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I

,

[

H

11-Tbe
DaU,. Soatlnei,MV+pori-Pimeioy,.O.,
July 14,1971
•
.
.

Try _Again

They'll

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe Committee.
HOUle Ways and Means · At issue was the number d
,.. (D!!rDitlee wis IQ meet again votes eaCh Jlarty would fumisb ·
today In an effort to squeeze a fer a tax bill. Democra18 also
c:cmprclllllae tu .bill onw ·the wel"e demanding lbat the tax
Hcilse-ftoor fer a poaible vote bill be bolstered by IJl(ft than
1hls we.elr;.
$l.IML million IQ acc&lt;:mmodate
~ran and Democratic pet ·programs in the apmembers d the committee, in propria tlons biU already
addltlim wHouse leaders from cleared to the Senate.
both parties and represen· Tbe tu bill, agreed upon by
tdvesofthe o(flce of GoY. Jobn Democratic a_nd ~publican
J. Gilligan, jousted all day · leaders I&amp;'!t weet, includes a
Tuesday to no avail m the $1.4 graduated pel'S1)1181 state inliDim revenue package. All come tu of 1 w4 ~ cent and
cmcemedgaveuplate Tuesday corporate tax bites bringing in
nlgbt after three hours of $35( millim in new revenues
negotiations and agreed w over the next two years.
conUnue today.
Republicans, Democrats and
ltj)l ese-tatives of the goftrnor's office all declined fcrmal
comment for · fear any ac~Uabments IJ}lgbt be too
A large crowd attended the
fra811e to stand up under public
diaciCISIII'l!.
outdoor evangelistic services
"We dm't want anytbing w Tuesday night at the Southern
get mm ~ up," said Rep. Higb Sch00I f00 tball tadi
s urn
James J . Flannery, DCieveland, ranking minority
member of the Ways and Means crusad e each evemng through
July I8.
The subject of tonight's
sennon will be "Heaven," Song
leader is Duane Wolfe and
featuredtonigbtwillbetheKing
Tonight &amp; Thursday
Family. Services begin at 8
July 14-15
p.m.
NOT OPEN
In case of rain the Crusade
will be held in the high school
Fridoy thru Tuesday
July 16-20
auditorium at Racine. A IIIII'·
TORA! TORAI TORA!
sery is provided each evening.
(Technicolor!
The public is invited. Those
U. S. Sequences:
attending may sit on the
Martin Ba Isam
Joseph Cotton
bleachers, use a lawn chair, or
First showing at popular remain in automcibiles.
prices!
Thursday night Rev. Norris
"G"
will
use as his topic "The Man
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M. ,
Wbo Had Ev.....th;n«
But the
' - 06
Rigbt Thing,""
and
will feature
-.
_lbe Norris Quartet.

Big Crowd at

Crusade Meet

M,-s. Lunsfor.d
Died T_rle$day

Dress Code
Ill ::;:...

a'=

":,!)for
•eoisiaosiJali~SIIIIIhtfrom all

Kathryn Marie Lunilor\'1, 5t, LGUiual.. .
Pomeroy,Rt.3, died~at
Ellfan:emenl.

Veterans- Mem~ H"'ipil:ll
Mrs. Luns(ord was lk'"""""' lD
death by a brother, Otto
Aleshire.
. She is survived by her
husband, Leonard, and tlae
children·, David Wayne, at
home;JoyceAnnSianley,Beuy
JeanJones,Leooani,Jr.,David
E.,JaekieLee,andll":enneth.all
of Columbus; Brinda Abrie
Graham and Olarles E., both d
Pomeroy,andBillyS.uAklon;
four brothers, ·E mil and
Freeman Aleshire, bolb of
Pomeroy ; Stanley Aleshire,
Rutland, and Harland Aleshire,
of ·Cleveland ; one sister,
Genevieve V&lt;!gden, South Bend.
Ind. ; eight grandcbildren, and
seFuneraveralru·~"~will~beabelds.
- • ~~
Thursdayat3p.m.attbe .........,
~ft...,.
Funeral Home with lbe Rao.
E:ug
Gill offi · ling Bnrial

1

of
tbe
l*otisiuus 111 the *- code
:sbail be tile lt!l"''"''billty of
every prOfessional staff
member to enforce the
PiOOisiuus or tbe ..._ A special
responsibilily for doing so
~loags to lbe homeroom
'ea"""' wbo is the lirsl.oo see
lilt 5h•loeo•t eadl daJr. In t1Je
aiu• ... • 1 or lbe 0x1e the
......_._ .-ltBD ill Piotedures
;,;oi,;'faiiDRd:
Al)riolatiaaswiDbereported

to the ph'" itel pruoptly and in '

srillm rorm_ First ¥iola.tion,
wamiag to tbe sli*nl by tbe

principal; second l'iolalion,

c:&lt;~~lact 1rilb the parent by the
_. ......_.,; !bini violation,
;: ~ 111 the sli*nt by the

.J....,
~ ifio details and forms w
.
in•""•elt tbe eduicement of
the code :sbail be deYeiDped by

Leota &amp;w~ey ·
Died Tllesilay

Mrs. Leota Hawley, a. died
Tuesday morning at !be
resl«&lt;erw. -of ber son. Jack,
North 3rd St., M'rddleprt.
She was born May 25, • in
West Virginia, tbe daughter of
the Ia te William and Ella
Olambers Riley. She ""!' also
preceded in death by her first
husband, George Whiteside,
and her se¢ond husband,
Wellington Hawley. Sbe,Wal a
member of the Middleport
Clmrch of Cbrist.
Survivocs in a:dditioo oo her
son, include two daughters,
Mrs Joan Haas Bethel, and
·
•
Mrs. Amos (Eima) Bailey, New
h
Richmond; a stepdaug ter,
Miss Mildred_ Hawley, Middlepcrt; two SISters, Mrs. Roy
(Ella) Hannum, Long BoUom,
and Mrs. George (icie) Bayes,
Springfield, Va. ; a stepdaugbter-in-law, Mrs. James
H I
M'ddl
t
11
aw ey,
• epor ;
grandcbildren, six greatgrandchildren and two
t-

;.,~~lsRe:~:ar~~ ~~~- :ooeneterybe. iFrin·.endsR:kmays~~gsat
a.;:;:~staff will great-~
grea
..,..
ba.-e the' , . ,.!1rte support of
Fw!era1 serviCeS will be held

MEIGS lHEATR£

,~~,n~ !) ~ ! ~ £· 1M

Tonight, Tbur. Fri.
July 14-IS-16
Double Feelure Program
DIRTY DINGUS

MAGEE

GP

Pan a vision ·Metrocolor
'F rank Sinatra

George Kennedy

-PiusELVIS ·
a film about him.
"thars fhf!. way it Is"
Color
Elvis Presley
G

Cal1No.41&amp;

the funeraI horne any lime.

FIRE HITS CHURCII

AKRON (UPI ) - Fire
destroyed the Calvary United
Methodist Churcbbel"eTuesday
nigbl Firemen said the sewnd
floor of lbe church was engulfed
in flames wben they arrived and
the fire spread quickly to ihe
rest of lbe bUilding. Tbere were
no injuries and the cause was
not immediately determined.

STENGER SENTENCED .
CLEVELAND
C b
C 1 (UPl
Co l uya oga oun y
mmon
Pleas Court Judge Adrian B.
Fink Tuesday senteooed Jobn
Stenger, 21, Rocky River, to IO
to 1ll years in prison m drQg
charges stemming tnm an
arrest in April I970· Stenger
pleaded guilty 00 P' ss ssioo of
heroin for sale and P'
i Tlllllf
mariJ'uana and dilaudid, Fink

EXAMINERS NAMED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Henry
W. Eckhart, cbainnan d lbe
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has announced the appointment of four attorney
examiners to tbe Cf!Dmission. said.
Appointed were Mrs. Cheryl
Keith, Nathan Gordon, and
MARRIAGE IJCENSE
David Turano, all of Columbos,
Howard Leroy Barber, 21,
and Michael Work of Pleasant Reedsville, and Barbara
Hill.
Jeanne Robie, 18, Reedsville.

CbarterNo.BW.
Na~BalltRegiOilNO . l
REPORT OF OONDlrloN, OONSOLJDATING
OOMESI'IC SUBSIDIARIL'I, OF THE

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
o1 Mlddlepertlll lbe State d Oblo, at the &lt;lOBe of bos'ness on JuDe 31, un
published Ill reiJHII8e to CaD made by COmpll'oller d the Curreacy, under Title
u, Ualled Slllel Code, .seca... m.
ASSEml ·
Cash and due from banks - - • • - - - - • • • • - • • • - - • $ 693,118.72
U.S. Treasui-y securities - • - - • - • - , - • • - - - • - - • 1,79I,468.75
Obligations d States and political subdivisions • • - - • - - - 1,159,0U.l3
Other securities • - - - - • • • - - • • • • • - I2,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
···
- • 500,000.00
Iinder agreements wresell • - - • - Loans • - - - - . - - - - • • • - • • • - - • - • 4,654,841.17
· Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - • • - - 56,888.16
Real estate owned other than bank premises - • • · - - • 10,959.70
Other assets - - - • - - - • • - - - - - - - • - - - • 5.352.89
TOTAL ASSETS - • - - • • • - - - • - • • • · - - $8,883,671.22
LIABll.lrJF.'I
Demand deposits of individuals, parlnerships,
and e&lt;rp(l'aiiiDS - - - • • - - - • • • - - - · - - - $I,597,660.50
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • • • - • - • - - • • - • 5,692,200.89
Deposits of United States Government - - • · - - • • - - • 41,450.43
Depooits of States and political subdivisions • - - - - • - - • - 523,ln.57
Deposits of commercial banks - • • - - • - - - • • - - - 5,000.00
Certified and o(flcers' checks, etc. - - - - • - - - · • - - · 30,604.44
TOTAL DEPOSITS - • • - • • · - f7,890,093.88 ·
(a) Total demand deposits • - - • - • • · $2.037,370.36
(b) Total time and.savings deposits • • - - • $5,852,723.52
Other liabilities - - - - • - • • • • • • - - • - - - I65,929,30
TOTAL IJABILITIES - - - - • • - - - • - · · - • $8,056,023.18
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURll'JF.'I
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings ) - - - - • - - - - · • · - - - ~.137.10
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - · - - $64,137.10
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
763,510.94
Equity capital-ootal • - - · ·
• - • • - - • •
CorDmon Stock-total par value • • • • • · • •
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,000
400,000.00
Surplus • - • - • • • - · · · - - • • • - - • • - ·
263,5I0.94
Undivided profi Is • • - • - • • • • •
763,510.94
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• - $8,8131671.22
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - • - • •
MEMORANDA
·'
Average of wtal aep®ts for the IS calendar
days ending with call date • • • - • - • - - • - • • • - -· $7,lMl9,I26.72
Average of ootalloans for the IS calendar
days ending with call date •• - - - - - - • - • • • • • • $4,635,408.7I

1, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice President, the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct wthe best of my
knowledge and belief.
HAROLD E. HUBBARD
We, lbe undersigned directors atl&gt;!st the correctness of Ibis report of conditioo and declare that it has been examined by us and w the best of our
1
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
· Rodoey DowDing
James F. Arnold - Directors
Paul s. Smart

1

the baai1l or education in the Frida y a t. 10 a.DL at "'""'
impl~talion of · the Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
....,.m...s Ill tbe dress code. with. ~ Rev•. Ra~J:llin ~oyer
OP'I'IoNIS BErAINED
· dfioating. Burial will be m the
A p•.. sa) oo alknr earty Sand Hill Cemetery at Long
~lion Ill lilt seni&lt;r year Bottcm.Friendsmaycallat~
far ...ue sh•iMIIs wbo qualifr funefr ~ ~ Thursdayevenmg
1l'liS disolssed by board
om •.
p.m.
s. George Hargraves,
!liljlbiabnlel!t, explained that
duo w iiiiCire subjects being
offered, some sludents are
acbkolng tbeir earned credits
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) -Home
early.
delivery of liquor in Ohio bas
Frank
Porler,
board been called "a total bomb" by
1M ' 1•111; suggested that the stale Liquor. Control Director
..,lion be loell"'*" and bandied Richard Guggenheim and the
on an indil'idual basis as officials says the delivery may
stodents in tbe voca ti'ona I be stopped at tbe end of the
eel li
.un on program mus t month.
"'''!lrte f_. J1!l8lS of high Tbe experiment was started
sciJool
in COlumbus, Cleveland, OnHargraves reported that cinnati, Toledo and Akron on
$l'lL3Z ..a.; receiftd as part of June 28 and was scheduled w
lllt.lrleigsL.ocaiSdloolllistricts run through August. Gug•
- a stal~ sw·1 ~nheim, however, said if
sew.ement 1n
agamst several publishers sales don't pick up the service
ao • • +&gt;I Ill text boot price may be· cut shcrt by a month.
"-'-.
Only 1• cases of liquor were
.......,.
•
Larry Morrison, assistant delivered in the first IO days of
superiniH•IH1I, n!ad the bids lbe experiment in the five cities.
received oo gaWine, oil and "I'm willing tn try anything that
grease. The board agreed oo might work, " said Gugac:apt the bid Sllllmitted by .genheim. "And if it doesn't
Teuco.
· work, I'll be the first oo admit
In other business Frank it. "
f'ortl&gt;r was named as the of.
6dal 1ep1
•lalive lo attend
lbe Ohio School Boards
TWO EARN HONORS
Association
meeting
in
Tbe spring semester dean's
Cleveland on Nov. I().ll . llst at Morehead State
Hargrares 'OS named as the University named I,~ fullUfirial iepreseDtalive of tbe time sludents, including two
boanl rw rereiWJg and ex- !from Meigs County. To be
pO.nd;ng fedeial funds.
listed a student must compile at
Grace Abbol1 was hired as a least a 3.0 average on a 4.0
c:oo* and Joe 1\kMurray and scale. They were, Ernest L.
Mrs. Jellie Ariz were hired as Smith, 3.SO, and Robert E.
su.bsli!Dte bus drtters pending Smith , Jr. , 3.53, both of
quatific::atioos.
Pomeroy.
1be bid Ill thE Ohio Valley
Baking Company was also
FINED $IO, COSTS
aa:epled._
Gary
Dale Arnold, 1J!, Mason,
Dom MulleD aslied if oil cwld
be sp:eacl 011 lbe parking lot was fined $10 and costs on
bebind tbe Megs Juni&lt;,o- Higll conviction 'of squealing tires in
Sdlool INor iisoo noted lbat Pomeroy Mayor Charles
arTallg4!IDellts bad been made Legar's Court Tuesday nigbl
oo take care d the matter.
lion'
U. ftPIIIIed tllat
LOCAL TEMPS
..,...,.., hr n ' !ism on
Temperature in downtown
... wp ..-.. wonkl
.... $I,GZ - illut • of Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m.
~- .... Jal', ud was 7~ degrees, under sunny
.titer "
we Wtllld run skies .
,..... .'!1.1 I, aa illu • of

"*"•"

~

Defennents ·Explained
prq~&lt;seil
MARIETTA - Highway
1tae deferment of
resurfacing projects in nine higlnray improvement projects,
Sou.tbeastem Ohi.o counties inwbicbstatefundaareab;eadr
•le\Jiedwbeginnedmonth ·assigned,willpermltthemost
bave been affected by the State . immediate relief · of . the
Highway Department's projected defldt. The resureeon&lt;my measU'e and have facing prognpn is finlnced
been deferred, possibly unlil entirely with state funds, hence
early ne:xt year. acccrding w the logical curtailment of the
Jlivisicln 10 Director Max R. remaining portion of _that
Farley.
&lt;Un'ellt program. Gallla and
Farley said the economy
QJeUtreS anilounced by State
lligbWay Director J. Pbillip
.
Riebley last week is an attempt Four defendants ~ filled
to maintain "fiscal integrity" in ~three others fcrieited bonds
the face of a projected $50 m ~t Mayer c. 0 .
miJli' defi11 1·t t
nt rate of Fishers Court Tuesday night.
In
~ a curre
·
· ·
scbeduledcoolractlettings. The Fmed were Wtlliam 0 .
Carman 17 Chauncey fine
prejeeted deficit is due, In a ·
• •
· '
large part, w the obligation of ~· ~18 :-messe~, no
cunent highway revenue far operators ~· Pbillip F.
the relin!ment and servicing_of Bearbs, · 34, Raone, $15 and
tbe two bood issues, for high- costS, left of center; Heglnald
way COIISiruction, approved by Hill, 59, N~w Haven, $15 and
lbe voters in the 1960s.
costs, speeding, and Kenneth L.

Three
· .

Meigs deferments are (Meigs), ;
Route 124 from Minersville w

i

Ra&lt;ineof',Rfnmte~tlandRouWtej::-~

lion
ou - ;
'
from junction 346 to junction 180 '
in both Me. lgs I and v_inton
Counties, and (GaDia), Route·t
I60, from Porter 00 · VInton .County line. Two ( 2) major ::
bridge repairs, RaCOID Ci'tlelt "
and _Kyger Creek.
;

·i

F·m·'·ed' B·y M;ny
· or .:_'
a.

Allan 35 Rumford R 1 , 100 •
• • ·
• ' ·•
~
and costs, three days In jail, ~
DWI.
r
'
Forfeiting bonds were :;
Charles McCloud, 46, Mid- t"
dleport, $30 · bond posted,
disturbing the peace; Lyle :_
Smith, Marietta, $25, 1'111111in8-,
red light, and Lowell L:~
Neimeyer, 25, Gallipolis; $50, ~
intoxication and disturbing the-~
peace. ·
~
•'
.•
•

El.berfelds l'n Pomer:oy"

~

I'

r

-...
•

'·House Gives Senate $1.4 Billion Tax Package .
By LEE LEONARD
UPt Slal!lboai!e Reporln'
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - House Republican and Democratic
leaders bave parlayed a fragile CCliDpi'OIIlise on a $1.4 billion tax
package including lbe state's first pmoual in COOle tax into a M42 vlctcry, sending lbe controftrsial measure over w tbe
Senate.
The long-awaited House vote came Wednesday evening after
abnost tlree hours of floor debate, which followed burry'up
tactics by House leaders to speed lbe bill to the floor and
Jftsei'Ve lbe agreement which overrode lbe wishes of fiscal
cmservatives.
Approval olthe bill, which contains a I w4~cent graduated
state individual income tax, ended a House deadlock of more
than two mmlbs oo taxes, but changes appear in store for lbe
measure once it reaches. lbe Senate.
Senate leaders bave said they 1l!iD work fer a compromise in
lbat rbamber, but claim they need six weeks. Since the interim
budget for July expires in two weets, another one-month
spending plan fer August seems imminent.
.

The me.asure contains slightly more _than $I billion in revenues

'

Weather

Now You Know
Lake Baikal in Soviet Siberia
with a maximum depth of more
than 5,000 feet.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason .Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

.·.·•

.·

BY CHET TANNEHILL
Continued operation of the
Imperial Electric Co. in Mid·
dleport is at a crossroad.
This was the main sense of a
letter from the company to its
employes Wednesday who
struck the new, modern plant
manufacturing AC and DC
motors on June 3. It has not
operated since.
Last week Local 1587, IBEW,
the local plant union, failed tn
establish at a fact-finding
preliminary hearing here that it
had been "locked oul" as
claimed.
John F. Kruse, vice president
in charge of production, Akron,
where Imperial's "mother
plant" is located, wrote to the
employes:

TOMATOES, AS THEY roll down tbe shute after being washed and dryed, are sorted
automatically. Cheryl Foster, above, packs the No. 2graded oomaooes.

Use· Elberfelds Free Parking Lots On

THE FIRSr STEP IN THE OPERATION of tbe toma oo grader Is oo place the oomaooes on a
conveyor belt as Pat Hill does here at left. The belt carries tbe tnmaooes to the washing and
drying operation. After the wmatoes are washed and dryed they are shoved ontn a wire screen
which auoomatically sorts them. See Page 2 for more pictures.

· Second Street and Mechanic Street

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Gasoline Tax Divvyup Made
The state distributed a total of

J-·

$8,628,978 in gasoline tax
revenue in July to Ohio's 88
counties, 229 cities, 7111 villages
and 1,320 townships, State
Audioor Joseph T. Ferguson
reported Wday. Meigs received
$5,075.

· - $1,511....- ....
1tae boanl also 8jllllu'ed tbe

Admiral
SUPER PRINCESS
AIR CONDITIONERS

~,(}()()

Goes to Ballot

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SUPER STYLING- SUPER VALUES!
"Cycl~

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"Squirrel Cage•: fan and smart decorator-fr.,;t styling.
All o1 thos 1s available in 8,000 BTU-hr. and 10.000 BTU-hr.
un1ts, perlect for apartments and economy-minded
budget keepers. .
.

AVAILAB'F IN 1,000, 10,000, 12,000 BTU, 120 VOLT

.

.

2.fiOUR

clEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON-'S
a.EANERS

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NOW

Admiral "CYCLE-AIRE" ~~·

Accident Probed

~ SPINS COOL AIR TO· EVERY CORNER

Enjo~

'

n.e

the unbealable comfort of wall-to-wall end

ceiling-to.floor cooling with Admiral's exclusive
"Cycle-Ai~e" distr ibution system. An independCnt .
mo t~r drrves the rofiitting " Cycle.Aire:• vaM.
cont1nuously changing lhe directim of the cooled elr
C?m •~g _from the unit. This advanced coot-eir
d•stn~hon sy.slem allows .you to gain the full '

capac•ty benefits of modern air conditioned living.

:·cycle-Aire" produces balanced cool comfort- not

IU~t a s•ngle Current of air. Annoying chills and

dra·t~

..

township total of $1,584,000. The
townships shares are mailed oo
the county auditors for
distribution oo tbe oownships
witbin each county the audioor .
said.
Gasoline tax distribution to
Meigs County were, Middleport
village treasurer, $1,877;
Pomeroy, $I,934; Racine, $417;
Rutland, $436; and Syracuse
$411.

Middleport Council Wed·
nesday evening in a brief
session passed a resolution
authorizing a $60,000 bond issue
wbe placed before voters in lbe
fall election. The bond issue Is
for lbe construction of a new
fire station.
Atlendiilg were john Zerkle,
Jean Morgan, David Oblinger,
Lawrence Stewart, CUfford
Stwnbo and Dick Vaughan,
council members, and Tom
Darst and Pete Kloes,
representing_ the fire department.

Aire" and Comfort-Stat Cmtrol. are available .., the
compact, lightweight Super Princess mod!ls 11AY11A
and IQIAYI2A. Here's complete personal environment

Beojamia 0 . Oavis was
tbe first Negro to become
a general in tbe U.S. Army.
beiDg appoiDied (kl 25.
mo. tbe World Alman~
ootes. His son, Benjamin
Davis Jr.. a West Point
graduate, boeame tbe second Negro general and retired from the Air Foree as
a lieuteDanl genM~l

Issue .

Receiving the largest share of
the state collection tax, or
$4,404,978, were the cities and
villages. They are in lbe tax
revenue based on a formula of
$1 for every motor vehicle
registered within their borders,
Ferguson said.
The counties received $30,000
each, for a county. total of
$2,640,000, while the oownships
each received $1,200 for a

are elimina tett .

_. -BAKER FURNITURE·------.
.....1
1
_
MIDDLEPORT
r

Meigs county Sheriff's Hill, bad been stolen from the
Dept. is Investigating the wreck parking lot at a local tavern.
r1. a car reported swlen.
Upon investigation, the
The department received a wrecked car was lbat of Dale
call at 1:05 a.m. !Qday lbat Hill's. Tbeunidentifreddriver of
there had beeo an accident on lbecar, apparentlymovillgata
State Route 7. Shortly after this high rate of speed, went «if the
call, Michael Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, road inw 300 feet of guardrail.
calll!d wrep&lt;irt lbe car he was ,Tbe car was demolisbed · Tbere
driving, a 1970 Mavrick _ was no one at the scene when
belonging 00 his father, Dale W. 1be o(flcer arrived. 'lbe incident
is still under
HUGHES OUT
'WASHINGTON (UP!)- Sen. Fair ud mild Sahinlay t1JrMCb
LOCAL TEMPS
Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, said MOIIday. IIJ&amp;Ia ill tile lljlper 'Ill
today he '!"ould not be a can· and lbe 1ner • · Oven!Pt Temlll!r&amp;ture in downtown
dldate for the Democratic lows ill lite 511 _.. ud t.wer Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.
was 74 degrees under sunny
~ldential nomination next 105 -til--"'-.
.....,........
._._ _ _ __skies.
year.

proposed we call in the servi£es
of Federal Mediation. This was

agreed oo and resulted in tbe
presence of lbe mediallr at the
meetings of June 1st and June
~-

~

When considering the union
was proposing more than 100
contract changes, it e med
unlikely indeed oo the company
that a genuine effort was being
made w effect a new cootract,
(Continued on Page 2)

Session Set

dleport, rumors develop that
are misleading and not factuaL"
One such apparent "nunor"
may have been the union claim
!bat it has offered wextend the
contract, subject to later
agreement on a new contract,
and been denied. In this con·
nection, Kruse wrote:
"Prior tn tbe morning of June
3, the company was willing 00
extend the contract for any
reasonable period of time, but
not on a day-to-day basis (as
demanded by the union). The
company was willing 00 extend
the conlract for three weeks,
three months, or longer, and is
stili willing to do so."
He further explained, "by a
reasonable period of time was
meant at least IO days."
About the sincerity of the
union leadership in its
wiUingness oo negotiate, ratber
than close down the plant no
matter what, Kruse's letter
says :
"In reviewing negotiations
prior to June 3, it appeared
strange to the company that so

r----------

!
1

•

• .

News ••• zn Bnefs
By UDited Presa !Ditnlall-.1

Heavy Air Strikes Resumed
SAIGON- RENEWED HEAVY air strikes in lbe l8lb d
South VIetnam were reported Wday by the U, S. OOO!DIIJICL On ti;Je
ground, American '}Is returned to ground fighting rw tbe first
time in two weeks, and Swth VleJruunese fcrces relined to Fire
Base Fuller,near the Demilitarized Zme, ovemmbyO•I'JI•"ist
lroops July 1. Military spokesman also said 29 Gls died last week
in Vietnam.

Somebody(?) Dragging His Feet
PARIS- THE VIETCONG charged at the VIetnam peace
talks today the Nixoo administration was~ i18 feet Oil tbe
Communist peace proposals. At the Western White House in Su
Clemente, Calif., meanwhile, Nlxoo and top policy aclrisen")
continued their consideration of lbe seven-point peace jllan, with
no details oo the adminlstra lion policy rea ss snent being made
public.

Missouri Trailers Ripped Up
DESLOGE, MO. - WGH WINDS RIPPED 11lllOUGII Ibis
lead mining wwn loday. leveling two trailer oourts, and lri)liag
three persons and injuring 23. But the Natiooal Weather Senioe
was unable w identify what type of sllrm boorled lllluigb tbe
small community, 60 miles south of St. Louis.

Clashes Move into Third Day
MMAN - FRESH FIGHTING BROKE oul today between
Cycle Rider . Arab'Acommandos
and soldiers of the Jordanian Army. R was tbe

Two Runs Made
Tile Middleport E·R squad
was called Wednesday at 1:09
p.m. oo 629 Pearl St. for a child
who bad fallen from a bicycle.
Before the squad arrived, the
child bad been taken by private
car oo the office of Dr. Pickens.
At :i:so p.m., !be squad was
called oo Route 554 for Dennie
Spires. Spires was taken w
Route 7 where he was lrans•
fered w a Rawlings Coats
~bulance, and taken wHolzer
Medical Center .

few meetings were scheduled
prior tn lbe expiration of the
contract. During the entire
month of May, only three
meetings were held. Only one
was held during the week im·
mediately preceding lbe expiration date.
"The reason for this was that
the union was unavailable to
meet that week other than on
Friday, May 28. It was at that
'
meeting that the company

U. S. Federal Mediator C. W. Miller announced
"We are now at the Wednesday a meeting of the Imperial Electric Co.
crossroads. Either the company management and the negotiation committee of
will be able to negotiate a Local 1587, IBEW, of Middleport, bas been
contract which is fair and scheduled next Tuesday, July 20; at 10:30 a.m. in
equitable lo the employees and Middleport.
the company, , or a long strike
A strike hilS been in progress since June 3 at the
will result. The consequences of plant employing approximately 80 men and womeo.
a strike are substantial losses of
cuslomers, reducing the orders The union last week failed to establish in a
to a point where fewer em· preliminary hearing (fact finding ) that its members
ployees would be required had been locked out of the plant on JUDe 3. Union
whenever the strike is setUed." President Tom Deeter said then the finding would be
Kruse wrote to the employes appealed.
tbe reason for his letter was ro
Members of the union negotiating committee
set facts straight. "In any are Deeter, William Harris,. Clara Frances, Keith
situation similar to what has
Kennedy and Roger Leifheit.
developed between the com·
Sel Smith is plant manager.
pany and the union in Mid·

THE TOMATO GRADER on the Bill Hill farm in Racine, at left, above,ls in full operation
this week with lbe tomato crop moving inoo high gear. Mrs. Bill (Rutb Ann) Hill packs tbe
mnnberone graded tomatoes from a rotating table at lbe end of the tomato grader. The grader
saves many hours of back breaking work. Bill Hill has been one of the first producers tn add a
grader oo his farm operation. At one time farmers paid $9a pound for oomato seed. Today the
cost is $350 a pound for hybrid seed. The profit from tomatoes loday is not much greater than it
was during the depression years, producers say.

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THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1971

~-- Imperial

A Sure Bomb

aUendalft of Sandra Lee CUrtis
at Meigs Bigb Sdlool
~lfendiq: the meeting were
Hargraves, Morrison, Lee
iML'Camas, dirt. and board
members. MuUeo. Porter,
Vqil King. l6nm Slawter and
Joe Sayre.

Clouay 10!1igbt wiih , cbaoce
of thundershowers east and
soutb. Lows in the middle 50s w
lbe lower 60s. Partly sunny
Friday , little change in tempera lure, cbancoe d sllowers
central and southeast in the
forenoon. Highs in the lower ID; ,

Is lbe deepest lake in the world

VOL XXIV NO. 64

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMEN'('_ ~F

This One Was

centao=

'

'

·Just Received • • •

added $167 million in new slate appropriations, mainly for we).
the local level for education, properiy tax relief and local
fare and Medicaid.
government.
,
On the other hand, the chamber knocked out $30 million worth
Pari of lbe money' would go for a 10 pet
lbeboard
of revenues which would have been derived from closing sales
reduction in property taxes, amounting to $5!1 millim the first
tax exemptions oo business, pleasing Republicans and annoying
year and $125 million the secood year.
organized labor.
Homestead Exempli16 GOP Join Dems
Also in the bill are property tax exemptioos d $1,000 a year fer
Sixteen Republicans joined 38 Democrats in clearing the tax
homeowners 65 and over . Eligible homeoWI)ers ~ less
than $6,000 a year would r ·
$%,500 pzemplim . Tbese
measure, a product of weeks of negotiations between legislative
leaders from both parties and the governor's office.
exemptions woUldced
2 per cent increase in tbe
Only six Democrats opposed the bill, joining 36 of the 54
inheritance tax on estates • ued at over $40,000.
Republicans in the House.
The current five-mille cor ratim franchise tax on net wcrth
The persorial income tax would be levied on all income earned
of businesses would be rna · ed. This would be augmented by
in Ohio by residents and non-residents, based on adjusted gross
a new tax on the net inc e of corpcratioos at ~ per cent on
income as reported in federal tax returns. ·
income up 00$25,000 a yea and 8 per cent ... amounts over lbal
Taxpayers would he allowed a $500 exemption for each de- . The corporation 'would pay whichever tax produces more
pendent, up to a maximum of $3,000.
revenue.
The tax would be I per cent on income of $5,000or less, ranging
Other features of the bill include :
tn 4per cent on annual income in excess of $50,000.
,
- A lOper cent reduction in lbe tangible persooal pooperty tax
(Continued on page Il l
II would be collected at the stall! level and distributed back to

fr«m the proposed personal income tax, plus $354 million in new
revenues from added taxes on corporations oo finance a $7.8
billion general appropriatioo bill already passed by the House
and sent 00 the Senate.House Republican leaders, who could not muster enough votes
for any tax bill by themselves, indicated reHef the package is off
their backs and over on lbe Senate side.
Dems Plan Amendments
Democrats said they would seek oo attach even more revenues
and spending proposals in lbe Senate.
Gov. John J. Gilligan, who proposed $2.1 billion in new taxes to
finance a $9.1 billioo bndget, said he was "gratified" by House
clearance of the proposal, which in many respects represented a
miniature version of his own plan.
"I will renew efforts in the Senate to reswre ill-advised cuts in
spending for elementary and secondary education and for the
medically indigent," Gilligan told newsmen after the House
-~ v:ote.
· The Democrats received partial satisfaction when the House

third slraight day of clashes. In Cairo, lbe stmHIIfi£iai
newspaper AI Ahram said Egypt is ready to interwne in Jonilll
.tn prevent a "bloodbath." Meanwllile, in Israel, that Datiaa
celebrated Air Force Day, with flyovers, speedJes, and :m ...,..,
The Middleport police
· department investigated a car· to the United States tn provide more jets.
motorcycle accident Wed· Strike Picture Cloudier
nesday at 4:30 p.m. at the en·
WASHINGTON - A HALF-MII.UON tele(lloote -llera
!ranee of lbe A&amp;P parking lot.
4jq: 1. . . .
James Henry Stevenson, 71, remained off their jobs today, and a union •¥
E. Main St., Pomeroy, was railroad workers vowed to strike afleast twO ...ur..JI FlldQ.
!raveling south when he turned Railroad management spokesman said lilt slrih, by the Tlwj!el
inoo the parking lot in front of Transportation Unioo, would mesn layoffs lild PlY Ci!ls rar
Bill Little,17, Cheshire, riding a workers m non-&lt;~truck roads.
motorcycle north.
Uttle was taken w Veterans Italy Rocked,by Quake
Memorial Hospital by the
PARMA. ITALY -AN EARTHQUAD rmii!d llnu&amp;h .....
Pomeroy E·R , squad, treated ern Italy early today, killing at leaat two paiiOIWI, aDd w • •
and released. Stevenson was thoosands fleeing in panic. The temblor, wbidJ .w 1 I ·
cited for faillll'e oo yield right of buildings and sent television antema.s swaying, lllled far 31
way •
seconds.
·
·

Is Injured

HARRY M. CROOS of Middleport. fifty years a Muon,
received his SO.year lapel pin from Robert King, Worshipful
Master of the Middleport Lodge No. 363, F&amp;A.M. Helping
wilb the presentaUon at the Cross home were Charles T.
Cassell, senior deacon; John Ketchka, ]iast master and lodge
secretary; and Carl Taylor, past master and lodge chaplain.
Mr. Cross has been a Master Mason since July 12, 192I, and
with his allaining this honor gives Middleport Lodge Eight
Jiving SO.year members.
'

'

I,

•

•

�·''

. 3-Tbe llally Sentinlll, Middle~Pimeroy, 0 .1July 15, i97i

Meigs Legion · Defeats
New .Haven ~ Club 7 to 5

L.ittle.Enthusiasm
at
17
Angela
Majored
r--------------':""------------1
He1en ·.He1·p us
Davis

E"' 's ff*: 11111 115 doe ...,.., as much opposed to tbe
llllnlel lift aiM ' tm • 1 ~ interracial marrlage as was
'! _J.J
111e .r Iliad:
&amp; cda Mrs.Da~andtberellllionship
DatiL
cooled'. ~ela .came back to
IIJ JAQ[ v.rox
!aU her last year at Brandeis. t
1
1
:
u.bll ....._ ...
Tbat ... tbe beginning o( her ·I: . . ·
Wbeo lbe Rev. William lutelage under Mlifmse.
tl !jsh drove Angela Davis Now '12 years old, r.tari:wi
rnm NeW v.n ~ Brandeis had been at Brandeis 10.. n I
I
umVeiSily ,.. 111e ....,.i•ts .of years after teaching previoUsly :
By Helen Bottel
Boston in eariJ Sl!pltmte', at western European universil!l&amp;l, the l7'fl!ll'-dd p:tsbowed lies. His best known book is YOUTH ASKED rDR IT!
lillJe mdni!15!1! abaatenll!ring called ''The One Dimensionill
'dlis 'COlumn is l1r young people, their prob...... and
· lbe&amp;eslu•YI)J"'U'cf&amp;O gem Man." One of its tbeses is !bat pleasures, their ~les 8lld fun. Aa wilb the rest of Helen Help
a scbolanbip.
tbe average man in the ·Us! itwelcuneslauglls b!ltwCII'tdodge a seriOQS questiClll with a
She bad been &amp;WQ rnm ber fedmGiogical society liaS be- Jnsb.oll.
parents aDd bame iD Binning- e&lt;me so S'lrilcbed into the
Send your teenage qDesti4111S to YOUTH ASKED rDR ri', care
bam, Ala., far twro J8ll'S. living material aspects of life, 111e of~~~ Help Us! tbililleWspaper.
with the 1Jeli&lt;lr$ iD llnx*lyQ ''sewe&lt; system" of telerlisloo
QUESTION AND ANSWER IN SAME MAIL
and al!!!nding lhe .... "Illes- and other mass llledia, tbe
Dear Helen:
· siJe" Elisabeth ~ high iDusioo !bat be liaS free speech
I still love bim though I de!ly it, even ~myself.
Sdlool in GIE&amp;Nidl Village. and tbe right to protest that be
How can you forget SOJDeCIIe you planned your Mure 'irilb?
Sbe, boid eotabtished ,.,• .,a- iS acquiescing in deprivation of
We went steady for a year and were alwaya .true ~each other,
ble ;..~ 11ut she was bis indWidual freedcm.
and lhen foolisb pride ndned things. You aee, I waited far bim to
still a sby 111111 alocf JIIIIIIC
Mamloe Praises AJIIela
penon.
Marcuse today describes An- call me 1lhen I was suppol'ed to caD IUD, except I wouldo'l call
French bad 11em ber IIHISl ·gela Davis as tbe best, or "one because I t~Jo®lt be owed me an apology. So there we both sat,
di!fl.:ult subject at Elisobelb ·of the two or three best" walillg, and getllng madder aU the lime.
It's toolatetodoanytbingaboutitnowbecanse we dOD.'I evm
Irwin SD with lhe drift to .students be baS had in 30 years.
Why•
•
.
speak. Butllelen, bedoesn'tdateanyotP else and he evm lelia his
overCGQJeany •• 1 .,lbat was
·
to bootme lJpical. she clllllle ''I've been asked !bat maily family we're still gWig IGgelber. Wby doesn't be just call up and
CANDYIIOBAatANDPAMBIIL(aDtbatletomatoesand
French lill!ralare as ber majtlr times," he says. "It's very say be's sorry! - HAT&amp;'! SI'UBBORNNESi
110 letluce), are paciing the No. 2 grade tomatoes from a
and IIIOVI!d iniD lbe ''Fieudl simple. Her intelligence was Dear H.S.:
rolating table at lhe end of the grader.
House" at llraDdeis wbore m1y superior · and so was her
Because boys (and men) usually aren't made that way. Here
are
letters !bat (I 1 answer your questioD and (2) tell you bow
!bat language was ~~~"'*"'
inten.st."
, Angela was at Br••'"i• 11r
Marcu.se does not discount to solve your problan:
rour years "' &lt;tA far a junior ~~eia~ be pllatiyedL~ shabeping Dear Helen:
year abroad at the Suilume iD ~... s evo u on ""'
says
What is an Ex-Boy friend!
Paris, anlil sbe was &amp;l.....,led it is probably exaggerated.
He's the me wbo ahraya asks your best friend ''Wbel'e's
in lhe SpriDg ef lJii5..
"H it hadn't been me, it wbat's-ber-oame?''
. . , _ Alb+, , Her
would haJe been someone much
- The me wbo calls and saya be bas the tmtng nnmher
Bnndeis, a nm ±-ian like me,n he says.
(ralher lbansays the wanls lbat 1f0Uidgetber bacll).
scbooJ has tatittd tn4teraWrites BIDI n Thesis
- Theldd wbo ''justbappeus" toridepastyo~r bus Blop when
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. being of American citizens b1e poblidty iD..,.. years as
Although Angela's senior year
be lmmrsyou're there. But 1fOUid be stop cr evm wave! Beet no!
Edward M. Kennedy, J).Ma.ss. , below its own special interests a ''bi'*"'i'lg &amp;IOiibd" .llr ~-~tlecmainlyandattending
-The nne wbo bas your phone miJDber serihbled an over bis
accused lhe American Medical in ordering its priorities. It reJolutiollariesaad aCIK loflist ..,..~.....,·s
llires
seminAssocialion today of obstructing deserves to be igmred, rejected eJement.s. It was lbe 1 •1\111'- ars, she wrote her senior waD, justin caae,you know, not for any special reason.
- The me who IPIIds you a birlbday card with no IIIJJie
alma;t every major step to and forgotlm."
ters of a nau-1 studefttalrike booors thesis on ''The Novels of
improve health care for Ameri- Kennedy said the AMA center iD lbe ¥illll cf U'JI.
(French writer) RobiJe.Grillet: signed, blit addressed in bis very distinc1ive handwriting with the
cans while degenerating into "a worked against such programs
W
Marcuse, SOQIJed A Study of Method and green pen be stole from you.
-He's lhe ldd you really bate to nm into on the street, bUt
propagarida organ for purvey- as health benefits for World propbet of lbe NeW Left, was Meaning."
ing 'medical politics."'
War U veterans, Blue Cross tea&lt;Dng at Br•••' · lbe entire · Prel. Sacha says her J.25.page mmt of an, face; and be gels lbat same sinking feeling when be
Kennedy made a blistering and private health imurance, lime Angela was !heft 1Jut sbe · thesis, bailed as one of the sees you, because·you both know !bat you love each other, bUt
attacll on tbe AMA and its medicare and ''today they did ·not ''dis oa" ._ tew ..., most brilliant ever written at you're both too PROUD to admit it.
(But I did.)
Policies toward affordable oppose any meaningful efforts" who was to laft lbe IIHISl llnndeis, was concerned with
ideas
rather
than
the
·-lhetic
Just sign me -LEARNED, AND NOW HE'S NO LONGER
health care as be resumed for review aimed at improving profound i•A we el aDJ1DI! ..,
'"'"""""" bv bis Senate subcom- the quality of medical care.
her intelleclual aDd p~a-;..,.,._ and literary style of Alain MYEX
_.....,
'
"In ~
-L-t," 531·d "-"""",
-'lhc·-=ng-lil"-'-'-•.
RIJbbe.Grillet as the "chief Dear Helen:
mittee
on Administrative
Prac"~ uu
_.!!!!_""' ,_
!ices, which is studying activi· "for generations, government Tben sbli ,.Cijijitid viltaally an theol'etician" of the new novel
He'sbacii.Re'slacll! 'lbahualaful guy was only m wmls
lies of presidential and national health programs have been ber other cw
and lid: an llcbool of French literature.
away aU those many llllilllbs.
M!I!1Tiissioos.
allowed to acx&lt;mplish only tbose .l laralse ..-..aL
Angela had been living for
"Hcmey, I'm sony. Please forgift me." Those...,.., .tbe six
Kennedy said tbe new round what qanized medicine would
Angela's lim two years at eight years mainly among magic wmls I Uled to bim. '1'lllrty milllles later be burst llnngh
of bearings would focus on tbe tolerate ... always, the AMA llraDdeis_ ...gNenminiJfar nte people. A Student friend my d- and
me so bard I couldn't breathe. He even acwort of commissions in the approach bas been the sam·
her lad; cf om nhlity as recalls she bad become increa- cepted part of the blame - lben.
bealtb care field, which be said reports and reccmmendations contrasted to lbe •
singly C()ILbned about racial
One 1JOI'Citoyour girl readers: By ms CGC!e, be nrnr WQIIId
" remains one of the major are weleome, so long as nolbing firebrand she later was to developments in America and,
bave called. He spec:led me to apolosize. So I bit my lip, buried
UllJDI!t ehallenges in America is done to implemeni them, so become, allboqgh ber ""*hlr as tJOe of her teachers said,
lllday."
long as they do not alter tbe performancewas"'!!sbndjng
''felt she coiiid not longer my pride, and did. - JEN
Dear Helen:
He said !bat based on status quo."
Angela later was to &amp;Iaduate tolerate the deterioraliiBI of tbe
I tolally disagree wilb the molber wbo llgned benelf "Down
findingsbybealthcarecommismagna aun laude, tJOe of 22 situatioo in tbe U.S. without
With Mother's Dily!" I tbiDk our Mother's Day Ia lbe best day of
sicms arid their reccmmend.a·
dass of about Jlll beccmingaclively involved." .
Sbe became involved-and tbe year, aDd Unow MY mother wooldn't mind at if an elebt of na
tioos, "no amount of historical WIN AT BRIDGE ::::"..:.... Sbe was tJOe of
gymnastics can bide the public
a dor.en blaclls iD the dass.
wilb a fervor lbat surprised gathered at our boule fardinner,evenlf she bad to coat put of II.
Mter aU, a family is the IIHISl impOi'lant thing to a mother - ·
recwd
of
AMA
oppooilion
to
"
NM!ed)
K.w
Her"
w::
stu'ry
isn'titwbatwewomenUvefor?-THERF&amp;.H.
" As I loot bacll, I lbiDk it is
virlually every major bealtb
reform in tbe past 50 years."
interesting sbe llft'D' spc*e of again under Marcuse, this time Dear Tbere a:
"Not mlirely,'' Uberatllmists will say, but !banta for your
Kennedy, sponsor of a broad
tensicm becluse of ber blacll- at the University of California
plan for national health insurness," Prof. Murr.ay Sa&lt;b .... at San Diego but lor the first good letter 811J1f8Y. - H.
P.S. "D.W.M.D." wun't agaiDit molba'bood, but only
advisor in Fleudl lileralure, lime she put "blacll" before
ance, said in a statement !bat
against lhe special day lbat sometimes only empballw the
most AmericaJIS still cannot
NORDI
said. "She nwst laft Rlt lib! everything else.
15
obtainadequatebealthcareand
• 62
anoutsider. WeDe¥Wdis
J (Nut: So Diego)
slights of other daJS. - H.
bec&lt;me impoverished from the
• A K 1 54 3
issues like lbal Sbe was very
Cllit of any major illness.
t 83
reS!rved on paswal matters.
"The organization of .our
"'K o4
She didn't do mach talking
beallb services is still a \VEST
EAST
Nobody (m the faculty) felt
sbambl'!S. Wby? Because the • A J4
; ~.~:;
they knew benell"
8
AMA and its friends in political
: ~ ~;
t 10 9 74 2
In her .sophtmtKe Jar, she I
I
life, and its friends in the "'Q 63
"'JI098
made lhe acqnainlance cf a
Riellani 11arr11 c111tribuleo lotlay'o eollma pioneerwboii&amp;ttbe.Wesl, whobeat•ture. You
health insurance induslry have
SOU111 (D)
young German ucbange
llnOIJ - be's bigger. But Ide WIJIP oul Put
stood in tbe way ol every
• KQ 9 3
student, Manfred Lmmz, wbo I• a. vaeaUaalng Jacll O'Brtu.
Wayne in clwles, put bim iD Times Square, and
majtlr step towards an effi.
• Q 62
was majtlring iD phi,.....,.,. and
6
be .,....•t make a dc&amp;r. ·
cient, effective, affordable
:~~2
wbo in1roduced ber to lhe
BY RICHARD IIARRIS
'I'Jp "Man In the Wlldenea" doesn't beat
beallb care system for the
None vulnerable
writings cf N'wfw Ie and
TRUDI BAS A ROLE
.. ture. He joins it - and s«nebow ma•ges to
American pe&lt;Jple.
West North East South Marcuse. They argned politics
FOR AN ACI'OR
"Instead
· tific and
erwfl Jy •
NEW YORK - I believe that acting is very survive. Is that a lessoo for today! It's 'l'lm
. of the SCien
I N.T.
public profeosional &lt;rganizalion
Pass · 2 t
Pass 2 •
In 1964 sbe went Ill Paris to perlllllllll, private and agonizing, like blrlb 8lld lessm.
01 course there are no set rules about actq..
it was founded as, the AMA bas Pass 4 •
Pass Pass
stutzy a.t lhe Sarbame. Sbe bad death.
turned into a propaganda &lt;rgan .. Pass
tbe added incentive that
I have agents and advisors wbo mean well. I But I'll take a cbaN'e wilb this one- De¥W plti,J
purveying 'medical politics,' for
Opening lead-• J
Manfred also was reluluia« to listen to them and dim take their advice. But the same role twice. Try acme- they dGII't
deceiving tbe Congress, the
~ e enll . lbat IIIey bad sometimes a man is in tbe ring all by hlmseH spec:t you to COllie up with. If you're had In II,
people, and tbe doctors of By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby fil1len iD love.
wilb a strong OW'"leell All the Nlvlce 8lld you're bad, so what! Alleut you did it. Tbert
America themselves.
Z studied the dummy be- The Re1aend M um, wll&amp; WW11inp shouted . from the sidelhes mean are no limits for an ambitious actor.
''The American Medical AssG- fore calling for the ace of had been cu•ec•nling 'Wilb ..,~.He bas to depend 00 instinctaltlne. And
Wben I see a good acllr, or a great actor,
ciation puts the lives and weD trumps. East s b 0 wed out Angela and ber fwnily Rgl!lar- !bat's what ""-ned to me In the caae of "A pia~ me o( dJe rJ 'c padl tbe. WIIJ
lhe
.....,..
and Z remarked, "It is just
as good that we are playing ly, said lbat alia'
JliiiiiC ManCalli!IIHcne."Nobodywanledmetodoil IIOO&gt;M!!l! else pl8yed It 20 yean ago, It's . . . .
SaDon' Cbaatles
the Jacoby transfer. Some- ~te ~~s~':ts~ All sm1s of· arguments were toseed iD my poinlillg. He (or obe) obould bring frr.b llCirt to
"Chanty" - often speUed thing tells me tbat every·
......,_
, ...., -....-butlduclledthemrightandleft.IIIIIW' it, fresh informatl~m, relnvallple the pu1, fllld
" shanty" - comes from tbe thing is going to be wrong their pam' ·.., Ill JGiih) .
;-..:....-:; trutb In !bat ....;nt, and no nne could
new and uclting ways to find keys to !be Jlll'l So
Fn;ncb · "chanter," to sing, with this band. Neverthern.. o
" tlot;t
.---- ...
and describes a strongly less,
would b ave made
~
111 SallJ cblnge my~· I wanted to do il Altbougb oo 1e is creating wmeiDng JPw, crallnC It far lhl
rhythmical song originally game in Wilbur Whitehead's (Mrs. Da . )
ftiJ f11nnal . lllilll' GCa!SI4111S I bowed to clem8llla of otben, I first lime. It's an obllgaticl! be baa Ill •
sung in unison by sailors as column back in tbe '20s and leUtr•Ri=~ Mg 'sband jastlui~adeafe~~Jibislime.Ididit.
audience to make them see lbat play for !be flnl
they J10isted sails or weighed trungs are no worse today." . ~,....;,- " SQS1 , u;
., ,
Wblit 1 really saw was somellllng quite time. I d~m't care bow 'WIII1I it Ia. But too ~
anchor.
Z led a diamond to bis m -·-..-.
.c-.ent
,.... pun·ty "" the Indiana lbe ·-- actin woo'tcCIIP through, TbeJ opt for !be e8IJ'
"Mama bit lhe roof. Sbe Willie -ell
- ....
"'
•
~~!:~ce~t t~~c~ciwao~d ~~~ me enclosing a cqJy of the dEnl8llding of the Indi•m. Too often tbese way. Tbey'd rather be stars lban actors.
toward a settlement II will be tinued with · the 10 of letterfnmMalfred.lkrleller ~bavebeenmlsrepresen'.edoolheacrem,
Peuple are always lalkq abOut IIJ)irit, and
lbe firSt meeting of tbe union trumps. Z won this in dum- was ftiJ ertM!1icmeJ It Slid and- I saw an oppcrbmity to remedy a IIOI'I'Y tbe purity of acton oil the stage. It's a lot of pure
negotiating committee and the my and led a spade. Once Angela was ftiJ U!Jbappy at eondili~m. Jwlging by lhe results, arliatically rubbish But lhe actor today bas a Dlllc:b larBer
management since June 2, 1971. more a queen fell to West's Brandeis and didn't want 111 go and_financially, a lot of other people tlrougbout say in what be does. He can bring bllll of Nmeel
ace. Back came the nine of baclllbere.
· ·
the'"'"' sbared my feelings.
into the parts be plays. And I don't mem1 jlllt the
trumps.
.
Z won this with the queen ''I told Sall,y that if JU8
NOIJ Ibave just finished~ picture, "A naked bits. LiD ''Hair." Now !be book of ''Hair"
and was ready to operate. refuse this and try Ill brelk Ibis 1laD in the W'Jldec m," 101' Warner Brothers. i.s lhe biggest ple&lt;!e of lrub In lhe world, lbe ·
He cas bed tbe king of up, lbey'U e1opt!. Jlal if JQ8 (b,e IIMft §mlelbing was biting at me, leWQg 11111!ic, bar two sooga, i.s -.~. Tbere
spades, _ ruffecLa spade . In . leave tbings aiGng it 1riil IUe me~ go ahead. Yes, this is a story wllicb bas isn't a melody In lhe 01Ure tbinll,tbe 'danc:~ Ia
dummy, led a diamond to are of· itself. .fast sit lick~ never been lllucbed 011 before. That was eJIII''&amp;h appeJ!ing, the arting is worae. Now what Ia It!
Tbe ywng IliaD's .-mts fG. me.
Mass, my character, was a
his king, ruffed a di.a!llond
Il'sa greatdisiHIIesty; a nacli~m to tbe mid·
in dummy, cashed dummy's
.,
king of clubs, led a club to
mountain pioneer of tbe 1800's, in Dakota. And a Victorian scene iD England arid In Alillrica,
puritanical natiOD.s that were brought up ~
bis ace and played bis last
Ilea' ate bim.
believe the body was IJ8\y. All of a ~ they
spade.
His friaJds l•ft bim for dead.
West held the eight of
The bidding has bem;
Todlly, lbere'd be lhe entire American Air can see' nudes 'lrilb tbe pa ml d~m of t.op
trumps and the queen of West Nonli s-11 FGn:e Jooting fer him. Tbey would be aendlng anliMrities. And you pay and go and see lbem.
clubs. Both were good, but
telegiaws and beliCopten. And in about five
Wbenyouseeitoace,you'ft- il What's
there was no way for him to Pass
1•
Pass
z B• .T. . . . -'dflnd bim. 'l'lln'e's no,....., •· M,.,;_ so extraclnlnary about -m&amp; a naRd body m
3
n:ake more than one trick. Pass
Pass
,.., - •
"5'1' " ' - ... ~
H 'he ruffed the spade, Z Pass
3 N.T. Pass
?
fllday as !heft bad to be in the West of tbahrild the stage?
A vast majority of peCIJIIe wantfcr more lban
would discilrd the club from
You. Soulh, bold:
puiai.BIItthepictureisnota Westan,perse.
dummy. If he discarded his ·• AKI • •llll5 'tiU4 "'KQZ Not a,.. WIJIP Wesler!i, to be sure. People !bat. 'I'Ie dnema Ia deveL•••c Jntu 1 1111n
queen of clubs, z ·would win
What do you do now?
jasta'tglftadlmnif Jobn Wayne is riding a perlinelll, Intellectual idllelent • Ia be...
. of.trumps.
a trick with dummy's seven
..,_,__ Y. ..;. ·. .,., ....naatol ......._«w'*lbe's""'-.Hecallllandup-'111
JI!'OVI!D by lhe JOUIC dhetl.on of today.
_,
.......,
..,
We're t.diJC Ill a more lbeatrkal JIU"'
"Could we have defeated bids.
a
and a tiiWboy bat and reNI a
you?" asked A . "Only with .a
TOD.'I.n Qlllm10N
' ' ;bono direckl'y, and be'd make four or five spectlve, and tbealre wu aJ\ran a IIW'I'"'I of
lntelleetual m:ha~~ge.
.
club lead at trick one,'' reInstead of bidding thn!e no- millicm dall8rs.
plied Z, "but t h a t lead · tromp your partner lias bid
'I'Jp rasan is si• • · John Wayne has
It was nevtr a place ,.,. an emoticNl a;.
would be aIm os t impos- uu... hearts ....,... JOUr lhrec betuoe identified with !bat ,.. of heroi
sible.''
diamonds. What do&gt; you do now!
.
. ·
.,..,.
c change.
'

In Her Weakest Fiem

-w ·

!!

• •

Los Angeles Rams Ink Phil Olsen
By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sporlll Writer
Opponents of Ute Los Angeles
Rams who felt IIIey had trouble
Cllping with one Olsen now have
anotber to contend with.
'!be Rams, in a rebuilding
process under new coach
TCIDIIly Prothro, Wednesday
signed Phil Olsen, a former All
America defensive lineman at
Utah State, after be found a

Second Round Play
Starts In KC Meet

Kennedy Charges
~ AMA Obstructs

Imperial at
·

(Coolinued from Page I)
other than by the pressure of a
work stoppage."
He continued:
"In reviewing the union
demands, they consist of over !Ill
which are economic, and over
60 lbat are language changes
involving job bidding, ternpcrary transfers, working a 7~
hour day. shift preference, right
to strike at any lime for any
reason, and a host of other
similar changes.
"All of these would severely
restrict supervision in the ef·
licient operatioo of tbe plant,
reduce productivity, increase
cmts and· make the company
JlOilo&lt;!OIIlpetitive. SUch a conclition would result in fewer
orders and fewer jobs, if any at
aD. Our customers simply will
not pay Imperial more for its
products than they can be
purchased elsewhere."
"Fcr some time now the
CODIJI8DY has been telli,"!g the
ccmmittee of the competitive
nature of our business.. There
are only five companies left in
the United States, and Imperial
is ooe of these, whose principal
business is solely the
manufacture of integral borsepower electric motors.
· "The remainder of the
electric motor market is conlroUed by giant companies,
wbichare really conglomerates
having many businesses, who
are in a position to ride out a
very competitive situation in
one or two of Uteir product lines.
Our business bas become highly
competitive due to the increasingly greater sales in this
country of foreign motor
manufacturers who have un·
dereut prices as much as 20 per
cent to.30 per cent. We are now
In direct competitioo with lower
wage rates of foreign , companies.
"Some of our American
competition are presenUy cut
back to l~year service employees, and capital equipment
sales, including machine tools,
are at their lowest levels in
years. Competition is rough and'
sbotVs every sign of becoming
rougber.
"Faced with these problems,

Crossro~ds
file only way the company can
survive is to increase
productivity, and the C1D1J1311Y
bas been doing ils part by
purchasing more efficient
equipment, machines and tools,
and introducing new melbcids."
Randcm eumples of lhe
union's clemands, among the
more than 100 on the negotiating
table, include:
(l )-Empl6yes may select
tbe lime of their vacation at any
time witb senior employes
enjoying first chcace.
(2)-Equal distribution of
overtime among all bargaining
members. Regardless ol ability
to do the job.
(3)-The union bas tbe right
to strike any lime for any
reason, with no arbitration of
grievances.
( 4)-Denying . the ccmpany
tbe right to set standards of
production.
Veteran supervisors at Imperial say about these:
(I )-Freedom of choice, on
seniority, of vacations would
wreck the plant's production
schedule because the C1D1J1311Y
bas many employes wbo are
specialists in certain jobs.
(2)-Equa\overtimewould be
administratively impossible as
only certain employes are
qualified for certain skills.
( 3)-The right to strike at any
time for any reason wilb no
arbitration features would
result in an impossible
situation, not only for the
company blit itscuskmers, wbo
would not tolerate such oncertain production schedules.
(4)- ln denying the company
the right to set standards of
production there would be no
way to evaluate emplo)e
progress, detennine· the plants
ability to meet customer
demands, or give the company
an evaluation of a fair days
work lor a fair days pay. In
essence, Ibis would be like a
housewife trying to do business
witb the grocer who refused to
provide scales.
Meanwhile, there was
cautious hope in tbe commuruty
today !bat a negotialiDg session
scheduled next Tuesday
arranged by tbe Federal
Mediation Service may lead

z Pulls It ·Out

:::!.

f fh f"
0 " e Ire

=

ba~":'

r-----------------------------------------1Voice along Broadway j

I

Mike Miller in
3-Hit Vretory

"•aed

*'''"'"

HAVEN - Harry A. chainnarrof its.administralift
Pickens, crane operator at the board, and the chairman of .._
Phllip. Sporn Plant near bere Pastor Parish Relationa
was recently promoted to Coounittee at tbe New Ravea
Utility Foreman. Pickens, born United Methodist · Cbureh.
in South Grove, Illinois,' Pickens is a member of the Jr.
graduated from Waharna lligb Order of United American
School. He ""rved in the U. S. Mechanics and holds the state
Marine Corps from 1945 to 1947. office of Inside Sentinel in •lhe
In June of 1950 he was em- fraternal order. He coaches' lhe
ployed at Sporn Plant as a coal grade school bastelball team.
ivuidler. He worked as a coo- Picllens and bis wife, Vera,
veypr operator, then as boat makelheirbomeiDNewRaven.
operator. In 1960 be was made a 1llliy have one daUghter, who is
crane operator and .served in married.
· that classification until his ·
recent promotion to utility
Size of home plate in base' foreman.
ball was established in 1900,
Church activities take a large whim a new ba""ball rule inPll1 of Pident1 Jlllfe lime. He trocluced !be tive-sided home
Ia die church layleader. the plalc"whicb is still used.

Claclanatl Reds begin the
secoad ball of their tlelllon
tonlcht, bollblg the San
FranclJco GlUts, lbe lront
numen of the National
Leagoe'• westem division.
Tile Reds, oa a f~ame win
; Areak, seDil Doll Gullett to lbe
_,... In the Dlght coolest. The
. GluU' WDlle Maya baa beea In
a lattl!lg slump, dropping his
averace to .Z88, aad first
bl-an Willie Md:ovey bas
beea playlag with a torn
Upment In lbe rlgbt lmee.
Tile Reds woa the lour-game
wee~ oerles from !he New
Yoril Meta before tbe All-Star
• breU. Most players bave bad a
lbree&lt;lay retJl

•

I!..

•
'

}

•

7,..._rv

3"'

1•

m-lboola'

night.
Milwaukee

(Pattin 8-9}

Cincinnati

41

San Diego

Sl

.446 15

The Mark V Bucks, using the Shockers, Rich Bailey dropped
hot shooting of Jeff Tyo and in 17, many from far out side;
Mike Sayre, ran tbeir winning Walters had II, Kim ·French,
streak to three games as they and Brown, two each and Larry
toppled The Daily Sentinel Harmon added one.
Shockers 58-53 in overtime The winners were led by
Wednesday evening.
Tyo's 19. Sayre got 15, in the
The Shockers broke out to a second half when they were
1J4&gt;oint lead in tbe first half but neededi Billy .Vaughan and
the Bucks kept tbe pressure on Werry each had seven, Deacon
to stay within range. At the end Dennis Boggs played a fine Door
of tbe half The Shockers led 3{). game and added eight and Bill
20.
Chaney had two.
The Bucks lurned on their
REAL SQUEAKER
defense in tbe third quarter to 1n the other contest, the
limit the Shockers to only seven revamped Adolphs Dairy
points, the quarter ending 37-31. Valley Stars gave the Ohio
Then in the fourth, the Shockers Valley Bakers Doughboys all
scored the first two points but they wanted before losing in
"m'S';:=:;::::~o;;;::*:Xf.~::~:::o;::~:::::x::~:::*:~ the Bucks poured in eight overtime, ~·
.r-'---'--'-''--'--'--~1' straight to tie it up at 39-39.
The Doughboys led, an the
The Daiy Sentinel Mark V then got its first lead' way, but were tied several
DEVOTED TO THE
; in the · game after swapping times, Ute last time putting the
tNTER.EST OF '
: buckets, 43-41.
game into overtime. Tbe
,MEIGS·II!ASON AREA
f
th
t
CHESTER L. TANNEHIL~. i Tyo added a ree row o Doughboys were never behind
Exec. Ed .
: make the score 44-41 but Rich as they went into undisputed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
· Bailey and Steve Dunfee each first place.
Tbe Bakery held a five-point
Published daily . except . added a basket to put the
Saturday by The Ohto Valley 1
.. r:. .._. Ty
. .
P'ublishing company, 111 , Shockers up one at.......... o lead at billftime, and a threeCourt St ... Pomeroy , Ohio, ' dropped in another charily loss point margin at the end of the
•S769. BOsoness Offoce Phone
. .
Th Sh k
·
992·1156. Editorial Phone 992 . to tie t! at 45-45.
e oc ers third quarter.
1
1157.
.
stalled the hall for a last sbo! TheStarstooktbeopeningtap
second
class
postage
paod
at
that bounced off tbe rim •
of the fourth pen'od , and began
Pomeroy, Ohto .
1
Nat ional advertising 1 The Shockers took the working for a good shot. Tony
representative
Bottinellf d · ediatel V ughan' ~ • t ·
sb t
•
Gallagher , Inc ., 12 east ""d .1 overtime tap an urun
y a
s .....oo JWDP
o
5t., New York City , New York. : scored. The Bucks went to Tyo, singed the nets, putting the
Subscroptoon rate" De .
'ed dri vmg
· Ia yup but I·t Stars WI'thin one. awu
o-Ferguson
1 livered by carr ier where ! who tn a
. availablo so cents per week ; , was blocked by Doxie Walters. hitafreethrowtoputtbeleadlo
::,.~~~orn:~u~ev:n:~re~ar~·~~ · The Sentinel worked the ball to two again. Tbe Stars again went
month sus. By mail in Ohio Waiters who ·missed the to Tony Vaughan, and again be
and w. va .. One year $1• .00. ·
sbot and lhen fo uled •came -""'6"'
th-.n~
·111 a c1U\CI.I
•-L
Si:i months s7 . 2s . Three pressure
WI
: mont~s u .so. Subscription . Tyo in tbe backcourtlrying to basket to tie the game for the·
~~~~~n':1dudes Sunday Tomes . steal the ball. The foul was firSt lime.
_ _ _ - -- - - J.; Walters' fiftb and last. Tyo
Witb four minutes remaining,
made bolb charity tosses io tie
the contest 47-47.
Sealy Imperial
Dunfee then gave The Sentinel its last lead with a .long
MATTRESS
jump 'shot. The Bucks scored
'
four:
straight baskets to lead 55Sale Priced
49, but .Don Brown and Bailey
Reg. $89.96
added a·bucket apiece to bring
For ,Elegance in Pipe
Now .159.95
Smoking
PINsure, Select •
the Shockers within two. But
Pipo !hal Nuds No
tall Mark Werry dumped in
Save$30on
Breaking ln.
three crucial free throws to ice
Eacbfiece
tbe game.
REES~
Dunfee of tbe Shockers was
tbe game's leading scorer with
4~2 Second Ave.
FURN. OUTlET
'""llipalis.Ohio
:lXI added points. Also lor the

.. .
•

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..
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Tawney Jewelets

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games scheduled )
Today's Probablo Pitchers
Philadelphia (Wise 9. 7) al
Chicago (Hands 9·9l.
San Diego I Roberts 7·91 at
Pitt.burgh {Johnson 5·6 ), night.
Los Angeles {Osteen 9·6) at
Atlanta !Reed 9·61. night .
( No

at

Montrea l (Strohmayer2-2 and
Stoneman 10-91 at St. Lou is
!carlton 12-5 and Reuss S.SI. 2.
Twi -night.
San Francisco (Marichal l0-5)
at Cincinnati (Gullett 9-JL

Chicago ( Horlen 4-6) at
Washington (Bosman 6-10 ).
night.
Minnesota (Perry 12-8) at

Boston ITia nt 0-JL night .
night.
'
Ballimore I Boswell 1·2 ) at
New York ( Williams 3-3)
(alilornia 1May 4·51. night.
Houston (Forsch 52 1. night .

at

Friday's Games
San DiegO al Pitts, night

Friday 's Games
Detroit at Oakland, night

Ball at Calif, night

Mont at St. Louis, nigh!
LA at Atlanta, night

Cleve! at Kan City, night
Chicago at Wa sh, night
Milw at New York, night
Minnesota at Boston, night

San Fran at Cine, night
N Y at Houston, night

Philadelphia at Chicago

Races Resume
BY Uoiled Press lnlemaUooal
The major league permant
races resume Thursday afternoon and night witb Ute big
question whether tbere reaDy
will be a race in any of the four
divisions.
Four strong front;unnerstbe Baltimore Orioles, Oakland
Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates
and San Francisco Giants-lead
the respective divisions by 51&gt;
games or more and seem to be
in stronger positions for the
second half of the season than
they were for the first half.
At the All-star 1.-eilk, the
Orioles led the Boston Red Sox
by 51'.! games in the American
League East, the Athletics bad
an II \'.! game lead over the
Kansas City Royals in tbe AL
West, !he Pirates had opened up
a I!filame margin over both the
New York Mets and Olicago
Cubs in the National League
East and the Giants had a sixgame advantage over the Los
Angeles Dodgers in the NL
West.
Mmt baseban men at the All·
Siar game thought that only !be
nea :sox and Dodgers bad
chances to create serious
pennant races.
The Orioles were expected to
have the AL East race wrapped
up by now and their 51'.! game
lead is not impressive. But

Carly Yastnemski and Billy
Conigliaro leading the opposing
factions, and do not appear
equipped to mount a big
challenge.
The Dodgers have cut into
early San Francisco leads a hall
dozen times in the first half of
the season but have fallen short
in key games. The Giants are
always suspect off Uteir history
of finishing second so many
times in the last decade but
their lead is substantial and
they have star pitchers like
Juan Marichal and Gaylord
Perry to belp protect it.
The Athletics, with Vida Blue
turning the pre~ dope
inside out, won't worry until the
Minnesota Twins move into
position for a ehallenge. That,
however, seems unlikely inasmilCh as the Twins are 15 games
behind the Athletics and are
scrambling for pitcbiilg on a
day.tAK!ay basjs.
.
The rat-tat-tat attack of the
Pirates is tDI!ikely to diminish
and poses an almost.UOpossible
problem for the Mets and Cubs
to over~e. '!be Mets problem
is offeDSive and the Cubs IS
pitching. Both the Mets and
Cubs also appear to have in·
ternaJ difficulties involving the
direction of . the teams by
managers Gil Hodges and Leo
Durocher, respectively.

the Doughboys called time to
set up their strategy.
When time resumed, Mick
Childs took the ball down the
middle of the Stars' zone,
missing on his drive, but was
fouled. He sank one of two.
The Stars ' Jerry Hubbard lied
it again with a free throw.
Ferguson then fed Jeff Morris
for an easy basket and pumped
in a long jumper for 45-41 favor
of the Bakery. Tom Cooke
stretched the lead to five with a
free toss but Andy Vaughan
stole the ball to score a layup,
Rod Gilkey hit a free throw, and
Tony Vaughan hit another
jumper to tie it a! 46-46!
Childs and Hubbard traded
baskets to make it 48-48 at the
end of regulation.
Jim Boggs opened the scoring
in the overtime with a 30-foot

basket. Bill Hensler matched
him with a long one from the
corner, Ferguson hit a free
!brow and it was 51-50. Childs
added another to make it a two
point lead but Hubbard hit a
long one to tie the game for the
last time. Childs added anoUter

rreetoss.

Eye May

.

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imminent.

Informed sources revealed
that the New Jersey Sports
Authority has advanced to the
point of drawing up a proposed
contract. However , there was
no confirmation if the authority
and the Giants had indeesJ
.affixed their signatures to it
yet.
.
The only blank in the
cootract, besides the place for
signatures, sources said, was
the date. The month, July, was
printed on it.
There was the possibility that
announcement of an agreement
was being held up until New
Jersey Gov. William T, Cahill
returned to his desk.

'

it. has been the past few
weeks," the spokesman said.
"Out lawyers are looking for
the lease and we're waiting to
hear from them."
~~---~~~~~~--·

The governor , one of the

End Career
BOSTON ( UPI ) - Tbe near
fatal injury Tony Conigliaro
suffered almost four years ago
may have finally ended his
stormy care er as one or
baseball's most promising
young sluggers.
The 26-year-&lt;Jid Conigliaro
revealed Wednesday that an
examination of the left eye he
almost lost on Aug. 18, 1967
showed a deterioration in his
vision that would make hitting a
pitched baseball "difficult if not
impossible.' '

Only, a second "mirarulous
recover y" would allow the
California Angels' outfielder to
continue as an ·active player
according ID a report filed by
Dr. Charles D. J . Regan, the eye
specialist who two years ago
classified Tooy's sight recovery
as a miracle unprecedented in
his medical experience.
The doctor's report, con·
tained in a letter to Tony and
made public by the player's
attorney, served as an explanation for Conigliaro's
sudden decision to quit the
Angels last weekend.
Dr. Regan's latest examina·
lion, carried out on Tuesday,
confirmed Tony's repealed con.
tention that he was not seeing
the ball as well as he bad when
he made his dramatic comeback with the Red Sox in 1969.
Tooy narrowly escaped death
when he was rut in tbe face by a
Jack Hamilton pitcb,then of tbe
same California club, nearly
four years earlier.
Idled for the rest of Boston's
dramatic permant run in 1967,
Tony tried to make a comeback
for the world series and again
lhe following spring but was
forced to sit out the 1968 seasoo.
He came back to rut 20
homers and hat .255 in 1969, and
hit 36 borne runs witb a .266
batting average in 1970 before
being lraded to tbe Angels in a
widely-unpopular six-player
deal last 0c Iober.
Insisting that he bad known
his vision was deteriorating,
Tony said he had kept the
matter a secret for sev..-al
weeks but was not surprised by
the medical finding.

prime movers in the quest to
bring the Giants to New Jersey,
has been · home all week
recuperating from a virus.
State ·Treasurer Joseph M.
McCrane Jr., a member of the
authority, was, according to the
sources, supposed to attend a
meeting in New York, presumbaly with the Giants represen·
tatives .
However, the source could
not confirm that the treasurer
had actually held the meeting.
As state treasurer, McCrane is
authorized to negotiate and sign
the con tract.
A spokesman for the Giants
said club president Wellington
Mara did not meet with the
New Jersey delegation Wednesday, but added it was possible
that club laWYers did .
"Our position is the same as

aubbard had 14, Andy Vaughan
and Gilkey seven each, and Big
Bill Hensler five.
Sweet Ronnie Ferguson again
led the winners as he dunked in
18. Jeff "Mouse" Morris had 15,
Boggs 8, Childs 10, and Cooke 5.

Hey
Tiger.

"All they talk
about is
dieting! "
It you'd like to talk about
budgeting your heat ing
bills lor next season over a
ten month per iod ... we
ha ve

sUch

a

plan

and

welcome your inquir y .

.......

RIZER

____....
You ' ll

Like

.....

Our
Se rvtce .

••

The
Values
Are
Great At
NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
"KERM'S KORNER"

-~::~::~::::~~--.!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;

Down one, th~ .S!i!J's went for I
a quick shot. The fielder missed
and with I :J:i left began their
stall. With 15 seconds left
Ferguson slipped a great pass
in!D Childs who layed in the ball
for a three point Doughboy lead.
The Stars added another point
but it was too late, the Bakery
held the hall the remaining few
seconds.
The game's leading scorer
was Tony Vaughan, Ute Stars'
taU pivot man who had a cool 20
points. Also for tbe losers, Jerry

UNTIL
JULY 17th

GUARDIAN PRIMIUM

POLYESTER CORD

TIRES

OFF

At Low Low Prices

650xl3

8/W

Pius $1.76 Fed. Ex . Tax

-

Other S'zes Comparably

ON ALL
ECLIPSE LAWN MOWERS

Low Priced

DBIVEDI

~~bersbach

POM·EROY HOME &amp;

MAIN Sl
J

'

Hardware

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

. !ODAYl

'
I.

.

Injury To

33 57 .367 22
Today 's Results

Bucks Topple Shockers; Doughboys
~~=!~~;(&lt;:.r~~ Take Over First in Summer League

Pickens Promoted at Sporn
~ NEW

legal loophole in his contract
with the New England Patriots
and became ·a free agent.
Olsen had been the first draft
pick of tbe then Boston Palriois
last year but missed the entire
season when he sustained a
knee injury while !raining for
the College All Star Game.
Olsen, a 6-foot.S, 265i&gt;ounder,
will join brother Merlin, a
veteran stalwart of tbe Rams'

.

NEW YORK (UPI)-New
Jersey officials have reportedly
drawn
up the contract and are
By United Press lnterna.t ional
Nationiil League
now hoping the New York
American League
East
East
w. L. Pel. GB . football . Giants will sign it,
W. L. Pet. GB Pittsl;iurgh
57 31 .6&lt;18
bringing big-league sports to
Baltimore
55 32 .632
New York
46 40 .5J5 10
New
Jersey.
49 37 .570 SV? Chicago
Boston
47 41 .534 10
,,
39
1
.547
7
;,
Detrllit
St. Louis
46 42 .523 11
New Jersey officials Wednes41 47 .466 141h Ph iladelphia J9 50 . 438 18'1? day maintained an official
New Yor~
38 51 .427 18
Cleveland
Montreal
34 54 .31!6 2J
silence in the fa ce of persistent,
Washington
34 52 . 395 2011?
West
West
W. L. Pet. GB but unconfirmed reports that an
W. L. Pel. . GB San Francisco 55 JS .611 ... agreement to bring the Giants
Oakland
56 31 .644 ...
Los Angeles 49 4.1 .5« 6
Kansas City
43 41 .512 11
Houston
4J 44 .494 l0 1r:; to the Garden State was
Minnesota
41 46 .471 151,2 Atlanta
44 &lt;Ill .478 12

New York !Stott Iemyre 9.5) .

"Fearsome FolD'SOIDe", after
turning down offers from 19
otber teams.
'
"I'm flaitered by the number
of teams which contacted my
representative," said Olsen.
'"11le two main reasoos why we
selected the Rams were, first,
we looked over the immediate
and long range futures of the
teams and the offers, and,
secondly, while there were
some negatives, I felt this would
he a fine opportunity to learn
fnm my 1.-olber, wbo's bad 10
years elpel'ience in tbe league.
" The negatives are the
pressure of being the I.-other of
such a great player and having
Secom round play in the 13th will lock horns with Albany at people expect too much."
annual Kyger Creek Little 8:30.
League baseball tournament Eighteen teams remain in the
will begin at 6 o'clock this running for the title out of a
evening on the KC Employees starting field of 36.
Diamond.
In last night's two games,
First round action was New Haven exploded for six
completed Wednesday. The runs in the third inning as the
New Hilven Reds walloped the Reds rolled over the Gallipolis r;c
1ll;,l,ll~
Gallipolis Senators 11-3, Senators. D. Russell was £Or lri.~JIVrt
Gallipolis Athletics won a 9-0 credited with the win. He had 12
forfeit over Pl. Pleasant Mason strikeouts. Swain was charged
The Pee Week League's
Insurance which failed to show with the loss. He had 12 Middleport Cubs, led by the fine
up, and Bidwell-Porter romped strikeouts. New Haven bitters pitching of Mike Miller,
over Ute Gallipolis Padres, IS..'i. were K. Scott, J. Riggs, T. defeated the Pomeroy Angels ~
In tonight's first game, the Smith, RusseU, J. Collier, B. 3 at the Laurel Cliff field
Gallipolis Yankees will hattie Rose and S. Ball. Senators Wednesday night July 7.
Ute Middlep()rt Indians at 6. In getting hitS were Swain, two
Miller, pitching the full six
the second game, Addaville will singles, R. Holley, A. Daniels innings, gave up only 3 runs on 4
tackle Pomeroy's Yankees at and G. Stover, two singles.
hits, struck out 13 batters and
7:15, and in the nightcap, In the nightcap, Bidwell walked only two.
tournament favorite McArthur .expluded for eight runs in tbe
Mark Norton was the pitcher
SCIOTO RF.'iULTS
first inning enroute ID its win for tbe losing team, giving up 9
COLUMBUS
( UPI)
over the Gallipolis Padres.
runs on 7 hits, striking out 14
.. Another Love won the . Minnis was credited with the and wallti!lg 10 hatters.
'featured ·..,ventll 'rare;· 8 S2,280 win. .vinson was charged With
!litters rO..'Ibe winning eubs
trot al Scioto Downs near here the loss.
were Ray SteWart, a double ;
Wednesday nigbtandpaid $5.80
For Bidwell, Patlerson had Bobby Fox, a single; Fife, two
$3.:/XI and $2.40.
' ~o hi~•. McMillan bad_three triples and a single; Mike
Lindys Speedy came in b!ts, MJDDIS two hits, TheiSS two Miller, a bome run and a triple.
second paying $3.60 and $2.60 hits, Plants one hit, Mendill two
!litters for tbe Angels were
with Painted Doll in third hits and Shaw two hits. For tbe Chris Woods, a single; Mark
relurning $2.40.
losers, Vinso~ had one hit, Norton, a single; Riel! BlaettThe daily double combination Johnson one hit and Chevalier nar, a borne run and Bobby
of 4-9, Joan Kid in the first and one hit.
Williams, a single.
Raintrees Hope in the second
paid $130.80.
Attendance was 5,050 and the
handie was $227,822.

two

2,000 baskets a day make their way tO respective marlr.els. A
tomato farm Is a "family operati011."

.

The Meigs Legion bllseball Van Maire and tbe results were Ute g;une at S-5.
Meigs added an insurance run
pitching of Rick VanMatre and .batters in tbe next six innings in the eighth when Powell
clutch bitting of Dave Boyd to and New Hilven•s two other singled, stole second, went to
take a come from beblrui 7..'i runs off him were unearned.
third on a wild pitch, and scored
vickl'y over a fired-up New Meigs was still playing cat- on Boyd's single.
Haven team Wednesday at chup in tbe sixtb inning when
Syracuse,
Gene Powell led off with a base
Besides Boyd's double and
on halls, Lonnie Bush singled, single, Van Maire had a double,
Meigs' Stan Perry started on sending Powell to third, and and Asb, Dixon, Bush, and
California
-42 50 .456 16lf?
Powell all bad singles.
tbe mound but was touched for Bush tben stole second.
Chicago
J8 47 .447 17
Perry in bis three full innings Milwaukee
three runs in the first three Boyd then lashed his firs! hit
37 48 .&lt;35 18
.
Today's Results
innings. Starting tbe fourth, of the game, a long double to struck out three, passed two,
I No games scheduled)
down 3-1, Manager George right driving in both runners Van Matre fanned nine and
Today's Probabt.e Pitchers
Nessleroad replaced Perry with and giving Meigs its first lead of gave up two free trips.
Detroil !Coleman ft.6 ) at
Oakland !Dobson 8·0L night.
Cleveland I Me Dowell 8·8) at
Kansas City !Splittorff 3·3),

team · used the . sharp relief great. Van Maire fanned 'nine

I

BnL J1ILL AND MN CHRIS cbect me of lbe maDJ'
baskets lbat will 1!1: shipped to Cleveland. Awtcu:imoltely
1000 basteIll are sbp each day. At tbe peak of the see'lOD

New Jersey ·After Grid Giants

POMEROY.

•

�·''

. 3-Tbe llally Sentinlll, Middle~Pimeroy, 0 .1July 15, i97i

Meigs Legion · Defeats
New .Haven ~ Club 7 to 5

L.ittle.Enthusiasm
at
17
Angela
Majored
r--------------':""------------1
He1en ·.He1·p us
Davis

E"' 's ff*: 11111 115 doe ...,.., as much opposed to tbe
llllnlel lift aiM ' tm • 1 ~ interracial marrlage as was
'! _J.J
111e .r Iliad:
&amp; cda Mrs.Da~andtberellllionship
DatiL
cooled'. ~ela .came back to
IIJ JAQ[ v.rox
!aU her last year at Brandeis. t
1
1
:
u.bll ....._ ...
Tbat ... tbe beginning o( her ·I: . . ·
Wbeo lbe Rev. William lutelage under Mlifmse.
tl !jsh drove Angela Davis Now '12 years old, r.tari:wi
rnm NeW v.n ~ Brandeis had been at Brandeis 10.. n I
I
umVeiSily ,.. 111e ....,.i•ts .of years after teaching previoUsly :
By Helen Bottel
Boston in eariJ Sl!pltmte', at western European universil!l&amp;l, the l7'fl!ll'-dd p:tsbowed lies. His best known book is YOUTH ASKED rDR IT!
lillJe mdni!15!1! abaatenll!ring called ''The One Dimensionill
'dlis 'COlumn is l1r young people, their prob...... and
· lbe&amp;eslu•YI)J"'U'cf&amp;O gem Man." One of its tbeses is !bat pleasures, their ~les 8lld fun. Aa wilb the rest of Helen Help
a scbolanbip.
tbe average man in the ·Us! itwelcuneslauglls b!ltwCII'tdodge a seriOQS questiClll with a
She bad been &amp;WQ rnm ber fedmGiogical society liaS be- Jnsb.oll.
parents aDd bame iD Binning- e&lt;me so S'lrilcbed into the
Send your teenage qDesti4111S to YOUTH ASKED rDR ri', care
bam, Ala., far twro J8ll'S. living material aspects of life, 111e of~~~ Help Us! tbililleWspaper.
with the 1Jeli&lt;lr$ iD llnx*lyQ ''sewe&lt; system" of telerlisloo
QUESTION AND ANSWER IN SAME MAIL
and al!!!nding lhe .... "Illes- and other mass llledia, tbe
Dear Helen:
· siJe" Elisabeth ~ high iDusioo !bat be liaS free speech
I still love bim though I de!ly it, even ~myself.
Sdlool in GIE&amp;Nidl Village. and tbe right to protest that be
How can you forget SOJDeCIIe you planned your Mure 'irilb?
Sbe, boid eotabtished ,.,• .,a- iS acquiescing in deprivation of
We went steady for a year and were alwaya .true ~each other,
ble ;..~ 11ut she was bis indWidual freedcm.
and lhen foolisb pride ndned things. You aee, I waited far bim to
still a sby 111111 alocf JIIIIIIC
Mamloe Praises AJIIela
penon.
Marcuse today describes An- call me 1lhen I was suppol'ed to caD IUD, except I wouldo'l call
French bad 11em ber IIHISl ·gela Davis as tbe best, or "one because I t~Jo®lt be owed me an apology. So there we both sat,
di!fl.:ult subject at Elisobelb ·of the two or three best" walillg, and getllng madder aU the lime.
It's toolatetodoanytbingaboutitnowbecanse we dOD.'I evm
Irwin SD with lhe drift to .students be baS had in 30 years.
Why•
•
.
speak. Butllelen, bedoesn'tdateanyotP else and he evm lelia his
overCGQJeany •• 1 .,lbat was
·
to bootme lJpical. she clllllle ''I've been asked !bat maily family we're still gWig IGgelber. Wby doesn't be just call up and
CANDYIIOBAatANDPAMBIIL(aDtbatletomatoesand
French lill!ralare as ber majtlr times," he says. "It's very say be's sorry! - HAT&amp;'! SI'UBBORNNESi
110 letluce), are paciing the No. 2 grade tomatoes from a
and IIIOVI!d iniD lbe ''Fieudl simple. Her intelligence was Dear H.S.:
rolating table at lhe end of the grader.
House" at llraDdeis wbore m1y superior · and so was her
Because boys (and men) usually aren't made that way. Here
are
letters !bat (I 1 answer your questioD and (2) tell you bow
!bat language was ~~~"'*"'
inten.st."
, Angela was at Br••'"i• 11r
Marcu.se does not discount to solve your problan:
rour years "' &lt;tA far a junior ~~eia~ be pllatiyedL~ shabeping Dear Helen:
year abroad at the Suilume iD ~... s evo u on ""'
says
What is an Ex-Boy friend!
Paris, anlil sbe was &amp;l.....,led it is probably exaggerated.
He's the me wbo ahraya asks your best friend ''Wbel'e's
in lhe SpriDg ef lJii5..
"H it hadn't been me, it wbat's-ber-oame?''
. . , _ Alb+, , Her
would haJe been someone much
- The me wbo calls and saya be bas the tmtng nnmher
Bnndeis, a nm ±-ian like me,n he says.
(ralher lbansays the wanls lbat 1f0Uidgetber bacll).
scbooJ has tatittd tn4teraWrites BIDI n Thesis
- Theldd wbo ''justbappeus" toridepastyo~r bus Blop when
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. being of American citizens b1e poblidty iD..,.. years as
Although Angela's senior year
be lmmrsyou're there. But 1fOUid be stop cr evm wave! Beet no!
Edward M. Kennedy, J).Ma.ss. , below its own special interests a ''bi'*"'i'lg &amp;IOiibd" .llr ~-~tlecmainlyandattending
-The nne wbo bas your phone miJDber serihbled an over bis
accused lhe American Medical in ordering its priorities. It reJolutiollariesaad aCIK loflist ..,..~.....,·s
llires
seminAssocialion today of obstructing deserves to be igmred, rejected eJement.s. It was lbe 1 •1\111'- ars, she wrote her senior waD, justin caae,you know, not for any special reason.
- The me who IPIIds you a birlbday card with no IIIJJie
alma;t every major step to and forgotlm."
ters of a nau-1 studefttalrike booors thesis on ''The Novels of
improve health care for Ameri- Kennedy said the AMA center iD lbe ¥illll cf U'JI.
(French writer) RobiJe.Grillet: signed, blit addressed in bis very distinc1ive handwriting with the
cans while degenerating into "a worked against such programs
W
Marcuse, SOQIJed A Study of Method and green pen be stole from you.
-He's lhe ldd you really bate to nm into on the street, bUt
propagarida organ for purvey- as health benefits for World propbet of lbe NeW Left, was Meaning."
ing 'medical politics."'
War U veterans, Blue Cross tea&lt;Dng at Br•••' · lbe entire · Prel. Sacha says her J.25.page mmt of an, face; and be gels lbat same sinking feeling when be
Kennedy made a blistering and private health imurance, lime Angela was !heft 1Jut sbe · thesis, bailed as one of the sees you, because·you both know !bat you love each other, bUt
attacll on tbe AMA and its medicare and ''today they did ·not ''dis oa" ._ tew ..., most brilliant ever written at you're both too PROUD to admit it.
(But I did.)
Policies toward affordable oppose any meaningful efforts" who was to laft lbe IIHISl llnndeis, was concerned with
ideas
rather
than
the
·-lhetic
Just sign me -LEARNED, AND NOW HE'S NO LONGER
health care as be resumed for review aimed at improving profound i•A we el aDJ1DI! ..,
'"'"""""" bv bis Senate subcom- the quality of medical care.
her intelleclual aDd p~a-;..,.,._ and literary style of Alain MYEX
_.....,
'
"In ~
-L-t," 531·d "-"""",
-'lhc·-=ng-lil"-'-'-•.
RIJbbe.Grillet as the "chief Dear Helen:
mittee
on Administrative
Prac"~ uu
_.!!!!_""' ,_
!ices, which is studying activi· "for generations, government Tben sbli ,.Cijijitid viltaally an theol'etician" of the new novel
He'sbacii.Re'slacll! 'lbahualaful guy was only m wmls
lies of presidential and national health programs have been ber other cw
and lid: an llcbool of French literature.
away aU those many llllilllbs.
M!I!1Tiissioos.
allowed to acx&lt;mplish only tbose .l laralse ..-..aL
Angela had been living for
"Hcmey, I'm sony. Please forgift me." Those...,.., .tbe six
Kennedy said tbe new round what qanized medicine would
Angela's lim two years at eight years mainly among magic wmls I Uled to bim. '1'lllrty milllles later be burst llnngh
of bearings would focus on tbe tolerate ... always, the AMA llraDdeis_ ...gNenminiJfar nte people. A Student friend my d- and
me so bard I couldn't breathe. He even acwort of commissions in the approach bas been the sam·
her lad; cf om nhlity as recalls she bad become increa- cepted part of the blame - lben.
bealtb care field, which be said reports and reccmmendations contrasted to lbe •
singly C()ILbned about racial
One 1JOI'Citoyour girl readers: By ms CGC!e, be nrnr WQIIId
" remains one of the major are weleome, so long as nolbing firebrand she later was to developments in America and,
bave called. He spec:led me to apolosize. So I bit my lip, buried
UllJDI!t ehallenges in America is done to implemeni them, so become, allboqgh ber ""*hlr as tJOe of her teachers said,
lllday."
long as they do not alter tbe performancewas"'!!sbndjng
''felt she coiiid not longer my pride, and did. - JEN
Dear Helen:
He said !bat based on status quo."
Angela later was to &amp;Iaduate tolerate the deterioraliiBI of tbe
I tolally disagree wilb the molber wbo llgned benelf "Down
findingsbybealthcarecommismagna aun laude, tJOe of 22 situatioo in tbe U.S. without
With Mother's Dily!" I tbiDk our Mother's Day Ia lbe best day of
sicms arid their reccmmend.a·
dass of about Jlll beccmingaclively involved." .
Sbe became involved-and tbe year, aDd Unow MY mother wooldn't mind at if an elebt of na
tioos, "no amount of historical WIN AT BRIDGE ::::"..:.... Sbe was tJOe of
gymnastics can bide the public
a dor.en blaclls iD the dass.
wilb a fervor lbat surprised gathered at our boule fardinner,evenlf she bad to coat put of II.
Mter aU, a family is the IIHISl impOi'lant thing to a mother - ·
recwd
of
AMA
oppooilion
to
"
NM!ed)
K.w
Her"
w::
stu'ry
isn'titwbatwewomenUvefor?-THERF&amp;.H.
" As I loot bacll, I lbiDk it is
virlually every major bealtb
reform in tbe past 50 years."
interesting sbe llft'D' spc*e of again under Marcuse, this time Dear Tbere a:
"Not mlirely,'' Uberatllmists will say, but !banta for your
Kennedy, sponsor of a broad
tensicm becluse of ber blacll- at the University of California
plan for national health insurness," Prof. Murr.ay Sa&lt;b .... at San Diego but lor the first good letter 811J1f8Y. - H.
P.S. "D.W.M.D." wun't agaiDit molba'bood, but only
advisor in Fleudl lileralure, lime she put "blacll" before
ance, said in a statement !bat
against lhe special day lbat sometimes only empballw the
most AmericaJIS still cannot
NORDI
said. "She nwst laft Rlt lib! everything else.
15
obtainadequatebealthcareand
• 62
anoutsider. WeDe¥Wdis
J (Nut: So Diego)
slights of other daJS. - H.
bec&lt;me impoverished from the
• A K 1 54 3
issues like lbal Sbe was very
Cllit of any major illness.
t 83
reS!rved on paswal matters.
"The organization of .our
"'K o4
She didn't do mach talking
beallb services is still a \VEST
EAST
Nobody (m the faculty) felt
sbambl'!S. Wby? Because the • A J4
; ~.~:;
they knew benell"
8
AMA and its friends in political
: ~ ~;
t 10 9 74 2
In her .sophtmtKe Jar, she I
I
life, and its friends in the "'Q 63
"'JI098
made lhe acqnainlance cf a
Riellani 11arr11 c111tribuleo lotlay'o eollma pioneerwboii&amp;ttbe.Wesl, whobeat•ture. You
health insurance induslry have
SOU111 (D)
young German ucbange
llnOIJ - be's bigger. But Ide WIJIP oul Put
stood in tbe way ol every
• KQ 9 3
student, Manfred Lmmz, wbo I• a. vaeaUaalng Jacll O'Brtu.
Wayne in clwles, put bim iD Times Square, and
majtlr step towards an effi.
• Q 62
was majtlring iD phi,.....,.,. and
6
be .,....•t make a dc&amp;r. ·
cient, effective, affordable
:~~2
wbo in1roduced ber to lhe
BY RICHARD IIARRIS
'I'Jp "Man In the Wlldenea" doesn't beat
beallb care system for the
None vulnerable
writings cf N'wfw Ie and
TRUDI BAS A ROLE
.. ture. He joins it - and s«nebow ma•ges to
American pe&lt;Jple.
West North East South Marcuse. They argned politics
FOR AN ACI'OR
"Instead
· tific and
erwfl Jy •
NEW YORK - I believe that acting is very survive. Is that a lessoo for today! It's 'l'lm
. of the SCien
I N.T.
public profeosional &lt;rganizalion
Pass · 2 t
Pass 2 •
In 1964 sbe went Ill Paris to perlllllllll, private and agonizing, like blrlb 8lld lessm.
01 course there are no set rules about actq..
it was founded as, the AMA bas Pass 4 •
Pass Pass
stutzy a.t lhe Sarbame. Sbe bad death.
turned into a propaganda &lt;rgan .. Pass
tbe added incentive that
I have agents and advisors wbo mean well. I But I'll take a cbaN'e wilb this one- De¥W plti,J
purveying 'medical politics,' for
Opening lead-• J
Manfred also was reluluia« to listen to them and dim take their advice. But the same role twice. Try acme- they dGII't
deceiving tbe Congress, the
~ e enll . lbat IIIey bad sometimes a man is in tbe ring all by hlmseH spec:t you to COllie up with. If you're had In II,
people, and tbe doctors of By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby fil1len iD love.
wilb a strong OW'"leell All the Nlvlce 8lld you're bad, so what! Alleut you did it. Tbert
America themselves.
Z studied the dummy be- The Re1aend M um, wll&amp; WW11inp shouted . from the sidelhes mean are no limits for an ambitious actor.
''The American Medical AssG- fore calling for the ace of had been cu•ec•nling 'Wilb ..,~.He bas to depend 00 instinctaltlne. And
Wben I see a good acllr, or a great actor,
ciation puts the lives and weD trumps. East s b 0 wed out Angela and ber fwnily Rgl!lar- !bat's what ""-ned to me In the caae of "A pia~ me o( dJe rJ 'c padl tbe. WIIJ
lhe
.....,..
and Z remarked, "It is just
as good that we are playing ly, said lbat alia'
JliiiiiC ManCalli!IIHcne."Nobodywanledmetodoil IIOO&gt;M!!l! else pl8yed It 20 yean ago, It's . . . .
SaDon' Cbaatles
the Jacoby transfer. Some- ~te ~~s~':ts~ All sm1s of· arguments were toseed iD my poinlillg. He (or obe) obould bring frr.b llCirt to
"Chanty" - often speUed thing tells me tbat every·
......,_
, ...., -....-butlduclledthemrightandleft.IIIIIW' it, fresh informatl~m, relnvallple the pu1, fllld
" shanty" - comes from tbe thing is going to be wrong their pam' ·.., Ill JGiih) .
;-..:....-:; trutb In !bat ....;nt, and no nne could
new and uclting ways to find keys to !be Jlll'l So
Fn;ncb · "chanter," to sing, with this band. Neverthern.. o
" tlot;t
.---- ...
and describes a strongly less,
would b ave made
~
111 SallJ cblnge my~· I wanted to do il Altbougb oo 1e is creating wmeiDng JPw, crallnC It far lhl
rhythmical song originally game in Wilbur Whitehead's (Mrs. Da . )
ftiJ f11nnal . lllilll' GCa!SI4111S I bowed to clem8llla of otben, I first lime. It's an obllgaticl! be baa Ill •
sung in unison by sailors as column back in tbe '20s and leUtr•Ri=~ Mg 'sband jastlui~adeafe~~Jibislime.Ididit.
audience to make them see lbat play for !be flnl
they J10isted sails or weighed trungs are no worse today." . ~,....;,- " SQS1 , u;
., ,
Wblit 1 really saw was somellllng quite time. I d~m't care bow 'WIII1I it Ia. But too ~
anchor.
Z led a diamond to bis m -·-..-.
.c-.ent
,.... pun·ty "" the Indiana lbe ·-- actin woo'tcCIIP through, TbeJ opt for !be e8IJ'
"Mama bit lhe roof. Sbe Willie -ell
- ....
"'
•
~~!:~ce~t t~~c~ciwao~d ~~~ me enclosing a cqJy of the dEnl8llding of the Indi•m. Too often tbese way. Tbey'd rather be stars lban actors.
toward a settlement II will be tinued with · the 10 of letterfnmMalfred.lkrleller ~bavebeenmlsrepresen'.edoolheacrem,
Peuple are always lalkq abOut IIJ)irit, and
lbe firSt meeting of tbe union trumps. Z won this in dum- was ftiJ ertM!1icmeJ It Slid and- I saw an oppcrbmity to remedy a IIOI'I'Y tbe purity of acton oil the stage. It's a lot of pure
negotiating committee and the my and led a spade. Once Angela was ftiJ U!Jbappy at eondili~m. Jwlging by lhe results, arliatically rubbish But lhe actor today bas a Dlllc:b larBer
management since June 2, 1971. more a queen fell to West's Brandeis and didn't want 111 go and_financially, a lot of other people tlrougbout say in what be does. He can bring bllll of Nmeel
ace. Back came the nine of baclllbere.
· ·
the'"'"' sbared my feelings.
into the parts be plays. And I don't mem1 jlllt the
trumps.
.
Z won this with the queen ''I told Sall,y that if JU8
NOIJ Ibave just finished~ picture, "A naked bits. LiD ''Hair." Now !be book of ''Hair"
and was ready to operate. refuse this and try Ill brelk Ibis 1laD in the W'Jldec m," 101' Warner Brothers. i.s lhe biggest ple&lt;!e of lrub In lhe world, lbe ·
He cas bed tbe king of up, lbey'U e1opt!. Jlal if JQ8 (b,e IIMft §mlelbing was biting at me, leWQg 11111!ic, bar two sooga, i.s -.~. Tbere
spades, _ ruffecLa spade . In . leave tbings aiGng it 1riil IUe me~ go ahead. Yes, this is a story wllicb bas isn't a melody In lhe 01Ure tbinll,tbe 'danc:~ Ia
dummy, led a diamond to are of· itself. .fast sit lick~ never been lllucbed 011 before. That was eJIII''&amp;h appeJ!ing, the arting is worae. Now what Ia It!
Tbe ywng IliaD's .-mts fG. me.
Mass, my character, was a
his king, ruffed a di.a!llond
Il'sa greatdisiHIIesty; a nacli~m to tbe mid·
in dummy, cashed dummy's
.,
king of clubs, led a club to
mountain pioneer of tbe 1800's, in Dakota. And a Victorian scene iD England arid In Alillrica,
puritanical natiOD.s that were brought up ~
bis ace and played bis last
Ilea' ate bim.
believe the body was IJ8\y. All of a ~ they
spade.
His friaJds l•ft bim for dead.
West held the eight of
The bidding has bem;
Todlly, lbere'd be lhe entire American Air can see' nudes 'lrilb tbe pa ml d~m of t.op
trumps and the queen of West Nonli s-11 FGn:e Jooting fer him. Tbey would be aendlng anliMrities. And you pay and go and see lbem.
clubs. Both were good, but
telegiaws and beliCopten. And in about five
Wbenyouseeitoace,you'ft- il What's
there was no way for him to Pass
1•
Pass
z B• .T. . . . -'dflnd bim. 'l'lln'e's no,....., •· M,.,;_ so extraclnlnary about -m&amp; a naRd body m
3
n:ake more than one trick. Pass
Pass
,.., - •
"5'1' " ' - ... ~
H 'he ruffed the spade, Z Pass
3 N.T. Pass
?
fllday as !heft bad to be in the West of tbahrild the stage?
A vast majority of peCIJIIe wantfcr more lban
would discilrd the club from
You. Soulh, bold:
puiai.BIItthepictureisnota Westan,perse.
dummy. If he discarded his ·• AKI • •llll5 'tiU4 "'KQZ Not a,.. WIJIP Wesler!i, to be sure. People !bat. 'I'Ie dnema Ia deveL•••c Jntu 1 1111n
queen of clubs, z ·would win
What do you do now?
jasta'tglftadlmnif Jobn Wayne is riding a perlinelll, Intellectual idllelent • Ia be...
. of.trumps.
a trick with dummy's seven
..,_,__ Y. ..;. ·. .,., ....naatol ......._«w'*lbe's""'-.Hecallllandup-'111
JI!'OVI!D by lhe JOUIC dhetl.on of today.
_,
.......,
..,
We're t.diJC Ill a more lbeatrkal JIU"'
"Could we have defeated bids.
a
and a tiiWboy bat and reNI a
you?" asked A . "Only with .a
TOD.'I.n Qlllm10N
' ' ;bono direckl'y, and be'd make four or five spectlve, and tbealre wu aJ\ran a IIW'I'"'I of
lntelleetual m:ha~~ge.
.
club lead at trick one,'' reInstead of bidding thn!e no- millicm dall8rs.
plied Z, "but t h a t lead · tromp your partner lias bid
'I'Jp rasan is si• • · John Wayne has
It was nevtr a place ,.,. an emoticNl a;.
would be aIm os t impos- uu... hearts ....,... JOUr lhrec betuoe identified with !bat ,.. of heroi
sible.''
diamonds. What do&gt; you do now!
.
. ·
.,..,.
c change.
'

In Her Weakest Fiem

-w ·

!!

• •

Los Angeles Rams Ink Phil Olsen
By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sporlll Writer
Opponents of Ute Los Angeles
Rams who felt IIIey had trouble
Cllping with one Olsen now have
anotber to contend with.
'!be Rams, in a rebuilding
process under new coach
TCIDIIly Prothro, Wednesday
signed Phil Olsen, a former All
America defensive lineman at
Utah State, after be found a

Second Round Play
Starts In KC Meet

Kennedy Charges
~ AMA Obstructs

Imperial at
·

(Coolinued from Page I)
other than by the pressure of a
work stoppage."
He continued:
"In reviewing the union
demands, they consist of over !Ill
which are economic, and over
60 lbat are language changes
involving job bidding, ternpcrary transfers, working a 7~
hour day. shift preference, right
to strike at any lime for any
reason, and a host of other
similar changes.
"All of these would severely
restrict supervision in the ef·
licient operatioo of tbe plant,
reduce productivity, increase
cmts and· make the company
JlOilo&lt;!OIIlpetitive. SUch a conclition would result in fewer
orders and fewer jobs, if any at
aD. Our customers simply will
not pay Imperial more for its
products than they can be
purchased elsewhere."
"Fcr some time now the
CODIJI8DY has been telli,"!g the
ccmmittee of the competitive
nature of our business.. There
are only five companies left in
the United States, and Imperial
is ooe of these, whose principal
business is solely the
manufacture of integral borsepower electric motors.
· "The remainder of the
electric motor market is conlroUed by giant companies,
wbichare really conglomerates
having many businesses, who
are in a position to ride out a
very competitive situation in
one or two of Uteir product lines.
Our business bas become highly
competitive due to the increasingly greater sales in this
country of foreign motor
manufacturers who have un·
dereut prices as much as 20 per
cent to.30 per cent. We are now
In direct competitioo with lower
wage rates of foreign , companies.
"Some of our American
competition are presenUy cut
back to l~year service employees, and capital equipment
sales, including machine tools,
are at their lowest levels in
years. Competition is rough and'
sbotVs every sign of becoming
rougber.
"Faced with these problems,

Crossro~ds
file only way the company can
survive is to increase
productivity, and the C1D1J1311Y
bas been doing ils part by
purchasing more efficient
equipment, machines and tools,
and introducing new melbcids."
Randcm eumples of lhe
union's clemands, among the
more than 100 on the negotiating
table, include:
(l )-Empl6yes may select
tbe lime of their vacation at any
time witb senior employes
enjoying first chcace.
(2)-Equal distribution of
overtime among all bargaining
members. Regardless ol ability
to do the job.
(3)-The union bas tbe right
to strike any lime for any
reason, with no arbitration of
grievances.
( 4)-Denying . the ccmpany
tbe right to set standards of
production.
Veteran supervisors at Imperial say about these:
(I )-Freedom of choice, on
seniority, of vacations would
wreck the plant's production
schedule because the C1D1J1311Y
bas many employes wbo are
specialists in certain jobs.
(2)-Equa\overtimewould be
administratively impossible as
only certain employes are
qualified for certain skills.
( 3)-The right to strike at any
time for any reason wilb no
arbitration features would
result in an impossible
situation, not only for the
company blit itscuskmers, wbo
would not tolerate such oncertain production schedules.
(4)- ln denying the company
the right to set standards of
production there would be no
way to evaluate emplo)e
progress, detennine· the plants
ability to meet customer
demands, or give the company
an evaluation of a fair days
work lor a fair days pay. In
essence, Ibis would be like a
housewife trying to do business
witb the grocer who refused to
provide scales.
Meanwhile, there was
cautious hope in tbe commuruty
today !bat a negotialiDg session
scheduled next Tuesday
arranged by tbe Federal
Mediation Service may lead

z Pulls It ·Out

:::!.

f fh f"
0 " e Ire

=

ba~":'

r-----------------------------------------1Voice along Broadway j

I

Mike Miller in
3-Hit Vretory

"•aed

*'''"'"

HAVEN - Harry A. chainnarrof its.administralift
Pickens, crane operator at the board, and the chairman of .._
Phllip. Sporn Plant near bere Pastor Parish Relationa
was recently promoted to Coounittee at tbe New Ravea
Utility Foreman. Pickens, born United Methodist · Cbureh.
in South Grove, Illinois,' Pickens is a member of the Jr.
graduated from Waharna lligb Order of United American
School. He ""rved in the U. S. Mechanics and holds the state
Marine Corps from 1945 to 1947. office of Inside Sentinel in •lhe
In June of 1950 he was em- fraternal order. He coaches' lhe
ployed at Sporn Plant as a coal grade school bastelball team.
ivuidler. He worked as a coo- Picllens and bis wife, Vera,
veypr operator, then as boat makelheirbomeiDNewRaven.
operator. In 1960 be was made a 1llliy have one daUghter, who is
crane operator and .served in married.
· that classification until his ·
recent promotion to utility
Size of home plate in base' foreman.
ball was established in 1900,
Church activities take a large whim a new ba""ball rule inPll1 of Pident1 Jlllfe lime. He trocluced !be tive-sided home
Ia die church layleader. the plalc"whicb is still used.

Claclanatl Reds begin the
secoad ball of their tlelllon
tonlcht, bollblg the San
FranclJco GlUts, lbe lront
numen of the National
Leagoe'• westem division.
Tile Reds, oa a f~ame win
; Areak, seDil Doll Gullett to lbe
_,... In the Dlght coolest. The
. GluU' WDlle Maya baa beea In
a lattl!lg slump, dropping his
averace to .Z88, aad first
bl-an Willie Md:ovey bas
beea playlag with a torn
Upment In lbe rlgbt lmee.
Tile Reds woa the lour-game
wee~ oerles from !he New
Yoril Meta before tbe All-Star
• breU. Most players bave bad a
lbree&lt;lay retJl

•

I!..

•
'

}

•

7,..._rv

3"'

1•

m-lboola'

night.
Milwaukee

(Pattin 8-9}

Cincinnati

41

San Diego

Sl

.446 15

The Mark V Bucks, using the Shockers, Rich Bailey dropped
hot shooting of Jeff Tyo and in 17, many from far out side;
Mike Sayre, ran tbeir winning Walters had II, Kim ·French,
streak to three games as they and Brown, two each and Larry
toppled The Daily Sentinel Harmon added one.
Shockers 58-53 in overtime The winners were led by
Wednesday evening.
Tyo's 19. Sayre got 15, in the
The Shockers broke out to a second half when they were
1J4&gt;oint lead in tbe first half but neededi Billy .Vaughan and
the Bucks kept tbe pressure on Werry each had seven, Deacon
to stay within range. At the end Dennis Boggs played a fine Door
of tbe half The Shockers led 3{). game and added eight and Bill
20.
Chaney had two.
The Bucks lurned on their
REAL SQUEAKER
defense in tbe third quarter to 1n the other contest, the
limit the Shockers to only seven revamped Adolphs Dairy
points, the quarter ending 37-31. Valley Stars gave the Ohio
Then in the fourth, the Shockers Valley Bakers Doughboys all
scored the first two points but they wanted before losing in
"m'S';:=:;::::~o;;;::*:Xf.~::~:::o;::~:::::x::~:::*:~ the Bucks poured in eight overtime, ~·
.r-'---'--'-''--'--'--~1' straight to tie it up at 39-39.
The Doughboys led, an the
The Daiy Sentinel Mark V then got its first lead' way, but were tied several
DEVOTED TO THE
; in the · game after swapping times, Ute last time putting the
tNTER.EST OF '
: buckets, 43-41.
game into overtime. Tbe
,MEIGS·II!ASON AREA
f
th
t
CHESTER L. TANNEHIL~. i Tyo added a ree row o Doughboys were never behind
Exec. Ed .
: make the score 44-41 but Rich as they went into undisputed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
· Bailey and Steve Dunfee each first place.
Tbe Bakery held a five-point
Published daily . except . added a basket to put the
Saturday by The Ohto Valley 1
.. r:. .._. Ty
. .
P'ublishing company, 111 , Shockers up one at.......... o lead at billftime, and a threeCourt St ... Pomeroy , Ohio, ' dropped in another charily loss point margin at the end of the
•S769. BOsoness Offoce Phone
. .
Th Sh k
·
992·1156. Editorial Phone 992 . to tie t! at 45-45.
e oc ers third quarter.
1
1157.
.
stalled the hall for a last sbo! TheStarstooktbeopeningtap
second
class
postage
paod
at
that bounced off tbe rim •
of the fourth pen'od , and began
Pomeroy, Ohto .
1
Nat ional advertising 1 The Shockers took the working for a good shot. Tony
representative
Bottinellf d · ediatel V ughan' ~ • t ·
sb t
•
Gallagher , Inc ., 12 east ""d .1 overtime tap an urun
y a
s .....oo JWDP
o
5t., New York City , New York. : scored. The Bucks went to Tyo, singed the nets, putting the
Subscroptoon rate" De .
'ed dri vmg
· Ia yup but I·t Stars WI'thin one. awu
o-Ferguson
1 livered by carr ier where ! who tn a
. availablo so cents per week ; , was blocked by Doxie Walters. hitafreethrowtoputtbeleadlo
::,.~~~orn:~u~ev:n:~re~ar~·~~ · The Sentinel worked the ball to two again. Tbe Stars again went
month sus. By mail in Ohio Waiters who ·missed the to Tony Vaughan, and again be
and w. va .. One year $1• .00. ·
sbot and lhen fo uled •came -""'6"'
th-.n~
·111 a c1U\CI.I
•-L
Si:i months s7 . 2s . Three pressure
WI
: mont~s u .so. Subscription . Tyo in tbe backcourtlrying to basket to tie the game for the·
~~~~~n':1dudes Sunday Tomes . steal the ball. The foul was firSt lime.
_ _ _ - -- - - J.; Walters' fiftb and last. Tyo
Witb four minutes remaining,
made bolb charity tosses io tie
the contest 47-47.
Sealy Imperial
Dunfee then gave The Sentinel its last lead with a .long
MATTRESS
jump 'shot. The Bucks scored
'
four:
straight baskets to lead 55Sale Priced
49, but .Don Brown and Bailey
Reg. $89.96
added a·bucket apiece to bring
For ,Elegance in Pipe
Now .159.95
Smoking
PINsure, Select •
the Shockers within two. But
Pipo !hal Nuds No
tall Mark Werry dumped in
Save$30on
Breaking ln.
three crucial free throws to ice
Eacbfiece
tbe game.
REES~
Dunfee of tbe Shockers was
tbe game's leading scorer with
4~2 Second Ave.
FURN. OUTlET
'""llipalis.Ohio
:lXI added points. Also lor the

.. .
•

·'

..
,,

Tawney Jewelets

',.

.

'
'

~~

'

, I

'

.

'

'

games scheduled )
Today's Probablo Pitchers
Philadelphia (Wise 9. 7) al
Chicago (Hands 9·9l.
San Diego I Roberts 7·91 at
Pitt.burgh {Johnson 5·6 ), night.
Los Angeles {Osteen 9·6) at
Atlanta !Reed 9·61. night .
( No

at

Montrea l (Strohmayer2-2 and
Stoneman 10-91 at St. Lou is
!carlton 12-5 and Reuss S.SI. 2.
Twi -night.
San Francisco (Marichal l0-5)
at Cincinnati (Gullett 9-JL

Chicago ( Horlen 4-6) at
Washington (Bosman 6-10 ).
night.
Minnesota (Perry 12-8) at

Boston ITia nt 0-JL night .
night.
'
Ballimore I Boswell 1·2 ) at
New York ( Williams 3-3)
(alilornia 1May 4·51. night.
Houston (Forsch 52 1. night .

at

Friday's Games
San DiegO al Pitts, night

Friday 's Games
Detroit at Oakland, night

Ball at Calif, night

Mont at St. Louis, nigh!
LA at Atlanta, night

Cleve! at Kan City, night
Chicago at Wa sh, night
Milw at New York, night
Minnesota at Boston, night

San Fran at Cine, night
N Y at Houston, night

Philadelphia at Chicago

Races Resume
BY Uoiled Press lnlemaUooal
The major league permant
races resume Thursday afternoon and night witb Ute big
question whether tbere reaDy
will be a race in any of the four
divisions.
Four strong front;unnerstbe Baltimore Orioles, Oakland
Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates
and San Francisco Giants-lead
the respective divisions by 51&gt;
games or more and seem to be
in stronger positions for the
second half of the season than
they were for the first half.
At the All-star 1.-eilk, the
Orioles led the Boston Red Sox
by 51'.! games in the American
League East, the Athletics bad
an II \'.! game lead over the
Kansas City Royals in tbe AL
West, !he Pirates had opened up
a I!filame margin over both the
New York Mets and Olicago
Cubs in the National League
East and the Giants had a sixgame advantage over the Los
Angeles Dodgers in the NL
West.
Mmt baseban men at the All·
Siar game thought that only !be
nea :sox and Dodgers bad
chances to create serious
pennant races.
The Orioles were expected to
have the AL East race wrapped
up by now and their 51'.! game
lead is not impressive. But

Carly Yastnemski and Billy
Conigliaro leading the opposing
factions, and do not appear
equipped to mount a big
challenge.
The Dodgers have cut into
early San Francisco leads a hall
dozen times in the first half of
the season but have fallen short
in key games. The Giants are
always suspect off Uteir history
of finishing second so many
times in the last decade but
their lead is substantial and
they have star pitchers like
Juan Marichal and Gaylord
Perry to belp protect it.
The Athletics, with Vida Blue
turning the pre~ dope
inside out, won't worry until the
Minnesota Twins move into
position for a ehallenge. That,
however, seems unlikely inasmilCh as the Twins are 15 games
behind the Athletics and are
scrambling for pitcbiilg on a
day.tAK!ay basjs.
.
The rat-tat-tat attack of the
Pirates is tDI!ikely to diminish
and poses an almost.UOpossible
problem for the Mets and Cubs
to over~e. '!be Mets problem
is offeDSive and the Cubs IS
pitching. Both the Mets and
Cubs also appear to have in·
ternaJ difficulties involving the
direction of . the teams by
managers Gil Hodges and Leo
Durocher, respectively.

the Doughboys called time to
set up their strategy.
When time resumed, Mick
Childs took the ball down the
middle of the Stars' zone,
missing on his drive, but was
fouled. He sank one of two.
The Stars ' Jerry Hubbard lied
it again with a free throw.
Ferguson then fed Jeff Morris
for an easy basket and pumped
in a long jumper for 45-41 favor
of the Bakery. Tom Cooke
stretched the lead to five with a
free toss but Andy Vaughan
stole the ball to score a layup,
Rod Gilkey hit a free throw, and
Tony Vaughan hit another
jumper to tie it a! 46-46!
Childs and Hubbard traded
baskets to make it 48-48 at the
end of regulation.
Jim Boggs opened the scoring
in the overtime with a 30-foot

basket. Bill Hensler matched
him with a long one from the
corner, Ferguson hit a free
!brow and it was 51-50. Childs
added another to make it a two
point lead but Hubbard hit a
long one to tie the game for the
last time. Childs added anoUter

rreetoss.

Eye May

.

.

imminent.

Informed sources revealed
that the New Jersey Sports
Authority has advanced to the
point of drawing up a proposed
contract. However , there was
no confirmation if the authority
and the Giants had indeesJ
.affixed their signatures to it
yet.
.
The only blank in the
cootract, besides the place for
signatures, sources said, was
the date. The month, July, was
printed on it.
There was the possibility that
announcement of an agreement
was being held up until New
Jersey Gov. William T, Cahill
returned to his desk.

'

it. has been the past few
weeks," the spokesman said.
"Out lawyers are looking for
the lease and we're waiting to
hear from them."
~~---~~~~~~--·

The governor , one of the

End Career
BOSTON ( UPI ) - Tbe near
fatal injury Tony Conigliaro
suffered almost four years ago
may have finally ended his
stormy care er as one or
baseball's most promising
young sluggers.
The 26-year-&lt;Jid Conigliaro
revealed Wednesday that an
examination of the left eye he
almost lost on Aug. 18, 1967
showed a deterioration in his
vision that would make hitting a
pitched baseball "difficult if not
impossible.' '

Only, a second "mirarulous
recover y" would allow the
California Angels' outfielder to
continue as an ·active player
according ID a report filed by
Dr. Charles D. J . Regan, the eye
specialist who two years ago
classified Tooy's sight recovery
as a miracle unprecedented in
his medical experience.
The doctor's report, con·
tained in a letter to Tony and
made public by the player's
attorney, served as an explanation for Conigliaro's
sudden decision to quit the
Angels last weekend.
Dr. Regan's latest examina·
lion, carried out on Tuesday,
confirmed Tony's repealed con.
tention that he was not seeing
the ball as well as he bad when
he made his dramatic comeback with the Red Sox in 1969.
Tooy narrowly escaped death
when he was rut in tbe face by a
Jack Hamilton pitcb,then of tbe
same California club, nearly
four years earlier.
Idled for the rest of Boston's
dramatic permant run in 1967,
Tony tried to make a comeback
for the world series and again
lhe following spring but was
forced to sit out the 1968 seasoo.
He came back to rut 20
homers and hat .255 in 1969, and
hit 36 borne runs witb a .266
batting average in 1970 before
being lraded to tbe Angels in a
widely-unpopular six-player
deal last 0c Iober.
Insisting that he bad known
his vision was deteriorating,
Tony said he had kept the
matter a secret for sev..-al
weeks but was not surprised by
the medical finding.

prime movers in the quest to
bring the Giants to New Jersey,
has been · home all week
recuperating from a virus.
State ·Treasurer Joseph M.
McCrane Jr., a member of the
authority, was, according to the
sources, supposed to attend a
meeting in New York, presumbaly with the Giants represen·
tatives .
However, the source could
not confirm that the treasurer
had actually held the meeting.
As state treasurer, McCrane is
authorized to negotiate and sign
the con tract.
A spokesman for the Giants
said club president Wellington
Mara did not meet with the
New Jersey delegation Wednesday, but added it was possible
that club laWYers did .
"Our position is the same as

aubbard had 14, Andy Vaughan
and Gilkey seven each, and Big
Bill Hensler five.
Sweet Ronnie Ferguson again
led the winners as he dunked in
18. Jeff "Mouse" Morris had 15,
Boggs 8, Childs 10, and Cooke 5.

Hey
Tiger.

"All they talk
about is
dieting! "
It you'd like to talk about
budgeting your heat ing
bills lor next season over a
ten month per iod ... we
ha ve

sUch

a

plan

and

welcome your inquir y .

.......

RIZER

____....
You ' ll

Like

.....

Our
Se rvtce .

••

The
Values
Are
Great At
NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
"KERM'S KORNER"

-~::~::~::::~~--.!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;

Down one, th~ .S!i!J's went for I
a quick shot. The fielder missed
and with I :J:i left began their
stall. With 15 seconds left
Ferguson slipped a great pass
in!D Childs who layed in the ball
for a three point Doughboy lead.
The Stars added another point
but it was too late, the Bakery
held the hall the remaining few
seconds.
The game's leading scorer
was Tony Vaughan, Ute Stars'
taU pivot man who had a cool 20
points. Also for tbe losers, Jerry

UNTIL
JULY 17th

GUARDIAN PRIMIUM

POLYESTER CORD

TIRES

OFF

At Low Low Prices

650xl3

8/W

Pius $1.76 Fed. Ex . Tax

-

Other S'zes Comparably

ON ALL
ECLIPSE LAWN MOWERS

Low Priced

DBIVEDI

~~bersbach

POM·EROY HOME &amp;

MAIN Sl
J

'

Hardware

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

. !ODAYl

'
I.

.

Injury To

33 57 .367 22
Today 's Results

Bucks Topple Shockers; Doughboys
~~=!~~;(&lt;:.r~~ Take Over First in Summer League

Pickens Promoted at Sporn
~ NEW

legal loophole in his contract
with the New England Patriots
and became ·a free agent.
Olsen had been the first draft
pick of tbe then Boston Palriois
last year but missed the entire
season when he sustained a
knee injury while !raining for
the College All Star Game.
Olsen, a 6-foot.S, 265i&gt;ounder,
will join brother Merlin, a
veteran stalwart of tbe Rams'

.

NEW YORK (UPI)-New
Jersey officials have reportedly
drawn
up the contract and are
By United Press lnterna.t ional
Nationiil League
now hoping the New York
American League
East
East
w. L. Pel. GB . football . Giants will sign it,
W. L. Pet. GB Pittsl;iurgh
57 31 .6&lt;18
bringing big-league sports to
Baltimore
55 32 .632
New York
46 40 .5J5 10
New
Jersey.
49 37 .570 SV? Chicago
Boston
47 41 .534 10
,,
39
1
.547
7
;,
Detrllit
St. Louis
46 42 .523 11
New Jersey officials Wednes41 47 .466 141h Ph iladelphia J9 50 . 438 18'1? day maintained an official
New Yor~
38 51 .427 18
Cleveland
Montreal
34 54 .31!6 2J
silence in the fa ce of persistent,
Washington
34 52 . 395 2011?
West
West
W. L. Pet. GB but unconfirmed reports that an
W. L. Pel. . GB San Francisco 55 JS .611 ... agreement to bring the Giants
Oakland
56 31 .644 ...
Los Angeles 49 4.1 .5« 6
Kansas City
43 41 .512 11
Houston
4J 44 .494 l0 1r:; to the Garden State was
Minnesota
41 46 .471 151,2 Atlanta
44 &lt;Ill .478 12

New York !Stott Iemyre 9.5) .

"Fearsome FolD'SOIDe", after
turning down offers from 19
otber teams.
'
"I'm flaitered by the number
of teams which contacted my
representative," said Olsen.
'"11le two main reasoos why we
selected the Rams were, first,
we looked over the immediate
and long range futures of the
teams and the offers, and,
secondly, while there were
some negatives, I felt this would
he a fine opportunity to learn
fnm my 1.-olber, wbo's bad 10
years elpel'ience in tbe league.
" The negatives are the
pressure of being the I.-other of
such a great player and having
Secom round play in the 13th will lock horns with Albany at people expect too much."
annual Kyger Creek Little 8:30.
League baseball tournament Eighteen teams remain in the
will begin at 6 o'clock this running for the title out of a
evening on the KC Employees starting field of 36.
Diamond.
In last night's two games,
First round action was New Haven exploded for six
completed Wednesday. The runs in the third inning as the
New Hilven Reds walloped the Reds rolled over the Gallipolis r;c
1ll;,l,ll~
Gallipolis Senators 11-3, Senators. D. Russell was £Or lri.~JIVrt
Gallipolis Athletics won a 9-0 credited with the win. He had 12
forfeit over Pl. Pleasant Mason strikeouts. Swain was charged
The Pee Week League's
Insurance which failed to show with the loss. He had 12 Middleport Cubs, led by the fine
up, and Bidwell-Porter romped strikeouts. New Haven bitters pitching of Mike Miller,
over Ute Gallipolis Padres, IS..'i. were K. Scott, J. Riggs, T. defeated the Pomeroy Angels ~
In tonight's first game, the Smith, RusseU, J. Collier, B. 3 at the Laurel Cliff field
Gallipolis Yankees will hattie Rose and S. Ball. Senators Wednesday night July 7.
Ute Middlep()rt Indians at 6. In getting hitS were Swain, two
Miller, pitching the full six
the second game, Addaville will singles, R. Holley, A. Daniels innings, gave up only 3 runs on 4
tackle Pomeroy's Yankees at and G. Stover, two singles.
hits, struck out 13 batters and
7:15, and in the nightcap, In the nightcap, Bidwell walked only two.
tournament favorite McArthur .expluded for eight runs in tbe
Mark Norton was the pitcher
SCIOTO RF.'iULTS
first inning enroute ID its win for tbe losing team, giving up 9
COLUMBUS
( UPI)
over the Gallipolis Padres.
runs on 7 hits, striking out 14
.. Another Love won the . Minnis was credited with the and wallti!lg 10 hatters.
'featured ·..,ventll 'rare;· 8 S2,280 win. .vinson was charged With
!litters rO..'Ibe winning eubs
trot al Scioto Downs near here the loss.
were Ray SteWart, a double ;
Wednesday nigbtandpaid $5.80
For Bidwell, Patlerson had Bobby Fox, a single; Fife, two
$3.:/XI and $2.40.
' ~o hi~•. McMillan bad_three triples and a single; Mike
Lindys Speedy came in b!ts, MJDDIS two hits, TheiSS two Miller, a bome run and a triple.
second paying $3.60 and $2.60 hits, Plants one hit, Mendill two
!litters for tbe Angels were
with Painted Doll in third hits and Shaw two hits. For tbe Chris Woods, a single; Mark
relurning $2.40.
losers, Vinso~ had one hit, Norton, a single; Riel! BlaettThe daily double combination Johnson one hit and Chevalier nar, a borne run and Bobby
of 4-9, Joan Kid in the first and one hit.
Williams, a single.
Raintrees Hope in the second
paid $130.80.
Attendance was 5,050 and the
handie was $227,822.

two

2,000 baskets a day make their way tO respective marlr.els. A
tomato farm Is a "family operati011."

.

The Meigs Legion bllseball Van Maire and tbe results were Ute g;une at S-5.
Meigs added an insurance run
pitching of Rick VanMatre and .batters in tbe next six innings in the eighth when Powell
clutch bitting of Dave Boyd to and New Hilven•s two other singled, stole second, went to
take a come from beblrui 7..'i runs off him were unearned.
third on a wild pitch, and scored
vickl'y over a fired-up New Meigs was still playing cat- on Boyd's single.
Haven team Wednesday at chup in tbe sixtb inning when
Syracuse,
Gene Powell led off with a base
Besides Boyd's double and
on halls, Lonnie Bush singled, single, Van Maire had a double,
Meigs' Stan Perry started on sending Powell to third, and and Asb, Dixon, Bush, and
California
-42 50 .456 16lf?
Powell all bad singles.
tbe mound but was touched for Bush tben stole second.
Chicago
J8 47 .447 17
Perry in bis three full innings Milwaukee
three runs in the first three Boyd then lashed his firs! hit
37 48 .&lt;35 18
.
Today's Results
innings. Starting tbe fourth, of the game, a long double to struck out three, passed two,
I No games scheduled)
down 3-1, Manager George right driving in both runners Van Matre fanned nine and
Today's Probabt.e Pitchers
Nessleroad replaced Perry with and giving Meigs its first lead of gave up two free trips.
Detroil !Coleman ft.6 ) at
Oakland !Dobson 8·0L night.
Cleveland I Me Dowell 8·8) at
Kansas City !Splittorff 3·3),

team · used the . sharp relief great. Van Maire fanned 'nine

I

BnL J1ILL AND MN CHRIS cbect me of lbe maDJ'
baskets lbat will 1!1: shipped to Cleveland. Awtcu:imoltely
1000 basteIll are sbp each day. At tbe peak of the see'lOD

New Jersey ·After Grid Giants

POMEROY.

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i~t~w:'~,~k~dleport-Pmneroy,o.,JulJs 1971

.,.

~ Social Calendar

L

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Gallipolis Ace
the SpOrts Desk
Jumps
To_
FoU11h.
lw Chet. Tannehili ·
In Ohio Am Play

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If you are me of 1lle many wbo apjftciate achievement in
alblelial, enjoy JeeUW me fiDel)l:bmed pbysique outduel another
eqneD:r atbmed, iuojiJ ed by a match turning 011 mental cooCIIIIIration rather tbu brulh strqth, lhen you bad to like - if
J011 saw It on TV I'I!CeDIIy - lhe vicl«y d. lhe young (and
llelulif1ll) Mrs. GOolapg fl. Australia in lbe Wllllbledon
WCIIIlell's · si~ ~ champimsbip.
'lbe girl frGn down uDder bad it aD, fluid motion, great speed
an a~~antelape-like slrlde, &amp;qlerlalive anticipatian, remarkable
pllylical coordinalion. As 1lle cmmienlators said, when she
perfeclll her first serve and lllilds a lllCI'e dependable forehand
(her""*banrlalreadyisSQIDelhiJWelse)Mrs.Goolagongmay be
lhe .,... WlllliU! tennis player o( aD lime.
We may !lave no ~lial Mrs. G®Jagongs in Meiga County,
bo.t webaft, fell' 1lle fint time In my rec:ollecli011 covering 25 years
here, organi2ed !emU 'e s \'liS for wboever wants tbem at the
Middleport Part. Instruction is by Jim Bulcber,lately out of Ohio
State University, where quite a bitli tennis is played
Tennis is a grueling imividualsput lhat cbaDenges lbe finest
bocly and mind. There's apcriy,elderly gentleman in lbe county
wbo wiD verify lhat, if you doubt me. Cbsrley Gibbs, retired
Puoaoy Scbools superintendent, in lis more active years bad a
S1rOng game. 'lbere were olbers bere !I 40 years ago who played
well too. Charley and Mrs. Gibbll are sumlnering here again, but
Wl11 rebn to their winter quarters inl'1orida ccmefrost.

"

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~fj

It. .

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·
. ·10 Am Golf Results . ·f!i ~!sf:~s:o~:~f't::c:1 :

,w

SATURDAY-JULY 17th

B:r Mn. Frudl Merril
Mrs. Lavinia Simpsm was
called to East Liverpool, due to
the deatb of a relative.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Evans
IIIIi Mr. and Mre. Gary Palmer
II RLI, C&gt;sb're and Mr. Don
Bemett of MinfcJrd, Ohio were
.s..lay aftemQOR and evening
posts li Rev. and Mrs. Frank
0
laew and attended the
mviceatPartlandOIUrch.Mr.
Beunett was soloist at the
.!Eli ice.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
In Granville Sunday to
attml tlte 1!11i9 Grand Officers

~~~m:~=

Roger, o( Pine GroVe were
recent dinner guests of Mrs.
· Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada
Bays.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bowers and
family entertained Monday,
July 5, with a family picnic at
their home. Those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters and
family of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hunt and son,
Columbus
and
; Mr.
Mrs. Max
Bowers and soo, Etna; Miss
Karen Grueser and Mr. Nor·
man Grueser of Minersville;

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
K.V. COMPUTING
OF
UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

:;~i:J:~~Is~

Appalachian Area

Mr. and' Mrs, Ralph Webb.

MARBLE CLIFF, OHIO
(CGS)-Drilling for gas is
like planning military strategy:
all you have to go on is a caiculaied guess.
But Columbia Gas System
geotogisls have a better-thanaverage calculated guess of
· h gas deposrts
·
where vast, nc
are located. They've zeroed-in

'•

WUUSM
•,

DOD IAI£ A

gas and the second iargeSI geological basin in the United
States.
New drilling equipment and
mature drilling experience in
Ibis ~rea juslify Columbia's

efforts.

~

Improved rotary drilling
methods cut into the curth
three times faster th an before.
Ant.l improved drill bits are
now tougher than ever. Ro-

DlfiDDICE
We INIY YCIU to Iaiit
1111111 tile P•r Is IIOOCil.

lary drills also go deeper than
the familiar cable rigs.

Geological findings also
play an important purt in pinning down an cx;~ct location.

The rCliuils of geophysical surveys, using seismic .shock
·waves , earth's gravity ant.l
magnetic intensity, help to t.l e~
scri be the underground slruc-

•

•

PAIII'QOK

ltAll

.... c.. . .

_.@

turc of the earth.

Despite all the technological
Untapped pockets of clean natural gas lie

miles beneath the surface of the earth . And we
mean to reach them. We listen to the earth 's
heartbeat deep underground in the ApR&lt;~Ia ­
chian area and our sophisticated prospeCti"g

instruments guide us to potentaal deposits of
natural gas. So we're roolinQ up to drill further
down than we've ever gone before. Wildcat
exploration is expensive and the chances of

finding gas in commercial quantities are one
out of nine. But the rewards in more clean,

modern natural gas for heatjng and cooling,
cooking, clothes drying, water healing and
industrial uses will be well worth it. Drilling
deeper in America's original natural gas land
is just one of the ways we will meet your everincreasing need for valuable natural gas.
Gas is right there.

advances, exploration for natur&lt;~l gas rcm;.lins a high·risk
business. For example, the

chances of hitting a successful
wildcat well are one out of
nine. The other eight wells arc
ciiher dry holes or nol commercially productive. Pres. cnlly, Columbia Gas is acli. valing several deep-drilling
operations in the Appalachian

area. These lest wells will contribute to our geological

knowledge of Ihe basin, which
prcscnlly accounls for 12%
of Columbia's supply.

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-MIDDLEPORT.
169 N. 2nd Ave. ·
· 992-2725

NEW HOURS:

Mon. Thr:u Thurs.

Friday
Saturday

8;00 A.M.-8:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -6:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -4:00P.M.

6 OPERATORS
Mary
Phy II is
Lois
Nina
Brenda
Kay

AppolntmeDt Not

POI..I..Y'S POINTERS

Always Neeeuaey

Mended Leather Rip
With Zipper Insert

\

·Manliness More Than Just .an Act

Bv Katie Crow
John Holman, 16-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Holman,
Racine, Rt. 1, is seriously ill at Olildren's Hospital in Columbus.
For those who would like to remember him with a greeting card
the address is Childrens Hospital, 17th Street, 3 A West, Columbus, Ohio.
May you have a speedy recovery, John.
SPEAKING OF GET-Wjl:LL wishes, I'd like to send them
along to Mrs. Ruth Moore, Middleport, who just returned home
after a stay In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
MR. AND MRS. Mit R. White of Colwnbus have placed a gift
book in lbe Pomeroy Public Ubrary in memory of the late Mrs.
Maud S. Crow. The title of the book is, "The Poetry of Robert
Fr 1 "The bookhasallllofFrost'sbookscomplete. What a nice
oturs·

ges

e.

MRS. HENRY (BEULAH) Ewing is elated over her recent
trip to Beckley, w. va ., where she saw the plsy, "Hatfields and

McCoys."
Beulah and her group, which included Mary Pllterson of St.
Cloud, Fla., Mrs. Emory Powell and Miss Addie Powell of Racine,
Mrs. Carl Kautz and daughter Joy of Chester, and Fred Rayburn
drove to Beckley last weekend. They caught lbe show on &amp;mday
and spent the night at the Honey in the Rock Motel.
The group had a wonderful time. According to Beulah the
park there Is beautiful. In fact Beulah is ready to go hack any
time.
SJME F ASHIONETTES -What goes over fur hot pants for
the new fashion season ahead? Why a fur poncho, or a fur cape, of

course.

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Built by craftsmen who care about you!

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By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-To mend a rip in the leather that ran
across the width of the front car seat I merely waited for
a warm day when the leather was warm and pliable, then
hand-sewed a zipper into the ripped place. When in, I just
zipped up the split and have received many compliments
on my ingenUity .-DENNIS
p!llllllii!-- W.! II

Polly's Problem

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with companies that
put pressure on the employes to give to various charity
drives through the company rather than at home, through
their church or elsewhere. I wonder if the other readers
think they should be allowed to do thls.-BURTON
DEAR POLLY-Probably Carol could clean her plastic
notebook cover without damaging the color by using one
of the good spray cleaners. I sprayed one on, wiped it with
a clean cloth and after two applications my white notebook cover looked like new.-IRENE
DEAR GIRLS-Spray wlndow.cleaner or rubbing alcohol
will also often clean sucb covers. Try a back corner first.
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-My son always carries his billfold in
the same hlp pocket with the result that this pocket used
~ wear before any other part of his corduroy pants. Now
I watch for the first thin spots in this pocket, remove both
hip pockets and replace them on opposite sides. He gets
almost twice the wear out of a pair of corduroy pants.BETTY F.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION)

Yo'u will receive a dollar H Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of tbls newspaper.

Mrs. Winston is Auxiliary Hostess
Lewis Manley Post Auxiliary
met Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Nellie Win.. ton.
Vice-president Mrs. Allen
.: Hampton presided. Meeting
: opened in ritualistic form with
• • Mrs. Gertrude Butler, color
- bearer and Mrs. Winston,
: cbapiain.
;"'. Report was made by Mrs.
;, Hampton on a recent party at
:; Chillicothe Veterans Hospital. A
: tentativ~ .J.lrogram schedule was

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-

MILL ENDS

~

CARPETS

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••

501Nylon
12x15 thru 12x24
SALE PRICED

'

&amp;-78 - 14 NYLON CORD
6/10 WSW

•24.38

•
I

•

*6/ 10 whitewall designed for today's stylish ca-s

I

FREE MOUNTING SERVICE

t
I
I

INSTALLATION SERVICE. ON
MUFFLERS • SHOCKS - BRAKE SHOES
.BAHERrES • CAR TUNE-UPS

whose favorite expression is, "I'm a man, not a mouse!"
-NO MINNIE MOUSE
DEAR MINNIE- It's never too late. Professional counseling might help your husband and you separate the

DEAR BETTY -During the Cbl'istmas holidays I burl
my in-laws feelings and they haven't spoken to me since
then. I was right but decided to bury the hatchet and
apologize beca use I don't mind being the loser In a
family argument I called but both my mother-in-law
and sister-in-law repeatedly hung up on me. Tben I wrote
letters of apology to them. My mother-in-taw returned
my letter. She tore it into small pieces before mailing
it to me ! Now they have sent word by a cousin of mine
that neither of them are going to come to my sod's wedding, my grandson's christening or my husband's and
my silver wedding anniversary party. What should I do
next ?-WORN OUT

DEAR WORN-Why not simpl1 consider yourself thrice
blessed? If you really want them at the functions, you
can take the extra step or two. Enlist your husbari as a
peace emissaiy. Or the cousin your in-laws trust r.:Ugbt
speak for you. Flowers might help. It's a waste of time
trying to figure out the winner and tbe loser in this
!&lt;ind of game.

Mrs. Wilson Hostess Of Grange No. 2612
LETART FALLS - Ohio Aget-wellcanlwassigned for reading by Doris Sayre, " Just a were served. The nat meeting
Valley Grange 2612 meeting at Mrs. Elizabeth Roush who is a Piece of Cloth;" name tbe is 10 be with Mrs. Elil.abelh
lbe borne of Mrs. Enna Wilson patient at Veterans Memorial capitals of states, by the group; Roush, if she's able. Refresb.
· was called to Hospt'tal .
a song • "God Bless America" menls of potluck wiDObi
be served.
Thursday evenmg,
..1.......
order by Worthy Master Her-· A literary program arranged by the group ; a reading by Four members of
o v~,
bert Shields.
by Mabel Shields Included a . Erma Wilson, " A Lawn Grange rece1vmg the fint four
Harriett Neigler reported on - - - - - - - - - - Mower," and a game, ''ll two tleguesat RockSpringsJune25
degree work at Rock Springs
were President What I'd Do." trere Mrs. Voda Teaford, Mrs.
EVENT POSTPONED
Refreshments of homemade Ira Orr, and Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush
described the grange float that The homecoming of the South ice cream, cake, pie, and pop Robert Smith.
won third prize. The trophy was Bethel United Methodist Olurcb
beautiful.
at Silver Ridge has been
It was decided not to visit pa;tponed until a later date to
Hemlock Grange Aug. 7 but be announced.
wait till a later date.
First Division
. The Geneva Version was
the first English Bible in
which tbe chapters were divided into verses. It was
edited by William WhittingTuesday. Members agreed to ham in 1560.
furnish sandwiches . Mrs. - - - - - - - - Warner and Mrs. Card reported where they attended lbe Cinon a meeting in Nelsonville on cinnati Reds doubleheader ball
July 8 where Miss Marge game &amp;mday.
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT
Mr. Leroy Wyant, who has
Mayer, returned missionary
from Africa, was the speaker. been a patient at Roher
Thirty-eight sick calls were Hospital, has returned borne
reported made during the and is very much improved.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
month. The meeting closed with
prayer by Mrs. Wlldennuth. John Walter and Richard, Miss
Punch and cookies were served. Peggy Imboden of Middlep&lt;rt;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Martins
of Racine, and Robert Bruce
Chicago, m. and were guests of Ried of Pataskala were in
BOYS
.. GIRLS
a friend and former Bible Ripley, W. Va: SUndiy and
. _
Shorts,
shirts.
sets
..
School teacher, Mi~s Ester attencted the Art and Crafts
~tiS. .. _
Johnson.
Show at Cedar Lakes where
Dnsses,. spr ts Mr.
suits, p.j.'s. Recent visitors of Mr. and they' enjoyed a family picnic.
-Is. ........ SOiits.
Sleeveless sllirts,
Mrs. John Dean, John and Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wyant
p.j.'s o!Od - .
shorts, toble
sLKU. wib.. trurt
Richard were Mr. and Mrs. had as recent visitors Mrs.
's.
Hank Grant, Mr. and Mrs. Veneva Gilliam and Debbie.
Lester Arnold, all of Columbus; Mr. andMrs. HalphBatesand
INFANT: Crib sets, shorts. sunsuits,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Smalley of family were visitors of Mr. and
shirts. coats, p.j. 'sChester; Mr. and Mrs. Gerold Mrs. Eugene Smith and family
Gilkey and children of Athens; and visited with steve Smith
Evaline Arnold of Columbus; who was hospitalized.
Ronnie McNalley of Athens and
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, local.
Kenny Hartley, Jr. was home
over the weekend from Florida
(where he is employed) to visit
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
~
Kenneth HarUey.
Steve Smith who is a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
recenUy underwent surgery and
is recovering nicely.
Mr.-and Mrs. Nonnan Wood
and family were in Cincinnati

Clearance Sale
Continues At

The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 59. Offeril)g was $39.92. Following
Sunday School pins for perfect
attendance were presented by
the superintendent to· Greg
Murray, one year, Rodney Carl
for II years.
Mrs. Uoyd King and children
are visiting at Lake City,
Florida where Mr. King is now
employed.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White were Mrs.
Myrtle White, Mrs. David Glenn
and family of West Virginia and
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Swearinger and Bobby of
Dayton and Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde P. Hinton of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison
and son were recent visitors of

his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olen
Harrison.
Mr. and Mrs. John Pedras,
Jr. (Sandra Beall are announcing the arrival of their
first child, a daughter who will
answer to the name .of Mary
Janeth. Grandparents are Mr.
and · Mrs. John Petlras, Sr. of
Johnstown, Pa., and Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Beal of Kingsbury.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Beal also of
this community. Mrs. Wayne
Beal is spending some time with
Mr, and Mrs. Pedras and new
baby at Cleveland.
Miss Mary Lou King, Miss
Karia Beal and Miss Geneva
King have returned from a 4-11
exchange trip to Wisconsin
where they stopped enroute at

THE

KIDDIE SHOP

--------------------·Infant Thru Size 12

lA ro ¥z m

S/,op! Comptl rtJ!
Buy! SavtJ!

. where
you get ..a
for your money

JUST RECEIVED-SHIPMENT

DRESSES
for School Belles
Cl1188 ~harmers. Perky,
A+ styles for girls.
And, they're here in easy·
care, easy-wear fabries.
They make the grade!

••

I

•'

24's

GILLETTE

RIGHT GUARD
Reg.
$117
'1.59

TUSSY ·
5PRA Y DEODORANT

Size 3 to &amp;X
. Size 7 to 12

•

•
•

PRAIRIE ·
DRESSES

•
•

••
••

I

I.

at

GILLETTE
FOAMY
6.4at

•3.98

V05

HAIR SPRAY

Size7
tluu 12

Re&amp;.
'1.50

oniJ

ZIRADRR

89'

ALKA-.

SELTZER

•
.,

--

COMET
14
17'
Re&amp;.. 19'

A Small Deposit Will Lay Them
Away For Back To School

..•'.
..•.

ADULT GL

Rec-93"

•

·===================d•

124 W. MAIN

Eichinger as Mrs. Christian, a
concerned Christian woman,
and Mrs. Ada Warner offering
prayer in all fields of endeavor.
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth
presided at the business
meeting. It was voled to send
Scott VanVranken to the school
of Mission for Youth at
Weslerville, Ohio Aug. !H3.
Mrs. Jeanne Card explained
the Health Clinic which ·the
Community Action program
sponsors held at Cheshire each

Kingsbury News, Notes

.

••

•
•
:
OORE __ :
· -· ..•..•••••. ~·

The Women's Society of
Christian Service of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church meeting Tuesday
evening at the church was
opened with prayer by Miss
Lucretia Genheimer.
The program chainnan, Mrs.
Thelma Dill, used as her theme,
" The United Nations" and
moderated a panel of Mrs.
Virginia Edwards as Madam
Quest, African woman, wife of
an U.N. delegate; Mrs. Polly

••

I
t
.

. squawks fr om the squeaks in your household.

DEAR BEITY-My father-in-law and his father are
real Casper Milquetoasts. My mother-in-law dominates
them in every area- including the family grocery business. She constantly tells one or the other he is wrong,
confused or mistaken.
My husband is the exact opposite of his father and
grandfather. In fact, he goes out of his way to prove he
is not ~enpecked . The only thing is that I have no desire
to henpeck or dominate h1m and only w;mt to make him
happy. We have been married 14 years and I thought be
would eventually see I am different from his mother but
to this day he nags and complains about everything I do.
We live in the same apartment bouse and I feel we
could be happier by moving but I think he is determined
to stay merely to prove he's the man of our family . It's
too late for me, but warn girls to be careful of the man

••

•nylon cord engineered to deliver a strong tire
•wide center rib de~lgned to provide stability

DAUGHTER VISITED
Mayor and Mrs. C. 0. Fisher
have returned from a visit with
their daughter, Mrs. Harold
Moore and family, at Pikeville,
Ky. They were accompanied by
their son Tommy, daughter
Sally' of Sacramento, calif.,
and grandson, Bruce FISher .

By BETTY CANARY

WSCS Panel Theme on UN

. VISIT BAKER'S

I
I

*full 4ply nlyon cord designed for durability

set up. Mrs. Winston served a
salad course.
The next meeting is scheduled
for September at the home of
Mrs. William Smith in
Pomeroy .

The important thing is to achieve the total fur look, according
to outfits from pacesetting fur designers at lbe Fur lnfonnation
and Fashion Council's fall and winter show.
Also more dyed furs are coming up for winter. These include
mink dyed to lhe color of coral and other furs dyed in shades of
red and green. For Christmas?
What in the world are we poor gals going to do? One coosolstion by the time the style gets here it will be out of style as it IS
a fur piece from here to the fashion centers.

BAKE SALE SET
MINERSVILLE The
Minersville WSCS will hold a
bake sale Saturday at the Hines
Building starting at 10 a.m.

REESE
FURN. OUTLET

PLUS $2.07 F. E. T.

I
I

Wll:M'!!mliii!lmlfiiiMiiill!ll'

DEAR POLLY-Is there any known way to remove ink stains from books? I accidentally spilled
some on a treasured book. Also, does anyone know
of a successful method for removing dried blood
stains from upholstery?-MRS. C. L. N.

-

on the Appalachian Basin area
-a prime source of natural

·WHERE

'

KAY'S BEAUTY SAlDN

.toGasRecord
Company Drills
Depths in

..

'.

,_......__..!:::::::=;:!

r-----:",----------------------, - -

.._ ...._ __ Coltrill of'~
"""'· , ... ""
._an,
lin. Joe Thoren, Sr. and Mrs.
Cirence Grueser of Nease
SeiUement were Friday
eft11iog callers of Mrs. Elbei
....._,_ and .,_ Ada Ba
.,....,... , =•·
ys.
Mrs. Elmor Frecker and son,

~ ~

ROBINSOtr.S

U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

visit Mrs. Dollie
Carol and Robin Foster of

•

,(U_pon

OPEN TO PUBLIC AnER 5 P.M.

:;.::.:l

•

CLEANING.·

spring.
The field, which was over 200
at the start of play Tuesday,
was cut to the low 60 and ties
for· the final two days of play
with 160 being the cutoff mark.
A total of 69 players will play
today and Friday.

.....

.

.
. TIWRSDAY
· covered dish and own table
· N.F .0. MEETING, Chester service
Grange Hall Thursday at 9 p.m. '
· · SUNDAy
. TEACHERS AND workers of THE MASONS and Eastern
the Pomeroy Church of Chrl~t Stars and families picnic will be
Vacation Bible School Thursday held Sunday at Forest Acre
at 8 p.m. Bible School will be Park, New Lima Roa.d,
held from Aug. 8 through 17 beginning at 2 p.m. Ham and
from6:3&amp; to .9 p.m.
drinks will be provided. Bring
ROCK SPRINGS Grange covered dish and table service.
Thurstjay at 8 p.m. at the haU. All members are welcome.
Inspection. Bring small bells for
SACRED HEART Parish
the program.
picnic Sunday . at · Middleport
. TWIN CITY Shrinettes Municipal Park, 12 noon. Bring
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the cove~ed dish and own table
Sluine Club in Racine.
serv1ce.
SPECIAL meeting of the PICNIC SUNDA_Y, Modern·
Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 R&amp;AM W~en of American ~ of
Friday .7:30 p.m. Work in EA Middleport, at Fort Me1gs,
degree. All Master Masons Rutlal)d, 12:30 p.m. Basket
invited.
dinner. Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired MEIGS CHAPTER Order
Teacher Assn. and guests picnic Demoiay Monday 7:30 p.m.,
at the Roadside Park on Rt. 33 Middleport Masonic Temple.
on left going north at 5:30p.m. Mothers Club will meet in the
Saturday, July 17. Bring basement.

Z-HOUR.

of Beachwood, Russell Coleman
of Portsmouth, Russell Jimeson
d. Colwnbus, and Klm Heisler
of Cleveland, the state l)igh
school Class AA medalist this

.

.

Katie's Korner

~~~%,&lt;::! ,:::~~~-:::;(.•:*~~1.~:::;: . .•"@, &lt;§!.;,::;,f::;:.\~%~0::::·::~-::::. ..:-~-~.

Mike McFee, Youngstown
79-75- IS·.;· · the University of OklahOI!III
Kim Heisler, Cleveland
77-77- 154
Ray Beallo, Beachwood
76-78- 154
.'
Russell Coleman, Portsmouth · 79-75- 154
Russell Jimeson, Columbus
78·76- 154
Steve Pipoly, Youngstown
75 -80-155
Paul Minnich, El(.ria
78·77- 155
Tom Thomas, To edo
78.77- 155
Barry Terjesen , Akron
75-80- 155
Pete Reiber, Columbu s
81 -74- 155
Robert Cooley, .Athens
80-76-156
~eq~est)
Mark Hessler, Columbus
77-79- 156
Glenn Apple. Cleveland
75-81- 156
Tom Gould, Cincinnati
80-76-156
Pandel Savic, Columbus
78-78-156 ·
Yank Heisler. Kent
80-76-156
Don Albert, Columbus
76·8Q-l56
George Frankenfeld, Dayton
83-73- 156 ·
Bob Smith. Wesll~ke
81 -75--156

.COLUMBUS (UPi) .:., · Second round
scores of the leaders In the 65th Ohio
Amateur Golf Tournament being played
at the Scioto Country Club Course:
Bill Bosshard, Akron
7H}-U9
· Steve Groves. Lancaster
75-74-149
Jim Hodges, Zanesville
75-75--150
Chris Roderick, Gallipolis ·
79-72-151
David Walther, Dayton
76-75-151
Craig Immel, Massillon
71 -81- 152
Jim Kennedy, Columbus
75-77- 152
Jack Hessler, Columbus
75-77-152
Gary Wilkens, Bellefontaine
77-75- 152
Dan Carmichael, Columbus
77-76- 153
Rav Sovlk, Columbus
74-79-153
Fritz Schmidt, Columbus
76 -77-153
Gary Artz, Akron
72-81- 153
Fred Nadalln, Columbus
73-li0-153
Ed Rosenbau"1•. Cleveland
77-.76- 153

By GENE CADDES
Ariz of Cuyahoga Falls who
UPI Sports .Writer ·
was one shot behind Immel
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bill with a 72 after lhe first day's
Iktishard considers himself a action, both 14 81 strokes to
betler match than medal play- negotiate the 6,A22-yard, par 71
er, but lbe 35-year~ld Akronite Scioto Country Club Course
is tied for the halfway lead at Wednesday. But both are still
149 with young Steve Groves in very much in contention, 1mthe 65th Ohio Amateur Golf mel with 152 and Ariz with 153.
Championships.
Roderick Posts Best Round
Bosshard, who was runnerup The best round of the day
tO Dick Flix:kenzier of Mans- was a 72 by Chris Roderick of ing with," Bosshard said.
Bossbard, who says his averfield In lhe 1965 Amateur when Gallipolis and Miami Univerage
drive is about 230 yards,
it was still match play, shot a sity, boosting him into a tie
75 in Wednesday's second for fourth place at 151 with doesn't think the Scioto course
is made for ihe long hitters.
round, while Groves, of l.an- David Wallber of Dayton.
"This is an old man's
easier, lbe No. 1 player on Roderio;k1 who hopes to tUrn
he
said. "Take No. 8 for inCoach Rod Myers' Ohio State pro this fall "if my game
golf team this spring, had a 74 comes around," went to his stance (a par five fronted by
to go with an opening 75.
three wood off the tee Wednes- a lake), these kids hit their
long drives and lben they think
ln third place, only one shot day and "kept it.in play."
behind the leaders with a pair Bosshart!, who runs a chemi- they have to go for the green
of 75s, is Jim Hodges, 31, an cal · company in the Rubber on their second shot. To hit lt
industrial engineer at the Am- City, says he gets more ''per: far doesn't mean a thing unless
you hit it straight.
BUTOJER, I HOPE, finds a .ew youngsters bere with talent co Steel Co. plant in Zanesville sonal satisfaction" out of match
"This reaDy isn't that tough
and desire for tennis. Wltlt IIOtiJid early instruelion, and hard, and .a tr~ian.led Ke~tucktnn play and believes "you remema course if you can keep it in
cmstant practice, they might find it rewarc!inil to begin tour- playmg m his first Ohio Ama- ber your rounds better."
N""'!Jt tenDis soan wbicb is wbere the game has to be learned. ' leur. .
.
"In medal play' you have to ~ fairway'" ~ continued.
'lbereisa tournamentCIIIIingupinHuntingtansoon, the{)hio
The f1rst r~ leader, Craig think about your game and for: · You have to think P?"i~vely.
~-n-Opeo.It_ • w-•-tyear._ .._.,_ __ ofCharleston
.
, Immel of Massillon, and Gary get about the guy yoU're play- Where you want to hili!, not
-~
"- -...
·~ ,..• ., ~-......
·
where you don't want to hit it."
• •••om now 19 yean old at CJernwm University 011 a tennis - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - Groves, who just turned 20
acbalarsbip (N~. 4 player on Clemsoo's ·slrmg team this past Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Hunt of
years old this spring and will
-""~)
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler, at be j ·
t osu this fall
..,...,. ·
Reynoldsburg; Mrs. Nedra Wh 1
a unlor a
,
ParsODs, you may recall, began at tlte table, with table ten·
ee ersburg.
felt the demanding Scioto
·
three limes liooal .,_ ___._ """
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles Covey
Ia ed
.
edn
ma; was
na
~~~ uuuco 13 ~ion. He took to Wolfe and sons, Mrs. Ada of
course
p
y
easier
W
es1pte and daughter, Mrs. da than d · th
teuais at age .....
•• ..
_.__
..........
·
·
Be
ua .. ., ... --tUW frGn High school he had WOII Sellers and family, Mrs. Kay K
th
y
urmg e opening
tbe Wat Virginia men's singles title and t1te state high sebool Dodderer and son, and Steve enne Francis · and three round, primarily because of the
boJI' title twice. He also was a starling guard on Cbarleston High llill.
daughters of Battle Ground, pin placements.
Srbool's stale romano L--'-tball'--- .,~ 1969.
Washington were Saturday
Hits Ball Good
~ .......,
..,..... ...
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rose guests of Mrs Ada Ba
d
Y1111 won't see Parsons in the Ohio v-"-y
stunmer. were hosts for a wiener roast Mrs. Ethel Wheeler.
·
ys an
Playing
in hhiskysecond state
....., Open this ----te the
His •mmer is full witb instructiOII comnritmeots In the Clemson Saturday nl·ght. Mrs. Rose's Mr . and Mrs. Steven Jacobs ama
ur •
us redhead hit
13 of th 18
· gu1 ·
region.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. of Lockbourne Air Force Base,
e greens m re ation
Marcus Weaver and Juanita of
figures. "I hit the ball good toCo1wnbus, spent Saturday with day," he said after his round.
TABLE 'lENNIS CAN be rewarding, too. SOD John, now 19, is Letart, W. Va. were present. her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grouped with Immel at 152
in Elnpe lhi.s .......
Jll'lctidngwilh lbe best be can find tuning
Mrs. Bessie Ervin was a Henry Roush ·
are Jack Hessler of Colwnbus,
"' far the IntematiODal Malcbes in TIK'llllto early in September dinner guest on July 5 of Mr~ Mr. and Mrs. George Ernest who has had rounds of 75 and
wbeu be bu MIIJ"' an lbe N!rlh American si~ title still held and Mrs. Howard Ervin.
of Marianna • pa. VISI
· 'ted her Tl, Gary Wilkens of Bellefonby s-B!Ju,tb KCftllll Dal JOGII Lee of &lt;leveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Johnso
.
n aun t , Mrs. Esther Piper.
Iaine with Tl-75, and Jim KenWhen Pv8ons waa 11 and tbe nalion's best in tbe under 13s, and Mrs. Bertha Spencer spent Mr. and Mrs . FloydFarra, Jr. nedy of Columbus with 75-TI.
JolmawPvsonsplayina BuntingtGn IAJumament. It was John's Sunday at Glendale, W.Va. with and family of Colwnbus spent
With Ariz at 153 were fonner
lint lime 8WIQ' fnm lis ba I !Wit and tbe oJd fJGppy tale in Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Cartwright the weekend with his parents, champion Dan Cartnichael of
IMI1epart Part (where for not lloowing 811,)' better he held his and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra.
Colwnbus (TI-76), Hay Sovik,
Mrs.
carrie
Nease
was
a
Mr
d
Mrs
Delbert
M
·
illlpJ ••IJIMP'I' bat in an illl!lfeclive and ..-lbodox way).
.
orns another Ohio State p1syer (74· an
Dell 10, be t.'OUld bit to the CCJnriS against tbe bigh scbool weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. of Athens, Mrs. Elsie Roush and 79), Fritz Sclunidt of Colwnbus
-...etltion IIIey bracketed bim witb tn Buntingtoo, winning lhat David Nease and son, David, at Mrs. Marie Chapman of ('/S-TI), Fred Nadaltn of ColwnPomeroy called on Mr. and bus (7U0) and Ed Rosenbawn
tlvlll1111, aDd winniJW a II Oj06y his lint -as lhe heginne~ with Baltimore.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thereon
Mrs
· Moms
· Sunda Y of Cleveland (77-76).
. FranCJS
tbe IIICIII pc*ntiaL He was sbocted sr ee i:Hess and inspired In with 154s were Mike Mc• lVslr:' Sll at Huntlngtm.
,.
, Johnson spent the weekend with afternoon.
Fee of YounRsll?wn, Ray Beally
I' Ill tbe JISt three yean John was to 'caiCb ral'il6!is ih- tible:: ~il: son,ip-law apd, daughter.
...... and deleat bim ftnall:r, But by tbat uine Parsons had
•ad lis major Interest to lhe big game, temis, and to bigb
ami bMtetblll
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
Now No. ZraaUd In the U.S. •i Canada, John wants 0a1
.loaD. RaJ bad. _... be _., did Panons.

Racine Soeial Events

···=·==~ Wade H. Walker, .the 48-year- :

BETTY CANARY

.•

Shop In

.

'

BAKER

••

POMERQY

Air

Conditioned
Comfort

HOURS
9 Til5 Daily
I 9Til9
Saturday

Re&amp;. J5•

25's
I •

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i~t~w:'~,~k~dleport-Pmneroy,o.,JulJs 1971

.,.

~ Social Calendar

L

'•'

Gallipolis Ace
the SpOrts Desk
Jumps
To_
FoU11h.
lw Chet. Tannehili ·
In Ohio Am Play

,.

..

.

~

If you are me of 1lle many wbo apjftciate achievement in
alblelial, enjoy JeeUW me fiDel)l:bmed pbysique outduel another
eqneD:r atbmed, iuojiJ ed by a match turning 011 mental cooCIIIIIration rather tbu brulh strqth, lhen you bad to like - if
J011 saw It on TV I'I!CeDIIy - lhe vicl«y d. lhe young (and
llelulif1ll) Mrs. GOolapg fl. Australia in lbe Wllllbledon
WCIIIlell's · si~ ~ champimsbip.
'lbe girl frGn down uDder bad it aD, fluid motion, great speed
an a~~antelape-like slrlde, &amp;qlerlalive anticipatian, remarkable
pllylical coordinalion. As 1lle cmmienlators said, when she
perfeclll her first serve and lllilds a lllCI'e dependable forehand
(her""*banrlalreadyisSQIDelhiJWelse)Mrs.Goolagongmay be
lhe .,... WlllliU! tennis player o( aD lime.
We may !lave no ~lial Mrs. G®Jagongs in Meiga County,
bo.t webaft, fell' 1lle fint time In my rec:ollecli011 covering 25 years
here, organi2ed !emU 'e s \'liS for wboever wants tbem at the
Middleport Part. Instruction is by Jim Bulcber,lately out of Ohio
State University, where quite a bitli tennis is played
Tennis is a grueling imividualsput lhat cbaDenges lbe finest
bocly and mind. There's apcriy,elderly gentleman in lbe county
wbo wiD verify lhat, if you doubt me. Cbsrley Gibbs, retired
Puoaoy Scbools superintendent, in lis more active years bad a
S1rOng game. 'lbere were olbers bere !I 40 years ago who played
well too. Charley and Mrs. Gibbll are sumlnering here again, but
Wl11 rebn to their winter quarters inl'1orida ccmefrost.

"

Oh •

~fj

It. .

· .
·
. ·10 Am Golf Results . ·f!i ~!sf:~s:o~:~f't::c:1 :

,w

SATURDAY-JULY 17th

B:r Mn. Frudl Merril
Mrs. Lavinia Simpsm was
called to East Liverpool, due to
the deatb of a relative.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Evans
IIIIi Mr. and Mre. Gary Palmer
II RLI, C&gt;sb're and Mr. Don
Bemett of MinfcJrd, Ohio were
.s..lay aftemQOR and evening
posts li Rev. and Mrs. Frank
0
laew and attended the
mviceatPartlandOIUrch.Mr.
Beunett was soloist at the
.!Eli ice.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
In Granville Sunday to
attml tlte 1!11i9 Grand Officers

~~~m:~=

Roger, o( Pine GroVe were
recent dinner guests of Mrs.
· Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada
Bays.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bowers and
family entertained Monday,
July 5, with a family picnic at
their home. Those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters and
family of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hunt and son,
Columbus
and
; Mr.
Mrs. Max
Bowers and soo, Etna; Miss
Karen Grueser and Mr. Nor·
man Grueser of Minersville;

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
K.V. COMPUTING
OF
UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

:;~i:J:~~Is~

Appalachian Area

Mr. and' Mrs, Ralph Webb.

MARBLE CLIFF, OHIO
(CGS)-Drilling for gas is
like planning military strategy:
all you have to go on is a caiculaied guess.
But Columbia Gas System
geotogisls have a better-thanaverage calculated guess of
· h gas deposrts
·
where vast, nc
are located. They've zeroed-in

'•

WUUSM
•,

DOD IAI£ A

gas and the second iargeSI geological basin in the United
States.
New drilling equipment and
mature drilling experience in
Ibis ~rea juslify Columbia's

efforts.

~

Improved rotary drilling
methods cut into the curth
three times faster th an before.
Ant.l improved drill bits are
now tougher than ever. Ro-

DlfiDDICE
We INIY YCIU to Iaiit
1111111 tile P•r Is IIOOCil.

lary drills also go deeper than
the familiar cable rigs.

Geological findings also
play an important purt in pinning down an cx;~ct location.

The rCliuils of geophysical surveys, using seismic .shock
·waves , earth's gravity ant.l
magnetic intensity, help to t.l e~
scri be the underground slruc-

•

•

PAIII'QOK

ltAll

.... c.. . .

_.@

turc of the earth.

Despite all the technological
Untapped pockets of clean natural gas lie

miles beneath the surface of the earth . And we
mean to reach them. We listen to the earth 's
heartbeat deep underground in the ApR&lt;~Ia ­
chian area and our sophisticated prospeCti"g

instruments guide us to potentaal deposits of
natural gas. So we're roolinQ up to drill further
down than we've ever gone before. Wildcat
exploration is expensive and the chances of

finding gas in commercial quantities are one
out of nine. But the rewards in more clean,

modern natural gas for heatjng and cooling,
cooking, clothes drying, water healing and
industrial uses will be well worth it. Drilling
deeper in America's original natural gas land
is just one of the ways we will meet your everincreasing need for valuable natural gas.
Gas is right there.

advances, exploration for natur&lt;~l gas rcm;.lins a high·risk
business. For example, the

chances of hitting a successful
wildcat well are one out of
nine. The other eight wells arc
ciiher dry holes or nol commercially productive. Pres. cnlly, Columbia Gas is acli. valing several deep-drilling
operations in the Appalachian

area. These lest wells will contribute to our geological

knowledge of Ihe basin, which
prcscnlly accounls for 12%
of Columbia's supply.

- -

· ~

.
.
-MIDDLEPORT.
169 N. 2nd Ave. ·
· 992-2725

NEW HOURS:

Mon. Thr:u Thurs.

Friday
Saturday

8;00 A.M.-8:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -6:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -4:00P.M.

6 OPERATORS
Mary
Phy II is
Lois
Nina
Brenda
Kay

AppolntmeDt Not

POI..I..Y'S POINTERS

Always Neeeuaey

Mended Leather Rip
With Zipper Insert

\

·Manliness More Than Just .an Act

Bv Katie Crow
John Holman, 16-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Holman,
Racine, Rt. 1, is seriously ill at Olildren's Hospital in Columbus.
For those who would like to remember him with a greeting card
the address is Childrens Hospital, 17th Street, 3 A West, Columbus, Ohio.
May you have a speedy recovery, John.
SPEAKING OF GET-Wjl:LL wishes, I'd like to send them
along to Mrs. Ruth Moore, Middleport, who just returned home
after a stay In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
MR. AND MRS. Mit R. White of Colwnbus have placed a gift
book in lbe Pomeroy Public Ubrary in memory of the late Mrs.
Maud S. Crow. The title of the book is, "The Poetry of Robert
Fr 1 "The bookhasallllofFrost'sbookscomplete. What a nice
oturs·

ges

e.

MRS. HENRY (BEULAH) Ewing is elated over her recent
trip to Beckley, w. va ., where she saw the plsy, "Hatfields and

McCoys."
Beulah and her group, which included Mary Pllterson of St.
Cloud, Fla., Mrs. Emory Powell and Miss Addie Powell of Racine,
Mrs. Carl Kautz and daughter Joy of Chester, and Fred Rayburn
drove to Beckley last weekend. They caught lbe show on &amp;mday
and spent the night at the Honey in the Rock Motel.
The group had a wonderful time. According to Beulah the
park there Is beautiful. In fact Beulah is ready to go hack any
time.
SJME F ASHIONETTES -What goes over fur hot pants for
the new fashion season ahead? Why a fur poncho, or a fur cape, of

course.

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Built by craftsmen who care about you!

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By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-To mend a rip in the leather that ran
across the width of the front car seat I merely waited for
a warm day when the leather was warm and pliable, then
hand-sewed a zipper into the ripped place. When in, I just
zipped up the split and have received many compliments
on my ingenUity .-DENNIS
p!llllllii!-- W.! II

Polly's Problem

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with companies that
put pressure on the employes to give to various charity
drives through the company rather than at home, through
their church or elsewhere. I wonder if the other readers
think they should be allowed to do thls.-BURTON
DEAR POLLY-Probably Carol could clean her plastic
notebook cover without damaging the color by using one
of the good spray cleaners. I sprayed one on, wiped it with
a clean cloth and after two applications my white notebook cover looked like new.-IRENE
DEAR GIRLS-Spray wlndow.cleaner or rubbing alcohol
will also often clean sucb covers. Try a back corner first.
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-My son always carries his billfold in
the same hlp pocket with the result that this pocket used
~ wear before any other part of his corduroy pants. Now
I watch for the first thin spots in this pocket, remove both
hip pockets and replace them on opposite sides. He gets
almost twice the wear out of a pair of corduroy pants.BETTY F.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION)

Yo'u will receive a dollar H Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of tbls newspaper.

Mrs. Winston is Auxiliary Hostess
Lewis Manley Post Auxiliary
met Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Nellie Win.. ton.
Vice-president Mrs. Allen
.: Hampton presided. Meeting
: opened in ritualistic form with
• • Mrs. Gertrude Butler, color
- bearer and Mrs. Winston,
: cbapiain.
;"'. Report was made by Mrs.
;, Hampton on a recent party at
:; Chillicothe Veterans Hospital. A
: tentativ~ .J.lrogram schedule was

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MILL ENDS

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CARPETS

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501Nylon
12x15 thru 12x24
SALE PRICED

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6/10 WSW

•24.38

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FREE MOUNTING SERVICE

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INSTALLATION SERVICE. ON
MUFFLERS • SHOCKS - BRAKE SHOES
.BAHERrES • CAR TUNE-UPS

whose favorite expression is, "I'm a man, not a mouse!"
-NO MINNIE MOUSE
DEAR MINNIE- It's never too late. Professional counseling might help your husband and you separate the

DEAR BETTY -During the Cbl'istmas holidays I burl
my in-laws feelings and they haven't spoken to me since
then. I was right but decided to bury the hatchet and
apologize beca use I don't mind being the loser In a
family argument I called but both my mother-in-law
and sister-in-law repeatedly hung up on me. Tben I wrote
letters of apology to them. My mother-in-taw returned
my letter. She tore it into small pieces before mailing
it to me ! Now they have sent word by a cousin of mine
that neither of them are going to come to my sod's wedding, my grandson's christening or my husband's and
my silver wedding anniversary party. What should I do
next ?-WORN OUT

DEAR WORN-Why not simpl1 consider yourself thrice
blessed? If you really want them at the functions, you
can take the extra step or two. Enlist your husbari as a
peace emissaiy. Or the cousin your in-laws trust r.:Ugbt
speak for you. Flowers might help. It's a waste of time
trying to figure out the winner and tbe loser in this
!&lt;ind of game.

Mrs. Wilson Hostess Of Grange No. 2612
LETART FALLS - Ohio Aget-wellcanlwassigned for reading by Doris Sayre, " Just a were served. The nat meeting
Valley Grange 2612 meeting at Mrs. Elizabeth Roush who is a Piece of Cloth;" name tbe is 10 be with Mrs. Elil.abelh
lbe borne of Mrs. Enna Wilson patient at Veterans Memorial capitals of states, by the group; Roush, if she's able. Refresb.
· was called to Hospt'tal .
a song • "God Bless America" menls of potluck wiDObi
be served.
Thursday evenmg,
..1.......
order by Worthy Master Her-· A literary program arranged by the group ; a reading by Four members of
o v~,
bert Shields.
by Mabel Shields Included a . Erma Wilson, " A Lawn Grange rece1vmg the fint four
Harriett Neigler reported on - - - - - - - - - - Mower," and a game, ''ll two tleguesat RockSpringsJune25
degree work at Rock Springs
were President What I'd Do." trere Mrs. Voda Teaford, Mrs.
EVENT POSTPONED
Refreshments of homemade Ira Orr, and Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush
described the grange float that The homecoming of the South ice cream, cake, pie, and pop Robert Smith.
won third prize. The trophy was Bethel United Methodist Olurcb
beautiful.
at Silver Ridge has been
It was decided not to visit pa;tponed until a later date to
Hemlock Grange Aug. 7 but be announced.
wait till a later date.
First Division
. The Geneva Version was
the first English Bible in
which tbe chapters were divided into verses. It was
edited by William WhittingTuesday. Members agreed to ham in 1560.
furnish sandwiches . Mrs. - - - - - - - - Warner and Mrs. Card reported where they attended lbe Cinon a meeting in Nelsonville on cinnati Reds doubleheader ball
July 8 where Miss Marge game &amp;mday.
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT
Mr. Leroy Wyant, who has
Mayer, returned missionary
from Africa, was the speaker. been a patient at Roher
Thirty-eight sick calls were Hospital, has returned borne
reported made during the and is very much improved.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
month. The meeting closed with
prayer by Mrs. Wlldennuth. John Walter and Richard, Miss
Punch and cookies were served. Peggy Imboden of Middlep&lt;rt;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Martins
of Racine, and Robert Bruce
Chicago, m. and were guests of Ried of Pataskala were in
BOYS
.. GIRLS
a friend and former Bible Ripley, W. Va: SUndiy and
. _
Shorts,
shirts.
sets
..
School teacher, Mi~s Ester attencted the Art and Crafts
~tiS. .. _
Johnson.
Show at Cedar Lakes where
Dnsses,. spr ts Mr.
suits, p.j.'s. Recent visitors of Mr. and they' enjoyed a family picnic.
-Is. ........ SOiits.
Sleeveless sllirts,
Mrs. John Dean, John and Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wyant
p.j.'s o!Od - .
shorts, toble
sLKU. wib.. trurt
Richard were Mr. and Mrs. had as recent visitors Mrs.
's.
Hank Grant, Mr. and Mrs. Veneva Gilliam and Debbie.
Lester Arnold, all of Columbus; Mr. andMrs. HalphBatesand
INFANT: Crib sets, shorts. sunsuits,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Smalley of family were visitors of Mr. and
shirts. coats, p.j. 'sChester; Mr. and Mrs. Gerold Mrs. Eugene Smith and family
Gilkey and children of Athens; and visited with steve Smith
Evaline Arnold of Columbus; who was hospitalized.
Ronnie McNalley of Athens and
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, local.
Kenny Hartley, Jr. was home
over the weekend from Florida
(where he is employed) to visit
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
~
Kenneth HarUey.
Steve Smith who is a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
recenUy underwent surgery and
is recovering nicely.
Mr.-and Mrs. Nonnan Wood
and family were in Cincinnati

Clearance Sale
Continues At

The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 59. Offeril)g was $39.92. Following
Sunday School pins for perfect
attendance were presented by
the superintendent to· Greg
Murray, one year, Rodney Carl
for II years.
Mrs. Uoyd King and children
are visiting at Lake City,
Florida where Mr. King is now
employed.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White were Mrs.
Myrtle White, Mrs. David Glenn
and family of West Virginia and
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Swearinger and Bobby of
Dayton and Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde P. Hinton of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison
and son were recent visitors of

his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olen
Harrison.
Mr. and Mrs. John Pedras,
Jr. (Sandra Beall are announcing the arrival of their
first child, a daughter who will
answer to the name .of Mary
Janeth. Grandparents are Mr.
and · Mrs. John Petlras, Sr. of
Johnstown, Pa., and Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Beal of Kingsbury.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Beal also of
this community. Mrs. Wayne
Beal is spending some time with
Mr, and Mrs. Pedras and new
baby at Cleveland.
Miss Mary Lou King, Miss
Karia Beal and Miss Geneva
King have returned from a 4-11
exchange trip to Wisconsin
where they stopped enroute at

THE

KIDDIE SHOP

--------------------·Infant Thru Size 12

lA ro ¥z m

S/,op! Comptl rtJ!
Buy! SavtJ!

. where
you get ..a
for your money

JUST RECEIVED-SHIPMENT

DRESSES
for School Belles
Cl1188 ~harmers. Perky,
A+ styles for girls.
And, they're here in easy·
care, easy-wear fabries.
They make the grade!

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GILLETTE

RIGHT GUARD
Reg.
$117
'1.59

TUSSY ·
5PRA Y DEODORANT

Size 3 to &amp;X
. Size 7 to 12

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PRAIRIE ·
DRESSES

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GILLETTE
FOAMY
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HAIR SPRAY

Size7
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89'

ALKA-.

SELTZER

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COMET
14
17'
Re&amp;.. 19'

A Small Deposit Will Lay Them
Away For Back To School

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ADULT GL

Rec-93"

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124 W. MAIN

Eichinger as Mrs. Christian, a
concerned Christian woman,
and Mrs. Ada Warner offering
prayer in all fields of endeavor.
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth
presided at the business
meeting. It was voled to send
Scott VanVranken to the school
of Mission for Youth at
Weslerville, Ohio Aug. !H3.
Mrs. Jeanne Card explained
the Health Clinic which ·the
Community Action program
sponsors held at Cheshire each

Kingsbury News, Notes

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The Women's Society of
Christian Service of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church meeting Tuesday
evening at the church was
opened with prayer by Miss
Lucretia Genheimer.
The program chainnan, Mrs.
Thelma Dill, used as her theme,
" The United Nations" and
moderated a panel of Mrs.
Virginia Edwards as Madam
Quest, African woman, wife of
an U.N. delegate; Mrs. Polly

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. squawks fr om the squeaks in your household.

DEAR BEITY-My father-in-law and his father are
real Casper Milquetoasts. My mother-in-law dominates
them in every area- including the family grocery business. She constantly tells one or the other he is wrong,
confused or mistaken.
My husband is the exact opposite of his father and
grandfather. In fact, he goes out of his way to prove he
is not ~enpecked . The only thing is that I have no desire
to henpeck or dominate h1m and only w;mt to make him
happy. We have been married 14 years and I thought be
would eventually see I am different from his mother but
to this day he nags and complains about everything I do.
We live in the same apartment bouse and I feel we
could be happier by moving but I think he is determined
to stay merely to prove he's the man of our family . It's
too late for me, but warn girls to be careful of the man

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•nylon cord engineered to deliver a strong tire
•wide center rib de~lgned to provide stability

DAUGHTER VISITED
Mayor and Mrs. C. 0. Fisher
have returned from a visit with
their daughter, Mrs. Harold
Moore and family, at Pikeville,
Ky. They were accompanied by
their son Tommy, daughter
Sally' of Sacramento, calif.,
and grandson, Bruce FISher .

By BETTY CANARY

WSCS Panel Theme on UN

. VISIT BAKER'S

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*full 4ply nlyon cord designed for durability

set up. Mrs. Winston served a
salad course.
The next meeting is scheduled
for September at the home of
Mrs. William Smith in
Pomeroy .

The important thing is to achieve the total fur look, according
to outfits from pacesetting fur designers at lbe Fur lnfonnation
and Fashion Council's fall and winter show.
Also more dyed furs are coming up for winter. These include
mink dyed to lhe color of coral and other furs dyed in shades of
red and green. For Christmas?
What in the world are we poor gals going to do? One coosolstion by the time the style gets here it will be out of style as it IS
a fur piece from here to the fashion centers.

BAKE SALE SET
MINERSVILLE The
Minersville WSCS will hold a
bake sale Saturday at the Hines
Building starting at 10 a.m.

REESE
FURN. OUTLET

PLUS $2.07 F. E. T.

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Wll:M'!!mliii!lmlfiiiMiiill!ll'

DEAR POLLY-Is there any known way to remove ink stains from books? I accidentally spilled
some on a treasured book. Also, does anyone know
of a successful method for removing dried blood
stains from upholstery?-MRS. C. L. N.

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on the Appalachian Basin area
-a prime source of natural

·WHERE

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KAY'S BEAUTY SAlDN

.toGasRecord
Company Drills
Depths in

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.._ ...._ __ Coltrill of'~
"""'· , ... ""
._an,
lin. Joe Thoren, Sr. and Mrs.
Cirence Grueser of Nease
SeiUement were Friday
eft11iog callers of Mrs. Elbei
....._,_ and .,_ Ada Ba
.,....,... , =•·
ys.
Mrs. Elmor Frecker and son,

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ROBINSOtr.S

U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

visit Mrs. Dollie
Carol and Robin Foster of

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,(U_pon

OPEN TO PUBLIC AnER 5 P.M.

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CLEANING.·

spring.
The field, which was over 200
at the start of play Tuesday,
was cut to the low 60 and ties
for· the final two days of play
with 160 being the cutoff mark.
A total of 69 players will play
today and Friday.

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. TIWRSDAY
· covered dish and own table
· N.F .0. MEETING, Chester service
Grange Hall Thursday at 9 p.m. '
· · SUNDAy
. TEACHERS AND workers of THE MASONS and Eastern
the Pomeroy Church of Chrl~t Stars and families picnic will be
Vacation Bible School Thursday held Sunday at Forest Acre
at 8 p.m. Bible School will be Park, New Lima Roa.d,
held from Aug. 8 through 17 beginning at 2 p.m. Ham and
from6:3&amp; to .9 p.m.
drinks will be provided. Bring
ROCK SPRINGS Grange covered dish and table service.
Thurstjay at 8 p.m. at the haU. All members are welcome.
Inspection. Bring small bells for
SACRED HEART Parish
the program.
picnic Sunday . at · Middleport
. TWIN CITY Shrinettes Municipal Park, 12 noon. Bring
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the cove~ed dish and own table
Sluine Club in Racine.
serv1ce.
SPECIAL meeting of the PICNIC SUNDA_Y, Modern·
Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 R&amp;AM W~en of American ~ of
Friday .7:30 p.m. Work in EA Middleport, at Fort Me1gs,
degree. All Master Masons Rutlal)d, 12:30 p.m. Basket
invited.
dinner. Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired MEIGS CHAPTER Order
Teacher Assn. and guests picnic Demoiay Monday 7:30 p.m.,
at the Roadside Park on Rt. 33 Middleport Masonic Temple.
on left going north at 5:30p.m. Mothers Club will meet in the
Saturday, July 17. Bring basement.

Z-HOUR.

of Beachwood, Russell Coleman
of Portsmouth, Russell Jimeson
d. Colwnbus, and Klm Heisler
of Cleveland, the state l)igh
school Class AA medalist this

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Katie's Korner

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Mike McFee, Youngstown
79-75- IS·.;· · the University of OklahOI!III
Kim Heisler, Cleveland
77-77- 154
Ray Beallo, Beachwood
76-78- 154
.'
Russell Coleman, Portsmouth · 79-75- 154
Russell Jimeson, Columbus
78·76- 154
Steve Pipoly, Youngstown
75 -80-155
Paul Minnich, El(.ria
78·77- 155
Tom Thomas, To edo
78.77- 155
Barry Terjesen , Akron
75-80- 155
Pete Reiber, Columbu s
81 -74- 155
Robert Cooley, .Athens
80-76-156
~eq~est)
Mark Hessler, Columbus
77-79- 156
Glenn Apple. Cleveland
75-81- 156
Tom Gould, Cincinnati
80-76-156
Pandel Savic, Columbus
78-78-156 ·
Yank Heisler. Kent
80-76-156
Don Albert, Columbus
76·8Q-l56
George Frankenfeld, Dayton
83-73- 156 ·
Bob Smith. Wesll~ke
81 -75--156

.COLUMBUS (UPi) .:., · Second round
scores of the leaders In the 65th Ohio
Amateur Golf Tournament being played
at the Scioto Country Club Course:
Bill Bosshard, Akron
7H}-U9
· Steve Groves. Lancaster
75-74-149
Jim Hodges, Zanesville
75-75--150
Chris Roderick, Gallipolis ·
79-72-151
David Walther, Dayton
76-75-151
Craig Immel, Massillon
71 -81- 152
Jim Kennedy, Columbus
75-77- 152
Jack Hessler, Columbus
75-77-152
Gary Wilkens, Bellefontaine
77-75- 152
Dan Carmichael, Columbus
77-76- 153
Rav Sovlk, Columbus
74-79-153
Fritz Schmidt, Columbus
76 -77-153
Gary Artz, Akron
72-81- 153
Fred Nadalln, Columbus
73-li0-153
Ed Rosenbau"1•. Cleveland
77-.76- 153

By GENE CADDES
Ariz of Cuyahoga Falls who
UPI Sports .Writer ·
was one shot behind Immel
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bill with a 72 after lhe first day's
Iktishard considers himself a action, both 14 81 strokes to
betler match than medal play- negotiate the 6,A22-yard, par 71
er, but lbe 35-year~ld Akronite Scioto Country Club Course
is tied for the halfway lead at Wednesday. But both are still
149 with young Steve Groves in very much in contention, 1mthe 65th Ohio Amateur Golf mel with 152 and Ariz with 153.
Championships.
Roderick Posts Best Round
Bosshard, who was runnerup The best round of the day
tO Dick Flix:kenzier of Mans- was a 72 by Chris Roderick of ing with," Bosshard said.
Bossbard, who says his averfield In lhe 1965 Amateur when Gallipolis and Miami Univerage
drive is about 230 yards,
it was still match play, shot a sity, boosting him into a tie
75 in Wednesday's second for fourth place at 151 with doesn't think the Scioto course
is made for ihe long hitters.
round, while Groves, of l.an- David Wallber of Dayton.
"This is an old man's
easier, lbe No. 1 player on Roderio;k1 who hopes to tUrn
he
said. "Take No. 8 for inCoach Rod Myers' Ohio State pro this fall "if my game
golf team this spring, had a 74 comes around," went to his stance (a par five fronted by
to go with an opening 75.
three wood off the tee Wednes- a lake), these kids hit their
long drives and lben they think
ln third place, only one shot day and "kept it.in play."
behind the leaders with a pair Bosshart!, who runs a chemi- they have to go for the green
of 75s, is Jim Hodges, 31, an cal · company in the Rubber on their second shot. To hit lt
industrial engineer at the Am- City, says he gets more ''per: far doesn't mean a thing unless
you hit it straight.
BUTOJER, I HOPE, finds a .ew youngsters bere with talent co Steel Co. plant in Zanesville sonal satisfaction" out of match
"This reaDy isn't that tough
and desire for tennis. Wltlt IIOtiJid early instruelion, and hard, and .a tr~ian.led Ke~tucktnn play and believes "you remema course if you can keep it in
cmstant practice, they might find it rewarc!inil to begin tour- playmg m his first Ohio Ama- ber your rounds better."
N""'!Jt tenDis soan wbicb is wbere the game has to be learned. ' leur. .
.
"In medal play' you have to ~ fairway'" ~ continued.
'lbereisa tournamentCIIIIingupinHuntingtansoon, the{)hio
The f1rst r~ leader, Craig think about your game and for: · You have to think P?"i~vely.
~-n-Opeo.It_ • w-•-tyear._ .._.,_ __ ofCharleston
.
, Immel of Massillon, and Gary get about the guy yoU're play- Where you want to hili!, not
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where you don't want to hit it."
• •••om now 19 yean old at CJernwm University 011 a tennis - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - Groves, who just turned 20
acbalarsbip (N~. 4 player on Clemsoo's ·slrmg team this past Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Hunt of
years old this spring and will
-""~)
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler, at be j ·
t osu this fall
..,...,. ·
Reynoldsburg; Mrs. Nedra Wh 1
a unlor a
,
ParsODs, you may recall, began at tlte table, with table ten·
ee ersburg.
felt the demanding Scioto
·
three limes liooal .,_ ___._ """
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles Covey
Ia ed
.
edn
ma; was
na
~~~ uuuco 13 ~ion. He took to Wolfe and sons, Mrs. Ada of
course
p
y
easier
W
es1pte and daughter, Mrs. da than d · th
teuais at age .....
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Be
ua .. ., ... --tUW frGn High school he had WOII Sellers and family, Mrs. Kay K
th
y
urmg e opening
tbe Wat Virginia men's singles title and t1te state high sebool Dodderer and son, and Steve enne Francis · and three round, primarily because of the
boJI' title twice. He also was a starling guard on Cbarleston High llill.
daughters of Battle Ground, pin placements.
Srbool's stale romano L--'-tball'--- .,~ 1969.
Washington were Saturday
Hits Ball Good
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Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rose guests of Mrs Ada Ba
d
Y1111 won't see Parsons in the Ohio v-"-y
stunmer. were hosts for a wiener roast Mrs. Ethel Wheeler.
·
ys an
Playing
in hhiskysecond state
....., Open this ----te the
His •mmer is full witb instructiOII comnritmeots In the Clemson Saturday nl·ght. Mrs. Rose's Mr . and Mrs. Steven Jacobs ama
ur •
us redhead hit
13 of th 18
· gu1 ·
region.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. of Lockbourne Air Force Base,
e greens m re ation
Marcus Weaver and Juanita of
figures. "I hit the ball good toCo1wnbus, spent Saturday with day," he said after his round.
TABLE 'lENNIS CAN be rewarding, too. SOD John, now 19, is Letart, W. Va. were present. her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grouped with Immel at 152
in Elnpe lhi.s .......
Jll'lctidngwilh lbe best be can find tuning
Mrs. Bessie Ervin was a Henry Roush ·
are Jack Hessler of Colwnbus,
"' far the IntematiODal Malcbes in TIK'llllto early in September dinner guest on July 5 of Mr~ Mr. and Mrs. George Ernest who has had rounds of 75 and
wbeu be bu MIIJ"' an lbe N!rlh American si~ title still held and Mrs. Howard Ervin.
of Marianna • pa. VISI
· 'ted her Tl, Gary Wilkens of Bellefonby s-B!Ju,tb KCftllll Dal JOGII Lee of &lt;leveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Johnso
.
n aun t , Mrs. Esther Piper.
Iaine with Tl-75, and Jim KenWhen Pv8ons waa 11 and tbe nalion's best in tbe under 13s, and Mrs. Bertha Spencer spent Mr. and Mrs . FloydFarra, Jr. nedy of Columbus with 75-TI.
JolmawPvsonsplayina BuntingtGn IAJumament. It was John's Sunday at Glendale, W.Va. with and family of Colwnbus spent
With Ariz at 153 were fonner
lint lime 8WIQ' fnm lis ba I !Wit and tbe oJd fJGppy tale in Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Cartwright the weekend with his parents, champion Dan Cartnichael of
IMI1epart Part (where for not lloowing 811,)' better he held his and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra.
Colwnbus (TI-76), Hay Sovik,
Mrs.
carrie
Nease
was
a
Mr
d
Mrs
Delbert
M
·
illlpJ ••IJIMP'I' bat in an illl!lfeclive and ..-lbodox way).
.
orns another Ohio State p1syer (74· an
Dell 10, be t.'OUld bit to the CCJnriS against tbe bigh scbool weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. of Athens, Mrs. Elsie Roush and 79), Fritz Sclunidt of Colwnbus
-...etltion IIIey bracketed bim witb tn Buntingtoo, winning lhat David Nease and son, David, at Mrs. Marie Chapman of ('/S-TI), Fred Nadaltn of ColwnPomeroy called on Mr. and bus (7U0) and Ed Rosenbawn
tlvlll1111, aDd winniJW a II Oj06y his lint -as lhe heginne~ with Baltimore.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thereon
Mrs
· Moms
· Sunda Y of Cleveland (77-76).
. FranCJS
tbe IIICIII pc*ntiaL He was sbocted sr ee i:Hess and inspired In with 154s were Mike Mc• lVslr:' Sll at Huntlngtm.
,.
, Johnson spent the weekend with afternoon.
Fee of YounRsll?wn, Ray Beally
I' Ill tbe JISt three yean John was to 'caiCb ral'il6!is ih- tible:: ~il: son,ip-law apd, daughter.
...... and deleat bim ftnall:r, But by tbat uine Parsons had
•ad lis major Interest to lhe big game, temis, and to bigb
ami bMtetblll
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
Now No. ZraaUd In the U.S. •i Canada, John wants 0a1
.loaD. RaJ bad. _... be _., did Panons.

Racine Soeial Events

···=·==~ Wade H. Walker, .the 48-year- :

BETTY CANARY

.•

Shop In

.

'

BAKER

••

POMERQY

Air

Conditioned
Comfort

HOURS
9 Til5 Daily
I 9Til9
Saturday

Re&amp;. J5•

25's
I •

'J

I

•'

'
j •

�.I

7-Tbe Illlily Sentinel.Middleport-Puner.,y,O., July 15, 1971
'

Middleport

BASSETT ·WEEK at Mason Furniture

•

Personal Notes

Free Serta Mattress a·n d Box ·Spring With
Any Bassett Bedroom Suite! Hurry In Nowl

'

Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink and
son Danny.had as dinner guests
recently. Mr. and Mrs . John
Buckley and "son Jeff of
Chesapeake, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. William Fink, Billy ,
Johnny and Chuckie , Miss
Kathy Teaford of Chester and
,.....·;q Miss Mabel Hysell of Mid-

dleport.

·LEAH ANN MD JEll

NEW STAFF MEMBER Leah Ann Miller, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Miller ·
of New Haven, bas accepted a
position for the 1971-7'2 school
year as an fnslruc~ in the
Family Life Department of
the Oregon Slate University,
Corvallis, Oregon. Miss
Miller graduated from
Marshall University in 1970
with a Bachelor of Arts
degree in Vocational Home
Econlllllics. Sbe is presently'
COOipieting ber Master of
Science degree in Child
Development and F;JIDily
Relations at the Pennsylvania Slate University ,
University Park, . Pennsylvania.

Mrs. Howard Owens of
Canton spent Wednesday with
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Ervin.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannari
and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth
visited recently with relatives
in Clarksburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris of
Colwnbus are here due to the
serious illness of his father,
-Rober~ W. Harris, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Dorothy 'Drenner of
Garden Grove, Calif., Mrs.
Charlie Turner and Debbie
Turner of Columbus have been
called bere due 10 the serious
illness of Jacob Turner, a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Gheen
and son Rodney of Glencoe,
Ohio were recent guests of Carl
0 . Gheen of Harrisonville.

Circus Horses
Quarantined

It's your beautiful world, 'inside,
when it's
from Bassett
at Mason Furnit!Jre

FAMOUS BRANDS AT DISCOU.NT PRICES

te Your Own Home ffia~ic
wit~ FAiR~oiNr
·,from Mason Furniture

SeR;·nTO ·

•

· Wash 'n Dri. -

. . ve~. tn~ is th• BnJen !I'OUPi"'l !h~t r.. at b•v
-ingl now'•.. proudly announ&lt;:eo; your IHitny~o. . .
thlt belutV is fll insi~ thing_ ..Quality cr~ttl!d in
pecilfl f!lgo,..ed '!elec ted
.,d ~rd.wod5 wi tt&gt;
iiroot1ted Wl)()(j Ora- overl,ys, ..,toQuetnu finish ·

ONLY_

VASELINE.

Washkins·
FOR BABY

by:Ba.s&amp;et t

3% Ol.

MOIST DISPOSABL£ TOWELETTES

$29995

EASY ClfANUPS FOR ACHANGE!

'2

f flple

,,_ can.
• l'lou

.,__,

o.-

..._. Regular &amp;Super
,.
__ _,
Reg. 98~

Mirror

..

Inside Texas
DAlLAS (UPI) - All the
circus borses will have to stay
in Tens when Ringling
Brothers and Bamwn &amp; Bailey
takes its big show out of the
stale.
.The agriculture deparbnent
said Tuesday it is qnarantining
every horse in the state to try to
s~ the spread of Venemelan
equine
encepbalomyelilis,
which is lrilling horses in
epidemic munbers in the slate.
" You can imagine bow
disastrous tllis_will be 10 us,"
Doo Hintz, a ctrCUS spokesman
said. "You can hardly put on a
circus without horses. Tiley are
in all of our produclioo numbers
and our spectaculars, as well as
featured acts by themselves."
A$ luck would have it; both
the circus' shows were in T935
when the quarantine was announced. The Dallas show
features 50 horses and a show in
Houstoo has' 60.

By United Press International
Today is Thursday, July 15,
the 196th day of 1971.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are Venus
Mars and Saturn.
'
The evening stars are Mereury and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Cancer .
Dukh painter Rembrandt
was born July 15, 1606.
On this day in hisWry :
In 1912 the United Slates, led
by Jim Thorpe, won the
Olympic Games in Stockholm,
Sweden.
In 1942 Americans in Eastern
cities were faced with the first
serious meat shortage of World
War n.
In 1945 Italy declared war on
its former axis partner, Japan.
In 1964 Sen. Barry Goldwater
was nominated as the Republican candidate for president. He
was beaten in November by
Lyndon Johnson.

A thought for today: Biologist
Sisters' FoiUider
Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton founded The American
Sisters of Charily at Emrnitsburg, Md., in 1.809. Mother Seton was beatified in
Rome on March 17, 1963.

Reg. 9r

--~-

$349

66~

95

INCLUDES:

• 9 Or-

Tripk Dr-

•rt.tt G'-"

• P'I~~t~ ~

~
shampoo

/IA/CN.Tt·

Many Other Bassett Suites On
Display For Your Choice. Trucks Arriving

.

--~·!._ _

-

...... . . ......___...._.._.._...._..._...__ ....

FOREST TAVERN
by Bassett

Th

H
Huxl
ornas enry
ey said,
"For every man the world is as
fresh as it was at the first day
and as full ol untold novelties
for him who has the eyes 10 see
them." ·

.. ·•'* '"" "'· .

: Good Houllkttping~-

@

~

TABLE GROUP

Each Week With Exciting New Ideas
' •\
From This Famous Maker. ·

,

· .. '::.-:· . ,.

-~-----

• After Bath Rub
• Soothe Tired
Burning Feet
•. Relieve Sun &amp;
Windbum
• After Shave

16 Ol

• Re li eves Mosquito
Bites

7fJ

BLADES
Reg. 11.69

IO's

994
playtex'

ABSORBINE Jr.

sdf.iidJUSDrlg

tamports

for sore aching muscles
••works
like a

lt!UO-

Fami~

bath"

R~

Size

Regular, Fine, Blue

•

instant

Medi-Quik®

59~

• Contains three germ killers.

• For minor cuts, scrapes, scratches.
• Kills germs with more antiseptic
strength than Iodine.

.

Reg; '1.50

WESTINGHOUSE

'11995UP
INSTOCK

REMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Bassett

Middleport, 0.

Prevent inlection.

aa~

Haley's M-0

SIZe

so~

Reg. 11.79

Regular &amp; Aavored
·Reg. st98

-~t

IS's ·
.
,._. • ._...._..._,.._..._...,_.,._...__.._.,._..,,._,_...._.._.... I

,.,.,.., ..

"'At~

• Stops itch.
H~ lps

w1da 10'1 '

....

....,......,......_....

..-.

Cockta il Table 50" x 2 1" x 18"'
I

-· ~·-·--.· -~-··-

,.~·-··-··_..._...

_...·-·--·-.

•.

Mason Furniture·

Notional ly advertised
. in lead ing magazines

HERMAN GRATE

.,

·BAYER
ASPIRIN

..... . . .

~~-----­

-

(Limit One)

R:;sJ9

56~

Suntan Lotion
4oz.

'13_3_
I

CAMPH0PHENIOUE
LIQUID
.' , .
~

Reg. '2.15

~

~~J"-·

• for poison oak, poisoli ivy, and
nonvemomous insect bites.

•

Reg. SI.09
14 Ol.
Coppertone

:Doan's Pil
Re&amp;. 1.15
40's

992-5321
N. 2nd Ave.

3oz.

The Fairfield Group
by BASSEIT.

Shampoo Lotion
&amp; Clear

40's

first-aid spray

1

White Rain

Reg. s1.19

. 32 oz. size

Step Table
28" X 19" X 25\2"

Reg.'l.l5

Reg. 98'

loz.

Room

Hair Dressing
and
Conditioner

s2.93

Reg. '2.29

69~

Reg. s1.09

8oz.

YOUR
CONFIDENCE BUILDER

--

-~::--- - -

Reg. •2.98

warm

lHEmSiill
TIME TO
BEAT THE
HE'AT•••

66~

Double Edge

A new anti-dandruff '"
shampoo we highly
recommend

BY

5oz.

994

_

1

SELSUNBLUE

--·

Reg. 11.09

...

No. 404

creme rinse

-~--~--

49~

I
I

Aches and much
much more

69~

ONLY

aa~

CASTORIA

1
I
I
I
I

• Relieves Muscular

f irst

•

----- ---· ..... .
You Don 't Have To Be Quite
As Rich As You Used To Be To Enjoy
Beauty,As -An Inside-Thing!
.
When Its Bassett
·-_,. . ,__,____
...... ·----

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

Reg. 11.29
7oz.
won't IRRITATEeyes

3 Cll.

DICKINSON'S
WITCH HAZEL

REG.

,....
------.-

HAZEL

Reg. 79'

Reg. '1.50

I The Multi-Purpose Product I
I Proven by Generation• of Use I

·==

Exha usts hot, sticky air . Pull s in cooL fresh air .
Circ ulates 4,000 cu. ft. of a ir per m inute to keep 3
or 4 room s comfortable. Two speeds . snap-out
safety guards · convenien t carr yi ng handle.
Model 2074

EZO DENTURE CUSHION

Feminine
Hygiene Deodorant

------------·

$}488

/

'119

loz.

REG. 1.59
2 01. TUBE

SALE

Reg. 11.90

61, 4 oz.

LOTION

•4 Or- Chell:

M;r,..

. Reg . 99c

· 20" WINDOW FAN
Reg. 126.95

AMMENSe
MEDICATED
POWDER Deodorant

.... ,_ QT TANNING

DICKINSON'S

•

SECRET
Roll-on

Q..a·T -

WITCH

Only

22~

bars

·~

Today'•
Almanac

SPECIAL PRICE !

LIMIT 4 BARS

Reg. 89c

IINCLUOES,

•!Mfl'-

HAIR TO.NIC

. REGULAR 98c PRICE

"""11ef'

ed hi&lt;dWilr~ ' nd -v-ur~ m~ tching M.ur t1 (RIIIi~
preWu~ l~mmated pl;r,hc: tops. . .lone C.:.otllmporlry
Tr;wosinon~l "yloo~...aod witt&gt; mlgi' m thf pr~~ .
" """ifii: you ffiiiV l htOk ~DIJ l)&lt; ieed II y(IO.lr!-!!1 .

Powerful
Dominion
Reversible

•

BABY LOTION
14 hour protection

a by
otion

Reg. 11.98

""-+&lt;-.)

.16 ()l.

.

Reg. 98'
2w.

· 59~

CREME DE PARFUM
A luxurious. long·la sting pertume l orm !
In five famous fragrances :

EMERAUDE, L'AIMANT, IMPREVU. ELAN, L'ORIGAN
New creamy, highly concentrated ... it hngers deliciously on yoursltin
all day! Non- sticky, ullra-smooth. In pettte. deco ralor JBfS, gift-bcl'.ed.

JuSI $2.50

Hot Pants
Spray Mist Cologne, 2 oz. Reg. 2.50
Solarcaine Spray, 4 oz. Reg . 2. 19
Shulton Desert Flower Spra y Cologne
Shulton Desert Flower Bath Powder
Tabu Cologne, 2 oz.
Dana Solid Colognes
Ta bu, Ambush, 20 Ca rat, 2.50 Va lue
Max Factor Specia ls :
12 oz. Ski n Freshener, reg. 4.00
12 oz. Liquid Clea nser, reg. 4.00
5¥• oz. Moisture Essence Nig ht Crea m.
5.75

ESQUIRE
LANOL WHITE
For All White Shoes ·

Re&amp;:
.3fJ

-22~

W.VA•
J

•

•

1.50

1.44
1.25
1.00
3.00

1.0o
2.50
2.50

reg.
l.SO

�.I

7-Tbe Illlily Sentinel.Middleport-Puner.,y,O., July 15, 1971
'

Middleport

BASSETT ·WEEK at Mason Furniture

•

Personal Notes

Free Serta Mattress a·n d Box ·Spring With
Any Bassett Bedroom Suite! Hurry In Nowl

'

Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink and
son Danny.had as dinner guests
recently. Mr. and Mrs . John
Buckley and "son Jeff of
Chesapeake, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. William Fink, Billy ,
Johnny and Chuckie , Miss
Kathy Teaford of Chester and
,.....·;q Miss Mabel Hysell of Mid-

dleport.

·LEAH ANN MD JEll

NEW STAFF MEMBER Leah Ann Miller, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Miller ·
of New Haven, bas accepted a
position for the 1971-7'2 school
year as an fnslruc~ in the
Family Life Department of
the Oregon Slate University,
Corvallis, Oregon. Miss
Miller graduated from
Marshall University in 1970
with a Bachelor of Arts
degree in Vocational Home
Econlllllics. Sbe is presently'
COOipieting ber Master of
Science degree in Child
Development and F;JIDily
Relations at the Pennsylvania Slate University ,
University Park, . Pennsylvania.

Mrs. Howard Owens of
Canton spent Wednesday with
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Ervin.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannari
and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth
visited recently with relatives
in Clarksburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris of
Colwnbus are here due to the
serious illness of his father,
-Rober~ W. Harris, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Dorothy 'Drenner of
Garden Grove, Calif., Mrs.
Charlie Turner and Debbie
Turner of Columbus have been
called bere due 10 the serious
illness of Jacob Turner, a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Gheen
and son Rodney of Glencoe,
Ohio were recent guests of Carl
0 . Gheen of Harrisonville.

Circus Horses
Quarantined

It's your beautiful world, 'inside,
when it's
from Bassett
at Mason Furnit!Jre

FAMOUS BRANDS AT DISCOU.NT PRICES

te Your Own Home ffia~ic
wit~ FAiR~oiNr
·,from Mason Furniture

SeR;·nTO ·

•

· Wash 'n Dri. -

. . ve~. tn~ is th• BnJen !I'OUPi"'l !h~t r.. at b•v
-ingl now'•.. proudly announ&lt;:eo; your IHitny~o. . .
thlt belutV is fll insi~ thing_ ..Quality cr~ttl!d in
pecilfl f!lgo,..ed '!elec ted
.,d ~rd.wod5 wi tt&gt;
iiroot1ted Wl)()(j Ora- overl,ys, ..,toQuetnu finish ·

ONLY_

VASELINE.

Washkins·
FOR BABY

by:Ba.s&amp;et t

3% Ol.

MOIST DISPOSABL£ TOWELETTES

$29995

EASY ClfANUPS FOR ACHANGE!

'2

f flple

,,_ can.
• l'lou

.,__,

o.-

..._. Regular &amp;Super
,.
__ _,
Reg. 98~

Mirror

..

Inside Texas
DAlLAS (UPI) - All the
circus borses will have to stay
in Tens when Ringling
Brothers and Bamwn &amp; Bailey
takes its big show out of the
stale.
.The agriculture deparbnent
said Tuesday it is qnarantining
every horse in the state to try to
s~ the spread of Venemelan
equine
encepbalomyelilis,
which is lrilling horses in
epidemic munbers in the slate.
" You can imagine bow
disastrous tllis_will be 10 us,"
Doo Hintz, a ctrCUS spokesman
said. "You can hardly put on a
circus without horses. Tiley are
in all of our produclioo numbers
and our spectaculars, as well as
featured acts by themselves."
A$ luck would have it; both
the circus' shows were in T935
when the quarantine was announced. The Dallas show
features 50 horses and a show in
Houstoo has' 60.

By United Press International
Today is Thursday, July 15,
the 196th day of 1971.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are Venus
Mars and Saturn.
'
The evening stars are Mereury and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Cancer .
Dukh painter Rembrandt
was born July 15, 1606.
On this day in hisWry :
In 1912 the United Slates, led
by Jim Thorpe, won the
Olympic Games in Stockholm,
Sweden.
In 1942 Americans in Eastern
cities were faced with the first
serious meat shortage of World
War n.
In 1945 Italy declared war on
its former axis partner, Japan.
In 1964 Sen. Barry Goldwater
was nominated as the Republican candidate for president. He
was beaten in November by
Lyndon Johnson.

A thought for today: Biologist
Sisters' FoiUider
Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton founded The American
Sisters of Charily at Emrnitsburg, Md., in 1.809. Mother Seton was beatified in
Rome on March 17, 1963.

Reg. 9r

--~-

$349

66~

95

INCLUDES:

• 9 Or-

Tripk Dr-

•rt.tt G'-"

• P'I~~t~ ~

~
shampoo

/IA/CN.Tt·

Many Other Bassett Suites On
Display For Your Choice. Trucks Arriving

.

--~·!._ _

-

...... . . ......___...._.._.._...._..._...__ ....

FOREST TAVERN
by Bassett

Th

H
Huxl
ornas enry
ey said,
"For every man the world is as
fresh as it was at the first day
and as full ol untold novelties
for him who has the eyes 10 see
them." ·

.. ·•'* '"" "'· .

: Good Houllkttping~-

@

~

TABLE GROUP

Each Week With Exciting New Ideas
' •\
From This Famous Maker. ·

,

· .. '::.-:· . ,.

-~-----

• After Bath Rub
• Soothe Tired
Burning Feet
•. Relieve Sun &amp;
Windbum
• After Shave

16 Ol

• Re li eves Mosquito
Bites

7fJ

BLADES
Reg. 11.69

IO's

994
playtex'

ABSORBINE Jr.

sdf.iidJUSDrlg

tamports

for sore aching muscles
••works
like a

lt!UO-

Fami~

bath"

R~

Size

Regular, Fine, Blue

•

instant

Medi-Quik®

59~

• Contains three germ killers.

• For minor cuts, scrapes, scratches.
• Kills germs with more antiseptic
strength than Iodine.

.

Reg; '1.50

WESTINGHOUSE

'11995UP
INSTOCK

REMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Bassett

Middleport, 0.

Prevent inlection.

aa~

Haley's M-0

SIZe

so~

Reg. 11.79

Regular &amp; Aavored
·Reg. st98

-~t

IS's ·
.
,._. • ._...._..._,.._..._...,_.,._...__.._.,._..,,._,_...._.._.... I

,.,.,.., ..

"'At~

• Stops itch.
H~ lps

w1da 10'1 '

....

....,......,......_....

..-.

Cockta il Table 50" x 2 1" x 18"'
I

-· ~·-·--.· -~-··-

,.~·-··-··_..._...

_...·-·--·-.

•.

Mason Furniture·

Notional ly advertised
. in lead ing magazines

HERMAN GRATE

.,

·BAYER
ASPIRIN

..... . . .

~~-----­

-

(Limit One)

R:;sJ9

56~

Suntan Lotion
4oz.

'13_3_
I

CAMPH0PHENIOUE
LIQUID
.' , .
~

Reg. '2.15

~

~~J"-·

• for poison oak, poisoli ivy, and
nonvemomous insect bites.

•

Reg. SI.09
14 Ol.
Coppertone

:Doan's Pil
Re&amp;. 1.15
40's

992-5321
N. 2nd Ave.

3oz.

The Fairfield Group
by BASSEIT.

Shampoo Lotion
&amp; Clear

40's

first-aid spray

1

White Rain

Reg. s1.19

. 32 oz. size

Step Table
28" X 19" X 25\2"

Reg.'l.l5

Reg. 98'

loz.

Room

Hair Dressing
and
Conditioner

s2.93

Reg. '2.29

69~

Reg. s1.09

8oz.

YOUR
CONFIDENCE BUILDER

--

-~::--- - -

Reg. •2.98

warm

lHEmSiill
TIME TO
BEAT THE
HE'AT•••

66~

Double Edge

A new anti-dandruff '"
shampoo we highly
recommend

BY

5oz.

994

_

1

SELSUNBLUE

--·

Reg. 11.09

...

No. 404

creme rinse

-~--~--

49~

I
I

Aches and much
much more

69~

ONLY

aa~

CASTORIA

1
I
I
I
I

• Relieves Muscular

f irst

•

----- ---· ..... .
You Don 't Have To Be Quite
As Rich As You Used To Be To Enjoy
Beauty,As -An Inside-Thing!
.
When Its Bassett
·-_,. . ,__,____
...... ·----

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

Reg. 11.29
7oz.
won't IRRITATEeyes

3 Cll.

DICKINSON'S
WITCH HAZEL

REG.

,....
------.-

HAZEL

Reg. 79'

Reg. '1.50

I The Multi-Purpose Product I
I Proven by Generation• of Use I

·==

Exha usts hot, sticky air . Pull s in cooL fresh air .
Circ ulates 4,000 cu. ft. of a ir per m inute to keep 3
or 4 room s comfortable. Two speeds . snap-out
safety guards · convenien t carr yi ng handle.
Model 2074

EZO DENTURE CUSHION

Feminine
Hygiene Deodorant

------------·

$}488

/

'119

loz.

REG. 1.59
2 01. TUBE

SALE

Reg. 11.90

61, 4 oz.

LOTION

•4 Or- Chell:

M;r,..

. Reg . 99c

· 20" WINDOW FAN
Reg. 126.95

AMMENSe
MEDICATED
POWDER Deodorant

.... ,_ QT TANNING

DICKINSON'S

•

SECRET
Roll-on

Q..a·T -

WITCH

Only

22~

bars

·~

Today'•
Almanac

SPECIAL PRICE !

LIMIT 4 BARS

Reg. 89c

IINCLUOES,

•!Mfl'-

HAIR TO.NIC

. REGULAR 98c PRICE

"""11ef'

ed hi&lt;dWilr~ ' nd -v-ur~ m~ tching M.ur t1 (RIIIi~
preWu~ l~mmated pl;r,hc: tops. . .lone C.:.otllmporlry
Tr;wosinon~l "yloo~...aod witt&gt; mlgi' m thf pr~~ .
" """ifii: you ffiiiV l htOk ~DIJ l)&lt; ieed II y(IO.lr!-!!1 .

Powerful
Dominion
Reversible

•

BABY LOTION
14 hour protection

a by
otion

Reg. 11.98

""-+&lt;-.)

.16 ()l.

.

Reg. 98'
2w.

· 59~

CREME DE PARFUM
A luxurious. long·la sting pertume l orm !
In five famous fragrances :

EMERAUDE, L'AIMANT, IMPREVU. ELAN, L'ORIGAN
New creamy, highly concentrated ... it hngers deliciously on yoursltin
all day! Non- sticky, ullra-smooth. In pettte. deco ralor JBfS, gift-bcl'.ed.

JuSI $2.50

Hot Pants
Spray Mist Cologne, 2 oz. Reg. 2.50
Solarcaine Spray, 4 oz. Reg . 2. 19
Shulton Desert Flower Spra y Cologne
Shulton Desert Flower Bath Powder
Tabu Cologne, 2 oz.
Dana Solid Colognes
Ta bu, Ambush, 20 Ca rat, 2.50 Va lue
Max Factor Specia ls :
12 oz. Ski n Freshener, reg. 4.00
12 oz. Liquid Clea nser, reg. 4.00
5¥• oz. Moisture Essence Nig ht Crea m.
5.75

ESQUIRE
LANOL WHITE
For All White Shoes ·

Re&amp;:
.3fJ

-22~

W.VA•
J

•

•

1.50

1.44
1.25
1.00
3.00

1.0o
2.50
2.50

reg.
l.SO

�I- Tile Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pmoeroy, 0 ., .Juey ~.1971

.Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Sentinel Cla~sifieds ·

·,

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P.M. Day Before Publlcatloo
Mondav ~dllne 9 a.m .
. Clll)~llatloo &amp; Corri!Ctlons
Will be accepted until9a.m. for
Day of Publl~llon
·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves lhe
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objeclional.,__ The
publisher wW nol be responsible
for more than one incorrect.
Insertion .
RATES
For Wtnl Ad Service
scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per wprd three.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
beds , clocks, d ishes, . old
furniture. etc. Write M. 0 .
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Call 992-6271.
].9.1fc

- - - - - -·

2 OR 3 BEDR09M used trailer.
Phone 992-3'135.
7-l l -61c
ANTIQUES :

2- '60 TRANSMISSIONS - 1
Pontiac and 1 Thunderbird for
· $25 each. Cbnlacl Roy and
Steve Roseberry', Bashan .
' Keno Road.
7-13-Jip
SIAMESE killens- heallhy ,
playful , lilterpan trained .
Have
had
temporary
distemper vaccination . Phone

992-5101 after 6 p.m.

d ish es ,

7-13-Jtp

telephones, clocks. br ass

beds tamps etc Lee Rud" ·;;

FENDER P. A. system, $500.
•
•
·
lSI •
Cameo ele,. t r ic guitar, 2
Phooe 992-3403.
'
________________
l ·_·l30IP
pickups , $40. Phone 94'1·3485.
7·1S.31c
-

---------------8· YEAR OLD palomino mare,

consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six COO · TOP PRICE on ginsellg and
gentle, saddle and bridle.
Golden Seal· yellow rool Seal
secutlve insertions.
Phone 742-.5865 Harrisonville,
tops and stem bone dry, _clean
25 Per Cenl Dlscounl oo pa id
Ohio.
no dirt. All roots . .Bill Bailev.
ads and ads paid wilhln 10 days.
7· 14-&lt;llc
P.O. · Box 14, Se&lt;lond. Slreel,
CARD OF THANKS
Reedsv ille~ Ohio .sm.
&amp;OBITUARY
1·1-JOIC CANNING lomaloes, Geraldine
SL50 for SO word minimum.
Cleland, East Main, Racine,
liach additional word 2c.
Oh io.
BLIND ADS
J.J4.181c
Addllional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
PINTO GELDING, 3 years old,
OFFICE HOURS
very gentle, 59 Inches tall .
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p. m. Daily ,
Phone 992-7066.
8 : 30 a .m . · to 12 : 00 Noon ·
7.J4.3fc
Salurday.
NEEDLE
sewing
TWIN
machine 1971 model in new
walnut stand. All features
GLIN SHOOT, Sunday, July 18, 1
built -in to _
make fancy
p.m. at Racine Gun Club.
designs
.
Also
buttonholes ..
1· 13·5fc
blind hems, etc., $43.35, cash
price, or terms available.
BURKETT'S Barber Shop will
and
Phone 992-5641.
be closed July 21fhru July 29.
7-14-61c
J. JS.ltc

Real.Estate For Sale
HOUSE, 7 rooms and 2 baths ,
corner SOXBO lo1, alumimJm
siding. Phone J04.nJ.5900.
'
7· 15·3tp

Free

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Phone 992-2156
Sporlsman Club. Sunday,
July 18 at noon .
] .14-Jic EARN at home addressi'\9
envelopes. Rush stamped sell.
THOROUGHBRED Stud addressed envelope. The
Service. Roman Caplain No . Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
637410. $50 registered .mares, Davisburg, Mich., -18019.
S35 grade mares . Return
7-2-JOip

privileges.

Greg

Roush ,

Phone 992·5039.
1·9·301C

For Rent

SEMI· DRIVER TRAINING We are currently offering

tractor

trailer

training

~""WINSOR

-tciUDDY

FIRE and

safety

All types and sizes of fire
e:dinguishers. Special prices
on extinguishers for boats,

campers,
homes .
Also
discount prices on other sizes.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
992·3821. Owner Owighl
Logan.
6-16-JOIC
PORTABLE dishwasher, used
few times. service for six.

SINGER, zig·zag,

7· 13·31p
needs

no

MEMORI"L BRIDGI!" TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBIJRG, W. VA.

t

OfNSON MASOtti¥
Complete

KildiOIIs,lalhs
ladi:llooAnd
Endluder Wort
Septic T•nlls

AndLeodl-.

742-4902

STEREO- RADIO console ,·- 4·

speed intermixed changer,
dual

volume

control.

4-

speaker sound system , lovely
walnut finish. Balance $62 .97.

Use our budge! terms. Call
992·7085.
J. ll -61c

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Oose to school.
Phone 992·~.
10.18-llc

Auto Sales

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
$2,500.00 - Business or home
site near Pomeroy.

with slidi~g glass doors to
porch. Fireplace in living.
Gas forced air furnace. 2 lots.
Double garage.

- - - - --

ice cream bar s or 28 half.

POMEROY
Jack w. Caney, Mgr.
Phone9fl-2111

~

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contact Roush Construction.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9·301C
O' DELL WHEEL a lignment
located al Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake serv ice.
Wheels
balanced
elecIron i cal ly .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.
6-2'-3MC ,
READY -MIX

delivered

CONCRETE
right to your

' project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992·328•.

15.55 .

-GUARANTEED_
Phone 992-2094
.._
Hom &amp; a•.a..
I"UIIIIIIIJ

8

ftiiiU

OpeniTiiS
Moiildiy ttwu Sifurdllly
E

__MN
___._~
__i_
~-~----~y~,_O_._J

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
S.1·1fC

Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.Ifc INTERIOR, exteriO&lt; decorator
and barn roofs. Phone 14'1·

Real Estate For Sale

5683.

HOUSE slory and hall, 6 rooms,
bath, Rutland . Phone 1-fJ.
5613.
6-2S.Ifc

OUR PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS
WIU BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 19 THRU 24th
VACATIONS-----------~----------------~'

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

-ll&lt;N' TI-l EN AH'LL
GITA FORT"UNE-

Middleport. 0.

-

.......

-OOT IF "ft::IS

.t'VIi GOT TO

.INT'RESTED
INA PORE
GAL

fiJ( THIS. Wii':IO

ONCtJR Tl/
ANTE:NNA!

A •lot e we l
Lilli-

MLJIIII
HaliieiDitWi

....,ne. -

d &amp;D I!

overdr,.i. ..
-·-··-~
Lint
:D

Fine Mesll
:Filter.

••s
z r a.
..Anas

IS SKINNV,
------,.19N'"~'

HIH

IZzY SEIGE-L I~ ONE
OF- MY OLDE&amp;T
FRIENDS 1 61LI.Y•••

RURAND
FURNITURE
·
.
-.

742-4211

Arnold Grate

Our Prices
Speak For

ONCE lHEV GET T'KNOIII
EACH
. OIHE&amp;l!!~LL

ARE YOU
LISTENING?

PRQI!I,II.ei.V
""""""""
INSEPAPAB'
FJ

1970
Chevrolet Monte c-. CDe.
Beautiful Gobi Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, &amp;dory ;Oir -conditioning, tinted glass, black nylon bui:bt Sllills,
console, Positradion axle. «10 c:u. in. engine. Turbo
Hydromatic, power steering, power disc ...,a!&lt;es.. ~....., &amp;
r . seat s~ker. bumper guards &amp; RaUy Whflltls.. ..,..
derseal. Save. Save. Balance of warranty~

7-IS"

1966
P~. ¥8 Sta. WaeJn-------v.e engine, good tires, clean bod;· nice wiinrJ

BORN LOSER

inloliar.

&amp;

automatic trans .• power steering, , ttdio, lug_gage Adt..
Regularly Priced at $1095.00 . Spec ial !

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

1966 Cheurolet Impala Cpe.._____'J99

I'Ll. KEEP MY LIGHTS O:F1

SC0081E~ l)tllll WE HIT
lRAFFIC~ - , . -

6 Cyl., sland. trans., local 1 owner car, g&lt;IOC!I Idr'es, ,.......
heater . Reg . Price $1095.00. Specia l.

-

·

1966 Buick Wildcat Cpe. ______ '1195
Aulomalic trans., power sleering &amp; bra'kes, goad W-w
Reg. ~

S1395.00. Special.

1967
fGrd LTD------------'~595
4 .Door Sedan, power steering brakes, •inrl"nloriar lilt..
&amp;

1971 HORNET

$2095

4 door sedan less than s.ooo m iles, owner needed a larger
car, 6cyl., std. trans .• balance of new car warranty.

4 Door sedan .. less than 9.1100 m iles, 6 cyl., std. trans., the
sharpes! ' 70 •n town, SST deluxe.

1968 OPEL

$1295

Kadel! Deluxe 4 cyl., ~ speed, station wagon, economy is
the word.

1968 DODGE

$1895

Coronel ' 500' • door, V-8 engine, T-FIIte, p. st. a ir
d tllootng, sharp.
'

1965 PLYMOUTH

0011 •

1995
51295

$)895

Flareside V-8 engine, 3 speed. good looks, tires, per.
formance.

1970 DODGE

S3595

Challenger, 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 engine, T·Fiile, p. sf., air
cond., console&amp; buckets, full new car warranty here. ,

DAILY CROSSWORD

v.a·-...

6 Cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio, good tices, 'greM rlllish.
Special E.O.M.

-

-

1970 HORNET

..... ., ...... , ........ u .......

v•nyl ~f, maroon finiSh, radio, new ·w-w tires,
automatoc trans. &amp; factory air conditioning _ 'Spertal.
Special.

&amp;

\~2~~~~j

cab like new !ruck, 6 cyl. 292 cu. in. eng. A ,.,.I truck.

1967 fGrd Ec:onoline ___________
H. duly Van, 6 cyl., super extended body, ,goad li-.

Clearance Priced

Open Evenings Till8:00

the range

I .4TING

common.

.. ~·.:...'1;.-:o.~ ·...- . .

2•. Gennan

l

river
26. Eternal

30. Hone
opera
31. "Comln '
th•
Rye"
32. Storyteller

M. Old as
lo{ethusela.h
35. Regrettable .
36.---Jim• .
37. Roland'.s
destroyor
38. Parod•

I
vX) 1 1 1

I KESTO

33. In Umefl past

ornament

•

~

.

.

IESCASC

~

I l'litUtel

tj
I [j

lSi IIIIWIIIIre

wetrht

All Shas

Jumht.o, AMITY

a&lt;:llvlty •
39. Copllant

Yeetenl•r'•

tO.DIBtance

41. Gift pver
42. wu father
to
DOWN
1. Dl-tempered

There's a Time To
a Time To Save!

SL.IITAI!ILE FOR AFTeRDINNER R:5APIN6.

Now orrance lilt clreleill~n
to form the IUillriH an~wer, ..

ounuted by lilt al&gt;ooe eutoon.

I "[I I I :t II)"
(AMwen l..,n-ow)

32.Mauna 35. Tourlat's

New '71 Chevrolets

.

C&gt;...Ll.~~--L_J__...J

IUIIDI

31. Chine.e

THINK

MAINLY

IISTI)W

FlaaJ lae .1aid .Men lie tc:antrcl .ro attro.-1
tile U:Cimlitn••'• otfention- "A..HIMI"

Pt \'1 I'"'

one
2. Bowllnr
alley
3. 1tall011
river

Now-Do lotla!
LOWal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a how to work It:
.

AXYDLBAAXR
to LONGFELLOW
0... Jolter Blmply 1tanda for another. In this 118111ple A Is
uoed for tbe th'" L's. X for the two O'o. etc. Slnlfe !ellen,
~tropbea. . the ltnrth and form!-tlon or the word" are all
hlnta. Each day the code letten a~ dlfferent.

Amberger. Hilton Wolfe on these one owner
bargains.

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
992-2151 or 992-2152

21.. Be
frugal
24
Divisible

Unscramble the,. foor Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinarv words.

bytwb
26. Globetrotter'sgulde
12 wds.)
U::.J.----..(J 21. Eagle's nest
28.Propam
, 29. Tum rlpt
30. Heavy
whaek
Ill~ I

See Pearl Ash, Emerson Jones. Wallace

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

rroup

Indian

6.Why?
ILBr.tra
12 w&lt;la.)
man
6. Song writer, 22. :Mal!l·
toba
Jule -·- Indian
7. American
Inventor
23 . Un·

13. Favored
phras&lt;of
8. Milwaukee
product
Jackie
&amp;. Beer
Gleason
container
16. Girl's
10. Sioux Indian
nickname
16. Movle hou,. H . Stuku,
'f.l--!1
or Spain
for
example
17. Knowledjre
lT. Roman
18. " -··- pro
nobts"
historian
18. Part of

.

1966
Chew. 2 Ton-------OniJ'1150
114" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires, 2 speed
axle. inl.

PRICES WILL NEVEl IE

19. Wrest

20. Theater

MexiCIIl

mediumsign
f.i:tiDTWiiT"iNCi::ui)i;§t 12. Rental
(2wds.)

springs, rear slep bumper, less than 9000 m il e s - less
than9 mo. old. Beaulilul red finish. Shows best a! are.

~ear

~.New

ACROSS
1. Skinnlsh
4. Mllltary
cap
11. Fred Allen's

1970 Chewlulet------------'22!15
'h Ton Pickup, wide body , G78x15 fires.• H. duly . _

Pomeroy Motor Co.-

USL

BR10

992-2126

Open Eves. Till

T S

--

OU KTSV

TD

YIV

TS

F. U U V . I Y Y L ·

UHO,

THAT'S KIND Of 5AD

N· rzl ••

Kt:ZDO . SUO

I

ORLA

YHO

A T N R L )"

BRIO

J B U T D 0

l "..t..Nio)"'• f'l}·ptequot..: PEOPLE WHO HAVE NO WEA!j:·
Nli:SBII:S ARE TERRIBLE : TH1!:RE IS NO WAY Of" T AKlNO
. ADVANTAGE OF THEM. AN ATOLE FRANCE
ttl 111'1 ICI•~ Jl'~mlutu S:~-· n.d lr.alt, IrK·. )

'

7-'~·

'
I
j

A Cr7PiowOMD cpolaha
DRU .H FV
DOHVC ALS

1&lt;HF~·c

Yo,. Cheuy De.ler
,.

'I

AN'MEB&amp;A
HU&amp;II!I&gt;IN,TOO··-

'

tires, radio, heafer, white finish, clean ~ nter•~

1968 FORD F100

S. 3rd Ave. ,

LANCELOT

PHONE rr2·2143

. . . C&amp;z ...
Sw .....

Charger 2 Dr. H.T.. V-8 engine, T-Fiile, p. steering. 2 to
choose from, both sharp.

'

Blaettnar's

~

EXPERT

1966 DODGE

-

Plus
P•rts

w illl

Valiant V200, 2 door sedan, slanl " 6" , r .Ftite, sha rp a nd
ready.

FOR

6.98

OFFICE SUPPUES

6-21J.301c
CONVEN"IENT but secluded
building lots .., T79 at Rock PAPER HANGJNG, interior
and exterior painting. Phone
Springs. Wi t hin walking
'192·3630.
distance of Me igs High
].1J.301p
School, a S minute drive from
$13,500.00 - 76 acres, 1 room
house . Outbuildings . Well
PO&lt;Jleroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends or after 5 OHIO VALLEY Decoraling
water. Minerals.
Services, interior and exp.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
leriorpa inling. Plione61'-l67·
6887.
S26,500.00 - 3 bedrooms, l'h
7685.
baths, central heat and AIR
7· 11-llc
7-IJ.61c
Garage.
CONDITIONING.
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
basement. 133 Butternut Ave. , WILL DO roofing, painting ,
$10,000.00 - or a good offer. 4
plumbing and carpenter
just walking distance from
bedrooms, bath, garage .
wO&lt;k
; also tearing down old
downtown
'Pomeroy.
Contact
Middleport .
build ings. Phone 992·7324 or
Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth
71:1-4919.
Drive, Columbus, O,io, phone
519,500.00 - NEW 3 bedroom ,
237
·4334,
Columbus.
7-6- l:Hc
one floor, l'h baths. Car·
-5-9-lfc
peting . Gas furnace . Carport .
HOUSE in Mason , 6 rooms and CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
Dick Vaughan, phone 992·
$25,000.00 - 80 acres. Barn,
bath, lot 80 x 100. See Jack E.
3374, Dale Little, phone 992·
Smith.
outbuildings. 6 room house .
6346.
Minerals.

FREEZER SALE

9a_
Ail

At

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

4 or 5 bedroom
home. Bath, gas furnace.
Modern kil~f" · Garden .

For Sale or Trade

gallons of FREE ice cream .

Speci~l

HOME &amp; AUTO

MOBil£ HOMES

1970 KAWASAKI 350 $650.
Roger Ba hr , Reedsville, Ohio.
Phone 985·3958.
1·9-ltc

Ai' Conditilning
lnspec!PJ and
R&amp;Oiatge

POMEROY

MILLER

For Sale

Ha.e YourS · 01~111

--

HARRISON 'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.

through the lacllllles of the
following
!ruck
Iines:
Sheridan Truck Lines, Truck 1964 FORD Van - completely
overhauled, S new tires. SAOO.
Line Distribution Systems
Contact Albert Roseberry ,
Inc.,
Express
Parcel
Bashan-Keno Road. 1
Deliveries, Inc., Skyline
7.1J-3fp
Deliveries, Inc . For ap plication and Interview call
304·3.4-4-8843 or write School 1961 OLDS, Super 88," 5150; 1964
Corvair ,
S12S.
George
Safety Div ision, Advance
Hackell,
93
Seventh
Ave .,
Systems, Inc .• c-o Terminal
Middleport
.
Phond
992·2444.
Bldg., 5517 Midland Drive,
1220 W•shington Blvd.
7-13;31p
Charleston, West Virginia,
Belpre, Ohio
25306.
7-1S.21c '54 MERCURY, 4 door sedan,
good shape. one &lt;Mner. May STEREQ.RADIO, combination S1.500.00 - Building lot . Chester
water.
be seen at Dolson Rest Home
unit, with AM-FM radio, 4
992·3325 992·2378
corner of Fourth and An·
speakers. dual volume conHELEN
L. TEAFORD,
derson Streets, Mason . or call
trol. modern maple console.
1969 CAMARO, 4-speed ; 1968
ASSOCIATE
Geraldine Dotson at 61'-nJ.
Balance $79.76. Use our
Chevrolet, 2 -door hardlop,
l · ll -61c
5712.
budget
terms. Call 992-7085.
automatic, power steering
].1].6fc
7-ll -61c S ROOM house. garage. water
and power brakes, air conditlooing . Phone 992-6547.
and gas, good condition, I 1·3
' 67 CHEVELLE Malibu 2door, 1
1· 13-31c
acres just off Route 1 b_ypass
local owner, V-8 automatic,
on Leading Creek Road .
new tires, excellent coodit ion.
Phooe 992-7142.
Phone 992·2011-4 or 992·7098.
1·11-61c
1·'-lfc
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
ITEM: Morning. A
Here's 1he way i1 works ... 3 BEDROOM brick home .
BU.ICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
you get seven ice cream
Choice localion in Middleport .
'z estful time for some 1969
hardtop, power steering,
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
Seen by appointment only.
people. Double dismal
cream, FREE for every·
power brakes, a ir, 18,000
Phone 992·5523 "after 4 p .m.
cubic toot you buy in a Un ico
miles.
Excellent
condition.
5·7-lfc
for others. Jim Mees
freezer . r·efrigerator or
Phone 992·2288.
combination .
somehow gels ·us all
6-3-lfc
UNICO 21 FOOT CHEST
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
together every day.
FREEZER
279.95
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2293.
With th is one you get 196 tree
10.25-llc

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

~

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

cams. all buill-in features. 513,000.00 makes bullonholes, etc .
Balance $43.17. Call 992·1085.
7-11·61c

•
Ph;
--·fn-tiG
.. .

FURNITURE

Must have water pressure. S2t,ooo.oo - 3 bedrooms, bath,
modern kitchen .. dining room
Cos! S-46. Sell for $30. Phone
742·3290.

~Assw£-u-

And

1·14-&lt;ltc

equipment. Sales and service.

7 - IS

'izE.v

PARKEISIUR_G MOBILE HOMES. INC

and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sales rep esentallve. For tree
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Sm, Inc.
5-27-lfc

1971 SOLID State Apache ,
sleeps six. Phone 992-5592.
7-11 -lfc

LOGAN

&lt;tiALSO
oOuBLE-WIDES

SEE TOM CROW OR lOB tROW

carports ,

MILLIONS of rugs have been
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It' s
America's
fines,! .
Rent

toAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
4·9-lfc·

•

•

- - - -- - Furniture Company.

:j[I:HAMPION
ri£_VAN DYKE

R-liddilions
Andl'olias .

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. ~
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operalor.

.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

AWNINGS, storm doors and

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pome•w.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scisson.
3-29-llc

I

' SOT CHORES
TOOO

Time You Ever Silellt.

marquees, aluminum siding

VACUUM cleaner: Electro
Hygiene new demonstrator
has all cleaning attachments
plus the new electro suds for
shampooing carpet. Qnly
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992·5641.
7-14-&lt;llc

. TH'WHOLE
I
. DAY,

411 Minutos al Yow Time Can Well Be the Most ..n.litable

Reri10delini

windows ,

CAN'T

· PLAY HOS5V

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME. BUYERS!

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER ·
VICE. Phone U9~1.
s.JO.IIc

electric shampooer/ $1, Baker

ONE
BEDROOM
trailer
apartment, ideal for couples.
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
your sick TV lo Chuck 's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
992·5248 or 992-3436.
7- 1~· 121c
Pomeroy.
4.2].1fc
MIDDLEPORT - 3 room and
bath, furnished apartment.
REDUCE safe and fast with
Phone 992·3205 or 992·2725.
Gobese tablets and E. Vap
7-14-&lt;lfp
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
6·21·301p
FURNISHED ~ room &amp; bath
apt., adults only, Middleport.
YARD SALE on Larkins St.,
Phone 992-3874.
Rulland, Friday and Satur J.lJ.Ifc
day .
1· 14-Jic
COUNTRY home, close to
Forked Run Lake. Couple,
TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop
prefer retired couple, must
will be closed Mon .. July 19th
lhru Sal., July 24th .
have references. Call 318-62'18
7-14-llp
or write Wayne Prince, Long
Bollom, Ohio.
7-lS.Jic
DO IT YOURSELF Coin
Operaled Car Wash In Tup.
pers Plains now open for HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath,
garage
allached,
full
business. Will iam Connolly.
basement, large lot . Midway
1· 14-61p
Drive. New Haven. Available
August 1. Phone 3CU 882-2052.
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, July.
7· 11-&lt;llc
August special, Kare Kondltloo oil S5. Value now ooly
S2.50. Distributors, Brown's, TRAILER LOTS, BOb' s Mobile
.phone..992,5113.
Court, Rl. 12~. Syracuse.
•
·
l ·•·lfC
Ohio. 992·2951. •
4-2-llc
SOHIO Service· Station al418 W.
Main Street, Pomeroy. is now MOBILE HOME, available July
under new management by
15, 1971. Phone 992·5592.
Monid Good . Starling Mon·
1·12·11C
day, July 12th thru Saturday,
July 17th , a free grease job TRAILER SPACE oo old Rl. 33,
will be given with every oil
lh-mile north of new Meigs
change and fill -up.
.
High School. Phone 992·2UI.
1· 11-6tc
3-S.Ifc

Instruction

Phone .

Qeland Realty

WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN
HARTFORD

estimates.

SYRACUSE - House, 3 rooms
3-12-lfc
•nd balh, lull basement, large
lot. Phone 992·3205 or 992·2125.
7· 14-61p AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6-1S.Ifc

CARRIER

Notice

-:::-::::::·B=u~s~.~·~~
~=ss===·-;~
~=r::::;;·v~i~ces
. =.::::=:::==:J,

Gallipolis -~.

SENTINEL

I

•.4.

SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitalioo, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph:
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom,
662·3035.
with or without farm
2·12·11C
machinery. House with 3
bedrooms, dining room • .living
Construclim. For
room, l'h baths. enclosed NEIGLER
building
..remodeling your
back porch, wall to wall
home
.
Call
Guy Neigler,
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
Racine,
Ohio.
awning. storm windows and
7.J1 -IIc
storm doors. City water.
Selling due to ill heallh. Phone
RALP!1' S CARPET - Up61 '"985-3938.
holstery Cl eaning Servi ce.
6-23-JO!p

Help Wanted

.

-

r
I

IF liE FLIES H1611EK 1HAN
iEN
l-IE .6ETS A
·BlEED ~.-t

_,

�I- Tile Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pmoeroy, 0 ., .Juey ~.1971

.Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Sentinel Cla~sifieds ·

·,

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P.M. Day Before Publlcatloo
Mondav ~dllne 9 a.m .
. Clll)~llatloo &amp; Corri!Ctlons
Will be accepted until9a.m. for
Day of Publl~llon
·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves lhe
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objeclional.,__ The
publisher wW nol be responsible
for more than one incorrect.
Insertion .
RATES
For Wtnl Ad Service
scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per wprd three.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
beds , clocks, d ishes, . old
furniture. etc. Write M. 0 .
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Call 992-6271.
].9.1fc

- - - - - -·

2 OR 3 BEDR09M used trailer.
Phone 992-3'135.
7-l l -61c
ANTIQUES :

2- '60 TRANSMISSIONS - 1
Pontiac and 1 Thunderbird for
· $25 each. Cbnlacl Roy and
Steve Roseberry', Bashan .
' Keno Road.
7-13-Jip
SIAMESE killens- heallhy ,
playful , lilterpan trained .
Have
had
temporary
distemper vaccination . Phone

992-5101 after 6 p.m.

d ish es ,

7-13-Jtp

telephones, clocks. br ass

beds tamps etc Lee Rud" ·;;

FENDER P. A. system, $500.
•
•
·
lSI •
Cameo ele,. t r ic guitar, 2
Phooe 992-3403.
'
________________
l ·_·l30IP
pickups , $40. Phone 94'1·3485.
7·1S.31c
-

---------------8· YEAR OLD palomino mare,

consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six COO · TOP PRICE on ginsellg and
gentle, saddle and bridle.
Golden Seal· yellow rool Seal
secutlve insertions.
Phone 742-.5865 Harrisonville,
tops and stem bone dry, _clean
25 Per Cenl Dlscounl oo pa id
Ohio.
no dirt. All roots . .Bill Bailev.
ads and ads paid wilhln 10 days.
7· 14-&lt;llc
P.O. · Box 14, Se&lt;lond. Slreel,
CARD OF THANKS
Reedsv ille~ Ohio .sm.
&amp;OBITUARY
1·1-JOIC CANNING lomaloes, Geraldine
SL50 for SO word minimum.
Cleland, East Main, Racine,
liach additional word 2c.
Oh io.
BLIND ADS
J.J4.181c
Addllional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
PINTO GELDING, 3 years old,
OFFICE HOURS
very gentle, 59 Inches tall .
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p. m. Daily ,
Phone 992-7066.
8 : 30 a .m . · to 12 : 00 Noon ·
7.J4.3fc
Salurday.
NEEDLE
sewing
TWIN
machine 1971 model in new
walnut stand. All features
GLIN SHOOT, Sunday, July 18, 1
built -in to _
make fancy
p.m. at Racine Gun Club.
designs
.
Also
buttonholes ..
1· 13·5fc
blind hems, etc., $43.35, cash
price, or terms available.
BURKETT'S Barber Shop will
and
Phone 992-5641.
be closed July 21fhru July 29.
7-14-61c
J. JS.ltc

Real.Estate For Sale
HOUSE, 7 rooms and 2 baths ,
corner SOXBO lo1, alumimJm
siding. Phone J04.nJ.5900.
'
7· 15·3tp

Free

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Phone 992-2156
Sporlsman Club. Sunday,
July 18 at noon .
] .14-Jic EARN at home addressi'\9
envelopes. Rush stamped sell.
THOROUGHBRED Stud addressed envelope. The
Service. Roman Caplain No . Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
637410. $50 registered .mares, Davisburg, Mich., -18019.
S35 grade mares . Return
7-2-JOip

privileges.

Greg

Roush ,

Phone 992·5039.
1·9·301C

For Rent

SEMI· DRIVER TRAINING We are currently offering

tractor

trailer

training

~""WINSOR

-tciUDDY

FIRE and

safety

All types and sizes of fire
e:dinguishers. Special prices
on extinguishers for boats,

campers,
homes .
Also
discount prices on other sizes.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
992·3821. Owner Owighl
Logan.
6-16-JOIC
PORTABLE dishwasher, used
few times. service for six.

SINGER, zig·zag,

7· 13·31p
needs

no

MEMORI"L BRIDGI!" TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBIJRG, W. VA.

t

OfNSON MASOtti¥
Complete

KildiOIIs,lalhs
ladi:llooAnd
Endluder Wort
Septic T•nlls

AndLeodl-.

742-4902

STEREO- RADIO console ,·- 4·

speed intermixed changer,
dual

volume

control.

4-

speaker sound system , lovely
walnut finish. Balance $62 .97.

Use our budge! terms. Call
992·7085.
J. ll -61c

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Oose to school.
Phone 992·~.
10.18-llc

Auto Sales

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
$2,500.00 - Business or home
site near Pomeroy.

with slidi~g glass doors to
porch. Fireplace in living.
Gas forced air furnace. 2 lots.
Double garage.

- - - - --

ice cream bar s or 28 half.

POMEROY
Jack w. Caney, Mgr.
Phone9fl-2111

~

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contact Roush Construction.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9·301C
O' DELL WHEEL a lignment
located al Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake serv ice.
Wheels
balanced
elecIron i cal ly .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.
6-2'-3MC ,
READY -MIX

delivered

CONCRETE
right to your

' project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992·328•.

15.55 .

-GUARANTEED_
Phone 992-2094
.._
Hom &amp; a•.a..
I"UIIIIIIIJ

8

ftiiiU

OpeniTiiS
Moiildiy ttwu Sifurdllly
E

__MN
___._~
__i_
~-~----~y~,_O_._J

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
S.1·1fC

Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.Ifc INTERIOR, exteriO&lt; decorator
and barn roofs. Phone 14'1·

Real Estate For Sale

5683.

HOUSE slory and hall, 6 rooms,
bath, Rutland . Phone 1-fJ.
5613.
6-2S.Ifc

OUR PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS
WIU BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 19 THRU 24th
VACATIONS-----------~----------------~'

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

-ll&lt;N' TI-l EN AH'LL
GITA FORT"UNE-

Middleport. 0.

-

.......

-OOT IF "ft::IS

.t'VIi GOT TO

.INT'RESTED
INA PORE
GAL

fiJ( THIS. Wii':IO

ONCtJR Tl/
ANTE:NNA!

A •lot e we l
Lilli-

MLJIIII
HaliieiDitWi

....,ne. -

d &amp;D I!

overdr,.i. ..
-·-··-~
Lint
:D

Fine Mesll
:Filter.

••s
z r a.
..Anas

IS SKINNV,
------,.19N'"~'

HIH

IZzY SEIGE-L I~ ONE
OF- MY OLDE&amp;T
FRIENDS 1 61LI.Y•••

RURAND
FURNITURE
·
.
-.

742-4211

Arnold Grate

Our Prices
Speak For

ONCE lHEV GET T'KNOIII
EACH
. OIHE&amp;l!!~LL

ARE YOU
LISTENING?

PRQI!I,II.ei.V
""""""""
INSEPAPAB'
FJ

1970
Chevrolet Monte c-. CDe.
Beautiful Gobi Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, &amp;dory ;Oir -conditioning, tinted glass, black nylon bui:bt Sllills,
console, Positradion axle. «10 c:u. in. engine. Turbo
Hydromatic, power steering, power disc ...,a!&lt;es.. ~....., &amp;
r . seat s~ker. bumper guards &amp; RaUy Whflltls.. ..,..
derseal. Save. Save. Balance of warranty~

7-IS"

1966
P~. ¥8 Sta. WaeJn-------v.e engine, good tires, clean bod;· nice wiinrJ

BORN LOSER

inloliar.

&amp;

automatic trans .• power steering, , ttdio, lug_gage Adt..
Regularly Priced at $1095.00 . Spec ial !

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

1966 Cheurolet Impala Cpe.._____'J99

I'Ll. KEEP MY LIGHTS O:F1

SC0081E~ l)tllll WE HIT
lRAFFIC~ - , . -

6 Cyl., sland. trans., local 1 owner car, g&lt;IOC!I Idr'es, ,.......
heater . Reg . Price $1095.00. Specia l.

-

·

1966 Buick Wildcat Cpe. ______ '1195
Aulomalic trans., power sleering &amp; bra'kes, goad W-w
Reg. ~

S1395.00. Special.

1967
fGrd LTD------------'~595
4 .Door Sedan, power steering brakes, •inrl"nloriar lilt..
&amp;

1971 HORNET

$2095

4 door sedan less than s.ooo m iles, owner needed a larger
car, 6cyl., std. trans .• balance of new car warranty.

4 Door sedan .. less than 9.1100 m iles, 6 cyl., std. trans., the
sharpes! ' 70 •n town, SST deluxe.

1968 OPEL

$1295

Kadel! Deluxe 4 cyl., ~ speed, station wagon, economy is
the word.

1968 DODGE

$1895

Coronel ' 500' • door, V-8 engine, T-FIIte, p. st. a ir
d tllootng, sharp.
'

1965 PLYMOUTH

0011 •

1995
51295

$)895

Flareside V-8 engine, 3 speed. good looks, tires, per.
formance.

1970 DODGE

S3595

Challenger, 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 engine, T·Fiile, p. sf., air
cond., console&amp; buckets, full new car warranty here. ,

DAILY CROSSWORD

v.a·-...

6 Cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio, good tices, 'greM rlllish.
Special E.O.M.

-

-

1970 HORNET

..... ., ...... , ........ u .......

v•nyl ~f, maroon finiSh, radio, new ·w-w tires,
automatoc trans. &amp; factory air conditioning _ 'Spertal.
Special.

&amp;

\~2~~~~j

cab like new !ruck, 6 cyl. 292 cu. in. eng. A ,.,.I truck.

1967 fGrd Ec:onoline ___________
H. duly Van, 6 cyl., super extended body, ,goad li-.

Clearance Priced

Open Evenings Till8:00

the range

I .4TING

common.

.. ~·.:...'1;.-:o.~ ·...- . .

2•. Gennan

l

river
26. Eternal

30. Hone
opera
31. "Comln '
th•
Rye"
32. Storyteller

M. Old as
lo{ethusela.h
35. Regrettable .
36.---Jim• .
37. Roland'.s
destroyor
38. Parod•

I
vX) 1 1 1

I KESTO

33. In Umefl past

ornament

•

~

.

.

IESCASC

~

I l'litUtel

tj
I [j

lSi IIIIWIIIIre

wetrht

All Shas

Jumht.o, AMITY

a&lt;:llvlty •
39. Copllant

Yeetenl•r'•

tO.DIBtance

41. Gift pver
42. wu father
to
DOWN
1. Dl-tempered

There's a Time To
a Time To Save!

SL.IITAI!ILE FOR AFTeRDINNER R:5APIN6.

Now orrance lilt clreleill~n
to form the IUillriH an~wer, ..

ounuted by lilt al&gt;ooe eutoon.

I "[I I I :t II)"
(AMwen l..,n-ow)

32.Mauna 35. Tourlat's

New '71 Chevrolets

.

C&gt;...Ll.~~--L_J__...J

IUIIDI

31. Chine.e

THINK

MAINLY

IISTI)W

FlaaJ lae .1aid .Men lie tc:antrcl .ro attro.-1
tile U:Cimlitn••'• otfention- "A..HIMI"

Pt \'1 I'"'

one
2. Bowllnr
alley
3. 1tall011
river

Now-Do lotla!
LOWal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a how to work It:
.

AXYDLBAAXR
to LONGFELLOW
0... Jolter Blmply 1tanda for another. In this 118111ple A Is
uoed for tbe th'" L's. X for the two O'o. etc. Slnlfe !ellen,
~tropbea. . the ltnrth and form!-tlon or the word" are all
hlnta. Each day the code letten a~ dlfferent.

Amberger. Hilton Wolfe on these one owner
bargains.

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
992-2151 or 992-2152

21.. Be
frugal
24
Divisible

Unscramble the,. foor Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinarv words.

bytwb
26. Globetrotter'sgulde
12 wds.)
U::.J.----..(J 21. Eagle's nest
28.Propam
, 29. Tum rlpt
30. Heavy
whaek
Ill~ I

See Pearl Ash, Emerson Jones. Wallace

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

rroup

Indian

6.Why?
ILBr.tra
12 w&lt;la.)
man
6. Song writer, 22. :Mal!l·
toba
Jule -·- Indian
7. American
Inventor
23 . Un·

13. Favored
phras&lt;of
8. Milwaukee
product
Jackie
&amp;. Beer
Gleason
container
16. Girl's
10. Sioux Indian
nickname
16. Movle hou,. H . Stuku,
'f.l--!1
or Spain
for
example
17. Knowledjre
lT. Roman
18. " -··- pro
nobts"
historian
18. Part of

.

1966
Chew. 2 Ton-------OniJ'1150
114" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires, 2 speed
axle. inl.

PRICES WILL NEVEl IE

19. Wrest

20. Theater

MexiCIIl

mediumsign
f.i:tiDTWiiT"iNCi::ui)i;§t 12. Rental
(2wds.)

springs, rear slep bumper, less than 9000 m il e s - less
than9 mo. old. Beaulilul red finish. Shows best a! are.

~ear

~.New

ACROSS
1. Skinnlsh
4. Mllltary
cap
11. Fred Allen's

1970 Chewlulet------------'22!15
'h Ton Pickup, wide body , G78x15 fires.• H. duly . _

Pomeroy Motor Co.-

USL

BR10

992-2126

Open Eves. Till

T S

--

OU KTSV

TD

YIV

TS

F. U U V . I Y Y L ·

UHO,

THAT'S KIND Of 5AD

N· rzl ••

Kt:ZDO . SUO

I

ORLA

YHO

A T N R L )"

BRIO

J B U T D 0

l "..t..Nio)"'• f'l}·ptequot..: PEOPLE WHO HAVE NO WEA!j:·
Nli:SBII:S ARE TERRIBLE : TH1!:RE IS NO WAY Of" T AKlNO
. ADVANTAGE OF THEM. AN ATOLE FRANCE
ttl 111'1 ICI•~ Jl'~mlutu S:~-· n.d lr.alt, IrK·. )

'

7-'~·

'
I
j

A Cr7PiowOMD cpolaha
DRU .H FV
DOHVC ALS

1&lt;HF~·c

Yo,. Cheuy De.ler
,.

'I

AN'MEB&amp;A
HU&amp;II!I&gt;IN,TOO··-

'

tires, radio, heafer, white finish, clean ~ nter•~

1968 FORD F100

S. 3rd Ave. ,

LANCELOT

PHONE rr2·2143

. . . C&amp;z ...
Sw .....

Charger 2 Dr. H.T.. V-8 engine, T-Fiile, p. steering. 2 to
choose from, both sharp.

'

Blaettnar's

~

EXPERT

1966 DODGE

-

Plus
P•rts

w illl

Valiant V200, 2 door sedan, slanl " 6" , r .Ftite, sha rp a nd
ready.

FOR

6.98

OFFICE SUPPUES

6-21J.301c
CONVEN"IENT but secluded
building lots .., T79 at Rock PAPER HANGJNG, interior
and exterior painting. Phone
Springs. Wi t hin walking
'192·3630.
distance of Me igs High
].1J.301p
School, a S minute drive from
$13,500.00 - 76 acres, 1 room
house . Outbuildings . Well
PO&lt;Jleroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends or after 5 OHIO VALLEY Decoraling
water. Minerals.
Services, interior and exp.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
leriorpa inling. Plione61'-l67·
6887.
S26,500.00 - 3 bedrooms, l'h
7685.
baths, central heat and AIR
7· 11-llc
7-IJ.61c
Garage.
CONDITIONING.
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
basement. 133 Butternut Ave. , WILL DO roofing, painting ,
$10,000.00 - or a good offer. 4
plumbing and carpenter
just walking distance from
bedrooms, bath, garage .
wO&lt;k
; also tearing down old
downtown
'Pomeroy.
Contact
Middleport .
build ings. Phone 992·7324 or
Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth
71:1-4919.
Drive, Columbus, O,io, phone
519,500.00 - NEW 3 bedroom ,
237
·4334,
Columbus.
7-6- l:Hc
one floor, l'h baths. Car·
-5-9-lfc
peting . Gas furnace . Carport .
HOUSE in Mason , 6 rooms and CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
Dick Vaughan, phone 992·
$25,000.00 - 80 acres. Barn,
bath, lot 80 x 100. See Jack E.
3374, Dale Little, phone 992·
Smith.
outbuildings. 6 room house .
6346.
Minerals.

FREEZER SALE

9a_
Ail

At

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

4 or 5 bedroom
home. Bath, gas furnace.
Modern kil~f" · Garden .

For Sale or Trade

gallons of FREE ice cream .

Speci~l

HOME &amp; AUTO

MOBil£ HOMES

1970 KAWASAKI 350 $650.
Roger Ba hr , Reedsville, Ohio.
Phone 985·3958.
1·9-ltc

Ai' Conditilning
lnspec!PJ and
R&amp;Oiatge

POMEROY

MILLER

For Sale

Ha.e YourS · 01~111

--

HARRISON 'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.

through the lacllllles of the
following
!ruck
Iines:
Sheridan Truck Lines, Truck 1964 FORD Van - completely
overhauled, S new tires. SAOO.
Line Distribution Systems
Contact Albert Roseberry ,
Inc.,
Express
Parcel
Bashan-Keno Road. 1
Deliveries, Inc., Skyline
7.1J-3fp
Deliveries, Inc . For ap plication and Interview call
304·3.4-4-8843 or write School 1961 OLDS, Super 88," 5150; 1964
Corvair ,
S12S.
George
Safety Div ision, Advance
Hackell,
93
Seventh
Ave .,
Systems, Inc .• c-o Terminal
Middleport
.
Phond
992·2444.
Bldg., 5517 Midland Drive,
1220 W•shington Blvd.
7-13;31p
Charleston, West Virginia,
Belpre, Ohio
25306.
7-1S.21c '54 MERCURY, 4 door sedan,
good shape. one &lt;Mner. May STEREQ.RADIO, combination S1.500.00 - Building lot . Chester
water.
be seen at Dolson Rest Home
unit, with AM-FM radio, 4
992·3325 992·2378
corner of Fourth and An·
speakers. dual volume conHELEN
L. TEAFORD,
derson Streets, Mason . or call
trol. modern maple console.
1969 CAMARO, 4-speed ; 1968
ASSOCIATE
Geraldine Dotson at 61'-nJ.
Balance $79.76. Use our
Chevrolet, 2 -door hardlop,
l · ll -61c
5712.
budget
terms. Call 992-7085.
automatic, power steering
].1].6fc
7-ll -61c S ROOM house. garage. water
and power brakes, air conditlooing . Phone 992-6547.
and gas, good condition, I 1·3
' 67 CHEVELLE Malibu 2door, 1
1· 13-31c
acres just off Route 1 b_ypass
local owner, V-8 automatic,
on Leading Creek Road .
new tires, excellent coodit ion.
Phooe 992-7142.
Phone 992·2011-4 or 992·7098.
1·11-61c
1·'-lfc
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
ITEM: Morning. A
Here's 1he way i1 works ... 3 BEDROOM brick home .
BU.ICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
you get seven ice cream
Choice localion in Middleport .
'z estful time for some 1969
hardtop, power steering,
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
Seen by appointment only.
people. Double dismal
cream, FREE for every·
power brakes, a ir, 18,000
Phone 992·5523 "after 4 p .m.
cubic toot you buy in a Un ico
miles.
Excellent
condition.
5·7-lfc
for others. Jim Mees
freezer . r·efrigerator or
Phone 992·2288.
combination .
somehow gels ·us all
6-3-lfc
UNICO 21 FOOT CHEST
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
together every day.
FREEZER
279.95
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2293.
With th is one you get 196 tree
10.25-llc

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

~

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

cams. all buill-in features. 513,000.00 makes bullonholes, etc .
Balance $43.17. Call 992·1085.
7-11·61c

•
Ph;
--·fn-tiG
.. .

FURNITURE

Must have water pressure. S2t,ooo.oo - 3 bedrooms, bath,
modern kitchen .. dining room
Cos! S-46. Sell for $30. Phone
742·3290.

~Assw£-u-

And

1·14-&lt;ltc

equipment. Sales and service.

7 - IS

'izE.v

PARKEISIUR_G MOBILE HOMES. INC

and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sales rep esentallve. For tree
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Sm, Inc.
5-27-lfc

1971 SOLID State Apache ,
sleeps six. Phone 992-5592.
7-11 -lfc

LOGAN

&lt;tiALSO
oOuBLE-WIDES

SEE TOM CROW OR lOB tROW

carports ,

MILLIONS of rugs have been
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It' s
America's
fines,! .
Rent

toAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
4·9-lfc·

•

•

- - - -- - Furniture Company.

:j[I:HAMPION
ri£_VAN DYKE

R-liddilions
Andl'olias .

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. ~
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operalor.

.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

AWNINGS, storm doors and

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pome•w.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scisson.
3-29-llc

I

' SOT CHORES
TOOO

Time You Ever Silellt.

marquees, aluminum siding

VACUUM cleaner: Electro
Hygiene new demonstrator
has all cleaning attachments
plus the new electro suds for
shampooing carpet. Qnly
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992·5641.
7-14-&lt;llc

. TH'WHOLE
I
. DAY,

411 Minutos al Yow Time Can Well Be the Most ..n.litable

Reri10delini

windows ,

CAN'T

· PLAY HOS5V

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME. BUYERS!

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER ·
VICE. Phone U9~1.
s.JO.IIc

electric shampooer/ $1, Baker

ONE
BEDROOM
trailer
apartment, ideal for couples.
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
your sick TV lo Chuck 's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
992·5248 or 992-3436.
7- 1~· 121c
Pomeroy.
4.2].1fc
MIDDLEPORT - 3 room and
bath, furnished apartment.
REDUCE safe and fast with
Phone 992·3205 or 992·2725.
Gobese tablets and E. Vap
7-14-&lt;lfp
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
6·21·301p
FURNISHED ~ room &amp; bath
apt., adults only, Middleport.
YARD SALE on Larkins St.,
Phone 992-3874.
Rulland, Friday and Satur J.lJ.Ifc
day .
1· 14-Jic
COUNTRY home, close to
Forked Run Lake. Couple,
TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop
prefer retired couple, must
will be closed Mon .. July 19th
lhru Sal., July 24th .
have references. Call 318-62'18
7-14-llp
or write Wayne Prince, Long
Bollom, Ohio.
7-lS.Jic
DO IT YOURSELF Coin
Operaled Car Wash In Tup.
pers Plains now open for HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath,
garage
allached,
full
business. Will iam Connolly.
basement, large lot . Midway
1· 14-61p
Drive. New Haven. Available
August 1. Phone 3CU 882-2052.
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, July.
7· 11-&lt;llc
August special, Kare Kondltloo oil S5. Value now ooly
S2.50. Distributors, Brown's, TRAILER LOTS, BOb' s Mobile
.phone..992,5113.
Court, Rl. 12~. Syracuse.
•
·
l ·•·lfC
Ohio. 992·2951. •
4-2-llc
SOHIO Service· Station al418 W.
Main Street, Pomeroy. is now MOBILE HOME, available July
under new management by
15, 1971. Phone 992·5592.
Monid Good . Starling Mon·
1·12·11C
day, July 12th thru Saturday,
July 17th , a free grease job TRAILER SPACE oo old Rl. 33,
will be given with every oil
lh-mile north of new Meigs
change and fill -up.
.
High School. Phone 992·2UI.
1· 11-6tc
3-S.Ifc

Instruction

Phone .

Qeland Realty

WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN
HARTFORD

estimates.

SYRACUSE - House, 3 rooms
3-12-lfc
•nd balh, lull basement, large
lot. Phone 992·3205 or 992·2125.
7· 14-61p AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6-1S.Ifc

CARRIER

Notice

-:::-::::::·B=u~s~.~·~~
~=ss===·-;~
~=r::::;;·v~i~ces
. =.::::=:::==:J,

Gallipolis -~.

SENTINEL

I

•.4.

SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitalioo, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph:
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom,
662·3035.
with or without farm
2·12·11C
machinery. House with 3
bedrooms, dining room • .living
Construclim. For
room, l'h baths. enclosed NEIGLER
building
..remodeling your
back porch, wall to wall
home
.
Call
Guy Neigler,
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
Racine,
Ohio.
awning. storm windows and
7.J1 -IIc
storm doors. City water.
Selling due to ill heallh. Phone
RALP!1' S CARPET - Up61 '"985-3938.
holstery Cl eaning Servi ce.
6-23-JO!p

Help Wanted

.

-

r
I

IF liE FLIES H1611EK 1HAN
iEN
l-IE .6ETS A
·BlEED ~.-t

_,

�- - ,, '

"

11-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pimeroy, 0., JUly 15,1971

processing will do little hann, Be sure and h~ve your checked. CaU tlie Exte~on
bill underiirocessing may result - pressure canner gauge Office at 992-3895 lor details.
in spoilage.
MUST CANNED vegetables
be boiled before tasting or·using? Yes, they must be boiloid
or heated at · boiling temperature for 10 to 15 minutes by
baking, steaming or cooking in
Garden
Sets.
Lawn
some manner. The 10 to 15
Mowers• Boats, Parasotes •
minutes may be-counted in the
Badminton, Pitch Games.
cooking·time needed to prepare ·
Flying Saucers, Crochet
the vegetable for serving.
Sets, etc.
WHEN BOILING home
canned vegetables 10 to 15
SWIM TOYS -' Balls, Rings, Wading Pools,
minutes in an open ketUe before
·Everything For Summer Fun. PICNI·C
serving them, must additional
SUPPLIES- Plates. Napkins. Forks, Spoons,
water be added to them? Only if
Table Cloths, Cups. Jugs and Ice Chests,
needed for the boiling. Place the
Picnic Grills, Sun Glasses and other
vegetable and the Uquid in
necessities.
which it was canned in the open
Beige Steel Case
kettle and boil both for the 10 to
15 minutes.

Canning uestiotls Answered

SUMMER
TOYS

b-

~

~

By DEBORAH CONKLIN
Ext Ageal, Home Econ.
Canning questions seemingly
come by the hundreds,
especially at this season. Here
are a few that you too may have
wondered about.
WHY THE RULE ... "Two
hours from the garden to the
jar?"Freshvegetablesproduce
a higher quality product with a
greater retention 'of vitamins
and minerals.
DID YOU SAY I could
. use a
pressure sauce pan for canning
vegetables? It is recommended
that vegetables be processed In
a large J)ressure canner. It is
poulbie, however, to use p
pressure sauce pan if it is
equipped with a · gauge or
weights, suitable to accurately
indicate the desired ternperature. Most authorities
recunmeud adding 20 minutes
to pressure canner time for pint
jars to make up for the quick
cllmli In temperatUre at the

the enzymes and to destroy Packing corn too tightly with
every SJlOilage organism. This insufficient liquid will also
is why use of a pressure canner c~use this carmellzation and
is recommended.
browning.
CAN IODIZED SALT be used_ IS IT SAF~ to use canned
to season jars of vegetables in food if the liquid Is cloudy?
canning? Yes, a small amount Cloudy liquid may ~ a sign of
of iodine in no way affects the spoilage. However, 1t may be
canned vegetables.
caused by the minerals in bard
SHOULD ALL vegetables be Wjller, or by the starch from
blanched or pre-cooked before overripe vegetables. If the
canning? No, some vegetables liquid is cloudy, boil the food .
should be blanched or pre- Do not taste or use any food that
cooked while others ~ be foams during heating or has an
packed. raw .· Consult your off odor.
canning bulletin.
IS IT SAFE to can foods
WHAT CAUSES CORN to without salt? Yes. Salt ~ used
turn brown during processing? for flavor only and 18 .~ot
This most often occurs when too necessary for safe processmg.
high a temperature is used. The WHAT IS "flat sour?" Flathigh temperature causes a sour is the most common type of
carmelization of the sugar in spoilage in canned ve~etabl_es .
the corn. It may also be caused It is caused by bacteria which
by some chemical such as iron gives food an unpleasan_t,
in the water used in canning. sourish flavor. Flat-sour 1s
Some varieties turn brown avoided ~y the n;;e of c~t
more readily than others. methods m selecting, handling,

.

preparing, packing, processing
and cooling foods.
WHAT CAUSES green
.vegetables to lose or change
from their bright green color?
Vegetables may lose their
bright green color because of a
breakdown of the chlorophyU,
the green coloring matter in
plants. This is caused by
beating. If green vegetables
turn brown, they ani overcooked or are too mature for
canning.
WHY IS IT MORE diHicult to
can vegetables than to · can
fniit? Because vegetables are
low-acid foods In which heat
resistant bacteria lire hard to
kill.
WHY
MUST
MOST
vegetables be processed !linger
lhari is l)ecessary to make them
tender? The processing time
which cooks some vegetables
longer than they are cooked for
ilrunedlate table use, must be

=-~:~==~;~
Summer Institute In Full SWing
the finish. Follow the canmng
.
.
instructions given by the "Whether the tbings we are
manufacturer of the pan you studying are good or bad enuae.
. vironmentally is another
WHAT _ABOUT cannmg question. Wbat we are trying to
vegetables m hot water. bath or cletennine Is the environmental
tbe oven? Tbe answer 18 no. A Impact of man's activity in
few people still can this way b~t GaUia County."
It is NOT SAFE. For this Thespeaker,GaryMcKenzie,
reuon, hot water bath and oven a faculty member from The
canning of vegetab~. cannot be Ohio Stale University, is one of
recunmended. In au-, water, four instructors and 26 par·
PJid soU, at aU times, there w:e ticlpantsspendingfourweeksat
molds, yeaslll, and bacterJa Rio -Grande College this sumwhich cause food spoilage. mer during a Summer Institute
Fresh vegetables also contain in Environmental Science. The
enzymes that may cause un- ll'ograDl Is funded by the
desirable changes )n color, NatiCIUII Science Foundatim
fiavor, and texture. When (NSF), me of many programs
vegetables are ~· heat funded annually by the NSF but
must penetrate each piece of the first such program In enfood In the jar sufficien~y to viromnental science.
stop or slow down the action of Twenty-six participants,
McKenzie said, are engaged In
: - - - - - - - - - , field and laboratory work
throughout Gallla County. The
group Is ccmposed of junior

lEGAl NOnCE
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of Sale
duly Issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, In a case of the

Trl

County

Bonk, Coolville,

Ohio, Plaintiff, vs. Woodrow
Schaffer and Kathryn Scti•trer,
292 Candler Strett, Atlanta,

Georgia, et al., upon a judgment
thereon rendered, and being
Can No. U,BOl in said Court, 1
will offer at public sale, at the
front door of the courthouse in
the Village of Pomeroy , Meigs
CountY, Ohio, on the 2_.1h day ot

July ,

1971, al II :00 O' Clock

high scbool and high scbool
teachers with a strong
background in biology and
earlll science.
McKenzie said that the group
was divided into independent
research teams of three or les8
andgivenacboiceof15topics.
Among the cboices were a
reduction plant, a water
treatment plant, a sewage
treatment plant, Tycoon Lake,
strip mines, Umestone quarry, a
sanitary landfill and a rural
water supply and waste
disposal system for mobile
bomes.
"We
looking at various
,environmental aspeclll of the
county," McKemie said, "and
are trying to ascertain man's
Impact on the area. After we
study a variety of activities
witlrln the county, we will know
wbat the impact in a number of
related fields is.
"We CIIDiot aay that one
activity is good or bad,"
McKenzie concluded, ''until we
have analyzed our findings and
drawn some scientific conclusloos."
One of the researchers is
studying a waste disposal
system for Gallipolis, that
would recycle the waste as
fertilizer. The method has been
discussed in a number of
scientific
and
national
magazines recenUy, and the
research is trying to de tennille
the feasibility of such a
ll'ogram in Gallipolis.
At the end of the study and

are

A .M·.• the following lands and
tenements, to-wit :
Situate in Olive Township, in
Fraction 27, Town •· Range 11.
Beginning in the middle of
County Road No. 9, which point
is also on the south line of
Fraction No . 27, Town_., Range
11 ; therce northwesterly 842
feet along Beam Road , wh ich
road Is also known as Bridle
Path Ro.ed, to a stake In *h.e
road; thence due east 108 feet to
a
post ;
thence
in
a
southeasterly direction parallel
with Beam Road , 652 feet to a
post; thence west 20 feet to a
.post; thence in a southeuterly
direction parallel with Beam
. Road , 190 feet to the south line
•of Fraction 27, to a point in the
middle ot the road; thence west
along the' middle of the road and
traction line, 88 feet to the place
ot beginning, containing 87,136
feet , more or less.
. ·
Deed Reference : VoL 2.. 0.

BREEZE BOX FAN

DEBBIE CONKLIN

field experience . in Gallia
County, . a nwnber of reports
will be released by the independent groups and- circulated 111 city and county of.
ficialB.
Following four weeks in a
rural environment, the group
will lake a one-week field trip
through North Carolina and
Kentucky, returning to Rio
Grande COllege June 23 for one
night. The last three weeks of
the Summer Institute will be
spent in Columbus, studying the
urban environment and comparing it to a rural enviromnent.
Reports on the one-week field
trip and the Columbus-area
study will also be released at
the end of the Institute.
Project director for the
Summer Institute on Envlronmental Science is Dr.
Victor Mayer, a member of the
department of mathematics
and science education. Tbe four
instructors at the Institute are
McKenzie, John Cauzan, a
faculty member of Geneva
College, New York, and two
OSU graduate students, Ben
Bohl and Ed Shay.

WEDDING

RINGS

.Portable EauiDment

Quantities

Cepacol
Reg. s1.29

Soft &amp; Dri
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Regular 1.00

ONLY

58~.._
'

•
•

VII IEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

lh oz.

ONLY

Anti· Gas
Antacid

,
'

"

•

'
1

.

'

&amp;iiddil.

- Graated omo..a credits on their slate Income tu for In·
oome tae. paid to local gaoalWdlts- Raised an additimal • mal!jm a year tlrough closing
sales tu eSemptlaas (llr t-•h l!iiS and industry.
l!:!esee of tbe biD fram. the WaJI lll1il Jleans Onnmittee
Wel1 ht IIOOil f«GJ wed two days of twSbed negotlatlolia belnm tbe l•aders fnm both parties.
1be biB- nubed oat of cqnmjltee In two minutes on a roll
can directm b)' Rep. E.W. ta"' •1, l:l-Jefferaon, committee
dwinnan, wbo lkiiiiiEd IISide tile fnmtlc abjections of Rep.
laJ!W Tborpe, R-Aitaince, bead of a CGiiWii oative Republican
~ ...._.li'W a flat rate Dune tu.
''l'wo Deft!' leeD IIIICb ohawnigans In 1~ )'MI'8 in the Gen·
eral AS! •lhQ-,'' said 'Dimpe, wbo later spearheaded the SUC•
Cl!811fulaUmlpttorelaln811lestaxe21Djltimsforbusinesa.

Reg. 75'

ONLY

MYADEC
High Potency Vitamin
I

,-ews."

TOP KEGMAN
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)-Johnny
Petraglia of Brooklyn, N.Y.,
continued this weef&lt;· as the
leader in the official money
standings of the . Professional
Bowlen Association.
Petraglia, who has competed
in %1 tournaments, leads the top
20 PBA bowlers with earnings
of $'12,338.

o;..-ed
6 Styles To

159

C-Fn1m

Bnided ·rt,~an

Adult Glycerin
Suppositories

RUNNERS
llaayc:.hn
SalePllted

-

15.55 _.

DINETIE
DWRS

. lfffSE
fURL ...... .
R-EDUCING PLAN CANDY

SeCond&amp;
SyCAmore

'

2 7

Middleport Amateur Gardners met Wedi"'WY evening at
tbe borne of Mrs. Qw-les
G"tiD, Frmt St., MiddlepiJrt,

A half million telephone
workers remained off their jobs,
in the second&lt; day of a strike
against the American Telephone and Telegraph CO.
(ATI&lt;T) and no negotiations
were scheduled,
Strikes also continued today
in the copper, shipping, telegraph and farm equipment
ind118tries. And complicating
the labor scene were contract
talks involving 350,000 steel
workers and 650,000 postal
workers In Washington.
Union Pacific and the South·

OSLO (UPI)-Jim Ryun of
Wichita, Kan., who finished last
uia mile race In Stockholm last
week, placed third in the 1100
meters race Wednesday night
in an international' track and
field meet at Bislett Stadium.
Ryun, with a clocking of

ern Railway are the targets of calling

information or in
the UTU's walkout, but the operator assisted caDs.
union also wants to strike the Scattered incidents of viChicago &amp; North Western olence and vandalism OCCUI'l'td.
Railway. Whether they will be
able to strike against the
C&amp;NW depends on a court
hearing today in Chicago on an
injunction issued by a federal
judge preventing the strike
until July 23.
As a result of the lhreate"'t4
strike, the railroads announced
Wednesday they would impose
the new work rules on aU
railroa~ not hit by the strike,
would fire thousands of UTU
members and paychecks would
suffer tremendous cuts.

lb.

95c;

SKINL£SS WIENERS ........... ~. 2 lb. 1.19
BACON, Dart Sliced....... ;.... 2 lb. 1.09

EGGS

PULLET

MEDIUM

3 doz. 69'

3 doz. 1.00
Betsy Ross

McCoy's Grade A
SEDANS OKAY
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI )-Sports sedans from the
Grand American division of the
National Association for Stock
Car AUto Racing (NASCAR)
will be anowed to C&lt;Bnpete in
the nine remaining grand
national short-track races this
season.
The ruling clears the way for
MustaDg, Javelins, Carnaros,
Firebirds, Barracudas and other "ponies" to race against the
big grand national cars on.
tracks under a mile long.·

-

I : 49.6, finished behind Tom
von Ruden of the United States
and Chris Fisher of Austria,
who won with a time of 1:47.0.

MILK
gal

99C

BREAD
5 lvs. 1.00

The Best! Lean

GROUND

DiUCK

~- 89~

Largest Selection of Dinner Wines
and Cold 6% Beer. Carry Out Only.

·TOMATOES, home oown 3 lb. 1.00

Dan Meadows Comments:

The mass walkout by 500,000

Communications Workers of
America Wedneaday morning
did little to ~t .normal
telephone servtce, With the
exception of delays when

centered w!lll an arrangement
of pelunlas with greenery. Jean
Moore preaided at a coffee
service and Roae Reynolds -

assistant hostess. Guests were
Jean Am Bradl1ury, Marine
Philson, Kay RaU and Mary
Webster.

Sorry!
For Any

lnconuenience
We Cause You
During This Time.

charter member, resigned
aetive status willl regret and
became 8!1 honorary memhM.
Oilier honorary manben are
Junlta Bachtel and Francis
Klein.
Tile •me4•uent table was

For Bearing With Us
While We Are • • •

MPUu DoDar Gate
First prize fight with a million-dollar gate was the Jack
Dempsey-George Carpentier
cbampionabip heavywei~t
fight held at Jersey C1ty,
N.J., July 2, 1921. Dempsey
won by a knockout In tbe 4th
round.

Please, Be Patient!

SKIN CLEANSER
Reg. 138
16 ounce
ONLY

CHOICE

We- Will Have Oti.e Of The Finest Drug Stores _
In This Area ••• Remodeled Completely!
•

1.97

"

'

~hannacists

to Serve You!

Swabby Jeans are right on. Snap or
button front. Tunnel or patch pockets.
They look good and they work, toe). Flare
bottoms, -high waistband. Available in
smashil)g solids.

rnmry

•

OPEN DAILY 8:00
t

dispute.

RYUN THIRD

ROUND
STEAK

,USDA

can

4 Registered

•

·By uaited Prell 1111er1111Uoaal
Ignoring threats of 1ll8SI
firings and tremendous pay
cuis, the 180,QOO.member United
Transportation Union today
made plans to add to the
nation's growing picket lines by
striking at least 'two railroads
Friday over a work rule

days, depending upon the
weather.
uWhen the disease is already
prevalent in a field,'' said
Ellett, "widespread development during the next three to
four weeks might essentiaUy
wipe out production in that
field.
"If it is necessary to begin a
spray program at this time,
four Ill sb: sprays at a cost of $20
to $30 may be needed,'' be said.
"From our experiences last
year, we know the disease can
reach severe proportions in a
short time and fanners should
check their fields closely,
preferably twice a week during
the next few weeks, in order to
make a decision on spraying.

m· ·T rouble

1f memba'l ~roll
willl recGilecUona of events
. . the happenings In . the
dub's crganllation 31 YMI'8
ago. Elizabet.h Burkett was
I*VIIiiiD chairman and Jean
Moore 1M kled.
PlaDs for the ftower show at
tbe Meigs c.unty Fair Wd'1!
clscossed and a n••li'lt of the
revised by-la'Wlll was heard, but
11111 voted upon. Mrs. Gukill, a

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN AND SEE US!

year, Ellett added, infection is
as severe on upper leaves as
lower with the change in pattern
probably related to the source
of initial inoculwn . .
EJ:perience in controlling the
blight by spraying is very
limited, however, Ellett said be
believed thorough spray
coverage at critical times could
protect corn plants from excesaive damage.
He suggested the following
guidellnes for spraying:
-Where lower leaves are not
severely infected, ~be first
spray should be applied wben
the number of lesions on the top
four or five leaves is between 20
and 30.
-II lower leaves are
uniformly heavily infected, the
first spray should be applied as
SOOil as any lesions are noted on
the top leaves.
-The Interval between
sprays should be no more than
seven days up to the lime the
plants are in tassel and aU
leaves fully expanded. After
this, time intervlll between
sprays may be from seven to 14

tance"- the structure between
the driver and the vehicle's
front.
"The Chevrolet and the
Dodge bus wagons bave onl}
slightly more than a foot and a
haH of collapse distance," the
article said. "The Ford bas less
than a foot and the VW a scant
balf fool"
Volkswagen disputed the finding. "Our engineers, using test
data compiled from scores of
barrier crash tests, conducted
in accordance with federal
standards, have designed into
our vehicle's structure energy
absorbing elements to protect
occupants in frontal collisions,"
Volkswagen said in a state-

.-.A.~

Mrs. Gaskill Hosts Garden Club

•

NEWOOMERS JO
OUR COMMUNITY

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Evidence of com leaf blight
continued to appear in more
Ohio COWlties during the past
several weeks with the disease,
as of last Monday, reported on
plantSln 58 coimties, C. Wayne
Ellett,
extension
plant
pathologist at Ohio State
Universiiy rep«ted today.
"So far," Ellett said, "the
diseaiM' does not appear to be
having much effect on Ohio
overaU com crop but a few
fields, particularly In soulbern
Ohio, are moderately to
severely affected.
'"Jbese fields,'".: he added,
"haVe been found in areas
where the initial lnocumum
apparently originated from
stored crib corn, hog-feeding
operations, corn shelling
operations, volunteer corn
plants or In fields under
minimum tillage,"
Initial development of the
blight this year is diHerent than
last year. Last year lower
leaves were infected first, and
lesions moved up the plant as
the lower leaves died. This

ODe

pas tired of those who teU me
when I should lie and how I
should lie. And very soon after
that, I made my decision."
Ellsberg, indicted by a
federal grand jury In Los
Angeles for illegaUy releasing
the secret documents, said be
was not aware of breaking the
law.
·
" If I bave broken the law,''
he said, "I'll go to prison for it.
But there's been a lo! of_lawbreaking over the past 25

e

Blight Gaining Ground Jr~;:=:~~:~r:.~

PHISOHE

69

·ONLY

He said Resor bad dropped
the charges on behalf of the
Jobnson administration,. over
the protests of the commander
of troops in Vretnam, Gen.
creighton Abrams.
The eight Green Berets never
were court-martlaled for sUegedly executing a suspected
Vietnamesedouble-agent.
"Then I started thinking,''
Ellsberg said, "This is the
system I spent 15 years serving

occupants adequately in a frmtend crash is marginal, in CU's
view_
"Protection In the Ford and,
the VW is so grossly inadequate
that we rated these two buses
not acceptable. Further, the
Ford's brakes were so poor that

buses."

~
- b~~~~dd=~ Two • Railroad
. .s
can't be part of that anymore. I

(ABC).

of such vehicles," the article
said. "The . ability · of the
Chevrolet and Dodge to protect

·

~~· 40•

DR ISTAN

Regular 3.50
24 Ounce .

··

Rep«ta tnagazine, said Dodge
and Cbevrolet bus wagoos
provide '"marginal" protection
of passengers in a front end
crash.
"Don't buy one unless you
absolutely need aU the load
capacity they offer," the article
said of bus wagons.
"CU (Coosumen Union) baa
grave doubts about the safety

on the "Dick Cavett Show"

Ayds
~ -

WASHINGTON (UPIH=on~ Union laid today ill
testa of bul-type station wagons
turned up lllfety-chortcomlngs
lnclud1ng "~ inadequate"
cruh protecilon In Volkswagen
and Ford models.
1be report, re1eued to
· newsmen in advance of its
scheduled publication In the
August issue of Consumer

NEW YORK (UPl)-Daniel
Elfsberg, one-lime Pentagm
ban turned antiwar activist,
decided to release the Defense
De(!.ll'lment study oo the
Vietnam War to the press
shortly after the Army dl'Gpped
murder charges against eight
Green Berets in 191i9.
"I was lying in bed reading
the paper when I saw the
'ww'line: 'Green Beret Case
Charges Dropped,"' Ellsberg
said Tuesday. "--- And very
50111 after that I made my

REXALL
Reg. 89'
24 Size

30 Free With 100
,

wouid

~
&amp; MAY FllVIIR

50 TABS

Formula With Minerals

' '

87$

Reg: 2.59

30 TABS

Reg. 7.79

- ,A IIINI10I iDeraa in the IDtall!iNes lax 111 flanclal insli111tlaas and clealen in stoeb aDd bonds
!bing debate, the Hoaae beat baciiiM!M'nciments which
bave:
-Retained the slate tu omlllocband bonds, and shunted fill
miiJjm wurtb of pa sw1 U.n11e tu revenues to local gov-

81NU8 CONGIIBTION

DI·GEL

TABLETS

(Coam-1 fnm Plge I) ·
·CII etapaiatlan!l Oftr a r-.,elr~.
-A !l"e-'mlllmill mere- in tbe tu 111 Obio-bued Insurance

a f&lt;nner Pentagon and State Deparllnent
adviser, said "a great deal bad
contributed" to his decisioo Ill
make public: the 47-wlume
study rommissi'llled by fUi mer
Secretary of Defense Rllbert s_
McNamara. But the final straw
was the announcemeot that
then-Secretary of the Army,
Stanley Resor, was dnljiPing
the charges against the Green
Berets, aUegedly because a
trial would meal too much
'Information cmcemlng the
'tentfal liltelllgeoce Agency
(CIA).
"I a- Ibis was
untrue," Ellsberg said In a
television interview. "Tbe
White Bouse had made the
decision."
EIJsberg made his remarb

ment.
rers had no ~te cCJmATransportation Deparlment menl
· , .
spokesman said federal crash CU said the models It tested l
standai-ds cover' the steering were the Chevrolet Beauvllle
we judged tb&amp;t vehicle not mechanism, not fronblf collapse Sportvan, Dodge Royal Spartaman, Ford Chateau Club Wagm
acceptable on those grounds, distance .
The
other
three
manufactu"
and
Volkswagen station wagm.
too: And the VW has so much
difficulty keeping up · with
highway traffic as to present a
bazard not only to.its occupants
but Ill occupants of vehicles
that share the road with it.
"We also judged that under
some conditions letbal exhaust
fumes could seep Into the
passenger compartments of the
Dodge, the Ford and the VW
115 W. MAIN
POMEROY

CU Says Some Wagons Unsafe

.House Package

··--·.... .....

COL.08

ONLY

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).

Termite Control Concentrate. Adu ,., Arab hosi.-end
spray Appll~afor and you' re ready to completely termiteproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared to the cost of calling in a professional exferml~ator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
f•vor. Prl.-,. mAv vary sliqhtly,

Reg. 1.50

Reg. 59'-13 oz.

Member Federal Reserve System

AND SAY~ 'JOO OR MORE

EYE DROPS

HAIR SPRAY

The Farmers Bank
and Savi~JS ,.Co~

lo( .

25 TABLETS ONLY

ONLY

BRITE SET

POMEROY, 0.

.

Alka-Seltzer

lka Seltz£&gt;!'

Regular 1.49
ONLY

certain 11111'1 from your Checking lo 8altlnga
Account_, monlh. Why not 11411 now?

-·

and Sunday Sale! !

Home Permanent

You almply authorize IIIIo trw~lllar a

Pomeroy

~aturday

I

r

I .

.·

U-'lben.II;JS 'I wi,IM'*IJact-l'ltlwtv),O., Julyl5,1971 ·

G1een Beret Case
Turned Ellsberg

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

FAST

and we1111Mdle your-lng lor you.

Court St.

202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE
992-3498

161 2•. 111 1, a, 15, 22, st

GOESSLER
------ -JeweiiJ Store

Also folding aluminuni chairs and
chaise lounges at special prices.
::
:.: :: :· .. ::: _:: .: :· :: .-. : ·:-.

Limit

ta~e ~:d

•

$}386

Reserved To

A ply
uic -drying T ·4·l.
Feef it
h
to check itch ,
burning in MINUTES . In 3 to 5
days, infected skin sloughs off .
Watch HEALTHY skin replace
iff If not delighted IN ONE
HOUR , your 59c back at any
drug counter . NOW at NELSON
DRUG STORE; SWISHER &amp;
LOHSE DRUGS .

Sign up for our Aulomlllc Saving~ Plan

14.81

Right Is

3.3 ounce

ATHLETE{S flOT
HOW TO TRE T IT-

Reg.
.•

BE;N,FRANKUN·

Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

Thursday, Friday,

Bernard v . Fultz
Webster and Fultz
Attorneys tor Plaintiff
P. 0 . Box 123
Pomeroy, Ohio •5769

A!! Carved

CERTIFIED WELDER

to underprocess, as o_ver-

Records.
The appraised value of the
real estate Is $3,,.00 .00. Terms of
sale : Cash on day of sale .
Robert C. Hartenbach
Sheriff of Meigs County

--~~~lltl&gt;$27.50

.

followed in order ·to kill the
bacteria in the food. If bacteria
is not rendered inactive or food
sterilized by proper amount of
heat, the food will spoil.
. DOES IT INJURE vegetables
to overprocess them? It is
bet.ter to overprocess them than

Page 965, Meigs County Deed

H~ tzi.IO

Portable 20-in. fan with
easy-switch 3 speed
dial. Circulates 5000
CFM.
•

1

271

u:TO l fP.M•• SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P:M. &amp;5 TO 9 P.M~
:

'

~l

••

•

•

lltrt• ••• An••
I

•

�- - ,, '

"

11-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pimeroy, 0., JUly 15,1971

processing will do little hann, Be sure and h~ve your checked. CaU tlie Exte~on
bill underiirocessing may result - pressure canner gauge Office at 992-3895 lor details.
in spoilage.
MUST CANNED vegetables
be boiled before tasting or·using? Yes, they must be boiloid
or heated at · boiling temperature for 10 to 15 minutes by
baking, steaming or cooking in
Garden
Sets.
Lawn
some manner. The 10 to 15
Mowers• Boats, Parasotes •
minutes may be-counted in the
Badminton, Pitch Games.
cooking·time needed to prepare ·
Flying Saucers, Crochet
the vegetable for serving.
Sets, etc.
WHEN BOILING home
canned vegetables 10 to 15
SWIM TOYS -' Balls, Rings, Wading Pools,
minutes in an open ketUe before
·Everything For Summer Fun. PICNI·C
serving them, must additional
SUPPLIES- Plates. Napkins. Forks, Spoons,
water be added to them? Only if
Table Cloths, Cups. Jugs and Ice Chests,
needed for the boiling. Place the
Picnic Grills, Sun Glasses and other
vegetable and the Uquid in
necessities.
which it was canned in the open
Beige Steel Case
kettle and boil both for the 10 to
15 minutes.

Canning uestiotls Answered

SUMMER
TOYS

b-

~

~

By DEBORAH CONKLIN
Ext Ageal, Home Econ.
Canning questions seemingly
come by the hundreds,
especially at this season. Here
are a few that you too may have
wondered about.
WHY THE RULE ... "Two
hours from the garden to the
jar?"Freshvegetablesproduce
a higher quality product with a
greater retention 'of vitamins
and minerals.
DID YOU SAY I could
. use a
pressure sauce pan for canning
vegetables? It is recommended
that vegetables be processed In
a large J)ressure canner. It is
poulbie, however, to use p
pressure sauce pan if it is
equipped with a · gauge or
weights, suitable to accurately
indicate the desired ternperature. Most authorities
recunmeud adding 20 minutes
to pressure canner time for pint
jars to make up for the quick
cllmli In temperatUre at the

the enzymes and to destroy Packing corn too tightly with
every SJlOilage organism. This insufficient liquid will also
is why use of a pressure canner c~use this carmellzation and
is recommended.
browning.
CAN IODIZED SALT be used_ IS IT SAF~ to use canned
to season jars of vegetables in food if the liquid Is cloudy?
canning? Yes, a small amount Cloudy liquid may ~ a sign of
of iodine in no way affects the spoilage. However, 1t may be
canned vegetables.
caused by the minerals in bard
SHOULD ALL vegetables be Wjller, or by the starch from
blanched or pre-cooked before overripe vegetables. If the
canning? No, some vegetables liquid is cloudy, boil the food .
should be blanched or pre- Do not taste or use any food that
cooked while others ~ be foams during heating or has an
packed. raw .· Consult your off odor.
canning bulletin.
IS IT SAFE to can foods
WHAT CAUSES CORN to without salt? Yes. Salt ~ used
turn brown during processing? for flavor only and 18 .~ot
This most often occurs when too necessary for safe processmg.
high a temperature is used. The WHAT IS "flat sour?" Flathigh temperature causes a sour is the most common type of
carmelization of the sugar in spoilage in canned ve~etabl_es .
the corn. It may also be caused It is caused by bacteria which
by some chemical such as iron gives food an unpleasan_t,
in the water used in canning. sourish flavor. Flat-sour 1s
Some varieties turn brown avoided ~y the n;;e of c~t
more readily than others. methods m selecting, handling,

.

preparing, packing, processing
and cooling foods.
WHAT CAUSES green
.vegetables to lose or change
from their bright green color?
Vegetables may lose their
bright green color because of a
breakdown of the chlorophyU,
the green coloring matter in
plants. This is caused by
beating. If green vegetables
turn brown, they ani overcooked or are too mature for
canning.
WHY IS IT MORE diHicult to
can vegetables than to · can
fniit? Because vegetables are
low-acid foods In which heat
resistant bacteria lire hard to
kill.
WHY
MUST
MOST
vegetables be processed !linger
lhari is l)ecessary to make them
tender? The processing time
which cooks some vegetables
longer than they are cooked for
ilrunedlate table use, must be

=-~:~==~;~
Summer Institute In Full SWing
the finish. Follow the canmng
.
.
instructions given by the "Whether the tbings we are
manufacturer of the pan you studying are good or bad enuae.
. vironmentally is another
WHAT _ABOUT cannmg question. Wbat we are trying to
vegetables m hot water. bath or cletennine Is the environmental
tbe oven? Tbe answer 18 no. A Impact of man's activity in
few people still can this way b~t GaUia County."
It is NOT SAFE. For this Thespeaker,GaryMcKenzie,
reuon, hot water bath and oven a faculty member from The
canning of vegetab~. cannot be Ohio Stale University, is one of
recunmended. In au-, water, four instructors and 26 par·
PJid soU, at aU times, there w:e ticlpantsspendingfourweeksat
molds, yeaslll, and bacterJa Rio -Grande College this sumwhich cause food spoilage. mer during a Summer Institute
Fresh vegetables also contain in Environmental Science. The
enzymes that may cause un- ll'ograDl Is funded by the
desirable changes )n color, NatiCIUII Science Foundatim
fiavor, and texture. When (NSF), me of many programs
vegetables are ~· heat funded annually by the NSF but
must penetrate each piece of the first such program In enfood In the jar sufficien~y to viromnental science.
stop or slow down the action of Twenty-six participants,
McKenzie said, are engaged In
: - - - - - - - - - , field and laboratory work
throughout Gallla County. The
group Is ccmposed of junior

lEGAl NOnCE
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of Sale
duly Issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, In a case of the

Trl

County

Bonk, Coolville,

Ohio, Plaintiff, vs. Woodrow
Schaffer and Kathryn Scti•trer,
292 Candler Strett, Atlanta,

Georgia, et al., upon a judgment
thereon rendered, and being
Can No. U,BOl in said Court, 1
will offer at public sale, at the
front door of the courthouse in
the Village of Pomeroy , Meigs
CountY, Ohio, on the 2_.1h day ot

July ,

1971, al II :00 O' Clock

high scbool and high scbool
teachers with a strong
background in biology and
earlll science.
McKenzie said that the group
was divided into independent
research teams of three or les8
andgivenacboiceof15topics.
Among the cboices were a
reduction plant, a water
treatment plant, a sewage
treatment plant, Tycoon Lake,
strip mines, Umestone quarry, a
sanitary landfill and a rural
water supply and waste
disposal system for mobile
bomes.
"We
looking at various
,environmental aspeclll of the
county," McKemie said, "and
are trying to ascertain man's
Impact on the area. After we
study a variety of activities
witlrln the county, we will know
wbat the impact in a number of
related fields is.
"We CIIDiot aay that one
activity is good or bad,"
McKenzie concluded, ''until we
have analyzed our findings and
drawn some scientific conclusloos."
One of the researchers is
studying a waste disposal
system for Gallipolis, that
would recycle the waste as
fertilizer. The method has been
discussed in a number of
scientific
and
national
magazines recenUy, and the
research is trying to de tennille
the feasibility of such a
ll'ogram in Gallipolis.
At the end of the study and

are

A .M·.• the following lands and
tenements, to-wit :
Situate in Olive Township, in
Fraction 27, Town •· Range 11.
Beginning in the middle of
County Road No. 9, which point
is also on the south line of
Fraction No . 27, Town_., Range
11 ; therce northwesterly 842
feet along Beam Road , wh ich
road Is also known as Bridle
Path Ro.ed, to a stake In *h.e
road; thence due east 108 feet to
a
post ;
thence
in
a
southeasterly direction parallel
with Beam Road , 652 feet to a
post; thence west 20 feet to a
.post; thence in a southeuterly
direction parallel with Beam
. Road , 190 feet to the south line
•of Fraction 27, to a point in the
middle ot the road; thence west
along the' middle of the road and
traction line, 88 feet to the place
ot beginning, containing 87,136
feet , more or less.
. ·
Deed Reference : VoL 2.. 0.

BREEZE BOX FAN

DEBBIE CONKLIN

field experience . in Gallia
County, . a nwnber of reports
will be released by the independent groups and- circulated 111 city and county of.
ficialB.
Following four weeks in a
rural environment, the group
will lake a one-week field trip
through North Carolina and
Kentucky, returning to Rio
Grande COllege June 23 for one
night. The last three weeks of
the Summer Institute will be
spent in Columbus, studying the
urban environment and comparing it to a rural enviromnent.
Reports on the one-week field
trip and the Columbus-area
study will also be released at
the end of the Institute.
Project director for the
Summer Institute on Envlronmental Science is Dr.
Victor Mayer, a member of the
department of mathematics
and science education. Tbe four
instructors at the Institute are
McKenzie, John Cauzan, a
faculty member of Geneva
College, New York, and two
OSU graduate students, Ben
Bohl and Ed Shay.

WEDDING

RINGS

.Portable EauiDment

Quantities

Cepacol
Reg. s1.29

Soft &amp; Dri
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Regular 1.00

ONLY

58~.._
'

•
•

VII IEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

lh oz.

ONLY

Anti· Gas
Antacid

,
'

"

•

'
1

.

'

&amp;iiddil.

- Graated omo..a credits on their slate Income tu for In·
oome tae. paid to local gaoalWdlts- Raised an additimal • mal!jm a year tlrough closing
sales tu eSemptlaas (llr t-•h l!iiS and industry.
l!:!esee of tbe biD fram. the WaJI lll1il Jleans Onnmittee
Wel1 ht IIOOil f«GJ wed two days of twSbed negotlatlolia belnm tbe l•aders fnm both parties.
1be biB- nubed oat of cqnmjltee In two minutes on a roll
can directm b)' Rep. E.W. ta"' •1, l:l-Jefferaon, committee
dwinnan, wbo lkiiiiiEd IISide tile fnmtlc abjections of Rep.
laJ!W Tborpe, R-Aitaince, bead of a CGiiWii oative Republican
~ ...._.li'W a flat rate Dune tu.
''l'wo Deft!' leeD IIIICb ohawnigans In 1~ )'MI'8 in the Gen·
eral AS! •lhQ-,'' said 'Dimpe, wbo later spearheaded the SUC•
Cl!811fulaUmlpttorelaln811lestaxe21Djltimsforbusinesa.

Reg. 75'

ONLY

MYADEC
High Potency Vitamin
I

,-ews."

TOP KEGMAN
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)-Johnny
Petraglia of Brooklyn, N.Y.,
continued this weef&lt;· as the
leader in the official money
standings of the . Professional
Bowlen Association.
Petraglia, who has competed
in %1 tournaments, leads the top
20 PBA bowlers with earnings
of $'12,338.

o;..-ed
6 Styles To

159

C-Fn1m

Bnided ·rt,~an

Adult Glycerin
Suppositories

RUNNERS
llaayc:.hn
SalePllted

-

15.55 _.

DINETIE
DWRS

. lfffSE
fURL ...... .
R-EDUCING PLAN CANDY

SeCond&amp;
SyCAmore

'

2 7

Middleport Amateur Gardners met Wedi"'WY evening at
tbe borne of Mrs. Qw-les
G"tiD, Frmt St., MiddlepiJrt,

A half million telephone
workers remained off their jobs,
in the second&lt; day of a strike
against the American Telephone and Telegraph CO.
(ATI&lt;T) and no negotiations
were scheduled,
Strikes also continued today
in the copper, shipping, telegraph and farm equipment
ind118tries. And complicating
the labor scene were contract
talks involving 350,000 steel
workers and 650,000 postal
workers In Washington.
Union Pacific and the South·

OSLO (UPI)-Jim Ryun of
Wichita, Kan., who finished last
uia mile race In Stockholm last
week, placed third in the 1100
meters race Wednesday night
in an international' track and
field meet at Bislett Stadium.
Ryun, with a clocking of

ern Railway are the targets of calling

information or in
the UTU's walkout, but the operator assisted caDs.
union also wants to strike the Scattered incidents of viChicago &amp; North Western olence and vandalism OCCUI'l'td.
Railway. Whether they will be
able to strike against the
C&amp;NW depends on a court
hearing today in Chicago on an
injunction issued by a federal
judge preventing the strike
until July 23.
As a result of the lhreate"'t4
strike, the railroads announced
Wednesday they would impose
the new work rules on aU
railroa~ not hit by the strike,
would fire thousands of UTU
members and paychecks would
suffer tremendous cuts.

lb.

95c;

SKINL£SS WIENERS ........... ~. 2 lb. 1.19
BACON, Dart Sliced....... ;.... 2 lb. 1.09

EGGS

PULLET

MEDIUM

3 doz. 69'

3 doz. 1.00
Betsy Ross

McCoy's Grade A
SEDANS OKAY
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI )-Sports sedans from the
Grand American division of the
National Association for Stock
Car AUto Racing (NASCAR)
will be anowed to C&lt;Bnpete in
the nine remaining grand
national short-track races this
season.
The ruling clears the way for
MustaDg, Javelins, Carnaros,
Firebirds, Barracudas and other "ponies" to race against the
big grand national cars on.
tracks under a mile long.·

-

I : 49.6, finished behind Tom
von Ruden of the United States
and Chris Fisher of Austria,
who won with a time of 1:47.0.

MILK
gal

99C

BREAD
5 lvs. 1.00

The Best! Lean

GROUND

DiUCK

~- 89~

Largest Selection of Dinner Wines
and Cold 6% Beer. Carry Out Only.

·TOMATOES, home oown 3 lb. 1.00

Dan Meadows Comments:

The mass walkout by 500,000

Communications Workers of
America Wedneaday morning
did little to ~t .normal
telephone servtce, With the
exception of delays when

centered w!lll an arrangement
of pelunlas with greenery. Jean
Moore preaided at a coffee
service and Roae Reynolds -

assistant hostess. Guests were
Jean Am Bradl1ury, Marine
Philson, Kay RaU and Mary
Webster.

Sorry!
For Any

lnconuenience
We Cause You
During This Time.

charter member, resigned
aetive status willl regret and
became 8!1 honorary memhM.
Oilier honorary manben are
Junlta Bachtel and Francis
Klein.
Tile •me4•uent table was

For Bearing With Us
While We Are • • •

MPUu DoDar Gate
First prize fight with a million-dollar gate was the Jack
Dempsey-George Carpentier
cbampionabip heavywei~t
fight held at Jersey C1ty,
N.J., July 2, 1921. Dempsey
won by a knockout In tbe 4th
round.

Please, Be Patient!

SKIN CLEANSER
Reg. 138
16 ounce
ONLY

CHOICE

We- Will Have Oti.e Of The Finest Drug Stores _
In This Area ••• Remodeled Completely!
•

1.97

"

'

~hannacists

to Serve You!

Swabby Jeans are right on. Snap or
button front. Tunnel or patch pockets.
They look good and they work, toe). Flare
bottoms, -high waistband. Available in
smashil)g solids.

rnmry

•

OPEN DAILY 8:00
t

dispute.

RYUN THIRD

ROUND
STEAK

,USDA

can

4 Registered

•

·By uaited Prell 1111er1111Uoaal
Ignoring threats of 1ll8SI
firings and tremendous pay
cuis, the 180,QOO.member United
Transportation Union today
made plans to add to the
nation's growing picket lines by
striking at least 'two railroads
Friday over a work rule

days, depending upon the
weather.
uWhen the disease is already
prevalent in a field,'' said
Ellett, "widespread development during the next three to
four weeks might essentiaUy
wipe out production in that
field.
"If it is necessary to begin a
spray program at this time,
four Ill sb: sprays at a cost of $20
to $30 may be needed,'' be said.
"From our experiences last
year, we know the disease can
reach severe proportions in a
short time and fanners should
check their fields closely,
preferably twice a week during
the next few weeks, in order to
make a decision on spraying.

m· ·T rouble

1f memba'l ~roll
willl recGilecUona of events
. . the happenings In . the
dub's crganllation 31 YMI'8
ago. Elizabet.h Burkett was
I*VIIiiiD chairman and Jean
Moore 1M kled.
PlaDs for the ftower show at
tbe Meigs c.unty Fair Wd'1!
clscossed and a n••li'lt of the
revised by-la'Wlll was heard, but
11111 voted upon. Mrs. Gukill, a

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN AND SEE US!

year, Ellett added, infection is
as severe on upper leaves as
lower with the change in pattern
probably related to the source
of initial inoculwn . .
EJ:perience in controlling the
blight by spraying is very
limited, however, Ellett said be
believed thorough spray
coverage at critical times could
protect corn plants from excesaive damage.
He suggested the following
guidellnes for spraying:
-Where lower leaves are not
severely infected, ~be first
spray should be applied wben
the number of lesions on the top
four or five leaves is between 20
and 30.
-II lower leaves are
uniformly heavily infected, the
first spray should be applied as
SOOil as any lesions are noted on
the top leaves.
-The Interval between
sprays should be no more than
seven days up to the lime the
plants are in tassel and aU
leaves fully expanded. After
this, time intervlll between
sprays may be from seven to 14

tance"- the structure between
the driver and the vehicle's
front.
"The Chevrolet and the
Dodge bus wagons bave onl}
slightly more than a foot and a
haH of collapse distance," the
article said. "The Ford bas less
than a foot and the VW a scant
balf fool"
Volkswagen disputed the finding. "Our engineers, using test
data compiled from scores of
barrier crash tests, conducted
in accordance with federal
standards, have designed into
our vehicle's structure energy
absorbing elements to protect
occupants in frontal collisions,"
Volkswagen said in a state-

.-.A.~

Mrs. Gaskill Hosts Garden Club

•

NEWOOMERS JO
OUR COMMUNITY

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Evidence of com leaf blight
continued to appear in more
Ohio COWlties during the past
several weeks with the disease,
as of last Monday, reported on
plantSln 58 coimties, C. Wayne
Ellett,
extension
plant
pathologist at Ohio State
Universiiy rep«ted today.
"So far," Ellett said, "the
diseaiM' does not appear to be
having much effect on Ohio
overaU com crop but a few
fields, particularly In soulbern
Ohio, are moderately to
severely affected.
'"Jbese fields,'".: he added,
"haVe been found in areas
where the initial lnocumum
apparently originated from
stored crib corn, hog-feeding
operations, corn shelling
operations, volunteer corn
plants or In fields under
minimum tillage,"
Initial development of the
blight this year is diHerent than
last year. Last year lower
leaves were infected first, and
lesions moved up the plant as
the lower leaves died. This

ODe

pas tired of those who teU me
when I should lie and how I
should lie. And very soon after
that, I made my decision."
Ellsberg, indicted by a
federal grand jury In Los
Angeles for illegaUy releasing
the secret documents, said be
was not aware of breaking the
law.
·
" If I bave broken the law,''
he said, "I'll go to prison for it.
But there's been a lo! of_lawbreaking over the past 25

e

Blight Gaining Ground Jr~;:=:~~:~r:.~

PHISOHE

69

·ONLY

He said Resor bad dropped
the charges on behalf of the
Jobnson administration,. over
the protests of the commander
of troops in Vretnam, Gen.
creighton Abrams.
The eight Green Berets never
were court-martlaled for sUegedly executing a suspected
Vietnamesedouble-agent.
"Then I started thinking,''
Ellsberg said, "This is the
system I spent 15 years serving

occupants adequately in a frmtend crash is marginal, in CU's
view_
"Protection In the Ford and,
the VW is so grossly inadequate
that we rated these two buses
not acceptable. Further, the
Ford's brakes were so poor that

buses."

~
- b~~~~dd=~ Two • Railroad
. .s
can't be part of that anymore. I

(ABC).

of such vehicles," the article
said. "The . ability · of the
Chevrolet and Dodge to protect

·

~~· 40•

DR ISTAN

Regular 3.50
24 Ounce .

··

Rep«ta tnagazine, said Dodge
and Cbevrolet bus wagoos
provide '"marginal" protection
of passengers in a front end
crash.
"Don't buy one unless you
absolutely need aU the load
capacity they offer," the article
said of bus wagons.
"CU (Coosumen Union) baa
grave doubts about the safety

on the "Dick Cavett Show"

Ayds
~ -

WASHINGTON (UPIH=on~ Union laid today ill
testa of bul-type station wagons
turned up lllfety-chortcomlngs
lnclud1ng "~ inadequate"
cruh protecilon In Volkswagen
and Ford models.
1be report, re1eued to
· newsmen in advance of its
scheduled publication In the
August issue of Consumer

NEW YORK (UPl)-Daniel
Elfsberg, one-lime Pentagm
ban turned antiwar activist,
decided to release the Defense
De(!.ll'lment study oo the
Vietnam War to the press
shortly after the Army dl'Gpped
murder charges against eight
Green Berets in 191i9.
"I was lying in bed reading
the paper when I saw the
'ww'line: 'Green Beret Case
Charges Dropped,"' Ellsberg
said Tuesday. "--- And very
50111 after that I made my

REXALL
Reg. 89'
24 Size

30 Free With 100
,

wouid

~
&amp; MAY FllVIIR

50 TABS

Formula With Minerals

' '

87$

Reg: 2.59

30 TABS

Reg. 7.79

- ,A IIINI10I iDeraa in the IDtall!iNes lax 111 flanclal insli111tlaas and clealen in stoeb aDd bonds
!bing debate, the Hoaae beat baciiiM!M'nciments which
bave:
-Retained the slate tu omlllocband bonds, and shunted fill
miiJjm wurtb of pa sw1 U.n11e tu revenues to local gov-

81NU8 CONGIIBTION

DI·GEL

TABLETS

(Coam-1 fnm Plge I) ·
·CII etapaiatlan!l Oftr a r-.,elr~.
-A !l"e-'mlllmill mere- in tbe tu 111 Obio-bued Insurance

a f&lt;nner Pentagon and State Deparllnent
adviser, said "a great deal bad
contributed" to his decisioo Ill
make public: the 47-wlume
study rommissi'llled by fUi mer
Secretary of Defense Rllbert s_
McNamara. But the final straw
was the announcemeot that
then-Secretary of the Army,
Stanley Resor, was dnljiPing
the charges against the Green
Berets, aUegedly because a
trial would meal too much
'Information cmcemlng the
'tentfal liltelllgeoce Agency
(CIA).
"I a- Ibis was
untrue," Ellsberg said In a
television interview. "Tbe
White Bouse had made the
decision."
EIJsberg made his remarb

ment.
rers had no ~te cCJmATransportation Deparlment menl
· , .
spokesman said federal crash CU said the models It tested l
standai-ds cover' the steering were the Chevrolet Beauvllle
we judged tb&amp;t vehicle not mechanism, not fronblf collapse Sportvan, Dodge Royal Spartaman, Ford Chateau Club Wagm
acceptable on those grounds, distance .
The
other
three
manufactu"
and
Volkswagen station wagm.
too: And the VW has so much
difficulty keeping up · with
highway traffic as to present a
bazard not only to.its occupants
but Ill occupants of vehicles
that share the road with it.
"We also judged that under
some conditions letbal exhaust
fumes could seep Into the
passenger compartments of the
Dodge, the Ford and the VW
115 W. MAIN
POMEROY

CU Says Some Wagons Unsafe

.House Package

··--·.... .....

COL.08

ONLY

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).

Termite Control Concentrate. Adu ,., Arab hosi.-end
spray Appll~afor and you' re ready to completely termiteproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared to the cost of calling in a professional exferml~ator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
f•vor. Prl.-,. mAv vary sliqhtly,

Reg. 1.50

Reg. 59'-13 oz.

Member Federal Reserve System

AND SAY~ 'JOO OR MORE

EYE DROPS

HAIR SPRAY

The Farmers Bank
and Savi~JS ,.Co~

lo( .

25 TABLETS ONLY

ONLY

BRITE SET

POMEROY, 0.

.

Alka-Seltzer

lka Seltz£&gt;!'

Regular 1.49
ONLY

certain 11111'1 from your Checking lo 8altlnga
Account_, monlh. Why not 11411 now?

-·

and Sunday Sale! !

Home Permanent

You almply authorize IIIIo trw~lllar a

Pomeroy

~aturday

I

r

I .

.·

U-'lben.II;JS 'I wi,IM'*IJact-l'ltlwtv),O., Julyl5,1971 ·

G1een Beret Case
Turned Ellsberg

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

FAST

and we1111Mdle your-lng lor you.

Court St.

202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE
992-3498

161 2•. 111 1, a, 15, 22, st

GOESSLER
------ -JeweiiJ Store

Also folding aluminuni chairs and
chaise lounges at special prices.
::
:.: :: :· .. ::: _:: .: :· :: .-. : ·:-.

Limit

ta~e ~:d

•

$}386

Reserved To

A ply
uic -drying T ·4·l.
Feef it
h
to check itch ,
burning in MINUTES . In 3 to 5
days, infected skin sloughs off .
Watch HEALTHY skin replace
iff If not delighted IN ONE
HOUR , your 59c back at any
drug counter . NOW at NELSON
DRUG STORE; SWISHER &amp;
LOHSE DRUGS .

Sign up for our Aulomlllc Saving~ Plan

14.81

Right Is

3.3 ounce

ATHLETE{S flOT
HOW TO TRE T IT-

Reg.
.•

BE;N,FRANKUN·

Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

Thursday, Friday,

Bernard v . Fultz
Webster and Fultz
Attorneys tor Plaintiff
P. 0 . Box 123
Pomeroy, Ohio •5769

A!! Carved

CERTIFIED WELDER

to underprocess, as o_ver-

Records.
The appraised value of the
real estate Is $3,,.00 .00. Terms of
sale : Cash on day of sale .
Robert C. Hartenbach
Sheriff of Meigs County

--~~~lltl&gt;$27.50

.

followed in order ·to kill the
bacteria in the food. If bacteria
is not rendered inactive or food
sterilized by proper amount of
heat, the food will spoil.
. DOES IT INJURE vegetables
to overprocess them? It is
bet.ter to overprocess them than

Page 965, Meigs County Deed

H~ tzi.IO

Portable 20-in. fan with
easy-switch 3 speed
dial. Circulates 5000
CFM.
•

1

271

u:TO l fP.M•• SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P:M. &amp;5 TO 9 P.M~
:

'

~l

••

•

•

lltrt• ••• An••
I

•

�..

~~~· ----------------~~----~·~-----------------~~--------~----------------- 7--------------,-~~-.,--~--------------------~----~--~~-------~

-·,

J

....
·-

••
M-'ftle

Dally Sentinei,~O), 0., July 15, lf1J

!leiationsDirectorforStandard
QnCmlpanyofOhiowillbethe
teatured speaker at a joint
111 of 'lbe Legion and Its
~ Friday afternoon at
bP.e o'clock. Cleveland Mayor
¢ar1 Stokes will also extend
p-eelings 1o the convention
!!eleKates.
:; A majcr function of the
pventlon Is the electioil ol new
llfate Officers &amp;lnday morning.
.!fhe offices of state ccanmander
~nd first vice coiDIWinder
•
-

.:e-

.
aPPear a formality, since IIley
have no known opposition.
However, the offices of state
seco11d vice COIIliD8Dder and
lnasurer will hsve at least two
men seeking each post
Veterans Administration
officials will meet with Legion
veterans affairs chsinnen and
service officers Friday and
include Michael L. Halloran,
Manager of the Cleveland
Regilll1lll VA Office.
Field competition among

A IIJge cmomtim parade,
consisting ol onr 1%i man:liag
and IDIJsical units. will be beld

.4nA
. ceeds ...uv
~

1:'
- ~

eon·

IRS

;_~H~t,.:...._.~

.!
_· "
__
".
"
.
"'

"'-·-. ~·-- ·~..--

JGOd iepreunlation frcan area

Just n!Cleived a new

this -

July II, following rlection and

Tl:--l TFF..J-_,_,.1_,.
.uwu
Wt...H-.-.J

WASBJNGTON (UPI) _
bi kl
"
"
Faet,
•
wee Y
prdiiiCIItlea 11 tbe DemoenUc·
NaUeul .Committee, aald
tadayVloePr-u tSplnT.
wiD an uee lllat lie
~
dan liOt nat·t. --lle-oa the
WwH11PrelldeliNIDIIIa
the lied eleetloL
''Oa the buls o!, accumalatlac evideDce, the
publication aald,. "tbe
tpecnlatlow that lollowed
Apew'a dlnstrtu um-

Kill8 Family

Kaiser Ahaniman

c...,.ny at

~·,......

Quartet
be
VEl'O UPBEW
evenlne- Friday
lbe aermon
!Gplc will be "A Meaaai!e For
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Our1bnell" a00 will feature the Senate Wednesday upheld
Sayre Family and tile Eaat President Nixon's veto of $2
Letart Youth Choir.
billion erash public works
program designed to create
150,000 jobs. Sponsors ci tile bill
.
leU five votes sky of the twotblrds majority necessary to
override tile veto. Voting to pass
Tonight, July 15
the bill over Nixon's velo were
NOT OPEN
51
Democrats and i
Republicans.
Friday tllru Tuesdoly
July 16-20
TORAI TORAI TORAI
(Tedmi«~torl
5,11110 STRIKE
u. S. Sequences:
Over 5,000 members of two
Martin Balsam
United Auto Wcrkers union
Joseph CoHan
locals struck plants in the
Fint showing at popular Cincinnati suburb of Evendale·
prices!
"G" and Elyria late Wednesday and
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
early IDday in a dispute over
unsettled grievances and
I -- - --cootract negotiations, the UP!
said.

.MEIGS lHEATR[·

fall
fabrics and colors to
require liffle or ~o

pwchasing these new

Knit Sport Shirts
-

sale and really

diKron "'""" ...__

Regular 2.5.00 Uniforms
Regular 22.00 Uniforms
·· Regular 19.50 Uniforms
Regular 16.50 Unilolms
Regular 14.95 Uniforms
Regular IUS Uniforms
Regular 12.95 Uniforms
Regular 10.95 Uniforms
Regular 1.95 Uniforms
Regular 7.95 Uniforms

-

-

-

-

- - - Sale 11.00
- - - Sale 15.00
Saie 14,00
Sale 13.00
Sale 11.00
Sale 10.00
Sale 9.00
Sale 8.00
- - - Sale 7.00
- - - Sale 6.00

In slim and reg~lar sizes 6

Ou1standil)!l values in washable ..-..... Sli'powr styles and
sleeve &lt;able stitdl cardigans. Many colors to choose
1rorn induding clar1t tones. pastels and white.
Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 1-'.

Salllrday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Owpel witb tbe Re9. O'Dell
Manlry lifida~. Bmial will
be in Meigs Meany Glrdells.
Friends may ea11 at tbe funeral
bome anytime

•

Middleport·, Porter Loudin,
Cheshire; .Norman Lebew,
Portland ; Charles Bayes,
Middleport; John Lawson,
Pcrtland.
..
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Terrill, Ranald Pooler, Sr.,
Erma Reitmire, Agnes Isaacs,

Young Men's

SLEEP SHIRTS
Sale 4.19
Sale 3.49
Sale 2.79

FURNI1URE

BELTS

Another big sh ipment of
these popular wide belts in
sizes 30 to 38. Vinyl and
simulated leathers.

2.50

5

Young Men's 54.50

Multi-Use . Easy Care . Faambaclc Throw Coven for all
Furniture and Beds. And
other uses - and out.

rna"'
Mitchine •ashable - no ironing ever.
Colors: Avocado · Gold - l!rvM1

4.f5.4h71 Small a.in or a. ., Cllairs
S.H-fh71
torgor Cllairs • - •
7.H-12t&amp;71 SIINII Solas.IJove Seats• - 1 0 h
US-IU&amp;71l.Mt0 Sola · US-141&amp;71 lMtO Selas - • - - • • • •

A-·_.

~99

Sale U5
Sale 4.95
SaleU5
5ale1.fS
5alei.9S

tUNOO SlACKS

cotton - wide belt loops .
taper leg . no cuff. l'l!rlect
slacks for general wear tor

S].88

Men's and Boys

SWIM
TRUNKS

Specials in Housewares Dept. 1st floor

traveling public in the PwleiO)

=ira~:·.::~~

to call Eastern R
valiciiiS at
1100-32340211 for Pumei oy for
schedule information and
cmfirmation ci hnh
..vacation travel at no cost.

Jar -

cvver -

Beginning Friday morning
special sale prices on all

senritlg - .

Sale •1.00

1·-·------·-·--------------------atll.DREN'S 2.95 3 PC. DINING SET

Mlode by ~ includes an JIOIP"" plllll! - - • or cera 1

-land tumbler.

Sale •1.50

·-----------------------------·
1.00 STACK ASH TRAY

5

ltrays in a set -hhoe -olive-geld.

Sale6tcset

roll : 12 indios widiolriplewued - utra~.

4 rolls 194

lAWN AND PATIO
FURNITURE SAL£
Tremendous savings now during our sale of
summer lawn and patio furniture on the Second
· Floor.
·
.

Stop in the busy
men's and boys'
department on . the
first floor. ·Make your
selection and save
now.
Two Days Only
Men's and Women's

Billfolds
Reg. 3.00 Billfolds
Sale 2.09
Reg. 2.00 Billfolds
Sale 1.39
Reg. 1.00 Billfolds
Sale69c

In ~o size ranges 9 to 11 and 7 to 9- made just like men's

Big selection of colors.

Another Big Shipment!

r.tEN'S_T·SHIRTS
WITH POCKET
Made by Hanes with Raglan shOulder for extra
comfort. Comfortable to wear . 100 per cent
cotton.
Small · medium · large · extra large in white .
black - pale pink - navy · yellow . dark green light blue.

Summer Sale
Reg. 6.00 Girdles
Sale 3.99
Reg. 3.00 Bras
.
Sale 2 forS.OO
Reg. 2.00 Bras
Sale 2 for 3.00
Reg. 3.00 Bra &amp; Bikini
Sets
Sale 2.19

Men's and Y1111ng lien's

SLACKS
This sale includes flare leg dress slacks - flare
leg jean type slacks - button fly flares - zipper fly
flares .
Selection of men's regular cut slacks in trim fit
and fuller cut models. Sizes 28 to 42 and extra
large sizes 44 to SO.

I

By Ualted Press Iaten.u..I

MEN'S LEAlHER MHIK BELTS

KINSHASA -CONGO- VIa: l'llBSIDtNI' Spiro T. Agnew
says the Uti.ted Slates is educating too many_"Ojlinian makers
who can't do anything with their bands" wbile it shmld he
biJinll bricklayers and carpenters. Agnew made tbe mnarb
'lbtnday evening at a reception, bis first official faacticJD in l.be
Democratic Republic of the Omgo. He arrived fnm Nainlbi
earlier in the day 1111 a llklalion 81 uaud-tbe wld diploma lie

Sale •1.75

---------------------------·
Men's 1¥4 inch width Garrison BeH. Black. Sizes
32 to so.

mission for Pre side~t Ni:lan. .
Agnew was mee~ today with President Josepllllcbrtu, a
staunCh friend of. lbe United States. Agnew aides said Mabutu
liRiywouldappeal for more American irw '~IM:JJiin tlleCCJngo.

Lockhe.ed's Credit Rating Up
WASHINGTON -THE LOI:CHEEII Aircraft Oltpcaatim's
cbancesolgettq the $250milliongwalliildltcwnnteedloln it
needs to stay. in bt1~'n
have bem lllllllidoDhly enbanced.
Senate DeiiiOCntiC I eader Mike Manllfield, in a dllilge ol heart,
bas IChedule! senate ·debate an the Loot'-! WI for next
'lburlday or Friday. ~ says its .. uspa:ts ol P''lin8 are im-

Sale!

KNIT SPORT SHIRTS

poWd.
,
'lbe bill would create a three man board with autlail) to
guarantee&amp;ova 1unentrepaymentol up lll$lbillion in but loans ·
to tmabied "•si• a1 Wboae collapse WliUid bait lbe nalional
e:onomy or tile flCCIIIWl\Y ef a region. 'lbe Treasury says
~!!d'S aWUcation WliUid be lbe first e. nWiea:l

hi sOlid

Men's 3.95 &amp; 4.00 Knit Shirts - • - - . Sale 2.00
Men's 4.95 Knit Shirts
S.le 2.50
Men's 6.00 Knit Shirts - • - -- •
S.le 3.01
Men's 8.95 Knit. Shirts - - - - • SaleUI

THIWifl SAVEI ALL OF YOUI SAUSLIPS

Tuilion Raiaed to Sdaoo/S

CATIIOUC:!!Oioou IN OIOO,ill an •t~Pqi' to nrd elf 1.be
r ..n;uty lbatstatefundswill be•lew..t tbem Ibis faD .... ••of
au. s. &amp;Jpree CCIUrl rulinR. will raise tuition bt.., mum as $Ito
(CC&amp;Itinued m p!lge ID)

FROM
'
I

PHONE 992-2156

lEN CENTS

abolish inefficiency and unnecessary CGOts. 'lbe railroads
said they would put the new
work rules inlo effect as soon as
tbe strike began and institute
mass firings of employes &amp;00
tremendous pay cuts.
In the 3-&lt;lay old telephone
strike by communication
workers, Ben System officials
have leveled charges of
sabotage and vandalism to
ccanpany facilities.

Lobby of Ohio, said loday.
The House of Representatives
Wednesday passed a bill CJ!IIing
for a personal income tax, first
ever for the state. The measure
has been sent to the Senate.
"A state income tax will put
Ohio on the same road lo ruin as
New York City," Basom said..
"Industry will move out, people
will lose their jobs and welfare
will become a way of life.
"This is just the beginning ol
high taxation in Ohio. Two
years from DOW the ~
will be back to double the taJ:..
Two years from then they will
double it again.
"The spenders are in control
of state government," Bason
said. "Unless the people act
soon and tell their repJeseDtative that they are against the
state income tax, it will be too
late."

I

SAN Dli!JGO, CALI1'.- ACON'I'RlVERSIAL "fa mwca kets'
j&amp;iesl"was ... ,...Mied 1bursday by the Rlman Catbolic Risbop ol
San Diego for using cmn llrti1Ias as the etmlllliiUI wafer in tile
Dl888. Father Viclca' Salandini, who bas bem SQing mass for
striking iDdl1ben ol Cesar a.a-• United Farm Waders
OrganiJing Cmunittee, was ordered to stop offering mass,
bearing confessions and preaching.
Bishop Leo T. Maher, wbo had issued fire warnings to l.be
defiant priest, a.....,..teJ Salandini after be ignored an ....... to
stop using corn ID1i1las inslead of bread made ol wheat as tile
host cllring the singing of ~ .

' .
'

first to be struck - at 6 a.m. followed by a 7 a.m. strike
against Unioo Pacific. UTIJ
members in Chicago respected
an injunction preventing a
strike against the Chicago &amp;
Ncrlb Western railroad, one of
the original strike targets of the
onion.
'lbe chief issue in negotiations
bas been the union's refusal lo
agree to work rule changes,
which the railroads said would

Holcomb Attended
J'o-Ag Conference
Everette Holcomb, Vo-Ag
mstructor « the Meigs High
School, and other vocational
agriculture instructors
Ifill' JtingaDsectioosolOhio
attended the Agricultural
Teacbers Conference at the
Scot's Inn in Columbus July 12,
13, and 14th. The theme fcr this
year's
conference
was
M•Mgement is the Key to the
Future.
1be
conference· was
lighlighled by talks given by
Gene Abercombie, Director,
State
Department
of
Agriculture;
Dr.
B_yrl
Shoemaker, Director.
Vocational Educatioo; James
Poogan, Direelca' Agriculture
FAlcalian Services; Dr. Ralph
Remer' Owirman Department
ol Agricultural F.dueation, &amp;00
many olher.J.

Too Many Chiefs, no Indians

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~U)DLEPoR ·

COLUMBUS (UP!) -A state dustry and jobs out of the
·inclme taJ: would put Ohio "on state," Lewis Basom, chairman
the road to ruin, driving in- ol a group caUed the TaJpayers

Com TortiUas too Hot

Sale 4.00
Sale 4.50
Sale s.oo
Sale 5.50
Sale 6.00
Sale 7.50
Sale 1.50

Good overall selection of popular styles
colors · stripes.
·

FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1971

uzn

WASHINGTON -IF YOU111INJt IRlSJNESS is bad aD 0919',
you haven't talked to an army recruiter. D Z?ife 1a:ud puhlic
disencbantmmt with the V~etnam War, young men sliD are
volunteering fCI' !be mililary in sufficient numben to keep smiles
on the faces ol reaui~ sergeants.
'lbe primary reason, acconing to a UP! naW:twide jQl, is
clearly the lackluster stall! oltbe u. s.~- Out of schDol and
with no job PI ospects, y~ men .-e turning Ill the mililary as
their employer of last rworl 1bere are olher faotcas : 'lbe
..-OI(II!Ct of bella' pay for first-year enlisted men, guaranteed
European duty and the chance to learn a skill. 1be Army's in1ensive advertiaillg campaign also bas paid off.

Select Black or Brown in sizes 30 to 50. Genuine
full grain cowhide bridle leather. 1'4 inch width.

Eyelet embroidered
pattern in white, blue.
pink,
gold
and
avocadO.
All popular
Sizes

POMEROY-MIODlEPORT,. OH!O
·- --

•

It's Uncle Sam, or Nuthin'

Two Day Sale!

-

NO. "XXIV NO. 65

WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL RFFRVE Beaird
tightened the natian's basic mooey anl"m!dit pOOc:y 1'llusla,y in
No injuries were reported in
an effCI't to Ji&amp;bl inflation that canlinues to plagoe tile etiiUIQ'. two accidents investigated by
'lbe actlan by lbe Independent se1'1'1Hnember bolrd is a setback the Meigs County Sheriff's
far Presidel!t Nixon's economic policies, whidl haw OIUited 90 Dept Thursday and loday.
Thursday at 8:56 p.m. on
CCKI11nued easy money to push a rerovery frcan last yar's
Beech
Grove Road Harold P.
rec: uioo.
'l1le board '11nusday increased its discount rail! -lbe interest Jmes, 19, Columbus, traveling
Federal Resene Bants charge for loami to COIDDlerdal ...W - backwards, went over an
frcan 4'% lo $ per cent In its official llree-pangraph an- embankment inlo a creek.
'lbere was medium damage.
normcement, the board said the boost shc7!rm its ''Uioce n over
Jmes
was cited to court on
CC&amp;Itinuationol substanliaiCIISI-push inflalioo in !be eeGDOIDJ."
chsrges of reckless operation.
At 6:7.5 a.m. loday oo State

Orion Jerk socks.

Just Received!

Butfam

•

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

I

BOYS JERK SOX

4.95 Slacks - - - 5.95 &amp; 6.00 Slacks -'
6.95 Slacks - - - - - 7.95 &amp; 8.00 Slacks · - 8.95 Slacks - - - -· - - 9.95 Slacks - - - - - Jo.95 Slacks - - - - - - - - - -

Peking. It said.

To 1Jae ln~ue~t~ OflJae Meig.·MGIOII Area

Bason said the state income
taJ: issue should be put to the
vote of !be people before it goes
into effect.
"Such a radiCJII change in
Ohio's tax system should go into
effect only with the direct apRt. 338, lllarles Thcanas Hill, proval of all the people of the
20, Racine, Rt. 2, backed his car state," he adde!. "I don't
from a private driveway into
the side of a car driven by Janet
Hill, 19, Racine, Rt. 2, traveling
in their districts."
north.
There was heavy damage to
Janet Hill's car, and light
da":'ge to the OJaries Hill
vehicle. 'lbere were DO arrests.
Meanwhile, Pwuero1 pdice
also investigated a twO&lt;ar
accident Thursday at 7 p.m. on
Rt. 33.
J'T_J_ ~~ •
Gary Swope, Middlepca1, was Ul&amp;aeT lrJelgS
stopped in line of traffic when COLUMBUS (UP!) - Large
his car was hit in the rear by portions of lour southeastern
another car driven by Vll'gi) Ohio counties may contain
Dill, 21, Pcaneroy.
suootantial reserves
deep
'Jbere """' DO injuries, and coal according to a recent
medium damage to both study, the state Department of
vehicles. Dill was cited oo Natural Resources said
charges of assured clear Thur.;day.
distance.
The
department
said
research conducted by the
EXTENDED OUILOOK
Division of GeologiCJII SUrvey
O~io Extewded WeaUoer showed possibilities of new coal
Oatleok Suday tbroqb reserves in Meigs, Monroe,
Tnelday:
Noble and Washington counties.
Varlable el..dlaeas ud There is a possibility of similar
lllild Suday Uoroa1h underlying reserves of coal in
Tuesday. A c...ee ef portions of Belmont and
&amp;bowen abtU 11 'ayJiiPt Guernsey counties, the report
or twsday ..mty lit tile eua said.
parti
Dally ldps from tile
Officials said, however, the
middle 'Its t. tile lewtr 111 report noted ''much addiliooal
118ld18lld • t. as 11t tile _ . . drilling will be required to
em sectlou. Leww at IIIPI substantiate this interpretation
from tiJe middle a. to tile and to develop the area if this
~m:kldle:::.:•~------ projection is found to be
•
essentially correct."

News •••in Briefs ! Cars Backing Up
Credit Belts Tightened, Again
In Two Accidents

-------------------------·--·~

sizes and styles .

normalizationofrdalioosbela !:lll.behnl
"Premier Chou En-uli and Dr. Henry Countries anc! abo to "'*&lt;hange views-on
lis Natiooal Securil) c......l, his top Kissing'!!', President Ni:lon's assistant for questiiiiS of &lt;GDm Ill the hnl sides.
fca-eign pdicy forum. to diWJISS a !road naliooal security affairs, belci talks in
He ampli6ed bisr-...- for making: tbe
range of dipl(l(ll8tic problems.
Ptking from July 9 lo 11, 1971.
.mo\oe,giving8S$IIl'8IICI!StotbeRepublic of
Ni:lon would beccane the first· U.S.
" Knowing of President Ni:lon's es- OJina that its special relatiansbip 1rilll the
President to visit Cmununist OJina siJ1ce I* e! desire to visit the Ptoples United States would lionlinae 1o emt..
. the Cooununist regime was proclaimed on Republic of Oiina, Premier Chou En-lai
"Our acliop in se ' ing a new rdalicaJ..
Sept. 21, 1949. 'lbe United States hss not bas eslende! an' invitation lo President ship with tbe Ptoples Rrp!hfir ol a.m.
bad dip1(1(1181ic rep sentalioo with Olina Ni:lnn Ill visit China at an appropriate date will not be at tile expense ol ...- Gld_
since s11ort1y after that lime.
before May, 19'1'2. President Ni:lon hss . friends.Itisnotmreeled.againstanyolller
'lbe President made tbe &amp;IIIIOIIllCeiJWI accepted tbe invitatioo with pleasure.
nations," he said.
in · a terse Uree-paragraph statement
''The meeting between tbe leaders of
"We seek friendly relalims with aD
identical to' ooe issued simultaneously in China and tbe United States is lo seek the
(cmtinued on page 101

N~wassebeWiedtomeettodaywitb

occasions 0919' 1be past tbree years, there
can be no stable and endming peace
witbw~ !be ~tion of the ~~
~ ol ~ and .us 750 million
peqlle, the Pr rd-nt said.
"I haw taken Uis action because ol my
~ CCK!viclioo that aD natiws will
gain frcan a reduction of tensions and a
better retatioosbip between tbe United

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

Ole size fits all sizes 10 to 13. OUr popular Orion dress and
sport socks in while . black and a tremendous selection ol
solid colors and heathertones. Come in select )'OUI'$ now.

Men's Short Sleeve

Brands, big selection of all
popular styles for your home.

SHOE 101

Mens and all Boys swim
trunks. Good selecti.., of

Scott Cut Rite Wu Paper
115- an

JeR Socks For
Men and Young Men

Sale!

StatesandthePeoplesRepublicolOiina."

'

lJerotftl

By Ullited Press laterwatiHal unemployed.to the labor IICellle,
'lbe nation's labor problems wbicb is already suffering from
mushroomed today when strikes by balf a million ccanUnited Transpcrtation Union rmmntians wcabrs and tens
members walked off their jobs ol thnJJsand5 ol e:mpioyes in !be
with tile Soulbem and Unioo toppa , shipping, telegraph and
Pacific railroads..
farm equipnent mamiraduring
A 12-bour bargaining session industries..
in Washington failed lo produte Despite the strikes on the two
an agreement in a work-rules railroa&lt;b, union-management
dispute.
&lt;ificials stWuled further talks
'lbe railroad strikes were later in the day.
expected Ill add scane 30,000 Soulbem railroad was the

Friday and 5atvnlay Sale

•3.U

JAM JARS

Sale 6.99 gal.
Sale 2.19 qt.
Sale 1.99 gal.
Sale 2.D qt.
Sale L99 gal.
Sale-Ut qt.
SaleL99gal.
SaleU9qt.
Salt ut pt.
Salelki'J pl.
Sale 7.19 gal.
Sale 2.49 qt.
· Sale 7.99 gal.
. Sale 7.99 gal.
· Sale 6.99 gal..
- Sale 7.59 gal.
- Salel.99 ql.

New S1ltclian af Cobs

sportswear - for back to
school .
.
Solid color and white.

last •e etenl by bis c:llief national security
ad¥ , IX. llt!my A.. Kissinger.
lfus'neer. tbenca~a roundlbe-world trip,
was Slid 1u bne bem recuperating from a

toward N'o:on's 1959 visit Ill the Soviet Unim wileD lbe
tbeiHice president bad bis celelnted "kilcben delate"
· with former PrmJier Nikita s. Kbrusbdlev.
1be Soviet press bas been rather erilical of !be ping
poog diplcanacy between PtSing and WasbiagtaL ODe
&lt;ificlal ('CKDirientary called it a "dippamacy ol smiles"
dilecltd againct the Soviet Uni111.and warld OJmnqtni&lt;m.
Another ccanmenlary denounced Olina's mo;w 1u improve lies with W~ as an ezp: ion of Mao TseTung's anti-&amp;Jrietism.

Housewares Department 1st floor

lizes 29 to 38 waist . per"Tlanent press 100 pet.

PETAL 3 PC. SAUD SET

3 Piece salad set including glass bowl - large spoon · large_
fortt . Use it for mixing « _,;.,g.
Friday a.... S.tvnlay Sale

51.59

save.

SPORT

Sale!

M~ Robbins.

FREE TO EASTI'.RN
Effective ~mmediately,
August 15, Eastern Airlines will
lifer toiHree direct dia1ing
telephone service to the

w~r.

Friday and Saturday

Women's

Well-known

N.2nd

school

S2.88

_!lst~~fll~ll-~ll~%~'!l~ie~hp~ll:__~-----~

~--•
·
will be lield
I' IIUCI·;u WI i&amp;:ES

taper leg . no cuff - wide
belt loops.
.
Good selection of solid
colors. Perfect lor bade to

Two Days Only

- - -

famous

Friday and saturday

·tOtoo SlACKS

~L-

·uwU S

700 Million tp Family of Nations

By HENRY liiiAPIRO
MOOCXIW (UPI) - 'lbe KremliD likely will vi1ew
President N'U:IIl'S cledsillllu. visit l'eking with •«*
and snspid'Xl, dipkmatic aoun:es said today. U.., Slid it
may tab considerable fin
to ponuade Slmet I 'hrs
1be visit will not be oonlrary to Soviet ir.laesb.
'lbe Kremlin may cmsider lbe trip a pre.election
device, the wces said. &amp;ICb was !be Soriet attilndi.

trim.

Boys $3.50

R eturn b

ill Go to China

Soviets: Program of Smiles

use during this

1.25 gallon Spred Satin . •. · · ·
2.65 quart Spred Satin - - . - .
9.50 gallon Spred LAtex · - - · ·
2.95 qts. 5pred Late• . . . · ·
9.50 gallon Spred Lustre semi-tloss • · ·
2.t5 qts. Spred Lustre semi-tloss · ·
10.25gal. Sprod GlossallpvrposuMmel
l.l5qts. Spred Gtossatlr,:...,...enamol
1.75 pis. Spred Glossal .....,..... 01111mel
1.15 Y, pt. Spred Gloss all put'IIIIWOIIIImel
9.25 gal. Spred Uretflane Ftorenamel 2.t5 qts. 5pred Urethlne FlorOIIIImel U5gal. Spred Ho- hint - - . . - ·
1.99 gal. Endurance house Jlllint - - 7.2S gal. Craftsman Oil House Point ·
1.99 gal. Royale Gel-Flo house Jlllint - 2.50 qt. Royale Gel-Flo house ""int · ·

'

'

•

stn~

to 16. Permanent press ·

SENATORS SPLIT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Obio'a two Republican ,..,.teas
!!pUt their vote Wehft'lay as
!be Senate failed by live votes to
override President N'u:on's wto
ol a public wcab jobs bill. Sell.
William Su:be, voted to
override the veto wbile Sell.
Robert TaftJr., voted to uphaM
!be veto.

for summer 1971. Come,
shop and save!

color with contrast

U

'lbe visit WliUid IDJIIt a giant step luwud
f1l1ding lbe isolatim olthe weald's ~
QMJMIMJnist D8ti(ll and ~ing it badJ: miltm' ." " - ' CDJ!!IICfl to trawlers in
Asia at a IDOIIDWn ......-1 50 miles frcan
into lbe intematlmal ecanmmiiJ. •
'lbe Pn!sident told a nationwjcJe radio IsJ""'IM, l"Pids"l'l, wben be actuany
and telerision ,.,imce that the trip was was inNing..
u As 1 haw pointed out on a nUJDiter of
arranged dming a secret visit to Pekiqs

Sizes 6 to 16. Crew neck raglan shoulder · so_lid

long

Reg. 5.98
,. Sleepshirts
S
Reg. 4.1eepshirfs
•
Reg. 3.91 Sleepshirts -

Buy

.

Just Rac:ehecl A Large

We've Got 'Em All

FAMILY

.

Sale!

Select from lop brand na""' ..,iforms. including oor entire
stod- uniformsandpantssuils · - k n i t polyester and

brothers Cbarley of Palls
Olufeh, \ra and Wuu.m ol
Flemming, Omo.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . him,~ ~oold ,not re~te
because it would be fnlile and
might benefit the Coounlmists.

' The entire fun collection

shipment of infant anc!
toddler dresses. Many
beauHful styles and tabrics
to choose from · solids,
stripes and prints.

Gliddosl paints lor
inside and outside

Permanent press or nylon in many colors and
prints P-S.M-L.

DIVORCE Aspm
One suit for divcace bas bem
filed in Meigs County Q01mm
'1~\0~ ~!!~~H·IN
Pleas Court and ID"'Irr bas
been granted. Robert Fcanst,
Tonight &amp; Friday
lnternationall.Aiague Standings Pcaneroy, filed mit 1111•
July 15-16
By United Press International Lyvonnia Fcanst, Pumei oy,
W' L. Pet. GB charging grillS negJecl ci duly
Double Future Pratram
Syracuse
52 33 .612
DIRTY DINGUS
and exlleme ruell). Luda I.
Tidewater
53 38 .587 2
MAGEE
Cleland was granted a divorce
Charleston
-4ll rr .565 ~
GP
Rochester
49 J8 .563 ~
from David w. Cleland
P1n1vision Metrocalor
Richmond
4-j &lt;15 .494 10
Fran~ Sinatra
louisville
39 .a! .«8 14
George Kennedy
Toledo
33 55 .375 20'h
-Piu,_
WiMipeg
31 55 .360 21'h
NO IU!SPONSE
ELVIS
Wednesdor,'s
Results
a film abollf him.
Rochester 3 To edo 1 nstl
SAIGON (UP!) - PnsiEDt
"that's the way It is"
Toledo 3 Rochester 0 (2nd)
Nguyen Van Tllieu said today
Color
Tidewater 6 Charleston 3 ·
that although Vi " ·'"' t
Elvis Presley
Louisville J Richmond o .
Ice h i
G
Syracuse 10 Winnipeg 9
Nguyen Cao Ky bad "made
..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
slanderous rematb" againal

FOR THE

May.

Paint

large

Sale Boys S2.95
Short Sleeve

He is survived by bis wife,
Pauline Gunnoe OJIIins; ~
sons, Glenn, Jr., and Ill.~
Wayne, both at bome; IE
parents, Mr. 81111 ) b. Willie
Cdlins, PwdO), Rt. 2; two
si.s~rs, Wilma Gonzaley,
Arlington, Va., and Audrey A&amp;bury, Grand Forks, N. D.; t.o

r.::::::::===:::

Keds

Just received a

M»MENS UNIFORMS

Ravenswood.

ADMISSIO:- Elbl6:r.

-

br

Shipment of Girls SweaterS

pectedly Wednesday night at _his
res1dence.
Tbe
Racme
emergency squad was swnmoned.butMr.Collinslf8Sdead
on amval_of the squad.
Mr. Collins was a member of
the Glen Rogers Baptist Owrcb

.------"'""11

can save

·-----~-------------~-------1
Sale! This Week End

pa!plll( lit 1m 1iU ..W
Veton.M
-RIB ·o 1
" 'J!t'tlada "tine p!qpam," be pnalllmoet t. a eerillaty.
IIIII.
II ~ Ia "'Z."
· Re9. NcaTll will 1110 as bls _....._
.......
_ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Minersville; Darren Jenks,
......, tbla _ . _ ''The Man
Mason; Pammie Ferguson,

....- ·

)'IIU

n__ • •

~IBIV8 1r.r:Ove• IR

~nuadayNJ&amp;btbebad": 1oted

an lnvilalian from l't-emi&lt;l' 01au En.bi to
v!lit Red C!ina wuetime befca-e aen

•

Beautiful Selection
of Infant Dresses
"Party Look"
by Haddad ·

shi-' of_,,.,,. wash dresses. For

wlloiS - short slee•es - many styles.
d..,.. from . All easy &lt;are fabrics ir..,ing. Misses and half sili!S.

Gl~nn Robert C?llins, 37, ill . W. Va., !be s1ee1. lfiJl'brs
Racme, Rt. I, died unex· uruon, and was eql!oyed at

Wbo Had Everytblng but the
JUpt Tiling". The Norris
Ifill
featured tbil

See Our

~ ).;

Sale·too

in downlolm Oeveland at 4
p.m., Salllrday, July 17. 'lbe
CC&amp;Itmtilm will end Sunda)••

•-w

: Ovw 401 penanuttencled the
tvangellatic Cruaade Wed.. lty wblcb is being held
"'·""- at the Soutbem Footblll
'!'II"~

I '1

D

SAN a.DIENTE, Calif. (UP!)-Io a
chJnalic liM I l(toJWil, Pt - M1t NixcJn

.

'

SAl£! -EllS ...

America begaa striking United Telepll•e Co.
facilities in Ohio early today on the. lleels or a
nationwide strike agaiast Bell Telephone
Systems.
United Telephoae facilities in Shelby aDd
Bucyrus were struck by CWA Local 4478 aDd
local 4474.struck United Telepbclne in w-ter.
'lbe contract between·United Te!eplloae aDd
the CWA expired last montb, IMat llollt sides
agreed to a GDe mGDth exteasioll wlli1e
negotiations continued. However, aegedatiolls
broke off last Wednesday and locals ......._..t
Ohio which represent 1,210 United Telepllae
workers began talliag strike votes.

Glenn

11J.J EUGI!NI!: V. •

l---~---------;_-----,~-----...;.--r-~-------------~--j

schednlelat_
Enclid
HighSdloal
Stadium
Friday
afterno!ln.
with
drum and bugle CGIJI8 C:caJ..
petition at tbe stadi1an at 7 p.m.

By United Press llltematioDal
Members of the C~manleatiaDS Workers of

t'rusade Crowd

cllllrcbel and the

-

Clllor~.anddrilllellmsis

U.qDaliiJl ol . , state ollicers,

President Nixon
f

Friday and Saturday Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open Until 9 in the Evening.
:A·Good lime For Family Shopping All Over
the Store.. Wea~ng Apparel For ·
Y•r Fami~ and Furnishings For Your Home

More than 8,0.00 to Attend
fhree~Day
Legion
Sessions
..
: Plans for the 53rd ~tate
aonverition of The American
~on of Ohio lo be held in
c;Jeveland Thursday tbrougb
l!m'd&amp;1 are almost completed
'l!ilh mincr details expected to
Iii finalized today at a meeting
ji(; the organization's state
lxeculive crmmlttee in the
SheraiOO;c!eveland Hotel.
: 'lbe threHay ~ons will be
sonducted in ,the Grand
Ballroom of the Sheraton·
Cleveland Hotel and will end
Sunday, July 18.
~ Delegates of the Legion, its
~•IYiliary &amp;00 the Fcrl) and
.pght (Legion honor society)
l!egin arriving in Cleveland
·"lay and will occupy nearly
looo rocans in hotels and motels
lh the · downtown area of the
l!ity. By Saturday, some 8,000 to
to,ooo LegiOIIIlllire$, their wives
~ others are expected lo
S£nverge on tbe city, according
·lo J. P. "Pal" Hone, State
~on Adjutant.
-~ Friday m..-ning, convention
j:oouolttees will consider over
$II resolutions running the
iJunut from Legion business to
lJI&amp;tlers cl state and national
interest Final actioo on these
)rill be taken by the· delegates
Salllrday.
•- Warren Guthrie, Public

•

FUTURE HOME OF THE MEIGS COUNTY MUSEVII ill this lllbaotite to-a lane
located cal BultemutAve., Pcaneroy, the formi!rhcaneof Dr. and Mrs. Ray Beaton,earlier, lhe
Flnstenrald Funeral Home. The museum was assured Thursday lfhm the Meigs 0111111:)'
PiODea" and Hisl«ical Society announce! collections of $6,3611 toward the $10,000 ,_w to
purchase !be property. Firm pledges are in band to ccanplete tbe fund.

==~r:of;:~~ Museum

New Reserves

Of Coal Found

of

A Meig$ County Museum was
a big step to becoming a reality
Thursday when the Meigs
County Piooeer and HislllriCJII
Society announced collections
ol $6,368 toward the $10,000
needed Ill purchase the former
Dr. and Mrs. Ray Heaton
Property.

Pledged CC&amp;Itributions to be
received in the nest 10 days will
bring the total to $10,000.
Trustees of tbe Herscher
Foundation Inc., O!arleston, W.
Va., have stipulated tbat$10,0011
must be raised locally towards
the purchase of life Heaton
IHme for tile museum site.
Several years ago the late J. W.
llerscber gave SJQ,OOO to the
society for !be museum.
At that time it was planned to
build a "'useum structure .
However, CGSis were estimated
at about $1115,000 and it was
found impossible to raise tile
additiooal funds needed locally,
so the biJilding was abandooed.
Several months ago wben the
Heaton property became
available the society began
negotiating with the Herscher
Foundation Ill keep tbe balance
ci the gift from the late Mr.
Herscher to apply on the pur-

Assured

chase.
The Foundation, on several
occasions, has asked the
balance of $26,000, plus interest,
be returned. However, the
society hesitated lo return tbe
money and several times hss
presented tbe proposal of tbe
purchase of the Heaton
property lo the trustees who
have now approved, providing
$10,000 can be raised locally.
As. soon as the balance of tbe
$10,000 bas been collected and
placed in a bank, a letter will be
sent to the Herscher Foundation
certifying tbat the stipulation
has been met.
Purchase price of the Heaton
property is $32,500. 1be Society
had a liiUe over SJQ,OOO on hand
before the recent donations
were received, $29,000 of which
includes tbe balance of the
Herscher gilt and accumulated
interest.
According lo tentative plans
the first Door of the Heaton
reside.nce will be used for the
museum while the second Door
will be used as a rental to help
provide operating funds fJll' the
society.
Contributing 1o the fund as cl
Thursday were Geraldine

Meigs Schools Dress Codes Explained

Young, Mr. and Mrs. Seth
Nicbolsm, Mr. and Mrs. Veman
Nease, Iris Kelton, Bea BurneUe, Mrs. Helen Rathbt!m
Clapp, Mr. and Mrs. l'nd
Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Clarles
E. Blakwlee, Mrs. W'llliam A.
Mcrgan, Mr. and Mrs. Leo R.
Story, David C. and Betty Stcay
McCmna-qgbey, Olarles P. and
Janice S1Ary !Jlchary, Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Betty
Millhoan, Annie and P.aul
Olapman, Evelyn Llde, Ralph
Ours, Howard Frank, Robert

Clark, Rutland Department
Store, Dexter Ladies Aid,
Racine Home Natiooal Bank,
Mr. and Mrs- W. P. I.odlary,
Crow, Crow and Porter, Delmar
and Bertha Canaday, Kermit
Walton, Ben Ewing, S1risbor
and Lohse, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Clark, Wallace Bradford,
Pomeroy National Bank,
Elberfelds, Ohio VaHey
Publishing Co., Sybil Ella.
bach, Dollie Hayes and Ma.
ning Webster.
'lbe society is ~
and accepting any and aD
donations. Donations . may be

mail..t to Mrs. Dollie Bayes. U
Oak St, PWDCiO).
Attending tbe Thursday
meeting at the COWlI) ill6rmar.,were Ed iSM Hobstetter, C. £.
Blakeslee, Waltace Boadfcad,
Earl &lt;lark, Seth Nidlolson, Pat
Locbary, Leo Story. Mrs. Annie

..-.;ate for daytime wear .. was dropped as was and acted. In acting it hss tried to establish something &lt;llapman and Dollie Hayes.
Molp Loeat Sdloel Dlllri&lt;t
"cwspicuCIIS and gaudy jewelry such as long, jangling that can be "lived with" by all concerned and not be
At our board meeting last Tuesday evening several ean-ings,tiarasandjewelrydesigne!forevmingwear !be source ot endless CC&amp;Itroversy. The Support anc! ~~rs. lue ..
1•1
significant items- ~ld the board's attention. Frean their only."
understanding of studenla, parents, and teachers is l r.li
•'li!Si&lt;leraliCIIS have COOle some important decisians.
'lbe ~th of skirts is a matter ol CCKICel1l and Deeded. I ~rmt that it will exist.,
'lbe drws code was adopted in a revised f~rm. parents and girls are urge! to use good taste in the
The board will review the code again next year. At
Imng lbe second hs.lf ol last school year the then selection of such wearing apparel. Girls may wear · that time it will solicit and consider suggestions fnm
existing code was studied at cmsiderable length by !be clean,neatslacb, jeans, levis, and pant suits to school staff and students.
.
Mrs. Ben
eutzling 0(
lighscboolsludmtcOUDCiland the faculties ol both the any time.
.
P
ill be
'lbe board worked out a revised lee schedule ftr omeroy w
at h
Boys• hair will sliD be cut and worn above the eyes,
jwi.CI' and the senior high schools. The code that lbey
ears, and collar. There will be no beards or mustaches, students in the vocational department, and scane other Department ol Ohlo AlllericaD
Speaking of Schools-No. 197 but sideburns can bewornaninch below tbe ear and be d• !9 who in their courses "use up" expensive Legion Auxiliary CcmmliGa
held Thursday lla• gt
were r:eviewing bad not been revised in any substantial up to two inches in widtb: Cotbing With scbool names matmals. 11ie!le revisions will ~discussed fully in a being
this SUnday at the Staller.BjUm
degree since lis adoption several years ago.
can be worn as can football jerseys of any type. Out- su1J s, quent article.
Hotel in Cleveland.
This study by these Uree groups was requested by doar type jackets can be worn in tile classrooms with
1be board
cansidere! the possibilil) oflsome Mrs. Neullling, EighUo
lbe board.. 'lbe board had u.licated that it 'IUI..tlhese the teacher's awoval. "Belts are to be lfOI1I with seniors c:canpleting their senior year at the end 'ol tbe District President, will SI!I'Ve •
s!Pfes andrecc•llll*'ldaltons fcr Its CCKISideratiCII. No tnuers with belllcqJS" was ck'opped. .Boys may wear first semester. It was decide! to consider each case head of her delegalioo w11a
CC&amp;IImilmeatwasmade to accept any reccanmendatian sanclals witbwt socks. They must wear socks with individually for.!be time beq and to adopt a pure yes . final repo1 Is of the ~ y.n
16 allY ol tile groups.
oilier footwear.
or no policy wben we see what results. We want lo help activities will be ptesmted _.
Sewral significant changes haw been made in the
'lbe fnJI supp..-t ol the board is behind each staff students get an early start if we can, bul we don'hrant pfu.es awarded in aD Alnri' J
moo111Jer
in the implementation ol Ibis code. Code students to miss taking a vocati011l11 course because programs.
code. Just less than a dozal the student CGIIDdil's
retOIDIIIEDdalians were incorporated in euct ..- violatiCIIS will result in: (1) Aw~ to the student; they just wanted "out" early.
·
·· Among the dipilaries S(21acantactwithl.beparentby the Principal; and (31 Students in vocatiooal courses or in !be scientific peeled to speak llefare lilt
• 'lbepla
"alravagancein style..- in cost is out of SO!pellsilll ci_tbe stndent by tbe principal.
callege 1*"11 11 ogtam camot coo.,lete lbeir work at lDe1llbers •
111Jlod will • ..
piaao" was romoved. 1bi, permissical to war ba,ir
I know and you know that no dress code is goq to mid vear bealuse of cwrse requirements. Only those Mrs. Clarence Kouas If
cwlas at the time ol special aocial evmll was added. lllllke everyone happy. Nevef'tbcl r, the board ol inotllercoursescou1de"VenbeCO!ISideredatUistime. Missouri, the l'llmlll Na'h w·
·~ use of make-up not considenll .,_ education bas accepted its responsibility in this area We'll see what develop&amp;.
(cca!linued
Pill" II)
By Geqe Harpwves, Sllpl

,.,l:-....,
--s

Jn Cleveland
At Convention

F.

of

'*'

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