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Weather

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. June6, 197.1
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Agreement

\......lo.,J;.;.p

l

I

Firemen Prepare
For July P~ade

(Contlnue.d from Page I)
duty at an entrance to
Company's plant site shall not
remain at the interu;ection with
State Route No. 1 closer than
thirty (30) yards; provided,
however, that this provision
shall not prevent said persons
from making normal use of the
highway in proceeding past .
Company's plant site.
"7. It is agreed by both
parties hereto that in the event
minor violations of this
agreement occur or claim to
have occurred, the . party
claiming of said minor
violatlpn shall profllptly notify
the other party and an earnest
effort will be made by both
parties and their respective
representatives to remedy or .
settle such matters between
them before taking other
actions with respect to such
minor violations.
For ·the
purpose pf clarifying this
provision minor violation is
understood to mean a violation
not involving threatening or
~ctual damage •., persons or
property."

RACINE ~ The Racine Fire
Dept. has completed plans for
its 22nd Annual Fourth of July
Celebration

Mrs~

MEMBERS OF THE NEW MEIGS County Humane Society are donating hours of their
time to making conditions a great deal better for dogs housed at the county dog pound. Above,
Mrs . Dorothy Fisher, one of the founders of the organization, cleans the kennels on Sunday
afternoon. Other society members were on hand to assist in feeding, watering and assisting
with helping residents adopt animals.

Missing Woman Found

(Technicolor)
Clin t Eastwood
Jessica Walter

IRI
ALSO CARTOONS
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wedne~day

&amp; Thursday

June 7-8
NOT OPEN

A Gallia County woman
missing 24 hours and feared
drowned was found by
·volunteer searchers ap·
proximately 150 yards from
her home mi a steep hillside

Slo-Pitch
Results
Tonight, June 6
Double Feature Program
" LITTLE BIG MAN"
I Color!
Dustin Hoffman

JG PJ

PLUS
The Incredible
2 HEADED

TRANSPLANt

Bruce Dern
Pat Priest

( GP)
W~d .- Thur.- Fri. .

June 7-8-9
Oouble Feature Program

THE BEGUILED

(Color)

Cl!nl Eastwood
Geraldine Page

I Rl
PLUS
"T HE HIRED HAND"
I Color)
Peter Fonda

Warren OateS
iGPi .

~cine

the first , second . and third
place !loa ts which will be
judged on the theme of Independence Day . In addition, a
trophy. will be awarded to the
most outstanding marching
unit and- the best decorated
commercial unit. There will be
out-of-town judges.
All organizations interested
in participating are to contact
Simpson by writing Box 213,
Racine or calling 949-4292 after
5p.m.

:Mees of Pomeroy Dies

I

Tonight, June 6

PLAY MISTY
FORME

in

Tuesday, July 4, Pete Simpson,
parade chairman, said today.
All Wlits taking part in the
annual parade are to ~ssemble
at the Racine ~ baseball
diamond at 9:15 a.m. Flag
raising ceremonies will be held
at 9:45 with the parade to
follow through town at 10 a.m.
Trophies will be awarded to

In 1968 Sen. Robert Kennedy

MEIGS THEATRE

For One Week

'

a

died of an assassin's bullet at
age 42. President Lyndon
Johnson declared Julie 9 a day
of national mourning.

Oinic Delayed

Randolph's Union 76, Fruth
Pharmacy and. Falls City
all scored victories last
evening in the opening night of
the Big Bend Tournament.
K &amp; K Mobile Homes also
moved into the second round as
they received a first round bye
since a 16th team did not enter
the annual event.
Randolph's Union 76 downed
Royal Crown 13-9 with Richard
Mabe having a home run for
the winners, Fruth Phartnllcy
downed Jim's Campers 11·11n
five innings with Jimmy Joe
Hemsley of Fruth having a
homer and Falls City blasted
GSI 17·3 in five innings.
Games tonight will be Foote
Mineral against Farmers Bank
at Quaker State against Ponn's
Texaco at 7, Redmann Inn vs.
ll&amp; 0 at8 and M &amp; E (Gulf Oil)
playing Peoples Bank at 9.

around 6:30 p.m., Monday.
Although dazed and in shock,
Mrs. Carroll (Adell) Caldwell,
41, Northup, was rushed to the
Holzer Medical Cimter by a
Waugh -Halley-Wood am·
bulance where she was treated
for exposure. She was released
later Monday evening.
Mrs. Caldwell reportedly left
home around 6:30 p.m., Sun.
day. She apparently climbed a
steep hill beyond the Caldwell
home·, slipped, fell and was
knocked unconscious.
She was exposed to Sunday
night's severe thunderstorm
which siruck the area around 9
o'clock Sunday.
Mrs. Caldwell was found by a
neighbor around 6:30 p.m.,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Hattie Eiam,
Pomeroy; Mary Bowman,
Reedsville; Orville B. Sayre,
Syracuse; Edna Mayes,
Gallipolis Ferry; Clara Hess,
Syracuse ; Usa Smith, Middleport; Mary Lewis, Mid·
dleport; Clinton Pitzer, Long
Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Anderson
Hawk, Steve Hartenbach,
Erma M. Smith, Richard
Bearhs, Sr., Darrell Young,
Irene Burris, Clarence Ten·
nant, Edna Cramlet, George
Conde.

"I DON'T KNOW HOW
Apple Grove
I EVER GOT ALONG WITHOUT
ACHECKING ACCOUNT." News, Events
Ry Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Connolly
of Orlando, Fla ., are visiting
the former 's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Everette Connolly.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and son of Charleston spent
Memorial weekend with Mrs.
Erma Wil~on .
Mr. and Mrs. Tpm Butram
and children of Cincinnati and
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Tarr and
children of CUyahoga Falls
spent Memorial weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Grimm.
Rev. and Mrs. Dale Van
Meter visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Byers.

Monday after Civil Defense
workers, numerous volunteers,
neighbors, and Gallia County
Sheriff's deputies conducted an
aii&lt;iay search.
It was reported some of the
searchers had come within five
or six feet of Mrs. Caldwell
earlier in the day, but did not
see her because of underbrush
in the area.
After combing all the stFip
mine and wooded areas,
voluntee&lt;s were preparing to
start dragging operations in
nearby Raccoon Creek. It was
feared Mrs. Caldwell had
drowned.
The Caidweiis reside on the
Northup-Yellowtown Rd.,
outside of Northup.

DONATIONS WANTED
The Racine. Fire Depart·
men! is accepting donations
for its annua I fireworks
display to be held on the
Fourth of July. Those
wishing to contribute are to
send donations to Walter
Cleland, Box 33, Racine.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;::::

TWO FINED
Two defendants were fined in
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's Court Monday night.
Darrell Ward Young, 32,
Rutland, was lined $50 and
costs on charges of consuming
beer in a motor vehicle and
Fred Jenkins, Syracuse was
fined $100 and costs and sen·
tenced to three days in jail on
charges of driving while in·
toxicated. The charges were
filed by Chief Milton Varian.

RACINE WINS
Racine Little League
dwnped Vinton 30 to 2 in play at
Racine Monday night. On the
mound for Racine was Billy
Harris. Collecting hits for the
winners were Mike Hud·
dieston , Steve Hill, Billy
Harris, Scott Wolfe, Perry Hill,
Richard Teaford, John West,
Greg Huffman and John
Fisher. For Vinton, Geiser,
McComas and Petrie each had
a single. Losing pitcher was
Petrie.

Theodore Croy
Died Monday

great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews .
Preceding him in death were
a daughter, Hildred Powell
Ridenour in 1954; three
brothers, and six sisters.
Funeral services will be held
at 3 p.m. Thursday .at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Freeland Norris of.
ficiating. Burial will be in the
Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 7 this evening.

ACCOUNT TODAY.
"Now I don't have to run around
paying bills every month."
"l feel so much safer carrying checks."
1
' lt's a real time-saver."
"It makes budgeting so much easier."
These are some comments from
people who have Checking ACcounts.
When you open your Checking Account
with us, you'll know just what they mean. So do it today.
And you'll
wonder how you ever got -along
without one!

60, Succwnhs

ln~talll

SHOCKS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federa·l oepostl lnsuranca Corporation

HE MAIJE. A NA~1E before lhr camera. now Sldne,·
Poiller is starting a new career behind it. Thr ,\cad·
emy Award·wlnno•r. directing. as wt•ll as starring in,
"A Warm flecember." coaches costar Esther ;\ndrr·
son during fllmln~ In l.ondon of lht• inh·rnational In·
trlgu• film.

IRAKU .

MUFPLIRS
TAIL PIPES

Now of Renomination; Humphrey's
· ~ite House Quest Gets Severe Jolt

TWEN'fY•THREE OF 24 MEN completing the deep mine foreman' s
course are, front, from the left, Freeman R. Aleshire, Pomeroy; Lindbergh
Arnold, Mason, W. Va .; Glenn Ray Boggs, New Haven, W. Va .; Darrel
Eugene Claywell, Cedar Grove, W. Va ., who was instructor but also un·
derwent testing to obtain Ohio certification; Robert E. Davis, Vinton Route
1; Ray Dawson, Mason, W. Va. ; Alex Butler Docie, Glouster; Guy Warren
Finley, Apple Grove, W.Va.; second row, from the left, Leo Friend Gibbs,
New Haven; William Levi Hammon, Bidwell Route 1; George Bryant
Hudson, Mason; Clifford Jacobs , Pomeroy ; Arthur Latanzio, Point

United Press Internattonal
Like a prairie wind, Gwrge
S. McGovern swept primaries
in California, New Mexico·,
New Jersey and his home state
of South Dakota Tuesday and
predicted "the same fresh
spirit" would lift him into the
presidency.
Less conspicuously,
President Nixon also trium·
phed. His onesided victory over
Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R·
Ohio, a conservative critic of
Nixon's disarmament, defense,
welfare and China policies,
assured the President of
enough GOP delegates to win
renomination. That was
confirmation of the obvious.
Among the day's other
winners were liberal Republi·
can Sen. Clifford P. Case in
New Jersey; conservative !)e.
mocratic Sen. James 0. Eas·
tland in Mississippi, and
Democratic Sen. Lee Metcalf.
of Montana, a battler against
· big utilities.
'
Among the IO.sers were Rep.
Cornelius E. Gallagher, D·
N.J., a 14-year veteran who is
under federal indictment for
conspiracy, perjury and tax
evasion, and James Meredith,

Pleasant ; Billy W. Little, Middleport Route 1; Clifton Moles, Cheshire; Roy
Eugene O'Dell, Rutland; back row, Homer Freece, Point Pleasant; Chester
Arieigh Sextion, Middleport ; Benny Ray Spears, Syracuse; William Francis
Van Meter, Mason ; Winfield Richard Van Meter, Mason; John Wilson; Jr.,
Pomeroy Route 2, and Oscar R. Perkins·, Wellston. The 24th not pictured is
William R. Barnhart, Pomeroy. The trio completing a strip mining
foreman's course and completed testing on Monday are John G. Casto,
Vinlon ; Leonard E. Perkins, McArthur, and Philip Ford Burchell, Olive
Hill, Ky.

"'--.

TWENTY-FOUR AREA MEAN have completed the first
deepmtneforeman 'scourse conducted by the Ameriean Electrie
Power Co. at the Meigs High Sehool. The men attended classes
taught by Darrel E. Claywell, Cedar Grove, W. Va. at the high
school one day a week for a two month period. Five years' ex·
perience in deep coal mining was a prerequisite for the course.
Monday and Tuesday, the 24 men underwent extensive oral and
wrllteo testing by the Ohio Mine Examining Board and eight
deputies . II will~ late July before the results are delermioed.
The course was conducted primarily In order to help pro~ide
personne11or the Southern Mines in Western Meigs County.
•

By United Press International
SAIGON - THE U. S. COMMAND TODAY reported
American warplanes bombed a rail yard and smashed a highway
bridge with electronically guided bombs in the closest raids to
the Chinese border ever ordered by President Nixon . Other
Thailand-based warplanes using laser beam and television·
guided bombs carried out their second raid in five days on the
Bac Giang power plant 25 miles northeast of Hanoi.
The strikes on the railroad yard and the highway bridge near
Lang Son , 20 miles from the major Chinese railhead at Pan Huo
were believed to have been the closest· pialllled raids to the
border. Pilots returning from the strikes said they spotted six
fires in the rail yards, located on North Vietnam 's northeast rail
line connecting Hanoi with China.
WANKiE, RHODESIA - OFFICIALS REPORTED today
eight persons survived •the Wankle coal mine explosion , but
deadly melhane gas halted rescue work and-left little hope that
any of the 455 miners still trapped underground would be found
alive. Mine officials today corrected the original figures released
· Tuesday afler the blast. Officials said there were 468 persons,
Including 33 white miners, in the mine instead of the original
figure of 468. Three were confirmed dead and eig ht survived all of them Africans .
Officials would not commit themselves on the ehanee that
(Continued on Page 101

School Tax
Case to he
Reviewed

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'
PROFESSIONAL lUNI-UP

.17 95
•

I CYLINDER

ln~~ts

Is your car acting up? Hal the winter

been hard on your auto? Now's the
lime ta have a funt·up. We c1n h1ve
your car running smoothly {n ,no tlmt.
Save money at Moore's.

'

'

MOORE'S
Service Center
124 W. Main

PDmeroy

· Ph.m-2141

I

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

States' Delegates

'' I

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\

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court agreed ioday to.
examine one of the most
pressing issues _in American
public education - w~ether a
state may constittitionally
ignore tax differences between
rich and poor dis trlcts in
financing their schools.
The Court will review a
ruling by a special three-judge
federal court in San Antonio,
which invalidated Tex~s'
meUtod of school financing and
gave the legislature two years
to devise a better one. The case
wlll be heard next fall or winter
and decided by written opinion.
At the same time, the Court
denied a hearing to four banks
and the Securities Industry
.Association whic~ wanted to
become parties to the suit
because of their role as un·
derwrlters of school district
. bonds.
The Texas case and a similar
one In California already have
(Continued on Page 10)

""

.Categories for judgicg of the
etghth annu~l Big Bend
Regatta Parade to be held
Friday evening, June 16, were
announced today by cochairman Jim Mees and

3rd Clinic in
Tuppers Plains
ITIERE ARE 308 YEARS OF MINING experience represent¢ in these eight deputies of
the Ohio Mine ):!xamining Board at the Meigs High School Monday and Tuesday. The eight
deputies conducted oral and practical segments of testing carried out at the completion of the
first mine foreman's court by the American Electric Power Co. The deputies include front row,
from the left, Fred Gaskins, Athens, superintendent of mine rescue; Ralph Dean, Athens; Dale
Gillespie, Jackson; Roy Smith, Caldwell; back row, from the left, Anthony Dindo, New
Philadelphia; Richard Jackson, Crooksville, state electrical inspector; J. E. Matheny, Logan,
and Joe Rome, Middletown. Testing of those taking the deep mine foreman's course,
oral and written, was over a two&lt;iay period while strip mine students, three in ail, completed
testing on Monday.

the California Poll last week,
but his defeat of Humphrey
was nonetheless substantial.
Hepicked up 271 delegates and,
in acknowledging victory, said
"the same fresh spirit, the
same devoted effort ... will
carry us to victory in Miami
Beach and then to the White
House in November."
Surprise Showing
New Mexico- McGovern
won with about a third of the
vote, but the surprise was the
big showing by Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace, who had
done no campaigning in the
state. He finished a close
second with about 30percent of
the vote and Humphrey trailed
with about a quarter of the
vote.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ohio Valley Manufacturing Co.
facilities will be the location of
a rabies clinic to be held from 2
to 4:30 p. m. Saturday in
Tuppers Plains sponsored by
the Meigs County Humane
Society.
This is the third such clinic
sponsored by the group in the
last few weeks. Dr. Dan Notter
of Gallipolis will be in charge of
the clinic assisted by MCHS
members. Dogs are to be taken
on leashes and cats in containers. The fee is $3,'

Wendell Hoover.
The categories are Commercial, Non~Commercial,
Frog, Religious, Best OVerall
and a new category, Environment, in the float division.
There will be one prize
awarded in each category.
There will be three places for
the best marching group, three
for the best majorette, two
awards for the best antique
car, and three for horse en·
tries . Eaeh band participating
in the parade which leaves
Middleport at 6 p.m. will
receive a trophy. Prizes for
various categories wiU vary.
Some winners will receive
trophies while others will
receive trophies and cash.
More entries in ali divisions
are needed. Organizations,
businessmen and individuals
are urged to enter and are
asked to send the informaiion
on their entries to Jim Mees, C·
o WMPO Radio, Box 71,
Middleport.

The remaining votes

were scattered. McGovern and
Wallace split the state's 18
delegate votes, each getting
nine.
Rep. Paul W. McCloskey, R·
Calif., who dropped out of the
primaries after winning only 20
per cent of the vote in New
Hampshire in March, won his
first convention delegate by
polling .6 per cent of the New
Mexico vote in the GOP
(Continued on Page 10)

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DUANE WILL
Duane Will, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Nonnan Will of near
Rutland, will be installed as
master councilor of Meigs
Chaper, Order of DeMolay,
at 7: 30 p. m. Friday at tbe
Middleport Masonic Temple.
The installation Is open to
anyone
Interested In
DeMolay - an organization
of young men between 13 and
21, sponsored by Middleport
Lodge 363, F. and A.M. Jack
Kauff Is the outgoing master
councilor.

Engineer's Road Plaintiff
Projec~ Approved Wins $9,100

Miss Allbright
.Is Directing ·
Work Program.
The Gallia-Meigs Com.
munity Action agency has
THE THREE MEMBERS OF the Ohio Mine Examlnlng Board, appointed by Ohio's
employed Miss Shirley
governor
on a ~on-part~ basis, were at the Meigs High School Monday and Tuesday to
Allbright of Gallia County as
conductexte.nstve
exanurung, both oral and written, of, '!I area men who have completed
its director of the Summer
courses m mme foreman work held over the past two months at the high school. J;enter in the
Neighborhood Youth Corps.
picture. is Gl~nn McKee, McConnellsville, chairman, and from left to right, D. M. Ryan, St.
She will be assisted by Mrs.
Clatrsvtlle, vtce chairman, and Amos Bellardo, Belaire. The two men on the left, respectively,
Jeanne Slawter of Meigs
are Darrel Claywell, Cedar Grove, W.Va., who served as insiruct0r, and John H. Stewart, New
County, as full time coor·
Haven, mine training coordinator. Claywell and Stewart are employed by the American
dinator-counselor, and David
Electric Power Co. which sponsored the 9chool primarily as an aid in providing personnel for
Russell Notter, of Gallia
County as half-time coor·
the Southern Mines \\!hie~ will 'be operating in Western Meigs County. Stewart said ap·
dina tor -co unselor. Miss
proXlmately 186foremen will be employed in the deep mines in Western Meigs County by 1977.
Marion Matusewicz has .been
•
employed as secretary.
bookkeeper on the project.
The' project will provide part.
lime summer employment for
200 enrollees from the twocounty area. Enrollees will be
The "Information, Research, of project: The director and having the programs un·
selected · according to labor and Planning Project" of the two assistants have collected derway by next year . These
department guidelines and will Meigs County Council on information
from
ap· programs, it is pointed out will
be placed on a variety of w9rk Aging, supported through a proximately 500 senior help nOt only with problems
s!les such as schools, in- slate ~rant from the Division of Citizens. This survey, Mrs. people encounter as they gNw
corporated villages, township Administration on Aging and Thomas reports, will deter· older, but with programs wblch
trustees, county, state and con triputions from local in· mine the most useful . and assist them in enjoying life
federal offices.
dividuals and business, is desirable projects for the more fully.
The director credits the help
The summer employment underway .
future.
interested
citizens,
will provide economic help and · Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
The Council is comprised of of
will enable the participants to director, said Tuesday, Meigs volunteers who have donated businesses and organizations
return to school, project County is the first county in the both time and money toward as that which has made the
spokesmen said.
(Continued on Page 10)
state to be funded for this lypc lite project work . Pl~ns call for

Survey of Aging Begun

..

the first Negro to enroll at the
University of Mississippi.
Count Not Complete '
Although the New Jersey
count was not complete early
today, McGovern was certain
of adding at least 356 delegates
to his total, giving him well
over 900 of the 1,509 needed to
win
the
Democratic
·presidential nomination in
July . He was confident of
winning the bulk of New York
State's 278 delegates in the
primary season finale June 20.
Hubert H. Humphrey put the
best face on events, but suf.
fered a severe setback to his 12year quest for the presidency. ·
The results from New Jer·
sey, with a constituency
Hwnphrey calls his own, hurt.
The nation 's most heavily
unionized state, it has big
Negro and Jewish blocs and
Humphrey was backed by
labor and virtually every
Democratic leader. But Me·
Govern won the majority of the
109 delegates.
This was the picture, stateby-state:
California-McGovern failed
to achieve the 20 percentage.
point spread awarded him by

Category Added
On Environment

ews.. zn Brzefs~

M-.'a hrvlw Center
lxpertly

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1972

p111Miim~~~:;o-.-$x;::::::-..;:::~::7:~W.W5-:::~::::;::;::::::"-::::::::::~»~:::-;~::::::l

Theodore Thomas Baker, 60,
a resident of Rogers, Ohio, died
unexpectedly around II p.m. ,
Sunday in Salem Hospital.
He was a native of Gallia
County, born May 12, 1912, in
Addison Twp., son of the late
.Samuel and Erma Folden
Baker.
He attended Addison Twp.,
schools, and graduated from
Cheshire High School. He was a
pipe fi Iter employed by the
Ashland Oil Co. ·
Mr . Baker moved from
Gallia County eight years ago.
He married Effie Mae Brown
in 1942. She survives, along
with a son, Donald, Bay St.
Louis, Miss.,and one daughter,
Linda, at home. One son,
Larry, preceded hitn in death
in l!Ni7. Four grandchildren
survive. "
The following brothers and
sisters survive: Allen Baker,
Gallipolis; Raymond Baker,
Middleport; Charles Baker,
New Boston; Robert Baker, ·
Cheshire ; Mrs. John (Julia)
Lee, Addison and Mrs. Robert
(Esther) Gordon, Cheshire.
He was a veteran of World
War II.
Funeral services will be held
2 p.m., Thursday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Paul Jones officiating. Burial
will be in Reynolds Cemetery,
Addison.
Friednds may call at the
funeral home on Wednesday
between 2-4 and 7·9 p:m.

For Dogs and Cats

President Swamps Ashbrook, Certain

Course Completed by 24 Men

•t'RDIJ BI.E·I=Rt:l:
DRIVINii•••

....C. CINCINHA Tl

McGovern Sweeps

ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR PARIS BELTS
FOR MEN
SELECT ONE FOR YOUR DAD
FOR FATHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 18

.

lilbens ~aUonal Bhk ,·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .,,

NO. 37

First Deep Mine Foreman's

Tune!Into A TUNE-UP Here Soon

PITTSBURGH

VOL. XXIV

Plains Saturday, 2-4: .10

Devoted To The lntere.,~ Of The Meigs-Mason Area

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

T. T. Baker,

' FUR

entine

Sunny today with highS in the
70s and low 80s. Clear tonight
and not &amp;s cool ·north and
central with lows in the 5os.
Fair . and little warmer
· Thursday witll highs Upper 70s
and mid 8lls.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Ernest
Knopp, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Ora Donohue, Jackson, 0.;
Mrs. John Bright, son, Point
Pleasant; Charles Camden,
Point Pleasant;H Mrs. Leroy
Larr
Absten, New aven;
. y
Angel, New Haven.; M_rs. Roy
Domtgan, Coolvtlle' Mrs.
George Samuei Rogers,
Charles Riffle, Pomt Pleasant.

ATTEND DINNER
·s
·
Mr . paul Grueser, M'd
1 ~
dleport and her sister Mrs .
Mabel Wolfe of Pomero;, wer~
in Parkersburg Monday to visit
Mrs.
Grueser 's
grand·
daughter, Mrs. Mitchell Me·.
Cale and her husband. Mrs.
Grueser entertained with a
LODGE TO MEET
Mrs. Mees was a member of bir thday dinner at the ChanCt.ester
Lodge
323,
cellor
Hotel
for
her
grandSt. Paul Lutheran Church in
Daughters
of
America,
will
daughter. Visiting over the
CHESTER- Theodore Crpy,, ' Pomeroy.
88, Chester, died Monday night
Funeral services will be held weekend with Mr. and Mrs. hold initiation for five mem·
at his residence. Mr. Croy was at 1 p.m. Thursday at the St. Grueser were Mr. and Mrs. bers of Kyger Lodge at a
a retired saw mill owner and Paul Lutheran Church with the Elmer John so n, Jr. ·· of meeting to be held at 8 tonight
operator in Meigs County.
Rev . Arthur Lund officiatin g. Wheeling. On Saturday at the Chester Hall. The
He is survived by his wile, Burial will be in Beech Grove evening Mr. and Mrs. Grueser charter will be draped for
Gladys Eynon Croy ; two Cemetery. Friends may call at and Mr . and Mrs. Johnson Charles Hensley. Ail members
grandchildren, Mrs . Roger the Ewing Funeral Home were dinner guests of Mrs . are urged to a!tend. They are
to wear white.
Wolfe.
(June)
and Keith
evening.
Ridenour,Epple,
both of Chester;
four anytime
,..
. _ _after
_ _7_this
__
_.;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

SHRINE TO MEET
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, at the IOOF hall in
Pomeroy.

OPEN YOUR CHECKING

•

Mrs. Floyd (Mabelle ) Mees, Genheimer Ebersbach, and a
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died brother, Clarence Ebersbach.
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Surviving are a son, Robert
Memorial Hospital.
Mees,
Columbus;
two
Mrs. Mees was the widow of daug~ter s, Mrs. Vivian
Floyd Mees, who was at one Williams, Columbus, and Mrs.
time
Meigs
County's Charles (Charlotte ) Evans,
representative in the General Pomeroy;·a sister, Mrs. L. W.
Assembly. Mr. Mees also Hench, South Orange, N. J .;
operated a grocery in Pomeroy two brothers, Edward C.
for a number of years.
Ebersbach, Lowell, and
Besides her -husband, Mrs. Richard M. Ebersbach,
Mees was preceded in death by Roseland , N. J. ; four grandthe late Albert and Emma children, Michael Mees, Jon
'
William s, Christopher
Willif ms and Robert C. Evans,
and a great-grandson, Eric
Mees, and several nieces and
nephews.

TllOMAS E. ltOUSH
CLIFTON - Thomas E.
Roush·, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Delner Roush, Jr., of Clifton,
W. Va., has enlisted In tbe
United States Air Force and
will leave · June IS for
· Lackland Air Force Base in
Texas. He is a 1972 graduate
of Wahama High School.

The Meigs County Family
Planning Clinic normally
scheduled in Pomeroy for
Thursday, June 15, will not be,
held. Instead the clinic is being
postponed for one week until
Thursday, June 22.
Free Family Planning
Clinics are llsually held on the
first and third Thlirsday lit
Veterans Memorial Hospital
beginnillg at 9 a.m.
Patients with June 15 appointments should call the
office in Pomeroy, 992-5912, to
confirm an appointment for the
postponed clinic on June 22.
There are· some vacancies for
new patient appointments for
the June 22 clinic. Any woman
desiring an appointment ·for
family planning is Invited to
call the Pomeroy office.

Rabies Clinic i11 Tuppers

'

The Meigs County Com·
missioners Tuesday approved
a road project submitted by
county engineer Theodore
Beegle and an animal claim
submitted by Pauline Wolfe.
The engineer's project, on
his program as No. 8, is for the

repair of an embankment on
County Road 3'at a total cost of
$4945.80. Pauline Wolfe,
Racine, Rt. 2, was paid $350 for
the loss of a Hereford cow and
calf killed by dogs.
Gary !Jill, Meigs County
Humane Officer, reported 131
dogs were picked up , 156 calls
were answered and 1472 miles
were driven In May.
The Meigs County Com·
missioners will meet in regular
session next Monday lnsU!ad of
Tuesday. AI lending were
Charles lt. Karr, Bob Clark
Tickets to the pnnual Frog and · Warden Ours, com.Ball to be held Saturday, June missioners, and Martha
17, at the Pomeroy Junior High Chambers, clerk.
School from 9 p. m. to 1 a. m.
will go .on sale Saturday, Earl
Ingels, chairman, announced
today.
GOODHEART
Tickets will be sold at
WARSAW (UP!)- Cuban
Nelson's Drugs, New York
Premier
.Fidel Cutro today
Clothing Hou;~e and the Athens
laughed
off reparll he had
County Savings &amp; LoQn
suffered a heart attack.
Company, Meigs County
I have a ~earl of steel,"
Branch, Pomeroy, and Village
he
told reportei'll aa he
Pharmacy and l)utton Drugs,
walked Into the Che Guevara
Middleport The tickets are $3
School
ill suburban Warsaw.
a single and $5 a couple. Jan
One day my heart may
and the Music Department of
fall
but now it Ia ttilla heart
Pt. Pleasant will provide the
of steel," he said.
music. The Regatta Queen will
be crowned at 10 :15 p. m.

Tickets for

Frog Ball to
Go on Sale

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court has awarded a plaintiff
$9,100, a divorce was granted
and a suit for partitition of real
estate was filed .
In the case of Lloyd Swan
and Eileen Swan versus
Marion Parsons and Gerald
Sellers, the court ruled that the
defendants were negligent
which resulted In injuries to
Eileen Swan and plaintiff
Lloyd Swan, now deceased,
and judgment was rendered
·against the defendants in Ute
amount of $9,100.
Patricia Taylor was granted
a divorce from Herman A.
Taylor on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty, and Edqa Hill, Langs·
ville, eta!, filed suit for par·
tition of real estate against
Garnet Entsminger, Mid·
dleport, eta!. The property i.s
located in Rutland township.

SALES STILL GOING
Fire extinguishers are• still
being sold by Middleport Ctib
Scout Pack ~- They can be
purchased !rom any cub scout
or through Mrs. Stanley Doss,
992·5058, or Mrs . Eulah
Francia, 992~.

�f

Wrdl1&lt;'&lt;dav .Jun~ 7. 1972

2

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.",June 7, 1972

•.

ABOUT PEOPLE

Jackson Powers

'

Degree Won at Age of 82
•

By United Press International
FRESNO, Cahf. (UP!)Mrs. Caroline Cooper. 82 and
confmed to a wheelchair,
receives her bachelor of arts
degree m ancient history and
!..a tip today from California
State UniverSity of Fresno
Mrs Cooper, who finished
high schoolm 1909, said if she
doesn't "come apart at the
seams/' she would return to

attend graduate school next
fall.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Black
Harlem Assemblyman Hulan
Jack was sentenced Tuesday to
three months m prison and
fmed $3,000 for his convtclion
on a conspU"acy charge
Jack, 65, lost his post as
borough
president
of
Manhattan in 1960 after bemg

,A's Past Indians

J

had a chance tAl speak With
Mi!l.'l Davis about the job.
"Angela's a very beautiful
person and we wouldn't want to
do anythmg that would exploit
her name," Hurst said "We
have made an extremely

convicted on a conflict of interest charge for which he
received a suspended sentence
, At the time Jack was the
highest black City offiCial In the
country Jack was conviCted
April24 of conspirmg with four
CCH:Iefendants to force Harlem smcere offer.u
supermarkets to buy certain
brand name products handled
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)by Jack's pubhc relations fli"IIl . Donald L Coleman, 24, was
round gmlty1 of air piracy
CHICAGO (UPI)- Angela Tuesday and l~s a 20-year
DaviS has been offered a mi!Uffium Jail sentence He wUI
Chicago teachmg post at a be sentenced Thursday
black commumiY college to
Coleman, of Downer's
lecture on philosophy, logic Grove, Ill., was charged with
and "tnshtuttonal raclSill "
attempting to hijack an
Charles G Hurst, preSident AmeriCan Airlines jetlmer en
of Chicago's Malcolm X route from Chicago to San
College, saJd Tuesday he had Francisco Dee 26. He was
made the offer and received a arrested when the plane made
"very favorable response from an unscheduled landing m Salt
Angela 's parents," but had not Lake C1ty

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Reggie Jackson, who helped
turn the A's from an also-ran
, Into a pennant. contender With
his homer hlttmg , IS on target
for his best season for homers
-47 !II 1969. He belted his 12th
and stxth smce Ma y 18 when he
rapped a three-run homer
Tuesday - mght that pushed
Oakland to a 7-2 victory over
Cleveland
"I never had a real good
start and that's why I miSsed
hittmg 300 a few times "
'
Jackson satd. "When you're
swmgmg a good bat, It doesn't
matter who's p1tchmg The
strong wmd doesn 't bother me
either, because when I really
connect, I don 't care If It's
snowmg, they 'll go out of the
park "
Ja ckson's mnth -mnmg
homer capped a four-run mnlng for Oakland Sal Bando
had smgled home the go-ahead
run m the eighth after Joe
Rud1's double brought home
Bert Campanens With the
tymg score
VIda Blue , still trymg to
recover from early season
holdout problems, was tagged
for two riiJIS and seven hits m
the SIX mnmgs he worked
!Wil1e Fingers, m rebel, picked
up his fifth VIctory against one
loss.
In other Amencan League
games, Mwnesota topped
Baltunore, 54, 10 Iii innmgs,
Boston shut out ChiCago, 2-0,
Kansas
City
down ed
Milwaukee,
4-2,
Texas
trounced New York, 6-3, and
Cahforma blanked Detroit, 4-ll,
after dropping an 8.jj opener to
the Tigers

Governors Outline Call
Truck Gardening Season Begins

'

IT'S CABBAG~ AND TOMATO TIME m the Letart Township hottoms where each sprmg
thousands of plants are grown to produce fresh vegetables for metropolitan markets. Among
the b1g growers of both tomatoes and cabbages are the Hill Brothers - Clifford, Harry, John
and Dallas - who also have several nephews 10 truck gardening The accompanymg photos
show the neat rows of cabbages, which have been gomg to city mark ets for about a week no~,
and tomatoes Which are domg well. The photographs were taken on one ol-the Clifford Hill
Fanns Hill, above, IS With his grandson, Max Hill, Jr , 4 The tomato crop IS expected to be
ready to market July I, providing there IS no more unusual weather Hill has 30 acres of
tomatoes and 300,000 cabbage plants m this year

•
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••
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Helen Help

Us.

"".:

By Helen Bottel

••

Making Marriage a Success
DEAR HELEN
You asked for formulas on makmg mamage work Here's
mme ·
Think of marriage as 1f 1t were an automobile tnR When the
car starts out the gears must shift If they mesh smoothly the
ride is smooth. If they grate, the nde 1s bumpy, Jerky and rough,
"""""'""1
halt.ll
''1
.
__
~'1"
~
(j,V
J:J:,
· the tnp IS Importa
•' ''/
• mflatmg
• · ' the
·
',l- l?f~pariJig llle Carnlor
n 'Try
"tt:~ith oompliments;&gt;fillln g th e radiator with ' trust, usmg
·illlltfllfti!estfoir o!l, 'delem unatwn for su'ceess
as the sta rter, let
.,.
pattence shwe m the headlights, put forgiveness m the battery,
use courtesy on the brakes, an anger-filter m the carburetor,
exhaust on Jealousy, fill the gas tank with enthusiasm Consider
"sharing" as the mgred1ent m super-gas that 1s m1ssmg m
regular gas Carry a safety flare of humility , plenty of first a1d
affection, a spare tire of tenderness, and polish with un·
derstandmg
Fur seat covers and mag wheels are mce If you don't need to
use the gas money to pay lor them
Never worry when you can pray mstead
Nearly everyone you meet will think that his and her car 1s
the best and their route the fastest and most mte1 cst mg Be
happy with what you have
It doesn't always cost ext1 a to g1ve someone a hit, but 1t
trught prove foolish to let that someone dnve
Don't expect your car to do wheehes, he as roomy as a bus ,
as comfortable as a house, as economical as a bug, as fast as a
cobra, to carry the load of an elephant, and to look hke a
-Gadillac
The best person to fix your car IS usually a mechamc
Remember, 11 '" very dllhcult to read the road map while
driving D1sregardmg traffic signals and road signs ISnot smart
Jumpmg from a movmg car usually ends m a rough landmg
.;;verybody gets m the wrong turn sometimes Lookmg ahead
saves wear on the brakes and smashed fenders Planmng ahead
proVIdes lime for an extra excursion of specml mterest Gears
need to be shilled as much gmng down hill as gomg up hill
Singing helps the time fly
The purpose of this tnp IS to take love on an outmg, to protect
it from diStracllons, g1ve 11 plenty of fresh mr and fi eedom, and
an mcentive to grow
Sumrmt signs represent goals attamed through hard work,
luck, understandmg, helpmg, forg1vmg and carmg.
Hisloncal monuments represent special happy events and
dates that you want to remember forever
Mentally place a laughter sign after every detoUI sign and
every summit sign
·
There will always be another ~ce mc pmnt, souvemr shop,
and wme-tastmg place'·or !nut stand down the road a htlle ways
Do not try toavmd all the hills and curves Astraight road on
fiat terram can get monotonous Welcome the changmg scenery
Detours often give one greater appreciatiOn for the mam roads
No matter hew rough the road or how steep the hill, have
confidence tbat eventually there 'Y 'll be a st1etch of road Ieadmg
right to the end of the rainbow m the sky The sun will be shmmg
and the grass will he green It Will be a place where your love can
expand effortlessly - JOSEPHINE L WOODSON
DEAR HELEN .
•
Another comment on '"makmg a successful marnage" I
would feel presumptuous m wntmg this, except for the fact that
another &lt;;ehbrate spoke on mamage 2,000 years ago, w1th conBiderable success
Since the cup is the psychologiCal symbol of love, 11 might be
good to start with this symhol A cup has t ~o surfaces - convex
and concave - each the opposite m nature of the other and each
inseparable from the other ThiS symbolism IS earned nght mto
th~ Scripture The "cup" of Psalm 23 IS overflowing, JOyous,
abundant and regal ; while the "cup" spoken of m the garden of
~semane IS pamful, sorrowful, a source of separation What
few reahze is that both are the same cup, viewed at different
limes There IS no true love without joy, abundance, elahon and
sense of royalty; but .there IS also no true love without pam,
IOITOW, crucifiXIon and an mlense awareness of separation The
failure today IS that married people tend to suppress the latter,
and so equally suppress and distort the former.
II would be well lor our married people·and psychologists
alike to accept the dual nature of the cup of love. When they do,
they will be amazed not by the weight of the burden , but at the
ecstalic sense of llberahon, vitality and overflow pounng from
themselves. - FATHER .IAMES J . CARROLL, Bloomfield,N J

l

r•

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Hospital
Discharges
Mrs Harold Stewart and son,
Heather Dawn Harg ra;es ,
Gregory Ne bb , Chm tm e
Swmgle, Anthony Arrowood,
.• T1 acy Huff, Edith Spurlock,
~ Mrs Weldon Myers and son,
Kelley Craig, Clara Shenefield,
Samuel VanHoose, Mary
Boli nger,
Norm a Jea n
Brannen, Raymond l,owery,
Betty Sue Harmon, David
Lawre nce' Bru ce WI1SOn,
Eloise .Ril ey, H nda Pratt ,
Luther
Johns,
Gladys
Brammer
Births
June 6th, Mrs Richa rd
Corvin , a soo, Wellston

Kleindienst

Can Win

His

..
1mproper conduct " Klemd1enst
decided, however, that Stew·
ard 's In terventiOn d1d not
change the course of the
mveshgahon and was not
sufficiently serious to warrant
dismissal
Kleindienst also came under
fir e lor !allure to report, for a
week , a bnhe offer to stop
prosecution of underworld fl.
gures mvolved In a stock
market fraud scheme

For Democrat Platform

HOUSTON (UPI )-The na·
tion's Democratic governors
today called for a party plat·
form to include major tax
refonn, open housmg laws,
national health msurance, guaranteed jobs lor the young and
disadvantaged and elimination
of the property tax.
The proposals, drafted for
dehvery today before the
Democrallc National Convention's Plat!onn Committee by
Gov John C. West of South
Carolma, also flailed the Nixon
admmistration
The governors charged tbat
admmistrat10n economic poliCies had failed to reduce mflation and unemployment as
promiSed, had produced "unprecedented" budget deficits,
and had led to "the growmg
gap between the baves and the
have nots."
The platform bluepnnt,
which was written m bebal! of
the 30 Democratic governors
attendmg the NatiOnal
Governors Conference, urged
that the federal tax structure
be redrawn to guarantee that
every "Citizen, orgaruzation
and every busmess pay their
fair
share ''
WITH HOUSE CABEL
'
'!'he
governors condemned
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep John F Se1berlmg, !). the value added tax Idea being
conSidered by the administraOhw, was one of 30 House
members who JOined with Rep tiOn and said that true tax
Les Aspw, D·Wls , w In· reform must mclude abolishtroduc mg a bill which could ment of the property tax and
force Congress to overhaul the
nation's tax laws. The 24
Democrats
and
seven
Republicans JOined with Aspm
m sponsonng the bill that and busmess tax deductions m
would ehmmate :;4 mdividual three stages by January 1974

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· 'I:R:.I:Re:pjlllllmlll£11l11J

Job Easily

Voice along Br'Way

THE VOICE OF BROADWAY
, WASHINGTON (UPI )-lnfor·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
' mal surveys showed today
THE KEY TO A VANISHING ACf
R1cha1 d G Klemd1enst easily
NEW YORK (KFS) - Star singer Ja ck
Will wm Senate confirmation as
attorney general when h1s Jones' diSappearance for a while now IS clea red
nommatwn comes to a vote up Jack collapsed He recuperated from the
Thu1sday-endmg the longest breakdown In Key Biscayne, which even calms
mveshgatiOn m history of a down Dick Nixon Joe Namath 's hustlin g up
presidenllal appointee
b1g outside-football deals to msure big next• The Senate agreed Tuesday season extra Income The psychology - so the
w vote at 4 p m Thursday on Jets will know he's not hungry for cash, ergo,
the Kleindienst appomtment- 16 Cll n demand a stratospheric renewal He'll
weeks and two days after proba bly get 11
President Nixon named the
Barbra Stre1sand's hardly bashful Dmed at
Amona native to succeed John Ruby Foo 's and asked for a doggie-bag - to
N Mitchell as the nation's !Jlke lwme egg rolls for son Jason
the nudity
highest legal officer
m "Oh 1 Calcutta 1' ' ISn't enough The show got
Sen M1ke Mansfield, the
Senate Democratic leader, won shoddy so extra rehearsals are bemg called to
unammous consent to brmg the spruce up the naked cast . Actor-Director
appmnlmenl to a vote after two Marvm Kaplan dates Chmtme Jorgensen.
days of mtens1ve backroom Wonder what he sees m 11. Marvm even gave
Chns exotic underwear from the Exot1que shop
negotiations ·
AI Toef1eld , who coordinated the big PepSI
Surveys showed Klemd1enst
probably Will wm confirmation B1ke Jamboree m Central Park, IS a cop.
w1th no more than 20 to 2!i Preaches what he practices Rides 50 miles a
week He's made 20 "colla rs" while cycling. HI·
votes agamst h1m
Robm Moore, who wrote
The Senate Judiciary Com· yoo handlebars'
m1ttee held more than two the best-peddling "French Connection" and
months of pohllcally charged "The Happy Hooker," will get back to the
heanngs mto Klemdienst's re- typewnter soon He's spent more than a month
cord as Mitchell's chief deputy . celebratmg the two huge hits H1c.
The controversy was fueled by
UN whispers suggest eight Cuban refugees
allegatiOns that the Department are trallmg Castro through Africa Object o! Justice made a favorable assassmatwn, everyone's afraid
George C
out-of;!:Ourt se ttlement of an (for Oscar) Scott's shce of "The New Cen·
anlltrust case agamst Interna- tunons" f1im Is:; per cent of the profits. Better 11
tional Telephone &amp; Telephone should 've been :; per cent of the gross What
Corp at the same tune the expenses studios can pile onto a moVIe '
company was pledgmg $200,000 Especially 11 It's filmed a flock of flops
or more to subsidize the
i&gt;Q!;liO"{liX sources can't keep up w1lh all the
Republican NatiOnal Con&lt;enllon
Bdwy'
!lith-houses' demands : so one 's r unrung
at San D1ego
• The committee also mvesli· an early Sophia Loren film which sounds
sated Kleindienst' clearance of rounchier than 11 1s : "Two Nights With
Carroll (Archie Bunker )
liarry Steward, US attorney Cleopatra"
O'Connor's
hte
rury
ambitions turned up a scnpt
at San Diego, of any wron gdomg after Steward mtervened about a black lm1yc1 Title's "RobJnson" ..
in a grand jury mvesbgatwn of "Fiddler on the Roof" passes ''Uie wtth
llhcit campaign contrtbullons Father" June 17 as the longest-runmng Bdwy
show of all time Not Without Its huge pnce: It's
by a pohllca l ally
A Department of Jusbce cost the producer, bi!ckers, writers etc $5,000 a
admm1strallve mqmry found week m losses for more than a year to topple the
!teward guilty of "highly great Lindsay and Crouse comedy Producer

1

Hal Prmce has money piled up like the Mafia,
but legal, so he can afford it Can his backers•
They 're rich, too such as Lou Brecker, owner
of Roseland Ballroom, a multi-millionaire
Analyze VIctor Borge's marvelous silliness.
He gets more laughs out of the sunpler truths
than the convoluted wiUicisms so-called of all
TV gagsters eombmed. A reporter asked VIctor
wbat his fatber d1d. "He dted," the dizZiest
Dane explained
Rodney Dangerfield says he still has scars
from oldEdSullivanshows: "I stayed on longer
than I was supposed to one Sunday mght,"
Roger said, "and Sullivan turned a dog act on
me."

ShU"ley MacLalne and her momentary-love,
Pete Hamill, at Gallagher's were talldng about
her first post-McGovem-campa~grung efforts .
two novels . Pete Hamill and the N. Y Post
parted company His colUI11118 had started to
sound like stuck whistles. And he's better than
that . Arthur Blake of the Plaza Nine shows
says hiS cousin's on the faculty of a medical
school As a golf instructor.
Producers of Tom Stoppard's new comedy
hit, "The Real Inspector Hound," had to
wheedie special clearances from Actors Equii1"
fo r a non-uruon member of the cast : Abe de Ia
Houssage plays the role of a murdered corpse.
Does nothing but he there from opening to final
curtain
Mervyn Leroy's writing his autobiography
Gifted gent who gave us some of our great
H'wood films . .. It's a relief Gregory Peck
became an actor mstead of what he fll"sl
yearned to be a priest. His idea of vicariously
fulfillmg part of that childhood ambition is to
produce and lmance the Daniel Barrigan
"Catonsville Nme" film . Fumy punchline on
what sudden showbiz does to people - author
Daniel Berngan's now SOCializing with the
glitter .film people at the Cannes FUm Festival
- and Peck's not.
Tennauee Wllliluns' brother Dakin was at
L' A1glon where he etplamed why "roses"
appear in so many of Tenn. Wms. plays: "It's
because our only stster IS named Rose," Dakm
sa1d
Nearby foursome of L'Aiglon : The
Arthur Hornblows and the Doug Falrbankses
Jr ., Sir Jumor Fairbanks said hiS presence in
L'Aiglon is :•tradition ""My father brought me
here f1rst."

adoption of a federal revenue
sharmg program m Its place
To lower unemployment, the
governors proposed that programs be m1hated to "guaran·
tee employment and traming
opportumlles for our youth and
disadvantaged persons."
HThe admmtstratlon's so-

called game plan to mfuse
vitality mto the Amencan
economy has Instead worked a
hardship on the substantial
majonty of the Amencan
people," the Democrallc state
chief execullves said.
They also urged that nallonal
!ann price pohc1es proVIde 100
per cent of parity on domesllc
producllon of natwnally essen·
llal commodities.
The governors charged that
at every level of the admimstration's domesllc programs
there was "dnft, vacillallon

and IndecisiOn . Issues of
Importance to the AmeriCan
people such as busmg have
been allowed to fester beyond
all reason and rational order "
Their platform Ignored the
busmg Issue
On crime, the governors sa1d
they supported federal compensation for widows and
families of slam law enforcement officers, gUidelines
to protect the CIVIl nghts of
prison Inmates, and programs
to provide "alternative wa ys"
to rehabilitate criminals
The attack on the admmiStratwn 's fi sca l and
domestic pohc1es came on the
final day of the three.&lt;fay
conference Most Demo era t1c
governors believe President
Nixon's economic record wUI
be the major issue m the fall
campaign

•

In the National League, Los
Angeles beat Chicago, 5-ll,
Atlanta edged Montreal, 3-2,

Dr Bruce Cur lis, Director of
Center , announced today
that SWimmmg lessons Will be
offered agam this summer at
th e Rio Grande College
. swimming pool.
The first session will begm
June 13 and end July 14 InL) ne

No doubt 1t mcreases when
you a1 e on a date because
Dear Dr. Lamb- I am a you are a b1t nervous Pe1
16-year-old gul who ha s a haps aft.er yo u ha ve dated a
small but em barrassmg littl e longer or are bett er acp1 oblem My stomach growls quam ted With yow date lhiS
a lot and mak es funn) p1 oblem Will no I be quite so
noises When I am with a great You m1gh1 keep m
date at a movie and every mmd that everyo ne has thi &lt;
thmg IS qwet It seems to m sQ me degree and 11 Is per
g1owl twice as much and fectly nm mal, so why be sv
1w1ce as loud It embarrass· emb arrassed about 11 ' If you
es me to death and I don't a1e a good 1I stcnc1, you
know what to do I have m1ght fmd yo ur boy f11end 's
t11ed holdmg my breath stomach growls, too
llghtenm g my stoma ch tak
Dear Dr Lamb- ! read
1ng deep brealhs and not the m ticle aboul !he woman
dnnkmg fluid s before 1 go with the problem of swollen
out I've also tned 1gnonng hps I had this sa me prob·
1t but nolhmg seems to help lem for a yea1 and avOided
Could you please tell me many d11lerent kmds of food
what causes thiS and how I and still had II ouble I h
ca n prevenl1 t• Please try to nally found out that It wa s
pll nt this before too long caused by two d i fferenl
because I would like to ha ve brands of hps11ck I was
a cure before my next date usmg
ThiS may not seem ImporDear Read er-Tha t's ven
tant to you but It IS very Im · thou ghtful of you It Illusportant to me I nave about trates agam the multitude of
decided to stop datmg be· different thm gs which can
&lt;a use It bothers me so much cause people to be allerg ic
Dear Reade~-That' s not and have swelhng of the
an easy p10blem to solve It face or lip which IS called
IS ca used by the normal con· ang10neurahc edema This
tractions of the digestiVe agam pomts up why doctors
11 act The entire long d1ges· have so much trouble fmdmg
live tube IS II n ed with out what causes an allergy
muscles whi ch contract to It can be anythmg from hr
pro p e l food m a normal slick or other cos metics to
fashiOn The di8es hve tra ct thin gs m the air, foods or
IS very susceptible to emo· even medicines A n o t he r
lions and excitement There reader found It was aspmn
are many thmgs which Will
( NEW~PAPER ENTE RPRI H ASSN )
\: ause ll to become 11 0veractive ' One of these IS bemg
hun gry It Is literally tru e
P/eose send your queJ flons and
that a person 's sto ma c h commen1J 1G Lawrence E. Lamb.
g1owls when they are hun· M D., 1n car.e ol t"u paper Wlule
gry You might try ea tm g Dr Lamb cannot onJwtr mdmdual
before you go ou1 on a da le letter!, h~ w1/l answtr letters ol
1ath er than avOiding fluid s
gtntral Ulf~resf 1n lututt columns
ll• Lawrence Lamb, M D

'

ot

Tommy Harper smgled
pome one Boston run and
scored the other on Lms
Aparicio's siXth mnmg double
as llmely h1ttmg backed Sonny
Siebert's fourhltter. The VIC·
tory was the fifth for Siebert.
Chicago ace Wilbur Wood
suffered his fourth loss agamst
eight VICIOtleS.
AL batting leader Lou
Pimella had a two-run smgle m
the SIXth mmng to drive m the
tymg and go-ahead runs
agamst Milwaukee R1ck
Auerbach clouted his first
homer of the year for
Milwaukee
Texas stayed 10 a fifth-place
he with Kansas C1ty on the
strength of Frank Howard's
third homer and Don Mmcher's
two-run smgle agamst New
York Rusty Torres hit his
third homer for the Yankees
Mickey Lohch benefitted
from Detroit homer power m
gaining his runth wm of the
year A three-run homer by Ed
Brmlunan and Aurelio Rodri·
guez ' two -run shot beat
California m the opener of a
twi-mght doubleheader The
Angels took the mghtcap on
Clyde Wright's four-hitter,
Sandy Alomar's first homer of
the year and three unearned
runs m the fourth mnmg.

Swimming Lessons
Start June 13 At
Rio Grande Pool

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Growling Stomach
Is Embar~assing

New York mpped Cincmnat1, 32,
Houston
topped
Pluladelphia, 4.J, and St. Lows
defeated San Francisco, 5..J
The Pittsburgh-San D1ego
game was postponed by ram
Steve Brye's smgle brought
Rod Carew home With Mm·
nesota 's wummg run m the
fifth mmng and extended Baltimore's losmg strmg to five
games, the AL champiOns'
lon gest smce 1969. Enc Soderholm's two-run homer belpeli
the Twms tie the score m the
mnth

BLUE DEVILS
BOOSTERS.
CLUB
PRESENTS:
,•

FEATURING:

~.Jiet
MAGIC MIDWAY
Tues., June 6
Thru
SaL June 10
Family Nile, Tl\urs '
June 8
Sat . Matmee
Rt . 7, Galhpolis
Free AdmiSSIOn.
Free Parking

structions for beginn~rs, ad·
vanced beginners and In ·
termed1ates will be offered m
the one hour sessiOns to be held
from 6-7 p. m , Monday through
Fnday The classes are offered
for children between the ages
of :; and 12 The cost IS fifty
ce nts per student per day,
when paid on a daily basiS and
ten dollars per student lor the
en lire fiYe·Week SeSSIOn, If paid
at the time of regis tratiOn
Reg1s lrahon will be held at 8 p
m on Tuesday, June 13
Students should come prepared
to ge t mto the water on that
day
This Is the th1rd year RID
Grande College has offered the
swimmi ng InstructiOn
program to the children of area
residents. Accordmg to Dr
Curtis, the mstructors for these
lessons are "RIO Grande
College students, or college
students fr om the Gallipolis
area. All of tbem have bad
experience as llfe guards and
sw1mmmg instructors. The
second sessiOn will begm July
17 and be completed August 18
The classes m that sesswn Will
meet from 4:30 to 5 30 Monday
through Fnday.
Dr Curtis also announced
that the Lyne Center pool will
be open to area resident. for
recreational swurunmg dally
from 2-4 p m. and from 7-9 p
m m the evening (except
Saturday evemng ) beglnnmg
June 13 There Is a charge of 00
cents for adults and 2li cents lor
children for recreatiOn
swunming Swunmers wearmg
"cutoffs" or shorts will not be
admitted to the pool for health

: ( Cheshire, t~e 1971 defendmg
, Galha-Me 1gs P~ny League
By Chet Tannehill
['·champs and Racine battled to a
['6·6 lie Tuesday mght at
' i·
~ · cheshlfe Thegamewascalled
a'-'.;..,....,...,...,...,...,....,....,...,....,...,....,....,....,».,.:~~"':_(""",....~ after mne mmn gs due to
darkness It was the opemng
Boys lfi.years old and up with the remotest Idea of makmg leag ue game for both teams
th e game their professiOn should accept opportumlles offered to · Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor,
attend baseball camps sponsored by the maJor league clubs nadoes took a 6-5 lead gmng
Even 1! a young fellow has no senous designs about the game, but mto the bottom of the IOU1 but
would like to Improve his skill m 11, the camps are no waste of once agam, Coach Dale
Rothgeb 's Red legs ralhed to he
t1me.
This IS on the word of Cmcmnati Reds' Scout J1m VeMan of the score 1
Pomeroy who will take part 10 the Reds' first area camp of the · Racme scored Its go ahead
sprmg at St Albans High School Saturday, June 10, and m run m the mnth on walks to
another three days later m City Park, Parkersburg Jun and Childers and Jenkms and a
Gene Bennett will speak at tne camps and observe the acllon s in gle by Mitch Nease
Childers' shd'" under a strong
Reds area superVIsor Elmer Gray will be m charge
Jun particularly IS Interested m every boy of the MeigS· throw by n ght!Ielder Dave
Wise
Galha-Mason area who hkes to play the game and has talent for
Cheshire lied the score m Its
It That objective of Jnn's ISn't altogether altru isllc Afterall, a
half of the mmng when Terry
scout's standing gams no pomts If a big leaguer on another team Lucas and James Howard
comes out of your own back yard
smgled. Lucas came across the
Jun has tendered mVIlatwns to Roger DIXon and Steve plate on a fielder's choice
Dunfee of the Marauders thiS past season, both of whom are Racme drew flfst blood m the
playmg with the Meigs Legion club DIXon IS a somewhat fir st wmn g Jenkms was safe
mimaturized but very strong verSion of Johnny Bench. Dunfee 1s on an error JUSI pnor to
an mfielder Jun Hubbard, the no·lutter phenom (4thiS sprmg J of Nease's long blast to left!Ield
Southern High also has a warm mvitaiiOn to the camp
The Red legs scored one run
Jun would like to see as many boys there as \\ant to come m their half of the mmng on an
They're welcome
er ror, Bruce Arnett's double
He said "We ge t a chance to look at them Then we can keep and a smgle by Jerry Bias
track of their progress "
Arnett was cutdown at the
plate on a !me throw by cen'
ter!Ielder
Huffman
ABOUT A MONTH AGO Reds' fans we re soundmg off
Racme plated Its th1td run on
monstrous sneers at the Houston-Reds trade that brought m·
Dunmng's
smgle and Sayre's
fielder Dems Menke, pitcher Jack Billingham, second baseman
Joe Morga n, outfielder Caesar Geron uno and mmor leaguer Ed double
Cheshire lied 11m the thlfd as
Armbruster to the Reds m return for home run hitter Lee May,
Bias
and Mike Larkms smgied
seco nd baseman Tommy Helms and utility player Jnnmy
ahead of a shot to center by
Stewart
firs
t base man Chns Preston
Menke seemed to be over the hill, Blilmgham \las gettmg
The
Redlegs moved ahead 4·
bombed regularly, and Geronnno wasn't hittmg Only base
stealer Joe Morgan looked hke money m the bank Hardly
enough for th e hk es of May, Heims and Stewart, because May's
ea rly assaults With th e bat m the dome, Helms' usual !me
defensive play, and Stewart's pmch hlttmg had Houston on top of
the NatiOnal Western Division The Reds then were !ioundermg
near th e bottom of th e same divisiOn
NEW YORK (UPI )-The
But thmgs change
trend was toward mflelders m
VelUian, who was called m, as were other scouts, to g1ve this year's eighth annual 'l!aJor
their op1mon on Morgan, Billingham, et a! before the trade, told league summer draft, with the
Sports Desk "I thought then, and I still thmk, that Billingham San Diego Padres and the
Cleveland Indians supposedly
can be the steeper m that trade "
Billingham m the last 10 days has won two games agamst no gettmg the priZe plums
The 26 maJor leag ue teams
losses and pitched well m two other outmgs m which he d1d not
conducted
their summer draft
figure m the deciSion Morgan IS lead mg the leag ue m stolen
of
talent
Tuesday
and 11 In·
bases Menke produced well when first baseman Tony Perez was
out or the hneup with an InJury Even Geron uno IS looking hke a IIelders were selected m the
first round , brea kin g the
b1g leaguer these days
pattern of recent yea rs which
What's more, the Reds have ousted Houston from first mto featured pitchers as the pnze
th1rd place and were pOised to make a serious run at Los Angeles commodity
as of Tuesday, one-half game back
The Padres, who selected
The snorts of dens1on about the trade are qUieted
first because they had the
For the lime bemg
worst record m the maJors m
1971, came up with a player
THE NAME, "VE NNARI" never falls to brmg up sweet they hope can crack thelf
memories of his remarkable achievement near a generation ago startmg lineup He IS Dave
as coach of the old Rutland Red Devil football team High School Roberts, a 21-year-old third
athletes of today weren 't around then, but a lot of fans were who baseman from the UmverSity
remember what the man Vennar1 and a gang of hoys did at of Oregon, who showed
tremendous power this past
Rutland
It really came m two great periods, 1948-1950, then m a season with 12 homers and 47
runs batted m lor the Ducks.
brilliant five-year span, 195o through 1959
!Wberts wasted no tune m
First the three year record: Rutland was 28-2-ll m 1948, '49
g With the Padres,
Signin
and '50
although
club VIce President
Then begmmng in 1955, and extendmg through 1959, Rutland
won 44, lost one, tied nohody ' That !mal undefeated season Peter Bavas1 would give no
terms of the contract The
brought Jun the Ohio Coach of the Year honors (Class A)
Padres want Roberts to report
We sportswriters of that day had a lot of fun w1th Jim's
directly to the club and he was
famous (or infamous J Sally Rand Play. Sally, oldtuners will to be placed on the active list
recall, was a legendary female from somewhere deep in the today
bistros of the Chicago Loop who danced m pubhc weanng
The Indians chose second
somewhat less than street dress
and selected Richard MaMmg,
Jun hlmsel! named the play for Sally, slyly, of course, on the a 17-year-old shortstop who
apparent assumption that a football can be hidden from the batted 613 for LaSalle High
oppostion througll the use of sleight-of-hand magic, exactly as School m Niagara Falls, N.Y
Sally tried (sometnnes not successfully, we he ard) to h1de her Mannmg's coach calls him
charms With fans
"the greatest high school hitter
Anyhow, the !avonte question to ask of Jun 's upcommg I've ever seen "
opposmg coaches was, "Are you ready for Sally Rand '"
Texas selected Roy Lee
And you know, whether the oppost10n prepared for Sally or Howell, a third baseman from
not, every time I saw her called, she went for a TO or a long Lompo c, Ca lif ; Milwaukee
went for Danny Thomas, an
gainer
Someday I'm gomg to have Jun diagram Sally for mflelder from Southern illinois
publication. It came off Vennar1's exqUISite smgle wmg for- Umvers1ty; California picked
mation Somehow - I never did see 11 happen - the ball got from Dave Chalk, a third baseman
the spiiUimg trulback unnoticed mto the hands of a halfback out from the Uruvers1ty of Texas;
wide scampering down the sidelines The tunmg of the backs had and Boston chose Joel BIShop,
to be perfect, so did their ball bandlmg; so did the timmg of the a shortstop from Sacramento,
Cahf
call itself
Los Angeles went for John
It was football perfectiOn.
Harbm , shortstop from Greenville, S C.; Kansas C1ly

· Desk

reasons It was also empbastzed that children under
the age of ten, must be accompamed by an adult. Dr.
CurtiS pomted out that Lyne
Center pool is low; feel deep at
tis shallowest pomt and
recommended close super·
VISIOn of young children by
their parents

.

Exec Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH.
City EdlfDr

St ,

Pomeroy . Oh •o

Bus•ness

SPECIAL

7151

Second class po stage pa id at

Pomeroy , Oh io

NattOnal ad'lerfls•ng
reprnent1f1\le
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oe

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1

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Plus Casslng

available SO cent1 ptr Neek ,

By Motor Route wher~ carrier
serv 1ce not IY'Itllbte
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lnd W \Ia One year su 00

To4oy's FUNNY .,,n pa1 51 DO for
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Stx mOnths S7 2S Tnree
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GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.

992-7161

Middleport, o.

C~oice

..,... ....

Low Low Discount

8 Vacation Trips . ·
Certified Gas Stations
538 W. Main
POMEROY, 0.
We honor BankAmericard 01nd Master Charge

WOODSTOCK Ill. (UP! ) Ilhn01s Racmg Board Chair·
man Alexander MacArthur,
who Is leadmg probes mto
possible race.f1xmg and cnme
snydiCate influence on Illm01s
racmg, has been given roundthe-clock pollee protecbon and
deputized so that he can carry
a gun
McHenry County Shenff
Arthur Tyrell said Tuesday he
ordered a pollee watch over
MacArthur and his family
several weeks ago after
strangers were spotted around
MacArthur's farm, located m
the Chi cago suburb of
Barrmgton Hills
"I know the cnme syndicate
and I wouldn't put anythmg
past them," the shenff said.
MacArthur, who said there
has not been any threats made
agamst himself or h1s family ,
said he suspects a race fiXing
nng w1th possible crime
sy ndicate connectiOns
operated at Maywood Park and
possibly Sportsmen 's Park.
The wvesbgahon was
opened after fires were set m
barns owned by harness racmg
driver Walter PaiSley

At A Fantastic

of

992-9981

Racing
Chainnan
Protected

These Are
Brand New Cars

LETS GO TO

Come In for Our Free Folder for

OfiJce Phone

" 2 21S6 Edtto rla l Phone 99'2

selected Jamie QUirk, a
shortstop from Whiltler, Calif ,
Detroit took Jerry Manuel, a
shortstop from Rancho Cor·
dova, Cab! , Oakland picked
Chester Lemon, a shortstop
from Los Angeles and Pills·
burgh
selected
Dwayne
Pelller, a shortstop from
Anaheun, Calif
Other f1rst-round picks were
pitcher Larry Chnstenson of
Marysville,
Wash ,
by
Pluladelph1a, catcher Bobbie
Goodman of Memphis, Tenn ,

. THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
ON NEW CARS
IKEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

DISNEY WORLD

Put&gt;lt shed dally eKcept
Saturdav by The Oh to \lj!illey
Publl shmg Company, 111
~S1lt'

l'HIRD ROUND
CHICHESTER, England
(UPI)- Aiex Olmedo, who won
the · men's singles litle at
Wunbledon in 1959, reached the
thU"d round of the '!Wihmans
Lawn Tennis Tourney Tuesday
by beating French southpaw
Enc Derasse, &amp;-I, 6-4, and
RhodeSian Tony Fawcett, 6-4,
6-2.

3rd Ave.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,

J m the fifth on Larkms' Single,
two stolen bases and a wild
pitch Racwe bed II aga m on
Sayre's doub le and Hart's
smgle The Tornadoes took a
one-run lead m the seventh E
Dunmng walked and was
brought home on a double by
Jenkms Lucas, the startmg'
Redieg hurler, was then
replaced by &lt;outhpaw Jeff
Blazer who quelled the
upnsmg
Cheshire scored the tymg run
w1th two outs m the seventh
Arnett led off the 1nnmg
reachmg second on a two base
error Luther Amos, runmng
for Arnett scored on Larkms'
smgle to nght Sayre m p1tchmg mne ~nmngs ,struckout 16
while walkmg two Lucas and
Blazer combmed to fan 13
while ISilumg four free passes
Nease paced Racme with
three hits m four tnps Larkms
led the Redlegs with three hits.
Preston and Bias had two hits
each
Cheshire travels to Bidwell
Fnday mght Racme will host
Middleport
Racme
201 001 101-6 8 j
Cheshire 102 010 101-&lt;i 12 2
POMEROY UPSET
Southwestern upset Pomeroy
10-8 m a zany contest at
Pomeroy Tuesday evenmg m
the opemng round of the MeigsGalha Pony League
The Galhans plated 8 runs m
the top of the seventh on mne
\lalks and three e1rors while
Pomeroy could get back only
one run m Its home half

SW
100 010 8-10 5
Pom
210 211 I-ll 7
W Call, B Marshall (6) ,
Nesse lroad (7 ) (l.P) and
Nesselroad, Blevms (7)
Carter, NIday ( 4J ( WP J,
Crouse (7) and Grate
BIDWELL WINS
BIDWELL - Jack Gardner,
a southpaw, all but totally
baffled his opposition Tuesday
evemng here to post a 9-2
victory over the Middleport A
Pony baseball club m the
opemng round of the MeigsGalha Pony Le~gue com.
pehtwn
Gardner had a no-hitter
gomg through siX mmngs, and
leadmg 9-0
Then m the top of the seventh
after Steve Walburn fanned,
Gardner
walked
Mike
Magnotta, and gave up a smgle
to centerf1elder Eh Ebersbach
Danny Hamson fanned, for
two outs, but shortstop Perk
Au! I doubled Magnotta and
Ebersbach scored ChriS Miller
grounded out to end the mnmg.
Middleport did not hit a ball
mto the outfield until Ebersbach's clean shot to ngh t
Meanwhile, Bidwell plated
two runs m the first mmng on a
leadoff walk by sta rling
nghthander Terry Whitlatch
and a home run by shortstop
Gregg Janes It was 4-ll after
two mmngs on smgles by Stout
and Freddie Logan, an error,
and a hit batsman
Bidwell broke 11 up m the
sixth with five run s on a double

Padres Get Another Dave Roberts

.s FUNNY r-Th_e_Da_i~-Se-ntil-el--.

Court

':Bidwell, S-W, Triumph

the $ports

1-New 1971 LT.D. 2 Dr., H.T.
Fully equipped, vinyl roof ._

2-New 1971 Galaxie 500'$
Dr., auto trans, P.S., radio, w·w tires,
wheel covers, body side molding.

4

by Montreal, pitcher Larry
Payne of Bedias, Tex , by
Cmcmnall, pitcher Richard
Ruthven of Fresno State
College by Mmnesota, outfielder Stephen Enghshhey of
South Houston, Tex, by
Houston , pitcher Preston
Hanna of Pensavola, Fla., by
Atlanta; outfielder Mtke Ondina of Cordova, Calif , by the
White Sox
Catcher D1ck Bengton of
Peona, ill , by the Mets, pitcher Scott McGregor of El
Seg undo , Calif , by the
Yankees , pitcher Bnan
Vernoy of Westmmster, Calif ,
by the Cubs; pitcher !Wbert
Dressler of Portland, Ore., by
San FranciSco ; pitcher Daniel
Larson of Alhambra, Calif., by
St WillS and catcher KeMeth
Thomas of BellVIlle, Ohio , by
Baltimore

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Un1ted Press International
w I Pet GB

Rtchmond

27 21 563

lOUISVille

26 23 537

Ttdewater

25 24 51 0 21h
24 24 500 3

Syracuse

by J-!f Hollenbaugh, a triple.
by Gene Welch, three walks
and an error Aull relieved the
t1r1ng Whitlatch w1th one out
andgotthesideoutafterWelch
tripled.
Gardner fanned 11, walked
six, hit nobody and was tough
w1th the 3-2 pitch He struck out
the side m the fifth, and got out
of serious trouble m the fourth
when Middleport had the hases
full on two walks and an error
by fanmng Ebersbach.
Whitlatch m five and two
thirds mmngs fanned 8, walked
three and hit two After hilling
Gardner m the third, he too
fanned the side ,
Ault fanned one, "alked
nobody m hiS two-thU"ds of an
mmng
Middleport IS at Racine
Fnday and Bidwell hosts
Cheshire
Middleport 000 000 ~2 2 ~
Bidwell
220 005 x-9 7 I
Whitlatch (LP), Ault (6) and
Stobart Gardner and Stout
VINTON WINS
Middleport B opened at home
Tuesday m the Me1gs-Gallia
Pony League With a 7-4 loss to
Vmton, Bill Peters p1tchmg a
six-hitter
Steve Bachner and Mick
Davenport gave up 8 flits to
Vmton batters Vmton put the
game away m the fourth mning
w1th two runs to make the
score lHJ. Mike Justice did the
most bat damage, gettmg two
triples and a smgle for Vmton
For Middleport B, Joey
Gleason got two of his club's
siX hits, both smgles
Friday Southwestern IS at
Middleport and Vmton IS at
Pomeroy
Vmton
302 010 1-7 8 2
M1dd. B
000 120 1-4 6 3
Peters and Tackett. Bachner
(LP), Davenport (4) and
Gleason, Thomas (7).

We measure our
prices in 'inches'
... our quality and
service in 'yards'.
Give us a try, at
Rizer Oil.

1\'2

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

24 22 522 2

Toledo
Rochester
Charleston
Pentnsu la

24 26 480 4
21 23 477 4
20 28 417 7

Tuesday's Results
Rt chmond 1 Louts vtlle l
lst, 7 tnntngs
Rtchmond 6 LoUISVIlle 1
2nd, 7 mmngs
Syr acuse at Tidewater
ppd , ram
Toledo at Penmsula
ppd ram
Charl eston s Rochester 2

John Now

SURGERY FOR
MARSHALL
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
(UP!) - Minnesota VIking
defensive end Jim Marshall
Imdergoes surgery today for
the removal of hone chips from
his r~ght ankle. One of the bone
chips has locked m the JOint.

Need A Bargain
Hamilton

G. E. Electrtc

Gas Dryer
At

DRYER
Al

'44)110

'4500

Norge Wringer

New G. E. 30"

WASHER

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MIDDLEPORT, O.

�f

Wrdl1&lt;'&lt;dav .Jun~ 7. 1972

2

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.",June 7, 1972

•.

ABOUT PEOPLE

Jackson Powers

'

Degree Won at Age of 82
•

By United Press International
FRESNO, Cahf. (UP!)Mrs. Caroline Cooper. 82 and
confmed to a wheelchair,
receives her bachelor of arts
degree m ancient history and
!..a tip today from California
State UniverSity of Fresno
Mrs Cooper, who finished
high schoolm 1909, said if she
doesn't "come apart at the
seams/' she would return to

attend graduate school next
fall.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Black
Harlem Assemblyman Hulan
Jack was sentenced Tuesday to
three months m prison and
fmed $3,000 for his convtclion
on a conspU"acy charge
Jack, 65, lost his post as
borough
president
of
Manhattan in 1960 after bemg

,A's Past Indians

J

had a chance tAl speak With
Mi!l.'l Davis about the job.
"Angela's a very beautiful
person and we wouldn't want to
do anythmg that would exploit
her name," Hurst said "We
have made an extremely

convicted on a conflict of interest charge for which he
received a suspended sentence
, At the time Jack was the
highest black City offiCial In the
country Jack was conviCted
April24 of conspirmg with four
CCH:Iefendants to force Harlem smcere offer.u
supermarkets to buy certain
brand name products handled
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)by Jack's pubhc relations fli"IIl . Donald L Coleman, 24, was
round gmlty1 of air piracy
CHICAGO (UPI)- Angela Tuesday and l~s a 20-year
DaviS has been offered a mi!Uffium Jail sentence He wUI
Chicago teachmg post at a be sentenced Thursday
black commumiY college to
Coleman, of Downer's
lecture on philosophy, logic Grove, Ill., was charged with
and "tnshtuttonal raclSill "
attempting to hijack an
Charles G Hurst, preSident AmeriCan Airlines jetlmer en
of Chicago's Malcolm X route from Chicago to San
College, saJd Tuesday he had Francisco Dee 26. He was
made the offer and received a arrested when the plane made
"very favorable response from an unscheduled landing m Salt
Angela 's parents," but had not Lake C1ty

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Reggie Jackson, who helped
turn the A's from an also-ran
, Into a pennant. contender With
his homer hlttmg , IS on target
for his best season for homers
-47 !II 1969. He belted his 12th
and stxth smce Ma y 18 when he
rapped a three-run homer
Tuesday - mght that pushed
Oakland to a 7-2 victory over
Cleveland
"I never had a real good
start and that's why I miSsed
hittmg 300 a few times "
'
Jackson satd. "When you're
swmgmg a good bat, It doesn't
matter who's p1tchmg The
strong wmd doesn 't bother me
either, because when I really
connect, I don 't care If It's
snowmg, they 'll go out of the
park "
Ja ckson's mnth -mnmg
homer capped a four-run mnlng for Oakland Sal Bando
had smgled home the go-ahead
run m the eighth after Joe
Rud1's double brought home
Bert Campanens With the
tymg score
VIda Blue , still trymg to
recover from early season
holdout problems, was tagged
for two riiJIS and seven hits m
the SIX mnmgs he worked
!Wil1e Fingers, m rebel, picked
up his fifth VIctory against one
loss.
In other Amencan League
games, Mwnesota topped
Baltunore, 54, 10 Iii innmgs,
Boston shut out ChiCago, 2-0,
Kansas
City
down ed
Milwaukee,
4-2,
Texas
trounced New York, 6-3, and
Cahforma blanked Detroit, 4-ll,
after dropping an 8.jj opener to
the Tigers

Governors Outline Call
Truck Gardening Season Begins

'

IT'S CABBAG~ AND TOMATO TIME m the Letart Township hottoms where each sprmg
thousands of plants are grown to produce fresh vegetables for metropolitan markets. Among
the b1g growers of both tomatoes and cabbages are the Hill Brothers - Clifford, Harry, John
and Dallas - who also have several nephews 10 truck gardening The accompanymg photos
show the neat rows of cabbages, which have been gomg to city mark ets for about a week no~,
and tomatoes Which are domg well. The photographs were taken on one ol-the Clifford Hill
Fanns Hill, above, IS With his grandson, Max Hill, Jr , 4 The tomato crop IS expected to be
ready to market July I, providing there IS no more unusual weather Hill has 30 acres of
tomatoes and 300,000 cabbage plants m this year

•
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Helen Help

Us.

"".:

By Helen Bottel

••

Making Marriage a Success
DEAR HELEN
You asked for formulas on makmg mamage work Here's
mme ·
Think of marriage as 1f 1t were an automobile tnR When the
car starts out the gears must shift If they mesh smoothly the
ride is smooth. If they grate, the nde 1s bumpy, Jerky and rough,
"""""'""1
halt.ll
''1
.
__
~'1"
~
(j,V
J:J:,
· the tnp IS Importa
•' ''/
• mflatmg
• · ' the
·
',l- l?f~pariJig llle Carnlor
n 'Try
"tt:~ith oompliments;&gt;fillln g th e radiator with ' trust, usmg
·illlltfllfti!estfoir o!l, 'delem unatwn for su'ceess
as the sta rter, let
.,.
pattence shwe m the headlights, put forgiveness m the battery,
use courtesy on the brakes, an anger-filter m the carburetor,
exhaust on Jealousy, fill the gas tank with enthusiasm Consider
"sharing" as the mgred1ent m super-gas that 1s m1ssmg m
regular gas Carry a safety flare of humility , plenty of first a1d
affection, a spare tire of tenderness, and polish with un·
derstandmg
Fur seat covers and mag wheels are mce If you don't need to
use the gas money to pay lor them
Never worry when you can pray mstead
Nearly everyone you meet will think that his and her car 1s
the best and their route the fastest and most mte1 cst mg Be
happy with what you have
It doesn't always cost ext1 a to g1ve someone a hit, but 1t
trught prove foolish to let that someone dnve
Don't expect your car to do wheehes, he as roomy as a bus ,
as comfortable as a house, as economical as a bug, as fast as a
cobra, to carry the load of an elephant, and to look hke a
-Gadillac
The best person to fix your car IS usually a mechamc
Remember, 11 '" very dllhcult to read the road map while
driving D1sregardmg traffic signals and road signs ISnot smart
Jumpmg from a movmg car usually ends m a rough landmg
.;;verybody gets m the wrong turn sometimes Lookmg ahead
saves wear on the brakes and smashed fenders Planmng ahead
proVIdes lime for an extra excursion of specml mterest Gears
need to be shilled as much gmng down hill as gomg up hill
Singing helps the time fly
The purpose of this tnp IS to take love on an outmg, to protect
it from diStracllons, g1ve 11 plenty of fresh mr and fi eedom, and
an mcentive to grow
Sumrmt signs represent goals attamed through hard work,
luck, understandmg, helpmg, forg1vmg and carmg.
Hisloncal monuments represent special happy events and
dates that you want to remember forever
Mentally place a laughter sign after every detoUI sign and
every summit sign
·
There will always be another ~ce mc pmnt, souvemr shop,
and wme-tastmg place'·or !nut stand down the road a htlle ways
Do not try toavmd all the hills and curves Astraight road on
fiat terram can get monotonous Welcome the changmg scenery
Detours often give one greater appreciatiOn for the mam roads
No matter hew rough the road or how steep the hill, have
confidence tbat eventually there 'Y 'll be a st1etch of road Ieadmg
right to the end of the rainbow m the sky The sun will be shmmg
and the grass will he green It Will be a place where your love can
expand effortlessly - JOSEPHINE L WOODSON
DEAR HELEN .
•
Another comment on '"makmg a successful marnage" I
would feel presumptuous m wntmg this, except for the fact that
another &lt;;ehbrate spoke on mamage 2,000 years ago, w1th conBiderable success
Since the cup is the psychologiCal symbol of love, 11 might be
good to start with this symhol A cup has t ~o surfaces - convex
and concave - each the opposite m nature of the other and each
inseparable from the other ThiS symbolism IS earned nght mto
th~ Scripture The "cup" of Psalm 23 IS overflowing, JOyous,
abundant and regal ; while the "cup" spoken of m the garden of
~semane IS pamful, sorrowful, a source of separation What
few reahze is that both are the same cup, viewed at different
limes There IS no true love without joy, abundance, elahon and
sense of royalty; but .there IS also no true love without pam,
IOITOW, crucifiXIon and an mlense awareness of separation The
failure today IS that married people tend to suppress the latter,
and so equally suppress and distort the former.
II would be well lor our married people·and psychologists
alike to accept the dual nature of the cup of love. When they do,
they will be amazed not by the weight of the burden , but at the
ecstalic sense of llberahon, vitality and overflow pounng from
themselves. - FATHER .IAMES J . CARROLL, Bloomfield,N J

l

r•

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Hospital
Discharges
Mrs Harold Stewart and son,
Heather Dawn Harg ra;es ,
Gregory Ne bb , Chm tm e
Swmgle, Anthony Arrowood,
.• T1 acy Huff, Edith Spurlock,
~ Mrs Weldon Myers and son,
Kelley Craig, Clara Shenefield,
Samuel VanHoose, Mary
Boli nger,
Norm a Jea n
Brannen, Raymond l,owery,
Betty Sue Harmon, David
Lawre nce' Bru ce WI1SOn,
Eloise .Ril ey, H nda Pratt ,
Luther
Johns,
Gladys
Brammer
Births
June 6th, Mrs Richa rd
Corvin , a soo, Wellston

Kleindienst

Can Win

His

..
1mproper conduct " Klemd1enst
decided, however, that Stew·
ard 's In terventiOn d1d not
change the course of the
mveshgahon and was not
sufficiently serious to warrant
dismissal
Kleindienst also came under
fir e lor !allure to report, for a
week , a bnhe offer to stop
prosecution of underworld fl.
gures mvolved In a stock
market fraud scheme

For Democrat Platform

HOUSTON (UPI )-The na·
tion's Democratic governors
today called for a party plat·
form to include major tax
refonn, open housmg laws,
national health msurance, guaranteed jobs lor the young and
disadvantaged and elimination
of the property tax.
The proposals, drafted for
dehvery today before the
Democrallc National Convention's Plat!onn Committee by
Gov John C. West of South
Carolma, also flailed the Nixon
admmistration
The governors charged tbat
admmistrat10n economic poliCies had failed to reduce mflation and unemployment as
promiSed, had produced "unprecedented" budget deficits,
and had led to "the growmg
gap between the baves and the
have nots."
The platform bluepnnt,
which was written m bebal! of
the 30 Democratic governors
attendmg the NatiOnal
Governors Conference, urged
that the federal tax structure
be redrawn to guarantee that
every "Citizen, orgaruzation
and every busmess pay their
fair
share ''
WITH HOUSE CABEL
'
'!'he
governors condemned
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep John F Se1berlmg, !). the value added tax Idea being
conSidered by the administraOhw, was one of 30 House
members who JOined with Rep tiOn and said that true tax
Les Aspw, D·Wls , w In· reform must mclude abolishtroduc mg a bill which could ment of the property tax and
force Congress to overhaul the
nation's tax laws. The 24
Democrats
and
seven
Republicans JOined with Aspm
m sponsonng the bill that and busmess tax deductions m
would ehmmate :;4 mdividual three stages by January 1974

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· 'I:R:.I:Re:pjlllllmlll£11l11J

Job Easily

Voice along Br'Way

THE VOICE OF BROADWAY
, WASHINGTON (UPI )-lnfor·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
' mal surveys showed today
THE KEY TO A VANISHING ACf
R1cha1 d G Klemd1enst easily
NEW YORK (KFS) - Star singer Ja ck
Will wm Senate confirmation as
attorney general when h1s Jones' diSappearance for a while now IS clea red
nommatwn comes to a vote up Jack collapsed He recuperated from the
Thu1sday-endmg the longest breakdown In Key Biscayne, which even calms
mveshgatiOn m history of a down Dick Nixon Joe Namath 's hustlin g up
presidenllal appointee
b1g outside-football deals to msure big next• The Senate agreed Tuesday season extra Income The psychology - so the
w vote at 4 p m Thursday on Jets will know he's not hungry for cash, ergo,
the Kleindienst appomtment- 16 Cll n demand a stratospheric renewal He'll
weeks and two days after proba bly get 11
President Nixon named the
Barbra Stre1sand's hardly bashful Dmed at
Amona native to succeed John Ruby Foo 's and asked for a doggie-bag - to
N Mitchell as the nation's !Jlke lwme egg rolls for son Jason
the nudity
highest legal officer
m "Oh 1 Calcutta 1' ' ISn't enough The show got
Sen M1ke Mansfield, the
Senate Democratic leader, won shoddy so extra rehearsals are bemg called to
unammous consent to brmg the spruce up the naked cast . Actor-Director
appmnlmenl to a vote after two Marvm Kaplan dates Chmtme Jorgensen.
days of mtens1ve backroom Wonder what he sees m 11. Marvm even gave
Chns exotic underwear from the Exot1que shop
negotiations ·
AI Toef1eld , who coordinated the big PepSI
Surveys showed Klemd1enst
probably Will wm confirmation B1ke Jamboree m Central Park, IS a cop.
w1th no more than 20 to 2!i Preaches what he practices Rides 50 miles a
week He's made 20 "colla rs" while cycling. HI·
votes agamst h1m
Robm Moore, who wrote
The Senate Judiciary Com· yoo handlebars'
m1ttee held more than two the best-peddling "French Connection" and
months of pohllcally charged "The Happy Hooker," will get back to the
heanngs mto Klemdienst's re- typewnter soon He's spent more than a month
cord as Mitchell's chief deputy . celebratmg the two huge hits H1c.
The controversy was fueled by
UN whispers suggest eight Cuban refugees
allegatiOns that the Department are trallmg Castro through Africa Object o! Justice made a favorable assassmatwn, everyone's afraid
George C
out-of;!:Ourt se ttlement of an (for Oscar) Scott's shce of "The New Cen·
anlltrust case agamst Interna- tunons" f1im Is:; per cent of the profits. Better 11
tional Telephone &amp; Telephone should 've been :; per cent of the gross What
Corp at the same tune the expenses studios can pile onto a moVIe '
company was pledgmg $200,000 Especially 11 It's filmed a flock of flops
or more to subsidize the
i&gt;Q!;liO"{liX sources can't keep up w1lh all the
Republican NatiOnal Con&lt;enllon
Bdwy'
!lith-houses' demands : so one 's r unrung
at San D1ego
• The committee also mvesli· an early Sophia Loren film which sounds
sated Kleindienst' clearance of rounchier than 11 1s : "Two Nights With
Carroll (Archie Bunker )
liarry Steward, US attorney Cleopatra"
O'Connor's
hte
rury
ambitions turned up a scnpt
at San Diego, of any wron gdomg after Steward mtervened about a black lm1yc1 Title's "RobJnson" ..
in a grand jury mvesbgatwn of "Fiddler on the Roof" passes ''Uie wtth
llhcit campaign contrtbullons Father" June 17 as the longest-runmng Bdwy
show of all time Not Without Its huge pnce: It's
by a pohllca l ally
A Department of Jusbce cost the producer, bi!ckers, writers etc $5,000 a
admm1strallve mqmry found week m losses for more than a year to topple the
!teward guilty of "highly great Lindsay and Crouse comedy Producer

1

Hal Prmce has money piled up like the Mafia,
but legal, so he can afford it Can his backers•
They 're rich, too such as Lou Brecker, owner
of Roseland Ballroom, a multi-millionaire
Analyze VIctor Borge's marvelous silliness.
He gets more laughs out of the sunpler truths
than the convoluted wiUicisms so-called of all
TV gagsters eombmed. A reporter asked VIctor
wbat his fatber d1d. "He dted," the dizZiest
Dane explained
Rodney Dangerfield says he still has scars
from oldEdSullivanshows: "I stayed on longer
than I was supposed to one Sunday mght,"
Roger said, "and Sullivan turned a dog act on
me."

ShU"ley MacLalne and her momentary-love,
Pete Hamill, at Gallagher's were talldng about
her first post-McGovem-campa~grung efforts .
two novels . Pete Hamill and the N. Y Post
parted company His colUI11118 had started to
sound like stuck whistles. And he's better than
that . Arthur Blake of the Plaza Nine shows
says hiS cousin's on the faculty of a medical
school As a golf instructor.
Producers of Tom Stoppard's new comedy
hit, "The Real Inspector Hound," had to
wheedie special clearances from Actors Equii1"
fo r a non-uruon member of the cast : Abe de Ia
Houssage plays the role of a murdered corpse.
Does nothing but he there from opening to final
curtain
Mervyn Leroy's writing his autobiography
Gifted gent who gave us some of our great
H'wood films . .. It's a relief Gregory Peck
became an actor mstead of what he fll"sl
yearned to be a priest. His idea of vicariously
fulfillmg part of that childhood ambition is to
produce and lmance the Daniel Barrigan
"Catonsville Nme" film . Fumy punchline on
what sudden showbiz does to people - author
Daniel Berngan's now SOCializing with the
glitter .film people at the Cannes FUm Festival
- and Peck's not.
Tennauee Wllliluns' brother Dakin was at
L' A1glon where he etplamed why "roses"
appear in so many of Tenn. Wms. plays: "It's
because our only stster IS named Rose," Dakm
sa1d
Nearby foursome of L'Aiglon : The
Arthur Hornblows and the Doug Falrbankses
Jr ., Sir Jumor Fairbanks said hiS presence in
L'Aiglon is :•tradition ""My father brought me
here f1rst."

adoption of a federal revenue
sharmg program m Its place
To lower unemployment, the
governors proposed that programs be m1hated to "guaran·
tee employment and traming
opportumlles for our youth and
disadvantaged persons."
HThe admmtstratlon's so-

called game plan to mfuse
vitality mto the Amencan
economy has Instead worked a
hardship on the substantial
majonty of the Amencan
people," the Democrallc state
chief execullves said.
They also urged that nallonal
!ann price pohc1es proVIde 100
per cent of parity on domesllc
producllon of natwnally essen·
llal commodities.
The governors charged that
at every level of the admimstration's domesllc programs
there was "dnft, vacillallon

and IndecisiOn . Issues of
Importance to the AmeriCan
people such as busmg have
been allowed to fester beyond
all reason and rational order "
Their platform Ignored the
busmg Issue
On crime, the governors sa1d
they supported federal compensation for widows and
families of slam law enforcement officers, gUidelines
to protect the CIVIl nghts of
prison Inmates, and programs
to provide "alternative wa ys"
to rehabilitate criminals
The attack on the admmiStratwn 's fi sca l and
domestic pohc1es came on the
final day of the three.&lt;fay
conference Most Demo era t1c
governors believe President
Nixon's economic record wUI
be the major issue m the fall
campaign

•

In the National League, Los
Angeles beat Chicago, 5-ll,
Atlanta edged Montreal, 3-2,

Dr Bruce Cur lis, Director of
Center , announced today
that SWimmmg lessons Will be
offered agam this summer at
th e Rio Grande College
. swimming pool.
The first session will begm
June 13 and end July 14 InL) ne

No doubt 1t mcreases when
you a1 e on a date because
Dear Dr. Lamb- I am a you are a b1t nervous Pe1
16-year-old gul who ha s a haps aft.er yo u ha ve dated a
small but em barrassmg littl e longer or are bett er acp1 oblem My stomach growls quam ted With yow date lhiS
a lot and mak es funn) p1 oblem Will no I be quite so
noises When I am with a great You m1gh1 keep m
date at a movie and every mmd that everyo ne has thi &lt;
thmg IS qwet It seems to m sQ me degree and 11 Is per
g1owl twice as much and fectly nm mal, so why be sv
1w1ce as loud It embarrass· emb arrassed about 11 ' If you
es me to death and I don't a1e a good 1I stcnc1, you
know what to do I have m1ght fmd yo ur boy f11end 's
t11ed holdmg my breath stomach growls, too
llghtenm g my stoma ch tak
Dear Dr Lamb- ! read
1ng deep brealhs and not the m ticle aboul !he woman
dnnkmg fluid s before 1 go with the problem of swollen
out I've also tned 1gnonng hps I had this sa me prob·
1t but nolhmg seems to help lem for a yea1 and avOided
Could you please tell me many d11lerent kmds of food
what causes thiS and how I and still had II ouble I h
ca n prevenl1 t• Please try to nally found out that It wa s
pll nt this before too long caused by two d i fferenl
because I would like to ha ve brands of hps11ck I was
a cure before my next date usmg
ThiS may not seem ImporDear Read er-Tha t's ven
tant to you but It IS very Im · thou ghtful of you It Illusportant to me I nave about trates agam the multitude of
decided to stop datmg be· different thm gs which can
&lt;a use It bothers me so much cause people to be allerg ic
Dear Reade~-That' s not and have swelhng of the
an easy p10blem to solve It face or lip which IS called
IS ca used by the normal con· ang10neurahc edema This
tractions of the digestiVe agam pomts up why doctors
11 act The entire long d1ges· have so much trouble fmdmg
live tube IS II n ed with out what causes an allergy
muscles whi ch contract to It can be anythmg from hr
pro p e l food m a normal slick or other cos metics to
fashiOn The di8es hve tra ct thin gs m the air, foods or
IS very susceptible to emo· even medicines A n o t he r
lions and excitement There reader found It was aspmn
are many thmgs which Will
( NEW~PAPER ENTE RPRI H ASSN )
\: ause ll to become 11 0veractive ' One of these IS bemg
hun gry It Is literally tru e
P/eose send your queJ flons and
that a person 's sto ma c h commen1J 1G Lawrence E. Lamb.
g1owls when they are hun· M D., 1n car.e ol t"u paper Wlule
gry You might try ea tm g Dr Lamb cannot onJwtr mdmdual
before you go ou1 on a da le letter!, h~ w1/l answtr letters ol
1ath er than avOiding fluid s
gtntral Ulf~resf 1n lututt columns
ll• Lawrence Lamb, M D

'

ot

Tommy Harper smgled
pome one Boston run and
scored the other on Lms
Aparicio's siXth mnmg double
as llmely h1ttmg backed Sonny
Siebert's fourhltter. The VIC·
tory was the fifth for Siebert.
Chicago ace Wilbur Wood
suffered his fourth loss agamst
eight VICIOtleS.
AL batting leader Lou
Pimella had a two-run smgle m
the SIXth mmng to drive m the
tymg and go-ahead runs
agamst Milwaukee R1ck
Auerbach clouted his first
homer of the year for
Milwaukee
Texas stayed 10 a fifth-place
he with Kansas C1ty on the
strength of Frank Howard's
third homer and Don Mmcher's
two-run smgle agamst New
York Rusty Torres hit his
third homer for the Yankees
Mickey Lohch benefitted
from Detroit homer power m
gaining his runth wm of the
year A three-run homer by Ed
Brmlunan and Aurelio Rodri·
guez ' two -run shot beat
California m the opener of a
twi-mght doubleheader The
Angels took the mghtcap on
Clyde Wright's four-hitter,
Sandy Alomar's first homer of
the year and three unearned
runs m the fourth mnmg.

Swimming Lessons
Start June 13 At
Rio Grande Pool

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Growling Stomach
Is Embar~assing

New York mpped Cincmnat1, 32,
Houston
topped
Pluladelphia, 4.J, and St. Lows
defeated San Francisco, 5..J
The Pittsburgh-San D1ego
game was postponed by ram
Steve Brye's smgle brought
Rod Carew home With Mm·
nesota 's wummg run m the
fifth mmng and extended Baltimore's losmg strmg to five
games, the AL champiOns'
lon gest smce 1969. Enc Soderholm's two-run homer belpeli
the Twms tie the score m the
mnth

BLUE DEVILS
BOOSTERS.
CLUB
PRESENTS:
,•

FEATURING:

~.Jiet
MAGIC MIDWAY
Tues., June 6
Thru
SaL June 10
Family Nile, Tl\urs '
June 8
Sat . Matmee
Rt . 7, Galhpolis
Free AdmiSSIOn.
Free Parking

structions for beginn~rs, ad·
vanced beginners and In ·
termed1ates will be offered m
the one hour sessiOns to be held
from 6-7 p. m , Monday through
Fnday The classes are offered
for children between the ages
of :; and 12 The cost IS fifty
ce nts per student per day,
when paid on a daily basiS and
ten dollars per student lor the
en lire fiYe·Week SeSSIOn, If paid
at the time of regis tratiOn
Reg1s lrahon will be held at 8 p
m on Tuesday, June 13
Students should come prepared
to ge t mto the water on that
day
This Is the th1rd year RID
Grande College has offered the
swimmi ng InstructiOn
program to the children of area
residents. Accordmg to Dr
Curtis, the mstructors for these
lessons are "RIO Grande
College students, or college
students fr om the Gallipolis
area. All of tbem have bad
experience as llfe guards and
sw1mmmg instructors. The
second sessiOn will begm July
17 and be completed August 18
The classes m that sesswn Will
meet from 4:30 to 5 30 Monday
through Fnday.
Dr Curtis also announced
that the Lyne Center pool will
be open to area resident. for
recreational swurunmg dally
from 2-4 p m. and from 7-9 p
m m the evening (except
Saturday evemng ) beglnnmg
June 13 There Is a charge of 00
cents for adults and 2li cents lor
children for recreatiOn
swunming Swunmers wearmg
"cutoffs" or shorts will not be
admitted to the pool for health

: ( Cheshire, t~e 1971 defendmg
, Galha-Me 1gs P~ny League
By Chet Tannehill
['·champs and Racine battled to a
['6·6 lie Tuesday mght at
' i·
~ · cheshlfe Thegamewascalled
a'-'.;..,....,...,...,...,...,....,....,...,....,...,....,....,....,».,.:~~"':_(""",....~ after mne mmn gs due to
darkness It was the opemng
Boys lfi.years old and up with the remotest Idea of makmg leag ue game for both teams
th e game their professiOn should accept opportumlles offered to · Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor,
attend baseball camps sponsored by the maJor league clubs nadoes took a 6-5 lead gmng
Even 1! a young fellow has no senous designs about the game, but mto the bottom of the IOU1 but
would like to Improve his skill m 11, the camps are no waste of once agam, Coach Dale
Rothgeb 's Red legs ralhed to he
t1me.
This IS on the word of Cmcmnati Reds' Scout J1m VeMan of the score 1
Pomeroy who will take part 10 the Reds' first area camp of the · Racme scored Its go ahead
sprmg at St Albans High School Saturday, June 10, and m run m the mnth on walks to
another three days later m City Park, Parkersburg Jun and Childers and Jenkms and a
Gene Bennett will speak at tne camps and observe the acllon s in gle by Mitch Nease
Childers' shd'" under a strong
Reds area superVIsor Elmer Gray will be m charge
Jun particularly IS Interested m every boy of the MeigS· throw by n ght!Ielder Dave
Wise
Galha-Mason area who hkes to play the game and has talent for
Cheshire lied the score m Its
It That objective of Jnn's ISn't altogether altru isllc Afterall, a
half of the mmng when Terry
scout's standing gams no pomts If a big leaguer on another team Lucas and James Howard
comes out of your own back yard
smgled. Lucas came across the
Jun has tendered mVIlatwns to Roger DIXon and Steve plate on a fielder's choice
Dunfee of the Marauders thiS past season, both of whom are Racme drew flfst blood m the
playmg with the Meigs Legion club DIXon IS a somewhat fir st wmn g Jenkms was safe
mimaturized but very strong verSion of Johnny Bench. Dunfee 1s on an error JUSI pnor to
an mfielder Jun Hubbard, the no·lutter phenom (4thiS sprmg J of Nease's long blast to left!Ield
Southern High also has a warm mvitaiiOn to the camp
The Red legs scored one run
Jun would like to see as many boys there as \\ant to come m their half of the mmng on an
They're welcome
er ror, Bruce Arnett's double
He said "We ge t a chance to look at them Then we can keep and a smgle by Jerry Bias
track of their progress "
Arnett was cutdown at the
plate on a !me throw by cen'
ter!Ielder
Huffman
ABOUT A MONTH AGO Reds' fans we re soundmg off
Racme plated Its th1td run on
monstrous sneers at the Houston-Reds trade that brought m·
Dunmng's
smgle and Sayre's
fielder Dems Menke, pitcher Jack Billingham, second baseman
Joe Morga n, outfielder Caesar Geron uno and mmor leaguer Ed double
Cheshire lied 11m the thlfd as
Armbruster to the Reds m return for home run hitter Lee May,
Bias
and Mike Larkms smgied
seco nd baseman Tommy Helms and utility player Jnnmy
ahead of a shot to center by
Stewart
firs
t base man Chns Preston
Menke seemed to be over the hill, Blilmgham \las gettmg
The
Redlegs moved ahead 4·
bombed regularly, and Geronnno wasn't hittmg Only base
stealer Joe Morgan looked hke money m the bank Hardly
enough for th e hk es of May, Heims and Stewart, because May's
ea rly assaults With th e bat m the dome, Helms' usual !me
defensive play, and Stewart's pmch hlttmg had Houston on top of
the NatiOnal Western Division The Reds then were !ioundermg
near th e bottom of th e same divisiOn
NEW YORK (UPI )-The
But thmgs change
trend was toward mflelders m
VelUian, who was called m, as were other scouts, to g1ve this year's eighth annual 'l!aJor
their op1mon on Morgan, Billingham, et a! before the trade, told league summer draft, with the
Sports Desk "I thought then, and I still thmk, that Billingham San Diego Padres and the
Cleveland Indians supposedly
can be the steeper m that trade "
Billingham m the last 10 days has won two games agamst no gettmg the priZe plums
The 26 maJor leag ue teams
losses and pitched well m two other outmgs m which he d1d not
conducted
their summer draft
figure m the deciSion Morgan IS lead mg the leag ue m stolen
of
talent
Tuesday
and 11 In·
bases Menke produced well when first baseman Tony Perez was
out or the hneup with an InJury Even Geron uno IS looking hke a IIelders were selected m the
first round , brea kin g the
b1g leaguer these days
pattern of recent yea rs which
What's more, the Reds have ousted Houston from first mto featured pitchers as the pnze
th1rd place and were pOised to make a serious run at Los Angeles commodity
as of Tuesday, one-half game back
The Padres, who selected
The snorts of dens1on about the trade are qUieted
first because they had the
For the lime bemg
worst record m the maJors m
1971, came up with a player
THE NAME, "VE NNARI" never falls to brmg up sweet they hope can crack thelf
memories of his remarkable achievement near a generation ago startmg lineup He IS Dave
as coach of the old Rutland Red Devil football team High School Roberts, a 21-year-old third
athletes of today weren 't around then, but a lot of fans were who baseman from the UmverSity
remember what the man Vennar1 and a gang of hoys did at of Oregon, who showed
tremendous power this past
Rutland
It really came m two great periods, 1948-1950, then m a season with 12 homers and 47
runs batted m lor the Ducks.
brilliant five-year span, 195o through 1959
!Wberts wasted no tune m
First the three year record: Rutland was 28-2-ll m 1948, '49
g With the Padres,
Signin
and '50
although
club VIce President
Then begmmng in 1955, and extendmg through 1959, Rutland
won 44, lost one, tied nohody ' That !mal undefeated season Peter Bavas1 would give no
terms of the contract The
brought Jun the Ohio Coach of the Year honors (Class A)
Padres want Roberts to report
We sportswriters of that day had a lot of fun w1th Jim's
directly to the club and he was
famous (or infamous J Sally Rand Play. Sally, oldtuners will to be placed on the active list
recall, was a legendary female from somewhere deep in the today
bistros of the Chicago Loop who danced m pubhc weanng
The Indians chose second
somewhat less than street dress
and selected Richard MaMmg,
Jun hlmsel! named the play for Sally, slyly, of course, on the a 17-year-old shortstop who
apparent assumption that a football can be hidden from the batted 613 for LaSalle High
oppostion througll the use of sleight-of-hand magic, exactly as School m Niagara Falls, N.Y
Sally tried (sometnnes not successfully, we he ard) to h1de her Mannmg's coach calls him
charms With fans
"the greatest high school hitter
Anyhow, the !avonte question to ask of Jun 's upcommg I've ever seen "
opposmg coaches was, "Are you ready for Sally Rand '"
Texas selected Roy Lee
And you know, whether the oppost10n prepared for Sally or Howell, a third baseman from
not, every time I saw her called, she went for a TO or a long Lompo c, Ca lif ; Milwaukee
went for Danny Thomas, an
gainer
Someday I'm gomg to have Jun diagram Sally for mflelder from Southern illinois
publication. It came off Vennar1's exqUISite smgle wmg for- Umvers1ty; California picked
mation Somehow - I never did see 11 happen - the ball got from Dave Chalk, a third baseman
the spiiUimg trulback unnoticed mto the hands of a halfback out from the Uruvers1ty of Texas;
wide scampering down the sidelines The tunmg of the backs had and Boston chose Joel BIShop,
to be perfect, so did their ball bandlmg; so did the timmg of the a shortstop from Sacramento,
Cahf
call itself
Los Angeles went for John
It was football perfectiOn.
Harbm , shortstop from Greenville, S C.; Kansas C1ly

· Desk

reasons It was also empbastzed that children under
the age of ten, must be accompamed by an adult. Dr.
CurtiS pomted out that Lyne
Center pool is low; feel deep at
tis shallowest pomt and
recommended close super·
VISIOn of young children by
their parents

.

Exec Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH.
City EdlfDr

St ,

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7151

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992-7161

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Low Low Discount

8 Vacation Trips . ·
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538 W. Main
POMEROY, 0.
We honor BankAmericard 01nd Master Charge

WOODSTOCK Ill. (UP! ) Ilhn01s Racmg Board Chair·
man Alexander MacArthur,
who Is leadmg probes mto
possible race.f1xmg and cnme
snydiCate influence on Illm01s
racmg, has been given roundthe-clock pollee protecbon and
deputized so that he can carry
a gun
McHenry County Shenff
Arthur Tyrell said Tuesday he
ordered a pollee watch over
MacArthur and his family
several weeks ago after
strangers were spotted around
MacArthur's farm, located m
the Chi cago suburb of
Barrmgton Hills
"I know the cnme syndicate
and I wouldn't put anythmg
past them," the shenff said.
MacArthur, who said there
has not been any threats made
agamst himself or h1s family ,
said he suspects a race fiXing
nng w1th possible crime
sy ndicate connectiOns
operated at Maywood Park and
possibly Sportsmen 's Park.
The wvesbgahon was
opened after fires were set m
barns owned by harness racmg
driver Walter PaiSley

At A Fantastic

of

992-9981

Racing
Chainnan
Protected

These Are
Brand New Cars

LETS GO TO

Come In for Our Free Folder for

OfiJce Phone

" 2 21S6 Edtto rla l Phone 99'2

selected Jamie QUirk, a
shortstop from Whiltler, Calif ,
Detroit took Jerry Manuel, a
shortstop from Rancho Cor·
dova, Cab! , Oakland picked
Chester Lemon, a shortstop
from Los Angeles and Pills·
burgh
selected
Dwayne
Pelller, a shortstop from
Anaheun, Calif
Other f1rst-round picks were
pitcher Larry Chnstenson of
Marysville,
Wash ,
by
Pluladelph1a, catcher Bobbie
Goodman of Memphis, Tenn ,

. THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
ON NEW CARS
IKEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

DISNEY WORLD

Put&gt;lt shed dally eKcept
Saturdav by The Oh to \lj!illey
Publl shmg Company, 111
~S1lt'

l'HIRD ROUND
CHICHESTER, England
(UPI)- Aiex Olmedo, who won
the · men's singles litle at
Wunbledon in 1959, reached the
thU"d round of the '!Wihmans
Lawn Tennis Tourney Tuesday
by beating French southpaw
Enc Derasse, &amp;-I, 6-4, and
RhodeSian Tony Fawcett, 6-4,
6-2.

3rd Ave.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,

J m the fifth on Larkms' Single,
two stolen bases and a wild
pitch Racwe bed II aga m on
Sayre's doub le and Hart's
smgle The Tornadoes took a
one-run lead m the seventh E
Dunmng walked and was
brought home on a double by
Jenkms Lucas, the startmg'
Redieg hurler, was then
replaced by &lt;outhpaw Jeff
Blazer who quelled the
upnsmg
Cheshire scored the tymg run
w1th two outs m the seventh
Arnett led off the 1nnmg
reachmg second on a two base
error Luther Amos, runmng
for Arnett scored on Larkms'
smgle to nght Sayre m p1tchmg mne ~nmngs ,struckout 16
while walkmg two Lucas and
Blazer combmed to fan 13
while ISilumg four free passes
Nease paced Racme with
three hits m four tnps Larkms
led the Redlegs with three hits.
Preston and Bias had two hits
each
Cheshire travels to Bidwell
Fnday mght Racme will host
Middleport
Racme
201 001 101-6 8 j
Cheshire 102 010 101-&lt;i 12 2
POMEROY UPSET
Southwestern upset Pomeroy
10-8 m a zany contest at
Pomeroy Tuesday evenmg m
the opemng round of the MeigsGalha Pony League
The Galhans plated 8 runs m
the top of the seventh on mne
\lalks and three e1rors while
Pomeroy could get back only
one run m Its home half

SW
100 010 8-10 5
Pom
210 211 I-ll 7
W Call, B Marshall (6) ,
Nesse lroad (7 ) (l.P) and
Nesselroad, Blevms (7)
Carter, NIday ( 4J ( WP J,
Crouse (7) and Grate
BIDWELL WINS
BIDWELL - Jack Gardner,
a southpaw, all but totally
baffled his opposition Tuesday
evemng here to post a 9-2
victory over the Middleport A
Pony baseball club m the
opemng round of the MeigsGalha Pony Le~gue com.
pehtwn
Gardner had a no-hitter
gomg through siX mmngs, and
leadmg 9-0
Then m the top of the seventh
after Steve Walburn fanned,
Gardner
walked
Mike
Magnotta, and gave up a smgle
to centerf1elder Eh Ebersbach
Danny Hamson fanned, for
two outs, but shortstop Perk
Au! I doubled Magnotta and
Ebersbach scored ChriS Miller
grounded out to end the mnmg.
Middleport did not hit a ball
mto the outfield until Ebersbach's clean shot to ngh t
Meanwhile, Bidwell plated
two runs m the first mmng on a
leadoff walk by sta rling
nghthander Terry Whitlatch
and a home run by shortstop
Gregg Janes It was 4-ll after
two mmngs on smgles by Stout
and Freddie Logan, an error,
and a hit batsman
Bidwell broke 11 up m the
sixth with five run s on a double

Padres Get Another Dave Roberts

.s FUNNY r-Th_e_Da_i~-Se-ntil-el--.

Court

':Bidwell, S-W, Triumph

the $ports

1-New 1971 LT.D. 2 Dr., H.T.
Fully equipped, vinyl roof ._

2-New 1971 Galaxie 500'$
Dr., auto trans, P.S., radio, w·w tires,
wheel covers, body side molding.

4

by Montreal, pitcher Larry
Payne of Bedias, Tex , by
Cmcmnall, pitcher Richard
Ruthven of Fresno State
College by Mmnesota, outfielder Stephen Enghshhey of
South Houston, Tex, by
Houston , pitcher Preston
Hanna of Pensavola, Fla., by
Atlanta; outfielder Mtke Ondina of Cordova, Calif , by the
White Sox
Catcher D1ck Bengton of
Peona, ill , by the Mets, pitcher Scott McGregor of El
Seg undo , Calif , by the
Yankees , pitcher Bnan
Vernoy of Westmmster, Calif ,
by the Cubs; pitcher !Wbert
Dressler of Portland, Ore., by
San FranciSco ; pitcher Daniel
Larson of Alhambra, Calif., by
St WillS and catcher KeMeth
Thomas of BellVIlle, Ohio , by
Baltimore

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Un1ted Press International
w I Pet GB

Rtchmond

27 21 563

lOUISVille

26 23 537

Ttdewater

25 24 51 0 21h
24 24 500 3

Syracuse

by J-!f Hollenbaugh, a triple.
by Gene Welch, three walks
and an error Aull relieved the
t1r1ng Whitlatch w1th one out
andgotthesideoutafterWelch
tripled.
Gardner fanned 11, walked
six, hit nobody and was tough
w1th the 3-2 pitch He struck out
the side m the fifth, and got out
of serious trouble m the fourth
when Middleport had the hases
full on two walks and an error
by fanmng Ebersbach.
Whitlatch m five and two
thirds mmngs fanned 8, walked
three and hit two After hilling
Gardner m the third, he too
fanned the side ,
Ault fanned one, "alked
nobody m hiS two-thU"ds of an
mmng
Middleport IS at Racine
Fnday and Bidwell hosts
Cheshire
Middleport 000 000 ~2 2 ~
Bidwell
220 005 x-9 7 I
Whitlatch (LP), Ault (6) and
Stobart Gardner and Stout
VINTON WINS
Middleport B opened at home
Tuesday m the Me1gs-Gallia
Pony League With a 7-4 loss to
Vmton, Bill Peters p1tchmg a
six-hitter
Steve Bachner and Mick
Davenport gave up 8 flits to
Vmton batters Vmton put the
game away m the fourth mning
w1th two runs to make the
score lHJ. Mike Justice did the
most bat damage, gettmg two
triples and a smgle for Vmton
For Middleport B, Joey
Gleason got two of his club's
siX hits, both smgles
Friday Southwestern IS at
Middleport and Vmton IS at
Pomeroy
Vmton
302 010 1-7 8 2
M1dd. B
000 120 1-4 6 3
Peters and Tackett. Bachner
(LP), Davenport (4) and
Gleason, Thomas (7).

We measure our
prices in 'inches'
... our quality and
service in 'yards'.
Give us a try, at
Rizer Oil.

1\'2

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

24 22 522 2

Toledo
Rochester
Charleston
Pentnsu la

24 26 480 4
21 23 477 4
20 28 417 7

Tuesday's Results
Rt chmond 1 Louts vtlle l
lst, 7 tnntngs
Rtchmond 6 LoUISVIlle 1
2nd, 7 mmngs
Syr acuse at Tidewater
ppd , ram
Toledo at Penmsula
ppd ram
Charl eston s Rochester 2

John Now

SURGERY FOR
MARSHALL
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
(UP!) - Minnesota VIking
defensive end Jim Marshall
Imdergoes surgery today for
the removal of hone chips from
his r~ght ankle. One of the bone
chips has locked m the JOint.

Need A Bargain
Hamilton

G. E. Electrtc

Gas Dryer
At

DRYER
Al

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New G. E. 30"

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MIDDLEPORT, O.

�·5-The DaUy Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, o., June 7, 1~

J

Today's

SPQrt Parade

'

. By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports WrilerJ •

'

!

NEW YORK {UPI)-"I've been up at lhe top and down'pretty
near the bottom. What's happening to me now is nice but I can't
get 100 excited about II. The season isn't even one-third over.
That's why I'm not getting carried away."
Maybe Johnny Bench isn't, but a lot of other people are- over

him.

NEWYORKtUPI)-.Johnny
Bench's bat refuses to cool off.
Bench belted hts 14th homer
of the season in. the fourth in·
rung Tuesday night to dnve in
two runs . for the Oncinnati
Reds, but tt was not enough as
the Eastern Division leading
New York Mets edged Cincin·
•2
na l1. .,..
.
The win broke the seven·
game win streak of the Reds,
during which tiine Bench re·
turned to the hilling form of
1970.
In those seven games the AllSt ar catcher ha d hit seven
h&lt;))lle runs, which earned him
the honor of National League

Player of the Week.
. Those seven hot?e runs came
m ftve games, tymg a record
set in 1929.
.
But it was Tommie Agee who
pr~ved to be the deciding blow
against the Reds.·
..
Agee singled in the tie·
brea~ing run In the seventh in·
ning while Tug McGraw pitch·
ed two innings of scoreless re· lief for New York's win.
McGraw blanked the Reds in
the lasttwo innings to save Jim
McAndrews' fifth victory of the
season.
The Reds had gone ahead in
the fout:\h on Bench's homer
which also scored Bobby

Nobody in either league is swinging a holler bat.
Bench, blistering the ball at a better than .400 clip for Cincinnati the past eight days, has driven in t7 runs in that span and
buill himself a 12-game hitting streak.
He equaled a National League record with seven home runs in
five games last week and you should have seen the one he ripped
against the Mets Tuesday night.
It was his 14th homer of the year and the hall traveled 420feet if
it did an jnch. Jim McAndrew , who served it up with one on in the
fourth inning, didn't even bother looking at the ball going over
the left centerfield fence. He merely listened when Bench made ·
contact, and he knew.
Got Into Bad Habits
"Everybody keeps asking me what I'.m doing diffPrent," says
Oncy's baby-faced superstar. "Actually, nothing. Last year I got
into some bad hRbits at the plate. I know what I did and I don't
plan to let it happen again. Right now I'm trying to be a little
more aggressive at the plate, trying to stay back a little longer
be more compact."
One of the bad habits Bench developed las~ year after winning
By FRED McMANE
Minnesota edged Baltimore, 5the NL's MVP award the year before was a loop in his swing. It
UPI Sports Writer
4, in 15 innings, Boston blanked
was a little_one, but Ted Kluszewski, the Reds' batting coach,
The Philadelphia Phillies' Chicago, 2~. Oakland beat
picked il'&lt;up and straightened it out.
•
fans, who were cheerftig their Cleveland, 7-2, Texas beat New
young team wildly only a York, 6-3, Kansas City defeated
Now you go intoanyoftheother dugouts around the league and
month ago, finally turned on Milwaukee, 4·2, and Detroit
they'll tell you 24-year old Johnny Bench has put it all together
their
favor ites Tuesday night topped California, 11-6, in the
again and looks like the same ballplayer he did in 1970 when all
he did was knock in 148 runs, hit 45 homers, bat .293 and make with all the rancor and first game of a doubleheader
everybody say "there goes the first $200,000 player in baseball." derlsi veness of bygone days before losing, 4~.
after the Phils dropped their
Southpaw AI Downing pitBut It was altogether different last year.
19th
game
in
20
starts.
ched a five-hiller to notch his
Bench pressed, not only in front of the plate but behind it where
the
abuse
came
Ironically,
IDOth major league victory as
he tried io catch the perfect game every time out. The more he
on
a
day
that
management
had
the
Dodgers whipped the Cubs.
pressed, the worse he got. Then came the boos at homechosen
to
boost
the
club
out
of
Downing allowed the Cubs only
something he had never heard before.
its .plight. The Phils' front two hits after the third inning
Said Unrepealable Things
office had billed the night as to raise his record to 3-2.
"It got to the point where you almost didn't care," he says. "!
" turn-around night" and
Ted Simmons ' two-run
used to say some things under my breath when I'd hear all that everything from the an·
double snapped a 2-2 tie in the
screaming and booing, things I don't even care to repeat. This nouncement of players to the
eighth inning and paced the
winter I made myself a promise though . I promised I'd never let flashing of messages on the cardinals' victory over the
it get to me again, that I'd never let lhe fans dictate me the way scoreboard was done back· Giants. Rick Wise . went the
they tried to do."
wards.
distance for the Cardinals to
Johnny Bench neve~ really lost his fluid million-dollar balling
It wasn't amusing lo the even his record at 5-5. Joe
stroke last year but instead of making contact the way he had the fans, however. They chided the Torre had a homer for St. Louis
season before, he'd frequently swing through the ball . He simply Phillies constantly with cat- while Garry Maddox and Ken
didn't look !Ike the Johnny Bench of the year before.
calls and songs and laughed Henderson homered for Sah
when the Houston Francisco.
derisively
"I couldn't believe a guy with his ability could hit .238," says
Dave Marsb,all, the Mets' outfielder, not meaning It as any Astros eked out a 4-3 victory.
Tommie Agee singled home
Almost
as
if
to
spite
the
fans
the
tie-breaking run in the
personal knock at Bench. "Hell, I hit .238 and I con,sidered it an
the
Phillies
came
close
to
seventh inning and Tug Me·
off year. !fit was an off year for me, wh;lt on earth would you call
pulling out the game in the Graw pitched two scoreless
it for him ?"
Bench undoubtedly will fall into other ruts along the way now ninth when they scored all their
and then but right now, Sparky Anderson, the Reds' manager, runs. But an early two-run
believes his bread and butter hitter is right back to being "his homer by winning pitcher
,
Dave Roberts proved to be the EIGHT ·PIN LEAD
nonnal self."
LAS ·VEGAS, Nev. (UP!)difference.
"I think last year he was trying to pr0ve to everybody that he
In other National League Betty Morris of lone, Calif.,
wiiSMVP," says Anderson. "John found out he was human."
games, Los Angeles blanked he ld an eight-pin lead going
Chicago, 5~, St. Louis defeated into today's second round of the
'
San Francisco, 5..1, New York $20,000 Showboat Professional
!1! EVONNE WINS AGAIN
Rosempry Casals in an openiqg
edged Cincinnati, 3·2, and Women's Bbwling Association
. NOTTINGHAM , England match of the John Player Lawn
Atlanta nipped Montreal, 3-2. tournament. Miss Morris
{UPI)-Evonne Goolagong, Tennis Tournament. Miss
Pittsburgh at San Diego was rolled a six-game high of 1,276
1971 Wimbledon champion, Goolagong, a 20-year-old
Tuesday . Betty Costello of
rained out.
tuned·up for this year's defense Australian, played despite a
In American League action, Washington is second at 1,268.
with a 7-5, 6-3 victory over painful case of shingles.

Tolan.
John Mtlner began the dfive
for revenge m the bottom of the
fourth when he drilled his fifth
homer of the season o~f Gary
Nolan.
·

Agee singled m jim Beauchamp in the seventh inning
wtth lhe winning run. Beau·
champ had pinch-hit for MeAndrews.

Nolan, working on a 7-1 record, was forced to leave the
· th · th b
f
.. game m e stx
ecause o a
blister on his right foot. He
gave way to Don Gullett who
allowed the tying and winning
runs, suffering hiil third defeat
against two wins.
·

Th e Reds , now 7-1 on their
current road · trip, throw Jim
McGlothlin (2-4) against Gary
.
,
Gentry {S.J) m tonight s1game . .
A single game Thursday winds
up this series and the Reds
move into Montreal for a three.
· game series to end the road
trip.

Milner scored the tying run
in the sixth inning on a double
by Cleon Jones.

. · ti'
h •·
Cmcmna
opens a om"
stand June 13 with a twi.night
twin bill against Philadelphia.

Roberts Has Two-Run Homer,
Astros Sink Phillies,· 4-3

•

Goalby, Harrison, Worsha'll Fail .T~ Qualify For U.S. Open

Mets · Rally, End Reds Streak, 3•2

&lt;f .•,

innings to preserve Jim MeAn·
drew's fifth victory against
only one loss as the Mets edged
the Reds. Johnny Bench ac·
counted for Cincinnati 's runs
with his 14th homer while
rookie John Milner hit his fifth
for the Mets.
Darrell Evans' two-run

•

BASE,BAL'L STANDINGS
' ,,'~}
I ft

By Unltt!d Press Iotematlonl!l
Big name golfers Paul
Harney, Don Massengale,
Deane Beman, Jim Berber and
Johnnyl'ottmade it to the IS&lt;&gt;
man iield for the June 1~18
U.S. Open at Pebble Beach,
caur.
Some househy ld names

"I"~

~

0

'

American league

Notional league(
· · ' East
b
w.
I.
pet.
g.
·
New York . 32 13 .711
Piltsburgrl
27 16 .628 4
Chicago .
24 19 .558 7
Montreal . 19 25 .432 l2'h
St. LouiS
18 28 .391 l4'h
Philadelphia 16 29 .356 16
West '
1
29
Los Angeles
. w' 18 · .6p1c7t ..g.b.
,Ci ncinnati
27 19 .587 Ph
Houston
27 19 .587 l'h
Atlanta
21 23 .477 6'h
San Diegq
16 29 .356 12
San Francisco 17 35 .327 1411,
•
Tuesday's Results
Atlan ta 3.Montreal 2 ·

East
w. I. pel. g.b.
25 18 .581 Detroit
21 22 ..488 4
Baltimore
20 21 .488 4
Cleveland
18 22 .450 5'~&gt;
Boston
18 25 .419 7
New York
15 24 .385 8
MilWaukee
:West

w.

I. pel. g.b.

Oakland
30 13 .698
Minnesota
25 16 .610 4
Chicago
25 18 .581 5
Californ ia
21 25 .457 101/2
Texas
19 26 .422 12
Kansas City 18 25 .419 12
Tuesday's Results
Kan City 4 Milwaukee 2

r

Linescores
.'

Trial Scheduled

Minn 5 Bait 4, 15 Inns

Today's Probable Pitchers
tAll Times EDT)
Milwaukee (Lon borg J-2) at
Kansas City (Drago 3-4), 8:30
p.m . ·"
Allan fa ( Niekro 7.4) at p.m.
New York (Kline 3·1) at
MOntrea l (Torrez 4-3}. 8 p.m.
- Cincinnati (McGlothlin 2-4) at Texas (Shellenback 1-2), 8:30
New York (Gentry_3·3l. 8 p.m. p.m .
Ca li fornia (Ryan 4-4) at
Houston (Reuss J.4l at
Philadelphia (Car lton 5-6). 7:30 Detroit (Niekro 1-0J. 9 p.m.
Oakland (Holtzman 8·3) at
p.m.
Chi cago (Hooton 4-4) at Los Cleveland (Tidrow 4-S) , 7:30
p.m.
Angeles (Singer 3-5 ). 11 p.m.
Minnesota (Perry 4-4) at
Pittsburgh (Moose 3-2 and
Ellis 5-2) at San Diego (Kirby Baltimore (Dobson HL 7:30
p.m.
3-6 and Arlin 4-SJ. 2. 9 p.m.
Boston (Krausse i -3) at
Thursday's Games
Chkago !Bahnsen H). 2:15
Cincinnat i at New York
tA ll Times EOTI
St. Louis (Cleveland 4-4) at
San Fran cisco (Marlchal 2-8). 4

homer highlighted a three-run
third inning that carried the
Braves over the Expos. A runscoring single by Rico 'carty
preceded Evans'. ninth homer
and helped Ron Reed to his St . Loui s at San Fran
fourth victory in 10 decisions. Atlanta at Montreal, night
Boots Day collected lour hits Houston at Phi Ia .• night
Chicago at Los Ang ., night
for Montreal.
Pitts at. San _Diego, night

Eisenhower became president
of Columbia University in New
York City.
A thought for the day :
American poet Ralph Waldo
By United Press International Emerson said " Beauty without
Today is Wednesday, June 7, grace is the hook without the
the !~9th day of 1972 with 207 to bait."
follow .
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
RETAINS TITLE
The morning stars are
LONDON (UPI) - Chris
Jupiter and Saturn.
Finegan of Britain retained his
The evening stars are Venus, European light heavyweight
Mars and Mercury.
title Tuesday on an eighth
Those born on this day are round knockout of Holland's
under the sign of Gemini .
Jan Lubbers . Finnegan is
British fashion expert, expected to meet world champ
George "Beau" Brummell, was Bob Foster in a title match
here on Oct. 10.
born Jtine 7, 1778.
On this day in history:
In 1864 delegates meeting in
Baltimore nominated Abraham
Lincoln and Andrew Johnson to
head the Republican presiden·
tial ticket.
In 1933 Great Britain, France ,
Italy and Germany signed a
ten-year peace pact.
In 1939 King George VI and
Queen Elizabeth became lhe
first British monarchs to visit
the United States.
In 1948 Gen. Dwight D.

p.m .

Thursday's Games

Milw at Kan City, night
New York at Texas. night
!Only games sche,duledl

Today's

Your Mattress
Is Lumpy Your Rugs Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Suite
Is Faded and
Torn - The
Lamps Are Dingy
And the Stove

Almanac

'

.',
.•

LADIES SLIP-ON AND OXFORDS STYLE

l
,l
•

1t

l

~

An~•----m-R_ffi_M_B-RA-ND_N_~__Loo_K_'~

:·

Do a 10ft lhoe mto summer.

~ lhoea were designed
wllh beauty and comfort In
mind. Try them and see!

t'

Tol an,C in

·

g. ob r. h. pet.
43 172 29 57 .331
43 155 26 51 32.9

ROAST.

USDR
Blade
Cut

CHOICE
·

CHUCK

·

·
ROAST Center
·Cut ......................... !~:.

Round Bone

Chuck Roast
lb.

$

lb.

79e

Oscar Mayer

Ra.COrn

ALL MEAT

SLICED BAOON

WIENERS
lb.

K·raft • 6 Stick .

69e

Vacuum Pak

59e

2 lb.

MIRACLE MARGARINE .

-------

3 Del Monte
Del Monte-Crushed

PINEAPPLE.

15lfz
oz.

VALUABl f

I

Kelly , Chi

Braun , Min 30 101

Pi nsn,Cal
Alomr. Cal
May, Chi
Freehn. Dei

41 147
46 189
41 154
30 106

8 31

21
21
26
17

45
57
45
31

==~

r,Jos

.307

TIDE

~rr==========='~)
~Jii
SERV ING : Break last. Lunch, Dinners
NEW MENUS - NEW PRICES

Colbert , SO 10; Aaron

WEDNESDAY ,

and Evans, Af l. May and
Watson, Hou 9.
American League : Jackson ,
Oak 12: Dun can, Oak 10; Allen ,
Chi and Ca sh, Det 9, Harper,
Bas, Stanton , Cal and Can igl ia·
ro , Mil 7.
Runs Batted In
Nationa l League : Kingman ,

Itali an Night

Spaghetti With
Italian Sauce

·

Any sl eak i n the house.
$4.95 plu s fir-st cocktail.

SF 38 ; Bench . Cin 37; Stargell ,
Pitt 35 ; Bonds, SF 32 ; Rader

With Maxine At The Organ

and Watson , Hou and 01 i ve r , "?-o-o-o-o-o-oo-O&lt;::»&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;o.:&gt;.c&gt;.c&gt;.c,..J.

Pit t 31.

'

LADIES MOLDED SOLE REG. 11.79
CHILDREN·M ISSES-GIRLS

o

I I

SPORT SNEAKERS

BOBBIE BROOK5-ROBBIE LYEEN
SUMMER

American Made

OPEN FRIDAY-SATURDAY

9:30 to 9:00

I

I

SWIM WEAR

69~

PEAS••••••••

Alcoa · 18"

'

'•

AT

..

6·10.72

OFFER EXPIRES
LIMIT 1 COUPON PER PURCHASE

$

99
Yard

45 INCH SPRING FLOCK DOTS .

16 oz.
cans

DOllED SWISS

CATSUP. ••••

ALUMINUM FOIL

COFFEE . ! $} 59
2

[

AT IIIII1MD
lltlTIAND Dt:Pr. SIORE

DEL MONTE
Cream Style or Whole Grain

CORN ..... 3 :a:

$1.59 45 inches wi de.$
New summer flock dot. In
e latest summer colors.
n floor .

.. '···

Broolss · Aileen • Jeanie
Famous
Labels
SAVE
NOW!

·:

'1500
~.
· EACH

'700EACH
,.

QUANTITIES "

· Prices Effective thru June 10

•

\.

READY TO WEAR

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

\ ..

STIFFLERS SECOND FLOOR

LADIES SUMMER

SANDALS
Ladles' new summer sandals - hi :

the latest styles. brudgel priced. :
asst . colors. Sites 5 to 10. Shoe :
):iepl.

Ladles' Reg . $1 .79 value
Jamalco Shari$. P.S!I.
colors, sites 8 to 18.
Permonent
press ,
outstanding value. Yes.
Stillier's save you
money.

1

Clea n up group of Spring and
Summer fam ous Bobbie Brooks .
Aileen - Jeanie Ladies' Sportswear, Shorts · Knit Tops, SportPants, Coordinates. All this spring
new merchandise. See this large
group and save at Stiffler's second
floor ready-to-wear.

·;·:··

JAMAICA SHORTS

TO

LIMIT

:I

LADIES SUMMER

HOT PANTS • JAMAICA
SHORTS ·
Values to 2.79 In this
group
ot
ladles'
doubleknit Jama ica
~horts and hot pants .
Wide selection. ·Sites a
to 1ij. ~st . colors ond
slvles . Stillier'~ Rtitdy

•
,.

1

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•

Spring and Summer Styles

GROU.P 3-VALUES TO '12.99 :

LADIES REG. '1.79
PERMANENT PRESS

RIGHT
RESERVED

SPORTSWEAR

00
st.\.t •1
EACH
;t

..•

AT TUPPERS PlAINS

LODWICK MARKET

Folgers • All Grinds

to

,.

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Reg .

AT RACINE
WAID CROSS SONS

00

GROUP 2-VALUES TO '17.99

cans

btls.

99 $

Pants ·Suits &amp; Dresses

S~\-l

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Reg . $3.99 yard . 60 inches
wide, 100 pet . polyeste r
doubl e knit in plain and
filn
pattern s. Wid e

14 oz.

Famous Bobbie Robbie
Lyeen new summer styles,
smart, in one and two pieces
all latest styles in all sizes.
Bright colors . Yes, you save
at Stiffler's.

SHOP FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P.M. SHOP
STIFFLER$
Cleanup! Ladies' Spring and Summer
FIRST

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LADIES FAMOUS

$

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ALSO TO 10 .000

J

IL OP~~u~?:~ aB~ST~~~ss

.306
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Home Runs
National Leagu e: Bench, Cin
and l&lt;.ingman, SF 14 ; Stargell.
II ;

'

S ONAT A $4 00
ALSO \50 TO \91~
WEOOlNG R ING 62 .!10

IN THE HEART OF MIDDLEPORT·

39 128 IS 40 .313
35 123 20 38 .309

Ladies' spring and summer pants sui ts and ::...
dresses regrouped tor clearance . Easy ca re new
miracle fabrics. No-irons, famous brands. Out
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King Size

RINGS

SOl.lLOQUV' UOO
WEODI NG IHNG 1S

MARTI N RESTAURANT

Rudi.Oak
40 17i 27 56 .327
McCraw, Cle

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cans

COUPON

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FROSTY ACRES

Concentrated

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$ 99

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FROZEN FOODS

2

lifetime trade-in-privilege.
There is no finer diamond ring

ment s.

t.

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DOUBLE KNITS
LEMONADE

guarantee of perfect quality.
protect ion against loss and

American League

Pniela. KC
Al len. Chi

Pill

Every Keepsake Diamond Ring
comes with a written

45 177 34 56 .316 8-4; Biy leven, Minn 7-4: Cole- lhe str inged mu sica l in stru -

Mota, LA
38 114 18 36 .3 16 man , Del 7-5.
Walsn, Hou 46 170 33 53 .312

-:

POLYESTER

SWEn

When you know
it's for keeps

Jf)f LEADING BATTERS

'•'
•,•

60 INCHES WIDE 100%

CHUCK

a

TALKS CONTINUE
DETROIT {UP!) - The Detroit Lions continued contract
discussions with quarterback
Bill Munson today after signing
wide
receiver Larry Walton to
Major League leaders ' ·
Ameriun league: Allen, Chi
By United Press International 37 ; Jackson, Oak 33; Duncan . a multi-year contract Tuesday.
Leading Batters
Oak 27 , Darw in , Minn 26 ; May . Walton , who caught 30 passes
National Leag ue
Chi 25.
and scored five touchdowns
g. ab r . h. pet.
Pitching
Snguiln, Pit 42 163 19 57 .350
National League : Sutton , LA had played out his option o~
,Aiou , Sl L 41 155 18 54 .348 8·0; Seaver. NY 8-2; Nolan, Cin May 1.
Torre,SI.L,. 44 171 23 58 .339 an d Ray , Hou 7-1; Niekro, Atl
Lee, SO
37 135 18 44 .324 ] .4.
Clmenle, Pit 39 156 27 50 .321
American League : Lolich,
Oliver. Pi t 43 178 22 57 .320 Def 9-3; Perry , Clev 9·4;
The harp is th e oldest of
Cdeno, Ho u 401 54 26 49 .3 18 Holtzman, Oak 8-3; Wood. Chi

REG. '3.99 YARD

FRESH PRODUCE BUYS

Marlin Bohen, 143; Tom Joyce three-way playoff.
' 'i ~e Hill, at 141; Bob
and Pete Davison 144; Ron
144, and
Smith, Austin Straub and Panasiuk, with
Glenn
Johnson,
145,
qualified
Ralph .Johnson 145, and Russell
at Birmingham, Mich., and m
Helwig, 146.
John Baker, tlie assistant pro others made the grade at
at Butler C.C., led a four -man Atlanta. They were Tom
contingent with a 73-68+.141. Collins, 142; Lee Wykle, 143;
Jim Kein and Dan O'Neill shot and Poll, Tommy Aaron . Tom
142s and Chuck Scally had a 143 Jenkins and Larry Stubbiefield
·'
before winning his berth in a at 145.

qualifiers there were Burt -Johnson. Ralph Baker and
Weaver with a i42, Everette Paul Moran Jr.
Vinzant at 143 and Larry Wood
Bunched at 144 were Beman,
on a 144.
.
Barber. Ronald Tery, Jack
The huge Philadelphia Lewis, Lee Elder, Dick Hencontingent was led by Jim drickson and Uoyd Monroe.
Hardy and Dwight Nevil, with Billy Ziobro, who finished at
140s. Tom Watson and Bunky 145, earned his berth in a
Henry and Lee Bonse fired playoff.
l42s, while in at 143 were Gil
Other qualifiers at Green·
Gonsalves, Jim Jewell, Bob wich were Ron Leteiller, 142 ;

PAIR •,

AT·THE BIG 3 MARKETS

.. 1

Reg .
$1.79
Va l ue,
American made. In white,
black , navy. Sizes 5 to 10 .
American made, moulded
so le . Shoe

FOOTWEA

•

•

,.SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

..

SUMMER SPORTS
CASUAL

I

1

"J

were 49 who made the
minimum cutoffs on Monday.
The 115 successful candidates
join 35 players exempted from
sectional qualifying.
Tuesday'S' low score was a
139 shared by St. Louis golfers
La rry Ziegler and Bill Hall at
their neighboring course. Ziegler carded a 7o.&lt;i9 and Hall
fired a 7 1~ . The three other

~

.

l1

'•

Won't Cook.

berths.
Bob Goal by shot a 157
Tuesday at the Westwood
Country Club in St. Louis to
miss a crack at fame and
fortune. Dutch Harrison, attempting to qualify for his 25th
·Open, failed with a 156 on the
same course. Lew Worsham,
the 1947 · U.S. golf champion

co.uldn't rrack the 143
mmtmum at. th e Bu.tler
· Country Club in Pittsburgh .
Harney and Massengale
qualified at 142 and 143 in
action at Greenwich, Cnnn.,
Beman and Barber shot 144s at
Philadelphia and Pott · made
the cut at Atlanta with a 145.
A total of 6li golfers qualified
for the Open on Tuesday. There

Payne Indicted,

Oakland 7 Cleveland 2
Pitts at San Dieg o, ppd ., rain Boston 2 Chicago 0.
DetroiiS Calif 6, lsi
Los Angeles S Chicag·a 0
Calif 4 Detroit 0. 2nd
St. Louis 5 San Fran 3
Today's Probable Pitchers

failedto~ualifyforthecoveted

.

Major League Results
By United Press lnlern.liono l (2nd game)
National League ·
Col iforn ia 000 310 ooo- 4 13 0
Pitts at San Diego. ppd .. rain Detroit . .
000 ooo ooo- o 4 3
Wright (S-2) and Stephenson;
Chicago
000 000 ooo- 0 50 . Coleman, Zachary (8) and
Los Ang
JPO000 20x- s 10 0 Freehan. LP- Coleman (7 S).
Hands, Hamilton (7), Aker HR - Aiomar (lstl .
l8l and Hundley ; Downing (3·2)
ATLANTA (UPIJ _ A Fulton
and Sims. LP.:._Hands (4-2) .
(15 innings I
' -Minnesota
County grand jury Tuesday
51. Louis
001 001 OJo- s 9 2 .
001 000 003 000 001- 5 16 1 indicted Atlanta Hawks '
SanFran
001 000 101- 3 7 1 Baltimore
basketball center Tom Payne
Wise (5-S) and Simmons;
000 300 100 000 OOo-4 11 o
h
Is
Stone, McMahon (8·) and· Rader.
Kaat, Norton IlL Granger . on t ree coun of rape and
LP- Stone (3-5). HRs- Torre (9). Corbin (121 and Roof. four.counls with intent to rape.
16th). Maddox (3rd) , Henderson Mitterwal.d (9); Palmer, Watt
Payne, who a lso faces
(6th).
(9). Jackson (9). Harri son (9). charges of rape in Cobb
Leonhard (1~). Scott (14) and
Houston
200 200 ooo- 4 11 0 Elchebarren, Oa tes ( 12). WP- County, Ga., and Louisville,
Phi Ia
ooo ooo 003- 3 6 1 Corbin 12·01 . LP- Scott (0-l) . Ky. , was ordered held without
Roberts. Gladding (9) and HR- Soderholm (Sihl .
bail in the county jail fo r trial
Howard; Frymann Lersc h (6) ,
in
September.
Selma (9) and Ryan . WP- Oakland , 100 000 024- 7 12 0
Roberls (4-31. LP- Fryman (2· Cleveland 002 000 OOo- 2 B2 The 21-year-old rookie joined
5) . HR- Roberls (1st).
Blue. Knowles (7) , Fingers the Hawks last year and
(7) , Locker (8) and Duncan ;
At lant'l'
003 ooo ooo-) 5o Colber t, Mingor i (8), Farmer showed promise of becoming a
Monlr~al
001010 ooo- 2 11 1 (81 and Fosse. WP- Fingers (5· star player . The Hawks picked
Reed (4-6) and Will iams; l) . LP- Mingori (0-3) . HR - him as a so-called "hardship
McAnally (l -6) and Humphrey. Jackson (t1fh) .
draft" while Payne wa s
HR- Evans (91hl .
New York 011 000 Ot o- 3 4 I playing at the University of
Cincinnati 000 200 ODO- 2 5 I Texas
100 203 OOx- 6 14 3 Kentucky .
N.Y.
000101 10x- 3 8 1 P e I e r so n. McDaniel (6),
The·indictments followed the
Nolan , Gullett (6) and Beene (7) and Munson ; BosBench ; McAndrew, McGraw man, Lindblad (7) and Bill ings. reported appearance of all the
(8) and Grote. WP- McAndrew WP- Bosman (4-5). LP- Peter· alleged victims before the
(S·ll . LP- Gulletl (2-31. HRs- son (J.st. HRs- Howard (3rdl.
grand jury Tuesday morning.
Bench (14th). Milner (5th ).
Torres (Jrd).
The assaults were alleged to
:- .
Mtlw
002 ooo ooo- 2 8 o have taken place between late
Kan City
010 002 lOx- 4 9 0 March and mid-May.
Amencan League
Brett. Linzy (7) and Rodri ·
The maximum penally for
(lsi Game)
guez; Murphy, Burgmeier (9)
Colllornlo 0000111 3Q-6102 and May. WP- Murphy (2·1) . rape in Gem·gia is death.
Detroit
204 002 ODO- 8 8 2 LP- Bretl (2-6) . HR - Auerbach
Rose. Fisher (3), Foster (5), (lsi) .
Queen (7) and Kusnyer: Lolich,
Seelbach (8) and Hai ler . WP- Boston
000 002 ODO- 2 6 0
Lolich (9-3) . LP- Rose (1 -l) . Ch icago
OOOOOOOQ0-0 40
No two person s have idenHRs- Brinkman (2n d) , Kos&gt;o Siebert (5-2) and Fisk ; Wood, tical fingerprints and thei r
(3rd) , Rodriguez tlstt. Ssanton Kealey (9) and Herrmann . LP pattern can not be altered.
17thI. Oliver 15th) .
. - Wood IB·4) .

Te)(as 6 New York 3

New York 3 Cincinnati 2
Houston A Phlla J

0

'1''·
PAIR

�·5-The DaUy Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, o., June 7, 1~

J

Today's

SPQrt Parade

'

. By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports WrilerJ •

'

!

NEW YORK {UPI)-"I've been up at lhe top and down'pretty
near the bottom. What's happening to me now is nice but I can't
get 100 excited about II. The season isn't even one-third over.
That's why I'm not getting carried away."
Maybe Johnny Bench isn't, but a lot of other people are- over

him.

NEWYORKtUPI)-.Johnny
Bench's bat refuses to cool off.
Bench belted hts 14th homer
of the season in. the fourth in·
rung Tuesday night to dnve in
two runs . for the Oncinnati
Reds, but tt was not enough as
the Eastern Division leading
New York Mets edged Cincin·
•2
na l1. .,..
.
The win broke the seven·
game win streak of the Reds,
during which tiine Bench re·
turned to the hilling form of
1970.
In those seven games the AllSt ar catcher ha d hit seven
h&lt;))lle runs, which earned him
the honor of National League

Player of the Week.
. Those seven hot?e runs came
m ftve games, tymg a record
set in 1929.
.
But it was Tommie Agee who
pr~ved to be the deciding blow
against the Reds.·
..
Agee singled in the tie·
brea~ing run In the seventh in·
ning while Tug McGraw pitch·
ed two innings of scoreless re· lief for New York's win.
McGraw blanked the Reds in
the lasttwo innings to save Jim
McAndrews' fifth victory of the
season.
The Reds had gone ahead in
the fout:\h on Bench's homer
which also scored Bobby

Nobody in either league is swinging a holler bat.
Bench, blistering the ball at a better than .400 clip for Cincinnati the past eight days, has driven in t7 runs in that span and
buill himself a 12-game hitting streak.
He equaled a National League record with seven home runs in
five games last week and you should have seen the one he ripped
against the Mets Tuesday night.
It was his 14th homer of the year and the hall traveled 420feet if
it did an jnch. Jim McAndrew , who served it up with one on in the
fourth inning, didn't even bother looking at the ball going over
the left centerfield fence. He merely listened when Bench made ·
contact, and he knew.
Got Into Bad Habits
"Everybody keeps asking me what I'.m doing diffPrent," says
Oncy's baby-faced superstar. "Actually, nothing. Last year I got
into some bad hRbits at the plate. I know what I did and I don't
plan to let it happen again. Right now I'm trying to be a little
more aggressive at the plate, trying to stay back a little longer
be more compact."
One of the bad habits Bench developed las~ year after winning
By FRED McMANE
Minnesota edged Baltimore, 5the NL's MVP award the year before was a loop in his swing. It
UPI Sports Writer
4, in 15 innings, Boston blanked
was a little_one, but Ted Kluszewski, the Reds' batting coach,
The Philadelphia Phillies' Chicago, 2~. Oakland beat
picked il'&lt;up and straightened it out.
•
fans, who were cheerftig their Cleveland, 7-2, Texas beat New
young team wildly only a York, 6-3, Kansas City defeated
Now you go intoanyoftheother dugouts around the league and
month ago, finally turned on Milwaukee, 4·2, and Detroit
they'll tell you 24-year old Johnny Bench has put it all together
their
favor ites Tuesday night topped California, 11-6, in the
again and looks like the same ballplayer he did in 1970 when all
he did was knock in 148 runs, hit 45 homers, bat .293 and make with all the rancor and first game of a doubleheader
everybody say "there goes the first $200,000 player in baseball." derlsi veness of bygone days before losing, 4~.
after the Phils dropped their
Southpaw AI Downing pitBut It was altogether different last year.
19th
game
in
20
starts.
ched a five-hiller to notch his
Bench pressed, not only in front of the plate but behind it where
the
abuse
came
Ironically,
IDOth major league victory as
he tried io catch the perfect game every time out. The more he
on
a
day
that
management
had
the
Dodgers whipped the Cubs.
pressed, the worse he got. Then came the boos at homechosen
to
boost
the
club
out
of
Downing allowed the Cubs only
something he had never heard before.
its .plight. The Phils' front two hits after the third inning
Said Unrepealable Things
office had billed the night as to raise his record to 3-2.
"It got to the point where you almost didn't care," he says. "!
" turn-around night" and
Ted Simmons ' two-run
used to say some things under my breath when I'd hear all that everything from the an·
double snapped a 2-2 tie in the
screaming and booing, things I don't even care to repeat. This nouncement of players to the
eighth inning and paced the
winter I made myself a promise though . I promised I'd never let flashing of messages on the cardinals' victory over the
it get to me again, that I'd never let lhe fans dictate me the way scoreboard was done back· Giants. Rick Wise . went the
they tried to do."
wards.
distance for the Cardinals to
Johnny Bench neve~ really lost his fluid million-dollar balling
It wasn't amusing lo the even his record at 5-5. Joe
stroke last year but instead of making contact the way he had the fans, however. They chided the Torre had a homer for St. Louis
season before, he'd frequently swing through the ball . He simply Phillies constantly with cat- while Garry Maddox and Ken
didn't look !Ike the Johnny Bench of the year before.
calls and songs and laughed Henderson homered for Sah
when the Houston Francisco.
derisively
"I couldn't believe a guy with his ability could hit .238," says
Dave Marsb,all, the Mets' outfielder, not meaning It as any Astros eked out a 4-3 victory.
Tommie Agee singled home
Almost
as
if
to
spite
the
fans
the
tie-breaking run in the
personal knock at Bench. "Hell, I hit .238 and I con,sidered it an
the
Phillies
came
close
to
seventh inning and Tug Me·
off year. !fit was an off year for me, wh;lt on earth would you call
pulling out the game in the Graw pitched two scoreless
it for him ?"
Bench undoubtedly will fall into other ruts along the way now ninth when they scored all their
and then but right now, Sparky Anderson, the Reds' manager, runs. But an early two-run
believes his bread and butter hitter is right back to being "his homer by winning pitcher
,
Dave Roberts proved to be the EIGHT ·PIN LEAD
nonnal self."
LAS ·VEGAS, Nev. (UP!)difference.
"I think last year he was trying to pr0ve to everybody that he
In other National League Betty Morris of lone, Calif.,
wiiSMVP," says Anderson. "John found out he was human."
games, Los Angeles blanked he ld an eight-pin lead going
Chicago, 5~, St. Louis defeated into today's second round of the
'
San Francisco, 5..1, New York $20,000 Showboat Professional
!1! EVONNE WINS AGAIN
Rosempry Casals in an openiqg
edged Cincinnati, 3·2, and Women's Bbwling Association
. NOTTINGHAM , England match of the John Player Lawn
Atlanta nipped Montreal, 3-2. tournament. Miss Morris
{UPI)-Evonne Goolagong, Tennis Tournament. Miss
Pittsburgh at San Diego was rolled a six-game high of 1,276
1971 Wimbledon champion, Goolagong, a 20-year-old
Tuesday . Betty Costello of
rained out.
tuned·up for this year's defense Australian, played despite a
In American League action, Washington is second at 1,268.
with a 7-5, 6-3 victory over painful case of shingles.

Tolan.
John Mtlner began the dfive
for revenge m the bottom of the
fourth when he drilled his fifth
homer of the season o~f Gary
Nolan.
·

Agee singled m jim Beauchamp in the seventh inning
wtth lhe winning run. Beau·
champ had pinch-hit for MeAndrews.

Nolan, working on a 7-1 record, was forced to leave the
· th · th b
f
.. game m e stx
ecause o a
blister on his right foot. He
gave way to Don Gullett who
allowed the tying and winning
runs, suffering hiil third defeat
against two wins.
·

Th e Reds , now 7-1 on their
current road · trip, throw Jim
McGlothlin (2-4) against Gary
.
,
Gentry {S.J) m tonight s1game . .
A single game Thursday winds
up this series and the Reds
move into Montreal for a three.
· game series to end the road
trip.

Milner scored the tying run
in the sixth inning on a double
by Cleon Jones.

. · ti'
h •·
Cmcmna
opens a om"
stand June 13 with a twi.night
twin bill against Philadelphia.

Roberts Has Two-Run Homer,
Astros Sink Phillies,· 4-3

•

Goalby, Harrison, Worsha'll Fail .T~ Qualify For U.S. Open

Mets · Rally, End Reds Streak, 3•2

&lt;f .•,

innings to preserve Jim MeAn·
drew's fifth victory against
only one loss as the Mets edged
the Reds. Johnny Bench ac·
counted for Cincinnati 's runs
with his 14th homer while
rookie John Milner hit his fifth
for the Mets.
Darrell Evans' two-run

•

BASE,BAL'L STANDINGS
' ,,'~}
I ft

By Unltt!d Press Iotematlonl!l
Big name golfers Paul
Harney, Don Massengale,
Deane Beman, Jim Berber and
Johnnyl'ottmade it to the IS&lt;&gt;
man iield for the June 1~18
U.S. Open at Pebble Beach,
caur.
Some househy ld names

"I"~

~

0

'

American league

Notional league(
· · ' East
b
w.
I.
pet.
g.
·
New York . 32 13 .711
Piltsburgrl
27 16 .628 4
Chicago .
24 19 .558 7
Montreal . 19 25 .432 l2'h
St. LouiS
18 28 .391 l4'h
Philadelphia 16 29 .356 16
West '
1
29
Los Angeles
. w' 18 · .6p1c7t ..g.b.
,Ci ncinnati
27 19 .587 Ph
Houston
27 19 .587 l'h
Atlanta
21 23 .477 6'h
San Diegq
16 29 .356 12
San Francisco 17 35 .327 1411,
•
Tuesday's Results
Atlan ta 3.Montreal 2 ·

East
w. I. pel. g.b.
25 18 .581 Detroit
21 22 ..488 4
Baltimore
20 21 .488 4
Cleveland
18 22 .450 5'~&gt;
Boston
18 25 .419 7
New York
15 24 .385 8
MilWaukee
:West

w.

I. pel. g.b.

Oakland
30 13 .698
Minnesota
25 16 .610 4
Chicago
25 18 .581 5
Californ ia
21 25 .457 101/2
Texas
19 26 .422 12
Kansas City 18 25 .419 12
Tuesday's Results
Kan City 4 Milwaukee 2

r

Linescores
.'

Trial Scheduled

Minn 5 Bait 4, 15 Inns

Today's Probable Pitchers
tAll Times EDT)
Milwaukee (Lon borg J-2) at
Kansas City (Drago 3-4), 8:30
p.m . ·"
Allan fa ( Niekro 7.4) at p.m.
New York (Kline 3·1) at
MOntrea l (Torrez 4-3}. 8 p.m.
- Cincinnati (McGlothlin 2-4) at Texas (Shellenback 1-2), 8:30
New York (Gentry_3·3l. 8 p.m. p.m .
Ca li fornia (Ryan 4-4) at
Houston (Reuss J.4l at
Philadelphia (Car lton 5-6). 7:30 Detroit (Niekro 1-0J. 9 p.m.
Oakland (Holtzman 8·3) at
p.m.
Chi cago (Hooton 4-4) at Los Cleveland (Tidrow 4-S) , 7:30
p.m.
Angeles (Singer 3-5 ). 11 p.m.
Minnesota (Perry 4-4) at
Pittsburgh (Moose 3-2 and
Ellis 5-2) at San Diego (Kirby Baltimore (Dobson HL 7:30
p.m.
3-6 and Arlin 4-SJ. 2. 9 p.m.
Boston (Krausse i -3) at
Thursday's Games
Chkago !Bahnsen H). 2:15
Cincinnat i at New York
tA ll Times EOTI
St. Louis (Cleveland 4-4) at
San Fran cisco (Marlchal 2-8). 4

homer highlighted a three-run
third inning that carried the
Braves over the Expos. A runscoring single by Rico 'carty
preceded Evans'. ninth homer
and helped Ron Reed to his St . Loui s at San Fran
fourth victory in 10 decisions. Atlanta at Montreal, night
Boots Day collected lour hits Houston at Phi Ia .• night
Chicago at Los Ang ., night
for Montreal.
Pitts at. San _Diego, night

Eisenhower became president
of Columbia University in New
York City.
A thought for the day :
American poet Ralph Waldo
By United Press International Emerson said " Beauty without
Today is Wednesday, June 7, grace is the hook without the
the !~9th day of 1972 with 207 to bait."
follow .
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
RETAINS TITLE
The morning stars are
LONDON (UPI) - Chris
Jupiter and Saturn.
Finegan of Britain retained his
The evening stars are Venus, European light heavyweight
Mars and Mercury.
title Tuesday on an eighth
Those born on this day are round knockout of Holland's
under the sign of Gemini .
Jan Lubbers . Finnegan is
British fashion expert, expected to meet world champ
George "Beau" Brummell, was Bob Foster in a title match
here on Oct. 10.
born Jtine 7, 1778.
On this day in history:
In 1864 delegates meeting in
Baltimore nominated Abraham
Lincoln and Andrew Johnson to
head the Republican presiden·
tial ticket.
In 1933 Great Britain, France ,
Italy and Germany signed a
ten-year peace pact.
In 1939 King George VI and
Queen Elizabeth became lhe
first British monarchs to visit
the United States.
In 1948 Gen. Dwight D.

p.m .

Thursday's Games

Milw at Kan City, night
New York at Texas. night
!Only games sche,duledl

Today's

Your Mattress
Is Lumpy Your Rugs Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Suite
Is Faded and
Torn - The
Lamps Are Dingy
And the Stove

Almanac

'

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LADIES SLIP-ON AND OXFORDS STYLE

l
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43 172 29 57 .331
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Kelly , Chi

Braun , Min 30 101

Pi nsn,Cal
Alomr. Cal
May, Chi
Freehn. Dei

41 147
46 189
41 154
30 106

8 31

21
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26
17

45
57
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31

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~rr==========='~)
~Jii
SERV ING : Break last. Lunch, Dinners
NEW MENUS - NEW PRICES

Colbert , SO 10; Aaron

WEDNESDAY ,

and Evans, Af l. May and
Watson, Hou 9.
American League : Jackson ,
Oak 12: Dun can, Oak 10; Allen ,
Chi and Ca sh, Det 9, Harper,
Bas, Stanton , Cal and Can igl ia·
ro , Mil 7.
Runs Batted In
Nationa l League : Kingman ,

Itali an Night

Spaghetti With
Italian Sauce

·

Any sl eak i n the house.
$4.95 plu s fir-st cocktail.

SF 38 ; Bench . Cin 37; Stargell ,
Pitt 35 ; Bonds, SF 32 ; Rader

With Maxine At The Organ

and Watson , Hou and 01 i ve r , "?-o-o-o-o-o-oo-O&lt;::»&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;o.:&gt;.c&gt;.c&gt;.c,..J.

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the latest styles. brudgel priced. :
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45 177 34 56 .316 8-4; Biy leven, Minn 7-4: Cole- lhe str inged mu sica l in stru -

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a

TALKS CONTINUE
DETROIT {UP!) - The Detroit Lions continued contract
discussions with quarterback
Bill Munson today after signing
wide
receiver Larry Walton to
Major League leaders ' ·
Ameriun league: Allen, Chi
By United Press International 37 ; Jackson, Oak 33; Duncan . a multi-year contract Tuesday.
Leading Batters
Oak 27 , Darw in , Minn 26 ; May . Walton , who caught 30 passes
National Leag ue
Chi 25.
and scored five touchdowns
g. ab r . h. pet.
Pitching
Snguiln, Pit 42 163 19 57 .350
National League : Sutton , LA had played out his option o~
,Aiou , Sl L 41 155 18 54 .348 8·0; Seaver. NY 8-2; Nolan, Cin May 1.
Torre,SI.L,. 44 171 23 58 .339 an d Ray , Hou 7-1; Niekro, Atl
Lee, SO
37 135 18 44 .324 ] .4.
Clmenle, Pit 39 156 27 50 .321
American League : Lolich,
Oliver. Pi t 43 178 22 57 .320 Def 9-3; Perry , Clev 9·4;
The harp is th e oldest of
Cdeno, Ho u 401 54 26 49 .3 18 Holtzman, Oak 8-3; Wood. Chi

REG. '3.99 YARD

FRESH PRODUCE BUYS

Marlin Bohen, 143; Tom Joyce three-way playoff.
' 'i ~e Hill, at 141; Bob
and Pete Davison 144; Ron
144, and
Smith, Austin Straub and Panasiuk, with
Glenn
Johnson,
145,
qualified
Ralph .Johnson 145, and Russell
at Birmingham, Mich., and m
Helwig, 146.
John Baker, tlie assistant pro others made the grade at
at Butler C.C., led a four -man Atlanta. They were Tom
contingent with a 73-68+.141. Collins, 142; Lee Wykle, 143;
Jim Kein and Dan O'Neill shot and Poll, Tommy Aaron . Tom
142s and Chuck Scally had a 143 Jenkins and Larry Stubbiefield
·'
before winning his berth in a at 145.

qualifiers there were Burt -Johnson. Ralph Baker and
Weaver with a i42, Everette Paul Moran Jr.
Vinzant at 143 and Larry Wood
Bunched at 144 were Beman,
on a 144.
.
Barber. Ronald Tery, Jack
The huge Philadelphia Lewis, Lee Elder, Dick Hencontingent was led by Jim drickson and Uoyd Monroe.
Hardy and Dwight Nevil, with Billy Ziobro, who finished at
140s. Tom Watson and Bunky 145, earned his berth in a
Henry and Lee Bonse fired playoff.
l42s, while in at 143 were Gil
Other qualifiers at Green·
Gonsalves, Jim Jewell, Bob wich were Ron Leteiller, 142 ;

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SUMMER SPORTS
CASUAL

I

1

"J

were 49 who made the
minimum cutoffs on Monday.
The 115 successful candidates
join 35 players exempted from
sectional qualifying.
Tuesday'S' low score was a
139 shared by St. Louis golfers
La rry Ziegler and Bill Hall at
their neighboring course. Ziegler carded a 7o.&lt;i9 and Hall
fired a 7 1~ . The three other

~

.

l1

'•

Won't Cook.

berths.
Bob Goal by shot a 157
Tuesday at the Westwood
Country Club in St. Louis to
miss a crack at fame and
fortune. Dutch Harrison, attempting to qualify for his 25th
·Open, failed with a 156 on the
same course. Lew Worsham,
the 1947 · U.S. golf champion

co.uldn't rrack the 143
mmtmum at. th e Bu.tler
· Country Club in Pittsburgh .
Harney and Massengale
qualified at 142 and 143 in
action at Greenwich, Cnnn.,
Beman and Barber shot 144s at
Philadelphia and Pott · made
the cut at Atlanta with a 145.
A total of 6li golfers qualified
for the Open on Tuesday. There

Payne Indicted,

Oakland 7 Cleveland 2
Pitts at San Dieg o, ppd ., rain Boston 2 Chicago 0.
DetroiiS Calif 6, lsi
Los Angeles S Chicag·a 0
Calif 4 Detroit 0. 2nd
St. Louis 5 San Fran 3
Today's Probable Pitchers

failedto~ualifyforthecoveted

.

Major League Results
By United Press lnlern.liono l (2nd game)
National League ·
Col iforn ia 000 310 ooo- 4 13 0
Pitts at San Diego. ppd .. rain Detroit . .
000 ooo ooo- o 4 3
Wright (S-2) and Stephenson;
Chicago
000 000 ooo- 0 50 . Coleman, Zachary (8) and
Los Ang
JPO000 20x- s 10 0 Freehan. LP- Coleman (7 S).
Hands, Hamilton (7), Aker HR - Aiomar (lstl .
l8l and Hundley ; Downing (3·2)
ATLANTA (UPIJ _ A Fulton
and Sims. LP.:._Hands (4-2) .
(15 innings I
' -Minnesota
County grand jury Tuesday
51. Louis
001 001 OJo- s 9 2 .
001 000 003 000 001- 5 16 1 indicted Atlanta Hawks '
SanFran
001 000 101- 3 7 1 Baltimore
basketball center Tom Payne
Wise (5-S) and Simmons;
000 300 100 000 OOo-4 11 o
h
Is
Stone, McMahon (8·) and· Rader.
Kaat, Norton IlL Granger . on t ree coun of rape and
LP- Stone (3-5). HRs- Torre (9). Corbin (121 and Roof. four.counls with intent to rape.
16th). Maddox (3rd) , Henderson Mitterwal.d (9); Palmer, Watt
Payne, who a lso faces
(6th).
(9). Jackson (9). Harri son (9). charges of rape in Cobb
Leonhard (1~). Scott (14) and
Houston
200 200 ooo- 4 11 0 Elchebarren, Oa tes ( 12). WP- County, Ga., and Louisville,
Phi Ia
ooo ooo 003- 3 6 1 Corbin 12·01 . LP- Scott (0-l) . Ky. , was ordered held without
Roberts. Gladding (9) and HR- Soderholm (Sihl .
bail in the county jail fo r trial
Howard; Frymann Lersc h (6) ,
in
September.
Selma (9) and Ryan . WP- Oakland , 100 000 024- 7 12 0
Roberls (4-31. LP- Fryman (2· Cleveland 002 000 OOo- 2 B2 The 21-year-old rookie joined
5) . HR- Roberls (1st).
Blue. Knowles (7) , Fingers the Hawks last year and
(7) , Locker (8) and Duncan ;
At lant'l'
003 ooo ooo-) 5o Colber t, Mingor i (8), Farmer showed promise of becoming a
Monlr~al
001010 ooo- 2 11 1 (81 and Fosse. WP- Fingers (5· star player . The Hawks picked
Reed (4-6) and Will iams; l) . LP- Mingori (0-3) . HR - him as a so-called "hardship
McAnally (l -6) and Humphrey. Jackson (t1fh) .
draft" while Payne wa s
HR- Evans (91hl .
New York 011 000 Ot o- 3 4 I playing at the University of
Cincinnati 000 200 ODO- 2 5 I Texas
100 203 OOx- 6 14 3 Kentucky .
N.Y.
000101 10x- 3 8 1 P e I e r so n. McDaniel (6),
The·indictments followed the
Nolan , Gullett (6) and Beene (7) and Munson ; BosBench ; McAndrew, McGraw man, Lindblad (7) and Bill ings. reported appearance of all the
(8) and Grote. WP- McAndrew WP- Bosman (4-5). LP- Peter· alleged victims before the
(S·ll . LP- Gulletl (2-31. HRs- son (J.st. HRs- Howard (3rdl.
grand jury Tuesday morning.
Bench (14th). Milner (5th ).
Torres (Jrd).
The assaults were alleged to
:- .
Mtlw
002 ooo ooo- 2 8 o have taken place between late
Kan City
010 002 lOx- 4 9 0 March and mid-May.
Amencan League
Brett. Linzy (7) and Rodri ·
The maximum penally for
(lsi Game)
guez; Murphy, Burgmeier (9)
Colllornlo 0000111 3Q-6102 and May. WP- Murphy (2·1) . rape in Gem·gia is death.
Detroit
204 002 ODO- 8 8 2 LP- Bretl (2-6) . HR - Auerbach
Rose. Fisher (3), Foster (5), (lsi) .
Queen (7) and Kusnyer: Lolich,
Seelbach (8) and Hai ler . WP- Boston
000 002 ODO- 2 6 0
Lolich (9-3) . LP- Rose (1 -l) . Ch icago
OOOOOOOQ0-0 40
No two person s have idenHRs- Brinkman (2n d) , Kos&gt;o Siebert (5-2) and Fisk ; Wood, tical fingerprints and thei r
(3rd) , Rodriguez tlstt. Ssanton Kealey (9) and Herrmann . LP pattern can not be altered.
17thI. Oliver 15th) .
. - Wood IB·4) .

Te)(as 6 New York 3

New York 3 Cincinnati 2
Houston A Phlla J

0

'1''·
PAIR

�J

·'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mirldlepod-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1972

rou.v·s POINTt;ns Pastor Morgan
Surprised on
Old Hmul L1H1 11 ~hm t't '
His Birthday
Valuuhlt~ · fu.- Gat•rlt~nin1!
II )' I'O).L\' ('IIMU:II
[)EAH POLLY - M1,'Pointer is t'or ga rdeners who ha\'t'
lroubll' making 5lr3 ight and t&gt;ve n ruws a"&lt;:russ · tht'
ga rde n pl ot. It is sn ~asy il
\'Oil US(' a t1 urd hand I (IWTI
inow(.•r which mak('S twu

row s just the ri;:ht wid th
at the same lime. Br surf:'
I he first row i s stra ight anc.l
pu sh mower ae ross l hf"n

pull it backward s in the
same row as il ma kes a
much deeper row when it
drags. Save the old mower

and then give th is a try.MHS. B. E. L.
DEAH PO LLY- My Pet Peeve is-DHIVES . Several
years ago when many chal'itie.s wPre conso lidated we
felt the constarrt solicitation·would end. That was not so
as the doorbell rings. the telephone rings and the mai l
box is stuffed with appea ls and always for what seem to
be worthy causes. It is not easy to say ·· no" for fear th e
one we are turning down may be the most worthy or all.
- FED UP
·f: ;?ti'Jt'Lf~::.~:~:':~~~if:r::m

Polly's Problem

.\l

DEAR POLLY- Please 1~11 me how to remove
W fruit stains !peaches in par ticular 1 from the wood
;1 top on my dishwasher. I have to·ied everything I can
j. thmk of so hope one of the readeo·s ca n com e to my
~, rescue .-MRS. L. A. S.
~-"l~~~ '&gt;-~ft.;·,,'
DEAR POLLY- Sharon ca n make a Nauga hyde pad fm·
her high chair just as she would make any other chaio·
pad but she should use a hea vy duty needle and longer
stitches. If the pad is too thin an old bath towel folded
makes good stuffing. (Poll~ ' s Note-My favurlw stuffing
lor lhla pads Is a piece cut from an old quilted bed pad. I
If this is not on hand foam rubber can also be used.
Leave one side open so th e pad cover can be 1urned and
stulled and then top stitched cl os~ d . Be sure to put ties
at the corners so it will stay in place .- KAREN
~(~

o.• ;.;

--,.

DEAR GIRLS-Irma suggested using the shortest zigzag
sdteh If Karen's machine does this type ul stitching. Also
to first tell · on a scrap ol the Iabrie. She also suggests
using polyester-covered cotton thread.-POLLY

COFFEE KEEPS MIKE CONNORS perking on a 5
a.m. to 7 p.m. daily shooting schedule for Mannix.
Connors feels new time slot mU\' hurt the show but
like any working man he keeps at it tu pay his taxes.

7- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 7, 1972

I,

.\

J:

H~rberi Morgan , pastor of
th e Seventh-day Adven ti st
Chur rh. · Pomeroy, was
pi~a.,mlly surprised 11lursday
evening, June I, when several
members or the church
• ~a thered in the basemen! to
celebrate his birthday.
A yellow ,and white color
scheme was used. Gifts were
placed on a table covered with
a white tablecloth . A beautiful
birthday cake with the inscription, "Happy Birthday,
Pastor Morgan," centered the
table, graced on either side by
vases of roses and f.rn .
Games were played . TI1e
door prize was awarded to
Elsie Upscomb. Refreshments
of cake, ice cream , corn chips,
fresh strawberries, mints and
punch were served, after whiCh
Pa stor Morgan opened and
acknowledged his gilts.
Attending were Mr. and Mr]
Burdell Black, Mr. and Mrs.
. B!Jb Lipscomb and sons, Eyria,
Robert, Daniel and William ;
Miss Louise Pennington, Mrs.
Clara Mcintyre and son,
WEST COLUMBIA - Mrs.
Herby; , Mrs. Ardath Zwies,
Mrs. Sarah Drake, Mr . Conley John Cur tis (Wanda ) Housh,
Cole and the hostess, Mrs. Rita West Colun1bia, entertained
wi lh a pa rty after the
Wright.
Sending gift s we re Mrs. graduation of her sons , Chester
Muriel Spires and Mrs. Irma and Curtis, at Wahama High
School on Tuesday evening at
Bales, Ralph and Rh onda .

'·

.-

' '

p ':

I

--·

Tigers Wreck

Pirates 32-2

Lionel Cartwright of Glendale, W. Va. played the piano
and provided entertainment
for the evening.

The refreshment table was
6the Ti ge rs ran over th e centered wi th a cake decora ted
Pirates 32-2 in the opening in the school colors of red and
round of the Pomeroy Boys white and depicted graduation
League Action.
wit h hats and rolled-up
The winners got 19 walks and diplomas and enscribed with
were aided by eight Pirate the twins names. Mrs. Armo
errors. Dale Browning fanned Mor rison, Point Pleasan t,
17 Pirates , walked 3 a nd served the cake and Nellie
allowed a single each to Doug Zerkle poured the punch.
Brownong and J. Couch. The Lighted red candles were used
winners committed only two '•.at each end of the table .
errors.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
· Tiger hitters were B. Me- Wayne Bergdoll, Cardington,
Clure two singles, R. Marshall Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs . Earl w.
a single, H. Johnson a home Hobinson, Nick. Cheryl, and
run, D. Browning • -single, Da vid of Gallipolis; Mr . and
triple and homer, K. Hawk a Mrs . Charl es Cartwri ght ,
single, D. Blake a single and Clifton; Mrs. Elaine Grogan
homer' S. Bearhs a single and and son' Chris, Clif ton·, Tech
trl , ·
.ple D Morns
. t wo song
. Ies Sgt. Pearl (Nick) Nicholson,
and B. Seelig a single .
Italy; Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson
FIRST AWARD
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Ohio Public Health Association
will present Leo F. Ey or
Columbus with its first special
award lor outstanding service
in ceremonies toda y. Ey.
retired chief of the Ohio Health
Depar tment Laboratori es ,
worked !or the health ctepartment from 1907 unti\1961 when
he retired.

,

Wall of Death Deggeller Magic Midway

Armo Morrison, and Terry,
Point Pleasa nt; Mrs. Lucinda
Mitchell, Daisey, Mark and
Tom of West Columbia; Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Sayre and Lynn,
Letart, W. Va ., Harold Sayre
and .Rupert Sayre, Letart, W.
Va .: Tommy Roush, Clifton;
Miss Brenda Cook and Miss
Beverly Knapp, both of New
Haven ; Miss Connie Haggerty,
Milton, W. Va ., host and
hostess; Mr. and Mrs . John
Curtis Roush , Carolyn, Cinda,
and honorees, Curtis and
Chester .
Pictures were taken during
the evening by Tech Sgt. Nick
Nicholson who was home on
furlough from Italy .

Tigers Bomb
Salem, 31-0
At
Cheshire
The Cheshire Tigers outclassed Salem 31 to 0 Monday
night at Cheshire behind a 24
hit barrage and the two-hit
pitching of Kelley Winebrenner
and Rog~r Spaulding:
The game was called alter
four innings due to darkness
and the score.
The Tigers were led in hitting
by Bruce Coleman and Hoger
Spaulding who had four hits
each and Steve Baird, Rusty
Lucas, Kelley Winebrenner
and Danny Chapman, who all
had horne runs. It was the
second consecutive league win
for the unbeaten Tigers who
next play at Rio Grande
Thursday evening.

HEADS TEAM
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Russell DeYoung, a rubber
company executive at Akron,
Ohio, was named today as
chairman of the Ohio Business
and Industry Committee for
the re-election or President
Nixon.

c

,1

LB.

-~ 00

@ffeemate

~
!ONDAIRY CREA~I~

0:::::::

.

•

. '

'''(

Misses and
Worn ens
'~~'~tt- ~

a

The season's just begun; and we have ~re
group of nifty sandals - eager to rriake your
wardrobe . The tags? Very sunny.

Chapman's:
SHOES

----------------·

POMEROY

USDA Choice, 'U. S. Government Inspected:'

Lean!

Nobody beats

reserved to limit quantities

Tender!

,\

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
.Saturday 9 to 9

.WIENERS

lb.

80 ct.

PORK STEAK

Check these buys!

lb.

We Glad~cept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective June 7-14

GROUND ROUND
STEAK

2 '1'5
lb.

LB. BOX $

59~

SUPERIORS
2 lb. pkg.

'139

J LB. PKG.

BOWL.OLEO

SLICED BACON

FAIRMONT
'

MIRACLE MARGARINE . . ~~~.~~-~~. ~.~~~~~..... 3Hb. p~ $1
RAPEFRUIT CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP. . ~~~~-~~~·~ ...... 6No.1 cans $1
CHARM IN NAPKINS ....................................~~.~~~~ . 10~
5 lb.
bag
CHEESE
PillA
....
~.~~:~~~~~~~~ .............................~~-~..~~~...49~
Home Grown
U.S. No. 1 Idaho
Letart
MAXWELL HOUSE INSJANT COFFEE 14~i$l 99
Potatoes
Cabbage
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~~a~~s::,e;e!u.~~:.~~.~~~...................~.~-~~~ ..45~
10 lb.
lb. se
bag 79e
·J0-80 DOG FO.OD....;................~ .......'............ 12 cans b $1
..

29 CARNIVAL
WIENERS

NU MAID

OHIO VALLEY

CLOSED SUNDAYS

ROYAL CROWN

2%

New Crop California

•

HONEYDALE-

us for good
meats at
lowest prices.

..

11

oz.

•
c:so :o Jar

I ' Dud ley's Flor·•st
I
I Serving : Gallipolis. Pomeroy, Middleport, 0., I
I
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.
I

Phebe says:

4 Breasts

The appointment or the
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co .
board chairman was announced by Donald M. Kendall,
chairman of the hoard of Pepsi
Co. Inc., who is· also national
chairman of th~ business
campaign group.

Fresh!

Ri~ht

4 Legs

ONLY

PORK LOIN ROAST
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

4 Thighs 4 Wings

~ ·:· · ~c COFFEEMATE

I

CHOICE

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

16 BEST PIECES

HAS3WINNERS
DINCINNATI (UP!)
Apprentice Jockey Vernon
Saylor rode three winners at
ARGONAUT WINS
River Downs Tuesday, giving
CLEVELAND (UP!)
him 25 for the season. He is two
Admirals Argonaut won the short of leading jockey Homero
fea tured ninth race at Hidolgo. Saylor rode Physical
Thistledown , covering o\0 Damage to victory in the fifth,
furlongs in 1:05 2-5. Tommy Princess Adair in the sixth, and
Meyers rode the colt to victory, Grand Spa, a 4~1 choice in the
over Sand Patch.
ninth which returned $98.40.

USDA

no" Chicken

FAMILY NIGHT WILL BE OBSERVED ThutSday
evening at the Deggeller Magic Midway which ·opened
Tuesday night for a five day run, near the former Holzer
Airparl off Route 7below Kanauga under the sponsorship of
the Gallia Academy High School Blue Devils Booster Club.
Some 25 rides and games are featured. Tickets during flllilily
night will be five for $1. There is free P{lrking and free admission to the midway. The midway opelisat4p. m. each day
and 11 a. m. on the weekend.

----------·-·
I- - - Re~ember Dad June 18
I
and Mrs. Jessie Cartwright, II
Fathers Love F
.lowers
II
both of Clifton .
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Car twright, Lionel and Eric or I
IN
I
Glendale, w. Va. ; Mrs. Earl II
Novelty Contal'ners
Darst and Bruce, Pt. Pleasan t;

Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark and
Barb ara, West Columbia;
Misses Hallie and Nellie
Zerkle, Middleport ; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Posey, Clifton ; Mrs.

PEACHES
2112 CAN 29 oz.

____ .. ..-... .... ..- .-

GradtuJtion of
Two Sons 17\TlOt ed.
the Roush 's home.

ket

STOKELY

MILK.

2

~gal.

crts.

89~

Fudge Bars ...............12 pk. Sf

'.

LA
CARTON OF
16 OZ. BOTTLES.
'

A Fuii .Line Of _

CANNIN~
SUPPLIES~ ..

ONLY

PWS DEPOSIT

'

~

�J

·'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mirldlepod-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1972

rou.v·s POINTt;ns Pastor Morgan
Surprised on
Old Hmul L1H1 11 ~hm t't '
His Birthday
Valuuhlt~ · fu.- Gat•rlt~nin1!
II )' I'O).L\' ('IIMU:II
[)EAH POLLY - M1,'Pointer is t'or ga rdeners who ha\'t'
lroubll' making 5lr3 ight and t&gt;ve n ruws a"&lt;:russ · tht'
ga rde n pl ot. It is sn ~asy il
\'Oil US(' a t1 urd hand I (IWTI
inow(.•r which mak('S twu

row s just the ri;:ht wid th
at the same lime. Br surf:'
I he first row i s stra ight anc.l
pu sh mower ae ross l hf"n

pull it backward s in the
same row as il ma kes a
much deeper row when it
drags. Save the old mower

and then give th is a try.MHS. B. E. L.
DEAH PO LLY- My Pet Peeve is-DHIVES . Several
years ago when many chal'itie.s wPre conso lidated we
felt the constarrt solicitation·would end. That was not so
as the doorbell rings. the telephone rings and the mai l
box is stuffed with appea ls and always for what seem to
be worthy causes. It is not easy to say ·· no" for fear th e
one we are turning down may be the most worthy or all.
- FED UP
·f: ;?ti'Jt'Lf~::.~:~:':~~~if:r::m

Polly's Problem

.\l

DEAR POLLY- Please 1~11 me how to remove
W fruit stains !peaches in par ticular 1 from the wood
;1 top on my dishwasher. I have to·ied everything I can
j. thmk of so hope one of the readeo·s ca n com e to my
~, rescue .-MRS. L. A. S.
~-"l~~~ '&gt;-~ft.;·,,'
DEAR POLLY- Sharon ca n make a Nauga hyde pad fm·
her high chair just as she would make any other chaio·
pad but she should use a hea vy duty needle and longer
stitches. If the pad is too thin an old bath towel folded
makes good stuffing. (Poll~ ' s Note-My favurlw stuffing
lor lhla pads Is a piece cut from an old quilted bed pad. I
If this is not on hand foam rubber can also be used.
Leave one side open so th e pad cover can be 1urned and
stulled and then top stitched cl os~ d . Be sure to put ties
at the corners so it will stay in place .- KAREN
~(~

o.• ;.;

--,.

DEAR GIRLS-Irma suggested using the shortest zigzag
sdteh If Karen's machine does this type ul stitching. Also
to first tell · on a scrap ol the Iabrie. She also suggests
using polyester-covered cotton thread.-POLLY

COFFEE KEEPS MIKE CONNORS perking on a 5
a.m. to 7 p.m. daily shooting schedule for Mannix.
Connors feels new time slot mU\' hurt the show but
like any working man he keeps at it tu pay his taxes.

7- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 7, 1972

I,

.\

J:

H~rberi Morgan , pastor of
th e Seventh-day Adven ti st
Chur rh. · Pomeroy, was
pi~a.,mlly surprised 11lursday
evening, June I, when several
members or the church
• ~a thered in the basemen! to
celebrate his birthday.
A yellow ,and white color
scheme was used. Gifts were
placed on a table covered with
a white tablecloth . A beautiful
birthday cake with the inscription, "Happy Birthday,
Pastor Morgan," centered the
table, graced on either side by
vases of roses and f.rn .
Games were played . TI1e
door prize was awarded to
Elsie Upscomb. Refreshments
of cake, ice cream , corn chips,
fresh strawberries, mints and
punch were served, after whiCh
Pa stor Morgan opened and
acknowledged his gilts.
Attending were Mr. and Mr]
Burdell Black, Mr. and Mrs.
. B!Jb Lipscomb and sons, Eyria,
Robert, Daniel and William ;
Miss Louise Pennington, Mrs.
Clara Mcintyre and son,
WEST COLUMBIA - Mrs.
Herby; , Mrs. Ardath Zwies,
Mrs. Sarah Drake, Mr . Conley John Cur tis (Wanda ) Housh,
Cole and the hostess, Mrs. Rita West Colun1bia, entertained
wi lh a pa rty after the
Wright.
Sending gift s we re Mrs. graduation of her sons , Chester
Muriel Spires and Mrs. Irma and Curtis, at Wahama High
School on Tuesday evening at
Bales, Ralph and Rh onda .

'·

.-

' '

p ':

I

--·

Tigers Wreck

Pirates 32-2

Lionel Cartwright of Glendale, W. Va. played the piano
and provided entertainment
for the evening.

The refreshment table was
6the Ti ge rs ran over th e centered wi th a cake decora ted
Pirates 32-2 in the opening in the school colors of red and
round of the Pomeroy Boys white and depicted graduation
League Action.
wit h hats and rolled-up
The winners got 19 walks and diplomas and enscribed with
were aided by eight Pirate the twins names. Mrs. Armo
errors. Dale Browning fanned Mor rison, Point Pleasan t,
17 Pirates , walked 3 a nd served the cake and Nellie
allowed a single each to Doug Zerkle poured the punch.
Brownong and J. Couch. The Lighted red candles were used
winners committed only two '•.at each end of the table .
errors.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
· Tiger hitters were B. Me- Wayne Bergdoll, Cardington,
Clure two singles, R. Marshall Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs . Earl w.
a single, H. Johnson a home Hobinson, Nick. Cheryl, and
run, D. Browning • -single, Da vid of Gallipolis; Mr . and
triple and homer, K. Hawk a Mrs . Charl es Cartwri ght ,
single, D. Blake a single and Clifton; Mrs. Elaine Grogan
homer' S. Bearhs a single and and son' Chris, Clif ton·, Tech
trl , ·
.ple D Morns
. t wo song
. Ies Sgt. Pearl (Nick) Nicholson,
and B. Seelig a single .
Italy; Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson
FIRST AWARD
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Ohio Public Health Association
will present Leo F. Ey or
Columbus with its first special
award lor outstanding service
in ceremonies toda y. Ey.
retired chief of the Ohio Health
Depar tment Laboratori es ,
worked !or the health ctepartment from 1907 unti\1961 when
he retired.

,

Wall of Death Deggeller Magic Midway

Armo Morrison, and Terry,
Point Pleasa nt; Mrs. Lucinda
Mitchell, Daisey, Mark and
Tom of West Columbia; Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Sayre and Lynn,
Letart, W. Va ., Harold Sayre
and .Rupert Sayre, Letart, W.
Va .: Tommy Roush, Clifton;
Miss Brenda Cook and Miss
Beverly Knapp, both of New
Haven ; Miss Connie Haggerty,
Milton, W. Va ., host and
hostess; Mr. and Mrs . John
Curtis Roush , Carolyn, Cinda,
and honorees, Curtis and
Chester .
Pictures were taken during
the evening by Tech Sgt. Nick
Nicholson who was home on
furlough from Italy .

Tigers Bomb
Salem, 31-0
At
Cheshire
The Cheshire Tigers outclassed Salem 31 to 0 Monday
night at Cheshire behind a 24
hit barrage and the two-hit
pitching of Kelley Winebrenner
and Rog~r Spaulding:
The game was called alter
four innings due to darkness
and the score.
The Tigers were led in hitting
by Bruce Coleman and Hoger
Spaulding who had four hits
each and Steve Baird, Rusty
Lucas, Kelley Winebrenner
and Danny Chapman, who all
had horne runs. It was the
second consecutive league win
for the unbeaten Tigers who
next play at Rio Grande
Thursday evening.

HEADS TEAM
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Russell DeYoung, a rubber
company executive at Akron,
Ohio, was named today as
chairman of the Ohio Business
and Industry Committee for
the re-election or President
Nixon.

c

,1

LB.

-~ 00

@ffeemate

~
!ONDAIRY CREA~I~

0:::::::

.

•

. '

'''(

Misses and
Worn ens
'~~'~tt- ~

a

The season's just begun; and we have ~re
group of nifty sandals - eager to rriake your
wardrobe . The tags? Very sunny.

Chapman's:
SHOES

----------------·

POMEROY

USDA Choice, 'U. S. Government Inspected:'

Lean!

Nobody beats

reserved to limit quantities

Tender!

,\

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
.Saturday 9 to 9

.WIENERS

lb.

80 ct.

PORK STEAK

Check these buys!

lb.

We Glad~cept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective June 7-14

GROUND ROUND
STEAK

2 '1'5
lb.

LB. BOX $

59~

SUPERIORS
2 lb. pkg.

'139

J LB. PKG.

BOWL.OLEO

SLICED BACON

FAIRMONT
'

MIRACLE MARGARINE . . ~~~.~~-~~. ~.~~~~~..... 3Hb. p~ $1
RAPEFRUIT CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP. . ~~~~-~~~·~ ...... 6No.1 cans $1
CHARM IN NAPKINS ....................................~~.~~~~ . 10~
5 lb.
bag
CHEESE
PillA
....
~.~~:~~~~~~~~ .............................~~-~..~~~...49~
Home Grown
U.S. No. 1 Idaho
Letart
MAXWELL HOUSE INSJANT COFFEE 14~i$l 99
Potatoes
Cabbage
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~~a~~s::,e;e!u.~~:.~~.~~~...................~.~-~~~ ..45~
10 lb.
lb. se
bag 79e
·J0-80 DOG FO.OD....;................~ .......'............ 12 cans b $1
..

29 CARNIVAL
WIENERS

NU MAID

OHIO VALLEY

CLOSED SUNDAYS

ROYAL CROWN

2%

New Crop California

•

HONEYDALE-

us for good
meats at
lowest prices.

..

11

oz.

•
c:so :o Jar

I ' Dud ley's Flor·•st
I
I Serving : Gallipolis. Pomeroy, Middleport, 0., I
I
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.
I

Phebe says:

4 Breasts

The appointment or the
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co .
board chairman was announced by Donald M. Kendall,
chairman of the hoard of Pepsi
Co. Inc., who is· also national
chairman of th~ business
campaign group.

Fresh!

Ri~ht

4 Legs

ONLY

PORK LOIN ROAST
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

4 Thighs 4 Wings

~ ·:· · ~c COFFEEMATE

I

CHOICE

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

16 BEST PIECES

HAS3WINNERS
DINCINNATI (UP!)
Apprentice Jockey Vernon
Saylor rode three winners at
ARGONAUT WINS
River Downs Tuesday, giving
CLEVELAND (UP!)
him 25 for the season. He is two
Admirals Argonaut won the short of leading jockey Homero
fea tured ninth race at Hidolgo. Saylor rode Physical
Thistledown , covering o\0 Damage to victory in the fifth,
furlongs in 1:05 2-5. Tommy Princess Adair in the sixth, and
Meyers rode the colt to victory, Grand Spa, a 4~1 choice in the
over Sand Patch.
ninth which returned $98.40.

USDA

no" Chicken

FAMILY NIGHT WILL BE OBSERVED ThutSday
evening at the Deggeller Magic Midway which ·opened
Tuesday night for a five day run, near the former Holzer
Airparl off Route 7below Kanauga under the sponsorship of
the Gallia Academy High School Blue Devils Booster Club.
Some 25 rides and games are featured. Tickets during flllilily
night will be five for $1. There is free P{lrking and free admission to the midway. The midway opelisat4p. m. each day
and 11 a. m. on the weekend.

----------·-·
I- - - Re~ember Dad June 18
I
and Mrs. Jessie Cartwright, II
Fathers Love F
.lowers
II
both of Clifton .
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Car twright, Lionel and Eric or I
IN
I
Glendale, w. Va. ; Mrs. Earl II
Novelty Contal'ners
Darst and Bruce, Pt. Pleasan t;

Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark and
Barb ara, West Columbia;
Misses Hallie and Nellie
Zerkle, Middleport ; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Posey, Clifton ; Mrs.

PEACHES
2112 CAN 29 oz.

____ .. ..-... .... ..- .-

GradtuJtion of
Two Sons 17\TlOt ed.
the Roush 's home.

ket

STOKELY

MILK.

2

~gal.

crts.

89~

Fudge Bars ...............12 pk. Sf

'.

LA
CARTON OF
16 OZ. BOTTLES.
'

A Fuii .Line Of _

CANNIN~
SUPPLIES~ ..

ONLY

PWS DEPOSIT

'

~

�r
..

,.., ,.,. ... _-, -··-.... •~•i•·--- ..........

WU • • • . ..

a

J

-

"l • •••;

•

Mrs. Rhoda Hackett Sr. is President of Salon 710
Mrs. H110da Hackett, Sr. of
Middiep&lt;Jfi is the new chapeau
of the Meigs County S!'ion 710,
Eight and Forty. Nelv 1officers
were elected at a meeting held
. at the Hackett home Monday
night.
Other ofhcers elected were
Mrs. Marie Boyd, first demi
chapeau premiere; Mrs. Veda
Davis, second demi chapeau
duexieme; Mrs. l..uia Uampton, i'aumonier; Mrs. Mary
Martin, Ia archlviste; Mrs.
Cahterine Welsh, pouvior

member; Mrs. Iva Powell,
!'avocate; and · Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith, Ia surendiante. Mrs.
Julia Hysell was appointed by
Mrs. Hackett to serve as.
secretary-treasurer for the
Salon.
Chairmen appointed by Mrs.
Hackett were Mrs. Arnoltl
Richards, ritual and emblems;
Mrs. Boyd, Mrs. Pearl Knapp
and Mrs. Mary Roush, children
and youth ; Mrs. Welsh, Mrs.
Brinker and Mrs . Knapp ,
partnership, and Mrs. Edith

Fox, parodies.
Plans were made for the
convention to be held July 23
and 24 at Cincinnati and il·was
voted by the Salon to pay the
expenses of any member who
wants to attend . The delegates
·at large are Mrs. Martin, Mrs.
Walker and Mrs. Brinker; the
elected delegates are Mrs.
Welsh, Mrs. Knapp and Mrs.
Hampton, ·and the alternates
are Mrs. Hackett, Mrs. Boyd
and Mrs. Hysell.
M,rs. Martin announced that

the convention speaker will be ·
Richard
N. ·atuestine,
executive vice president of the
National Jewish Hospital at
Colo.
Other
Denver,
distinguished guests to attend
are Mrs . Raymond Sloan 1
Ashland American Legion
Auxiliary Department
president ;
Miss
Ann
Esh .e lman, Zanesville,
Auxiliary Department
secretary; Charles R. Green,
American Legion, Department
ol Ohio, commander ; Jack

Blevins,.Portsmouth, gran chef
de gare, 40 et 8; Mrs. Violet.
Aichhillz, second mellll!'lr of
finance on the ·national ~mmittee; Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
national pouvior member;
Garnet Grant, Kentucky
Departemental Chapeau; Miss
Dorothy Dolle, national
chapeau; Esther c. Edgar,
chapeau pa~ of Ohio .and
mistress .of cere!llonies: Mrs.
Evaline Berkley, Ohio chapeau
elect; Jo Hrabak, American
Legion national committee
woman and Diana While,
Shelby, entertainment

('

Mr. and Mrs. William Meredith
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Meredith of IOU Wood lana
Ave., Beverly, wt11 celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary
with an open house Sunday, J\Ule II, from 2 to 5 p. m. Mrs.
Meredith is the former Gladys Pickens, daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pickens of Reedsville. Mr. Meredith is
the eon of Mrs. Ray Meredith of Phoenix, Ariz., and the late
Mr. Meredith, a former Meigs CoWlty resident. •
Thecouplewasmarriedoi!June 8,1947, at the Reedsville
Methodistaturch by the late Rev. E. L. Miller. Mr. Meredith
i.s the general superintendent of Interlake, Inc., Beverly
Plant. They have two aons, Charles, an electrical engineer
with Eastman Kodak, Rochester, N. Y., and Roger, employed by the Mid:.COntinent Erection Corp., Vienna, W. Va.
Mr, and Mrs. Meredith request that gifts be omitted.

Mrs. Slack Hostess To
Two Garden Clubs
Members of the Cheshire
Garden Club were guests at the
Monday night meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held
at the spacious home of Mrs.
Sibley Slack.
Floral arrangements were
used thro~~&amp;hout the home.
Mrs. C. 0. Fisher, Mrs. Etoilla
CaaeU and Mrs. John Davis
were the assilting hostesaes.
Mrs. Michael Fry conducted
the meeting with members
responding to ron call by
namlns a geranium specimen.
''Oiw •Fragrant Yesterday",
• article WJ;itten by Ethel
McCool, was reviewed by Mrs.
David Entsminger. It told of
.roses and herbs In summer
gardena and gave lnatructions
for making rose jars.
An lnvltatloit was read from
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners for their open meeting
to be held on June 28 at the
Rutland Church ·of Christ. Mrs.
Robert Thompson will be the
auest demonstrator. Reported
ill were Mrs. WUliam Morris, a
'patient at the Riverside
Methodist
Hospital
in
Columbui; Miss Harrie Marie

Smith, and Mrs . Garen
Stansbury. Also noted was the
death of Mrs. C. A. Emmish.
Mrs. Cassell displayed the
arrangement of the month
using peonies and lemon lillies
in a pewter container. The
refreshment table featured an
arrangement of roses from the
gardens of Mrs. C. 0. Fisher
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy in a
silver compote with tapers in
matching holders. A salad
course was served to the 17
members and four local guests
and the nine members of the
Cheshire Club attending.
A!tending from the Cheshire
Club were Mrs. Rosetta
Wilson, Mrs. Edward Preston,
Mrs. Harry Clark, Mrs. Phyllis
Hawley, Mrs. Everett Long,
Mrs. William Scott, Mrs. Paul
Shumaker, Mrs. Paul Marlin,
and Mrs. Richard Russell.
Other guests were Mrs. Robert
Bumgarner, Mrs. tloscoe
Fowler, Mrs . Walter Crooks,
and Miss Nancy Large,
granddaughter of Mrs. Cassell.
Mrs. Fry and Miss Nellie
Zerkle presided at the coffee
and tea service.

Wearing pants
continues to be a
definite way of life for
many women . The
belted pont shirt with
o soft shaped neckline
and plenty of length
· to flatter the larger·
than-overage size
I left I is ovoiloble in
sizes 38-44. The twinpocketed shi rt comes
in six colors with
contrast stitching . Not
oil larger size women
and girls ore old . This
is but one of the
knits I right I designed
for the lorger-propor·
tioned person regard less of her age . It is
suitable for o 16-yeorold size 44 and
equa lly acceptable for
a 44-year-old size 44 .
The knit shirt in a
swimming fish pattern
is the popular St.
T ropez sty le and
although th e style
wasn't created initially
to flatter o largersize figure, the swooping slit $ides ore
the perfect ruse for
wide hips.
I designs from
Ship 'n' Shore. I

NEW YORK - 1NEA1 Allhough the state ol bemg
overweight is by no means a
new phenomenon, it ha s
reached e pi d e m i c statu s

t h a n k s to our affluent
society .
There are almost 40 mil·
lion overweight women in th~;•
world and dieting. exercise
and health spas have become•
big bllsiness as a resull .

Program is on Africa

.,

'·

)

A program on Africa was
presented by Mrs. Willia
Anthony at a meeting of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionai'Y, Society
'of the Middleport First Baptist
Church Monday night. ·
Mltlslonary work in Africa,
climate, and the products
which support the continent
were -dlscussed by Mrs. An·
thony whose niece has been a
misaiilnary there for several
years. Readings about Africa
were given by Mrs. Beulah
White, Mra. Fred Lewis, Mrs.
Paul Smart and Mrs. David
.O.rst;
Mrs. John Werner had
charge of the meeting wilh
Mts. Leora· Sigman giving
devotions. She used Psalm 21
u her scripture and read an
article from Billy Graham's
mltlslon 1111gazine, using a
prayer poem to close.
The love gift dedication was
conducted by Mrs. Charles
Simona who noted that the
fortieth anniveraary of the love
&amp;1ft In B.lplllt Churches .Is
btlng observed. She read "A
Love Gift Parable". ParUcipatln&amp; In the dedication
ceremony were Mrs. Arland
King, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman and
Mu. Fred Hoffman. Mrs.
Smart reported on the May
Fellowship Day held ·at the
Baptilt Church. She reported
.U .t. the Rev. Henry. Key
dtcllJied the ~peaker's fee and
that the amount was given for a
leper colony In Africa. .
Thete wtn 1M! no meeting in
July and the annual August
piCnic will be held at the
aterry Ridge farm of the Mr.
and Mrs. Willla Anthqny. Attending the meeting were nine
from the Oorcaa Circle, five
from the EJecta Circle, and
fovr from the Love Joy Circle.
1'111 rtfreahment ta~~- was

covered in orange and centered
with yellow roses in a cream
container. Hostesses were Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mrs. Fred'
Hoffman, Mrs. Dana Hartlm,
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin and Mrs.
Dale Walburn . Punch and
cookies were served.

BIKE HIKE TAKEN
Abike hike was taken Friday
by the youth group of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ with
their leaders, Harry and Sandy
Guenther. The group left the
church at 10:30 a.m. for Fort
Meigs for a picnic. They were
joined at the park by Hoyt
Alien, Jr., Sindy and Allen, and
Naomi Ohlinger. Young people
on the hike were Kathryn
Ohlinger, Cathy Osborne,
Debbie Osborne, Rose Colburn,
Iiliane Smith, Vicki Hoffman,
Crystal Glaze, Jo Ghafin, Craig
Venoy, Rick McKnight, Denny
Allen and Paul Jones.
VISITS MOORES
Mrs. Harry Hoagland and
Miss Grace · Sauvage of
Columbus were .recent
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Sr..
Middleport. Other recent
visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Jones and Kenneth of
Columbus. Mr.and Mrs. Moore
also visited recenUy In Ashland
with their sons, Harry, Jr. and
William, and their families .
SALE DAYS SET
A rummage sale will be held
Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday at the Eagles Club,
Pomeroy from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
ThflSe having rummage to be
picked up are to call 992-9976.

Past matrons and past
patrons of Evangeline Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern Star,
were honored at a recent
meetip
ld at the Masonic
Temple,
dleport . Smail
white Bibles w re presented to
each one by Mr. and ·Mrs.
Harry Chesher, worthy matron
and patron of the chpater.
Initiatory work was exemplified for two candidates.
Read at the meeting .was an
invitation from Pomeroy
~hapter to. attend Inspection.

Paula Hedges to
Be Wed June 17

•

and having to undergo four have been taken to dress
complete wardrobe changes. their "' faithfuls"' and "' join·
In the reverse. if you 're on ers ."' no matter what their
age or size- right un up 1o
your way up , the change 46.
from a size 36 to a 4Q takes
you out of the regular size
Not only do they have the
category to extra sizes and size to fit any frame, any
puts you on !he wav to the age, bttt fashion looks at
upper 40 where you're about realistic prices.
to reach dilemma propor·
tions when it comes to ward- For summer !here are inrobe selections.
expensi ve cotton knits thai
will keep their shape and as
Ship 'n Shore has kept ttp
are about $6.00 the price
with the times and is aware they
right
for a changing ward ·
is
of the doldrums · through robe . The
styles are right.
which a woman goes when too. for a heavier
the
'her size changes The com - proportions properfigure.
for the
pany ts also aware that over·
weigh t is something that si7.e.
happens to a 16-year-uld girl
There are long , belted
a s readily as to a 40 -year-old shirts that can be worn low

The almost universal com plaint has to do with ill ·fit ·
ling clothes. According to a
well -known diet group. a
gain of tO pottnds in stitutes a
size change . Imagine being
on H di et to lose 40 pounds woman .

Ninth Birthday

Is Celebrated
Mrs. Larry Hudnall and Mrs.
Thomas Darst entertained
Sunday afternoon with a party
in observance of the ninth
birthday of their sister,
Tammy Pettit. The affair was
held at the Hudnall home in '
Middleport.
Cake and ice cream were
served and favors of bubbles,
balloons and harmonicas were
given to the 'children . Games
were played with Annette
Johnson and Lisa Harris
winning the prizes.
Other guests were Robin
McDaniel, Mark and Steven
Oldaker, Cammie Morris,
Craig Darst, Roxanne and
Michele McDaniel, Robbie
Johnson, Mrs. Kathy Johnson,
Mrs. Avenelle Pettit, Mrs.
Mabel Pettit, Venessa Pettit,
Mrs. Doris Smith and Mrs.
Adam Oldaker. Sending gifts
were Brenda Fry, William
Pettit; and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Pettit.

BALD KNOBS
Mr . and Mrs .f Russell
Callendar and son, Troy, of
Grand Rapids, Mich., Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Van Meter and
family of East Liverpool, Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Van Meter and
Missy of Minersville Route and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans
and family, local, visited Mrs.
Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs . ·Russell
Calendar and son, Troy, of
Grand Rapids, Mich. , Mary
Birch of Gallipolis , ,~.Leota
Birch, Mrs. Jean Dailey, Mrs.
Maxine Durst, Mrs. Ann
Cozart, Mr. and · Mrs. Gene
Ward and family, local, visited"
Mr. and Mrs. Michael £vans
and family.

that dues are payable now.
Penny bags were turned in ai
the meeting. The Salon
members still have jewelry
and nuts for sale. A catd was
read from Mrs. Wanda Tanner,
scholarship chairman,
thanking the salon for $113
donated.
.
It was nolell that a-reception ·
will be held for Mrs. Martin on
Saturday night of the Cin· clnnatl convention.
·
A cosmetic party was beld
following the meeting.

FOOTWEAR

Aggressive

steps enough to hide slow -to-d im in -

o=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::...::=:::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::::--:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::*~=~=!:~=~=~=m::~:i!::::~:i::::!%:::::::==::::~~

~

Social Calendar
•

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in EA degree. All master
masons invited.
POMEROY Quarterly
Luncheon picnic, Wednesday,
noon, Route 33 roadside park.
Auction to be held.
LADIES Auxiliary, Middleport Firemen, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Mrs.
Donald Lowery, Logan St. ,
Mrs . David Ohlinger, cohostess.
THURSDAY
'ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Inspection, 8 p.m: Thursday
night at the hall. Program and
refreshments . Ail members
urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E.S., Thursday, 8 p.m. Inspection . Inspection officer
grand conductress Vera
Thornton.
SOUTHERN Local Board
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
high school.
SHADE River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
hall in Chester. Work in E.A.
Degree . All Master Masons
invited.
PAST
Councilors
of
Daughters of America No. 17
will meei aU:30 p.m. Thursday at the hom~ of Mrs. Don
Rea, Minersville with Mrs.
Ruby Erb as hostesa.
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
potluck picnic, 6; 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr., 528 S. Second, Middleport.
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, annual
flag day covered dish dinner, I
p.m. at the . home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson, Racine.
Members to meet at the Shrine
Park at 12:30 p.m. for the trip

l\

to the Johnson home. Mrs.
Dayton Parsons will be cohostess. Mrs. David Miller will
present a program on "Our
Flag", and Misa Lucille Smith
will give junior citizenship.
awards.

ish hips or quickly expanding
derrieres. Necklines on these
are designed to make the
neck look longer for a more
sleek look .
The fabricsi used for target·
sizes are exactly the same
ones used for regular sizes.
One lament of the larger
woman or girl is that the
fabrics they must choose
from are always second rate.
oldet· looking. But not so
these. All the popular summer fabrics and the newest
prints can be found and ,
most important for at ·alltimes neatness . every fabric
is an easy-care one that will
keep its clean crisp look
with just a minimttm of
upkeep .

SALE SATURDAY
LETART FALLS - The
WSCS of the East Letart United
Methodist Church will hold a
rummage and yard sale
Saturday at Letart Community
Hall beginning at.9 :30 a.m.

repo~ted.

TO VISIT CAMP
Parent visitation will he
observed Thursday afternoon
at the Big Bend Neighborhood
Girl Scout camp being held thil
week at Klashuta near Chester.
Aprogram will be presented by
the girls at 1:30 p.m. with skits,
songs, and a craft display to be
featured. Thirty-seven girls
are registered for the five day
camp with eight adulta and six
senior aides asaisting. Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger lfi the director.

. Sympathy

Flowers
~~convey your thoughts
when words are hard to

Dudley's Florist
Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Mlddllporl, 0.
&amp; Muon Co., W. Va.

Don't Forget

$388
PAIR

wear.

'200
Values to 11.19 ·

HOUSEHOLD ·

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge
·

10 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
5 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. STEW MEAT

8 lb.
8 lb.
8 lb.
4 lb.

PORK CHOPS
GROUND BEEF
SLICED SLAB BACON
ALL MEAT WIENERS

ROUND STEAK
GROUND. BEEF
CHUCK· 'ROAST
PORK CHOPS

992·3502 ,; -~~E!~~othtrtllln :::Is)

Ulle lot of mens Work shoes
and dress style boots that

OUT TO THE BARE WALL_~~--· .....
o~e·~~

SELL

resularly sold for $10.99.
~~ they go now at this low
pnce.

~·EVERYTHING · GOES
-QUITTING BUSINESS SALEMEN'S REGULAR $6.99

CLOSE-OUT LOT LADIES

LACE-TO-TOE TENNIS

DRESS &amp;CASUAL

OXFORDS·

FOOTWEAR

Mens high quality lace to toe tennis oxfords,
in blue, black or white. Regular $6.99 values.
A great value!

Va~~es $ 30.0
6.99 .

Reg. 11.79 Value ·

STOCK OF HIGH QUALITY~~\\~
Ladies'
MERCHANDISE \~~~~ ,~ SPORT SNEAKERS
~!aies~ ~~e~f~~~
QQ
FICED

Close-Out lot. Choose from dress and caaual
styles. Save now!

1

PAIR

1

-THE SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESSBIG CLOSE-OUT ASSORTMENT
Quitting Business 5ale

-~

.•

Our better footwear ts Included In this big

made

moulded

sole. white, blue,
black , 5 to 10 .•

QUITIIIIC

~USIIESS

$ 7

A good selection of
popular toys, consisting
of games, dolls, trucks
and many other toy
items. Save y, ,

EACH

IITCHIII PATIO LIUIGES

Y2

GLASSWARE

A big lot of Anchor Hodting hausehold
glassware, bowls, tumbfen, cups1
mugs, vases, ash trays in asaoneo
colors and kinds.

:EYERYTHII
lUST

SPORT SNEAKERS
American made .
Red, white, navy . All

00

OUR COMPLETE
STOCK I

1~

OFF
REG.
PRICE!

DRESS

Save up to one-half now oo
line spring dresses .
Cottons, acetates and
blended fabrics in an the
wanted colora an11
patterna. Now Ia the Ume•to
&amp;aYfl! .

tACH '

EACH

Big 20-inch ventilating box fan with powerfl!l two speed
mo.tor, safety guards, strap handles. Made by McGraw
Ediaon. Save now.

•SIFETJ
BUIRIS
'.STRIP
II IlLES

QUITTING BUSINESS
VAWES TO 11.50

men's lies, asst. patterns and

VLen ' s

WE
QUIT!

1/ . OFF REG.
12 PRICE ·

styles. We have to move them.
out they go. Yes, buy several
for this low prlc~ .

boys'

2

'

'1:' '

PAIR

'1.49 VAWE VINYL 37'14'x6'

WINDOW
SHADES
Reg .

QUilTING BUSINESS SALE

97~

CLOSE OUT GROUP

roller. Save now.

HAIR CARE

~OTHING

. QUITTI~G BUSINESS SALE

Values To 69~
Ladles' .

Our complete stock

of ladies' ha ir . care

.r IIOY'S SHOll SLEEVE PUIII AND
FANCY SPORT

SHIRTSboya.

FANCY UNDIES

Shart lleeve atyle IJIIOrl ohlrta for
In plain
calol'l aDd fancy patterm.ln an ••. 4 to 18. Save

Grout&gt;ed for Quick
IOOUOS fancy
unc11e~ . vatues to
69c.
styles.
Good selecflpn of
colors. See these.
Buy several pair~.

VA~ES·1.44 ·a

.__,

...

and coSmetics . Wide
selection . Also our
complete line of

school

Save

VALUES TO

1~

2

Famous brands · •

walking shorts · •
plains and fancies . Save Big
Here.

BUSINE~

SA.LE

REG. 35' YARD

Snowy white famous
Hope Muslin. Reg.
35c
yard . Buy
several yards now 'It

OFF
REG.
PRICE

·BOYS'

WALKING SHORTS

Values to $3.99 In
this group of buys.

QUITTING

HOPE MUSLIN

COSMETICS
AND

44 EVERYTHING GOES
I

and

.Jask etb all shoe s. In
N ~ite and bla ck high I
and low cut. Reg . $2.99.

BEAUTY AIDS

, _.

"

MEN'S TIES

Values to S1.50 In this group of

AND

washable. Out they
go. Complete with

r~tt~n

801 WINDOW FANS

75%

·HEALTH

$1 .49' . J7 W'
mches - 6 u, long
vinyl window shades,

•......,

'

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

....:. QUITIIC
GIRL'S SUMIEI

·o·o'

over 1/~,.• ,!I OW at· thlh,iow::.loW J(

PAIR ·

'

PAIR

SPORTSWEAR

TO WEIR lOW AID
liTO SillER
VALUES TO $8.88

sor.-

QUITTING BUSINESS
VALUES TO 43.99 .

Girls Patent Leather ·

Ill sa~e

20 IICH .2 SPEED lciRIW EIISOI

.$ ,88

CLOSE-OUT GROUP SCHOOL SHOES

SLIPPERS
$2~~~

GREETING
CARDS

40-~~

Values to $3.99 in this group of
men 's swim wear . Assorted
·styles and colors . Priced to go
at $1.88.

QUITTING BUSINESS

FOOTWEAR

Values to S6.99, smart styles, flats,
heels, dress and sport styles. Ladles .

VE -THE SHOPPER'-5' BOIAIZA QUmiiC BUSIIESS SALE-

Men's Swim Trunks

PAIR

sizes. Stock up now
for summer.

Values To '6.99
Ladies' Better

pnce.

c

Big 9·inch size plastic play balls in a
variety of patterns and colors. Closeout value.

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
'
REG. '1.79
CHILDREN'S·MISSES-GIRLS

misses molded sole,

these.

$~~~

RECULAR
PRICE

PLAY BALLS

Reg. $1.79 value $
children , girls.

PAIR

PRICE

SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESS
fANCY 9-INCH PLASTIC

Full size tubular aluminwn patio lounga in multi color
to~ the chairs. Buy a lei now antf uve.

HOUSEHOLD

and
Summer
Footwear . Large
se lection, reduced
for quick sa le. See ·

Big lot of sewing, hair
household notions. Ali at just one
~urin.g our big Close-Out Sale.

IIJLTI-COLOR VINYL WEBBED

Bif 'Assor1111t Aac•or HockiAg

Value s to S3 .99
Ladies' Spring

SEWING IIOTIOIIS

.ASSORTED TOYS

PATIO CHAIR
..

LADIES' FOOTWEAR

QUITTING BUSINESS
CLOSE-OUT LOT OCEAN Of

- QUITTING BUSINESS SALE CLOSE-OUT GAMES-DOLLS

VINYL WEBBED
Sturdy tubular
aluminlun patio
furniture with
multi color vinyl
webbing. Folds
for easy storage.

$1

Values To 13.99

SALE-

ALUIIIUI FOLIIII

LADIES' FINE SPRING
ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
GRO'VND BEEF
ALL MEAT WIENERS

'

. Values to $1.19 in this group of better
household utensils. Stock up now at this
low pri~e .

129 MILL STREET -MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

2

5 lb.
3 lb.
5 lb .
4 lb.

IYLOI NET

UTENSI~S .

On Usl

Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Desserts

One lot - 'llroken sizes. Boys
work shoes and dress oxfords.
Shop early.

VAWES TO '4.98

You Can Count
For Prompt Service,
Delicious Food

'5.00 Ladies'

FOOTWEAR

FOOTWEAR .

~~footwear in·spring and
· styles. For dresa and

DAOUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cooper,
the former Marilyn Engle, of
Middlepprt, are announcing
the birth of a daughter, Susie
Ann, born on May 18 at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. The two pound, two
ounce Infant Is In Children's
Hospital, Columbus. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Engle, Middleport;
Clarence Cooper, Portland,
and Mrs. Bessie Cooper, An·
namorrah," W: va.
'

VISITING HERE
Jody Ferguson of Gahanna Is
spending the week visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Johnson, Jerry
and Mona, Pomeroy.

10 lb .
10 lb.
5 lb.
2 lb.

Phone Us &lt;&amp;s)
Your Ord.er!

~

Reg.

'

FOOTWEAR ·

'

find ."

SUPPER .HELD
The Women's Fellowship of
the Meigs Cpunty Churches of
Christ met recently at the Ohio
Va lley Christian Assembly
near
Darwin · f o r a
camp tour. A potluck supper
was held following a vesper
service. The next meeting will ·
be on June 22at 7:30p.m. at the
Hemlock Grove Church. Mrs.
Jacob Johnson is president of
the FeiiO\l'Ship.

YOUNG ADULT Cla ~s.
Bradford Church of Christ,
Friday, 6 p. m. cookout at Fort
HERE SUNDAY
·Meigs.
.
Sunday guests of Mrs. Jesale
MARY ~HRINE, White Reeves and Arthur Reeves
Shrine of Jerusalem, regular , Pomeroy, were Mr. apd Mrs:
meeting, 7:30p. m. Friday at Ed Marshall, Moundsville, W.
IOOF Hall, Pomeroy.
Va . and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
INSTALLATION of officers Howe, Glenville.
when Meigs .Chapter, Order of
DeMolay meets at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at Middleport Masonic
Temple. Those interested in
DeMoiay invited.
BAKE SALE Friday, 10 a.m.
to. 2 p. m. M&amp;R Bargainland. '
Sponsored by ladies auxiliary
ol Middleport Pentecostal
Church.
·
(62)
For
The
SATURDAY
Freezer
EASTERN ALUMNI
Banquet Saturday, 7:30 p, m.
at high school. Reservations to
be made by contacting Marilyn
Robinson, Coolville,. Rt. 2, or
phone 985-3629.

PROGRAM SET
Adaily vacation Bible school
program will be held al 7:30
Sunday night at the Middleport
Church of Christ. An
enrollment of 92 has been

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hedges,
Coolville, are announcing the
engage)llent and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Paula, to Mr. Danny Lantz, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lantz,
Reedsville.
The bride·dect is a student
at Federal Hocking High
School. Mr. Lantz is a 1971
graduate of Eastern . High
School and Is employed with
the Whitaker and Merrell Co.,
Columbus.
. The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, June i7, at 7 p.m.
in the United Methodist
Church, TUppers Plains. The
custom of open church will be
observed. A private reception
will he held for the couple
immediately following the
wedding,,

An invitation was also extended to Eastern Star
members, friends and families
to attend the Meigs Chapter
Otder of DeMolay instaUation
of officers to be held at 7:30 p.
m. on June 9. Also read was an
invitation from the Belpre
Chapter to attend Friends
Night and a reception for Mrs.
Marlene Logston, deputy
grand matron, on June 17. · . •
Mrs. Chesher announced a
"blind" auction to be held at
the July 6 meeting with
proceeds to go to the worthy
grand matron's cancer project.
Obligation , night will he observed at that meeting also.
Mr·. and Mrs. George
Meinhart and Mrs. Farie
Kennedy served refreshments.
The past matrons of the
Chapter wiU be hostesaes for
the social hour at the next
meeting. Final plans were
made for the Eastern Star and
Mason family picnic to be held
on J\Ule 11, 2 p.m. at the Forest
Acres Park, Rutland. The ham,
cold drinks and coffee will be
furnished.

Boy's Work &amp; Dress·

·Ladies Dress &amp;Canil

A Close-&lt;lltt lot of boys shoes
oxfords ancl boots. Val'*s up·
to $7.99.
..

Initiation Conducted

.Try Summer Style ·on for Size
lly HELEN HENNESS\'

chaMiermmabne.rs were reminded

BOY'S WORK &amp; DRESS ·

this low-low close out
price. Shop Early.

QUmiNG BUSINESS SALE
VALUES TO 59'

ODDS and ENDS ·

10~

�r
..

,.., ,.,. ... _-, -··-.... •~•i•·--- ..........

WU • • • . ..

a

J

-

"l • •••;

•

Mrs. Rhoda Hackett Sr. is President of Salon 710
Mrs. H110da Hackett, Sr. of
Middiep&lt;Jfi is the new chapeau
of the Meigs County S!'ion 710,
Eight and Forty. Nelv 1officers
were elected at a meeting held
. at the Hackett home Monday
night.
Other ofhcers elected were
Mrs. Marie Boyd, first demi
chapeau premiere; Mrs. Veda
Davis, second demi chapeau
duexieme; Mrs. l..uia Uampton, i'aumonier; Mrs. Mary
Martin, Ia archlviste; Mrs.
Cahterine Welsh, pouvior

member; Mrs. Iva Powell,
!'avocate; and · Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith, Ia surendiante. Mrs.
Julia Hysell was appointed by
Mrs. Hackett to serve as.
secretary-treasurer for the
Salon.
Chairmen appointed by Mrs.
Hackett were Mrs. Arnoltl
Richards, ritual and emblems;
Mrs. Boyd, Mrs. Pearl Knapp
and Mrs. Mary Roush, children
and youth ; Mrs. Welsh, Mrs.
Brinker and Mrs . Knapp ,
partnership, and Mrs. Edith

Fox, parodies.
Plans were made for the
convention to be held July 23
and 24 at Cincinnati and il·was
voted by the Salon to pay the
expenses of any member who
wants to attend . The delegates
·at large are Mrs. Martin, Mrs.
Walker and Mrs. Brinker; the
elected delegates are Mrs.
Welsh, Mrs. Knapp and Mrs.
Hampton, ·and the alternates
are Mrs. Hackett, Mrs. Boyd
and Mrs. Hysell.
M,rs. Martin announced that

the convention speaker will be ·
Richard
N. ·atuestine,
executive vice president of the
National Jewish Hospital at
Colo.
Other
Denver,
distinguished guests to attend
are Mrs . Raymond Sloan 1
Ashland American Legion
Auxiliary Department
president ;
Miss
Ann
Esh .e lman, Zanesville,
Auxiliary Department
secretary; Charles R. Green,
American Legion, Department
ol Ohio, commander ; Jack

Blevins,.Portsmouth, gran chef
de gare, 40 et 8; Mrs. Violet.
Aichhillz, second mellll!'lr of
finance on the ·national ~mmittee; Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
national pouvior member;
Garnet Grant, Kentucky
Departemental Chapeau; Miss
Dorothy Dolle, national
chapeau; Esther c. Edgar,
chapeau pa~ of Ohio .and
mistress .of cere!llonies: Mrs.
Evaline Berkley, Ohio chapeau
elect; Jo Hrabak, American
Legion national committee
woman and Diana While,
Shelby, entertainment

('

Mr. and Mrs. William Meredith
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Meredith of IOU Wood lana
Ave., Beverly, wt11 celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary
with an open house Sunday, J\Ule II, from 2 to 5 p. m. Mrs.
Meredith is the former Gladys Pickens, daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pickens of Reedsville. Mr. Meredith is
the eon of Mrs. Ray Meredith of Phoenix, Ariz., and the late
Mr. Meredith, a former Meigs CoWlty resident. •
Thecouplewasmarriedoi!June 8,1947, at the Reedsville
Methodistaturch by the late Rev. E. L. Miller. Mr. Meredith
i.s the general superintendent of Interlake, Inc., Beverly
Plant. They have two aons, Charles, an electrical engineer
with Eastman Kodak, Rochester, N. Y., and Roger, employed by the Mid:.COntinent Erection Corp., Vienna, W. Va.
Mr, and Mrs. Meredith request that gifts be omitted.

Mrs. Slack Hostess To
Two Garden Clubs
Members of the Cheshire
Garden Club were guests at the
Monday night meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held
at the spacious home of Mrs.
Sibley Slack.
Floral arrangements were
used thro~~&amp;hout the home.
Mrs. C. 0. Fisher, Mrs. Etoilla
CaaeU and Mrs. John Davis
were the assilting hostesaes.
Mrs. Michael Fry conducted
the meeting with members
responding to ron call by
namlns a geranium specimen.
''Oiw •Fragrant Yesterday",
• article WJ;itten by Ethel
McCool, was reviewed by Mrs.
David Entsminger. It told of
.roses and herbs In summer
gardena and gave lnatructions
for making rose jars.
An lnvltatloit was read from
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners for their open meeting
to be held on June 28 at the
Rutland Church ·of Christ. Mrs.
Robert Thompson will be the
auest demonstrator. Reported
ill were Mrs. WUliam Morris, a
'patient at the Riverside
Methodist
Hospital
in
Columbui; Miss Harrie Marie

Smith, and Mrs . Garen
Stansbury. Also noted was the
death of Mrs. C. A. Emmish.
Mrs. Cassell displayed the
arrangement of the month
using peonies and lemon lillies
in a pewter container. The
refreshment table featured an
arrangement of roses from the
gardens of Mrs. C. 0. Fisher
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy in a
silver compote with tapers in
matching holders. A salad
course was served to the 17
members and four local guests
and the nine members of the
Cheshire Club attending.
A!tending from the Cheshire
Club were Mrs. Rosetta
Wilson, Mrs. Edward Preston,
Mrs. Harry Clark, Mrs. Phyllis
Hawley, Mrs. Everett Long,
Mrs. William Scott, Mrs. Paul
Shumaker, Mrs. Paul Marlin,
and Mrs. Richard Russell.
Other guests were Mrs. Robert
Bumgarner, Mrs. tloscoe
Fowler, Mrs . Walter Crooks,
and Miss Nancy Large,
granddaughter of Mrs. Cassell.
Mrs. Fry and Miss Nellie
Zerkle presided at the coffee
and tea service.

Wearing pants
continues to be a
definite way of life for
many women . The
belted pont shirt with
o soft shaped neckline
and plenty of length
· to flatter the larger·
than-overage size
I left I is ovoiloble in
sizes 38-44. The twinpocketed shi rt comes
in six colors with
contrast stitching . Not
oil larger size women
and girls ore old . This
is but one of the
knits I right I designed
for the lorger-propor·
tioned person regard less of her age . It is
suitable for o 16-yeorold size 44 and
equa lly acceptable for
a 44-year-old size 44 .
The knit shirt in a
swimming fish pattern
is the popular St.
T ropez sty le and
although th e style
wasn't created initially
to flatter o largersize figure, the swooping slit $ides ore
the perfect ruse for
wide hips.
I designs from
Ship 'n' Shore. I

NEW YORK - 1NEA1 Allhough the state ol bemg
overweight is by no means a
new phenomenon, it ha s
reached e pi d e m i c statu s

t h a n k s to our affluent
society .
There are almost 40 mil·
lion overweight women in th~;•
world and dieting. exercise
and health spas have become•
big bllsiness as a resull .

Program is on Africa

.,

'·

)

A program on Africa was
presented by Mrs. Willia
Anthony at a meeting of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionai'Y, Society
'of the Middleport First Baptist
Church Monday night. ·
Mltlslonary work in Africa,
climate, and the products
which support the continent
were -dlscussed by Mrs. An·
thony whose niece has been a
misaiilnary there for several
years. Readings about Africa
were given by Mrs. Beulah
White, Mra. Fred Lewis, Mrs.
Paul Smart and Mrs. David
.O.rst;
Mrs. John Werner had
charge of the meeting wilh
Mts. Leora· Sigman giving
devotions. She used Psalm 21
u her scripture and read an
article from Billy Graham's
mltlslon 1111gazine, using a
prayer poem to close.
The love gift dedication was
conducted by Mrs. Charles
Simona who noted that the
fortieth anniveraary of the love
&amp;1ft In B.lplllt Churches .Is
btlng observed. She read "A
Love Gift Parable". ParUcipatln&amp; In the dedication
ceremony were Mrs. Arland
King, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman and
Mu. Fred Hoffman. Mrs.
Smart reported on the May
Fellowship Day held ·at the
Baptilt Church. She reported
.U .t. the Rev. Henry. Key
dtcllJied the ~peaker's fee and
that the amount was given for a
leper colony In Africa. .
Thete wtn 1M! no meeting in
July and the annual August
piCnic will be held at the
aterry Ridge farm of the Mr.
and Mrs. Willla Anthqny. Attending the meeting were nine
from the Oorcaa Circle, five
from the EJecta Circle, and
fovr from the Love Joy Circle.
1'111 rtfreahment ta~~- was

covered in orange and centered
with yellow roses in a cream
container. Hostesses were Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mrs. Fred'
Hoffman, Mrs. Dana Hartlm,
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin and Mrs.
Dale Walburn . Punch and
cookies were served.

BIKE HIKE TAKEN
Abike hike was taken Friday
by the youth group of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ with
their leaders, Harry and Sandy
Guenther. The group left the
church at 10:30 a.m. for Fort
Meigs for a picnic. They were
joined at the park by Hoyt
Alien, Jr., Sindy and Allen, and
Naomi Ohlinger. Young people
on the hike were Kathryn
Ohlinger, Cathy Osborne,
Debbie Osborne, Rose Colburn,
Iiliane Smith, Vicki Hoffman,
Crystal Glaze, Jo Ghafin, Craig
Venoy, Rick McKnight, Denny
Allen and Paul Jones.
VISITS MOORES
Mrs. Harry Hoagland and
Miss Grace · Sauvage of
Columbus were .recent
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Sr..
Middleport. Other recent
visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Jones and Kenneth of
Columbus. Mr.and Mrs. Moore
also visited recenUy In Ashland
with their sons, Harry, Jr. and
William, and their families .
SALE DAYS SET
A rummage sale will be held
Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday at the Eagles Club,
Pomeroy from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
ThflSe having rummage to be
picked up are to call 992-9976.

Past matrons and past
patrons of Evangeline Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern Star,
were honored at a recent
meetip
ld at the Masonic
Temple,
dleport . Smail
white Bibles w re presented to
each one by Mr. and ·Mrs.
Harry Chesher, worthy matron
and patron of the chpater.
Initiatory work was exemplified for two candidates.
Read at the meeting .was an
invitation from Pomeroy
~hapter to. attend Inspection.

Paula Hedges to
Be Wed June 17

•

and having to undergo four have been taken to dress
complete wardrobe changes. their "' faithfuls"' and "' join·
In the reverse. if you 're on ers ."' no matter what their
age or size- right un up 1o
your way up , the change 46.
from a size 36 to a 4Q takes
you out of the regular size
Not only do they have the
category to extra sizes and size to fit any frame, any
puts you on !he wav to the age, bttt fashion looks at
upper 40 where you're about realistic prices.
to reach dilemma propor·
tions when it comes to ward- For summer !here are inrobe selections.
expensi ve cotton knits thai
will keep their shape and as
Ship 'n Shore has kept ttp
are about $6.00 the price
with the times and is aware they
right
for a changing ward ·
is
of the doldrums · through robe . The
styles are right.
which a woman goes when too. for a heavier
the
'her size changes The com - proportions properfigure.
for the
pany ts also aware that over·
weigh t is something that si7.e.
happens to a 16-year-uld girl
There are long , belted
a s readily as to a 40 -year-old shirts that can be worn low

The almost universal com plaint has to do with ill ·fit ·
ling clothes. According to a
well -known diet group. a
gain of tO pottnds in stitutes a
size change . Imagine being
on H di et to lose 40 pounds woman .

Ninth Birthday

Is Celebrated
Mrs. Larry Hudnall and Mrs.
Thomas Darst entertained
Sunday afternoon with a party
in observance of the ninth
birthday of their sister,
Tammy Pettit. The affair was
held at the Hudnall home in '
Middleport.
Cake and ice cream were
served and favors of bubbles,
balloons and harmonicas were
given to the 'children . Games
were played with Annette
Johnson and Lisa Harris
winning the prizes.
Other guests were Robin
McDaniel, Mark and Steven
Oldaker, Cammie Morris,
Craig Darst, Roxanne and
Michele McDaniel, Robbie
Johnson, Mrs. Kathy Johnson,
Mrs. Avenelle Pettit, Mrs.
Mabel Pettit, Venessa Pettit,
Mrs. Doris Smith and Mrs.
Adam Oldaker. Sending gifts
were Brenda Fry, William
Pettit; and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Pettit.

BALD KNOBS
Mr . and Mrs .f Russell
Callendar and son, Troy, of
Grand Rapids, Mich., Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Van Meter and
family of East Liverpool, Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Van Meter and
Missy of Minersville Route and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans
and family, local, visited Mrs.
Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs . ·Russell
Calendar and son, Troy, of
Grand Rapids, Mich. , Mary
Birch of Gallipolis , ,~.Leota
Birch, Mrs. Jean Dailey, Mrs.
Maxine Durst, Mrs. Ann
Cozart, Mr. and · Mrs. Gene
Ward and family, local, visited"
Mr. and Mrs. Michael £vans
and family.

that dues are payable now.
Penny bags were turned in ai
the meeting. The Salon
members still have jewelry
and nuts for sale. A catd was
read from Mrs. Wanda Tanner,
scholarship chairman,
thanking the salon for $113
donated.
.
It was nolell that a-reception ·
will be held for Mrs. Martin on
Saturday night of the Cin· clnnatl convention.
·
A cosmetic party was beld
following the meeting.

FOOTWEAR

Aggressive

steps enough to hide slow -to-d im in -

o=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::...::=:::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::::--:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::*~=~=!:~=~=~=m::~:i!::::~:i::::!%:::::::==::::~~

~

Social Calendar
•

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in EA degree. All master
masons invited.
POMEROY Quarterly
Luncheon picnic, Wednesday,
noon, Route 33 roadside park.
Auction to be held.
LADIES Auxiliary, Middleport Firemen, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Mrs.
Donald Lowery, Logan St. ,
Mrs . David Ohlinger, cohostess.
THURSDAY
'ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Inspection, 8 p.m: Thursday
night at the hall. Program and
refreshments . Ail members
urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E.S., Thursday, 8 p.m. Inspection . Inspection officer
grand conductress Vera
Thornton.
SOUTHERN Local Board
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
high school.
SHADE River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
hall in Chester. Work in E.A.
Degree . All Master Masons
invited.
PAST
Councilors
of
Daughters of America No. 17
will meei aU:30 p.m. Thursday at the hom~ of Mrs. Don
Rea, Minersville with Mrs.
Ruby Erb as hostesa.
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
potluck picnic, 6; 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr., 528 S. Second, Middleport.
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, annual
flag day covered dish dinner, I
p.m. at the . home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson, Racine.
Members to meet at the Shrine
Park at 12:30 p.m. for the trip

l\

to the Johnson home. Mrs.
Dayton Parsons will be cohostess. Mrs. David Miller will
present a program on "Our
Flag", and Misa Lucille Smith
will give junior citizenship.
awards.

ish hips or quickly expanding
derrieres. Necklines on these
are designed to make the
neck look longer for a more
sleek look .
The fabricsi used for target·
sizes are exactly the same
ones used for regular sizes.
One lament of the larger
woman or girl is that the
fabrics they must choose
from are always second rate.
oldet· looking. But not so
these. All the popular summer fabrics and the newest
prints can be found and ,
most important for at ·alltimes neatness . every fabric
is an easy-care one that will
keep its clean crisp look
with just a minimttm of
upkeep .

SALE SATURDAY
LETART FALLS - The
WSCS of the East Letart United
Methodist Church will hold a
rummage and yard sale
Saturday at Letart Community
Hall beginning at.9 :30 a.m.

repo~ted.

TO VISIT CAMP
Parent visitation will he
observed Thursday afternoon
at the Big Bend Neighborhood
Girl Scout camp being held thil
week at Klashuta near Chester.
Aprogram will be presented by
the girls at 1:30 p.m. with skits,
songs, and a craft display to be
featured. Thirty-seven girls
are registered for the five day
camp with eight adulta and six
senior aides asaisting. Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger lfi the director.

. Sympathy

Flowers
~~convey your thoughts
when words are hard to

Dudley's Florist
Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Mlddllporl, 0.
&amp; Muon Co., W. Va.

Don't Forget

$388
PAIR

wear.

'200
Values to 11.19 ·

HOUSEHOLD ·

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge
·

10 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
5 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. STEW MEAT

8 lb.
8 lb.
8 lb.
4 lb.

PORK CHOPS
GROUND BEEF
SLICED SLAB BACON
ALL MEAT WIENERS

ROUND STEAK
GROUND. BEEF
CHUCK· 'ROAST
PORK CHOPS

992·3502 ,; -~~E!~~othtrtllln :::Is)

Ulle lot of mens Work shoes
and dress style boots that

OUT TO THE BARE WALL_~~--· .....
o~e·~~

SELL

resularly sold for $10.99.
~~ they go now at this low
pnce.

~·EVERYTHING · GOES
-QUITTING BUSINESS SALEMEN'S REGULAR $6.99

CLOSE-OUT LOT LADIES

LACE-TO-TOE TENNIS

DRESS &amp;CASUAL

OXFORDS·

FOOTWEAR

Mens high quality lace to toe tennis oxfords,
in blue, black or white. Regular $6.99 values.
A great value!

Va~~es $ 30.0
6.99 .

Reg. 11.79 Value ·

STOCK OF HIGH QUALITY~~\\~
Ladies'
MERCHANDISE \~~~~ ,~ SPORT SNEAKERS
~!aies~ ~~e~f~~~
QQ
FICED

Close-Out lot. Choose from dress and caaual
styles. Save now!

1

PAIR

1

-THE SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESSBIG CLOSE-OUT ASSORTMENT
Quitting Business 5ale

-~

.•

Our better footwear ts Included In this big

made

moulded

sole. white, blue,
black , 5 to 10 .•

QUITIIIIC

~USIIESS

$ 7

A good selection of
popular toys, consisting
of games, dolls, trucks
and many other toy
items. Save y, ,

EACH

IITCHIII PATIO LIUIGES

Y2

GLASSWARE

A big lot of Anchor Hodting hausehold
glassware, bowls, tumbfen, cups1
mugs, vases, ash trays in asaoneo
colors and kinds.

:EYERYTHII
lUST

SPORT SNEAKERS
American made .
Red, white, navy . All

00

OUR COMPLETE
STOCK I

1~

OFF
REG.
PRICE!

DRESS

Save up to one-half now oo
line spring dresses .
Cottons, acetates and
blended fabrics in an the
wanted colora an11
patterna. Now Ia the Ume•to
&amp;aYfl! .

tACH '

EACH

Big 20-inch ventilating box fan with powerfl!l two speed
mo.tor, safety guards, strap handles. Made by McGraw
Ediaon. Save now.

•SIFETJ
BUIRIS
'.STRIP
II IlLES

QUITTING BUSINESS
VAWES TO 11.50

men's lies, asst. patterns and

VLen ' s

WE
QUIT!

1/ . OFF REG.
12 PRICE ·

styles. We have to move them.
out they go. Yes, buy several
for this low prlc~ .

boys'

2

'

'1:' '

PAIR

'1.49 VAWE VINYL 37'14'x6'

WINDOW
SHADES
Reg .

QUilTING BUSINESS SALE

97~

CLOSE OUT GROUP

roller. Save now.

HAIR CARE

~OTHING

. QUITTI~G BUSINESS SALE

Values To 69~
Ladles' .

Our complete stock

of ladies' ha ir . care

.r IIOY'S SHOll SLEEVE PUIII AND
FANCY SPORT

SHIRTSboya.

FANCY UNDIES

Shart lleeve atyle IJIIOrl ohlrta for
In plain
calol'l aDd fancy patterm.ln an ••. 4 to 18. Save

Grout&gt;ed for Quick
IOOUOS fancy
unc11e~ . vatues to
69c.
styles.
Good selecflpn of
colors. See these.
Buy several pair~.

VA~ES·1.44 ·a

.__,

...

and coSmetics . Wide
selection . Also our
complete line of

school

Save

VALUES TO

1~

2

Famous brands · •

walking shorts · •
plains and fancies . Save Big
Here.

BUSINE~

SA.LE

REG. 35' YARD

Snowy white famous
Hope Muslin. Reg.
35c
yard . Buy
several yards now 'It

OFF
REG.
PRICE

·BOYS'

WALKING SHORTS

Values to $3.99 In
this group of buys.

QUITTING

HOPE MUSLIN

COSMETICS
AND

44 EVERYTHING GOES
I

and

.Jask etb all shoe s. In
N ~ite and bla ck high I
and low cut. Reg . $2.99.

BEAUTY AIDS

, _.

"

MEN'S TIES

Values to S1.50 In this group of

AND

washable. Out they
go. Complete with

r~tt~n

801 WINDOW FANS

75%

·HEALTH

$1 .49' . J7 W'
mches - 6 u, long
vinyl window shades,

•......,

'

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

....:. QUITIIC
GIRL'S SUMIEI

·o·o'

over 1/~,.• ,!I OW at· thlh,iow::.loW J(

PAIR ·

'

PAIR

SPORTSWEAR

TO WEIR lOW AID
liTO SillER
VALUES TO $8.88

sor.-

QUITTING BUSINESS
VALUES TO 43.99 .

Girls Patent Leather ·

Ill sa~e

20 IICH .2 SPEED lciRIW EIISOI

.$ ,88

CLOSE-OUT GROUP SCHOOL SHOES

SLIPPERS
$2~~~

GREETING
CARDS

40-~~

Values to $3.99 in this group of
men 's swim wear . Assorted
·styles and colors . Priced to go
at $1.88.

QUITTING BUSINESS

FOOTWEAR

Values to S6.99, smart styles, flats,
heels, dress and sport styles. Ladles .

VE -THE SHOPPER'-5' BOIAIZA QUmiiC BUSIIESS SALE-

Men's Swim Trunks

PAIR

sizes. Stock up now
for summer.

Values To '6.99
Ladies' Better

pnce.

c

Big 9·inch size plastic play balls in a
variety of patterns and colors. Closeout value.

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
'
REG. '1.79
CHILDREN'S·MISSES-GIRLS

misses molded sole,

these.

$~~~

RECULAR
PRICE

PLAY BALLS

Reg. $1.79 value $
children , girls.

PAIR

PRICE

SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESS
fANCY 9-INCH PLASTIC

Full size tubular aluminwn patio lounga in multi color
to~ the chairs. Buy a lei now antf uve.

HOUSEHOLD

and
Summer
Footwear . Large
se lection, reduced
for quick sa le. See ·

Big lot of sewing, hair
household notions. Ali at just one
~urin.g our big Close-Out Sale.

IIJLTI-COLOR VINYL WEBBED

Bif 'Assor1111t Aac•or HockiAg

Value s to S3 .99
Ladies' Spring

SEWING IIOTIOIIS

.ASSORTED TOYS

PATIO CHAIR
..

LADIES' FOOTWEAR

QUITTING BUSINESS
CLOSE-OUT LOT OCEAN Of

- QUITTING BUSINESS SALE CLOSE-OUT GAMES-DOLLS

VINYL WEBBED
Sturdy tubular
aluminlun patio
furniture with
multi color vinyl
webbing. Folds
for easy storage.

$1

Values To 13.99

SALE-

ALUIIIUI FOLIIII

LADIES' FINE SPRING
ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
GRO'VND BEEF
ALL MEAT WIENERS

'

. Values to $1.19 in this group of better
household utensils. Stock up now at this
low pri~e .

129 MILL STREET -MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

2

5 lb.
3 lb.
5 lb .
4 lb.

IYLOI NET

UTENSI~S .

On Usl

Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Desserts

One lot - 'llroken sizes. Boys
work shoes and dress oxfords.
Shop early.

VAWES TO '4.98

You Can Count
For Prompt Service,
Delicious Food

'5.00 Ladies'

FOOTWEAR

FOOTWEAR .

~~footwear in·spring and
· styles. For dresa and

DAOUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cooper,
the former Marilyn Engle, of
Middlepprt, are announcing
the birth of a daughter, Susie
Ann, born on May 18 at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. The two pound, two
ounce Infant Is In Children's
Hospital, Columbus. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Engle, Middleport;
Clarence Cooper, Portland,
and Mrs. Bessie Cooper, An·
namorrah," W: va.
'

VISITING HERE
Jody Ferguson of Gahanna Is
spending the week visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Johnson, Jerry
and Mona, Pomeroy.

10 lb .
10 lb.
5 lb.
2 lb.

Phone Us &lt;&amp;s)
Your Ord.er!

~

Reg.

'

FOOTWEAR ·

'

find ."

SUPPER .HELD
The Women's Fellowship of
the Meigs Cpunty Churches of
Christ met recently at the Ohio
Va lley Christian Assembly
near
Darwin · f o r a
camp tour. A potluck supper
was held following a vesper
service. The next meeting will ·
be on June 22at 7:30p.m. at the
Hemlock Grove Church. Mrs.
Jacob Johnson is president of
the FeiiO\l'Ship.

YOUNG ADULT Cla ~s.
Bradford Church of Christ,
Friday, 6 p. m. cookout at Fort
HERE SUNDAY
·Meigs.
.
Sunday guests of Mrs. Jesale
MARY ~HRINE, White Reeves and Arthur Reeves
Shrine of Jerusalem, regular , Pomeroy, were Mr. apd Mrs:
meeting, 7:30p. m. Friday at Ed Marshall, Moundsville, W.
IOOF Hall, Pomeroy.
Va . and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
INSTALLATION of officers Howe, Glenville.
when Meigs .Chapter, Order of
DeMolay meets at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at Middleport Masonic
Temple. Those interested in
DeMoiay invited.
BAKE SALE Friday, 10 a.m.
to. 2 p. m. M&amp;R Bargainland. '
Sponsored by ladies auxiliary
ol Middleport Pentecostal
Church.
·
(62)
For
The
SATURDAY
Freezer
EASTERN ALUMNI
Banquet Saturday, 7:30 p, m.
at high school. Reservations to
be made by contacting Marilyn
Robinson, Coolville,. Rt. 2, or
phone 985-3629.

PROGRAM SET
Adaily vacation Bible school
program will be held al 7:30
Sunday night at the Middleport
Church of Christ. An
enrollment of 92 has been

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hedges,
Coolville, are announcing the
engage)llent and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Paula, to Mr. Danny Lantz, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lantz,
Reedsville.
The bride·dect is a student
at Federal Hocking High
School. Mr. Lantz is a 1971
graduate of Eastern . High
School and Is employed with
the Whitaker and Merrell Co.,
Columbus.
. The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, June i7, at 7 p.m.
in the United Methodist
Church, TUppers Plains. The
custom of open church will be
observed. A private reception
will he held for the couple
immediately following the
wedding,,

An invitation was also extended to Eastern Star
members, friends and families
to attend the Meigs Chapter
Otder of DeMolay instaUation
of officers to be held at 7:30 p.
m. on June 9. Also read was an
invitation from the Belpre
Chapter to attend Friends
Night and a reception for Mrs.
Marlene Logston, deputy
grand matron, on June 17. · . •
Mrs. Chesher announced a
"blind" auction to be held at
the July 6 meeting with
proceeds to go to the worthy
grand matron's cancer project.
Obligation , night will he observed at that meeting also.
Mr·. and Mrs. George
Meinhart and Mrs. Farie
Kennedy served refreshments.
The past matrons of the
Chapter wiU be hostesaes for
the social hour at the next
meeting. Final plans were
made for the Eastern Star and
Mason family picnic to be held
on J\Ule 11, 2 p.m. at the Forest
Acres Park, Rutland. The ham,
cold drinks and coffee will be
furnished.

Boy's Work &amp; Dress·

·Ladies Dress &amp;Canil

A Close-&lt;lltt lot of boys shoes
oxfords ancl boots. Val'*s up·
to $7.99.
..

Initiation Conducted

.Try Summer Style ·on for Size
lly HELEN HENNESS\'

chaMiermmabne.rs were reminded

BOY'S WORK &amp; DRESS ·

this low-low close out
price. Shop Early.

QUmiNG BUSINESS SALE
VALUES TO 59'

ODDS and ENDS ·

10~

�..

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-• .•

to :... The D31ly SeriliiK'l,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Jane 7, 1972

.

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.. -

....... . . .

..

• • .... .. . • • .... ' t

~ h

-

"'

.. .

, ._~.,1--

~

•

..

¥

-.

,.

~

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.... · · · 1 . · . " . .. • .. ,. . .. ,, .

'

..

Barnette Retul'ns as.·Wahama's Head Grid .Coach
.

.

BY JEANW~RNER
.r
Grant Barnette will return to Wahama High School as head
coach and athletic director ahd two vacancies have been
created in administrative posts in two high schools, which were
among actions concerning teaching personnel that resulted in
several split votes. at Tuesday evening's ·regular Board of
Education meeting.
There were periods the voting became so confused that the
Popular quotation, "I know you believe you understand what you
th ink I said. But I am not sure you realize that what you heard is
not what I meant," could have been applicable.
A period of confusion reigned when Supt. Charles Withers
recommended that Mr. Barnette be transferred from principal
of H.annan to Head Coacll and Athletic Director at Wahama
Junior ·and Senior High School on three-year contract to
become effective July I.
· Board member Bill Withers set forth a·motion to accept the
·superintendent's recommendation and Charles Eshenaur gave
the second. Supt. .Withers proceeded to read a letter from
Barnette concerning the move.
·· When president Ted Stevens c;alled for the vote Harry Siders
said "no," Ray Fields said "aye on only one yearn and Stevens,
at this point injected that he was voting "aye on only one year."
Bill Withers in an attempt to get the boar&lt;Lto change its y0te,
entered· the conversation saying "! don 't like a three-year
contract either" and referring " previous executive sessions
went on to comment "Mr. Barnette was treated more like they
would treat s': ves. Mr. Barnette was hwnilated, talked to like
he was a dog . When Grant was at Wahama he had a lot of
problems. These problems were agitated," adding "The m•n
did a terrific job," in behalf of Barnette.
· Stevens expressed considerable objection to the three year·
contract saying"every coach would want a three-vear contract.

a

months.
Siders was yisi~ly shook stating "In all due respect to young
·teachers ·and many more· who have taught for many many
years" that he objected to this action.
Supt. Withers had recommended Alice Bartley as a teacher
at WesT'Collimbia, but Eshenaur, S"'~ens and Fields voted "no"
on this and with Siders' "no" vote on the entire move this made
a 4-1 vole' on Ms. ll:!rtley thus leaving her placement pending.
Withers was only one voting "aye" .
.
.
Several employments were made, but Siders viited against
·these say(ng he wanted to study the 'list further, with the
exception of Kay Gygax, which he approved.
Employments approved include the following :
Richard Sweet, teacher at N~w Haven Elementary-10
months; Ira Atkinson as teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High for 10
months; D3vid Graham as teacher at Point Pleasant J. High-10
months; Joan Uinunerrnan as teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High
for 10 months:' Clyde Sullivan as teacher at Point Pleasant Jr.
High for JOmonths; James Reymond as football Coach at Point
Pleasant Jr. High with $500.00 excess and 10~ months
employment (Mr. Reymond was previously employed as a
teacher) .
·
Edward Shacke), teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High School-10
months ; Kay Gygax, teacher at Point Pleasant Jr. High-10
months; Leo Watson, Teacher-Coach and Athletic Director at
Hannan High School, 12 months employment with excess of
$ll0.00 per month for 10 months; William Absten as Bus Driver
for the 72-73 school term.
Robert E. Allbright, Michael Fields, Donald Ray
McDermitt, Larry Matheny, Henry David Rossi, Charles
William Leach, all in maintenance as needed at $2.15 per hour
effective 6-7-72.
Patty Pyles as secretary in the County Office, to replace

I

McGovern

News ••• in ·Briefs

(Continued from Page I)
(Continued from Page I )
·
primary. Nixon won 89 per cent
some
of
those
still
Wldergrouhd
may
have
found
their
way to
and 5 per cen t of the
safety. But authoritative sources agreed there was "no hope" for
Republjcans voted for neither,
those entombed·:!oo feet below the surface. The coal mine, one of
in effect casting blank ballots.
uie largest in the world, was shaken by an unexplained blast in
Twenty-five Democrats and
shaft No. 2 Tuesday.
eight Republicans competed
for their parties' nominations
to succeeil Democratic Sen.
WASHINGTON - UNDERSECRETARY of State George W.
Clinton P. Anderson, who is
Ball in a memorandum dated Oct. 5, 1964, urged a negotiated
retiring after a Washington
settlement in Vietnam and warned the JohilSOn administration
career that stretches back to
against escalating the war. The memoraodum, which was
the New Deal. The winners
classified top secret, is being-pul!llshed by the Atlantic Magazine
were unknown ·early today.
in its July issue.
In New Jersey
The magazine's editor, Robert W. Manning, said in a
New Jersey - McGovern
telephone interview Tuesday he believed the 13-j)age document
edged out Humphrey narrowly
filled in an important gap in the historical record. "It shows a
for th e seven Qemocralic
carefully reasoned adversary position very early in the game,"
delegates elected at-large but
Manning said.
cleaned up in most of the 21
counties which elected the
CORPUS CHRISTI, TEX. -THE MILIJONAIRE stepson of
remaining 102 delegates. The
Frances
Farenthold, who lost the Democratic nomination for
McGovern camp claimed he
Texas governor four days ago in a runoff eleclion, was clubbed
would wind up with 80
unconscious and thrown to his death in the Gulf of Mexico with a
delegates. Humphrey counted
concrete anchor attached to his neck, a medical examiner said
on support from -17 successful
today.
uncommited delegates plus
four Humphrey men.
The body of Randy Farenthol~ 1 32, wrapped in chains tied to
Uberal Republican Sen. Clifconcrete blocks, washed into the shallows off Port Aransas, Tex.,
ford P. Case, considered virTuesday. Police said Farentbold, made wealthy by an
tua lly. inbeatable, won re-.
inheritance from his grandmother, was known to have been
nominatio~ for a fourth term'
"hanging around" with WJderworld characters. Officers called
aga inst James W. Ralph, a
the murder a "gangland slaying."
Vietnam war hero. Democrats
nominated former Rep. Paul J.
Krebs to oppose Case in a lourman race.
Rep. Dominick V. Daniels,
PRETTY IS as pretty smells, or something like that.
FALSE ALARM
~pparentl~· taking more than a stricti)· professional
D, defeated Gallagher, who
(Continued from Page I)
A
call
to the bank of the
Interest in his work. Juan Sarmiento of the El Paso.
claimed his indictment last
had nationwide impact among Ohio River in Middleport by
Tex., Parks and Recreation Department was snapped
May resulted from an FBI plot
~.ijcators and lawmakers heby photographer Brad Coo per during an appreciative
the Middleport E-R squad at
to defame him. ·Redistricting
cause of their revolutionizing I : 19 Tuesday afternoon
mom ent while setting up a riow er show .
threw the two incumbents into
effect on states' taxing fortunately turned out to be a
one district.
systems. Almost all states lean false alarm.
In a North Jersey district
heavily on local property taxes
A resident, seeing what
with a 52 per cent black
to finance schools.
she thought was an overmajority, Rep. Peter W.
turned
boat, called the
(Continued
from
Page
I)
Rodino, who is white, easily
squad.
However,
the squad
project
possible.
A
certain
won renomination for a 13th
concluded what she saw was
THREE FINED
term against three black op- percentage of the funds had to
actually
an optical IUusion.
be
committed
in
the
county
Three
defendants
were
fined
ponents.
Some
children
had made a
before
the
application
could
be
- two on charges of driving
South Dakota- Uncontested,
Swimming classes at the while intoxicated - in the raft of Inner tupes and had
McGovern won his home made for a state grant. Over
Middleport
· community pool court of Middleport Mayor placed a plastic top over the
$2,000
has
been
donated
state's 17 delegates.
will
get
underway
on JWJe 26, John Zerkle Tuesday night. lupes. The plastic appeared
already
and
the
emphasis
will
No Republican Named
Freshman Rep. James be on getting others to take an Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, park Leroy Edmonds, 47 , Mid- to be a capsized boat.
dleport, was fined $150 and
Abourezk, D, easily won the interest in the endeavors of the manager, said today.
for
the
classes
Registration
Council
fo
r
community
betcosts
and given a three-day jail
Democratic Senate nomination
for children one year of age sentence on conviction of
lor the seat being vacated by terment.
Those
who
have
already
and
older will be held the week driving while intoxicated ; Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sen. Karl Mundt, 72, who has
ADMITTED
James
Henry D. Watson, 68, Midbeen absent from the Capitol contributed to the program preceding the classes.
Hamm,
Raeine;
Albert
Zahl,
Tomorrow, junior and senior dleport, was fined $100 and
since suffering a stroke 21'. include Pomeroy Lutheran
Racine; Lucille Lambert,
years ago. No Republican won Cliurch through a Lenten of. lifesaving courses will ge t costs, and given the same jail Rutland; Manuel Fernendes,
the 35 per cent needed for the fering; St. Paul Lu thera n underway at the pool. The sentence on the same charge, Gallipolis ; Birdie Fields,
GOP Senate nomination so the Church Women ; Athens junior lifesaving fee is $6 and and Roland Goodwin, 18, Middleport ; Elizabeth Conde,
issue will be decided by a Dis tr ict United Methodist senior lifesaving, $7. This in· Pomeroy, was fined $18 and Pomeroy; Howard L. Largent,:
convention. Former state Sen. Church ; United Methodist clu~es the book needed for both costs, assured clear distance Syra cuse; Orville Hussell ,
Roher! Hirsch led with 28 per Chu rches, Leten offerings; courses. Those interested may charge.
Mason ; Laura Grano 1 Vinton ;
Grace Ep iscopal Ch urch contact Mrs. Vaughan this
cent in a field of five.
:=::::::::::::~:=:~:::::::~~::::w.~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Clyde BayIes, Middl ep_
or t ;
Montana-Metcalf easily Women, Racine Home Bank, evening or tomorrow.
John
Blosser,
Middleport;
More girls are also needed
won renomination for a third The Farmers Bank and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Clifford Beegle, Racine; Olive
Savings
Co.,
the
Pomeroy
for
the softball program. They
term. His opponent appeared
Ohio
Extended
Outlook
Lawson,
Portlapd ; Mayme
to he state Sen. Henry Hibbard. National Bank, the Citizens should be between the ages or 8 Friday through Sunday: A Ferguson, West Columbia;
Mississippi- Eastland, 67, National Bank, Krogers, and 15. All equipment with the chance of showers Friday. Roy Sears, Middleport ; Harold
easily defeated two opponents American Cegion Auxiliary 39 exception of gloves is provided. Fair Saturday and Sunday. King, Pomeroy.
for renomination to a sixth six- of Pomeroy, Middleport- Those interested may contact Highs In the 70s except near
DISCHARGED - Brenda
year term, campaigning on the Pomeroy Rotary Club, Royal Mrs. Vaughan.
80 extreme south. Overnight Durbin, Josephine Browning,
claim that as chairman of the Crown Bottling Co. , Karr
lows
In the ~s and low 60s. Bonnie Whittington , Eric
Senate Judiciary Committee Construction Co., Ohio Eta Phi
"' Leonard Stover, Henry Roney.
he helped make th e Supreme Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Court less liberal. Meredith Sorority, Rawlings-Coats
IN HOSPITAL
won only 20 per cent of the vote Funeral Home, Ewing Funeral
The Meigs County Board of
GRANGE TO MEET
Keith Black of Middleport
in his attempt to win the GOP Home, General Telephone Co., Education Tuesday night
LETART
FALLS - Ohio
nomination
to
oppose Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mrs. Ger- empl oyed Jean Meyer of entered Children's Hospital in
Eastland. The winner of__the trude- Mitchell,. Miss Nellie Lakewood, Ohio, graduate of Col umbus today for ob- Valley Grange 2612 will meet at
state's fi rst Republican seriate Zekle, Miss Lydia Ebersbach, Ohio University, as county servation and treatment. He 8 p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Potluck refreshments will be
primary was Gil Carmichael, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary, speech therapist and re-hired was accompanied to Columbus served.
44, a Meridian business leader. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mr. Mary Blt(on as work study c~&gt;­ by Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Democrats renominated Reps. and Mrs. C. J. Stuble, Mr. and ordinator.ln other business the Franeis.
Jamie Whitten and G.V. Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Mr. board adopted new text books
and Mrs. Paul Simon, Mr. and
"Sonny" Montgomery.
for the high school.
REUNION SET
Mrs. 'Delmar Canaday.
· Attending were Robert The Bobo family reunion will
Bowen,county superintendent; be held at the Kyger Creek
REVIVAL UNDERWAY
Virgil Atkins, Harold Roush, Park Sunday with a basket
CHESTER - Revival serAUTOS COLLIDE
Harold Lohse, Gordon Collins dinner at I p.m. Mr. and Mrs.
vices are Wlderway at 7:30
No injuries were reported in and George Perry, members. Clyde Van Cooney of Tempe,
each evening. through Sunday a two-car accident Tuesday at
Ariz ., wlll attend the reunion.
at the Chester Church of the the intersection of SR 124 and
Family and friends are
Nazarene. The Rev. John Els- 338 in Racine. The Meigs
welcome.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
wick of Athens is evangelist. County Sheriff's Dept. said
'
The Pomeroy E-R squad
The public Is Invited. ·
cars driven by Clara Adams: answered a call to the Joe
Racine, and Woodrow J . Conde residence, Oak St .,
MEET NEXT WEEK
LOCAL TEMPS
Richard, Long Bottom, Rt. I, Pomeroy, at 2:13 p. m.
Rutland Council, which did
Temperature in downtown collided . There was light Tuesday for Elizabeth Conde, not meet Tuesday due to lack of
Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m. damage to the Adams car and who was ill. She was taken to quorum, will meet next
was 7t degrees, under sunny 1t1edium to Richard:s. There Veterans Memorial Hospital Tuesday at 7:30 p.m ., Mayor Th,tu ro
E l . Jomison
skies.
.were no arrests.
where she was admitted.
Eugene Thompson said today.
Teftn

I

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uJrr

~SUNDAY 1·

Mabel Martin

; SOCKET SET

Pocked in HUSKY'S space-oge co mpartmen tal plastic tool
box thi s ¥ersotile HUSKYiool set guarantees a lifetime of top
performance . Ide al for a ll home and auto maintenance and
a perfect addition to the trailer or boat!

I

HECK'S REG .

$15 .88
ELECTRIC

Of Mason·Dies

MASON - Mrs. Mabel
Martin, 91, Mason , who died
Tuesday evening, was born
Aug. 27,1880, at Letart, W. Va.,
the daughter of the late John
Wesley and Rebecca Roush.
Mrs. Martin was preceded
also in death by her husband,
John, in 1969. She was a
great-grandchild.
Funeral services will he held
at 10 a. m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Burial will be in St.
Joseph Cemetery at Columbus.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4and 7 to 9p. m.
Thursday.

Gibson

member of the Mason United
Methodist Church.
She is survived by one stepson, Tom Danielson, Cin.cinnatl; four nieces, Mrs. Jean
Lyons and Mrs. Eugia Johnson, both of Mason; Mrs.
Hester Fields, Uncoln Park,
Mich ., and Mrs . Georgia
Purdy, Killbuck, Ohio, and a
·nephew, Enunett Roush, Belle,
W.Va.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1:30 p. m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Stan Craig officiating.
Burial will be in SWJcrest
Memorial Park, Pt. Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 3 p. m.
Thursday.

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PAINT
SPRAYER
OUTFIT

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•

'f!!1'"-"·- -

· · ·.';···.~

HARDWARE
DEPT.

EDISON

SABRE SAW
, Top handle for oM hon~ control

' It crOSJ-cwt1. ript, scrolls., natches • •""
makes itt own starting·holt•
' ll!umb switch for quid QN .QFF control
, Rom speed 3000 strok.s per minute

' I
...

ELECTRIC RANGE

US• 76 REEL
J

•

$34.88

HARDWARE
DEPT.

,,

e

•

to to.....

$2.77
SPORTS DEPT.

All rnetol

SPIN REEL.

gea r~ provide long lile ond smooth po.,..er. Machined

he lical buns pinio n o nd heavy duty ball bearing odion. Boil is
stoinfess 1leel, hard chromed line toilet guide . Spool hood ond
reel body ore an odi l ed aluminum

'444

PORTABLE
RADIO

DRESS SHIRTS

'

HECK'S
REG,

. '

ClOTNI*' DEPT.

SEAT COVERS
The fioul nylon ond loam cornlr udion moke1_the1e the best
sect coven you mn buy . Th ~~e cover~ lit OS 1! they were built
right into the car . The beau t•fu \ ~ty lir~ g ond protedion of these
populor seol cover s o' ler year s o f tom lor l ond elega11 ce . Fot
1plit or solid botk.

SPORT$ DIP T. .

l ~•"•iou 1 &lt;DII ' " "''' ;n a "'h blud ol b!ocl
to b rown t o~••. 10 cmofull r c r o lt~d r ou'd
o!mo l! brtlie,. rl wo• fOOl lo ntkl r ll~wg ned to
lit 1nwgly Into ltnai ii ~D&lt;I • e ili1 lugg age
,.he~ ht't lfo.,.lrng • o M 11t dto"'" ' ... he n
he\ at lht olltce e hit d9n w~n ht't ot home

ncl vdes : 4 oz. Aeros~l Deo'doro.nt ond
Afte r Shove.

Conl.v•"" 7 " oQ d·h&lt;&gt;&lt;-•d ho11ello" , n.,.
b•u1 he 1. I 1hono tloth1. :1 •f")"ll• lole "!'f&gt;l•w
ton :l1nap ·opon con• f.WU iaf Snot Po!" ' '
(I &amp;lot• . I ~ r~wn J.

$p9

2 1/1 oz.
OLD SPIU

AFTER SHAVE

loday· s FUNNY

. $1~8

One year from date of purchue,

detlverv

of

the

appliance

reQuired because of service .

Second through fifth year from

date af purcflue, Gibson will :

Provide a repla cement surface

heating element , oven heating
element. or surface element
swi tch for any such part found

defective .

.,..

The customer will pay for : Any

pick up and delivery of the ap .
plial"lce requfre d because ot

sendee . Al l cos ts for labor , parts.
i!ll"ld tran spor ta tion other than the

cost of t he r&amp;pletcement surfa ce
heating element , oven heating
e lement, or surface etemenl
switch rtsel t .

4

oz .

HAl KARATE
AFTERSHAVE

HECK'S REG.

$1.07

COSMETIC DEPT.

GILLEnE TRAC II
DELUXE RAZOR

$ 99

INGELS

'
$3.99

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

HECK'S REG- TO $2.79

COSMETIC

COSMETIC DEPT.

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2635
Open Fri . &amp; Sat, Nights

1.

!

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'

MEN' S

POLYESTER

DRESS PANTS
Fancies and solids in sizes 29 to 38.
"•

$899

HECK'S REG.

,

•

(

4 OZ. COLO~NE

Gib, on will : Pay all costs for
repa ir ing or repla cing any parts we fi nd defective . The cu stomar

will po, for: Any pick up and

•

$_
1 22 -

• With continuous clean oven
• ~isual~e oven
• Electric clock and timer

"
I

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT,

•

HECI('S REG.
$4.99

STICK DEODORANT

$3.18

$2.99

4·oz. TROUBLE

$199

$399

HECK'S
REG .

HECK'S

MENNEN

ClOTH/*'
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

SHOE GROOM KIT

GIFT SET

this 5 year guarantee of quality.

MEII'S DENIM PATCH POUET

Sanforized . Wa1 ho ·
ble . Sleek ~tyl ing with
con t ras ting
pot ch
pocke t ~ . Si U! \ : 29 t o
38 .

$4.99

ESQUIRE

The Very Best Value your money can buy with

ssoo
HECK'S REG . $3 . 99 EACH

NYLON-N-FOAM

HECK'S REG.

$11.88

'

•5.99

2 FOI

JEANS

1
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.

"m
,I

Pt Pleasant Store Only
,"

Shon 1leevt1 models tho! ~;~re e~;~sy
cart ond lono wear permane nt
p reu fabric. ReoYiar caller. Avo i!·
able in auorled prinfl ond med• ·
solids.Sim: 141'1 t617.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

BERKLEY NO: 4201

TRIFOLD
WALLETS

PERMAIIEIIT PRESS

$2888

HECK'S REG.

ClOTHIIIC DEPT.
MEN'S

operat es on .4 "(,_If cell bol·
t~r ies or AC Cl!Hent • slide
rvle ty ning e t.,.. o 21f• " wid e
r~;~nge d)momit speok~r1

.., )h;, '"''"''" l•bco ••~ 1 .111
If••• ho m t.,h,n\1/~ft ond lOt~·
lo&lt;1ron lo' mon~ fa1M r"1 Do r &lt;

REG.
1
4.48
Pt Pleasant Store Only

HECK'S
REG.

2 FOR

5-BAND
A(-DC

HECK'S

'3''

Excitingly new crews or
plockeh in bold stripes
or so lid colors. Sizes: S·
M· l·Xl.

HECK'S REG. $2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG.

Pt. Pleasant
Store Only

WITH BATTERY

I'

KNIT
SHIRTS

ssoo

HECK'S REG. si4.66

Swim Classes
Begin June 26
In Middleport

I

1 A fine quality cost aluminum spray gu~ with f~ll pin t
capacity. 2. Full length 8ft'. a ir hose . 3. Hobb~1sl 600
compressor - in color. 4 .6 h . heo11y duty e lec tri c wrd.
5. Comple t e ·eo~y to re ad instructions on spray pam !·
ing.

$ 88

, Bri 9ht aluminum finish

easy clean

MEN'S
SHORT
SLEEVE

McGRAW

EVEREADY
LANTERN
~

SUNDAY JUNE

18 PC. HUSKY

108

OU Grad Hired

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I

State audit findings for a period from 1962 through 1969
came under discussion and Eshenaur instigated a move "a clear
up all the findings of the state audit lor final dlswsitlon."
Stevens said these deal with .overpayments etc. Charles
Chambers, assistant superlnl\!n~ent, disclosed these are
accumlative and in order to clear present recor&lt;ls disposition
should he .made. Presently, books are WJdergolng au!lll in the
board office. Siders and Fields expressed a desire to wait until
the present findings are complete, but E~henaur insisted and the
motion passed in a 4-1 vote with Siders dissenting.

U:retta F~en
Died Tuesday
Mrs. Loretta Agnes Feen, 71,
Ewington Route l , died
Tuesday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. F:een was horn May 30,
1901 in Columbus, the daughter
of the late Andrew and Agnes
Snyder Decker. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Charles Feen.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Eugene (Marie) Grubbs,
Hopewell Route I ; a son,
Raymond Basing, Clearwater,
F1a. ; a sister, Mrs. Mildred
Murphy, Columbus; a brother,
Charles Decker of zanesville;
seven grandchildren, and ooe

•

Trace Sorenson, effective' July I, • $374.00 per month;
Elliott as acting principal at Roosevelt, effective May 11, 1972 to
June 14, 1972. Salary baSed on certification, experience, and
principals excess.
. .
James Ri~s 'l'iiS employed as assistant coacl) at Wahama
Juniiii':Senior High on a split 4-1 vote. Siders voted against the
move.~~ -·
Teachers previously employed were placed as follows:
San\lra Gibbs Preece, M~son Elementary; Shirley Ukens
and Sandra Morgan, at Beale Elementary; VIcki Steele Hall at
Hanna.n Elementary and Florence McCoy as teaching·principal
at Beech Hill for 101'• months.
Several major changes resulted through resignations,
including the vice-principals position at PPHS through the
resignation of J. Walter Copley Jr., who submitted a resignation
to return to his home in Richwood. With Barnette's.move and
this, the vacancies are left in the principalship at Hannan and
vice-principal's position at PPHS.
Other resignations include that of the following :
Dennis Stranahan, bus driver; Jacquelyn Carpenter,
teacher PPJr.HS and Jimmy Carpenter, teacher-eoach
PPJr.HS; Jo Ruth Skeen, Wahama ; John R. Owen, speech
clinician ; Kaye Spillman, teacher at Beale Elementary.

.

School Tax

Survey

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•

The Administration is· different now ... "' Stevens asked Rill
Withers.if he would give every principal a three 'year .cootract
and Withers answered "If Mr. Barnette had bee~ treated proper
he wouldn 'I need a three-year contract."
Fields directed a question to Rill Withers asking "Did you
vote your honest opinion?" with Withers replying "yes" and
then when Withers put the same quesllon to Fields, Fields'
·answer was"! did too". Once more, Bill Withers said he was
simply trying to get the board to c!J;onge its mind.
Supt. Withers explained to the board that Mr. Barnett.
already has a three year contract, but has served one year at
Hannan and still has two remaining years or this contract,
although the ihree-year contract was not affirmed.
· Teacher placement concerning persons on the transfer and
subsequent assignment list was another controversial matter
faced by the board.
Fields and Siders were&lt;J't &gt;0 amicable when U1ey had an
exchange of words on these placements. Fiellls said to Siders
that he didn't think he (Siders) was aware of all the situations in
the school system, but Siders asserted he had held the board
post longer than Fields and felt he was.
Side,. protested "the way it was handled" and was
emphatic when he asked "Gentlemen why in the world are you
in such a hurry?" In a split vote of 4-1 with the exception of one
teacher, Alice BarUey, changes were made as follows :
Lowell Thomas, teacher, Point Pleasant Junior High, 10
months: Howard Lee Miller, teacher-coach, PPHS, IO't..
months; Olston Wright, teaching principal at West Columbia,
10¥• months; Jerry Romine, Jane Smith and Don lipton,
teachers at Wahama Junior and Senior High, each 10 months;
Una Hinson reassigned as teaching principal at Mt. Flower
Elementary for tov, months; Pamela Cottrill, teacher PPHS, 10
months; Donald VanMetre teacher-coach at PPHS, 10 ~

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11- The Doily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u.. June •. '" •
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HECK'S RIG, TO $13.99

ClOTHING DII'T.

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to :... The D31ly SeriliiK'l,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Jane 7, 1972

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Barnette Retul'ns as.·Wahama's Head Grid .Coach
.

.

BY JEANW~RNER
.r
Grant Barnette will return to Wahama High School as head
coach and athletic director ahd two vacancies have been
created in administrative posts in two high schools, which were
among actions concerning teaching personnel that resulted in
several split votes. at Tuesday evening's ·regular Board of
Education meeting.
There were periods the voting became so confused that the
Popular quotation, "I know you believe you understand what you
th ink I said. But I am not sure you realize that what you heard is
not what I meant," could have been applicable.
A period of confusion reigned when Supt. Charles Withers
recommended that Mr. Barnette be transferred from principal
of H.annan to Head Coacll and Athletic Director at Wahama
Junior ·and Senior High School on three-year contract to
become effective July I.
· Board member Bill Withers set forth a·motion to accept the
·superintendent's recommendation and Charles Eshenaur gave
the second. Supt. .Withers proceeded to read a letter from
Barnette concerning the move.
·· When president Ted Stevens c;alled for the vote Harry Siders
said "no," Ray Fields said "aye on only one yearn and Stevens,
at this point injected that he was voting "aye on only one year."
Bill Withers in an attempt to get the boar&lt;Lto change its y0te,
entered· the conversation saying "! don 't like a three-year
contract either" and referring " previous executive sessions
went on to comment "Mr. Barnette was treated more like they
would treat s': ves. Mr. Barnette was hwnilated, talked to like
he was a dog . When Grant was at Wahama he had a lot of
problems. These problems were agitated," adding "The m•n
did a terrific job," in behalf of Barnette.
· Stevens expressed considerable objection to the three year·
contract saying"every coach would want a three-vear contract.

a

months.
Siders was yisi~ly shook stating "In all due respect to young
·teachers ·and many more· who have taught for many many
years" that he objected to this action.
Supt. Withers had recommended Alice Bartley as a teacher
at WesT'Collimbia, but Eshenaur, S"'~ens and Fields voted "no"
on this and with Siders' "no" vote on the entire move this made
a 4-1 vole' on Ms. ll:!rtley thus leaving her placement pending.
Withers was only one voting "aye" .
.
.
Several employments were made, but Siders viited against
·these say(ng he wanted to study the 'list further, with the
exception of Kay Gygax, which he approved.
Employments approved include the following :
Richard Sweet, teacher at N~w Haven Elementary-10
months; Ira Atkinson as teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High for 10
months; D3vid Graham as teacher at Point Pleasant J. High-10
months; Joan Uinunerrnan as teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High
for 10 months:' Clyde Sullivan as teacher at Point Pleasant Jr.
High for JOmonths; James Reymond as football Coach at Point
Pleasant Jr. High with $500.00 excess and 10~ months
employment (Mr. Reymond was previously employed as a
teacher) .
·
Edward Shacke), teacher at Wahama Jr. Sr. High School-10
months ; Kay Gygax, teacher at Point Pleasant Jr. High-10
months; Leo Watson, Teacher-Coach and Athletic Director at
Hannan High School, 12 months employment with excess of
$ll0.00 per month for 10 months; William Absten as Bus Driver
for the 72-73 school term.
Robert E. Allbright, Michael Fields, Donald Ray
McDermitt, Larry Matheny, Henry David Rossi, Charles
William Leach, all in maintenance as needed at $2.15 per hour
effective 6-7-72.
Patty Pyles as secretary in the County Office, to replace

I

McGovern

News ••• in ·Briefs

(Continued from Page I)
(Continued from Page I )
·
primary. Nixon won 89 per cent
some
of
those
still
Wldergrouhd
may
have
found
their
way to
and 5 per cen t of the
safety. But authoritative sources agreed there was "no hope" for
Republjcans voted for neither,
those entombed·:!oo feet below the surface. The coal mine, one of
in effect casting blank ballots.
uie largest in the world, was shaken by an unexplained blast in
Twenty-five Democrats and
shaft No. 2 Tuesday.
eight Republicans competed
for their parties' nominations
to succeeil Democratic Sen.
WASHINGTON - UNDERSECRETARY of State George W.
Clinton P. Anderson, who is
Ball in a memorandum dated Oct. 5, 1964, urged a negotiated
retiring after a Washington
settlement in Vietnam and warned the JohilSOn administration
career that stretches back to
against escalating the war. The memoraodum, which was
the New Deal. The winners
classified top secret, is being-pul!llshed by the Atlantic Magazine
were unknown ·early today.
in its July issue.
In New Jersey
The magazine's editor, Robert W. Manning, said in a
New Jersey - McGovern
telephone interview Tuesday he believed the 13-j)age document
edged out Humphrey narrowly
filled in an important gap in the historical record. "It shows a
for th e seven Qemocralic
carefully reasoned adversary position very early in the game,"
delegates elected at-large but
Manning said.
cleaned up in most of the 21
counties which elected the
CORPUS CHRISTI, TEX. -THE MILIJONAIRE stepson of
remaining 102 delegates. The
Frances
Farenthold, who lost the Democratic nomination for
McGovern camp claimed he
Texas governor four days ago in a runoff eleclion, was clubbed
would wind up with 80
unconscious and thrown to his death in the Gulf of Mexico with a
delegates. Humphrey counted
concrete anchor attached to his neck, a medical examiner said
on support from -17 successful
today.
uncommited delegates plus
four Humphrey men.
The body of Randy Farenthol~ 1 32, wrapped in chains tied to
Uberal Republican Sen. Clifconcrete blocks, washed into the shallows off Port Aransas, Tex.,
ford P. Case, considered virTuesday. Police said Farentbold, made wealthy by an
tua lly. inbeatable, won re-.
inheritance from his grandmother, was known to have been
nominatio~ for a fourth term'
"hanging around" with WJderworld characters. Officers called
aga inst James W. Ralph, a
the murder a "gangland slaying."
Vietnam war hero. Democrats
nominated former Rep. Paul J.
Krebs to oppose Case in a lourman race.
Rep. Dominick V. Daniels,
PRETTY IS as pretty smells, or something like that.
FALSE ALARM
~pparentl~· taking more than a stricti)· professional
D, defeated Gallagher, who
(Continued from Page I)
A
call
to the bank of the
Interest in his work. Juan Sarmiento of the El Paso.
claimed his indictment last
had nationwide impact among Ohio River in Middleport by
Tex., Parks and Recreation Department was snapped
May resulted from an FBI plot
~.ijcators and lawmakers heby photographer Brad Coo per during an appreciative
the Middleport E-R squad at
to defame him. ·Redistricting
cause of their revolutionizing I : 19 Tuesday afternoon
mom ent while setting up a riow er show .
threw the two incumbents into
effect on states' taxing fortunately turned out to be a
one district.
systems. Almost all states lean false alarm.
In a North Jersey district
heavily on local property taxes
A resident, seeing what
with a 52 per cent black
to finance schools.
she thought was an overmajority, Rep. Peter W.
turned
boat, called the
(Continued
from
Page
I)
Rodino, who is white, easily
squad.
However,
the squad
project
possible.
A
certain
won renomination for a 13th
concluded what she saw was
THREE FINED
term against three black op- percentage of the funds had to
actually
an optical IUusion.
be
committed
in
the
county
Three
defendants
were
fined
ponents.
Some
children
had made a
before
the
application
could
be
- two on charges of driving
South Dakota- Uncontested,
Swimming classes at the while intoxicated - in the raft of Inner tupes and had
McGovern won his home made for a state grant. Over
Middleport
· community pool court of Middleport Mayor placed a plastic top over the
$2,000
has
been
donated
state's 17 delegates.
will
get
underway
on JWJe 26, John Zerkle Tuesday night. lupes. The plastic appeared
already
and
the
emphasis
will
No Republican Named
Freshman Rep. James be on getting others to take an Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, park Leroy Edmonds, 47 , Mid- to be a capsized boat.
dleport, was fined $150 and
Abourezk, D, easily won the interest in the endeavors of the manager, said today.
for
the
classes
Registration
Council
fo
r
community
betcosts
and given a three-day jail
Democratic Senate nomination
for children one year of age sentence on conviction of
lor the seat being vacated by terment.
Those
who
have
already
and
older will be held the week driving while intoxicated ; Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sen. Karl Mundt, 72, who has
ADMITTED
James
Henry D. Watson, 68, Midbeen absent from the Capitol contributed to the program preceding the classes.
Hamm,
Raeine;
Albert
Zahl,
Tomorrow, junior and senior dleport, was fined $100 and
since suffering a stroke 21'. include Pomeroy Lutheran
Racine; Lucille Lambert,
years ago. No Republican won Cliurch through a Lenten of. lifesaving courses will ge t costs, and given the same jail Rutland; Manuel Fernendes,
the 35 per cent needed for the fering; St. Paul Lu thera n underway at the pool. The sentence on the same charge, Gallipolis ; Birdie Fields,
GOP Senate nomination so the Church Women ; Athens junior lifesaving fee is $6 and and Roland Goodwin, 18, Middleport ; Elizabeth Conde,
issue will be decided by a Dis tr ict United Methodist senior lifesaving, $7. This in· Pomeroy, was fined $18 and Pomeroy; Howard L. Largent,:
convention. Former state Sen. Church ; United Methodist clu~es the book needed for both costs, assured clear distance Syra cuse; Orville Hussell ,
Roher! Hirsch led with 28 per Chu rches, Leten offerings; courses. Those interested may charge.
Mason ; Laura Grano 1 Vinton ;
Grace Ep iscopal Ch urch contact Mrs. Vaughan this
cent in a field of five.
:=::::::::::::~:=:~:::::::~~::::w.~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Clyde BayIes, Middl ep_
or t ;
Montana-Metcalf easily Women, Racine Home Bank, evening or tomorrow.
John
Blosser,
Middleport;
More girls are also needed
won renomination for a third The Farmers Bank and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Clifford Beegle, Racine; Olive
Savings
Co.,
the
Pomeroy
for
the softball program. They
term. His opponent appeared
Ohio
Extended
Outlook
Lawson,
Portlapd ; Mayme
to he state Sen. Henry Hibbard. National Bank, the Citizens should be between the ages or 8 Friday through Sunday: A Ferguson, West Columbia;
Mississippi- Eastland, 67, National Bank, Krogers, and 15. All equipment with the chance of showers Friday. Roy Sears, Middleport ; Harold
easily defeated two opponents American Cegion Auxiliary 39 exception of gloves is provided. Fair Saturday and Sunday. King, Pomeroy.
for renomination to a sixth six- of Pomeroy, Middleport- Those interested may contact Highs In the 70s except near
DISCHARGED - Brenda
year term, campaigning on the Pomeroy Rotary Club, Royal Mrs. Vaughan.
80 extreme south. Overnight Durbin, Josephine Browning,
claim that as chairman of the Crown Bottling Co. , Karr
lows
In the ~s and low 60s. Bonnie Whittington , Eric
Senate Judiciary Committee Construction Co., Ohio Eta Phi
"' Leonard Stover, Henry Roney.
he helped make th e Supreme Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Court less liberal. Meredith Sorority, Rawlings-Coats
IN HOSPITAL
won only 20 per cent of the vote Funeral Home, Ewing Funeral
The Meigs County Board of
GRANGE TO MEET
Keith Black of Middleport
in his attempt to win the GOP Home, General Telephone Co., Education Tuesday night
LETART
FALLS - Ohio
nomination
to
oppose Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mrs. Ger- empl oyed Jean Meyer of entered Children's Hospital in
Eastland. The winner of__the trude- Mitchell,. Miss Nellie Lakewood, Ohio, graduate of Col umbus today for ob- Valley Grange 2612 will meet at
state's fi rst Republican seriate Zekle, Miss Lydia Ebersbach, Ohio University, as county servation and treatment. He 8 p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Potluck refreshments will be
primary was Gil Carmichael, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary, speech therapist and re-hired was accompanied to Columbus served.
44, a Meridian business leader. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mr. Mary Blt(on as work study c~&gt;­ by Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Democrats renominated Reps. and Mrs. C. J. Stuble, Mr. and ordinator.ln other business the Franeis.
Jamie Whitten and G.V. Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Mr. board adopted new text books
and Mrs. Paul Simon, Mr. and
"Sonny" Montgomery.
for the high school.
REUNION SET
Mrs. 'Delmar Canaday.
· Attending were Robert The Bobo family reunion will
Bowen,county superintendent; be held at the Kyger Creek
REVIVAL UNDERWAY
Virgil Atkins, Harold Roush, Park Sunday with a basket
CHESTER - Revival serAUTOS COLLIDE
Harold Lohse, Gordon Collins dinner at I p.m. Mr. and Mrs.
vices are Wlderway at 7:30
No injuries were reported in and George Perry, members. Clyde Van Cooney of Tempe,
each evening. through Sunday a two-car accident Tuesday at
Ariz ., wlll attend the reunion.
at the Chester Church of the the intersection of SR 124 and
Family and friends are
Nazarene. The Rev. John Els- 338 in Racine. The Meigs
welcome.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
wick of Athens is evangelist. County Sheriff's Dept. said
'
The Pomeroy E-R squad
The public Is Invited. ·
cars driven by Clara Adams: answered a call to the Joe
Racine, and Woodrow J . Conde residence, Oak St .,
MEET NEXT WEEK
LOCAL TEMPS
Richard, Long Bottom, Rt. I, Pomeroy, at 2:13 p. m.
Rutland Council, which did
Temperature in downtown collided . There was light Tuesday for Elizabeth Conde, not meet Tuesday due to lack of
Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m. damage to the Adams car and who was ill. She was taken to quorum, will meet next
was 7t degrees, under sunny 1t1edium to Richard:s. There Veterans Memorial Hospital Tuesday at 7:30 p.m ., Mayor Th,tu ro
E l . Jomison
skies.
.were no arrests.
where she was admitted.
Eugene Thompson said today.
Teftn

I

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uJrr

~SUNDAY 1·

Mabel Martin

; SOCKET SET

Pocked in HUSKY'S space-oge co mpartmen tal plastic tool
box thi s ¥ersotile HUSKYiool set guarantees a lifetime of top
performance . Ide al for a ll home and auto maintenance and
a perfect addition to the trailer or boat!

I

HECK'S REG .

$15 .88
ELECTRIC

Of Mason·Dies

MASON - Mrs. Mabel
Martin, 91, Mason , who died
Tuesday evening, was born
Aug. 27,1880, at Letart, W. Va.,
the daughter of the late John
Wesley and Rebecca Roush.
Mrs. Martin was preceded
also in death by her husband,
John, in 1969. She was a
great-grandchild.
Funeral services will he held
at 10 a. m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Burial will be in St.
Joseph Cemetery at Columbus.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4and 7 to 9p. m.
Thursday.

Gibson

member of the Mason United
Methodist Church.
She is survived by one stepson, Tom Danielson, Cin.cinnatl; four nieces, Mrs. Jean
Lyons and Mrs. Eugia Johnson, both of Mason; Mrs.
Hester Fields, Uncoln Park,
Mich ., and Mrs . Georgia
Purdy, Killbuck, Ohio, and a
·nephew, Enunett Roush, Belle,
W.Va.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1:30 p. m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Stan Craig officiating.
Burial will be in SWJcrest
Memorial Park, Pt. Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 3 p. m.
Thursday.

.

...
.

..

• •

PAINT
SPRAYER
OUTFIT

.

•

'f!!1'"-"·- -

· · ·.';···.~

HARDWARE
DEPT.

EDISON

SABRE SAW
, Top handle for oM hon~ control

' It crOSJ-cwt1. ript, scrolls., natches • •""
makes itt own starting·holt•
' ll!umb switch for quid QN .QFF control
, Rom speed 3000 strok.s per minute

' I
...

ELECTRIC RANGE

US• 76 REEL
J

•

$34.88

HARDWARE
DEPT.

,,

e

•

to to.....

$2.77
SPORTS DEPT.

All rnetol

SPIN REEL.

gea r~ provide long lile ond smooth po.,..er. Machined

he lical buns pinio n o nd heavy duty ball bearing odion. Boil is
stoinfess 1leel, hard chromed line toilet guide . Spool hood ond
reel body ore an odi l ed aluminum

'444

PORTABLE
RADIO

DRESS SHIRTS

'

HECK'S
REG,

. '

ClOTNI*' DEPT.

SEAT COVERS
The fioul nylon ond loam cornlr udion moke1_the1e the best
sect coven you mn buy . Th ~~e cover~ lit OS 1! they were built
right into the car . The beau t•fu \ ~ty lir~ g ond protedion of these
populor seol cover s o' ler year s o f tom lor l ond elega11 ce . Fot
1plit or solid botk.

SPORT$ DIP T. .

l ~•"•iou 1 &lt;DII ' " "''' ;n a "'h blud ol b!ocl
to b rown t o~••. 10 cmofull r c r o lt~d r ou'd
o!mo l! brtlie,. rl wo• fOOl lo ntkl r ll~wg ned to
lit 1nwgly Into ltnai ii ~D&lt;I • e ili1 lugg age
,.he~ ht't lfo.,.lrng • o M 11t dto"'" ' ... he n
he\ at lht olltce e hit d9n w~n ht't ot home

ncl vdes : 4 oz. Aeros~l Deo'doro.nt ond
Afte r Shove.

Conl.v•"" 7 " oQ d·h&lt;&gt;&lt;-•d ho11ello" , n.,.
b•u1 he 1. I 1hono tloth1. :1 •f")"ll• lole "!'f&gt;l•w
ton :l1nap ·opon con• f.WU iaf Snot Po!" ' '
(I &amp;lot• . I ~ r~wn J.

$p9

2 1/1 oz.
OLD SPIU

AFTER SHAVE

loday· s FUNNY

. $1~8

One year from date of purchue,

detlverv

of

the

appliance

reQuired because of service .

Second through fifth year from

date af purcflue, Gibson will :

Provide a repla cement surface

heating element , oven heating
element. or surface element
swi tch for any such part found

defective .

.,..

The customer will pay for : Any

pick up and delivery of the ap .
plial"lce requfre d because ot

sendee . Al l cos ts for labor , parts.
i!ll"ld tran spor ta tion other than the

cost of t he r&amp;pletcement surfa ce
heating element , oven heating
e lement, or surface etemenl
switch rtsel t .

4

oz .

HAl KARATE
AFTERSHAVE

HECK'S REG.

$1.07

COSMETIC DEPT.

GILLEnE TRAC II
DELUXE RAZOR

$ 99

INGELS

'
$3.99

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

HECK'S REG- TO $2.79

COSMETIC

COSMETIC DEPT.

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2635
Open Fri . &amp; Sat, Nights

1.

!

.

'

MEN' S

POLYESTER

DRESS PANTS
Fancies and solids in sizes 29 to 38.
"•

$899

HECK'S REG.

,

•

(

4 OZ. COLO~NE

Gib, on will : Pay all costs for
repa ir ing or repla cing any parts we fi nd defective . The cu stomar

will po, for: Any pick up and

•

$_
1 22 -

• With continuous clean oven
• ~isual~e oven
• Electric clock and timer

"
I

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT,

•

HECI('S REG.
$4.99

STICK DEODORANT

$3.18

$2.99

4·oz. TROUBLE

$199

$399

HECK'S
REG .

HECK'S

MENNEN

ClOTH/*'
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

SHOE GROOM KIT

GIFT SET

this 5 year guarantee of quality.

MEII'S DENIM PATCH POUET

Sanforized . Wa1 ho ·
ble . Sleek ~tyl ing with
con t ras ting
pot ch
pocke t ~ . Si U! \ : 29 t o
38 .

$4.99

ESQUIRE

The Very Best Value your money can buy with

ssoo
HECK'S REG . $3 . 99 EACH

NYLON-N-FOAM

HECK'S REG.

$11.88

'

•5.99

2 FOI

JEANS

1
. . . ·..

.

"m
,I

Pt Pleasant Store Only
,"

Shon 1leevt1 models tho! ~;~re e~;~sy
cart ond lono wear permane nt
p reu fabric. ReoYiar caller. Avo i!·
able in auorled prinfl ond med• ·
solids.Sim: 141'1 t617.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

BERKLEY NO: 4201

TRIFOLD
WALLETS

PERMAIIEIIT PRESS

$2888

HECK'S REG.

ClOTHIIIC DEPT.
MEN'S

operat es on .4 "(,_If cell bol·
t~r ies or AC Cl!Hent • slide
rvle ty ning e t.,.. o 21f• " wid e
r~;~nge d)momit speok~r1

.., )h;, '"''"''" l•bco ••~ 1 .111
If••• ho m t.,h,n\1/~ft ond lOt~·
lo&lt;1ron lo' mon~ fa1M r"1 Do r &lt;

REG.
1
4.48
Pt Pleasant Store Only

HECK'S
REG.

2 FOR

5-BAND
A(-DC

HECK'S

'3''

Excitingly new crews or
plockeh in bold stripes
or so lid colors. Sizes: S·
M· l·Xl.

HECK'S REG. $2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG.

Pt. Pleasant
Store Only

WITH BATTERY

I'

KNIT
SHIRTS

ssoo

HECK'S REG. si4.66

Swim Classes
Begin June 26
In Middleport

I

1 A fine quality cost aluminum spray gu~ with f~ll pin t
capacity. 2. Full length 8ft'. a ir hose . 3. Hobb~1sl 600
compressor - in color. 4 .6 h . heo11y duty e lec tri c wrd.
5. Comple t e ·eo~y to re ad instructions on spray pam !·
ing.

$ 88

, Bri 9ht aluminum finish

easy clean

MEN'S
SHORT
SLEEVE

McGRAW

EVEREADY
LANTERN
~

SUNDAY JUNE

18 PC. HUSKY

108

OU Grad Hired

'

I

State audit findings for a period from 1962 through 1969
came under discussion and Eshenaur instigated a move "a clear
up all the findings of the state audit lor final dlswsitlon."
Stevens said these deal with .overpayments etc. Charles
Chambers, assistant superlnl\!n~ent, disclosed these are
accumlative and in order to clear present recor&lt;ls disposition
should he .made. Presently, books are WJdergolng au!lll in the
board office. Siders and Fields expressed a desire to wait until
the present findings are complete, but E~henaur insisted and the
motion passed in a 4-1 vote with Siders dissenting.

U:retta F~en
Died Tuesday
Mrs. Loretta Agnes Feen, 71,
Ewington Route l , died
Tuesday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. F:een was horn May 30,
1901 in Columbus, the daughter
of the late Andrew and Agnes
Snyder Decker. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Charles Feen.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Eugene (Marie) Grubbs,
Hopewell Route I ; a son,
Raymond Basing, Clearwater,
F1a. ; a sister, Mrs. Mildred
Murphy, Columbus; a brother,
Charles Decker of zanesville;
seven grandchildren, and ooe

•

Trace Sorenson, effective' July I, • $374.00 per month;
Elliott as acting principal at Roosevelt, effective May 11, 1972 to
June 14, 1972. Salary baSed on certification, experience, and
principals excess.
. .
James Ri~s 'l'iiS employed as assistant coacl) at Wahama
Juniiii':Senior High on a split 4-1 vote. Siders voted against the
move.~~ -·
Teachers previously employed were placed as follows:
San\lra Gibbs Preece, M~son Elementary; Shirley Ukens
and Sandra Morgan, at Beale Elementary; VIcki Steele Hall at
Hanna.n Elementary and Florence McCoy as teaching·principal
at Beech Hill for 101'• months.
Several major changes resulted through resignations,
including the vice-principals position at PPHS through the
resignation of J. Walter Copley Jr., who submitted a resignation
to return to his home in Richwood. With Barnette's.move and
this, the vacancies are left in the principalship at Hannan and
vice-principal's position at PPHS.
Other resignations include that of the following :
Dennis Stranahan, bus driver; Jacquelyn Carpenter,
teacher PPJr.HS and Jimmy Carpenter, teacher-eoach
PPJr.HS; Jo Ruth Skeen, Wahama ; John R. Owen, speech
clinician ; Kaye Spillman, teacher at Beale Elementary.

.

School Tax

Survey

.

•

The Administration is· different now ... "' Stevens asked Rill
Withers.if he would give every principal a three 'year .cootract
and Withers answered "If Mr. Barnette had bee~ treated proper
he wouldn 'I need a three-year contract."
Fields directed a question to Rill Withers asking "Did you
vote your honest opinion?" with Withers replying "yes" and
then when Withers put the same quesllon to Fields, Fields'
·answer was"! did too". Once more, Bill Withers said he was
simply trying to get the board to c!J;onge its mind.
Supt. Withers explained to the board that Mr. Barnett.
already has a three year contract, but has served one year at
Hannan and still has two remaining years or this contract,
although the ihree-year contract was not affirmed.
· Teacher placement concerning persons on the transfer and
subsequent assignment list was another controversial matter
faced by the board.
Fields and Siders were&lt;J't &gt;0 amicable when U1ey had an
exchange of words on these placements. Fiellls said to Siders
that he didn't think he (Siders) was aware of all the situations in
the school system, but Siders asserted he had held the board
post longer than Fields and felt he was.
Side,. protested "the way it was handled" and was
emphatic when he asked "Gentlemen why in the world are you
in such a hurry?" In a split vote of 4-1 with the exception of one
teacher, Alice BarUey, changes were made as follows :
Lowell Thomas, teacher, Point Pleasant Junior High, 10
months: Howard Lee Miller, teacher-coach, PPHS, IO't..
months; Olston Wright, teaching principal at West Columbia,
10¥• months; Jerry Romine, Jane Smith and Don lipton,
teachers at Wahama Junior and Senior High, each 10 months;
Una Hinson reassigned as teaching principal at Mt. Flower
Elementary for tov, months; Pamela Cottrill, teacher PPHS, 10
months; Donald VanMetre teacher-coach at PPHS, 10 ~

'I

.. • , I
~

.
11- The Doily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u.. June •. '" •
'

,. ...,....,

HECK'S RIG, TO $13.99

ClOTHING DII'T.

�....

..

.
•·, ..

, ·.~····~·

• ' •·•

.·, '

;, '

''

'

•

I; ~

\,to

'

••

.,..aaY

-IAI.Y
10 TO 9

-

• ~·

._

• • •

~ ;o . . . . . . .

..

. .

··' " ·

..

. .

. ...

+• •

1•-&lt;

-

~ ··

....

·-

SWEAT SHIRTS·

Arnlll' l feney prln; h wit h

Many colors and pOt-

terns to choose from .
Pull On waist. Sizes; 8

I

to 16.

..

M

. . . . . .

TO~

.

CLOTHES HAMPER

BABY STROLLER

NOVELTY
JEANS

Poplllor re&lt; l ongliiCir ~ hope wi1h lull lomi l~ · \iu~ copoci ty. Size
23 " hi gh. 2'2 h " wide , 19 In " deep . Ho~ pod ded lea there lle

WITH CANOPY

I

Sizes

plete with side tie , Site\: S·
M·t.

.

-

'

LADIES'

1

placket fran t and lnap
crol ch . The 'kirt is COI'l'l •

Short sleeve models with rag·
lan sleeve. Cq lors of b lu e,
green , lilac, and wh ite to
~ hoose from . Sizes: S·M· l.

..

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., JUNE 11, ·WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

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

LAD'IES' BODY SUIT
. WITH SKIRT

,,~,~

10

PRIC-S II EFFECT lOW THROUGH.SUI. JUNE 11, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
LADIES'

..

O"IDAILY

.

LADIES'

, ,

O"IIAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

--------------JAMAICA SHORTS

.,

wn ~cni e nt " lift lop" hand le. Qy illed vinyl eder •O&lt;

cover wi th

i~ ottro C1 • ~fl. dumble, and eo~y to dt."on.

HECK 'S REG.

8 to 18

. $15 .88

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $10.88

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.
HECK 'S
· REG.
$2 .94 .

HECK'S
REG.

CLOTHINt
DEPT.

CLPTHIN6
DEPT.

FESCO PLASTIC
$7.88

HECK'S REG;
$7.88

$~ . 28

IN FAITS'

TODDLERS

SUN SUITS
&amp;
BATHING SUITS

•

An a ssortment of easy ca re permanent p ress sty les in sizes 9 to 18
months.

Choose from shOn or aver ·
age lengths. Wkites and Pas ·
te ls, Tailored and lace trim.
Sizes: S· M·L

FITTED CRIB AND
PILLOW CASES
In solid colors of white, p ink. b lue a nd ma ize. Also
in asso rted prints.

HECK'S REG . $2 .38

CLOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEI'T.

2 PLAYER

SET

·

SOUTH BEND

99e

SPIN ROD

HECK 'S REG.

HECK 'S REG. $25.99

'1.3.
BASKETBALL

5 x 7 PLASTIC

BACKBOARD &amp;RIM SET

HECK'S REG, $'22.99

ha uling, co ntra stin g iritlescut
brown onodiled nose cone; while
handle. Co me1wi1h 100 yd1 10 lb.
mono.

$138

SOFTBALL BATS

SPORTS DEPT.

LANTERN &amp;STOVE FUEL

•

LITTLE LEAGUE

HECK 'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG. 99'

SI'OI/TSDEI'T.

SPORTS DEPT.

..
~

thto moot ptO/tfl IIUHIOf ilat .
IMnt ~~ ito ~i ..d ;., thto wCHia
· · · ti•rd• Sw ""·"otrl.
Unli ~t _ , •thtr Uftt t , tlw
lriOttrial uwd in Su~ · "G ·
lyl ..., lo rlll~la'-d , olld It
II'•Oduuol , u ( hUiu l ~ lo• '
ltlf&gt;l"t

TRANSCO PLASTIC

4 Pc. SPIC &amp; SPAN

HlCK'SREG. $1.38

CLEANING SET

ENTERPRISE

'1'•

ALUMINUM

COOKWARE

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

A. 3 QT. SAUCE PAN
B. 10 QT. DISH PAN
(, 9" PIE CARRIER
D. 3 P(. RANGE SET
E. 3 P(. SAUCE PAN
F. 4 QT. SAU(E POT
G. CAKE PAN

HDUSEWAIII
DEPT.

Pl Pleasant Store

CHOICE

B.
I.
/

·Jf"51 .

' ·....-·· ~d-·"''

RENUZIT

E.

Ava ilable in ma ny
fra gra nces.

.

- .

. --. ·I)
'l'-'-&lt;'
=--_
.;&lt;

BEHOLD

~.

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$1.50

On~

70Z.

'

--..;.,.. ·t

.

)

~

c.

HECK'S
REG.
49'

ggc

WEED LESS

EAGLE Q.AW

· HOOKS

HOOKS

liGHT (RAWLER

HARNESS

$128

32(

HECK'S REG. $1 .99

HJCK 'S REG.
48'

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1 . 1 5

HECK'S REG. 6fl'

HECK'S REG.
49' EACH

NOUSEWAIIEDEPT.

HOUSEWAIIE DEP1.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'SREG.

29•

53•

SPORTS DEI'r.

,,

·'

..::)

Includes Air Pistol, vis ua l ammunition section with generous supply of BBs, pellets and darts, operation -maintenance manual and facto ry guarantee. O ff icial skill
t~rgets included. · ~p attractive styrofoam tra y di splay

.

SPOT TAIL SHINER
;I

goli box.

~ $888

HECK 'S
REG .
78 '
I

PERSONNA
TUNCSTEI STEEL

Stripes or navy .
Sizes, 4to '12

~NDERWEAR
Tee $hi rts o r briefs made o f
sa nforized cotton. Sizes : 5-Ml·Xl. end :i0·42.

ARTIFICIAL WOMMS
HECK'S
REG:
77• EACH

IOYS'

POLO SHIRTS
Polyester an d co tt on b len d .
Sizes. 6 to 16.

CIIMI'

a a~

BLADES
10's

DERBY BRAND

HECK'S REG. $10.99

CHEESE EGGS

DOUBLE EDGE

MEN'S

SPOITS DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. '1.18

._. __

WALK
SHORTS

•

.• ) .,

MINNOW
SPORTS
DEPT. :

BOYS'

AIR PISTOL

MIKES SALMON

-

. ·.:"!t"" ..,

.•.

MARKSMAN

p~32t

6FT.

. POLY ST

.

WITH SARtY FLAa

HOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

SI'OITS DEPT.

BALL BATS

t

FISH LINE

HECK'S REG.
$1.29 .

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

A.

c

GARCIA

FLASHLIGHT

IItlE CALLOII

FRAMED PICTURES
A co ..,plolo " "" c1 popular •epoodu"•D'" of f,,,. ool p(&gt;i,hn~&lt; ,
•o&lt;h ••nd•·ed ..;th ho9h lr d•il'•' 0''' ond · ~o r , ,, ,, b• u• h ' """••
1n d ud•~ rn lim fob clou\ &lt;n.,&gt;rtmon1 &lt;t rf I&lt;UI«to••. und""P"'·
modt "l and t ill ' lol•t

HECK'S REG . $9 .29

WIND EX

SHITStJgr,

HIPWELL

c

$488

200Z.

'1.77

SPORTS /IIPr.

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

16x20

NOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

BOTTLES
$1'5

Ha rdened l letl pick· up; chrame
lin• guida ; metolli&lt; brown d i• ·cost

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

ALSO:
LEATHER COVERED

SPIN CAST REEL

'144

Pl Pleasant Store Only

37 1/•"x6'

$100

$7.99

COMPAC

TARP

Eas y to install and
dura bl e enough to la st .

stee l track • Fric tion t ype
, la tch • Smart de sign e As·
' sorted ~ olors.

A mo st attractive assortment of fancy de· •
signed and hi -sty led bottle~ in on array of
colors to accent a ny color scheme.

$3~~:·

SPORTS
IJEPT. N0.

SPDITS/111'1.

SJIOITS DliT.

• Self lubrication po lyet hylene car rie rs • Baked enamel

IT ALlAN BOTTLES

H is ea sy to handle spin rod is made to lost for many sea·
sons to co me
...
·

$1888

, • Fvll-leng th stee l panel core

Pt. Pleasant
Store Only

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. 8()4

HECK'S REG. 88'

HECK'S REG. s12.88

HECK 'S REG.
$2 .88

• Wonderful for ba ck ya rd "cookouts" or dining
ot camp sites. • Aluminum telesco ping center
po le. • Join ted steel corner poles . e Attractive
Blue end Yel low Fabric.

sse
1---------t--------WINDOW SHADE •
"

FOLDING DOOR

•a••

C.OTNIIIGDIPT.

DECANTER ··.·······

LAP TRAY·

Sauce Pot o l~o· l i t s Fr)l Pon! )

SMOKING
STANDS

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

12' DINING C'ANOPY ·

BADMINTON

HECK'S .REG. $12 . 88

. 4 STYLES

CHOOSE FROM "BOZO THE
CLOWN " OR " SMKOEY THE
BEAR"

ClOTHING DEPT.

10-ln. Open Fry Pan
Covered Sauce Pot

NOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

CHILDREN'S DISH
SETS

$188

HECK'S REG.
$1.48

$688

$1.18

3·PIECE

Solids o nd prints with em bro idery an d applique
tnm . Sizes: 9 to 24 month~ .

2-Qt . Covered Sovcepon

( Co~er o l

HECK'S
REG .

HDUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

and ·

7PC. TEFLON COOKWARE SET
l -Ot. Covered Saucepan

HECK'S
REG .
$2.35

INFANTS'

BLOOMER SETS

STORACE CONTAINERS

$144

ClOTNI/IC DEPr.

LADIES'

NYLON
. .· HALF SLIP

DIAPER PAll

HE.CK' S REG.

2 QUART
PLASTIC

TV BED

F.EDERAL GLASS

1

2 $1 00
FOR

,,,

CLOTHING

i

dial
........... .

~~~~~-•
6

oz.

DIAL

MEN'S

DEODORANT

SWIM TRUNKS

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

HECK'SREG. $1.44

HECK'S REG. 13.99

ClOTH"" IJE,T.

CI.OTNI/1' DEPT.

. WIOI FACIAL CLIWR

5

e REG . &amp; UNSCENTED

Boxer style in fanc ies or sol·
ids. Sizes. S·M-l·Xl.

'2''

51/4 oz.

HECK'S REG.
$1.39
HECK'S REG. $1.14
HECK'S RIG. 99 1

COSMETIC fEPT.

COSMETIC Dl,,

S/IDITS "''·

' i

l

'!

'

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..
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.... ....... .
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15 - The uauy .x-n
•·- 1me1, MlekUepon.-t'omttruy, u., "ur~e 1, 1:11 1.

OPIIIAI.Y
10 TO 9

OPIIIA&amp;Y
10 TO 9

~~

..

OPIIIAILY .

O"IDAILi
10 TO 9.

10 TC' 9

PRICES_II EFFECT THROUGH _SUNDAY JUNE 11, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

NIEDICINE
CABINET

STRUCTO

·

BAR-B~Q GRILL

. .

Galvanized, clip,pn hood wit h p9inted steel
top. Rustp roof. chromeplated grid. New positive grid adjustment has 4 heights and coo l,
hardwood handle . Ul-listed motor. The tripod-type folding legs len.d t hem selves to
compact storage, 5" easy-roll wheels.

LAWN RAK.E

Combines . good, rugged
design and constru ction '
with low Pjice.

Two shelves. All steel construction.
Baked on enamel.

,, $1288
I

Ci.E. STEREO
PHQNOCiRAPH

SHOVEL
• LOIIG HANDlf
• ROUIID POIIIT

Solid Stole Performonce • . 4_- Speed
Automoti c Record Changer I Holds Up To Six
Record s I Positi ve Size Selection- 12" 10"
7" Di scs I Repeat Ploy Opti on
, '
'
V ~ 931

HECK 'S lfEG. $2.77

.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.

$3.48

$44.96

$16.99

$299

HECK'S REG. $3.99

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HOE

HARDWARE DEPT.

WEED CUTTER

FOLDING COT

.1" tu bu lar a luminum frames on non-si nk Ulegs. Rugged center brace gives ex tra su pport.

HECK'S REG. $9 .88

\

$ 99

318" McGraw

HECK'S
REG.

.,••

$2.77

-

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '12.88

~

HECK'S REG. $1 .49

12 OZ. JOHNSONS

McGraw Electric

SANDER

~·~~

/

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:".: ii'
'·•0
'· • .....

$1.58

~- .

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'

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BUMPER
· JACK

.

.'

Easy to use. Easy to store. Idea l to
ha ve for emergencies.

AUTOMO nvE DEPT.

.

ALUMINUM
OR

NAVALJEUY
CHOICE

$

EXHAUST
EXTENSIONS

Avai lable in asso rted styles.

66&lt;

HECK'S REG. $3.77

HARDWARE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

LUNAR ROCKET
ANP MODULES

Three slyles to choose from . P!csti.!: construction .

HECK'S
REG.

96'

74&lt;

TOY DEPT.

PLAY DOH
TOY ·
DEPT.

POWER SUBMARINE
S144

84'

$9.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

$21.96

14 SPEED

STYLING DRYER

DELUXE MIXER

e

cold air • Style s in minutes

Custom two sl i ce, en d
contro l toas te r in po l ished chrome wi th block

end ponel_s.

HIS AND HERS

'. '

HECK'S REG.

Dries in min -

ute!. for that professional look
proved

e

U.l. ap-

MllH G RIN DE ~ L1l 1 o &lt;~el on lht ~~~ &lt;he~ IO•e• ""'' ond tflotl . -, heo•y duly \lond
"'"~' "" '~ 10 lull po ..., 1poe rl1 I&lt;&gt;&lt; ••e•y &lt;Oolo• nll ne~ . ( c.,y ta re&lt;;&gt;d "'""'II doal ,
Cqmo1 "'"h ''" "
bo"'l' ond '""" lt"'O•oblt d&gt;&lt;Oif&gt;IIHo lt t\ ft,Dwh h• ld on •• ·
...t.,ng bn1~ thol l~tn l "' yov "" ' odluoto b l• leo lo•'il• o• '"'"II bowl .t.i"l lndvd"
qud VIOP·on jjllndtr Ol'o &lt;h men l "' ~" ~ olulrouolly &lt;ko~• ""'"''· "'9elobleo. n 0 t o , l~h
o .. r tood 120~oh o .t.( .

"'"'"'i

YW .. 59

HS-300 ·

.,' ~«-a,-•. '?i1Y $688

HECK'S REG.

$39.96 .

$14.96
HECK'S REG. $9.88

JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

-

JEWELRY
DEPT.

,

POPCORN POPPER

Slim b@outy brew~ 4 to 8 cup \ . Streng th
r.ele(lor, tw i~ t lod safety to p . light5ignol~
when reo dy to ~erve . Keep~ coilee
~ervtng - hot outomo ttcolly . St 01nle~\ !!eel
vtmel , bo~ket end pump .

AP-74

The Holl e&lt; u,, ~ "''~ ~ · N., w tklm &gt;IIM Jloo ,&gt;&lt; h l oclu., •t . f1 no hy o po~orn popp&lt;lf
on&gt;q..., &gt;I boltt ll ,r own pOf&gt;«"" o• ' ' pop• lho ""h;.&lt;.,. P""''P'- Mhond thot onll&lt;l•
•ohon ~.,, be~ n ·~gu t~roa '""" '"' V ) ~ gl.,&gt;l U""• · rtomrlloA lltoth Ot1i9n1d lhil
!)Opper wolh 0 &gt;pe&lt;ool oulomolo&lt; bull~• d"l"'"'" ' All you do" pln&lt;o b ull•r '" lod &lt;!•1·
Ill" .. ' a nd oo heor ' oo k1 '"'"· b'-'"1' "'Ill&gt; a"d rlrop l dow~ 10 1001 popcorn 10 ptfkc ·
l101'l If• "''""f&gt;ll . and e o d~r~• ... you111 t.rod ol only on tho Ho""l ton lltoth " lutior •
IJp"
Poppe• . Th""'"'IOUIOII~ co-tl rclled heel lcr per le t t ~ o pcorn , 4 q""'' ccpa&lt;ily
co .. , doubltt 01" ..,.,n~ bowl: unoqw Oo rn t l .. pa&lt;»lor elim&gt;nOifl ""popped cor~ ;
lt'"*ll&gt;\)ht !tilt wllan ccr" "pop pori

w&gt;

CHAD MILLER

HECK'S REG.

REFRIGERATOR DE-FROSTER

$1.38
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
RID EM

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

WILLIE
WORM
HOUND

SILFIUTTU lNG

$1.09

$19.96

REF RIGERATOR

DEFROSTER

Handy kitchen appliance cvh
d e f ro~t in g t imein hoi I Sole
e nd co n venien t . Co mes with

499

spg

Ul approved cord . Eo(h in
bo.K..

HECK'S REG.

$14.96

JEWELRY DEPT.
JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.
G.E.

G.E.

CANISTER

TOY DEPT.

VACUUM CLEANER

TOY DEPT.

PLASTIC

ARMY JEEP

17 In ch in size . Plastic in construction .

e

Three styles to choose from .

$1 .58

SUNSET

ISO FT. 3" REEL

HECK'S REG

HECK'S
REG.

$47.96

4

,/q..

ALARM CLOCK

•• Snooz-Aiorm '' wakes you, then lets you
snooze before waking you again I Compact si ze • Antique white or beige

$

&amp;OR

99

HECK'S REG.
99•
HECK'S REG.
39' EACH

JEWElRY DEPT.

$L58

FLASHCUBES

ECORDING TAPE

88

HECK'S REG.

$1.99

p

360 Degree Swivel Top I Automatic Cord
Rewind e Storage Caddy For Atta chment
Tools I Full Set Of Attach'ments

SJ08
HECK'S
REG.

SYLVANIA

Model C-1S ·

PLASTIC TRUCKS

TOY DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

PERCOLATOR

HECK'S REG, $1 .99

'

\v'

$777

• 2-woy contro l ~wi t ch • B low~ hot end

OR

BOAT CARRIERS

roll e r ~.

HAMILTON &amp;EACH

$100

HARDWARE DEPT.

SLICING KNIFE

Trip le treat for your hai r! Thi s unique new Kindne~s
Hai r ~e tt er ~et . Moisll!rizes, deep·conditions all ol once.
.or il sets your hair with wcter·mist. , .or it setS your
hair os is. Co me s complet e with excl usive co nd itioner
and special formula for extra bo dy end curl power. 20

b"'"'"-&lt;l

TOASTER

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

block v;nyl. 16"x3 2".

HECK'S REG. $1.77

VANWYCK

N• w ' 0 11en ~ 011dl~ lot"'"" o l opo••&lt;~hnn
ld•allor " "ht " ' 1~11 hun d llot u•q Pud&gt;h ull&lt;&gt;n
blu&lt;l&lt; ~ ~~ '''"" :.oa.,o le\1 ' '" ''bind~, lool
"' '~ '''" plm~ fo ~Q&lt;!' top an ou (Mirol t. ut
ton Hro ·~ du l' "''-''m luo "" " t•o .. n• 8~ u
"l ull y

AMILTON BEACH
2-SLICE

JEWELRY DEPT.

Chemtex treated fi bre with
wire coil insert and bound in

. $133

HECK'S REG. $29.96

VANWYCK

Heck's Reg. $29.96

VENTILATED
WIRE

SCRUB TUB

''""'g'

iEWELRY
DEPT.

88

· Cov!red with Blo ck and White

GRASS SHEAR

IUIY

:

WAFFLE BAKER

306

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

STANLEY .

Mh ' ""' l~mpl"r&lt;&gt;h"~'. too"' Hoi
10 Cool Po .,obl~ ond (OmOO&lt; I lo o

&lt;1'-nr lrd pn\lrl '"'" ' '

HAIRSEnER

Reversible grids - bake~ wafRet.. 9"ills &amp; l~sts !oo!
. Has Pft•ttt tn.rmoitot . all c... ame, plottu: trtm.

SHETLAND
RUG SHAMPOOER
.AND POLISHER

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

oz.

......'•

1-,_,,.

bul '""'"' ''" No h o t loo-e\ o• bon

$191.96
JEWELRY
DEPT.

SEAT CUSHION

$288
HECK'S REG. $4.99

oz.

$1.19

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

,.,

"' home'"

N o1hon9 '""'''"' you •

TWIN

HECK'S REG

HECK'S REG .

HECK'S REG. '9.48

•

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JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWELRY
DEPT.

88&lt;

'6''

HECK'S
REG.

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AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

""'"'"" ,.

IIlla~

(1/••1111 !II

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

-

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$12 .88

99&lt;

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lllt"-!11~11!~

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77(
15

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$12 .96

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Reg .

SPRAY CAN

• For most cars • In clude s
~
points, rolor ond condenser • (Q. ::.,.. '.,! _.;.
Hi·perfo,m once not included .

GUM OUT

8 iQ cor nome~ such a~ s~ cn on the prolessicincl No~cor racing circuit ore avai lable
in o Ill'"' liue of per\oiiOlili!~lo - graph
kits. Chevrole1. Plymouth , Ford , Dodge, &amp;
O ther ;.

~'-' " "

nl&lt;&gt;)

HECK'S REG.

CARBURETOR CLEANER

DRILL

CASCO IGNITION -

•

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Pl Pleasant Store Only

HARDWARE DEPT.

$

hn llhlul " " ' ul oh,.

"'c•(lhl. 10r&lt;ll~" po ... e• ""ndle
q "" ~'r loo • .,,, ,l~ n n• ~q • •

CLAIROL

• Handsome styl ing wi th beige poly~tyiene ca binet e
Ho rizontal brushed coppe r color COI11ro l panel e So lid stote d esi9n e 4" fr o nt -fire d dy nam ic spe ak er e
lighted Cloc k Dia l • Snooz-Aiorm dock e Sleep swi tch
shuts off ra dio automatical ly. Adjus ta bl e up t o 60
miriul es • Woke -to - Music o r Mus ic/ Alarm •
Automatic Volume Control minimizes change in volum e
as stations o re tuned

HARDWARE DEPT.
NYLON

~:, ~

77

~,,.,,j,,l

.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

AM CLOCK RADIO

HECK'S REG. $2.48

•

TOOTH BRUSH'

GENERAL ELECTRIC

LONG HANDLE

HARDWARE
DEPT;

-

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MIST PRO STYLE'
HAIR DRYER

• t•, .,.,dr\ ' ""'""' l« e lh lhol' lf"d"""Y h&lt;uioll umh
•n&lt;t • (o., ,.o&gt;l l~d up o"d rio wn '""''"" • ~. d , '"

JEWELRY

77 .

.

ELECTRIC

r-;~~27. ..

HECK'S REG,

.Fots_LAWN
MOWER
BlADE
most popular size,. Made of strong steel.

TEFLON

.. -=-&lt;~~

.

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REPLACEMEilfT

G.E.

e feotvre~wntrollcd coo ~ ing tcmpe•oli..trc:\ • Ho s big 11
inc h ~q. coo kin g area • Tilt -top f1d e li mina te s mo ' r
splottE;:r • Dtolu~" ~il&lt;! to~~' core of Liu lumil~ 11eed ~ •
. Ea si ly brought to d inn er toble! Special non -5tick coolin g .

HARDWAIM DEPT.

77

G.E.

FRY PAN

I

$177 .
HARDWARE DEPT.

s

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

HECK!S REG.

JEWELRY
DEPT.

$5 . 19

JEWElRY DEPT•

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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1972

Taxpayers Promised· Relie~ in New House Bill

...

- 4''

I ··.

'

By LEE LEONARD

ity."

re"ppraisals lake place.
Appe,ls to IL~e a mathematical
Thorpe Complains
formula so new lax rates would
Rep. James Thorpe, R-AJ .. · rcflecl current land values and

UPI StatehuUSl' Ht•vnrlrr
The Supreme Court.' rulin~
COLUMBUS I UP!) - :I'he for the th1rd time in the IC).year

1.

I

Painted Doll, four-year&lt;&gt;ld trotter, trained and cD&lt;&gt;wned by
Sidney Spencer of Pomeroy, is one or six outstanding trotters
moving Into the mobile starting gate at Scioto Downs, Columbus,
Thursday night in the $11,000 Challenge Stakes.
Officials at the "DoWIIS" report that Painted Doll is "sharp
and ready", She was the winn.er of 16 of 28 starts last year and
"has been keeping company with the elite of Scioto's trotting
lrlgade the past year."

We can increase your sales with this valuable free service
\

To better serve you The Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times · Sentinel are
equipped to give you a complete sales producing copy and layout service.
We can take your preliminary thoughts and ideas, polish them and set them
down on paper to achieve a hard-hitting and productive ad. In addition, we also
subscribe to the major mat services which make available lens of thousands of
illustrations . headlines, seasonal promotional ideas and other valuable
promotional tools to insure the ~uccess . of your advertising program .. These
nalional mal services are created and produced by experts and are subscnbed to
by newspapers throughout the country and therefore comprise the best thoughts,
ideas. merchandising techniques and art that is available.

..
\

Our representatives are trained to sell merchandi.se on
paper and therefore are._able to present your product 1n the
most effective and productive manner to our more than 46,000
readers.

AREVISED PUBLICATION about the official state tree, the
O!J!o Buckeye, is being distributed free of charge. Copies can be
Seellred by writing Publications Center, O~io Department of
Natural Resources, 15oo Dublin Road, Columbus, Ohio, 4321~. It's
an informative pllmphlet - printed on 100 per cent cycled paper,
by the way.

The Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times · Sentinel save you
valuable time that you might utilize in making up yo~r own a~s.
You save 111oney that you might have to pay lor out.s1de serv•.ce
and art. You get distinctive .one-of-a-kind, profess•o~ally la!d·
out ads which have high impact and tremendous pulhng power. :~ ·
You are relieved of the responsibility of (he ardyo~s tas~ ~I ad
preparation. These professionally produced ads w1ll defmltely
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They will boost your profits, increase your turnover. Th1s free
service can be valuable to you, don't you agree? Start on the
road to profits today.

TilE NEXT MEETING OF SCOPS - South C'entral Ohio
Preservation Society, Inc. - which met in Pomeroy last spring
wUI be held iri Gallipolis Sunday. Members will be participating
In the homes tour and other events ofthe day. The Society will be
presenting several awards in Gallipolis.

House has passed and returned old P•rk Inve.stmenl Case, had
to the Senate a bill designed to snid last sununer the Board of
delay the jmpacl of property Tax Appeals must write
tax hikes brought about by a regulatiops f~r
taxing
Wliforrn assessment rlile hand- residential, commerical, ined down by the state Board of dustrial and agricultural
Tax Appeals.
property uniformly at no more
The measure was passed than 50 per cent of tru e value .
Tuesday, ~. despite warThe boa1·d last ·December
nings it would run counter to a chose 35 per cent as the unstate Supreme Court decision iform !eve\, forcing residential
of one year ago calling for property taxes up in some
speedy implementation of areas of the state and downuniform assessments.
ward in others.
The proposal alr.eady has
Lampson said immediate
cleared the Senate, but it is ..Iinplementation would require
possible a conference commit- · reappraisal of 4.4 million partee will be needed to iron out eels of land in Ohio, costing the
the differences between the L'Ounties more than $20 million.
two chambers on the bill.
He recommended passage of
Rep. E. W. Lampson, R.Jeff- the bill which invokes uniforrrierson, floor manager of the bill ity after each county's regular
in the House, said it was "the sexennial rea ppraisal - delayonly reasonable and orderly ing the full impact of ihe 35 per
means to reach tax uniform- cent rule until 1977 when final

constru ction costs instead or

would do exactly what the high
L1J Urtput anendto in June,i971
- delay uniform assessments.
Thorpe pointed out that last
year's court decision overruled
a 1969 law enacted by the legislature temporarily remuving
the Board of Tax Appeals' rulemaking powers.
"Nobody in his right mind is
going to say the court will uphold this bill," Thorpe said.
"They already said 1972 w;f
too late for uniform taxation.
This bill says 1977. It will producc guarantee&lt;) inequality.
The Supreme Court is goin g to

those from the last decade.
Lampson sa id Pease 's
proposal would "completely
wreck " the plan for orderly
implementation or equality in
taxation .
cin another major bill, the
Senate rejected House changes
and sent to conference committce a proposa l to .grant tax
breaks to perso"s 65 and older.
The Senate version had
ca lled for exemption of up to
$8,000 worth of annual pension
income from the state income
tax . The House voted to extend
a credit of up to $40 a year on

continue to strike down these

earned and unearned income of

fudge bills ."
Before passing the bill, the
Hous e overwhelmin gl y
rejected an attempt by Rep.
Donald J. Pease, D.Oberlin, to
require. the Board of Tax

persons 62 and older.
Joint Study on Ban
A jo int conference committee also began work on
legislation banning oil and gas
drilling under Lake Erie. 'f\1e

Housr ·•mendmenls and sent
Gov . John J . Gilligan a bill
permitting . the · Board of
Regents to constru ct a
university branch campus if
trustees fail · to heed a
leg islative recommendation to
do so within one year.
· Both chambers reconvene
at 1:30 p.m . today.
IN FINAL ROUND
CAN TON IUPI I - Carl
Menelle of North Canton's
Shady Hollow Country Club
goes into the final round of the
Ohio Seniors Golf Tournament
witl-1 a one-stroke lead over
defending champion Jim
Federici of Findlay. Menelle
fired a 36-36 for a two-over par
74 Tuesday, edging Federici
who had a 36-37·75.
Federici, .. wh o won the
tournament last year with a
148, predicls putting today will
win lhe tournament.

GEORGE E. JOHNSON, 134 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
suffered a heart aUack while on board ship at his employment at
Port Huron, Mich . He undoubtedly would appreciate hearing
from Meigs Countians. His address is George E. Johnson, Port
Huron Hospital, 1209 Willow St., Room 211, Port Huron, Mich.

Call 992-2156 and ask for Display Adve~ng

DICK SARGENT IS OPERATING the former Domigan
service station and grocery on former Route 33 near Pomeroy.
Sargent purchased the stock and lease of Mr. and Mrs. Domigan.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold owns the real estate used for the business.
Mrs. Arnold owns the real estate us'ed for the business. Mrs.
Arnold operated the business herself for a number of ye~rs.
Maxine, who has returned to the Big Bend following several
years a~nce, is working with the Headstart program at the
Harrisonville Sehool this spring.

*OUTSTANDING PRESTIGE - Your sales message will be
more effective when it appears in The Daily Sentinel and
Sunday Times . Sentinel.
*PLANNED MER.CHANDISING SERVICE- Eliminates costly
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for maximum results.

MR. AND MRS. DON BETZING, .Pomeroy , had one brief
addition to their wild bird family recently - a red bird which
they fouod. The bird was Injured. After lhe Betzings nursed it
beck to health, he answered the call of the wild as did one of two
robins which the family has been caring for . One robin remains
under the good, good care provided b~ the Betzings.

INSTANT PLEASURE AND
INSTANT SAVINGS
FOR INSTANT

benefit of their home areas.
Vaughan has been a member
of the Committee lor one
year and was recently appointed secretary. In addillon to the regular courses
Vaughan will lake a course
dealing with community
work in alcohol problems
and a course dealing with
alcohol problems in the field
of
law
enforcement.
Vaughan is a dispatcher for
the Ohio State Patrol and Is ·· ·'
stationed at the Gaillpolis

The Daily Sentinel

and

COFFEE DRINKERS!
The~ are instants and there are instants .. .
and they're not all the same.

The thing tllat makes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee
10 auperb Ia its speeial blend of
• lin' Btuilian Colen. ·•·
100% Bruilian Cofees. Nothing else.

post. He also serves as part

Sunday Times-Sentinel

time patrolman for the
Pomeroy Police Department.

And that'• the secret behin4 one
memorable moment of inatant pleasure.

LOUIS VAUGHAN
Louts Vaughan, a member
of Meigs County Alcoholism
and Drug Abuse Commitlee
Is lhe recipient of a
scholarship to attend the 1972
Mldwelt Institute of Alcohol
Studies at Northwestern
Unlnrsity, Evanston, Dl.,
from June 11 through the 16.
The commlltee was Informed of lhe scholarship by
the Ohio Department of
Heollh, Alcoholism
Program. Priority lor
scholarships was given to
Individuals who have current
Interest and Involvement in
alcohol problems and who
wUI be able to Wle the In·
stltute expertenoe for the

•

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to

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.

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. or you get your money back.

We call that "INSTANT SATISFACTION"!

Nest- Instant lea

Plant Sale

:J.u,

(tlr

GERANIUMS
Reg. 89c Now 59c

9ftc
7

'1~~~

COUPON

Good Tltr• S•l•rd•y, Jyno IOlh
At Yo•r Friondly A&amp;P Store;
ONE PElt FAMILY

Dudley's

VALUAILE COUPON

Serving: Gallipolis/

Dixie Cup Refill
WITH

Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
&amp; Mason Co.~ · w. Va.

•
:

••
5 gal. can
••
•:
3.99 •

•t

C

.

There's no better instant at any price.

June

·Pure Asphalt' Coating
· or Fibre Coating

·••

ALL VARIETIES . JIFFY

That'a why we unconditionally guarantee you'll love it

100
5-oa. cops

641

~. Jhru

THIS
COUPON

69C
5
'1
00
a-n Coffee • •~~~ I ftc - Apple Sauce
4
.
9
CoHee Rich • • t;~.: 7 ~ Cocktail • • • • ft'i:'
c

S.lwd1y, Juno lOth

At Your Friondly A.P St.....

••
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•• ' ..
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ONE Pllt FAMILY

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For

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RICH'S

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.&amp;

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f..ROOFiDDAiiNG••i
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"TUFF KOTE"
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•

ANY SIZE PIECE

WHOLE or SHANK HALF VIRGINIA FARM

~.JAR

2«.JAR

I

NAMED ASSISTANT
TOLEDO (UPIJ - Ed Klein,
33, has been named an
assistant football coach at the
University of Toledo, succeeding Roger Merg who has
accepted a head coaching job
at Portsmouth High Sc~ool.

4ftc
Fresh Picnics • elb.J9c Braunschweiger1b. . 7Hams •••••• lb. 98 Meat Entrees • :~~ 99
SEMI·BONELESS

Enjoy Ita great tas!A! and you'll discover
another delightful fact .•• instant savings.

•

1

OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY

3

ftcleDetergent
KINs~:!ZE

'I" r~~~

4-or. I
COUPON
Good Thru Sot.rd1y, Juno IOth
At Your Friendly ,AlP Sto&lt;e.
ONI Pll FAMILY

YALUAILI COUPON

A4P Aspirin
~H. If

15

C

WITH
THIS

100
COUPON
Good ·Tltru Sohwd•y, Juno lOth
At Ywr Friendly AlP Shrt.
ONE I'll FAMILY

.'

.'

..
.,
f

I

lianct! , eomplained the bill

House called for a permanent
ban, while the Senate voted for
a lwo-year ban .
In other legislative action
Tuesday:
- The Senate unanimously
agreed to a conference report
placing on the May, 1973,ballot
the constitutional question of
permitting local governments
to take possession of property
lor. sewer ·and water projects
before making payments.
- The House unammously
passed and sent the Senate a
bill requiring individual races
for Toledo Municipal Court
judgeships rather than a field
of ca ndidates competing for
the most votes.
- The House adopt ed
Senatepassed leg islation
providing for a 10 per cent
penally for late liquor license
renewal applications, but an
emer gency clause was
elimmated .
- The Senate agreed with

~a , .

. "~

MATERIALS CO.

773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

- ~···.. ··············~
~~
(

·laleguarcll..-p

. 3

WITH

N..
~
THIS
""
COUPON
· Good Tltru S.honliy, Jwto IOth
At Y..., Fri•tly A&amp;P Store•
QNII'fl FAMILY

1UY 2
"6ET t FRE£

52.

WHOI.I
KliNK
. . . . . . . . 60LDEN.

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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1972

Taxpayers Promised· Relie~ in New House Bill

...

- 4''

I ··.

'

By LEE LEONARD

ity."

re"ppraisals lake place.
Appe,ls to IL~e a mathematical
Thorpe Complains
formula so new lax rates would
Rep. James Thorpe, R-AJ .. · rcflecl current land values and

UPI StatehuUSl' Ht•vnrlrr
The Supreme Court.' rulin~
COLUMBUS I UP!) - :I'he for the th1rd time in the IC).year

1.

I

Painted Doll, four-year&lt;&gt;ld trotter, trained and cD&lt;&gt;wned by
Sidney Spencer of Pomeroy, is one or six outstanding trotters
moving Into the mobile starting gate at Scioto Downs, Columbus,
Thursday night in the $11,000 Challenge Stakes.
Officials at the "DoWIIS" report that Painted Doll is "sharp
and ready", She was the winn.er of 16 of 28 starts last year and
"has been keeping company with the elite of Scioto's trotting
lrlgade the past year."

We can increase your sales with this valuable free service
\

To better serve you The Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times · Sentinel are
equipped to give you a complete sales producing copy and layout service.
We can take your preliminary thoughts and ideas, polish them and set them
down on paper to achieve a hard-hitting and productive ad. In addition, we also
subscribe to the major mat services which make available lens of thousands of
illustrations . headlines, seasonal promotional ideas and other valuable
promotional tools to insure the ~uccess . of your advertising program .. These
nalional mal services are created and produced by experts and are subscnbed to
by newspapers throughout the country and therefore comprise the best thoughts,
ideas. merchandising techniques and art that is available.

..
\

Our representatives are trained to sell merchandi.se on
paper and therefore are._able to present your product 1n the
most effective and productive manner to our more than 46,000
readers.

AREVISED PUBLICATION about the official state tree, the
O!J!o Buckeye, is being distributed free of charge. Copies can be
Seellred by writing Publications Center, O~io Department of
Natural Resources, 15oo Dublin Road, Columbus, Ohio, 4321~. It's
an informative pllmphlet - printed on 100 per cent cycled paper,
by the way.

The Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times · Sentinel save you
valuable time that you might utilize in making up yo~r own a~s.
You save 111oney that you might have to pay lor out.s1de serv•.ce
and art. You get distinctive .one-of-a-kind, profess•o~ally la!d·
out ads which have high impact and tremendous pulhng power. :~ ·
You are relieved of the responsibility of (he ardyo~s tas~ ~I ad
preparation. These professionally produced ads w1ll defmltely
gain for your readership of your sales message and draw p~ple
into your business presold and ready to buy more of your ~oods.
They will boost your profits, increase your turnover. Th1s free
service can be valuable to you, don't you agree? Start on the
road to profits today.

TilE NEXT MEETING OF SCOPS - South C'entral Ohio
Preservation Society, Inc. - which met in Pomeroy last spring
wUI be held iri Gallipolis Sunday. Members will be participating
In the homes tour and other events ofthe day. The Society will be
presenting several awards in Gallipolis.

House has passed and returned old P•rk Inve.stmenl Case, had
to the Senate a bill designed to snid last sununer the Board of
delay the jmpacl of property Tax Appeals must write
tax hikes brought about by a regulatiops f~r
taxing
Wliforrn assessment rlile hand- residential, commerical, ined down by the state Board of dustrial and agricultural
Tax Appeals.
property uniformly at no more
The measure was passed than 50 per cent of tru e value .
Tuesday, ~. despite warThe boa1·d last ·December
nings it would run counter to a chose 35 per cent as the unstate Supreme Court decision iform !eve\, forcing residential
of one year ago calling for property taxes up in some
speedy implementation of areas of the state and downuniform assessments.
ward in others.
The proposal alr.eady has
Lampson said immediate
cleared the Senate, but it is ..Iinplementation would require
possible a conference commit- · reappraisal of 4.4 million partee will be needed to iron out eels of land in Ohio, costing the
the differences between the L'Ounties more than $20 million.
two chambers on the bill.
He recommended passage of
Rep. E. W. Lampson, R.Jeff- the bill which invokes uniforrrierson, floor manager of the bill ity after each county's regular
in the House, said it was "the sexennial rea ppraisal - delayonly reasonable and orderly ing the full impact of ihe 35 per
means to reach tax uniform- cent rule until 1977 when final

constru ction costs instead or

would do exactly what the high
L1J Urtput anendto in June,i971
- delay uniform assessments.
Thorpe pointed out that last
year's court decision overruled
a 1969 law enacted by the legislature temporarily remuving
the Board of Tax Appeals' rulemaking powers.
"Nobody in his right mind is
going to say the court will uphold this bill," Thorpe said.
"They already said 1972 w;f
too late for uniform taxation.
This bill says 1977. It will producc guarantee&lt;) inequality.
The Supreme Court is goin g to

those from the last decade.
Lampson sa id Pease 's
proposal would "completely
wreck " the plan for orderly
implementation or equality in
taxation .
cin another major bill, the
Senate rejected House changes
and sent to conference committce a proposa l to .grant tax
breaks to perso"s 65 and older.
The Senate version had
ca lled for exemption of up to
$8,000 worth of annual pension
income from the state income
tax . The House voted to extend
a credit of up to $40 a year on

continue to strike down these

earned and unearned income of

fudge bills ."
Before passing the bill, the
Hous e overwhelmin gl y
rejected an attempt by Rep.
Donald J. Pease, D.Oberlin, to
require. the Board of Tax

persons 62 and older.
Joint Study on Ban
A jo int conference committee also began work on
legislation banning oil and gas
drilling under Lake Erie. 'f\1e

Housr ·•mendmenls and sent
Gov . John J . Gilligan a bill
permitting . the · Board of
Regents to constru ct a
university branch campus if
trustees fail · to heed a
leg islative recommendation to
do so within one year.
· Both chambers reconvene
at 1:30 p.m . today.
IN FINAL ROUND
CAN TON IUPI I - Carl
Menelle of North Canton's
Shady Hollow Country Club
goes into the final round of the
Ohio Seniors Golf Tournament
witl-1 a one-stroke lead over
defending champion Jim
Federici of Findlay. Menelle
fired a 36-36 for a two-over par
74 Tuesday, edging Federici
who had a 36-37·75.
Federici, .. wh o won the
tournament last year with a
148, predicls putting today will
win lhe tournament.

GEORGE E. JOHNSON, 134 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
suffered a heart aUack while on board ship at his employment at
Port Huron, Mich . He undoubtedly would appreciate hearing
from Meigs Countians. His address is George E. Johnson, Port
Huron Hospital, 1209 Willow St., Room 211, Port Huron, Mich.

Call 992-2156 and ask for Display Adve~ng

DICK SARGENT IS OPERATING the former Domigan
service station and grocery on former Route 33 near Pomeroy.
Sargent purchased the stock and lease of Mr. and Mrs. Domigan.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold owns the real estate used for the business.
Mrs. Arnold owns the real estate us'ed for the business. Mrs.
Arnold operated the business herself for a number of ye~rs.
Maxine, who has returned to the Big Bend following several
years a~nce, is working with the Headstart program at the
Harrisonville Sehool this spring.

*OUTSTANDING PRESTIGE - Your sales message will be
more effective when it appears in The Daily Sentinel and
Sunday Times . Sentinel.
*PLANNED MER.CHANDISING SERVICE- Eliminates costly
guesswork; helps you key your message to local buying habits
for maximum results.

MR. AND MRS. DON BETZING, .Pomeroy , had one brief
addition to their wild bird family recently - a red bird which
they fouod. The bird was Injured. After lhe Betzings nursed it
beck to health, he answered the call of the wild as did one of two
robins which the family has been caring for . One robin remains
under the good, good care provided b~ the Betzings.

INSTANT PLEASURE AND
INSTANT SAVINGS
FOR INSTANT

benefit of their home areas.
Vaughan has been a member
of the Committee lor one
year and was recently appointed secretary. In addillon to the regular courses
Vaughan will lake a course
dealing with community
work in alcohol problems
and a course dealing with
alcohol problems in the field
of
law
enforcement.
Vaughan is a dispatcher for
the Ohio State Patrol and Is ·· ·'
stationed at the Gaillpolis

The Daily Sentinel

and

COFFEE DRINKERS!
The~ are instants and there are instants .. .
and they're not all the same.

The thing tllat makes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee
10 auperb Ia its speeial blend of
• lin' Btuilian Colen. ·•·
100% Bruilian Cofees. Nothing else.

post. He also serves as part

Sunday Times-Sentinel

time patrolman for the
Pomeroy Police Department.

And that'• the secret behin4 one
memorable moment of inatant pleasure.

LOUIS VAUGHAN
Louts Vaughan, a member
of Meigs County Alcoholism
and Drug Abuse Commitlee
Is lhe recipient of a
scholarship to attend the 1972
Mldwelt Institute of Alcohol
Studies at Northwestern
Unlnrsity, Evanston, Dl.,
from June 11 through the 16.
The commlltee was Informed of lhe scholarship by
the Ohio Department of
Heollh, Alcoholism
Program. Priority lor
scholarships was given to
Individuals who have current
Interest and Involvement in
alcohol problems and who
wUI be able to Wle the In·
stltute expertenoe for the

•

.•

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;.·~

to

•:·'

~

'•, I

-~

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.

1~.JAR

. or you get your money back.

We call that "INSTANT SATISFACTION"!

Nest- Instant lea

Plant Sale

:J.u,

(tlr

GERANIUMS
Reg. 89c Now 59c

9ftc
7

'1~~~

COUPON

Good Tltr• S•l•rd•y, Jyno IOlh
At Yo•r Friondly A&amp;P Store;
ONE PElt FAMILY

Dudley's

VALUAILE COUPON

Serving: Gallipolis/

Dixie Cup Refill
WITH

Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
&amp; Mason Co.~ · w. Va.

•
:

••
5 gal. can
••
•:
3.99 •

•t

C

.

There's no better instant at any price.

June

·Pure Asphalt' Coating
· or Fibre Coating

·••

ALL VARIETIES . JIFFY

That'a why we unconditionally guarantee you'll love it

100
5-oa. cops

641

~. Jhru

THIS
COUPON

69C
5
'1
00
a-n Coffee • •~~~ I ftc - Apple Sauce
4
.
9
CoHee Rich • • t;~.: 7 ~ Cocktail • • • • ft'i:'
c

S.lwd1y, Juno lOth

At Your Friondly A.P St.....

••
••••
•• ·HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
•• ' ..
•
t
t
i

A&amp;P

EiGHT O'CLOCK 100% BRAZIUAN .

ONE Pllt FAMILY

16 o1.

Can

For

\

YALU.ULE COUPON

RICH'S

t

f
.&amp;

C

VALUAILE COUPON

f..ROOFiDDAiiNG••i
:
"TUFF KOTE"
••
••
•
•:
:
•

ANY SIZE PIECE

WHOLE or SHANK HALF VIRGINIA FARM

~.JAR

2«.JAR

I

NAMED ASSISTANT
TOLEDO (UPIJ - Ed Klein,
33, has been named an
assistant football coach at the
University of Toledo, succeeding Roger Merg who has
accepted a head coaching job
at Portsmouth High Sc~ool.

4ftc
Fresh Picnics • elb.J9c Braunschweiger1b. . 7Hams •••••• lb. 98 Meat Entrees • :~~ 99
SEMI·BONELESS

Enjoy Ita great tas!A! and you'll discover
another delightful fact .•• instant savings.

•

1

OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY

3

ftcleDetergent
KINs~:!ZE

'I" r~~~

4-or. I
COUPON
Good Thru Sot.rd1y, Juno IOth
At Your Friendly ,AlP Sto&lt;e.
ONI Pll FAMILY

YALUAILI COUPON

A4P Aspirin
~H. If

15

C

WITH
THIS

100
COUPON
Good ·Tltru Sohwd•y, Juno lOth
At Ywr Friendly AlP Shrt.
ONE I'll FAMILY

.'

.'

..
.,
f

I

lianct! , eomplained the bill

House called for a permanent
ban, while the Senate voted for
a lwo-year ban .
In other legislative action
Tuesday:
- The Senate unanimously
agreed to a conference report
placing on the May, 1973,ballot
the constitutional question of
permitting local governments
to take possession of property
lor. sewer ·and water projects
before making payments.
- The House unammously
passed and sent the Senate a
bill requiring individual races
for Toledo Municipal Court
judgeships rather than a field
of ca ndidates competing for
the most votes.
- The House adopt ed
Senatepassed leg islation
providing for a 10 per cent
penally for late liquor license
renewal applications, but an
emer gency clause was
elimmated .
- The Senate agreed with

~a , .

. "~

MATERIALS CO.

773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

- ~···.. ··············~
~~
(

·laleguarcll..-p

. 3

WITH

N..
~
THIS
""
COUPON
· Good Tltru S.honliy, Jwto IOth
At Y..., Fri•tly A&amp;P Store•
QNII'fl FAMILY

1UY 2
"6ET t FRE£

52.

WHOI.I
KliNK
. . . . . . . . 60LDEN.

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S;;~if~;[(ij;;;·ifieds Get ActiOniSentinel Cbssifieds Get Jlesults!
.

.

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
, DEADLINES

Card ~ 1 Thanks

THE FAMILY QF Minerva
5 P .M. Da~ Before Publication .
Childers wishes to thank Dr .
· Monday Otldllne 9 i .m ,
CarM:ellatiOI'I - Corrections
Will be •cceptfd untll9a .m . for.
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

T~e Publisher reserves

the

rlgtH to ed!f .or rt/ect any ads

Geemtd
cbjtctionel.
The
publisher will not be rupons lble

for more tllan one Incorrect
insertion.

RATES

For Wan't Ad Service
5 cents per Word one lnsertlot;'l
'
M inimum Charge 75c
12· cents per word three
consecutive InSertions .
18 cents per word she con .

J. J. Davis , Or. Ri chard
Sla ck,
Pl easant
Valley
Hospital , nurses ·and aides lor
their kindnesses and care
during her hospitalization ;
also Rev . Raullin Moyer and
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
Home . We wish to thank all
our relatives, friend s and
neighbors for the beautiful
floral offerings and for the
prepared meals and food sent

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads J'ald within lO.days .

CARD OF THANKS
I. OBITUARY

$1'.50 for SO word minimum .
each addltlona~ word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional

2.Sc

Advertfumen t.

Charge

per

Impala Sport Coupe, 350 cu. in., V-8 e~gine, tu~bo­
hycramatlc, power steering &amp; brakes, rad 1o, red v1nyl
Interior, black finish. White-wall fires, like new.

Pearl Reynolds.

6-7-ltc

12295
Factory air conditioning, v.e engine, auto. tra.ns.,. ~.S ..

Notice
GIANT Garage Sale, saturday,
June 10th, 9 a. m . to 9 p. m. ,
Middleporl.

YARD SALE, Avon Bottles, Old
Bottles, Antiques. On larkin
Street in Rutland , Friday and
Saturday.
6-7-3tc

Middleport. For more definite
dllcrlptlon, reference Is made
to tj'\e Plat of said VIllage .
The dtmand of the Complaint
11 tor the quieting of the title of
lht Dtt~naants based on a
can tract of purchase dated June
10, ·1957, Which was abandoned
by the Deftndan's Carl Moles
and Evelyn Moles, and for other
lrtlllf.
'
Said Defendants are required
to asnwtr llld complaint within
21 days after the last date of
publlnllon , which date IS June

21, 1972.

Bernard V. Fultz
Webster and Fultz

P. 0 . Box 723

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attornevafor Pla lnl!tt

15117, 24, 31 (6) 7, U, 21,61

LEGAL NOTICE

Bids will be received a&amp; of
ubllc 1uct1on for the sale of I he
remises known as the Coal .
ort School . The property wn
tlcQUir'ed by deeds rtcorded In

i

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Window

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P'.M.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
' • BELPRE, 0 .

t'PMEROY, "OHIO

1-------

MUST SACRIFICE '69 Dodge v,
ton pickup. Ca ll at lot 5,

Charlotte Taunton. 618 Soulh

4-4-tfc

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,

151 Butternut Ave ..• Pomeroy .

~io

BOAT LICEN SE
for

motor .

- -- - - -

Marine Sales

POODLE pupp ies, Silver Toy ,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 ·

CARPORT Sale, June·10; 9 a .m. 32 FT. Houseboal, 40 h.p. out·
to 5 p.m ., 1165 Vine Street,
Middl eport .

YAR D SAL E, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, June9, 10 &amp; 11 ;
Walter Lee's, Middl epprt Hill.
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

'

8-15-ttc

,

4-12-tfc

llelp Wanted

6-6-3tp LAD Y fo r part -time Retail
Store work ; 35 to 50 years old
preferred ; Modern Supply,
399 W. Ma in SL Pomeroy,

LEGAL NOTICE

Ohio.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO

MAN AND WIFE lo work in
house and ya rd . Living
quarters orov ided . Applicants
write Box 7295 this news .
paper .

6-4-61(

vs.

Clarence Hudnall , el aL ,

Oefendonls.
No . 20418
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
The Defendants , Stan l ey

CARRIERS
WANTED

Dozer &amp; End loader Work,
ponds, b""semenl, landscaping. We have 2 ~i1e
dozers, 2 sile 'loaders. Work
done by hour or contract ..
Free Estimates. We also

haul fitl dirt, top soil. Dump
• trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3125
after 7 p.m. or phone · 9925232 .

For Sale
KAWASAKI

"500"
1971
motorcycle , like new cond.,
Racing Fe'rring, bags, roll

COLON IAL Maple Slereo-radio
combination, AM·FM radio. 4
speakers, 4 speed changer,
separate controls. Balance
$77 .39 . Use our budget terms.

Ca II 992-7085.

- - - - - - --6·1·61c

ST EREO-RADIO comb ination,
Modern Walnut. 4 speakers, 4
speed · changer, separate
controls. Balance $65.43 . Use
our bUdget terms . Ca ll 992·

7085.

.POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

Meigs County Detd Record to
which reference Is hereby
madt. A survey descr iption Is
on flit In the Office of the Cler.k
of the Board of Education . The
prtmlsts are on Liberty
Avtnut. Pomeroy, Ohio, where
the euctlon will be held at 7:30
p.m. Monday 1 June 19, 1972.
TermS:ofsale : cash . The right
Is reserved to refect .fny and all

LANP -

HER'N

O'GOSHEN!!

PA INT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig-Zag
Sewing Machines. Still in
original car ton s. No at tachments needed as our
control s are buill -in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sews on buttons,
monograms and blind hem
st itch. Full cash pr ice, $38.50
or budget plan avai lable.

Phone 9925641.

6·1-6tc
VACUUM CLEANER new 1972
mode l. Complete with all
clea ning tools . Small paint
damage in shipp ing . Will take

equipment, · ., furnl~ure
suppli.es. Typewnter

·~

&amp;
&amp;

WHAT SORTA FORM
15 S HE Ft LIN ' OtJP

121.00 cash or budget plan
6-1-61c

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

424 Main St.

1

NEW LISTING
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedroom home, ha s gas furnace,
modern bath, basement. Front and back porches . 5 nice
rooms in all . Only asking $7,500.00 .

'

NICE AND NEAT

~ERE

AT MICW!GAN
WE PROBABLY

304 E. Main .St.

GRADUATE: MORe

Pomeroy, Ohio

TEAC~E~S T~AN ANY

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522. ·
6·10·tfc

availab le. Phone 992-6517 .
6-1-ttc

VACUUM CLEANER. Siill in

MORE

~AN .

Z,600 LAST VEAl&gt;.

ALONE

wow;
MIND

ESPECIAU.'I FOR
OUR PLACEMENT
BUQEAU

BO~&amp;LING.

:SN'T IT

i!

$5.55

On "lost America.I!..~Mt
1

HAS DEVOTED
MAH WHOLE LIFE
TOLDVE- ~--

Pomeioy Home &amp;_AUto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomaroy, &lt;

6517.

6-1-tlc

SPECIAL
MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS
Economy Tiller. 3'1&gt;h.p. B&amp;S
engine. Reg . 159.95

144,9.5

Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S JV2
h.p. engine. In carton
70.25

POMEROY
·· · - Jack W. Car&gt;ey, Mgr.
Ail
Phone992·2181

From t,he 'largest
Bu II dozer Radiator to
Sma lleSt· Heater Core.

I 'THINK WE

S~OUlD ~AVE

TURNED /.EFT
AT 'THE FORK
IN T~E ROAD
T~t&lt;'EE MILES
BACK !

· Nathan Biggs
Rodlo.tor Specialist

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.'
Ph. 99'&gt; -2174

W~ERE

WEAR&lt;!

W ::N I 'LL MEET Hll/i
BE. HEADING 13ACK
TO PA:30-PAGO!

WINDOW Cleaning
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance ;
commercial; profess ional
men for profess ional jobs ;

phone 614-446-9202.

6·6-121p
SEWING MACHINES. Repirlr
service, all makes. 992-2284.

VERMEER hay conditioner. A·
1 condi t ion, S250 . County Road

18, first house on lett off U. S.
33, west near roadside 'park ;

leo R. Story, Rt . 2, Pomeroy,
992 -6756.
6-7-3tp
WHISPERING PINES Nile
Club, l mile north of
Pomeroy, Ohioan Rt . 7. Have
2: 30 night club license. phone

ALUMINUM boats, on county
road 18, 15C yards west ol Rt.
33. Gall 992·6256. lorenzo

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tfc

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est :mates . Phone 992-3284:
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio .

1

6-JO·tfc
BACKHO~

AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
1Bllll Pullins. Phone 992 -2478.
4·25-lfc

SEE t)!;"i'OR: Awnings, storm

Davis.

~

4. "Artie11

author
7. Ship
9, Disregard
12 wds.)
13. Fuel
14. Harmon!·
ous (2

DICK TRACY
1 SUPPED CARBON
PAPER IN DAD'S NOTE
PAD. IT SUPPLIED ME
WIT~ DOODLES

------

after 1 p.m. 992-6133.
.

6·6·121c

We tall! to, :fOil
like a. persOn,

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

18.Jna-(in·
stantly)
19. Beat
pounder

t;::::;;;;;L___...;=:..J

.__ _, li

20. On terra
firma
22. European
blaekbird
23..._
Boots Are
Made for
Walkin'"
Billiard
shot
25. Theater

JJl!lJWOOib~;lkJ==~f: -t.~·=
Unscramble these foor Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

form four ordinary words.
10. Rags-to·
riches
saga (2
wds.)
11. Dismount
12. Colonized
16. Father
20. Minimally
(2 wds.)
21. Less

, llll ~. l'K·D•l·~

28. Assail
(2 wds.)

1 1'1\/H"''
\'

31. Sensible
33. Candlenut
tree

prolix

22. Napole·
onic vic·
tory site
(June 14,
1800)

35. Viet·

namese

'''' "'"

" · ·· ~·········O~o'

24.Lady's
slipper
26. Hidden

t.\f/IU.:H I
] I

holiday

.l .'i.\IH "Ik.'l

j

I

,.,

II I
I.

V:
~

Now arrance ihe drded

,j suggooted by tht~bo\oe cartoon.

CAARLIE MXUN,
I HAVE A
QUESTION ..

.

AXYDLBAAXR
.
io LONGFELLOW
One letler simply sta nds for another . In this sample A is
d f r the three L's. X for the two O's, etr. Single letlers,
~~~str~phes, tHe lenglh and formati~n of the words .are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are dtlterent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
0\\!0YFUAPLX
RLZOY
UAD

GOZOYEM

LDI

TOOST

VOLUYDM

LEUPDLEM
ZOJU
1
JRZXOU .-JD J
XDZZEYZ

UD

(\

JO

OCVOBU

ELZ

UAO

'

,

.'

NICIL Y · GOITII

A.n~"'•· r: 'IPI/ lhi~e _,..,v W "" to '''""'JI - mrr/ ~-n,'ll
Jll•l n r, .•,,.;,•.w iml 11[ laim! -A FIIEMAN

DAILy CRYl'TOQUOTE _ Here's how to work it:

RUTLAND ·fURNITUR£. ... .
Arnold Grate
Rutla!JCI~,O . :Jjl ·
. ..

1~11&lt;1'1

~ to form the surprist an1wer. u

Ju ••l'l'" MERCY i fAITH

26. Swore
27. Bemis·
taken
28. Does a
shoe repair job
29.-loss
(per·
plexed)
(2 wdi.)
30. HappenIngs
32. Sober·
minded
3t. r .aughing·
stork

Strvtc•

ON THE FARM.

(Antweu tomorrowl

box

Dryers t .
. Surroul')d clotll\r
· .'NIIh geotlo, e~oir
. .htlt. No hoi spots
•.,.!)o .overdrylng ,
'O'Int ~h Lint
l'lllar, .
..
Wti!jr~
zttn ·
MAYTAG · ·
Rtd.Cjrptt
l•

THEY SOMETIMES l'vORK
A~OUND THE CLOCK

~I~Pria~',::::llle~SUII=PRISI~A:;;;NSW~IR~IIm~;l "(II X1 ]"

zt;

HalaofHtat

~-

3. Succeed
(3wds.l
4. For each
5.lmmortal
poet
6. Superla·
tive suffix
8. Fragrant
flower
(2 wds.)

measure

For Rent

apartmen t, paneled, fur · 5 ROOM house. lot on river,

song ·
2. Source

15. Pieces of
porcelain
(2 wds. )
17. Japanese

- -- - - -

You are requ ired to answer
Railroad St.. Middleport ·
nlshed or unfurnished; phone
the Petition With in twenty eight
992
-7384
or
992·7133.
14.000;
phone 992 -3265.
days after the last publicat ion of
6-4-6tc
6·6·12tc
this not ice, nam.ely , by not later
than the 20th . day ot July 1 1972.
or ludgment by default will be FURNISHED 4 room apt . LOTS ON Wright St., Pomeroy :
Adulls only , Middleport . phone 742-5937.
rendered against you .
phone 992-3874 .
Myrtle Han1ng,
H ·l2tc
Adm in ls tratrlx of•lhe
6-44fc
Estate of
37 ACRE fa rm. modern house.
.
Rebecca Hudnall , Deceased . --'----- - - - - TRAILER. Brown's Trailer drHied we ll. 7 acres river
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter ,
Patl&lt;. Mlner sv llle, Ohio. bottom. on good road : call
Attorneys for Plaintiff

DOWN
1. Start ofa
children's

wcts.)

P~ONE

{0 1972 K in&amp;: Featul'411 Syndicate, Ine.)

36. Quake
37. Caen's
river
38. Emmet
39. On the
other
hand

ACROSS
1. Prepare
for war

The
DaUy Sentinel

Employment Wam: •

yesterday's Cryptoquote: KNDOWLEKDNGO
' Ew[~J'~~RHAP:
KNOWLEDGE IS SAFETY, AN .. .
PINESS.-THOMAS JEFFERSON

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Real Estate For Sale

6·6-lfc

EXACTLY

IN =RISCO AND WELL

Pomeroy

------

Phone 992-3324.

ER ,..lEMME HAVE
ANOTHER. LOOK
AT THAT MAP!

UNLA')(! I
KNOW

Aluminum
Sheets

For Rent or Sale

21 , It '

MA~H!

FGR..

-GU ARANTEEDPhone 992-209•

factory
cartons ,
price
reduced because of paint
damage . 7 c l eaning af.
tachments . Plus carpet
shampooer, $15.8ll . Phone 992-

VERA EBUM

14,

MONEY FOR 11-iE

CilY E!UPGE'TS

For Sale.

CLELAND
REALTY

lSI . 10, 17 , 24 , 31 161 7,

EY.~A

EXPERT
Whf!el Alignrilent·

. .For Sale

material, buttonholes, .dial
controt for fancy designs.
Pr ice reduced because of
shipping scratches. Pay only
S2S .OO cash price or terms

CAN FIND WAYS 10 GET

OT~ER 11.$. ~C~OOL.

Phone 992,3795
or Mason 7_73-5535

Pt. Pteuant

992-9943, Pomeroy, Oh io.
6-7-61p

MONKEY RUN AREA
POMEROY
-ALSOSYRACuSE

.2

-----------

r ...

WAN'~!'&gt;

CITY HALL.

Three Ways---One Is Right

1

' ,.;.·

~~\

·-"~

,r

1HE MAYOR

$TATE

PHONE 675-3628

Wanteli To Buy

of diamonds _

VJIFI&gt;, VJIU.. YA ...

'IOU TO WJRK FOI&lt;'

Specializing In
Small Businesses

Adding Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

available . Phone 992-5641.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE
.
992 2156

fi.

'

..

llrf

G-7

doors and windows, carporl$,
Case No . 20702
RUTLAND - Modern J bedrooms , bath, hot water heat,
marquees, aluminum siding
5-19-30tc
Esta t e of Charles Hyatt ,
dining, diS hwasher, base ment, fenced yard. Try us on th is
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Deceased.
one, you may be surprised, about the price.
reP,resentatlve. For free
Not ice Is hereby given tha t
estl mates, phone Charles
Franklin
Harriet Yatt of R.D. 2, Rac ine , McCouty,
COUNTRY HOME
Harold w;lson
and MrsMcCouly,
. Haro ld
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Ohio, has been duly appo inted Wilson, Marie N ew and Mr.
OUT RT . 7 WAY - 2 bedrooms , plains water, modern
Administratrix of the Estate of New , hu sband 01 Mar;e New,
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
kif&lt;hcn and bath , 4 acres of land. Wou ld you believe only
Charles Hyatt, deceased , late of and !he unknown heir s,
3-2-Ho
$9,500.00.
Come
in
to
seJ.
Meigs County , Ohio.
devisees,
lega
tees,
executors.
-----=~
=
Creditors are required to file administrators or assigns of
NEW LISTING
36" X 23" X .009
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
their claims with said fid uciary
EDGE
OF
TOWN
One
floor
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
Lenn;e Wilson , Deceased , w;ll
'
within four months .
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
bids.
take not ice 1hat on the 8th . day
furnace, modern kitchen with cook units. Recreation
Jrd
day
of
June,
Dates
this
Complete front end service,
of May , 1972, a Petit ion was
.- Lle W. McComas 1972.
room . Large living with stone fir eplace . Asking only
tune up and brake service.
Clerk , Board Of Education
;n lh e Probal e o;, ;s;on ol
$17,500.00. 'Better see thi s today .
John c. Bacon (;led
the Common P leas Court ot
•
Wheels balanced elec .
Meigs Local School District
Probate Judge of said County
(ll 17. 24. 31 (61 7,"
2 APARTMENTS
tronlcally .
All
work
Me;gs Counly. Oh;o, wherein
161 7. 14, 21
vou have be en named defen .
guaranteed.
Reasonable .
MIDDLEPORT
Rent
is
gelling
higher.
You
should
buy
danls pray ing for sale of the ' - - rates. Phone 992-3213.
fh is one and let the rent pay lor il. You can look now.
eM ire in terest in the real estate
1·27-tfc
hNelnafter
descr
ibed
in
order
USEO .OFFSET PLATES
WIN AT BRIDGE
to pay the debts of the decedent,
DO YOUR BUYING, MOVING , AND SELLING NOW,
HAVS.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Rebecca Hudnall , and the costs
THAT SCHOOL IS OUT. WE HAVE PLENTY OF
MANY IISES
of administration . The real OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
cancelled?
Lost
your
clocks, brllss beds , silver
PLACES FOR YOU TO SEE . OUR LISTINGS ARE
estate is desc ribed as follows :
operator's
license?
Call
992·
GROWING .
Parcel No . 1: The follow ing
dol lars
or
complete
2966.
r eal estate situate in Bedford
household s. Write M . 0 .
HELEN l. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
6·15-lfc
The other line of play is to Township , Meigs Coun ty, Ohio, Miller, Rl . 4, Pom eroy, Ohio.
992 -3325
NORTH
7
bounded
and
descr
i
bed
as
992-2378
cash JUS! t w o heart s and
Call 992·6271.
4Al0943 2
8 for $1.00
'
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED ·
fol lows
Beginning at th e
3-16-tfc
the
n
lead
dummy
's
sin
glelon
¥AKQJ1,09
southeast corner of Section 31, - - -- - -- - - !
REASONABLE
rates. Ph . 446·
diamond .
•
4782
,
Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
Tow
n
3, Range 13 in Bedford BRUSH HOG , pull ·lype. Phone
Thi s play w or k s 1Ves1 Townst1ip , thence West along
OYJner &amp; Operator.
• Void
the sout h line of said Section 31
992.7106.
WEST (Dl
wins the diamond and ca n ·1 to the sou theas t corner of
EII.S1'
S-12-tfc
6·7-3tc
4 K6
lead anything to keep S&lt;lu1h Xav ier Thoma 's 95 acre tra ct of
----~'-•
a.
• 84
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
• 765
Old uprigh t
from ga inin g the lead in or · land in Section 31, then ce North WANTED
608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
Complete Service
+AJI093
• 8764
der to tak e a trum p fine sse . aton51 th e east l ine of said pianos, grand pian os, old
Phone 949·3821
XaiJ~tr
Thoma'
s
95
acre
tract
of
pump
organs
.
Any
condition.
.AIOH
49 876:1
STANDINGllOOM ONLY
Ttus play IS also · superi or . land to the northeast corner of Paying SlO each. Write giving
Racine, Ohio
111
Court
St.
·SOUTH
Is your home gett in g too
West n e e d s the k~n g ol sa
id
Xavier
Thoma
's
95
acre
directions.
Witten
Piano
Co.,
·Crill
Bradford
trac t of land to the northeast
• QJ 8;
sma ll for a growing family?
Pomeroy, Ohicl
spades for his vul nerable corner of Thoma's tract; thence
5·1-Hc
Box
188.
Sardis,
Ohio,
43946
.
• 32
We have several spacious
opening. Thus. thi s play Will West along the north lin e of said
6-4-6tp
+ KQ 5
hom es at " Budget " prices.
'------;;-------.1.. SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
work as long a s h e a r t s ThOma's tract to the so utheast - - - - - - -- - .KQJ4
corner
of
Em
IIV
Thoma's
13.17
LIKE
sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
992-3020
break 3·2 ·and as I on g as acre tra ct of lan d In said Sec t ion
662-3035.
HANGING GARDENS?
160 Coal St.
MiddlePQrl
Both vulnetable
West does hold that spade 31 , thence north westerly atonp
This home has Ihem, 1 story
2' 12-tfc
the easterly li ne of said Em ily HOUSE IN Long Bollom, phone
We.t North East Suuth
king .
GROUND Ideal for building or
MIDDLEPORT
1
Mma
's
tract
to
a
point
which
2
bedrooms,
large
frame
,
It
985-3529.
Pas!l 3N.T.
2+
trailer, located on hardtop SEW ING MACHINE service,
It fai ls miserably if Wes1 is south 66 1f• degrees , wes t 55
First time offered - this one
bath , large kltcheri with lot s
Pass 4+
Pass 54
5-21 -llc
roads: Rt. 338, about 6 miles
opened some sort of fancy rod s and 10 links from the road
won't
last
long.
3
bedrooms
clean, oil. set tension $4.99.
of cabinets , disposal, liv ing
Pa,.
Pass Pa s.&lt;~
North of Racine, Ohio ; phone
btd with j ust nine high-card lead i ng from Wolf Pen to
.( extra large) and bath up.
Special Electro -Grande
room with electric fireplac e,
Pass
Bunker Hill Church, thence
. 992-7330 or 247·2161 .
Company.
Phone 992'65i7.
'stairs
,
spacious
llvingro6m,
points but that is the sort ot North
6611• degrees East 55 rods
2 car garage, full basement,
Open in~ lt:ad·- tft A
6-4-6tc
5-21 -ttc
,dining room, built-In kklt.
chance a good pla.ver ha s to and 10 l ink s to the road leading YOUNG man age 16 desires utility room . All THIS FOR
·chen,
foyer,
and
glassed
in
lake .
from Wolf Pen to Bun ker Hi ll
summer work. 742·3776.
JUST $14,900.00.
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO . ROOF painting and -minor
Church ,
thence
in
a
sun porch ct.ownstalrs. All
(NfWSPAP[R ENT£RF'RI~I ASSN ,
lly Oiwald &amp; Jamu Jacob)'
6-5-6tc
YOUR OWN GAS WELL
southeaster ly dire ction wlfh the
Lake Conchas. New Me•lco. repair. For estimates call 992·
car peted, carport . Owner
meanderings of said road to Its
$2,875. No Down. No interest. 2239, Oris Hubbard.
This 20 acres has one. J
leaving
state.
Here is another Eddy Kan.
Jntersecllon with th e east l ine of WILL do house roof and barn
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise.
6·Hip
houses, 2 rented, live in this 9
said Section 31.' thence South
tar hand from lhe American
J)'3irlting, interior painting;
Olmer out of town - I 'm
Money
Maker.
Free
old
ranch'
type
home,
3
year
along the east l ine of said
free estimates ; phone 992Contract Bridge League Bul·
accepting offers on tht'
Brochure . Ranchos: Bo• INTERIOR and exterior
The bidd ing has been :
Sec tion 31 to the southeast
bedrooms (large closets). 25
7085.
letin .
2001DD, Alameda, California
painting. Phone 992-2368.
investment proper ty easily
corner
of
said
Sec
tion
31,
the
foot of cabinet space in this
East
Suuth place of beginning , contain ing
5-9 30tc
94501.
6-4-6tp
South arrives ~~ a poor six- We!lt North
made into 3 or 4 apts.
u ltra
modern
kitchen,
1 N.T.
Pass
2 olo
29 .8S acres , ore or less.
6·7·14tp
,
,
.
,
spade contract but you can' t
Downtown
Middleport.
..
carpe t ed throughout,
2•
P11ss
Parce l No. 2: The following
CALL 949-2789for auto body and
fault the bidding. There is Pass
described real estate situated in
breezeway , garage, OTHER
RACINE - 6 room house, bath, paint work . Also repair fiber
You, South. hold
tremendous duplication of
Sec lud ed Country hom e,
Salisbury Towns hi p, Meigs 3 ROOM furn ished apartment ,
uti lity room, garage , S10.000; glass boats, plus electric and
FEAT!J..RES
TOO
utilities
paid
,
no
pets,
one
values .
4KJ 54 ¥K KH t 54 oloQ111 7 County , and State or Ohio, and
modern all-electric on 3 A.
phone
949-4195 .
NUMEROUS
TO
MENTION
,
gas welding. Stanley's
in Sect ion 36, Town 2 and Range
ch ild accepled. 356 N. 4th
West gets off to what turns
tract.
lots
of
timber,
out
of
What do you do now ?
Custom Body Shop
3-~1
tfc
13, and bounded and described
furnishe
d
or
unfurnished
.
Slreel. Mldd leporl, Will iam
out to be a v e r y fri endly
towr
owner,
make
an
offer.
A- Bid fuu1· h f.' a 1· t "· Your as follows : Beg inning at the
5-19-30tc
MINERALS~ unfurnished,
Smith.
opening lead and it is up to hand is worth 10 puinls in sup- northeast corner of Section 36 ,
515,9.
0
0.00.
You
can'
t
beat
6·7-3tp
NICE
2-story
home
with
lull
•
2, Range 13, In Salisbury
South to plan his play _
Close to Rutland , large 1
DOZER and liac'k hoe work,
port of heaa·ts lhd your ·P&amp;•·tne•· Town
thi s one .
. basement, 2 lots, new forced
To wnsh ip , thence West along
pondsandseptlctanks; B&amp; K
Naturally, he r u I f s in ha" i lfi-18-point hand. Even if the
floor
plan
home,
basement
&amp;
north Hne of said Section 36, TRAILER spaces overlookins
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
CALL
US
FOR
YOUR
dummy. Then he considers he has cheated a point, the1·c to the Northeast corner of
gas
furnace,
Jlh
A
..
'
very
Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan,
lilementary School. Phone · Dick Karr, Jr.
.
NEEDS IN REAL ESTATE .
his next play. One line is to will still he 8 rllir chanre rur Jessie w. Slys 23 acre tract of
level , Q'lCd water supply .
phone Mason~ 773-5750.
992-738.4 to see.
5-2 1-tfc
land
in
said
Sec
tion
36,
t
~ence
in
WE
HAVE
THEM
OR
WILL
play three rounds of hearts tame.
·
5- ll -301~
1J.7·tfc
a Southeasterly dir ec tion along
GET
THEM.
Comfortable 3 bedroom &amp;
and hope to be able to ruff
TODAY'S QiJESTIOI'i
the eas tern line Of said Jessie
home on lot 100x190.
bath
the third one s uccessfullr.
w.
Slys
23
acre
tract
to
th
e
north
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
SR.
Instead of b id di 11~ two hea rt:-..
Overlooking
A slightly better line IS to your partner has rehid two dia - line of Emma J. Slys 40.50 acre
unfurn is hed
apartments.
Mddleport.
REALTOR
of land in Sect ion 36,
$7,950.
Phone
992
-5434.
cash the ace of !rumps first . monds to deny holding a four - tract
thence east along the north line
Call992·2259
4-12-tfc
You just might drop a single· card major suit. Wh&lt;~l do you d r~ of said Emma J . Slys 40.50 acre
If
no
answer 992-2568
tract to the east l ine of said
ton king_ Il you don ' t you now?
1~0 Co~l Street - Also
TRAILER space, Ri ve rvi ew
Section
36,
thence
North
along
location
of the Middleport C
stlll play three rounds of
Imps.
Trailer Park , Hartford, W.
the east l ine of said Section 36 to
of
C
office
.
~earls, ruffing the lhird one.
water
1
the northeast corner Of said
va., concrete patio. al l
E
h
.'confrot. ·• ·
Sec tion 36 the point of begin ·
Both these plays fail be·
phone
304-882-2006.
RACIN
10
room
ouse.
utilities
:
Jl for JACOBY MODERN book ning, containing 37 acres , more
. FIHer o,. Power
cause West holds Just two ScmJ
5-28-12tp bath, basement. garage, two
to: "Win of Bridgt," (c/o this nt,s · or les&amp;.
,Fin Agllalor. .
lots. Phone 949-4313.
hurts and will overruff the po,.rJ, P.O. Bo.. 489, Radio Citr Reference Deed : Vol. 164, - - - - - - - -l"frllli' l'ro.,· ~
4-s.tfp
third lead and cash his ace Stotion, Ntw York, N.Y. 10019.
Page 551 , Deed Records Meigs NEW 2 bedroom. all eleclric - -:c::-::-cc-:--'7',--,-:-:-::;
Maytat
County Ohio.
.

Vol. 44 pages 139-41, lt8, 231,

'iEP .. BUT SHE'S
DRET FUL fiUSV
RIGHT NOW
FIL LIN' OUT A
BODACIOOS FORM

KEBLERIS
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

Complete line of office

6- J.6tc

Real Estate FJr Sa -:

6 ·6· 31c

- PROVATE DIVISION1972 .
Myrtle Haning, Admini stratrix , '
John C. Baco!f- of the Estate ol
Probetfe Judge of said County Rebecca Hudnall,
(6) 7, 1'.1, ·2,
Deceased,
Ptalntitr ,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

-5443.

board motor and !railer; will
sell seasonable. Phone 992- ~,----:--:­
7157 or see at 28A River St., COAL·. Li mes tone, Excelsior
Sa il Works, E. Ma in Sl.,
Midd lepor t.
6-7-61c Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.

6-6-4k

Case No . 20676
Estate of Bess H. Sa nborn,
Deceased .
Not ice is h'ereby given that
Paul S. Smart, of Middl eport ,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Executor of the Estate of Bess
H . Sanborn, decea sed, lat e of
Meigs Coun ty , Oh io.
Creditors are requ ired to fi le
their claims with said fiduciar y
w ith in four month s.
Dated th is 3rd day of June.

"at the caution lighl",

, 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
Phone collect 985-3915. Gale CAMPER
condition, $1,000. Phone 992·
Osborne.
6329.
6-7-Jip
5-12-lfc

new products - specia ls each
month ,· also sa tes personnel
needed. Phone 992-5113 .
6-6-ff c

NOTI'CE OF
APPOINTMENT

reasonably -priced household
·ooods and aoollances . St . Rt.

morning in front of Village
Pharmacy , Middleporl.

KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Severa l

LEGAL NOTICE

Kuhl for

6-2-61p FARMALL Cub lractor with
-,---:c:-:cc----:::---,----:-:plow ' phone 1-304-882 -2361.
LOST - Boys billtold, Monday
·
6·1-6tc

5-16-30tc

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

Kuh l 's Bargain Store. Check

first wi th Bill

claim .

3830.

'

Buy more al

6. Closed Mondays. Phone 667·
3858.
area, ca ll 74?-3934, desc ribe to __ __ _ _ __ __6_.s_.6fc

Pair Shoe Store , 108 W. Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992 ·

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

PAY LESS -

Tuppers Plains , Ohio. Open to

Ldst and Found

Available at Simon 's Pick A-

Plumbing
Electrical Work

6-6-3tc

FOUND S ponies in Langs vi lle

tor your

your

phone 992 7133 .

7,

6-4-7tc

Hot Water Heaters

- - -----'-- 6-1-6tc

SAVE up to one ha lf. Bring your

45760, 992-2248.

FOl Sa'le

Cline's Trailer Park across ANTIQUE din ing room suite
from Blue Fountain Motel, with round table ; 1969 16 ft.
Gallipolis.
Pennant Camping Trai ler;

Bend

Third Ave., Middleport.

Air Conditioners

EARTH MOVING

bar. luggage rack . signal
lighs, $950. 992-5617.
ZIG ZAG SEW ING MACHINE
6·5-3tc
1972 Model, sews all . stretch

Auto Sates

Regatta, Pome roy , · Ohio,
June 16, 17 and 18; spaces
availa ble. contact: Mrs .

boat.

home

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Ponniroy Jlotor Co.

FLEA MARKET, Big

nHEIL"

mobile

service - plus gigantic
·d'isplay of mobile homes
always available at .. .

Clothing, dishes, Avon bottles
and ·mi sc., 463 Grant St..

Notice

ltlng Lot No. 104 In Behan 's

&lt;;omplele

P. B., good W· S·W tires , many more ex tras . Whtfe f1n1sh ,
blk . vi nyl roof . Priced to move.

LEGAL NOTICE

Addition to the said VIllage ol

• Air Conditioners
• Awnings
• Underpinning

1970 DODGE POLARA

-

OhiO.

,

12495

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

______ _ ______

liltle wear, maroon finish. Blk. vinyl interior, radio.

REDUCE excess fluids with GUN SHOOT, also rifle mal FLUIDEX , 11.69 . LOSE
ches. Open sights only, REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
WEIGfH safely with Dex·A·
Service, sso Reg. mares, $40
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Dlef. 98c at Nelson Drugs.
Grade, Francis Ben edu m ,
Sunday, June 11. 12 noon
6-7-llp
6-/ -3tc Phon e 667 -3856.
S-17-301p

Cerl Moles, address unknown ,
Evelyn
Mo les, · address
unknown, the unknown heirs of
Evelyn Moles, all of whose
•ddresaes are unknown l!md
Clnnol
wilh
reasonable
dlllg1nce be ascertained, w ill
take notice that on the nm day
Cl!f May, 1972, Plaintiff, Bernice
Bowen flied her comp laint
against them In tf'le court of
Common Pleas .of Meigs
County, OhiO, ttle same being
Cau No. 15.073 in said court, for
an action to quiet title In the
following described real estate,
tO·Wit :
Sltu1ted In the VIllage of
Middleport, Meigs County,

1965 SOx 10 mobile home; phone
247.2161.

51595

1970 CHEVROLET

IS LOWEE2V
ROUNDABOUT,
SNUFF'/ ?

SJFPO~D m 1$
)
A VIJIOI.J, IS/V'T IT ?

~tL , 'TELl

- - ------

2 Dr., low mileage by local owner, original tires, shows

6-7-3tc

Notice

Phone' area code 614-423-9531.
4-1 3-lfc'

MOB ILE HOME S FOR SALE
1970VOLKSWAGEN

Daughters : Nina Bland and

OFFICE HOURS

8: 30a .m . to 5:00p.m . Daily,
8: 30 a .m. t·o 12 : 00 Noon
Saturdev .

models of mobile homes .

r-----;r-------~'""""

MARRIAG;E I:;.

Business Services

. CASH paid for all makes and

•tor Co.

IUALITY

· at the time of her death.

secutive insertions .

~-troy

ZSIGIS
Of,

Mobile Homes For Sale

•

'

�.

•

'

. .-..

.

~

·

~

.....

v

..

..

•..........."·'• ~ 1&lt;1·•

.

..

'

.

.

,-

"I

S;;~if~;[(ij;;;·ifieds Get ActiOniSentinel Cbssifieds Get Jlesults!
.

.

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
, DEADLINES

Card ~ 1 Thanks

THE FAMILY QF Minerva
5 P .M. Da~ Before Publication .
Childers wishes to thank Dr .
· Monday Otldllne 9 i .m ,
CarM:ellatiOI'I - Corrections
Will be •cceptfd untll9a .m . for.
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

T~e Publisher reserves

the

rlgtH to ed!f .or rt/ect any ads

Geemtd
cbjtctionel.
The
publisher will not be rupons lble

for more tllan one Incorrect
insertion.

RATES

For Wan't Ad Service
5 cents per Word one lnsertlot;'l
'
M inimum Charge 75c
12· cents per word three
consecutive InSertions .
18 cents per word she con .

J. J. Davis , Or. Ri chard
Sla ck,
Pl easant
Valley
Hospital , nurses ·and aides lor
their kindnesses and care
during her hospitalization ;
also Rev . Raullin Moyer and
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
Home . We wish to thank all
our relatives, friend s and
neighbors for the beautiful
floral offerings and for the
prepared meals and food sent

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads J'ald within lO.days .

CARD OF THANKS
I. OBITUARY

$1'.50 for SO word minimum .
each addltlona~ word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional

2.Sc

Advertfumen t.

Charge

per

Impala Sport Coupe, 350 cu. in., V-8 e~gine, tu~bo­
hycramatlc, power steering &amp; brakes, rad 1o, red v1nyl
Interior, black finish. White-wall fires, like new.

Pearl Reynolds.

6-7-ltc

12295
Factory air conditioning, v.e engine, auto. tra.ns.,. ~.S ..

Notice
GIANT Garage Sale, saturday,
June 10th, 9 a. m . to 9 p. m. ,
Middleporl.

YARD SALE, Avon Bottles, Old
Bottles, Antiques. On larkin
Street in Rutland , Friday and
Saturday.
6-7-3tc

Middleport. For more definite
dllcrlptlon, reference Is made
to tj'\e Plat of said VIllage .
The dtmand of the Complaint
11 tor the quieting of the title of
lht Dtt~naants based on a
can tract of purchase dated June
10, ·1957, Which was abandoned
by the Deftndan's Carl Moles
and Evelyn Moles, and for other
lrtlllf.
'
Said Defendants are required
to asnwtr llld complaint within
21 days after the last date of
publlnllon , which date IS June

21, 1972.

Bernard V. Fultz
Webster and Fultz

P. 0 . Box 723

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attornevafor Pla lnl!tt

15117, 24, 31 (6) 7, U, 21,61

LEGAL NOTICE

Bids will be received a&amp; of
ubllc 1uct1on for the sale of I he
remises known as the Coal .
ort School . The property wn
tlcQUir'ed by deeds rtcorded In

i

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Window

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P'.M.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
' • BELPRE, 0 .

t'PMEROY, "OHIO

1-------

MUST SACRIFICE '69 Dodge v,
ton pickup. Ca ll at lot 5,

Charlotte Taunton. 618 Soulh

4-4-tfc

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,

151 Butternut Ave ..• Pomeroy .

~io

BOAT LICEN SE
for

motor .

- -- - - -

Marine Sales

POODLE pupp ies, Silver Toy ,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 ·

CARPORT Sale, June·10; 9 a .m. 32 FT. Houseboal, 40 h.p. out·
to 5 p.m ., 1165 Vine Street,
Middl eport .

YAR D SAL E, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, June9, 10 &amp; 11 ;
Walter Lee's, Middl epprt Hill.
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

'

8-15-ttc

,

4-12-tfc

llelp Wanted

6-6-3tp LAD Y fo r part -time Retail
Store work ; 35 to 50 years old
preferred ; Modern Supply,
399 W. Ma in SL Pomeroy,

LEGAL NOTICE

Ohio.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO

MAN AND WIFE lo work in
house and ya rd . Living
quarters orov ided . Applicants
write Box 7295 this news .
paper .

6-4-61(

vs.

Clarence Hudnall , el aL ,

Oefendonls.
No . 20418
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
The Defendants , Stan l ey

CARRIERS
WANTED

Dozer &amp; End loader Work,
ponds, b""semenl, landscaping. We have 2 ~i1e
dozers, 2 sile 'loaders. Work
done by hour or contract ..
Free Estimates. We also

haul fitl dirt, top soil. Dump
• trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3125
after 7 p.m. or phone · 9925232 .

For Sale
KAWASAKI

"500"
1971
motorcycle , like new cond.,
Racing Fe'rring, bags, roll

COLON IAL Maple Slereo-radio
combination, AM·FM radio. 4
speakers, 4 speed changer,
separate controls. Balance
$77 .39 . Use our budget terms.

Ca II 992-7085.

- - - - - - --6·1·61c

ST EREO-RADIO comb ination,
Modern Walnut. 4 speakers, 4
speed · changer, separate
controls. Balance $65.43 . Use
our bUdget terms . Ca ll 992·

7085.

.POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

Meigs County Detd Record to
which reference Is hereby
madt. A survey descr iption Is
on flit In the Office of the Cler.k
of the Board of Education . The
prtmlsts are on Liberty
Avtnut. Pomeroy, Ohio, where
the euctlon will be held at 7:30
p.m. Monday 1 June 19, 1972.
TermS:ofsale : cash . The right
Is reserved to refect .fny and all

LANP -

HER'N

O'GOSHEN!!

PA INT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig-Zag
Sewing Machines. Still in
original car ton s. No at tachments needed as our
control s are buill -in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sews on buttons,
monograms and blind hem
st itch. Full cash pr ice, $38.50
or budget plan avai lable.

Phone 9925641.

6·1-6tc
VACUUM CLEANER new 1972
mode l. Complete with all
clea ning tools . Small paint
damage in shipp ing . Will take

equipment, · ., furnl~ure
suppli.es. Typewnter

·~

&amp;
&amp;

WHAT SORTA FORM
15 S HE Ft LIN ' OtJP

121.00 cash or budget plan
6-1-61c

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

424 Main St.

1

NEW LISTING
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedroom home, ha s gas furnace,
modern bath, basement. Front and back porches . 5 nice
rooms in all . Only asking $7,500.00 .

'

NICE AND NEAT

~ERE

AT MICW!GAN
WE PROBABLY

304 E. Main .St.

GRADUATE: MORe

Pomeroy, Ohio

TEAC~E~S T~AN ANY

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522. ·
6·10·tfc

availab le. Phone 992-6517 .
6-1-ttc

VACUUM CLEANER. Siill in

MORE

~AN .

Z,600 LAST VEAl&gt;.

ALONE

wow;
MIND

ESPECIAU.'I FOR
OUR PLACEMENT
BUQEAU

BO~&amp;LING.

:SN'T IT

i!

$5.55

On "lost America.I!..~Mt
1

HAS DEVOTED
MAH WHOLE LIFE
TOLDVE- ~--

Pomeioy Home &amp;_AUto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomaroy, &lt;

6517.

6-1-tlc

SPECIAL
MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS
Economy Tiller. 3'1&gt;h.p. B&amp;S
engine. Reg . 159.95

144,9.5

Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S JV2
h.p. engine. In carton
70.25

POMEROY
·· · - Jack W. Car&gt;ey, Mgr.
Ail
Phone992·2181

From t,he 'largest
Bu II dozer Radiator to
Sma lleSt· Heater Core.

I 'THINK WE

S~OUlD ~AVE

TURNED /.EFT
AT 'THE FORK
IN T~E ROAD
T~t&lt;'EE MILES
BACK !

· Nathan Biggs
Rodlo.tor Specialist

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.'
Ph. 99'&gt; -2174

W~ERE

WEAR&lt;!

W ::N I 'LL MEET Hll/i
BE. HEADING 13ACK
TO PA:30-PAGO!

WINDOW Cleaning
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance ;
commercial; profess ional
men for profess ional jobs ;

phone 614-446-9202.

6·6-121p
SEWING MACHINES. Repirlr
service, all makes. 992-2284.

VERMEER hay conditioner. A·
1 condi t ion, S250 . County Road

18, first house on lett off U. S.
33, west near roadside 'park ;

leo R. Story, Rt . 2, Pomeroy,
992 -6756.
6-7-3tp
WHISPERING PINES Nile
Club, l mile north of
Pomeroy, Ohioan Rt . 7. Have
2: 30 night club license. phone

ALUMINUM boats, on county
road 18, 15C yards west ol Rt.
33. Gall 992·6256. lorenzo

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tfc

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est :mates . Phone 992-3284:
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio .

1

6-JO·tfc
BACKHO~

AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
1Bllll Pullins. Phone 992 -2478.
4·25-lfc

SEE t)!;"i'OR: Awnings, storm

Davis.

~

4. "Artie11

author
7. Ship
9, Disregard
12 wds.)
13. Fuel
14. Harmon!·
ous (2

DICK TRACY
1 SUPPED CARBON
PAPER IN DAD'S NOTE
PAD. IT SUPPLIED ME
WIT~ DOODLES

------

after 1 p.m. 992-6133.
.

6·6·121c

We tall! to, :fOil
like a. persOn,

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

18.Jna-(in·
stantly)
19. Beat
pounder

t;::::;;;;;L___...;=:..J

.__ _, li

20. On terra
firma
22. European
blaekbird
23..._
Boots Are
Made for
Walkin'"
Billiard
shot
25. Theater

JJl!lJWOOib~;lkJ==~f: -t.~·=
Unscramble these foor Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

form four ordinary words.
10. Rags-to·
riches
saga (2
wds.)
11. Dismount
12. Colonized
16. Father
20. Minimally
(2 wds.)
21. Less

, llll ~. l'K·D•l·~

28. Assail
(2 wds.)

1 1'1\/H"''
\'

31. Sensible
33. Candlenut
tree

prolix

22. Napole·
onic vic·
tory site
(June 14,
1800)

35. Viet·

namese

'''' "'"

" · ·· ~·········O~o'

24.Lady's
slipper
26. Hidden

t.\f/IU.:H I
] I

holiday

.l .'i.\IH "Ik.'l

j

I

,.,

II I
I.

V:
~

Now arrance ihe drded

,j suggooted by tht~bo\oe cartoon.

CAARLIE MXUN,
I HAVE A
QUESTION ..

.

AXYDLBAAXR
.
io LONGFELLOW
One letler simply sta nds for another . In this sample A is
d f r the three L's. X for the two O's, etr. Single letlers,
~~~str~phes, tHe lenglh and formati~n of the words .are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are dtlterent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
0\\!0YFUAPLX
RLZOY
UAD

GOZOYEM

LDI

TOOST

VOLUYDM

LEUPDLEM
ZOJU
1
JRZXOU .-JD J
XDZZEYZ

UD

(\

JO

OCVOBU

ELZ

UAO

'

,

.'

NICIL Y · GOITII

A.n~"'•· r: 'IPI/ lhi~e _,..,v W "" to '''""'JI - mrr/ ~-n,'ll
Jll•l n r, .•,,.;,•.w iml 11[ laim! -A FIIEMAN

DAILy CRYl'TOQUOTE _ Here's how to work it:

RUTLAND ·fURNITUR£. ... .
Arnold Grate
Rutla!JCI~,O . :Jjl ·
. ..

1~11&lt;1'1

~ to form the surprist an1wer. u

Ju ••l'l'" MERCY i fAITH

26. Swore
27. Bemis·
taken
28. Does a
shoe repair job
29.-loss
(per·
plexed)
(2 wdi.)
30. HappenIngs
32. Sober·
minded
3t. r .aughing·
stork

Strvtc•

ON THE FARM.

(Antweu tomorrowl

box

Dryers t .
. Surroul')d clotll\r
· .'NIIh geotlo, e~oir
. .htlt. No hoi spots
•.,.!)o .overdrylng ,
'O'Int ~h Lint
l'lllar, .
..
Wti!jr~
zttn ·
MAYTAG · ·
Rtd.Cjrptt
l•

THEY SOMETIMES l'vORK
A~OUND THE CLOCK

~I~Pria~',::::llle~SUII=PRISI~A:;;;NSW~IR~IIm~;l "(II X1 ]"

zt;

HalaofHtat

~-

3. Succeed
(3wds.l
4. For each
5.lmmortal
poet
6. Superla·
tive suffix
8. Fragrant
flower
(2 wds.)

measure

For Rent

apartmen t, paneled, fur · 5 ROOM house. lot on river,

song ·
2. Source

15. Pieces of
porcelain
(2 wds. )
17. Japanese

- -- - - -

You are requ ired to answer
Railroad St.. Middleport ·
nlshed or unfurnished; phone
the Petition With in twenty eight
992
-7384
or
992·7133.
14.000;
phone 992 -3265.
days after the last publicat ion of
6-4-6tc
6·6·12tc
this not ice, nam.ely , by not later
than the 20th . day ot July 1 1972.
or ludgment by default will be FURNISHED 4 room apt . LOTS ON Wright St., Pomeroy :
Adulls only , Middleport . phone 742-5937.
rendered against you .
phone 992-3874 .
Myrtle Han1ng,
H ·l2tc
Adm in ls tratrlx of•lhe
6-44fc
Estate of
37 ACRE fa rm. modern house.
.
Rebecca Hudnall , Deceased . --'----- - - - - TRAILER. Brown's Trailer drHied we ll. 7 acres river
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter ,
Patl&lt;. Mlner sv llle, Ohio. bottom. on good road : call
Attorneys for Plaintiff

DOWN
1. Start ofa
children's

wcts.)

P~ONE

{0 1972 K in&amp;: Featul'411 Syndicate, Ine.)

36. Quake
37. Caen's
river
38. Emmet
39. On the
other
hand

ACROSS
1. Prepare
for war

The
DaUy Sentinel

Employment Wam: •

yesterday's Cryptoquote: KNDOWLEKDNGO
' Ew[~J'~~RHAP:
KNOWLEDGE IS SAFETY, AN .. .
PINESS.-THOMAS JEFFERSON

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Real Estate For Sale

6·6-lfc

EXACTLY

IN =RISCO AND WELL

Pomeroy

------

Phone 992-3324.

ER ,..lEMME HAVE
ANOTHER. LOOK
AT THAT MAP!

UNLA')(! I
KNOW

Aluminum
Sheets

For Rent or Sale

21 , It '

MA~H!

FGR..

-GU ARANTEEDPhone 992-209•

factory
cartons ,
price
reduced because of paint
damage . 7 c l eaning af.
tachments . Plus carpet
shampooer, $15.8ll . Phone 992-

VERA EBUM

14,

MONEY FOR 11-iE

CilY E!UPGE'TS

For Sale.

CLELAND
REALTY

lSI . 10, 17 , 24 , 31 161 7,

EY.~A

EXPERT
Whf!el Alignrilent·

. .For Sale

material, buttonholes, .dial
controt for fancy designs.
Pr ice reduced because of
shipping scratches. Pay only
S2S .OO cash price or terms

CAN FIND WAYS 10 GET

OT~ER 11.$. ~C~OOL.

Phone 992,3795
or Mason 7_73-5535

Pt. Pteuant

992-9943, Pomeroy, Oh io.
6-7-61p

MONKEY RUN AREA
POMEROY
-ALSOSYRACuSE

.2

-----------

r ...

WAN'~!'&gt;

CITY HALL.

Three Ways---One Is Right

1

' ,.;.·

~~\

·-"~

,r

1HE MAYOR

$TATE

PHONE 675-3628

Wanteli To Buy

of diamonds _

VJIFI&gt;, VJIU.. YA ...

'IOU TO WJRK FOI&lt;'

Specializing In
Small Businesses

Adding Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

available . Phone 992-5641.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE
.
992 2156

fi.

'

..

llrf

G-7

doors and windows, carporl$,
Case No . 20702
RUTLAND - Modern J bedrooms , bath, hot water heat,
marquees, aluminum siding
5-19-30tc
Esta t e of Charles Hyatt ,
dining, diS hwasher, base ment, fenced yard. Try us on th is
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Deceased.
one, you may be surprised, about the price.
reP,resentatlve. For free
Not ice Is hereby given tha t
estl mates, phone Charles
Franklin
Harriet Yatt of R.D. 2, Rac ine , McCouty,
COUNTRY HOME
Harold w;lson
and MrsMcCouly,
. Haro ld
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Ohio, has been duly appo inted Wilson, Marie N ew and Mr.
OUT RT . 7 WAY - 2 bedrooms , plains water, modern
Administratrix of the Estate of New , hu sband 01 Mar;e New,
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
kif&lt;hcn and bath , 4 acres of land. Wou ld you believe only
Charles Hyatt, deceased , late of and !he unknown heir s,
3-2-Ho
$9,500.00.
Come
in
to
seJ.
Meigs County , Ohio.
devisees,
lega
tees,
executors.
-----=~
=
Creditors are required to file administrators or assigns of
NEW LISTING
36" X 23" X .009
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
their claims with said fid uciary
EDGE
OF
TOWN
One
floor
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
Lenn;e Wilson , Deceased , w;ll
'
within four months .
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
bids.
take not ice 1hat on the 8th . day
furnace, modern kitchen with cook units. Recreation
Jrd
day
of
June,
Dates
this
Complete front end service,
of May , 1972, a Petit ion was
.- Lle W. McComas 1972.
room . Large living with stone fir eplace . Asking only
tune up and brake service.
Clerk , Board Of Education
;n lh e Probal e o;, ;s;on ol
$17,500.00. 'Better see thi s today .
John c. Bacon (;led
the Common P leas Court ot
•
Wheels balanced elec .
Meigs Local School District
Probate Judge of said County
(ll 17. 24. 31 (61 7,"
2 APARTMENTS
tronlcally .
All
work
Me;gs Counly. Oh;o, wherein
161 7. 14, 21
vou have be en named defen .
guaranteed.
Reasonable .
MIDDLEPORT
Rent
is
gelling
higher.
You
should
buy
danls pray ing for sale of the ' - - rates. Phone 992-3213.
fh is one and let the rent pay lor il. You can look now.
eM ire in terest in the real estate
1·27-tfc
hNelnafter
descr
ibed
in
order
USEO .OFFSET PLATES
WIN AT BRIDGE
to pay the debts of the decedent,
DO YOUR BUYING, MOVING , AND SELLING NOW,
HAVS.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Rebecca Hudnall , and the costs
THAT SCHOOL IS OUT. WE HAVE PLENTY OF
MANY IISES
of administration . The real OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
cancelled?
Lost
your
clocks, brllss beds , silver
PLACES FOR YOU TO SEE . OUR LISTINGS ARE
estate is desc ribed as follows :
operator's
license?
Call
992·
GROWING .
Parcel No . 1: The follow ing
dol lars
or
complete
2966.
r eal estate situate in Bedford
household s. Write M . 0 .
HELEN l. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
6·15-lfc
The other line of play is to Township , Meigs Coun ty, Ohio, Miller, Rl . 4, Pom eroy, Ohio.
992 -3325
NORTH
7
bounded
and
descr
i
bed
as
992-2378
cash JUS! t w o heart s and
Call 992·6271.
4Al0943 2
8 for $1.00
'
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED ·
fol lows
Beginning at th e
3-16-tfc
the
n
lead
dummy
's
sin
glelon
¥AKQJ1,09
southeast corner of Section 31, - - -- - -- - - !
REASONABLE
rates. Ph . 446·
diamond .
•
4782
,
Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
Tow
n
3, Range 13 in Bedford BRUSH HOG , pull ·lype. Phone
Thi s play w or k s 1Ves1 Townst1ip , thence West along
OYJner &amp; Operator.
• Void
the sout h line of said Section 31
992.7106.
WEST (Dl
wins the diamond and ca n ·1 to the sou theas t corner of
EII.S1'
S-12-tfc
6·7-3tc
4 K6
lead anything to keep S&lt;lu1h Xav ier Thoma 's 95 acre tra ct of
----~'-•
a.
• 84
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
• 765
Old uprigh t
from ga inin g the lead in or · land in Section 31, then ce North WANTED
608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
Complete Service
+AJI093
• 8764
der to tak e a trum p fine sse . aton51 th e east l ine of said pianos, grand pian os, old
Phone 949·3821
XaiJ~tr
Thoma'
s
95
acre
tract
of
pump
organs
.
Any
condition.
.AIOH
49 876:1
STANDINGllOOM ONLY
Ttus play IS also · superi or . land to the northeast corner of Paying SlO each. Write giving
Racine, Ohio
111
Court
St.
·SOUTH
Is your home gett in g too
West n e e d s the k~n g ol sa
id
Xavier
Thoma
's
95
acre
directions.
Witten
Piano
Co.,
·Crill
Bradford
trac t of land to the northeast
• QJ 8;
sma ll for a growing family?
Pomeroy, Ohicl
spades for his vul nerable corner of Thoma's tract; thence
5·1-Hc
Box
188.
Sardis,
Ohio,
43946
.
• 32
We have several spacious
opening. Thus. thi s play Will West along the north lin e of said
6-4-6tp
+ KQ 5
hom es at " Budget " prices.
'------;;-------.1.. SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
work as long a s h e a r t s ThOma's tract to the so utheast - - - - - - -- - .KQJ4
corner
of
Em
IIV
Thoma's
13.17
LIKE
sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
992-3020
break 3·2 ·and as I on g as acre tra ct of lan d In said Sec t ion
662-3035.
HANGING GARDENS?
160 Coal St.
MiddlePQrl
Both vulnetable
West does hold that spade 31 , thence north westerly atonp
This home has Ihem, 1 story
2' 12-tfc
the easterly li ne of said Em ily HOUSE IN Long Bollom, phone
We.t North East Suuth
king .
GROUND Ideal for building or
MIDDLEPORT
1
Mma
's
tract
to
a
point
which
2
bedrooms,
large
frame
,
It
985-3529.
Pas!l 3N.T.
2+
trailer, located on hardtop SEW ING MACHINE service,
It fai ls miserably if Wes1 is south 66 1f• degrees , wes t 55
First time offered - this one
bath , large kltcheri with lot s
Pass 4+
Pass 54
5-21 -llc
roads: Rt. 338, about 6 miles
opened some sort of fancy rod s and 10 links from the road
won't
last
long.
3
bedrooms
clean, oil. set tension $4.99.
of cabinets , disposal, liv ing
Pa,.
Pass Pa s.&lt;~
North of Racine, Ohio ; phone
btd with j ust nine high-card lead i ng from Wolf Pen to
.( extra large) and bath up.
Special Electro -Grande
room with electric fireplac e,
Pass
Bunker Hill Church, thence
. 992-7330 or 247·2161 .
Company.
Phone 992'65i7.
'stairs
,
spacious
llvingro6m,
points but that is the sort ot North
6611• degrees East 55 rods
2 car garage, full basement,
Open in~ lt:ad·- tft A
6-4-6tc
5-21 -ttc
,dining room, built-In kklt.
chance a good pla.ver ha s to and 10 l ink s to the road leading YOUNG man age 16 desires utility room . All THIS FOR
·chen,
foyer,
and
glassed
in
lake .
from Wolf Pen to Bun ker Hi ll
summer work. 742·3776.
JUST $14,900.00.
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO . ROOF painting and -minor
Church ,
thence
in
a
sun porch ct.ownstalrs. All
(NfWSPAP[R ENT£RF'RI~I ASSN ,
lly Oiwald &amp; Jamu Jacob)'
6-5-6tc
YOUR OWN GAS WELL
southeaster ly dire ction wlfh the
Lake Conchas. New Me•lco. repair. For estimates call 992·
car peted, carport . Owner
meanderings of said road to Its
$2,875. No Down. No interest. 2239, Oris Hubbard.
This 20 acres has one. J
leaving
state.
Here is another Eddy Kan.
Jntersecllon with th e east l ine of WILL do house roof and barn
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise.
6·Hip
houses, 2 rented, live in this 9
said Section 31.' thence South
tar hand from lhe American
J)'3irlting, interior painting;
Olmer out of town - I 'm
Money
Maker.
Free
old
ranch'
type
home,
3
year
along the east l ine of said
free estimates ; phone 992Contract Bridge League Bul·
accepting offers on tht'
Brochure . Ranchos: Bo• INTERIOR and exterior
The bidd ing has been :
Sec tion 31 to the southeast
bedrooms (large closets). 25
7085.
letin .
2001DD, Alameda, California
painting. Phone 992-2368.
investment proper ty easily
corner
of
said
Sec
tion
31,
the
foot of cabinet space in this
East
Suuth place of beginning , contain ing
5-9 30tc
94501.
6-4-6tp
South arrives ~~ a poor six- We!lt North
made into 3 or 4 apts.
u ltra
modern
kitchen,
1 N.T.
Pass
2 olo
29 .8S acres , ore or less.
6·7·14tp
,
,
.
,
spade contract but you can' t
Downtown
Middleport.
..
carpe t ed throughout,
2•
P11ss
Parce l No. 2: The following
CALL 949-2789for auto body and
fault the bidding. There is Pass
described real estate situated in
breezeway , garage, OTHER
RACINE - 6 room house, bath, paint work . Also repair fiber
You, South. hold
tremendous duplication of
Sec lud ed Country hom e,
Salisbury Towns hi p, Meigs 3 ROOM furn ished apartment ,
uti lity room, garage , S10.000; glass boats, plus electric and
FEAT!J..RES
TOO
utilities
paid
,
no
pets,
one
values .
4KJ 54 ¥K KH t 54 oloQ111 7 County , and State or Ohio, and
modern all-electric on 3 A.
phone
949-4195 .
NUMEROUS
TO
MENTION
,
gas welding. Stanley's
in Sect ion 36, Town 2 and Range
ch ild accepled. 356 N. 4th
West gets off to what turns
tract.
lots
of
timber,
out
of
What do you do now ?
Custom Body Shop
3-~1
tfc
13, and bounded and described
furnishe
d
or
unfurnished
.
Slreel. Mldd leporl, Will iam
out to be a v e r y fri endly
towr
owner,
make
an
offer.
A- Bid fuu1· h f.' a 1· t "· Your as follows : Beg inning at the
5-19-30tc
MINERALS~ unfurnished,
Smith.
opening lead and it is up to hand is worth 10 puinls in sup- northeast corner of Section 36 ,
515,9.
0
0.00.
You
can'
t
beat
6·7-3tp
NICE
2-story
home
with
lull
•
2, Range 13, In Salisbury
South to plan his play _
Close to Rutland , large 1
DOZER and liac'k hoe work,
port of heaa·ts lhd your ·P&amp;•·tne•· Town
thi s one .
. basement, 2 lots, new forced
To wnsh ip , thence West along
pondsandseptlctanks; B&amp; K
Naturally, he r u I f s in ha" i lfi-18-point hand. Even if the
floor
plan
home,
basement
&amp;
north Hne of said Section 36, TRAILER spaces overlookins
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
CALL
US
FOR
YOUR
dummy. Then he considers he has cheated a point, the1·c to the Northeast corner of
gas
furnace,
Jlh
A
..
'
very
Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan,
lilementary School. Phone · Dick Karr, Jr.
.
NEEDS IN REAL ESTATE .
his next play. One line is to will still he 8 rllir chanre rur Jessie w. Slys 23 acre tract of
level , Q'lCd water supply .
phone Mason~ 773-5750.
992-738.4 to see.
5-2 1-tfc
land
in
said
Sec
tion
36,
t
~ence
in
WE
HAVE
THEM
OR
WILL
play three rounds of hearts tame.
·
5- ll -301~
1J.7·tfc
a Southeasterly dir ec tion along
GET
THEM.
Comfortable 3 bedroom &amp;
and hope to be able to ruff
TODAY'S QiJESTIOI'i
the eas tern line Of said Jessie
home on lot 100x190.
bath
the third one s uccessfullr.
w.
Slys
23
acre
tract
to
th
e
north
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
SR.
Instead of b id di 11~ two hea rt:-..
Overlooking
A slightly better line IS to your partner has rehid two dia - line of Emma J. Slys 40.50 acre
unfurn is hed
apartments.
Mddleport.
REALTOR
of land in Sect ion 36,
$7,950.
Phone
992
-5434.
cash the ace of !rumps first . monds to deny holding a four - tract
thence east along the north line
Call992·2259
4-12-tfc
You just might drop a single· card major suit. Wh&lt;~l do you d r~ of said Emma J . Slys 40.50 acre
If
no
answer 992-2568
tract to the east l ine of said
ton king_ Il you don ' t you now?
1~0 Co~l Street - Also
TRAILER space, Ri ve rvi ew
Section
36,
thence
North
along
location
of the Middleport C
stlll play three rounds of
Imps.
Trailer Park , Hartford, W.
the east l ine of said Section 36 to
of
C
office
.
~earls, ruffing the lhird one.
water
1
the northeast corner Of said
va., concrete patio. al l
E
h
.'confrot. ·• ·
Sec tion 36 the point of begin ·
Both these plays fail be·
phone
304-882-2006.
RACIN
10
room
ouse.
utilities
:
Jl for JACOBY MODERN book ning, containing 37 acres , more
. FIHer o,. Power
cause West holds Just two ScmJ
5-28-12tp bath, basement. garage, two
to: "Win of Bridgt," (c/o this nt,s · or les&amp;.
,Fin Agllalor. .
lots. Phone 949-4313.
hurts and will overruff the po,.rJ, P.O. Bo.. 489, Radio Citr Reference Deed : Vol. 164, - - - - - - - -l"frllli' l'ro.,· ~
4-s.tfp
third lead and cash his ace Stotion, Ntw York, N.Y. 10019.
Page 551 , Deed Records Meigs NEW 2 bedroom. all eleclric - -:c::-::-cc-:--'7',--,-:-:-::;
Maytat
County Ohio.
.

Vol. 44 pages 139-41, lt8, 231,

'iEP .. BUT SHE'S
DRET FUL fiUSV
RIGHT NOW
FIL LIN' OUT A
BODACIOOS FORM

KEBLERIS
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

Complete line of office

6- J.6tc

Real Estate FJr Sa -:

6 ·6· 31c

- PROVATE DIVISION1972 .
Myrtle Haning, Admini stratrix , '
John C. Baco!f- of the Estate ol
Probetfe Judge of said County Rebecca Hudnall,
(6) 7, 1'.1, ·2,
Deceased,
Ptalntitr ,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

-5443.

board motor and !railer; will
sell seasonable. Phone 992- ~,----:--:­
7157 or see at 28A River St., COAL·. Li mes tone, Excelsior
Sa il Works, E. Ma in Sl.,
Midd lepor t.
6-7-61c Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.

6-6-4k

Case No . 20676
Estate of Bess H. Sa nborn,
Deceased .
Not ice is h'ereby given that
Paul S. Smart, of Middl eport ,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Executor of the Estate of Bess
H . Sanborn, decea sed, lat e of
Meigs Coun ty , Oh io.
Creditors are requ ired to fi le
their claims with said fiduciar y
w ith in four month s.
Dated th is 3rd day of June.

"at the caution lighl",

, 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
Phone collect 985-3915. Gale CAMPER
condition, $1,000. Phone 992·
Osborne.
6329.
6-7-Jip
5-12-lfc

new products - specia ls each
month ,· also sa tes personnel
needed. Phone 992-5113 .
6-6-ff c

NOTI'CE OF
APPOINTMENT

reasonably -priced household
·ooods and aoollances . St . Rt.

morning in front of Village
Pharmacy , Middleporl.

KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Severa l

LEGAL NOTICE

Kuhl for

6-2-61p FARMALL Cub lractor with
-,---:c:-:cc----:::---,----:-:plow ' phone 1-304-882 -2361.
LOST - Boys billtold, Monday
·
6·1-6tc

5-16-30tc

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

Kuh l 's Bargain Store. Check

first wi th Bill

claim .

3830.

'

Buy more al

6. Closed Mondays. Phone 667·
3858.
area, ca ll 74?-3934, desc ribe to __ __ _ _ __ __6_.s_.6fc

Pair Shoe Store , 108 W. Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992 ·

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

PAY LESS -

Tuppers Plains , Ohio. Open to

Ldst and Found

Available at Simon 's Pick A-

Plumbing
Electrical Work

6-6-3tc

FOUND S ponies in Langs vi lle

tor your

your

phone 992 7133 .

7,

6-4-7tc

Hot Water Heaters

- - -----'-- 6-1-6tc

SAVE up to one ha lf. Bring your

45760, 992-2248.

FOl Sa'le

Cline's Trailer Park across ANTIQUE din ing room suite
from Blue Fountain Motel, with round table ; 1969 16 ft.
Gallipolis.
Pennant Camping Trai ler;

Bend

Third Ave., Middleport.

Air Conditioners

EARTH MOVING

bar. luggage rack . signal
lighs, $950. 992-5617.
ZIG ZAG SEW ING MACHINE
6·5-3tc
1972 Model, sews all . stretch

Auto Sates

Regatta, Pome roy , · Ohio,
June 16, 17 and 18; spaces
availa ble. contact: Mrs .

boat.

home

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Ponniroy Jlotor Co.

FLEA MARKET, Big

nHEIL"

mobile

service - plus gigantic
·d'isplay of mobile homes
always available at .. .

Clothing, dishes, Avon bottles
and ·mi sc., 463 Grant St..

Notice

ltlng Lot No. 104 In Behan 's

&lt;;omplele

P. B., good W· S·W tires , many more ex tras . Whtfe f1n1sh ,
blk . vi nyl roof . Priced to move.

LEGAL NOTICE

Addition to the said VIllage ol

• Air Conditioners
• Awnings
• Underpinning

1970 DODGE POLARA

-

OhiO.

,

12495

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

______ _ ______

liltle wear, maroon finish. Blk. vinyl interior, radio.

REDUCE excess fluids with GUN SHOOT, also rifle mal FLUIDEX , 11.69 . LOSE
ches. Open sights only, REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
WEIGfH safely with Dex·A·
Service, sso Reg. mares, $40
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Dlef. 98c at Nelson Drugs.
Grade, Francis Ben edu m ,
Sunday, June 11. 12 noon
6-7-llp
6-/ -3tc Phon e 667 -3856.
S-17-301p

Cerl Moles, address unknown ,
Evelyn
Mo les, · address
unknown, the unknown heirs of
Evelyn Moles, all of whose
•ddresaes are unknown l!md
Clnnol
wilh
reasonable
dlllg1nce be ascertained, w ill
take notice that on the nm day
Cl!f May, 1972, Plaintiff, Bernice
Bowen flied her comp laint
against them In tf'le court of
Common Pleas .of Meigs
County, OhiO, ttle same being
Cau No. 15.073 in said court, for
an action to quiet title In the
following described real estate,
tO·Wit :
Sltu1ted In the VIllage of
Middleport, Meigs County,

1965 SOx 10 mobile home; phone
247.2161.

51595

1970 CHEVROLET

IS LOWEE2V
ROUNDABOUT,
SNUFF'/ ?

SJFPO~D m 1$
)
A VIJIOI.J, IS/V'T IT ?

~tL , 'TELl

- - ------

2 Dr., low mileage by local owner, original tires, shows

6-7-3tc

Notice

Phone' area code 614-423-9531.
4-1 3-lfc'

MOB ILE HOME S FOR SALE
1970VOLKSWAGEN

Daughters : Nina Bland and

OFFICE HOURS

8: 30a .m . to 5:00p.m . Daily,
8: 30 a .m. t·o 12 : 00 Noon
Saturdev .

models of mobile homes .

r-----;r-------~'""""

MARRIAG;E I:;.

Business Services

. CASH paid for all makes and

•tor Co.

IUALITY

· at the time of her death.

secutive insertions .

~-troy

ZSIGIS
Of,

Mobile Homes For Sale

•

'

�' .• .-.:

,~.

r

J ~..~ •. ~

_.

~'- .... #&gt;• '

.. ' I

•

•

J'fo~

"' ..;/'

~

...

u

'

...

....

•

'

~

•.. ...

.... -t

_-

-;..--

..

_.. _........ .....
I

zo - Tl_!e Daily Sentinel, Mlddl.eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., JWlt 7, 1972

~::::::~:::-~.~.~;:-.:::-.::::;:;:;:;~~~;:::;:::m;::m~~w.::-.i:::~·~·~';'"''Jff~l~.!.(. •• 0 bdb
0

'.

I I

u:

:::e: .. :.io:;w.:~:;m~n

\

esr

'Coupon to ·E nter Regatta ·Weekend Frog ·Jump

•

4 p.m. Satunlay, June 11, 1972
SENIOR

NAME OF FROG

•Qualifying Jump ·

ENTRY~

$2.00 Eacl

Rabies Clinic in Tuppers

en tine

at y

Partly cloudy with a chance
. of a few showers or .thun. dershowers) 1or!h mostly fair ·
central and south tonight and
Friday. Lows tonight up)&gt;er 5os
and low 60s. Turning cooler
north Friday highs upper 70s to
mid 80s.

VOL XXIV

CHILDREN Under 15 • 50¢'

•

Weather

Plains Saturday, 24:30
. For Dogs and Cats

Devoted To The ln~rf!'ll OJ The Meigs-Ma&amp;On Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 38

T~URSDAY,

PHONE 992-2156

JUNE 8, 1972_

TEN CENTS ·

Entry No •. _,~"';"-"'"-

I

tFEET

INCE.ES

Please check--X

I

( ) I 1 11 pro vi de my own frog.

t'

( ) Provide a frog for me. 50~
Fill in this section
•

NAME OF QUALIFYING FRON
canoe. Making the trip were, from left, fll'st canoe, front to
back, Floyd Cleland and Robert Council; secOI)d canoe, Tom
Cleland; third canoe, James Council, advisor; fourth canoe,
front to back, Mart Matson and James David Council.

RETURN 'HOME TUESDA'i - Members of Boy Scout
Explorer Post 239 o!.-Langsvllle returned home Tuesday
Jlfternoon following a seven day can&lt;Je trip from Pittsburgh
to Pomeroy. The group went to Pittsburgh from Pomeroy by
motor vehicl• and returned from Pittsburgh to Pomeroy by

RICHMOND, Va. (UPI)The 4th · U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, overruling a lower
federal court, said Tuesday
that suburban counties cannot
be held responsible for the
effects of "inner city decay" on
public schools.
The 5-1 decision overturned a
U.S. district court ruling that
had s wept aside political
boundaries in ordering the
consolidation of mostly black
Richmond city schools with the
predominantly while systems
of Chesterfield and Henri co
counties.
"We think that the root
causes of the concentration of
blacks in the inner cities of
America are simply not known
and that the district court could
not realistically place on the

MASON DRIVE IN
.
...

'
:

,, •

r.1 11 1 11,

,

Tonight-Thur.-Frl.
. June7-8-9
Double FeatUre Program
THE BEGUILED

(Color)
Cl int EastwoOd

Geraldine Page
( R)

PLUS
" THE HIRED HAND"

(Color)
Pe ler Fonda
War ren Oates

IG P)

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton ight &amp; Thursday
June 7-8

NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
June9-10
THE OMEGA MAN
(Technicolor)
Char lton Heston
Anthony Ze r be

iGP)

counties the responsibility for
the effect that iMer city decay
has had on the public schools of
Richmond," said the appellate
court.
Judge Robert R. Merhige Jr.
had issued his order Jan . 10 in
an effort to achieve a racial
balance in metropolitan
schools and hall the w~ile
flight to the suburbs. II would
have created a . 104,000 pupil
system requiring tlie busing of
78,000 children . The order
touched off such resentment
among white parent.s that
Merhige's house and office
were placed under guard by
u.s. marshais.
The Richmond School Board,
which joined black plaintiffs In
seeking the merger and pressing for more desegregation of
the city school system, voted to
appeal the decision to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The appeals court, in an
opinion written by Judge J.
Braxton Carven, said there
was Utile evidence in
Merhlge's opinion to indicate
the counties had tried to keep
blacks out of their residential
areas and it was not in his
power to q,rder the consolidation.
It also said the judges were
"convinced that what little
action, if any, the counties may
seem to have taken to keep
blacks out is slight indeed
compared to the myriad
reasons - econo111ic, political
and social- lor the concentration of blacks in Richmond and
does not support the conclusion
that it has been invidious state
action which has resulted in the
racial composition of the three
school districts ."
"That there has been housing
discrimination in all three
units is deplorable," the circuit
court said, 'iBut a school case,
like a vehicle, can carry only a
limited amount of baggag ~."

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College will offer a course in
Appalachian Culture as part of
the Summer '72 program at the
College . Registration for the
first summer term is Monday,
June 12.
The course was offered on a
trial basis during Summer '70,
and again last summer. The
COUJ:i!e, Soc. 323, has had a good
response in the community and
by students.
The Appalachian Culture

. I

UP, UP AND AWAY was Earl Ingels Saturday as he
went high above the Ohio in an A-Line Kite. The kite, a first in
the Meigs-Mason area, is owned jointly by the Earl Ingels
family and the James Thomas family. Those who have flown
in addition to Ingels are James Thomas and son Jamie . The
strong wind and choppy water that prevailed Saturday made
flying of the kite more difficult. Ingels reached a bight of
approximately 60 feet. Kite riding is popular in Florida. This
one is 14 feet long and 12 feet wide. In order to become airborne several people have to assist. Saturday they were
James Thomas, pilot ; Darla Neutzling, Pomeroy, and Mr .
and Mrs. Russ Dewart of Columbus.

1Family for only

I
I

I

I

I s .25 !
1

~

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

~\.~

II

1!ii{:

~

I

THRIFT BOX9 pieces
regularly '2.65

Offer good thru June 29, 1972

I
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I

II Why cook? Visit the Colonel II
1Katuek1t fried Chiekea~ I
GOLONEL SANQERS· RECIPE

1

Crow's Steak House

I

I

·. POMEROY, OHIO

I

·------~----,..----·1
.
'

.,

P,JMEROY, OHIO

Fill in the address l abe l below
(pl ease print) t" have Y01JR f'ROG'i:"
jump distance mailed to you ( d•&gt;
n ~ t d~tac h l abe l, )

WASHINGTON (UPI)- A
bill which would authorize
creation of a processorfunded
wheal food promotion program
was approved by a House
subcommittee Tuesday, but
only after the panel voted to
give farmers a veto over the
program.
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Graham Purcell, D-Tex., and
24 other House members from
both parties , was approved by
a 7-3 vote in the livestock and
Grains Subcommittee which
Purcell heads.
Before clearing the bill to the

5~%
INTEREST
On 90-Day

lull House Agriculture Committee, however, the panel
adopted, 7 to 6, an amendment
by Rep. Paul Findley, R-lll.
The Findley amendment would
bar actual operation of the new
promotion program unless it is
first approved in a referendum
by farmers as well as the
processors and manufactorers
directly affected by the plan.
The legislation would
authprlze a levy ranging from I
cent to 2.5 cents per hundredweight on processed flour for
use in research. education and
promotion to expand wheat
sales.
Although the fee would be
collected from processors and
the measure had the backing of
some grower groups, several
farm groups had objected on
grounds the cost could be passed back to farmers in the form
of lower wheat prices .

Certificates
of Deposit
S'12 per cent per yefr
paid on 90 day Certificate.s of Deposit.
$1,000 .00 Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarter.y

Meigs Co. Branch

{!j)

Travel Easy
Tnvcl s e tt s o n is here

aga in and lhe curnmt trend
In easy-to-care-for Ia b rIc s
lends ltscH to comfortabk
carrying. Avoid bulky things
t h a I will require • ironing
when thev nrc taken from
the suitcase. Take along the
soft, body clinging, wrinklefree outfits so you won 't
have to spend more tim e
t h a n necessary preparln~
clothes.

The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co:

S.cond St..
Pomor~y. Ohio
296

All Acco unts In sured To

S20.000.oo by FSLIC.

Be Subtle
for lodav 's nat ural look in
make-up . sublety is the clue .
You can wear p I e n I y of
make -up as lung as ·no one
ca n tell . Tn prt•venl founds linn f1·om havi ng that "caked
on·· ldok. tt·~r dcrb hing ief:•
m· a·Jight lt•mon !'n•sh·
('IH'r n\-'t'.' lh1• fini s hNi ft~( ' l '.
(' ltiJPli

course, according to Fred
Snuffer, assistant professor of
sociology at the college, traces
the early Celtic history and
heritage of the people of Appalachia. It looks at their institutions of family, religion,
education, politics, and
language and arts.
Each summer, as part of the
co urse, Snuffer invites a
number of authorities on
Appalachia to deliver guest
lectures to the class. Last year

one member of the class
cooked a complete meal of .
11
Wildn food, common to the
area.
Last sunimer's class also
looked at mountain mUsic and
the dulcimer, a stringed in·
strument unique in the area,
and mountain speech.
Snuffer noted that seiUers,
having decided to make the
mountains their borne, became
isolated .and left alone to
develop their culture with little

outside interference.
Their personality and culture
has received national attention
in recent years. The Appalachian personality Is
fatalistic according to modern
writers.
Classes in 17 areas will be
offered during Summer '71.
For more information, contact
the Dean 's Office at Rio
Grande College. The college
number is 245-5353.

Moore Otarged in HeUcopter fuss
CHARLESTON , W.Va.
(UPI ) -Syndicated columnisb
Ja~k
Anderson charged
Tuesday that Gov. Arch Moore
tied up three of five West
Virginia National Guard
helicopters for his own use
during the initial phase of the
Buffalo Creek flood rescue
work.
At the same time, state Sen.
Robert Nelson backed-up
Anderson's claim and called

Farmers Win Veto Andrews to
Right over Bill
Head GOP's

r-----·····,~·~~ ~-------i

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Bl'lX 191

Appalachian Culture Study Offered

huck shuns the basic brown
or black lor parsley gree n,
sky blue , plum purple and
mi s t~· gruy .

.
I Feed the Whole

ENTRY BLANK TO:

·--------------- TO,_________________________

ruolutlon. Its ro1orrul co me·

IGI
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

RET~RN

&lt;i!N'l'H:Y PJo:F: I'!ID

Colorful Comeback
Masca ra has had a color

Van Johnson
Ray Miiland

( ) Send more en try blanks. Have
fri ends I 'll surprise with froc
entry.

REGATTA FROG JUHP

ADDRESS._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

COMPANY OF

KILLERS
( Technicolorl

Positien in Grand Final__________

ENTERED BY_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Richmond Gets
Court Relief

He Isn't
About to
Dictate

(() I '11 j'ockey my own fr c.g .
( )Provide a jockey for me.

Delegation
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Republican Party Chairman
John S. Andrews will head up
the Buckeye State's delegation
to the Republican National
Convention in Miami.
Vice chairmen will be
Clarence W. Rogers of
Hamilton and Mrs. Caludia
Guzzo of Cleveland.
Mrs. Frances Rex of Akron,
WIIS'elected secretary and John
Kellogg of Cleveland was
named parliamentarian.
Ray Bliss of Akron was elected national committeeman and
Martha C. Moore of Cambridge
was named national committeewoman.
Other committee assignments :
Credentials: E. E. Davis of
Oak Hill and Mrs. Jean M.
Barren of Steubenville.
Permanent Organization:
Cleveland, Mayor Ralph Perk
and Mrs. Beverly M. Atkinson
of Warren.
Rules a.nd Order of Business:
Canton Mayor Stanley Cmich
and Mrs. JeMiev J . Henson of
Columbus.
Resolutions : U. S. Rep. Don·
aid Clancy of Cincinnati and
Mrs . Marian Stokes of
Fremont.

Outdoor Color
Fur an ouldoorsy I o o k
••ven ' if vnu 're not the outd on r s y type, try • rich
cream rouge with clear colnr . It will odd a s u n Ill.
h~althy glow to your face
that wit! lnok like you •l&gt;&lt;'nl
)1lur whnle day uutAidc. Thr
ft•s1ilts ~- Ill bt• u ~lnwln~ nul·
ura l Junk lnsl••ad nl a dn .
·
llllllh· rlnish .

for an inquiry.
I want the appropriate slate or said. " H this Indeed is what
Anderson and ·Nelson federal authorities to deter· happened, it was a real
claimed Moore used one of the mine if it is correct .'' Nelson tragedy. "
helicopters to transport
himself and his staff to the
scene where at least 118 persons died last Feb . 26 when a
coal mine slag dam broke,
releasing 30 million cubic feet
of water down the Buffalo
Creek valley. The other two
helicopters were · psed to
transport newsmen to the
scene to cover the inspection
tour, they said.
Also going with the governor
on the trip were Sen. President
Hans McCourt and House
Speaker U!wis McManus.
Anderson -and Nelson said
only the other two helicopters
were available for rescue work
although each of the three heli·
Stop in the drapery
copters used by the governor
department on the 2nd
flew one rescue mission each
floor . See this fine line of
later in the day.
Hoover Sweepers .
Anderson charged, "The goIncluding
Hoov er
vernor's arrival was carefully
Portables
Hoover
orchestrated. The press planes
Constellation · Tank
landed ahead of him so the TV
Type Sweepers and a
crews could set up to film
big selection of Hoover
Moore as he stepped out to
Uprights . You'll like
inspect the damage."
Hoover for the fine
UP! correspondent MBMix
quality · long life and
A. Porterfield was one of the
most of all for lhe fine
11
pool" of newsmen who acway they clean your
companied the governor's
rugs and carpels.
party on the flight Sunday
morning, Feb. '!1, the day after
the flood, from Olarleston to
Man, W.Va., at the head of the
valley.
Porterfield said only one
helicopter was used to transport newsmen to the scene
and it arrived after the
governor's helicopter had
already touched down. He said
It was followed by the press
helicopter.
''When we touch~ down and
got out, we soon found out that
Moore and his party had taken
off by private car for the disaster area," Porterfield said.
"We were standing around In
the hospital area without a
ride. Everybody was pretty
uptight about being left
behind."
Visitthe 3rd Floor Furniture Department
Porterfield said, however, a
and see the big selection of lamps for
national guard truck was
e~ery room in your home. Table lamps •
finally flagged down and took
Ptn-up lamps · Flpor lamps • Pole lights •
the newsmen up the valley to
Desk lamps. You'll enloy seeing them .
catchup with the governor.
Pick out one or two you may need for
Nelson said l)e has asked
yourself or for gifts.
state Senate President ·Hans
See the pictures, too, on the 3rd .floor.
McCourt to look Into his
Many
I
subjects all
chargea and has also forframed.
selection of
warded his Information to Sen.
Harrison Williams, D·N.J .,
who heads a Senate labor
subcommittee whlclt is probing
the flood.
"! have this information and

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Just Received

A Big Shipment

Hoover Sweepers

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

ANNA McKINNEY, BASHEBA WITTE and Lynetta
Whittington, Ito r, portray mermaids in the ballet segment,
"Peter Pan's U!st Island." Attractive stage settings such as

the sbells wh~e the mermaids are ~ted have been created
by Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs, parents of Mrs. Judy Fraser,
·
director of the schooL

jj;:r_;q
Democrats
Fuss
Js~

m;~~·;· i~·
fL '~
.

'
Gl
T 0 Gop S ee

By United Presslotematlonal
STOCKHOLM - MAN RAPIDLY IS DRIVING himself
crazy with noise although it is the easiest form of pullution to
control, the World Health Organization (WHO ) said today in a
,
report to the U. N. Environment Conference. The WHO report
described noise as "the curse of modern times and a major enHOUSTON (UPl) - The National Governors Conference
vironmental problem,'' and said people's hearing is increasingly ended Wednesday the way it began - with Democrats in political
severely affected.
,
· disarray and Republicans quietly pleased with their opponents'
For instance, a recent survey in Sweden showed that nearly dilemma.
20 per cent of all persons between the ages of 15 and 2Q applying
The fight over the Democratic presidential nomination
for jobs had hearing problems caused by noise. It was double the virtually dominated the entire three-day affair as governors
number in 1956. WHO said doctors now attrirute one in every politically maneuvered against or in behalf of Sens. Hubert H.
three cases of neurosis to noise and blame noise for one in every Humphrey, GeorgeS. McGovern,'Edmund S. Muskie, and Gov.
five headaches.
GC!)rge C. Wall_ace.
'J
Faced with open rebe!Uon her husband's behalf.
WANK!E, RHODESIA -RESCUE TEAMS USING special against his candidacy, Mcdn the final day, when the
breathing apparatus today found the bodies of four of the 428 Govern made a trip to the candidates had left, the goverminers still missing in the Wankie disaster. There was little hope conference Tuesday to nors fowtd they could not agree
for survivors. "No one could live down there, not with all that gas reassure Democratic gover- on a proposed party platform
passing right through the mine," one miner said. "You could see nors that his views were not to present a special hearing of
extreme as his critics charged the Democratic National
the stuff (vapors) seeping out at both ends."
A massive underground eXplosion swept through the coal and that he would not allow his Convention's platform com·
colliery Tuesday. Eight African workers have been pulled out forces to conduct ''frivolous" mlttee.
Only hours before a '!/-page
alive and seven bodies have been found. Another 424 still are credential challenges against
their
state
delegations.
platform
blueprint was to be
missing. Rescue teams using special breathing apparatus with
Then
carne
Humphrey,
after
presented
before the commitliquid oxygen made their way more than half a mile along 'the
being
defeated
in
four
tee,
bickering
over propused
three-mile shaft 300 feet below the surface, but then were halted
presidential primaries, who end-the-war and antibusing
by lethal gas.
sought to win needed support provisions forced Gov. Marvin
from uncommilled governors Mandel of Maryland, conferWASHINGTON - SENATE INVESTIGATORS today hoped particularly among Southern
ence chairman, to scrap the
to find out why an obscure chemical firm reputedly linked to the and border states, areas where entire document and go before
underworld won a contract with one of the nation's biggest McGovern is considered weak- the committee with only a few
corporations - American Telephone &amp; Telegraph. Although the est.
informal remarks.
witness list was not aMounced in advance, it was expected that
Humphrey told the goverAT&amp;T officials, along with those from its supplier subsidiary, nors In individual meetings
Western Electric Co., would be among the witnesses called as the that he was in the race to stay
Senste Commerce Committee went Into a third day of hearings despite McGovern's rising
on the mysterious success of an all-purpose Industrial cleaner delegate vote total. He then
ealled Poly-Clean .
told newSil)en at the conTestimony· earlier this week linked the produ~t's major lerence that Wallace, under
Randy Tolley, 19, Carpenter,
dlstrlrutor, All-Purpose Chemical Co. of East Orange, N. J ., with certain conditions could be an
acceptable
vice
presidential
has been apprehended by the
high level organized crime figures - including Thomas Pecora,
running
mate.
police
in Chillicothe on an
leader of Teamsters Local 97 In Newark.
"H he will accept the plat- affidavit issued by Meigs
NEW YORK - A PENN CENTRAL COMMUTER train form, he would be acceptable County Sheriff Rober \ C.
packed with up to 500 persons derailed this morning in the Park on the ticket In my hook," he Hartenbach.
Avenue Tunnel of Grand Central Tenninal. About 18,passengers said.
Tolley -•llegedJy_broke Into
were injured, police said. They were treated at a mobile disaster
Muskie never came to the and entered the dwelling of
vehicle unit of the City's Health and Hospital Corp.
oonf~ rence, but nine governors Dale Dye in Carpenter and is
Authorities said only one of the five cars in the train went off who originally endorsed him believed to have taken part in
before he withdrew from the several other breaking and
the tracks.
primaries said they would stay enterings in the Carpenterin
his corner up to the con- Dyesv!Ue area. Tolley has been
NEW LEXINGTON, OHIO - A LANCASTER woman
drowned Wednesday night at the Perry County Gun Club near . ventlon in Miami Beach next lodged in Meigs County Jail.
Bond has been set•at $4000.
here while apparently trying to sl'iim across a pond at the club. month.
Wallace
was
hospitalized
in
Jll'evlously sentenced on the
Mrs. Patricia Ann Rayner, 32, was swimming with some club
Maryland
and
recovering
from
same
charge were David Grant
members, including her husband Gerald wbo said she got to
bullet
wounds
from
a
would-be
Starcher
to the Ohio
within 50 feet of the !bore and went under.
assassin,
but
his
wife
Cornelia
Penitentiary and Robert U!roy ·
The sheriff's office said her body was recovered by her
spent almost two days at the Hudnall to Mansfield Reforhusband who applied mouth-tcHnouth resuscitation but to no
conference attending C!JUCUses matory by Common Pleas
avail. The pond is about 300 feet wide.
and meeting with governors m Judge John C. Bacon.

Tolley Lodged

Jn

Autos Collide
The Meigs 'County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a lw&lt;H:ar
accident today at 7:15 a. m. on
County Road 37 in Bedford
Township. Gary G. Basham,
Cleveland, traveling west and
Ronald E. Eastman, Coolville,
traveling southeast collidOd in
a curve.
There were no injuries or
arrests. There was light
damage to the Eastman car
· and medium to Basham's.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II a . m.
ThursdaY was 70 degrees under
sunny skies.
COMING MONDAY

The Meigs Cwnt¥ Bloodmobile will be at the Pomeroy
Elementary School M~y,
June 19, between 111ld I p. m.

Texan
Wins Bee

Meigs Jail

Free ·Water Tests
To September 30

WASHWGTON (UPil
Robia Kral, 14, an eighth
Meigs Countians have until
grade •llll!enl from Lamen, only September 30 to receive
Tex., won the 45th annoal free water sample testing
Natlooal SpelUq; Bee today. through the Meigs County
He spelled &amp;arnett - a Department of Health.
The testing has been carried
proce•• iD texltle-maklq; correctly · a~r Laurea H. · out through the Appalachian
Prlagle, 13, of Buffalo, N. Y., Water .lmprovement Project
ml1oed II, then cliDched the funded for a two year Jl!!riod
title by spelllne macerate, which concl!ldes on Sept. 30,
whlcb lnvolvu aofteDlnc 1 · this year.-At the termination of
IUbtlaace by oleeplag It In
the federally' funded program,
u,Wd.
· the Meigs ·County Health
Robia, apolfiOrfld by the Departll)ent may· have to
Lubbock Avallllche Joumal, resort to a minimal fee to cover
II I llqy Scoat ud U lc:the expense of taking a water
compllabed plaafat. Hla sample.
)lllfttll an Mr. ud Mrl.
So far In a seven county area
RGben ltnl el Llmeu, Tes. ...: Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
,..U;Cc!:#J:r;;; ~~;tg ~ ." ... Jackson! Lawrence, Vinton

and Meigs - 10,000 samples
have been colleCted with 50
percent showing private water
being used as "bad". Tests are
run for the presence of
coliform bacteria and, If
p'resenl, is indicative that
typhoid or other disease
producing organisms have
possibilities o! developing in
the water source.
Ways of Improving a private
water supply will be supplied
by Charlea (Chuck) Bartels,
health department water
sample supervl.lor, If water ts
found Ulltt8fe for wte. Residents
· wishing to take advantaae of
the free iervice may call the
health d'!p8rbnent, 992-3723.

LOS ANGELES (UPI),...With
George S. McGovern far out
front, speculation has · started
ill earnest on the man, or,
possibly, the woman the South
Dakota senator might choose
as a running mate if he marches on to the Democratic
presidential nomination .
The speculation is inhibited
by McGovern's reluctance to
discuss the question in any
more than generalities and the
very strong possibility that the
delegates may assert their &amp;.WII
judgment.
In the Democratic Party,
PETER PAN, PLA YEO by Becky Thomas, center, and Captain Hook, played by Katrina
under Its new reform rules, the
Batey, right, conclude the ballet segment in a dramatic duel Friday night at the former Midday when the presidential
dleport High SchooL At left is The Crocodile, played by Sandi Hamilton.
candidate could just dictate his
choice for a rUMing mate and
have It accepted by acclamation or with only . token opposition is over.
In 1968 for instance, Hubert
H.
Humphrey on the morning
By BOB HOEFLICH
compamst ts veteran ptamsl,
"Lulu's Back in Town" will
Clever, colorful costuming Mrs. Margaret Neuman of be the background for a tap after he was nominated anand new backdrops, created by Syracuse. Curtain time is 8 duet by Lynette Whittington nounced he wanted Edmund S.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs, will o'clock.
and Anna McKinney and the Muskie on the ticket and got
enhance the eighth annual
A showboat backdrop will be trio of Katrina Batey, June him.
McGovern is fully cognizant,
recital of the Mid-Porn School featured in the first segment of Wamsley and Suzy Samuels
as
the man who chaired the
of Dance Friday evening in the the recital built around the tap will dance to "Sugar Blues".
former Middleport High work of students. Kristen The popular "Marne" will be party's reform commission,
SchooL
Anderson , Megan Miller, used on the routine of a line that it would be highly InapMrs. Judy Fraser will direc t Jacqueline Van Meter and composed of Rhonda Reuter, propriate for him to dictate the
her students through the three Carmen Burns will open the Charlene Goeglein , Linda number two man, even if he
segment program assisted by show with "Here Comes the Rosenbaum, Becky Thomas could. It would smack far too
much of the "old politics"
her dau ghter, April. Ac- Showboat ".
· (Continued on page 5)
against which McGovern has
campaigned.
Yet McGovern pro~ably cannOt leave the aeiectfun totally
to the 3,016 delegates wltoout at
lea!it letting them know hill
Ideas.
At times; wben questioned,
McGovern has indicated he
might suggest three or four
names from which the convenWASHINGTON (UP!) - The cosmetics through a pyramid number of prospective par- tio could choose.
Federal Trade Commission to- sales organization which pays ticipants in a town, the com- So far, McGovern has done
day annowtced formal com- distr ibutors commissions plaint said, so some little playing around with
plaints charging Kosco,\ Inter- based ort the number of Sub- distributors invest money rut names.
planetary. Inc., with ruMing a distributors and door-to-door ''receive little or no return."
He has ruled out George C.
deceptive lottery-type sales op- sales personnel they hire and
The FTC said Koscot's sales Wallace as a rUMing mate or
eration for door-t&lt;Hioor sales of obtain orders from .
''is in the nature of a lottery" as an official of his administraThe FTC said Koscot's pro· because a distributor Invests tion. No one else has yet been
Kosco\ cosmetics.
The complaint also cited sev- gram "contemplates an en- money with no control over l!ls accorded that distinction by
en present or former officers of dless recruiting of participants chances of success, which name, at least not in public.
the Orlando, Fla., firm in· since each person entering the depend on whether tbe local
McGovern has frequently
eluding its chairman, Glenn W. program must bring In other market has become saturated. been asked about Rep. Shirley
Turner, a wealthy Florida distributors to acltleve the
The program "results In the Olisbolm, a black, as a partrepresented earnings.
Businessman.
recruitment of many partici- ner. His standard answer has
This quickly dries up the pants who have virtually no
The ITC said Koscot sells Its
been that no one will be
chance to recover their Invest· dlsqualllied by. sex, race, or
l!lents of substantial s111118 of religion.
DICIIIey ... and woo have been
But It appears that Mrs.
indtlced to participate by ml.s- Oli!lholm has about as much
representations as lo potential chance as Wallace of winding
earnings," the FTC said.
up on the ticket.
The agency proposed an
McGovern Is already under
order barring the allegedly severe pressure from SoutherIllegal practices. Preswnlng ners to pick one of their own.
Kosco!
contests
the Jle has mentioned two as the
lllegatlons, the case will go type of Southerner that would
before a federal bearing fit his qualifications lor a viceuaminer.
president.
Kosco\ also faces legal action. They are Florida Gov,
by at least 32 states, the FTC Reubin Askew and former
said.
North Carolina Gov. Terry
Sanford - both members of the
new, progressive breed of
Southern politicians.
But the Southern governors,
who met several times this
week in Houston, Indicated that
a conservative-Rep. Wilbur
Mills of Arkansas-would be
ASenior Citizens Day will be the type of candidate who
held at the Meigs County Fair might salvage the So~th for the
this year and the success of the Democrats.
event will depend on par- And Missouri's Gov. Warren
.ticipation by those 60 years of Hearnes pushe&lt;l the vice'
age or · over, Mrs. Eleanor presidential candidacy of WarBARBARA NEASE
JUDI ROBERTS
Thomas, director of the Meigs lace.
County Council on Aging, McGovern gives the stan·
states.
dard definition of the beSt
She reports that Senior vlcepresldential candidate to
Citizens Day has been choose- "a person who Is
arranged by the Council qualified to take over at a
through the cooperation of the moment's notice."
.
Meigs County Fair Board and He qualllies this to add that
Delegate and alternate to Bucteye Girls State selected by will be he_ld .on Thursdiy, Aug. ~e number two man sh~d _be
the American Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post 602 are Judi 17. Admlsston that day for 'In the same ballpark wtth
Roberts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Roberts, Racine, Meigs Cowltlans 60 years of him philoaoplllc~y to. avoid
delegate; and Barbara Nease, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald age and over will be half-price continuous warrmg tn the
Nease, alternate.
•
or 50 cents.
lldmlniltration.
Both girls have completed \hell junior years at Southern The Fair Board has donated McGovern c:ould turn to on~
.
·
space and a tent for displays of the many candldatea ,wit()
High School. Girls State will be held at Capital University and activit!~. Tralll!fl~rtation ente ~ed prlmarlea and
beginning June 17 ·
•
of.
n..
will be furnished for those who received national- e~poaure,
Ml8a Roberts Is a member of the AII80Ciation Most vut· need II. As pointed out by Mrs. ~Uy _ allevlating the problem
standing ~erlcan High School Students. She Is vice president of Thomas, the important tl1in8 to of a vice presidential candidate
the student council, reporter.for the National HOnor Society, a make the day a succesa 1s who Is not a howtehold word.
member of the glee club and choir, a 'varsity clteerleader, participation.
Neither Humplttey nor Muk·
ruslness manager of the junior class, and active in the Pep Club. Senior citizens are invited to lie are likely canclldatn
Miss Nease Is president of the French Club, secretary of the contact either Mrs. Th&lt;imas, Humphrey had the POll once
Natiooal Honor Society, a member of the glee club and choir, a 992-7400 ·or m-7316, or Mra.llld OO..'t wlllt It again, llld •
varsity cheerleader, active with the Pep Club, and a student Margaret Amberger, ClteaterMUikleiOQIItt_IUciuryeariiiiO
council representative.
98$-3542.
111d Jolt . .

Recital In Three _Segments

Deception Charged to

Koscot Cosmetics Inc.

· Seniors Plan

. Day at Fair

,l

Delegate, Alternate to

Girls State Announced

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