t keeps and
enhances Its strength, no great
war need come agam

f.bveVER,TAAVE~ING FOUR BlOCKS
1tl SCiJOO~ THfa.T'S DIFFERENTIAL
I DON'T SEE

The

WHY 'rOJ OoXT
WALK OR .JOIS
TO 6CHC:l01,

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO ITHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

GOOO!

City Editor

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•

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By Motor Route where carr er

servtce not avatleblt

of 248-feet-3 set by Don F1sh of
ou In 1969
OU posted a score of 1120 for
the 54 hole two day golf tourna
men! to wm that event followed
by Kent State at 1129 M1am1
at 1139 Western Michigan at
1172, Bowlmg Green at 1178 and
Toledo 1186
Dan Strimple of Kent State
took medalist honors w1th a 74
73-71-218 score for the 54 holes
Ed Strickler of Kent ~tate,
who led Strunple by f1ve shots
gomg mto the fmal round had
73-jj!)-77-219 whde Tun Rear
don of OU f1mshed third w1th
73-75-74-222
Toledo handily won the tenms
title with 20 pomts to 13 for
Wes~rn MIChigan
The Rockets won three smgles
and one doubles titles
Kent State was third w1th 9
pomts followed by M1am1 6
Bowhng Green 5 and Oh10
Umvers1!y 4
Oh10 Umvers1ty was awarded
the ail-sports trophy for QUI
standmg parhcJpahon m all
vars1ty sports for the enbre
school year

Cmcmnab Reds mpped the
Phdadelph1a Phlls 4-3 the Los
Angeles Dodgers trJpped the
Chicago Cubs 4 3 and the
Montreal Expos beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2
The Met.s Jumped off to an
early 3-U lead over Atlanta and
Tomm1e Agee added the JCmg
w1th a f1fth mmng homer as
New York completed a sweep
of the three game senes M1ke
McQueen (2 I) was the loser
Reggie Cleveland celebrated
hJS 23rd brrthday w1th h1s first
two hits of the season mcluding

Rose qwckly fielded a smgle
by pJnch-lutter T!Dl Mccarver
and threw a perfect str1ke to
catcher Johnny Bench to cut
down pmch-runner DJCk Selina
at the plate and preserve the
Reds' WIO
In Saturday s game pitcher
J1m Memtt threw a bunt from
wmmng pitcher Barry Lersch
mto nghtf1eld m the fifth mn,

mg when the three runs that
frame scored unearned
Those three runs gave the
Phds a 5-3 lead after Joe Us
had belted a two-run homer m
the second
Cincmnatl got two runs m the
seventh after a single by Lee
May and back to-hack doubles
by Tommy Helms and Buddy
Bradford

Ont

month $1 75 By mail in Ohto

and W Va One year SU 00

SIK months S7 25
Three
months U .SO Subscription
price tncludes SundiV Ttme$
Sentinel

a run sconng double as he
pitched the Cardmals to v1ctory
over San D1ego Cleveland now
4-2 struck out mne and allowed
seven hits
Bobby Bonds collected three
hJts, mcludmg a double and a
tnple drove m three runs and
scored another to lead the
G1ant attack at Houston Ron
Bryant w1th mnth mmng help
from Jerry Johnson stretched
his record to 5 I although
allow1pg 12 h1t.s
J1m Lefebvre hit a two-run

By Un1led Press lnternatJonal
National League
East
W l Pel GB
New Yprk
24 15 615
51 LOUIS
25 16 610
P1ttsburgh
24 17 585 l
Ch1cago
20 21 488 5
Montreal
16 17 485 5
Phdadelph a
14 25 359 10
West
W L Pel GB
San Franc sea

30 13 698

Cmc mnatt

17 24 415 12

Los Angeles
Atlanla
Houslon

San D1ego
12 29 293 17
Sundays Results
Montreal 4 P llsburgh 2
New York 4 Atlanla 0
Cmcmnatt 4 Phlladelphta 3

Los Angeles 4 Ch1cago 3
Sl
6 San D1ego I
homer w1th none out m the San LouiS
Franctsco 7 Houston 4
mnth mmng to hft the Dodgers
Today s Probable P1tchers
Atlanta
(N&gt;ekro 3 31 at
over ChJCago and end Ferguson
Monlreal
I
Renko
4 21 n ghl
Jenkms seven game wmmng
Cmcmnatl (Nolan 3 3) al
streak J1m H1ckman drove m Philadelphia (Wise 3 21 n ghl
San D1ego (Phoebus 2 31 al Sl
two runs for the Cubs w1th a
LOUIS
(Gibson 4 4) n ght
homer and a smgle
Erme McNally won h1s fll"st
Tuesdav s Games
maJOr league game for Mon Atlanta at Montreal n Qh!
F al Los Angeles n ght
Ileal after four losses although S
Houston at San Dieg o n ght
he had to be relieved m the Ph Iadelphia al New York
mnth mmng by M1ke Marshall n1ghl
when Pittsburgh scored both Its Cmcmnatt at P tt n ght
Ch cago al 51 Lou s n ghl
runs Bob Ba1ley hJt a three-run
homer for , .,the Expos m the
Saturday s Results
Chicago
5 Los Angeles 2
e1ghth
New York 8 Atlanta 7 111 nnsl
Montreal 5 P1llsburgh 2
Ph Jadelph a 5 Cincmnat 3
Sl LouiS 7 San Dego 4
Houston 2 SF I (12 nns)

FORT WORTH Tex (UPI)Gene U!tier Sipped on h1s
champagne Sunday evenmg and
reflected back to a pomt Just a
httle more than 24 hours
before
1 had Just come off the lith
hole (on Saturday) WJth a
double bogey and I was s1x
over par for the tournament
he sa1d And now here I am a
wmner It Just doesn t seem
possible
But anythmg was poss1ble for
a golfer who could mbble away
at the beastly Coloma! Country
Clubs 7 142 yard par 35-35--70
course on about as wmdy a
Sunday as they dream up m
Texas these days
Littler survived the wmds
and the narrow fairways to f1re
a one under par 69 that was
good enough for a three-over
par 283 and a pne strQke victory
'lfl the ~6th. Coloma! Natwnal

lnvJ!atJOn
The former U S Open cham
p10n sacked up $25 000 for h1s
second wm of the year Bert
Yancey who closed w1th a 70
was one stnke back at 284 and
won $14 300
The1r challengers were all
gobbled up by one of the
toughest golf acreages m the
nation
Th1rd round leader Juhus
Boros faded to a 76 and wound
up lied for th1rd w1th Fred
Marl! George Knudson and
Orville Moody Marti shot a 74
and Knudson a 73 Moody was
one of the day s fortunate souls
shootmg a 69 and moved past
25 other golfers m the process
Uttler s wmmng score of
three-over par was the highest
champ10nsh1p total m relatiOn
to par smce the 1963 U S Open
when Boros Arnold Palmer and
Jacky Cup1t ali shot l!klver

293s to lie Boros subsequently
won the 18-hole playoff
Uttler started the day f1ve
shots behmd Boros but the
wmd soon got to the leader
Dave Stockton moved mto the
temporary lead but he trJple
bogeyed the th1rd hole and
double bogeyed the s1xth and he
was out of 11 for the day and
wound up seven over par
George Knudson moved mto
!he lead, and held 11 un!Jl late
on the back mne but then
L1 ttler made h1s move
Uttler had made two bogeys
on the front mne when he found
a trap on the seventh hole and
the water on the mnth But he
ran m a s1x footer on the 13th
~ 35.footer on the 15th and an a1rooter
on the 16th
It was only then that he knew
the tournament was h1s for the

wmnmg

Blue Chalks Up lOth Win

Siebert s homer helped the
By JOE CARNICELLI
Red Sox leaders m the AL
UPI Sports Writer
It may only be late May but East split their senes w1th the
the race for Amencan League Onoles who remained m
Cy Young Award honors IS second three games back
developmg mto a two man Frank Robmson drove m !1 ve
batUe between Oakland s V1da runs w1th a pa1r of homers m
Blue and Boston s Sonny the opener to spark an easy
Baltunore VIctory He had a
Siebert
three-run
homer m the first and
Blue the Athlellcs 21 year
old rookie sensal!on, recorded connected agam durmg a seven
his lOth consecul!ve victory run fourth
Sunday as the A s beat the Siebert was hit on the
Mmnesota Twms 3 I to run shoulder with a lme dnve by
the1r Western DIVISIOn lead to Mark Belanger m the s1xth
m games Blue now 10 I mmng and needed extra !IDle
allowed only f1ve smgles and w1th an 1ce pack after the
!he only Mmnesota run was game His arm !lghtened up m
the mnth and he was reheved
unearned
Siebert pitched a f1ve hitter to by Sparky Lyle after glVlng up
boost h1s record to 8-0 and h1t a a double to Brooks Robmson
two run homer- his th1rd of the Mickey Lohch p1tched a four
season-&lt;JS the Red Sox beat hJtter to beat former teammate
Baltunore 2 1 m the second Denny McLam m the opener
Heres Saturdays Class AA game of a doubleheader The and Les cam and Joe N1ekro
and Class AAA H1gh School
DIStrict Track and Field team Onoles romped to a 12-3 VICtory combmed for a SIX hitter m the
standings
second game as the Tigers
m the opener
CLASS AA
Elsewhere w the AL DetrOJt posted twm shutouts over
TEAM
POINTS
Hillsboro
75 shut out Washmgton t\l(lce 5-U Washmgton Norm Cash had
Southeastern
70 and 11-U Cleveland beat New three home runs and drove m
Warren Local
48 York 2·1 after losmg the opener seven runs m the doubleheader
New Lex~ngton
46
Chesa~ake
42 6-3 Cahforma downed Chicago Pmch h1tter Gomer Hndge
M1am1Trace
37 10-5 and MJlwaukee blanked smg led home Eddie Leon WIth
Ironton
25 Kansas C1ty 4..0
the wmmng run m the mnth
Wellston
24
Blue struck out mne and now mmng as the Indians beat New
Wheelersburg
19
GallipoliS
17 leads the maJors m v1ctones York m the second game of a
Greenfield
16 complete games (10) shutouts doubleheader The Yankees had
Sheridan
13
Federal Hocking
10 (5) and strikeouts (95) He snapped a f1ve..game losmg
Rock Hill
10 lowered h1s earned run average streak m the opener as Fntz
Portsmouth East
8 to I 03 for 93 2-3 Innings and Peterson p1!ched a flve-tutter
Alexander
5
Cleveland s Sam McDowell
Waverlv
3 has not allowed more than
Allnforq
l three runs m any of h1s 10 who p1tched h1s f1rst complete
(Four teams d d not score 1 triumphs
game of the season nearly
CLASSAAARESULTS
Loser Jun Perry retlfed the started a free lor all m the
TEAM
SCORt
Lancaster
103 first 11 batters before Reggie e1ghth mmng of the second
Steubenville
74 Jackson blooped a two-out game McDowell smgled m the
Marietta
62 double m the fourth and Mike e1ghth and was forced at
East Llv~rpool
37
Chillicothe
36 EpsteJn followed w1th h1s lhll"d second He began trading
Zanesville
33 homer of the season A walk punches w1th shortstop Gene
Wintersville
27 Sal Bando s single and Ricky Michael and slammed the
Bellaire
24
Athens
20 Monday s sacr1f1ce fly account Yankee mflelder to the ground
Cambridge
17 ed for the Athletics other run before both benches emphed
Dover
16 m the SIXth
Order was restored quickly
New Philadelph ia
6
Sandy Alomar went four.for
Logan
6 Mmnesota s only run came
Jackson
4 when Blue walked Perry four mcludmg a homer and
Me1gs
0 leadmg off the s1xth An error John Stephenson extended h1s
by Bert campanens allowed h1ttmg streak to 15 games w1th
GARVEY NAMED DffiECTOR runners to reach second and a three-run homer as cahforma
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The th1rd and Steve Braun smgled
National Football League Playl' home Perry
er~ Assoclabon Sunday an
nounced the electJon of Edward
Escaped Bombing
R Garvey as 1ts execubve
A I t h o u g h the famous
director
Christchurch Cathedral at
Garvey a Mmneapohs attor Canterbury England was a
ney was retamed by the target for Ge~man bombers
Association m 1970 as labor durmg World War II it wa.
attorney and was elevated to not directly hit Nearby
bmldmgs however w e r e
general counsel last January
destroyed
r

Track Scores

1

npped the While Sox
Rookie till Parsons smgled m
two runs and pitched a f1ve
hltter to help Mliwaukee beat
Kansas City

5iiiiiiiC:::::==:J
21
1
iiQP
1

By Un1ted Press lnterna!Jonal
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1onal Leaaue

'500' Set

East

W L Pel GB

26
23
22
ll
17

Boston
Balli mor e
Oelrotl

New York
Cleveland
Washlnglon

13 667
16 590 J
19 537 5

22 436 9

23 425 9'12
15 26 366 12
W L Pel GB
30 15 667
21 21 500 7;,
21 23 477 8 ,
19 21 475 8;,
16 21 432 10
15 22 405 11

Oakland
M nnesota
Cal torn a
Kansas C ly

Sunday s Results
New York 6 Cleveland 3 (l si)

Cleveland 2 New York 1 (2nd !
Detro I 5 Wash nglon 0 (1st)
De lre I II Wash nglon 0 (2nd )
M lwaukee 4 Kansas City 0
Oakland 3 M nnesola 1

Ca l fornta 10 Cht ca go 5

Ball more 12 Boslon 3 list )
Basion 2 Ball more I (2nd)
Today s Probable Pttchers

Was hongton (Cox 0 2)
Basion (Lee 4 II n1ght
iOn y game sci eduled)

at

Tuesday s Games

Cal t at Oak n ght

Mmn at Milwau kee n gh l

K C al Ch cago

n~ghl

New Y ar k at Detro it mght
Clevela nd at Ba ll more mght

Wa sh ng lon at Bos ton ntght
Saturday s Results

M Iwaukee 12 Kansas C ly 0
Detro I 3 Wa shmglon 1

Cleve land 2 New York 1

Ba I more 5 Boslon 2

Oakland 5 M nnesola 1
Ch cago 13 Cal lorn a 0

•

Linescores

MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI) Michigan, 33-5, made
Central
By United Press lnternahonat
National League
short work of Southern
Cm
400 000 QOO- 4 7 0 Illinois at Ed118rdsvtlle
Ph1la
200 ooo 010 - 3 9 1
Gullet! Carroll (BI and Sunday to advance to the
Bench Short Fryman 181 and NCAA College Division
Rvan WP Gullel IS 21 LP
baseball tournament finals
Shorl (3 6) HRS Perez l61hl
Central blanked Southern 8
Montanez (9th) Johnson l3rdl
0 In the opener of the
All
000 000 0~ 0 5 1 doubleheader and came back
012 010 oox- 4 7 1
NY
McQueen Herbel 181 and with an 8-li win m the nightcap
to take the Mideast regionals
D1dler Wlil1ams 181 Sadeck
12 OJ and Grote LP McQueen The finals will be played at
(21) HR Agee (6th)
Springfield Mo June 4-6
Pltl
000 000 002- 2 4 0
Mont
001 000 03x- 4 7 3
Johnson Veale (8) and May
McAnnally Marshal (9) and GIMENO BEATS SZOEKE
Boccabelta WP McAnally 11 4)
HAMBURG Germany (UP I)
LP Johnson (3 3) HR Ba1ley
(3rd)
- Andres Gmteno a 34-year-&lt;&gt;1d
LA
001 100 002 - 4 10 I Spamsh pro defeated Peter
Ch c
000 001 2~3 15 l Szoeke of Hungary 6-3 6-2 6-2,
Down I n g Mikkelsen (7) Sunday to wm the men s singles
Brewer (91 and Sims Hailer 11tle of the 65th Gennan
(91 Jenk&gt;ns (3 31 and Cannlzza
ro WP Mikkelsen (52) HRS Internatwnal tenms champiOn·
t·llckman l51h) L~ febvre (3rdl sh1ps

!NDIANAPOI IS Ind (UP!)
- A startmg lineup 4 5 mlles an
hour faster than last year and
averagmg better than the
swiftest quahfler only a year
ago was set today • for
Saturday s milhon-dollar 500nule Speedway Auto Race WJ!h
the only certamty that more
records will twnble
rhe 33-car lineup averagmg
171 665 mlies per hour was
f1 rmed up Ia te Sunday conclud
mg two weekends of t1me tnals
on theJr usuany hecllc note but
only three dr1vers made sue
cessful qualification runs Sun
day as lime ran out
Twenty-one cars were quail
fled fas ter than the 170 221
m p h that won the 1970 pole
for AI Unser Albuquerque
N M who also won the race
Peter Revson of New York
won the pole spot th1s year at a
1ecm d chp of 178 696
Veterans Mel Kenyon Leban
on lnd Art Pollard Medford
Ore and Bob Harkey lndJanapohs were last three speed
sters to JOin the f1eld m the
11th and last row on race dayPollard 24 hours after he was
bwnped by a faster machme
Kenyon ehmmated a car
quahfled by Carl W1lhams
Grandview Mo at 170 205,
Pollard ousted J1m McElreath
Arlmgton Tex at 169 500 and
Harkey bumped Dick Simon,
Salt Lake C1ty at !69 197
makmg h1m the slowest m the
held
McElreath a former speed
\\BY rook1e of the year' and
wmner of the maugural call
!01 ma 500 last year was
bwnped tw1ce H1s or1gmal car
was ousted Saturday He
regamed a startmg spot in
another creatwn but only for a
day

SD
000 000 OlD- 1 7 I
St LOUIS 102 002 OlX- 6 9 0 DRYSDALE TENNIS WINNER
BRUSSELS (UPI) -Cliff
Arlin Kelley t7l Sevennsen
(8) and Barton Cleveland (4 21 Drysdale of South Afnca swept
and McNertney LP Arlin (l 6) to a 6-U 6 1 7-5 v1clory over
SF
022 120 0~ 7 8 I !he Nastase of Romama Sunday
Housl
110 100 011)- 4 12 l to capture the men s smgles
Bryant Johnson (9) and title of the Belgian Open tenms
Healy Gnffm Ray (31 Le
masler (7) Culver (9) and champtonshJp
Hlatl WP Bryant 15 1) LP
Gnffln (0 5)
WP Cam 11 O) LP Thompson
Amer~can League
(0 21 HRS Cash 2 (lOth &amp; lllh )
(lsi Gamel
NY
002 120 1~ 6 ll 0 Jones l2ndl Hor lon (91h)
Clev
010 000 2~ 3 5 1
000 030 OlD- 4 9 0
Pelerson (4 3) and Gibbs Mllw
KC
ooooooooo-o
4 o
Lamb Ausl1n (5) Colberl (6)
Parsons (54) and Roof Dal
Mmgorl (8) and Fosse LP
Canton Burgme er (51 York
Lamb (I 21 Hr Hmton llstl
(7) Abernathy (9) Rooker (9)
and
May LP Dal Canton (4 2J
(2nd Gamel
HR
Briggs
(3rdl
NY
000 000 1~ 1 6 0
Clev
ooo 100 001 - 2 10 0
Mlnn
000 001 OOQ- 1 5 l
Klme
(4
3J
and
Munson
Oak
000
201 OO•- 3 6 I
McDowell (3 5) and Fosse
Perry, Hall (7) and Miller
wald) Blue (10 1) and Duncan
(3rd Gamel
Bas
010 100 001- 3 8 0 LP Perry (54) HR Epsle n
Bait
300 720 oox- 12 13 0 (3rdl
Peters Nagy (4) Koonce (5)
000 001 31Q- 5 7 0
and Pavlellch Palmer (V 21 ChiC
222 003 01•- 10 13 0
and Etchebarren LP Peters (4 Calif
31 HRS F Robinson 2 (3rd &amp; Johnson John (31 Kealey (61
4th) Scoll (Sihl Johnson (Sih) and Herrmann Messersmith
FISher (7) Moses (9I and
Pavlel1ch llsll

GAB R H Pel
42 166 26 64 386
42 177 34 68 384
40 164 35 59 360
41 167 30 60 359
34 121 23 43 355
37 128 26 45 352
41 154 30 52 338 (2nd Gamel
41 165 17 S5 333 Bas
000 020 QOO- 2 3 0
000 001 ooo- l 5 0
38 158 15 52 329 Ball
Siebert Lyle (9) and Jo
37 133 17 43 323
American Leaaue
sephson McNally (6 3) and
GABRHPct Dalrymple WP Sieber! (8 OJ
01 va Mm
34 138 2S 52 377 Hr Siebert (3rd)
Mrcr NY
39 138 20 51 370
Rchrdl Ch1 32 119 13 39 328
ooo
o 4 o
Sm1th Bas
39 155 27 50 323
Del
002
000
21x5 8 0
Ystrzmsk 8os
39 134 32 42 313
Mclain R1ddleberger 18) and
Ro1as KC
40 151 21 47 311 Casanova Lollch (7 31 and
Hal l Mmn
37 104 9 32 308 Freehan LP Mclain (4 71
Tovar Mlnn 40 167 24 51 305 HRS Kaline (3rdl Cash (9th)
Kllbrw Mmn 40 149 15 45 302
May Ch1
37 141 17 42 298 (2nd game)
Wash
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0
Home Runs
000 250 13x- 11 ll 0
Nahonal League Aaron All Del
Thompson Shellenback (51
and Stargell P1tl 14 Bench
Cm 13 Cepeda All W1lllams R1ddleberger (7) and Casano
va Cam N1ekro (7) and Price
Ch and Bonds SF 11
Amencan League Cash Del
11 Oliva Mlnn 10 Horton Del
9 Powell Ba If Sm 1th Bas
Netlles Clev Oil s KC White
NY dnd Jackson Oak 7
Runs Batted In
Nahonal League Stargell
P1tl 36 Sanlo Ch1 34 Aaron
All 33 Torre Sf L 31
Cardenal Sl L 30
Amencan League Killebrew
M1nn 32
Petrocelli
Bos
28 Banda Oak 27 Powell
Ball 26 Yastrzemsk1 Bas 25
P1tch1ng

DaviS LA
Garr All
Brock St L
Bckrl Ch1
Slaubb Mont
Mays SF
Torre St L
Mlln All
Alou St L
Smmns St L

Amertcan League

21 22 488 9
20 22 476 9 ' M Iwa ukee
20 22 476 9 ' Ch cage

Littler Colonial Champ

Class AA

COLUMBUS (UP!) - M1d
American €onference champion
Ohw University (29 10) will
play Southern fihn01s UmversJ
ty (~) Thursday m the open
mg round of the NCAA Dlstr1ct
4 baseball tournament at Mich
1gan State
In the second game Thursday
the University of Cmomnat1 (24
!6) w1ll meet Big Ten l!ti!SI
Michigan State (38-8)
Michigan State, at East Lan
smg, Mich , was chosen as the
s1te of ,lhe tournament Sunday
by the bistrJCt 4 coaches meet
1ng here
'
Southern fillnms JS represent
mg the Conference of Midwest.
ern UmversJiles markmg the
f1rst thne the team has played
m an orgamzed league Cmcin
nat1 is the at large represents
live since the Bearcats are not
a member of anv athletic league

By PHIL PASTORET

At the way pnces are go
Dear Reader-Pam m the
mg
up maybe the caubon
chest occurrmg with exe1
ary
wordmg on cigarette
hon IS often due to heart d1s
packages should have the
ease ThiS can cause pam m
word
wealth ' subs!Jtuted
both arms and the choked
for ' health
feehng wh1ch you desc11be
• •
Ep1sodes that last as long as
One secret most of us
one how a1e unusual unless
never lear11 IS the one of
some damage to the hea1 t
success
has occurred You s h o u 1d
'
see your docto1 so that he
So far as our nonfavonte
can get a more &lt;1 eta 11 e d
bartender is concerned,
s!OJ y of yoUJ symptoms and
spring time never cotnes
pel haps do a heart tracmg
to his pub
to see if there 1s any othe1
• • •
ev1dence of hea1 I disease It
Some p e 0 p 1e spend
IS Important enough to wa1
mo1t of their time tel!lng
rant vom makmg the eff1
or:J~a~m:o:u:n~t~o~f~e~x~e~rt~Jo~n~as~~L_w~ha~t~t~h~el/~d~on~'~l~k~IIQ!w~=--b=~;~~~~===::!..~E=L

lifay to score Tommy Hehns
drove m Ferrara w1th a double
Gullett 1ssued home run balls
m the f1rsl mmng to W111ie
Montanez and Deron Johnson,
then cahned down and worked
untd the eighth mmng when
Clay Carroll came m as a re
Iiefer
W1th two out m the e1ghth
and two on nghtf1elder Pete

Announce

MAC Champs

l'rD OOYOU

BARBS

can t get too upset about not
playmg more We have several
good strong starters and only a
few off days m the schedule so
11 s tough to get anyone else m
the rotation
It makes me feel real good
to do the JOb W1th a staff as
strong and as deep as ours you
tell me who they re gomg to s1t
down After you ve pitched
around and have a chance to
analyze thmgs 11 s eas1er to
accept bemg a relief pitcher
Th1s would be a temble JOb
With a second-dlVlsJOn club but
w1th a wmner 1t's not too bad
Thanks to Sadecki s second
victory Ill as many deciSIOns
the Mets mamtamea the1r shm
edge on fll"st place m the
National League s East D1v1
s1on, five percentage pomts m
front of the Cardmals who
whipped the San D1ego Padres
6-1
The San Franc1sco Gl3nts
meantune stretched their West
DIVISIOn lead to mne full games
as they beat the Houston
A3tros 7-4 In other games the

Favorites Win

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time
lc~ THE J.l!Gfi SCHOOL ST1&gt;.R IS

Ph1ts 4-3 Sunday after droppmg
Saturday ll}ght s game 5-3
Tony Perez belted a two-run
homer m the first mmng Sun
day and two more runs came
hmne through an error as Don
Gullett was able to get hJS f1fth
wm agamst three losses
Phds leftflelder Joe Us mJS
played a two-&lt;&gt;ut fly by AI Fer
rera and the error allowed Lee

Lineup For

Mets Blank Br(lves,Giants Win

I

See Doctor for Chest Pain
Bv Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lamb-! have a
lot and garden and don t !Jke
weeds so I work some but
1! I don t stop at the first
warnmg and get to the house
and to a cha1r I get cons1d
erable pam m my chest and
right arm and generally up
my left arm too Sometimes
I feel choked Usually I get
relief m one to two hours I
don t want to go back to the
hospital on my mcome of $75
a month 1 am a long way
past rellrement age and oth
ei w1se m good health In
fact I have s u r v 1v e d m)
own cookmg for about 17
years smce my WJle d1ed
Here s hopmg you can g1ve
me adv1ce

PHILADELPlliA(UPI)-The
Cincmnatl Reds try for a wm
mng senes with PhJladelphJa
tonight after the Reds won two
of the first three games
Gary Nolan (3-3) w1ll work
tonight s contest agamst Rick
W1se (3-2)
The Reds scored four runs m
the operung mmng then held on
WJih top fielding to outlast the

WORLD ALMAN ~lc

By United Press International
Today IS Monday, May 24 the
144th day of 1971
The moon IS new
The mornmg stars are
Mercury Venus, Mars and
Saturn
The evenmg star IS Jupiter
Those born on thts day are
under the s1gn of Gemm1
Queen Victoria of England
was born May 24, 1819
On thJS day m history
In !626 Peter Mmmt dll"ector
of the Dutch West Indies
Trading Co bought the ISland
ci M~nhattan for the equivalent
of $24
In
the Brooklyn Bridge
linking the borougha of Brook
lyn and Manhattan was opened
to the public for the first time
In 1941 the HMS Hood ' of
the Br11lshnavy the world s
largest warship at the time
was sunk by the German
battlewagon "Bismarck' be
tween Greenland and Iceland
In 1962 Lt Cmdr. Malcohn
Scott Carpenter of the U S
prostate gland trouble but Navy became the second
most don t It IS not ava1l American to go Into orbit He
able yet, but some anti sex Circled the earth three times
hormone preparahons tend
to neutrahze some of the ef
A thought for today Philoso
fects of the male hormone
and may be useful In pre phjor Vannevar Bush saJd, 'If
democracy loses 1ts touch, then
ventmg prostate trouble
no great war will be needed to

Stal'ting

olan

Us

SWEET 60 AND HARDLY EVER KISSED
Dear Helen
I'm m81Tled to two men - the public one and the private one
When we v1s1t my children Of his (all grown) he's all love and
kisses They thmk I couldn't tle luckier, havmg such an attentive
man
But at home, I m not only unk1ssed bot un talked-to He eats
at a TV tray the minute he gets home, then falls asleep on the
couch He made love to me twice in 1968, once In 1969 (if you could
calli! love ) and he hasn't even put his arm around me for over
a year - except when we re w1th other people Then he'c {)ld
Love bug and,1f I don'tplay up,IIlookslike I'm the cold one
At 60, I don t expect flammg romance, but at least he could be
kind Instead, he's cruel and sarcashc, and has even slapped me
around: I'm expected to walt on him, then leave hun alone -and
if I left hun everyone would think I was crazy -MARRIED TO
AN ACI'OR
Dear MTAA
Heres a suggestion that might work InVIte one of the grown
ch!ldr~n to spend a vacation w1th you When your husband goes
mto hill act - react In kmd Make 1! the biggest compatiblllty
team smce Lunt and Fontanne
Th1s could have two effects Hopefully, several weeks of puton affection m1ght produce more of the real thing (when you both
discover how much happier you are) Or, after a couple of days,
your man will revert to type, wh1ch wouldatleast show the famUy
you have grounds for leavmg him - H
Dear Helen
It DID help I General M1lls has g1ven us until December 31,
1971 (rather than May) to complete our Betty Crocker-Kidney
Machine Project
Helen, we've been overwhehned by the response of your
readers to th1s project Thousands of coupons (well over 150,000)
have poured m from all over the country and we want to thank
everyone Also many HHU readers wrote to General Mills asking
that we be pemutted to continue past thef1rst deadline
We still need some 300,000 coupons before we can get a kidney
machine for our new Regional Hemodialysis Center and, now that
we have until December 31, the goa!JS WJthm reach We hope your
great fans will continue to send along !hell" coupons PROGRAM CHAIRMAN FOR KIDNEY MACHINE PROJECI',
Saddle River Reformed Church 500 East Saddle River Road,
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 07458
Dear Readers
To those of you who are collecting for sun1lar projects In your
own areas General Mills Inc recently announced 1t has changed
the cmnpletion date for ALL Kidney Machine and other lifesavmg
eqwpment from May 31 to December 31, 1971 Keep saVIng and
sending those Betty Crocker coupons' - H
Dear Helen
Th1s 1s another letter to ' Murderer at 16" A number of years
ago, when abortion was the scandal of the town and meant
disgrace for the family I had one I lost long-tune friends and
couldn't walk down the street without those awful stares
It was a bad job and I nearly died I was forced to testify
agalliSt the doctor and he lost hill license to prachce med1cme
Uke you Miss 16, I felt regret and guilt, not for the destroyed
fetus, but for my family and the doctor's life I had ruined, and for
myself
At 16, you should put shame, guilt and regret ' In a box and
label them experience " 1.3 you go through life each
achievement should be stacked on top till eventually the first box
willsmkoutofsJght -WIFEANDMOTilERNOW

Today'•
•+CARDSerne•+ Almanac

DR. LAWRENCE E. L.A.MB

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

••

Both vulnerable

West

GARYMERRILLDOESBEI"IEfl
IN THE SLACK SEASON
NEW YORK - Gary Merrill (Bette DaviS'
ex) fancies hts avant.garde haberdashery aod
featured male hot pants at Quogue sCat Ballou,
the consenses Gams not so hot
Right after
Kate Sinlth celebrated her brrthday (62nd if the
Alamanac s right) at the Rambow Room, she
was hospitalized for gaU bladder miseries
The Yankees' Mike Burke, between pasta
inhaiabons at La Scala, asked for La Scala
regular Joe DIMaggio, unportant he S3ld if he
really wanted Joe, a call to a sportswnter would
get the Bomber qu1cker than M1ke could get his
hair cut
Record shops are overstocked WJth
albwns but prices will zoom a buck anyway
Tiny Tim's tubbiness IS part of a ploy he'll shed
It m tune for a d1et book he's tiptoemg through
Lady realtor Jane Momson no longer sees
the White House Don Juan, and says her pats
• wonder who s Kissmger now
if Danny Lavezzo m (son of the p J
C1arke s prop ) and lovely Greek songstress
Marla Rmnaneau were any closer, they d be
behind each other
Beauty hp from Michel
Kazan Pop artist Andy Warhold s gray locks
are Clalrol's Ghost Grey No 4 The Gordon
MacRaes packed In Manhattan to hve m Las
Vegss
David Frosts Westbury Mus1c Fmr date was
cancelled after three days Even a Sun matinee
was dropped
Metropolitan Transit Corp
Ch8ll'lll8n Bill Ronan told friends at L'Etoile he's
writing a book about his life versus the
pobticums and will call1t "Profiles m Cowardice'
Remember when the Jets banned Joe
Namath s saloon ownership under threat of
f~rmg' Jets safety man Mike Battle owns one
here called Fox Run, complete with playgirl·
type barely dressed bargals and waitresses
Prettiest alfresco restaurant In town Barbetta
(321 E 46th St ), a summer garden full of Roman
statuary and qu1et lights and Neapolitan am.
blence Nifty spot
Playwright M1ke (' Hatful of Ram ) Gazzo

You ve heard of breakfast cereals shot from guns but trees
In one of the rare examples of man replacmg ma
chmes foresters m Georgia PacJfJC s tree farms are hter
ally shootmg new trees out of guns
The machme m th1s case Is the hehcopter once ha1led
as the most effective way to reseed harvested forest
lands on a mass scale The gun JS a spec1al mert!8 gun
wh1ch dO'es an even better JOb
Instead of seeds the gun f1res two-mch seedlmgs en
capsulated m ferhhzed bullets mto the ground One
man on foot can plant up to 2 500 trees a day
The new method permits transplantmg of v1gorous
seedhngs from nursery stock and allows more natural
spacmg It also ehmmates losses of seeds to b1rds or the
, need to treat them agamst rodents
W1th better trees low mortality and a head start 1! 1s
beheved that the growth cycle may be reduced from the
present 40 years to 35 In the face of th1s country s m
creasing consump!Jon of trees and tree products that s
' good news

If you thmk that chevon 15 either the name of a gasolme additive an automobile a Mexican word for hat or a
new game you re m good company
Those were among the defimtions elic1ted In response
to a recent survey made by the Consumer Federallon of
Amer1ca
The word which can be found m Webster s Unabridged
actually means goat meat and 1s the label of choice
among goat meat packers and processors most of whom
are located m Texas At least 1t was until the U S Depart
ment of Agriculture ruled agamst 1ts use as m1sbrandmg
The packers are afra1d that people w1ll not buy meat
products With the words ~oat meat' prmted on the label
and are protestmg the ruling
They may be fightmg the wrong battle
If goat meat IS tasty eating and presumably 1t 1s why
not take the pos1hve approach and say so? Goat meat
1s good and Js good for you
Try goat meat for an exc1t
mg mam d1sh surprise
If you hke lamb you ll love
goat
Its worth a try and better than bemg accused of trymg
to make a goat out of the pubhc through decephve label
mg

24
NORTH
.9862
¥Vmd
t A984
... Q10532
WEST
EAST
.43
.KQJ!07
¥7654
¥K2
tQJ65
t72
... AK4
"-J976
SOUTH (D)
•As
¥ AQJ 10983
t K 103
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I

r----------------------

~~~hGame~oo o~

Stephenson

WP

Messersmith

(4 51 LP Johnson (4 5) HR
McMullen (Sthl Stephenson
Ilsi) Alomar (1st)
p __"!_[llll_ _ _ _ _•

SKIING CONTESTS OPEN
OPATIJA Yugoslavia (UPI)
- The 28th Congress of the
lnternallonal Skung Federation
(FIS) opened Sunday with
about 400 delegates from 40
countries meeting m sessiOn
The sessions were divided
mto four committees the
comm1 ttee for ski jumps, the
Alpme, the Nordic and the
committee of referrees
'Swan Song
The behef that a dymg
swan smgs a beautiful song
a1 ose behmd the curtam of
prehistory foday
swan
" ong IS used to descnbe the
fmal p1 oducllon of an arhst
01 mus101an 01 the end of
a penod

Your
Insurance
Agent
ID;a le Warner

SH 1RT

FINISHING
~AME

DAY

SERVICE
In At 9--0ut At 5
Use Our Free t'arKJng LOt

Robinson's Cleaners
l.lt

E 2nd Pomeroy

HOW MANY
POLICIES
does 11 take to msure
your farm? Under
one plan - )ust one
pol1cy
one
low
prem1um
payment.
Ofle place to pay

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
114 Court St
Pomeroy

Reduce

National

League

Jenkms

Ch 8 3 D1erker Hou 7 1
Carlton Sf L 7 2 Osteen LA
and Marlchal SF 6 2
American League Blue Oak
S eberl Bos 8 0 Hunter
Palmer Ball 7 2
73

your monthly payments
with .••

Action
Loans up to

$3500

THE CITY LOAN COMPANY
992 2171

Pomeroy 0

- • Other C L Co loans of $5000 and more

�I
3- The Da1ly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 May 24 1971

2- The Dally Sentmel M!ddleport..Pmneroy, 0 May 24 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

''Don't Me an' My Buddy
Make a Great Team'"

EDITORIALS

fast Donates !Helen Help
By Helen Bottel
to Charity !

CARE for People
Who Really Care
On Mav ll 1946 a package arnved m Le Havre
France-the small begmnmg of an operahon destmed
to mvolve every contment on the globe touch the hves
of hundreds of nulhons and a quarter century later still
be engaged m a never flmshed mission
It began JUst s1x months after V E Day The devasta
hon of Europe was tremendous Mllhons of people were
refugees Houses factories en,hre cJbes were destroyed
The task facmg governments was a tremendous one and
the U S government was to play a maJor role m the re
bUIIdmg of Europe
But Ame11cans and Canad&lt;ans wanted a way to send
d1rect a1d to fnends and relatives and to needy people m
general CARE was their answer
CARE was mcorporated m November 1945 by 22 ma
JOr Amertcan voluntary service agencies Ohe of J!s Hrst
ads was to purchase 2 8 m1lhon 10-m one packs from the
US Army Each contamed enough food to feed one sol
d1er for 10 days or 10 soldiers for one day
For $15 donors could buy a pack des1gnate the person
to whom 1! was to be sent and obtam a rece1pt from h1m
As the supply of 10m ones dwmdled m a flood of re
quests CARE began des1gnmg and producmg 1ts own
food parcels creahng special packages for the d1ffermg
na!Jon~hhes of Europe as well as packages of clothmg
and household arl!cles
Today, the CARE m1ssJon m Greece JS the only one re
mammg m Europe But CARE contmues to feed people
Th1s year alone 1! w1ll send enough food overseas to feed
25 mJihon people each day
Through 1ts Self Help program the orgamzahon IS
helpmg East Pak1stams rebuild 10 000 homes destroyed
by last fall s monsoon and domg the same for 600 000
Peruv1ans left homeless after the disastrous earthquake
of May 1970
Under another serv1ce called MEDICO vJsJting volun
leer specahsts from the Umted States and Canada spend
one month tours of duty abroad teachmg and treatmg
m the1r special!Jes
In 1ts 25 years of operation CARE has fed more than
half a b1lhon men women and children The value of
goods sh1pped to all 1ts missions smce they were opened
totals $1 2 b1lhon

New Forests---Quicker

Ji

Goad 'em to Label It Goat

;..:
'"

.~

Lib Myth

;.:

~

;:
••
':
~

"
:
~

~
~

,.

'.i

.:
••
.•
·:
•
;
~

,•
·:
:
•

Bra burmng the symbolic act associated with the
women s liberatwn movement 1s JUSt a myth kept alive
by the news media that never happened anywhere
says Alleen Hernandez president of the Natwnal Orgam
zallon for Women (NOW)
A few years ago she explams protesters at a M1ss
Amenca pageant m Atlantic C1ty threatened such an act
But they called 11 off when f1re officials sa1d 1! would be
a hazard to the Boardwalk
The symbol stuck however even though the event
never took place
The record stands corrected If not exactly uphfted

~

'

•'••
••

BEARY'S WORlD

•',•
·:
'•

••••

!•
~:

•••'

.,.•'•'•

jl••

f

tf!' 1971

•r NEA

I~

"There's a nosty rumor gomg around the club, F_rguson,
that you potil toresl'

Pass
Pass

North
1•
Pass

East Soulh
1¥
Pass 4¥

Pass
Openmg lead-.t. K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald One of the tough
est JObs m bndge IS that un
dertaken by Alfred Dormer
Tannah Hirsch Tom Sm1th
and Steve Becker They at
tempt to analyze what will
happen when a 100 000 pa1rs
play the hands m the contin
en! WJde chanty game
J1m It JS tough enough
to guess what wlll happen
" hen a hand 1s played Just
tw1ce m a team game Let s
show some of the hands m
the column placmg declare'
m the South
Oswald The panel takes
a rather safe stand With to
day s hand and suggests that
p
r a c tic a 11 y every South
II
player WJJI wmd up m hearts
The bJddmg m the box 1s
IS JUS! an actor m The Gang That Couldn 'I Shoot fairly normal
Strmght
S10bhan McKenna snooted $100,000
J1m West will open the
for a TV commercial, but aot siSter Ir1sher
kmg of clubs and probably
Geraldine Fitzgerald Who signed wtth VoJghts shlft to the four of spades
&amp; Fields, who made Alice Playten a national South w1ll take h1s ace and
favonte
Lana Turner's June 8 Maryland go after trumps East Will
prem1ere m '40 carats' In Agnew country get m With the kmg cash a
already has Kissmger and K~ reservations h1gh spade and lead another
wnereupon South w1ll
TriVIa Columb!8 Pictures Statue of Uberty one
make the rest of the tncks
signature on 1ts old Late Late TV movies have a
Oswald It 1s one of those
vaguely fam1bar face for you? You're old' Its automatic s que e z e s1tua
Delores Costello, an earlier John Barrymore lions He runs all h1s trumps
wife
to come down to three d1a
Renata Adler was JUSt keepmg Pete Hamill s moods wh1le dummy holds
hands warm no doubt for Shrrley MacLalne at two diamonds and the queen
, of clubs and West holds a
the Kitty Hawk, the staff there wh1SJ)ered
hve rattlesnake
Henry Fonda who started out m stock with the
JJm The panel pmnts out
Uruvers1ty Players, wms this years Strawhat that East can break up the
Achievement Award, last year's Faberge laurel squeeze, but I doubt 1f any
went to Bette DaviS
Harr stylist Pippo of one d1d 1! The break up play
Rome researched that ancient Greeks when IS for East to lead a diamond
they grew to manhood, cut off their long tresses before cashmg e v e n one
spade T h a t leaves West
and dedicated same to a god
w1th one extra card and pulls
The late Herald Tnb's ed1tonal wnter Geoff the f a n g s of the rattle
Parsons grandk1d Sheila Long weds Andrew snake
Munster shorUy
Remember vaudevilles
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
Dave Apollon? You're old, too Anyway Daves
had many months of phySical agonies, but he s
recuperating rucely Dave's act was a muSical
The b1ddmg has been
Laugh-In a thick-accented RUSSian Dave led a
large band of marvelously unpertlnent Fillpmos Wesl North East Soulh
I¥
Dble
Pass 2"'
Sticklers for Old Church Tradlllon tune m Pass
?
2NT
Pass
Westchester station WVOX to hear the old, the
You South hold
ongmal, the real Latin Mass Sun mornings at .KH ¥6543 t32 AID875
8 30
You d be amazed, the Pope too, at the
What do you do now'
percenfage of catholics who miss the mystical
A-Pass Y o JJ don 1 have
enough to ra~se and no sutt to
Latin grandeur
'Ryans Daughter ' star Sarah Miles met bid
scads of b1g hhn stars but her biggest H'wood
treat was hOWJa domg L,illian Gish
Q-How did the pratne
Diplomatic range Hugh GriH1th played an Arab
schooners recezve thetr
m Exodus ' a Jew m 'Dr Phibes" Tel AVIV name•
has a new cafe, ' Tiffany'S", Of course It's ex
A-They were called by
pensive
David Frost may have chilled the that name because at a dts
suburban set at Westbury, but he's domg fine as tance the wh1te awnings that
a c1ty lad he's been dubbed "N Y Oty's '71 covered the wagons looked
like a fleet of sailmg ships
Summer Festival Host '
With all canvas spread

r-----------------------------------------1 Voice along Broadway i
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Exertion .May Be Cause

t883

s1r
Two other condJ!JOns that
would cause recurrent prob
!ems of the type you de
scnbe are a spasm or
crampmg m the esophagus
and sometimes art h r 1t 1s
Some people With a herma
of the upper part of the
stomach through the d1a
phragm Wlll have difficulbes
when they have been stoop
mg over pullmg weeds Th1s
may cause the esophagus to
have spasms or cause s1m1
Jar difficulties In severe de
grees th1s can also cause
1eferred pam to the arm
If you s1mply can t afford
to se~ a doctor- and I really
can t see how you can afford
NOT to see one - the only
general advice I could g1ve
) ou Without knowmg more
about your problem would
be to reduce your weight If
you should be overweight
hm1t your fats and choles
terol along the lines I have
discussed frequently m m'
column and JUSt m case
your problem IS related to a
h1atal he r n 1a eat small
meals frequently rather than
large ones
And don t mvolve yourselt
m achv1t1es t h a t require
bending or stooping over In
fact you could try a little
test on yourself to see if you
can tole1 ate about the same

as you stay upnght without
developmg the problem that
you have descnbed If you
can th1s suggests a hiatal
herma There JS no substJ
lute though for seemg your
doctor
•
Dear Dr Lamb-Is there
any way to prevent prostate
gland trouble m men afte1
65?
Dear Reader- It would be
poss1ble to prevent 1t by cas
trat10n and takmg female
hormones, but most men
aren t older
mterested
t h 1s
Some
men mescape

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
U there s one thmg Ray
Sadeckl has learned durmg h1s
14 years m professwnal base
ball 11 would have to be
patience
It takes a good deal of
patience for a man particularly
one who once was the age of a
world champiOnship team to
s1t on a bench and wa1t for a
call It takes somethmg else to
make good use of the lnfre
quent opportumties
Sadeck1 who won 20 games
for the world champ10n St
Lou1s Cardmals m 1964, re
ce1ved a chance for h1s second
start of the season Sunday and
he allowed hard·hlttlng Atlanta
only f1ve h1ts as the New York
Mets downed the Braves, 4-0
Sadeck1 walked only one batter
and struck out s1x as a crowd
of 50 999 watched the contest at
Shea Stadium
I ve only pitched 152-3
mmngs Sadeckl sa1d after hiS
fme tnumph But I understand
the situatiOn on th1s club and I

~DIN5

IN CROSS COUNTIN,
INDOOR AND OUTDOOR TRACK

I,~~~r:~~~~i--;~----::1

ATHENS Oh10 (UP!) -West
ern MJChJgan Ohio Umvers1ty
and the Umvers1ty of Toledo
all favored to wtn titles m Mid
AmeriCan Conference sprmg
competition here over the week
end, d1d JUS! that
Western Michigan picked up
Jts 13th track and field title m
14 years while OU won the golf
champ10nsh1p and Toledo cap·
lured its s1xth consecutive ten
ms tttle
The Broncos compiled 158
pomts to easily outdiStance OU
which wound up w1th 119 pomts
and second place followed by
Muum, 113 Kent State, 112
Bowling Green, 66 and Toledo
52
AI Schoterman of Kent State
broke the MAC hammer throw
mark and R1ch Bowswell of OU
broke the record for the Javelm
toss
Sohoterman tossed
the
hammer 215-feet 7 to eclipse the
record 184 feet 7 toss made by
Warren Converse of Western
Michigan last year
Dowswell tossed the Javehn
252-feet-li to break the old mark

FACn.

Dr Samuel Howe was an
Amencan reformer and
p lone e r m educatmg the
bhnd In 1832 Howe headed
the New England Asylum
for the B II n d the first
school for the blind m the
U SA The World Almanac
recalls Dr Howe also pro
mated care of the msane
educatwnal and pnson re
form aboht10n of slavery
and women suffrage

Get SI Nine

Valuable Wood
Very hard and havmg a
close gram wood of the holly
tree IS valuable for mus1cal
mstruments furmture and
mtenor decorabon The m
ner bark y1elds the sbcky
matenal called birdlime
The th1gh bone or femur
IS the longest bone m the
bojly
overhwehn Jt If 1t keeps and
enhances Its strength, no great
war need come agam

f.bveVER,TAAVE~ING FOUR BlOCKS
1tl SCiJOO~ THfa.T'S DIFFERENTIAL
I DON'T SEE

The

WHY 'rOJ OoXT
WALK OR .JOIS
TO 6CHC:l01,

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO ITHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

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City Editor

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By Motor Route where carr er

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of 248-feet-3 set by Don F1sh of
ou In 1969
OU posted a score of 1120 for
the 54 hole two day golf tourna
men! to wm that event followed
by Kent State at 1129 M1am1
at 1139 Western Michigan at
1172, Bowlmg Green at 1178 and
Toledo 1186
Dan Strimple of Kent State
took medalist honors w1th a 74
73-71-218 score for the 54 holes
Ed Strickler of Kent ~tate,
who led Strunple by f1ve shots
gomg mto the fmal round had
73-jj!)-77-219 whde Tun Rear
don of OU f1mshed third w1th
73-75-74-222
Toledo handily won the tenms
title with 20 pomts to 13 for
Wes~rn MIChigan
The Rockets won three smgles
and one doubles titles
Kent State was third w1th 9
pomts followed by M1am1 6
Bowhng Green 5 and Oh10
Umvers1!y 4
Oh10 Umvers1ty was awarded
the ail-sports trophy for QUI
standmg parhcJpahon m all
vars1ty sports for the enbre
school year

Cmcmnab Reds mpped the
Phdadelph1a Phlls 4-3 the Los
Angeles Dodgers trJpped the
Chicago Cubs 4 3 and the
Montreal Expos beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2
The Met.s Jumped off to an
early 3-U lead over Atlanta and
Tomm1e Agee added the JCmg
w1th a f1fth mmng homer as
New York completed a sweep
of the three game senes M1ke
McQueen (2 I) was the loser
Reggie Cleveland celebrated
hJS 23rd brrthday w1th h1s first
two hits of the season mcluding

Rose qwckly fielded a smgle
by pJnch-lutter T!Dl Mccarver
and threw a perfect str1ke to
catcher Johnny Bench to cut
down pmch-runner DJCk Selina
at the plate and preserve the
Reds' WIO
In Saturday s game pitcher
J1m Memtt threw a bunt from
wmmng pitcher Barry Lersch
mto nghtf1eld m the fifth mn,

mg when the three runs that
frame scored unearned
Those three runs gave the
Phds a 5-3 lead after Joe Us
had belted a two-run homer m
the second
Cincmnatl got two runs m the
seventh after a single by Lee
May and back to-hack doubles
by Tommy Helms and Buddy
Bradford

Ont

month $1 75 By mail in Ohto

and W Va One year SU 00

SIK months S7 25
Three
months U .SO Subscription
price tncludes SundiV Ttme$
Sentinel

a run sconng double as he
pitched the Cardmals to v1ctory
over San D1ego Cleveland now
4-2 struck out mne and allowed
seven hits
Bobby Bonds collected three
hJts, mcludmg a double and a
tnple drove m three runs and
scored another to lead the
G1ant attack at Houston Ron
Bryant w1th mnth mmng help
from Jerry Johnson stretched
his record to 5 I although
allow1pg 12 h1t.s
J1m Lefebvre hit a two-run

By Un1led Press lnternatJonal
National League
East
W l Pel GB
New Yprk
24 15 615
51 LOUIS
25 16 610
P1ttsburgh
24 17 585 l
Ch1cago
20 21 488 5
Montreal
16 17 485 5
Phdadelph a
14 25 359 10
West
W L Pel GB
San Franc sea

30 13 698

Cmc mnatt

17 24 415 12

Los Angeles
Atlanla
Houslon

San D1ego
12 29 293 17
Sundays Results
Montreal 4 P llsburgh 2
New York 4 Atlanla 0
Cmcmnatt 4 Phlladelphta 3

Los Angeles 4 Ch1cago 3
Sl
6 San D1ego I
homer w1th none out m the San LouiS
Franctsco 7 Houston 4
mnth mmng to hft the Dodgers
Today s Probable P1tchers
Atlanta
(N&gt;ekro 3 31 at
over ChJCago and end Ferguson
Monlreal
I
Renko
4 21 n ghl
Jenkms seven game wmmng
Cmcmnatl (Nolan 3 3) al
streak J1m H1ckman drove m Philadelphia (Wise 3 21 n ghl
San D1ego (Phoebus 2 31 al Sl
two runs for the Cubs w1th a
LOUIS
(Gibson 4 4) n ght
homer and a smgle
Erme McNally won h1s fll"st
Tuesdav s Games
maJOr league game for Mon Atlanta at Montreal n Qh!
F al Los Angeles n ght
Ileal after four losses although S
Houston at San Dieg o n ght
he had to be relieved m the Ph Iadelphia al New York
mnth mmng by M1ke Marshall n1ghl
when Pittsburgh scored both Its Cmcmnatt at P tt n ght
Ch cago al 51 Lou s n ghl
runs Bob Ba1ley hJt a three-run
homer for , .,the Expos m the
Saturday s Results
Chicago
5 Los Angeles 2
e1ghth
New York 8 Atlanta 7 111 nnsl
Montreal 5 P1llsburgh 2
Ph Jadelph a 5 Cincmnat 3
Sl LouiS 7 San Dego 4
Houston 2 SF I (12 nns)

FORT WORTH Tex (UPI)Gene U!tier Sipped on h1s
champagne Sunday evenmg and
reflected back to a pomt Just a
httle more than 24 hours
before
1 had Just come off the lith
hole (on Saturday) WJth a
double bogey and I was s1x
over par for the tournament
he sa1d And now here I am a
wmner It Just doesn t seem
possible
But anythmg was poss1ble for
a golfer who could mbble away
at the beastly Coloma! Country
Clubs 7 142 yard par 35-35--70
course on about as wmdy a
Sunday as they dream up m
Texas these days
Littler survived the wmds
and the narrow fairways to f1re
a one under par 69 that was
good enough for a three-over
par 283 and a pne strQke victory
'lfl the ~6th. Coloma! Natwnal

lnvJ!atJOn
The former U S Open cham
p10n sacked up $25 000 for h1s
second wm of the year Bert
Yancey who closed w1th a 70
was one stnke back at 284 and
won $14 300
The1r challengers were all
gobbled up by one of the
toughest golf acreages m the
nation
Th1rd round leader Juhus
Boros faded to a 76 and wound
up lied for th1rd w1th Fred
Marl! George Knudson and
Orville Moody Marti shot a 74
and Knudson a 73 Moody was
one of the day s fortunate souls
shootmg a 69 and moved past
25 other golfers m the process
Uttler s wmmng score of
three-over par was the highest
champ10nsh1p total m relatiOn
to par smce the 1963 U S Open
when Boros Arnold Palmer and
Jacky Cup1t ali shot l!klver

293s to lie Boros subsequently
won the 18-hole playoff
Uttler started the day f1ve
shots behmd Boros but the
wmd soon got to the leader
Dave Stockton moved mto the
temporary lead but he trJple
bogeyed the th1rd hole and
double bogeyed the s1xth and he
was out of 11 for the day and
wound up seven over par
George Knudson moved mto
!he lead, and held 11 un!Jl late
on the back mne but then
L1 ttler made h1s move
Uttler had made two bogeys
on the front mne when he found
a trap on the seventh hole and
the water on the mnth But he
ran m a s1x footer on the 13th
~ 35.footer on the 15th and an a1rooter
on the 16th
It was only then that he knew
the tournament was h1s for the

wmnmg

Blue Chalks Up lOth Win

Siebert s homer helped the
By JOE CARNICELLI
Red Sox leaders m the AL
UPI Sports Writer
It may only be late May but East split their senes w1th the
the race for Amencan League Onoles who remained m
Cy Young Award honors IS second three games back
developmg mto a two man Frank Robmson drove m !1 ve
batUe between Oakland s V1da runs w1th a pa1r of homers m
Blue and Boston s Sonny the opener to spark an easy
Baltunore VIctory He had a
Siebert
three-run
homer m the first and
Blue the Athlellcs 21 year
old rookie sensal!on, recorded connected agam durmg a seven
his lOth consecul!ve victory run fourth
Sunday as the A s beat the Siebert was hit on the
Mmnesota Twms 3 I to run shoulder with a lme dnve by
the1r Western DIVISIOn lead to Mark Belanger m the s1xth
m games Blue now 10 I mmng and needed extra !IDle
allowed only f1ve smgles and w1th an 1ce pack after the
!he only Mmnesota run was game His arm !lghtened up m
the mnth and he was reheved
unearned
Siebert pitched a f1ve hitter to by Sparky Lyle after glVlng up
boost h1s record to 8-0 and h1t a a double to Brooks Robmson
two run homer- his th1rd of the Mickey Lohch p1tched a four
season-&lt;JS the Red Sox beat hJtter to beat former teammate
Baltunore 2 1 m the second Denny McLam m the opener
Heres Saturdays Class AA game of a doubleheader The and Les cam and Joe N1ekro
and Class AAA H1gh School
DIStrict Track and Field team Onoles romped to a 12-3 VICtory combmed for a SIX hitter m the
standings
second game as the Tigers
m the opener
CLASS AA
Elsewhere w the AL DetrOJt posted twm shutouts over
TEAM
POINTS
Hillsboro
75 shut out Washmgton t\l(lce 5-U Washmgton Norm Cash had
Southeastern
70 and 11-U Cleveland beat New three home runs and drove m
Warren Local
48 York 2·1 after losmg the opener seven runs m the doubleheader
New Lex~ngton
46
Chesa~ake
42 6-3 Cahforma downed Chicago Pmch h1tter Gomer Hndge
M1am1Trace
37 10-5 and MJlwaukee blanked smg led home Eddie Leon WIth
Ironton
25 Kansas C1ty 4..0
the wmmng run m the mnth
Wellston
24
Blue struck out mne and now mmng as the Indians beat New
Wheelersburg
19
GallipoliS
17 leads the maJors m v1ctones York m the second game of a
Greenfield
16 complete games (10) shutouts doubleheader The Yankees had
Sheridan
13
Federal Hocking
10 (5) and strikeouts (95) He snapped a f1ve..game losmg
Rock Hill
10 lowered h1s earned run average streak m the opener as Fntz
Portsmouth East
8 to I 03 for 93 2-3 Innings and Peterson p1!ched a flve-tutter
Alexander
5
Cleveland s Sam McDowell
Waverlv
3 has not allowed more than
Allnforq
l three runs m any of h1s 10 who p1tched h1s f1rst complete
(Four teams d d not score 1 triumphs
game of the season nearly
CLASSAAARESULTS
Loser Jun Perry retlfed the started a free lor all m the
TEAM
SCORt
Lancaster
103 first 11 batters before Reggie e1ghth mmng of the second
Steubenville
74 Jackson blooped a two-out game McDowell smgled m the
Marietta
62 double m the fourth and Mike e1ghth and was forced at
East Llv~rpool
37
Chillicothe
36 EpsteJn followed w1th h1s lhll"d second He began trading
Zanesville
33 homer of the season A walk punches w1th shortstop Gene
Wintersville
27 Sal Bando s single and Ricky Michael and slammed the
Bellaire
24
Athens
20 Monday s sacr1f1ce fly account Yankee mflelder to the ground
Cambridge
17 ed for the Athletics other run before both benches emphed
Dover
16 m the SIXth
Order was restored quickly
New Philadelph ia
6
Sandy Alomar went four.for
Logan
6 Mmnesota s only run came
Jackson
4 when Blue walked Perry four mcludmg a homer and
Me1gs
0 leadmg off the s1xth An error John Stephenson extended h1s
by Bert campanens allowed h1ttmg streak to 15 games w1th
GARVEY NAMED DffiECTOR runners to reach second and a three-run homer as cahforma
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The th1rd and Steve Braun smgled
National Football League Playl' home Perry
er~ Assoclabon Sunday an
nounced the electJon of Edward
Escaped Bombing
R Garvey as 1ts execubve
A I t h o u g h the famous
director
Christchurch Cathedral at
Garvey a Mmneapohs attor Canterbury England was a
ney was retamed by the target for Ge~man bombers
Association m 1970 as labor durmg World War II it wa.
attorney and was elevated to not directly hit Nearby
bmldmgs however w e r e
general counsel last January
destroyed
r

Track Scores

1

npped the While Sox
Rookie till Parsons smgled m
two runs and pitched a f1ve
hltter to help Mliwaukee beat
Kansas City

5iiiiiiiC:::::==:J
21
1
iiQP
1

By Un1ted Press lnterna!Jonal
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1onal Leaaue

'500' Set

East

W L Pel GB

26
23
22
ll
17

Boston
Balli mor e
Oelrotl

New York
Cleveland
Washlnglon

13 667
16 590 J
19 537 5

22 436 9

23 425 9'12
15 26 366 12
W L Pel GB
30 15 667
21 21 500 7;,
21 23 477 8 ,
19 21 475 8;,
16 21 432 10
15 22 405 11

Oakland
M nnesota
Cal torn a
Kansas C ly

Sunday s Results
New York 6 Cleveland 3 (l si)

Cleveland 2 New York 1 (2nd !
Detro I 5 Wash nglon 0 (1st)
De lre I II Wash nglon 0 (2nd )
M lwaukee 4 Kansas City 0
Oakland 3 M nnesola 1

Ca l fornta 10 Cht ca go 5

Ball more 12 Boslon 3 list )
Basion 2 Ball more I (2nd)
Today s Probable Pttchers

Was hongton (Cox 0 2)
Basion (Lee 4 II n1ght
iOn y game sci eduled)

at

Tuesday s Games

Cal t at Oak n ght

Mmn at Milwau kee n gh l

K C al Ch cago

n~ghl

New Y ar k at Detro it mght
Clevela nd at Ba ll more mght

Wa sh ng lon at Bos ton ntght
Saturday s Results

M Iwaukee 12 Kansas C ly 0
Detro I 3 Wa shmglon 1

Cleve land 2 New York 1

Ba I more 5 Boslon 2

Oakland 5 M nnesola 1
Ch cago 13 Cal lorn a 0

•

Linescores

MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI) Michigan, 33-5, made
Central
By United Press lnternahonat
National League
short work of Southern
Cm
400 000 QOO- 4 7 0 Illinois at Ed118rdsvtlle
Ph1la
200 ooo 010 - 3 9 1
Gullet! Carroll (BI and Sunday to advance to the
Bench Short Fryman 181 and NCAA College Division
Rvan WP Gullel IS 21 LP
baseball tournament finals
Shorl (3 6) HRS Perez l61hl
Central blanked Southern 8
Montanez (9th) Johnson l3rdl
0 In the opener of the
All
000 000 0~ 0 5 1 doubleheader and came back
012 010 oox- 4 7 1
NY
McQueen Herbel 181 and with an 8-li win m the nightcap
to take the Mideast regionals
D1dler Wlil1ams 181 Sadeck
12 OJ and Grote LP McQueen The finals will be played at
(21) HR Agee (6th)
Springfield Mo June 4-6
Pltl
000 000 002- 2 4 0
Mont
001 000 03x- 4 7 3
Johnson Veale (8) and May
McAnnally Marshal (9) and GIMENO BEATS SZOEKE
Boccabelta WP McAnally 11 4)
HAMBURG Germany (UP I)
LP Johnson (3 3) HR Ba1ley
(3rd)
- Andres Gmteno a 34-year-&lt;&gt;1d
LA
001 100 002 - 4 10 I Spamsh pro defeated Peter
Ch c
000 001 2~3 15 l Szoeke of Hungary 6-3 6-2 6-2,
Down I n g Mikkelsen (7) Sunday to wm the men s singles
Brewer (91 and Sims Hailer 11tle of the 65th Gennan
(91 Jenk&gt;ns (3 31 and Cannlzza
ro WP Mikkelsen (52) HRS Internatwnal tenms champiOn·
t·llckman l51h) L~ febvre (3rdl sh1ps

!NDIANAPOI IS Ind (UP!)
- A startmg lineup 4 5 mlles an
hour faster than last year and
averagmg better than the
swiftest quahfler only a year
ago was set today • for
Saturday s milhon-dollar 500nule Speedway Auto Race WJ!h
the only certamty that more
records will twnble
rhe 33-car lineup averagmg
171 665 mlies per hour was
f1 rmed up Ia te Sunday conclud
mg two weekends of t1me tnals
on theJr usuany hecllc note but
only three dr1vers made sue
cessful qualification runs Sun
day as lime ran out
Twenty-one cars were quail
fled fas ter than the 170 221
m p h that won the 1970 pole
for AI Unser Albuquerque
N M who also won the race
Peter Revson of New York
won the pole spot th1s year at a
1ecm d chp of 178 696
Veterans Mel Kenyon Leban
on lnd Art Pollard Medford
Ore and Bob Harkey lndJanapohs were last three speed
sters to JOin the f1eld m the
11th and last row on race dayPollard 24 hours after he was
bwnped by a faster machme
Kenyon ehmmated a car
quahfled by Carl W1lhams
Grandview Mo at 170 205,
Pollard ousted J1m McElreath
Arlmgton Tex at 169 500 and
Harkey bumped Dick Simon,
Salt Lake C1ty at !69 197
makmg h1m the slowest m the
held
McElreath a former speed
\\BY rook1e of the year' and
wmner of the maugural call
!01 ma 500 last year was
bwnped tw1ce H1s or1gmal car
was ousted Saturday He
regamed a startmg spot in
another creatwn but only for a
day

SD
000 000 OlD- 1 7 I
St LOUIS 102 002 OlX- 6 9 0 DRYSDALE TENNIS WINNER
BRUSSELS (UPI) -Cliff
Arlin Kelley t7l Sevennsen
(8) and Barton Cleveland (4 21 Drysdale of South Afnca swept
and McNertney LP Arlin (l 6) to a 6-U 6 1 7-5 v1clory over
SF
022 120 0~ 7 8 I !he Nastase of Romama Sunday
Housl
110 100 011)- 4 12 l to capture the men s smgles
Bryant Johnson (9) and title of the Belgian Open tenms
Healy Gnffm Ray (31 Le
masler (7) Culver (9) and champtonshJp
Hlatl WP Bryant 15 1) LP
Gnffln (0 5)
WP Cam 11 O) LP Thompson
Amer~can League
(0 21 HRS Cash 2 (lOth &amp; lllh )
(lsi Gamel
NY
002 120 1~ 6 ll 0 Jones l2ndl Hor lon (91h)
Clev
010 000 2~ 3 5 1
000 030 OlD- 4 9 0
Pelerson (4 3) and Gibbs Mllw
KC
ooooooooo-o
4 o
Lamb Ausl1n (5) Colberl (6)
Parsons (54) and Roof Dal
Mmgorl (8) and Fosse LP
Canton Burgme er (51 York
Lamb (I 21 Hr Hmton llstl
(7) Abernathy (9) Rooker (9)
and
May LP Dal Canton (4 2J
(2nd Gamel
HR
Briggs
(3rdl
NY
000 000 1~ 1 6 0
Clev
ooo 100 001 - 2 10 0
Mlnn
000 001 OOQ- 1 5 l
Klme
(4
3J
and
Munson
Oak
000
201 OO•- 3 6 I
McDowell (3 5) and Fosse
Perry, Hall (7) and Miller
wald) Blue (10 1) and Duncan
(3rd Gamel
Bas
010 100 001- 3 8 0 LP Perry (54) HR Epsle n
Bait
300 720 oox- 12 13 0 (3rdl
Peters Nagy (4) Koonce (5)
000 001 31Q- 5 7 0
and Pavlellch Palmer (V 21 ChiC
222 003 01•- 10 13 0
and Etchebarren LP Peters (4 Calif
31 HRS F Robinson 2 (3rd &amp; Johnson John (31 Kealey (61
4th) Scoll (Sihl Johnson (Sih) and Herrmann Messersmith
FISher (7) Moses (9I and
Pavlel1ch llsll

GAB R H Pel
42 166 26 64 386
42 177 34 68 384
40 164 35 59 360
41 167 30 60 359
34 121 23 43 355
37 128 26 45 352
41 154 30 52 338 (2nd Gamel
41 165 17 S5 333 Bas
000 020 QOO- 2 3 0
000 001 ooo- l 5 0
38 158 15 52 329 Ball
Siebert Lyle (9) and Jo
37 133 17 43 323
American Leaaue
sephson McNally (6 3) and
GABRHPct Dalrymple WP Sieber! (8 OJ
01 va Mm
34 138 2S 52 377 Hr Siebert (3rd)
Mrcr NY
39 138 20 51 370
Rchrdl Ch1 32 119 13 39 328
ooo
o 4 o
Sm1th Bas
39 155 27 50 323
Del
002
000
21x5 8 0
Ystrzmsk 8os
39 134 32 42 313
Mclain R1ddleberger 18) and
Ro1as KC
40 151 21 47 311 Casanova Lollch (7 31 and
Hal l Mmn
37 104 9 32 308 Freehan LP Mclain (4 71
Tovar Mlnn 40 167 24 51 305 HRS Kaline (3rdl Cash (9th)
Kllbrw Mmn 40 149 15 45 302
May Ch1
37 141 17 42 298 (2nd game)
Wash
000 000 ooo- 0 6 0
Home Runs
000 250 13x- 11 ll 0
Nahonal League Aaron All Del
Thompson Shellenback (51
and Stargell P1tl 14 Bench
Cm 13 Cepeda All W1lllams R1ddleberger (7) and Casano
va Cam N1ekro (7) and Price
Ch and Bonds SF 11
Amencan League Cash Del
11 Oliva Mlnn 10 Horton Del
9 Powell Ba If Sm 1th Bas
Netlles Clev Oil s KC White
NY dnd Jackson Oak 7
Runs Batted In
Nahonal League Stargell
P1tl 36 Sanlo Ch1 34 Aaron
All 33 Torre Sf L 31
Cardenal Sl L 30
Amencan League Killebrew
M1nn 32
Petrocelli
Bos
28 Banda Oak 27 Powell
Ball 26 Yastrzemsk1 Bas 25
P1tch1ng

DaviS LA
Garr All
Brock St L
Bckrl Ch1
Slaubb Mont
Mays SF
Torre St L
Mlln All
Alou St L
Smmns St L

Amertcan League

21 22 488 9
20 22 476 9 ' M Iwa ukee
20 22 476 9 ' Ch cage

Littler Colonial Champ

Class AA

COLUMBUS (UP!) - M1d
American €onference champion
Ohw University (29 10) will
play Southern fihn01s UmversJ
ty (~) Thursday m the open
mg round of the NCAA Dlstr1ct
4 baseball tournament at Mich
1gan State
In the second game Thursday
the University of Cmomnat1 (24
!6) w1ll meet Big Ten l!ti!SI
Michigan State (38-8)
Michigan State, at East Lan
smg, Mich , was chosen as the
s1te of ,lhe tournament Sunday
by the bistrJCt 4 coaches meet
1ng here
'
Southern fillnms JS represent
mg the Conference of Midwest.
ern UmversJiles markmg the
f1rst thne the team has played
m an orgamzed league Cmcin
nat1 is the at large represents
live since the Bearcats are not
a member of anv athletic league

By PHIL PASTORET

At the way pnces are go
Dear Reader-Pam m the
mg
up maybe the caubon
chest occurrmg with exe1
ary
wordmg on cigarette
hon IS often due to heart d1s
packages should have the
ease ThiS can cause pam m
word
wealth ' subs!Jtuted
both arms and the choked
for ' health
feehng wh1ch you desc11be
• •
Ep1sodes that last as long as
One secret most of us
one how a1e unusual unless
never lear11 IS the one of
some damage to the hea1 t
success
has occurred You s h o u 1d
'
see your docto1 so that he
So far as our nonfavonte
can get a more &lt;1 eta 11 e d
bartender is concerned,
s!OJ y of yoUJ symptoms and
spring time never cotnes
pel haps do a heart tracmg
to his pub
to see if there 1s any othe1
• • •
ev1dence of hea1 I disease It
Some p e 0 p 1e spend
IS Important enough to wa1
mo1t of their time tel!lng
rant vom makmg the eff1
or:J~a~m:o:u:n~t~o~f~e~x~e~rt~Jo~n~as~~L_w~ha~t~t~h~el/~d~on~'~l~k~IIQ!w~=--b=~;~~~~===::!..~E=L

lifay to score Tommy Hehns
drove m Ferrara w1th a double
Gullett 1ssued home run balls
m the f1rsl mmng to W111ie
Montanez and Deron Johnson,
then cahned down and worked
untd the eighth mmng when
Clay Carroll came m as a re
Iiefer
W1th two out m the e1ghth
and two on nghtf1elder Pete

Announce

MAC Champs

l'rD OOYOU

BARBS

can t get too upset about not
playmg more We have several
good strong starters and only a
few off days m the schedule so
11 s tough to get anyone else m
the rotation
It makes me feel real good
to do the JOb W1th a staff as
strong and as deep as ours you
tell me who they re gomg to s1t
down After you ve pitched
around and have a chance to
analyze thmgs 11 s eas1er to
accept bemg a relief pitcher
Th1s would be a temble JOb
With a second-dlVlsJOn club but
w1th a wmner 1t's not too bad
Thanks to Sadecki s second
victory Ill as many deciSIOns
the Mets mamtamea the1r shm
edge on fll"st place m the
National League s East D1v1
s1on, five percentage pomts m
front of the Cardmals who
whipped the San D1ego Padres
6-1
The San Franc1sco Gl3nts
meantune stretched their West
DIVISIOn lead to mne full games
as they beat the Houston
A3tros 7-4 In other games the

Favorites Win

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time
lc~ THE J.l!Gfi SCHOOL ST1&gt;.R IS

Ph1ts 4-3 Sunday after droppmg
Saturday ll}ght s game 5-3
Tony Perez belted a two-run
homer m the first mmng Sun
day and two more runs came
hmne through an error as Don
Gullett was able to get hJS f1fth
wm agamst three losses
Phds leftflelder Joe Us mJS
played a two-&lt;&gt;ut fly by AI Fer
rera and the error allowed Lee

Lineup For

Mets Blank Br(lves,Giants Win

I

See Doctor for Chest Pain
Bv Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lamb-! have a
lot and garden and don t !Jke
weeds so I work some but
1! I don t stop at the first
warnmg and get to the house
and to a cha1r I get cons1d
erable pam m my chest and
right arm and generally up
my left arm too Sometimes
I feel choked Usually I get
relief m one to two hours I
don t want to go back to the
hospital on my mcome of $75
a month 1 am a long way
past rellrement age and oth
ei w1se m good health In
fact I have s u r v 1v e d m)
own cookmg for about 17
years smce my WJle d1ed
Here s hopmg you can g1ve
me adv1ce

PHILADELPlliA(UPI)-The
Cincmnatl Reds try for a wm
mng senes with PhJladelphJa
tonight after the Reds won two
of the first three games
Gary Nolan (3-3) w1ll work
tonight s contest agamst Rick
W1se (3-2)
The Reds scored four runs m
the operung mmng then held on
WJih top fielding to outlast the

WORLD ALMAN ~lc

By United Press International
Today IS Monday, May 24 the
144th day of 1971
The moon IS new
The mornmg stars are
Mercury Venus, Mars and
Saturn
The evenmg star IS Jupiter
Those born on thts day are
under the s1gn of Gemm1
Queen Victoria of England
was born May 24, 1819
On thJS day m history
In !626 Peter Mmmt dll"ector
of the Dutch West Indies
Trading Co bought the ISland
ci M~nhattan for the equivalent
of $24
In
the Brooklyn Bridge
linking the borougha of Brook
lyn and Manhattan was opened
to the public for the first time
In 1941 the HMS Hood ' of
the Br11lshnavy the world s
largest warship at the time
was sunk by the German
battlewagon "Bismarck' be
tween Greenland and Iceland
In 1962 Lt Cmdr. Malcohn
Scott Carpenter of the U S
prostate gland trouble but Navy became the second
most don t It IS not ava1l American to go Into orbit He
able yet, but some anti sex Circled the earth three times
hormone preparahons tend
to neutrahze some of the ef
A thought for today Philoso
fects of the male hormone
and may be useful In pre phjor Vannevar Bush saJd, 'If
democracy loses 1ts touch, then
ventmg prostate trouble
no great war will be needed to

Stal'ting

olan

Us

SWEET 60 AND HARDLY EVER KISSED
Dear Helen
I'm m81Tled to two men - the public one and the private one
When we v1s1t my children Of his (all grown) he's all love and
kisses They thmk I couldn't tle luckier, havmg such an attentive
man
But at home, I m not only unk1ssed bot un talked-to He eats
at a TV tray the minute he gets home, then falls asleep on the
couch He made love to me twice in 1968, once In 1969 (if you could
calli! love ) and he hasn't even put his arm around me for over
a year - except when we re w1th other people Then he'c {)ld
Love bug and,1f I don'tplay up,IIlookslike I'm the cold one
At 60, I don t expect flammg romance, but at least he could be
kind Instead, he's cruel and sarcashc, and has even slapped me
around: I'm expected to walt on him, then leave hun alone -and
if I left hun everyone would think I was crazy -MARRIED TO
AN ACI'OR
Dear MTAA
Heres a suggestion that might work InVIte one of the grown
ch!ldr~n to spend a vacation w1th you When your husband goes
mto hill act - react In kmd Make 1! the biggest compatiblllty
team smce Lunt and Fontanne
Th1s could have two effects Hopefully, several weeks of puton affection m1ght produce more of the real thing (when you both
discover how much happier you are) Or, after a couple of days,
your man will revert to type, wh1ch wouldatleast show the famUy
you have grounds for leavmg him - H
Dear Helen
It DID help I General M1lls has g1ven us until December 31,
1971 (rather than May) to complete our Betty Crocker-Kidney
Machine Project
Helen, we've been overwhehned by the response of your
readers to th1s project Thousands of coupons (well over 150,000)
have poured m from all over the country and we want to thank
everyone Also many HHU readers wrote to General Mills asking
that we be pemutted to continue past thef1rst deadline
We still need some 300,000 coupons before we can get a kidney
machine for our new Regional Hemodialysis Center and, now that
we have until December 31, the goa!JS WJthm reach We hope your
great fans will continue to send along !hell" coupons PROGRAM CHAIRMAN FOR KIDNEY MACHINE PROJECI',
Saddle River Reformed Church 500 East Saddle River Road,
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 07458
Dear Readers
To those of you who are collecting for sun1lar projects In your
own areas General Mills Inc recently announced 1t has changed
the cmnpletion date for ALL Kidney Machine and other lifesavmg
eqwpment from May 31 to December 31, 1971 Keep saVIng and
sending those Betty Crocker coupons' - H
Dear Helen
Th1s 1s another letter to ' Murderer at 16" A number of years
ago, when abortion was the scandal of the town and meant
disgrace for the family I had one I lost long-tune friends and
couldn't walk down the street without those awful stares
It was a bad job and I nearly died I was forced to testify
agalliSt the doctor and he lost hill license to prachce med1cme
Uke you Miss 16, I felt regret and guilt, not for the destroyed
fetus, but for my family and the doctor's life I had ruined, and for
myself
At 16, you should put shame, guilt and regret ' In a box and
label them experience " 1.3 you go through life each
achievement should be stacked on top till eventually the first box
willsmkoutofsJght -WIFEANDMOTilERNOW

Today'•
•+CARDSerne•+ Almanac

DR. LAWRENCE E. L.A.MB

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

••

Both vulnerable

West

GARYMERRILLDOESBEI"IEfl
IN THE SLACK SEASON
NEW YORK - Gary Merrill (Bette DaviS'
ex) fancies hts avant.garde haberdashery aod
featured male hot pants at Quogue sCat Ballou,
the consenses Gams not so hot
Right after
Kate Sinlth celebrated her brrthday (62nd if the
Alamanac s right) at the Rambow Room, she
was hospitalized for gaU bladder miseries
The Yankees' Mike Burke, between pasta
inhaiabons at La Scala, asked for La Scala
regular Joe DIMaggio, unportant he S3ld if he
really wanted Joe, a call to a sportswnter would
get the Bomber qu1cker than M1ke could get his
hair cut
Record shops are overstocked WJth
albwns but prices will zoom a buck anyway
Tiny Tim's tubbiness IS part of a ploy he'll shed
It m tune for a d1et book he's tiptoemg through
Lady realtor Jane Momson no longer sees
the White House Don Juan, and says her pats
• wonder who s Kissmger now
if Danny Lavezzo m (son of the p J
C1arke s prop ) and lovely Greek songstress
Marla Rmnaneau were any closer, they d be
behind each other
Beauty hp from Michel
Kazan Pop artist Andy Warhold s gray locks
are Clalrol's Ghost Grey No 4 The Gordon
MacRaes packed In Manhattan to hve m Las
Vegss
David Frosts Westbury Mus1c Fmr date was
cancelled after three days Even a Sun matinee
was dropped
Metropolitan Transit Corp
Ch8ll'lll8n Bill Ronan told friends at L'Etoile he's
writing a book about his life versus the
pobticums and will call1t "Profiles m Cowardice'
Remember when the Jets banned Joe
Namath s saloon ownership under threat of
f~rmg' Jets safety man Mike Battle owns one
here called Fox Run, complete with playgirl·
type barely dressed bargals and waitresses
Prettiest alfresco restaurant In town Barbetta
(321 E 46th St ), a summer garden full of Roman
statuary and qu1et lights and Neapolitan am.
blence Nifty spot
Playwright M1ke (' Hatful of Ram ) Gazzo

You ve heard of breakfast cereals shot from guns but trees
In one of the rare examples of man replacmg ma
chmes foresters m Georgia PacJfJC s tree farms are hter
ally shootmg new trees out of guns
The machme m th1s case Is the hehcopter once ha1led
as the most effective way to reseed harvested forest
lands on a mass scale The gun JS a spec1al mert!8 gun
wh1ch dO'es an even better JOb
Instead of seeds the gun f1res two-mch seedlmgs en
capsulated m ferhhzed bullets mto the ground One
man on foot can plant up to 2 500 trees a day
The new method permits transplantmg of v1gorous
seedhngs from nursery stock and allows more natural
spacmg It also ehmmates losses of seeds to b1rds or the
, need to treat them agamst rodents
W1th better trees low mortality and a head start 1! 1s
beheved that the growth cycle may be reduced from the
present 40 years to 35 In the face of th1s country s m
creasing consump!Jon of trees and tree products that s
' good news

If you thmk that chevon 15 either the name of a gasolme additive an automobile a Mexican word for hat or a
new game you re m good company
Those were among the defimtions elic1ted In response
to a recent survey made by the Consumer Federallon of
Amer1ca
The word which can be found m Webster s Unabridged
actually means goat meat and 1s the label of choice
among goat meat packers and processors most of whom
are located m Texas At least 1t was until the U S Depart
ment of Agriculture ruled agamst 1ts use as m1sbrandmg
The packers are afra1d that people w1ll not buy meat
products With the words ~oat meat' prmted on the label
and are protestmg the ruling
They may be fightmg the wrong battle
If goat meat IS tasty eating and presumably 1t 1s why
not take the pos1hve approach and say so? Goat meat
1s good and Js good for you
Try goat meat for an exc1t
mg mam d1sh surprise
If you hke lamb you ll love
goat
Its worth a try and better than bemg accused of trymg
to make a goat out of the pubhc through decephve label
mg

24
NORTH
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~~~hGame~oo o~

Stephenson

WP

Messersmith

(4 51 LP Johnson (4 5) HR
McMullen (Sthl Stephenson
Ilsi) Alomar (1st)
p __"!_[llll_ _ _ _ _•

SKIING CONTESTS OPEN
OPATIJA Yugoslavia (UPI)
- The 28th Congress of the
lnternallonal Skung Federation
(FIS) opened Sunday with
about 400 delegates from 40
countries meeting m sessiOn
The sessions were divided
mto four committees the
comm1 ttee for ski jumps, the
Alpme, the Nordic and the
committee of referrees
'Swan Song
The behef that a dymg
swan smgs a beautiful song
a1 ose behmd the curtam of
prehistory foday
swan
" ong IS used to descnbe the
fmal p1 oducllon of an arhst
01 mus101an 01 the end of
a penod

Your
Insurance
Agent
ID;a le Warner

SH 1RT

FINISHING
~AME

DAY

SERVICE
In At 9--0ut At 5
Use Our Free t'arKJng LOt

Robinson's Cleaners
l.lt

E 2nd Pomeroy

HOW MANY
POLICIES
does 11 take to msure
your farm? Under
one plan - )ust one
pol1cy
one
low
prem1um
payment.
Ofle place to pay

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
114 Court St
Pomeroy

Reduce

National

League

Jenkms

Ch 8 3 D1erker Hou 7 1
Carlton Sf L 7 2 Osteen LA
and Marlchal SF 6 2
American League Blue Oak
S eberl Bos 8 0 Hunter
Palmer Ball 7 2
73

your monthly payments
with .••

Action
Loans up to

$3500

THE CITY LOAN COMPANY
992 2171

Pomeroy 0

- • Other C L Co loans of $5000 and more

�.
5-'1'111' Oallv Sentinel. Middleoort·PfWTl..-ov. n

McCarthy Calls For True P~y
,

Pupils Enjoyed Field Day

Green Thumb
Notes • •..

of my career yet."
After the defeat of hi§,
presidential bid at the 100«
Democratic National Convention, McCarthy declined to run
for re-election to the Senate in
career."
Then he checked himself, 1970. His seat was won by
stopped and added he did not former Vice President Hubert
and a true America."
As the crowd cheered in a want to "acknowledge the end H. Humphrey.
demonstration reminiscent of
McCarthy's 1968 presidential
campaign, he told them the
rally was the ''most moving
experience of my · political

sons at' a "Dump the War"
raUy: in his ... home state,
McCarthy said he hoped peace
could be attained within one of
the two major parties but; he
said, "If it cannot, let 'us have
a· new party and a new policy

. '

.,

1

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP!)
-Fonner Sen. Eugene McCarthy, his voice shaking at the
"most moving experience of
my political career," Sunday
·called for a third party as a
last resort to realize the goal of
peace.
Speaking before 27,000 per·

...~ ?.4. t971

SteveJl Ohlinger , and Mike
Zeigler; first and second grade
girls, Kimberly Bashan, Linda
Williams, and Jena Welker ;
third and fourth girls, Brenda
Ross, Elizabeth Blevins and
Yvonne Core.
Three legged race: first and
second grade boys, Steve Hood
and Otis Core, Brian King and
Mark Burson, Mike Dill and
David Doerfer; third and fourth
graders, Eric Scites and
William Collins, Mike Graham
and ·David Barnhouse, and

MRS. JIM WISE, left, and Mrs. lewis Johnson, rigbt, of

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL Freshman O!eerleader$ for tlle
19'11·7211Chool year are, 1-r, Diane Smith, Mo Hennessy, Joyce
Hutchlson, capt., Cindy Schneider, and Sandra CUrtis.

.

....
-:

::

·.

'.

Eastern Graduates
(Continued from Page 1)
and gowns to enter the
auditorium. The Rev. John
Wyatt presented the invocation
and benediction and Michael
lloring, class president, introduced the speaker. The band
presented "Bless This House"
and tlle recessional "Fanfare
and Reces8ional" to close the
commencement.
On Sunday afternoon the
annual baccalaureate was held
with the Rev. Freeland Norris
delivering the sermon. Invocation and benediction were
by the Rev. Eldon Blake and
Sherry McCain presented the
proce~lonal and recessional.
John Riebel, superintendent •
of the district, presented the
class of '71 at Sunday evening's
commencement. Diplomas
were presented by Ernest
Whitehead, vice president of the
district's board of education to:
Howard N. Bahr, Eleanor
Dian Balley, Robert Allen
Salley, Jean Baker, Ruby
Deloris Barber, Nancy Kay
Baurn, ·Jacqueline Ann Bise,
Larry Michael Bissell, Gregory
H. Boatright, Robert Paul
Boggs, Brenda Kay Boring,
Michael Grant Boring, Dale
Allen Boston, Richard P.
Buckley, Howard Blair Caldwell, Martha Kay Wella Camp,
Roger L. Carpenter, Sr., Victoria Sue Cole, Kimberly Lynn
Flck, Debra Ann Fitch
Charl~e Frederick, Caroly~
Kay Griffin, Randy Hall, Randy
Hand, Patti Holsinger.
Also, Gordon Holter, Thomas

FUR YOU!
When you open a
Savings Account here
with S25.00 ...
We Will Give You
A Place Setting of Dishes
Or
A Set Of 4 Glasses.
When you open an
account with $500
We Will Give You A
4 Place Selling of Dishes
and all this for lust letting us
PlY you 4'f• per cent on your
SIVings.
'

Meigs Co.
Branch

Robbery, Charges
COLUMBUS - (Special) U. S. District Judge Joseph P.
Kinneary this morning, upon
the request of Assistant U. S.
Altorney James E. Rattan,
dismissed federal bank robbery
charges against four North

Meigs

Property
Transfers

Cockroft Runs
Mile in 5:46

Pomeroy, Ohio

~
. ~
•

'

Edward M. Blake, Jr., Joyce
Ann Blake to John Tracy Blake,
Marjorie H. Blake, Parcel,
. Salisbury.
Alfred J . Cashdollar, Dorothy
Mae Cashdollar to Manning D.
Webster, .25 Acre, Reedsville.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
WebstertoAHredJ. Gashdollar,
Dorothy Mae Cashdollar, .25
Acre, Reedsville.
Charles E. Chancey, Mary
Ann Chancey to Paul F. Am·
berger • Dorothy S. Amberger,
Lot, Syracuse.

Augusta, S. C. men arrested by
th~ FBI in connection with the
Vinton Bank robbery last
Tuesday .
Charges were dropped due to
lack of evidence.
Three of the four, John I.
Sherlock, 47, Michael D.
Sherlock, 19, and John Carroll,
22, were released from custody
over the weekend on their own
recognizances. They had been
scheduled for preliminary
hearings this afternoon before a
Federal Commissioner in
Columbus. A fourth suspect,
Patrick· Sherlock, 23, is expeeled to be released today
from the Holzer Medical Center
where he is recovering from
injuries suffered when the
quartet's car crashed during a
high speed chase last Tuesday
afternoon at the intersection of
CoWLiy Roads 5-30 in Vinton
County.
Meanwhile, an FBI spokesman reported the .department is pressing its in·
vestigation.lt was revealed this
morning· that $2,572.82 was
taken in the robbery and a total

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Cleveland Browns punter Don Cockraft ran the mile in 5:46 at a
weekend "volunteer practice"
session, three seconds faster
than defensive back Ernie KelIerman.
Browns head coach Nick Skor'tch 'd h h ld th
·1
sat e e
e mt e run
Eugene Wyatt, Nina Wyatt, of $490 in dimes had been
Saturday to make sure the . Elmer Ihle, Neva !hie to Brady recovered from the first
players know they are to re- Gilbert, Ellen Gilbert, 100 Acre getaway car, a 1963 Chevrolet
port July 16 prepared to sweat. Lot 328, .22 Acre, Salisbury.
abandoned and burned on
.ll Nel
Sa h M Smith E
1o dward E. Shiloh Rd., in Huntington 'Twp.
Quarterback Bl
sen was
ra .
forcedtowatchtherunningfrom Stiles, Eloise F. Stiles Lot 53
Asltstands,FB!agentsmust
the sidelines because he was Behan's Add.,
• start their investigation again
advised running was not the
Harry T. Fleming, Blanche from scratch.
best for his weak, knees.
M. Fleming to Ohio Power Co.,
The South Carolina residents,
Slowest in the race was Ron Ease., Lebanon.
first seen on the Appalachian
Snidow, who was clocked at Charles R. Harris, Waynita Highway near Wilkesville ,
8:20.
Harris, Bryan ·Harris, Betty apparently were just driving in
Skorich said he wants the line Harris, Mayford A. Harris the area. They were spotted by
to run the mile in 7:30 at the Wilma Harris to Ohio !lowe; Agent Herman Henry, Bureau
start of camp
and the others Co.,
of Criminal Investigation,
·
·1 · 6 ••
E Ease., Lebanon.
mogene A11en, Howard R. London, who was enroute from
are to run 1 m :.w.
Allen, J ames E . Harris, Juanita Jackson, to assist in the inV. Harris to Ohio Power Co., vestigation. They failed to stop
Ease., Lebanon.
when Agent Henry opened
Not Cultivated
Paul E. Harris, Marylyn pursuit. He therefore called for
Maple trees are not culli·
vated to produce superior Harris to Ohio Power Co., assistance. Later, highway
maple sugar. This is one Ease., Lebanon.
patrolman, FBI agents, and
product which nature had
Charles Cook, Sylvia Cook to Gallia County sheriff's deputies
produced better than man.
Trees must be grown from Robert V. King, Lillian B. King, joined the chase which ended
seed to produce good maple
Moore to
sugar ; second-growth wood
has poor sugar sap.
w . Rapp, Linda Rapp, Grand Prix.
71'h A.,. Bedford.
No explanation was offered as
SON IS BORN
Homer G. Mourn, Estella M. to why they tried to outrun the
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hood, Mourn to Spencer R. Buchanan, law. According to unofficial
Mtddleport, are annoWLcing the Freda Buchanan, Parcels, reports none of the four has
birth of a son, Stephen Todd, on Orange.
been identified in lineups
M 15 t th H 1
D lb t W ·T f d J
showed the personnel
the
ay , a e o zer Medical
e er
· ea or • r ·•
Center, Gallipolis. The baby Helen Marie Teaford to Bobby bank at the time of the robbery.
weighed seven oounds. four Joe Wolfe, Tessie Wolfe, .87 A.,
''
ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Hood Letart. ·
· have another soil, Jeffery Paul,
Bonnie Rife to Clair Might, l:TiadS
age 2. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Patricia Might, 6 A., Salisbury.
McElhinny and Mr. and Mrs.
Guy M. Cole, Fannie Cole to
Milton Hood are the grand- Clifford Icenhower, Helen
parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Icenhower, Parcels, Salisbury.
'.J'(JS
aBnadileyM, MidEdlepoSrtrt, bRJoute 1,
WHippeldl,Leaka , High ch
' I ad tes of the
rs. va
u e, Mid- tc r tppe o aro
uts
s oo gr ua

Middlep~rt.

2.~:c~~e~0:~~b;:~

~rry

·Honored at

Mas. B k&gt;£ t

v·JtoohnW~ictlort

~~~~~~~~·~~~~d~le~p~or~t~,
Marie
parents. _:a~re~~g=re:a~t:-g~ra:n:d-~ Anderson,
Anderson, 1.0Margaret
A., Cbester.

Need a florist who's
a budding genius?
Yell9w
Pages

I to r, first place winners.

:s,

rea,

WIS ROSENBAUM and Dick Rosenbaum, high game
at left. RUSS MOORE AND Mary Morrow most
.awards,
'
Improved average awards, in center. NEACIL CARSEY,
high average and high series, and Dan Meadows, high series
award, at right.

Bowling Season Ended

r---------------------------,

HOSPITAL NEWS

!
SOC I' aI

caIen dar

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
A day that is fortunate or Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
auspicious is called a " red- 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
letter day" '"in allust'on to Pediatrics Ward. ·

~~~s~u~~o~i~:s~:;~!~1nhf~~

Mr ndMrBirlhs
.a
s. Edward J. King,

sCh00 I P'Jannzna set

old calendar with red letters.

.

MONDAY
STAFF AND Officers Club,
Metgs Temple, Pythian Sisters,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room.
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
p.m. Monday at the high school.
Election of officers.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter, Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes: 7:30 Monday night,
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport. Report of the state
convention held in Cleveland to
be given by the president.
TUESDAY
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
8 p.m. at

PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, Tuesday night
home oi Mrs . Glenn om:
Syracuse.
RE
VIVAL SERVICES, 6 p.m.
through May 30 at Alfred
Methodist Church featuring
Rev. Curt Davis, organist on TV
and radio, and the Rev. Randy
La d
to
ven er, pas r, speaking.
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
Boosters, Tuesday 7:30p.m. at
high school.
TUESDAY
JUNUlOR AMERICAN Legion
Aux iary, Feeney-Bennett Post

•

6

A daily vacation Bible school
plannlilg. session has been set
for JWLe 1 by the Helping Hands
Missionary Society of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
During a recent meeting of
the groUP
it was
decided
to
h
1·
f
pure ase supp tes or the
SCh 1 Mr Tr · H dr' k
oo · s. essie en LC s
presided at the meeting .
Arrangements were made to
send boxes this week to two
servicemen. Mission boxes will
be mail&lt;;&lt;! at a later time.
The Circle purchased a ham
for a. family who had a death

Reed, Mrs. Ruth Durst and
Tinuny, Mrs. Vada Hazelton
and' Cynthia, Mrs. Rose Hysell
and Gary, Mrs. Eleanor
Hoover, Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, Mrs. Norma Russell,
Mrs. Nancy Morris, .Mr$:
Frances
H
ll Hysell, and Mrs. Verna

1·

Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Terry G. Dickerson, Wellaton, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Pjc]t~ps, Bi~I;Vell, a
·daughter. ,; ·.
.. ..
Discharges
·
Mrs. Wendell W. Bradbury,
Leslie Brucker' Bobby J . Clark,
Russell Lee Denney,
J.
Dickerson, Johnny E. Donu'me,
Mrs. Ora E. Haynes and son,
Ella Frances Huston, Mrs.
Virginia E. Jones, Robert K.
McCormick, Jr ., James
R.
0
Merry, Mrs. Larry · Miller
and son, Mrs. Risden N. Miller,
Arthur R. Petrie, Darlene
Scarberry, Keltll E. Snyder,
Mrs. Charles W. Thacker •
William H.
Thuener,
PaulLee
A.
Tripp,
Mrs.
Marvin
Wickline and son, and Lloyd G.

Conni~

I

0. D.

..gJB

for expenses
while you're in
the hospital
New Host' IT AL lndcmnit~'
Plan :
• P;tys yuu $50 to S20U n
week {dept•ndin g upon the
b:1 sic llo spitnlizntion you
presently cmry) to usc as
yuu sec fi1.
• Puy~ you ~..:ash while you're

in !he 1\l)SpJtal.

The ARTISTE • Mod111l A564W . Hand·
~o rn e Hnee.piece modtllar Circlfl ol
sll!r eo uJHt lets ~o u hear ~lereo the

w;1s mean\ to be nearo .. all around

Cal\ me tllday for details.

1rom w,rll to wall . cor ner l o corner .

side to srde
JUS ! 3l thouah
Iron\ row t ell\8! ~ ~ a ll~e pe~t&lt;H m •oco . l
Gramed Walnut color cabmet.

P. J. PAULEY

992-2318
Spring

, 307

A·VO.

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

ttonw

INGELS
FUR NITURE
MIDDLEPORT

N.lll•~t11'1' 1 '· ~ h 11udlln11 H !I Il\~

(',,
ll u11W Dlliu· l••lumbus. Uh 11•

yse .

I____________:Sw:=an:::·· - - - - - - - -

~du~~s~~ : ~~!~h~:j~~

"_Diso~edlence
~~~r

Brings
was the devotional
P c Mrs. Hendricks.
Present were Mrs. Jackie

HOT LINE to SU ER •••

It's
more
tha
ltl "Lets na

Plans for the sewing and
baking contests to be held at the
June 17 meeting were noted by
Mrs. Amos Leonard when tbe
Rock Springs Grange met
Thursday night at tlle hall.
Two applications for membership were received and a
contribution was made to the
Meigs County unit of the
American Cancer Society. A
communication from Virgil
Atkins, !leputy master, announced inspection for June 17.
Reported ill were Homer Rice
and Eleanor EnevoldSen. It was
decided to order holiday cookbooks from tlle junior state
grange to sell. Mr. and Mrs.
James Conkle showed slldes of
their recent trip to the west
Coasi. Refreshments were
served by the Enevoldsen
famlly.

S

How many trell·hc&gt;us13s
forts, hideaways and
"The Star-Spangled Ban- castles can a tree be?
ner," written by Francis Ask a kid.
Scott Key on Sept. 14 1814
was officially a d 0 p ted
Only you can
Congress as the national ·an- prevent forest
them in 1931, according to fires . •
tat,
"·,
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
~.

bY··

POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, 12 noon, WedMneesthdaodyis; t ChPourmcheroy United
·

Sacred
Hearthonored
Catholic
Church
128,officers
6:30p.m.and
Tuesday
Election
THURSDAY
~rish were
during
the ·of
final' plans
1o
WOMEN'S
ASSN., MidSunday morning Mass and a attend Department conference dleport
First
United
breakfast following.
on June 51n Columbus.
Presbyterian Church , 7:30
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
WEDNESDAY
Thursday night at the church :
Krajcovicpresented•.achofthe
AMERICAN
LEGION Mrs. Don Lowery, book study;
graduates with a , medal. Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post Mrs . . Jesse
Shumaker
Following tile sermon by the 128, 7:30p.m. at the hall. Dinner devotions; and Mrs. Rodney
Rev. Donald Wehrung, a break- at 6:.30 prec~dlng meeting, Downing, Mrs. Nora Ball, Mrs.
fast was served in their honor in Election of officers.
, Mildred Beeson and Mrs.
tlle church auditorium by the
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club, William Morris, hostesses.
Catholld Women's Guild. 8 p.m. Wednesday at tbe home
ROCK SPRING Better Health
Hon!l'ed were Patrick Mullen, of Mrs. ~omer Holter with Mrs. Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday, home
Frank Glrolaml, Richard M~on Fisher, co-llostess.
of Mrs. Louis Grueser.
Radford, Thomas · Hofner,
Eugene Goodwin, Carol
Hargraves, Bernadette .Hennesy, Judy r.lcKnlghl, Kayle
Mullen, Stella Neutzllng, alld
Ubby Brown.

Gladys E. Mowrey to Gail P.
Buck, Addie M. Buck, Parcels,
Salisbury.
•
Lucille Holden, WiJliam T.
Eville, Rebecca H. Eville to
George M. Gordon, 3 A.,
Pomeroy.
Kenneth R. Young, Lucy
Young to Brenda J. Randolph,
Alfred E. Randolph, 1.5 A.,
Olive.
James R. Priddy, Linda L.
Priddy to Pomeroy Nan: Bank,
l'. A., Pomeroy.
Della Lovett, Dec'd., to Dana
Lovell, Clara Belle Yinger,
Betty Lou .Lovett, Aff. Trans.,
Lebanon.
John Victor Wipple , aka
Victor Wippel, to Keith Woods:
Gertrude Woods, 0.5 A., There are 132 rooms in the
Chester.
White .House.

now

POMEROY - A tour of the Nelson, 100 hours .
Hostesses ror the June
new wing highlighted the
evening when the Women's meeting are to be Mrs. Nelson,
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Mrs. Fox, Mrs, Halliday and
Hospital met in the dining room Joann White.
Mrs . Bertha Parker con·
of the hospital Tuesday evening .
dueled
a quiz and Ada Slack
The Auxiliary prayer was
given by Mrs. Hugh Bearhs and read "Recipe For Family-Size
for
the
the treasurer's report by Mrs. Communicake"
program session.
Sibley Slack.
A tentative date of June 26 The hostesses, Mrs. Eugene
and 'll has been set for the open Eskew, Mrs. James Daniels,
house of the new wing of the Mrs. Charles Karr, with Myla
hospital. On the 26th there will Hudson a contributing hostess,
be a private showing, 2 to 5 served refreshments to Mrs.
p.m., and on the 27th for the Parker, Mrs. Nelson, Mrs.
Halliday, Mrs. Massar, Mrs.
public at 1 to 5 p.m.
Auxiliary ladies will be the Hayes, Mrs. Rowan, Mrs.
hostesses to serve refr esh- Bearhs, Mrs. Fox, Mrs. Ada
ments. All are to wear their Slack, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Alex Wheeler , Sandra Jones,
uniforms and white sh~.
Mrs
. Robert Tucker , Mrs.
It was announced that the
Candystripers are in need of George White, Mrs. Ernest
new members due lo the loss of Molden, Mrs . Sibley Slack, Mrs.
30 by graduation. It was also Ray Pickens, Sr. and a guest,
of
stated that they have five new Mrs . Glenn Wolfe,
recruits to date and that Becky Washington, D. c.
Wright has been elected their
new president.
Children under eight years of
A'ITEND CONVENTION
age receive television free when
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Reed,
they are patients, it was noted. Jr., Mr. and Mrs. N. W. CampThe Women's Auxiliary of ton, and the Rev . and Mrs.
Feeney Bennett Legion Post Stanley Plattenburg, Grace
donated $25 und the junior Episcopal Church, attended the
· Auxiliary $10 to purchase toys annual convention of the
for tbe children's ward. These ' Episcopal Church of the
are given, one to each child Diocese of Southern Ohio
patient, for them to take home Friday and Saturday at Christ
with ~m. .
.
Church in [)ayiA:m. '
Mrs. -searhs pre~entkd so.
·'
·
hour patches to Mrs. Kenneth
First Passage
Searles and Mrs. Ray Fox. Pins
First ship passage through
were given to Mrs . Harold the Golden Gate was in 1775.
San Carlos, a packet of
Massar, 1,000 hours; Mrs. R . K. The
. h r o y a 1 navy
t he Spams
Rowan, 500 hours, and to Mrs. passed through the channel
Arnold Hayes , Mrs . John to enter San Francisco Bay
Halliday, and Mrs . Dana from the Pacific Ocean.

DICK OWEN, Sara Owen, Pat Holter and Roy Holter,

RUSS MOORE, Hope Moore, Neacll Clrsey and Jacil
Carsey, I to r, second place winners.

~0~e~ol Jo~n h:~ ~~;loc:on:~:~ ~~~Lliary Tuesday

r ..

_

Auxiliary Plans
New Wing Tour

Dropped Today

m
·

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.

•

Wesley Karr, Mary Joyce
Kautz, Richard Liter, Steven 0.
Mays, Robyn Marlene Mills,
Rhea Jeannette Mora, Daryl
William Pooler, Mary Upton
Robinson, Julie Arlene Rose,
Cathy Sue Smith, David Grove
Smith, Timmy Lee Smith,
Charles J . Stearns, Belinda G.
Steele, Rebecca Jo Steele,
Terry Michael Stethem,
Margaret Suzanne Teaford,
Ruthie Marie Walker, Paula
Eileen Watkins, Ray Watson,
Frances M. Wells, Jean Denise
Whitehead, Deborah Kay Wood,
James R. Young.

tlle Haven Homemakers are witll two residents of the Meigs
County Infinnai'y who received trays of gifts and goodies
made recently by the club. The group met at the home of
Mrs. David Zirkle, Middleport, to prepare the trays of fruit,
candy, licarves, and hose for the patients, and then took them
to the Infirmary. Delivering the trays to the patients were
Mrs. Wllllam Fields, Mrs. Jesse Maynard, Mrs. Jim W'1se,
Mrs. Lewis Johnson, Mrs. Sadie Warth, Mrs. Russell
Maynard and Mrs, Zirkle,

terri Robson; boys, Keith
Kline, Steven Randolph, and,
Gary Zeigler. .
Softball throw: third and
fourth grade boys, David Blake,
Bobby Haggy, and Randy
Randolph; fifth and sixth boys,
and second grader s, l.aura Keith Kline, Dale · Browning,
Smith and Teresa Dorst, tie for and Tim Scites; fifth and sixth
second, Jena Welker and Linda girls , Emmogene Blevins,
Williams and Kathleen Parker Vicky Branham, and Denise
and Kathryn Chaney; Carol Marshall.
Morris and Kathy Sheet;;; third Winners in events for pre·
and fourth graders, Shirley schoolers were Mike Kennedy,
Landacre a nd Eliwbeth Jacki e Welker, and Chuck
Ble\1ns. Christy Evans and Jan Blake, forty yard dssh; and
Burson. and Carla Whaley and Priscilla Herdman, Sherri
Mari hall and Becky Arnott,
1~na RandolPh; fifth and sixti&gt;
graders, Peggi Ai rson an d girls dash.
Helen King, Laura Russell and
Kathleen Ney, and Nancy
Stanley and Diane Sn1ith.
Forty yard dash: first and
second grad e gi rls, .Joyce
Baker. Carol Morris, and
Cllmille Swindell; boys, Steve
Ohlinger , Mark Friend, and
Brian King; third and fourth
b'&gt;'a ders, Bobby Haggy, , Bobby
Seelig , William Collins; girls.
Debbie Russell, Yvonne Score,
and Nancy SmiU1.
SiKty yard dash: fifth and
sixth grade girls, Emmogenef
Blevins, Tammy Blake and

Timmy Herdman u.nd Fred
Ney; fifth and sixth boys, Rick
Johnson and Steven Randolph,
Charles Ney and Keith Kline,
and Tim Scites and Dale
Browning.
Three legged ra ce , girls: first

Eighth Birthday
'

Is Celebrated

...

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w

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Fine Selection of Name Brands
Your First Long Weekend Is Coming Up

FOR HIM

FOR HER
Swimwear and
Sportswear by Catalina

Swimwear by Puritan
and Rugby .

Blouses by Shapely
and Catalina

Banlon &amp; Knit Shirts
by Puritan and Jockey

Skirts and Slacks by
Catalina and Jantzen

Slacks by Hubbard

Dresses and Pants Suits
by Berkshire, HobNober and Parkshire

Jackets by Puritan
and Rugby ·

Girdles and Bras by
.Flexnit
Hosiery by- Mojud

Sport Coats by Curlee
and Warren Sewell

. Luggage by Samsonite
and Airway
.•

'

Levi's Permanent Press
.Sl&gt;ortswear and Denims

I

.. /

t
You11 be alive to ·pay the fine.
Congratulations.
Congratu lations lor a traffic ticket?
Think about il.
A traffic ticket may cost a few dollars. An accident
could cost mare. Far more than money. Trafltc acci-

dents Look the lives of more than 56.000 Americans
last year.

BAMR tLOTHIERS

Because carelul dnv1ng ts the be st way

dents. Or lickels.
And remember. the ofhcet who
writes ou t the ticket is only try tng. to
make the road sater. For everybody.
So. if you gel a tlckel , don·t feel bad,

\:ijjl~
'
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,.,..

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~

' :•.,e

:

11,.,••• ••

National Automobile ,[)ealers Assooii!tioo
( 1!1 ,!

1~1 01 ~ "'" o J,~~ Ji l

II&gt; tl r&lt; ·l ,, ' 11• •"1

~· • • •I ~~ ~ • '

I'

1

I

' ' •'•

iJ

' •~·•..,1ft~ Jf \

Oneln a series present~d by N.A, D. A.• T~e Daily Sentinel and Tho ,Tri-Counly Auto Dealer• •moe.
I

'

I

"•

You m&lt;ghl evon be yratelul ,

As 'new car dealers, we 'r·e cOncerned w (th cars . As

. members ollhe community, we're concerned about
people. We'd like all drivers lo be 'Carelul drivers.

to a\told acct·
. ,,••,,,1~

'

.

�.
5-'1'111' Oallv Sentinel. Middleoort·PfWTl..-ov. n

McCarthy Calls For True P~y
,

Pupils Enjoyed Field Day

Green Thumb
Notes • •..

of my career yet."
After the defeat of hi§,
presidential bid at the 100«
Democratic National Convention, McCarthy declined to run
for re-election to the Senate in
career."
Then he checked himself, 1970. His seat was won by
stopped and added he did not former Vice President Hubert
and a true America."
As the crowd cheered in a want to "acknowledge the end H. Humphrey.
demonstration reminiscent of
McCarthy's 1968 presidential
campaign, he told them the
rally was the ''most moving
experience of my · political

sons at' a "Dump the War"
raUy: in his ... home state,
McCarthy said he hoped peace
could be attained within one of
the two major parties but; he
said, "If it cannot, let 'us have
a· new party and a new policy

. '

.,

1

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP!)
-Fonner Sen. Eugene McCarthy, his voice shaking at the
"most moving experience of
my political career," Sunday
·called for a third party as a
last resort to realize the goal of
peace.
Speaking before 27,000 per·

...~ ?.4. t971

SteveJl Ohlinger , and Mike
Zeigler; first and second grade
girls, Kimberly Bashan, Linda
Williams, and Jena Welker ;
third and fourth girls, Brenda
Ross, Elizabeth Blevins and
Yvonne Core.
Three legged race: first and
second grade boys, Steve Hood
and Otis Core, Brian King and
Mark Burson, Mike Dill and
David Doerfer; third and fourth
graders, Eric Scites and
William Collins, Mike Graham
and ·David Barnhouse, and

MRS. JIM WISE, left, and Mrs. lewis Johnson, rigbt, of

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL Freshman O!eerleader$ for tlle
19'11·7211Chool year are, 1-r, Diane Smith, Mo Hennessy, Joyce
Hutchlson, capt., Cindy Schneider, and Sandra CUrtis.

.

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'.

Eastern Graduates
(Continued from Page 1)
and gowns to enter the
auditorium. The Rev. John
Wyatt presented the invocation
and benediction and Michael
lloring, class president, introduced the speaker. The band
presented "Bless This House"
and tlle recessional "Fanfare
and Reces8ional" to close the
commencement.
On Sunday afternoon the
annual baccalaureate was held
with the Rev. Freeland Norris
delivering the sermon. Invocation and benediction were
by the Rev. Eldon Blake and
Sherry McCain presented the
proce~lonal and recessional.
John Riebel, superintendent •
of the district, presented the
class of '71 at Sunday evening's
commencement. Diplomas
were presented by Ernest
Whitehead, vice president of the
district's board of education to:
Howard N. Bahr, Eleanor
Dian Balley, Robert Allen
Salley, Jean Baker, Ruby
Deloris Barber, Nancy Kay
Baurn, ·Jacqueline Ann Bise,
Larry Michael Bissell, Gregory
H. Boatright, Robert Paul
Boggs, Brenda Kay Boring,
Michael Grant Boring, Dale
Allen Boston, Richard P.
Buckley, Howard Blair Caldwell, Martha Kay Wella Camp,
Roger L. Carpenter, Sr., Victoria Sue Cole, Kimberly Lynn
Flck, Debra Ann Fitch
Charl~e Frederick, Caroly~
Kay Griffin, Randy Hall, Randy
Hand, Patti Holsinger.
Also, Gordon Holter, Thomas

FUR YOU!
When you open a
Savings Account here
with S25.00 ...
We Will Give You
A Place Setting of Dishes
Or
A Set Of 4 Glasses.
When you open an
account with $500
We Will Give You A
4 Place Selling of Dishes
and all this for lust letting us
PlY you 4'f• per cent on your
SIVings.
'

Meigs Co.
Branch

Robbery, Charges
COLUMBUS - (Special) U. S. District Judge Joseph P.
Kinneary this morning, upon
the request of Assistant U. S.
Altorney James E. Rattan,
dismissed federal bank robbery
charges against four North

Meigs

Property
Transfers

Cockroft Runs
Mile in 5:46

Pomeroy, Ohio

~
. ~
•

'

Edward M. Blake, Jr., Joyce
Ann Blake to John Tracy Blake,
Marjorie H. Blake, Parcel,
. Salisbury.
Alfred J . Cashdollar, Dorothy
Mae Cashdollar to Manning D.
Webster, .25 Acre, Reedsville.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
WebstertoAHredJ. Gashdollar,
Dorothy Mae Cashdollar, .25
Acre, Reedsville.
Charles E. Chancey, Mary
Ann Chancey to Paul F. Am·
berger • Dorothy S. Amberger,
Lot, Syracuse.

Augusta, S. C. men arrested by
th~ FBI in connection with the
Vinton Bank robbery last
Tuesday .
Charges were dropped due to
lack of evidence.
Three of the four, John I.
Sherlock, 47, Michael D.
Sherlock, 19, and John Carroll,
22, were released from custody
over the weekend on their own
recognizances. They had been
scheduled for preliminary
hearings this afternoon before a
Federal Commissioner in
Columbus. A fourth suspect,
Patrick· Sherlock, 23, is expeeled to be released today
from the Holzer Medical Center
where he is recovering from
injuries suffered when the
quartet's car crashed during a
high speed chase last Tuesday
afternoon at the intersection of
CoWLiy Roads 5-30 in Vinton
County.
Meanwhile, an FBI spokesman reported the .department is pressing its in·
vestigation.lt was revealed this
morning· that $2,572.82 was
taken in the robbery and a total

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Cleveland Browns punter Don Cockraft ran the mile in 5:46 at a
weekend "volunteer practice"
session, three seconds faster
than defensive back Ernie KelIerman.
Browns head coach Nick Skor'tch 'd h h ld th
·1
sat e e
e mt e run
Eugene Wyatt, Nina Wyatt, of $490 in dimes had been
Saturday to make sure the . Elmer Ihle, Neva !hie to Brady recovered from the first
players know they are to re- Gilbert, Ellen Gilbert, 100 Acre getaway car, a 1963 Chevrolet
port July 16 prepared to sweat. Lot 328, .22 Acre, Salisbury.
abandoned and burned on
.ll Nel
Sa h M Smith E
1o dward E. Shiloh Rd., in Huntington 'Twp.
Quarterback Bl
sen was
ra .
forcedtowatchtherunningfrom Stiles, Eloise F. Stiles Lot 53
Asltstands,FB!agentsmust
the sidelines because he was Behan's Add.,
• start their investigation again
advised running was not the
Harry T. Fleming, Blanche from scratch.
best for his weak, knees.
M. Fleming to Ohio Power Co.,
The South Carolina residents,
Slowest in the race was Ron Ease., Lebanon.
first seen on the Appalachian
Snidow, who was clocked at Charles R. Harris, Waynita Highway near Wilkesville ,
8:20.
Harris, Bryan ·Harris, Betty apparently were just driving in
Skorich said he wants the line Harris, Mayford A. Harris the area. They were spotted by
to run the mile in 7:30 at the Wilma Harris to Ohio !lowe; Agent Herman Henry, Bureau
start of camp
and the others Co.,
of Criminal Investigation,
·
·1 · 6 ••
E Ease., Lebanon.
mogene A11en, Howard R. London, who was enroute from
are to run 1 m :.w.
Allen, J ames E . Harris, Juanita Jackson, to assist in the inV. Harris to Ohio Power Co., vestigation. They failed to stop
Ease., Lebanon.
when Agent Henry opened
Not Cultivated
Paul E. Harris, Marylyn pursuit. He therefore called for
Maple trees are not culli·
vated to produce superior Harris to Ohio Power Co., assistance. Later, highway
maple sugar. This is one Ease., Lebanon.
patrolman, FBI agents, and
product which nature had
Charles Cook, Sylvia Cook to Gallia County sheriff's deputies
produced better than man.
Trees must be grown from Robert V. King, Lillian B. King, joined the chase which ended
seed to produce good maple
Moore to
sugar ; second-growth wood
has poor sugar sap.
w . Rapp, Linda Rapp, Grand Prix.
71'h A.,. Bedford.
No explanation was offered as
SON IS BORN
Homer G. Mourn, Estella M. to why they tried to outrun the
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hood, Mourn to Spencer R. Buchanan, law. According to unofficial
Mtddleport, are annoWLcing the Freda Buchanan, Parcels, reports none of the four has
birth of a son, Stephen Todd, on Orange.
been identified in lineups
M 15 t th H 1
D lb t W ·T f d J
showed the personnel
the
ay , a e o zer Medical
e er
· ea or • r ·•
Center, Gallipolis. The baby Helen Marie Teaford to Bobby bank at the time of the robbery.
weighed seven oounds. four Joe Wolfe, Tessie Wolfe, .87 A.,
''
ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Hood Letart. ·
· have another soil, Jeffery Paul,
Bonnie Rife to Clair Might, l:TiadS
age 2. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Patricia Might, 6 A., Salisbury.
McElhinny and Mr. and Mrs.
Guy M. Cole, Fannie Cole to
Milton Hood are the grand- Clifford Icenhower, Helen
parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Icenhower, Parcels, Salisbury.
'.J'(JS
aBnadileyM, MidEdlepoSrtrt, bRJoute 1,
WHippeldl,Leaka , High ch
' I ad tes of the
rs. va
u e, Mid- tc r tppe o aro
uts
s oo gr ua

Middlep~rt.

2.~:c~~e~0:~~b;:~

~rry

·Honored at

Mas. B k&gt;£ t

v·JtoohnW~ictlort

~~~~~~~~·~~~~d~le~p~or~t~,
Marie
parents. _:a~re~~g=re:a~t:-g~ra:n:d-~ Anderson,
Anderson, 1.0Margaret
A., Cbester.

Need a florist who's
a budding genius?
Yell9w
Pages

I to r, first place winners.

:s,

rea,

WIS ROSENBAUM and Dick Rosenbaum, high game
at left. RUSS MOORE AND Mary Morrow most
.awards,
'
Improved average awards, in center. NEACIL CARSEY,
high average and high series, and Dan Meadows, high series
award, at right.

Bowling Season Ended

r---------------------------,

HOSPITAL NEWS

!
SOC I' aI

caIen dar

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
A day that is fortunate or Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
auspicious is called a " red- 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
letter day" '"in allust'on to Pediatrics Ward. ·

~~~s~u~~o~i~:s~:;~!~1nhf~~

Mr ndMrBirlhs
.a
s. Edward J. King,

sCh00 I P'Jannzna set

old calendar with red letters.

.

MONDAY
STAFF AND Officers Club,
Metgs Temple, Pythian Sisters,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room.
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
p.m. Monday at the high school.
Election of officers.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter, Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes: 7:30 Monday night,
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport. Report of the state
convention held in Cleveland to
be given by the president.
TUESDAY
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
8 p.m. at

PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, Tuesday night
home oi Mrs . Glenn om:
Syracuse.
RE
VIVAL SERVICES, 6 p.m.
through May 30 at Alfred
Methodist Church featuring
Rev. Curt Davis, organist on TV
and radio, and the Rev. Randy
La d
to
ven er, pas r, speaking.
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
Boosters, Tuesday 7:30p.m. at
high school.
TUESDAY
JUNUlOR AMERICAN Legion
Aux iary, Feeney-Bennett Post

•

6

A daily vacation Bible school
plannlilg. session has been set
for JWLe 1 by the Helping Hands
Missionary Society of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
During a recent meeting of
the groUP
it was
decided
to
h
1·
f
pure ase supp tes or the
SCh 1 Mr Tr · H dr' k
oo · s. essie en LC s
presided at the meeting .
Arrangements were made to
send boxes this week to two
servicemen. Mission boxes will
be mail&lt;;&lt;! at a later time.
The Circle purchased a ham
for a. family who had a death

Reed, Mrs. Ruth Durst and
Tinuny, Mrs. Vada Hazelton
and' Cynthia, Mrs. Rose Hysell
and Gary, Mrs. Eleanor
Hoover, Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, Mrs. Norma Russell,
Mrs. Nancy Morris, .Mr$:
Frances
H
ll Hysell, and Mrs. Verna

1·

Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Terry G. Dickerson, Wellaton, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Pjc]t~ps, Bi~I;Vell, a
·daughter. ,; ·.
.. ..
Discharges
·
Mrs. Wendell W. Bradbury,
Leslie Brucker' Bobby J . Clark,
Russell Lee Denney,
J.
Dickerson, Johnny E. Donu'me,
Mrs. Ora E. Haynes and son,
Ella Frances Huston, Mrs.
Virginia E. Jones, Robert K.
McCormick, Jr ., James
R.
0
Merry, Mrs. Larry · Miller
and son, Mrs. Risden N. Miller,
Arthur R. Petrie, Darlene
Scarberry, Keltll E. Snyder,
Mrs. Charles W. Thacker •
William H.
Thuener,
PaulLee
A.
Tripp,
Mrs.
Marvin
Wickline and son, and Lloyd G.

Conni~

I

0. D.

..gJB

for expenses
while you're in
the hospital
New Host' IT AL lndcmnit~'
Plan :
• P;tys yuu $50 to S20U n
week {dept•ndin g upon the
b:1 sic llo spitnlizntion you
presently cmry) to usc as
yuu sec fi1.
• Puy~ you ~..:ash while you're

in !he 1\l)SpJtal.

The ARTISTE • Mod111l A564W . Hand·
~o rn e Hnee.piece modtllar Circlfl ol
sll!r eo uJHt lets ~o u hear ~lereo the

w;1s mean\ to be nearo .. all around

Cal\ me tllday for details.

1rom w,rll to wall . cor ner l o corner .

side to srde
JUS ! 3l thouah
Iron\ row t ell\8! ~ ~ a ll~e pe~t&lt;H m •oco . l
Gramed Walnut color cabmet.

P. J. PAULEY

992-2318
Spring

, 307

A·VO.

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

ttonw

INGELS
FUR NITURE
MIDDLEPORT

N.lll•~t11'1' 1 '· ~ h 11udlln11 H !I Il\~

(',,
ll u11W Dlliu· l••lumbus. Uh 11•

yse .

I____________:Sw:=an:::·· - - - - - - - -

~du~~s~~ : ~~!~h~:j~~

"_Diso~edlence
~~~r

Brings
was the devotional
P c Mrs. Hendricks.
Present were Mrs. Jackie

HOT LINE to SU ER •••

It's
more
tha
ltl "Lets na

Plans for the sewing and
baking contests to be held at the
June 17 meeting were noted by
Mrs. Amos Leonard when tbe
Rock Springs Grange met
Thursday night at tlle hall.
Two applications for membership were received and a
contribution was made to the
Meigs County unit of the
American Cancer Society. A
communication from Virgil
Atkins, !leputy master, announced inspection for June 17.
Reported ill were Homer Rice
and Eleanor EnevoldSen. It was
decided to order holiday cookbooks from tlle junior state
grange to sell. Mr. and Mrs.
James Conkle showed slldes of
their recent trip to the west
Coasi. Refreshments were
served by the Enevoldsen
famlly.

S

How many trell·hc&gt;us13s
forts, hideaways and
"The Star-Spangled Ban- castles can a tree be?
ner," written by Francis Ask a kid.
Scott Key on Sept. 14 1814
was officially a d 0 p ted
Only you can
Congress as the national ·an- prevent forest
them in 1931, according to fires . •
tat,
"·,
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
~.

bY··

POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, 12 noon, WedMneesthdaodyis; t ChPourmcheroy United
·

Sacred
Hearthonored
Catholic
Church
128,officers
6:30p.m.and
Tuesday
Election
THURSDAY
~rish were
during
the ·of
final' plans
1o
WOMEN'S
ASSN., MidSunday morning Mass and a attend Department conference dleport
First
United
breakfast following.
on June 51n Columbus.
Presbyterian Church , 7:30
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
WEDNESDAY
Thursday night at the church :
Krajcovicpresented•.achofthe
AMERICAN
LEGION Mrs. Don Lowery, book study;
graduates with a , medal. Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post Mrs . . Jesse
Shumaker
Following tile sermon by the 128, 7:30p.m. at the hall. Dinner devotions; and Mrs. Rodney
Rev. Donald Wehrung, a break- at 6:.30 prec~dlng meeting, Downing, Mrs. Nora Ball, Mrs.
fast was served in their honor in Election of officers.
, Mildred Beeson and Mrs.
tlle church auditorium by the
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club, William Morris, hostesses.
Catholld Women's Guild. 8 p.m. Wednesday at tbe home
ROCK SPRING Better Health
Hon!l'ed were Patrick Mullen, of Mrs. ~omer Holter with Mrs. Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday, home
Frank Glrolaml, Richard M~on Fisher, co-llostess.
of Mrs. Louis Grueser.
Radford, Thomas · Hofner,
Eugene Goodwin, Carol
Hargraves, Bernadette .Hennesy, Judy r.lcKnlghl, Kayle
Mullen, Stella Neutzllng, alld
Ubby Brown.

Gladys E. Mowrey to Gail P.
Buck, Addie M. Buck, Parcels,
Salisbury.
•
Lucille Holden, WiJliam T.
Eville, Rebecca H. Eville to
George M. Gordon, 3 A.,
Pomeroy.
Kenneth R. Young, Lucy
Young to Brenda J. Randolph,
Alfred E. Randolph, 1.5 A.,
Olive.
James R. Priddy, Linda L.
Priddy to Pomeroy Nan: Bank,
l'. A., Pomeroy.
Della Lovett, Dec'd., to Dana
Lovell, Clara Belle Yinger,
Betty Lou .Lovett, Aff. Trans.,
Lebanon.
John Victor Wipple , aka
Victor Wippel, to Keith Woods:
Gertrude Woods, 0.5 A., There are 132 rooms in the
Chester.
White .House.

now

POMEROY - A tour of the Nelson, 100 hours .
Hostesses ror the June
new wing highlighted the
evening when the Women's meeting are to be Mrs. Nelson,
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Mrs. Fox, Mrs, Halliday and
Hospital met in the dining room Joann White.
Mrs . Bertha Parker con·
of the hospital Tuesday evening .
dueled
a quiz and Ada Slack
The Auxiliary prayer was
given by Mrs. Hugh Bearhs and read "Recipe For Family-Size
for
the
the treasurer's report by Mrs. Communicake"
program session.
Sibley Slack.
A tentative date of June 26 The hostesses, Mrs. Eugene
and 'll has been set for the open Eskew, Mrs. James Daniels,
house of the new wing of the Mrs. Charles Karr, with Myla
hospital. On the 26th there will Hudson a contributing hostess,
be a private showing, 2 to 5 served refreshments to Mrs.
p.m., and on the 27th for the Parker, Mrs. Nelson, Mrs.
Halliday, Mrs. Massar, Mrs.
public at 1 to 5 p.m.
Auxiliary ladies will be the Hayes, Mrs. Rowan, Mrs.
hostesses to serve refr esh- Bearhs, Mrs. Fox, Mrs. Ada
ments. All are to wear their Slack, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Alex Wheeler , Sandra Jones,
uniforms and white sh~.
Mrs
. Robert Tucker , Mrs.
It was announced that the
Candystripers are in need of George White, Mrs. Ernest
new members due lo the loss of Molden, Mrs . Sibley Slack, Mrs.
30 by graduation. It was also Ray Pickens, Sr. and a guest,
of
stated that they have five new Mrs . Glenn Wolfe,
recruits to date and that Becky Washington, D. c.
Wright has been elected their
new president.
Children under eight years of
A'ITEND CONVENTION
age receive television free when
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Reed,
they are patients, it was noted. Jr., Mr. and Mrs. N. W. CampThe Women's Auxiliary of ton, and the Rev . and Mrs.
Feeney Bennett Legion Post Stanley Plattenburg, Grace
donated $25 und the junior Episcopal Church, attended the
· Auxiliary $10 to purchase toys annual convention of the
for tbe children's ward. These ' Episcopal Church of the
are given, one to each child Diocese of Southern Ohio
patient, for them to take home Friday and Saturday at Christ
with ~m. .
.
Church in [)ayiA:m. '
Mrs. -searhs pre~entkd so.
·'
·
hour patches to Mrs. Kenneth
First Passage
Searles and Mrs. Ray Fox. Pins
First ship passage through
were given to Mrs . Harold the Golden Gate was in 1775.
San Carlos, a packet of
Massar, 1,000 hours; Mrs. R . K. The
. h r o y a 1 navy
t he Spams
Rowan, 500 hours, and to Mrs. passed through the channel
Arnold Hayes , Mrs . John to enter San Francisco Bay
Halliday, and Mrs . Dana from the Pacific Ocean.

DICK OWEN, Sara Owen, Pat Holter and Roy Holter,

RUSS MOORE, Hope Moore, Neacll Clrsey and Jacil
Carsey, I to r, second place winners.

~0~e~ol Jo~n h:~ ~~;loc:on:~:~ ~~~Lliary Tuesday

r ..

_

Auxiliary Plans
New Wing Tour

Dropped Today

m
·

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.

•

Wesley Karr, Mary Joyce
Kautz, Richard Liter, Steven 0.
Mays, Robyn Marlene Mills,
Rhea Jeannette Mora, Daryl
William Pooler, Mary Upton
Robinson, Julie Arlene Rose,
Cathy Sue Smith, David Grove
Smith, Timmy Lee Smith,
Charles J . Stearns, Belinda G.
Steele, Rebecca Jo Steele,
Terry Michael Stethem,
Margaret Suzanne Teaford,
Ruthie Marie Walker, Paula
Eileen Watkins, Ray Watson,
Frances M. Wells, Jean Denise
Whitehead, Deborah Kay Wood,
James R. Young.

tlle Haven Homemakers are witll two residents of the Meigs
County Infinnai'y who received trays of gifts and goodies
made recently by the club. The group met at the home of
Mrs. David Zirkle, Middleport, to prepare the trays of fruit,
candy, licarves, and hose for the patients, and then took them
to the Infirmary. Delivering the trays to the patients were
Mrs. Wllllam Fields, Mrs. Jesse Maynard, Mrs. Jim W'1se,
Mrs. Lewis Johnson, Mrs. Sadie Warth, Mrs. Russell
Maynard and Mrs, Zirkle,

terri Robson; boys, Keith
Kline, Steven Randolph, and,
Gary Zeigler. .
Softball throw: third and
fourth grade boys, David Blake,
Bobby Haggy, and Randy
Randolph; fifth and sixth boys,
and second grader s, l.aura Keith Kline, Dale · Browning,
Smith and Teresa Dorst, tie for and Tim Scites; fifth and sixth
second, Jena Welker and Linda girls , Emmogene Blevins,
Williams and Kathleen Parker Vicky Branham, and Denise
and Kathryn Chaney; Carol Marshall.
Morris and Kathy Sheet;;; third Winners in events for pre·
and fourth graders, Shirley schoolers were Mike Kennedy,
Landacre a nd Eliwbeth Jacki e Welker, and Chuck
Ble\1ns. Christy Evans and Jan Blake, forty yard dssh; and
Burson. and Carla Whaley and Priscilla Herdman, Sherri
Mari hall and Becky Arnott,
1~na RandolPh; fifth and sixti&gt;
graders, Peggi Ai rson an d girls dash.
Helen King, Laura Russell and
Kathleen Ney, and Nancy
Stanley and Diane Sn1ith.
Forty yard dash: first and
second grad e gi rls, .Joyce
Baker. Carol Morris, and
Cllmille Swindell; boys, Steve
Ohlinger , Mark Friend, and
Brian King; third and fourth
b'&gt;'a ders, Bobby Haggy, , Bobby
Seelig , William Collins; girls.
Debbie Russell, Yvonne Score,
and Nancy SmiU1.
SiKty yard dash: fifth and
sixth grade girls, Emmogenef
Blevins, Tammy Blake and

Timmy Herdman u.nd Fred
Ney; fifth and sixth boys, Rick
Johnson and Steven Randolph,
Charles Ney and Keith Kline,
and Tim Scites and Dale
Browning.
Three legged ra ce , girls: first

Eighth Birthday
'

Is Celebrated

...

..

..

";'
~

w

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Fine Selection of Name Brands
Your First Long Weekend Is Coming Up

FOR HIM

FOR HER
Swimwear and
Sportswear by Catalina

Swimwear by Puritan
and Rugby .

Blouses by Shapely
and Catalina

Banlon &amp; Knit Shirts
by Puritan and Jockey

Skirts and Slacks by
Catalina and Jantzen

Slacks by Hubbard

Dresses and Pants Suits
by Berkshire, HobNober and Parkshire

Jackets by Puritan
and Rugby ·

Girdles and Bras by
.Flexnit
Hosiery by- Mojud

Sport Coats by Curlee
and Warren Sewell

. Luggage by Samsonite
and Airway
.•

'

Levi's Permanent Press
.Sl&gt;ortswear and Denims

I

.. /

t
You11 be alive to ·pay the fine.
Congratulations.
Congratu lations lor a traffic ticket?
Think about il.
A traffic ticket may cost a few dollars. An accident
could cost mare. Far more than money. Trafltc acci-

dents Look the lives of more than 56.000 Americans
last year.

BAMR tLOTHIERS

Because carelul dnv1ng ts the be st way

dents. Or lickels.
And remember. the ofhcet who
writes ou t the ticket is only try tng. to
make the road sater. For everybody.
So. if you gel a tlckel , don·t feel bad,

\:ijjl~
'
. I' •
,.,..

.

~

' :•.,e

:

11,.,••• ••

National Automobile ,[)ealers Assooii!tioo
( 1!1 ,!

1~1 01 ~ "'" o J,~~ Ji l

II&gt; tl r&lt; ·l ,, ' 11• •"1

~· • • •I ~~ ~ • '

I'

1

I

' ' •'•

iJ

' •~·•..,1ft~ Jf \

Oneln a series present~d by N.A, D. A.• T~e Daily Sentinel and Tho ,Tri-Counly Auto Dealer• •moe.
I

'

I

"•

You m&lt;ghl evon be yratelul ,

As 'new car dealers, we 'r·e cOncerned w (th cars . As

. members ollhe community, we're concerned about
people. We'd like all drivers lo be 'Carelul drivers.

to a\told acct·
. ,,••,,,1~

'

.

�•

•
. :.

:

'•

More

Bargains, Bargains,
LEGAL NOTICE

2

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
HIGHWAYS

OF
QUALI"

Columbus, Ohio,
May H, 1971
Contract Sates Legal

copy No. 71-341

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Seated proposals will be
receiv ed at the office of th e
State H ighway Director of Ohio ,
Columbus, Oh10, until 10 00
AM .• Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, T~esday. June 8, 1971 , for
improvements m:

Par11

Meigs county, Ohio on MEG 124 - (24 10-29 .44). State Route
124 and Roadside Rest , in Sutton
Township and in the Villages of
Syracuse and Racine, by
resurfacing with asphalt con -

Pomeroy
Motor Co.
$1695

Impala Cpe .• V-8 engine, automatic trans., lo_
cal .1 ow~er
ca r . good w·w tires, radio. blue finish &amp; match1ng mtenor.

1968 OLDSMOBILE

$1895

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, v.a engine, automatic trans., p.
steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, radio , white over turq .
finish , good t ir es. Loca l 1 owner car
1968 CHEVY II
.
$1565
Nova-2 Or., 1 owner car, clean interior , like new w_·w t1re~ ,
white finish. 6 cyl. engine, automatic trans . Rad 1o. See 1t

loday .

News, Event
Mrs. Edith Lyons who ,was
injured in an automobile accident on Mother's Day has
transferred
from
been
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens to University Hospital,
Columbus, for further tests and
treatment for injuries.
Several members of Temple
Church WSCS, along with other
guests, joined members of the
Carpenter Baptist Church Busy
Bee Society for a family night at
the church. Wayne Turner,
Rutland, showed slides and
gave an interesting resume of
his trip to the Holy Land,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
attended dedication services of
the new Laurel Cliff United
Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J . Spurlock,
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan and Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thor Crabtree were dinner
guests at the home of Mr. and
· Mrs. Reed Jeffers on Sunday.
Murl Galaway accompanied
Roxie Arbaugh to a meeting of
the Knox Home Demonstration
group at the home of Mrs.
Nancy Martin, Prattsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Gregory
and Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Gregory
Jr. and daughter cailed on Mrs.
Goldie Gillogly on Sunday af ·
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan,
Bryan and Keith, local, and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree,
McArthur, attended the Grand
Ole Opry in Nashville, Tenn., on
'Saturday evening and toured
Mammoth Cave in Kentucky
enroute home on Sunday.
Columbia Grange No. 243:&gt;
were guests and held their May
meeting with Harrisonville
Grange. The literary program
was in memory of those who
have helped in guiding us and
are now gone. Special readings,
a contest, and a song were
given: Degree Day in June was
discussed. All granges in Meigs
County will be asked to par·
ticipate. A potluck supper was
enjoyed during the social hour.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
Rutland, called on Murl
Galaway on Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were recent guests of their son·
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jones in Nelson·
ville and Mrs . Jones accompanied them to Columbus
where they visited their son.Jn.
law, Roy Wiseman, who was a
patient at Riverside Methodist
HospitaL Mr. Wiseman has now
returned to his home at
Harrisonville.
Bert Christian has been
released from the armed forces
and he and Mrs. Christian
(Sharon Cox) have purchased
the property on State Route 143
formerly owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Stacy.
The WSCS of the Temple
Church met at the church with
Mrs. Carl Crabtree, president,
in charge. The group made
plans to meet with Mrs. Howard
Stanley In Belpre in July. Mrs.
Mendal Jordan gave devotion.•
using the theme, Follow Hi111,
He Answers Prayer.

'61 CHEV ., '!z.loo pick up wilh 6
tires

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellalloo &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

Notice
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service;

$50

registered
mares, any breed; $40 grade
mares . Francis Benedum .

Phone Coolville 667-3856.
5·16·301p

Phone 985·3920.

5-21 -31c

BEAUTIFUL Colonial early
Ameri ca n
c:IPrPo - rt~dio
combina tion , AM·FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4·
spee d automatic changer.
Balance $79 . 12. Use our

The Publisher reserves the

PLANTS FOR SALE. Home
grown Improved Mexican
tomato plants, large smooth,
non.acid. Also, Heinz 1350,

Yellow Go lden Jubilee and
Large Supersonic. They are

sturdy, well rooted plants.
and cabbage plants. On Rt.

124 in Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feet
above the park. Thomas
Haynian .

5-2-JOtc

years old, black and brown, 70
pounds. Chain col lar. Vicinity

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per wo~&lt;&gt; · three

con~ecutlve

Insertions.
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

5-9·11C

r-

Mar· 30

at

Racine

Fire

Sta ion . Homemade ice
cream and baked goods .
Serving from 12 noon on .

5·19-9tc
KOSCOT Kosmetics, wigs and
accessories. May and June
special. Kleansing Kream ,

$2 .25. Dlstrlbulors. Brown's.
Phone 992·5113 .
4-23-ltc
-:-S_
A_V_E_U
_ P_I_o_on
_e_h_a_ll_.-=Bring
your sick TV tcr Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
4_23 .1fc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
Ches ter. Ohio, has flowers for
Memorial Day, SSe and up.
Also nice baskets.

5-12·121c
--------HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
5·9-301p

------

REDUCE sale and fast with
Gobese tablets and E· Vap
waler pills . Nelson Drugs .
4·14·601p

REGISTERED

Tennessee

walker
stud
se r vice .
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone

742·5862.
4·20-30ic

-------

OVEN FRESH bakery pro·
ducts . Jimmy's Paslry Shop,
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
Phone 992-3555.
4·29-301c

Wanted To Buy
TELEPHONES, brass beds ,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
etc. Wri le M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
4-27·1fC
,--------ANTIQUES :
Dishes ,
lelephones, lin. brass beds,
lamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
Phone 992·3403.
4-23-3otp

Carmel News,

By the Day

W~AT'S

W~EN I ASt&lt;ED
~ROF WMAT MV MARK

W~ONG,

SiiARK

WOULD BE ...

~

YE$,1\JE'

!'M "THE 0\IJN ol: !
PIP YOU ,AS!( To

HAD 'TWO

M15€~1l8LI: O.EAM~D

OIICf(~l.l DtOINE!tS MJP 0()~

se. M~?

Bll~ 6 ~1 I HoW DO YCIJ
STA'l' IN BUSINeSS ?

Evenings Call992-2534, Dale Dutton

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service
.
·--·

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

~

.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Real Estate For Sale
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bollom,
with
or
without fBrm
machinery . House with 3
bedrooms, dining room, living
room , 1112 baths, enclosed

back porch, wall to wall

ca rpeting. Aluminum siding,
awning , stor m windows and
storm doors. City wafer.

Selling due lo ill health. Phone
614·985·3938.
5·18·301p

Alexander school district.

inlervie~,

'i(WINSOR
-tiBUDDY

.j,-CHAMPION
-j{VAN DYKE

LANCELOT

i!ALSO
DQUBLE • WIDES

.
'METHOD"

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
1

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Artificial Flowers

JOHNSON MASONRY

Single Flowers
Arrangements

Cemetery

Flowers

Complete
Remoaeling

&amp;

Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

VILLAGE

Open 9 TIIS
Thurs.. Fri. . Sat.
Or Phone 949·2223

RACINE, 0.

742-4902
Air Conditioning
Inspection and
Re-Charge

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you

Special
At

The
Daily Sentinel

Those calling at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and family a(ld Betty
VanMeter during the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Randolph, Rock Springs; Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Johnson,
Racine ; Mrs. Max Manual Jr.,
East Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Byers,
Forrest Run ; Mrs.
Roger Manual, · Mrs . Gary
Wilford , Junior Johnson,
daughter Brenda, and William
Carleton, all of Racine, and
Ralph Lee, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris,
Springfield, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle, Vernie, Wavie and other
relatives.
Mr . ""d l'r:rs . .Shelby Pickens
and family of Syracuse spent
nice lots for mobile homes,
~unday with Mr. and Mrs. Allan Auto Sales
$4,000.00
REGISTERED quarter stud
Taylor.
service, Hanks Rock, 209498.
1962 CHEVY II. mechan ically
ACRES
five
room
home,
.
Contact Mike Jones, Rl. 3,
Rev. L. L. Roush of Gallipolis
sound. Good body, new palnl .
balh,
gas
h.eal.
·
Good
spring
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
Good tires, Eugene Young,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
1
water.
Garage,
small
barn
.
6880.
12' • 14' • 24 • WIDE
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
Robert Lee and family and
All minerals with producing
5·24-61c
742·3043.
oil ancl gas well. FREE GAS.
Ralph Lee.
s.23 ·3tp
New listing , $10,500.00
The Commonwealth of
Mr. and .Mrs. George Circle
Puerto Rico is represe'rited and family; Mr. and Mrs. 1964 PONTIAC, $350 ; 1962 Ford,
GIT 'lllllllll WIDil
•BUY ONE NOW
in 'the U.S. House of ·Repre·
S150. ~hone 742·5361 or may
99l · 3325
sentatives by a resident com· James Circle of New Haven, W.
be seen al Giles Smith
1220 Wuhtngton Blvd.
HELEN
L. TEAFORD
residence in Rulland .
Belpre, Ohio
ml$sioner In Washington who Va., were at the home of Mary
Assocl•te
'
Circle !JII Sunday.
h•• a voice but no vote.
. 5·21·61c
5·23-~lc ,. .'1'11--~~~~~~L,•

Virgil B._
TEAFORD
SR.

'8

MILLER

WintAd

,.....,__

p~~~RTH'

-

Pomeroy,

&amp;

,,,,_,.,,_ ...
""""'"'~·-

JVINNIE WINKLE

BUGS BUNNY

OLD WORK

YA FUPPSY! TH ' PRICE 15

RIGHT AN' IT GOES WITH
- - - - , YER EYES! .-~

LIKE HOT CAKES!

I

OH-OH! HERE
COMES TH'
LAW, AN' ME
WITH NO
CITY
LICENSE!

THIS TIE'S A G_,EAT BUY FEt:1

WINNI~-" l}Jf5E HOT
PANT.:;~ WILL $ELL

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

LE'S STEP AROUND Tl.f'
COF!NEI&lt; INTO Tl.fl$ A~l-~"
1TIL. YA MAKES UP ,.,~_,
MINI'!

r---,

6.98

delivered

to

l'_our

project. Fast and easy . Free
esti males . Phone 992· 3284.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
,
6·30-lfc
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial. residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 247.
2113.
. 3·12:tfC

ADTOMOBILE Insurance- been
cancelled?
Lost
-your
operator's license? Call 992-

2966.

6·15-ttc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No . 20,485
Estate of Charles Earle
Humphrey Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that
May Hunter Humphrey, of
Reedsville, Meigs County, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
Charles Earle Humphrey,
creceased , late of Reedsvllle,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditor s are receuired to file
their claims with sa ld fiduciary
within four months.
Deted this 4th day of May

( 5)

742-4902
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
HIGHWAYS

THE ·BORN LOSER

Colum.,us, Ohio, May 7, 1971
contrac1 Sales. Legal

Insurance

1971.

... IFI~MV
MOvE IN THE
OTHER OIRSCTION(

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

CONCRETE
right

Experlenced
Work Guaranteed

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Plus
Parts

PHONE 992·2143

READY.MIX

1nsured-

JOHNSON MASONRY

Blaettnar's

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said Countv
10,
11,
24 ,
3tc

Copy No. 71 ·303
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
F-479·(20)

Sea l ed proposal.s will be
received at the office Of the
State Highway Director of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 :00
AM ., Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, Tuesday, June 8, 1971, for
improvemflnts in :
Meigs County, Ohio, on
Sec tion MEG -7-6. 15, State Route
No.7 in Sal lsbury Townsh ip, by
grading , drain ing end paving
with plain Portland cement
concre te one cement stabilized
base, and by constructing :
Bridge No . MEG -7·0113 Left and
Right, dual concrete decks on
continuous steel beams with
concrete substructures (each :
spa ns 64 teet - 82 feet - 82 feet
- 64 feet, roadway 40 feet
between deflector para pets ),
over Stete Route 124 ; Bridge

LET TAMARA ENTERTAIN I'JELl···MAYBE
YIJtJ FOR A CH ANGE!
tl 'LL GET MY
ii'fRE, PUT Ori MY
MIND OFF
TUTU ANP I SHALL /"IJADDY" FOR A
SHr:JII '(()() HOW
WH ILE!
10 BE A BALLET
DAMCER!

£ltN1~

t~ VERY
PERTURBED

1lY "OODDY'

SEE.'" WE

COULD BE
1 WifiS~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No. 20491

Eslate ol DON C. GORBY ,

Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Coosie Gorbv, of R. o. 1,
Langsville, Ohio, has been duly
appo inted Executri)( Ef1 the
Estate of Don c . 1.1.0rby,
deceased, late of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their
claims
with
said
fidudicary with in four months.
Dated this Sth day of May

1971.

F. H. O' Brien
Prqbate Judge
of said County

(5) 10, 17, 24, 3tc
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Proba1e Court.
To the Executor of the estate;
to such of the following as are
residents of the Stele of Ohio,
v is. - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will ; and to the at .
torn ey
or
attorneys
representing tiny of the
aforem ent loned persons :
William
A.
Carman.
Deceased, No . 20,.601 Pomeroy
Ohio , R. 0 . Salisbury Township .
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned , deceased, late
of sale County, was filed In this
Court Seld Inventory and
Appraisement wilt be for
hearing before this Court on the

3rd day of June, 1971, at 10:00

o'clock A.M .
· Any person desiring to file
e)(ceptions 1hereto must tile
them at teast five days ptlor to .
the date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
sear of said Court, this 14th diY

Of May 1971.

~- H.

ACROSS
1. Art style

' DICK TRACY

dual concrete decks on con .
tinuous steel beams with con .
cre te substr uctures (ea ch :
spans 36 feet - 45 feet 36 feet , roadwav 40 feet between
deflector parapets), over
County Road 77 ; and Bridge No .

r,. Follower of
WITH THIS

POUCH,

DI,AMOND CARGO?

Clerk of sold Court
By Ann B. Wat10n

Clerk
(5) 17,2•• 21c

Genghis

dual concrete docks on con .
tinuous steel beams with con .
crete substructures (eech :
spans 46 feet - 65 feet - 65 feet
- 46 feet, roadway 40 teet
between deflector parapets ),
over State Route 7.
Pavement Width - 2 at 24
feet .
Project Length - 14,650.52
feet or 2.77~ mil es .
Work Length - 23.248.94 feet
·
or 4.403 miles .
"Minimum wage rates for
have
been
this project
predetermi':'ed as required by
law and are set forth In the bid
proposal ."
" The date set for compt~tion
Of this work shall be set forth In
the bidding proposal."
Each bidder shall be required
to file with his bid a certified
check for an amount equat to
five per cent of his bid, but In no
event more then ten thousand
dollars, or a bond for ten per
cent of his bid, payable to the
· Director .
Bidders m,ust apply, on the
proper forms , for qualification
at least ten days prior io the
date set for opening bids in'
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specifications are
on file in the Department of
Highwavs and the Office of th e
Division Deputv Director .
'The Director reserves the
right to reject anv and all bids .

40. Complete
U . Hamlet

wnsone

42. Whirled

14. One of the
Gorgon$
15. Noah's
youngest

son
16. For each
17. - - dem er
18. Shade tree

19. HelghL
(abbr.\
20."- -

I'OCTOR DUI'GEON '5

FIRST CONTACT wmo
PUTTAL!M, THE LAVl"

1'111!.\f MINISTER OF
SERENI'IP, RESULTS

INAN IMMEDIATE
CONFLICT OF WillS.

CAPTAIN EASY

RIGif\ COlONEL

lEE . MY REoiME DEPfND5 ON
THE liBERATOR'S SURVIVAL,
II TAll&lt;"'
l MUST ENDURE YOUR IN·
?UFFERAI!Lt PHYSICIAN ...

i MAT ANCIENT

23. Trust

24. Well·

NOl lHE li~INo

J.J&amp;WOO~®IJ..J ~cud'd -.J ,.-

mon
by

l&gt;v Ill N f ll AllNOLD . u H! IlOII t I I

DOWN
'voice
1. Code .signals 22.1n·
2. Dismay
cline,
3. Baton
twirler
the
{2 wds.)
head

Un•cramble these fourJumbleo,

one letter to each

Rhine
tributary
5. With
meekness
4.

6. Ward off
7. Mao's --

23. Lcgcn·

T/IAP

Bel·
qull

30. Arach-

nld

corn·
par.don

32. That place
38. Se88lne
plant
39. CommoUon

27. Small

r2wds.)

to

lowed
29. Tran·

bird
25. Afford
26. Tot·
ter's

Guards

bird

28.

dary

8. Sonorous

~quare,

form four ordinary words.

••

valley

;;-t-+-t-t-+-i

English
FOOL ! IF ME WEfre.

(@} 1971 King Features Syndicate, lnc,)

estate

and the
Pendulum''
21 . ltslng poor
'!Oti~E QUITE

GREENE.

16. Sum-

(slang)

goad

PHILLIP RICHLEY
DI.RECTOR
(S) 17, 24, 2tc

I

_.l
'

TJEWPOR

known GI

25. Fortune
26. Trampled
28. Jntera

I

mission

-1-+-i

:n. Word with

f-t+

drum or
trumpet
32. Sutftx for
simple
or glut
33. Necktie
fabric
34. Early snake
charmer
35. owned
36: Indian title
il7. Nervc.us

I

o o
tSU'C!
·

/..1 ~ ·"

I [t

I

t.
"j

~

WH.II.T TO ro WHEN
YOU FEEL. OUT
OF 5PIRITS.
Now IUTIII1It the cln:led letters

to form tho ourprile IUIIWtr, U
IUiftlted by tho above Cli'IOOR.

~I~Prii~.,~-~IISl~IIISWII~~-~.:1 ( II I I I I J
(AMwen lomorrow)

Jumble" SCAIIf IUIST LIMPID HAZING

1tJ 5TAAT EACH NEW
WITH A SMILE ON M'1 LIPS ...

laugh

39 Filled with
re\·erencc

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR

We.talk to JOU

to

work It: ,_......,...,

1------\~

!!_:;::~====::~~~

I• L&gt;· 0~tnNnd.s
G .for
F F.aqother.
L J, 0 W
One letter simp!:'
In this sample A is ,.
used for the three L'~. X fot· the two O's. etc. Single lettera,
·a postrophe ~. the lPngth 1\nd fOI' Ill~tion or the words arc · l\11
hint~ . Ea.ch day the cOde )('tters arf' rliffcre-nt.

like a permn.

A ('r.}·ptogram

WMP0/1390

8•turda)''o Oryptoquole: THERE ARE TIMES WE SHOULD
TURN THE OTHER CHEEK BUT THERE ARE LIKIIlWISE
TIMES WE MUST FIGHT THE 'GOOD FIGHT. - WARD

9. Attack
10. Real

43 . Heavy blow

Khan
11. - -

Harbor.
Guam
12. Unwilling
13. Urge on;

O' Brien

Judge and ex -officio

BlACK WHEMSOMEBODY
WAS LOOKitf A1 US!

DAILY CROSSWORD

No. MEG .7.0762 Left and Righi ,

J.

SURf"' IF-IT WAS PITCH

WARBUCK'S
MYSTERIOUS
!IKGERJ!IG
lLLHESS ···

MEG ·33-0955 Left and Right,

Sheets

20$

DEATH!!

DEXTER , 0 . 4S726
PHONE 742·3945

For Your Garments

Aluminum

Ph. 992-2143

0' AN'ffi.liNG
WOPSETHAN

DFWTHER
DIE!!

. BLAETTNARS

NEW

Have Your Seasonal

For Sale

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer RadlatQr to the
~mallest Heater Core.

NO SENSE
lf.IFOORIATii'J'
TH' Si&lt;Di'JKS NO.
MORE!!THJ;:Y'S

EVEN '/0'
CAIN'T THINK

'

FREE STORAGE

Cleland Realty

TO "10'
FILTH'/
eEASTS?
-AH

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Wolil
Spouting, Roof
Painting

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

FLOWER SHOP··

-ElUTYO'
1-\Ali'J'T GITTIN'
'/ORE DRUTH~S..

TEACH MAH

,i EE TOM CROW, GUY S!f(ILER OR BOB CROW

gel them back.
Phone Albany 669·4851 after 3 FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
call 512·244·3071, or wnle 50X10 RICHARDSON mobile
p.m. or write Lavern Jordan ,
School Salely Division. Ad·
home, 2 bedroom , with air
DELIVERY SERVICE
Rl . 3, Albany, Ohi o.
vance Systems, Inc., 1100
cond11ion1ng. Ca ll 992-5867.
CALL
773·5543.
5·18·6fc
Enoch Dr ive, Middletown,
5 18-61c
Please! No Free Storing on
Ohio 45042.
HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey in. Bulk Cleaning.
5-24·21c
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
Bashan . If interested, contact
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths,
by teller at lhis address : Mrs.
ABC CLEANERS
sprays,
baskets.
ArHelp Wanted
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St.,
rangements, 69c and up.
No., 51. Pelersburg, Florida 71J.5543
Mason, W. Va .
- . SECURITY GUARD
4-2B·30tc
33714.
NEED full time security guards
5·2-JOic
in lhe Galllpolls -Cheshiro
FOR
BETTER
cleaning,
to
area . Insurance and pald
BULLDOZER work. Basement,
keep colors gleaming, use
vacation. All equipment
ponds, landsca ping . We do all
3
BEDROOM
home.
Svracuse.
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner.
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
furnished by employer. Must
Hardwood
floors,
14x24
Rent electric shampooer. Sl.
be 21, physically sound and
dirt and lop soil . See or call
garage , well' insulated,
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
free of criminal record .
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
carport. Lol 48 x 152. Phone
5·19.61c
Applicants will be in ·
Phone
992·3525.
992·5165.
terviewed at the William Ann
4·23·30ic
5·18-61p
Motel , Wednesday May 26 and FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
Thursday May 27 from 8 a .m.
- won't rust, rot , or leak. Call HOUSE, slory and half, 6 EXPERT TREE service. Call
lo 5 p.m. An Equal Op·
collect after 5 p.m ., Richard
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
room s, bath, Rulland . Phone
portunity Employer .
Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
742·5613
5·24-31p
5·19·301p
5-16-30tc
5·12-lfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
LICENSED practiCal nurse, BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446·4782
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327.
Syracuse Nur sing Home .
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
5-4-3Q
Apply in person.
Owner &amp; Operator.
POMEROY - 3.33 acres,
s.t9·61c
5·13-tfc
THREE consecutive lots in
CLOSE IN AND LEVEL, 3
Beech Grove Cemetery, Nos.
bed rooms, bath, utility room , GENERAL remodeling, car·
EARN AT home addressing
9·10·11
in
row
fi
ve.
Contact
R.
has building 20x100 and a two
envelopes. Rush stamped
pantry, roofing, paintlnQ, etc.
C.
)on~s. 35 Riverside Dr .,
slory
building 28x32 GREAT
self-addressed envelope to the
Phone 992-7729 between 9 a.m.
Day iOrt~Ohlo 45405.
AT JUST $15,960.
Ambrose Company , 4325
to 6 p.m.
5-2J.61c
Lakeborn, Dav is burg ,
5-18-61c
POMEROY - l story brick,
Michigan, 48019.
_A_C_K_H_O_E_A
_N
_D
_ D_O_Z_E_R-work.
BEAUTIFUL buill-in kilchen, _B
4-30-30tp USED Ferguson 20 tractor,
$700. New 4 II. rolary, $240, 5
3 large bedrooms with double
Septic lanks installed. George
fl rolary, $260; 6 fl . 6 in . pick close Is, bath, ulilily room, full
IMMEDIATE open ing full or
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
up disc, $225. 6 fl. grader
basement with recreation
partlime, train while earning.
4·25·tiC
blade, $80. Ermel Luckell,
room, carpeted and liled.
No obligations or deposits.
Albany . Phone 698-3032.
THIS YOU MUS J SEE.
Phone 992·3211 between 9 a.m.
NEIGLER Construction. For
$27,500.
5·23-21c
and 4 p.m .
building or remodeling your
5-21 31c ONE SPRAYER, used 1 yea r. FINANCIAL INDEPEN·
home, Call Guy Nelgler ,
Racine, Ohio.
DENCE
More peo·
Ltke new . Fiberlined drum .
7.JJ.tfc
pie have started on the
Phone 992-6214.
For Rent
5·2J.61p
road io lhis goal by home
UNFURN ISHED 3 . rocm
CARPET
ownership
than by any other RALPH'S
apartmenl. Phone 992-2288.
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
way
.
SEE
US
TODAY.
l-31 -lfc
Free
estimates .
Phone
HENRY CLELAND
~--::------·
Gallipolis
446·0294.
REALTOR
HOUSE, 1634 Lincoln Hgts. ,
3·12·1fc
Office
992·2259
36" X 23" X .009
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·3575
Residence 992·2568
after 5:30 p.m.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5-23·61c
5-23·tlc
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
24 ACRE FARM. Long Bottom ,
BUILDING 50 x 50 x 24 fool
Racine, Ohio
with
or
without farm
high . See Di ck Seyler, Modern
Crllt
Bradford
machinery . House with 3
Chemicals. Phone 992-2798.
USED OFFSET PLATES
5·1-lfc
bedrooms, dining room , living
5·21 -3tc
HAVE
room, 1112 baths, enclosed
MANY USES
back porch, wall to wall EXPERT lawn mower and
2 BEDROOM !rai ler. Utilities ·
Iiiier repair. Free pickup and
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
paid . Phone 992·7384 or 992.
delivery.
Warren's Mower
awning, storm windows and
7133.
Shop.
248
Condor Sl. Phone
stor m doors . City water .
521 ·31p
992-7357.
8
for
51.00
Selling
due
lo
ill
health
.
Phone
----5·18·tfc
614-985·3938.
NICE 8X35 TRAILER with
s.t8.3otp O'DELL WHEEL alignment
lipout
extension.
One
located al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
bedroom, air conditioner .
5
ROOMS
and
bath.
Furnished
Complete
front end service,
Phone 992·6452.
or
unfurnished
.
Call
992·3792
tune
up
and
brake service.
5-16-lfc
or 304·882 ·2138.
Wheels balanced elec·
5-23.3tp
Ironically .
All
work
111 Court St.
~----TRAILER SPACE on old Rt .33.
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
Pomeroy, Ohio
rates. Phone 992·3213.
'lz-mile north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992.2941 .
4·22 ·301c
3·5·1fc
TWIN
NEEDLE
Sewing
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
:F...U-::R-N-IS:-H
...E
: -D
: -a_n_d _u_n...
fu-rn- lshed
Machine 1971 Model in new
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
walnut stand. All features
apartments . Close to school.
992-2522.
buil
t
in
to
make
fancy
Phone 992·5434.
6·11l·tfc
designs. Also bullonholes ,
10·1 8·11c
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
Broker
price or terms available.
SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
110
Mechanic
St.
Phone
992·5641.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
Co.url , Rl. 124, Syracuse,
Pomeroy, Ohio
662·3035.
5·18·6fc
Ohio. 992·2951.
2·12·tfc
4·2·1fC VACUUM CLEANER, Electro 20 ACRES - -7 room home,
bath , furnace, basement.
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Moblje home lot. Chester SEWING MACHINES. Repair
2 BEDROOM mobile home air
has all cleaning attachments
water . All minerals. Only
service, all makes. 992·2284
conditioning . Racine area .
plus Ihe new Electro Suds for
$6,000.00
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Phone 992-6329.
shampooing carpel. Only
Authorized Singer Sales and
5-18.61c $27.50 cash price or . terms POMEROY - Nice 8 room
Service. We Shar-pen Scissors.
available. Phone 992·5641.
home, balh, furnace, porch
3·29·tfC
5-18.6tc
1
and
garage.
6
acres
and
2nd
For Sale or Trade
house, rented. Only $18,000.00 EXPERIENCED pal.nter,
STUD pony . Phone 742·4691.
exterior on~ Interior . Donald
POMEROY - 6 room frame
5-J9.6tc
Van Meter, 985·3951.
' house. oul of high water. 2
s.11 .12tp

MOBILE HOMES

ANDms

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

POMEROY
J. W. Carsey,Mgr
Phone 992-2181

cousiN

- --y-

01:
I
ORVILLE

-·- ··

Come See Us At97111 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992·7129

CALL GEORGE 985·3837
OR DON 992-6883

.

of Point Rock, Meigs County, 3 BEDROOM trail er, phone
on May 8. Reward. Call
Mason 773·5688 after 4 p.m. 3 BEDROOM brick hom e.
Albany 698-4803 after 6 p.m. or
5-23-6tp · Choice location in Middleport.
Alhens 594-6918 days. Ask for
Seen by appoi ntment only.
Bill Morgan.
1969
RCA
Whirlpool
chest
Phone. 992-3491 after 4 p. m.
5-18-61c
freezer, 18 cu. ft., $135. Phone
5.7.tfc
992-6416.
5-23-3tp
SHuation Wanted
NEW · BRICK home on 'h-acre
lot in Tuppers Plains .
WILL DO babysitling in my HAMMOND organ. two full
Features built·in kitchen ,
home. , Contact Janet Mckeyboards, one full octave
wall
to wall carpet, bath and a
Daniel, 368 E. Main Sl.,
base pedals. Would make a
half. full basement . Call
nice organ for a small church.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Chesler 985·3598.
5-18·61c
Phone 992-6602 .
5·5·30tc
5·23·3tc

application and

CHICKEN barbecue, Sunda y,

Free Estimates

, Sale Prices Thru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
271.95
ECONOMY Tl LLERS
As Low As
134.95

Instruction
OFFICE HOURS
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln Hts .,'
BEAUTIFUL selection of
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Pomeroy. Phone 992.2293.
INSTRUCTIONAL
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
8:30 a.m. lo 12 : 00 Noon LOCAL MEN . Train now to
10·25-tfc
.and sprays for Memorial Day.
Saturday.
drive semi tractor trailers .
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport. ··MODERN coun try home, 6.2
You can earn high wages
4.2 t.tfc
acres , plenty of water,
after short training . For
Notice

Beds

Everyone Can!

V0U

(~~A
~ICKI

I.S

..

You will have something ol value to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
come Tax benefit, you build an equity ~nd you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loan$.

Septic Tanks and Leach

OU CAN BUY AT LANOMARK

wuz. HeRe. --

Wi~H

TJ-\1~

RIDICULOUS!

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS- RECEIPTS! ! *

Limestqne Driveways

5-21-61c

Also, hot peppers. mangos

right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The Lost
publisher will not be responsible FEMALE German shepherd, 2·
for more than one Incorrect

237-4334, Columbus.

and overloads.

WHAT DO
IT SAV?

WHAR
IS GOOD

What Do You Have For The US You P•y In Rent?

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Dri ve, Colu mbus, Ohio, phone

992-7065.

5 cents per Word one insertion

'

For Sale

'' D~Re )NUFFY·-

..I..

.

Ed Hedrlck, 2137 Wadsworth

GLORY BE!!

ORI/iLLe"

·Business ·seri'ices

COAL. limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, , E. ·Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992.3891 .
sizes, all prices. Circle M
4-9-tfc
Stables, 10 miles north of
Athens, State Rt. 13 at SIX ROOM hOuse, bal. ,, lull
Millfield , Phone 725-2330.
basement, 133 Butternut Ave .,
5-20·121C
1usl walking distance from

HORSES . Over 100 head
registered and grade. All

speaker sound system, 4
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $64.89. Use
our time payment plan . Call

RICHLEY insertion .
DIRECTOR
RATES
(5 ) 24, (6)'1, 21c
For WQnt Ad Service

Carpenter

For Sale

Livestock For Sale

budgel lerms. Call 992-7085.
5 21-6tc
- -----WALNUT slereo co nsole , 4

" The date set for completion
of this work shall be·as set forth
m the bidding proposal."
Each bidder shall be reu iqre d
to me with his bid a certifie d

PlltHER POST CARD
IN TH' MAlllilOX

.

ply

Pavement Width - 18 feet
Project and work Length
29.832.0 teet or 5.65 m fles .

J . PHILLIP

PA1Jo1 !!'ie GOT A

downtown Pomeroy . Contact

1967 CHEVROLET

crete .

check tor an.:tmount equal to
ftve per cent cJ'f his bid , but in no
event more than ten thousand
dollars. or a bond for ten per
cent of his bid, payable to the
Director.
Bidders must apply, on the
proper torms, for qualif ica tion
at least ten davs prior to the
date set for opening bids in
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and spec ifi cat ions are
on file In the Department of
Highwevs and the OffirP nt thP
Division Deputy Director. The
Director reserves the right to
refect any and all b•dS .

IIARNiY

. ....

..

JFYYOCVRR
;

'

A K B

MVC·S

OR

Quol:~tlon

NOIV
O'S

R )." G FA

YVGQBLV

KC

K

S J V GR

TOSJKBS · H\"SSOCH RKLV )'C' AKBG'
RVNQ .,-'l'ONQVGX

F.

YVSVGRK C

'

�•

•
. :.

:

'•

More

Bargains, Bargains,
LEGAL NOTICE

2

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
HIGHWAYS

OF
QUALI"

Columbus, Ohio,
May H, 1971
Contract Sates Legal

copy No. 71-341

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Seated proposals will be
receiv ed at the office of th e
State H ighway Director of Ohio ,
Columbus, Oh10, until 10 00
AM .• Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, T~esday. June 8, 1971 , for
improvements m:

Par11

Meigs county, Ohio on MEG 124 - (24 10-29 .44). State Route
124 and Roadside Rest , in Sutton
Township and in the Villages of
Syracuse and Racine, by
resurfacing with asphalt con -

Pomeroy
Motor Co.
$1695

Impala Cpe .• V-8 engine, automatic trans., lo_
cal .1 ow~er
ca r . good w·w tires, radio. blue finish &amp; match1ng mtenor.

1968 OLDSMOBILE

$1895

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, v.a engine, automatic trans., p.
steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, radio , white over turq .
finish , good t ir es. Loca l 1 owner car
1968 CHEVY II
.
$1565
Nova-2 Or., 1 owner car, clean interior , like new w_·w t1re~ ,
white finish. 6 cyl. engine, automatic trans . Rad 1o. See 1t

loday .

News, Event
Mrs. Edith Lyons who ,was
injured in an automobile accident on Mother's Day has
transferred
from
been
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens to University Hospital,
Columbus, for further tests and
treatment for injuries.
Several members of Temple
Church WSCS, along with other
guests, joined members of the
Carpenter Baptist Church Busy
Bee Society for a family night at
the church. Wayne Turner,
Rutland, showed slides and
gave an interesting resume of
his trip to the Holy Land,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
attended dedication services of
the new Laurel Cliff United
Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J . Spurlock,
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan and Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thor Crabtree were dinner
guests at the home of Mr. and
· Mrs. Reed Jeffers on Sunday.
Murl Galaway accompanied
Roxie Arbaugh to a meeting of
the Knox Home Demonstration
group at the home of Mrs.
Nancy Martin, Prattsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Gregory
and Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Gregory
Jr. and daughter cailed on Mrs.
Goldie Gillogly on Sunday af ·
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan,
Bryan and Keith, local, and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree,
McArthur, attended the Grand
Ole Opry in Nashville, Tenn., on
'Saturday evening and toured
Mammoth Cave in Kentucky
enroute home on Sunday.
Columbia Grange No. 243:&gt;
were guests and held their May
meeting with Harrisonville
Grange. The literary program
was in memory of those who
have helped in guiding us and
are now gone. Special readings,
a contest, and a song were
given: Degree Day in June was
discussed. All granges in Meigs
County will be asked to par·
ticipate. A potluck supper was
enjoyed during the social hour.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
Rutland, called on Murl
Galaway on Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were recent guests of their son·
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jones in Nelson·
ville and Mrs . Jones accompanied them to Columbus
where they visited their son.Jn.
law, Roy Wiseman, who was a
patient at Riverside Methodist
HospitaL Mr. Wiseman has now
returned to his home at
Harrisonville.
Bert Christian has been
released from the armed forces
and he and Mrs. Christian
(Sharon Cox) have purchased
the property on State Route 143
formerly owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Stacy.
The WSCS of the Temple
Church met at the church with
Mrs. Carl Crabtree, president,
in charge. The group made
plans to meet with Mrs. Howard
Stanley In Belpre in July. Mrs.
Mendal Jordan gave devotion.•
using the theme, Follow Hi111,
He Answers Prayer.

'61 CHEV ., '!z.loo pick up wilh 6
tires

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellalloo &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

Notice
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service;

$50

registered
mares, any breed; $40 grade
mares . Francis Benedum .

Phone Coolville 667-3856.
5·16·301p

Phone 985·3920.

5-21 -31c

BEAUTIFUL Colonial early
Ameri ca n
c:IPrPo - rt~dio
combina tion , AM·FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4·
spee d automatic changer.
Balance $79 . 12. Use our

The Publisher reserves the

PLANTS FOR SALE. Home
grown Improved Mexican
tomato plants, large smooth,
non.acid. Also, Heinz 1350,

Yellow Go lden Jubilee and
Large Supersonic. They are

sturdy, well rooted plants.
and cabbage plants. On Rt.

124 in Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feet
above the park. Thomas
Haynian .

5-2-JOtc

years old, black and brown, 70
pounds. Chain col lar. Vicinity

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per wo~&lt;&gt; · three

con~ecutlve

Insertions.
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

5-9·11C

r-

Mar· 30

at

Racine

Fire

Sta ion . Homemade ice
cream and baked goods .
Serving from 12 noon on .

5·19-9tc
KOSCOT Kosmetics, wigs and
accessories. May and June
special. Kleansing Kream ,

$2 .25. Dlstrlbulors. Brown's.
Phone 992·5113 .
4-23-ltc
-:-S_
A_V_E_U
_ P_I_o_on
_e_h_a_ll_.-=Bring
your sick TV tcr Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
4_23 .1fc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
Ches ter. Ohio, has flowers for
Memorial Day, SSe and up.
Also nice baskets.

5-12·121c
--------HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
5·9-301p

------

REDUCE sale and fast with
Gobese tablets and E· Vap
waler pills . Nelson Drugs .
4·14·601p

REGISTERED

Tennessee

walker
stud
se r vice .
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone

742·5862.
4·20-30ic

-------

OVEN FRESH bakery pro·
ducts . Jimmy's Paslry Shop,
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
Phone 992-3555.
4·29-301c

Wanted To Buy
TELEPHONES, brass beds ,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
etc. Wri le M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
4-27·1fC
,--------ANTIQUES :
Dishes ,
lelephones, lin. brass beds,
lamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
Phone 992·3403.
4-23-3otp

Carmel News,

By the Day

W~AT'S

W~EN I ASt&lt;ED
~ROF WMAT MV MARK

W~ONG,

SiiARK

WOULD BE ...

~

YE$,1\JE'

!'M "THE 0\IJN ol: !
PIP YOU ,AS!( To

HAD 'TWO

M15€~1l8LI: O.EAM~D

OIICf(~l.l DtOINE!tS MJP 0()~

se. M~?

Bll~ 6 ~1 I HoW DO YCIJ
STA'l' IN BUSINeSS ?

Evenings Call992-2534, Dale Dutton

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service
.
·--·

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

~

.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Real Estate For Sale
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bollom,
with
or
without fBrm
machinery . House with 3
bedrooms, dining room, living
room , 1112 baths, enclosed

back porch, wall to wall

ca rpeting. Aluminum siding,
awning , stor m windows and
storm doors. City wafer.

Selling due lo ill health. Phone
614·985·3938.
5·18·301p

Alexander school district.

inlervie~,

'i(WINSOR
-tiBUDDY

.j,-CHAMPION
-j{VAN DYKE

LANCELOT

i!ALSO
DQUBLE • WIDES

.
'METHOD"

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
1

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Artificial Flowers

JOHNSON MASONRY

Single Flowers
Arrangements

Cemetery

Flowers

Complete
Remoaeling

&amp;

Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

VILLAGE

Open 9 TIIS
Thurs.. Fri. . Sat.
Or Phone 949·2223

RACINE, 0.

742-4902
Air Conditioning
Inspection and
Re-Charge

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you

Special
At

The
Daily Sentinel

Those calling at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and family a(ld Betty
VanMeter during the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Randolph, Rock Springs; Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Johnson,
Racine ; Mrs. Max Manual Jr.,
East Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Byers,
Forrest Run ; Mrs.
Roger Manual, · Mrs . Gary
Wilford , Junior Johnson,
daughter Brenda, and William
Carleton, all of Racine, and
Ralph Lee, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris,
Springfield, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle, Vernie, Wavie and other
relatives.
Mr . ""d l'r:rs . .Shelby Pickens
and family of Syracuse spent
nice lots for mobile homes,
~unday with Mr. and Mrs. Allan Auto Sales
$4,000.00
REGISTERED quarter stud
Taylor.
service, Hanks Rock, 209498.
1962 CHEVY II. mechan ically
ACRES
five
room
home,
.
Contact Mike Jones, Rl. 3,
Rev. L. L. Roush of Gallipolis
sound. Good body, new palnl .
balh,
gas
h.eal.
·
Good
spring
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
Good tires, Eugene Young,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
1
water.
Garage,
small
barn
.
6880.
12' • 14' • 24 • WIDE
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
Robert Lee and family and
All minerals with producing
5·24-61c
742·3043.
oil ancl gas well. FREE GAS.
Ralph Lee.
s.23 ·3tp
New listing , $10,500.00
The Commonwealth of
Mr. and .Mrs. George Circle
Puerto Rico is represe'rited and family; Mr. and Mrs. 1964 PONTIAC, $350 ; 1962 Ford,
GIT 'lllllllll WIDil
•BUY ONE NOW
in 'the U.S. House of ·Repre·
S150. ~hone 742·5361 or may
99l · 3325
sentatives by a resident com· James Circle of New Haven, W.
be seen al Giles Smith
1220 Wuhtngton Blvd.
HELEN
L. TEAFORD
residence in Rulland .
Belpre, Ohio
ml$sioner In Washington who Va., were at the home of Mary
Assocl•te
'
Circle !JII Sunday.
h•• a voice but no vote.
. 5·21·61c
5·23-~lc ,. .'1'11--~~~~~~L,•

Virgil B._
TEAFORD
SR.

'8

MILLER

WintAd

,.....,__

p~~~RTH'

-

Pomeroy,

&amp;

,,,,_,.,,_ ...
""""'"'~·-

JVINNIE WINKLE

BUGS BUNNY

OLD WORK

YA FUPPSY! TH ' PRICE 15

RIGHT AN' IT GOES WITH
- - - - , YER EYES! .-~

LIKE HOT CAKES!

I

OH-OH! HERE
COMES TH'
LAW, AN' ME
WITH NO
CITY
LICENSE!

THIS TIE'S A G_,EAT BUY FEt:1

WINNI~-" l}Jf5E HOT
PANT.:;~ WILL $ELL

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

LE'S STEP AROUND Tl.f'
COF!NEI&lt; INTO Tl.fl$ A~l-~"
1TIL. YA MAKES UP ,.,~_,
MINI'!

r---,

6.98

delivered

to

l'_our

project. Fast and easy . Free
esti males . Phone 992· 3284.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
,
6·30-lfc
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial. residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 247.
2113.
. 3·12:tfC

ADTOMOBILE Insurance- been
cancelled?
Lost
-your
operator's license? Call 992-

2966.

6·15-ttc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No . 20,485
Estate of Charles Earle
Humphrey Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that
May Hunter Humphrey, of
Reedsville, Meigs County, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
Charles Earle Humphrey,
creceased , late of Reedsvllle,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditor s are receuired to file
their claims with sa ld fiduciary
within four months.
Deted this 4th day of May

( 5)

742-4902
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
HIGHWAYS

THE ·BORN LOSER

Colum.,us, Ohio, May 7, 1971
contrac1 Sales. Legal

Insurance

1971.

... IFI~MV
MOvE IN THE
OTHER OIRSCTION(

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

CONCRETE
right

Experlenced
Work Guaranteed

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Plus
Parts

PHONE 992·2143

READY.MIX

1nsured-

JOHNSON MASONRY

Blaettnar's

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said Countv
10,
11,
24 ,
3tc

Copy No. 71 ·303
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
F-479·(20)

Sea l ed proposal.s will be
received at the office Of the
State Highway Director of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 :00
AM ., Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, Tuesday, June 8, 1971, for
improvemflnts in :
Meigs County, Ohio, on
Sec tion MEG -7-6. 15, State Route
No.7 in Sal lsbury Townsh ip, by
grading , drain ing end paving
with plain Portland cement
concre te one cement stabilized
base, and by constructing :
Bridge No . MEG -7·0113 Left and
Right, dual concrete decks on
continuous steel beams with
concrete substructures (each :
spa ns 64 teet - 82 feet - 82 feet
- 64 feet, roadway 40 feet
between deflector para pets ),
over Stete Route 124 ; Bridge

LET TAMARA ENTERTAIN I'JELl···MAYBE
YIJtJ FOR A CH ANGE!
tl 'LL GET MY
ii'fRE, PUT Ori MY
MIND OFF
TUTU ANP I SHALL /"IJADDY" FOR A
SHr:JII '(()() HOW
WH ILE!
10 BE A BALLET
DAMCER!

£ltN1~

t~ VERY
PERTURBED

1lY "OODDY'

SEE.'" WE

COULD BE
1 WifiS~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No. 20491

Eslate ol DON C. GORBY ,

Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Coosie Gorbv, of R. o. 1,
Langsville, Ohio, has been duly
appo inted Executri)( Ef1 the
Estate of Don c . 1.1.0rby,
deceased, late of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their
claims
with
said
fidudicary with in four months.
Dated this Sth day of May

1971.

F. H. O' Brien
Prqbate Judge
of said County

(5) 10, 17, 24, 3tc
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Proba1e Court.
To the Executor of the estate;
to such of the following as are
residents of the Stele of Ohio,
v is. - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will ; and to the at .
torn ey
or
attorneys
representing tiny of the
aforem ent loned persons :
William
A.
Carman.
Deceased, No . 20,.601 Pomeroy
Ohio , R. 0 . Salisbury Township .
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned , deceased, late
of sale County, was filed In this
Court Seld Inventory and
Appraisement wilt be for
hearing before this Court on the

3rd day of June, 1971, at 10:00

o'clock A.M .
· Any person desiring to file
e)(ceptions 1hereto must tile
them at teast five days ptlor to .
the date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
sear of said Court, this 14th diY

Of May 1971.

~- H.

ACROSS
1. Art style

' DICK TRACY

dual concrete decks on con .
tinuous steel beams with con .
cre te substr uctures (ea ch :
spans 36 feet - 45 feet 36 feet , roadwav 40 feet between
deflector parapets), over
County Road 77 ; and Bridge No .

r,. Follower of
WITH THIS

POUCH,

DI,AMOND CARGO?

Clerk of sold Court
By Ann B. Wat10n

Clerk
(5) 17,2•• 21c

Genghis

dual concrete docks on con .
tinuous steel beams with con .
crete substructures (eech :
spans 46 feet - 65 feet - 65 feet
- 46 feet, roadway 40 teet
between deflector parapets ),
over State Route 7.
Pavement Width - 2 at 24
feet .
Project Length - 14,650.52
feet or 2.77~ mil es .
Work Length - 23.248.94 feet
·
or 4.403 miles .
"Minimum wage rates for
have
been
this project
predetermi':'ed as required by
law and are set forth In the bid
proposal ."
" The date set for compt~tion
Of this work shall be set forth In
the bidding proposal."
Each bidder shall be required
to file with his bid a certified
check for an amount equat to
five per cent of his bid, but In no
event more then ten thousand
dollars, or a bond for ten per
cent of his bid, payable to the
· Director .
Bidders m,ust apply, on the
proper forms , for qualification
at least ten days prior io the
date set for opening bids in'
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specifications are
on file in the Department of
Highwavs and the Office of th e
Division Deputv Director .
'The Director reserves the
right to reject anv and all bids .

40. Complete
U . Hamlet

wnsone

42. Whirled

14. One of the
Gorgon$
15. Noah's
youngest

son
16. For each
17. - - dem er
18. Shade tree

19. HelghL
(abbr.\
20."- -

I'OCTOR DUI'GEON '5

FIRST CONTACT wmo
PUTTAL!M, THE LAVl"

1'111!.\f MINISTER OF
SERENI'IP, RESULTS

INAN IMMEDIATE
CONFLICT OF WillS.

CAPTAIN EASY

RIGif\ COlONEL

lEE . MY REoiME DEPfND5 ON
THE liBERATOR'S SURVIVAL,
II TAll&lt;"'
l MUST ENDURE YOUR IN·
?UFFERAI!Lt PHYSICIAN ...

i MAT ANCIENT

23. Trust

24. Well·

NOl lHE li~INo

J.J&amp;WOO~®IJ..J ~cud'd -.J ,.-

mon
by

l&gt;v Ill N f ll AllNOLD . u H! IlOII t I I

DOWN
'voice
1. Code .signals 22.1n·
2. Dismay
cline,
3. Baton
twirler
the
{2 wds.)
head

Un•cramble these fourJumbleo,

one letter to each

Rhine
tributary
5. With
meekness
4.

6. Ward off
7. Mao's --

23. Lcgcn·

T/IAP

Bel·
qull

30. Arach-

nld

corn·
par.don

32. That place
38. Se88lne
plant
39. CommoUon

27. Small

r2wds.)

to

lowed
29. Tran·

bird
25. Afford
26. Tot·
ter's

Guards

bird

28.

dary

8. Sonorous

~quare,

form four ordinary words.

••

valley

;;-t-+-t-t-+-i

English
FOOL ! IF ME WEfre.

(@} 1971 King Features Syndicate, lnc,)

estate

and the
Pendulum''
21 . ltslng poor
'!Oti~E QUITE

GREENE.

16. Sum-

(slang)

goad

PHILLIP RICHLEY
DI.RECTOR
(S) 17, 24, 2tc

I

_.l
'

TJEWPOR

known GI

25. Fortune
26. Trampled
28. Jntera

I

mission

-1-+-i

:n. Word with

f-t+

drum or
trumpet
32. Sutftx for
simple
or glut
33. Necktie
fabric
34. Early snake
charmer
35. owned
36: Indian title
il7. Nervc.us

I

o o
tSU'C!
·

/..1 ~ ·"

I [t

I

t.
"j

~

WH.II.T TO ro WHEN
YOU FEEL. OUT
OF 5PIRITS.
Now IUTIII1It the cln:led letters

to form tho ourprile IUIIWtr, U
IUiftlted by tho above Cli'IOOR.

~I~Prii~.,~-~IISl~IIISWII~~-~.:1 ( II I I I I J
(AMwen lomorrow)

Jumble" SCAIIf IUIST LIMPID HAZING

1tJ 5TAAT EACH NEW
WITH A SMILE ON M'1 LIPS ...

laugh

39 Filled with
re\·erencc

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR

We.talk to JOU

to

work It: ,_......,...,

1------\~

!!_:;::~====::~~~

I• L&gt;· 0~tnNnd.s
G .for
F F.aqother.
L J, 0 W
One letter simp!:'
In this sample A is ,.
used for the three L'~. X fot· the two O's. etc. Single lettera,
·a postrophe ~. the lPngth 1\nd fOI' Ill~tion or the words arc · l\11
hint~ . Ea.ch day the cOde )('tters arf' rliffcre-nt.

like a permn.

A ('r.}·ptogram

WMP0/1390

8•turda)''o Oryptoquole: THERE ARE TIMES WE SHOULD
TURN THE OTHER CHEEK BUT THERE ARE LIKIIlWISE
TIMES WE MUST FIGHT THE 'GOOD FIGHT. - WARD

9. Attack
10. Real

43 . Heavy blow

Khan
11. - -

Harbor.
Guam
12. Unwilling
13. Urge on;

O' Brien

Judge and ex -officio

BlACK WHEMSOMEBODY
WAS LOOKitf A1 US!

DAILY CROSSWORD

No. MEG .7.0762 Left and Righi ,

J.

SURf"' IF-IT WAS PITCH

WARBUCK'S
MYSTERIOUS
!IKGERJ!IG
lLLHESS ···

MEG ·33-0955 Left and Right,

Sheets

20$

DEATH!!

DEXTER , 0 . 4S726
PHONE 742·3945

For Your Garments

Aluminum

Ph. 992-2143

0' AN'ffi.liNG
WOPSETHAN

DFWTHER
DIE!!

. BLAETTNARS

NEW

Have Your Seasonal

For Sale

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer RadlatQr to the
~mallest Heater Core.

NO SENSE
lf.IFOORIATii'J'
TH' Si&lt;Di'JKS NO.
MORE!!THJ;:Y'S

EVEN '/0'
CAIN'T THINK

'

FREE STORAGE

Cleland Realty

TO "10'
FILTH'/
eEASTS?
-AH

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Wolil
Spouting, Roof
Painting

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

FLOWER SHOP··

-ElUTYO'
1-\Ali'J'T GITTIN'
'/ORE DRUTH~S..

TEACH MAH

,i EE TOM CROW, GUY S!f(ILER OR BOB CROW

gel them back.
Phone Albany 669·4851 after 3 FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
call 512·244·3071, or wnle 50X10 RICHARDSON mobile
p.m. or write Lavern Jordan ,
School Salely Division. Ad·
home, 2 bedroom , with air
DELIVERY SERVICE
Rl . 3, Albany, Ohi o.
vance Systems, Inc., 1100
cond11ion1ng. Ca ll 992-5867.
CALL
773·5543.
5·18·6fc
Enoch Dr ive, Middletown,
5 18-61c
Please! No Free Storing on
Ohio 45042.
HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey in. Bulk Cleaning.
5-24·21c
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
Bashan . If interested, contact
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths,
by teller at lhis address : Mrs.
ABC CLEANERS
sprays,
baskets.
ArHelp Wanted
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St.,
rangements, 69c and up.
No., 51. Pelersburg, Florida 71J.5543
Mason, W. Va .
- . SECURITY GUARD
4-2B·30tc
33714.
NEED full time security guards
5·2-JOic
in lhe Galllpolls -Cheshiro
FOR
BETTER
cleaning,
to
area . Insurance and pald
BULLDOZER work. Basement,
keep colors gleaming, use
vacation. All equipment
ponds, landsca ping . We do all
3
BEDROOM
home.
Svracuse.
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner.
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
furnished by employer. Must
Hardwood
floors,
14x24
Rent electric shampooer. Sl.
be 21, physically sound and
dirt and lop soil . See or call
garage , well' insulated,
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
free of criminal record .
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
carport. Lol 48 x 152. Phone
5·19.61c
Applicants will be in ·
Phone
992·3525.
992·5165.
terviewed at the William Ann
4·23·30ic
5·18-61p
Motel , Wednesday May 26 and FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
Thursday May 27 from 8 a .m.
- won't rust, rot , or leak. Call HOUSE, slory and half, 6 EXPERT TREE service. Call
lo 5 p.m. An Equal Op·
collect after 5 p.m ., Richard
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
room s, bath, Rulland . Phone
portunity Employer .
Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
742·5613
5·24-31p
5·19·301p
5-16-30tc
5·12-lfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
LICENSED practiCal nurse, BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446·4782
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327.
Syracuse Nur sing Home .
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
5-4-3Q
Apply in person.
Owner &amp; Operator.
POMEROY - 3.33 acres,
s.t9·61c
5·13-tfc
THREE consecutive lots in
CLOSE IN AND LEVEL, 3
Beech Grove Cemetery, Nos.
bed rooms, bath, utility room , GENERAL remodeling, car·
EARN AT home addressing
9·10·11
in
row
fi
ve.
Contact
R.
has building 20x100 and a two
envelopes. Rush stamped
pantry, roofing, paintlnQ, etc.
C.
)on~s. 35 Riverside Dr .,
slory
building 28x32 GREAT
self-addressed envelope to the
Phone 992-7729 between 9 a.m.
Day iOrt~Ohlo 45405.
AT JUST $15,960.
Ambrose Company , 4325
to 6 p.m.
5-2J.61c
Lakeborn, Dav is burg ,
5-18-61c
POMEROY - l story brick,
Michigan, 48019.
_A_C_K_H_O_E_A
_N
_D
_ D_O_Z_E_R-work.
BEAUTIFUL buill-in kilchen, _B
4-30-30tp USED Ferguson 20 tractor,
$700. New 4 II. rolary, $240, 5
3 large bedrooms with double
Septic lanks installed. George
fl rolary, $260; 6 fl . 6 in . pick close Is, bath, ulilily room, full
IMMEDIATE open ing full or
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
up disc, $225. 6 fl. grader
basement with recreation
partlime, train while earning.
4·25·tiC
blade, $80. Ermel Luckell,
room, carpeted and liled.
No obligations or deposits.
Albany . Phone 698-3032.
THIS YOU MUS J SEE.
Phone 992·3211 between 9 a.m.
NEIGLER Construction. For
$27,500.
5·23-21c
and 4 p.m .
building or remodeling your
5-21 31c ONE SPRAYER, used 1 yea r. FINANCIAL INDEPEN·
home, Call Guy Nelgler ,
Racine, Ohio.
DENCE
More peo·
Ltke new . Fiberlined drum .
7.JJ.tfc
pie have started on the
Phone 992-6214.
For Rent
5·2J.61p
road io lhis goal by home
UNFURN ISHED 3 . rocm
CARPET
ownership
than by any other RALPH'S
apartmenl. Phone 992-2288.
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
way
.
SEE
US
TODAY.
l-31 -lfc
Free
estimates .
Phone
HENRY CLELAND
~--::------·
Gallipolis
446·0294.
REALTOR
HOUSE, 1634 Lincoln Hgts. ,
3·12·1fc
Office
992·2259
36" X 23" X .009
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·3575
Residence 992·2568
after 5:30 p.m.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5-23·61c
5-23·tlc
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
24 ACRE FARM. Long Bottom ,
BUILDING 50 x 50 x 24 fool
Racine, Ohio
with
or
without farm
high . See Di ck Seyler, Modern
Crllt
Bradford
machinery . House with 3
Chemicals. Phone 992-2798.
USED OFFSET PLATES
5·1-lfc
bedrooms, dining room , living
5·21 -3tc
HAVE
room, 1112 baths, enclosed
MANY USES
back porch, wall to wall EXPERT lawn mower and
2 BEDROOM !rai ler. Utilities ·
Iiiier repair. Free pickup and
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
paid . Phone 992·7384 or 992.
delivery.
Warren's Mower
awning, storm windows and
7133.
Shop.
248
Condor Sl. Phone
stor m doors . City water .
521 ·31p
992-7357.
8
for
51.00
Selling
due
lo
ill
health
.
Phone
----5·18·tfc
614-985·3938.
NICE 8X35 TRAILER with
s.t8.3otp O'DELL WHEEL alignment
lipout
extension.
One
located al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
bedroom, air conditioner .
5
ROOMS
and
bath.
Furnished
Complete
front end service,
Phone 992·6452.
or
unfurnished
.
Call
992·3792
tune
up
and
brake service.
5-16-lfc
or 304·882 ·2138.
Wheels balanced elec·
5-23.3tp
Ironically .
All
work
111 Court St.
~----TRAILER SPACE on old Rt .33.
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
Pomeroy, Ohio
rates. Phone 992·3213.
'lz-mile north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992.2941 .
4·22 ·301c
3·5·1fc
TWIN
NEEDLE
Sewing
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
:F...U-::R-N-IS:-H
...E
: -D
: -a_n_d _u_n...
fu-rn- lshed
Machine 1971 Model in new
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
walnut stand. All features
apartments . Close to school.
992-2522.
buil
t
in
to
make
fancy
Phone 992·5434.
6·11l·tfc
designs. Also bullonholes ,
10·1 8·11c
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
Broker
price or terms available.
SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
110
Mechanic
St.
Phone
992·5641.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
Co.url , Rl. 124, Syracuse,
Pomeroy, Ohio
662·3035.
5·18·6fc
Ohio. 992·2951.
2·12·tfc
4·2·1fC VACUUM CLEANER, Electro 20 ACRES - -7 room home,
bath , furnace, basement.
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Moblje home lot. Chester SEWING MACHINES. Repair
2 BEDROOM mobile home air
has all cleaning attachments
water . All minerals. Only
service, all makes. 992·2284
conditioning . Racine area .
plus Ihe new Electro Suds for
$6,000.00
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Phone 992-6329.
shampooing carpel. Only
Authorized Singer Sales and
5-18.61c $27.50 cash price or . terms POMEROY - Nice 8 room
Service. We Shar-pen Scissors.
available. Phone 992·5641.
home, balh, furnace, porch
3·29·tfC
5-18.6tc
1
and
garage.
6
acres
and
2nd
For Sale or Trade
house, rented. Only $18,000.00 EXPERIENCED pal.nter,
STUD pony . Phone 742·4691.
exterior on~ Interior . Donald
POMEROY - 6 room frame
5-J9.6tc
Van Meter, 985·3951.
' house. oul of high water. 2
s.11 .12tp

MOBILE HOMES

ANDms

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

POMEROY
J. W. Carsey,Mgr
Phone 992-2181

cousiN

- --y-

01:
I
ORVILLE

-·- ··

Come See Us At97111 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992·7129

CALL GEORGE 985·3837
OR DON 992-6883

.

of Point Rock, Meigs County, 3 BEDROOM trail er, phone
on May 8. Reward. Call
Mason 773·5688 after 4 p.m. 3 BEDROOM brick hom e.
Albany 698-4803 after 6 p.m. or
5-23-6tp · Choice location in Middleport.
Alhens 594-6918 days. Ask for
Seen by appoi ntment only.
Bill Morgan.
1969
RCA
Whirlpool
chest
Phone. 992-3491 after 4 p. m.
5-18-61c
freezer, 18 cu. ft., $135. Phone
5.7.tfc
992-6416.
5-23-3tp
SHuation Wanted
NEW · BRICK home on 'h-acre
lot in Tuppers Plains .
WILL DO babysitling in my HAMMOND organ. two full
Features built·in kitchen ,
home. , Contact Janet Mckeyboards, one full octave
wall
to wall carpet, bath and a
Daniel, 368 E. Main Sl.,
base pedals. Would make a
half. full basement . Call
nice organ for a small church.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Chesler 985·3598.
5-18·61c
Phone 992-6602 .
5·5·30tc
5·23·3tc

application and

CHICKEN barbecue, Sunda y,

Free Estimates

, Sale Prices Thru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
271.95
ECONOMY Tl LLERS
As Low As
134.95

Instruction
OFFICE HOURS
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln Hts .,'
BEAUTIFUL selection of
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Pomeroy. Phone 992.2293.
INSTRUCTIONAL
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
8:30 a.m. lo 12 : 00 Noon LOCAL MEN . Train now to
10·25-tfc
.and sprays for Memorial Day.
Saturday.
drive semi tractor trailers .
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport. ··MODERN coun try home, 6.2
You can earn high wages
4.2 t.tfc
acres , plenty of water,
after short training . For
Notice

Beds

Everyone Can!

V0U

(~~A
~ICKI

I.S

..

You will have something ol value to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
come Tax benefit, you build an equity ~nd you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loan$.

Septic Tanks and Leach

OU CAN BUY AT LANOMARK

wuz. HeRe. --

Wi~H

TJ-\1~

RIDICULOUS!

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS- RECEIPTS! ! *

Limestqne Driveways

5-21-61c

Also, hot peppers. mangos

right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The Lost
publisher will not be responsible FEMALE German shepherd, 2·
for more than one Incorrect

237-4334, Columbus.

and overloads.

WHAT DO
IT SAV?

WHAR
IS GOOD

What Do You Have For The US You P•y In Rent?

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Dri ve, Colu mbus, Ohio, phone

992-7065.

5 cents per Word one insertion

'

For Sale

'' D~Re )NUFFY·-

..I..

.

Ed Hedrlck, 2137 Wadsworth

GLORY BE!!

ORI/iLLe"

·Business ·seri'ices

COAL. limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, , E. ·Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992.3891 .
sizes, all prices. Circle M
4-9-tfc
Stables, 10 miles north of
Athens, State Rt. 13 at SIX ROOM hOuse, bal. ,, lull
Millfield , Phone 725-2330.
basement, 133 Butternut Ave .,
5-20·121C
1usl walking distance from

HORSES . Over 100 head
registered and grade. All

speaker sound system, 4
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $64.89. Use
our time payment plan . Call

RICHLEY insertion .
DIRECTOR
RATES
(5 ) 24, (6)'1, 21c
For WQnt Ad Service

Carpenter

For Sale

Livestock For Sale

budgel lerms. Call 992-7085.
5 21-6tc
- -----WALNUT slereo co nsole , 4

" The date set for completion
of this work shall be·as set forth
m the bidding proposal."
Each bidder shall be reu iqre d
to me with his bid a certifie d

PlltHER POST CARD
IN TH' MAlllilOX

.

ply

Pavement Width - 18 feet
Project and work Length
29.832.0 teet or 5.65 m fles .

J . PHILLIP

PA1Jo1 !!'ie GOT A

downtown Pomeroy . Contact

1967 CHEVROLET

crete .

check tor an.:tmount equal to
ftve per cent cJ'f his bid , but in no
event more than ten thousand
dollars. or a bond for ten per
cent of his bid, payable to the
Director.
Bidders must apply, on the
proper torms, for qualif ica tion
at least ten davs prior to the
date set for opening bids in
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and spec ifi cat ions are
on file In the Department of
Highwevs and the OffirP nt thP
Division Deputy Director. The
Director reserves the right to
refect any and all b•dS .

IIARNiY

. ....

..

JFYYOCVRR
;

'

A K B

MVC·S

OR

Quol:~tlon

NOIV
O'S

R )." G FA

YVGQBLV

KC

K

S J V GR

TOSJKBS · H\"SSOCH RKLV )'C' AKBG'
RVNQ .,-'l'ONQVGX

F.

YVSVGRK C

'

�'

'.

I

~

8-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporf...Pomeroy,O., May 24, 1971

.

News ... in Briefo
Four Strip Mine Bills
To he Combined in 0 n e

Holdup

ment of Oh1o's strip mine law
IS now under the ch1ef of the
dlViswn of forestry and reclamatwn 10 the Depa-rtment of Natural Resources.
Lancione's bill would set up a
spec1al d1vis10n of str1p mimng
and reclamation 1n the department headed by a chief appomted by the governor for six years
to enforce the Jaw. Regulations
would be made by a separate
flve-!nember board now operating under a different name.
Lancione's proposed board
would be reqmred to VISit each
str1p mining area at least once
a year without nollce. Subject
to hear~ngs, the board would
designate areas unsUitable for
str1p mimng under specific conditions.
Speck's b1ll would also set up
a spec1al strip m10ing and reclamatiOn diviswn to adopt rules
and make sure they are followed; to make necessary 10spections and 10veshgations; to IS·
sue cease and desiSt orders, revoke operators' licenses and to
deSignate certain areas unsuitable for shp m10ing following a
hearing called on its own or by
an Ohio Citizens.
This bill would place regulatory powers in the hands of the
ch1ef of the diVISion rather than
with the board, which under
Speck's bill would be hmited to
hearing appeals.
Welker's and Paulo's b11ls
would not significantly change
existing law with regard to administration.
LICENSE FEES
Current law is $75 plus $15
per acre to be mmed. Lancione's
bill raises this to $150 plus ,$40
per acre . Speck's bill provides
for $20 an acre or $75, whichever IS greater. Welker's bill
calls for a flat $30 per acre fee .
Paulo's bill does not change existing law.

(Continued from page 1)
them if they attempted to move
up the basement steps, and left.
Snedaker told police, he and
Miss Steele, the Shoppe's
cleaning woman, came up the
steps after 20 minutes.
Meanwhile, Gallia County
sheriff's deputies inviestigated
two breaking and enterings and
a s[!Jien car report over the
weekend.
Ethea Roberts, Sidney, Ohio,
said someone entered her
weekend home located on Rt.
325, two and one half miles west
of Vinton. Missing was a hot
water tank, well pump, new
wheelbarrow, four tables, one
chair, two house jacks and
boxes of miscellaneous items.
Entry was made by going
through a side door.
Janet M. Hartman, Rio
Grande College student,
reported someone took her 1964
Volkswagen which was parked
in the Davis Hall parking lot.
Mrs. Blanche Price Barton,
The car was found later 90 died Sunday at her Rutland
Saturday night parked on a fire ~dme. Mrs. Barton was
road, one mile from Coal Valley
Rd. in Huntington Twp.
Marvin Ours, Eureka Star
Rt., said someone entered his
home on Swan Creek. it was not
immediately determined what,
If a~ything, was taken.
Dell Talbott, 71, Portland,

BOND
Operators must post $300
bond per acre, but not less than
$2,000. Lancwne's bill would allow the ch1ef of the division to
determine bond between $500
and $1,000 per acre.
Speck's bill would allow the
chief to set bond at the cost of
reclamallon plus 10 per cent a minimum of $300 per acre or
$2,000 total for clay, sand and
gravel or $500 per acre or $5,000
for coaL
Welker's b1ll would set bond
at $500 per acre or a $5,000
totaL Paulo's bill does not deal
w1th bond requirements.
RECLAMATION
Ex1sting law requires reclamatiOn w1thin two years. Lancwn 's btU requires continuous
backfillmg as minmg progresses Speck's b1ll requ~res continuous backfilling, with reclamatwn to be accomplished w1thm
six months and planning completed within one year.
Welker's bill requires all reclamatwn to be completed withm
18 months to allow for a growlpg season. Paulo's b11l mcorporates existmg law but requires operators to fill the final
cut and make it smtable for
cultivatiOn.
LICENSE REVOCATION
Existmg law allows the chief
of the diviSion to revoke licenses, as do Speck's and Welker 's
bills. Lancwne's bill leaves it
up to the strip mining and reclamation' board. Pauio's b11l
does not change existing law.
PENALTIES
Existing law sets a $300 to
$1,000 fine for vwlatwns of the
law Lancione 's bill contains
fines up to $10,000 or SIX
months in priSon for certain
vwlabons, ad does Speck's bill .
Welker's and Paulo's bills do
not alter ex1sting law.

da
Blanche Barton Died on Sun y

Dell Talbott
Died Saturday.

'f1f1f1f¥1f¥1f1f¥1f1f1f¥1ff died Saturday ~ight at Pleas~nt
i(

Th - h
oug t
Toda

+: Valley Hospttal 10 Pomt
+: Pleasant.
+: Mr. Talbott was a retired
il
Or
employe of the U. S. Corps of
If 1 lake care of my +: Engineers at Lock 21 in Porcharacter, my reputation
tland. He was a member of the
will take care of Itself
+: Stiversville Community
- Dwight L. Moody 'iC Church.
He is survived by his wife,
+: Olive Durst Talbott, Portland; a
-1&lt; son, Randall, New Lexington,
Ohio; a daughter, Mrs. Mildred
-1&lt; Souders, Xenia; his mother,
~ Mollie Wolfe Talbott, ~ortland
-1&lt; Route I; two grandchildren,
ic Randy and Toni; two sisters,
Fridays Only
Mrs. Ada Fox, Beimont, and
+:The Drive-In Window -1&lt; Mrs. Nell Middleswart, Por+:
is Open
+: tland; five brothers, Burhl and
'+:
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
Henry, both of Steubenville ;
(Continuously)
+: Uoyd,ofBarberton;Charles,of
:f;
+: Wintersville, and Stanley, of
+: Other Banking Hours 9 to +: Clarksburg W. Va .
iC: 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on .;:
'
.
+: Fridays.
+: He was preceded 10 death by
il
+: his father, William; two
brothers, and a sister.
+:
+: Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
il
POMEROY OHIO
+: Funeral Home with the Rev .
Member FDIC
+: Edward Griffith officiating .
Mefllber Federal
Burial will be in the Stiversville
.
Reserve System
,fC Cemetery. Friends may call at
••••••••••1f-¥1f¥1c tlle funeral home any time.

.. A
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lfs Quick! Easy

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DRIVE-IN
BANKING

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t and SAVINGS co. :

I

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ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM .

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BAK=ER;:..:s__

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tOOt'S
~\.\. Mt~
fU\\tt\1U\\t

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.BAKER

$S9S
·FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

associated with her husband in
the operation of the Barton
Pharmacy in Pomeroy many
years .
He was a charter member of
the Meigs County Riding Club.
She is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Thelma B. Campbell,
Rutland, a teacher in the
Rutland elementary school; a
grandson, Austin Barton
Campbell, Washington, D. C.;
four grea !-grandchildren,
Andy, Beth and Colin Campbell,
of Eden, N. Y., and Carter
Campbell, of Clinton, N.C., and
a step-sister, Mrs. Martha
Bolton Agler, Colwnbus. Mrs.
Barron was preceded in deatll
by her Husband, Austin, in 1955.
Funeral services will be held
at 4:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Tuesday afternoon and evening
and on Wednesday until time of
services. Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery.

YOL XXIV

Ashley One of Four Winners
COLUMBUS - THE AMERICAN LEGION of Ohio has prssented $500 scholarships to four Ohio high school seniors to aid in
their college education. The recipients are children of Ohio
Legionnaires.
Selected were Kyle Ann Kress of Laura, Michael J. Tadsen of
Rock Creek, Larry D. Van Niel of Brook Park and Keith Ashley of
Racine .

Sohio to Sell Reserves
CLEVELAND (UPI) --Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohw) has
agreed to sell $200 m1lhon worth
of' 1ts crude oil reserves m
Alaska's Prudhoe Bay area to
Colwnb1a Gas Systems, Inc., 1l
was announced Sunday.
The transactwn, wh1ch IS expected to be closed July I, would
g•ve Columbia, based in Wilm10gto~, Del., complete purchase
nghtS to a substantial portion
of Sohio's Prudhoe Bay gas output as welL
Charles E. Spahr, chairman
of the board of Soh10, and
Cecil E. Loomis, chairman of
the board of Colmnb1a, JOmtly

made the announcement. They
said Colmnb1a would make a
$60 milhon first payment and
dehver the rest of the purchase
price alter a perm1t IS ISsued
for constructiOn of the TransAlaska pipeline to transport the
crude OIL
Acting as sole agent for Colwnbia, Sohio will dispose of the
oil once the pipeline is flowmg
on a contmuous basis. Gas production will not begin until after
the o1l is underway.
Spahr said the $200 mllhon
will be used by Sohw to further
develop 1ts Prudhoe Bay properties on Alaska 's north slope.

NEW FffiE TRUCK _Officials of the New Haven Volunteer Fire Department .proudly
pose beside the new $24 500 fire truck that was driven into town on Friday and offiCially unveiled with an Open Ho.;.. Sunday afternoon at the Town Buildmg. ShoW? With th~ new truck
f ~cil Duncan President Harry Hoffman and AssiStant Chief Charles
are, from left ' Chi e
'
.
t Co
f Colum
Roush. The truck was built in Michigan for the Sutphen Fire Equ1pmen mpany 0
•
bus, 0.

Big Day in New Haven
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven
Volunteer
F~re
Department had one of 1ts
proudest days Sunday. And the
reason was quite obvwus.
A crowd was constant commg and going - at the
Town Buildmg along Fifth St.,
between 2-4 p. m. to mspect a
$24,500 new fire truck officially
unve1led for an Open House .
The bright red vehiCle,
shmmg from top to bottom and
front to back, was - to say the
least - the hit of the afternoon
Chlidren chmbed on the "new
fire engme" while the adults
took turns Slttmg beh10d the
steer10g wheel of the huge
veh1cle wh1ch amved 10 town
Fnday
The new truck 1s the VIllage's
fourth p1ece of f~re-flghtmg
eqmpment. New Haven also
owns a 1952 model pmnper
truck, a 1965 model tanker truck
and an eqmpment truck.
Fire Chief Cecil Duncan sa1d
the new pmnper, which wlil
pmnp 750 gallons of water per
mmute, IS to be used exclusively

2,000 troops into the city of
113,000.
The troops were split up inoo
20-rnen ''roller teams" which
cruised through trouble spots in
the city.

been alerted for a racial
disorder in Tennessee since
1968, when civil rights leader
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was
shot to death by a smper in
Memphis.
Except for some isolated
. Asst. Adjutant Gen. Van instances of winoow breaking.
Nunally said an officer in each police said Chattanooga was
team had been given live am- quiet today .
munition to dispense if
necessary. He said the am- Dunn dispatched the troops
munition would be issued only if about midnight at the request of
"troops are in danger or newly installed Mayor Robert
someone else's life" is K. Walker, who said his outthreatened."
manned )Hilice department was
The troop call was the first unable to cope with increasing
time the National Guard has lawlessness.

for flght10g fires mSlde town.
A $7,000 down payment has
been made on the truck. The
remaining portiOn IS fmanced
th1·ough the Mason County Bank
of New Haven. The in debtedness w1ll be paid off by
money rai sed from a !1re
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - William
McCoy, Henderson; Tanya
Randolph, Leon ; Elwood
L1eving, New Haven ; Donald
Sh~ek, Letart; Danny Hill, John
Gleason, both Pomt Pleasant,
Sarah Ellen Vickers, New
Haven ; Trent Forbm, Buffalo;
Mrs. Emil Martm , James
Spears, Mrs Fred Kiser, Mrs.
Burt Russell, Loraine Grady,
all Point Pleasant; Andrew
Scherer, Winf1eld ; Mrs . Hiram
Shepherd, Brent's Run; Ronald
Byus, Po10t Pleasant.
DISCHARGES - Mrs. B. F.
Turner, Marsha Carr, Jimm1e
Lee Hughes, Rufus Hubbard,
Raymond Moults, Mrs. Wayne
Capehart, Charles Young, John
A. Little, Glenn Sayre, Wilham
Stewart, Conme Gerlach,
Carlson Stone, Mrs Vernon
Rizer, Wilham Huffman,
Rebecca Fry, Bilhe Hickman,
Robert VanMeter, Mrs. Wanda
Sm1th, Mrs. D~niel Childers,
Ed1th Dent, Mrs. John Elliott.
BIRTH - May 22, a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene An·
spache, Letart.

department assessment that
contmues two more years, by
donallons , and by moneymaking projects.
The New Haven Volunteer
Fire Department Auxilia•·y
members were also on hand for
the Open House servmg
refreshments.
New Haven has 43 volunteer
fire department members .
OffiCers are Mr. Duncan, chief;
Charles Roush, assiStant ch1ef;
Harry Hoffman, president;
Thomas Grinstead, secretary,
and Charles Weaver, treasurer .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSHomer Goeglein, Pomeroy;
Patnc1a Groves, Middleport ;
Raymond Jewell , Pomeroy;
Lovie Watson, Pomeroy;
Leonard Lunsford, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mildred Jacobs, John
Teaford, Harry Clark, Tommy'
McGrath ,
Oneitz
Cole,
Raymond Ridgway , Harvey
Rockhold.
SUNDAY ADMISSIO~:; John Curry, Pomeroy; harry
Layne, New Haven; Hattie
Sm1th, Middleport; Joseph
Rudolph, Middleport; Kevm
Powell , Reedsville; William
Russell , Syracuse; Edith
Durham, Pomeroy; Neva
Pratt, Middleport; Alice
Coleman, Albany.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Carrie Swartz.

Elberfelds Housewares Department on the Main
·'
Floor is Headqua~rs for Hoover Appflances.
See the new line now!

Man Olarged in Stabbings

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
May 24-25
Double Feature Program
BEYOND THE VALLEY
OF THE DOLLS
ARuss Meyer Production
(Color)
-PtysHAR·D CONTRACT
(Color)
James Coburn
Lee RemiCk

X

R

seen in front of Lyken's house. carrying, glasses that Lori
Police reportedly found two wore, and a hunting knife
litter bags the girls had been believed to be the murder
weapon in Lykens' home.
An autopsy report by the
county coroner last week said
the girls had been slain with "A
J_
very sharp knife ."
Police said It was believed the
two had been slain in the home,
Mrs. Nella (Nellie) Barsotti, then driven seven miles to Por·
71, Middleport, died early tage County and dwnped in the
Sunday morning at the Holzer ditch.
1
Medical Center.
Following the killings, pollee
Born Aprill6, 1899, at Lucca, and Portage County sheriff's
Italy, Mrs. Barsotti was deputi~s conducted on~ of the
precede4 in death by her most 10tensive mvestlgatlons
husband, Leroy, a number of the northeastern Ohio area has
years ago.
seen, questioning ne~h~ors for
Surviving are a daughter blocks around the g1r!s homes
Mrs. Dorothy M. Steven~, High and checking out tllousands of
St., Middleport, with whom she phThone tips.
. d.
ree men were ques110ne m
made her home; two sons, Enzo connection with the case but
L., of Fresno, Calif., and Carl leased
J., Memphis, Tenn.; a brother, reCutrlght said Lykens1 had
Clemente (Ned) Menchini of been questioned by pollbe In
Pomeroy; a sjster, Mrs . their
neighborhood
in·
Giovanni Fabrl, . of Italy; 10 vestigation and became a
grandchildren, and one great- suspect when it was learned the
grandchild.
1
girls were last seen hear his
Funeral
services
will
be
held
home.
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
· 1 May24&amp;25
at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Cutright said Lyken's court
1. Sa_cred Heart Olurch with the appearance today .would be
THE GREAT rRev. Father Bernard Krajcovic brief, with the case hkely oo be
WHITE HOPE
officiating. Burial will be in the continued for "a week or two"
!Ttchnicolor) ·
Sacred
Heart Cemetery. Ill allow attorneys to prepare
James Earl Jones
Jane Alexander
Friends may call at the thelr .cases.
"GP"
RawlingsCoats ,Funeral Home ·- ·
Colorcartoons:
NOW YOU KNOW
any time. Rosary services, will
peep Sea Doodle
';qhe
poslj::ard originated in
.Nobody's Gool
, be 11eld at 7:30 tonight at the
SHOW STARTS7P.M. '
Austria in '1869.
funeral home.

MEIGS THEATRE

POtyl_EBPJMIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Thepulilic was urged today to
participate In the annual
Memorial Day Parade by the
DrewWebsterPostNo.39ofthe
American Legion.
All interested persons and
patriotic groups are cordially
Invited and urged oo participate
in the activities on Monday.
The parade will form at the
rear of the Pomeroy Junior
High School at 9 a.m. The
parade will move west down
Main St. led by the Legion honor
guard, firing squad, members
of the Legion and Legion
Auxiliary followed by Golden
Star Mothers with honored
guests and veteran organizations next in line,
followed by the Meigs High
School marching band.
Boy and girl scout troops.
baton units, Pomeroy firemen

'

Live Antmo in Chattanooga

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.
(UP! )- National Guard troops,
supplied with live ammunition,
moved into Chattanooga today
oo aid local police, exhausted by
three nights of lawlessness by
black ''marauders."
The sniping, firebombing and
looting started Friday night
when a musical group failed oo
put in an appearance at the
city's audiooriwn and youths
went on a rampage.
A Negro armed with a .22
caliber pistol was wounded
during Sunday night's outburst,
SCHOOL SET
A Bible school w1!! be held at which caused Gov. Winfield
the Carleton Church on Dunn oo order between 1,500 and
Kingsbury Road from Monday,
May 31, through June 4. Classes
will be held from 9 a.m. to 12
noon, Monday through Friday
under directiOn of William
Uber Each child of the comAKRON,Ohio (UP!) - 'Akron
mumty is mvited.
'
police have arrested and
charged
a 27-year.()ld Akron
BEGINS IN JOB
Kenneth Well, son of Mrs. man witll stabbing to death two
Evelyn Well, Orange Township, nine-year-old neighbor girls last
week and dwnping their bodies
and the late Flo~d Well, began
his duties in the State into a Portage County ditch.
Treasurer 's office of Mrs. Police Maj. Carroll T. CutGertrude Donahey this mor- right, chief of the detective
squad, said Kenneth Lykens
&lt;~mg. A graduate of Eas~ern
H1gh School and the Tn-County was to appear in municipal
court today to answer rharges
Vocational School at Nelson- of first degree murder in the
ville, Well has been assigned to
deaths of Lorna Ritz and Lori
the data processing section.
Crowe. The two school friends
Lucy Amsbary of Pomeroy is disappeared last Monday while
also workmg in that section of
taking part in a neighborhood
the treasurer's office
litter cleanup project, and their
slashed bodies were found in a
roadside
ditch Tuesday.
The s p inn in g jenny is
Cutright said Lykens was arnamed after the youngest
daugh(er of inventor James rested at his home, only a half
Hargreaves, according to dozen doors away from the
the Encyclopaedl8 Bntan- homes of the two girls, Sunday.
mca.
He said intensive door to door
questioning of neighbors
revealed the pair had last been

NO. 29

TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Memorial Services

VISTA, Radicalizing Experience

OLD LYME, CONN.- FORMER Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, DConn., once censured by his Senate colleagues for alleged misuse
of campaign funds, died at his home today apparently of a heart
attack. He was 63.
Afamily S)Hikesman said Dodd died at !2:30a.m. (EDT).
Dodd was defeated for his third Senate term last year. Dodd
ran as an independent and lost to Republican Lowe! P. Weicker.

Cloudiness southeast tonight, ·
a chance of showers. Cooler,
lows m upper 40s to mid 50s. •
Wednesday cooler with highs in ·
the 60s and low 70s.

Devoted To 1lae lnteresu Of 'I'M Meigs·M~n Area

ISTANBUL -TURKISH AUTHOKI'l'l~ said today they
have arrested two girls and a man in connection with the
assassination of kidnaped Israeli Consul-General Ephraim
Elrom. The authorities identified tlle man as Orner Erinc and the
two girls as kadrive Nizo~en and Julide Zaim, but gave no other
details. Elrom, 59, was found &amp;!nday by police and troops during
a massive sweep of the city during a 15-hour curfew. His hands
were tied behind his back and be bad been shot three times in the
head.
The body of the Israeli diplomat, who had joined his nation's
foreign service only two years ago in an effort to recover from the
death of his son, was flown back to Tel Aviv where it lay in state
and was then being buried today.

Former Senator Dodd is Dead

Weather

!'

Three Held in Assassination

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.- MANY young Americans who
volunteered to work for VISTA, tlle domestic peace corps, say
they were radicalized by their year of working with the poor, a
major stndy reported Sunday. More than a quarter of 3,000. fo~er
VISTA volunteers questioned by a Penn State Umvers1ty
sociologist call themselves radicals today, and 60 per cent say
they were moved politically to the left by the experience.
All but a handful of the self-&lt;lescribed radicals among the
former VISTA workers are committed to peaceful change in the
system, said the sociologist, Davie Gottlieb, 40.

•

a1

The only mammal indigenous oo New Zeland Is the
bat.

(Continued from Page I)
date for tlle Mariner, but a definite schedule will not be fixed until
ffild week, when top Space Agency officials review the overall
status of tlle $77 million missiOn.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Re)Hirler
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A sixman House Environment sub·
committee will study strip mine
control proposals after House
work on the budget is completed
and is expected to combine the
best features-of four bills.
The four pieces of legislation
were sponsored by Reps. Sam
Speck, R-New Concord; A. G.
Lncione, D-Bellaire ; Walter H.
Paulo, R-Canfield and Ralph
Welker R· Pomeroy.
Here is a comparative analysis ol tlle four bills, how they
differ with each other and w1th
current law:
COVERAGE
Speck's bill governs clay,
sand and gravel as well as
coal stripping. The other three
cover just coal mining, as does
existing law.
ADMINISTRATION
Administration and enforce-

•

Now You Know

Nella Barsotti
Died on SUnuay

TOAST

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the whole family or fUSt one lone
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Four-Slice Toaster

Hoover Washers and Dryers .in the Furniture
Dept., Jrd floor. Hoover Sweepers in the '
'Drapery Department, 2nd floor.
'

Elberfeld$ 'In ·Pomeroy
\

over Christmas 1944.
All members are urged tD
Prizes will be awarded to the attend a Hemlock Grove
boy and girl witb the best Memorial service on Sull'day
decoratedbicyclescarryingout and are asked to meet at the
tlle Patriotic !berne.
Legion hall at 12:30 p.m. On
Members of the post, their return from Hemlock
following tlle conclusion of the Grove a stop will be made at
program will proceed to Beech Rock Springs Cemetery for
Grove cemetery for a short prayer and a salute.
prayer service and salute to the
Richard Vaughan is parade
dead. Fr&lt;m Beech Grove they Marshall. Groups interested In
will go to the Catholic CeJlletery participating are asked to
for a similar program.
contact Vaughan or Paul Case!.
At the conclusion ol the
In case of rain Monday the
program,.Leglon'members will program will be held at the
meet at tlle Legion post for · Pomeroy Legion Hall at 10 a.m.
dinner fd prepare for the The general public is invited
Chest~r Memorial Service, and all members are urged oo
leaving e hall by 12:45 p.m. be present.

and emergency unit members
have been a~ked to join the
parade.
Theparadewillproceeddown
Main St., turn at Butternut, go
up Second St. and stop at the
Civil War Memorial where
flowers will be placed at the
monmnent with a rtring of the
salute and playing of( taps, The
procession will move up Second
oo Lynn St., cross Main, and
stop at the parking lot for the
usual flag raising ceremony
witll the Meigs Band playing the
National Anthem.
In a program tllere, members
of Veterans' groups will be
recognized. George Hargraves,
Jr., Supt. of Meigs Local School
District, will be tbe guest
speaker. Hargraves was an
infantry sergeant in the whole
action in the BatUe of the Bulge,

LI'mited

OONTROUJNG POLLUTION -

John A. Webb,
Charleston, demonstrates to Henry Werry, left, and Billy
Folmer, center, Pomeroy Motor Co. mechanics, how to use

1

e'

B
.
,.t,
11ews..• zn rze1 s :

e

Street Resllrfacing Explained

(--------------~------------, ~:::;;::;:•:;:;.o;:;:~:e::::."!-~::::~:::::::~-:~==~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::~;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::;:;:;:;:;~s;:!m::::::::::.~=:=:=:=:=:::::::~=:::•:::::::::~~

I
.
1

1\T

•

I

By United Press IDternallonal

Law Abiding Nation Slipping
NEW YORK - A YALE UNIVERSITY sociology professor
says a report by college students who rode witll patrolmen in
Chicago, Boston and Washington shows that nearly one out of four
)Hilicemen broke laws even though tlley knew they were being
observed. Dr. Albert Reiss, speaking Monday at a briefing on law
enforcement and crime control sponsored by the Counctl for the
Advancement of Science Writing, said the infractions ranged
from neglect of duty to accepting bribes.
Reiss said he showed tlle figures to the chiefs of all three
departments and one chief, whom he did not name, exclaimed:
"They all ought oo be fired." But Reiss said the chief said they
should be fired not for having done the misdeeds, but for having
done tl1em in tlle presence of an outsider. Reiss said this
illustrated a "police subculture ."

\

~

I elp

0 nors'

antedl

WVEA to members of the
Mason and Jackson County
Boards of Educa lion and to all
employes of the schools mviting
them to share their v1ews and
offer factual information that
may help.
The investigating teams Will
meet in Charleston June 5 for
instructions and will be in
Mason County from June 6
through June 9. They will also
seek views of others such as the
general citizenry. However,
persons submitting reports in
answers to a prepared list of
queshons are reminded that
'Unless the report is signed, it
cannot be used by the com-

Cash Taken
teachers' events. She played
Prelude in D Major and TwoPart Invention, No. II by
johann Sebastian Bach, and
Sonata in E Major, Op.14, No. 1
and Sonata Pathetique, Op. 13
by Ludwig Van Beetboven.
Judge of the first place
winners in the teachers' events
was Robert Grant Bums of
Austin, Tex.
,

Pomeroy Alumnz
· .
Meet, Wednesday
The Pomeroy Alumni Assn.
will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday
at the former junior high school
to complete plans for the annual
banquet and dance Saturday
night.
The banquet oo begin at 6:30
p.m. at , the Pomeroy
Elementary SchooL The dance
in the junior high building will
follow. The ba~quet is closed
but the dance IS open to the
public.
Tickets for the banquet and
dance at $4 each will be on sale
until Wednesday at the New
Yo~k Clothing House or by
wnting Mrs. Bessie Hays, P. 0.
Box 202, Pomeroy.

m1ttee. "
Questwns asked on the
confidential report concermng
school problems m Mason
County include the followmg :
When d1d the problems affeeling Mason County first
come to light: Would you
cons1der them recent in nature
or Jong-standmg?
What do you consider to be •
the greatest wrong and where
and with whom does it he?
What spec1al person or
persons (give names and ad(Continued on page 8)

Adult Classes Will Continue

WASHINGTON(UPI) -Thirteen Democratic members of
the House, including Louis
Stokes of Ohio, said today they
will go to court in an attempt
to force President Nixon to obtain congressional authorization
for the Vietnam War - or to
cease participation in it within
60 days.

An adult education program
conducted at Meigs High School
through the 1970-71 school yevr
will be continued through the
summer, Tom Kelley, program
co-ordinator, said today.
' Kelley said Meigs Local
School District has been exftnded a federal grant for
classes each Tuesday and
Thursday from 6:30 to 9:30p.m.
at Middleport Central building

The congressmen already
have filed suit in U.S. Distr1ct
Court asking that the Vietnam
War be declared in violation of
tlle Constitution because the
President is prosecuting It without congressional authorization.
They ·sald their motion to force
the President to come to Con•
gress would be a "followup
procedure."
In ~ statement prepared for

this summer.
The program is designed
persons over 18 who have not
graduated from high school.
The General Educational
Development (G.E.I),) test
qualifies students for a cer',ificate equivalent to a hlgh
school diploma.
Thursday open registration
will be held. Enrollees will be
accepted any time. . ,

release before the latest motion
was filed, Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, D-Md., said the action was
"the most serious effort yet
undertaken by anyone to stop
the Vietnam War In its tracks."
On Monday, Common Cause,
the so-called "people's lobby,"
opened an office on Capitol Hill
in the Congressional Hotel to
direct its drive for House approvalof an end-the-war amendmen! to the defense procurement authorization bill.
· The amendment sponsored by
Reps. Lucien N. Nedzi, D-Mich.,
and Charles W. Whalen, ROhio, would forbid use of funds
authorized in. the bill after Dec.
31, 1971 to support deployment
of · troops to Indochina or the
conduct of any military operations in or over North and

Legion parade and a garden
tractor pull will highlight
Memorial Day activities at
Chester beginning at 1:30
p.m. Monday, May 31.
The tractor pull will be held
at 2 p.m. Tractors are to be
weighed In at the Dale Kautz
!arm. Chicken and sparerlb
barbecue will be served along
with homemade Ice cream.
The event is being s)Hinsored
by Chester Volunteer Fire
Department. Proceeds will be
used to purchase new !Ire
equipment.
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T eenagerS

Gallia-Meigs
Work Program
Granted Funds
The Gallia-Me~gs Community
Action Agency has received
approvalfor its Summer Neighborhood Youth Corps.
The project was approved for
120 enrollees for the two-county
area. Each enrollee 1s to work
24 hours per week for eight and
one half weeks and receive the
mimmum wage . Enrollees must
be sixteen years of age and
returning to either elementary
or high school next fall. In
addition, the enrollees' family
income must fall within the
Labor Department's income
guidelines, based on the size of
the fam1ly.
Applications have been given
to schools for distnbution
Enrollees may also secure a~
application blank from either of
the C.A.P. Offices in Pomeroy
or Gallipolis. The application
mustbe signedbytheapplicant
as well as a parent or guardian.
The proJect also was approved for three staff poSitions.
They are project director, full
lime; assistant d1rector, halflime, and a secretarybookkeeper, full time. These
positions are for a penod of lO ll
weeks. Persons interested in
these poSitions should contact
e1ther of the C.A.P. Off1ces.

Dems File Against War

KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. - PRESIDENT Nixon turned his
attention to George Wallace country fOOay in hopes of shoring up
his administration's Deep South support shaken by accelerated
public school desegregation. The President was flying from his
vacation retreat to Moblle1 Ala., to dedicate a $386 million, 253(Continued on page 8)

,,~=~:::;:-;:~,~:7~mert~:~= Lack

~

PT. PLEASANT - The West
Virginia Education Assn. today
mvited the public to help its
10vestigating team "in getting
at the root causes for the
problems (in the schools) that
have existed seemingly for
some time and particularly in
the last few years in Mason
County."
WVED recently moved officially to conduct a full-scale
fact-finding investigation of the
education systems and their
'
practices In both Mason and
Tornado Kills a Golfer
A CHICAGO HEIGHTS GOLFER, A SEAPLANE docked at Jackson Counties. The National
Education Association (NEA)
Hougton, Mich.,a Kentucky tobacco barn, and trees, power lines,
will assist in the investigation.
and mobile homes became targets ol tornadoes and storms that
Letters have been mailed by
spread damage through the Midwest and Southeast Monday. Tlie
golfer, Robert Spuhler, 28, was killed when lightning struck a tree
near him at the first tee of the Glenwoodle Country Club in U
suburban Glenwood.
fl~
Tornadoes oouched down in Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee,
Arkansas and Missouri. Tornado watches or warnings were
posted in two additional states - Indiana and Mississippi, A
Mrs. Judy Butcher Garwell,
tornado cut all JHIWer for tlle 12,000 residents of Franklin, Ky., daughter of Mr. and Mrs, IraN.
damaged houses and overturned at least two mobile homes.
Butcher, Middleport, has won
honors and a cash award as a
Julie to Get $6,800 as Teacher
first place winner in the 1971
ATLANTIC BEACH, FLA. -JUUE NIXON Eisenhower will International Piano Recording
teach a fourth grade class in tlle Atlantic Beach Elementary Competition for tl!achers.
Mrs. Garwell received her
School this fall, Duval County School Supt. Cecil D. Hardesty
bachelor
of Fine Arts in music
announced Monday. President NU:on's younger daughter will
receive a salary of $6,800, slightly above the minimum since she from Ohio University where she
studied p~o witb Mr. George
has extra credits toward a Master's degree.
Julie and her husband, Ens. David Eisenhower, are expected Katz. She IS privately teaching
oo move into a garage apartment at Atlantic Beach this swnmer plano in Chickasha, Oklahoma
where her husband teaches at
while Eisenhower is stationed at tlle Mayport Naval Station.
Oklahoma College of Uberal
Arts.
.
Lockheed only First in Line
.In the 197~ International
WASHINGTON- A CIVILIAN contract official who works Pilmo Recor(jing C~mpetition,
for tlle Navy has told Congress It should let Lockheed Aircraft spo~oredby !be National Guild
Corp. go broke rather than give government backing to a $250 of Piano Teachers, Teachers
million loan for the aerospace firm. Gordon Rule, chairman of the Di~i~n ol American College of
Navy's Contract Claims Control &amp; Surveillance Group, told a Mus1Cl811S, were 1,034 entrants
Senate joint economic subcommittee Monday the loan guarantee from 37 states. There were 135
Is ''most unwise from a procurement point of view."
events for students and 35 for
"I can tell you tllere are other companies stan(jing in line teachers.
right now," he said. "H we do this for Lockheed, we will never live
Mrs. Garwell was one 0 ~ eight
it down .... if their management has been lousy. I say let 'em go chosen as cash winners 10 the
broke.! don't see why we should take this action, except possibly
tllat they're from California."
15 JOBS OPEN
The Leading Creek ConMr. Hoover Unruffled
servancy District has 15 job
WASHINGTON -FBI DIRECI'OR J . Edgar Hoover, in a openings for men. Applications
rare public appearance, has said recent criticism of him and the will be accepted at the district's
FBI has caused him no concern. "It doesn't bother me at all," office in Rutland from 8:30a.m.
Hoover said Monday night. "I've been under tllat kind of pressure to 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
for 40 years."
.
Hoover was besieged by reporters when he aJll&gt;eared at a
dinner honoring Martha Mitchell, wife of Attorney General John
N. Mitchell. The dinner was sponsored by the American Women's
Newspaper Club.

Shoring Up the South

equipment on a mablle service tmlt that reduces l!lhaust
emissions on new and older auoo engines. Webb conducted
demonstrations and instruction to help mecharucs upgrade
skills leading oo better customer service.

l"rJJNY....

On Council
Two teenagers - though they
w11l not vote- will set on the St.
Paul's Lutheran Church
Council, it was decided in the
congregahon's semi-annual
meeting May 23 following the
morning worship service. The
youths will be between
sophomore age and 17-year
olds.
Also discussed were ptans for
St. Paul's annual ice cream sale
during Regatta Weekend.
PreSident Thomas Clelland
noted council's approval of
Pastor Arthur Lund's summer
study at Rutger's University
June 28-July 17. H1s expenses
are to be paid by the Ohio Dept.
of Health, Alcoholism Dept.
Taken under advisement was
the pastor's suggestion of
havmg summer mid-week
services to benefit church
members who may be out of
town on vacation durmg Sunday
services.

of Money Blamed

For Incomplete Project
Complaints of residents living on streets which were not included in the recent resurfacing projects were aired Monday
night when Middleport VIllage Council met in regular session.
A Jetter from Mr. and Mrs. Leverett Roush, 39 Rutland St., was
read by Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate. The letter objected oo the
fact that Rutland St. from Nortll Second Ave., to Front St., was
not included in the resurfacing work . It stated that the street is
heavily traveled and that an alley nearby also is in bad condition.
The Roushes' letter -the writers were present to support their
letter - charged that certain areas were resurfaced but tllese two
loca lions were not, even though they are used frequently by heavy
traffic,
Speaking oo councU, Roush said that there are holes from elgbt
to 10 inches deep in Rutland St. In the designated secUon, Neilb·
bors there have even beeJI placing bricks In the holes, Rouah said.
He and Mis, Roush termed the street "deplorable." They com.
plalned because some alleys In tlle town were resurfaced In
preference oo stree~ being resurfaced.
Lack of funds, councilmen
and Mayor C. 0. Fisher pointed Columbus and Southern Olllo
out, hmited the extent of Electric Co. to provide electric
resurfacing work that could be serviCe in the village. The rate
done thiS spring and they also remains unchanged. However,
pointed this out as the reason William Bellamy, from the
improvements were not made company's municipal relatlona
to Fairlane Drive. Three department, pomted out that
res1dents from that sector were Columbus and Southern has
present to complain because the applied for a rate increase to
road was not resurfaced.
the Public utilities Commission
Harold Chase, maintenance of Ohlo.lf this rate is grantedsupervisor, told the Roushes possibly m the fall - then the
tllat holes in Rutland St. will be company will renegotiate Its
repaired as soon as possible contract with the village. The
following Memorial Day. He present contract expires on July
stated that some alleys in the 25.
business section were resur- Mrs. Eula Francis, repfaced because they are used resenting Cub Scout Pack
heavily by truck traffic. Chase 215, outlined to council the
pointed out that a number of pack's plans to "Keep America
other streets m the community Beautiful Day"•on June 5. AI
also are "bad," but the lack of that lime an intensive cleanup
funds prevented them from campaign will be carried out at
bemg included in tlle resur- the Mumcipal Park.
facing project.
The pack also will place trash
Council unanimously passed cans at various locations in the
an ordmance renewing for one community. Refuse cans and
year the contract of the (Contmued on Page 8)

Other My L ai.s H.dd
I
en
·

FT. MEADE, Md. (UPI)Every large American combat
unit in Vietnam has carried out
mass slayings of Vietnamese
civilians according to the
officer ~ho commanded troops
at My Lai.
CoL Oran K. Henderson,
racing a court martial on
charges that he covered up
atrqcities commited by his own
soldiers, sa1d Monday 11 is the

south yietnam, Cambodia or Teenagers Will
Laos.
Common Cause, which will H
G • u
staff the office with pa•d work- ave uztar Juass
ers and volunteers, plans to
A guitar mass , will be
assemble representatives of var- celebrated at 10 a.m. Sunday at
ious antiwar grqups for daily the Sacred Heart Catholic
meetings to determine how Church.
many members of the House Teenagers of the parish and
support the amendment. Thus others interested In parfar, 130 to 13S have endorsed ticipating are asked oo attend a
withdrawal of all U.S. troops by practice at 7:30p.m, Friday in
the end of the year.
tlle church basement. The Rev.
"Thewholeideaoftheamend- Donald Wehrung, the Rev. Paul
ment is to put heat upon the Waller, Mr. David Shane, and
President to get negotiations Mr. ,Vic Cinson of St. John's
going," explained Nedzi in .an Vianney, Bloomingsda!e, will
interview. "It's my contenbon have charge of the mass.
that what we are doing right At 11 a.m. Sunday, the Rev.
1
now IS piddhng away our nego- ·Fr. Bernard Krajcovic will
tiating power ~Y withdrawing ' ,have the blessing of the statue
troops piecemeal without get- of Our Lady of Sa lima at Sacred
ling anything for,it."
Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy.

army's great reluctance to talk Henderson, wlrS rebuffed by
that has kept these incidents Weshnoreland w1th a "very
quiet.
blunt reply."
"Every unit of br~gade size Sitting in the same small
has its My Lal hidden court anteroom where he first
someplace," Henderson told was officially charged 14
reporters in an interview during months ago, Henderson denied
a recess at hiS precourt martial that he had lied before the
hearing.
. Army's My Lai inquiry, headed
But he added: "Every unit by Lt. Gen. William R. Peers.
doesn't have a Ridenhour." "I have never made up a
Ronald L. Ridenhour was the story about what happened at
Vietnam veteran whose letter My Lai," Henderson sa1d. In
to the secretary of defense fact, queried more than a year
focused attention on the My Lai after the incident by the
10cident.
.
Army's inspector general, HenHenderson also disclosed that derson said, "I didn't even
in December, 1969, he wrote know where My Lai was."
Army Chief of Staff Gen. · As commander of the Amerl,
William C. Weshnoreland say- cal Division's lith Brigade,:
ing he would take full blame however, Henderson watched:
for the actions of his troops at his troops from a helicopter • '·
My Lai in order to save the they swarmed through My Lal
Army further embarrassment. on March 16, 1968, the day of
Thd offer, according to the mass murders.
He attributed later dilferenPERRIN ON TV
ces between his own version of
The Rev. W. H. Perrin, pastor the massa~re and lhat of tile
of Trinity Church, Pomer~y, Army to a chronic bad memGI')'
wlll appear at 10 a.m. Thursday and the fact he took over the
as a guest on the Jackie lith Brigade just a day befcn
Oblinger show, WCHS-TV, the My Lai operation.
Charleston. He and Mrs.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Oblinger will discuss the
recently publtshed book of the Robert Roy Sylvesftr', 24, ·
Rev, Mr. Perrin, "Look Who's Syracuse, and ~le Louile
Killing GOd."
I
Havs, 24, Pomeroy.

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