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Now You Know

u Dile
. d TeIe_. phone.
.
..

I C- The Daily SentinPl. Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Jaly JJ,lfll
APPROVAL GAINED
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Thestate
Highway Dept. has rec~ived federal approval to continue
with detailed plans for the eastem portiori and route selection
for the wesll)tn portion of a limited - access highway running
from lnll)tslate 71 at Kings .
.Mills to Hamilton.
.

.

·

F es
925 Workers
e

.. ...

.a.J.

r • ~:y
. By JOHN T• ......,
.
Uailed PMis .. _li-.1
The United Telephme Co. ba.s
fired about 925 mits 1,300 employess for participalillg in a
series of wildcat slrikes last
week. '!'be t.elepbone CO!DJI!IDY
says they can file
~
t but lbe Qmnnmu-.
I
P
oymen
lions
worten~ Union said
tbere

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
· July 19-20
Double Feature Program
" SCAR S OF

'(I'

ORACI)LA "
- P lus~

" HORROR S OF '
FRANK EN STE IN "

The coo tract between !be utility and !be CWA e:a:pired last
montb but was extended for 30
days. However, talb broke aft
last week and tbe lOcal unioos
toot a
to strike United. .

vote

sighl Also on strike are !be 4,''Th!&gt;ie who deiiJe to return 4,2111 employees of OncinMti
to wock should CCIIIIad tbeir BeD.
supervisor r... pnlCl!Gire," said
In Cleveland today, Commoo
a United Spclkegnan.
Pleas Coort Judge Joseph J.
However, James Harper, Co- Na11111 is sdieduled to hear a
Obio bell to limit tbe
lmnbus, a CWA regiiWAI "'1ft- --tby
• ....,-

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Jut y 1 9~2 0 .
TORA ! TORA! l ORA !

sentativesaidtbismemslbatif
the employe returns to his job
Martin Balsam
~ must agree to lose bis
Joseph Cotton
· ·ty
First showing at popular seruorJ •
The
employees walked olf tbe
prices !
"G" job last 'lbursday twame m a
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
lack of progress in CODtract oe-goliatioos.
(Technicolor)
u. S. 5e&lt;!uences :

-;;;;;t;;i;~ ;;;;&amp;.~.~

1[1

ing in MaJmini!!, l!e!moo\
and
G-

Mootgomery Qm!...,..
The Montganaj Camty injuncliCJD wilrbanded doom after
four pickets were arrested
Friday during a IC!!!f)e . witb
s.ae c-upolice and Jllllll8gleiDelt pe~­
The strike by nearly 20,000 nel at the Obio Bell office m
Obio Bell employees cootinued Dllyton.
·t m
·
· va..t..lian
- lied
today with no agreemen
•a
_____ •
-..-

- : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; are strings attadled.
1

The city of Waabington, Pa.,
ll'iginally was called "Catfish's
Camp," after an Indian chief
·who had camped there.

'

·

mmberolpicketsatBelloifices
in tbe !ale lra!t city.
A pdiceman sustained numerous cuts and laceratioosoved
last
week when he was sb
tbnJug)l a plate glass door at an
Obio BeD facility in Oeveland.
"'lbe court does not, 1111' will
mt, lcllerate violence or intimidatiCJD in these matters," said
Nabra oter the weekend. ''It
never settles an issue. I urge
botb sides to cooduct themselves in a manner lbat can be·
lrllllght aut in open court."
Obio Bell bas received restraiDDg orders limilillg picket-

COLuMBUS CUP))- Two separate pollee
raids nev tile Ohio S..te tlaiversity eampus
duriDg tile weekead ~ Z5 to 30 poaads !If
·mariju:taa, 5,010 LSD lallkts and $!,000 worth of
~-

.

Police said they (otmd the marijuana in the
apartment of John M. Cronin, Zl. He was
charged with keeping a place where
haDucinogens are used and possession of drugs
for sale.
Michael D. Trott, ZZ, was arrested at his
residence after polke armed with a search
warrant aUegedly found the CC~Caine and LS_D. He
was charged with possession of narcotics.

Testing Will Begin Soon

News ... in Briefs
.
~the~
Now the House of Represenoatlves is done 111
.
ogram and bas given it to the Senate where awroval ol the
:prcpriations-tax package is expected to take at lea$1 a IDOIItb.
RAVENNA OWO - MOTIONS TO QUASII riolillg indictment for 20,persons arrested during dlsonlers at Kent Slate
University in May !9'10, were dismissed by Pmtage County
C&lt;mmon Pleas Ju~e Edwin W. Jones.
·
Jones, who handed down the-ruling Saturday, Clftered DO
written explanation.
.
'ty
The 20 deferxlants, most of them Kent Sta~ Umvel'll
siUdents, were indicted on various ~ges of noliJig by the
Portage County Grand Jury.

Jq&gt;Uiation of first graders with
SANDUSKY, OWO - LAURIE LEA saJA_EFER of Bedey •
1espert to mental ability will be who won the~Ohiocrownonherthird try, will be~ Hucke~
admitted.
State entry in the Miss America Pageant at Atlantic Oty m
The birth certificate of the September.
.
cbild is required.
The Moot-7, 11~ central Ohio brunette wttb green e_yes
Applic:ation blanks may be entered the 1971 Miss Ohio Pageant at Cedar Point as the Miss
obtained from the county office Central Ohio title winner. Twice before she was in !be anm•l
oo Mulbeny Heij:bts or phone amusement park contest, in 1968 and 1969; lilt eacli time finished
992 •
between July 20 and an also ran.
AUgust I. All teslillg will be
done lbe first week in A~t.
CLEVELAND _ TilE FIRST black e&lt;mmander In the
Appoinlmeots must be made m history of the Ohio American Legion was installed
as
advance.
delegates to the state convention voted to urge CoDgress to lift a
trade embargo against tbe white government of Rhodesia. .
The delegates to the 53rd convention here gave newly mstalled commander Charles Green, 50, Warren, a
DIES OF INJURIES
ovation. He previously had served in tbe No.2 spot as VIce comCLEVELArm (UPI) -Regis mander.
Byrne, 13, Cleveland, died at
St. Johns Hospital bere Sunday
of injuries be received when Three Defendants Are Fined Here
hit by a car last Wednesday
Three defendants were fined feited a $25 bond posted,
oo the west side.
and one 'fmfeited a bond in squealing tires.
Pomeroy Mayor Charles
l.egar's court Saturday night.
Fined were Charles Boyles,
SEEKS DIVORCE
Middleport, $5 and costs, intoxication; Virgil Dill, 21 , Sandra S. Williams, Thppers
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured Plains, has filed suit for divurce
clear distance, and Claude in Meigs County Commoo Pleas
said Roy Johnson ol the U.S. -point, wbich asked for a cease- called for reunificati_
on of the Eblin no address reported, $5 Court . against John M.
embassy. " Of course, we've fire and the fourtb point, which country," Johnson said.
and ~osts, open flask. William Williams, Tuppers Plains,
only bad it for about two hours.
Williams, 20, Pomeroy, for- charging gross neglect of duty.

·-Y-

&amp;lnda.!

:=tanding

1/2 Cu. Fl WHIBJIJIIIIOliiV

I

WHEELBARROW

IEG. 39.~ ·

J288

l friON.

One piece heart ~tul tray.
Red cotroslon-resii5tunte~-

l EG, 9. .tl9

&amp;11 o '!.hong onr;l durOiblc, yet
1
end balanced. Red.

Rear-End Accident

3.. dia. red re-

n "'.." l~e&lt;oo&lt;.

IS Investigated

A.ODIJIONAL OR lEG. 99C
WitHOUt COUPON 1'91

QEG. S9C EA.

3/99~

CONC O&lt;D

While wood en fen(e.

LONG HANDLED
UTIUTY SHOVEl
lEG. 5.19

l EG . 3.1 9

Rou nd point, slvrd y A1"
01.h handl •.

Forward turned
slep. 27" handle.

PLASTIC ROOF
I GAL
CEMENT

ASPHALT
CEMENT

SALE PltCE

' J22

SAlE PIICE

271;

S5~A~E

Sticlu tight.S ea15, loeb.
I !0 gel.

· AI'\

.,..aJerprod~

,. -;,._.-_- -·- -

~

J~

aspholt -bas.e odi:11eiol e.
;• ~ ! e o.-'5hrin\..

w~~· · ..- rrY~ ,

Slocl

MANY
MORE
VALUES
I
I
I
.

MEN'S

GREEN THUMB

GLOVES
Edmoot Wilson
Reg. 1.19

77'

With · ·
Caupoo

Addl ti onal or
WithautCoopoo 88c
•

I
I
I

GARDEt4
GLOVES
Edmon! Reg.
Wllsoo US
.

Vinyl impregnated cottm.
Non-61ip grip, washable.

- -- -

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department ·Store
•' Building Sin&lt;~ ms

No injuries were reported
following a two car .accident
Saturday at 7:!» pm. oo SR 124
in the village of Racine.
Tbe Meigs County Sheriff's
Department said a car
trawling south on 124 driven by
Rick W. Snider, 16, Racine, was
stopped in line of traffic when
struck in the rear by a car
tkiven by Edward A. Lawson,
17, Racine, Rt. 2.
Tbere was hea-vy damage to
tbe Lawsoo car and medium to
!be sructer vehicle. There were
no arrests.
PROBE HlT-8KIP
Under investigation by the
Meigs County
Sheriff's
Department and the Pomeroy
Police Department is a hit.Wp
that occw1ed on SR 33 at 4:20
a.m.
Tbe car, driver unknown,
sliuck mailboxes belonging to
Elias Stiles and Carl MO(I'e, and
left the scene.

I

,~~~? l•

397

OVERAU

~
~

SAIGON (UPI) -The South
VIetnam
government appealed today to North Vietnam
to discuss reunification of !be
eomtli'y arxl the bolding of free
elections under a total ceaselire.
1n a cominunique issued by
tbe Foreign Ministry oo Natiooal Grief Day cm~memorating
the divisioo of N(l'th and South
VIetnam under the 1954 Geneva
a«ords, the government recalled it asked two years ago
that North Vietnamconsider
reunificatioo.
u.s. spoki'SIIJell said there
was nothing new in the offer.
"So~ we haven't been able
to 6nd anything new about it,"

As ~ aastwo-:r--&lt;lkl
we can ~
renewed
propo-it
sal and reitented two of the
five points in tbe peace plan
presented by the gove'rnment in
Paris on July I.
''Those were the second

PJeaunt Vlllley !Pespi'al
ADMISSIONS: Eleanor
Smithson, Letart; Katbleen
Childers, Mrs. Cherris McDaniel, Mrs. Olester Frye,
Lawrence Rayburn, Cbarles
Camden, Harold Whillingtoo,
all Point Pleasant; Mrs. Peter
Sturgeon, Ashtm; Mrs. Eugene
Duncan, Gallipolis Feny; Mrs.
Orville wm;amsm, Southside;
Jesse Maynard, New Haven;
Mrs. Orville Poar, West
Colwnbia; Mrs. Edison Brace,
Racine ; Mrs. William Carpenla', Colounbus; Mrs. David
Brace, New Haven; Mrs.
William W'illis, Eleanor; Mrs.
William Holcomb, Mrs. F1ossie

t he

* * Easy* :

•N
:
: BANKING
Dli,IPII

:-tr FARMERS
BAliK t-tl Ctain,
~~;- Doris Dailey,
Pomeroy, William D. Kearns,
•• and SAVINGS m' •il dleport;
Jactson; Basil Hayes, MidElinore Hathaway,
f

..,.

-tc

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve Sy,tem .

-tc
l!t~\ -~~?&lt;·-~:~;:j@f.itt~~~r~~r:::~~~::~:~:.-=-:·--:~::::r,·=:·:ilB:~HtK~i!it~~-- ........
,

~ Jarkson.
~ Suday DIKiwJos - Irene
ti F ber Ali
i&lt; Darst, Ernes ne . a • . ce
• Holliday Thomas Lutheran.

•-• , ...... ..-

e,C""

,·

1

r------------------~--------,

! News ...in Briefs !
I

Bell Strike Ends

I

By UDited Press lllterualtooal
WASHINGTON UNION AND MANAGEMENT
Degolialt008 have reached tentative agreement on contracts
covering 1.25 mllllon postal and communicaticm workers. But a
railroad unloo which has struck two carriers bas threatened to
ezpand tbe walkout to eight other lines. In tbe Far West,
negoliat«. are hcping the settlement of ooe copper strike can set
a pattern f&lt;r agreement in the :IJI.day-&lt;&gt;ld walkout that bas idled
39,000 workers.
Leaders of tbe CoiiiiiiUiucations Workers of America (CWA)
Cl'dered the unioo's 500,000menibers back to work Monday night,
but in New York, at least, tbere was some questions whether all
locals wOUld end their week-&lt;&gt;ld strike. The union bas agreed to a
new contract with 33.5 per cent in wage increases over tbree
years.
The U. S. Postal Service, whi~ bas agreed to tentative
CCIIItract terms with a coalition of seven unions represenlillg
750,000workers, has not aMounced details of its settlement.

By United Pr;sslnternalional
Some 20,000 repairmen,
installers and operators of
the Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
were expected back on
the
job
starting
at
midnight tonight, ending a
strike that began a week ago
Wednesday.
An Ohio Bell executive called
the tentative agreement pounded .out on the national level Monday with the Communications
Workers of America "exceptionally good" and said he welcomes "our people back to their
jobs."
Thomas C. Ryan, director of
the CW A fn Ohio, said the new
three - year contract provides
more than a 30 per cent hike

SAIGON- VIEG CONG and North Vietnamese forces ended
a 21k!ay lull in their summer offensive with a series of rocket and
m(l'tar attacks along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), military
saurces reported today. Authorities gave cmflicting analyses for
lbe new fighting: that they partend a new phase of the Communist
offensive or that they merely occurred because a dark phase of
!be moon coincided with some of Vietnam's worat July weather In
3lyearx. Most of tbe fighting Monday was in South Vietnam's five
northern provinces.

BEIRUI' - BEBEL ARMY OFFICERS ejected from the
Sudanese government nine months ago for tbeir alleged Comn:wnistS)'iiiJlllthies have overthrown the revolutionary regime of
their African nation and set up a ruling council today, according
to Arab broadcasts monitored in Lebanon. Col Babkr al Nour
beads the new regime, which took power in a bloodless coup and
jailed Maj. Gen. Gaffar al-Nwneiry, who had ruled tbe Sudan
since May' 1969.

~

CAMP KENNEDY -THE COUNTDOWN for the launch of
Apollo 15 loday. This 0. S. space mlssioo, · if su~ssful,
Should produce a harvest of scientific data far surpassmg that
reaped by Apollo 11 two years ago. Astronauts David R. Scott,
Alfred M. Wirden ant) James B. Irwin are scheduled for liftoff at
9:34 am. (EDT) Monday. Scott arxllrwin hope to land on the
mooo's surface for a stay of 67 hours.

Ky spoke lriefly to newsmen after laying a cornerstone for a
Buddhist ~goda at An Phu, a Saigon subw:b in Gia Diny Province
... Sunday.
V0UJ11B1J11 -AN EMERGENCY pl-oclamation prohibiting
lbelmportatloo into Ohio of any horse having been in Texas since
tbe outbreak of a rare form of sleeping sickness was issued
Mooday by Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Gilligao acted oo a request by Agriculture Director Gene
Abercrombie. The disease has killed thousands of horses and
mules in Texas.

ARNEL KNIT FABRIC

MISS LAUREL (Laurie) Lea Schaefer, Bexley, as she
appeared on May 4, 1968 when she won the Miss Southern
Ohio tiUe in Pomeroy. In her third attempt in state competition, Miss Schaefer was crowned Miss Ohio in Cect:'r
Point Saturday night and will represent the state at the MISs
America Pageant at Atlantic City in September.

Won Title Here In '68

New Miss Ohio Will
MOREHEAD, KY. -ARMY ENGINEERS appeared to be
·
W/ ll
matlngprogresstodayintheireffor~toshoreupapa~llybuilt Renresent tate we
earthen cafter dam holding back a nver more tban 15 miles long.
r

Select your fall knit fabrics now in our. Second
Floor Sewing Department and save. Beautiful
stripings in fall fashion colors of permanent' press
Arnei-Nylon knit.
54" Wide. Reg. 4.49 yard.
1

s

Wala's from the Ucking River, fed by five days of rain, apBY BOB HOEFLICH
peared to be near a crest. Officials said at 7 a.m. that the water
It was May 4, 1968, when John
wasalmostonefootfrom the tcp of the dam.
Lisle stepped to the microphine
About 1 000 persons living in the area were warned of the in the Pomeroy Junior High
danger Monday night but only about 60 per cent of them left their School Auditorium to open
..,,.}nnes.
. .
vocally the fourth annual Miss
Army engineers bad feared that a steady nse m the water Southern Ohio Pageant.
could cause an overllow. The engineers said if the dam broke
Doing a parody to a popular
''uncontrolled," the water could cover 75 square miles.
song at that lime, "Step to the
Rear," Lisle sang:
WASHINGTON -DEPUTY DEFENSE Secretary David
"Will everyone here, clap and
Packard has revealed that the Nixon administration overrode and whistle and cheer,
censa-ec1 his opposition to legislation that would help Lockheed
And start a winner on her
way,
Alrtraft Corp. and otber financially troubled firms.
"Here's where we pick a girl
Packard believes the government should guarantee
~tfor $250million in bank Joana Lockheed is seeking; but to go to .the stale,
" And maybe she'll rate and
be 'M"
a 0Iea5UI'e, now nearing a Senate vote, ~':' which
Ill)' ampany in trouble cauld ask tbe government for similar loan get to Atlantic City."
Out of the pack of 17 conhading.
testants that evening came the
1968 Miss Southern Ohio. She
was Laurel (Laurie) Lea
Schaefer of Bexley who last
Saturday night became Miss
Ohio at Ceda,. Point.
It took Laurie (as she became
known to her many friends in
By Ualted Press International since July 14. Some 87 workers the Big B~nd area) four years to
A vote on a proposed contract were off their jobs at the Kam- step from the Miss Southern
offtted by Ohio Power Co. was mer plant and another 59 were Ohio title to the Miss Ohio crown
but area residents attending the
to be taken today and Wednes- idled at Mitchell plant.
Pomeroy
pageant back in 1968
day by an estimated 1,700 work- A spokesman for Ohio Power
ers who have been at their jobs said the finn's original contract did start a winner on her way !
After winning the Miss
at least two weeks or more offer was changed in an effort
Southern· Ohio Pageant in
since their contracts expired.
to seal a new pact.
A spokesman for tbe Utility "We've had negotiating meet- Pomeroy Miss Schaefer went to
:Workers of America in Canton ings with them (union mem- the Miss Ohio Pageant at Cedar
said a vote on the contract bers)," he said. "The company
would be taken tonight and has modified its offer - imWednesday night. Other locals proved it and we anticipate the
were to vote on the pact this union will . submit it to their

09

yard

Ohio Power Employees

Will Vote On Contract

All First Quality .

TOWEL SALE
Matching Bath Towels, Hand Towels. and
Wash Cloths selected from our regular stock.
Cannon Royal Family - Fieldcrest - Mar!ex.
Jacquards · Veluras - Prints.
REG.~·ZS-~

members for a vote."
An estimated 1,200 UW A He refused to say what terms
members have remained on the company bad offered. or the
tbeir jobs at Ohio Power since demands of the· union.
Another 500 workers, mem-their cOIItracts expired. Con-

week.

BATH TOWELS
--.. . . -...

------ --:1

tracts (or power plant employes bers of the International Broth-

f1_....~AND-· ToWELs
w 88'1_
,. __ . . . ._______

expired at midnight, May 31, erhood of Electrical Workers,
and contracts for line crews in. have been reporting to their
tbe ojldating divisions expired jobs at three operating divisions

midnight June 30.
Tbe power plants included
Pbi1a south of Zanesville; Tidd,
in
Ohio; Cardinal in
. Brilliant, and Windsor, north of
"WWng, w. Va. The opera~g
divisions are headquartered m
Cantm, Coshocton, Tiffin, and
Uma.
Members of the union at two
plants near Moundsville, W.Va.,
.have been on strike, however,

REG. 79' • 69' - 59'

l!rimant.

WASH a.DTHS
Open Weekda)s 9::1) to 5- Shop Bolh Friday and Sa_turday 9-:30 to 9 p.m.

.ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

in Ohio despite their contract
expiration on June 30. The three
divisions affected were Steubenville, Zanesville and Newark.
MEET WEDNESDAY
The Winding Triill Garden
Club will hold a workshop at
their regular meeting Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Clarence Heaton .

•

Point in 1968. She was
fascinated by the state competition even though she failed
to even gel into the top 10
finalists ' group.
In 1969, she entered the Miss
Central Ohio Pageant in the
Columbus area and won that
title which took her to state
competition. That same year,
Miss Schaefer returned to
Pomeroy as the reigning Miss
Southern Ohio to help with the
1969 Pageant held in Pomeroy
that spring.
Besides being lovely to look
at, Miss Schaefer was the
epitome of graciousness as she
worked with the contestants
taking part in the 1969 event.
She gave them every tip that
she 'd learned in her experiences with the pageants.
Her energy appeared endless as
she helped move the 1969
contestants through their paces
in rehearsal sessions for the
evening p,ublic . show . She
brought ~ifts for each of the
contestants plus remembrances
for local people who helped with
the pageant.
Miss Schaefer was striking
and radiant that evening in
several appearances during th~
pageant including her vocal
(Continued on Page 10)

SAIGON

0

.

·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The draft lottery to
decide the order in which young men will be·called
up in 1972 was set today for Aug. 5.
Selective Service officials said the "random
sequence lottery" will be conducted at the U. S.
Commerce Department Auditorium to determine
the order of call, by birth dates, ofyoung men who
became 19 this year.
Legislation to extend the
basic induction provision of the
draft law is snagged in
Congress, and inductions have
been halted since the old law
expired July I. House-Senate
negotiations to resolve an
impasse have been posl.poned
until next Monday.
Although the induction provision has run out, draft officials
said "the responsibility to
conduct tbe lottery continues
under draft law."
The lottery for next year
originally had been set for July
15, but was postponed because
of the congressional bangup
over extension of the law.
Selective Service officials
said the 1972 order of call was
being held now because "the
young men who face possible
induction next year deserve to
know their relative chances of
induction so they are better
able to plan ahead".
Both the House and Senate
have voted to extend the draft
but conferees are snagged over
an end-the-war resolution attached by the Senate to a bill to

exterxl the basic law for two
years. The House negotiators
are against setting any Vietnarn withdrawal date.
1n the third renewal of the
draft lottery, scheduled for
10:30 am. EDT on Aug. 5, six
young people from various
parts of the nation will take
turns drawing capsules from
two clear plexig!ass drums.
One drum will contain all the
dates of tbe year 195Z-rneaning
there will be 366 (including a
Feb. 29 date) since that was a
leap year. The other drum will
contain nwnbers 1 through 366.
As each birth date is drawn, it
will be matched with a number
drawn from the second drum.
That will determine the order
of call.
For example, if tbe first birtb
date drawn is July 15, and tbe
first number drawn is 125
thlll!le born on July, 15, 1952:
would stand !25th in the order
of call for the draft neil year .
The No 1 vulnerability conceivably ~~ not be dell)tmined
until at the very end of the
random drawing.
Sen John c Stennis O.Miss.
lea~ of
Senate' team U:
House-Senate draft talks said a
IN PULPIT SUNDAY
negolialillg meeting Monday
The Rev. Dwight Zavitz of
was called ·olf because of lack
Ossian, Irxliana will supply_ the
of "sufficient headway" toward
pulpit at the First Um~d resolving the dispute.
Presbyterian Churches ID
Syracuse and Middleport
&amp;mday at 9 and 10 a.m. The Services Today
Rev. Russell Lester bas~ a
congregational mee~IDg For Erb Twin
following each of !be services.
NEW HAVEN - Donald
All members are urged to atStephen Erb, twin son of Ronnie
tend their respective services. and Martha Riffte Erb, New

be rehired and would not lose
their seniority.
The contract between United
and the CWA expired June 30,
but was continued one month,
but some employes struck any'
way to protest lack of negotiations.
''Applications for employment
will be processed by appropriate supervisors," United said
in a statement at its headquarters in Mansfield. ''Those incjividuals who apply inunediatt:ly
and are accepted and are returned on their next regularly
scheduled tour will not lose their
seniority .
The company has 1,300 employes in 47 counties that are
represented by the CWA.
11

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The

u. S. Sixth Circuli Court of
Appeals today agreed to bear
a suit flied by tbree Kent
State University students
asking tbat parts of Oblo's
riot control law be declared
UDCODS!itutlonal.
The suit was filed by Craig
Morgan, former president of
the Kent State student body
who bas beeD Indicted on I'lol
charges stemmiDg from the
disturbances of May 4, 1970,
when four students were sbot
to deatb by National Guan1s- I
men, Tom Dlckenoo student
body vice prealdent and
William Slocum, presideiil
pro·lem of the Studeut
Senate.

Reds Hr·t
TT
n
0
V • •
'DII.I''7 L •
zne
.

s
.

'lr~LJ
.
..
SAIGON (UPI) .- .Military
spokesme_n reported today that
North V1etnamese and Vtet
Cong forces ended a 20-day lull
in tbe Communist summer
offensive with a series ~rocket
and mortar atla~ks agamst the
all•"'!. defense line along tbe
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Military sources said the
South Vietnamese general staff
sees the new attacks as
portending the opening of a new
phase. of the Communist
offensiVe.
.,.
..
But otber numary authcrities
Sl!id the wave of sheUings and
clashes merely coincided with a
dark phase of the moon as well
as witb some of the worst July
weather In 20 years. They
pointed out that Communist
attacks always increase during
the dark of the moon.
American and South Vietnamese troops reported lrilling 102
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese in fighting Monday. Most ·
of the fighting was in South
Vietnam's five northern provinces.
Haven, died Sunday afternoon For the Americans it was the
at Holzer Medicaf Center two heaviest casualties against tbe .
hours afla' birth. .
North Vietnamese and Viet
In addition to his parents, he Cong in nearly six weeks,
is SUrvived by bis two brothers, military sources said.
bis twin Ronafd Scott, and
The heaviest fighting for both
William Eugene, age four. American and South VietnaMaternal grandparents are Mr. mese trocps was.'centered in
and Mrs. UO)')I Riffle, New northwestern Quang Tri ProHaven, and paternal grand- vince just below tbe DMZ and
parents are Mr. and Mrs. around the abandoned Khe Sanh
William Erb, Der'&gt;y, Ohio.
. Combat Base and on the slcpes
Graveside rileS will be held of Dong Ha Mountain surtoday at 2 pm. at Pleasant1 mounted by the recently rebuilt
Cemetery at Erie, Ohio, tbel Fire Base Fuller.
Rev, Howard Rollins ofCommunist forces hit Fuller
ficiating.
: with 11 rounds of 122mm
rockets and attackod an infan.

u.;

s;

military pollee in
Vietqam arrested almost as many Gls on heroin
charges last month as they did in aU of 1970,
American command statistics showed today. A
total of 1,13'6 men were arrested in June, just 10
less than the 1,146 arrested in all of last year.
The latest figures, combined with a huge
increase in requests for "amnesty" by Gl heroin
&lt;UPIJ -

caused the public and welcome
our pecple back to their jobs."
Meantime, United Telephone
Co. officials in Ohio said the settlement probably would have no
effect on its negotiations with
the CWA,
"They are two separate sets
of negotiations," said Thomas
Mitchell, CWA regional
representative in Cleveland.
"They're not related whatsaver."
A spokesman for United declined to say if the company
would attempt to match the settlement made in the Ohio Bell
agreement.
United officials said the 925
employes fired last week because of wildcat strikes would

Resumes Aug. 5

Pomeroy
CC Names
Directors
Five directors of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce were
named Monday with the sixth
member to be named by the
Board of Directors due to a tie
vote .
Named to the Board of
Directors following the counting
of ballots were Jack Carsey,
William Grueser, Marjorie
Hoffner, Wendall Hoover and
Ada Nease.
Other Board members
elected last year for a two year
term are Tom Cassell, Fred
Crow, Donald Diener, Jack
Kerr, Fred Morrow, Ralph
Graves and Bob Jacobs.
Bill Grueser, president,
commented about Miss I.aw;el
Lea Schaefer winning the Miss
Ohio Pageant Saturday night at
Cedar Point. Miss Schaefer was
Miss Southern Ohio in 1968
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Members voted to pay the
amount due the Pomeroy
National Bank and the Farmers
Bank and Savings as soon as all
receipts are received from the
Big Bend Regatta.
Attending the noon-luncheon
meeting held at Bowers' DriveIn were Bob Jacobs, Grueser,
Tom Cassell, Richard Chambers, Wendall Hoover, Jack
Kerr, N. W. Compton, Thereon
Johnson , and Earl Ingels.

in wage and fringe benefits.
Wage increases would be retroactive to May I, 1971.
The tentative.settlement must
be ratified by local unions before it goes into effect. Agency
shcps, where all employes are
required to pay union dues, and
a c~t of living provision were
included in the prcposed contract.
Robert 0 . Boyer, Ohio Bell
personnel vice president, said
the company was delighted with
the tentative pact.
"II was an exceptionally good
contract -one that will enable
us to attract the pecple we
need to provide tbe best service
we know how to give," be said.
"We regret any inconvenicence

D•oft Lottery

By .uruted Press Jnternauonai
Ohio Extended Outlook
Thursday Through Saturday
Mild Thursday with chance
of showers northern sections
by evening. Cooler Friday
and Saturday with chance of
showers. Daytime highs 80 to
85 Thursday, dropping off to a
range from the mid to upper
70s the remainder of the
. period. Lows at night from
the mid 50s to the lower 60s.

tiaffic.

f~rc

Sale

To The lntere.l&amp; Of The Meigs-M010n Area

SAIGON -SOUDI VIETNAM'S Vice President Nguyen Cao
Ky bas added his denial to that of President Nguyen Van Thieu
tbat the two eiecutives are involved in Indochina's narcotics

St&gt; · l\3se·

Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck and
Mrs. Alvin Norris bave
returned from Pontiac,
Michigan wbere they attended
tbe funeral services of Mr.
Orville Gattie, husband of the
former Janet Ewing.
Mr. Gattie is survived by bis
wife, Janet Ewing Gattie; two
step-sons, · Larry Reuter,
Pontiac, and Roger Reuter of
Draytm Plains, Michigan.
Funeral services were held
Friday at the Bessardet
Funeral Home in Oxford, Mich.
The Rev. Artbur Howard of.
liciated. &amp;rial was in Stiles
Cemetery at Lapeer, Micb.

disconlenled -tc Poar and Oscar Prid&lt;!y.
- le I know are lrymg -tc
to be something they are 'il
rot. and to do something -tc VeterusMemortaiHoopital
they cannot.
-t1 Sa
dmk •-- •
- David Grayson -tc
turday A J&amp;LL.arry
-t1 Fitch, Jr.,' Portland; Anna
-t1 Icenhower; Portland ; Leona
: w 5 n..:..a..l
Hubbard, RaS~acuse; KaCitho
-tc 11: ¥~Y
-tc Adams,
cme;
y
-tc
~
-t1 Carleton, Racine.
-tr
Saturday DladJarKes -tc Carolyn Wood, Lillian Duffy,
-t1
-11 Anna Wheeler, Sharon Tackett.
-tr
Fridays Only
-tr Suday Admluleas Donald
: The Drive- In Window : Brickles, Pomeroy ; Charles
-tr
is Open
-tc Hysell, Middleport; Beulah
-t1 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
-t1 White, Middleport ; Let
:
(Continuously)
: Wallace, Jr., Little Hocking;
-tr
-t1 MyrUe Wolford, Middleport;
-tc Oilier Bankong Hours &gt;10 -tl Mary Baldwin, PLAlldoyi Paul
i&lt; 3 •nd s to 1 •• usual on -tc ParsODs Racine . Larry Werry
• Frida
iC
I
'
I
-t1
ys.
i&lt; Hundred, W. Va.; Jimles Me-

-tc

:.~1

Funeral Services

Bateman, Roy Sa,...e, Lydia
•"''''"'''"''fA Thought -tc King,
Sally Morgan, Delra
:
: Allbright, Bary Mille~-' Bobby
•-+- For
Today •-tc Charles
Plants, Mrs. Robert Spencer,
·
Lee Baird, Mrs. Orville
Atl

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

AHend Gatkie

LOCAL TEMPS
Bowen, Mason.
Temperatures in downtown
DISCHARGES: Milford
Ptwkroy Monday at II a. m. Lyvere, Sherrie Roush, Walter
was 74 degrees under cloudy Donohue, Rita Roush, Ul.ah
sties.
Powell, Delford Bragg, Mrs.
Roy Wilmouth, WU.Uam

-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc

·~------~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Partly clou&lt;!y and cooler
loday and tonight. Highs today
in the 70s and the. lows tonight
from the upper 40s to the middle
50s. Sunny aild a little WarJller
Wednesday with highs from the
middle 70s \0 the lower 808. ·

VOL XXI~ NO. 67·-~----__:P~O~ME~RO~Y:_:
·M~ID~DL~EP~UR:.:::T,~O~HI.:::._O_ _ _ __ ____:.TU~E=SD::.::AY~,J::::_:UL::.:.Y~20:!...,_:.::l9~7l~_ __ _ _ __ P
_H_ON_E_99_2-_21_56_ _ _T_E_N_CE_NT_S

~~

Appeal Reuni ·cation
3CUBIC FOOT

~oted

(Continued from page I)
'signed into law a one-month. apJX'opriati~ ~Ian afla' the~ .
fiscal year started July I Without the biennial program
.

Obio Bell bas Jepwled serer- The test ol pre-bldergarteo
al instances ol. vandalism In- and pre-first grade children will
clndingtbe~a~Uah«olnailsin start early in August, Robert E.
Bell office driveways in Bowen, county superinteudeot,
&lt;levelarxllbe tbiowiJ« cl eggs announced today.
and-~ fillod balloon•.
September 30 iS tbe date a
...__
_.._in Day- ehild must be six years of age to
auo: ....;..;•• w....
tm came af~ tine days of enter school in the first grade
disturbances 011 the picket liDe. and five yeaN. of age by SepDllytm police officials met tember 30 to enter kinwitb unloo 1epr -talives to dergarten.
eq,lain police J*ocedwe during Children with birthdays
a strike.
between September 30 and
''We tald them lbat we don't January 1 mthe scbool year
tUe sides but we'Je there to may request early 8dmissiiJII.
preserve order,." said Rod Students will be evaluated by
&amp;nitb, putu: iclormatiCJD oflic- an educationally accepted
er f&lt;r !be police deparlment. standardized testing program
A SJV*eman fl.- tbe Daytm conducted by tbe COWtty school
CWA local, Mrs. Jemie Winter- supervisors, Greta Suttle and
botbam, said tbe n:stnining or- Nellie Vale.
der wall ''as fair an order as Only siUdents in the upper
could be obtained."
five pet. of the general

Weather

U.

addicts, also showed the narcotics problem in
Vietnam is as bad or worse than congressional
estimate-• released a month ago that 10 to 15 pet:
cent of all Gls in Vietnam are narcotics users.

Chief Webster Suggests Sick Leave Policy f~'k1=
Be
Established Before Labor Da~ s;:::~$3~:
Near Khe Sanh, American

·

The resignation of meterman
Wayne Payne was accepted as
of July 19 and a lengthy
discussion ih regard to the
payment of wages for
policemen who take sick leave
on a working holiday was
discussed at a meeting of
Pomeroy · Council Monday
night.
,
It was noted that some time
ago council in its minutes had
agreed to disallow six holidays
for members of the police force
and instead increase their pay

$18 a month.
If any member of the force
called In sick on a working
holiday $36 would be deducted
from their paycheck but they
would be paid sick leave.
Members of the police force are
allowed 15 days of sick leave a
year.
It' noted that the paycheck of
Edith Sissgn, night dispatcher,
was deducted $36 and she was
not paid sick leave. A motion
was made to reimburse Mrs.
Sisson the $36 but the motion

was voted' down 3 to 2.
Jim Mees suggested that an
ordinance be adopted regarding
sick leave and days off.
Franklin Rizer noted that the
matter should be given a great
deal of consideration and study
before any actiO.. was taken.
Don Collins agreed. ·
Council agreed to turn the
matter over to the safety
committee for sludy and
recommendation.
Pomeroy . Police Chief Jed
Webster suggested that the

changes be made before the
next holiday. The six holidays
council agreed on are Christmas,
New
Year's,
Thanksgiving, Fourth of July,
Memorial and Labor Days.
In other business council
agreed to paint the Unem•
ployment Office and install. a
1 k the door following a
~:u: s:;:mitted by members
of the Bureau o( Unemployment. Council is presenUy
redecorating other rooms in the
City Hall building.

An e~timate from l!eltz
Ent.erpnses of. l..ancasll)t for
ex~nsive c~ on the exteriGrofthe~tyhallatacostof
$5,300 '!'as discussed, howeve~,
no acli~ was Iaten.
Co_u~~ll
discussed the
J)OSBibility of a no left turn D!f
Butternut onto West Matn
Street. It was noted that to tate
such action a recommendation
would have to be made by the
state. . .
Council did, IKnrever, agree
(Continued on Page!O)

with antiaircraft machinegwls.
They killed 11 Viet Cong' in the
first incident northeast of Khe
Sanh and 14 in the second
southeast of the base.
TWO PERSONS F1NED ·
'J'!Ioo defendants were fined In
Syracuse Herrnaq London'a
court Monday ni&amp;ht Marsllll
Milton Varian reported.
·
Carl L. Tennant, 21, New
Haven, and Joyce A. Prollltt,
21, Portla.'ld, were . eacb lined
$15 a~ coets on chargee Gl
speedmg.
I

I
~

.

- .

�!

·,

.

.

11

.
. .
.-----------------------------

.Better Voters
Or .Just Younger?
-~

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fainting Is
Common
Symptom
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr-,· Lamb-! am 41
years old, five feet nine and
=-weigh 155. I passed my phy~ slcal exam. for military serv·
ice 20 years ago. Through'out my life, there have been
times I have fainted (three
times) or felt faint.
It has occurred when I donated blood and after standlng longer than five minutes
in church. I usually can
battle this, but there have
been times when it was hard
to hear the-pastor after 1 sat
down.
I am somewhat . nervous,
easily emotionally disturbed
DMr sleeper. I do not
and a ..-··
smoke or drink any alcoholic
beverages and rarely have
more than two cups of coffee
a day. 1 operate a mediumsized dairy farm, so I get an
adequate amount of physical
activity. Is my problem quite
common and what is the
usual cause?
Dear Reader-Fainting is
a symptom and ,can mean
many things. It is quite common in perfectly healthy
people. True, it occurs more
often in young people, before
the age of 00, than in older
people without disea~e.
I once set up a study to
find out how common fainting was in the Air Force fly ing population. As a generalization. about 40 per cent of
these healthy men rem em·

bered losing consciousness at
one time or another and
.
about half of these had been
simple faints from "standing
in church," visiting the hospita!, par ad e formation .
shots, blood drawing and the
like. I do not regard three
faints or near-faints in a lifetime as really unusual in an ffitered first by settllng beds and groond seepage ... though that
otherwise healthy person.
doesn't do much foc pbosphates. U everyone using the lake
Fainting is caused by in- washed his or her hair in It, there might soon he a scum so thick
adequate circulation to the you'd have m cut it. - H.
brain. This can occur be- Dear Helen:
cause too much of the blood
I'"' embarrassed by my mother. She drinks, walks around
,.,_
collects in the legs while the house with nothing on, leaves the bathroom door open, even
standing still. Moving the
he ha
and sh f0u
legs, to contract the muscles , w n 1 ve CIDipally,
e
ows me everywhe re, eJ'the r
yelling cr crying.
helps prevent this.
I stay away as much as possible and never bring anyone home
The
heart
may
beat
too
'th
1 1
t t
WI me, but you don 'I koop many frieods tba t way. The one or
s ow y or can even s op emporarily, through reflex ac- two times I slept over at a girl friend's house, my mother called
lions, even in healthy people. about 2 a.m. and I couldn't shut her off 'cause she was drunk.
When a ~rson_ fall_s to the Natw-ally 1 wasn't ever invited again.
g.:ound with this kind of a
I tried staying home and kooping the booze away from her but
famt, the heart us:ually starts she just hid and sneaked it. I'd run away, but then she really
a g a i 0 automatically. The WOULD drink herself !Ddeath. And I'd feelas though I caused it.
h e a r l can . also beat too
slowly because of disease, It's awful m hate and love your mother, all at once. usually 10 much older per- MISERABLE
sons, and cause repeated · Dear Miserable:
fainting episodes. Usually
Your mother is sick. She needs cl~ help aDd, if she won't
these individuals have heart
rates below 40 a minute and accept it via Alcoholics Anonymous, then call your local
&amp;re sometimes treated with Alcohollsm Center. .Or write m The National Council on
an implanted electrical pace- Alcohollsm, TWo East 103 Street, New York, N. Y., 10029, for
maker.
further information.
You could get the support YOU need by attending Al-Anon or
Nervous individuals sometimes breathe too rapidly Ala teen meetings, where you'll learn that facing your problemand too deeply (hyperventll- and t;rying to understand your mother's problem - is much
ation) . This blows off too
much carbon dioxide and af- healthier than trying m hide it. - H.
feels the body chemistry, Dear Helen:
which in turn affects the cirIn high schoolllaM!w two girls who were such close friends
that people Insinuated !bey were queer. I never believed it,
because Mary was a childhood friend of mine.
The other day I saw Mary downtown, and noticed she had on
an engagement ring. I congratulated ber, and she hesitated and
said, ''Ann, I'm dying m tell someone about this, and I know you
won't condemn me like others might ____ Amy and I are engaged
and we are t;rylng m find a way ID be 1egally married."
Helen, I was caught off balance and was just speechless. So
Mary turned and walked away, very llu1.
Could you tell me what I can do m ler her know I'm lt3lly not
condemning. Mter all, she is a good person, a long time friend,
and who am I m judge? - ANN
Dear AnnL
A card oc letter, saying essentially what you wrote in your
letter m me, should make Mary realize that you can like the
person even though you can't understand ber actions.- H.

u

-----=--------------BERRJ'S WORLD

••..

fNEWSPA,PU EHTUPliSf: A.1SH. I
I

q:l

usure, I haYe

1911., ""·I... ~~ -·

interest in work, I'm indolent, nonproductive ond neglect personal hygiene- but I did it
without &lt;(rugs!"
no

'/east tend · pout 4Hsfions ortd
commtnb to L.awre"" E. lcrntb,
M.D., in core of lhis po~. WIHie
IJr. Lomb CGIJttOt onswer ittdhiduol
idten, Itt will aiuw•r letters 01
gtnerol interest ;,. f•t11r! columns.

LUCKY NUMBER
More players in the Pro
Football Hall of Fame wore
jersey No. 14 than wore
any other number. Don Hutson. Otto Graham, Y. A.
TitHe, Link Lvman, Curly
Lambeau and John McNally
all wore 14 at one time during
their pro careers. No. ' 11,
with five Hall of Fame wearers. is second.

J.:..

WIN AT BRIDGE

CareluiTrumpManagement
.
Noam

:zG

• 53
• A 98 6

:~;0652

WEST

EAST

• A ~O} 6
•void
+ 10 9 8 54

"'K J 8 3
soUTH (D)

• J 942
•K543
+KJ
• Q94

• KQ 8

• QJ 1012

+ A 632
• 7
East-West vulnerable
Wesf North

r...t

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

UPI.,_. Wilkt
I bad at the start. 1 was
11B'e 11ere twa names lhe ~ at everything, even
h 'tea menlioli!ei IIHI' and Iitchell in lbe dirt. Now 1 wait
01'11' apin liHt in ~ foc my pitch and I think before
tr.Dng.
_
· gotng up ID the plate."
·
Two ,....g ~ aged 20
and u, had lbe "can't miss"
Cedeno hit _310 in the second
tag.. 'D1ey wen Mli4Mreed m be half of. last season .at age . .19
lasbmt -lions. 'D1ey were when be fmrt beard himself

1.4.

South

Opening lead-+ 10

mtW&amp;e,lllaehaslivedupto Willie Mays and Roberto
1U Pie
mlmMip bo.t 19'11 Clemente.
has ' - ' 11is1 a year of Manager Harry Walker says,
flusllation fer a.. 2Diar-old ''be has the potential m be a
Cedeno. The Houobi Astrcrs' Mays.cr Clemente. He has good
Ollt!ie..,_ started !be
speed, a good arm and be can
t.tting 111111er Jill and bas been lit. He's lbe type of player wbo
slniggling ID maintain his causes things to happen. But
anrage Oiilioft .250.
he's not even close to being the
.But be still "'-s "ashes cl ting of ballplayer MAys and
lU P' I ~jal ml be did it Oemente are yet. It will take
Mondlly Digbt when be ooiJeded five cr six years before we -irill
three lila inrt"'ir.: a game- find out whether be can be that
wimingsiJJdeinlheUthinnlng kind of player."
as the Astras dOWlil!d The question is whether the
Ph~•. ~
Astro&amp;, who've eJpeCted too
"''m IliOn! ,...ml at the mucli too soon fr0111 Cedeno can
plalle,"lbe Dominican J!t¥Nic wait lbatlong for Cedeno~ find
111tiw Slid, "I'm mt over himself. YollDg -ballplayers
swinging 811Jillcre. Wilen I have been ruined in the past by
swing, I'm just lr}ing 1D hit the a fast buildup befoce they were
bali ap lhe micMJe and ID right. ready.

Ashe, Laver
Upset Victims

North's jump to three
hearts is a limit raise, but
South has enough to continue
to game. In JACOBY MODERN, you only pass after a
limit raise with a real minimum.
South plays dummy's
queen of diamonds at trick
one. The king covers and
South sees a considerable
problem in trump management developing. He may
want to ruff two diamonds
and a spade in dummy, so
the last thing he plans is to
play trumps. He lets East
hold the first diamond. East
leads a trump. South wins in
dummy and notes East holds
all the missing trumps.
This shouldn't worry South.
He leads a spade to his king.

seat to no one.
Stroking his backhand for
consistent winners, Bowrey
spotted Laver a one-set lead,
then stormed back m win the
second set and reel off a iHl
lead in the third set before
Laver rallied to take four
straight games. Bowrey held
his service in the lOth game m
win the match, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.
With Ashe and Laver out of
contention, Cliff Drysdale of
round.
South Africa moved into the
Prier ID Monday, Pilic never favorite 's role as the thirdhad beaten Ashe, IliA' had seeded player.
80IIrey ever defeated Laver.
Ken Rosewall, winner of the
Pilic and Ashe waged a tense Washington Star International
.struggle that weJt ID match on Sunday, is seeded sixth in
point 11 times before the the tourney which runs through
Yugoslav Jefthander scca-ed the next Sunday.
clincher 111 a .r..., shot that
In other first-round matches,
Ashe bit wl rl br•nh. It pve Andres Gimeno of Spain
Pilic a U. 7-4, 7-&amp; vidlrry.
defeated Owen Davidson of
"It was like Rmrian Roulette Australia, 6-2, 6-3; Ismail El
...t there," said Pille in his Shafei of the United Arab
1lalkarHicxi!Jited English, " I Republic beat Roy Barth of San
have him llt'Yen match points Diego, Calif., 6-7, 6-4, 6-4;
and be has roe fOlD'. II was the Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield,
first time I beat Ashe, bot I Calif., conquered Allan Stone of
CWJe close in our olber tbree . Australia, 6-4, 7'6, and Fred
malcbes. And iKf .this clay Smile of Australia OI!Sted tour
surfac:e, I clOD'! give him any rookie Tom Leonard, 6-4, 6-4.
IDOI"e cbances tban me."
Bowrey, a harutgme f1·year·
old Auslralian, bas been
overshadowed by his fellow
countrymen Laver, Ken Rosewall, John Newtmlbe and Tooy
Roche. He never has advanced
beyorwl the ......! round 011 the
pro taur this year,
,
•I
\
But Monday be took a bact

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
West takes the ace. So fai,
south bas found th~ king of
WASHINGTON (NEAl
diamonds, ace of spades and
In the Southwest, a huge new electric power complex is
king of trumps wrong, but rising in the desert. The pollution-fighters, protective of
he has no worries, provided the desert's clean air, have made it controversial. Somehe can ruff a spade and two thing ·etse makes it a very interesting project.
diamonds in dummy.
Nicknamed the "four corners" development, from the
West leads the nine of dia- fact that }I is near the joining point of Utah, Colorado,
moods. When East plays the New Menco and Arizona, it is designed to supply major
jack, South should be alerted supplementary power for Los Angeles, Phoenix and some
to ruffing a spade before a other cities. Its potential capacity is set at 00,000 megawatts ~ 20 billion watts) .
diamond.
Therefore, he cashes the
What makes this interesting is contrast.
queen of spades, ruffs the
The other day a high government official concerned
eight of spades, cashes dum- with world matters spotted that megawatt figure. He
my's ace of clubs, ruffs a suddenly realized that it almost perfectly matched the
club, leads a diamond and is power development which the World Bank had financed
caref u1 to ruff with the ace over a 2:&gt;-year period in developing nations with a total
of trumps. Now it is a simple population of 1.8 billion.
matter to ruff a club and his
That power growth financed by the bank represents
last diamond with a small today about one-fifth of the total power resources in the
trump. East can overruff developing countries.
now with his k ing, but
To put it most dramatically, what those 1.8 blllion
South's contract is safe.
people have in the way of power is just .five times o~~s
(HlWSPAPU ..IHTUPI.ISl ASSN.)
great as what is being planned in our southwestern desert to take care of power overloads in Los Angeles and
Phoenix.
The official who cited this example offered it to point
The bidding has been:
up the incredible disparity between the affluent countries
West
North
East
and the "'have-nots." It is not news to say that many
officials working to pull up the economies of the poorer
Pass
1•
Pass
lands think the gap is getting wider au the time.
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass
One reason, known to us all, is the galloping rise in
Pass
5 N.T.
Pass
popu!atlon m the world's poverty-stricken nations. There
You, South, hold:
are some judgments that population pl:inning (birth con.AK6 •Attts tKU.KQZ trol) •s _not effective in these areas. By one estimate, the
population m the developing lands may climb steadily
What do you do now?
for
another century-to a peak of perhaps 10 billion-beA-If your jNU'IDer will !mow
fore
any sort of stability is achieved.
what it means, bid Ax no-trump
An
a~vious critical c o n s e q u e n c e : unemployment
to show three kincs and jrut
about the hand you have. Olher- spreading like the plague in the teeming cities of the
disadvantaged countries. The gulf between them and the
wise answer six spades.
well-off nations is on the way to becoming a huge, bot- ·
TODAY'S QUESTION
tomless chasm. Says the high official:
Instead of bidding one heart
" Human beings are not going to tolerate these exyour partner has raised you to tremes."
two clubs. What do you do now?
Exploding numbers spell joblessness and that means
worse and -worse malnutrition.
. The experts today are deeply troubled over scientific
fmdmgs that early human brain development is crucial
FACTS
and is heavily derendent on an adequate protein diet. By
the age of four, 90 per cent of a human's brain growth
has occurred.
Serious deprivation of protein foods in the early span
stunts th~ br"!n. The results are irreversible. Thus, given
the detenorating human condition in the underdeveloped
world, hundr_eds and hundr_eds of millions of today's cliildren are bemg doomed r1ght now to inadequate brain
developf!'Jent. This is already poverty's cruelest cost.
E_ven if nutritlon were good, the chances to extend the
bram through education are so limited in many countries
that another dimen~ion is added to the widening cruelty.
~e official mentioned Ethiopia, merely as an ezample
w_hich could be d~plicated in many places. One wliole reDespite the vast expanse g•on bas not a smgle secondary school. Catastrophic is
of land in tbe U.S. interior, the fact that 87 per cent of that country's primaryabout 53 per cent of the ""hool-age chil~en are not in school and likely never
American people are now will be. What this_means, in coldest prospect, is that 50
living in counties which lie years from now-m an era when knowledge is advancing
at least partly within 50 w!th rocket speed- nearly nine of every 10 Ethiopians
miles of the coasts, accord- Will not have even the most rudimentary education.
ing to 1970 Census figures, .. Now_. '!"'!:'l's all_ this sell-pitying nonsense from some
The World Almanac says.
idealistic Amer1cans that there's nothing challen~g
About 107 million Ameri- left to do? The challenges are everywhere. Question:
cans live near the coast.
Where are the fervent helpers?

,

'I

This was not a breach of
the national security. We
gave away no national secrets. We didn't jeopardi2e
any American soldiers or
Marines overseas.
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger,
president and publisher of
a secret Pentagon study
of U. S. involvement in
Vietnam.

I look at it as a job, and
I imagine I do it at much
the same pressure I would
any other job.
- Britain's Prince Philip, on
being a prince.

We lost our way sometime in the 19th century.
-Architect Archibald Rog-

U

Linesrores
By United Press 1-....tional
.ArheriQn ' ,,,ue

Cleveland 0011 OliO flO)- 3 9 1
California 0011 OliO 001- I 7 1
McDowell (9-91 SuareZ;
Clark. LaRoche (t), Allen (91
and Moses. LP-Oarlt (2-1).
Milwaukee al llo&gt;lon, PO&gt;I-

paned, rain.

Balllmor" 012 0011 ICIO- 4 5 o
Ookland 000 2011 ~ 2 7 1
Dobson (12-4) and Elclrebarren; Segui, Fingers (9) and
Dunc:.an! LP-Segui 1~1 - HRs-Biair (61h). Mmday (IOihl.
Johnson (llhl.

They1l Do It Every Time

ers, on today's uunlivable''

cities.

J.FrtR
DE\0!11'(; 1115 UFE TO GETTING A
5WEI-L f«JME IN THE SUI!!ORBS, GRINDBI.
TAKES 1115 FAMILY ON AV.ACATION· ·-

To A BACKv-.ooos 51-lKK,., BEAR

I'.()OLCJN'T UYE IN "·I&gt;.ND HE TliiN)&lt;S
l-IE'S REALLY UVIN'!· · · ·

••
--

·

He's not responsible for
what he's sayinl!. He's emotionally upset. The poor man
has been under a lot of pres-

--

sure.

-•

-New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefeller on criticisms
of the stale legislature by
Mayor John Lindsay of · '-""'""
New York 'City.

-

••

••
~-

•

'

•

•

,,

'

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By United Press International
Le.Jding Bailers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre, St.L 94 363 SS 129 .3SS
Bckrt. Chi
89 360 60 126 .3SO
Davis. LA
95 383 59 132 .345
Clmnt, Pit
80 326 SS Ill .340
Pptn. Chi
72 269 37 91 .338
Brock, SI.l 91369 73123 .333
Garr. All
94391 67 129 .330
Atou. St.l
88 355 43 Ill .324
Snglln, Pit 83 320 33 103 .322
Cash, Pit
70 283 S6 91 .322
American tngue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min
72 276 49 104 .377
Nurcer, NY 91 3'25 57 109 .335
Otis, KC
11.4 332 Sl 104 .313
Buford. Bal 76 282 74 88 .312
Rojas. KC
as 312 43 97 .311
F.Rbsn. Bal 76 265 -48 82 .309
Kaline. Det 77 251 43 76 .303
Rchrdt, Chi 78 288 29 87 .302
Mnchr. Wash 80 256 30 77 .301
Hwrd. Wash 89 33'2 37 99 .298

Minnesola 000 002 ~ 2 7 I
Washngtn 004 000 lOx- S 10 I
Perry. Williams (6). Hall (71
and Miilerwald; Brown, Shellffl&gt;ack (6) , Pina (6) , Lindblad
Home Runs
(6) and Billings WP-Brown (3_
Natio""l
league: Stargell,
2) . LP Peo ry !12-91. HRP11l
31
;
Aaroo,
All 25; May,
Billings (Jrdl.
Cin 24 ; Johnsoo, Phil 22;
Colbert. SO and Bonds, SF 20.
(isl ~-. 11 inaingsl
Oric:.ago 210. 0011 0011 s- 1 13 0 American League: Mellon,
Chi and Cash, Dot 21 ; Smith.
New York
300 000 0011 ,.___ J 1 0 8os 20; Oliva, Minn 18;
Magnuson, Rorno !II. Hinlon Pelrocelli. Bos, Murcer, NY
(1). Johnson (10) Her- aird Jacksoo, Oak 17.
Runs Batted ln
rmann; Slollleotlyre (9-9) and
Natio""l league: Stargell,
~son. WP-Hinlon 11-01. HR
Pill 89 ; Torre, Sl.l 73; Aaron,
-HerrmaM 16ihl.
All 70; Montanez, Phil 67;
Sanlo, Chi 64.
(2nd ~-1
Chicago 000 120 ~ J 9 I American lo~ue: Petrocelli.
New York 000 100 ~ I 6 I 8os 64; Killebrew. Mlnn 63; 8.
John (9-101 Herrmann; Robirn;on, Ball 60; F. Robinson,
Hanlin. Oosler (6), Hambright Ball and Melton, Chi 59.
Pitching
(9) and Munson. LP-Hardin
NalioNI
league: Ellis, Pill
(0-21. HR--May (Jrd).
lS-3; Jenkins, Chi 14-8; Carlton,
O.troit
000 «&lt;I ~ S 9 0 Sl.l 13-6; Dierker, Hou 12-4;
Kan City 000 001 001- 2 I 0 Downing and Osteen, LA 11-6;
· lolich (IS-61 and F~; Stoneman. Mont 11-9.
Ameriari League: Blue. Qak
Rooker, Nelson (6). Abernathy
111-3;
Lolich, Del 15-6; Cuellar,
~~~-May . LP-Rool&lt;er U-11.
Ball 13-2; McNally, Ball and
Sieberl. Bos 13-4. .
1
~tiMYI
·~
Montre.ll
2011 em oo•- 5 1 o
Chicago 000 003 ~ 3 5 0
Strahmayer. Raymond (61,
Marshall (71 and Bocc:abella;
Holtzman, Bmham (6). llr!do.l!r
{1). Pizarro (t). R"9'J11 191 Mat-tin. WP-Sirohmayer !3-3).
LP - Holiunan 1-10). HR Woods (1st).

The dominance of American husbands by their wives
IS worse than a Saturday
night beating. The "Craig's
Wife" type still exists. Even
thought control of a husband
Q-Who is the last pitcher ts common in the United
in majot league baseball his- States.
toru l,o be a 300-game win-Author Mary McCarthy.
ner?
on women's lib.
A- Early Wynn.

•

1

I'•·~

:::::=::JJ

;;a;,t•

;::0;1;1

WORLD ALMANAC

TIMELY QUOTES

A half-truth is like half a
brick; you can throw it farther.
-Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rick-

WUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI}Giant.Xil.lers Nikki Pilic and
Billllowrey savmed their finest
hours in prof -oaal tennis
lodayaffft-up!lettingtap
Jed
Arthur Ashe and sec&gt;ML' : led
Rod Lawr, nspeclively, Mooday in the ~.aao First
National Tennis Cassie
It was the first time during
the cun-ent world champiiJilship
tennis taur that Ashe aDd Laver
had'-' eliminated in the first

-

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP])- 1972-73athletic year.
~nU:al Michiga~ and Eastern
The new league teams will
Michigan wete g.'ven memiM;r- begin competing in football and
ship . Monday 10 the Mid- basketball as soon as schedules
Amencan Conference.
permit, according to Dr. Phillip
~ two schools will be R Shriver, president of Miami
elig~ble for MAC competition in University and chairman of the
all sports but _foo~ll and.-MAC's Council of Presidents,
basketball starting With the and MAC President Fred

~ l)drm 81111 V'Jda Blur. being ccmpared m players like

Growing Threat of
World Have-Nots

.

ne n.o, s r ' •Ml • .. ._
, . ~-P
1m11 oy,· o., Jaly m. 1m

~~ N!R..~~~ Two Michigan Teams ·Admitted

BRUCE BIOSSAT

over.

culation and flow of blood to
the brain. Such people should
NOT hold their breath but
can get benefit from slow
and shallow breathing.
Breath-holding can trigger
undesirable reflexes that can
cause fainting .
There are a lot of other
reasons for fainting but, in
the vast majority of people
who faint and have no other
complaints. it is not serious.

I

tl- tw..,...

,,

I

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is fer young people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! it welcomes laughs but won'tdodge a serious question with a
!rush-off.
HAIR POlLUTION PROBlEMS
Dear Helen:
There's been much talk of the threat m our environment by
polluting lakes and streams.
Last summer when I was at camp, many of the kids washed
their halt in the lake. Helen, we have showers at camp, aDd the
used water goes into septic tanks. The lake is so clean and pretty.
Won't It be polluted by hair-washing? Shampoos are probably
higher phosphate detergeniB than thn91! used on clothes.
I'm wrong, 1 won •t say anything •·
w th e camp direc'·
wr th'IS
year, so please tell me so I'll !mow if I'm 'right m protest. ·YOUNG OONCERNED CAMPER
Dear Camper:
I'd say you have a right to protest. While septic tanks may
eventually drain in!D the lake (lbope not!!!) the water is at least

-

Jael O'llrtu Ia • ......._ b 1111 p18ce, counlry. IW9mally, I liD !be_ "!"I• llllllic
PWl CHilly,awl.,, ;.11 f d 1111 lovers are the losers bee••"' 11 IS ,....ny
Ide• • __..._ Ia a
aeries.
~ceded that lbe old boy bas a pretty good W"aJ
·
With a song.
.
.
Because he is a great fisiJermaD 81111 a vt!l')'
BY PIIIL OUIS8Y
ardent cmaervaticmist, he be1iefta that buntq
SALMON n..LIIF..IU'IS
and fishing should be dcme in modeJalion apd,
A DAN1811 PASTING
under supervision so that no wildlife species is
NEW YORK - 'lbere is a lot of Irish in the
threatened with extinction.
Crosby clan and if I learned anything from my
pop and my gnrDnolber, it was that if a Crosby
rm also fer COIItrolled and legal bunting
gel! involVed in a light be isezpeded mcome out because certain aniDials muSt be t1inrw1 out cr
swingbig until be winds up either a winner or a they pr esent a danger m olber fCII'IIIS rl wildlife
candida~ fer the emergency ward.
as well as their own species. The gOfti'DIIIellt
It's not that my beloved kin advocate will tell you what these cnatuns are. and you
violence ~ llir from ll We would be h8ppy if we are e,s:pected 19 go and bunt lllll!l1 011 a fair aDd
could ramble lbrougb life wilbout raising our square basis.
.
fisiB &lt;r even our voices in anger. But as my dad
1am against indiscriminate llillinllcr killing
is wont m say: "If you evel' getinma bnimigan, foc stftt sporl But since this plaiiet got lDjust make sure the opposition knows il"
derway several million years ago, man has
My dad is pr
illy a member rl a group of realized thattosurvive,bemust kill animals 81111
coocemedmenaDd wUUli!ilwboare engaging the
other wildlife creatures.
Danish government in verllal fisticuggs because
I got in!D a domnylaoot with a fP1 in FairDanish fishermen are basteniDg lbe demise of
banks, Alaska, because I.made an unllatlering
Atlantic salmmbyfishing methods that can only remark about his shooting a palar bear from an
be described as dangerws.
airplane. The gist It my m ~ mthis IIJq
The Danish liabamen are indisa'iminately N'IJIII'Od was that it did not take ai.y great
laking. large hauls of !be salmm in lbe Nmth
amount of guts m shoot a hdpl animal with a ·
Atlantic, andilydoing so, they do not allow the higbi)Owered rifle fnm the safety rl an airfish m return m Inland rivers aDd slreams where plane.
.
they spawn. As a result, there is the probability
1said that while shoOting a bear could DOC be
that ~ fish will vl1lish fnm !be waters rl the
coostrued as murdel', the way be did It came
wcrld.
pretty close. 1 am happy m repcrt that lbe
My dad has laid a lot of barsb wwds on the
genUeman in queslion bad to liD up Danish government - which be regreiB doing
pretty good alibis to explain the mouse UDder bis
because he is Danish on his father's side aDd
eye. The Al••lnm govenment bas wllawed Ibis
thinks very higbly of the Danish people.
kind of biDiling, bot tiHft is always a siel type
The Danish government has ucip:ocated by
banning all of his songs and recouls in that arormd to pursue il

I

!Helen Help Us!

.

! Voice along Broadway !

You See Anything That Looks Like
a Job on the Horizon?"

The vote for 18-year-olds ·"las one of those irresistible
ideas whose tim~ cam~and how !
In the amazingly brief span of two months and seven
days after it was approved by Congress, the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, extending suffrage to Ill·,
19- and 20-year-olds in all state, local and federal elections, was ratified by the necessary two-thirds (38) of
the states.
This is a new record for the adoption of a constitutional
amendment. The previous record was six months and six
days for the adoption of the 12th Amendment in 1804.
. The ratification .touched off a renewed flood of. speculation as to what effects, if any, .the infusion of more than
11 million potential voters under the age of 21 will have
on national policies and priorities.
· (Actually, 14 million young people under 25 who will be
eligible to vote for -the first time in 1972 should be added
to this number, making a graild total of some 25 million.)
Will they vote as a youth bloc, " turning American
around" by sheer electoral weight of numbers? Or will
they vote pretty much as their parents do? Will they be
absorbed over the entire political spectrum?
No .one knows. Certainly, at least at first. there will be
a burst of enthusiasm and a~vism. An 18-year-old girl
in an Ohio town, for example, has announced .her candidacy for tbe local school board. There will likely be
youthful candidates for every available office throughout
the country.
it is to be hoped that, in their enthusiasm, young voters
do not repeat the error of so many of their elders, who
scan the ballot with an eye for the candidate with the
"right" national name, who judge office-seekers not by
what they are and what they stand for. but whether they
have the "ri~ht" ethnic or racial background or belong
to the "right ' party.
For young voters, the particular peril may be a built-in
. bias toward the candidate of the "right" age (which, to (
older voters, may automatically be the "wrong" age) .
No one can familiarize himself with all the candidates
and all the issues. No one c.an really know how a person
will perform until he is actually in office. Thus when
knowledge or . certainty are lacking, the temptation is
great to select among candidates on the basis of narrow
r---------------------------1
categories.
. What greater temptati9n for youn~t voters than to assume that a contemporary is their kind of candidate?
Chances are, however, that America's new voters will
I
put its older ones to shame with the judgment and con- I
1
I
scientiousness with which they exercise their newly won
1
By Helen Bottel
1
right to vote.

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

Tlley'D try agalli at Kyger
Creell .-ts evealag. Last
lli&amp;IJt's pmes .,.., washed
II)' llir wayside by Mondjy's
big dewapo•r. Weatlier
penalttm&amp;, Clielter will play
llir Ml II tperl lkaves at I,
San Diego 2011 OliO 1120-- 4 • ' Pl PI
.. p I
---L
1
Cincimali 300 OliO 1100--- 3 ~ D
' t i i N I .....,.
Kirily. Miller (71 Ken- n. New Haw.. Redo at 7:15
,rlall ; Simpson. Clcrninger (I) _ . 11ir l'""''ipoJoII A'a n.
and Corrales. WP-Miller (7-2). BWw.e l Pw1er al 1:31 p.m.
LP-Oaninger (3-6). HRs-Perez (161111. Spi&lt;!lio l51hl.
-

!969forrecruiling violations.
·
" Nblirrg the substantial improvements which have been
made in the Marshall Athletic
Program, the Council of
Presidenis has gran ted that
institution permission to apply
for reinstatement at an early
daw," Jacoby said .

Jacoby said admission of
Cenlr•l and Easwrn marks the
first expansion ·in MAC membership since 1953. Other
conrerence members .a re Ohio
U., Bowling Green, Kent State,
Miami , Toledo and Western

Padres Rally, Nip Beds 4-3
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ivan
Murrell was on bis knees, raising his hands first up iniAl Ute air
and then dropping them to the
Door.
Other San Diego players, taking their cue from Murrell, followed suit as flush-laced Bob
Miller entered the i'adres clu~
bouse at Riverfront Stadium
here.
Miller, whose relief pitching
has been phenomenal since he
signed as ~ free agent with the
Padres back on May 11, blanked

.

the Cincinnati Reds the last
three innings Monday night m
pick up his seventh vlcmry.
" He's fantastic, our good luck
charm," said Ed Spiezio, the
Padres' third baseman. "Something good always happens after he comes into a game."
Spiezio's two-out two-run
eighth inning bomer was another good thing, as the Padres
won 4-3.
The win upped Miller's win-

.

Miami Has Holdouts

By United Press International
Larry Csonka and Jim Klick
have put the Miami Dolphins'
running attack on the sidelines.
· The two, who combined for
· 1,532 of the 2,082 yards the
Dolphins gained on the ground
last season and added almost
another. 600 yards in pass
receptions, are reportedly holdBy United Press International
ing out for between $55,000 and
American League
$60,000 apiece.
East
W. L. Pel. GB
The pair may need the
Baltimore
58 34 .630
money,
too, since the Dolphins
Boslon
53 38 .582 4'12
are fining them $200 for each
Oelroit
-49 43 .535 ~
New York
45 so .474 '12 day they are late.
Cleveland
40 54 .427 19
"We just hope all the guys
Washing ton
37 54 .407 20'12
understand," Csonka said in a
West
W. L. Pet. GB copyrighted Miami Herald arOokland
58 34 .630 ... ticle. "We think the fellows
Kansas Cily
47 43 .52'1 10
California
4S 52 .464 IS if:z realize our position. They know
Minnesola
42 SO .457 16
how we feel about football and
Chicago
41 51 .446 17
about them.
Milwaukee
39 51 .433 18
"You make some shots out
Monday's ResuHs
Milwaukee at Boston
there. Both Jim and I are only
(ppd, rain) 24, but it's well known that a
Ball. 4 Qak. 2
running back's career is about
Chic. 8 N.Y- 3
(lsi, 10 inns) the shortest of any player,'' he
Chic. 3 N.Y. I (2nd)
added. "Either Jim or I could
Del. 5 K.C. 2
be racked up any time and
Wash . 5 Minn. 2
have to look for another. job.
Cleveland 3 Calf. 1
We feel we must be paid
Today's Probable Pitchers
Cleveland · (Dunning 7-7) al according to our contributions
while we are at, or approachOakland (Blue 18-3). night.
Baltimore ( 13-2) at Kansas ing, our peak."
Cily (Drago 10-S), nighl .
Oetroil !Cain S-41 al California (Messersmith 8·9), night.

Milwaukee (Pattin 8-10) al
Washingloo (Bosman 7.10),
nighL

Minnesota (Biyleven 7-12) at

New York (Bahnsen 9-8), night.
Chicago I Horlen 4-7) at
Boslon (Tianl 0-3!. night.
Wednesday's Games
Ciev . al Oak. (nighll
Del. al Calil. 2
·
(twi-nighl)
Ball. al K.C. ~nigh I)
Milw. al Wash. ~nighl)
Minn . al N.Y.
_Chic. al Bos. lnig~H ___ _

15th Win

50 43 .538 11'12
-48 43 .511 12'h
49 45 .521 13

New York

St . Louis

Philadelphia
Monlreal

41 54 .43'2 21 '12
37 57 .394 25
West
W. L. Pet. GB

San FranCisco

58 38 .604

los Angeles
51 45 .531
Houslon
47 46 .505
Allanla
47 51 .480
Cincinnati
44 53 .454
San Diego
34 31 .358
Monday's Results
Monlreal5 Chicago 3
L.A. 10 Pitt. 4
N.Y. 5 S.l. 2
S.F. 11 Allan Ia 8
S.D. 4 Cine. 3
Hous. 3 Phil. 2 (II inns!

1
Child

A

I

gency• nc.

•'

Biggest selection of all models. Biggest
savings of the year. Better hurry!

By Wll.LIAM VERIGAN
UPI Sports Wriler
Mickey Lolich has his own
ideas of how to get into shape.
His shape is rounder than
ever this year, and it has been
doing wonders for his won-lost
record with Detroit. A 19-game
loser last season, Lolich added
about seven pounds, "all of it
around my belly," and has
become a 15-game winner.
Lolich scattered eight hits
and struck out seven in leading
the Tigers to a :&gt;-2 victory over
the Kansas City Royals Monday
night. AI Kaline and Bill
Freehan each got three hits m
support Lolich.
in other American League
games, the Chicago White Sox
swept a doubleheader from the
New York Yankees, 3-1, and 83; Baltimore defeated Oakland
4-2, Washington beat Minnesota·
:&gt;-2, Cleveland defeated California 3-1 Qnd Milwaukee's game
at Bosmn was postponed by
rain.

National League
W. L. Pel. GB
62 32 .660
Pi llsburgh

Chicago

D

Lolich
Captures

.. .
7

9'h
12
Wh

23'h

Today's Probable Pitclrers
New York (Williams 3-3 or
Genlry 1-71 al Chicago (Jenkins
14-8).
San Francisco (Perry 8-81 al
Pillsburgh ~Blass 10-41, nighl.
Philadelphia (Fryman 6-3) at
51. louis (Reuss 8-9) , nighl.
San Diego I Roberts 7-9) al
Allanta (Reed 9-7), nighl.
los Angeles ~Sulton 9-81 al
Cincinnati (Gullett 9-3), nigh I
Montreal (Stoneman 11-9) at
Houston (Forsch S-3), nighl.

Home Improvement

LOANS

Wednesday's Games
S.F. at Pill. (nightl
N.Y. at Chicago
Phlla. al Sl. Louis (nightl
S.D. at Atlanta 2 (lwl-nlghll
LA at Cin. !nignll
Monl. at Hous. (nightl

II i1n't j ust the money Y\hllave- ll's the valu• you get

The Daiy Seulilll

YES! ... At
Meigs ·to. Branch

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
.
Exec. Ed.
ROtERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Published dalllf except
Sa turdity bY The Ohio Vafle·v
Publishing Company, 111 '

Court St..

Pomeroy, Ohio, ·

.S769. Busineu Office Phone
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

Central, located In .Mount
, Pleasan~ Mich., has an enroll·
ment of 1~,000. The school's
intercollegiate athletic lea!DS
had an overall record this past
year of 121 wins and 54 losses.
Central 's football team bas
Michigan .
posted 7-3 records in each of
the past two years. lt.s
basketball ~am was 18-9 and
the baseball team, :la-7, was
runner-up in the College Division World 5eties.
Eastern, a powerhouse In
track and field, this past year
won both the indoor and
outdoor
titles in NAJA competiloss record m 7-2 and lowered the majors 13 years now and ready made up my mind !hall
his earned run average to 1.33 hope to make it in at l~as l 16 wasn't going to sign with any tion and took both the NAIA
club until I found out whether E. and NCAA College DivtSion
after 32 relief appearances and before I'm through." ,
cross country crowns last year.
54 1-3 innings.
The former St. Louis Cardinal J. Bavas i wanted me."
Bavasi is president and part The Hurons finished secoird IAl
Oldesl In Club
bonus baby -at the age o[ 18 in
Miller has now pitched for 1957 - packed up and headed owner of the Padres. Miller's powerful Kenlucky Sta~ in the
relationship with him daws 1971 NAIA haskethall murseven different major league for Los Angeles.
clubs, and since he's only 32, he When he arrived, Detroit was hack to •the fi ve years Bob nament and had a 7-2-1 foolball
could very likely add to his playing the Angels. Miller pitched with the Dodgers. At record last season.
total.
talked with both the Tigers gen- thai time Bavasi was general For the past five 'years,
Eastern has ranked seventh
"Imagine, I'm only 32, and eralmanager,Billy Martin, and manager of the Dodgers.
''
Treat~d
Me
Super"
r•Homally in scoring defense,
still I'm the oldest player on this with lire Los Angeles Dodgers.
"I love the guy," said Miller. allowing an average of only 10
club," said Miller. "I've been in "But' " said Miller "I had al"The five years I pitched for points per game while compilhim he trea wd me super."
ing a 31-14-2 record during that
Ten days after the Cubs cut time.
him loose, Miller signed a
Padre contrac t.
The relief ace was not too
The New York Giants also to the Oakland camp came as
wound up with their first no surprise since he is pushing surprised, frankly, at his reholdout in the club's hislory for a healthy raise over his lease from Chicago. He had apwhen running back Ron John- eslimated three-year contract peared as a po(Htp pitcher in
son failed to show up at camp, of $65,000, but all-pro tackle only two games.
Except for one bad pitch,
and quarwrback Dary le Lamo- Bob Brown's appearance al
nica and tackle Bo'l, Svihus practice was a surprise. Brown Monday night's victory would
added their names to the ranks was obtained· in a trade with have gone to Padre righthander
of the missing by failing to the Los Angeles Rams la st Clay Kirby.
The pitch was a home run hall
come to terms with the month and was expected to be
a
holdout.
Kirby
served up to Tony Pere2:
Oakland Raiders.
In other training camps- with two runners aboard in the
Giants owner Wellington
Archie
Manning, the New first inning .
Mara said the club is prepared
Perez' homer, his 16th of the
to offer Johnson a contract thai Orleans Saints' top draft pick,
said
he
hopes
to
sign
his
season,
wiped oul a 2-0 lead the
would make him the highest
paid New York running back in contract next week: veteran Padres had taken in the !Alp of
history. Johnson gained 1,027 quarwrback Rick Norton was the first inning when Wayne
Yes, if your home is
yards last season m become the among seven players cut by the Simpson issued bases-loaded unlivable
by an ;"'""'"I
lk
Olli
B
d
Giants' first 1,000-yard runner. Green Bay Packers·, Bob wa s to
e rown an Spieyour ~~=~r.::~
Policy will pay the
"He did something no other Young, a vewran guard who zio.
After Perez' homer, Kirby cos! ol living away
running back did for the Giants had been counwd on as a
starwr
for
the
Houston
Oilers,
yielded
only one other hit before home until your home
and he's going to get a contract
. lifted f
· hhit ·
repaired a nd livable.
be
no other Giant running hack said he will retire rather than
rng
or a ptnc
term vesligale a1 .,:~~~:;:~~~:~~~
undergo a knee operation ; the seventh. He struck out 11
at the o
ever got before," Mara said.
quarterback
Terry
Hanratty
of
hatters
along
the
way.
Tony
l~.g
er~ey
.
Although Johnson was the
only Giant player who failed to Pittsburgh suffered a slight Cloninger was the victim of
0Wft ftg •
report on time, Mara revealed ankle sprain; Paul Flatley and Spie2:io's homer in the eighth.
that more than twO-thirds of Gary Orcutt announced their The loss was the second in the
I
the team still hasn't signed. retirement from the Boston last nine games for lhe Reds,
Tucker Frederickson signed Patriots and second-year line- who will send Don Gullett
a contract on Monday morning, backer Bob Olson, Boston's No. against the Los Angeles IQ.night
of a three-game
0 N •d
and Fran Tarkenlon and Bobby 5 drafl pick from Notre Dame in .the opener
hi h .od8
the
2 o • 2n
••
in 19£9, was cut [rom the series w c WI
up
MIDDLEPORT . ,
Duhon were close to ~rms.
current homestand.
Lamonica's failure to report squad.

Jacoby .
·
Jacoby also disclosed tift the
council would review Marshall
University's stalus if officials
of the suspeirded Huntington,
W. Va., school formally request
such action .
Marshall was indefiniwly
suspended from the league in

"2·2156, EHitoriel Phone 9922157 .
'
Second class

sellers like LTD. Fam9d for ils

postaoe paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio.
· National edvertising

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

representative
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pr•ce inclUdes Sunday T me5 Sentlnel .

It's nol only the
savlngs-ll's the canr
that make th11111 such
grill buys Canr like Mcverick,
the lamed "simple machine."
Including e roomy new "family"
4-&lt;loor ... the sporty "Grabber"
. .. the new V-81
Besl-sellers now at the
bast-selling prices Best-

!

luKurlously qu iet rlde,'real prool
of a car lhal's solidly buill to last.
Now clearance-priced!

.Jri!:fk,
Maka your move lo Ford Country today!

Member Federal Home loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
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ccounts insured up . to

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~·

'·

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
.

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11

.
. .
.-----------------------------

.Better Voters
Or .Just Younger?
-~

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fainting Is
Common
Symptom
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr-,· Lamb-! am 41
years old, five feet nine and
=-weigh 155. I passed my phy~ slcal exam. for military serv·
ice 20 years ago. Through'out my life, there have been
times I have fainted (three
times) or felt faint.
It has occurred when I donated blood and after standlng longer than five minutes
in church. I usually can
battle this, but there have
been times when it was hard
to hear the-pastor after 1 sat
down.
I am somewhat . nervous,
easily emotionally disturbed
DMr sleeper. I do not
and a ..-··
smoke or drink any alcoholic
beverages and rarely have
more than two cups of coffee
a day. 1 operate a mediumsized dairy farm, so I get an
adequate amount of physical
activity. Is my problem quite
common and what is the
usual cause?
Dear Reader-Fainting is
a symptom and ,can mean
many things. It is quite common in perfectly healthy
people. True, it occurs more
often in young people, before
the age of 00, than in older
people without disea~e.
I once set up a study to
find out how common fainting was in the Air Force fly ing population. As a generalization. about 40 per cent of
these healthy men rem em·

bered losing consciousness at
one time or another and
.
about half of these had been
simple faints from "standing
in church," visiting the hospita!, par ad e formation .
shots, blood drawing and the
like. I do not regard three
faints or near-faints in a lifetime as really unusual in an ffitered first by settllng beds and groond seepage ... though that
otherwise healthy person.
doesn't do much foc pbosphates. U everyone using the lake
Fainting is caused by in- washed his or her hair in It, there might soon he a scum so thick
adequate circulation to the you'd have m cut it. - H.
brain. This can occur be- Dear Helen:
cause too much of the blood
I'"' embarrassed by my mother. She drinks, walks around
,.,_
collects in the legs while the house with nothing on, leaves the bathroom door open, even
standing still. Moving the
he ha
and sh f0u
legs, to contract the muscles , w n 1 ve CIDipally,
e
ows me everywhe re, eJ'the r
yelling cr crying.
helps prevent this.
I stay away as much as possible and never bring anyone home
The
heart
may
beat
too
'th
1 1
t t
WI me, but you don 'I koop many frieods tba t way. The one or
s ow y or can even s op emporarily, through reflex ac- two times I slept over at a girl friend's house, my mother called
lions, even in healthy people. about 2 a.m. and I couldn't shut her off 'cause she was drunk.
When a ~rson_ fall_s to the Natw-ally 1 wasn't ever invited again.
g.:ound with this kind of a
I tried staying home and kooping the booze away from her but
famt, the heart us:ually starts she just hid and sneaked it. I'd run away, but then she really
a g a i 0 automatically. The WOULD drink herself !Ddeath. And I'd feelas though I caused it.
h e a r l can . also beat too
slowly because of disease, It's awful m hate and love your mother, all at once. usually 10 much older per- MISERABLE
sons, and cause repeated · Dear Miserable:
fainting episodes. Usually
Your mother is sick. She needs cl~ help aDd, if she won't
these individuals have heart
rates below 40 a minute and accept it via Alcoholics Anonymous, then call your local
&amp;re sometimes treated with Alcohollsm Center. .Or write m The National Council on
an implanted electrical pace- Alcohollsm, TWo East 103 Street, New York, N. Y., 10029, for
maker.
further information.
You could get the support YOU need by attending Al-Anon or
Nervous individuals sometimes breathe too rapidly Ala teen meetings, where you'll learn that facing your problemand too deeply (hyperventll- and t;rying to understand your mother's problem - is much
ation) . This blows off too
much carbon dioxide and af- healthier than trying m hide it. - H.
feels the body chemistry, Dear Helen:
which in turn affects the cirIn high schoolllaM!w two girls who were such close friends
that people Insinuated !bey were queer. I never believed it,
because Mary was a childhood friend of mine.
The other day I saw Mary downtown, and noticed she had on
an engagement ring. I congratulated ber, and she hesitated and
said, ''Ann, I'm dying m tell someone about this, and I know you
won't condemn me like others might ____ Amy and I are engaged
and we are t;rylng m find a way ID be 1egally married."
Helen, I was caught off balance and was just speechless. So
Mary turned and walked away, very llu1.
Could you tell me what I can do m ler her know I'm lt3lly not
condemning. Mter all, she is a good person, a long time friend,
and who am I m judge? - ANN
Dear AnnL
A card oc letter, saying essentially what you wrote in your
letter m me, should make Mary realize that you can like the
person even though you can't understand ber actions.- H.

u

-----=--------------BERRJ'S WORLD

••..

fNEWSPA,PU EHTUPliSf: A.1SH. I
I

q:l

usure, I haYe

1911., ""·I... ~~ -·

interest in work, I'm indolent, nonproductive ond neglect personal hygiene- but I did it
without &lt;(rugs!"
no

'/east tend · pout 4Hsfions ortd
commtnb to L.awre"" E. lcrntb,
M.D., in core of lhis po~. WIHie
IJr. Lomb CGIJttOt onswer ittdhiduol
idten, Itt will aiuw•r letters 01
gtnerol interest ;,. f•t11r! columns.

LUCKY NUMBER
More players in the Pro
Football Hall of Fame wore
jersey No. 14 than wore
any other number. Don Hutson. Otto Graham, Y. A.
TitHe, Link Lvman, Curly
Lambeau and John McNally
all wore 14 at one time during
their pro careers. No. ' 11,
with five Hall of Fame wearers. is second.

J.:..

WIN AT BRIDGE

CareluiTrumpManagement
.
Noam

:zG

• 53
• A 98 6

:~;0652

WEST

EAST

• A ~O} 6
•void
+ 10 9 8 54

"'K J 8 3
soUTH (D)

• J 942
•K543
+KJ
• Q94

• KQ 8

• QJ 1012

+ A 632
• 7
East-West vulnerable
Wesf North

r...t

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

UPI.,_. Wilkt
I bad at the start. 1 was
11B'e 11ere twa names lhe ~ at everything, even
h 'tea menlioli!ei IIHI' and Iitchell in lbe dirt. Now 1 wait
01'11' apin liHt in ~ foc my pitch and I think before
tr.Dng.
_
· gotng up ID the plate."
·
Two ,....g ~ aged 20
and u, had lbe "can't miss"
Cedeno hit _310 in the second
tag.. 'D1ey wen Mli4Mreed m be half of. last season .at age . .19
lasbmt -lions. 'D1ey were when be fmrt beard himself

1.4.

South

Opening lead-+ 10

mtW&amp;e,lllaehaslivedupto Willie Mays and Roberto
1U Pie
mlmMip bo.t 19'11 Clemente.
has ' - ' 11is1 a year of Manager Harry Walker says,
flusllation fer a.. 2Diar-old ''be has the potential m be a
Cedeno. The Houobi Astrcrs' Mays.cr Clemente. He has good
Ollt!ie..,_ started !be
speed, a good arm and be can
t.tting 111111er Jill and bas been lit. He's lbe type of player wbo
slniggling ID maintain his causes things to happen. But
anrage Oiilioft .250.
he's not even close to being the
.But be still "'-s "ashes cl ting of ballplayer MAys and
lU P' I ~jal ml be did it Oemente are yet. It will take
Mondlly Digbt when be ooiJeded five cr six years before we -irill
three lila inrt"'ir.: a game- find out whether be can be that
wimingsiJJdeinlheUthinnlng kind of player."
as the Astras dOWlil!d The question is whether the
Ph~•. ~
Astro&amp;, who've eJpeCted too
"''m IliOn! ,...ml at the mucli too soon fr0111 Cedeno can
plalle,"lbe Dominican J!t¥Nic wait lbatlong for Cedeno~ find
111tiw Slid, "I'm mt over himself. YollDg -ballplayers
swinging 811Jillcre. Wilen I have been ruined in the past by
swing, I'm just lr}ing 1D hit the a fast buildup befoce they were
bali ap lhe micMJe and ID right. ready.

Ashe, Laver
Upset Victims

North's jump to three
hearts is a limit raise, but
South has enough to continue
to game. In JACOBY MODERN, you only pass after a
limit raise with a real minimum.
South plays dummy's
queen of diamonds at trick
one. The king covers and
South sees a considerable
problem in trump management developing. He may
want to ruff two diamonds
and a spade in dummy, so
the last thing he plans is to
play trumps. He lets East
hold the first diamond. East
leads a trump. South wins in
dummy and notes East holds
all the missing trumps.
This shouldn't worry South.
He leads a spade to his king.

seat to no one.
Stroking his backhand for
consistent winners, Bowrey
spotted Laver a one-set lead,
then stormed back m win the
second set and reel off a iHl
lead in the third set before
Laver rallied to take four
straight games. Bowrey held
his service in the lOth game m
win the match, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.
With Ashe and Laver out of
contention, Cliff Drysdale of
round.
South Africa moved into the
Prier ID Monday, Pilic never favorite 's role as the thirdhad beaten Ashe, IliA' had seeded player.
80IIrey ever defeated Laver.
Ken Rosewall, winner of the
Pilic and Ashe waged a tense Washington Star International
.struggle that weJt ID match on Sunday, is seeded sixth in
point 11 times before the the tourney which runs through
Yugoslav Jefthander scca-ed the next Sunday.
clincher 111 a .r..., shot that
In other first-round matches,
Ashe bit wl rl br•nh. It pve Andres Gimeno of Spain
Pilic a U. 7-4, 7-&amp; vidlrry.
defeated Owen Davidson of
"It was like Rmrian Roulette Australia, 6-2, 6-3; Ismail El
...t there," said Pille in his Shafei of the United Arab
1lalkarHicxi!Jited English, " I Republic beat Roy Barth of San
have him llt'Yen match points Diego, Calif., 6-7, 6-4, 6-4;
and be has roe fOlD'. II was the Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield,
first time I beat Ashe, bot I Calif., conquered Allan Stone of
CWJe close in our olber tbree . Australia, 6-4, 7'6, and Fred
malcbes. And iKf .this clay Smile of Australia OI!Sted tour
surfac:e, I clOD'! give him any rookie Tom Leonard, 6-4, 6-4.
IDOI"e cbances tban me."
Bowrey, a harutgme f1·year·
old Auslralian, bas been
overshadowed by his fellow
countrymen Laver, Ken Rosewall, John Newtmlbe and Tooy
Roche. He never has advanced
beyorwl the ......! round 011 the
pro taur this year,
,
•I
\
But Monday be took a bact

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
West takes the ace. So fai,
south bas found th~ king of
WASHINGTON (NEAl
diamonds, ace of spades and
In the Southwest, a huge new electric power complex is
king of trumps wrong, but rising in the desert. The pollution-fighters, protective of
he has no worries, provided the desert's clean air, have made it controversial. Somehe can ruff a spade and two thing ·etse makes it a very interesting project.
diamonds in dummy.
Nicknamed the "four corners" development, from the
West leads the nine of dia- fact that }I is near the joining point of Utah, Colorado,
moods. When East plays the New Menco and Arizona, it is designed to supply major
jack, South should be alerted supplementary power for Los Angeles, Phoenix and some
to ruffing a spade before a other cities. Its potential capacity is set at 00,000 megawatts ~ 20 billion watts) .
diamond.
Therefore, he cashes the
What makes this interesting is contrast.
queen of spades, ruffs the
The other day a high government official concerned
eight of spades, cashes dum- with world matters spotted that megawatt figure. He
my's ace of clubs, ruffs a suddenly realized that it almost perfectly matched the
club, leads a diamond and is power development which the World Bank had financed
caref u1 to ruff with the ace over a 2:&gt;-year period in developing nations with a total
of trumps. Now it is a simple population of 1.8 billion.
matter to ruff a club and his
That power growth financed by the bank represents
last diamond with a small today about one-fifth of the total power resources in the
trump. East can overruff developing countries.
now with his k ing, but
To put it most dramatically, what those 1.8 blllion
South's contract is safe.
people have in the way of power is just .five times o~~s
(HlWSPAPU ..IHTUPI.ISl ASSN.)
great as what is being planned in our southwestern desert to take care of power overloads in Los Angeles and
Phoenix.
The official who cited this example offered it to point
The bidding has been:
up the incredible disparity between the affluent countries
West
North
East
and the "'have-nots." It is not news to say that many
officials working to pull up the economies of the poorer
Pass
1•
Pass
lands think the gap is getting wider au the time.
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass
One reason, known to us all, is the galloping rise in
Pass
5 N.T.
Pass
popu!atlon m the world's poverty-stricken nations. There
You, South, hold:
are some judgments that population pl:inning (birth con.AK6 •Attts tKU.KQZ trol) •s _not effective in these areas. By one estimate, the
population m the developing lands may climb steadily
What do you do now?
for
another century-to a peak of perhaps 10 billion-beA-If your jNU'IDer will !mow
fore
any sort of stability is achieved.
what it means, bid Ax no-trump
An
a~vious critical c o n s e q u e n c e : unemployment
to show three kincs and jrut
about the hand you have. Olher- spreading like the plague in the teeming cities of the
disadvantaged countries. The gulf between them and the
wise answer six spades.
well-off nations is on the way to becoming a huge, bot- ·
TODAY'S QUESTION
tomless chasm. Says the high official:
Instead of bidding one heart
" Human beings are not going to tolerate these exyour partner has raised you to tremes."
two clubs. What do you do now?
Exploding numbers spell joblessness and that means
worse and -worse malnutrition.
. The experts today are deeply troubled over scientific
fmdmgs that early human brain development is crucial
FACTS
and is heavily derendent on an adequate protein diet. By
the age of four, 90 per cent of a human's brain growth
has occurred.
Serious deprivation of protein foods in the early span
stunts th~ br"!n. The results are irreversible. Thus, given
the detenorating human condition in the underdeveloped
world, hundr_eds and hundr_eds of millions of today's cliildren are bemg doomed r1ght now to inadequate brain
developf!'Jent. This is already poverty's cruelest cost.
E_ven if nutritlon were good, the chances to extend the
bram through education are so limited in many countries
that another dimen~ion is added to the widening cruelty.
~e official mentioned Ethiopia, merely as an ezample
w_hich could be d~plicated in many places. One wliole reDespite the vast expanse g•on bas not a smgle secondary school. Catastrophic is
of land in tbe U.S. interior, the fact that 87 per cent of that country's primaryabout 53 per cent of the ""hool-age chil~en are not in school and likely never
American people are now will be. What this_means, in coldest prospect, is that 50
living in counties which lie years from now-m an era when knowledge is advancing
at least partly within 50 w!th rocket speed- nearly nine of every 10 Ethiopians
miles of the coasts, accord- Will not have even the most rudimentary education.
ing to 1970 Census figures, .. Now_. '!"'!:'l's all_ this sell-pitying nonsense from some
The World Almanac says.
idealistic Amer1cans that there's nothing challen~g
About 107 million Ameri- left to do? The challenges are everywhere. Question:
cans live near the coast.
Where are the fervent helpers?

,

'I

This was not a breach of
the national security. We
gave away no national secrets. We didn't jeopardi2e
any American soldiers or
Marines overseas.
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger,
president and publisher of
a secret Pentagon study
of U. S. involvement in
Vietnam.

I look at it as a job, and
I imagine I do it at much
the same pressure I would
any other job.
- Britain's Prince Philip, on
being a prince.

We lost our way sometime in the 19th century.
-Architect Archibald Rog-

U

Linesrores
By United Press 1-....tional
.ArheriQn ' ,,,ue

Cleveland 0011 OliO flO)- 3 9 1
California 0011 OliO 001- I 7 1
McDowell (9-91 SuareZ;
Clark. LaRoche (t), Allen (91
and Moses. LP-Oarlt (2-1).
Milwaukee al llo&gt;lon, PO&gt;I-

paned, rain.

Balllmor" 012 0011 ICIO- 4 5 o
Ookland 000 2011 ~ 2 7 1
Dobson (12-4) and Elclrebarren; Segui, Fingers (9) and
Dunc:.an! LP-Segui 1~1 - HRs-Biair (61h). Mmday (IOihl.
Johnson (llhl.

They1l Do It Every Time

ers, on today's uunlivable''

cities.

J.FrtR
DE\0!11'(; 1115 UFE TO GETTING A
5WEI-L f«JME IN THE SUI!!ORBS, GRINDBI.
TAKES 1115 FAMILY ON AV.ACATION· ·-

To A BACKv-.ooos 51-lKK,., BEAR

I'.()OLCJN'T UYE IN "·I&gt;.ND HE TliiN)&lt;S
l-IE'S REALLY UVIN'!· · · ·

••
--

·

He's not responsible for
what he's sayinl!. He's emotionally upset. The poor man
has been under a lot of pres-

--

sure.

-•

-New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefeller on criticisms
of the stale legislature by
Mayor John Lindsay of · '-""'""
New York 'City.

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By United Press International
Le.Jding Bailers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre, St.L 94 363 SS 129 .3SS
Bckrt. Chi
89 360 60 126 .3SO
Davis. LA
95 383 59 132 .345
Clmnt, Pit
80 326 SS Ill .340
Pptn. Chi
72 269 37 91 .338
Brock, SI.l 91369 73123 .333
Garr. All
94391 67 129 .330
Atou. St.l
88 355 43 Ill .324
Snglln, Pit 83 320 33 103 .322
Cash, Pit
70 283 S6 91 .322
American tngue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min
72 276 49 104 .377
Nurcer, NY 91 3'25 57 109 .335
Otis, KC
11.4 332 Sl 104 .313
Buford. Bal 76 282 74 88 .312
Rojas. KC
as 312 43 97 .311
F.Rbsn. Bal 76 265 -48 82 .309
Kaline. Det 77 251 43 76 .303
Rchrdt, Chi 78 288 29 87 .302
Mnchr. Wash 80 256 30 77 .301
Hwrd. Wash 89 33'2 37 99 .298

Minnesola 000 002 ~ 2 7 I
Washngtn 004 000 lOx- S 10 I
Perry. Williams (6). Hall (71
and Miilerwald; Brown, Shellffl&gt;ack (6) , Pina (6) , Lindblad
Home Runs
(6) and Billings WP-Brown (3_
Natio""l
league: Stargell,
2) . LP Peo ry !12-91. HRP11l
31
;
Aaroo,
All 25; May,
Billings (Jrdl.
Cin 24 ; Johnsoo, Phil 22;
Colbert. SO and Bonds, SF 20.
(isl ~-. 11 inaingsl
Oric:.ago 210. 0011 0011 s- 1 13 0 American League: Mellon,
Chi and Cash, Dot 21 ; Smith.
New York
300 000 0011 ,.___ J 1 0 8os 20; Oliva, Minn 18;
Magnuson, Rorno !II. Hinlon Pelrocelli. Bos, Murcer, NY
(1). Johnson (10) Her- aird Jacksoo, Oak 17.
Runs Batted ln
rmann; Slollleotlyre (9-9) and
Natio""l league: Stargell,
~son. WP-Hinlon 11-01. HR
Pill 89 ; Torre, Sl.l 73; Aaron,
-HerrmaM 16ihl.
All 70; Montanez, Phil 67;
Sanlo, Chi 64.
(2nd ~-1
Chicago 000 120 ~ J 9 I American lo~ue: Petrocelli.
New York 000 100 ~ I 6 I 8os 64; Killebrew. Mlnn 63; 8.
John (9-101 Herrmann; Robirn;on, Ball 60; F. Robinson,
Hanlin. Oosler (6), Hambright Ball and Melton, Chi 59.
Pitching
(9) and Munson. LP-Hardin
NalioNI
league: Ellis, Pill
(0-21. HR--May (Jrd).
lS-3; Jenkins, Chi 14-8; Carlton,
O.troit
000 «&lt;I ~ S 9 0 Sl.l 13-6; Dierker, Hou 12-4;
Kan City 000 001 001- 2 I 0 Downing and Osteen, LA 11-6;
· lolich (IS-61 and F~; Stoneman. Mont 11-9.
Ameriari League: Blue. Qak
Rooker, Nelson (6). Abernathy
111-3;
Lolich, Del 15-6; Cuellar,
~~~-May . LP-Rool&lt;er U-11.
Ball 13-2; McNally, Ball and
Sieberl. Bos 13-4. .
1
~tiMYI
·~
Montre.ll
2011 em oo•- 5 1 o
Chicago 000 003 ~ 3 5 0
Strahmayer. Raymond (61,
Marshall (71 and Bocc:abella;
Holtzman, Bmham (6). llr!do.l!r
{1). Pizarro (t). R"9'J11 191 Mat-tin. WP-Sirohmayer !3-3).
LP - Holiunan 1-10). HR Woods (1st).

The dominance of American husbands by their wives
IS worse than a Saturday
night beating. The "Craig's
Wife" type still exists. Even
thought control of a husband
Q-Who is the last pitcher ts common in the United
in majot league baseball his- States.
toru l,o be a 300-game win-Author Mary McCarthy.
ner?
on women's lib.
A- Early Wynn.

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;;a;,t•

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WORLD ALMANAC

TIMELY QUOTES

A half-truth is like half a
brick; you can throw it farther.
-Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rick-

WUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI}Giant.Xil.lers Nikki Pilic and
Billllowrey savmed their finest
hours in prof -oaal tennis
lodayaffft-up!lettingtap
Jed
Arthur Ashe and sec&gt;ML' : led
Rod Lawr, nspeclively, Mooday in the ~.aao First
National Tennis Cassie
It was the first time during
the cun-ent world champiiJilship
tennis taur that Ashe aDd Laver
had'-' eliminated in the first

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By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP])- 1972-73athletic year.
~nU:al Michiga~ and Eastern
The new league teams will
Michigan wete g.'ven memiM;r- begin competing in football and
ship . Monday 10 the Mid- basketball as soon as schedules
Amencan Conference.
permit, according to Dr. Phillip
~ two schools will be R Shriver, president of Miami
elig~ble for MAC competition in University and chairman of the
all sports but _foo~ll and.-MAC's Council of Presidents,
basketball starting With the and MAC President Fred

~ l)drm 81111 V'Jda Blur. being ccmpared m players like

Growing Threat of
World Have-Nots

.

ne n.o, s r ' •Ml • .. ._
, . ~-P
1m11 oy,· o., Jaly m. 1m

~~ N!R..~~~ Two Michigan Teams ·Admitted

BRUCE BIOSSAT

over.

culation and flow of blood to
the brain. Such people should
NOT hold their breath but
can get benefit from slow
and shallow breathing.
Breath-holding can trigger
undesirable reflexes that can
cause fainting .
There are a lot of other
reasons for fainting but, in
the vast majority of people
who faint and have no other
complaints. it is not serious.

I

tl- tw..,...

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YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is fer young people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! it welcomes laughs but won'tdodge a serious question with a
!rush-off.
HAIR POlLUTION PROBlEMS
Dear Helen:
There's been much talk of the threat m our environment by
polluting lakes and streams.
Last summer when I was at camp, many of the kids washed
their halt in the lake. Helen, we have showers at camp, aDd the
used water goes into septic tanks. The lake is so clean and pretty.
Won't It be polluted by hair-washing? Shampoos are probably
higher phosphate detergeniB than thn91! used on clothes.
I'm wrong, 1 won •t say anything •·
w th e camp direc'·
wr th'IS
year, so please tell me so I'll !mow if I'm 'right m protest. ·YOUNG OONCERNED CAMPER
Dear Camper:
I'd say you have a right to protest. While septic tanks may
eventually drain in!D the lake (lbope not!!!) the water is at least

-

Jael O'llrtu Ia • ......._ b 1111 p18ce, counlry. IW9mally, I liD !be_ "!"I• llllllic
PWl CHilly,awl.,, ;.11 f d 1111 lovers are the losers bee••"' 11 IS ,....ny
Ide• • __..._ Ia a
aeries.
~ceded that lbe old boy bas a pretty good W"aJ
·
With a song.
.
.
Because he is a great fisiJermaD 81111 a vt!l')'
BY PIIIL OUIS8Y
ardent cmaervaticmist, he be1iefta that buntq
SALMON n..LIIF..IU'IS
and fishing should be dcme in modeJalion apd,
A DAN1811 PASTING
under supervision so that no wildlife species is
NEW YORK - 'lbere is a lot of Irish in the
threatened with extinction.
Crosby clan and if I learned anything from my
pop and my gnrDnolber, it was that if a Crosby
rm also fer COIItrolled and legal bunting
gel! involVed in a light be isezpeded mcome out because certain aniDials muSt be t1inrw1 out cr
swingbig until be winds up either a winner or a they pr esent a danger m olber fCII'IIIS rl wildlife
candida~ fer the emergency ward.
as well as their own species. The gOfti'DIIIellt
It's not that my beloved kin advocate will tell you what these cnatuns are. and you
violence ~ llir from ll We would be h8ppy if we are e,s:pected 19 go and bunt lllll!l1 011 a fair aDd
could ramble lbrougb life wilbout raising our square basis.
.
fisiB &lt;r even our voices in anger. But as my dad
1am against indiscriminate llillinllcr killing
is wont m say: "If you evel' getinma bnimigan, foc stftt sporl But since this plaiiet got lDjust make sure the opposition knows il"
derway several million years ago, man has
My dad is pr
illy a member rl a group of realized thattosurvive,bemust kill animals 81111
coocemedmenaDd wUUli!ilwboare engaging the
other wildlife creatures.
Danish government in verllal fisticuggs because
I got in!D a domnylaoot with a fP1 in FairDanish fishermen are basteniDg lbe demise of
banks, Alaska, because I.made an unllatlering
Atlantic salmmbyfishing methods that can only remark about his shooting a palar bear from an
be described as dangerws.
airplane. The gist It my m ~ mthis IIJq
The Danish liabamen are indisa'iminately N'IJIII'Od was that it did not take ai.y great
laking. large hauls of !be salmm in lbe Nmth
amount of guts m shoot a hdpl animal with a ·
Atlantic, andilydoing so, they do not allow the higbi)Owered rifle fnm the safety rl an airfish m return m Inland rivers aDd slreams where plane.
.
they spawn. As a result, there is the probability
1said that while shoOting a bear could DOC be
that ~ fish will vl1lish fnm !be waters rl the
coostrued as murdel', the way be did It came
wcrld.
pretty close. 1 am happy m repcrt that lbe
My dad has laid a lot of barsb wwds on the
genUeman in queslion bad to liD up Danish government - which be regreiB doing
pretty good alibis to explain the mouse UDder bis
because he is Danish on his father's side aDd
eye. The Al••lnm govenment bas wllawed Ibis
thinks very higbly of the Danish people.
kind of biDiling, bot tiHft is always a siel type
The Danish government has ucip:ocated by
banning all of his songs and recouls in that arormd to pursue il

I

!Helen Help Us!

.

! Voice along Broadway !

You See Anything That Looks Like
a Job on the Horizon?"

The vote for 18-year-olds ·"las one of those irresistible
ideas whose tim~ cam~and how !
In the amazingly brief span of two months and seven
days after it was approved by Congress, the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, extending suffrage to Ill·,
19- and 20-year-olds in all state, local and federal elections, was ratified by the necessary two-thirds (38) of
the states.
This is a new record for the adoption of a constitutional
amendment. The previous record was six months and six
days for the adoption of the 12th Amendment in 1804.
. The ratification .touched off a renewed flood of. speculation as to what effects, if any, .the infusion of more than
11 million potential voters under the age of 21 will have
on national policies and priorities.
· (Actually, 14 million young people under 25 who will be
eligible to vote for -the first time in 1972 should be added
to this number, making a graild total of some 25 million.)
Will they vote as a youth bloc, " turning American
around" by sheer electoral weight of numbers? Or will
they vote pretty much as their parents do? Will they be
absorbed over the entire political spectrum?
No .one knows. Certainly, at least at first. there will be
a burst of enthusiasm and a~vism. An 18-year-old girl
in an Ohio town, for example, has announced .her candidacy for tbe local school board. There will likely be
youthful candidates for every available office throughout
the country.
it is to be hoped that, in their enthusiasm, young voters
do not repeat the error of so many of their elders, who
scan the ballot with an eye for the candidate with the
"right" national name, who judge office-seekers not by
what they are and what they stand for. but whether they
have the "ri~ht" ethnic or racial background or belong
to the "right ' party.
For young voters, the particular peril may be a built-in
. bias toward the candidate of the "right" age (which, to (
older voters, may automatically be the "wrong" age) .
No one can familiarize himself with all the candidates
and all the issues. No one c.an really know how a person
will perform until he is actually in office. Thus when
knowledge or . certainty are lacking, the temptation is
great to select among candidates on the basis of narrow
r---------------------------1
categories.
. What greater temptati9n for youn~t voters than to assume that a contemporary is their kind of candidate?
Chances are, however, that America's new voters will
I
put its older ones to shame with the judgment and con- I
1
I
scientiousness with which they exercise their newly won
1
By Helen Bottel
1
right to vote.

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

Tlley'D try agalli at Kyger
Creell .-ts evealag. Last
lli&amp;IJt's pmes .,.., washed
II)' llir wayside by Mondjy's
big dewapo•r. Weatlier
penalttm&amp;, Clielter will play
llir Ml II tperl lkaves at I,
San Diego 2011 OliO 1120-- 4 • ' Pl PI
.. p I
---L
1
Cincimali 300 OliO 1100--- 3 ~ D
' t i i N I .....,.
Kirily. Miller (71 Ken- n. New Haw.. Redo at 7:15
,rlall ; Simpson. Clcrninger (I) _ . 11ir l'""''ipoJoII A'a n.
and Corrales. WP-Miller (7-2). BWw.e l Pw1er al 1:31 p.m.
LP-Oaninger (3-6). HRs-Perez (161111. Spi&lt;!lio l51hl.
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!969forrecruiling violations.
·
" Nblirrg the substantial improvements which have been
made in the Marshall Athletic
Program, the Council of
Presidenis has gran ted that
institution permission to apply
for reinstatement at an early
daw," Jacoby said .

Jacoby said admission of
Cenlr•l and Easwrn marks the
first expansion ·in MAC membership since 1953. Other
conrerence members .a re Ohio
U., Bowling Green, Kent State,
Miami , Toledo and Western

Padres Rally, Nip Beds 4-3
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ivan
Murrell was on bis knees, raising his hands first up iniAl Ute air
and then dropping them to the
Door.
Other San Diego players, taking their cue from Murrell, followed suit as flush-laced Bob
Miller entered the i'adres clu~
bouse at Riverfront Stadium
here.
Miller, whose relief pitching
has been phenomenal since he
signed as ~ free agent with the
Padres back on May 11, blanked

.

the Cincinnati Reds the last
three innings Monday night m
pick up his seventh vlcmry.
" He's fantastic, our good luck
charm," said Ed Spiezio, the
Padres' third baseman. "Something good always happens after he comes into a game."
Spiezio's two-out two-run
eighth inning bomer was another good thing, as the Padres
won 4-3.
The win upped Miller's win-

.

Miami Has Holdouts

By United Press International
Larry Csonka and Jim Klick
have put the Miami Dolphins'
running attack on the sidelines.
· The two, who combined for
· 1,532 of the 2,082 yards the
Dolphins gained on the ground
last season and added almost
another. 600 yards in pass
receptions, are reportedly holdBy United Press International
ing out for between $55,000 and
American League
$60,000 apiece.
East
W. L. Pel. GB
The pair may need the
Baltimore
58 34 .630
money,
too, since the Dolphins
Boslon
53 38 .582 4'12
are fining them $200 for each
Oelroit
-49 43 .535 ~
New York
45 so .474 '12 day they are late.
Cleveland
40 54 .427 19
"We just hope all the guys
Washing ton
37 54 .407 20'12
understand," Csonka said in a
West
W. L. Pet. GB copyrighted Miami Herald arOokland
58 34 .630 ... ticle. "We think the fellows
Kansas Cily
47 43 .52'1 10
California
4S 52 .464 IS if:z realize our position. They know
Minnesola
42 SO .457 16
how we feel about football and
Chicago
41 51 .446 17
about them.
Milwaukee
39 51 .433 18
"You make some shots out
Monday's ResuHs
Milwaukee at Boston
there. Both Jim and I are only
(ppd, rain) 24, but it's well known that a
Ball. 4 Qak. 2
running back's career is about
Chic. 8 N.Y- 3
(lsi, 10 inns) the shortest of any player,'' he
Chic. 3 N.Y. I (2nd)
added. "Either Jim or I could
Del. 5 K.C. 2
be racked up any time and
Wash . 5 Minn. 2
have to look for another. job.
Cleveland 3 Calf. 1
We feel we must be paid
Today's Probable Pitchers
Cleveland · (Dunning 7-7) al according to our contributions
while we are at, or approachOakland (Blue 18-3). night.
Baltimore ( 13-2) at Kansas ing, our peak."
Cily (Drago 10-S), nighl .
Oetroil !Cain S-41 al California (Messersmith 8·9), night.

Milwaukee (Pattin 8-10) al
Washingloo (Bosman 7.10),
nighL

Minnesota (Biyleven 7-12) at

New York (Bahnsen 9-8), night.
Chicago I Horlen 4-7) at
Boslon (Tianl 0-3!. night.
Wednesday's Games
Ciev . al Oak. (nighll
Del. al Calil. 2
·
(twi-nighl)
Ball. al K.C. ~nigh I)
Milw. al Wash. ~nighl)
Minn . al N.Y.
_Chic. al Bos. lnig~H ___ _

15th Win

50 43 .538 11'12
-48 43 .511 12'h
49 45 .521 13

New York

St . Louis

Philadelphia
Monlreal

41 54 .43'2 21 '12
37 57 .394 25
West
W. L. Pet. GB

San FranCisco

58 38 .604

los Angeles
51 45 .531
Houslon
47 46 .505
Allanla
47 51 .480
Cincinnati
44 53 .454
San Diego
34 31 .358
Monday's Results
Monlreal5 Chicago 3
L.A. 10 Pitt. 4
N.Y. 5 S.l. 2
S.F. 11 Allan Ia 8
S.D. 4 Cine. 3
Hous. 3 Phil. 2 (II inns!

1
Child

A

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gency• nc.

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Biggest selection of all models. Biggest
savings of the year. Better hurry!

By Wll.LIAM VERIGAN
UPI Sports Wriler
Mickey Lolich has his own
ideas of how to get into shape.
His shape is rounder than
ever this year, and it has been
doing wonders for his won-lost
record with Detroit. A 19-game
loser last season, Lolich added
about seven pounds, "all of it
around my belly," and has
become a 15-game winner.
Lolich scattered eight hits
and struck out seven in leading
the Tigers to a :&gt;-2 victory over
the Kansas City Royals Monday
night. AI Kaline and Bill
Freehan each got three hits m
support Lolich.
in other American League
games, the Chicago White Sox
swept a doubleheader from the
New York Yankees, 3-1, and 83; Baltimore defeated Oakland
4-2, Washington beat Minnesota·
:&gt;-2, Cleveland defeated California 3-1 Qnd Milwaukee's game
at Bosmn was postponed by
rain.

National League
W. L. Pel. GB
62 32 .660
Pi llsburgh

Chicago

D

Lolich
Captures

.. .
7

9'h
12
Wh

23'h

Today's Probable Pitclrers
New York (Williams 3-3 or
Genlry 1-71 al Chicago (Jenkins
14-8).
San Francisco (Perry 8-81 al
Pillsburgh ~Blass 10-41, nighl.
Philadelphia (Fryman 6-3) at
51. louis (Reuss 8-9) , nighl.
San Diego I Roberts 7-9) al
Allanta (Reed 9-7), nighl.
los Angeles ~Sulton 9-81 al
Cincinnati (Gullett 9-3), nigh I
Montreal (Stoneman 11-9) at
Houston (Forsch S-3), nighl.

Home Improvement

LOANS

Wednesday's Games
S.F. at Pill. (nightl
N.Y. at Chicago
Phlla. al Sl. Louis (nightl
S.D. at Atlanta 2 (lwl-nlghll
LA at Cin. !nignll
Monl. at Hous. (nightl

II i1n't j ust the money Y\hllave- ll's the valu• you get

The Daiy Seulilll

YES! ... At
Meigs ·to. Branch

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
.
Exec. Ed.
ROtERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Published dalllf except
Sa turdity bY The Ohio Vafle·v
Publishing Company, 111 '

Court St..

Pomeroy, Ohio, ·

.S769. Busineu Office Phone
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

Central, located In .Mount
, Pleasan~ Mich., has an enroll·
ment of 1~,000. The school's
intercollegiate athletic lea!DS
had an overall record this past
year of 121 wins and 54 losses.
Central 's football team bas
Michigan .
posted 7-3 records in each of
the past two years. lt.s
basketball ~am was 18-9 and
the baseball team, :la-7, was
runner-up in the College Division World 5eties.
Eastern, a powerhouse In
track and field, this past year
won both the indoor and
outdoor
titles in NAJA competiloss record m 7-2 and lowered the majors 13 years now and ready made up my mind !hall
his earned run average to 1.33 hope to make it in at l~as l 16 wasn't going to sign with any tion and took both the NAIA
club until I found out whether E. and NCAA College DivtSion
after 32 relief appearances and before I'm through." ,
cross country crowns last year.
54 1-3 innings.
The former St. Louis Cardinal J. Bavas i wanted me."
Bavasi is president and part The Hurons finished secoird IAl
Oldesl In Club
bonus baby -at the age o[ 18 in
Miller has now pitched for 1957 - packed up and headed owner of the Padres. Miller's powerful Kenlucky Sta~ in the
relationship with him daws 1971 NAIA haskethall murseven different major league for Los Angeles.
clubs, and since he's only 32, he When he arrived, Detroit was hack to •the fi ve years Bob nament and had a 7-2-1 foolball
could very likely add to his playing the Angels. Miller pitched with the Dodgers. At record last season.
total.
talked with both the Tigers gen- thai time Bavasi was general For the past five 'years,
Eastern has ranked seventh
"Imagine, I'm only 32, and eralmanager,Billy Martin, and manager of the Dodgers.
''
Treat~d
Me
Super"
r•Homally in scoring defense,
still I'm the oldest player on this with lire Los Angeles Dodgers.
"I love the guy," said Miller. allowing an average of only 10
club," said Miller. "I've been in "But' " said Miller "I had al"The five years I pitched for points per game while compilhim he trea wd me super."
ing a 31-14-2 record during that
Ten days after the Cubs cut time.
him loose, Miller signed a
Padre contrac t.
The relief ace was not too
The New York Giants also to the Oakland camp came as
wound up with their first no surprise since he is pushing surprised, frankly, at his reholdout in the club's hislory for a healthy raise over his lease from Chicago. He had apwhen running back Ron John- eslimated three-year contract peared as a po(Htp pitcher in
son failed to show up at camp, of $65,000, but all-pro tackle only two games.
Except for one bad pitch,
and quarwrback Dary le Lamo- Bob Brown's appearance al
nica and tackle Bo'l, Svihus practice was a surprise. Brown Monday night's victory would
added their names to the ranks was obtained· in a trade with have gone to Padre righthander
of the missing by failing to the Los Angeles Rams la st Clay Kirby.
The pitch was a home run hall
come to terms with the month and was expected to be
a
holdout.
Kirby
served up to Tony Pere2:
Oakland Raiders.
In other training camps- with two runners aboard in the
Giants owner Wellington
Archie
Manning, the New first inning .
Mara said the club is prepared
Perez' homer, his 16th of the
to offer Johnson a contract thai Orleans Saints' top draft pick,
said
he
hopes
to
sign
his
season,
wiped oul a 2-0 lead the
would make him the highest
paid New York running back in contract next week: veteran Padres had taken in the !Alp of
history. Johnson gained 1,027 quarwrback Rick Norton was the first inning when Wayne
Yes, if your home is
yards last season m become the among seven players cut by the Simpson issued bases-loaded unlivable
by an ;"'""'"I
lk
Olli
B
d
Giants' first 1,000-yard runner. Green Bay Packers·, Bob wa s to
e rown an Spieyour ~~=~r.::~
Policy will pay the
"He did something no other Young, a vewran guard who zio.
After Perez' homer, Kirby cos! ol living away
running back did for the Giants had been counwd on as a
starwr
for
the
Houston
Oilers,
yielded
only one other hit before home until your home
and he's going to get a contract
. lifted f
· hhit ·
repaired a nd livable.
be
no other Giant running hack said he will retire rather than
rng
or a ptnc
term vesligale a1 .,:~~~:;:~~~:~~~
undergo a knee operation ; the seventh. He struck out 11
at the o
ever got before," Mara said.
quarterback
Terry
Hanratty
of
hatters
along
the
way.
Tony
l~.g
er~ey
.
Although Johnson was the
only Giant player who failed to Pittsburgh suffered a slight Cloninger was the victim of
0Wft ftg •
report on time, Mara revealed ankle sprain; Paul Flatley and Spie2:io's homer in the eighth.
that more than twO-thirds of Gary Orcutt announced their The loss was the second in the
I
the team still hasn't signed. retirement from the Boston last nine games for lhe Reds,
Tucker Frederickson signed Patriots and second-year line- who will send Don Gullett
a contract on Monday morning, backer Bob Olson, Boston's No. against the Los Angeles IQ.night
of a three-game
0 N •d
and Fran Tarkenlon and Bobby 5 drafl pick from Notre Dame in .the opener
hi h .od8
the
2 o • 2n
••
in 19£9, was cut [rom the series w c WI
up
MIDDLEPORT . ,
Duhon were close to ~rms.
current homestand.
Lamonica's failure to report squad.

Jacoby .
·
Jacoby also disclosed tift the
council would review Marshall
University's stalus if officials
of the suspeirded Huntington,
W. Va., school formally request
such action .
Marshall was indefiniwly
suspended from the league in

"2·2156, EHitoriel Phone 9922157 .
'
Second class

sellers like LTD. Fam9d for ils

postaoe paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio.
· National edvertising

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

representative
Boltineii iGallagher. Inc ., 12 East &lt;~2nd
St ., New York. City, New York .
SuDScription rares : De --

livered by carrier where
•vailable SO cents per week ;

By Motor Route where carrier
service not ava ila ble : One
month S1.7S. By mall in Ohio
and
Six

w.

va ., One year SU.OO.

months

S7 .2S . Three

months U .50. Subs.crif,tion

pr•ce inclUdes Sunday T me5 Sentlnel .

It's nol only the
savlngs-ll's the canr
that make th11111 such
grill buys Canr like Mcverick,
the lamed "simple machine."
Including e roomy new "family"
4-&lt;loor ... the sporty "Grabber"
. .. the new V-81
Besl-sellers now at the
bast-selling prices Best-

!

luKurlously qu iet rlde,'real prool
of a car lhal's solidly buill to last.
Now clearance-priced!

.Jri!:fk,
Maka your move lo Ford Country today!

Member Federal Home loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounts insured up . to

20.0011.110.

~·

'·

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
.

461 Sooth Third stt Middlepllt, o..

�'.

•

-·
.1 -lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .,.July 20, 1m

Reclamation Hearing Starts
.._ ""' Gov • -b A
mAliU'SI'ON, W: Va. !UPI) lumed
.
"""" u' ' "'" .
-.A bearing. wu • hed•H ID MIIGft Jr. m lbe basis that its
miring would damllge the aes4ipl!ll today by lbe Rlda!NIIiim
8oll'd of Review 111 a CGD- !betic value of tbe land. .
JDValvedin the project is lalld
_.ovaiUI strip mille Jnject.
lluno!d earlier In lbe ,_. by a in Prestnn County near
CIIOper's Rock State F«reSt and
~IDrlal wder.
tbe West Virginia University
On appell is lbe IUI'face min- Elperiliiental
Fcnst.
Ill JII'IIIMUl of H. L. x....ity. a
Pittsburgh firm. wlidl ... Today's bearing followed

Monda •
·
y s appombnent of two
new members of
the
reclamatim board.
Moore's Office disclased the
governor bad Selected Paul Nay
fi Jane LeW, president of tile
West Virginia Farm Bureau,
and Richard K. Neal of

would give the board its full
five member strength for the
llearlng in Kingwood.
Nay is tn serve a term that ex'"""" Jllne 30, 1976, and Neal
,.... was ·.named ID the unexpired
~ofDonFogus, who stepped
down from the post last March
and left the stale.
Ne8I. represents the !crest In·
dusby on the board, while Nay
serves as a spokesman for the

ing, gr!lnted by lbe stale Deparbnenlof Natural Resource~~,
but later cancelled by Moore.
Moore's &amp;!'lion re~einlllnl the
permit ~ on the heels .r i
IIIJJiei'OUII prolests In the Laurel
nun area ri l'resiOII County,
where opponents of lbe mbMilg
marched In ''nature walka" on
two oeai.sions.
•

Fresh, Meaty Polil

AT MARK VSTORE • .MIDDLEPORT ·
'

'

NECK BONES

7

Mar- ·agri~ture indusby.

GU Fredeick, lftsldent ri the
mel
association, blamed "errioMoore said the appoin1ments
Kennedy sought file bearing timaliam" for public reactlm
ID appeal a permitfor strip mi•- against the mine.

Budget Sliced

lbs.

BACON
lbs.
for

.

HOME MADE PORK

.

ENJOYING A HAYRIDE recenUy at the farm home of Mr. and Mn. 'Dilw Koblentz,
Olester Road, were members of Carolyn Parker's Bead Start Class of Middlep&lt;rl. Left tn right
are, frmtrow, Rq:er Busb; secmd row, Malcolm Guinther, Roy Arms, Anita liudson, SUsan
Bryan, Sberry Wears, Sharlene Schwartz, Robin Campbell, Donna Gilm«e, B. K. Arms; third
row, Mary Jane Arm&lt;!, Evelyn Bauer, Ray Justis, Cheryl Neutzling and Carolyn Parker.

Low Temps
Hit Midwest

Y01JNGSTERS OF Cardyn Parter's Head Start Class of
Middlepcrt were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Koblentz,
. Olester Road, fir a wiener ·roast and hayride recently. The
children Inured the dairy barn and fed and milked the cows.

Meigs Democrats .

Will Be Active
The
Meigs
County
Democratic Executive Committee met Thursday night, at
the Party Headquarters in
Pomeroy with Chairman J;:. A.
Wmgett presiding.
Wingett and Committeeman
Paul Gerard opened the
meeting with a report on the
Democratic State Convention
which was held on June 2li in
Colwn bus.
Among other matters acted
upon:
- The August meeting of the
Meigs . Democratic Eiecutive
Corrumttee was rescheduled to
Thursday, August 12th, to avoid
conflictwith flleCounly Fair. At
the suggestion of Gerard, this
meeting will not be held at the
Party Headquarters but instead
as a potluck supper at the
Forest Acres Park in Rutland.
- Young Democrats will
present a special program on
Friday, Aug. 13, in Middleport.
Among the business for that
evening will be the election of

officers. Paul Gerard has indicated that he will be a can-

didate for President of the
Meigs Young Dems at that
time.
- Democrats will have a
booth at file Meigs County Fair.
Among features ID be offered
there will be a -survey of
preferences for the Democratic
Party's
nomination · for
President.
.
'
- October 13 bas been tentatively set as the date for a
dinner in which Meigs
Democrats will play host ID the
lOth District Democratic Action
Club_Details will be announced
later.

Officials
Plan Jomt
•
Euorl
J.J.I

BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UPf)
-Mexican and U.S. health
officials tnday launched a
coordinated battle against a
South American sleeping
disease that has killed more
than 11,000 horses in Mexico
and Texas.
· Mexico's top veterinarian,
Gustavo
Rela P.ettersson, said
0
10.000 horses were killed by the
sickness during one threeDennis E. Keney, vice month period alone, far more
president of the Pomeroy than U.S. offoctals had first
National Bank, was one of Ml thoughL .
.
.
banker-studen ts completing an The . dosease, . earned by
intensive week of instruction at mO&lt;Sqwtoes and boling flies, has
lhe eighth annual session the kiUed al least 800 horses in
Ohio School of Ins tallment Texas and has infec ted at least
Credit.
another 1,000 in a continuing
The school was held the week northward a~vance.
of July II throu gh 16 on file Kent Cases haff-been reported in
Stale University campus at Oklahoma, Louisiana and the
Kent. The Ohio Bankers Texas Panhandle- 1,000 miles
Association, headquartered in n~th of the 8i..P Grande where
Columbus, annually sponsors d~se-laden m05qwtoes first
the srhool in cooperation with carroed the Venezuelan equme
Kent Slate University.
encepbalomyebtis. (VEE). mto
The course of instruction the Uno ted States on late June:
consists of a resident summer · Mexican officials said 779
session of one week. Each humans caught the illness
student is required to complete duru;og the past two years in
the
enlire
specialized Mexico, but th~ . government
curriculum to qualify for said no one dted. In south
graduation.
.
Texas, dozens of persons have
The school approach to been bospi~ with syinpfinancial -education is based on toms of the illness.
actual cases from file files of It causes only a flu-like
typical Ohio banks. Each illness in man and is seldom
student is uposed to ap- fatal. ~owever, 110 per cent of
proximately 'l1 classroom hours horses mfected dte.
of work in addition to ten.hours
of group-seminar program_
BICYCUST KILLED
The schOol is open to all ofc AKRON, Ohio (UP! ) - Carl
ficers and employees of OBA E.Gallatin, 16, Hornerville,died
member banks.
Munday in City Hospital here

Keney

Takes Part
In Sesswn

or

8y United Presa Jntematiooal
Widespread shower and thunderstnrm activity moved intn
file Northeast and Southwest
sections of the natlm tndsy
while in the Midwest temperatures approacbed rec&lt;rd lows.
SlighUy more than an inch of
rain feU at Bangor and Old
Town, Maine, during the early
morning hours and Las Vega8
and Santa Fe, N.M., each
recorded more than an inch.
Pea sized hall belted Fargo,
N.D. while winds gusted to
nearly 50 miles an hour at
Albuquerque, N.M .
Du Page, ru. lied the record
low for today with a 50 degree
reading, exactly baH of the 100
degree high recorded at
Needles, Calif.
Tornado-like winds uprooted
trees and blew off the roofs of
several buildings In suburban
Pittsburgh Monday night. High
winds also knocked down trees
and power lines on file city's
north side, disrupting service
for several hours. A number of
suburban communities were
also without power for a short

PORK

•

Stornts and

SAUSAGE
lbs.
for

LIVER

•

lbs.
for

•
•

-·

Beautiful offer. Free

iced tea glass with
each $3.00 gasoline purchase at participating
Ashland stations.
-

Beautiful color. Rich, avocado green.
Beautiful size. Generous 16 ounces

UNGRADED
for

••••••••••••••••
MR. BEE

your favorite summertime beverages.

Beautiful shape.

With the cutest I ittle

REG.

dimples.

59~

doz.

S

pkg.

••••••••••••

And that's the beauty of it all.

SCOT LAD
ICE MILK
1h

,

time.

c-;

A frontal aystem stretching
from the North Atlantic stales
ID the Southern Plains brought
shower and thunderstcrm activity, some accompanied by
high winds and hall, ID the
Southeast. At file end of a sixhour period Bridgeport, Conn.,
had recorded 5.7 inches of rain.

m·

ISS

A

I ~"'ll"----1

~YOUR

ccepts

V,

3 rrom Meigs

oo-LLARSI

SHASTA CANNED POP ...................... 10
SCOT LAD MARGARINE ....................10
EDON TOILET TISSUE ........................... 12
SCOT LAD PAPER TOWELS ................ 3
SCOT LAD ALUM. FOIL ........................ 4
EASY MONDA Y...~.·.~.~.~~Y.:.~~~~!................ 3
SUNSHINE VANILLA WAFERs ........ 3

Three Meigs County students
have been accepted by Bliss
College, Columbus.
Accepted at file School of
Business are Dorothy Debra
llarbrecht, daughter of Mrs.
Norman Harbrecht, Pomeroy.
Dorothy bas chosen ID lake her
training in fashion merchandising and will begin her
preparation Sept. 13. Brenda
Kay Boring, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. nichard Boring,
Reedsville, nt. 1, and Kimberly
Lynn Fick, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Fict, Long Bottom, nt. 1, have each chosen 1D
take . training in secretarial
work and will begin on Sept. 13.
Bliss College was founded in
1899 and since that time has
been successfully training
young men and women for
business careers.

I
I

RICH'S WHIPPED

TOPPING
cans
12 lb.

1

Rolls
Rolls
Jumbo

Rolls
2S ft.
Rolls
Qts.

12 oz.
Bxs.

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

I

10 oz. Plastic Container

NORTH STAR

SPLITS

.12 pak

~- 9f

C:..

GOOD AT MARK VSTORE
I ~-;;.;EXP~IR;;;;;ES;,.,;;SA;;;,;ru.;.;.R:;;.DA;,;,Y_
I t:au.w.a.a.w.www.LI,I.LijW&amp;Uilll
VALUABlE COU P O N

..-r S1ZI

In. IR.N.

~~/,LIQUID
ONLY

OCEAN PERCH
l-Ib.

··--.

11111ml

FRUI~a~~ErShorru ~&lt;&gt; 2 9
2 lb.

•

nn•-.

I

39~

LEMONADE

69'1=
lm:::: ::1

' MARK
v
STORE

MINUTE MAID

GOOD

o:~•

100

wmo..swo

UMrT 1 COUPON PER PURCIIASE

We~k's Special

USED CARS

67 CHEVEUE
MALIBU 2 DR. HT

SAT. ONLY

. Beige with matching in!.,
283 V.-8. auto.. P .S., real
nice. ·
•

• •

'1795

.md Ma~ h'f Ch.u~ee crt'&lt;'lit cards.

" '(ou' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business." .
· GMAC FINANCING
99l-5J42
Pomeroy
Opo!n Evenings 'Til i:OO
. ._•T•i•ls•PII.Miii.•
S.iiil.--.1

V.avorite Large size

16 oz. bois.

Wt• llonoJ BankAmL&gt;rit'ard

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

8 PAK

••

HOME GROWN

BREAD Cabbage

Ashland.·

loaves

~

lor

'

lb.

MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 ~ Sun. 10 to
We Accept Federal FOOd Stnmp:4

Comer ~ill and Seconll Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480
" We Reserve The Rigl-t T0 Limit Ouontilies"
0

~------- · ~~--------~

•

'I

'.

'

'

=

BANQUET

FRENCH FRIES

THURS. ONLY

I

3 ·9~
.,

COOD MARK V
~'STORE

p.iiioiiiiiiiio,;,:;;;::;;,;;;;___"'i
This

IISTMT TEA

IVORY

CAPE ANN

ORE-IDA POTATOES

after being struct by a tractnrtrailer truck while riding ·a bicytle on Ohio 224 in Medina
County.
He had been transferred here
from Lodi Hospital.

69~

ftESTEA

'

x ii

�'.

•

-·
.1 -lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .,.July 20, 1m

Reclamation Hearing Starts
.._ ""' Gov • -b A
mAliU'SI'ON, W: Va. !UPI) lumed
.
"""" u' ' "'" .
-.A bearing. wu • hed•H ID MIIGft Jr. m lbe basis that its
miring would damllge the aes4ipl!ll today by lbe Rlda!NIIiim
8oll'd of Review 111 a CGD- !betic value of tbe land. .
JDValvedin the project is lalld
_.ovaiUI strip mille Jnject.
lluno!d earlier In lbe ,_. by a in Prestnn County near
CIIOper's Rock State F«reSt and
~IDrlal wder.
tbe West Virginia University
On appell is lbe IUI'face min- Elperiliiental
Fcnst.
Ill JII'IIIMUl of H. L. x....ity. a
Pittsburgh firm. wlidl ... Today's bearing followed

Monda •
·
y s appombnent of two
new members of
the
reclamatim board.
Moore's Office disclased the
governor bad Selected Paul Nay
fi Jane LeW, president of tile
West Virginia Farm Bureau,
and Richard K. Neal of

would give the board its full
five member strength for the
llearlng in Kingwood.
Nay is tn serve a term that ex'"""" Jllne 30, 1976, and Neal
,.... was ·.named ID the unexpired
~ofDonFogus, who stepped
down from the post last March
and left the stale.
Ne8I. represents the !crest In·
dusby on the board, while Nay
serves as a spokesman for the

ing, gr!lnted by lbe stale Deparbnenlof Natural Resource~~,
but later cancelled by Moore.
Moore's &amp;!'lion re~einlllnl the
permit ~ on the heels .r i
IIIJJiei'OUII prolests In the Laurel
nun area ri l'resiOII County,
where opponents of lbe mbMilg
marched In ''nature walka" on
two oeai.sions.
•

Fresh, Meaty Polil

AT MARK VSTORE • .MIDDLEPORT ·
'

'

NECK BONES

7

Mar- ·agri~ture indusby.

GU Fredeick, lftsldent ri the
mel
association, blamed "errioMoore said the appoin1ments
Kennedy sought file bearing timaliam" for public reactlm
ID appeal a permitfor strip mi•- against the mine.

Budget Sliced

lbs.

BACON
lbs.
for

.

HOME MADE PORK

.

ENJOYING A HAYRIDE recenUy at the farm home of Mr. and Mn. 'Dilw Koblentz,
Olester Road, were members of Carolyn Parker's Bead Start Class of Middlep&lt;rl. Left tn right
are, frmtrow, Rq:er Busb; secmd row, Malcolm Guinther, Roy Arms, Anita liudson, SUsan
Bryan, Sberry Wears, Sharlene Schwartz, Robin Campbell, Donna Gilm«e, B. K. Arms; third
row, Mary Jane Arm&lt;!, Evelyn Bauer, Ray Justis, Cheryl Neutzling and Carolyn Parker.

Low Temps
Hit Midwest

Y01JNGSTERS OF Cardyn Parter's Head Start Class of
Middlepcrt were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Koblentz,
. Olester Road, fir a wiener ·roast and hayride recently. The
children Inured the dairy barn and fed and milked the cows.

Meigs Democrats .

Will Be Active
The
Meigs
County
Democratic Executive Committee met Thursday night, at
the Party Headquarters in
Pomeroy with Chairman J;:. A.
Wmgett presiding.
Wingett and Committeeman
Paul Gerard opened the
meeting with a report on the
Democratic State Convention
which was held on June 2li in
Colwn bus.
Among other matters acted
upon:
- The August meeting of the
Meigs . Democratic Eiecutive
Corrumttee was rescheduled to
Thursday, August 12th, to avoid
conflictwith flleCounly Fair. At
the suggestion of Gerard, this
meeting will not be held at the
Party Headquarters but instead
as a potluck supper at the
Forest Acres Park in Rutland.
- Young Democrats will
present a special program on
Friday, Aug. 13, in Middleport.
Among the business for that
evening will be the election of

officers. Paul Gerard has indicated that he will be a can-

didate for President of the
Meigs Young Dems at that
time.
- Democrats will have a
booth at file Meigs County Fair.
Among features ID be offered
there will be a -survey of
preferences for the Democratic
Party's
nomination · for
President.
.
'
- October 13 bas been tentatively set as the date for a
dinner in which Meigs
Democrats will play host ID the
lOth District Democratic Action
Club_Details will be announced
later.

Officials
Plan Jomt
•
Euorl
J.J.I

BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UPf)
-Mexican and U.S. health
officials tnday launched a
coordinated battle against a
South American sleeping
disease that has killed more
than 11,000 horses in Mexico
and Texas.
· Mexico's top veterinarian,
Gustavo
Rela P.ettersson, said
0
10.000 horses were killed by the
sickness during one threeDennis E. Keney, vice month period alone, far more
president of the Pomeroy than U.S. offoctals had first
National Bank, was one of Ml thoughL .
.
.
banker-studen ts completing an The . dosease, . earned by
intensive week of instruction at mO&lt;Sqwtoes and boling flies, has
lhe eighth annual session the kiUed al least 800 horses in
Ohio School of Ins tallment Texas and has infec ted at least
Credit.
another 1,000 in a continuing
The school was held the week northward a~vance.
of July II throu gh 16 on file Kent Cases haff-been reported in
Stale University campus at Oklahoma, Louisiana and the
Kent. The Ohio Bankers Texas Panhandle- 1,000 miles
Association, headquartered in n~th of the 8i..P Grande where
Columbus, annually sponsors d~se-laden m05qwtoes first
the srhool in cooperation with carroed the Venezuelan equme
Kent Slate University.
encepbalomyebtis. (VEE). mto
The course of instruction the Uno ted States on late June:
consists of a resident summer · Mexican officials said 779
session of one week. Each humans caught the illness
student is required to complete duru;og the past two years in
the
enlire
specialized Mexico, but th~ . government
curriculum to qualify for said no one dted. In south
graduation.
.
Texas, dozens of persons have
The school approach to been bospi~ with syinpfinancial -education is based on toms of the illness.
actual cases from file files of It causes only a flu-like
typical Ohio banks. Each illness in man and is seldom
student is uposed to ap- fatal. ~owever, 110 per cent of
proximately 'l1 classroom hours horses mfected dte.
of work in addition to ten.hours
of group-seminar program_
BICYCUST KILLED
The schOol is open to all ofc AKRON, Ohio (UP! ) - Carl
ficers and employees of OBA E.Gallatin, 16, Hornerville,died
member banks.
Munday in City Hospital here

Keney

Takes Part
In Sesswn

or

8y United Presa Jntematiooal
Widespread shower and thunderstnrm activity moved intn
file Northeast and Southwest
sections of the natlm tndsy
while in the Midwest temperatures approacbed rec&lt;rd lows.
SlighUy more than an inch of
rain feU at Bangor and Old
Town, Maine, during the early
morning hours and Las Vega8
and Santa Fe, N.M., each
recorded more than an inch.
Pea sized hall belted Fargo,
N.D. while winds gusted to
nearly 50 miles an hour at
Albuquerque, N.M .
Du Page, ru. lied the record
low for today with a 50 degree
reading, exactly baH of the 100
degree high recorded at
Needles, Calif.
Tornado-like winds uprooted
trees and blew off the roofs of
several buildings In suburban
Pittsburgh Monday night. High
winds also knocked down trees
and power lines on file city's
north side, disrupting service
for several hours. A number of
suburban communities were
also without power for a short

PORK

•

Stornts and

SAUSAGE
lbs.
for

LIVER

•

lbs.
for

•
•

-·

Beautiful offer. Free

iced tea glass with
each $3.00 gasoline purchase at participating
Ashland stations.
-

Beautiful color. Rich, avocado green.
Beautiful size. Generous 16 ounces

UNGRADED
for

••••••••••••••••
MR. BEE

your favorite summertime beverages.

Beautiful shape.

With the cutest I ittle

REG.

dimples.

59~

doz.

S

pkg.

••••••••••••

And that's the beauty of it all.

SCOT LAD
ICE MILK
1h

,

time.

c-;

A frontal aystem stretching
from the North Atlantic stales
ID the Southern Plains brought
shower and thunderstcrm activity, some accompanied by
high winds and hall, ID the
Southeast. At file end of a sixhour period Bridgeport, Conn.,
had recorded 5.7 inches of rain.

m·

ISS

A

I ~"'ll"----1

~YOUR

ccepts

V,

3 rrom Meigs

oo-LLARSI

SHASTA CANNED POP ...................... 10
SCOT LAD MARGARINE ....................10
EDON TOILET TISSUE ........................... 12
SCOT LAD PAPER TOWELS ................ 3
SCOT LAD ALUM. FOIL ........................ 4
EASY MONDA Y...~.·.~.~.~~Y.:.~~~~!................ 3
SUNSHINE VANILLA WAFERs ........ 3

Three Meigs County students
have been accepted by Bliss
College, Columbus.
Accepted at file School of
Business are Dorothy Debra
llarbrecht, daughter of Mrs.
Norman Harbrecht, Pomeroy.
Dorothy bas chosen ID lake her
training in fashion merchandising and will begin her
preparation Sept. 13. Brenda
Kay Boring, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. nichard Boring,
Reedsville, nt. 1, and Kimberly
Lynn Fick, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Fict, Long Bottom, nt. 1, have each chosen 1D
take . training in secretarial
work and will begin on Sept. 13.
Bliss College was founded in
1899 and since that time has
been successfully training
young men and women for
business careers.

I
I

RICH'S WHIPPED

TOPPING
cans
12 lb.

1

Rolls
Rolls
Jumbo

Rolls
2S ft.
Rolls
Qts.

12 oz.
Bxs.

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

I

10 oz. Plastic Container

NORTH STAR

SPLITS

.12 pak

~- 9f

C:..

GOOD AT MARK VSTORE
I ~-;;.;EXP~IR;;;;;ES;,.,;;SA;;;,;ru.;.;.R:;;.DA;,;,Y_
I t:au.w.a.a.w.www.LI,I.LijW&amp;Uilll
VALUABlE COU P O N

..-r S1ZI

In. IR.N.

~~/,LIQUID
ONLY

OCEAN PERCH
l-Ib.

··--.

11111ml

FRUI~a~~ErShorru ~&lt;&gt; 2 9
2 lb.

•

nn•-.

I

39~

LEMONADE

69'1=
lm:::: ::1

' MARK
v
STORE

MINUTE MAID

GOOD

o:~•

100

wmo..swo

UMrT 1 COUPON PER PURCIIASE

We~k's Special

USED CARS

67 CHEVEUE
MALIBU 2 DR. HT

SAT. ONLY

. Beige with matching in!.,
283 V.-8. auto.. P .S., real
nice. ·
•

• •

'1795

.md Ma~ h'f Ch.u~ee crt'&lt;'lit cards.

" '(ou' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business." .
· GMAC FINANCING
99l-5J42
Pomeroy
Opo!n Evenings 'Til i:OO
. ._•T•i•ls•PII.Miii.•
S.iiil.--.1

V.avorite Large size

16 oz. bois.

Wt• llonoJ BankAmL&gt;rit'ard

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

8 PAK

••

HOME GROWN

BREAD Cabbage

Ashland.·

loaves

~

lor

'

lb.

MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 ~ Sun. 10 to
We Accept Federal FOOd Stnmp:4

Comer ~ill and Seconll Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480
" We Reserve The Rigl-t T0 Limit Ouontilies"
0

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'

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=

BANQUET

FRENCH FRIES

THURS. ONLY

I

3 ·9~
.,

COOD MARK V
~'STORE

p.iiioiiiiiiiio,;,:;;;::;;,;;;;___"'i
This

IISTMT TEA

IVORY

CAPE ANN

ORE-IDA POTATOES

after being struct by a tractnrtrailer truck while riding ·a bicytle on Ohio 224 in Medina
County.
He had been transferred here
from Lodi Hospital.

69~

ftESTEA

'

x ii

�'
1- The Dilly Seillinel, Mlddleport-Pomey, 0., July II, lfll

6.:_ Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31,1971

:::::=:=:::~=:=~~~=:%%:~=:~~:::w.::::::=:=:~=~:~:=:~=:::::~c :i:m il ·

!:!i:tn:· · ·

MAIY ITEMS lOT SHOWI! SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STOlE.

Mrs. Kessinger Installed I~$&lt;@@"ffif''""';'~'''*·'W·~;;
Social Calendar
r, :~~"-~'''*'';';WJ•@W.;ii!;3@;m@;,W§l*';;mm;g;,,,,
A P: ·a· . .at 'c
t
.
Onven ton
relurnil~rhapsyous~ltlntheatticorloanedittosomeone s . rest .ent

Community
. Corner sy

.

.

charlene Hoeflich

Have you ever borrowed scmething and just neglected to

e

' .·

.

else

Ttus

.

seems to have been what has happened to the beds,
wheelchairs, canes, crutches, walkers a~ other hospital supplies
r1 the loan cen!A!r maintained by the Middleport Busmess and
Professional Women's Club.
.
.
The cluh is armoos that aU the equipment be kept m USE, and if
you have b«rowed something and are still using it, fine. If you
are not using i~ then now is the time to return it.
·
'. ·
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president ci the cluh, reports that daily
requests are coming in lor the loan of hospital equipment. She
asks tbat if you have borrowed from the loan ~enter, and are not
now using the equiJment, then that you return 11.
In any event she requests that peraons with B&amp;PW equipment
telephone her so that reccrds can be updated.
The cluh is hCf~ing to enlarge the hospital loan center and will
appreciate any equipment donations.

Mrs. Charles Kessinger of
Pomeroy, Route4, was ~tailed
IS president of District 8, and
numerous awards
were
-p-esented to Meigs County units
lit the Department of Ohio,
American ~egion Auxiliary,
annual cooventioo held over the
weekend at the Sheraton-Hilton
Ho!A!l, Cleveland.
Mrs. Kessinger, active
member of the Auxiliary unit of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport, succeeds Mrs. Ben
Neulzling, also of Pomeroy,
who has been District 8
tresidenlfor the past two years.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush of Middleport,
Mrs. Kessinger was elei:ted to
the district post at the June 3
coovenlion held In Pomeroy. In
thechaMiddllalneporf t urutw't she servfirsedt
P
or o years,
as
vice president, two years;
tresident, two years; senior
advisor to the juniors, four
years, and has been on standing
committees since 1964, a year
after she joined the Auxiliary.
For the past year she has
.served as district junior ac-

.~ MRS. WILLARD (ANNA) WILSON of the Enterprise area~
·Pomeroy, is having a bad time. She ~ rurren~y reported m
serirus condition at the St. Mary's Hosp•tal, Huntington, W. Va.,
Room 1013.
Two weeks ago Mrs. Wilson had an appendectomy at the
' Hurtingtm haspital. She had been home a week when a clot
:developed and lodged in her lungs. Our best wishes for a speedy
recoVl!ry.

• Mianwbile; a son, Bob, who resides in the Bellefontaine area,
: isrecuperatingfromrecentsurgery. Some time ~o he ~uffereda
: neck injury while playing sports, and dunng his recent
, hospilalization a bone was taken from his hip and transplanted
into his neck. He's coming along fine.
FROM MARY AND TIPPY DYE at Evenston, m. comes
: word of the birth 11 a granddaugbter. Eight pound, eight ounce
ndRog Ca
· onJulyll
: MaryLynewasborn
er
. ·
; TheyliveatMillValley,Calif.Mrs.DyeflewoutFridaytobeWith
family.

•

•-•·ft•
tos~,.,.-uea

rneg~e

~ the

.

Mrs. Charles
K ·
esstngerc

M."See llaneous JfJOWe
(' ]_, r
~
h
uonor.·r Schnms er.·r
11
11
·

FIRSl'S ARE SUCH FUN and the 17 Middleport cub scouts
• whoweretakenforplaneridesSundaybythegener~Dr. R. R.
: Pickens, report it was just "too much."
:
Oibs enjoying the rides were DaVid Wilcox, Don Geary,
j
J
; Jamie Scally, Kevin Smith, Danny Smith, Steve Carson, Dean
.
• Spencer, Jeff Laudermilt, Jobn · Byer, Keith Doss, Dorset
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Schrim~ Thomas, Max Geary, Keith Black, Roger Carson, Joe McCloud, sher, newJy.weds now living in
· David Hysell, and Ivan Lane.
Hartford, W.Va., were guests of
honor at a miscellaneous
;
~
shower Saturday night at the
l.Long Bottom' home of Mr. and
r1/ .
Mrs. Floyd Weber with Mrs.
'J
Robert White as CD-hostess.
:• Mrs. James Murray, Mid- seven great-grandchildren, and
Bride bingo was enjoyed an d
' dleport, celebrated her 91st her great-great-granddaughter. door prizes were awarded to
' birthday anniversary at a party Missing from the family group Mrs. Erma ·Johnston and Mrs.
hosted by her son-in-law and was Chadd Comer, infant son of Marcia Keller. After the gifts
' daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ran· Mr. and Mrs. Mike Comer and were opened, refreshments of
: dolph Ward, at their home in the great-great-grandson of sandwiches,cakeandicecream
• Ravenswood.
Mrs. Murray, who relll8ined were served.
Also celebrated at the party h""pitalized.
The guest list included
was the third birthday of Mrs. At the party were Mr. and Thelma Orr, Jean Spencer,
Murray's great-granddaugbter, Mrs. Bill Dow and Susie, Mr. BeckY and Denise Pullins, Betty
; Tammy Giles. Cakes, one in- and Mrs. Richard Ward, Ricky, Friend, Margaret Tutlie, Alice
; scribed "Happy Birthday, Sherrie and Mike; Mr. and Mrs. Capehart, Murl Ours, Hazel Lee
· Grandmother" and the other Duape Giles, Tammy and Reibel, Mary Rose and
: " Happy Birihday, Tammy'; Angela; Mr. and Mrs. Mike daughwrs, Debbie Rose, Cass
were served. Party hats and Comer and daughwr, Candy. Bissell, Avice BisseU, Sylvia.
favors were given and gifts Family pictures were taken Carpenwr, Mae Johnston, Neva
. were presented to the two during the day, Mrs. Murray Frederick, Thel!na, Jennie and
, honored guests.
also received gifts and cards Sandy White , Mary Offutt,
• Atwnding besides Mrs. Ward, from her neighbors and church Garnet Johnston, Wilma and
daughter of Mrs. Murray, were friends .
Brenda Anderson.
her three grandchildren, her
Wilma Ballard, Kathy
Johnson, Mrs. Charles Pullins,
Lizzie Reibel, Edith Sisson and
Jane, Lillian Napper, Clara
:

celevlated

::91 st B'trthda

·

J

.
.
Milhoan, Kathleen Mllhoa.n,
Norma and Joseph Ritch1e,
Sbllla and Melissa Coleman,
Thelma Farnsworth, Floss1e
Maxon, Monad Wilson, Marcia
Keller, Rosemary Ke_ller,
Thelma Ashworth, MarjOrie
Schrimsher, Alta Schri":'"her
an d Fl orence
J ~rmge n•
Columbus. Also attendmg were
Ernest Weber, Handy Friend,
and Robert White.

.I~

TT

VO,UUrJan
~'

A nnua·t

Reunton
• 11e
U /d

0

•

Meigs

Chester

: Property
:
;T
r_
· ransters
;.

N

N

Daileys Honored
Freda Miller and Lenore
Belzing spent Saturday with On Bz'rth.-~111
Edith Osborn of Keno.
uaJ
ews

•
•

otes

Several have been attending

Mr. and Mrs. Cline Dailey,

is preaching. Rev. Herbert
Grate is pastor:
.
Herbert Sm1th, wtfe and
family of Colul!l~us spent
Sunday with his siSter, Mrs.
Mace! Barton and family and to
pick,up their son, Glen, who had
SPent a week with his cousin,
Kevin Barton.
Rose Ginther called on Mrs.
Harry Ludwick,&amp;:.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
son and 'daughwr of Pomeroy
SPent Sunday evening with his
mother, Georgia Thoma.
Mr and Mrs Guy Thoma, son
and daughter ~ the Flatwoods
Rd . spen t 8unday evenmg
· wt'th
his mother, Mrs. Georgie
Tholll8
. ·
V1ola Teagarden of Portsmouth spent some time last
week with her mother, Mrs.
Sena Pooler and Sally. Mrs.
Pooler is quite poorly.
'til Ki
tur ed
Mrs. Ed1
ng re n
home last week from a visit
.
with her son at Mounds~1Ue and
a daughter at East Liverpool.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kueker
and family of Urbana, ill. spent
Monday with Mrs. John Hoff.
IIJaD and in the afternoon they

of their aunt and uncle, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert White, Long
Bottom. Chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream featured
the dinner. Others there were
Mr. and Mrs . Daileys '
daughter Melissa Mrs. Lydia
Stewart' Mr . 'and Mrs.
Seidenabel, Mr . and Mrs .
William Ohlinger, Debbie, Kim
and Steve aU of Pomeroy.
'

~ Sarah
Weaver,
Lucy the revival at the Na~ene Pomeroy, were guests Sunday
~ Vineyard, James Vineyard, Church where Rev. Ed Grmdley at a birthday dinner at the home
: Mary Benedum, Charles W.
• Benedum, Lawrence Weaver,
: HelenWeaver, RoyWeaver,Ina
:· Jean Weaver to Clara. Blake,
• Orval Blake, Parcel, Olive.. .
George W. Cwldiff, Viola
' Irene Cundiff, Evelyn Moore _to
! William Davis, Coral DaVIS,
! Lots, Syracuse. .
~ Elmer S. ·Bailey, Eva E.
~ Bailey to Letta A. Spencer,
• Parcels, Salisbury,.
~ Letta A. Spencer to Elmer S.
~ Bailey, Eva E. Bailey, Parcels,
" Salisbury.
;
Kissell A&lt;lso., Inc., to Village
:: of Middleport, Easement,
..
M'ddleport.
~ 1
.
·
.. Letta A. Spencer to William
:: E. Criner, Ruth Criner, Lot448,
t
. - Middl
;:
epor .
• Robert C. Hartenbach,
!: Sheriff, Russell E . Lewis ,
:; Carolyn Z. Lewis to Farmers
:; Bank - Savmgs Co., Lot 502,
P
:
omeroy.
Goldie Clendenin to John M.
•
•
ban
: WeDs, 212 Acres, Le on.
._ Marvellus Weaver, dec., to
: Sarah Weaver, Lucy Vmeyard,
~ Mary Benedum , Lawrence
: Weaver, Roy Weaver, Clara
= Blake, Aff. for Trans., Olive.

~
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'Ed en News

:
;:

By Martha Holsinger
Sunday School attendance

=Sunday, July 11, was 61.
.,. Rev. Eden Blake is attending

.,.
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conference this week.
Mrs. Sandy Fields visited
with her' grandmother, Martha
Holsinger, Monday evening.
Miss Rhonda Jean Holsinger
was given a weiner roast in
honor of her 9th birthday. Many

:
..
"
.,.
·,.•

were in attendance. Several
games were played.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Holsinger
Jr. and family, Racine v.isited
wfth Mi-s. Martha Holsinger,
~ Saturday evening.
0

I

B'trth·-1udJ R'(Jrt:J

Shelly Kay Wolfe, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs.h Johnd Wolfe,
S
her
fyratcub. seth,dwasJuloyn~r~ 1 aonparty
1rs 1r ay,
,
at the home of her parents.
Ice cream, cake, and KoolA'd
edtoM
dMr
Gel wledreM~rhav I G r.anCa sl.
ra
tc e
ary
ro
Roger Dennisa~d Debbie, Mrs:
H I'M. h l Mr and Mrs
aze
IC ae
,..,,. R 1
d D id Mr and
Mvvn JeuherBan U av 'd J ·
rs 0 n en ey an enny,
Mr ·John McClintock and Mr.
·E ~~ Locket
'
I

h'"'"

•

•

.
A. rewuon of the Vaughan
la~mly was held Sunday at the
Middlep~rt Park.
.
Attendmg were MISS ruma
Vaugh~n and Mrs. May Bird,
CedarviUe; Walblr L. Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. R1chard W.
Vaughan, M~. and Mrs. Ted
Warner, Patrick, Kunberly and
Scott, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, Jr., Bill,
DQn, Beth and Zandra, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Vaughan, Matthew and David,
of Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vaughan
and Tony, Pomeroy; Miss
Thurma Vaughan, Rochester,
N. Y.; Loring Vaughan,
Bowling Green University; Roy
Vaughan, Ohio Northern
University; Robert Vaughan
and Charles, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Vaughan, Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Bryne Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Joe Spencer, Belinda,
Rebecca, Greg, Melissa and
Vaughan, Medina ; Mrs. Frank
Vaughan, Andy, Pam and
Patrick, Pomeroy.
Linda Shenefield of Salem
Center was the guest of Roy
Vaughan for the picnic, and
Teresa Gooch, Minersville, was
the guest of Tony Vaughan.

WEDNF3DAY

.

An~ate~

, ALL FOOTBALL players

A DISCOUNT
D£PARTMtNT STOll

SPECIAL meeting,
lrlterested in ·participating In Garden Club, at the home
.the football program at Mrs. Harold Lohse, w:;;_e
Southern High School this fall prive,. Pomeroy, Wedne ~
•
are Invited to attend a meeting evening, July 21 at 7:30; Mrs .
Martin, Departemental ci Ohio Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the high Earl Dean, Jr. to presen~ a
workshop on interpretive
Chapeau, Eight and Forty, Oct. schoool.
arranging.
.
3, Middlep&lt;l't Church of Christ;
OHIO
ETA
PHI
Chapter,
Beta
and the District il fall coil,
('
Sigma Phi Sorority, members
terence, Athens, Oct. ~and children to meet a~ 10 ~.m.
Going to the cooventi~ from
Wednesday at the Middleport
Meigs and Gallla Counties were
.
.
Park and from there will go to
Mrs. Neutzllng, Mrs. George U
Camden Park for an outing.
Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Martin, Mrs.
FRIDAY
Harry Davis, Mrs. Catherine
Welab, Pmneroy Unit 39; Mrs. Members of Evangeline WILLING WORKERS Class,
Kessinger, Mrs. Dale Mour- Chapter 172, Order of the Enterprise United Methodist
Ding, Mrs. Harry Stahl, and Eastern Star, and the Mid- Church, Friday, 7:30pm. a.t the
Mrs. Clair Might, Middleport dleport Masons staged a ~icnic home of Mrs. Herbert DixOn.
Unit 128; Mrs. VirgU Walker Sunday at ·Forest Acres Park.
and Mrs. John Boyd, Racine Following the public dinner,
Unit 602, and Mrs. Mabel the group played games, toured
Brown, Mrs. Dorothy Hecker, Fort Meigs and fished.
and Mrs. Mildred Hamilton, Attending were Mr. and Mrs. ,...............................
Galllpolls Unit 'll.
Carl Taylor, Gary Taylor, Mr. il
and Mrs. Ken Clark, Mr. and il n.
Mrs. E. M. Harrah, Mr. and
Mrs. James Buchanan, Mrs.
Oleva Cotterill, Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Evans, Mr. and Mrs. , . The longest sorrow finds~
Thomas Evans and Todd, Mr. : ·· at last relief .
and Mrs. D&lt;m Roush, Julie and
Amy, Rex Roush, Miss :
-Wm. Rowley
Mrs. Margaret Neuman has Charlotte Clevenger, Mr. andi
il
_
.., ...
returned from a several days Mrs. Ruben Collins, Mr. and
!" -tr
visit in Worthington with · her Mrs. Walter Roush, Wallace .
·
'
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. RusseU, Mrs. Eli28beth Oiler, ·
lfs Quick! Easy
andMrs. JackWhittie .Mr.and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patterson,
Mrs. Whittle returned Mrs. Roxanna, Jeff, Ray, and Steve, :; . . . ___ _ . .
of!
Neuman and_ took their
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King and
month old mece, Ann Marie Tim, Mr. and Mrs. Harry of!
...
of!
Buckley, home with them for a Chesher, Mrs. Raymond..
Fndays Only
week's visit. Before going to Wilcox, Beverly and Bryan.
i&lt; The Drive- In Window::;
Worthington, Mrs. Neuman Joining. the group for the
is Open
il
visited at Waterford with Mrs. afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. of!
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
•
Evelyn Morris.
William King and Kevin, and il
(Continuously)
il
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich HeatherFinlaw, granddaughter il
·
and Jayne Lee have returned of the Kings.
:Other Bonking Hours' to 3
from a several day's visit in
il .;n~d1ysto 7 as usuol on
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
r
·
Mike Hammer, Lou Ann and
il
Kimberly.
VISIT SMITHS
i' ·r
Miss Genevieve Stobart is at
Mr.and Mrs. Mike Speakman 1':
her home at Enterprise and daughter, Beth, and Mrs.
.Jftl .
•
following a five week stay at the Elizabeth Johnson of Columbus ·
POMEROY, OH 10
·
Holzer Medical Center.
spen t the week here wlth Mr .
Member
MemberFederal
FDIC
Mr. and Mrs . Charles and Mrs. Harold E. Smith of ·
Reserve System
i'
Wildermuth, Cathy and Teresa, Middleport.
.......................
have returned from a Florida
vacation. They camped along
the ocean for a week.
,
Dale Roush of St. Albans, W.
Va., spent the weekend here
.,
withMr.andMrs.AlbertRoush
•
and Mr. and '{Mrs. Charles
Kessinger.
Mr. and Mrs. James Akines of
Norfolk, Va. and Mrs.
Katherine Embleton were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
William Fields and family of
Pomeroy.

tivities chairman.
1n recogniti011 of her work as
district junior activities
chairman, a special award was
tresented to Mrs. Kessinger at
the convention. She aiSil
received the century club
award for having secured over
100 members last year.
Escort for Mrs. Kessinger at
the Sunday lnstaUation
ceremony was Commander
Cecil Cooper d. · the Ashland
Post 88. Tbe newly elected
Department of Ohio officers
installed at tbat llme were Mrs.
Raymond Sloan, Ashland,
president; Mrs. Donald Miller,
Alliance, first vice tresi.dent;
Mrs.GeorgeSallq&gt;,secondvice
tresident; Mrs. Robert Riley,
treasurer.
Both the MiddlePort 128 and
Pomeroy 39 junior units
received citations of merit for
activities. The Middleport
group received the $5 award for
the outstanding year-around
trogram.
"'
Unit39 took secood place, and
Unit 128, third place, on poppy
window displays. The Middleport, Pomeroy and Racine
602 units all received citations
of merit for well rounded
trograms during the past year,
along with SPecial membership
citations.
·
Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
Pomeroy, received third place
in the state on legislation
reports with the Pomeroy unit
also receiving an award in this
caU!gory.
A total d. 892 American
Legion Auxiliary members
were in attendance at the
meeting. Cmunander Roger
Smith extended greetings.
Distinguished guesls introduced
included Donald Gruenba wn,
national executive committeeman; Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
chapeau, departemental Eight
and Forty; John Bender,
grande chef de gare; Mrs.
Melvin
Junge,
national
executive committee woman;
Mrs. William Gill, natiOilal
chairman of publications; and
Mrs. Lester Nimon, national
music chairman, Central
Division. Mrs. Clarence Kouns,
natiqnal vice president, Central
Division, was guest speaker.
Membership theme for the
year will be "Little Red School
House" with the district
president reaching goal first to . .- - - - -. .- . .
carry the American flag at the
national convention in 1972, and
•
.
the president reaching goal
second to carry the Auxiliary
Bag.
Events announced included
SAME DAY
the national convention at
SERVICE
Houston, Texas, Aug. 2.t-Sept. 2;
In At 9-0ut At 5
a school of instruction at the
Use'Our:Free Parking Lot
Nei1House,' Colwnbus,Sept.18;
a reception honoring Mrs. 0. A.

'

Eastern utar
TJ4Cntc'
110/d.s r-.

MADE WITH STRONG NYLON LEADERS!

~

t

•

•

f

r:ARMERS BANK
d ~·"INGS
1

.an

I

etc.

Q;,, /

36

LIGHT COLORS!

GIRLS

MENS WALK SHORTS
MOST ALL SIZES!

·cANVAS OXFORDS

1

EACH

SLACKS

ALL CUT-OFFS - TOO!

CHILDRENS ·OR MISSES

·•

6tol8, Crew$
'neci&lt;S, tank lqls,
·

.
~
.
25

~------------~
VALUES TO $3.98- NO IRON

SHIRTS

m

PAIR

SEAMLESS
NYLONS

BOYS KNIT

~

Its clean ~ time on these fine warm weather shoes. Sizes
for toddler thru girls. Choice or 3 colors. &gt;rs.

AND Stn

ALL SIZES!

METAL SWIVEL HOOK!
CLEAR - GOLD - AVACADO

SWIM TRUNKS

PAIR .

99~R

BAKER FURNITURE

$133AND $233

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

. ALL METAL- $1.00 VALUE!

GIRLS SKIRT

"Did you know
that Debbie only
cleans her house
once a month'?"

ON
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE!

SIZE 3 TO .14
SCOOTERS- PLEATS- A-LINES
"

g,ge AND$
.l1l!li.&amp;.L.:I.LL:~~

OUT THEY GO!
AT DEEP PRICE CUTS!

NOZZLE
MilLE THEY LASn

ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED!

~

88$

SPORT SHIRTS OR DRfSS SHIRTS

Knit or permanent press cotton blend 'sport shirts or no iron
dress shirts In solid colors, white or str!pes. ·Size 14'12 to
17. Stock ~ now-p1ent,y of warm weather still ahead.

DUPONT'S TEFLON II .

FRY
PAN
IN COLORS!

Noows the ~ to lniYI We've a big se1ectloo
still left In many styles and colors.

10 INCH SIZE!

r.IANY STYLES!

$ 44

Do Your

fALSE TEETH

NO
SCOURING!

Drop, Slip, or Fall?
Don't keep wwying about your
fal11e teeth droppmo at the wronr
time. A denture adhesive an help.
·FASTEETH• giv., dentu .... along·
er, firmer, ~teadier hold. Makes e!'Lin• more enJoyable. For more ""urlty
and comlort, use FASTEETH Denture Adhesive Powder. Dentures
thot fit are essential to health. See
· your dentist reaulorly.

PLAST

DE CAN
37c VALUE!

8

PR.

AND

WOMENS SKIRTS

~

GALLON SIZE!

GIR.LS
SWIM
SUIT·S

Mens Shirts

HOSE

$1.66 AND $2.66 .

EACH

SAVE NOW ON

IRLS D·RESSES ~
OR PANT SHIFTS

96e

~

-

SLEEVELESS STYLES!

BY HOOVER

SHORT
SETS

DRESS HANGERS

CLEARANCE PRICE ON BOYS

ALL SIZES!
LATEX-BOXERS
NYLONS

Reduced! Girls 2Piece

HIGH IMPACT PLASTIC

CUT-OFFS
INCLUDED!

URRlflC VALUlS
ON fAMOUS BRAND
APPUANCESl

· 216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

NOW!

WOMENS 1ST QUALITY

PRICES SLASHED!

¥•••...

fiNISHING

EACH

Sl ZE 811 TO II
A!R4 VALUB
IN 2 PAIR PACKAGES

,t

•

f

s·HI RT

Robl"nson's Cleaners

•

$

PT. PLEASANT
GALLIPOLIS MASON-

f IANKING t
0

44

SANDALS
$ 44
SAVE

OPEN TILL 9 o.m.
SHOP
IN

. .

t DRI_VE-IN

SUMMER

WHITES - LIGHT COLORS
-STRAWS-

PAIR

«"

1

BOYS or MEN'S

HANDBAG

FLATS OR HEELS
VALUES TO $3.87

FOR

T~- r
JUlY

LITTLE BOYS SIZE 3 TO 7

BOYS PANTS
Mall)' fabrics and colors included in this
large sale group.

$

HO

SCRAPPING!

H

SPECIAL!

•
•
• ·

1 La rf»e
II Table

because she
has Electric
He a tin "

Our Good · Quality!
Entire

Grouping

Reduced To

Values to 16

•
•

~

Goessler'S Jewelry Store

+ Court St.

...

Pomeroy .

It

OUR LOW PRICE ''COLORAMIC"

TIME TO CLEAR OUR ENTIRE STOCK!

LATEX WALL PAINT

WOMENS SHORTS

t'or your .palntmg choresgive our budget priced coloramlc brand a tey. White
and !I colors.

uor course,

Many KindS to Choose!

•
•

•

•I

czearanee

OUTSIDE WHITE $3.27
0

l

•

f

,

,T

What e_vcr ls len-now reduced
to these two low sale prices.
Buy yours now lor ne•t year
at big savings.

EnHre Stock Cut!

PR.

•

,~...

. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . ..

AND
r .
•

A. M.

REDUCED! WOMENS SUMMER

WOMENS SANDALS

REGULAR 6 FOR 9c
SIZES 2-4-6-8

Persona·I Notes·

*

DEEP PRICE CUTS ON ALL

SHELLED-· FISH HOOKS

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY

Pomeroy....

- 9:30

STARTING WEDNESDAY MORNING - ;::::'T.:PLEASANT:
·:·::-:GALL:IPO:L:IS;-;MASON~===~,A~T...:A~Ll~3 SHOPPERS MARTS ! ! !
•

_a~--·--------~~:=~-;',

J

called on Mr . and Mrs. :
Franklyn Hoffman and Mrs. •
Margie Gootl.

SLEEPING HORSES
Ever won d e r if horses
sleep standing up or lying
down? Dr, Manuel Gilman,
an examining veterinarian
for the New York Racing
Association, has the answer :
" The horse can sleep either
lying down m· standing up.
Older horses are more apl to
sleep on their feet because
lying &lt;lown and getting up
may he mnn• dilficnlt lor
llll'll\. Horses sleeJl a lew
:o t " tirnc. rluy or
Jl i ~~1 : 1 . ' .

TU~DAY

·

S166

Compare-you'll find
many of the same
tools priced elsewhere as high as
$1.~9. Give our se·
lectlon a look. "Roy·
al" Qualley,

�'
1- The Dilly Seillinel, Mlddleport-Pomey, 0., July II, lfll

6.:_ Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 31,1971

:::::=:=:::~=:=~~~=:%%:~=:~~:::w.::::::=:=:~=~:~:=:~=:::::~c :i:m il ·

!:!i:tn:· · ·

MAIY ITEMS lOT SHOWI! SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STOlE.

Mrs. Kessinger Installed I~$&lt;@@"ffif''""';'~'''*·'W·~;;
Social Calendar
r, :~~"-~'''*'';';WJ•@W.;ii!;3@;m@;,W§l*';;mm;g;,,,,
A P: ·a· . .at 'c
t
.
Onven ton
relurnil~rhapsyous~ltlntheatticorloanedittosomeone s . rest .ent

Community
. Corner sy

.

.

charlene Hoeflich

Have you ever borrowed scmething and just neglected to

e

' .·

.

else

Ttus

.

seems to have been what has happened to the beds,
wheelchairs, canes, crutches, walkers a~ other hospital supplies
r1 the loan cen!A!r maintained by the Middleport Busmess and
Professional Women's Club.
.
.
The cluh is armoos that aU the equipment be kept m USE, and if
you have b«rowed something and are still using it, fine. If you
are not using i~ then now is the time to return it.
·
'. ·
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president ci the cluh, reports that daily
requests are coming in lor the loan of hospital equipment. She
asks tbat if you have borrowed from the loan ~enter, and are not
now using the equiJment, then that you return 11.
In any event she requests that peraons with B&amp;PW equipment
telephone her so that reccrds can be updated.
The cluh is hCf~ing to enlarge the hospital loan center and will
appreciate any equipment donations.

Mrs. Charles Kessinger of
Pomeroy, Route4, was ~tailed
IS president of District 8, and
numerous awards
were
-p-esented to Meigs County units
lit the Department of Ohio,
American ~egion Auxiliary,
annual cooventioo held over the
weekend at the Sheraton-Hilton
Ho!A!l, Cleveland.
Mrs. Kessinger, active
member of the Auxiliary unit of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport, succeeds Mrs. Ben
Neulzling, also of Pomeroy,
who has been District 8
tresidenlfor the past two years.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush of Middleport,
Mrs. Kessinger was elei:ted to
the district post at the June 3
coovenlion held In Pomeroy. In
thechaMiddllalneporf t urutw't she servfirsedt
P
or o years,
as
vice president, two years;
tresident, two years; senior
advisor to the juniors, four
years, and has been on standing
committees since 1964, a year
after she joined the Auxiliary.
For the past year she has
.served as district junior ac-

.~ MRS. WILLARD (ANNA) WILSON of the Enterprise area~
·Pomeroy, is having a bad time. She ~ rurren~y reported m
serirus condition at the St. Mary's Hosp•tal, Huntington, W. Va.,
Room 1013.
Two weeks ago Mrs. Wilson had an appendectomy at the
' Hurtingtm haspital. She had been home a week when a clot
:developed and lodged in her lungs. Our best wishes for a speedy
recoVl!ry.

• Mianwbile; a son, Bob, who resides in the Bellefontaine area,
: isrecuperatingfromrecentsurgery. Some time ~o he ~uffereda
: neck injury while playing sports, and dunng his recent
, hospilalization a bone was taken from his hip and transplanted
into his neck. He's coming along fine.
FROM MARY AND TIPPY DYE at Evenston, m. comes
: word of the birth 11 a granddaugbter. Eight pound, eight ounce
ndRog Ca
· onJulyll
: MaryLynewasborn
er
. ·
; TheyliveatMillValley,Calif.Mrs.DyeflewoutFridaytobeWith
family.

•

•-•·ft•
tos~,.,.-uea

rneg~e

~ the

.

Mrs. Charles
K ·
esstngerc

M."See llaneous JfJOWe
(' ]_, r
~
h
uonor.·r Schnms er.·r
11
11
·

FIRSl'S ARE SUCH FUN and the 17 Middleport cub scouts
• whoweretakenforplaneridesSundaybythegener~Dr. R. R.
: Pickens, report it was just "too much."
:
Oibs enjoying the rides were DaVid Wilcox, Don Geary,
j
J
; Jamie Scally, Kevin Smith, Danny Smith, Steve Carson, Dean
.
• Spencer, Jeff Laudermilt, Jobn · Byer, Keith Doss, Dorset
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Schrim~ Thomas, Max Geary, Keith Black, Roger Carson, Joe McCloud, sher, newJy.weds now living in
· David Hysell, and Ivan Lane.
Hartford, W.Va., were guests of
honor at a miscellaneous
;
~
shower Saturday night at the
l.Long Bottom' home of Mr. and
r1/ .
Mrs. Floyd Weber with Mrs.
'J
Robert White as CD-hostess.
:• Mrs. James Murray, Mid- seven great-grandchildren, and
Bride bingo was enjoyed an d
' dleport, celebrated her 91st her great-great-granddaughter. door prizes were awarded to
' birthday anniversary at a party Missing from the family group Mrs. Erma ·Johnston and Mrs.
hosted by her son-in-law and was Chadd Comer, infant son of Marcia Keller. After the gifts
' daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ran· Mr. and Mrs. Mike Comer and were opened, refreshments of
: dolph Ward, at their home in the great-great-grandson of sandwiches,cakeandicecream
• Ravenswood.
Mrs. Murray, who relll8ined were served.
Also celebrated at the party h""pitalized.
The guest list included
was the third birthday of Mrs. At the party were Mr. and Thelma Orr, Jean Spencer,
Murray's great-granddaugbter, Mrs. Bill Dow and Susie, Mr. BeckY and Denise Pullins, Betty
; Tammy Giles. Cakes, one in- and Mrs. Richard Ward, Ricky, Friend, Margaret Tutlie, Alice
; scribed "Happy Birthday, Sherrie and Mike; Mr. and Mrs. Capehart, Murl Ours, Hazel Lee
· Grandmother" and the other Duape Giles, Tammy and Reibel, Mary Rose and
: " Happy Birihday, Tammy'; Angela; Mr. and Mrs. Mike daughwrs, Debbie Rose, Cass
were served. Party hats and Comer and daughwr, Candy. Bissell, Avice BisseU, Sylvia.
favors were given and gifts Family pictures were taken Carpenwr, Mae Johnston, Neva
. were presented to the two during the day, Mrs. Murray Frederick, Thel!na, Jennie and
, honored guests.
also received gifts and cards Sandy White , Mary Offutt,
• Atwnding besides Mrs. Ward, from her neighbors and church Garnet Johnston, Wilma and
daughter of Mrs. Murray, were friends .
Brenda Anderson.
her three grandchildren, her
Wilma Ballard, Kathy
Johnson, Mrs. Charles Pullins,
Lizzie Reibel, Edith Sisson and
Jane, Lillian Napper, Clara
:

celevlated

::91 st B'trthda

·

J

.
.
Milhoan, Kathleen Mllhoa.n,
Norma and Joseph Ritch1e,
Sbllla and Melissa Coleman,
Thelma Farnsworth, Floss1e
Maxon, Monad Wilson, Marcia
Keller, Rosemary Ke_ller,
Thelma Ashworth, MarjOrie
Schrimsher, Alta Schri":'"her
an d Fl orence
J ~rmge n•
Columbus. Also attendmg were
Ernest Weber, Handy Friend,
and Robert White.

.I~

TT

VO,UUrJan
~'

A nnua·t

Reunton
• 11e
U /d

0

•

Meigs

Chester

: Property
:
;T
r_
· ransters
;.

N

N

Daileys Honored
Freda Miller and Lenore
Belzing spent Saturday with On Bz'rth.-~111
Edith Osborn of Keno.
uaJ
ews

•
•

otes

Several have been attending

Mr. and Mrs. Cline Dailey,

is preaching. Rev. Herbert
Grate is pastor:
.
Herbert Sm1th, wtfe and
family of Colul!l~us spent
Sunday with his siSter, Mrs.
Mace! Barton and family and to
pick,up their son, Glen, who had
SPent a week with his cousin,
Kevin Barton.
Rose Ginther called on Mrs.
Harry Ludwick,&amp;:.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
son and 'daughwr of Pomeroy
SPent Sunday evening with his
mother, Georgia Thoma.
Mr and Mrs Guy Thoma, son
and daughter ~ the Flatwoods
Rd . spen t 8unday evenmg
· wt'th
his mother, Mrs. Georgie
Tholll8
. ·
V1ola Teagarden of Portsmouth spent some time last
week with her mother, Mrs.
Sena Pooler and Sally. Mrs.
Pooler is quite poorly.
'til Ki
tur ed
Mrs. Ed1
ng re n
home last week from a visit
.
with her son at Mounds~1Ue and
a daughter at East Liverpool.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kueker
and family of Urbana, ill. spent
Monday with Mrs. John Hoff.
IIJaD and in the afternoon they

of their aunt and uncle, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert White, Long
Bottom. Chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream featured
the dinner. Others there were
Mr. and Mrs . Daileys '
daughter Melissa Mrs. Lydia
Stewart' Mr . 'and Mrs.
Seidenabel, Mr . and Mrs .
William Ohlinger, Debbie, Kim
and Steve aU of Pomeroy.
'

~ Sarah
Weaver,
Lucy the revival at the Na~ene Pomeroy, were guests Sunday
~ Vineyard, James Vineyard, Church where Rev. Ed Grmdley at a birthday dinner at the home
: Mary Benedum, Charles W.
• Benedum, Lawrence Weaver,
: HelenWeaver, RoyWeaver,Ina
:· Jean Weaver to Clara. Blake,
• Orval Blake, Parcel, Olive.. .
George W. Cwldiff, Viola
' Irene Cundiff, Evelyn Moore _to
! William Davis, Coral DaVIS,
! Lots, Syracuse. .
~ Elmer S. ·Bailey, Eva E.
~ Bailey to Letta A. Spencer,
• Parcels, Salisbury,.
~ Letta A. Spencer to Elmer S.
~ Bailey, Eva E. Bailey, Parcels,
" Salisbury.
;
Kissell A&lt;lso., Inc., to Village
:: of Middleport, Easement,
..
M'ddleport.
~ 1
.
·
.. Letta A. Spencer to William
:: E. Criner, Ruth Criner, Lot448,
t
. - Middl
;:
epor .
• Robert C. Hartenbach,
!: Sheriff, Russell E . Lewis ,
:; Carolyn Z. Lewis to Farmers
:; Bank - Savmgs Co., Lot 502,
P
:
omeroy.
Goldie Clendenin to John M.
•
•
ban
: WeDs, 212 Acres, Le on.
._ Marvellus Weaver, dec., to
: Sarah Weaver, Lucy Vmeyard,
~ Mary Benedum , Lawrence
: Weaver, Roy Weaver, Clara
= Blake, Aff. for Trans., Olive.

~
•

"'

'Ed en News

:
;:

By Martha Holsinger
Sunday School attendance

=Sunday, July 11, was 61.
.,. Rev. Eden Blake is attending

.,.
:
:'
:
:
"'
;

conference this week.
Mrs. Sandy Fields visited
with her' grandmother, Martha
Holsinger, Monday evening.
Miss Rhonda Jean Holsinger
was given a weiner roast in
honor of her 9th birthday. Many

:
..
"
.,.
·,.•

were in attendance. Several
games were played.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Holsinger
Jr. and family, Racine v.isited
wfth Mi-s. Martha Holsinger,
~ Saturday evening.
0

I

B'trth·-1udJ R'(Jrt:J

Shelly Kay Wolfe, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs.h Johnd Wolfe,
S
her
fyratcub. seth,dwasJuloyn~r~ 1 aonparty
1rs 1r ay,
,
at the home of her parents.
Ice cream, cake, and KoolA'd
edtoM
dMr
Gel wledreM~rhav I G r.anCa sl.
ra
tc e
ary
ro
Roger Dennisa~d Debbie, Mrs:
H I'M. h l Mr and Mrs
aze
IC ae
,..,,. R 1
d D id Mr and
Mvvn JeuherBan U av 'd J ·
rs 0 n en ey an enny,
Mr ·John McClintock and Mr.
·E ~~ Locket
'
I

h'"'"

•

•

.
A. rewuon of the Vaughan
la~mly was held Sunday at the
Middlep~rt Park.
.
Attendmg were MISS ruma
Vaugh~n and Mrs. May Bird,
CedarviUe; Walblr L. Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. R1chard W.
Vaughan, M~. and Mrs. Ted
Warner, Patrick, Kunberly and
Scott, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, Jr., Bill,
DQn, Beth and Zandra, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Vaughan, Matthew and David,
of Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vaughan
and Tony, Pomeroy; Miss
Thurma Vaughan, Rochester,
N. Y.; Loring Vaughan,
Bowling Green University; Roy
Vaughan, Ohio Northern
University; Robert Vaughan
and Charles, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Vaughan, Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Bryne Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Joe Spencer, Belinda,
Rebecca, Greg, Melissa and
Vaughan, Medina ; Mrs. Frank
Vaughan, Andy, Pam and
Patrick, Pomeroy.
Linda Shenefield of Salem
Center was the guest of Roy
Vaughan for the picnic, and
Teresa Gooch, Minersville, was
the guest of Tony Vaughan.

WEDNF3DAY

.

An~ate~

, ALL FOOTBALL players

A DISCOUNT
D£PARTMtNT STOll

SPECIAL meeting,
lrlterested in ·participating In Garden Club, at the home
.the football program at Mrs. Harold Lohse, w:;;_e
Southern High School this fall prive,. Pomeroy, Wedne ~
•
are Invited to attend a meeting evening, July 21 at 7:30; Mrs .
Martin, Departemental ci Ohio Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the high Earl Dean, Jr. to presen~ a
workshop on interpretive
Chapeau, Eight and Forty, Oct. schoool.
arranging.
.
3, Middlep&lt;l't Church of Christ;
OHIO
ETA
PHI
Chapter,
Beta
and the District il fall coil,
('
Sigma Phi Sorority, members
terence, Athens, Oct. ~and children to meet a~ 10 ~.m.
Going to the cooventi~ from
Wednesday at the Middleport
Meigs and Gallla Counties were
.
.
Park and from there will go to
Mrs. Neutzllng, Mrs. George U
Camden Park for an outing.
Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Martin, Mrs.
FRIDAY
Harry Davis, Mrs. Catherine
Welab, Pmneroy Unit 39; Mrs. Members of Evangeline WILLING WORKERS Class,
Kessinger, Mrs. Dale Mour- Chapter 172, Order of the Enterprise United Methodist
Ding, Mrs. Harry Stahl, and Eastern Star, and the Mid- Church, Friday, 7:30pm. a.t the
Mrs. Clair Might, Middleport dleport Masons staged a ~icnic home of Mrs. Herbert DixOn.
Unit 128; Mrs. VirgU Walker Sunday at ·Forest Acres Park.
and Mrs. John Boyd, Racine Following the public dinner,
Unit 602, and Mrs. Mabel the group played games, toured
Brown, Mrs. Dorothy Hecker, Fort Meigs and fished.
and Mrs. Mildred Hamilton, Attending were Mr. and Mrs. ,...............................
Galllpolls Unit 'll.
Carl Taylor, Gary Taylor, Mr. il
and Mrs. Ken Clark, Mr. and il n.
Mrs. E. M. Harrah, Mr. and
Mrs. James Buchanan, Mrs.
Oleva Cotterill, Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Evans, Mr. and Mrs. , . The longest sorrow finds~
Thomas Evans and Todd, Mr. : ·· at last relief .
and Mrs. D&lt;m Roush, Julie and
Amy, Rex Roush, Miss :
-Wm. Rowley
Mrs. Margaret Neuman has Charlotte Clevenger, Mr. andi
il
_
.., ...
returned from a several days Mrs. Ruben Collins, Mr. and
!" -tr
visit in Worthington with · her Mrs. Walter Roush, Wallace .
·
'
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. RusseU, Mrs. Eli28beth Oiler, ·
lfs Quick! Easy
andMrs. JackWhittie .Mr.and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patterson,
Mrs. Whittle returned Mrs. Roxanna, Jeff, Ray, and Steve, :; . . . ___ _ . .
of!
Neuman and_ took their
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King and
month old mece, Ann Marie Tim, Mr. and Mrs. Harry of!
...
of!
Buckley, home with them for a Chesher, Mrs. Raymond..
Fndays Only
week's visit. Before going to Wilcox, Beverly and Bryan.
i&lt; The Drive- In Window::;
Worthington, Mrs. Neuman Joining. the group for the
is Open
il
visited at Waterford with Mrs. afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. of!
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
•
Evelyn Morris.
William King and Kevin, and il
(Continuously)
il
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich HeatherFinlaw, granddaughter il
·
and Jayne Lee have returned of the Kings.
:Other Bonking Hours' to 3
from a several day's visit in
il .;n~d1ysto 7 as usuol on
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
r
·
Mike Hammer, Lou Ann and
il
Kimberly.
VISIT SMITHS
i' ·r
Miss Genevieve Stobart is at
Mr.and Mrs. Mike Speakman 1':
her home at Enterprise and daughter, Beth, and Mrs.
.Jftl .
•
following a five week stay at the Elizabeth Johnson of Columbus ·
POMEROY, OH 10
·
Holzer Medical Center.
spen t the week here wlth Mr .
Member
MemberFederal
FDIC
Mr. and Mrs . Charles and Mrs. Harold E. Smith of ·
Reserve System
i'
Wildermuth, Cathy and Teresa, Middleport.
.......................
have returned from a Florida
vacation. They camped along
the ocean for a week.
,
Dale Roush of St. Albans, W.
Va., spent the weekend here
.,
withMr.andMrs.AlbertRoush
•
and Mr. and '{Mrs. Charles
Kessinger.
Mr. and Mrs. James Akines of
Norfolk, Va. and Mrs.
Katherine Embleton were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
William Fields and family of
Pomeroy.

tivities chairman.
1n recogniti011 of her work as
district junior activities
chairman, a special award was
tresented to Mrs. Kessinger at
the convention. She aiSil
received the century club
award for having secured over
100 members last year.
Escort for Mrs. Kessinger at
the Sunday lnstaUation
ceremony was Commander
Cecil Cooper d. · the Ashland
Post 88. Tbe newly elected
Department of Ohio officers
installed at tbat llme were Mrs.
Raymond Sloan, Ashland,
president; Mrs. Donald Miller,
Alliance, first vice tresi.dent;
Mrs.GeorgeSallq&gt;,secondvice
tresident; Mrs. Robert Riley,
treasurer.
Both the MiddlePort 128 and
Pomeroy 39 junior units
received citations of merit for
activities. The Middleport
group received the $5 award for
the outstanding year-around
trogram.
"'
Unit39 took secood place, and
Unit 128, third place, on poppy
window displays. The Middleport, Pomeroy and Racine
602 units all received citations
of merit for well rounded
trograms during the past year,
along with SPecial membership
citations.
·
Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
Pomeroy, received third place
in the state on legislation
reports with the Pomeroy unit
also receiving an award in this
caU!gory.
A total d. 892 American
Legion Auxiliary members
were in attendance at the
meeting. Cmunander Roger
Smith extended greetings.
Distinguished guesls introduced
included Donald Gruenba wn,
national executive committeeman; Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
chapeau, departemental Eight
and Forty; John Bender,
grande chef de gare; Mrs.
Melvin
Junge,
national
executive committee woman;
Mrs. William Gill, natiOilal
chairman of publications; and
Mrs. Lester Nimon, national
music chairman, Central
Division. Mrs. Clarence Kouns,
natiqnal vice president, Central
Division, was guest speaker.
Membership theme for the
year will be "Little Red School
House" with the district
president reaching goal first to . .- - - - -. .- . .
carry the American flag at the
national convention in 1972, and
•
.
the president reaching goal
second to carry the Auxiliary
Bag.
Events announced included
SAME DAY
the national convention at
SERVICE
Houston, Texas, Aug. 2.t-Sept. 2;
In At 9-0ut At 5
a school of instruction at the
Use'Our:Free Parking Lot
Nei1House,' Colwnbus,Sept.18;
a reception honoring Mrs. 0. A.

'

Eastern utar
TJ4Cntc'
110/d.s r-.

MADE WITH STRONG NYLON LEADERS!

~

t

•

•

f

r:ARMERS BANK
d ~·"INGS
1

.an

I

etc.

Q;,, /

36

LIGHT COLORS!

GIRLS

MENS WALK SHORTS
MOST ALL SIZES!

·cANVAS OXFORDS

1

EACH

SLACKS

ALL CUT-OFFS - TOO!

CHILDRENS ·OR MISSES

·•

6tol8, Crew$
'neci&lt;S, tank lqls,
·

.
~
.
25

~------------~
VALUES TO $3.98- NO IRON

SHIRTS

m

PAIR

SEAMLESS
NYLONS

BOYS KNIT

~

Its clean ~ time on these fine warm weather shoes. Sizes
for toddler thru girls. Choice or 3 colors. &gt;rs.

AND Stn

ALL SIZES!

METAL SWIVEL HOOK!
CLEAR - GOLD - AVACADO

SWIM TRUNKS

PAIR .

99~R

BAKER FURNITURE

$133AND $233

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

. ALL METAL- $1.00 VALUE!

GIRLS SKIRT

"Did you know
that Debbie only
cleans her house
once a month'?"

ON
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE!

SIZE 3 TO .14
SCOOTERS- PLEATS- A-LINES
"

g,ge AND$
.l1l!li.&amp;.L.:I.LL:~~

OUT THEY GO!
AT DEEP PRICE CUTS!

NOZZLE
MilLE THEY LASn

ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED!

~

88$

SPORT SHIRTS OR DRfSS SHIRTS

Knit or permanent press cotton blend 'sport shirts or no iron
dress shirts In solid colors, white or str!pes. ·Size 14'12 to
17. Stock ~ now-p1ent,y of warm weather still ahead.

DUPONT'S TEFLON II .

FRY
PAN
IN COLORS!

Noows the ~ to lniYI We've a big se1ectloo
still left In many styles and colors.

10 INCH SIZE!

r.IANY STYLES!

$ 44

Do Your

fALSE TEETH

NO
SCOURING!

Drop, Slip, or Fall?
Don't keep wwying about your
fal11e teeth droppmo at the wronr
time. A denture adhesive an help.
·FASTEETH• giv., dentu .... along·
er, firmer, ~teadier hold. Makes e!'Lin• more enJoyable. For more ""urlty
and comlort, use FASTEETH Denture Adhesive Powder. Dentures
thot fit are essential to health. See
· your dentist reaulorly.

PLAST

DE CAN
37c VALUE!

8

PR.

AND

WOMENS SKIRTS

~

GALLON SIZE!

GIR.LS
SWIM
SUIT·S

Mens Shirts

HOSE

$1.66 AND $2.66 .

EACH

SAVE NOW ON

IRLS D·RESSES ~
OR PANT SHIFTS

96e

~

-

SLEEVELESS STYLES!

BY HOOVER

SHORT
SETS

DRESS HANGERS

CLEARANCE PRICE ON BOYS

ALL SIZES!
LATEX-BOXERS
NYLONS

Reduced! Girls 2Piece

HIGH IMPACT PLASTIC

CUT-OFFS
INCLUDED!

URRlflC VALUlS
ON fAMOUS BRAND
APPUANCESl

· 216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

NOW!

WOMENS 1ST QUALITY

PRICES SLASHED!

¥•••...

fiNISHING

EACH

Sl ZE 811 TO II
A!R4 VALUB
IN 2 PAIR PACKAGES

,t

•

f

s·HI RT

Robl"nson's Cleaners

•

$

PT. PLEASANT
GALLIPOLIS MASON-

f IANKING t
0

44

SANDALS
$ 44
SAVE

OPEN TILL 9 o.m.
SHOP
IN

. .

t DRI_VE-IN

SUMMER

WHITES - LIGHT COLORS
-STRAWS-

PAIR

«"

1

BOYS or MEN'S

HANDBAG

FLATS OR HEELS
VALUES TO $3.87

FOR

T~- r
JUlY

LITTLE BOYS SIZE 3 TO 7

BOYS PANTS
Mall)' fabrics and colors included in this
large sale group.

$

HO

SCRAPPING!

H

SPECIAL!

•
•
• ·

1 La rf»e
II Table

because she
has Electric
He a tin "

Our Good · Quality!
Entire

Grouping

Reduced To

Values to 16

•
•

~

Goessler'S Jewelry Store

+ Court St.

...

Pomeroy .

It

OUR LOW PRICE ''COLORAMIC"

TIME TO CLEAR OUR ENTIRE STOCK!

LATEX WALL PAINT

WOMENS SHORTS

t'or your .palntmg choresgive our budget priced coloramlc brand a tey. White
and !I colors.

uor course,

Many KindS to Choose!

•
•

•

•I

czearanee

OUTSIDE WHITE $3.27
0

l

•

f

,

,T

What e_vcr ls len-now reduced
to these two low sale prices.
Buy yours now lor ne•t year
at big savings.

EnHre Stock Cut!

PR.

•

,~...

. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . ..

AND
r .
•

A. M.

REDUCED! WOMENS SUMMER

WOMENS SANDALS

REGULAR 6 FOR 9c
SIZES 2-4-6-8

Persona·I Notes·

*

DEEP PRICE CUTS ON ALL

SHELLED-· FISH HOOKS

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY

Pomeroy....

- 9:30

STARTING WEDNESDAY MORNING - ;::::'T.:PLEASANT:
·:·::-:GALL:IPO:L:IS;-;MASON~===~,A~T...:A~Ll~3 SHOPPERS MARTS ! ! !
•

_a~--·--------~~:=~-;',

J

called on Mr . and Mrs. :
Franklyn Hoffman and Mrs. •
Margie Gootl.

SLEEPING HORSES
Ever won d e r if horses
sleep standing up or lying
down? Dr, Manuel Gilman,
an examining veterinarian
for the New York Racing
Association, has the answer :
" The horse can sleep either
lying down m· standing up.
Older horses are more apl to
sleep on their feet because
lying &lt;lown and getting up
may he mnn• dilficnlt lor
llll'll\. Horses sleeJl a lew
:o t " tirnc. rluy or
Jl i ~~1 : 1 . ' .

TU~DAY

·

S166

Compare-you'll find
many of the same
tools priced elsewhere as high as
$1.~9. Give our se·
lectlon a look. "Roy·
al" Qualley,

�.•.

-'

Bargains, Bargains and.More Bargains In -The Sentinel Clas~ifieds
Syraeuse
News, Society
By .wa Slae.t
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
lDwell Matlact, of stewart
Yilllted bls mothe'r, Mrs. Velma
C.sudy, at the horne of her
dlollllhler, Mr. and Mrs. Clem

~- ·
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Triplett,

Card of Thanks
WE, LEONARD Lunsford and
family, do sincerely wish to
offer our' thanks fo fhe Rev.
Gill for his comforting and
consoling words offered over

our wife and mother while she
lay in slate at The Ewing
Chapel. and at the Interment. ·
And for the beautiful . songs
sung over her~y Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Eblin ·ahd ·Ruth Ann
Delong, the staff of Veterans
Memorial Hospital . And for
. the many beautiful flowers
offered by her many fr iends,
neighbors, and relatives. also
for the very good food sent to ·
my home by our Immediate
neighbors and If any others If
all is sincerely appreciated by
all of the Lunsfords and by
husband of deceased.
7-20-llp

2..
Of
QUALm

.,.••,.,
.,.,Co.

Wanted To Rent

,....,
1

HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY :
Six or more rooms preferred.
Will do minor repair work.
Please write: Gary Klein, 129
W. Slate St., Athens, Ohio
45701, or call collect (6141 .5921789.
n8-3tp

1966 BUICK WILDCAT CPt.
$1 ..5
Automatic trans .• power sieerlng &amp; brakes, goocj w-w ·
tires, .r.adlo, heater, while finish, clean Interior. Reg. price
W!5,00• spectat.
1967 FORO l TO
$1595
'tfloor Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes. vinyl interior-, blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w fires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Special.
·

1

c

...;....

.HM Yu Sir nlil
Ai' Colldililnina
I~

and

Special
At

6.98·

Plus

Pam

'67 CHEVELLE Miilibu 2door, i
lllld Wendy Jane, accompanied
local owner, V-8 automatic, ·
by Mrs. Vu-gie Stewart, of West
new fires, excellent condition.
Columbia, w. ,Va. visited in
.
Phone 992·20U or 992-7098.
1964 CHEVELLE2 ODOR
$399
PHO.N E 992-2143
7--4-lfc
Charleston, W. Va . with
6 Cyl. engine, stand. trano., radio, good tires, green finish.
- -- - -- relatives.
Special. . .
1967 CAMARO, 6 cyl .• standard,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mumaw,
3-speed, $1,200. Phone 985Roofintl&amp; Carpenter
ot MJnso Junction, spent two LEGAL NOTICE
3503.
'Work
daya with his aunt Miss Frankie
7-18-31p
NOTICE OF
Spouting, Roof
M11118W.
APPOINTMENT
DP.EN EYES. 1:00 I'.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Woster, of
Case No. 20523
Painting
, . -f!OMEROY, 01110
L-ctiOII Qru VISI
' 'ted here wt'th Estate ol THEtMA MICHAEL
.-w•
•3
Deceased.
NEW&amp;OLDWORK
ber a111t Myla Hudson.
. Notice is hereby given that
All
Wuther
&amp; Con·
7-18-6tc structlon Co.Roofing
Mrs. James Teaford, ac- Oh
Pauline
M. Marklns of Rutland ,
ond Anthony
io, has been duly appoin1ed
WANT AD
Notice
Plumbint &amp; Heltint·. . .
companied by Mrs. Vada Admin istratrix of the Estate of
INFORMATION
1969 BUICK LeSabr-e, 2-dr. Complele
Plumbing, Heotrng
Teafw
. d, of Racine VISI.·ted .._ _ Thelma Michael, deceased, late
DEADLINES
hardtop, power steering, . and Air Conditioning.
.PU;, of Meigs County , O.h lo.
Day Before Publication SAVE UP fo one half. Bring
power brakes, air, 18,000
St. Middleporl. o.
Edith Teaford, at the Holier
Credilors are required to file S P.M.
your sick· TV to Chuck's TV miles. Excellent condition. 271 Lincoln
Monday
Deadline 9 a.m.
-992-2550
M iical een
' ter.
their c laims with Sll ld fiduciar y
CaQq&gt;flation &amp;Corrections . Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Phone 992-2288.
with in four months.
Insured . E•periencod
Pomeroy.
•
·6-3-ttc
Will
be accepted until9a,m. for
Ml:. Richard Duckworth and Dated thiS 8th day Of July
Work Guraronteed
Day
of
Publication
19
o4-2~ttc
.
-----------------sister ntiin;oa
• - Wbite, spent two 71.
F . H. O'Brien
REGULATIONS
1967 FORD Galaxie 500, 2 door,
days with Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Probate Judge
The Publisher reserves the THOROUGHBRED Stud
V-8, automatic, power
Duekw. orth. They were acof said
countv
Service. Roman captain No.
steering, new fires, excellent
(7 ) 13,
20. 27 right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
For Sale
637410. S50 reillsfered mares,
condition. Phone 98...t381.
ClliDJIIIlied home by Harold and
publisher will not be ~Pbnsible
$35 grade mares. Return
7-18-Jtc:
, G1rry McComas, enroute to
for more than orie incorrect.
23 CHANNEL C. B. radio, 18
privileges. Greg Roush,
NOTICE OF SALE
insertion.
'
Phone
992-5039.
h.p. Johnson outboard motor.
Raw-wood, W, Va.
Bids will be received at the
For
Sale
RATES
7-9-JOfc
Phone 'I&amp;S-~112.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harris, office of Webster and Fultz,
1947 CADILLAC pickup, only
For W~nt Ad Service
7-20-Jfc
and family of Buena Park, Att..-neys, Pomeroy, Ohio, until 5 cents per Word one Insertion WANTED to rent, lease or buy 4,G miles, In good running
2~th day of July, 1971. at
Minimum Charge 75c
· on land contract, small farm condition, $250. '59 F..-d ~­
Calif. visited recently with hls the
11:00 a.m. for the sale of the
10 X ·55 "M081LE horne, 3
12
cents
per
word
three.
with good hou5e. Phone 367- door , nice thr.o ughout, 1962
parents Mr. and Mrs. Die~ Nellie Stethem real estate, consecutive lnsertlms.
bedrciom - $2,500 with ~p­
mechanically good, $175 .
7410.
consisting of approximately 8
pliances. Phone 7~-5245.
Harris, and other relatives.
18 cents per word· six con7-20-Jfp Wizard riding mower, almost
7-20-31c
acres
of
real
estate and a six- secutive Insertions.
like new only $100. County
Kenneth Guinther spent room house, located in Olive
25 Per Cent Discount on paid JEAN'S Variety St..-e loc;ated Road 163, second lane on lelf,
Friday night and Saturday with Township near Long Bottom, ads
SIAMESE kittens - healthy,
and ads paid within 10 days.
between Cheshire and Mid· Irvin Miller.
playful. litterpan tra ined.
bls brother and sister-in.Jaw Ohio.
CARD OF THANKS
dleport has just received a
7-18-lfp
Garth
Smith;
Have
had
temporary
&amp;OBITUARY
Mr.llldMrs. Willie Guinther,of
new shipment of used clothing
Phone
distemper
vaccination.
Administrator of
$1.50 for SO word minimum.
and shoes. Better hurry 8-YEAR OLD palomino mare,
Gllllpolia.
' '
the Estate of. Each addillonal word 2c.
992'5101
after
6
p.m.
because they won't last long, genfle, saddle and bridle.
7-20-2tp
Nellie Stethem
.Mr. and Mrs. V1rgil Pibl,
Phone 742-.5865 Harrisonville.
BLIND ADS
at
our low prices.
(7)
18,
20,
22.
23,
~t
Additional 25c Charge per
Sindt:&amp;, and Steve, of Salina,
Ohio.
7-20-Jfp
Advertisement.
7- 1~-6fc
Klaa. visited relatives here
OFFICE HOURS
I
WILl
NOT
be
responsible
lor
after • visit with her parents
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
any debts contracted by any CANN lNG tomatoes. Geraldine
Mr, llld Mrs. Woodrow HenLEGAL NOTICE
8: 30 a.m. to 12: 00 tloon · one other than myself. Signed
Cleland, East Main, Racine,
....._ In
ukee
Snteq..'bids wiH be r&amp;ceived Saturday.
Ohio.
Frank
Musser.
.... , Milwa
, Wis. Mrs. by tho Meigs Local School
7-U-18tc
7-18-3tp
Plltl,lnd chilcren also called on Oistrllt Bo~rd of Education at
.._ u . .
the if offi~ In the Meigs Jr . Notice
,... •. """Slack.
HjOh SpMol Bu ilding, Mid·
safe and fast with 1971 SOLID State Apache,
.Mr. and Mrs. John Burnell, of diepor)'; Ohio, tor school bus DO IT YOURSELF Coin REDUCE
sleeps six. Phone 992-5592.
Gobese
tablets and E-Vap
""--'~11 re~/Untll 12 :00 o'clock noon
Operated Cor Wash In Tup- waler pills.
12' - 14' - 24' • WIDE
7-11-lfc
Nelson
Drugs.
...,....,_,, W. Va. spenta week Eas'lern Oaytlghl Standard
pers Plains now open for
6-27-JOfp
-wilb Mrs. Freda Duffy, and -Time, on August ~. 1971, at
business. William Connolly.
R.C.A. COLOR Television 21 "
....._ relativ-. .
which lime Bids will be opened .
7 lof.61p
console, excellent condition The Tire-bid prices are to in ·
·
·1 1r t'
~ the July 4 weekend elude
the demo~nllng of the old tWIN CITY Cob operal'ng 2, ns UC tOn
$200. Phone 992-2873.
lire and mounting the new or ·
t
..
7-20-5tc
wilbMr. andMrs.ErnestSisson recapped lire on the r1m and , hours, 7 days a week. Phone TRUCK LINES: City and Road
1220 WoshinghHI Bivd.
Jr. and Sherrr, were Mr. and placing the mounted tire and 9d92·3~80Geor.
DrlverRs Joe An driver training. Coli or write
rim on the bus.
reonr,
ge owley and
Sheridan Truck lines, 1255
Beljn, Ollio
Mrs. Paul Bloaer, and six
For specifications please call Odel Blake.
Corwin Avenue, 513-1163-6404,
cbUckeD; Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell or write Larrv Morr ison , 9927-18-71p
Hamilton, Ohio 45015.
1961 TRAVELER 18ft. fiberglas
2153
Clart, andtwochildrenofFlat
·
7-19-2tc
1
boat. 1961 Johnson 75 h.p.
36" _X23" ! --D09
Rock, Mich.
sc~O::a~i~~r~~~ KOAusgcuos1T specKos1am1etKicasr'e JKuonly1961 Gator-Tilt
motor .
Board
of
Education
•
·
Wanted
Trailer
,
fully
equipped. Phone
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Armeli,
dillon oil $5. Value now only
992-2172.
·
and son Joe, of Jacbon, Mich.
Lee W. McComas S2.50: Distributors, Brown's, . .- - - - - - - - - ·
7
1
71c
.
6·
L-und with her father
Clerk phone 992-5113.
. -7-4-tic
""
Duckworth.
(7) 6. 1J. 20. 27. •t
USED OFFSET PLATES
Real Estate F"cir Sale
HAVE
Mr. Jobn Buchanan Jr. of
Wanted To Buy
Alliance Yilllted here with bls 1966 OLDSMOBILE Toronado
~au:~UAII
HOUSE story and half, 6 rooms,
MANY USES
· ._..__ Mr. John Buchanan Sr. Deluxe will be sold at public ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
.
~
bath , Rutland. Phone 74~ W da Guinthe
auction on July 26, 1971. at
beds , clocks, dishes, old Must have safes experience.
5613.
JBU.
an .
r, and 2:00 P.M., Room 322, New
furniture. etc. Write M. D. A
rt
6-25-ttc
1
r--th and '"erry and her Federal Building, Columbus,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
rN oppo unity for on
lfor$1.00
nau..
I'
'
Ohio. For Information contact
can 992-6271.
ambitious man ... good
3 BEDROOM brick home.
7-9-lfc salory. Cor furnished.
P•tdaot1 Malcolm Guinther U, William . W. Turpin, Trustee,
Choice location In Middleport.
accampanied Mr. and Mrs. Pleasantville 468-2288.
Caii91S-4100
Seen by appointment only.
Willie Guinther, of Gallipolis to
(7) 19, 20 AN T I Q U E S :
d Ish e s .
or see Roy or David Riggs
Phone. 992·5523 alter ~ p.m.
Camden Park, in Hmtington.
telephones, clocks, brass
S-7-tfc
~
beds, lamps, etc. lee Rudisill,
Kenneth and Terry remained -,;r o
o
Phone 992-3~.
I
2~ ACRE farm Long Bottom,
avemlcht with their brother . .L'
7-J.JOfp .__•C•h•es•te.r,•O•hio_ _..
with or without farm
m Court Sf.
mach iner y. House with 3
Pomeroy,
Ohio
' Carl Matlack and Clair
TOP PRICE on ginseng and Help Wanted
bedrooms, dining room, living
Ca81ady, of Tuppers Plains
Golden Seal · yellow root. Seal
room , llh baths, enclosed
, visited their mother Mrs .
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
lops and stem bone dry, _clean RESPONSIBLE person for TWIN
NEEDLE sewing
back porch, wall to wall
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
no dirt. All roots. Bill Bailev. route salesman, will share as
; Velma C•nl"'y.
machine 1971 model in new
carpeting.
Aluminum siding,
Bill Mitchell spent Tuesday
P.O.· Box 1~. Second Street, partnership. A B.C. Cleaners,
walnut stalld. All features
awning.
storm
windows and
Mason, w. Va.
' Mr . and Mrs. Earl Lynch, and tbr h Thursda 'th
Reedsville, Ohio &amp;72.
built-In to make fancy
storm
doors.
City water .
7·16-lfc
; family of Clarleston spent a
oug
YWI Mr. and
7-1-JOtc
designs. Also · buHonholes,
Selling due to ill health. Phone
blind hems, etc., W .35, cash
weekend with Mrs. Freda Mrs. Faud Haught at
614-985-3938.
FARN
at
home
addressing
price, or terms available.
6-23-JOip
Duffy, and other relatives.
Parkersburg. Mrs. Mitchell was Female Help Wanted
envelopes. Rush stamped selfPhone 992-5641.
' tlnd Mr
d
Mrs
Cl
anovernightguestThursdayof
HOUSEWIVES
evenings
7-1of.6tc 6 ROOMS and bath, split level,
Vi111-..,
envelope. The
an
· em Mrs. Rob'
· to he r f ree. Earn 25 per cent · addressed
'' Cooper,
and •Velma
Cassady,
. mson re turnl!'g
Ambrose Co., 4325 lakeborn,
back and front porch,
Mr and Mrs De
horne m Columbus Friday.
demonstrating toys and gifts Davisburg, Mich., 411019.
VACUUM
cleaner:
Electro
alum
inurn siding , stor m
"-•
.
wey
with the highest paying party
Hygierle new demonstrator
windows and doors. Monkey
7-2-JOtp
Deems of W'~
W · Mrs. Charles Lawson and plan. Compare our program
has all cleaning attachments
Run, phone 992-2045. 7-16-61c
Va. and Mr. De:rter eooperwn', and daugh~r Evelyn spent Thurs- and color catalog before
plus the new electro suds lor
day wtth Mrs Ida Do h
making any other comshampooing carpet. Only HOUSE, 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
grandson of Annamoriah W
·
no ue.
motments. No experience, no
S27.50 cash price or terms
Va
'
·
Mr. and Mrs. Richard inveslment. car necessary.
can Danny Thompson, 992available. Phone 992-.5641.
2196.
recestU with Miss Sargent of Columbus, Mrs. Jack Call 98-3233 or write Toy
7-14-61c
7-18-lfc
"'-~· SouJsbv werey Mr
and Stephanie Radford, ladles Party Plan, John....,u..
,
. and Sargent
Mrs Marl
Fishe M 11
stown, Pa. 15902.
MILLIONS of rugs have been
0 Y•
Mrs William' Soulsb 0f Ba
·
ene
r'
7 20-31
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It's HOUSE, 8 rooms, Union Ave .•
. . .
y
y Larry and Amy· Mrs Bill
•
P
America ' s finest.
Rent
Pomeroy. can 992-.5641 .
atr. Michigan; _Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, childre~. Pat,'Mike, For Sale or Trade
7-16-61p
electric shampooer, Sl , Baker
W. A. Q-ouse, Mrs. Carol Dave, Roberta, Pete end Brad WILL sell or trade house in
Furniture Company.
7-14·61c
llrown,- Rusty and Keith of
lied ,..._ -0 ,- tha R "''
Pomeroy for one in Mid·
Columbus.
ca
on ....... .,.,r
oumson
and
dleport or Rutland. ~17 Spring
Sunday.
.
CQAL, limestone. Excelsior
Ave.• Naylors Run, Pomeroy.
Salt Works, E. Ma in St .•
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudson,
7-20-61p
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Mrs. Katie Young of Minersville
A ~9 - Hc
Phone 992-2156
were Sunday dinner· guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel. Mr.
LEGAL NOTICE
FREEZER SALE
Sealed
w il l be For Rent
and Mrs. Robert Bailey and rec eived proposals
by
the Board of
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
Bobby were Friday night guests Education o the Meigs Local ONE BEDROOM trailer
School
District
in
the
office
of
apartment,
Ideal
for
couples.
Here's the way it works ...
of the Manuels.
the clerk in the Meigs Jr . High
you get seven lee cream
Contad McClure's Dairy Isle,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons School Build ing in Middleport, 992-524ll or 992-3436.
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
for lnsunnce coverasle
cream , FREE for ev~ry
spent Tuesday through Thur- Ohio,
7-14-12fc
'or School buses, trucks, and
cubic foot you buy In a Unlco
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver sday with Mr. and Mrs. ChesU!r Other
motor vehicles, until12 :00
freezer, refrigentor or
and sons of Bridgeman, Mich., Durst at Niles, 0.
noon on August .4, 1971 , East ern FURNISHED ~ room &amp; bath
combination .
apl., adults only, Middleport.
Daylight Standard T ime. at
UNICO 21 FOOT CHEST
were week end visitors of her
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, wh ich ti me b i ds w ill be opened.
Phone 992-387~FREEZER
27US
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sharon, Cindy, David and A li st of the buses, trucks, and
7-11 -lfc
:-v ith this one you get 196 free
other motor v'l!hlcles to be in 1ce cream bars or 28 ha lf·
Thoma . Patricia Thoma Edward ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana sured
with the specif ications for MIDDLEPORT - 3 room and
gallons of FREE ice cream.
relllrned home after spending Lewis were dinner guests same may be obtained by
bath,
furnished
apartment.
Mr . Larry Morrison,
POMEROY
several days with her sisier ancj Saturday of ' Mr. and Mrs. calling
Phone 992-3205 or 992·2125.
telephone 992-2153.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
7-14-61p
family Mr. and Mrs. Sarver.
Phone 992-2111
Ronnie Russell at Minersville,
Meigs Loca l
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Van Meter of
Sc hool District
ZIGZAG · omafic, well known
: family of Rutland were Sunday Pomeroy called on the R~lls
Boar:d of Educat ion 2 BEDROOM trailer, utilities
make sewing machine, makes
paid.
Bob's
Mobile
Courl,
: visilln of her parents Mr. and Saturday evening .
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
Lee W . McComas
Syracuse. Phone 992·2951 .
etc.
Balance W .31. Coli 992·
t Mrs. Howard 1boma, Patricia Mrs. Ora Carsey and son
Clerk
7-20-lfc
7085
.
1: and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver Terry of Albany, Mr . and Mrs. · en 6, 13, 20 , 21 .
7-18·6tc
" EXTRA large trailer space, 1
, and sons.
Roger Carsey and two children --------------------mile W. of Eastern High EARLY AMERICAN stereo! Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vaughan of Columbus called on Mr . and
School
on State Route 7.
LEGAL NOTICE
radio combination, AM&amp;FM
Phone 985-4106.
~ were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush Sunday.
Sealed bids will be rece ived
radio. hpeaker sound
7-20-6tc
the Mei gs Loca l School
1 Mrs. Ted Warner and family. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rowe of by
system, ... speed · automatic
Distr ict Board of Education at
changer. Balance S78.32. Use
New Brighton, Pa. spent the their office in the Meigs Jun ior TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
t
our budget terms. Call 992High Build ing, Middleport, Court, Rt. 12~. Syracuse,
week end with Mrs. Kate Rowe Oh
7085.
io, for 3; IU passenger)
7-18-6tc ·
and Ada. Karen Wines ac- school bus (chassis onlyJ until Ohio. 992-2951.
12 :00 o'cloc k noon on August 10,
~-2-lfc
companied them borne Sunday 1971.
MODERN walnut ·Stereo-radio
)1111
Specifications tor the bus MOBILE HOME, available July
lor a visit.
combination, 4-speaker sound
c hass is mav be obta ined by
system,
4-speed automatic
Mr. and Mrs. Don Whittekand celtlng
t5,
1971
.
Phone
992-5592.
or wrlttng Mr. Larry
changer,
separate controls.
of Marietta visited Monday with Morrison, Ass istant Superin - =:-::-====----7...:.:
·12-lfc
Balance
-$6~. 79 .
Use our
; ttlephone 992-2153 .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp and Mr. tendent
budget terms. can 992-7085.
The Me-Igs Locet School TRAILER SPACE on old Nt. ~.
7-18-6tc
District Board of Educat ion
and Mrs. Ralph Hutton. '
'h·mile north of new Meigs
reserv&amp;
s
the
r
ight
to
reject
any
High
School.
Phone
99229~1.
J
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rowe of and all bids.
3-5-lfc 1952 SCHULT housetrailer in
Me igs Local
Trenton, Mich., are visiting
good condition, 8 x 35, one
School Di5tr ic t
Mrs. Kale Rowe and Ada.
6edroom . Idea l tor .conSoard of Edu cation FURNI SHED and unfurnished
struction workers or summer
apartmenls, Close to school.
Miss Jan Hill, brother Dearl '
home. No Sunday sales. Call
Phone
992-$43~ .
!-.ee
W.
McComas
and friend called on Sharon and .
Clerk
614-698-2282.
111-11-tfc
1-11-61c
11) 13, 20, 27 (I) 3
Cindy Roush Monday evening.
7-18·3tc

BlaeHna,Ws

- ·

.

MIWR

MOBILE HoMES

w•uTEo

C

FUll nME

For Sale
Aluminum ·

Sheets

CAR

8l11)lBW

Vwling

20'
The
RIGGS BROS. INC.
Daily Sentinel

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

------

Wolfpen

SR.

News, Notes

..........--.

.DtNSON MASONRY
.
.

(.o~plete

Remodeling
Kitchens, S.ths
Room Additions
1\lld Potios
S.ckhoeAnd

~~'\7Tt~~EiRE£i·s~Til~Elf";r',;
OOPS!
BeL~.

TI!4T
MUST BE
!liM

EndlooderW~

Septic Tanks
And LHCh lltcfs.

•

~URRY,

JKJPE ••

.f'h.-.m -2143

HOME&amp; AUTO .
. 992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

1 -20

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

tl

10 Pf'~FORh\
IN A ROCK
CONCoRT.

-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? call 992·
2966.
6-15-lfc

Pomeruy ·Home &amp; Auto
OpeniTiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mlln, Pomeroy, 0.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER·
VICE. Phone 98-4551.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
5-30-ttc Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
- -- -- -- - 662-3035.
2·12-flc

Real Estate For Sale

CONVENIENT but secluded BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
building lots on T79 at Rock Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-~78.
Springs. Within walking
+25-lfc
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill HARRISON'S TV AND ANWitte weekends or after 5 TENNA SERVICE . Phone
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992· 992-2522.
6-lO.tfc
6887.
7-11 -ffc
SIX ROOM house, balh, full AWNINGS, storm doors and
basement, 133 Butternut Ave .• windows , carports,
marquees. aluminum siding
just walking distance from
and
railing. Call A. Jacob,
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
•
sales
representative. For tree
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
estimates,
phone Charles
Drive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
lisle, Syracuse, · V. V.
237-4334, Columbus.
·5-9-lfc Johnson and Son. Inc.
5-27-lfc
HOUSE, t 6~0 lincoln His .;
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
. Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-lfc delivered right to your
prolect. Fast and easy. Free
est
mates. Phone 992-3284.
MIDDLE PORT - 5 room brick
Goeoleln
Ready-Mix Co.,
home with bath, paneling and
Middleport,
Ohio.
.
wall to wall carpeting. Phone
6-30-tfC
992-~ or 992-:1465.
7-18-71c WILL DO roofing, painting,
---------------plumbing and carpenter
SYRACUSE - House, 3 rooms work, aluminum siding.
•ndbath, full basement, large Phone 992-731• or 7~- ~79 .
lot. Phone 992·3205 or 992-2725.
7-20-121c
7-14-6tp
C. BRAOFORb, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 9~· 3821
Racine, Ohio
·crttt Bradford
608 Eosl Mlin
5-1-ftc
POMEROY
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
POMEROY - CLOSE TO service. all makes, 992-228A,
SHOPPING - W2 story The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
frame. bath, 3 ..- • bedrooms, Authorized Singer Sales and
full basement, cabinets In fhe
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
kitchen. A BUY $6,500.00.
3-29-tfc
ROUTE 124 'CLOSE TO
POMEROY AND MID- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
DLEPORT- 3.33 ACRES, 1 Reasonable rates. Ph. ~~782,
story
house, bath , 3 Gallipolis , · John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
bedrooms, forced air furnace,
Alum . s iding , 2 water
5-13-tlc

BUGS BUNNY

OKAY, WENDY, 'THE G/Wif:.
15 OVER ! WHERE ARE
l'OU GOING... AND WHAT
HAVE l'OU 13EfN UP10 ?

Celand Realty

systems,

2

mE BORN LOSER

LITrLE ORPHAN ANNIE
RlR 100R COIITRI._,IlO!I
'D lite llfSli!UCIIOH OF
liE I.UOtCI!DUS - WAY Of lifE" 1!l!J !!!!!!
~ IWIOSOOA!LY l!fWAIIDEO
!!l' JiY ctlMRIIDES -

add it ional

buildings. A NICE PLACE TO CURTISS " caffle" breeding
LIVE. $15,900.00.
. service. Daily service ..-any
·
type of lnformaflon, call
1 Leland Parker 992- 226~
TUPPERS PLAINS LEVEL ACRE, 2 story frame
Pomeroy, home office. .;
home, bath, ~ bedroo.ms , Coolville, call station 667-3251
carpeted , cellar. garage. IN
7-18-12fc
GOOD CONDITI!)N $8,900.00. _ _ _ __ _ _ _:._
MEAT CUTTING .
POMEROY - 2 rentals, close .to CUSTOM
Dick
Vaughan,
992shopping, IN GOOD CON- 3374, Dale Little, phone
phone
992.
DITION,ALWAYS RENTED. 63-46.
$6,900.00.
6·23·30tc
TO BUY OR SELL
PAPER HAN.GING, Interior
CALL US
and exterior painting . Phone
992-3630.
.
HENRY CLELAND
7- 1~~
REALTOR
INTERIOR. exterior decorator
Office 992-2259
and barn roofs. P.hone 7•2·
Residence 992-2568
5683.
7-14-6tc
6-20-JOfc.

George 5. Hobslefler, Jr.
Ru I Estate Broker
· .

DAILY CROSSWORD.
Ac.otlll
l.Ac:eedo
• • Gentle-

- room ouse, 96
alocacrestlonof f land, v~ry h good
• ree gas ;n ouse
plenty of limber ..: Pric~
$!3,500.
RACINE-Portland Rd. - 100
acres of land, plenty of
litryber, very good location.
Proce $10,000.

17. Famll·

ptcrnenl
42.Brlbe

l&amp;r

(2 wdlo.)

1tJ1tleman

DICK TRACY

-

U.Pimola

DOWN

2. Lamb's

JS. Quoues
H. Ttrra 15. Slripttnc
ll.Non•n•!
18. Nervous
twitch

3. Crltlclle

belllg

:n. ~erlod

ZZ. -

deU

22. Ira·

·

blanche

21. Ard.u0\13

(hnls.)
4. Nlcht before

5. Ttmporuy
delay

ocible
23. Etllloplan

lake
Ji. -

6. French

reuon

reaort

(aeem

7. Nigerian
tribesman

8. F&amp;u!Ueu
• . 100%
·10. Blscull

trip
fl. "On ll1e
Bead&gt;"
ll01'elllt
25. 9)'1'11J&gt; or

IOJic:al)
(2
welL )

25. Daydre&amp;m~

(2wdlo.)

Y0.41'8

21. -

x.-.

::srllan
:U.. Lahr
36. Eel
(oldiCq.)
36. You (Ger.)

A Bf6UILING

21.BIP

.... ort;rla

--~
SI
.. J\ ,

· - Cbolllplonllllp '

-. hJe

Ill

CAPI'AIN EASY
mps.

water
control
L
. Filter _
oj. Power

Fin ,Agitator. •
Ptrm1-Prtss
MtJitt

Halo ot Ntet

OWJFITJB C

£UCUT\VE

StrYICI

GJIRA&amp;&amp;
-0
U&amp;lilrr..tl':t.-._0 .

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
742-421l
- Arnold
R·u!
-·I

. and, o. · ·

•

•

•

v'

•

•

UJICCBCPXZF XU RCG

VXIJBPJ(

J"JXPWJB,

MAYTACI '
Red Carpet

Grate

EDCIT."i

Now..._dlecilcW'"" a
tof_lhe .... iw&amp; · · · -

NO---· 1(1 I n r I r r I r 1
l••W..• U.THI A .... ,pr.

--...

We Speclallltln

If

t t
Yn4..rd•l''•

,.

I JPOJJI'

!•

rJ . - t J '

(

UIPYpm
-.w-

Fine Mtsh Lint
Filler.

• H

..------,,
uu;;~1v

1

(Bnlolclyn )

auuan
a-._

Dryers
Surround clothts .
With gentlt. IVIri t
heat . No hot lpota,
no ovtrdrylng

-J=

I
I
I
~::~::::-:.::===·~--;-:;;;·..=·=.. •.. "'tile ... ..,.,

IJI&amp;nd

ILM'

1,'

---

(mill.)

NEIGLER Construction. For
buli(jlng or remodeling your
POMEROY - 2 apartments, 3
home.
Call Guy Neigler
rooms and bath, 6 rooms and
Racl
ne,
Oh to.
'
bath, rented for $95.00 a
7-3t-lfc
·
month - $7,500.
Hinon Wolle, ·
RALPH'S CARPET - UpLicensed RNI Estate
holstery Cleaning Service.
Safesmon
Free estimates. Phone
Phont 949-:tlll •
~-029~.
.
Gallipolis
.
7-18-3tc
3-12-lfc

,., .,

·-·~--

l_J

215. Lo&lt;:queNd
metalware
2T. -

11fOOGH1; a:wii'L

H! .. .. ,

Te....,..•Auwer

-

·O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads Rt 124
Complete front end 'ser~lce '
1
nd b k
•
~;::er~ a bala~~e~ ser:~~~~:
Ironically .
Ali
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
· ·
6-2~·30fc

~

Unscramble th... fwr Jumbleo,
one letter to oath square, to
form four ordinarr •ords.

media

pen name

18. Folklore

!

20.Com·

1. LI'ring -

12.0olfde8Bof

~llliMID~;u,j ::0::!!:'

-

41.Earlhy

DWl'l

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contad Roush Construdjon.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9·30fc

IIi a person,

WMP0/1390

I'M IN NO

. . BLAETTNARS

PoiMEROY

- - - -- -

We talk to

ER. ..'"'
; _ _...:...,_...,..._ _ _ _ _. -- - - - - - - ,

From the Largest T.ruck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
. ~allesf Heller (ore.

. 742-4902

Virgil B. HOBSTETTER
TEAFORD. PORTLA":~ero{' Oh~

HARTFORD

FENCE, MAW

~-

•

Auto.Sales

.'IE OUT AT TH'

·Business S.ervi~e_~_. · ·
__
Re-Oialil

,.

.ELVlNEV IS
HOLLERIN' FER

XF

U C LJ . -· JORNI'G

RJ(

CFG

TNUPXKJ .

•
ZEXFXZF. xu

INB 'SJ

4

au

MUKU flAIIIY

nil ..,., H • ...atl tftiMtlll: f w
I....V., ..-ltool-IHI IILl
.

I

ao••

�.•.

-'

Bargains, Bargains and.More Bargains In -The Sentinel Clas~ifieds
Syraeuse
News, Society
By .wa Slae.t
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
lDwell Matlact, of stewart
Yilllted bls mothe'r, Mrs. Velma
C.sudy, at the horne of her
dlollllhler, Mr. and Mrs. Clem

~- ·
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Triplett,

Card of Thanks
WE, LEONARD Lunsford and
family, do sincerely wish to
offer our' thanks fo fhe Rev.
Gill for his comforting and
consoling words offered over

our wife and mother while she
lay in slate at The Ewing
Chapel. and at the Interment. ·
And for the beautiful . songs
sung over her~y Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Eblin ·ahd ·Ruth Ann
Delong, the staff of Veterans
Memorial Hospital . And for
. the many beautiful flowers
offered by her many fr iends,
neighbors, and relatives. also
for the very good food sent to ·
my home by our Immediate
neighbors and If any others If
all is sincerely appreciated by
all of the Lunsfords and by
husband of deceased.
7-20-llp

2..
Of
QUALm

.,.••,.,
.,.,Co.

Wanted To Rent

,....,
1

HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY :
Six or more rooms preferred.
Will do minor repair work.
Please write: Gary Klein, 129
W. Slate St., Athens, Ohio
45701, or call collect (6141 .5921789.
n8-3tp

1966 BUICK WILDCAT CPt.
$1 ..5
Automatic trans .• power sieerlng &amp; brakes, goocj w-w ·
tires, .r.adlo, heater, while finish, clean Interior. Reg. price
W!5,00• spectat.
1967 FORO l TO
$1595
'tfloor Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes. vinyl interior-, blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w fires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Special.
·

1

c

...;....

.HM Yu Sir nlil
Ai' Colldililnina
I~

and

Special
At

6.98·

Plus

Pam

'67 CHEVELLE Miilibu 2door, i
lllld Wendy Jane, accompanied
local owner, V-8 automatic, ·
by Mrs. Vu-gie Stewart, of West
new fires, excellent condition.
Columbia, w. ,Va. visited in
.
Phone 992·20U or 992-7098.
1964 CHEVELLE2 ODOR
$399
PHO.N E 992-2143
7--4-lfc
Charleston, W. Va . with
6 Cyl. engine, stand. trano., radio, good tires, green finish.
- -- - -- relatives.
Special. . .
1967 CAMARO, 6 cyl .• standard,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mumaw,
3-speed, $1,200. Phone 985Roofintl&amp; Carpenter
ot MJnso Junction, spent two LEGAL NOTICE
3503.
'Work
daya with his aunt Miss Frankie
7-18-31p
NOTICE OF
Spouting, Roof
M11118W.
APPOINTMENT
DP.EN EYES. 1:00 I'.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Woster, of
Case No. 20523
Painting
, . -f!OMEROY, 01110
L-ctiOII Qru VISI
' 'ted here wt'th Estate ol THEtMA MICHAEL
.-w•
•3
Deceased.
NEW&amp;OLDWORK
ber a111t Myla Hudson.
. Notice is hereby given that
All
Wuther
&amp; Con·
7-18-6tc structlon Co.Roofing
Mrs. James Teaford, ac- Oh
Pauline
M. Marklns of Rutland ,
ond Anthony
io, has been duly appoin1ed
WANT AD
Notice
Plumbint &amp; Heltint·. . .
companied by Mrs. Vada Admin istratrix of the Estate of
INFORMATION
1969 BUICK LeSabr-e, 2-dr. Complele
Plumbing, Heotrng
Teafw
. d, of Racine VISI.·ted .._ _ Thelma Michael, deceased, late
DEADLINES
hardtop, power steering, . and Air Conditioning.
.PU;, of Meigs County , O.h lo.
Day Before Publication SAVE UP fo one half. Bring
power brakes, air, 18,000
St. Middleporl. o.
Edith Teaford, at the Holier
Credilors are required to file S P.M.
your sick· TV to Chuck's TV miles. Excellent condition. 271 Lincoln
Monday
Deadline 9 a.m.
-992-2550
M iical een
' ter.
their c laims with Sll ld fiduciar y
CaQq&gt;flation &amp;Corrections . Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Phone 992-2288.
with in four months.
Insured . E•periencod
Pomeroy.
•
·6-3-ttc
Will
be accepted until9a,m. for
Ml:. Richard Duckworth and Dated thiS 8th day Of July
Work Guraronteed
Day
of
Publication
19
o4-2~ttc
.
-----------------sister ntiin;oa
• - Wbite, spent two 71.
F . H. O'Brien
REGULATIONS
1967 FORD Galaxie 500, 2 door,
days with Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Probate Judge
The Publisher reserves the THOROUGHBRED Stud
V-8, automatic, power
Duekw. orth. They were acof said
countv
Service. Roman captain No.
steering, new fires, excellent
(7 ) 13,
20. 27 right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
For Sale
637410. S50 reillsfered mares,
condition. Phone 98...t381.
ClliDJIIIlied home by Harold and
publisher will not be ~Pbnsible
$35 grade mares. Return
7-18-Jtc:
, G1rry McComas, enroute to
for more than orie incorrect.
23 CHANNEL C. B. radio, 18
privileges. Greg Roush,
NOTICE OF SALE
insertion.
'
Phone
992-5039.
h.p. Johnson outboard motor.
Raw-wood, W, Va.
Bids will be received at the
For
Sale
RATES
7-9-JOfc
Phone 'I&amp;S-~112.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harris, office of Webster and Fultz,
1947 CADILLAC pickup, only
For W~nt Ad Service
7-20-Jfc
and family of Buena Park, Att..-neys, Pomeroy, Ohio, until 5 cents per Word one Insertion WANTED to rent, lease or buy 4,G miles, In good running
2~th day of July, 1971. at
Minimum Charge 75c
· on land contract, small farm condition, $250. '59 F..-d ~­
Calif. visited recently with hls the
11:00 a.m. for the sale of the
10 X ·55 "M081LE horne, 3
12
cents
per
word
three.
with good hou5e. Phone 367- door , nice thr.o ughout, 1962
parents Mr. and Mrs. Die~ Nellie Stethem real estate, consecutive lnsertlms.
bedrciom - $2,500 with ~p­
mechanically good, $175 .
7410.
consisting of approximately 8
pliances. Phone 7~-5245.
Harris, and other relatives.
18 cents per word· six con7-20-Jfp Wizard riding mower, almost
7-20-31c
acres
of
real
estate and a six- secutive Insertions.
like new only $100. County
Kenneth Guinther spent room house, located in Olive
25 Per Cent Discount on paid JEAN'S Variety St..-e loc;ated Road 163, second lane on lelf,
Friday night and Saturday with Township near Long Bottom, ads
SIAMESE kittens - healthy,
and ads paid within 10 days.
between Cheshire and Mid· Irvin Miller.
playful. litterpan tra ined.
bls brother and sister-in.Jaw Ohio.
CARD OF THANKS
dleport has just received a
7-18-lfp
Garth
Smith;
Have
had
temporary
&amp;OBITUARY
Mr.llldMrs. Willie Guinther,of
new shipment of used clothing
Phone
distemper
vaccination.
Administrator of
$1.50 for SO word minimum.
and shoes. Better hurry 8-YEAR OLD palomino mare,
Gllllpolia.
' '
the Estate of. Each addillonal word 2c.
992'5101
after
6
p.m.
because they won't last long, genfle, saddle and bridle.
7-20-2tp
Nellie Stethem
.Mr. and Mrs. V1rgil Pibl,
Phone 742-.5865 Harrisonville.
BLIND ADS
at
our low prices.
(7)
18,
20,
22.
23,
~t
Additional 25c Charge per
Sindt:&amp;, and Steve, of Salina,
Ohio.
7-20-Jfp
Advertisement.
7- 1~-6fc
Klaa. visited relatives here
OFFICE HOURS
I
WILl
NOT
be
responsible
lor
after • visit with her parents
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
any debts contracted by any CANN lNG tomatoes. Geraldine
Mr, llld Mrs. Woodrow HenLEGAL NOTICE
8: 30 a.m. to 12: 00 tloon · one other than myself. Signed
Cleland, East Main, Racine,
....._ In
ukee
Snteq..'bids wiH be r&amp;ceived Saturday.
Ohio.
Frank
Musser.
.... , Milwa
, Wis. Mrs. by tho Meigs Local School
7-U-18tc
7-18-3tp
Plltl,lnd chilcren also called on Oistrllt Bo~rd of Education at
.._ u . .
the if offi~ In the Meigs Jr . Notice
,... •. """Slack.
HjOh SpMol Bu ilding, Mid·
safe and fast with 1971 SOLID State Apache,
.Mr. and Mrs. John Burnell, of diepor)'; Ohio, tor school bus DO IT YOURSELF Coin REDUCE
sleeps six. Phone 992-5592.
Gobese
tablets and E-Vap
""--'~11 re~/Untll 12 :00 o'clock noon
Operated Cor Wash In Tup- waler pills.
12' - 14' - 24' • WIDE
7-11-lfc
Nelson
Drugs.
...,....,_,, W. Va. spenta week Eas'lern Oaytlghl Standard
pers Plains now open for
6-27-JOfp
-wilb Mrs. Freda Duffy, and -Time, on August ~. 1971, at
business. William Connolly.
R.C.A. COLOR Television 21 "
....._ relativ-. .
which lime Bids will be opened .
7 lof.61p
console, excellent condition The Tire-bid prices are to in ·
·
·1 1r t'
~ the July 4 weekend elude
the demo~nllng of the old tWIN CITY Cob operal'ng 2, ns UC tOn
$200. Phone 992-2873.
lire and mounting the new or ·
t
..
7-20-5tc
wilbMr. andMrs.ErnestSisson recapped lire on the r1m and , hours, 7 days a week. Phone TRUCK LINES: City and Road
1220 WoshinghHI Bivd.
Jr. and Sherrr, were Mr. and placing the mounted tire and 9d92·3~80Geor.
DrlverRs Joe An driver training. Coli or write
rim on the bus.
reonr,
ge owley and
Sheridan Truck lines, 1255
Beljn, Ollio
Mrs. Paul Bloaer, and six
For specifications please call Odel Blake.
Corwin Avenue, 513-1163-6404,
cbUckeD; Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell or write Larrv Morr ison , 9927-18-71p
Hamilton, Ohio 45015.
1961 TRAVELER 18ft. fiberglas
2153
Clart, andtwochildrenofFlat
·
7-19-2tc
1
boat. 1961 Johnson 75 h.p.
36" _X23" ! --D09
Rock, Mich.
sc~O::a~i~~r~~~ KOAusgcuos1T specKos1am1etKicasr'e JKuonly1961 Gator-Tilt
motor .
Board
of
Education
•
·
Wanted
Trailer
,
fully
equipped. Phone
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Armeli,
dillon oil $5. Value now only
992-2172.
·
and son Joe, of Jacbon, Mich.
Lee W. McComas S2.50: Distributors, Brown's, . .- - - - - - - - - ·
7
1
71c
.
6·
L-und with her father
Clerk phone 992-5113.
. -7-4-tic
""
Duckworth.
(7) 6. 1J. 20. 27. •t
USED OFFSET PLATES
Real Estate F"cir Sale
HAVE
Mr. Jobn Buchanan Jr. of
Wanted To Buy
Alliance Yilllted here with bls 1966 OLDSMOBILE Toronado
~au:~UAII
HOUSE story and half, 6 rooms,
MANY USES
· ._..__ Mr. John Buchanan Sr. Deluxe will be sold at public ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
.
~
bath , Rutland. Phone 74~ W da Guinthe
auction on July 26, 1971. at
beds , clocks, dishes, old Must have safes experience.
5613.
JBU.
an .
r, and 2:00 P.M., Room 322, New
furniture. etc. Write M. D. A
rt
6-25-ttc
1
r--th and '"erry and her Federal Building, Columbus,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
rN oppo unity for on
lfor$1.00
nau..
I'
'
Ohio. For Information contact
can 992-6271.
ambitious man ... good
3 BEDROOM brick home.
7-9-lfc salory. Cor furnished.
P•tdaot1 Malcolm Guinther U, William . W. Turpin, Trustee,
Choice location In Middleport.
accampanied Mr. and Mrs. Pleasantville 468-2288.
Caii91S-4100
Seen by appointment only.
Willie Guinther, of Gallipolis to
(7) 19, 20 AN T I Q U E S :
d Ish e s .
or see Roy or David Riggs
Phone. 992·5523 alter ~ p.m.
Camden Park, in Hmtington.
telephones, clocks, brass
S-7-tfc
~
beds, lamps, etc. lee Rudisill,
Kenneth and Terry remained -,;r o
o
Phone 992-3~.
I
2~ ACRE farm Long Bottom,
avemlcht with their brother . .L'
7-J.JOfp .__•C•h•es•te.r,•O•hio_ _..
with or without farm
m Court Sf.
mach iner y. House with 3
Pomeroy,
Ohio
' Carl Matlack and Clair
TOP PRICE on ginseng and Help Wanted
bedrooms, dining room, living
Ca81ady, of Tuppers Plains
Golden Seal · yellow root. Seal
room , llh baths, enclosed
, visited their mother Mrs .
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
lops and stem bone dry, _clean RESPONSIBLE person for TWIN
NEEDLE sewing
back porch, wall to wall
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
no dirt. All roots. Bill Bailev. route salesman, will share as
; Velma C•nl"'y.
machine 1971 model in new
carpeting.
Aluminum siding,
Bill Mitchell spent Tuesday
P.O.· Box 1~. Second Street, partnership. A B.C. Cleaners,
walnut stalld. All features
awning.
storm
windows and
Mason, w. Va.
' Mr . and Mrs. Earl Lynch, and tbr h Thursda 'th
Reedsville, Ohio &amp;72.
built-In to make fancy
storm
doors.
City water .
7·16-lfc
; family of Clarleston spent a
oug
YWI Mr. and
7-1-JOtc
designs. Also · buHonholes,
Selling due to ill health. Phone
blind hems, etc., W .35, cash
weekend with Mrs. Freda Mrs. Faud Haught at
614-985-3938.
FARN
at
home
addressing
price, or terms available.
6-23-JOip
Duffy, and other relatives.
Parkersburg. Mrs. Mitchell was Female Help Wanted
envelopes. Rush stamped selfPhone 992-5641.
' tlnd Mr
d
Mrs
Cl
anovernightguestThursdayof
HOUSEWIVES
evenings
7-1of.6tc 6 ROOMS and bath, split level,
Vi111-..,
envelope. The
an
· em Mrs. Rob'
· to he r f ree. Earn 25 per cent · addressed
'' Cooper,
and •Velma
Cassady,
. mson re turnl!'g
Ambrose Co., 4325 lakeborn,
back and front porch,
Mr and Mrs De
horne m Columbus Friday.
demonstrating toys and gifts Davisburg, Mich., 411019.
VACUUM
cleaner:
Electro
alum
inurn siding , stor m
"-•
.
wey
with the highest paying party
Hygierle new demonstrator
windows and doors. Monkey
7-2-JOtp
Deems of W'~
W · Mrs. Charles Lawson and plan. Compare our program
has all cleaning attachments
Run, phone 992-2045. 7-16-61c
Va. and Mr. De:rter eooperwn', and daugh~r Evelyn spent Thurs- and color catalog before
plus the new electro suds lor
day wtth Mrs Ida Do h
making any other comshampooing carpet. Only HOUSE, 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
grandson of Annamoriah W
·
no ue.
motments. No experience, no
S27.50 cash price or terms
Va
'
·
Mr. and Mrs. Richard inveslment. car necessary.
can Danny Thompson, 992available. Phone 992-.5641.
2196.
recestU with Miss Sargent of Columbus, Mrs. Jack Call 98-3233 or write Toy
7-14-61c
7-18-lfc
"'-~· SouJsbv werey Mr
and Stephanie Radford, ladles Party Plan, John....,u..
,
. and Sargent
Mrs Marl
Fishe M 11
stown, Pa. 15902.
MILLIONS of rugs have been
0 Y•
Mrs William' Soulsb 0f Ba
·
ene
r'
7 20-31
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It's HOUSE, 8 rooms, Union Ave .•
. . .
y
y Larry and Amy· Mrs Bill
•
P
America ' s finest.
Rent
Pomeroy. can 992-.5641 .
atr. Michigan; _Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, childre~. Pat,'Mike, For Sale or Trade
7-16-61p
electric shampooer, Sl , Baker
W. A. Q-ouse, Mrs. Carol Dave, Roberta, Pete end Brad WILL sell or trade house in
Furniture Company.
7-14·61c
llrown,- Rusty and Keith of
lied ,..._ -0 ,- tha R "''
Pomeroy for one in Mid·
Columbus.
ca
on ....... .,.,r
oumson
and
dleport or Rutland. ~17 Spring
Sunday.
.
CQAL, limestone. Excelsior
Ave.• Naylors Run, Pomeroy.
Salt Works, E. Ma in St .•
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudson,
7-20-61p
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Mrs. Katie Young of Minersville
A ~9 - Hc
Phone 992-2156
were Sunday dinner· guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel. Mr.
LEGAL NOTICE
FREEZER SALE
Sealed
w il l be For Rent
and Mrs. Robert Bailey and rec eived proposals
by
the Board of
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
Bobby were Friday night guests Education o the Meigs Local ONE BEDROOM trailer
School
District
in
the
office
of
apartment,
Ideal
for
couples.
Here's the way it works ...
of the Manuels.
the clerk in the Meigs Jr . High
you get seven lee cream
Contad McClure's Dairy Isle,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons School Build ing in Middleport, 992-524ll or 992-3436.
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
for lnsunnce coverasle
cream , FREE for ev~ry
spent Tuesday through Thur- Ohio,
7-14-12fc
'or School buses, trucks, and
cubic foot you buy In a Unlco
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver sday with Mr. and Mrs. ChesU!r Other
motor vehicles, until12 :00
freezer, refrigentor or
and sons of Bridgeman, Mich., Durst at Niles, 0.
noon on August .4, 1971 , East ern FURNISHED ~ room &amp; bath
combination .
apl., adults only, Middleport.
Daylight Standard T ime. at
UNICO 21 FOOT CHEST
were week end visitors of her
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, wh ich ti me b i ds w ill be opened.
Phone 992-387~FREEZER
27US
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sharon, Cindy, David and A li st of the buses, trucks, and
7-11 -lfc
:-v ith this one you get 196 free
other motor v'l!hlcles to be in 1ce cream bars or 28 ha lf·
Thoma . Patricia Thoma Edward ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana sured
with the specif ications for MIDDLEPORT - 3 room and
gallons of FREE ice cream.
relllrned home after spending Lewis were dinner guests same may be obtained by
bath,
furnished
apartment.
Mr . Larry Morrison,
POMEROY
several days with her sisier ancj Saturday of ' Mr. and Mrs. calling
Phone 992-3205 or 992·2125.
telephone 992-2153.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
7-14-61p
family Mr. and Mrs. Sarver.
Phone 992-2111
Ronnie Russell at Minersville,
Meigs Loca l
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Van Meter of
Sc hool District
ZIGZAG · omafic, well known
: family of Rutland were Sunday Pomeroy called on the R~lls
Boar:d of Educat ion 2 BEDROOM trailer, utilities
make sewing machine, makes
paid.
Bob's
Mobile
Courl,
: visilln of her parents Mr. and Saturday evening .
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
Lee W . McComas
Syracuse. Phone 992·2951 .
etc.
Balance W .31. Coli 992·
t Mrs. Howard 1boma, Patricia Mrs. Ora Carsey and son
Clerk
7-20-lfc
7085
.
1: and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver Terry of Albany, Mr . and Mrs. · en 6, 13, 20 , 21 .
7-18·6tc
" EXTRA large trailer space, 1
, and sons.
Roger Carsey and two children --------------------mile W. of Eastern High EARLY AMERICAN stereo! Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vaughan of Columbus called on Mr . and
School
on State Route 7.
LEGAL NOTICE
radio combination, AM&amp;FM
Phone 985-4106.
~ were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush Sunday.
Sealed bids will be rece ived
radio. hpeaker sound
7-20-6tc
the Mei gs Loca l School
1 Mrs. Ted Warner and family. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rowe of by
system, ... speed · automatic
Distr ict Board of Education at
changer. Balance S78.32. Use
New Brighton, Pa. spent the their office in the Meigs Jun ior TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
t
our budget terms. Call 992High Build ing, Middleport, Court, Rt. 12~. Syracuse,
week end with Mrs. Kate Rowe Oh
7085.
io, for 3; IU passenger)
7-18-6tc ·
and Ada. Karen Wines ac- school bus (chassis onlyJ until Ohio. 992-2951.
12 :00 o'cloc k noon on August 10,
~-2-lfc
companied them borne Sunday 1971.
MODERN walnut ·Stereo-radio
)1111
Specifications tor the bus MOBILE HOME, available July
lor a visit.
combination, 4-speaker sound
c hass is mav be obta ined by
system,
4-speed automatic
Mr. and Mrs. Don Whittekand celtlng
t5,
1971
.
Phone
992-5592.
or wrlttng Mr. Larry
changer,
separate controls.
of Marietta visited Monday with Morrison, Ass istant Superin - =:-::-====----7...:.:
·12-lfc
Balance
-$6~. 79 .
Use our
; ttlephone 992-2153 .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp and Mr. tendent
budget terms. can 992-7085.
The Me-Igs Locet School TRAILER SPACE on old Nt. ~.
7-18-6tc
District Board of Educat ion
and Mrs. Ralph Hutton. '
'h·mile north of new Meigs
reserv&amp;
s
the
r
ight
to
reject
any
High
School.
Phone
99229~1.
J
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rowe of and all bids.
3-5-lfc 1952 SCHULT housetrailer in
Me igs Local
Trenton, Mich., are visiting
good condition, 8 x 35, one
School Di5tr ic t
Mrs. Kale Rowe and Ada.
6edroom . Idea l tor .conSoard of Edu cation FURNI SHED and unfurnished
struction workers or summer
apartmenls, Close to school.
Miss Jan Hill, brother Dearl '
home. No Sunday sales. Call
Phone
992-$43~ .
!-.ee
W.
McComas
and friend called on Sharon and .
Clerk
614-698-2282.
111-11-tfc
1-11-61c
11) 13, 20, 27 (I) 3
Cindy Roush Monday evening.
7-18·3tc

BlaeHna,Ws

- ·

.

MIWR

MOBILE HoMES

w•uTEo

C

FUll nME

For Sale
Aluminum ·

Sheets

CAR

8l11)lBW

Vwling

20'
The
RIGGS BROS. INC.
Daily Sentinel

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

------

Wolfpen

SR.

News, Notes

..........--.

.DtNSON MASONRY
.
.

(.o~plete

Remodeling
Kitchens, S.ths
Room Additions
1\lld Potios
S.ckhoeAnd

~~'\7Tt~~EiRE£i·s~Til~Elf";r',;
OOPS!
BeL~.

TI!4T
MUST BE
!liM

EndlooderW~

Septic Tanks
And LHCh lltcfs.

•

~URRY,

JKJPE ••

.f'h.-.m -2143

HOME&amp; AUTO .
. 992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

1 -20

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

tl

10 Pf'~FORh\
IN A ROCK
CONCoRT.

-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? call 992·
2966.
6-15-lfc

Pomeruy ·Home &amp; Auto
OpeniTiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mlln, Pomeroy, 0.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER·
VICE. Phone 98-4551.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
5-30-ttc Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
- -- -- -- - 662-3035.
2·12-flc

Real Estate For Sale

CONVENIENT but secluded BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
building lots on T79 at Rock Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-~78.
Springs. Within walking
+25-lfc
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill HARRISON'S TV AND ANWitte weekends or after 5 TENNA SERVICE . Phone
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992· 992-2522.
6-lO.tfc
6887.
7-11 -ffc
SIX ROOM house, balh, full AWNINGS, storm doors and
basement, 133 Butternut Ave .• windows , carports,
marquees. aluminum siding
just walking distance from
and
railing. Call A. Jacob,
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
•
sales
representative. For tree
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
estimates,
phone Charles
Drive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
lisle, Syracuse, · V. V.
237-4334, Columbus.
·5-9-lfc Johnson and Son. Inc.
5-27-lfc
HOUSE, t 6~0 lincoln His .;
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
. Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-lfc delivered right to your
prolect. Fast and easy. Free
est
mates. Phone 992-3284.
MIDDLE PORT - 5 room brick
Goeoleln
Ready-Mix Co.,
home with bath, paneling and
Middleport,
Ohio.
.
wall to wall carpeting. Phone
6-30-tfC
992-~ or 992-:1465.
7-18-71c WILL DO roofing, painting,
---------------plumbing and carpenter
SYRACUSE - House, 3 rooms work, aluminum siding.
•ndbath, full basement, large Phone 992-731• or 7~- ~79 .
lot. Phone 992·3205 or 992-2725.
7-20-121c
7-14-6tp
C. BRAOFORb, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 9~· 3821
Racine, Ohio
·crttt Bradford
608 Eosl Mlin
5-1-ftc
POMEROY
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
POMEROY - CLOSE TO service. all makes, 992-228A,
SHOPPING - W2 story The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
frame. bath, 3 ..- • bedrooms, Authorized Singer Sales and
full basement, cabinets In fhe
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
kitchen. A BUY $6,500.00.
3-29-tfc
ROUTE 124 'CLOSE TO
POMEROY AND MID- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
DLEPORT- 3.33 ACRES, 1 Reasonable rates. Ph. ~~782,
story
house, bath , 3 Gallipolis , · John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
bedrooms, forced air furnace,
Alum . s iding , 2 water
5-13-tlc

BUGS BUNNY

OKAY, WENDY, 'THE G/Wif:.
15 OVER ! WHERE ARE
l'OU GOING... AND WHAT
HAVE l'OU 13EfN UP10 ?

Celand Realty

systems,

2

mE BORN LOSER

LITrLE ORPHAN ANNIE
RlR 100R COIITRI._,IlO!I
'D lite llfSli!UCIIOH OF
liE I.UOtCI!DUS - WAY Of lifE" 1!l!J !!!!!!
~ IWIOSOOA!LY l!fWAIIDEO
!!l' JiY ctlMRIIDES -

add it ional

buildings. A NICE PLACE TO CURTISS " caffle" breeding
LIVE. $15,900.00.
. service. Daily service ..-any
·
type of lnformaflon, call
1 Leland Parker 992- 226~
TUPPERS PLAINS LEVEL ACRE, 2 story frame
Pomeroy, home office. .;
home, bath, ~ bedroo.ms , Coolville, call station 667-3251
carpeted , cellar. garage. IN
7-18-12fc
GOOD CONDITI!)N $8,900.00. _ _ _ __ _ _ _:._
MEAT CUTTING .
POMEROY - 2 rentals, close .to CUSTOM
Dick
Vaughan,
992shopping, IN GOOD CON- 3374, Dale Little, phone
phone
992.
DITION,ALWAYS RENTED. 63-46.
$6,900.00.
6·23·30tc
TO BUY OR SELL
PAPER HAN.GING, Interior
CALL US
and exterior painting . Phone
992-3630.
.
HENRY CLELAND
7- 1~~
REALTOR
INTERIOR. exterior decorator
Office 992-2259
and barn roofs. P.hone 7•2·
Residence 992-2568
5683.
7-14-6tc
6-20-JOfc.

George 5. Hobslefler, Jr.
Ru I Estate Broker
· .

DAILY CROSSWORD.
Ac.otlll
l.Ac:eedo
• • Gentle-

- room ouse, 96
alocacrestlonof f land, v~ry h good
• ree gas ;n ouse
plenty of limber ..: Pric~
$!3,500.
RACINE-Portland Rd. - 100
acres of land, plenty of
litryber, very good location.
Proce $10,000.

17. Famll·

ptcrnenl
42.Brlbe

l&amp;r

(2 wdlo.)

1tJ1tleman

DICK TRACY

-

U.Pimola

DOWN

2. Lamb's

JS. Quoues
H. Ttrra 15. Slripttnc
ll.Non•n•!
18. Nervous
twitch

3. Crltlclle

belllg

:n. ~erlod

ZZ. -

deU

22. Ira·

·

blanche

21. Ard.u0\13

(hnls.)
4. Nlcht before

5. Ttmporuy
delay

ocible
23. Etllloplan

lake
Ji. -

6. French

reuon

reaort

(aeem

7. Nigerian
tribesman

8. F&amp;u!Ueu
• . 100%
·10. Blscull

trip
fl. "On ll1e
Bead&gt;"
ll01'elllt
25. 9)'1'11J&gt; or

IOJic:al)
(2
welL )

25. Daydre&amp;m~

(2wdlo.)

Y0.41'8

21. -

x.-.

::srllan
:U.. Lahr
36. Eel
(oldiCq.)
36. You (Ger.)

A Bf6UILING

21.BIP

.... ort;rla

--~
SI
.. J\ ,

· - Cbolllplonllllp '

-. hJe

Ill

CAPI'AIN EASY
mps.

water
control
L
. Filter _
oj. Power

Fin ,Agitator. •
Ptrm1-Prtss
MtJitt

Halo ot Ntet

OWJFITJB C

£UCUT\VE

StrYICI

GJIRA&amp;&amp;
-0
U&amp;lilrr..tl':t.-._0 .

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
742-421l
- Arnold
R·u!
-·I

. and, o. · ·

•

•

•

v'

•

•

UJICCBCPXZF XU RCG

VXIJBPJ(

J"JXPWJB,

MAYTACI '
Red Carpet

Grate

EDCIT."i

Now..._dlecilcW'"" a
tof_lhe .... iw&amp; · · · -

NO---· 1(1 I n r I r r I r 1
l••W..• U.THI A .... ,pr.

--...

We Speclallltln

If

t t
Yn4..rd•l''•

,.

I JPOJJI'

!•

rJ . - t J '

(

UIPYpm
-.w-

Fine Mtsh Lint
Filler.

• H

..------,,
uu;;~1v

1

(Bnlolclyn )

auuan
a-._

Dryers
Surround clothts .
With gentlt. IVIri t
heat . No hot lpota,
no ovtrdrylng

-J=

I
I
I
~::~::::-:.::===·~--;-:;;;·..=·=.. •.. "'tile ... ..,.,

IJI&amp;nd

ILM'

1,'

---

(mill.)

NEIGLER Construction. For
buli(jlng or remodeling your
POMEROY - 2 apartments, 3
home.
Call Guy Neigler
rooms and bath, 6 rooms and
Racl
ne,
Oh to.
'
bath, rented for $95.00 a
7-3t-lfc
·
month - $7,500.
Hinon Wolle, ·
RALPH'S CARPET - UpLicensed RNI Estate
holstery Cleaning Service.
Safesmon
Free estimates. Phone
Phont 949-:tlll •
~-029~.
.
Gallipolis
.
7-18-3tc
3-12-lfc

,., .,

·-·~--

l_J

215. Lo&lt;:queNd
metalware
2T. -

11fOOGH1; a:wii'L

H! .. .. ,

Te....,..•Auwer

-

·O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads Rt 124
Complete front end 'ser~lce '
1
nd b k
•
~;::er~ a bala~~e~ ser:~~~~:
Ironically .
Ali
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
· ·
6-2~·30fc

~

Unscramble th... fwr Jumbleo,
one letter to oath square, to
form four ordinarr •ords.

media

pen name

18. Folklore

!

20.Com·

1. LI'ring -

12.0olfde8Bof

~llliMID~;u,j ::0::!!:'

-

41.Earlhy

DWl'l

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contad Roush Construdjon.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9·30fc

IIi a person,

WMP0/1390

I'M IN NO

. . BLAETTNARS

PoiMEROY

- - - -- -

We talk to

ER. ..'"'
; _ _...:...,_...,..._ _ _ _ _. -- - - - - - - ,

From the Largest T.ruck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
. ~allesf Heller (ore.

. 742-4902

Virgil B. HOBSTETTER
TEAFORD. PORTLA":~ero{' Oh~

HARTFORD

FENCE, MAW

~-

•

Auto.Sales

.'IE OUT AT TH'

·Business S.ervi~e_~_. · ·
__
Re-Oialil

,.

.ELVlNEV IS
HOLLERIN' FER

XF

U C LJ . -· JORNI'G

RJ(

CFG

TNUPXKJ .

•
ZEXFXZF. xu

INB 'SJ

4

au

MUKU flAIIIY

nil ..,., H • ...atl tftiMtlll: f w
I....V., ..-ltool-IHI IILl
.

I

ao••

�•••

,.,

_j

.~,

.. .,.

----~------------------------~--~~~~~-----~~
··---------------------{

·.
.-.

h
al
·
II
;;a:::···:: Re .·ears .•· tor Apo o 15
B
.
•
T
d
·
·
Ca
===rs~dCo~~ e
s .0 ay at . '.pe

· -'nle n.ilt•SSI!I.~;;ll•!l,l,, IIMilil•'5ol"epoollepori~, O., July2ll, Jt71

Chief ••

~

~

mootb of JUDe sb&lt;&gt;l!ing roceipls

lfnm-1)
ID juce • 1111 U 11m sip at the
Jx.!• • rl LiDI;Gin lliU aad a no
rillit twa sicD at tbe entrance
cf Balleuut aad LiDcoD Hill.
c..nc;,1 also di:Stt 1 at
lea&amp;tb Gle kiteriilg on the
k*UC lots. Seoisal aftlllli!S to
salve lhe pcoblem were
•
'· bowua. no solution
"'tbe J*1lllltm wu decioled
u-lllllled tbat appliralions
fen melerl*lrolman""' being
Ida.
'l1le .....,., report [Gr the
(

a

I..egar, Mayor, Franklin

Ralph

w~.

•

Ebna Russell,

CAPE . KENNEDY (UP! )_:
The
countdown started today
REUNION SUNDAY
The Hayes-Young-Holiday for the launch of Apollo IS on a
school reunion will be held mission expected to far surpass
SW!day. Aug. 1,
the old the scientific yield prOduced by
Apollo 11 's lunar landing
Holiday school grounds.
pioneers two years ago.
The long series of final flight
preparations began at 6:30a.m,
EDT and will lead to the laW&gt;Ch
of David R, Scott, Alfred M,
Worden and James B. Irwin at
9:34 a.m. Monday.
Scott and Irwin are scbeduled
to land July 30 in a.moon basin
surrounded by towering mountains and a deep canyon and
stay there a record 67 hours.
Worden will set a lunar orbit
endurance record of six days.
The two surface explorers
devoted much of IDday's
training scbedule to final
rehearsals of their moon
landing and takeoff operations
in a lunar module trainer
CJ~n
simulating as closely as possible the operations of the lander
Falcon,
Use a bank Checking Account to
The launch team received
fmal
clearance to begin the 104s1raighten out your finances. Record
bour, 30-minute countdown late
your finances.
Monday even though a long test
failed to pinjioint the cause of
Cancelled checks will tell you where
an annoying fluctuation in
elecbical
power in the comevery penny goes each month. It's the
mand ship Endeavour last
easy · way to keep your budget
week.
straightened out. Apply for a Checking
Spacecraft specialists were
Account today.
reviewing tbe test data today,
but a Space Agency spokesman
said the problem was not
considered serious enough 1o
'
: . ~· ·, ·,·'" .
' &gt;' ARK HHE
interfere with the launch.
Before slarting the countdown the Space Agency
ann~ced tbat tbe Apollo 15
astronauts have been directed
to wear tbeir spacesuits when
they jettison tbe lunar module
in moon orbit. This decision
was the result of a review of
fligh-t operations after the
recent deatbs of the three
MIDDLEPORT, OH 1n
Soyuz 11 cosmonauts.
5'
er n I Ill OI!J nit . . . . - CorporaUIII
The llinar module jettisoning

on

HAVING YOUR OWN

is the only Apollo operation
comparable to the maneuver
which led to the deatbs of the
Soviet spacemen. They were
killed by a rapid cabin pressure
loss through a batcl! seal after
separation of their ~ntry
module from an orbital module~
The Soviets advised the
'

United States tbat tbe accident
"should be of no concern in
relationship to the impending
Apollo flight"
In one of the final launch pad
jobs before the Apollo 15
countdown began, engineers
installed a pair of 36-volt silverzinc batteries in tbe moon car

'

tbat will giVe Scott and Irwin
the ability to explore 22 miles
&lt;Jilunar terrain.
The mooo buggy is folded aad
stowed in a special COQijl8rt..
mentiil tbe landing craft and it
is not scheduled to be seen
again untillnrin pulls the cord
~t will deploy it on the moon.

W•hlw&amp;taa WIBdow

Orders Placed For Two New
Air-Conditioned Ambulances

'
By EUGENE V. RISHER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon always bas
regarded the CODflict in Vietnam as a scene in a much
larger drama.
.
Altbougb no me talks about It mucb a11)'1110ri&gt;, the
main reason bis pcedecessors became involved in tbat
tragic conflict was to contain China and tbe wars of
Uberatim it espouses.
Tbis bas led many to conclude tbat tbere can be DD
lasting selllement 111 Vietnam witbwt tbe assent of
a.ina, the maiD supplier of arms and ideological support
toHanoiandtbeVietCong,Aitdbere,perbapsmorethan
anywhere ebe, lies tbe hope of the President's forthcwning trip to Peking.
Ellormoas Colllequences
Finally, themainactorsin the drama have entered the
stsge.
The invitation Ia meet with Cbainnan ~o The-tung
and Premier Otou En-lai is a coup of enormous coosequences for tbe President, both at home and abroad.
Politically, it is bound to raise his popularity aad Jake
tbe focus of public attention from the negotiations in
Paris, wlue the VietCmg have putfortb a disagreeable
peace plan Nixon bas been under increasing pressure to
acceplltgi¥J:Sbimll)(ft freedom to resist the demands
of Saiate doves and others to set a date for witbdrawing
American troops.
An diplomatically, it signifies a shift in tbe power

-

_,
- ~

MASON - Orders have been as set forth by their committee member may cmtact Michael
placed for two new air- on the transportation of the sick Merritt at 882-2733 at New
conditioned ambulances, one and injured.
' Haven or .run Laveodar at T/3M.. RSOORLIHER-A-~~s1loe department .
for New Haven and one for
Tbe ambulance will be '56fl at Mason.
~son,
·
localed
at tbe ,....,. cf Seeond aad Rutland Streets, Midequipped with the latest first aid
First Aid courses are being
The units are built by the equipment, backboards , given at ~son and are soon to
dleport, held its grml ~ d11g 'I'IU'sday. Dave Busllil'k,
Springfield Equipment Co., on resuscitators, splints, built..in be started at New Haven,
manager,sbd!dsbesideone&lt;lilbemany shoe displays in the
International chassis and and portable oxygen units and
The cost &lt;ll each ambulance is
a~tile ltAft. An lboes are displayed m open, ''pick and
purchased from the Meigs many otber life.&amp;ving devices. approximately $13,000 with
cboaoe" :sbelvbc fGr _,. "lake your time" shopping.
Equipment Co., Pomeroy. · The vehicles are equipped Federal grants of 16,500 to be
Delivery is expected in one with large double speaker made on each unit
month.
sirens, red lights, crowd cootrol 'lbe balance of the money will
mow her in the Bend area
The ambulances meet speakers and are 55 inches bigb come from local industry,
realize tbat the Miss Ohio title
requirements of State and inside to enable better care of business establishments and
couldn't bave gone to a more
Federal regulations as well as patients,
donatioos frmn the general
(Continlled
fnllll
pege
II
deserving
contestant. Her
the recommendation of the
Persons interested in public. Plans for a fund drive
American Medical Association becoming an Emergency Squad will be announced at a later rendition &lt;ll '"lbe b•t•HSiNe radiaDt smile and manner are
•
Dream."
Dol r
ved for a panel of
date.
Later in 196!1, she returned to jiMiges- they're juSt part of an
the Miss Ohio P;cl!lllll aad every day pleasant personality
fared better tban ber first ex- p
d by the new Miss Ohio.
perieooe but again railed to bit Good luck, Miss Schaefer.
the top.
We're happy to have started a
Mrs. Rublin bas been working lhree-volume printed 1ramcript
WASillNGT()N (UPI)- AdIn 1970, instead of par- winner on ber way!
yocates of pu!Ung pea~ back for more tban two years to of tbe llearqs, which covered ticipating in pageants, Miss
m tbe schools today clamM'd 175 convince congr wen tbat vol- among suggested amendments Schaefer made a trip to
of tbe 218 House supporters they untary, nondenominational the specific language now pro- California.Hoaua,tbisspring
M
rial H........,'
fouod tu again ia tbe ~ VtWDI emo
...,.._
need to force a vote m the issue. school pnyersare proper under llC-' by Mrs. Rublin.
aad
she
the
Miss
Cellini
ADMISSIONS
Harold
the
Constitutilll.
Mrs.
Rnhlin
said
the
16!1
sigPrayer lobbyis.ls beaded by
The amendll!eJit she seeb to natures m the discharge peti- Ohio Pageant title [Gr the Hood, Middlep&lt;rl;. Tammy K.
Mrs. Ben Ruhlin, Oiyaboga
to the House floor would tim at the clca! cf House busi- second time. Her paseoaaote Ferguson, M~ddleport;
ftree
F~, Ohio, circulated Urougb
cocndors of tbe tbree House of. state specificany tbat sucb ness last week increased to 175 paid cff aJd last Sall!nlay night ~t McKenzie, Pomeroy;
Newell: Marion; Charles
lice buildings seeking ad- pcayers in schools and public Meftday, If a majority cf the she became Miss Ohio aad will'
places
were
not
to
be
pnrluded
House
signs,
the
amendment
rep1
nt
tbe
state
at
tbe
Miss
Olilinger.
Middleport; Ralph
ditional hackers.
will be [Greed to tbe noor.
America Pageant in Atlantie Spencer, Pomeroy; Anna Hart,
Mrs, Ruhlin said lu group by the First Amendment
Judiciary
Coounittee
&lt;lJair.
After
tbat,
it
must
be
ap.
City
in September. Slle will do a no addres;; recorded; Mae
would be bere aU week in an
of Hawk, Mtddleport; Harry
~crt to put ~':' the top House man Emanuel CeUer, con- proved by a two-lbirds vote in considerable amount
oemed
at
the
growing
list
of
both
HOllie
aad
Senate,
aad
Miss
Ohio
Hysell, Middleport
traveling
as
discharge petitim No. 1 - to
dislodge from tbe Judiciary petitioners seeking to dislodge ratified by tbree-fourtbs &lt;ll the
You can bet tbat La~ will
DISCHARGES - Charles
tbepcoposedamermnent,
today
state
legislatures,
to
become
a
Committee a constitutional
represent Ohio well. S1Je is H~, Larry Werry, Fred E.
amendll1enl that would reverse sent aU House !IIPII!hers a letter part of tbe Constitution.
genuine aad sincere. 'lbose who Smith, James E. llall, Harold
Hood, Doris Sayre, Norman
&amp;ipreme Court rulings against pointing out that bis committee Assisting Mrs. Rublin's pnyLehew. Harold JeHers.
beld extensive bearings on the er campaign committee in loberganized pcayer in schools.
issue
in
1964
and.
despite
an
bying
member!
fer
signatures
The court in decisions about a
SOCIAL SA11JRDAY
decade ago held that scbopl early inclination toward such an were about 30 women reJn·
prayers, however prescribed, amendment. cmcluded it cruld senting Citizens fer Public RevAn ice cream SGCial will be
TWO sum FILED
Violated the First Amerv!mP.nt's not be written without erence, from New Yll"k aad beld Saturday at 6 p.m. at the
guarantee of religious freedom. jeopardizing religious freedom. Pennsylvania ; National Salisl.gy F;lme!W'y Srhool Two suits for divorce have
Celler sent eacb member a Parents for Prayer, and Project spcnsored by · tbe PTA. been filed in Meigs County
Pl'ayer. from Califcrnia; the Homemade ice cream. pios, Common Pleas Court.
Back to God Movement, iced tea aad oolfee will be sold. Joy MitcbeU, Rutland, flied
District of Columbia , the Those wishing to like ice cream against Elmer Mitchell,
Retired Teacben Association; home are ~ to llring their Ra~d, a~d Paul Wolfe,
tbe
Retired
Persons own containers. All PTA Racine, agamst Leota Mae
Associatim; and the Veterans members who will be waking Wol&amp;:, Racine, eacb charging
of Foreign Wars and the Salurday are asbd to be at the gi'QIS neglect of duty and exAmerican Legion.
school by 4 p.m.
~ treme cruelty.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-A not combat the problem," said
Wlt1 male VQU hllhl'lrCN in» OU' bi Uldat.Jook the presents you • • blue-ribbon
crime committee of Police Chief Allred Neider,
educators, lawyers and busi· "You can't legalize a wrong oot
nessmen said Monday that of existence."
Newest Touch &amp; Sew" sewing m::~,~hitnt&gt;l society should continue its Neider said be recently
0FF
REG.
attempts to deter marijuana canvassed numerous heroin
PRICE in its own handy carrying case.
use but recommended the drug addicts and t'aU said they
started on marijuana. Each
be legalized for adults.
"Criminalization bas failed. was asked if they advocated
1&lt;'"'""''"
We suggest that society now try usage of marijuana. AU said
~
non-criminalization," said the no."
One Touch
Built-in
San Francisco ColllllliUie on
Regional chief of tbe State
c-:.... '
.,.,..,ng.
buttonholer,
~
;
.
7
different
1
Crime which previously advo- Narcotics Bureau, Matthew
Slraighlor
Push-Button
as seen in
~ f:
stretch
O'Connor,
said
the
recommencated
condoning
such
"nonzig-:zag.
Sobon.
SEVENTEEN
victim" crimes as pcostitution, dations were "a serious misstitches
take," and called marijuana "a
gambtingand homosexuality.
Law enforcers immediately dangerous. unpredictable subknocked the report, which stance.
proposed that marijuana use be The crime commiSsion, in its
11th and final report of a
regulated like liquor.
"Legalizing marijuana will stormy three year study on law
enforcement, approved the report on drugs 17 to nine witb
one member not participating.
"We do not propose tbat
See the many new arrivals
society discontinue efforts to
Tonight, July 20
deter people from using mariTORA! TORA! TORAI
juana," the majority report
each day for the coming season
(Technicolorl
U. S. Sequences:
said. "Its use is probably not as
Morfin Balsam
deliterious as its most earnest
beautiful fine of womens
Joseph Cotton
detractors
say,
but
certainly
First showing at popular
people would be better off
prices!
polyesler knit--pants suits in
" G"
without it."
SHOW 5T ART57 P.M.
"We simply conclude tbat the
misws and bait sizes - We
criminal process is not the way
Wedne~y &amp; Thursday
to go about achieving the goal
July 21 ·22
bcwe also receiled many of our .
given the present state of
NOT OPEN

atECKING ACCOUNT

be easier!

Budget minding

lla'?i

75
nr.r '
llt
·~

One Touch Sewing!

.nJI \
f.
I ;:
~j

It

MEIGS THEATRE'

Visit Elberfelds Busy
Ready to
Wear
Department
- a

evidence."

-

We have a credit plan designed to fit Y.QY! budget.

Uearance!

POLYESTER KNITS
SPECIAL

'4.49 YARD

GROUP

Tonight, July 20

APPROVED 5 IN G E It DEALER

CLEARANCE!

IQ Tallie
'

Wed., Thu. &amp; Friday
July21 ·22·ll
Double fl!ilture Program

THE FABRIC SHOP

S.•er

FABRICS

2:•1
'

Double Feature Program
"SCARS ·OF
DRACULA"
- P!us "HORRORS OF
FRANKE'NSTEIN"

EL CONDOR
I Color I

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
MtCALL'S&amp; SIMPliCITY PATTERNS

liS W.

Second

992-2284

Mayor Joseph Alioto, reached
at a conference in Milwaukee,
said be opposed legalizing pot
because such a move "may
lead to its more widespread use
under the subtle encouragement
of apparent governmental sanction." Alioto, who appointed the
commission, termed the report
a "thoughtful analysis."
The nine dissenting crime
committee members said not
enough was known about
marijuana's effects to make a
judgment.

Pomeroy, 0.

:tim Brown .
Lee Van Cleef
Patrick O' Neal
-Plus. 'A PLACE
FOR LOVERS'
Faye Dunawa ~
Marcella Mastroianni

IRl

ENTERS 1108PlfAL
The Middlepcrt E-R Squad
Wa8Clllled Mmday at 9:15p.m.
to Wolf Pen Road for Mae
Hawk, a medical patient who
was taken to Veterans
Memcrial Hospital wbere she
admitted.
'

was

I ,

. ..
.' : ·
'; •
'•• •
: •
·'

I

Last Battalion Pulled Out
IWGON - 'l'BE U. 8. roMMAND pulled its last in·
fantry battalim out of the nortbemmost Quang
Tri province IDday amid predictims by allied intelligence officers
tbatSouth Vietnam WGUld have difficulty holding the area against
an.estimated 28,0011 {'mlmnnists me ~~ nearby.
Tbewitb:lrawal&lt;JithelstBattalim of the llth!Dantry meant
tbatfor tbe first time since 191i6wben the U. S. Marines marched
in there will be no U. S. infantry alnng the Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ), spokesmen said. Military sources said about 5,0011 Soutb
Vtetnarnese lrDOpl inside Cambodia started a sweep into Communist .sanctuaries east of the rubber plantation town of Snuol 85
miles -th cfSaigm, BotbSoutb Vtetnamese spc*esman Col. Le
Trung HieD aad U. S. officials denied tbat any new govenment
lrDOpl bad C!~ 1111 the border or that a new operation was underway,

Newspapers Favored
NEW YORK - AMERICANS rely on newspapers more than
any otber medium to give than informatim about subjects in
which they are interested, the Bureau cf Advertising says.
The lueau bas released a bOOklet entitled ''News about the
News Media," based on a series of questims about the media
asked cf 2,023 men and women aged 18 or older. Fifty per cent of
aU respondents named newspapers as the medium in wbicb they
would be mosllltely to fmd wt aU there is aboot news in wbich
they are very mucb interested, and 46 per cent named television.
Among ligb scbooli!J'8duates, 56 per cent named newspapers.
For those with family incomes of more tban $10,000 it was 55 per

cenl

Packai-d, B no-man, on Carpet
WASIIINGToN- A CWUD HANGS over the governmental
future cf Deputy Defense Seeretary David Packard, a former
businessman wbo bas made clear his displeasure witb Nixon
administratim effcrts to shore up~ firms such as Lockheed
Aircraft Corp. There were rumors around the Pentagm today
Packard might n!Sign. Testimony be bad prepared for a House
(Continued on page 12)

Stand $107.,046

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'

BY JANET KORN
It all slarted back in 1863, the
Meigs County Fair.
. l'm not sure thai it was actually called by that. The
memories of our sources of
information don 't all date back
that far, and history· passed
down sometimes suffers a lack
of detail and accuracy.
Never!heless, that was the
year it all started.
The fair began on just a few
acres and a few people showing
their wares. Construction of a
one-third mile race track came
early; in 1885 it was made into a
12-mile track.
The grandstand, built by Lou
Davis of Meigs County, who cut

Pomeroy Village funds as of
June 30 totaled $107,046:23
according to the report of Clerk
Jane Walton · submitted to
Pomeroy Council Monday
night Receipts, disbursements
and clerk's balaiH:e, respeclively in the active fund were:
•.. General, $5,964U4, $4,193Jl,
$5,709.59; sewer, $&amp;1,394.43,
$110,9119.16, $34,&amp;17.S8; boat dock,
$190, $46.52, $61L36; fire
department, · no receipts,
$215.11, $3,073:81; cemetery,
t&amp;68.90, $971i:9Z, $146.95; street,
$1,830.95; $1.534.31, $11,112.59;
slate highway, $14:i.06, $63.Sl,
$1,60%.80; utility fund, no
receipts, $151.54. $13,139.75;
water operating, $&amp;,436.17,
$9,02:i.55, $6,906.66; water
improvement, no receipts, no

A cluster of three United
Presbyterian Churches in
Meigs County with a directorpastor and an assistant Tuesday
night was approved by the
Scioto Presbytery in special
convocation in Wellston.
Presiding
was
ViceModerator J. Sherman Porter
in tbe absence of Moderator
. John W, Morris, There were 43
persons attending from 55
churches.
Motions setting up the united
Meigs County Council, which
will
brink
Middleport,
Syracuse, and Harrisonville
churches
together
administratively and for financing
were made by the Rev. Martin
L. Griffith of Ironton.
The Rev, Russell Lester, area
field executive, who bas served
Meigs County Presbyterians for
a year and half, described !he
new United Meigs County
CounciL
The Rev, Mr. Lester pointed
to the fact of the $488 million
Gavin plant now building and
the hundreds of new "souls to be
won" in the next decade
because of its presence.
He said that each church
would maintain its own session
(board of elders) and continue
its own services. The United
Meigs County Council would
handle administrative matters,
Attending from !he Meigs

•

PHONE 992-2156

fEN CENTS

•

n1ng

board fence eight feet high with
lour gates (which were locked
all year round) enclosed the
area . The amusement area
offered one ride, a merry-goround powered by a coal-fired
engine.
But time marches on.
This year Meigs County
its 108th annual fair. The
stages
The early fairgrounds liad
three springs, the main one Junior Fair. added in 1946, is
located below the present now a five day ~vent.
The up-eoming fair, Aug. 17·
grounds behind the old Goeglein
family home, now a part of the 21, will present domestic arts,
proposed interchange of Routes flower shows, a polled Hereford
show, the fat steer and fat lamb
33-7 and 124.
There were also four or five sales, dairy cattle, dairy
wells on the grounds. All water showmanship, poultry and
had to be carried up the hilL rabbit showmanship, beef,
There were no meals served. A sheep and swine shows and of
course, horse:&lt;, in pony pulling
contests, a conformation horse
and pony show, running horse
races (including quarter horse
racing and twilight horse
harness racing 1 and other
oulstanding grandstand enu · . -lrli
- ---.. tertainmenl.
It's all part of lhe· 1971·Meig!;
·
County Fair!
it and put it together by band,
slands today as an architect's
dream because of its curving
ro of, a feat accomplished
without a blueprint, in an era
when such construction under
such conditions was !hough!
impossible.

County churches were:
Syracuse - Beatrice Blake,
Rachel McBride, Margare!
Cotbill, Esther Sylvester, and
Margaret Winebrenner.
Middleport - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Haptonslall , Faye
Wallace, Fairy Kennedy, and
John Ful!z.
Harrisonville - Kenn eth
Welsh and Virgil Aikins.

Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar said today applications
lor extra police and a meter
patrolman are being accepted
at town ball .
Legar also noted that the
parking meters on the parking
lots next to Main St. have been
changed to new rates of 30
minutes for five cents, one hour
for 10 cents and five hours for 50
cents. Tbe old rate was two
hours lor 10 cents and 10 hours
lor 50 cents.
YOUNG BATTIN NOW
"Bunkie" Battin, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Clyde Battin of
Columbus, former Middleport
residents will appear with the
popular vocal group "The
Byrds" at the 9 a. m. Tbur$day
show of David · Frost over
Channel6 Columbus. Mr. Battin
coached Middleport High
School athletic teams in their
early great achievements.

,'

I'

•,

0 I

EXTENSIVE REMODELING OF tbe CerUfled 011 l)!mptny Gil Statloa loealed 011 •' '
Pomeroy's West ~in Street bas been COO!pleted. Atlractlve wood shingles have been placed
on the exterioc of the building. The driveway bas been black topped and new Island installed.
. Russell Miller, Middlepocl; bas operated the statlon[Gr tbe~sltbreeyean. Miller lll!rved with
the U. S. Navy as a cook 21 years.

Mrs. Martin New Ohio Chapeau ·

Note to Jobless

•

eXpenditures, $15.61, guaranty
meter, $150, $99.00, $3.422.74;
parking meter, $968,00, no
expenditures,
$6,775.49;
sanitary sewer construction, no
recefpts, no expenditures,
$5,005.58. Total receipts,
disbursements and the balance
fn the active fund respectively
Were, $99,744.04, $97,910.73.
Reeeipts, disbursemen'ts and
clerk's balance respectively in
the inactive fund include,
special street repair bend
retirement, no receipts, no
expenditures, $1,6S4.23; bond
retirement, • no receipts,
$2,407.50, $13,03U9.
Reteipts, disbursements, and
balances in all funds respeclively totaled $99,7H:Il4,
$100,318.23, $101,046.2:1: . ·

after !he plaintiff bad. called 29:.:·
witnesses to the stand.
According to Judge Calhoun, '.
the evidence showed the gas.
explosion was caused by &amp;•
separation of a coupling due to.
land slippage.
Calhoun ruled tbat it was not·.· .
the duty of the gas company to .
check the soil for the owners: .
The insurance firm bad
charged the gas company with·.
negligence in the manner in :
which !he gas service was in· ·
stalled in the bouse and for , ·
permitting !he use of a Dayton :
Coupling in new fill and moving ·
earlh.

Of 'flu! Meiga-Maaon Area

. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21 , 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OH!O

'·.

I

blo11ses, sllils, slacks, sWeaters,
amlinate groups - Come in

You/ ·

R

Devotal To The lntereatl

~-~-------------------------,

Pom~roy FWJ.ds

Capable
Salespeople
ToA.aist

e
NO. XXIV NO. 68

Baird was charged with
negligence in lighting a
cigarette in !he home where gas
had been reported.
On June 3, Gallia County
Common Pleas Court Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun rendered a
directed verdict in favor of the
defendant, Columbia Gas of
Ohio, in a $13,965 damage suit
filed in Gallia County by the
Aetna Life and Casually Co.,
Charleston, W. Va. as a result of
the explosion.
The insurance firm had
sought !he money for the loss of
!he home leveled in the explosion. The decision was made

•

Presbyterians
•t
nu'ftCl
C
Set
-Up! News .•Jn Briefs · !

new dresses. cmls. car coats,·

and see for ~urself.

.
:'
;
. :: ~
··

'the second action was filed
by members of !he Larry E.
Will family . Will asks $S60,000
for his injuries; $420,000 for
injuries suffered by his wile,
Ruby ; $56o,OOO damages lor
injuries to their son, Brett and
$550,000 for injuries to another
son, Brian.
The two suits charge on
several occasions when Rober!
Baird and Douglas Wetherholt
showed the house to prospective
buyers, they were advised !he
odor of gas was very noticea~le .
The gas company is charged
as negligent in not disconlinuing serv ice and Oscar

petition stated .
Mr , and Mrs. Milstead seek
$195,000 for the loss of their son.
Milstead suffered burns over a
large part o! his body and was
hospitalized more than ' lhree
mon!hs. As the result of his
injuries and expenses incurred
to members of his .family, he
asks $650,000 damages.
His wife, Sharon Milstead,
also was hospilalized over three
months. She seeks damages
tolaling $425,000. The couple's
daughter, Nancy Ellen, age
seven. was bospilalized two
mrnths. The suit asks $550,000
in damages in her behalf.

A. Milstead and Mr. and Mrs .
Larry E. Wilt, all o! Gallipclis,
The explosion occurred Aug.
10, !969 at the residence of
James N. and Geraldine Smith,
348 Valley Dr., Planlz Subdivision, Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
According to the petitions, the
eight persons injured and
realtor Oscar C. Baird were
viewing the home when Baird
allegedly lit a cigarette which
'ignited gas that had accumulated in the house.
The former occupants asked
the gas firm to discontinue
service to !he house when they
vacated it April 1, 1968, the

'-J

Ne Faile Bepes Raised
Hut it is fraught with dan!!ers and nobody realires Ibis
better tban the President himself.
He remembers, fer instance, the humilialim suffered
by his old mentor, President Dwight D, Eisenhower,
when a U2 spy plane incident resulted in cancellatim of
a summit trip to the Soviet Union.
For Ibis reason. the Wbite House bas purposely sought
Ill downgrade its own expectations for fear of raising
false bopes about what can be accomplished ·in Peking,
particularly with regard to Vietnam.
'l1le President's terse annwncement said tbe trip was
aimed at ''nwmlli2ing relatims" with a.ina ia a quest
for world peace and in discussing matters of mutual
interest. It did not mention Vietnam.
High-level Wbite HOil'le officials amplifying the trip
plans lata- would not speculate on what it migbt mean
for ending the war. Perhaps anticipating the fcrecasts
now emanating from Capitol Hill that be would have aU
troop! out of Vielllam by the time he goes to Peking, the
President purpoeely warned in a meeting earlier Ibis
week with cmgrellllimalleaders and his cabinet against
raising false bopes tbat the new diplomatic opening
could result in an end to tbe war.

won

at

Two da!llage suits totaling
$3,190,QOO ivere filed Tue$day in
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court in Columbus as a result of
a gas explosion nearly two
years ago in Gallia County
which claimed the life of twoyear old James Thomas
Milstead and bospilalized eight
other persons.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, 99
North Front St., Columbus and
three men connected wi!h the
Baird Realty Co., Gallipolis,
Oscar C. Baird, Robert Baird
and Douglas Wetherholt were
named defendants· in actions
. , filed by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
.' ;

~

School Prayer Gains Support

Committee Makes
Recommendations

'

=.:~:=-:~z~:as~ •
.'Humh1e Be

New •••

I

SINGER
120th BIRTHDAY
SALE

$3,190,000 Asked In Gas Explosion::·
.

Ideological
.Breakthrough.

IUzer.

•
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•

-,.,
MRS. MARTIN

Mrs. Mary Martin of Pomeroy is the
new Eight and Focty Departemenlal
d'Ohio Chapeau.
Her election and installation to the top
Ohio office in the Eight and Forty, an af.
filiate of the American Legion Auxiliary,
was on Monday at the annual convention at
the S!altler Hotel in Cleveland,
Mrs. Martin is the inunediate past
departemenlalle demi chapeau premiere.
Her departementai appointments began in
1956 when she was appointed honorary
page, a position she held five years. She
was color marshall in 1960 ·and 1963,
parody chairman in 1963, and departemenlal Ia secretaire-caissiere of the
Chapeaux Passe Club in 1~.
In 1966 she was elected departemenlal
Ia concierge; in 1967, departemental
l'archiviste; in 1968, departemental
l'aumonier; and in 1969, departem·&gt;ntal le
demi chapeau deuxieme.

Mrs. Pearl Knapp of Mel@ Salon 710, ·
Eight and Forty, of which Mrs~ Martin Ia a ,
charter member, nominated Mrs. Martin ,
for departemenlal chapeau.
She described Mn, Martin as an
"ardent and tireless worker In botb 1M
Eight and Forty and the American
Auxiliary" and credited her with the
ability to lead others In aU plw.s of the
work of both organizaUons, particularly
It relates to service to children wttb cystic
fibrosis and tuberculosis.
·
In her acceptance speech, Mrs. Martui
said her goal is prevention and control ql
tuberculosis and cystic fibrosis.
·.
Her theme for the year is, "Today -c-.:·
Reach Out to a Child." She said tbai "
September has been set aside as Cystic ·
Fibrosis Month and abe challenged ~ '
salons to have a fund drive fer researcb, . .
(Continued on Page I)
. ,

UNION TO MEET
Union members at Philip
Sporn Plant wiU bold a special
meeli~ this evening to vote on
the cMitract proposed by the
company. 11 the contract is not
accepted there is a possibility
employes wiU go on strike
Proposed budgets for 1972 of morning at tbe office of the
Wednesday at midnight or
Thursday morning, Carl the several·county offices were Meigs County Commissioners,
The total budget. which
received for study Tuesday
Searles said.
showed estimated receipts In
the amount of $3114,518 and
expenditures of $3114,001 in the
general fund, was presented to
the budget commission for
appr~val, ~rtha Chambers,
clerk, reported.
In other business the .cornmissioners awarded the bids for
lhree duiiip trucks. Prop.lsal
number one, with a tJ:ade-in of a
1967 International, · was
awarded to Keith Goble Ford in
!he amount of $5,6211; proposal
number two with a 1966
Chevrolet trade-in the amount
of $6,4SO went to M~igs
Equipment Co., and proposal
number tbree, with a 1966 GMC
trade-in, of $6,310, went to ~Ceith
Goble Ford, All three trucks are
equi~ with Marion dump
beds and No. 30 hoists.
Commissioners approved
tbe estimate lor prepared amount &lt;ll bituminous

Lesion

u·

$384,518 General Fund :·:
Is Proposed Next -Year·
stockpil~

mix to be UIII!CI county
wide in the amount of S24••
submitted by Theodore Beegle",
County Engineer. A transfer cf
$10,0011 in . the Meigs CouniJ
Highway Department was allo ·
approved.
'
The commissioners ala!) ,
approved the purchase of ofllc,';
equipment for Meigs' Coun!Jo:::
Court and paid $450 to the YelP~·
County historical SocletJi:•
toward the operation of It
Museum.
'
Albert F. Gehres, exlenll111.
specialist
of
Researdj.
Development at Ohio Stat.c.
University, met wltb lilt~•
commissioners to dilcull IJ;Iit.,
city study program wbicb c~ea~~ :.
with major problemo &lt;ll U.
area. Vernon Weber allo met·.
with · the commlsslonera
discuss the naming &lt;ll a a;jl,•
Defense Director.
~;_.
Attending went Bab Cl8rll aqt•
Warden Ours, ccmn"nrir•J: ..
and Martba Cbamben, dlrll:::

to!.

Weather
CHESTER TEAM-The Three River LiWe teague

Dave Carpenter, Jackie Parker, TeiTy Farrar, and Dana
(]tamps, of Olester who lost a close game Tuesday night in ,. Slnith; back row, Ralph Trussell, Mgr.: Steve Trussell, Jim
. 'lhe Kyger Creek twrnament to the Middleport Braves, are, Steel¢, Gary Nelson, Don Eichinger, Greg Ginther, David
front 1. to r , Bruce Myers, Kevin Bucld~y, Leonard Myers,
Mills, George ·Morrison and Larry Heines, Managers absent
· · Wl(l'e Kevin Barton and Bruce Myers .
'

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•

•

..

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