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/

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 2,1971

· ·.·-:·:·:-: -::-:-:-:·:·.·:·:·.·.·.·.-:-:-:-.-:·:·.··:.·..··.·•·.·•·

,BRUCE BIOSSAT

Reform vs. Unity
Splits Democrats

BERRY'S WORLD

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

© 1971

~ HEA,I~

"Got ony change?"

. NOW YOU KNOW
The possibility of an
astronaut on the moon being hit
by a meteorite is remote
because a lunar landing site is
struck one in 10 years by an
outer-space object no larger
· than a bird seed.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight and Tuesday
Augusi2-J
Wall Disney's
20,000 LEAGUES
UNDER THE SEA
ITechnicolor)
Kirk Douglas
James Mason

REDMOND ASSIGNED
NEW HAVEN - Airman
Michael C. Redmond, son of
Mrs. Mary E. Workman of New
Haven, has received his first U.
S. Air Force duty assignment
after completing basic training
at Lackland AFB, Tex. The
airman has been assigned to a
unit of ·the Strategic Air Com. mand at Blytheville AFB, Ark.,
for training and duty in the
administrative field. Airman
Redmond is a ·1966 graduate of
Wahama High School, Mason,
W. Va. His father, Russell K.
Redmond, resides on Rt. 1,
Wadsworth, m.

G

Colorcartoons:
Honorable House Cal
Peanut BaHie
Honorable Family
Problems
. SI!OW STARTS 1 P.M.

-

M!W

.

'

Ht\S ASSIGNMENT
RUTLAND - Ainnan Mark
A. Brogan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Brogan of Rt. I, has
received his first U. S. Air
Force duty assignment after
completing basic training at
Lackland AFB, Tex., to a unit of
the Strategic Air Command at
Pease AFB, N. H., for training
and duty in fuel services.
Airman Brogan is a 1971
graduate of Meigs High School.

ftDIJ.f'·IH
-·~---

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
August2-3
Double Feature Program
Hell Run!
ANGEL UNCHAINED
(Color)
Don Stroud
Luke Askew
- Piu,._
DON'T COME
ALONE!
(GPI
(Colorl
Robert Quarry
Roger Perry

.Charles lARue Died, Su-.1-y
IUI.a
MASON- Charles Emory La

handcrafted
ALL 1971

TV and Stereo
Now
At
Ingels!

Save
BIG
While

They Last!

hlgels Furniture
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. WIGHTS
MIDDLEPORT
•

'

llilllllJ

,. / I /
I

(I

'

Apollo
(ConUnued fmn page 11
deep.
.'
Instructions from mission
control luipt tbem struggling
willt the balky driD that held the
Cll't!. They finally yanked it out
of the ground and tbell bad
trouble separelinl the care to
he stowed in their spacecraft.
They had Qlll't! trouble willt
the care when they rehnned to
Falcon. But Scott finally pulled
apart one section and aald he
would bring It ba$ to earth.
At one point, ·Scott !ripped
over a rock and fell down in the
dusty soil In full view of a
television ·audience. Scott
qulcldy recovered and went
about his business of eqOOring.
AI the canyon, the pilots
r~ported
seeing distinct
layering in the opposite wall.
This indicated the lava which
makes up the plain was formed
at different in~ leaving
slabs rather !ban pouring from
surface fissures
all at once
'
The astronauts relurned to
their spacecraft at 8:11 a.m.,
after covering 3.1 miles of
terrain. That raised their 1o1a1
coverage for three days tD about
15 miles - far more !ban the
three previous moon crews
combined.
·
Dr. Farouk El Baz said
Worden's sighting of 'cinder
cones near Littrow may stend
the period the mom was hot
enough to produce vcilcanism
another 1 billion yean - to
about 2.5 billion years ago.
El Baz called this the moon's
"last gasp of volcamism."
Littrow is on the southeastern
edge of the Sea of Serenity,·east
of Apollo 15's landing site.

CHICAGO (NEA)
Two strong trends, in clear conflict with each other,
are tugging at the Democratic party. One is bent toward
smoothing over differences for the big presidential
struggle of 1972. The other gives party reform top priority, even if the push for it enlarges those differences.
Seven months of 1971 travel with the active Democratic
presidential candidates in nearly half the 50 states showed
the unity urge to be very powerful.
Here. in Illinois, in Minnesota, California, New York
and other places, the word is plain:
"People in the party don't want another Chicago, another 1968. They don't want any more big battles. The
sooner they ~et a chance to line up behind one guy for
the presidential nomination, the better they'll like it."
What this means is that if one candidate jumps off into
an early 1972 lead by winning most of the March-April
primaries, hundreds and hundreds of party leaders at all
levels will qUickly_move his way. They are just looking
for the excuse to move.
This urge to develop a united front is not limited to
conservative. party wheel-horses and other traditional
types. It embraces a lot of liberals in the crucial big
states, including some with a substantial wish for reform.
More importantly, however, they fear another political
bloodbath of that sort could cost them the next election.
EAST END Chesler
And, taken together, the unity types are governed by one
liiTH REUNION SET
overriding, pragmatic purpose-to beat President Nixon.
The 65th annual reunion of the
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tholila and
The hardline party reformers, on the other ·hand, are
family of Pomeroy called on his descendants of Hoi! .and Mary
postponing their· worry over Nixon. What they want first
mother, Mrs. Georgia Thoma Foster Curtis will be held at the
is 100 per cent compliance with agreed reforms on the
Alexandria Park at Alexandria,
Sunday evening.
part of the 50 state Democratic organizations.
Ohio,
on Sunday, Aug. 22, with a
Richard Koblentz and friend,
Most of the proposed changes have to do with opening
Bonnie Kabusta, and his basket dinner at noon. All
up party procedures to allow for freer, more current,
grandfather, Pearl Koblentz, relatives and friends are . inmore balanced selection of national convention delegates.
took Sunday dinner with Mr. vited.
The militant reformers are quite right in saying that
only a handful of state organizations are today in evident
and Mrs. George Genheirner.
compliance with the McGovern-Fraser commission reform guidelines. The commission's own July 16 report
DIVORCE GRANTED
cited nine in this category, includin~ just one (Ohio)
Bonnie
J. Cremeans was
LODGE TO MEET
of the most populous 10.
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM granted a divorce in Meigs
Another five, including New Jersey, have " unofficially
will meet Wednesday at 7:30 County Common Pleas Court
complied," whatever that means. Some 28 states have
p.m. AU master masons are from Gary L. Cremeans on
assured the national party they will be in full, official
charges of gross neglect of duty
invited.
compliance by the end of 1971. Deducting for overlaps, ·
and extreme cruelty.
that could raise the compliance total to almost 40.
PRESIDENT NAMED
But the reformers are skeptical as they watch the slow
pace. Under prod from Kenneth Bode, former commisDAYTON, Ohio (UPI)
sion research chief, a whole rash of lawsuits may deColumbus attorney Frank
velop in challenge to 1972 convention delegations which
Dunbar Jr. was elected
might be chosen by rules not fitting the guidelines.
chairman of the Ohio Young
Even without this organized undertaking, the Demo·
(Continued from page 1)
Republicans Saturday at the
crats' Miami Beach convention seems sure to feature
TRY, TRY, TRY again is organization's convention here . as relations between the two counbies deteriorated!D the wake of
many delegation challenges. At the reform commission's
Mrs. Sandra Nemser's
a Sudanese purge of Qlmmuntsla. The govemmeDt of President
recent meeting, Paul Austin ·Ranney of the University of
poUcy. The 27-year-old
Jaafar Numelry said the nation's top COm1111mista Wl!l'e 8lllOIIg
Wisconsin said :
. Denver attorney, rejected
The
eye
of
God
has
been
In elforts to become an
the plotters of the coup that overtlrew hla gOYtlnment fell' 73
"Nixon could be elected by default, because the conFBI agent, Is taking her pictured on U.S. $1 bills hours two weeka ago. Numeiry regained control ID a comtervention may be tied up for four months by credentials
since 1782.
ease to court.
challenges."
coup.
The hardliners are purists, and they are not prepared
to give any state "A" for effort. They want the whole bag
right now.
· The conflict is already severe. Listening to commission
VISIT ELBERFELDS Busy Men's and Boys' Department on the 1st Floor. See the -big Selection
starr director Robert Nelson put a good face on reform
moves up to this date, an urgent hardliner called the
of Lee Work Clothes and Western Wear.
performance "nauseating." In their turn , the regulars
look upon Bode and his type as potential party wreckers
Shop every week day 9:30to 5, Friday and Saturday9:30to
who could cost the Democrats the White House. Their
,, 9.
point : Give the American voters another round of DemOcratic convention chaos in 1972; and they'll happily rerlect Richard Nixon .
MEN'S LEE RIDER JACIEIS

1..--------.1
t---------------------------,-----r

•

News, Event

.

a!l ~

True western style blue denim Jackets.
Sanforized shrunk. Unlined - Button front.
Regulars in sizes 36 to 48. longs in sizes 38
to 48.

Rue, 87, Mason, died Sunday
evening at the Holzer Medical
Center.
The son of the late Joshua aod
Harriett Hoffman La Rue, he
was born March 17, 1864 at
Hartford. He was a retired coal
miner and blacksmith. Mr. La
Rue was a member of the
Clifton Masonic Lodge No. 23
who had been awarded a SOyear pin.
Surviving are bis wife, Tillie;
a daughter, Mrs. Louise
Kramhe, Gary, Iod.; a son,
Charles, of Tucson, Ariz., and
two grandchildren, Mrs.
Martha Moore, Highland, Ind.,
and Larry La Rue, Denver,
Colo.
Funeral services will he held
at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Ralph Mahoney officiating. Burial will he in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Frieods may call at the funeral
home after 3 p.m. Tuesday.

.

NO IRON JEANS

CABLE CABS COUIDE
ALAGNA VALSESIA, Italy
( U.P il - Two cable cars
collided and one of them
plunged 1,000 feet into a valley
in the Alpine foothills Sunday.
Two Italian tourists were killed.

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Slims. Sizes 14and 16. Regulars and Slims.

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-·
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Slim Sizes 28 to 34 waist
Regular Sizes 29 to 44 waist

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SADDL£ SMOOllt STRETat DENIM
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heel for correct Boot cut fit. Size 29 to 38 waist. 13'4
ounce Blue Denim, 50 pet. Polyester, 50 pd. Cotton
blend, Tanbark .. Olive.

Just Arrived!

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Regulars and Slims In sizes 61o 18. Tan bark and olive.
Made just like the Men's Boot Cut Riders. Also Boys
Lee R1ders Western Jackets to match.

LE£ UNIONAUS

Special Sale
7. 95 Short Sleeve

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Permanent press. 80 pet.
Dacron Polyester , 20 pet.

com~ed cotton. Zipper neck
openmg - f inished placket has fashion collar . Solid
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large 1 (16-16'11 1. ex tra large
(11 -17 121.

Originated by Lee over 50 years ago. ·Known nationwide for good looks · comfort · long wear. Shorts In
sizes 361o 44. Regulars lUI sizes 341o 50. Longs In sizes
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Choose Herringbone denim in blue Fisher stripe or
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Lee Blue Denim Bib IMi1lls ,
Sizes 34 to 50 In all lengths. Exclusive heavy weight Lee
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bib pocket, rust proofed button, saddle crotch, triple
seams, corded buHon holes, lined hlp pocket.
Also Lee Painters Bib overalls - while - Lee Carpenters over~ lis . striped -= Lee Carpenters overalls .
white.
·

Sale Lee 4.98 Men's Sport

Another Shipment
Lee Prest

KNIT SHIRTS

tech Twl Work Pants

Made of 65 pet. Dacron
Polyester and 35pcl. combed

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Small (14·14'12 ). medium (151511,). large (16-16';,), extra
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Buy these Lee Pants for unmatched long economical
wear. 50 pet. Polyester. 50 pet. CoHon. Tailored for
perfect fit and good looks. Never need Ironing. All sizes
291o 50 waist and In your correct length.
Spruce gr""" and olive
·
Also Lee Tech Twill Shirts to match. Sizes Wh to 20.
Full front facing. Convertible collar. Two button
through flap pockets . extra long tails.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

finding ofa.-tr.e!qipall-

from a sarveJ ~de immediately D()CIIllbe 1'1 ' trJ•s
dramatic anr-•p•rrnrnt that
his .,..,..I•rity ratinc sh culm
significant cballge_ after the
facl
In any muntry iD ED'4* a
step so vast and pc-o'hly so
fa tefnl woald have been
llllinnally and. tc*'eelly _ .
as a delibente •...,.... to !be ·
left,.. .. aAJe&amp;l tD Jelt.wiDg
sentiment, by !be leader involved. 'rhe speculation of ·
many .a bia idS bere that lfr.
N"WJD had some sud! IIIOiive.
ammg olhers, would sean to be .
well off the mart.
This is said beca- RidJard
Nixon. 3llft c.- disagree witll
bim and lite him er DOt like

volunlarlly IDI!IItioned

the llllliject, despite !be ¥liSt
·moun~ of P'Nidty about it,

and wben it wu bnwcbed by
tbil!l enhgnmst tbe lesptn• was
~t aln,s eitbet tepid ...
qwte simply, uninterested.
Bilk .. hanker (not bulcllers
.. Iiden bavinll been encounlel'ed), it was all the Slllle:
a Yawn and a tum in the talk tD
otbet mailers.
All Ibis, pm:enthetically,

BY WILLIAM S. WWIE

I

York State, is going nqwhere.
So much, then, for the
domestic side of this huge turn
in American policy toward
Communist China. What is
reaDy irnportant,anyhow, is the
wisdom of Mr. Nino's
audacious and extremely risky
moral concession or Red China,
whose prisOO&lt;amp society is
even more frightful than was
Russia's under Josef Stalin.
Nothing so far has c&lt;111e to
light to indicate that the
President's gesture of open
anns has assisted him in any
malerial way - in hom..ably .
seWing the Vietnam war, for
example - though, of course,
not more than baH a doun men
in lite United States know what
may he going on in deepest

counlly.
..
This be may have done. The

ullra·liberals are, for lbe
zncmen~ saying

and writing

.relatively kind things about
bim, all this being acccmpanied
by a good deal of instant..expert
journalistic analysis to the
effect that the Red Olinese are
pn!Uy good fellows, after all. At
the same lime. the attack
opened upm the Presidenlfrom
ultra~ oatives, mainly in

• katim

Wl!l'e involved, it was surely DOt
any idle I* . Mlial lqle that

tonrd Red Clina
_nrmmgup
wou1d placate rr tunat llr~
N'IXOII'S liberal. and ....,vily
his ul~ ad•awies.
Their Current scftening toward

privacr between Washki&amp;fGG
and Peking.
.
.
Wbat 1a perfectly piain, ·
however,ls that !be Asian lilies
of the United Slates, alq with
Australia and New 7-l•nd,
have.been.deeply o!wbn; ud
that is all to !be bid. But 10 baa .
the Soviet Union m illl side; and
that Is all tD the good. If the
President actually goesllaoagb
with his China vilit (and It Is,
after all, possible that flllln
events may change his milld),
he ID\ISt extract some gemii!P
and suhiltantlal Chinese COD:
cessions in return.
If he does, he will be 1
national hero; if be does not, be
will be in profound lrouble, and
so will this natioo.
This is !be immellle and
brooding enigma of today!

lite COnservative party of New

him will neve.- last until election
day.
In sb&lt;rt, even if one cannot
accept lbe view thl!t this
bos'n 1 was nonpolilicalln the
heme sense, lheo the most that
can be made of it is that llie
President did hope · to
strengthen himself among the
political centrists of the

. him, bas strikiDg tatile
quality tD a degree aever
;,hjbjted by any oilier ..ticml
politicWI ~rome. 'ltis isa
I'JI(I"rity tD and a'hnnsl to
feel. in ac!Yaooe, !be I* .....
· Pl1blic reactian tD any gjvm
issue.
1'be assumption follows.
tberefll't!, that be was DOt
surprised by lbe' nature of the
('-aU.IP It''" hHI!S IIIII that in
this mallei' be was acting nat so
nudi above as simpty wtside
c!ameslic politicS. And if aD)'
. chnrslic political Cli

Ho, hum, and What Else is New?

Weather
Chance · of showers

Now You :Know

and
thundershowers m.o st likely
. south. Variable cloudiness
tonight and Wednesday,
showers and tlwndenllowel'8
likely south. Lows tonight In 5011
north and 6011 south. Highs
Wednesday in ~.

1be Battle of Bastings in 10&amp;6
1fas actually fought six miles
northwest or . Hastings,
· Eugland, m a hilltop where lite
small town of Battle stands

tndi,Y- .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 77

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1971

TEM CENTS

or Return
'lbere are c6en that may be !be first
By AL ROSSIIER Jr.
dripped dil:«lly off a la,er ofla'ia GDthe
UPI Spertl WrfteF
SPA&lt;E &lt;ENTER, Hw"".in (UPI)- 1110011.
''We haw . . . tbinp Clll this m' 'Gil
ApGIIo li's lbree .tronauts orbited the
In the of ICieDce today, thai.are very eviting huhoe - ' t reaDy
nwpinjj: ditLirtm fnm a tbreHay lunar mow what we haw anti! we eel the
blic:ll:," Slid h'. SIDey Zilt, a
mace ec&amp;iedition that already ramed as
America's 11101t rewarding ~1. 1l!f!l!ber of the ,.;,.,u• •i¥J'l !elm at the
David R.: Scott, Alfrul M. Worden and MlsliCil CGDtnll CaRer.
Tbe tlree ulrmanls will bead bd: to
la!!IPJI B. Irwin DMIIhrir IDII!Nind sbip
Etldeavoar as an orbiline ot vallicy, Earth We&amp; 1aJ aftemooD after En""'''PiDB braad llretehel of rugged mooo deavour uuipletes llill diiJs of ma~
li!nain that may be visited by IDBil mll)llirW. Worden ld a reta'd fell' limlr
Cl'bital fli.&amp;bt wbm be P' I Apollo U's
lfoot.
Stowul carefully ]D the nooks and II hom' mark """-Y.
Thlnday be will. petft; m a CD&amp;bow
cranni&lt;s of EndeavDID' was a prize haul of
2a7 powlds of PQieo. ScoU md lnrin !p8Criallt . . . miles fnm _.. to
CGIIected them GD lbree moon baggy s- retriew IDift tbaD a ..W., of 6lm fram
wnillll the l'&lt;lllq, cralael Endeavour's mapping cameras. Tbe
lliOUDIIin 9aDey they callul home for a 5pii£tiaft wiD &amp;p)•+ doom in the Plidfil:
Saturday.
reta'd • hDin ~ millates.
Scotl and lnrin cast all their tnulY
''We've got awfully
quarlen
IDOOII
lander, FalcGD, ll,cmday Digbt altB'
aadalot ofsluflloiii!M!aroand," Worden
1
NUl( [el aftlr illtl coli···
na.. t ltllltframalll' 1•1 N 'H
ferred their lr "V't tD Ende&amp;vour. "I frtm tile lliOCil'J BalleJ ._to • flad
tardezt- ud tiup with Wardtll in
ldDd ofliRd II aD by myaelf.''
AIIIOIIII the •"l()Jes are pieces of Endeavcur.
"I hope JOU let her 10 gently, Dave,"
cryllalllne nd that~ think may
said
ground communicator RDba't
be c!IJnb of tile prirnitift lunar crust.

.,,Itt

en...,.,.

A one-balf mill levy will be
placed m the Novanber ballot
for the conslru!:tioo, ft'building,
and resurfacing of streets and
roads in Beecb Grove Cemetery
Pomeroy COuncil decided
Monday night.
Council approved as an
emergency
measure
a
resolution directinc the clerk to
file the levy action with the
Meigs County Board of Electionsbefare the Aug. 4 deadline.
The onNJalf mill levy would
run from 1971 tbrougb 19'15 and
. produce $15,000.

CwncU noted that it would
have to advertise fw bids but
loot no action.
COUNCIL AT AN earlier
meeting on the hiring of ad:
ditiooal persmnel for !be police
force and payment of si$ leave
to members of the force, had
agRed ID ~ six bcJidays
for members of the police force
and instead ina'ease their pay
$11 a montb.
If any member of the force
called in sick 1111 a WCI'king
holiday, $36 would be dullnted
from their pay, but they would
l1tBER ~INas
be paid sictJeave. Mnmh:n of
Mayc.- Olarles Legar read a the police force are allo wed 1$
letlel' from the State Depart- days of sick leave a year.
ment of Higlnrays that the COuncilwoman Eima RDssell
town's share of the cast in said she had talked 1D the slate
movitlg the I* : .t water 6nes ewniner who aald IIlii in order
..ong SR 33 wbere a new high- to enforce the sick leaft P'Y
way is tD be constructed is and c1isa11ow the holidays u
estimated at $%1,•. The total crdimnce would have to be
may be paid in lhree in- pas ed by COUDcil Ma)'CI' Legar
staDmenll of $7,22&amp; each.
said !be examiner g&amp;ft him
Earlier the Stale bad said the similar advice.
dlanges would cost $41,000. Police Chief Jed Webster said
Council agreed tD tate the his deparlmeut .-led extra
matter to the village solidtor help and ._hod them befll't!
fCI' advisement .
theendoflbeweek. Cmnrilman
A 1ep: ntative of the Beltz Ra~ph Werry ·.suggested_ a
Enterprises of Lancaster policeman be hirm full lime
ouUined a poposal tD NuBric along with a meterman. Ollanc:il.
the exterier of City Hall. Fc.- had agRed the matten H a
$5,300 lbe company would great deal of study alld hnned
remove scale, clean, seal; the matter over tD the safety
remove Jooae P'Uy fnm all Clmlllillee at the last meetincsash, prime and reglue them;
Lucien Poulin, chain!ian of
windows and c*n would be the ClllllllliUee, said be bad
tb&lt;roughiy caullled, two coata several applications fell' extra
ofpaintgiventDtheaooduak, policemen and ~Ierman;
sandstone on windows and however,thecoomulleebadnat
fiUidatian would be sealed and been able to meet.
finished in natural sandstme A meeting of the CIIIIIIDittee
color mcrtar joints penciled In was called fw Wul-'ay at 7
gray' and two coats of NuBric p.m. when Webster will meet
app1k.t.
with the committee. The mallei'

Parte.-. "She wu a good --"
"aa, u was atlbat," tt!j&amp;d Sccllt. the
tired "i'D1'i"ider of !be $M5 aallim, ~
dly"'

...

Tbe lwiar module jettisoning was
delayed - ortlit lpaJw of WLt!i lainty
CD !be utn-DIII' (Etas to abetba their
., .... .., D•'ele batcb was airtigbL
Aller • tm'efal series oE tsts, lbe7 fGund
tbere was DD p ••elern
'!bey wure "C•
its, bcseitl, •

"ecaatim

~g~tnst

a

•·•leo

a

\lei .....
jl
liR lba1 wmdJ kiilul !be tine
Soya&amp; U j1NjMIMQtll in ~
FaklDillsler ns .U Clll a JIIISd' 4Ift tAl
deslnH:tim ... the ~ It Cllilbed at
:l,tei miiM per hoar - - Apollo w.
liuding site, cnatinc btildll felt by 1be
IM""Iuike meier ScoU and lnrin 11ft
belind
It lhe did oE of !be JDOIIl
clet&amp;- ting claJS mm have eM" Speilt 111
!(I'CI!, mel ScoU mel lnrin were rargr '
01W aslr~ llrNitl L Sb1J1.m lill1l
I!Mh to tae a .. ( • filii "''a ,.. c::ill
tally JIIISd' doom far tile aipt."
''Yc. reaDy .m it," be tllld lbem.
'Uiay, lbaJi: JOII," •ecOd Seed
Theaeamm said good Di«btatabout U
p.m. EIJI'.
0

m

suRE, TAfT AGREE
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Botb
of Ohio's GOP Senators,
W'tlliam B. Sube and R11ber1
TaftJr. Mondllyjoinultlolller
sena~ in voting api•t a llill
pr-oviding a $250 miliian l4(aD
guarantee fc.- !be ud' e~
Corp. The Jeli•lation wbidl
pa • G-41, was 3UII to lbe
White House.

AUIOS DAMAGED
Two vehicles wae heavily
damaged in an accident em
M1i1berry Ave. iii fi*Det"1 at
12:3t a.m. n-iay, Ptutioy
police said. A car dmal· by
Edward Start, 23. PtutiOi,
struck the left iear ,....ter
panel of a pldul car owned by
DonEblin,PuiMIOJ. 'lberewas
110 arreslc.- injury.

of sick leave, hoae;a, wiD no1 Sa •ice, Slate Department of
be decided at the special Education, at a cost of $1• per
meeting_
perscm. The five.day tnitJing
Henry .Werry, policeaDllll, wiD be beld at Ohio Slale
recomne•IM erecling a sip University Sept. ll-17.
·
m the anr ny street near OVW'ilman :Fraa*Iin Rime.Shammy's IJrive..In IIlii would believed that if a IDBil is wiDing
s1.!9 cars fnm pulling ooiD the to take time tD altaid the
bighway from the opposite school, COilildl shouJd ~ 1D
direction. The discussioa pay his expeii!IES, as lbe
- "is -·-• va=."
resulted fnm an II(• mt that training
-~
ou:unul at the site wbm a Council agreed tD send two
driver pulled from Shammy's IDI!II pi oviding they take two
cb i•ewilJ oat 1111to the biglnray &lt;&lt;Uses. Slaublr wiD altaid,
in the opposite direction.. with anolber pet 5iL tD be
OVW'il agRed to dinm the named. S1aub1r •lfendul the
mallei' with village solicitor -school last year.
tnd w. ()ow.
!tlending fti'E Lfgar. ru.er.
Joe Struble asked if aJIJIII:il Poulin, Mrs. R• D, Rqlb

II" C. DW IIUUTY SAUB- 'Die aew and &amp;
l!.h..•filit"'t brid: hnilding located at the !Dtenection of Union
Ave. and Stale Route 7 Bypass will liOOII bouse Johmie's
DeEly Salllll and ofliees of the Jolmon Ml!mry firm. 1be

Jobs Were Key
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
fmo- that 60,000 peums might
bave lost their jobs apparenUy
carrlod the day fCI' Lockheed
Ainnft Clrp. in the Senate's
au.- decision to save the big
defense conlract..- from bankruptcy. .

tD the (tio Slate File School Wallllll, clod&lt;; Pbyllis U..
sp•ISOotd by the Vocaliooal nessy, treasurer; Webstu,
Trade and IndDslrial Education Henry Werry, and Studile.

Entries DeadJine
For Fair Aug. 12
Mrs. Mickey King, fair board
seaetary, will be at the fair
beard office on the Rock
~ Faiigwunds fnm 10
.a.m. lllllil4 _,.m. nat Mcnlay
thrilugh Thursday, Aq. t
tlnugb Aug. 12, to accept
mtries fer 1be 1971 Meigs
County Fair.
Du§•fc.-mlriesistp.m.
1111 Aug. U far beef and dairy
cattll:, j . 1 and swine, and 4
p.m. m Aug. 12 fc.- all othe:i'
deparlmeuts. Ealries in the
..-.1 iD'sr :dlow will be ac-a:pted, bcwua, •till p.m. on
Aug. 11, the dale of the sboll.
·The Meip O.!J Fair will
N1Aug.17lliiCIIICIIADII-nud
mrm!wrslip tid:ets hne beai
·plarul Clll sale in Etaal Meigs
County li-mi
he II I. 'l1leJ
itdode DcwnigMs' Sl;ibio Sa'·
viceSiatimonllalile331Dtbof

Pomeroy; Sim~R~'s Gt«Eii,
New York ClolhiDg 8~,
Green Lantern. Sagar Run
F1oi!r Mill and SWilhei and

Lohse Drugs. PwiaOj' ; Waid
Quss Soos', Racinr; Bamo
Lumber Co., Clester, and
Miller Brothers Grocery,
Rutland.
Membership tichls are $3
each this year. The pwcba.it
entitles 011e to "*'"•+ slip in
the Meigs c-&gt;ty Agriollbnl
Sodetywbidlrtagesthe...-1
fair and pte •• , - 'm md
free parking for the allire fair :
Purchasers of membership
tichts are also eiiplle tD vote
c.-filefCI'Ibe llainloflliledDs
of the Society.
Directors of the llllciety fell'
!be 1m fair ino+Mie llilvid
Koblentz, Hagb P. CIIStu,
a.ril:s Wi!Jiams William K
Smith. Marrin
Waiiate
Braclcri,tnd('-oeg'. ,C. W.
Ilendeuon, .Danny S. Zktit,
Hatold C.......,, WIIIUD B.
Downie, L. E. B ,,.... Ra:
Slaw&amp;lot 111111 Bally Slaater.
E:o:41icio diredlln are C. E.
B'HesJee 111111 R*lt Boaal.

iq,

. . . wiD be owned and Gpet'ated "' Jfn. Jleoll Joy
Mrs. John . . WCI'IJ:ulas a beaty operatGr ID CO'gmh1s for
the past 13yean. She Is a fG:mera IMtof J!ull!!!d and •
llfBduale of Rulland lligb Sdaool. 1be Beauty SiiCil..m Opeil
someUme Ibis month.

st!K::!t/:!1 !.:!.·~ Jury
groups

food studa ••
the Melga CO..ty Fair ..ve
beea set for Weds oday.
Tbole pl••a!Dg 1o .....n 1a
1he M~lp Atblellc Buidul
booth •I lite fair are .. report
tD the office of Dr. R. R.
Plcke,aslii Mkldleport by 4:31
p.m. Wed• day ftr their
testa. Tbole plaa•late te .....n
ID the CheoRr Fire llepait.
meat booth darlale tile fair
are to report 1o tile oa rtr
Fire Houle betweea 7 111111 8
Wednesday evealag f..- !be
skin tests.
two

]D

Fails
T0 Reach
Deci·SI.OD

Sen. Marlow W. Cook, R-Ky.,
was credited ·with casting the
deciding vote for the bill in
Monday's 49 to 41 decision. He
said later he didn't like the way
he voted, but he didn't want to
put people out of wwk.
Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont.,
Judge John C. Bacoa
who also cast a surprise vote
dismlsaul the petit jury FtldQ
.
for the bill, said he went tD the
in Ohio vtrsas Marlon
floor prepared to vote against
Easterday of Racine, ludided
•
it; but he said the jobs issue,
for drlvinc while inllldr.ated.
and persuasion on that point
He will be trial apia iD Sepfrom Sen. Alan O'anston, Dteanber.
Calif., changed bis mind.
The jury said It .,. maNe to
"The arguments about unemw-=···"·"'~'m
.....,.,.,.
reach a verdict aft« tlane
•
•.-....Yo"•''.'\...........Nh~
ployment scared a suffiCient
hours
of
deliberatioa.
Easterday .bad plw •.., Dol
Govemca' John J. Gilligan number of senators to win
passage,"
said
Sen.
Lowell
guilty
tD the cilarle&amp; filed iD
anaounced today the apNoveii!her ,- 11'111. Eut . , il
p(jnlmailofDr. Charles Hoher Weicter, R-Conn.
of Gallipolis as a IDI'Diber of !be
Board of Tnastees of Ohio .:ed
filed lbe charee ag.m&amp;l
Uaaivasity. Dr. Holzer took provides government backing
for the
million in bank Ten !'"titions of candidacy for Eulerday, foiiDwbll the- of
office on the nine-member
loans Lockheed wants to finisb ~ts 10 the Novanber %~- • brealh+i!pr the first time In
board July :z&amp; and will serve building the TriStar. a 250- lions w~re filed Monday With Meigs County.
mtil May D, t a He succeeds pasiJenget' jetliner. If Lockheed the Me1gs Cwnty Board of Serving ,.. the jm'y .-e
Fred Crow oE l"w6oy whose
defaults on the loans, the Elections. .
. .
JIDJM ·Guion, TGDy TayiGr,
term eaPrul May 14.
Trea5111Y will repay them.
The deadline for filing IS 4 Ruth Bnidfcri, Aiilllll#a• d,
A native of Gallipnlis, the 54The closeness of the vote p.m. Wednesday·
Victor HyaeU Betty Stoat,
yar-GidSiiigi!UI is chief of staff
indicated the misgivings many Latest to file were Herman Kemelb
Ida 0
%
of the Holzer Medical Center at
lawmakers had about the loan Lond~nti.' forhmayor hofldsSyraAllencuse, OrtaSmllh. MnEiil hte , IJali
GaDipo1is
guarantee, or about the prece- a ~ 011 e now 0 ;
RIIUih and RayDIGai WikaL
He 'IIlilS a 1!137 graduate of dent it ep:esented.
G
..
L~pscomb,
for
Syracuse
1
Haverfonl
COllege
in
Sen. Frank Cburcb, D-Idaho, council ; Mrs. Kathryn Crow,
pbiladrJpJai•, Pa ., and received
said it amounted tD socialism for clerk of Syracuse Village;
DIVORCE AS!'ED
his doctorate in medicine from
for the ricli bolt free enterprise Dale Connolly' fc.- trustee of a.rging llfC* Jlellecl of
Olmell Unita sity Scbool of
fer the poor. Sen. J. William Olive Township; Gleam Rizer, duty· and extreme c:naeii:J,
lil edid,.. in l!Ml.
Fulbright, D-Ark.. said "the for Racine Village council; Nancy Aeiter, Racine, bas e1u1
h'. Hobia' is a Trustee of Rio question is wbelher government Richard B.-Rowe, for trustee of suit··fc.- 111varce fnm O..lw
Grande COllege, Regional Sla(, should iDJderwrite the equity of Letart Township; Werley Haley' Aeiter, P'wlaO),In lbe ..._.
Ad\oisGr fer the Ownmittee of
Lockheed stocldlolders....
f~ trustee of Ru~ Toan- Cwnty r-IDOii Plea a.t.
Regional M•dirnl Programs,
''We ought tD nationalize it, ship; Herman IIJ•chael, ~or The plaintiff Is ae Nne t&amp;l .,,
aade;a.as Clinical Assistant
which I am agaiMt, or let it go trustee of SahsN!fY Township; of 011e minor child.
Pi ol c.- of SUrgecy at the through reorganization in the Cha~les F .. Pyles fc.- mayor of
Universily of Cincinnati bankruptcy cOID'ts," he said.
Racme Village, and R.. A.
JEWEL i&amp;Di
lbpital.
President NiJ:1111 said "this Whittington for trustee of ''tUPLES, ItaiJ (UPI)
He is a iii"Dber of the Central action will save tens of Columbia Township.
Surgeons Association, the
1'lliefts atale · -J- ...... If
lltousands of jobs that would
jeaeli. fiiMr _, 1tn rna 1111
Commission
on
Nurses
otherwise
have
been eliminated.
UNION '1'0 MEEl'
'llife of 1 blppl.
F..rati4ln at OQo University
It
will have a majol' impact on
A lmeeU.tin~ ~.. beBrktiaheldyerstI .Adlllle . _ . wlilll 1111 ! C,
mel is a dipkmal on the
the
economy
of California and Loca ruon .. ww
a . was on 'fdllalila
American Board of&amp;lrgay. He
will
contribute greaUy ·to the p.m. '11llrsday at the Drea was pinal by •:wll. . a . . 11
lilld his .n and five cliildreD econlllllic growth of the COUIItry
Web$1er Post 39, Aarican the IIIOU. ..._'lilt 0' 1a
reside at $25 First Averue.
as a whole."
l...gion home in Poi111tt oyhalllul away two 111111..
Gal. . .

Dr HoJzer

===== -~C::.~'!.t~= Appointed
OU Board

..
I

·'

pet...

se '" tD haft cu6med !be

New fobrlc In 10 ounce denim or 50 pet. Fortrel

Sale .Prite SS.OO
ENGINEERS TO MEET
All operating engineers are
asked to make every effort io
attend a special meeting called
for 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
American Legion Hall in
Athens,
Homer
Hysell,
Pomeroy Route 2, said today.

WASHINGTON - II two
_.of nndmn .cba~ wilb
a wide . olmeut of peq11e ln
New ......., may be Slid tD
, _ IDJ guide, Ibis CIUitry Ia
aware neitbet of !be 1q1e ncw
the dnga Jyq ID Pt 'ile1•t
Niml's projected vi.sl.t with !be
leatets of Ommunlat Olina.
In aD that fcrtuigbt DOt -

Wi.hington
·White P•per

New Tax Levy Proposed

Boys Lee Prest

NEW APOUO STAMP
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
new U. S. stamp depicting the
Apollo 15 astronauts in their
lunar vehicle rover will go on
sale today at post offices in
Cape Kennedy, Huntsville, Ala.,
and Houston after the
astronauts officially cancel the
first stamp of the series on the
moon. The stamps will go on
sale at its offices across the
nation Tuesday. Approximately
200 million' of the stamps are
being printed.
REUNION SET
The annual reunion of the
families of Abraham and Mary
Will Bahr will be held at Forked
Run Lake Sunday, Aug. 8. A
basket dinner will he held at
12:30 p.m.

Excites Few

TumLe

News•.. in Briefs

LBJ AT LffiRARY
AUSTIN, Tex . (UPI) Former President Lyndon B.
Johnson, dressed in an
all - white su\t and accompanied by his wife,
Lady Bird, greeted thousands of visitors at the
Johnson Library Sunday,
signing autographs and shaking
hands.
·

countYorg~,Vampire

HUSKIES LOSE
CALI, Colomlda .(UPII· Argentina deleated · the
University of Wublagtoa
crew repre~e~~llllc the U..ted
Stales
for the gold medal
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck,
Wanda and Alice, have returned today In tbe eight-oared
frllll ~ two weeks vacallon. rowing final ]D the p Amerlcu Games.
They visited hiS brother, Donald
Brazil won botb of the other
Peck and family, Kansas Cllf!
Mo.: their daughter Ale Helen rowing llnal• •• today'•
Peck, Offutt Air Force Base, program, !be four-withoutNebrasks, who traveled with cox and doubles, wblle !be
them thropgh southern states United Stales gabled Olily a
where they enjoyed many in- sUver medal in the eiglll ud
teresting sights and . enroute a bron2e In doubles by Tom
they were guests of !ler uncle McKibbon of Huatlagton
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beach,,CalH., and John NIIDD
Pen!Dsula,
.
Bennett i.Jj Holiday, Fla. They of Palo . Verdes
Todo,'t FUNNY will par $1.00 for
were as far south as st. Calif.
eacll otiti~~al "f11nnr.. wml. Send gogi
Petersburg before returning
to: TDdoy', FUNNY, 1200 W~1f Third
'@;W~"~·~~···~~~~··~~iZ~&gt;;;l;~\I~I!Il"'fiS'~llfi&amp;j;~lt
St., Clnelond, Ohio 44111,
home.
Mr. and Mrs. David Wiseman
REUNION SET
and children of Rutland were
The annUal Weber reunion
guests of his grandparents, Mr. will he held Sunday at the home
and Mrs. Earl Starkey. The of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul,
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown W'Jselllall family will leave in a Sumner Road. Norman Weber
Pomeroy Monday at II a.m. few days for Cambridge, Ohio, is president and Rosemary
was 74 degrees, .under cloudy where he will be pastor of the Keller sectetary.treasurer.
Free Methodist Church there.
skies.

.. : ..·:·:· ... :·. .··.·.·. ·.·.· •.·

M
10 ore

"::r:i9':~~,.:.

In Elections rreen: =~e""'Ht~'!:r;.~

=a

webb.

7

P:.ta

'*" -,

�2-TIIIIlllll llelltlnei,MI!IIepor:t-l'lmeiOJ, o., Allpau.trn

.

3- The Daily SenHnel,lfll\lepu&lt;t-Pcaaaoy, 0., AllgUII3, 1171

Editorial ·Comment, Columns of Opinion

..

Open Election Coalition in South V~etnam Favored
•

•

'

. By

·•:

•

•••

~y

CROJdl,EY
WASHINGTON (NEAl
After the Oct. 3 presidential elections in South Vietnam,
a strong bloc of very influential (anti-Communist) Vietnamese officials plans to launch a drive to. amend the
· onstitution of the republic to make it JlOSSible for .mem•·ers of the Viet Cong and other Communists to run· for
office.

It is believed that these men will attempt to extract
a pledge of supj&gt;Ort from President Thieu· for this plan as
a part of the price for their support for his re-i!lectjon.
Tbese men, including s~me of the most powerful figures in the Saigon government, beli~ve that giving Communists the right to run for office is the only way to
end ·the war. and bring peace to their troubled country.
Tbey are cODfldent today, as they were not two years
ago, that in fair and open elections the Communists,
running openly as Communists, would be defeated hands
down.
·
·
Tbey
much less confident of the results if the
Viet Cong should systematically run CoiJ•munists parading as non-Red liberals or as conservatives.
·
Once this change in the constitution is made-or per-

a.re·

•

.

•

·, .

haps while the drive for a change is getting under way
-these men hope to induce the Saigon government to
negotiate in Pans with the Communists on recognition of
Communists arid candidates and freedom for peaceful
political activities in South Vietnam · as part of an overall peace package.
. •
These men have no objection to a "coalition government" if (and only if) it is a coalition resulting from
open elections. They are not prepared to ac~ept a coali- ·
lion by foree or by diplomatic agreement as part of a
compromise arrangement to end the war. That artificial
sort of coalition, they believe, would open ·the door to
North Vietnamese subversion from within and end all
hope for democracy and freedom in South Vietn~ .
The projected proposals would not be all one :way. Before Communist parties would be recognized, they would
be required to disband their armies and armed guerrilla
forces in the south and give up military force and political assassination as lt)eans for attaining their ends.
Just how this is to be accomplished is not clear. Historically, even a solemn signed-and-witnessed agreement
has never been binding in fact on underground subver-

when this was the real prob- your cycle, that might help.
lem.
Otherwise I think the best
Often the doctor has no thing you can do is follow
way of telling the difference your doctor's advice and be
and properly concludes it is glad you have one who isn't
better to operate and be anxious to rush you off to the
wrong than not operate and operating room unless he is
have a ruptured appendix. certain you need to go.
Tbe fact that you have been
having several of these epi- • Dear Dr. Lamb-1 was
sodes sug. ge.sts it i.s not ap- told by VA doctors that
pendicitis, even if append!- I. have pylorospasm. I .wou~d
ellis does often have earlier like to know what this mlindefinite attacks.
ment is and if there is .any
treatment and cure for it.
A second problem is painful swelling of lymph nodes
Dear Reader-The outlet of
in the abdomen, which is the stomach is called the
more common in young peo- pylorus and the valve that
ple and is hard to separate controls the opening is called
f r o m appendicitis. Then the pyloric valve. Tbe musthere is the old problem of cular wall of the digestive
disturbances in the digestive tube in this area can contract
tract, including irritable co- or go into spasm like other
lon, that may cause acute areas of the digestive tract
pain.
(colon or esophagus, for ex.
Thil; IS called a pyloample).
You should note the relarospasm.
tionship of your attacks to

-

r---------------------~--------------------

Voice along Broadway

1

j

I

'

starred -

and ran three weeks •... Conparable

elements In a London show would guarantee a hit

"

'I'IIE PLAY'S NOT THE

,,

THING, rr'S '1BE AllDIENCE ·

LONDON -'!'be lhealerst:lrsmorehealtbily
iD Tmdon than In ·Manhattan even ir some
glocm IIJVB ltllllpeCI It's a ·fl'klilus invalid
wiiiJIIe time wiD Clllll!, diacwrtesy a1 television
meally .... But lbere il greater interest in Lon-

dou'a legitimate tbealllr than cbneltllmlly in
New Yml's: Pricel for cue ueg are mar.veloualy inr:ql"'Mi'lll-1011 sliD may attend good
pla)'l fOI' $2.40 in tbe better pews and there is
little ~ealping, scept at "Hair," where a new
breed al umraahed, furtive ticket bustier lurks in
dark haDways and sidles up to passersby near
lhe !llallesbury Theater ID mutter his wares.
West End thesters offer more comfortable
play.goqlhan Broadway's, not just because of
lhe llhabby.genteel but merry bars that abound
In aD stage show houses .... The public Itself
attends lhe theater with an easy expectancy that
states better than words that they are acc:uaflmed to attending plays and musicals and
ltnow they will enjnu di erting
·
-,. a v
everung. .
In New Ycrk, audiences seem In contest With
lhe critics, a mood evidenced ,in an edgy combativeness over aeats even to lbe race to get an
Ulber ID seat them befoce others .... 'lbe grumpy
mood al theatergoers leavlq Broadway shows
·
in recent aeasons has been amazmg to us, the
C8111e undoubtedly the price of tickets, ~to '15
fQr the bolter musicals and even some of the
o!pld tunesho1n; it's an audience's wallets
the high ticket prices, especially if bought
· f
.... smash
fr ~a acalpe. r (up to -~;·a~
orsu~
':"
as 'No, No, Nanette and Sleuth ); benefit
!hester partygoers are even worse for they're
often made up of audiences that aren't em..!betic; they've simply been cajoled into
eJ[CJ'bitant if tax-deductible contribulions of $00
·
to $100 a ticket,
often for shows that haven~
·
made the critical grade and have been bought
far in advance of the reviews; when stuck with a
pg-in.a.p&lt;h, !essJh&amp;no6Til8sh.Qit show, benefit
audiences are tbe most insolently rude
gillherlnga !lis side al radical politics.
·
Not so in London : audiences
preponderantly
are made up on unglamorously intelligent
midtiJe.c:lass folk who attend in easy reverence ;
at least with respect .... '!'bey enjoy a preiibow
lliien1 and Intermission whiskies (small drinks,
amaD prices) and settle down to what !bey fully

va-

expect will be a sa~ e~perience.

~----Jt-1bs'ttake-the-unanimous·approval of

lmdon critics ID jam a theater, and even had
, tevlewa can't lrel!p fans away from a
Shakespeare or Shaw revjval· "Captain
•
·
··
Braubound s Conversion" has enJoyed a
ltllll'lly profitable e~agement despite critical
lhlftutlts creaky Abvlan antiquity; but Ingrid
Bergman In the star role Insured the run; we're
tthra)'lremindedofRobertSberwood'slaatplay,
"'l'be Rqged Palb,'' which received a doting
palt-WW U production with ~cer Tracy

...

run.

h•

• '

•

'

•

"·-·~.

••

Jean Pliul Sarlre's "KeaD" ivlls revived at
the Globe '!'beater, wilb Alan Bade! starred, and
keeps the crowds coming; we thought Hadel's
jlerfca'mance more sensatiOIISI than good, too
mincq, hardly virUe enough to justify the
flamboyant wlmllllizing of the famed actor
l!;dmundKean'slupine reputation in lhe naughty
. gospel according to Sartre; but his broad fardeal swipes and swoops delighted the Globe's
sellout audience the night we attended.
Robert Bolt's "Vivat!" Vivat Regina! " is a
line fat hit at the Piccadilly Theater; it's by the
author of "A Man for All Seasons," and the
fihnplays "Lawrence of Arabia" and ''Ryan's
Daughter"; and it has a lrilliant first of two acts
that plainly is enough ID delight London
audiences; just as plays don~ often travel
successfully across lbe Atlantic, either way,
perhaps we lacked the audience ingredient to
find it the unqualified enchantment London has;
it Is a great hit and will be produced on Broadway. 1
1 ,
•
There s a spate of plays and movt~ about
the Mary QJ.een al Scots versus Queen Elizabeth
I. Hal Wallis just finished a movie starring
Vanessa Redgrave on the subject and Robert
Bolt expects his play similarly to be filmed; they
• an ·
,can t Wlll.
•
At the Duke of York's '!beater IS a slender •
c:beerful little (tiny!) comedy caUed "The
Jockey aub Stakes,'' starring Wilfred Hyde
White, a consummate light comedian who
manages almost alone ID turn minuscule
. .
.
material mto an everung of English~acter
laughs and giggles, often due solely to the star's
practiced technique, sheer burlesque on a muted
note; it's about a group of elegant Jockey Club
members caught in cheerful swindles, fixing
•-Iresand droll maru·pulation
races; WI'th dauble....
· tbe d'
b
t
ter of
of . a.u Ience Y a pas mas
scenestealing .... Although Robert Coote and Godfrey
&amp;unner aren'tfar behind Wilfred Hyde While in
pilferinglbescenery ... Wedoubtitwlllcrossthe
Atlantic successfully but it's marvelOus on its
local
, ·
,
Our 12-and 13-year-oldshad become Agatha
C!ristie fiends the last two years, and lhey saw
and enjayed Aggie's "The Mousetrap,'' now in
Its 19th London year (it was a quick-abject flop
on Broadway). Tbey pronounced tbe performances. ..corny. , while delighting in Its
switch.ending.
America has inflicted (besides "Hair") the
incredibly dull and dirty ''Oh! Calcutta!" which finds Its prurient niche apparenUy in· · 1 Robert M ley' "H the Other
ternationa ,;..;
or. s _ow
Half Loves IS a happy hit, tho Its Broadway
copy sank swiftly .... London's summer total of
shows is about double Broadway's, most of the
tatter now being on "twofers,'' two tickets fOI'
one.
te
. nns

Tbere are a lot of things
that can cause this, and it is
similar to the hyperacidity
or u I c e r problem. This
means that certain spicy
foods, too much coffee, alcohol and cigarettes all can
aggravate 9r cause the problem . Dietary management,
and sometimes the same
medicines used to treat
ulcers are helpful. Antacids
help reduce the acidity and
medicines used to block the
action of nerves to the stomach relax the pylorus. In fact
some cases of pylorospasm
are caused by a small ulcer
near the pyloric area.
(NEWSPAPU ENnRPIISE ASSN.)
Pf.a~e ,.,.,

rour qwst;o..s and

conllllien&amp; r. l..awrtRCe E. Lamb,
M.D .., in cate of t~is fHipet. Wltil•
tk. Lamb cG•not ••swer itwlifidfiGI
letters, h will a•snr leffets ol
general interat in lufute colulfiiiJ.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Setting Up
9th Trick

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WEST

EAST

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Is America's love alfalr with the automobile turning

r--------~------------------1

Help Us l

!Helen
I

I

I

By Helen Bottel

,

.l

YOtrrH ABKED FOR IT!
This 400lumn is f&lt;lr young people, their problems and
pleasures, tbeir troubles and fun. All with tbe rest al Helen Help
Us! it wekQJ!es laughs but woo 't dodge a serious question with a
lrusb«f.
Send your teenage questiOIIS to YOU'111 ASKED FOR IT, care
al.Helen Help Us! !lis newspaper.
SISTER I:XJFSN'T NEED SNOBIII.SliNF:s&lt;;
Dear Helen:
My !i-year-old sister was dalillg a Z.,ear-old man and got
p-egnant. So tbey had to get married, but they divorced in four

•sz

.Void
.AQ97
SOUTH (D)
.AQ

.A102

• K 1093

.K6S3
East-West vulnerable
West North East South
lN.T.
3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

'----------'
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Put yourself in the South
seat. You are in a perfectly
normal three no-trump "Contract. It should be a laydown,
smce dummy has 12 highcard points opposite your 16,
but the heart lead has hit
you with only one stopper in
the suit. Yo~ hav~ to develop
two club tricks If you want
to score your game.
You hold off until the third
heart lead. Then you take
your ace and play a couple
of r~unds of diamonds _before
commg off dummy With the
deuce of clubs. East pl~ys
the sev~n and you go up with
your king. West shows out
and, while you are over one
hurdle, thiqgs look mighty
bad because you can only
count up to a total of eight
lrtcks.
Th
·t d
e on1y way o eve1op a
ninth is to set up a second
club and there sits East with
three apparent tricks in the
suit.
.
They ar~ only apl;'arent tf
you do a little countmg. You
play out the last two diamonds and East chucks two
spades. He can't afford to
chuck· a club.
Now you know that East
s~arted with four clubs, two
diamonds, three hearts, two
srades and two other cards.
1 you have watched the
play of the hearts, you can
assume that these two other
cards are both spades. You
have a complete count. You
cash the two spades and
lead a club to dummy's jack.
East wins the trick but is
d~wn to clubs. and ~as to
gtve you your mnth tnck.

Fish Documenter Angles
For Bigger Things

today· sFUNNY

lz•.

O!lwns, who ctbviaaBiy c.ne

here phued for

·

J,

TODAY'S QlliSik)li
. Vou bid four '-rts- .rour
partner continues :lo five diamonds' What do you do now!

•

'· ~

So well have some flowers
clone in adopted lands that
,,._._ «q;m
- - IS
· .org
• ....
.......
....en. Ho1lalld's tulip, for instance.
Originated in Turley and the
~uisteo!ars returned from
Mexico Ia Elli'llpe with the
"'F ralcb" miulgold.
•

_

.,

-

.398 24

O

Wednesdilr-s Games
x.San Diego at Chicago
Cincinnati at New York .
Atlanta at Philadelphia, mght

This Week's Specl;o!

68 PONTIAC
Safari Wagon, V-8, auto.,
P .S., P . B. .' green with
matching int., only' 36,000

Bottineiii -

miles.

St., New York City, Ntw York .

• By Motor Route where

carriW

month $1 .75. By mail In Ohio

r-----,.------...,:
a':'d
T...,' f
.
, Snc

W. Va., One year . $1.4.00.
months 17 . 25 . Three
._11 1. . UN~T ~ ,.,. SI.CD fw . m~nt~s , ... SO. Subscription
,.: T=U~N{ .;;;~~1::4 . prtc~. •ncludes Sunday T1mes .
St., c~ ..... Ot.W: 441114 .
. Senll~el.

- -- -

ing wt ROllS Grimsley. Wayne
Gnnger came on to retire the
side.

UaJ Carroll, the Reds' third
pildlel', went the final two inDing!, holding lhe Mets runless
w two bits. He got the victory,

t

Downing.·

Chllcls

Age~,

Inc. .

200 N.2nd

MIDDLEPORT

MaUack, replaced after the
eighth, was lhe loser. He is
now lh'l.
A doubleheader was scheduled tonight with the Reds'
Wayne Simpson (2-4) going
against Nolan Ryan (a.8) in lhe
opener. Jim Merritt (0-10) was
to oppose the Mets' Charlie
Williams (~) in the nightcap.

1

Said.
Clarence Gastoo, one al the
p&lt;lWef' hitters CariiGD referring too, tr.M'IJed the Sl
Louis southpaw fOI' San Diego's
only SCOI'e when be slammed
his 14th home run of lbe
in the first inning: Colbert
followed with 1 hard sinllle to
left but CarltGD then relittd the
next 14 men be faoed befcae
allowing a single by Enm
Hernandez in lbe sixth.
San Fran at St.louis. nigh!.
Los Angeles al Houstan. night
Pitts at ·M ontreat. night
x-Resumption of a S!!'$1 ! aded
game prior to regular game

lriteraattc.al • ··••

sta-.p

By United Press t - l i o u l
WLI'd. G!I
Rochester
63 " .5lt

Tlck!water

6S 46 .516

Charleston
60 " 511
Syracuse
'!1'1 46 .56l
Richmond
S. ss .oilS
louisville
st S1 .412
Tot edo
«&lt; 61 .J1II
Winnipeg
11 69 .319
Monday's Resoolls
Richmond 3 ~alor 1
Rochester 7 Syracuse ~
Charleston J Louisville 2
(Only games 5chediAedl

lYJ
3

10
t:ZV.
2;J'h
2SYJ

"You'll Like Our Quality
War ot Doing Business."

GMAC FINANCING
t~n-s.~

0poR

~~

£•11io• 'Tit I:M

Tll5 P.M. Sal•

'

(l~th).

Oak
000 100 1~ 2 I 0
K.C.
001 000 000- 1 • 0
Segui, Knowles (1), Fingers
(7) and Tenace; Sptiltorlf, Vorl&lt;
191 and Kirkpatrick . WP-SeQul
(H) . LP-Splitlorff (4·•1 . H~­
Tenace(4th). Kirkpatrick (8th).
Milw
000 000 1~ I • 0
Cal
100 100 Olx- 3 7 1
Patlin, Morris (8). Sanders
181 and Rodriguez; May (7.6)
and Stephenson, Moses (9). LP
- Patlin 19·12). HR- Repoz
lith).
N.Y.
~ 010 .00 020- 7 10 0
C!ev
000 000 000- 0 4 2
Peterson (10·11 and Munson ; ·
Gibbs (81 ; Paul Hennigan (8),
Mingorl 191 and Fosse. LPPaul 11 ·21. HR-Michael 13rd).
Minn
102 000 1102- s 15 2
Chi
021 0&gt;10 OOx- I 9 0
Perry , Gebhard Ill and
Mitterwald ; Bradley. Johnson
!91 and Herrmann. WPBradley 1!0·91. LP-Perry 112
12) . HR- Ke!ly (lstl. Andrews
17th) .
Wash
1102 000 500- 1 s 2
Del
500 200 llx- 11 13 2
Broberg, Pina II). Brown 13)
Shellenback (S), Thompson (6).
Cox (7). Grzenda (7) and
Billings; ,Coleman, Perranoski
(7), Timmerman (8) and
Freehan. WP- Timmerman (5·
41. LP- Cox 15.61 . HR- Horton
1171hl. Burroughs llst).

line drive in the eighth inning
to belp the Astros down
Chicago.
Ferguson Jenkins, trying to
become the National League's
first Ill-game winner, suffered
his ninth loss. Don W1Jsoo, ~7,
pitched a two-hitter against lhe
Cubs and slruck out nine to win
the duel with ·Jenkins.
Lee May clouted his 28th
homer of lhe season to break a
2-2 tie in the ninth inning and
Johnny BenCh drove in three
runs as Cincinnati posted its
sixth win in 13 · meetings with
the Mets.
May. first up in the ninth,
drilled an 0-1 pitch over lhe
center field fence off Mets'
starter and loser Jon MaUack.
Tony Perez followed with a
triple and BenCh made it 4-2
with a single.

Hous
Jenkins (17.9) and Cannizza·
ro ; Wilson (9-7) and Hiatt. HR
- Hickman (lith).

UPI Sperts Writer
Mike Andrews got !mocked
dolm, but it was the Minnesota
Twins wbo gQl counted out.
Al:dtews, a bustling second
lte'"lll!n rcr the Chicago White
Scm, was cleded by a Jim
Peny fastball in the fifth
illiUg 1 Mooday night but
jumped ID bis feet and hit the
next pildl !01' a three-run
burner to lead-the White Sox to
a 7~ vil:tOI'y anr the Twins.
FAI ,llonmann's run«oring
single g;ne the While Sox a ~
lead in. the liflh and preceded
Andrews' tum at the plate.
f\uy's 1irs1 pitch sent the
man sprawling to
the dirt, bnt be got up, dug in
and llil Perry's next pitch into
lbe upper ded: al lbe left-field
stands f&lt;lr his sevenlb homer of
lbe year.
''Peny'• pitch wils a real
btddouu pildl and at first I'
lhoogbl it was going to get me.
l6s fas1baD moves in on rightbondrd llillers,'' said And! ews.
"Peny tbnnrs a lot of sliders

*'*"' •

Steve Dunfee, The Daily Sentinel's S.l guard in lhe Middleport Sununer Baskelball League, won league scoring honors
wi lb an impressive total of 247 poin&lt;s in 13 games for a 19.0 SCOI'ing
average.
The No. 2 scorer was also a Sentinel player, Doxie Walters,
with 242and an 18.5 average. Right behind was Jeff Morris of The
Ohio Valley Bakery, who led the loop for most of lbe season but
finishing third with a total of235pointsandan 18.1 average.
Dunfee and Morris are the co.captains of the 1971-72 Meigs
Marauder baskelball team.
The league's highest average belonged to Jeff Tyo, who threw in
22.0 pts . per game in 10 games. RCil Ferguson, O.V.B., had most
points in one game, 46, against Mark V.
G

Ron Ferduson, O.V.B.
Rich Ba• ey, Dail~ Sentinel

Tom Cooke. O.V . .
Mike Sayre. MiJrk V
Cin
200 000 1102- 4 8 0 Bill Chaney, MiJrk V
N.Y.
000 1102 000- 2 7 1
Grimsley, Granger (61. Car.
roll (8) and B.ench ; MiJtlack,
Taylor (91 and Grote. WPCarro!! 16-2). LP- Mat!ack (0·
3). HR-MiJy (28th).
S.D.
100 000 000- 1 5 o
S. L.
010 100 lOx- 3 10 0
Roberts, Miller Ill and
Barton; Carltoo (lHI and
Simmons. LP- Roberts (8·12).
HR- Gaston 041hl.
L.A.
000 010 013- S 8 1
000 000 &gt;100- • 10 0
S.F.
Osteen, Brewer 17), Pena 181.
Mikkelsen 191 and Ferguson.
Sims 191; Cumberland. Johnson
(9), Hamilton (9) and Dietz.
WP-Pena Ferguson (2nd),
Garver (Sth).

Chicago Rally
Top Twins 7-5
IIJ I'Bm McMANE

Steve Dunfee: Shooter

S1eve Dunfee , Da ily Sentinel
Dox ie Wal1er s, Daily Sentinel
Jeff Morri s, 0 . V. B.
Jell Tyo, Mark V
020 000 OOx- 2 8 1 Tony V .ugha n. Adolph's

the Orioles in the AL Easl. ·Carl
Yastrzemski also homered for
BosiDn, which wiped out a fourrun first inning deficit. Boog
Powell and Dave Johnson
homered for the Orioles.
Gene Tenace broke up a
pitcher's duel with his fourth
homer of the year in the
seventh inning as the A's
so I figured he would throw me handed the Royals their seventh
one on lhe next pitch. I wanted straight loss. The lriumph
to be really because all 1· moved the A's 13'h games
wanted to do was reaCh out and ahead of the second place
hit it through the middle.
Royals in the AL West
"All I can say was that I was Jim Northrup's run«oring
surprised when he came hack double snapped a 7-7 tie in the
with a high inside fastball. eighth inning and belped lhe
Whenever I get knocked down Tigers defeat the Senators.
it makes me a little mad and Willie Horton homered for
more determined."
Detroit in the game and Jeff
In other American League Burroughs hit his first major
games, Boston defeated Balli- league homer for Washington.
more, 7-f; Oakland edged Gene Michael's two-run hoKansas City, Z-1, Detroit mer capped a four-run fourth
outslugged Washington, 11-7; inning and Frit Peterson tossed
New YOi'k beat Cleveland, 7-4, a four-bitter for his first
and California topped Milwauk- shutout of the season as the
ee, 3-1.
Yankees blanked the Indians.
Los Angeles edged San Second baseman Horace Clarke
Francisco, 5-4, Sl Louis beat of the Yankees had a busy
San Diego, 3-1, Philadelphia night as be accepted 16 chances
blanked Atlanta, 4-11, Houston flawlessly.
edged Chicago, 2-1, and CincinRoger Repoz' solo homer in
nati defeated New York, 4-2, in the fourth inning supported
the only National League Rudy May's four-bit pitching
action.
and sparked the Angels'
Reggie Smith drove in three triumph. May pitched hitless
runs with his 23rd h&lt;mer and a ball fOI' 6 1-3 Innings en route to
sacrifice fly as the Red Sox his seventh victory in 13
moved to within 4'h games of decisions.

OOLUMBVS (UPI) - 11le
featured eil!hth nee at Scitlto
Downs Monday ail!ht. a ~
..ce at cue mile, ns b.r

11UIIersBellyin2:tl,l'I:IIDtioc
OOUJIOiliS (UPJ) - Lee
SS.40 S!.• and S!.•T:etioo ns whisked away to
-Rolewasrc•Hfl,pDJiDc be bootied by "the greatest
$2.&amp;0 and · $1,411, wifb Stalet pdlflle in the world" but not beMila in tbe tbolr JP11 re1a • g fcore be pocteled another ,1,000
lf!ow!ay fOI' winning lbe sixth
._.. 0+-nt- Pro-Am Golf

SIDEUNES ADVIII!D
NEW YORK (UPf) - 8eBet
by uncertainties, the stock
mamt tiiltently is lorhd iDto
a clefettaift ptilbae, wdilc
to
ht d a. ......
tDIIIl
Iikel:r will remaiauo •lillh!re
are sij!ns o1 resolution (li
ecOilOIIlic pt•....., iL' •til
stockpricesEl'Odetothepcilltcl
over~ SliP addl. 1o
the .-time,lbe litm ..,1nc1ers and imeslllrs tu iftDiin
the si!Wbes.

m

n

TMI-MII.
A 1 ' galiw fnm El Paso,
Tu., Jed by Mayor Bert WIIlial!l,....tedlbeleadingmon"'1 wilau5o '*'the PGA tour back
lollis.....,bometownwhere
be ns to be bonored today.
· IIIII. befwe • ldl, Trevino,
piiJing llis - t locoR,. fun-¥n"·
illl style, cr maybe even lllCft
so, fired • ~...... 85
aver the 5,511- )'lid Columbus
Country 01111 ccau *·
1\eoinu, w11o plans to take
lbe next dJI4IIe 91 weeb off
fr&lt;m the ~ pint!, stood at
a
~ lllluch lbe first
n holes Jlaada)o, but topped six
sbols all pal' daring lbe final

=•

seven holes with four birdies
and an eagle three on tbe 4Myard 15th.
Trevino's 6s over the Colwnbus course; site of the 196f PGA
tourney, was three shots better
than his cloeest challengers. Ineluded in that group were Orville Moody' Steve Reid, a.ar1es Coody, Lee Elder w amateur Robin Obelz.
Obelz, who plays to a six
handicap, fired eight natural
birdies and had four bogyes to
lead his team to the best.ball
title with a 17-unileril&amp;r ~Jim Logue, ·asaiatant pro at
Columbus Couiltry Club, Bllbbed
on'the winning team for tbe wteran Art waD who was a last
minute cancellation and picked
Up the winner's share of $150.
Five players, Gay Brewer,
Dale Douglass, J. c. Snead,
Fred Marti and Tom Welllkop(,
had 68's; while George Jor-,

'

13

2~7

13

242
235
220

13

10
13
12
13
12
13
!l

208

200
18.4
146
122
10.

Av
19.0
18.5
18.1
22.0
16.0
16.6
14.2
12.4
10.2
8.6

Pomeroy and Racine copped
victories Monday night in the
opening round of the Second
Annual Cheshire Pee Wee
Tournament.· Pomeroy scored
two runs in the bottom o! the
sixthinning \oedge BidweU,''hl.
Racine defeated Addaville, 8-4
in the nightcap.
Tonight, weather pennitting,
Greene will meet the Mason
Angels at 6:30 p.m. and
Cheshire will tangle with New
Haven . All games are played at
the Kyger Creek Employees
·

Club Diamond.
Trailing 3-2 going into lhe
bottom of the sixth, Pomeroy
scored two runs on four hits. M.
NOI'ton and R. Blaettner led the
winners with two hits each.
Bidwell's only hilwua slnl'e
by B. Howell in the fifth inning.
Bidwelllrailed Ugoing into lbe
fifth but knotted the score with
Howell's single and three walks.
Scoring in every inning,
Racine stormed from-behind 1D
defeat Addaville, 8-4. Addaville
took a W lead in the first but
Racine scored three to cut lhe
lead to 4-3. Racine moved in
PAT TO CHINA?
front with a two run second
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Pat frame and added two additiOilal
Nixon says she would like to runs in the third.
accompany the President on his M. Huddleston and J. Powell
upcoming lrip to China but she led the winners wilb two singles
hasn 't been invited yet. "I'm each. S. Russell paced tbe
putting my name on the signup losers with a double and single.
list," she told reporters Mon- Powell was the winning hurler
day, adding "there are a lot of while G. Nibert was charged
other names on the list too." ·with the loss.

In the News

NEW CHIEF of the Atomic
Energy Commission,
James Schlesinger replaces
r e II r In g AEC Chairman
Dave Eichbelbeiger and Bob Glenn Scaborg. SchleslnJ:ei'
W sh two-wtd
70 ,
bas been assistant dlredor
ynn at
er par s. of the Olflce of Mana~:e­
Inotherteamscoring,Snead's ment and Budget. SeahorJ:,
squad had a best-ball 56, the a Nobel Prlu wlaner and
teams of Babe Hiskey and cltalrmaa since 1111, Ia reBrewer had 57's whi\e Elder's turalac to lhe University
and Weiskopf's teams finished of California at Berkeley.
wilh 58'S.
Wllile Trevino, who teed off
in the morning, captured
most of the early gallery, hometown favorite . Jd~ck
Nicklaus with ~orne Ian
Bob Hope and his group
drew the big following in the
afternoon. Nicldails; keeping up
a continuing banter with Hope,
shot a 75.
Another attraction was Byron
Nelson who WilD the first of four
Columbus Invitational Tournaments in 1946 and was presented a plaq~ commemorating the
25th anruversary of !hat event.
Nelson, now a television golf
commentator. shot a 74.

SuperMex Pockets $1,000

TP

Pomeroy, Racine
Cop Tourney Wins

BUTLERS BETSY WINS .

•

'

Br United Preos International
Ameriun le.gue
8os
0~~ 011 JOl- 7 ll 1
Sal
..... 000 1)00,-· . s 0
Tiant, Lee 11) and Monlgame·
ry: Leonhard. Dukes 161, Pena
(7) and Etchebarren. WP- Lee
(9·2). LP- Dukes IJ.Sl . HRPowe!l OSihl, Johnson (12th),
S m i t h I2Jrd), Yastrzemskl

· National League
Ia otM- National League WestpaCMettingGiants, whose
All
000 000 000- 0 11 0
games . l'lliladelphia blanked own winning streak was Phil
000 JOO lOx- • 10 0
Stone. Mc()Jeen !8) . and
Aiianta, 4-11, Hooston edged snapped at four.
Williams;
1!0-9) and
Cbirag11 Z-1, Las Angeles nipped
Jesus Akou, who has batted McCarver. Wise
LP- Stone 14·4 ).
San Ftancisco 5-4, and Cincin- in 16 runs in his last 13 games, HRS...Johnson l26thl . Freed
mil downed New YOi'k 4-2.
singled in lhe winning run and l•lhl.
In lbe American League made a good catch of a looping
Chi
000 100 000- 1 2 0

St. Louis pitching staff, expr ss d more deligbt in allowing only one walk than in
winning his 15th game of the Bostoo defeated Baltimore 7-f,
season.
New Yml sbul out Cleveland 7Carlton allowed oiiiy 1M bits .. Oakland edged Kansas City
Monday ~bt in pi!rbiq( the Z-1,Detroitoutslugged Washingsecond-place Cardinals to a 3-1 ton 11-7, Chicago downed
triumph over lhe San Diego MiDIII""l*a 7~ and California
Padres.
bmt Mihraulee 3-L
Carlton, only n.o viclories Deroo Johnson and Roger
shOI't of his pasmal aJl.time Freed bit back-tc&gt;back homers
high of 17 set in 19lil!l, an. utd in lbe fourth inning to belp
only one pass in lbe vr to Rick W'Ise reeo~ d his lOth win
Nate Colbert-in t"eeOiding his in 1' dedsions. Wise allowed 11
15th victory against six dofeals. bits and survived a handful of
Tbe :IS-year old left.bander, jams wbile striking out live and
rebounding fr&lt;m a 10-19 all- walking 011e.
season last year. eap1 1
Steve Garvey's two-out,
amarement at his ......,.., llllw:un homer in the ninth
control.
i:miDg broughllbe Las Angeles
"I don't believe r.e had 1i1J J.lodtl IS a co:ne-from-behind
other ooe-walk pmes tis ,_. victAiry om the Giants.
although I've had a lilt ol' 11 The 1'ictory was the fourth in
walk games,'' Slid Carllan. "I a . - fOI' the Dodgers and
just haven' t bad that much . pulled them to within eight
'· games of the National League
control this year."
Although Carlton lllllllljled ...
bold lhe Padres in cbed; be
admitted to being a liUII!
nervous about lbe close ~
''I was just lr'yq to keep the
little guys off bur befu:e their
big power bitten Cll!lll' up," be

s•.

retts : · De -

, service not .aiv•U•ble : One

nms back in lhe sixth, knock-

USED CARS

Galll9htr, Inc ., 12 ~1st 42nd
Subscrip1ion

But the Mets got the two

UPI Sports Wrikr
·
Steve Carltm, wbo bas
emerged as lhe suprise of the

\ ·.• .• '
,
X!Eijl;!ii:Iili!C:::=:::...)

advertising

livered by curler where
6 IS , avoiloble 50 cents per ~k.

'-line to sccre both runners.

By NEIL

I

Pomeroy, Ohio.

! .

drtwe a shot down the third his sixth against two losses,

Cards Nip Padres, 3-1

West
W. L. Pd. Gl
Oakland
67 3'1 .632 ...
Kansas City 52 Sl .505 ll'l:l
California
S3 5I .42 16
.
\
Chicago
50 5I .&lt;167 1711:1
MiMesota
4 ST .451 1Blh
..
~ Milwaukee
45 61 ..as 22
Monday's Resu tis
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
lr Uniied Press international Chicago 7 Mimesota s
Leading S.tters
New York 1 Cleveland o
National Le119ue
Detroilll Washington 7
G. AB R. H. Pet. California J Milwaukee 1
Torre, SIL 109 ~18 63 1S2 .364
Bdut.Chl IOL o!IIS 67 142 ,351
Today's~lllel'ik'-n
Garr, All
107 A38 71 W .336
Minnesota (Kaat 8-8) at
Brck. St. L 106 437 86 W .336 Chicago (Harten 6-11) , night.
C!mnl, Pt
91 36• 60 122 .335
Washington (McLain S.lS) at
Sgnl!n, Pit
94 365 43 121 .332 Detroit (Niekro J-4), night.
Cash, P it
75 302 S8 98 .32S
New York ( Kekich S.S) at
Dav is. LA 106 427 62 138 .323 Cleveland &lt;Foster 6-10) , night .
Alou. St.L 100 410 55 132 .322
Boston (Siebert l«l at
Jones, NY
88 331 38 106 .320 Baltimore (Palmer 12~1. night.
American league
Milwaukee (Lopez 2~) at
G. AB R. H. Pet. California (Wright 1·2), night.
Ol iva , Min
BS 32'1 5I 120 .365
Oakland (Blue t9·4l at
Mrcr, NY
lOS 378 68 126 .333 Kansas City (SpJiHorff 4·31.
Otis, KC
97 J8J S8 120 .Jll night.
Rchrdt, Ch i 91 336 J'l ·· l04 .310
Rojas. KC
98 360 48 m .308
W•esday's ~mH
Tovar,Minn 102 .a• 1&gt;4 lJO .307 Minn at Kan City, 2. Twi·night
Rtlnmnd, Bat
Milwaukee at Oakland, night
90 2'17 SA 90 .303 Chicago at California, night
Mnchr. Wash 91 2'11 34 88 .302 washington at Detroit, night
Hwrd. Wash 103 384 42 115 .299 New York at Cleveland, night
Smith, Bos 107 413 6J 122 .2'15 Boston at Baltimore, night
Home Runs
National League
National League: Stargel!,
E.st
PiN 38 ; Aaron, All JO ; MiJy ,
'IV. L. Pd. GB
Cln 28; Johnson . Phil 26;
Pittsburgh
67 · 41 .620 ...
Robertson. Pit 22.
St. louis
5'1 ¥1 .s.t6 8
56 50 .528 10
Americal\ League: Me!too, Chicago
New
York
SA 51 .514 11 '12
Chi 25 ; Smith. Bos and Cash,
Phitadetf"ia
U 61 .435 20
Del 2J; Petrocelli, 8os, Oliva,
Montrea
43 65 .398 24
Minn and Murcer. NY 20.
West
Runs S.tted In
W. L. Pet. GB
Natianal League: Stargell,
Pitt 100; Torre, St.L 87 ; Aaroo, San Francisco 67 .u .604 ...
All 79 ; Motanez, Phil 7J ; Los Angeles 58 51 .532 81
~ S3 .509 10 1:1
Houston
Johnson, Phil 70.
Atlanta
5I
SS .509 1011:1
Amtrican League: Killebrew,
Minn 7J; Petrocelli, Bos 70: B. Cincinnati • SO 61 .450 17
39 71 .JSS 27'h
Robinson, Salt, Murcel', NY and San Diego
A1oudly's
Results
Sando, Oak 61 .
Cincinnati 4 New York 2
Pitching
National League: Jenkins, Philadelphia 4 Atlanta 0
Chi 11·9: Ellis, Pill JS.5; St. Louts 3 San Diego 1
Carlton , St.L 1s..l; Downing , LA Houston 2 Chicago 1
1).6; Johnson, SF 12-4; Dierker, Los Angeles 5 San Francisco •
( Ontr games scheduled)
Hou 12-5: Stoneman, Monll2·9.
American LNgue: Blue, Oak
19·• : Lo!ich , Del 16-8; Dobson ,
T..Uy's Probable Pitchers
Batt lH; Sieber!, Bos J4.6;
Atlanta (Reed 11-7) at
Cuellar and McNally, Batt lH; Philadelphia (Shorl6-12), night.
Cu!p, Bos 13-8; Hunt.,., Oak llSan Diego (Arl i n .S.1~) at St.
11 .
Louis (Reuss 10.10), n1ghl.
Chicago (Jenkins 17-8) at
Houston (Dierker12-5), night.
Los Angeles (Sutlon 10.10) at
San Franciscu (Bryant 7-7) .
Pittsburgh (Blass 11..4) at
Montreal (Morton 11-12), night.
Cincinnati (Simpson 2·• and
Merrill 0-10) at New York
(Ryan J1.8 and Williams J-SL 2,
Twi.night.

Second class postage Pllid at

National

the •tbl Ilea who DWRil tile
Americus wt Ill thl!ir CIIIIDtnanditW lead in cGid m-'"s
wi1b trltlltqilll • Y. ltiji,
W••mabr .,.... ane cl the
games' lllCIIt WI ' I dlampiOillbips - the Decalblaa, a
gl"'e!Jing l!lfti!Dt ""'w!itim
over two days wtae wi
Is
called the "Best All-Maul
Athlete." The D ,_--old.Des
Moines, Iowa, 11m' led 'l'irt.IJ;y
aD the way lbtongb the bg.
grind fD win willl ,,~~~ ,-.. -~~~~li@WilfliWi~.RW~~J%lU:Mf1~UW1tWW51K~@Wf

Ding run with the score tied a-2,

4365

992-2156, Editorial Phone 992 • .
7151 .

reprtsentative

ud

NEW YORK (UPI)-Lee May but Tony Perez tripled and
had just one hit Mooday night scOI'ed on a Johnny Bepdl liDbnt it was enough.
gle a little later in the izDng
May clwted his Zlth homer of ID give the visilllrs some
the seasnn over lhe left center breathing rOoui.
field fence in the ninth inning '1'be Reds hit New Yml startto lift the Clncinnali Reds over er Jon Matlack !01' two rws in
the New Yml .Mets 4-2 in the the first inning.
opener of a four.game series Pete Rose led all lbe game
here.
,
with a single and Geoqe Fa:sler'
May gave the Reds the win- walked. Two outs later Ilelldl'

Br unoled Press lnterNiional ·
American LNgue
East
W. L. Pd. Gl
653'1 .625
62 45 .519 4'h
5I ¥1 .S38 9
5356 .4116 W h
43 62 .410 22'12

I

Felierbacb

AI

gymnast ROPnne Place WB"e

e·d s End Losfug Spell, Win 4-2

111

OrtCIB

lig effort in

'1'be Utated Slates had 13 gold
medals at lbe end of Monday's
"''llp"titi.w against only six fOI'
OJba.Butintolalmedal•itwas
d..;, _ U. S. 33, OJba ~ Canada was a distant third with
til.
Tract
stars
Rick

DIVERS

Fag lie•

1

aD spcrts.

WE1e1HE
.FIRST SKIN

Tbe United stall!s ·~wed
t~e Statue of Liberty as a
~ from the people cl
trance. on ,_
4, lMl, acd.
bidding has been:
11
d 1~g w · DCJC41!
co.r
'I
SouIll
North
East
Bntanmca. .
1•
Pass
portMr .....W loe • ....
3•
Pass 3N.T. tloi• • oloowillc ... - . ... •
?
4•
Pass
heart sui1.

(NIWSPAPil ltmRPliSl ASSN.).

ccmeii at a lime wben lbe
U:ated states ts mt frwl In the
UiiGffidal team "''llp"titiou in
the P'"· bnt only by a 1111'prilingly amallmarginove- the

mmlhs.

My sister wants to start school again in the faD, but 1D teD tbe
truth I'D be vety ashamed being in the same scbool wilb ber.
Isn't there a different kind al school sbe can go ID! Lite one for
div01ced mothers?- SHAMiiD
Dear Shamed:
Your sister made a mistake and paid for it. !lie doesn' rieed
the added burden of snobbery! Help her make a comeback, for
heaven's sake - by accepling her iniD your life and school
trouble. Don'tpl'Oillote more by bltllnglhe ''sh•llll'" button! -B.
Dear Helen:
This summer a bunch of Deigbt«bood kids got together and
started building a park on L'Oilllty land. ('Ibe coonty l8jd "go
_,.. .... ..
Not counting anylbing 1• il overboard bY .Apollo 15, ahead," bn t couldn't fmnlBb IDIICb llllllley.) We 8crounged an old
there are-presently some 2,427 lllliiHilade oAjects in orbit JIIIDP and got water from lhe river, planted graso and trees, and
around the earth-satellites, racket bodies and parts of it's be(!lnnl~ to look great already.
rocket bodies and· various other items cl debris.
Now we want to add a playgroond fOI' little !lids, and maybe
This compares with 1.819 objects in orbit at this time by ned year we can belp unda privileged c:bildren fnJm the inner
last year. The difference is mainlY attGUDted for by 12 city to get ~ fresh air.
U.S. and 48 Soviet tauncbings, with associated items of
We heard there's an award pnJgl'8111 for teenage Sllllllllel'
debris, between June 29, I!IID, and June 'D, l!r71.
Other nations, however, are beginning to contribute to JI'Ojects and if your group wins, it gets several tbou.uod dollars.
the space traffic problem. F'nnce, for example, can This w~ really get our park going, as alreacly a lot of people are
claim seven payloads and 34 items cl debris for a total interested enough to cmie down and belp. Oould you tell us lliOi'1!
of 41 objects in earth orbit.
about trying for a prize? - THE GROUP
Since the October 4, 1957, llnmd!ing of Sputnik I, 5,3011 Dear Group:
objects have been put into orbit A catalogue of these
Manpower, Inc., 1120 N. Plankinton Ave., Milwaukee,
objects maintained by lhe joint U.S..C..nadian North
American Air Defense Cfmmand (NORADI Space De- Wisconsin, 53113, awards cash prizes fOI' outst•nding teen
fense Center shows that %,1181 cl tbese have decayed- JI'Ojects in its SUMMER AC'l'ION PROGRAM. '1'be nationwide
COIDpetition, designed ID ''spur comm1mily betlertnent tlrougb
fallen into the atmosphere and burned up.
The Air Defense Command does not maintain this creative action by y~ people," allers a first prize al p,ooo,
space watch and cil.talogue because it is intrigued by oeeond and third prizes al $2.000 and '1,000 respectively, and 40
satellites or so that ~ can diet lbeir tongues and $100 merit awards.
say, "Imagine that. "
()I]y penons 21 ~ old or under are eJi3ible, and enlrles
It has a deadly serious JIIII'IIOSl!. All tbese thousands
of objects in orbit must be catalogued and watched lest must be in befnSeptember 15,1f11.FOI' further lnfOiilllllica and
in the confusion that woold olhenrise prevail, nothing is · registration flmlB, write to Snmmer Action Pl'ogram, at the
above addn~.
ever launched against us tbrougll space UDawares.
Good luck! - H.
Dear Helen:
When yoo hear career women (n•n•Dy show buoiness typea)
on TV talk l!bon, they ahnost always come on strong about
"marriage Is oblolete," "live withbimbutdon'tmarry him," etc.
'1'be few wbo are married indicate they'd just aa liOClil have It the
other way, and almost no 011e any more apects matriage to be
By DICK KLEINER
lorewr. Movlea and boob also downgrade the lnaUtution.
HOLLYWOOD-(NEA)-Afler a buncb cl years OD Wall
Yet people are still getting hitched. '1'be median IIlii! al brides
Street, Peter Gimbel decided be tr.llllm to make movies. is sliD under 21. Girls In blgb scbool don't aim fcr careen euept
Lots of people come to that ambitious conclusion. but
don't know what to do to impleD!'!Ilt it. Peter Gimbel had as illlurance (''in c:.e I'm not hdJ in love"), And they mn't
two things going for bim m bis quest to be a movie- snllcipaling divorce.
We've got two dJI(erent breeds here: Females wbo talk,
maker.
First, he had money. He's from lhe department store write, and "aoct" against marriage, gi~ the lmpreuion it's out
Gimbles and, although be is not adive in nnming the al style. And then we have aD the eager kids (and older people
New York emporium, be is .., the hoard ci directors.
too) flocking ID get liCen8es;
Second, he had a particularly pbotogenic bobby-diving
So what does It aD prove? - sruDENT OF HUMAN
down into the depths of tile ocean He was lhe man who NATURE
first photographed tbe stmkea ADdrea Doria, the day
Dear Student:
after that ship weut to tile bollom
... limply that the oulllpoken "new.thought" people are
So he decided his first movie va~ture woold be a
documentary about some pbase of tile ocean. He opted beard, read, a.nd watdled, bnt the great majority of'IJ.steners and
for sharks, reasoning c«tecUy that lhey scared peGple.
oils vera nmain fascluted but IDW8yed.
Tbe ·result is lhe movie !bat's IIIIW out, called "Blue
As I've said before, ltusuaDy takes three generatims to effect
Water, White Death," about lhe seardl for the biggest sweeping aoctal ~e - and by that time, we may have started
and most ferocious fish of them all, tile great white shark. swinging in the other direction. - H.
It's a great film , ..;ling and beautiful and with touches
P.S. Webster.deflnllica '~,'' tbat is.
of humor and mystery.
But don't look for llll'l'her undea 11 documeutary from
Gimbel. This was made sbictly as a stepping-stooe. He
.t '· _The
_
DaiJ
_
s.~li--.,
wants to make movie .movies-stories with plots and
actors that don't bite people. "Blue Water, While .Death"
· DEVOTED TO THE
is just a stepping-'Stnae f« him.
INTERE$TOF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
He's already got bis aext 011e in the wads, a story he's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
written called "Mexican SaH," wbicll be hopes to produce
Ekec. Ed.
ROIERT HOEFLICH,
and perhaps direct.1be theaty is ll!at "Blue Water" will
Ci1y Editor ·
help get the Cmanc.ing far ••p• ft;m Salt.u
'
Published daily except
"I've finally fouDCI wbat I wani to do with my life,"
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, Jll
Gimbel says. "I wasted 13 ye.us--aine as a Wall Street
Court
St.. Pomerar. Ohio, ·
stockbroker-ilnd this is w~t I tully want to do."
-45769. Bbsiness Office Phone

•

•'

"William F. Buckley and I hare a lot in common people
either lore me or loathe mel"

sour?

been building fOI' the moment
they would get lhe United Stall!s
back on a ball field, a moment
that comes about noon EDT
when lhe two unbeaten teams
~ off here in lbe Cauca
River VaDey, 3,000 feet high in
lheAndesmountalnsandalong
way fr&lt;m the Canadian prairie.
Ed Bane, a 19-year-old
sophomore southpaw from
Arizona State U., with an 11-2
record, was lhe cboice al U. S.
manager Ron Fraser to start on
the mound fll' lhe Yanks. The
O!bans weren't saying who
their pitcher ....Ud be but, as
Fraser said, "you can just bet
he'D be the best me they've
got."
The selection al Bane empbasiuod lhe difference between
the two teams -lhe U. S. squad
averaging 19 years in age, the
O!bans wilh several players 25
ID 30 who have played together
fOI' some time wilb a lot of In-

MASON - Tbe Little League- here will
spoasor its secoad ~nnual Men's Slo-Pitch SoftNil Tlllli1Uiment on the weekends of August %8-29
ud Sept. 4-51 at the Little League baD diamoad
.aut ta the Mason Drive-In Theatre. It will be a
da We e6minati011-sanctioned tonrnament. AU
teams mast be sanctioned.
'111e fint 16 teams tG COiltact any of the
following tournament directors will be accepted,
Red TKker at 773-5636, Charles Stanley at 7735!55, or Bob OUver at 773-5571: Drawing for the
loutnament will be held August 22. There is a $Z5
e~ky fee.
Last year' s champion was Farmers Bank of
Pomeroy. and runnersup were Barr &amp; Son
Cou.truetion of Gallipolis.

ternalionaf npa iellce.
Track ttars lUrk Waa'1'be U. S.-Cola tGDft ontatim amalter, Sleft Pnfwt.ine, ...

&amp;nee then lhe OtbaM haveR

~

A- Three-Arnold Palmer. eggs?
A- The developing
Jack Nicklaus and Billy
are carried attached to the
Casper.
Q. i\11"'1 (I :S. presi&lt;lellt
appendages beneath the tail Pus
Q- Which U.S. city claims for 10 to JJ months.
lil&gt;ed the slwrt&lt;.&lt;l .time?
Poss
A-,-John F. Kennedy. who t.h• ,hort.est.nicknnme'
Pass
A-l.,os Angeles. popularly
died ai the a~e of 46.
You, South, hold:
Q-How old . is the SIJ·
uarncd ·'LA''
called "11ew mathematics"? • AK87 .AZ •KQt ..KU3
Q- lJUU' 'ftHIIJ!I 71 r rJ f e ·''
(J -f·ut lw w lony ~~~ •.:·~ the , A- The New Math origin- What do you· do now?
.imu1l y, II f" r .~. lm o • IPtW
co 711 m fJ 11 l.tiiJ.o;ter Cfltt !I it.s ated during the 1950s.
A-Bid four hearts. Your
murP Llwu $1 miiJj,,. '

'

time.
These men are no babes in tile woods. Numbers have
long experience in gueniiJa war. 'l'lq received their
baptism as young men in tile war l!ll•mst tile French.
In that fight for i"""J'eJ
a goad many in this grolip
were teamed up with Ho Cbi llinb--IJut as natillllll,!ists.
lri that war. they lost any maa- IIley may have had
about communuism. Tiley are mating this move with
their eyes open, but witll c.wru......., that the Communists
can be beaten at the polls.

Nothing so drastic as divorce is even hinted, but there
is talk that after some two4birds ci a century the Dame
has gone out of the roma..,... . Familiarity has bred, not
contempt but-well. familiarity; and as in many a marriage, it is more oonveniente than passion that now holds
the union together.
It is not, however, a case ci lbe molorist deserting the
motorcar but of the motorcar being unfaithful to the
motorist. The automobile is, alas, a victim of its own
spectacular success.
When there were only a few thousand cars in the country, it didn't matter how much !bey smoted and fumed.
Now that there are stclles of miDiODS, it matters very
urgently.
When highway dealjls were measured in the hundreds
per year, society took liUie notire cl tbe safety either of
cars, roads or drivers. But with peaple mntinuing to kill
themselves at the rate of 50,(100-plus a year, society is
demanding reforms in at least lhe first two categories.
This concern, lranslated into gova wnent regulations,
has Detroit engineers wodillg overtime. What they envision as the car of tile very aear More is not the low,
sleek to~ that used to be pictured on magazine
covers back
lhe '50s and '&amp;Is. It is nothing less than
a return to
basic-box configuratiOD.
The car of tomomnr will have a long hood (to contain
pollution.rontrol equipment), a llcmy paSSdlger compartment and more vertical windsbield (for better visibility,
rollover protection, ete.) and a smaller trunk (because
between bumpers that reallf bump and an engine compartment crammed with antipollutioo devices, something
has to give, roomwise).
It will also be smaller, mare -siNe, more expensive
·
and hopefully more durable.
But will it be loved!

Showdown Today
· .,ttJi JOIIJI( G. GRIFFIN
IJPI Sportto Edl._
CAll, Colcmbia (UPIJ- It's
showdown day between lbe
Voited ~tes and , W. tn
hast!baU m the Pa:I-AIQeriran
Gatnes- the day the powetful
O!bans have been awallillg for
lour years since their dofeat by
lhe Yanks in lhe 1967 games in
~
'1'be defeat -by a Z-1 soore in
a p!aJalf at Portage La Prairie,
Man. - .was particularly
galling to lhe CWians becaDSe
they were beavy favorites and
had wbippal tbe U. S. team
twice c~urq ~~~e regular.part r~
the games tournamenl

sives.
Tbere are three l"'8""'S wily these men will wait until
late this year to push Ibis CClDStiluticiua reform :
'
• They doa't want to disn.,t tile IPwer house elections
in August or lhe presidetdia! elections in October.
• President Tbieu at I*
11 is mucll loo suspicious
and cautious to agree to any socii plan.
• Tbey expect that tlleir graap will gain a great deal
of additional ~ in tile August and October voting.
This will add eonsiderabll to lbeir leverage with Tbieu,
assuming that be is re e ted, as s : ms likely at this

Our Space Inventory

· .... NOBTJI,
.ll·h'·' .6KJ )'-'

The
eggs Wesl

QUICK QUIZ

·.

··~

J

a Better Car

Appendix Isn't Only Side Pain
.,

BY JACI O'IIIUAN

I

From Pressures,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
· May 8e Swelling, Ovulation

By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am 16
years old and have been
having pains in my rig])t side
!ar more than a year. I went
to the doctor and he said It
acts like appendicitis but be's
not sure. I don't usually have
fever but I have vomited. He
iald he doesn't want to operate unless he really must. I
read in one of your articles
that sometimes attacks of
pain not clearly appendicitis
are noted before a definite
attack occurs. Can this be
what's happening to me?
What should I do?
Dear Reader-In young
girls especially, pain in the
right side similar to appendicitis can be caused by ovulation. Tbe pain is usually mid·
way between periods, and is
known as the middle pain.
More than one girl has been
operated on for appendicitis

BERRY'S

Linescores

Home lmpiUllllllent

LOANS
YES!_· M
Meigs fA Branch

Meigs County Branch ol Tilt
Athens County S..vings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeror.Oilio
Member Federal Home Loan
Sank.
Member Federal Sovings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounts insured up to
,000.00.

�2-TIIIIlllll llelltlnei,MI!IIepor:t-l'lmeiOJ, o., Allpau.trn

.

3- The Daily SenHnel,lfll\lepu&lt;t-Pcaaaoy, 0., AllgUII3, 1171

Editorial ·Comment, Columns of Opinion

..

Open Election Coalition in South V~etnam Favored
•

•

'

. By

·•:

•

•••

~y

CROJdl,EY
WASHINGTON (NEAl
After the Oct. 3 presidential elections in South Vietnam,
a strong bloc of very influential (anti-Communist) Vietnamese officials plans to launch a drive to. amend the
· onstitution of the republic to make it JlOSSible for .mem•·ers of the Viet Cong and other Communists to run· for
office.

It is believed that these men will attempt to extract
a pledge of supj&gt;Ort from President Thieu· for this plan as
a part of the price for their support for his re-i!lectjon.
Tbese men, including s~me of the most powerful figures in the Saigon government, beli~ve that giving Communists the right to run for office is the only way to
end ·the war. and bring peace to their troubled country.
Tbey are cODfldent today, as they were not two years
ago, that in fair and open elections the Communists,
running openly as Communists, would be defeated hands
down.
·
·
Tbey
much less confident of the results if the
Viet Cong should systematically run CoiJ•munists parading as non-Red liberals or as conservatives.
·
Once this change in the constitution is made-or per-

a.re·

•

.

•

·, .

haps while the drive for a change is getting under way
-these men hope to induce the Saigon government to
negotiate in Pans with the Communists on recognition of
Communists arid candidates and freedom for peaceful
political activities in South Vietnam · as part of an overall peace package.
. •
These men have no objection to a "coalition government" if (and only if) it is a coalition resulting from
open elections. They are not prepared to ac~ept a coali- ·
lion by foree or by diplomatic agreement as part of a
compromise arrangement to end the war. That artificial
sort of coalition, they believe, would open ·the door to
North Vietnamese subversion from within and end all
hope for democracy and freedom in South Vietn~ .
The projected proposals would not be all one :way. Before Communist parties would be recognized, they would
be required to disband their armies and armed guerrilla
forces in the south and give up military force and political assassination as lt)eans for attaining their ends.
Just how this is to be accomplished is not clear. Historically, even a solemn signed-and-witnessed agreement
has never been binding in fact on underground subver-

when this was the real prob- your cycle, that might help.
lem.
Otherwise I think the best
Often the doctor has no thing you can do is follow
way of telling the difference your doctor's advice and be
and properly concludes it is glad you have one who isn't
better to operate and be anxious to rush you off to the
wrong than not operate and operating room unless he is
have a ruptured appendix. certain you need to go.
Tbe fact that you have been
having several of these epi- • Dear Dr. Lamb-1 was
sodes sug. ge.sts it i.s not ap- told by VA doctors that
pendicitis, even if append!- I. have pylorospasm. I .wou~d
ellis does often have earlier like to know what this mlindefinite attacks.
ment is and if there is .any
treatment and cure for it.
A second problem is painful swelling of lymph nodes
Dear Reader-The outlet of
in the abdomen, which is the stomach is called the
more common in young peo- pylorus and the valve that
ple and is hard to separate controls the opening is called
f r o m appendicitis. Then the pyloric valve. Tbe musthere is the old problem of cular wall of the digestive
disturbances in the digestive tube in this area can contract
tract, including irritable co- or go into spasm like other
lon, that may cause acute areas of the digestive tract
pain.
(colon or esophagus, for ex.
Thil; IS called a pyloample).
You should note the relarospasm.
tionship of your attacks to

-

r---------------------~--------------------

Voice along Broadway

1

j

I

'

starred -

and ran three weeks •... Conparable

elements In a London show would guarantee a hit

"

'I'IIE PLAY'S NOT THE

,,

THING, rr'S '1BE AllDIENCE ·

LONDON -'!'be lhealerst:lrsmorehealtbily
iD Tmdon than In ·Manhattan even ir some
glocm IIJVB ltllllpeCI It's a ·fl'klilus invalid
wiiiJIIe time wiD Clllll!, diacwrtesy a1 television
meally .... But lbere il greater interest in Lon-

dou'a legitimate tbealllr than cbneltllmlly in
New Yml's: Pricel for cue ueg are mar.veloualy inr:ql"'Mi'lll-1011 sliD may attend good
pla)'l fOI' $2.40 in tbe better pews and there is
little ~ealping, scept at "Hair," where a new
breed al umraahed, furtive ticket bustier lurks in
dark haDways and sidles up to passersby near
lhe !llallesbury Theater ID mutter his wares.
West End thesters offer more comfortable
play.goqlhan Broadway's, not just because of
lhe llhabby.genteel but merry bars that abound
In aD stage show houses .... The public Itself
attends lhe theater with an easy expectancy that
states better than words that they are acc:uaflmed to attending plays and musicals and
ltnow they will enjnu di erting
·
-,. a v
everung. .
In New Ycrk, audiences seem In contest With
lhe critics, a mood evidenced ,in an edgy combativeness over aeats even to lbe race to get an
Ulber ID seat them befoce others .... 'lbe grumpy
mood al theatergoers leavlq Broadway shows
·
in recent aeasons has been amazmg to us, the
C8111e undoubtedly the price of tickets, ~to '15
fQr the bolter musicals and even some of the
o!pld tunesho1n; it's an audience's wallets
the high ticket prices, especially if bought
· f
.... smash
fr ~a acalpe. r (up to -~;·a~
orsu~
':"
as 'No, No, Nanette and Sleuth ); benefit
!hester partygoers are even worse for they're
often made up of audiences that aren't em..!betic; they've simply been cajoled into
eJ[CJ'bitant if tax-deductible contribulions of $00
·
to $100 a ticket,
often for shows that haven~
·
made the critical grade and have been bought
far in advance of the reviews; when stuck with a
pg-in.a.p&lt;h, !essJh&amp;no6Til8sh.Qit show, benefit
audiences are tbe most insolently rude
gillherlnga !lis side al radical politics.
·
Not so in London : audiences
preponderantly
are made up on unglamorously intelligent
midtiJe.c:lass folk who attend in easy reverence ;
at least with respect .... '!'bey enjoy a preiibow
lliien1 and Intermission whiskies (small drinks,
amaD prices) and settle down to what !bey fully

va-

expect will be a sa~ e~perience.

~----Jt-1bs'ttake-the-unanimous·approval of

lmdon critics ID jam a theater, and even had
, tevlewa can't lrel!p fans away from a
Shakespeare or Shaw revjval· "Captain
•
·
··
Braubound s Conversion" has enJoyed a
ltllll'lly profitable e~agement despite critical
lhlftutlts creaky Abvlan antiquity; but Ingrid
Bergman In the star role Insured the run; we're
tthra)'lremindedofRobertSberwood'slaatplay,
"'l'be Rqged Palb,'' which received a doting
palt-WW U production with ~cer Tracy

...

run.

h•

• '

•

'

•

"·-·~.

••

Jean Pliul Sarlre's "KeaD" ivlls revived at
the Globe '!'beater, wilb Alan Bade! starred, and
keeps the crowds coming; we thought Hadel's
jlerfca'mance more sensatiOIISI than good, too
mincq, hardly virUe enough to justify the
flamboyant wlmllllizing of the famed actor
l!;dmundKean'slupine reputation in lhe naughty
. gospel according to Sartre; but his broad fardeal swipes and swoops delighted the Globe's
sellout audience the night we attended.
Robert Bolt's "Vivat!" Vivat Regina! " is a
line fat hit at the Piccadilly Theater; it's by the
author of "A Man for All Seasons," and the
fihnplays "Lawrence of Arabia" and ''Ryan's
Daughter"; and it has a lrilliant first of two acts
that plainly is enough ID delight London
audiences; just as plays don~ often travel
successfully across lbe Atlantic, either way,
perhaps we lacked the audience ingredient to
find it the unqualified enchantment London has;
it Is a great hit and will be produced on Broadway. 1
1 ,
•
There s a spate of plays and movt~ about
the Mary QJ.een al Scots versus Queen Elizabeth
I. Hal Wallis just finished a movie starring
Vanessa Redgrave on the subject and Robert
Bolt expects his play similarly to be filmed; they
• an ·
,can t Wlll.
•
At the Duke of York's '!beater IS a slender •
c:beerful little (tiny!) comedy caUed "The
Jockey aub Stakes,'' starring Wilfred Hyde
White, a consummate light comedian who
manages almost alone ID turn minuscule
. .
.
material mto an everung of English~acter
laughs and giggles, often due solely to the star's
practiced technique, sheer burlesque on a muted
note; it's about a group of elegant Jockey Club
members caught in cheerful swindles, fixing
•-Iresand droll maru·pulation
races; WI'th dauble....
· tbe d'
b
t
ter of
of . a.u Ience Y a pas mas
scenestealing .... Although Robert Coote and Godfrey
&amp;unner aren'tfar behind Wilfred Hyde While in
pilferinglbescenery ... Wedoubtitwlllcrossthe
Atlantic successfully but it's marvelOus on its
local
, ·
,
Our 12-and 13-year-oldshad become Agatha
C!ristie fiends the last two years, and lhey saw
and enjayed Aggie's "The Mousetrap,'' now in
Its 19th London year (it was a quick-abject flop
on Broadway). Tbey pronounced tbe performances. ..corny. , while delighting in Its
switch.ending.
America has inflicted (besides "Hair") the
incredibly dull and dirty ''Oh! Calcutta!" which finds Its prurient niche apparenUy in· · 1 Robert M ley' "H the Other
ternationa ,;..;
or. s _ow
Half Loves IS a happy hit, tho Its Broadway
copy sank swiftly .... London's summer total of
shows is about double Broadway's, most of the
tatter now being on "twofers,'' two tickets fOI'
one.
te
. nns

Tbere are a lot of things
that can cause this, and it is
similar to the hyperacidity
or u I c e r problem. This
means that certain spicy
foods, too much coffee, alcohol and cigarettes all can
aggravate 9r cause the problem . Dietary management,
and sometimes the same
medicines used to treat
ulcers are helpful. Antacids
help reduce the acidity and
medicines used to block the
action of nerves to the stomach relax the pylorus. In fact
some cases of pylorospasm
are caused by a small ulcer
near the pyloric area.
(NEWSPAPU ENnRPIISE ASSN.)
Pf.a~e ,.,.,

rour qwst;o..s and

conllllien&amp; r. l..awrtRCe E. Lamb,
M.D .., in cate of t~is fHipet. Wltil•
tk. Lamb cG•not ••swer itwlifidfiGI
letters, h will a•snr leffets ol
general interat in lufute colulfiiiJ.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Setting Up
9th Trick

..

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WEST

EAST

• 108653

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Is America's love alfalr with the automobile turning

r--------~------------------1

Help Us l

!Helen
I

I

I

By Helen Bottel

,

.l

YOtrrH ABKED FOR IT!
This 400lumn is f&lt;lr young people, their problems and
pleasures, tbeir troubles and fun. All with tbe rest al Helen Help
Us! it wekQJ!es laughs but woo 't dodge a serious question with a
lrusb«f.
Send your teenage questiOIIS to YOU'111 ASKED FOR IT, care
al.Helen Help Us! !lis newspaper.
SISTER I:XJFSN'T NEED SNOBIII.SliNF:s&lt;;
Dear Helen:
My !i-year-old sister was dalillg a Z.,ear-old man and got
p-egnant. So tbey had to get married, but they divorced in four

•sz

.Void
.AQ97
SOUTH (D)
.AQ

.A102

• K 1093

.K6S3
East-West vulnerable
West North East South
lN.T.
3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

'----------'
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Put yourself in the South
seat. You are in a perfectly
normal three no-trump "Contract. It should be a laydown,
smce dummy has 12 highcard points opposite your 16,
but the heart lead has hit
you with only one stopper in
the suit. Yo~ hav~ to develop
two club tricks If you want
to score your game.
You hold off until the third
heart lead. Then you take
your ace and play a couple
of r~unds of diamonds _before
commg off dummy With the
deuce of clubs. East pl~ys
the sev~n and you go up with
your king. West shows out
and, while you are over one
hurdle, thiqgs look mighty
bad because you can only
count up to a total of eight
lrtcks.
Th
·t d
e on1y way o eve1op a
ninth is to set up a second
club and there sits East with
three apparent tricks in the
suit.
.
They ar~ only apl;'arent tf
you do a little countmg. You
play out the last two diamonds and East chucks two
spades. He can't afford to
chuck· a club.
Now you know that East
s~arted with four clubs, two
diamonds, three hearts, two
srades and two other cards.
1 you have watched the
play of the hearts, you can
assume that these two other
cards are both spades. You
have a complete count. You
cash the two spades and
lead a club to dummy's jack.
East wins the trick but is
d~wn to clubs. and ~as to
gtve you your mnth tnck.

Fish Documenter Angles
For Bigger Things

today· sFUNNY

lz•.

O!lwns, who ctbviaaBiy c.ne

here phued for

·

J,

TODAY'S QlliSik)li
. Vou bid four '-rts- .rour
partner continues :lo five diamonds' What do you do now!

•

'· ~

So well have some flowers
clone in adopted lands that
,,._._ «q;m
- - IS
· .org
• ....
.......
....en. Ho1lalld's tulip, for instance.
Originated in Turley and the
~uisteo!ars returned from
Mexico Ia Elli'llpe with the
"'F ralcb" miulgold.
•

_

.,

-

.398 24

O

Wednesdilr-s Games
x.San Diego at Chicago
Cincinnati at New York .
Atlanta at Philadelphia, mght

This Week's Specl;o!

68 PONTIAC
Safari Wagon, V-8, auto.,
P .S., P . B. .' green with
matching int., only' 36,000

Bottineiii -

miles.

St., New York City, Ntw York .

• By Motor Route where

carriW

month $1 .75. By mail In Ohio

r-----,.------...,:
a':'d
T...,' f
.
, Snc

W. Va., One year . $1.4.00.
months 17 . 25 . Three
._11 1. . UN~T ~ ,.,. SI.CD fw . m~nt~s , ... SO. Subscription
,.: T=U~N{ .;;;~~1::4 . prtc~. •ncludes Sunday T1mes .
St., c~ ..... Ot.W: 441114 .
. Senll~el.

- -- -

ing wt ROllS Grimsley. Wayne
Gnnger came on to retire the
side.

UaJ Carroll, the Reds' third
pildlel', went the final two inDing!, holding lhe Mets runless
w two bits. He got the victory,

t

Downing.·

Chllcls

Age~,

Inc. .

200 N.2nd

MIDDLEPORT

MaUack, replaced after the
eighth, was lhe loser. He is
now lh'l.
A doubleheader was scheduled tonight with the Reds'
Wayne Simpson (2-4) going
against Nolan Ryan (a.8) in lhe
opener. Jim Merritt (0-10) was
to oppose the Mets' Charlie
Williams (~) in the nightcap.

1

Said.
Clarence Gastoo, one al the
p&lt;lWef' hitters CariiGD referring too, tr.M'IJed the Sl
Louis southpaw fOI' San Diego's
only SCOI'e when be slammed
his 14th home run of lbe
in the first inning: Colbert
followed with 1 hard sinllle to
left but CarltGD then relittd the
next 14 men be faoed befcae
allowing a single by Enm
Hernandez in lbe sixth.
San Fran at St.louis. nigh!.
Los Angeles al Houstan. night
Pitts at ·M ontreat. night
x-Resumption of a S!!'$1 ! aded
game prior to regular game

lriteraattc.al • ··••

sta-.p

By United Press t - l i o u l
WLI'd. G!I
Rochester
63 " .5lt

Tlck!water

6S 46 .516

Charleston
60 " 511
Syracuse
'!1'1 46 .56l
Richmond
S. ss .oilS
louisville
st S1 .412
Tot edo
«&lt; 61 .J1II
Winnipeg
11 69 .319
Monday's Resoolls
Richmond 3 ~alor 1
Rochester 7 Syracuse ~
Charleston J Louisville 2
(Only games 5chediAedl

lYJ
3

10
t:ZV.
2;J'h
2SYJ

"You'll Like Our Quality
War ot Doing Business."

GMAC FINANCING
t~n-s.~

0poR

~~

£•11io• 'Tit I:M

Tll5 P.M. Sal•

'

(l~th).

Oak
000 100 1~ 2 I 0
K.C.
001 000 000- 1 • 0
Segui, Knowles (1), Fingers
(7) and Tenace; Sptiltorlf, Vorl&lt;
191 and Kirkpatrick . WP-SeQul
(H) . LP-Splitlorff (4·•1 . H~­
Tenace(4th). Kirkpatrick (8th).
Milw
000 000 1~ I • 0
Cal
100 100 Olx- 3 7 1
Patlin, Morris (8). Sanders
181 and Rodriguez; May (7.6)
and Stephenson, Moses (9). LP
- Patlin 19·12). HR- Repoz
lith).
N.Y.
~ 010 .00 020- 7 10 0
C!ev
000 000 000- 0 4 2
Peterson (10·11 and Munson ; ·
Gibbs (81 ; Paul Hennigan (8),
Mingorl 191 and Fosse. LPPaul 11 ·21. HR-Michael 13rd).
Minn
102 000 1102- s 15 2
Chi
021 0&gt;10 OOx- I 9 0
Perry , Gebhard Ill and
Mitterwald ; Bradley. Johnson
!91 and Herrmann. WPBradley 1!0·91. LP-Perry 112
12) . HR- Ke!ly (lstl. Andrews
17th) .
Wash
1102 000 500- 1 s 2
Del
500 200 llx- 11 13 2
Broberg, Pina II). Brown 13)
Shellenback (S), Thompson (6).
Cox (7). Grzenda (7) and
Billings; ,Coleman, Perranoski
(7), Timmerman (8) and
Freehan. WP- Timmerman (5·
41. LP- Cox 15.61 . HR- Horton
1171hl. Burroughs llst).

line drive in the eighth inning
to belp the Astros down
Chicago.
Ferguson Jenkins, trying to
become the National League's
first Ill-game winner, suffered
his ninth loss. Don W1Jsoo, ~7,
pitched a two-hitter against lhe
Cubs and slruck out nine to win
the duel with ·Jenkins.
Lee May clouted his 28th
homer of lhe season to break a
2-2 tie in the ninth inning and
Johnny BenCh drove in three
runs as Cincinnati posted its
sixth win in 13 · meetings with
the Mets.
May. first up in the ninth,
drilled an 0-1 pitch over lhe
center field fence off Mets'
starter and loser Jon MaUack.
Tony Perez followed with a
triple and BenCh made it 4-2
with a single.

Hous
Jenkins (17.9) and Cannizza·
ro ; Wilson (9-7) and Hiatt. HR
- Hickman (lith).

UPI Sperts Writer
Mike Andrews got !mocked
dolm, but it was the Minnesota
Twins wbo gQl counted out.
Al:dtews, a bustling second
lte'"lll!n rcr the Chicago White
Scm, was cleded by a Jim
Peny fastball in the fifth
illiUg 1 Mooday night but
jumped ID bis feet and hit the
next pildl !01' a three-run
burner to lead-the White Sox to
a 7~ vil:tOI'y anr the Twins.
FAI ,llonmann's run«oring
single g;ne the While Sox a ~
lead in. the liflh and preceded
Andrews' tum at the plate.
f\uy's 1irs1 pitch sent the
man sprawling to
the dirt, bnt be got up, dug in
and llil Perry's next pitch into
lbe upper ded: al lbe left-field
stands f&lt;lr his sevenlb homer of
lbe year.
''Peny'• pitch wils a real
btddouu pildl and at first I'
lhoogbl it was going to get me.
l6s fas1baD moves in on rightbondrd llillers,'' said And! ews.
"Peny tbnnrs a lot of sliders

*'*"' •

Steve Dunfee, The Daily Sentinel's S.l guard in lhe Middleport Sununer Baskelball League, won league scoring honors
wi lb an impressive total of 247 poin&lt;s in 13 games for a 19.0 SCOI'ing
average.
The No. 2 scorer was also a Sentinel player, Doxie Walters,
with 242and an 18.5 average. Right behind was Jeff Morris of The
Ohio Valley Bakery, who led the loop for most of lbe season but
finishing third with a total of235pointsandan 18.1 average.
Dunfee and Morris are the co.captains of the 1971-72 Meigs
Marauder baskelball team.
The league's highest average belonged to Jeff Tyo, who threw in
22.0 pts . per game in 10 games. RCil Ferguson, O.V.B., had most
points in one game, 46, against Mark V.
G

Ron Ferduson, O.V.B.
Rich Ba• ey, Dail~ Sentinel

Tom Cooke. O.V . .
Mike Sayre. MiJrk V
Cin
200 000 1102- 4 8 0 Bill Chaney, MiJrk V
N.Y.
000 1102 000- 2 7 1
Grimsley, Granger (61. Car.
roll (8) and B.ench ; MiJtlack,
Taylor (91 and Grote. WPCarro!! 16-2). LP- Mat!ack (0·
3). HR-MiJy (28th).
S.D.
100 000 000- 1 5 o
S. L.
010 100 lOx- 3 10 0
Roberts, Miller Ill and
Barton; Carltoo (lHI and
Simmons. LP- Roberts (8·12).
HR- Gaston 041hl.
L.A.
000 010 013- S 8 1
000 000 &gt;100- • 10 0
S.F.
Osteen, Brewer 17), Pena 181.
Mikkelsen 191 and Ferguson.
Sims 191; Cumberland. Johnson
(9), Hamilton (9) and Dietz.
WP-Pena Ferguson (2nd),
Garver (Sth).

Chicago Rally
Top Twins 7-5
IIJ I'Bm McMANE

Steve Dunfee: Shooter

S1eve Dunfee , Da ily Sentinel
Dox ie Wal1er s, Daily Sentinel
Jeff Morri s, 0 . V. B.
Jell Tyo, Mark V
020 000 OOx- 2 8 1 Tony V .ugha n. Adolph's

the Orioles in the AL Easl. ·Carl
Yastrzemski also homered for
BosiDn, which wiped out a fourrun first inning deficit. Boog
Powell and Dave Johnson
homered for the Orioles.
Gene Tenace broke up a
pitcher's duel with his fourth
homer of the year in the
seventh inning as the A's
so I figured he would throw me handed the Royals their seventh
one on lhe next pitch. I wanted straight loss. The lriumph
to be really because all 1· moved the A's 13'h games
wanted to do was reaCh out and ahead of the second place
hit it through the middle.
Royals in the AL West
"All I can say was that I was Jim Northrup's run«oring
surprised when he came hack double snapped a 7-7 tie in the
with a high inside fastball. eighth inning and belped lhe
Whenever I get knocked down Tigers defeat the Senators.
it makes me a little mad and Willie Horton homered for
more determined."
Detroit in the game and Jeff
In other American League Burroughs hit his first major
games, Boston defeated Balli- league homer for Washington.
more, 7-f; Oakland edged Gene Michael's two-run hoKansas City, Z-1, Detroit mer capped a four-run fourth
outslugged Washington, 11-7; inning and Frit Peterson tossed
New YOi'k beat Cleveland, 7-4, a four-bitter for his first
and California topped Milwauk- shutout of the season as the
ee, 3-1.
Yankees blanked the Indians.
Los Angeles edged San Second baseman Horace Clarke
Francisco, 5-4, Sl Louis beat of the Yankees had a busy
San Diego, 3-1, Philadelphia night as be accepted 16 chances
blanked Atlanta, 4-11, Houston flawlessly.
edged Chicago, 2-1, and CincinRoger Repoz' solo homer in
nati defeated New York, 4-2, in the fourth inning supported
the only National League Rudy May's four-bit pitching
action.
and sparked the Angels'
Reggie Smith drove in three triumph. May pitched hitless
runs with his 23rd h&lt;mer and a ball fOI' 6 1-3 Innings en route to
sacrifice fly as the Red Sox his seventh victory in 13
moved to within 4'h games of decisions.

OOLUMBVS (UPI) - 11le
featured eil!hth nee at Scitlto
Downs Monday ail!ht. a ~
..ce at cue mile, ns b.r

11UIIersBellyin2:tl,l'I:IIDtioc
OOUJIOiliS (UPJ) - Lee
SS.40 S!.• and S!.•T:etioo ns whisked away to
-Rolewasrc•Hfl,pDJiDc be bootied by "the greatest
$2.&amp;0 and · $1,411, wifb Stalet pdlflle in the world" but not beMila in tbe tbolr JP11 re1a • g fcore be pocteled another ,1,000
lf!ow!ay fOI' winning lbe sixth
._.. 0+-nt- Pro-Am Golf

SIDEUNES ADVIII!D
NEW YORK (UPf) - 8eBet
by uncertainties, the stock
mamt tiiltently is lorhd iDto
a clefettaift ptilbae, wdilc
to
ht d a. ......
tDIIIl
Iikel:r will remaiauo •lillh!re
are sij!ns o1 resolution (li
ecOilOIIlic pt•....., iL' •til
stockpricesEl'Odetothepcilltcl
over~ SliP addl. 1o
the .-time,lbe litm ..,1nc1ers and imeslllrs tu iftDiin
the si!Wbes.

m

n

TMI-MII.
A 1 ' galiw fnm El Paso,
Tu., Jed by Mayor Bert WIIlial!l,....tedlbeleadingmon"'1 wilau5o '*'the PGA tour back
lollis.....,bometownwhere
be ns to be bonored today.
· IIIII. befwe • ldl, Trevino,
piiJing llis - t locoR,. fun-¥n"·
illl style, cr maybe even lllCft
so, fired • ~...... 85
aver the 5,511- )'lid Columbus
Country 01111 ccau *·
1\eoinu, w11o plans to take
lbe next dJI4IIe 91 weeb off
fr&lt;m the ~ pint!, stood at
a
~ lllluch lbe first
n holes Jlaada)o, but topped six
sbols all pal' daring lbe final

=•

seven holes with four birdies
and an eagle three on tbe 4Myard 15th.
Trevino's 6s over the Colwnbus course; site of the 196f PGA
tourney, was three shots better
than his cloeest challengers. Ineluded in that group were Orville Moody' Steve Reid, a.ar1es Coody, Lee Elder w amateur Robin Obelz.
Obelz, who plays to a six
handicap, fired eight natural
birdies and had four bogyes to
lead his team to the best.ball
title with a 17-unileril&amp;r ~Jim Logue, ·asaiatant pro at
Columbus Couiltry Club, Bllbbed
on'the winning team for tbe wteran Art waD who was a last
minute cancellation and picked
Up the winner's share of $150.
Five players, Gay Brewer,
Dale Douglass, J. c. Snead,
Fred Marti and Tom Welllkop(,
had 68's; while George Jor-,

'

13

2~7

13

242
235
220

13

10
13
12
13
12
13
!l

208

200
18.4
146
122
10.

Av
19.0
18.5
18.1
22.0
16.0
16.6
14.2
12.4
10.2
8.6

Pomeroy and Racine copped
victories Monday night in the
opening round of the Second
Annual Cheshire Pee Wee
Tournament.· Pomeroy scored
two runs in the bottom o! the
sixthinning \oedge BidweU,''hl.
Racine defeated Addaville, 8-4
in the nightcap.
Tonight, weather pennitting,
Greene will meet the Mason
Angels at 6:30 p.m. and
Cheshire will tangle with New
Haven . All games are played at
the Kyger Creek Employees
·

Club Diamond.
Trailing 3-2 going into lhe
bottom of the sixth, Pomeroy
scored two runs on four hits. M.
NOI'ton and R. Blaettner led the
winners with two hits each.
Bidwell's only hilwua slnl'e
by B. Howell in the fifth inning.
Bidwelllrailed Ugoing into lbe
fifth but knotted the score with
Howell's single and three walks.
Scoring in every inning,
Racine stormed from-behind 1D
defeat Addaville, 8-4. Addaville
took a W lead in the first but
Racine scored three to cut lhe
lead to 4-3. Racine moved in
PAT TO CHINA?
front with a two run second
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Pat frame and added two additiOilal
Nixon says she would like to runs in the third.
accompany the President on his M. Huddleston and J. Powell
upcoming lrip to China but she led the winners wilb two singles
hasn 't been invited yet. "I'm each. S. Russell paced tbe
putting my name on the signup losers with a double and single.
list," she told reporters Mon- Powell was the winning hurler
day, adding "there are a lot of while G. Nibert was charged
other names on the list too." ·with the loss.

In the News

NEW CHIEF of the Atomic
Energy Commission,
James Schlesinger replaces
r e II r In g AEC Chairman
Dave Eichbelbeiger and Bob Glenn Scaborg. SchleslnJ:ei'
W sh two-wtd
70 ,
bas been assistant dlredor
ynn at
er par s. of the Olflce of Mana~:e­
Inotherteamscoring,Snead's ment and Budget. SeahorJ:,
squad had a best-ball 56, the a Nobel Prlu wlaner and
teams of Babe Hiskey and cltalrmaa since 1111, Ia reBrewer had 57's whi\e Elder's turalac to lhe University
and Weiskopf's teams finished of California at Berkeley.
wilh 58'S.
Wllile Trevino, who teed off
in the morning, captured
most of the early gallery, hometown favorite . Jd~ck
Nicklaus with ~orne Ian
Bob Hope and his group
drew the big following in the
afternoon. Nicldails; keeping up
a continuing banter with Hope,
shot a 75.
Another attraction was Byron
Nelson who WilD the first of four
Columbus Invitational Tournaments in 1946 and was presented a plaq~ commemorating the
25th anruversary of !hat event.
Nelson, now a television golf
commentator. shot a 74.

SuperMex Pockets $1,000

TP

Pomeroy, Racine
Cop Tourney Wins

BUTLERS BETSY WINS .

•

'

Br United Preos International
Ameriun le.gue
8os
0~~ 011 JOl- 7 ll 1
Sal
..... 000 1)00,-· . s 0
Tiant, Lee 11) and Monlgame·
ry: Leonhard. Dukes 161, Pena
(7) and Etchebarren. WP- Lee
(9·2). LP- Dukes IJ.Sl . HRPowe!l OSihl, Johnson (12th),
S m i t h I2Jrd), Yastrzemskl

· National League
Ia otM- National League WestpaCMettingGiants, whose
All
000 000 000- 0 11 0
games . l'lliladelphia blanked own winning streak was Phil
000 JOO lOx- • 10 0
Stone. Mc()Jeen !8) . and
Aiianta, 4-11, Hooston edged snapped at four.
Williams;
1!0-9) and
Cbirag11 Z-1, Las Angeles nipped
Jesus Akou, who has batted McCarver. Wise
LP- Stone 14·4 ).
San Ftancisco 5-4, and Cincin- in 16 runs in his last 13 games, HRS...Johnson l26thl . Freed
mil downed New YOi'k 4-2.
singled in lhe winning run and l•lhl.
In lbe American League made a good catch of a looping
Chi
000 100 000- 1 2 0

St. Louis pitching staff, expr ss d more deligbt in allowing only one walk than in
winning his 15th game of the Bostoo defeated Baltimore 7-f,
season.
New Yml sbul out Cleveland 7Carlton allowed oiiiy 1M bits .. Oakland edged Kansas City
Monday ~bt in pi!rbiq( the Z-1,Detroitoutslugged Washingsecond-place Cardinals to a 3-1 ton 11-7, Chicago downed
triumph over lhe San Diego MiDIII""l*a 7~ and California
Padres.
bmt Mihraulee 3-L
Carlton, only n.o viclories Deroo Johnson and Roger
shOI't of his pasmal aJl.time Freed bit back-tc&gt;back homers
high of 17 set in 19lil!l, an. utd in lbe fourth inning to belp
only one pass in lbe vr to Rick W'Ise reeo~ d his lOth win
Nate Colbert-in t"eeOiding his in 1' dedsions. Wise allowed 11
15th victory against six dofeals. bits and survived a handful of
Tbe :IS-year old left.bander, jams wbile striking out live and
rebounding fr&lt;m a 10-19 all- walking 011e.
season last year. eap1 1
Steve Garvey's two-out,
amarement at his ......,.., llllw:un homer in the ninth
control.
i:miDg broughllbe Las Angeles
"I don't believe r.e had 1i1J J.lodtl IS a co:ne-from-behind
other ooe-walk pmes tis ,_. victAiry om the Giants.
although I've had a lilt ol' 11 The 1'ictory was the fourth in
walk games,'' Slid Carllan. "I a . - fOI' the Dodgers and
just haven' t bad that much . pulled them to within eight
'· games of the National League
control this year."
Although Carlton lllllllljled ...
bold lhe Padres in cbed; be
admitted to being a liUII!
nervous about lbe close ~
''I was just lr'yq to keep the
little guys off bur befu:e their
big power bitten Cll!lll' up," be

s•.

retts : · De -

, service not .aiv•U•ble : One

nms back in lhe sixth, knock-

USED CARS

Galll9htr, Inc ., 12 ~1st 42nd
Subscrip1ion

But the Mets got the two

UPI Sports Wrikr
·
Steve Carltm, wbo bas
emerged as lhe suprise of the

\ ·.• .• '
,
X!Eijl;!ii:Iili!C:::=:::...)

advertising

livered by curler where
6 IS , avoiloble 50 cents per ~k.

'-line to sccre both runners.

By NEIL

I

Pomeroy, Ohio.

! .

drtwe a shot down the third his sixth against two losses,

Cards Nip Padres, 3-1

West
W. L. Pd. Gl
Oakland
67 3'1 .632 ...
Kansas City 52 Sl .505 ll'l:l
California
S3 5I .42 16
.
\
Chicago
50 5I .&lt;167 1711:1
MiMesota
4 ST .451 1Blh
..
~ Milwaukee
45 61 ..as 22
Monday's Resu tis
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
lr Uniied Press international Chicago 7 Mimesota s
Leading S.tters
New York 1 Cleveland o
National Le119ue
Detroilll Washington 7
G. AB R. H. Pet. California J Milwaukee 1
Torre, SIL 109 ~18 63 1S2 .364
Bdut.Chl IOL o!IIS 67 142 ,351
Today's~lllel'ik'-n
Garr, All
107 A38 71 W .336
Minnesota (Kaat 8-8) at
Brck. St. L 106 437 86 W .336 Chicago (Harten 6-11) , night.
C!mnl, Pt
91 36• 60 122 .335
Washington (McLain S.lS) at
Sgnl!n, Pit
94 365 43 121 .332 Detroit (Niekro J-4), night.
Cash, P it
75 302 S8 98 .32S
New York ( Kekich S.S) at
Dav is. LA 106 427 62 138 .323 Cleveland &lt;Foster 6-10) , night .
Alou. St.L 100 410 55 132 .322
Boston (Siebert l«l at
Jones, NY
88 331 38 106 .320 Baltimore (Palmer 12~1. night.
American league
Milwaukee (Lopez 2~) at
G. AB R. H. Pet. California (Wright 1·2), night.
Ol iva , Min
BS 32'1 5I 120 .365
Oakland (Blue t9·4l at
Mrcr, NY
lOS 378 68 126 .333 Kansas City (SpJiHorff 4·31.
Otis, KC
97 J8J S8 120 .Jll night.
Rchrdt, Ch i 91 336 J'l ·· l04 .310
Rojas. KC
98 360 48 m .308
W•esday's ~mH
Tovar,Minn 102 .a• 1&gt;4 lJO .307 Minn at Kan City, 2. Twi·night
Rtlnmnd, Bat
Milwaukee at Oakland, night
90 2'17 SA 90 .303 Chicago at California, night
Mnchr. Wash 91 2'11 34 88 .302 washington at Detroit, night
Hwrd. Wash 103 384 42 115 .299 New York at Cleveland, night
Smith, Bos 107 413 6J 122 .2'15 Boston at Baltimore, night
Home Runs
National League
National League: Stargel!,
E.st
PiN 38 ; Aaron, All JO ; MiJy ,
'IV. L. Pd. GB
Cln 28; Johnson . Phil 26;
Pittsburgh
67 · 41 .620 ...
Robertson. Pit 22.
St. louis
5'1 ¥1 .s.t6 8
56 50 .528 10
Americal\ League: Me!too, Chicago
New
York
SA 51 .514 11 '12
Chi 25 ; Smith. Bos and Cash,
Phitadetf"ia
U 61 .435 20
Del 2J; Petrocelli, 8os, Oliva,
Montrea
43 65 .398 24
Minn and Murcer. NY 20.
West
Runs S.tted In
W. L. Pet. GB
Natianal League: Stargell,
Pitt 100; Torre, St.L 87 ; Aaroo, San Francisco 67 .u .604 ...
All 79 ; Motanez, Phil 7J ; Los Angeles 58 51 .532 81
~ S3 .509 10 1:1
Houston
Johnson, Phil 70.
Atlanta
5I
SS .509 1011:1
Amtrican League: Killebrew,
Minn 7J; Petrocelli, Bos 70: B. Cincinnati • SO 61 .450 17
39 71 .JSS 27'h
Robinson, Salt, Murcel', NY and San Diego
A1oudly's
Results
Sando, Oak 61 .
Cincinnati 4 New York 2
Pitching
National League: Jenkins, Philadelphia 4 Atlanta 0
Chi 11·9: Ellis, Pill JS.5; St. Louts 3 San Diego 1
Carlton , St.L 1s..l; Downing , LA Houston 2 Chicago 1
1).6; Johnson, SF 12-4; Dierker, Los Angeles 5 San Francisco •
( Ontr games scheduled)
Hou 12-5: Stoneman, Monll2·9.
American LNgue: Blue, Oak
19·• : Lo!ich , Del 16-8; Dobson ,
T..Uy's Probable Pitchers
Batt lH; Sieber!, Bos J4.6;
Atlanta (Reed 11-7) at
Cuellar and McNally, Batt lH; Philadelphia (Shorl6-12), night.
Cu!p, Bos 13-8; Hunt.,., Oak llSan Diego (Arl i n .S.1~) at St.
11 .
Louis (Reuss 10.10), n1ghl.
Chicago (Jenkins 17-8) at
Houston (Dierker12-5), night.
Los Angeles (Sutlon 10.10) at
San Franciscu (Bryant 7-7) .
Pittsburgh (Blass 11..4) at
Montreal (Morton 11-12), night.
Cincinnati (Simpson 2·• and
Merrill 0-10) at New York
(Ryan J1.8 and Williams J-SL 2,
Twi.night.

Second class postage Pllid at

National

the •tbl Ilea who DWRil tile
Americus wt Ill thl!ir CIIIIDtnanditW lead in cGid m-'"s
wi1b trltlltqilll • Y. ltiji,
W••mabr .,.... ane cl the
games' lllCIIt WI ' I dlampiOillbips - the Decalblaa, a
gl"'e!Jing l!lfti!Dt ""'w!itim
over two days wtae wi
Is
called the "Best All-Maul
Athlete." The D ,_--old.Des
Moines, Iowa, 11m' led 'l'irt.IJ;y
aD the way lbtongb the bg.
grind fD win willl ,,~~~ ,-.. -~~~~li@WilfliWi~.RW~~J%lU:Mf1~UW1tWW51K~@Wf

Ding run with the score tied a-2,

4365

992-2156, Editorial Phone 992 • .
7151 .

reprtsentative

ud

NEW YORK (UPI)-Lee May but Tony Perez tripled and
had just one hit Mooday night scOI'ed on a Johnny Bepdl liDbnt it was enough.
gle a little later in the izDng
May clwted his Zlth homer of ID give the visilllrs some
the seasnn over lhe left center breathing rOoui.
field fence in the ninth inning '1'be Reds hit New Yml startto lift the Clncinnali Reds over er Jon Matlack !01' two rws in
the New Yml .Mets 4-2 in the the first inning.
opener of a four.game series Pete Rose led all lbe game
here.
,
with a single and Geoqe Fa:sler'
May gave the Reds the win- walked. Two outs later Ilelldl'

Br unoled Press lnterNiional ·
American LNgue
East
W. L. Pd. Gl
653'1 .625
62 45 .519 4'h
5I ¥1 .S38 9
5356 .4116 W h
43 62 .410 22'12

I

Felierbacb

AI

gymnast ROPnne Place WB"e

e·d s End Losfug Spell, Win 4-2

111

OrtCIB

lig effort in

'1'be Utated Slates had 13 gold
medals at lbe end of Monday's
"''llp"titi.w against only six fOI'
OJba.Butintolalmedal•itwas
d..;, _ U. S. 33, OJba ~ Canada was a distant third with
til.
Tract
stars
Rick

DIVERS

Fag lie•

1

aD spcrts.

WE1e1HE
.FIRST SKIN

Tbe United stall!s ·~wed
t~e Statue of Liberty as a
~ from the people cl
trance. on ,_
4, lMl, acd.
bidding has been:
11
d 1~g w · DCJC41!
co.r
'I
SouIll
North
East
Bntanmca. .
1•
Pass
portMr .....W loe • ....
3•
Pass 3N.T. tloi• • oloowillc ... - . ... •
?
4•
Pass
heart sui1.

(NIWSPAPil ltmRPliSl ASSN.).

ccmeii at a lime wben lbe
U:ated states ts mt frwl In the
UiiGffidal team "''llp"titiou in
the P'"· bnt only by a 1111'prilingly amallmarginove- the

mmlhs.

My sister wants to start school again in the faD, but 1D teD tbe
truth I'D be vety ashamed being in the same scbool wilb ber.
Isn't there a different kind al school sbe can go ID! Lite one for
div01ced mothers?- SHAMiiD
Dear Shamed:
Your sister made a mistake and paid for it. !lie doesn' rieed
the added burden of snobbery! Help her make a comeback, for
heaven's sake - by accepling her iniD your life and school
trouble. Don'tpl'Oillote more by bltllnglhe ''sh•llll'" button! -B.
Dear Helen:
This summer a bunch of Deigbt«bood kids got together and
started building a park on L'Oilllty land. ('Ibe coonty l8jd "go
_,.. .... ..
Not counting anylbing 1• il overboard bY .Apollo 15, ahead," bn t couldn't fmnlBb IDIICb llllllley.) We 8crounged an old
there are-presently some 2,427 lllliiHilade oAjects in orbit JIIIDP and got water from lhe river, planted graso and trees, and
around the earth-satellites, racket bodies and parts of it's be(!lnnl~ to look great already.
rocket bodies and· various other items cl debris.
Now we want to add a playgroond fOI' little !lids, and maybe
This compares with 1.819 objects in orbit at this time by ned year we can belp unda privileged c:bildren fnJm the inner
last year. The difference is mainlY attGUDted for by 12 city to get ~ fresh air.
U.S. and 48 Soviet tauncbings, with associated items of
We heard there's an award pnJgl'8111 for teenage Sllllllllel'
debris, between June 29, I!IID, and June 'D, l!r71.
Other nations, however, are beginning to contribute to JI'Ojects and if your group wins, it gets several tbou.uod dollars.
the space traffic problem. F'nnce, for example, can This w~ really get our park going, as alreacly a lot of people are
claim seven payloads and 34 items cl debris for a total interested enough to cmie down and belp. Oould you tell us lliOi'1!
of 41 objects in earth orbit.
about trying for a prize? - THE GROUP
Since the October 4, 1957, llnmd!ing of Sputnik I, 5,3011 Dear Group:
objects have been put into orbit A catalogue of these
Manpower, Inc., 1120 N. Plankinton Ave., Milwaukee,
objects maintained by lhe joint U.S..C..nadian North
American Air Defense Cfmmand (NORADI Space De- Wisconsin, 53113, awards cash prizes fOI' outst•nding teen
fense Center shows that %,1181 cl tbese have decayed- JI'Ojects in its SUMMER AC'l'ION PROGRAM. '1'be nationwide
COIDpetition, designed ID ''spur comm1mily betlertnent tlrougb
fallen into the atmosphere and burned up.
The Air Defense Command does not maintain this creative action by y~ people," allers a first prize al p,ooo,
space watch and cil.talogue because it is intrigued by oeeond and third prizes al $2.000 and '1,000 respectively, and 40
satellites or so that ~ can diet lbeir tongues and $100 merit awards.
say, "Imagine that. "
()I]y penons 21 ~ old or under are eJi3ible, and enlrles
It has a deadly serious JIIII'IIOSl!. All tbese thousands
of objects in orbit must be catalogued and watched lest must be in befnSeptember 15,1f11.FOI' further lnfOiilllllica and
in the confusion that woold olhenrise prevail, nothing is · registration flmlB, write to Snmmer Action Pl'ogram, at the
above addn~.
ever launched against us tbrougll space UDawares.
Good luck! - H.
Dear Helen:
When yoo hear career women (n•n•Dy show buoiness typea)
on TV talk l!bon, they ahnost always come on strong about
"marriage Is oblolete," "live withbimbutdon'tmarry him," etc.
'1'be few wbo are married indicate they'd just aa liOClil have It the
other way, and almost no 011e any more apects matriage to be
By DICK KLEINER
lorewr. Movlea and boob also downgrade the lnaUtution.
HOLLYWOOD-(NEA)-Afler a buncb cl years OD Wall
Yet people are still getting hitched. '1'be median IIlii! al brides
Street, Peter Gimbel decided be tr.llllm to make movies. is sliD under 21. Girls In blgb scbool don't aim fcr careen euept
Lots of people come to that ambitious conclusion. but
don't know what to do to impleD!'!Ilt it. Peter Gimbel had as illlurance (''in c:.e I'm not hdJ in love"), And they mn't
two things going for bim m bis quest to be a movie- snllcipaling divorce.
We've got two dJI(erent breeds here: Females wbo talk,
maker.
First, he had money. He's from lhe department store write, and "aoct" against marriage, gi~ the lmpreuion it's out
Gimbles and, although be is not adive in nnming the al style. And then we have aD the eager kids (and older people
New York emporium, be is .., the hoard ci directors.
too) flocking ID get liCen8es;
Second, he had a particularly pbotogenic bobby-diving
So what does It aD prove? - sruDENT OF HUMAN
down into the depths of tile ocean He was lhe man who NATURE
first photographed tbe stmkea ADdrea Doria, the day
Dear Student:
after that ship weut to tile bollom
... limply that the oulllpoken "new.thought" people are
So he decided his first movie va~ture woold be a
documentary about some pbase of tile ocean. He opted beard, read, a.nd watdled, bnt the great majority of'IJ.steners and
for sharks, reasoning c«tecUy that lhey scared peGple.
oils vera nmain fascluted but IDW8yed.
Tbe ·result is lhe movie !bat's IIIIW out, called "Blue
As I've said before, ltusuaDy takes three generatims to effect
Water, White Death," about lhe seardl for the biggest sweeping aoctal ~e - and by that time, we may have started
and most ferocious fish of them all, tile great white shark. swinging in the other direction. - H.
It's a great film , ..;ling and beautiful and with touches
P.S. Webster.deflnllica '~,'' tbat is.
of humor and mystery.
But don't look for llll'l'her undea 11 documeutary from
Gimbel. This was made sbictly as a stepping-stooe. He
.t '· _The
_
DaiJ
_
s.~li--.,
wants to make movie .movies-stories with plots and
actors that don't bite people. "Blue Water, While .Death"
· DEVOTED TO THE
is just a stepping-'Stnae f« him.
INTERE$TOF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
He's already got bis aext 011e in the wads, a story he's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
written called "Mexican SaH," wbicll be hopes to produce
Ekec. Ed.
ROIERT HOEFLICH,
and perhaps direct.1be theaty is ll!at "Blue Water" will
Ci1y Editor ·
help get the Cmanc.ing far ••p• ft;m Salt.u
'
Published daily except
"I've finally fouDCI wbat I wani to do with my life,"
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, Jll
Gimbel says. "I wasted 13 ye.us--aine as a Wall Street
Court
St.. Pomerar. Ohio, ·
stockbroker-ilnd this is w~t I tully want to do."
-45769. Bbsiness Office Phone

•

•'

"William F. Buckley and I hare a lot in common people
either lore me or loathe mel"

sour?

been building fOI' the moment
they would get lhe United Stall!s
back on a ball field, a moment
that comes about noon EDT
when lhe two unbeaten teams
~ off here in lbe Cauca
River VaDey, 3,000 feet high in
lheAndesmountalnsandalong
way fr&lt;m the Canadian prairie.
Ed Bane, a 19-year-old
sophomore southpaw from
Arizona State U., with an 11-2
record, was lhe cboice al U. S.
manager Ron Fraser to start on
the mound fll' lhe Yanks. The
O!bans weren't saying who
their pitcher ....Ud be but, as
Fraser said, "you can just bet
he'D be the best me they've
got."
The selection al Bane empbasiuod lhe difference between
the two teams -lhe U. S. squad
averaging 19 years in age, the
O!bans wilh several players 25
ID 30 who have played together
fOI' some time wilb a lot of In-

MASON - Tbe Little League- here will
spoasor its secoad ~nnual Men's Slo-Pitch SoftNil Tlllli1Uiment on the weekends of August %8-29
ud Sept. 4-51 at the Little League baD diamoad
.aut ta the Mason Drive-In Theatre. It will be a
da We e6minati011-sanctioned tonrnament. AU
teams mast be sanctioned.
'111e fint 16 teams tG COiltact any of the
following tournament directors will be accepted,
Red TKker at 773-5636, Charles Stanley at 7735!55, or Bob OUver at 773-5571: Drawing for the
loutnament will be held August 22. There is a $Z5
e~ky fee.
Last year' s champion was Farmers Bank of
Pomeroy. and runnersup were Barr &amp; Son
Cou.truetion of Gallipolis.

ternalionaf npa iellce.
Track ttars lUrk Waa'1'be U. S.-Cola tGDft ontatim amalter, Sleft Pnfwt.ine, ...

&amp;nee then lhe OtbaM haveR

~

A- Three-Arnold Palmer. eggs?
A- The developing
Jack Nicklaus and Billy
are carried attached to the
Casper.
Q. i\11"'1 (I :S. presi&lt;lellt
appendages beneath the tail Pus
Q- Which U.S. city claims for 10 to JJ months.
lil&gt;ed the slwrt&lt;.&lt;l .time?
Poss
A-,-John F. Kennedy. who t.h• ,hort.est.nicknnme'
Pass
A-l.,os Angeles. popularly
died ai the a~e of 46.
You, South, hold:
Q-How old . is the SIJ·
uarncd ·'LA''
called "11ew mathematics"? • AK87 .AZ •KQt ..KU3
Q- lJUU' 'ftHIIJ!I 71 r rJ f e ·''
(J -f·ut lw w lony ~~~ •.:·~ the , A- The New Math origin- What do you· do now?
.imu1l y, II f" r .~. lm o • IPtW
co 711 m fJ 11 l.tiiJ.o;ter Cfltt !I it.s ated during the 1950s.
A-Bid four hearts. Your
murP Llwu $1 miiJj,,. '

'

time.
These men are no babes in tile woods. Numbers have
long experience in gueniiJa war. 'l'lq received their
baptism as young men in tile war l!ll•mst tile French.
In that fight for i"""J'eJ
a goad many in this grolip
were teamed up with Ho Cbi llinb--IJut as natillllll,!ists.
lri that war. they lost any maa- IIley may have had
about communuism. Tiley are mating this move with
their eyes open, but witll c.wru......., that the Communists
can be beaten at the polls.

Nothing so drastic as divorce is even hinted, but there
is talk that after some two4birds ci a century the Dame
has gone out of the roma..,... . Familiarity has bred, not
contempt but-well. familiarity; and as in many a marriage, it is more oonveniente than passion that now holds
the union together.
It is not, however, a case ci lbe molorist deserting the
motorcar but of the motorcar being unfaithful to the
motorist. The automobile is, alas, a victim of its own
spectacular success.
When there were only a few thousand cars in the country, it didn't matter how much !bey smoted and fumed.
Now that there are stclles of miDiODS, it matters very
urgently.
When highway dealjls were measured in the hundreds
per year, society took liUie notire cl tbe safety either of
cars, roads or drivers. But with peaple mntinuing to kill
themselves at the rate of 50,(100-plus a year, society is
demanding reforms in at least lhe first two categories.
This concern, lranslated into gova wnent regulations,
has Detroit engineers wodillg overtime. What they envision as the car of tile very aear More is not the low,
sleek to~ that used to be pictured on magazine
covers back
lhe '50s and '&amp;Is. It is nothing less than
a return to
basic-box configuratiOD.
The car of tomomnr will have a long hood (to contain
pollution.rontrol equipment), a llcmy paSSdlger compartment and more vertical windsbield (for better visibility,
rollover protection, ete.) and a smaller trunk (because
between bumpers that reallf bump and an engine compartment crammed with antipollutioo devices, something
has to give, roomwise).
It will also be smaller, mare -siNe, more expensive
·
and hopefully more durable.
But will it be loved!

Showdown Today
· .,ttJi JOIIJI( G. GRIFFIN
IJPI Sportto Edl._
CAll, Colcmbia (UPIJ- It's
showdown day between lbe
Voited ~tes and , W. tn
hast!baU m the Pa:I-AIQeriran
Gatnes- the day the powetful
O!bans have been awallillg for
lour years since their dofeat by
lhe Yanks in lhe 1967 games in
~
'1'be defeat -by a Z-1 soore in
a p!aJalf at Portage La Prairie,
Man. - .was particularly
galling to lhe CWians becaDSe
they were beavy favorites and
had wbippal tbe U. S. team
twice c~urq ~~~e regular.part r~
the games tournamenl

sives.
Tbere are three l"'8""'S wily these men will wait until
late this year to push Ibis CClDStiluticiua reform :
'
• They doa't want to disn.,t tile IPwer house elections
in August or lhe presidetdia! elections in October.
• President Tbieu at I*
11 is mucll loo suspicious
and cautious to agree to any socii plan.
• Tbey expect that tlleir graap will gain a great deal
of additional ~ in tile August and October voting.
This will add eonsiderabll to lbeir leverage with Tbieu,
assuming that be is re e ted, as s : ms likely at this

Our Space Inventory

· .... NOBTJI,
.ll·h'·' .6KJ )'-'

The
eggs Wesl

QUICK QUIZ

·.

··~

J

a Better Car

Appendix Isn't Only Side Pain
.,

BY JACI O'IIIUAN

I

From Pressures,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
· May 8e Swelling, Ovulation

By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am 16
years old and have been
having pains in my rig])t side
!ar more than a year. I went
to the doctor and he said It
acts like appendicitis but be's
not sure. I don't usually have
fever but I have vomited. He
iald he doesn't want to operate unless he really must. I
read in one of your articles
that sometimes attacks of
pain not clearly appendicitis
are noted before a definite
attack occurs. Can this be
what's happening to me?
What should I do?
Dear Reader-In young
girls especially, pain in the
right side similar to appendicitis can be caused by ovulation. Tbe pain is usually mid·
way between periods, and is
known as the middle pain.
More than one girl has been
operated on for appendicitis

BERRY'S

Linescores

Home lmpiUllllllent

LOANS
YES!_· M
Meigs fA Branch

Meigs County Branch ol Tilt
Athens County S..vings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeror.Oilio
Member Federal Home Loan
Sank.
Member Federal Sovings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounts insured up to
,000.00.

�·'

'

ji r...._o,,O.,AIIplt3,lm

4-'l'llllla!Q91i'leeJ,WI11

-

--

-

3,1971

-

Social
Calendar

Governor Contradicts Doomsday ·Claimers
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan labeled "irrespoosible" MOIIIIa7 statements
that Ohio is in for a major
ecooomlcsetbact if the $1.4 billioo tax package under consideratiOII in the General AA8embly
becomes law.
Gilligan predicted if a \ax 011
corporate and personal income
is not enacted, there would be
"an effort in the legislature to
tax everytbing that wiggles,

TUESDAY
ANNUAL Pomeroy comIDJIII(ty Bible school, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Monday through Fri!lay rit
Pwll!ioy Junior High School.
Open to all young people, three
years old tbrough junior high
scbool age.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F and AM, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at temple.
. POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,' walks or files."
regular meeting at Mlisonlc
"All of us bave heard talkTemple.
IDia1ly irresponsible talk, I
NEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian might add - that Ohio is in
Sisters, 7:30 Tuesday at the flll" a m!jOr economic setbact
Legion ball, lliddJeport. Mrs. when tbe hi • partisan tax proHelen r..tbal( East Palestine, posa1 passed by the Ohio House
grand cbief of Obio, to visit.
becomes law. later this year,"
.wEDNEsDAY
Gilligan said at a news conferPOMEROY LODGE 164 ence.
F&amp;AM regular siated meeting
"Butwhatbusinessmeilreally
Wednesday 7:30 p,m. All dislike is tbe antiquated, unfair
Master Masons invited.
system of taxes on property and
THURSDAY
machinery we have now," he
OPERATING engineers said.
wed to make special effort to He said that without an · Inattend the special meeting come tax, property taxes would
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at likely double over the next ten
American Legion Hall, Athens. years and sales taxes would InFriday
crease.
mEODORUS COUNCD.. 17,
Onobndman Created
D. of A., 7:30p.m. JOOF ball, Gilligan's comments came as
Inspection. Members to take he announced tbe creation of a
cookies or sandwiches.
new state service, tbe "business-

man's ombudsman, "desigliedto
Unk ·his adminislrati011 and the
business corrununity.
"The businessman's ombudsman is the first in a Series· of
action programs desiglied to
make state government more
responsive to the needs and attitudes of Ohio's business community," Gilligan said . .
"The ombudsman is a direct

line, slicing througb red tape,
The operation of the new proto the network of services; In- grain was to be the responsibformation and espertlae avail· "Uity of Development Director
able throughout state govern- David C. Sweet, who backed GilmenttoOhio businesa," be said. ligan's rejection of "talk" that
Gilligan said tbe service, to be a Cll'}lOI"ate income tax would
staffed by the Ohio lleparlment drive business from the state.
of Development, was designed Sweetsaidsurveysreveal that
to allow ~n to gain in- taxes. are only seventh on the
formation aiKt assistance or of. list of"business concerns when
fer criti~ of state programs. location in a given state is be-

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Oiarles mula would conect $38 million
Undberg, president of the Cln- in new taxes next year from
cinnati Board of Education, Cincinnati school district realasked the Senate Educati011 dents and return only $5.8 mil·
Committee Mollday night to re- li011 to Cincinnati schools.
consider the House-passed for- Cincinnati and 17 other Ham·
mula for distribution of slate ilion County school districts are
aid to local scbools.
considering legal action io .halt
The committee, chaired by unequal distrilmtion of funds,
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R·Iron- Undberg said.
ton, is considering the educa- "We've gotten sort of desperlion portion of tbe $7.9 billion ate because we have a strong
budget approved by the House · feeling this formula is wrong,"
for the next bienniwn.
he said.
·
Lindberg said distribution of
Wa)l ADd Mew Meetl .
state aid to school districts Backing Lindberg was Sen.
was unequal, with rural dis- Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinclnnati.
tricts receiving more than they "How can you expect me to
collect in taxes and urban dis- vote fQJ" a bill which· returns
tricts receiving far less.
only 20 per cent of ihe money
He said the Honse passed for- we in Oncinnall contribute in

l':!::g

Pwuble

Browns

Will ~ he_;Back:

ClEVELAND (UPI) - Art
Modell, president of the
Oe9eland Browns, sees the
tam that finished 7-7 last
J
•• "honnclng back to the
fGp where It baa ~ and where
it beiMp "
"I don't .lite 7-7 seasons,"
MOdell said Monday. "The
~of Cleveland didn't lake
lindly to last season. It was a
fire type of year. Now we've
got to get the people back with
us."
Modell bas a new coach this
-..-on In Nlct Sk&lt;rlch, wbo
IDok over ftcm tbe retired
Blanton Collier, alld he feels
''anticipation ... apectation,
similar ID 1913."
In 1913 Cti1ier was named
coach after Paul Brown, tbe
ltam's founder' was fired. The
Browns won the National
Football League cbamP,onship
tbat year.
"It's almolit identical,"
Modell said. "Eight years ago
we were 011 a real spot, in·
cbdng me penooally with a
new bead coach and we
deliwred.

"Now the whole organlxatim
isontbespotagaintoregainonr
place in (1"0 football," be said.
"I'm very optimistic about
1m aDd I ba-ve !iUpl'eDie COD·
fidenoe in Nick lltoricb and bis
assistants," Modell added. "We
had some fine years witb
Blanton Collier and now I'm
looking forward to mn with
the realigned ataff.'\
The Browns oWiier said

..

'

Music is tbe universal lan·
guage of mankind.-Henry
W. Longfellow. Am e r1 can
poet.
The sun shall be no more
your light by day, nor for
brightness shall the moon
gi!Je light to you by night;
but the Lord will be your

everlasting light,

and

your

God will be your glory.-

lsoich 60:19.

• • •

We find God twicf--{)nce
witbin, once without us;
witbin us as an eye, wit~out
us as a light.-Jean Paul
Richter, German novelist.
Whoewr confesses that
Je1111 is tlu Son of God, God
abides in him, and he in
God. So we know and be·
lii!Oe llae love God ha.• fliT
u. God is love, and he who
abides in luve abides in God,

and God abides in him .-1
John ,4:15, 16.

• • •

"nle great tra~tedy or life
is oot tbat men rwrish. but

that they ····•se to love ··

Som"r!O••t M&lt;•!' ' .' t ~ rn . Brjli ~ tl
lid ion • · ' ·1..:111ia &lt;Writer

Aaswen QuesliMs
He said the functions of the
new program would include:

increased taxes for education?" and adjourned list week for ~
he asked other committee 12-day vacation.
members.
The Senate held a Door ses-

While the EdUcation Committee, which is pivotal in decld·
ing how much in new taxes will
be needed for the next two
years, heard testimony from
Lindberg, Sen. Michael J. Ma·
Ioney, R-Cincinnati, began a series of meetings of his six-man
Sena!e Ways and Means subcommittee on technical details
of the House-passed tax bill.
The House bas completed action on a $1.4 billion package
of new taxes and the budget

·agencies and responsibility fQr
following up referrals to determine if further assistance Is re.
quired.
-Suggestingcbangesforsolv.;ing business complaints with re.
gard to state activities.
- Assisting in arranging
business.
meetings and conferences when
- Referring inquiries to ap- necessary with appropriate of.
prq~riatestatedeparlmenls and ficials in state departments and
agencies.
Sweet said the ombudsman
would'not interv.ene in conlract
negotiations be'!'een tbe slate
and business or m caaes before
regulatorY agencies.
sentence has been imposed.
Under present law, tbe judge Businessmen may call tbe
may suspend sentence in such service toll free at 1~282-1085
cases only at the time of origi- in Ohio; 1-aro.1107 from outside Ohio; and 4119 1689 in Colnal sen~cing .
umbus.
A1lo Acted On
In otber action the Senate:
-Approved House amendf f f f f ' f ' ,...... . ·
men~ to two ~nate bills ~- ·ii ·
creasmg the maxrmwn pernns- :!!
. . . ~~ ..;
sible tax levy imposed by voters • '
witbin a port authority and pr(). : . Qr .
viding for additional payment
Nobody has any right to
authority for sales tax when
lind tile uninteresting or
maintenance of adequate rec- ; unrewarding.
__ ~
ords is unreasonably burden- ,
-Charles Eliot · .

Shippers Choose
Trutks

WASHINGTON-Man·
ufacturers of two-thirds of
the nation's major types of
commodities ship more than
50 per cent of their products
by truck, according to the
latest U.S. Census of Trans·
fielder J~~try Coleman was to portation.
make a presentation on behalf
of retired players seeking
pensim lncreailes

·

Olanges proposed in tbe free

agent chft would return four
,ears c~e pla)'!rs to the
regular dran pbase when

eligible and secondary cbft
pbaaeJllllyers wwld be subject
ID aelection unO' once and lben
to the - • · · ""'·-

h·-

sion Monday night to CMSider
several measures.
Senators unanimously approved and sent to Gcw. John
J. Gillipn a House bill grant.
ing judges authority to suspend sentence in a misdemeanor case at any time after the

!J.,'

Trutks Pay Taxes

WASHING T 0 N _
Trucks each year pay more
than one-third of all high·
way-user taxes collected in
the U.S., although only one
vehicle in six is a truck. In
1969, this amounted to
about $5.3 billion.

JUMI0:Stll ERASEIS
Onward ' Prnk and green

Pkt. of 12 ARliiUSHU
$1.20 IJalue

!;.!!~;':J~r!f::

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r..,ei.celtn

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Toolsie Pops , Tootsie Rolls.
Reg-. 51tc

floral or mod ~ t: ks . Black
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rADMERS

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and transformed into rigor· F&amp;STEETB Denture Adhuive
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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
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ALARIII CLOCJI

FOOTIALLS

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Attract ive antique whtle

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Brown labrlt, while

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Permanent 01 wata r·

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color marlung pens

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aegotiation rig.lits 111 selected
players under other Jl"opoeed

i·SMII

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cbanges.

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having probleDIB on pass
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Abwt 8,000 penms turned
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91Gicb said quarterbaciCMike
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and BlllNelaen ''moved tbe club

Holds up to 16 garment s.
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Walnul lir1ish . Au~m­
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Clear box ""''" colored
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Cotor1ul metal boxes.
ho lds B-oz. Ttl erm9s
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Two Reg. 19c pens and
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ATilETIC SOCJIS

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Moctern patterns deoorate
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•rs CREW SOCICS

JUMBO THEMEBOOICS

REPOIIT COVERS

and

B latll. COIOI'I.

0 ~--~

he kills himself."...

C. C. Johnson Spink, the
publisher of the' book, says
maybe it isn 'I his place to say
so but he thinks it's "tbe finest
book on baseball we have ever
published." .
I agree.

'~~

28t

Joy. Happiness palterns.

Broeg puts it, Grover Cleveland
Alexander reeling down the
street of a UtUe Nebraska town
to pnst his last letter to his
beloved Aimee before he died
drunk in obocurity ...
And Yogi Berra being introduced to Ernest Hemingway by
Toots Shor. When the author
left, Shor said to Berra,
" You've read Hemingway,
haven't you, Yog?"
•
Berra frowned. "I don't think
so," he said. " What paper's. he
'
WI"th'"
• •••
There's also the one and only,
Babe Ruth, uninhibited as
always on one of those
infrequent occasions Calvin
Coolidge visited the Washington
ballpark during his presidency.
Politely, correcUy, each of
the Yankees . met and shook
hallds with the President. When
Ruth's turn came, he stuck out
a friendly mitt and said, 'Geez,
. 't 1"t• ........
1't's hot' am
rn::~ ,. .. .. .•
Dizzy Dean also is represented.
Broeg tells bow Diz, out of
baseball six years and bulging
at the seams, started tbe final
game of the 1947 season for ~
St. Louis Browns. Dean burled
four scnless im\ingB but then
got up limping after connectins
safely, slidins into second and
pulling a muscle.
His wife, Pal, seated in .a box
seat near the BrOWI\8' dugout,
leaned over the railing and .
·caUed down to manager Muddy
Rue!:
"Get him Dlit Or there before

0n•e11f•

LIIIICII JilTS

IIC BALL PEIIS

"·"
... 11J

Drultftt

De•l•n•d tot Girlal

"He (Nelaen) needs just
enough work to keep him
sbarp," Skorlcb said of the
ailing veteran.

.

.'

.

1~~.Set

The Sports Parade

By MIL1'0N RICHMAN
like that.
UPI Sporta Writer
There are, fortunately, other
NEW YORK (UP!)-There books, too. Books like ''The
are any number of somnifa- Godfather," whlcb grab you
cients on the market.
from the very first sentence,
All you have to do is ask your hold you by tbe lapels all the
nelghborhooddruggistandhe'll way through and leave you
reel off a number of them from looking for more at the end.
which you can cboose.
I've just !inillhed reading
A somnifacient is merely a such a book. It's called "Super
75-cent word meaning a drug or Stars of Baseball," and I can't
some other agent .that puts you remember enjoying any book
to sleep. There are a lot of more.
books that have the same Bob Broeg, tbe sports editor
effect.
and columnist of the St. Louis
You struggle through the first Post-Dispatch and an absolutely
'iQ.OO pages and suddenly your delightful man with a wonderful
head starts nodding. Then your Oair for words, is the autbor of
eyes begin closing, the book this extraordinar) book which
drops .out of yoilr band and tbe goes for $8.95 and is easily
next thing you know some- worth five times the price.
body's shaking you, ll I say Bob Broeg has turned
turns out to be your out an extraordinary book
wife and she's busting your because in crisp simple Jan.
shoes about why don't you guage, the kind everyone
go to bed if you want to sit understands and enjoys, he
there in the chair and snore · comes as humanly close to
bridging baseball's generation
gap as anyone I know.
He has you meet such
Good Safety Record · celebrated old-timers as . Cy
WASHINGTON - A Young, Ty Cobb, Bonus WagnNational Safety Council er, Walter Johnson and Christy
study shows that trucks ac- Mathewson as well as otbers
count for only II per.cent of who came later like Babe Ruth,
all vehicles involved in acci· Rogers Hornsby, Mickey Cochdents. though they make up rane, Gabby Hartnett, Lefty
more than 16 per cent of the Grove, Joe DiMaggio and Hank
Nation's vehicle fteet. . ·
Greenberg. Broeg also provides
. unusual insighis Into such more
recent superstars as Ted
Williams, Warren Spahn, Jackie
Trutk Taxes
Robinson, Roy Cam~,
Reported
Stan Musial, Sandy Koufaz aDd
WASHINGTON - An· Mickey ManUe.
nual state and federal highThe book is the outgrowth of
way usc taxes for a typical
heavy truck range from Si.· a series of articles Broeg did
654 for a three-axle tractor- originally for tbe Sporting
trailer 140.000 pounds gross News.
It has everything. Humor,
vehicle weight) tn Sl400
paid by h five-axle tractor- Romance,.pathos.
1
For example, there is, as
trailer (72,000 lh&lt;. GVW) .

Nrhe school ""os an
rrl ~u'lyl ! rpper POUCh

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SET INCLUDES:
• 1111-ln. Capeclty Blncltt
• lO'hxS·In. Theme Book
• 4rS..ln. Nolobook

:: t&gt;~~r:::!~:
::oft ; and sAVINGS CO.
ro,.... llrmor, -dter .
..

Modell

without questlm the game fl
football "bas become mci-e
physical lately."
"And I know Nick will instill
this In the BroWII8," he said.
91ciicb said be was pleased
with moet aspects of the team's
second scrimmage at the
lrainingcampatHiramCollege
on Saturday.
"Both Unes played better,
although the offense still is

soo

Woi·Look VInyl Pottem•

·BARREL '0
PASTE

10•
18•

12·1NCH WOOD IUUI

.•

from the registrar of motor vebicles to the Divislon.of Watercraft in the Department of Natural Resources.
-Ap(l"oved a hill .":pealing
obsolete law authorumg the
bigbway director to build and
"Poor Ric bard's Alma- ~intain roads betw~n slate
nack" was published by bigbways and state historical
Benjamin Franklin in 1732. parks.
The WQI"ld Almanac notes
that Franklin's almanac u_. M
W
was, for about 25 years, tbe nvW any ear
most popular book in the
American colonies, exceptilh
f
ling tbe Bible. Usin~the
. Wi Mort Com Orl

s;~~d~~~~o:~r~sayinU:;

CHECK THESE
BASIC BACK TO
SCHOOL NEEDS

,..

*.If~. ~ickJ
* Easy*.t

some.

.,

FRANKLI

.. -

-Approved legislation trans-

Owners Open Debates

"011 what were its bases
.nmk ' or who laid the cor·
.
nerslone, when the mormng
stors sang together, and all
tile sons of God shouted for
joy?"-Job 38: 6, 7.

Sweet said factors such as
availability of manpower and
tr8llllp0l"tllti011 are cmSidered
far more important and providing .information 011 such factors
was the purpose of the ombudsman program.

-Receivingandansweringall
questions on state programs of
interest to business.
- Providing a central clearing house for receiving and
handling complaints, critiCism,
infonnation and suggestions
about state activities relating to

EN

New Look at School Aid Formula ASke d

BLUE POWER
·oi.\laiul Albletle ace VIda
Bloe · gave 1 o m e hint of
&amp;llag1 to come with Ids
perfermuee list September.
movements. American League
His first two major league CHICAGO (UPI) - Major uw1ras recently considered tbe
wlH were a JIO:bltter agailllt league baaeball ownas begin possible transfer of the Wasb·M bulettta aDd a one-bitter delate today 111 a le~
agenda submitted by COIIIIIIJ&amp;. ~too franchise at a Detroit
agalast Kaa~as City.
slmer Bowie Kubn flll" their meeting.
Kuhn's agenda covered such
annual summer meeting.
points as a shcrter spring
TWIN TERRORS
Jim Kaat and Jim Perry Owners will discus.s the lraining season, rules revisions,
of tbe Minnesota Twins were Cllllllllssloner's agenda to open the free agent draft, the perthe top two Am eric an the two day aeasim and then formance bonus rule, Ira~ of
League pitchers in lifetime Clllvelie In separate league contracts of unnamed pla,ers,
wins
into tb&lt; 1971 sea- meetlnga to vote on the points minor league realignment, and
son.
t bad recorded· 156 llcought up
·
possible modification of tbe
victories, Perry 150.
n was
that owners major league divisional setup.
might Iring up other illms for The pla,er relations cmuni~
league
cOBIIidentim in tbelr . tee and the prcmotiiiiS corpora~
Meteorites are meteoroids
wbicb bave landed upon tbe separate meetinga, including tlon were to report also and
earth.
the poSBibllity of franchise former New York Yankee In-

Thoughts

ing CMSidered. ·

..

for

con'ltnience

andaolidl

Phone: 372-2221

•
I

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Florala

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POilFOUOS ·

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Report ·po.-tlolio wrth
2 WCIIIIt. IIYIIIII ·in

RALL'S

BEN FRANKLII)I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.,

�·'

'

ji r...._o,,O.,AIIplt3,lm

4-'l'llllla!Q91i'leeJ,WI11

-

--

-

3,1971

-

Social
Calendar

Governor Contradicts Doomsday ·Claimers
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan labeled "irrespoosible" MOIIIIa7 statements
that Ohio is in for a major
ecooomlcsetbact if the $1.4 billioo tax package under consideratiOII in the General AA8embly
becomes law.
Gilligan predicted if a \ax 011
corporate and personal income
is not enacted, there would be
"an effort in the legislature to
tax everytbing that wiggles,

TUESDAY
ANNUAL Pomeroy comIDJIII(ty Bible school, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Monday through Fri!lay rit
Pwll!ioy Junior High School.
Open to all young people, three
years old tbrough junior high
scbool age.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F and AM, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at temple.
. POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,' walks or files."
regular meeting at Mlisonlc
"All of us bave heard talkTemple.
IDia1ly irresponsible talk, I
NEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian might add - that Ohio is in
Sisters, 7:30 Tuesday at the flll" a m!jOr economic setbact
Legion ball, lliddJeport. Mrs. when tbe hi • partisan tax proHelen r..tbal( East Palestine, posa1 passed by the Ohio House
grand cbief of Obio, to visit.
becomes law. later this year,"
.wEDNEsDAY
Gilligan said at a news conferPOMEROY LODGE 164 ence.
F&amp;AM regular siated meeting
"Butwhatbusinessmeilreally
Wednesday 7:30 p,m. All dislike is tbe antiquated, unfair
Master Masons invited.
system of taxes on property and
THURSDAY
machinery we have now," he
OPERATING engineers said.
wed to make special effort to He said that without an · Inattend the special meeting come tax, property taxes would
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at likely double over the next ten
American Legion Hall, Athens. years and sales taxes would InFriday
crease.
mEODORUS COUNCD.. 17,
Onobndman Created
D. of A., 7:30p.m. JOOF ball, Gilligan's comments came as
Inspection. Members to take he announced tbe creation of a
cookies or sandwiches.
new state service, tbe "business-

man's ombudsman, "desigliedto
Unk ·his adminislrati011 and the
business corrununity.
"The businessman's ombudsman is the first in a Series· of
action programs desiglied to
make state government more
responsive to the needs and attitudes of Ohio's business community," Gilligan said . .
"The ombudsman is a direct

line, slicing througb red tape,
The operation of the new proto the network of services; In- grain was to be the responsibformation and espertlae avail· "Uity of Development Director
able throughout state govern- David C. Sweet, who backed GilmenttoOhio businesa," be said. ligan's rejection of "talk" that
Gilligan said tbe service, to be a Cll'}lOI"ate income tax would
staffed by the Ohio lleparlment drive business from the state.
of Development, was designed Sweetsaidsurveysreveal that
to allow ~n to gain in- taxes. are only seventh on the
formation aiKt assistance or of. list of"business concerns when
fer criti~ of state programs. location in a given state is be-

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Oiarles mula would conect $38 million
Undberg, president of the Cln- in new taxes next year from
cinnati Board of Education, Cincinnati school district realasked the Senate Educati011 dents and return only $5.8 mil·
Committee Mollday night to re- li011 to Cincinnati schools.
consider the House-passed for- Cincinnati and 17 other Ham·
mula for distribution of slate ilion County school districts are
aid to local scbools.
considering legal action io .halt
The committee, chaired by unequal distrilmtion of funds,
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R·Iron- Undberg said.
ton, is considering the educa- "We've gotten sort of desperlion portion of tbe $7.9 billion ate because we have a strong
budget approved by the House · feeling this formula is wrong,"
for the next bienniwn.
he said.
·
Lindberg said distribution of
Wa)l ADd Mew Meetl .
state aid to school districts Backing Lindberg was Sen.
was unequal, with rural dis- Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinclnnati.
tricts receiving more than they "How can you expect me to
collect in taxes and urban dis- vote fQJ" a bill which· returns
tricts receiving far less.
only 20 per cent of ihe money
He said the Honse passed for- we in Oncinnall contribute in

l':!::g

Pwuble

Browns

Will ~ he_;Back:

ClEVELAND (UPI) - Art
Modell, president of the
Oe9eland Browns, sees the
tam that finished 7-7 last
J
•• "honnclng back to the
fGp where It baa ~ and where
it beiMp "
"I don't .lite 7-7 seasons,"
MOdell said Monday. "The
~of Cleveland didn't lake
lindly to last season. It was a
fire type of year. Now we've
got to get the people back with
us."
Modell bas a new coach this
-..-on In Nlct Sk&lt;rlch, wbo
IDok over ftcm tbe retired
Blanton Collier, alld he feels
''anticipation ... apectation,
similar ID 1913."
In 1913 Cti1ier was named
coach after Paul Brown, tbe
ltam's founder' was fired. The
Browns won the National
Football League cbamP,onship
tbat year.
"It's almolit identical,"
Modell said. "Eight years ago
we were 011 a real spot, in·
cbdng me penooally with a
new bead coach and we
deliwred.

"Now the whole organlxatim
isontbespotagaintoregainonr
place in (1"0 football," be said.
"I'm very optimistic about
1m aDd I ba-ve !iUpl'eDie COD·
fidenoe in Nick lltoricb and bis
assistants," Modell added. "We
had some fine years witb
Blanton Collier and now I'm
looking forward to mn with
the realigned ataff.'\
The Browns oWiier said

..

'

Music is tbe universal lan·
guage of mankind.-Henry
W. Longfellow. Am e r1 can
poet.
The sun shall be no more
your light by day, nor for
brightness shall the moon
gi!Je light to you by night;
but the Lord will be your

everlasting light,

and

your

God will be your glory.-

lsoich 60:19.

• • •

We find God twicf--{)nce
witbin, once without us;
witbin us as an eye, wit~out
us as a light.-Jean Paul
Richter, German novelist.
Whoewr confesses that
Je1111 is tlu Son of God, God
abides in him, and he in
God. So we know and be·
lii!Oe llae love God ha.• fliT
u. God is love, and he who
abides in luve abides in God,

and God abides in him .-1
John ,4:15, 16.

• • •

"nle great tra~tedy or life
is oot tbat men rwrish. but

that they ····•se to love ··

Som"r!O••t M&lt;•!' ' .' t ~ rn . Brjli ~ tl
lid ion • · ' ·1..:111ia &lt;Writer

Aaswen QuesliMs
He said the functions of the
new program would include:

increased taxes for education?" and adjourned list week for ~
he asked other committee 12-day vacation.
members.
The Senate held a Door ses-

While the EdUcation Committee, which is pivotal in decld·
ing how much in new taxes will
be needed for the next two
years, heard testimony from
Lindberg, Sen. Michael J. Ma·
Ioney, R-Cincinnati, began a series of meetings of his six-man
Sena!e Ways and Means subcommittee on technical details
of the House-passed tax bill.
The House bas completed action on a $1.4 billion package
of new taxes and the budget

·agencies and responsibility fQr
following up referrals to determine if further assistance Is re.
quired.
-Suggestingcbangesforsolv.;ing business complaints with re.
gard to state activities.
- Assisting in arranging
business.
meetings and conferences when
- Referring inquiries to ap- necessary with appropriate of.
prq~riatestatedeparlmenls and ficials in state departments and
agencies.
Sweet said the ombudsman
would'not interv.ene in conlract
negotiations be'!'een tbe slate
and business or m caaes before
regulatorY agencies.
sentence has been imposed.
Under present law, tbe judge Businessmen may call tbe
may suspend sentence in such service toll free at 1~282-1085
cases only at the time of origi- in Ohio; 1-aro.1107 from outside Ohio; and 4119 1689 in Colnal sen~cing .
umbus.
A1lo Acted On
In otber action the Senate:
-Approved House amendf f f f f ' f ' ,...... . ·
men~ to two ~nate bills ~- ·ii ·
creasmg the maxrmwn pernns- :!!
. . . ~~ ..;
sible tax levy imposed by voters • '
witbin a port authority and pr(). : . Qr .
viding for additional payment
Nobody has any right to
authority for sales tax when
lind tile uninteresting or
maintenance of adequate rec- ; unrewarding.
__ ~
ords is unreasonably burden- ,
-Charles Eliot · .

Shippers Choose
Trutks

WASHINGTON-Man·
ufacturers of two-thirds of
the nation's major types of
commodities ship more than
50 per cent of their products
by truck, according to the
latest U.S. Census of Trans·
fielder J~~try Coleman was to portation.
make a presentation on behalf
of retired players seeking
pensim lncreailes

·

Olanges proposed in tbe free

agent chft would return four
,ears c~e pla)'!rs to the
regular dran pbase when

eligible and secondary cbft
pbaaeJllllyers wwld be subject
ID aelection unO' once and lben
to the - • · · ""'·-

h·-

sion Monday night to CMSider
several measures.
Senators unanimously approved and sent to Gcw. John
J. Gillipn a House bill grant.
ing judges authority to suspend sentence in a misdemeanor case at any time after the

!J.,'

Trutks Pay Taxes

WASHING T 0 N _
Trucks each year pay more
than one-third of all high·
way-user taxes collected in
the U.S., although only one
vehicle in six is a truck. In
1969, this amounted to
about $5.3 billion.

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SPECIAL ' FREE BARBECUE
GRILL OFFER EXPIRES AUG . 31,
1971 . So don 't delay.
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·'Lovt·Paelc" THEMEBOOICS
Moctern patterns deoorate
covt~: r . , . Love, Peace, Ecol·

Gregg r~.rled . Colorl~.rl
" Girl Talk" de$ign.

ovr

symbols , mora ! HIO·

shnts. White or pastels.

HING·A·DING VAlUES\~ E~ERY DEPART"'ENT!.

Ashlantt .

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FOlD-UP SCHOOL BAG

GENE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, St;lle Road 124

· Nevt ... eny to carry. 14•
10\;x4-in. Z1pptr o't 3 sictet

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: 992-5111

Ripley, W. Va. -

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Did you have trouble with your
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You also get free Installation and
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And Ashland offers you a convenIent LP-G as budget plan. Levels out
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~ium!Tall.

v..on.

•rs CREW SOCICS

JUMBO THEMEBOOICS

REPOIIT COVERS

and

B latll. COIOI'I.

0 ~--~

he kills himself."...

C. C. Johnson Spink, the
publisher of the' book, says
maybe it isn 'I his place to say
so but he thinks it's "tbe finest
book on baseball we have ever
published." .
I agree.

'~~

28t

Joy. Happiness palterns.

Broeg puts it, Grover Cleveland
Alexander reeling down the
street of a UtUe Nebraska town
to pnst his last letter to his
beloved Aimee before he died
drunk in obocurity ...
And Yogi Berra being introduced to Ernest Hemingway by
Toots Shor. When the author
left, Shor said to Berra,
" You've read Hemingway,
haven't you, Yog?"
•
Berra frowned. "I don't think
so," he said. " What paper's. he
'
WI"th'"
• •••
There's also the one and only,
Babe Ruth, uninhibited as
always on one of those
infrequent occasions Calvin
Coolidge visited the Washington
ballpark during his presidency.
Politely, correcUy, each of
the Yankees . met and shook
hallds with the President. When
Ruth's turn came, he stuck out
a friendly mitt and said, 'Geez,
. 't 1"t• ........
1't's hot' am
rn::~ ,. .. .. .•
Dizzy Dean also is represented.
Broeg tells bow Diz, out of
baseball six years and bulging
at the seams, started tbe final
game of the 1947 season for ~
St. Louis Browns. Dean burled
four scnless im\ingB but then
got up limping after connectins
safely, slidins into second and
pulling a muscle.
His wife, Pal, seated in .a box
seat near the BrOWI\8' dugout,
leaned over the railing and .
·caUed down to manager Muddy
Rue!:
"Get him Dlit Or there before

0n•e11f•

LIIIICII JilTS

IIC BALL PEIIS

"·"
... 11J

Drultftt

De•l•n•d tot Girlal

"He (Nelaen) needs just
enough work to keep him
sbarp," Skorlcb said of the
ailing veteran.

.

.'

.

1~~.Set

The Sports Parade

By MIL1'0N RICHMAN
like that.
UPI Sporta Writer
There are, fortunately, other
NEW YORK (UP!)-There books, too. Books like ''The
are any number of somnifa- Godfather," whlcb grab you
cients on the market.
from the very first sentence,
All you have to do is ask your hold you by tbe lapels all the
nelghborhooddruggistandhe'll way through and leave you
reel off a number of them from looking for more at the end.
which you can cboose.
I've just !inillhed reading
A somnifacient is merely a such a book. It's called "Super
75-cent word meaning a drug or Stars of Baseball," and I can't
some other agent .that puts you remember enjoying any book
to sleep. There are a lot of more.
books that have the same Bob Broeg, tbe sports editor
effect.
and columnist of the St. Louis
You struggle through the first Post-Dispatch and an absolutely
'iQ.OO pages and suddenly your delightful man with a wonderful
head starts nodding. Then your Oair for words, is the autbor of
eyes begin closing, the book this extraordinar) book which
drops .out of yoilr band and tbe goes for $8.95 and is easily
next thing you know some- worth five times the price.
body's shaking you, ll I say Bob Broeg has turned
turns out to be your out an extraordinary book
wife and she's busting your because in crisp simple Jan.
shoes about why don't you guage, the kind everyone
go to bed if you want to sit understands and enjoys, he
there in the chair and snore · comes as humanly close to
bridging baseball's generation
gap as anyone I know.
He has you meet such
Good Safety Record · celebrated old-timers as . Cy
WASHINGTON - A Young, Ty Cobb, Bonus WagnNational Safety Council er, Walter Johnson and Christy
study shows that trucks ac- Mathewson as well as otbers
count for only II per.cent of who came later like Babe Ruth,
all vehicles involved in acci· Rogers Hornsby, Mickey Cochdents. though they make up rane, Gabby Hartnett, Lefty
more than 16 per cent of the Grove, Joe DiMaggio and Hank
Nation's vehicle fteet. . ·
Greenberg. Broeg also provides
. unusual insighis Into such more
recent superstars as Ted
Williams, Warren Spahn, Jackie
Trutk Taxes
Robinson, Roy Cam~,
Reported
Stan Musial, Sandy Koufaz aDd
WASHINGTON - An· Mickey ManUe.
nual state and federal highThe book is the outgrowth of
way usc taxes for a typical
heavy truck range from Si.· a series of articles Broeg did
654 for a three-axle tractor- originally for tbe Sporting
trailer 140.000 pounds gross News.
It has everything. Humor,
vehicle weight) tn Sl400
paid by h five-axle tractor- Romance,.pathos.
1
For example, there is, as
trailer (72,000 lh&lt;. GVW) .

Nrhe school ""os an
rrl ~u'lyl ! rpper POUCh

tltser

eraWts'

• Loose Leaf Binder
• 2 Notobooh

iC
,~ .
...
'ie Other Banking Hours 9 to
iC
. 3 and s to 7 as usual on
Fridays.
,oft
DAIIK
oft rnn
unn
1
:

s~.tper

ll~.rrablt:,

pak

brightest, newett colora altodey!

is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
1Continuously)

oft

Po~;:kel · l l le

ONWARO®FilLER PAPER

Pockttttra with 8·pockell .. 88c
Woi-Look lioport Folder .. . . . 47c
Clipboard with 1prlng clip ... .88c
.Gio11y Printed lioport Folder..14c

Roarty faol·pocod pollornt In the

S7•

29t
18t

PENCIL COMPASS

Match-mate• In exciting new
colors and paHerna.

BANKING :

~ ,
:oft . oft
F;idays Only
oft The Drive-In Window

ERASER PAll
Onw110'

47t

Onward· . Smoath 'acliOfl ..

lor the whole year t

ALL TOGETHER and
SPORTING THING

27+

B ig 8\'J ·o:r piastre
barrel o f easy · to·
use , easy -to -c lean
paste

Hard coa tecl lrbre. Colo•s

sheets ! Buy now. stock up

•
it

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PEIIClL SHARPEMR

paper. Jumbo packs ol 500

·A Tho•......l..t•
F TodaY.• ·

·

LOOSE UAF INDEXES

SET INCLUDES:
• 1111-ln. Capeclty Blncltt
• lO'hxS·In. Theme Book
• 4rS..ln. Nolobook

:: t&gt;~~r:::!~:
::oft ; and sAVINGS CO.
ro,.... llrmor, -dter .
..

Modell

without questlm the game fl
football "bas become mci-e
physical lately."
"And I know Nick will instill
this In the BroWII8," he said.
91ciicb said be was pleased
with moet aspects of the team's
second scrimmage at the
lrainingcampatHiramCollege
on Saturday.
"Both Unes played better,
although the offense still is

soo

Woi·Look VInyl Pottem•

·BARREL '0
PASTE

10•
18•

12·1NCH WOOD IUUI

.•

from the registrar of motor vebicles to the Divislon.of Watercraft in the Department of Natural Resources.
-Ap(l"oved a hill .":pealing
obsolete law authorumg the
bigbway director to build and
"Poor Ric bard's Alma- ~intain roads betw~n slate
nack" was published by bigbways and state historical
Benjamin Franklin in 1732. parks.
The WQI"ld Almanac notes
that Franklin's almanac u_. M
W
was, for about 25 years, tbe nvW any ear
most popular book in the
American colonies, exceptilh
f
ling tbe Bible. Usin~the
. Wi Mort Com Orl

s;~~d~~~~o:~r~sayinU:;

CHECK THESE
BASIC BACK TO
SCHOOL NEEDS

,..

*.If~. ~ickJ
* Easy*.t

some.

.,

FRANKLI

.. -

-Approved legislation trans-

Owners Open Debates

"011 what were its bases
.nmk ' or who laid the cor·
.
nerslone, when the mormng
stors sang together, and all
tile sons of God shouted for
joy?"-Job 38: 6, 7.

Sweet said factors such as
availability of manpower and
tr8llllp0l"tllti011 are cmSidered
far more important and providing .information 011 such factors
was the purpose of the ombudsman program.

-Receivingandansweringall
questions on state programs of
interest to business.
- Providing a central clearing house for receiving and
handling complaints, critiCism,
infonnation and suggestions
about state activities relating to

EN

New Look at School Aid Formula ASke d

BLUE POWER
·oi.\laiul Albletle ace VIda
Bloe · gave 1 o m e hint of
&amp;llag1 to come with Ids
perfermuee list September.
movements. American League
His first two major league CHICAGO (UPI) - Major uw1ras recently considered tbe
wlH were a JIO:bltter agailllt league baaeball ownas begin possible transfer of the Wasb·M bulettta aDd a one-bitter delate today 111 a le~
agenda submitted by COIIIIIIJ&amp;. ~too franchise at a Detroit
agalast Kaa~as City.
slmer Bowie Kubn flll" their meeting.
Kuhn's agenda covered such
annual summer meeting.
points as a shcrter spring
TWIN TERRORS
Jim Kaat and Jim Perry Owners will discus.s the lraining season, rules revisions,
of tbe Minnesota Twins were Cllllllllssloner's agenda to open the free agent draft, the perthe top two Am eric an the two day aeasim and then formance bonus rule, Ira~ of
League pitchers in lifetime Clllvelie In separate league contracts of unnamed pla,ers,
wins
into tb&lt; 1971 sea- meetlnga to vote on the points minor league realignment, and
son.
t bad recorded· 156 llcought up
·
possible modification of tbe
victories, Perry 150.
n was
that owners major league divisional setup.
might Iring up other illms for The pla,er relations cmuni~
league
cOBIIidentim in tbelr . tee and the prcmotiiiiS corpora~
Meteorites are meteoroids
wbicb bave landed upon tbe separate meetinga, including tlon were to report also and
earth.
the poSBibllity of franchise former New York Yankee In-

Thoughts

ing CMSidered. ·

..

for

con'ltnience

andaolidl

Phone: 372-2221

•
I

.I

Florala

1"

IIINI TOll

87t
l~a13~ n .. Jutt the
fiQhtliM for 1011. Stuny

yirtJI

POilFOUOS ·

.::r •••
Report ·po.-tlolio wrth
2 WCIIIIt. IIYIIIII ·in

RALL'S

BEN FRANKLII)I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.,

�Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

John and Edna Davidson .have been nominated by Mrs.
Ha;old Sauer fit' the "good neighbor of the week" Utle.
While Mrs. Sauer and daughters Mary Ruth and Joy were in
Europe, and Mr. Sauer was involved in a summer school
program, the Davidsons took care of the Sauers' cherry crop.
Tiley pic~ the cherries, pitted them, froze them, and then put
the 12 or so quarta in the Sauers' freezer. Only those whO have
worked with cherries can appreciate the lime and work Involved.
Incidentally, Mrs. Sauer tells us thst already she is recruiting
students for a trip alroad next swnmer. Seems thst if reservalions are in befOre Jan. 1 the rate will be the same as it was for
this summer's trip while next year it will be more. Interested?
Call Mrs. Sauer.
TEARS CAME TO THE EYES li mao,y ..hen Paul Haptmstall played a tape reconllDg of the late Rev. Howard Ruppel!
singing "I Walked Today Wbere Jeslis Walked" at a memorial
service some mooths back. The Rev. Mr. RuppeIt was the long11me' 'and beloved pastor of the Middleport First United
Presbytetia,n Church.
After hearing the tape, many began aJlldng Paul hOw they
could get a copy. He checked with a Columbus recording firm and
has been advised that they will make up the record for $6 each.
The Rev. Mr. Ruppeltwillbefeatured oo /me side, his mother and
siJJiers oo the other.
Orders for the record are now being taken by Miss Phyllis
Joachim and Mrs. Michael Zirkle. Only the number of records
crdered will be made by the finn, so if you are Interested in
securing one, now is the time to place your order.

Anthony's Farm is Scene
of Church Group Picnic
The annual picnic of the B. H.
Sanborn Misslonsry Society of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church was held Monday night
at the Cherry Ridge farm of Mr.
and Mrs. Willis Anthony.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
gave the prayer to open the
meeting. Devotions were by
Mrs. Dale Walburn of the Love
Joy Circle. Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, scholarship
chairman, read a letter from'
Nancy Demott, !he· scholarship
girl. The semi-annual Rio
Grande Association meeting
was announced for Sept. 18.
Members were reminded that .

cancelled · stamps are to be . Labor Day.
given to Mrs. Fred Lewis. The Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
lap robe project for patients in Willis
Anthony,
Mrs.
area nursing homes was Wmebrermer, Mr. and Mrs.
discussed by Mrs. Ethel Hughes David Darst, Mrs. Ethel
with each circle to decide about Hughes, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
participating.
Mrs. Golda Mourning, Mrs.
Also announced was the Lillian -McGhee, Mrs. Harold
Women's Conference to be held Chase, Mrs. Imboden, Mrs.
June 29-30, 1972, at Otterbein Harold Hubbard, Mrs. Lewis,
College. "Flowers of Today" Mrs. Dana Hamm, Mrs.
was the love gift dedication Walburn, Mrs. Arlanll King,
theme used by Mrs. Anthony Mrs. Gerald Aqthooy, Mrs.
whowas assisted by Mrs. David Fowler, Mrs. ·Werner, Peggy
Darst, Mrs. Tony Fowler, and Imboden, Barbara and Joe
Mrs. Gerald Anthony.
Anthony, and Michl King.
The September meeting was Sherbet was served by Mrs.
announced for Sept. 7 due to Anthony following the meeting.

Ground Steak Treat

•

A PICTURE OF A FORMER Middleport resident is on the
ccver this month of the Ohio West News, a publication of the Ohio
West Area United Methodist Clmch.
Judge Daniel C. Jenkins, New Lexington, bas been appointed
the new lay leader for the Ohio West area. For the past 20years he
bas been the Perry County Court judge. 1n Middleport he lived
with his grandmother, a Mrs. Dawson, In an apartment in the
building now occupied by the Village Phannacy. ·
WHEN THE APOlLO 15 TOOK OFF for the moon, Mr. and

Mrs. L. F. Schoenleb and Mrs. Alonzo Custer were there to see it.
The Uree relllrned &amp;u!day after a visit in Titusville, Fla. with
Mr. and Mrs. Heiman Fisher and in Sanford, Fla. with Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Vale.

•
' .
•
I .

Plastic Bags Protect
Lnggage on Car Top .

Reunion Held

. . Tile fourlb annual reunion of
the familY of the late Pearl Cole
By POLLY CRAMER
of Reedsville was beld SundaY
at Royal Oak Park with a
DEAR POLLY-My Pointer is to help summer travelers ba:;let dinner at noon.
keep their luggage clean and dry while it is on the car
Attending trere Mr. and Mrs.
top carrier. Put each piece in a separate large plastic
bag and tape shut rather than trying to tie plastic over Orville Cole, Dayton ; .Mrs.
the complete carrier. 'There ·is not so much danger of Pearl Cole, Reedsville; Mr. and
losing them as there is of losing a big -tarp or plastic in Mrs. Gerald A. Cole, Lao·
the wind.-MARILYN
caster; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Belzing, ('Qmeroy; Mrs.. Letha .
. - - - - • Polly's Problem _ _ _._ Wood, Mrs. Freda Miller, Miss
LeliiJI'e Belzing, Chesler, Mr.
DEAR POLLY-Wet glasses have left marks on
the flagstone slab in front of my fireplace , I bave
and Mrs. Alfred Yeauger,
tried to remove these with cleansing powder, bleach,
Minl!rSfi)le.
etc., but cannot get the marks off. What do you sug·
¥JS. H. A. Cole, TUppers
gest?- MRS. R. Y.
·
Plains; MJ:. and Mrs. Bill ·
Ritchie, Cindy and Robin,
DEAR POLLY-'The first of my Pet Peeves concerns Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
clothes that do not have instructions as to wasbability. An Gordon CaldweU, Tuppers
expensive blouse of mine shrunk terribly and tater the Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
store advised me that it was to be dry cleaned only-BUT Depoy and family, Guysville;
it had no tag saying this. Do teD Mrs. J . B. the dry
cleaner was able to stretch it back to its original size Lnthel" and Miriam Amaker, St.
Mathews, s. C. ; Mrs. Claude
easily and cheaply.
.
Even more upsetting is the way ink from magazines, Ma&amp;, Smth Carolina; Mr. and
Avery
Goeglein,
catalogues and newspapers stains my bands when I am Mrs.
thumbing through or reading them. This was especially Ptmaoy ; Mr. and Mrs. Veri
evident when I made a doorstOp from an old catal.ogue as Tuttle, TuppeiS Plains; Mr. and
instructed In the column. I would suggest using plastic Mrs. UQYd Awalt., Snead, Fla.;
gloves for this but cannot imagine putting them on every Mr. and Mrs. Billie F. Mercer,
time I pick up something to read.-MARSHA
Coolville; Enid Cole, ReedsDEAR POLLY- To use your travel iron in a bote! or ville ; Deborab Mercer,
motel, empty a dresser drawer, turn it over and cover Katlryu Mercer, Coolville, and
with a batb rowel for an improvised ironing board which Pamela COle, Reedsville.
works amazingly weU.-MARY B.
FUNERAL ATrENDED
DEAR POLLY-I want to
share the neatest Irick I
Mr. and Mrs. C. 0 . Newland,
have discovered in a long
Mn. Veri Tuttle and Mrs. Clyde
time. Among my daughKuhn attended the funeral of
ter's soon-to-~arded
their ami, Mrs. Ge«ge Branch
stuffed animals was a long,
held at Marion. While there they
long snake. With the help
visited at the borne of Mr. and
of a cloth that resists mois·
Mrs. Gene Branch.
lure (spray starch particularly) fastened around
ole ..snake eyes," I · now .,;;;;;;::::;::
have the neatest ironing
" bam. " The head is just
the right size for those hard-to-press sleeves when sewing
and the body and tail are small enough for even the tiniest
sleeve.- BETIY B.

"

Featuring Superiors USDA Choice
Meats. U. S. ·Government
Inspected.

Try

a

Dill Fish Grill

Ground s teak always
proves popular with young
ones and makes cooking
easier for mom. However,
try a different tack next time
around with the chopped
meat. Broil, barbecue or
pan·fry the meat patties and
serve them with a Russet
Sauce. This different topping
is made with fresh necta·
riDes, in full season now .
Serve witb yellow rice.
GROUI\'D STEAK WITII
RUSSET SAUCE
2 or 3 fresb nectarines
t tablespoons butter or
margarine
I large tomato, chopped
(about I cup)
! tablespoons ebopped
fresh parsley
% teaspoon garlie salt
'I• teaspoon oregaoo
'fa teaspoon pepper
4 thick hamburgers
Yellow rice
Parsley sprigs
Thinly slice unpeeled nectarines. Melt butter in saucepan, mix in tomato, chopped
parsley, garlic salt , oregano,
pepper and nectarines ; heat
thoroughly. stirring gently.
Broil, barbecue or pan.fry
hamburgers. - Spoon sauce
over. Serve with yellow rice .
Garnish with fresh parsley
sprigs. Makes 4 servings .

Middleport

Personal Notes

Party Given for
Terry Ohlingers

Seventh Annual Reunion Held

GROUND BEEF. .~~.~~~'. ~~.~~. ~~~~ ...............................~~: ... 69~
GROUND CHUCK . ~~.~~.~~.~~~~~.~.~~~...............~~·... 79~
LUNCH MEA15...~.~~.~~~~~~.~~~~~~...........................'~:....79~
BOLOGNA . ~~~~~~~~ ...................~ ......................~............~~: .. 49~ '·
WIENERS ...~~~~~~~.~~.~~~.~-~~~ ...........................................~~: .. 59~

Young, Tender
BONELESS

lb.

have to wind!

UNGRADED

4PAK

:BOUNCE

CANDY BARS

3 dozen

99~

HI·HO

SCOT LAD SALTINE

Summer Treat/ Scot Lad

CRACKERS
l-Ib. 00

SHERBET
caloo

49c

=~IES
4
•
'1'
:
'
~~-------------PET RITZ
PIE SHELLS

Hb. box

CRACKERS

'

..iiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiil

bxs.

Strongheart

DOG FOOD

LIVER \FlAVOR

..

Or Chuck Wagon Instant Dinner

GEM

Throw A-ray

Bottle

POP.

~=MN~'""'

29o,1, IVORY LIQUID BOLD
----------·mn 22
Ol.

VISIT BAKER'S

can

PURINA
s lb. baa
..
:• PUPPY CHOW
•

pkg. of 2

12 pall

Reg, 89'

Nestle's $100,000

00

ORANGE JUICE

today· s FUNNY

SAVE '75 ~bdl

RICH'S WHIPPED TOPPING

SCOT LAD

GOESSLER
JEWELRY

Shower Given

Large Size

Reg, 49' • 12 oz.
Plastit Container

.. the watch you aevet

rTransfers

Sealtest gat
MIlK · i;naL 53'

FROZEN FOOD SALE/
f·

00

lbs.
for

lb.

Get-Acquainted Session
For Aug. 12 at Bradbury

Property

NECK
BONES
.

RUMP
ROAST

PORK CUTLETS

WE REDEEM

3 green peppers,
By AILEEN CLAIRE
parbolled and cut in
NEA Food Editor
squares
Skewered seafood and fish
Pickle Dressing•
vary the usual barbecued
A parent-teacher get· schools this summer under
Mix oil, pickle liquid, salt
kebab theme. A Dill Seafood and pepper in large bowl ;
acquainted meeting bas been sponsorship of the Meigs Local
Grill includes fillet of had· add all ingredients except
set for Aug. 12 at 7:30 p.m. at School District.
dock, shrimp, sea scallops, Pickle Dressing• and toss
Mrs. Bernard Fultz and Mrs.
the Bradbury School.
·Audrey Heiney Sheppard, formerly of the F~iew-Apple tomatoes, onions and green
lightly until ingredients are
Ben
Philson attended coe at
Empbasis of the meeting will
Grove area, Ill aerlously ill at ber heme, 1176 Irvin St • AkrOn, peppers. Serve with rice and coated. Alternate seafood
be on sharing plans for the Ohio University in June, Mrs.
H"*ring from fi1finds and reliltlves here would'surely Dlake tier "' a chilled Pickle Dressing.
with vegetables on 6 long
coming school year witb Philson spent a week at Miami
days brighter.
DILL SEAFOOD GRILL
skewers. Cook on outdoor
parents of the Middleport- University on the n~
grill or broil 3 to 4 inches
% cup salad oil
Bradbury district with fifth and program In June, and Mrs.
from source of heat for about
'I• cup dill pickle liquid
3 to 5 minutes on each side or
sixth graders entering the Phyllis Hackett and Mrs. Fultz
1 teaspoon salt
until
lightly
browned.
Serve
attended a session on advanced
'AI teaspoon pepper
school.
1 pound fillet of haddock, with pickle dressing'.
Particularly invited are new nm.graded school at Miami The C:.mlle TraMisiDr ...,., nteds
Makes 6 servings .
cut In 2-lnch pieces
residents who will have cbildren Universi!J In July. Coosultants wiodin&amp;. lb relial!le lillie tr..sistoT
% pound sea scallops
*Pickle Dressing - Makes
of national prominence were
entering the school this fall.
and flectroaic: circuitry operate on •
% pound raw shelled
about 1'14 cups) Blend ~ cup
In
preparation
for
the
fall leaders for the various liiiJ ..,...ne lu1tety. From one
shrimp
mayonnaise, ~ cup dairy
Afarewell party honoring Mr.
program several members of workshops.
ripe
tomatoes,
cut
in
2
,.. to tile nert Sa lot&amp;elllle
sour cream , 1 tablespoon
and
Mrs.
Terry
Ohlinger
was
the
teaching
staff
have
attended
Mr. and Mrs. George Doolittle
sixths
spicy brown prepared mus·
dliiJari~nd. Giwe
workshops on non.graded
3 medium onions,
and family visited in Middleport given Sunday afternoon at the
tard and ~ cup chopped dill
lrJnsistoriz!d tine lly C.rM ite.
PICNIC ENJOYED
parboUed and
pickle. Chill several hours.
over ,the weekend wiUr her Middleport Church of Christ
$39.9518 $59.95
sponsored
by
members
of
the
quartered
Approximately
~~
young
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Tbe Alm•aK
people and adults of the Rutland
Lambert. They had spent the Tic-Toe Class. Mr. and Mrs.
Ohlinger
and
son,
Jay,
will
By United Press lateraalioaal &lt;llllrch of the Nazarene enjoyed
past week at Burr Oak and on
move
to
Philo
this week.
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 3, the a hayride and wiener roast
Wednesday had as their guests
Approximately
50
were
at
the
21!ith day of 1971.
. Thursday night. Charles
there, Mr. and Mrs. Lambert,
The seventh annual Crary Reed Crary, ·Mr. and Mrs.
party
with
Mike
Gerlach
serThe
moon
is
between
its
first
Barrett provided the wagon and
Mrs. Pete Elberfeld and son,
Grant
Smith,
Terry,
John
and
family
reunion
was
held
Sunday
quarter and full phase. .
Arnold Grate the tractor. The
Mike, Chester. Steven Doolittle ving as master of cerem9nies. A at the Rock Springs grange hall Michael , and a guest, Christina
gift
was
given
to
the
couple
The
morning
stars
are
Venus,
group
went from the clmrch to
remained for week's visit with
Martin,
Reedsville
;
Mr.
and
on
the
Meigs
County
Mars and Saturn.
Beecb Grove and then oo to
his grandparents and the rest of from the class. Others fairgrounds.
Mrs.
Norman
Fisher,
presenting
gifts
were
Miss
The evening stars are Mereu- Forest Acres Park on the New
the family ·returned to their
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Senecaville ; Mr. and Mrs .
Mildred
Hawley,
Mrs.
Grace
ry
and Jupiter.
Lima Road where they bad a Court St.
home in Berea Monday.
Pomeroy
James Smith , Marsha and
Hawley,
the
Primary DepartThose born on this day are wiener roast.
David Robert Yates of
Melissa, Columbus ; Mr. and
under the sign of Leo.
Cambridge was the weekend ment of the Sunday School, and
Meigs
Mrs.
Pete
Nibert,
Tina
and
guest of his mother, Mrs . Miss Mabel Hysell.
WorldPyle
Warwas
II correspondent
Todd, Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ernie
born Aug. 3, I~iiiiiiiiii
Geneva Yates. On Sunday he Tom Kelly spoke briefly,
Gerald Wildermuth, Mr. and
1900.
accompanied her to a commending. both Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bob Wamsley, June Ann
Ohlinger
lor
their
work
in
the
On this day in histocy :
homecoming at Long Bottom.
and J. R., Pomeroy; Mr. and
church.
A
decorated
cake
and
In 1492 Ouistopber Coilnnbus
She was returned home by Mr.
Mrs.
Pearl
Mora,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
set sail from Spain for the New
•1&lt;1 Mrs. Lewis Edgell, Long punch were served.
Donald Mora , David, Thea, and
world with the Santa Maria,
Bottom.
Mark, Debbie Fitch, Mr. and
Nina and Pinta.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Russell M. Cline, Leona J. Mrs. Earl Ingels and Brian,
In 1914 Germany declared
and Mrs. Chester Erwin were
Cline to Alva Holsinger, Jr., Pomeroy, R. D.
war on France. The following
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Miller and Mrs. Terry Michael was Grace M. Holsinger, Parcel,
Mr. and Mrs. .Earl Shumaker,
day Britain declared war on
REG. u.us
- -.OM:E Ssulngl
daughter, Grace Ann, and the honored recently with a shower Sulton.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Germany.
Millers' grandson, Athens; and held at the home of Linda
Dorothy Lewis Stecklein to Shumaker, Ricky, Vicky and
In 19:i4 Mrs. Barbara ''Bobo" NevJeSt Touch &amp; Sew" sewing machine with
Mr . and Mrs. Don Erwin and Stobart.
Ohio Power Co ., Ease. , Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rockefeller was granted a carrying case. One touch-you switch from
daughter, Amy, Middleport.
Games were played with Lebanon.
Shumaker, Jeff, Eddie, Julie,
divorce with a $5.~ million straight to zig-zag. Sew 7 stretch stitches, too.
Mr. and Mrs. Mick Miller and prizeS going to Sandy See,
Mrs. Geneva Palmer Dennis, New Lexington ; Mr . and Mrs.
settlement from Winthrop
children, Jeff, Mike and Holly, Nancy Manley, Frances Blaine E. Dennis to Ohio Power Bob Shumaker, Steven and
Rockefeller.
Middleport, have returned from Manley, and Virginia Fife. Co., Ease., Lebanon.
Shawn, Mr . and Mrs. Delbert ~~~~~~!!!!!!~
In 19511 the American nuclear
John Henry Busch, Irene Robinson , Dean, Douglas,
a week's vacation , at Indian Other guests were Martha
T.tor•• FU~~y will ,_, $1.00 I«
submarine ''Nautilus'' comLake. While there they visited Buckley, Betty Williams, Peggy Louise Busch to Milo Nugent, Deanne, Somerset.
rocll origi~~M~I "'f.•'/."' ~. Sncl_gop
pleted the first undersea
ta ; Todar's FUNN • 1200 Wnt 'ninl
with Dick Fryoff and family. Jeffers, Elva Grueser, Sharon Ruth Nugent, 13'h Acres ,
St., Clnt:loM., Ollie '.M1U.
crossing of the North Pole.
Ross Wise arrived Thursday Grueser, Gladys Fife, Joan Lebanon .
from Miami, Fla. for an ex- Wise, Leona Eblin, Maxine
HOSPITAL NEWS
Dorsel Miller, Cather.ine
tended visit here.
Michael, Nellie Watkins, Miller to Drury L. Harper,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris of Christine Buchanan, Martha Barbara J . Harper, Parcel, Holzer Medical Center, First
Columbus are here due to the Baker, Iva Powell, Ernestine Orange.
Ave. and Cedar St. General
illness of his lather, R. W. Campbell, Darlene Michael.
Iva Orr to Lawrence M. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Harris, a patient at Veterans Others presenting gifts were Stewart, Beatrice 0 . Stewart, Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Memorial Hospital.
Wanda Patterson, Frances .49 Acre, Letart.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Robert Lengs of Ravenns has Jeffers, and Vidia Girolami.
Charles
D. Hamilton , Pediatrics Ward .
spent the past three weeks with
Discharges
Margaret F. Hamilton to
Mr. and Mrs. James Simpson.
General Telephone Co., Right of Mrs. Ronald Angel, Esco T.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Way, Sutton.
Brumfield, Mrs. Ralph Burns
QAUGIITER BORN
Russell Lengs came over the . Mr. and Mrs. William J .
Betty Van Meter to General and
daughter ,
Chester
weekend for their son and to Burton, the former Aleta Lynn Telephone Co., Right of Way. Cremeens, Cyrus Drlimmond,
We have a credit plan
visit with the Simpsons.
Mrs. Theron Durham and son,
Russell, are announcing the Sutton.
designed to fit Your budget.
Percy Oakes, Ada May Oakes Ray Ellis, Mrs. Harold Exline,
birth of a daughter, Erika Lynn,
on July 26 at the Orange to Jerry M. St. Clair, Bonnie Sue Mrs. Hillus FaUlkner, Mrs.
Marion Ferguson and son,
Memorial Hospital in Orlando, St. Clair, 2 Acres, Olive.
Robert L. Sayre, Wanda Jean Elmer Geer, John Gillespie,
Fla. Paternal grandparents are
Sayre
to Charles E. Sayre, Mrs. F. William Howells and
SON BO\N JULY 19
Thomas H. Burton, Elyria, and
Mr. lind Mrs. William Milton Mrs. Sue Burton of Lorain, the Mary Ruth Rogers, Martha son, Mrs. Curtis Hubbard and
. .Stobart of Columbus are the great-grandmother. Mr. and Jane Drenner, Lots, Pomeroy. son, Mrs . John E. Lyons and
Consolidated Coal Co . to son, Melissa Mourning, Mrs.
parepts of a son, Steven Ross, Mrs. Kenneth Russell, Racine
born on July 19. They have a Route 2, are the mall'mal Donald L. Sayre, Sandra K. Gerald Northup, Donald Par·
SINGER SALES &amp; SEIIIVItE
daughter, Tracy Lynn, age two. grandparents . Mrs. Harry Sayre, 10.73. Acres, Sahsbury. sons, Mrs. Albert Pierce, Mrs.
McCALL'S&amp;SIMPliCITY PATTERN$ '
Theodore Van Cooney, Sharon Earl Reynolds, Mrs. Bill
Mrs', Stobart is the fonner Hawk of New Marshfield is the
Sondra Drake. Mr. and Mrs. great-grandmother. Mr .. and Van Cooney .to Albert ·Van Shrader, Mrs. Larry Taylor and
MIDDlEPORT, 0.
·ns W. Second
Pomeroy,O
Cooney,
Marie
Van
Cooney,
..
55
wn,
William
Thuener,
and
Mrs.
'lubert Pullins of Middleport Mrs. Burton also have a
are the paternal grandparents. dalll\hter, Lisa Anne, 7.
Acre, Salisbury.
Clinton H. Couger.
A THOUGIIT, A CARD, A PRAYER can inake such a dif.
ference to someooe ill.
Ed Stobart,illfor a long time, is now at the Veterans Hospital
In Lexingtm, Ky. His wife and his mother, Mrs. Hubert Pullins, of
Middleport were there for a visit with him over the weekend and
repll't thst be Is aomewhat Improved.

Superiors
Boneless

c

Yon wm receive a dGilar Jf PoUy ~our favorite
homematill« Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's
em er Hill·
tlon w a prohl.em. Writ~! PoDy In eare of this aewl)lllper.

Russet Sauce with nectarines makes ground steak a treat.

lbs.
for

OUND .STEA
lb.

•.

SLICED

CHOICE

(HEWSPAPEI lMTllllliSE ASSOCIATIOM I

PAUIJNE HYSELL, SENIOR calllletology teacher at Meigs
High School, Is just back from Toronto, Canada where she attended a week's training at the Bruno's Advanced Academy of
Hair Design. There she learned the new tecbniques in back
lirushing and back ccmbing and tips m the new cuts- the shag,
the gypsy, and the lioness. She also did some work with wigs and
hair pieces.

SUPERIORS
BUDGET

59° :·'. bot.

giant
size

TIDE ~
,giant

.

Sill!

DOUBLE
COLA
8 pak

16 oz.

79~

EW!Jday Low Price

FA

BREAD

5

lis. .,~

HEADQUARTERS FOR

HOOVER

••

QUALITY.

BAKER

I

•t

and

CABBAGE
r
J

Diet Rite Cola

•

lb.

FURNnu•

'

RC COLA

FIISh and Tender

FABRIC

APPLIANCES

SAT. ONLY

PRODUCE
SPECIAL!

•

16 Ill.

'•.
•'
I
•
I
,.
••

BREAD
Favorite Large Size
loaves
lor

.

'

.

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal FOOd Stn~t~~~
.
·
PHONE: 992·3480 .
To l:.imti .O uanlilie&gt;" MIDDLEPORT, 0
Comer Mill and Seconcl Sts.
·

�Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

John and Edna Davidson .have been nominated by Mrs.
Ha;old Sauer fit' the "good neighbor of the week" Utle.
While Mrs. Sauer and daughters Mary Ruth and Joy were in
Europe, and Mr. Sauer was involved in a summer school
program, the Davidsons took care of the Sauers' cherry crop.
Tiley pic~ the cherries, pitted them, froze them, and then put
the 12 or so quarta in the Sauers' freezer. Only those whO have
worked with cherries can appreciate the lime and work Involved.
Incidentally, Mrs. Sauer tells us thst already she is recruiting
students for a trip alroad next swnmer. Seems thst if reservalions are in befOre Jan. 1 the rate will be the same as it was for
this summer's trip while next year it will be more. Interested?
Call Mrs. Sauer.
TEARS CAME TO THE EYES li mao,y ..hen Paul Haptmstall played a tape reconllDg of the late Rev. Howard Ruppel!
singing "I Walked Today Wbere Jeslis Walked" at a memorial
service some mooths back. The Rev. Mr. RuppeIt was the long11me' 'and beloved pastor of the Middleport First United
Presbytetia,n Church.
After hearing the tape, many began aJlldng Paul hOw they
could get a copy. He checked with a Columbus recording firm and
has been advised that they will make up the record for $6 each.
The Rev. Mr. Ruppeltwillbefeatured oo /me side, his mother and
siJJiers oo the other.
Orders for the record are now being taken by Miss Phyllis
Joachim and Mrs. Michael Zirkle. Only the number of records
crdered will be made by the finn, so if you are Interested in
securing one, now is the time to place your order.

Anthony's Farm is Scene
of Church Group Picnic
The annual picnic of the B. H.
Sanborn Misslonsry Society of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church was held Monday night
at the Cherry Ridge farm of Mr.
and Mrs. Willis Anthony.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
gave the prayer to open the
meeting. Devotions were by
Mrs. Dale Walburn of the Love
Joy Circle. Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, scholarship
chairman, read a letter from'
Nancy Demott, !he· scholarship
girl. The semi-annual Rio
Grande Association meeting
was announced for Sept. 18.
Members were reminded that .

cancelled · stamps are to be . Labor Day.
given to Mrs. Fred Lewis. The Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
lap robe project for patients in Willis
Anthony,
Mrs.
area nursing homes was Wmebrermer, Mr. and Mrs.
discussed by Mrs. Ethel Hughes David Darst, Mrs. Ethel
with each circle to decide about Hughes, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
participating.
Mrs. Golda Mourning, Mrs.
Also announced was the Lillian -McGhee, Mrs. Harold
Women's Conference to be held Chase, Mrs. Imboden, Mrs.
June 29-30, 1972, at Otterbein Harold Hubbard, Mrs. Lewis,
College. "Flowers of Today" Mrs. Dana Hamm, Mrs.
was the love gift dedication Walburn, Mrs. Arlanll King,
theme used by Mrs. Anthony Mrs. Gerald Aqthooy, Mrs.
whowas assisted by Mrs. David Fowler, Mrs. ·Werner, Peggy
Darst, Mrs. Tony Fowler, and Imboden, Barbara and Joe
Mrs. Gerald Anthony.
Anthony, and Michl King.
The September meeting was Sherbet was served by Mrs.
announced for Sept. 7 due to Anthony following the meeting.

Ground Steak Treat

•

A PICTURE OF A FORMER Middleport resident is on the
ccver this month of the Ohio West News, a publication of the Ohio
West Area United Methodist Clmch.
Judge Daniel C. Jenkins, New Lexington, bas been appointed
the new lay leader for the Ohio West area. For the past 20years he
bas been the Perry County Court judge. 1n Middleport he lived
with his grandmother, a Mrs. Dawson, In an apartment in the
building now occupied by the Village Phannacy. ·
WHEN THE APOlLO 15 TOOK OFF for the moon, Mr. and

Mrs. L. F. Schoenleb and Mrs. Alonzo Custer were there to see it.
The Uree relllrned &amp;u!day after a visit in Titusville, Fla. with
Mr. and Mrs. Heiman Fisher and in Sanford, Fla. with Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Vale.

•
' .
•
I .

Plastic Bags Protect
Lnggage on Car Top .

Reunion Held

. . Tile fourlb annual reunion of
the familY of the late Pearl Cole
By POLLY CRAMER
of Reedsville was beld SundaY
at Royal Oak Park with a
DEAR POLLY-My Pointer is to help summer travelers ba:;let dinner at noon.
keep their luggage clean and dry while it is on the car
Attending trere Mr. and Mrs.
top carrier. Put each piece in a separate large plastic
bag and tape shut rather than trying to tie plastic over Orville Cole, Dayton ; .Mrs.
the complete carrier. 'There ·is not so much danger of Pearl Cole, Reedsville; Mr. and
losing them as there is of losing a big -tarp or plastic in Mrs. Gerald A. Cole, Lao·
the wind.-MARILYN
caster; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Belzing, ('Qmeroy; Mrs.. Letha .
. - - - - • Polly's Problem _ _ _._ Wood, Mrs. Freda Miller, Miss
LeliiJI'e Belzing, Chesler, Mr.
DEAR POLLY-Wet glasses have left marks on
the flagstone slab in front of my fireplace , I bave
and Mrs. Alfred Yeauger,
tried to remove these with cleansing powder, bleach,
Minl!rSfi)le.
etc., but cannot get the marks off. What do you sug·
¥JS. H. A. Cole, TUppers
gest?- MRS. R. Y.
·
Plains; MJ:. and Mrs. Bill ·
Ritchie, Cindy and Robin,
DEAR POLLY-'The first of my Pet Peeves concerns Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
clothes that do not have instructions as to wasbability. An Gordon CaldweU, Tuppers
expensive blouse of mine shrunk terribly and tater the Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
store advised me that it was to be dry cleaned only-BUT Depoy and family, Guysville;
it had no tag saying this. Do teD Mrs. J . B. the dry
cleaner was able to stretch it back to its original size Lnthel" and Miriam Amaker, St.
Mathews, s. C. ; Mrs. Claude
easily and cheaply.
.
Even more upsetting is the way ink from magazines, Ma&amp;, Smth Carolina; Mr. and
Avery
Goeglein,
catalogues and newspapers stains my bands when I am Mrs.
thumbing through or reading them. This was especially Ptmaoy ; Mr. and Mrs. Veri
evident when I made a doorstOp from an old catal.ogue as Tuttle, TuppeiS Plains; Mr. and
instructed In the column. I would suggest using plastic Mrs. UQYd Awalt., Snead, Fla.;
gloves for this but cannot imagine putting them on every Mr. and Mrs. Billie F. Mercer,
time I pick up something to read.-MARSHA
Coolville; Enid Cole, ReedsDEAR POLLY- To use your travel iron in a bote! or ville ; Deborab Mercer,
motel, empty a dresser drawer, turn it over and cover Katlryu Mercer, Coolville, and
with a batb rowel for an improvised ironing board which Pamela COle, Reedsville.
works amazingly weU.-MARY B.
FUNERAL ATrENDED
DEAR POLLY-I want to
share the neatest Irick I
Mr. and Mrs. C. 0 . Newland,
have discovered in a long
Mn. Veri Tuttle and Mrs. Clyde
time. Among my daughKuhn attended the funeral of
ter's soon-to-~arded
their ami, Mrs. Ge«ge Branch
stuffed animals was a long,
held at Marion. While there they
long snake. With the help
visited at the borne of Mr. and
of a cloth that resists mois·
Mrs. Gene Branch.
lure (spray starch particularly) fastened around
ole ..snake eyes," I · now .,;;;;;;::::;::
have the neatest ironing
" bam. " The head is just
the right size for those hard-to-press sleeves when sewing
and the body and tail are small enough for even the tiniest
sleeve.- BETIY B.

"

Featuring Superiors USDA Choice
Meats. U. S. ·Government
Inspected.

Try

a

Dill Fish Grill

Ground s teak always
proves popular with young
ones and makes cooking
easier for mom. However,
try a different tack next time
around with the chopped
meat. Broil, barbecue or
pan·fry the meat patties and
serve them with a Russet
Sauce. This different topping
is made with fresh necta·
riDes, in full season now .
Serve witb yellow rice.
GROUI\'D STEAK WITII
RUSSET SAUCE
2 or 3 fresb nectarines
t tablespoons butter or
margarine
I large tomato, chopped
(about I cup)
! tablespoons ebopped
fresh parsley
% teaspoon garlie salt
'I• teaspoon oregaoo
'fa teaspoon pepper
4 thick hamburgers
Yellow rice
Parsley sprigs
Thinly slice unpeeled nectarines. Melt butter in saucepan, mix in tomato, chopped
parsley, garlic salt , oregano,
pepper and nectarines ; heat
thoroughly. stirring gently.
Broil, barbecue or pan.fry
hamburgers. - Spoon sauce
over. Serve with yellow rice .
Garnish with fresh parsley
sprigs. Makes 4 servings .

Middleport

Personal Notes

Party Given for
Terry Ohlingers

Seventh Annual Reunion Held

GROUND BEEF. .~~.~~~'. ~~.~~. ~~~~ ...............................~~: ... 69~
GROUND CHUCK . ~~.~~.~~.~~~~~.~.~~~...............~~·... 79~
LUNCH MEA15...~.~~.~~~~~~.~~~~~~...........................'~:....79~
BOLOGNA . ~~~~~~~~ ...................~ ......................~............~~: .. 49~ '·
WIENERS ...~~~~~~~.~~.~~~.~-~~~ ...........................................~~: .. 59~

Young, Tender
BONELESS

lb.

have to wind!

UNGRADED

4PAK

:BOUNCE

CANDY BARS

3 dozen

99~

HI·HO

SCOT LAD SALTINE

Summer Treat/ Scot Lad

CRACKERS
l-Ib. 00

SHERBET
caloo

49c

=~IES
4
•
'1'
:
'
~~-------------PET RITZ
PIE SHELLS

Hb. box

CRACKERS

'

..iiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiil

bxs.

Strongheart

DOG FOOD

LIVER \FlAVOR

..

Or Chuck Wagon Instant Dinner

GEM

Throw A-ray

Bottle

POP.

~=MN~'""'

29o,1, IVORY LIQUID BOLD
----------·mn 22
Ol.

VISIT BAKER'S

can

PURINA
s lb. baa
..
:• PUPPY CHOW
•

pkg. of 2

12 pall

Reg, 89'

Nestle's $100,000

00

ORANGE JUICE

today· s FUNNY

SAVE '75 ~bdl

RICH'S WHIPPED TOPPING

SCOT LAD

GOESSLER
JEWELRY

Shower Given

Large Size

Reg, 49' • 12 oz.
Plastit Container

.. the watch you aevet

rTransfers

Sealtest gat
MIlK · i;naL 53'

FROZEN FOOD SALE/
f·

00

lbs.
for

lb.

Get-Acquainted Session
For Aug. 12 at Bradbury

Property

NECK
BONES
.

RUMP
ROAST

PORK CUTLETS

WE REDEEM

3 green peppers,
By AILEEN CLAIRE
parbolled and cut in
NEA Food Editor
squares
Skewered seafood and fish
Pickle Dressing•
vary the usual barbecued
A parent-teacher get· schools this summer under
Mix oil, pickle liquid, salt
kebab theme. A Dill Seafood and pepper in large bowl ;
acquainted meeting bas been sponsorship of the Meigs Local
Grill includes fillet of had· add all ingredients except
set for Aug. 12 at 7:30 p.m. at School District.
dock, shrimp, sea scallops, Pickle Dressing• and toss
Mrs. Bernard Fultz and Mrs.
the Bradbury School.
·Audrey Heiney Sheppard, formerly of the F~iew-Apple tomatoes, onions and green
lightly until ingredients are
Ben
Philson attended coe at
Empbasis of the meeting will
Grove area, Ill aerlously ill at ber heme, 1176 Irvin St • AkrOn, peppers. Serve with rice and coated. Alternate seafood
be on sharing plans for the Ohio University in June, Mrs.
H"*ring from fi1finds and reliltlves here would'surely Dlake tier "' a chilled Pickle Dressing.
with vegetables on 6 long
coming school year witb Philson spent a week at Miami
days brighter.
DILL SEAFOOD GRILL
skewers. Cook on outdoor
parents of the Middleport- University on the n~
grill or broil 3 to 4 inches
% cup salad oil
Bradbury district with fifth and program In June, and Mrs.
from source of heat for about
'I• cup dill pickle liquid
3 to 5 minutes on each side or
sixth graders entering the Phyllis Hackett and Mrs. Fultz
1 teaspoon salt
until
lightly
browned.
Serve
attended a session on advanced
'AI teaspoon pepper
school.
1 pound fillet of haddock, with pickle dressing'.
Particularly invited are new nm.graded school at Miami The C:.mlle TraMisiDr ...,., nteds
Makes 6 servings .
cut In 2-lnch pieces
residents who will have cbildren Universi!J In July. Coosultants wiodin&amp;. lb relial!le lillie tr..sistoT
% pound sea scallops
*Pickle Dressing - Makes
of national prominence were
entering the school this fall.
and flectroaic: circuitry operate on •
% pound raw shelled
about 1'14 cups) Blend ~ cup
In
preparation
for
the
fall leaders for the various liiiJ ..,...ne lu1tety. From one
shrimp
mayonnaise, ~ cup dairy
Afarewell party honoring Mr.
program several members of workshops.
ripe
tomatoes,
cut
in
2
,.. to tile nert Sa lot&amp;elllle
sour cream , 1 tablespoon
and
Mrs.
Terry
Ohlinger
was
the
teaching
staff
have
attended
Mr. and Mrs. George Doolittle
sixths
spicy brown prepared mus·
dliiJari~nd. Giwe
workshops on non.graded
3 medium onions,
and family visited in Middleport given Sunday afternoon at the
tard and ~ cup chopped dill
lrJnsistoriz!d tine lly C.rM ite.
PICNIC ENJOYED
parboUed and
pickle. Chill several hours.
over ,the weekend wiUr her Middleport Church of Christ
$39.9518 $59.95
sponsored
by
members
of
the
quartered
Approximately
~~
young
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Tbe Alm•aK
people and adults of the Rutland
Lambert. They had spent the Tic-Toe Class. Mr. and Mrs.
Ohlinger
and
son,
Jay,
will
By United Press lateraalioaal &lt;llllrch of the Nazarene enjoyed
past week at Burr Oak and on
move
to
Philo
this week.
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 3, the a hayride and wiener roast
Wednesday had as their guests
Approximately
50
were
at
the
21!ith day of 1971.
. Thursday night. Charles
there, Mr. and Mrs. Lambert,
The seventh annual Crary Reed Crary, ·Mr. and Mrs.
party
with
Mike
Gerlach
serThe
moon
is
between
its
first
Barrett provided the wagon and
Mrs. Pete Elberfeld and son,
Grant
Smith,
Terry,
John
and
family
reunion
was
held
Sunday
quarter and full phase. .
Arnold Grate the tractor. The
Mike, Chester. Steven Doolittle ving as master of cerem9nies. A at the Rock Springs grange hall Michael , and a guest, Christina
gift
was
given
to
the
couple
The
morning
stars
are
Venus,
group
went from the clmrch to
remained for week's visit with
Martin,
Reedsville
;
Mr.
and
on
the
Meigs
County
Mars and Saturn.
Beecb Grove and then oo to
his grandparents and the rest of from the class. Others fairgrounds.
Mrs.
Norman
Fisher,
presenting
gifts
were
Miss
The evening stars are Mereu- Forest Acres Park on the New
the family ·returned to their
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Senecaville ; Mr. and Mrs .
Mildred
Hawley,
Mrs.
Grace
ry
and Jupiter.
Lima Road where they bad a Court St.
home in Berea Monday.
Pomeroy
James Smith , Marsha and
Hawley,
the
Primary DepartThose born on this day are wiener roast.
David Robert Yates of
Melissa, Columbus ; Mr. and
under the sign of Leo.
Cambridge was the weekend ment of the Sunday School, and
Meigs
Mrs.
Pete
Nibert,
Tina
and
guest of his mother, Mrs . Miss Mabel Hysell.
WorldPyle
Warwas
II correspondent
Todd, Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ernie
born Aug. 3, I~iiiiiiiiii
Geneva Yates. On Sunday he Tom Kelly spoke briefly,
Gerald Wildermuth, Mr. and
1900.
accompanied her to a commending. both Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bob Wamsley, June Ann
Ohlinger
lor
their
work
in
the
On this day in histocy :
homecoming at Long Bottom.
and J. R., Pomeroy; Mr. and
church.
A
decorated
cake
and
In 1492 Ouistopber Coilnnbus
She was returned home by Mr.
Mrs.
Pearl
Mora,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
set sail from Spain for the New
•1&lt;1 Mrs. Lewis Edgell, Long punch were served.
Donald Mora , David, Thea, and
world with the Santa Maria,
Bottom.
Mark, Debbie Fitch, Mr. and
Nina and Pinta.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Russell M. Cline, Leona J. Mrs. Earl Ingels and Brian,
In 1914 Germany declared
and Mrs. Chester Erwin were
Cline to Alva Holsinger, Jr., Pomeroy, R. D.
war on France. The following
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Miller and Mrs. Terry Michael was Grace M. Holsinger, Parcel,
Mr. and Mrs. .Earl Shumaker,
day Britain declared war on
REG. u.us
- -.OM:E Ssulngl
daughter, Grace Ann, and the honored recently with a shower Sulton.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Germany.
Millers' grandson, Athens; and held at the home of Linda
Dorothy Lewis Stecklein to Shumaker, Ricky, Vicky and
In 19:i4 Mrs. Barbara ''Bobo" NevJeSt Touch &amp; Sew" sewing machine with
Mr . and Mrs. Don Erwin and Stobart.
Ohio Power Co ., Ease. , Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rockefeller was granted a carrying case. One touch-you switch from
daughter, Amy, Middleport.
Games were played with Lebanon.
Shumaker, Jeff, Eddie, Julie,
divorce with a $5.~ million straight to zig-zag. Sew 7 stretch stitches, too.
Mr. and Mrs. Mick Miller and prizeS going to Sandy See,
Mrs. Geneva Palmer Dennis, New Lexington ; Mr . and Mrs.
settlement from Winthrop
children, Jeff, Mike and Holly, Nancy Manley, Frances Blaine E. Dennis to Ohio Power Bob Shumaker, Steven and
Rockefeller.
Middleport, have returned from Manley, and Virginia Fife. Co., Ease., Lebanon.
Shawn, Mr . and Mrs. Delbert ~~~~~~!!!!!!~
In 19511 the American nuclear
John Henry Busch, Irene Robinson , Dean, Douglas,
a week's vacation , at Indian Other guests were Martha
T.tor•• FU~~y will ,_, $1.00 I«
submarine ''Nautilus'' comLake. While there they visited Buckley, Betty Williams, Peggy Louise Busch to Milo Nugent, Deanne, Somerset.
rocll origi~~M~I "'f.•'/."' ~. Sncl_gop
pleted the first undersea
ta ; Todar's FUNN • 1200 Wnt 'ninl
with Dick Fryoff and family. Jeffers, Elva Grueser, Sharon Ruth Nugent, 13'h Acres ,
St., Clnt:loM., Ollie '.M1U.
crossing of the North Pole.
Ross Wise arrived Thursday Grueser, Gladys Fife, Joan Lebanon .
from Miami, Fla. for an ex- Wise, Leona Eblin, Maxine
HOSPITAL NEWS
Dorsel Miller, Cather.ine
tended visit here.
Michael, Nellie Watkins, Miller to Drury L. Harper,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris of Christine Buchanan, Martha Barbara J . Harper, Parcel, Holzer Medical Center, First
Columbus are here due to the Baker, Iva Powell, Ernestine Orange.
Ave. and Cedar St. General
illness of his lather, R. W. Campbell, Darlene Michael.
Iva Orr to Lawrence M. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Harris, a patient at Veterans Others presenting gifts were Stewart, Beatrice 0 . Stewart, Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Memorial Hospital.
Wanda Patterson, Frances .49 Acre, Letart.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Robert Lengs of Ravenns has Jeffers, and Vidia Girolami.
Charles
D. Hamilton , Pediatrics Ward .
spent the past three weeks with
Discharges
Margaret F. Hamilton to
Mr. and Mrs. James Simpson.
General Telephone Co., Right of Mrs. Ronald Angel, Esco T.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Way, Sutton.
Brumfield, Mrs. Ralph Burns
QAUGIITER BORN
Russell Lengs came over the . Mr. and Mrs. William J .
Betty Van Meter to General and
daughter ,
Chester
weekend for their son and to Burton, the former Aleta Lynn Telephone Co., Right of Way. Cremeens, Cyrus Drlimmond,
We have a credit plan
visit with the Simpsons.
Mrs. Theron Durham and son,
Russell, are announcing the Sutton.
designed to fit Your budget.
Percy Oakes, Ada May Oakes Ray Ellis, Mrs. Harold Exline,
birth of a daughter, Erika Lynn,
on July 26 at the Orange to Jerry M. St. Clair, Bonnie Sue Mrs. Hillus FaUlkner, Mrs.
Marion Ferguson and son,
Memorial Hospital in Orlando, St. Clair, 2 Acres, Olive.
Robert L. Sayre, Wanda Jean Elmer Geer, John Gillespie,
Fla. Paternal grandparents are
Sayre
to Charles E. Sayre, Mrs. F. William Howells and
SON BO\N JULY 19
Thomas H. Burton, Elyria, and
Mr. lind Mrs. William Milton Mrs. Sue Burton of Lorain, the Mary Ruth Rogers, Martha son, Mrs. Curtis Hubbard and
. .Stobart of Columbus are the great-grandmother. Mr. and Jane Drenner, Lots, Pomeroy. son, Mrs . John E. Lyons and
Consolidated Coal Co . to son, Melissa Mourning, Mrs.
parepts of a son, Steven Ross, Mrs. Kenneth Russell, Racine
born on July 19. They have a Route 2, are the mall'mal Donald L. Sayre, Sandra K. Gerald Northup, Donald Par·
SINGER SALES &amp; SEIIIVItE
daughter, Tracy Lynn, age two. grandparents . Mrs. Harry Sayre, 10.73. Acres, Sahsbury. sons, Mrs. Albert Pierce, Mrs.
McCALL'S&amp;SIMPliCITY PATTERN$ '
Theodore Van Cooney, Sharon Earl Reynolds, Mrs. Bill
Mrs', Stobart is the fonner Hawk of New Marshfield is the
Sondra Drake. Mr. and Mrs. great-grandmother. Mr .. and Van Cooney .to Albert ·Van Shrader, Mrs. Larry Taylor and
MIDDlEPORT, 0.
·ns W. Second
Pomeroy,O
Cooney,
Marie
Van
Cooney,
..
55
wn,
William
Thuener,
and
Mrs.
'lubert Pullins of Middleport Mrs. Burton also have a
are the paternal grandparents. dalll\hter, Lisa Anne, 7.
Acre, Salisbury.
Clinton H. Couger.
A THOUGIIT, A CARD, A PRAYER can inake such a dif.
ference to someooe ill.
Ed Stobart,illfor a long time, is now at the Veterans Hospital
In Lexingtm, Ky. His wife and his mother, Mrs. Hubert Pullins, of
Middleport were there for a visit with him over the weekend and
repll't thst be Is aomewhat Improved.

Superiors
Boneless

c

Yon wm receive a dGilar Jf PoUy ~our favorite
homematill« Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's
em er Hill·
tlon w a prohl.em. Writ~! PoDy In eare of this aewl)lllper.

Russet Sauce with nectarines makes ground steak a treat.

lbs.
for

OUND .STEA
lb.

•.

SLICED

CHOICE

(HEWSPAPEI lMTllllliSE ASSOCIATIOM I

PAUIJNE HYSELL, SENIOR calllletology teacher at Meigs
High School, Is just back from Toronto, Canada where she attended a week's training at the Bruno's Advanced Academy of
Hair Design. There she learned the new tecbniques in back
lirushing and back ccmbing and tips m the new cuts- the shag,
the gypsy, and the lioness. She also did some work with wigs and
hair pieces.

SUPERIORS
BUDGET

59° :·'. bot.

giant
size

TIDE ~
,giant

.

Sill!

DOUBLE
COLA
8 pak

16 oz.

79~

EW!Jday Low Price

FA

BREAD

5

lis. .,~

HEADQUARTERS FOR

HOOVER

••

QUALITY.

BAKER

I

•t

and

CABBAGE
r
J

Diet Rite Cola

•

lb.

FURNnu•

'

RC COLA

FIISh and Tender

FABRIC

APPLIANCES

SAT. ONLY

PRODUCE
SPECIAL!

•

16 Ill.

'•.
•'
I
•
I
,.
••

BREAD
Favorite Large Size
loaves
lor

.

'

.

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal FOOd Stn~t~~~
.
·
PHONE: 992·3480 .
To l:.imti .O uanlilie&gt;" MIDDLEPORT, 0
Comer Mill and Seconcl Sts.
·

�(

I

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The_·Sentinel Classifieds

TEMo Tom Hili. He play
, Sweat &amp; Tears an
mo Con. But he play
oollght Serenade on
y Wl'lioms too. Varle
;s tM spice of our music:.

.WMP0/139«

WANT AD
INFoRMATioN

5P.M. O~::::o'::-~o~icafion
9

ran~ellalion
MondayOeadline
&amp; CorrectiOns
a.m.
Will o. a~cepfed unlilfa.m. lor
Day of PublicaliO'l
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional
The
publisher will not be r~sible
for more than one inmrred.
insertion.
RAT E$
For Want AdSenlice
5 cenfs per Word one insertion

MinimumCharge75c
.
12 :ents per word lhree
consec ·Jtive insertions.
18 cents per word six conseculive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for EJ word minimum.
iiach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charge per

@)-

·

DNLYS1150

·
1967FORDLTD
$1595
HloorSedan,powersteerlng&amp;brakes, vlriyllnferlor. blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish. radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Special.

oy Motor·' Coa ·

. _ _ , ,.

r'-

Of'~N

EVES. 1:00 ·p,M_

pallbearers , . fr ie nds ~nd

neighbors. W1fe -

Pauhne.

Sons - Glenn, Jr. and David,
mother and father - Mr. and

Mrs . Will ie Collins.

8-3'11P

Notice

WILL CARE lor elderly female

FURNISHED
apartments. and
Closeunturnlslled
to school,
Phone 992- ~.
·
10-18-lfc

EXPERIENCED

ROOMS - furnished. Phone
Mrs. A. R. Knight 992-243:.
8-l-6fc;

5

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

606 E. Main

TRAILER LOTS: "ecib•s Mobile
Cour t, Rl. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951 .
4-2-lfc

8-J.Jtc

NOTICE I

Bill Miller is joining our Company, a specialist

in air conditioning and refrigeration. both
home and commercial.

OONTACI':

FURNISHED apartment In
country, Ideal for con ·
strucllon worker or couple,
15-minute drive from town.
Will accept one child. Inquire
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
8-1-Ttt

-----~--

t

HOUSE, 1637 Lincoln Hgts., 4
rooms, bath; basement, atflc,
storage and driveway.
Available after Aug. Slh.

. Salt W~rks, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
•-9-lfc ·
.. -: .... •\
i'.

ANTII)NY PWMBING &amp;HEATING
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

NIGHIS

Jz. - 14' • 24' • WIDE

MIWR
.
.
MOBIL£. tiJMES .
.

.

1220 Wasllington Blvd..
I WILL NOT be responsible for
t&lt;OSCOT Kosmetics, Julyany
debts
.·-August special, Kare Konanyone
other contracted
than myself by·
as ~--·Be-lpn!-•,Ohi-·
"!"
dilioo oil ss. Value now only
of Saturday, July 31, 1971. COLONIAL style stereo, AMS2.50. Distributor.;, Brown's,
Signed, Earl W. Riggs.
FMradio, Hpeakers, 4-speed
phone 992-5113.
8-1-Jtp
record
changer . Balance
7-4-tfc - - - - : - : : - - - -..,-$79.19. Use our budget terms.
I WILL NOT be responsible 10!' Call 992-708$.
any debts contracted bl
8-1-6fc
anyone other than mysel , - . . , - - - - - - - -STRAYED from Laurel Cliff
elfeclive July 30, 1971. Signed MODERN walnut stereo, AMarea, 3 blue tick pups. Two
Jackie Lee Lyons, Sr.
FM radio features 4-speed
located in Meigs County dog
8-1-Jip
record changer, 4 speakers,
pound. Reward tor .safe
separate controls. Balance
return or information leading - - - - - - - - THOROUGHBRED
Stud
$67.89. Call992-7085.
to return of third pup. Contact
Oscar T. Smith, Pomeroy .
Service. Roman Captain No .
8-1-61c
637410. S50 registered mares, - - - - - - - -Ohio. Phone 992-5594.
$35 grade mares. Return SINGER zig zag, sewing
S-3-3tp

...

lost and Found

~I

mARS

Ph. m -2143

Pomeroy

1-----------'

Stop In and See Our .
FI!IOf Display. ·

.J

~E'GOr B~­

HINDME

AND

GME MEA

•..
•.·~....

-·

OpHITII$
MaoodllrlllruS.tu,..Y
. 606 E. Mlln.
0.

-roy.

Ai ton;liunin&amp; .
IMI*fion and
RtOialll

Kitchens, Bolfls
Room Additions
Ani! Polios
Bocklloe And
End~ Work

Special
AI

SePtic Tanks
And LHch
Bods.
.

.•

6.98 ·Plus
Ports

BlaeHnar'•

.

742-4902

PHONE 992-2143

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contact Roosh Construction.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9-lO!c

RoofinM&amp; Carpenter
.

rwork

SJiouting, Roof

SEWING -MACHINES. Repair
Painting :
service, all makes, m -22&amp;1.
NEW&amp;Oi.OWORK
9N FORO tractor with Sherman The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ' All Wattier Raefi!ltl &amp; ConAuthorlzect Singer Sales and
overdrive. Phone 992-7044.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. struction ea,,_~ftll- Aitlll-1 ·
8-2-3tc
Plumlline &amp; ~""'·.
J.29.1fc ~p~eP~m~,~H11t1
.1!!!!. l,lr Condifionl!lfl.
C=
~
A=
N~N~
IN
=G
~t~om
~
a==~
,~
~-~.~
alc-re~y
AUTOMOB 1i.e lnsuranC.. been 240 Llnmtn St. Middleport, 0.
picked, $1.25 bu., bring
concelled?
Lost
your
containers . Geraldine
operator's license? Call 992PfloMm.me
Cleland, East Main, Racine:
Insured - Expsrlen 1t
2966.
7-28-lfc
Work....;....
Guroronleed
- - - - - . . , . . 6-15-tfc
-2-YEAR -OLD registered
Ill;; · AWNINGS, storm ~ and
quarter horse gelding. Phone SEPTIC .tanks cleaned. 1M
Sanitation, Stewart, Oh 0· ·
w 1n d 0 w 5 ,
carp o·r ts ,
- 992-2990.
7-30-5tc
662-3035.
marquees, aluminum sldi""
2-12-lfc
...
- -----:----:and
rai11119. Call A. Jacob,
..
TREE ripened peaches at the
sales representative. For free
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Mason Peach Orchard
"'"mates,
phone Chertes
Complete Service
starting Sat .• July 31st. Hours
Lisle,
Syracuse.
V. V.
Phone 949-3821
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Phone 713Johnson and Son, tnc.
Racine,
Cillo
5559.
5-27-tfc
Crill Bradford
7-30-6tc
5-1-lfc -=-: - - - - - - - - - :;-;:;c~;;;:;;:;;::--=-:-::::~::-- SEPTIC- TANKS CLEANED
r - - - - - - - - - - - , · lQ.RRISO'N'S TV AND AN- Reasonable rates. Ph. ~
TENNA SERVICE . Phone Gallipolis. John Russell,
992-2522.
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
6-iO-tfc
5-13-lfc
36"" J[ 23" •.009
_A_t&lt;_C_R_E_G""·1-S:::T-E_R_E"'o"'··""b~larck
PAPER HANGING, inferior
poodle, miniature and toy for
and exterior painting. Phone
stud service. Call 992-S11.
992-3630.
ll-3-iltc
7-13-Jotp

For Sale

.. .____

WHIJ.E AT THAT 11E1?YMOOENT. ...

______....,

IMAGINE 'THAT OILLY 515reR
OF MINE 'TRYING 10 PULL
lHE \\.OOL OVER
OURE$.

For Sale

Aluminum
Sheets·

Help

- - -- - -

Cleland Realty

or Trade

..::..

Co~plefe

For

Sales

For

155§

•....•••..,

OtNsoN MASORRY

For

Wanted To Buy

•'·'
.,
'

w•nRIIII
. . . . _ __.

Remodeling

Daily Sentinel

. FREEZER

'

.~

Ham &amp; a .....
POIIIIIIIf .. I ,...,

------

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

..

....

Phone 992-2094

FURNITURE
From tile largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
IN Arn"ll

-~

......,••.:.

...,.~

-GUARANTEED-

The:

HARTFORD

....

.,...

·

Pomeroy

ing the introduction of tbe
United States Numistamp
series as the newest facet in
coin collecting, we bave
learned that the producers
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
USED OFFSET PLATES
have bowed to two popular
privileges. Greg Roush .
machine needs no cams, all
Septic tanks Installed. George
HAVE
requests from the coUectDrs
Phooe 992-5039.
buill -in features . Makes
(Bill) Pullins, Phone992-2478.
MANY USES
of such numismatic ma- lnslr~~:tion
7-9-JOtc buttonholes, etc. Pay balance
4-25-tfc
$49.75. C&lt;ill 992-7085.
terial : I) keep the quantity T!lUCKING INDUSTRY
8-l-61c
issued low, and 2) maintain
NEEDS MEN- You can now
DOG grooming - Poodles,
train to be&lt;:ome an over the
consecutive denominational
Schnauzers . Experienced
lforS1.00
road driver or citv driver . 19U VOLKSWAGEN . 1969 U-FT SPEEDLINER boat, 40
_
professional
work ,
no
order
in
each
series.
"J\. llnlited:~tlon ," .in. the
h .p. ,.,.,.cury motor, etectrlc
Excellent earning• alter short
tranquilizers,
gentle
handToyota
Station
Wagon.
Phone
true1 sense of the word, restarter . trailer. skis, and life
According to Jerry Parl&lt;er
tra ining on our trucks with
ling, SS up. Coolville 667-6214.
992-6547.
jackets. Price $300. Phone
stricts the total pieces struck of Jerry Parker, Ltd., tbis
our d{iver instrudors. to help
7-23-12tp
7-29-lfc
992-2388.
of a commemorative coin or means issuing consecutive
you . For ar.plication and
8-1 -Jic
interview, ca I 513-2•1-5572, or
medal to a specified number. pieces in one denomination
~:-:-:-:-:~--'-­
write
Trai
ni
ng
Safety
Real Estate
Sale
Tbis number may be pre- before jumping to another
Female Help Wanted
CANNING tomatoes, picked
Division,
United
Systems,
determined by tbe producer denomination or series. It
111 CourtS!.
$1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
Inc., C-0 Motor Freight HOUSEWIVES - Evenings
3 BE OROOM brick home.
before offering tbe tssue for makes sense because it alPomeroy, Ohio
phone 247-2547.
Terminal Bldg .• 3101 Gano tree ... Earn 25 per cent
Choice location In Middleport.
sale, or it may represent a lows · the collector to bouse
8-3-Jtc
Road , Sharonville, Cin- demonsirallng toys and gifts
Seen
by appointment only.
-total of the subscriptions re- and catalogue one complete
cinnati, Ohio. 45241.
with the highest paying party
Phooe
992-5523 alfer 4 p.m.
8-3-2tc plan. Compare our program 4 GRAVE lot - Chesler Real Estate
ceived prior to an advertised series while waiting for the
Sale
5-7-lfc
Memory Gardens. Phone 992·
and color catalog before
cut-off date.
lirst issue of a second series.
HOUSE, S rooms and bath, has
5771 . Roland Russell.
making any other comSo, starting with the 1909 Auto
In either event both meth·
8-3-3tp
new aluminum s iding, storm tONVENt.ENT but secluded
mitments. No e~~:perience. no
building lots on T79 at Rock
ods usually re&lt;{uire each Lincoln Cent Numistamp, 1962 PLYMOUTH Valiant, good
windows and doors, good
investment. Car neces$ary.
Springs. Within walking
piece to be senally num- the six-coin set of Small
condition, in Monkey Run
conditioo , $400 or best offer .
Call 949-3233 or write Toy TWO male A. K.C. registered
of Meigs High
diStance
pups.
8
weeks
old.
$40
beagle
area. Priced r""sonable. Call
.bered for the protection of Cents will consist of tbe 191.'1 Phone 611'6-1123.
Ladies Party Plan, JohnsSchool,
a
S
minute
drive from
992-7128
or
992-378.1.
""ch.Phone
992-3126.
town. Pa . 15902.
8-1-6tc
the collector or investor Steel Lincoln Cent; tbe 1959
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
8-J.ltp
8-3-lfc
8-J.3tp
Lincoln Memorial Cent; . ,67 CHEVELLEMalibu 2door, 1
Wille weekends or after S
-:-:-:-:~~::-:-:-­
local owner, V-ll automatic,
(shown at tbe top of this
p.m . weekdays. Phone m .
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred APPROXIMATELY 1 acre lot
column) the 1857 Flying
new tires. el&lt;cellent condition. Business Opporbllities
6887.
stud sorrel , 2 while, sox.
with drilled well. at !JeKter,
Eagle Cent ; the 1859 Indian
Phone 992-20114 or 992-7098.
7-11-lfc
Phooe 992-2436.
Dlio. Phone 992-3223.
8-3-Jic
8-3-Jtc
Head and tbe 1860 Indian
7-4-tfc
~-------=
BUSINESS
SIX ROOM hoose, bath;tUiT
-------Head Cents.
OPPORTUNITY
' 70 DODGE Dart. Phone 992ONE gentle Morgan riding 6 ROOM HOUSE, bath, Depot
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
Each will be issued in a
3597 after s p.m.
'mare, also her gelded
just walki ng distance trom
St.,
Rutland,
J.
J
.
Fry.
M&lt;~norWam&lt;ln
limited edition of 4,000 serial8-3-3tp
yearling
thorobred.
Phone
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
7-30-tfc
Rel iable person from this
ly
numbered
pieces
at
$4.50
nl-Sl33
or
write
BoK
286,
Ed
Hedrick,
2137 Wadsworth
---to service and collect
against theft or counterfeit1970 CONTINENTAL Mark 19 area
each
postpaid.
Interested
Mason,
W.
Va
.
Orlve,
Columbus,
Ohio, phone
5
ROOM
house,
garage,
water
from automatic dispensers.
ing. But more importantly,
camping trailer, fully self- No e~~:per l ence needed. we
8-3-6tp and gas, good condition, 1 1-3
237·4334, Columbus.
readers may write Numiit guards against a diminish· stamps, Jerry Parker Ltd.,
contained~ excellent con-5-9-tfc
establish accounts tor you .
acres just off Route 7 bypass
ing value through deliberate P .O. Box 880, · Ladysmith,
dition. Call m -2367 beiO!'e 5 Car , references, and $995 to 14· YEAR OLD sorrel gaited
on Leading Creek Road . NEW. 3-bedroom home In
S1885 cash capilli necessary.
p.m .
overruns by the producer.
Phone 992-71~.
horSe
my
wife's
·
gelding
B.C. Canada.
Middleport . . Buill-in kitchen,
•
to
12
hours
weekly
nets
8-3-6tp
7-21-1 2fc ceramic file bath, all-electric
horse - See in evenings at
More often than not the
u .cellent monthly income .
Arnold Grate residence ,
sequence in which an order Twenty Top Value Dollar 1953 FORD, V8, standard with Full t ime more. For local
treat. g'X&gt;d neighborhood. Can
Ust
interview,
write
:
Rutland. Phone days 7~-4211 , 2 LOTS, PLUS 5 acres and 5 arrange FHA financing .
is received establishes the
overdrive, good tires, ex(I nclude telephone number)
evenings 742-5502.
room house. House needs
Telephone 992-3600 or m .
We have over 200 requests
cellent mechanical condition.
serial number of the piece .
8-3-6tc
repair.
Located
al
Minersville
2186.
Sl50. Custom factory frailer
EAGLE
A bill of sale or certificate on hand but our supply is ex-------on Welchtown Road. Price
7-25-lfc
hitch for 68-70 charger S10.
of ownership assigns this hausted. The list will be pubINDUSTRIES
HALF RUNNER beans, $2 S700cash for al l. If interested,
Two
univers
al
hitche
s
S5
number to one buyer, and all lished in part sometime after
bushel , pick your own. call collect 559-34'11.
each. Call 992-7113 evenings
3931 Me1dowbrook Road
future issues bought by him , th e National American NuCucumbers and tomatoes.
8-1-llc
only.
St. Louis Park, Milln. 55426
mismatic
Convention
in
AuClarence
Proffilf,
Portland.
-::------,-...,..--_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
B-3-21c
._
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
•
will bear that number. One
Phooe 843-2254.
HOOSE, 1642 · Lincoln 'Heights.
certificate is all that is ever gust.
8-3-15tc
Call Danny Thompson, 992required for the entire series .
2196.
Wanted
It identifies the owner of that
1971 DIAL 'n Sew zig-zag sewing
7-18-tfc•
particular n u m be r and,
COUNTRY and western band
machine left In layaway .
wanted Friday and Saturday
sbo uld it be necessary to
Beautiful pastel color, full HOUSE story and hall, 6 rooms,
nights. Apply In person at
size model. All built-in to
transfer ownership, the cerbath, RuHand. Phone 742Jack's Club.
buHonhole. overcast and
lll'oker
tificate properly endorsed,
5613.
8-3-3tc
fancy stitch. Pay just $48.75
110 Mechanic Street
6-25-tfc
makes it legal.
cash or terms available .
POmeroy, Ohio
Round coins and medals
EARN AT home addressing
Trade-ins accepted. Phone
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
envelopes . Rush stamped
display the number on the
992-~1.
$6,500.00 - 2 bedrooms, bath,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
self-addressed envelope. The
7-28-6tc
rim along with the coiner's
garage, gas heat - 2nd house.
10-25-lfc
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, ....,--:-:-:---:---:---:ballmark-if there is one.
6 rooms, bath . $4,500 .00 .
Davisburg, ,Mich. -48019.
VACUUM cleaner brand new
BASHAN
Square, oblong and plaquette
8-1-JOfp
1971 model. Complete with ali
pieces show it on the re·
cleaning tools. Small paint
$1,500.00 - 4 bedrooms, bath,
. verse as demonstrated above
damage In shipping. Will take
garage.
Fenced
yard.
on the back of the Memorial
S27 cash or budget plan
MIDDLEPORT
408 bst Mlin
Lincoln Cent Numistamp.
available. Phone 992-56.11".
POMEROY
7-2B-6tc
Because of the size and
$9,500.00 2 bedrooms.
- - : -:--::-:--:-depth of these tiny ligures,
paneled, bath, large lot.
MIDDLEPORT
:....A
wonderful
LOFTY PILE, free from soil Is
RUTLAND
it is virtually impossible to
buy just $9.600. 1 story frame,
the carpel cleaned with Blue
alter or erase them without .
J nice large' bedrooms,
Lustre.
Rent
electric
$1~ ,500 .00 - 4 bedrooms. bath,
detection through X-ray exshampooer $1 , Baker Fur- closet•, bath, nice cabinets in rCentral heat and .air COI1 ·
lhe kitchen, full width front
amination .
niture Company.
difion ing. MIDDLEPORT
porch,
new aluminum siding,
7-28-6fc
Since our article announcquiet street, all in eKcellent
$10,000.00 - 3 large bedrooms
condition.
with large closets. Bath, gas
and
SCIOTO UVESTOCK
POMEROY - Close to store, heat, garage on corner lot.
Hogs: 200-230, 20; No. I, 20.25;
~
SAL£
MIDDLEI'ORT NEW
and elementary school - 2
FREE IC-E CREAM OFFER
230-240, 19. 7~; 240..260, 19.25; 260LISTING
story frame, 1 rooms, .t
280, i8.50; 190-200, 19.50; 180-190;
Here' s the way It works ...
Phone 992-2156
bedrooms , l'h bath, full 520 000 00
2 barns. s room
you get seven ice cream
19. Sows, 300-400, 15.40-16.25;
with
utility
space,
h~me,
balh,
furnace, I u
basement
bars, o ~ a halt-gallon of ice
gas · forced-air heat. large
ACRES.
400-550, 16.80-17.10. Boars, 14.30.
cream , ' FREE for every
front porch, garj!ge with room ·
cvbic foet you buy in a Unico
Stock hogs, 14-30:50. Pigs bh,
Bea l'f 1 NEW 8
fr~ezer ,
refr igerator or · over. hardwood floors . The
ANTIQUES, telepllones, brass
very low price of 'tust $18 500. $35,000.00 u' u
6.75-16.
combinalion.
..
'
room
ranch
home,
4
beds. clocks, dishes, old
UNI(O
21FT.
UPRIGHT
Cattle, choice steers, 32.11).33;
"
POMEROY
_
This
can
be
bedrooms
with
la'i,'!eclosels,
2
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
26f.U
FREEZER
good, 29.90-31.50; Holstein
yours for [us I $3,500. Needs a
full baths. !lou e garage.
Miller. Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
With th i s one you get UO free
Call
992-6271.
'fepa~r,
dose
In,
1
story
IS ACRES.
lillie
ice
cream'
bars
or
'20
half
steers, 28.50-31.60; choice ·
gallons of FREE ice creem .
7-9-lfc
frame,
2
bedrooms,
bath,
5
belfers, 29-,11.25; good cows, 21rooms In all, could have $12,500.00 Large 3 bedrooms,
'
POMEROY .
balh. furnace. garage.
23; uWity, 18-20.50; canner and
another bedroom In the attic.
"JOT A DOG'S LIFE but a du.fs act is Oleg Popov's
Jack w. C•rs•Y· Mer.
RACINE
Sa.
l
e
See
it
today.
cutters, 17 down. Bulls, 26-27.50;
·
Ph~ne tt2-2111
1lr11blcm . The hrp - blllt~ ltussian down on a lour ol
LIST WITH US FOR RESULTS
1968 CHEVY. 2 door hardtop,
stock cattle .steers, 24.50-34.25.
Engla nd was prevented b~ str ingent British quarantine
FOR APPOINTMENT
. HENRY CLELAND
a
ir
conditioning
,
power
14 Fl. TAGALONG travel
Veal calves, choice, 42; good, · luws lrum brtnginl( alung the dug regularly costarring
CALL m-:ms
REALTOR
steering and power brakes.
trailer. fully self contained.
HEL.EN
L. TEAFORD,
3UO; mediiun, 31; baby calves, in his acl. So he audilio.~ for a replacemeal with tbe
Office
m-2259
1969 C&lt;imaro, 4 speed, 350
React(
to
go,
Sl500.
Phone
773'
ASSOCIATE
winner In his arms-"fiemma ," a l~orooghly 8rlllsh
Resldtnce m-2561
engine. Phone 992-6547.
BH, 30-62.50.
5651, Mason, W. Va.
8-1-61c
W••s! Jlighlund terrier.
7-28-6tc
7-23-lfc
·
7-23-ffc
Lambs, choice, 31 ; good, 29.

For Sale or Trade

-.

I"'IIIIHI-n

~.

And

':OAL, limestOne. Excelsior

'

Days a Week.

I

I ,,,----~-----~...--...,, -, .,...--..-

EXPERT

omC£ SUPPUES

For Sale

Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating is now open 6

True
Li.mited
Editions

r -

·

POMEROY
'HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

SAVE UP to one half. Bring APPL~Peaches, Fitzpatrick
your sick TV to Chuck's TV Orchard, State Route 689.
Shop, 151 Buffemuf Ave..
Phone Wilkesville 669-378$.
Pomeroy.
...
8-1-lotc
4-23-lfc
· SW~ET corn . Bryan Harris,
Succe.s Rd . , Reedsville,
Ohio. Phone 667-3652.
8-1-Jic

992--

S.rK,I Nurnbo r ..--1

I" ' .. '

Busmess
•· .. Se
•
.
,
ces
~~========~~====::======li~=====:=?==::::f

For Rent

Phone 992-2780 or 992,.3432.

OR PHONE
992-2550 DAYS OR .

5

&gt; ¥ ...,.....

~~~~~·--~------------~~~
·

8-3-tfc

t'
No iCe
278$.

Manley , si ngers , organ ist ,

®
t#. .

POMEROY 111110

who helped in any way during
the loss of our son. husband

for Charlotte Reid will he
on the Federal Communications Commission. The
Republican representative
from Illinois bas been
named to tbe regulatory
agency by President Nixon.

.

1"'CHEV. 2TON

WE WISH to thank everyone

NEW ROLE In government

fOr ·(o
. !I

•

14'' cab to axle, good 825x20 tires. 2 speed rea&lt;a xle, Int. &amp;
cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln. eng. A real clean
trud

Stewart, Minersville, 992·

and father, Glenn R. Collins.
Sr. Special thanks to the
Racine Emergency Squad,
Dr. J. J . Da vis, Ewing
Funeral Home. Rev. O'Dell

• .,.,

1910CHEVROLET
$2295
'' Ton Pickup, wide body. G78x15 tires, H. duty rear
springs. rear step bumper, less tha n 9000 miles and less
than 9 mo. old. Beautiful red finish . Shows beSt of care.

patients in my home. Mrs. Iva

Card. of Thanks

Pt ·

2 SillS
Of'·,

QUALITY

Advertisement.

OFfiCE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily. ·
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon·
Saturday .

f

.- . ~-

, ,, )

a- Tile OlDy Sentinel, Middleport-~ oy, o., Aupst 3,lm

.........

.

Yirgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

NEIGLER Consfrucflon. For .
building or remodellt19 your
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, 'Ohio.
7-31-lfc
-

RALPH'S CARPET - Upholsfory Cleaning SerVIce.
Free estimates. Phone
GallipOlis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc
.
.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at CrossrO!Ids, Rt. 12~.
Complete front end ser-vice,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
b~lanced
electronically . · All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

..

'

ROSEBEoRRY Furnace installation. Free esflmales on
new furnaces, oil or gas.
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-843-2274.
7-22-JOtc
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast- Hsy. Free
esflmales. Phone 992-3214.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-:tO-Ifc
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERVICE. Phone 949-4551.
5-30-lfc

DAILY CROSSWORD
A.CROSfl
1.Intemanatlonal

treaty
5.Pooreat

DICK TRACY
AW, HA, HA, HA!

TNI! DUMMIES

LEGAL NOTICE

IM DI!AD!

LEGAL NOTICE

n.....

8. Wind
Instrument
9. WIUldem'

13. Earthen-

Sealed bids will bt received

ware jar

by !he Meills Local School

14.. Smen

District Board of Education at
their office In the Melgl- Junior

15. Papal

High Building , Middleport,
Ohlo, tor 3 ; 166 ponengerl

name

16.Peer

school bus (chassis only) until
12 :00 o'clock noon on August 10,

Gynt'a
mother
17. Sterling or

1971.

Specifications for the bus
chessls may be obtalntd bY
calling or writing Mr. L11rry
Morrison, Assistant Superfn .
tendent; telephont "2·21.53.

Peerce

18. C&amp;Ued

:zo. Bueball

The Meigs LOCI! School
District Board of Education
reserves the right to refect any
and oil bids.

lO.Sbaw
play

38.0pon.Ue
piece

Jj{IJ-ThJ!;I4J!' d' , ...J c

(2wcll.}

39. SnugJery
40. Electrical

11.EcltaUc
otate
12. Loosee

unit

Umcrambletbtlefour Jwnlllel.
- ldta ......... _,e. to

16-Cbln-

DOWN

port

1. HaUor
room

19. -

2. Competent
3. cartoonlat

21. DeBe&amp;·

David
Low' a

rann rour ordinUJ words.

-

boy!

· _,'OMliiJ

goodies

32. Standard
quanUty

22. ~

creaUon
(Zwcll.)

bundle
23. African

4.Shlpment
f1'om

33. Steoico
- and
chops
33. Surrounded

24. Subllat
26. Un·
married
28. Itt·
porter'•

Ceylon
5.Aoc:ended

6. Llke

oome

great,

cl'Jcken

:r.t:et -

T. Rldlculoua!

I •

..
Ht'BE.I

~ IJ

';

'.

36. JwUpruden&lt;:e

qut~llon

I•

l:UNESS

·-

Edue~tlon

23. S&amp;Une

Lee W. McComas

2t. Heavy
work'

11lll, 20, 27 (I) 3

25.Famoua

Clerk

I I

26. Birthplace

To the- Executrix .ot the
estate-; to such of the fOllowing
as are residents of the State of
Ohio, vlx : - the survivinG
spouse, the n,x:.t of kin. the
beneficiaries under the will ;
and to the attorney or aHorneys
representing any ot the
afOrementioned persons :
Carl Hellman, Deceased ,

2'1.8-U

'.

'.'
'•

1 of

0"•·
Count.y . Probate Court

Now......,.. 1M cheW leiUn
tor... t~oo-,.•-·•
lllllftl..t by 1M alloN - t i l l

...
I ( I I I I I I I I I J ....
•••J

Spo.nlah
genenl

NOTICE ON FILING
01[ I_NYI;NTORY .
AND APPRAISEMENT
Mei1s
The Stott at

.

'

(2 wcll.l
22. French

Meigs LOCI I

.

'

by

21. Atta.:k

School District

Board of

¥ I ' J'a Qnl 4 I ; BOW lNDIITAliLY GRACII:II'UL
auJU!M Alii: BII:FORII: TJD:T LEARN TO DANCE.SAIWBL 'l'AYUIR COLl!:IUDGE
101m 1D11C......,.. Bp41cat•, '-&lt;.)

(A

Ces&amp;re

I
J

Slepl

Ye~~eHa,·•

-

&amp;boy! .

28. Vacillate
29. Friend

II

w IOUND

"D ACJ

uta I

MISLAy GALliY

.... .4• ~ """"""'
fr- • -•-A 10GA

do•• .......... .. ..

..
'
'

-

"'"· .

(Fr.}

30. Hulen
31. Bobo
M.·Bordered
38.~

Pomeroy, Ohio R. D. 2, Chester
Township, No. 20497.

-y
3?. Havea

You ~re hereby notified thtt
the
lnven,ory and
A.p.
pralsement of the estate Of t~e
aforementioned. deceased, late

lofty
amb!Uon

of sold Coun!y, was tiled In this

DAILY CRYPlOQUOTE-Here'• how to~ It: ~-

_,
,.

19th day at August, 19.71. at 10o00
o'clock A.M .

h L 0 N 0 F .E L L 0 W
A. X
y D for
L Banother.
A. A. X In
B tills 1111111J11e A Ill
' oae letter otmply
otandl
11110&lt;1
for the thrH L'o, X tor lhe two O'o, el&lt;. Slncte letttnlt'
__ . _ . . . the 1enct11 aDd fonnatlon of lhe worcll are a

Court . Said ln'vtntory 1nd
Appra isement will be tor
hearing before this Court on the
Any person desiring to tile
e~tceptlons thereto mutt file
tt.em at least five days prior to

Given under my h.nd Md
Hal of said Court, this 31st dty

of July 1971 .

H JW K

JOhn c. Bacon
Judge and e~r - Dfficio Clerk

BVQlQWJS

..

OIHidC~

ZJREP

ByAnnB.Wa'. Depulr Clor(11 3, 10,21

'

FCQWGPV

CQE

••

JE

JW

EQHUSK

0 P·

HPHBVK

,_

. QE

FBB

JBBM. - WQPFNEZCP

r

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I

.t

A.~-~~-XJQSE
HJ W
·J

lll,Ol' - '....... • - .-, 7.
...,.,... ..-,...;...,..

'

,•

r-~-.r-------1 j----7/_::;r--.,-:-r-1 ''

;r.;"'b.i:';d.-day lhe cacle ·letten an dlff01'01lL

the date HI tor he.rlnt

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

�(

I

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The_·Sentinel Classifieds

TEMo Tom Hili. He play
, Sweat &amp; Tears an
mo Con. But he play
oollght Serenade on
y Wl'lioms too. Varle
;s tM spice of our music:.

.WMP0/139«

WANT AD
INFoRMATioN

5P.M. O~::::o'::-~o~icafion
9

ran~ellalion
MondayOeadline
&amp; CorrectiOns
a.m.
Will o. a~cepfed unlilfa.m. lor
Day of PublicaliO'l
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional
The
publisher will not be r~sible
for more than one inmrred.
insertion.
RAT E$
For Want AdSenlice
5 cenfs per Word one insertion

MinimumCharge75c
.
12 :ents per word lhree
consec ·Jtive insertions.
18 cents per word six conseculive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for EJ word minimum.
iiach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charge per

@)-

·

DNLYS1150

·
1967FORDLTD
$1595
HloorSedan,powersteerlng&amp;brakes, vlriyllnferlor. blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish. radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Special.

oy Motor·' Coa ·

. _ _ , ,.

r'-

Of'~N

EVES. 1:00 ·p,M_

pallbearers , . fr ie nds ~nd

neighbors. W1fe -

Pauhne.

Sons - Glenn, Jr. and David,
mother and father - Mr. and

Mrs . Will ie Collins.

8-3'11P

Notice

WILL CARE lor elderly female

FURNISHED
apartments. and
Closeunturnlslled
to school,
Phone 992- ~.
·
10-18-lfc

EXPERIENCED

ROOMS - furnished. Phone
Mrs. A. R. Knight 992-243:.
8-l-6fc;

5

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

606 E. Main

TRAILER LOTS: "ecib•s Mobile
Cour t, Rl. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951 .
4-2-lfc

8-J.Jtc

NOTICE I

Bill Miller is joining our Company, a specialist

in air conditioning and refrigeration. both
home and commercial.

OONTACI':

FURNISHED apartment In
country, Ideal for con ·
strucllon worker or couple,
15-minute drive from town.
Will accept one child. Inquire
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
8-1-Ttt

-----~--

t

HOUSE, 1637 Lincoln Hgts., 4
rooms, bath; basement, atflc,
storage and driveway.
Available after Aug. Slh.

. Salt W~rks, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
•-9-lfc ·
.. -: .... •\
i'.

ANTII)NY PWMBING &amp;HEATING
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

NIGHIS

Jz. - 14' • 24' • WIDE

MIWR
.
.
MOBIL£. tiJMES .
.

.

1220 Wasllington Blvd..
I WILL NOT be responsible for
t&lt;OSCOT Kosmetics, Julyany
debts
.·-August special, Kare Konanyone
other contracted
than myself by·
as ~--·Be-lpn!-•,Ohi-·
"!"
dilioo oil ss. Value now only
of Saturday, July 31, 1971. COLONIAL style stereo, AMS2.50. Distributor.;, Brown's,
Signed, Earl W. Riggs.
FMradio, Hpeakers, 4-speed
phone 992-5113.
8-1-Jtp
record
changer . Balance
7-4-tfc - - - - : - : : - - - -..,-$79.19. Use our budget terms.
I WILL NOT be responsible 10!' Call 992-708$.
any debts contracted bl
8-1-6fc
anyone other than mysel , - . . , - - - - - - - -STRAYED from Laurel Cliff
elfeclive July 30, 1971. Signed MODERN walnut stereo, AMarea, 3 blue tick pups. Two
Jackie Lee Lyons, Sr.
FM radio features 4-speed
located in Meigs County dog
8-1-Jip
record changer, 4 speakers,
pound. Reward tor .safe
separate controls. Balance
return or information leading - - - - - - - - THOROUGHBRED
Stud
$67.89. Call992-7085.
to return of third pup. Contact
Oscar T. Smith, Pomeroy .
Service. Roman Captain No .
8-1-61c
637410. S50 registered mares, - - - - - - - -Ohio. Phone 992-5594.
$35 grade mares. Return SINGER zig zag, sewing
S-3-3tp

...

lost and Found

~I

mARS

Ph. m -2143

Pomeroy

1-----------'

Stop In and See Our .
FI!IOf Display. ·

.J

~E'GOr B~­

HINDME

AND

GME MEA

•..
•.·~....

-·

OpHITII$
MaoodllrlllruS.tu,..Y
. 606 E. Mlln.
0.

-roy.

Ai ton;liunin&amp; .
IMI*fion and
RtOialll

Kitchens, Bolfls
Room Additions
Ani! Polios
Bocklloe And
End~ Work

Special
AI

SePtic Tanks
And LHch
Bods.
.

.•

6.98 ·Plus
Ports

BlaeHnar'•

.

742-4902

PHONE 992-2143

FOR YOUR new shingled roof,
contact Roosh Construction.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9-lO!c

RoofinM&amp; Carpenter
.

rwork

SJiouting, Roof

SEWING -MACHINES. Repair
Painting :
service, all makes, m -22&amp;1.
NEW&amp;Oi.OWORK
9N FORO tractor with Sherman The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ' All Wattier Raefi!ltl &amp; ConAuthorlzect Singer Sales and
overdrive. Phone 992-7044.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. struction ea,,_~ftll- Aitlll-1 ·
8-2-3tc
Plumlline &amp; ~""'·.
J.29.1fc ~p~eP~m~,~H11t1
.1!!!!. l,lr Condifionl!lfl.
C=
~
A=
N~N~
IN
=G
~t~om
~
a==~
,~
~-~.~
alc-re~y
AUTOMOB 1i.e lnsuranC.. been 240 Llnmtn St. Middleport, 0.
picked, $1.25 bu., bring
concelled?
Lost
your
containers . Geraldine
operator's license? Call 992PfloMm.me
Cleland, East Main, Racine:
Insured - Expsrlen 1t
2966.
7-28-lfc
Work....;....
Guroronleed
- - - - - . . , . . 6-15-tfc
-2-YEAR -OLD registered
Ill;; · AWNINGS, storm ~ and
quarter horse gelding. Phone SEPTIC .tanks cleaned. 1M
Sanitation, Stewart, Oh 0· ·
w 1n d 0 w 5 ,
carp o·r ts ,
- 992-2990.
7-30-5tc
662-3035.
marquees, aluminum sldi""
2-12-lfc
...
- -----:----:and
rai11119. Call A. Jacob,
..
TREE ripened peaches at the
sales representative. For free
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Mason Peach Orchard
"'"mates,
phone Chertes
Complete Service
starting Sat .• July 31st. Hours
Lisle,
Syracuse.
V. V.
Phone 949-3821
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Phone 713Johnson and Son, tnc.
Racine,
Cillo
5559.
5-27-tfc
Crill Bradford
7-30-6tc
5-1-lfc -=-: - - - - - - - - - :;-;:;c~;;;:;;:;;::--=-:-::::~::-- SEPTIC- TANKS CLEANED
r - - - - - - - - - - - , · lQ.RRISO'N'S TV AND AN- Reasonable rates. Ph. ~
TENNA SERVICE . Phone Gallipolis. John Russell,
992-2522.
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
6-iO-tfc
5-13-lfc
36"" J[ 23" •.009
_A_t&lt;_C_R_E_G""·1-S:::T-E_R_E"'o"'··""b~larck
PAPER HANGING, inferior
poodle, miniature and toy for
and exterior painting. Phone
stud service. Call 992-S11.
992-3630.
ll-3-iltc
7-13-Jotp

For Sale

.. .____

WHIJ.E AT THAT 11E1?YMOOENT. ...

______....,

IMAGINE 'THAT OILLY 515reR
OF MINE 'TRYING 10 PULL
lHE \\.OOL OVER
OURE$.

For Sale

Aluminum
Sheets·

Help

- - -- - -

Cleland Realty

or Trade

..::..

Co~plefe

For

Sales

For

155§

•....•••..,

OtNsoN MASORRY

For

Wanted To Buy

•'·'
.,
'

w•nRIIII
. . . . _ __.

Remodeling

Daily Sentinel

. FREEZER

'

.~

Ham &amp; a .....
POIIIIIIIf .. I ,...,

------

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

..

....

Phone 992-2094

FURNITURE
From tile largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
IN Arn"ll

-~

......,••.:.

...,.~

-GUARANTEED-

The:

HARTFORD

....

.,...

·

Pomeroy

ing the introduction of tbe
United States Numistamp
series as the newest facet in
coin collecting, we bave
learned that the producers
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
USED OFFSET PLATES
have bowed to two popular
privileges. Greg Roush .
machine needs no cams, all
Septic tanks Installed. George
HAVE
requests from the coUectDrs
Phooe 992-5039.
buill -in features . Makes
(Bill) Pullins, Phone992-2478.
MANY USES
of such numismatic ma- lnslr~~:tion
7-9-JOtc buttonholes, etc. Pay balance
4-25-tfc
$49.75. C&lt;ill 992-7085.
terial : I) keep the quantity T!lUCKING INDUSTRY
8-l-61c
issued low, and 2) maintain
NEEDS MEN- You can now
DOG grooming - Poodles,
train to be&lt;:ome an over the
consecutive denominational
Schnauzers . Experienced
lforS1.00
road driver or citv driver . 19U VOLKSWAGEN . 1969 U-FT SPEEDLINER boat, 40
_
professional
work ,
no
order
in
each
series.
"J\. llnlited:~tlon ," .in. the
h .p. ,.,.,.cury motor, etectrlc
Excellent earning• alter short
tranquilizers,
gentle
handToyota
Station
Wagon.
Phone
true1 sense of the word, restarter . trailer. skis, and life
According to Jerry Parl&lt;er
tra ining on our trucks with
ling, SS up. Coolville 667-6214.
992-6547.
jackets. Price $300. Phone
stricts the total pieces struck of Jerry Parker, Ltd., tbis
our d{iver instrudors. to help
7-23-12tp
7-29-lfc
992-2388.
of a commemorative coin or means issuing consecutive
you . For ar.plication and
8-1 -Jic
interview, ca I 513-2•1-5572, or
medal to a specified number. pieces in one denomination
~:-:-:-:-:~--'-­
write
Trai
ni
ng
Safety
Real Estate
Sale
Tbis number may be pre- before jumping to another
Female Help Wanted
CANNING tomatoes, picked
Division,
United
Systems,
determined by tbe producer denomination or series. It
111 CourtS!.
$1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
Inc., C-0 Motor Freight HOUSEWIVES - Evenings
3 BE OROOM brick home.
before offering tbe tssue for makes sense because it alPomeroy, Ohio
phone 247-2547.
Terminal Bldg .• 3101 Gano tree ... Earn 25 per cent
Choice location In Middleport.
sale, or it may represent a lows · the collector to bouse
8-3-Jtc
Road , Sharonville, Cin- demonsirallng toys and gifts
Seen
by appointment only.
-total of the subscriptions re- and catalogue one complete
cinnati, Ohio. 45241.
with the highest paying party
Phooe
992-5523 alfer 4 p.m.
8-3-2tc plan. Compare our program 4 GRAVE lot - Chesler Real Estate
ceived prior to an advertised series while waiting for the
Sale
5-7-lfc
Memory Gardens. Phone 992·
and color catalog before
cut-off date.
lirst issue of a second series.
HOUSE, S rooms and bath, has
5771 . Roland Russell.
making any other comSo, starting with the 1909 Auto
In either event both meth·
8-3-3tp
new aluminum s iding, storm tONVENt.ENT but secluded
mitments. No e~~:perience. no
building lots on T79 at Rock
ods usually re&lt;{uire each Lincoln Cent Numistamp, 1962 PLYMOUTH Valiant, good
windows and doors, good
investment. Car neces$ary.
Springs. Within walking
piece to be senally num- the six-coin set of Small
condition, in Monkey Run
conditioo , $400 or best offer .
Call 949-3233 or write Toy TWO male A. K.C. registered
of Meigs High
diStance
pups.
8
weeks
old.
$40
beagle
area. Priced r""sonable. Call
.bered for the protection of Cents will consist of tbe 191.'1 Phone 611'6-1123.
Ladies Party Plan, JohnsSchool,
a
S
minute
drive from
992-7128
or
992-378.1.
""ch.Phone
992-3126.
town. Pa . 15902.
8-1-6tc
the collector or investor Steel Lincoln Cent; tbe 1959
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
8-J.ltp
8-3-lfc
8-J.3tp
Lincoln Memorial Cent; . ,67 CHEVELLEMalibu 2door, 1
Wille weekends or after S
-:-:-:-:~~::-:-:-­
local owner, V-ll automatic,
(shown at tbe top of this
p.m . weekdays. Phone m .
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred APPROXIMATELY 1 acre lot
column) the 1857 Flying
new tires. el&lt;cellent condition. Business Opporbllities
6887.
stud sorrel , 2 while, sox.
with drilled well. at !JeKter,
Eagle Cent ; the 1859 Indian
Phone 992-20114 or 992-7098.
7-11-lfc
Phooe 992-2436.
Dlio. Phone 992-3223.
8-3-Jic
8-3-Jtc
Head and tbe 1860 Indian
7-4-tfc
~-------=
BUSINESS
SIX ROOM hoose, bath;tUiT
-------Head Cents.
OPPORTUNITY
' 70 DODGE Dart. Phone 992ONE gentle Morgan riding 6 ROOM HOUSE, bath, Depot
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
Each will be issued in a
3597 after s p.m.
'mare, also her gelded
just walki ng distance trom
St.,
Rutland,
J.
J
.
Fry.
M&lt;~norWam&lt;ln
limited edition of 4,000 serial8-3-3tp
yearling
thorobred.
Phone
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
7-30-tfc
Rel iable person from this
ly
numbered
pieces
at
$4.50
nl-Sl33
or
write
BoK
286,
Ed
Hedrick,
2137 Wadsworth
---to service and collect
against theft or counterfeit1970 CONTINENTAL Mark 19 area
each
postpaid.
Interested
Mason,
W.
Va
.
Orlve,
Columbus,
Ohio, phone
5
ROOM
house,
garage,
water
from automatic dispensers.
ing. But more importantly,
camping trailer, fully self- No e~~:per l ence needed. we
8-3-6tp and gas, good condition, 1 1-3
237·4334, Columbus.
readers may write Numiit guards against a diminish· stamps, Jerry Parker Ltd.,
contained~ excellent con-5-9-tfc
establish accounts tor you .
acres just off Route 7 bypass
ing value through deliberate P .O. Box 880, · Ladysmith,
dition. Call m -2367 beiO!'e 5 Car , references, and $995 to 14· YEAR OLD sorrel gaited
on Leading Creek Road . NEW. 3-bedroom home In
S1885 cash capilli necessary.
p.m .
overruns by the producer.
Phone 992-71~.
horSe
my
wife's
·
gelding
B.C. Canada.
Middleport . . Buill-in kitchen,
•
to
12
hours
weekly
nets
8-3-6tp
7-21-1 2fc ceramic file bath, all-electric
horse - See in evenings at
More often than not the
u .cellent monthly income .
Arnold Grate residence ,
sequence in which an order Twenty Top Value Dollar 1953 FORD, V8, standard with Full t ime more. For local
treat. g'X&gt;d neighborhood. Can
Ust
interview,
write
:
Rutland. Phone days 7~-4211 , 2 LOTS, PLUS 5 acres and 5 arrange FHA financing .
is received establishes the
overdrive, good tires, ex(I nclude telephone number)
evenings 742-5502.
room house. House needs
Telephone 992-3600 or m .
We have over 200 requests
cellent mechanical condition.
serial number of the piece .
8-3-6tc
repair.
Located
al
Minersville
2186.
Sl50. Custom factory frailer
EAGLE
A bill of sale or certificate on hand but our supply is ex-------on Welchtown Road. Price
7-25-lfc
hitch for 68-70 charger S10.
of ownership assigns this hausted. The list will be pubINDUSTRIES
HALF RUNNER beans, $2 S700cash for al l. If interested,
Two
univers
al
hitche
s
S5
number to one buyer, and all lished in part sometime after
bushel , pick your own. call collect 559-34'11.
each. Call 992-7113 evenings
3931 Me1dowbrook Road
future issues bought by him , th e National American NuCucumbers and tomatoes.
8-1-llc
only.
St. Louis Park, Milln. 55426
mismatic
Convention
in
AuClarence
Proffilf,
Portland.
-::------,-...,..--_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
B-3-21c
._
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
•
will bear that number. One
Phooe 843-2254.
HOOSE, 1642 · Lincoln 'Heights.
certificate is all that is ever gust.
8-3-15tc
Call Danny Thompson, 992required for the entire series .
2196.
Wanted
It identifies the owner of that
1971 DIAL 'n Sew zig-zag sewing
7-18-tfc•
particular n u m be r and,
COUNTRY and western band
machine left In layaway .
wanted Friday and Saturday
sbo uld it be necessary to
Beautiful pastel color, full HOUSE story and hall, 6 rooms,
nights. Apply In person at
size model. All built-in to
transfer ownership, the cerbath, RuHand. Phone 742Jack's Club.
buHonhole. overcast and
lll'oker
tificate properly endorsed,
5613.
8-3-3tc
fancy stitch. Pay just $48.75
110 Mechanic Street
6-25-tfc
makes it legal.
cash or terms available .
POmeroy, Ohio
Round coins and medals
EARN AT home addressing
Trade-ins accepted. Phone
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
envelopes . Rush stamped
display the number on the
992-~1.
$6,500.00 - 2 bedrooms, bath,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
self-addressed envelope. The
7-28-6tc
rim along with the coiner's
garage, gas heat - 2nd house.
10-25-lfc
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, ....,--:-:-:---:---:---:ballmark-if there is one.
6 rooms, bath . $4,500 .00 .
Davisburg, ,Mich. -48019.
VACUUM cleaner brand new
BASHAN
Square, oblong and plaquette
8-1-JOfp
1971 model. Complete with ali
pieces show it on the re·
cleaning tools. Small paint
$1,500.00 - 4 bedrooms, bath,
. verse as demonstrated above
damage In shipping. Will take
garage.
Fenced
yard.
on the back of the Memorial
S27 cash or budget plan
MIDDLEPORT
408 bst Mlin
Lincoln Cent Numistamp.
available. Phone 992-56.11".
POMEROY
7-2B-6tc
Because of the size and
$9,500.00 2 bedrooms.
- - : -:--::-:--:-depth of these tiny ligures,
paneled, bath, large lot.
MIDDLEPORT
:....A
wonderful
LOFTY PILE, free from soil Is
RUTLAND
it is virtually impossible to
buy just $9.600. 1 story frame,
the carpel cleaned with Blue
alter or erase them without .
J nice large' bedrooms,
Lustre.
Rent
electric
$1~ ,500 .00 - 4 bedrooms. bath,
detection through X-ray exshampooer $1 , Baker Fur- closet•, bath, nice cabinets in rCentral heat and .air COI1 ·
lhe kitchen, full width front
amination .
niture Company.
difion ing. MIDDLEPORT
porch,
new aluminum siding,
7-28-6fc
Since our article announcquiet street, all in eKcellent
$10,000.00 - 3 large bedrooms
condition.
with large closets. Bath, gas
and
SCIOTO UVESTOCK
POMEROY - Close to store, heat, garage on corner lot.
Hogs: 200-230, 20; No. I, 20.25;
~
SAL£
MIDDLEI'ORT NEW
and elementary school - 2
FREE IC-E CREAM OFFER
230-240, 19. 7~; 240..260, 19.25; 260LISTING
story frame, 1 rooms, .t
280, i8.50; 190-200, 19.50; 180-190;
Here' s the way It works ...
Phone 992-2156
bedrooms , l'h bath, full 520 000 00
2 barns. s room
you get seven ice cream
19. Sows, 300-400, 15.40-16.25;
with
utility
space,
h~me,
balh,
furnace, I u
basement
bars, o ~ a halt-gallon of ice
gas · forced-air heat. large
ACRES.
400-550, 16.80-17.10. Boars, 14.30.
cream , ' FREE for every
front porch, garj!ge with room ·
cvbic foet you buy in a Unico
Stock hogs, 14-30:50. Pigs bh,
Bea l'f 1 NEW 8
fr~ezer ,
refr igerator or · over. hardwood floors . The
ANTIQUES, telepllones, brass
very low price of 'tust $18 500. $35,000.00 u' u
6.75-16.
combinalion.
..
'
room
ranch
home,
4
beds. clocks, dishes, old
UNI(O
21FT.
UPRIGHT
Cattle, choice steers, 32.11).33;
"
POMEROY
_
This
can
be
bedrooms
with
la'i,'!eclosels,
2
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
26f.U
FREEZER
good, 29.90-31.50; Holstein
yours for [us I $3,500. Needs a
full baths. !lou e garage.
Miller. Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
With th i s one you get UO free
Call
992-6271.
'fepa~r,
dose
In,
1
story
IS ACRES.
lillie
ice
cream'
bars
or
'20
half
steers, 28.50-31.60; choice ·
gallons of FREE ice creem .
7-9-lfc
frame,
2
bedrooms,
bath,
5
belfers, 29-,11.25; good cows, 21rooms In all, could have $12,500.00 Large 3 bedrooms,
'
POMEROY .
balh. furnace. garage.
23; uWity, 18-20.50; canner and
another bedroom In the attic.
"JOT A DOG'S LIFE but a du.fs act is Oleg Popov's
Jack w. C•rs•Y· Mer.
RACINE
Sa.
l
e
See
it
today.
cutters, 17 down. Bulls, 26-27.50;
·
Ph~ne tt2-2111
1lr11blcm . The hrp - blllt~ ltussian down on a lour ol
LIST WITH US FOR RESULTS
1968 CHEVY. 2 door hardtop,
stock cattle .steers, 24.50-34.25.
Engla nd was prevented b~ str ingent British quarantine
FOR APPOINTMENT
. HENRY CLELAND
a
ir
conditioning
,
power
14 Fl. TAGALONG travel
Veal calves, choice, 42; good, · luws lrum brtnginl( alung the dug regularly costarring
CALL m-:ms
REALTOR
steering and power brakes.
trailer. fully self contained.
HEL.EN
L. TEAFORD,
3UO; mediiun, 31; baby calves, in his acl. So he audilio.~ for a replacemeal with tbe
Office
m-2259
1969 C&lt;imaro, 4 speed, 350
React(
to
go,
Sl500.
Phone
773'
ASSOCIATE
winner In his arms-"fiemma ," a l~orooghly 8rlllsh
Resldtnce m-2561
engine. Phone 992-6547.
BH, 30-62.50.
5651, Mason, W. Va.
8-1-61c
W••s! Jlighlund terrier.
7-28-6tc
7-23-lfc
·
7-23-ffc
Lambs, choice, 31 ; good, 29.

For Sale or Trade

-.

I"'IIIIHI-n

~.

And

':OAL, limestOne. Excelsior

'

Days a Week.

I

I ,,,----~-----~...--...,, -, .,...--..-

EXPERT

omC£ SUPPUES

For Sale

Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating is now open 6

True
Li.mited
Editions

r -

·

POMEROY
'HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

SAVE UP to one half. Bring APPL~Peaches, Fitzpatrick
your sick TV to Chuck's TV Orchard, State Route 689.
Shop, 151 Buffemuf Ave..
Phone Wilkesville 669-378$.
Pomeroy.
...
8-1-lotc
4-23-lfc
· SW~ET corn . Bryan Harris,
Succe.s Rd . , Reedsville,
Ohio. Phone 667-3652.
8-1-Jic

992--

S.rK,I Nurnbo r ..--1

I" ' .. '

Busmess
•· .. Se
•
.
,
ces
~~========~~====::======li~=====:=?==::::f

For Rent

Phone 992-2780 or 992,.3432.

OR PHONE
992-2550 DAYS OR .

5

&gt; ¥ ...,.....

~~~~~·--~------------~~~
·

8-3-tfc

t'
No iCe
278$.

Manley , si ngers , organ ist ,

®
t#. .

POMEROY 111110

who helped in any way during
the loss of our son. husband

for Charlotte Reid will he
on the Federal Communications Commission. The
Republican representative
from Illinois bas been
named to tbe regulatory
agency by President Nixon.

.

1"'CHEV. 2TON

WE WISH to thank everyone

NEW ROLE In government

fOr ·(o
. !I

•

14'' cab to axle, good 825x20 tires. 2 speed rea&lt;a xle, Int. &amp;
cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln. eng. A real clean
trud

Stewart, Minersville, 992·

and father, Glenn R. Collins.
Sr. Special thanks to the
Racine Emergency Squad,
Dr. J. J . Da vis, Ewing
Funeral Home. Rev. O'Dell

• .,.,

1910CHEVROLET
$2295
'' Ton Pickup, wide body. G78x15 tires, H. duty rear
springs. rear step bumper, less tha n 9000 miles and less
than 9 mo. old. Beautiful red finish . Shows beSt of care.

patients in my home. Mrs. Iva

Card. of Thanks

Pt ·

2 SillS
Of'·,

QUALITY

Advertisement.

OFfiCE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily. ·
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon·
Saturday .

f

.- . ~-

, ,, )

a- Tile OlDy Sentinel, Middleport-~ oy, o., Aupst 3,lm

.........

.

Yirgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

NEIGLER Consfrucflon. For .
building or remodellt19 your
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, 'Ohio.
7-31-lfc
-

RALPH'S CARPET - Upholsfory Cleaning SerVIce.
Free estimates. Phone
GallipOlis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc
.
.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at CrossrO!Ids, Rt. 12~.
Complete front end ser-vice,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
b~lanced
electronically . · All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

..

'

ROSEBEoRRY Furnace installation. Free esflmales on
new furnaces, oil or gas.
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-843-2274.
7-22-JOtc
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast- Hsy. Free
esflmales. Phone 992-3214.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-:tO-Ifc
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERVICE. Phone 949-4551.
5-30-lfc

DAILY CROSSWORD
A.CROSfl
1.Intemanatlonal

treaty
5.Pooreat

DICK TRACY
AW, HA, HA, HA!

TNI! DUMMIES

LEGAL NOTICE

IM DI!AD!

LEGAL NOTICE

n.....

8. Wind
Instrument
9. WIUldem'

13. Earthen-

Sealed bids will bt received

ware jar

by !he Meills Local School

14.. Smen

District Board of Education at
their office In the Melgl- Junior

15. Papal

High Building , Middleport,
Ohlo, tor 3 ; 166 ponengerl

name

16.Peer

school bus (chassis only) until
12 :00 o'clock noon on August 10,

Gynt'a
mother
17. Sterling or

1971.

Specifications for the bus
chessls may be obtalntd bY
calling or writing Mr. L11rry
Morrison, Assistant Superfn .
tendent; telephont "2·21.53.

Peerce

18. C&amp;Ued

:zo. Bueball

The Meigs LOCI! School
District Board of Education
reserves the right to refect any
and oil bids.

lO.Sbaw
play

38.0pon.Ue
piece

Jj{IJ-ThJ!;I4J!' d' , ...J c

(2wcll.}

39. SnugJery
40. Electrical

11.EcltaUc
otate
12. Loosee

unit

Umcrambletbtlefour Jwnlllel.
- ldta ......... _,e. to

16-Cbln-

DOWN

port

1. HaUor
room

19. -

2. Competent
3. cartoonlat

21. DeBe&amp;·

David
Low' a

rann rour ordinUJ words.

-

boy!

· _,'OMliiJ

goodies

32. Standard
quanUty

22. ~

creaUon
(Zwcll.)

bundle
23. African

4.Shlpment
f1'om

33. Steoico
- and
chops
33. Surrounded

24. Subllat
26. Un·
married
28. Itt·
porter'•

Ceylon
5.Aoc:ended

6. Llke

oome

great,

cl'Jcken

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T. Rldlculoua!

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36. JwUpruden&lt;:e

qut~llon

I•

l:UNESS

·-

Edue~tlon

23. S&amp;Une

Lee W. McComas

2t. Heavy
work'

11lll, 20, 27 (I) 3

25.Famoua

Clerk

I I

26. Birthplace

To the- Executrix .ot the
estate-; to such of the fOllowing
as are residents of the State of
Ohio, vlx : - the survivinG
spouse, the n,x:.t of kin. the
beneficiaries under the will ;
and to the attorney or aHorneys
representing any ot the
afOrementioned persons :
Carl Hellman, Deceased ,

2'1.8-U

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1 of

0"•·
Count.y . Probate Court

Now......,.. 1M cheW leiUn
tor... t~oo-,.•-·•
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...
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Spo.nlah
genenl

NOTICE ON FILING
01[ I_NYI;NTORY .
AND APPRAISEMENT
Mei1s
The Stott at

.

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(2 wcll.l
22. French

Meigs LOCI I

.

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by

21. Atta.:k

School District

Board of

¥ I ' J'a Qnl 4 I ; BOW lNDIITAliLY GRACII:II'UL
auJU!M Alii: BII:FORII: TJD:T LEARN TO DANCE.SAIWBL 'l'AYUIR COLl!:IUDGE
101m 1D11C......,.. Bp41cat•, '-&lt;.)

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28. Vacillate
29. Friend

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MISLAy GALliY

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(Fr.}

30. Hulen
31. Bobo
M.·Bordered
38.~

Pomeroy, Ohio R. D. 2, Chester
Township, No. 20497.

-y
3?. Havea

You ~re hereby notified thtt
the
lnven,ory and
A.p.
pralsement of the estate Of t~e
aforementioned. deceased, late

lofty
amb!Uon

of sold Coun!y, was tiled In this

DAILY CRYPlOQUOTE-Here'• how to~ It: ~-

_,
,.

19th day at August, 19.71. at 10o00
o'clock A.M .

h L 0 N 0 F .E L L 0 W
A. X
y D for
L Banother.
A. A. X In
B tills 1111111J11e A Ill
' oae letter otmply
otandl
11110&lt;1
for the thrH L'o, X tor lhe two O'o, el&lt;. Slncte letttnlt'
__ . _ . . . the 1enct11 aDd fonnatlon of lhe worcll are a

Court . Said ln'vtntory 1nd
Appra isement will be tor
hearing before this Court on the
Any person desiring to tile
e~tceptlons thereto mutt file
tt.em at least five days prior to

Given under my h.nd Md
Hal of said Court, this 31st dty

of July 1971 .

H JW K

JOhn c. Bacon
Judge and e~r - Dfficio Clerk

BVQlQWJS

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ByAnnB.Wa'. Depulr Clor(11 3, 10,21

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;r.;"'b.i:';d.-day lhe cacle ·letten an dlff01'01lL

the date HI tor he.rlnt

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

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I

10-TIIeDali7SentiDei,~,O.,-..a.lt'IJ ·

--------

f-------------;-------=-----:--1

Another Elderly Man Robbed S:.Jii! N~~:::~J!!!efs

A Swan Creek farmer, Sprouse, the third persoo enMerman S. (Tom) Sprouse, tered through the rear door.
Crown City, Rt. 2, Monday After threatening to shoot
. became lbe fourth elderly Sprouse, the lrio thol'oughly
vicUni of an armed robbery In ransacked the house, apGaUia County In lhe past four parently searching for DIOIIey.
•nonths.
They then threatened to pistol

'

Sheriff's deputies were
continuing . a search today for
three suspects, one armed, who
robbed Sprouse ik a small
amount of money after
threatening to ki11 him.
'lbe men were believed to be
Wiving a red Codillac with a
white · ~op bearing a Kentucky
license plate.
According to depuUes,
Sprouse, who lives alone, was
upstairs and beard sllllleone
yeiUng outside his front door at
approximately 10 p.m.. He
came downstairs and unlocked
the doer to see who was outside.
When Sprouse opened the door,
one of the two men waiting at
tile door pulled a gun and placed
it at Sprouse's neck. They
forced him Into the dining room
where be waa Ued to a heavy
steel cbalr. After blindfolding

~ MEIGS :ntEAJflr.

whip Sprouse, but later left,
taidng an undetermined amount
of old coins.
Sheriff's deputies were called
by an alert neighbor who bean!

Sprouse yeU for help.
plates. ·
It is not known if Ibis latest
Monday's robbery waa lhe
armed robbery bu any con- mth major anned robbery In
nectiOn with a sirnit.r one July . GaUia County In tbe past m
2. Hugh Niday, a resident of months, Orie and Emmett
Hannan Trace Rd., was robbed Roasiter, twin brothers,
at gunpoint of • · He was Ued residents of Good Hope Ridge
withadbeslvetapeandwlreand Rd., Rl 1, Crown City, were
his life also was lhreatened. beaten and robbed on March 29.
'l1lnie men are stiU sought In 'lbe VInton Bank waa robbed at
tbat robbery. They too drove a gunpoint on May 18. Three
car bearing ouklfo&amp;tate license peraona were involved In tbat

sgr3ement was reacbed on a
new contract between tbe UmtWall Disney's
ed Steel Workers union ani the
20,000LEAGUES
basic.....steeltrikelnduatry which
UNDER THE SEA
averocu
as
CTechnicolor)
'lbe first werkers to be called
Kirk Douglas
back by the Nr.W were 1rack,
James Mason
engine
and signal maintenance
G
1
talorcartoons:
~
exPect to be back In lull
Honorable HoUH Cat
Peonut Bottle
operaUon within two or three
Honorable Family days" Said an N&amp;W spokesProblems
man:
SI!OW STARTS 7 P.M.
Vandalism Reported
SPikes were removed from
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
some track In tbe Bellevue arAugust4-5
ea and tile N&amp;W bu asked tbe
NOT OPEN
FBI to Investigate.
The N&amp;W employes 9,000 per. .- - - - - - - • sons In Ohio and serves nearly
5,000 lnduslries.
Three major Ohio steel producers, Republic Steel, Youngs..
town Sheet a. Tube and Armco
Tonight, Aug. 13
Steel, Monday announced an increase In prices lilal would avDouble FNture Program
Hell Run I
erage about B per cent, tbe
ANGEL UNCHAINED
same as lhe earlier Increase
(talor)
announced by tf.S. Steel
Don Stroud
Armcosaidtheprlce.lnereaae
Luke Askew
would only partially offset tbe
-Pluscost
of the new contract with
DON'T CDME ALONE!
the USW which it called "tbe
.
(GPJ
(CGforJ
most costly ever negotiated "
COUNT YORGA,
The major i*ublem fadtlg.tbe
VAMPIRE"
steel fll'lllS and tbe USW now
Robert Quarry
is the amount of steel
Roger Perry
stockpiled by heavy steel users
which will cut down on tbe
Wed., Thur. &amp; Fri.
need for new steel.
August4-5-6
Double FNture Program
Industry Week Magazine In
Grandpa Jones
Cleveland said some steel users
&amp; Randy Boone
had stockpiled enough steel to
in
last them fer three months.
"HERE COMES
Layoffs Seen
THAT
NASHVILLE SOUND"
ArmCO, which Is based at
-PiusMiddletown, said it would lay"COUNTRY MUSIC
off 200 persons at its Asbland,
ON BROADWAY"
Ky., plant this week.
..,_ _ _ _ _ __ .
·
Tonight, Aug. 3

0

0

La--------'

Armco baa about 7,tl00 workers at its Middletown plant
..'lbe lu~ is pretty Bl;im."
said an Armco ~n.
U.S. Steel laid off t700 persoos at its Youngstown plant
before the negotiations started.
"We are golns back Into producUon very gradually," said a
u.s. Steel spokesman...As of
.now we haVe called only a ftrY
few people back to work and
lbeyareprimarilymalntenance
people."
'lbespokesmansaidlhemain-

tenance people would get the
furnaces going but bow many
other workers would be called
back would depend on the back·log of mdeis.
'lbe president of USW Dislrict Z6 in Cleveland said the
new contract with the steel industry was "the greatest pack:age ever won" by any union.
"It far exceeds anyone's expectatlons and lhe unlimited
cost of living clause would insure tbe workers' wages against
mounting lnflaUon," said Jos-

UPHiealer Edllur
Together again, the ~
Apollo 15 astronauts ~led
around the moon today m a
scienUfically exciting extension
of their search fer informaUon
about the birlh and evoluUon of
the solar gystem.
Nothing In today's achedule
could match Monday's drama.
Fer the first time, television
viewers saw In color tbe
blastoff of 11 spacecraft from a
celestial body other lhan Earth.
They saw the ascent stage of
the moon lander Falcon burl
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin, after three days of
almost Incredibly successful
surface exploraUon, Into lunar
orbit to join Alfred M. Worden ·
aboard tile mothershlp Endeavour.
But for the scientists who
helped plan Ibis 12-&lt;lay, $445
million expediUon Into the dim
· ~t of billions of yeara ago,
tbe experiments being condoct..
ed with remote radiaUon
sensors and cameras _aboard
the Apollo command ship may
turn out to be as reVI!allng as
tbe great discoveries made by
Scott and Irwin on tile IWIIII'

.
surface. These experiments will
be continued for two days more
beftire the astronsuts start
heme on W~y.
Already, while Worden flew
solo 70 miles above the moon,
the command ship's instruments bave sent hllllle new
informaUonaboutlunarchemistry Including dala about radioactive materials which reveal their presence by the rays
they emit.
.
~ greatesb l ~nzethtbe&amp;ott andhe
Irwin broug t wt
mw n
tbey rejoined Worden was a
sample of rocks which may
date back to lhe time when the
moon was created--at about the
same time tbe SWI and its
planetary family came into
belng--aome 4.6 billion years
ago.
While Worden awaited them
In lunar orbit, Scott and Irwin
spent about 67 hours on the
moon. For 18 hours and 27
mln~les of that time . they
explcred tbe surface, ~d o~t
an atomilOWeJ'ed sclenliflc
laboratory' drilled holes into
lunar crust, and travelled 16
miles · over terrain never
explored before.
They brought back 228 poWlds

.

--

NEW YORK (UPI) -United
Press InternaUonalbas advised
its subscribers lila! rates for
UPI news and newspicture
services Win be Increased by 10
po;r cent effective Sept. . 5 to
meet a world-wide Increase In
costs of operaUon.
In a letter to subscribing
newspapers and broadcasters,
UPI Vice President Frank
Tremaine said UPI was meetlng much of the higher costs
with improved technological

facilities but that a general rate
Increase was unavoidable to
maintain tbe high standards
service.
"Payroll costs represent the
largest single item in our
expense structure," Tremaine's
letter said.
He pointed out in this area
UPI has had to absorb this
year sharp increases In wages
provided by union contracts,
Increased poyroll fringe costs
for health Insurance and

of

CHECKING ACCOUNT.
'./, H f N 't' 0 U V I ) I T f' A R k f R f E

.

'

t.iiilens ~aliONll
....... CIINCINNA Tl

MIDDLEPORT
-~OHIO

· TWO TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to New Haven
at 6:05 p.m . Monday for
·
Rob'mson, Sr ., who
Ha rrJSon
was having difficulty breathing.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where be
was admitted. At 8:46 a.m.
today Harry Hysell 660 High
St., Middleport, w.;. taken to
the same hospital by the squad.
He was sick at bla stomach. He
was · In the emergency room
Wldergoing examination this
morning.

'SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
.SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

• Parlllng Lot .
Use"Our Fl'ft

MIDDLEPORl, OHIO
Member

Federal · Depolllllas~

216 E. 2nc1, l'l!merov

of

Church, served as organist over
50 years. She was a member
the Women's Society of
Christian ~ice and S.F.R.
Sunday School Class.
Surviving are a dall8bter,
Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt of Mason;
two sons, b'oth funeral
directors, Samuel, of Mullens,
W.Va.,Mrs.
andDonald,ofMason;a
sister,
Miles 0. Brown; a
brother, L. J. Ruttencutter,
Mason; 10 grandchildren, and
10 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at lhe
Mason United Methodist ·
Church with the Rev. Parker
Hin2man officiating. Burial will
be In the Suncrest Memorial
Park at Point Pleasant. Friends
may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home after 3 p.m.
Wednesday.

Middleport Sidewalk Sales Days

Two defendants forfeited
bonds and seven others were
fined Monday .;ahtln lhe court
•..,
of Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar. Forfejtlng a $200 bond
posted .for driving wbile intoxicated was Richard Johnson
of Letart, W.Va., and Coy Nitz,
Poineroy, forfeited a $25 bond
on an Intoxication charge.
Fined were Gerald Arnold,
Pllllleroy,$25andcosts,assault
and battery, and $10 and costs,
disturbln lhe peace· Julie
g
.
'
d
Ferrell, Flint, Mich:, $25 an

costs,assa~tandbattery;Jobn

.·...

. ··:&lt;

...·.·.·..

of

Showers likely today and

The Mexican government in
1944 officially banned the siesta
- the custom of stopping
business at midday for a nap and ordered continuous working
hours.

possibly some thundershowers

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT,

VOL XXIV NO. 78

OHIO

rew
::::::;f}~::::;:;::::

Scott Would do
2 More Weeks

Carriers Count Single Gain
WASHINGroN - THE RAILROADS' IBIEFAm"" GAIN In the
cmtract settlement lila! elided lhe Jlday itrlke by Ule· umted
TranspcrtaUon Unloo was a new aeries of 1I'Cft rules tbat will
aUowrallcaniers to provide more efficient service to cnatomel'B.
'lbat iS a plua fer the railroads' CGIDpelitlon In lhe freight market
agallist li-ucts, shlpa, bargea aod other model of lranlpo!'t.
'lbe employea retained a D•nnber of the beneftlll tbey bad
under old work rules, however, such as edra pay for serving on a
1raln crew lilaI travels liiOI'e lhan 100 mllea In one worldng day.
'lbe union alao won a 42 pet. wage increase In tbe 42-mootb con'
1racl

re.::

137

of

Instructors go
To Notre Dame

of

of.----------------------------..
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r---------------------------,
N
• B •t

I

:
1

ews

•••

ln

ne

S

I
1
1

!

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON bas coupled his
s1rongeststatementyetagalnstbuslng school children for racial
lntegraUoo wilh a request lila I Congress not allow use of proposed
federal funds for tbat prupose. At tbe same time lbe admlnistraUon
anaounced It was appealing a benchmark court
ruling against massive busing In the public schools of Austin, Tex.

Stop In the music department on the 2nd floor

" It is highly gratifying to
report that thousands are enjoying the hospitality, particularly tourists from all parts
of the United Stales who avail
themselves to the many
features of the park in providing
for the comfort and convenience
of an who enter its gates.
"It was but natural that the
park should be selected as the
home of the trophy after sufficient ground for lbe erection of
the memorial building had been
donated and its perpetual
upkeep guaranteed by Fides
Lodge 210, Knights of Pythias of

Color T.V. • Black and White T.V. • Tape P1aJets &amp;
Recorder .,• Stera · Portable Record Players and Racb
..

Use our sensible credit plan to purchase

""e .,

Allan Downie, a veteran of
Vietnam, joined the Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, and Joe Hall, also a
veteran of Vietnam, was Introduced at the regular meeting
Tuesday night. ·
George Nesselroad, coa.h
the Meigs Legion baseball
team, expressed his thanks to
Legion members for their
support and displayed the
trllphy lhe team won when they
captured the Eighth District
championship last Saturday.
Nesselroad said the squad is
"filled with a determination to
win and gave a· great display of
determination."
Plans were made for the upcoming state playoff to be held
at Ashland College. All district
winners will meet Sunday for

of

R /a d

l\T _.J_

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

l
~

-------~-~~-----'·--'-------

.

the drawings. Teams will be
housed on the campus.
Also discussed was the Meigs
County fair police detail.
Volunteers are asked to sign up
to help park cars during the
week of the fair. Legion
members have been doing the
volunteer work the past 10
years.
Also discussed was · the
purchase of a new color TV for
the post home.
The All8. 17 meeting was
cancelled due to lbe fair. The
next meeting will be Sept. 7with
a meeting of trustees Tuesday,
All8." 31.
Plans were made for Cooches
Night and Boys Staters dinner
to be held at the Sept. 21
meeting . Post Commander
Leonard Jewell presided.
Refreshments were served by
Robert Vaughan.

n 1 ~e~ ~,_,.,.,,
. ""''·-··'·"''- ·' ' «&lt;.«O:X'&lt;';m~mm::;.;s'2
...,
Fire Equipment EXTENDED OUTLOOK
uf,

be

' what you want.

Middleport."
Ferd Hunker's Idea
The park was eventually
given up by the lodge.
The memorial structure was
the dream of Ferd G. HWlker,
Middleport, who was high in
slate ranks of the Knights of
Pythias lodge. The late Mr.
Hunker drew on paper his ideas
of what the memorial should
look like and the late James
Harley, who was a member of
the lodge and a former Middleport mayor, created a model
which was followed in the actual
(Continued on page 15 )

Downze
• . zn
• LP.UJOR
•

However, it Indica led it was appealing the case not to promote
raciaJ.buslngbuttocomplywithreceill&amp;lpremeCourtdecisions.
.
.
Nixon's statement Tuesday said: ..1 am against busing as
RUTLAND - Fire Chief
lhattenn lscOOIIIIonly used in acbool desegregaUon cases. I have ' Duke Kennedy and firemen Bill
consistently opposed lhe busing of out naUon's school chlldren to Smith .and Bill Willia'?"on told.
. balance and 1 am opposed to lbe busing of council :ruesday_ .mght the
ac hieve a raCIB 1
•
.
present f~re truck IS obsolete
children simply ~r tbe sake~ busing. .
.
and that if the equipment Is not
"Furlber,whiletbee:ecnU~ebranchwillconlillletoenfcrce updated, in-town :insurance
the crders ct the court, mcll~C!q court«dered busing, I bave rates would be Increased.
instructed lhe attlrney general and tbe ~~.of health,
Council asked firemen to
educaUonandweif~re tbat ~~to work~~~~ lndivtd~al school secure'eslimates to buy what is
districllltoholdbuaing!Dtbemmunwnrequ~redbylaw. Then he needed and said the matter
said Congress was being asked to amend legislation still under would
studied.
conslderaUon so tbat nooe of a proposed $1.5 billion In ·Attending
were . Gene
desegregation aid funds could be used for busing.
Thompson, mayor ; Bill Brown,
Harvey Erlewine, Ernest
OU Fee Schedules Raised
Nicholson, Jim Fry and Robert
ATHENS. OHIO- INSTRUcriONAL lee Increases of $30 per Snowden, council members,
and Vernon Weber, clerk.
(Continued on page 15)

- See the 1972 RCA.

-=--·--------......

BY BOB HOEFIJCH
of the memorial to the soldiers
Somehow and ap- and sailors of the COWlly In all
propriately so - Feeney- wars was hailed as lbe biggest
Bennett Post 128, American event ever held in Meigs
U!gion has got it aU together . . County.
The "aU," of course, is the The Middleport Herald's
impressive memorial - a edition of April 26, 1927,
World War I field cannon - to reported in part:
"There is little doubt that
veterans of aU wars and a park
in which to display it.
Meigs County will excel aU
It was over 44 years ago that other counties of the state in its
the memorial was dedicated in potriolism demonstrated, and
Middleport's old Pytbian Park its appreciaUon of the trophy
where the new Imperial presented by the government
Electric Plant is now located. It through the adjutant general's
was fell then lbat · the office of Ohio.
monument forever would be
"Meigs County may well feel
located there. However, van- proud of its · trophy when
dalism became so serious that compared with some of the guns
thememorialwasmovedln1940 intheaUotment,anditwasonly
ID what then was the state through the prompt action of
roadside park on Mill St..near those interested in the project
the postoffiee.
that secured the splendid
The roadside park, however, trophy. Pylhian Park, the only
was abandoned by the state In park in Meigs CoWlty and the
the mid-61xties, and through a permanenllocaUon of the gun,
bit of a complicated title was purchased several years
process, went to the village, ago bx the Knights of Pythias of
which turned it over to Feeney- Middleport for the purpose of
Bennett Post.
providing a commWlity park
Patriotism wasn't always out which the people of all sections
of style. In 192'1, the dedication could use and enjoy.

President Brakes Racial Busing

Headquarters For RCA

MIDDLEPORT'S FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, has the memorial to
all veterans and a park in
which to display it on Mill St.
The memorial was constructed and dedicated in the
former Pythian Park on May
30, 1927 but was moved in 1940
due to vandalism.

History Recalled
Of War Memorial

...____
11 1
By United rress blleriUI 0118

[Kl(]3LJO

SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - As Apollo 15 circled the
moon for the sixth and last day, David R. Scott said today be
would like ID stay there for weeks gazing at the ''mind-boggling"
lunar labyrinth far below.
"I just wish we had more time because, believe me, there's an
awful lot to be seen and done up here." Scott said he and his two
colleagues were awakened 1D the tune the opening theme from
lbe movie .. 2001 : A Space Odyssey."
Before firing themselves out of lunar orbit late today, Scott,
Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin were leaving behind an ao.
pound sateilite that will circle lhe moon for a year, mooitorlng
radiation and magnetic forces .
But today marked the end of manned lunar exploraUon until
Apollo sets out March 17 on a mission as ambitious as Apollo 15.
Scott told ground control at Houston :
'• As we go aroWld in lunar
orbit here I can look down and Before the IWlar breakaway
I can just spend weeks and for splashdown !ale Saturday
weeks looking and I can pick 328 miles north of Hawaii, the
out any number of superb siles astronauts conducted as much
down there which would lake scientific investigation as they
you several weeks to analyze on could cram into their final
the surface."
orbits.
"There 's just so much here,
Mission controllers, planning
to coin · a phrase, it's 'mind- for the deep space Extra
boggling' ."
Vehicular Activity (EVA),
. This was a low-key joke, urged all three pilots to
since ''mind-boggling" was the continue to eat and drink well
term Sco,tt used to describe his to maintain their strength for
impression of the moon on the walk.
"I think everybody's in fine
Apollo 15's arrival there last
shape and ready to take care of
Thursday.
Dr. Leon T. Silver, a what's on the rest of the llight
geologist from California Insti- plan the rest of the way," Scott
tute of Technology, took the said.
The film will join an
microphone al mission control
an'd told Scott and his estimated 175 to 180 pounds of
colleagues lbey had done "a moon rock and dirt Scott and
Irwin collected from three days
lovely job."
"You just don't know how of surface exploration. Eager
we're jumping up and down scientists hope the samples and
the pictures will help unlock the
here," Silver said.
"I hope some day we can get secrets of the moon's earliest
you all up here too," Scott days.
Worden, who has spent more
replied. ''I think we really need
to have some good professional time circling the moon than
geologists up here .
"You all would just really
have a field day. There's just
so much to be gained here."

of

•

of

where a will
Miss
Majorettefrom
America
be selected
the state finalists during lhe
four day event. Emceeing the
pageant will be Miss Pamela
Ann Eldred, Miss America of
1970. World talent winners in
such areas as singing and
dancing also will be selected.
Ted Mack, TV :Jersonality, will
present special awards. The
American Youth on Parade Is a
National Baton Twirling Assn.
event.
There will be no baton class
this week for the students of
Forgery Charged
Miss Buck in. M~ddleport,
Geo-rge . Andrew Miller, Pome1·oy or Galtipolis.
Middleport, was charged with
forgery Moilday following an
lnvestigaUon over the weekend
Weather
by Sheriff Robert C. llarRoad Enemy
tenbach and Middleport Police
WASHINGTON- StudChief J . J. Cremeans.
ies show weather is the
.The charge was based on a $90 worsl enemy of good highcheck Mill~r wrote on lhe ways. So~king rains, frosl,
Racine Home National Bank. heal, and rapid temperature
There are also 10 Insufficient changes break up highw.,vs
!Wid checks bUt in lhe Mid- - even lhosc where lraflic
dleport area, the sheriff's is li~ht!
department reported.
LOCAL TEMPS
CWB TO MEET
Tempera lure in downtown
The Laurel Cliff Health Club Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
will meet at 7::10p.m. Thursday wjs 70 degrees under rainy
at the home of Neltie Tracy.
skies.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1971

At $21 973 34

n

south portion, e'nding this
.-•ening central portions. Lows
tooight in the SC&amp;. Olance of
showers soulb Thursday, highs
in the mid 10 upper 715.

Devoted To 17w lnterest.l OJTh.e Meigs-Mason Area

THE U.S. DECIUIN TO BACit A UNnED NATICI'ill aeat
fer CCJ!nmllnist Cblna cauaed UU!e upriae In world capltall
today. Some Ccimll!1mlst natiODS reacted with IIUIIplclon and
western Europe geoerally approved.
Approval came fnm such natiODS as F'raDce and Sweden,
whicb have diplomatic relatiODS wiUi mainland Clrina, tbe
Pllilipplnes, WtdCb baa been moving In lhal direction, and
Australia. Joaef Tekosb, lhe Israeli MDhaMM to WasbingtOD,
said he would recommend U.N. memberabJp.

surface and subsurface soli
and rock samples.
1n their last traverse Monday, Scott and Irwin confirmed
that the mile-wide, J,IMMJ-foot
deep chasm beside which IIJey
landed July 30 was, as
photographs had Indicated, a
many-layered canyon.
This indicated to scientists
that the gorge, known as
Hadley Rille, was the produce
of successive lava flows billions
of years ago which left )heir
Look at the Fine Print
individual marks as the moon
cooled gradually to its present Sales tax receipts on motor
COWMBUS -SlATE A'ri'MNEY GENERAL WUllam J.
relatively quiet state.
vehicles purchased by Meigs Brown said today bla ~lee Is continuing to nceive complaints
Meanwhile Worden In his Counlians during the month of reganllng "retirement heme" land frauds.
exploratory '1ravels ui orbit July totaled $21,973.34, Mrs.
Standard procedure In Bllcll fraud cases, Brown said, Ia for
reported discovery of a field of Evelyn Lucke, county clerk of lhe prospective buyera to be enticed Into lmatlng In bomesltes
volcanic cinder cones near courts, reports.
which are In remote and deaolate area.s ani promised imLittrow Crater on the edge of In addition a total of $4,475.19 provements are often far In lhe future er newr materlallzf.
theSes of Serenity.
waspaidincasualandusetaxes "Often," said Brown, "a personal visit at great espense Is
When the Falcon separated and there were inspections on 94 required to find lilaI tbe actual PI opa ty Is aowbere cl011e to exfrom the mothership on its way cars brought i(lto Meigs County pectatl0118," be said.
to lhe moon's surface Friday, from out of the state during lhe
Worden told his friends lilat month.
Price Boosts Sort of Sudden
"now you're on your own."
Receipts for othefautomoUve
PII i'SBURGB _ Wll'll A SUDDENNESS that embatTuaed
As tbey joined forces again ' activities in the office of Mrs.
Monday, billions years later Lucke for the month of July an~ .annoyed tbe Nixon admlnlstratloo, the steel lndllllry began
In terms of tile discoveries they totaled $1 644 'th the county to I'BISIII8 prices Monday, lea than 15 hours after negotlatu. a new
bad made he told Scott and receive $i 274~and lhe state to labor contract. U. S. Steel Corp., tbe nation's Jaiogeslproclleer,
Irwin.
'
. $36&amp; 5o
, announced prices would rise an average of a pel on aU Its
"W~Icome home."
acUrtU~ Included the · pr~cts ';!'oeptstalnlea steel, to finance what It caJ1ed tbe 'Inissuance of m certificates of fla~ooary three-year ~tract witll the United steelworkers
title · 227 nolations of Uen· 128 Umon (USW) negotiated m Wasblnglon SWiday.
me~orandums; 737, • apThe announcement here C8ll1e as u.s. Secretary of Labor
plications, affidavits and James D. Hodgson, briefing repcriers on tbe contract setuement
assignments and 10 certified In Wasb!nllton, was saying: "I hope if there are price Increases,
pensions, and higher Social copies.
tbeywll! be moderate." Wllhlnhoura, Betblebem steel, tbe No.2
Security taxes. He said tbat
producer, Republic, lhe No. 3 producer, Armco, ani YOUIIplown
UPI's payroll costs overseas
Sheet and Tube followed witb o!m!Jar lncreuea. Tbe real of tbe
also are up to a similar extent.
rJ.it•
lnduatrywasexpectedtofaUinllnebytlleendoflbeweek.
Tremaine said that UPI had
I
avoided a dramatic increase in
Jetliner Came Down
the cost of its leased Teletype Meigs Countians purchased
DENVER _ A I.ON-IIOllND BRll'1SII Overseas Airlines
lines by foreseeing the advog;e 137 new and 174 used motor Corp. (BOAC) 747 jetliner witb 379 penona on board was diverted
result
the press rates case vehicles in July, Mrs. Nellie to lhe miJe.blgb Denver Airport today wbenan anODymoua caller
and going to a new system. Brown, deputy clerk of clalmedapressurebonlbwasaboard,settogooflwbentheplanll
How~ver, lhe press rates courts, reports. Of
the
decision will Increase the cost new vehicles purchased, 18 dropped below 5•tl00 feet.
of some of UPI's circuits, were motorcycles, 22 were
The giant plant, which originated In Montreal, landed aafely
parUcularly ~,!Jose in lhe news- trucks,'BO were passenger cars at Stapleton lnlel'naliooal Airport at 4:06 a.m. (EDT). AU
pictures system, he added.
and 17 were trailers. Among the pamngers were taken off and Denver pollee searcbed It top to
used vehicles were 152 bottom, bulnobcmb was foWKI. Tbe airport, one of the Mgbellt on
passenger cars, four motor- lbeNortbAmericanconllnent,ls5,2501eetabclveaealevel.
cycles, 13 trucks and five
1railers.
Veteraaa Memortal Hoopltal
TJIUDEAU TO BELGRADE
O'ITAWA (UPI) - Prime ADMmED- Ronald Smith,
Neal
White,
Miss Gloria Buck Pomeroy
OES TO MEET
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau Pomeroy;
and Miss Valorie Koker of
A regular meeting of and his wife are planning a trip Pomeroy; Mary Fcrd, Letart,
Athens County left today to Evange~ne Chapter No. 172, to Yll8oslavia ''In the near W.Va.; Harrlaon Robinson, Sr.,
attend the American Youth on OES, will be held at 7:30 p.m. future " a spokesman for New Haven.
Parade at Notre Dame Thursday at the Masonic TrudeAu's office said Monday DISCHARGED - Lydia A.
Hysell.
University in South Bend, Ind., Temple In Middleport.
night.

Sales

.

Weather

1

R

, ••.

Now YouKnQw

Ingles, Middleport, $10 and
Is
linn lire
Cal
cos • sque~~'tl
s;
vm
Black, ~emee, F!-"·· $5 and
costs, failure to yteld right . of
way ; Kenneth Hayes, ~·ddlepcrt, $5 and.costs,I'Wllllllll 8 Presidential Buddy in at Kent
n:&lt;Jiight; Cecil See and Gary
KENT, OHIO- DR. GLENN A. OUJS, a cl011e friend of
Rife, both of Middleport, $5 and
c?sts each, assured clear President Nlxoo and fermer U. S. tepl'eaentatiw to tbe United
Natlona, wasnamedpresldentofKentState Univeralty Monday, a
distance.
job be said be welcomes bee•use "I happen to be 111e wbo bellews
lheproblem81ilaiC81111! lntofocuaatKentare unlvenal."
111 •
Olda, 50, an Ordained Methodist mlnlater, was selected by the·
1r~ergs
ecerpts
acbool board of Cruatees, aflel' a sizofJIODih sCreening of potential
caMidatea by a apedal ccmmlttee. He 1rill become the sdlool's
seventJu!residentwbenRobertl. WbiteretlreaSepl15.
'
•
0

See Ads in Newspaper
Today and Thrusday

Little Surprise Anywhere

UPI Will Raise Rate 10 Per wnt

MASON - Mrs. Martha
Katharine (KaUe) Foglesong,
85, Mason, died Monday afternoon at the Kimes Convalescent Center In Athens.
Mrs. Foglesong was born
Feb. 24, 1886, in Mason, the
dall8hter of lhe 'late Sarah
Frances Jarrou and W. E.
Ruttencutter. Her husband, W.
H. Foglesong, died In 1962.
Mrs. Foglesong, a member of
the Mason United Melhodist

SEEMS TO HAVE WINGS •.•
KEEP TRACK OF IT
EASIER WITH A

Court Bond

Dr81113 u nmatc·hed

Mrs. Foglesong Died Monday

IF YOUR MONEY

epb Kender.
Kender said the unlimited cost
of living clause was so important a cost esUmate could not
be made.
"I honestly believe that the
Industry would have been shut
down for the longest period in
its history if it didn't grant ibe
clause," Kender said. .
..Anyone' who had lhe Interest of the union members at
heart couldn't possibly have
considered rejecting the poet,''
he said.

·

By JOSEPH L. MYLER

:

ReHIIftell"'lllllg allllputed . New China Policy Unclear
episode.
a s.,..p JI!IDe Ueeue 1e permit
·
ON ,__ not yet
A masked banfllt robbed tile lbe Martelli Coal Co. 1e
WASHINGTON - THE ADMlNIS'l'llATI
...,
Sllake Sh&lt;lPJ!e of • on May 24. upaad strip mlnlac In spelled out.bow It bclpai to~ Natlaaalill CIUa'svoice In
.The Niday ca.e occurred on Belmont Comdy.
lbe ~ted Naliona while opealnc tile door ~ tbe world bodt to
July 2and tbe Bonded Ga8ollne -· N • t 8 r a 1 R e 1 0 u r c e 1 Pek!Dg. ADd enil if It can tum Its policy Into fact, ll)ere Ia lliU 110
Station, Second Ave., Gallipolis, Dlrecter WIIIWii B. Nye Aid publlclndlcalloowbetbermalalandOiinawouldbewllllncto lab
and an A&amp;P trucker were· tbe appnval was a "~ up tile iavltallon.
robbed on July 22.
..U.recant of tbe pablle IaAs .receaUy as July 19 Premier Qlou Ea-lai reiterated
Thus far, only the VInton terest" and fDrlkr provided Pek!Dg's !q..taadlng CJIIIIOIIItiOII to any~ tbat would
Bank robbery and Bonded evlcleafe tbat Olllo'o pmeat Jeaw "twoOJ!us"ln tbe U.N. ''If IIICb a lllaatiOII eonllnueeln
Gasoline Station cases ap- strip mining Jaws are 1lle UnitedNatiODS,"beadded. ''wewinnotgolbere."
peared to have been solved.
woefully Inadequate to
'lbe ·Nixon administration's decision to vote for. Pek!Dg's
protect tbe atate •gala•t the a"m'sslon to tbe U.N. was both an oDttP:owlh of 1lle new cbaplel' In
ravages of strip ml•lag!'
U.S.-Cbicese n!latl01111118t produced NIIon's pllma for a~ to
•. &lt; ·. -:-:-:.: .·:·:-:.;-: : :·:·:·:·:··' :-· : . :·:·:·:···.·· tbe aDnese capital, and a recopltlon of tbe resUty tbat Peking
would probably haw beenaGIIItted to ned month's U.N.aesslm
anyway.

Steel Mills in No Hu1Ty Two Forfeit'
By JOiiN T. KADY
UaltedPreallaterlllltlouf
Norfolk r. Western Railroad
freight trains rolled through
Ohio today following a Uklay
strike that cost tbe state's economy over rr million but steel
mills were slow In returning to
producUon because of beavy
stockpiling by steel usen.
The strike against the N&amp;W
and n1ne other railroads by tbe
Cleveland based United TranspcrtaUon Union ended Monday,
a little over 24 hours after

.:: ·.:

~"""""'""

· E ted d
11 k F id
x n e ou oo
r ay
dFr
..
lwnatrmhe 150sng ("

tlhre~noaugdl.rhLow~w~s ~tdioawy

hi b f
h
0s
and g 8 rom 1 e upper 7
to the lower 80s. By Sunday
lows in the 60s with highs
generally in the 80s.
~"S*'«&gt;.w.&lt;':~:.::::::::l2Snii!IIM'ni':·;:.~l
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED _Steve Eblin,
Pomeroy; Harry Hysell ,
Middleport; Jerry Frederick,
Middl eport; Don covert,
Pomeroy : Alice Beaver,
Racine .
DISCHARGED
Hilda
Kuehl, Lena Markins.

$8 Million

Car
Won't Survive

Apollo 15 Schedule
SPACE CENTER. Houslon (UPU- The Apollo

I~

timetable all time EDT and subjKt to change:

TODAY
3:00 p.m. - Apollo 15 fires ih ~N:in engine for 3.4
seconds to raise orbit to 63 by 66 mUes above ttle moon.
4:10 p.m. - Small scientific wtellite is eiected

from Apollo IS's service module to study radiation and
magnetic forces for a ye•r.
S:23 p.m. - Apollo 15 fires its main engine tor 2
minutes, 18 seconds to break out of luur orbit and
head back toward Earth.
9:34 p.m. - Astronauts begin eight hour rest
period.

THURSDAY

5:24 a.m. - Crew wakes up.
1:26 a.m. - Course correction, il n-ec::e55ary .
11:34 ,a.m.- Worden starts spacewilk to retrieve

two film cassettes from the Qperiment Nr in the

service module. Telec.11st begins at 11 :44 a.m. The
spacew1lk will last a maximum of one hour.

10:04 p.m. - Astronauts be!Jin eight-hour sleep

.:,}.

period.

anyone, was doing most of the
orbital science work. He had to
switch the Endeavour's powerlui mapping cameras on and off
with precise timing and adjust
the set of sensors that have
been reporting on the general
composition of vast stretches of
moon terrain since Thursday.
By analyling the nature of
the radiation emitted and
reflected from the · lunar
surface, these sensors can give
scientists a general idea of the
crustal composition. This is
important in the overall £ffort
ID understand the origin and
evolution of the moon.
· The value-· of these studies
was enhanced by the exploration carried out by Scott and
Irwin. They provided the
"ground truth" to confirm the
accuracy of the orbital measurement.
Worden has said the mapping
is as significant as the surface
work to future exploration of
the moon and the planets.
"jt will provide planners with

more information on future
Apollo landing areas. It also
will point out potential sites for
unmanned exploration later this
decade and lell scientists what
kind of instrwnenls to put in
automated orbiten.
The science station ScoU and
Irwin left behind in the
mountain valley tbey called
Hadley Base was reported
working normally. And controller.; said Tuesday night that the
color television camera left
behind on the astronauts' moon
car bad plenl:Y of battery power
to view a solar eclipse Friday
and continue working IUltil
hmar sunset later this month.
As the three pilots prepared
to go to sleep, Scott reported
they had bad another. ":ater
leak, bul qwckly fixed 11 With a
wrench.
.
"We bad a little liiiScheduled

maintenance on our friendly
water valve again," the commander said, .. but it's Wider
control-same problem we had
before."

2 Million Futures on
Line in Capsule Drums

WASHINGTON ( UPI) -In a
SPACE CENTER, Houston locked and guarded room a
(UPI) -The most expeusive block from the White House
car ever made will become a there are two bulky objects
frozen bulk Aug. 13. No an- wrapped In brown paper. The
tifreeze oo the market could contents of those two packages
could change the lives or about
save it.
Rover 1 cost $8 million and 2 miltion young American men
took Apollo 15 astronsuts burn in 1952.
The wrapped objects are
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin 17.4 mlles from the clear plastic drums, each with
slopes of the Moon's Apennlne 366 capsules inside. In the
Mountains to the rim of yellow capsules are numbers
from I to 366. In the brown
canyon-like Hadley Rille.
A bumper-mounted camera capsules are dates from Jan. I
took television viewers aloog to Dec. 31. They are the
for the ride that cost makings for the third annual
$458,111.44 a mile. The car Selective Service System draft
performed weD, but bad to be lottery to be held Thursday at
left behind. Rover was not 10 a.m. EDT.
Even though the law that has
designed to survive lbe frigid
lunar nights when tem- authorized the government to
peratures fall to 295 degrees conscript young men into lbe
below zero, said Flight armed forces explfed June 30,
Director Gerald P. Griffin. the Selective Service is going
So, when tbe sun sell on ahead wilb lbe draft lottery for
Hadley Base, Rover and ·111 1972 induction priorities on the
color television wiU freeze. assumption that Congress evenEarthbOund viewers wUI get tually will extend lhe law. Both
one last show before lbe big lhe Senate and House h3ve
freeze
wbea
ground voled to do so, but are at
conorollers train the camers loggerheads over a Vietnam
withdrawal rider added by the
on a solar eclipse Friday.
Senate.
Until that matter is
-: .• .,. •
. ·.··.·.··:·.-...:·:&lt;·:·.·.-:-:--· .,:.

'·

...;.

y.:::;;;.;:;:;.;•:;.; .\:_··:·.

worked out, the ·government
can't draft another persiJn in
1971, let alone 1972.
But Selective Service officials
believe youths who turned 19

this year and are draft eligible
in 1!172 desl:f:ve as much
advance notice as possi!&gt;le
abuut their status. 'lbat is what
(Continued on Page 10)

Drivers Certified
Certificates were issued to
bus drivers for lbe new school
year Tuesday night by the
· Meigs County Board of
Education. Supt. Robert Bowen
said several applications are
pending because they were not
completed properly.
Certificates were issued to:
Meigs Local School DistrictPauline D.arsl, Amos Tillis,
Worley Haley, Rosalie Sayre,
Teresa Cremeans, Vernon
Weber, Annette Knight, Hie!
French, Mary King , Lane
Daniels, Donna Daniels, Jetta
Arix Leo Morris Norman
. ' Linda Morris' William
Wood
' Ralph McCumber,
'
Ratliff,
Linda Jell, Ernest Wood, James
McMurray, Naoini Floyd,
Austin Philtips, U!alh&lt;! Colterill, Virgil Carl, Faye Manley,
Marvin Wilson, Anthony Jordan, Alice Globokar, Denver

Hysell, Laveda June Yost,
William Smith.
Meigs Coolmunity School Jean Wood, Dee Brown.
Eastern Local , District
Paul Baer, C. 0 . Newland, B. F.
Upton, Mary K. Rose; Cecil
CaldweU, Allred Wolfe, Robert
Shook, Harold Brannon,
Darlene Reed, Charles Bissell,
Helen Blake, Oscar Pennington,
Warren Rose, Roland Easbnan,
Francis Benedum.
Southern Local District Dan Smith, Gordon Proffitt,
Charles Cornell, Harold Circle,
Albert Hill, Jr., Clarence
Wickline, Earl Cross, Delbert
Smith, Russell Cline, Jesse
Brinker.
Board members presen,t lor
the meeting we:re Virgil Aikins,
Harold Roush, Gcrdon Collins
and Gecrge Perry.

Ky Files Question
• ·ed p· etitiOD
• •

By MARGARET A. ~ILGORE
SAIGON (UPil -Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky today
filed his petitions to qualify in
the Oct. 3 presidenUal .election
and left it up to his nation's
supreme court to determine if
the signatures were valid.
The vice president, who has
spent the past several weeks
trying to muster support lo
oppose President Nguyen Van
' Thieu, said he had filed 102
signatures: two more than

required by law.
. Ky, at a news conference at a. slogan ''molher of, Vietnam."
He conceded that only 61 of , presidential gueslhouse two He said he would 1101 have the
the signatures had been by hours after be filed, accused traditionalallemate vice presThieu-appointed province Thieu of intimidating his idential caodidale, but would
chiefs.
potentialsupporters, ofrunning tun only. with his friend,
The rest of the signatures a fraudulent election and of wealthy prinlel' Truong Vinh
were obtained !rom councillors harminJ the COWltry.
Le.
who switched their allegiance
"A change of leadership is Ky said a slate beaded by a
from Thieu to Ky. There is a essential," Ky said. "Mr. Thieu virtually unkncnm i &amp;ll'l"late.
legal question whether they can dare not accept a fair election Ngu)'l!ll Tran, was fiW ~
make the switch Wider the and has used rigged means at after he fiW and said if Tr-an
election law , ' ~ut Ky said he the very beginning of - the is 3l'Cfl'ted. it would would leave it up to the court eleclions."
Tran's suppor1 t.t to eume
to decide.
.Ky said he would run on lhe ft'llln Thi&lt;'u_

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