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;;a:::···:: Re .·ears .•· tor Apo o 15
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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.

•
••

'

•
••
•

-,.,
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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�I

2- The DailY Stnlinel. ~y. o.. Julv21.1m

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

Washington
R enort
By ~arence
:t'
Miller

On the heels of the visit of the
ping-pong players came the
announcement that the U. S.
team had, in tum, offered to
host the Otinese players on a
tour of the United States
sometime in the future .
Following this, President
Nixon, who has long endeavored
to thaw the two decades Of
diplomatic contempt and
suspicion between the. Cbinese
and Western ·powers, an-

Last week, in a brief but
dramatic address to the nation,
President Nixon announced that
be will visit witfl the leaders of
Mainland China before May,
1972. The invitation · was ex·
tended to the Chief Executive
bY Premier Chou En-lai through
the President's assistant for
national security affairs, Henry
Kissinger. No one, outside of an
extremely small group of
assistants close to t~e
President, knew of the announcement prior to disclosure.
The pending visit by the
President was announced
simultaneously In Pelting. News
of the up-coming journey is the
latest of a number of
noteworthy events which have
slowly but impressively begun
to shift U.S.-Chinese relations.
Flr.&gt;t was the much.publicized
ping.pung tournament travels
of the U. S. table tennis team.
The visit of these Americans to
Mainland China marked the
first time ~ce 1949- when the
Communists assuined power in
Peking - that Americans were
permitted behind the silent,
mysterious Great Wall isolating
the People's Republic of China
: from the world outside.

w.·

e ght
re·
Overnl
' .
' . ~~:~~~ha:~!~~sal: ~;

nounced that a trade ·ban On mis\rust . and the ever- that ~dent Nixon accepted
certain · non-slrategic goods present 'threat of nuclear the invitation to visit Red China.
.would be lifted and that the u.s. confrontation. The world is And it is with the hope of
would seek to encour11ge an more crowded now and the old replacing decades of inexchange of various items~ The· expression that Mother Earth Is ternational hostility with a
first goods from China to arrive getting smaller has.never been .fresh, Invigorating atmoSphere
on Ameri~an soil were uncrated truer. In these times when we of harmony and open dialogue
in California only recently. The are .. virtually elbow' to elbow that the President told the world
campaign for better relati(IIIS with neighbors of different that he wiU, indeed, travel to the
has also included permilting colors, creeds and cultures, we Asian mainland within the next
one!Hlxcluded U. S. newsmen cannot close ourselves off from 10 months.
into China for a first hand look interlocking situations ~bich His intenti(IIIS are not to
at the lifestyle of the world's affect the very course of .renege on promises to allies or
most populated nation.
modern history. Just as we · open a diplomatic gulf between
Now, the President himself is cannot ignore the obvious the . U. S. and her historical
going to China. I. applaud the differences between the peoples partners. The President has
President and wiU wait, with and places of this shrinking placed a priority of peace and
great anticipation for the globe, we must likewise reconciliation on the overtures
'results of his venture.
vigorously search out and toward~ainland Chiila and his
I think it ill important to nurture the ideals common dedication to attaining those
underscore the President's among men of good will _: stated goals has become all the
reasoning. in taking this paramount aniong them being m?"e obvio_us with ~los~ of
initiative. Like it or not, we live the desire for world peace.
~IS latest 1tem of mternallonal
in a lime of turmoil, It was in this spirit of peace mteresl.

· By UPI

Rate Increase Expected Soon By Bell
By JOHN T. KADY
Ualted PresslDtematloDal
The new contract with the
Communications Workers of

::::sl:":!~ce~=

PT, PLEASANT ·
LIVES'l'OCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Salurday, Jaly 17, 1971
ROGS-175 to 220 20 to 21.70;
Heaviea 18 to 21.30; Lights 16.50
to II; Fat Sows 15 to 16.10;
Boars 11.70 to 14.80; Pigs 5.25 to
11; Stock Shoats Byljd.12 to 17.
CAnLE - Steers 21.85 to
25.60; Heifers 18.25 to 24.85; Fat
Cows 18 to 19; Canners 11 to
17.75; Bulls 20.85 to 28.90; Stock
Cows and Calves 137.50 to 220;
." StoctSteers27.10to30.75; Stock
. . Heifers 20 to 27.50; Stock Steer
• Calves 26.25 to 30.85; Stock
• • Heifer Calves 28 to 29.
VEAL CALVFii - Tops 38;
Secmds 34.90; Medium 33 to
33.50; Commob &amp; Heavies 30.50
to 36.50.

...

OLD TEAMMATES
Pete Role of tile CIK!nnatl

Red1 ud Ed Brlatmaa of
tile Detrell Tiien were
lellmmalel at Wnlera Hllla
Hlp Sebocpl Ia Clllclnnatl.

"sometime soon," a company
spokesman said Tuesday.
The unidentified spokesman
said first the company would
"take a very close look" at thi
new pact.
"Inflation has bit us hard and
unlike other companies we can't
just raise rates armtrarily," he
said. "We have to appeal to the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio and obtain its approval."
New contract between the
CWAand the Bell Telphone Systerns calls for a 30 per cent increase in pay and fringe benefits over a ~year period.
"! am sure our management
is taking a very close look now
to how our earnings will be af.
fected and as.we stated in our
recent annual report several
months ago, our earnings were

already&amp;dverselyaffectedbyin- - -- -- - - - - -- - -- - - - Dation," the spokesman said.
"So, all in all, our management WIN AT BRIDGE
could decide application for a

==,....=:-=:====-

=

·:?crease would be neces-

The strike · by 25,000 CWA
members in Ohio cost the Buckeye state economy nearly ··$4
million in lost payrolls.
If the week-long strike had
lasted longer, it would have got.
len worse for the striking employes because the CWA does
not have a strike lund, such as
other unions.
The CWli. has a national "defense fund" which is used to
help some strikers, but only if
they really need the.money.
"We give II out on a hardship
basis, a need basis," said jerry Chevalier, president of Columbus CWA Local4320. He said
he was "not at Uberty to reveal how much money was in
the defense fund."

Search for the 1Oth Trick
NORTH

that there is nothing he can
do.
If he leads his six of
trumps, dummy's nine will
hold the trick and South will
have that extra entry to
dummy. South will abandon
diamonds and simply ruff a
club, enter dummy with the
trump ace, ruff another club,

%1

(D)

.A94

.AJ3
• 85
.AI0974
WEST

EAST

.1062
.Q!074
.KJ9

.7
.K982
tA1063
.Q862

• J53
SOUTH

America's top exptrtJ explain tlleir
tournament-winning techniques ill a
new I21-pogo boak on J A C 0 8 Y
MODERN. Far pour copy sf11t Sl
witlt your name, oddress a'i1tJ zip
cod• to : 'Win at Bridge," (c/o this
newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.

.KQJ85J
.65
tQ742

.K

None vulnerable
West North Eost South
1•
Pass I .
Pass 2•
Pass '"'
Pass - Pass
Pass
Opening

1

lead-· 2

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby

South can count nine winThe Daily Sentilel ners
with no trouble. Where
DEVOTED TO THE
is the loth to come from? If
INTEREST OF
he
has time, he can lead diaMEIGS-MASON AREA
monds and· eventually ruff a
CHESTER L. TANNEHIL~.
Exec. Ed.
diamond in dummy. Without
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
a
trump lead, he would have
City Editor
had
time. If trumps are 2-2,
Published daily except
GOOD RELATIONS
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
he
will
get that ruff in, but
WASH.fNGTON (UP!)
Publishing Company, 111
South
has
a feeling trumps
William D. Ructelshaus, ad- Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, will break 3-1.
45769. 86siness Office Phone
mlnlstrator of the En-. 992-2156.
Ed i torial Phone 992Where else can he get that
vironmental Protection 2157.
loth
trick? Dummy has five
Second class postage paid at
Agency, describes his relations Pomeroy, Ohio .
clubs. Can he set up dumNational advertising
with the White House as very
my's fifth club? If clubs
representative
Bottinelli - break 4-3 and he can get to
good liJid· "I've never seen Gallagher, Inc .. 12 East 42nd
anythi!lg in what the President St., New York City , New York . dummy three times, everySubscript ion rates : De thing will work out nicely,
has sard or done that indicates livered
by carrier where
but there are on\y two sure
anything but full support for available SO cents per week; entries. South decides to give
By Motor Route where carrier
what we're doing." Ruck- service
himself every chance.
not available : One
elshaus made the com- month 51 .75. By mail in Ohio
He wins the trump lead
W. Va .• One year SU .OO.
mentTuesdaywben aSked if the and
with the eight, cashes his
Six months $7 .25 . Three.
President backed tough an- months $4 .50 . Subscription j king of clubs and plays a
P~"ice includes Sunday Times low diamond. West Is on lead
tipollution enforcement.
Sentinel .
with the nine-spot and finds

enter dummy with the heart
ace and discard two of his
four remaining losers on the
ace and 10 of clubs.
If West decides to lead a
heart, South wins immediately in dummy and plays a
second diamond. Now he is
able to ruff a diamond and
get his loth trick that way.
(N£WSP.P£R £NT£lPRISE ASSN.I

WASHINGTON - Governmentofficials have announced a
new step to help protect the
nation's hogs against invasion
by a devasiating foreign disease
nowpoisedwithin.90milesofU.
S. territory. The action was a
formal declaration by the
Agriculture Department of a
fact which had been publicly
announced weeks ago ~ that
African swine fever has made
its first Western Henusphere
appearance by invading Cuba.
Formal posting of Cuba on the
list of swine fever countries
means there is now a ban on
entry of pork and pork prO!iucts
from Cuba. There are no
comm~rcial imports of such
Cuban products, officials said,
but the b8n will enable port
agents to enforce safeguards on
ships reaching the Uiuted States
after visiting Cuban ports.
African swine fever is classed
by experts as "potentially the
most dangerous and destructive
of all communicable swine
diseases."
When swine fever strikes a.
hog herd, one spokesman said,
it kills almost all the animals it
touches. The few t.lujt survive
become carriers.
The only effective way to
combat the virus ailment, the
spokesman added, is to
slaughter all infected and exposed animals .
LOS ANGELES - A young
member of Charles Manson's
"family" not only admitted
decapitating a movie sluntman
in 1969 but said he fell "groovy"
when the head went "bloop,
bloop, bloop" as it rolled away,
the prosecution charged
Tuesday.

North

East

Pass

2•

Pass

You, South, hold:

.AKB .Al065 tK94 ""KQ2
What do you do now?
three no-trump. For-

' A~Bid

get about slain 'but be SUre tb

SE~VICE

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding two clubs
your Partner has jumped to
Lwo no-trump in response to
your one club. What do you do
now?

.

Pll1sburgh
Chicago
New York
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal

4x8
SHEET

' I

I

' i'

9·5'

...

46 .526 7
41 47 .500 9V.
o11 51 .oilS 11
45 53 .459 13'1&gt;

~

I

~

f&gt; I

'

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MATERIALS CO.

Robinson's Cleaners

We Dllilw

216 E. 2nd, Po!merov

MGII
--

A-1 BLEACH
gallon
on~

RACINE Tomato Juice . ~~~~:~:.......... 3
$}
Cake
FOOD
Stokely Corn .~;!~~;r~~~~ . . 5 ~:~s $1
MARKET Tomatoes .. ~:.~~~.~:~. ~~.~~i~~ 4~:~th s15
5th and·PEARL STS., RAciNE White Eggs.~:.~:~. ~i·z·~
'The Store With A Heart,
Folger's Coffee
You, WE liKE" .
oz.
Right reserved to limit quantities
N
I
d
.
oo
es
~~~~~~ .....
Ronco
Accept
Peanut Butter~:~~. ~~.~ ..... i:roz. 89~
Prices Effective July 21-27
Mon. Tues., Wed.;- -9 to. 7
Hi-Ho Crackers.~~~.:~::~....... ~~- 39~
Thurs., Fri.,
g to 9
39~
Margarine.~~~:~
..
~~~~~:
........
.
.
.
Q.OS£0 SUNDAYS

'

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19~

·SUPERIORS

Semi-Boneless· Hams

bxs.

for

••

••

HaKor
Whole

••

lb.

..........

.

iloz.

All Grinds

3 lb.

••••••••••••••••• can
Homemade

We Glad~

pkg.

Fed. Food Stam~

LUNCHEON MEAT

12

Sat ___

l-Ib. ..

2
Bakery
Special

pkg.

wt IIIC!!t. lbe Mlddleprl
Braves IICOl"ed ....-tlm8e In
the second inning, then went on
to nip ~ter, 3-~. Dannport
was credited .with the win.
Smith and Eichinger lwrled for
the losers. Smith, Thomas,
Owen, and Hovatter each bad
ufetles lor tbe Braves.
Eichinger, Morrlaon, Smith and
Nelson bit aafely for the losers.
The New Haven Reds lallled
three big runs in the first, then
went on Ill ouat People's Bank of
Pt. Pleasant, 4-1. Russell was
credited witb the win. M. Miller
WBB charged with the IO&amp;S.
Colhw", Thwnpson, Smith, eacb
bad base hila for 'the wlmers.
Scott had two hila. Fw- the
!OIIers, Fisher had two bits, A.
Miller and M. Miller ooe eacb.

CIIO.fllllll.'lll50117-27-71

I, ,. Without Coupon, 1.59

-This-coupon
- redeemable
- - -only-at.Racine Food Market

EACH

-

•
'I

119

*

retire A11m.
couldn't be faulted. Neither plate In the seventh inning,
"I've blmd a lot about bow could the relief job turned in
Woody WOodward doubled
good a fielder IJoNiie Shantz by Clay Carroll, who prevented home Helms with the fourlh
11115," aid Rms MBMgl!l" the Los Angeles Dodg..-s from run of the inning and one oot
Sparty Ander.m, "bul when it se&lt;ring while pitching up his later Rose dropped a pop Hy

·

Two Middleport summer baskets by Tony Vaughan and
ba*elbaD leape games were Jerry Hubbard. The Shockers
playal Wider the ligllts at the called time 1!1 adjust to the
JC.,tdlrprl Park Mtmday, the situation which (Mil Dunfee on
vasllyiiJ+iovedMolph'sDairy Vaughan which worked to
Valley tnomng tfi 11Je.Daily perfection. The Sentinel Shut
Sentinels.Gand the first place the Stars out for the rest of the
Ohio Valley Dnagllbofs ewer- quarter, reeling off II slraight
]MMI!ring the Marl V !IDcb IIi&gt;- points to get their first lead of
57.
the game at 411-46.
In the first game, Adolpb's The Shockers kept up the
Stars blt!'w a hig lead to The pressure beginning the fourth
Sentinel Sh•twdut. rallied in quarter as Bailey and Dunfee
the final milltles Ill pull out still were hot with two minutes
tbeir vidary.
gone in the fmal period, the
The Stars bnh tJDt to a 26.7 Shockers bad their biggest lead,
advantage after eight minutes, 53-411.
most of tile early baskets But from then on it was all
CIDiingfnmtallTonyV•~n Adolph's as Hubbard and Andy
wbo contiauaDy tkvve in past Vaughan began bitting difficult
The Sentinel tleltiwltas fill" easy shots from in close. Tbe
shots.
Shockers last chance came with
In the wuw1 quarter the a minute to go, and down only
lihot:hn began tbe long haul two. The Shockers gave
bad&lt; as Slewe llldee and Rid! Adolph's Rick Ash a long outBailey lwned Ill tbeir hot side Shot that swished through
IPncls At lb. end of the period to end all Sentinel hopes.
Molpb's lead was down Ill 12 at
•. : .
.
:K-ZZ.
Dunfee was the · game's
The wwd half began as if leading scorer with 24 points.
theStarswa-egoingtoblowthe Ricb Bailey had II, big l..rTy
lihot:hn down fill" good as they Harmon 4, Doxie Walters 21,
strelcbed !heir lead to 16 on and Fred Burney 2.

."' •_•.uc
,. aDthe '...u..n-"
-ee.- "-uuw.
Jam N"rllus to U.S. and
British 0pe11 c1prqJinn Lee
Tmintl.
1mrino, u.. boUest golfer on
the circuit ri&amp;bt DOW, must
figurr as the fa'IGri~t is if
be can 1en........, to ..t his
alarm doct so· tbat be won't
miss llis t.!Hif time.
Last :rear Trevino was
olisqnalifinl wben be failed to
~ up fill" aa arty mwning
start. Trevino, lmo.,ulmost as
mudl fiJI" llis
c:b of a good
time as fill" his OOqmjng dmes
clown the
dajrMI be
ow a slept.

top of his game over the&amp;••
yard, par 72 course.

mnr.:v.

Nicklaus' game is well suited
to the Weslcbester CounlrJ
aub course. Nicklaus Is ooe Ill
the game's longest hitters ud
the course features four •
yard plus par five boles wbicb
have been strong birdie boll!l
for Jack in lbe past.
The final two rounds of the
toornameol on Saturday and
Sunday will be televise&lt;\ by the
Hugbes Sports Network, and in
the event of a tie for first place
at the end of 72 boles a suddendeath playoff will be held.
A Pro-Am will tick off the
toornameot today with 5I
professionals and 161 amateur&amp;
cunpeting.
The defending champion Ia
Australia's Bruce Crampton.

Your choice $299

·20 cl

OOLZIIIAN STAYS
NEW YORK (UPI)-Ailing
New. York KnicU coach and
generaf manager Red HolZ!IIlln
will continue his dual role with
the club.
Holzman has been recovering
from a May 16 auto accldent
which Jlllt him in the bolpltal
for lour dllys. The team's
announcement Tueeday dispelled reports he would give up
his double reaponslbllllies because of his injuries.
Holzman be&lt;:ame coach In ·
198'1 and led the· KnictB to their
first NBA cbampiiJIIIIhlp two
seasons later. He got his second
.job In Marcb 19'10 when he
succeeded Eddie Dooovan u
general manager.

HOLSUM REG. 6!r

FAIRMONT

.

BUTTERMILK
. -

- ..,_

%GAL CA!m)N

California

PLUMS
,. •o:' 49~

Eastern

.49~
"

Sh~

White

POTATOES
10 IIJ.
bag

....
.."
~

".,'"

•

·-"''
M

~·

. The African republic
Tanzania was formed
April, 1184, by the Joining
Tanganyika and Zanzibar.

42 51
35 57

.452 16
.380 12'' '

32 ,61 .344 26

Tuesda y's Results
Syracuse 3 Winnipeg 2 (l.s t. 7
inn ings &gt;

Syracuse 8 Winn ipe g I (2nd, 7

innings )
"'!'"idewater 2 Rochester 1 t l st ,
7 innings }
Tidewater 2 Rochester 1 (2 nd
7 in ninQS )
Toledo J Char leston 1
Louisville 10 Richmond 7

time.

tinue to run 1-2 In the scoring
race with Dunfee and Bailey
follooring closely.

Morris, held to 8 In the first
half, began to get the ball inside
more in the second half as Jim
Boggs and Ron Ferguson fed
expertly. The Bucks attempted
to come back behind the
Shooting ol Jeff Tyo but the
Doughboys slapped a triple
team defense on him and the
Shook-&lt;IP Bu&lt;:ks failed to adjust.
With their lead al211 late in the
third quarter the Doughboys
began to take long passes off the
deferLSive and broke loose for
easy baskets.
The game was probably the

AnENTION: ·

SMALL CAR OWNERS

GOODfiEAR "POWER

cellar.
Morris and Ferguson con-

$20

PITCHER REACTIVATED

~r.~~·~·"

Plus S1.96
or S2.01
Fed. Ex.
FREE SETUP Tax
White Walls Only $2.50 more

Pl'ITSBURGH (UPl )-Pilcher Frank Reherger was reactivated by the San Francisco
Giants. Tuesday and Steve Slone
was optioned to Phoenix of the
Pacific Coast League.
?.;o&lt;: ,-.., ·• ...,
Reberger has been on the
disabled list since June 23 with
a smashed right index finger.
700 E . Main
Stone, &gt;9, was a no. 3 starter
most of the season.

RIZER OIL CO., INC.
992-2101

Pomeroy ·

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SUMMER

PRICES START TODAY
THRU JULY 24th
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

129 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
CLEARANCE SAI.E
Ladies Summer

DRESSES
Values

$

To

CLEARANCE SALE
Girls Assorted

SKOOTER
SKIRTS

CLEARANCE SALE
LADIES

·

Popular Styles \ \ } .

: s 00

00

'1.99

PANT
DRESSES
\
Various Colors

'~·,

Sizes

$

88

S.M-l

EAOI

7-14

PAD&amp;
COVER
SET

20 cu. ft. Chest Freezer

WIENERS

99~

AGELESS ATHLETES
Four of the top W money
winners on the pro golf tour
this year are 40 or older and
of 13 leading players by scoring average. seven won 't see
39 again. Julius Boros is the
oldest of the gr oup at 51. But
Ben Hogan and Sam Snead .
both 59, are still ac live. too.

l1111ing Board

• Adjustable temperature

pkg.

Louisville

Toledo
Winnipeg

Bakers· finesl de!ens1ve perf~ as they shot down the
leagu&lt;&gt;"s hottest team of lale.
The "inners pul four men in
double figures, headed by
Morris's 28, Stick Mick Childs
had 19, Tom Cooke and lhe . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
sugarman,
Sweet
Ron
Ferguson, each had 16; Jim
Boggs :; and Floyd Burney 4.
Tyo led the losers with 23,
BiUy Vaughan had 10, Deacon
Boggs 9. Mark Werry 7 and Bill
Chaney and Bear Sayre each 4.
The win stretched the Doughboys· lead to two full games
aver the Shockers. Mark V is
third and Adolph's is in lhe

00

llandJe of $24&lt;1,252.

Ohio Valley Skeel·

Standings

Racine's quid: Jerry Hub:
bard led the way for the winners
as he pumped 18. "Tall Tony ..
had 17, Andy Vaughan lo. Rick
Ash 6, Rodney Gilkey 4 and
Billy Hensler bad 2. Hubbard
was cited for playing a fine
defensive and good floor game
and fo r the losers, Larry
Harmon did a great job
rebounding.
DOUGHBOYS WIN
In the second game the league
)j!ading OVB Doughboys kepi on
rolling, Irouncing the Marl&lt; V
Bucks bebind the Shooting of
talented Jeff Morris.
The Doughboys broke out to a
10 point lead in lbe firsl period
and increased it to 15 by half-

Assorted Styles

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pacer
Tsml Town, driven bY Phil
Siebold of West Jofferson, came
from fHth at the three-quarter
m.rt to win bY two lengths the
featured $1,500 eighth nee at
Scioto Downs Tuesday night.
The winner toured the mile
course in 2:08 and returned $12.
$'1.40 and f3.60. Dolly Widow, a
zt-1 choice, was second and paid
$20 and $8.10. 'lbird place
Rozzle Thorpe returned f3.20.
In the nlghUy double, Scotcb
Dar! won the first race and
Adios Flyer toot the secood,

game.
i. • • • •• •• • • •
"Those three hils.," said JohnSOFTBALL TOURNEY
ny, "make the wrisl feel a lol Rave
ood .11 h t sl
bette ."
nsw
w1
os a ow
Be~h's homer his 19th of pitch soltball U&gt;urnament for
.
.' . ·
. both men and women at the c1ty .
the season, was h1s first for the
rk on Jul 29 30 and Jl. First
Reds sm~e June 25.
pa ·
Y •.
''l f.1gur ed J ohnnys~·w
, ...... t was place
teams
he presented
.
. k t . will
b h d" ..
"ghl" I'd And
" ( J3 C e S 1n Ot
IVISIOnS.
aII " . ' h'tsa . balls
erson.
Proceeds WI"II go Iowar
. d .that
saw h1m 1 .11ve batt" oul o1 commune.1y ,s Ba b e Rulh
the park durmg
mg prac- League program. Bntry fee .IS
ti ..
';';~lms' IJlree RBI's gave him $25. For further information,
Jack Hendrecks, 27335 for ihe ..season, on1y .Tony conlacl
4122

Adolphs ', Doughboys Each Wm

the PGA tournament ,.. the
Brilisb Open but they will be
COOling out 'or the woodwwt
'l'lllrsday for the Wes' I 'er
Classic at the Westcbes'er
Country aub.
The reason fill" the big
in~t in this lourniiDleDt
111110ng the pros is simple. The
7Z-hole tourney carries 8 lint
place pr11e of $SO 000 and the
$250,000 overall
mooey
. • stillest CDJ¥1i.tion
"
mates it the ricbest tour- ~.auws
nament on the circuit
is apectetl to amr fnm
The tounwnent is Ell*" t.ed Nicllaus, wbo the first
• - in 1917 end
to attract a field of 150 golfers, Westcbeslti 0
wbo ai..,s RmlS to be at tbe

Prue

The Reds" all-slar caleher.
..-ho has been nursmg a sore
lefl niSI, was making h15 first
start behind lhe plate since
July 7.
Thai's excluding the AII.Siar

.

Perez, Lee May and Bench top · · •••••mm~~llft
him on the club.
Sulton's sacrifice, sandwiched
between singles by Bill Russell
and Mola in the sixth inning.
accoun ted for the Dodgers' run
off Gullett.
Inter nation al Lea gue
The Reds' Gary Nolan meels
Sta ndings
Sy
Unit
ed
Press lnternationa I
Doyle Alexander tonight and
W L Pel . GB
Jim McGlothlin will fa ce AI Syracuse
57 34 .6'1 6
58 :19 .598 2
Downing in Thursday night's Tidewater
51 4\ .559 6
Rochester
game which winds up lhe cur· Charle
ston
48 o12 .533 91,1
; rent homesland. '
R;chmood
48 47 .505 11

e

e

- ,..,.,.."""',N.Y.(UPI'
.......
~._,
,-•~
big ooe has arrind for the
rnemben of the tmring prore.
sional golfers cin:u)l
It doesn't carry the prestige
of the u.s. Open, the Maslin,

season and double

lbe

DPNMwl "
Gallelt, relriering the ball a walt.
three among five hils as the
quickly, llired to first base to However, Anderson'sstrategy Reds sent nine batters ID the

• Stores up to 700 lbs.

I· -

Mangoes
Cucumbers

RINSO

lb. can

to centerfield oH Jim
especially on those plays where preserving a 1-J. victory, the Brewer to se&lt;&gt;re Woody for the
he has to cover first, I d!ll't lOth of the season lor young Reds" fdth and final run ol the
inning.
see boW anyorie could be bel1er Gullett.
" I can grip a bat," said
than Gullett."
Tommy Helms delivered a
'"Gullett did everything to- key hi~ a three-run double, Helms pointing to a still swolnight," chimed in Pete ROse. during a fivH1111 seventh inning len right hand, '·but it hurts to
"He got a hit, fielded his posi- that cost Don Sutloo his nlnlh shake hands.''
Bench, who homered for the
tioo, won and even got his loss against nine victories.
managll!" booed."
A walk, a single by Johnny Reds first run or the game in
The booing came when An- Bench, and a bunt single by the fourth inning; singled for .
derson lifted the Reds' 2G.year- Ge&lt;rge Foster preceded Helms" his lhinl hit ol the game lo
old lefty in the ninth inning line shot over the head of Mola drive home pinch-runner Dave
COIICI'pcioo in the eighth lor the
after Manny Mota led off with In leflfield.
a single and W"dlie Darl5 drew
Helms' double was one of Reds' se\·enth and final run.

comes to fielding his position, lOth save of

producing a u combination
wfll"lh f68.60.
The u Quinella paid $161.40.
Attendance was 5,990 with a

Ciff House Canned
SPICED

for

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

.

R
h
T
Op
•
:!~u.e~=en~.will
IC
ou_t·ney
emng

With 15.00 or More Purchase
Phebe's Store. ..

one.

tactle the Vinton Dodgers, and

!""~

;;,

In the nightcap; . Bidwell
for 17 runs In the
aecond inning tD maul the
Gallipolis Athletics, ~ Theiss
was credited with the win.
Swann was cbarged with the
loss. King and SWIM bad the
losers only bits. McMillian had
three hila fiJI" the winners,
Minnis two, Pattenoo two,
Thellsooe, Paynetwoandllasb
e~ploded

aNCJNNA'l1 (UPI) -Wayoe
Gr\11 ger s•itht was the hardest
bUI he bas _ . hit at a
piidw.
11te "" i1••1i Bods' reiH!f
t..ter - re&amp;rrine to Ricbie
Allm's line sbot wbidl Don
Gallelt ... _..,.. down with his
gl!wed baatl itt lb. seveatb inDing Taetda:r nigbl
"Don aid the ball was right
at his lad," said Gnnger. " If
that bad been ..., pilcbing, I'd
still be )Jing ODl there oo the

wil

'-U·•·SPINb·
'·' , .
HOGG ·&amp;'·"m
.

Use·ou.-,Free Parking Lot

$}

:v....

West
W. L Pd. Gl

L. Pel. Gl

39 .598

:so 1:
.m

&gt;46
13....,
«1 55 ..01 19
31 S4 .413 19'h

Sl .400 25

Nine teams oot of the original
field of 36 were left today
followlng res11mption of play in
the 13th annual Kyger Creek
LitUe League Tournament
Tuesday night.
One game this evening-the
Middleport Indians va. the
Addaville Jets-will ~Mtermine
the 6nal quarterfinal berth.
Two quarterfinal games are
slated tonight following the 6
p.m., Indlans-Jela club. At
7:15, powt!rful McArthur

'·

46 oz.
cans

~

Oakland
S'l 34 .634 •••
Kansas City
48 -13 SO 10
California
46 52 .oM ISV.
Minnesota
.t! 51 .452 17
Chicago
41 52 .441 11
34 62 .354 23'12
Milwaukee
39
52 .429 19
TUIIItlay's Rosuns
Chlcaqo 4 NeW York '
PIH, 11 S.F. 1, night
\ uesdly's Results
Philo. 5 S.L. 1, night
8os 5 O.le. 4, night
All. 3 S.D. 1, night
N. Y. 6 Mlm. 5, night
One. 1 L.A 1, nlaht
Wash. 5 Mllw. 1. iht
Mtl 4 Hstn 3,
K. C. 1 Ball. 1, ni ·
10 Inn.• night Calif. 2 Del. 0, nlg
TotlaJ's l'nllllllle Pitchers
()a~. 6 Clev. 3, nlaht
New York {Williams 3-3 or
Gentry 7-8) at Chicago (Hands
Tod.llf's ........,ble Pitdoers
9-10).
Mlmesoia
I Kaat ._., at Nft
San Francisco (Marlchal1~l
at Pifuburgh (Johnson HI, YorldKIIne 11-1) .
Chicago ( Horlen 4-7) at
Night.
Boston
f Lonbora 4-3), Night.
Philadelphia {Short 6-lll at
. (Pattin 1-lO
St. Louis (Cleveland 11-8), Night. at Milwaukee
Washington (Broberg 1·3),
San Diego (Arlin 4-13 and
Norman 0-5) at Atlanta (Niekro Night.
Baltimore {Palmer 11-5) al
10-8 and Jarvis 2-9), 2, Twl· Kansas
City {Fitzmorris 1-ll,
Night.
Night.
[os Angeles {Alexander 1-21
Detroit {Coleman 9-&lt;1 and
at Cincinnati {Nolan 7-10),
Gilbreth 2-11 at California
Night.
Montreal {Renko 11-10) at (Wright 9-1 and Murphy 5-11),
Twi·Night .
Houston !Billingham 5. 8), 2, Cleveland
(Paul 1.0) at
Night.
Oakland
{Dobson 8-0l. Night.
Thu...-y's~mes
S. F. at Pifuburgh
Thursday's GlmK
N.Y. at Chicago
Minn. at New Vorl&lt;
Philo. at S.L. night
Chicago at Boston
S.D. at All. night
Mllw. at Wash., Night
L.A. at Cine., night
Ball. at K.C., Night
Mil at Hous., night

Houston
Atlanta
CinCinnati
San Diego .

STYLE BOARD~

In At 9-0ut At 5

A

5I 35 .61•

Baltimore
Boston
Ootrolt
NewY«k
If# &gt;46 .516 14
Cleveland
42 54 ..tJI 21'h ·Washington ·

Nine Teams Still
In :Running At KC

.

DOLLAR

L Pet. 01

63 32 .663 •.•
51 -13 .s.3 llV.
oil" .522 13'h

38
West
Sa .
W.
n Francisco 58
Los Angeles
51

.•

Get Our

Nllllanal ........ .
Ealt
W. L. Pd. Gl

•

SHIRT
FINISHING

reach game.

..

ly lon.lllcl Pnu lnt.niietilnit

Creamo go11.1 design. Ideal · ~or
bathroom and . kitchen walls.
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.
•

Reds Rip LA, 7-1

filed its first case today

Dudley's Florist .

WEATHER REPORT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Persons engaging in cloud
seeding or other rainmaking
activities would have to report
their plans to the Commerce
Department before acting
under a bill approved by the
House Commerce Committee.

•.·· ·.S·AME .DA':f. .,, .. ,

(FTC)

f'l1C

·tSouth
"" . .- - - - - - -

'

Federal Trade Commi'ssion

Deputy Di.strJct . Attorqey fixing by _bll,! ~Mpar~t ~~
Bur)on Katz made the ac- . .at Shoppmg centers. .~
cusatlon · in • his opening spokesman · said the ..pracyre
statemeni at the trial of Steve COllis ·consumers :lnliUons of
Grogan,20, for the murder of dollars by eliminating price
Donald "shorty" Shea, a part- competition at many. Shopp~
time cowboy actor whose body centers throughoot the nation;
has never been found.
It is done; the spoll:e5J118i1
VIENNA - THE Kremlin said, by big department sl«eii
sees no merit in American agreeing to··· lease' shopping
Congressional suggestions of a center space only in return for
summit conference before the power ·to .approve or
President Nixon goes to China, .disap~rove other prospeetive
Communist sources said today. tenants. The !large storea -lhen
·American Senators, Including screen out d~ount ,torea;·tlle
1968 Democratic Presidential spokesman said~ '"!'hi$ · allows
nominee Hubert H. Hump~y, them · to maintain higher
had suggested that Nixon meet prices,'! he added. "The conwith Soviet Premier Alexei N. sumer's choice is cut back
Kosygin before his Peking trip. considerably."
There had been suggestions
here lhat . the two men could • - - - - • - - -. .
meet if and when the first
Welcome
Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks (SALT) treaty is signed.
Mother &amp; Ba~y
But the sources, without
With ·
ruling out a change of mind,
said Soviei leaders were surprised and irritated at !lie
ina
announcement of the China trip
Novelty Container
and suspicious that Nixon might
be carrying on a "two-faced"
foreign policy aimed at wooing
both Russia and its Communist s e r v in g, G1 I I i polIs,
neighbors.
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0., &amp;
WASHINGTON THE ,;;.Ma;.so;;;;.n.,;Co;;,;;,·•,;W;;_. .iViii•·;..,-..,.1

The bidding has been:

West

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Printed Patterns

ladies &amp; Girls

LADIES

SUMMER
SHOES

U5y To Use

• 2 sliding baskets,
wrtical divider

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PLAY
BALLS
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Sizes 7·14 Girls

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22" I 44" Velour

Girls Sizes

BATH• 'led,..._
TOWELS

SUMMER
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REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER witll
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KITCHEN

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7

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air

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2- The DailY Stnlinel. ~y. o.. Julv21.1m

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

Washington
R enort
By ~arence
:t'
Miller

On the heels of the visit of the
ping-pong players came the
announcement that the U. S.
team had, in tum, offered to
host the Otinese players on a
tour of the United States
sometime in the future .
Following this, President
Nixon, who has long endeavored
to thaw the two decades Of
diplomatic contempt and
suspicion between the. Cbinese
and Western ·powers, an-

Last week, in a brief but
dramatic address to the nation,
President Nixon announced that
be will visit witfl the leaders of
Mainland China before May,
1972. The invitation · was ex·
tended to the Chief Executive
bY Premier Chou En-lai through
the President's assistant for
national security affairs, Henry
Kissinger. No one, outside of an
extremely small group of
assistants close to t~e
President, knew of the announcement prior to disclosure.
The pending visit by the
President was announced
simultaneously In Pelting. News
of the up-coming journey is the
latest of a number of
noteworthy events which have
slowly but impressively begun
to shift U.S.-Chinese relations.
Flr.&gt;t was the much.publicized
ping.pung tournament travels
of the U. S. table tennis team.
The visit of these Americans to
Mainland China marked the
first time ~ce 1949- when the
Communists assuined power in
Peking - that Americans were
permitted behind the silent,
mysterious Great Wall isolating
the People's Republic of China
: from the world outside.

w.·

e ght
re·
Overnl
' .
' . ~~:~~~ha:~!~~sal: ~;

nounced that a trade ·ban On mis\rust . and the ever- that ~dent Nixon accepted
certain · non-slrategic goods present 'threat of nuclear the invitation to visit Red China.
.would be lifted and that the u.s. confrontation. The world is And it is with the hope of
would seek to encour11ge an more crowded now and the old replacing decades of inexchange of various items~ The· expression that Mother Earth Is ternational hostility with a
first goods from China to arrive getting smaller has.never been .fresh, Invigorating atmoSphere
on Ameri~an soil were uncrated truer. In these times when we of harmony and open dialogue
in California only recently. The are .. virtually elbow' to elbow that the President told the world
campaign for better relati(IIIS with neighbors of different that he wiU, indeed, travel to the
has also included permilting colors, creeds and cultures, we Asian mainland within the next
one!Hlxcluded U. S. newsmen cannot close ourselves off from 10 months.
into China for a first hand look interlocking situations ~bich His intenti(IIIS are not to
at the lifestyle of the world's affect the very course of .renege on promises to allies or
most populated nation.
modern history. Just as we · open a diplomatic gulf between
Now, the President himself is cannot ignore the obvious the . U. S. and her historical
going to China. I. applaud the differences between the peoples partners. The President has
President and wiU wait, with and places of this shrinking placed a priority of peace and
great anticipation for the globe, we must likewise reconciliation on the overtures
'results of his venture.
vigorously search out and toward~ainland Chiila and his
I think it ill important to nurture the ideals common dedication to attaining those
underscore the President's among men of good will _: stated goals has become all the
reasoning. in taking this paramount aniong them being m?"e obvio_us with ~los~ of
initiative. Like it or not, we live the desire for world peace.
~IS latest 1tem of mternallonal
in a lime of turmoil, It was in this spirit of peace mteresl.

· By UPI

Rate Increase Expected Soon By Bell
By JOHN T. KADY
Ualted PresslDtematloDal
The new contract with the
Communications Workers of

::::sl:":!~ce~=

PT, PLEASANT ·
LIVES'l'OCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Salurday, Jaly 17, 1971
ROGS-175 to 220 20 to 21.70;
Heaviea 18 to 21.30; Lights 16.50
to II; Fat Sows 15 to 16.10;
Boars 11.70 to 14.80; Pigs 5.25 to
11; Stock Shoats Byljd.12 to 17.
CAnLE - Steers 21.85 to
25.60; Heifers 18.25 to 24.85; Fat
Cows 18 to 19; Canners 11 to
17.75; Bulls 20.85 to 28.90; Stock
Cows and Calves 137.50 to 220;
." StoctSteers27.10to30.75; Stock
. . Heifers 20 to 27.50; Stock Steer
• Calves 26.25 to 30.85; Stock
• • Heifer Calves 28 to 29.
VEAL CALVFii - Tops 38;
Secmds 34.90; Medium 33 to
33.50; Commob &amp; Heavies 30.50
to 36.50.

...

OLD TEAMMATES
Pete Role of tile CIK!nnatl

Red1 ud Ed Brlatmaa of
tile Detrell Tiien were
lellmmalel at Wnlera Hllla
Hlp Sebocpl Ia Clllclnnatl.

"sometime soon," a company
spokesman said Tuesday.
The unidentified spokesman
said first the company would
"take a very close look" at thi
new pact.
"Inflation has bit us hard and
unlike other companies we can't
just raise rates armtrarily," he
said. "We have to appeal to the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio and obtain its approval."
New contract between the
CWAand the Bell Telphone Systerns calls for a 30 per cent increase in pay and fringe benefits over a ~year period.
"! am sure our management
is taking a very close look now
to how our earnings will be af.
fected and as.we stated in our
recent annual report several
months ago, our earnings were

already&amp;dverselyaffectedbyin- - -- -- - - - - -- - -- - - - Dation," the spokesman said.
"So, all in all, our management WIN AT BRIDGE
could decide application for a

==,....=:-=:====-

=

·:?crease would be neces-

The strike · by 25,000 CWA
members in Ohio cost the Buckeye state economy nearly ··$4
million in lost payrolls.
If the week-long strike had
lasted longer, it would have got.
len worse for the striking employes because the CWA does
not have a strike lund, such as
other unions.
The CWli. has a national "defense fund" which is used to
help some strikers, but only if
they really need the.money.
"We give II out on a hardship
basis, a need basis," said jerry Chevalier, president of Columbus CWA Local4320. He said
he was "not at Uberty to reveal how much money was in
the defense fund."

Search for the 1Oth Trick
NORTH

that there is nothing he can
do.
If he leads his six of
trumps, dummy's nine will
hold the trick and South will
have that extra entry to
dummy. South will abandon
diamonds and simply ruff a
club, enter dummy with the
trump ace, ruff another club,

%1

(D)

.A94

.AJ3
• 85
.AI0974
WEST

EAST

.1062
.Q!074
.KJ9

.7
.K982
tA1063
.Q862

• J53
SOUTH

America's top exptrtJ explain tlleir
tournament-winning techniques ill a
new I21-pogo boak on J A C 0 8 Y
MODERN. Far pour copy sf11t Sl
witlt your name, oddress a'i1tJ zip
cod• to : 'Win at Bridge," (c/o this
newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.

.KQJ85J
.65
tQ742

.K

None vulnerable
West North Eost South
1•
Pass I .
Pass 2•
Pass '"'
Pass - Pass
Pass
Opening

1

lead-· 2

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby

South can count nine winThe Daily Sentilel ners
with no trouble. Where
DEVOTED TO THE
is the loth to come from? If
INTEREST OF
he
has time, he can lead diaMEIGS-MASON AREA
monds and· eventually ruff a
CHESTER L. TANNEHIL~.
Exec. Ed.
diamond in dummy. Without
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
a
trump lead, he would have
City Editor
had
time. If trumps are 2-2,
Published daily except
GOOD RELATIONS
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
he
will
get that ruff in, but
WASH.fNGTON (UP!)
Publishing Company, 111
South
has
a feeling trumps
William D. Ructelshaus, ad- Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, will break 3-1.
45769. 86siness Office Phone
mlnlstrator of the En-. 992-2156.
Ed i torial Phone 992Where else can he get that
vironmental Protection 2157.
loth
trick? Dummy has five
Second class postage paid at
Agency, describes his relations Pomeroy, Ohio .
clubs. Can he set up dumNational advertising
with the White House as very
my's fifth club? If clubs
representative
Bottinelli - break 4-3 and he can get to
good liJid· "I've never seen Gallagher, Inc .. 12 East 42nd
anythi!lg in what the President St., New York City , New York . dummy three times, everySubscript ion rates : De thing will work out nicely,
has sard or done that indicates livered
by carrier where
but there are on\y two sure
anything but full support for available SO cents per week; entries. South decides to give
By Motor Route where carrier
what we're doing." Ruck- service
himself every chance.
not available : One
elshaus made the com- month 51 .75. By mail in Ohio
He wins the trump lead
W. Va .• One year SU .OO.
mentTuesdaywben aSked if the and
with the eight, cashes his
Six months $7 .25 . Three.
President backed tough an- months $4 .50 . Subscription j king of clubs and plays a
P~"ice includes Sunday Times low diamond. West Is on lead
tipollution enforcement.
Sentinel .
with the nine-spot and finds

enter dummy with the heart
ace and discard two of his
four remaining losers on the
ace and 10 of clubs.
If West decides to lead a
heart, South wins immediately in dummy and plays a
second diamond. Now he is
able to ruff a diamond and
get his loth trick that way.
(N£WSP.P£R £NT£lPRISE ASSN.I

WASHINGTON - Governmentofficials have announced a
new step to help protect the
nation's hogs against invasion
by a devasiating foreign disease
nowpoisedwithin.90milesofU.
S. territory. The action was a
formal declaration by the
Agriculture Department of a
fact which had been publicly
announced weeks ago ~ that
African swine fever has made
its first Western Henusphere
appearance by invading Cuba.
Formal posting of Cuba on the
list of swine fever countries
means there is now a ban on
entry of pork and pork prO!iucts
from Cuba. There are no
comm~rcial imports of such
Cuban products, officials said,
but the b8n will enable port
agents to enforce safeguards on
ships reaching the Uiuted States
after visiting Cuban ports.
African swine fever is classed
by experts as "potentially the
most dangerous and destructive
of all communicable swine
diseases."
When swine fever strikes a.
hog herd, one spokesman said,
it kills almost all the animals it
touches. The few t.lujt survive
become carriers.
The only effective way to
combat the virus ailment, the
spokesman added, is to
slaughter all infected and exposed animals .
LOS ANGELES - A young
member of Charles Manson's
"family" not only admitted
decapitating a movie sluntman
in 1969 but said he fell "groovy"
when the head went "bloop,
bloop, bloop" as it rolled away,
the prosecution charged
Tuesday.

North

East

Pass

2•

Pass

You, South, hold:

.AKB .Al065 tK94 ""KQ2
What do you do now?
three no-trump. For-

' A~Bid

get about slain 'but be SUre tb

SE~VICE

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding two clubs
your Partner has jumped to
Lwo no-trump in response to
your one club. What do you do
now?

.

Pll1sburgh
Chicago
New York
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal

4x8
SHEET

' I

I

' i'

9·5'

...

46 .526 7
41 47 .500 9V.
o11 51 .oilS 11
45 53 .459 13'1&gt;

~

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~

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'

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MATERIALS CO.

Robinson's Cleaners

We Dllilw

216 E. 2nd, Po!merov

MGII
--

A-1 BLEACH
gallon
on~

RACINE Tomato Juice . ~~~~:~:.......... 3
$}
Cake
FOOD
Stokely Corn .~;!~~;r~~~~ . . 5 ~:~s $1
MARKET Tomatoes .. ~:.~~~.~:~. ~~.~~i~~ 4~:~th s15
5th and·PEARL STS., RAciNE White Eggs.~:.~:~. ~i·z·~
'The Store With A Heart,
Folger's Coffee
You, WE liKE" .
oz.
Right reserved to limit quantities
N
I
d
.
oo
es
~~~~~~ .....
Ronco
Accept
Peanut Butter~:~~. ~~.~ ..... i:roz. 89~
Prices Effective July 21-27
Mon. Tues., Wed.;- -9 to. 7
Hi-Ho Crackers.~~~.:~::~....... ~~- 39~
Thurs., Fri.,
g to 9
39~
Margarine.~~~:~
..
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........
.
.
.
Q.OS£0 SUNDAYS

'

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19~

·SUPERIORS

Semi-Boneless· Hams

bxs.

for

••

••

HaKor
Whole

••

lb.

..........

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iloz.

All Grinds

3 lb.

••••••••••••••••• can
Homemade

We Glad~

pkg.

Fed. Food Stam~

LUNCHEON MEAT

12

Sat ___

l-Ib. ..

2
Bakery
Special

pkg.

wt IIIC!!t. lbe Mlddleprl
Braves IICOl"ed ....-tlm8e In
the second inning, then went on
to nip ~ter, 3-~. Dannport
was credited .with the win.
Smith and Eichinger lwrled for
the losers. Smith, Thomas,
Owen, and Hovatter each bad
ufetles lor tbe Braves.
Eichinger, Morrlaon, Smith and
Nelson bit aafely for the losers.
The New Haven Reds lallled
three big runs in the first, then
went on Ill ouat People's Bank of
Pt. Pleasant, 4-1. Russell was
credited witb the win. M. Miller
WBB charged with the IO&amp;S.
Colhw", Thwnpson, Smith, eacb
bad base hila for 'the wlmers.
Scott had two hila. Fw- the
!OIIers, Fisher had two bits, A.
Miller and M. Miller ooe eacb.

CIIO.fllllll.'lll50117-27-71

I, ,. Without Coupon, 1.59

-This-coupon
- redeemable
- - -only-at.Racine Food Market

EACH

-

•
'I

119

*

retire A11m.
couldn't be faulted. Neither plate In the seventh inning,
"I've blmd a lot about bow could the relief job turned in
Woody WOodward doubled
good a fielder IJoNiie Shantz by Clay Carroll, who prevented home Helms with the fourlh
11115," aid Rms MBMgl!l" the Los Angeles Dodg..-s from run of the inning and one oot
Sparty Ander.m, "bul when it se&lt;ring while pitching up his later Rose dropped a pop Hy

·

Two Middleport summer baskets by Tony Vaughan and
ba*elbaD leape games were Jerry Hubbard. The Shockers
playal Wider the ligllts at the called time 1!1 adjust to the
JC.,tdlrprl Park Mtmday, the situation which (Mil Dunfee on
vasllyiiJ+iovedMolph'sDairy Vaughan which worked to
Valley tnomng tfi 11Je.Daily perfection. The Sentinel Shut
Sentinels.Gand the first place the Stars out for the rest of the
Ohio Valley Dnagllbofs ewer- quarter, reeling off II slraight
]MMI!ring the Marl V !IDcb IIi&gt;- points to get their first lead of
57.
the game at 411-46.
In the first game, Adolpb's The Shockers kept up the
Stars blt!'w a hig lead to The pressure beginning the fourth
Sentinel Sh•twdut. rallied in quarter as Bailey and Dunfee
the final milltles Ill pull out still were hot with two minutes
tbeir vidary.
gone in the fmal period, the
The Stars bnh tJDt to a 26.7 Shockers bad their biggest lead,
advantage after eight minutes, 53-411.
most of tile early baskets But from then on it was all
CIDiingfnmtallTonyV•~n Adolph's as Hubbard and Andy
wbo contiauaDy tkvve in past Vaughan began bitting difficult
The Sentinel tleltiwltas fill" easy shots from in close. Tbe
shots.
Shockers last chance came with
In the wuw1 quarter the a minute to go, and down only
lihot:hn began tbe long haul two. The Shockers gave
bad&lt; as Slewe llldee and Rid! Adolph's Rick Ash a long outBailey lwned Ill tbeir hot side Shot that swished through
IPncls At lb. end of the period to end all Sentinel hopes.
Molpb's lead was down Ill 12 at
•. : .
.
:K-ZZ.
Dunfee was the · game's
The wwd half began as if leading scorer with 24 points.
theStarswa-egoingtoblowthe Ricb Bailey had II, big l..rTy
lihot:hn down fill" good as they Harmon 4, Doxie Walters 21,
strelcbed !heir lead to 16 on and Fred Burney 2.

."' •_•.uc
,. aDthe '...u..n-"
-ee.- "-uuw.
Jam N"rllus to U.S. and
British 0pe11 c1prqJinn Lee
Tmintl.
1mrino, u.. boUest golfer on
the circuit ri&amp;bt DOW, must
figurr as the fa'IGri~t is if
be can 1en........, to ..t his
alarm doct so· tbat be won't
miss llis t.!Hif time.
Last :rear Trevino was
olisqnalifinl wben be failed to
~ up fill" aa arty mwning
start. Trevino, lmo.,ulmost as
mudl fiJI" llis
c:b of a good
time as fill" his OOqmjng dmes
clown the
dajrMI be
ow a slept.

top of his game over the&amp;••
yard, par 72 course.

mnr.:v.

Nicklaus' game is well suited
to the Weslcbester CounlrJ
aub course. Nicklaus Is ooe Ill
the game's longest hitters ud
the course features four •
yard plus par five boles wbicb
have been strong birdie boll!l
for Jack in lbe past.
The final two rounds of the
toornameol on Saturday and
Sunday will be televise&lt;\ by the
Hugbes Sports Network, and in
the event of a tie for first place
at the end of 72 boles a suddendeath playoff will be held.
A Pro-Am will tick off the
toornameot today with 5I
professionals and 161 amateur&amp;
cunpeting.
The defending champion Ia
Australia's Bruce Crampton.

Your choice $299

·20 cl

OOLZIIIAN STAYS
NEW YORK (UPI)-Ailing
New. York KnicU coach and
generaf manager Red HolZ!IIlln
will continue his dual role with
the club.
Holzman has been recovering
from a May 16 auto accldent
which Jlllt him in the bolpltal
for lour dllys. The team's
announcement Tueeday dispelled reports he would give up
his double reaponslbllllies because of his injuries.
Holzman be&lt;:ame coach In ·
198'1 and led the· KnictB to their
first NBA cbampiiJIIIIhlp two
seasons later. He got his second
.job In Marcb 19'10 when he
succeeded Eddie Dooovan u
general manager.

HOLSUM REG. 6!r

FAIRMONT

.

BUTTERMILK
. -

- ..,_

%GAL CA!m)N

California

PLUMS
,. •o:' 49~

Eastern

.49~
"

Sh~

White

POTATOES
10 IIJ.
bag

....
.."
~

".,'"

•

·-"''
M

~·

. The African republic
Tanzania was formed
April, 1184, by the Joining
Tanganyika and Zanzibar.

42 51
35 57

.452 16
.380 12'' '

32 ,61 .344 26

Tuesda y's Results
Syracuse 3 Winnipeg 2 (l.s t. 7
inn ings &gt;

Syracuse 8 Winn ipe g I (2nd, 7

innings )
"'!'"idewater 2 Rochester 1 t l st ,
7 innings }
Tidewater 2 Rochester 1 (2 nd
7 in ninQS )
Toledo J Char leston 1
Louisville 10 Richmond 7

time.

tinue to run 1-2 In the scoring
race with Dunfee and Bailey
follooring closely.

Morris, held to 8 In the first
half, began to get the ball inside
more in the second half as Jim
Boggs and Ron Ferguson fed
expertly. The Bucks attempted
to come back behind the
Shooting ol Jeff Tyo but the
Doughboys slapped a triple
team defense on him and the
Shook-&lt;IP Bu&lt;:ks failed to adjust.
With their lead al211 late in the
third quarter the Doughboys
began to take long passes off the
deferLSive and broke loose for
easy baskets.
The game was probably the

AnENTION: ·

SMALL CAR OWNERS

GOODfiEAR "POWER

cellar.
Morris and Ferguson con-

$20

PITCHER REACTIVATED

~r.~~·~·"

Plus S1.96
or S2.01
Fed. Ex.
FREE SETUP Tax
White Walls Only $2.50 more

Pl'ITSBURGH (UPl )-Pilcher Frank Reherger was reactivated by the San Francisco
Giants. Tuesday and Steve Slone
was optioned to Phoenix of the
Pacific Coast League.
?.;o&lt;: ,-.., ·• ...,
Reberger has been on the
disabled list since June 23 with
a smashed right index finger.
700 E . Main
Stone, &gt;9, was a no. 3 starter
most of the season.

RIZER OIL CO., INC.
992-2101

Pomeroy ·

r-------------------------------------...
OPEN 9-5 MON. lHRO lHURS.-9-3 FRIDAY-9-9 SATURDAY
'
SUMMER

PRICES START TODAY
THRU JULY 24th
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

129 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
CLEARANCE SAI.E
Ladies Summer

DRESSES
Values

$

To

CLEARANCE SALE
Girls Assorted

SKOOTER
SKIRTS

CLEARANCE SALE
LADIES

·

Popular Styles \ \ } .

: s 00

00

'1.99

PANT
DRESSES
\
Various Colors

'~·,

Sizes

$

88

S.M-l

EAOI

7-14

PAD&amp;
COVER
SET

20 cu. ft. Chest Freezer

WIENERS

99~

AGELESS ATHLETES
Four of the top W money
winners on the pro golf tour
this year are 40 or older and
of 13 leading players by scoring average. seven won 't see
39 again. Julius Boros is the
oldest of the gr oup at 51. But
Ben Hogan and Sam Snead .
both 59, are still ac live. too.

l1111ing Board

• Adjustable temperature

pkg.

Louisville

Toledo
Winnipeg

Bakers· finesl de!ens1ve perf~ as they shot down the
leagu&lt;&gt;"s hottest team of lale.
The "inners pul four men in
double figures, headed by
Morris's 28, Stick Mick Childs
had 19, Tom Cooke and lhe . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
sugarman,
Sweet
Ron
Ferguson, each had 16; Jim
Boggs :; and Floyd Burney 4.
Tyo led the losers with 23,
BiUy Vaughan had 10, Deacon
Boggs 9. Mark Werry 7 and Bill
Chaney and Bear Sayre each 4.
The win stretched the Doughboys· lead to two full games
aver the Shockers. Mark V is
third and Adolph's is in lhe

00

llandJe of $24&lt;1,252.

Ohio Valley Skeel·

Standings

Racine's quid: Jerry Hub:
bard led the way for the winners
as he pumped 18. "Tall Tony ..
had 17, Andy Vaughan lo. Rick
Ash 6, Rodney Gilkey 4 and
Billy Hensler bad 2. Hubbard
was cited for playing a fine
defensive and good floor game
and fo r the losers, Larry
Harmon did a great job
rebounding.
DOUGHBOYS WIN
In the second game the league
)j!ading OVB Doughboys kepi on
rolling, Irouncing the Marl&lt; V
Bucks bebind the Shooting of
talented Jeff Morris.
The Doughboys broke out to a
10 point lead in lbe firsl period
and increased it to 15 by half-

Assorted Styles

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pacer
Tsml Town, driven bY Phil
Siebold of West Jofferson, came
from fHth at the three-quarter
m.rt to win bY two lengths the
featured $1,500 eighth nee at
Scioto Downs Tuesday night.
The winner toured the mile
course in 2:08 and returned $12.
$'1.40 and f3.60. Dolly Widow, a
zt-1 choice, was second and paid
$20 and $8.10. 'lbird place
Rozzle Thorpe returned f3.20.
In the nlghUy double, Scotcb
Dar! won the first race and
Adios Flyer toot the secood,

game.
i. • • • •• •• • • •
"Those three hils.," said JohnSOFTBALL TOURNEY
ny, "make the wrisl feel a lol Rave
ood .11 h t sl
bette ."
nsw
w1
os a ow
Be~h's homer his 19th of pitch soltball U&gt;urnament for
.
.' . ·
. both men and women at the c1ty .
the season, was h1s first for the
rk on Jul 29 30 and Jl. First
Reds sm~e June 25.
pa ·
Y •.
''l f.1gur ed J ohnnys~·w
, ...... t was place
teams
he presented
.
. k t . will
b h d" ..
"ghl" I'd And
" ( J3 C e S 1n Ot
IVISIOnS.
aII " . ' h'tsa . balls
erson.
Proceeds WI"II go Iowar
. d .that
saw h1m 1 .11ve batt" oul o1 commune.1y ,s Ba b e Rulh
the park durmg
mg prac- League program. Bntry fee .IS
ti ..
';';~lms' IJlree RBI's gave him $25. For further information,
Jack Hendrecks, 27335 for ihe ..season, on1y .Tony conlacl
4122

Adolphs ', Doughboys Each Wm

the PGA tournament ,.. the
Brilisb Open but they will be
COOling out 'or the woodwwt
'l'lllrsday for the Wes' I 'er
Classic at the Westcbes'er
Country aub.
The reason fill" the big
in~t in this lourniiDleDt
111110ng the pros is simple. The
7Z-hole tourney carries 8 lint
place pr11e of $SO 000 and the
$250,000 overall
mooey
. • stillest CDJ¥1i.tion
"
mates it the ricbest tour- ~.auws
nament on the circuit
is apectetl to amr fnm
The tounwnent is Ell*" t.ed Nicllaus, wbo the first
• - in 1917 end
to attract a field of 150 golfers, Westcbeslti 0
wbo ai..,s RmlS to be at tbe

Prue

The Reds" all-slar caleher.
..-ho has been nursmg a sore
lefl niSI, was making h15 first
start behind lhe plate since
July 7.
Thai's excluding the AII.Siar

.

Perez, Lee May and Bench top · · •••••mm~~llft
him on the club.
Sulton's sacrifice, sandwiched
between singles by Bill Russell
and Mola in the sixth inning.
accoun ted for the Dodgers' run
off Gullett.
Inter nation al Lea gue
The Reds' Gary Nolan meels
Sta ndings
Sy
Unit
ed
Press lnternationa I
Doyle Alexander tonight and
W L Pel . GB
Jim McGlothlin will fa ce AI Syracuse
57 34 .6'1 6
58 :19 .598 2
Downing in Thursday night's Tidewater
51 4\ .559 6
Rochester
game which winds up lhe cur· Charle
ston
48 o12 .533 91,1
; rent homesland. '
R;chmood
48 47 .505 11

e

e

- ,..,.,.."""',N.Y.(UPI'
.......
~._,
,-•~
big ooe has arrind for the
rnemben of the tmring prore.
sional golfers cin:u)l
It doesn't carry the prestige
of the u.s. Open, the Maslin,

season and double

lbe

DPNMwl "
Gallelt, relriering the ball a walt.
three among five hils as the
quickly, llired to first base to However, Anderson'sstrategy Reds sent nine batters ID the

• Stores up to 700 lbs.

I· -

Mangoes
Cucumbers

RINSO

lb. can

to centerfield oH Jim
especially on those plays where preserving a 1-J. victory, the Brewer to se&lt;&gt;re Woody for the
he has to cover first, I d!ll't lOth of the season lor young Reds" fdth and final run ol the
inning.
see boW anyorie could be bel1er Gullett.
" I can grip a bat," said
than Gullett."
Tommy Helms delivered a
'"Gullett did everything to- key hi~ a three-run double, Helms pointing to a still swolnight," chimed in Pete ROse. during a fivH1111 seventh inning len right hand, '·but it hurts to
"He got a hit, fielded his posi- that cost Don Sutloo his nlnlh shake hands.''
Bench, who homered for the
tioo, won and even got his loss against nine victories.
managll!" booed."
A walk, a single by Johnny Reds first run or the game in
The booing came when An- Bench, and a bunt single by the fourth inning; singled for .
derson lifted the Reds' 2G.year- Ge&lt;rge Foster preceded Helms" his lhinl hit ol the game lo
old lefty in the ninth inning line shot over the head of Mola drive home pinch-runner Dave
COIICI'pcioo in the eighth lor the
after Manny Mota led off with In leflfield.
a single and W"dlie Darl5 drew
Helms' double was one of Reds' se\·enth and final run.

comes to fielding his position, lOth save of

producing a u combination
wfll"lh f68.60.
The u Quinella paid $161.40.
Attendance was 5,990 with a

Ciff House Canned
SPICED

for

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

.

R
h
T
Op
•
:!~u.e~=en~.will
IC
ou_t·ney
emng

With 15.00 or More Purchase
Phebe's Store. ..

one.

tactle the Vinton Dodgers, and

!""~

;;,

In the nightcap; . Bidwell
for 17 runs In the
aecond inning tD maul the
Gallipolis Athletics, ~ Theiss
was credited with the win.
Swann was cbarged with the
loss. King and SWIM bad the
losers only bits. McMillian had
three hila fiJI" the winners,
Minnis two, Pattenoo two,
Thellsooe, Paynetwoandllasb
e~ploded

aNCJNNA'l1 (UPI) -Wayoe
Gr\11 ger s•itht was the hardest
bUI he bas _ . hit at a
piidw.
11te "" i1••1i Bods' reiH!f
t..ter - re&amp;rrine to Ricbie
Allm's line sbot wbidl Don
Gallelt ... _..,.. down with his
gl!wed baatl itt lb. seveatb inDing Taetda:r nigbl
"Don aid the ball was right
at his lad," said Gnnger. " If
that bad been ..., pilcbing, I'd
still be )Jing ODl there oo the

wil

'-U·•·SPINb·
'·' , .
HOGG ·&amp;'·"m
.

Use·ou.-,Free Parking Lot

$}

:v....

West
W. L Pd. Gl

L. Pel. Gl

39 .598

:so 1:
.m

&gt;46
13....,
«1 55 ..01 19
31 S4 .413 19'h

Sl .400 25

Nine teams oot of the original
field of 36 were left today
followlng res11mption of play in
the 13th annual Kyger Creek
LitUe League Tournament
Tuesday night.
One game this evening-the
Middleport Indians va. the
Addaville Jets-will ~Mtermine
the 6nal quarterfinal berth.
Two quarterfinal games are
slated tonight following the 6
p.m., Indlans-Jela club. At
7:15, powt!rful McArthur

'·

46 oz.
cans

~

Oakland
S'l 34 .634 •••
Kansas City
48 -13 SO 10
California
46 52 .oM ISV.
Minnesota
.t! 51 .452 17
Chicago
41 52 .441 11
34 62 .354 23'12
Milwaukee
39
52 .429 19
TUIIItlay's Rosuns
Chlcaqo 4 NeW York '
PIH, 11 S.F. 1, night
\ uesdly's Results
Philo. 5 S.L. 1, night
8os 5 O.le. 4, night
All. 3 S.D. 1, night
N. Y. 6 Mlm. 5, night
One. 1 L.A 1, nlaht
Wash. 5 Mllw. 1. iht
Mtl 4 Hstn 3,
K. C. 1 Ball. 1, ni ·
10 Inn.• night Calif. 2 Del. 0, nlg
TotlaJ's l'nllllllle Pitchers
()a~. 6 Clev. 3, nlaht
New York {Williams 3-3 or
Gentry 7-8) at Chicago (Hands
Tod.llf's ........,ble Pitdoers
9-10).
Mlmesoia
I Kaat ._., at Nft
San Francisco (Marlchal1~l
at Pifuburgh (Johnson HI, YorldKIIne 11-1) .
Chicago ( Horlen 4-7) at
Night.
Boston
f Lonbora 4-3), Night.
Philadelphia {Short 6-lll at
. (Pattin 1-lO
St. Louis (Cleveland 11-8), Night. at Milwaukee
Washington (Broberg 1·3),
San Diego (Arlin 4-13 and
Norman 0-5) at Atlanta (Niekro Night.
Baltimore {Palmer 11-5) al
10-8 and Jarvis 2-9), 2, Twl· Kansas
City {Fitzmorris 1-ll,
Night.
Night.
[os Angeles {Alexander 1-21
Detroit {Coleman 9-&lt;1 and
at Cincinnati {Nolan 7-10),
Gilbreth 2-11 at California
Night.
Montreal {Renko 11-10) at (Wright 9-1 and Murphy 5-11),
Twi·Night .
Houston !Billingham 5. 8), 2, Cleveland
(Paul 1.0) at
Night.
Oakland
{Dobson 8-0l. Night.
Thu...-y's~mes
S. F. at Pifuburgh
Thursday's GlmK
N.Y. at Chicago
Minn. at New Vorl&lt;
Philo. at S.L. night
Chicago at Boston
S.D. at All. night
Mllw. at Wash., Night
L.A. at Cine., night
Ball. at K.C., Night
Mil at Hous., night

Houston
Atlanta
CinCinnati
San Diego .

STYLE BOARD~

In At 9-0ut At 5

A

5I 35 .61•

Baltimore
Boston
Ootrolt
NewY«k
If# &gt;46 .516 14
Cleveland
42 54 ..tJI 21'h ·Washington ·

Nine Teams Still
In :Running At KC

.

DOLLAR

L Pet. 01

63 32 .663 •.•
51 -13 .s.3 llV.
oil" .522 13'h

38
West
Sa .
W.
n Francisco 58
Los Angeles
51

.•

Get Our

Nllllanal ........ .
Ealt
W. L. Pd. Gl

•

SHIRT
FINISHING

reach game.

..

ly lon.lllcl Pnu lnt.niietilnit

Creamo go11.1 design. Ideal · ~or
bathroom and . kitchen walls.
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.
•

Reds Rip LA, 7-1

filed its first case today

Dudley's Florist .

WEATHER REPORT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Persons engaging in cloud
seeding or other rainmaking
activities would have to report
their plans to the Commerce
Department before acting
under a bill approved by the
House Commerce Committee.

•.·· ·.S·AME .DA':f. .,, .. ,

(FTC)

f'l1C

·tSouth
"" . .- - - - - - -

'

Federal Trade Commi'ssion

Deputy Di.strJct . Attorqey fixing by _bll,! ~Mpar~t ~~
Bur)on Katz made the ac- . .at Shoppmg centers. .~
cusatlon · in • his opening spokesman · said the ..pracyre
statemeni at the trial of Steve COllis ·consumers :lnliUons of
Grogan,20, for the murder of dollars by eliminating price
Donald "shorty" Shea, a part- competition at many. Shopp~
time cowboy actor whose body centers throughoot the nation;
has never been found.
It is done; the spoll:e5J118i1
VIENNA - THE Kremlin said, by big department sl«eii
sees no merit in American agreeing to··· lease' shopping
Congressional suggestions of a center space only in return for
summit conference before the power ·to .approve or
President Nixon goes to China, .disap~rove other prospeetive
Communist sources said today. tenants. The !large storea -lhen
·American Senators, Including screen out d~ount ,torea;·tlle
1968 Democratic Presidential spokesman said~ '"!'hi$ · allows
nominee Hubert H. Hump~y, them · to maintain higher
had suggested that Nixon meet prices,'! he added. "The conwith Soviet Premier Alexei N. sumer's choice is cut back
Kosygin before his Peking trip. considerably."
There had been suggestions
here lhat . the two men could • - - - - • - - -. .
meet if and when the first
Welcome
Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks (SALT) treaty is signed.
Mother &amp; Ba~y
But the sources, without
With ·
ruling out a change of mind,
said Soviei leaders were surprised and irritated at !lie
ina
announcement of the China trip
Novelty Container
and suspicious that Nixon might
be carrying on a "two-faced"
foreign policy aimed at wooing
both Russia and its Communist s e r v in g, G1 I I i polIs,
neighbors.
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0., &amp;
WASHINGTON THE ,;;.Ma;.so;;;;.n.,;Co;;,;;,·•,;W;;_. .iViii•·;..,-..,.1

The bidding has been:

West

'

Printed Patterns

ladies &amp; Girls

LADIES

SUMMER
SHOES

U5y To Use

• 2 sliding baskets,
wrtical divider

control
• "Pow-on" signal light

PLAY
BALLS
hl-6&amp;'

,. • Only 60" wide

NEY!Xl

CLEARANCE SALE
Sizes 7·14 Girls

CLEARANCE SALE

22" I 44" Velour

Girls Sizes

BATH• 'led,..._
TOWELS

SUMMER
DRESSES

GE 2-DOOR 14.7 cu. ft, NO-FROST

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER witll
giant 141-lb. Zero-degree N•Frost
freezer. Vegetable Bills. 4 Ref• igerator
Shelves (1

slide out)!

•

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

of
in
nr
N 2ntl
· .....

tt1-12J1

•

\MW~

IJiesl Slyles

aiSias

·'!!11--------------·________.._. . .

.·

KITCHEN

JO"~

MIDDI r-OIT

•

PLAY
SHORTS
7

00
air

�•'

4.:.. The Daily sentindl, Middi~,O., July 21, !971

Rauch

its Bills

By United Press lolematlonal "not disappointed" with' the
The Buffalo Bills can count of way things are shaping up
Harvey Johnson to take .over as otherwise. In Starr's absence,
coach when the team iS in passing chores .are being
handleil by veterans lA!ke
trouble.
When the gomg gets tough, Bratkowulti and Frank Patrick
the Buffalo owner calls .on and rookie Scott Hunter of
Harvey. He got the call on Alabama.
Tuesday when John Rauch quit
The Minnesota Vikings have
the Bills as head coach after an quarterback problems, too, with
argument with Owner Ralph C. Gary Cuozzo refusing to sign
Wilson.
,
.
his contract and indicating he
Ta)ting over a team '!'lth a 3- might play out his . option.
1().1 record is not every coach's Cuozzo became a regular last
dream, but it's nothing new for season and led the Vikings to
Johnson, who was director of the Central Division tiUe by
player personnel for the Bills. passing for 1,720 yards and
Johnson took over the Bills as seven TDs.
interim coach in 1968, succeedRunning back Dick Posto of
ing Joe Collier three hours the San Diego Chargers said he
after the Bills' 43-6 defeat by is also going to play out his
Rauch's Oakland Raiders.
Rauch left the Raiders in 1969
following a dispute with Oakland owner AI Davis . .
Rauch's feud with Wilson
stemmed from the coach's
cri'icism of two former •Bills
l
d p ul
pIa yers, Ron McDo e an a
Maguire.
Green Bay's rookie coach,
Dan Devine, also has problems
_J)
0" 11
Wl' th quarterback Bart Starr
unable to pass. Starr has been By United Press International
ordered out of passing drills
Leading Batters
National League
indefinitely because his arm is .
G. AB R. H. Pet.
ailing but Devine said he is Torre, St. L 95 367 55 130 .35~
'
Bckrl, Chi
90 36~ 62 128 .352
Davis, LA
96 386 59 133 .3~5
Clmte, Pit
81 331 56 112 .338
Garr, All
' 95 395 69 132 .33j
Pptne, Chi
73 273 37 91 .333
Brock,St.L 92 373 73 123 .330
Snglln, Pit
84 32~ 36 105 .32~
70 283 56 91 .322
Friday Night Mixed Lugue 1 Cash, Pit
Alou, St.L
89 359 ill 115 .320
POMEROY LANES
American League
Evelyn's Groc..-y
30
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Racine Home Nat. Bank
20
Team No. ~
18 Oliva,Minn 73 280 50 106 .379
Mark V
18 Murcer, NY 92 330 58 111 .336
Team No. 5
6 Rojas, KC
86 317 45 101 .319
Team No.3
Olis, KC
85 336 52 105 .313
FRbsn, Ball 77 268 j8 83 .310
High Individual Games 77 286 74 88 .308
Pleas Ellis 218, Maxine Duf/on · Bird, Ball
177 ; Pleas Ellis 212, Joann Kallne, Del 77 251 j3 76 .303
Ferguson 167.
Mnchr, Wash 80 256 30 77 .301
May, Mil
85 297 47 89 .300
High Individual Series 79 292 29 87 .298
Pleas Ellis 613, Maxine Dugan Rchdt, Chi
473; Dick Whipple 530, Joann
Home Runs
.
Ferguson 436.
National League' Stargell,
Team High Game- Evelyn's Pitt 31 : Aaron, All 26; May,
Grocery 866.
Cin 2~; Johnson . Phil 22;
Team High Series - Evelyn's Colberj, SO and Bonds, SF 20.
Grocery 2163.
Amencan League: MeHvu,
Chi and Cash, Del 21; Smith,
Bos 20; Petrocelli , Bos and
Oliva, Minn 18.
CRAMPrON FOURTii
Runs .Batted In
National League : Slargell,
• AKRON, Ohio (UPI )-Defending Westchester Classic Pitt 90 ; Torre, St.L 73; Aaron,
All 72; Mootanez, Phil 67 ;
champ Bruce Crampton, who Santo, Chi and Johnson, Phil6~.
American League: Petrocelli,
won the Western Open last
Bos 66 ; Killebrew, Minn 63; B.
week, will occupy the fourth Robinson, Bait 60 ; ·F. Robinson,
spot in the World Series of Golf Bait and Mel!on,Chi 59.
Potchong
at 'the Firestone Country Club,
National League: Ellis, Pitt
Sept. 11-12.
'
15-3; Jenkins, Chi 15-8: Carlton,
The other golfers, competing St.L 13-6; Dierker, Hou 12 - ~ ; ·
for a $50,000 first prize, are 0owning and Osteen, LA 11-6:
Stoneman, Monl11-9.
-PGA champion Jack Nicklaus,- American League : Blue, Oak
Masters winner Charles Coody 18-3; Lolich, Del 15-6; Cuellar,
•; and U.S. Open and British Open Ball 13-3; McNally, Ball and
Siebert, Bos 13 -~.
winner Lee Trevino.

65iiiii:U:C:::;:_..;__

Local Bowling

Reunion . Held

option unless he receives · an
acceptable salary offer, "They
should be willing to pay for a
starting running back," he said.
"I'm In the best shape I've
ever been in and I really want
to play this year, especially
with that great offensive line
they've g9t."
Elsewhere, the Dallas Cowboys announced their trade of
Mike Gaechter to the New York
Giants two weeks ago has been
voided by mutual consent. .. Pete
Perreault, an eight-year veteran guard, has .been placed on
waivers by the New York jets
at his own request .. .former
Denver Broncos quarterback
Pete Liske was named the
Philadelphia Eagles starter by
coach Jerry Williams ...Doug
Woodlief, a linebacker with Los
Angeles for six years, retired.

NEW HAVEN - The annual
Spencer reunion Sunday at the
New Haven Garden Club park
began with a covered dish
dinner at noon, the invocation
being given by Mrs, Ernest
Wingett of Racine.
Following dinner, Mrs. John
C. Fry, president, presided over
business when the new officers
elected were Ernest Wingett,
president; Fred Spencer, vicepresident; Jean Lindsey,
secretary-treasurer, and Mrs.
Uoyd Roush, publicity chairman.
After the new officers were
elected with Wingett in charge,
the work of the past two years
by members who have been
collecting a history of the
'Spencer family was reviewed.
Wingett appointed a conunittee
to continue this work the
By United Press International coming year of Mrs. John C.
N•tional League
Fry, chairman, Orville SpenSan Fran 120 120 011)- 7 9 2
Pittsbrgh 010 520 30x-11 15 2 cer, Mrs. Jesse Brown, Mrs.
Perry, Carrill1ers (~), Robert- Erma Skeen and Mrs. Wingett.
"'n (61. Debarger (8) and
Mrs. Jean Lindsey was
Dietz, Healy (6) ; Blass. Veale presented a gift for her work as
(2), Briles (61. Giusti 17) and
Sanguillen. WP- Veale · (~-0). secretary-treasurer of the
LP-Carrithers I 1-1) . HR- organizaUon. The New Haven
Henderson !lOth) .
Garden Club was also given a
Phila
110 100 021)- 5 8 1 cash gift. It was decided to hold
St. Louis 000 010 000- 1 3 2 the 1972 reunion in the New
Short !6-11) and Ryan;
Reuss, Linzy (8). Patterson (9) Hsven Park.
Games for the children atand Simmons. LP-Reuss. (B·
10).
tending were provided by Mr.
and Mrs. James Fry. Orville
(10 innings)
Spencer
furnished games for
Montrl 120 000 000 1- ~ 9 1
Houston 000 000 003 1)- 3 ~ 1 the adults.
Stoneman, Marshall (9) and
Attending the reunion were
Boccabella ; Forsch, Ray (2),
Lemaster (7), Harris (9), Mrs . Joan Mattingly and
Culver (10) and Edwards. WP- daughters, Karen and Kim of
Marshall (2-5!. LP-Harris (1 ·.

Linescores

1) .

New York 000 002 000- 2 8 0
Chicago 011 101 OOx- ~ 9 0
Gentry, McGraw (6). Frisella
and Grote; Jenkins (15-8) and
Cannizzaro. LP-Genlry (7-8).
HRs- Agee (9th). Kranepool
(8th) .
San Diego 000 000 106- 1 3 1
Allanta
000 001 002- 3 10 1
Roberts (7-10) and Kendall ;
Reed (10-7) and Williams. HRs
- Brown !5th) , Aaron (26th) .
Los Ani 000 001 000- I 7 0
Cincinnati 000 100 51x- 7 10 0
Suflon, Brewer (7), Strahler
18 ) and Ferguson; Gullett,
Carroll (9) and Bench. WPGullett (10-3). LP- Sulton (9-9) .
HR-Bench (19th) .
.
American League
CBohifgo
~ ~
s on
Kealey, Bradley (6) and
Egan ; Tiant, Lee(~), Bolin (9)
and Josephson. WP-Bolln (42). LP- Bradley (8·9). HRPetrocelli (18111).

(9). Perranoski (9) and Root,
Tischinski 19) ; Bahnsen, Aker
(6)', Hambri~ht (B) and Gibbs.
WP-Hambnght (1 .0). LPWilliams 12- ~) . HR-Nettles
(~th) .

Ball
000 010 000- 1 5 0
Kan City 014 000 20x- 5 14 0
Cuellar, Boswell (3). Pena
(3L Richert (7) and Hendricks;
Drago (11 -5) and May. LPCuellar (13-3). HR-Hendricks
(61h) .

Milwakee 100 000 000- 1 11 0
Washngtn 030 002 OOx- 5 4 0
Lopez, Krausse (2). Weaver
(6) and Ratliff; Bosman (8-10)
and Billings. LP-Lopez (2-4) .

; •n

Jr., and Mrs. James Fry and
children, Ruth Ann and Sue
Ellen, all of Pomeroy; Mr. And
Mrs. Fred Spencer of Mason;
Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Hazlett of
Letart, and Mrs. John c. Fry
and Mrs. Uoyd Roush of New
Haven.

Clsy Center, Kansas; Mrs. Jean
Lindsey, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Orville-Spencer, London,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wingett, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Spencer and Mrs. Ann Coe,
Racine; Mrs. Max Eichinger
and children, Becky and Max,

The Poet's
The Church In AcUon
You have often heard how folk
used to work
When sick or old folk needed
help they never did shirk;
Men used to cut hay, plant corn,
husk corn
Cut, saw and split wood to keep
sick folk warm.

Corner
School prove it is not.
At the time some had sickness,
some in the hospital too.
But not one tried to find an

excuse;

Shank or Butt Portion

only

Dr. Bruce Curtis, director of run from July .!9 through
health, pbysical education and August 20. The .charge for the

recreation at Rio Gr•nde lessons is 50 cents per child for
CoUege, today announced the each lesson, or $1 per child fCII'
schedule for community use of the ro-tesson term.
the Paul R. Lyne Center. The
schedule is effective July 19
through August 20.
According to Curtis, the pool
w\11 be open for college and
community recreation Monday
through Friday from 3 to 4 and
7:30 to 8:30 p.m.,- I to 3 on
Saturday and 7·30 to 9:30 on
·
Sunday·
The pool w\11 .he in use
Monday thr~ugh Frida~ fr~ 4
to 5 for children's swurumng
classes, and 9 to 10 p.m. Sunday
.through Thursday for the
participants at this year's
Camp Crescendo Ohio Division
Band CamP
The ~ium will be open
for colleJ:e an_d community
recreation from 7 to 9 Sunday
through Friday and 1 to 3 on
Saturday.Curtissaidthereisno
charge to use the gym, but that
there is a charge of 25 cents for
children and 50 cents fCII' adults
to use the pool.
eurtis. also ~nouncec~ that
commuruty swunnung classes
for children 5 through 12 w\11

Now these few lines In uncouth
rhyme
My thoughts of ;appreciation
and of gratitude.
But seldom you hear of a To write them on paper words
fail me I find.
mission like this.
Here came some of the young
married Sunday School class. But if we w\11 all gather at
Stepladders, buckets, ajax,
Sunday School time;
Not miss the church services
brushes, rollers and psint
attend prayer meeting too.
To work they all went with no
Seek God's loving favor in all
time to chat.
that we do
On the very first day Oh! what a Rich rewards in Heaven w\11 be
waiting for you.
surprise
The Oriental agalloch or
In more . ways than one, they
These things were done as a eaglewood is thought to he
birthday gift for the teacher. the aloes mentioned in the
even brought lunch.
Bible.
Recipient, Lucy Gaul.
The task was begun, each one
enjoyed it;
And before you scarce knew it,
"Liquid SuDShlne"
four rooms had a new look.
Residents of the West In·
Rooms were made bright, dian island of Dominica are
kept cool and refreshed by
hearts were made light.
"liquid sunshine." The unNowadays our newscasts are usual rainfall there is such a
fine mist that it can only be
filled with murder and strife. seen when backlighted by the
But the good deeds folk do sun. Gently drifting from a
seldom make news at all;
cloudless sky, it gives a senNow these few lines as you read sation of coolness rather than
of wetness.
them take note
Folk still have love and are
Copernicus' theory that the
loved a lot.
sun is the center of the system of planets became the
For to church twice on Sunday foundation of modem astronand sometimes thrice;
omy.
On Wednesday night also, both
there and back.
On a very few occasions, I
recall with regret
Messengers of love
For' transportation there was a
&amp; Understanding
lack.

1*******
* **~
Th *ugh
U

A

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~

•
•
:

-1'
it
•

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-1'

0
.

.

il

YOI! c;~nnot"prevenl the ~
birds of sorrow from it
flying o~..- your head, but it
you can prevenl them •
from building nesl$ .In il
your h.Jir.
il
. -ChineSe Proverb il

*If · Quick!

~

.

BANK1nG
. .

•

Serve The Gang
Our Famous

11:- it

• WUJ

DRIV
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it
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•

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For Todav •

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it
it

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Fri_days Only

•
:

· 9 A.M: to 7 P.M.

it

!Contmuously)

:

WHOLE

The Dr~Ve' In Window it
IS Open
. -1'

ONLY

it ·other Banki119 Houn ' k&gt; -II
il J ~nd 5 to 7 as usual on :
: Fridays.
il
it
..
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it

45~

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FARMERS BANK •
t and SAVINGS CO. •

•

•
·•
*************~

•
-"
.-..
·-1'
it

.

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
· Member Fed. ..-a I
Res..-ve System

STYROFOAM

•
-II
.o.
..,.
•

.

CUPS

T.V. DI-NNERS

In Our Budget Shop

3

50 ct.

TURKEY, STEAK
CHICKEN, MEAT
LOAF, FISH

COMPLETE
ROOMS

.., '595

7 O'L

LETTUEE
only

Large Solid Head
~~'

$Jmpathy Flowers

000 000 000- 0 3 0
Detroit
California 000 000 02x- 2 7 0 Now most of my family could
Cain (5-5) and Freehan;
not help a lot.
Messersmith (9-9) and Moses.
l:n • ion• thev came and paid
Cleve
000 201 000- 3 8 1
~~ir part,
Oakland 030 200 lOx- 6 9 1 Now if you think doing good
Lamb, Mlgnorl W, Colbert
deeds is a lost art
(5) and Suarez; Dobson,
Mi nn
000 005 000- 5 ~ 1 Fingers (9) and Duncan. WP- The Young Married Class of the
New York 100 000 oos-- 6 13 1 Oobson (9-01. LP- Lamb (H).
Chester Nazarene Sunday
Blyleven, Hall (9) , Williams HR-Epsteln (15th) .

:0

Lyne Center SchedrJe
Announced By Curtis

lllh
oz.
c
pkg.

We Deliver Flowers

ArGUnd The
Corner

Around The
World

Dudley's Florist

FURNRUIE

59 N. Se&lt;:ond St.
Middleport, 0 ,

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

992-SS60

--

PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 24th

IDg

We Accept

Federal
Foocl Stamps
Dairy Buys

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS

ICE
Ml

WHOLE .......~~: 59~

•

•

69~

65~

Reg, 49c

DONUTS

Rts~~Yool

To
-j;lalt
QUIIltilliS

Head

LEITUCE

CAMPBELL$
VEGETABLE

\TOMATO
JUICE
SOUP

29~

•

•
•••
•
•

.... •••
•

Del Monte

•
••
•
•••
•

FRUIT
SWEET.PICKLES
COCKTAIL
16 oz.
,

$} 09

•

•

••
•••
•
••

•

..•

)ar

•
•

303

••
•••
•
••
••
••
••

cans
F70%en
·Food Buys

Beauty Dept.

Sudden Beauty

Hair Sp
17 oz.

59°

•

Aunt Jane
.

POTATOES
20 lb.
bag

can

lb. BASKET
OF -YOUR
CHOICE

•

Virginia White No. 1

. Del Monte

TREET

39~

Fresh Produce

FRANK IES ..... -~~~ .~~~!..................... ~~:-~:. 49c
SLICED BACON.. ~~~..~~.~~..................~.~-.. 69c

ARMOUR

Sugar
Powder

;

. Rllltl

Bakery Special

Superior

12 Ol.

'

COnAGE 16
oz.
CHEESE

HAM
HALF. ..........~~:.

AID CROSS

MORTON

CREAM PIES

Lemon

Banana
Choc.
Strawberry

Cocoanut

-... .

•••

NESIEA

. . ... . . 89'
TEA:
INSTANT
3 07_ JAR
STORE

With

c8u.-

ExplrH 7.zt.11,

••
•

•••
•
•••

'

••
•
• '

..

MIDDLEPORT

•
"•
••

Ritllll Rex: ueatt
Ullllt Qn llllltl

•

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4.:.. The Daily sentindl, Middi~,O., July 21, !971

Rauch

its Bills

By United Press lolematlonal "not disappointed" with' the
The Buffalo Bills can count of way things are shaping up
Harvey Johnson to take .over as otherwise. In Starr's absence,
coach when the team iS in passing chores .are being
handleil by veterans lA!ke
trouble.
When the gomg gets tough, Bratkowulti and Frank Patrick
the Buffalo owner calls .on and rookie Scott Hunter of
Harvey. He got the call on Alabama.
Tuesday when John Rauch quit
The Minnesota Vikings have
the Bills as head coach after an quarterback problems, too, with
argument with Owner Ralph C. Gary Cuozzo refusing to sign
Wilson.
,
.
his contract and indicating he
Ta)ting over a team '!'lth a 3- might play out his . option.
1().1 record is not every coach's Cuozzo became a regular last
dream, but it's nothing new for season and led the Vikings to
Johnson, who was director of the Central Division tiUe by
player personnel for the Bills. passing for 1,720 yards and
Johnson took over the Bills as seven TDs.
interim coach in 1968, succeedRunning back Dick Posto of
ing Joe Collier three hours the San Diego Chargers said he
after the Bills' 43-6 defeat by is also going to play out his
Rauch's Oakland Raiders.
Rauch left the Raiders in 1969
following a dispute with Oakland owner AI Davis . .
Rauch's feud with Wilson
stemmed from the coach's
cri'icism of two former •Bills
l
d p ul
pIa yers, Ron McDo e an a
Maguire.
Green Bay's rookie coach,
Dan Devine, also has problems
_J)
0" 11
Wl' th quarterback Bart Starr
unable to pass. Starr has been By United Press International
ordered out of passing drills
Leading Batters
National League
indefinitely because his arm is .
G. AB R. H. Pet.
ailing but Devine said he is Torre, St. L 95 367 55 130 .35~
'
Bckrl, Chi
90 36~ 62 128 .352
Davis, LA
96 386 59 133 .3~5
Clmte, Pit
81 331 56 112 .338
Garr, All
' 95 395 69 132 .33j
Pptne, Chi
73 273 37 91 .333
Brock,St.L 92 373 73 123 .330
Snglln, Pit
84 32~ 36 105 .32~
70 283 56 91 .322
Friday Night Mixed Lugue 1 Cash, Pit
Alou, St.L
89 359 ill 115 .320
POMEROY LANES
American League
Evelyn's Groc..-y
30
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Racine Home Nat. Bank
20
Team No. ~
18 Oliva,Minn 73 280 50 106 .379
Mark V
18 Murcer, NY 92 330 58 111 .336
Team No. 5
6 Rojas, KC
86 317 45 101 .319
Team No.3
Olis, KC
85 336 52 105 .313
FRbsn, Ball 77 268 j8 83 .310
High Individual Games 77 286 74 88 .308
Pleas Ellis 218, Maxine Duf/on · Bird, Ball
177 ; Pleas Ellis 212, Joann Kallne, Del 77 251 j3 76 .303
Ferguson 167.
Mnchr, Wash 80 256 30 77 .301
May, Mil
85 297 47 89 .300
High Individual Series 79 292 29 87 .298
Pleas Ellis 613, Maxine Dugan Rchdt, Chi
473; Dick Whipple 530, Joann
Home Runs
.
Ferguson 436.
National League' Stargell,
Team High Game- Evelyn's Pitt 31 : Aaron, All 26; May,
Grocery 866.
Cin 2~; Johnson . Phil 22;
Team High Series - Evelyn's Colberj, SO and Bonds, SF 20.
Grocery 2163.
Amencan League: MeHvu,
Chi and Cash, Del 21; Smith,
Bos 20; Petrocelli , Bos and
Oliva, Minn 18.
CRAMPrON FOURTii
Runs .Batted In
National League : Slargell,
• AKRON, Ohio (UPI )-Defending Westchester Classic Pitt 90 ; Torre, St.L 73; Aaron,
All 72; Mootanez, Phil 67 ;
champ Bruce Crampton, who Santo, Chi and Johnson, Phil6~.
American League: Petrocelli,
won the Western Open last
Bos 66 ; Killebrew, Minn 63; B.
week, will occupy the fourth Robinson, Bait 60 ; ·F. Robinson,
spot in the World Series of Golf Bait and Mel!on,Chi 59.
Potchong
at 'the Firestone Country Club,
National League: Ellis, Pitt
Sept. 11-12.
'
15-3; Jenkins, Chi 15-8: Carlton,
The other golfers, competing St.L 13-6; Dierker, Hou 12 - ~ ; ·
for a $50,000 first prize, are 0owning and Osteen, LA 11-6:
Stoneman, Monl11-9.
-PGA champion Jack Nicklaus,- American League : Blue, Oak
Masters winner Charles Coody 18-3; Lolich, Del 15-6; Cuellar,
•; and U.S. Open and British Open Ball 13-3; McNally, Ball and
Siebert, Bos 13 -~.
winner Lee Trevino.

65iiiii:U:C:::;:_..;__

Local Bowling

Reunion . Held

option unless he receives · an
acceptable salary offer, "They
should be willing to pay for a
starting running back," he said.
"I'm In the best shape I've
ever been in and I really want
to play this year, especially
with that great offensive line
they've g9t."
Elsewhere, the Dallas Cowboys announced their trade of
Mike Gaechter to the New York
Giants two weeks ago has been
voided by mutual consent. .. Pete
Perreault, an eight-year veteran guard, has .been placed on
waivers by the New York jets
at his own request .. .former
Denver Broncos quarterback
Pete Liske was named the
Philadelphia Eagles starter by
coach Jerry Williams ...Doug
Woodlief, a linebacker with Los
Angeles for six years, retired.

NEW HAVEN - The annual
Spencer reunion Sunday at the
New Haven Garden Club park
began with a covered dish
dinner at noon, the invocation
being given by Mrs, Ernest
Wingett of Racine.
Following dinner, Mrs. John
C. Fry, president, presided over
business when the new officers
elected were Ernest Wingett,
president; Fred Spencer, vicepresident; Jean Lindsey,
secretary-treasurer, and Mrs.
Uoyd Roush, publicity chairman.
After the new officers were
elected with Wingett in charge,
the work of the past two years
by members who have been
collecting a history of the
'Spencer family was reviewed.
Wingett appointed a conunittee
to continue this work the
By United Press International coming year of Mrs. John C.
N•tional League
Fry, chairman, Orville SpenSan Fran 120 120 011)- 7 9 2
Pittsbrgh 010 520 30x-11 15 2 cer, Mrs. Jesse Brown, Mrs.
Perry, Carrill1ers (~), Robert- Erma Skeen and Mrs. Wingett.
"'n (61. Debarger (8) and
Mrs. Jean Lindsey was
Dietz, Healy (6) ; Blass. Veale presented a gift for her work as
(2), Briles (61. Giusti 17) and
Sanguillen. WP- Veale · (~-0). secretary-treasurer of the
LP-Carrithers I 1-1) . HR- organizaUon. The New Haven
Henderson !lOth) .
Garden Club was also given a
Phila
110 100 021)- 5 8 1 cash gift. It was decided to hold
St. Louis 000 010 000- 1 3 2 the 1972 reunion in the New
Short !6-11) and Ryan;
Reuss, Linzy (8). Patterson (9) Hsven Park.
Games for the children atand Simmons. LP-Reuss. (B·
10).
tending were provided by Mr.
and Mrs. James Fry. Orville
(10 innings)
Spencer
furnished games for
Montrl 120 000 000 1- ~ 9 1
Houston 000 000 003 1)- 3 ~ 1 the adults.
Stoneman, Marshall (9) and
Attending the reunion were
Boccabella ; Forsch, Ray (2),
Lemaster (7), Harris (9), Mrs . Joan Mattingly and
Culver (10) and Edwards. WP- daughters, Karen and Kim of
Marshall (2-5!. LP-Harris (1 ·.

Linescores

1) .

New York 000 002 000- 2 8 0
Chicago 011 101 OOx- ~ 9 0
Gentry, McGraw (6). Frisella
and Grote; Jenkins (15-8) and
Cannizzaro. LP-Genlry (7-8).
HRs- Agee (9th). Kranepool
(8th) .
San Diego 000 000 106- 1 3 1
Allanta
000 001 002- 3 10 1
Roberts (7-10) and Kendall ;
Reed (10-7) and Williams. HRs
- Brown !5th) , Aaron (26th) .
Los Ani 000 001 000- I 7 0
Cincinnati 000 100 51x- 7 10 0
Suflon, Brewer (7), Strahler
18 ) and Ferguson; Gullett,
Carroll (9) and Bench. WPGullett (10-3). LP- Sulton (9-9) .
HR-Bench (19th) .
.
American League
CBohifgo
~ ~
s on
Kealey, Bradley (6) and
Egan ; Tiant, Lee(~), Bolin (9)
and Josephson. WP-Bolln (42). LP- Bradley (8·9). HRPetrocelli (18111).

(9). Perranoski (9) and Root,
Tischinski 19) ; Bahnsen, Aker
(6)', Hambri~ht (B) and Gibbs.
WP-Hambnght (1 .0). LPWilliams 12- ~) . HR-Nettles
(~th) .

Ball
000 010 000- 1 5 0
Kan City 014 000 20x- 5 14 0
Cuellar, Boswell (3). Pena
(3L Richert (7) and Hendricks;
Drago (11 -5) and May. LPCuellar (13-3). HR-Hendricks
(61h) .

Milwakee 100 000 000- 1 11 0
Washngtn 030 002 OOx- 5 4 0
Lopez, Krausse (2). Weaver
(6) and Ratliff; Bosman (8-10)
and Billings. LP-Lopez (2-4) .

; •n

Jr., and Mrs. James Fry and
children, Ruth Ann and Sue
Ellen, all of Pomeroy; Mr. And
Mrs. Fred Spencer of Mason;
Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Hazlett of
Letart, and Mrs. John c. Fry
and Mrs. Uoyd Roush of New
Haven.

Clsy Center, Kansas; Mrs. Jean
Lindsey, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Orville-Spencer, London,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wingett, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Spencer and Mrs. Ann Coe,
Racine; Mrs. Max Eichinger
and children, Becky and Max,

The Poet's
The Church In AcUon
You have often heard how folk
used to work
When sick or old folk needed
help they never did shirk;
Men used to cut hay, plant corn,
husk corn
Cut, saw and split wood to keep
sick folk warm.

Corner
School prove it is not.
At the time some had sickness,
some in the hospital too.
But not one tried to find an

excuse;

Shank or Butt Portion

only

Dr. Bruce Curtis, director of run from July .!9 through
health, pbysical education and August 20. The .charge for the

recreation at Rio Gr•nde lessons is 50 cents per child for
CoUege, today announced the each lesson, or $1 per child fCII'
schedule for community use of the ro-tesson term.
the Paul R. Lyne Center. The
schedule is effective July 19
through August 20.
According to Curtis, the pool
w\11 be open for college and
community recreation Monday
through Friday from 3 to 4 and
7:30 to 8:30 p.m.,- I to 3 on
Saturday and 7·30 to 9:30 on
·
Sunday·
The pool w\11 .he in use
Monday thr~ugh Frida~ fr~ 4
to 5 for children's swurumng
classes, and 9 to 10 p.m. Sunday
.through Thursday for the
participants at this year's
Camp Crescendo Ohio Division
Band CamP
The ~ium will be open
for colleJ:e an_d community
recreation from 7 to 9 Sunday
through Friday and 1 to 3 on
Saturday.Curtissaidthereisno
charge to use the gym, but that
there is a charge of 25 cents for
children and 50 cents fCII' adults
to use the pool.
eurtis. also ~nouncec~ that
commuruty swunnung classes
for children 5 through 12 w\11

Now these few lines In uncouth
rhyme
My thoughts of ;appreciation
and of gratitude.
But seldom you hear of a To write them on paper words
fail me I find.
mission like this.
Here came some of the young
married Sunday School class. But if we w\11 all gather at
Stepladders, buckets, ajax,
Sunday School time;
Not miss the church services
brushes, rollers and psint
attend prayer meeting too.
To work they all went with no
Seek God's loving favor in all
time to chat.
that we do
On the very first day Oh! what a Rich rewards in Heaven w\11 be
waiting for you.
surprise
The Oriental agalloch or
In more . ways than one, they
These things were done as a eaglewood is thought to he
birthday gift for the teacher. the aloes mentioned in the
even brought lunch.
Bible.
Recipient, Lucy Gaul.
The task was begun, each one
enjoyed it;
And before you scarce knew it,
"Liquid SuDShlne"
four rooms had a new look.
Residents of the West In·
Rooms were made bright, dian island of Dominica are
kept cool and refreshed by
hearts were made light.
"liquid sunshine." The unNowadays our newscasts are usual rainfall there is such a
fine mist that it can only be
filled with murder and strife. seen when backlighted by the
But the good deeds folk do sun. Gently drifting from a
seldom make news at all;
cloudless sky, it gives a senNow these few lines as you read sation of coolness rather than
of wetness.
them take note
Folk still have love and are
Copernicus' theory that the
loved a lot.
sun is the center of the system of planets became the
For to church twice on Sunday foundation of modem astronand sometimes thrice;
omy.
On Wednesday night also, both
there and back.
On a very few occasions, I
recall with regret
Messengers of love
For' transportation there was a
&amp; Understanding
lack.

1*******
* **~
Th *ugh
U

A

-1'

~

•
•
:

-1'
it
•

il
-1'

0
.

.

il

YOI! c;~nnot"prevenl the ~
birds of sorrow from it
flying o~..- your head, but it
you can prevenl them •
from building nesl$ .In il
your h.Jir.
il
. -ChineSe Proverb il

*If · Quick!

~

.

BANK1nG
. .

•

Serve The Gang
Our Famous

11:- it

• WUJ

DRIV
. I! •N ·

it
:
•

LB.

1t . ~

1t"

-1' . . S

t
il
it
t

it
it

For Todav •

it
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it
it

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it

Fri_days Only

•
:

· 9 A.M: to 7 P.M.

it

!Contmuously)

:

WHOLE

The Dr~Ve' In Window it
IS Open
. -1'

ONLY

it ·other Banki119 Houn ' k&gt; -II
il J ~nd 5 to 7 as usual on :
: Fridays.
il
it
..
it · ..
it

45~

t

FARMERS BANK •
t and SAVINGS CO. •

•

•
·•
*************~

•
-"
.-..
·-1'
it

.

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
· Member Fed. ..-a I
Res..-ve System

STYROFOAM

•
-II
.o.
..,.
•

.

CUPS

T.V. DI-NNERS

In Our Budget Shop

3

50 ct.

TURKEY, STEAK
CHICKEN, MEAT
LOAF, FISH

COMPLETE
ROOMS

.., '595

7 O'L

LETTUEE
only

Large Solid Head
~~'

$Jmpathy Flowers

000 000 000- 0 3 0
Detroit
California 000 000 02x- 2 7 0 Now most of my family could
Cain (5-5) and Freehan;
not help a lot.
Messersmith (9-9) and Moses.
l:n • ion• thev came and paid
Cleve
000 201 000- 3 8 1
~~ir part,
Oakland 030 200 lOx- 6 9 1 Now if you think doing good
Lamb, Mlgnorl W, Colbert
deeds is a lost art
(5) and Suarez; Dobson,
Mi nn
000 005 000- 5 ~ 1 Fingers (9) and Duncan. WP- The Young Married Class of the
New York 100 000 oos-- 6 13 1 Oobson (9-01. LP- Lamb (H).
Chester Nazarene Sunday
Blyleven, Hall (9) , Williams HR-Epsteln (15th) .

:0

Lyne Center SchedrJe
Announced By Curtis

lllh
oz.
c
pkg.

We Deliver Flowers

ArGUnd The
Corner

Around The
World

Dudley's Florist

FURNRUIE

59 N. Se&lt;:ond St.
Middleport, 0 ,

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

992-SS60

--

PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 24th

IDg

We Accept

Federal
Foocl Stamps
Dairy Buys

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS

ICE
Ml

WHOLE .......~~: 59~

•

•

69~

65~

Reg, 49c

DONUTS

Rts~~Yool

To
-j;lalt
QUIIltilliS

Head

LEITUCE

CAMPBELL$
VEGETABLE

\TOMATO
JUICE
SOUP

29~

•

•
•••
•
•

.... •••
•

Del Monte

•
••
•
•••
•

FRUIT
SWEET.PICKLES
COCKTAIL
16 oz.
,

$} 09

•

•

••
•••
•
••

•

..•

)ar

•
•

303

••
•••
•
••
••
••
••

cans
F70%en
·Food Buys

Beauty Dept.

Sudden Beauty

Hair Sp
17 oz.

59°

•

Aunt Jane
.

POTATOES
20 lb.
bag

can

lb. BASKET
OF -YOUR
CHOICE

•

Virginia White No. 1

. Del Monte

TREET

39~

Fresh Produce

FRANK IES ..... -~~~ .~~~!..................... ~~:-~:. 49c
SLICED BACON.. ~~~..~~.~~..................~.~-.. 69c

ARMOUR

Sugar
Powder

;

. Rllltl

Bakery Special

Superior

12 Ol.

'

COnAGE 16
oz.
CHEESE

HAM
HALF. ..........~~:.

AID CROSS

MORTON

CREAM PIES

Lemon

Banana
Choc.
Strawberry

Cocoanut

-... .

•••

NESIEA

. . ... . . 89'
TEA:
INSTANT
3 07_ JAR
STORE

With

c8u.-

ExplrH 7.zt.11,

••
•

•••
•
•••

'

••
•
• '

..

MIDDLEPORT

•
"•
••

Ritllll Rex: ueatt
Ullllt Qn llllltl

•

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7-~Dally SelltiDd, M!Mepi,.t.Ptmao). 0 .. July 21.1rn

4- The Dally Sentinel.Middleport-Pom•rov, 0., July 21, 1971

REMEMBER!

Fun with Foods
by Charlene

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
MONDAY

Hoeflich

A funny thing happened to Vilma Pikkoja on her -way to a
picnic Surday.
·
She got mired down In the mud and went home mad .... well,
not euctly. She did get her car stuck in the mud and by the lime
she got it out, It seemed too late to go on to the picnic. So she
turned around and returned home.
Now thesadpartcitlllsstory Is that Mrs. Pikkoja had made a
special dish "Rossolye," a glorified potato salad frmn her native
Estoola.
It's a pretty, pink coococtlon; quite tasty. While it has only a
haH herring (cubed) In it, the fish taste is predominant.
Mrs. Pikkoja says Rossolye, a favorite of her people particularly during the loog summer days, is often served with
vodka. The dish which she prepared for the picnic, incidentally,
went to Mrs. HortenseEplingo!Galllpolisandyours 1ru1y:
·
Give Mrs. Pikkoja's salad a tty to add a little variety to the
menus ci these hot swruner days. The recipe makes six servings.
ROSSOLYE
(Estooian Polato Salad)
2 thick slices of cold cooked meat cut into 'h Inch cubes; I
cooked carrot, 2 or 3 firm, boiled potatoes peeled, both cubed; I
small raw onion, diced; I raw apple, cored, peeled and cubed; 'h
herring, cubed; 1 sour dill pickle cubed; 3 beets, cooked and
peeled (or canned) cubed; and2hardboiledeggs.
DR&amp;'ISING
1cup sour cream, 2 tsblespoons sharp mustard, 2 tablespoons
vinegar, I teaspoon sugar, salt to taste.
~
Combine the first five salad ingredients In a bowl. Mix the
d! es;ng separately. Keep both In a cool place until ready to
serve.
Just before ~. mlx the herring, pickle, and beets into
the salad. Toss it with the dresaing, and decorate it with slices of
herd bolted egg.

Ju~

Drastic Reductions .for Men &amp; Boys, (and Ladies too).
Remember we just have 2 Sales each year. This is the
Salt! everyone waits on. Save up to 1f2'and more •.

.

She'll Represent

n yov odd to your savings
Nch week ot tile Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
S.vlngs and Loan.

4%%

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

Meigs Co. Branch

PT. "PLEASANT - Miss
Jacqueline Gabrit.sch, formerly
of Mason, and now of Sand Hill
Road, Pt. Pleasant, has been
selected to represent West
Virginia in the Miss Charm
International Beauty Pageant
to be held in Houston, Texas, at
the Shamrock Hilton, August :;..
7. She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald F. Gabrit.schand a
graduate of Point Pleasant High
School. She. bas also been
selected as one of the five top
twirlers in the stste to compete
in the Winter Carnival in St.
Paul, Minn. , in January, 1972.

MEN'S SUITS

· Our Famous Bnrlds of Men's

Y2 PRICE

Dacron &amp; Wool, all wools and rayon
blends. Some are washable. Reg. $9.98 to
$19.98. Sale Price $4.99 to $9.98. Small
charge for alterations.

s Knit Shirts lh Price
Men's S. S. Cotton

T

tt

It
fi

Both Slipover and Button Styles in Round
Neck 'and Collar Styles. A real nice
selection of colors and sizes in S-M·l &amp; XL
Reg.$2.981o$7.98. These-'llosttangot
$1.49 to S3.99.

Men's Wool

Ladies' and Men's

Luggage lh Price

Sport Hats 1fz Price

An excellent name in t:;:~,gage.
in every color. Just rig t for

.

Not I
going back to school. Reg. Price
520.95to m .oo. Now Only na .41 to
&gt;

Plaid and Plain Colors Reg. $2,98 lo $5. 98.
Now only 51.49 to 12.99 .

Men's

Men's Ban Lon

Shirts Y.l off
Navy, gold, brown, while and light blue.
Not everT size in every color. Re,. $5.fl to
S9.98. Sa e Price $2.99 to sut.

Men's

Straw Hats 1fz Price Summer Caps 113 off
Reg . $1.19 to $2.98. Sale Price 79c
to 52.00.

Reg. $4.98 to $5.98
Now just $2.49 to $2.99

Grey

T·Shirts
$1
Short Sleeve

Shirts 1fz Price

Reg . $2.98toS4.98. Sale Price $1.49 buy. Reg. $5.00 to $6. 98. Sale Price
$2.50 to $3.49.
'

to $2.49.

Men's Lona Sleeve

Boys' Short Sleeve

Dress Shirts 1fz Price

off

Boys'

Suits ;nl Sperl Coats

Values to $7.98.
Sizes are broken.

$2

Ladies Blouses 1fz Price

Sizesarebroken. Reg. S14.9BtoS29.SO.

...ly S1.4t

to

$14.75.

.

Men's &amp; Boys'

Ladies Slacks 1fz Price

Mens Ties

Reg. Price $3.98 in Boys to S7.98 in Men's.
sote Priu su' to SJ.".

Pajamas 113 off

Values to 2.50

Sizes 8'n to. 11

fRIDAY, JULY 23

$'1.98. Silo

Now Only $3.32 to $5.32.

First Quality

2 real pretty colors

The Doon Open

Reg. $4.98 to $7.98

Ladies Hose 2 pair 88'

3/$1.00
Be Here When

Men's

Some are lloir. Reg. $6.98 to
Price SJ.49 lo $4." .

Hot Pant length and Bermuda
length. Some have the bib front.
Sizes from 5 to 16. Reg. $4.98 to $6.98
Now Only 52.49 to 53.49.

Both while and colored in stripe~-----------­
and plain colors. Reg. $5.00 to
58.98. Yours for only 52.50 to 54.49.
Both French cuff and buHon cuffs.
Knits. Cottons, &amp; Dacron &amp; Cotton
Men's Long Sleeve
Blends. Plain &amp; Fancy Patterns.
Sizes 10 to 16. Reg. $6.98 to $14.98.
This you mjJst see now just $3.49 to
$7.49.
Just right for the Fall and Winter
ahead. Reg. $4.98 to 57.98. Now 1--------~----0nly $2.49 to 53.99.

Station

992-9981

(Just 12 in Lot).

Sport Shirts 1fz Price

'n Price

FREE

Certified Gas Stations

Ladies Blouses

Dress Shirts 1fz Price Ladies Shorts 1fz Price
Swimwear 1fz Price Sizes
are broken but this is a real

Sizes are broken

"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" If We Fail To
Clean Your Windshield, Weather PlirmiHing.
No Other Company Dares To Offer This
Policy.

FOR THE LADIES

Sleeveless, Short Sleeves &amp; long
Sleeves. Fancy and plain colors. An
Both short Sleeves and long Sleeves. Reg.
SJ.4t to $5.91. Now Only $1.75 to $2.99 . For both BovsandGi'rls Imprint on Front. excellent name in· Ladies Blouses.
Included is the Y Neck Meigs Marauder Reg. Price sa .98.
Sizes 8 to 18. Reg. $4.98 to $8.98. You
Sweat Shirt.
S-M-L &amp; SL.
will want several of these at 52.49 to
--~---------t-----------·-·-+-~-----~~s----1 $4.49.
Boys'
Odd lot Men's Short leeve

113

AT 9 A.M.

Ladies Dresses
1fz Price
This you have to see . Long sleeve,
sleeveless and short sleeves. A very
go_od name in Dresses. Reg. $12.98 to·
$18.98. Sale Price $6.49 to $9.49.

'

POmeroy, Ohio

(We Honor BankAmericard and Master Char e)

Picnic Held

!Jn

New York Clothing House POMEROY
I .

"KERM'S CORNER"

First Annual Yeauger Family
Retired Teachers Picnic
Reunion Held at Royal Oak Park

Jacob E. Thomas, Lula M.
Thomas to Robert L. Strong,
Jeannine Strong, Lots 100, 101,
104 and 1115, C. W. Dabney's
Add .• Pomeroy.
G. E . Veregan, Anna Belle
Veregan to Roman F. Warmke,
Dorothy E . Warmke, 98.20
Acres, Columbia.
Forrest M. White, eta! to
State of Ohio, Journal Entry,
Meigs.
. Kenneth E. Harris, Margaret
Y. Harris to John Lisle, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Mabel Goff to Keith Oiler,
Gloria Oiler, I Acre, Salem.
Helen GibnW"e to Edgar P.
Gilmore, .Trus., Lot, Pomeroy.
Clayton Bogard, Rosalie
Bogard to Harlan A. Ballard,
Alta L. Ballard, Parcel,
Lebanon.
Asa Hoskins to Dana H.
Bailey, Lois Bailey, llO Acres
Timber, Orange.
Clarence
E.
Fraley,
Jacqueline F, Fraley to Frank
Hamilton, Susan Hamilton,
2.5&amp;1 Acres, CoiW!Ibia.
Robert M. Steele, Ruth E.
Steele to John E. McLaughlin,
Jo Ann McLaughlin, 5 Acres,
Chester.
Chrisie E. Powell, Clara M.
Powell to Joseph D. Glenn, .59
Acre, Sulton.
Velma Dains Wade, Ernest L.
Wade to Robert L. Strong,
Jeannine Strong, Int. Lots 100,
101, 104 and 105, C. W. Dabney's
Add., Pomeroy.

All seven sons and the one
daughter of the late Mote
Yeauger and their families
were present for the reunion.
Recognized for having traveling

Wahama Band Boosters
Plan Trip For Band
County Fair. Named a~ cochairman in charge of pie
baking were Mrs. John Hoff·
man and Mrs. Patty Paugh.
Final plans for the food booth
will be made at a special
meeting with the date of the
meeting to he announced later.

MASON - The regular
monthly meeting of the
Wahama Band Boosters was
held in the Band Room recently
with James Jarrell, president,
presiding.
Jarrell, Earl Dean Knight and
Gerald Simmons were named to
meet with Mr. Wedge to discuss
some of the problem areas of
the new band building. A work
crew bas been selected to begin
instslling cabinets for uniform
storage. Help is needed for this
project it was reported.
A letter was read which was
directed to the Board of
Education in regard to hiring an
assistsnt band director who
would also assist with the vocal
music program.
· Also discussed were plans for
a food booth at the Mason

60th ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Haning,
former Meigs County residents,
will observe their 60th wedding
anniversary with an open house
at their Millersport, Ohio
residence Sunday from 2 to 4
p.m.
They are the parenls of four
daughters, Mrs. Fred Goeglein,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Clarence Karr,
Millersport; Mrs. Philip Stolp,
Indianapolis; and Mrs. Delton
Hughes, Lancaster.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
bouse hours. Mr. and Mrs.
Haning have requested that
there be no gifts.

Gerald Simmons, band
director, announced that the
secondary activities committee
had given ils approval for the
band to travel to Virginia and
Tennessee on Oct. 1, 2 and 3,
however, approval must be
secured from the County Board
of Education.
The band members hope to
make the trip in chartered
buses and perform in the field
and marching maneuvers in
class C &amp; D competition.

R. Scott Carter, junior at
Roanoke
Bible College,
Elizabeth City, N. C. was ordained to the ministry at the
New Marshfield Church on July
11.
Mr. Keith Wise, a junior at the
Kentucky Christian College and
minister of the Rutland Church
of Christ, sang a solo. Professor
William A. Griffin, Roanoke
Bible College, delivered the
ordination sermon and Mr. Bill
Carter, minister of the Bradbury Church and father of the
candidate, gave the charge and
presented the certificate of
ordination.

BIG SALE!

Big Bargains
SHOES

FOR THE FAMILY

Chapman's Shoes
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

Assisting in the laying on of
hands ceremony were the
candidate's grandfather, Mr.
Virgil H. Carter, elder of the
New Marshfield congregation;
Mr. Harry Hawk and Mr. Bob
Russ, also elders at New
Marshfield, and Earl Werner
and Dale Barnhart, elders of the
Bradbury Church of Christ.
RUMMAGE SALE
A rummage and bake sale
wiU be held Thursday, Friday
and Saturday beginning at 10
a.m. in the Fry Building, Mill ,
Street, Middleport, sponsored
by the Middleport Pentecostal
Church Auxiliary.

SATURDAY - JULY 24th
FOR

"ANNUAL SUMMER -OUTING"
OF
GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.
U.S. 60WEST-HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor D.ly

Summer Sale on Com ort Chairs
From the Craftsmen of
............

Shop Sat. Til 8:30
Mon.-Fri.,

8:30 to 5

. , ... .. .,.

* .
..

•1\\ ~r : o:· . ~·~ -!{1.1

®

BERKLINE

,_.....~J·

'lr.

~-

; Good Housekeeping·~
',....~

GU ~IIl'i UI$

'' )
., ·~(.ff ORl lfC!riD 10 t~'!'~

'

~-.;

Thurs., 8:30 Til Noon

Hosts Better

Here's. smart ~tyling and deep
· comfort in a quality Rock:A·
Lounger. Deluxe 3- way act1on
mechanism for sitting, rocking,
TV-viewing or full ,reclining.

CELEBRATE BIR111DAYS
The birthday anniversaries of
Mrs. Janet Kay Cooper Compson and ber son, Timmy, were
celeJx:ated ~Y with a party
at their boole 10 Mason, W. Va.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clem Cooper, Syracuse, and
Mrs. ~ Lee Cooper Russell
and children.

Health Club

the farthest and being the oldest
family member present was
Max Yesuger ct Pennington,
Va. ·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, Minersville ;
Max Yeauger, Pennington, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Allan
Yeauger, Sr., South Point; Mr.
and Mrs. Allan Yeauger, Jr.,

Approximately 75 persons
were present for the first
Yeauger family reunion held
&amp;mday at the Royal Oak Park.

Twenty.four members and LuciUe Smith, an of Olester;
~~ests attended the Meigs Mrs. Ethel Chapman, Mrs.
and sons, John and Michael, County Retired Teachers Anna Ogdin, Mrs. Blanche.
South Point; Mr . and Mrs. Association
picnic held Nelson and Mrs. Martha
Donald Yeauger , Pam and Saturday at the State Park on Chapman, aU of Rutland; Mr.
Gary, Xenis ; Mr. and · Mrs. SR 3J.
and Mrs. Charles Gibbs,
Gene Yeauger and daughter,
During a short business Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Paige, Enon; Mr. andMrs. Paul mee ting held following the Wiley, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Yeauger and sons, Edward and din ner Legislative and House Hughes, Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs.
Preston, Columbus.
Bill 284 was discussed. It was Ruth Euler , Mrs . Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Yeauger also announced that due to the Reynolds and Mrs. Edith
and ·daughter, Maryln and son, District meeting on Oct. 6 at Forrest, all of Middleport; Mrs.
Wayne, Charleston ; Mr. and, Burr Oak and the State meeting Anna Hilldore and Mrs. Glady$
Mrs.
Marvin
Yeauger . on Oct. 21 at Columbus the next Hayllli'n of Syracuse.
Cheshire ; Kenneth Yeaug~r •regular meeting would be held
and children, Terra and Chris, on Nov. 6with a noon luncheon .
Fast Writer
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mrs. Lucille Smith, president,
Smith, Tina, ~y. Jr., Anthony • presided.
0. Henry is said to have
Laura and Ertc, Cheshire ; Mr . Attending were , Mr. and Mrs. written his famous Christmas
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger and c. s. Morris and Mr. and Mrs. short story, "The Gift of the
Kevin, Middleport; Mr. and Maurice Lott, aU of Racine ; Mr . Mag1," in three hours on a
November afternoon for the
Mrs. Robert Halley and and Mrs. Fred Rice, Mrs . New
York World's magazine
children, Alex, Slephen and Fannie Bell Brown and Miss section in 1905.
Amy, Cheshire; Mrs. Delma
Yeauger Halley, Cheshire ; Mr. ~~--·••••••••••••••
and Mrs. Robert Mcintosh and
Luanna, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. John Carsey, son, Ryan,
,Athens ; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Halley and Missy, Tuppers
Plains. '
~awrence
Yeauger,
Cheshire; Carolyn D. Yeauger
and Marri Anne of Cheshire;
Thelma Mays, Pataskala;
Genia Walburn, Pamela
Walburn, Cheshire ; Mrs.
Sharon Yeauger Parker and
Suzy, Parkersburg ; Mrs. Reva
Beach, Middleport; Mary
Ramsey, Patriot; Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Rice and Bill, Middleport; Virgil Dill, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Anna Riggs, Malta; Mr.
and Mrs. Barry Yeauger and
Pomeroy
Main St.
Barry Alan, Cheshire.

Ordained Into Ministry

Mrs. Conkle

Men's Sweat

Knit Shirts

family was presented a gift of
luggage from members and
friends of St. Paul Lutheran.
Attending were Clarence C.
)
Blessing, Mrs. Pat Paugh, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald F. Roush, Mr.
D _ _;__
and Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
1.\Uf.,l'f~
. Johnny Roush, Mrs. Edna
Burris, Kathy and Linda The 'l'win-O.ty Shrine Park at
Luikart, Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs. Racine was the site of the anEdwin Roush, Mt. and Mrs. Don 11181 picnic ri the Middleport
Bwngardner, Mr. and Mrs. Business and Professional
Uoyd Ruusb, Pastor and Mrs. Wcmen'sClub Mooday evening.
George C. Weirick, Miss Lelah Mrs. Grace PraU cooducted
Jam; Powell, Mr · and Mrs. the blasjness meeting during
William Russell, Mrs. Orpba wmch time it was voted to
Ohlinger, Mrs. Chester Weayer, purchaseanewmattressfor the
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. William · hospital bed. Operation ct the
Powell, Mrs. Paul Scally, Mr · club's bospitalloan Cilllter was
discussed and residenls with
eqadpment, wbelber ..- not it is
now in use, are asked to cootact
Mrs. PraU so that an ~te
inventory can be prepared.
The budget for the year was
presented by Mrs. Mary
Kwuelman who also suggested
projects to raise the needed
mmey. It was also reported
that dues are payable by AUg.
10.
The Head Start class taught Mrs .
Pearl
Reynolds
by Joy Bentley, Daisy Blakeslee discussed plans for the August
and Mary Skinner was tsken on meeting. She also noted that she
a field trip Friday to the Roy has 1rocms made by the tmnd
Holter Dairy Farm.
lorsaleandtbatallpraceedsgo
'lhe dllldren were &amp;lftll the to the bla.l.
"grand tour" of the farm's Mrs. Jean Moore and Mrs.
rolling pastures, saw the Reynolds were cbainnen of the
animals, and enjoyed a bay hospitality committee for the
ride. A picnic lunch was held picnic. Mrs. Reynolds won the
followed by horseback riding. 1raveting prhe. Games were
Attending in addition to played d~ the evening.
rnemben of the class were Guests at the picnic were
Mrs. Bentley, Mrs. Rlalresl~. Jolm Werner and his nephew,
Mrs. Skinner, Nora Nil%, Janice Mart ~vis, ~urst, m.,
Smith Nan Herman, Judy Mrs. Dorinda Nanlie and son,
~ Tammy Robbie and Edgar Reynolds, Homer
Keith 'Lander~, Carolyn Forresi,Belinds,EdieandH.J.
Allensworth and Mike, Anette Stobart, Tammy Hamnell, Mrs.
and Nannette Nil%, Debbie Harry Hwdashelt, and Harry
Campbell, Pauline Deren- Moore.
berger Earl Wines Wanda MI!DIIMn there besides those
Sc~~, Shelby M~ey and named above were Mrs. Edith
Fay Filzpatrick.
Forrest, Mrs. Norma Wilson,
Mrs. Linda Stobart, Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs.
Rose
Reynolds, Mrs. Betty Cline,
Mrs. Olga Plerotli, Mrs. Wilma
Sargent, Mrs. Ahrilda Werner
and Miss Frelklie Houdasbelt.

T raflSterS
l'

Children
Take A
Field Trip ~

Light Weight and year round weight all top
quality Coats in double and single breasted
models. A good run of sizes from 35 to 48.
Reg. $49.50 to $60.00. For 3 days only $24.75
to $30.00

Bermuda Shults 'n PriCe

538 W. Main

Y2 PRICE

Y2 PRICE

Most of these never need ironing Plaids, plain
colors and stripes. This you must see. You can't
just buy one of these. You will want several of
these. Short sleeve. Sizes S.M-l and XL Reg.
Price $4.98 to $6.98. Now justS1.49 to S3.49.

HAVEN - The Rev. and Mrs. John F. Roosh, Kathy
James Y~ Kin Moy, paslllr ct Roush, Dianna Ruusb, Mr. and
Sl Paul Lutheran Cllurcb ci Mrs. Jobn Thorne, Marsha
New Haven, was honored Thome, Mrs. Thomas Grin' recently with a farewell stead, Mrs. William Mereception given by The · Farland, Becky Roush, Mrs.
Lutheran Church Women.
Charles W. Roush, Mrs. CliH
Paslllr Moy has served as Roush, Mike Oblinger, David
pastor of St. Paul for the past Rose, Mrs. Harold Rose, Mrs.
two years while working on his Carroll Adams, Jr., Mrs. B. R.
Doctorate in Guidance Coon- Vance, Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs.
seling and student Persoonel Frank Young, Jr., Judy Young,
Administration, at Ohio Rick Siders, Betty WoHe, Mr.
University in Athens. His wife, and Mrs. John Fry, Mrs. J. V.
Mabel, also spent the last two McGrew, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse,
years commuting to Ohio Miss Becky Burris, Mrs.
University lor. work oo her Howard Burris, J,.ou Ellen
1118Bier and Doctorate degrees Roush, Kay Roush, Mrs. Velma
in curriculum and supervision Roush, Miss Myra Roush,
in Elementary Education.
Bruce L. Adams, Harriett
Pastor and Mrs. Moy and Layne, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
their two sons, Jimmy and Layne, Mr. and Mrs. F. C.
Tommy, will leave New Haven Reichert, Brisn Russell, The
the last of July. Pastor Moy has Rev. Wllliam DeMoss, Vicki
accepted the position of Bumgardner, Marsha Sprouse,
Director ci Student Affairs at Gary Bwngarner, and Mrs.
Wartburg College, a Lutheran Melvin Knapp.
Orurth College, In Waverly,

I~ the reception the Moy BPW Annw/

SPORT SHIRTS SPORT COATS

Gene Wettstone , coach of
the U.S. gymnastics team,
says he is expecting an· exPomeroy, Ohio ·
ceptionally youthful turnout
when he holds tryouts this
Member Federnl Home Loan
summer for a team to tour
Ban~ .
Eorope : "The field for the
Member Federal Sdv1 ngs &lt;IS. European tryouts shapes up
Locm Insurance Corp All . ns one of youth and ~reat poacCOI 'nts inwred up to tential for the 1972 Olym·
$20.00'! .00
pies."

Co~pany

AU. SAl ES CASH!

Good Run of Sizes • Men's

YOUNG GYMNASTS

At Your Certified Oil

FOR THIS EVENT

DRESS SLACKS

Both Summer and year round weight all from our
regular stock of top quality suits. Stripe, plaids, and
plain colors in both double and single breasted
·models. .Y.ostly regulars and longs. A few shorts in
group. Reg. $65.00 to $95.00 Now Only $32.50 to $47.50.
Sizes36 to48. A small charge for alterations.

'

FREE _

'

and Year 'Round

Y2 PRICE

An excellent run of sizes and colors. Sizes B
to 20. Reg. $1.&lt;191oS-1.9B. Amust at S1.66 to
SJ.n.

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

'·

'

County in Texas

Watch Your
$$Grow

NJi:W

Men's Summer Weight

~~.~~.~~"'•'~
Club Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
home of Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
w ksh
or op.
_ OHIOETAPHI~pter,Beta
Sigma Phi Soronty. members
and children to meet a~ 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the Mi~dleport
Plll:k and from there WI~ go to
Clqden Park for. ~ outmg. .
THURSDAY
POMEROY CUB Scouts,
.Pack 249, Dens I and 4 Thursday, 7 p.m. for cleanup project
around lake at Beech Grove
Cemetery entrance followed by
wiener roast and fishing.
FRIDAY
WILUNG WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the
h(IJ)e of Mrs. Herbert Dillon.
REVIVAL Friday, Saturday
an d Sunda y, 7:30 p.m. sponsored by Mount Hermon
Bre tbren Youth . Rev. John E .
· te
· . te
Edwa rds , Lancas
r, I1IIIUS r.
Services will be held In the open
Friday and Saturday nights.
Youth events each night after

Moy
Family
Honored
P Meigs
.
.
.
roperty

Semi-Annual

::.~:

services, Friday, hayride,
Saturday, bowling. Wear casual
clothing. Sunday night a gettogether.
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM Social St. Paul's
United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains, Saturday
beginning at 2 p.m.
I~E CREAM Social Saturday
Salisbury Elementary School
sponsored by PTA beginning at
6 p.m. Homema de ·ace cream,
pie, iced tea and coffee will be
sold. Bring own containers for
take home orders
HYMN SING Saturday at
Eagle Ridge Community
Church, 7:30 p.m. Bissell
Brothers. featured singers.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING Sunday at
Dexter Community Church
starling at 10 a.m. Several
groups of singers will be
featured along with sill year old
Terry Saunders who will sing
and play the mandolin. Basket
dinner at noon. Everyone is
welcome to attend.
THE CHESTER High School
Class of 1931 wiU hold its Annual
Reunion Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker,
S
Ba k t d'
t
yracuse.
s e
mner a
12:30. All members of the class,
teac hers and schoolmates are
ed to tte d
urg
a n ·

PREPA~ING

New York
Clothing. House
.

23-24-26

~~-:-~:( -~=:· -~=::·.::::::=.::::::=:..:::::~~=-·= :·: :.:.:=-~=: :==~=:~,:s:~s..-::::-#.~~w.x:::re.:t:===~=*~m~:::::::::::::~=~*==~~?{e@:::::t&gt;;w

WEDNEsDAY
SPECIAL meeting, Amateur
Garden Club, at the home of
Mrs. Harold Lohse, Wolfe
Drive, Pomeroy, Wednesday
evening, July 21 at 7:30; Mrs.
Earl Dean, Jr. to present a
workshop on interpretive
arranging.
WINDING TRAIL Garden

.•

CLOSED
AU DAY
THURSDAY

•

Annual picnic ct the Rock
Springs Better Health Club was
beld Thunday at the home ct
Mrs. James Conkle, Cheshire.
Following the noon dinner,
the group spent the afternoon
socializinll. It was noted that
there will be no meeting in
Q-What insect can act as
August and that the September
a
living
thermometer?
meeting will be held at the home
A- Tbe cricket. Crickets
of Mrs. CliHord Leifheit. At that
chirp
faster as the tempera·
time there will be a style revue
ture rises.
by the members.
Attending the picnic were
Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs. Harold
Blackston, Mrs. William
Folmer, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Amos Leonard, Mrs.
Homer Radford, Mrs. Welby
Whaley, Mrs. George Skinner,
Mrs. MarkGrueser, Mrs. Oliver
Clark, Mrs. Lewis Grueser,
Mrs. Scott Fobner, Mrs.
William Grueser, and Mrs.
Frances Conkle, Mrs. James
Conkle, and Mrs. Amos
Leonard.
Mrs. Morgan, Mrs. Conkle,
and Mrs. Leonard were ap.JUDO UOO. WED. lUNG ISO
pointed to provide the infirmary
PORTRAIT
treat this month.

SALE

109

5

This beautiful 3-position Recliner
is detailed in a smart combination of vinyl and fabric. And it's
:;o comfortable. A real value · at
thi s low price!

$129

... . ·-

·:· .·

OF PERFECTION

A b..utiful Keepsolte diamond

Ftaally..&amp;a«eufal
Milton S. Hershey unsuc·
cesslullf o p e r a t e d candy
stores m Philadelphia l!nd
New York before siicceedmg
in tbe manufacture or ·caramelll and establishing tbe
world's I a r. g est chocolate
plant in 1903 according to
Encyclopaecb Britannica.

ring. P~rmJinmtly rqiste.ml
;and paranteed "&amp;ainst

diamond l.Ss. A perfect

I-.: ( .' .l ; -

;Ik '

&gt;

'

MASON FURNITURE

The oil leasing scandal or
tbe I!I'.Mls was called Teapot
Dome after a rock formation
00 one of the oil reservations

involved.
'1
1

t

Deluxe Recliner

Rock

diamond of fine cut •nd color
... pi the pictwd

HERMAN GRATE

·--------"----

'I

MASON, W. VA.

'

'

'

�....

,.,

.....

·-

.........:......_..... . ...............................,......r

' l

l

'•'

I
'

7-~Dally SelltiDd, M!Mepi,.t.Ptmao). 0 .. July 21.1rn

4- The Dally Sentinel.Middleport-Pom•rov, 0., July 21, 1971

REMEMBER!

Fun with Foods
by Charlene

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
MONDAY

Hoeflich

A funny thing happened to Vilma Pikkoja on her -way to a
picnic Surday.
·
She got mired down In the mud and went home mad .... well,
not euctly. She did get her car stuck in the mud and by the lime
she got it out, It seemed too late to go on to the picnic. So she
turned around and returned home.
Now thesadpartcitlllsstory Is that Mrs. Pikkoja had made a
special dish "Rossolye," a glorified potato salad frmn her native
Estoola.
It's a pretty, pink coococtlon; quite tasty. While it has only a
haH herring (cubed) In it, the fish taste is predominant.
Mrs. Pikkoja says Rossolye, a favorite of her people particularly during the loog summer days, is often served with
vodka. The dish which she prepared for the picnic, incidentally,
went to Mrs. HortenseEplingo!Galllpolisandyours 1ru1y:
·
Give Mrs. Pikkoja's salad a tty to add a little variety to the
menus ci these hot swruner days. The recipe makes six servings.
ROSSOLYE
(Estooian Polato Salad)
2 thick slices of cold cooked meat cut into 'h Inch cubes; I
cooked carrot, 2 or 3 firm, boiled potatoes peeled, both cubed; I
small raw onion, diced; I raw apple, cored, peeled and cubed; 'h
herring, cubed; 1 sour dill pickle cubed; 3 beets, cooked and
peeled (or canned) cubed; and2hardboiledeggs.
DR&amp;'ISING
1cup sour cream, 2 tsblespoons sharp mustard, 2 tablespoons
vinegar, I teaspoon sugar, salt to taste.
~
Combine the first five salad ingredients In a bowl. Mix the
d! es;ng separately. Keep both In a cool place until ready to
serve.
Just before ~. mlx the herring, pickle, and beets into
the salad. Toss it with the dresaing, and decorate it with slices of
herd bolted egg.

Ju~

Drastic Reductions .for Men &amp; Boys, (and Ladies too).
Remember we just have 2 Sales each year. This is the
Salt! everyone waits on. Save up to 1f2'and more •.

.

She'll Represent

n yov odd to your savings
Nch week ot tile Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
S.vlngs and Loan.

4%%

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

Meigs Co. Branch

PT. "PLEASANT - Miss
Jacqueline Gabrit.sch, formerly
of Mason, and now of Sand Hill
Road, Pt. Pleasant, has been
selected to represent West
Virginia in the Miss Charm
International Beauty Pageant
to be held in Houston, Texas, at
the Shamrock Hilton, August :;..
7. She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald F. Gabrit.schand a
graduate of Point Pleasant High
School. She. bas also been
selected as one of the five top
twirlers in the stste to compete
in the Winter Carnival in St.
Paul, Minn. , in January, 1972.

MEN'S SUITS

· Our Famous Bnrlds of Men's

Y2 PRICE

Dacron &amp; Wool, all wools and rayon
blends. Some are washable. Reg. $9.98 to
$19.98. Sale Price $4.99 to $9.98. Small
charge for alterations.

s Knit Shirts lh Price
Men's S. S. Cotton

T

tt

It
fi

Both Slipover and Button Styles in Round
Neck 'and Collar Styles. A real nice
selection of colors and sizes in S-M·l &amp; XL
Reg.$2.981o$7.98. These-'llosttangot
$1.49 to S3.99.

Men's Wool

Ladies' and Men's

Luggage lh Price

Sport Hats 1fz Price

An excellent name in t:;:~,gage.
in every color. Just rig t for

.

Not I
going back to school. Reg. Price
520.95to m .oo. Now Only na .41 to
&gt;

Plaid and Plain Colors Reg. $2,98 lo $5. 98.
Now only 51.49 to 12.99 .

Men's

Men's Ban Lon

Shirts Y.l off
Navy, gold, brown, while and light blue.
Not everT size in every color. Re,. $5.fl to
S9.98. Sa e Price $2.99 to sut.

Men's

Straw Hats 1fz Price Summer Caps 113 off
Reg . $1.19 to $2.98. Sale Price 79c
to 52.00.

Reg. $4.98 to $5.98
Now just $2.49 to $2.99

Grey

T·Shirts
$1
Short Sleeve

Shirts 1fz Price

Reg . $2.98toS4.98. Sale Price $1.49 buy. Reg. $5.00 to $6. 98. Sale Price
$2.50 to $3.49.
'

to $2.49.

Men's Lona Sleeve

Boys' Short Sleeve

Dress Shirts 1fz Price

off

Boys'

Suits ;nl Sperl Coats

Values to $7.98.
Sizes are broken.

$2

Ladies Blouses 1fz Price

Sizesarebroken. Reg. S14.9BtoS29.SO.

...ly S1.4t

to

$14.75.

.

Men's &amp; Boys'

Ladies Slacks 1fz Price

Mens Ties

Reg. Price $3.98 in Boys to S7.98 in Men's.
sote Priu su' to SJ.".

Pajamas 113 off

Values to 2.50

Sizes 8'n to. 11

fRIDAY, JULY 23

$'1.98. Silo

Now Only $3.32 to $5.32.

First Quality

2 real pretty colors

The Doon Open

Reg. $4.98 to $7.98

Ladies Hose 2 pair 88'

3/$1.00
Be Here When

Men's

Some are lloir. Reg. $6.98 to
Price SJ.49 lo $4." .

Hot Pant length and Bermuda
length. Some have the bib front.
Sizes from 5 to 16. Reg. $4.98 to $6.98
Now Only 52.49 to 53.49.

Both while and colored in stripe~-----------­
and plain colors. Reg. $5.00 to
58.98. Yours for only 52.50 to 54.49.
Both French cuff and buHon cuffs.
Knits. Cottons, &amp; Dacron &amp; Cotton
Men's Long Sleeve
Blends. Plain &amp; Fancy Patterns.
Sizes 10 to 16. Reg. $6.98 to $14.98.
This you mjJst see now just $3.49 to
$7.49.
Just right for the Fall and Winter
ahead. Reg. $4.98 to 57.98. Now 1--------~----0nly $2.49 to 53.99.

Station

992-9981

(Just 12 in Lot).

Sport Shirts 1fz Price

'n Price

FREE

Certified Gas Stations

Ladies Blouses

Dress Shirts 1fz Price Ladies Shorts 1fz Price
Swimwear 1fz Price Sizes
are broken but this is a real

Sizes are broken

"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" If We Fail To
Clean Your Windshield, Weather PlirmiHing.
No Other Company Dares To Offer This
Policy.

FOR THE LADIES

Sleeveless, Short Sleeves &amp; long
Sleeves. Fancy and plain colors. An
Both short Sleeves and long Sleeves. Reg.
SJ.4t to $5.91. Now Only $1.75 to $2.99 . For both BovsandGi'rls Imprint on Front. excellent name in· Ladies Blouses.
Included is the Y Neck Meigs Marauder Reg. Price sa .98.
Sizes 8 to 18. Reg. $4.98 to $8.98. You
Sweat Shirt.
S-M-L &amp; SL.
will want several of these at 52.49 to
--~---------t-----------·-·-+-~-----~~s----1 $4.49.
Boys'
Odd lot Men's Short leeve

113

AT 9 A.M.

Ladies Dresses
1fz Price
This you have to see . Long sleeve,
sleeveless and short sleeves. A very
go_od name in Dresses. Reg. $12.98 to·
$18.98. Sale Price $6.49 to $9.49.

'

POmeroy, Ohio

(We Honor BankAmericard and Master Char e)

Picnic Held

!Jn

New York Clothing House POMEROY
I .

"KERM'S CORNER"

First Annual Yeauger Family
Retired Teachers Picnic
Reunion Held at Royal Oak Park

Jacob E. Thomas, Lula M.
Thomas to Robert L. Strong,
Jeannine Strong, Lots 100, 101,
104 and 1115, C. W. Dabney's
Add .• Pomeroy.
G. E . Veregan, Anna Belle
Veregan to Roman F. Warmke,
Dorothy E . Warmke, 98.20
Acres, Columbia.
Forrest M. White, eta! to
State of Ohio, Journal Entry,
Meigs.
. Kenneth E. Harris, Margaret
Y. Harris to John Lisle, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Mabel Goff to Keith Oiler,
Gloria Oiler, I Acre, Salem.
Helen GibnW"e to Edgar P.
Gilmore, .Trus., Lot, Pomeroy.
Clayton Bogard, Rosalie
Bogard to Harlan A. Ballard,
Alta L. Ballard, Parcel,
Lebanon.
Asa Hoskins to Dana H.
Bailey, Lois Bailey, llO Acres
Timber, Orange.
Clarence
E.
Fraley,
Jacqueline F, Fraley to Frank
Hamilton, Susan Hamilton,
2.5&amp;1 Acres, CoiW!Ibia.
Robert M. Steele, Ruth E.
Steele to John E. McLaughlin,
Jo Ann McLaughlin, 5 Acres,
Chester.
Chrisie E. Powell, Clara M.
Powell to Joseph D. Glenn, .59
Acre, Sulton.
Velma Dains Wade, Ernest L.
Wade to Robert L. Strong,
Jeannine Strong, Int. Lots 100,
101, 104 and 105, C. W. Dabney's
Add., Pomeroy.

All seven sons and the one
daughter of the late Mote
Yeauger and their families
were present for the reunion.
Recognized for having traveling

Wahama Band Boosters
Plan Trip For Band
County Fair. Named a~ cochairman in charge of pie
baking were Mrs. John Hoff·
man and Mrs. Patty Paugh.
Final plans for the food booth
will be made at a special
meeting with the date of the
meeting to he announced later.

MASON - The regular
monthly meeting of the
Wahama Band Boosters was
held in the Band Room recently
with James Jarrell, president,
presiding.
Jarrell, Earl Dean Knight and
Gerald Simmons were named to
meet with Mr. Wedge to discuss
some of the problem areas of
the new band building. A work
crew bas been selected to begin
instslling cabinets for uniform
storage. Help is needed for this
project it was reported.
A letter was read which was
directed to the Board of
Education in regard to hiring an
assistsnt band director who
would also assist with the vocal
music program.
· Also discussed were plans for
a food booth at the Mason

60th ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Haning,
former Meigs County residents,
will observe their 60th wedding
anniversary with an open house
at their Millersport, Ohio
residence Sunday from 2 to 4
p.m.
They are the parenls of four
daughters, Mrs. Fred Goeglein,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Clarence Karr,
Millersport; Mrs. Philip Stolp,
Indianapolis; and Mrs. Delton
Hughes, Lancaster.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
bouse hours. Mr. and Mrs.
Haning have requested that
there be no gifts.

Gerald Simmons, band
director, announced that the
secondary activities committee
had given ils approval for the
band to travel to Virginia and
Tennessee on Oct. 1, 2 and 3,
however, approval must be
secured from the County Board
of Education.
The band members hope to
make the trip in chartered
buses and perform in the field
and marching maneuvers in
class C &amp; D competition.

R. Scott Carter, junior at
Roanoke
Bible College,
Elizabeth City, N. C. was ordained to the ministry at the
New Marshfield Church on July
11.
Mr. Keith Wise, a junior at the
Kentucky Christian College and
minister of the Rutland Church
of Christ, sang a solo. Professor
William A. Griffin, Roanoke
Bible College, delivered the
ordination sermon and Mr. Bill
Carter, minister of the Bradbury Church and father of the
candidate, gave the charge and
presented the certificate of
ordination.

BIG SALE!

Big Bargains
SHOES

FOR THE FAMILY

Chapman's Shoes
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

Assisting in the laying on of
hands ceremony were the
candidate's grandfather, Mr.
Virgil H. Carter, elder of the
New Marshfield congregation;
Mr. Harry Hawk and Mr. Bob
Russ, also elders at New
Marshfield, and Earl Werner
and Dale Barnhart, elders of the
Bradbury Church of Christ.
RUMMAGE SALE
A rummage and bake sale
wiU be held Thursday, Friday
and Saturday beginning at 10
a.m. in the Fry Building, Mill ,
Street, Middleport, sponsored
by the Middleport Pentecostal
Church Auxiliary.

SATURDAY - JULY 24th
FOR

"ANNUAL SUMMER -OUTING"
OF
GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.
U.S. 60WEST-HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor D.ly

Summer Sale on Com ort Chairs
From the Craftsmen of
............

Shop Sat. Til 8:30
Mon.-Fri.,

8:30 to 5

. , ... .. .,.

* .
..

•1\\ ~r : o:· . ~·~ -!{1.1

®

BERKLINE

,_.....~J·

'lr.

~-

; Good Housekeeping·~
',....~

GU ~IIl'i UI$

'' )
., ·~(.ff ORl lfC!riD 10 t~'!'~

'

~-.;

Thurs., 8:30 Til Noon

Hosts Better

Here's. smart ~tyling and deep
· comfort in a quality Rock:A·
Lounger. Deluxe 3- way act1on
mechanism for sitting, rocking,
TV-viewing or full ,reclining.

CELEBRATE BIR111DAYS
The birthday anniversaries of
Mrs. Janet Kay Cooper Compson and ber son, Timmy, were
celeJx:ated ~Y with a party
at their boole 10 Mason, W. Va.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clem Cooper, Syracuse, and
Mrs. ~ Lee Cooper Russell
and children.

Health Club

the farthest and being the oldest
family member present was
Max Yesuger ct Pennington,
Va. ·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, Minersville ;
Max Yeauger, Pennington, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Allan
Yeauger, Sr., South Point; Mr.
and Mrs. Allan Yeauger, Jr.,

Approximately 75 persons
were present for the first
Yeauger family reunion held
&amp;mday at the Royal Oak Park.

Twenty.four members and LuciUe Smith, an of Olester;
~~ests attended the Meigs Mrs. Ethel Chapman, Mrs.
and sons, John and Michael, County Retired Teachers Anna Ogdin, Mrs. Blanche.
South Point; Mr . and Mrs. Association
picnic held Nelson and Mrs. Martha
Donald Yeauger , Pam and Saturday at the State Park on Chapman, aU of Rutland; Mr.
Gary, Xenis ; Mr. and · Mrs. SR 3J.
and Mrs. Charles Gibbs,
Gene Yeauger and daughter,
During a short business Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Paige, Enon; Mr. andMrs. Paul mee ting held following the Wiley, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Yeauger and sons, Edward and din ner Legislative and House Hughes, Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs.
Preston, Columbus.
Bill 284 was discussed. It was Ruth Euler , Mrs . Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Yeauger also announced that due to the Reynolds and Mrs. Edith
and ·daughter, Maryln and son, District meeting on Oct. 6 at Forrest, all of Middleport; Mrs.
Wayne, Charleston ; Mr. and, Burr Oak and the State meeting Anna Hilldore and Mrs. Glady$
Mrs.
Marvin
Yeauger . on Oct. 21 at Columbus the next Hayllli'n of Syracuse.
Cheshire ; Kenneth Yeaug~r •regular meeting would be held
and children, Terra and Chris, on Nov. 6with a noon luncheon .
Fast Writer
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mrs. Lucille Smith, president,
Smith, Tina, ~y. Jr., Anthony • presided.
0. Henry is said to have
Laura and Ertc, Cheshire ; Mr . Attending were , Mr. and Mrs. written his famous Christmas
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger and c. s. Morris and Mr. and Mrs. short story, "The Gift of the
Kevin, Middleport; Mr. and Maurice Lott, aU of Racine ; Mr . Mag1," in three hours on a
November afternoon for the
Mrs. Robert Halley and and Mrs. Fred Rice, Mrs . New
York World's magazine
children, Alex, Slephen and Fannie Bell Brown and Miss section in 1905.
Amy, Cheshire; Mrs. Delma
Yeauger Halley, Cheshire ; Mr. ~~--·••••••••••••••
and Mrs. Robert Mcintosh and
Luanna, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. John Carsey, son, Ryan,
,Athens ; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Halley and Missy, Tuppers
Plains. '
~awrence
Yeauger,
Cheshire; Carolyn D. Yeauger
and Marri Anne of Cheshire;
Thelma Mays, Pataskala;
Genia Walburn, Pamela
Walburn, Cheshire ; Mrs.
Sharon Yeauger Parker and
Suzy, Parkersburg ; Mrs. Reva
Beach, Middleport; Mary
Ramsey, Patriot; Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Rice and Bill, Middleport; Virgil Dill, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Anna Riggs, Malta; Mr.
and Mrs. Barry Yeauger and
Pomeroy
Main St.
Barry Alan, Cheshire.

Ordained Into Ministry

Mrs. Conkle

Men's Sweat

Knit Shirts

family was presented a gift of
luggage from members and
friends of St. Paul Lutheran.
Attending were Clarence C.
)
Blessing, Mrs. Pat Paugh, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald F. Roush, Mr.
D _ _;__
and Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
1.\Uf.,l'f~
. Johnny Roush, Mrs. Edna
Burris, Kathy and Linda The 'l'win-O.ty Shrine Park at
Luikart, Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs. Racine was the site of the anEdwin Roush, Mt. and Mrs. Don 11181 picnic ri the Middleport
Bwngardner, Mr. and Mrs. Business and Professional
Uoyd Ruusb, Pastor and Mrs. Wcmen'sClub Mooday evening.
George C. Weirick, Miss Lelah Mrs. Grace PraU cooducted
Jam; Powell, Mr · and Mrs. the blasjness meeting during
William Russell, Mrs. Orpba wmch time it was voted to
Ohlinger, Mrs. Chester Weayer, purchaseanewmattressfor the
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. William · hospital bed. Operation ct the
Powell, Mrs. Paul Scally, Mr · club's bospitalloan Cilllter was
discussed and residenls with
eqadpment, wbelber ..- not it is
now in use, are asked to cootact
Mrs. PraU so that an ~te
inventory can be prepared.
The budget for the year was
presented by Mrs. Mary
Kwuelman who also suggested
projects to raise the needed
mmey. It was also reported
that dues are payable by AUg.
10.
The Head Start class taught Mrs .
Pearl
Reynolds
by Joy Bentley, Daisy Blakeslee discussed plans for the August
and Mary Skinner was tsken on meeting. She also noted that she
a field trip Friday to the Roy has 1rocms made by the tmnd
Holter Dairy Farm.
lorsaleandtbatallpraceedsgo
'lhe dllldren were &amp;lftll the to the bla.l.
"grand tour" of the farm's Mrs. Jean Moore and Mrs.
rolling pastures, saw the Reynolds were cbainnen of the
animals, and enjoyed a bay hospitality committee for the
ride. A picnic lunch was held picnic. Mrs. Reynolds won the
followed by horseback riding. 1raveting prhe. Games were
Attending in addition to played d~ the evening.
rnemben of the class were Guests at the picnic were
Mrs. Bentley, Mrs. Rlalresl~. Jolm Werner and his nephew,
Mrs. Skinner, Nora Nil%, Janice Mart ~vis, ~urst, m.,
Smith Nan Herman, Judy Mrs. Dorinda Nanlie and son,
~ Tammy Robbie and Edgar Reynolds, Homer
Keith 'Lander~, Carolyn Forresi,Belinds,EdieandH.J.
Allensworth and Mike, Anette Stobart, Tammy Hamnell, Mrs.
and Nannette Nil%, Debbie Harry Hwdashelt, and Harry
Campbell, Pauline Deren- Moore.
berger Earl Wines Wanda MI!DIIMn there besides those
Sc~~, Shelby M~ey and named above were Mrs. Edith
Fay Filzpatrick.
Forrest, Mrs. Norma Wilson,
Mrs. Linda Stobart, Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs.
Rose
Reynolds, Mrs. Betty Cline,
Mrs. Olga Plerotli, Mrs. Wilma
Sargent, Mrs. Ahrilda Werner
and Miss Frelklie Houdasbelt.

T raflSterS
l'

Children
Take A
Field Trip ~

Light Weight and year round weight all top
quality Coats in double and single breasted
models. A good run of sizes from 35 to 48.
Reg. $49.50 to $60.00. For 3 days only $24.75
to $30.00

Bermuda Shults 'n PriCe

538 W. Main

Y2 PRICE

Y2 PRICE

Most of these never need ironing Plaids, plain
colors and stripes. This you must see. You can't
just buy one of these. You will want several of
these. Short sleeve. Sizes S.M-l and XL Reg.
Price $4.98 to $6.98. Now justS1.49 to S3.49.

HAVEN - The Rev. and Mrs. John F. Roosh, Kathy
James Y~ Kin Moy, paslllr ct Roush, Dianna Ruusb, Mr. and
Sl Paul Lutheran Cllurcb ci Mrs. Jobn Thorne, Marsha
New Haven, was honored Thome, Mrs. Thomas Grin' recently with a farewell stead, Mrs. William Mereception given by The · Farland, Becky Roush, Mrs.
Lutheran Church Women.
Charles W. Roush, Mrs. CliH
Paslllr Moy has served as Roush, Mike Oblinger, David
pastor of St. Paul for the past Rose, Mrs. Harold Rose, Mrs.
two years while working on his Carroll Adams, Jr., Mrs. B. R.
Doctorate in Guidance Coon- Vance, Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs.
seling and student Persoonel Frank Young, Jr., Judy Young,
Administration, at Ohio Rick Siders, Betty WoHe, Mr.
University in Athens. His wife, and Mrs. John Fry, Mrs. J. V.
Mabel, also spent the last two McGrew, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse,
years commuting to Ohio Miss Becky Burris, Mrs.
University lor. work oo her Howard Burris, J,.ou Ellen
1118Bier and Doctorate degrees Roush, Kay Roush, Mrs. Velma
in curriculum and supervision Roush, Miss Myra Roush,
in Elementary Education.
Bruce L. Adams, Harriett
Pastor and Mrs. Moy and Layne, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
their two sons, Jimmy and Layne, Mr. and Mrs. F. C.
Tommy, will leave New Haven Reichert, Brisn Russell, The
the last of July. Pastor Moy has Rev. Wllliam DeMoss, Vicki
accepted the position of Bumgardner, Marsha Sprouse,
Director ci Student Affairs at Gary Bwngarner, and Mrs.
Wartburg College, a Lutheran Melvin Knapp.
Orurth College, In Waverly,

I~ the reception the Moy BPW Annw/

SPORT SHIRTS SPORT COATS

Gene Wettstone , coach of
the U.S. gymnastics team,
says he is expecting an· exPomeroy, Ohio ·
ceptionally youthful turnout
when he holds tryouts this
Member Federnl Home Loan
summer for a team to tour
Ban~ .
Eorope : "The field for the
Member Federal Sdv1 ngs &lt;IS. European tryouts shapes up
Locm Insurance Corp All . ns one of youth and ~reat poacCOI 'nts inwred up to tential for the 1972 Olym·
$20.00'! .00
pies."

Co~pany

AU. SAl ES CASH!

Good Run of Sizes • Men's

YOUNG GYMNASTS

At Your Certified Oil

FOR THIS EVENT

DRESS SLACKS

Both Summer and year round weight all from our
regular stock of top quality suits. Stripe, plaids, and
plain colors in both double and single breasted
·models. .Y.ostly regulars and longs. A few shorts in
group. Reg. $65.00 to $95.00 Now Only $32.50 to $47.50.
Sizes36 to48. A small charge for alterations.

'

FREE _

'

and Year 'Round

Y2 PRICE

An excellent run of sizes and colors. Sizes B
to 20. Reg. $1.&lt;191oS-1.9B. Amust at S1.66 to
SJ.n.

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

'·

'

County in Texas

Watch Your
$$Grow

NJi:W

Men's Summer Weight

~~.~~.~~"'•'~
Club Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
home of Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
w ksh
or op.
_ OHIOETAPHI~pter,Beta
Sigma Phi Soronty. members
and children to meet a~ 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the Mi~dleport
Plll:k and from there WI~ go to
Clqden Park for. ~ outmg. .
THURSDAY
POMEROY CUB Scouts,
.Pack 249, Dens I and 4 Thursday, 7 p.m. for cleanup project
around lake at Beech Grove
Cemetery entrance followed by
wiener roast and fishing.
FRIDAY
WILUNG WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the
h(IJ)e of Mrs. Herbert Dillon.
REVIVAL Friday, Saturday
an d Sunda y, 7:30 p.m. sponsored by Mount Hermon
Bre tbren Youth . Rev. John E .
· te
· . te
Edwa rds , Lancas
r, I1IIIUS r.
Services will be held In the open
Friday and Saturday nights.
Youth events each night after

Moy
Family
Honored
P Meigs
.
.
.
roperty

Semi-Annual

::.~:

services, Friday, hayride,
Saturday, bowling. Wear casual
clothing. Sunday night a gettogether.
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM Social St. Paul's
United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains, Saturday
beginning at 2 p.m.
I~E CREAM Social Saturday
Salisbury Elementary School
sponsored by PTA beginning at
6 p.m. Homema de ·ace cream,
pie, iced tea and coffee will be
sold. Bring own containers for
take home orders
HYMN SING Saturday at
Eagle Ridge Community
Church, 7:30 p.m. Bissell
Brothers. featured singers.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING Sunday at
Dexter Community Church
starling at 10 a.m. Several
groups of singers will be
featured along with sill year old
Terry Saunders who will sing
and play the mandolin. Basket
dinner at noon. Everyone is
welcome to attend.
THE CHESTER High School
Class of 1931 wiU hold its Annual
Reunion Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker,
S
Ba k t d'
t
yracuse.
s e
mner a
12:30. All members of the class,
teac hers and schoolmates are
ed to tte d
urg
a n ·

PREPA~ING

New York
Clothing. House
.

23-24-26

~~-:-~:( -~=:· -~=::·.::::::=.::::::=:..:::::~~=-·= :·: :.:.:=-~=: :==~=:~,:s:~s..-::::-#.~~w.x:::re.:t:===~=*~m~:::::::::::::~=~*==~~?{e@:::::t&gt;;w

WEDNEsDAY
SPECIAL meeting, Amateur
Garden Club, at the home of
Mrs. Harold Lohse, Wolfe
Drive, Pomeroy, Wednesday
evening, July 21 at 7:30; Mrs.
Earl Dean, Jr. to present a
workshop on interpretive
arranging.
WINDING TRAIL Garden

.•

CLOSED
AU DAY
THURSDAY

•

Annual picnic ct the Rock
Springs Better Health Club was
beld Thunday at the home ct
Mrs. James Conkle, Cheshire.
Following the noon dinner,
the group spent the afternoon
socializinll. It was noted that
there will be no meeting in
Q-What insect can act as
August and that the September
a
living
thermometer?
meeting will be held at the home
A- Tbe cricket. Crickets
of Mrs. CliHord Leifheit. At that
chirp
faster as the tempera·
time there will be a style revue
ture rises.
by the members.
Attending the picnic were
Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs. Harold
Blackston, Mrs. William
Folmer, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Amos Leonard, Mrs.
Homer Radford, Mrs. Welby
Whaley, Mrs. George Skinner,
Mrs. MarkGrueser, Mrs. Oliver
Clark, Mrs. Lewis Grueser,
Mrs. Scott Fobner, Mrs.
William Grueser, and Mrs.
Frances Conkle, Mrs. James
Conkle, and Mrs. Amos
Leonard.
Mrs. Morgan, Mrs. Conkle,
and Mrs. Leonard were ap.JUDO UOO. WED. lUNG ISO
pointed to provide the infirmary
PORTRAIT
treat this month.

SALE

109

5

This beautiful 3-position Recliner
is detailed in a smart combination of vinyl and fabric. And it's
:;o comfortable. A real value · at
thi s low price!

$129

... . ·-

·:· .·

OF PERFECTION

A b..utiful Keepsolte diamond

Ftaally..&amp;a«eufal
Milton S. Hershey unsuc·
cesslullf o p e r a t e d candy
stores m Philadelphia l!nd
New York before siicceedmg
in tbe manufacture or ·caramelll and establishing tbe
world's I a r. g est chocolate
plant in 1903 according to
Encyclopaecb Britannica.

ring. P~rmJinmtly rqiste.ml
;and paranteed "&amp;ainst

diamond l.Ss. A perfect

I-.: ( .' .l ; -

;Ik '

&gt;

'

MASON FURNITURE

The oil leasing scandal or
tbe I!I'.Mls was called Teapot
Dome after a rock formation
00 one of the oil reservations

involved.
'1
1

t

Deluxe Recliner

Rock

diamond of fine cut •nd color
... pi the pictwd

HERMAN GRATE

·--------"----

'I

MASON, W. VA.

'

'

'

�- - I

I.

, I

•

a...:. 'l'hP TlailvSentinel,MidcDeport-Pcineroy,O.,July 21,1m

Forest Run Baptist
:Celebrates Homecoming

·
.

The 50th anniversary and Sunday School presided over by Run junior choir.

' homecoming of the Forest Run Mrs . Cornelius
Bunch,
Baptist Church will b"' superintendent. At 10:45
celebrated Sunday with an aU- Deacons Walter Green and
day service.
Robert Armstrong will have
The church was organized in devotions. The morning sermon
, 1921 at the old mining camp at will be delivered by the Rev.
. Forest Run. Events of the day Eddie Buffington and there will
will begin at 9:30 a.m. with be special music by the Forest
'

.Mrs. Hit/Honored ·
With Stork Shower
Mrs. Larry Hill was honored
guest at a layette shower held
recenUy at the home of Mrs~
Earl Dean with Miss Jenny
· Dean and Mrs. Twila Buckley
as hostesses.
Games were played with
' prizes going to Mrs. Keith
Ridenour and Mrs. Roger Babr.
Gifts were placed in an antique
cradle. A dessert course was
served and favors were cradle
replica mint cups.
\}uests were Mrs. Ridenour,
Mrs. James 'Ihomas, Mrs.
David Koblentz, Mrs, Evelyn
Bauer, Mrs. Tom McGrath,
Miss Barbara McGrath, Mrs.
Charles LaDeaux,. Mrs. Babr,
Mrs. Ronald Clay, Mrs. Jolm
: Wickhalb, Mrs. Richard Bar' ton, Miss Patty Bahr, Miss
· Patty Goeglein, Mrs. Gilbert
:WOOds, Mrs. Paul Chadwell,
: Miss-Shelia Toney, Mrs. Roger
;Toney, Mrs. Gordon Chevalier,

Miss Cella McCoy, Mrs. Earl
Dean, Miss Nancy Ridenour
and Miss Denise Dean.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Hill were Mrs. Jim
Ridenour, Mrs. Barbara
Sargent, Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell,
Mrs. Jack Ginther, Mrs. Hobart
Smalley, Mrs. Marion Parker,
~!iss Carolyn Parker, Mrs. JOhn
Riebel, Mrs. Gerald Douglas,
Mrs. Roger Epple, Mrs. Robert
Mills, Mrs. Raymond Fisher,
Mrs. Richard Gaul, Mrs. Jim
Conkle, Mrs. Jolm Ginther,
Mrs. Gordon Ridenour, Mrs.
Thomas Weber, Mrs. Guy
Summerfield, Miss Pam
Griffin, Mrs. James Mayes,
Mrs. Donald Roush, Mrs. Buel
Ridenour, Mrs. Jolm Ridenour,
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, Mrs.
Forrest Showalter, Mrs. John
Ambrose, Mrs. Eskey Hill, Mrs.
Bill Grueser, Mrs. Gary
Ridenour, Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
Mrs. Bill Windon.

Following a dinner at noon,
the alternoon session will
convene at 1:45 p.m. opening
with the congregation singing
Lift the Precious Saviour Up.
Deacons from other churches
will give devotions, a program
will be presented and there will
he a history of the church.
Speaker at the 2:30 p.m.
service will be the Rev. Ralph
Hill, assistant pastor of the
Love Zion Baptist Church,
Columbus. He will be accompanied by several members
of his congregation. Mrs.
Margaret Armstrong is director
of the Forest Run choir and her
daughter, Miriam, is the
pian,ist.
An invitation to the
celebration is exteilded to the
public. .

PT. PLEASANT
Two
busloads of Mason , County
homemakers will take their
annual tour on Thursday, July
22 to Cincinnati where they will
tour the Natural Museum of
History and Conservatory, then
go by bus into Kentucky where
they will have lunch on Floating
Restaurant.
The Chamber of Commerce
will conduct a guided tour of
Cincinnati. After a visit to
Shilitos and dinner, the ladies
will return home .

··,"oo"fWr-Ui!!.ltt" Vwtlil\.

CHUCK
R·OAST
c
....

~

tNews, Notes

-

JU'-Y

MANY ADDITIONAL
CLEARANCE VALUES NOT LISTED
HERE ARE AVAILABLE AT
POINT PLEASANT STORE
ALL SALES FINAL

our l:t'."'' /:uy:
.

All Quantities Subject To Prror Sale

G-19

....

WHOLE
SLICED

....

BUTT STYLE

•

JULY 22-WHILE

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9-SUNDAY l TO 1- SALE BEGINS

No. 5033

BAR-B-QUE

19" LAWN MOWER

CUT

• Briggs and Stratton Motor.
e 3 H.P. e Tubular Steel loop
Handle. • 6" Wheels. e Con
Be Adjusted to four Cutting
Heights.

Reduced

GRILL
Heck's Reg.

16.48

Picnic Table

1

$~88 '19

Phc.. Good ThN Soiwdoy, July 24th.

HECK'S REG.

10

$46.99
IIABWAII . .T.

Only
To Sell

22 To Sell

99

"SUPER-RIGHT" THICK "' REGULAR

Clbe Steaks . • tb. $159 Sliced Bacon • ::. 6t
·suPER!OR-lN 4-lb. BOXES ONLY
ROUND BONE SHOULDER CUT
S
,
S
k
WISS lea s • • lb. 98c Wieners ~~N~~; . . ... 5t

Reg. Sate
Quonl.

FRESH FRYINS

QUARTERED LOIN

CHICKEN
LEGS

PORK
CHOPS

49~.

'"'11
CHOPS

'··

Quont.

........
...

11

~WI1H . .

.... 1.7

OOUIQN

79c

lb.

OSCAR MAYER

DECKER'S SMOKEO

Sausage •

•

... $149 Sliced Bacon
• 2P•r·

OSCAR MAYER

•

OCEAN PERCH

Wieners .•

l.U..I!ftc:

Fillets •

• •
This We eks Special Buys'
•

•

.Jrkc. - -

WITH COUPON IN THIS AD

WITH COUPON IN THIS AD

EIGHT O'CLOCK
COFFEE

BOUNTY
TOWELS

•a..Lggc 3 ..... $100
I•r

~Is

ANN PAGE

SAUCE

·

L
ggc
21
L$138
4
STOCK UP

Imperial . .

1
/ ...

tulles

....... .
I.U..

A:2.:11.E

ALL FLAVORS

Sherbet

LIBBY'S FROZEN

Jftc
-

Lemonade

•

A&amp;P FROZEN

French Fries .6 =. 5100

• • •

INSTANT COFFEE

A&amp;P FROZEN

Chase&amp;Sanborn

Macaroni

SAlE

HOME GROWN

Sweet Corn
WASHINGTON STATE

Bing Cherries

30
12
3
9
15
5
14
7
17
12
16
4
3
83
52
Backyard 3 lb.
97 Char Base,_ __ _

.93

2 for

$I

.36

_ l.19

.88
.40
.70
1.39
1.99
.22
.77
1.19

2.88
1.33
.36
8.75
.88
.40
•97
1.33
.97
.42

Price Price

2
18
120
12
48

2Ton Hoist_ _ _ 38.50 27.00
Car Wash Bl-ushes__ 4.48 2.99
Car Wash Bl-ushes
.99
.66
Car Wash 81-usha__ 1.48
.99
Fire.Uter·s..__ _ _ _ .79
.55

Pan 0 Fire
102 Char Starters._ _ _ .49

.33

16 Plastic Lawn E~ing .88 1.00
9 Metal Lawn Edging_ 1.88 1.00
11 Bow-saws
.97 2.77
.88
42 Garden Gloves
1.35
24 Garden Glove,~_ _ 1.59 1.00
9 Garden Glove
1.07
.66
24 in.
11 Lawn Mower Blades 3.99 2.75
39.88 32.00
6 Fans VHT20"
3 Fans WF 20 E
32.88 26.00
22 Elec. Bug Kille._r_ _ 5.88 3.99
15 Weed Hand Digger_1 .05
15 Grass Shear
2.44
32 Grass Shears _ __ 3.77
3 Grass Shear
3.12
6 Grass Shear
4. 97
20 Prune A Mafic
5.55
17 Flower Shear
2.99
11 Shears Grass
5.36
19 Shears Grass
3.77
3.10
5 Shears Grass
8 Shears Grass
5.97
7 Shears Grass
6.92
5 Shears Grass
6.01
37 Pruning Saws
3.77
i1 Short Handle Spacle_5.77
3 Ames CuHivators
5.10
1· Spade Fork
3.72
3 Spade Fork
3.37
4 Spade Fork
5.43
26 Weed Whip
2.48
Crystal ,
404 Park Grass Seed__1.24

.66
1.66
2.66
2.00
3.50
3.88
2.00
3.75
2.66
2.00
4.00
5.00

11 GE Make-Up Mirror

1.00

Quonl.

, Item

2.66
3. 99
3.99
2.99
2.66
3.99
1.66
.88

Price Price

·?!.~:2f!!,dric Pencii_U$ f:U
5 Slide . er

3.99

Quant. .

19.96 16.50

324
251
156
117

3.25

6 GE Elec. Toolhbrush ·4.96 12.70

6 GE Elec. Toolhbrush 15.96 13.50

3.99

34 Ladies Culottes._ _.6 .88
40 Ladies Dresses
5.88
Ladies
148 Baby Doll Pajamas_3.48
166 Ladies Waltz Gowns- 3.48
142 Mens Walk Shorts__2.99
166 Boys Knit Shirts
2.29

1.00
.88
3.92

4.58
3. 92
2.32
2.32
1.97
1.53

*

H'!'k's
Reg. Price

• Ladies &amp;Olildrens
Bathing Suits
• Bathing Caps
• Men &amp;Boys Swim Trunks

1f2

Off Heck's
Reg. Price
Off Heck's
Reg. Price

Item

2 Picnic Baskets
9 Picnic Pack

/

.99

3.48

2.50

1.44
·,
.20

.99
.14

3.66
C":. 7.48
&lt;:

Reg. Sa It
Quant .

Item

Price

ft.i&lt;l!.
,..r

1.92

All Clothing Reduced
Up To

1.44

"

Beach Towel
l. 99
Girls Hot Pant
1.28
Ladies Hot Pants_ _5.88
Ladies Scooter Skirts 2.88

Quant.

4 Piece
73 Jeannette Ash Tray_
Chilton
.
20 12 Qt. Sauce Pan
Enterprise
28 3 Qt. Sauce Pan
Jeannette
144 Stack Cereal Bowl

I ten\

4.25

Reg. Sate

Black &amp; Decker
4 Sidewalk Trimme[_12.88 1G.95
3 Garden Cultivator_1.33
.88
51 30 Gal. Garbage Can 5.99 4.97
4 1 Ton Hoist.
29.50 20.00

AND
CHEES£

A &amp;P'\ FRESH PRODUCE BUYS '

48.00
Bar 8Q Gril
6.48 4.50
Bar BQ Grill
11.48 · a.oo
Bar BQ Grill
24.66 17.50 ·
Bar BQ Grill
3.99 2.75
Bar BQ Grill
21.48 15.00
Folding Table
16.88 11.00
Folding Tables
13.88 9.75
Folding Beds
21.99 15.50
Folding Beds. _ _.::..
.. 17.99 12.50
Folding Cots
9.88 7.oo
Folding Beds, _ _ _ 13.88 9.75
Wheel Barrows
9.88 7.00
Lawn Cart
9.88 7.00
Grass Seed. Sib. Ky. 3.99 2.75
.88
Grass Seed
1.24

Wizard 1 Qt.
113 Charcoal Lighter~_.60
60 Window Screens
.99
46 Window Screens
l. 99
19 Window Screens
2.]7
358 White Picket Fence_ .4-4
48 Gas Cans 1 Gal.
1.19
22 Gas Cans 2 Gal.
1.77
4 Gas Cans 5 Gal.
4.10
Plastic
• 4 Water Containers_1 .88
Asst. Hand
22 Garden Tools _ _ _ .49
1 2 Gal. Sprayers
12.45
18 Hand Sprayers
1.19
25 Hand Sprayer
.60
3 Hand Sprayers
1.51
24 Rose Spray
l.99
11 Rose Dust
1.48
102 Hose Hanger
.66
7-16" x 50 Feet
317 Garden Hose!_ _ _ 2.13

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

Z...
lwL

ulii!P Mawe·c..__ _ 69.88

Gal.
19 Charcoal Lighter,_

Zo OFF

WHITE
BREAD

Item

112

Potato Chips •
LABEL-MARSARINE
Bl1e Bonnet

•

'

Reg. Sate
Price Price

Gulf 1 Qt.
760 Charcoal Lighter_ _ .49

JANE PARKER

WITH TOMATO

Item

42 Jade 6 Transistor Radio 4.96

AU.
PUIPOSI
6aadnft.

Don't Miss These Special Values '

HOSPITAL Beans
ANN PAGE
NEWS
Ira Jim

;:Mason .Area

Areception was then held to honOr Mrs.
Martin and ber new officers. lva Powell ol
the Meigs County Salon registered the
approximately 125 guests attending.
.
Active in American Legion Auxiliary
units for 23 years, Mrs. Martin is a
member of Drew Webster Post. 39 unit,
Pllmeroy, and ~ served in all tbe elected
offices and many committee chairmanships. A past president ol Drew
Webster Post 39 Past Presidents Parley,
she has served as the District a chainnan
of ·community service twice and as
chairman .of junior activities.
She is citrrenUy in her fourth year as
Department of .O~o, Ar\H!rican Legioo
Auxiliary representative for the
Sootbeastern Ohio Mental Health Center
at Athfns, with the responsibility ol.
arranging for veteran .and community
service parties for patients there.
Mrs. Martin was a charter member of
the Gallia County Salon 612, organiud in
1955, and in 1964 organized the Meigs
County Salon. She is a member of tbe
Middleport Church of Christ, the Philathea
Society and the Homebuilders Sunday
School Class, and is emPioyed as part,.
lime secretary at the churCh.

SYCAMORE

BLADE

Descendants of J?hn E. and

Dan-··

\JI'uf ..;-}

roses and green ivy.. 11te '~!~lite tence
around the simulated rose garden featured
18 pasts, each a statioo f..- me m tbe
participants, all of whom carried baste!$
ri red and white flowers wiUa slreamers.
fn . the groop talting part • ••es tbe
new officers were Helen l..tftl., Wanda
Tanner, Etta Tricky, Mildred Oifton,
Louise Goodall, Ella Mae Be:.vet sm.
Helen Sloan, Reva Cilda, and Golda
Mourning of Middleport, a member of tbe
Gallia County Salon, and l&lt;:unie Brinker,
Julia Hysell, Edith Fox, Ylcla Davis,
Rhoda Hackett, Marie lloyd, Catberine
Welsh, all of Meigs County Saloo no..All
were attired in white IGrmals.
As each of the new officers took ber
obligation, sbe present.eid Mrs. Martin with
a red rose. Mrs. Martin's daugbiEr, Pat,
was tben escorted to the plalform by Mrs.
Knapp and attached a ribbon to tbe
bouquet of roses.
"Mytlodandl" wastbeseleclionSIIIIl!
by Mrs. Myrtle B;.lithwaile, to Mrs.
Martin before Mrs. Edgar gave ber tbe
gavel and Mrs. Susie Sonsan.stine
presented her with the chapeau wings. The
ceremony was concluded as _tbe Eight aad
Forty chorus sang ''Oil&lt;' l1tlle Candle."

.

.'

BONELESS

; The 29th &lt;~nnual Frank reunion recenUy at the ho~e of
: reunion was held at the Athens Mr. and Mrs. John H. Lewis, 308
~County Fairgrounds on July 18. FourPrth St., Beledin~· th dinn
' The
...
ayer prec
g e
er
~
day w~s spent VISiting. A was given by Sam Lewis. .
.,bounteo_us dinner was serv~ at Pictures were taken during the
~noon wtth Nora Brown asking day.
1grace. ~e was the oldest Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
(.member m attendance and George E. Lewis and son,
~Tanya Lucas was the youngest, Ronald of Salt Lake City Utah.
··I
month old. .
Mr. an d Mrs. Rlcharct' Le.WIS.'
•· Th
1
'' · , 1;ose a tending were Mrs. and sonY' Gregory of Salt Lake
;;oruda McVey and Terry and C't M D th Le .
~ Tim. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Pigg stec'ykl; . rsM. ordoMrsy Larrywas
• and Re••; Mr d ·Mrs Bill
em, r. an
·
,.
..,..e,. · an
·
Lewis, Mark and Sheri
::Lucas, Brtan and Tonya, Hayman, all of Laurel, Md.
..Columbus;
Eldon Frank,
Mr . and Mrs. James Mercer
•
_
.. ostrander; Forrest Marian,
d h'ld
J'
d
~Alba
J
S
rr·
ld
an c 1 ren, tmmy an
..
ny; ean umme te and Tamar of Camb 'd . Mr d
~ Nora Brown, Chester; Richard
a .
rt ge,
·an
··Du kw th Ag
White Mr Mrs. Will18m E. Franks and
~an: Mror Roll n~ nd
Barbara, Macksburg; Mrs.
::__. Cas._ Syry e . 'J hn Wm Diane Fritsche and children,
- ..... me, acuse , 0
I F dd'
R'1 h d
· Ch
::Frank, St. Cloud, Fla.; Donald,
ery • re •_e.
': ar
''...Maria nne, Greg, Cindy Fra nk, M
Deron,
and
Dav~d. Martella;
·d
~-Harold Frank, Bob, Kathy
r. an Mrs. John Grounds and
,. d Han F nk N Is ill . children, Patrtcta and Jerry,
,.an
s ra , e onv e, Mr
d M
Sam Le .
WIS,
-- Mr . and Mr s. Albert Fr ank• H · .an 'II rs. M
.
• Mr Ra
nd F ank M
d arrtsonvt e;
rs. Suste
..~ Mrss. Hymo Frank
r 'Mrr. and Hams,
· Mrs. Barha ra Anth ony,
~Mrs· AHenryed Fr · k 'Le li. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gibbs and
· r
an ' s e an daug hters, Vem'da and Tr'rna,
,.•· Donna Sue , pomer0y,. B'II'di e M'ddl
:"White and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
t eport; Mr. and Mrs.
'-M 1 G IIi lis
George Cll'cle and daughters,
;; ea • a po ·
Cheryl and Carol, New Haven,
!
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
~ Announce Birth
~wis and Brenda of Racine ;
and the hosts, Mr . and Mrs.
::- Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. John H. Lewis, Belpre.
: 'Buckley, Cheshire, and Mr. and
~ 'Mrs. Charles Richards, Patriot,
;:were in Columbus recenUy to
~ see their new granddaughter,
-:Tracy Ann, born on Monday,
July 12, at the Riverside
!:Jiospital to Mr . and Mrs .
~ Charles B. Richards (Joyce
Holzer Medical Center, First
~ Buckley) of 950 Colgare Road,
Ave. and Cedar St. General
;-columbus.
)i Great-grandparents of the visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
"new litUe girl are Mr. Jesse Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
: Gainer, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
:.;Russell H. Buckley of New Pediatrics Ward.
Births
~righton, Pa., Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Kearns,
~Clarence L. Carter and Mr. and
Jr.,
Mason, W. Va., a son; Mr.
~Mrs. Gomer Richards, all of
and Mrs. Gerald L. Fragale,
,..Patriot.
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
•
Ronald Boggs, Wellston, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
•
John M. Crosswhite, Gallipolis,
••
a son.
'
Discharges
,.
Tammi L. Angell, Roger W.
~. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ryan · Barrett, Roger Dale Downey,
~ and James Ryan of Roanoke, Mrs. Noel E. Dyer, Worley C.
~ Va. visited over the weekend Gheen, Mrs. W. T. Gooderham,
~with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. FrankL. Hendericks, Mrs.
~ Edward Ryan, Mason, and with Oakey Johnson, Forrest L.
';:Mrs. Ryan 's parents, Mr. and Long, T. Heber McClung, Floyd
;: Mrs. John Brabham, New Dewitt Mendenhall, Mrs. James
;: Haven .
C. Pashki, Renne L. Riebel,
~· Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harmon Mrs. William J. Roush and
::and sons, Danny and 'Ricky, daughter, Mrs. Floyd R. Shafer,
~'have returned home from Mrs. Larry Stirgill and
f.spending a two weeks vacation daughter and Mrs . Gray
l'~t Daytona Beach, Fla.
Quickie.
:-; Mr. Thomas Ryan of Lima, - - - - - -- - .Ohio visited here for the first Higgenbotham and son, Ricky,
:~ lime in two years. While here he all of Chicago; Mrs. Russell La
:: visited his mother, Mrs. T. J . Rue and family of Brilliant, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yeager
!'::Emma) Ryan and with his
/.Jrother and family, Mr. and and Marty, Mr. and Mrs.
JOSI'ph Lish and ~. Mr. and
;: \Irs. ·Edward Ryan.
:· Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Larry Noble and Jeff. Mr.
~~ber Roush were Josephine and Mrs. L. E. Piersall went to
~;.~arti,n, Leslie Counterman, Beckley, for the weekend. While
~ary Counterman, Timmy there they attended two outdoor
,.,c:ounterman, all of Fort Wayne, dramas, Haffield and McCoys,
·~:ndiana; Mr. an~ Mrs. Ralph Honey in the Rock.

(Cllltinued fl'cllll page i)

Support for uie nurses scholarship fund
was also asked by tbe new departelDental
chapeau.
Mrs. Martin inlruduced ber son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leldler Wme
of Clevela,nd, ~ sm and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. RObert Martin, Ailiance, and
her husband, Osby Martin. Pnmeroy. She
also inlruducedber Ia secntaire-caissiere,
Mrs. Myrtle Waiter, of Racine.
A rose garden was tbe scene for the
impressive installation ceremony coodueled by Esther C. Edgar ol Columbus,
installing officer. Assisliug her were Mrs.
NEW GRID RIVALRY
Mabel Brown of Gallipolis, l'aumooieF,
Alabama and Penn State and Mrs. ·Knapp, Meigs Salon 710, Ia
have agreed to a six-game concierge.
lootbaU series starting In
Installed were Mrs. Martin, depar1981. The two teams have ~·
tal ha
Mrs. Hazel EUi tt
never met In regular season tem_en
c peau;
o •
play, although Peaa State nabonal pou~otr member ;_ Evahna
woa a 1959 L l b e r t y Bowl Berkley, le demi chapeau preunere; Irene
meeting, 7-t.
Meir, le demi chapeau deuDeme; Mrs.
Walker, Ia secretair~aissiere; Mrs.
Marcella Houston, l'aumooieF; and Mrs.
,BJG FAMILY
· Audrey Glaub, Ia cmcierge.
Mrs. Evelyn Brill, pianist, played " In
D e t r o i t Tiger outfielder
Willie Horton is the youngest the Garden," as tbe new officers were
of 22 children.
escorted through an archway ol red velvet

Frank
Family
.
.
:
uwts Reunwn c•uck Roast . . lb.88c Pork Steaks
:neunt'on IlJeld
1\,
ll
Luella Cochran Lewts met for a

Mrs. Martin New Ohio_· Chapeau·

2.50
5.00

34 Plastic Spoons &amp; ForkS.55
.39
30 1'V Trays
.88
.55
2 Qt. and 4 Qt.
4 Ice Cream Freezer 18.88 14.00
16 Mini Oven
- 1.18
.88
16 Clothes Drye
2.88 1.99
19.99 14.00
4 Porta Play Yard
4 Samsonite Charis
9.22 6.50
5 Mesh Nylon Gate
6.18 4.30
Bissell
16 Wall to Wall Cleaner .7.99 5.50
Indoor &amp;
5 Outdoor Drye,.r.._ _...5.44 3.88
By Mac Dowel
.66
66 Turntabl''f-------88
Anchor Hocking
.58
17 Serving Dish - - - ·88
Anchor Hocking
14 Se_rving Dish,_ _ _ .88
.58

7 Whirly Bird _ __ 24.88 17.00
1 Swing Se
23.88 17.00
15
5
35
58

Pitch Back
8.88
Kid Size Playhouse- 14.88
Golf Sets
1. 99
Sun &amp; Shower Set
.99

35 Little Miss High Heels ..96
20 Wacky Whale
5.99
79 24 Inch Ring
.84

6.00
8.00
1.44
.66
.66
4.00
.66

3 Pc.

114 Sweetie Pie Asst.

2.18
28 24 Inch Ring
.88
13 60 ln. Beach Ball_ _ 4.48
1B
13
12
95

48
30
24
26

Inch Cano
2.18
Inch Raft
.78
Inch Ring
.88
Inch Ringy,._ _ __ .88

23
55
18
48
24
275

Vinyl Mattres
Swim Ring
22 ln. Swim Ring
30 ln. Swim Ring
24 ln. Swim Ring
16 ln. Beach Ball
11 20 ln. Beach Ball
16 24 ln. Beach Ball
95 20 ln. Beach Ball
Inflatable
9 52 in.x10 in. Pool

1.28
.99
.72
.99
.99
.24
.48
.68
.54

1.44

.66
3.00
1.44

.55
.66
.66
.88
.66
.55
.66
.66

.15
.33
.44
.37

2.99

9 63 in.x12 in. Pool_-----'

Sale
Price Price
Reg.

Quant.

Item

17 Snorkel and Mask__2 .29
10 Snorkel and Mask__5.99
7 Snorkel
· 1.38·
7 Swim Fins
2.99
11 Water Ski Rope
. 99
l/4" X 25 ft,

1.50
3.00
.99
1.50
.66

6 Golf Shoes. Broken

Size
15.99
6 Golf Shoes. Broken
Size
7.99
9 Swim Floa
3.38
26 Leather Strip Asst._l.77
6 Air Mattress
5.99
"'
'19 Air Mattress
6.99
66 Air Mattres
1.38
28 Camp Stools. Metai- U11
7 Volley Ball Game
Set
9 99
.
Volley Ball &amp;
4 Badmiton Comb. _' _ 13.99
6 Croquet Sets
19.99
11 Croquet Sets
16.99
20 Chip It Golf Game_10.99

1• •

40 Fishing Helmets.
40 Fishing Helmets, foam .. 88
232 Foam Ice Buckets
.66
56 Foam Ice Buckets _ _ .38
6 Canoe Paddle
l. 99
32 Baseball Bats
2.99
22 Baseball Bats
2.48
5 Baseball Bats
3.77
19 Baseball Bats. alum. 7.99
24 Baseball Cap
2.38
5 Baseball Caps
1.99
5 Baseball Caps
.38
11 Alum . Horse Shoe Sets
7.88
48 Foam Cooler
w-handle _ _ _ _ _3.38
106 Foam Cooler:.__ _ 2.47
12 Hip Waders,
Broken size _ _ _ __ 9.88
6 Chesl Waders,
Broken size ---,~--10 . 88
265 Cheese Baif
1.18
3 Exerciser
4.88
Compact Fish Hooks
Pkg. 6
.08
396 Impact Golf Balls_J-.99
106 Badminton Set, 4
• 3.38
Play. _ _ _ _ __
89 Badminton Set, 2
1.38
Play.
8 Baseball Gloves __ll, 99
4 Baseball Gloves
9. 99
15 Baseball Gloves
6.99
8 Boat Anchors
4. 99
3 Metal Water Cooler,
2 gal--...,..,-----'8.99
I Metal Water Cooler!
5 gal.
14.99
1 Metal Water Cooler,
10.99
3 gal.
7 Baseball Batting
Helmet _ _ __ _
2.99

Eado
Ear
OoiJ

39c Blueberries • • piot39c

msH

Ull R"E

EXCEL

'SUNMAID SEEDLESS

•

Peaches .• • • lb.:ztc Watermelons • .=.stc

Mixed Nuts • • '.!;·6CJc ·Raisins • •

.....:-.~-

\

•

5.50
2.50
1.25

4.50
5.25
.99
.99
8 00
•

10.00
15.00
12.00
8.00

25 Per Cent Off Heck's Reg.
Price
On All Rods &amp; Reels

FRESH l'lUMP
•

10.50

•

.48
. . 40
.25
1.40
2.00
1.80
2.70
5.50
1.66
1.33
.88
5.50
2.40
1.80
5.00 '
6.00
.66
24.00
.03
3-.66
2.38

.99
8.50
7.00
5.00 .
3.00
6.50
10.50
8.00
2.00

�- - I

I.

, I

•

a...:. 'l'hP TlailvSentinel,MidcDeport-Pcineroy,O.,July 21,1m

Forest Run Baptist
:Celebrates Homecoming

·
.

The 50th anniversary and Sunday School presided over by Run junior choir.

' homecoming of the Forest Run Mrs . Cornelius
Bunch,
Baptist Church will b"' superintendent. At 10:45
celebrated Sunday with an aU- Deacons Walter Green and
day service.
Robert Armstrong will have
The church was organized in devotions. The morning sermon
, 1921 at the old mining camp at will be delivered by the Rev.
. Forest Run. Events of the day Eddie Buffington and there will
will begin at 9:30 a.m. with be special music by the Forest
'

.Mrs. Hit/Honored ·
With Stork Shower
Mrs. Larry Hill was honored
guest at a layette shower held
recenUy at the home of Mrs~
Earl Dean with Miss Jenny
· Dean and Mrs. Twila Buckley
as hostesses.
Games were played with
' prizes going to Mrs. Keith
Ridenour and Mrs. Roger Babr.
Gifts were placed in an antique
cradle. A dessert course was
served and favors were cradle
replica mint cups.
\}uests were Mrs. Ridenour,
Mrs. James 'Ihomas, Mrs.
David Koblentz, Mrs, Evelyn
Bauer, Mrs. Tom McGrath,
Miss Barbara McGrath, Mrs.
Charles LaDeaux,. Mrs. Babr,
Mrs. Ronald Clay, Mrs. Jolm
: Wickhalb, Mrs. Richard Bar' ton, Miss Patty Bahr, Miss
· Patty Goeglein, Mrs. Gilbert
:WOOds, Mrs. Paul Chadwell,
: Miss-Shelia Toney, Mrs. Roger
;Toney, Mrs. Gordon Chevalier,

Miss Cella McCoy, Mrs. Earl
Dean, Miss Nancy Ridenour
and Miss Denise Dean.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Hill were Mrs. Jim
Ridenour, Mrs. Barbara
Sargent, Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell,
Mrs. Jack Ginther, Mrs. Hobart
Smalley, Mrs. Marion Parker,
~!iss Carolyn Parker, Mrs. JOhn
Riebel, Mrs. Gerald Douglas,
Mrs. Roger Epple, Mrs. Robert
Mills, Mrs. Raymond Fisher,
Mrs. Richard Gaul, Mrs. Jim
Conkle, Mrs. Jolm Ginther,
Mrs. Gordon Ridenour, Mrs.
Thomas Weber, Mrs. Guy
Summerfield, Miss Pam
Griffin, Mrs. James Mayes,
Mrs. Donald Roush, Mrs. Buel
Ridenour, Mrs. Jolm Ridenour,
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, Mrs.
Forrest Showalter, Mrs. John
Ambrose, Mrs. Eskey Hill, Mrs.
Bill Grueser, Mrs. Gary
Ridenour, Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
Mrs. Bill Windon.

Following a dinner at noon,
the alternoon session will
convene at 1:45 p.m. opening
with the congregation singing
Lift the Precious Saviour Up.
Deacons from other churches
will give devotions, a program
will be presented and there will
he a history of the church.
Speaker at the 2:30 p.m.
service will be the Rev. Ralph
Hill, assistant pastor of the
Love Zion Baptist Church,
Columbus. He will be accompanied by several members
of his congregation. Mrs.
Margaret Armstrong is director
of the Forest Run choir and her
daughter, Miriam, is the
pian,ist.
An invitation to the
celebration is exteilded to the
public. .

PT. PLEASANT
Two
busloads of Mason , County
homemakers will take their
annual tour on Thursday, July
22 to Cincinnati where they will
tour the Natural Museum of
History and Conservatory, then
go by bus into Kentucky where
they will have lunch on Floating
Restaurant.
The Chamber of Commerce
will conduct a guided tour of
Cincinnati. After a visit to
Shilitos and dinner, the ladies
will return home .

··,"oo"fWr-Ui!!.ltt" Vwtlil\.

CHUCK
R·OAST
c
....

~

tNews, Notes

-

JU'-Y

MANY ADDITIONAL
CLEARANCE VALUES NOT LISTED
HERE ARE AVAILABLE AT
POINT PLEASANT STORE
ALL SALES FINAL

our l:t'."'' /:uy:
.

All Quantities Subject To Prror Sale

G-19

....

WHOLE
SLICED

....

BUTT STYLE

•

JULY 22-WHILE

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9-SUNDAY l TO 1- SALE BEGINS

No. 5033

BAR-B-QUE

19" LAWN MOWER

CUT

• Briggs and Stratton Motor.
e 3 H.P. e Tubular Steel loop
Handle. • 6" Wheels. e Con
Be Adjusted to four Cutting
Heights.

Reduced

GRILL
Heck's Reg.

16.48

Picnic Table

1

$~88 '19

Phc.. Good ThN Soiwdoy, July 24th.

HECK'S REG.

10

$46.99
IIABWAII . .T.

Only
To Sell

22 To Sell

99

"SUPER-RIGHT" THICK "' REGULAR

Clbe Steaks . • tb. $159 Sliced Bacon • ::. 6t
·suPER!OR-lN 4-lb. BOXES ONLY
ROUND BONE SHOULDER CUT
S
,
S
k
WISS lea s • • lb. 98c Wieners ~~N~~; . . ... 5t

Reg. Sate
Quonl.

FRESH FRYINS

QUARTERED LOIN

CHICKEN
LEGS

PORK
CHOPS

49~.

'"'11
CHOPS

'··

Quont.

........
...

11

~WI1H . .

.... 1.7

OOUIQN

79c

lb.

OSCAR MAYER

DECKER'S SMOKEO

Sausage •

•

... $149 Sliced Bacon
• 2P•r·

OSCAR MAYER

•

OCEAN PERCH

Wieners .•

l.U..I!ftc:

Fillets •

• •
This We eks Special Buys'
•

•

.Jrkc. - -

WITH COUPON IN THIS AD

WITH COUPON IN THIS AD

EIGHT O'CLOCK
COFFEE

BOUNTY
TOWELS

•a..Lggc 3 ..... $100
I•r

~Is

ANN PAGE

SAUCE

·

L
ggc
21
L$138
4
STOCK UP

Imperial . .

1
/ ...

tulles

....... .
I.U..

A:2.:11.E

ALL FLAVORS

Sherbet

LIBBY'S FROZEN

Jftc
-

Lemonade

•

A&amp;P FROZEN

French Fries .6 =. 5100

• • •

INSTANT COFFEE

A&amp;P FROZEN

Chase&amp;Sanborn

Macaroni

SAlE

HOME GROWN

Sweet Corn
WASHINGTON STATE

Bing Cherries

30
12
3
9
15
5
14
7
17
12
16
4
3
83
52
Backyard 3 lb.
97 Char Base,_ __ _

.93

2 for

$I

.36

_ l.19

.88
.40
.70
1.39
1.99
.22
.77
1.19

2.88
1.33
.36
8.75
.88
.40
•97
1.33
.97
.42

Price Price

2
18
120
12
48

2Ton Hoist_ _ _ 38.50 27.00
Car Wash Bl-ushes__ 4.48 2.99
Car Wash Bl-ushes
.99
.66
Car Wash 81-usha__ 1.48
.99
Fire.Uter·s..__ _ _ _ .79
.55

Pan 0 Fire
102 Char Starters._ _ _ .49

.33

16 Plastic Lawn E~ing .88 1.00
9 Metal Lawn Edging_ 1.88 1.00
11 Bow-saws
.97 2.77
.88
42 Garden Gloves
1.35
24 Garden Glove,~_ _ 1.59 1.00
9 Garden Glove
1.07
.66
24 in.
11 Lawn Mower Blades 3.99 2.75
39.88 32.00
6 Fans VHT20"
3 Fans WF 20 E
32.88 26.00
22 Elec. Bug Kille._r_ _ 5.88 3.99
15 Weed Hand Digger_1 .05
15 Grass Shear
2.44
32 Grass Shears _ __ 3.77
3 Grass Shear
3.12
6 Grass Shear
4. 97
20 Prune A Mafic
5.55
17 Flower Shear
2.99
11 Shears Grass
5.36
19 Shears Grass
3.77
3.10
5 Shears Grass
8 Shears Grass
5.97
7 Shears Grass
6.92
5 Shears Grass
6.01
37 Pruning Saws
3.77
i1 Short Handle Spacle_5.77
3 Ames CuHivators
5.10
1· Spade Fork
3.72
3 Spade Fork
3.37
4 Spade Fork
5.43
26 Weed Whip
2.48
Crystal ,
404 Park Grass Seed__1.24

.66
1.66
2.66
2.00
3.50
3.88
2.00
3.75
2.66
2.00
4.00
5.00

11 GE Make-Up Mirror

1.00

Quonl.

, Item

2.66
3. 99
3.99
2.99
2.66
3.99
1.66
.88

Price Price

·?!.~:2f!!,dric Pencii_U$ f:U
5 Slide . er

3.99

Quant. .

19.96 16.50

324
251
156
117

3.25

6 GE Elec. Toolhbrush ·4.96 12.70

6 GE Elec. Toolhbrush 15.96 13.50

3.99

34 Ladies Culottes._ _.6 .88
40 Ladies Dresses
5.88
Ladies
148 Baby Doll Pajamas_3.48
166 Ladies Waltz Gowns- 3.48
142 Mens Walk Shorts__2.99
166 Boys Knit Shirts
2.29

1.00
.88
3.92

4.58
3. 92
2.32
2.32
1.97
1.53

*

H'!'k's
Reg. Price

• Ladies &amp;Olildrens
Bathing Suits
• Bathing Caps
• Men &amp;Boys Swim Trunks

1f2

Off Heck's
Reg. Price
Off Heck's
Reg. Price

Item

2 Picnic Baskets
9 Picnic Pack

/

.99

3.48

2.50

1.44
·,
.20

.99
.14

3.66
C":. 7.48
&lt;:

Reg. Sa It
Quant .

Item

Price

ft.i&lt;l!.
,..r

1.92

All Clothing Reduced
Up To

1.44

"

Beach Towel
l. 99
Girls Hot Pant
1.28
Ladies Hot Pants_ _5.88
Ladies Scooter Skirts 2.88

Quant.

4 Piece
73 Jeannette Ash Tray_
Chilton
.
20 12 Qt. Sauce Pan
Enterprise
28 3 Qt. Sauce Pan
Jeannette
144 Stack Cereal Bowl

I ten\

4.25

Reg. Sate

Black &amp; Decker
4 Sidewalk Trimme[_12.88 1G.95
3 Garden Cultivator_1.33
.88
51 30 Gal. Garbage Can 5.99 4.97
4 1 Ton Hoist.
29.50 20.00

AND
CHEES£

A &amp;P'\ FRESH PRODUCE BUYS '

48.00
Bar 8Q Gril
6.48 4.50
Bar BQ Grill
11.48 · a.oo
Bar BQ Grill
24.66 17.50 ·
Bar BQ Grill
3.99 2.75
Bar BQ Grill
21.48 15.00
Folding Table
16.88 11.00
Folding Tables
13.88 9.75
Folding Beds
21.99 15.50
Folding Beds. _ _.::..
.. 17.99 12.50
Folding Cots
9.88 7.oo
Folding Beds, _ _ _ 13.88 9.75
Wheel Barrows
9.88 7.00
Lawn Cart
9.88 7.00
Grass Seed. Sib. Ky. 3.99 2.75
.88
Grass Seed
1.24

Wizard 1 Qt.
113 Charcoal Lighter~_.60
60 Window Screens
.99
46 Window Screens
l. 99
19 Window Screens
2.]7
358 White Picket Fence_ .4-4
48 Gas Cans 1 Gal.
1.19
22 Gas Cans 2 Gal.
1.77
4 Gas Cans 5 Gal.
4.10
Plastic
• 4 Water Containers_1 .88
Asst. Hand
22 Garden Tools _ _ _ .49
1 2 Gal. Sprayers
12.45
18 Hand Sprayers
1.19
25 Hand Sprayer
.60
3 Hand Sprayers
1.51
24 Rose Spray
l.99
11 Rose Dust
1.48
102 Hose Hanger
.66
7-16" x 50 Feet
317 Garden Hose!_ _ _ 2.13

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

Z...
lwL

ulii!P Mawe·c..__ _ 69.88

Gal.
19 Charcoal Lighter,_

Zo OFF

WHITE
BREAD

Item

112

Potato Chips •
LABEL-MARSARINE
Bl1e Bonnet

•

'

Reg. Sate
Price Price

Gulf 1 Qt.
760 Charcoal Lighter_ _ .49

JANE PARKER

WITH TOMATO

Item

42 Jade 6 Transistor Radio 4.96

AU.
PUIPOSI
6aadnft.

Don't Miss These Special Values '

HOSPITAL Beans
ANN PAGE
NEWS
Ira Jim

;:Mason .Area

Areception was then held to honOr Mrs.
Martin and ber new officers. lva Powell ol
the Meigs County Salon registered the
approximately 125 guests attending.
.
Active in American Legion Auxiliary
units for 23 years, Mrs. Martin is a
member of Drew Webster Post. 39 unit,
Pllmeroy, and ~ served in all tbe elected
offices and many committee chairmanships. A past president ol Drew
Webster Post 39 Past Presidents Parley,
she has served as the District a chainnan
of ·community service twice and as
chairman .of junior activities.
She is citrrenUy in her fourth year as
Department of .O~o, Ar\H!rican Legioo
Auxiliary representative for the
Sootbeastern Ohio Mental Health Center
at Athfns, with the responsibility ol.
arranging for veteran .and community
service parties for patients there.
Mrs. Martin was a charter member of
the Gallia County Salon 612, organiud in
1955, and in 1964 organized the Meigs
County Salon. She is a member of tbe
Middleport Church of Christ, the Philathea
Society and the Homebuilders Sunday
School Class, and is emPioyed as part,.
lime secretary at the churCh.

SYCAMORE

BLADE

Descendants of J?hn E. and

Dan-··

\JI'uf ..;-}

roses and green ivy.. 11te '~!~lite tence
around the simulated rose garden featured
18 pasts, each a statioo f..- me m tbe
participants, all of whom carried baste!$
ri red and white flowers wiUa slreamers.
fn . the groop talting part • ••es tbe
new officers were Helen l..tftl., Wanda
Tanner, Etta Tricky, Mildred Oifton,
Louise Goodall, Ella Mae Be:.vet sm.
Helen Sloan, Reva Cilda, and Golda
Mourning of Middleport, a member of tbe
Gallia County Salon, and l&lt;:unie Brinker,
Julia Hysell, Edith Fox, Ylcla Davis,
Rhoda Hackett, Marie lloyd, Catberine
Welsh, all of Meigs County Saloo no..All
were attired in white IGrmals.
As each of the new officers took ber
obligation, sbe present.eid Mrs. Martin with
a red rose. Mrs. Martin's daugbiEr, Pat,
was tben escorted to the plalform by Mrs.
Knapp and attached a ribbon to tbe
bouquet of roses.
"Mytlodandl" wastbeseleclionSIIIIl!
by Mrs. Myrtle B;.lithwaile, to Mrs.
Martin before Mrs. Edgar gave ber tbe
gavel and Mrs. Susie Sonsan.stine
presented her with the chapeau wings. The
ceremony was concluded as _tbe Eight aad
Forty chorus sang ''Oil&lt;' l1tlle Candle."

.

.'

BONELESS

; The 29th &lt;~nnual Frank reunion recenUy at the ho~e of
: reunion was held at the Athens Mr. and Mrs. John H. Lewis, 308
~County Fairgrounds on July 18. FourPrth St., Beledin~· th dinn
' The
...
ayer prec
g e
er
~
day w~s spent VISiting. A was given by Sam Lewis. .
.,bounteo_us dinner was serv~ at Pictures were taken during the
~noon wtth Nora Brown asking day.
1grace. ~e was the oldest Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
(.member m attendance and George E. Lewis and son,
~Tanya Lucas was the youngest, Ronald of Salt Lake City Utah.
··I
month old. .
Mr. an d Mrs. Rlcharct' Le.WIS.'
•· Th
1
'' · , 1;ose a tending were Mrs. and sonY' Gregory of Salt Lake
;;oruda McVey and Terry and C't M D th Le .
~ Tim. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Pigg stec'ykl; . rsM. ordoMrsy Larrywas
• and Re••; Mr d ·Mrs Bill
em, r. an
·
,.
..,..e,. · an
·
Lewis, Mark and Sheri
::Lucas, Brtan and Tonya, Hayman, all of Laurel, Md.
..Columbus;
Eldon Frank,
Mr . and Mrs. James Mercer
•
_
.. ostrander; Forrest Marian,
d h'ld
J'
d
~Alba
J
S
rr·
ld
an c 1 ren, tmmy an
..
ny; ean umme te and Tamar of Camb 'd . Mr d
~ Nora Brown, Chester; Richard
a .
rt ge,
·an
··Du kw th Ag
White Mr Mrs. Will18m E. Franks and
~an: Mror Roll n~ nd
Barbara, Macksburg; Mrs.
::__. Cas._ Syry e . 'J hn Wm Diane Fritsche and children,
- ..... me, acuse , 0
I F dd'
R'1 h d
· Ch
::Frank, St. Cloud, Fla.; Donald,
ery • re •_e.
': ar
''...Maria nne, Greg, Cindy Fra nk, M
Deron,
and
Dav~d. Martella;
·d
~-Harold Frank, Bob, Kathy
r. an Mrs. John Grounds and
,. d Han F nk N Is ill . children, Patrtcta and Jerry,
,.an
s ra , e onv e, Mr
d M
Sam Le .
WIS,
-- Mr . and Mr s. Albert Fr ank• H · .an 'II rs. M
.
• Mr Ra
nd F ank M
d arrtsonvt e;
rs. Suste
..~ Mrss. Hymo Frank
r 'Mrr. and Hams,
· Mrs. Barha ra Anth ony,
~Mrs· AHenryed Fr · k 'Le li. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gibbs and
· r
an ' s e an daug hters, Vem'da and Tr'rna,
,.•· Donna Sue , pomer0y,. B'II'di e M'ddl
:"White and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
t eport; Mr. and Mrs.
'-M 1 G IIi lis
George Cll'cle and daughters,
;; ea • a po ·
Cheryl and Carol, New Haven,
!
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
~ Announce Birth
~wis and Brenda of Racine ;
and the hosts, Mr . and Mrs.
::- Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. John H. Lewis, Belpre.
: 'Buckley, Cheshire, and Mr. and
~ 'Mrs. Charles Richards, Patriot,
;:were in Columbus recenUy to
~ see their new granddaughter,
-:Tracy Ann, born on Monday,
July 12, at the Riverside
!:Jiospital to Mr . and Mrs .
~ Charles B. Richards (Joyce
Holzer Medical Center, First
~ Buckley) of 950 Colgare Road,
Ave. and Cedar St. General
;-columbus.
)i Great-grandparents of the visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
"new litUe girl are Mr. Jesse Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
: Gainer, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
:.;Russell H. Buckley of New Pediatrics Ward.
Births
~righton, Pa., Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Kearns,
~Clarence L. Carter and Mr. and
Jr.,
Mason, W. Va., a son; Mr.
~Mrs. Gomer Richards, all of
and Mrs. Gerald L. Fragale,
,..Patriot.
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
•
Ronald Boggs, Wellston, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
•
John M. Crosswhite, Gallipolis,
••
a son.
'
Discharges
,.
Tammi L. Angell, Roger W.
~. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ryan · Barrett, Roger Dale Downey,
~ and James Ryan of Roanoke, Mrs. Noel E. Dyer, Worley C.
~ Va. visited over the weekend Gheen, Mrs. W. T. Gooderham,
~with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. FrankL. Hendericks, Mrs.
~ Edward Ryan, Mason, and with Oakey Johnson, Forrest L.
';:Mrs. Ryan 's parents, Mr. and Long, T. Heber McClung, Floyd
;: Mrs. John Brabham, New Dewitt Mendenhall, Mrs. James
;: Haven .
C. Pashki, Renne L. Riebel,
~· Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harmon Mrs. William J. Roush and
::and sons, Danny and 'Ricky, daughter, Mrs. Floyd R. Shafer,
~'have returned home from Mrs. Larry Stirgill and
f.spending a two weeks vacation daughter and Mrs . Gray
l'~t Daytona Beach, Fla.
Quickie.
:-; Mr. Thomas Ryan of Lima, - - - - - -- - .Ohio visited here for the first Higgenbotham and son, Ricky,
:~ lime in two years. While here he all of Chicago; Mrs. Russell La
:: visited his mother, Mrs. T. J . Rue and family of Brilliant, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yeager
!'::Emma) Ryan and with his
/.Jrother and family, Mr. and and Marty, Mr. and Mrs.
JOSI'ph Lish and ~. Mr. and
;: \Irs. ·Edward Ryan.
:· Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Larry Noble and Jeff. Mr.
~~ber Roush were Josephine and Mrs. L. E. Piersall went to
~;.~arti,n, Leslie Counterman, Beckley, for the weekend. While
~ary Counterman, Timmy there they attended two outdoor
,.,c:ounterman, all of Fort Wayne, dramas, Haffield and McCoys,
·~:ndiana; Mr. an~ Mrs. Ralph Honey in the Rock.

(Cllltinued fl'cllll page i)

Support for uie nurses scholarship fund
was also asked by tbe new departelDental
chapeau.
Mrs. Martin inlruduced ber son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leldler Wme
of Clevela,nd, ~ sm and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. RObert Martin, Ailiance, and
her husband, Osby Martin. Pnmeroy. She
also inlruducedber Ia secntaire-caissiere,
Mrs. Myrtle Waiter, of Racine.
A rose garden was tbe scene for the
impressive installation ceremony coodueled by Esther C. Edgar ol Columbus,
installing officer. Assisliug her were Mrs.
NEW GRID RIVALRY
Mabel Brown of Gallipolis, l'aumooieF,
Alabama and Penn State and Mrs. ·Knapp, Meigs Salon 710, Ia
have agreed to a six-game concierge.
lootbaU series starting In
Installed were Mrs. Martin, depar1981. The two teams have ~·
tal ha
Mrs. Hazel EUi tt
never met In regular season tem_en
c peau;
o •
play, although Peaa State nabonal pou~otr member ;_ Evahna
woa a 1959 L l b e r t y Bowl Berkley, le demi chapeau preunere; Irene
meeting, 7-t.
Meir, le demi chapeau deuDeme; Mrs.
Walker, Ia secretair~aissiere; Mrs.
Marcella Houston, l'aumooieF; and Mrs.
,BJG FAMILY
· Audrey Glaub, Ia cmcierge.
Mrs. Evelyn Brill, pianist, played " In
D e t r o i t Tiger outfielder
Willie Horton is the youngest the Garden," as tbe new officers were
of 22 children.
escorted through an archway ol red velvet

Frank
Family
.
.
:
uwts Reunwn c•uck Roast . . lb.88c Pork Steaks
:neunt'on IlJeld
1\,
ll
Luella Cochran Lewts met for a

Mrs. Martin New Ohio_· Chapeau·

2.50
5.00

34 Plastic Spoons &amp; ForkS.55
.39
30 1'V Trays
.88
.55
2 Qt. and 4 Qt.
4 Ice Cream Freezer 18.88 14.00
16 Mini Oven
- 1.18
.88
16 Clothes Drye
2.88 1.99
19.99 14.00
4 Porta Play Yard
4 Samsonite Charis
9.22 6.50
5 Mesh Nylon Gate
6.18 4.30
Bissell
16 Wall to Wall Cleaner .7.99 5.50
Indoor &amp;
5 Outdoor Drye,.r.._ _...5.44 3.88
By Mac Dowel
.66
66 Turntabl''f-------88
Anchor Hocking
.58
17 Serving Dish - - - ·88
Anchor Hocking
14 Se_rving Dish,_ _ _ .88
.58

7 Whirly Bird _ __ 24.88 17.00
1 Swing Se
23.88 17.00
15
5
35
58

Pitch Back
8.88
Kid Size Playhouse- 14.88
Golf Sets
1. 99
Sun &amp; Shower Set
.99

35 Little Miss High Heels ..96
20 Wacky Whale
5.99
79 24 Inch Ring
.84

6.00
8.00
1.44
.66
.66
4.00
.66

3 Pc.

114 Sweetie Pie Asst.

2.18
28 24 Inch Ring
.88
13 60 ln. Beach Ball_ _ 4.48
1B
13
12
95

48
30
24
26

Inch Cano
2.18
Inch Raft
.78
Inch Ring
.88
Inch Ringy,._ _ __ .88

23
55
18
48
24
275

Vinyl Mattres
Swim Ring
22 ln. Swim Ring
30 ln. Swim Ring
24 ln. Swim Ring
16 ln. Beach Ball
11 20 ln. Beach Ball
16 24 ln. Beach Ball
95 20 ln. Beach Ball
Inflatable
9 52 in.x10 in. Pool

1.28
.99
.72
.99
.99
.24
.48
.68
.54

1.44

.66
3.00
1.44

.55
.66
.66
.88
.66
.55
.66
.66

.15
.33
.44
.37

2.99

9 63 in.x12 in. Pool_-----'

Sale
Price Price
Reg.

Quant.

Item

17 Snorkel and Mask__2 .29
10 Snorkel and Mask__5.99
7 Snorkel
· 1.38·
7 Swim Fins
2.99
11 Water Ski Rope
. 99
l/4" X 25 ft,

1.50
3.00
.99
1.50
.66

6 Golf Shoes. Broken

Size
15.99
6 Golf Shoes. Broken
Size
7.99
9 Swim Floa
3.38
26 Leather Strip Asst._l.77
6 Air Mattress
5.99
"'
'19 Air Mattress
6.99
66 Air Mattres
1.38
28 Camp Stools. Metai- U11
7 Volley Ball Game
Set
9 99
.
Volley Ball &amp;
4 Badmiton Comb. _' _ 13.99
6 Croquet Sets
19.99
11 Croquet Sets
16.99
20 Chip It Golf Game_10.99

1• •

40 Fishing Helmets.
40 Fishing Helmets, foam .. 88
232 Foam Ice Buckets
.66
56 Foam Ice Buckets _ _ .38
6 Canoe Paddle
l. 99
32 Baseball Bats
2.99
22 Baseball Bats
2.48
5 Baseball Bats
3.77
19 Baseball Bats. alum. 7.99
24 Baseball Cap
2.38
5 Baseball Caps
1.99
5 Baseball Caps
.38
11 Alum . Horse Shoe Sets
7.88
48 Foam Cooler
w-handle _ _ _ _ _3.38
106 Foam Cooler:.__ _ 2.47
12 Hip Waders,
Broken size _ _ _ __ 9.88
6 Chesl Waders,
Broken size ---,~--10 . 88
265 Cheese Baif
1.18
3 Exerciser
4.88
Compact Fish Hooks
Pkg. 6
.08
396 Impact Golf Balls_J-.99
106 Badminton Set, 4
• 3.38
Play. _ _ _ _ __
89 Badminton Set, 2
1.38
Play.
8 Baseball Gloves __ll, 99
4 Baseball Gloves
9. 99
15 Baseball Gloves
6.99
8 Boat Anchors
4. 99
3 Metal Water Cooler,
2 gal--...,..,-----'8.99
I Metal Water Cooler!
5 gal.
14.99
1 Metal Water Cooler,
10.99
3 gal.
7 Baseball Batting
Helmet _ _ __ _
2.99

Eado
Ear
OoiJ

39c Blueberries • • piot39c

msH

Ull R"E

EXCEL

'SUNMAID SEEDLESS

•

Peaches .• • • lb.:ztc Watermelons • .=.stc

Mixed Nuts • • '.!;·6CJc ·Raisins • •

.....:-.~-

\

•

5.50
2.50
1.25

4.50
5.25
.99
.99
8 00
•

10.00
15.00
12.00
8.00

25 Per Cent Off Heck's Reg.
Price
On All Rods &amp; Reels

FRESH l'lUMP
•

10.50

•

.48
. . 40
.25
1.40
2.00
1.80
2.70
5.50
1.66
1.33
.88
5.50
2.40
1.80
5.00 '
6.00
.66
24.00
.03
3-.66
2.38

.99
8.50
7.00
5.00 .
3.00
6.50
10.50
8.00
2.00

�FTTT-

'

''

~7

f I 7T

. t

..

'

;•

I

•-""-Bar~·;~""B~ains and More Bargains In The sentinel Classifi~ds
,...••••••••••••••••••--,·
·; For Rent
I·
. .. . . ·
.
I REWARD ! (if:) 2 S:S .,..,,., ·T~r:.~~~~~~24~:r::: I Business Servi~e.s
I
1 ~ QUAliTY
Motor
Co.
•. 2 5 .00
1·
·
IIIII Y.OIIMII """"'"RY .
II
Arllolllil"
oNE BEDROOM trauer
apartment.
ideal forDairy
couples.
Cnntact McOure's
Isle,

I

I
I
I
I
1
I
I

· f"
f I
Leading to the arrest and CORVIC lOR 0
I
Person Or perSORS thaf broke my pIate
, SS door, alSO assuming all COSfS.
11
gla

I1

This also applies to person or persOns
my musl·c box.
l
Who broke ·nto

I aNTURY BAR

1

-LEONARD HESS I

L----•------·--------~

r---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us !
I
I

I
I

l

By Helen Bottel

1

"MALE CHAUVlNIST" EDITOR STRIKES BACK

Dear Helen:
May a ·male editor present a ·rebuttal to tile female editor

1970 Chevrolet
52295
'12 Ton Pickup. wide body, G78x15 tires. H. duly rear
springs, rear step bumper, less than 11000 miles. and less
than 9 mo. old. Beautiful red finish . S)lowsbestof care.

1966Chev.2Ton
0n1ysuso
84'' cab to axle, good 82Sx20 tires, 2 speed axle, int. &amp; cab
like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. in. eng. Areal cleen truck.
1967 Ford Econoline
.
H.DulyVan,6cyl.,superextende&lt;lbody.goodllres.

.

Pomeroy ...., Co.
OP-EH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROV, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
. Ca~~!'llollon &amp;Corrections
Will be accepted unli19·a.m. for
Day ol Publication
·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be res,ibnsible

(suciety pages) who took another male to taat for his
"dlaavilliam"? 'lbe lady claimed hubby showed emotional in·
l'antilism and lack of interest in her as a person by complaining
wbeli his wife covered her legs with pantsuits.
more than one Incorrect.
1claim this sbowll a definite Jack of awareness of any emotion for
Insertion.
between males 8lld females.
RATES '
For
W~nl
Ad Service
Tile )Nobands appreciation for his wife's legs surely wasn't
5 cen1s per Word one in$ertion .
lie lilly tiling he appreciated about ber. Otherwise it wouldn't be
Mlnlmum·Charge75c '
alllll'rial!e any longer, and they would have gone their &amp;epafllte
12 cents per word three
Insertions.
ways. He obviously likes her companillllllhlp, probably ber !rains, consecutive
18 cents per word six cont.ralilllty to do various and many thing~en including the way secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
IoGb In pani:Bults.
ads
and ads paid within 10 deys.
But wben sometbing is beautiful, It seems a1mlnal to cover it.
CARD OF THANKS
No cme would appreciate putUng linoleum over terrazzo tile, or
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50
for
SO word minimum.
)llint over mabogany paneling, or a canvas drape over the Mona
Each additional word 2c.
Ull. Nor would we fence directly across a view of lbe ocean or a
BLIND ADS
loRiy mountain. It would evidence a total Jack of aenaitivlty.
Additional 25c Charge per
llbe gal has "great iegll," 8lld her husband appreciates Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
Olein. that lbould be enough for both, and she sbould,.ooce in a
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon·
willie, edlllil lbem in the accepted fasbloo of the day.
'Ibm's -uHng cmslderably paranoid about some of the Saturd"Y
wWkll's libpcopc:~~ents who see any reference to beauty, the body
Notice
of reboticnbips between male and female as a threat to their KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, Julye~~~tlnaed l!listence. And paranoia is a heck of a lbink upon which
August special ~ Kare Kon·
dillon
oil ss. Value now only
Ill bulldawcrtbwbile case for equality. -MALE EDITOR
S2.SO. Distributors, Brown's,
Dear Helen:
phone 992-5113.
No doubtit is true that tile elqlresslon "Right m!" came into
rmtdll usage tlrough the Black Panthers, but II Is also a TWIN CITY Cab operating 24
hours, 7 days a week. Phone
~ from Shakespeare. In Julius Caesar, Act m, scene 1,
992·3280.
Drivers Joe AnMark Alllcmy says: "I only speak rlgbt oa. I tell you that which
dreoni, George Rowley and
J'OII ,-oanelves do know." - SALLY
Odel Blake.
7-18-71p
rarS.U,.:

*

Rlgbt on and oo! - H.

Dear HeleD :
Wilen I went shopping with my husband, I was shocked to see

IIIJ broaler-ln-law with another wiman, acting very much like
- bmheNI.
.
'"&gt;~
:~.;_•, ~
I ulued my man about it and llY'sald It's just one of those
tblnp. Be was surpised 1didn't know because It bad been going
Cll a lq lime.
·
Wbat bothers me, Helen, is that this man plans to renew his
m.:rilge vows with his wife in church, just as if everything was

,

$695

·
®
()1..

$

z1

992·52411or 992-~. 7-1"-12lc

FURNISHED
&amp; bath
adult 4 1room
Middleport
:.f.;,e -~~-Y·
·
7-11-lfc
::-::==~=--'7,;;
2 BEDROOM trailer. utilities
paid. Bob's Mobile Court,
Syracuse. Phone 992-2951.
7-20-lfc

992

1;,,. -.....,.
11111
I

ReOiaiJe

And Patios
Badl-And

En•ud~r Work

Rt. 7

Pomeroy, 0.

REDUCE excess fluids with
Fluldex, .$1.69- lose weight REDUCE safe and fasl wilh
Gobese tablets . and E-Vap
safely with ·Dex-A-Diet, 98
waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
cents at Nelson Drugs.
6-27-JOip
7-21-llp

~=-·~~~•-·~'2,~4~·~"~2
- -v•,'~:;:::~
POMEROY

Spo uti ng. Roof

HOME&amp; AUTO

~nest ~er

TllEV SNICKER.
AT I-I•S SECURITY
III.ANKE.T

I

tore.

.IOEIINMS
-.!:f!'h:·:m=-2=143:
· ==~':...,:!':.....,~
·~·

SUPPUES

•

;:

Wlieel Meneni
15.55 .

'·'~

7 -2 1 ~

MILL'#UNSOF"EM!!

LOOK-IT'S

ro ~ 1HINI&lt; t: roN'T

POINTIJ..l' DOWN!!

-mAR'SI&lt;OWAY

TWROUGH 'EM .'r

-MEANIJ..l'
'

SWIM UNDER

..

'EM,_

&amp;

NEV~~ ~AI?'

KIOW HOII10 HANl71.E
A CANOe:,~~~~

/A~

PIWt!"S-*' WI1H

o;e:AMAN6HIP,
HAVE WE~

~-

;r,,.,_ ,... _ _

-·.-··-

BUGS BUNNY
YES ... AND EACH MORNING-·AT tl'\WN l\'E BEEN 6 011-.G

l'vE ...I'vE 6EEN
GOING TO II

6ACK lO 'THE CITY, HOPING

HOTEL...

A DMRS.MIRR
~.l\5 a=~
ccv=~ING-

YOJ AND WJM \\OU!.DN T
CATD-1 ON lD WHAT I \IE
6EEN UP TO !

UP5l'ATE !

We Are Ouaslllcked

on Super C· l model tr~ctors.
During July we will sell
Illes• Gr~velys, equipped
willl •lec:lri&lt; st~rter ~nd 12
volt batt.ry ~t the price of
thl' hand crank tractor.
SSlO.OI. You got the storlir
ond battery frH.

GRAVELY

MOOERN walnut _ , . _
combination, 4-sprnh•· sound
system. -4-speed autamalic
changer; sepo ...,.. canlrols.

Balance W .79. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-'laiS.
1-1Uic:

fREFZFR

SAlf

FREE ICE CREAMOFFEA
· Here~s tt.e way it 'warks --you get seven ice crNm
bars , or a h•"..g•lkWI Of ice
cre-am , FREE for every

!

FOR SALE

.

11, · 14' - 24' • WIDE

MfiiFR

Puppies

MOBILE DES

Centenary
Woods Kennel

Real Estate

Sale

in_...,. ,. .,

For Sale
Aluminum

Sheets
20'

The
Dai~ Sentinel

- - - -- -

anllliars

"

. SlU.Y··

EXPERT

_

HARTFORD

f
I

GRAVELY TRACIORS

TRAC10R SA' ES

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

r

For

&gt;

a-

ADOLESCENTS]

From the Largeiit Truck orl
Bulldozer RIICIIat« to the

And l.elch Beds.

Roofi~rpenler

~WCAN

TEACII PSYCf./0/.0GY
TO SUCU CI411J)!SH1

ARE IMMA11JI!E

5eptic:·Tanks

,

Voice along Broadway

YES, ~E STUDENTS
WE'RE Ga'I1N6 TODAY

For

tllispelirl&amp; Pines
Nite Qub

·; .

:'=~.::::

.

---&amp; .

2410112

..,AIR GO. . .
VUtO (;().. .
S00/0! ''

:uru.-.!UftiU'Sena
.
• .

Painting
992-2094
'
606 E..Main Pomeroy
FURNISHED and unfurnished
NEW&amp;OLUWORK
aparlmeniS. Close to school. All - - . .Iiiii &amp; c-. .
NOTICE
OffiCE
Phone 992·5434.
. stru~ C..~ II R I
10-18-tfc . nv..__,.
, •
He ,.
And .
· CoMplete Pic • I·
...
SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to ·Ehuck's TV Auto Sales
FURNITURE
· ~":J.:"~:.r:;:a, t.o.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
-GUARANTEEDPomeroy.
•
'67CHEVELl.EMallbu2door, 1
........ m:ID
Stop In and See Our
lnsurM - Eapeo " ed
...:13-lfc local owner, V.fl automatic,
Phooe 992-2094
.new tires. excellent condition. , __:.Werll
_ _......,
__...,_....,.
_ _ __. Flocll' Display •
PomeRIJ ·Home AulD
Phone 992-2Q8.1 or 992-7098.
•
L-----'------'
THOROUGHBRED Stud
Service. Roman Captain No.
7-4-lfc
()pin I TIIS
Sale
637410. SSO registered mares,
Real Estate F11 Sale
,
.
,
.
, 111ru S.tunllr
CANNING tomatoes. Geraldine
$35 grade mares. Return
606E.Miin,Piomtooy,O.
1969
BUICK
LeSabre,
2-dr.
Oeland, East Main. Racine,
privileges . Greg Roush,
hardtop. power steering,
HOUSE, 16-40 Lincoln His. ,
ctlio.
Phone 992-5039.
power
brakes,
air,
18,000
1-l
..
llk
7-9-JOic
Puneoy . PhOIM! 992 ·~25-tfc . AUTOMOBILE tnsiJrence been
miles. Excellent condition.
conceited?
Lost
your
1970 HONDIJ. 11Soc. asking WIS.
WANTED to rent. lease or buy Phone 992-2288.
CONVENIENT
but
secluded
operator's
license?
Call
992·
· conditim. " ' - 992on land contract, small farm --~--,==--:-""
6-:-J.tfc good
building
tots
on
Tl9
at
Rock
2966.
65-tfc
5170.
1
with good house. Phone 367- 1970 MAVERICK. standardSprings. Within walking
7-21-Sip
High
distance
ot
Meigs
7~10.
transmission, radio, dark
7·20-Jip· blue, 25 m.p.g., exce II en I POODLE - AKC Black,
Sdooal. a 5 minute drive from
Pameroy. Call or see Bill O' BRIEN ECECTRIC SER·
51
female,
8
wks.,
champion
JEAN'S Variety Store located
condition, only
'-ISO.
VICE. Phone 9-19-4551.
Wille weekends or alter 5
s1ock $75. Dog gr-.ing SS
between Cheshire and MidCoolville 667-6214.
5-30-tfc
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9927-21-61p
up. Coolville 667-6214.
dleport has just received a
. V.
1-Z1-61p
new shipment of used clothing 1963 FORD Van _ Complelely - - - - - , . . , - 7-11 -lfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
and shoes. ·Better hurry
overhauled, 5 new tires. $4011. ZIGZAG · omalic. well ~-----Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
because they won't last long,
Conlact Alberl Roseberry.
makesewingmadline. malres SIX ROOM house, bath, full
662-3035.
Bashan-Keno Road.
at our low prices.
buttonhol.,., sews .., buthlns.
basemen I, 133 BuHernut Ave .•
2-12-lfc
7-20-Jip
. .
elc. Balance $8.31. Call 992iust wa(king distance from
72131p
7oil5.
-town Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 7137 Wadsworth BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
7-IUk
Sale
Septic tanks installed. Geora~
Orive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2.01.
231-4334. Columbus.
EARLY AMER ICAN 4-25-tfc
radio
combina~ AM&amp;FM
-5-9-lfc
Saturday Night
radip,
'-Speaker sound
system. ._speed autamalic MIDDLEPORT- 5 room brick HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Ju~
hamewith balh, paneling and
TENNA SERVICE . · Phone
changer. Balance Sll.lZ. Use
992-2522.
""'"
fo
walt
carpeHng.
Phone
our
budget
terms.
Call
992Music By Jones &amp; CD.
6-10-lfc
992-:ISCI or 992-3465.
7085.
-From MarieHa, Ohio
7-18-71c
1-1Uic

DANa

OUR lATIIV PHRASE.
R&gt;R~'i IS ...

·
Remode/inu
--e

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run Wanted To Buy
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
ANTIQUEs. telephones, brass
July 24, 12 noon.
" " - m-2915
7-21 -Jic
cubic filet vou buy in 11 Unico
beds. clocks, dishes, old
Pomei'O'f
.. furniture.
freeier , refr iger11tor or
etc. Write M. D.
combination .
Miller, Rt. •· Pomeroy. Ohio.
YARD SALE on Larkin Street,
UNICO tl IFOOT CHEST
Call 992-6271.
Rutland, Friday and SaturTHIS SPOT that spot, lraffic
FREEZER
ut.H
7-9-lfc
paths too, removed will! Blue · With th is one rou get 1M free
t!Debelween them -and they'Ve been living as brother and sister , day.
7-21-Jic
Luslre carpet shampoo.
ice- cream bars or 2:1 llil lf~
fur RVIl"lll years.
ANTIQUES :
dishes,
Baker Furni1ure Company.
gallons of F REE ice crN m.
'lbele relatives go camping and fishing with us. After leam- GUN SHOOT, Sundey, July 25, 1 telephones, clocks, brass
7-21-61c
POME.OY
beds,
lamps,
etc.-Lee
Rudisill,
·
p.m.,
Racine
Gun
Club.
IDI tbia terrible secret, I dm't know whether I want to go out
J1cl1: w. carser. MWF7-2Hic
Phone 992-J«ll.
PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig-zag
P - t n-tlal
wllblbemanymore. Howshouldlact? -SHOCKED
7-1-JOip sewing machines. Sfill in
original cartons. No at .
DMr Shocked;
TOP PRICE on ginseng and
Lost
tachments needed as our 23 CHANNEL C. 8. r- . I I
.... Act "as was." Evidently these two have worked out their
h.p. Johnson outboard mokr.
Golden
Seal
yellow
rool.
Seal
con1rols are buill-in. Sews
Collie dog, answers to
Phone m-.112.
IF""Jrm• or they wouldn't still be together and apparently LOST,
tops
and
stem
bone
dry,
clean
with
1
or
2
needles,
makes
name of Rover. While front
1-~c
no dirl. All roots. Bill Bailev.
bullonholes. sew on buttons.
paws, black with brownish
,.... ,wtlble. H you dropped them, the wife would have one less
P
.0.
·
Box
14,
Second
Street,
monograms. and blind hem
casl. If seen, phone 992-5.470.
frlendllip when abe needs all the morale-boosting she can get. Reedsville, Ohio 45172.
slltcb. Full cash price, $38.50 1962 10 X 55 MOBI LE hame. J
7·21·31c
bedroom - 12-SOO with ap7-1-JOic
or budget plan.. available.
B.
pliances. Phone 742-526.
Phone 992-5641.
7-21-6tc
Female Help Wanted
-HOUSEWIVES - evenings ELECTROLUX vacuum SIAMESE kittenS - heaiW&gt;y,
r---------~-------------------------------1
free . Earn 25 per cent cleaner . complete with atplayful , litterpan tra ined.
demonstrating Joys and gills
Have
had
temporary
tachments, cord winder and
with the highest paying party
distemper vaccination. Phane
painl
spray.
Used
but
in
like
plan. Compare our program
992-5101 after 6 p.m.
new condition. Pay $37.45
and color calalog before cash
7-20-llp
or credl1
terms
making any other com I
,
available. Phone 992-5641.
mitments. No experience, no
7-21-6tc
Tlda Ia lbe seeoad of a two-part series oa say it is dangerous to man. 'lbere is no proof that
inveslmenl. Car necnsary.
-..atlo&amp; by Pbll Crosby, substituting for tbe a .cheelah ever atlacked anybody unless it was
Call 949-3233 or write Toy 1970 350 KAWASAKI-~. low
Ladies Parly Plan, John- mileage, Roger Bahr, Route
~ Jack O'Brian.
provoked- and even a wild beast has tbe right
stown, Pa. 15902.
1. Reedsville, phone 985-3951.
BY PHIL CROSBY
to protect itself.
7-20-Jip
7-21-7tp
'lbe amiable old walrus Is also marked !..- - - - - -FUZZY THINKING PLAGUES
doom. You used to be able to count their herds in FII Sale 11 Trade
111E ANIMAL WORIJl
the thousands - now you are lucky if you even WILL sell or trade house In
Pomeroy for one in MidNEW YORK - Cerlain forms of wildlife see a dozen of them together. They are valuable
dleport or Rulland. 417 Spring
~~~~at be rigidly protected by law, or they are to hunters for their tustks, fat, ftesh and bide and
Ave., Naylors Run , Pomeroy.
A. K. C. Saint
• 7-20-61p
doomed to extinction. Take the bald eagle, for are wJnerable because they have bad eyes, bad
eumple - the symbol of America. We are bearing and move very slowly.
.Bernard
wiJiing out that noble bird at an alanning rate
Most people fear the grizzly bear -and with Employment Wanted
1220 W~!lliillgtoll-..
8efpre, Ollie
ANY
TYPE
ot
work.
Phone
742because we use pestiCides thatturn up in fish and good reason.It is a dangeroua and 1Ulpredictable
5775.
other snail animals that the eagle eats.
animal. But tf you stay out of its lerTain and
7-21-61c
1961 TRAVELER II ft. fiberglas
Ben Franklin thought that tile eagle should leave it alme, It will not harm you. People who
boat. 1961 John.,., 75 ll.p.
not be the symbol of America because it was a go up to these animals and try to feed them
·
motor. 1961 Gator-n il
Help Wanted
pinle bird. Ben wanted the turkey because he lidbits better have their medical Insurance paid
Ph. 446-0231
Trailer, fully equipped. P1aoe
992-2ln.
!eft it was a bird of some merit. 'lbe day may up. You might as well loot down tbe barrel of a RESPONSIBLE person for
Gallipolis. Ohio
7-16-1ic
route salesman, will share as
c:mJe w!J!n Ben's wish will be a reality, and the gun and pull the triggertoseeifitis loaded.
partnership. A. B.C. Ci'!"ners,
eagle wiD no longer exist - even though lb!lre is
'lbe gri2zly is a defensive animal and will kill
Mason, W. Va.
. . • ·· 1971 SOLID State Apache,
F11
7-16-tfc.
sleeps six. Phone 992-55'12.
a $1,000 fine for shooting one.
and maim if bothered. So ... don't bother him. By
-------7·11-lfc
A skeptic might point out tllat animals breed the end of this century they will be wiped out
HOUSE story and hall, 6 raonos.
f ARN at home addressing
bath, Rutland. " ' - 74 p-etty rapidly and there is no chance of a species anyway because ruthless h1Ulters want lbeir envelopes. Rush stamped self. R.C.A. COLOR Television 21"
5613.
beU.:' wiped out entirely. Want an example of hides.
addressed envelope. The console, excellent condlllon..· ' . . 6-25-llc
$200. Phone Wl-2873.
this fuzzy kind of erroneous thinking?
And now a good word r..- the cougar - who Ambrose Co .. .t32S Lakeborn,
7-20-Sic
3 BEDROOM bridl home.
At the turn of this century the skies of the really deserves it. People think this :nlpoundsof Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
. . Choice location
7-2-JOip
w«Jd were black with flocks of' passenger tawny truculence kills deer for fun. He kills deer
Seen by appolnlment anly.
pigetlns - billions of them. Today not one flies to eat _that's all. A well.fed cougar will walt
Phone 992'55Zl alter • p.m.
S-1-llc
llllllugh tbe sky. H1Ulters killed them by the through a herd of deer and not even raise a paw
36... 23"! .009
lbclusands- as many as 120 with one buckshot against them.
24 ACRE farm Lang Bot..... ,
with or without farm
blast« 1,000 in a ilel Tbe last one- kept in a zoo
A lot of people thought cougars were wiped
machinery. Hous. with ·1"
-died 30 years ago.
out in 1860 because they suddenly disappeared.
bedrooms. dlnlng """"· living
· ~ wWf has got a bad repulatlon because They did' Ibis in self-defense because IIley were
room, H'&gt; batlos. PidoYd
back porCh, wall to Wolll
JDQSt of our Eoropean ancestors had a lot of being slaughtered like flies. 'lbere are probably
USED OFFSET PLATES
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
· cn1;y ideas and S'l!'efslitions about wolves - about 500 still aro1Uld today - but they are
HAVE
awning. storm ..,._. manly that they a!\! people. Wolves are no real . doomed to extinction because noble sportsmen
· storm doors. City water.
MANY USES
and
Selling due to ill heallh. l'honlo
dnlll to ~uman life and they. are valuable are hunting them from snowbobiles and
614-985-3931.
beca• they thin out deer herds .
helicopters. Real sportsmanship.
.
6-23-JIIIp
Mltlt my ''friend" in Fairbanks got off the
1 was quite pleased to read in the psper
lforSJ.OO
Phone 992-2156
6 ROOMS and batto, $11lit ·
1 aplalned to him that there were only recently that eight more whooping a-anes had
back and fron l porch,
.... p1iar beln left in the world, and IIIey been discovered in canada to bring the known OPPORTUNITY. sparelime,
aluminum siding, storm
-ad bnlped out In 10 years. It didn't cut any total to ee for these once-doomed birds. I know addressing envelopes and
windows ·and doors. Monkey
circulars. Make $27.00 per
Run. phone 992-21NS. 7-1~
1c11 wllll blm beca111e be told me right back that that tf the a-anes vardlbed from the globe
lhousand. Handwrlllen or
'- Cllllld •0. polar bear rug for $1,000.
tomorrow It would not bulcally affect your life
HOUSE, 16-12 Una&gt;4n ££!gills.
lyped, In your home. Send just
· .
Call Dannr Thorn....., 992111
Court
St.
The same fate awaits the cheetah In East or mJne
$2 for lnsfructlons end allsl of
2196.
Ohio
Pomeroy,
firms
using
•ddresser$.
Afrb because a pelt is worth $1,200. Said me
But I go along with my dad who belleves that
7-11-lfc
Salisfaction guaranleed. B &amp;
acii:M wllo )!ought a :~().pelt coat for $10,000: the exlinclioo of any form of lrildlife marks the
V Enlerprlses, Dept. 7-77. PO
Bo• 398, Pearblossom, Cali! .. COAL. llmeotone. Excelolor 110USE. I rooms. Ullan A..,.,
''allllle
were already .dead."
death of a world in which freedom was once
~II Works, E. Mi!ln St.,
93553.
Pomeroy. Call tn-56-U.
.
111e~ also will be extinct in 10 years if possible.
7-21-61p Pllmeroy. l'l1cln. 992-:1191.
.
1·~
iliilalaiii!IJtered'at the present rate. Its assassin
- -- - - -- -'
A.9.Hc

f

IJliGHAID'SSWING
REMINDS ME OF
WH.EN I WUZ. A
LEETLE GAL..
.A· SWII\JGIN'
BACK AN' FORTH~
TH' LIVEIDNG
DAY

Complete

EXTRA
large
space,
PHONE ~lG
mile W.
of trailer
Eastern
High1
School
on Slate Route 7. '-========:::;::::~
Phone 985-4106.
r
7-20-61c
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'h-mlle north ot new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
J.S.Ifc

rvKDiriU'£ft

oNn

I

I:

uaMIII

--

I THINK I'LL GO
FOR A LEETLE
SWING-- JEST FER
0~ TIMEV'S SAKE

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

AWNINGS, storm - s and
windows. carports.
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-21-tfc

Mind qivinq me

la~t \:lit one
more t )me ?

that

Broker

,_....,,Ollie

111 Mechanic Stroet

WILL DO roofing, palnllng,
plumbing and carpenter
THIS WEEK'S
work, alum inum siding.
BARGAINS
Phone 992-73U or 74-lf/19.
3HOUSES- FREE GAS-One
7-20-12fc
nearly . - 3 bedroom home,
bath, gas forced air furnace . READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Two porches, breez~ way,
delivered right to your
prage-. 2 other houses,
project. Fast and eesy . FI'H
RENTED.
Gas
well,
estimates. Phone 992-3214.
minerals. 19 acres. NEW
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .•
LISTING. $2 1~.00.
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc
It ROOM OLDER HOME - 6
..
rooms down, 4 up. Will make
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
a double rental. $3,500.00.
Complete Service
Phone 9-19-31121
LETART- 3 bedrooms, bath,
Racine, Ohio
forced air turnace . Basement
Crill Bradford
Drilled wel l. $1,000.00.
5-1-lfc
BELOW MIDDLEPORT - 3
bedn aum home, bath, fur - SEWING MACHINES. Repair
nace. Well water. Garage. service. all make5, 992-2214.
The Fabric Shop, Pwuefoy.
S7.000.011.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpe~~ Scissors.
NEW LISTING - 5 rooms,
3-29-lfc
balll. gas heal. Nice basement
and
lot.
SYRACUSE.
S6,000.011.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas Reasonable rales. Ph. ~.
1umace !forced air). ApartJohn Russell,
menl down. Lot for mobile Gallipolis.
Owner
&amp;
Opera
lor.
hame. Asking $7,500.00.
S.IJ.Ifc
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrooms,
bath, basement Nice lot. CURTISS " cait le" breeding
service. Dally service or any
Rutland. $4.0011.00.
type · of information, call
FOR BEST RESULTS
Leland Parker 992-2264.
CALLUS.
Pomeroy, home office, or
m.)JH
Coolville,
call station 667-3251.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
7-11-12fc
ASSOCIATE
7-1Hic
--- CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
Dick Vaughan, phone 992·
3374, Dale Lillie, phone 992-

Celand Realty

•!
I

~

,,•
!

~

J

~
'1-1 .

ILY CROSSWORD

DICK TRACY
IS BURIED

MJLUONSOF
OF

~

Cr- AO.d.
....... tn-714.
7-21-12fc

- - -- - -

I [l

Slilrle)" -

.upuyot
(2wU.)

:K."-

I

I

H.Spake

orr&amp;IIJI" the tircled letters
to form the turpriM arwwer. aa
sunnted by the.....,
;I; ow

cart-.

out!"

(2wU.)

:rr. RMdy ror

......,

I

311.:n.

Ju•ubl.. ~ : SOAPY

.-

produ&lt;t

GRAIN

DIGEST

IRIDGI

ll"ltnr m11n~· ~··t {N.Hit lf.o ""'"-''

TuleUde

I•~ AfJT,.ml•

D. New
Go-port

-IIG SltiiADS

WELL, SllOOf'l(,

H.~·

,.,.._
a

HERE WE ARE
AT CAMP...

'pt

aBn 'ldttC
ST.~

'
CAPI'A1N EASY

. . Put rlllloe
root

DAILY CRtrtoqU~-Bere'• llllw to work It:
&amp;lliDL.&amp;&amp;Xa
Ia LONGI'II:LLOW
.
Olio tatter lllmPI1 for uoother. Ja lJilo """"'" A II
for 11oe 11oree L'o, X for lbe two O'o, etc. llllille litton.
If z' Dt t I• the lealtb. aDd ~farmatloll of tbe wonk are all
bloto. · day tbe code letters an cllfteral
1"7--------.::~ r--;:--?'"'----~1 _HI 1HER€ ... M~ NAME I!&gt;
A CIC"&gt;,.P'"kl"'1'111n-• q 'a"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21,HI
ESate
t
of
MABEl

Decooled

Notice is hereby given th.ti
J~n P · Williams of Srr•cuu,
OhiO, has been duly •ppointld
E~ecutor of the Estate of Mabel
Wn~ebrenner, decea&amp;ec~. l•t• of

CHARLIE !!ROliN., L 6t.lf5S WE ..

. )(VA
NHT'B

KABII . QCSMFCT
WVXA

THNAWABB,

FB

CX

VFB

H

ICCJ

WFIIIIWA,

PTSAN_,ANKASAJ

HGNB

\

...;

/

CX

TFTJTAIIB

201'11'WII'HN

F . H. 0'8rltrt
Probtte Jud,• of Mid County
l1t 21, :t1 Ill 4,31

HT.J

CX

WCLA . ..

ZCBJBII!CSIIV

Yi! t ,..,. CIJSII! 1 1 f\'ii&amp;h&amp;YM A aPAI\A.;t'IO" ~
AiW&amp;t tlp Pli AJfD JU8D('S, ND~""
MY OPDI'ION, IIIAn.-lllliiUND IIVIUD!:'

. IL\DI:
•

~---

example

Ude

(Zwds. )

Jll. Clecb. river
21. Brltilh

LEGAL NOTICE

--"--·

ated

29:-

[J I

II

clilof

L

•

28. Allevi-

hone

-..-.

(2wdl.)
32. PapniDI's
birthplace
38. Wield
40. Jl&amp;ta Hari,
for

26. lm'dl

5. Clothes'

(..-.)

30.Jiult

nuti

p.nnent

li.Daold'•

y,.....,.........

23. Couple
%5. Benve-

(3'Ndl.)
{ , Arab

18.Setedlft
Senlce
Syoiem.

Metgs. County, Ohio
C.redit~rs are reqUired to file
s ROOM ...,._, gao-age, water fh_ttr_clanns with said t.udlcuery
- gas. a-' condltim, 1 1·3 wtlhtn fout: months.
Dated
t~is t61~ day of July
alf Route 1 " " - 1971
.
'

.....
t..r
an lHding

otheno
3.NatWy
&amp;ttlnd

up

U~~~trunbltlhese fwr JumbltL
one teller to oac:h ICJU&amp;re, lo
form four ordinary words.

otate
21. Devour

liDd

(qltated)
17. - de

Racine. Olio.

WINEBRENNER

THI!. THREE CI!OOKS:'

~~~~;f"J:::!:!~=

-

6-2J.301c
PAPER HANGING, inlerlor
· • East Mlin
and exterior painting. Phone
POMEROY
992-3630.
7-1J.301p
MINERSVILLE - 7 spacious
rooms plenly of closets.
Delightful porCh with view of FOR YOUR new shingled root,
contad Roush Cnnstructlm.
the river. LARGE YARD for
Phone 992-5039.
.
the children to romp ln. Bath,
7-9-JOic
8'! ment with utility space.
NEW forced-air gas furnace
as well as aluminum siding O' DELL WHEEL alignment
for lhal cold weat~ ahead. ' located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
FULL PRICE JUST S10,0011. Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
HAVE A LOW INCOME? Wheels balanced elecWANT TO RETIRE? HERE tron ically .
All
work
IS YOUR HOME 2 guaranteed.
Reasonable
bedrooms, NEW bath, nice rates. Phone 992~13.
kitchen, utility room, NEW
6-2..301c
torced~ai r ga.s. furnace,
LARGE GARDEN SPACE NEIGLER Cnnsfrucllon. For
OR
YARD
LOW
building or remodeling your
UTILITIES.. JUST !1.5,300.
home. Call Guy Nelgler,

LIST WITH US
FOR RESULTS.
CALLUSFOR ALL
OF YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDS.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Ollim tn-mt
Rn· 1 [:t tn-~
__ __ _ _· ___7_
·21-6tc

~

~~~~~~~~J

Allloorent

~-

A FINE HOME liND AN IN7-31-tlc
COME - 6 large rooms,
dosel space, bath, nice kit- RALPH' S CARPET - Upe'- for m&lt;&gt;m. full basement
holslery Cleaning Servlco. '
with apartment. garden
Free estimates. Phone
space. garage- and many
Gallipolis &lt;146-0294.
oilier features. ACT QUICK
3-12-lfc
ON THIS BARGAIN. S10,0011.

"A. FRGI'ER RESTING Pt.A.CE

e. Aft
41. Jtecount
•"'MI!I
T.
Lariat
42.Took&amp;
LID-matched
8.ota
bounding
4. Remote
region
pit
8. Jlacp&amp;lcll
B.
Fop
4S.Xerely
(2
u. Ballld
wdJ.)
lLGruewlth
10.
Wleked
ll.llanl·
DOWN
a bullet
1... -rhree ltten
lob&amp;
U.llovle
Indian
-Horse"
cuiDo
15.
Cblnese
2.Al'!IU
'1'\onnerk

\

.

j

\

�FTTT-

'

''

~7

f I 7T

. t

..

'

;•

I

•-""-Bar~·;~""B~ains and More Bargains In The sentinel Classifi~ds
,...••••••••••••••••••--,·
·; For Rent
I·
. .. . . ·
.
I REWARD ! (if:) 2 S:S .,..,,., ·T~r:.~~~~~~24~:r::: I Business Servi~e.s
I
1 ~ QUAliTY
Motor
Co.
•. 2 5 .00
1·
·
IIIII Y.OIIMII """"'"RY .
II
Arllolllil"
oNE BEDROOM trauer
apartment.
ideal forDairy
couples.
Cnntact McOure's
Isle,

I

I
I
I
I
1
I
I

· f"
f I
Leading to the arrest and CORVIC lOR 0
I
Person Or perSORS thaf broke my pIate
, SS door, alSO assuming all COSfS.
11
gla

I1

This also applies to person or persOns
my musl·c box.
l
Who broke ·nto

I aNTURY BAR

1

-LEONARD HESS I

L----•------·--------~

r---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us !
I
I

I
I

l

By Helen Bottel

1

"MALE CHAUVlNIST" EDITOR STRIKES BACK

Dear Helen:
May a ·male editor present a ·rebuttal to tile female editor

1970 Chevrolet
52295
'12 Ton Pickup. wide body, G78x15 tires. H. duly rear
springs, rear step bumper, less than 11000 miles. and less
than 9 mo. old. Beautiful red finish . S)lowsbestof care.

1966Chev.2Ton
0n1ysuso
84'' cab to axle, good 82Sx20 tires, 2 speed axle, int. &amp; cab
like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. in. eng. Areal cleen truck.
1967 Ford Econoline
.
H.DulyVan,6cyl.,superextende&lt;lbody.goodllres.

.

Pomeroy ...., Co.
OP-EH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROV, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
. Ca~~!'llollon &amp;Corrections
Will be accepted unli19·a.m. for
Day ol Publication
·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be res,ibnsible

(suciety pages) who took another male to taat for his
"dlaavilliam"? 'lbe lady claimed hubby showed emotional in·
l'antilism and lack of interest in her as a person by complaining
wbeli his wife covered her legs with pantsuits.
more than one Incorrect.
1claim this sbowll a definite Jack of awareness of any emotion for
Insertion.
between males 8lld females.
RATES '
For
W~nl
Ad Service
Tile )Nobands appreciation for his wife's legs surely wasn't
5 cen1s per Word one in$ertion .
lie lilly tiling he appreciated about ber. Otherwise it wouldn't be
Mlnlmum·Charge75c '
alllll'rial!e any longer, and they would have gone their &amp;epafllte
12 cents per word three
Insertions.
ways. He obviously likes her companillllllhlp, probably ber !rains, consecutive
18 cents per word six cont.ralilllty to do various and many thing~en including the way secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
IoGb In pani:Bults.
ads
and ads paid within 10 deys.
But wben sometbing is beautiful, It seems a1mlnal to cover it.
CARD OF THANKS
No cme would appreciate putUng linoleum over terrazzo tile, or
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50
for
SO word minimum.
)llint over mabogany paneling, or a canvas drape over the Mona
Each additional word 2c.
Ull. Nor would we fence directly across a view of lbe ocean or a
BLIND ADS
loRiy mountain. It would evidence a total Jack of aenaitivlty.
Additional 25c Charge per
llbe gal has "great iegll," 8lld her husband appreciates Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
Olein. that lbould be enough for both, and she sbould,.ooce in a
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon·
willie, edlllil lbem in the accepted fasbloo of the day.
'Ibm's -uHng cmslderably paranoid about some of the Saturd"Y
wWkll's libpcopc:~~ents who see any reference to beauty, the body
Notice
of reboticnbips between male and female as a threat to their KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, Julye~~~tlnaed l!listence. And paranoia is a heck of a lbink upon which
August special ~ Kare Kon·
dillon
oil ss. Value now only
Ill bulldawcrtbwbile case for equality. -MALE EDITOR
S2.SO. Distributors, Brown's,
Dear Helen:
phone 992-5113.
No doubtit is true that tile elqlresslon "Right m!" came into
rmtdll usage tlrough the Black Panthers, but II Is also a TWIN CITY Cab operating 24
hours, 7 days a week. Phone
~ from Shakespeare. In Julius Caesar, Act m, scene 1,
992·3280.
Drivers Joe AnMark Alllcmy says: "I only speak rlgbt oa. I tell you that which
dreoni, George Rowley and
J'OII ,-oanelves do know." - SALLY
Odel Blake.
7-18-71p
rarS.U,.:

*

Rlgbt on and oo! - H.

Dear HeleD :
Wilen I went shopping with my husband, I was shocked to see

IIIJ broaler-ln-law with another wiman, acting very much like
- bmheNI.
.
'"&gt;~
:~.;_•, ~
I ulued my man about it and llY'sald It's just one of those
tblnp. Be was surpised 1didn't know because It bad been going
Cll a lq lime.
·
Wbat bothers me, Helen, is that this man plans to renew his
m.:rilge vows with his wife in church, just as if everything was

,

$695

·
®
()1..

$

z1

992·52411or 992-~. 7-1"-12lc

FURNISHED
&amp; bath
adult 4 1room
Middleport
:.f.;,e -~~-Y·
·
7-11-lfc
::-::==~=--'7,;;
2 BEDROOM trailer. utilities
paid. Bob's Mobile Court,
Syracuse. Phone 992-2951.
7-20-lfc

992

1;,,. -.....,.
11111
I

ReOiaiJe

And Patios
Badl-And

En•ud~r Work

Rt. 7

Pomeroy, 0.

REDUCE excess fluids with
Fluldex, .$1.69- lose weight REDUCE safe and fasl wilh
Gobese tablets . and E-Vap
safely with ·Dex-A-Diet, 98
waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
cents at Nelson Drugs.
6-27-JOip
7-21-llp

~=-·~~~•-·~'2,~4~·~"~2
- -v•,'~:;:::~
POMEROY

Spo uti ng. Roof

HOME&amp; AUTO

~nest ~er

TllEV SNICKER.
AT I-I•S SECURITY
III.ANKE.T

I

tore.

.IOEIINMS
-.!:f!'h:·:m=-2=143:
· ==~':...,:!':.....,~
·~·

SUPPUES

•

;:

Wlieel Meneni
15.55 .

'·'~

7 -2 1 ~

MILL'#UNSOF"EM!!

LOOK-IT'S

ro ~ 1HINI&lt; t: roN'T

POINTIJ..l' DOWN!!

-mAR'SI&lt;OWAY

TWROUGH 'EM .'r

-MEANIJ..l'
'

SWIM UNDER

..

'EM,_

&amp;

NEV~~ ~AI?'

KIOW HOII10 HANl71.E
A CANOe:,~~~~

/A~

PIWt!"S-*' WI1H

o;e:AMAN6HIP,
HAVE WE~

~-

;r,,.,_ ,... _ _

-·.-··-

BUGS BUNNY
YES ... AND EACH MORNING-·AT tl'\WN l\'E BEEN 6 011-.G

l'vE ...I'vE 6EEN
GOING TO II

6ACK lO 'THE CITY, HOPING

HOTEL...

A DMRS.MIRR
~.l\5 a=~
ccv=~ING-

YOJ AND WJM \\OU!.DN T
CATD-1 ON lD WHAT I \IE
6EEN UP TO !

UP5l'ATE !

We Are Ouaslllcked

on Super C· l model tr~ctors.
During July we will sell
Illes• Gr~velys, equipped
willl •lec:lri&lt; st~rter ~nd 12
volt batt.ry ~t the price of
thl' hand crank tractor.
SSlO.OI. You got the storlir
ond battery frH.

GRAVELY

MOOERN walnut _ , . _
combination, 4-sprnh•· sound
system. -4-speed autamalic
changer; sepo ...,.. canlrols.

Balance W .79. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-'laiS.
1-1Uic:

fREFZFR

SAlf

FREE ICE CREAMOFFEA
· Here~s tt.e way it 'warks --you get seven ice crNm
bars , or a h•"..g•lkWI Of ice
cre-am , FREE for every

!

FOR SALE

.

11, · 14' - 24' • WIDE

MfiiFR

Puppies

MOBILE DES

Centenary
Woods Kennel

Real Estate

Sale

in_...,. ,. .,

For Sale
Aluminum

Sheets
20'

The
Dai~ Sentinel

- - - -- -

anllliars

"

. SlU.Y··

EXPERT

_

HARTFORD

f
I

GRAVELY TRACIORS

TRAC10R SA' ES

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

r

For

&gt;

a-

ADOLESCENTS]

From the Largeiit Truck orl
Bulldozer RIICIIat« to the

And l.elch Beds.

Roofi~rpenler

~WCAN

TEACII PSYCf./0/.0GY
TO SUCU CI411J)!SH1

ARE IMMA11JI!E

5eptic:·Tanks

,

Voice along Broadway

YES, ~E STUDENTS
WE'RE Ga'I1N6 TODAY

For

tllispelirl&amp; Pines
Nite Qub

·; .

:'=~.::::

.

---&amp; .

2410112

..,AIR GO. . .
VUtO (;().. .
S00/0! ''

:uru.-.!UftiU'Sena
.
• .

Painting
992-2094
'
606 E..Main Pomeroy
FURNISHED and unfurnished
NEW&amp;OLUWORK
aparlmeniS. Close to school. All - - . .Iiiii &amp; c-. .
NOTICE
OffiCE
Phone 992·5434.
. stru~ C..~ II R I
10-18-tfc . nv..__,.
, •
He ,.
And .
· CoMplete Pic • I·
...
SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to ·Ehuck's TV Auto Sales
FURNITURE
· ~":J.:"~:.r:;:a, t.o.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
-GUARANTEEDPomeroy.
•
'67CHEVELl.EMallbu2door, 1
........ m:ID
Stop In and See Our
lnsurM - Eapeo " ed
...:13-lfc local owner, V.fl automatic,
Phooe 992-2094
.new tires. excellent condition. , __:.Werll
_ _......,
__...,_....,.
_ _ __. Flocll' Display •
PomeRIJ ·Home AulD
Phone 992-2Q8.1 or 992-7098.
•
L-----'------'
THOROUGHBRED Stud
Service. Roman Captain No.
7-4-lfc
()pin I TIIS
Sale
637410. SSO registered mares,
Real Estate F11 Sale
,
.
,
.
, 111ru S.tunllr
CANNING tomatoes. Geraldine
$35 grade mares. Return
606E.Miin,Piomtooy,O.
1969
BUICK
LeSabre,
2-dr.
Oeland, East Main. Racine,
privileges . Greg Roush,
hardtop. power steering,
HOUSE, 16-40 Lincoln His. ,
ctlio.
Phone 992-5039.
power
brakes,
air,
18,000
1-l
..
llk
7-9-JOic
Puneoy . PhOIM! 992 ·~25-tfc . AUTOMOBILE tnsiJrence been
miles. Excellent condition.
conceited?
Lost
your
1970 HONDIJ. 11Soc. asking WIS.
WANTED to rent. lease or buy Phone 992-2288.
CONVENIENT
but
secluded
operator's
license?
Call
992·
· conditim. " ' - 992on land contract, small farm --~--,==--:-""
6-:-J.tfc good
building
tots
on
Tl9
at
Rock
2966.
65-tfc
5170.
1
with good house. Phone 367- 1970 MAVERICK. standardSprings. Within walking
7-21-Sip
High
distance
ot
Meigs
7~10.
transmission, radio, dark
7·20-Jip· blue, 25 m.p.g., exce II en I POODLE - AKC Black,
Sdooal. a 5 minute drive from
Pameroy. Call or see Bill O' BRIEN ECECTRIC SER·
51
female,
8
wks.,
champion
JEAN'S Variety Store located
condition, only
'-ISO.
VICE. Phone 9-19-4551.
Wille weekends or alter 5
s1ock $75. Dog gr-.ing SS
between Cheshire and MidCoolville 667-6214.
5-30-tfc
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9927-21-61p
up. Coolville 667-6214.
dleport has just received a
. V.
1-Z1-61p
new shipment of used clothing 1963 FORD Van _ Complelely - - - - - , . . , - 7-11 -lfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
and shoes. ·Better hurry
overhauled, 5 new tires. $4011. ZIGZAG · omalic. well ~-----Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
because they won't last long,
Conlact Alberl Roseberry.
makesewingmadline. malres SIX ROOM house, bath, full
662-3035.
Bashan-Keno Road.
at our low prices.
buttonhol.,., sews .., buthlns.
basemen I, 133 BuHernut Ave .•
2-12-lfc
7-20-Jip
. .
elc. Balance $8.31. Call 992iust wa(king distance from
72131p
7oil5.
-town Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 7137 Wadsworth BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
7-IUk
Sale
Septic tanks installed. Geora~
Orive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2.01.
231-4334. Columbus.
EARLY AMER ICAN 4-25-tfc
radio
combina~ AM&amp;FM
-5-9-lfc
Saturday Night
radip,
'-Speaker sound
system. ._speed autamalic MIDDLEPORT- 5 room brick HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Ju~
hamewith balh, paneling and
TENNA SERVICE . · Phone
changer. Balance Sll.lZ. Use
992-2522.
""'"
fo
walt
carpeHng.
Phone
our
budget
terms.
Call
992Music By Jones &amp; CD.
6-10-lfc
992-:ISCI or 992-3465.
7085.
-From MarieHa, Ohio
7-18-71c
1-1Uic

DANa

OUR lATIIV PHRASE.
R&gt;R~'i IS ...

·
Remode/inu
--e

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run Wanted To Buy
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
ANTIQUEs. telephones, brass
July 24, 12 noon.
" " - m-2915
7-21 -Jic
cubic filet vou buy in 11 Unico
beds. clocks, dishes, old
Pomei'O'f
.. furniture.
freeier , refr iger11tor or
etc. Write M. D.
combination .
Miller, Rt. •· Pomeroy. Ohio.
YARD SALE on Larkin Street,
UNICO tl IFOOT CHEST
Call 992-6271.
Rutland, Friday and SaturTHIS SPOT that spot, lraffic
FREEZER
ut.H
7-9-lfc
paths too, removed will! Blue · With th is one rou get 1M free
t!Debelween them -and they'Ve been living as brother and sister , day.
7-21-Jic
Luslre carpet shampoo.
ice- cream bars or 2:1 llil lf~
fur RVIl"lll years.
ANTIQUES :
dishes,
Baker Furni1ure Company.
gallons of F REE ice crN m.
'lbele relatives go camping and fishing with us. After leam- GUN SHOOT, Sundey, July 25, 1 telephones, clocks, brass
7-21-61c
POME.OY
beds,
lamps,
etc.-Lee
Rudisill,
·
p.m.,
Racine
Gun
Club.
IDI tbia terrible secret, I dm't know whether I want to go out
J1cl1: w. carser. MWF7-2Hic
Phone 992-J«ll.
PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig-zag
P - t n-tlal
wllblbemanymore. Howshouldlact? -SHOCKED
7-1-JOip sewing machines. Sfill in
original cartons. No at .
DMr Shocked;
TOP PRICE on ginseng and
Lost
tachments needed as our 23 CHANNEL C. 8. r- . I I
.... Act "as was." Evidently these two have worked out their
h.p. Johnson outboard mokr.
Golden
Seal
yellow
rool.
Seal
con1rols are buill-in. Sews
Collie dog, answers to
Phone m-.112.
IF""Jrm• or they wouldn't still be together and apparently LOST,
tops
and
stem
bone
dry,
clean
with
1
or
2
needles,
makes
name of Rover. While front
1-~c
no dirl. All roots. Bill Bailev.
bullonholes. sew on buttons.
paws, black with brownish
,.... ,wtlble. H you dropped them, the wife would have one less
P
.0.
·
Box
14,
Second
Street,
monograms. and blind hem
casl. If seen, phone 992-5.470.
frlendllip when abe needs all the morale-boosting she can get. Reedsville, Ohio 45172.
slltcb. Full cash price, $38.50 1962 10 X 55 MOBI LE hame. J
7·21·31c
bedroom - 12-SOO with ap7-1-JOic
or budget plan.. available.
B.
pliances. Phone 742-526.
Phone 992-5641.
7-21-6tc
Female Help Wanted
-HOUSEWIVES - evenings ELECTROLUX vacuum SIAMESE kittenS - heaiW&gt;y,
r---------~-------------------------------1
free . Earn 25 per cent cleaner . complete with atplayful , litterpan tra ined.
demonstrating Joys and gills
Have
had
temporary
tachments, cord winder and
with the highest paying party
distemper vaccination. Phane
painl
spray.
Used
but
in
like
plan. Compare our program
992-5101 after 6 p.m.
new condition. Pay $37.45
and color calalog before cash
7-20-llp
or credl1
terms
making any other com I
,
available. Phone 992-5641.
mitments. No experience, no
7-21-6tc
Tlda Ia lbe seeoad of a two-part series oa say it is dangerous to man. 'lbere is no proof that
inveslmenl. Car necnsary.
-..atlo&amp; by Pbll Crosby, substituting for tbe a .cheelah ever atlacked anybody unless it was
Call 949-3233 or write Toy 1970 350 KAWASAKI-~. low
Ladies Parly Plan, John- mileage, Roger Bahr, Route
~ Jack O'Brian.
provoked- and even a wild beast has tbe right
stown, Pa. 15902.
1. Reedsville, phone 985-3951.
BY PHIL CROSBY
to protect itself.
7-20-Jip
7-21-7tp
'lbe amiable old walrus Is also marked !..- - - - - -FUZZY THINKING PLAGUES
doom. You used to be able to count their herds in FII Sale 11 Trade
111E ANIMAL WORIJl
the thousands - now you are lucky if you even WILL sell or trade house In
Pomeroy for one in MidNEW YORK - Cerlain forms of wildlife see a dozen of them together. They are valuable
dleport or Rulland. 417 Spring
~~~~at be rigidly protected by law, or they are to hunters for their tustks, fat, ftesh and bide and
Ave., Naylors Run , Pomeroy.
A. K. C. Saint
• 7-20-61p
doomed to extinction. Take the bald eagle, for are wJnerable because they have bad eyes, bad
eumple - the symbol of America. We are bearing and move very slowly.
.Bernard
wiJiing out that noble bird at an alanning rate
Most people fear the grizzly bear -and with Employment Wanted
1220 W~!lliillgtoll-..
8efpre, Ollie
ANY
TYPE
ot
work.
Phone
742because we use pestiCides thatturn up in fish and good reason.It is a dangeroua and 1Ulpredictable
5775.
other snail animals that the eagle eats.
animal. But tf you stay out of its lerTain and
7-21-61c
1961 TRAVELER II ft. fiberglas
Ben Franklin thought that tile eagle should leave it alme, It will not harm you. People who
boat. 1961 John.,., 75 ll.p.
not be the symbol of America because it was a go up to these animals and try to feed them
·
motor. 1961 Gator-n il
Help Wanted
pinle bird. Ben wanted the turkey because he lidbits better have their medical Insurance paid
Ph. 446-0231
Trailer, fully equipped. P1aoe
992-2ln.
!eft it was a bird of some merit. 'lbe day may up. You might as well loot down tbe barrel of a RESPONSIBLE person for
Gallipolis. Ohio
7-16-1ic
route salesman, will share as
c:mJe w!J!n Ben's wish will be a reality, and the gun and pull the triggertoseeifitis loaded.
partnership. A. B.C. Ci'!"ners,
eagle wiD no longer exist - even though lb!lre is
'lbe gri2zly is a defensive animal and will kill
Mason, W. Va.
. . • ·· 1971 SOLID State Apache,
F11
7-16-tfc.
sleeps six. Phone 992-55'12.
a $1,000 fine for shooting one.
and maim if bothered. So ... don't bother him. By
-------7·11-lfc
A skeptic might point out tllat animals breed the end of this century they will be wiped out
HOUSE story and hall, 6 raonos.
f ARN at home addressing
bath, Rutland. " ' - 74 p-etty rapidly and there is no chance of a species anyway because ruthless h1Ulters want lbeir envelopes. Rush stamped self. R.C.A. COLOR Television 21"
5613.
beU.:' wiped out entirely. Want an example of hides.
addressed envelope. The console, excellent condlllon..· ' . . 6-25-llc
$200. Phone Wl-2873.
this fuzzy kind of erroneous thinking?
And now a good word r..- the cougar - who Ambrose Co .. .t32S Lakeborn,
7-20-Sic
3 BEDROOM bridl home.
At the turn of this century the skies of the really deserves it. People think this :nlpoundsof Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
. . Choice location
7-2-JOip
w«Jd were black with flocks of' passenger tawny truculence kills deer for fun. He kills deer
Seen by appolnlment anly.
pigetlns - billions of them. Today not one flies to eat _that's all. A well.fed cougar will walt
Phone 992'55Zl alter • p.m.
S-1-llc
llllllugh tbe sky. H1Ulters killed them by the through a herd of deer and not even raise a paw
36... 23"! .009
lbclusands- as many as 120 with one buckshot against them.
24 ACRE farm Lang Bot..... ,
with or without farm
blast« 1,000 in a ilel Tbe last one- kept in a zoo
A lot of people thought cougars were wiped
machinery. Hous. with ·1"
-died 30 years ago.
out in 1860 because they suddenly disappeared.
bedrooms. dlnlng """"· living
· ~ wWf has got a bad repulatlon because They did' Ibis in self-defense because IIley were
room, H'&gt; batlos. PidoYd
back porCh, wall to Wolll
JDQSt of our Eoropean ancestors had a lot of being slaughtered like flies. 'lbere are probably
USED OFFSET PLATES
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
· cn1;y ideas and S'l!'efslitions about wolves - about 500 still aro1Uld today - but they are
HAVE
awning. storm ..,._. manly that they a!\! people. Wolves are no real . doomed to extinction because noble sportsmen
· storm doors. City water.
MANY USES
and
Selling due to ill heallh. l'honlo
dnlll to ~uman life and they. are valuable are hunting them from snowbobiles and
614-985-3931.
beca• they thin out deer herds .
helicopters. Real sportsmanship.
.
6-23-JIIIp
Mltlt my ''friend" in Fairbanks got off the
1 was quite pleased to read in the psper
lforSJ.OO
Phone 992-2156
6 ROOMS and batto, $11lit ·
1 aplalned to him that there were only recently that eight more whooping a-anes had
back and fron l porch,
.... p1iar beln left in the world, and IIIey been discovered in canada to bring the known OPPORTUNITY. sparelime,
aluminum siding, storm
-ad bnlped out In 10 years. It didn't cut any total to ee for these once-doomed birds. I know addressing envelopes and
windows ·and doors. Monkey
circulars. Make $27.00 per
Run. phone 992-21NS. 7-1~
1c11 wllll blm beca111e be told me right back that that tf the a-anes vardlbed from the globe
lhousand. Handwrlllen or
'- Cllllld •0. polar bear rug for $1,000.
tomorrow It would not bulcally affect your life
HOUSE, 16-12 Una&gt;4n ££!gills.
lyped, In your home. Send just
· .
Call Dannr Thorn....., 992111
Court
St.
The same fate awaits the cheetah In East or mJne
$2 for lnsfructlons end allsl of
2196.
Ohio
Pomeroy,
firms
using
•ddresser$.
Afrb because a pelt is worth $1,200. Said me
But I go along with my dad who belleves that
7-11-lfc
Salisfaction guaranleed. B &amp;
acii:M wllo )!ought a :~().pelt coat for $10,000: the exlinclioo of any form of lrildlife marks the
V Enlerprlses, Dept. 7-77. PO
Bo• 398, Pearblossom, Cali! .. COAL. llmeotone. Excelolor 110USE. I rooms. Ullan A..,.,
''allllle
were already .dead."
death of a world in which freedom was once
~II Works, E. Mi!ln St.,
93553.
Pomeroy. Call tn-56-U.
.
111e~ also will be extinct in 10 years if possible.
7-21-61p Pllmeroy. l'l1cln. 992-:1191.
.
1·~
iliilalaiii!IJtered'at the present rate. Its assassin
- -- - - -- -'
A.9.Hc

f

IJliGHAID'SSWING
REMINDS ME OF
WH.EN I WUZ. A
LEETLE GAL..
.A· SWII\JGIN'
BACK AN' FORTH~
TH' LIVEIDNG
DAY

Complete

EXTRA
large
space,
PHONE ~lG
mile W.
of trailer
Eastern
High1
School
on Slate Route 7. '-========:::;::::~
Phone 985-4106.
r
7-20-61c
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'h-mlle north ot new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
J.S.Ifc

rvKDiriU'£ft

oNn

I

I:

uaMIII

--

I THINK I'LL GO
FOR A LEETLE
SWING-- JEST FER
0~ TIMEV'S SAKE

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

AWNINGS, storm - s and
windows. carports.
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-21-tfc

Mind qivinq me

la~t \:lit one
more t )me ?

that

Broker

,_....,,Ollie

111 Mechanic Stroet

WILL DO roofing, palnllng,
plumbing and carpenter
THIS WEEK'S
work, alum inum siding.
BARGAINS
Phone 992-73U or 74-lf/19.
3HOUSES- FREE GAS-One
7-20-12fc
nearly . - 3 bedroom home,
bath, gas forced air furnace . READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Two porches, breez~ way,
delivered right to your
prage-. 2 other houses,
project. Fast and eesy . FI'H
RENTED.
Gas
well,
estimates. Phone 992-3214.
minerals. 19 acres. NEW
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .•
LISTING. $2 1~.00.
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc
It ROOM OLDER HOME - 6
..
rooms down, 4 up. Will make
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
a double rental. $3,500.00.
Complete Service
Phone 9-19-31121
LETART- 3 bedrooms, bath,
Racine, Ohio
forced air turnace . Basement
Crill Bradford
Drilled wel l. $1,000.00.
5-1-lfc
BELOW MIDDLEPORT - 3
bedn aum home, bath, fur - SEWING MACHINES. Repair
nace. Well water. Garage. service. all make5, 992-2214.
The Fabric Shop, Pwuefoy.
S7.000.011.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpe~~ Scissors.
NEW LISTING - 5 rooms,
3-29-lfc
balll. gas heal. Nice basement
and
lot.
SYRACUSE.
S6,000.011.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas Reasonable rales. Ph. ~.
1umace !forced air). ApartJohn Russell,
menl down. Lot for mobile Gallipolis.
Owner
&amp;
Opera
lor.
hame. Asking $7,500.00.
S.IJ.Ifc
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrooms,
bath, basement Nice lot. CURTISS " cait le" breeding
service. Dally service or any
Rutland. $4.0011.00.
type · of information, call
FOR BEST RESULTS
Leland Parker 992-2264.
CALLUS.
Pomeroy, home office, or
m.)JH
Coolville,
call station 667-3251.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
7-11-12fc
ASSOCIATE
7-1Hic
--- CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
Dick Vaughan, phone 992·
3374, Dale Lillie, phone 992-

Celand Realty

•!
I

~

,,•
!

~

J

~
'1-1 .

ILY CROSSWORD

DICK TRACY
IS BURIED

MJLUONSOF
OF

~

Cr- AO.d.
....... tn-714.
7-21-12fc

- - -- - -

I [l

Slilrle)" -

.upuyot
(2wU.)

:K."-

I

I

H.Spake

orr&amp;IIJI" the tircled letters
to form the turpriM arwwer. aa
sunnted by the.....,
;I; ow

cart-.

out!"

(2wU.)

:rr. RMdy ror

......,

I

311.:n.

Ju•ubl.. ~ : SOAPY

.-

produ&lt;t

GRAIN

DIGEST

IRIDGI

ll"ltnr m11n~· ~··t {N.Hit lf.o ""'"-''

TuleUde

I•~ AfJT,.ml•

D. New
Go-port

-IIG SltiiADS

WELL, SllOOf'l(,

H.~·

,.,.._
a

HERE WE ARE
AT CAMP...

'pt

aBn 'ldttC
ST.~

'
CAPI'A1N EASY

. . Put rlllloe
root

DAILY CRtrtoqU~-Bere'• llllw to work It:
&amp;lliDL.&amp;&amp;Xa
Ia LONGI'II:LLOW
.
Olio tatter lllmPI1 for uoother. Ja lJilo """"'" A II
for 11oe 11oree L'o, X for lbe two O'o, etc. llllille litton.
If z' Dt t I• the lealtb. aDd ~farmatloll of tbe wonk are all
bloto. · day tbe code letters an cllfteral
1"7--------.::~ r--;:--?'"'----~1 _HI 1HER€ ... M~ NAME I!&gt;
A CIC"&gt;,.P'"kl"'1'111n-• q 'a"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21,HI
ESate
t
of
MABEl

Decooled

Notice is hereby given th.ti
J~n P · Williams of Srr•cuu,
OhiO, has been duly •ppointld
E~ecutor of the Estate of Mabel
Wn~ebrenner, decea&amp;ec~. l•t• of

CHARLIE !!ROliN., L 6t.lf5S WE ..

. )(VA
NHT'B

KABII . QCSMFCT
WVXA

THNAWABB,

FB

CX

VFB

H

ICCJ

WFIIIIWA,

PTSAN_,ANKASAJ

HGNB

\

...;

/

CX

TFTJTAIIB

201'11'WII'HN

F . H. 0'8rltrt
Probtte Jud,• of Mid County
l1t 21, :t1 Ill 4,31

HT.J

CX

WCLA . ..

ZCBJBII!CSIIV

Yi! t ,..,. CIJSII! 1 1 f\'ii&amp;h&amp;YM A aPAI\A.;t'IO" ~
AiW&amp;t tlp Pli AJfD JU8D('S, ND~""
MY OPDI'ION, IIIAn.-lllliiUND IIVIUD!:'

. IL\DI:
•

~---

example

Ude

(Zwds. )

Jll. Clecb. river
21. Brltilh

LEGAL NOTICE

--"--·

ated

29:-

[J I

II

clilof

L

•

28. Allevi-

hone

-..-.

(2wdl.)
32. PapniDI's
birthplace
38. Wield
40. Jl&amp;ta Hari,
for

26. lm'dl

5. Clothes'

(..-.)

30.Jiult

nuti

p.nnent

li.Daold'•

y,.....,.........

23. Couple
%5. Benve-

(3'Ndl.)
{ , Arab

18.Setedlft
Senlce
Syoiem.

Metgs. County, Ohio
C.redit~rs are reqUired to file
s ROOM ...,._, gao-age, water fh_ttr_clanns with said t.udlcuery
- gas. a-' condltim, 1 1·3 wtlhtn fout: months.
Dated
t~is t61~ day of July
alf Route 1 " " - 1971
.
'

.....
t..r
an lHding

otheno
3.NatWy
&amp;ttlnd

up

U~~~trunbltlhese fwr JumbltL
one teller to oac:h ICJU&amp;re, lo
form four ordinary words.

otate
21. Devour

liDd

(qltated)
17. - de

Racine. Olio.

WINEBRENNER

THI!. THREE CI!OOKS:'

~~~~;f"J:::!:!~=

-

6-2J.301c
PAPER HANGING, inlerlor
· • East Mlin
and exterior painting. Phone
POMEROY
992-3630.
7-1J.301p
MINERSVILLE - 7 spacious
rooms plenly of closets.
Delightful porCh with view of FOR YOUR new shingled root,
contad Roush Cnnstructlm.
the river. LARGE YARD for
Phone 992-5039.
.
the children to romp ln. Bath,
7-9-JOic
8'! ment with utility space.
NEW forced-air gas furnace
as well as aluminum siding O' DELL WHEEL alignment
for lhal cold weat~ ahead. ' located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
FULL PRICE JUST S10,0011. Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
HAVE A LOW INCOME? Wheels balanced elecWANT TO RETIRE? HERE tron ically .
All
work
IS YOUR HOME 2 guaranteed.
Reasonable
bedrooms, NEW bath, nice rates. Phone 992~13.
kitchen, utility room, NEW
6-2..301c
torced~ai r ga.s. furnace,
LARGE GARDEN SPACE NEIGLER Cnnsfrucllon. For
OR
YARD
LOW
building or remodeling your
UTILITIES.. JUST !1.5,300.
home. Call Guy Nelgler,

LIST WITH US
FOR RESULTS.
CALLUSFOR ALL
OF YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDS.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Ollim tn-mt
Rn· 1 [:t tn-~
__ __ _ _· ___7_
·21-6tc

~

~~~~~~~~J

Allloorent

~-

A FINE HOME liND AN IN7-31-tlc
COME - 6 large rooms,
dosel space, bath, nice kit- RALPH' S CARPET - Upe'- for m&lt;&gt;m. full basement
holslery Cleaning Servlco. '
with apartment. garden
Free estimates. Phone
space. garage- and many
Gallipolis &lt;146-0294.
oilier features. ACT QUICK
3-12-lfc
ON THIS BARGAIN. S10,0011.

"A. FRGI'ER RESTING Pt.A.CE

e. Aft
41. Jtecount
•"'MI!I
T.
Lariat
42.Took&amp;
LID-matched
8.ota
bounding
4. Remote
region
pit
8. Jlacp&amp;lcll
B.
Fop
4S.Xerely
(2
u. Ballld
wdJ.)
lLGruewlth
10.
Wleked
ll.llanl·
DOWN
a bullet
1... -rhree ltten
lob&amp;
U.llovle
Indian
-Horse"
cuiDo
15.
Cblnese
2.Al'!IU
'1'\onnerk

\

.

j

\

�'

..
U ..C. Tbe DaUy Senllnel, Mlddleport.Ppneroy, 0 ., Jllly 21, 1971..

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI) cident.
Tuesday craSh also revived
-A federal investigation bas RegiStered to Maryland Re- memories of the Oct. 29, 1970,
· started here in the wake of fractories of Alexandria;. Pa., crash of a twin~ngine inHitary
Tuesday'scrash of a twinenglne lhe Piper ·Twin COillDl8nche craft as it approached Tti.State
•· to Altoona , Pa., ~,..
a~...,;..t. That mishap claun
' ed
private plane, killing all four was en rou..,
persons aboard, near Tri-state when it Cf!lslied and exploded in . three Army officers.
Airport.
a ravine about one-fourth of a
There was no immediate
Ihras the third air lragedy In mile from the end of runway 29, speculation by FAA authorities
West Virginia's largest city In just after tsking off.
m the possible cause of the
the past nine months, the most Hours later, the badly- Tuesday crash.
memorable occurring last No- charred bodies &lt;i two adults They indicated an eyewitness
vember, when a chartered jet and two children were removed saw lite craft about 300 feet
fell sbort &lt;i the runway and · from the craft and identified as: above ground before careening
killed 75 persons, most of them
Into a clump of frees near the
Marshall University football Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Ox- runway.
players and coaches.
nard Sr. of Asbland, Ky., their
Two investigators arrived dsugliter, Dottie, 12, a!KI grandTuesday night from the Federal daugliter, l&gt;enese, 3.
Tommy
Spencer
of
Aviation Adminislration to be- Besides
the
Marshall Gallipolis was admitted to
gin probing tl)e cause of the ac- University disaster,
the Christ University Hospital in
Cincinnati early this morning
lo undergo tesiS to determine
'the extent of a bee Injury
suffered 10 days ago while
· g Class AA baseball
Playm
with Three Rivers in Canada.
Spencer may be lost Ul the
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The p~ tax rate of 1-to-4 per cent squad lor the remainder of
GilliganadministrationTuesday did not raise enough money to the season If tests show he has
asked the Senate . Ways and finance the budget. ·.
torn cartilages in hls rlghl
Means Committee to restore the
The House ~ the budget knee.
originally proposed 1-to-8 per and then passed a tax package
He attended last night's LAcent graduated personal income totsling $1.4 billion to help pay Cinelnnali game at Rivertax because the ~ $7.9 for the state's spending pro- front Stadium. His parents,
billion budget is $157.1 million gram over the next two years. relatives and 1frlends had
out of balance.
planned to travel to Reading,
State Tax Commissioner
Pa., this weekend to watch
Robert Kosydar, in testimony
hlm perform for the first
before the committee, said that
place Eagles of the National
the present House - pa••ed proDivision of tbe Eastern
League.

l-8 Renewed
HOSPITAL
NEWS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS Edley
McDonald, Pt. Pleasant; Betty
Gill, Pomeroy; George Miller,
Middleport; Edward Stobart,
Middleport ; Donna Manley,
Middleport; Anna Hudson,
Syracuse; Harold Schwarz,
Mason.
DISCHARGES - Bessie
Douglas; David Newell, Basil
Haflles, Leona Hubbard, Ollie
Tyree, Lena Heilman, William
Buchanan, Ettie Custer, Hattie
Smith, John Lawson, Herman
• • • • • • • - • Michaels, Carl Clem, Larry
Fitch, Jane McClain.

Parked' Auto Hit
Middleport
police
investigated a two-car accident
Monday at 10:45 a.m. on North
Second St.
. Glen F. Goff, Parkersburg,
driving a truck belonging to
• Dudley Florist, crowded off the
street by an unidentified driver,
struck a pitied ear belonging
to the Methodist Publishing
House of Nashville, Tenn.
There was light damage to the
car, none to the truck. There
were no Injuries or arrests.

0

orse
the heavy duty
E

Pleasaal Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Harley Wells,
Crown City; Mrs. Glenn Adkins,
Pliny; Leola Dines, Glenwood;
Mrs. Billy King, Leon; Pauline
Snodgrass, Leon, and Jesse
Harold, New Haven.
DI.SCHARGES: Lewis Fife;
Mn\'Charles Shepherd and son,
Robert Cook, Jr., Harry Krebs,
Mrs. Nolin Young, Mrs. Roger
Klein and son, Rosa Slayton,
Mrs. David Machir, Mrs.
Richard Holland and Michael
Turner.
SIX DRAW FINES
Six defendants were fined by
Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher
Tuesday night. They were
Charles W. Boyles, 33, Middleport, Burwell
(Bud)
McKinney, 54, Middleport, and
Willard Mohler, 49, Middleport,
each $5 and costs on conviction
of intoltication; Lawrence D.
Fields, G5, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, speeding; James H.
Stephenson, 78, Pomeroy, $20
and costs, failure to yiel!l right
of way, and Jeffrey L. Brewer,
18, Portland, $5 and costs,
wrong way on one way street.

NEW WORSHIP HOURS
Sunday worship services at
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
will be at 9 a. m. and at Middleport PresbyteriSh Church at
10:30a. m. instead of 10 a.m. as
previously reported.
WeAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
was 73 degrees under sunny
skies.

One suit for divorce has been
filed and one was granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Tuesday.
Joyce
M.
Gallimore,
Syracuse, filed suit against
Steven E. Gallimore, Plain
City, charging gross neglect of
duty, and seeking custody of one
minor chUd. James Edward
Spaun was granted · a divorce
from Judy Spaun. Michael
Perry Zirkle has been appointed
special deputy sheriff of Meigs
County.

OniJ 27:tl'" wkll

ONLY

24995 .
It's bigger. .. it's bettei
• Wash ai l amount s !rom Z to big 18-!bs.
loads wrthQul SPtCUI I al!achm6flts

Faye Dunaway
Marcello Mastroianni

water.
• Safety Tiel , out of balance com per~d. ­
tor , ser~ ic e from lion!

, IM G"!•tt•undfJ line is even qreeter

.INGELS
FURNITURE
Open Fri. ~ Sat.
Nights
992-2635

Middleport

Bank &amp; Savings
Company won three consecutive games Tuesday night
to earn at least a third place
finish in the 25th Annual Big
·Bend So£tball Tournament.
The Pomeroy enlry, playing
in the losers bracket after being
defeated by.Redman's Inn 3-2ln
ils first game o£ the tourney,
scored wins last night over
Citizens National Bank of
Middleport, Kapp's Grocery of
West Columbia and then Hart's
Used Cars of .New Haven.
Farmers Bank . &amp; Savings
Company will play Falls City
today at 6 o'clock with the
winner earning the right to go
up against undefeated Harlow
Lime in the championship
round beginning at 7 p. m.
Harlow Lime of Parkersburg,
the defending West Virginia
Slow-Pitch champions, would
have to be defeated twice
~·armers

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
July 21-22
NOT OPEN

SEEOUR~­

The Shoe Box

RRECTION

Friday &amp; Saturday
July 1l•l4
TOO LATE
THE HERO

25~.

2 PAIR PACKAGES

50c For Pacl1age Of 2 Pairs

Michael Cane. and Academy
Award
Winner
Cliff

Rober.tson .

GP

Colorcartoon ; ·

It's tor the Birds
. SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

DISCOlJNT
O!PA~TMtNT ITO ••
A

and 8.00 WOMENS SHORTS ............
and 7.00 WOMENS SHORTS ..... . ......
WOMENS SHORTS ....... ........ ...
WOMENS SHORTS .... - .............
WOMENS SHORTS.-- .. --· · ·- -- .....

' PT. PLEASANT
*GALLIPOLIS·
. ' MASON

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

5.110
4.50
4.00
3.50
3.to

consecutively to be beaten ou
o[ the tourney championship. I
A Group of Womens
a second game becomes
necessary, the contest would be
3.95 ond 4.00 Cotton Dresses
played at 8 p. m.
FIRST GAME
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings A group of womens sleeveless cotton shifts and dresses.
Company slipped past Citizens Zipper and button front styles.
Misses and Half Sizes
National Bank 6-1 in its first
......
game Tuesday.
The winners scored all of
their runs in the third and fourth
innings.
Regular 12.95 to 25.00
After Citizens jumped off to a
I-ll advantage in the top half of
the second, Farmers came hack Our entire stock of womens better summer
with three runs in the bottom dresses including polyester knits, cottons, voiles,
and blends. Juniors. Misses and half sizes. About
end of the third.
Citizens tallied its lone run on 125 to sell.
a single by K. Dunfee and a
double by J. Hawley.
Farmers' first two runs of the
third came as the result of a
horne run
Keith Phalin after.,.~--·----------------"'"'~----------------·
pitcher Jerry Vanlnwagen had
drawn a walk. The other was A group of Womens Extra Size Shorts and Pedal
scored on a single by Bob Pushers, washable cotton fabrics, navy, brown
Whaley and a double £rom Jeff and black .
Burt.
Regular 4.95 and 5.95
The Pomeroy team's fourth
inning markers were scored
lL
when Van lnwagen singled with
7Z
two .outs, Don Swisher singled, 1--------------------~---~..;
Whaley doubled and Ed Baer
Save Now!
and Mike Wright slapped backto-hack singles.
Other Farmers Bank hits in
the outing were singles by Bill Our en11re stock of womens and girls bathing suits. 2 piece
and 1 piece sty les, womens sizes in Junior, Misses and Half
Radford and Bob Grueser in the Sizes. Girls sizes 3_to6x and 7 to 14.
filth and base knocks off the
bats o£ Baer and Van lnwagen
in the sixth.
SECOND GAME
_.,., ...._..
...........
Farmers Bank opened up
with three runs in the second
inning and went on to an easy
Resilient. lig ht weight. Allergy free, odorless. Floral
13-1 victory over Kapp's
covering .
Grocery o£ Wes\ Columbia in
the second outing o£ the

Wall Clocks

_

-- ------ -- - .. -Sale! Womens Summer Dresses

Sale 1h Price
- -- ·--- ---- .... -

'4.49 Dacron Bed Pillows
Special Pnce" 139

evening.

._._ _ _ _ ._...... .....

--=---

- - - ,_ ...

UPHOLSTERY SQUARES

= .. - - -

While They Last

Cans
With snap-lock

lid.
Noiseless, seamless.
Easy to clean .
.

Sale 3111
sam
FAMILY
PlACEMATS
in a package. Colorful
designs.

Special Sale!
Mons and Young Mens

Tank Tops
Colorful stripes and solid
in sizes small.

medium,
large.

larg~

and edra

Special Sale Prices

100

nssuE

AND 1tMEL

Sale 4.99
·BARBEQUE
CARTS

single, and Baer, 3

sin~le.

Other Hart's hitters were
Clark, Jeff Swisher ; Dick
TennantandJerryArnold , each
a single, and Bunny Arthur, two
singles.
•
I •

sa tlsfrtcfion, comfort and service. All~ sale on the 2nd floor .

12.00

1------------------------:.
.
.
t
.
-.
.
,
.
.
.
,
.
.
,
.
.
----.J
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
._llliiiiioiiii.,iiilltiiiitiiiliiiii,.;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiillllii,_..iii.,..,.lllii._lllii.,iioii-iiii.:;;;.;;=;..:--.1

·--~~--·-

'

contract - covering wages,
fringe benefits and work rulesat a news conference at noon
EDT today in Chicago.
A court order reslricted the
union from striking the C&amp;NW,
and because of this factor it
would not be known until late
today whether the negotiated
agreement was likely to set a
pattern £or the industry.
Federal mediators called

Bv Unlled Press lnt...-uaUoaal

24 two ply place mats

colors

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
first break in a djspute that has
shut down two railroads 811d
threatens to close eight more
may have ocau'l'ed with the
announcement today of an
agreement between the United
Transportation Union (UTU)
and the Chicago &amp; North
Western Railway.
The C&amp;NW said it would
reveal detail'l of the proj,osed

! News .•. in Briefs

DISPENSERS

........____ ·--

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Clearing north portions
torught. Lows in the 6Cl9. Friday
m .. tly sunny es:cept partly
cloudy along the rive!'. Higbs in
the 80s.

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1971

representatives of the UTU and fighting work rules the railthe industry into another roads want to establish. The
meeting today in another carriers claim the new rules
attempt to solve the long- are needed to cut waste and
standing work rules &lt;\ispute. expenses but the union claims
The rules triggered the strike the jobs are necessary.
Friday against the Southern
After the strike began last
and Union Pacific railroads.
week the remaining railroads
The UTU has served notice it instituted the new rules,
will strike \!}e Southern Paci£ic resulting in widespread layoffs.
and the Norfolk and Western at That situation triggered a
6 a.m. Saturday. The union is walkout against the Chicago,

TEN CENTS

Rock Island &amp; Pacific Railroad
in the Peoria, Ill. , area
Wednesday. The UTU Local's
85 members left their jobs to
protest the new 'WOrk rules and
their picket line• halted traffic
in the area, including the tine's
once-a-day passenger train between Chicago ar•d Peoria.
The UTU plans to strike six
more lines on July 30including the sprawling Chicago-to-California Santa Fe, if the
dispute remains unresolved.
The other five are the
Bessemer &amp; Lake Erie ; the
Duluth, Messabi &amp; Iron Range;
the Ho~ston Belt &amp; Tenninal;
the Elgin, Joliet &amp; Eastern in
northern Illinois and the Alton
&amp; Southern. in St. Louis.
A strike against all the
railroads mentioned would cut
off supplies of raw materials to
many heavy industries and
would shut off raU transportation to most of the Far West.

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

--

20% DISCOUNT SALE

The word "robot" is derived
!rem the Czech word "robota "
'
meaning "work."

Garbage

Mixing Bowls

39'

Weather

5.95. All Weather

Sale 16.00

..

'

15.00

Wildow Fans

_ ---

der the bill.
The pensioo bill, granting $10 to $40montbly inc:mtses in the
retirement benefits' of 79,000 fCJnDel' stale teachers, school
employes a!KI public employes, ..,.. sportsored by Yirtually the
entire House lilembership.
House Speaker Kurfess announctd there will be no substantive House sessions for the first !Odays &lt;i August, llllo1tq: :.
members to take vacations while the Senate wrestles with taxes
and the budget..

Now You Know

VOL XXIV NO. 69

each 50•

__

It reduces from 21 to II the legal minimum age for sjpiqc .
conlracts, incurring debts, llliiiT)ring witboutJIIII'eDtal em ;z!, :
serving on juries, drinking alcobolic beverages and fillnlla,._
suits. The 11ge for holding public office would not be ndoced m-

Devotf!d To The lntf!rf!!lts OJ The Meigs-Mawn Area

Kapp 's scored its lone run in
the seventh and had a total of
only three hits in the game off
Big se lection. For cushions. bags, upholstering, small chairs.
22.98
General
moundsman John Wolfe. They
Electric
were a double by Heary and
singles by J . Hoschar and M
·~--·----~------------------------.-4
14 ilch Portable
, Another Big Shipment of
Van Matre .
Farmers Bank hils included
three singles by Gary Sisk, a
LOG CABIN RUGS
double and a single by Bob
High velocity 5 element
100 percent Viscose Rayon Throw Rugs . Machine washable,
Gr~eser, doubles by Greg
blade. Powerful 2 speed
skid prooof back. Beaulilul decorator colrs in all sizes.
motor. Finger guard
Bailey and Bill Radford, and
prolecflve grilles.
singles by Don Swisher, Mike
24Xl4 - 1.95
Jx5 - 5.95
Wright, Ed Baer, Keith Phalin,
l7X45 - 2.95
4X' - 1.95
Jef£ Burt, Dennis Ault, Wolfe
. 24x65 - l.95
and Cleon Pratt.
LAST GAME
.
99•-45"
FLOCKED
DOT
Hart's Used Cars, behing the
Sale!
65 percent .Dacron •. 35 percent Cotton. Wash and wear, pre
entire game but constantly in
Heat Proof
shrun.k, d.rtp-dry, little or no ironing. All the wanted color
contention, [ell at the hands of
comb~naftons.
the Farmers Bank team by a 4-3
Weekend Special Prite 68• yd.
score.
Yellow, blue, green, red.
..,Hart's mustered a rally in the 1--------~·-·-·
----~-------\
bottom o£ the seventh frame
39c BOWLS
1.00 Throw-Away Vacuum Bags
that scored two runs before
SALE 21c '
For all vacuum cleaners . Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
pitcher John Wolfe finally shut
•
59c BOWLS
off the threat.
SALE llc
69• pkg.
Hart's had runner.• on first
69c
BOWLS
____..,_..._._..._.._.. _....
.........-.~~--~
and third bases when Ed Van
SALE l6c
Matre lined out to second
79c BOWLS
RUG YARN
sacker Gary Sisk for the final · ~unt Lydia's and C.::oats &amp; Clark 's. Fast color, shrink
SALE41c
out o£ the contest. Hart's had
resistant . Big selection of colors . Regular 45c skein.
r--~-----1 ·
WEEKEND SALE
last inning bits by Gene
9.98 Kromex
Thompson and Jimmy Joe
Hemsley along with two bases
on balls.
The New Haven team scored
I
its only other run in the third on
For the. weekend. all of our AIRWAY LUGGAGE at 20
.
)
·.
a single by Bunny Arthur, a
Percent Discount including Airway Discovery - Aquarius
Smart.
and
Travel
fielder 's choice play to Gary
Styles for Ladies:
Clark and a single by Hemsley.
Floral decorations on
Cosmetic Cases, Weekend, POllman and Tote Bags, G,arment
Harvest
Gold, avocado
Hemsley went three for four in
Bags.
green
and
poppy red
Styles for Men:
the contest.
backgrounds.
Compan_;on Two Sui1er, Three Suiter. Garmen1 Bags and
Farmer• Bank tallied its first
~Attache Cases.
~ ~
- two runs in the second on
Colors : Blue, Green, Charcoal Green, Honey Gold, While,
singles by Cleon Pratt, Gary
Charcoal. Brown Olive.
~.._
---·~..t'"-------~---1 ;
Sisk and Bill Ra&lt;jford.
Special
Purchase
and
Sale
This
Week
End
of
Bob Grueser scored the third
Sale! 19.95
run for the eventual winners
LAWN BOY MOWERS
when Pratt doubled after
Grueser was safe on a fielder's
For 89 .95 at the Warehouse on Mechanic Street.
choice.
The final Farmers Bank run
.
was scored in the top of the
Save This Weekend On
Folding c:arts, fwo shelves,
se~}mth on a double by Sisk and
• hooks for hanging toots.
A\otado or harvest gold.
then a single by Radford.
Porch, lawn and Patio Furniture
btack tiim.
Other hitters for the winners
~ere Wha.Jey, a double and
Your favorite dependable quality that wilt give years of

-·------.

year.
County welfare departmenl!l would be authorill!JCI to paJ (,..
lransporting lhe applicants back to the natiV!I state or ~XU~tr,.
The adulthood bjl1 came to the Senate~ SeD. Stanley J. ·
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, chief spoh90r oflhe succ lui ruolutlllll
to lower the voting age Ul 18. and Sen. Harry " l:el, DYoungstown.

39.95.

---------------·1

SaleJ

House vote narrowly to challenge a 1969 US Supreme Court contended before that a lollery system would be incorrectly
decision forbidding stale residency requirements for public viewed as an alternative to higher ta•es a!KI would be a ''poor
welfare applicants.
rrian's tax."
On other fronts, the Senate received legislation to lower the
Mottl said a state lottery such as conducted in New Hampage ci adulthood to 18 to match the voting age, and the House shire, New York and New Jersey could raise $40to $50 million a .
passed and sent to the Senate legislation boosting pensions of · year for education. He also envisions off track betting on horse
retired teachers a!KI other public employes, Including legisla- races and wagering pools on professional sports as new ways for
tors.
lhe state to raise revenues.
MotU's lottery resolution was defeaied on a 17-13' vote last
Mottl's resolutioo also legalizes lotteries conducted by
June 15, but the senator later got the four votes he needed to churches and charitable organitations.
reach the necessary three.ftfths majority for a constitutional
The welfare residency requirement bill, sponsored by Rep.
admendment.
Rodney H. Hughes, R-Bellefontaine, would be effective untU
Althouih one proponent, Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R- July 1,.1973, or until the federal government ruled Ohio ineligible
Middletown, was not present Wednesday, Mottl got five other for federal welfare aid.
·
' joining 42
.votes he didn't have In June.
It was cleared on a 53-43 vote, with 11 Democrats
He said they
camefromSens. Robilt T.Turner, R-Marion, and R.!pub'licans in sending it to the Senate.
I
•\
·'
Bishop Kilpatrick, D-Warren, who weren't present· in June,
BaekPaymeDII
and President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, R-Piqua; Sen.
The
measure,
a
product
of Hughes' special public assistance
·Oakley C. Collins, R-lronton, and Sen. Paul E . .GillmOre, Rstudy committee, would back welfare and medical assistance
Tiffin, who changed their votes.
There was no debate on the resolution, but opponenets had payments from applicants until they tived in Ohio at least one

By LEE LEONARD
UPI S1ale-.e Rep«""'
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Tbe Ohio HDU,~e, which just completed
~ &lt;i wranglillf! over a tax biil, bas been thrown another hot
potato -a pn~p"led constitutional amendlnenl wbich could lead
to a state lottery.
·The state Senate, in a dramatic about..face Wednesday, passed and ~~ the House a proposal to eliminate the prohibition
against lotteries in the Ohio Coostitution.
The vote was .21-10, with~ vQtes needed for passitge. If the
HOUBe dears the measure, sponsored by Sen. Rooald M. MotU,
0-Parma, it would go on the November ballot for approval by
lhe voters.
HOUBe Speaker Ctarles F. Kurfess, R-Bowtlng Green, has said
he feels lotteries may be a revenue-raising mechanism of the
future. He cautiOiled, however, that Mottl's resolution will
rereive nOfDlal cmsideration in the House and no special treatment
Other major legislative actiO!\ Wednesday saw the Senate
Finance Committee swifUy ship to the floor $151.7 million worth
ci ink!rim aisle aPII'Oiriations for the month of August, and the

Time Art conversation

Sale lh· Price

by

/

J!ieces. Cordless. Regularly

Sale 2.44

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

SEAMLESS
NYLONS

SIZEB~TOII
A !lie VALUE!

Spartus

Womens and Girts Bathing Suits

WASHINGTON - AN111'HER EFFORT was launched
Tuesday to breathe new life into the Appalachian Regional
Development program and the Economic Development Ad·
ministration. Sen. Jennings Ra!Kiolph, chairman of the Senate
Public Works Committee, and other committee members drafted
a bill to exte!KI lhe two programs vetoed earner by President
Nixon.
·
111e Prdsident vetoed the measures because they in'cluded a
$2 billion accelerated public works program he viewed ·as inOationary, and the Senate last week narrowly missed overturning
the veto. Ra!Kiolph said he expects Senate action in a matter of
dafS. "I anticipate that it will be passed by both houses well
before the SlJIIllllef recess, so it can be signed into law by·
President Nixon, who has endorsed both of these important
" be said.

ALERT

7.95
6.95
5.95
4.95
l.95

Sale pnee
•

ARC May Yet Live

WOMENS 1ST QUALITY

ling lor all fabr ics.

• Perma nent Prest care-Special oool·
down cycle olimlnates wrinkles.
• lnfinrte waTer level saves detergent.

Bankers Win 3

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

• Multiple temperature aod speed nl·

11lursday at 2 p. m. at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral Horne
with the Rev. _Elden Her~l
Morgan officiating. Burtal will
be in Miles Cemetery at
Rutland. Graveside rites will be
conducted by Feeney Bennet
1'1161121. Friends may call at
the taneral home anytime:
Pallbearers ·are Virgil
Wamsley, Clair Athey, Stanley
Searles, Clyde Bradbory, Leo ·
Rupe and Dal~ Sission.

in this sale. knits and cotton fabrics, misses and extra sizes.

THURSDAY AD

( R)

attendant,at G.S.I. in Gallipolis.
He is survived by his wife,
Milriel Athey Spires; three
daughters, Mrs. Mayo (Irma)
Bales Bidwell· Mrs. Walter
( Ard~th) Swi~s. Pensacola,
Fla., and Mrs. James (Rita)
Wright, Kyger; two sons,
Rodney E. and .Dennis M.
SPires, both of K)'ger, a sister,
Mrs. Madge McFarland,
LaCrosse, Ind.; nine grandchildren,andseveralniecesand

Salel WOMENS SHORTS

BEffiUT, LEBANON- TANKS AND armored cars guarded
key installations and the overthrown rulers of the Sudan today as
the seven leaders of the new regime consul led on the formation of
a new cabinet to head Africa's largest nation.lraqi News Agency
said it was likely the new prime minister would be Maj. Farouk
Osman Hamadallah, a member of the seven-men leftwing
revolutionary council set up Tuesday. Hamadallah and four
others on the council are pro-Communists, Arab political sources
said.
The two-year-old government of Maj. Gen. Jaafar Numeiry
was overthrown by rebel army officers Monday in a bloodless
coup which was over in 45 rn!nutes, one of the shortest takeovers .
on record in the Arab world, said the man who led the rebels, Maj.
Hashem Alta, pro-Communist, was appointed vice chairman of
the council and comma mer of the armed forces.

Jim Brown

Dennis L. (Bud) Spire~. 78,
Cheshire, Rt. I, died Tuesday
afternoon at Holzer . Medical
Center, Mr. Spires was born
Nov. 22, 1892, at Rutland the son
of the late Curtis and Alvira
McGhee SP.ires. He was also
preceded in death by a son, .a
brother and two sisters. ·
Mr. Spires was a veteran of
World War 1 witb 37th Army
Division, a member of DAV No.
53, ~omeroy, and a retired

ne:::~ services will be held

-11:
ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Overthrown Rulers .under Guard

R

Dennis Sp~ Died Toosday

The Meigs County Junior Fair August 5 at the Junior Fair
Board in a regular meeting last building for the purpose of
week at the Meigs County cleaning the building. Members
Extension office reviewed present were Tom Hamm,
progress of the Livestock president, who presided; S~ven
Committee as reported by Stanley, Daniel Midkiff,
Daniel Midkiff, who said the Rosemary
Rice, . Annie
senior fair board is putting in Ohlinger, Milisa Rizer, Donna
restrooms, gravel, and more Ohlinger, ·Carol Ohlinger,
wash racks as requested by the
Debbie Conklin, Leota Young, . .-~-~-------------------------,
junior board.
Harry Slawter, . Alan Holter,
.......
. Of. a~""·I·OS
· Jb'IS w-~o-d all A - n.. "'- .
It was decided the Teen Rhea Mora, Mike Benedum,
w~
uatp
- t M \IIIII 11111:
Dance would be omitted from
Junior Fair Night. A committee and Everett Holcomb.
was named to decide what
would take its place.
Shop in Comfort Oh AI 3 Floo!s. TbuiSday 9:30 to 5:00.
Otber ideas discussed about
PICNIC HOUR SET
the Junior Fair were the Prince
Past M,atrons and Patrons of
Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9
and Princess contest. publicity, Evangeline Chapter 172,
project cards, pie and cake Middleport, will hold their
Sale! 2 Only
baking contest, and pie eating annualpicnicatthehomeofMr
contest.
· and Mrs. Robert King in
The next meeting will be Bradbury, Friday at 6: IG p. m Save now - OJr enfire stock of womens shorts are included

(Continued from Page I)
committee was withdrawn and censored Monday because of
cOmments criticizing a bill to guarantee loans to failing companies.
Packard was brought into the administration in 1969 as No. 2
man at the Pentagon because of his recognized talents as a
manager. He is not the type to brawl in public over policy
djsputes, but he does have very strong opinions about how to
manage large organitations such as the Defense Department and
big military contractors.

Tonight, Thu. &amp; Fri.
July 21-22-2l
Double Feature Program
EL CONDOR
(Color)
Lee Van Cleel
Patrick O'Neal
-Plus' A PLACE
FOR LOVERS'

Improvements Installed

News ... in Briefs

MASO~
.. '. OP.!~!·IN
.
AWII: ·fl20

mendment

1

Feds .Open Crash Probe Lives~ock Area HaVing

JACKSON- One girl and one
boy were selected to represent
the nine counties of the Jackson
Area at the state safety
speaJdN! activity on August 'll,
at the Ohio State Fair. Debbie
Darling, Jackson County, was
chosen to represent the girls.
Her topic was "Use of Safety
Belts in cars."
John Lester, Lawrence
County, was chosen to represent
the boys. His topic was "Lawn
Mower Safety."

.

I

15,000 WUling to Pay

! Autos Collide
At Fairgrounds

COLUMBUS - RELIGIOUS LEADERS REPRESENTING
various denoptinations in Ohio presented to the state Senate
Wednesday a scroll they said contained 15,000 signatures of
Ohioans willing to have their taxes raised to provide more aid to
depemenl children.
. "A ll]opocrlaJ.~ wileD welfare IIJ'&amp;IIIa are lower than the
stale standard &lt;i minimum need," said Father Bernard McClory,
lt(ll en'ing the Catholic Cooference of Ohio. "Society has an
obliglltion Ul Its dependent chUdren." Rev. John Frazer,
representing the Ohio Council of Oturches said ''$44 per month
per cbild cannot deliver much In the way of human services" and
said the amount should be "increased sufficiently for those who
are powerless to help themselves."

Which, Mr. Buckley, is Hoaxing?
NEWYORK-WILLIAMF.BUCKLEYJR.saidWednesday
documents on the Vietnam War In the National Review were a
hoa:x printed to sbow the public would accept as classified in·1
ti
thin that seemed
bl B ckl edit of
orma on any
g
reasons e. u ey,
or ·
lhe weekly magazine, said the articles were written last week In
th N ti 1Revi off'
IKI
sed .. lDlihil "
t
0 -ou
e a , 0118 . ew Jcesa werecompo
e
ci nothing.
, ~articles~ published In the maga~'s current editi~
as 'highly classified government documents which were satd
IeaRd by an informant who wanted to show the other side of the
Plmtagoo papers published In the press. Buckley, meeting with
newsmenonhisreturnfrunSeattle, Wash.,~dthearticleswere
printed in the National Review to prove "that forged docwnents
would be widely accepted as genuine provided their content was
inherently plausible."

Pro.rmire still in Battle
WASHINGTON- WITH ITS CHAIRMAN keeping tabs from
a Capitol hideaway,I..oo t• eed Aircraft Corp. has won impressive
HOUBe and Senate victories In its bid for the governmentguaranteed $250 millioo loan it needs to forestall bankruptcy. But
Sen. William Proxml ·~. 0-Wis., Lockheed's foremost foe in
Congress, threatened today to mastermind a filibuster aimed at
....,venting a final Senate vote before €ongress quits Aug. 8 for a
mooth's vacation. He said lobbyist pressure was near overwhe!JniqJ and disclosed two threats on his life.
Proxmirewas whiwe&lt;] by a 5(h'J6 vote Wednesday in hts move
Ul send bact for new bearings a bill giving the government
authority !D guarantee repayment of up to $2 billion worth of loans
1o ailin4l corporations such as Lockheed. A second crucial victory
for the aerospace giant came in the House Banking Committee,
which outvoted ils chairman, 32 to 11 and approved a bill identical
Ul the Senate measure.

Three accidents were jn- traveling south on Leading
vestigated Wednesday by the . Creek Road when a motorcycle
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept., driven by Michael Harrison, 14,
and a fourth was reported.
Middleport, Rt. I, struck his car
Al7:10 at the enlrance of the headon. Young Harrison .was
Meigs County fairgrounds, taken to Veterans Memorial
Leland Everett Nelson, 54, Hospital by private car, treated
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was leaving the and released.
fairgrounds and George Edward Starcher, 56, Pomeroy,
RL 2, was entering. They
collided headon.
Nelson complained .o[ a chest
injury but was not immediately
treated. The Starcher car was
demohshed and the Nelson car
had medium damage. There
was no arrest.
·
Beginning Aug. I, food
Under investigation is a car stamps in Meigs County will be
truck acct'dent that occurred.
sold [rom the Meigs County
Wednesdayat8:36a.m. onSR7. Branch of the Athens County
Harold L. Flowers, 42, Savings and Loan Co., Second
Williamstown, W. Va., driving a st., Pomeroy, and the Racine
semi-trock reported he was Home National Bank in Racine .
traveling south when a truck in
his front turned right without
Three banks formerly issuing
giving a signal.
the stamps in Meigs County _
Flowers, in trying to avoid a Citizens National, Middleport;
collision, pulled to the left and The Farmers Bank and Savings
struck a car traveling north co. and the Pomeroy National
driven by E!lward R. Cayner, Bank in Pomeroy, have elected
to, New Haven, W. Va. Cayner to withdraw from the program,
had pulled to the right as far as leaving only the Racine Home
possible. There were no in- National Bank.
juries.
At 10:40 p.m., Elden Lee Since approximately 1,000
Stover, 29, Cheshire, Rt. 2, car-ds are issued per month, it
traveling east on Zuspan Hollow would have been impossible for
Road, went off the road on the one bank to handle the lull load
lefts'triking a fence and several of transactions, the Meigs
posts.
·
County Welfare Office said. "It
Stover was charged with would have been impossible to
dciving while intolticated. He keep the !Oild stamp program in
was .not injured. There was the county had not the Meigs
medium damage to the car.
County Branch of the Athens
Philip L. McFarlllld, 26, County Savings and Loan Co.
Rutland, reported a car- agreed to acbept the issuance of
motorcycle accident at 1:30 these coupons," a Welfare
p.m. McFarland said he was Department spokesman said.

Girl, 9
Food Stamp InJure
• d

SWilC
• h Made

A nine-year old Gallipolis girl
was injured in one of two accidents Wednesday investigated
by the . State Highway Patrol.
The hrst was on County Road
31 · G ll. County at pm tealta!O·"
EdnaaA
proxnna y ..... a.m.
.
Stewart, 33, Athens, driving
westbound collided with a car
driven by' Lawrence R. Murdoch 72 Rt. 1 Hamden at the
crest or' a hili ·on the ~rrow
roadway . No citation was
issued.
The second accident occurred
in Meigs County at approximately 2:05p.m., two and
nine-tenths miles north of the
Gallia-Meigs county line on Rt.
7.
Acar driven south by Michael
K. Smith, 25, 785 Dock St.,
Gallipolis, slowed down for a
le£1 turn onto County Road 3
when a car driven by 31-yearold Drema H. Adams, ClinUin,
Pa., plowed. into the rear end of
the car. Mrs. Adams 1·:as cited
for failure to yield assured clear
distance. Jacqueline D. Adams,
9, suffered a lip laceration and
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated,
and released.

Notification was posted late
this morning on the union
bulletin board at PbUip Sporn
Plant thai agreement bas
been reached by Local 426,
Ullllly Workers Union of
America, AFL-CIO, and the
Centra,! Operating Co. on
terms of a new contract.
Sporn Plant sources said
the announcement disclosed
the union vote went 724 for
and 403 against the

\

Soviets Lied, Says Jew
TEL AVIV (UPI)-An Israeli
citizen says it was the Russians
and not the Nazi&amp;4ls the
Russians claim· - whO massacred 12,000 Polish army
officers during World War II in
the Katyn Forest near the
Soviet city of Smolensk.
German soldiers uncovered a
mass grave in 1943 containing
the bodies and said Soviet
troops killed the Poles by
shooting each one in the hack
of the head.
The Russians accused the
Nazis of another war crime.
The U.S. Congress lnvestigated the incident 1n 1952
issued a report which said
Russian troops bad killed . the

officers, probably as part of a before he died.
Wydra saicj at the star.t of the
move to eliminate leaders of
potential anti-Communist war he was interned in the
Starobyelsky labor camp near
forces in postwar Poland.
where the killings occurred and
Wednesday, Israeli citizen was told of the incident by a
Avraham Wydra, 64, said the Major ·Sorokin who saw the
Russians were responsible for Poles slain.
the massacre. A Polish Jew by
Wydra said, ;,the major got
birth, he said he spent several
years in Soviet labor camps me alone and poured out his
heart. He said 'the world will
during the war.
Wydra told the Israeli news- never believe what my eyes
paper Maiariv that three Soviet beheld. The Poles have all been
Jewish officers who either shot.'''
" It seemed as if he was going
parllctpaled in or witnessed the
through
a .fit of convulsions as
killings told him of the
massacre ... He said he was he talked," Wydra · said .. "He
sworn to secrecy at the time could not retain his words."
At a second labor camp two
but wanted to tell the story now

years later two other officers
said they had taken part in the
killings, Wydra said. He said
they confided in him because he
was a Jew.

He said one of the officers
identified as 1st Lt. Alexander
Suslov told him, " I want to tell
you the story of my life.
Tichonov (the second o£ficer)
and I are the two most
unfortunate people ln the whole
world. I killed the 'Polacks'
with my own hands. I shot
them.

agreement .

·

ABSE~·MINDED?

KENT, Ohio (UPI)
Motorcyclist Paul Exring had
his safety helmet on, as
required by law, but police still
arrested him when he rode
"There were some Russian thr.ough downt9wn Kent. The
soldiers who couldn'tstand it- only other thing he had on was
they threw themselves into the sneakers. He was charged with
disorderly conduct.
pit and committed suicide."

..

TROPIUES AWARDED- Mrs. Eunie Brinker, cbapem• of Meigl CGunty Salan 711, lfn.
Mary Martin, l'archiviste, and Mrs. Marie Bo,Yd, children and youth cbalrmut, left to rilbt.
display the d'Ohio Deparbnental Eight and Forty trapbles awarded to the Meip Salan for
outstanding achievement during the past year. See Page 2forstory andsecoudpiclure.

Water Patrons'
.
Meeting Called
RUTLAND-There will be
an important meeting CGncerning the Leading Creek
Conservancy Dislrlcl Rural
Water Supply Program July
26 at 8 p. m. al the Rutland
Elementary School
Auditorium.
II ls importul that all
people of Vinton and Meigs
Counties who have applied
for, or pald a tap fee for water
service attend tbls meeting,
said Jack W. Crisp, presideD!
of the district.

Vacation Pay

Huddle Called
for Delta Queen
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Supporters of the riverboat Delta
Queen, the sole remaining overnight passenger steamer on the
nation's inland waterways, will
meet Friday to map strategy to
gainapermanenteiemptionfor
the paddle-. heelr from federal
safety at sea laws.
The Cincinnati-based boat was
granted a three-year ei~tion
last year after a bitter fight in
Congress. The Queen does not
meet all safety standardsincluded in the statute, so it must be

Issue &amp;gging

3 OU Dorn1s

Imperial Talks

May Uose

At the end of the second day of
negotiations Wednesday between the union and the Imperial
Elf!:tric Company, the meeting
bogged down on the issue of
vacation pay.
The company proposed that
vacations could be taken immediately and pay vacatior.
pay ; the employees to return to
work after taking vacation, and
resume negotiations on a new
conlract.
·
Union repreStntatives stated
that until vacation pay was
paid ,
no
meaningful
negotiations could be conducted.
Union leadership claimed to
have contacted a majority of
the work force , numbering
about 90 empioyees late
Tuesday afternoon and found
that over half of the employees
were unwilling to return to work
unless they received vacation
pay at once.
Federal Mediator C. W.
Miller called for a recess in
negotiations subject to call. No
meetings are
currently
sCheduled.

granted a Congreasjonalaett'"
tion to remain an..t
Those es:pecled to
lhe
•'riday strategy luncheon were
Ohio Reps. William M. McCalloch William J. K.. q and
~ D. Clancy; and aide
to Ohio Sens. W'tlliam B. Sa·
be and · Robert Taft Jr. a
K~ntucty Sen. Marlow cd,
"We are trying to gel the MerchantMarineC&lt;mmitleetobold
hearings on the fate II 111e
Queen," said 11Jcmas E. M-ey, aide to McCulloch and usoeiate counsel to the Jndii»'J
Committee.
"Before we can exp$01
ings," he added. 'lJetiii'U.
will have .to be introd!Me.l either for a pennanent or -..
poraryexemptioofnmthelaw,••

tltend

a-

..

ATHENS, Olio (UPI)...: Oltio
University said today three
College Green dormitories may
be closed this !.ill because of
appro•imately 560 potential
vacancies.
'
Dr. Richard C. Dorf, vice
president for educational
services, said Lindley, Howard
and Scott halls were not ez.
Meigs County school dilll ida
)lected ·to hou.oe students during
received
$121,915.31 in .July i.
the 1971-72 academic year. o...r
said present llousi.qJ projec- direct assislaln lltlder tile
tions indicate thatl,331 students school foundation program,
will subrriit contracts to live in State Auditor Joseph T.
·
Ohio U~Yverslty donnit«ies. Ferguson reported taday.
Additionally, the state ..W
but the school has residence hall
$20,714.21 into the state ( I I
space for 8,8!10.
.retirement system ltld
• • • • • • • • • • into the scbool emplo,W
WJEH Radio 4AMl wiD
retirement system for . . . ..
broadcasl Uve from Obla
County as the slate's .....
University Field llle Me~
tow;trd retirement bemfila. U.
Legion baseball pau! with
Meigs County Boanl If
Lancaster SollunDy It II •· · F.ducatiori'ftmnd tl,221.'11.:
m. Breadcast time i111:5t a.
its Jaly allocation.
'•
m._~ould Meigs will, it wiD
Amountart«&lt;wdiiJIIIelai
go into Ute flltli ca- Saday districiS an. the retia
e
at 3 p. m. Sltould ·u lese it dedactions were
•·ould play Ia tile lostr'1
$2t,911.49: Meip 1«11,
bracktl at 3 n m. Satunla~
.... 193 65 and .,_..
• ,.....,

Sclwols Get

$128,915 in

July Payment

sa.•

Eu..._

.afte-m·oo·n··-----·
r

'

""•

.

'

$22.740.17.
•

-D-

,,

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