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                  <text>Pie Eating Stakes Added To Saturday Hilarity

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, MlJUJejliJrt·Pomeroy, 0., June 14, 1971

·Cyclist Injured

Overnight Wire.

••

A motorcyclist was Ire~~&lt;! Saturday on old Rt. 35 at the
.and released at Veterans junction of the village of
Memorial · Hospital, Pomeroy, Thurman. Officers said
Sunday following .a traffic Timothy D. Nichols, 18, Rt. 2,
·accident at 3:10 p.m. on Rt. 33, Thurman, backed his vehicle
one and one tenth mile north of into a parked car owned by
Rt. 681 in Meigs County.
Connie J. Miller, 28, Thurman,
According to the Gallia-Meigs causing minor damage. Nichols
Post State Highway Patrol, was cited for unsafe vehicle.
Gregory E. Mueller, 24, • Donald Lee Phillips, 15, Rt. I,
Freeport, 01., went left of Crown City, suffered a
center strik(ng a northbound laceration to the right attn in an
car driven by Carl L. Hubbard, accident at 2:10p.m. Sunday on
59, Syracuse .. Adrian Hubbard, Rt. 218, four tenths of a mile
58, a passenger In the Hubbard north of Rt. 553. Phillips
auto, also suffered minor in- repor-tedly lost control of his
juries. Mueller was charged car, ran off the right side of the
with driving left of center.
highway and struck a tree. He
The first of two Gallia County was cited to Juvenile Court for
mishaps occurred al11 :30 p.m. having no driver's license.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Oullook lor
Wedaesday through Friday:
Mostly fair Wednesday and
ThursdAy with a chance of
showen Friday. Hlgbs from
tbe mid and upper 70s north to
the low and mid 60s south.
Overnight lows from the mid
50s to lbe low 60s.

Dwight C. Wetherholt, 68,

Ex-Tribune Editor, Dies

By .Ualted Prell .lntemall_,.l
_
.
'
AN ARAB GUERRII.LA attack on an Israeli freighter in
internatlooal waters heightened tension In the Middle East today.
editor and publisher of the ·
Dwight C. Wetherholt, 68, attended graduate school at the Tribune and Gallia Times. ,
Israeli Premier Golda Melr said she took "a very grave view" of
retired newsman, school University of . Southern Preceding 'hi~U In death
the attack a;.d an Israeli radio commentator likened it to the
teacher and local historian, died California in 1931-32.
besides his parents was one
incident that started the 1967 war.
Sunday shorlly after being
Mr. Wetherholt was a history
The Coral Sea, carrying 70,000 tons of oU, was attacked by an
sister . .
admitted to the Holzer Medical instructor at GAHS 13 years. In
unmarked .speedboat Friday in the Bab El Mandeb (Gate of
Center on Fourth Ave.
1942,he resigned as a teacher to Mr. Wetherholt was active in
Tears) Strait at the eastern end of lhe Red Sea. Several shots
Mr. Wetherholt was admitted accept a position with the U. S. many community .affairs. He
were fll'ed at the Coral Sea from baZookas aboard the speedboat.
to Ute hospital shortly after Corps of Engineers at Ute West was a member of Grace United
Three fires started aboard Ute lanker were quickly extinguished.
Continued from Page I
noon after returning to his home Virginia Ordinance and Ohio
The left.wlng Popular Front for the Liberation ·of Palestine lor any court to determine the at 610 F'irst Ave., from tre River Division Office in Methodist Chtirch and of all the
Masonic bodies. He was a Past
(PFLP) claimed responsibility for the attack, the same
'sole' or 'dominant' motivation Gallipolis radio station where Columbus.
Master of the Morning Qawn
organization that hijacked four airliners to Jordan and then blew behind the choices of a group of he was employed part time in
After World. War ll, Mr. Lodge and a Past Commander
Utem up in September.
legislators. Furthermore, there the news department. He died · Wetherholt was employed by of the Rose Commandery. He
WASHINGTON - .. MR. AND MRS. Edward Finch COJ[, is an element of futility in a at 2:10p.m.
the F and R. Lazarus Co., m
married Saturday in the spectacle and splendor of a White House judicial attempt to invalidate a Mr. Wetherholt was editor of Columbus for three yea~s was a member of the Gallla
County Jury Commission at the
wedding, honeymooned in secrecy today, their whereabouts law because of the bad motives the Gallipolis Tribune and before joining the Tribune 1n
time of ·his death. He was also
known only to the President of the United States and the rest of of its supporters.
weekly
Gallia
Times
from
Feb.
1948.
'
an active member of the
Following his· retirement Gallipolis Rotary Qub.
their families.
''¥, tile law is struck down for 23, 1960, until Feb. 7,1967. When
There was speculation they were on a secluded Caribbean this reason, rather than because he retired from Uie newspaper from the newspaper , Mr · Friends may call at the
island or perhaj:l!l in Pabn Beach, Fla. Some thought the couple of its facial content or effect, it four years ago, he had com- Wetherholt hec~me associated McCoy-Wetherholt Funeral
Mrs.,Vielta
Mae ... Tuttle ' 94 ' .Mrs. TutUe, having accepted spent their wedding night at Camp David,tbe presidential retreat would presumably be valid as pleted nearly a hall-&lt;!entury with Radio StattOn WJEH and Home on First Ave ., in
"
soon as the legislature or association in the newspaper Ute Gallipolis City Schools as a Gallipolis between 7 and 9 p.m.,
South Second· St., Middleport, Christ . early in life, was a in the Maryland mountains outside Washington.
MoscOW - THE SOVIET spacemen nursed cabbage and relevant governing body business in the Old French Qty. part-tine newsman and sub- Tuesday. Masonic serviceS will
died early today at the member of the United Brethren
stitute teacher.
onion plants aboard their Salyul orbital laboratory today ,and repassed it for different
He was first employed by the
residence of her son, V. Clay Church.
He was married tq the former be conducted at the funeral
TutUe.
Funeral services will be went walking on a treadmill to keep their muscles from becoming reasons."
Gallipolis Journal as a carrier Alberta Junod in Athens in 1930. home at 8 p.m., Tuesday by the
Mrs. TutUe was born Feb. 2, Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the "lazy" because of weightlessness. Cosmonauts Georgi
and printer 's devil. He also She survives, along with one Morning Dawn Lodge.
FOUR FINED
1877 In Meigs County, the Rawlings Coals Funeral Home Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov and Vlktor Parsayev Sunday
worked for the Gallipolis
Funeral services will be held
Fined by Pomeroy Mayor Bulletin. In his high schdol and daughter, Mrs. Evan (Carolyn ) at !0:30 a.m. Wednesday from
daughter of the late Phillip and with the Rev. C. C. Thomas of voted from;space, casting ballots for the straight Communist
Charles Legar Saturday night college days, he reported sports Roderick , Gallipolis, Two Ute McCoy-Wetherholt Funeral
Emma Ridgley Hoffman. She tile Haven of Rest Rescue party line in the Soviet Union's parliamentary elections.
granddaughters survive.
was also preceded in death by Mission of Akron officiating.
"We give our votes to the candidates of the Inviolable bloc of were Jerry Collins, $10 and for the Daily Tribune. He was
Mr. Wetherholt is also sur- Home with Rev. Linson H.
her husband, A. W. Tuttle, one Burial will he in the Christian Communists and nonparty members," they radioed. "We vote for costs, and Otto Johnson, $15 and the Tribune's first · "official" vived by one brother, Harold Stebbins officiating. Burial will
sister, and three brothers.
Church Cemetery at Tuppers the wise foreign and domestic policy of our Conununlst pa,rty, for costs, boUt for intoxication; sports editor in the 20s.
Wetherholt, Gallipolis, former follow in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Richard
D.
Williams,
In
the
fall
of
1948,
Mr.
Mrs. TutUe is survived by Plains.
the bnplementatlon of the grandiose plans of the new live-year
Parkersburg, $10 and costs, Wetherholt joined the Tribune
four daughters, Mrs. Veda Friends may call at the economic plsn."
.
failure to have vehicle under
Parrish and Mrs . Verneda funeral home on Tuesday from
WASHINGTON - wmt TilE UNEMPWYMENT rate control, and Donald Randolph, as circulation manager. He
Hartung, both or Miami, Fla.; 2-4 and 7-9 and on Wednesday among Vietnam-era veterans now exceeding 10 per cent,
became a member of the
Pomeroy,
$20
and
costs,
Mrs. Vesta Tuttle and Mrs. wltil time of ·services.
paper's editorial staff in 1953. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Williams, Helena Binderbasin, Glouster
President Nixon SUnday ordered the government to turn its reckless operation.
He served as a feature writer 70, Union Ave., Pomeroy, who and a brother, Harold Bin·
Roscoe (Flora Marie) Gibson,
resources on a top priority effort to find jobs lor ex-servicemen.
and
reporter until ·he became owned and operated the derbasln, Columbus.
bot~ of Akron ; a brother,
"This is an effort which I consider to be of tile highest priority and
editor in 1960. One DCW feature, Williams 5 and 10 cent store in Funeral services will beheld
Everett Hoffman,
New
of such importance that every available program should be used
Lexington ; several grand·
to the maximum toward achieving Its goals," Nixon said in a Veterans Memorial Hospital "Gallia County Landmarks," Pomeroy wiUt · her husband at I p. m. Wednesday at the
children, great-grandchildren
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - appeared weekly in the Gallia many years, died Sunday at Ewing Funeral Home with
letter to Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson.
Martha McElroy, Minersville; Times 15 years, as did his "Our Veterans Memorial Hospital. burial in Maplewood Cemetery
and great-great-grandchildren.
Nixon began a Jobs-for-Veterans effort last fall but it was·
Clarence Adams, Racine ;. District Library."
mainly a promotional effort. The new program will enlist the Grace Gloeckner, Pomeroy ;· Mr. Wetherholt was born in Born Dec. 2, 1900, she was tile at Glouster at 4 p. m. Friends
heads of federal agencies to mobilize federal resources so that Qarence Hawley, Pomeroy. · Gallipolis on Feb. 7, 1903, son of daughter of the late John and may call at the funeral home
BELPRE MAN KILLED
Sophia Blnderbasin. Besides anytime.
jobs can be found for the 1.1 million men who leave the service
RAVJi;NSWOOD, W. Va .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES the late Elias and Servilla Walls her parents, she was preceded
every year. Nixon proposed six specific steps, including a Jobs- - Phyllis Knopp, Anna Collins. WeUterholt. He spent most of
(UPI) - Owens N. Castro, 45, of
in death by a brother, John
MEETING MOVED UP
Belpre, Ohio, was killed Sunday NEW YORK (UPI)-A spe- For-Veterans drive by the National Alliance of Businessmen, an
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - his life in this communi ly.
A regular meeting of the
Binderhasin.
when hls car ran off W. Va. 2 cial study of the Vietnam War ocganlzalion which has concentrated on finding jobs for disad· Charles William Frazier, Jr. , He graduated from Gallia A member of the United Southern Local School District
riear here and plunged Into a ordered by Defense Secretary vantaged minority workers.
Cheshire ; Rollin Terril , Academy High School in 1922.
Board of Education scheduled
MOSCOW- MORE THAN 6,500 MILES of pipeline are under Pomeroy; Kimberly Klein, He attended Ohio State Methodist Church at Glouster,
creek. A pasilenger In the car, Ro\Jert S. McNamara said a
Thursday has been changed to
James Hinzman , 25, of "general consensus" to bomb construction to carry oil to EJlrope and Asia from the. Soviet Minersville.
University, and received his BS Mrs. Williams is survived by Tuesday (tomorrow) evening at
Parkersburg, was hospitalized North Vietnam was reached by Union's huge, untapped petroleum fields. Soviet Oil Minister
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - degree in Education from Ohio her husband, Reese E. 8 at the high school in Racine.
Williams; two sisters, Edna and
. in serious condition.
the Johnson administration on ValenUn D. Shashin, speaking to the eighth World Oil Congress.at Constance Carig, Leveda Flinn. Wesleyan University in 1928. He
-..,; Sept. 7, 1964, while the its opening session SUnday, hinted the Soviet Union could become
President was running for re· one of the world's major suppliers of oil.
election, the New York Times
''There are vast areas ol the Soviet Union not yet thoroughly
said today.
explored or still lying untapped and whose combined oil and gas
-Mon.-Tue.
The decision was not imple- bearing areas cover some 7.4 million square miles - nearly half
mented until the following the total ares of the Soviet Union," he said.
February and up until that time
· WASHINGTON -THE FAMILIES OF SOME U.S. prisoners
President Johnson was reluc· o1 war have joined the lobbying effort to get Congress to end the
ALSO
!ant lo act despite the steady conflict, even though President Nixon has maintained that
and ·Increasing movement tow- rele&amp;se of tile POWs Is an Integral part of his gradual withdrawal.
ard overt war, the, Times said.
One of Ute women who has been canvassing Capitol Hill for
5
The consensus was reached,
the past month today claimed an overwhelming majority of the
~ated R
the newspaper said, ·while famllles of tile 1,630 U. S. servicemen captured or missing in
L:========~
Johnson was
running
re- action in Southeast Asia want to see Congress approved pending
r
election
against
Sen. forBarry
Goldwater, R-Arlz., who during measures that would terminate American involvement in Vietthe campaign advocated air nam by Dec. 31, provided tile other side agrees to return all U. S.
prisoners. Mrs. Lewis F. Jones, Fairfax, Va., whose husband has
attacks on North Vietnam.
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
The study according to. the been missing since he was shot down over Laos Nov. 20, 1967, said
June14·1l
Times was ordered by McNa· she is sure she and her handful of associates have changed the
Walt Disney's
mara in 1967 shortly before he minds of some legislators.
BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE left office and after he had
WASHINGTON- TWO DAYS BEFORE President Nixon
!Technicolorl
become disenchanted ~Yith the lifted Ute 20-year trade embargo on trade with Communist China,
Kurt Russell
war. It was completed by 30 to his southern campaigner, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C.,
Heather North
"G" 40 men a year later when aark denounced Ute idea in lhe Senate. Thurmond said there had been a
M. Qifford had taken his place. "massive propaganda effort" on behalf of Peking, "coordinated
Colorca rtoons:
Surprisin' Ex:ercisin'
with continuing efforts originating In the State Department to
Abominable Mountaineer
weaken our stand ... "
Rock Hound
"When the Illusions have been destroyed, the American
Sheep Dog
people will remember the leaders who permitted our solid policies
Great Day
SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
to be weakened. The verdict of history may be harsh," he added.
ALBUQUERQUE, N, M. - ABOUf 500 persons battled police
Continued from Page I
Sunday night in a dispute over the arrest of several minors for
at.a picnic In a public park. Several downtown stores
Style#J73
Style #73
A THOUGHT il was no Immediate word on any drinking
Playtex
Cross-Your·
PlayteJC
&amp;
Cross-Your·
Heart" Stretch Bra
~ signs of debris or survivors. were burned and looted and 10 persons received gunshot wounds.
Heart" Fiberfill·lined
At least 25 persons were injured, including seven policemen hurt
sheer elastic sides
Stretch Bra
FOR TODAY
"We can't positively identify
and back (A, B, C)
for perfect fit and
by
bricks
and
rocks
thrown
at
the
height
of
the
disturbances.
it (the indicator) as the one on
Reg. $3.95 ea.
comfort ...
Demonstrators Said police roughed up the young persons
Now 2 for $6.89
(A, 8, Cl Reg.
.
.
that aircraft, but it is the same
(0 cups) Reg.
$5.00 ea. Now
accused of drinking in the park, touching off the disturbances.
$5.50 ea. Now
·work IS better than il ype as
.
2
for
$8.49
More than 50 adults were arrested on charges ranging from
2 for $9.49
-whiskey.
11 , by the plane," sa1d a search resisting arrest to disturbing the peace. Byrd said an "un.
~~ official.
~
- Thomas Ed1son il ' Four military search planes countable number" of juveniles were arrested.
~'
1'
~
J#.
from Hawaii circled the spot
Style #39
Style #187
~Y·~
Playtex
Cross-Your·
.,
il ' where the radio beacon was
Playtex Cross·Your· ~
· . \'\
Heart"
Cotton
and
_
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Heart" Stretch Bra• ~
~~~5 Quick! Easy
il l found and four others were to
Lace Bra
" ·~HI
Full Lace Cups
:
ADMISSIONS : Robert
il J leave for Ute scene at daylight.
Double under-cup
Youthful Support
oanels for
and separatlon- t
Errett, Frank Dolson, Point
t ~ The planes were equipped with
better support
Stretch
back
J
Pleasant'; Mrs. Ira Potts,
(A, 8, Cl Reg.
.j(
11 1flares, para;escuemen, rafts
and
side's
r;
·~
Funeral services for Mrs. Henderson; Robert Wood,
(A, 8 Cl Reg.
'
$3.50 each
11
il .and other rescue gear. The
Now 2 tor $5.99
Mabel
L.
Lee,
Pomeroy·
Route
1,
Racine;
Mrs
.
Vaughn
Johnson,
$5.00ea.
Now
.
,,
~
Fridays only
~ . weather in the area -was cloudy ·
New! (0 cups)
2 for $8.49
· ~ . •·,
64, who dled Friday night at the Point Pleasant; Mrs. Carroll
0 cups) Reg.
;;,..~·
Reg. $4.50 each
il The Drive-In Window 11 1to fatr with swells about seven South
6.00 ea. Now
, _..Now 2 for $7.99
Baltimore General Saxon, Gallipolis; Carl Bone,t
isOpen
1t1feet high .
for
$10.49
·
. :j;
9 A.M. to 7 P.M. t 'j The Cl35 belonged to the Air Hospitalln Baltimore, Md., will cutter, Henderson; Howard
11
(Continuously)
.; Force Systems Command, the be held al3 p. m. Wednesday at KeY,ser, John Herrera, Roy
Style #35 (Featured)
Playtex Padded Bras
Huffman, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
11
i!;. Air Force's r~search and Ute ·Ewing Funeral Home.
Playtex
Cupe keep natural shape
Surviving are nine children Qayton Dunn, Point Pleasant;
Cross·Your·Hearte
washing after washing
~· O.ner BanKing Houn 9to
development arm. Similar
Cotton Bra
Style #37 (A, 81 cotton straps
.j( ,and 5 to 7 as usual on:j; C135s have been refitted with including Mrs. Margaret Mc· Mrs. Drexel Vance, Pomeroy;
America's most
Reg. $3.95 ea. now 2 for $6.89
popular Bra Style
il Fr1days.
11 electronic gear for monitoring Call, Ostrander; John Lee, Jr., Jack Wheeler, James Toles,
Style #38 (A, Bl Stretch Straps
(A, B, C)
Reg.
$4.50ea.
now2for
$7.99
Gormlnia, W. Va.; Virgil, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Ronald
.il
11 and surveillance purposes.
Reg. $3.00 each
Style
#56
(A,
81 Streich
Now 2 for $4.99 ,
~
~ u. s. planes are known to Pomeroy Route 1; Louie and Miller, West Columbia; Mrs.
back &amp; straps
(0 cups)
Leo,
both
of
Racine;
Gary
and
Harold
Darst,
Henderson;
Reg.
$5.00
ea.
M 1t lmonitor French nuclear tests at
Reg,
$4.00 each
now
2
for
$8.49
U Jftl
Wo 11 Mururoa Atoll in the South Charlf!!, Elyria; Mrs .. Donna James Williamson, Southside.
Now 2 for $6.99
POMEROY, OHIO
~ Pacific, and their base ls Rollins, Baltimore, Ohio, and DISCHARGES: Mrs. Eugene
Member FDIC
American Samoa. The latest ' Clarence, . Pomeroy; four Qonch, Penny Burris, Mrs.
Ploytu&lt;l frH Spirit&lt;' GirdlesMember Federal
Reserve System
. French nuclear lest was sisters, Mrs. Irene Stanley, Frank Wamsley, 1Dhronda
.
Unique light weight- natural,
Mrs. Grace capp, and Mrs. Robertson, Mrs. John Long,
gentle figure control1 keeps stockings up••••••••••••~ Saturday morning.
panty hose tn place without garters
Ruby Morrow, all of Point Hildreth Armstrong, Jerry
Shortie (XS, S, M, Ll Reg. $6.00 now $6.99
Pleasant, .and Mrs . Pearl Slayton, Mrs. Robert Bateman,
Average Leg (Featured) (XS, S, M, L) Reg. $8.50 now $7.49
. Long Leg (XS, S, M, Ll Reg. $9.00 now $7.99
Mitler, Youngstown; 29 grand· Joseph Klnnlard, Kenneth
XL in all styles $1.00 more
children, and several nieces and Glllltpie, Helen Barker, Mrs.
nephews.
Oonald Fry, Mrs. Chancery
The Rev. Edward Griffith will Meadows, Mrs. Roy Bostic.
Shop in air conditioned comfort on all 3 floors.
officiate. Burial will be in Rock · BIRTH: June 13, a son to Mr.
Open weekdays 9:.30 to 5 p.m . Shop both Friday
Spt)ngsCemetery. Friendsmay and Mrs. Vaughn Johnson,
and Saturday til 9 p.m.
'·
call at the funeral home Point Pleaaant.
$35.00 DI'MI
anytime.
· REYNOWS DIES·
Bala..,:e On
MOVE STUDIED ·
, RICHMOND, Va. (t1PI) -Lt.
' . Conv•lent
1
DAYTON (UPI) - Officials Gov. J. Sergeant Reynolds, 34,
of the Frigidaire division of heir to the Reynolds Metal Co.
'
'
Gtlneral ·Motorure considering and belt apparent to the ·
,

Pool

~pie-eating con teat has been Crow noted that nag action
~ edtothefunandfrollcofthe will begin at S p.m. with the
Jumping cham- preliminary events for the
1p ,!~,!:_rDgdW'ing
the Big Bend jumping. AI 7:30p.m. the junior
Rega
.
SatiU'day.
· .·
and senior fm.ls of the jump
Fred W. Crow, charter grand will be held, In addition to the
croaker .of the Ohio Association lrog race.
for the Promotion of Bull Frogs, From 8p.m. to 8:30will be the
~lng the program for the Frog .Cycle race with Mayor C.
omeroy Chamber of Com- o. Fisher of Middleport, Mayor
:;:Monday,saldthecontest· Charles Legar, Pom~roy,
Umited to sa contestants Mayor Charles Pyles, Racine,
with no age Umit.
Bob Wingett, Syracuse, and
The one who can est the pie In Mayor Gene Thompson,
the least time - as simple as Rutland, participating.
that - will be the champ, and Frog polo will display Dale
will rece.tve a SIO prize.
Dutton, George Hicks, Bob

-'it:'

Miller and Russ Brown as
drivers. Each polo carl will
carry a passenger·who will hit a
bouncing ball.
Other events during the half·
hour will he tile fat ladies

See Pages 13·24 today:
The 1971 Big Bend Regatta
Week End Special Section

VOL. XXIV NO. 44

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

TUESDAY. jUNE 15, 1971

------------------------------------------------~~~----~·

..._,.,

&gt;f"

~'-~

Revive
A $S permissive auto license
tax proposal voted down in
. Middleport by referendum last
fall is back with a new reason
for its acceptance.
Middleport council Monday
night unanimously approved
the first reading of an ordinance
that would tax each vehicle
owned by Middleport residents
$S annually effective in 1972.
Two more readings of the ordinance must be approved. ·
. The ordinance was suggested
by Council President John
Zerkle who said that plans are
underway in the state to place a
$10 additional tax on license
plates, with $S to go to a
respective township and $S to
the county commissioners of the
various counties. Zerkle said

t

Seroices Set
For Mabel Lee

j ,.

~·

~

Jt

FARMERS BANK
'- an·'"' I::IIUINGS

ROOMS

10

fURIIlURE

'311.15

••

t. ! : . _L~~~~!:....-.J.L~;:,.!,J:~~:.~.l:C~":~;~ .the~Som~dl~v:'=";~,2~t0il:an~~:er:ly_;~~r~Li~~~~~~o~;:,~rn~;~r!;~l;~;d~::~dJ~~~E~L:'::'~~~~~F~E~LID
.. h iPOM ERO y

•

ln

Middleport would beat the
legislators to the punch by
putting its own $S tax into effect
now so that the town will benefit
by the additional payment and
residents will not have to pay a
$10 increase when approved by
the state legislators.
They would pay only the $S
legislated, he said.
Councilman Clifford Stumbo
said, it is the "only lair way,"
since people who use the streets
would be paying for the street
maintenance program.
Proceeds from the tax would
be earmarked for street repair
and maintenance.
Council reviewed the action
laken by opponents of the tax
last year when the proposal was
defeated. Petitions were signed

•

leport

l

throughout town leading to the
referendum that turned down
the permissive auto tax.
Allen Lee King, independent
candidate for mayor in upcoming election in the fall, said
that he felt people did not
support the measure because
they did not understand the
need for the additional revenue.
Opponents of the tax had a more
effective program of influencing the voters than did
vlllage officials, King said.
Questioning what would
happen to funds now used for
street maintenance and repair,
King was advised by Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate that the
money so used is never enough
to carry out any general
program of maintenance and

program.
Stumbo said that had the
program gone through as
planned last year, the villsg~
could now have all Its streets in
good repair ..
ANOTHER PROPOSAL
Co uncilman Ohlinger
proposed a tax levy for the fire '
department before the Middleport voters in the falll:!ut was
advised to bring In .1 resolution
from the department asking . r
that the levy be placed before
voters.
Ohlinger said that a .7 of a
mlll bond Issue on the new fire
truck is expiring this year. He
suggested that a levy' of ap-.
proximately one mill be placed·
before voters for the depart.
ment. Only .3 of the one mill'
would be a tax increase, If th~

improvements.
Stumbo pointed out that the
new tax would relieve other
funds of the ylllage which
already are hard pressed.
'
Stumbo
commented that,
perhaps, "The auto tax would
relieve other funds so that some
village employes could have
pay increases." A nunlber are
underpaid, Stumbo said.
"People today cannot live on
$1.55 to $1.60 an hour," he said.
Approving the first reading of
the measure were Councibnan
Zerkle, Stumbo, Richard
Vaughan , David Ohlinger and
Lawrence Stewart. Zerkle
concluded that the tax is the
only way the village ever will
have enough money to carry out
an adequa te street repair

V

WASHINGTON (UPI )-The
Justice Department said today
It will seek an injunction
against the New York Times if
the newspaper refused lo stop
publication of a secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam War.
The governm~nt charged ~at
the art1cles v1olate the Esp1onage Act. .
.
The T~mes m a front page

PLAYTEX
SUMMER

i

.i
DRIVE-IN
·BANKING

7\.T
1

HEADQUARTERS FOR PLAYTEX

....................
.
t

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

k
'J'.•
· 111 t le:;,ro;:~i~~~~v~;udbringin
,·ew ~ or . .1. lmes on ,1r~a ~.,~~~~~~~~;·:l'J 1

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Mystery

fEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

.

,:...4;~a;.,'"'r:

On Bombs

Buy all your summer wardrobe
needs now on these popular styles

bond and · first and second
runnersup will each receive $50
bonds. All girls will receive ,
trophies.
The Pomeroy National Bank,
Citizens National Bank, The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
and the Racine Home National
Bank will provide Ute bonds.
The Pomeroy Branch of the
Athens Savings .and Loan
Company will prov.ide the
trophies.
The noon-luncheon of the
Chamber was held at Bowers'
Drive-ln.

Devoted To The Interest&amp; Of The Meigs•M0110n Area

Of Ba.rry

MEIGS THEATRE

a $7&amp;

Cloudy through Wednesday
and a chance of afternoon and
thu ndershowers south . Lows
tonight in the upper 50s north to
Ute 60s south.

In 1829 II cost 12~ cents to
travel by ferry between Staten
Island and Manhattan In New
York City. II now costs a hlckel.

LBJ Ahead

"Lovin"'' (R)

"N ili J .:t.:etve

Weather

Mrs. Williams Dies on Sunday

"Getting Straighf'

i u.; quee:1

Now You KnQw

Mrs. Tuttle, 94, Dies Today
.

'
·walking race which has a prize backward race (thus far ) are Frog Association will be selling . Mees also noted a boat and
of $25 and a ladles backward Pearl Welker , Norma Amsbury green derby hats and balloons. travel. trailer show will diSplay
Bill Grueser, chamber products on the upper parking
race, which also offers a $25 and Mildred Karr.
Benny
Ewing
and
Bob
president,
announced that lot, an~ a mobile home display
prize, and the pie conte~t.
Roberts are In charge of the pie Wilkie Holmlln will be' the will he behind the Pomeroy
·
In Ute early lists for the ladles and frog cycle contest, erow janitor in charge of the ·building.
said.
·
· · Pomeroy building and that F. 0. The seven candidates for
Mrs. Franklin Lewis an· Day of Marietta will be in · Regatta Queen will ride on the
nounced she has 22 dealers who charge of the sound system.
Queen Float. Persons attendirig
positively will be participating Grueser said that the tractor the Regatta may ·vote on the
in the Flea Mar"ket, and possibly pull contesi will he held at 10 queen of their choice at the
more. · Exhibitors will be a.m. Saturday morning at the Pomeroy Junior High where a
stationed behind the Pomeroy rear of the Pomeroy building. booth will be provided. Votes
Junior High School building.
Roy Miller is in charge of it. may be cast until Saturday at 4
Dale Warner, past grand
Jim Mees said the "parade is p.m. The winner will be ancroaker of the Frog Association, ready." Five bands are ex- nounced at 10:15 p.m. at th1
and Crow, reported that tile peeled to participate.
Frog BalL

GElliJIIG REAI&gt;Y FOR THE FROG JUMPING CONTEST are Debbie Hartenbach,
daughter of the Sheriff and Mrs. Robert C. Hartenbach, and Fred Crow, charter Grand
Q-oaker of Ute Ohio Association for the Promotion of Bull Frogs. Debbie's two frogs (cuddled
above by Crow) really won't be in the race as they are replicas made by her grandfather, otto
Hartenbach, of Minersville. Crow models a Pennsylvania Dutch style bonnet (the very latest )
made by Mrs. 9rln Smith of Middleport. The design In the material represents frog eggs, made
from water repellent material. Croakers wear one of these while "knee-deep" in water,
without getting wet.

r---------------------------,
! News ... in Briefs 1 ·2 Switch
·

St

By UDited Press lnlernllllonal

And Why Not be Disturbed?
WASHINGTON - DEFENSE SECRETARY Melvin R. Laird
Said today he had asked the Justice Department to Investigate the
unauthorized disclosure of a top secret report on the Vietnam War
to determine If security laws bad been violated.
Laird told the Senate Foreign Relations committee that the
extensive reports disclosed by the New York Tbnes concerning
the origins of United States involvement In Vietnam still were
highly sensitive loday, although they concerned the period prior
to !968. He Said the administration was "highly disturbed by this .
disclosure of classified lnfonnation."

-.

Law and Order Attitude Wanted
WASHINGTON -INTERIOR Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton
called on Ute nation's leading coal operators Monday to adopt a
tougiHnlnded "law and order" attitude towards coal mine health
and iafety.
Morton Said the health and well-being of those who work in the
nation's mines "Is of the highest priority to the President and to
me." The Interior secretary made his remarks in a speech
prepared for delivery to the 54th annual convention of the
National Coal Association .

Resumption PI, War Imminent

JSRAEU DEFENSE MINISTER Moshe Dayan warned

Monday "the resumption of war may be immient" in the Middle
E~t.

"Dayan, who has been taking a public soft-line attitude in
recent months, changed .his tone sharply in a speech to Hebrew
(Continued .on page 12)

Unit Answers Calls for Help
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call to the Archie
· EIUs residence on Route 7 below
Middleport at 8:47 a.m.
' Tuesday where Mrs. Ellts had
gone into shock after the family
received a death message. She
waa taken ·to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she

On

Vietnam

(Contlntlld on page 7)

story in today's edition said it
would not voluntarily halt
publication, "believing that It is
in the interest of this country to
be informed of the material

contained in this series of
articles. "
The Times began publishing
the Pentagon report, ordered
by Defense Secretary RobertS.

Funds SbOWlJlg
•· · $1.74,089
.
All Middleport Village funds
as of May 31 totaled $174:088.63
according to the monthly report
of Cle~k-Treasurer G~ne Grate
submitted to Middleport
Council Monday night. Much of
it is in funds regulated by law
for specific uses, other than
general operation.
Receipts and disbursements,
respectively, during the month
and the balance in each fund as
of May 31 include: general,
$2,983.69, $3,227.40, $39,206.29;
cemetery, $1 ,173.39, $745.12,
$882.33 ; .parking meter, no
receipts , no disbursements
$6.03; fire equipment, $510:
$93.68, $480.31; swimming pool,
$556, $20.98, $1,101.88; planning
conunlssion, no receipts, $30.45,

$l,56S. 7o.

Street maintenance, $7,843.63,
$1,945.25, $9,639. 46; state highway, no receipts, no dlsbur·
sements, $3,298.89 ; sanitary
sewer, $3,801, $5,6l 4.45 ,
$20,839.15; water, $6,121.92,
$6,735 .11, $22,469 .55 ; water
meter deposit trusts $375 $1t3
$5,418.57; water c~nstr~ction:
no receipts, $192.66, $!,597 .21;
sanitary escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements, $54,811.42;
general bond retirement, no
receipts , no disbursements,
$12,768.84.
Receipts for the month
totaled $23,364 .63 while ex·
penditures amounted to
$18,748.10.

McNamara in 1967, In Slll!day'a
editions. A second installment
was printed Monday and a third
today.
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell asked the Times in a
telegram not to publish any
. more of the series and totd the
newspaP,er publication was
directly prohibited by provl·
Slon~ of the Espionage Act.
Mitchell said the information
contained~~ .the .senes had top
secrelclasstf1cat1on and further
publication would harm .the
defense interests of the Umted
States.
The government said Monday
the report-which quotes from
se~ret strategy meetings, dlplomatlc cables and military
directives .-contalna highly
sensitive mformatlon eventhough It deals with the period
before 1~68.
AJusltce Department spokesman said Harding Bancroft,
Times executive vice president,
asked what the government
(Continued on page 12)

WASHINGTON (UPI)-,Two
Southerners, both long,lime
backers of the U.S. efforts in
Vietnam, reversed their positions today and called for total
U. S. withdrawal from .the war.
Sens. Herman Talmadge, 1).
Ga., and B. Everett Jordan, 1).
N.C., issued unequivocal calls
for the · withdrawal of all
Amrican forces .
Jordan said Monday he would
vote for the Vietnam disengagement act Wednesday. The
legislation would require an end
to U.S. combat in lndochins by
Dec. 31.
Talmadge said he could not
vote for the measure on constitutional grounds. But, in a'
speech prepared for deliyery
. today, he denounced Ute war as
a drain on U. S. manpower and
resources lind implored Pres·
(Continued on page 12)

Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook - Thunday through
Saturday: .
A chance of showers
Thursday. Fair Friday and
Saturday. Highs In the upper
70s to the low lllls and lows In
lhe upper 50s to the mid 60s.

'

DOLLIE HAYES
MRS. CHARLES (Oolllel
Hayes, 13 Oak St., Pomeroy,
will begin her duties as new
executive secretary of the
Meigs County Tuberculosis
and Health Assn. on July 1.
Mrs. Hayes was associated
with Ute count)' auditor's
office for a number of years
until several months ago. She
Is a member of the Winding
TraU Garden Qub and Is
treasurer of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
SOI!Iety.

Referendum
,,·
Proniised
Verner H. See,' Grant St.,
Middleport, today promised
Middleport village officials that
another referendum action will
be initiated if they proceed to
establish a $S permissive auto
license tax.
See told the Daily Sentinel
today following Monday night's
meeting of Middleport Council
when the first of three readings
of an ordinance to impose the
tax was approved -that he 'iriD
seek to secure signatures II(
residents to place th~ tall
measure before voters again.
Last year Middleport Council
approved the neceasarj
legislation to place the tax Ill
effect. See, and others, Lir·
culated petitions that proclaced
a referendum, the • tax illu
was placed on tilt ballot ill
which the pr()pl)931 'lost.

'

was reported responding to
treatment.
AI 5:51 p.m . . Monday, the
squad went to the home of Ann
Zirkle, South Sixth Ave., sui·
ferlng from severe stomach ·'
pains. She , was lt~ken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where s,he was admitted.
'

aD

d

For the second lime In two
weeks, pickets appeared Ibis
moptlng althe site of lbe new
Ja;;;,es M. Gavin Plant at
Cheshire.
According to Fred R.
Carman, project engineer for
Ohio Power Co., the
millwrights began picketing
activities at the job Monday.
Carman said there Is no work
lor the mlllwrlgbls Local1619
at lhe plant at lbe present
time. Carpenters and elec·
lriclans honored the Une but
all olher crafts reported to
work as suual.

1

'

EARL INGELS, MANAGER of the Meigs Branch of the
Athens·county ,Savings and Loan Assn., displays trophies lo
be awarded to the Big Bend Regatta queen contestants
Saturday. Voting for lhe seven candidates will take place at
·the Pomeroy junior high school Saturday under the supervision of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
There Is no charge lor voting. The queen~ will ride on a

special float In Friday's parade. Bonds provided by the
Pomeroy National Bank, the Racine Home-National Bank,
Farmers Bank and Savings Co., and the atizP.ns' Nall&lt;lnal
Bank of Middleport will be aw'arded the queen and the two
· runners-up. The branch omce of the · loan company is
providing the trophies.
I

been lUI off l1ince where he wu belnllreated for
an
.brain

---- ~

',

�'

1-fte l'lllllv III!IIIIMI, Middleoort-PclmeroY, 0 ., JuM It, ltn
11

IDITORIALS

..
,.

Sometimes I Wis~ They'd Riot Again!"
1.'KIV-'Jr

The Playing Field:
War Substitute?

a g•ant step for mankmd
In a little publicized senes held m the Sw1ss town of
Alstatten last month, members of West Germany's Bundestag, or parliament, played football (soccer) against
teams made up of colleagues from Austria and Switzerland.
, •• As !bey say on the sports pages, Switzerland and Germany tied 1 and 1, Austna edged Switzerland by a score
of 3 to 1, and Austna blanked West Germany 1 to 0.
The Bundestag sports committee Is trymg to get contests going among more European parliaments With the
a1m of promoting mternallonal understanding The
French, Italians and Dutch are sa1d to be Interested So
are the British
The latter have a saying that the Battle of Waterloo
was won on the playmg tields of Eton
It would be the greatest development m history if future
Waterloos were actually "fought" on the playing !Jeldslf Instead of young men bemg called to fight and die in
old men's wars, the old men themselves met and settled
their differences over a football
•

•

Have a Care, Libs
An offshoot of the women's lib movement, but not directly associated with 1t, Js a new magazme called, appropriately enough, New Woman Its stated aim is to
elevate the status of women m general
Male chauvinists may want to take a peek at the current, frrst issue. A pictorial p,resentatwn, "How to Undress in Front of Your Wife, ' starring a sort of harrycheated playmate of the month, has the temerity to poke
fun at those Interesting centerfolds m certain men's
m!lgazines
Write on, girls, but don't go too far American men
did not fight two World Wars for democracy and mom's
apple pie, only to have their pmups parodied.

•
•

'

-

••

..

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA) makes abundantly clear that m Brezhnev's eyes and m
•
those of his chief party colleagues the mvas1on of Czecho••·
Before the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia In slovakia
was m retrospect a ma]or success
; : August, 1968, there were long discussions within the
As these Soviet leaders view the invasiOn
,. • Kremlin and between Moscow and the East European
·-· capitals which were to cooperate In the action.
• It taught the world a lesson It warned the West and
Tile story, as learned from a contact close to high- dlssJdehts Within the Sov1et Umon and the Sov1et bloc
placed East European government officials, Is that in tha~ Moscow would not permit divisions and would supthese discussions the party secretary for the Ukraine press any attempts with strong mll!tary force
urgently argued for the Invasion, saying that If the Czechs
• It helped establish the "class duty" of all Comwere allowed to get away with democratization the munist countries to socialist mternallonabsm as defmed
"virus" would inevitably spread.
by Moscow, wh•ch means that as a matter of prmc1ple
-~ :
The wne argumenta were used by East Germany's the Soviet Union must be accepted as the !mal arbiter
Walter Ulbricht.
of what are correct Internal policies m any part of the
-:: ;
What they were ergulng, of course, was the dommo Soviet bloc.
"" ~ theory In reverse.
• It was a ma]or factor m leadmg the West toward
'' ·It was this argument, it is reported, which convinced acceptance of the status quo m Eastern Europe
;~. Soviet officials !bey must act.
Speakers at the congress emphasized that the trends
&lt;'
Opinion began to grow In the West after the Invasion m Czechoslovakia, and by Impllcallon similar trends m
, .• that the Soviet Ulilon had made a most serious mistake, any other Commumst country , would, If allowed to pro• that it later came to regret this blatant use of force in a ceed unchecked, be a threat to the entire "socialist
camp."
~· !n frlendly country.
~
1
Thus Brezhnev and other ma]or congress speakers
•
It was argued In high places In \he United States and
, 1
In Western European capitals that the Czech Invasion made clear the Czech mvas1on was a precedent and that
bad brought new dissension and new divisiveness to the this t)'pe of act1on has now become for them an accepted
prmc1ple of Soviet action
Communfst world
But an analysis by Kremlin wa\J:hers of the recent 24th
Congress of the Communist party of the Soviet Union
,

,

.,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
full Life Still Possible .
~ IU

-.

S

'
H
t
rre d ear

Permanent

ly to have a heart attack
than another man w1th the
Dear · Dr. Lllmb-1 would same weight, age and other
lite to know bow senous a medical factors
heart attack, called acute
The kind of life, a person
myocardial Infarction (tem- can
lead after a heart attack
porary) IS' {)(Jes It do dam- depends
h1s recovery. If
age to your heart• Can you the heart on
damage
was slight,
have another one' What leaving lots of good
ca111es an attack !Ike this heart muscle to pump strong
blood,
and can a person live a Jf none of the v1tal structures
normal Ufe after he has one1 within the heart are damDear Reader-A myocar- aged and, finally, If the disdial infarction is the serious ease In the arteries to the
type of heart attack most heart is not too far adcommon m men and older vanced, the person can often
women. It is caused by fatty do astonishing things. Lyndeposits in the arteries to don Johnson is an excellent
the hoart An area of the example - having recovered
heart muscle (called the from a heart attack when he
myocardium) Is damaged be- was a senator and then gocause the blood supply to it lng on to the vice-presidency
Is blocked off. The damaged and the difficult years as
muscle •s replaced by a scar president. Incidentally he
•n tbe muscular wall of the stopped. smoking cigarettes
heart. II IS not temporary tooL whicb II a must In proJust think of it like an area moung a good recovery and
of tbe muscle on the arm mlnlmlllng the chances of
that Is dsmaged and heals a recurrence. Of course, it
leaving a scar.
Ia better to atop before the
Smce the common cause of flnt attack. There are many
myocardial illfarctlons is other people who Jlave lead
disease of the artenes, the active, vlgoroua Uvea long
cause of the heart attack re. after having an attack. It Is
mains even after the patient by no means the 8Jtd ot the
"recovers" and goes home road.
The llfe patterns there11fter
There Is no way to tell for
should be directed toward certain how much a penon
preventing more changes in can do until he Is well alCIDI
the arterlas. This Is where the road to recovery Jb:
diet, atop pi_ n g clsaretle 'ercue IDleruce IJid ·
amol&lt;tna, nllht control and wtu lit Min belli Clll't
proper jlllyalcal ac:ilvlty ,be- J.._. uatJ1 eevwat m••b
eome bilporlallt. I have re- iftW tile ID!Im 1tr1tQ
peatedly em~lirAid the lm·
•
portance of tbese l!liblt patlema In my column.
have another
By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.

"•

' ,
•'

.• '
,

..
'' ;

Jloti

'*

jf

not

I

I

I

Great jazz trumpeter Charlie Shavers IS
recovenng from throat surgery
Olivia de
Havllland assures us Britam's PrUDe Minister
Edward Heath's "an adorable man" and a fancy
dancer .... The Rolls-Royce fiscal scandals don't
really affect the famed RR motorcar Itself,
which small portion of RR busmess makes
money; the tale of the limousine will be filmed
by Anna Neagle and her husband Herbert
Wilcox, a $5 million production.
The Met's beautiful Anna Moffo shifts gears
from opera to TV to films -and wlll make half a
dozen thiS year, currently she's shooting one m
Budapest about The Prmcess of O!ardss ,
"The Third Rose" IS a !ibn to be shot In France

Soviet 'Lesson' to Czechs et al

1

I

Love Machme' "

RAY CROMUY
Behind the Kremlin facade

WIN AT BRIDGE

r

! Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK O'BRIAN
LAUGH·IN STAR'S
WED-IN BOMBS OUT
NEW YORK - Judy Carne of passmg
Laugh-In fame ill up the headlines on her wlldly
publicized Central Park-at-dawn marriage to
Bob Bergman: They just got therr divorce in a
whisper .. Judy's new romance Gary Osborne,
IS some 15 years her junior ... Singer John Gary
and wife are discording agam .... Ditto Yves
Montand and Simone Signore! . , Gen.
EJsenhower's wartime staff-dlief Col JUD
Stack's okay after senous surgery .. His Shrrley
MacLalne period ended, NBO's Sander Vanocur
dated his estranged wife again at "21".. During
therr "Huntmg Party" fUming, Candy Bergen's
dog b1t co-star Oliver Reed (fiercely). jealous
Utile cur
Arlene De Marco of the famed De Marco
Sisters of rad1~TV fame and wife of Keefe
Brasselle (tho Arlene can't find bUD for alleged
$100,000 back-child support for therr two bttle
gu-ls) tells us she has been on welfare m New
Jersey for three years: she'll try to recoup with a
book she's fmishmg titled "TrJangle," and says
"It's my answer to 'The Cannibals' and 'The

It was a small step lor sportsmen, but it may have been

'L

r------------------- -----------------------I

GLOBAl. VIEW

Brandt Will Stand
Firm on NATO

about Gertrude Stem and Alice B. Tokias. a glrlgels1!rri tragedy.
t&gt;rab Utile boxofflce headlines will center Oil
the Innocent-VIctim Pixie Judy Troupe (ldddles'
lovely stage romps) and a bilker ... David Bilek
thinks he has Claudette Colbert ready for a fall
Bdwy play ... Joe Namath's buying a Palm
Springs home; Manhattan's action l.vl't enough
any more , . Melina Mereouri simply adores
droppmg mto westchester's Charles V spot to
smg French songs - so long as the FrenCh plano
player turns on hiS dimpled charms .... The
Nlllon, Pa., beauty eontesl wmner who dropped
m on Pres Nixon at the Wbite House, rather
more quietly at the Bahamas Kings Inn eonfessedshe's not so sure she'll vote for him In '72;
well, she's th~ prettiest Ingrate 1
Max WOk's "Wit &amp;Wisdom of H'wood" tome
credits Sam Goodwyn wtth lntonmg to an underling, "How do you love the movie?" . ~c­
tually 1t was Spyros Skouras who COI'Dl ed
publicist Harry Sobol a dozen years ago with that
aggressive gem; we decided to keep 1! secret lest
Harry got lrred and prmted 1t only when Spyros
descended from cmema heaven - Sam gets
credit for more apocryphal japes than the late
Dorothy Parker . First there was "The Fifth
DimensiOn" group (marvelous) so now there 1s
"The Fourth Altitude" rockers at Stratford's
Public House.
Alan King and Helen Hayes are a total
contrast m personalities - but partners in a
Mex~can busmess venture . , Marion Brando
fmJShed his title chores m "The Godfather"
Without one temperamental fit, must have a
percentage .. , All reviews for the original book
and film versiOn of "Tell Me That You Love Me
Junle Moon" 1111ssed the very basic point of both :
Marjorie Kellogg of Columbia Presbyterian
Hospital wrote it to dramatiZe houaing problems
of the handicapped, Dr. Audrey Randolph of the
Mayor's Qmunittee on the Handicapped told us

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

!Helen Help Us !I
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people, their problems and
NEW YORK (NEAl
pleasures, therr troubles and fun . As with the rest of Helen Help
Old Walter Ulbricht IS no longer the Commumst chief
Us•,Itwelcomes laughs but won't dodge a ser10us question with a
of East Germany but his tough pohcy on West Berlm IS
brush-off.
not likely to change soon
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
Ulbricht, m fact, never had a policy of his own He was
of Helen Help Us I this newspaper
at all times Moscow's mouthpiece His younger successor
TIIREE IN A BEDROOM
Ench Honecker, 56, IS also a Soviet puppet and there IS
little doubt that his promotiOn was approved by the
Dear Helen.
Kremlm m advance
I knew my guy was a motorcycle nut, but I didn't think I'd
Honecker wants to tighten the Commumst stranglehold
have to share our bedroom With this third member of our
on West Berlin He 1s opposed to a rapprochement w1th
mamage - I mean the two-wheeled monster
West Germany for lear that East Germans might be enWe have a studio apartment, no garage If you leave a good
couraged to beheve that some liberalization IS m the
'cycle on the street, it gets stolen, no matter how It's chained. So
offmg
how do you decorate around a thing Uke that~ How dO' YOU avoid
This spells more trouble for the Eastern policy ("Ostfalling over it' I swear to Buddha, it reaches out and grabs me,
politik") of West German Chancellor Willy Brandt
espec18lly when I get up at mght.
A strong advocate of East-West detente, Brandt has
made a greater effort than any other European statesman
After !allmg on my face for the third time, I' told my husband
m recent years to reach an understandmg With the
either his bike goes or I go. It was our firSt big fight, and I didn't
Russians
really mean 11, but don't I have a r.ght to complain' - 'QfREE'S
He offered them substant13l concessiOns when he signed
ACROWD
.'{
the Soviet-German "no na~gresswn" treaty last August
Dear T AC
He accepted the disputed Oder-Ne1sse !me as Communist
Complain about the size of the apartment, but not the
Poland's permanent boundary and acknowledged the exIstence of East Germany as an mdependent state
motorcycle, which came w1th the package, remember?
If you can't find a bigger place wtth a locked shed or
The Russians promised, however vaguely, to improve
basement storage, then maybe a neighbor wlll rent out part of hiS
of west Berlm
IS theInstatus
Bonn's VIeW. thiS would mean a guarantee of free
garage for the monster.
access to the divided and Isolated city and the recogMeanwhile, use it for an extra chair and be glad No. 3 m thiS
spade as West ruffs the last mhon of Its legal ties to West Germany
mamage
IS a two-wheeled zmger, rather than a tw~legged
diamond
However, Moscow contmues to ms1st on makmg Berlin
swmger - H
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN) a "special entity" and on CU\tJRg all J(S poiitJcal and
Dear Helen
cultural lies With West Germany
I'm 17 and he's 20. We hsvea three months old baby and we're
The Russians now demand rahficahon of the Sovietverymuchm love. The only problem 18 : My mother won't sign for
The boddmg has been
German nonaggressiOn treaty by Bonn's Bundestag me to get marned.
,
- Wesl
North East South where It faces stiff opposition - prwr to any agreement
1•
Dhte !NT on Berlm
He has a good job. lknowwe could make it, but Mom says I'm
Poss
Pass
Dble Redble By postpomng any settlement of the thorny Issue they
too lllU1181ure and she wants the baby and me to stay at home.
Pass
Pass
2 + Pass obviOusly hope to pressure Chancellor Brandt mto makmg
Actually, she hates Blll's mother who Is real mce, but of a dif.
Pass
2¥
3+
• more concessiOns and, above all, lure West Germany ferent
rehgwn, and she figures if she can keep us pretty much
You, South, hold
away from the North Atlantic Treaty Orgamzabon
apartfor Sill more months, I'll "get over him" and marry the boy
•K7H ¥54 +K93 •QJ62 Bonn's army, as the Kremlm leaders know well , IS
she has picked out for me.
'
What do you do now•
perhaps a more formidable conventiOnal force than any
A-Pass. II you don't think other European army committed to NATO
If we ran away and got married In another state (that allows
Eos! knows what he 11 doing- The Russians envisage a detente merely as a means
II) could she keep us frornhaVJDg our baby? We wanted to marry
double
to establish their hegemony over Europe by first weakwhen I was 16, and we've been wantmg to ever smce
TODAY'S QUESTION
enmg the Western defense alliance
IMOGENE FROM SOUTHERN CAIJFORNIA
Instead of passong over your This IS a pnce Brandt will not pay He seeks detente
Dear Imogene·
no-trump, West has ~~d two but not Soviet dommahon He has repeatedly stressed
Why not consult the marriage counselor at your County Court
spades Your partner has gone Bonn's fum mtent10n to remam Withm the NATO strucHouse? (The service is free ) Perhaps he can persuqde your
to three hearts and East has ture
mother that her grandchild shouldn't walt six months to have a
l~:ped to fo~r spades What do, Brandt's policy was spelled out clearly by Bonn's pro
legal father. - H.
Y
do now
Western Defense Mm1ster Helmut Schmidt m a recent
lecture at Prmceton Umvers1ty Schmidt said the balance
Dear Helen
of forces between West and East must be mamtamed for
Yesterday my grrl friend and I went shoppmg. We had money,
We looked for peace but safeguardmg the West's secuntv and this cannot be "ac
so I don't know why we did 11, but we started lifting things It got
no good peace came,
a comphshed Without NATO" Nor can a balance be
eaSier and easier to take the stuff, except as we walked out of one
time of healing, but beloolrl. achieved without the Umted States, he added
shop, we were caught
terror -Jeremiah 8 15
"We Europeans should not 1magme that we can counterWe finally admitted the truth and, because we were mmors,
our parents had to come and sign for us We had to go back to each
store and return the things Lucidly no one pressed charges but,
&lt;ll
Helen, I never felt so terrible In my life
;====='i'h To make It even worse, my folks are bemg great about 11,
though it made them both sick. Probably my friend's parents
CAN REPAIR
ARs, POPGIRDLE
won't let me see her again,
E ~EAI&lt;S AND
~AS TilE BEST"
THE GUTiER--But still, I'm glad we got caught, because maybe we nught
ROOFEQIN
IT'L.L. COST
have done 1tagam if we had gotten away with stealing
$18Z~
TOWN GIVE
I'll never get over how crummy I fell and still feel every time
~ER AN
I go mto a store and think people are watching me because they
ESTIMATE"·
know I'm a thief.
Maybe if you print this, 11 might persuade a few other kids not
to try something stupid just for kicks.- E.
Dear E:
I hope so! -H.
By LEON DENNEN

8I'dd'lng Four- Card Ma1'o
NORTH
• 87

IS

0 32

WEST

:~: 4
• Q 874

EAS'r

• KQJ
• Q 9 53
t 865
"'9 52

• A 1092
• 76
t 974
• K 10 6 s

SOUTH (D)
• 6543
• AKJ2

+KQJ
• AJ
Both vulnerable

West North
PIW

2•

P...

Pass

East South
1•
Pass 4 •
Po"'

Operung lead-• K
.

~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In JACOBY MODERN we
do open four-card m a j or
suits when we have no sensible mmor-suit call or when
our hand is unsuitable for
no-trump With most of these
hands we stop at two 1! partner raises us to that level
With today's hand we probobly would jump right to
four after the single raise
We have 19 high-card pomts
-too many for a one notrumr. opening
It 1 well that we steered
clear of no-trump The best
a no-tn~~RP d~larer can do
Iii to br_lai In el.lht tricks
A fGuNieirt declarer will
If be makes aure
l•at 011t apade

io1

balance the Soviet military power without American
support "
This explams Bonn's nervous reaction to th&amp; prQpO!ali
lor an abrupt reduction ol American troopa In liluropel
Bonn backs President Nixon's view that any unl/altri
reduction in the U S fighting strenlth will leopard •• thl
Western alliance "and the security of 1 I plrtlllf'l In
NATO."

Popaldcm Growb11
WASHINGTON - By
1980, there &amp;I'll c~pccle~ tu

3- Tbt Daily Sentinei,MicldleDort-l'mlefOv. o__ JuM ~~. It'll

Simpson ·Returns; Wilcox Demoted
•
ST LOU'IS (UPI)-Fastballer
Wayne Simpson, who has spent
the last month on a farm team
rejomed the Clncmnati Recb
here today as they wrapped up
a threei!ame series with the
St. Louis Cardmals.
Simpson, 23, was 1-1 when
the Reds sent him to the Ind1,
anapoiis club May 14 He has
compiled a 2-1l record there
Milt Wilcox will take his

place Wilcox, 21, bas compiled
a 2-1 record this &amp;lason
Simpson, a rookl~ sensation
last year, was sent down to
the llllnors when he continued
to experience ann trouble
which started m spnng trainlng
and was plagued w1th wildness
The Reds were scheduled to
go with JIID Memtt (().7) ton.ght against the Cards' Reggie
Cleveland I 5-5 l

I

of the season and slammed Into seevno.
The Reds also scored m the
the lower right field deck In
Sixth,
which opened with a high
the first mmng to score two
houncmg single' to second hy
runs.
His double m the mnth drove Rose
Helms followed w1th a fly to
home Pete Rose, who had
walked with two out, and Tom- nght, but Jose Cardenal dropmy Helms, who reached frrst ped the ball and mana~ed only
to get Helms out ~t first. May
on an error
Pat Corrales had started the added a sharp single to \hlrd
mnth w1th a leadoff Single to and advanced w1th Rose on a
nght and scored on an error at Wild pitch by Jerry Reuss, who

B1g Lee May supplied the
power Mondsy night as the
Reds swtpt over Sl Lollis 7-2,
g1vmg rookie ROllS Grimsley
his fourth w1n in f1ve dectSions.
Reliever Clay carroll, who
took over the last one and a
third inmng, got his seventh
save of the season
May drove 1n lour runs with
a homer and a double to lead
ule wm. It was hiS 13th homer

evened his record at 6-6 will\
the loss
Reuss then loa&lt;led the bases
by mteniJonaily walking Tony
Perez and Hal McRae followed
with a two-run double to left
field
The Cardmals scored 10 the
fourth and eighth 10 absorbing
theu seventh straight loss and·
lith m 14 games

.

Giants Lose lOth Tilt In 13 Outings
My MARTIN LAUER
UPI Sports Writer
The San FranciSCo Giants,
"'ho at one time looked like
they'd wrap up the National
Lea~ue West DIVISIOn by
Memorial Day, now may find
themselves knocked out of first
place by Independence Day,
'!'he Giants lost for the lOth
time m their last 13 outings
Monday mght, lllkmg a 9-4
pasting from the Philadelphia
Phillies, while the runnerup Los
Angeles Dodgers mpped the
New York Mets, 3-2, for the1r
fourth consecutive triUmph and
their 13th success m 17 games
As a result, San Francisco's
once majestic lead, which
soared at one stage to 11
games, has been reduced to a
shaky five and the Giants are
scheduled to meet the Dodgers
fiVe times early next month
pnor to the All-star game
The Pittsburgh Pirates, who
hold a 21'. game edge over New
York ID the East DIVISIOn,
failed to take advantage of the
Mets' loss, droppmg a f&gt;-4
decision to the Houston Astros
Elsewhere, the Cmcinnab Reds
routed the St Louis Cardinals,
7-2, the San Diego Padres

mpped the Montreal Expos, 2-1,
and the Chicago Cubs tripped
the Atlanta Braves, 3-2
In the American League,
Kansas City beat the New York
Yankees, 4-1, Detroit squeezed
by the Chicago White Sox, 4-3,
m 10 mmngs, Mmnesota beat
Cleveland, 3-1, and Boston
mpped Califorma 4-3 In 15
mmngs Milwaukee at Baltimore was postponed by ram
RICk WJSe pitched a six-hitter
and hit a three-run homer
dunng a s1x-run second mmng
rally as the Phils enJoyed a
Iaugher agamst the Giants
W1lhe Montanez, Tim McCarver
and Oscar Gamble also homered for Philadelphia Wise,
who struck out mne batters,
stretched his record to 7-4
Bobby Valentine hit a two-run
double 1n the fourth mnmg to
give the Dodgers their wmmng
run against the Mets Valentine's hit was only the third one
off loser Tom Seaver, and II
was the last safety Los Angeles
cotiected 1n the game Willie
DaviS' !Jrst-mnlng homer accounted (or the other Dodger
run
J1m Brewer retired all seven
batters he faced 1n rehef to

and two out m the bottom of
the nmth Fred Gladding (3-1)
gamed the victory lor Houston
Lee May drove in four runs,
two w1th a !Irst-mmng homer
and two more with a mnthmmng double, to lead the
Clncmnati attack against St
LoUis It was the seventh
consecutive loss for the Cardin-

provide Don Sutton w1th his
filth triumph agamst s1x losses
Pittsburgh, after rallymg for
two runs m the top of the ninth
on Dave Cash's two-run single,
to tie the score, had Its fourgame wmning streak ended
when rehever Dave Giusti
walked Joe Morgan on four
pitchers w1th the bases loaded

als and their lith m 14 games
Clarence Gaston doubled
home two runs with two out m
the mnth Inning to provide the
Padres wJ!h alt their runs in
the victory over Montreal Clay
Kirby, who worked the first
eight mnings hefOJ e bemg
removed for a pmch hitter,
altowed three hits and struck

Those Nobodies Keep Winning
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Wriler
Ah, the Kansas City Royals,
those "faceless wonders" of the
AmeriCan League West just
keep on wmnlng But at least m
therr latest victory, they've.
~liken on a familiar look
Bob Oliver and Lou Plnlella,
last year's Kansas City hitting
stars, returned to the lineup
Monday mght and led the
Royals to a 4-1 triumph over
the New York Yankees for their
sixth straight victory and 12 m
the last 13 games.
Oliver, benched six days for
weak h1ttmg by manager Bob
Lemon, cracked a two-run

3-2, Philadelphia belted San
Francisco 9-4 and Sail Diego
tripped Montreal2-1
Yankees' starter Mike Kek!Ch
had the Royals stopped on a
three-hit shutout gomg Into the
sixth
mmng when he was
In other AmeriCan League
games Monday Detroit edged kayoed by consecutive smgles
ChiCago 4-3 Mmnesota topped from Paul Schaal, Amos Otis
Cleveland 3:1, Boston outlasted and Chuck Hamson Plmella
Cahforma 4-3 m 15 mnmgs and then greeted reliever Gary
Milwaukee and Baltimore were Waslewsk1 with a bunt smgle to
ramed out Oakland and Wash- load the bases and Otis scored
while the oUJer runners moved
mgton were not scheduled
In the National League, Los up as Waslewskl uncorked a
Angeles nipped New York 3-2, Wild pitch while facing Oliver
Houston dropped Pittsburgh f&gt;-4 Oliver then followed up with a
Clncmnatl ripped St Louis 7-2: sharp smgle up the middle to
ChiCago squeezed past Atlanw score Hamson and Plnlella
"I won 't know how to conduct
myself when we lose," Lemon
said of the streak, "but I've
Nv
ooo 010 ooo- 1 6 0 had enough experience m the
Kc
ooo 004 oox- 4 8 0 past and It'll all come back to
Keklch Waslewskl 161 Me
Dame! I 7) and Munson Hed me ''
lund (6 31 and May LPOliver, who drove in 99 runs
Kek~eh 11 21
for the Royals last year
Mlnn
300 000 ooo- 3 7 1 compared to only 15 so far this
Clev
000 000 001- 1 6 0 season, was grateful for the
Perry (9 Sl and Ratliff chance to participate again
Foster, Mlngorl (9) and Fosse
"It felt good to do someJIJing
LP- Foster 15 J) HR- OIIva
right for a change," the Royal
I l41h l
first baseman said, "It's been a
t 15 ennmgs)
long lime since I contributed
Bos
120 000 000 000 001- 4 14 3 something "
11
You can never give up on a
Cal
003 000 000 000 OOQ-3 6 J guy who got you 99 RBI 's,"
Culp, Lee (Ill Lyle IW and
Josephson Messersm llh Allen Lemonsa1d of Oliver " II we're
(11) Laroche (12). Fisher (13) gomg to do It this year, we're
and Moses WP- Lyle I 3 01 LP gmng to have to gel help from
- Fisher (4 Jl HR- Lahoud (21
both Ohver and Pmiella "
(10 mnmgs)
Mike Hedlund went the
Ch~eago 300 ooo 000 o- 3 9 o distance for the Royals to pick
Detroit 100 001 000 1- 4 11 0
Bradley, Forster (6), Johnson up hiS sixth victory in mne
(61 Romo (8) Eddy (10). dCCISJOnS
Kealey t 101 and Egan Cole
Tony OUva upped his 1971
man Zepp (7). Scherman (8)
average
to 375 with two hits,
and Freehan WP- Scherman
(5 0) LP- Romo II 4) HR- lncludmg a three-run homer
Mellon (9th)
Single m a lour-run sixth mmng
wh!le Plmella, just off the
disabled list after a broken
thumb, collected two hits m four
trips to the plate

By United Pross lnternat1onal
Natoonat League
All
001 010 ooo- 1 9 0
Ch1
000 000 03x- 3 5 I
Nlekro (4 1) and Didier,
Regan , Tompkins (9) and
Cannizzaro WP Regan (2 2)
HR Pepitone 19th)

·LA
10020000Q-3 3 0
NY
000000200-2 1 l
The Middleport 1\raves Braves with two singles, Mike
Sutlon, Brewer (7) and Sims
Seaver,
Taflor (8) and Grote
, , "MQ!l.dttY ~y.~pmg poll,l'll&lt;lllf;ross,, ~!l~eoder, Tim Eber~bach,
WP
Sutton
LP'Seaver (8
four runs In the thirdlnnmg to Rick Hovatter, Mlck Daven- 3) HR- HR-56)
W Davis (2nd)
break a ~ tie and went on to port, and Bachner each chipped
hand the Indians their first loss in a Single,
so
000 000 002- 2 9 1
010 000 ooo- 1 3 o
of the season, 7 to 4
For the losers, Jeff Beaver Mont
Kirby, Miller (9) and Barton ,
Both teams had been tied for and Gleason each had a triple, Morton
(S 9) and Bateman LP
first with two wins and no and Mike !Iindy and Mark - Kirby (5 51
losses. The wm gave Charley Venoy had smgles
Amencan League
Smith's Braves undiSputed flrst In the other game of the Mllw at Baltimore (ppd, rain)
place m the loop, and the In- evenmg, the Mets came up with
dlans dropped to second
tliree runs m their last at bat to
The Braves pitcher, Steve overcome a 3, to I Mark V Reds
Bachner, went the distance to lead. The wm allowed the Mets
fan hve and pass none, to escape the league cellar but
exhibiting fine control The loss the winless Reds were not so
went to Joe Gleason, a young lucky as therr record dropped to
flreballer who struck out 10 but lh1
walked eight
Starter Jeff Mlller went all
Timmy Thomas led the the way to gain the victory for
the Meta He struck out seven
'
and walked two Ronnie easel
In Pomeroy Little League
was charged with the loss as he
action
Monday evening the
fanned six and passed three.
Ron Cunningham bad the big T1gers rolled over the Pirates 9
stick for the Mets as he to 5 and the Yankees edged the
smacked a ~ouble and a single. Dodgers 5 to 3
In the Tiger-Pirate tdt, the
Bobby Powers doubled and
Greg Becker and Joey Watkins Tigers broke up a close contest
with five runs in the fourth
smgled
John Magnotta led the Reds mnmg
with two singles, Kevin Ed- Dale Browmng picked up the
wards had ..,a double, Mark win as he went the diStance
Haggerty and Cascl each a striking out eight and a passing
only two Eddie Stsson was the
single.
Braves
004 300-7 7 3 loser. He fanned seven and
Indians
002 020---4 4 2 walked 12
Browmng also led the Tigers
Bachner and Ebersbach
at the plate wlth a triple He was
Gleason and Lynch
Reds
030 000--3 5 2 followed by Randy Marshall
Mets
001 03x-4 5 2 with a double, Tim Sc1tes a
Mlller and Becker Case! and single, Danny Moms a double,
and Bruce Carmen, a smgle.
Edwards
For the losers, Bobby Snyder
had a double and single, poug
Browning a double, and Duane
'
Qualls, Sisson and Couch each a
single
In the other game the
Yankees knocked three Dodger
pitchers for five runs as they
slipped by the Dodgers 5 to 3
Brentley Sfth was the big
man at tile plate for the
WIT~
Yankees He had two doubles
Todd Rawhngs had two smgles
Clellsnd and Glaze each had one
hit
For the Dodgers, Hood had
two hits, PhillJps a single,
Brownmg
a triple, Snyder a
"Subrogation?"
double, and Hawley a single.
Th1s Is an insurance ferm
Rick Taylor went all the way
wh1ch means that your
on the mound for the Yankees,
Insurance company pays
your insurance loss to you,
strikmg out three and passing
but the~ assumes the nght
10. Randy Phillips was the
to collect the loss from the
losmg pitcher. Dodger hurlers
responsible party
Subfogatlcln can mNn full
combmed to KO three and walk
payment ol 1n auto
seven
collision lou, even tho you
Pirates
Oil 120 6-6 6 2
havei!O or 1100 deductible
Tigers
IMK 50X - 9 6 3
p
Slsaon and Milch Brownmg
aDd McClure
c.n
200 1m 003 - 1 9 o
• Sl
000 100 OJQ- 2 10 1
Gtimsley, Carroll (8) and
Corralfi, Reuss, Parker (7).
Taylor 181 and Sommoos WPGrtmslo~ (4 0 LP- Reuss (6
•1 HR- May 113fh)

that carried Mmnesota ove1
Cleveland Jim Perry yielded
SIX hits and struck out 11 to
notch his mnth wm of the
season for the Twins
DetrOit got an unmedJate
dividend from veteran Tony
Taylor, acqmred II om the
Philadelphia Phlihcs over the
weekend Taylor sliced a double
to right which scored AI Kaline
from second base with two out
in the lOth, g1vmg the 'IIgei s
their sixth victory m seven
games Bill Melton hit his mnth
homer of the season for the
While Sox In a losmg cause.
A smgle by rookie Doug
Griffin drove In Luis Aparicio
with the wlnmng run m the 15th
Inning to give the Red Sox their
narrow triumph over Califorma
With one out, Rico Petrocelli
smgled and advanced to second
with a wild pitch before being
replaced by Aparicio as a
pinchrunner Griffin then
stroked his single to left off
rellever Eddie Fisher who
suffered the loss Sparky Lyle,
the third Boston hurler, picked
up his third win of tp~11 ~e~son
without a defeat,
.
International League ~landings
By United Press tnternahonal
W L Pet GB
Syracuse
35 18 660 Charleston
30 23 566 l
Tldewaler
33 26 559 l
Rochester
28 25 528 7
Louisville
27 30 474 10
Richmond
27 31 466 tOI/!1
Winnipeg
21 33 389 141/!1
Toledo
21 36 368 16
Monday's Results
Winnipeg 13 Tidewater 5
Toledo 13 Syracuse 6
Rochester 5 Richmond 3
Charleston at Louisville (ppd ,
rain)

Tigers,
Yankees
In Wins Indians Rapped for-$5,000

Sp,-uee
11p

YOUR HOME INSIDE
ANEW
ARMSTRONG
CEILING

Amencan League

East

W L Pct. GB

36 20 643
34 211 561 4
3J 26 559 4'1•
38 30 483 9
New York
21 33 450 II
Wash ington 21 3.\ J.\8 1s•;,
West
W L Pel GB
Oakland
39 21 650
Kansas City 32 23 l82 &lt;'h
M1nnesola
29 32 475 10'"
C-aliforn ia
28 34 452 12
21 34 382 15'1&gt;
Atlanta
29 J6 446 1H2 Chicago
1
Milwaukee
21 34 382 lS'I2
Cmcmnat1
26 35 426 12 'l
Monday's Results
San D1ego
21 40 355 17
Kansas C!ly 4 New York I
Monday s Res,ul1s
Detro•! 4 ChiCago 3 (10 Inns)
Chicago 3 Atlanta 1
Mmnesota
3 Cleveland 1
L A 3 N Y 2 n1ght
Milwaukee
at Ball (ppd ra&gt;nl
Houston 5 P1tl 4 nlgm
Boston 4 California 3 {15 Inns)
Cmc 7 Sl Lou&gt;s 2 night
Today's Probable Pitchers
Ph• la 9 S F 4 mghl
Washington
(Janeskl I 4) at
San Diego 2 Montreal I, night
Oakland
(Dobson
4 OJ n&gt;ght
Today 's Probable Pitchers
Allanta !Stone 0 31at Chicago New York ( Kllne 4 51 at
Kansas Ci ty (Wnght 22) n1ght
1Hands 6 81
Boslon (Peters 6 5) al Cal •
San D1ego ( Norman 0 0) at
Montrea l ( Bn lon 0 1 or Stroh torn1a (Mur phy J 81 mghl
Chicago t Horlen 0 3) at
may er 0 1) n1ght
Los Angeles ( Downln9 6 3) al Detro• I I Kilkenny I 21 n1ghl
M1nnesola I Blyleven 6 8) at
New York I Ryan 6 Jl. mghl
Sa n F ra nc1sc o (Bryan t 53) at Cleveland 1Lamb 4 2) n1ght
M i lwaukee [Krausse 2 8) at
Phllaclelphla l Le, sch 4 51
Bi!l llmore (Palmer 9 31 night
mghl
Wednesday's Games
C1nconna h (Merritt 0 1) at 51
Washongton al Oak la11d, noght
LouiS I Cleveland 55 ) night
p,tfsburgh (B lass 6-3) at Basion at California , night
New York at Kan City, nlghl
Houslon I D1erker 10 21 nlghl
Ch1cago at Detro1f night
Minnesota at Cleveland, night
Wednesday ' s Games
Milwaukee at Baltomore, night
Atlanta at Ch1 cago

Balhmore
Defro•l
Boston
Cleveland

1

Cmcmnat1 at Sl Louis

Linescores

Braves Leading
In Middleport

out mne batters to even his
record at 5-5 Carl Mo1ton t:&gt;-9)
was the hard luck loser
Joe Pepitone h1t a three''"'
homer with two out m the
eighth mmng to hit the Cubs
'over AUanta Phil Regan.
starling for the first hme m
almost four years, w01 ked eight
mmngs for the Cubs to even' his
record at 2-2

By United Pre .. lnfernahonal
Nahone~.~eavue
W L, Pd GB
Pittsburgh
3a 24 61J
New York
13 24 579 2'1•
St LOUIS
35 27 565 3
Chicago
30 31 492 711&gt;
Montreal
24 31 436 10 11&gt;
Ph!ladelph•a
24 35 407 12112
West
w L Pet GB
San franmco 40 24 625
Los Angeles
34 28 548 5
Houslon
31 31 500 8

CLEVELAND (UPI)- "The
deCISIOn of the commiSSIOner
has been made and there Is
nothing we can do about 11 "
That was the only sllltement
Issued by Gabe Paul, president
and treasurer of the Cleveland
lnd18ns, Monday mght after the
Cleveland club was notified that
a !me of $5,000 was levied upon
1t by Baseball CommiSSioner
Bowie Kuhn for s1gmng bonus
contracts with Ken Harrelson,
Sam McDowell, Grag1g Nettles
and Vada Pmson
"I have no feelings about the
!me," said McDowell, who
hurled h1s sixth straight victory
Sunday agamst the Milwaukee
Brewers "I have no statement
to make unhl I talk to my

lawyers''

McDowell, whose contract
was supposed to mclude a
bonus clause for every victory
over 20 games, would have
made up to $100,000 with a good
year
Harrelson, who has been
benched m favor of rookie
Chris Chambliss, denied he had
a bonus clause while NetUes,
whose contract allegedly had a
clause about reaching base
durmg the year, sa1d, "no

comment "
"I have no comment on the
s1tuatwn ," said Pmson, who
was a holdout early In spring
trammg "We'll just wait and
see what happens

"I figure this would happen
so 11 Is not so shockmg I'm
just gomg lo sleep on it tonight
and we 'll see what happens
tommrow ''

Los Angeles at Ne ... York

San D1ego at Montreal. nigh I
S F at Phlla noghl
P1tlsburgh al Houslon . night

Boston Ace

Tops In
Voting
NEW YORK (UPI)- Carl
Yastrzemski, although still
balling unde1 300, continues to
lead all American League
players 111 the balloting to
dctemllne the SWI ling All-Sial
team
The Boston Red Sox outfielder, three tunes a len gue
batting champiOn and in 1067
wlnneJ of the Tnpie Crown,
drew 156,279 of the 275,000
ballots cast thus far, accorqing
to the official figures announced by Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn,
The Ali.S(jlr game will be
plafed in Pe,trolt July 13
Three ,members ol the World
Champion Baltlm~~te Orioles
are among the leaders (or the
eight positions to ba determined
m the voting by the fans Boog
Poweti leads at first base with
105,788 votes, Brooks Robinson
leuds at third with 110,286 and
Frank Robinson, wi!)J 72,191
votes, has the instde track for
the third outfield berth,
There were no changes
among the leaders from the
first week of voting, which Is
being conducted among fans In
major and mmor league parks
and at 85,000 Gltlette votmg
stations
Rod Carew of the Mlnnesolll
Twins leads at second base
with 81,930 votes, Llus Aparicio
of Boston leads at shortstop
with 79,000, Bit! Freehan of the
Detroit leads the catc~ers with
64,518 votes and Tony Ollvu of
the Twins Is second behi nd
Yastrzemskl in the balloting for
outfield positions with 93,566
votes
Oddly, although the surprisIng Kansas City Jlqyals are
runmng second to Oakland in
the West Division pennant race ,
they were able to place only
one player among the top six at
any of the positions He Is
cookie Rojas, running fifth In
the second base balloting with
18,669 votes

By United f'rt$$ lnternolio~al
~eadlng Batters
National ~eague
G AB R. H Pet
Davis, LA
61 245 39 87 355
Torre St L 63 242 38 85 351
Bckrt Chi
60 240 36 84 350
Brock, 51 L 62 258 51 89 345
Garr. All
63 265 45 91 343
Staub, Mont 56 198 34 65 328
Alou, Hou
50 181 14 59 326
Snglln, PI
l7 219 24 7l 324
Mtln, All
51 229 26 74 323
Mays, SF
56 187 37 60 311
Amen can League
G AB R. H Pet
Oliva, Mlnn 53 208 40 78 375
Murcer NY 59 210 35 75 357
Katlne, Del 52 169 34 54 320
Tovar.Min 59 244 36 11 316
Rchrdt, Chi 46 172 16 54 3H
Buford, Bal 45 175 46 l4 309
Hwrd, Wash 55211 21 6S 3oa
FRbsn,B~I
45159 27 49 308
BRbsn, Bat 56 211 30 66 304
Ofls, i&lt;C
52 207 3l 63 304
Home Run•
,

Pt~"l\~n~. ~!lf.'l~r:,, ~ 'g~~~~:

Cln 16 , Bond•, SF 11, Cepeda,
All and William•. Chl14 "'
Amorlcon ~tague : Cash , Del
and Oliva, Mlnn 141 Horlon,
Del 13, Jackson, Oak 12 ,
Smlf)l, Bos and Oils, KC II
Runs Batted In
National League : Stargell ,
Pitt 57 , Aaron, A11 50 , Torre,

St L 45 , Santo, Chi 42 , Cepeda,
All 41
Amencan League : Killebrew,

Mlnn 48 , Petrocelli, Bos and
While, NY 43 , Horton Del and
Bando, Oak 38
Pifchmg
National League• Dierker,
Hou 10 2, Carlton, St L 10 3,
Jenkins, Chi 10 6, El lis, Plft 9
3, Seaver, NY a 3. Stoneman,
Mont and Marlcha l, SF 8 4
Ameril;an League : Blue, Oak

13 2, Cuellar, Ball 10 1, Pal
mer, Bait and Siebert, Bas 9 3J
McNally, Bait and Hunter , Oa~
9 4, Perry , Mlnn 9 s Loilch,
Det 9 6

ATHLETIC GROUP MEETS
GRANVILLE, OhiO (UPI)About 500 athletes, coaches and
officials of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes arc partlclpatmg ln a week-long natiOnal
conference that opened Sunday
night
The conference IS one of 18
scheduled nationally ror this
summer and expected to draw
10,000 young people

Kuhn Indicated thst Cleveland 's arrangement with the
four players was mvalld
because they were set forth In
side letters rather than in the
official contracts
The commissiOner also stated
that mstead of the bonuses the
players were to get, each
player would be entitled to
receive lrom the club at the
-------end of the season whatever
additiOnal salary Amencan
The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
League President Joe Cronm
INTEREST OF
REDS RECALL SIMPSON
fell each merited
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The CHESTE~ L TANNEHILL,
exec Ed
•
Cmcmnah Reds Monday reROBE AT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Edttor
called nghthanded pitcher
PubliShed
dally except
• 1
lt:l
Wayne Simpson from their Sa lurda)t! by The
Oh 10 Valley
Indianapolis farm club in the Publ iSh ing Company 111
St
Pomeroy , OhtO
The angels were trying to get American Association and op- Court
45769 B1,1s )ne$s Office Phone
2156, Ed1tor•iil Phone 992
rid of Johnson, despite the tioned pitcher Milt Wilcox to 992
2157
the
Indianapolis
team.
league balling title he won last
Second c la ss postage paid af
Pom eroy Oh10
year, before the trading deadNat.onal advert•s•ng
line is reached today He Is up BREWERS SEI,L HEGAN
r epresen tilfl\le
eott lnelll
MILWAUKEE (UPI) ~ The Gallagher, Inc, 12 East &lt;!2nd
for trade because of his lack of
St New York. Ctty, New York ,
hustle and mabtllty to get along Milwaukee Brewers announced
Sub sc npt•on ratea
01
Monday they have sold first ltvered by c arr ie r where
with Ins teammates
ava Jiable SO cents per week,
Asked if he reported the baseman MJ~e Hegan to the By Motor Route where carrier
threat at the lime, Johnson said Oakland Athleties lor an se-nnce not available One
month Sl 75 By mall In Ot}l('
he told a secu·Jty officer and undiilclosed sum and rookie Rob ar'ld w va One 'fe~r ''"' 00
Ellis, 20, acquired last week m S1x mon tb -s 57 ~5 Thret
left
monlh s !4 50 Supscropllon
The Anaheim police detail the pro baseball draft, to ~like pn ce II')C iudes Sl,lnday T1m1t1
stationed at the park said they Regan's place on the Brewe1 s' San l1net
rece~ved no sue~ report, an&lt;! roster.
Wal~h said there was no report
to the club He called both rnen
on the carpet after Johnson's
charg~s became known, and
they bot!)i-epeated the1r stands
"I have no reason to believe
either man was lymg," sail!
Walsh "But I would assume
there would be a Witness, and
no one saw it lt&lt;!Ppen I must
lake
account the bad bi!IOII
between U•ese qJeri '' He said
'U -~ 171
tl;e club would cuntmue to
1251; MAIN I
POMOOY, OHIO
mvesllgate

R uz·. . . Denies Johnson cha .,.'g'nS
1it1

ANAHEIM, Calif (UPI)- The
Cahforma Angels, already hopmg to find a new home lor
Amencan League balling
champiOn Alex Johnson before
the tradmg deadhne today, now
have to wonder whether he was
really threatened w1th a gun by
a teammate.
Johnson accused Ch1co Rwz
Monday of pulhng a gun on h1m
m the locker room, the latest
mcldent In Johnson's controverSial career of little more than a
year with the Angels
Rlllz vehemently demed the
accusahon, say1ng he has never
owned a gun.-not so much as
cap pilltol~nd wasn't even m
the locker room when he was
supposed to be threa temng
Johnson
"Your guess Is as good as
mine as to what happened,"
said D•ck Walsh, the Angels'
perplexed general manager
Johnson said Rulz pulled the
gun on him m the locker room
durmg the mnth Inning of

Sunday's game against the
Washington Senators Both had
been plhch hitters and were
through for the day.
"He brought a gun to the
clubhouse," Johnson said "He
had been lalklng all year that
he was gomg to bring a 38 to
the park and kill me You can
take 1! from me, he threatened
me wtth a gun He's crazy "
RuJZ responded "That's the
most nd!Culous story I've ever
heard I don't own a ~un. not
even a cap pistol I was m the
dugout unlll the last out was
made, not In the clubhouse."
Both Ru1z and Johnson came
to the Angels from the
Cmcmatt1 Reds, and there is a
hiStory of bad feelings between
them. Ru1z sa•d he and Johnson
had a fiSt light last year
because Johnson called h1m
names
"I've had words with him hke
everyone else," Rlllz sa)d, "But
I couldn't do a thmg bke that"

Jnaen a vacation is the question •••

mw

u the an..vwer

~

�'

1-fte l'lllllv III!IIIIMI, Middleoort-PclmeroY, 0 ., JuM It, ltn
11

IDITORIALS

..
,.

Sometimes I Wis~ They'd Riot Again!"
1.'KIV-'Jr

The Playing Field:
War Substitute?

a g•ant step for mankmd
In a little publicized senes held m the Sw1ss town of
Alstatten last month, members of West Germany's Bundestag, or parliament, played football (soccer) against
teams made up of colleagues from Austria and Switzerland.
, •• As !bey say on the sports pages, Switzerland and Germany tied 1 and 1, Austna edged Switzerland by a score
of 3 to 1, and Austna blanked West Germany 1 to 0.
The Bundestag sports committee Is trymg to get contests going among more European parliaments With the
a1m of promoting mternallonal understanding The
French, Italians and Dutch are sa1d to be Interested So
are the British
The latter have a saying that the Battle of Waterloo
was won on the playmg tields of Eton
It would be the greatest development m history if future
Waterloos were actually "fought" on the playing !Jeldslf Instead of young men bemg called to fight and die in
old men's wars, the old men themselves met and settled
their differences over a football
•

•

Have a Care, Libs
An offshoot of the women's lib movement, but not directly associated with 1t, Js a new magazme called, appropriately enough, New Woman Its stated aim is to
elevate the status of women m general
Male chauvinists may want to take a peek at the current, frrst issue. A pictorial p,resentatwn, "How to Undress in Front of Your Wife, ' starring a sort of harrycheated playmate of the month, has the temerity to poke
fun at those Interesting centerfolds m certain men's
m!lgazines
Write on, girls, but don't go too far American men
did not fight two World Wars for democracy and mom's
apple pie, only to have their pmups parodied.

•
•

'

-

••

..

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA) makes abundantly clear that m Brezhnev's eyes and m
•
those of his chief party colleagues the mvas1on of Czecho••·
Before the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia In slovakia
was m retrospect a ma]or success
; : August, 1968, there were long discussions within the
As these Soviet leaders view the invasiOn
,. • Kremlin and between Moscow and the East European
·-· capitals which were to cooperate In the action.
• It taught the world a lesson It warned the West and
Tile story, as learned from a contact close to high- dlssJdehts Within the Sov1et Umon and the Sov1et bloc
placed East European government officials, Is that in tha~ Moscow would not permit divisions and would supthese discussions the party secretary for the Ukraine press any attempts with strong mll!tary force
urgently argued for the Invasion, saying that If the Czechs
• It helped establish the "class duty" of all Comwere allowed to get away with democratization the munist countries to socialist mternallonabsm as defmed
"virus" would inevitably spread.
by Moscow, wh•ch means that as a matter of prmc1ple
-~ :
The wne argumenta were used by East Germany's the Soviet Union must be accepted as the !mal arbiter
Walter Ulbricht.
of what are correct Internal policies m any part of the
-:: ;
What they were ergulng, of course, was the dommo Soviet bloc.
"" ~ theory In reverse.
• It was a ma]or factor m leadmg the West toward
'' ·It was this argument, it is reported, which convinced acceptance of the status quo m Eastern Europe
;~. Soviet officials !bey must act.
Speakers at the congress emphasized that the trends
&lt;'
Opinion began to grow In the West after the Invasion m Czechoslovakia, and by Impllcallon similar trends m
, .• that the Soviet Ulilon had made a most serious mistake, any other Commumst country , would, If allowed to pro• that it later came to regret this blatant use of force in a ceed unchecked, be a threat to the entire "socialist
camp."
~· !n frlendly country.
~
1
Thus Brezhnev and other ma]or congress speakers
•
It was argued In high places In \he United States and
, 1
In Western European capitals that the Czech Invasion made clear the Czech mvas1on was a precedent and that
bad brought new dissension and new divisiveness to the this t)'pe of act1on has now become for them an accepted
prmc1ple of Soviet action
Communfst world
But an analysis by Kremlin wa\J:hers of the recent 24th
Congress of the Communist party of the Soviet Union
,

,

.,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
full Life Still Possible .
~ IU

-.

S

'
H
t
rre d ear

Permanent

ly to have a heart attack
than another man w1th the
Dear · Dr. Lllmb-1 would same weight, age and other
lite to know bow senous a medical factors
heart attack, called acute
The kind of life, a person
myocardial Infarction (tem- can
lead after a heart attack
porary) IS' {)(Jes It do dam- depends
h1s recovery. If
age to your heart• Can you the heart on
damage
was slight,
have another one' What leaving lots of good
ca111es an attack !Ike this heart muscle to pump strong
blood,
and can a person live a Jf none of the v1tal structures
normal Ufe after he has one1 within the heart are damDear Reader-A myocar- aged and, finally, If the disdial infarction is the serious ease In the arteries to the
type of heart attack most heart is not too far adcommon m men and older vanced, the person can often
women. It is caused by fatty do astonishing things. Lyndeposits in the arteries to don Johnson is an excellent
the hoart An area of the example - having recovered
heart muscle (called the from a heart attack when he
myocardium) Is damaged be- was a senator and then gocause the blood supply to it lng on to the vice-presidency
Is blocked off. The damaged and the difficult years as
muscle •s replaced by a scar president. Incidentally he
•n tbe muscular wall of the stopped. smoking cigarettes
heart. II IS not temporary tooL whicb II a must In proJust think of it like an area moung a good recovery and
of tbe muscle on the arm mlnlmlllng the chances of
that Is dsmaged and heals a recurrence. Of course, it
leaving a scar.
Ia better to atop before the
Smce the common cause of flnt attack. There are many
myocardial illfarctlons is other people who Jlave lead
disease of the artenes, the active, vlgoroua Uvea long
cause of the heart attack re. after having an attack. It Is
mains even after the patient by no means the 8Jtd ot the
"recovers" and goes home road.
The llfe patterns there11fter
There Is no way to tell for
should be directed toward certain how much a penon
preventing more changes in can do until he Is well alCIDI
the arterlas. This Is where the road to recovery Jb:
diet, atop pi_ n g clsaretle 'ercue IDleruce IJid ·
amol&lt;tna, nllht control and wtu lit Min belli Clll't
proper jlllyalcal ac:ilvlty ,be- J.._. uatJ1 eevwat m••b
eome bilporlallt. I have re- iftW tile ID!Im 1tr1tQ
peatedly em~lirAid the lm·
•
portance of tbese l!liblt patlema In my column.
have another
By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.

"•

' ,
•'

.• '
,

..
'' ;

Jloti

'*

jf

not

I

I

I

Great jazz trumpeter Charlie Shavers IS
recovenng from throat surgery
Olivia de
Havllland assures us Britam's PrUDe Minister
Edward Heath's "an adorable man" and a fancy
dancer .... The Rolls-Royce fiscal scandals don't
really affect the famed RR motorcar Itself,
which small portion of RR busmess makes
money; the tale of the limousine will be filmed
by Anna Neagle and her husband Herbert
Wilcox, a $5 million production.
The Met's beautiful Anna Moffo shifts gears
from opera to TV to films -and wlll make half a
dozen thiS year, currently she's shooting one m
Budapest about The Prmcess of O!ardss ,
"The Third Rose" IS a !ibn to be shot In France

Soviet 'Lesson' to Czechs et al

1

I

Love Machme' "

RAY CROMUY
Behind the Kremlin facade

WIN AT BRIDGE

r

! Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK O'BRIAN
LAUGH·IN STAR'S
WED-IN BOMBS OUT
NEW YORK - Judy Carne of passmg
Laugh-In fame ill up the headlines on her wlldly
publicized Central Park-at-dawn marriage to
Bob Bergman: They just got therr divorce in a
whisper .. Judy's new romance Gary Osborne,
IS some 15 years her junior ... Singer John Gary
and wife are discording agam .... Ditto Yves
Montand and Simone Signore! . , Gen.
EJsenhower's wartime staff-dlief Col JUD
Stack's okay after senous surgery .. His Shrrley
MacLalne period ended, NBO's Sander Vanocur
dated his estranged wife again at "21".. During
therr "Huntmg Party" fUming, Candy Bergen's
dog b1t co-star Oliver Reed (fiercely). jealous
Utile cur
Arlene De Marco of the famed De Marco
Sisters of rad1~TV fame and wife of Keefe
Brasselle (tho Arlene can't find bUD for alleged
$100,000 back-child support for therr two bttle
gu-ls) tells us she has been on welfare m New
Jersey for three years: she'll try to recoup with a
book she's fmishmg titled "TrJangle," and says
"It's my answer to 'The Cannibals' and 'The

It was a small step lor sportsmen, but it may have been

'L

r------------------- -----------------------I

GLOBAl. VIEW

Brandt Will Stand
Firm on NATO

about Gertrude Stem and Alice B. Tokias. a glrlgels1!rri tragedy.
t&gt;rab Utile boxofflce headlines will center Oil
the Innocent-VIctim Pixie Judy Troupe (ldddles'
lovely stage romps) and a bilker ... David Bilek
thinks he has Claudette Colbert ready for a fall
Bdwy play ... Joe Namath's buying a Palm
Springs home; Manhattan's action l.vl't enough
any more , . Melina Mereouri simply adores
droppmg mto westchester's Charles V spot to
smg French songs - so long as the FrenCh plano
player turns on hiS dimpled charms .... The
Nlllon, Pa., beauty eontesl wmner who dropped
m on Pres Nixon at the Wbite House, rather
more quietly at the Bahamas Kings Inn eonfessedshe's not so sure she'll vote for him In '72;
well, she's th~ prettiest Ingrate 1
Max WOk's "Wit &amp;Wisdom of H'wood" tome
credits Sam Goodwyn wtth lntonmg to an underling, "How do you love the movie?" . ~c­
tually 1t was Spyros Skouras who COI'Dl ed
publicist Harry Sobol a dozen years ago with that
aggressive gem; we decided to keep 1! secret lest
Harry got lrred and prmted 1t only when Spyros
descended from cmema heaven - Sam gets
credit for more apocryphal japes than the late
Dorothy Parker . First there was "The Fifth
DimensiOn" group (marvelous) so now there 1s
"The Fourth Altitude" rockers at Stratford's
Public House.
Alan King and Helen Hayes are a total
contrast m personalities - but partners in a
Mex~can busmess venture . , Marion Brando
fmJShed his title chores m "The Godfather"
Without one temperamental fit, must have a
percentage .. , All reviews for the original book
and film versiOn of "Tell Me That You Love Me
Junle Moon" 1111ssed the very basic point of both :
Marjorie Kellogg of Columbia Presbyterian
Hospital wrote it to dramatiZe houaing problems
of the handicapped, Dr. Audrey Randolph of the
Mayor's Qmunittee on the Handicapped told us

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

!Helen Help Us !I
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people, their problems and
NEW YORK (NEAl
pleasures, therr troubles and fun . As with the rest of Helen Help
Old Walter Ulbricht IS no longer the Commumst chief
Us•,Itwelcomes laughs but won't dodge a ser10us question with a
of East Germany but his tough pohcy on West Berlm IS
brush-off.
not likely to change soon
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
Ulbricht, m fact, never had a policy of his own He was
of Helen Help Us I this newspaper
at all times Moscow's mouthpiece His younger successor
TIIREE IN A BEDROOM
Ench Honecker, 56, IS also a Soviet puppet and there IS
little doubt that his promotiOn was approved by the
Dear Helen.
Kremlm m advance
I knew my guy was a motorcycle nut, but I didn't think I'd
Honecker wants to tighten the Commumst stranglehold
have to share our bedroom With this third member of our
on West Berlin He 1s opposed to a rapprochement w1th
mamage - I mean the two-wheeled monster
West Germany for lear that East Germans might be enWe have a studio apartment, no garage If you leave a good
couraged to beheve that some liberalization IS m the
'cycle on the street, it gets stolen, no matter how It's chained. So
offmg
how do you decorate around a thing Uke that~ How dO' YOU avoid
This spells more trouble for the Eastern policy ("Ostfalling over it' I swear to Buddha, it reaches out and grabs me,
politik") of West German Chancellor Willy Brandt
espec18lly when I get up at mght.
A strong advocate of East-West detente, Brandt has
made a greater effort than any other European statesman
After !allmg on my face for the third time, I' told my husband
m recent years to reach an understandmg With the
either his bike goes or I go. It was our firSt big fight, and I didn't
Russians
really mean 11, but don't I have a r.ght to complain' - 'QfREE'S
He offered them substant13l concessiOns when he signed
ACROWD
.'{
the Soviet-German "no na~gresswn" treaty last August
Dear T AC
He accepted the disputed Oder-Ne1sse !me as Communist
Complain about the size of the apartment, but not the
Poland's permanent boundary and acknowledged the exIstence of East Germany as an mdependent state
motorcycle, which came w1th the package, remember?
If you can't find a bigger place wtth a locked shed or
The Russians promised, however vaguely, to improve
basement storage, then maybe a neighbor wlll rent out part of hiS
of west Berlm
IS theInstatus
Bonn's VIeW. thiS would mean a guarantee of free
garage for the monster.
access to the divided and Isolated city and the recogMeanwhile, use it for an extra chair and be glad No. 3 m thiS
spade as West ruffs the last mhon of Its legal ties to West Germany
mamage
IS a two-wheeled zmger, rather than a tw~legged
diamond
However, Moscow contmues to ms1st on makmg Berlin
swmger - H
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN) a "special entity" and on CU\tJRg all J(S poiitJcal and
Dear Helen
cultural lies With West Germany
I'm 17 and he's 20. We hsvea three months old baby and we're
The Russians now demand rahficahon of the Sovietverymuchm love. The only problem 18 : My mother won't sign for
The boddmg has been
German nonaggressiOn treaty by Bonn's Bundestag me to get marned.
,
- Wesl
North East South where It faces stiff opposition - prwr to any agreement
1•
Dhte !NT on Berlm
He has a good job. lknowwe could make it, but Mom says I'm
Poss
Pass
Dble Redble By postpomng any settlement of the thorny Issue they
too lllU1181ure and she wants the baby and me to stay at home.
Pass
Pass
2 + Pass obviOusly hope to pressure Chancellor Brandt mto makmg
Actually, she hates Blll's mother who Is real mce, but of a dif.
Pass
2¥
3+
• more concessiOns and, above all, lure West Germany ferent
rehgwn, and she figures if she can keep us pretty much
You, South, hold
away from the North Atlantic Treaty Orgamzabon
apartfor Sill more months, I'll "get over him" and marry the boy
•K7H ¥54 +K93 •QJ62 Bonn's army, as the Kremlm leaders know well , IS
she has picked out for me.
'
What do you do now•
perhaps a more formidable conventiOnal force than any
A-Pass. II you don't think other European army committed to NATO
If we ran away and got married In another state (that allows
Eos! knows what he 11 doing- The Russians envisage a detente merely as a means
II) could she keep us frornhaVJDg our baby? We wanted to marry
double
to establish their hegemony over Europe by first weakwhen I was 16, and we've been wantmg to ever smce
TODAY'S QUESTION
enmg the Western defense alliance
IMOGENE FROM SOUTHERN CAIJFORNIA
Instead of passong over your This IS a pnce Brandt will not pay He seeks detente
Dear Imogene·
no-trump, West has ~~d two but not Soviet dommahon He has repeatedly stressed
Why not consult the marriage counselor at your County Court
spades Your partner has gone Bonn's fum mtent10n to remam Withm the NATO strucHouse? (The service is free ) Perhaps he can persuqde your
to three hearts and East has ture
mother that her grandchild shouldn't walt six months to have a
l~:ped to fo~r spades What do, Brandt's policy was spelled out clearly by Bonn's pro
legal father. - H.
Y
do now
Western Defense Mm1ster Helmut Schmidt m a recent
lecture at Prmceton Umvers1ty Schmidt said the balance
Dear Helen
of forces between West and East must be mamtamed for
Yesterday my grrl friend and I went shoppmg. We had money,
We looked for peace but safeguardmg the West's secuntv and this cannot be "ac
so I don't know why we did 11, but we started lifting things It got
no good peace came,
a comphshed Without NATO" Nor can a balance be
eaSier and easier to take the stuff, except as we walked out of one
time of healing, but beloolrl. achieved without the Umted States, he added
shop, we were caught
terror -Jeremiah 8 15
"We Europeans should not 1magme that we can counterWe finally admitted the truth and, because we were mmors,
our parents had to come and sign for us We had to go back to each
store and return the things Lucidly no one pressed charges but,
&lt;ll
Helen, I never felt so terrible In my life
;====='i'h To make It even worse, my folks are bemg great about 11,
though it made them both sick. Probably my friend's parents
CAN REPAIR
ARs, POPGIRDLE
won't let me see her again,
E ~EAI&lt;S AND
~AS TilE BEST"
THE GUTiER--But still, I'm glad we got caught, because maybe we nught
ROOFEQIN
IT'L.L. COST
have done 1tagam if we had gotten away with stealing
$18Z~
TOWN GIVE
I'll never get over how crummy I fell and still feel every time
~ER AN
I go mto a store and think people are watching me because they
ESTIMATE"·
know I'm a thief.
Maybe if you print this, 11 might persuade a few other kids not
to try something stupid just for kicks.- E.
Dear E:
I hope so! -H.
By LEON DENNEN

8I'dd'lng Four- Card Ma1'o
NORTH
• 87

IS

0 32

WEST

:~: 4
• Q 874

EAS'r

• KQJ
• Q 9 53
t 865
"'9 52

• A 1092
• 76
t 974
• K 10 6 s

SOUTH (D)
• 6543
• AKJ2

+KQJ
• AJ
Both vulnerable

West North
PIW

2•

P...

Pass

East South
1•
Pass 4 •
Po"'

Operung lead-• K
.

~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In JACOBY MODERN we
do open four-card m a j or
suits when we have no sensible mmor-suit call or when
our hand is unsuitable for
no-trump With most of these
hands we stop at two 1! partner raises us to that level
With today's hand we probobly would jump right to
four after the single raise
We have 19 high-card pomts
-too many for a one notrumr. opening
It 1 well that we steered
clear of no-trump The best
a no-tn~~RP d~larer can do
Iii to br_lai In el.lht tricks
A fGuNieirt declarer will
If be makes aure
l•at 011t apade

io1

balance the Soviet military power without American
support "
This explams Bonn's nervous reaction to th&amp; prQpO!ali
lor an abrupt reduction ol American troopa In liluropel
Bonn backs President Nixon's view that any unl/altri
reduction in the U S fighting strenlth will leopard •• thl
Western alliance "and the security of 1 I plrtlllf'l In
NATO."

Popaldcm Growb11
WASHINGTON - By
1980, there &amp;I'll c~pccle~ tu

3- Tbt Daily Sentinei,MicldleDort-l'mlefOv. o__ JuM ~~. It'll

Simpson ·Returns; Wilcox Demoted
•
ST LOU'IS (UPI)-Fastballer
Wayne Simpson, who has spent
the last month on a farm team
rejomed the Clncmnati Recb
here today as they wrapped up
a threei!ame series with the
St. Louis Cardmals.
Simpson, 23, was 1-1 when
the Reds sent him to the Ind1,
anapoiis club May 14 He has
compiled a 2-1l record there
Milt Wilcox will take his

place Wilcox, 21, bas compiled
a 2-1 record this &amp;lason
Simpson, a rookl~ sensation
last year, was sent down to
the llllnors when he continued
to experience ann trouble
which started m spnng trainlng
and was plagued w1th wildness
The Reds were scheduled to
go with JIID Memtt (().7) ton.ght against the Cards' Reggie
Cleveland I 5-5 l

I

of the season and slammed Into seevno.
The Reds also scored m the
the lower right field deck In
Sixth,
which opened with a high
the first mmng to score two
houncmg single' to second hy
runs.
His double m the mnth drove Rose
Helms followed w1th a fly to
home Pete Rose, who had
walked with two out, and Tom- nght, but Jose Cardenal dropmy Helms, who reached frrst ped the ball and mana~ed only
to get Helms out ~t first. May
on an error
Pat Corrales had started the added a sharp single to \hlrd
mnth w1th a leadoff Single to and advanced w1th Rose on a
nght and scored on an error at Wild pitch by Jerry Reuss, who

B1g Lee May supplied the
power Mondsy night as the
Reds swtpt over Sl Lollis 7-2,
g1vmg rookie ROllS Grimsley
his fourth w1n in f1ve dectSions.
Reliever Clay carroll, who
took over the last one and a
third inmng, got his seventh
save of the season
May drove 1n lour runs with
a homer and a double to lead
ule wm. It was hiS 13th homer

evened his record at 6-6 will\
the loss
Reuss then loa&lt;led the bases
by mteniJonaily walking Tony
Perez and Hal McRae followed
with a two-run double to left
field
The Cardmals scored 10 the
fourth and eighth 10 absorbing
theu seventh straight loss and·
lith m 14 games

.

Giants Lose lOth Tilt In 13 Outings
My MARTIN LAUER
UPI Sports Writer
The San FranciSCo Giants,
"'ho at one time looked like
they'd wrap up the National
Lea~ue West DIVISIOn by
Memorial Day, now may find
themselves knocked out of first
place by Independence Day,
'!'he Giants lost for the lOth
time m their last 13 outings
Monday mght, lllkmg a 9-4
pasting from the Philadelphia
Phillies, while the runnerup Los
Angeles Dodgers mpped the
New York Mets, 3-2, for the1r
fourth consecutive triUmph and
their 13th success m 17 games
As a result, San Francisco's
once majestic lead, which
soared at one stage to 11
games, has been reduced to a
shaky five and the Giants are
scheduled to meet the Dodgers
fiVe times early next month
pnor to the All-star game
The Pittsburgh Pirates, who
hold a 21'. game edge over New
York ID the East DIVISIOn,
failed to take advantage of the
Mets' loss, droppmg a f&gt;-4
decision to the Houston Astros
Elsewhere, the Cmcinnab Reds
routed the St Louis Cardinals,
7-2, the San Diego Padres

mpped the Montreal Expos, 2-1,
and the Chicago Cubs tripped
the Atlanta Braves, 3-2
In the American League,
Kansas City beat the New York
Yankees, 4-1, Detroit squeezed
by the Chicago White Sox, 4-3,
m 10 mmngs, Mmnesota beat
Cleveland, 3-1, and Boston
mpped Califorma 4-3 In 15
mmngs Milwaukee at Baltimore was postponed by ram
RICk WJSe pitched a six-hitter
and hit a three-run homer
dunng a s1x-run second mmng
rally as the Phils enJoyed a
Iaugher agamst the Giants
W1lhe Montanez, Tim McCarver
and Oscar Gamble also homered for Philadelphia Wise,
who struck out mne batters,
stretched his record to 7-4
Bobby Valentine hit a two-run
double 1n the fourth mnmg to
give the Dodgers their wmmng
run against the Mets Valentine's hit was only the third one
off loser Tom Seaver, and II
was the last safety Los Angeles
cotiected 1n the game Willie
DaviS' !Jrst-mnlng homer accounted (or the other Dodger
run
J1m Brewer retired all seven
batters he faced 1n rehef to

and two out m the bottom of
the nmth Fred Gladding (3-1)
gamed the victory lor Houston
Lee May drove in four runs,
two w1th a !Irst-mmng homer
and two more with a mnthmmng double, to lead the
Clncmnati attack against St
LoUis It was the seventh
consecutive loss for the Cardin-

provide Don Sutton w1th his
filth triumph agamst s1x losses
Pittsburgh, after rallymg for
two runs m the top of the ninth
on Dave Cash's two-run single,
to tie the score, had Its fourgame wmning streak ended
when rehever Dave Giusti
walked Joe Morgan on four
pitchers w1th the bases loaded

als and their lith m 14 games
Clarence Gaston doubled
home two runs with two out m
the mnth Inning to provide the
Padres wJ!h alt their runs in
the victory over Montreal Clay
Kirby, who worked the first
eight mnings hefOJ e bemg
removed for a pmch hitter,
altowed three hits and struck

Those Nobodies Keep Winning
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Wriler
Ah, the Kansas City Royals,
those "faceless wonders" of the
AmeriCan League West just
keep on wmnlng But at least m
therr latest victory, they've.
~liken on a familiar look
Bob Oliver and Lou Plnlella,
last year's Kansas City hitting
stars, returned to the lineup
Monday mght and led the
Royals to a 4-1 triumph over
the New York Yankees for their
sixth straight victory and 12 m
the last 13 games.
Oliver, benched six days for
weak h1ttmg by manager Bob
Lemon, cracked a two-run

3-2, Philadelphia belted San
Francisco 9-4 and Sail Diego
tripped Montreal2-1
Yankees' starter Mike Kek!Ch
had the Royals stopped on a
three-hit shutout gomg Into the
sixth
mmng when he was
In other AmeriCan League
games Monday Detroit edged kayoed by consecutive smgles
ChiCago 4-3 Mmnesota topped from Paul Schaal, Amos Otis
Cleveland 3:1, Boston outlasted and Chuck Hamson Plmella
Cahforma 4-3 m 15 mnmgs and then greeted reliever Gary
Milwaukee and Baltimore were Waslewsk1 with a bunt smgle to
ramed out Oakland and Wash- load the bases and Otis scored
while the oUJer runners moved
mgton were not scheduled
In the National League, Los up as Waslewskl uncorked a
Angeles nipped New York 3-2, Wild pitch while facing Oliver
Houston dropped Pittsburgh f&gt;-4 Oliver then followed up with a
Clncmnatl ripped St Louis 7-2: sharp smgle up the middle to
ChiCago squeezed past Atlanw score Hamson and Plnlella
"I won 't know how to conduct
myself when we lose," Lemon
said of the streak, "but I've
Nv
ooo 010 ooo- 1 6 0 had enough experience m the
Kc
ooo 004 oox- 4 8 0 past and It'll all come back to
Keklch Waslewskl 161 Me
Dame! I 7) and Munson Hed me ''
lund (6 31 and May LPOliver, who drove in 99 runs
Kek~eh 11 21
for the Royals last year
Mlnn
300 000 ooo- 3 7 1 compared to only 15 so far this
Clev
000 000 001- 1 6 0 season, was grateful for the
Perry (9 Sl and Ratliff chance to participate again
Foster, Mlngorl (9) and Fosse
"It felt good to do someJIJing
LP- Foster 15 J) HR- OIIva
right for a change," the Royal
I l41h l
first baseman said, "It's been a
t 15 ennmgs)
long lime since I contributed
Bos
120 000 000 000 001- 4 14 3 something "
11
You can never give up on a
Cal
003 000 000 000 OOQ-3 6 J guy who got you 99 RBI 's,"
Culp, Lee (Ill Lyle IW and
Josephson Messersm llh Allen Lemonsa1d of Oliver " II we're
(11) Laroche (12). Fisher (13) gomg to do It this year, we're
and Moses WP- Lyle I 3 01 LP gmng to have to gel help from
- Fisher (4 Jl HR- Lahoud (21
both Ohver and Pmiella "
(10 mnmgs)
Mike Hedlund went the
Ch~eago 300 ooo 000 o- 3 9 o distance for the Royals to pick
Detroit 100 001 000 1- 4 11 0
Bradley, Forster (6), Johnson up hiS sixth victory in mne
(61 Romo (8) Eddy (10). dCCISJOnS
Kealey t 101 and Egan Cole
Tony OUva upped his 1971
man Zepp (7). Scherman (8)
average
to 375 with two hits,
and Freehan WP- Scherman
(5 0) LP- Romo II 4) HR- lncludmg a three-run homer
Mellon (9th)
Single m a lour-run sixth mmng
wh!le Plmella, just off the
disabled list after a broken
thumb, collected two hits m four
trips to the plate

By United Pross lnternat1onal
Natoonat League
All
001 010 ooo- 1 9 0
Ch1
000 000 03x- 3 5 I
Nlekro (4 1) and Didier,
Regan , Tompkins (9) and
Cannizzaro WP Regan (2 2)
HR Pepitone 19th)

·LA
10020000Q-3 3 0
NY
000000200-2 1 l
The Middleport 1\raves Braves with two singles, Mike
Sutlon, Brewer (7) and Sims
Seaver,
Taflor (8) and Grote
, , "MQ!l.dttY ~y.~pmg poll,l'll&lt;lllf;ross,, ~!l~eoder, Tim Eber~bach,
WP
Sutton
LP'Seaver (8
four runs In the thirdlnnmg to Rick Hovatter, Mlck Daven- 3) HR- HR-56)
W Davis (2nd)
break a ~ tie and went on to port, and Bachner each chipped
hand the Indians their first loss in a Single,
so
000 000 002- 2 9 1
010 000 ooo- 1 3 o
of the season, 7 to 4
For the losers, Jeff Beaver Mont
Kirby, Miller (9) and Barton ,
Both teams had been tied for and Gleason each had a triple, Morton
(S 9) and Bateman LP
first with two wins and no and Mike !Iindy and Mark - Kirby (5 51
losses. The wm gave Charley Venoy had smgles
Amencan League
Smith's Braves undiSputed flrst In the other game of the Mllw at Baltimore (ppd, rain)
place m the loop, and the In- evenmg, the Mets came up with
dlans dropped to second
tliree runs m their last at bat to
The Braves pitcher, Steve overcome a 3, to I Mark V Reds
Bachner, went the distance to lead. The wm allowed the Mets
fan hve and pass none, to escape the league cellar but
exhibiting fine control The loss the winless Reds were not so
went to Joe Gleason, a young lucky as therr record dropped to
flreballer who struck out 10 but lh1
walked eight
Starter Jeff Mlller went all
Timmy Thomas led the the way to gain the victory for
the Meta He struck out seven
'
and walked two Ronnie easel
In Pomeroy Little League
was charged with the loss as he
action
Monday evening the
fanned six and passed three.
Ron Cunningham bad the big T1gers rolled over the Pirates 9
stick for the Mets as he to 5 and the Yankees edged the
smacked a ~ouble and a single. Dodgers 5 to 3
In the Tiger-Pirate tdt, the
Bobby Powers doubled and
Greg Becker and Joey Watkins Tigers broke up a close contest
with five runs in the fourth
smgled
John Magnotta led the Reds mnmg
with two singles, Kevin Ed- Dale Browmng picked up the
wards had ..,a double, Mark win as he went the diStance
Haggerty and Cascl each a striking out eight and a passing
only two Eddie Stsson was the
single.
Braves
004 300-7 7 3 loser. He fanned seven and
Indians
002 020---4 4 2 walked 12
Browmng also led the Tigers
Bachner and Ebersbach
at the plate wlth a triple He was
Gleason and Lynch
Reds
030 000--3 5 2 followed by Randy Marshall
Mets
001 03x-4 5 2 with a double, Tim Sc1tes a
Mlller and Becker Case! and single, Danny Moms a double,
and Bruce Carmen, a smgle.
Edwards
For the losers, Bobby Snyder
had a double and single, poug
Browning a double, and Duane
'
Qualls, Sisson and Couch each a
single
In the other game the
Yankees knocked three Dodger
pitchers for five runs as they
slipped by the Dodgers 5 to 3
Brentley Sfth was the big
man at tile plate for the
WIT~
Yankees He had two doubles
Todd Rawhngs had two smgles
Clellsnd and Glaze each had one
hit
For the Dodgers, Hood had
two hits, PhillJps a single,
Brownmg
a triple, Snyder a
"Subrogation?"
double, and Hawley a single.
Th1s Is an insurance ferm
Rick Taylor went all the way
wh1ch means that your
on the mound for the Yankees,
Insurance company pays
your insurance loss to you,
strikmg out three and passing
but the~ assumes the nght
10. Randy Phillips was the
to collect the loss from the
losmg pitcher. Dodger hurlers
responsible party
Subfogatlcln can mNn full
combmed to KO three and walk
payment ol 1n auto
seven
collision lou, even tho you
Pirates
Oil 120 6-6 6 2
havei!O or 1100 deductible
Tigers
IMK 50X - 9 6 3
p
Slsaon and Milch Brownmg
aDd McClure
c.n
200 1m 003 - 1 9 o
• Sl
000 100 OJQ- 2 10 1
Gtimsley, Carroll (8) and
Corralfi, Reuss, Parker (7).
Taylor 181 and Sommoos WPGrtmslo~ (4 0 LP- Reuss (6
•1 HR- May 113fh)

that carried Mmnesota ove1
Cleveland Jim Perry yielded
SIX hits and struck out 11 to
notch his mnth wm of the
season for the Twins
DetrOit got an unmedJate
dividend from veteran Tony
Taylor, acqmred II om the
Philadelphia Phlihcs over the
weekend Taylor sliced a double
to right which scored AI Kaline
from second base with two out
in the lOth, g1vmg the 'IIgei s
their sixth victory m seven
games Bill Melton hit his mnth
homer of the season for the
While Sox In a losmg cause.
A smgle by rookie Doug
Griffin drove In Luis Aparicio
with the wlnmng run m the 15th
Inning to give the Red Sox their
narrow triumph over Califorma
With one out, Rico Petrocelli
smgled and advanced to second
with a wild pitch before being
replaced by Aparicio as a
pinchrunner Griffin then
stroked his single to left off
rellever Eddie Fisher who
suffered the loss Sparky Lyle,
the third Boston hurler, picked
up his third win of tp~11 ~e~son
without a defeat,
.
International League ~landings
By United Press tnternahonal
W L Pet GB
Syracuse
35 18 660 Charleston
30 23 566 l
Tldewaler
33 26 559 l
Rochester
28 25 528 7
Louisville
27 30 474 10
Richmond
27 31 466 tOI/!1
Winnipeg
21 33 389 141/!1
Toledo
21 36 368 16
Monday's Results
Winnipeg 13 Tidewater 5
Toledo 13 Syracuse 6
Rochester 5 Richmond 3
Charleston at Louisville (ppd ,
rain)

Tigers,
Yankees
In Wins Indians Rapped for-$5,000

Sp,-uee
11p

YOUR HOME INSIDE
ANEW
ARMSTRONG
CEILING

Amencan League

East

W L Pct. GB

36 20 643
34 211 561 4
3J 26 559 4'1•
38 30 483 9
New York
21 33 450 II
Wash ington 21 3.\ J.\8 1s•;,
West
W L Pel GB
Oakland
39 21 650
Kansas City 32 23 l82 &lt;'h
M1nnesola
29 32 475 10'"
C-aliforn ia
28 34 452 12
21 34 382 15'1&gt;
Atlanta
29 J6 446 1H2 Chicago
1
Milwaukee
21 34 382 lS'I2
Cmcmnat1
26 35 426 12 'l
Monday's Results
San D1ego
21 40 355 17
Kansas C!ly 4 New York I
Monday s Res,ul1s
Detro•! 4 ChiCago 3 (10 Inns)
Chicago 3 Atlanta 1
Mmnesota
3 Cleveland 1
L A 3 N Y 2 n1ght
Milwaukee
at Ball (ppd ra&gt;nl
Houston 5 P1tl 4 nlgm
Boston 4 California 3 {15 Inns)
Cmc 7 Sl Lou&gt;s 2 night
Today's Probable Pitchers
Ph• la 9 S F 4 mghl
Washington
(Janeskl I 4) at
San Diego 2 Montreal I, night
Oakland
(Dobson
4 OJ n&gt;ght
Today 's Probable Pitchers
Allanta !Stone 0 31at Chicago New York ( Kllne 4 51 at
Kansas Ci ty (Wnght 22) n1ght
1Hands 6 81
Boslon (Peters 6 5) al Cal •
San D1ego ( Norman 0 0) at
Montrea l ( Bn lon 0 1 or Stroh torn1a (Mur phy J 81 mghl
Chicago t Horlen 0 3) at
may er 0 1) n1ght
Los Angeles ( Downln9 6 3) al Detro• I I Kilkenny I 21 n1ghl
M1nnesola I Blyleven 6 8) at
New York I Ryan 6 Jl. mghl
Sa n F ra nc1sc o (Bryan t 53) at Cleveland 1Lamb 4 2) n1ght
M i lwaukee [Krausse 2 8) at
Phllaclelphla l Le, sch 4 51
Bi!l llmore (Palmer 9 31 night
mghl
Wednesday's Games
C1nconna h (Merritt 0 1) at 51
Washongton al Oak la11d, noght
LouiS I Cleveland 55 ) night
p,tfsburgh (B lass 6-3) at Basion at California , night
New York at Kan City, nlghl
Houslon I D1erker 10 21 nlghl
Ch1cago at Detro1f night
Minnesota at Cleveland, night
Wednesday ' s Games
Milwaukee at Baltomore, night
Atlanta at Ch1 cago

Balhmore
Defro•l
Boston
Cleveland

1

Cmcmnat1 at Sl Louis

Linescores

Braves Leading
In Middleport

out mne batters to even his
record at 5-5 Carl Mo1ton t:&gt;-9)
was the hard luck loser
Joe Pepitone h1t a three''"'
homer with two out m the
eighth mmng to hit the Cubs
'over AUanta Phil Regan.
starling for the first hme m
almost four years, w01 ked eight
mmngs for the Cubs to even' his
record at 2-2

By United Pre .. lnfernahonal
Nahone~.~eavue
W L, Pd GB
Pittsburgh
3a 24 61J
New York
13 24 579 2'1•
St LOUIS
35 27 565 3
Chicago
30 31 492 711&gt;
Montreal
24 31 436 10 11&gt;
Ph!ladelph•a
24 35 407 12112
West
w L Pet GB
San franmco 40 24 625
Los Angeles
34 28 548 5
Houslon
31 31 500 8

CLEVELAND (UPI)- "The
deCISIOn of the commiSSIOner
has been made and there Is
nothing we can do about 11 "
That was the only sllltement
Issued by Gabe Paul, president
and treasurer of the Cleveland
lnd18ns, Monday mght after the
Cleveland club was notified that
a !me of $5,000 was levied upon
1t by Baseball CommiSSioner
Bowie Kuhn for s1gmng bonus
contracts with Ken Harrelson,
Sam McDowell, Grag1g Nettles
and Vada Pmson
"I have no feelings about the
!me," said McDowell, who
hurled h1s sixth straight victory
Sunday agamst the Milwaukee
Brewers "I have no statement
to make unhl I talk to my

lawyers''

McDowell, whose contract
was supposed to mclude a
bonus clause for every victory
over 20 games, would have
made up to $100,000 with a good
year
Harrelson, who has been
benched m favor of rookie
Chris Chambliss, denied he had
a bonus clause while NetUes,
whose contract allegedly had a
clause about reaching base
durmg the year, sa1d, "no

comment "
"I have no comment on the
s1tuatwn ," said Pmson, who
was a holdout early In spring
trammg "We'll just wait and
see what happens

"I figure this would happen
so 11 Is not so shockmg I'm
just gomg lo sleep on it tonight
and we 'll see what happens
tommrow ''

Los Angeles at Ne ... York

San D1ego at Montreal. nigh I
S F at Phlla noghl
P1tlsburgh al Houslon . night

Boston Ace

Tops In
Voting
NEW YORK (UPI)- Carl
Yastrzemski, although still
balling unde1 300, continues to
lead all American League
players 111 the balloting to
dctemllne the SWI ling All-Sial
team
The Boston Red Sox outfielder, three tunes a len gue
batting champiOn and in 1067
wlnneJ of the Tnpie Crown,
drew 156,279 of the 275,000
ballots cast thus far, accorqing
to the official figures announced by Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn,
The Ali.S(jlr game will be
plafed in Pe,trolt July 13
Three ,members ol the World
Champion Baltlm~~te Orioles
are among the leaders (or the
eight positions to ba determined
m the voting by the fans Boog
Poweti leads at first base with
105,788 votes, Brooks Robinson
leuds at third with 110,286 and
Frank Robinson, wi!)J 72,191
votes, has the instde track for
the third outfield berth,
There were no changes
among the leaders from the
first week of voting, which Is
being conducted among fans In
major and mmor league parks
and at 85,000 Gltlette votmg
stations
Rod Carew of the Mlnnesolll
Twins leads at second base
with 81,930 votes, Llus Aparicio
of Boston leads at shortstop
with 79,000, Bit! Freehan of the
Detroit leads the catc~ers with
64,518 votes and Tony Ollvu of
the Twins Is second behi nd
Yastrzemskl in the balloting for
outfield positions with 93,566
votes
Oddly, although the surprisIng Kansas City Jlqyals are
runmng second to Oakland in
the West Division pennant race ,
they were able to place only
one player among the top six at
any of the positions He Is
cookie Rojas, running fifth In
the second base balloting with
18,669 votes

By United f'rt$$ lnternolio~al
~eadlng Batters
National ~eague
G AB R. H Pet
Davis, LA
61 245 39 87 355
Torre St L 63 242 38 85 351
Bckrt Chi
60 240 36 84 350
Brock, 51 L 62 258 51 89 345
Garr. All
63 265 45 91 343
Staub, Mont 56 198 34 65 328
Alou, Hou
50 181 14 59 326
Snglln, PI
l7 219 24 7l 324
Mtln, All
51 229 26 74 323
Mays, SF
56 187 37 60 311
Amen can League
G AB R. H Pet
Oliva, Mlnn 53 208 40 78 375
Murcer NY 59 210 35 75 357
Katlne, Del 52 169 34 54 320
Tovar.Min 59 244 36 11 316
Rchrdt, Chi 46 172 16 54 3H
Buford, Bal 45 175 46 l4 309
Hwrd, Wash 55211 21 6S 3oa
FRbsn,B~I
45159 27 49 308
BRbsn, Bat 56 211 30 66 304
Ofls, i&lt;C
52 207 3l 63 304
Home Run•
,

Pt~"l\~n~. ~!lf.'l~r:,, ~ 'g~~~~:

Cln 16 , Bond•, SF 11, Cepeda,
All and William•. Chl14 "'
Amorlcon ~tague : Cash , Del
and Oliva, Mlnn 141 Horlon,
Del 13, Jackson, Oak 12 ,
Smlf)l, Bos and Oils, KC II
Runs Batted In
National League : Stargell ,
Pitt 57 , Aaron, A11 50 , Torre,

St L 45 , Santo, Chi 42 , Cepeda,
All 41
Amencan League : Killebrew,

Mlnn 48 , Petrocelli, Bos and
While, NY 43 , Horton Del and
Bando, Oak 38
Pifchmg
National League• Dierker,
Hou 10 2, Carlton, St L 10 3,
Jenkins, Chi 10 6, El lis, Plft 9
3, Seaver, NY a 3. Stoneman,
Mont and Marlcha l, SF 8 4
Ameril;an League : Blue, Oak

13 2, Cuellar, Ball 10 1, Pal
mer, Bait and Siebert, Bas 9 3J
McNally, Bait and Hunter , Oa~
9 4, Perry , Mlnn 9 s Loilch,
Det 9 6

ATHLETIC GROUP MEETS
GRANVILLE, OhiO (UPI)About 500 athletes, coaches and
officials of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes arc partlclpatmg ln a week-long natiOnal
conference that opened Sunday
night
The conference IS one of 18
scheduled nationally ror this
summer and expected to draw
10,000 young people

Kuhn Indicated thst Cleveland 's arrangement with the
four players was mvalld
because they were set forth In
side letters rather than in the
official contracts
The commissiOner also stated
that mstead of the bonuses the
players were to get, each
player would be entitled to
receive lrom the club at the
-------end of the season whatever
additiOnal salary Amencan
The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
League President Joe Cronm
INTEREST OF
REDS RECALL SIMPSON
fell each merited
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The CHESTE~ L TANNEHILL,
exec Ed
•
Cmcmnah Reds Monday reROBE AT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Edttor
called nghthanded pitcher
PubliShed
dally except
• 1
lt:l
Wayne Simpson from their Sa lurda)t! by The
Oh 10 Valley
Indianapolis farm club in the Publ iSh ing Company 111
St
Pomeroy , OhtO
The angels were trying to get American Association and op- Court
45769 B1,1s )ne$s Office Phone
2156, Ed1tor•iil Phone 992
rid of Johnson, despite the tioned pitcher Milt Wilcox to 992
2157
the
Indianapolis
team.
league balling title he won last
Second c la ss postage paid af
Pom eroy Oh10
year, before the trading deadNat.onal advert•s•ng
line is reached today He Is up BREWERS SEI,L HEGAN
r epresen tilfl\le
eott lnelll
MILWAUKEE (UPI) ~ The Gallagher, Inc, 12 East &lt;!2nd
for trade because of his lack of
St New York. Ctty, New York ,
hustle and mabtllty to get along Milwaukee Brewers announced
Sub sc npt•on ratea
01
Monday they have sold first ltvered by c arr ie r where
with Ins teammates
ava Jiable SO cents per week,
Asked if he reported the baseman MJ~e Hegan to the By Motor Route where carrier
threat at the lime, Johnson said Oakland Athleties lor an se-nnce not available One
month Sl 75 By mall In Ot}l('
he told a secu·Jty officer and undiilclosed sum and rookie Rob ar'ld w va One 'fe~r ''"' 00
Ellis, 20, acquired last week m S1x mon tb -s 57 ~5 Thret
left
monlh s !4 50 Supscropllon
The Anaheim police detail the pro baseball draft, to ~like pn ce II')C iudes Sl,lnday T1m1t1
stationed at the park said they Regan's place on the Brewe1 s' San l1net
rece~ved no sue~ report, an&lt;! roster.
Wal~h said there was no report
to the club He called both rnen
on the carpet after Johnson's
charg~s became known, and
they bot!)i-epeated the1r stands
"I have no reason to believe
either man was lymg," sail!
Walsh "But I would assume
there would be a Witness, and
no one saw it lt&lt;!Ppen I must
lake
account the bad bi!IOII
between U•ese qJeri '' He said
'U -~ 171
tl;e club would cuntmue to
1251; MAIN I
POMOOY, OHIO
mvesllgate

R uz·. . . Denies Johnson cha .,.'g'nS
1it1

ANAHEIM, Calif (UPI)- The
Cahforma Angels, already hopmg to find a new home lor
Amencan League balling
champiOn Alex Johnson before
the tradmg deadhne today, now
have to wonder whether he was
really threatened w1th a gun by
a teammate.
Johnson accused Ch1co Rwz
Monday of pulhng a gun on h1m
m the locker room, the latest
mcldent In Johnson's controverSial career of little more than a
year with the Angels
Rlllz vehemently demed the
accusahon, say1ng he has never
owned a gun.-not so much as
cap pilltol~nd wasn't even m
the locker room when he was
supposed to be threa temng
Johnson
"Your guess Is as good as
mine as to what happened,"
said D•ck Walsh, the Angels'
perplexed general manager
Johnson said Rulz pulled the
gun on him m the locker room
durmg the mnth Inning of

Sunday's game against the
Washington Senators Both had
been plhch hitters and were
through for the day.
"He brought a gun to the
clubhouse," Johnson said "He
had been lalklng all year that
he was gomg to bring a 38 to
the park and kill me You can
take 1! from me, he threatened
me wtth a gun He's crazy "
RuJZ responded "That's the
most nd!Culous story I've ever
heard I don't own a ~un. not
even a cap pistol I was m the
dugout unlll the last out was
made, not In the clubhouse."
Both Ru1z and Johnson came
to the Angels from the
Cmcmatt1 Reds, and there is a
hiStory of bad feelings between
them. Ru1z sa•d he and Johnson
had a fiSt light last year
because Johnson called h1m
names
"I've had words with him hke
everyone else," Rlllz sa)d, "But
I couldn't do a thmg bke that"

Jnaen a vacation is the question •••

mw

u the an..vwer

~

�•

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OMAHA, Neb. (UP!)- Tulsa's
Golden Hurricane has moved
into th~ favorite position in the
~th Annual College World
Series by getting through the
first three rounds of play
without a defeat.
Tulsa, Southern California,
Southern Illinois and . Pan
American were still in the
doubie~limination tournament,
but one of the four-and
poJ;Sibly tw"'-were to be sent
packing tonight.
The loser of the Southern
nlinois-Pan Am game_ will be
knocked out and Southern
California's Trojans could be
ousted by losing to Tulsa.
Tulsa, behind the stout
pitching of Steve Rogers, who
picked up his second series
victory and his 12th of the year,
battered Southern lllinois with
a 14-hit attack in a 9-4 win
Monday night. Among the hits
was .a first-inning, two-run shot
over the wall by Jerry Tabb.
But the big hero for Tulsa
bad to be Rogers. He had only
one .rocky inning, the fourth,
when Southern lllinois punched
out four hits and also stole
three bases during a three-run
rally.
•. Other than that, Rogers was
in pretty firm command as he
walked none and struck out 13,
including the last seven he
faced.
Steve Randall, first of four
Saluki pitchers, took the loss,
evening his series record at 1-1
and bringing his record at 1·1

T~·eir

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By IRA BERKOW
NEW YORK - tNEA I Hoyt Wilhelm, with little en·
thusiasm, said that it's like
being on vacation. It was alll)OSI June and Wilhelm was
still home in Columbus, Ga.,
while the Atlanta Braves
•wer,e on tile. TOad ill New
Yotk, in Montreal. m St.
Louis.
"What do ~ou do to occupy
your days? ' he was asked
by telephone .
"What does anybody do '"
he replied, sharply.
ur don 't kn0w,11
' 'Gorishin '.' '

"What have you been
catching_? "
~&gt; Not

much .n

Hoyt Wilhelm, who will be

48 years old in July, also ran

•

9-2.

Southern California sent !lrigham Young University (BYUI
home when the Trojans clipped
the Utah school, ~. USC is
defending the title they won one
year agq.
The Trojans appeared ·en
route to a rather easy victory
until BYU scored four times in
the eighth inning to get within
two runs.
Tim Coffin, a reliefer, got the
victory although cuffed for four
runs during BYU's late-game
.rally. Coffin took over mound
duties for starter Eric Raich in
the 5th.

Incentives, civilian Ufe c:ould be
made entirely voluntary, they
argued.
According to . draft offldall,
however, . not nearly enoach
servicemen Jre voluntarUy
ieaving the al"ll)ed force~~ to
meet civilian· manpower 1\eeds ,
at this time.
:
'
They conceded that some
servicemen had fled w Cariada
'to avoid the civlllan draft. But
they insisted that the nwnber
of draft dodgers in unlfonn is
negligible.

contention that civilian life
unfairly interrupts the military
careers of young servicemen
and in many c;ases causes
financial hardshl~.
Senate D!lbelt
In recent Senlite dehate on
extension of the draft, 'opponents called for tennination
of Selective Service coupled
with measures to make civilian
life more attractive, thus
putting more volunteers in
mufti.
With proper rewards and

Cancer Controversy Mounts
ments meet standards to which
the Academy subscribes.
Lewis, president of Lewis Laboratories in nearby Shaker
Heights, stands accused of unethical solicitation of patients
for clinical trials of hia drug,
the Lewis Coupled Tumor Protein Antigen, by the Academy.
He said he was asking .physicians to act as investigators in
treating their own patients who
might be considered terminal
cancer cases and added that the
experiments had the approval
of the Ohio Division of Food and
Drugs.
The drug previously had been
tested on more than 200 mice at
John Carroll University here.
Lewis said In 13 per cent of
the treated animals, tumor

.

'

SECURITY FORCE BEGINS WORK- Representatives
of th~ Wackenhut Security Corp., Cincinnati, began
providing s~urity this morning at Ohio Power's $488 'million
Gavin Plant at Cheshire. P. D. McCreedy, Gallipolis, retired
lieutenant and COlllJllllnder of the Gallla-Melgs Post state
Highway Patrol, will superintend the security force. Guards
Joe DIMaggio
Longest · hitting streak,
56 games.

Connie Mack

Lou Gehrig

Most consecutive years
managed, 53 .

Most con.secutive games
played, 2,130.

Bible School Had Its Commencement

Cy Young

Ty Cobb

The climax of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene Church
was reached Sunday night when
"commencement" was held
with the church nearly full.
Mrs. Leonard Bass directed
singing. Bob Moore, Sunday
school superintendent, was in

. Most victories by a
.pitcher, 511 . .

· Highest lifetime batting
average, .367.

Ask Roger Maris
Not All the Records Are Made to be Broken

By IRA BERKOW
NEW YORK- (NEAl_
When following sports, one
comes to learn a whole new
•
language in optimism: The
game is never over until the
last m~n is out, win n e rs
never quit-quitters never
win, the impossible · just
.
takes a little'longer, and so
forth.
But sometimes even sports
people de I u de themselves
through the blinders of nostalgia. Especially baseball
people, and especially in the
. case of "sacred records." It
got so bad, in fact, that old·
line baseballers refused to
accept without an asteri'k
Roger Maris' Sl home runs
, in a s.(l)gle. season, fQr .. th~
"Immortal Babe Ruth" had
set the "immortal" record of
60 homers in 1927.
Now, Henry Aaron and
Willie Mays both have an
opportunity to o v e r t a k e
another gargantuan Ruthian
record-714 homers in a ca·
reer. A scan through "The
Little Red Book," baseball's
official book of records published by Elias Sports Bureau, turns up many more
"impossible" and "immor·
tal" records that may never
be broken:
Lou Gehrig's "Iron Man"
record of playing in 2,130
consecutive
regular-season
HOYT WILHELM may
have a little Jess hair than games, over a 14-year pe·
he once did, but he seems riod.
to have boundless · energy.
Billy Williams of the Cubs
T h o u g h he was on the is second with a very dis·
Atlanta Braves' disabled tant 982. Most basebalt pea·
list through the early part pie feel that pres en !·day
of the season, he kept In scheduling, with few offshape p It c hI n g batting days, and the physical wear·
p r a c tIc e during Brave and-tear of plane flights, ar·
home stands.
tificial turf and night base-

some every day to keep his
ie~ s and wind in shape. He
threw a baseball almost
every day, too. He threw to
: i some local high school kids,
• • and he threw to his 13-year.
: ; old son, Jimmy. He threw
• . just strai!\ht stuff, he said,
C• and not hos famed knuckle·
ball. w h i c h e v e n major
• leaguers have trouble catch·
: i in g. tA rookie with the White
,' ,' So x severa I years ago dis.
, : dained a mask when warm: : in~ up Wilhelm and re·
'
ceoved a black eye on the
: : first pitch.)
and assorted relief pitching
C· Wilhelm, placed on the di s· records: most games (9901,
• i abled list by the Braves be· most victories I 124/, most
: : fore' the 1971 season started, saves 12231 and most in·
: : threw his knuckleball only in nings pitched 11,825).
:t batting practice when the Yet the man who won a
• c Bnwps were home.
purple heart in the Battle
't'I
"I'm ~II right as far as I'm of the Bulge has a relatively
•' concerned ," he said . " I'm unlined face , though his still·
throwin ' just about as good dark haio· is thinning above
the fore head. "It's how old
as ever."
you
feel , how old you act
He had been suffering
that's important. " he said.
from "a little shoulder stiff. "Not how old are you."
ness." It wasn't really a sore
Bub Didier, the Braves·
arm, he said , because he's catcher, who was born seven
never had a sore arm in ail
after Withem began
of the 26 years he has been years
hi s career with Mooresviile
pitching !l9 of those years of the Class D North Carohave been with eight major lina State League in 1942.
league teams I ~
went hunting with Wilhelm
"My shoulder usually get s last wi n I e r in southern
stiff that way and needs Georgia
workin ' out in the spring of
"We walked for miles and
the year ," he said .
miles, " recall s Didier. "I
Wilhelm says he is ready kep! saying to myself, 'I ·
to return tu the Braves as a can t let this old man outrelief pitcher. Manager Lu· walk me.' ..
man Harris also said that
says he is in awe
Wilhelm is ready tu pitch. of Didier
Wilhelm
the pitcher, too.
"But we do11 't have ruom for "It's catching
a legend ." he
hi'!' on the roster right now ." saod.
saod Barns.
Wilhelm admits, though it
This is difficult for Wil· seems
hardly believes.
helm to swallow . He led the thai the he
day
when
Braves' staff last season in he no longerwillcant"Ome
throw
ea!'ned. run average; with knuckleball for a living. · Hisa
:l.l2. IBe bridles at talk con· ,Southern, nasal twang be·
ccrning the number of times comes crusty at the mention
he has been traded. " I led of
post-playing days. "I'll
just about every team in cross that bridge when I
ERA the season they traded
me," he said .! Wilhelm be· come to it," he said.
It was mentioned to him
lieves his skills hav~ not
diminished . Br·aves' bullpen that Eddie Mathews. now· a .
coaeh Ken Silvestri, among Braves· coach, had returned
others, agrees. " fli s knuckle- to baseball after a two-year
ball is slill knucklin ' ... Si l- rctircm(,nt and said that he.
/Ike other ballplayers, was
~5tri lll!id.
unpo·cparcd tn meet life "on
Wllbeln'l is !he oldest man lht~out.,;icl&lt;l
."
· . .\
• play hi.l(-lcB~m· hus&lt;•hull
lllrly . "'' hokls (ht· o:oc- "Thai's Mathews sayin·
~~!· . ~rll!lttfor m·cmt ~am&lt;•s pildn•d Ihat. Nc1t ""'·" ~a id Wilhelm.
.,
IIC'f&lt;~r&lt;· this .~euku~ '· '' I lo•&lt;m 'l hav(• pr11hlems ...

:!

Records Are 'lmmortai'-Or Are They?

•

By DICX WEST
They said the stepped-up
WASHINGTON (l)PI) -Un- draft rate was necessary to
der the military pay scale replace the growing number of
recenUy approved by the civilians who are becoming
Senate, recruits at the botwm permanently embedded in traf.would be r~ised to $5,328:43 a fie jams.
·
· year in pay and allowances, ' It was the largest monthly
plus su,ch fringe benefits as free quota since enactment last year
medical care, uniforms, com- of the law requiring all
mi.ssary discounts and, in some ultmarried enlisted men .under
cases, travel.
~ age of 30 to register for the
I don't know what this civilian draft.
amounts to in terms of total The big increase undoubtedly
income, but when you put them will be seized upon by critics of
all together the adjective In the draft to support their
"buck private" begins to take
on new significance.
At least it does to anyone old
enough to remember the song
"21 Dollars a Day Once a
Month."
Supporters of the increase
CLEVELAND(UPII- Controsaid it would move the Army
versy
mounted here and in
closer to volunteer status, and I
don't doubt that. If military pay other Ohio cities Monday over
went much higher, there might an alleged anti-cancer drug beeven be difficulty getting ing tested on patients.
Two developers of the drug,
. enough people to volunteer for
' .
Andrew J. Lewis and Norman
civilian life.
will work in three shifts, 7a.m. to 3 p.m.; 3 to·ll p.m. and 11
H. Daily, are involved in the
News Story
p.m. to 7 a.m. Reporting for work this morning were P. D.
Perhaps the following futuris- action along with the Cleveland
McCreedy, security force captain and superintendent; Lt.
tic news story will prove Academy of Medicine.
Mike Arey, Cincinnati; Detner Roush, Mason; and Hills
Dr. John J. Gaughan, Acadprophetic:
Faudree, Pt. Pleasant. Mike Zirkle, Middleport, and Bill
WASHINGTON - Selective emy president. advised Greater
RO'!S, Jackson, are in the second row. John Huber,
Service headquarters an- Cleveland doctors in letters to
Wackenhut representative, Is shown on the far-left.
nounced today that 100,000 stay away from the drug heLASS DIES
members of the atl)led forces cause there continue to be serYOUTH KILLED
. WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) - will be drafted for civilian life ious questions about its value.
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)
Gaughan said the Academy,
Howard L. Carroll, 15, Ver- SherUyn D. Collins, 4, Rt. I, next month.
although it did not have the
million, was killed Monday Orrville, was killed Monday Officials said the July call facilities to review such drugs,
night when the car he was night when hit by a car as she represented a 30 per cent advised ~octors to continue withriding in ran of! the.west-bound walked along a Wayne County increase over the number of holding their participation from
servicemen inducted into civilane of the Ohio Turnpike in this road.
testing the drug until experilian life during June.
area.

'PERMANENT' REC~~D5-0!, ol! the tho111onds of recotds set by the t~oulonds of m~jor league b~seboll . ~toyers, only a few appear ta be unbNOkable
(accent on the word Jlppeor, wcth a nod of the memory to Roger Mores). He~e ore Ill former stars who .set standards lhot hove. an a11ra af permanency.

WilheIm 0 Ut ?
i•
Maybe SOrneday
'

1

and bringing his season slate to

The win for Coffin was his
second in as many decisions.
The loss wept to Steve Fitts,
whose record is 7-2.
The most exciting game
Monday ·was Pan Am's I~
defeat of · Harvard. Harvard
iefthander Roz Brayton, who
hasn't pitched much this year,
did not allow a hit through the
first five innings. But consecutive doubles in the sixth by Bo
McNurlen and Jesse Banda
produced the one run needed
for victory.
Andre Rabouin, a hardthrowing righthander, went all
the way for Pan Am and won
his eighth game in 10 decisions
for the Texas club. He struck
out 11 and allowed just four
hits, the same number given
by Brayton.

..

Buck Private More Significant

4- The Daily Senoinel, Miridleoort-Pomeroy, 0., June 15, 1971

.Tulsa Becomes
NCAA Favorite

I

ball will keep Gehrig's rec·
ord unapproachable.

Most errors in a game,
seven, held by shortstops
George Smith (Brooklyn in
1885) and J. Hallinan 1New
York Mutuals in 1876) is untouchable.
In this age of violent re·
action, man age r s always
slooot players after their
fifth error committed in a
game .

Most games won in a life·
time, 5ll, by Cy Young, is a
sure bet for immortality.
When a pitcher reaches

300 wins nowadays (and
only eight . have in historyEarly Wynn .was the last!,
the pitcher's arm is removed
and sent to a scientific laboratory.

Connie Mack's record of season.
a doubleheader, two, by Ed
Joe DiMaggio's feat of hit· Ruelbach (Chicago Cubs in
having managed for 53
1908 ).
ling in 56 straight games.
straight years.

Shutouts are very hard to
Tommy Holmes' National
Since the invention of ulcome
by these days.
League
record
of
37
straight
cers, few managers live 53
years, starting from their games is formidable in its
Most triples in a lifetime,
own rig h t. Hitting in 56 312, by Sam Crawford.
birth.
Most consecutive y ears games would be like reach·
Because of symmetrical
managing an eig hth-place ing the moon in a doy by
ball parks, hard artificial
balloon.
·team, seven, by the estima·
turf and the long ball, tri·
ble Mr. Mack.
Pitching most shutouts in ples are becoming a mem·
Eighth-place hru gone the
way of bowler hats and
spats .

ory. Roberto Clemente, for commonly lunched by their
in.stance, leads active players teammates after the 23rd
in triples with iust over one· run given up in a game.
half of Crawford's total. Cle·
The records of Satchel
mente wil! probably not Paige.
even hit 200 triples at ca·
The Negro Leagues did
reer's end.
· not keep records and stati$Most runs off a pitcher in tics.

a game, 35, David E. :llowe
The records of Josh Gib(C leveland, NL, July 24, son, Judy Sweet Juice John1882).
son and Cool Papa Bell.
Pitchers these days are

Ibid:

charge of the Bible school which
.had an average attendance of
66. Theme for the school was
"His Church for Our Day."
An offering of $17.42 was
given to the foreign mlsalonary
work of one of the services.

BEN' FRANKLIN
'

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GENE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, State Road 124 ·
Pomeroy, Ollio
Phone: 992-5111
Ripley, W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

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"

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS ( UPI 1
Keystone Mite Monday night
won the featured $1,31&gt;0 trot at
Scioto Downs in 2:04.4.
The four-year-old mare took
the lead at the quarter post and
finished three-quarters of a
length in front of Crisis,
returning $23.80, $9.20 and $5.80.
Flashy Buckeye won the first
r,ace and Morphine the second
lo return $66 on the 5-8 combination in the daily double.
The crowd of 5,43B wagered
$223,699.

PETTY INCREASES LEAD
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPII- Richard Petty, a sixthplace finisher in Sunday's
Motor State 400, increased his
lead in ·the NASCAR Winston
Cup point standings.
Petty now has 2,009 points to
1,876 for runner-up . James
Hylton.

.

People must understand
that we cannot have peace
without strength, we cannot
have strength without unity
and we cannot have peace
wIthout sacrifice. - Gen.
Lewis W. Walt.

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WALTON'S NEW CONTRACT
.NEW YORK (UPI)-Offensive tackle Wayne Walton of
Abilene Christian, the. No. 2
draft choice for the New York
Giants of the National Football
League, has signed his 1971
contract with the club and will
report to rookie camp on July
13.

ATIEND EXERCISES
Mrs. Webster Hodge, Mrs.
Clarence Hill, Mrs. Walden
Roberts, all of Pomeroy, attended the commencement
exercises of Ronald Shumway
in Dayton, Friday. He was the
son of Mrs. Mary Shumway and
the late Charles Shumway,
fonner residents.
,,

~-~ - 2''

$99

I
•

l" this age of inferiority
complexes, a pitcher usuatly
has a mental breakdown
after his 32nd loss of the

6-FT CHAISE LOU
Reg. 7.99

About 11-ln. Dtep

Most games lost in a sea·
son by a' pitcher, 48, John'
Coleman t Philadelphia, National League, in 18831.

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Ty Cobb 's lifetime batting
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Some 10-year veterans in
this age won 't bat .367 after
ADDING UP their combined
yearly averages.

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growth was arrested and in trl
per cent the tumor growth was
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Sale Starts Wednesday
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SlORE HOURS
9 TILS DAILY
9 TIL 9

�•

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.

OMAHA, Neb. (UP!)- Tulsa's
Golden Hurricane has moved
into th~ favorite position in the
~th Annual College World
Series by getting through the
first three rounds of play
without a defeat.
Tulsa, Southern California,
Southern Illinois and . Pan
American were still in the
doubie~limination tournament,
but one of the four-and
poJ;Sibly tw"'-were to be sent
packing tonight.
The loser of the Southern
nlinois-Pan Am game_ will be
knocked out and Southern
California's Trojans could be
ousted by losing to Tulsa.
Tulsa, behind the stout
pitching of Steve Rogers, who
picked up his second series
victory and his 12th of the year,
battered Southern lllinois with
a 14-hit attack in a 9-4 win
Monday night. Among the hits
was .a first-inning, two-run shot
over the wall by Jerry Tabb.
But the big hero for Tulsa
bad to be Rogers. He had only
one .rocky inning, the fourth,
when Southern lllinois punched
out four hits and also stole
three bases during a three-run
rally.
•. Other than that, Rogers was
in pretty firm command as he
walked none and struck out 13,
including the last seven he
faced.
Steve Randall, first of four
Saluki pitchers, took the loss,
evening his series record at 1-1
and bringing his record at 1·1

T~·eir

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By IRA BERKOW
NEW YORK - tNEA I Hoyt Wilhelm, with little en·
thusiasm, said that it's like
being on vacation. It was alll)OSI June and Wilhelm was
still home in Columbus, Ga.,
while the Atlanta Braves
•wer,e on tile. TOad ill New
Yotk, in Montreal. m St.
Louis.
"What do ~ou do to occupy
your days? ' he was asked
by telephone .
"What does anybody do '"
he replied, sharply.
ur don 't kn0w,11
' 'Gorishin '.' '

"What have you been
catching_? "
~&gt; Not

much .n

Hoyt Wilhelm, who will be

48 years old in July, also ran

•

9-2.

Southern California sent !lrigham Young University (BYUI
home when the Trojans clipped
the Utah school, ~. USC is
defending the title they won one
year agq.
The Trojans appeared ·en
route to a rather easy victory
until BYU scored four times in
the eighth inning to get within
two runs.
Tim Coffin, a reliefer, got the
victory although cuffed for four
runs during BYU's late-game
.rally. Coffin took over mound
duties for starter Eric Raich in
the 5th.

Incentives, civilian Ufe c:ould be
made entirely voluntary, they
argued.
According to . draft offldall,
however, . not nearly enoach
servicemen Jre voluntarUy
ieaving the al"ll)ed force~~ to
meet civilian· manpower 1\eeds ,
at this time.
:
'
They conceded that some
servicemen had fled w Cariada
'to avoid the civlllan draft. But
they insisted that the nwnber
of draft dodgers in unlfonn is
negligible.

contention that civilian life
unfairly interrupts the military
careers of young servicemen
and in many c;ases causes
financial hardshl~.
Senate D!lbelt
In recent Senlite dehate on
extension of the draft, 'opponents called for tennination
of Selective Service coupled
with measures to make civilian
life more attractive, thus
putting more volunteers in
mufti.
With proper rewards and

Cancer Controversy Mounts
ments meet standards to which
the Academy subscribes.
Lewis, president of Lewis Laboratories in nearby Shaker
Heights, stands accused of unethical solicitation of patients
for clinical trials of hia drug,
the Lewis Coupled Tumor Protein Antigen, by the Academy.
He said he was asking .physicians to act as investigators in
treating their own patients who
might be considered terminal
cancer cases and added that the
experiments had the approval
of the Ohio Division of Food and
Drugs.
The drug previously had been
tested on more than 200 mice at
John Carroll University here.
Lewis said In 13 per cent of
the treated animals, tumor

.

'

SECURITY FORCE BEGINS WORK- Representatives
of th~ Wackenhut Security Corp., Cincinnati, began
providing s~urity this morning at Ohio Power's $488 'million
Gavin Plant at Cheshire. P. D. McCreedy, Gallipolis, retired
lieutenant and COlllJllllnder of the Gallla-Melgs Post state
Highway Patrol, will superintend the security force. Guards
Joe DIMaggio
Longest · hitting streak,
56 games.

Connie Mack

Lou Gehrig

Most consecutive years
managed, 53 .

Most con.secutive games
played, 2,130.

Bible School Had Its Commencement

Cy Young

Ty Cobb

The climax of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene Church
was reached Sunday night when
"commencement" was held
with the church nearly full.
Mrs. Leonard Bass directed
singing. Bob Moore, Sunday
school superintendent, was in

. Most victories by a
.pitcher, 511 . .

· Highest lifetime batting
average, .367.

Ask Roger Maris
Not All the Records Are Made to be Broken

By IRA BERKOW
NEW YORK- (NEAl_
When following sports, one
comes to learn a whole new
•
language in optimism: The
game is never over until the
last m~n is out, win n e rs
never quit-quitters never
win, the impossible · just
.
takes a little'longer, and so
forth.
But sometimes even sports
people de I u de themselves
through the blinders of nostalgia. Especially baseball
people, and especially in the
. case of "sacred records." It
got so bad, in fact, that old·
line baseballers refused to
accept without an asteri'k
Roger Maris' Sl home runs
, in a s.(l)gle. season, fQr .. th~
"Immortal Babe Ruth" had
set the "immortal" record of
60 homers in 1927.
Now, Henry Aaron and
Willie Mays both have an
opportunity to o v e r t a k e
another gargantuan Ruthian
record-714 homers in a ca·
reer. A scan through "The
Little Red Book," baseball's
official book of records published by Elias Sports Bureau, turns up many more
"impossible" and "immor·
tal" records that may never
be broken:
Lou Gehrig's "Iron Man"
record of playing in 2,130
consecutive
regular-season
HOYT WILHELM may
have a little Jess hair than games, over a 14-year pe·
he once did, but he seems riod.
to have boundless · energy.
Billy Williams of the Cubs
T h o u g h he was on the is second with a very dis·
Atlanta Braves' disabled tant 982. Most basebalt pea·
list through the early part pie feel that pres en !·day
of the season, he kept In scheduling, with few offshape p It c hI n g batting days, and the physical wear·
p r a c tIc e during Brave and-tear of plane flights, ar·
home stands.
tificial turf and night base-

some every day to keep his
ie~ s and wind in shape. He
threw a baseball almost
every day, too. He threw to
: i some local high school kids,
• • and he threw to his 13-year.
: ; old son, Jimmy. He threw
• . just strai!\ht stuff, he said,
C• and not hos famed knuckle·
ball. w h i c h e v e n major
• leaguers have trouble catch·
: i in g. tA rookie with the White
,' ,' So x severa I years ago dis.
, : dained a mask when warm: : in~ up Wilhelm and re·
'
ceoved a black eye on the
: : first pitch.)
and assorted relief pitching
C· Wilhelm, placed on the di s· records: most games (9901,
• i abled list by the Braves be· most victories I 124/, most
: : fore' the 1971 season started, saves 12231 and most in·
: : threw his knuckleball only in nings pitched 11,825).
:t batting practice when the Yet the man who won a
• c Bnwps were home.
purple heart in the Battle
't'I
"I'm ~II right as far as I'm of the Bulge has a relatively
•' concerned ," he said . " I'm unlined face , though his still·
throwin ' just about as good dark haio· is thinning above
the fore head. "It's how old
as ever."
you
feel , how old you act
He had been suffering
that's important. " he said.
from "a little shoulder stiff. "Not how old are you."
ness." It wasn't really a sore
Bub Didier, the Braves·
arm, he said , because he's catcher, who was born seven
never had a sore arm in ail
after Withem began
of the 26 years he has been years
hi s career with Mooresviile
pitching !l9 of those years of the Class D North Carohave been with eight major lina State League in 1942.
league teams I ~
went hunting with Wilhelm
"My shoulder usually get s last wi n I e r in southern
stiff that way and needs Georgia
workin ' out in the spring of
"We walked for miles and
the year ," he said .
miles, " recall s Didier. "I
Wilhelm says he is ready kep! saying to myself, 'I ·
to return tu the Braves as a can t let this old man outrelief pitcher. Manager Lu· walk me.' ..
man Harris also said that
says he is in awe
Wilhelm is ready tu pitch. of Didier
Wilhelm
the pitcher, too.
"But we do11 't have ruom for "It's catching
a legend ." he
hi'!' on the roster right now ." saod.
saod Barns.
Wilhelm admits, though it
This is difficult for Wil· seems
hardly believes.
helm to swallow . He led the thai the he
day
when
Braves' staff last season in he no longerwillcant"Ome
throw
ea!'ned. run average; with knuckleball for a living. · Hisa
:l.l2. IBe bridles at talk con· ,Southern, nasal twang be·
ccrning the number of times comes crusty at the mention
he has been traded. " I led of
post-playing days. "I'll
just about every team in cross that bridge when I
ERA the season they traded
me," he said .! Wilhelm be· come to it," he said.
It was mentioned to him
lieves his skills hav~ not
diminished . Br·aves' bullpen that Eddie Mathews. now· a .
coaeh Ken Silvestri, among Braves· coach, had returned
others, agrees. " fli s knuckle- to baseball after a two-year
ball is slill knucklin ' ... Si l- rctircm(,nt and said that he.
/Ike other ballplayers, was
~5tri lll!id.
unpo·cparcd tn meet life "on
Wllbeln'l is !he oldest man lht~out.,;icl&lt;l
."
· . .\
• play hi.l(-lcB~m· hus&lt;•hull
lllrly . "'' hokls (ht· o:oc- "Thai's Mathews sayin·
~~!· . ~rll!lttfor m·cmt ~am&lt;•s pildn•d Ihat. Nc1t ""'·" ~a id Wilhelm.
.,
IIC'f&lt;~r&lt;· this .~euku~ '· '' I lo•&lt;m 'l hav(• pr11hlems ...

:!

Records Are 'lmmortai'-Or Are They?

•

By DICX WEST
They said the stepped-up
WASHINGTON (l)PI) -Un- draft rate was necessary to
der the military pay scale replace the growing number of
recenUy approved by the civilians who are becoming
Senate, recruits at the botwm permanently embedded in traf.would be r~ised to $5,328:43 a fie jams.
·
· year in pay and allowances, ' It was the largest monthly
plus su,ch fringe benefits as free quota since enactment last year
medical care, uniforms, com- of the law requiring all
mi.ssary discounts and, in some ultmarried enlisted men .under
cases, travel.
~ age of 30 to register for the
I don't know what this civilian draft.
amounts to in terms of total The big increase undoubtedly
income, but when you put them will be seized upon by critics of
all together the adjective In the draft to support their
"buck private" begins to take
on new significance.
At least it does to anyone old
enough to remember the song
"21 Dollars a Day Once a
Month."
Supporters of the increase
CLEVELAND(UPII- Controsaid it would move the Army
versy
mounted here and in
closer to volunteer status, and I
don't doubt that. If military pay other Ohio cities Monday over
went much higher, there might an alleged anti-cancer drug beeven be difficulty getting ing tested on patients.
Two developers of the drug,
. enough people to volunteer for
' .
Andrew J. Lewis and Norman
civilian life.
will work in three shifts, 7a.m. to 3 p.m.; 3 to·ll p.m. and 11
H. Daily, are involved in the
News Story
p.m. to 7 a.m. Reporting for work this morning were P. D.
Perhaps the following futuris- action along with the Cleveland
McCreedy, security force captain and superintendent; Lt.
tic news story will prove Academy of Medicine.
Mike Arey, Cincinnati; Detner Roush, Mason; and Hills
Dr. John J. Gaughan, Acadprophetic:
Faudree, Pt. Pleasant. Mike Zirkle, Middleport, and Bill
WASHINGTON - Selective emy president. advised Greater
RO'!S, Jackson, are in the second row. John Huber,
Service headquarters an- Cleveland doctors in letters to
Wackenhut representative, Is shown on the far-left.
nounced today that 100,000 stay away from the drug heLASS DIES
members of the atl)led forces cause there continue to be serYOUTH KILLED
. WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) - will be drafted for civilian life ious questions about its value.
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)
Gaughan said the Academy,
Howard L. Carroll, 15, Ver- SherUyn D. Collins, 4, Rt. I, next month.
although it did not have the
million, was killed Monday Orrville, was killed Monday Officials said the July call facilities to review such drugs,
night when the car he was night when hit by a car as she represented a 30 per cent advised ~octors to continue withriding in ran of! the.west-bound walked along a Wayne County increase over the number of holding their participation from
servicemen inducted into civilane of the Ohio Turnpike in this road.
testing the drug until experilian life during June.
area.

'PERMANENT' REC~~D5-0!, ol! the tho111onds of recotds set by the t~oulonds of m~jor league b~seboll . ~toyers, only a few appear ta be unbNOkable
(accent on the word Jlppeor, wcth a nod of the memory to Roger Mores). He~e ore Ill former stars who .set standards lhot hove. an a11ra af permanency.

WilheIm 0 Ut ?
i•
Maybe SOrneday
'

1

and bringing his season slate to

The win for Coffin was his
second in as many decisions.
The loss wept to Steve Fitts,
whose record is 7-2.
The most exciting game
Monday ·was Pan Am's I~
defeat of · Harvard. Harvard
iefthander Roz Brayton, who
hasn't pitched much this year,
did not allow a hit through the
first five innings. But consecutive doubles in the sixth by Bo
McNurlen and Jesse Banda
produced the one run needed
for victory.
Andre Rabouin, a hardthrowing righthander, went all
the way for Pan Am and won
his eighth game in 10 decisions
for the Texas club. He struck
out 11 and allowed just four
hits, the same number given
by Brayton.

..

Buck Private More Significant

4- The Daily Senoinel, Miridleoort-Pomeroy, 0., June 15, 1971

.Tulsa Becomes
NCAA Favorite

I

ball will keep Gehrig's rec·
ord unapproachable.

Most errors in a game,
seven, held by shortstops
George Smith (Brooklyn in
1885) and J. Hallinan 1New
York Mutuals in 1876) is untouchable.
In this age of violent re·
action, man age r s always
slooot players after their
fifth error committed in a
game .

Most games won in a life·
time, 5ll, by Cy Young, is a
sure bet for immortality.
When a pitcher reaches

300 wins nowadays (and
only eight . have in historyEarly Wynn .was the last!,
the pitcher's arm is removed
and sent to a scientific laboratory.

Connie Mack's record of season.
a doubleheader, two, by Ed
Joe DiMaggio's feat of hit· Ruelbach (Chicago Cubs in
having managed for 53
1908 ).
ling in 56 straight games.
straight years.

Shutouts are very hard to
Tommy Holmes' National
Since the invention of ulcome
by these days.
League
record
of
37
straight
cers, few managers live 53
years, starting from their games is formidable in its
Most triples in a lifetime,
own rig h t. Hitting in 56 312, by Sam Crawford.
birth.
Most consecutive y ears games would be like reach·
Because of symmetrical
managing an eig hth-place ing the moon in a doy by
ball parks, hard artificial
balloon.
·team, seven, by the estima·
turf and the long ball, tri·
ble Mr. Mack.
Pitching most shutouts in ples are becoming a mem·
Eighth-place hru gone the
way of bowler hats and
spats .

ory. Roberto Clemente, for commonly lunched by their
in.stance, leads active players teammates after the 23rd
in triples with iust over one· run given up in a game.
half of Crawford's total. Cle·
The records of Satchel
mente wil! probably not Paige.
even hit 200 triples at ca·
The Negro Leagues did
reer's end.
· not keep records and stati$Most runs off a pitcher in tics.

a game, 35, David E. :llowe
The records of Josh Gib(C leveland, NL, July 24, son, Judy Sweet Juice John1882).
son and Cool Papa Bell.
Pitchers these days are

Ibid:

charge of the Bible school which
.had an average attendance of
66. Theme for the school was
"His Church for Our Day."
An offering of $17.42 was
given to the foreign mlsalonary
work of one of the services.

BEN' FRANKLIN
'

•

PATIO CHAIRS

I

•

\!!-ln. lnold&lt;J Diem.
SO·Foet long

Merry-Go-Round

Super-Fielihle
Garden

6-FT. POOl

~.~~· 499

2 .99

flog.
3.99

A carni .. al of !o n' Sp lash
around in in!l illable. gian t
pool and play with anima l

heads molded to si des~

JACQUARD BEACH TOWELS

'"

dts1Q111 . Btg enough lor bath
o r beac;h . . . 28-56·inc;h.

TeD Pop he's tops ..• say it with flowers

Fll'• .,
~

!•

ft

. .Adem fl o"l

1

arrangement

lo tkkte ihe
fancy ol every
"good sport"!

We can deliver
this Father's Day
special anywhe ~
in the Un1ted ',.
States through
Flora( ax .

Order Today!

Mermaid' lnfletablas

Bt~gt"lt hovenY jacQuar d wove n

187

... ............
KITS ·

IIIII'.
&lt;k

27"T .,

Rlpair , ,.,d rtntw t hl irt.
thlrtu' Eacn krl hu 17-11.

\

LP-Gas barbecue grill
when you buy an Ashland
LP-Gas forced air heating system.

$527!~.r.ned.

· ·~ ~
~.0/~!
t~~ty.-

11-tn. hi~~Jh , m•taltebte.
Brill. tripod l1gt wllh
no·m•r plutlc llpt.

Reg.
15.88

Fj .:' .

PIIIIN·Grlp

Bud;• I Qualify!

SO-FT. CARDEN HOSlS
Durable ancl re1r11en1, vrnyl
hose wr!h l•·rn. drame1er . $Oir0

d•loks. 7·oz. size.

bran

U!!bttlkltlll, A'I'«IOG.

to~Jpl t ngs .

Green

Reg. 1.2i

99~

Llghlwelght l You can carry
from room to room l Alltaclive
steel Cllt wilh ryiOided plastic

NOZZLES

"'•· 77+

grilllront artd bacl.:. White grill,

con1ttl11ng color caH. UL

t .JI

1pproved,

JUil tQ ..ttU !01 corr1cl
Sjlf·~ l)fU 1UII ! Non•COr•
• ofi~• -

9rtn

1~86
.,

~•IYu .

.

,:&amp;,.(.'
~··~
~ ~~
'':~
· ~·· ·····
'" . -;'......1'!~
#!."0-:10&gt;:
...~
\

O.tp·Tone Colora!

,,;..,..-,~ .
.. ~

,7- . ~ '

PKC. OF 140 NAPKINS

.

{

2'8~

Whrsper Qu altly napkir~s lor
home and tamtly outlngs' •
Orange blue or tu rquorse.

Pkg.

CONVENIENT

For Your

3· Polltlon Grid

27•12·/nch

AIR
Btrght h'IIO·Ione p11n1s on eatra
sturcty piOIS!rr But11·rn prllow 2
~Ja lves E as~

to

rnll&lt;~ te .

Reg. 1.27

77~

Summtr OUIIngt!

24-IN.
PATIO CRILLS

.14-QUART COOLER CHESTS
12x9x12-ln . . .. Ughlwelght !
Great lor picn tell . ftsn l ng
tnps , etc. 2-tone styrotoam.
Metal ham:lte.

Foh11n9 trrpOO legs lor e~ s y s t orr n~
24 ·rn !tame·tolor enarnele(t sreel

77~

hiler Ourlltrf

iO.OUART COOLERS
18x12x1J·In. Keep rood hot
or cold ! Lightweight styro·
loam with molded handles.

96 YA

30-Qt. HARDLINER CHESTS ·
17xll• l3· rn . hi•1 mptc1 plullc.
Foam msullltd 10 lr.ttp !Ooda
l1u h 1 E.ny •tirry htndlot.

IIRGETTUIII$
AM!

Did you have trouble with your
furnace last winter? If so. now's the
time to take advantage of our special summertime offer. Order a n~w
Ashl;md LP-Gas Heating system
now and we'll include a deluxe LPGas barbecue grill FREE . The heavy
duty cast aluminomo grill os an $80
value. Your bonus with a comptet~&gt; .'
modern Ashland LP-Gas healing
system Installation.
You also get free installation and
rent-free use of .the storage tank.
And Ashland offers you a convenient LP-Gas budget plan. Levels out
your annual heating bill in equal' Installments over a t 0 month period.

ForP/cnlct/CNUngtl

HARDLINER
t-GALJUCS

H ea~ r· d 11 1~ metal handle

C h rom e ·

Insulated ~eg h11s motdeCJ reg 1.
ttre w·on c ac and e a s~· o our
aprgol' WoocHrke brown wrlh
p oly loner
,.
II

legs lor storing .

Flame Color Bowl.

25·F••t l.ont!

.

'

'

1

r

:

ASHLAND PETROLEUM COMPANY

I'

.,........ .,. .......... 01~ Inc.
Plutlt

CllroMt·Pfllld

11()-1,

"r

t ~ ltr•atO r

hell

1'1"1· 1
e"gttr

r.r a~111. wud ~•
JllniiC M ftQ•IIP ttl lld~l

•

\

0

BIRD IATIIS

~~·
·~' " ' • c t

t"

m• nv futhtue d·
frrtflt:li ' 11· rn IJiam . 25·•"·
iugh Wnrtt

cold longer. Euypour spout, usy·

2s7

c•rry handle.

" ' '' J,
Flngtr· np Conlro/

-'

fo1m il'tutatlon to

kttp drinks h0l or

jug with convenient
pour·spout . . . keeps
liquids hot or cold!

3-CAL. FOAM KEOS

pla!e d g ri d wilh
han dl es . Fold i ng

Ht·lmpac:l pllltiC

shell with alyrtrlt ·

B'l' ·in . diameter ,
10·1n. high . Light·
weight Slytoloam

f••Y ·Pour Splgol!

• fl-ln . Df•,.t•r ...

and hnger·grlp in bOI·
tom tor UIY pouring.

Clloict

•

ho o d

PICNIC
ORILLS

~~~';· 88~

•.•.'"" 4t"
'

Handsome enam -eled steel bowl and

AdJuotlbll Grid!

,O•r••• Ttolt

.

17l ·

99+

SPECIAL FREE BARBECUE
GRilL OFFER EXPIRES AUG . 3t ,
1971. So don't delay.
,
Want more information? Write or
phone the Ashland LP-Gas Bulk
Plant nearest you . .
' ,

GENE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, State Road 124 ·
Pomeroy, Ollio
Phone: 992-5111
Ripley, W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

444

..ltef.Qv...,,

A~AIWU

'

MRS. MtlLARDVAN METER
106 BUTTERNUT

,,...

D~rlbt1 pUrtllt .. , lignl •
wtrglll, tlly· tO ·YN llld fll(.

1-0ALLON
FOAMJUOS

POMEROY
. 'FlOWER SHOP
PHONE I M2-2039

;~'7-

~.~·

ol:l

20-ln. Portt~le
Breeze-Bo• fin

: ==~ 2 ~.;1;1 :~~~·~:~ :0~''::'~:~~

ring. JS.rt 18· tn. surlnder

sell-seat vat .. es. 1 t7

'·"

Powerlul Motor, Dl•l SwHcll/

i7t

20 ·i n. b all , 20· i n sw rm

~i n y l ,

"... tn

7-0Z. SIZE
FOAM CUPS

You gel. SSII1:l·m. pool,
an d re patr ~i l. He avy d \.11 y

P~TIO T~ILIS

Pkg. ol 48

~.;~· 399

..,....,e... .

·-~II••

,~

100% virgin vinyl hose
. , .llelt lble even in
extrem'e tempera tures!
Uncondlliona.lly guar·
antt."XX by manufacturer.

Regular 77c .•. SAVE 40c

OUTDOOR POOL
PLAY SETS

As low as

'

"

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS ( UPI 1
Keystone Mite Monday night
won the featured $1,31&gt;0 trot at
Scioto Downs in 2:04.4.
The four-year-old mare took
the lead at the quarter post and
finished three-quarters of a
length in front of Crisis,
returning $23.80, $9.20 and $5.80.
Flashy Buckeye won the first
r,ace and Morphine the second
lo return $66 on the 5-8 combination in the daily double.
The crowd of 5,43B wagered
$223,699.

PETTY INCREASES LEAD
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPII- Richard Petty, a sixthplace finisher in Sunday's
Motor State 400, increased his
lead in ·the NASCAR Winston
Cup point standings.
Petty now has 2,009 points to
1,876 for runner-up . James
Hylton.

.

People must understand
that we cannot have peace
without strength, we cannot
have strength without unity
and we cannot have peace
wIthout sacrifice. - Gen.
Lewis W. Walt.

Sturdy aluminum frame with aturdy
two-tone webbing In bright colors.
Folds easily and compactly lor
carrying or storing.

of 2'.'o ·ln. wide wlbbrng .

WALTON'S NEW CONTRACT
.NEW YORK (UPI)-Offensive tackle Wayne Walton of
Abilene Christian, the. No. 2
draft choice for the New York
Giants of the National Football
League, has signed his 1971
contract with the club and will
report to rookie camp on July
13.

ATIEND EXERCISES
Mrs. Webster Hodge, Mrs.
Clarence Hill, Mrs. Walden
Roberts, all of Pomeroy, attended the commencement
exercises of Ronald Shumway
in Dayton, Friday. He was the
son of Mrs. Mary Shumway and
the late Charles Shumway,
fonner residents.
,,

~-~ - 2''

$99

I
•

l" this age of inferiority
complexes, a pitcher usuatly
has a mental breakdown
after his 32nd loss of the

6-FT CHAISE LOU
Reg. 7.99

About 11-ln. Dtep

Most games lost in a sea·
son by a' pitcher, 48, John'
Coleman t Philadelphia, National League, in 18831.

Aluminum, Folding

Strong, Well -buill lrame with durable, weather·
resistant webbing in bright two·l one colors. Folds
easily for moving and storing.

Ty Cobb 's lifetime batting
average of .367.
Some 10-year veterans in
this age won 't bat .367 after
ADDING UP their combined
yearly averages.

Sturdy Aluminum Fr•m•

growth was arrested and in trl
per cent the tumor growth was
only one-fifth as large as it was
in the untreated group of mice.

I-TUBE SOAKERS

:.:1

199

For sprtn kltnll i n d I Oik ·
rn g slowly . , . e¥enlyl

Muni•Purpole

Oullltllnt Sprinkltn

.....

Rtg.

299

:~·

Cov1rs ovtr 2250·5(1.
11. Eas ily adjUIII
Orlletent lfllll .

10-INCH FANS

lor

886

SHILL

••r•·O·&amp;.Ifto

NO-PEST STRIP

Chlnill LIOIITER
~i~ J8+

~u

1n

Jus\ hl ri Q llt1 Y.,;.. ~ere ... •I dS
ar11 oll!yrng rnsec ts

Ne...er n11d1 ol!1ng t Ctr•
Cu!l let 1200 CFM. On·Off
&amp;wrt ch. UL IJ)Pf OYid.

!);ttl &lt;~,u • ~~

~No

I! II!IY 1 ~ l u • t:l

orn/lutl l Cltrllrl burnrriQ
' ore ll&gt;,tl. '· ~" llr. u~ r:l "'

•mnutl' •

100•. dvrable vrnyl .

Shop In
.Air Conditioned
Comfort · ,

RALL'S BEN. FAANKLII)I
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Sale Starts Wednesday
'

.I

SlORE HOURS
9 TILS DAILY
9 TIL 9

�..-.
-.---.
--.•
~

8- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy,O., June 15,1971 ·

&lt;1t{Qfli~~Mi~Ud~~H~~#tttH1Hlrtl1Wf*f@l1@ffii~Jf~

Winners in Buckeye Mayoralties

COLUMBUS (UPI) "'- Deleaark: Nancy Miletti, Tiffin. Warren.
gates at Buckeye Girls State,
Coil: Siri R. Carr, Sandusky. . McKinley: Lydia Bobak, operating on the Capital UniverCook : Debby McWhorter, Roasford.
sity campus, elected niayors
Lackland.
O;lkley: Laura Lee Cum- and other officials of their 25
Finley : Tamara J. Allen, mings, Leesburg,
mske - believe cities Monday
Marion.
Schille: Christine Purdon, night.
Gage: Jody Hopkins, New AI· Georgestown.
bany.
Sherman: Chris Gibson, Col- The newly elected msyors
Garfield: Jane Arnold, Arch· urn bus.
were sworn in tonight by former
bold.
· Sherwood: Christine Lee Xenia Mayor Olive Huston.
Greene: Stephanie Ann Mick· Clark, Minerva.
its, Shelby.
Storer : Laura Bredeson, Prior to the swearing-ill ceremonies, the officials were to be
Hayes : Cheri Diller, Mt. Kirtland.
.
Cory.
Sullivant: Marva Hargraves, briefed in their duties of running government by some of
Hobart: Virginia Brozovich, Xenia.
Digges,
their real-life counterparts.
Ruth
Toronto.
Taft:
James: Deborah Milligan, Chillicothe.
Several of the other 1,281 del·
Lowellville.
Woolsey: Susan Workman,
egates to the 25th annual AmerJanis: Jacqueline Ecker, Waynesville.
•

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Winnen. of the mayoral .elections
Monday nigh! at Buckeye Girls
Slate:
l!acon: Janet M. Walker,
Adena.

Blckerdyke: Kathleen -Ann
Murray, Reading.
Burwell : Nancy Jane
Brockett, Stow.
Cary: Barbara Schoen, L]llldhurst.
·
Cather,wood: Kathy L.
Franks, Wooster.

Board
Denies
Charters

A DISCOU"T
·
DfPARTMtNT STORI

I

••••
••••
••

NO-PEST
STRIP
Kills Illes and
Works up to 3
months.

•133

inch

diameter .

Cleans with damp
cloth.

EACH

GIRLS .SLEEVELESS

KNIT TOPS
'Nylons, cottons, blends in sleeveless or

tank top styles. Sizes

94~

4

to 14.

$164

TO

MINIATURE
:· KEROSENE
LAMPS
Novelty lamps that will
Qive . your home a new

look . Cute, different. Low

special price!

'' '

Meta I swivel hooks.

FREEZER
POPS
Unbreakable poly. Just
fill with your flavor and
' freeze. Makes 6 flavors .

Slig ht irregulars from a

"MATCH" -REG•.11.29

WOMEN'S
·suMMER
'GOWNS

33

A HUGE COLOR SELECTION!
Easy care polyester .

POP-ART
TEENS • POSTERS
Save 95c on each
one.

Jllllll - .. . . "fll'Y oppor-

OPEN
6 NilES

uow one pother,''

g.

........ IJlndlviGII.-

aw~~o~e."
I

Kids

love

them to give their
room the "with
it" look.

Cannon's

the new wonder fabric.

Non-skid back . Size
21 x36.

KEEPS DRINKS HOT OR COLD

WANTED STYLES!

9(OUNCE SIZE

SWIM
MASK

$2~!

STOCK
UP!

NEWBORN PAMPERS

GIRLS BABY DOLL
SIZES 4 TO 14

~·

COlTON
e OUR EVERYDAY '2.44 SHIRT
AT THIS PRICE - GET DAD A COUPLE

66
.

''

l

I

\

'

44

STYRO-FOAM CHEST

s

Self Insulating.
Large moulded
handles tor . easy
carrying. Divided
partment.

A VERY

com-

.

GIRLS 2 PIECE

.

·TEFLON II
SAUCE PANS
eREGULAR 11.33
'
el Q,T. and 3 QT. SIZ£
POPPY -

~·

1••

PRI

CANVAS

$

•

'16

WALKING
SHORTS

DAD WILL USE

A COMPLETE SELECTION!

94
AND

Our regular $2.94 shorts. Full
cut with big belt loop. Solids,
plaids. latteralls.

PAIR'

194

. 1

00

Surfers, boxers. lastex nylon - In solids.
plai~s or prints for his fun in the water.

- TATTERSALS$
·- STRIPES
•

•'166

BOYS' SWIM TRUNKS

57
"•'

ELECTRIC
FIRE
·sTARTER

33

TAPERED BODY OR FULL CUT STYLES

•

PAIR

USEFUL GIFT FOR DAD!

6 COLORS
SIZES
SM-MD-LG

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

TO ,
GIRLS - MISSES

THEY LAST!

GIFT DAD WITH

MANY
COLORS,

$}67 $294

cEA.

1·

WHILE

SWEAT
SHIRTS

HEAVY GAUGE - IN COILC

Father's from solids, stripes or '
lnts. All are permanent pressed
labr·tcs, in the newest collar styles.
Dad a Shirt!
.

Some have knit tops - ·
others crop tops · or
sleeveless blouses with
color keyed. shorts. A host
of colors and . patterns.
Sizes 3 to 14.

BEACH
BALL

MEN'S SHO.RT SLEEVE

budget here

SHORT SETS

e

BIG 16 INCH SIZE - 6 COLOR PANELS

SUMMER WEARABLES FOR TEENS &amp; MEN

TC

KNITS!

•

'

46

'

'

IF PERFECT-YOU'D PAY 11.00 PAIR!

MEN'S ORLON
DRESS SOCKS

I

THE BIG ONE! 50 QUART SIZE

Inner

. SUN~ lNG . $127
O.R SPLASHING

Auto Tax

FO.R WATER
FUN!
INFLATABLE VINYL

NO
FLUID
NEEDED)

. SWIM RAFTS
FOR

KEEP BABY DRIER
Willi PAMPERS

1

100%
DRIP DRY
COTTON!

WHITE DRESS SHIRTS

Nylon Lastex, cottons- 1 piece, 2
piece - we have them all-not
just a handful!. but a complete
selection. Priced low enough to
buy her a couple.

BOX OF 30

PAJAMAS

A GREAT BUY FOR DAD!

WE HAVE A STYLE THAT SHE'LL LIKE!

PKG.

SPECIAL OFFER! ..

SWIM
·RINGS "

SWIM SUITS

OUR REGULAR 57'

BEGINNERS

FATH

GIRLS &amp;PRE-TEENS

STYRO-FOAM
CUPS

~ l FOR HER SLEEPING COMFORT!

4 COLORSFITS SIZE lUO 13

$ 77

WHY PAY MORE??
SHOP THE DISCOUNT STORE!

-

a·rown or black . Soft. supple vinyl in sizes
30 to 42. Save 31c on each one.
·

flnesf

sheet. Quality
percale.

ITALIAN
SANDALS

&lt;

MEN'S DRESS
. BELTS

84 4
48 OUNCE SIZE .............. 94 4
80 OUNCE SIZE .............. $1 24

32 OUNCE SIZE ;..............

Size 81x108 or
titled full bed size . .

WOMEN'S NEWEST ARRIVALS

e SIZES 14lfz TO 17
e PERMANENT PRESS

SALE STARTS
\1EDNESDAY
9:30A.M.

· Unbreakable plastic - guaran·
teed for 1 year. Use for storing
wet or dry foods.

COMPARE AT $4.49

EACH

SIZE S.M-LG·XXL
So lid color, all cotton sa nforized
gowns . Save 61c on each one. The
perfect weight for summer
sleeping comfort.

AIR-TIGHT! STACKABLE!

SHEETS

WOMEN'S ·
SUMMER
SANDALS
~

SEE, STORE &amp; SAVE JARS

PASTEL COLORED PERCALE
'

Long Length or Waltz Length

~

SPECIAL PURCHASE

'

EACH

.FAMOUS
PETER MAX

Sweeps Clean!

popllns 1

better maken

CASTING
REEL

MT. VERNON, Ohio (UPI)U. S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R·
Ohio, said Monday the goals of
the Nixon administration are
the same as those of demon.
strating youths.
"Too many have blindly opposed your goals, your aspirations, without taking time to
understand that aU of us seek
many of the same ends," Tafl
silld in a commencement address at MI. Vernon Nazarene
CoUege.
'"lbe cry of youth for peace
now, for an end to the draft, for
a clean environment, for decent
housing, for educational opportunltiel for aU -Americans, for
an end to poverty and despair
.Ire the lloals of jhe Nixon Adminlllration," he $Bid.
He caUed on tile graduates lo
seek a •'blend of the knowledge
oi age and the adventure of
youth.
' .
"What I am asking my genaMGn to do IIIII tear down the
waUl tlllt uve too long
wpwaW 111 frllm America's

Choose from

MAGNETIC
DUST
MOP

POLYESTER RUGS

1(

FITS FOOT
SIZE
3 TO ..

A 13' VALUE! OPAQUE PLASTIC

Goals Same

rainbow.

twills, polyesters and other wanted fabrics.
All regular and extra large sizes.

VALUES TO '3.98

MEN'S
WHITE
HDKF'S

.

DRESS HANGERS
Clear. gold or avocado colors .

ALL COlTON!

SAVE 30'
·"MICKEY MOUSE"

FCA in Meeting

COTTON
CRAWLERS

Long Wooden Hand~!

Hot pants, iama leas - In every color of the

33~ 99~ · 10~

ORGANIZE YOUR CLOTHING!

...., to •• I' In a ~

SUMMER SHORTS
summer

!

BROOM

"CANNON'S" FAMOUS MONTICELLO BRAND
A 59' VALUE

Mickie Ann Vester, BS.
LETART - Dale Gene
Rollins, AS •. Robert Lee Brown,
BBA, Charles J&gt;:rvin Keefer,
MA.
MASON - James Carl
Lawhorn, AB, Pamela Ann
Roush;
AB.
NEW HAVEN- Franz Andre
Reichert, BBA, Ronald

ALL CORN.

TEENS OR LADIES

HERE'S WHY THE THRIFTY SHOP HERE

non-voters "nodoubtseei&gt;Oiitics presented his State of the State
eliminating any possibility .of bi- needed to act," he said.
partisan co&lt;iperatlon in the pas- The governor told the Boys as irrevelant to their lives." message · to the General
sage of this legislatlon - and State delegates that voting is "And a major reason for this Assembly Monday and had llt'l•
then .revealed ilself to be in, necessary to keep the United ~nse of irrelevancy stems from ' era! of !Us progr~ introduced.
their belief that they simply Roberson's : administration :
don't have a voice in politlcal proposes to lower the minimum
decisions, that they have no ef. age for consumir1&amp;}.2 per cenl
feet on the colirse of this na- beer to 16, enact a griduate
lion," Gilligan said.
state income tax, and revise the ,
Franklin Steln, BBA, •William Ann Morse, AB, Elizabeth "Unfortunatelymany of Ohio's Ohio Constitution.
Lee Capehart, MA, Mary Lee Burcham Nibert, AB, Jack non-voters would only have that
Blount Park, AB, Becky Baker belief reinforced by some recent A regular business &lt;lay was
PoweU, MA . .
POINT PLEASANT - Loren Reymond, AB, Donna Keister actions in the Ohio legislature," scheduled today through Thursday with graduation set for FriScott Cook, BBA, Roger Lee Woomer, AB, Rebecca Withrow he added.
Hopson, AS, Beverly Hathaway, T~omas, AB, Maria Ethel Jessie Roberson of Shaker day.
AB,
Kay
AB, Joyce Warren Caufman, Williamson,
AB, Unda Humphrey Jarrell, Blankenship Lanier, ASN .
AB, Camille Madeleine WEST COLUMBIA - Sandra
Spurlock McNeely, AB, Carol Sue Stewart, AB.
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UPI) About 500 athletes, coaches and
officials of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes were gather_ed here this week for ~ conference, one of 18 scheduled acroas
the na tio·n this summer.
College football coaches attending include Jlm Feix of
Western Kentucky, Jack
Lengyel of Marshall, Dal Shealy
of Carson Newman, and 'Gene
TODDLERS
Here's Your Bonus!
Harris, an assistant at the UnivSIZE 12 Jf.O.
ersity of Redlands.
BasketbaU coaches include
TO 24 MO.
' Jlm Snyder of Ohio University,
Joe Stamp! of the University of
Chicago, Curt Tong of Otterbein, and Frank Truitt of
Kent State University.
Also here for the weeklong
conference were basebaU coach
PRINTS - SOLIDS
Jlm Dimick of St. Ol!ifs, tennis
REG.
coach Scott Greer of Western
11.00
IUinois and track Coach Tom
Neuberger of Concordia
VALUE!
Lutheran.
·
Pro athletes attending include
PR.
Dlck Logan of the Green Bay
Packers, Sam Wyche of the
Washington Redsklns and Don
Cockroft of the Cleveland
SELECT FROM 3 STYLES
Brown.

VISIT
SHOPPER$
MARTI

PICK YOUR LENGTH I

more. See these, .you'll want severa l.

'

HUNTINGTON.- At the !34th
Commencement at Marshall
University May 20, 1,527 '
students were awarded
degrees.
From Mason County were:
APPLE GROVE - John
Forrest. Nibert, AB, amy
Richard Steele, MA.
.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY -

YOU SAVE 45'

•1 77

rul~ of · the ' House, virtually capable of producing the votes States a democracy, but thst the Heights, Boys State governor,

27 from ·Mason Awarded Degrees ·

'p"' ·TO 6 PM

GRECIAN URN
FLOOR PLANTER
Made of rugged
" Duratuf" plastic. 11

while ·the .weeks roD on," Gilligan said.·
"ESsentiaUy this paralysis occurred because the majority
abUsed its position, violated tile

1

ALL STORES OPEN
UNTIL 9 P.M.
6 NIGHTS

The extra strong fabric that really stands
heavy duty. If perfect - you'd pay much .

operationa for the next biennium, and funding the programs
through adequate tax revenues
have ground to a halt ·..:. and
the House now sits paralyzed,

OUR REGULAR 12.49 - 16 INCH

..SHELLS" INSECTICIDE

mosquitoes indoors.

the serious.work of government
begins, slow painstaking, day to
day effort by aU three branchest the governor said:
qilligan used the occasion of
his speech to criticize, the Republican majority in the House
of Representatives, which is.rearranging and cutting the programs of his Democratic adminstrlition.
Currently, GiUigan's tax plans
~ changed from a graduated
personal income tax to a flat
rate tax collected at the county
level - are s.taUed in the
House with little more than two
weeks left in the .fiscal year.
''The legislaUveprocedures of
approving a budget for state

OPEN
SUNDAY

HUCK TOWELS

Taft Finds

....... , u

s
HOSP ITA.L NEW .

-----------:'--:---------1 :

SNOW WHITE

&lt;

't'IIIIUK.. - ..

ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI)-Gov.
John J. Gi!Ugan told delegates
to Buckeye Boys State Monday
night that too many citizens confuse polltl,cs and government
, wlth "the seventh game of the
World Serles."
·
"You go to the game, you
cbee~· 81!d boo for your team,"
he said. "But when the game is
over, or when the election is decided there is reaDy nothing for
you to do.
"That's the World Serles, but
it's not politics," he said. "In
poUtics, an election Is not the
end of the whole process, but
only the beginning.
"After tile bands stop playing
and the bunting is taken down,

SHOP YOUR NEAREST STORE!

- Approwed the transfer of
388.56 acres In the Miamisburg
City School District to the West
Carrollton City School District
and the transfer of 39.74 acres
. fr&lt;ITl the West CarroUton City
School District to Kettering City
Schools.
- Denied the request of the
Norwalk City Board of Education to transfer 145.96 acres in
the Western Reserve Local
School District to the Norwalk
Qty School District on the basis
the area, when developed, was
expected to be industrial and
commercial rather than
residential.
- Approved the appoinlment
of DsrreU L. Parks, 34, Canal
Winchester, as director of the
Education Department's
Division of Research, Planning
and Development to succeed
Russell Working who resigned.

!I'~"

lean Legion Auxiliary-sponsored have their names placed on bal- ' all!luration set for Thursday · Neill will admin~ter the ,oath to :
government school circulated' lol,s for the county and state of- nighl.
the state officl8ls, an~ Goy. ::
petition,s to get signatures to fiees, the legislature and boards
C)lief Justice of the Ohio John J. Gilligan wiD deliver the "'
of education.
Sumprerrie Court c. William 0'· ev.ening's address. ·
:
TJCAFFIC IN POT · .
Those petitions were made
::;.
MEXICO CITY (U~I)-~r. available shortly after Monday r-----:-.
Ernesto Lammoglla Rwz, chtef . night's elections and were to be
1 .,
of the psychology deparlment ·filed today.
I~
,
•
•
I:
of the ·city's Juvenile Court, The delegates representative · 1
estimated that the illegal of the state's ai counties have
"'
trafficking in marijuana in !Mien assigned to one of the two
Pleasant VaHey Hospital
Simpkins, Point Plea!!Bnt.
:
Mexico comes. to 20 tons a parties,NationalistandFederal- ADMISSIONS- Goldie Piatt, DISCHARGES - f4rs. Lens •
week.
ist, and will llve in one of the Point Pleasant; Harry Snyder, Crookham, Hilda Cpleman, He sald that half of this 25 cities named after famous Leon; Clifford Akers, Glen- James Toles, Nicky Weaver, :
amount is consumed in Mexico. Ohio wom.en durm· g their week wood; Mrs. Robert Nibert, Mrs. McArthur Adkins B!ld son; ::
The value of the marijuana at Girls State.
Gallipolis Ferry; Marvin Unda Xlng, Ona Dyer, Roy :::
trafficked in Mexico totals 23 After a full day of campaign- Be~nett, Letar~; Pearl . Jones, Huffman, Mrs .. Effle Turner, ·;
miUion pesos ($1,840,?00) he ing . today, the girls will hold Pomt P~easant, Paul Will, Jr., Carol Bonecutter, Mr~. I. E. :
said. The value quadrUples m their primary and general Ractne, Mrs. Flora Euler, Orner, Jr., Micheal Carll$le.. ;:
the United States.
elections Wednesday with the in- Cottageville, and Samuel
:::;

. POINT PLEASANT • GALLIPOLIS • MAS0.,

•·&gt;Valley.

........

.Boys Staters Asked Not to Confuse Politics and Government

:.~

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
State Board of Education refused to retnstate.charters Monday
to two Tt:umbull County school
dl&amp;trlcts whose charters were
revoked in April when the
llchools failed to meet state
standards.
1b~ state bosrd said It realfinned the revocations upon
recommendations from a near·
1ng referee who sat in on hear~
lngsln May, requested by official• from the two districts,
IFannington and Bloolnfleld•
.Mqpo Local.
lbe board, in other actlon,
approved the allocation of $4.4
million in matching funds for
five vocational education
construction projects. Those
dlstrlcts Include the new
Ucklng County Joint Vocational
School, the Mayfield High
School ln Cuyahoga County,
Washington High School in the
• Ma881Uon City School District,
the Montgomery County Joint
Vocational School Dlstrlct and
the, Woodland Job Center in the
Cleveland City School District.
1be board also:
-Approved $1.7 mlllion to reImburse universities with which
the state has contracted for vocational teacher preparation.
-Approved $22,464 in federal
funds to employ students in
East Liverpool, Salem and
Sandusky City School districts
and in the Meigs Local School
· .»iDistrlct ·and the ·StransburgFranklln and Tuscarawas

--~

Girls
Elect
.
M
ayors
other
Officials
IJ•

7- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pori&gt;· oy, 0., June t5, 1971

A DISCOUNT
D!PARTMlNT 'lOill

SIZES
3 TO 18 .

I
I

(Continued from page 1)
would discuss the matter further with firemen.
At the suggestion of Zerkle, It
was agreed that Grate will
direct a letter to Ohio Department of Highways Division
Engineer Max Farley and to
Rep. Ralph Welker inquiring as
to the status of Improvements to
Page St. The Improvements
were listed among several in
Melgs County to be carried out
' through •State laaue •·I•Jfunds.
Page St. ,leads to tile inarlna.
The marina also came up for
discussion wlth King who
sugges.ted that the area be kept
cleaner so that it will be used
more. Grate pointed out thst,
according to plans announced
sometlme ago, the Corps of
Engineers is to dredge Leading
Creek that leads into the
·marina. Maintenance Supervisor H~rold Chase, who inspected the marina saturday.
sald "It is not in too bad condition."
Chase also told King, in answer to another question, that
gravel wiU be placed along the
newly resurfaced streets in the
town before freezing weather in
order to protect the new surfaces.
Grate read a letter from the
Ohio ·Department of Health
indicating its approval of
proposed redesigning of two of
the sewage disposal lift stations
as suggested by Floyd G. Brown
Associates, providing it be done
under the supervision of a
qualified engineer.
Council agreed to renew lta
membership in the Ohlo
Municipal League. Council also
agreed to incorporate in a new
ordinance provision that the
Columbia Gas Co: must remove
abandoned llnes in the future
when new lines are instaUed.
King also questioned councU
about the strike, or lockout, at
Imperial Electric Co. He said he
had been told thst 24 hours
lapsed from the time union
members asked permission to.
se,t up a tent on viUage owned
property near the plant until
they were given permi881on to
do so.
Chief of Police J. J. Cremeans
said the employes did not h&amp;ve
the tent the first day. Both he
and Mayor C. 0. Fisher said, u
did Chase, thst they had handled the matter at once when
the request was received.
King urged the uae of 111
auxiliary police organizatioll
for more police protectioo in the
village at no cost in salarlel.
·Mayor Fisher said some
auxiliary police officers . .
available ab;eady. C~
Stumbo and Chief Cr~Mm.-M
commented thst dutiea wlicll
aWtiliary. officers caD pel fGI•
are limited, due to the ladt Gl
workmen's compensation
covering such, offlctl'll.
At the suggestion of c-.
ciln\an StUmbo, who ..W thin
were budget probleml to be
disci)Ssed, council adloWnell tt ·
go Into executive seialon.

I

I
II

�..-.
-.---.
--.•
~

8- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy,O., June 15,1971 ·

&lt;1t{Qfli~~Mi~Ud~~H~~#tttH1Hlrtl1Wf*f@l1@ffii~Jf~

Winners in Buckeye Mayoralties

COLUMBUS (UPI) "'- Deleaark: Nancy Miletti, Tiffin. Warren.
gates at Buckeye Girls State,
Coil: Siri R. Carr, Sandusky. . McKinley: Lydia Bobak, operating on the Capital UniverCook : Debby McWhorter, Roasford.
sity campus, elected niayors
Lackland.
O;lkley: Laura Lee Cum- and other officials of their 25
Finley : Tamara J. Allen, mings, Leesburg,
mske - believe cities Monday
Marion.
Schille: Christine Purdon, night.
Gage: Jody Hopkins, New AI· Georgestown.
bany.
Sherman: Chris Gibson, Col- The newly elected msyors
Garfield: Jane Arnold, Arch· urn bus.
were sworn in tonight by former
bold.
· Sherwood: Christine Lee Xenia Mayor Olive Huston.
Greene: Stephanie Ann Mick· Clark, Minerva.
its, Shelby.
Storer : Laura Bredeson, Prior to the swearing-ill ceremonies, the officials were to be
Hayes : Cheri Diller, Mt. Kirtland.
.
Cory.
Sullivant: Marva Hargraves, briefed in their duties of running government by some of
Hobart: Virginia Brozovich, Xenia.
Digges,
their real-life counterparts.
Ruth
Toronto.
Taft:
James: Deborah Milligan, Chillicothe.
Several of the other 1,281 del·
Lowellville.
Woolsey: Susan Workman,
egates to the 25th annual AmerJanis: Jacqueline Ecker, Waynesville.
•

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Winnen. of the mayoral .elections
Monday nigh! at Buckeye Girls
Slate:
l!acon: Janet M. Walker,
Adena.

Blckerdyke: Kathleen -Ann
Murray, Reading.
Burwell : Nancy Jane
Brockett, Stow.
Cary: Barbara Schoen, L]llldhurst.
·
Cather,wood: Kathy L.
Franks, Wooster.

Board
Denies
Charters

A DISCOU"T
·
DfPARTMtNT STORI

I

••••
••••
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STRIP
Kills Illes and
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A COMPLETE SELECTION!

94
AND

Our regular $2.94 shorts. Full
cut with big belt loop. Solids,
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PAIR'

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plai~s or prints for his fun in the water.

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cEA.

1·

WHILE

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SHIRTS

HEAVY GAUGE - IN COILC

Father's from solids, stripes or '
lnts. All are permanent pressed
labr·tcs, in the newest collar styles.
Dad a Shirt!
.

Some have knit tops - ·
others crop tops · or
sleeveless blouses with
color keyed. shorts. A host
of colors and . patterns.
Sizes 3 to 14.

BEACH
BALL

MEN'S SHO.RT SLEEVE

budget here

SHORT SETS

e

BIG 16 INCH SIZE - 6 COLOR PANELS

SUMMER WEARABLES FOR TEENS &amp; MEN

TC

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•

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Inner

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just a handful!. but a complete
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BOX OF 30

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A GREAT BUY FOR DAD!

WE HAVE A STYLE THAT SHE'LL LIKE!

PKG.

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-

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30 to 42. Save 31c on each one.
·

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sheet. Quality
percale.

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MEN'S DRESS
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84 4
48 OUNCE SIZE .............. 94 4
80 OUNCE SIZE .............. $1 24

32 OUNCE SIZE ;..............

Size 81x108 or
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WOMEN'S NEWEST ARRIVALS

e SIZES 14lfz TO 17
e PERMANENT PRESS

SALE STARTS
\1EDNESDAY
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COMPARE AT $4.49

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SIZE S.M-LG·XXL
So lid color, all cotton sa nforized
gowns . Save 61c on each one. The
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CASTING
REEL

MT. VERNON, Ohio (UPI)U. S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R·
Ohio, said Monday the goals of
the Nixon administration are
the same as those of demon.
strating youths.
"Too many have blindly opposed your goals, your aspirations, without taking time to
understand that aU of us seek
many of the same ends," Tafl
silld in a commencement address at MI. Vernon Nazarene
CoUege.
'"lbe cry of youth for peace
now, for an end to the draft, for
a clean environment, for decent
housing, for educational opportunltiel for aU -Americans, for
an end to poverty and despair
.Ire the lloals of jhe Nixon Adminlllration," he $Bid.
He caUed on tile graduates lo
seek a •'blend of the knowledge
oi age and the adventure of
youth.
' .
"What I am asking my genaMGn to do IIIII tear down the
waUl tlllt uve too long
wpwaW 111 frllm America's

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1(

FITS FOOT
SIZE
3 TO ..

A 13' VALUE! OPAQUE PLASTIC

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twills, polyesters and other wanted fabrics.
All regular and extra large sizes.

VALUES TO '3.98

MEN'S
WHITE
HDKF'S

.

DRESS HANGERS
Clear. gold or avocado colors .

ALL COlTON!

SAVE 30'
·"MICKEY MOUSE"

FCA in Meeting

COTTON
CRAWLERS

Long Wooden Hand~!

Hot pants, iama leas - In every color of the

33~ 99~ · 10~

ORGANIZE YOUR CLOTHING!

...., to •• I' In a ~

SUMMER SHORTS
summer

!

BROOM

"CANNON'S" FAMOUS MONTICELLO BRAND
A 59' VALUE

Mickie Ann Vester, BS.
LETART - Dale Gene
Rollins, AS •. Robert Lee Brown,
BBA, Charles J&gt;:rvin Keefer,
MA.
MASON - James Carl
Lawhorn, AB, Pamela Ann
Roush;
AB.
NEW HAVEN- Franz Andre
Reichert, BBA, Ronald

ALL CORN.

TEENS OR LADIES

HERE'S WHY THE THRIFTY SHOP HERE

non-voters "nodoubtseei&gt;Oiitics presented his State of the State
eliminating any possibility .of bi- needed to act," he said.
partisan co&lt;iperatlon in the pas- The governor told the Boys as irrevelant to their lives." message · to the General
sage of this legislatlon - and State delegates that voting is "And a major reason for this Assembly Monday and had llt'l•
then .revealed ilself to be in, necessary to keep the United ~nse of irrelevancy stems from ' era! of !Us progr~ introduced.
their belief that they simply Roberson's : administration :
don't have a voice in politlcal proposes to lower the minimum
decisions, that they have no ef. age for consumir1&amp;}.2 per cenl
feet on the colirse of this na- beer to 16, enact a griduate
lion," Gilligan said.
state income tax, and revise the ,
Franklin Steln, BBA, •William Ann Morse, AB, Elizabeth "Unfortunatelymany of Ohio's Ohio Constitution.
Lee Capehart, MA, Mary Lee Burcham Nibert, AB, Jack non-voters would only have that
Blount Park, AB, Becky Baker belief reinforced by some recent A regular business &lt;lay was
PoweU, MA . .
POINT PLEASANT - Loren Reymond, AB, Donna Keister actions in the Ohio legislature," scheduled today through Thursday with graduation set for FriScott Cook, BBA, Roger Lee Woomer, AB, Rebecca Withrow he added.
Hopson, AS, Beverly Hathaway, T~omas, AB, Maria Ethel Jessie Roberson of Shaker day.
AB,
Kay
AB, Joyce Warren Caufman, Williamson,
AB, Unda Humphrey Jarrell, Blankenship Lanier, ASN .
AB, Camille Madeleine WEST COLUMBIA - Sandra
Spurlock McNeely, AB, Carol Sue Stewart, AB.
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UPI) About 500 athletes, coaches and
officials of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes were gather_ed here this week for ~ conference, one of 18 scheduled acroas
the na tio·n this summer.
College football coaches attending include Jlm Feix of
Western Kentucky, Jack
Lengyel of Marshall, Dal Shealy
of Carson Newman, and 'Gene
TODDLERS
Here's Your Bonus!
Harris, an assistant at the UnivSIZE 12 Jf.O.
ersity of Redlands.
BasketbaU coaches include
TO 24 MO.
' Jlm Snyder of Ohio University,
Joe Stamp! of the University of
Chicago, Curt Tong of Otterbein, and Frank Truitt of
Kent State University.
Also here for the weeklong
conference were basebaU coach
PRINTS - SOLIDS
Jlm Dimick of St. Ol!ifs, tennis
REG.
coach Scott Greer of Western
11.00
IUinois and track Coach Tom
Neuberger of Concordia
VALUE!
Lutheran.
·
Pro athletes attending include
PR.
Dlck Logan of the Green Bay
Packers, Sam Wyche of the
Washington Redsklns and Don
Cockroft of the Cleveland
SELECT FROM 3 STYLES
Brown.

VISIT
SHOPPER$
MARTI

PICK YOUR LENGTH I

more. See these, .you'll want severa l.

'

HUNTINGTON.- At the !34th
Commencement at Marshall
University May 20, 1,527 '
students were awarded
degrees.
From Mason County were:
APPLE GROVE - John
Forrest. Nibert, AB, amy
Richard Steele, MA.
.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY -

YOU SAVE 45'

•1 77

rul~ of · the ' House, virtually capable of producing the votes States a democracy, but thst the Heights, Boys State governor,

27 from ·Mason Awarded Degrees ·

'p"' ·TO 6 PM

GRECIAN URN
FLOOR PLANTER
Made of rugged
" Duratuf" plastic. 11

while ·the .weeks roD on," Gilligan said.·
"ESsentiaUy this paralysis occurred because the majority
abUsed its position, violated tile

1

ALL STORES OPEN
UNTIL 9 P.M.
6 NIGHTS

The extra strong fabric that really stands
heavy duty. If perfect - you'd pay much .

operationa for the next biennium, and funding the programs
through adequate tax revenues
have ground to a halt ·..:. and
the House now sits paralyzed,

OUR REGULAR 12.49 - 16 INCH

..SHELLS" INSECTICIDE

mosquitoes indoors.

the serious.work of government
begins, slow painstaking, day to
day effort by aU three branchest the governor said:
qilligan used the occasion of
his speech to criticize, the Republican majority in the House
of Representatives, which is.rearranging and cutting the programs of his Democratic adminstrlition.
Currently, GiUigan's tax plans
~ changed from a graduated
personal income tax to a flat
rate tax collected at the county
level - are s.taUed in the
House with little more than two
weeks left in the .fiscal year.
''The legislaUveprocedures of
approving a budget for state

OPEN
SUNDAY

HUCK TOWELS

Taft Finds

....... , u

s
HOSP ITA.L NEW .

-----------:'--:---------1 :

SNOW WHITE

&lt;

't'IIIIUK.. - ..

ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI)-Gov.
John J. Gi!Ugan told delegates
to Buckeye Boys State Monday
night that too many citizens confuse polltl,cs and government
, wlth "the seventh game of the
World Serles."
·
"You go to the game, you
cbee~· 81!d boo for your team,"
he said. "But when the game is
over, or when the election is decided there is reaDy nothing for
you to do.
"That's the World Serles, but
it's not politics," he said. "In
poUtics, an election Is not the
end of the whole process, but
only the beginning.
"After tile bands stop playing
and the bunting is taken down,

SHOP YOUR NEAREST STORE!

- Approwed the transfer of
388.56 acres In the Miamisburg
City School District to the West
Carrollton City School District
and the transfer of 39.74 acres
. fr&lt;ITl the West CarroUton City
School District to Kettering City
Schools.
- Denied the request of the
Norwalk City Board of Education to transfer 145.96 acres in
the Western Reserve Local
School District to the Norwalk
Qty School District on the basis
the area, when developed, was
expected to be industrial and
commercial rather than
residential.
- Approved the appoinlment
of DsrreU L. Parks, 34, Canal
Winchester, as director of the
Education Department's
Division of Research, Planning
and Development to succeed
Russell Working who resigned.

!I'~"

lean Legion Auxiliary-sponsored have their names placed on bal- ' all!luration set for Thursday · Neill will admin~ter the ,oath to :
government school circulated' lol,s for the county and state of- nighl.
the state officl8ls, an~ Goy. ::
petition,s to get signatures to fiees, the legislature and boards
C)lief Justice of the Ohio John J. Gilligan wiD deliver the "'
of education.
Sumprerrie Court c. William 0'· ev.ening's address. ·
:
TJCAFFIC IN POT · .
Those petitions were made
::;.
MEXICO CITY (U~I)-~r. available shortly after Monday r-----:-.
Ernesto Lammoglla Rwz, chtef . night's elections and were to be
1 .,
of the psychology deparlment ·filed today.
I~
,
•
•
I:
of the ·city's Juvenile Court, The delegates representative · 1
estimated that the illegal of the state's ai counties have
"'
trafficking in marijuana in !Mien assigned to one of the two
Pleasant VaHey Hospital
Simpkins, Point Plea!!Bnt.
:
Mexico comes. to 20 tons a parties,NationalistandFederal- ADMISSIONS- Goldie Piatt, DISCHARGES - f4rs. Lens •
week.
ist, and will llve in one of the Point Pleasant; Harry Snyder, Crookham, Hilda Cpleman, He sald that half of this 25 cities named after famous Leon; Clifford Akers, Glen- James Toles, Nicky Weaver, :
amount is consumed in Mexico. Ohio wom.en durm· g their week wood; Mrs. Robert Nibert, Mrs. McArthur Adkins B!ld son; ::
The value of the marijuana at Girls State.
Gallipolis Ferry; Marvin Unda Xlng, Ona Dyer, Roy :::
trafficked in Mexico totals 23 After a full day of campaign- Be~nett, Letar~; Pearl . Jones, Huffman, Mrs .. Effle Turner, ·;
miUion pesos ($1,840,?00) he ing . today, the girls will hold Pomt P~easant, Paul Will, Jr., Carol Bonecutter, Mr~. I. E. :
said. The value quadrUples m their primary and general Ractne, Mrs. Flora Euler, Orner, Jr., Micheal Carll$le.. ;:
the United States.
elections Wednesday with the in- Cottageville, and Samuel
:::;

. POINT PLEASANT • GALLIPOLIS • MAS0.,

•·&gt;Valley.

........

.Boys Staters Asked Not to Confuse Politics and Government

:.~

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
State Board of Education refused to retnstate.charters Monday
to two Tt:umbull County school
dl&amp;trlcts whose charters were
revoked in April when the
llchools failed to meet state
standards.
1b~ state bosrd said It realfinned the revocations upon
recommendations from a near·
1ng referee who sat in on hear~
lngsln May, requested by official• from the two districts,
IFannington and Bloolnfleld•
.Mqpo Local.
lbe board, in other actlon,
approved the allocation of $4.4
million in matching funds for
five vocational education
construction projects. Those
dlstrlcts Include the new
Ucklng County Joint Vocational
School, the Mayfield High
School ln Cuyahoga County,
Washington High School in the
• Ma881Uon City School District,
the Montgomery County Joint
Vocational School Dlstrlct and
the, Woodland Job Center in the
Cleveland City School District.
1be board also:
-Approved $1.7 mlllion to reImburse universities with which
the state has contracted for vocational teacher preparation.
-Approved $22,464 in federal
funds to employ students in
East Liverpool, Salem and
Sandusky City School districts
and in the Meigs Local School
· .»iDistrlct ·and the ·StransburgFranklln and Tuscarawas

--~

Girls
Elect
.
M
ayors
other
Officials
IJ•

7- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pori&gt;· oy, 0., June t5, 1971

A DISCOUNT
D!PARTMlNT 'lOill

SIZES
3 TO 18 .

I
I

(Continued from page 1)
would discuss the matter further with firemen.
At the suggestion of Zerkle, It
was agreed that Grate will
direct a letter to Ohio Department of Highways Division
Engineer Max Farley and to
Rep. Ralph Welker inquiring as
to the status of Improvements to
Page St. The Improvements
were listed among several in
Melgs County to be carried out
' through •State laaue •·I•Jfunds.
Page St. ,leads to tile inarlna.
The marina also came up for
discussion wlth King who
sugges.ted that the area be kept
cleaner so that it will be used
more. Grate pointed out thst,
according to plans announced
sometlme ago, the Corps of
Engineers is to dredge Leading
Creek that leads into the
·marina. Maintenance Supervisor H~rold Chase, who inspected the marina saturday.
sald "It is not in too bad condition."
Chase also told King, in answer to another question, that
gravel wiU be placed along the
newly resurfaced streets in the
town before freezing weather in
order to protect the new surfaces.
Grate read a letter from the
Ohio ·Department of Health
indicating its approval of
proposed redesigning of two of
the sewage disposal lift stations
as suggested by Floyd G. Brown
Associates, providing it be done
under the supervision of a
qualified engineer.
Council agreed to renew lta
membership in the Ohlo
Municipal League. Council also
agreed to incorporate in a new
ordinance provision that the
Columbia Gas Co: must remove
abandoned llnes in the future
when new lines are instaUed.
King also questioned councU
about the strike, or lockout, at
Imperial Electric Co. He said he
had been told thst 24 hours
lapsed from the time union
members asked permission to.
se,t up a tent on viUage owned
property near the plant until
they were given permi881on to
do so.
Chief of Police J. J. Cremeans
said the employes did not h&amp;ve
the tent the first day. Both he
and Mayor C. 0. Fisher said, u
did Chase, thst they had handled the matter at once when
the request was received.
King urged the uae of 111
auxiliary police organizatioll
for more police protectioo in the
village at no cost in salarlel.
·Mayor Fisher said some
auxiliary police officers . .
available ab;eady. C~
Stumbo and Chief Cr~Mm.-M
commented thst dutiea wlicll
aWtiliary. officers caD pel fGI•
are limited, due to the ladt Gl
workmen's compensation
covering such, offlctl'll.
At the suggestion of c-.
ciln\an StUmbo, who ..W thin
were budget probleml to be
disci)Ssed, council adloWnell tt ·
go Into executive seialon.

I

I
II

�8- The Dally Se~th~el . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 1~. 1971

Miss Ronoyce Barnes Honors
Weds .Phillip Grate Roberta
Miss Rorioyce Dianne Barnes
and Mr. Phillip Eugene Grate
exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony 'at the
Indian Lake Church of Christ on
June 6 at 2:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Barnes of
Lewiston, Route 1, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr .
and Mrs . Arnold Grate,
RuUand.
The Rev . Herbert Grate,
pastor of the Chester Church of
the Nazarene, officiated at the
ceremony following a program
ol music by Mr. Robert Bray of
anctnnati, organist, and Miss
Vicki Harback of Franklin,
whose vocal selections were
"Saviour, Like a Shepherd Lead
Us," and ''0 Perfect Love."
Church decorations featured
an arched candelabra with
baskets of gladioli, daisies,
carnations arid cornflowers.
Escorted to the altar by her
fa !her, the bride wore a princess style gown of rose embossed textured cotton with a
short chapel train. The front
panel of the gown and the
neckline were trimmed in seed
pearls. The bride's shoulder
length veil of silk illusion fell
from a plateau of roses and
buds of the same material as
the dress. She carried a colonial
arrangement of white roses,
carnations and stephanotis.
'lbe bride's attendants were
her sisters, Miss Cindy liarnes,
maid of honor; Miss Becky
Barnes and Miss Cheri Barnes,
bridesmaids. They wore
princess style gowns of light
blue polyester trimmed in
matching ribbon with flower
headpieces, and carried
bouquets of pink roses, daisies,
carna lions, cornflowers, and
baby's breath, tied with blue
ribbons.

Smith

Mr. David Grate of llutland
served as best man, and the
ushers were Mr .. Floyd Hoff.
Miss Kollt!rta Smith, Midman, Marion; and Mr. Larry
dletown, daughter of the Rev.
Morgan, Bourbonnais, Ill.
and
Mrs. Robert E. Smith,
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Barnes wore a blue double Hysell Run Road, was honored
knit dress, A-line, trimmed in Saturday night with a bridal
white, white accessories, and a shower at the home of Mrs .
corsage of white spider mums. Norman E. Hysell .
Mrs. Grate was in a pink en- Games were played with
semble with white accessories prizes going to Mrs. Leo Hill,
and also wore a spider ' mum Mrs. Lydia Smith, Mrs. Leta
Fetty. Mrs. Archie Rose won
corsage.
A reception honoring the the door prize.
couple was held in the Masonic After Miss Smith opened her
Temple building at Lakeview , gifts, refreshments of ice
The bride'.s table featured a cream, cake, punch and mints
seven-piece wedding cake were served to those named and
decorated with glazed artificial Mrs . Donald Smith and Tona ,
Mrs. Ernie smith and David,
flowers . Miss Kathy Harris,
Mrs. David Grate, Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Eloise smith, Mrs. Maude
Grate, and Miss Arlene Blair Smith, Mrs. Esther Hauge,
Cinda Fetty, Mrs. Sheila Curtis
presided at the table, with Miss
Jeannie Dawson registering the and Donna , Mrs. Hope Drake,
Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, Carol
guests .
For a wedding trip to Ken- Coleman, Mrs. Faye Sauer, and
tucky, the bride changed into a Norma Jean Hysell .
blue polyester knit dress. She Others presenting gifts to the
wore the rose corsage from her bride~lect were Mrs. Roy
Johnson, Mrs . Raymo nd
bridal bouquet.
The couple will reside at Keesee, Mrs. James Carpenter,
Bethany, Okla. The new Mrs. Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs. Roy
Grate is a graduate of the In- Snowden, Mrs . Roberta
dian Lake High School, class of canaday, Mrs. Allen Gibson,
1968, and in 1970 graduated from Mrs. Tom Deeters, Mrs. Lori
the Mount Vernon Nazarene Dugan, Mrs. Harold Dewhurst,
Junior College. She will be Mrs. Paul Patterson, Mrs. Glen
a senior this fall at Bethany Deeters, and Mrs. Woodrow
Hill.
Nazarene College.
Mr. Grate, a 1968 graduate of 1!111!!1111lt$itM!l!i$!!W!ifli!iOO'!iJ!I!III!IIW
Rutland High School, also
graduated from the Mount Open meeUng of the Rutland
Vernon Nazarene Junior Garden Club wlll be .held June
College in 1970, and will also be 28 at the Rutland United
a senior at Bethany College. He Methodist Church. All clubs of
is employed at Hagee Foods, the county have been Invited,
and are asked lo advise Mrs.
Bethany.
Relatives and college friends Harvey Erlewine by pbone (742!rom Wapakoneta, Lima, Mount 4448), or by letler as to how
Vernon, Cridersville, Marion , many will be atlendlng by June
Quincy, and Bellefontaine at- 23. Mrs. Robert Thompson will
be giving demonstraUoDB on
tended the wedding.
rose arranging.

Attendance Averaging 47
The Daily Vacation BiDJe
School of the Silver Run Free
Will Baptist Church which
began June 7 through the 18th
has an average attendance of 47
with a total of 60 enrollees.
The program will conclude on
June 20 at 7:30 p.m. with a
display of craft work with the

ptcmc to ue held on the 21st at 7
p.m.
Nursery teacher and helper
are Evelyn Matthews and
Delores Miller, 'Primary
teacher and helpars are Freda
Little, Delma Halley and Judy
McHaffie, junior teacher and
helper a~e George McHaffie
and Fon'est Gillenwater, young
teens teacher and helpers are
Henry and Letha Davis, Bill
Little and Pearl Remy, pianist
is Maxine Little, director is
Delila Mulford and Jean
Thomas is secretary.

MISS HYSELL ILL
Miss Mabel Hysell was a
contributing hostess for the
Phllathea Society meeting at
the Middleport Church of Christ
Thursday night. She was unable
to attend due to lllness which
HOSPITALIZED
has kept her confined to her Jeff Buckley, son of Mr. and
home for the past week.
Mrs . John Buckley of
Chesapeake, and grandson of
DEGRE
ECEIVES
,R J is Schm 11 EMid Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink, is
MISS an · ed h ob, h 1 - confined to St. Mary's Hospital
dlepor t , rece1v
•
er ac e or at Huntin•ton,
W. Va. for
of
science
in
education
from
treatment
of
a
leg
fracture
The
Ohio University Sunday. At- youngster's condition
is .com· din
t
ten
g
commencemen
plica ted
by a blood
disease.
He
her parents, Mr. and were
Mrs. had
planned
a visit
to Mid·
Robert Schmoll, Bob and Jim, dleport this month with his

GS Day Camp Begins at
Big Bend Neighborhood
Annual day camp of the Big
Bend Neighborhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council got
underway Monday at Camp
Kiashuta with 63 girls
registered for the week-long
program.
Personnel of the camp includes Mrs. Mary . Bahr,
director ; Mrs. Mary Hunter,
folk dance instructor; Mrs.
Mary Lou Fick, nurse ; Mrs.
Donna Ohlinger, lady of the

Birthday Party to
Honor Mrs. Roush
A dinner party in observance
of the 80th birthday anniversary
of Mrs. L. R. Roush was held
Saturday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Young.
Four of the five children of
Mrs. Roush attended the observance with her son, Charles
Roush, telephoning from Des
Moines, Iowa. Gifts were
presented to the honored
guest and a decorated cake was
served following the dinner.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Roush, Mrs. Young, Mrs.
Richard Root, Middleport ; Mr .
and Mrs. Harley (Kathryn )
Brown , Columbus; Mrs.
Patricia Groves and J. R.
Kennedy, Middleport; grandchildren, Sandy, Cathy, Randy
and Bobby Yates, Tony and
Tammy Kennedy; greatgrandchildren, Mrs . Judy
Kennedy, Richard Knight, and
Melinda Groves.

GRADUATES FROM OU
carla Morris Salser, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris,
Racine, received a bachelor of
arts degre·e in psychology from
Ohio University Sunday. Attending her graduation were
her parents, a sister, Carol
Morris, and her husband, Larry
Salser.
MRS. FRY VISITS
rs
M . Ge orge Fr yoI CoIwnbus
came Saturday for a several
weeks' visit to Middleport with
relatives . She was the weekend
houseguest . of Mr. and Mrs.
oWen Fink, and visited briefly
with her sister, Miss Mabel
Hysell. She Is spending this
week in Racine with her sister,
Mrs. Alice Fink, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin.
Mrs. Fry was accompanied to
Middleport by Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Seipel.
IN HOLZER
Mrs. Iva Stewart of Rutland
was scheduled for surgery th'
IS
morning at the Holzer Medical
Center. She is in room 381. Mrs.
Stewart is employed at Jack's

d
t
h
WordS Of Love Aro

and Mrs, G. 0 . Schmoll,

.
RUSSELL GRADUATES
J. C. Russell, employed as a
pharmacist at Grant Hospital,
Columbus, received his degree
from the College of Pharmacy
at Ohio State University Friday.
Following his graduation, he
and his wife, Debbie, and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Truman
Russell, left on a vacation lrip
to Florida. They will be guests
of Mrs . Hattie Russell at St.
Petersburg,
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling
and Jay Pomeroy also attended c~mmencem~nt as well
a; a program by the pharmacy
graduating class on Th da
urs y
nigh..
DINNER PARTY
A dinner party was held
Saturday evening honoring
Mrs. Velma Cassady, Tuppers
Plains.
·
Cards and gifts along with red
roses were presented to Mrs.
Cassady by her daughter, Mrs.
Leota Cooper , Syracuse·,
grandd aug hters, Mrs . Janet
Kaye Cooper Compson, Mason,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Karen Lee
Cooper Russell , Tuppers Plains,
and great-grandchildren, Mark
Allen and Timmy Compson,
Mason, W. Va .; Eddie Lee and
Tammy Rene Russell, Tuppers

grandparents.

Dairyu Banr
.

e Plaw
ins.

By CHARLES F. BERLITZ where the stress alone indi· :'Doll," while a compliment
NEW YORK - ( NEA) - cates the language in which 10 most languages, is deli·
Male travelers wishing to you are speaking words of nitely not one in Japanese,
make an immediate, unfor· love. Other compliments in no matter how ·doll-like Japgettable impression on a Hebrew might include "You anese women may look to
member of the opposite sex are lovely!"-Aht n-e· khiiUI· foreigners. This is because
in her own lan~uage would dah! or "You are most the Japanese ideograph for
be interested 10 the fact lovely!"-Aht h·a·mudah!
"doll" implies "imitation hu·
that in every language there
In Spanish compliments man being" or "puppet." In
are compliments about the are so varied and imagina· hke manner the English
beauty and charm of women tive that there exists a spe· word of e n d e a r m en t
that, if you say them, will cia! word just for the com· "honey" is a source of mer·
immediately establish you as pliment that one fields at an riment to speakers of other
a linguistic expert in love unknown attractive woman languages, as is the French
even without knowing much as one passes her on the term Mon petit chou-"My
more of the language than street. This is the piropo little cabbage," the Portu·
you have just used.
which is not, as many lema I~ guese Meu passarinho-"My
For example, a delicate tourists have thought, a pre· little sparrow" and the Ger·
and poetic compliment to a Jude to a pick-up but is sim· man Mein goldfisch-"My
·1· t
ply an appreciative observa· goldfish," to name a few.
J apanese g1r IS o refer to t'
Greek, with an eye to fi'rst
her face as tamago kata 110 Ion on their charms, com· th
kao, "egg form face ," or parable to th e Italian pinch
inp first, uses "my golden
· "
on the d erriere. Piro pos one' to refer to one's lovet
eamago
s" meh 111, an egg
h with range from the c Ia s sic a 1 kh7'1.sl'mo to a won1an and
ye ' a p rase muc appre- Guapa! Bendita sea la madre khrisosmo to a man.
elated for its allusion to the
classically perfect Japanese que t~ ha parido!-"Beauti·
It is strange, in fact, how
female countenance - oval, ful one! B 1esse d be the words of love somehow re·
flat, with striking, black, mother
that bore you!" to fleet the spirit or geist of a
almond-shaped eyes.
Vaua 1 Un angelito se ha es· country. In Russia, for ex·
c a"p u do del cielo!-"Weli
A compliment that wi' ll now .1 An ange 1 has escaped fample,
l" . ,thed"word for "beautiget i m mediate reaction from heaven!" or to ali sorts u IS 're or vice versa in
from an Arab girl is to refer M ?tiler impromptu piropos Rhssian literature the set
to her eyes as yoon al ghra· limited only by one's imagi. P rase for "beautifu l girl"
zaali-"eyes of the gazelle:" nation .
or "fair maiden" is krasna
as it brings immediately to
d'yevtisa- which me an s
Italians, who share with either "beautiful girl" or
mind the huge, limpid, appealing eyes of the gazelle other Latins the custom of · "red girl." This interesting
of the desert. Perhaps this the Immediate· spoken com- juxtaposition of "beautiful"
compliment came from the plunentl usually have only aild "red" is part of the
fact that custom formerly favorab e Phrases Which Russian soul, coming from
allowed Arab males to see tend to embrace all women. long 'before the r.evolution,
only this part of the female. Even an elderly woman may possibly because the vivid
except in the case of his' own well walk with a livelier .and lively color of red in a
•
• step when she hears a ,male Ian.d of snow and mournful
harem.
voice murmur Vecclua-mu winter grayness would be
Modern Hebrew. a .. lin· 1111C01'U lmonu!- "Old- but indeed a beautiful contrast
gulstic co u • i n of Arabic. still gond!" For a younger
·
shares a~ least nne endear· woman the stroller along .. The intensive ":.otd foi'
ment with it, with a differ· the ,Via Veneto may exclaim very beaut I~." I. m ~~ke
ence only or stress uf une Cit e '"' m b rd. u!·- "What a manner, means very red syllable. In i\rahic •'my he· doll!" nr simply Bellissimo!'· przkras1!aya. Russian sung
Invert. '' when said fn &lt;I - "Sur(•r heautiful!''
bulfs will reco g nize tlus
wom~n Is ilo.l&gt;-i.llcl.i., whih•
wqrd !rom "Dark Eyci'hi Hdtrcw il j,, litlflilid ·i, un , Words nf ;uln\i ration and Ocll! Clwrlt111frl. Whose [irsl
in t crestIng r•xamltlr• nf nnd!•a rment vary coilsirh&gt;r· line translates "Dark eyes)
ahi,Y ;u·r·r•r&lt;llnA f.o language. black ~hd very beautiful" u1·

0rId

"Dark eyes, black and very
red," according to how prik·
rasnCi ya is translated.
In choosing words of love
or compliment it is importa nt to know what not to say
and what appa rently inol·
lensive words should not be
used. Take French, for ex·
ample- a language of endless subtlety. Look up the
wo rd "to kiss" in y o u r
Fr. e n ch ·English dictionary.
lt IS bazser , Would it not be
logical to use this as an im·
perative and to tell a girl
"Kiss me!" if yo u wanted a
kiss ' Now, grammatically at
least, this would be Baibez.

moi.1

But no. In this sense it
would be a very crass way
of commanding your partner
to participate in the sexual
embrace. So, if you wanted
to kiss yo u would have to
say ''Embrace me!"-Em·
brass e Z·lllOi! - however
grammatica lly illogical this
might be.
In French, in admiration
as well as in words of Jove '
things are defin itely not
what they seem. For exam·
ple, if you admire a lady's
breasts, you ca n reasonably
say Quell~ belle' go ,. g e!hterally ' What a beautiful
throat!'' The regular word
lor "girl- "fille"- is used
a·tone only to maan "daugh·
ter'' ; otherwise its general
ideomatic meaning is "girl
of the streets'' or "prosti·
tute.'' A young America n
male in France who might
logically refer to his fiancee
as "my girl." as in the case
of " my girl is com:og to visit
my family in 'Philadelphia,"
would cause even the pernHssive 1'1·ench to conclude
that A1nericans are crazy,
depraved, or. wor~t of all
lacking jn savoir-faire.
'

lodge ; Eleanor .~nd Nick
Leonard, archery instructors;
Janet Duffy, business manager.
Monday the girls were
assigned to units and the
various activities, games, and
craft work were started. Friday
~ill be parents' day and at that
lime demonstrations and
displays will be featured.
The units are as follows :
Brownie: Mrs . Margaret
Sheridan, Mrs. Kathryn
Johnson, Mrs. Nancy Morris,
leaders; Annie Ohlinger, senior
aide; Jan Betzing, Kenda
Braun, Cheryl Johnson, Linda
Kovalchik, Carol Morris, Laura
Ohlinger, Beth Perrin, Lena
Phalin, Lori Rupe, Angela
Sinclair, Camille Swindell,
Tonya Taylor, Jena Welker,
Linda Williams, Lorra Wisecup,
Timmy Starcher, and Connie
Whaley.
Junior Unit 1: Mrs. Marge
Benedum and Mrs. Sharon
Swindell, leaders; Amy Harnm,
Nancy Buskirk, senior aides;
Teresa Bendwn, Robin Dugan,
Rebecca Edwards, Charlene
Goeglein, Angela Hensley,
Vicki Hood, Maria Legar, Anita
Musser, Jennifer Ohlinger,
Linda Partlow, Kathie Quivey,,

Daughter 's Farrtily in··r.~.A-U.&gt;
Visited by Wilber Parkers

Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker shore line. They also visited
returned June 9 from a week Longhorn Town, Baker, Texas,
long visit with their daughter and saw a collection or'. the
Kimberly Seth, Jamie Sisson, and family, S~t. and Mrs. many kinds of barPed wire used
Joseph R. Poole, and Will, in In the old days, an old sleigh,
Marianne Welsh, Anna Wlles,
San
AntOnio, Texas. They went and a covered wagon.
Teresa Ervin, Lora Knighting,
by plane from Columbus via At Chicago's O'Hare Airport
and Pam Smith.
Chicago. ·
they were met QY their son and
Junior Unit 2: Mrs. Jackie
While at San Antonio they family, Mr. and .Mrs. Eric
Zirkle and Mrs. Betty Wiles,
leaders; Arlene Connolly, Patty visited Lackland Air Force Parker and Randy, and enjoyed
Edward&amp;, Ann Fitch, Cheryl' Base, the Alamo, Brackenridge •a visit with them between
Griffin, Tammy Johnson , Park, Central Park Shopping flights.
Sandra Miller, Robin Napper, Center, and Medina Lake. ·
Patricia Parker, Lori Pullins, Lackland is called the ·••••••••••••••
• ·
Linda Rosenbaum, Susan "Gateway to the Air Force" ·
Shields, Sherr! Starcher, Karla because all new Air Force i-t&lt;
);'
"'~- ~
· ..:.
Whaley, Susan Zikrle, Marie recruits take_ their basic
training
here.
r
.1
Pickens, Connie Knighting.
S.Sgt. Poole works in the
Cadettes: Mrs . Sharon
finance
department of the Air
Life given us by nature Is
Welker , leader;
Debbie
· 1
kl d
short; but the memory of
a well-spent life I~ eter·
Ohlinger, senior aide; Diana Force Hospita at Lac an 'one
of
the
largest
in
the
U.
S
.
.
-t&lt;
nal.
·~
Benedum, Mary Boggs, Teresa
i&lt;
'-Cicero .:
Buckley, Debra Connolly, Cathy Military, with 1,000 beds.
At
Brackenridge
Park
the
i&lt;
i&lt;
Meadows, Kim Ohlinger, Debra,
Shields, Luanne Staats, Cindy ·Parkers enjoyed the sky-ride
rlrl
Triplett, and Sandra Hensley. across the beautiful Chinese -t&lt;
Sunken
Garden
which
is
built
in
i&lt;
S
l"'i'
Mascots of the camp are
Patricia Duffy, Paula Swindell, an. old stone quarry and con- :
. ·
Jackie Welker, and Steve tams pools and plants of many -t&lt;
different kinds. Central Park i&lt;
Ohlinger.
Shopping Center is a complex of
F ·.da
i&lt;
1
shops built around a big central i&lt;
n. ys .Y
i&lt;
fountain with statues of the four i&lt; The Dr~ve-ln Wmdow i&lt;
seasons.
·•
IS Open
:
7
9
All under on·e roof, it is air- :
A. M: to P.M.
conditioned. Medina Lake is -t&lt;
( Conhn ~ouslyl .
located west of San Antonio in i&lt; Other Banking Hours 9 Ia
the desert area and is used for
J and 5 to 1 as usual on
irrigation, fishing, and sports. -t&lt; Fridays.
The Parkers accompanied the i&lt;
Th~ Happy Harvesters Class Pooles to the home of 5-Sgt.
~!~r~~ltrh~h~ch ~0~ to .~~~· . Poole's parenls, .Mr. and Mrs. • .
i&lt;
urc ounc1 ° Harmon Poole, Livingston, Tex. i&lt;
.;Jft~
.
•
apply on the parsonage debt Here they toured th Lak i&lt;
.
during a meeting Friday night L' . to
Th' laek
e i&lt;
POMEROY, OHIO
Miss Sybil Ebersbach and Ivmgs n ar~a. IS e was ·i&lt;
Member FDIC
built by the City of Houston for i&lt;
Member Federal
h te
Mrs. Da1e·Smith
tin were
'th Mr
. os S sses
'th use as a wa ter supp1y. It covers i&lt;
..,.
Reserve sys tem
for th e mee g w1
s. nu 93 000
d ha 8 80 011.1
,.
presid:ng at ·the business
' acres an
es of

A Thought

or UUilY

tt

* * Easy*

t If Qu'
t

DRIVE•IN
BANKING :

'an

Happy Harvesters

i

Contribute to
Parsonage Fund

t~Tbe O.Uy Sentlnel,Mlddleport-PoniOI'Oy, o., June 15, 1971

Mark ·Jf Old Fashioned
ONE. SILVER DOLLAR

Bu 6 lb. French

PORK .STEAK .• ~:::
NECK BO_
NES•. :u:::~:~...•.. 5
.SLIC. BACON.:::::::....4 .. s1
; BO~STO'N BUTTS
49t
:
........... ·······
5

...........: .

lb.

SUPERIORS

....

...

.

.. ·

lb.

.

l ·~ Superiors Smoked

t

.
R
'
S
59}
0
WI EN E •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

t fARMERS-BANK :

Social
Cale'ndar
TUESDAl
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S
Auxiliary, 7:30Tuesday night at
the firehouse.
GROUP !1, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Tuesday, 7,30 p. m. home of
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall with
M M
M'll
~ te
rs. yron 1 er' co- ·' 8 ss.
HAVEN HIGHMAKERS Club
meeting, Tuesday, (tomght ),
7:30 p.m.
WEDNESD
AY .
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Master, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
~emdplek, All ntuals requested at
e es ·
EASTERN. Athlet'lC Boosters,
8:30 p. m. Wednesday at high
school.
MRS. VILMA Pikkoja, guest
spea ker when F ores t Run
WSCS • Um' ted Meth od'IS t
Ch urc h' meets · a t 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at church. All
· 'ted .
women of church mv1
PAST PRESIDENTS,
·
Amencan
Legion Auxiliary,
E&gt;· rew webster Pos t 39,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Iva Powell.
THURSDAY
WILLING WORKERS CIW&gt;S,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Carl Moore.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 6:30
·

an d t'A' IN.·' Gs

co·

session. The food sale to be this
weekend was d1'scussed and
plans made for homemade ice
cream, cake, pie and coffee to
be served Friday night and a
luncheon with sandwiches,
salads, desserls and beverages
on Saturday.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart was
appointed to secure prices on a
new electric mixer and a car-·
ving knife for the church kitchen. Read at the meeting was a
card of thanks from Miss
Thelma Grueser for a gift' sent
her while she was hospitalized.
A picnic was planned for July
9 at the Route 33 roadaide park.
The menu was planned and
each one is' to~ehe~own table
service. Mrs. Be\iNeJtzling will
have the devotions and Mrs.
Stella Kloes will ·pr1sent the
program.
.,
'
A prayer for fellowship
by
Mrs. smith opened the lneeting.
Mrs. Clara Karr gave devotions
·
usmg
"My Last Days as a
Communist" by Jan Chi.icicky,
·"\church
now a pastor In a small
near the Russian borde!.
The program by Mrs.
Clarence Massar included a
story "It's Never the End"
relating to the problems of the
senior citizen. Members sang
"Happy Birthday" to Mrs.
carrie Meinhart. Prizes were
won by Mrs. Henry Reibel, lirs.

FABRIC SAVINIGS
BY THE YARD

590
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

GROUP REG. 15.98

From USDA
Choice Beef.
Any Amount

lb.

KNitS

18 ;

bOUBfE

YD.

Kettle Clofh, Sal lclofh, Printed
Whipped Creams, Ginghams,
Stretch Terry &amp; Colton Knifs.

8 pak

Gallon ·

16 oz.
bois.

1f2 ·gal.

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVII:E
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

•

o. .

QUICK SALE!

Ec. Department of the
school.

-•
••

'

•'•

,I

....•'
'•
•

FOR$

•

t.:

SHORTENING...~~.~~~~ ............................... 3 can
FAVORITE BREAD . ................................. 5 ~for
TOILET TISSUE ...~~~ ......... ~. .................12
PAPER TOWELS. :~.~~. ~~-·-······················· 3 ~~ 1oo
EASY MONDAY... ,~~~.~.~~~~~~. ~~~~~~~~~·················ql 33~
SPRAY STARCH ~ . .~~.~.~~~~~~............. . ...........~~ can 39~
JOY DOG FOOD. :.....................................~.~.'.~·. ~~~. 2.49
lb.

bol

I

•freezers
•Dishwashers

•

Scot Lad Fr.ncn

5

lb.

•••t ••••••u•••
bag ·
Troy Pack Breaaeo
18 oz.
Chuck Wogon,. .... . .. , ..... , Pkg.
Friel

794
794

Steak
Breaded ShritnP...... ~:.... ~:·. ~ 2.69 .,
,
Boaquet
5 &gt; "'· 51
bags

lARGE UNa.ASSIFIED

EGGS
1.•00

EVERYDAY LQW PRICE!

FAVORITE BREAD

EGGS
3 doz.
-- -

--- --

-

FOLGER'S
INSTANT COFFEE .
WITH
10 oz. $119
COUPON
JAR
GOOD AT MARK V STORE
\

L----

,..,._

___

I

I

1-

I

.I

I
I

I
_ _ _ _ .JI

I
I
I
I
I

I

I

I

ICE TEA MIX

with
PKG. 10
coupon
Good At Mark VStore
EXPIRES

59$

TOMATOES.
2 lb. pkg.
SUPER ,MARKET ··Open Daily 9 tO 10 • Sun.

·

.

.

We Accept Federal Food Stnmps ·
PHONE: ~92·3480

I

I
I
I

I•

FOR SUMMER SALADS!

, ORANGE JUICE

Potatoes.

~

16 oz.

"ani\\a

1umbo

Sc:ot Lad Frozen

(Upon Request)

8 pak

lARGE UNCLASSIFIED

oz.

.Dryers

lb.

dot

AIIAavnrs
Tb!OW-Away
Bottles

CLEANING

1.1o c:. • .,t.a
Pomeroy
PIIOIIt 992-5421
'

lb.

ICE ~gal.
CREAM

53~

2-HOUR

CLEANERS

All lean Choice
~ USDA Beef.
Fine For

SCOT LAD

THE FABRIC SHOP

•Washers

It
,.

Rt·COlA.

MILK

Large. Selection Summer Fabrics

0.

·eRanges
eRefriprators

Ib.

Seaitest Grade A

COLA

60" Wide

BAKER F RNITURE

ROBINSON'S

SUPERIORS POLISH .

DAIRY SPECIAL

ON SALE AT

Frigidaires from the
local

lb.

ROUND .BEEF GROUND CHUCK

Poly~er

TAGS 'EM

SUPERIORS SLICED OR atUNK

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

Club. Take covered dish and served from a table cente\00
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pom~roy,
table service.
with pink rosebuds ln a gr~n
MEIGS HIGH School band bowl. Attending, besides th e
rehearsal for regatta parade, 7 named, were Mrs . Eth I
'1JSTEN TO THUS"
to 9 p.m. Thursday at high Williamson, Mrs. Rose Ginthel,
FUN FOR ALL AT BIG
school. Members provide own Mrs . Ada Holter, Mrs.
transportation for rehearsal. Lawrence Lanning, Mrs. Neva
BEND REGATTA TIME.
Bus transportation available on Seyfried,Mrs.FredaDuffy,an~ , _ .
Friday' parade day' with buses Miss Erma Smith.
leaving Middleport, Pomeroy,
Rutland, at 4:45 p.m. Band
members not taking bus be at
high school by 5 p.m.
FRIDAY
ANNUAL REGATTA ice
cream social, fellowship hall of
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, Lunches
and baked goods available also.
Ice cream take home orders, ·
phone, Tuesday through Thurs·
dsy, 7 to 10 p.m, and Friday, 11
a.m. to 7 p.m., 992-2010.
0

.·•
•

J

lb.

'

-k,Jflflf•+••••••••:¥--1&lt;

:~ij~:u=~~:£:t~~i~:E:~~ ~~~~:~.~:.·a::::~::

MCCL PICNIC
Annual picnic of the Middleport Child Conservation
League will be held Thursday at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Mrs. Walter Morris will have
the devotions, and there will be .
initiation for new members: In
response to roll call, members
are t11 name the first thing they
would redecorate ln their home.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

·'

.... ••• ••••••

•

Jowl

MIDDLEPORT, Q .

�8- The Dally Se~th~el . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 1~. 1971

Miss Ronoyce Barnes Honors
Weds .Phillip Grate Roberta
Miss Rorioyce Dianne Barnes
and Mr. Phillip Eugene Grate
exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony 'at the
Indian Lake Church of Christ on
June 6 at 2:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Barnes of
Lewiston, Route 1, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr .
and Mrs . Arnold Grate,
RuUand.
The Rev . Herbert Grate,
pastor of the Chester Church of
the Nazarene, officiated at the
ceremony following a program
ol music by Mr. Robert Bray of
anctnnati, organist, and Miss
Vicki Harback of Franklin,
whose vocal selections were
"Saviour, Like a Shepherd Lead
Us," and ''0 Perfect Love."
Church decorations featured
an arched candelabra with
baskets of gladioli, daisies,
carnations arid cornflowers.
Escorted to the altar by her
fa !her, the bride wore a princess style gown of rose embossed textured cotton with a
short chapel train. The front
panel of the gown and the
neckline were trimmed in seed
pearls. The bride's shoulder
length veil of silk illusion fell
from a plateau of roses and
buds of the same material as
the dress. She carried a colonial
arrangement of white roses,
carnations and stephanotis.
'lbe bride's attendants were
her sisters, Miss Cindy liarnes,
maid of honor; Miss Becky
Barnes and Miss Cheri Barnes,
bridesmaids. They wore
princess style gowns of light
blue polyester trimmed in
matching ribbon with flower
headpieces, and carried
bouquets of pink roses, daisies,
carna lions, cornflowers, and
baby's breath, tied with blue
ribbons.

Smith

Mr. David Grate of llutland
served as best man, and the
ushers were Mr .. Floyd Hoff.
Miss Kollt!rta Smith, Midman, Marion; and Mr. Larry
dletown, daughter of the Rev.
Morgan, Bourbonnais, Ill.
and
Mrs. Robert E. Smith,
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Barnes wore a blue double Hysell Run Road, was honored
knit dress, A-line, trimmed in Saturday night with a bridal
white, white accessories, and a shower at the home of Mrs .
corsage of white spider mums. Norman E. Hysell .
Mrs. Grate was in a pink en- Games were played with
semble with white accessories prizes going to Mrs. Leo Hill,
and also wore a spider ' mum Mrs. Lydia Smith, Mrs. Leta
Fetty. Mrs. Archie Rose won
corsage.
A reception honoring the the door prize.
couple was held in the Masonic After Miss Smith opened her
Temple building at Lakeview , gifts, refreshments of ice
The bride'.s table featured a cream, cake, punch and mints
seven-piece wedding cake were served to those named and
decorated with glazed artificial Mrs . Donald Smith and Tona ,
Mrs. Ernie smith and David,
flowers . Miss Kathy Harris,
Mrs. David Grate, Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Eloise smith, Mrs. Maude
Grate, and Miss Arlene Blair Smith, Mrs. Esther Hauge,
Cinda Fetty, Mrs. Sheila Curtis
presided at the table, with Miss
Jeannie Dawson registering the and Donna , Mrs. Hope Drake,
Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, Carol
guests .
For a wedding trip to Ken- Coleman, Mrs. Faye Sauer, and
tucky, the bride changed into a Norma Jean Hysell .
blue polyester knit dress. She Others presenting gifts to the
wore the rose corsage from her bride~lect were Mrs. Roy
Johnson, Mrs . Raymo nd
bridal bouquet.
The couple will reside at Keesee, Mrs. James Carpenter,
Bethany, Okla. The new Mrs. Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs. Roy
Grate is a graduate of the In- Snowden, Mrs . Roberta
dian Lake High School, class of canaday, Mrs. Allen Gibson,
1968, and in 1970 graduated from Mrs. Tom Deeters, Mrs. Lori
the Mount Vernon Nazarene Dugan, Mrs. Harold Dewhurst,
Junior College. She will be Mrs. Paul Patterson, Mrs. Glen
a senior this fall at Bethany Deeters, and Mrs. Woodrow
Hill.
Nazarene College.
Mr. Grate, a 1968 graduate of 1!111!!1111lt$itM!l!i$!!W!ifli!iOO'!iJ!I!III!IIW
Rutland High School, also
graduated from the Mount Open meeUng of the Rutland
Vernon Nazarene Junior Garden Club wlll be .held June
College in 1970, and will also be 28 at the Rutland United
a senior at Bethany College. He Methodist Church. All clubs of
is employed at Hagee Foods, the county have been Invited,
and are asked lo advise Mrs.
Bethany.
Relatives and college friends Harvey Erlewine by pbone (742!rom Wapakoneta, Lima, Mount 4448), or by letler as to how
Vernon, Cridersville, Marion , many will be atlendlng by June
Quincy, and Bellefontaine at- 23. Mrs. Robert Thompson will
be giving demonstraUoDB on
tended the wedding.
rose arranging.

Attendance Averaging 47
The Daily Vacation BiDJe
School of the Silver Run Free
Will Baptist Church which
began June 7 through the 18th
has an average attendance of 47
with a total of 60 enrollees.
The program will conclude on
June 20 at 7:30 p.m. with a
display of craft work with the

ptcmc to ue held on the 21st at 7
p.m.
Nursery teacher and helper
are Evelyn Matthews and
Delores Miller, 'Primary
teacher and helpars are Freda
Little, Delma Halley and Judy
McHaffie, junior teacher and
helper a~e George McHaffie
and Fon'est Gillenwater, young
teens teacher and helpers are
Henry and Letha Davis, Bill
Little and Pearl Remy, pianist
is Maxine Little, director is
Delila Mulford and Jean
Thomas is secretary.

MISS HYSELL ILL
Miss Mabel Hysell was a
contributing hostess for the
Phllathea Society meeting at
the Middleport Church of Christ
Thursday night. She was unable
to attend due to lllness which
HOSPITALIZED
has kept her confined to her Jeff Buckley, son of Mr. and
home for the past week.
Mrs . John Buckley of
Chesapeake, and grandson of
DEGRE
ECEIVES
,R J is Schm 11 EMid Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink, is
MISS an · ed h ob, h 1 - confined to St. Mary's Hospital
dlepor t , rece1v
•
er ac e or at Huntin•ton,
W. Va. for
of
science
in
education
from
treatment
of
a
leg
fracture
The
Ohio University Sunday. At- youngster's condition
is .com· din
t
ten
g
commencemen
plica ted
by a blood
disease.
He
her parents, Mr. and were
Mrs. had
planned
a visit
to Mid·
Robert Schmoll, Bob and Jim, dleport this month with his

GS Day Camp Begins at
Big Bend Neighborhood
Annual day camp of the Big
Bend Neighborhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council got
underway Monday at Camp
Kiashuta with 63 girls
registered for the week-long
program.
Personnel of the camp includes Mrs. Mary . Bahr,
director ; Mrs. Mary Hunter,
folk dance instructor; Mrs.
Mary Lou Fick, nurse ; Mrs.
Donna Ohlinger, lady of the

Birthday Party to
Honor Mrs. Roush
A dinner party in observance
of the 80th birthday anniversary
of Mrs. L. R. Roush was held
Saturday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Young.
Four of the five children of
Mrs. Roush attended the observance with her son, Charles
Roush, telephoning from Des
Moines, Iowa. Gifts were
presented to the honored
guest and a decorated cake was
served following the dinner.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Roush, Mrs. Young, Mrs.
Richard Root, Middleport ; Mr .
and Mrs. Harley (Kathryn )
Brown , Columbus; Mrs.
Patricia Groves and J. R.
Kennedy, Middleport; grandchildren, Sandy, Cathy, Randy
and Bobby Yates, Tony and
Tammy Kennedy; greatgrandchildren, Mrs . Judy
Kennedy, Richard Knight, and
Melinda Groves.

GRADUATES FROM OU
carla Morris Salser, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris,
Racine, received a bachelor of
arts degre·e in psychology from
Ohio University Sunday. Attending her graduation were
her parents, a sister, Carol
Morris, and her husband, Larry
Salser.
MRS. FRY VISITS
rs
M . Ge orge Fr yoI CoIwnbus
came Saturday for a several
weeks' visit to Middleport with
relatives . She was the weekend
houseguest . of Mr. and Mrs.
oWen Fink, and visited briefly
with her sister, Miss Mabel
Hysell. She Is spending this
week in Racine with her sister,
Mrs. Alice Fink, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin.
Mrs. Fry was accompanied to
Middleport by Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Seipel.
IN HOLZER
Mrs. Iva Stewart of Rutland
was scheduled for surgery th'
IS
morning at the Holzer Medical
Center. She is in room 381. Mrs.
Stewart is employed at Jack's

d
t
h
WordS Of Love Aro

and Mrs, G. 0 . Schmoll,

.
RUSSELL GRADUATES
J. C. Russell, employed as a
pharmacist at Grant Hospital,
Columbus, received his degree
from the College of Pharmacy
at Ohio State University Friday.
Following his graduation, he
and his wife, Debbie, and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Truman
Russell, left on a vacation lrip
to Florida. They will be guests
of Mrs . Hattie Russell at St.
Petersburg,
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling
and Jay Pomeroy also attended c~mmencem~nt as well
a; a program by the pharmacy
graduating class on Th da
urs y
nigh..
DINNER PARTY
A dinner party was held
Saturday evening honoring
Mrs. Velma Cassady, Tuppers
Plains.
·
Cards and gifts along with red
roses were presented to Mrs.
Cassady by her daughter, Mrs.
Leota Cooper , Syracuse·,
grandd aug hters, Mrs . Janet
Kaye Cooper Compson, Mason,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Karen Lee
Cooper Russell , Tuppers Plains,
and great-grandchildren, Mark
Allen and Timmy Compson,
Mason, W. Va .; Eddie Lee and
Tammy Rene Russell, Tuppers

grandparents.

Dairyu Banr
.

e Plaw
ins.

By CHARLES F. BERLITZ where the stress alone indi· :'Doll," while a compliment
NEW YORK - ( NEA) - cates the language in which 10 most languages, is deli·
Male travelers wishing to you are speaking words of nitely not one in Japanese,
make an immediate, unfor· love. Other compliments in no matter how ·doll-like Japgettable impression on a Hebrew might include "You anese women may look to
member of the opposite sex are lovely!"-Aht n-e· khiiUI· foreigners. This is because
in her own lan~uage would dah! or "You are most the Japanese ideograph for
be interested 10 the fact lovely!"-Aht h·a·mudah!
"doll" implies "imitation hu·
that in every language there
In Spanish compliments man being" or "puppet." In
are compliments about the are so varied and imagina· hke manner the English
beauty and charm of women tive that there exists a spe· word of e n d e a r m en t
that, if you say them, will cia! word just for the com· "honey" is a source of mer·
immediately establish you as pliment that one fields at an riment to speakers of other
a linguistic expert in love unknown attractive woman languages, as is the French
even without knowing much as one passes her on the term Mon petit chou-"My
more of the language than street. This is the piropo little cabbage," the Portu·
you have just used.
which is not, as many lema I~ guese Meu passarinho-"My
For example, a delicate tourists have thought, a pre· little sparrow" and the Ger·
and poetic compliment to a Jude to a pick-up but is sim· man Mein goldfisch-"My
·1· t
ply an appreciative observa· goldfish," to name a few.
J apanese g1r IS o refer to t'
Greek, with an eye to fi'rst
her face as tamago kata 110 Ion on their charms, com· th
kao, "egg form face ," or parable to th e Italian pinch
inp first, uses "my golden
· "
on the d erriere. Piro pos one' to refer to one's lovet
eamago
s" meh 111, an egg
h with range from the c Ia s sic a 1 kh7'1.sl'mo to a won1an and
ye ' a p rase muc appre- Guapa! Bendita sea la madre khrisosmo to a man.
elated for its allusion to the
classically perfect Japanese que t~ ha parido!-"Beauti·
It is strange, in fact, how
female countenance - oval, ful one! B 1esse d be the words of love somehow re·
flat, with striking, black, mother
that bore you!" to fleet the spirit or geist of a
almond-shaped eyes.
Vaua 1 Un angelito se ha es· country. In Russia, for ex·
c a"p u do del cielo!-"Weli
A compliment that wi' ll now .1 An ange 1 has escaped fample,
l" . ,thed"word for "beautiget i m mediate reaction from heaven!" or to ali sorts u IS 're or vice versa in
from an Arab girl is to refer M ?tiler impromptu piropos Rhssian literature the set
to her eyes as yoon al ghra· limited only by one's imagi. P rase for "beautifu l girl"
zaali-"eyes of the gazelle:" nation .
or "fair maiden" is krasna
as it brings immediately to
d'yevtisa- which me an s
Italians, who share with either "beautiful girl" or
mind the huge, limpid, appealing eyes of the gazelle other Latins the custom of · "red girl." This interesting
of the desert. Perhaps this the Immediate· spoken com- juxtaposition of "beautiful"
compliment came from the plunentl usually have only aild "red" is part of the
fact that custom formerly favorab e Phrases Which Russian soul, coming from
allowed Arab males to see tend to embrace all women. long 'before the r.evolution,
only this part of the female. Even an elderly woman may possibly because the vivid
except in the case of his' own well walk with a livelier .and lively color of red in a
•
• step when she hears a ,male Ian.d of snow and mournful
harem.
voice murmur Vecclua-mu winter grayness would be
Modern Hebrew. a .. lin· 1111C01'U lmonu!- "Old- but indeed a beautiful contrast
gulstic co u • i n of Arabic. still gond!" For a younger
·
shares a~ least nne endear· woman the stroller along .. The intensive ":.otd foi'
ment with it, with a differ· the ,Via Veneto may exclaim very beaut I~." I. m ~~ke
ence only or stress uf une Cit e '"' m b rd. u!·- "What a manner, means very red syllable. In i\rahic •'my he· doll!" nr simply Bellissimo!'· przkras1!aya. Russian sung
Invert. '' when said fn &lt;I - "Sur(•r heautiful!''
bulfs will reco g nize tlus
wom~n Is ilo.l&gt;-i.llcl.i., whih•
wqrd !rom "Dark Eyci'hi Hdtrcw il j,, litlflilid ·i, un , Words nf ;uln\i ration and Ocll! Clwrlt111frl. Whose [irsl
in t crestIng r•xamltlr• nf nnd!•a rment vary coilsirh&gt;r· line translates "Dark eyes)
ahi,Y ;u·r·r•r&lt;llnA f.o language. black ~hd very beautiful" u1·

0rId

"Dark eyes, black and very
red," according to how prik·
rasnCi ya is translated.
In choosing words of love
or compliment it is importa nt to know what not to say
and what appa rently inol·
lensive words should not be
used. Take French, for ex·
ample- a language of endless subtlety. Look up the
wo rd "to kiss" in y o u r
Fr. e n ch ·English dictionary.
lt IS bazser , Would it not be
logical to use this as an im·
perative and to tell a girl
"Kiss me!" if yo u wanted a
kiss ' Now, grammatically at
least, this would be Baibez.

moi.1

But no. In this sense it
would be a very crass way
of commanding your partner
to participate in the sexual
embrace. So, if you wanted
to kiss yo u would have to
say ''Embrace me!"-Em·
brass e Z·lllOi! - however
grammatica lly illogical this
might be.
In French, in admiration
as well as in words of Jove '
things are defin itely not
what they seem. For exam·
ple, if you admire a lady's
breasts, you ca n reasonably
say Quell~ belle' go ,. g e!hterally ' What a beautiful
throat!'' The regular word
lor "girl- "fille"- is used
a·tone only to maan "daugh·
ter'' ; otherwise its general
ideomatic meaning is "girl
of the streets'' or "prosti·
tute.'' A young America n
male in France who might
logically refer to his fiancee
as "my girl." as in the case
of " my girl is com:og to visit
my family in 'Philadelphia,"
would cause even the pernHssive 1'1·ench to conclude
that A1nericans are crazy,
depraved, or. wor~t of all
lacking jn savoir-faire.
'

lodge ; Eleanor .~nd Nick
Leonard, archery instructors;
Janet Duffy, business manager.
Monday the girls were
assigned to units and the
various activities, games, and
craft work were started. Friday
~ill be parents' day and at that
lime demonstrations and
displays will be featured.
The units are as follows :
Brownie: Mrs . Margaret
Sheridan, Mrs. Kathryn
Johnson, Mrs. Nancy Morris,
leaders; Annie Ohlinger, senior
aide; Jan Betzing, Kenda
Braun, Cheryl Johnson, Linda
Kovalchik, Carol Morris, Laura
Ohlinger, Beth Perrin, Lena
Phalin, Lori Rupe, Angela
Sinclair, Camille Swindell,
Tonya Taylor, Jena Welker,
Linda Williams, Lorra Wisecup,
Timmy Starcher, and Connie
Whaley.
Junior Unit 1: Mrs. Marge
Benedum and Mrs. Sharon
Swindell, leaders; Amy Harnm,
Nancy Buskirk, senior aides;
Teresa Bendwn, Robin Dugan,
Rebecca Edwards, Charlene
Goeglein, Angela Hensley,
Vicki Hood, Maria Legar, Anita
Musser, Jennifer Ohlinger,
Linda Partlow, Kathie Quivey,,

Daughter 's Farrtily in··r.~.A-U.&gt;
Visited by Wilber Parkers

Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker shore line. They also visited
returned June 9 from a week Longhorn Town, Baker, Texas,
long visit with their daughter and saw a collection or'. the
Kimberly Seth, Jamie Sisson, and family, S~t. and Mrs. many kinds of barPed wire used
Joseph R. Poole, and Will, in In the old days, an old sleigh,
Marianne Welsh, Anna Wlles,
San
AntOnio, Texas. They went and a covered wagon.
Teresa Ervin, Lora Knighting,
by plane from Columbus via At Chicago's O'Hare Airport
and Pam Smith.
Chicago. ·
they were met QY their son and
Junior Unit 2: Mrs. Jackie
While at San Antonio they family, Mr. and .Mrs. Eric
Zirkle and Mrs. Betty Wiles,
leaders; Arlene Connolly, Patty visited Lackland Air Force Parker and Randy, and enjoyed
Edward&amp;, Ann Fitch, Cheryl' Base, the Alamo, Brackenridge •a visit with them between
Griffin, Tammy Johnson , Park, Central Park Shopping flights.
Sandra Miller, Robin Napper, Center, and Medina Lake. ·
Patricia Parker, Lori Pullins, Lackland is called the ·••••••••••••••
• ·
Linda Rosenbaum, Susan "Gateway to the Air Force" ·
Shields, Sherr! Starcher, Karla because all new Air Force i-t&lt;
);'
"'~- ~
· ..:.
Whaley, Susan Zikrle, Marie recruits take_ their basic
training
here.
r
.1
Pickens, Connie Knighting.
S.Sgt. Poole works in the
Cadettes: Mrs . Sharon
finance
department of the Air
Life given us by nature Is
Welker , leader;
Debbie
· 1
kl d
short; but the memory of
a well-spent life I~ eter·
Ohlinger, senior aide; Diana Force Hospita at Lac an 'one
of
the
largest
in
the
U.
S
.
.
-t&lt;
nal.
·~
Benedum, Mary Boggs, Teresa
i&lt;
'-Cicero .:
Buckley, Debra Connolly, Cathy Military, with 1,000 beds.
At
Brackenridge
Park
the
i&lt;
i&lt;
Meadows, Kim Ohlinger, Debra,
Shields, Luanne Staats, Cindy ·Parkers enjoyed the sky-ride
rlrl
Triplett, and Sandra Hensley. across the beautiful Chinese -t&lt;
Sunken
Garden
which
is
built
in
i&lt;
S
l"'i'
Mascots of the camp are
Patricia Duffy, Paula Swindell, an. old stone quarry and con- :
. ·
Jackie Welker, and Steve tams pools and plants of many -t&lt;
different kinds. Central Park i&lt;
Ohlinger.
Shopping Center is a complex of
F ·.da
i&lt;
1
shops built around a big central i&lt;
n. ys .Y
i&lt;
fountain with statues of the four i&lt; The Dr~ve-ln Wmdow i&lt;
seasons.
·•
IS Open
:
7
9
All under on·e roof, it is air- :
A. M: to P.M.
conditioned. Medina Lake is -t&lt;
( Conhn ~ouslyl .
located west of San Antonio in i&lt; Other Banking Hours 9 Ia
the desert area and is used for
J and 5 to 1 as usual on
irrigation, fishing, and sports. -t&lt; Fridays.
The Parkers accompanied the i&lt;
Th~ Happy Harvesters Class Pooles to the home of 5-Sgt.
~!~r~~ltrh~h~ch ~0~ to .~~~· . Poole's parenls, .Mr. and Mrs. • .
i&lt;
urc ounc1 ° Harmon Poole, Livingston, Tex. i&lt;
.;Jft~
.
•
apply on the parsonage debt Here they toured th Lak i&lt;
.
during a meeting Friday night L' . to
Th' laek
e i&lt;
POMEROY, OHIO
Miss Sybil Ebersbach and Ivmgs n ar~a. IS e was ·i&lt;
Member FDIC
built by the City of Houston for i&lt;
Member Federal
h te
Mrs. Da1e·Smith
tin were
'th Mr
. os S sses
'th use as a wa ter supp1y. It covers i&lt;
..,.
Reserve sys tem
for th e mee g w1
s. nu 93 000
d ha 8 80 011.1
,.
presid:ng at ·the business
' acres an
es of

A Thought

or UUilY

tt

* * Easy*

t If Qu'
t

DRIVE•IN
BANKING :

'an

Happy Harvesters

i

Contribute to
Parsonage Fund

t~Tbe O.Uy Sentlnel,Mlddleport-PoniOI'Oy, o., June 15, 1971

Mark ·Jf Old Fashioned
ONE. SILVER DOLLAR

Bu 6 lb. French

PORK .STEAK .• ~:::
NECK BO_
NES•. :u:::~:~...•.. 5
.SLIC. BACON.:::::::....4 .. s1
; BO~STO'N BUTTS
49t
:
........... ·······
5

...........: .

lb.

SUPERIORS

....

...

.

.. ·

lb.

.

l ·~ Superiors Smoked

t

.
R
'
S
59}
0
WI EN E •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

t fARMERS-BANK :

Social
Cale'ndar
TUESDAl
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S
Auxiliary, 7:30Tuesday night at
the firehouse.
GROUP !1, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Tuesday, 7,30 p. m. home of
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall with
M M
M'll
~ te
rs. yron 1 er' co- ·' 8 ss.
HAVEN HIGHMAKERS Club
meeting, Tuesday, (tomght ),
7:30 p.m.
WEDNESD
AY .
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Master, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
~emdplek, All ntuals requested at
e es ·
EASTERN. Athlet'lC Boosters,
8:30 p. m. Wednesday at high
school.
MRS. VILMA Pikkoja, guest
spea ker when F ores t Run
WSCS • Um' ted Meth od'IS t
Ch urc h' meets · a t 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at church. All
· 'ted .
women of church mv1
PAST PRESIDENTS,
·
Amencan
Legion Auxiliary,
E&gt;· rew webster Pos t 39,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Iva Powell.
THURSDAY
WILLING WORKERS CIW&gt;S,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Carl Moore.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 6:30
·

an d t'A' IN.·' Gs

co·

session. The food sale to be this
weekend was d1'scussed and
plans made for homemade ice
cream, cake, pie and coffee to
be served Friday night and a
luncheon with sandwiches,
salads, desserls and beverages
on Saturday.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart was
appointed to secure prices on a
new electric mixer and a car-·
ving knife for the church kitchen. Read at the meeting was a
card of thanks from Miss
Thelma Grueser for a gift' sent
her while she was hospitalized.
A picnic was planned for July
9 at the Route 33 roadaide park.
The menu was planned and
each one is' to~ehe~own table
service. Mrs. Be\iNeJtzling will
have the devotions and Mrs.
Stella Kloes will ·pr1sent the
program.
.,
'
A prayer for fellowship
by
Mrs. smith opened the lneeting.
Mrs. Clara Karr gave devotions
·
usmg
"My Last Days as a
Communist" by Jan Chi.icicky,
·"\church
now a pastor In a small
near the Russian borde!.
The program by Mrs.
Clarence Massar included a
story "It's Never the End"
relating to the problems of the
senior citizen. Members sang
"Happy Birthday" to Mrs.
carrie Meinhart. Prizes were
won by Mrs. Henry Reibel, lirs.

FABRIC SAVINIGS
BY THE YARD

590
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

GROUP REG. 15.98

From USDA
Choice Beef.
Any Amount

lb.

KNitS

18 ;

bOUBfE

YD.

Kettle Clofh, Sal lclofh, Printed
Whipped Creams, Ginghams,
Stretch Terry &amp; Colton Knifs.

8 pak

Gallon ·

16 oz.
bois.

1f2 ·gal.

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVII:E
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

•

o. .

QUICK SALE!

Ec. Department of the
school.

-•
••

'

•'•

,I

....•'
'•
•

FOR$

•

t.:

SHORTENING...~~.~~~~ ............................... 3 can
FAVORITE BREAD . ................................. 5 ~for
TOILET TISSUE ...~~~ ......... ~. .................12
PAPER TOWELS. :~.~~. ~~-·-······················· 3 ~~ 1oo
EASY MONDAY... ,~~~.~.~~~~~~. ~~~~~~~~~·················ql 33~
SPRAY STARCH ~ . .~~.~.~~~~~~............. . ...........~~ can 39~
JOY DOG FOOD. :.....................................~.~.'.~·. ~~~. 2.49
lb.

bol

I

•freezers
•Dishwashers

•

Scot Lad Fr.ncn

5

lb.

•••t ••••••u•••
bag ·
Troy Pack Breaaeo
18 oz.
Chuck Wogon,. .... . .. , ..... , Pkg.
Friel

794
794

Steak
Breaded ShritnP...... ~:.... ~:·. ~ 2.69 .,
,
Boaquet
5 &gt; "'· 51
bags

lARGE UNa.ASSIFIED

EGGS
1.•00

EVERYDAY LQW PRICE!

FAVORITE BREAD

EGGS
3 doz.
-- -

--- --

-

FOLGER'S
INSTANT COFFEE .
WITH
10 oz. $119
COUPON
JAR
GOOD AT MARK V STORE
\

L----

,..,._

___

I

I

1-

I

.I

I
I

I
_ _ _ _ .JI

I
I
I
I
I

I

I

I

ICE TEA MIX

with
PKG. 10
coupon
Good At Mark VStore
EXPIRES

59$

TOMATOES.
2 lb. pkg.
SUPER ,MARKET ··Open Daily 9 tO 10 • Sun.

·

.

.

We Accept Federal Food Stnmps ·
PHONE: ~92·3480

I

I
I
I

I•

FOR SUMMER SALADS!

, ORANGE JUICE

Potatoes.

~

16 oz.

"ani\\a

1umbo

Sc:ot Lad Frozen

(Upon Request)

8 pak

lARGE UNCLASSIFIED

oz.

.Dryers

lb.

dot

AIIAavnrs
Tb!OW-Away
Bottles

CLEANING

1.1o c:. • .,t.a
Pomeroy
PIIOIIt 992-5421
'

lb.

ICE ~gal.
CREAM

53~

2-HOUR

CLEANERS

All lean Choice
~ USDA Beef.
Fine For

SCOT LAD

THE FABRIC SHOP

•Washers

It
,.

Rt·COlA.

MILK

Large. Selection Summer Fabrics

0.

·eRanges
eRefriprators

Ib.

Seaitest Grade A

COLA

60" Wide

BAKER F RNITURE

ROBINSON'S

SUPERIORS POLISH .

DAIRY SPECIAL

ON SALE AT

Frigidaires from the
local

lb.

ROUND .BEEF GROUND CHUCK

Poly~er

TAGS 'EM

SUPERIORS SLICED OR atUNK

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

Club. Take covered dish and served from a table cente\00
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pom~roy,
table service.
with pink rosebuds ln a gr~n
MEIGS HIGH School band bowl. Attending, besides th e
rehearsal for regatta parade, 7 named, were Mrs . Eth I
'1JSTEN TO THUS"
to 9 p.m. Thursday at high Williamson, Mrs. Rose Ginthel,
FUN FOR ALL AT BIG
school. Members provide own Mrs . Ada Holter, Mrs.
transportation for rehearsal. Lawrence Lanning, Mrs. Neva
BEND REGATTA TIME.
Bus transportation available on Seyfried,Mrs.FredaDuffy,an~ , _ .
Friday' parade day' with buses Miss Erma Smith.
leaving Middleport, Pomeroy,
Rutland, at 4:45 p.m. Band
members not taking bus be at
high school by 5 p.m.
FRIDAY
ANNUAL REGATTA ice
cream social, fellowship hall of
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, Lunches
and baked goods available also.
Ice cream take home orders, ·
phone, Tuesday through Thurs·
dsy, 7 to 10 p.m, and Friday, 11
a.m. to 7 p.m., 992-2010.
0

.·•
•

J

lb.

'

-k,Jflflf•+••••••••:¥--1&lt;

:~ij~:u=~~:£:t~~i~:E:~~ ~~~~:~.~:.·a::::~::

MCCL PICNIC
Annual picnic of the Middleport Child Conservation
League will be held Thursday at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Mrs. Walter Morris will have
the devotions, and there will be .
initiation for new members: In
response to roll call, members
are t11 name the first thing they
would redecorate ln their home.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

·'

.... ••• ••••••

•

Jowl

MIDDLEPORT, Q .

�.--- ----• .. . :: . i' ;: : !: =~ . ·: :

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne 9a ,m.

LEGAL NOTICE
ORDINANCE

411

2 SIRS

OF
QUALITY

OIIDINANCE PROVIDING
,OR THE AWARD OF AN
Ca~c~tllallon &amp; Corr~cllons
IUUI OF SEWER IMWill
be accepted unlil9a .m. for
PIIOVEMENT BONDS OF
Dar of Publication
VILLAGE
OF
THE
REGULATIONS
POMEROY,
AND
DECLARING
AN · The Publisher reserves the
EMERGENCY
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
WHEREAS, on May 26, 1971 , publisher wi ll not be responsible
bids were received for the
purchase of 575 ,000 Sewer for more than one incor'red

radio, new

tum per annum with a premium
of UIO.OO;

NOW, THEREFORE , BE IT
RESOLVED by the Council of

the Vllllge of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio :
Section 1. That the aforesaid

Sewer lmprovemtnt Bonds

bearing
the
terms
and
maturltiiS as provided In Or dinance No. 416 are hereby
awarded and sold to Sweney

Cartwright of Columbus, Ohio,

burlng Interest at the rate of 6
pet per centum per annum,

with a prem tum of uao.oo.
section 2. That the Clerk shall

Section A. This ordinance Is
hereby declared to be an
emergency measure nteeasary
for the pa\:rvatlon of the
public
c
welflre and

r•

safety o this

llage, and for

W· S-w, radio, clean

l

In Memory

cease, no pain Is ever felt .
Sadly missed by his wife,
Lucy, children, grandchildren
and great-grandchildren.
6-lS-tic

- ----Card of Thanks

the further reason that the THE CHILDREN and I wish to
lmmtdlate sale of such bonds Is
express our very deep
ntctsserv to preaerve the credit
gratitude to those friends and
of tht VIllage by retiring the
neighbors who so generously
outstanding notes Issued In
and
unselfishly gave of their
anticipation
thereof ;
lime and efforts during this
wherefore, this resolution shall
recent trytngferlod following
takt effect and be In force
the death o my husband,
Immediately u.pon Its passage .

~

Paned: May 26, 1971

Attest : Jane Walton

Clerk

Chlares w. Legar
Mayor.•
(6)

.

15, 22

ORDINANCE
NO. '75-71

'
An Ordinance to Regulate the
removal of curbs along • the
Streets and Highway of the
VIllage end the Fee thereof .
Be It ordained by the Council
of the Village of Middleport as
follows :

c Soe. 1. That no person shall

Robert Carlton Gorrell. The
beautiful
flowers
and
thoughtful cards, as well as
the gifts of food and genuine

concern, have been sincerely

Mayor of the VIllage .

Stet. II. No removal Is valid

N0t'ICe
p .m . AI kinds mechanic
work. On Rt. 124 near the
Crossroads. Phone 992-6392 or

992·7121.

6-15-31c

•·

unless authorized or supervised GUN SHOOT Sunda June 20.
by the Street Maintenance
'
y,
Supervisor so as to control
Assorted meats, will start at 1
drainage of adiacent proper .
p.m . Racine Gun Club.
ties.
.
6-1S-41c

sec.

Ill. The fee for such

days ancl 949.4499 even ing s.

6-15·3fc

- -----

selling, hus band deceased. No
Sunday sa les. $4S. Mrs .
Rann 1e

@

_____ P'_OM
....:.I!ROY_,_OH
_I_O_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~

--,--:c-:--::----

pormll is $5.00.
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Sec. IV. The penalty tor
Gobe$0 tablets and E-Vap -

maklng such removal without
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
said permit and Supervisor
shall be not tess than $5.00 nor REVIVAL AT lhe Burlingham
morJ than $50.00.
Church. Featuring the youth
Stc. v. This Ordinance shall
evangeletts
of Athens, Ohio,
take effect an~ be In force from

June 16 to 20, 1971 , 7:30 each

and alter May 25, 1971.
Passed the 24th day of Mav

evening. Everyone welcome .

1171 .

Rev . Donald L. Brlckles,

John W. Zerkle
evangellsl.
President of Council
6-15-3tc
Attest : Gene Grate
Glerk
(6) t, 8, (15, 3t PHIL AND JIM's Restaurant
and Pizza , formerly Home
Restaurant. Open at 6 a. m.

6-13-31c

----FATHER'S DAY special :

Moore,

Rt.

Cemetery. Good location . No

Sunday sale, $40. Mrs. Rannie
M oore, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.

telephon es.

6-15-3tp

------

dishe s, GOOD MILK cow, Guernsey

clock s. bra ss

and Hol stein. Phone 992·2362.

This Is highest raid earning
opportunity o its kind
available and If you qualify,

you can expect to earn over

6-15-3tc

Big Tire Sale

For Sale
KOSCOT

KOSMETICS.

wigs

required . For detail information, write Electro-Lux

or apply at 657 Seventh Street,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
6-13-3tc

make your rubber stamp wi th
your name and address .
Stamp and Information, $2.

Th e

Ambrose

Co .,

4325

992-5113 .

6-2-tfc

LAWN mower, Simplicity 5'4 H.P.• 321nch cut, 7
ft . mower semi -mounted.
Phone 949-4111.
6-13-31p
- - - - - -- - REGA TT A Spec ia I, 17 -IT"
Thompson boa t. dock cove rs,

wh i te Pek ingese. Priced very
reasonable . Phone Parker s.
burg 428·7545.
6-13-31p

For Sale

6-10-61p

- -- - - -

36" X23 11 X.009

Female Help wanteo
RETAIL

SALES

Aluminum

position.

Qua llfy for some .respon .

sib il lly . Good health. 40 hour
week. Reply lo Box 729, Daily
Sentinel.
6-IS-tfc

Instruction

Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

high

wages

after

s hort

training. For application and

inlerview. call304-344-8843, or
write School Safety Division,
Advance Systems, Inc ., C·O

8 for Sl.OU

The
Daily Sentinel

Term inal Bldg., 5S17 Midland
Drive,

Charleston,

Vi rginia 25306.

- -----

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

111

1h PRICE
POMEROY
J.W. Cortty,Mgr~

,
·

Pltono9n-tJ'1

..~·' ~~-.....!II!!I!I!IJ!!~·~!11111!!"!11~

A PUBLIC

AUCTION As we

have sold our farm, we will
sell at Public Auction at the

!arm on Parker Run . On
Meigs Co. Road No. 9, one and

a half mile off 124, seven
miles north of Rutland, approxima te ly six miles south

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be lhe Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spen1.

ta ble, coal cook stove. Cattle,
4 head cows - Hereford, 2
young bulls . Lunch served by
lhe Rutland Fire Dept . Not
re spon s ible t or accidents .
Terms: Cash on day of sale.

Owner : Mr . and Mrs. Worl ey
Francis . Auct ioneer : Slim

Chapman, Hamden, Ohio.

6- 13~3tp

court St.

'ii:WINSOR
ii:BUDDY

PARKERSBUR~

_____

or all bids .

WMP0/1390

Bv order of the Board or•

be seen a t Bob
Racine Ohio. I
'

TWIN

1970 MAVERI CK: standard
triln $mission,

radio ,

25

Trustees of ,Sullon Township M.P.G. $1595. 1965 Ford
· Wlll tam 5 Cross. ClerK G,, I,1X Ie, Au tomatic. fac tory
. P 0 . Box 341 ~ir, S695 Coolville 667 -6114
Rac1ne 1 Ohio 45771
·
16 1 14, 15, 16, Jl c ·
•6,1&amp;-61p

. I

NEEDLE

·- - --

Free Estimates

CALL GEOR~E 985·3837
OR DON 992-6883

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworlh
137-4334, Columbu s.

1196.

SEPT IC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation , Stew•rl, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

S- 26-lfc

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
ho(lle• Call Guy Neigler ,
Racine, Ohio.

WITH HER? SHE~
A!; A CAT
FULL OF

7-31-ttc

------

machinery . Hou se with J
bedrooms, d ining room, living
room, 1'12 baths, enclosed

Virgil B.

back porch, wall to wall
carpeling . Aluminum siding,

awning , storm windows and
storm doors . City water .

l'D LIKE TO CALL MIM

AW, NOT' AGAIN,

FOR CATSAKfE./

FREE ;STIMATE Of{ general·
remodeling, roofing and
painting . Phone 992-7729, 9
a .m. to 6 p. m.
6-9-30tc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford "'
5-1-tfc

THE BORN LOSER

lRRE€ LIITlf ~!
\H,i.l'S Nl- I'D I.IKE

""·

U'l'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

11/f9R~

Iiiier repair . Free pickup and
delivery. Warren's Mower

Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
992-7357 .
5-18-tfc

sales representative. For free

.·

eslimales, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-lfc

Cleland Realty

SYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedroor..
and floors, 8 rooms with bath,
dining and paneled modern
ki tchen. Gas furnace, nice

garden . Aski ng on ly $13,000.00
with furniture.

1. Landacape

no traffic. Large yard lor kids SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. '192-2284.
and pets. More than $27,500
The Fabric Shop;'&gt; Pomeroy.
worth of contentment here,
bedrooms. New 2 ca r garage
Au thori zed Singer Sales and '
all on large lot . Asking
tha t's all we 're asking .
Service . We Shar.pen Scissors.
$14,SOO.OO.
3-"1'1-tfc
I AM LOCATED ON THE
-~--76 ACRES - 20 nearly leve l.
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER
- I have kitchen. dining room, U' OELL WH~E:L alignment
pasture of 25 ac r es fenced.
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Large 8 room house. Nice 3
living
room ,
bath ,
4
Complete front end service,
bay imp lement shed. other
bedrooms , basement, nic e
tune up and brake serv ice.
out buildings, several kinds of
ard . MY SELLING PRICE
Wheel s balanced eleclrult, well water. All this for
S JUST $10.000. SEE ME
tronically
.
All
work
only m ,ll!D".oo.
TODAY.

~

•··

failure
15. Craggy
htll
Krarnden's
vehicle

17.Make

-'
·,

grlllee

,.

Reasonable

3.

TERRY
MMIAM PUTTALfM CALLE[&gt; IT
i116HT. THE 0Pf051TIOH PARTY

'

,I

'.-

HAS loii&lt;EN O'lfR 5EI!fNOIP.
TKEI~ FII15T COIMIUNIQUE

ACCU~5 YOU CF

KAVING
BUNGLED THE LI~E~ATOR'S

:'1 '

WAS AL50 A QIJOTE
FRO\\ A M05CON HEART
5PECIAli5T A~OUT TilE
I'IIN6ER5 OF ENTRU5TIN6
THE LIVES OF IMI'ORTANT
MEN 10 CAPITAli5TIC

ISN'T A
FIGURE Of A IIOMAN AT THAT!

Y'KNOw, LEE, PUTTALEM

Filter.

MAY TAG
Rod Corptt

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rut lind. 0,

I

~ ~ 1,

•

1\l.'iOUE

WHAi DEVELOF&amp;AFieR
/!- HeAiED ARGUMENTc

;'I'ERIE5
arranp the
V
V
'l
I
to
the
11111wer, u
I~~==1\;:=::::::t&gt;.::::::j:::~
I
•urreated the aiAIYe eanoon.
-

I

-

Now
form

elrd«&lt;letton
ourprloe
by

I [ I l I I XI X]

Prillltle SU8P11SE ANSW!Un

(Aatwen to.orni")

Jumbl'" SQUAI

DRAWL

AVOWAL

WALLOP

VPalr.rd•y'•
An~wrr :

A

f'rln/nf' n r:~&gt;

of lnditln p11p1 -A " BOW.-OIP"'

I'L\NI • I S

bonu.s

....

35. Fit for

•

eaUnc
37. Whetotoi1e
38. Throw
off the
ll'li.ck

' II!--::&gt;
-' ~-

39. Exhort

DAILY CRYProQUOTE-Here'a bow to work It:
.t.

XYDL8AA Xa

II L 0 N 0 FIE L L 0 W
One letter simply 1tand• for another. In this sample A Ia
1110d for t~e three L'e, X for the two O'o, etc. Single letten,
apo1tropbea, the lenrth and formation of the words are &amp;11
hlnll, Each day the code lettAtn are different.

~'l-

~::;·~-~~~·t~~;I~·...,_~;-~-===~
,,_ ,, ~:::::=========
r
I CAr'l'T

M

KUT

JGHNTC

MCTlUGH

KUT

POMHMCIGG

YMC ' l

Y M C'l

IUM!

UG

WOOOSlOCK HAS FAu.EN
IN LOVE IJJITH A WORM!

BEliEVE
IT ~

A Orn&gt;toJftllll Quol&amp;llon

' RUTLAND AUTO SALES
t

admlxture

'-

37. Paul Newman role

32. Before

-·

j

I~III•TI,. C •ouf" l•.,.,.

""v"'~""''~'-

I UJNIW

keeper's
entry (a.bbr.

33. Gareon's

The Best Quality
Guaranteed LO WE.S'l' Pnces

~

I abbr.)

36. Book-

31. Mediator,
tor short

fALK TO SH·ERMAN TILLIS

Service

member

3•. Nobleman

fonn
25- Snicker
26. Yearn
27. Skin
aperture
28. Arctic
decor
29. Moat

LIL COLT &amp; TIMBER
LAKE
'

.

We Sptclalitt In

huoband
6. DwellLng
7.Bar

J

Like It"
lady
SO. Tint

burger's

I

'

Moytag

G. Wile or

I m;n.,-,,

29. "As You

mentis
22. Footprint
28. Ham-

CAPl'AIN EASY

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even r
heat, No hot spots,
no overdrylng ,
F tnt Mesh L lnt

(3 wds.)
i . This very

Ye .. ehtiJ'• &amp;a1wu

weight
19. Head
22. Parched
28. Coupled
2~. Complied
with
25. Carry
27. With·
out

21. Compos

M1ytag

Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps .
Au.to.
water
level
cQ ntrol.
Lint
F !Iter •or Power
Fin Agitator .
Perma-Press ·

"'ain

place

'•
..

...

Big Capacity

lellt

12.Copy

attractive

TRAILERS &amp;CAMPERS
,.

demon

20. Porker's

$AJIE $AJIE $AVE $AVE:

6-t 61c

speed

&gt;I&lt; HI 1 I I

Unscramble the se foor JumbleR,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word&amp;.

reetp-

16. Under-

fora

18. Rest

t&gt;y HI Nil! 1\HI\U II ll

9. Bequeot

2. Equity

member
3. Query

~lJJJW@~®IJ..J ..,,.,;.&amp;IJ .-J
,_
"'rl

mation
(8wdl.)

that

tnsta.nt

16. Ralph

oeen

HELEN L. TEAFORD,

DOWN
1. For fear

or Irish

.,

for
Infor-

expert

14. Power

rates . Phone 992-3213.
COUNTRY HOME
3 WE HAVE SOLD MANY
5-22-3Dtc
bedrooms. bath, shallow well
HOMES THIS MONTH. LET
water , garage, ce llar and
US SELL YOURS TODAY.
garden . A good buy at
msurance
$7,000.00 or make us an offer.
HENRY CLELAND.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
We are ready to deal.
REALTOR
cancelled?
Lost
,y our ·
Office "2-22S9
opera tor's license? Call 992CALL US, IF 'YOU WANT TO
Residence992-2568
2966.
SELL WE WILL DO OUR
6-13-6tc
BEST
TO SELL
YOUR
· 15=-l~fc,
PROPERTY.
NO SALE
NO l::::::::'::::::::=-~::::::::::::::6:
COST TO 1 YOU. CALL 992-

ms.

10. Reverb·
." erate
11. Uproar;
commotion
18. Mulligan

15 T HAT A C.AR
ON TI-4E QUARRY
FI...OOR ?

8. ROqueat

~~-Coloring

5. Senorita's
garb

\RACY,

r

guaranteed .

4.0. Moratorium

feature
,I

extra protection . Quiet street,

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms air
conditioned . Nice living. 4

Y01tord&amp;y'1 Vl')'ptoquiltel Wll DON'T Billa( TO 811 J.B!&amp;
TO CHltx:K CRDilli, 80 WHY NOT LillOA' ,na: rr Alii&gt;
THEN TAX rr OUT OF BU8INII88.-WlLL J100111R1
&lt;C lfll Kl.. r.r.l11H11 1Ja41colo, Jloo.l

. DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

60B.Easl Main
Pomeroy
AND' IJOZER work.
ALMOST NEW BRICK- t&gt;ACKHOE
Septic
tanks
Installed. George
ROOMY RANCH STYLE
(Bill
)
Pullins,
Phone 992-2478.
HOME . 3 big bedrooms with
4-25-tfc
double closets. Insulated for

ni ce older house with oak trim

As:9~.;~~iE

GAS!

WEND'Y WRIGHT ••••

storm doors and
Selling due to Ill health . Phone AWNINGS,
windows, ca'rports , mar 614-98S-3938.
S-18-30tp quees, aluminum siding
and railing. Carl A. Jacob,

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Arnold Grate

HELLO1 LONG DI&amp;TANCE?

EXPERT · TREE service. Call
collect after 5 p.m .• Ri chard
Hayman. Reedsville 667-3041.
S;).VOip

RALPH'S
CARPET
READY-MIX
CONCRETE ·
Upholslery Cleaning Service. delivered right to your
Free
estimates .
Phone.
project. Fast tnd easy. Free
Gallipolis 4-16-0294.
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
3-12-tfc
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
Middleport. Ohio.
•
10 miles llB miles 4 lane high- O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER 6-30-tfc
way!, 19 miles, and 18 miles,
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
respective ly ; 31h miles fr"om
5-30-lf c HARRISON'S TV AND AN Coolville. 1 mile from .Tup- - - -- - TENNA SERVICE , Phone
pers Plains . $14,500 by
991-2522.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
owners, Frank and Pat
24 ACRE FARM, Long Boltom, .,---::-:--~__;;6.:.-l.:..O·:_:;tfc
Goebel, 667-3838.
with or wllhoul farm EXPERT lawn mower and
6-6-tfc

-~----

MVGUE66
IS IT
NliEDS

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 4-16-4782
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-tfc

Septic Tanks and Leach

Dri '&lt;e, Colu mbus, Ohio, phone

- ·- .
WINNIE WlNKLE

742-4902

Beds

basemen t, 133 Butternut Ave .,
iu s! walking distance from
down law n Pomeroy . Con ta ct

h -1 !&gt;

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Limestone Driveways

SIX ROOM house, balh, full

•,_ IS &amp;LOWIII
OUT OF HONES\
ABE'5 LI'L
HEAD~~

Kitchens. Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

6-15-31p

'

Complete
Remodeling

PHONE 992-2143

gas furnace, garage. Phone

991-2488.

_.Pomeroy!

JOHNSON MASONRY

6, 98 Parts
Plus
Blaettnar's

FIVE
ROOM
house, 2
· bedr ooms, bath, large kit chen . plenty of cupboards,

®

BLAEJTNARS

Special
At

DEXTER, 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-l14S

THAT M I GI-IT'i
6LA5T ALL KI-JOWLEDGE
OF ''TI-\E. METHOD'' -,
""y
'.

-AI-JD

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Healer Core.

Re-Charge

construction Co.

sewing

' 742-4211

•

~ mallest

Air Conditioning
lnspectipn and

All Weather Roofing &amp;

machine, 1971 model, in new

walnul sland , All features
tiulll -ln to make fancy
designs . Also butlonhole~ .
blind hems, etc., 543 - ~S cash
price or terms available.
Phooe 992-5641.
6-15-61c

THSM'--0::.

•

From the Larg&amp;~t Tt uck or,

_Ph . '92-2143

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

Salser's, ,

6-13-31c

wm ...ACTUAL-LV,

1 SU~GiiSTE I&gt; IT 10

•
!

NOPEFEELS
FINE-

Have Your seasonal

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Wolf!
Spouting, Roof
Paintinl!

_____

. T~actor and I. H. Tractor ,
. B•dd ,er t~ _subm i t d~tailed
$pec•flcattons of e(lu1pment
offered. The Board of Trustees'
re~erves the right to reject any

MY [.Q, GillES ME
CEI?TAIN ADVANTAG ES ovE~ GL AMOR
GIRLS/
.
SLlRI!
If DOES!
J
;

DOUBLE-WIDE~

MOBILE HOMES, INC.

SlL

- - -- - -

~

~ALSO

MEMORIAL BRIDGf TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc

MOBILE HOMES

.

, AMAZif'ltLT~EV HAl&gt;
THE I'ORSSIG~T TO NAME
'fOU /.Q. W~EN VOU WEllE
ONL-Y HOUII.S OL-1&gt; ~

,tEE TOM CROW, GUY SHttLER OR BOB "CROW

COAL , limeston e. Exce lsior

MILLER

Morning. A
time for some
.Double dismal
oltl~. Jim Mees
somehow .gets us 111
fogether every d1y.

;jrCHAMPION
1-jcVAN DYKE

TEAFORD

Skate-A-Way announces free
TRUCK LINES
skating Wednesday night for City and road driver training .
fathers accompan led by
Call or write Sheridan Truck
children. Open Wednesday .
Lines , 1255 Corwin Avenue , IS-16 CHAROLAIS bull, 4 years
WIDE
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to
S13-863-6404, Hamilton, Ohio, old. and Hampshire boar hog ,
240
lbs.
Phone
949-383S.
10:30 p.m . Private parti es
45015.
6-13-3tc
available. Phone 985-3929 or
6-14-2tc
985-3585-----6-13-3tc
FOR A Meyers alum inum boat
Wanted
- won'trust. rot.orl eak . Call
f,EGISTERED quarter stud
1220 Washington Blvd.
991-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
BABYSITTER
.
days.
in
my
service, Hank s Rock 209.498 .
fibergla
ss
15
foot
canoes.
Belpre, Ohio
home. Phone 992 7794.
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
S-16-3Dtc
6.10-5tc
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 9916880.
NEW 4 fl . or s fl . brush hog. Real Estate For Sale
6-1-11tc
Phone 992-6319.
For Ren~
14 ACRE FARM, Long Botlom ,
LABOR LOCAL NO. 83, election TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, _ _ _ __ _ _ _6:_:_9-6tc
with
or
withou t ·farm
June19, 1971, 9 a . m. - 3 p. m.
m
achi
nery
.
Hou se with 3
lh.mile
north
of
new
Meigs
MODER N WALNUT Stereo Vote for Gardner (Jun e)
bedrooms,
dining
r oo m , li ving
High
School.
Phone
991-2941.
radio combination, dual
Dunham, Jr. for bu siness
Jl/z
baths
, enclosed
room
,
3-5-lfc
volume control , 4 speakers. 4
agent. Support his staff. Why
back
porch,
wall
to wall
speed changer, separate
are local laborers loafing
carpeting
.
Aluminum
siding,
controls . Balance $63.79. Use
when outside men are coming FUR NISHE D and unfurn ished
windows
and
awning,
storm
apartments.
Close
to
school
.
· our budget terms. Call 992In to our area working . I
sl
or
m
do
ors
.
City
water.
Phone
992-5434.
708S.
romise if elected to work
Selling dve to ill health . Phone
10-18-lfc
6-13-6tc
r.ocal
men in their area first
614-98S-3938.
before outside laborers come
5-18-JOtp
EFFICIENCY
apartment,
$10
COLONIAL Maple Stereo-Radio
into your area . A man to se r ve
per
week
.
Phone
991-5434.
comblnal lon, AM-FM radio ,
you, not ru.le you . Your vote
6-11-3tc four speakers , 4 speed in· 5 ROOMS AND bath, basement
apprecla'llted.
and cellar . Good location .
lermixed changer, separate
6-8-91p
4 ROOM furnished apartment
Phone 992-5808.
controls. Balance $78.60. Use
~R;-;E::;D:;;u""c'"E;:-:s:-:a-;fe-=a-=n"'"
d - f;:a"'"slc-cwi1h
with bath . Reynolds Flower
6-13-31c
ou r lime payment plan . Call
__:_:
Gobese ta blets and E-VapShop. Mason, W. Va . Also 2 992-7085.
Waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
bedroom trailer. Phone 7736-13-61c H(JlJ~~. 1640 Lin co ln His. :
5-26-3Dip
5147.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
6-8-tfc STRAWBERRIES. Geraldine
10-25-lfc
Cleland, Racine. Ohio.
SAVE UP to one half. Brino
6-3-11tc J BEDROOM brick home .
your sick TV lo Chuck's TV TRAILER LUIS. t&gt;ob's M0011e
Court. Rl . 124, Syracuse ,
Shop, lSI Butlernut Ave. ,
Choice location in Middleporl .
FROM WA LL lo wall , no soil at
Seen by appoin tment only .
Pomeroy.
Ohio . 991-2951.
4-2-lfc
4-13-lfc
all on carpels cleaned with
Phone 992-5523 afler 4 p.m .
Blue Lustre . Rent electric
5-7-ttc
shampooer Sl. Baker Fur ---c.X rR,.... ldrge tra iler lots, gooa
LEGAL NOTICE
niture.
l ocation . Velma G. Zuspan ,
The Board of Sul1on Townsh ip
6-9-61c
773-S750, Mason. W. Va.
Trustees, Meigs County , Oh io,
.:_
6-15-12tc
will receive bids un t il 9 o'c lock
SET OF Colliers Encyclopedia
A. m . the 25th day of Jun e, 1971
for the purchase of a used
and 12-year books. Boy Scout
uniforms. P.hOne '192-6529.
Tractor. Lo•der. Backhoe . Auto Sales
Mower , '
w i th
m i nimum
6-13-3tc
specifications as follows : 51 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . - - -.; -:----::-c--'H.P Diesel Engine, 8 speed
ha rd top , power steering, 5Dx10 RICHARDSON mobile
shuttle transm ission, new
home, 1 bedroom • with air
power brakes, air, 18 ,000
750x 16 fron t tires and new
conditioning.
Phone 992'-5867.
14.9x25 rear tires. self .Jevellng · miles Excellent condi tion .
6-11 -61c
loader with 1/e cu . yd . bucket,
Phone .991-1188.
Backhoe with 14' d igg in g depth
6-J-tfc
and 24'' buckel. Traclor to have
5 POLLE D Hereford cows.
mod hitch and 8( industr ial rear
Phone 669-4240 Wilkesville
blade and side mount ed 1963 DODGE DART. 4 door,
after
5 p.m.
hydrauli c mower with 5' cut .
au toma t ic
transmiss ion,
6-ll -6tp
Offered as trade -I n : Case excellent condition . S42S. f.Aay

Olf.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

kinds , antique marble top
dresser . Farm machinery, NI CE HOME IN COUNTRY manure spreader , cut -off
One acre, nifi:ely f inished two
saw, double disk, hay rake .
bedr oom lionie with fir eplace,
old dump, mowing machine .
b uil l ·! n
k i tchen,
wood
7 ft. , cultipa cKer , lime
paneli ng , carpeted , ci ty
spre ader , cultivator, co rn
water . Loca ted on A:thens
plan ter, rotary hoe, Case
County road C-64, Vanderhoff
tractor , c r eam sepa rator ,
Rd ., one m ile from Rl. 7 and
wheat crad le, woo l tier , an.
lhree miles from Rt. 50.
tique sewing machine. an ·
Twenty minutes to Parkers.
tique wa sher , old tr unk , large
burg. Athens, or Pomeroy ;

dining lable. antique folding
bed. antique davenport bed.

.~

EXPER1ENCED
Radiator
ServiCe
'
. .

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

ut. , .

'-'"'

FRECKlES AND IDS FRIENDS

Eveni~gs Call992-l&gt;J4, uale Dutton

S-9-ltc
eas t of
Wilkesville on
Satu rday , June 19, at 11 a.m . HOU SE - 1642 Linco ln He1ghls.
the fol l owing: 3 rocking
Call Da nny Th ompson. 991chairs, Westinghouse washer,
Stone jars and jugs of all

J) 1111

Giiii:EN HIL L HOMES • INC •

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, Ohio

West

6-14-1tc

get 2nd tire at

--4

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A..
And Conventional Loans.
Come see us At 97V, N. Second st., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129 _

at regular price -

antique cup board , libra ry

20~

INSTRUCTIONAL
LOCAL MEN
TRAIN now to drive semi
tractor trailers . You can earn

Buy 1 t1re

..

i'

come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you ere not

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

UNIOO TIRES

~IDING

Lakeborn. Davi sburg , Mi ch.

48019

All Our First Lin e

and accessories. Call us for
your needs. We deliver
di stributor s. Brown 's, Phone

$200 per week in this opportunity . No investment

55 .

Rutland , Friday and Satur.

day .

·

SHE GITS
IT, DOC

You will have something of value to show for the
you,
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an ln-

Phone 992-2094

beds, lamps,elc . Lee Rudisill. - - - - - - ' - -- -- 6-· IS -3tc
Phone 991-3403.
S-27 -30tc YARD SA LE on Larkin St.,

REGISTERED Appaloosa stud TELEPHO N~S . brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furn i tur e,
serviCe; $50 register ed
elc. Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, NEW PEAS, fre sh and sweet,
mares, any breed; $40 grade
by lhe pound or larger
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 991-6171.
mares. Francis Benedum .
quantities
. Dw1ghl Spe ncer
4-17-tfc
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
120 E. Main St .,
Produce,
5-16-30tp
Pomeroy.
'
6-15-llp
RHODE ISLAN D Red or White
Rock pullets. Phone 992-7108.
Help Wanted
6- IS 31p
ELECTRO-LUX . We want -~~--someone who has had experience In service and sales
for our Pomeroy area. Can be
started on par1.ti me basis.

.

liJI-IERO':

!

-GUARANTEED-

6-15-3tc

Minersville, Ohio, Rt . l.

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES :

-...

1 SINGLE lots in Beech Grove

ca lf by side . Helen F. Baer.

REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service. Klrafl No. 050481 .
Rich Raffles blood lines. Fee
$50. Phone 992-6880. E. J. Hill,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-13-111c

SI:

- - - - -- -

12' · 14' - 24t -

,..,

4,

Pomeroy, Ohio, Hyse ll Run
Road .
6-tS-31c

FRESH Guernsey cow. Heifer

Notice

,

••

10, PAL?

* A STACK Of. WORIHi.E:SS ft[t;f!fl;i!sss *

tan . Good hunter . Reason for

&amp; ready to travel.

Servi'ces

What Do You Have For TheUS You PaY _In Re_nt?

WheeL Alignment

lrailer. Sleeps two. Power.ed
by 183 Chevy engine. A-1
shape, S7SO. Phone 949-3151

FOXHOUND. black , wh ite, and

rot::!~!s. ~o!.~r Co.

EXPERT

181f:z. FT . cabin cruiser and

appreciated. My wish is that
God will grant each a long life LIVE IN companion for elderly
filled with His richest
extras, 75 HP newly rebuilt
woman, light hou sework.
blessings.
Cooking, good wages. Phone
motor. trailer. Good ski boat,
$600. Ca II 992 -2003 . W1ll
991-3507.
EARN AT HOME addressing
6-t3-3tc
demon st rate.
envelopes . Rush stamped - - - - - - - - 6-8- lfc
addressed envelope. K. 0 . WE'LL PUT yo u lo work - - - - - - -- Mall Service, S173 68th Lane,
stamping commi ssion c ir OLD ENGLISH SheepdogN. St. Petersburg. Fla. 33709.
puppies, 5 months old. Also a
cular s paying 50 per cent I' ll

remove eny curb or portion ROGER AND Gary Hysell's
thereof In the VIllage of Mid- Garage orn evenings 6 to 11

dteport for the purpose of
establishing a driveway or
opening In said curb without
securing a permit for such
purpos~s from the Office of the

j_

tires.

_

~=========~-;:::=============::;==:==:::;--

$27.50 cash price. or terms
available Phone 992-S:4
c
1 61

I

1169 CHEVROLET
$2395
Townsman 2-seat wagon, dark blue. black vinyl Int.. 2way tail gate with elec. window, v.a auto., P.S. , like new

bt and she 11 hereby authorized IN LOVING memory of Oris
and directed to cause said bonds
who passed away live
to be printed forthwith and Gaul
years
ago , June 15: Another
thereupon have tht ume
year
has
passed and gone and
executed end delivered to;ether
this
one
makes it flvei our
with a true transcript of the
hearts still ache, our tears
procttdlng&amp; authoi-ltrng bonds
ta said purchaser Upon payment ' will flow, we would not call
of tho par velue thereof, plus the
you back. How sweet the sleep
atortsald prem lum and accrued
where all Is peace, where
Interest to the date of delivery ,
sorrows cannot reach; there,
Section 3. That the Cler~ Is
all life's trials and heartaches
hereby authorized and directed

to deliver a copy of this ordlnonco to the Auditor of Meigs
County.

W· W

B' usm· ess

·

has all
attachments
plus
thecleaning
new electro
suds for 1
shampooing car pet. Only

condl11onlng . Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish,

a.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within tO days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
,
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30. a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

\IACUUM cleaner. Electro
hygiene new demonstrat_or

t967 FORD
$1695
4 Door sedan L.T.O., power steering, power brakes, air

r.

Interest rate of 6 pet. per cen -

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

NARVOUS TWITCHES, LOWEElY -- 1

WHAT SHE NEEDS IS

For Sale

1167 CHEVROLET
Stou
Impala Cpe.• V-8 engine, standard trans .• local 1 owner
car, good w-w tires, radio, blue finish &amp; matching interior.

Improvement Bonds authorizes insertion.
RATES
by Ordinance No. 416 passed
For Wl)nf Ad Service
April 23, 1971 , following due
advertisement of said bonds for
scents per Word one Insertion
ubllc sale In accordance with
Minimum Charge 75c
aw , the highest qualified bid for
12 cents per word three
said bonds based upon the consecutive insertions.
lowttt r-ate of lntere$1 btlng
18 cents per word she con·
that of Sweney Cartwright Co.
which bid tor bonds bear ing an secufive Insertions.

..

Bargains

(

THAT PORE OL: COW'S GOT

I'LL SHORE
SEE THAT

________,

)
JMB ,

PGIN

JMB ,
YMC

IT

i.'

-JMB . -

I~

'I t

,dnd, Ohlu

MOIUTH

OCFCTKic

'

I'

•
1

�.--- ----• .. . :: . i' ;: : !: =~ . ·: :

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne 9a ,m.

LEGAL NOTICE
ORDINANCE

411

2 SIRS

OF
QUALITY

OIIDINANCE PROVIDING
,OR THE AWARD OF AN
Ca~c~tllallon &amp; Corr~cllons
IUUI OF SEWER IMWill
be accepted unlil9a .m. for
PIIOVEMENT BONDS OF
Dar of Publication
VILLAGE
OF
THE
REGULATIONS
POMEROY,
AND
DECLARING
AN · The Publisher reserves the
EMERGENCY
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
WHEREAS, on May 26, 1971 , publisher wi ll not be responsible
bids were received for the
purchase of 575 ,000 Sewer for more than one incor'red

radio, new

tum per annum with a premium
of UIO.OO;

NOW, THEREFORE , BE IT
RESOLVED by the Council of

the Vllllge of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio :
Section 1. That the aforesaid

Sewer lmprovemtnt Bonds

bearing
the
terms
and
maturltiiS as provided In Or dinance No. 416 are hereby
awarded and sold to Sweney

Cartwright of Columbus, Ohio,

burlng Interest at the rate of 6
pet per centum per annum,

with a prem tum of uao.oo.
section 2. That the Clerk shall

Section A. This ordinance Is
hereby declared to be an
emergency measure nteeasary
for the pa\:rvatlon of the
public
c
welflre and

r•

safety o this

llage, and for

W· S-w, radio, clean

l

In Memory

cease, no pain Is ever felt .
Sadly missed by his wife,
Lucy, children, grandchildren
and great-grandchildren.
6-lS-tic

- ----Card of Thanks

the further reason that the THE CHILDREN and I wish to
lmmtdlate sale of such bonds Is
express our very deep
ntctsserv to preaerve the credit
gratitude to those friends and
of tht VIllage by retiring the
neighbors who so generously
outstanding notes Issued In
and
unselfishly gave of their
anticipation
thereof ;
lime and efforts during this
wherefore, this resolution shall
recent trytngferlod following
takt effect and be In force
the death o my husband,
Immediately u.pon Its passage .

~

Paned: May 26, 1971

Attest : Jane Walton

Clerk

Chlares w. Legar
Mayor.•
(6)

.

15, 22

ORDINANCE
NO. '75-71

'
An Ordinance to Regulate the
removal of curbs along • the
Streets and Highway of the
VIllage end the Fee thereof .
Be It ordained by the Council
of the Village of Middleport as
follows :

c Soe. 1. That no person shall

Robert Carlton Gorrell. The
beautiful
flowers
and
thoughtful cards, as well as
the gifts of food and genuine

concern, have been sincerely

Mayor of the VIllage .

Stet. II. No removal Is valid

N0t'ICe
p .m . AI kinds mechanic
work. On Rt. 124 near the
Crossroads. Phone 992-6392 or

992·7121.

6-15-31c

•·

unless authorized or supervised GUN SHOOT Sunda June 20.
by the Street Maintenance
'
y,
Supervisor so as to control
Assorted meats, will start at 1
drainage of adiacent proper .
p.m . Racine Gun Club.
ties.
.
6-1S-41c

sec.

Ill. The fee for such

days ancl 949.4499 even ing s.

6-15·3fc

- -----

selling, hus band deceased. No
Sunday sa les. $4S. Mrs .
Rann 1e

@

_____ P'_OM
....:.I!ROY_,_OH
_I_O_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~

--,--:c-:--::----

pormll is $5.00.
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Sec. IV. The penalty tor
Gobe$0 tablets and E-Vap -

maklng such removal without
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
said permit and Supervisor
shall be not tess than $5.00 nor REVIVAL AT lhe Burlingham
morJ than $50.00.
Church. Featuring the youth
Stc. v. This Ordinance shall
evangeletts
of Athens, Ohio,
take effect an~ be In force from

June 16 to 20, 1971 , 7:30 each

and alter May 25, 1971.
Passed the 24th day of Mav

evening. Everyone welcome .

1171 .

Rev . Donald L. Brlckles,

John W. Zerkle
evangellsl.
President of Council
6-15-3tc
Attest : Gene Grate
Glerk
(6) t, 8, (15, 3t PHIL AND JIM's Restaurant
and Pizza , formerly Home
Restaurant. Open at 6 a. m.

6-13-31c

----FATHER'S DAY special :

Moore,

Rt.

Cemetery. Good location . No

Sunday sale, $40. Mrs. Rannie
M oore, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.

telephon es.

6-15-3tp

------

dishe s, GOOD MILK cow, Guernsey

clock s. bra ss

and Hol stein. Phone 992·2362.

This Is highest raid earning
opportunity o its kind
available and If you qualify,

you can expect to earn over

6-15-3tc

Big Tire Sale

For Sale
KOSCOT

KOSMETICS.

wigs

required . For detail information, write Electro-Lux

or apply at 657 Seventh Street,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
6-13-3tc

make your rubber stamp wi th
your name and address .
Stamp and Information, $2.

Th e

Ambrose

Co .,

4325

992-5113 .

6-2-tfc

LAWN mower, Simplicity 5'4 H.P.• 321nch cut, 7
ft . mower semi -mounted.
Phone 949-4111.
6-13-31p
- - - - - -- - REGA TT A Spec ia I, 17 -IT"
Thompson boa t. dock cove rs,

wh i te Pek ingese. Priced very
reasonable . Phone Parker s.
burg 428·7545.
6-13-31p

For Sale

6-10-61p

- -- - - -

36" X23 11 X.009

Female Help wanteo
RETAIL

SALES

Aluminum

position.

Qua llfy for some .respon .

sib il lly . Good health. 40 hour
week. Reply lo Box 729, Daily
Sentinel.
6-IS-tfc

Instruction

Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

high

wages

after

s hort

training. For application and

inlerview. call304-344-8843, or
write School Safety Division,
Advance Systems, Inc ., C·O

8 for Sl.OU

The
Daily Sentinel

Term inal Bldg., 5S17 Midland
Drive,

Charleston,

Vi rginia 25306.

- -----

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

111

1h PRICE
POMEROY
J.W. Cortty,Mgr~

,
·

Pltono9n-tJ'1

..~·' ~~-.....!II!!I!I!IJ!!~·~!11111!!"!11~

A PUBLIC

AUCTION As we

have sold our farm, we will
sell at Public Auction at the

!arm on Parker Run . On
Meigs Co. Road No. 9, one and

a half mile off 124, seven
miles north of Rutland, approxima te ly six miles south

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be lhe Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spen1.

ta ble, coal cook stove. Cattle,
4 head cows - Hereford, 2
young bulls . Lunch served by
lhe Rutland Fire Dept . Not
re spon s ible t or accidents .
Terms: Cash on day of sale.

Owner : Mr . and Mrs. Worl ey
Francis . Auct ioneer : Slim

Chapman, Hamden, Ohio.

6- 13~3tp

court St.

'ii:WINSOR
ii:BUDDY

PARKERSBUR~

_____

or all bids .

WMP0/1390

Bv order of the Board or•

be seen a t Bob
Racine Ohio. I
'

TWIN

1970 MAVERI CK: standard
triln $mission,

radio ,

25

Trustees of ,Sullon Township M.P.G. $1595. 1965 Ford
· Wlll tam 5 Cross. ClerK G,, I,1X Ie, Au tomatic. fac tory
. P 0 . Box 341 ~ir, S695 Coolville 667 -6114
Rac1ne 1 Ohio 45771
·
16 1 14, 15, 16, Jl c ·
•6,1&amp;-61p

. I

NEEDLE

·- - --

Free Estimates

CALL GEOR~E 985·3837
OR DON 992-6883

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworlh
137-4334, Columbu s.

1196.

SEPT IC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation , Stew•rl, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

S- 26-lfc

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
ho(lle• Call Guy Neigler ,
Racine, Ohio.

WITH HER? SHE~
A!; A CAT
FULL OF

7-31-ttc

------

machinery . Hou se with J
bedrooms, d ining room, living
room, 1'12 baths, enclosed

Virgil B.

back porch, wall to wall
carpeling . Aluminum siding,

awning , storm windows and
storm doors . City water .

l'D LIKE TO CALL MIM

AW, NOT' AGAIN,

FOR CATSAKfE./

FREE ;STIMATE Of{ general·
remodeling, roofing and
painting . Phone 992-7729, 9
a .m. to 6 p. m.
6-9-30tc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford "'
5-1-tfc

THE BORN LOSER

lRRE€ LIITlf ~!
\H,i.l'S Nl- I'D I.IKE

""·

U'l'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

11/f9R~

Iiiier repair . Free pickup and
delivery. Warren's Mower

Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
992-7357 .
5-18-tfc

sales representative. For free

.·

eslimales, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-lfc

Cleland Realty

SYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedroor..
and floors, 8 rooms with bath,
dining and paneled modern
ki tchen. Gas furnace, nice

garden . Aski ng on ly $13,000.00
with furniture.

1. Landacape

no traffic. Large yard lor kids SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. '192-2284.
and pets. More than $27,500
The Fabric Shop;'&gt; Pomeroy.
worth of contentment here,
bedrooms. New 2 ca r garage
Au thori zed Singer Sales and '
all on large lot . Asking
tha t's all we 're asking .
Service . We Shar.pen Scissors.
$14,SOO.OO.
3-"1'1-tfc
I AM LOCATED ON THE
-~--76 ACRES - 20 nearly leve l.
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER
- I have kitchen. dining room, U' OELL WH~E:L alignment
pasture of 25 ac r es fenced.
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Large 8 room house. Nice 3
living
room ,
bath ,
4
Complete front end service,
bay imp lement shed. other
bedrooms , basement, nic e
tune up and brake serv ice.
out buildings, several kinds of
ard . MY SELLING PRICE
Wheel s balanced eleclrult, well water. All this for
S JUST $10.000. SEE ME
tronically
.
All
work
only m ,ll!D".oo.
TODAY.

~

•··

failure
15. Craggy
htll
Krarnden's
vehicle

17.Make

-'
·,

grlllee

,.

Reasonable

3.

TERRY
MMIAM PUTTALfM CALLE[&gt; IT
i116HT. THE 0Pf051TIOH PARTY

'

,I

'.-

HAS loii&lt;EN O'lfR 5EI!fNOIP.
TKEI~ FII15T COIMIUNIQUE

ACCU~5 YOU CF

KAVING
BUNGLED THE LI~E~ATOR'S

:'1 '

WAS AL50 A QIJOTE
FRO\\ A M05CON HEART
5PECIAli5T A~OUT TilE
I'IIN6ER5 OF ENTRU5TIN6
THE LIVES OF IMI'ORTANT
MEN 10 CAPITAli5TIC

ISN'T A
FIGURE Of A IIOMAN AT THAT!

Y'KNOw, LEE, PUTTALEM

Filter.

MAY TAG
Rod Corptt

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rut lind. 0,

I

~ ~ 1,

•

1\l.'iOUE

WHAi DEVELOF&amp;AFieR
/!- HeAiED ARGUMENTc

;'I'ERIE5
arranp the
V
V
'l
I
to
the
11111wer, u
I~~==1\;:=::::::t&gt;.::::::j:::~
I
•urreated the aiAIYe eanoon.
-

I

-

Now
form

elrd«&lt;letton
ourprloe
by

I [ I l I I XI X]

Prillltle SU8P11SE ANSW!Un

(Aatwen to.orni")

Jumbl'" SQUAI

DRAWL

AVOWAL

WALLOP

VPalr.rd•y'•
An~wrr :

A

f'rln/nf' n r:~&gt;

of lnditln p11p1 -A " BOW.-OIP"'

I'L\NI • I S

bonu.s

....

35. Fit for

•

eaUnc
37. Whetotoi1e
38. Throw
off the
ll'li.ck

' II!--::&gt;
-' ~-

39. Exhort

DAILY CRYProQUOTE-Here'a bow to work It:
.t.

XYDL8AA Xa

II L 0 N 0 FIE L L 0 W
One letter simply 1tand• for another. In this sample A Ia
1110d for t~e three L'e, X for the two O'o, etc. Single letten,
apo1tropbea, the lenrth and formation of the words are &amp;11
hlnll, Each day the code lettAtn are different.

~'l-

~::;·~-~~~·t~~;I~·...,_~;-~-===~
,,_ ,, ~:::::=========
r
I CAr'l'T

M

KUT

JGHNTC

MCTlUGH

KUT

POMHMCIGG

YMC ' l

Y M C'l

IUM!

UG

WOOOSlOCK HAS FAu.EN
IN LOVE IJJITH A WORM!

BEliEVE
IT ~

A Orn&gt;toJftllll Quol&amp;llon

' RUTLAND AUTO SALES
t

admlxture

'-

37. Paul Newman role

32. Before

-·

j

I~III•TI,. C •ouf" l•.,.,.

""v"'~""''~'-

I UJNIW

keeper's
entry (a.bbr.

33. Gareon's

The Best Quality
Guaranteed LO WE.S'l' Pnces

~

I abbr.)

36. Book-

31. Mediator,
tor short

fALK TO SH·ERMAN TILLIS

Service

member

3•. Nobleman

fonn
25- Snicker
26. Yearn
27. Skin
aperture
28. Arctic
decor
29. Moat

LIL COLT &amp; TIMBER
LAKE
'

.

We Sptclalitt In

huoband
6. DwellLng
7.Bar

J

Like It"
lady
SO. Tint

burger's

I

'

Moytag

G. Wile or

I m;n.,-,,

29. "As You

mentis
22. Footprint
28. Ham-

CAPl'AIN EASY

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even r
heat, No hot spots,
no overdrylng ,
F tnt Mesh L lnt

(3 wds.)
i . This very

Ye .. ehtiJ'• &amp;a1wu

weight
19. Head
22. Parched
28. Coupled
2~. Complied
with
25. Carry
27. With·
out

21. Compos

M1ytag

Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps .
Au.to.
water
level
cQ ntrol.
Lint
F !Iter •or Power
Fin Agitator .
Perma-Press ·

"'ain

place

'•
..

...

Big Capacity

lellt

12.Copy

attractive

TRAILERS &amp;CAMPERS
,.

demon

20. Porker's

$AJIE $AJIE $AVE $AVE:

6-t 61c

speed

&gt;I&lt; HI 1 I I

Unscramble the se foor JumbleR,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word&amp;.

reetp-

16. Under-

fora

18. Rest

t&gt;y HI Nil! 1\HI\U II ll

9. Bequeot

2. Equity

member
3. Query

~lJJJW@~®IJ..J ..,,.,;.&amp;IJ .-J
,_
"'rl

mation
(8wdl.)

that

tnsta.nt

16. Ralph

oeen

HELEN L. TEAFORD,

DOWN
1. For fear

or Irish

.,

for
Infor-

expert

14. Power

rates . Phone 992-3213.
COUNTRY HOME
3 WE HAVE SOLD MANY
5-22-3Dtc
bedrooms. bath, shallow well
HOMES THIS MONTH. LET
water , garage, ce llar and
US SELL YOURS TODAY.
garden . A good buy at
msurance
$7,000.00 or make us an offer.
HENRY CLELAND.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
We are ready to deal.
REALTOR
cancelled?
Lost
,y our ·
Office "2-22S9
opera tor's license? Call 992CALL US, IF 'YOU WANT TO
Residence992-2568
2966.
SELL WE WILL DO OUR
6-13-6tc
BEST
TO SELL
YOUR
· 15=-l~fc,
PROPERTY.
NO SALE
NO l::::::::'::::::::=-~::::::::::::::6:
COST TO 1 YOU. CALL 992-

ms.

10. Reverb·
." erate
11. Uproar;
commotion
18. Mulligan

15 T HAT A C.AR
ON TI-4E QUARRY
FI...OOR ?

8. ROqueat

~~-Coloring

5. Senorita's
garb

\RACY,

r

guaranteed .

4.0. Moratorium

feature
,I

extra protection . Quiet street,

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms air
conditioned . Nice living. 4

Y01tord&amp;y'1 Vl')'ptoquiltel Wll DON'T Billa( TO 811 J.B!&amp;
TO CHltx:K CRDilli, 80 WHY NOT LillOA' ,na: rr Alii&gt;
THEN TAX rr OUT OF BU8INII88.-WlLL J100111R1
&lt;C lfll Kl.. r.r.l11H11 1Ja41colo, Jloo.l

. DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

60B.Easl Main
Pomeroy
AND' IJOZER work.
ALMOST NEW BRICK- t&gt;ACKHOE
Septic
tanks
Installed. George
ROOMY RANCH STYLE
(Bill
)
Pullins,
Phone 992-2478.
HOME . 3 big bedrooms with
4-25-tfc
double closets. Insulated for

ni ce older house with oak trim

As:9~.;~~iE

GAS!

WEND'Y WRIGHT ••••

storm doors and
Selling due to Ill health . Phone AWNINGS,
windows, ca'rports , mar 614-98S-3938.
S-18-30tp quees, aluminum siding
and railing. Carl A. Jacob,

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Arnold Grate

HELLO1 LONG DI&amp;TANCE?

EXPERT · TREE service. Call
collect after 5 p.m .• Ri chard
Hayman. Reedsville 667-3041.
S;).VOip

RALPH'S
CARPET
READY-MIX
CONCRETE ·
Upholslery Cleaning Service. delivered right to your
Free
estimates .
Phone.
project. Fast tnd easy. Free
Gallipolis 4-16-0294.
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
3-12-tfc
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
Middleport. Ohio.
•
10 miles llB miles 4 lane high- O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER 6-30-tfc
way!, 19 miles, and 18 miles,
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
respective ly ; 31h miles fr"om
5-30-lf c HARRISON'S TV AND AN Coolville. 1 mile from .Tup- - - -- - TENNA SERVICE , Phone
pers Plains . $14,500 by
991-2522.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
owners, Frank and Pat
24 ACRE FARM, Long Boltom, .,---::-:--~__;;6.:.-l.:..O·:_:;tfc
Goebel, 667-3838.
with or wllhoul farm EXPERT lawn mower and
6-6-tfc

-~----

MVGUE66
IS IT
NliEDS

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 4-16-4782
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-tfc

Septic Tanks and Leach

Dri '&lt;e, Colu mbus, Ohio, phone

- ·- .
WINNIE WlNKLE

742-4902

Beds

basemen t, 133 Butternut Ave .,
iu s! walking distance from
down law n Pomeroy . Con ta ct

h -1 !&gt;

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Limestone Driveways

SIX ROOM house, balh, full

•,_ IS &amp;LOWIII
OUT OF HONES\
ABE'5 LI'L
HEAD~~

Kitchens. Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

6-15-31p

'

Complete
Remodeling

PHONE 992-2143

gas furnace, garage. Phone

991-2488.

_.Pomeroy!

JOHNSON MASONRY

6, 98 Parts
Plus
Blaettnar's

FIVE
ROOM
house, 2
· bedr ooms, bath, large kit chen . plenty of cupboards,

®

BLAEJTNARS

Special
At

DEXTER, 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-l14S

THAT M I GI-IT'i
6LA5T ALL KI-JOWLEDGE
OF ''TI-\E. METHOD'' -,
""y
'.

-AI-JD

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Healer Core.

Re-Charge

construction Co.

sewing

' 742-4211

•

~ mallest

Air Conditioning
lnspectipn and

All Weather Roofing &amp;

machine, 1971 model, in new

walnul sland , All features
tiulll -ln to make fancy
designs . Also butlonhole~ .
blind hems, etc., 543 - ~S cash
price or terms available.
Phooe 992-5641.
6-15-61c

THSM'--0::.

•

From the Larg&amp;~t Tt uck or,

_Ph . '92-2143

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

Salser's, ,

6-13-31c

wm ...ACTUAL-LV,

1 SU~GiiSTE I&gt; IT 10

•
!

NOPEFEELS
FINE-

Have Your seasonal

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Wolf!
Spouting, Roof
Paintinl!

_____

. T~actor and I. H. Tractor ,
. B•dd ,er t~ _subm i t d~tailed
$pec•flcattons of e(lu1pment
offered. The Board of Trustees'
re~erves the right to reject any

MY [.Q, GillES ME
CEI?TAIN ADVANTAG ES ovE~ GL AMOR
GIRLS/
.
SLlRI!
If DOES!
J
;

DOUBLE-WIDE~

MOBILE HOMES, INC.

SlL

- - -- - -

~

~ALSO

MEMORIAL BRIDGf TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc

MOBILE HOMES

.

, AMAZif'ltLT~EV HAl&gt;
THE I'ORSSIG~T TO NAME
'fOU /.Q. W~EN VOU WEllE
ONL-Y HOUII.S OL-1&gt; ~

,tEE TOM CROW, GUY SHttLER OR BOB "CROW

COAL , limeston e. Exce lsior

MILLER

Morning. A
time for some
.Double dismal
oltl~. Jim Mees
somehow .gets us 111
fogether every d1y.

;jrCHAMPION
1-jcVAN DYKE

TEAFORD

Skate-A-Way announces free
TRUCK LINES
skating Wednesday night for City and road driver training .
fathers accompan led by
Call or write Sheridan Truck
children. Open Wednesday .
Lines , 1255 Corwin Avenue , IS-16 CHAROLAIS bull, 4 years
WIDE
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to
S13-863-6404, Hamilton, Ohio, old. and Hampshire boar hog ,
240
lbs.
Phone
949-383S.
10:30 p.m . Private parti es
45015.
6-13-3tc
available. Phone 985-3929 or
6-14-2tc
985-3585-----6-13-3tc
FOR A Meyers alum inum boat
Wanted
- won'trust. rot.orl eak . Call
f,EGISTERED quarter stud
1220 Washington Blvd.
991-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
BABYSITTER
.
days.
in
my
service, Hank s Rock 209.498 .
fibergla
ss
15
foot
canoes.
Belpre, Ohio
home. Phone 992 7794.
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
S-16-3Dtc
6.10-5tc
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 9916880.
NEW 4 fl . or s fl . brush hog. Real Estate For Sale
6-1-11tc
Phone 992-6319.
For Ren~
14 ACRE FARM, Long Botlom ,
LABOR LOCAL NO. 83, election TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, _ _ _ __ _ _ _6:_:_9-6tc
with
or
withou t ·farm
June19, 1971, 9 a . m. - 3 p. m.
m
achi
nery
.
Hou se with 3
lh.mile
north
of
new
Meigs
MODER N WALNUT Stereo Vote for Gardner (Jun e)
bedrooms,
dining
r oo m , li ving
High
School.
Phone
991-2941.
radio combination, dual
Dunham, Jr. for bu siness
Jl/z
baths
, enclosed
room
,
3-5-lfc
volume control , 4 speakers. 4
agent. Support his staff. Why
back
porch,
wall
to wall
speed changer, separate
are local laborers loafing
carpeting
.
Aluminum
siding,
controls . Balance $63.79. Use
when outside men are coming FUR NISHE D and unfurn ished
windows
and
awning,
storm
apartments.
Close
to
school
.
· our budget terms. Call 992In to our area working . I
sl
or
m
do
ors
.
City
water.
Phone
992-5434.
708S.
romise if elected to work
Selling dve to ill health . Phone
10-18-lfc
6-13-6tc
r.ocal
men in their area first
614-98S-3938.
before outside laborers come
5-18-JOtp
EFFICIENCY
apartment,
$10
COLONIAL Maple Stereo-Radio
into your area . A man to se r ve
per
week
.
Phone
991-5434.
comblnal lon, AM-FM radio ,
you, not ru.le you . Your vote
6-11-3tc four speakers , 4 speed in· 5 ROOMS AND bath, basement
apprecla'llted.
and cellar . Good location .
lermixed changer, separate
6-8-91p
4 ROOM furnished apartment
Phone 992-5808.
controls. Balance $78.60. Use
~R;-;E::;D:;;u""c'"E;:-:s:-:a-;fe-=a-=n"'"
d - f;:a"'"slc-cwi1h
with bath . Reynolds Flower
6-13-31c
ou r lime payment plan . Call
__:_:
Gobese ta blets and E-VapShop. Mason, W. Va . Also 2 992-7085.
Waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
bedroom trailer. Phone 7736-13-61c H(JlJ~~. 1640 Lin co ln His. :
5-26-3Dip
5147.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
6-8-tfc STRAWBERRIES. Geraldine
10-25-lfc
Cleland, Racine. Ohio.
SAVE UP to one half. Brino
6-3-11tc J BEDROOM brick home .
your sick TV lo Chuck's TV TRAILER LUIS. t&gt;ob's M0011e
Court. Rl . 124, Syracuse ,
Shop, lSI Butlernut Ave. ,
Choice location in Middleporl .
FROM WA LL lo wall , no soil at
Seen by appoin tment only .
Pomeroy.
Ohio . 991-2951.
4-2-lfc
4-13-lfc
all on carpels cleaned with
Phone 992-5523 afler 4 p.m .
Blue Lustre . Rent electric
5-7-ttc
shampooer Sl. Baker Fur ---c.X rR,.... ldrge tra iler lots, gooa
LEGAL NOTICE
niture.
l ocation . Velma G. Zuspan ,
The Board of Sul1on Townsh ip
6-9-61c
773-S750, Mason. W. Va.
Trustees, Meigs County , Oh io,
.:_
6-15-12tc
will receive bids un t il 9 o'c lock
SET OF Colliers Encyclopedia
A. m . the 25th day of Jun e, 1971
for the purchase of a used
and 12-year books. Boy Scout
uniforms. P.hOne '192-6529.
Tractor. Lo•der. Backhoe . Auto Sales
Mower , '
w i th
m i nimum
6-13-3tc
specifications as follows : 51 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . - - -.; -:----::-c--'H.P Diesel Engine, 8 speed
ha rd top , power steering, 5Dx10 RICHARDSON mobile
shuttle transm ission, new
home, 1 bedroom • with air
power brakes, air, 18 ,000
750x 16 fron t tires and new
conditioning.
Phone 992'-5867.
14.9x25 rear tires. self .Jevellng · miles Excellent condi tion .
6-11 -61c
loader with 1/e cu . yd . bucket,
Phone .991-1188.
Backhoe with 14' d igg in g depth
6-J-tfc
and 24'' buckel. Traclor to have
5 POLLE D Hereford cows.
mod hitch and 8( industr ial rear
Phone 669-4240 Wilkesville
blade and side mount ed 1963 DODGE DART. 4 door,
after
5 p.m.
hydrauli c mower with 5' cut .
au toma t ic
transmiss ion,
6-ll -6tp
Offered as trade -I n : Case excellent condition . S42S. f.Aay

Olf.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

kinds , antique marble top
dresser . Farm machinery, NI CE HOME IN COUNTRY manure spreader , cut -off
One acre, nifi:ely f inished two
saw, double disk, hay rake .
bedr oom lionie with fir eplace,
old dump, mowing machine .
b uil l ·! n
k i tchen,
wood
7 ft. , cultipa cKer , lime
paneli ng , carpeted , ci ty
spre ader , cultivator, co rn
water . Loca ted on A:thens
plan ter, rotary hoe, Case
County road C-64, Vanderhoff
tractor , c r eam sepa rator ,
Rd ., one m ile from Rl. 7 and
wheat crad le, woo l tier , an.
lhree miles from Rt. 50.
tique sewing machine. an ·
Twenty minutes to Parkers.
tique wa sher , old tr unk , large
burg. Athens, or Pomeroy ;

dining lable. antique folding
bed. antique davenport bed.

.~

EXPER1ENCED
Radiator
ServiCe
'
. .

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

ut. , .

'-'"'

FRECKlES AND IDS FRIENDS

Eveni~gs Call992-l&gt;J4, uale Dutton

S-9-ltc
eas t of
Wilkesville on
Satu rday , June 19, at 11 a.m . HOU SE - 1642 Linco ln He1ghls.
the fol l owing: 3 rocking
Call Da nny Th ompson. 991chairs, Westinghouse washer,
Stone jars and jugs of all

J) 1111

Giiii:EN HIL L HOMES • INC •

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, Ohio

West

6-14-1tc

get 2nd tire at

--4

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A..
And Conventional Loans.
Come see us At 97V, N. Second st., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129 _

at regular price -

antique cup board , libra ry

20~

INSTRUCTIONAL
LOCAL MEN
TRAIN now to drive semi
tractor trailers . You can earn

Buy 1 t1re

..

i'

come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you ere not

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

UNIOO TIRES

~IDING

Lakeborn. Davi sburg , Mi ch.

48019

All Our First Lin e

and accessories. Call us for
your needs. We deliver
di stributor s. Brown 's, Phone

$200 per week in this opportunity . No investment

55 .

Rutland , Friday and Satur.

day .

·

SHE GITS
IT, DOC

You will have something of value to show for the
you,
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an ln-

Phone 992-2094

beds, lamps,elc . Lee Rudisill. - - - - - - ' - -- -- 6-· IS -3tc
Phone 991-3403.
S-27 -30tc YARD SA LE on Larkin St.,

REGISTERED Appaloosa stud TELEPHO N~S . brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furn i tur e,
serviCe; $50 register ed
elc. Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, NEW PEAS, fre sh and sweet,
mares, any breed; $40 grade
by lhe pound or larger
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 991-6171.
mares. Francis Benedum .
quantities
. Dw1ghl Spe ncer
4-17-tfc
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
120 E. Main St .,
Produce,
5-16-30tp
Pomeroy.
'
6-15-llp
RHODE ISLAN D Red or White
Rock pullets. Phone 992-7108.
Help Wanted
6- IS 31p
ELECTRO-LUX . We want -~~--someone who has had experience In service and sales
for our Pomeroy area. Can be
started on par1.ti me basis.

.

liJI-IERO':

!

-GUARANTEED-

6-15-3tc

Minersville, Ohio, Rt . l.

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES :

-...

1 SINGLE lots in Beech Grove

ca lf by side . Helen F. Baer.

REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service. Klrafl No. 050481 .
Rich Raffles blood lines. Fee
$50. Phone 992-6880. E. J. Hill,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-13-111c

SI:

- - - - -- -

12' · 14' - 24t -

,..,

4,

Pomeroy, Ohio, Hyse ll Run
Road .
6-tS-31c

FRESH Guernsey cow. Heifer

Notice

,

••

10, PAL?

* A STACK Of. WORIHi.E:SS ft[t;f!fl;i!sss *

tan . Good hunter . Reason for

&amp; ready to travel.

Servi'ces

What Do You Have For TheUS You PaY _In Re_nt?

WheeL Alignment

lrailer. Sleeps two. Power.ed
by 183 Chevy engine. A-1
shape, S7SO. Phone 949-3151

FOXHOUND. black , wh ite, and

rot::!~!s. ~o!.~r Co.

EXPERT

181f:z. FT . cabin cruiser and

appreciated. My wish is that
God will grant each a long life LIVE IN companion for elderly
filled with His richest
extras, 75 HP newly rebuilt
woman, light hou sework.
blessings.
Cooking, good wages. Phone
motor. trailer. Good ski boat,
$600. Ca II 992 -2003 . W1ll
991-3507.
EARN AT HOME addressing
6-t3-3tc
demon st rate.
envelopes . Rush stamped - - - - - - - - 6-8- lfc
addressed envelope. K. 0 . WE'LL PUT yo u lo work - - - - - - -- Mall Service, S173 68th Lane,
stamping commi ssion c ir OLD ENGLISH SheepdogN. St. Petersburg. Fla. 33709.
puppies, 5 months old. Also a
cular s paying 50 per cent I' ll

remove eny curb or portion ROGER AND Gary Hysell's
thereof In the VIllage of Mid- Garage orn evenings 6 to 11

dteport for the purpose of
establishing a driveway or
opening In said curb without
securing a permit for such
purpos~s from the Office of the

j_

tires.

_

~=========~-;:::=============::;==:==:::;--

$27.50 cash price. or terms
available Phone 992-S:4
c
1 61

I

1169 CHEVROLET
$2395
Townsman 2-seat wagon, dark blue. black vinyl Int.. 2way tail gate with elec. window, v.a auto., P.S. , like new

bt and she 11 hereby authorized IN LOVING memory of Oris
and directed to cause said bonds
who passed away live
to be printed forthwith and Gaul
years
ago , June 15: Another
thereupon have tht ume
year
has
passed and gone and
executed end delivered to;ether
this
one
makes it flvei our
with a true transcript of the
hearts still ache, our tears
procttdlng&amp; authoi-ltrng bonds
ta said purchaser Upon payment ' will flow, we would not call
of tho par velue thereof, plus the
you back. How sweet the sleep
atortsald prem lum and accrued
where all Is peace, where
Interest to the date of delivery ,
sorrows cannot reach; there,
Section 3. That the Cler~ Is
all life's trials and heartaches
hereby authorized and directed

to deliver a copy of this ordlnonco to the Auditor of Meigs
County.

W· W

B' usm· ess

·

has all
attachments
plus
thecleaning
new electro
suds for 1
shampooing car pet. Only

condl11onlng . Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish,

a.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within tO days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
,
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30. a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

\IACUUM cleaner. Electro
hygiene new demonstrat_or

t967 FORD
$1695
4 Door sedan L.T.O., power steering, power brakes, air

r.

Interest rate of 6 pet. per cen -

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

NARVOUS TWITCHES, LOWEElY -- 1

WHAT SHE NEEDS IS

For Sale

1167 CHEVROLET
Stou
Impala Cpe.• V-8 engine, standard trans .• local 1 owner
car, good w-w tires, radio, blue finish &amp; matching interior.

Improvement Bonds authorizes insertion.
RATES
by Ordinance No. 416 passed
For Wl)nf Ad Service
April 23, 1971 , following due
advertisement of said bonds for
scents per Word one Insertion
ubllc sale In accordance with
Minimum Charge 75c
aw , the highest qualified bid for
12 cents per word three
said bonds based upon the consecutive insertions.
lowttt r-ate of lntere$1 btlng
18 cents per word she con·
that of Sweney Cartwright Co.
which bid tor bonds bear ing an secufive Insertions.

..

Bargains

(

THAT PORE OL: COW'S GOT

I'LL SHORE
SEE THAT

________,

)
JMB ,

PGIN

JMB ,
YMC

IT

i.'

-JMB . -

I~

'I t

,dnd, Ohlu

MOIUTH

OCFCTKic

'

I'

•
1

�~I

•

11- The Dail¥ Sellliuei,Middleport.P(IIIIt!I'Oy, O., June ~. lfTI

~!!?u~!m~~~- Johnson Kept Decision Secret

Justi_fied Homicide Ruled
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio
(UPI) - City Prosecutor Henry B. Fischer ruled today that
the fatal ~ shooting of a
black high school Industrial arts
teacher Willi a jus~ble homi·
clde.
·

Fischer said he made hls ruJ.
ing .In the death of WendeD
MltcheU, 29, a l)letal shop
teacher at Shaw High School,
on tWo grounds.
, First, he said, fhe arresting
·officers had probable cause to

30 Arrested In 30 Days
Thirty arrests were made and
seven · accidents Investigated
during May by the Middleport
PoUce Department, Chief of
PoUce J. J. Cremeans reported
Monday night to Middleport

belleveMitcbeUhadcommittted
a felony and were justified In
using whatever force nece$881'y
to.arrest him.
Fiscl!er said that secondly,
the officer who fired the fatal
shot
justified In shooting In
'!elf defense because he himself
had been shot by MitcheU.
The shooting occurred June 5
as police attempted to arrest
Mitchell after believ!ng he had
stolen a woman's purse. Witni!Mes said that In the ensuing
scuffle, MitcheU grabbed a police pistol and began firing,
wounding slightly two Qf the
five pqllcemen on the scene.
• The five officers were later
suspended pending an lnvestiga.
tlon
Ai a hearing todsy before
City Manager Gladstone L.
Chand!er, the five were granted
a continuance until June 28.

was

U-Tile Daib'Senttnel, Mlcldleport-Pomoy, O.,June 15, lf71

'
p&lt;l6ltlon woUia be if publication
continued.
"The depar tmen t wv"uid seek
to enforce all applicable stalutes and would seek an
Injunction to prevent further
pubUcatlon of the Information,"
said Assistant Attorney General
Robert Mardlan, In cllarge of
the Internal Security Division.
The department did not say
when such action would he
taken.
..
The Times said It would
"op~ any request for an
injunction for the same reason
that led us to publish the
articles in the first place. We
would of course abide by the
final decision of the court."
The Pentagon study, which
runs 40 volumes and took a
year to complete, details u.s.
involvement In Indochina from
the Trwnan administration to
the Johnson administration. It
details a deeper and deeper
commitment in Vietnam
through the years and states
that several policy decisions did
not correspond with official
public statements.
The Times said today the
goveml)lentsaid the publication
of the study violated provisions
of the Espionage Law, Title 18,
United States Code, Section 793
which carries a $10,000 fine
and-or 10 years in prison for
conviction.
The newspaper said it be·
lieved it was the first time a
publication had been involved In
that particular legal code.
Mardian caijed Bancroft
abOut 7:30 p.m, Monday, two
hours before press time for
today's edition, the Times said.
An hour later the newspaper
'd 't t Mitch. U' tel
sal 1 go
e s eg_ram.
Defense Secretary Melvm R.
Laird asked the J liS tice De par..
•
men! Monday to find out_ who
leaked the report to the Tunes.
A Pentagon spokesman indica!ed that person might be
prosecuted.
Laird said because of the
limited number of copies
available, ''it wiD not be hard
to track down." .
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler said President
Nixon had had access to all
information in the Pentagon
report but had not seen this
particular history of · U.S.
involvement tn VIetnam.
Ziegler would not discuss the
matter further, saying, "I'm
not going to build up by White
House comment the exposure of
classified information."
A spokesman tn Te~as for
fonner President Lyndon B.
Johnson said Johnson "Isn't
making any statements on
anything these days. "

'
h
NEW YORK (U.P l ) - the Communists to t e
President LyndoqB. Johnson on bargaining table, The 'rimes
Apr1·1 1, 1os•
• v or dere d h'IS sa\·d.
.
. .
decision to use offensive gr:ound At the same t1me, !he
troops in South Vietnlin! be kept possibility of greatly jncreaslng
a secret so that there would not the range and scale of bombing
appear to be a sudden shift tn U. was rejected be.cause such
s. foreign policy, according to a action might bring the Com·
Pentagon study of the war munistChinese Into the conflict,
printed today in the New York
Times
. The .decision to use ground ' .
troops came when the ad·
ministration realized that
You have to watch those
bombing North Vietnam would painted ponies on the merry-gonot keep South Vietnam from round.
collapsing and would not bring
Daniel Brown, Newcomer·
stown, didn't and ended up tn
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night.
Brown was working for the

The
. Times said

·

·

Included
. The s~ternentltslwertne series
m a third ar ce Times
a on .a
published dby ~~ In 1961 by
secret stu Y or •·~ Robert S
Defense Secre-, U S In:
McNamara to ~~Y~ from
volvement In · dmlnoclstr tlon to
the Truman a
a

'

the Johnaan adminlltratlon. •
The JuaUce Deparlrnent hu
as.ked The Times to atop
.
publlahln8 the art1c1e1 on the
grounds they could hurl
naUOiial definle. n.e TimeiJ
refuled Monday eaylnc the
public had a
to bow what
was included In the repc111
·

d
•
wateh the p 81•nt e p.0 mes.

Council.
Among the arrests were eight
·
·
:
for Intoxication, six for
Nolan Amusement Company the hospital for treatment of a·
speeding, three each for
which Is setting up rides near laceration by the Puneroy E-R.
reckless operation and driving
the Pomeroy First Baptist squad and released.
whUe intoxicated, two e,~~ch lor
Church In preparation for the At 3:45 a.m. Tueaday the ;
Big Behd Regatta Week End. Pomeroy squad went to the .
dls~u~blng the peace and
One of the merry-go-round home of Mrs. Claretlce East-.
resiSting. arrest, and one each
ponies fell at 7:49p.m. striking man who It was feared suHered
for leavmg the scene of an
accident, usured clear
hlmontheloot.Hewastakento a fracture of her hlp In a faD.:
She was transferred to an ;
distance,. failure to Y!eld the
IJ
TFJ:
D~l'
r,
ambulance and taken to the '
n~ht of way~ hit skip, permtltlng an unlicensedhidriver. to
W 00 DlJ '0
Ue J U
Holzer Medical Center:
1
to
te
Meigs county farmers are months of age or older for 30. However, she was returned ·
opera a mo . r ve c e, lin·
The Meigs County Board of proper backmg and no
reminded that June 18 Is the consecutive days during 1971. home In Harrisonville by the :
ElecUons reported Monday that operator's license.
Virgil E. Jacks, 18, Racine, final date to mall ballots on the BaUots have been mailed to ambulance Tuesdsy morning. ·
the deadltne for aU candidates Parking meter coUectlons for
Rt. I, was arrested on a charge wool referendum to the Meigs all ktiown eligible voters in
·
to fUe expense statements the month totaled $844 and the
(Continued frol)l page I)
of reckless operation following c 0 u n t y Ag ric u 1t u r e , Meigs County. However, if a £" __
l
resulting from the primary police cruiser mUeage totaled !dent Nixon "from the floor
investigation of a single car Stabilization and Conservation fanner did not receive a ballot,
JetDe
elections is Friday, June 18, at 4 4,438 miles for the month.
of this Senate to negotiate a
accident Monday at 5:45p.m. on Service office.
he may secure one by calling at'
p.m.
release of our pri!fOhers and
Township Road 165, the Meigs
Producers eligible to vote tn the Meigs County ASCS office,
I I _ ..J _
FaUure to COI)lply, even by Damage E tim ted announce a policy of complete
County Sheriff's Dept. reported. the referendum are aU of those Masonic Temple building,
lr~Onuay
.
8
losers, will result In the .can·
a
and total disengagement to
Jacks, traveling east, who have owned sheep six Pomeroy.
NEW HAVEN - Geclrge C.:
didate's dlaquallficatlon to seek At 81,000 Monday
begin now, and to terminate one
rounded a curve, lost control
Jewell, 71, New Haven, dled:
pubUc office the nen five years. Damage was estimated at year from today."
and drove Into a ditch on the
Monday afternoon at St. Joseph;
The board office, located In $1,000 In a traffic accident In·
"The American people," Talright. His auto stopped on its top
Hospital In Parkerab!ll'g.
.
the Masonic Temple building ai vesUgated at : p.m. Monday madge said, "are weary to the
in the middle of the road. There
Mr. JeweU, the 11011 of the late:
3 30
Pomeroy, will be open from I to on property owned
by Ohio bone and fed up with this iUwere no injuries. The car was
Mrs. Alice Sidenstricker Canaday, of Columbus; three William and Allee Roush:
4 p.m. th('ough Friday for the
conceived con!Uct. It has placed
demolished,
Rawlings, 91, widow of the late great • grandchUdren, and a JeweU, was a retired electrician:
PUfP01M! of accepting' expense PowerCo. nearthe Gavtn pJant adangerousdratnonaprecloi!S
Bart H. Rawlings, who was niece and a nephew.
withtheAppalacblanPowereo.:
statements.
at
Cheshire.
According
to the reservoir ·.which we once
senior partner In the Rawlings- Her first husband, Mr . He was a member of the
County
sheriff's
. New.'
Gallla
department, Carlos Monroe thought bottomless-the unity
Coats Funeral Home bi!Slness tn Sldenstrlcker, dled many ye'lt's Haven United ~ethodlst Church:
DAUGHTER BORN
Hutchinson 45 Ashland Ky · of spirit and purpose which has
Middleport, died this morning ago and she was preceded In lllld the Junior O.U.A.M. here. :
• Euclid' end'' made this nation great.
at the Palm Beach Care Nur· ' death by Mr. Rawlings a"• · lvlng are '!"'
"· -''
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Roush, oper ating a' 1970
~
~urv
....e,· Ara; .
" ...Americans have reached
sing Home in Lake Worth, Fla. proximately 20 years ago.
two daughter s, Mrs. Harry'·
~t, are announcing the dwnp leased by the J J Blazer
. .&amp;
bl,rth of a 7lb., 5 oz. daughter,
A fonner resident of Mid· Mrs. Rawlings attend.,. the (Maxine) Mlller, ·New Hayen; ·
· ·
. the end of their patience. There
dleport and Rutland, Mrs. Middleport Church of Christ Mrs. Donald (Martha) Cook, of.
Kristin Leigh, Monday, June 14, Construction Co., Wheelers· Is a rising tide of sentiment in
Rawlings Is survived by two and was acUve In that church Wintersville·, Bill grand·
at Holzer Medical Center. burg, struck a parked auto our land against this war. We
owned by Granville Camp, 60, ha h ed
·
t
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Huntln ton. Cam 's 1970
ve onor our comrmtmen
daughters, Miss Lelah Slden- many years.
chUdren; two brothen, Tom, ln .
dp
h
to
the
South
VIetnamese
many
stricker,
also
of
the
Palm
Beach
Funeral
services
have
been
Flon'da and Lonnie local and
Wllllam Roush of New Haven p tl g
1a1ne
•
on
ac
sus
eavy
Urn
·t
t
hi
h
·
' of
and Mr. and Mrs. James · dama etobothfenders to and
es over, a a cos w c 1s
Care Nursing Home, and Mrs. tentativelysetfor I p.m. Friday a sister,' Mrs. Edith' Roush,
Slmpaon, . Middleport. Great- hood g
' p
staggering. Families are shat·
Lady Canaday of Grove City, at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral New Haven.
grandparents' are Mrs. Mayme
Ued M da tered and torn apart by the war
Ohio; a grandson, Richard Home with burial In Miles Funeral services wiD be held
11
Hartenbach, Kent, and Mrs. L. to In u e~ w:e ca th ft on y and the idejlloglcal divisions it
Cemetery. The mtnlster and at 1:30 p.m. Wedneaday at the
D. Scott, of Middleport.
·
ves ga a e case .has crested." .
calling hours wiD he announced. New Haven United Methodist
.
reported by William Cornell, 733 Talniadge sa1d he could not
FlrstAve.CorneUsaldsomeone supporttheend-the-waramendVeterans Memorial Hospital
Church with the Rev. Wllllam
--16
took bls
foot gr:een canvas ment because the date for with·
ADMITIED - Judy Uevtng, • • • • • • • • • • Demoss offlclattng. Burial will
MASON
. '.
canoe.
drawal Is the President's
Letart, W. Va.; Frances Peck,
Calls answered by tbe ~~W:~ke~~~~
prerogative "and his alone"
Columbus ; Maude Connolly, Middleport Fire Department
Tonight Only
IN THE RACE
one hour prior to the service.
Mason ; Georgia Grimm, in May totaled just two, Friends may call at the
BOSTON ( UPI) - Rep. under the Constitution.
"But, let no one Interpret my
Ravenswood; Morris Packo III, compared to 1% in Aprll, Foglesong Funeral Home fl'om
J,oulse Day Hicks, ·D-Mass.,. vote
as an endorsement of the
Ypsilanti, Mich.; Lizzie Han· accordlug to tbe report of
promising to be a "mayor who prolooglng of this war,'' he said.
PFC. SPANGLER
nlng, Middleport; Ann Zirkle, Fire Chief Tom Darst to town 7 to 9 p.m. today.
cares,'' announced today her "The administration's policy of
Army Pfc. Thomas M. Middleport ; Kathleen Cain, couucU Monclliy nlgbt.
ALSO
candidacy for mayor of B08ton. Vletnamlzation Is dragging ... lt
Spangler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albany; Edna Parsons, Racine;
In AprU, the Department
DIVORCE ASKED
Mrs. Hicks, 47, told a. news Is time to put an end to this cruel
Phillip M. Spangler, Shelocta, Guy Keller, Pomeroy.
IUillwered lO.out of town calls
VIvian E. Arnott, Racine, has
conference the city's prestige and unusual war which we have
Pa., Route I, formerly of
DISCHARGED - Mark and two In Middleport, flied suit for divorce In Meigs
and the morale of Its citizens never tried to wtn, and which Is
Racine, recently received the Gilkey.
reqnlrlug 289 mauhoars. Ia County Common Pleas Court
Rated R
ha~e "never been lower.
tearing at the basic fabric that
army commendation medal
May tbe two calls, both oat of aj!alnst Charles F. Arnott,
"Let's face it, our city Is a holds this country together."
near Phu Ral, Vietnam. The
town, Wled 14 manhours.
Racine, ili. 2, charging gross
deplorable mess and It wiU
Jordan said he would vote for
medal was awarded for
neglect of duty.
continue to be unless we the the antiwar measure, which he
meritorious service. Pic.
SUPPER PLANNED
people, young and old and In opposed last year, because it
Spangler received the award
The Vacation Bible School
between, decide once and for aU was obvioi!S that a negotiated
whUe assigned as a can· feUowship supper of the First
Tonight, june 1S
that politics as usual In city haU settlement was nowhere near.
noneer with Battery B, 2nd Southern Baptist Chapel of
muat go.
"The war has drained away
Bn., 11th Artillery of the lots! Pomeroy wiD be held at 6:30
Wall Disney•o
(Continued from page I)
BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE
our national strength In every
Airborne Division · (Air· p.m. Wednesday at the roadside University students In Jerusalem. His words aiiP8renlly were
PRIEST QUITS
ITechnicolor)
conceivable way," be said.
mobile). Pfe. Spangler has a park on new Route 33. Each prompted by the Arab guerrinB attack against an laraell-bound
PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UPI) "The country is divided as It has
Kurt Russell
PT. PLEASANT
number of relatives In Meigs family Is to bring a meat and
Heather North
- The Most Rev. Bernard not been since the Clvll War.".
LIVESTOCK SALEs CO.
County among whom are Mr. vegetable dish, !Miverage and oil tanker in the Red Sea Friday. The winds blowing In the'Arab
"G" KeUy, 53, auxiliary bishop of the
capitals tend more towards the resumption of the war than putJordan's support raised tbe
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
and Mrs. Thomas Hayman, table service. A prayer service
Colarcartoons:
ting an end to it,'' he said. ''Therefore the resumption of war may
Roman Catholic Diocese of number conunltted to vote for
Saturday, June 12, 1971
Syracuse
Surprisin' Exerc;lsin'
will follow the meaL
Providence,
Monday
announced
be
imminent."
Abominlble Mountaineer
the end-the-war measure to 38. HOGS -175 to 22018 to 18.80;
his resignation from the
Rock Hound
However,aUPisurveylndicat- ' Heaviesl6toi7.75; L i g h t s 1 3 . 5 0 , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Sheep Dog
priesthood because .of a "sense ed
that 51-a majority-jllan to to 16.75; Fat Sows II to 14.25;
Grut DIY
of frustration over attitudes and vote against It, with eight un· Boars 12 to 14.25; Pigs 5.50 to 12;
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
policies of the hirarchy of decided and three absent or not Stock Shoats 10 to 19.
bishops In the United States." voting.
CATTLE - Steers 24.75 to
On the other side of the 30.50; Heifers 20 to 26.75 ; Fat
Capitol, the House also turned Cows 19 to 23.90; Canners 16 to
to the issue of Vietnam. Leaders 19; BuDs 2UO to 27.50; Milk
called up for debate a $21.8 Cows 140 to 230; Stock Cows and
bllllon weapons authorization to Calves 185 to 290; Stock Steers
which antiwar lawmakers 24 to 33; Stock Heifers 21.50 to
hoped to attack an amendment 29; Stock Steer Calves 24.50 to
slmUar to the Senate proposal. 36; Stock Heifer Calves 23.75 to
House members are expected 32.50.
to decisively turn down the end· VEAL CALVES - Tops 42.50;
the-war amendment that wiD be Seconds 40; Mediwn 34 to 40;
put before them Wednesday. Common &amp; Heavies 34.85 to
Sponsors were shooting for 150 41.90.
aye votes, aU but 25 or so of • • •• •• •• • •
them coming from Democrats. By uiuted Press International
The only question left unanA strike by United Mine
swered was whether a majority Workers members that began
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - C&gt;f the House's 255 Democrats In west VIrginia In protest
wiD vote against U.S. policy·
over a federal court order
removing UMW president
Tony Boyle from the Union's
welfare and retirement lund
spread to Eastern Ohio today
with 1,100 miners ofllhe job
and at least %0 mines closed.
AU deep mines. In Belmont,
Harrison, Jefferson and
Monroe Counties and at least
one mine in Coshocton CoiiDty
were reported closed early
today by striking UMW
members.

Candidates to
Get Statement
In by FridJJy

2 Switch

neP

DRIVE·III

''Getting strai&amp;hf'

"l.ovint' (R)

'---------.1
MEIGS THEATRE

Racine Youth
C'L _ d ft
narge

·

l

er

D

t

uevrge
Died

l'r~~s... ill Jflr-i~jf,S

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY • JUNE 19-20
peliciOUS

---------~-

Edition
DICK .NEUTZLING is driving this
pleasure craft, the type of boat which will do
all the racing during the Big Bend Regatta .

Alice Rawlings IS
• Dead

DAD'S DAY - SPECIAL

· SlOP IN AND'·SEE US REGATTA. WEEKEND ,
f'OIJinl ~D UDSJ STS. 992-5248 . MIODI.EPORTt OHIO

Regatta

ll

JUNE 20th- D-DAYI

, McCLUR,'S DAIRY ISLE

Big Bend

Wreck of Auto

VIsit our 3rd floor Furniture Department
For qua.llty furniture at low, low prices.

'

,

nelB

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

FRENCH
FRIES

The 1971,.

rlghi

$500for
the Record!

NAME OMITTF,:D
A son, Veri Tuttle, Tuppers
Plains, was omitted from the
survivors of Mrs. Vletta Mae
Tuttle, 94, Middleport, listed
Monday in T!te Daily Sentinel.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature ~ downtown
Pomaroy at q a.m. Tuesday
was 74 degree• Wider partially
~unny sides.
·

We have bedroom suites made by the top manufacturers~ Bassett, 111omasville,
Lane, Riverside, Kroehler, Heywood-Wakefield, Coleman &amp; Webb. Early
American · Modern • French Provincial • Italian Provinci.al · Spanish and
Mediterranean. Our Credit System Is one you will like. Pick out a suite and we
'will promptly and carefully deliver it to you.
I

'

'

The event which offers fun and relaxation to one
and aU offers other prizes.
• The winners tn the senior division of the frog jwnp
will receive $100 for the first place, $50 for second and
$30 for third. In the junior division first, second and

third prizes respecfl.vely are, $50, $25 and $10.
t.
11.

Pre!\IJllnarl' eventa for the Frog jumping contest
..will be

3rd Aoor·Furniture Department
I

)

'

.

~

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.

~.

bekJ at tb~ M~gs Footb&amp;U Bll!dium In Po111eroy

Therelsn'O chatg for watching the races or to~ the Athens
Board and Ski Club ehtertalrunent during the afternoon in coil·
junction with the rAcUig program. Pl'actlce runs for the racing
will b&lt;i held Saturday afternoon.
· ·

from 5 to 8 p.m. on Saturday. Finals In the junior and
senior division will be heldfl'om 8 to 9:30-p.m.

•

In addition to the Frog jumps there wiD be a frog

oo a bicycle ~ace, ladles backwards race, frog polo and
a fat ladles race.

!

Prizes totaling $800 will be awarded Sunday when boat racing '
is hehj in conjunction with the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
This year, instead of the flat bottomed, high speed traditional
racing boats, outboards and runabouts wiD have the run of the
river during tbe Sunday races beginning at 1 p.m. Local contestants are invited to take part.
.
The.races for bosts from 60 to 100 horsepower and from 13 to
161eet in length are being staged under allSpices of the American
Power Boat Assn., Lorain OUtboard Racing Club.
Eight races of two heats each will be held. Local residents
interested in taking part should notify Jack Carsey for
classifications.
1n addition to· cash awards, trophies wlU be presented win· ,

Frog that breaks the world's record jumps .of 19 feet
three Inches. Jockeys may coax their beasts lly
blowlqj on them, boUertng loudly at them.

..

•

To add to the fun of the afternoon an initiation of 24
honorary Grand Croakers of the sponsoring
&lt;l'ganlzatlon, the Ohio Society for the Promotion of the
Bull Frog wiD be held.
Fred W. Crow, charter Grand Croaker, announced
thatDr.GeorgeW. Nace,ofthe Department of Zoology
at lbe University of Michigan, and his wife and three
children wiD be here to join In the hilarity as well as Dr.
T. Kawamura, President Emeritus of the University of
Hlroehbna, Mr. Masashl Ryuzakl, a graduate student
fi Dr. Kawamura's at the University of Hiroshima,
and Dr. Robert E. Moyers, director of the Cent~ for
Human Growth and Development, and his wife and two
children.

Welcome to

,·~

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·.·. ~
' '~&gt;· &lt;&gt;·
.

.~

~il~t]l}'i

~

.•

.,.

.

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'..,'-

-.•:

.· _,

,.,·.~' ~'

" ..
·''"'·-J
..••

:,. , .,

. ·'

3 Days o
Fun, Frolic

THE SIZE OF FREDDIE THE FROG,
located in the attractive yard of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse, is suggested by,
1-r, Rick Chancey, Debbie Michael and Mike
Chancey.

Big Bend Regatta Schedule of Events
Friday, June 18
9 a.m.-7 p.m.
~noon-11 p.m.

r.m.

8:30 p.m.

Fleil Market, Junior High School.
Nolan carnival rides.
Parade moves through Middleport to
Pomeroy.
"Grande
Squares,"
Gallipo_lis,
exhibition western and folk dancmg,
junior high . auditorium, audience
participation urged.
American Legion-open air teen d~nce.

Saturday, June 19
10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Take Advantage of Our June
·Sale of Bedroom Fumitrue!

'

To Total $800

The $500 Is being offered to the contestant with the

•

ELBERFELDS I·N POMEROY·

.. l

'!be winner In what has been proved the most
spectacular event of the Big Bend Regatts, the Frog
Jumping Contest, could take home a grand prize qf
$500.

9:30 p.m.
TOOK IN $1,179
BusinesS in the office of
Mayor C. 0 . Fisher during May
brought $1,179.35lnto the village
treasury at Middleport, it was
reported last night. The mayor
collected $1,015.35 in fines and
fees and $18Hn merchant police
paymenfs.

Racing Purses

..

9 a.m.-6 p.m ..

10 a.m.
10 a.m.-11 p.m.
12 noc;~n
12 noon-8 p.m.

Nationa I open Class A a ll'trophy baton
twirliog contest, junior hig~ sch~ol
auditorium at Middleport Jumor H1gh
Schcfol auditorium. Judy Riggs,
director.
Flea Market
Garden Tractor Pulling Contest.
No'lan carnival rides.
.
Fire Department and American Leg!on
chicken barbecue on upper parkmg .
lot.
Art sho.w, up~er... parkingJotilnd St. Paul
Lutheran C~urch.
- -

12 noon-5 p.m.
12 noon-5 p.m.
p.m .
s p.m.-8 p.m.
8 p.m.-9:30 p.m ;
9:30 p.m.
9:30p.m.

2

'

Flower Show, former Pomeroy Junior
High.
Ceramics display, former Pomeroy
Junior High.
Practice runs, racing boats,
Preliminary frog jumping events.
Frog jumping finals.
Frog Ball, crowning q11een at .10:15.
Open Air teen dance.

Sunday, June 20
8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.-5 :30 p.m.
12 noon
12 noon-8 p.m.
12 ryoon-4 p.m.
12 noon-4 p.m.
12 noon-6 p.m.
1 p.m.-2:30 p.m.

2: 30-.3:30 p.m.
3:30-5:30 p.lll.

•

Church services· of your choice.
Nolan carnival rides.
American Legion and Fire Department
chicken barbecue, upper parking lot.
Art Show, upper parking lot.
Flower Show, former Pomeroy Junior
High.
Ceramics display, Junior High.
' Flea Market
'·
Boat Races- outboards, runabouts.
Racing un'd er sponsorship of
American Power Boat Assn., Lorain
Outboard Racjng Club. Local Contestants invited. 13-16 feet length, 60180 horsepower, 8 races, 2 heats per
race.
Ski Show-Athens
Boat and Ski Club.
'
.
Boat Racing finals:
.

•

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11- The Dail¥ Sellliuei,Middleport.P(IIIIt!I'Oy, O., June ~. lfTI

~!!?u~!m~~~- Johnson Kept Decision Secret

Justi_fied Homicide Ruled
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio
(UPI) - City Prosecutor Henry B. Fischer ruled today that
the fatal ~ shooting of a
black high school Industrial arts
teacher Willi a jus~ble homi·
clde.
·

Fischer said he made hls ruJ.
ing .In the death of WendeD
MltcheU, 29, a l)letal shop
teacher at Shaw High School,
on tWo grounds.
, First, he said, fhe arresting
·officers had probable cause to

30 Arrested In 30 Days
Thirty arrests were made and
seven · accidents Investigated
during May by the Middleport
PoUce Department, Chief of
PoUce J. J. Cremeans reported
Monday night to Middleport

belleveMitcbeUhadcommittted
a felony and were justified In
using whatever force nece$881'y
to.arrest him.
Fiscl!er said that secondly,
the officer who fired the fatal
shot
justified In shooting In
'!elf defense because he himself
had been shot by MitcheU.
The shooting occurred June 5
as police attempted to arrest
Mitchell after believ!ng he had
stolen a woman's purse. Witni!Mes said that In the ensuing
scuffle, MitcheU grabbed a police pistol and began firing,
wounding slightly two Qf the
five pqllcemen on the scene.
• The five officers were later
suspended pending an lnvestiga.
tlon
Ai a hearing todsy before
City Manager Gladstone L.
Chand!er, the five were granted
a continuance until June 28.

was

U-Tile Daib'Senttnel, Mlcldleport-Pomoy, O.,June 15, lf71

'
p&lt;l6ltlon woUia be if publication
continued.
"The depar tmen t wv"uid seek
to enforce all applicable stalutes and would seek an
Injunction to prevent further
pubUcatlon of the Information,"
said Assistant Attorney General
Robert Mardlan, In cllarge of
the Internal Security Division.
The department did not say
when such action would he
taken.
..
The Times said It would
"op~ any request for an
injunction for the same reason
that led us to publish the
articles in the first place. We
would of course abide by the
final decision of the court."
The Pentagon study, which
runs 40 volumes and took a
year to complete, details u.s.
involvement In Indochina from
the Trwnan administration to
the Johnson administration. It
details a deeper and deeper
commitment in Vietnam
through the years and states
that several policy decisions did
not correspond with official
public statements.
The Times said today the
goveml)lentsaid the publication
of the study violated provisions
of the Espionage Law, Title 18,
United States Code, Section 793
which carries a $10,000 fine
and-or 10 years in prison for
conviction.
The newspaper said it be·
lieved it was the first time a
publication had been involved In
that particular legal code.
Mardian caijed Bancroft
abOut 7:30 p.m, Monday, two
hours before press time for
today's edition, the Times said.
An hour later the newspaper
'd 't t Mitch. U' tel
sal 1 go
e s eg_ram.
Defense Secretary Melvm R.
Laird asked the J liS tice De par..
•
men! Monday to find out_ who
leaked the report to the Tunes.
A Pentagon spokesman indica!ed that person might be
prosecuted.
Laird said because of the
limited number of copies
available, ''it wiD not be hard
to track down." .
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler said President
Nixon had had access to all
information in the Pentagon
report but had not seen this
particular history of · U.S.
involvement tn VIetnam.
Ziegler would not discuss the
matter further, saying, "I'm
not going to build up by White
House comment the exposure of
classified information."
A spokesman tn Te~as for
fonner President Lyndon B.
Johnson said Johnson "Isn't
making any statements on
anything these days. "

'
h
NEW YORK (U.P l ) - the Communists to t e
President LyndoqB. Johnson on bargaining table, The 'rimes
Apr1·1 1, 1os•
• v or dere d h'IS sa\·d.
.
. .
decision to use offensive gr:ound At the same t1me, !he
troops in South Vietnlin! be kept possibility of greatly jncreaslng
a secret so that there would not the range and scale of bombing
appear to be a sudden shift tn U. was rejected be.cause such
s. foreign policy, according to a action might bring the Com·
Pentagon study of the war munistChinese Into the conflict,
printed today in the New York
Times
. The .decision to use ground ' .
troops came when the ad·
ministration realized that
You have to watch those
bombing North Vietnam would painted ponies on the merry-gonot keep South Vietnam from round.
collapsing and would not bring
Daniel Brown, Newcomer·
stown, didn't and ended up tn
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night.
Brown was working for the

The
. Times said

·

·

Included
. The s~ternentltslwertne series
m a third ar ce Times
a on .a
published dby ~~ In 1961 by
secret stu Y or •·~ Robert S
Defense Secre-, U S In:
McNamara to ~~Y~ from
volvement In · dmlnoclstr tlon to
the Truman a
a

'

the Johnaan adminlltratlon. •
The JuaUce Deparlrnent hu
as.ked The Times to atop
.
publlahln8 the art1c1e1 on the
grounds they could hurl
naUOiial definle. n.e TimeiJ
refuled Monday eaylnc the
public had a
to bow what
was included In the repc111
·

d
•
wateh the p 81•nt e p.0 mes.

Council.
Among the arrests were eight
·
·
:
for Intoxication, six for
Nolan Amusement Company the hospital for treatment of a·
speeding, three each for
which Is setting up rides near laceration by the Puneroy E-R.
reckless operation and driving
the Pomeroy First Baptist squad and released.
whUe intoxicated, two e,~~ch lor
Church In preparation for the At 3:45 a.m. Tueaday the ;
Big Behd Regatta Week End. Pomeroy squad went to the .
dls~u~blng the peace and
One of the merry-go-round home of Mrs. Claretlce East-.
resiSting. arrest, and one each
ponies fell at 7:49p.m. striking man who It was feared suHered
for leavmg the scene of an
accident, usured clear
hlmontheloot.Hewastakento a fracture of her hlp In a faD.:
She was transferred to an ;
distance,. failure to Y!eld the
IJ
TFJ:
D~l'
r,
ambulance and taken to the '
n~ht of way~ hit skip, permtltlng an unlicensedhidriver. to
W 00 DlJ '0
Ue J U
Holzer Medical Center:
1
to
te
Meigs county farmers are months of age or older for 30. However, she was returned ·
opera a mo . r ve c e, lin·
The Meigs County Board of proper backmg and no
reminded that June 18 Is the consecutive days during 1971. home In Harrisonville by the :
ElecUons reported Monday that operator's license.
Virgil E. Jacks, 18, Racine, final date to mall ballots on the BaUots have been mailed to ambulance Tuesdsy morning. ·
the deadltne for aU candidates Parking meter coUectlons for
Rt. I, was arrested on a charge wool referendum to the Meigs all ktiown eligible voters in
·
to fUe expense statements the month totaled $844 and the
(Continued frol)l page I)
of reckless operation following c 0 u n t y Ag ric u 1t u r e , Meigs County. However, if a £" __
l
resulting from the primary police cruiser mUeage totaled !dent Nixon "from the floor
investigation of a single car Stabilization and Conservation fanner did not receive a ballot,
JetDe
elections is Friday, June 18, at 4 4,438 miles for the month.
of this Senate to negotiate a
accident Monday at 5:45p.m. on Service office.
he may secure one by calling at'
p.m.
release of our pri!fOhers and
Township Road 165, the Meigs
Producers eligible to vote tn the Meigs County ASCS office,
I I _ ..J _
FaUure to COI)lply, even by Damage E tim ted announce a policy of complete
County Sheriff's Dept. reported. the referendum are aU of those Masonic Temple building,
lr~Onuay
.
8
losers, will result In the .can·
a
and total disengagement to
Jacks, traveling east, who have owned sheep six Pomeroy.
NEW HAVEN - Geclrge C.:
didate's dlaquallficatlon to seek At 81,000 Monday
begin now, and to terminate one
rounded a curve, lost control
Jewell, 71, New Haven, dled:
pubUc office the nen five years. Damage was estimated at year from today."
and drove Into a ditch on the
Monday afternoon at St. Joseph;
The board office, located In $1,000 In a traffic accident In·
"The American people," Talright. His auto stopped on its top
Hospital In Parkerab!ll'g.
.
the Masonic Temple building ai vesUgated at : p.m. Monday madge said, "are weary to the
in the middle of the road. There
Mr. JeweU, the 11011 of the late:
3 30
Pomeroy, will be open from I to on property owned
by Ohio bone and fed up with this iUwere no injuries. The car was
Mrs. Alice Sidenstricker Canaday, of Columbus; three William and Allee Roush:
4 p.m. th('ough Friday for the
conceived con!Uct. It has placed
demolished,
Rawlings, 91, widow of the late great • grandchUdren, and a JeweU, was a retired electrician:
PUfP01M! of accepting' expense PowerCo. nearthe Gavtn pJant adangerousdratnonaprecloi!S
Bart H. Rawlings, who was niece and a nephew.
withtheAppalacblanPowereo.:
statements.
at
Cheshire.
According
to the reservoir ·.which we once
senior partner In the Rawlings- Her first husband, Mr . He was a member of the
County
sheriff's
. New.'
Gallla
department, Carlos Monroe thought bottomless-the unity
Coats Funeral Home bi!Slness tn Sldenstrlcker, dled many ye'lt's Haven United ~ethodlst Church:
DAUGHTER BORN
Hutchinson 45 Ashland Ky · of spirit and purpose which has
Middleport, died this morning ago and she was preceded In lllld the Junior O.U.A.M. here. :
• Euclid' end'' made this nation great.
at the Palm Beach Care Nur· ' death by Mr. Rawlings a"• · lvlng are '!"'
"· -''
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Roush, oper ating a' 1970
~
~urv
....e,· Ara; .
" ...Americans have reached
sing Home in Lake Worth, Fla. proximately 20 years ago.
two daughter s, Mrs. Harry'·
~t, are announcing the dwnp leased by the J J Blazer
. .&amp;
bl,rth of a 7lb., 5 oz. daughter,
A fonner resident of Mid· Mrs. Rawlings attend.,. the (Maxine) Mlller, ·New Hayen; ·
· ·
. the end of their patience. There
dleport and Rutland, Mrs. Middleport Church of Christ Mrs. Donald (Martha) Cook, of.
Kristin Leigh, Monday, June 14, Construction Co., Wheelers· Is a rising tide of sentiment in
Rawlings Is survived by two and was acUve In that church Wintersville·, Bill grand·
at Holzer Medical Center. burg, struck a parked auto our land against this war. We
owned by Granville Camp, 60, ha h ed
·
t
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Huntln ton. Cam 's 1970
ve onor our comrmtmen
daughters, Miss Lelah Slden- many years.
chUdren; two brothen, Tom, ln .
dp
h
to
the
South
VIetnamese
many
stricker,
also
of
the
Palm
Beach
Funeral
services
have
been
Flon'da and Lonnie local and
Wllllam Roush of New Haven p tl g
1a1ne
•
on
ac
sus
eavy
Urn
·t
t
hi
h
·
' of
and Mr. and Mrs. James · dama etobothfenders to and
es over, a a cos w c 1s
Care Nursing Home, and Mrs. tentativelysetfor I p.m. Friday a sister,' Mrs. Edith' Roush,
Slmpaon, . Middleport. Great- hood g
' p
staggering. Families are shat·
Lady Canaday of Grove City, at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral New Haven.
grandparents' are Mrs. Mayme
Ued M da tered and torn apart by the war
Ohio; a grandson, Richard Home with burial In Miles Funeral services wiD be held
11
Hartenbach, Kent, and Mrs. L. to In u e~ w:e ca th ft on y and the idejlloglcal divisions it
Cemetery. The mtnlster and at 1:30 p.m. Wedneaday at the
D. Scott, of Middleport.
·
ves ga a e case .has crested." .
calling hours wiD he announced. New Haven United Methodist
.
reported by William Cornell, 733 Talniadge sa1d he could not
FlrstAve.CorneUsaldsomeone supporttheend-the-waramendVeterans Memorial Hospital
Church with the Rev. Wllllam
--16
took bls
foot gr:een canvas ment because the date for with·
ADMITIED - Judy Uevtng, • • • • • • • • • • Demoss offlclattng. Burial will
MASON
. '.
canoe.
drawal Is the President's
Letart, W. Va.; Frances Peck,
Calls answered by tbe ~~W:~ke~~~~
prerogative "and his alone"
Columbus ; Maude Connolly, Middleport Fire Department
Tonight Only
IN THE RACE
one hour prior to the service.
Mason ; Georgia Grimm, in May totaled just two, Friends may call at the
BOSTON ( UPI) - Rep. under the Constitution.
"But, let no one Interpret my
Ravenswood; Morris Packo III, compared to 1% in Aprll, Foglesong Funeral Home fl'om
J,oulse Day Hicks, ·D-Mass.,. vote
as an endorsement of the
Ypsilanti, Mich.; Lizzie Han· accordlug to tbe report of
promising to be a "mayor who prolooglng of this war,'' he said.
PFC. SPANGLER
nlng, Middleport; Ann Zirkle, Fire Chief Tom Darst to town 7 to 9 p.m. today.
cares,'' announced today her "The administration's policy of
Army Pfc. Thomas M. Middleport ; Kathleen Cain, couucU Monclliy nlgbt.
ALSO
candidacy for mayor of B08ton. Vletnamlzation Is dragging ... lt
Spangler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albany; Edna Parsons, Racine;
In AprU, the Department
DIVORCE ASKED
Mrs. Hicks, 47, told a. news Is time to put an end to this cruel
Phillip M. Spangler, Shelocta, Guy Keller, Pomeroy.
IUillwered lO.out of town calls
VIvian E. Arnott, Racine, has
conference the city's prestige and unusual war which we have
Pa., Route I, formerly of
DISCHARGED - Mark and two In Middleport, flied suit for divorce In Meigs
and the morale of Its citizens never tried to wtn, and which Is
Racine, recently received the Gilkey.
reqnlrlug 289 mauhoars. Ia County Common Pleas Court
Rated R
ha~e "never been lower.
tearing at the basic fabric that
army commendation medal
May tbe two calls, both oat of aj!alnst Charles F. Arnott,
"Let's face it, our city Is a holds this country together."
near Phu Ral, Vietnam. The
town, Wled 14 manhours.
Racine, ili. 2, charging gross
deplorable mess and It wiU
Jordan said he would vote for
medal was awarded for
neglect of duty.
continue to be unless we the the antiwar measure, which he
meritorious service. Pic.
SUPPER PLANNED
people, young and old and In opposed last year, because it
Spangler received the award
The Vacation Bible School
between, decide once and for aU was obvioi!S that a negotiated
whUe assigned as a can· feUowship supper of the First
Tonight, june 1S
that politics as usual In city haU settlement was nowhere near.
noneer with Battery B, 2nd Southern Baptist Chapel of
muat go.
"The war has drained away
Bn., 11th Artillery of the lots! Pomeroy wiD be held at 6:30
Wall Disney•o
(Continued from page I)
BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE
our national strength In every
Airborne Division · (Air· p.m. Wednesday at the roadside University students In Jerusalem. His words aiiP8renlly were
PRIEST QUITS
ITechnicolor)
conceivable way," be said.
mobile). Pfe. Spangler has a park on new Route 33. Each prompted by the Arab guerrinB attack against an laraell-bound
PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UPI) "The country is divided as It has
Kurt Russell
PT. PLEASANT
number of relatives In Meigs family Is to bring a meat and
Heather North
- The Most Rev. Bernard not been since the Clvll War.".
LIVESTOCK SALEs CO.
County among whom are Mr. vegetable dish, !Miverage and oil tanker in the Red Sea Friday. The winds blowing In the'Arab
"G" KeUy, 53, auxiliary bishop of the
capitals tend more towards the resumption of the war than putJordan's support raised tbe
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
and Mrs. Thomas Hayman, table service. A prayer service
Colarcartoons:
ting an end to it,'' he said. ''Therefore the resumption of war may
Roman Catholic Diocese of number conunltted to vote for
Saturday, June 12, 1971
Syracuse
Surprisin' Exerc;lsin'
will follow the meaL
Providence,
Monday
announced
be
imminent."
Abominlble Mountaineer
the end-the-war measure to 38. HOGS -175 to 22018 to 18.80;
his resignation from the
Rock Hound
However,aUPisurveylndicat- ' Heaviesl6toi7.75; L i g h t s 1 3 . 5 0 , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Sheep Dog
priesthood because .of a "sense ed
that 51-a majority-jllan to to 16.75; Fat Sows II to 14.25;
Grut DIY
of frustration over attitudes and vote against It, with eight un· Boars 12 to 14.25; Pigs 5.50 to 12;
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
policies of the hirarchy of decided and three absent or not Stock Shoats 10 to 19.
bishops In the United States." voting.
CATTLE - Steers 24.75 to
On the other side of the 30.50; Heifers 20 to 26.75 ; Fat
Capitol, the House also turned Cows 19 to 23.90; Canners 16 to
to the issue of Vietnam. Leaders 19; BuDs 2UO to 27.50; Milk
called up for debate a $21.8 Cows 140 to 230; Stock Cows and
bllllon weapons authorization to Calves 185 to 290; Stock Steers
which antiwar lawmakers 24 to 33; Stock Heifers 21.50 to
hoped to attack an amendment 29; Stock Steer Calves 24.50 to
slmUar to the Senate proposal. 36; Stock Heifer Calves 23.75 to
House members are expected 32.50.
to decisively turn down the end· VEAL CALVES - Tops 42.50;
the-war amendment that wiD be Seconds 40; Mediwn 34 to 40;
put before them Wednesday. Common &amp; Heavies 34.85 to
Sponsors were shooting for 150 41.90.
aye votes, aU but 25 or so of • • •• •• •• • •
them coming from Democrats. By uiuted Press International
The only question left unanA strike by United Mine
swered was whether a majority Workers members that began
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - C&gt;f the House's 255 Democrats In west VIrginia In protest
wiD vote against U.S. policy·
over a federal court order
removing UMW president
Tony Boyle from the Union's
welfare and retirement lund
spread to Eastern Ohio today
with 1,100 miners ofllhe job
and at least %0 mines closed.
AU deep mines. In Belmont,
Harrison, Jefferson and
Monroe Counties and at least
one mine in Coshocton CoiiDty
were reported closed early
today by striking UMW
members.

Candidates to
Get Statement
In by FridJJy

2 Switch

neP

DRIVE·III

''Getting strai&amp;hf'

"l.ovint' (R)

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MEIGS THEATRE

Racine Youth
C'L _ d ft
narge

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uevrge
Died

l'r~~s... ill Jflr-i~jf,S

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY • JUNE 19-20
peliciOUS

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Edition
DICK .NEUTZLING is driving this
pleasure craft, the type of boat which will do
all the racing during the Big Bend Regatta .

Alice Rawlings IS
• Dead

DAD'S DAY - SPECIAL

· SlOP IN AND'·SEE US REGATTA. WEEKEND ,
f'OIJinl ~D UDSJ STS. 992-5248 . MIODI.EPORTt OHIO

Regatta

ll

JUNE 20th- D-DAYI

, McCLUR,'S DAIRY ISLE

Big Bend

Wreck of Auto

VIsit our 3rd floor Furniture Department
For qua.llty furniture at low, low prices.

'

,

nelB

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

FRENCH
FRIES

The 1971,.

rlghi

$500for
the Record!

NAME OMITTF,:D
A son, Veri Tuttle, Tuppers
Plains, was omitted from the
survivors of Mrs. Vletta Mae
Tuttle, 94, Middleport, listed
Monday in T!te Daily Sentinel.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature ~ downtown
Pomaroy at q a.m. Tuesday
was 74 degree• Wider partially
~unny sides.
·

We have bedroom suites made by the top manufacturers~ Bassett, 111omasville,
Lane, Riverside, Kroehler, Heywood-Wakefield, Coleman &amp; Webb. Early
American · Modern • French Provincial • Italian Provinci.al · Spanish and
Mediterranean. Our Credit System Is one you will like. Pick out a suite and we
'will promptly and carefully deliver it to you.
I

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'

The event which offers fun and relaxation to one
and aU offers other prizes.
• The winners tn the senior division of the frog jwnp
will receive $100 for the first place, $50 for second and
$30 for third. In the junior division first, second and

third prizes respecfl.vely are, $50, $25 and $10.
t.
11.

Pre!\IJllnarl' eventa for the Frog jumping contest
..will be

3rd Aoor·Furniture Department
I

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bekJ at tb~ M~gs Footb&amp;U Bll!dium In Po111eroy

Therelsn'O chatg for watching the races or to~ the Athens
Board and Ski Club ehtertalrunent during the afternoon in coil·
junction with the rAcUig program. Pl'actlce runs for the racing
will b&lt;i held Saturday afternoon.
· ·

from 5 to 8 p.m. on Saturday. Finals In the junior and
senior division will be heldfl'om 8 to 9:30-p.m.

•

In addition to the Frog jumps there wiD be a frog

oo a bicycle ~ace, ladles backwards race, frog polo and
a fat ladles race.

!

Prizes totaling $800 will be awarded Sunday when boat racing '
is hehj in conjunction with the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
This year, instead of the flat bottomed, high speed traditional
racing boats, outboards and runabouts wiD have the run of the
river during tbe Sunday races beginning at 1 p.m. Local contestants are invited to take part.
.
The.races for bosts from 60 to 100 horsepower and from 13 to
161eet in length are being staged under allSpices of the American
Power Boat Assn., Lorain OUtboard Racing Club.
Eight races of two heats each will be held. Local residents
interested in taking part should notify Jack Carsey for
classifications.
1n addition to· cash awards, trophies wlU be presented win· ,

Frog that breaks the world's record jumps .of 19 feet
three Inches. Jockeys may coax their beasts lly
blowlqj on them, boUertng loudly at them.

..

•

To add to the fun of the afternoon an initiation of 24
honorary Grand Croakers of the sponsoring
&lt;l'ganlzatlon, the Ohio Society for the Promotion of the
Bull Frog wiD be held.
Fred W. Crow, charter Grand Croaker, announced
thatDr.GeorgeW. Nace,ofthe Department of Zoology
at lbe University of Michigan, and his wife and three
children wiD be here to join In the hilarity as well as Dr.
T. Kawamura, President Emeritus of the University of
Hlroehbna, Mr. Masashl Ryuzakl, a graduate student
fi Dr. Kawamura's at the University of Hiroshima,
and Dr. Robert E. Moyers, director of the Cent~ for
Human Growth and Development, and his wife and two
children.

Welcome to

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3 Days o
Fun, Frolic

THE SIZE OF FREDDIE THE FROG,
located in the attractive yard of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse, is suggested by,
1-r, Rick Chancey, Debbie Michael and Mike
Chancey.

Big Bend Regatta Schedule of Events
Friday, June 18
9 a.m.-7 p.m.
~noon-11 p.m.

r.m.

8:30 p.m.

Fleil Market, Junior High School.
Nolan carnival rides.
Parade moves through Middleport to
Pomeroy.
"Grande
Squares,"
Gallipo_lis,
exhibition western and folk dancmg,
junior high . auditorium, audience
participation urged.
American Legion-open air teen d~nce.

Saturday, June 19
10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Take Advantage of Our June
·Sale of Bedroom Fumitrue!

'

To Total $800

The $500 Is being offered to the contestant with the

•

ELBERFELDS I·N POMEROY·

.. l

'!be winner In what has been proved the most
spectacular event of the Big Bend Regatts, the Frog
Jumping Contest, could take home a grand prize qf
$500.

9:30 p.m.
TOOK IN $1,179
BusinesS in the office of
Mayor C. 0 . Fisher during May
brought $1,179.35lnto the village
treasury at Middleport, it was
reported last night. The mayor
collected $1,015.35 in fines and
fees and $18Hn merchant police
paymenfs.

Racing Purses

..

9 a.m.-6 p.m ..

10 a.m.
10 a.m.-11 p.m.
12 noc;~n
12 noon-8 p.m.

Nationa I open Class A a ll'trophy baton
twirliog contest, junior hig~ sch~ol
auditorium at Middleport Jumor H1gh
Schcfol auditorium. Judy Riggs,
director.
Flea Market
Garden Tractor Pulling Contest.
No'lan carnival rides.
.
Fire Department and American Leg!on
chicken barbecue on upper parkmg .
lot.
Art sho.w, up~er... parkingJotilnd St. Paul
Lutheran C~urch.
- -

12 noon-5 p.m.
12 noon-5 p.m.
p.m .
s p.m.-8 p.m.
8 p.m.-9:30 p.m ;
9:30 p.m.
9:30p.m.

2

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Flower Show, former Pomeroy Junior
High.
Ceramics display, former Pomeroy
Junior High.
Practice runs, racing boats,
Preliminary frog jumping events.
Frog jumping finals.
Frog Ball, crowning q11een at .10:15.
Open Air teen dance.

Sunday, June 20
8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.-5 :30 p.m.
12 noon
12 noon-8 p.m.
12 ryoon-4 p.m.
12 noon-4 p.m.
12 noon-6 p.m.
1 p.m.-2:30 p.m.

2: 30-.3:30 p.m.
3:30-5:30 p.lll.

•

Church services· of your choice.
Nolan carnival rides.
American Legion and Fire Department
chicken barbecue, upper parking lot.
Art Show, upper parking lot.
Flower Show, former Pomeroy Junior
High.
Ceramics display, Junior High.
' Flea Market
'·
Boat Races- outboards, runabouts.
Racing un'd er sponsorship of
American Power Boat Assn., Lorain
Outboard Racjng Club. Local Contestants invited. 13-16 feet length, 60180 horsepower, 8 races, 2 heats per
race.
Ski Show-Athens
Boat and Ski Club.
'
.
Boat Racing finals:
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"

�14-1be Dally Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,June 1$, 1971
1 Bwled In Samoa
Jn·l8110, Robert Louis Steven1011 went to live in Samoa,
where he died in 1895. Sixty
ll!ltlvel carried his body to
the .top of !1ft. Vaea, where
he was buned. ·
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Requirement
Persons considered for the
U.S. Hall of Fame must be
deceased 25 ~ears or more
and are conSidered at elections held every five year~.
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
·

Announcement
ATHENS, OHIO
lOw Has I Brand law

~~

I. Everybody
Has
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IReal Goo
zme ~til

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A new feature of this year's
Big Bend Regatta Weekend·will
be a flea market conducted
under the direction of Mrs. Rita
Bail ·Lewis representing Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
Antiques, primitives, toys,
homemade candies and whathave-you are to be offered for
sale at the flea market. Anyone
having merchandise for sale
may rent space for $5 a day or
$10 for the three day weekend.
Facilities for exhibiting must be
provided by the exhibitor and
the area designated" for the
event is the rear of the Pomeroy
Junior High School. There will
be some limited space available
inside the building.
Hours of the market are from
9a.m. to 7p.m. Friday, 9a.m. to
6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6
p.m. on Sunday.
Washington Court House has
made the "flea market"
practically a byword in Ohio the
past few years . Widely
publicized, it draws patrons
from throughout the midwest on

'*HOMIMADUOUPIIa CHILl

I

It's Just" A Short Drive from Pomeroy
Route 33 North ... COlumbus Road
Phone S92-U78
Athens, Ohio

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Step Up
To •••

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Oldsmobile

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MRS.
RITA
LEWIS, .chairman of

Tickets to Ball
Saturday on Sale
from a field of seven candidates
and the naming of the "frog
queen and king." Contestants
for the latter event must be at
least 30 years of age_ and
dressed in frog type cost~g.
Tickets are $2 each, $3.50 a
couple and $14.50 for a reserved
table 10r six. The Meigs County
Jaycees are staging the event.

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WE NEED

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Late Model Used Cars

.•• -

Generous
Allowance
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For Your Car Ri&amp;ht Now!

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TRY USI

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Severa/1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van .Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business''
992-5342 . GMAC FINANCING POMEROY
Open Evenings Until 8: 00- Til S P.M. Sat.

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

Mrs. Nellie Borgan had the Will Clonch.
misfortune to fall off a chair and
Recent guests of Mrs. John
break her wrist while changing Stout were Mrs. Gheen and Mrs.
a light bulb.
Martha Clonch.
A new trailer was set up on Mrs. Earl McGrath is paint·
the Kelley farm Wednesday ing for Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
better known as the Jonah
Bob Alkire is working this
Cotterill farm.
week at Portsmouth, Ohio.
Paul Cotterill is sUll confined
Mr. Willard Faudree is not so
in the Athens hospital following well at this writing.
a tractor accident In which he
Clinton Gilkey visited his
broke an arm and foot.
mother, Ava Gilkey, Sunday
Mrs. Frances Alkire and son, evening. Mrs. Gilkey is "sick
Ray, visited the Bobby Gibsons with a virus.
In Columbus, 0. Tuesday af- Mrs. Jane Gilkey is spending
ternoon.
some time with relatives in
Misses Kathy and Karen West Virginia.
Gilkey of Albany visited Ava
Clement Landaker passed
Gilkey Monday evening.
away with cancer in April In
Rodney Gilkey visited his North Dakota. He was the son of
grandma Gilkey Saturday Sam Landaker and leaves one
evening and Sunday dinner sister.
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mrs. Sally Welsh will be our
Alkire and Alice Whaley.
new Avon lady.
Recent visitors of the M. A.
Epples was Mrs. Earl Foil, ·
Mrs. Margaret Douglas and
Presidential Mansion
In 1789, President-elect and
Mrs. George Washington
moved into a house on
Cherry Street in New York
City, making it the first
presidential mansion . .

WITH A lJ.HAUL
TRUCK or TRAILER
CONVENIENT 1-WAY SERVICE
''

!

•'
•
••
,''

.

'

[

••

•
•

.'•

•
•
•

•• •
•

•

NECESSinES.

FOR EC:ONOM.YAND .

also •· ••

. COIVENIENCE-U.tiAUL

'COMPLETE U-HAUL SERVICE

IT'S 'TUNE-UP" TIME

FOR YOUR CAR ·
DON?' FORGET .•• .

.---~----- ~----------i

I

l

LOU'S ASHLAND
.SERVICE STATION

~ WilT~

~~\, ~~

IIJ.1111 .

POMDOV,O.

I

:

I1'4Z.ZIDE

l .I

~--------------~~----·

SPORT SHOP

PRONT aT,
MARI.TTA. rtll!
HON.S'78··44•

..

.

MRS. JUDY RIGGS, Reedsville Route I, a champim
baton twirler, wUI be in charge of the annual Big Bend
Regatta Bston Twirling Championships which get underway
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Middleport Junior High School.

. ""~'; :l'~..~·~·.:i

"\.~V'Y '

STEER HERE. • • • FOR
FULL PROTECTION
We're experienced in arranging
adequate coverage for boat owners,
and their families, for full financial
protection in any ev.entuality. Get
details here.

DAVIS • WARNER INSURANCE
114 COURT ST.
PHONE 992-2966
POMEROY

J MILES NORTHEAST OF POMEROY, JUST 1 MILE OFF

STATE ROUTE 7 ON WELLS ROAD

••
•

Featuring The
Best In

I
I

'

I·I

~

'---------------~

•"
••
•

- FISHING

.

3 Sparkling Lakes

The second annual Big Bend to tal
Regatta Baton Twirling
Championships will be another
top attraction this year of the
1971 Regatta Festivities. Last
year's contest was very successful as twirlers from a four ·
state area took part in the
event.
The contest, directed by Mrs.
Judy Riggs, above, for the
Chamber of Commerce, will be·
held Saturday, June 19, at the
Junior High Gym In Middleport.
The National Open Class "A"
contest is sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association , and Registered
Licensed Judges with N.B.T.A.
will be used.
Approximately 400 trophies
will be awarded to various
winners throughout the daylong competition, and featured
events will be the selection of
the "Miss Regatta Majorette
Queen" and her Princesses, a,nd
at the end of the day ·· the
" Regatta 'trand Champion"
will be selected on the basis of

•

Heifers 24 to 29.85; Baby Beef 30
to 42.50; Fat Cows 17 to 22.50;
Canners IS to 24; Bulls 21 to
28.50; Milk Cows 125 to 345.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 41.60;
~conds 38.75 to 40; Medium 34
to 37.50; Com. &amp; Hvs. 28 to 35.25;
Culls 30 Down.
BABY CALVES - 26 to 65.
LAMBS - Tops 30 ; Seconds
26.85 to 27.90.

·'Have a Wo1J.derful Visit "

RACINE HOME NATIONAL
BANK
Your Friendly Bank
RACINE, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT

-BOATING
-PICNICKING

~

-..
.-.
---•
-...

Gleem II Toothpaste
REG. 39•
1.75 oz.
12~

VAN '. DYKE BY
Dan Says:
We Have.--....
ERDON'S

EXPIRES : 6-20-71
LIMIT ONE

The Better Buys.•.
II

I

M&amp;R

heater , stainles s sink and
plumbed for washer .

Local~

SALE PRICE

•7395

Owned &amp; Operated

We Welcome
Trade-Ins

•.

•

lf~

NOW ON DISPlAY

Complete deluxe furniture

JUHE 18-19-20

M

.

'

II FLUSH TOILETS AND PLENTY OF HOT WATER.
4 . CENTRAL SHOWER HOUSES, LAUN~RY
FACILITIES, FLUSH TOILETS ·AND PLENTY OF
HOT WATER.
•A TRADING POST WELL STOCKED WITH FOOD
ITEMS, BEVERAGES, SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT.

-v

• Liberty

Our compliments lo all of1he
hard working commlllees
that pul thiS very worthwhile
program together - Ano!her
link In acquainting people
wilh our• beautiful south·

'

.

516.00 PER WEEK I Special Rates to Camping Clubs &amp; Groups on Request)
PICNICKING SOc PER FAMILY
SWIMMING SOc PER PERSON
HORACE KARR, OWNER

Many Styles
an d MOdt!IS

eastern Ohio region .

Stop ln, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom f:avender or John Ketchka

: I
••

..
...•.
.0
.....

In Any Way•••

, Belmon t
and Sect ional

Automobile
.. Cub
of Soothern Ohio

M

53.00 PER FAMILY I Includes Fishing)
ISO&lt; ADDITIONAL FOR ELECTRICITY!
160c ADDITIONAL FOR SEWER &amp; WATER)

Every Worker and
Citizen That Has Helped

•King

.

ROYAL OAK PARK CAMPSITE RATES &amp; PRICES

Regatta Week
Red Hot Special!
M&amp;·R SHOPPING CENTER

New 65x14 Wide
•

~

Everything For Everybody At -Discount Prices!

You Alwa,s Get A Better Buy At Goble's Lot

REGATTA'

w

,.,

·&lt;

Ph. 667-3370
Jet . Hwy. 124 &amp; 144 Hockingport, Ohio

pac;kege, tully carpeted ,
house .type door , storms
and screens, 30 gal . water

~

ELECTRIC OUTLETS AVAILABLE AT 220 CAMPSITES.
SEWER &amp; WATER HOOKUPS AT 60 ·CAMPSITES. j

PHONE 991-6100 or tti-3341

::!!

EVINRUDE MOTORS

H

4 St;r ~mp Rating

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Salurday, June 12, 1971,
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 18 to
18.35; 220 to 250 lbs. 17.85 to
18.10; Light 15 to 16.50; Fat
Sows 13.50 to 14.40; Boars 10.50
to 12.50; Pigs 4 to 15.
CATTLE- Steers 24 to 32.85 ;

accum;lations~========~~~===~~=~

BIG BEND

- CAMPING 1
-SWIMMING

4

Market Report

•.•.

SCHWARZEL MARINE

•

OUTDOOR
FAMILY1
- RECREATION

2
3

t.

SERVICE CENTER OF THE MID-OHIO VALLEY

Top Attraction Again

•

I

old U.S. Route 33. The lnstitoot
houses an undetermined
member of tadpoles that some
day may be the center of attraction for future Frog Jumping contests at the annual Big
Bend Regatta.
The lnstitoot was built by
Kerns Roush, Stanley Bass and
William Grueser, each a
dedicated bull frog promoter.
Dedication services befitting
the greatest frogs were held this
spring when members gathered
to christen the newly built
facility .
Roy Holter, Grand Croaker,
using a bottle filled with spirits
from Happy Hoppy Holter
Farm, christened the wire mesh
building .
No. 1 Freight Movers
WASH!NGTON- Three
out of every four Ions of
freight move at one time or
another by truck.

~

Come see our display at the RegaHa,
June 18, 1'1, 20.

'

ROYAL OAK 'PARK

.

To increase the interest in the
Frog Jumping Contest held
each year during the Big Bend
Regatta, members of the Ohio
Association for the Promotion
of the Bull Frog built the first
known Frog Institoot in the
world in Meigs County.
The lnstitoot is located on the
Harold Blackston property on

:::=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~!(.:::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~=~=~===t
~

DUO BOATS

REGATTA WEEKEND VISITORS WELCOME!

A thought for today: Scottish
author John Buchan said, "We
can only pay our debt to the
past by putting the future in
debt to ourselves. "

,~

Small Loads-Short Moves· Long Moves
V!lcations-Any Moving Problem

JUNE 18-19-20

•••

!n 1960 Premier Kishi asked
President Eisenhower to postpone a visit to Japan because
of anti-American riots in Tokyo.

lnstitoot to
Build Interest

Trophy will also be awarded to
the twirler traveling the farthest.
The contest is scheduled to
start at 10 a.m. with the Corps
Competition, and will run the
remainder of the day. Late
registrations will start at 9 a.m.
Food wUI be served all day by
the Meigs Band Boosters.
Entry forms may be obtained
by contacling Mrs. Judy Riggs
at Chester 985-3595.

!

•

I..

TRUCKS

.. ,.

Ball.

~SHOP ZI~I!'SI
FOR YOUR
I
. PORTING GOODS
NEEDS
I
eSpaldin~ .
• Uawlinp;~
.I
eVoit
• i.OI! is viii~· Sluji~N'
I
'
T.AM s~•CIALISTS
I
n.. l:olo:oll-( :••u-,. .... oloull-ll••••ball
I
I SIO,OC!jl w,rthofTrophios IIISttck I II

and
WE SlOCK THE

JACK
CARSEY of Pomeroy
in this attire was the
"frog queen" at the
1970 Regatta Frog
MRS .

NOW THAT WE HAVE
YOUR ATTENTION-

VANS

ROY HOLTER, GRAND CROAKER; In actlm as be
christened the Frog lnstitoot early this spring. The Institoot
is located on the Harold Blackston farm. Blackston's Beauty
was the first Meigs County Frog to take the Ohio Frog
Jumping Championship In 1969 at the Big Bend Regatta.

Association for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs exWntne one of the frogs housed in
the new Frog lnstitoot.l-rare Harold Blackston, Roy Holter,
Fred Crow and Dale Warner ..They get more laughs from the
Frog event than anyone else.

SEA STAR &amp;

SEX-SATIONAL!

.•.

GRAND CROAKERS of the Ohio

Regatta Weekend

---------------·

"l1lere are I,M U-HAUL llellenbl&amp;ll ID t,Ae eom·
aalEtlet, U.S._. Clilada. Relit U..fiA\JL wllere you 1re,
IIUWt, ud lllnlltiD 111 De.Jer ID yoar aew nellbborbood,
Yoa e• evea aao.e ODeoftY 10 AIMb wlib I U-IIAUL
tnller I Yolll' 100111 are protected by fl.OOO Clrlo Ill·
~WUee Gil .v.ry oae-ny mo.e; U.fiAUL eqatpmeat II
IIKM"'"'oal'ly .-.uteed, IIIII .lh.oald you need It,
JXGIIIIII l'8ld ~erilee Will be provided III)'Wbere RrOute.
:All 1f 110 eDrl eolt.

oncemonthly dates throughout the
year .
Each month lea lures a
special category of articles that
individuals, merchants, t m
"drununers" may bring to Ute
market. Each seller pays a
nominal " booth " fee from
w.hich
the
sponsoring
organization derives its profit.
Recent flea markets in
Athens also have proved
popular.
The flea mark;et, i~ a sense, is
a throw-back to an earlier
American time when to
bargain, or to haggle, on price
was the accepted way of doing
business.
Aseller may have his price on .
an article (though he's not sure
what it's worth) and the buyer
has his own idea of the object's
value (depending upon how
badly he wants it) . Somewhere
along the line there Is a meeting
of the minds. Usually, but not
always.
, !n the meantime, everybody
has fun!

WELCOME TO . ..
REGATTA CITY, IJ.S.A .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, June 15,
the J66th day of 1971.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn .
The evening star is Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Gemini.
American sculpter Malvina
Hoffman was born June 15,
1887.
On this day in history:
In 1752 Benjamin Franklin
demonstrated the relationship
between electricity and lightning by launching a kite during
a storm in Philadelphia with an
iron key suspended from the
string.
In 1904 the excursion steamboat "General Slocwn" burst
into flames on the East River
in Manhattan , taking the lives
of 1,021 persons.

~

••

advanced- s~heduled ,

the Big Bend Regatta
Flea Market, with
a table of antique,
unusual, or rare articles similar to those
featured at such an
event.

Harrisonville Society News

Cutlass S Hardtop Coupe

1'1

DALE C. WARNE~ THE EX··
GRAND CROAKER SAYS:

' ,.I

Tickets for the annual frog
ball to be held at 9:30 Saturday
night at the Pomeroy Junior
High School In conjunction with
J!lg Bend Regatta Weekend are
being sold at Nelson's Drug
Store and the New York
Clothing House .
Highlights of the ball will be
the naming of the regatta queen

i

!I •

i

I

••
••
•'

·.

9..20

... . . i

~-&amp;:,.·.·

I

(

( ' QPEtlllllTGJ.PM DAILY ?

IN

NE

"

,

lA·BOR

,w.,

**IIIAKS
. . * HAM
*
SIAPOODI
PAMOUI COUNTRY ITYLI CHIC KIN

i'

..

REGATTA CITY, POMEROY, 0.

_BULLF:ROGS·
..

I,)!&lt;·

....,.~

"F*T S1lLE REITAURIIT''

I ·4! YA11n111 o• PANCAKII

QU\~Tl

COME ONE! COME Al.L

•

Phooe446-0699 ·'
ll Court St.
Gallipolis
}

~E

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.
·-------- ..
·
If No Answer, 992-3422
. Daily 12 to 9, Sunday 1 to 6

Lot Ph. 992-7004

.,

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT
ISSUE. BOA.T &amp;

MII)DLEPORT' OH10 '

1

To
the
committe e
chairmen , all workers
who have contributed
·time and energy, we say
thanks for bringing this
bigger and better event
to the Big Bend Area . It
is devotion to duty that
brings
great
ac·
compli shment. We urge
the utmost cooperation
of the gen eral public in
this endeavor .

Time!

Big Bend Regatta
JUNE

18-19-20

1

I Free Set-Up I
: We Service ~
I We Finance I
I
.J

l

\

I

.
1.~....~....~~~..~~..--~- ~~..................~..~..~..~--~~~~f
L.·~. ····~···.·.M.OT•O•R·L~IC~E·N•S•E• ~~~. . . .~~~~~~~~·~~. .~~. .~. . . . .-.-.-. .-.-.-. -~-~~,
'

'

�14-1be Dally Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,June 1$, 1971
1 Bwled In Samoa
Jn·l8110, Robert Louis Steven1011 went to live in Samoa,
where he died in 1895. Sixty
ll!ltlvel carried his body to
the .top of !1ft. Vaea, where
he was buned. ·
' ..

Requirement
Persons considered for the
U.S. Hall of Fame must be
deceased 25 ~ears or more
and are conSidered at elections held every five year~.
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
·

Announcement
ATHENS, OHIO
lOw Has I Brand law

~~

I. Everybody
Has
I
..
I

-·

d T. . ,. .
IReal Goo
zme ~til

!' •

A new feature of this year's
Big Bend Regatta Weekend·will
be a flea market conducted
under the direction of Mrs. Rita
Bail ·Lewis representing Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
Antiques, primitives, toys,
homemade candies and whathave-you are to be offered for
sale at the flea market. Anyone
having merchandise for sale
may rent space for $5 a day or
$10 for the three day weekend.
Facilities for exhibiting must be
provided by the exhibitor and
the area designated" for the
event is the rear of the Pomeroy
Junior High School. There will
be some limited space available
inside the building.
Hours of the market are from
9a.m. to 7p.m. Friday, 9a.m. to
6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6
p.m. on Sunday.
Washington Court House has
made the "flea market"
practically a byword in Ohio the
past few years . Widely
publicized, it draws patrons
from throughout the midwest on

'*HOMIMADUOUPIIa CHILl

I

It's Just" A Short Drive from Pomeroy
Route 33 North ... COlumbus Road
Phone S92-U78
Athens, Ohio

·.

••'·

••••
'·~:

Step Up
To •••

..
..
.,,
•••
••
'

&lt;' (

.••••,
•

Oldsmobile

...

~

*

r

,-

.t·:
.,.

A1W/ft A SIEP AHEAD

~·

••ol

..;

::

••+
•

MRS.
RITA
LEWIS, .chairman of

Tickets to Ball
Saturday on Sale
from a field of seven candidates
and the naming of the "frog
queen and king." Contestants
for the latter event must be at
least 30 years of age_ and
dressed in frog type cost~g.
Tickets are $2 each, $3.50 a
couple and $14.50 for a reserved
table 10r six. The Meigs County
Jaycees are staging the event.

..•

WE NEED

••

-••

Late Model Used Cars

.•• -

Generous
Allowance
. .

;

•
•

;

•~

*

For Your Car Ri&amp;ht Now!

=

•

TRY USI

~

••
~
~

••
'·

f
•
•''

I

Severa/1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van .Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business''
992-5342 . GMAC FINANCING POMEROY
Open Evenings Until 8: 00- Til S P.M. Sat.

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

Mrs. Nellie Borgan had the Will Clonch.
misfortune to fall off a chair and
Recent guests of Mrs. John
break her wrist while changing Stout were Mrs. Gheen and Mrs.
a light bulb.
Martha Clonch.
A new trailer was set up on Mrs. Earl McGrath is paint·
the Kelley farm Wednesday ing for Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
better known as the Jonah
Bob Alkire is working this
Cotterill farm.
week at Portsmouth, Ohio.
Paul Cotterill is sUll confined
Mr. Willard Faudree is not so
in the Athens hospital following well at this writing.
a tractor accident In which he
Clinton Gilkey visited his
broke an arm and foot.
mother, Ava Gilkey, Sunday
Mrs. Frances Alkire and son, evening. Mrs. Gilkey is "sick
Ray, visited the Bobby Gibsons with a virus.
In Columbus, 0. Tuesday af- Mrs. Jane Gilkey is spending
ternoon.
some time with relatives in
Misses Kathy and Karen West Virginia.
Gilkey of Albany visited Ava
Clement Landaker passed
Gilkey Monday evening.
away with cancer in April In
Rodney Gilkey visited his North Dakota. He was the son of
grandma Gilkey Saturday Sam Landaker and leaves one
evening and Sunday dinner sister.
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mrs. Sally Welsh will be our
Alkire and Alice Whaley.
new Avon lady.
Recent visitors of the M. A.
Epples was Mrs. Earl Foil, ·
Mrs. Margaret Douglas and
Presidential Mansion
In 1789, President-elect and
Mrs. George Washington
moved into a house on
Cherry Street in New York
City, making it the first
presidential mansion . .

WITH A lJ.HAUL
TRUCK or TRAILER
CONVENIENT 1-WAY SERVICE
''

!

•'
•
••
,''

.

'

[

••

•
•

.'•

•
•
•

•• •
•

•

NECESSinES.

FOR EC:ONOM.YAND .

also •· ••

. COIVENIENCE-U.tiAUL

'COMPLETE U-HAUL SERVICE

IT'S 'TUNE-UP" TIME

FOR YOUR CAR ·
DON?' FORGET .•• .

.---~----- ~----------i

I

l

LOU'S ASHLAND
.SERVICE STATION

~ WilT~

~~\, ~~

IIJ.1111 .

POMDOV,O.

I

:

I1'4Z.ZIDE

l .I

~--------------~~----·

SPORT SHOP

PRONT aT,
MARI.TTA. rtll!
HON.S'78··44•

..

.

MRS. JUDY RIGGS, Reedsville Route I, a champim
baton twirler, wUI be in charge of the annual Big Bend
Regatta Bston Twirling Championships which get underway
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Middleport Junior High School.

. ""~'; :l'~..~·~·.:i

"\.~V'Y '

STEER HERE. • • • FOR
FULL PROTECTION
We're experienced in arranging
adequate coverage for boat owners,
and their families, for full financial
protection in any ev.entuality. Get
details here.

DAVIS • WARNER INSURANCE
114 COURT ST.
PHONE 992-2966
POMEROY

J MILES NORTHEAST OF POMEROY, JUST 1 MILE OFF

STATE ROUTE 7 ON WELLS ROAD

••
•

Featuring The
Best In

I
I

'

I·I

~

'---------------~

•"
••
•

- FISHING

.

3 Sparkling Lakes

The second annual Big Bend to tal
Regatta Baton Twirling
Championships will be another
top attraction this year of the
1971 Regatta Festivities. Last
year's contest was very successful as twirlers from a four ·
state area took part in the
event.
The contest, directed by Mrs.
Judy Riggs, above, for the
Chamber of Commerce, will be·
held Saturday, June 19, at the
Junior High Gym In Middleport.
The National Open Class "A"
contest is sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association , and Registered
Licensed Judges with N.B.T.A.
will be used.
Approximately 400 trophies
will be awarded to various
winners throughout the daylong competition, and featured
events will be the selection of
the "Miss Regatta Majorette
Queen" and her Princesses, a,nd
at the end of the day ·· the
" Regatta 'trand Champion"
will be selected on the basis of

•

Heifers 24 to 29.85; Baby Beef 30
to 42.50; Fat Cows 17 to 22.50;
Canners IS to 24; Bulls 21 to
28.50; Milk Cows 125 to 345.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 41.60;
~conds 38.75 to 40; Medium 34
to 37.50; Com. &amp; Hvs. 28 to 35.25;
Culls 30 Down.
BABY CALVES - 26 to 65.
LAMBS - Tops 30 ; Seconds
26.85 to 27.90.

·'Have a Wo1J.derful Visit "

RACINE HOME NATIONAL
BANK
Your Friendly Bank
RACINE, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT

-BOATING
-PICNICKING

~

-..
.-.
---•
-...

Gleem II Toothpaste
REG. 39•
1.75 oz.
12~

VAN '. DYKE BY
Dan Says:
We Have.--....
ERDON'S

EXPIRES : 6-20-71
LIMIT ONE

The Better Buys.•.
II

I

M&amp;R

heater , stainles s sink and
plumbed for washer .

Local~

SALE PRICE

•7395

Owned &amp; Operated

We Welcome
Trade-Ins

•.

•

lf~

NOW ON DISPlAY

Complete deluxe furniture

JUHE 18-19-20

M

.

'

II FLUSH TOILETS AND PLENTY OF HOT WATER.
4 . CENTRAL SHOWER HOUSES, LAUN~RY
FACILITIES, FLUSH TOILETS ·AND PLENTY OF
HOT WATER.
•A TRADING POST WELL STOCKED WITH FOOD
ITEMS, BEVERAGES, SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT.

-v

• Liberty

Our compliments lo all of1he
hard working commlllees
that pul thiS very worthwhile
program together - Ano!her
link In acquainting people
wilh our• beautiful south·

'

.

516.00 PER WEEK I Special Rates to Camping Clubs &amp; Groups on Request)
PICNICKING SOc PER FAMILY
SWIMMING SOc PER PERSON
HORACE KARR, OWNER

Many Styles
an d MOdt!IS

eastern Ohio region .

Stop ln, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom f:avender or John Ketchka

: I
••

..
...•.
.0
.....

In Any Way•••

, Belmon t
and Sect ional

Automobile
.. Cub
of Soothern Ohio

M

53.00 PER FAMILY I Includes Fishing)
ISO&lt; ADDITIONAL FOR ELECTRICITY!
160c ADDITIONAL FOR SEWER &amp; WATER)

Every Worker and
Citizen That Has Helped

•King

.

ROYAL OAK PARK CAMPSITE RATES &amp; PRICES

Regatta Week
Red Hot Special!
M&amp;·R SHOPPING CENTER

New 65x14 Wide
•

~

Everything For Everybody At -Discount Prices!

You Alwa,s Get A Better Buy At Goble's Lot

REGATTA'

w

,.,

·&lt;

Ph. 667-3370
Jet . Hwy. 124 &amp; 144 Hockingport, Ohio

pac;kege, tully carpeted ,
house .type door , storms
and screens, 30 gal . water

~

ELECTRIC OUTLETS AVAILABLE AT 220 CAMPSITES.
SEWER &amp; WATER HOOKUPS AT 60 ·CAMPSITES. j

PHONE 991-6100 or tti-3341

::!!

EVINRUDE MOTORS

H

4 St;r ~mp Rating

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Salurday, June 12, 1971,
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 18 to
18.35; 220 to 250 lbs. 17.85 to
18.10; Light 15 to 16.50; Fat
Sows 13.50 to 14.40; Boars 10.50
to 12.50; Pigs 4 to 15.
CATTLE- Steers 24 to 32.85 ;

accum;lations~========~~~===~~=~

BIG BEND

- CAMPING 1
-SWIMMING

4

Market Report

•.•.

SCHWARZEL MARINE

•

OUTDOOR
FAMILY1
- RECREATION

2
3

t.

SERVICE CENTER OF THE MID-OHIO VALLEY

Top Attraction Again

•

I

old U.S. Route 33. The lnstitoot
houses an undetermined
member of tadpoles that some
day may be the center of attraction for future Frog Jumping contests at the annual Big
Bend Regatta.
The lnstitoot was built by
Kerns Roush, Stanley Bass and
William Grueser, each a
dedicated bull frog promoter.
Dedication services befitting
the greatest frogs were held this
spring when members gathered
to christen the newly built
facility .
Roy Holter, Grand Croaker,
using a bottle filled with spirits
from Happy Hoppy Holter
Farm, christened the wire mesh
building .
No. 1 Freight Movers
WASH!NGTON- Three
out of every four Ions of
freight move at one time or
another by truck.

~

Come see our display at the RegaHa,
June 18, 1'1, 20.

'

ROYAL OAK 'PARK

.

To increase the interest in the
Frog Jumping Contest held
each year during the Big Bend
Regatta, members of the Ohio
Association for the Promotion
of the Bull Frog built the first
known Frog Institoot in the
world in Meigs County.
The lnstitoot is located on the
Harold Blackston property on

:::=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~!(.:::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~=~=~===t
~

DUO BOATS

REGATTA WEEKEND VISITORS WELCOME!

A thought for today: Scottish
author John Buchan said, "We
can only pay our debt to the
past by putting the future in
debt to ourselves. "

,~

Small Loads-Short Moves· Long Moves
V!lcations-Any Moving Problem

JUNE 18-19-20

•••

!n 1960 Premier Kishi asked
President Eisenhower to postpone a visit to Japan because
of anti-American riots in Tokyo.

lnstitoot to
Build Interest

Trophy will also be awarded to
the twirler traveling the farthest.
The contest is scheduled to
start at 10 a.m. with the Corps
Competition, and will run the
remainder of the day. Late
registrations will start at 9 a.m.
Food wUI be served all day by
the Meigs Band Boosters.
Entry forms may be obtained
by contacling Mrs. Judy Riggs
at Chester 985-3595.

!

•

I..

TRUCKS

.. ,.

Ball.

~SHOP ZI~I!'SI
FOR YOUR
I
. PORTING GOODS
NEEDS
I
eSpaldin~ .
• Uawlinp;~
.I
eVoit
• i.OI! is viii~· Sluji~N'
I
'
T.AM s~•CIALISTS
I
n.. l:olo:oll-( :••u-,. .... oloull-ll••••ball
I
I SIO,OC!jl w,rthofTrophios IIISttck I II

and
WE SlOCK THE

JACK
CARSEY of Pomeroy
in this attire was the
"frog queen" at the
1970 Regatta Frog
MRS .

NOW THAT WE HAVE
YOUR ATTENTION-

VANS

ROY HOLTER, GRAND CROAKER; In actlm as be
christened the Frog lnstitoot early this spring. The Institoot
is located on the Harold Blackston farm. Blackston's Beauty
was the first Meigs County Frog to take the Ohio Frog
Jumping Championship In 1969 at the Big Bend Regatta.

Association for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs exWntne one of the frogs housed in
the new Frog lnstitoot.l-rare Harold Blackston, Roy Holter,
Fred Crow and Dale Warner ..They get more laughs from the
Frog event than anyone else.

SEA STAR &amp;

SEX-SATIONAL!

.•.

GRAND CROAKERS of the Ohio

Regatta Weekend

---------------·

"l1lere are I,M U-HAUL llellenbl&amp;ll ID t,Ae eom·
aalEtlet, U.S._. Clilada. Relit U..fiA\JL wllere you 1re,
IIUWt, ud lllnlltiD 111 De.Jer ID yoar aew nellbborbood,
Yoa e• evea aao.e ODeoftY 10 AIMb wlib I U-IIAUL
tnller I Yolll' 100111 are protected by fl.OOO Clrlo Ill·
~WUee Gil .v.ry oae-ny mo.e; U.fiAUL eqatpmeat II
IIKM"'"'oal'ly .-.uteed, IIIII .lh.oald you need It,
JXGIIIIII l'8ld ~erilee Will be provided III)'Wbere RrOute.
:All 1f 110 eDrl eolt.

oncemonthly dates throughout the
year .
Each month lea lures a
special category of articles that
individuals, merchants, t m
"drununers" may bring to Ute
market. Each seller pays a
nominal " booth " fee from
w.hich
the
sponsoring
organization derives its profit.
Recent flea markets in
Athens also have proved
popular.
The flea mark;et, i~ a sense, is
a throw-back to an earlier
American time when to
bargain, or to haggle, on price
was the accepted way of doing
business.
Aseller may have his price on .
an article (though he's not sure
what it's worth) and the buyer
has his own idea of the object's
value (depending upon how
badly he wants it) . Somewhere
along the line there Is a meeting
of the minds. Usually, but not
always.
, !n the meantime, everybody
has fun!

WELCOME TO . ..
REGATTA CITY, IJ.S.A .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, June 15,
the J66th day of 1971.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn .
The evening star is Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Gemini.
American sculpter Malvina
Hoffman was born June 15,
1887.
On this day in history:
In 1752 Benjamin Franklin
demonstrated the relationship
between electricity and lightning by launching a kite during
a storm in Philadelphia with an
iron key suspended from the
string.
In 1904 the excursion steamboat "General Slocwn" burst
into flames on the East River
in Manhattan , taking the lives
of 1,021 persons.

~

••

advanced- s~heduled ,

the Big Bend Regatta
Flea Market, with
a table of antique,
unusual, or rare articles similar to those
featured at such an
event.

Harrisonville Society News

Cutlass S Hardtop Coupe

1'1

DALE C. WARNE~ THE EX··
GRAND CROAKER SAYS:

' ,.I

Tickets for the annual frog
ball to be held at 9:30 Saturday
night at the Pomeroy Junior
High School In conjunction with
J!lg Bend Regatta Weekend are
being sold at Nelson's Drug
Store and the New York
Clothing House .
Highlights of the ball will be
the naming of the regatta queen

i

!I •

i

I

••
••
•'

·.

9..20

... . . i

~-&amp;:,.·.·

I

(

( ' QPEtlllllTGJ.PM DAILY ?

IN

NE

"

,

lA·BOR

,w.,

**IIIAKS
. . * HAM
*
SIAPOODI
PAMOUI COUNTRY ITYLI CHIC KIN

i'

..

REGATTA CITY, POMEROY, 0.

_BULLF:ROGS·
..

I,)!&lt;·

....,.~

"F*T S1lLE REITAURIIT''

I ·4! YA11n111 o• PANCAKII

QU\~Tl

COME ONE! COME Al.L

•

Phooe446-0699 ·'
ll Court St.
Gallipolis
}

~E

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.
·-------- ..
·
If No Answer, 992-3422
. Daily 12 to 9, Sunday 1 to 6

Lot Ph. 992-7004

.,

OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT
ISSUE. BOA.T &amp;

MII)DLEPORT' OH10 '

1

To
the
committe e
chairmen , all workers
who have contributed
·time and energy, we say
thanks for bringing this
bigger and better event
to the Big Bend Area . It
is devotion to duty that
brings
great
ac·
compli shment. We urge
the utmost cooperation
of the gen eral public in
this endeavor .

Time!

Big Bend Regatta
JUNE

18-19-20

1

I Free Set-Up I
: We Service ~
I We Finance I
I
.J

l

\

I

.
1.~....~....~~~..~~..--~- ~~..................~..~..~..~--~~~~f
L.·~. ····~···.·.M.OT•O•R·L~IC~E·N•S•E• ~~~. . . .~~~~~~~~·~~. .~~. .~. . . . .-.-.-. .-.-.-. -~-~~,
'

'

�••
. • . 17-The Daily·Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pommy, o., June Ia, 1971
each year in the nranufacturc .
of trucks- enough to paint
one million avctagc frame
· homes. ·

Paint For Truc:ks
WASHINGTON - More
than eight million gallons ot
paint nnd thinner arc used

, Innovation

•

;"Al,Regatta

Swing

/

i

JAway

f

RENEE BURKE

BERNADE'ITE HENNESSY

Mason, W. V.a.

••J?
···························~·
Q f7 '
:

Seven Meigs County girls-most of whom
graduated from high schools this spring will vie for the title of "Miss Big Bend
Regatta Queen" Saturday.
This will mark the first time that a
regatta queen has been chosen and handling
the selection processes is Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The queen will receive $75 bond and a
. trophy while .the first and second runners-up
will receive $50 bonds and trophies. Eitch of
the participants will receive mementos of the
occasion.
Crowds attending the regatta will be
pennitted to vote for the candidate of their ·
choice at the Pomeroy Junior Higll School
auditorium where a voting
booth will he set up by the
sorority. Votes will he accepted
until 4 p.m. Saturday. The
queen will he crowned at the
Frog Ball at 10:15 p.m.
Saturday.

•

•r •• .:, \·

••,

·'

"RUPP" SPRINT

MINI-BIKE!
Register every lime you come .to lown
Drawing: Noon July 3rd
eNo ,urchaso Necessory

eNetcl Not h ,resent To Win.

••
•

RHEA MORA

The Pomeroy National Bank,
Citizens National Bank, Mid·
die port ; The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, and the
Racine Home-National Bank
will provide the bonds while
trophies and remembrances
will he provided by the Meigs
County Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Assn.
Contestants for the queen title
inClude Rhea Mora, Eastern
High School graduate, Pomeroy
Route 3; Jennifer Goble, Meigs
High School graduate, Middleport Route 1; Lu Ann
French, Meigs High School
graduate, Middleport; Peggy
Story, Meigs High School
gra!luate, Pomeroy; Bernadette Hennessy, Meigs High
School graduate, Pomeroy;
Renee Burke, Southern High
School graduate, Racine ; Sandy ·
Sayre, Southern High School
graduate, Racine.
The queen candidates will
ride on a professionally made
float being rented by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Com-

Reedsville
GRAVEL

Mr. and Mrs. A. N. McGregor
of Vincent, Mr. and Mrs. Gerold
Parks and Beth of New
Lexington, and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh of Chauncey
were guests over the weekend of
Mr. and Mrs. Dencil Jamison.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg,
W. Va., and Ernest Grim of
Paden City .

: Need ...

: READY MIXED
:CONCRETE
• Coli Us!

,

: GOEGLEIN BROS.
:
:

•

READY MIX aMENT
PAOE ST.

...

1
I

f .. •

WASHINGTON - More
than eight million persons
- one out of every nine
workers in the U.S. - are
employed by the Nation's
trucki ng industry.

!

THIS PROFESSIONALLY MADE FLOAT is being
ren led by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for the annual B1g Bend Regatta Parade which moves out of Mid·
dleport at 6 p.m. Friday. The float, which will not be in the
c~petltion for prizes being awarded the best parade entnes, Will carry the seven contestants for the title of Miss
Bend Regatts Queen along the parade route.

More
Experience
In Selling
and
Servicing!

:

11

•

.. We gu arantee you good foo d -

Better
Quality I
Better
Brands!
Better
Buys!

• .Whe'e

Cl!' tv the

Best . Food is Good Enough.

Gallipolis, Ohio

~ow

Bulova ·

Your Savings

... that's Great/

Can Earn Up To

... that's Value/

5%%
WITH DEPOSIT INSURANCE
UP TO $20,000

Transistorized watch

AND YINDALIIS !IIIIlS! 101 1971
STp, IN AND SEE Jllf 707AJ. EIECT.IC

.rt=ATHEKS DAY
.' :..·

YINDALE

JUNE 20

],
'

.

ALSO (4) 24 WIDES
ON ·DISPLAY
•

60xl2 Super Metro

'5995

Regatta Weekend _
JUNE 18-19-20

Plan To Attend...

I

GENERAL TIRE.SALES·
,.2·7i61

'

Delivered and Set. Up

,,

Nation's No. 1. sefler for last 8
years. One year warranty ~"
walls, lofal electric. Dellv~ed
and set up.

4

JOIN IN THE FUN, THERE'S
LOTS TO DO AND SEE!!
RACES- ENTERTAINMENTDISPLAYS

465 Second

'6995

Middleport, 0.

JOHNSON

MOBILE HOME
SALU '

VINDAILE- CHAMPION- HOLLY PARK
NEW MOON-KIRKWOOD_, FREEDOM
FreeDelhlery &amp; Set Up
Repair service &amp; Parts

Rt} East Gallipolis, Ohio

Phol.. 446-1547

.

'

e

•
e
.fj
··'
••
•
e
.
e FREE PARKING- a
IN OUR SPACIOUS LOT
•
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
a
fl
AUTO BANK
DRIVE-IN WINDOW SERVICE
t' ·
•••

•

LIVE ALIT11.E

PIOIIAL WOSif IMSUUIKI CCMPOIAIION

.

NEW .MOON
FREEDOM. 64x14

Reseave System

•
•
•••
••
..,
•
•
•• Every Banking Service •
.
s
•
e
a Under ONE Roof
•
••
•
•
e
•e
8

· ~~

..

Fa sf courteous

The home of famous Co l. Sa nder s Kentucky Fried
Chicken i n Gallipolis.

. . . that's News/

Mobilt homt li-,ing iJ t~• l97l way to lint

Member Federal

~

CARAVELLE'

ONDJSPLA¥
Ptica A Vindole Anywhere Else In Ohio ond
Then Compare Our Low Price.

se rvice in a pleasant atm os phere.

·!f.

1

Pomeroy, Ohio

,-

it's electronic

. ~ it's . '.by

"14x70" VINDALE
THE STAFF OF BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE
INVITES ALL OF YOU PEOPL£
TO BREAKFAST IN THE MORNING
Lunch At Nom .• And Dinner
In The Evening

" Farmers Bank
• .and
.savmgs Co.

~'
•
•
•
......
•
,
8

'

992·3284 MIDDLEPORT :

Area's
Oldest
Dealer

re called
,, some a
·1y
·ness Banks ,
"The Fa!1'11
•'BUSh•
wn as
.
·you
are calle d
are ~&lt;.,no
· . serv1ces
some banks I sanl&lt;..s" ..• we all the banking to serve you.
''Commercia? Because we ha~e We'll be haPPY
sank". WhY. 'I will ever nee .
. and your famt Y

FUN TIME
POMEROY!
BIG BEND REGATTA
E 18-

Come to Johnson's

Truc:k Employment Up

ON YOUR WAY TO FUN TIME

: When You

••

,.

·······~···················~
.'

parade from Middleport to
Pomeroy.

~
Big Bend Regatta
JUNE 18-19-20

•••
•••
••
••
•••
••
•••
••
••

••
•••

Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Mary)
Lewis and son, Richard, Jr., :
and daughter, Beth Ar,ln, sp~nt •
Memorial Day with her father, 1
E. A. Kibble.
1

. .

!

liMESTONE:
CRUSHED •
STONE
:

News, Notes

merce in Friday evening's

.•..TIME FOR All

•

at REGA1TACTY, U.S.A.:•
••
POMEROY, OHIO ••
•
June Ul-19-20:

:•
•
:

JENNIFER GOBLE

&lt; •

ur '.::lae~l • . •

:v-'e

•
.. •
4

•

•

The event will get underway No steel wheels or tire chains
. at 10 a.m in the area behind the will be allowed.
•: old Pomeroy Junior High School All weights must be bolted
building. Five weight classes pinned or chained to tractor t~
will he scheduled in the Junior satisfaction of the judges.
• Division, under 16 years, and Judges' decision in all cases
· the Senior Adult Division, ages are final.
:: 16 to. 79. .
There will be no weighing out.
; Pr1~es Will he $10, $5, and All tractors will be weighed in
$2.50m each classwithanentry · before the contest starts he·
fe£ of $1 for each competitive tween 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. at the
pull.
'
contest site.
. Weigh-in will·be at the contest If tractor front raises to point
s1te ~fore the contest. Entries judges feel endangers the
'. may ~e made with any com- driver, judges may stop the
rrutte~ 1member or mailed to pull.
·
Box 32/Pomeroy, Ohio or at the Booms must not exceed 12
• contest.
inches from front edge of front
CLASSES &amp; RULES
wheels.
Junior Division, under 16 Width of track will be ten feet.
years, ~lass I, Up to 500 (lbs.); The contestant must stop
Class 2, 501 to 700; Class 3, 701 to when whistle is blown.
. 900; Cl'a5s 4, 901 to 1100; Class 5, Judges will decide on tractors
Free For All.
over 1000 pounds if garden
Sel]lor Division, 16 years and tractor or not.
over,' Class 6, Up to 500 (lbs.);
Class 7, 501 to 700; Class 8, 701 to
Truc:ks Carry
900;' Class 9, 901 to 1100; Class
Perishables
10, Free For All .
WASHINGTON - PerPrizes, $10 first place, $5
second place, $2.50 third place. ishable fruits and vegetables
produced in the winter garRULES
Entry fee of $1.00 for each dens of Florida, Texas. Arizona, New Mexico, and Calcompetitive pull .
One driver will be pennitted ifornia are quick-frozen to
preserve their flavor and texfor each tractor.
and trucked all over
Drivers must have his tractor ture,
the country at zero temperaunder control at all times.
tures in refrigerated vans.
All tractors must be patented
and factory built.
Drawbar must be of a stable
design , fastened securely to
the tractor with no moving
Gulls Saved Crops
parts between pinhole and Thousands of California
tractor.
gulls, suddenly gathering to
Drawbar neight will be feed on the armies of crickmaximum of 12 inches on a tight ets devouring the Mormon
chain.
crops, are said to have saved
1 Len~th of chain will he 24 the Utah settlers from star• inches. ,
vation. In appreciation, the
D 1 h 1
Mormons erected , in Salt
ua l" ee son rear of tractor Lake City, the famous monuwill pot, he allowed.
men! to the gulls.

Riverside Golf Course
Phone 773-9527

LU ANN. FRENCH

·,
On~- of s~verai innovations in the Seventh Annual Big Bend
·; Regatta 'feekend 1s a garden tractor pulling contest to be held
Satur\IJly morning.
Roy Miller is chairman of the event with Dorsey Jordan Bob
Uch and C. E. Blakeslee assisting.
'

PEGGY STORY

Seven Seek R_egatta's Que.e n Role

·I

'

•

SANDY SAYRE

'

Tr•tllt.,IIH bltt.I'J witch.
Wlttr rnltt•nt. Silwer NdlftUM dlai .Lumlnou

.

'

It's the world's newest
electronic and Bulova gives
it a precision jewel-levered
movement energized by a tiny .
power cell. This a!fvanced design
movement is found In far
more expensive watches. The
result: a highly accurate watch
that will give you years and
yem of dependable performance. And you never have to
wind it!

FUNTIME FOR
.I

THE FAMiLY

Big Bend Regatta

JUNE .18-19-20
..

GOESSLERJ

' Jewelry ·Store

.Pomeroy

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

'

I ,

•

1

••

FOR YOUR cONVENIENCE

•"

•"
•• • e a.ca aca• • ••·
•

&lt;

�••
. • . 17-The Daily·Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pommy, o., June Ia, 1971
each year in the nranufacturc .
of trucks- enough to paint
one million avctagc frame
· homes. ·

Paint For Truc:ks
WASHINGTON - More
than eight million gallons ot
paint nnd thinner arc used

, Innovation

•

;"Al,Regatta

Swing

/

i

JAway

f

RENEE BURKE

BERNADE'ITE HENNESSY

Mason, W. V.a.

••J?
···························~·
Q f7 '
:

Seven Meigs County girls-most of whom
graduated from high schools this spring will vie for the title of "Miss Big Bend
Regatta Queen" Saturday.
This will mark the first time that a
regatta queen has been chosen and handling
the selection processes is Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The queen will receive $75 bond and a
. trophy while .the first and second runners-up
will receive $50 bonds and trophies. Eitch of
the participants will receive mementos of the
occasion.
Crowds attending the regatta will be
pennitted to vote for the candidate of their ·
choice at the Pomeroy Junior Higll School
auditorium where a voting
booth will he set up by the
sorority. Votes will he accepted
until 4 p.m. Saturday. The
queen will he crowned at the
Frog Ball at 10:15 p.m.
Saturday.

•

•r •• .:, \·

••,

·'

"RUPP" SPRINT

MINI-BIKE!
Register every lime you come .to lown
Drawing: Noon July 3rd
eNo ,urchaso Necessory

eNetcl Not h ,resent To Win.

••
•

RHEA MORA

The Pomeroy National Bank,
Citizens National Bank, Mid·
die port ; The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, and the
Racine Home-National Bank
will provide the bonds while
trophies and remembrances
will he provided by the Meigs
County Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Assn.
Contestants for the queen title
inClude Rhea Mora, Eastern
High School graduate, Pomeroy
Route 3; Jennifer Goble, Meigs
High School graduate, Middleport Route 1; Lu Ann
French, Meigs High School
graduate, Middleport; Peggy
Story, Meigs High School
gra!luate, Pomeroy; Bernadette Hennessy, Meigs High
School graduate, Pomeroy;
Renee Burke, Southern High
School graduate, Racine ; Sandy ·
Sayre, Southern High School
graduate, Racine.
The queen candidates will
ride on a professionally made
float being rented by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Com-

Reedsville
GRAVEL

Mr. and Mrs. A. N. McGregor
of Vincent, Mr. and Mrs. Gerold
Parks and Beth of New
Lexington, and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh of Chauncey
were guests over the weekend of
Mr. and Mrs. Dencil Jamison.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg,
W. Va., and Ernest Grim of
Paden City .

: Need ...

: READY MIXED
:CONCRETE
• Coli Us!

,

: GOEGLEIN BROS.
:
:

•

READY MIX aMENT
PAOE ST.

...

1
I

f .. •

WASHINGTON - More
than eight million persons
- one out of every nine
workers in the U.S. - are
employed by the Nation's
trucki ng industry.

!

THIS PROFESSIONALLY MADE FLOAT is being
ren led by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for the annual B1g Bend Regatta Parade which moves out of Mid·
dleport at 6 p.m. Friday. The float, which will not be in the
c~petltion for prizes being awarded the best parade entnes, Will carry the seven contestants for the title of Miss
Bend Regatts Queen along the parade route.

More
Experience
In Selling
and
Servicing!

:

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.. We gu arantee you good foo d -

Better
Quality I
Better
Brands!
Better
Buys!

• .Whe'e

Cl!' tv the

Best . Food is Good Enough.

Gallipolis, Ohio

~ow

Bulova ·

Your Savings

... that's Great/

Can Earn Up To

... that's Value/

5%%
WITH DEPOSIT INSURANCE
UP TO $20,000

Transistorized watch

AND YINDALIIS !IIIIlS! 101 1971
STp, IN AND SEE Jllf 707AJ. EIECT.IC

.rt=ATHEKS DAY
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YINDALE

JUNE 20

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ALSO (4) 24 WIDES
ON ·DISPLAY
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60xl2 Super Metro

'5995

Regatta Weekend _
JUNE 18-19-20

Plan To Attend...

I

GENERAL TIRE.SALES·
,.2·7i61

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Delivered and Set. Up

,,

Nation's No. 1. sefler for last 8
years. One year warranty ~"
walls, lofal electric. Dellv~ed
and set up.

4

JOIN IN THE FUN, THERE'S
LOTS TO DO AND SEE!!
RACES- ENTERTAINMENTDISPLAYS

465 Second

'6995

Middleport, 0.

JOHNSON

MOBILE HOME
SALU '

VINDAILE- CHAMPION- HOLLY PARK
NEW MOON-KIRKWOOD_, FREEDOM
FreeDelhlery &amp; Set Up
Repair service &amp; Parts

Rt} East Gallipolis, Ohio

Phol.. 446-1547

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.
e FREE PARKING- a
IN OUR SPACIOUS LOT
•
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
a
fl
AUTO BANK
DRIVE-IN WINDOW SERVICE
t' ·
•••

•

LIVE ALIT11.E

PIOIIAL WOSif IMSUUIKI CCMPOIAIION

.

NEW .MOON
FREEDOM. 64x14

Reseave System

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••
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•• Every Banking Service •
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s
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a Under ONE Roof
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Fa sf courteous

The home of famous Co l. Sa nder s Kentucky Fried
Chicken i n Gallipolis.

. . . that's News/

Mobilt homt li-,ing iJ t~• l97l way to lint

Member Federal

~

CARAVELLE'

ONDJSPLA¥
Ptica A Vindole Anywhere Else In Ohio ond
Then Compare Our Low Price.

se rvice in a pleasant atm os phere.

·!f.

1

Pomeroy, Ohio

,-

it's electronic

. ~ it's . '.by

"14x70" VINDALE
THE STAFF OF BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE
INVITES ALL OF YOU PEOPL£
TO BREAKFAST IN THE MORNING
Lunch At Nom .• And Dinner
In The Evening

" Farmers Bank
• .and
.savmgs Co.

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992·3284 MIDDLEPORT :

Area's
Oldest
Dealer

re called
,, some a
·1y
·ness Banks ,
"The Fa!1'11
•'BUSh•
wn as
.
·you
are calle d
are ~&lt;.,no
· . serv1ces
some banks I sanl&lt;..s" ..• we all the banking to serve you.
''Commercia? Because we ha~e We'll be haPPY
sank". WhY. 'I will ever nee .
. and your famt Y

FUN TIME
POMEROY!
BIG BEND REGATTA
E 18-

Come to Johnson's

Truc:k Employment Up

ON YOUR WAY TO FUN TIME

: When You

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parade from Middleport to
Pomeroy.

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Big Bend Regatta
JUNE 18-19-20

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Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Mary)
Lewis and son, Richard, Jr., :
and daughter, Beth Ar,ln, sp~nt •
Memorial Day with her father, 1
E. A. Kibble.
1

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liMESTONE:
CRUSHED •
STONE
:

News, Notes

merce in Friday evening's

.•..TIME FOR All

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at REGA1TACTY, U.S.A.:•
••
POMEROY, OHIO ••
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June Ul-19-20:

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JENNIFER GOBLE

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The event will get underway No steel wheels or tire chains
. at 10 a.m in the area behind the will be allowed.
•: old Pomeroy Junior High School All weights must be bolted
building. Five weight classes pinned or chained to tractor t~
will he scheduled in the Junior satisfaction of the judges.
• Division, under 16 years, and Judges' decision in all cases
· the Senior Adult Division, ages are final.
:: 16 to. 79. .
There will be no weighing out.
; Pr1~es Will he $10, $5, and All tractors will be weighed in
$2.50m each classwithanentry · before the contest starts he·
fe£ of $1 for each competitive tween 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. at the
pull.
'
contest site.
. Weigh-in will·be at the contest If tractor front raises to point
s1te ~fore the contest. Entries judges feel endangers the
'. may ~e made with any com- driver, judges may stop the
rrutte~ 1member or mailed to pull.
·
Box 32/Pomeroy, Ohio or at the Booms must not exceed 12
• contest.
inches from front edge of front
CLASSES &amp; RULES
wheels.
Junior Division, under 16 Width of track will be ten feet.
years, ~lass I, Up to 500 (lbs.); The contestant must stop
Class 2, 501 to 700; Class 3, 701 to when whistle is blown.
. 900; Cl'a5s 4, 901 to 1100; Class 5, Judges will decide on tractors
Free For All.
over 1000 pounds if garden
Sel]lor Division, 16 years and tractor or not.
over,' Class 6, Up to 500 (lbs.);
Class 7, 501 to 700; Class 8, 701 to
Truc:ks Carry
900;' Class 9, 901 to 1100; Class
Perishables
10, Free For All .
WASHINGTON - PerPrizes, $10 first place, $5
second place, $2.50 third place. ishable fruits and vegetables
produced in the winter garRULES
Entry fee of $1.00 for each dens of Florida, Texas. Arizona, New Mexico, and Calcompetitive pull .
One driver will be pennitted ifornia are quick-frozen to
preserve their flavor and texfor each tractor.
and trucked all over
Drivers must have his tractor ture,
the country at zero temperaunder control at all times.
tures in refrigerated vans.
All tractors must be patented
and factory built.
Drawbar must be of a stable
design , fastened securely to
the tractor with no moving
Gulls Saved Crops
parts between pinhole and Thousands of California
tractor.
gulls, suddenly gathering to
Drawbar neight will be feed on the armies of crickmaximum of 12 inches on a tight ets devouring the Mormon
chain.
crops, are said to have saved
1 Len~th of chain will he 24 the Utah settlers from star• inches. ,
vation. In appreciation, the
D 1 h 1
Mormons erected , in Salt
ua l" ee son rear of tractor Lake City, the famous monuwill pot, he allowed.
men! to the gulls.

Riverside Golf Course
Phone 773-9527

LU ANN. FRENCH

·,
On~- of s~verai innovations in the Seventh Annual Big Bend
·; Regatta 'feekend 1s a garden tractor pulling contest to be held
Satur\IJly morning.
Roy Miller is chairman of the event with Dorsey Jordan Bob
Uch and C. E. Blakeslee assisting.
'

PEGGY STORY

Seven Seek R_egatta's Que.e n Role

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SANDY SAYRE

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Tr•tllt.,IIH bltt.I'J witch.
Wlttr rnltt•nt. Silwer NdlftUM dlai .Lumlnou

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It's the world's newest
electronic and Bulova gives
it a precision jewel-levered
movement energized by a tiny .
power cell. This a!fvanced design
movement is found In far
more expensive watches. The
result: a highly accurate watch
that will give you years and
yem of dependable performance. And you never have to
wind it!

FUNTIME FOR
.I

THE FAMiLY

Big Bend Regatta

JUNE .18-19-20
..

GOESSLERJ

' Jewelry ·Store

.Pomeroy

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FOR YOUR cONVENIENCE

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•• • e a.ca aca• • ••·
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Prollllc Oyster
Pholographcd Moon
In
one
season, a large VirJohn William Draper took ginia oyster
produce ~s
the lirst photograph of the many as 500maymillion
moon in t84D. Though not 1m· and, as the oyster may eggs
well
pressive by later sta~d~rd~, live for 10 years or so, it
it forfshadowed Amenca s may liberate five billion durrole in the develop!llent of ing its lifetime.
photography and its use m
astronomy.
·

11- Tile Dally llentlnei,Middleport-PClllleroy, 0., June 1~. 1971

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·nus PATRIOTIC FLOAT by the Junior Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American

"Fun For Young ana Uld•• "

·Theme:
'Big Bend

MONA KING WAS A first
place winner In the decorated
blcyde contest held In 1970
during the Big Bend Regatta
Parade. This year costuming
of the rider and Its
relationship to the decoration
of the bicycle will be con·
sldered In the judging. The
contest Is open to young
people from t!lght through 14.

"

"Big Bend -1971" will be the
theme of the Seventh Annual
Big Bend Regatta Parade which
will move out at Middleport at 6
p.m. Friday non-stop to
Pomeroy.
Jim Mees, heading this year's
parade with Wendell Hoover as
co-chaii'!Jlan, reports that the
parade promises to be one of the
best in regatta weekend history.
Numerous entries have been
received . Last minute participants are welcome as the
parade forms on Middleport's
South Second Ave., Friday
evening.
Numerous trophies are to be
presented to the best parade
entries which will include
fl oats,.horsemen, riding groups,
bands, marching groups,
decorated bicycles and others.

1971'

A$25award will be presented to
the float best furthering the
parade theme.
Float categories include best
theme, best commercial float,
best non -commercial , best
religious and best frog float.

_RICK CHANCEY, DEBBIE MICHAEL AND MIKE CHANCEY check the frog fountain
located in the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse. Two frogs are seated on a love seat
under an umbrella, as water flows over the top.

•\Lv:tYOlL

Meigs 4;.H
Oub News

fit Tri·County

. OVLL RESULTS
Cheshire and Syracuse
captured victories Monday
night in the Ohio Valley Utile
League. Cheshire topped
Vinton, 6-3 while Syracuse
bombarded Rio Gr~nde, 13-3.
All other league g~mes were
washed out.
In the Ohio Valley Pee Wee
League last week, Rio Grande
defeated Green, 10-3; Bidwell
edged Vinton, 2-1 and Cheshire
outscored Racine, 15-14.

The Home 'fwve
Been Waiting fori
24x56 3BDRM.

On Your Way to Big Bend Regatta .. . Stop In and See Us
,

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t,N\1t~S ~~:~

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:l4' x 56' 3 bedroom, total ole&lt;tric, Early Amerkan, 14 Birch ponotong
throughout, fully carpeted, full bathroom with 11'(. fiber.glaa bath tub,
utilily room with l·pc. fiber-glas shower stall, ('II&lt; bath),_40 gal. water
heater, houselype aluminum siding, with storm windows, aolid •hlngled

&lt;t

roof- it's a BEAUTY!

REATEST
BUYS

SJJ,900.00

14x64' MOBILE

g&lt;JUrmetdish of llllute frOfl meat
and a crab meat wlih 'a dub ol
brandy added.
What I Uke About Toadll,
Hawes, A frog .can get •way
from you in a flash. ,. frOg can
make big jumps with his long .
back legs.
Robjns
and
·Rabbits, .
Hawkinson, Excellent water
color frog sketches of llull
Frogs.
.
cats and Bats and Tbinp
With Wings, Aiken, How nice to
be a speckled frog. Keep so cool
j1,1st squatting in your private
pool.

SAKI ·

KA

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JUNE
18-19-20

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Club met June 11 at Paula
Rife's home with five members
and one advisor present. They
discussed what they would take
to . the fair. ·Roger Wamsley
gave a demonstration on
bicycle safety. Jeff Peckham
gave a special report on the
hike. He was·also in charge of
recreation. They rode their
bikes. Mary Kauff . served
rJfreshments. The next meeting
is to be held June 17. -Roger
Wamsley.

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llf£ KID

BERKSHIRE KNITS
EXCELLENT SELECTION
On The T In Middleport

The Stitch and Sew 4-H Club
met June 8 at Robbin and
Cheral Wilson's home. There
were ten members and one
advisor present.
They discussed selling flower
bulbs. Mrs . Boso gave a
demonstration on foods. The
Wilson girls served refreshments. The next meeting is
scheduled for June 22 at Terry
Manuel's home. - Leslie
Roberts.
THE LETART Farm Boys 4·
H Club met June 10 at the home
of Randall Roberts. There were
three members and one advisor
in attendance. They discussed
their project books . James
Foreman gave a demonstration
with a rope. The next meeting is
to be held July 19 at the home of
James Foreman . - Todd
Roberts.
THEBUCKEYEBeauties4-H
Club met June 17 at the Baptist
Church with two advisors and 12
members in attendance. Mrs.
Pat Hindy gave a demon-

Rotary Valve Engine - Tubular Frame- 5 Speed Transmission -

12

mo. -12,000 mi. Warranty .

SPECIAL PRIC~ .................................. •34900

COYOTE MINI BIKE
SPECIAL PRICE

~

00
•159
........ ·························

. These Prices For Regatta Weekend Only

SEE OUR DISPLAY ON THE PARKING LOT ·

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

. 18th.

BOYS AND GIRLS-INFANT 1HRU 12
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stration on using a pattern.
Cindy Hindy served refreshments.
The next meeting is scheduled
for June 14 at the Baptist
Church. Each girl is to trim her
pattern and bring her material
and sewing box. - Cynthia
Lane.
THE PINK PANTHERS 4·H
Club met June 6 at Karen
Werry's home. There were two
advisors and nine members
present. They decided to sell
flower bulbs and to ride in the
Regatta parade Friday, the

POMEROY, 0.

263 W. MAIN

wedu know it was written down
in Scotiand, but itls lhe very
own story ol the chiljlren of the
Southern Appalach)an mountains when they sing it.
No One Wri~s A U,tter .to the
Snail, K.~mm, A Simple
statement Salamanders, toads
. a.s P0II'n~ogs.
• ndfr· ogs aII be gm
Outdoor £ducallon, Garnson,
Cecil, Campmg, an excellent
source of food to be had for the
takmg IS frogs, How to prepare
frog legs, Page 96.
Louisiana cookery, Land,
Culinary, If you ask for saute
bourgemse, you will have a

90S

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.

·Legion, won a first place in the junior division of floats taking part in the annual Big Bend
Regatta Parade in !970.

Norway on Magic WoOd, was
taught swimming by the
·champion swimming' in. _be Frog
T
strTim
uc tor,Tadpole
and' the Great
.Bu!Urog, Flack, Tim Jumped!
Language of Animals,
Selsam, Wben a frog says
"Kerroooaaak", what does he
mean?
A F og Went a Courtin'
Langs~ff, Nobody knows ho~
or when the story really started

BY VILMA PIKKOJA
mind, ask it? Why Ubrary?
Bookmobile Ub111rlaa
· Because tli;lt is where I make
If you had never ·prepared an my IIQme now, and if you had
article about a frog, then all I the impertinence to ask what
can say is that you haven't met the frogs and librarians have in
the right frog.
cOmmon, ihen it only shows
l'lalnly, one must classify all your Ignorance in Greek, Latin,
croaking, jumping . green Mythology,
Archeology,
creatures as frogs and let it go Recreation, Cooking, Enat that, or maybe catch one of tertainment, and Physiology!"
them, thus saying a word about
"The literature of Western
the bait, or fried frog legs Civilization is rich in my lore.
(which would be the end).
Read about me":
No! There is a story with no
Apricot ABC, Miles, A frog
·end in sight if you once meet helps a grasshopper. You learn
Fred Crow, Dale Warner, Guy the letter "G".
Guinther or Roy Holter; all
The Surprise Party, Hutchins,
Grand Croakers. You may be A frog comments on poetry.
the envy of all the non.{lrand
Sleepy Book, Zolotow, A frog
Croakers, or object of mirth to sitting on a lily pad.
the ignorant. But you cannot
Book of Poetry, Fisher, "I
ignore the Real Story of AFrog. can'tstab,l can't snare, I can't
Not any frog ; rather: "A grab, I can'tscare," com~lains
Frog."
the frog.
He lives in Pomeroy, of TheTraveling Frog, Rudolph,
course, coming of the finest line What a pity when the frog cried,
of Pomeroy frogs. He is the son "I did it! It was 1 who thought
of the illustrious Blackston of the clever trick!" and there
Beauty, winner of the statewide was no one to hear.
Frog Jumping contest in 19&amp;8. Zoo- Where Are You?,
Hls original pond is the McGovern, There was no zoo in
closest neighbor to the Frog Josh's town. But Josh found his
lnstitoot (the upstarts from friends. Afrog hopped past fast,
Michigan get their limelight qui~kly Josll grabbed for tile
there) but-"the Blackston Frog but it was gone.
Pond is my home and now I am Mrs. Pepperpot in the Magic
a Ubrary Frog.
Wood, Proysen, Mrs. Pep"lf you have a question in perpot, who lives on a hillside in

~

HELP MAKE" IT AGREAT
~UCCESS. •••AND DRIVE
SAFELY TO GET THERE.

THIS SCENE WILL BE REPEATED many times Friday evening when awards are
presented winners following the annual Big Bend Regatta Parade. Here Tom Cassell .presents
a first place award to Jennifer Grate accepting for Rutland Girl Scout Troop 180 as the best
marching unit in last year's parade.

.

. Mel. s' the- Best .ffi· F r 0 g.dom
M'".eet., m
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TO THE
BIG BEND REGAnA
JUNE 18-19·20

t

748 E. MAIN

Sharon Holter and Bonnie
Smith gave demonstrations on
sewing and setting the table.
J ody Grueser and Sandy
Hamilton were in charge of
recreation. They played Fruit
Basket. Mrs. Grueser served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be held
June 15 at Karen Werry's home.
- Kimberly Grueser.
THE T.N.T.. 4-H ;::tub met
June 8 at the home of Mrs.
James Robson. There were fiye
advisors and nine members in
attendance. The members
decided to buy a set of flags,
(one 4-H and one American).
The group decided not to have
their project meeting every
week.
Diane Pullins gave a
demonstration on how to tie a
square lrnot. Evelyn Well and
Kathryn Robson served
refreshments. The next meeting
is to be held June 15 at Mrs.
Robson's home.
THE GREEN Hornets 4-H

992-5153

POMEROY,O.

DISCOVER REGATTA CITY, U.S.A. IN A

·
~~oBLE'S
FORD FROM KEITH .\Jl : ,, •.

IN TOWN!

Everything
For The
Horse &amp; Rider

LOOK
Now o""lloble, thlt 3 bedroom, 1~

• TEX TAN, BIG HORN
AND BONNA ALLEN

lri&lt;, w~h Early American docor _

fully cnrpeted. luxury witf!economy,

s6,99S,

SADDLES
• UNUNED HORSE BLANKETS
• SADDLE .B.lANKETS
• FlY REPELLENTS
• GROOMING SUPPLIES
• ACME WESTERN BOOTS
.• AMERICAN WESTERN HATS
•WESTERN BELTS AND BUCKLES
• HORSE SHOES-BRIDLES-HALTERS
• WHIPS-SPURS

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

. "DECALS"

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
AIR CONDITIONED
.
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MODERN 'UPPLY
m W. Mlln St.

m -2114

Pomeroy, Olllo

ThtSioreWifti "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"

For Pals · St.t&gt;Jas · Large

&amp; Small Animals .

l.twni··~··

VISIT US DURING THE

REGArrA - JUNE 18-19-20

LOW BUDGETS ARE BAtK IN STYLE!

IT TOOK 30 YEARS TO PRODUCE THIS ONE!

I

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'Brentwood

Are you the Volkswagen Type 3 type?
Don'llet the foci thot Ihis cor mig hi
look like Indy .100 moleriol throw you
ofllhe trock.

Those racing stripes ore o con.

OF DIFFERENT BREEDS OF
HORSES FOR TRUCK DOORS AND
HOOD ORNAMENTS

BEFORE
YOU LEAP!

(

both FlfETWOOO Mobilo HoMo. A
lv~urious 14x64' homo, totally oltc·

..

Thot sports cor bod is o fro nt.
The Volkswagen Type 3 con no
,more fly down o racetrack than it con
Oy through lhe clouds.
What, lhen, can il do, ond wh o,
lhen is II for?
If y,ou're more concerned with
slowing down tho n speeding up, it
hos slondord front disc brakes.
All 4 wheels ore independen lly
susp&amp;nded so it holds the rood boiler
when cornering.
It has the mosl odvonced syslem of
distributing gasoline in lhe eng ine,
electronic fuel in fection.
Shihing on l.he VW Type 3 is less

.

mis:.1on is standard .

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR ·LOW-COST

and e'len less water or antifreezenone.
But contrary to Volkswagen trodi·
lion, il isn'l bod looking. In fact,
equipped wilh alllhe options os you

AUTO LOANS

I

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see it in the picture, you can make it
look like th'e menacing, overpowe;.
ing creature of lhe road thot II isn' l,
So if you're looking for 0 &lt;ocy little

sports cor, look somewhere else.

BEFORE YOU SIGN ANY OTHE.RFINANCE PlAN
WHEN YOU VISIT PARK FREE

These homes are in a variety of moi:lels. The market for used Mobile Homes is
excellent, ond we feel fortunate to be able to offer these. Good for
RENTALS, SECOND or SUMMER HOMES, or an economical buy for anyone
in need of a modestly priced home.

If you're in lhe market for just an

economy sedan, this isn't it.
Bul if you're lhe lype who wanls o

racy, economical, lillie, sporly sedan,
eureka! ·

TRI-COUNTY MOBILE HOMES,

INC.
ROUTE 7 NORTH PHONE 446-0175 GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

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Service, Parts &amp; Office Mon ..Frl. s.s, Sat . B-12

,,

DAILy 10·1 P.M.

TORINO
•

WE STOCK USED MOBILES- SHOP OUR LOT!

195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7),
. Pllone (614) 446-9800

'

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And in keeping wilh Volkswagen
slandords, il gels around 26 miles lo
'
;
o gallon of gos, uses very lillie oil,

Open: Sales, Mon.-Fri. 8to 8; Sat. 8-S

TAKE

by DeRose

12x60' wilh 23" pullout, by DE ROSE. Shingltcl
roof, briCk oding. 2·btdroomt, fully fur·
nlshtd. Iorge boy window, shding

sticky, 4·speed synchromesh ' Irons·

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, 'INC.
Gallipolis. ·OIIio

MUSTANG

I

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Support The Frog
'
Jumping Contest
During, The Regatta
June 18-19-20.

MAVERICK .

KEITH GOBLE FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OIUO.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance ·corporation ·

Phone 992-2196

461 S. 3rd

\

Middleport

"Your Friendly Ford Dealer"
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Prollllc Oyster
Pholographcd Moon
In
one
season, a large VirJohn William Draper took ginia oyster
produce ~s
the lirst photograph of the many as 500maymillion
moon in t84D. Though not 1m· and, as the oyster may eggs
well
pressive by later sta~d~rd~, live for 10 years or so, it
it forfshadowed Amenca s may liberate five billion durrole in the develop!llent of ing its lifetime.
photography and its use m
astronomy.
·

11- Tile Dally llentlnei,Middleport-PClllleroy, 0., June 1~. 1971

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·nus PATRIOTIC FLOAT by the Junior Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American

"Fun For Young ana Uld•• "

·Theme:
'Big Bend

MONA KING WAS A first
place winner In the decorated
blcyde contest held In 1970
during the Big Bend Regatta
Parade. This year costuming
of the rider and Its
relationship to the decoration
of the bicycle will be con·
sldered In the judging. The
contest Is open to young
people from t!lght through 14.

"

"Big Bend -1971" will be the
theme of the Seventh Annual
Big Bend Regatta Parade which
will move out at Middleport at 6
p.m. Friday non-stop to
Pomeroy.
Jim Mees, heading this year's
parade with Wendell Hoover as
co-chaii'!Jlan, reports that the
parade promises to be one of the
best in regatta weekend history.
Numerous entries have been
received . Last minute participants are welcome as the
parade forms on Middleport's
South Second Ave., Friday
evening.
Numerous trophies are to be
presented to the best parade
entries which will include
fl oats,.horsemen, riding groups,
bands, marching groups,
decorated bicycles and others.

1971'

A$25award will be presented to
the float best furthering the
parade theme.
Float categories include best
theme, best commercial float,
best non -commercial , best
religious and best frog float.

_RICK CHANCEY, DEBBIE MICHAEL AND MIKE CHANCEY check the frog fountain
located in the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse. Two frogs are seated on a love seat
under an umbrella, as water flows over the top.

•\Lv:tYOlL

Meigs 4;.H
Oub News

fit Tri·County

. OVLL RESULTS
Cheshire and Syracuse
captured victories Monday
night in the Ohio Valley Utile
League. Cheshire topped
Vinton, 6-3 while Syracuse
bombarded Rio Gr~nde, 13-3.
All other league g~mes were
washed out.
In the Ohio Valley Pee Wee
League last week, Rio Grande
defeated Green, 10-3; Bidwell
edged Vinton, 2-1 and Cheshire
outscored Racine, 15-14.

The Home 'fwve
Been Waiting fori
24x56 3BDRM.

On Your Way to Big Bend Regatta .. . Stop In and See Us
,

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t,N\1t~S ~~:~

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:l4' x 56' 3 bedroom, total ole&lt;tric, Early Amerkan, 14 Birch ponotong
throughout, fully carpeted, full bathroom with 11'(. fiber.glaa bath tub,
utilily room with l·pc. fiber-glas shower stall, ('II&lt; bath),_40 gal. water
heater, houselype aluminum siding, with storm windows, aolid •hlngled

&lt;t

roof- it's a BEAUTY!

REATEST
BUYS

SJJ,900.00

14x64' MOBILE

g&lt;JUrmetdish of llllute frOfl meat
and a crab meat wlih 'a dub ol
brandy added.
What I Uke About Toadll,
Hawes, A frog .can get •way
from you in a flash. ,. frOg can
make big jumps with his long .
back legs.
Robjns
and
·Rabbits, .
Hawkinson, Excellent water
color frog sketches of llull
Frogs.
.
cats and Bats and Tbinp
With Wings, Aiken, How nice to
be a speckled frog. Keep so cool
j1,1st squatting in your private
pool.

SAKI ·

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JUNE
18-19-20

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Club met June 11 at Paula
Rife's home with five members
and one advisor present. They
discussed what they would take
to . the fair. ·Roger Wamsley
gave a demonstration on
bicycle safety. Jeff Peckham
gave a special report on the
hike. He was·also in charge of
recreation. They rode their
bikes. Mary Kauff . served
rJfreshments. The next meeting
is to be held June 17. -Roger
Wamsley.

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llf£ KID

BERKSHIRE KNITS
EXCELLENT SELECTION
On The T In Middleport

The Stitch and Sew 4-H Club
met June 8 at Robbin and
Cheral Wilson's home. There
were ten members and one
advisor present.
They discussed selling flower
bulbs. Mrs . Boso gave a
demonstration on foods. The
Wilson girls served refreshments. The next meeting is
scheduled for June 22 at Terry
Manuel's home. - Leslie
Roberts.
THE LETART Farm Boys 4·
H Club met June 10 at the home
of Randall Roberts. There were
three members and one advisor
in attendance. They discussed
their project books . James
Foreman gave a demonstration
with a rope. The next meeting is
to be held July 19 at the home of
James Foreman . - Todd
Roberts.
THEBUCKEYEBeauties4-H
Club met June 17 at the Baptist
Church with two advisors and 12
members in attendance. Mrs.
Pat Hindy gave a demon-

Rotary Valve Engine - Tubular Frame- 5 Speed Transmission -

12

mo. -12,000 mi. Warranty .

SPECIAL PRIC~ .................................. •34900

COYOTE MINI BIKE
SPECIAL PRICE

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. These Prices For Regatta Weekend Only

SEE OUR DISPLAY ON THE PARKING LOT ·

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

. 18th.

BOYS AND GIRLS-INFANT 1HRU 12
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stration on using a pattern.
Cindy Hindy served refreshments.
The next meeting is scheduled
for June 14 at the Baptist
Church. Each girl is to trim her
pattern and bring her material
and sewing box. - Cynthia
Lane.
THE PINK PANTHERS 4·H
Club met June 6 at Karen
Werry's home. There were two
advisors and nine members
present. They decided to sell
flower bulbs and to ride in the
Regatta parade Friday, the

POMEROY, 0.

263 W. MAIN

wedu know it was written down
in Scotiand, but itls lhe very
own story ol the chiljlren of the
Southern Appalach)an mountains when they sing it.
No One Wri~s A U,tter .to the
Snail, K.~mm, A Simple
statement Salamanders, toads
. a.s P0II'n~ogs.
• ndfr· ogs aII be gm
Outdoor £ducallon, Garnson,
Cecil, Campmg, an excellent
source of food to be had for the
takmg IS frogs, How to prepare
frog legs, Page 96.
Louisiana cookery, Land,
Culinary, If you ask for saute
bourgemse, you will have a

90S

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.

·Legion, won a first place in the junior division of floats taking part in the annual Big Bend
Regatta Parade in !970.

Norway on Magic WoOd, was
taught swimming by the
·champion swimming' in. _be Frog
T
strTim
uc tor,Tadpole
and' the Great
.Bu!Urog, Flack, Tim Jumped!
Language of Animals,
Selsam, Wben a frog says
"Kerroooaaak", what does he
mean?
A F og Went a Courtin'
Langs~ff, Nobody knows ho~
or when the story really started

BY VILMA PIKKOJA
mind, ask it? Why Ubrary?
Bookmobile Ub111rlaa
· Because tli;lt is where I make
If you had never ·prepared an my IIQme now, and if you had
article about a frog, then all I the impertinence to ask what
can say is that you haven't met the frogs and librarians have in
the right frog.
cOmmon, ihen it only shows
l'lalnly, one must classify all your Ignorance in Greek, Latin,
croaking, jumping . green Mythology,
Archeology,
creatures as frogs and let it go Recreation, Cooking, Enat that, or maybe catch one of tertainment, and Physiology!"
them, thus saying a word about
"The literature of Western
the bait, or fried frog legs Civilization is rich in my lore.
(which would be the end).
Read about me":
No! There is a story with no
Apricot ABC, Miles, A frog
·end in sight if you once meet helps a grasshopper. You learn
Fred Crow, Dale Warner, Guy the letter "G".
Guinther or Roy Holter; all
The Surprise Party, Hutchins,
Grand Croakers. You may be A frog comments on poetry.
the envy of all the non.{lrand
Sleepy Book, Zolotow, A frog
Croakers, or object of mirth to sitting on a lily pad.
the ignorant. But you cannot
Book of Poetry, Fisher, "I
ignore the Real Story of AFrog. can'tstab,l can't snare, I can't
Not any frog ; rather: "A grab, I can'tscare," com~lains
Frog."
the frog.
He lives in Pomeroy, of TheTraveling Frog, Rudolph,
course, coming of the finest line What a pity when the frog cried,
of Pomeroy frogs. He is the son "I did it! It was 1 who thought
of the illustrious Blackston of the clever trick!" and there
Beauty, winner of the statewide was no one to hear.
Frog Jumping contest in 19&amp;8. Zoo- Where Are You?,
Hls original pond is the McGovern, There was no zoo in
closest neighbor to the Frog Josh's town. But Josh found his
lnstitoot (the upstarts from friends. Afrog hopped past fast,
Michigan get their limelight qui~kly Josll grabbed for tile
there) but-"the Blackston Frog but it was gone.
Pond is my home and now I am Mrs. Pepperpot in the Magic
a Ubrary Frog.
Wood, Proysen, Mrs. Pep"lf you have a question in perpot, who lives on a hillside in

~

HELP MAKE" IT AGREAT
~UCCESS. •••AND DRIVE
SAFELY TO GET THERE.

THIS SCENE WILL BE REPEATED many times Friday evening when awards are
presented winners following the annual Big Bend Regatta Parade. Here Tom Cassell .presents
a first place award to Jennifer Grate accepting for Rutland Girl Scout Troop 180 as the best
marching unit in last year's parade.

.

. Mel. s' the- Best .ffi· F r 0 g.dom
M'".eet., m
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TO THE
BIG BEND REGAnA
JUNE 18-19·20

t

748 E. MAIN

Sharon Holter and Bonnie
Smith gave demonstrations on
sewing and setting the table.
J ody Grueser and Sandy
Hamilton were in charge of
recreation. They played Fruit
Basket. Mrs. Grueser served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be held
June 15 at Karen Werry's home.
- Kimberly Grueser.
THE T.N.T.. 4-H ;::tub met
June 8 at the home of Mrs.
James Robson. There were fiye
advisors and nine members in
attendance. The members
decided to buy a set of flags,
(one 4-H and one American).
The group decided not to have
their project meeting every
week.
Diane Pullins gave a
demonstration on how to tie a
square lrnot. Evelyn Well and
Kathryn Robson served
refreshments. The next meeting
is to be held June 15 at Mrs.
Robson's home.
THE GREEN Hornets 4-H

992-5153

POMEROY,O.

DISCOVER REGATTA CITY, U.S.A. IN A

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FORD FROM KEITH .\Jl : ,, •.

IN TOWN!

Everything
For The
Horse &amp; Rider

LOOK
Now o""lloble, thlt 3 bedroom, 1~

• TEX TAN, BIG HORN
AND BONNA ALLEN

lri&lt;, w~h Early American docor _

fully cnrpeted. luxury witf!economy,

s6,99S,

SADDLES
• UNUNED HORSE BLANKETS
• SADDLE .B.lANKETS
• FlY REPELLENTS
• GROOMING SUPPLIES
• ACME WESTERN BOOTS
.• AMERICAN WESTERN HATS
•WESTERN BELTS AND BUCKLES
• HORSE SHOES-BRIDLES-HALTERS
• WHIPS-SPURS

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

. "DECALS"

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
AIR CONDITIONED
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m W. Mlln St.

m -2114

Pomeroy, Olllo

ThtSioreWifti "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"

For Pals · St.t&gt;Jas · Large

&amp; Small Animals .

l.twni··~··

VISIT US DURING THE

REGArrA - JUNE 18-19-20

LOW BUDGETS ARE BAtK IN STYLE!

IT TOOK 30 YEARS TO PRODUCE THIS ONE!

I

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'Brentwood

Are you the Volkswagen Type 3 type?
Don'llet the foci thot Ihis cor mig hi
look like Indy .100 moleriol throw you
ofllhe trock.

Those racing stripes ore o con.

OF DIFFERENT BREEDS OF
HORSES FOR TRUCK DOORS AND
HOOD ORNAMENTS

BEFORE
YOU LEAP!

(

both FlfETWOOO Mobilo HoMo. A
lv~urious 14x64' homo, totally oltc·

..

Thot sports cor bod is o fro nt.
The Volkswagen Type 3 con no
,more fly down o racetrack than it con
Oy through lhe clouds.
What, lhen, can il do, ond wh o,
lhen is II for?
If y,ou're more concerned with
slowing down tho n speeding up, it
hos slondord front disc brakes.
All 4 wheels ore independen lly
susp&amp;nded so it holds the rood boiler
when cornering.
It has the mosl odvonced syslem of
distributing gasoline in lhe eng ine,
electronic fuel in fection.
Shihing on l.he VW Type 3 is less

.

mis:.1on is standard .

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR ·LOW-COST

and e'len less water or antifreezenone.
But contrary to Volkswagen trodi·
lion, il isn'l bod looking. In fact,
equipped wilh alllhe options os you

AUTO LOANS

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see it in the picture, you can make it
look like th'e menacing, overpowe;.
ing creature of lhe road thot II isn' l,
So if you're looking for 0 &lt;ocy little

sports cor, look somewhere else.

BEFORE YOU SIGN ANY OTHE.RFINANCE PlAN
WHEN YOU VISIT PARK FREE

These homes are in a variety of moi:lels. The market for used Mobile Homes is
excellent, ond we feel fortunate to be able to offer these. Good for
RENTALS, SECOND or SUMMER HOMES, or an economical buy for anyone
in need of a modestly priced home.

If you're in lhe market for just an

economy sedan, this isn't it.
Bul if you're lhe lype who wanls o

racy, economical, lillie, sporly sedan,
eureka! ·

TRI-COUNTY MOBILE HOMES,

INC.
ROUTE 7 NORTH PHONE 446-0175 GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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Service, Parts &amp; Office Mon ..Frl. s.s, Sat . B-12

,,

DAILy 10·1 P.M.

TORINO
•

WE STOCK USED MOBILES- SHOP OUR LOT!

195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7),
. Pllone (614) 446-9800

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And in keeping wilh Volkswagen
slandords, il gels around 26 miles lo
'
;
o gallon of gos, uses very lillie oil,

Open: Sales, Mon.-Fri. 8to 8; Sat. 8-S

TAKE

by DeRose

12x60' wilh 23" pullout, by DE ROSE. Shingltcl
roof, briCk oding. 2·btdroomt, fully fur·
nlshtd. Iorge boy window, shding

sticky, 4·speed synchromesh ' Irons·

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, 'INC.
Gallipolis. ·OIIio

MUSTANG

I

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Support The Frog
'
Jumping Contest
During, The Regatta
June 18-19-20.

MAVERICK .

KEITH GOBLE FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OIUO.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance ·corporation ·

Phone 992-2196

461 S. 3rd

\

Middleport

"Your Friendly Ford Dealer"
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�ENTERTAIN STUDENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Compson and sons, Mason, W. Va.,
entertained recently Miss Irene
Cooper of Syracuse and Frank·

21- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-POillfi'DY. 0 ., June 15, 1971

Carpenter News~ Event
Mrs. Virginia TolJIISend and
Sulie, Columbua, visited her
uncles, Wililam C. and Paul
Peck. Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye,
, local, were callers at the Peck
home alao. · '
,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie 'Jordan
and Clay Willi8n\, who have
been located at Columbus,
Mississippi, visited with their
parents, Mi-. and Mrs. L. D.
Cottrill and Mrs. Faye Jordan,
and other relatives in the area.
.They were enroute to Loll
Angeles, ~lifornia, where he
has been transferred.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
by. Mrs.

FOR
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Goldie Gillogly, attended
graduallon .exercises at ·Rio.
Gr&amp;nde on Sunday and visited ·
with Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Frazier and family in GalliPolis
following tlle exercises. Danny
Frazier, grandson of Mrs.
Gillogly, wa's a member of the
·graduating
class
from
Gallipolis. Others attending
from here were Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Gillogly and family.
Mrs. Hazel Throckmorton,
Columbus, called on Mrs. Reed
Jeffers. Mrs . Throckmorton
was a former resident from the
area.

LITTlE
GIRLS

HAVE infinite trust in

their dadr,lies. And loving daddies
do tight by their little girls by.
opening a trust account for mE?m·- ·
savings that will see them through
school-maybe even help with
inevitable trousseau. If you have
.little girl, it's time to see us
.about a trust account for her.

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Come in and see Us For A

THE ATHENS BOAT AND SKI CLUB will provide a free
water show at tlle Big Bend Regatta on Sunday. The show
will begin at 2: 30p.m. and will feature a number of novel
acts. Among the participants will be Dave Russell, Coolville,
pictured cutting the water in a solo presentation; the clown
act of Mike Buck, Athens; Russell and Bill Riley, Coolville,
with Clyde Baker of The Plains as dock starter and tlle waterballet group composed of, from the left, Dianne Stauder,
Lbra Brundige, Christy Shaeffer, Melody Stauder, Sbauna
Pierce and Sherry Canter.

'

•CLUB HOUSE ·
•GOLFING
. ·EQUIPM

LOW COST

LONG TERM LOAN

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"MAY WE HELP YOU"
•V

Flower Show

Meigs

Will Feature
.,

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· ' '~ ··T".t:"

-T ransfers

POMEROY. OHIO

RAYMOND·ANDREWS won a III'St With Ill! decorated "'
bicy le last year. Prizes are being offered again in the 1971
parade to youngsters in the' bicycle brigade.

Autherson, Oma
Autherson to Hilda Olmstead, I
Acre, Lebanon.
Mary Wippel, Joseph Wippel
to General Telephone Co. of
Ohio, Right of Way, Chester.
Mildred Levell, to General
Telephone Co. of Ohio, Right of
Way, Chester.
Reed Young, Leota Young to
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester.
Kenneth E. Newland to
General Telephone Co., of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester ,
N, G, Rose, Martha E. Rose to
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester.
Jacob E. Schilling, Margaret
Ellen Schilling to Joe M. Bolin,
Janet U. Bolin , 15\\! Acre,
Rutland.
Armett M. Sheets, dec. to Mae
Lee, Edward Sheets, Carrie
Wears, Beulah Stahl, Cert. for
Trans., Rutland.
Delbert
H.
Stearns,
Marguerite Stearns to Warren
Stearns, 130 Acres, Orange.
Lawrence Beegle, Norman H.
Roush, Janet K. Roush to Ohio
Power Co. , Ease., Sutton.
Hobert Vineyard , Mae
Vineyard, 1 Acre, 1I&gt; Acre,
Orange.
Carl M. Matlack, Louise M.
Matlack, to Raymond Clair

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Sales Service

FOR
'71

-,-

·'"

'Suzvki TM-400 Cyclone
Str ictly fer :he

KANAUGA. OHIO

Chester,
Ohio

Offer Good June 18-19-20 Olly

::-;!;0'..1S

KIT DOUBLE WIDE£-~aciOus,

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A TALENT' FOR VALUE!

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TRAILER SALES
10% DISCOUNT

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ON ALL
NEW TRAVEL TRAILERS

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A charming selection of styles to satisfy every
discriminating taste.
'

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FEATURES
DECORS
.,

· • VELVETIQUE
• EARLY AMERICAN
•MODERN

Hawk's Cvcle Sales, IND.

·

. HONDA • SUZUKI
Tues. a Sat; 11 to6-. Wed. &amp; Fri •.a to a
Closed Sun. and Mon. ·

•CONTEMPORARY

Ph. Sf~7323

Athens

CHESTER OHIO

Best Buys!

e GRANADA

bas made over the years.
Frank Sinatra is quitting the
limelight but not retiring, He'll
be around.
He's vague about what he
plans to dO. He says he will read
a lot and meditate. He is
planning to write a book about
his life but hasn't started
chapter one yet. But it should be
quite a book.

FUNTIME!
THE BIG BEND REGATTA

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

You Won't Be In AHea·pOf Trouble If You Trade With Us .
Matador 4 Dr. Wuon

Polara 2 Dr. H!Top

V·8, automatic, p. st .• p, br., AIR CONDITIONED.

V-8, T· fllle, p, st., p, br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

Polara Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

V·8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark green, ·AIR CON -

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Coronet' Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

Polara Custom 4 Dr. SGn .

V-8, T.· FIIte. p. st .. dark gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

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SEE: JOE GILES or JIM STAATS FOR AGOOD DEA~!

v.s,

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Coronet Brougham 4 Dr. Sedan
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Seroice What We Sell"

Monaco 2 Dr. HIToP

V -8, T· FIIte, p. st. , p. br .. " 318" dark greel), AIR CON DITIONED.

V·B, T· Fiite, p. st.. p, br .. dark blue, AIR CONDITIONED.
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CAMPERS

Eat AI Our Picnic Tables!

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V-8, p, st., p. br., automatic, AIR CONDIHPNED.

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SKAMPER,

SUNDAES, CONES, MALTS, SHAKES,
COLD DRINKS, SANDWICHES
&amp; SHERBETS.

ON YOUR WAY ...
to luntime at the 'Big
Bend . Regatta, stop ·
an~ see us for

Pleasant Building

'

BASKETS - Shrif1:1P &amp;Chicken

to take on the &lt;;ounfry.

..,.

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SPECIALITES:

40 hp alum inunJ &lt;•og;r,e.
Only ?.36 1bo, light,Sir.g:o
le a di n g· ' h"~ lr o:11
brakes. CCI ot)i c mQ,::c
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THE KIT OLYMPIA - A MOBILE HOME OF OUTSTANDING
QUALITY.
.
MANY DECORS-FLOOR PLANS. SO MUCH HOUSE FOR SO LITTLE
MONEY.
H.GH QUALITY- LOW MAINTENANCE - EASY CAR

Sales, Supplies,

sion chomber. ,) s p~ec ~.

\iracious Uving

..
tears' in the
eyes o(several tllousand of the
Hollywood faithful at the motion
picture-television relief gala
as the kid from Hoboken; N.J.,
made his adieu.
He was accorded three
standing ovations during his
appearance.
Hail Princess Grace
He was preceeded on stage by
Barbra Streisand, Bob Hope,
Jack Benny, Jimmy Stewart,
Pearl Bailey and a dozen other
top stars.
Princess Grace Kelly of
Monaco gave a brief speech in
which she said she has always
felt close to Hollywood and,
"Hollywood w!ll always be close
to my heart."
The former actress, dressed
in a white evening gown, also
received an ovation.
But the show was Sinatra's.
"We'll begin at the begiilning," he said.
He then crnoned a series
of his past ,hits, starting with " All Or Nothing At All" and he went
through several other including,
"The Lady Is a Tramp," "I'll
Never Smile Again," "That's
All," and "I Qfd It My Way."
Sinatra, like the others; performed free for !be benefit,
produced by Gregory Peck lll!d
Rosalind Russell. Tbe goal was
to raise $1 million in one night
with tickets ranging from $100
to $250 apiece.
He has no future night club,
television, movie or recording
commitments. But his fans do
bave some 50 record alb~ he.

:f

eros~

Built

We are the oldest and most experienced In the area In ·selling, and erecting sectional housing .
Slop by our Lot on Upper River Road and seethe New Exciting Mobile HOMES!

ride r. A ccmplete mule ..

c omp etitio n
mc: chine. A lull'. al! c'/
rlrru. High tun" nran•

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Bu t place."
there were

•

•

SALES

19e

\

home or sectional home - remember

SMITH AUTO

NOW

·•zl
1!1

I

. If you're considering bu~ng _a mobile

FROW WIGHTY TO WIMI·
HOMDA HAS IT ALL!

"SPECIAL"

REG.' 25'

'

'

SHAKE HAVEN

FLOATS

Off Rt. 7

· • ·· . !II

POMEROY - Four classes staged Saturday and Sunday in
have been included in the Big the Pomeroy junior high school
Bend Regatta flower show to be auditorium .
The show is sponsored by the
Meigs County Jaycees with
Ingels as the chainnan .
HAWK'S 3-DAY Earl
The classes are "Beautiful
CYCUSAUS
Ohio," a hogarth design ;
2 mi. soulh of Athens on Rl. " Down by the Riverside,"
3~5 (lint rinht oost tho Rain· showing a phase of recreation;
bow)
"Froggy Went A Ccurtin'"
using a frog container or ac·
cessory; and "The Big Bend '71,, an arrangement carrying
out the theme of the weekend
MAl CO
observance.
MOTORCYCLES
Ribbon awards will be given
to the first, second and third
places in each category , Rib·
bons will also be awarded to
th ose receiv ing honorable
mention. A best of show award
will also be presented.
The rules specify that no
artificial flowers will be permitted. Only one entry- in each
&amp;
class is permitted per person,
and each entry must be tagged
with name, address, and garden
"Your Authorized Honda Dealer"
club affiliation, if any.
Entries are to be in place by
10 :30 a.m. on Saturday and to
Int. in Minerals 87 . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
remain there until 4 p.m. on Cassady,
Acres, Orange.
COMPACT TRACTORS Sunday. The show will be open
for public viewing beginning at
11 a.m.
Mrs. A. E. Deglonie of the
OPEN MON. WED., FRI.
Division of HorticultJ.ll'e, Ohio
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
State University , will be the
593 -8669
judge.

f .IUJ!:GB

1 Mi. From Pomeroy

The Meigs County Branch

296 W. SECOND ST.

C ~rl

Four Classes

a saloon singer all my life and
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Hollywood Correspondent it's appropriate that I started
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-Frank quietly and I end quieUv."
Sinatra made his curtain call Then the 55-year-{)ld crooner
sang an emotional "Angel
Sundaynlghtaaytng, "I've been Eyes."
"' Iff~
~"
The singer, who announced
his retirement last March, said,
"Yes, I'm serious about my
decision. There are lots of
things I want to do that I haven't
done before. I want to meet
some girls ·and build a house

The Athens County Savings &amp; Loan

Property

Po· ~nt

POMEROY
Sinatra Ended as He Began
GOLF CLUB ·
L..-----------------..1

•

Earl F. Ingels Jr., Branch Mgr.
.._JI1'7.WI~

GEORGE .INGEI.S left, owner of Ingels Furniture in Middleport, again has donated two
bicycles to be given to the boy and girl with the best decorated bicycles in Friday evening's Big
Bend Regatta Parade. Children from eight through 14 are invited to take part. This year,
costwning of the rider w!ll be judged as well as tbe bicycle decorations. With lnge~ ~ Wendell
Hoover, co-chairman of this year's parade. Bicycles should be registered for partiCipatiOn by
calling Hoover at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. in Middleport.

FRENCH CITY MOBILE
HOMESAUS
UPPER RIVEH 1&lt;1).- 446·9340- GAlLIPOLIS,

Q,

l

ir'
ALL DRESSED UP with
iomeplace lo go, little Clrl
Is paraded through 1treeta
as a featured altractlon of ·
a Hong Kong eelebratlot~.
The annual Bun Festival 11
a bl~ event on outlylnR
Cheung Chau Island .

12 ' COOL" REASONS TO TALK
TO THE GOOD' GUYS AT RAWLINGS •.• Pea~ Ash, Emenoo Jones,
'
Hilton Wolfe, Wallace Amberger, DiCk RawlinJS.
~

'

'

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.
992-2151 or 992·2152 '
Open Ewniqs T1 &amp;:GO
VISIT US DURING BIG BEND REGAnA - JUNE IX..l!l-·20

�ENTERTAIN STUDENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Compson and sons, Mason, W. Va.,
entertained recently Miss Irene
Cooper of Syracuse and Frank·

21- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-POillfi'DY. 0 ., June 15, 1971

Carpenter News~ Event
Mrs. Virginia TolJIISend and
Sulie, Columbua, visited her
uncles, Wililam C. and Paul
Peck. Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye,
, local, were callers at the Peck
home alao. · '
,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie 'Jordan
and Clay Willi8n\, who have
been located at Columbus,
Mississippi, visited with their
parents, Mi-. and Mrs. L. D.
Cottrill and Mrs. Faye Jordan,
and other relatives in the area.
.They were enroute to Loll
Angeles, ~lifornia, where he
has been transferred.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
by. Mrs.

FOR
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Goldie Gillogly, attended
graduallon .exercises at ·Rio.
Gr&amp;nde on Sunday and visited ·
with Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Frazier and family in GalliPolis
following tlle exercises. Danny
Frazier, grandson of Mrs.
Gillogly, wa's a member of the
·graduating
class
from
Gallipolis. Others attending
from here were Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Gillogly and family.
Mrs. Hazel Throckmorton,
Columbus, called on Mrs. Reed
Jeffers. Mrs . Throckmorton
was a former resident from the
area.

LITTlE
GIRLS

HAVE infinite trust in

their dadr,lies. And loving daddies
do tight by their little girls by.
opening a trust account for mE?m·- ·
savings that will see them through
school-maybe even help with
inevitable trousseau. If you have
.little girl, it's time to see us
.about a trust account for her.

'

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••••

.v

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Come in and see Us For A

THE ATHENS BOAT AND SKI CLUB will provide a free
water show at tlle Big Bend Regatta on Sunday. The show
will begin at 2: 30p.m. and will feature a number of novel
acts. Among the participants will be Dave Russell, Coolville,
pictured cutting the water in a solo presentation; the clown
act of Mike Buck, Athens; Russell and Bill Riley, Coolville,
with Clyde Baker of The Plains as dock starter and tlle waterballet group composed of, from the left, Dianne Stauder,
Lbra Brundige, Christy Shaeffer, Melody Stauder, Sbauna
Pierce and Sherry Canter.

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•GOLFING
. ·EQUIPM

LOW COST

LONG TERM LOAN

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Flower Show

Meigs

Will Feature
.,

..-.......

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· ' '~ ··T".t:"

-T ransfers

POMEROY. OHIO

RAYMOND·ANDREWS won a III'St With Ill! decorated "'
bicy le last year. Prizes are being offered again in the 1971
parade to youngsters in the' bicycle brigade.

Autherson, Oma
Autherson to Hilda Olmstead, I
Acre, Lebanon.
Mary Wippel, Joseph Wippel
to General Telephone Co. of
Ohio, Right of Way, Chester.
Mildred Levell, to General
Telephone Co. of Ohio, Right of
Way, Chester.
Reed Young, Leota Young to
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester.
Kenneth E. Newland to
General Telephone Co., of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester ,
N, G, Rose, Martha E. Rose to
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
Right of Way, Chester.
Jacob E. Schilling, Margaret
Ellen Schilling to Joe M. Bolin,
Janet U. Bolin , 15\\! Acre,
Rutland.
Armett M. Sheets, dec. to Mae
Lee, Edward Sheets, Carrie
Wears, Beulah Stahl, Cert. for
Trans., Rutland.
Delbert
H.
Stearns,
Marguerite Stearns to Warren
Stearns, 130 Acres, Orange.
Lawrence Beegle, Norman H.
Roush, Janet K. Roush to Ohio
Power Co. , Ease., Sutton.
Hobert Vineyard , Mae
Vineyard, 1 Acre, 1I&gt; Acre,
Orange.
Carl M. Matlack, Louise M.
Matlack, to Raymond Clair

~·

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FOR
'71

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Str ictly fer :he

KANAUGA. OHIO

Chester,
Ohio

Offer Good June 18-19-20 Olly

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A charming selection of styles to satisfy every
discriminating taste.
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DECORS
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· • VELVETIQUE
• EARLY AMERICAN
•MODERN

Hawk's Cvcle Sales, IND.

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. HONDA • SUZUKI
Tues. a Sat; 11 to6-. Wed. &amp; Fri •.a to a
Closed Sun. and Mon. ·

•CONTEMPORARY

Ph. Sf~7323

Athens

CHESTER OHIO

Best Buys!

e GRANADA

bas made over the years.
Frank Sinatra is quitting the
limelight but not retiring, He'll
be around.
He's vague about what he
plans to dO. He says he will read
a lot and meditate. He is
planning to write a book about
his life but hasn't started
chapter one yet. But it should be
quite a book.

FUNTIME!
THE BIG BEND REGATTA

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

You Won't Be In AHea·pOf Trouble If You Trade With Us .
Matador 4 Dr. Wuon

Polara 2 Dr. H!Top

V·8, automatic, p. st .• p, br., AIR CONDITIONED.

V-8, T· fllle, p, st., p, br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

Polara Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

V·8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark green, ·AIR CON -

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Coronet' Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

Polara Custom 4 Dr. SGn .

V-8, T.· FIIte. p. st .. dark gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

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v.s,

T-FIIte, p. , t., p. br .• dark bronze. AIR CONDITIONFn,

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V-8, T-Fiile, p. sl. , white. AIR CONDITIONED.

Polara Custom 2 Dr. H!Top

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Seroice What We Sell"

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V -8, T· FIIte, p. st. , p. br .. " 318" dark greel), AIR CON DITIONED.

V·B, T· Fiite, p. st.. p, br .. dark blue, AIR CONDITIONED.
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"It Does Make A Difference Where You Save"

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CAMPERS

Eat AI Our Picnic Tables!

Sl Rt 7 .

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V-8, p, st., p. br., automatic, AIR CONDIHPNED.

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ILY
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GO.TAG-ALONG

FLOA1S, BANANA SPLITS,

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Ambassador Brougham 4 Dr. Sedan

SKAMPER,

SUNDAES, CONES, MALTS, SHAKES,
COLD DRINKS, SANDWICHES
&amp; SHERBETS.

ON YOUR WAY ...
to luntime at the 'Big
Bend . Regatta, stop ·
an~ see us for

Pleasant Building

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to take on the &lt;;ounfry.

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40 hp alum inunJ &lt;•og;r,e.
Only ?.36 1bo, light,Sir.g:o
le a di n g· ' h"~ lr o:11
brakes. CCI ot)i c mQ,::c
l~l!o. PEl ion;;;o:1.

Ats. SOA&amp; 33N

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QUALITY.
.
MANY DECORS-FLOOR PLANS. SO MUCH HOUSE FOR SO LITTLE
MONEY.
H.GH QUALITY- LOW MAINTENANCE - EASY CAR

Sales, Supplies,

sion chomber. ,) s p~ec ~.

\iracious Uving

..
tears' in the
eyes o(several tllousand of the
Hollywood faithful at the motion
picture-television relief gala
as the kid from Hoboken; N.J.,
made his adieu.
He was accorded three
standing ovations during his
appearance.
Hail Princess Grace
He was preceeded on stage by
Barbra Streisand, Bob Hope,
Jack Benny, Jimmy Stewart,
Pearl Bailey and a dozen other
top stars.
Princess Grace Kelly of
Monaco gave a brief speech in
which she said she has always
felt close to Hollywood and,
"Hollywood w!ll always be close
to my heart."
The former actress, dressed
in a white evening gown, also
received an ovation.
But the show was Sinatra's.
"We'll begin at the begiilning," he said.
He then crnoned a series
of his past ,hits, starting with " All Or Nothing At All" and he went
through several other including,
"The Lady Is a Tramp," "I'll
Never Smile Again," "That's
All," and "I Qfd It My Way."
Sinatra, like the others; performed free for !be benefit,
produced by Gregory Peck lll!d
Rosalind Russell. Tbe goal was
to raise $1 million in one night
with tickets ranging from $100
to $250 apiece.
He has no future night club,
television, movie or recording
commitments. But his fans do
bave some 50 record alb~ he.

:f

eros~

Built

We are the oldest and most experienced In the area In ·selling, and erecting sectional housing .
Slop by our Lot on Upper River Road and seethe New Exciting Mobile HOMES!

ride r. A ccmplete mule ..

c omp etitio n
mc: chine. A lull'. al! c'/
rlrru. High tun" nran•

~orqe
Bu t place."
there were

•

•

SALES

19e

\

home or sectional home - remember

SMITH AUTO

NOW

·•zl
1!1

I

. If you're considering bu~ng _a mobile

FROW WIGHTY TO WIMI·
HOMDA HAS IT ALL!

"SPECIAL"

REG.' 25'

'

'

SHAKE HAVEN

FLOATS

Off Rt. 7

· • ·· . !II

POMEROY - Four classes staged Saturday and Sunday in
have been included in the Big the Pomeroy junior high school
Bend Regatta flower show to be auditorium .
The show is sponsored by the
Meigs County Jaycees with
Ingels as the chainnan .
HAWK'S 3-DAY Earl
The classes are "Beautiful
CYCUSAUS
Ohio," a hogarth design ;
2 mi. soulh of Athens on Rl. " Down by the Riverside,"
3~5 (lint rinht oost tho Rain· showing a phase of recreation;
bow)
"Froggy Went A Ccurtin'"
using a frog container or ac·
cessory; and "The Big Bend '71,, an arrangement carrying
out the theme of the weekend
MAl CO
observance.
MOTORCYCLES
Ribbon awards will be given
to the first, second and third
places in each category , Rib·
bons will also be awarded to
th ose receiv ing honorable
mention. A best of show award
will also be presented.
The rules specify that no
artificial flowers will be permitted. Only one entry- in each
&amp;
class is permitted per person,
and each entry must be tagged
with name, address, and garden
"Your Authorized Honda Dealer"
club affiliation, if any.
Entries are to be in place by
10 :30 a.m. on Saturday and to
Int. in Minerals 87 . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
remain there until 4 p.m. on Cassady,
Acres, Orange.
COMPACT TRACTORS Sunday. The show will be open
for public viewing beginning at
11 a.m.
Mrs. A. E. Deglonie of the
OPEN MON. WED., FRI.
Division of HorticultJ.ll'e, Ohio
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
State University , will be the
593 -8669
judge.

f .IUJ!:GB

1 Mi. From Pomeroy

The Meigs County Branch

296 W. SECOND ST.

C ~rl

Four Classes

a saloon singer all my life and
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Hollywood Correspondent it's appropriate that I started
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-Frank quietly and I end quieUv."
Sinatra made his curtain call Then the 55-year-{)ld crooner
sang an emotional "Angel
Sundaynlghtaaytng, "I've been Eyes."
"' Iff~
~"
The singer, who announced
his retirement last March, said,
"Yes, I'm serious about my
decision. There are lots of
things I want to do that I haven't
done before. I want to meet
some girls ·and build a house

The Athens County Savings &amp; Loan

Property

Po· ~nt

POMEROY
Sinatra Ended as He Began
GOLF CLUB ·
L..-----------------..1

•

Earl F. Ingels Jr., Branch Mgr.
.._JI1'7.WI~

GEORGE .INGEI.S left, owner of Ingels Furniture in Middleport, again has donated two
bicycles to be given to the boy and girl with the best decorated bicycles in Friday evening's Big
Bend Regatta Parade. Children from eight through 14 are invited to take part. This year,
costwning of the rider w!ll be judged as well as tbe bicycle decorations. With lnge~ ~ Wendell
Hoover, co-chairman of this year's parade. Bicycles should be registered for partiCipatiOn by
calling Hoover at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. in Middleport.

FRENCH CITY MOBILE
HOMESAUS
UPPER RIVEH 1&lt;1).- 446·9340- GAlLIPOLIS,

Q,

l

ir'
ALL DRESSED UP with
iomeplace lo go, little Clrl
Is paraded through 1treeta
as a featured altractlon of ·
a Hong Kong eelebratlot~.
The annual Bun Festival 11
a bl~ event on outlylnR
Cheung Chau Island .

12 ' COOL" REASONS TO TALK
TO THE GOOD' GUYS AT RAWLINGS •.• Pea~ Ash, Emenoo Jones,
'
Hilton Wolfe, Wallace Amberger, DiCk RawlinJS.
~

'

'

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.
992-2151 or 992·2152 '
Open Ewniqs T1 &amp;:GO
VISIT US DURING BIG BEND REGAnA - JUNE IX..l!l-·20

�I'
.

:12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 15, 1971

Mrs. Louise Eshelman, RD I,
Athens, has been a patient in I3.

~

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.

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...
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Pomeroy Bridge

'::: ~-

During Big Bend Regatta

Cool, Cool Reft~hments Plus
Delicious Sandwiches With
All The Extras.

By DICK DU BROW
of the hair and face was
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Tbe absolutely fascinating.
Jacques Cousteau underwater But for the viewer , there
documentaries have proved the were other points about the
tremendous appeal of well-done. hOlU" just as intriguing as this
BClenutic detecUve stories on ' verbal and pictorial disagree·
television. And Sunday night ment. For it was, overall, a
CBS-TV began a new series of monumental detective story in
tdmllar appeal With an hour historical terms. As an exam·
about a woman's controversial pie, we were shown Miss Love's
archaeological search for the expedition hard at work, and
11101t lalnous statue of ancient what we saw was that those
times, the long-lost Aphrodite, involved, in the process of •
goddess of sensual love.
·looking for Aphrodite, were also
Tbe broadcast was the first unearthing the city of Knidos
of a number of occasional hours itself, discovering added in!or·
to be produced by CBS-TV in mation.
conjuncUon with the Smithso· The beautiful scenery in and
nlan Institution. "Search For around Knidos made Sunday
the Goddess of Love" was the night's holU" breathtakingly
provocative tiUe of SUnday's attractive at times. We also
program, and it was narrated were informed that the hope of
and hosted by former astronaut finding the statue of Aphrodite
Wally Schirra, who will also whole is small because, among
carry out these duties on future other things, it may have been
broadcasts in the series, which an earthquake victim-~aving
is called "Smithsonian Adver!· been In the area of earthquake
ture."
country . Still, this does not
APhrodite, the first nude detolU" those working at un·
statue of' a woman in Greek . covering the puzzle and teach·

First Marriage
Anne Burrows and John cate that .this was probably
Eugene and Kent, and one Layden were married in Vir· . the first marriage performed
ginia in. 1609. Records indi· m the American colonies.
sister, Janeen, all at home.
Orlyn Wallace, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, is an uncle. Aunts
surviving here are Mrs. Susie
Swisher, Rt. 1, Cheshire; and
Mrs. Cecil Cook, Gallipolis.
Funeral services were held 2
p.m., today at the Third Ward
WS Chapel, .3200 Cassia St.,
Boise.
Her parents reside at 1404
Columbus Ave., Boise, Idaho.

Tire and Retreading Specialists
1601 E. State
Athens, 0.
Phone 592·1 877
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There's plenty of elbow room
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Now In Stock• ..

CHEVY VAN'S the one with
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Rutland Furniture

It has a lar!jt engine,
a 350 CID V-8, automotit
minion, power ltMrin9,
~rakes at1d air condltionino.

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POMEROY

PH. 992-?84R

REGATTA TIME IS FUN TIME - JUNE 18-19"·20
I

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.WE SERVICE!
WE FINANCE!

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Factory
tra fned se-rvice men for
proper, dependable \n .
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t

BAG

FOR

12 DEGREES

~ -...:.

A size for every purpose

_____ ..-c;.;

~-

ICE PAK "-

.

- ______ ....

new compact motor home.

~~

REUSABLE

.

Body.

,,••

-iJ-7116 7

and up

·'..••..

$299

$6''

95

SEE OUR BIG
SELECTON

designed fo corry Camper

.

ALUMINUM

heat.- WE INSTALL lP GAS
SYSTEMS COMPUTny, One

good ...

Chevy Fleetside Pickup. Strong
like a tr~ck . Easy riding like a
cor. Fully •~uipped. Especially

.....

COLDER

comfortable··1roside-r with

FLEETSIDE PICKUP:

~~

Special

JUNE 18-19-20

/[0

~::

When you buy yours, get in
IOU!h with us -let us hook your
trailer up for both &lt;ooking arid

Welcome Weekend!
BIG BEND
REGAnA TIME

When it's hot a.nd humid
outside, stay cool and

·.

...i

you stop far the night

Charcoal

ENJOY THE REGATIA - JUNE 18-19-20

-Mrs. L. Balderson
:Ba~ld~e:rso:n~Tu~e~sd:a!y~ev~e:m~ng~.!.,r:e:ce:nt:iy~. ..:!::;!;!~=~~==============::::::::::::::::::~

•.

..
.

5x3x3 WEB IN AVOCADO
NEW SEVILLE PATTERN

•••

Your Hand Stamp Entitle•
You to All the RiM• You Want
/rom Opening untU 10 P.M.

KEEPS FOOD FRESH

LAWN CHAIR

•

visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Garrett Reed of Coolville
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead and family, and Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber and
family attended the graduation
of Roger Meredith from Fort
Frye High School at Beverly

•

SJ99

FOLDING ALUMINUM

HEATING&amp; COOKING

Pomeroy Rd ., recently .
Committee report was given.
Refreshme~ts were served to
the followmg famohes, Dorh·
man Reeds, Denver Webers,
E~nest Whiteheads,_and Warren
Pickens. Next meetmg os to be a
picnic at the lake.
Susan Ha~num ?I Long
Bottom VISited woth . Kay

JW

Coltlpock ICE CHBT

PERSON

Be.Cool! Feel Cool!

..

.

,,

:i QUARTS

POPS CORN ON
THE GRill, IN
THE FIREPLACE,
ETC.

. . .

00
PER

--------------~--­

Visiting Jamie.
with Mr. and. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Ruth
daughter,
Gene wilson were Ernest Grim
of Paden City, Emma Hugh of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Reed of Waldo, and Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Sams and sons
of Jane Lew, W. Va .
Melvin Chaney of Hobart,
Indiana was.an overnight guest
at the Williams-Baiderson
home. He is a nephew of R. E.
W'Jlli~s .
.,. ~ ... 101 ......,......,... ...
C.B.C.metatthe homeofMr.
,
and Mrs. Donald Myers,
··

.;
•.

~~

P.OPCORN POPPER

FOR YOUR
MOBILE
HOME
NEEDS •••

'

FUND GETS BOOST
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.
rUPI)-Ananonymouspledgeof
fllO,OOO by a former All·
America football player to the
NaUonal Footbell FoundaUon
Buildintl Fund hal helped to
boolt the ftllld 10 PJ mWlt~~ ln
"CIIh, firm ~!~edges and uatt," II iru. 8nnounced laat
Thurlllay by Chalrrilan Chelter

.•'

..

always ready when

•

~

· Miss Carol Nichols, a
member of-the graduating class
at Ohio University, received the
Sigma Alpha Iota dean's honor,
for exemplifying the highest
musical scholastic and ethical
standard
·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
visited With Sgt. and Mrs. Grary
Barnhart of Sumter, south
carolina. The Barnhartshave a
son, Bradley Forrest, and

.:

HEAT AND COOK FOR LESS!

,,

..•.
·.

•

&lt;

II

llE
~· t--

CA,IoiPFIRE, STOVE

CAMP WAGON

· or camp,

News~ Notes :

TERRY, APACHE
OPEN ROAD, JEWELL
AND TRUCK TOPS

AND FRIDAY

The Grande Squares from Gallipolis, pictured in action,
will present an hour of entertainment which will include
western and folk dancing in the Pomeroy Junior High School
Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Friday as a part of the evening
activities of the Seventh Annual Big Bend !legatta Weekend.
The group will seek audience participation dlU"ing the
program.

Reedsville

........

REG . $3 .59

COOK OVER GRILL .

Cn.te,.t~in~mnt

EVERY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY

IRON ·

•FOR YOUR

•
•
.,•

__s_a_le_F_o_r--..l(

ALL SPECIALS ON SALE ALL WEEK LONG

\

Wlr.oi4~ome

Phone 429-4231

AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR:

Tonka Toaster PIE

9wr Place /or

U.S. RT. 60 WEST HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 25718

'

For Your Home Or ••.

~

9ami/IJ

0.

,,

McKIN.
S
TRY
TIRE &amp; ALIGNMENT CENTER

••• ••••

•

~o

G.ean.,

~OMEROY,

W. MAIN

MOORE'S

in~g~us:m~or=p=o~f~olU"~h:er~ita:g:e~.:11~:::::::::::::~===

•

*

TIRES

Praxlteles
about In
350Athens
B.C., but
art,
was carved
by is good work.
disappeared some 1,500 years ,
ago, in the Fifth Century A.D.,
and it is the consuming passion
of Iris Love to lind it. MiSB
Love Ia an archeologist, and the
focus of the Sunday holU" was
on her efforts as they have
taken her to the western coast
RUTLAND
Tlll"key, at the site of the
. •~ ofancient,
buried city of Knidos.
FURNITURE
Says Schirra: "Miss Love' ...
stoutly maintains that five
pieces she has unearthed- two
marble lingers, a wrist section
of a hand and two pieces of
drapery carved in marble-are
proof that Aphrodite ·became
burled at Knidos cenllU"ies ago
and that she has solved the
mystery."
Miss Love, however, is a
subject of some controversy.
For example, as the program
detailed, she maintains the
head of the Aphrodite she set!ks
is in the British Museum . But
disagreeing with her was Sir
Bernard Ashmole, former kee.'
per of Greek and Roman
antiquities at the muselU"D.
Their disagreement over such
matters as the shape and lines

....•

992·2556 .

•'

* CHILDREN'S ZOO
REFitESHMENTS
*CAFETERIA

DAIRY VALLEY

Dayton

--.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vlaitlng hOlU"s 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hOlU"s 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Mrs. Ervin Ray Arrowood
and son, Mrs. !lay J. Brumley,
Leland C. Bumgardner, Mrs.
James llichard Call and son,
Mrs. Michael F. Carpenter,
BrianA-. Castor, Mrs. Jeffrey E.
Cheney, Lawrence A. Derenge,
Mrs. Russell Eshelman,
Dorothy J . Griffith, Mrs. Pearl
N. Hoffman, Mrs. Charles L.
Hughes, Mrs. Walter Scott
Lucaa, MrS. James E. Mont.
gomery and daughter, James
H. Nichols, Mrs. Russell R.
Rankin, Mi9B lllts F. Smith,
Mrs. John C. Benedict, William
A. Johnson,Mrs. Oral Waugh,
David A. Searls, Mrs. Dallas
Wllllam.son, Infant Male Lee
and Mrs. Elizabeth Lycan. '

* FREE PARKING
'
* PICNIC GROUNDS
*AMUSEMENT GAMES
*ROUER SKAnNG
*MINIATURE GOLF .

JUNE 18-19-20

A 23-year-oid niece of Gallia
County residents, Luey Ann
Wallace, Boise, Idaho, was
killed in an auto accident near
Boise Friday night.
·Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren (Leone) Wallace, Miss
Wallace ·had just graduated
from eollege, and was enroute
home at the time of the accident
around 11:55 p.m. Her vehicle
and a bus collided headon.
besides ber parents
two
Warren

•

*23 FUN FILLED RIDIS

KEEP YOUR COOL
At The End of The

•
R
•
·
Niece Killed In Accident
TV. • .ln evzew

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center since
June 3. Arter treatments, tests
and rest, she left Sunday, June

LEFT HOSPITAL

THIS CONVERTED SCHOOL BUS is
important to the new concept of the annual
art show of the Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
The bus, owned by Mrs. Ruth Gosney of
D'Artiste Gallery, Middleport, will be
parked on the upper Pomeroy parking lot
·where its sides will exhibit' paintings. A
"snow fence" 40--feet long also will be
stretched on the lot to provide additional
display space for art works. The show is
open not only to art students of Mrs. Gosney
but to all artists who will help staff the show
from 12 noon to 8 p.m. Saturday and Sun·
day. Local artists will also be painting at
the scene. In addition, an art show will be
staged at the St. Paul Lutheran Church where the entire art presentation has been
held in past years - by Meigs County
members of the French Art Colony of
Gallipolis.

'

..
..•
~'
..••
:•'
'.,•

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .

Serving Meigs, Gama and Mason Counties

®

..

•

•

. Phone 992-~ 181

· ()pen Mon •• Sat. Until6 P.M.

'

�I'
.

:12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 15, 1971

Mrs. Louise Eshelman, RD I,
Athens, has been a patient in I3.

~

ii

.:.·

--- ------...._ - -·---- ---- --.··;._-.
.

~ ..~
...
_

Pomeroy Bridge

'::: ~-

During Big Bend Regatta

Cool, Cool Reft~hments Plus
Delicious Sandwiches With
All The Extras.

By DICK DU BROW
of the hair and face was
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Tbe absolutely fascinating.
Jacques Cousteau underwater But for the viewer , there
documentaries have proved the were other points about the
tremendous appeal of well-done. hOlU" just as intriguing as this
BClenutic detecUve stories on ' verbal and pictorial disagree·
television. And Sunday night ment. For it was, overall, a
CBS-TV began a new series of monumental detective story in
tdmllar appeal With an hour historical terms. As an exam·
about a woman's controversial pie, we were shown Miss Love's
archaeological search for the expedition hard at work, and
11101t lalnous statue of ancient what we saw was that those
times, the long-lost Aphrodite, involved, in the process of •
goddess of sensual love.
·looking for Aphrodite, were also
Tbe broadcast was the first unearthing the city of Knidos
of a number of occasional hours itself, discovering added in!or·
to be produced by CBS-TV in mation.
conjuncUon with the Smithso· The beautiful scenery in and
nlan Institution. "Search For around Knidos made Sunday
the Goddess of Love" was the night's holU" breathtakingly
provocative tiUe of SUnday's attractive at times. We also
program, and it was narrated were informed that the hope of
and hosted by former astronaut finding the statue of Aphrodite
Wally Schirra, who will also whole is small because, among
carry out these duties on future other things, it may have been
broadcasts in the series, which an earthquake victim-~aving
is called "Smithsonian Adver!· been In the area of earthquake
ture."
country . Still, this does not
APhrodite, the first nude detolU" those working at un·
statue of' a woman in Greek . covering the puzzle and teach·

First Marriage
Anne Burrows and John cate that .this was probably
Eugene and Kent, and one Layden were married in Vir· . the first marriage performed
ginia in. 1609. Records indi· m the American colonies.
sister, Janeen, all at home.
Orlyn Wallace, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, is an uncle. Aunts
surviving here are Mrs. Susie
Swisher, Rt. 1, Cheshire; and
Mrs. Cecil Cook, Gallipolis.
Funeral services were held 2
p.m., today at the Third Ward
WS Chapel, .3200 Cassia St.,
Boise.
Her parents reside at 1404
Columbus Ave., Boise, Idaho.

Tire and Retreading Specialists
1601 E. State
Athens, 0.
Phone 592·1 877
" I I

'

I

Dagton.

$259

CAST ALUMINUM
14" HANDLES

... ·~

"
•••
••

•

~

••

~

w

••

,,••

IT IS

so

HANDY!

(

•

'•
i

J.I~Rclche.

I

"'&lt;:::

HOLDS

·.
...
.'

"

'

'

'

:,i'

)- r.; •

.,
,I

~

....,..

•.
'.•
•,.

.

s273

l ightweighl . . . rustproof. Has
molded divider 1o provide two star·
age sections . . . adds structural
sfrength. Aluminum handle.

REG . $3.99

·:
•'

NOW

oNLY

:.:

·.•
.

......
:::
·•·
) ·.
"

...•••
'•.•.•.
...

..·

..••••'·•

CHAISE LOUNGE

.r::
·~

L

5x14 WEB IN AVOCADO
NEW SEVILLE PATTERN

,.,.'
'
...~

ADJUSTS TO
5 POSITIONS

SPORTY AN OR
CHEVY VAN
CONVERSION:
VAN·CAMPERIZED.

Cool Low Prices
On All Sizes

There's plenty of elbow room
ana head room in Chevy's

Now In Stock• ..

CHEVY VAN'S the one with
. the new sliding side door. let
us tell you What else is new •••
today!

••
·~..
,.

~

tonk does it oil, and so very,
my reosonobly!

lb. bag

79~

II~SULATED

I~~

THAN ICE

'

77~

~~-"""'·

~
'•

CHEST
FREEZER

!:'•

••
.,.••••

OTHER
THING~

..•••.

spece oolore•

'•'

..''•''•',..

CHEVROLET
N

,,.f.,.'•

CHOICE OF

,.'•.
.,...
•••

PATTERNS

Rutland Furniture

It has a lar!jt engine,
a 350 CID V-8, automotit
minion, power ltMrin9,
~rakes at1d air condltionino.

.

POMEROY

PH. 992-?84R

REGATTA TIME IS FUN TIME - JUNE 18-19"·20
I

-

WE DELiVER!
.WE SERVICE!
WE FINANCE!

.'

,.

· Reeular

1285.00

ea. $50

~ - wheelers.

~·

· ARNOLD GRATE

2·Good Used
Refrigerators

Named "the Tow Car' of
·
, The best buy in tht

,,.~·.

,

Limited Supply! On Sale While They Last!

BIG 19 CU. FT. UN ICO

•••

124 MAIN

;/

•'•'

":
..

Rutland, Ohio

We can cool It tor youMobile Home Air Conditioning and Central Air
·conditioning.
Factory
tra fned se-rvice men for
proper, dependable \n .
stallatlon. Call 9'12·2181.

••••
[1

•

74.2~211

Specialists in
whole hoQSe
air conditioning

''

·:••

·Ph.

t

•

. - -- ·- -

tl

PICNICS
CAMPING
DIAPERS ·
AND 100

REG. 91c

.

. ... . ..,. . .::;-::::;;:::::;'!1

' 5,000. 7,000, 10,200, 12.000,
15 ,000, 18,000, 24,000 and
29,000 BTU . We install!

--~··

t

BAG

FOR

12 DEGREES

~ -...:.

A size for every purpose

_____ ..-c;.;

~-

ICE PAK "-

.

- ______ ....

new compact motor home.

~~

REUSABLE

.

Body.

,,••

-iJ-7116 7

and up

·'..••..

$299

$6''

95

SEE OUR BIG
SELECTON

designed fo corry Camper

.

ALUMINUM

heat.- WE INSTALL lP GAS
SYSTEMS COMPUTny, One

good ...

Chevy Fleetside Pickup. Strong
like a tr~ck . Easy riding like a
cor. Fully •~uipped. Especially

.....

COLDER

comfortable··1roside-r with

FLEETSIDE PICKUP:

~~

Special

JUNE 18-19-20

/[0

~::

When you buy yours, get in
IOU!h with us -let us hook your
trailer up for both &lt;ooking arid

Welcome Weekend!
BIG BEND
REGAnA TIME

When it's hot a.nd humid
outside, stay cool and

·.

...i

you stop far the night

Charcoal

ENJOY THE REGATIA - JUNE 18-19-20

-Mrs. L. Balderson
:Ba~ld~e:rso:n~Tu~e~sd:a!y~ev~e:m~ng~.!.,r:e:ce:nt:iy~. ..:!::;!;!~=~~==============::::::::::::::::::~

•.

..
.

5x3x3 WEB IN AVOCADO
NEW SEVILLE PATTERN

•••

Your Hand Stamp Entitle•
You to All the RiM• You Want
/rom Opening untU 10 P.M.

KEEPS FOOD FRESH

LAWN CHAIR

•

visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Garrett Reed of Coolville
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead and family, and Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber and
family attended the graduation
of Roger Meredith from Fort
Frye High School at Beverly

•

SJ99

FOLDING ALUMINUM

HEATING&amp; COOKING

Pomeroy Rd ., recently .
Committee report was given.
Refreshme~ts were served to
the followmg famohes, Dorh·
man Reeds, Denver Webers,
E~nest Whiteheads,_and Warren
Pickens. Next meetmg os to be a
picnic at the lake.
Susan Ha~num ?I Long
Bottom VISited woth . Kay

JW

Coltlpock ICE CHBT

PERSON

Be.Cool! Feel Cool!

..

.

,,

:i QUARTS

POPS CORN ON
THE GRill, IN
THE FIREPLACE,
ETC.

. . .

00
PER

--------------~--­

Visiting Jamie.
with Mr. and. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Ruth
daughter,
Gene wilson were Ernest Grim
of Paden City, Emma Hugh of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Reed of Waldo, and Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Sams and sons
of Jane Lew, W. Va .
Melvin Chaney of Hobart,
Indiana was.an overnight guest
at the Williams-Baiderson
home. He is a nephew of R. E.
W'Jlli~s .
.,. ~ ... 101 ......,......,... ...
C.B.C.metatthe homeofMr.
,
and Mrs. Donald Myers,
··

.;
•.

~~

P.OPCORN POPPER

FOR YOUR
MOBILE
HOME
NEEDS •••

'

FUND GETS BOOST
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.
rUPI)-Ananonymouspledgeof
fllO,OOO by a former All·
America football player to the
NaUonal Footbell FoundaUon
Buildintl Fund hal helped to
boolt the ftllld 10 PJ mWlt~~ ln
"CIIh, firm ~!~edges and uatt," II iru. 8nnounced laat
Thurlllay by Chalrrilan Chelter

.•'

..

always ready when

•

~

· Miss Carol Nichols, a
member of-the graduating class
at Ohio University, received the
Sigma Alpha Iota dean's honor,
for exemplifying the highest
musical scholastic and ethical
standard
·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
visited With Sgt. and Mrs. Grary
Barnhart of Sumter, south
carolina. The Barnhartshave a
son, Bradley Forrest, and

.:

HEAT AND COOK FOR LESS!

,,

..•.
·.

•

&lt;

II

llE
~· t--

CA,IoiPFIRE, STOVE

CAMP WAGON

· or camp,

News~ Notes :

TERRY, APACHE
OPEN ROAD, JEWELL
AND TRUCK TOPS

AND FRIDAY

The Grande Squares from Gallipolis, pictured in action,
will present an hour of entertainment which will include
western and folk dancing in the Pomeroy Junior High School
Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Friday as a part of the evening
activities of the Seventh Annual Big Bend !legatta Weekend.
The group will seek audience participation dlU"ing the
program.

Reedsville

........

REG . $3 .59

COOK OVER GRILL .

Cn.te,.t~in~mnt

EVERY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY

IRON ·

•FOR YOUR

•
•
.,•

__s_a_le_F_o_r--..l(

ALL SPECIALS ON SALE ALL WEEK LONG

\

Wlr.oi4~ome

Phone 429-4231

AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR:

Tonka Toaster PIE

9wr Place /or

U.S. RT. 60 WEST HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 25718

'

For Your Home Or ••.

~

9ami/IJ

0.

,,

McKIN.
S
TRY
TIRE &amp; ALIGNMENT CENTER

••• ••••

•

~o

G.ean.,

~OMEROY,

W. MAIN

MOORE'S

in~g~us:m~or=p=o~f~olU"~h:er~ita:g:e~.:11~:::::::::::::~===

•

*

TIRES

Praxlteles
about In
350Athens
B.C., but
art,
was carved
by is good work.
disappeared some 1,500 years ,
ago, in the Fifth Century A.D.,
and it is the consuming passion
of Iris Love to lind it. MiSB
Love Ia an archeologist, and the
focus of the Sunday holU" was
on her efforts as they have
taken her to the western coast
RUTLAND
Tlll"key, at the site of the
. •~ ofancient,
buried city of Knidos.
FURNITURE
Says Schirra: "Miss Love' ...
stoutly maintains that five
pieces she has unearthed- two
marble lingers, a wrist section
of a hand and two pieces of
drapery carved in marble-are
proof that Aphrodite ·became
burled at Knidos cenllU"ies ago
and that she has solved the
mystery."
Miss Love, however, is a
subject of some controversy.
For example, as the program
detailed, she maintains the
head of the Aphrodite she set!ks
is in the British Museum . But
disagreeing with her was Sir
Bernard Ashmole, former kee.'
per of Greek and Roman
antiquities at the muselU"D.
Their disagreement over such
matters as the shape and lines

....•

992·2556 .

•'

* CHILDREN'S ZOO
REFitESHMENTS
*CAFETERIA

DAIRY VALLEY

Dayton

--.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vlaitlng hOlU"s 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hOlU"s 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Mrs. Ervin Ray Arrowood
and son, Mrs. !lay J. Brumley,
Leland C. Bumgardner, Mrs.
James llichard Call and son,
Mrs. Michael F. Carpenter,
BrianA-. Castor, Mrs. Jeffrey E.
Cheney, Lawrence A. Derenge,
Mrs. Russell Eshelman,
Dorothy J . Griffith, Mrs. Pearl
N. Hoffman, Mrs. Charles L.
Hughes, Mrs. Walter Scott
Lucaa, MrS. James E. Mont.
gomery and daughter, James
H. Nichols, Mrs. Russell R.
Rankin, Mi9B lllts F. Smith,
Mrs. John C. Benedict, William
A. Johnson,Mrs. Oral Waugh,
David A. Searls, Mrs. Dallas
Wllllam.son, Infant Male Lee
and Mrs. Elizabeth Lycan. '

* FREE PARKING
'
* PICNIC GROUNDS
*AMUSEMENT GAMES
*ROUER SKAnNG
*MINIATURE GOLF .

JUNE 18-19-20

A 23-year-oid niece of Gallia
County residents, Luey Ann
Wallace, Boise, Idaho, was
killed in an auto accident near
Boise Friday night.
·Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren (Leone) Wallace, Miss
Wallace ·had just graduated
from eollege, and was enroute
home at the time of the accident
around 11:55 p.m. Her vehicle
and a bus collided headon.
besides ber parents
two
Warren

•

*23 FUN FILLED RIDIS

KEEP YOUR COOL
At The End of The

•
R
•
·
Niece Killed In Accident
TV. • .ln evzew

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center since
June 3. Arter treatments, tests
and rest, she left Sunday, June

LEFT HOSPITAL

THIS CONVERTED SCHOOL BUS is
important to the new concept of the annual
art show of the Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
The bus, owned by Mrs. Ruth Gosney of
D'Artiste Gallery, Middleport, will be
parked on the upper Pomeroy parking lot
·where its sides will exhibit' paintings. A
"snow fence" 40--feet long also will be
stretched on the lot to provide additional
display space for art works. The show is
open not only to art students of Mrs. Gosney
but to all artists who will help staff the show
from 12 noon to 8 p.m. Saturday and Sun·
day. Local artists will also be painting at
the scene. In addition, an art show will be
staged at the St. Paul Lutheran Church where the entire art presentation has been
held in past years - by Meigs County
members of the French Art Colony of
Gallipolis.

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POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .

Serving Meigs, Gama and Mason Counties

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. Phone 992-~ 181

· ()pen Mon •• Sat. Until6 P.M.

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Guest Artist with Columbus Youth Symphony

IIIII

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BY BoB HOEFLICH
Miss Karen Griffith, daughter
Of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Griffith
. of Pomeroy, has been selected
to appear as guest artist with
the Colwnbus Youth Symphony
at a .concert to be presented at
the annual 4-H Club Congress in
Colwnbus Friday evening.
A talented musician, Miss

•

Griffith has appearea on M.etgs conductor of the Columbus
County stage~ for a number of Youth Symphony, who heard,
years presenting trumpet solos Miss Griffith during ·her perwhich have been well received · fortnance at the honors reCital
by local audiences. For the past at the university this Sllrin~.
year she has studied trwn- Miss Griffith has studied
pet
at
Ohio
State trumpet for nine years and her
University and was se- selections to be played with
lected . for the guest ap-. symphonic accompaniment will
pearance by AnUiony Ginter. include Haydn's "Concerto for

Trwnpet," first movement, and
Leroy Anderson's "A '!'rumpeter's Lullaby."
Miss· Griffith is the only
soloist selected to appear with
the sympnony in Ohio. She has a
dual interest in the club
congress since she nas been a 4Hclub member seven years, the
last four being with the Meigs

County 4-H J:&gt;leasure Riders.
A member Of the All-Ohio
Youth Choir last year, Miss
Griffith was featured on her
trumpet with the choral group
at many appearances. She
toured Europe with the choir
last swnmer.
Recently, Miss Griffith
transferred from the College of

Music a• Ohio State to the
College of Veterinary Medicine.
She will continue private music
lessons at the school, however.
This swnmer she will be attending Ohio University. MiSs
Griffith wiD leave Thursday for
Colwnbus where she will go into
final rehearsals with the orchestra for the Friday concert.

Devoled To 1lae IM!resll Of The Meip-M010n Area

Pomeroy

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO. XXIV NO. 45

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16. 1971

PHONE 992-2156

lEN CENTS

Entering by
Ruse Charge

Holds Trio

Karen Griffith, trumpet soloist

Three men are in the Meigs
County jail today following their
arrest by combined law enforcement agencies Tuesday
afternoon after the trio
allegedly attempted to ransack
a home in Syracuse.
The trio said they were
representatives of a power
company apparently in order to
gain admission to the home of
Mrs. Sally Allison on Route 124
near Syracuse, Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach said.
.
Sheriff Hartenbach said he
was on routine patrol about
noon on Route 124 above
Syracuse when his attention
was drawn to a car parked at
the home of Mrs . Allison. Aman
sitting in the car- identified as
Maynard Junior Keaton, Circleville·"took off" in the vehicle
down Route 124, the aherl!f
following, and stopping it.
Keaton told the sheriff he was
"looking for Route 33."
Se nslng some dlfflcul ty,

r---------------------------,
! News .•• in Briefs !
11v llnltm Press International

70,000 Miners LP.ave Pits .
We take care of this family as if they were ours
. , . and they are, along with many families in
this community who choose our friendly bank
as their financial housekeeper. We help
families save for everything from vacatlons to
college educations, we provide convenient
Checking Accounts and we help out with loans
when needed. May we be your family's bank?

CHARLES"''N, W.VA. -ABOUT 70,000 miners loyal to
United Mine Workers (UMW) President W. A. (Tony) Boyle were
oo a wildcat slrike today. Coal producers termed it "an
emergency of national impor\3nce." The strike was a protest
over Boyle's removal as a trustee of the UMW's Welfare and
Retirement Fund. It cut ba&lt;~' sharply on coal production in at
least five states, although a majprity of the unions 450,000
members reported for work. The ll:aikouts began Monday in
southern West Virginis coal fields where an estimated 30,000
miners went on slrike. The protest spread Tuesday with about
25,000 Kentucky miners and 15,000 others in Ohio, Virginia and
Alabama failing to report to work.

Now they Can Break Code
WASIUNGTON - GOVERNMENT officials appear more
about possible diplomatic and foreign espionage consequences from publication by the New York Times of the top
secret Vietnam war history than they do by the facts revealed in
the first three Installments.
Of particular concern to many officials is ·the possibility that
extensive publication of diplomatic and military cable texts
, might aUow the Soviet Union to crack the code of other U. S.
communications transmitted during the early 1960s. "You may
r,;,t assurPd that no one is reading this series any more closely
than the Soviet embassy," one official said.
dis~urbed

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Times Enjoined by Feds

NEW YORK -THE JUSTICE Department won a temporary
injunction Tuesday to keep the New York Times from publishing
Us series on a Pentagon report of the Vietnam war. The Times
said it would continue the leglll' fight agaipst what it called unprecedented suppression Of a newspaper.
Federal judge Murray Grufein, in only his third day on the
federal bench, scheduled a hearing on a possible permanent injunction against the Times for 10 a.m. (EDT) Friday. The temporary injunction runs out at I p.m. Saturday. The Times said it
would comply with the restraining order but would continue to
press its case. Because the case involved such basic issues as
national security and freedom of the press, it was almost certain
to go to the Supreme Court eventually.

Here's What Full
Service Banking Means
~-FUNTIME!

• Mortgage Loans
• Personafl.oans
e Auto Loans
• Savings Accounts
• Checking Accounts ·
• lank by Mall
• Night Depository
• Safe Deposit Boxes

REGATTA
TIME
JUNE 18-19-20
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VietCong in

Comma~do

Raid

PHNOM PENH - THE VIET CONG earried out a commando,style raid against cambodian naval guard posts on Phnom
Penh's northern outskirts early today after seltii1g up a naif-circle
of rocket and mortar positions around the city.
It was the first Communist attack inside ll:Je Csmbodian
capital since a: Viet Cong squad. inflicted heavy damage at the
city's airport last Jan. 21. Communiques from Saigon said the
Viet Cong shot down a U. S. helicopter near the former combat
base atKhe Sanh, killing two crewmen and wounding two others.
B52 bombers kept up heavy strikes against a North Vietnamese
troop bllildup just below the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).

President Dared by Congress
WASHINGTON- WITH UNEMPLOYMENT at a nine-year
high, Congressional Democrats have pushed a job creating public
works bill onto President Nixon's desk, daring him to carry out
his threab!ned veto.
The house completed congressional action on the measure
Tuesday. approving it on a 275 to 104 roll call. The $5.4 billion
catch.;~ll biU includes $2 billion for a speeded public works
program under which the government would help create jobs by
financing up to 80per cent of the cost of sewers, hospitals, public
buildings and other factllties in areas of nigh unemployment.

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POMEROY

RUTlAND

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MEMBER FEDE'RAL I RESERVE SYSTEM

MOTORISTS ON Route 124 between Racine and
Syracu8e.were startled to see this helicopter in the middle of
a field of weeds Wednesday afternoon. After a brief time, the
, •copter,-wlllllts three passengers, took off inl9 the blue
'yonder.ltis reported that the 'copter wali one being used by
The Ohio Pbwer Co. to check the distance from Ol)lo to west
V~rglnla across the Ohio River preparatory to the installation
of a new power llne in the area.

Uti!&lt; WOKW uy have

gone mod, but "yesterday"
siUI holds an attraction for
many, the Delta Queen
proved about 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday as II moved past
Pomeroy the flrat time Ibis
season. Tbe nostalgic caUope
rang out with favorlles of
yesteryear as the boat" moved
upriver- much to lbe delight
of residents who llneli the ·
parking lots In Pomeroy for a
gllmpse of tbe famous excursion boat.

Public Meeting
Of Red Cross

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Two Teachers Employe.d

RACINE - Two teachers
were employed for the new
school year by the Southern
Local School District Board of
Education in a regular session
Donald Diener, chairman of Tuesday night at the high
the Meigs Chapter of the school.
American Red Cross, an- Employed were Mrs. Jean
nounced tqday the annual Red Alkire, Racine, as kindergarten
Cross meeting will be held at teacher, and James Burns for
Veterans Memorial Hospital vocational agriculture . Mrs .
'l'h ur sday, J une 24 , at 7:3"• p.m. Alkire is a former teacher in the
when officers will be elected dislrict who more recenUy was
and new board members in the Kyger Creek and the
named.
Columbus School systems.
Annual reports from the Burns is a graduate of Ohio
areas ·of Rea Cross service, State University this spring.
service to · military families,
The board awarded contracts
water safety, blood program . to Valley Bell to provide dairy
and disaster assistance will be products for the coming year,
given.
Standard Foods, Hurrfcane, W.
Diener said the Red Cross Va., and canned goods, Ohio
program in Meigs County, "Is Valley Banking Co. for baked
in great need of support." goods , and Portion Pack,
Adequat~ funds to 'operate
another fiscal year are not on
hand, he said.
Tile meeting \.9 open to the
public. Board members and all
other persons concerned with
the Red Cross services are
urged to attend.

Set June 24th

for baton instruction.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Ralph Sayre, Principal
Adams, Clerk Charles Norris
Robert Ewing Buck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck Of
and board members Charles Pomeroy, received his juris doctor's degree in the College of Law
Pyles, president; Gene Yost, at Ohio Slate University Friday.
flennie Hill and David Nease.
A graduate of Pomeroy High School, Bob was married In
Pomeroy recently to Debbi Keebaugh. ·Tile couple is living in
Two Bonds Given Colwnbus
at the present time but there are strong possibilities
that they'll be making their home in Meigs County in the not too
Up in Syracuse
One defendant was fined and distant future. Bob has yet wtake his bar examination.
Attending the graduation were Bob's parents, his grandtwo others forfeited bonds In
Syracuse Mayor · Herman mother, Mrs. Frank Buck of Racine Route 2, Mr. and Mrs.
London's Court '!'Uesday night. Marvin Keebaugh·and daughter, Tony a; a sister of Fritz Buck,
Marshall Milton Varian said Mrs. Betty Stewart and her daughter, Mrs. Sandy Hammond Of
ruchard R. Smith, 19, Mid- Columbus and Robert Foster of Columbus. Foster is the son Of
dlepOrt, was fined $10 and costs another of Fritz' sisters.
for speeding; Donald E. Green,
SEVEN ATTRACTIVE GIRLS are competing for the regatta
41, Colwnbus, forfeited his $25
bond posted for unsafe queen title Otis weekend.
LOCAL TEMPS
operatlon
and Michael D.
Voting -at no cost to the voter -will be conducted at a booth
The temperature in Pomeroy
Adkins,
18,
Cleveland,
his
of
$15,
In
the
Pomeroy Junior High School with Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
at 11 a.m. Wednesday under
for no operator's license.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in charge. Residents can vote Friday
cloudy skies was 67 degrees.
following the parade and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. In
fairness to all, ·each person is asked to cast only one vote for their
favorite candidate.

Columbus, for meat.
Principal James Adams was
named athletic director for. the
coming year. Mrs. Daisy Cook,
a faculty member, will Instruct
in the federal program during
the next school year. An advisory council for. the program
was named including Mrs .
Clarence Lawrence, Mrs. Daisy
Patterson and Mrs. Mary Ann
Huddleston, all residents of the
district, but not teachers. A
coordinator for the program
will be named later.
Mrs. Eria Christophersen wlll
be a substitute cook and Mrs.
Judy lliggs was given permission to use school facilities

MARVIN KELLY, MIDDLEPORT, ·new adjutant of Meigs
Chapter 53, Dlsabl!!d American Veterans, is urging that members

and potential members turn out for the regular cbapter meetings
which are held at 7:30 p.m. on the second Thursday of each
month. Tile hall is m Butternut Ave. Auxiliary members serve
refreslunents at each session.

Frogmobile
Gets Expert
Going Over
Joseph Shubert, state
librarian of Ohio and an
horrorary Grand Croaker of the
Ohio Association for the
Promotion of the Bull Frog,
Inc ., will be here Saturday to
inspect the Frogmoblle sponsored by Pomeroy - Middleport
Libraries, Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja
reported.
Tile Frogmoblle will be on
exhibit during the three-day
event of the Big Bend Regatta .
Mrs. Leslie Hart of the
.Pomeroy Library and Mrs. Roy ·
Holter, board member, are in
charge of the exhibit.
Tile Frogmoblle will 'offer
books about Frogdom for
distribution and show a film
tak~n at the University of
Michigan when Fred Crow and
Dale Warner visited there ·this
' spring in connection with
dev,elopmenl of 'their Frog
lnstitoot.
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Sheriff Hartenbach - a friend
of Mrs. Allison's son, Paul, of
Zanesville - returned to the
Allison home. He had told Paul
earlier he would keep a check
on Mrs. Allison to make sure
she was all right from time to
time.
Sheriff Hartenbach entered
the Allison home where a man
identified as Hugh Smith, Of
Columbus, was in the kitchen
talking to Mrs. Allison. Smith
allegedly had told Mrs. Allison
he was with the power company
and had come to her home to
check the electric service. Tile
sheriff was not aware there was
another man in the house as he
questioned Smith. However,
Forrest Edward Redman,
Columbus, in the front of the
home, had left through the front
door. He was s€e~ by Mrs.
Hartenbach who was waiting
for her husband in the sheriff's
vehicle.
(Continued on page \0)

TEN AREA RESIDENTS ARE pictured in the current edition
of Tile IUumtnator, a power company newspaper, for having
completed 20 years of service at Ute Philip Sporn Power Plant.
Included are S. E. Holliday, E. F. Hudson, P. D. Nease, C. A.
Bradford,G.P. Buck, W. C. Gibbs, K.O. Rollins, C. P. Buxton, G.
A. Wolfe, and M. F. Justis.
MISS r,IARY PHILSON, formerly of Racine and a former
teacher in the Meigs County schools, was one of three prOfessors
of West Virginia Tech named winners of the "Wine Awards" for
distinguished teaching recently.
MiSs Philaon, profeliiiOI' of management, housing and family
development, has bqm a member Of Ute Tech faculty since ·1113.
She received her bachelor's and master's degrees at Ohio
University and her docwra~ degree in household equipment and
foods at Iowa Sl4!te University, She has taught at several Ohio .
· high schools as well .as on the faculty at Ohio University.
Miss Philson wiiS on the faculty at Auburn University from
1953 until joining Tech in 1963. She has been doing research on
standards for activities and storage as well as temperature and
humidity effecis of using household'appllances.

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GEmNG READY Monday for tile upcoming Big Bend Regatta weekend were workmen
of Nolan Amusement COmpany as they began setting up rides for the big event. The Carnival

will open Thursday afternoon with the official three day·even~ to get underWay Friday. Young
Nolan Rutrer and Hanry Beckman, employes of Nolan Amusement were busy getting the
kiddie Sky Fighter ride ready for Thursday's activities.
I

MRS. RAROW MARTIN OF Fort Lauderdale, Fla., bq been
spending several days in Pomeroy - and finds it dellcl)lful, by the
way- cl\ecking genealoRY of the Martin family. Her lalaband, u '
attorney in Florida, Ia formerly from the Rock Sprilwl area o1
Meigs Coun!Y :ind retutna to Meigs periodically for a villi. Mra.
Martlo is oot a Melga native but has enjCJ7ed her My. 111cidentaUy, Mrs. Martin observed the .5Gth annlvlll'lll')' Of her
graduation from Ohio University in Athens flef01'1' cGIJiial to
· Pomeroy. '
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