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12 ~ The Dally Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug, 9,1972

nNews ••• in Briefs
(Continued from page I i
two slots provided for jack insertion. The problem could cause a
car to drop from a raised posiUon, Ford said.
Aspokesman from Ford's customer service division said the
condi tion haS resulted in no' repo~ted injuries. Ford is providing
dealers with a special tool to enlarge the slot for the bumper jack.

... , .,,,.

~~::,.:o·:.~

Now Yod Know

Tax Issue in Courts Again

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Onllook ~
Friday through SUllday
Fair Friday, chance of
showers Saturday and
Sunday. High In the upper
70s and lower Ills Friday,
warming lo the middle and
upper 80s Sunday. Lows ID
the upper 50s Friday,
warming to tbe upper 60s by
Sunday.

COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Supreme Couri ·ruled that
JI'Operly In Ohio must be taxed
llllformly, but the Ohio Gener·
II Assembly tOOk steps recently to delay any changes. Now
tile tax question is headed for
court again. ·
The slflte Board of Tax Appeals set the stage for another
.legal test of uniform evaluation
Ill real estate Tuesday by approving a ' I~ property tax
abstra!'l prepared under the
Gld formulas in Scioto County.
The issue first was raised io
)'ears ago by Park Investment
Co. of Cleveland which clatmed
II was discriminated against by
the widely varying taxes
..idby owners of property used
for different purposes.
The Supreme Couri ruled in
favor of Park Investment, say.
lng aU property in the state
must be assessed uniformly.
Park Investment attorney
John E. Forrester said the firm
was prepared to re-enter the
eouri fight now by filing for a
new mandamus decision from
tile high court or for contempt
charges against the Board of
Tilx Appeals for not complying
with
the court-ordered
uniformity.
.The legislature, seeking to
delay the effects that 35 per
cent uniform evaluation would
bave on tu revenues which go
to support schools, recently
. voted to delay the effect of the
ordered change.
The law gives county
auditors a reprieve until their
required six-year real estate
reappraisal is completed in the
normal cycle. Uniform
assessment, therefore, will not
be in effect statewide until
1977.
Until the Supreme Court reversal, local auditors for years
had applied higher assessment
to commercial and Industrial
property than to residential
land.
In the Scioto County action,
the three-member Board of
Tax Appeals conceded the tax
· duplicate did not satisfy the
uniformity order.
.But Chairman Edwin
Sawicki said the board was
bound by the delay set up by

Board member Nipo)fon
the legislature.
The board ruled the Scioto Bell Slid he wu' ccmcerned
County County abstract about the "great dllparlty" of
totaling $1Z2,131,UO Wll ."in Scioto County residential
substantial em~pllance with assessments, ranging from
the minimum requirements" 30.04 to 45.18 per cent, with
· highest uaeumenta falling on
of tate aaaesament law.
Residential and Industrial· homes valued under f7 ,500.
commercial ua n.mt rates
Bell aald II appeared 8111!111
both average 32.72 per cent of ment rates were lower loc
market
value ·' while more affluent homeowners
agriC)Ilbiral property averages outside the city of Portanoulh
24.84 per cent, based on than lor poorer families In tbe
"current use" rather than true city.
market value In some areu.

WASHINGTON- FEDERAL NO-FAULT AUTO insurance
is dead for "the rest of this year and maybe for two more years. A
Senate vote of 49-46 Tuesday night killed a bill which would have :::::~:::::::::;:::;~:;:;:;::::::::~:;:;~:;:~:~::::::::::::=-::::::.-!:*
put the insurance reform plan into effect nationwide within 18
months of enactment.
HOSPITAL NEWS
1'ectmicaUy, the vole merely sent the bill to the Senate
Births - Mrs. Allan Brown,
Judiciary committee for further study. Magndson and other
son, Wellston ; Mrs. Jerry
I.Jo ~k crs called the Judiciary Committee the bill's "graveyard."
Westmoreland, son, HavensConservatives dominate that panel.
wood, W. Va., and Mrs. Jerry
Custer, son, Middleport.
Discharges - French Casey,
Fred Shields of
Terry
Lewis,
Melinda
Mltrikov,
Mrs.
David
Penwell
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
_New Haven Dies
and
son,
Mrs.
Roger
Israel
and
Saturday, Augusts, 1972
NE W HAVEN - Fred l\.
daughter, Hache! Arthur, Mrs.
SALES REPORT OF
Shields, 8l, New Haven, died
Mark Mullen and daughter,
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Wednesday morning at the · HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 27.75 Barbara Wright, Harold
.Jar·kson General Hospital in to 28.10; 220 to 250 lbs. 28 to Taylor, Leah Jo Stout, Emily
WASHINGTON (UP!) - nominated, with represen·
Hiplcy. The son of the late 28.50; Light 2fi to 27.75; Fat Smith, Helen Roberts, LesUe
Admitting he was virtually talives of the women's caucus,
En'i ll and Nora Freeman Sows 21.50 to 25; Stags 20 Newcomb, David Nelson,
starting over in his presidential a coalition of women's groups.
Shields, he was born in Mason Down; Boars 18 to 22; Pigs 8.50 Donald Metheney, Mildred
S. Then a meeting With Latin·
campaign,
George
( \, WilY on July 31, 1888. Mr. to 29.50; Shoats 17.50 to 30.
Lambert and.Elenore Gordan.
McGovern and his new running American and SpanishSh ields was a retired farmer.
mate, Sargent Shriver, American representatives
CA TILE - Steers 34.50 to
SJJr vivi ng are his wife, 40; Heifers 25.50 to 33; Baby
campaigned together for the follow~ by a conference with
Myrite; a daughter, Mrs. Cecil Beef 38.50 to 45.50; Fat Cows 19
first lime today, wooing some Democratic governors
(Mary) Sayre, New Haven; a to 23.75; Canners 17.50 to 2fi.60;
mayors, congr,essmen, women who were here for tbe Nallonal
grandson , Paul, a.nd several Bulls 28lo 32.75; Milk Cows 200
and minorities.
Committee meeling.
nl fccs and nephews.
The South Dakota senator
to 345.
f•'uneral services will be held
said the past three weeks In·
VEAL CALVES (Several
at I :30 p.m. Friday at the Single Veal Calves 50 to 54 );
volving swllclling running
BUTZ TO SPEAK
Fng!esong FWleral Home with Tops 50.75; Seeonds 46.50 to 48;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters
mates had been "hard and
COLUMBUS
(UP!) - U. I.
t11c 1\ev. Wilbur Baxter of· Medium 45 to 47.75; Com. &amp; and children are vacationing at
painful" and conceded it was
ficiati ng. Burial will be in the Hvs. 46.50 to 52; Culls 45 Down. Myrtle Beach.
now like starling all over; but Secretary of Agriculture Earl
Butz Is scheduled to speak at
Hopewell Cemetery at Mt.
Belly Ault of Columbus
he said "I have a feeling this
BABY CALVES- 27.50 to 70.
Al to. Friends may call at the
visited over the weekend with
will draw us closer together. the American Soybean Con·
ference to be held here next
fuu ernl home anytime after 3
her mother, Mrs. Winnie
We're ready to go."
Tuesday. Butz also is expected
p.nt Thursday.
Holland .
·
McGovern and Shriver mel
PT. PLEASANT
Mrs. Thelma Henry along
first for two hours with aboul15 to discuss the Nixon ad·
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
MASON COUNTY FAIR QUEEN - Karen Froendt,
with her daughter and son·in·
mayors in a closed session on ministration's agricultural
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
right, of West Columbia was crowned queen of the 1972
BILL SPROUSE DIES
law, Mr ~ and Mrs. Don
Capitol Hill. The mayors were policies at a news conference
Saturday, August 5, 1972
Mason County Fair by Debbie Sturgeon, retiring queen.
Bill Sprouse, formerly of
primarily interested in the bere that day.
HOGS - 175 to 220 28.50 to Quisenberry and children, are
Point -Pleasant, died Tuesday
nominees'
support
for
eve11ing at Chester, W. Va. He 28.80; heavies 2fi to 27.20; vacationing in Florida.
Staff
Sgt.
Ronnie
Roush
of
legislation
to
funnel
more
than
OHIO SENATORS DIFFD
Lights
26
to
27;
Fat
Sows
22
to
was born at West Columbia,
Heidelberg,
Germany
came
to
$5
billion
a
year
of federal
23;
Boars
21
to
22.40;
Pigs
14lo
WASHINGTON (UP!) the son of the late Thomas and
attend the funeral of his sister,
revenues to state and local Ohio's two senators went .. .
Joan Sprouse, Surviving. are 20; Stock Shoats 25 to 28.
PT. PLEASANT - Queen for It was her talent for sewing
Mrs.
Chester
(Jennifer
)
Roush
governments.
They won "firm posite ways in the Senate
CATTLESteers
34
to
38;
his wi fe, Evaj three sons, and a
a day? No, queen for a year. that produced the gown she
Young,
who
was
killed
in
an
Heifers
25
to
27:60;
Fat
Cows
24
commitment"
of such supPort. which sent a national no-&amp;alt
d&lt;&gt; ug hter . Funeral
That's
the
fortune
of
Karen
The two then met in a closed insurance bill to a committee
wore. For the material she
arrangements are incomplete. to 26.50; Canners 22 to 24 ; Bulls automobile accident. Staff Sgt.
session with Democratic for study, probably postponing
30 to 35; Stock Cows and Calves Roush is stationed in the army Froendt after being crowned selected a pale green
Mason CoWlty's Fair Queen background accented with
senators - some of whom have acUon on the measure In this
275 to 415; Stock Steers 36lo 41; there.
during
special
festivities
on
the
· Stock Heifers 31 to 35; Stock
been less than enthusiastic session of Congress. Sen .
small figures and fashioned It
Mr. and Mrs . Landon Smith
SUIT FILED
about the McGovern can· William B. Saxbe, R.Qhio,
Steer Calves 37.75 to 46.25; visited on Sunday with his outdoor stage on opening night with long sleeves. She also
A partition of real estate Stock Heifer Calves 35 to 39.
didacy.
voted to send the bill to the
sister, Mrs. Griff Durbin, a or the lith annual Fair made most of the other gar·
uction on 'property in Orange
Tuesday.
Next came a session at the Judiciary Committee. Sen .
VEAL CALVES - Tops patient at Morris Memorial
ments she wore during the
Township has been filed in the 52.10; Seconds 51.25; Medium
She is the 18-year old Queen events over the past
Sheraton Park Hotel, site of Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhlo, voted
Meigs County Common Pleas 49.25 to 50.75; Common &amp; Rest Home at Milton, W. Va. daughter of Mrs. Mary Froendl several days.
Tuesday's extraordinary mini· against the motion which
Mrs. Paul Randolph, Letart,
Co urt by C. F. Betzing against Heavies 45to 48; Culls 40 to 45.
of
West
Columbia.
convention where Shriver was carried 4148.
has returned home .after
Archie Betzing, el al. The court
Tears fell from Karen's
BABY CALVES - 68 top visiting her daughter and
!Ins gra nted Sandra Lee average $51; Market strong,
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas cheeks as she exclaimed, "!
Swisher a divorce from Gerald higher on two way cattle.
King at Rl. 9, Joneboro, Tenn. am just so happy" while the
Lee Swisher on charges of
Mrs. King was recently crown was being placed by
gross neglect of duty and ex·
hospitalized . She also visited Debbie Sturgeon, the retiring
lreme cruelty. ·
· SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
her other daughter and queen.
WELL KNOWN BRANDS fURNITURE FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOM~
Other top contenders were
Cattle: Steers, Choice, 35.5(). husband, Mr. and Mrs. James
36 .30; Good, 33.40-34 .50 ; Krebs at Johnson City, Tenn . Michelle Holmes, daughter of
ON SALE ON THE 3rd FLOOR.
Standard, 29.~0-33; Heifers : Mrs. Randolph returned home Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd D. Holmes
DRIVE-IN
.
of 2618 Jefferson who was
Choice, 32.115-35.50; Good, 31.30: by plane.
..~' (,,,!I' •
:. I . •
named
first runner-up; Linda
32.75; Cows: Commercial,
Lee Shadle, daughter of Mr.
25.40-2fi.90; Utility, 23-24.75 ;
Thursday &amp; Friday
and Mrs. James Shadle of
Canners and Cutters, 18.75·
Aug. 10·11
Southside; second runner-up
22.70; Bulls: Commercial, 31·
Double Feature Program
and Tiny Lynn Collier,
32.90; Stockers and Feeders,
" PLAY MISTYFOR ME"
daughter of Ernest Collier of
Steer
Calves,
34.50-44.75;
. (Color)
Clint Eastwood
Heifer Calves, 31-41.50; Veal By United Press lnternationsl Ravenswood and Mrs. Ethel
Calves: Choice, 55.50; Good,
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 9, Collier of 2916 Spruce Avenue,
Plus
53.75.
the 222nd day of 1972 with 144 to Point Pleasant, who was third
" WHERE'S POPPA"
runner-up. Miss Carolyn Boles
George Segal
Lambs: Choice, 31.20.
follow.
Ruth Gordon
was named Miss Congeniality.
Hogs : 200-230, 28.90; No. 1,
The moon is new.
Rated I Rl
Queen contestants for the
29.15; 230-240, 26.65; Sows,
The morning stars are
24.10-25.05; Boars, 23.10.
Mercury, Venus and Saturn. past several days undec the
The evening stars are Mars direction of Mrs. Belva Farley
have been on a whirl wind of
GRANGE TO MEET
and Jupiter.
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 will
Those born on this date are activities highlighted with a
television appearance, lun- .
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the under the sign of Leo.
Tonight &amp; Thursday •
August 9-10
cheon
at the Red Carpet Inn,
hall in Letart Falls. Deputy
British writer lzaak Walton
·NOT OPEN
participation in the Fair
Virgil Atkins will be present for was born Aug. 9, 1593.
parade and then finally
Dn
this
day
in
history
:
inspection
and
potluck
refresh·
Friday thru Tuesday
Tuesday
night's special
ments will be served.
In 1831, the first train in the
Augusfll -15
SUMMER OF '42
.
.
.
United States to be powered by program.
IRI
LEGION TO MEET
The
nine
lovelies
radiating
.
steam
made
a
run
between
Cnrtoons:
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Albany and Schenectady, N.Y. youthful beauty while attired in
Berry Funnv
American
Legion, will meet in
Oscars Thinking Cap
their long gowns, were glowing
Adm ission : Adul ts, $1.50;
regular session at the hail in
as
they look their places on the
Marriage License
Cl1ildr en : SI.OO.
Middleport
at
7:30
this
James Eugene Watson, 21, stage. One by one they were
Show Starts 7 P.M.
evening. Refreshments will be Tuppers Plains, and Deborah called to the Iron t where their
served following the meeting . Joan Heaton, 16, Pomeroy biographical sketches were
read by Mrs. Farley who also
Route 3.
posed individual qestions to
each.
FBI MAKES ARRESTS
In addi lion to those
COLUMBUS (UPI) - FBI
agents arrested Gwendolyn previously named were four
Denise Alexander, 19, and other con tenders who were
Capp Spencer Anderson, 34, Carolyn Barnett, Clarissa
both or Columbus, Tuesday. Joyce Dalton, Becky Fry and
The woman was charged with Barbara Matheny.
Miss Froendt, sponsored by
perjury and held under $50,000
bond. Anderson was charged the Point Pleasant-Area
with obstruction or justice by Jaycees , is an active
assault on a federal witness 4-H'er
and
is
well
and was held under $25,000 known for many talents . ·
bond .
369.00 Sofas-2 pc. Suites
Sale 296.00
139.00 Rocking Love Seats · · - Sale 112.00
389.00 Sofas·2 pc. Suites
Sale 312.00
OHIO'S SHARE LESS
149.00 Rocking Love Seats . . . Sale 120.00
featuring world's fnest color TV picture!
398.00 2 pc. Suites . • . . ·
Sale 319.00
WASHINGTON (UPl)- The
219.00 Love Seats
419.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
.
.
•
.
Sale 334.00
(Continued from Page I)
federal revenue-6haring for·
·
2
pc.
Living
Room
Suite
.
.
.
.
Sale
176.00
439.00
Sofas
.
.
.
•
•
·
·
.
.
Sale 352.00
GENUINE
mula approved Tuesday by the Nixon, defeated challenges
229.00
2
pc.
Living
Room
Suite
.•.
Sale
184.00
449.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
Sale 360.00
WOOD
moderrate
Senate Banking Committee from
239.00 Love Seats · · . . . . . . Sale 192.00
479.00 2 pc. Suites ·
CABINET!
Sale 384.00
Republicans.
would give Ohio $185.4 million.
249.00
Love
Seats-Sofas
.
.
.
•
Sale
200.00
498.00
2
pc.
Suites
·
Sale 399.00
In a key race In a Detroit
Tht LAWRINC!
Ohio's share under that plan
269.00 2 pc. -~uits - Sofa - Love Seats Sale 216.00
519.00 2 pc. Suites •
ClSIIW
suburb
where
busing
was
an
Sale 416.00
would be $42 million less than
Contemporary llyllf
529.00
2
pc.
Suites
•
279.00
Love
Seats
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
Sale
224.00
Sale 424.00
compacl console.
under the revenue-sharing important issue Incumbent
549.00 2 pc. Suites · ·
Rep.
WUIIam
Broomfield
won
289.00
Sofas
Sale
232.00
Sale 440.00
6" Jl 3~ Twin·Cdne
measure which passed the
Speaker.
against
Jack
MacDonald
in
the
298.00
Sofas
·
.
.
.
•
·
Sale
239.00
568.00
Sectionals
·
•
•
.
•
•.
Sale 455.00
House.
Republican primary. Both ·ran
319.00 Sofas . . . . . .
Sale 256.00
617.00 2 pc. Suites •
Sale 494.00
strong anti-busing campalgm
339.00
Sofas-2
pc.
Suites
.
Sale
272.00
695.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
.
.
.
•
Sale 556.00
MCHS TO MEET
In the only statewide race,
The Meigs County Humane Republican Sen . Robert P.
Society. wlll discuss par· Griffin, the minority whip, and
ticipatlon in lbe Meigs County Democratic Attorney General
Fair and fund raising activities Frank J. Kelley, were unopPROMPT DELIVERY TO YOUR HOME - CONTINUOUS SERVICE
at il regular meeting to be held posed for their parties'
at 7:30 p.r.1. Thursday at the nominations for U.S. Senate.
BANK RATE FINANCING
AND .OUR OWN SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE
•
Meigs Inn .

Market Report

Mason Area

News., Notes

Queen Crowned

Candidates Open
Campaign in East·

'*

Elberfelds In Pomeroy August Furniture Sale
ot

MASON

.

I

• •

Today's
Almanac

MEIGS THEATRE

AUGUST SALE!

Living Room Sui~es
Sofas
Love Seats
Sectionals
KROEHLER, BROYHILl, BERKLINE, NATIONAl, MAPLES

STANDi)UTVALUE!

CH.?J'giant-screen console

Ingels Furniture
992-2635

Middleport

.

Large Selection of Colors and FabricsEarly American - Tr~clltlonal - ¥oclern •

•

at y

The word gun originally
came from mongonel, a large
catapult which hurled stones.

PLEASANT VALLEY '
LOCAL TEMP!i
DISCHARGES: Betty
The temperature in down· Johnson, Bidwell, 0.; Jeffery
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. CaJper, Henderson; Teresa
Wednesday was 71 degrees, Mitchell, Gallipolis; James A.
under cloudy skies.
Stewart, West Columbia.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
\

•

enttne

Sunny and a litUe warmer
today. High mostly in the 701!1.
Clear and cool tonight. Low in
L~e 50s. MosUy sunny and
warmer Friday, high in tbe 8011.

Devoted To The lntere813 OJ The Me~s-Mason Area
.

VOL.
XXIV
'

NO. 82

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The latest fabrics fashioned into at·
tractive garments by Meigs County
teenage girls will be featured at the Meigs
County Fair at 8 p.m. Wednesday when the
annual junior fair style revue is the
grandstand attraction.
Preparatory to the fair revue, girls
modeled their garments before judges In
the Eastern High School auditorium
Tuesday night for grading. Most of these
girls will be taking part in the revue at the
fair .
Modeling Tuesday night were :
Clothing From Top To Toe
Meg Am burger, Joyce Baker, Robin
Capehart, Sheri Colmer, Paula Cun·
. ningham, Tammy Curtis, Rebeeca Ed·
wards, Kim Follrod, Denise Hauber, Paige
Hayman , Robin Herald, Cheryl Johnson,
Tammy Johnson, Mary Lou Kauff, Laurie
Miller, Judy Mora, Kathy Parker, Patty
Parker, Kathy Pooler, Becky Pooler,
Donna Rice, Teresa Rice, Beth Ritchie,
Nancy Samos, Traci Sayer, Tammy
Snider. Timmy Starcher, Connie Stout,
Usa Thomas, Melinda Thomas, Rita
Vining, Denise White and Shari William.
Clothing Males
Brenda Ash, Melinda Dailey, Tammy
Davis, Opal Dyer, Alicia Evans, Christie
Evans, Pam Evans, Terri Guinther, Lori
Guinther, Jody Gureser, Rhonda Haning,
Beth Headley, Jerrie Jordan, Rebekah
Long , Teresa Meadows, Janet Middleswart, Debbie Miller, Rilla Rhoades,
Diane Smith, Tammy Smith, Nicki Dawn
VanMeter, Diana Ward, Kimberly Ward,
Debbie Waddle, Deborah Kay Woodyard
and Cynthia Pitzer.
Joyful Jumper
Cheryl Barnhart, Angela Dailey , Bar·
hara Douglas, Mary Sue Durst, Patty
Dyer, Kim Grueser, Pamela Harden,
Paula Hysell, Virginia Jordan, Sharon
Karr, Patty Lambert, Sandra Might, Mary
Mora, Margaret Province, Kathy Pullins,
Terri Pullins, Becky Roush, Debbie
llemoa, J111e Thomu, M.lbo .Thomu 8l1d
Sherr! Vining .
Clothes For School
Patricia Boston , Denise Dean, Paula
Eichinger , Tammy Fitch , Vanessa
Folmer, Rachel Hunter, Betty Jordan,
Pam Kautz, Cheryl Lawson, Beth
McKnight, Tami Milliron, Janet Mora,
Bonnie Morris, Kathy Newell, Tammy
Pitzer, Diana Pullins, Nancy Ridenour,
Sheri Shillz, Alberta Schultz, Diana
Thornton and Debbie Wipdon.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

0
\

..

PARIS (UP!) - The Viet
Cong, detailing for the first
lime its demands for a
coalition regime in South
Vietnam, said today the war
will. rage on and negotiations
remain deadlocked until the
Saigon government resigns.
Before the actual talks began
the Hanoi delegation used
statements by actress Jane
Fonda, Sen. Eward Kennedy,
former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark and U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim to
bsck its claims that the United
states was deliberately bombIng dikes in North Vietnam.
Madame Nguyen Thi Binh,
chief VietCong negotiator, said
at the 154th session of the
stalemated Vietnam Peace

~.
~I .
....
••
1) ,•... --:
'

'

•J
...

talks, "As long as that ad- U.S. Presidenttal adviser
ministration (or South Viet· Henry A. Kissinger as well ·as
namese President Nguyen Van to the weekly semipublic
Thieu ) exists, the war goes on sessions on Kleber Avenue.
and the negotiations remsin
Today'll session of the con·
deadlocked."
ference, despite recently exU.S. negotiator William J. pressed optimism of American
Porter said the Communists officials, had the same atmos·
refusal to accept a cease.fire phere of angry charges and
and then negotiate a political countercharges about alleged
settlement proved their "ob- U.S. bombing of dikes that
sessive pursuit" of a military marked last Thursday's
victory in order to seize power session.
in South Vietnam. He
North Vietnam told the
dismissed Hanoi's dike deadlocked session that U.S.
allegations
as
pure aircraft had attacked its
propaganda.
irrigation dikes and dams 177
Madame Binh did not specify times, increasing the figure of
whether
her
wotd 173 times that was used at last
"deadlocked" applied to the Thursday's stormy session.
backstage private talks bet- · The deputy chief negotiator
ween Hanoi's negotiators and for North Vietnam, Nguyen

The new Holzer Medical Advisory Committee, Blue
Center, one of the most modern Cross Advisory Committee,
rural medical centers in the and the Federal Price Com·
world, learned today from the mission. While the new rates
Price
Commission
in will enable Holzer Medical
Washington that its rate in· Center to finance the cost of
crease request has been ap· operation of the new facility,
proved.
they are still well below the
The new rates mean the cost average cost of hospital rooms
of a bed at the new facility will for modern insti tutions in
go up only $7 a day .
Retroactive to August I,
LOUNGING GARMENTS such as these colorful oulfits will be among the
semi-private
rooms will be $57
wide-range of clothing modeled at the junior fair style revue at 8 p.m. Wednesday
per day and private rooms $62
at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured from the left, in garments which lbey made in
FF A Planning
per
day
.
Previously
a
semi·
4-H club work are Ray anna Cole, Spinning Wheels Club; Marylu Mills, Five Point
private was $50 and a private
First Market
Star Stitchers, and Teresa Carr, Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls. Miss Mills was the
room $56.
grand prize winner in the class of ali ages participating .
The Southern High School
These increases have been
Future
Farmers of America
approved by the State Hospital
Lounging Clothes,
will hold what Is believed to
Stephanie Radford, Mandie Rose, Julia
be the first hog market at a
And Undergarments
Schultz, Kim Sebo, Jane Sisson, Becky
JUDGE UPHELD
Tere58 carr, Rayanna Cole ahd Mary Thomas, Cindy Lou Thomas, Donna
Meigs County lair this year.
In an unanimous opinion, the
Mills.
Some 10 to 15 animals will
Thornton, Lola Walker, June Ann Wams·
Sports Clothes
be shown Wednesday
ley, Barbara Well, Susan Wright, Avis court of appeals has affirmed a
decree of divorce and custody
morning and a trophy,
Marcia Carr (FHA); Debbie Birchfield, Bissell and Sue Kennedy .
award
of
a
two-year
Qld
child
to
provided by the Radne
Beverly Bishop, Brenda Bishop, Cathy
Dress Up Dress
Blaettnar, Mary Blaettnar, Niese! Duvall,
Home National Bank, will be
Betsy Amsbary, Debbie Boatright, Robert L. Reeves, granted
Dinah Erlewine, Cindy Garnes, Conni e Marcia Carr, Jenny Cline, Helen Cotterill, June 25, 1971 by Judge John C.
awarded. The hogs wtll be
Bacon
of
the
Meigs
Coun
ly
sold at 8 p.m. Friday.
Garnes. Julia Gheen, Joy Hayes, Ingrid Cindy Domigan, Brenda Donohue, Margie
Hawley, Usa Herald, Sharon Holter, Sue Jeffers, Jane Jordan , Linda Myers, Vicki Common Pleas Court in a
The committee of tbe FFA
Oberholzer,
Denise
Pullins,
Pat
Robson,
contested
divorce
action
in
Jones, Barbara Jordan, Sherri Kaufr,
In charge of the market
Kimberly Krautter, Sandra VanMeter, Bonnie Smith, Sheri Young, Connie Smith which Sheila Reeves was
Includes Rocky Hupp,
Connie Miller, Lisa Peerey, Faith Perrin, (FHA ), Jennifer Chapman.
· plaintiff.
chairman; Mike Salser, CoChairman; Bob Spurlock,
Don Hupp, Grover Salser,
Jr., and Any Cross, Advisor.

classroom and half time in the
Title I remedial reading
program . Twenty-seven new
staff members, mostly
replacements, have been
employed for the new school
year.
Meetinf in an adjourned
session Monday night th~
district's Board of Education
employed several teachers .

They were:
Sheila Black, elementary , a
June graduate of Ohio
University who did her student
teacher work at the Bradbury
School.
Samuel Crow, to teach
educable mentally retarded; a
March graduate of Ohio
University in history and
government; a native of
Bellaire with three years

military service. He is now and French; has a bachelor of
completing work required for science degree from Northern
temporary EMR certification. Michigan and her MA from the
University of Michigan . Her
Gary Reed, a graduate of Rio mother.was a native of Wilkes·
Grande in History, English and ville; her grandparents resirle
Government, native of Reeds· in Wellston.
ville, has had two years of Mrs. Margaret Kinsey
military experience, and is Goodman, to teach in the OC·
completing work required for a cupational work experience
temporary EMR certificate. field; has a bachelor's degree
Miss Loujse Kahn, English from Eastern Nazarene
College; a few hours remain to
complete her work for a MA
Degree at Ohio Stale
University; has taught seven
years in vocal music, three in
The V. D. Edwards Insurance East Liverpool and four In
Co. also bid . Texaco won the Upper Arlington; her masters
gasoline contract on its bid of work is in journalism, and for
15 cents per galion for regular the past six months has worked
and 19 cents a gallon for high in public relations for the office
test. Ashland Refming also bid of the Ohio Attorney General.
for the gasc:1•• e contract.
She and her husband reside on
Texaco also received the a farm near Vinton. Her
contract for motor oil, at 24.4 husband will coordinate the
cents per quart, over Ashland. occupational work experience
Texaco received the contract program in Gallipolis.
for supplying multi-purpose
Rebecca L. Tate, elemen·
grease and Ashland will fur· tary, graduate of Hope College
nish anti-freeze.
in Holland, Mich ., and a niece
The board accepted the of Mrs. Claude Husted, teacher
resignation of Dwight ~~as a in the local high school; Miss
bus mechanic. He had been on Tate's home is In Lakewood.
a leave of absence and has
The board released Miss
accepted employment in in· Joyce Myers, a teacher who
(Continued on page 4i
had not begun her duties, here, ·
from her contract.

Davis and Sons Win Buses Bid
The Meigs Local School
District Board of Education
has accepted bids on four new
school buses and awarded
contracts on vehicular supplies, George Hargraves,
superintendent, said today.

Minh Vy, continuing Hanoi's
worldwide campaign against
the alleged deliberate bombing
of dikes, said U.S. planes had
"destroyed 58 portions of dikes
and
seven
floodgates,
devastated dmens of cities and
towns, damaged several
economic installations, struck
even at kindergartens, schools,
hospitals, churches and
pagodas ."
Porter called the dike char·
ges a flood of propaganda
designed to divert attention
from the actual peace negotla·
lions and said they were
~~unconvincing"

when com-

pared with North Vietnam's
"severity and harshness"
during its current military
offensive in South Vietnam.

Holzer Bed Rates Up $7 Daily

Teaching Staff near Complete
With one exception, the
teaching staff of ap·
proximately 140 persons in the
Meigs Local School District
has been completed for the
1972-73 school year,' George
Hargraves,. superintendent,
said today.
The single vacancy Is at the
Salem Center school where a
teacher is needed half time in a

TEN CENTS

Viet Cong says again:

Style Revue
Wednesday
Attraction

Awarded the contract to
supply the four bus bodies was
Edwin H. Davis and Sons,
Superior Bodies, Danville, at a
price of $3,590 each. The other
bidder was Reynolds True~
Bodies Co. with a bid of $3,565.

French Provincial • Mediterranean.

Trends

Weather

By United Preu!nteroatlonal
COLUMBUS-STATEHIGHWAYPATROLMANCharlesS.
Lauver, 32, of the Steubenville post, has received the patrol's
highest honor for vtllor for rescuing two men trapped In a bur·
nlng truck, It was aMounced today. Lauver and six civillans who
stopped to help were all burned .when tbe tmck exploded after
they pulled the men from the blazing vehicle, May 8, 1971.
"When he arrived on tbe scene of the aceident near
Steubenville, Patrolinan Lauver found the truck laying on its lop,
pinning the two occupants within," said patrol Superintendent
Robert M. Chiaramonte. ''The vehicle was burning and very
shortly thereafter the gas tank exploded."
, .

However, the Davis bid,
although slightly higher, was
accepted because of its
availability for service,
Hargraves said.
Awarded the bid for the
chassis of the new buses was
the Meigs Equipment Co., the
lower bidder, at $5,199 each,
with an additional $945 each for
an automatic transmission.
Other bidders were Smith·
Nelson Motors, Pomeroy ;
Pomeroy Motor Co., Keith
Goble Ford, Inc., and the R. H.
Rawlings Sons Co .
Tlie vehicle fleet insurance
coverage was awarded to the
Downing-Childs Agency, low
bidder, at a cost of $3,799.33.

Youth Wrecks Stolen ·Auto

A car believed to have been
stolen, driven by is.year old
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE HAS responded to the Chesapeake · yodth, was
assassination attempt agailllt Gov. Gecrge C. Wallace with a wrecked at the junction of
new firearms control bill aimed 't cheap little guns ~alled Routes 7 and 33 at the con·
"Saturday night specials." But, In three days of roll caD votes struction site Wednesday at
that produced paaaage !!fthe bill Wednesday, rnOJllbera a~ ~:30 a.m. In Meigs CoWlty
the til(ht of Aqlericiii\S to keep guna lor protection and once again ae~:ordlng to \he Gallia·Meigs
defeated overwhelmingly attempts to bsn possession of hl!nd· , State Highway Patrol this
~ or require their reglatrallon with tbe government.
' morning. '
•,
- The new. gun bill, apcjn,bred by Sen. Birch BByh, D-lnd.,
~ youth was northbound on
fa,ces an up~ struggle In the House, and President Nixon's 7 whe~ he started to e?ter 33
views on the measure are not known. Bit II cleared the Senate and crashed Into a ditch ~
with surprising ease on a 81 to 21 roll call vole preceded by Oilly a avoid colliding with a sem1 r1g
half-llearted attempt to &lt;lllute the meuure.
·
northbound on 33. The car -was
_.
)
moderately damaged.
(CIInllnulld on Jllll 12 ·
When the Investigating of·

a·

ficer, A. F. Casto, arrived at car for recognition of ap·
the 5cene, the youth said his prehension. Lt. Ernest
rather was driving and had Wigglesworth, post corn·
gone to get a wrecker, but mander, will present the
further investigation proved award.
this statement apparently
false. It was found later that
Another accident in Meigs
the car was owned by G!Uen County 200 feet above the
Ford Sales, Inc:, Chesapeake. Galila County line on Route 7·
The youth also l:llld stolen a set occurred at 4: to p.m. Wed·
oJ plates.
nesday. Ona E. Sheets, 30,
The youth was released to Gallipolis, was driving a truck
the
Chesapeake Police southbound when a northbound
Department for prosecution. auto flipped a stone Into the
The officer, Casto, wiD be ·windshield Qfthe truck causing
awarded a red lightning bolt minor damage. There were no
for the right door of his patrol· llljll'iea or arrests.

larger cities. In Columbus, for
example, semi-private rooms
comparable to those at Holzer
Medical Center could cost $67 a
day or $10 more thari the new
Holzer rate.
John W. Rafferty, executive
\·Ice president of Holzer
Medical Center said :
"There have been many
rumors that we will be
charging $100 and more per
room each day, and I welcome
this opportunity to point out
that even with this increase,

Students submitting exhibits
given a "superior" rating
receive a blue ribbon and $1.50;
those with " good" ratings
receive a red ribbon and $1 and /\
"average" exhibits gel a white
ribbon and 50 cents. No ribbons
or cash awards are given for
below average work .
Entries for the school display
close at 4 p.m. Saturday and
are confined to pupils enrolled
in the Meigs County school

WASH!NGTON (UPI) - Un·
derdog George s. McGovern
sets forth for the streeb · and
factories of New England today
to launch his · campaign to
depose President Nixon.
The Democratic presidential
candidate described the two·
day trip that would take him to
New Hampshire, Connecticut
and Rhode Island and end in
New York City Friday as a
"listening tour." He said he
intended to talk to voters and
find out what tbey want.
McGovern prepared for hi~
first full-6cale campaign trip

system during the past school
year. Exhibits muat represent
original work completed by
students In the Immediate
preceding . school year. They
must be in place by 4 p.m.
Tuesday and must not be with·
drawn before 4 p.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 19.
Exhibits will be judged upon
the basis of appearance, 20
pet.; workmanship, 40 pet.;
originality, 20 pet., and
educational value, 20 pet.
Science exhibits will be
directly related to topics in
health, conservation, earth
science, biology, botany,
physics or chemistry. Arts and
crafts exhibits migbl consist of
handcraft, Involving wood
work, metal work, leather
craft, weaving , knitting,
needlework, paintings, ·
drawlng,letlering or ceramics.
Robert Bowen, county
superintendent .of schools, is
superintendent of the depart·
ment.

Eyes for Needy Project

rates. "Where else," he said,
"could you move from an old,
overcrowded building, into a
new modern $21 million
structure with the latest up to
date equipment and services
for a mere $7 more a. day?"

Wednesday by mendinalencea
withHouae Democrata. Accom·
panied by Sargent Shriver, his·
new running mate, McGovern
spent an hour and a hall with
his party's congressmen,
posing for pictures and then
addressing the group.
He courted the congressmen
-some of whom have been less
than enthusiastic about his
candidacy-by telling them he
realized that congressmen run
better in their districts than the
party's presidential candidate.
"We need your advice, we

need your counsel, we need
your support," McGovern said.
Rep. Thomas · P. O'Neill,
chairman of the House Democratic Campaign Committee,
~id McGovern's appearance
had gone a long way toward
healing party differences, and
Rep. Ken Hechler, D-W.Va.,
called McGovern's approach
"a political masterstroke."
· ' McGovern scbeduled his first
steops today in New Hampshire. He planned to visit the J.
F. McElwain shoe factory at
Manchester, hold a news
conference, alld make a walk·
lng tour down Elm Street.,
McGovern also planned ca'll·
paign stops today in Hartford,
Conn. and was scheduled to
spend the night in Providence,
R.I., and make a walking tour
through the city Friday. He
ends the tour later ntday with.
a . press conference in New
York.
'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Ex1elided Onlloot Saturclay through MoJI!Iay:
Partly cloudy, warm and
humid with a chance of af.·
ternoon thunderabowers
each day. Highs ranging
from the lower Ills to the
lo,.~r 901J. Early mol'lliDI
lows from lhe upper 5811 to ·
the upper 1101.
. '

~-cc

f

~W.~~!.W.~

,.
AID GIVEN
The Middleport Emergency
Squsd answered a call on Rose
Hill at 10:26 p.m. Wednesday
.. .
for Mrs. Margaret Mullins who
recipient of club illd. Another wu Suffering severe stomach
case was approv(d and tbe
and chest pains. She wu taken
club will provide eyeglaslea.
to Veterans Memorial Hoepltal
where
lhe was treated andTom
repoi-ted on the
recent ho,i~-one golf contest released.
conduct~!~~· by the club at the
Rock Springs Falrgroun4s.
JOBS AVAILABLE
Preparat10111 were started for
The Leading Creek Connext year's promotion. The servancy District in Rutland
contest this year was con- baa employment openings for
sidered successful and 2$ men, 115 years of age or
proceeds will go for the li&amp;l\1 older. Thoae l!lterested should
saving progral!l; Wendell contact the olllce In Rutllnd.
Hoover, vice presidtnt, wuln PIIGae 7U4922, lor an ·~
polallllenl.
char&amp;e of lhe IDMIIDI·

Advanced by Lions a~
Plans for picking up used eye
glasses which have been
collected In several business
houses over the past lew weeks
were made when tbe Pomeroy •
Middleport Uons Club met lor
a luncheon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn.
The glasses will be packed at
7 p.m. .Monday and sent to
"New Eyes for the Needy" in
New Jersey.
N. W. Compton reported on
the club's sight program. He
said the club has received a
~tier of thanki from one

· One hospital officials said
today the patients served by
Holzer Medical Center are the
ones benefiting from these

Opinions Sought

Student Exhibits
Number 300 Plus
Over 300 exhibits will be
featured in the public schools
display to be featured at the
Meigs County Fair next week.
Each pupil is permitted only
one exhibit and it must be in
the field of either science or
arts and crafts. Classifications
for judging are broken down
into grades 1 and 2;. grades 4
through 6; grades 7 through 9
and grades 10 through 12. Each
exhibit will be judged on its
own merits rather than on a
competitive basis.

our rates will go up just $7 and
our highest rate will be only $62
per day."

ea.en

�2- The DaUy Sentmel,Mtddltport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aug 10,1972

EDITORIAL

Mall\

~unong

the

ltll l l'll\

WNd ol s(, llOol

lllllts

.mi.l

1t!ltll me1 :s oJ en uu.llt(lll "ould pt olhlllh s ..l' Ht,!ht un
lo Jam~s &lt;\ Gat fields- ldt:.t ol .1 tllllvt&gt; t stl' ..:on1anwd 111

a

tr1but~;~

to oru: ol hts te.t cht&gt;r"

lng hut ~ 1th unl\ .1 ~ 11l1JIIt' buH h I\ Itt k
Hopkms on one encl and I un11w o th(ll ::tnd \Ottlllt.l\ hd\l
Gl\t&gt; me

:1.

appat~ lu s

and ltbratt es "Jthoul lum
One of the be•l knoy,n &lt;lilies Joh n I loll pu1nts ""I 111
a comment 111 PsH lwlug' 1odL.I\ ntugd:tllle that tht "-Old
alllhe bmldmgs

A 'Horrol
Turns Out
O.K:

FARMER SILO
I'OUND CXJT HE

COULD ONLY
A BONI'IRE
ON A SPECIAL
DESIGNATED
DAY

•

EAST

¥1
tQJ1412
4A96

tAK8
"'Q4

• Q8!!,4
.J652

SOUTII (0)
(IAIO~

of homeh philosoph• and usclul mfo1mat 1on sunpl) II\
Slltmg on one end ol a bench ilslenmg to old M31 k shoot
the b1 eeze on the olhe1 end ~n\ one who has ne\ eJ h,ul
thiS kmd or expeuence w1th a teachei - II Sing teache1
m 1ls w1dest sense-has m1ssed somet hm g
As long as Mark Hopkms to nlm e&lt; Ius teaclung to
keepmg h1s audience ente1lamed 0 K Be\ ond Ihal how
ever he and John Holt pa1t compa ny
The ope1at1ve ph1ase 111 Holt s del1mtwn IS Wh&lt;n
He goes on to

WEST

(IJ7t.

studenl ~.:o uld pick up a s1zable st olt

someone wants to lea1 n somethmg

6~

(IIOR71

• AQ 103

• 109

l.

.KJ$2
Both vulnerable
Wesl North F.t.&lt;l South

Guitar 33
7 00 - Elec Co 2(), Course of Our Times 33 Let's Make A Deal
3 Dick Van Dyke 4, What s My L~ne&gt; 8 Big Red Jubilee 15
News 6 Wild W1ld West 13
7 30 - I'll See You In Court 4 Dragnet 8 In The Know 10
Chapter 33 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The Truth 6, In The
Know 10, Chapter 33, Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The
, Truth 6, W1ld Kingdom 10, Mr Rogers 20
8 DO - Alias Sm1th and Jones 13 NBC Adventure Theatre 3, 15
My World and Welcome To 118, Jean Shepherd's America 20,
33 Bob Brauns Hawaiian Holiday 4, Ask The Governor 10
a 30 - MyThreeSonsB 10 JazzSet20. 33
9 00- Longstreet 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 Hollywood TeleviSIOn
Theatre 20, 33, Movte 'The Bobou 8 10

10 oo - Owen Marshall6, 13 News20 Bobby DarlnJ 4 15 Paul
Nuchlms 33
11 00-NewsJ 4 6 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 Movie 'The
Alphabet Murders' 8 Movie 'Away Ail Boals 10 Mov1e
'' The River Changes" 13
100-News4

1 30 - News 13

FRIDAY, AUGUST 11
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
I •
Dbl
Redbl l¥
Farmtlme 10
Pa~•
2¥
3. 4¥
Farm Report 13
Pass
Pas.li
Pa ~"'
Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8, Blue R1dge Quartet
Open m~ lead- t Q
13 News 6 Herald 1of Truth 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
llv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv 7 00- Today3 4 15. CBS NewsB, 10
30- Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
One way to wm any bndge 87 00
- Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 6 Sesame
event IS to overbid and then
Street 33.
make your contract Bobby 8 30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack LaLanne 13
Goldman s one-club opening 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Peyton Place 13 Romper Room 8 Phil
was JUSt above a mm1mum
Dona~ue15 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3 T•mmy &amp;
Lassie 6. Mr Rooers 33 Friendly Junction 10
West's dtamond overcall was
- Truth o' Conseq 3, Mike Douglas6 One Life to L•ve 13
based on a SIX-card SUit and 9 30Electric
Co 33 My Three Sons 8
general optimism Nancy 10 00- Dinah
Shore 3 15 Lucille Ball 10 Phil Donahue 8 DICk
Alpaugh s double was one of
Van Dyke 13. Halhoyoga 33
those newfangled negative 10 30 - Concentration J, 15, Phil Donahue 4 Beverly Hillbillies
doubles for takeout East's
8 In School Instruction 33 Spill Second 13 My Three Sons
10
redouble showed strength
10
45Lucille R1vers 6
and Bobby and Nancy over
11
00
Family Afla~r 8 10 Love American Style 13 Com
b1d to four hearts
munlque6 SaleoltheCentury3 15 Elec Co 20
The contract IS a horror 11 30- Hollywood Squares 4, 1l Love of Llle 8 Bew1tched 6, 13,
Sesame St 20
There are four lostng tncks
12
00
- Jeopardy 3 I~ Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
plus all sorts of handling
Local
News 10 News 13 Contact 8
charges but watch whal
12 JO ~ 3 W's Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split
happened
Second 6. Electnc Co 33
E~st cashed h1s top dta
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 , Divorce Court 8 Green
monos and led a th~rd Thts
Acres 10 Watch Your Child• 15 International Cookbook 33
gave Bobby a chance to 1 30- 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15 , Lets Make a Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Designing Women 33
d1scard a losmg spade and
2
00
- 0aysDfOur L•ves3, 4 15 NewlywedGame13 Virginia
111ff 1n dumm)
Graham 6 Love Is Splendored Thing 8, 10 Soc relies In Tran
Slllon 33
A club was led from dum·
my and West plunked hts ace 2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Dating Game 13 Guiding L1ght 8 10 ,
Even~ng at Pops 33
rtght on Bobbfs Jack Th1s
Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6 13 , Secret
represented mistake number 3 00Storm B 10 Tennis Anyone' 33
two by the defense The 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 IS Edge of Nights 10
th~rd d1amond lead gave
Jeff's Collie 13 Oft The Record 33 One Life to Ltve6
Bobby a chance to get rid of 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame 51 20 33 Flint
stones6 13 Batman&amp; Movie Lets Do It Again' 10
a spade loser ThiS rush to
take the ace made 1t pos 4 30- Green Acres 3 I Love Luch 6 Virginian 8 Password 13
Merv Griffin 4 Andr Griffith 15
Sible for Bobby to pull
5
00
- It Takes A Thle 4, Wagon Tra in 3 Mavemk 13, Elec
trumps and score h1s clubs
Co 33 , Mister Rogers 20 Dick Van Dykel5 Big Valley6
West actually led a fourth 5 JO - Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 33
diamond Bobby ruffed m 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10, 15 NBC News 8, 10 Truth or Conseq 6 I
of Jeannie 13 , Sesame St 20, Hathayoga 33
dummy East could have 7 00Dream
Porter
Wagoner 3 Dick Van Dyke 4 News6 10 Whars
helped out by overru!flng
My Line 8 Elec Co 20 Wild Wild West 13 Sam! 15
but East dJscarded the queen
Masterpiece Theatre 33
of clubs Bobby was ready 7 30- To Tell The Truth 6 Dragnet 8 Adam 12 3 1 Dream of
Jeannle4, Gove•norandJ J 10 Mr Rogers20
He played dummy's ktng of
11 umps !messed agatnst the 8 00 - Washington Week 1n Review 20, O'Hara U S Treasury
8 Book Beat 33 Brady Bunch 6 13 Baseball 3 4 Partners
Jack drew trumps and made
15 , All Star Game Prev1ew 10
h1s ImposSible game
8 30 - Partridge Family 6 13 Movie' Kill a Dragon 15, High
(NEWSPAPU ENTUPIUS£ ASSN )
School Football 10, Yo Soy Chicano 1 ~0 n33. ,~ 1
, , ..,
!~IW 1 '
9 00 - Room 222 13, Dymplans '72 6 Moi/(e '?eve~ Thleves •{I
9 30- NBC News Speclall 4 IS Odd Coupre6 u Fine Art of
Gooklng 2o, 33
10 OO - News20 LoveAmerlcanStyle6, 13 Ron Dellums33
10 30 - Dr Simon Locke 3 Dr In The House 4 Rollin On River
The b1ddm11: has been
15, News 20 Wash1ngton Week In Review 33
We~t
North
East
11 00-NewsJ 4,6 ~ 10, 13,15
I¥
Dble
Pass
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnn'( Carson 15 Movie The Black
Pass
3.
Pass
Knight' B Movie' Curse o the Mummy s Tomb' 10 Movie
Pass
3•
Pass
Tne Tall Men' 13
Pass
5¥
PaM
1 00 - Roller Derby 4, Movie The Unearthly' 10

SCi\

6 00 6 15 6 20 6 25-

But 1f b1 teachmg we mean detldlllg f01 sumenn&lt;
else what 11 "''' be good fo1 hull to learn and then a1
rangmg thai leal mng mlo a seq uence of I asks wh1ch ""
Impose on h•m such teacl1111g 1s without exceptiOn the
enemv p1 eventer and deslro)er ol lea1mng
Thus consigned to one or the outer cu cles of hell b1
thiS typiCall) exheme ani! establishment statement
BY JACK O'BRIAN
drmks are okay, from tea or Cokes to local
ts every teache1 who ever d•v•dcd a subJet l mto a se
AS IN GAMBUNG,
quence of leal nm g tasks that he 1m posed on hiS student s
orange and concoctions, 1t's been nght there
LE1 US PREY
Cons1gned to 1rrelevanc" IS eve1y teache1 who bemg
hard by the Span1sh Steps at 86 Vta Condotll,
NEW YORK (KFS) -Europe at Random
older and mo1e expe11enced than hiS &gt;fudent s not o 111
across from Gucc1 s, at least Since 17l2, acknows what hiS students don 1 know b11t thmks he kno\\s Tne Queen Ehza beth 2 floated a shipload of folks
cordmg to the untidy memo1rs of Gtacomo
what 11 would be good fm them to kno"
who ~eemed apathehc about Sabbath worship
Cassanova
Couple of years ago, It started
Indeed , conSigned to m elevan cy would be all or human Jews have their own tmy synagogue aboard but
losmg money (It's m the highest-rent comh1sto1 y 1f a student dec1ded he d1dn t want to lea111
II did so-so Sat busmess, Cathohcs and memal dtstnct m Rome, comparable to 5th
about 11
Protestants shared the mov1e theater Sunda}
Ave m the iiOs) and the Ctty of Rome Sl;lved 11
But then accm dmg to engmee1 and plulosophe1 H
mormng, separately, 11 wasn t SRO there either from a fate worse tilan debt a short while ago,
Buckmmster Fulle1 111 another lvplta lh ext~eme stall
No more big Sh1p s Pool' a Ia the nch pmes f1rst dubbmg 11 a national monument, lmally
ment 'The past IS Illelc,anl to the p•e•ent
Fuller IS a sort of latter da1 Ma1 k Hopkms upon whost of yesler)ear be•t was a hal pool, meamng taking 1t over and operating 11, for 11 was about
bench 11 IS c111 rentlv fashiO nabl e to s11 But 1f he Iller alii ten equal contnbutors ($10) and a waiter exto be turned mto a shoe shop, and that S11llply
means what he says by lhls statem en t he IS gtnlt1 ol tracted one card our shipboard fnend, Mr
wouldn't
do nghl by the shades of so many
fotstmg permcJow; non sense on h1 s msuspectln g 'oun g Winkleman won the $100 (the old ship's pools
admirers
ghostly gemuses It's marvelous for tis amrf en went above $10 000) and managed to top
If he means somellung else If he means thai new p• ob
bience 1f not liS sandwiches and hauls m not only
I ems demand new solutiOns then Ab1 aham Lmtoln sa1d the $100 hat-tnck by wuuung at Bmgo seems no
tounsls but Romans, probably the most popular
It better The dogmas of lhe qu1et past a1e madequate b1g garnblmg pools are countenanced aboard
meetmg place for CIVIlized folk, tile hlpptes
to the stormy present
now that the QE2 ca mes lis own gambling congregate m smelly d1sarray st1ll on the
Lmcoln of com se was lot tunat~ enough. to esca pe the casmo w1th roulette, craps, chemm de fer and
otherwise lovely Spamsh Steps
stult1fymg mtluence of nmmal sthool mg w1th all •Is 1111
21 operated by a London gambling
Last year Rome had sc.ds of strtkes and
posed seq11ences of Jearn1n g tasks
sl2'd1cate
Its a m1m Las Vegas With far
unrest but sllll hiked tounsm 11 pet , tills year
better manners, guests m dmner clothes mostly,
early statistiCs suggests a boost of 20 pet
an elegant Sight Authonlles never solved the
compared to that Organ12ed touriSJII (charter
robberv of the QE2's cas mo vaul t last wmter
planes busloads of touriSts) causes a love-hate
durmg the crUise season 11 was cons1dered an reactwn mhotels rooms, meals, tours, etc are
mSJde JOb and lho no one co uld be pmned down, prepared for tile hordes , delllXe hotels fear tl
there were several qUiet sackmgs of casmo
w1ll debase the fmest personal servtce wh1ch
bosses
'NICE GIRLS ' DON'T WIN •
separates great European tradtllon from
In Rome, we sat htgh m the Alban Hills computenzed Impersonal Amertcan effiCiency,
Rap
trymg to tune m the DemocratiC convention v1a but tilal s where the btg money 1s, so 11 1s
"Be amce liltle g1rl and I'll bu) you some bubble gwn
Voice of Amertca but 1t was mostly futile ex- spendmg - wildly
Be nice at the dentist's and he'll g1ve you a balloon '
cept
for a I a m news scraps Our old radio
"Be nice in school and get good grades and you ll get that
The AmeriCan dollar IS m tile fore1gn
sport of DXmg (tw1ddlmg dials to haulm d1stant doghouse tile travel agency which arranged
new dress "
"Go out w1th that mce boy and you'll get to wear your new statwns) broughl m Overwhehmngly American our Pan Am tickets back to N Y Ctty pleaded
Jazz from unlikely places, such as LoUis Arm- Wltil us to cash our check elsewhere and pay
dress II
strong
from Mumch the unmistakably tuneless til em mhre seems 11 takes up to 90 days for a U
"Hewasn'tso mce• Oh well, keep on bemg mce yourself and
glamor of Marlene D1etrtch attackmg 'Falhnk S check to clear 'and we're frightened of the
' you'll find the nght guy "
All my life I've had this 'be mce' JW'Ik handed to me They m Luff Agam' from Zagred, Nat King Cole from shaky money market," we were told
It's
Yugoslavia endless Amencan record stars and expected the lire momPntarlly w1ll devaluate
say If I'm "a mce gu-1" everythmg Will turn out JUSt great
Well, maybe 1t works w1th bubble gum aQd balloons, but fa1r lmtlallons thereof from all over Germany
agam probably early m the fall Meanwhile
dating boys tsn't the same as 'Hand tills good k1d a candy bar ' what seemed dreary propaganda from Russ1a Roman restaurants haven t zoomed their prtces
I'm "nice" and I get hurt The !elias end up saymv 'You re leavened by an occaswnJl anc1ent-type small much shghtly but sllll considerably below U
chamber orchestra ~ avermg through pseudo - S and certamly N Y City levels
loo ntce "In other words, 'I'm bored w1til you '
1 30 - News A, 13
You South hold
I trted bemg mce m anotiler way to tile boy I really fell for, popular p1eces and then wham Shostakov1ch
R1storante G Ramere1, at 26 Vta Mano de
bnlhantly
\Ia
grea
t
symphomc
sounds
but he just used me and now he's w1th a loudmouth who probably
Fwn,1s an elegant eatery wtth fine Roman food (IHH3¥Z tAK9f3.762 ~:::~ .:.-.:::::: ..:.. .... ..•.,,:,:(~''''''''''''''
Swedish
stations
seemed
to
flmg
tile
most
What do you do no\\.,
never earned anythmg for bemg 'mce "
m the middle of Old Rome also moderate by U
A-Ju!lt b1d (In spad~ \ ou
So send this "sweet thing" a b1g bouquet of roses For a modern Jazz n01ses mto the a1r modern up to
S levels
don I ha\ c an honor lh lh\: ~Uit
say
M1les
Davts
,
an
Isolated
Charlie
Parker
booby priZe&gt; She sure found out "mce g1rls don't lim" Nmo's at II V1a Borgognona has two tomd
TODAY S QUF.STIO~
recording and one fiddle acrobatic by the late
SWEARING OFF
spec1allles we recommend enthuSiastically to
Yom
partner continues to sax
Stuff Sm1th, not easy to hold the sound steady
~
expenmental palantes penne all'arrabbl81a clu bs What do yOu do now"
however
DearS 0
Answer tomorro"
(an 'angry" pasta) for sturdy tummtes, d1tto
,)
.
ln tereshng, the slow deliberate careful
I'll bet there Isn't a bastcally ' mce," good-hearted
biStecca d1 costs all'arrabbtata, a steak sizzled
It's my day to wonder WHY
(therefore somewhat eas1ly duped) person m the world who at enunc1allon of speakers on tile VOA, usefully m the same garhc-herbs-peppers sauce and It's SenJ 51 fo• JACOBY MODERN book
s1mple
for
prtmlhve
Enghsh
learners
behind
Why It Is that, out of hundreds of household appliances,
some time or otber hasn't mourned, ' Ntce guys don I wm 1"beautiful when It's angry
to
'Wm
at
Bttdgt
'(c/o
tltu
ntwj
the Iron Curiam but 11 sounded consistently as
and resolved to get tougher
For a fme day m tbe sun and water, motor paptrJ fJ 0 loJ 419, R.ad1o C1ty vacuum cleaners are sold door-to-door?
1f
they
were
spealung
to
pupp1es
Why Is that some of the world's moot celebrated and revered
But they seldom JOIIl the 'black hats because they aren't
out to Marmo, 14 mlles south of Rome, and have Slol10n, New Yo•k, NY 10019
Italy's hosting some 5 ffillh on touriSts thiS
books - the Holy Bible, the dictionary, and the encyclopedia built that way and, though you wont belteve 11 now, they usually
lunch at Heho Cabala and a swim before and
year,
spending
some
$4
btll10n
and
of
all
are
peddled the same way•
come out wmners m the long run
after (look around, the lazy fellow reading
I
European countms the Itahans m shops and
Why 18 tt that soap products and detergents are the exclusive
That IS, if they aren't pWlhovers, but learn to be selectiVe
under the umbrella m1ght be me), lunch prtce
hotels
and
restaurants
alone
seem
apprectaltve
domain
of radio and television - at advertising pr1ces that must
-HELEN
covers your sw11ll, too
Up m the nearby
always
to
the
pomt
of
warm
CIVIhty
run the cost of the product up quite a bit• (Can you Imagine
+++
moun tam town of Frascat1 (great wine) IS
We
raved
about
R1storanle
Augustea
m
someone rmging your doorbell and amounclng, "Procter and
Swearmg OFF
RIStorant;, Cacc1aru, run by Armando and
yesterdays
column,
lots
of
others
are
worth
Gamble calling'")
ESPEClALLY 1f they aren't pushovers and learn to be
Tommaso Cacc1am, everytillng fresh, tasty, a
tippmg
our
lastebuds
m
gustatory
appreciation
Why could ltpoMlbly rain more than two inches on July 31m
selective'
see-through glass kitchen wall where you can
The
Caffe
Greco
on
V1a
Condottt
remams
a
By
United
Press
loleroatioual
Charlestoo,
whlle the Gallipolis - Pt Pleasant - Middleport Don't change tile way you are Just be careful m choosmg
watch the pasta bemg made and just-caught fish
splendid
meellng
place
1f
somewhat
Jess
than
Today
IS Thursday, Aug 10,
Pomeroy
area
felt not a single drop•
your friends 'N1ce guys" sometimes get hurt because they re
wngghng It's a fresh memory that makes us
superb m food tis sandwiches by N Y stan- wish we were back there 3Jlam Oh, well-41ext the223rd day of 1972with 143 to
Wby .do people misspell so frequenUy the words they use
attracted to "not-so-nice guys, ' who use them
dards
are
skimpy
(one
shce
of
ham
or
cheese
follow
every
day• (Nothing makes me quite so Irritated as misspelled
Smarten up but don't be b1tter - SUE
year
seems tasteless m a hotdog-size roll ) but the
The moon Is between Its new worda on a restaurant menu- and the fancier the cafe, the more
phase
and first quarter
trksome the boo-boo )
Dear Rap
The morning stars are
Why did the fates conapire to have the Shadle Brtdge at Pt
Here's a new thing m weddmg announcements These two
Mercury,
VenWI
and
Saturn
Pleasant
cut to one-way traffic at the very time the Pomeroydon't g1ve a hoot about gtfls 1
The evenmg stars are Mars Mason Bridge was closed, and everyone had to detour around •
We just rece1ved an mYitatron to. the wedding of a college
and Jup1ter
Those born on this date are (It rea)ly wasn't the fault of tbe Highway Department in etther
frtend Enclosed was a little engraved card &gt;~hlch read
under
the sign of Leo
State, but it was darned Inconvenient )
"There are m1lhons of poor who are cold and hungry and
Why could the pushers of another low-voltage game show
President Herbert Hoover
there are so many mequaltt1es tilal tilts makes us aware of our
was
born
Aug
,
called
"Tbe Parent Game" sell this spln.off of other spin-offs to
rtches Therefore, if you had planned to g1ve us a gift, we would
10 1874
On tills day in history
practically every televlalon market m the country, at a time
apprectate a conlflbulton mstead to your favorite chanty or
1n
1776,
a
committee
of
when
other game shows seem to be glutting the market• (Yes,
cause so that, because of our marriage, life for others may be a
little better Peace "
dwbetes has a defect Ill a problem There has been a Benjamin Franklin, John It'll be seen locally, on WSAZ-TV )
B• Lawrence Lamb M ll
Adams and Thomas Jefferson
Why hasn't someone been killed In tile 5oshawful trafftc
portiOn of the pitUitary gland
Pretty neat, huh• - IMPRESSED
llc,Jr Dr Lamb - Can you that rests just beneath the lol of pubhclty in recent
suggested that the United '" crush that resulted when the new Holzer Medical Center and
gtv e me an} m£01 matwn on br am The gland normally years about the dyslextc
States
adopt "E Pluribus Gallla Junior Fair were handling Incredible amounts of traffic at
ch1ld,
who
has
difficulty
In
Dear Impressed
water d•abeles I never heard produces hormone wh1ch pre
readmg
and
wntmg
There
ts
Unum" as !be motto of the certain times of day• (Because of some darned good traffic
We're Impressed, too (But somehow we doubt that this will of 11 unl1l recentl) t I have vents too much water from
an
opposite
disorder,
the
hy
Great
Seal of tbe newly Ln-. control people, that's why I just asked to get a kind word for
the
•egula1
d1abetes1
and
I
start a trend too many people sllll "g1ve a hoot about the loot ")
bemg passed by the kidneys perlex1c child These ch ldren
am
ve1
v
mte1
ested
Does
11
dependent
nation
them Into print )
-HELEN AND SUE
If msuff•ctent amounts of th1s
1equn e the same d1 et as the hormone are produced then are compulsive readers and
Why don't tbe Avco Broad"'sting people recognize that
+++
1egu lm diabetes or a d1ffe• the usual control to prevent are able to read Without ever
bemg
taught
to
do
so
TwoDear Helen and Sue
The
Dailoo
t!a..&amp;'llltl
Waite
Hoyt, a great old guy and a man with a very good Intellect,
ent one ~
passmg
too
much
water
from
year
old
youngsters
reading
"1
.mu
is
finally
getting a llttle too old to cut II• (In a recent series, he
Hoorah for 'Respectable Parents' who learned from tiletr
Dear 1\eader - It s an en th e k1dney 1s lost So mdlVId· volummous material have
0
~~~H~lN,.HE
studioualy mlapronounced a Chicago pitcher's name, then
kids that pottsn't harmful and are now for legalizatiOn
lu elv d1ffe1 e nt d1sease from uals wtth th1s defect will pass been reported Desptte their
MEIGS
MASON
UEA
spelled It to conform With his llllSCue- and fumbled another
While I was m Panama for 18 montils, I smoked grass all
sugar d1abetes 1 he kmd large volumes of urme fre- great fac1hly m reading WlthCHE~n:.~/:~NEHILL,
player's name just two or tlree days later)
of dwbetes I p1esume )OU quently Thev wtll also re oul be•ng mstructed they
dlly, every day, wtth no bad effects
ROI,RT
HOEFLICH,
Why 18 the photography SO good on "Mannix"? IS that the
Beheve me, if everyone m the world would have a JOint have Js 1ela ted to msufflcent place their water loss by are retarded and are said to
Ctty Edttor
msuhn 111 the panc~eas and dr.nkmg lat ge amounts of have bram damage They
Pub I JShea da&gt;ly eocept reason I watch it, when I don't even like m111t CO(lll-llnd-robbera
before gomg about datly tasks, there wouldn't be a war to a lu gh level of blood sugar
water
The
slmJianty
to
Saturday
by The OhiO Volley shows'
don
t
just
read
children's
protest
The usual dwbettc, unless sugar dtabeles" ends there books They read newspapers Publ•sh•n; Company 111
Why Is tbe lettering on the water tower above Bob Evans
In addttion, Helen and Sue, have you ever stopped to ask the d1sease ts cont1 oiled smce 11 IS not related to and novels How In the world cour1 sr Pomeroy o••o
W69
Bu••noss
Off•ce
Phont
Farma
at Rio Grande placed in such a wav
that you can't read It
yourselves what the Indians had m tilose peace p1pes while they loses a lot of sugar m the sugar Ill any way As you do they ever qevelop this 99'2 2154 Ed1f0r11 1 Phont 9P2
~
1111ne To flush oul thts ex· would expect from the above super capac1ty to read With 1t51
when traveUns from any direction -except perh8pl by air•
were tryrng to gam freedom and peace from the white man• cess
sugat
the
person
w11l
Second
Class
postage
Pl&gt;d
It
'
Why did they take the lllllle of the ....,....,"""
, _ _ lo~l~.
explanatwn
these
1110111u
out mslructlon • Do they In·
FOR IT
OhiO
..-a•aav - "---~
I.NIM:\l
pass a lot of water To re uals do not have to go on a hent thetr readmg capacity• Pamerov
N 1 1 ' on a 1 1 d.. r t "• n D on two fllle novell, a great movie, arxl a line teleplay by Earl
place the water loss he has dtabehc dtet m lerms of All of this suggests that there represrntattvt BOitintll!
Hamner ...... u. ""yh
......t ,.. w ood In Appalachia (II could have taken
Dear For It
to d11nk a Jot of water fhu s carbohydrate control nor are may be more to mherlted Galloghor Inc fl , hst &lt;1na
SI,
~ew
York
Clly,
New
York
place
right
around here) -and changed the aeries to "The
Your last question isn't exactly the best recommendation for the t y p 1c a I uncont1 oiled they helped With msuhn or knowledge than has been Subscr•pfton rttn Dt
.,
dtabell&lt; whose diSease Is any other such medtcmes suspected Its a very rare IJvored by corr.er wtlo.u ~Waltooa Ill' television?
pot While the Indians got peaceful, the1r country got ' took'" +++
suff1cenll
y advanced drmk s commonl~ used In pat•ents diSorder but m a way tt's re 1\oadablt ~0 ctnfl p!r week
SUE
8~ Motor Route where carritr
lots ol water and passes w1th sugar diabetes Usually freshmg It's good to know serv &gt;ee not ovalloble One
ON THE TV DIAL: Bob BralUl, "5040Ciub" host pn WLWC+++
I a r g" e volumes of ur me they are g1ven mcdtcattons that there are still a lot of monlh Sill By moll .n O••o TV aetspriJIIe.llmee.......•-toshowtheplctureshelookonhlB
Dear For It
"'
- r - - ...
frequently 1 hese two char- that w111 help the k1dnev con mtere~tmg facels of hfe to anct W va . One vear Sl• 00
S••
months
S7
JS
Throe
VICitlon
(to
Hawlil).
lt'sata .. Ohloatllllhould 1111Joy a unique
rdon't thmk much of your next-to-tbe-last sentence ••Jher' If actenstJcs are s1m1l ar to wa trol the water output
be solved
monrhs S&lt; SO Subscrlpt,on
1-'
_,__ In_..,_., Gov J·'- J Qllfl-·
ler
d1abetes
'
prier tncludes sundav Tlmtt
lOr Ul JrQI '-VIIIVlllllltl'e
WJW.J:I
, ut••
...._..,wwen
everyone were constantly stoned tbe world might go up msmuke
(NEWSPAPER lNTERPill5f ASSN)
1
Senl•nel
tJII!Ionanolfrom
.
b
u
t
from
onllnlry
dt~,IIIGitrl
Here
1s
an
mteres
tmg
Drifting smoke, that IS - HELEN
I •
nn With water
111111n
around Columq, Il'sat on WBNB-TV.

·!Tube Talk:~f
~- ...

By Paul Crabtree

Today's
Almanac

-J&gt;R. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Two Different Diabetes Diseases

..

rrun

a

.

Mator League Standlnps
By United Press International
National League
East
Wlpclgb
Prttsburgh
65 39 625
New York
56 47 544 sv,
Ch1cago
55 51 519 11
St LOUIS
51 52 495 13'h
Mcntreal
46 56 451 18
Ph•ladelph•a 40 64 385 25
West
wlpctgb
Clncmnat1
64 39 621
Houston
58 48 547 7'12
Los Angeles 53 50 575 11
Atlanta
49 58 458 17
San Francasco 48 60

San Diego

CINCINNATI(UPI)-Sparky
Anderson looked at the calendar
"I m pred!Clmg It'll be on
th1s date,' sa1d the Cmcmnall
Reds manager
Sparky s fmger rest;,d on
Aug 19 'We'll be playmg the
New York Mels, ' sa1d Anderson
He was predicting the dale
he expects Pete Rose s battmg
mark to reach 30Q
' 1hat w•ll g1ve htm mne
games,' pomt;,d out Anderson
Rose IS battmg 288 after rap
pmg out two hils, one a basesloaded double, and dnvmg
home three runs Wednesdav
mght, as Tommy Hall and Clay
Carroll teamed up to p1lch the

444 181f".l

42 63 400 23

Wednesday's Results

Montreal 8 Ch1cago 2
San D1ego 5 San Fran 2
Atlanta 6 Houston 0
Ph1la 2 Pittsburgh 0
Ctnclnnatt 6 Los Ang 3

New York 8 St Louis 3
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All T1mes EDT&gt;
Montreal (Mcore 3 51 at
Ch1cago (Hands 9 7) 2 30 p m
Houston I Roberts 9 5) at
Atlanta I N1ekro 10 101 8 05
pm
Los Angeles (Osteen 12 8) at
Clncmnatl IB•IImgham 7 101
8 05 p m
(Only games scheduled)

Reds to a 6-3 v1ctory over the stopped me with that l).for-5
Los Angeles Dodgers
The next da) Rose mijde two
Anderson ts also betting that hits Then came Tuesday
Rose w1ll be h1ttmg 300 at the mght s 19-mmng game when
end of the season • "! thmk 11 Pet;, went !).for~
w111 be 300 ' he said
Rose has 124 hils now so h1s
Rose IS b1ddmg for h1s e1ghth chances of reat hmg h1s covet
stra1ght 300 or better season
ed goal of 200 are m1ghty
So far 1! has been a real shm
sl! uggle
That would be 76 hils m the
Nlekro Stops Him
52 remammg games, • said An' I thought I was gomg to derson 'Thais an awful lot of
get to 300 when the Braves hils'
were m town last week, sa1d
Hall moved mto the starling
Rose
rolatwn when Gary Nolan was
Before gomg agamst Phil struck down w1th arm m1scne.s
N1ekro last Sunday Rose was shmllv before the all star
balling 293
game wound up w1th h1s fifth
• ' I had made seven h1ls m
the three games before fa cmg
N1ekro sa1d Pete ' Then he

San Fran at Houston ntght

Tigers, Yanks
Split Twinhill

St LouiS at P11ts n•ght
New York at Ch1cago
Cmcl at Atlanta n1ght
Los Ang at San D1ego n1ght
Amencan league

w I pet g b

Detro• I

Baltimore
New York
Boston

58 47 5S2
57 47 548

54 49 524 3'I'
The Yankees spilt a double
53 50 515 4
Cleveland
48 57 457 10
header w1th the Ttgers Wed
Milwaukee
41 64 390 17
nesday, wmrung, 2-1 after
West
losmg
6-ll The spht left the
wlpctgb
Oakland
62 44 585
New Yorkers three games
Ch1cago
60 44 577 1 behind DetrOit
Mmnesota
l4 48 529 6
Ball!more remamed m
Kansa s C1ty 50 54 48t 11
Cal1forn1a
47 58 448 141;2 second place, Just a game off
Texas
42 64 Jq6 20
the pace, w1til a 10-0 rout of
Wednesday's Results
Mtlwaukee
and Oakland
Texas 3 Minnesota 2
continued to slump w1th a ii-2
Boston 5 Cleveland 2
Detroit 6 New York 0 lsi
loss at the hands of Kansas
New York 2 DetrOit 1 2nd
C1ty
Balli more 10 Mllw 0
In other AL contests, Boston
Kan City 5 Oakland 2
Chicago 1 Callforma 0
beat Cleveland, ii-2, Texas
Today's Probable Pitchers
stopped Mmnesota, 3-2, and
I All T1mes EDTI
Baltimore !Palmer 15 4) at Clucago blanked Cahforma 1Milwaukee (Parsons 9 9) 2 30 0 behind durable Wilbur Wood
pm
In the Nallonal League,
Detroit (Coleman 12 10) at
New York I Klme 12 4) 7 35 Pittsburgh blanked Philadel
pm
ph1a , 2-0, New York troW!ced
Ch1cago (Bradley 12 9) at St Lows, 8-3, Montreal man
Oakland I Holtzman t4 9) 11
handled Ch1cago, 8-2 C1n
p m
8
Minnesota ICorbm 6 51 at cmnatl defeated Los Angeles,
California (May48 ) II p m
6-3, Atlanta shut out Houston, 6(Only games scheduled I
0, and San Diego stopped San
Frtdav's Games
Francisco, ii-2
Chicago at Oakland, night
Mmnesola at Calif, n~ht
" Cel~rl1)o ,SIIl\C1\~ tapped a
t&lt;ar City at Toxat,&lt;-n h~, • · .. two-outslrTgle oftreli~ver )'red
&lt;lteve at Detlpll ~lg I
Scherman m the seventil mnmg
Boston al Ball. nlgt\f '·
Mllw at New York n1ght
of the second game to produce

Realignment
Major Issue
KANSAS CITY, Mo (UPI)Baseball Commisstoner Bowte
Kuhn was singularly umnformatlve Wednesday after tile
first joint meetmg of major
league club owners and
general managers But Kuhn
was tbe rule, rather than the
el&lt;cepUon
Realignment of teams along
geographical lines mto four,
SIX-team d!vWons or three
eight-team leagues was the
most discussed issue It's no
secret that the Amencan
League favors realignment,
while some NaUonal League
clubs are opposed
Kuhn sa1d it would take a
unanlmo118 vote at the November meetings In Hawali to
realign by 197l
"There's no doubt that
there's considerable interest
and considerable oppoelUon,"
Kuhn satd "It's difficult to
forecast the outcome "
Alter the joint meeting, the
American and National
leagues met separately
Another joint meeting will be
held today at the Alameda
Plaza Hotel
"This tends to be largely a
dischssion meeting," Kuhn
said "The meatier Items will
crop up a I the winter
meetings"
Realignment would set up
some of the natural rivalries
Utat baaeball doesn't have For
Instance, such teams as the

New York Yankees and Mels
and the Chicago White Sox and
Cubs would be m the same
divtsion
Also discussed was the
proposal to mclude secondplace te81IIS m Ute playoffs
Another proposal would mclude the two non-dtv1s1on
wmnmg teams w1til tile highest
percentages m each league
But Atlanta, whtch made the
proposals, later withdrew
them
"The subject will be examined further and there w1ll be
another report In November,'
Kuhn said
New Orleans, wh1ch 1s
seeking a :JO.game schedule m
1974 for its new Superdome,
made tis presentation Tuesday
night, but Kuhn S81d that Item
wasn't discussed m Wednesday's joint meeting
SECOND HEAT
OOPENHAGEN (UPI)-The
second beat of the European
soling championships Wednesday was won by champ1un Paul
Elvstroem of Denmark despite
changing winds from one to
eight me(!r)l.
•

VICIOI y agamsl SIX defeats He
gave way to Carroll m the
e1ghth mmng afte1 one-out
walks to Mann) Mota and Wes
Parker
Robmsou IS VIctim
It was then that Dave Concepcwn and Darrell Chaney
pulled off one of tile slickest
double plays ever w1tnessed by
Reds fans
That was a play wh1ch
could very well have saved
the game ' offered Anderson
If 11s not made the Dodgers

ed w1th one away m the fourlh hiS bun tmg than h1s p1tchmg
for the Dodgers second run,
Tw1ce Hall beat out bunts for
was the v1cl!m of the Reds hils a ftrsl for htm
larceny
I he second of Halls two
ConcepciOn fieldmg Robm- bunt smgles loaded the bases
son s hot smash behmd second and set the stage £01 Rose s
fl1pped the ball to Chaney s1xth mnng double wh1ch
whose rela) to f~rst complet;,d wrapped up the VIctory
the mmng-&lt;!ndmg double play
The second of Hall s two
The e1ghth mnmgdouble play bunt smgles loaded the bases
was one of four executed by and set the stage for Roses
the Reds The last of the four siXth mmng double wh1ch
ended the game and gave Car- wrapped up the VIctory
roll hts 24th save or the sea
The Reds wmd up the home
son
stand tomghl sendmg Ja ck
have a run m and runners on
Desp1te h1s wmmng perform- B1llmgham agamst Claude Os
first and th~rd
ance Hall found himself an
teen m a btd for a sweep of
Frank Robmson who home• swenng more questwns about the tilree game senes

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

Carlton Blanks Pirates

Fnday's Games

Montreal at Phlla night

East

" 4N PARKERSBURG
Mrs Edna Re1bel and Ml s
Nettle Hayes accompanied
Mrs Wtlham Rathff and her
daughter, Anita, to ParkersW Va , Tuesday

Morganless Reds Increase
Division Lead To 7¥2 Games

30- Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 39

6 30 - NBCNewsJ 4 15, ABCNews61J CBSNews8.10. Folk

tn

NORTII

(IK32
¥ K984

thmgs that \\Ill help hun led lll 11 and .1ll ol these can
p1opeli) be called le at lun ~
\ULI!lg

5

6 00 - News 3, 4 8, 10, 15 Truth or Conseq 6 I Dream of
Jeannie 13 sesame 51 2() Halhoyoga 33

~AVE

teach can mean m an\ thm~s \\hen sonHon~ w~mts to
lt?aln somet hmg ano1he1 pt&gt;r son rna\ bt.• able 1o Uo man\

No doui.Jt a

Tel~~~!?u~sT ~og

\II'IN AT BRIDUE

Word 'Teach' Has
Multiple Meaning

S- ~ Da!lf Semlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aug. 10, 1972

•

his second game wmrung hit m
two days The hit followed a
smgle by Roy White and a
double by Ron Blomberg
Fryman Blanks Yanks
Woody Fryman a veteran of
stx years m the Natwnal
League, blanked the Yankees
on SIX hils as he made his
Amencan League debut m the
opener Aureho RodnguezWlth three htls three runs
batted mand two runs scoredled a Tiger attack that dealt
Mel Stottlemyre h1s 13th loss
Baltimore struggling to
break free of tile lethargy
which has unaccountably overtaken the AL champions of the
last three years recetved four
hit shutout p1tchmg from Dave
McNa lly (who also h1t his hrst
home run of the year) to wm !Is
fourth straight game
The demons continued to
plague Oakland as unhkely
hero Cookte Rojas poled his
first home run ever m Kansas
cr!Y.:. ' h''W~ ~!,l,'i' lli the
seventh mmrg that-..11\ai .the
f~rst c~rcutt surrendered this
year by reliever Darold
Knowles- to start the A's to
their siXth setback m seven
eames
Wood prevailed over the
Angels' Nolan Ryan m a
st1rrmg pitcher's duel and
accounted for tile lone run of
the game wttil a tw&lt;H&gt;ut Single
m the seventilmmng to pull the
White Sox to within a game of
Oakland tn the West and
become the majors' ftrst 19game wmner m the process
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Tuxedo Gene won the featured
e1ghth race at Scwto Downs
Wednesday
m 2 03 4-5 ,
returmng $10 20, $5 and $4 20
Lippe Hanover placed and Si S1
Adios was th1rd
Rtchard Farrmgton drove
Tuxedo Gene and also had wms
m the seventh race, dnvmg
Gretchen Adws, and m the fifth
w1th Bee Boy
In the mghtly double, Dougs
Special and Instant Wmner, 79, pa1d $79
Attendance was 4,494 and the
handle was $205,022

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
'I don t think about records
because they're sometilmg to
look back on ' Steve Carlton
sa1d Wednesda) mght after he
ptlched a three-lutter and hit a
homer to g1ve the hapless
Phh!ladelphla Ph1lless a 2-0
VIctory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates and run his wmnmg
streak to 13 straight games
Carlton hasn't lost smce May
30 and smce that time the Phils
have won 21 games 1ncludmg
tile 13 by Carlton For tile
season, Carlton has almost half
of the club s wms- 18 or 40 Not
smce somebody named
Noodles Hahn won 22 of 52
games for Cmcmnatt m 1901
has a Natwnal League p1tcher
Had such a high percentage of
his team's v1ctor1es
Pluladelph1a manager Paul
Owen sa1d, " he 's been
amazmg, he's hke a machine
and he's the best I've seen
smce (Sandy) Koufax Our
team plays well behmd him
and 1f we can get him a couple
runs, that's usually enough "
Pittsburgh ts tile best hittmg
team m tile majors but he
stopped them on smgles by
lnlernat•on~l

League Stand1ngs
Bv Un1ted Press International

W L Pel GB

T1dewater

65 49 570
63 50 558 l'h
64 53 547 21!1

Syracuse

54 62 446 12

lOUISVIlle

Char leston
Toledo
Rochester

R1chmond
Pen •nsu la

59 57 509 7
58 58 500 8

53 62 471 1211&gt;
44 69 389 20'11

Wednesdays Results

Charleston 3 Lowsvtlle 2
Rochester 3 R1chmond 1
Syracuse 4 Penin sula 3 ( 11
mn•ngs)
Ttdewa1 er 5 Toledo 4 (10 1n
nmgs)

Gene Clmes and Manny Sangulllen and a double by Rennte
Stennett
AI Ohver who went 0-for-4
sa1d, 'He's the best m tile
league he has a good fastball
and curve and great control '
Slargell Goes 0-for-3
Wllhe Stargell, who went 1).
for 3, sa1d, "Hitting agamst
him tomght was hke drtnkmg
coffee w1th a fork
Ph1iadelph1a scored the only
run 1! needed off loser Steve
Blass, IU, m the second mmng W1lhe Montanez led off
w1til a smgle, followed by Greg
Luzmskt's smgle and when the
ball was miShandled by nghtf•elder Gene Clmes, Montanez
scored Carlton tilen added his
homer m the thlfd tnnmg for
Insurance

LEADING~

BATTERS '6t \I (
Nat•onal League
g ab r h pet
Cdeno Hou
92 371 77 130 350
Wilm s Ch1 104 405 66 137 338
Mota LA
81 264 42 88 333
Garr All
97 395 62127 322
Sng"•ln P1t
97 372 42 119 320
Alou 51 L
94 366 42 117 32()
Baker All
80 265 31 84 317
Brock St L 102 435 54 137 315
Slrgll Plf
96 340 55 107 315
Lee soAmertcan68League
251 35 79 315
g ab r h pet
Rud1 Oak
102 415 70 134 323
Shblm KC
89 299 41 94 314
Carew Mm
93 352 41 1o8 307
Berry Cal
76 268 32 82 306
Allen Ch1
104 351 68 107 305
Pn1eta KC 102 38852 118 304
Oils KC
98 37250 113 304
FISk Bos
84 289 53 88 304
Nlay Ch1
102 360 65 107 297
Krkptrk KC
79 255 34 74 290

In other National League
action, Cincmnati topped Los
Angeles, 6-3, Atlanta defeated
Houston, 6-0, San D1ego
downed San Francisco, 5 2,
Montreal beat Chicago, 8-2
and New York stopped St
LoUIS, 8-3
In the Amertcan League,
DetrOit beat New York IHI, but
lost the second game, 2-1,
Boston topped Cleveland, ii-2,
Baltimore routed Milwaukee,
10-0, Kansas C1ty stopped
Oakland, ii-2, Texas edged
Minnesota, 3-2 and Chicago
rupped Califorma I-ll
Clarence Gaston and Garry
Jestadt each drove m a pa1r of
runs m leading tile Padres to
the victory over the G1ants
Fred Norman saved tile game
wtth a fme rehef stmt m the
last two 1nnmgs as he worked
out of a bases-loaded and noneout }am m the etghth by
retlrmg three stra1ght batters
Aaron Hits 2-Run Homer
Henry Aaron htl a two-run
homer and George Stone pltched a m-h1tter as Atlanta
defeated Houston Aaron hit
the 23rd homer of the season
and the 662nd of his career m
tileflrstlnnmgtogtveStoneall
the help he needed Aaron 1s
now only 52 away from the 714
mark
A bases-loaded double by
Pete Rose highhghted a tilreerun s1xth mnmg rally and
helped carry Cmc•nnab to the
d
VIctory over the Do gers
Rose's double, one of his two
hit m tile game, helped Tom
Hall notch his fiftil VICtory In
SIX deCISIOns although he
needed rehef help from Clay
Carroll

Fatrly doubled borne a pa1r of
runs m a f1ve-run runth 1nnmg
as Montreal topped Cubs M1ke
Marshall, now 11).3, p1tched
three uuungs of hitless rehef
ball to get the wm
Ken Boswell and Ed Kranepool each drove home three
runs as New York defeated St
Loms behmd the SIX-lut pllchmg of Jtm McAndrew
McAndrew won hiS th1rd
straight game and boosted his
record to 8-3 wh1ie Don
Durham, 0-0 took the loss

John Now

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
JEAN STYLE

SLACKS
Brushed Den1ms
Plam Blue Den 1m

Sizes 27 38

5.98

To

9.98

Kerm 's Komer

NEW YORK

CLOTHING

HOUSE
W
1ll•ams P1tt
Chi 27
andBench
May Hou
tile e1ghth mmng and Ron
Stargell
C1n r~ti~e~w~tt~h~a~ru~n~-s~co~r~m:g~s~tng~l~e
~m~~~~P;O;M;E~R~O~Y~O~H~I~O~~~~~~~~~~~;~
Home Runs

Nahonal League Colbert SO

FOX TRADED
KANSAS CITY (UPI)..,Jun

25
31
24

Fox, a 6-10 center, Wednesday
was traded by the Kansas CityOmaha Kings of the Nattonal
Basketball Assoc1atton to the
Seattle Super Somes m exchange for 6-5 Don KoJIS and 69 Pete fross, both forwards
BRADSHAW TO Sf ART
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers of the
Nahonal Football league annO\mced Wednesday that Terry
Bradshaw, who has been
recovermg from a leg InJury,
will start at quarterback this
Saturday whop the club meets
tile New York Jets Ill SeatUe

28 Cash Del and Jackson, Oak
21 K1llebrew, Mmn 19 FISk
Bos, Murcer NY and Epstem
Oak 18
•
Runs Batted In
National League Stargell
P1tl 89 Colbert SO 84 , Bench
Cm 80 William s Ch1 74 , May
Hou 72

Tun McCarver snapped a 2-2

Amencan League Allen Ch1

•

Amencan league Allen Ch1
82

Murcer

NY 64

Jackson,

Oak 61 Scott Mil 60 Darwm,
Mlnn 58
PitChing
National League Carlton
Ph1i 18 6 Jenkms Ch1 15 10
Nolan Cm 13 3 Sutton LA 13
6 l1ve l 1ed with 12 v1ctones

AmeriCan League Wood Ch 1
19 11 Lol•c h Del 18 8 Perry
Clev 18 10 Palmer Ball 15 4
Bahnsen Ch1 15 11

ROOF COAliNG

Q-Does the U S pres~
dent ever preSide over sesSIO!IS of Congress?
A- No The v1ce president
serves as the Senate president, and ts addressed there
as "Mr President "

~~

Ford Galaxlt 500.
II g1vea you Fords famous quiet
ride In a car that s built strong

A'~

to last and lasl And now's your

~t'' EAGLES PICNIC "~

BLACK

AT

or~~um

Asbestos Fibre

•375

KYGER CREEK PARK
SUNDAY, AUG. 13

SGAL CAN

fGbeslos Aluminum
Wdh Asbestos Fibre

chance to shoal down Its sUcker
pnce dunng your Ford Team s

§hcowd•own Clearance Sale

'3~11011

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

11 AM· 8 PM
Refreshments and Food '

fc"

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST.

POMEROY
•

' I'
'I

SEE YOUR NEAREST FORD DEALER TODAY
•
I

l

�2- The DaUy Sentmel,Mtddltport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aug 10,1972

EDITORIAL

Mall\

~unong

the

ltll l l'll\

WNd ol s(, llOol

lllllts

.mi.l

1t!ltll me1 :s oJ en uu.llt(lll "ould pt olhlllh s ..l' Ht,!ht un
lo Jam~s &lt;\ Gat fields- ldt:.t ol .1 tllllvt&gt; t stl' ..:on1anwd 111

a

tr1but~;~

to oru: ol hts te.t cht&gt;r"

lng hut ~ 1th unl\ .1 ~ 11l1JIIt' buH h I\ Itt k
Hopkms on one encl and I un11w o th(ll ::tnd \Ottlllt.l\ hd\l
Gl\t&gt; me

:1.

appat~ lu s

and ltbratt es "Jthoul lum
One of the be•l knoy,n &lt;lilies Joh n I loll pu1nts ""I 111
a comment 111 PsH lwlug' 1odL.I\ ntugd:tllle that tht "-Old
alllhe bmldmgs

A 'Horrol
Turns Out
O.K:

FARMER SILO
I'OUND CXJT HE

COULD ONLY
A BONI'IRE
ON A SPECIAL
DESIGNATED
DAY

•

EAST

¥1
tQJ1412
4A96

tAK8
"'Q4

• Q8!!,4
.J652

SOUTII (0)
(IAIO~

of homeh philosoph• and usclul mfo1mat 1on sunpl) II\
Slltmg on one end ol a bench ilslenmg to old M31 k shoot
the b1 eeze on the olhe1 end ~n\ one who has ne\ eJ h,ul
thiS kmd or expeuence w1th a teachei - II Sing teache1
m 1ls w1dest sense-has m1ssed somet hm g
As long as Mark Hopkms to nlm e&lt; Ius teaclung to
keepmg h1s audience ente1lamed 0 K Be\ ond Ihal how
ever he and John Holt pa1t compa ny
The ope1at1ve ph1ase 111 Holt s del1mtwn IS Wh&lt;n
He goes on to

WEST

(IJ7t.

studenl ~.:o uld pick up a s1zable st olt

someone wants to lea1 n somethmg

6~

(IIOR71

• AQ 103

• 109

l.

.KJ$2
Both vulnerable
Wesl North F.t.&lt;l South

Guitar 33
7 00 - Elec Co 2(), Course of Our Times 33 Let's Make A Deal
3 Dick Van Dyke 4, What s My L~ne&gt; 8 Big Red Jubilee 15
News 6 Wild W1ld West 13
7 30 - I'll See You In Court 4 Dragnet 8 In The Know 10
Chapter 33 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The Truth 6, In The
Know 10, Chapter 33, Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The
, Truth 6, W1ld Kingdom 10, Mr Rogers 20
8 DO - Alias Sm1th and Jones 13 NBC Adventure Theatre 3, 15
My World and Welcome To 118, Jean Shepherd's America 20,
33 Bob Brauns Hawaiian Holiday 4, Ask The Governor 10
a 30 - MyThreeSonsB 10 JazzSet20. 33
9 00- Longstreet 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 Hollywood TeleviSIOn
Theatre 20, 33, Movte 'The Bobou 8 10

10 oo - Owen Marshall6, 13 News20 Bobby DarlnJ 4 15 Paul
Nuchlms 33
11 00-NewsJ 4 6 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 Movie 'The
Alphabet Murders' 8 Movie 'Away Ail Boals 10 Mov1e
'' The River Changes" 13
100-News4

1 30 - News 13

FRIDAY, AUGUST 11
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
I •
Dbl
Redbl l¥
Farmtlme 10
Pa~•
2¥
3. 4¥
Farm Report 13
Pass
Pas.li
Pa ~"'
Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8, Blue R1dge Quartet
Open m~ lead- t Q
13 News 6 Herald 1of Truth 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
llv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv 7 00- Today3 4 15. CBS NewsB, 10
30- Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
One way to wm any bndge 87 00
- Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 6 Sesame
event IS to overbid and then
Street 33.
make your contract Bobby 8 30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack LaLanne 13
Goldman s one-club opening 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Peyton Place 13 Romper Room 8 Phil
was JUSt above a mm1mum
Dona~ue15 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3 T•mmy &amp;
Lassie 6. Mr Rooers 33 Friendly Junction 10
West's dtamond overcall was
- Truth o' Conseq 3, Mike Douglas6 One Life to L•ve 13
based on a SIX-card SUit and 9 30Electric
Co 33 My Three Sons 8
general optimism Nancy 10 00- Dinah
Shore 3 15 Lucille Ball 10 Phil Donahue 8 DICk
Alpaugh s double was one of
Van Dyke 13. Halhoyoga 33
those newfangled negative 10 30 - Concentration J, 15, Phil Donahue 4 Beverly Hillbillies
doubles for takeout East's
8 In School Instruction 33 Spill Second 13 My Three Sons
10
redouble showed strength
10
45Lucille R1vers 6
and Bobby and Nancy over
11
00
Family Afla~r 8 10 Love American Style 13 Com
b1d to four hearts
munlque6 SaleoltheCentury3 15 Elec Co 20
The contract IS a horror 11 30- Hollywood Squares 4, 1l Love of Llle 8 Bew1tched 6, 13,
Sesame St 20
There are four lostng tncks
12
00
- Jeopardy 3 I~ Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
plus all sorts of handling
Local
News 10 News 13 Contact 8
charges but watch whal
12 JO ~ 3 W's Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split
happened
Second 6. Electnc Co 33
E~st cashed h1s top dta
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 , Divorce Court 8 Green
monos and led a th~rd Thts
Acres 10 Watch Your Child• 15 International Cookbook 33
gave Bobby a chance to 1 30- 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15 , Lets Make a Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10 Designing Women 33
d1scard a losmg spade and
2
00
- 0aysDfOur L•ves3, 4 15 NewlywedGame13 Virginia
111ff 1n dumm)
Graham 6 Love Is Splendored Thing 8, 10 Soc relies In Tran
Slllon 33
A club was led from dum·
my and West plunked hts ace 2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Dating Game 13 Guiding L1ght 8 10 ,
Even~ng at Pops 33
rtght on Bobbfs Jack Th1s
Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6 13 , Secret
represented mistake number 3 00Storm B 10 Tennis Anyone' 33
two by the defense The 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 IS Edge of Nights 10
th~rd d1amond lead gave
Jeff's Collie 13 Oft The Record 33 One Life to Ltve6
Bobby a chance to get rid of 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame 51 20 33 Flint
stones6 13 Batman&amp; Movie Lets Do It Again' 10
a spade loser ThiS rush to
take the ace made 1t pos 4 30- Green Acres 3 I Love Luch 6 Virginian 8 Password 13
Merv Griffin 4 Andr Griffith 15
Sible for Bobby to pull
5
00
- It Takes A Thle 4, Wagon Tra in 3 Mavemk 13, Elec
trumps and score h1s clubs
Co 33 , Mister Rogers 20 Dick Van Dykel5 Big Valley6
West actually led a fourth 5 JO - Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 33
diamond Bobby ruffed m 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10, 15 NBC News 8, 10 Truth or Conseq 6 I
of Jeannie 13 , Sesame St 20, Hathayoga 33
dummy East could have 7 00Dream
Porter
Wagoner 3 Dick Van Dyke 4 News6 10 Whars
helped out by overru!flng
My Line 8 Elec Co 20 Wild Wild West 13 Sam! 15
but East dJscarded the queen
Masterpiece Theatre 33
of clubs Bobby was ready 7 30- To Tell The Truth 6 Dragnet 8 Adam 12 3 1 Dream of
Jeannle4, Gove•norandJ J 10 Mr Rogers20
He played dummy's ktng of
11 umps !messed agatnst the 8 00 - Washington Week 1n Review 20, O'Hara U S Treasury
8 Book Beat 33 Brady Bunch 6 13 Baseball 3 4 Partners
Jack drew trumps and made
15 , All Star Game Prev1ew 10
h1s ImposSible game
8 30 - Partridge Family 6 13 Movie' Kill a Dragon 15, High
(NEWSPAPU ENTUPIUS£ ASSN )
School Football 10, Yo Soy Chicano 1 ~0 n33. ,~ 1
, , ..,
!~IW 1 '
9 00 - Room 222 13, Dymplans '72 6 Moi/(e '?eve~ Thleves •{I
9 30- NBC News Speclall 4 IS Odd Coupre6 u Fine Art of
Gooklng 2o, 33
10 OO - News20 LoveAmerlcanStyle6, 13 Ron Dellums33
10 30 - Dr Simon Locke 3 Dr In The House 4 Rollin On River
The b1ddm11: has been
15, News 20 Wash1ngton Week In Review 33
We~t
North
East
11 00-NewsJ 4,6 ~ 10, 13,15
I¥
Dble
Pass
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnn'( Carson 15 Movie The Black
Pass
3.
Pass
Knight' B Movie' Curse o the Mummy s Tomb' 10 Movie
Pass
3•
Pass
Tne Tall Men' 13
Pass
5¥
PaM
1 00 - Roller Derby 4, Movie The Unearthly' 10

SCi\

6 00 6 15 6 20 6 25-

But 1f b1 teachmg we mean detldlllg f01 sumenn&lt;
else what 11 "''' be good fo1 hull to learn and then a1
rangmg thai leal mng mlo a seq uence of I asks wh1ch ""
Impose on h•m such teacl1111g 1s without exceptiOn the
enemv p1 eventer and deslro)er ol lea1mng
Thus consigned to one or the outer cu cles of hell b1
thiS typiCall) exheme ani! establishment statement
BY JACK O'BRIAN
drmks are okay, from tea or Cokes to local
ts every teache1 who ever d•v•dcd a subJet l mto a se
AS IN GAMBUNG,
quence of leal nm g tasks that he 1m posed on hiS student s
orange and concoctions, 1t's been nght there
LE1 US PREY
Cons1gned to 1rrelevanc" IS eve1y teache1 who bemg
hard by the Span1sh Steps at 86 Vta Condotll,
NEW YORK (KFS) -Europe at Random
older and mo1e expe11enced than hiS &gt;fudent s not o 111
across from Gucc1 s, at least Since 17l2, acknows what hiS students don 1 know b11t thmks he kno\\s Tne Queen Ehza beth 2 floated a shipload of folks
cordmg to the untidy memo1rs of Gtacomo
what 11 would be good fm them to kno"
who ~eemed apathehc about Sabbath worship
Cassanova
Couple of years ago, It started
Indeed , conSigned to m elevan cy would be all or human Jews have their own tmy synagogue aboard but
losmg money (It's m the highest-rent comh1sto1 y 1f a student dec1ded he d1dn t want to lea111
II did so-so Sat busmess, Cathohcs and memal dtstnct m Rome, comparable to 5th
about 11
Protestants shared the mov1e theater Sunda}
Ave m the iiOs) and the Ctty of Rome Sl;lved 11
But then accm dmg to engmee1 and plulosophe1 H
mormng, separately, 11 wasn t SRO there either from a fate worse tilan debt a short while ago,
Buckmmster Fulle1 111 another lvplta lh ext~eme stall
No more big Sh1p s Pool' a Ia the nch pmes f1rst dubbmg 11 a national monument, lmally
ment 'The past IS Illelc,anl to the p•e•ent
Fuller IS a sort of latter da1 Ma1 k Hopkms upon whost of yesler)ear be•t was a hal pool, meamng taking 1t over and operating 11, for 11 was about
bench 11 IS c111 rentlv fashiO nabl e to s11 But 1f he Iller alii ten equal contnbutors ($10) and a waiter exto be turned mto a shoe shop, and that S11llply
means what he says by lhls statem en t he IS gtnlt1 ol tracted one card our shipboard fnend, Mr
wouldn't
do nghl by the shades of so many
fotstmg permcJow; non sense on h1 s msuspectln g 'oun g Winkleman won the $100 (the old ship's pools
admirers
ghostly gemuses It's marvelous for tis amrf en went above $10 000) and managed to top
If he means somellung else If he means thai new p• ob
bience 1f not liS sandwiches and hauls m not only
I ems demand new solutiOns then Ab1 aham Lmtoln sa1d the $100 hat-tnck by wuuung at Bmgo seems no
tounsls but Romans, probably the most popular
It better The dogmas of lhe qu1et past a1e madequate b1g garnblmg pools are countenanced aboard
meetmg place for CIVIlized folk, tile hlpptes
to the stormy present
now that the QE2 ca mes lis own gambling congregate m smelly d1sarray st1ll on the
Lmcoln of com se was lot tunat~ enough. to esca pe the casmo w1th roulette, craps, chemm de fer and
otherwise lovely Spamsh Steps
stult1fymg mtluence of nmmal sthool mg w1th all •Is 1111
21 operated by a London gambling
Last year Rome had sc.ds of strtkes and
posed seq11ences of Jearn1n g tasks
sl2'd1cate
Its a m1m Las Vegas With far
unrest but sllll hiked tounsm 11 pet , tills year
better manners, guests m dmner clothes mostly,
early statistiCs suggests a boost of 20 pet
an elegant Sight Authonlles never solved the
compared to that Organ12ed touriSJII (charter
robberv of the QE2's cas mo vaul t last wmter
planes busloads of touriSts) causes a love-hate
durmg the crUise season 11 was cons1dered an reactwn mhotels rooms, meals, tours, etc are
mSJde JOb and lho no one co uld be pmned down, prepared for tile hordes , delllXe hotels fear tl
there were several qUiet sackmgs of casmo
w1ll debase the fmest personal servtce wh1ch
bosses
'NICE GIRLS ' DON'T WIN •
separates great European tradtllon from
In Rome, we sat htgh m the Alban Hills computenzed Impersonal Amertcan effiCiency,
Rap
trymg to tune m the DemocratiC convention v1a but tilal s where the btg money 1s, so 11 1s
"Be amce liltle g1rl and I'll bu) you some bubble gwn
Voice of Amertca but 1t was mostly futile ex- spendmg - wildly
Be nice at the dentist's and he'll g1ve you a balloon '
cept
for a I a m news scraps Our old radio
"Be nice in school and get good grades and you ll get that
The AmeriCan dollar IS m tile fore1gn
sport of DXmg (tw1ddlmg dials to haulm d1stant doghouse tile travel agency which arranged
new dress "
"Go out w1th that mce boy and you'll get to wear your new statwns) broughl m Overwhehmngly American our Pan Am tickets back to N Y Ctty pleaded
Jazz from unlikely places, such as LoUis Arm- Wltil us to cash our check elsewhere and pay
dress II
strong
from Mumch the unmistakably tuneless til em mhre seems 11 takes up to 90 days for a U
"Hewasn'tso mce• Oh well, keep on bemg mce yourself and
glamor of Marlene D1etrtch attackmg 'Falhnk S check to clear 'and we're frightened of the
' you'll find the nght guy "
All my life I've had this 'be mce' JW'Ik handed to me They m Luff Agam' from Zagred, Nat King Cole from shaky money market," we were told
It's
Yugoslavia endless Amencan record stars and expected the lire momPntarlly w1ll devaluate
say If I'm "a mce gu-1" everythmg Will turn out JUSt great
Well, maybe 1t works w1th bubble gum aQd balloons, but fa1r lmtlallons thereof from all over Germany
agam probably early m the fall Meanwhile
dating boys tsn't the same as 'Hand tills good k1d a candy bar ' what seemed dreary propaganda from Russ1a Roman restaurants haven t zoomed their prtces
I'm "nice" and I get hurt The !elias end up saymv 'You re leavened by an occaswnJl anc1ent-type small much shghtly but sllll considerably below U
chamber orchestra ~ avermg through pseudo - S and certamly N Y City levels
loo ntce "In other words, 'I'm bored w1til you '
1 30 - News A, 13
You South hold
I trted bemg mce m anotiler way to tile boy I really fell for, popular p1eces and then wham Shostakov1ch
R1storante G Ramere1, at 26 Vta Mano de
bnlhantly
\Ia
grea
t
symphomc
sounds
but he just used me and now he's w1th a loudmouth who probably
Fwn,1s an elegant eatery wtth fine Roman food (IHH3¥Z tAK9f3.762 ~:::~ .:.-.:::::: ..:.. .... ..•.,,:,:(~''''''''''''''
Swedish
stations
seemed
to
flmg
tile
most
What do you do no\\.,
never earned anythmg for bemg 'mce "
m the middle of Old Rome also moderate by U
A-Ju!lt b1d (In spad~ \ ou
So send this "sweet thing" a b1g bouquet of roses For a modern Jazz n01ses mto the a1r modern up to
S levels
don I ha\ c an honor lh lh\: ~Uit
say
M1les
Davts
,
an
Isolated
Charlie
Parker
booby priZe&gt; She sure found out "mce g1rls don't lim" Nmo's at II V1a Borgognona has two tomd
TODAY S QUF.STIO~
recording and one fiddle acrobatic by the late
SWEARING OFF
spec1allles we recommend enthuSiastically to
Yom
partner continues to sax
Stuff Sm1th, not easy to hold the sound steady
~
expenmental palantes penne all'arrabbl81a clu bs What do yOu do now"
however
DearS 0
Answer tomorro"
(an 'angry" pasta) for sturdy tummtes, d1tto
,)
.
ln tereshng, the slow deliberate careful
I'll bet there Isn't a bastcally ' mce," good-hearted
biStecca d1 costs all'arrabbtata, a steak sizzled
It's my day to wonder WHY
(therefore somewhat eas1ly duped) person m the world who at enunc1allon of speakers on tile VOA, usefully m the same garhc-herbs-peppers sauce and It's SenJ 51 fo• JACOBY MODERN book
s1mple
for
prtmlhve
Enghsh
learners
behind
Why It Is that, out of hundreds of household appliances,
some time or otber hasn't mourned, ' Ntce guys don I wm 1"beautiful when It's angry
to
'Wm
at
Bttdgt
'(c/o
tltu
ntwj
the Iron Curiam but 11 sounded consistently as
and resolved to get tougher
For a fme day m tbe sun and water, motor paptrJ fJ 0 loJ 419, R.ad1o C1ty vacuum cleaners are sold door-to-door?
1f
they
were
spealung
to
pupp1es
Why Is that some of the world's moot celebrated and revered
But they seldom JOIIl the 'black hats because they aren't
out to Marmo, 14 mlles south of Rome, and have Slol10n, New Yo•k, NY 10019
Italy's hosting some 5 ffillh on touriSts thiS
books - the Holy Bible, the dictionary, and the encyclopedia built that way and, though you wont belteve 11 now, they usually
lunch at Heho Cabala and a swim before and
year,
spending
some
$4
btll10n
and
of
all
are
peddled the same way•
come out wmners m the long run
after (look around, the lazy fellow reading
I
European countms the Itahans m shops and
Why 18 tt that soap products and detergents are the exclusive
That IS, if they aren't pWlhovers, but learn to be selectiVe
under the umbrella m1ght be me), lunch prtce
hotels
and
restaurants
alone
seem
apprectaltve
domain
of radio and television - at advertising pr1ces that must
-HELEN
covers your sw11ll, too
Up m the nearby
always
to
the
pomt
of
warm
CIVIhty
run the cost of the product up quite a bit• (Can you Imagine
+++
moun tam town of Frascat1 (great wine) IS
We
raved
about
R1storanle
Augustea
m
someone rmging your doorbell and amounclng, "Procter and
Swearmg OFF
RIStorant;, Cacc1aru, run by Armando and
yesterdays
column,
lots
of
others
are
worth
Gamble calling'")
ESPEClALLY 1f they aren't pushovers and learn to be
Tommaso Cacc1am, everytillng fresh, tasty, a
tippmg
our
lastebuds
m
gustatory
appreciation
Why could ltpoMlbly rain more than two inches on July 31m
selective'
see-through glass kitchen wall where you can
The
Caffe
Greco
on
V1a
Condottt
remams
a
By
United
Press
loleroatioual
Charlestoo,
whlle the Gallipolis - Pt Pleasant - Middleport Don't change tile way you are Just be careful m choosmg
watch the pasta bemg made and just-caught fish
splendid
meellng
place
1f
somewhat
Jess
than
Today
IS Thursday, Aug 10,
Pomeroy
area
felt not a single drop•
your friends 'N1ce guys" sometimes get hurt because they re
wngghng It's a fresh memory that makes us
superb m food tis sandwiches by N Y stan- wish we were back there 3Jlam Oh, well-41ext the223rd day of 1972with 143 to
Wby .do people misspell so frequenUy the words they use
attracted to "not-so-nice guys, ' who use them
dards
are
skimpy
(one
shce
of
ham
or
cheese
follow
every
day• (Nothing makes me quite so Irritated as misspelled
Smarten up but don't be b1tter - SUE
year
seems tasteless m a hotdog-size roll ) but the
The moon Is between Its new worda on a restaurant menu- and the fancier the cafe, the more
phase
and first quarter
trksome the boo-boo )
Dear Rap
The morning stars are
Why did the fates conapire to have the Shadle Brtdge at Pt
Here's a new thing m weddmg announcements These two
Mercury,
VenWI
and
Saturn
Pleasant
cut to one-way traffic at the very time the Pomeroydon't g1ve a hoot about gtfls 1
The evenmg stars are Mars Mason Bridge was closed, and everyone had to detour around •
We just rece1ved an mYitatron to. the wedding of a college
and Jup1ter
Those born on this date are (It rea)ly wasn't the fault of tbe Highway Department in etther
frtend Enclosed was a little engraved card &gt;~hlch read
under
the sign of Leo
State, but it was darned Inconvenient )
"There are m1lhons of poor who are cold and hungry and
Why could the pushers of another low-voltage game show
President Herbert Hoover
there are so many mequaltt1es tilal tilts makes us aware of our
was
born
Aug
,
called
"Tbe Parent Game" sell this spln.off of other spin-offs to
rtches Therefore, if you had planned to g1ve us a gift, we would
10 1874
On tills day in history
practically every televlalon market m the country, at a time
apprectate a conlflbulton mstead to your favorite chanty or
1n
1776,
a
committee
of
when
other game shows seem to be glutting the market• (Yes,
cause so that, because of our marriage, life for others may be a
little better Peace "
dwbetes has a defect Ill a problem There has been a Benjamin Franklin, John It'll be seen locally, on WSAZ-TV )
B• Lawrence Lamb M ll
Adams and Thomas Jefferson
Why hasn't someone been killed In tile 5oshawful trafftc
portiOn of the pitUitary gland
Pretty neat, huh• - IMPRESSED
llc,Jr Dr Lamb - Can you that rests just beneath the lol of pubhclty in recent
suggested that the United '" crush that resulted when the new Holzer Medical Center and
gtv e me an} m£01 matwn on br am The gland normally years about the dyslextc
States
adopt "E Pluribus Gallla Junior Fair were handling Incredible amounts of traffic at
ch1ld,
who
has
difficulty
In
Dear Impressed
water d•abeles I never heard produces hormone wh1ch pre
readmg
and
wntmg
There
ts
Unum" as !be motto of the certain times of day• (Because of some darned good traffic
We're Impressed, too (But somehow we doubt that this will of 11 unl1l recentl) t I have vents too much water from
an
opposite
disorder,
the
hy
Great
Seal of tbe newly Ln-. control people, that's why I just asked to get a kind word for
the
•egula1
d1abetes1
and
I
start a trend too many people sllll "g1ve a hoot about the loot ")
bemg passed by the kidneys perlex1c child These ch ldren
am
ve1
v
mte1
ested
Does
11
dependent
nation
them Into print )
-HELEN AND SUE
If msuff•ctent amounts of th1s
1equn e the same d1 et as the hormone are produced then are compulsive readers and
Why don't tbe Avco Broad"'sting people recognize that
+++
1egu lm diabetes or a d1ffe• the usual control to prevent are able to read Without ever
bemg
taught
to
do
so
TwoDear Helen and Sue
The
Dailoo
t!a..&amp;'llltl
Waite
Hoyt, a great old guy and a man with a very good Intellect,
ent one ~
passmg
too
much
water
from
year
old
youngsters
reading
"1
.mu
is
finally
getting a llttle too old to cut II• (In a recent series, he
Hoorah for 'Respectable Parents' who learned from tiletr
Dear 1\eader - It s an en th e k1dney 1s lost So mdlVId· volummous material have
0
~~~H~lN,.HE
studioualy mlapronounced a Chicago pitcher's name, then
kids that pottsn't harmful and are now for legalizatiOn
lu elv d1ffe1 e nt d1sease from uals wtth th1s defect will pass been reported Desptte their
MEIGS
MASON
UEA
spelled It to conform With his llllSCue- and fumbled another
While I was m Panama for 18 montils, I smoked grass all
sugar d1abetes 1 he kmd large volumes of urme fre- great fac1hly m reading WlthCHE~n:.~/:~NEHILL,
player's name just two or tlree days later)
of dwbetes I p1esume )OU quently Thev wtll also re oul be•ng mstructed they
dlly, every day, wtth no bad effects
ROI,RT
HOEFLICH,
Why 18 the photography SO good on "Mannix"? IS that the
Beheve me, if everyone m the world would have a JOint have Js 1ela ted to msufflcent place their water loss by are retarded and are said to
Ctty Edttor
msuhn 111 the panc~eas and dr.nkmg lat ge amounts of have bram damage They
Pub I JShea da&gt;ly eocept reason I watch it, when I don't even like m111t CO(lll-llnd-robbera
before gomg about datly tasks, there wouldn't be a war to a lu gh level of blood sugar
water
The
slmJianty
to
Saturday
by The OhiO Volley shows'
don
t
just
read
children's
protest
The usual dwbettc, unless sugar dtabeles" ends there books They read newspapers Publ•sh•n; Company 111
Why Is tbe lettering on the water tower above Bob Evans
In addttion, Helen and Sue, have you ever stopped to ask the d1sease ts cont1 oiled smce 11 IS not related to and novels How In the world cour1 sr Pomeroy o••o
W69
Bu••noss
Off•ce
Phont
Farma
at Rio Grande placed in such a wav
that you can't read It
yourselves what the Indians had m tilose peace p1pes while they loses a lot of sugar m the sugar Ill any way As you do they ever qevelop this 99'2 2154 Ed1f0r11 1 Phont 9P2
~
1111ne To flush oul thts ex· would expect from the above super capac1ty to read With 1t51
when traveUns from any direction -except perh8pl by air•
were tryrng to gam freedom and peace from the white man• cess
sugat
the
person
w11l
Second
Class
postage
Pl&gt;d
It
'
Why did they take the lllllle of the ....,....,"""
, _ _ lo~l~.
explanatwn
these
1110111u
out mslructlon • Do they In·
FOR IT
OhiO
..-a•aav - "---~
I.NIM:\l
pass a lot of water To re uals do not have to go on a hent thetr readmg capacity• Pamerov
N 1 1 ' on a 1 1 d.. r t "• n D on two fllle novell, a great movie, arxl a line teleplay by Earl
place the water loss he has dtabehc dtet m lerms of All of this suggests that there represrntattvt BOitintll!
Hamner ...... u. ""yh
......t ,.. w ood In Appalachia (II could have taken
Dear For It
to d11nk a Jot of water fhu s carbohydrate control nor are may be more to mherlted Galloghor Inc fl , hst &lt;1na
SI,
~ew
York
Clly,
New
York
place
right
around here) -and changed the aeries to "The
Your last question isn't exactly the best recommendation for the t y p 1c a I uncont1 oiled they helped With msuhn or knowledge than has been Subscr•pfton rttn Dt
.,
dtabell&lt; whose diSease Is any other such medtcmes suspected Its a very rare IJvored by corr.er wtlo.u ~Waltooa Ill' television?
pot While the Indians got peaceful, the1r country got ' took'" +++
suff1cenll
y advanced drmk s commonl~ used In pat•ents diSorder but m a way tt's re 1\oadablt ~0 ctnfl p!r week
SUE
8~ Motor Route where carritr
lots ol water and passes w1th sugar diabetes Usually freshmg It's good to know serv &gt;ee not ovalloble One
ON THE TV DIAL: Bob BralUl, "5040Ciub" host pn WLWC+++
I a r g" e volumes of ur me they are g1ven mcdtcattons that there are still a lot of monlh Sill By moll .n O••o TV aetspriJIIe.llmee.......•-toshowtheplctureshelookonhlB
Dear For It
"'
- r - - ...
frequently 1 hese two char- that w111 help the k1dnev con mtere~tmg facels of hfe to anct W va . One vear Sl• 00
S••
months
S7
JS
Throe
VICitlon
(to
Hawlil).
lt'sata .. Ohloatllllhould 1111Joy a unique
rdon't thmk much of your next-to-tbe-last sentence ••Jher' If actenstJcs are s1m1l ar to wa trol the water output
be solved
monrhs S&lt; SO Subscrlpt,on
1-'
_,__ In_..,_., Gov J·'- J Qllfl-·
ler
d1abetes
'
prier tncludes sundav Tlmtt
lOr Ul JrQI '-VIIIVlllllltl'e
WJW.J:I
, ut••
...._..,wwen
everyone were constantly stoned tbe world might go up msmuke
(NEWSPAPER lNTERPill5f ASSN)
1
Senl•nel
tJII!Ionanolfrom
.
b
u
t
from
onllnlry
dt~,IIIGitrl
Here
1s
an
mteres
tmg
Drifting smoke, that IS - HELEN
I •
nn With water
111111n
around Columq, Il'sat on WBNB-TV.

·!Tube Talk:~f
~- ...

By Paul Crabtree

Today's
Almanac

-J&gt;R. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Two Different Diabetes Diseases

..

rrun

a

.

Mator League Standlnps
By United Press International
National League
East
Wlpclgb
Prttsburgh
65 39 625
New York
56 47 544 sv,
Ch1cago
55 51 519 11
St LOUIS
51 52 495 13'h
Mcntreal
46 56 451 18
Ph•ladelph•a 40 64 385 25
West
wlpctgb
Clncmnat1
64 39 621
Houston
58 48 547 7'12
Los Angeles 53 50 575 11
Atlanta
49 58 458 17
San Francasco 48 60

San Diego

CINCINNATI(UPI)-Sparky
Anderson looked at the calendar
"I m pred!Clmg It'll be on
th1s date,' sa1d the Cmcmnall
Reds manager
Sparky s fmger rest;,d on
Aug 19 'We'll be playmg the
New York Mels, ' sa1d Anderson
He was predicting the dale
he expects Pete Rose s battmg
mark to reach 30Q
' 1hat w•ll g1ve htm mne
games,' pomt;,d out Anderson
Rose IS battmg 288 after rap
pmg out two hils, one a basesloaded double, and dnvmg
home three runs Wednesdav
mght, as Tommy Hall and Clay
Carroll teamed up to p1lch the

444 181f".l

42 63 400 23

Wednesday's Results

Montreal 8 Ch1cago 2
San D1ego 5 San Fran 2
Atlanta 6 Houston 0
Ph1la 2 Pittsburgh 0
Ctnclnnatt 6 Los Ang 3

New York 8 St Louis 3
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All T1mes EDT&gt;
Montreal (Mcore 3 51 at
Ch1cago (Hands 9 7) 2 30 p m
Houston I Roberts 9 5) at
Atlanta I N1ekro 10 101 8 05
pm
Los Angeles (Osteen 12 8) at
Clncmnatl IB•IImgham 7 101
8 05 p m
(Only games scheduled)

Reds to a 6-3 v1ctory over the stopped me with that l).for-5
Los Angeles Dodgers
The next da) Rose mijde two
Anderson ts also betting that hits Then came Tuesday
Rose w1ll be h1ttmg 300 at the mght s 19-mmng game when
end of the season • "! thmk 11 Pet;, went !).for~
w111 be 300 ' he said
Rose has 124 hils now so h1s
Rose IS b1ddmg for h1s e1ghth chances of reat hmg h1s covet
stra1ght 300 or better season
ed goal of 200 are m1ghty
So far 1! has been a real shm
sl! uggle
That would be 76 hils m the
Nlekro Stops Him
52 remammg games, • said An' I thought I was gomg to derson 'Thais an awful lot of
get to 300 when the Braves hils'
were m town last week, sa1d
Hall moved mto the starling
Rose
rolatwn when Gary Nolan was
Before gomg agamst Phil struck down w1th arm m1scne.s
N1ekro last Sunday Rose was shmllv before the all star
balling 293
game wound up w1th h1s fifth
• ' I had made seven h1ls m
the three games before fa cmg
N1ekro sa1d Pete ' Then he

San Fran at Houston ntght

Tigers, Yanks
Split Twinhill

St LouiS at P11ts n•ght
New York at Ch1cago
Cmcl at Atlanta n1ght
Los Ang at San D1ego n1ght
Amencan league

w I pet g b

Detro• I

Baltimore
New York
Boston

58 47 5S2
57 47 548

54 49 524 3'I'
The Yankees spilt a double
53 50 515 4
Cleveland
48 57 457 10
header w1th the Ttgers Wed
Milwaukee
41 64 390 17
nesday, wmrung, 2-1 after
West
losmg
6-ll The spht left the
wlpctgb
Oakland
62 44 585
New Yorkers three games
Ch1cago
60 44 577 1 behind DetrOit
Mmnesota
l4 48 529 6
Ball!more remamed m
Kansa s C1ty 50 54 48t 11
Cal1forn1a
47 58 448 141;2 second place, Just a game off
Texas
42 64 Jq6 20
the pace, w1til a 10-0 rout of
Wednesday's Results
Mtlwaukee
and Oakland
Texas 3 Minnesota 2
continued to slump w1th a ii-2
Boston 5 Cleveland 2
Detroit 6 New York 0 lsi
loss at the hands of Kansas
New York 2 DetrOit 1 2nd
C1ty
Balli more 10 Mllw 0
In other AL contests, Boston
Kan City 5 Oakland 2
Chicago 1 Callforma 0
beat Cleveland, ii-2, Texas
Today's Probable Pitchers
stopped Mmnesota, 3-2, and
I All T1mes EDTI
Baltimore !Palmer 15 4) at Clucago blanked Cahforma 1Milwaukee (Parsons 9 9) 2 30 0 behind durable Wilbur Wood
pm
In the Nallonal League,
Detroit (Coleman 12 10) at
New York I Klme 12 4) 7 35 Pittsburgh blanked Philadel
pm
ph1a , 2-0, New York troW!ced
Ch1cago (Bradley 12 9) at St Lows, 8-3, Montreal man
Oakland I Holtzman t4 9) 11
handled Ch1cago, 8-2 C1n
p m
8
Minnesota ICorbm 6 51 at cmnatl defeated Los Angeles,
California (May48 ) II p m
6-3, Atlanta shut out Houston, 6(Only games scheduled I
0, and San Diego stopped San
Frtdav's Games
Francisco, ii-2
Chicago at Oakland, night
Mmnesola at Calif, n~ht
" Cel~rl1)o ,SIIl\C1\~ tapped a
t&lt;ar City at Toxat,&lt;-n h~, • · .. two-outslrTgle oftreli~ver )'red
&lt;lteve at Detlpll ~lg I
Scherman m the seventil mnmg
Boston al Ball. nlgt\f '·
Mllw at New York n1ght
of the second game to produce

Realignment
Major Issue
KANSAS CITY, Mo (UPI)Baseball Commisstoner Bowte
Kuhn was singularly umnformatlve Wednesday after tile
first joint meetmg of major
league club owners and
general managers But Kuhn
was tbe rule, rather than the
el&lt;cepUon
Realignment of teams along
geographical lines mto four,
SIX-team d!vWons or three
eight-team leagues was the
most discussed issue It's no
secret that the Amencan
League favors realignment,
while some NaUonal League
clubs are opposed
Kuhn sa1d it would take a
unanlmo118 vote at the November meetings In Hawali to
realign by 197l
"There's no doubt that
there's considerable interest
and considerable oppoelUon,"
Kuhn satd "It's difficult to
forecast the outcome "
Alter the joint meeting, the
American and National
leagues met separately
Another joint meeting will be
held today at the Alameda
Plaza Hotel
"This tends to be largely a
dischssion meeting," Kuhn
said "The meatier Items will
crop up a I the winter
meetings"
Realignment would set up
some of the natural rivalries
Utat baaeball doesn't have For
Instance, such teams as the

New York Yankees and Mels
and the Chicago White Sox and
Cubs would be m the same
divtsion
Also discussed was the
proposal to mclude secondplace te81IIS m Ute playoffs
Another proposal would mclude the two non-dtv1s1on
wmnmg teams w1til tile highest
percentages m each league
But Atlanta, whtch made the
proposals, later withdrew
them
"The subject will be examined further and there w1ll be
another report In November,'
Kuhn said
New Orleans, wh1ch 1s
seeking a :JO.game schedule m
1974 for its new Superdome,
made tis presentation Tuesday
night, but Kuhn S81d that Item
wasn't discussed m Wednesday's joint meeting
SECOND HEAT
OOPENHAGEN (UPI)-The
second beat of the European
soling championships Wednesday was won by champ1un Paul
Elvstroem of Denmark despite
changing winds from one to
eight me(!r)l.
•

VICIOI y agamsl SIX defeats He
gave way to Carroll m the
e1ghth mmng afte1 one-out
walks to Mann) Mota and Wes
Parker
Robmsou IS VIctim
It was then that Dave Concepcwn and Darrell Chaney
pulled off one of tile slickest
double plays ever w1tnessed by
Reds fans
That was a play wh1ch
could very well have saved
the game ' offered Anderson
If 11s not made the Dodgers

ed w1th one away m the fourlh hiS bun tmg than h1s p1tchmg
for the Dodgers second run,
Tw1ce Hall beat out bunts for
was the v1cl!m of the Reds hils a ftrsl for htm
larceny
I he second of Halls two
ConcepciOn fieldmg Robm- bunt smgles loaded the bases
son s hot smash behmd second and set the stage £01 Rose s
fl1pped the ball to Chaney s1xth mnng double wh1ch
whose rela) to f~rst complet;,d wrapped up the VIctory
the mmng-&lt;!ndmg double play
The second of Hall s two
The e1ghth mnmgdouble play bunt smgles loaded the bases
was one of four executed by and set the stage for Roses
the Reds The last of the four siXth mmng double wh1ch
ended the game and gave Car- wrapped up the VIctory
roll hts 24th save or the sea
The Reds wmd up the home
son
stand tomghl sendmg Ja ck
have a run m and runners on
Desp1te h1s wmmng perform- B1llmgham agamst Claude Os
first and th~rd
ance Hall found himself an
teen m a btd for a sweep of
Frank Robmson who home• swenng more questwns about the tilree game senes

See
Uncle
Frank
or Uncle

Carlton Blanks Pirates

Fnday's Games

Montreal at Phlla night

East

" 4N PARKERSBURG
Mrs Edna Re1bel and Ml s
Nettle Hayes accompanied
Mrs Wtlham Rathff and her
daughter, Anita, to ParkersW Va , Tuesday

Morganless Reds Increase
Division Lead To 7¥2 Games

30- Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 39

6 30 - NBCNewsJ 4 15, ABCNews61J CBSNews8.10. Folk

tn

NORTII

(IK32
¥ K984

thmgs that \\Ill help hun led lll 11 and .1ll ol these can
p1opeli) be called le at lun ~
\ULI!lg

5

6 00 - News 3, 4 8, 10, 15 Truth or Conseq 6 I Dream of
Jeannie 13 sesame 51 2() Halhoyoga 33

~AVE

teach can mean m an\ thm~s \\hen sonHon~ w~mts to
lt?aln somet hmg ano1he1 pt&gt;r son rna\ bt.• able 1o Uo man\

No doui.Jt a

Tel~~~!?u~sT ~og

\II'IN AT BRIDUE

Word 'Teach' Has
Multiple Meaning

S- ~ Da!lf Semlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aug. 10, 1972

•

his second game wmrung hit m
two days The hit followed a
smgle by Roy White and a
double by Ron Blomberg
Fryman Blanks Yanks
Woody Fryman a veteran of
stx years m the Natwnal
League, blanked the Yankees
on SIX hils as he made his
Amencan League debut m the
opener Aureho RodnguezWlth three htls three runs
batted mand two runs scoredled a Tiger attack that dealt
Mel Stottlemyre h1s 13th loss
Baltimore struggling to
break free of tile lethargy
which has unaccountably overtaken the AL champions of the
last three years recetved four
hit shutout p1tchmg from Dave
McNa lly (who also h1t his hrst
home run of the year) to wm !Is
fourth straight game
The demons continued to
plague Oakland as unhkely
hero Cookte Rojas poled his
first home run ever m Kansas
cr!Y.:. ' h''W~ ~!,l,'i' lli the
seventh mmrg that-..11\ai .the
f~rst c~rcutt surrendered this
year by reliever Darold
Knowles- to start the A's to
their siXth setback m seven
eames
Wood prevailed over the
Angels' Nolan Ryan m a
st1rrmg pitcher's duel and
accounted for tile lone run of
the game wttil a tw&lt;H&gt;ut Single
m the seventilmmng to pull the
White Sox to within a game of
Oakland tn the West and
become the majors' ftrst 19game wmner m the process
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Tuxedo Gene won the featured
e1ghth race at Scwto Downs
Wednesday
m 2 03 4-5 ,
returmng $10 20, $5 and $4 20
Lippe Hanover placed and Si S1
Adios was th1rd
Rtchard Farrmgton drove
Tuxedo Gene and also had wms
m the seventh race, dnvmg
Gretchen Adws, and m the fifth
w1th Bee Boy
In the mghtly double, Dougs
Special and Instant Wmner, 79, pa1d $79
Attendance was 4,494 and the
handle was $205,022

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
'I don t think about records
because they're sometilmg to
look back on ' Steve Carlton
sa1d Wednesda) mght after he
ptlched a three-lutter and hit a
homer to g1ve the hapless
Phh!ladelphla Ph1lless a 2-0
VIctory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates and run his wmnmg
streak to 13 straight games
Carlton hasn't lost smce May
30 and smce that time the Phils
have won 21 games 1ncludmg
tile 13 by Carlton For tile
season, Carlton has almost half
of the club s wms- 18 or 40 Not
smce somebody named
Noodles Hahn won 22 of 52
games for Cmcmnatt m 1901
has a Natwnal League p1tcher
Had such a high percentage of
his team's v1ctor1es
Pluladelph1a manager Paul
Owen sa1d, " he 's been
amazmg, he's hke a machine
and he's the best I've seen
smce (Sandy) Koufax Our
team plays well behmd him
and 1f we can get him a couple
runs, that's usually enough "
Pittsburgh ts tile best hittmg
team m tile majors but he
stopped them on smgles by
lnlernat•on~l

League Stand1ngs
Bv Un1ted Press International

W L Pel GB

T1dewater

65 49 570
63 50 558 l'h
64 53 547 21!1

Syracuse

54 62 446 12

lOUISVIlle

Char leston
Toledo
Rochester

R1chmond
Pen •nsu la

59 57 509 7
58 58 500 8

53 62 471 1211&gt;
44 69 389 20'11

Wednesdays Results

Charleston 3 Lowsvtlle 2
Rochester 3 R1chmond 1
Syracuse 4 Penin sula 3 ( 11
mn•ngs)
Ttdewa1 er 5 Toledo 4 (10 1n
nmgs)

Gene Clmes and Manny Sangulllen and a double by Rennte
Stennett
AI Ohver who went 0-for-4
sa1d, 'He's the best m tile
league he has a good fastball
and curve and great control '
Slargell Goes 0-for-3
Wllhe Stargell, who went 1).
for 3, sa1d, "Hitting agamst
him tomght was hke drtnkmg
coffee w1th a fork
Ph1iadelph1a scored the only
run 1! needed off loser Steve
Blass, IU, m the second mmng W1lhe Montanez led off
w1til a smgle, followed by Greg
Luzmskt's smgle and when the
ball was miShandled by nghtf•elder Gene Clmes, Montanez
scored Carlton tilen added his
homer m the thlfd tnnmg for
Insurance

LEADING~

BATTERS '6t \I (
Nat•onal League
g ab r h pet
Cdeno Hou
92 371 77 130 350
Wilm s Ch1 104 405 66 137 338
Mota LA
81 264 42 88 333
Garr All
97 395 62127 322
Sng"•ln P1t
97 372 42 119 320
Alou 51 L
94 366 42 117 32()
Baker All
80 265 31 84 317
Brock St L 102 435 54 137 315
Slrgll Plf
96 340 55 107 315
Lee soAmertcan68League
251 35 79 315
g ab r h pet
Rud1 Oak
102 415 70 134 323
Shblm KC
89 299 41 94 314
Carew Mm
93 352 41 1o8 307
Berry Cal
76 268 32 82 306
Allen Ch1
104 351 68 107 305
Pn1eta KC 102 38852 118 304
Oils KC
98 37250 113 304
FISk Bos
84 289 53 88 304
Nlay Ch1
102 360 65 107 297
Krkptrk KC
79 255 34 74 290

In other National League
action, Cincmnati topped Los
Angeles, 6-3, Atlanta defeated
Houston, 6-0, San D1ego
downed San Francisco, 5 2,
Montreal beat Chicago, 8-2
and New York stopped St
LoUIS, 8-3
In the Amertcan League,
DetrOit beat New York IHI, but
lost the second game, 2-1,
Boston topped Cleveland, ii-2,
Baltimore routed Milwaukee,
10-0, Kansas C1ty stopped
Oakland, ii-2, Texas edged
Minnesota, 3-2 and Chicago
rupped Califorma I-ll
Clarence Gaston and Garry
Jestadt each drove m a pa1r of
runs m leading tile Padres to
the victory over the G1ants
Fred Norman saved tile game
wtth a fme rehef stmt m the
last two 1nnmgs as he worked
out of a bases-loaded and noneout }am m the etghth by
retlrmg three stra1ght batters
Aaron Hits 2-Run Homer
Henry Aaron htl a two-run
homer and George Stone pltched a m-h1tter as Atlanta
defeated Houston Aaron hit
the 23rd homer of the season
and the 662nd of his career m
tileflrstlnnmgtogtveStoneall
the help he needed Aaron 1s
now only 52 away from the 714
mark
A bases-loaded double by
Pete Rose highhghted a tilreerun s1xth mnmg rally and
helped carry Cmc•nnab to the
d
VIctory over the Do gers
Rose's double, one of his two
hit m tile game, helped Tom
Hall notch his fiftil VICtory In
SIX deCISIOns although he
needed rehef help from Clay
Carroll

Fatrly doubled borne a pa1r of
runs m a f1ve-run runth 1nnmg
as Montreal topped Cubs M1ke
Marshall, now 11).3, p1tched
three uuungs of hitless rehef
ball to get the wm
Ken Boswell and Ed Kranepool each drove home three
runs as New York defeated St
Loms behmd the SIX-lut pllchmg of Jtm McAndrew
McAndrew won hiS th1rd
straight game and boosted his
record to 8-3 wh1ie Don
Durham, 0-0 took the loss

John Now

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
JEAN STYLE

SLACKS
Brushed Den1ms
Plam Blue Den 1m

Sizes 27 38

5.98

To

9.98

Kerm 's Komer

NEW YORK

CLOTHING

HOUSE
W
1ll•ams P1tt
Chi 27
andBench
May Hou
tile e1ghth mmng and Ron
Stargell
C1n r~ti~e~w~tt~h~a~ru~n~-s~co~r~m:g~s~tng~l~e
~m~~~~P;O;M;E~R~O~Y~O~H~I~O~~~~~~~~~~~;~
Home Runs

Nahonal League Colbert SO

FOX TRADED
KANSAS CITY (UPI)..,Jun

25
31
24

Fox, a 6-10 center, Wednesday
was traded by the Kansas CityOmaha Kings of the Nattonal
Basketball Assoc1atton to the
Seattle Super Somes m exchange for 6-5 Don KoJIS and 69 Pete fross, both forwards
BRADSHAW TO Sf ART
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers of the
Nahonal Football league annO\mced Wednesday that Terry
Bradshaw, who has been
recovermg from a leg InJury,
will start at quarterback this
Saturday whop the club meets
tile New York Jets Ill SeatUe

28 Cash Del and Jackson, Oak
21 K1llebrew, Mmn 19 FISk
Bos, Murcer NY and Epstem
Oak 18
•
Runs Batted In
National League Stargell
P1tl 89 Colbert SO 84 , Bench
Cm 80 William s Ch1 74 , May
Hou 72

Tun McCarver snapped a 2-2

Amencan League Allen Ch1

•

Amencan league Allen Ch1
82

Murcer

NY 64

Jackson,

Oak 61 Scott Mil 60 Darwm,
Mlnn 58
PitChing
National League Carlton
Ph1i 18 6 Jenkms Ch1 15 10
Nolan Cm 13 3 Sutton LA 13
6 l1ve l 1ed with 12 v1ctones

AmeriCan League Wood Ch 1
19 11 Lol•c h Del 18 8 Perry
Clev 18 10 Palmer Ball 15 4
Bahnsen Ch1 15 11

ROOF COAliNG

Q-Does the U S pres~
dent ever preSide over sesSIO!IS of Congress?
A- No The v1ce president
serves as the Senate president, and ts addressed there
as "Mr President "

~~

Ford Galaxlt 500.
II g1vea you Fords famous quiet
ride In a car that s built strong

A'~

to last and lasl And now's your

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chance to shoal down Its sUcker
pnce dunng your Ford Team s

§hcowd•own Clearance Sale

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11 AM· 8 PM
Refreshments and Food '

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MAIN ST.

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•

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•
I

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�•

SBA Expands Aid to Vets

Rockets Picked To Finish
In Second Division In '72
.,

NEW YORK (UPI)- When a man is young, he dreams, he
hopes, he talks.
· So it is with Marty Uquori, only 22, and regarded among the
world's foremost milers not that long ago.
He dreams, he hopes, he talks. Primarily about this one single
object that goes for somewhere around $36-an Olympic gold
medal. lole still talks about getting one some day. Even Marty
liquori knows his chances are slim, though.
Look at it this way: If a man trains most of his life to nm,.and
then suddenly ~iscovers he can no longer nm, what has he got?
The answer is obvious. Not much·.,
Marty Liquori won't be running the 1,500meters at Munich in
these Olympics. He won't be running in any other event either
due to torn ligaments mhis left heel which kept him out of
training five months this year and killed any chance for a golq
medal in Munich four weeks from now.
~A year ago Iiquori looked like this country's best bet in the
1,500 meters.

~

By GENE CADI)ES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jack
Murphy, in his second season
as head football coach at the
University of Toledo, stated
flatly: "We're the champions
and they'll have to take it away

from us."

.

The Rockets have won 35
straight games but because of
the heavy losses due to gradua·
lion they are picked to frnish in
the second division of the MAC
this season by both the coaches
and the· news media.
·The news media selected Mi·
ami to win the title while a poll
of the coaches had Miami and
Ohio University tying for the
title.
"Miami and ·Bowling Green
are the top two teams," in
Murphy's opinion but he added,
"we're the champions and they
will have to take it away from

Beats Jim Ryun
He had gone up against the mighty Jim Ryun in a head-to-head
duel during the Martin Luther King Games in Philadelphia and
beaten him with a performance that will never he forgotten by
anyone who saw it.
"Walch Liquori in Munich ! "
us."
That'swhat everybody was saying then. But it wasn't too much
Among the losses suffered by
longer that Uquori carne up with his heel problem and that was the Rockets were UPI first
the end of that.
team All-American Mel Long,
He is leaving for Munich shortly and he'll be there for the a defensive tackle, quar·
games, but only to talk about them, not to compete in them. .
terback Chuck Ealey who was
_ He's going over as a color commentator for ABC·TV, and if named to the second team, his
you'd like to know what it feels like to he a runner, who has top receivers Glyn Smith and
worked, trained and sweated more than 10 years to get to this Don Fair, middle guard Steve
Schnitkey and linebacker John
point and then be unable to run, Marty liquori will tell you.
"I just feel il!ld because I won't get an opportunity to prove how Niezgoda.
Murphy, in his second season
good I am or aih.11ot," he says.
''How will I feel silting up there In the stadium, only watching at Toledo, switched senior Joe
and not ninning ?'!.imagine I'll feel bad. I had some indication Schwartz from running back to
from watching the 10lympic tl'ials In Eugene, Ore. It's rough. But quarterback in an attempt to
replace Ealey.
I look at these Olympics with mixed .~!motions.
Schwartz, who hasn 't played
Could be a Break
quarterback since high school,
"I've always said l'd like to go into sports broadcasting after I gained 1,079 yards rushing last
was finished running, My mother believes what has happened Is season and is described by
God's will. She thinks It could even be a good break for·me. She Murphy as "an excellent ath·
says 'For years you've been saying you'dlike to do broadcasting. lete.
·
Now you've got what you wanted. You can~ complain."'
Were Convinced
Marty Uquori concedes his mother may be right.
"We went into .spring prace
"It'll be a few years before I can look back and decide whether
tice just to see if he could do the
this is a good break or a bad one," he says.
job," said Murphy. "By the
No matter what, he can't forget about that gold medal.
eighth day he had convinced
He had a crack at one during the 1968 Olympics in Mexico, but
us. The important thing was,
he really wanted to do it."
was only 18 then, nowhere near his peak .and finished last.
The Rockets put their win·
Kenya's Klpchioge Kelno won that 1,500 meters medal and Ryun
ning
streak on the line Sept. 9
was second. Liquori thinks Ryun and Keioo will fight it out again
against a tough Tampa team
in Munich.
and Murphy believes the
When Marty Liquori talks about Munich he grows wistful. This
victory
skien could be a help to
was the one he was pointing for and that knowledge always is
his inexperienced team.
with him.
"We're always conscious of
"I don't know if I'll still be around for the next Olympics," he
the winning streak," Murphy
says. "That's a long way off. I'll be 26 by then. Who knows
told members of the news
what'll happen by then?"
media at a gathering earlier
this week of MAC coaches.
0 "We used jt,l~~t. ye~r,, tq e,:'llt
Jli'~.
,. perssure on. our -coaches '11M
f'
players t&lt;i ~ get' the' job' di&gt;n'e.
That pressure will be exerted
f"Jl
again this year."
.1.
Murphy said he was also
rather glad that the MAC
ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI ) In other games, Hillsboro opener with Ohio U. isn't until
Findlay and Athens are the edged Scioto 7~, KirUand beat Sept. 30.
only undefeated teams in the Van Wert 11&gt;-11, Euclid beat
"H our young people can
state American Legion Marion lU, and in a game ·gain some experience in our
baseball tournament . They carried over from Tuesday, first three games we'll be in the
were to play each other this Cincinnati downed Troy 5-0.
thick of it," he said.
morning.
The losses ousted Van Wert,
Three other starters return
Findlay defeated Steuben· Scioto, Marion and Troy from on offense for the Rockets in
ville 4-1 while Athens blasted the double-elimination tour· tackle Dough Neuendorf,
Cincinnati 11·1 in Wednesday's ney.
guard Steve Bowman and
action.
running back Rich Eberlin,
and three from the defensive
unit in tackle Steve Donahue,
linebacker Mel Minnfield and
VISIT BOWDENS
NewYork 210002211)-8110 back Pete Alsup.
Mr . and Mrs. A. W. Hayes St.
Louis
020 001 ooo- J 6 1
were in Princeton, W, Va.
Toledo Picked Fourth
McAndrew (8-3) and Dyer;
1n a turther breakdown of the
recently to visit Mr. and Mrs. Durham. Cumberland (2), Bare
Grzenda (8) , Drabowsky voting Toledo was picked
0. H. Bowden. They also (7),
191 and Simmons. LP- Durham
~ourth by the media and fifth
visited in Hinton, W. Va. with (0·5) .HR- Boswell (5th) .
by the coaches.
Mrs. Evelyn Richmond.
Bowling Green finished third
in the coaches balloting and
second in the media voting
while the fifth and six places
were rounded out by Western
Michigan and Kent State. Kent
State also finished last in the
........
I
coaches poll.
"! feel we have an exciting
and potentially good team
coming up this year," said

,llfla y, .A.thens 'R'emazri
,.,. ··"" .

ft~u

Unbeaten In

ournamen

.fAIIUmli

LU(jJTIJ'I

f

Western Michigan Coach Bill
Doolittle. "How exciting and
how good it depends on how
well we coach them."
Doolittle will have to replace
an outstanding quarterback in
Ted Grignon who gained over
1,300 yards in total offense in
leading the Broncos to a 7-3
record last year.
Billy Screws, back up to
Grignon last season, will be
given the first shot at starting
quarterback.
"He is going to be a very
exciting player for us," said
Doouttle. "Screws may be a
little stronger thrower than
Grignon but he's not as quick.
He compliments our triple
optioo very well.''
~
Doolittle will also have an
outstanding running back in
Larry Cates returning who
gained 819 yards on 162 carries
last season for a 5.1 yard
per
.,
carry average.
"We'll have to get him
(Cates) the ball more than last
year," said Doolittle.
Players Return
Western Michigan has six of·
fensive starters back in ends
Mark Braciszewski and Keith
Pretty, tackle Bob Pokorny,
guard Larry Ulmer, center
Fred Hicks and Cates. Four
defensive starters returning
are tackles Beranrd Thomas
and George Zender, back Mike
Johnson and linebacker Ed
Schroeder.
Don James, in his 8ec()nd

Bus Bids

Education has adopted a free
meal policy for Meigs Loca l
School children unable to ·pay
the full price of a meal, ef.
fective July 1, 1972.
"'

Local school, oUjclals havi
adopled the foftowlng family

size and income scale to assist
them In determ ining eligibility.
In FamiiV.
Income
2
$3209
3
$3968
4

$4727

S

SS428

6
7

$6130
$6762

8
9

$7395
$7970

II

~MS
~IW

12

Eligibility

that is, all the children in the
same fa mily attending schools

under the /uri sdiction of the
same schoo food authority are
to receive the same benefits.

Families falling within this

scale or those suffering from
unusual ci rcumstances or

hardships

may

may do so by till ing In the

applicat ion forms sent home i~J

a letter to paren". Additional

copies are available at the
principal's office in each

school. Applications may be
submitted any time dur ing the
school year. The form itself is
simple to complete and
requests information needed to
determine economic need
based on the income, number
of persons In the family.
number of children in school
and
any
unusua l
clr.
cum stances or hardships

which affect the family 's
ability to pay for school lun·
ches. The informatlon,provlded

on the application will be

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(Continued from page 1)
dustry.
The board has approved a
required routine resolution and
contract leading to obtaining a
simulated mine training center
for classes in mining for both
students and adults. The Ap·
palachian Regional Com·
mission would provide 80 pet.
of the cost involved, if it is
approved.
The board ~lso has approved
a policy on a free school lunch
program for the new school
year. It reads:
The Meigs Local Board of

10

lor Your

_PRUG* NEEDSNOW

STOCK YOUR MEOICINE CHfST

season at Kent State, feels the
F1ashes could be a "good bit
better football team this year"
and still not improve on last
season's 3-8 record. ·
"We feel we should he the
favorite in two games," said
James but he dldn:t say which
~y were.
Larry Hayes, a senior, will
again be the starting quarter·
back and Jaines says he needs
confidence.
"He's a little better football
player than he realizes," said
James.
The biggest problem facing
James is a defense that gave
up 304 points iri 11 games last
season.
The only member of the defensive line returning is junior
Jack Lambert.
Admitting he "got very
little" out of his linebackers
last year, James hopes Bob
Bender, a 5·11 220 pound
transfer from Buffalo can help.
The offense should he in
pretty good shape with the top
four rushers returning in
Renard Harmon, (566 yards),
Rich Oden (408), Eddie
Woodard (401) and Hayes
(393).
The offense may be fired up
somewhat later in September
with the return to the U.S. of
Gerald Tinker who is in Europe
to participate in the Olympics.
He is a transfer from Memphis
State and has run the 100 yard
dash in 9.2.

only for the purpose of
determining eligibility .

Under the provisions of the
pol icy ,
the
Assistant
Superintend ent will review
applications and determ ine
eligibility. If a parent is

dissatisfied with the ruling of
the local official he may make

a request either orally or in
writing for a hear ing to appeal
the decision.
George Hargraves, whose
address is South Third Avenue,

Middleport, Ohio, has been

design.ated

as

the

Hearing

Official. Hearing procedures
are outlined In the policy.
The policy also provides tha t
there will be no identification
of or disc rim ination against
student unable to pay the
ful cost of a meal.

••

r:

\

l'

I

district, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, has announced two new appointments. Paul Witten,
left, is the new chief of real estate division, and Larry G. Hatfield the new civilian personnel
officer. Witten has been ll'lth the government 30 years, all in the real .estate division. Hatfield
has had 13 years of government service. He joined the Huntington district in 1~ in design
branch of engineering division. The Huntington district encompasses 45,000 square miles in
parts of West Vll"ginil\, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia and North Carolina, with approximately 1,000
employees and an annual payroll of over $14 million.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Hospital
August 9
BIRTHS - Mrs . Walter
Green, son, Pomeroy and Mrs.
Walter Loveday Jr., son,
Bidwell.
DISCHARGED Elsa
Russell, Janice McPea k,
Loretta Jones, Beula Murray,
Robert Conger, Mrs. Ernest
Hatfield and daughter, Mrs.
Jimmy Potter and daughter,
Frank Franch, Jerry Brown,
Opie Swiney, Ina Phillips,
Peggy Osborne, Crystal
Thacker, Nanny Skidmore,
Conrad Ohlinger, Glenna
Nance, Patricia McKnight,
Waid Johnson, Mrs. Elvin Ice
and daughter, Gladys Hollings·
worth, Scot Hineman, Dorothy
Edmonson, Robert Crow, Mrs.
David Bush and son and Ruth
Bradley .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED - Ada Fraley,
Acomplete copy oil he policy Gallipolis; Louis Matlack, is on file in each school district Reedsville; Harrison Robin·
in the office of the Clerk where
it ma y be reyiewed l!Y, any son, Letart, W. Va. ; Christy
ii'lterested perSOn: ~ '
..
Dye, -Long Bottom ; Mamie ·
,
,, , ,.
,
. .- \'"I·
• II'!!
'' , I
Buchanan , Pomeroy and
. .
- Q- Are a hyena's front or Shauna Tackett, Rutland.
hind legs l o11ger?
DISCHARGED - Frances
A-The animal's front King, Clara Grueser, Maxine
legs are longer than its hind Har t, Eva McKinney and
legs.
Franklin Sisson.

'

an associate dean at Bowling
Green University, was named
vice provost for student affairs
Wednesday.

VICE PROVOST NOW
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Dr. Richard R. Eakin,

BAND SHOE_
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By
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THE SHOE
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9x12 Linoleum Rugs........... ~488
22" Metal Utility Cabinet..Sl898
Sofa Beds ... ~ .........................s5800

i;
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CHALK ARTISr MRS. FRYE AT WORK
AREA WOMEN are invited to the Southeast Fatm Bureau "Autumn Interlude" Sept . 22
near Zanesville when chalk artist Mrs. Bert Frye of Xenia will present the program, '.'Christ
St!lllng the Storm." Mrs. Thomas Sayre is chairman of the Meigs County Farm Bureau
Women's Committee. She said the day~ong session is expected to draw about 300 women to the
Pleasant Grove United Methodist O!urch on State &amp;ute 93. Each county will present a oneminute report on special projects completed during the year. A special style show, "Interlude
of Fashion," will be presented by Fann Bureau women. Tickets oostlng $2.25 are available at
the County Farm Bureau office or from a meinber of the Farm Bureau Women 's Comm~ttee.

News, Notes

=;::~:~~~~
Mrs. is Rosella
:
of Pennsboro
a great·

Recliners ...~~~::'.......................~4SOO
Table Lamps.......................... s399

Osa Bailey of
:Sra4!ntcm, F1a., spent few
-n•tvs.·~'"' Mrs. Bess Larkins.
at the home of Mrs.
Clufllns Included Mr. and Mrs.
Smith, Nathan and
of Wellsville, Mrs. Jo Ann

a

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lletause ol it's excltalw triDie- ·
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TIO SPEED IIOTOR gives 501 more suctiOtlloratllcllments. LARGE TIIIOW·AIAY BAG holds more ~rt...
.
needs
itt less i11ten. 4-POSITION RUG ADJiJniOO
... indoor,outdoor floor coverif1s lo-dee~ shalncs.
VINYl OUTER'.IACKET neveta dusty odoi. Wipes cleln
with a daflll clolh. .
· ·

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Bookcase
spn"ngs.MattressPer Ser......... ssOCII0 HOOVER BAGS 3 pkgs. '2.0t ,

carry out the bill as though it
bad been signed into law.
Kennedy accused Nixon of a
"promiscuous use of the pocket
veto power, a transparent but
un constitutional attempt to
prevent an embarrassing vote
by Congress to override a
regular veto and another
example in the long line of
actions by the administration
in derogation of the powers of
Congress under the Con·
stitution."
Under the Constitution, if a
President fails to sign or veto a
bill, the measure normally
becomes law without his
signature within 10 days.
If the 10-day period ends
while Congress is adjourned,
· however, the bill does not
become law, but is "pocket
vetoed."
In the case of the Kennedy
bill, the senator said, the 1().
day period e~P,!_r,e,d; ~n J?eU~.
1970, when t;ongress was on a ·
four-day recess for Christmas.
The Senate returned Dec. 28,
but Nixon's use of the pocket
veto prevented ,an attempt in
Congress to override the vote.
Kennedy charged that the use
of the pocket veto in those
circumstances was invalid.
Tbe bill was to authorize a
three-year, $225 million
program of federal grants to
hospitals and medical schools
for training family doctors. It
passed the Senate 64-1 and the
House 346-2.
·
Kennedy said the Justice
Department was citing
Supreme Court decisions in

1929 and 1938 to justify Nixon's
action. But he said those
decisions had not ruled on the
specific issue.
In his view, the pocket veto
provision in the Constitution
was meant to apply only when
Congress adjourns for the
session, not when it takes a
brief recess within a session.
Kennedy said the Justice
Department acknowledged the
interpretation of that section of
the Constitution "has been a
bone of contention between
Congress and the President
over the years. " Kennedy's
suit asks the court to order the
defendants to publish the bill
"as a validly enacted law of the
United States. "

Management and Technical
Assistance from private
management consulting
companies contracted by SBA.
Ray said that, in addition to
these program areas now
available to the 5.8 million
Vietnam Veterans already
returned , and those to return in
the future, all standard SBA
services for .small business·
equity financing, long-term
loans, government contracts,
management and technical
assistance, surety bonds,
certificates of competency,
lines of credit, Federal
regulatory compliance and
others, are still available .

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'at~ \O

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and schoolyard ore reody. Big on goad looks ...
big on long wear ... big on comfort ... Bring in the
kids and set them on the right bock-to-school path.

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•,

"We welcome inquiries on
these new program areas at
our 50 West Gay Stl'eet office in
Columbus or our Cincinnati
Branch Office at 550 Main
Street, Cincinnati. These
programs are designed to give
Boys ' brown
coffee cream .

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AUGUST 11-12

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The Kiddie Shoppe

Your

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

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'•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CONTINUES AT

• • •
f ••

l .

:.... . .------------------------------------------------------------: Mr. and
Roy L. Reed of
::. Tuppers P{X,s are announcing
: the birth PI a 7 lb. 1 oz.
: daughter 4n the 14th of July.
• She has been named Crystal
; Diane. The little one is being
: welcomed home by her two
:; sislers, Brenda Kay and Lea
:: Ann. Grandparents are Mr.
:;; and
Francis Reed of
!: Penns'1pro, w. Va ., and Mr.
~ and
Edward Chevalier of

Modell031
R~~o '74.95

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, J).
Mass., filed a court suit against
the administration Wednesday
charging President Nixon
unconstitutionally pocketvetoed a Kennedy bill in 1970 to
help educate family doctors.
Kennedy filed his suit in U. S.
District Court in Washington
against Arthur F. Sampson,
head of the General Services
Administration, and Thomas
M. Jones, chief of records for
the White House.
He asked the court to declare
Nixon's veto invalid and to
order the two defendants to

=

-

-f

Court Asked to
Void Pocket Veto

~

.ls.

_

dirt other cleanels c111'1
action cleanif1,

elude biology, chemistry,
microbiology, physiology and
general education courses
required by Rio Grande
College. The second part of the
two-year program is a lull
summer and full academic
year on hospital rotation.
The rotation program is a
theoretical and practical
learning experience that includes work In all the areas oi
the department of pathology.
The program includes work in
the department and lecture
periods.
There is presently a critical
shortage of personnel in the
field of medical laboratory
technology . By 1975, some
experts say, more than 200,000
persons will be needed in the
field, including personnel in
hospitals, clinics, physicians'
offices, public health agencies,
the armed forces , phar·
maceutical
firms
and
research institutions.

Economic Opportunity
LQans of up to $50,000 for 15
years at a low interest rate to
expand an existing business or
establish a new business.
Federal Government Con·
tracts, in which SBA obtains
from other Federal agencies
contracts sui table to the
capabilities of a Veterans'
firm .

ELEVEN students have started the 12-month hospital rotation phase of the Medical
Laboratory Technology program offered by Rio Grande College and Holzer Medical Center.
They are: First Row (L toR): Lucinda Bradley, Wellston; Carrie Roe, Pt. Pleasant; and
· Barbara Bengar, Toronto, Ohio. Second Row -Marlene Cusick, Lancaster; Regina Boggs,
Oak Hill; Mrs. Glada Jenkins, Oak Hill; and Carolyn Hughes, Gallipolis. Third Row - Mrs.
Alice Mills, Gall!polis; Tom Kramer, Dayton; Bob Murray, Ray, Ohio and Debbie Hyrne,
Gallipolis.
·,
·
· ·

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~4400

(Full Size)

Eleven students, including
three from Gallia County, have
begun the 12-month hospital
rotation phase of the Medical
Laboratory Technology
;.. program offered by Holzer
~- Medical Center and Rio
Grande College.
~- The students have completed
: one year of course work at the
At the end of the 12••• college.
month hospital rotation, they
•• will receive an associate of
: science degree from the
: college and will be eligible for
: registration by the American
: Society
of
Clinical
• Pathologists.
•• A student in the Medical
•• Laboratory Technology
: program prepares for a career
: in medical technology while
: earning college credit that can
be applied toward a bachelor's
• degree In any science-related
•• field.
•• Courses required during the
first year of the program in·

\

:

-

AUGUST FURNITURE
SALE
AT
BAKERMIDDLEPORT,
FURNITURE
0.

Chest ....... ~..~~.~~~~ ........·... s331s
2 pc. Uving Room Suites s11 goo
3 pc: Bedroom Suites......s11goo
Baby Beds ~~;:~s .~d .............S3goo
Ladder Back Chairs.~~~:~:~~~~. sg•
. I Ref.ngerators.......
(12 cu. ft.&gt;slg oo
Ad m1ra
7

Complete Phase I

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$}081
. Sliding Glass Door........
;} ·

773-!513

· u

TWO APPOINTED - Col. Kenneth E. Mcintyre, district engineer of the H111tington

. . .(9") ...$60111
Portable T•eIev1S1ons.........
o
Hours:7a . m.to5 :30p.m.DIIIy
.
MASON, W; VA.
71. m, to' p. m. Friday &amp; Slllvrday

....

~Eleven MLT Pupils

anr

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COLUMBUS - Three new the best possible break to return to the business comareas of SBA assistance for Vietnam Veterans as they munity," stated
Vietnam-era veterans were .....,;,;,;,..._ _.,;..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .
announced Wednesday by
REGISTER FOR
Frank D. Ray, Director of the
Columbus District Office of the
BICYCLE
Small
Business
Ad·
FREE
ministration . The
new
programs,
being made
Nothing to buy, just register.
available in response to
To be given away Sept. 16.
President Nixon's recent call
for renewed · efforts by all
Federal agencies to aid these
Veterans, are:

Capenter and Dorothy of
Toronto and Mrs. Jean Smith.
Paul Dean Brannon spent
several days with Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Atkins and family of
Evansville, Indiana. ·
Mr . and Mrs . Junior
Congrove and Dee of
ZanesvUle and Mr . and Mrs.
Gene
Wilson
recently
vacationed at Long Branch, N.
J., and Niagara Falls.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Opal
Randolph were Mrs. -Delphia
Harvey, Detroit, Mich., and
Mrs. Pauline Atkerson of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hauber at•
tended the 50th .wedding an·
niversary of Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Kibble at Parkersburg.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Atkins and
family of Evansville, Ind.,
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Densil Jamison and
family,
Kay Balderson celebrated
her 11th birthday July 24.
Homemade ice cream, cake
and punch were served to Mrs.
George Arnold of Northridge,
Calif., Mrs. T. S. Mulitauapele,
of San Diego, Calif., Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Williams of Athens,
Ga., Mrs. Lena Pickering,
Susan Hannum, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
R. E, Williams, Mr , and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and the
honored guest.
Mrs. Ruth Moore of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Mike
McClusky
of
Pickerington visited Sunday at
the Williams-Balderson home.
-Mn. I.. Balderson

PARK RESERVED SATURDAY, AUGUST 12TH
FOR

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CAMDEN PARK
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CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

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3'12 to 6-6112 to 11
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OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P,M.

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.MEN AND BOYS SANDALS
REG. •s.95 SALE '3.99
·REG. s5,50 SALE ·~.66
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$499To$ll 95
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

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�•

SBA Expands Aid to Vets

Rockets Picked To Finish
In Second Division In '72
.,

NEW YORK (UPI)- When a man is young, he dreams, he
hopes, he talks.
· So it is with Marty Uquori, only 22, and regarded among the
world's foremost milers not that long ago.
He dreams, he hopes, he talks. Primarily about this one single
object that goes for somewhere around $36-an Olympic gold
medal. lole still talks about getting one some day. Even Marty
liquori knows his chances are slim, though.
Look at it this way: If a man trains most of his life to nm,.and
then suddenly ~iscovers he can no longer nm, what has he got?
The answer is obvious. Not much·.,
Marty Liquori won't be running the 1,500meters at Munich in
these Olympics. He won't be running in any other event either
due to torn ligaments mhis left heel which kept him out of
training five months this year and killed any chance for a golq
medal in Munich four weeks from now.
~A year ago Iiquori looked like this country's best bet in the
1,500 meters.

~

By GENE CADI)ES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jack
Murphy, in his second season
as head football coach at the
University of Toledo, stated
flatly: "We're the champions
and they'll have to take it away

from us."

.

The Rockets have won 35
straight games but because of
the heavy losses due to gradua·
lion they are picked to frnish in
the second division of the MAC
this season by both the coaches
and the· news media.
·The news media selected Mi·
ami to win the title while a poll
of the coaches had Miami and
Ohio University tying for the
title.
"Miami and ·Bowling Green
are the top two teams," in
Murphy's opinion but he added,
"we're the champions and they
will have to take it away from

Beats Jim Ryun
He had gone up against the mighty Jim Ryun in a head-to-head
duel during the Martin Luther King Games in Philadelphia and
beaten him with a performance that will never he forgotten by
anyone who saw it.
"Walch Liquori in Munich ! "
us."
That'swhat everybody was saying then. But it wasn't too much
Among the losses suffered by
longer that Uquori carne up with his heel problem and that was the Rockets were UPI first
the end of that.
team All-American Mel Long,
He is leaving for Munich shortly and he'll be there for the a defensive tackle, quar·
games, but only to talk about them, not to compete in them. .
terback Chuck Ealey who was
_ He's going over as a color commentator for ABC·TV, and if named to the second team, his
you'd like to know what it feels like to he a runner, who has top receivers Glyn Smith and
worked, trained and sweated more than 10 years to get to this Don Fair, middle guard Steve
Schnitkey and linebacker John
point and then be unable to run, Marty liquori will tell you.
"I just feel il!ld because I won't get an opportunity to prove how Niezgoda.
Murphy, in his second season
good I am or aih.11ot," he says.
''How will I feel silting up there In the stadium, only watching at Toledo, switched senior Joe
and not ninning ?'!.imagine I'll feel bad. I had some indication Schwartz from running back to
from watching the 10lympic tl'ials In Eugene, Ore. It's rough. But quarterback in an attempt to
replace Ealey.
I look at these Olympics with mixed .~!motions.
Schwartz, who hasn 't played
Could be a Break
quarterback since high school,
"I've always said l'd like to go into sports broadcasting after I gained 1,079 yards rushing last
was finished running, My mother believes what has happened Is season and is described by
God's will. She thinks It could even be a good break for·me. She Murphy as "an excellent ath·
says 'For years you've been saying you'dlike to do broadcasting. lete.
·
Now you've got what you wanted. You can~ complain."'
Were Convinced
Marty Uquori concedes his mother may be right.
"We went into .spring prace
"It'll be a few years before I can look back and decide whether
tice just to see if he could do the
this is a good break or a bad one," he says.
job," said Murphy. "By the
No matter what, he can't forget about that gold medal.
eighth day he had convinced
He had a crack at one during the 1968 Olympics in Mexico, but
us. The important thing was,
he really wanted to do it."
was only 18 then, nowhere near his peak .and finished last.
The Rockets put their win·
Kenya's Klpchioge Kelno won that 1,500 meters medal and Ryun
ning
streak on the line Sept. 9
was second. Liquori thinks Ryun and Keioo will fight it out again
against a tough Tampa team
in Munich.
and Murphy believes the
When Marty Liquori talks about Munich he grows wistful. This
victory
skien could be a help to
was the one he was pointing for and that knowledge always is
his inexperienced team.
with him.
"We're always conscious of
"I don't know if I'll still be around for the next Olympics," he
the winning streak," Murphy
says. "That's a long way off. I'll be 26 by then. Who knows
told members of the news
what'll happen by then?"
media at a gathering earlier
this week of MAC coaches.
0 "We used jt,l~~t. ye~r,, tq e,:'llt
Jli'~.
,. perssure on. our -coaches '11M
f'
players t&lt;i ~ get' the' job' di&gt;n'e.
That pressure will be exerted
f"Jl
again this year."
.1.
Murphy said he was also
rather glad that the MAC
ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI ) In other games, Hillsboro opener with Ohio U. isn't until
Findlay and Athens are the edged Scioto 7~, KirUand beat Sept. 30.
only undefeated teams in the Van Wert 11&gt;-11, Euclid beat
"H our young people can
state American Legion Marion lU, and in a game ·gain some experience in our
baseball tournament . They carried over from Tuesday, first three games we'll be in the
were to play each other this Cincinnati downed Troy 5-0.
thick of it," he said.
morning.
The losses ousted Van Wert,
Three other starters return
Findlay defeated Steuben· Scioto, Marion and Troy from on offense for the Rockets in
ville 4-1 while Athens blasted the double-elimination tour· tackle Dough Neuendorf,
Cincinnati 11·1 in Wednesday's ney.
guard Steve Bowman and
action.
running back Rich Eberlin,
and three from the defensive
unit in tackle Steve Donahue,
linebacker Mel Minnfield and
VISIT BOWDENS
NewYork 210002211)-8110 back Pete Alsup.
Mr . and Mrs. A. W. Hayes St.
Louis
020 001 ooo- J 6 1
were in Princeton, W, Va.
Toledo Picked Fourth
McAndrew (8-3) and Dyer;
1n a turther breakdown of the
recently to visit Mr. and Mrs. Durham. Cumberland (2), Bare
Grzenda (8) , Drabowsky voting Toledo was picked
0. H. Bowden. They also (7),
191 and Simmons. LP- Durham
~ourth by the media and fifth
visited in Hinton, W. Va. with (0·5) .HR- Boswell (5th) .
by the coaches.
Mrs. Evelyn Richmond.
Bowling Green finished third
in the coaches balloting and
second in the media voting
while the fifth and six places
were rounded out by Western
Michigan and Kent State. Kent
State also finished last in the
........
I
coaches poll.
"! feel we have an exciting
and potentially good team
coming up this year," said

,llfla y, .A.thens 'R'emazri
,.,. ··"" .

ft~u

Unbeaten In

ournamen

.fAIIUmli

LU(jJTIJ'I

f

Western Michigan Coach Bill
Doolittle. "How exciting and
how good it depends on how
well we coach them."
Doolittle will have to replace
an outstanding quarterback in
Ted Grignon who gained over
1,300 yards in total offense in
leading the Broncos to a 7-3
record last year.
Billy Screws, back up to
Grignon last season, will be
given the first shot at starting
quarterback.
"He is going to be a very
exciting player for us," said
Doouttle. "Screws may be a
little stronger thrower than
Grignon but he's not as quick.
He compliments our triple
optioo very well.''
~
Doolittle will also have an
outstanding running back in
Larry Cates returning who
gained 819 yards on 162 carries
last season for a 5.1 yard
per
.,
carry average.
"We'll have to get him
(Cates) the ball more than last
year," said Doolittle.
Players Return
Western Michigan has six of·
fensive starters back in ends
Mark Braciszewski and Keith
Pretty, tackle Bob Pokorny,
guard Larry Ulmer, center
Fred Hicks and Cates. Four
defensive starters returning
are tackles Beranrd Thomas
and George Zender, back Mike
Johnson and linebacker Ed
Schroeder.
Don James, in his 8ec()nd

Bus Bids

Education has adopted a free
meal policy for Meigs Loca l
School children unable to ·pay
the full price of a meal, ef.
fective July 1, 1972.
"'

Local school, oUjclals havi
adopled the foftowlng family

size and income scale to assist
them In determ ining eligibility.
In FamiiV.
Income
2
$3209
3
$3968
4

$4727

S

SS428

6
7

$6130
$6762

8
9

$7395
$7970

II

~MS
~IW

12

Eligibility

that is, all the children in the
same fa mily attending schools

under the /uri sdiction of the
same schoo food authority are
to receive the same benefits.

Families falling within this

scale or those suffering from
unusual ci rcumstances or

hardships

may

may do so by till ing In the

applicat ion forms sent home i~J

a letter to paren". Additional

copies are available at the
principal's office in each

school. Applications may be
submitted any time dur ing the
school year. The form itself is
simple to complete and
requests information needed to
determine economic need
based on the income, number
of persons In the family.
number of children in school
and
any
unusua l
clr.
cum stances or hardships

which affect the family 's
ability to pay for school lun·
ches. The informatlon,provlded

on the application will be

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

seat it with WCITE®
• Dries to a protective sheet
• Flexible-strelches and shrinks
when your house does ·
• Lets moisture out, won't let
wealher in.

• Protects from cracking and
peelini
• Proven best by test

apply for tree

meals for their children. They

~ ........IKA · DAtfS IN AN HOUR · WATER

against tbe weather.

$9695

determinations

are made on a family basis,

House Paint '

Protect ,Our house

confidential and will be used

(Continued from page 1)
dustry.
The board has approved a
required routine resolution and
contract leading to obtaining a
simulated mine training center
for classes in mining for both
students and adults. The Ap·
palachian Regional Com·
mission would provide 80 pet.
of the cost involved, if it is
approved.
The board ~lso has approved
a policy on a free school lunch
program for the new school
year. It reads:
The Meigs Local Board of

10

lor Your

_PRUG* NEEDSNOW

STOCK YOUR MEOICINE CHfST

season at Kent State, feels the
F1ashes could be a "good bit
better football team this year"
and still not improve on last
season's 3-8 record. ·
"We feel we should he the
favorite in two games," said
James but he dldn:t say which
~y were.
Larry Hayes, a senior, will
again be the starting quarter·
back and Jaines says he needs
confidence.
"He's a little better football
player than he realizes," said
James.
The biggest problem facing
James is a defense that gave
up 304 points iri 11 games last
season.
The only member of the defensive line returning is junior
Jack Lambert.
Admitting he "got very
little" out of his linebackers
last year, James hopes Bob
Bender, a 5·11 220 pound
transfer from Buffalo can help.
The offense should he in
pretty good shape with the top
four rushers returning in
Renard Harmon, (566 yards),
Rich Oden (408), Eddie
Woodard (401) and Hayes
(393).
The offense may be fired up
somewhat later in September
with the return to the U.S. of
Gerald Tinker who is in Europe
to participate in the Olympics.
He is a transfer from Memphis
State and has run the 100 yard
dash in 9.2.

only for the purpose of
determining eligibility .

Under the provisions of the
pol icy ,
the
Assistant
Superintend ent will review
applications and determ ine
eligibility. If a parent is

dissatisfied with the ruling of
the local official he may make

a request either orally or in
writing for a hear ing to appeal
the decision.
George Hargraves, whose
address is South Third Avenue,

Middleport, Ohio, has been

design.ated

as

the

Hearing

Official. Hearing procedures
are outlined In the policy.
The policy also provides tha t
there will be no identification
of or disc rim ination against
student unable to pay the
ful cost of a meal.

••

r:

\

l'

I

district, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, has announced two new appointments. Paul Witten,
left, is the new chief of real estate division, and Larry G. Hatfield the new civilian personnel
officer. Witten has been ll'lth the government 30 years, all in the real .estate division. Hatfield
has had 13 years of government service. He joined the Huntington district in 1~ in design
branch of engineering division. The Huntington district encompasses 45,000 square miles in
parts of West Vll"ginil\, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia and North Carolina, with approximately 1,000
employees and an annual payroll of over $14 million.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Hospital
August 9
BIRTHS - Mrs . Walter
Green, son, Pomeroy and Mrs.
Walter Loveday Jr., son,
Bidwell.
DISCHARGED Elsa
Russell, Janice McPea k,
Loretta Jones, Beula Murray,
Robert Conger, Mrs. Ernest
Hatfield and daughter, Mrs.
Jimmy Potter and daughter,
Frank Franch, Jerry Brown,
Opie Swiney, Ina Phillips,
Peggy Osborne, Crystal
Thacker, Nanny Skidmore,
Conrad Ohlinger, Glenna
Nance, Patricia McKnight,
Waid Johnson, Mrs. Elvin Ice
and daughter, Gladys Hollings·
worth, Scot Hineman, Dorothy
Edmonson, Robert Crow, Mrs.
David Bush and son and Ruth
Bradley .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED - Ada Fraley,
Acomplete copy oil he policy Gallipolis; Louis Matlack, is on file in each school district Reedsville; Harrison Robin·
in the office of the Clerk where
it ma y be reyiewed l!Y, any son, Letart, W. Va. ; Christy
ii'lterested perSOn: ~ '
..
Dye, -Long Bottom ; Mamie ·
,
,, , ,.
,
. .- \'"I·
• II'!!
'' , I
Buchanan , Pomeroy and
. .
- Q- Are a hyena's front or Shauna Tackett, Rutland.
hind legs l o11ger?
DISCHARGED - Frances
A-The animal's front King, Clara Grueser, Maxine
legs are longer than its hind Har t, Eva McKinney and
legs.
Franklin Sisson.

'

an associate dean at Bowling
Green University, was named
vice provost for student affairs
Wednesday.

VICE PROVOST NOW
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Dr. Richard R. Eakin,

BAND SHOE_
S

By
Hush Puppie
and Pedwin

THE SHOE
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPPRT, 0.

t

5 pc. Dinette......................
.•
7 pc. Dinette....... :: .............. s73oo
9 pc. Dinette .... ::~ ............... sggoo
9x12 Linoleum Rugs........... ~488
22" Metal Utility Cabinet..Sl898
Sofa Beds ... ~ .........................s5800

i;
••.
=

CHALK ARTISr MRS. FRYE AT WORK
AREA WOMEN are invited to the Southeast Fatm Bureau "Autumn Interlude" Sept . 22
near Zanesville when chalk artist Mrs. Bert Frye of Xenia will present the program, '.'Christ
St!lllng the Storm." Mrs. Thomas Sayre is chairman of the Meigs County Farm Bureau
Women's Committee. She said the day~ong session is expected to draw about 300 women to the
Pleasant Grove United Methodist O!urch on State &amp;ute 93. Each county will present a oneminute report on special projects completed during the year. A special style show, "Interlude
of Fashion," will be presented by Fann Bureau women. Tickets oostlng $2.25 are available at
the County Farm Bureau office or from a meinber of the Farm Bureau Women 's Comm~ttee.

News, Notes

=;::~:~~~~
Mrs. is Rosella
:
of Pennsboro
a great·

Recliners ...~~~::'.......................~4SOO
Table Lamps.......................... s399

Osa Bailey of
:Sra4!ntcm, F1a., spent few
-n•tvs.·~'"' Mrs. Bess Larkins.
at the home of Mrs.
Clufllns Included Mr. and Mrs.
Smith, Nathan and
of Wellsville, Mrs. Jo Ann

a

••••••••

f« !he finest in lloli' ca1e, this HOo'ier can't be beafGtts

lletause ol it's excltalw triDie- ·
-

TIO SPEED IIOTOR gives 501 more suctiOtlloratllcllments. LARGE TIIIOW·AIAY BAG holds more ~rt...
.
needs
itt less i11ten. 4-POSITION RUG ADJiJniOO
... indoor,outdoor floor coverif1s lo-dee~ shalncs.
VINYl OUTER'.IACKET neveta dusty odoi. Wipes cleln
with a daflll clolh. .
· ·

cbs.

'58.

Bookcase
spn"ngs.MattressPer Ser......... ssOCII0 HOOVER BAGS 3 pkgs. '2.0t ,

carry out the bill as though it
bad been signed into law.
Kennedy accused Nixon of a
"promiscuous use of the pocket
veto power, a transparent but
un constitutional attempt to
prevent an embarrassing vote
by Congress to override a
regular veto and another
example in the long line of
actions by the administration
in derogation of the powers of
Congress under the Con·
stitution."
Under the Constitution, if a
President fails to sign or veto a
bill, the measure normally
becomes law without his
signature within 10 days.
If the 10-day period ends
while Congress is adjourned,
· however, the bill does not
become law, but is "pocket
vetoed."
In the case of the Kennedy
bill, the senator said, the 1().
day period e~P,!_r,e,d; ~n J?eU~.
1970, when t;ongress was on a ·
four-day recess for Christmas.
The Senate returned Dec. 28,
but Nixon's use of the pocket
veto prevented ,an attempt in
Congress to override the vote.
Kennedy charged that the use
of the pocket veto in those
circumstances was invalid.
Tbe bill was to authorize a
three-year, $225 million
program of federal grants to
hospitals and medical schools
for training family doctors. It
passed the Senate 64-1 and the
House 346-2.
·
Kennedy said the Justice
Department was citing
Supreme Court decisions in

1929 and 1938 to justify Nixon's
action. But he said those
decisions had not ruled on the
specific issue.
In his view, the pocket veto
provision in the Constitution
was meant to apply only when
Congress adjourns for the
session, not when it takes a
brief recess within a session.
Kennedy said the Justice
Department acknowledged the
interpretation of that section of
the Constitution "has been a
bone of contention between
Congress and the President
over the years. " Kennedy's
suit asks the court to order the
defendants to publish the bill
"as a validly enacted law of the
United States. "

Management and Technical
Assistance from private
management consulting
companies contracted by SBA.
Ray said that, in addition to
these program areas now
available to the 5.8 million
Vietnam Veterans already
returned , and those to return in
the future, all standard SBA
services for .small business·
equity financing, long-term
loans, government contracts,
management and technical
assistance, surety bonds,
certificates of competency,
lines of credit, Federal
regulatory compliance and
others, are still available .

~

••·!

.;.
,,-·

~\\¥.\iS ~c\\oo\

'at~ \O

Come and get them! Our spiffy shoes for classroom
and schoolyard ore reody. Big on goad looks ...
big on long wear ... big on comfort ... Bring in the
kids and set them on the right bock-to-school path.

..

'

•,

"We welcome inquiries on
these new program areas at
our 50 West Gay Stl'eet office in
Columbus or our Cincinnati
Branch Office at 550 Main
Street, Cincinnati. These
programs are designed to give
Boys ' brown
coffee cream .

SPECIAL

lord, black

BOYS
'

'

while.

Connie

.s·H·t''R'"l' s·· ., "'
'

&amp;

Pall Parrot
Thorn
MeAn
Active Age

BUTTON FRONT PERMA-PRESS
'

..

•' '&lt;I

;I

'

SIZE

2-lZ

...-.

Glr ls 1 saddle OX ·

AUGUST 11-12

,

&amp;

Boys' deml-boot,
buckle trim.
Girls' Mary· Jane
strapped shoe.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

...

t:

1/2 PRICE·
j·

SOLIDS · STRIPES · PRINTS

•
'·

itage house
The Kiddie Shoppe

Your

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

1)\;;;Jt~''- Shoe Store

..'
'•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CONTINUES AT

• • •
f ••

l .

:.... . .------------------------------------------------------------: Mr. and
Roy L. Reed of
::. Tuppers P{X,s are announcing
: the birth PI a 7 lb. 1 oz.
: daughter 4n the 14th of July.
• She has been named Crystal
; Diane. The little one is being
: welcomed home by her two
:; sislers, Brenda Kay and Lea
:: Ann. Grandparents are Mr.
:;; and
Francis Reed of
!: Penns'1pro, w. Va ., and Mr.
~ and
Edward Chevalier of

Modell031
R~~o '74.95

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, J).
Mass., filed a court suit against
the administration Wednesday
charging President Nixon
unconstitutionally pocketvetoed a Kennedy bill in 1970 to
help educate family doctors.
Kennedy filed his suit in U. S.
District Court in Washington
against Arthur F. Sampson,
head of the General Services
Administration, and Thomas
M. Jones, chief of records for
the White House.
He asked the court to declare
Nixon's veto invalid and to
order the two defendants to

=

-

-f

Court Asked to
Void Pocket Veto

~

.ls.

_

dirt other cleanels c111'1
action cleanif1,

elude biology, chemistry,
microbiology, physiology and
general education courses
required by Rio Grande
College. The second part of the
two-year program is a lull
summer and full academic
year on hospital rotation.
The rotation program is a
theoretical and practical
learning experience that includes work In all the areas oi
the department of pathology.
The program includes work in
the department and lecture
periods.
There is presently a critical
shortage of personnel in the
field of medical laboratory
technology . By 1975, some
experts say, more than 200,000
persons will be needed in the
field, including personnel in
hospitals, clinics, physicians'
offices, public health agencies,
the armed forces , phar·
maceutical
firms
and
research institutions.

Economic Opportunity
LQans of up to $50,000 for 15
years at a low interest rate to
expand an existing business or
establish a new business.
Federal Government Con·
tracts, in which SBA obtains
from other Federal agencies
contracts sui table to the
capabilities of a Veterans'
firm .

ELEVEN students have started the 12-month hospital rotation phase of the Medical
Laboratory Technology program offered by Rio Grande College and Holzer Medical Center.
They are: First Row (L toR): Lucinda Bradley, Wellston; Carrie Roe, Pt. Pleasant; and
· Barbara Bengar, Toronto, Ohio. Second Row -Marlene Cusick, Lancaster; Regina Boggs,
Oak Hill; Mrs. Glada Jenkins, Oak Hill; and Carolyn Hughes, Gallipolis. Third Row - Mrs.
Alice Mills, Gall!polis; Tom Kramer, Dayton; Bob Murray, Ray, Ohio and Debbie Hyrne,
Gallipolis.
·,
·
· ·

=

f ReedSville

~4400

(Full Size)

Eleven students, including
three from Gallia County, have
begun the 12-month hospital
rotation phase of the Medical
Laboratory Technology
;.. program offered by Holzer
~- Medical Center and Rio
Grande College.
~- The students have completed
: one year of course work at the
At the end of the 12••• college.
month hospital rotation, they
•• will receive an associate of
: science degree from the
: college and will be eligible for
: registration by the American
: Society
of
Clinical
• Pathologists.
•• A student in the Medical
•• Laboratory Technology
: program prepares for a career
: in medical technology while
: earning college credit that can
be applied toward a bachelor's
• degree In any science-related
•• field.
•• Courses required during the
first year of the program in·

\

:

-

AUGUST FURNITURE
SALE
AT
BAKERMIDDLEPORT,
FURNITURE
0.

Chest ....... ~..~~.~~~~ ........·... s331s
2 pc. Uving Room Suites s11 goo
3 pc: Bedroom Suites......s11goo
Baby Beds ~~;:~s .~d .............S3goo
Ladder Back Chairs.~~~:~:~~~~. sg•
. I Ref.ngerators.......
(12 cu. ft.&gt;slg oo
Ad m1ra
7

Complete Phase I

t

~

Maple or Walnut
$}081
. Sliding Glass Door........
;} ·

773-!513

· u

TWO APPOINTED - Col. Kenneth E. Mcintyre, district engineer of the H111tington

. . .(9") ...$60111
Portable T•eIev1S1ons.........
o
Hours:7a . m.to5 :30p.m.DIIIy
.
MASON, W; VA.
71. m, to' p. m. Friday &amp; Slllvrday

....

~Eleven MLT Pupils

anr

··~1

COLUMBUS - Three new the best possible break to return to the business comareas of SBA assistance for Vietnam Veterans as they munity," stated
Vietnam-era veterans were .....,;,;,;,..._ _.,;..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .
announced Wednesday by
REGISTER FOR
Frank D. Ray, Director of the
Columbus District Office of the
BICYCLE
Small
Business
Ad·
FREE
ministration . The
new
programs,
being made
Nothing to buy, just register.
available in response to
To be given away Sept. 16.
President Nixon's recent call
for renewed · efforts by all
Federal agencies to aid these
Veterans, are:

Capenter and Dorothy of
Toronto and Mrs. Jean Smith.
Paul Dean Brannon spent
several days with Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Atkins and family of
Evansville, Indiana. ·
Mr . and Mrs . Junior
Congrove and Dee of
ZanesvUle and Mr . and Mrs.
Gene
Wilson
recently
vacationed at Long Branch, N.
J., and Niagara Falls.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Opal
Randolph were Mrs. -Delphia
Harvey, Detroit, Mich., and
Mrs. Pauline Atkerson of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hauber at•
tended the 50th .wedding an·
niversary of Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Kibble at Parkersburg.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Atkins and
family of Evansville, Ind.,
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Densil Jamison and
family,
Kay Balderson celebrated
her 11th birthday July 24.
Homemade ice cream, cake
and punch were served to Mrs.
George Arnold of Northridge,
Calif., Mrs. T. S. Mulitauapele,
of San Diego, Calif., Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Williams of Athens,
Ga., Mrs. Lena Pickering,
Susan Hannum, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
R. E, Williams, Mr , and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and the
honored guest.
Mrs. Ruth Moore of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Mike
McClusky
of
Pickerington visited Sunday at
the Williams-Balderson home.
-Mn. I.. Balderson

PARK RESERVED SATURDAY, AUGUST 12TH
FOR

BASKETBALL SHOES

$""00

BEACH
TOWELS

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60 WEST, HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

8lx108
Full Sire e11. Reg. $3.98-SALE
Matching Pillow Cases $2.69-SALE

2/$300

50% COTION· 50% POLYESTER

GAY NINTY COOKIES
REG. 13.50

. CONVERSE "ALL-STAR"

BASKETBALL SHOES .

•9•5

'

'2"
'1"

LADIES' SHOES AND SANDALS

lllz LB. BOX

OF lARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

LADIES'

DAN RIVER
NO-IRON .SHEETS
72x108
'249
Twin Size ea . Reg. $3.29 - SALE

3'12 to 6-6112 to 11
Red, Gold

"SUMMER OUTING"

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P,M.

,.

Men &amp; Boys'

SAL£

REG. 13.98 SALE
REG. '5.50 SALE

JtEG. '6.95 SALE
REG. 17.95 SALE
REG. '8.95 SALE

.MEN AND BOYS SANDALS
REG. •s.95 SALE '3.99
·REG. s5,50 SALE ·~.66
REG. •4.95 SAl£ •3.30

L
,.'

BODY SUITS

$499To$ll 95
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

..,

.,
•'

BERMUDAS
'

C11t Offs

REG. $2.50
REG. $2.98
REG. $3.50
REG. $3.98

NOW$1.66
NOW$1.99
NOW$2.33
NOW$2.66

----t
SHIRTS
'$499

Boys' 2 pc.

'

3 pc.

SHIRT &amp;
SHORT SETS
·.

�6

-~~-S!!~. ~~~po.~-~~
...~~·~roi'i~in~··~~~·m~l~!:~::~.:~w~~~·~··~·.·.~·.·.~·.·.·~.·.·~.·.o~.o...·~~
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"'"~
~
~:m:e:oeoabg:g;g db mJC::;::::e """'"' , 'i».·
Summe~

~
~~
~:·

" ""'

Dress

Long, washable !lresses
are perfect lor a carefree ~~
1ummer. For at home or at . ~·:
the seashure, thrs~ dresses ::;:
can be dressed ~P or played \.:~
down.
::::

ham
ber 0 commer
·
·
·
one• woman
c
·
·
•l'e
::!:
·
·
.
.· ._,
·::.::.•
1• . ..
'

O:O"!X

•

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0

..

.

.

PeopIe Make ·th e PIace·

:jjj·:

~

..

'·

'

h_
Free.TV Kits oemg'
oo
. ered
'.

:· :
~:
~.

PT. PLEASANT-Rev . C. studentwhomaynotbeableto
·
~ Adult Basic Education the Learning Center the op~:: program in '!he Mason County portunity to ·study at home. ·
::§ Schools, said Monday there is a This same program was shown
limited number of television last year anq was most sue:~:· high school kits available to the cessful.
~i public at no charge.
'The kit, valued at $13.5\l, is
:~
The kits are to be used in free to students who sign up for
conjunction with the Television the course. However, the
~ High Schopl Program ·to be supply is limited. To obtain a
:::; shown on WMUL-TV (Channel kit, or for further information,
~ 9 on the Cable or Channel 33 call ' Rev. Frum or Mrs.
~:: IJHF) scheduled to begin in Morrison at the Learning
~•.· .September. The kits ~nable the Center, 675-3039.
.
~
.~
·..·.
•.

!i

BY WILMA REECE
But none of the the reasons for not
repll~, "Not very much, " when asked
;.:
It doesn't pay to get too attached to moving seemed insurmountable.
how I liked this area, I now apologize.
~one place or group of friends.
I decided to save the "pros" until
I was ' making the mistake of
I found this out when my husband we'd made a trip to Meigs County to
judging a community solely. on its
·"·
1'n ape rfeellY normaI tone of "get th e 1ay of the Ia nd" and search for
appearanc"e. I've sin~ learned that its .
:::: a•nounced
••
:;:; voice last spring that he had been a new house.
charm(andltlsthere)lleslnitspeople.
:f.: transferred from our home in Canton,
Since my husband works for Ohio . It's the busy neighbor who brought us
fj Ohio, to someplace called Meigs Power Company, he felt that be should . homemade cookies at Christmas, the
~; County.
at least use their product, which: meant
folks with gardens (everyone has a
:$ To say I had mixed reactions would that we . probably would .live In garden!) who load us down with fresh
:i~ be quite art unders.tatement.- I began Pomeroy.
vegetables and advice on how to grow :~
@. tallying up the pros and cons of moving.
We left our children with a neighbor
our own.
~~
Number one con was, of course, for a couple of days and came alone so
Our children have settled into their .,
~ leaving all the friends we had made in we could really look around. We soon
new environment like kittens In a rug. ~ ·
~ eightyears.Numbertwocon,Ihadjust realized that we should have brought
Theyhavemetandlearnedtolikemore ~;:;:.
~:: ahout gotten our house the way I
the children with us. Perhaps if,he had
people, young and old, in one year here
.:;:: wanted it (since I'm a compulsive seen It through their eyes, we would
than they had In canton all the time
ij. house fixer-upper, I was already have liked it a little better. I started they lived there.
~~ ·
~ looking forward to another house, then really wishing we didn't have to
To the people I meet who are ~
~ however). Under number three, !listed move.
weighing the pros and cons of moving to :~;
~. \he large, modern shopping center near
Because the transfer meant a
Meigs County, I am now a one-woman ~~
~ our home (my husband would add here promotion and a raise for my husband
Chamber of Commerce.
;~
:~: . that I am also a compulsive shopper). . and because it behooves a man to make
Ed. note: Wibna Reece, mother of ~
:~ Then,1oo, there were the fears that the a living for his family; move we did. two young daughters, is the wife of John :~
:;:; children would undergo some sort of Happily, we found a house that we all
Reece, public affairs coordinator of the ~
~*. trauma as a result of being uprooted so liked, and fine neighbors in the bargain.
Ohio Power Co. at its new Gen. James ::i:
:~: suddenly. I'd heard of such things
That was one short year B.I{O.
Gavin Power Plant near Cheshire. Mr. ~;.·
;:~ happening.
Now, to those people to whom I
and Mrs. Reece reside at 220 Lincoln .;.
;:;:
Hill, Pomeroy.
~

J

water resistant, pretlsiOI'I
jeweled movement, shock ·
resls1ant, sweep 1econd.

CARAVELLE'
by BULOVA

X

.

Brewer Reunion Held at Park

GOESSLER

PORTLAND - There were Portland Park.
64 friends and relatives atPrayer was offered at noon
JEWELRY STORE
tending
the
Brewer
family
by
Miss Unda Close, ColumCourt St.. Pomeroy
reunion Sunday, Aug. 6, at bus, before the picnic dinner
was served. After dinner, a
brief business meeting was
conducted by the president,
David A. Brewer.
Coming In Person
A letter was read from A. W.
Brewer, White Cottage, Ohio
who was unable to attend,
thanking all the relatives who
sent cards and letters to his
wife, Ullian, who suffered a
stroke a year ago and who is
confined to a nursing home at
New Conrcord, Ohio.
Gif.ts were presented by the
Tommy Scott's Big Country Music Circus with
president to Mr. and Mrs. Eber
10 car loads of Radio, TV, Recording and
Brewer, eldest couple present;
Movie stars direct from Hollywood, California
Jerry Close, son of Mr. and
and Nashville Tenn., featuring Chuck
Mrs. LSrry Close, the youngest
Housley, Raymond Walker, Sam Baxter, the
Nashville Hillbillies, Fantastic Modern Day
Annie Oakley Lady Sharpshooter, ropespinning, real cowboys and Indians, Circus
_.... ~ . Funny Clowns. Also . TV.~s . or.iginal.
~id~r. with his bull whip act.
THURSDAY
PAST COUNCILORS Club,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America, cookout, 6:30p.m.
Last ofthe All Time Great Movie Stars
Thursday, home of Mrs .
And His
Charles Cohen, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
hall. Refreshments. All Master
Masons invited.
HOUSEWARES party,
The Real McQJy one of America's most
Junior American Legion,
beloved western movie QJwboys and star of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
more than 200 pictures. including Mike Todd's
p.m. Public invited.
Around the World in 80 days. See Tim McQJy
WILLING WORKERS Class,
with the World's Only Country Music Circus.
Enterprise United Methodist
Church,
7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Appearing in Person At
home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.
MEIGS HIGH School band
practice, 6 p.m. this evening at
high school. Band plays at fair
3 p.m. Aug. 19.
OHIO VAlLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, 8 p.m. Thursday
at hall. Deputy Virgil Atkins
, Sponsored By Racine Fire Department
present for inspection; potluck
Children underll $1.50- Studentund AduHs$3.00
refreshments.
TICKETS WILL BEON SALE AT THE DOORS
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
DON'T MISS IT
Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday,at
ANY FIREMEN HAVE TICKETS FOR SALE
Meigs Inn. Plans for county

COUNTRY MUSIC CIRCUS
WILD WEST SHOW

present; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer, who had six children
present, and Mrs. Rollin
Lawrence, Harvertown, Pa.,
who came the farthest.
A gift was sent to Mrs.
Earnest Brewer who has been
ill and was just returned from
the hospital. Gifts also were
given to Mrs. Clyde Close and
Edgar Brewer and get well
cards were signed to be sent to
Mrs. Earnest Brewer and Mrs.
A. W. Brewer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Beall, Columbus, Miss
Ronda Beall and Terry Groves,
Mark Beall, Columbus; David
A. Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer, Portland; Mr. and
Mrs. John Dobbins, Dennis and

Social ·Calendar

COL TIM McCOY

1

discussed.

;

THESE DISCOUNT
PRICES EFtECTIVE
THRU SEPT.

Elegant Jumpsuit,
One-piece drawatriog billter-neck jumpsuits are easy
to make with the wide, fuU

'--

of the same material for an
elegant coverup.

=

::AS BINDERSl.29

.J

FIWR PAPER

.29

ORGANIZER

.lQ

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

_ ·- ·---NOW ONLY
......

First Showing

500

c;

COUNT

School Fashions
Girls and Teens

SKIRTS - DRESSES

PRICES
START FROM

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.
•

The Department Store of Building Sin~ 1915

Pomeroy
Phontllf2·542

I2~m

--;:::;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:1 NON-STING ANTI-PERSPIRANT

r

SCENTED OR UNSCENTED

new , new

leans In elephan I leg
and flare leg styles ...
denims , corduroys.
cotton suedes and the
smart body sh irts to
go with them . F irst
with new fashions
now . See them all.

IlL

REG. 12.19

Intimate
cleanliness,
intimately
understood.

ola's Dress Shop

WITH IRON

77¢

REG. 12.49
REG.
11.35

60's $}49

25's

2.95

SIMI LAC®

1

POMEROY
Cor. Main &amp; Sycamore

POLAROID COLORPAO
TYPE l OB LAND FILM

•

'

VALUE .

ONLY

ready to feed 32 oz cans

REG. 13.74.

•,•I I j,

:

,!~~~

0

-

feeding

• no mixing
just open
and pour

aor 42e
6_9._~--·---~~
REG.

~

REG.

INCHES

ONLY

DISPOSABLE BOTILES

3r

REG. 11.19

ONLY

9e

LISTERINE

'REG. 33'

32 oz.

2 ROLLS

100
WITH 30 FREE

REG.

$10.38 .

$2.49

49~

79~

WITH or WITHOUT IRON

IN PLASTIC DISPENSER

~~~-

REG.

• full day's

case of 6-

Petroleum Jelly

L .__

NO. 264
REG. 11.29

60's $}29

REG.

i.

REG. 95'

1.,.~~--~-·-~-~:&gt;--;

CHOCKS
PLAIN

VASELINE

30's
11.871

VALUE
REG.
NOW

GJJirds o a rather
w'hat do these birds have in common? The owl from the
wide-awake bank and the eagle from E Pluribus Unum.
There's an eagle on every dollar, isn't there? And the wideawake bank is famous for all things having to do with money.
So there's a natural attraction. That's why the wide-awake
owl and the eagle stick together so often in s!lvings,
checking, aut.o loans, personal loans, ))orne loans . . .

13 OZ.

... _

•

'

BOBBY
·PINS ·

•

on

POMEROY, OHIO .

Member Federal Reserve System
/
Fridays Our Drive· ln Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
· s2o;ooo Maximum lnsunmce
For Each Depositor

gr

79~

~

Share a bottle ol Bonne Bell's famous
Ten-Q.SIK lotion wilh everyone. Now
during this sPecia l offe&lt;, buy an 8 oz.
bottle at the regular polce and gel a 2 oz.
bottle lree. Share It with your boyfriend,
your brolher. slsler, or how about dear,
IW&amp;el Dad.
.
Toltlhem how Ten·O·SIK helps to keep

REG.

$1.17

Bec~use

It

cleanses belter than soap-uncl09$
lnd tightens lhom. How It's a deep,
onlisepllc cleanser lhat helps to clear
blemishes and keep lhem clear-and
it normalizes oily or dry skin condillons.
Toll them to use llllralthlng In lhe
morning ond loot thing ot night.

REG. 2f

8 oz. .

Ten-0-Six Lotion-• lot of love
to give. And to r•celve.

WITH TRIAL AND TRAVEL SIZE FREE

Combo 5350

LIMIT OF ONE
PER. CUSTOMER

7oz.

REG.

· 6 oz.
REG. $1.66

88C~

deodorant

DISTILLED ·
WATER
GAL

•

Offer

RIGHT GUARD

$2.29

$1.59

100's
REG. s2.98 .

49~

'1 •77
•

\

1.59

1

Special

makes itgff;o ~~ .
.

REG.

. JS's
REG. 99'

"THE ,WORLD'S MOST TIIUSTEO,
MOST TAKEN VITAMINS"

The wide-awake bank

.

REG.

faces clean, clear and honest.

Come to think of it, how about you? Wouldn't
you like to keep company with•fine feathered friends
at our wide-awake bank?

The.Farmers Bank &amp;Savings CO. ·

$}49 I

Bayer Aspirin

Sl,()()

ONLY

(Upon Request)

210 E. 2nd

49~

Friday and
Saturday Only!

~·

· 2-HOUR
CLEANING
ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

~pl!l!iall

$139

@~~~~

L.------------------

On-the-Move Shampoo
. Dry shampoo Is a great
time saver for quickie trips
or . overnight stays. And you
won't have to lug around
dryers, curlers or hair spray
since dry shampoo cleans
without causing the hair to
lose Ita style.

49e

'' .,

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrine of Jerusalem, family
picnic, Twin City Shrine Club
Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Friday.

New Hondbogs
There's a whole new look
in handbags to go with short
bare little evening dresses .
Bags are smaller to keep in
proportion with the cocktail
dress. Old favorites like patent leather trimmed with silver. peau de soie clutches
and crushed velvets all re·
turn iri smaller versions.

5's

OFF
See our

MARINE
[
'

14 Ol
REG. 12.49

-"-4''---''--"'looo

Be first to see and
choose
the
new
fash ions tor school at
lola 's. sa~e money!

For The Natural Hair-Do Look!
Oisappe•

69e

ONLY

1

.EARLY L

Helps Mllt1
Split Ends

1.29 VAWE

JEANS- BLOUSES

SATIJRDAY
ANNUAL Herbert and Helen
Miller Family Reunion
Saturday at Forest Acres Park
on New Uma Road with dinner
beginning at 5 p.m. All family
and friends invited.
SUNDAY
EIGHTH DISTRICT
.American Legion picnic,
Sunday, Wilkesville; dinner at
3 p.m.
CARMEL CHURCH annual
homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School at 10 a.m., basket
dinner at noon, program at
1:30. Rev. Borden, Gallipolis,
guest speaker, everyone
welcome.
HOMECOMING and all day
services Sunday, Freedom
Gospel Mission, Bald Knob.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m .;
basket dinner, 12 noon; affair and flUid raising to be ternoon services, 1:30 p.m.,
Rev. 0. G. McKinney,
Charleston, speaker. Bissell
Brothers and other special
FACTORY FINISHED singers;
public invited.

PAN·ELINGS

Gillette

REG.
89'

29e

NEW

• 89:

1

SOUTHERN LOCAL HIGH SOKJOL
FRIDAY, AUGUST 11

QUALITY

88'

•

PAPER

BODY SHIRTS

0

•

NOTE
BOOK
REG.

NOTEBOOK

WILD WEST SHOW

(Showtime 7:30 P.M.)

1.68

STENOGRAPHER
NO. W-180

--

'

·.:

'·:

DEPARTMENT.

5

lOTAL '

~

4

YOU'LL FIND
SAVINGS IN EVERY

School Starter Special

0

•

WITH ·DISCOUNT PRICES AT • • •

:a!~!~tsfe':~!;. 1::k~:~:~:

l • ,

·=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::-.&amp;..""8::!~&amp;.«"~*:::~::::::8!!~!~~:::~:::::::::::::-~=:::::w:::::~=:=:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::--::::.m:;~&amp;&amp;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::s::=::::::::~~:::::::::;:;::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Kerry, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Simeral and
Tlsha, Findlay;· Roy Grimes,
Dayton; Linda Close, Rita
Close, Mr. and Mrs. George
Todd, Vanessa and James,
Columbus~ Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Close and Jerry, Watertown;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brewer,
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Brewer, Porlland; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer,
Teresa and Kenneth II, l\11'.
and Mrs. John Glockner and
Reva, Columbus; Earnest
Brewer, Racine; Mrs. Deloris
Harrop, Rick and Mike,
Columbus; Mrs. Rollin
Lawrence, Patricia and Debra,
Harvertown, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs . Ross Grimes, East
Liverpool ; Mrs. Maxine
Pardee, James, Martha and
Robert, Youngstown; Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Grimes, Ross and
Paul, Maryland; Mrs. Grace
Byers and son, Columbus;
Mrs. Mary Tucker, Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Brewer, East
Liverpool; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close, Wayne and Roy,
o,yaterfllf4,"- a~d Roy Bush,
R;acine. w
.. " ~·

Gold metallic fabrics have
always sold well during the
holidays. Butdesignershave
perfecte(j these fabri~ so
t~ey're subtler than ever be- .
fore. Look for the latest in
fashion with silver specks or '
golden thread s running
through.

Friday &amp; Satruday

i.J.

s•urr "A"-

S1'lyerondGold

L: 'Frum, recruiter for the ·· attend regularly the Classes at

~

' Middleport-Pomeroy,
'
.
7- The Daily S!!ntinel,
0., Aug. 10, 1972

\

VALUE
••
COUPON EXPIRES

64~

.

WITH THIS COUPON
SEPT. 4, 1972

COUPON REDEEMABLE AT

NELSON'S

foOiliiftl

foal dtadllfPtjdry 111111 ~

liMIT Of PNE
lttR CUSTOMER

1.49 VALUE
~~~~~~ SEPT. 4, 1972
I COUPON REDEEMABLE AT NELSON'S
L----------1

;

'

... :

�6

-~~-S!!~. ~~~po.~-~~
...~~·~roi'i~in~··~~~·m~l~!:~::~.:~w~~~·~··~·.·.~·.·.~·.·.·~.·.·~.·.o~.o...·~~
.. ~...~:.~.:~::~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~m~•~~~
"'"~
~
~:m:e:oeoabg:g;g db mJC::;::::e """'"' , 'i».·
Summe~

~
~~
~:·

" ""'

Dress

Long, washable !lresses
are perfect lor a carefree ~~
1ummer. For at home or at . ~·:
the seashure, thrs~ dresses ::;:
can be dressed ~P or played \.:~
down.
::::

ham
ber 0 commer
·
·
·
one• woman
c
·
·
•l'e
::!:
·
·
.
.· ._,
·::.::.•
1• . ..
'

O:O"!X

•

:

0

..

.

.

PeopIe Make ·th e PIace·

:jjj·:

~

..

'·

'

h_
Free.TV Kits oemg'
oo
. ered
'.

:· :
~:
~.

PT. PLEASANT-Rev . C. studentwhomaynotbeableto
·
~ Adult Basic Education the Learning Center the op~:: program in '!he Mason County portunity to ·study at home. ·
::§ Schools, said Monday there is a This same program was shown
limited number of television last year anq was most sue:~:· high school kits available to the cessful.
~i public at no charge.
'The kit, valued at $13.5\l, is
:~
The kits are to be used in free to students who sign up for
conjunction with the Television the course. However, the
~ High Schopl Program ·to be supply is limited. To obtain a
:::; shown on WMUL-TV (Channel kit, or for further information,
~ 9 on the Cable or Channel 33 call ' Rev. Frum or Mrs.
~:: IJHF) scheduled to begin in Morrison at the Learning
~•.· .September. The kits ~nable the Center, 675-3039.
.
~
.~
·..·.
•.

!i

BY WILMA REECE
But none of the the reasons for not
repll~, "Not very much, " when asked
;.:
It doesn't pay to get too attached to moving seemed insurmountable.
how I liked this area, I now apologize.
~one place or group of friends.
I decided to save the "pros" until
I was ' making the mistake of
I found this out when my husband we'd made a trip to Meigs County to
judging a community solely. on its
·"·
1'n ape rfeellY normaI tone of "get th e 1ay of the Ia nd" and search for
appearanc"e. I've sin~ learned that its .
:::: a•nounced
••
:;:; voice last spring that he had been a new house.
charm(andltlsthere)lleslnitspeople.
:f.: transferred from our home in Canton,
Since my husband works for Ohio . It's the busy neighbor who brought us
fj Ohio, to someplace called Meigs Power Company, he felt that be should . homemade cookies at Christmas, the
~; County.
at least use their product, which: meant
folks with gardens (everyone has a
:$ To say I had mixed reactions would that we . probably would .live In garden!) who load us down with fresh
:i~ be quite art unders.tatement.- I began Pomeroy.
vegetables and advice on how to grow :~
@. tallying up the pros and cons of moving.
We left our children with a neighbor
our own.
~~
Number one con was, of course, for a couple of days and came alone so
Our children have settled into their .,
~ leaving all the friends we had made in we could really look around. We soon
new environment like kittens In a rug. ~ ·
~ eightyears.Numbertwocon,Ihadjust realized that we should have brought
Theyhavemetandlearnedtolikemore ~;:;:.
~:: ahout gotten our house the way I
the children with us. Perhaps if,he had
people, young and old, in one year here
.:;:: wanted it (since I'm a compulsive seen It through their eyes, we would
than they had In canton all the time
ij. house fixer-upper, I was already have liked it a little better. I started they lived there.
~~ ·
~ looking forward to another house, then really wishing we didn't have to
To the people I meet who are ~
~ however). Under number three, !listed move.
weighing the pros and cons of moving to :~;
~. \he large, modern shopping center near
Because the transfer meant a
Meigs County, I am now a one-woman ~~
~ our home (my husband would add here promotion and a raise for my husband
Chamber of Commerce.
;~
:~: . that I am also a compulsive shopper). . and because it behooves a man to make
Ed. note: Wibna Reece, mother of ~
:~ Then,1oo, there were the fears that the a living for his family; move we did. two young daughters, is the wife of John :~
:;:; children would undergo some sort of Happily, we found a house that we all
Reece, public affairs coordinator of the ~
~*. trauma as a result of being uprooted so liked, and fine neighbors in the bargain.
Ohio Power Co. at its new Gen. James ::i:
:~: suddenly. I'd heard of such things
That was one short year B.I{O.
Gavin Power Plant near Cheshire. Mr. ~;.·
;:~ happening.
Now, to those people to whom I
and Mrs. Reece reside at 220 Lincoln .;.
;:;:
Hill, Pomeroy.
~

J

water resistant, pretlsiOI'I
jeweled movement, shock ·
resls1ant, sweep 1econd.

CARAVELLE'
by BULOVA

X

.

Brewer Reunion Held at Park

GOESSLER

PORTLAND - There were Portland Park.
64 friends and relatives atPrayer was offered at noon
JEWELRY STORE
tending
the
Brewer
family
by
Miss Unda Close, ColumCourt St.. Pomeroy
reunion Sunday, Aug. 6, at bus, before the picnic dinner
was served. After dinner, a
brief business meeting was
conducted by the president,
David A. Brewer.
Coming In Person
A letter was read from A. W.
Brewer, White Cottage, Ohio
who was unable to attend,
thanking all the relatives who
sent cards and letters to his
wife, Ullian, who suffered a
stroke a year ago and who is
confined to a nursing home at
New Conrcord, Ohio.
Gif.ts were presented by the
Tommy Scott's Big Country Music Circus with
president to Mr. and Mrs. Eber
10 car loads of Radio, TV, Recording and
Brewer, eldest couple present;
Movie stars direct from Hollywood, California
Jerry Close, son of Mr. and
and Nashville Tenn., featuring Chuck
Mrs. LSrry Close, the youngest
Housley, Raymond Walker, Sam Baxter, the
Nashville Hillbillies, Fantastic Modern Day
Annie Oakley Lady Sharpshooter, ropespinning, real cowboys and Indians, Circus
_.... ~ . Funny Clowns. Also . TV.~s . or.iginal.
~id~r. with his bull whip act.
THURSDAY
PAST COUNCILORS Club,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America, cookout, 6:30p.m.
Last ofthe All Time Great Movie Stars
Thursday, home of Mrs .
And His
Charles Cohen, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
hall. Refreshments. All Master
Masons invited.
HOUSEWARES party,
The Real McQJy one of America's most
Junior American Legion,
beloved western movie QJwboys and star of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
more than 200 pictures. including Mike Todd's
p.m. Public invited.
Around the World in 80 days. See Tim McQJy
WILLING WORKERS Class,
with the World's Only Country Music Circus.
Enterprise United Methodist
Church,
7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Appearing in Person At
home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.
MEIGS HIGH School band
practice, 6 p.m. this evening at
high school. Band plays at fair
3 p.m. Aug. 19.
OHIO VAlLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, 8 p.m. Thursday
at hall. Deputy Virgil Atkins
, Sponsored By Racine Fire Department
present for inspection; potluck
Children underll $1.50- Studentund AduHs$3.00
refreshments.
TICKETS WILL BEON SALE AT THE DOORS
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
DON'T MISS IT
Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday,at
ANY FIREMEN HAVE TICKETS FOR SALE
Meigs Inn. Plans for county

COUNTRY MUSIC CIRCUS
WILD WEST SHOW

present; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer, who had six children
present, and Mrs. Rollin
Lawrence, Harvertown, Pa.,
who came the farthest.
A gift was sent to Mrs.
Earnest Brewer who has been
ill and was just returned from
the hospital. Gifts also were
given to Mrs. Clyde Close and
Edgar Brewer and get well
cards were signed to be sent to
Mrs. Earnest Brewer and Mrs.
A. W. Brewer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Beall, Columbus, Miss
Ronda Beall and Terry Groves,
Mark Beall, Columbus; David
A. Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer, Portland; Mr. and
Mrs. John Dobbins, Dennis and

Social ·Calendar

COL TIM McCOY

1

discussed.

;

THESE DISCOUNT
PRICES EFtECTIVE
THRU SEPT.

Elegant Jumpsuit,
One-piece drawatriog billter-neck jumpsuits are easy
to make with the wide, fuU

'--

of the same material for an
elegant coverup.

=

::AS BINDERSl.29

.J

FIWR PAPER

.29

ORGANIZER

.lQ

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

_ ·- ·---NOW ONLY
......

First Showing

500

c;

COUNT

School Fashions
Girls and Teens

SKIRTS - DRESSES

PRICES
START FROM

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.
•

The Department Store of Building Sin~ 1915

Pomeroy
Phontllf2·542

I2~m

--;:::;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:1 NON-STING ANTI-PERSPIRANT

r

SCENTED OR UNSCENTED

new , new

leans In elephan I leg
and flare leg styles ...
denims , corduroys.
cotton suedes and the
smart body sh irts to
go with them . F irst
with new fashions
now . See them all.

IlL

REG. 12.19

Intimate
cleanliness,
intimately
understood.

ola's Dress Shop

WITH IRON

77¢

REG. 12.49
REG.
11.35

60's $}49

25's

2.95

SIMI LAC®

1

POMEROY
Cor. Main &amp; Sycamore

POLAROID COLORPAO
TYPE l OB LAND FILM

•

'

VALUE .

ONLY

ready to feed 32 oz cans

REG. 13.74.

•,•I I j,

:

,!~~~

0

-

feeding

• no mixing
just open
and pour

aor 42e
6_9._~--·---~~
REG.

~

REG.

INCHES

ONLY

DISPOSABLE BOTILES

3r

REG. 11.19

ONLY

9e

LISTERINE

'REG. 33'

32 oz.

2 ROLLS

100
WITH 30 FREE

REG.

$10.38 .

$2.49

49~

79~

WITH or WITHOUT IRON

IN PLASTIC DISPENSER

~~~-

REG.

• full day's

case of 6-

Petroleum Jelly

L .__

NO. 264
REG. 11.29

60's $}29

REG.

i.

REG. 95'

1.,.~~--~-·-~-~:&gt;--;

CHOCKS
PLAIN

VASELINE

30's
11.871

VALUE
REG.
NOW

GJJirds o a rather
w'hat do these birds have in common? The owl from the
wide-awake bank and the eagle from E Pluribus Unum.
There's an eagle on every dollar, isn't there? And the wideawake bank is famous for all things having to do with money.
So there's a natural attraction. That's why the wide-awake
owl and the eagle stick together so often in s!lvings,
checking, aut.o loans, personal loans, ))orne loans . . .

13 OZ.

... _

•

'

BOBBY
·PINS ·

•

on

POMEROY, OHIO .

Member Federal Reserve System
/
Fridays Our Drive· ln Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
· s2o;ooo Maximum lnsunmce
For Each Depositor

gr

79~

~

Share a bottle ol Bonne Bell's famous
Ten-Q.SIK lotion wilh everyone. Now
during this sPecia l offe&lt;, buy an 8 oz.
bottle at the regular polce and gel a 2 oz.
bottle lree. Share It with your boyfriend,
your brolher. slsler, or how about dear,
IW&amp;el Dad.
.
Toltlhem how Ten·O·SIK helps to keep

REG.

$1.17

Bec~use

It

cleanses belter than soap-uncl09$
lnd tightens lhom. How It's a deep,
onlisepllc cleanser lhat helps to clear
blemishes and keep lhem clear-and
it normalizes oily or dry skin condillons.
Toll them to use llllralthlng In lhe
morning ond loot thing ot night.

REG. 2f

8 oz. .

Ten-0-Six Lotion-• lot of love
to give. And to r•celve.

WITH TRIAL AND TRAVEL SIZE FREE

Combo 5350

LIMIT OF ONE
PER. CUSTOMER

7oz.

REG.

· 6 oz.
REG. $1.66

88C~

deodorant

DISTILLED ·
WATER
GAL

•

Offer

RIGHT GUARD

$2.29

$1.59

100's
REG. s2.98 .

49~

'1 •77
•

\

1.59

1

Special

makes itgff;o ~~ .
.

REG.

. JS's
REG. 99'

"THE ,WORLD'S MOST TIIUSTEO,
MOST TAKEN VITAMINS"

The wide-awake bank

.

REG.

faces clean, clear and honest.

Come to think of it, how about you? Wouldn't
you like to keep company with•fine feathered friends
at our wide-awake bank?

The.Farmers Bank &amp;Savings CO. ·

$}49 I

Bayer Aspirin

Sl,()()

ONLY

(Upon Request)

210 E. 2nd

49~

Friday and
Saturday Only!

~·

· 2-HOUR
CLEANING
ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

~pl!l!iall

$139

@~~~~

L.------------------

On-the-Move Shampoo
. Dry shampoo Is a great
time saver for quickie trips
or . overnight stays. And you
won't have to lug around
dryers, curlers or hair spray
since dry shampoo cleans
without causing the hair to
lose Ita style.

49e

'' .,

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrine of Jerusalem, family
picnic, Twin City Shrine Club
Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Friday.

New Hondbogs
There's a whole new look
in handbags to go with short
bare little evening dresses .
Bags are smaller to keep in
proportion with the cocktail
dress. Old favorites like patent leather trimmed with silver. peau de soie clutches
and crushed velvets all re·
turn iri smaller versions.

5's

OFF
See our

MARINE
[
'

14 Ol
REG. 12.49

-"-4''---''--"'looo

Be first to see and
choose
the
new
fash ions tor school at
lola 's. sa~e money!

For The Natural Hair-Do Look!
Oisappe•

69e

ONLY

1

.EARLY L

Helps Mllt1
Split Ends

1.29 VAWE

JEANS- BLOUSES

SATIJRDAY
ANNUAL Herbert and Helen
Miller Family Reunion
Saturday at Forest Acres Park
on New Uma Road with dinner
beginning at 5 p.m. All family
and friends invited.
SUNDAY
EIGHTH DISTRICT
.American Legion picnic,
Sunday, Wilkesville; dinner at
3 p.m.
CARMEL CHURCH annual
homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School at 10 a.m., basket
dinner at noon, program at
1:30. Rev. Borden, Gallipolis,
guest speaker, everyone
welcome.
HOMECOMING and all day
services Sunday, Freedom
Gospel Mission, Bald Knob.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m .;
basket dinner, 12 noon; affair and flUid raising to be ternoon services, 1:30 p.m.,
Rev. 0. G. McKinney,
Charleston, speaker. Bissell
Brothers and other special
FACTORY FINISHED singers;
public invited.

PAN·ELINGS

Gillette

REG.
89'

29e

NEW

• 89:

1

SOUTHERN LOCAL HIGH SOKJOL
FRIDAY, AUGUST 11

QUALITY

88'

•

PAPER

BODY SHIRTS

0

•

NOTE
BOOK
REG.

NOTEBOOK

WILD WEST SHOW

(Showtime 7:30 P.M.)

1.68

STENOGRAPHER
NO. W-180

--

'

·.:

'·:

DEPARTMENT.

5

lOTAL '

~

4

YOU'LL FIND
SAVINGS IN EVERY

School Starter Special

0

•

WITH ·DISCOUNT PRICES AT • • •

:a!~!~tsfe':~!;. 1::k~:~:~:

l • ,

·=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::-.&amp;..""8::!~&amp;.«"~*:::~::::::8!!~!~~:::~:::::::::::::-~=:::::w:::::~=:=:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::--::::.m:;~&amp;&amp;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::s::=::::::::~~:::::::::;:;::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Kerry, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Simeral and
Tlsha, Findlay;· Roy Grimes,
Dayton; Linda Close, Rita
Close, Mr. and Mrs. George
Todd, Vanessa and James,
Columbus~ Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Close and Jerry, Watertown;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brewer,
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Brewer, Porlland; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer,
Teresa and Kenneth II, l\11'.
and Mrs. John Glockner and
Reva, Columbus; Earnest
Brewer, Racine; Mrs. Deloris
Harrop, Rick and Mike,
Columbus; Mrs. Rollin
Lawrence, Patricia and Debra,
Harvertown, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs . Ross Grimes, East
Liverpool ; Mrs. Maxine
Pardee, James, Martha and
Robert, Youngstown; Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Grimes, Ross and
Paul, Maryland; Mrs. Grace
Byers and son, Columbus;
Mrs. Mary Tucker, Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Brewer, East
Liverpool; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close, Wayne and Roy,
o,yaterfllf4,"- a~d Roy Bush,
R;acine. w
.. " ~·

Gold metallic fabrics have
always sold well during the
holidays. Butdesignershave
perfecte(j these fabri~ so
t~ey're subtler than ever be- .
fore. Look for the latest in
fashion with silver specks or '
golden thread s running
through.

Friday &amp; Satruday

i.J.

s•urr "A"-

S1'lyerondGold

L: 'Frum, recruiter for the ·· attend regularly the Classes at

~

' Middleport-Pomeroy,
'
.
7- The Daily S!!ntinel,
0., Aug. 10, 1972

\

VALUE
••
COUPON EXPIRES

64~

.

WITH THIS COUPON
SEPT. 4, 1972

COUPON REDEEMABLE AT

NELSON'S

foOiliiftl

foal dtadllfPtjdry 111111 ~

liMIT Of PNE
lttR CUSTOMER

1.49 VALUE
~~~~~~ SEPT. 4, 1972
I COUPON REDEEMABLE AT NELSON'S
L----------1

;

'

... :

�...
8- .The Daily Se!tlnel, Middleport-P()Ill«&lt;y, 0., Aug. 10,1972
~Q _ _e_ ..

By Charlene Hoeflich
At least three Meigs Olunty girl scout troops will be
exhibiting at the Meigs Olunty Fair.
The Salisbury Cadette Troop will have a display on the plant
kingdom and other troops exhibiting on facets of badge work will
be Middleport Junior 39 whose leader·is Mrs. Roscoe Wise, and
the Pomeroy troop of Mrs. Thomas &amp;ruth.
.The cadettes'will again this year operate !Ill information booth
for the convenience of fairgoers.
r'

•

t
•

'~
~

~

~

:1
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•·

MRS. WILLIAM OHUNGER reports that to date only II
businesses have responded to letters sent out in the annual girl
scout fund drive. Atotal of 114letters were mailed several weeks
ago in an effort to raise money for the scout JrOgram in the Big
, Bend Neighborhood which involves several hundred girls.
Olntributing so far have been the Pomeroy Cement Block,
the Middleport Ben Franklin, the Pomeroy Ben Franklin, the
Qtizens National Bank, the Ohio Power Olmpany, Goessler
Jewelry,Swisher and Lohse,the Sugar Run Feed Mill, The Daily .
Sentinel, Royal O'own Bottling Ol. and Columbia Gas of Ohio.
The fund now stands at $105. Olntributions may be mailed to
Mrs. William Ohlinger, Route 3, Pomeroy.
·

'·

:
SEVERAL NEW TROOPS will be organized.in September
• ~d Mrs. Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, . reports · that
• volunteer leaders are needed. An organizational meeting of the
Big Bend Neighborhood of the Four Rivers Girl Sco~t Council is
planned for early September.

Sprouse Funeral is Set
~

~
~
~

••

•
~.·
•.
~
~

t
•

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~

Funeral services for Bill
Sprouse, 75, formerly of West
Ollumbia, Point Pleasant and
Mason, who died Wednesday
morning at an East Liverpool
hospital, will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Arner Funeral
Home at Chester, W. Va.
'Mr. Sprouse, who resided at
430'L
-.. GrantSt.,NeweU, W. Va.,
was the last member of the
Thomas Sprouse family,
formerly of West Columbia.

Harrisonville Society News

'~

Mr. and Mrs. Homer Willard
; visited Mr. Clarence Eastman
~ Wednesday.
r Sam Steimetz of California
~ are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
~ Donald Weaver and relatives.
~
Mrs. Don Gibson and
~ children of Maryland visited
,.~ the past week with heqiarents,
' Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas and
:• Mrs. Lana GibSon.
~ Bige Lambert is staying with
• his daughter, · Mrs. ·Alice
J Reeves, while Mrs. Lambert-is
confined to Pleasant Valley
~ Hospital.
~
Mr. Waldo Neal is a patient
~ in University Hospital. Mrs.

..

t

. .
:•••~;, FairVIew
~

~ News
'·•

Notes

By Mn. Herbert Roush
~ Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons
~ and baby of Ashland are
~ · visiting his mother, Mrs. Jessie
1: Parsons at the home of Miss
"' Ada Rowe. They also visited
t• relatives at Richwood, W. Va.
~
Weekend guests .of Mrs.
:: Mary Donohue and David and
:: Mrs. Rose Bachus were Mr.
~ and Mrs. John Waddle of
• Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
; Everette Roush of Galena.
t
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Rnush
~ and children, Sharon, Cindy,
: David and Edward, Mrs.
~ Ronnie Russell and daughter,
' Amanda Lynn, spent Saturday
J with the latter's husband,
• Ronnie Russell at Ft. Knox,
• Ky.
. Mr. and Mrs. James Sayre
• and daughter and husband of
' Kanauga spent Thursday with
; Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
' and son, Charles, of Letart,\'.
· Va., spent Wednesday with Mr.
; and Mrs. Charles Lawson and
' family. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
: Lawson and children spent
· Sunday with the Lawsons.
Mrs . Nancy Russell and
daughter , Amanda Lynn,
David and Edward Roush
visited Mr. · and Mrs. Robert
Russell Sunday at Wolf Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolfe
have pW'chased the Robert
. Wingett farm and are moving
• there from the Wiley Ours
• farm.

I

Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by three
brothers and a sister.
· SW'viving are his wife, Eva
Noble Sprouse; four sons,
James, Huntington, W. Va.;
William, Jr.,San Diego, Calif.;
Robert of East Liverpool and
Stephen of Newell; a daughter,
Mrs. Don (Eva) Mills, Newell ;
a grandson and several nieces
and nephews. BW'ial will be at
Newell.

Neal was called home from her
visit In Calflronla due to her
husband's illness.
Mr. and ·Mrs. Doug Bishop
and children are vacaioning in
Florida .
Mrs. Stella Atkins, Mrs .
Ardis Waggoner and Ruby
Diehl spent a two week
vacation in the western states.
Mr. and Mrs. Babe Whaley
visited Mrs. Ava Gilkey and
::ke.:t.'a,
;j.

The 21st Annual Davis
Reunion was held Sunday at
Lake Alma near Wellston with
74 in attendance. A basket
dinner was held at noon with
Mrs. Edith Hougland giving
tile blessing.
The group sang " Happy
Birthday" to Gordon Hvlter,
observing his. 19th birthday
anniversary. Bruce Davis,

acting president in the absence
of James Davis,"presided at the
business meeting.· Plans were
made for the reunion again
next year to be held at Lake
Alma.

Officers elected were Bruce
Davis, president;
Mrs .
Hougland, secretary; and Mrs.
Susie Davis, chairman of
games. Mrs. Hougland read
letters from several who could
not attend including Mrs . Ed
Davis of Aurora, Dl.; James
Davis, Lexington, Ky., who
noted that they were attending
his wife's reunion, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Hunt of Aurora,
Jll., who were on a trip and
would be in Amsterdam,
Holland on reunion day.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Rosalie Hood and daughters
who traveled the farthest; Mrs.
Edna Hill, the oldest, and
Greta Riffle, the youngest.
Mrs. Esther Davis won the
door prize, and Mrs. Jeanette
Davis conducted games.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Saunders, Lockbourne;
One McClung and Donald

Birchfield, Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Birchfield, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.; Mrs. Edna
Hill and Mrs. Eleanor
Williamson, South Charleston,
W. Va.; Mrs. James Hood,
Jolene and Leslie, Fountain
Valley, Calif.; Rodney Davis
and Paul Walker, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis and
Jimmie, Mrs. Mark Tillis and
Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Davis, David and Danny, Mr.
and Mrs. Merle Davis and
grandchildren, . Debbie and
Pammie Davis, Mrs. Elizabeth
Nelson and John, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis,
Rita, Cindy and Glenn, Mrs.
Vona Gillenwater, Langsville;
Mr. and Mrs. Worley Davis,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Molden and
Timmy, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Riffle and Greta ,
Middleport; Mr . and Mrs .
Arvil Holler and Gordon,
Bashan; Mrs. Edith Saunders,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schuler,
Jr ., Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Davis, Addison; Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Hougland,
McArthur ; Mr . and Mrs .
Melvin Hougland, Ki ttiesue
and Cindy, Mr. and Mrs.
Dannie Hougland, Michelle
and Angela, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Hougland, Kathy,
Brenda, and Ricky, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Hawk and Billy,
ChiUicothe; and Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Ravers, Greg and Mark,
Wilkesville .

rsrmJ ..w.....

:.e

·~

TRAVEL IN EAST
Mr. aDd Mn. Harold Wolfe
and cbildrea, Beth and
Datln, have rel!tmed from a
trip through -Pennsylvania,
Connecticut and
Massachusetts.
They visited Storybook
Forest at Legioruer, Pa.,
drove tbrougb the Amish
country around Lancaster,
went to Mystic Port, Conn.1
Cape Cod, and Boston and
came home by way of
Niagara Falls. Enroute
home they visited In
Cleveland wltb Mr. Wolle's
unCle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Kemya.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs . .Bruce Swart·
wont of Route 3, Pataskala, are
announcing the birth of tlleir
first child, a son, Matthew
Wayne, on July 20. Mrs.
Wartwont is the former . Ellen
Shuler. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Shuler of
Racine. Mrs. Agnes Schmidt of
Everette, Washington, and
Carl Wartwont of Minot, N. D.
are the grandparents.

Cool Cover
Coole r evenings call for
the bare look under cover.
That's a tube or tiny halter
top worn with a cardigan
sweater over it. Coordinate
or clash as''"the mood fits .

CONCORD CA BBAGE

NEA Food Editor

CASSEROLE
medium red cabbage,
shredded
3 green tart apples. cored.
peeled and sliced
I cup sliced onions
3 cups cooked rice
I tablespoon salt
'I• teaspoon pepper
'4&lt; teaspoon allspice

Casseroles come in many
guises. One that fills the
need for more vegetables on
the daily menu is a Concord
Cabbage casserole. It com.
bines the bitey navor of red
cabbage and tart apples and
makes a complete meal dish
or a side dish with a beef
or pork roast.

~rs. Edna Raibel 'and Mrs. '

Hettie Hayes will represent ,
Theodorus ·Council
17,
Daughters of America, at the
78th Annual State Council
session to be held Aug. 21·23 at
Imperial House South, Dayton .
Plans for the state session
were noted during a meeting of
Theodorus Council Monday
night at the IOOF hail. Mrs.
Reibel serves In the state
legislative committee and Mrs.
Hayes is the local Council
representative. They will go to
Dayton on Aug. 20 and attend
an open house that evening.
Announced
during
the
meeting
conducted
by Mrs.
Eva Dessalier, councilor pro
tern, was the 28th biennial
session of the National Council
to be held Oct. 3-4 at the
Marriott Twin Bridges Hotel in
Arlington, Va.

Ari~ng.Jectur~ tour wlll be a
part df the . National Council
program with the tour lo take
the Daughters of America past
the Capital, the Supreme
Court, the Library of Congress,
the White House, and . the
Washington Monument. V1s1ts
to Lincoln Memorial, Aflington
Cemetery, and M?unt Vernon
are also included on the ·totlr
agenda for those attending the
National Council. Reservations
are to be made with Mrs.
Agnes Magarity, 1233 Ingels1de
Ave., Mc.,.an, Va. 22101.
Reported ill were Mrs. Betty

'

Riebel, home from ihe. HpJ.zer
Medical Center where she
underwent surgery on July 'll,
and Marie Hauck w~o will be
entering the hospital Monday.
Also repor,ted iU wa~ Mrs.
Gertrude )lass, a ~tlent at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Nominated, elected and
installed were Mrs. Ber·
tha Parker, vice councilor; Mrs. Dessaler, warden and 18 month trustee.
A meeting of the Past Councilors to be held at the home of
Mrs. Lottie Cohen tonight at 6
p.m. was announced.

'" - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINJ .

ITY
4"
IIIII·
2" NYLON TRIM BRUSH!

Cycle Style
Bicycling as a favorite
pastime has Inspired special
outfits for cyclists. Halter
tops allow plenty of movement and look so cool with
shorts. Special bike motifs
or emblems I e ave little
doubt about your favorite
sport. Either shorts or shorts
that look like skirts, scooter
culottes are available with
bike designs.

COVER BOY
Important Watches
NEW YORK (UPI)-lt was
Futuristic designers have 18 years ago on Aug. 18 that
added some modern interest · Eddie Mathews, now manager
to watches. Lucile bangles. of the Atlanta Bl'aves, adorned
chrome and silver or wood· · the first cover of Sports
en bracelets with unusual Illustrated magazine .
faces, make watches an im portant jewelry accessory .
Mathews, then with the
.Milwaukee Braves, was shown
slugging a ball in a night game.

Bitey Cabbage Casserole
By AILEEN CLAIRE

State Sessions Planned

$649 VAWE''

'

.

... - - - ....

.

!

/FREE\·

1 .

WITH EVERY /

QIUNG
TU Our Low Plb

Q-ln religious s y m b o l·
ism, what does the triangle
within a circle represent?

'DDClr AL Q'V'F
S
..;;.'.r;.;;;....,;;;;;.L~.t::l;.;;,;;;;;~'.C';;;..;::,o
.'E;;::;;;;;;:.;1l:....-SA._TU._RD_AY_ON_LY-;.,~ '"y~~
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{NEWS PAPER ENTERPIIISE ASSN .)

h
nson Family Reunion Held ,

J
~art ~'J_er the, J 0 .
•

·-

~. ~

The Stiemetz reunion was
held at the Athens Caounty
Fairgrounds July 30. There
were 107 present. Mrs. Goldie
Jones of Zanesville was a
guest.
MikeEpplecalledonMr.and
Mrs. Guy Bolin and Mrs. Ava
Gilkey recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smitly
attended the reception for Mr.
and Mrs. Larry McMurray at
the townhouse in Downington
SatW'day evening.
Charles Newhouse and Anita
Estep were married Friday
evening. A reception was held
at her parents home. A large
number aitended.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Foil and
family of Columbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Schmitz and
fljlllily were weekend guests of
their mother, Mrs. Minnie Foit.
They all attended the Steimetz
reunion Sunday.
Mr. Darrell Porter is in
Holzer Hospital. He was hW't
when an electric. pole broke
with him while at his em·
ployment.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins
were in Columbus on business
Wednesday.
Sam Damron is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center and is
somewhat improved.

The annual reunion of the
Johnson family was held
Sunday at Kachetmacher Park
in Logan .
Attending were Mrs. Nora
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Belford, Mr. and
Mrs. James Stough, David and
Mike O'Day, Mrs. Diane
Corbin and Kelly, Mr. and Mrs.
Lioyd Beets, Miss Kay Evans
and Tom Johnson of Grove
City.

Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray
Johnson, Audra, Jeffrey and
Eric, Mr . and Mrsc Paul
Johnson and Charles, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Johnson, Mrs .
Myrta Wiison, Mr. and Mrs.
William Lowery and Deanna,
and Mrs. Elhel Johnson,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Smith, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Van Horn, Michael and
Letitia, New Lexington ; Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Zarley, Sue,
Jay, Paul, Peggy, and Amy,

A /V'It"/Tn~ementsJud:gre·
d
u
1 1

Judging of arrangements rose.
and specimens exhibited by
"Food
in Biblical
Times"
members was a feature of a was
the devotional
theme
used r
recent meeting of the Chester by Mrs. Gintller. Thank you
Garden Club held at the notes were read from Mrs.
country home of Mrs. Roy William Frost and Mrs .
Miller . The meeting was Frances Spencer, and from the
preceded by a picnic hosted by Pomeroy Post Office for a
Mrs. Mlller, Mrs . Earl Ingels, planter. Mrs. Donald Mora
Mrs. Roger Gaul, and Mrs. reported on flowers at the
Gordon Anderson.
cemetery and Mrs. Howard
Winnine blue ribbons were Knight reported on the planter
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, gladioli at the high school. The door
arrangement; · Mrs. Ada prize was won by Mrs. Leonard
Holter, gladioli and Indian corn Erwin and Mrs. Earl Dean and
arrangement ; Mrs. Holter, Mrs . Donald Mora
specimen dahlia;
Mrs . contest prizes.
.Chadwell, specimen gladioli;
Refreshments were
Mrs. Rose Ginther, tiger lily;
Mrs. Miller, orange ruffled by the hostesses .

Croton; Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Roush, Rodney ; Cheryl and
Joseph Allen, Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, Jamie Sue, Todd and
Teresa , Mulberry Heights ,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Johnson, Gina, Tahnee and
Brady Gene; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Johnson, Annette and
Duane, Mrs. Helen Johnson of
Pomeroy ; and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Johnson and Mona of
Rutland.
Mrs. Nora Johnson will be 86
years old on Aug. 22. Relatives
or friends wishing to
remember her with a card may
mall it lo her at 4674
HarrisbW'g Pike, Grove City,

• ove·R.
30 YRS.
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BILLS

JAN.

the

'

dreamed of at our low

prices.

Authorized Dealer

FURNITURE
Herm•n Gr1te

777-55f2

Mlson, W. V•.

'

ter Jan. 1. They would be col·
lectible for 1972, however.
Any further income tax or increase in the rate would have
to be approved first in a state·
wide vote.
Presentatlon of the petitions,
a relatively rare occurrence in
the Statehouse, brought
onlookers from all corners.
Lobbyists watched with
interest as Republican House
members representing the .
repeal group presented Brown
with the petitions in 24 card·
board boxes.
Curious secretaries from
Gov. John J . GiUigan's office
across the hall took time out to
watch the proceedings .
There was an element of
"cops aod robbers," as the petitions were driven to the Statebouse in a Brink's, Inc., armored car from various banks

if approved.
PlQUA, Ohio (UPI) - An utilities director, said.
Twelve of the 88 municipal
agreementwasannouncedWed·
"It is far better from an
nesday whereby 88 municipal economic standpoint to obtain power systems in Ohio generate
electric power systems in Ohio power from one major source tbeirown power. The remainder
ended their objections to tile than to have each system in· buy power from private firms. would mount a "massive
campaign to misle@d the
\ 11pr•ol Ule ~~\.~, .,. cre~!'\ngjts CB!l$fity.'.' he "'lid . Jr.C.:.~~ ~- witll ele~l!'· c peopf~ . of bhio with 'falSe
!ric' Power Co. (AEI') "ancf'tcJ. "The greater the production, power comitilrfrom a comlnon
lumbus and Southern Electric tile lower the per kilowatt hour existing plant, the 12 cities with statements and scare tactics."
Estimates of the revenue loss
individual operations would not
Co.
costs."
The dispute erided when AEP
Crosby would not speculate have to expand. Along with from repeal have ranged up to
agreed to sell a non-profit firm, when final approval of the now saving these cities money, Cros· $1.3 billion.
"The special interest lobfanned to provide the systems four-year-old merger proposal by said a common plant would
with low-cost p&lt;iwer, a plant would be given by the Federal ease problems of complying bying groups would have the
taxpayers of Ohio believe that
capable of producing 600 to Power Commission and the Se- with environmental rules re·
beneficial services will be
all
1,200 megawatts of power daily. curitiesandExchange Commls· garding smoke and waste· dis·
abolished," Tulley said. "They
AEP also said it would pro· sion. He also said AEP has not charges.
say
nothing about reducing the
Strong opposition to the mervide transmission lines for designated which plant it would
rapidly
growing welfare exger is expected to continue
power lo the municipal plants sell.
penditures, which will remain
in a good part of the state
The Cleveland municipal sys- from Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
unchecked."
through Its subsidiary, Ameri· tern is expected to be the Jar- Co. and Dayton Power &amp; Light
Netzley said repeal would
can Municipal Power-Ohio, . gest beneficiary of tile merger, Co.
have "aOO.iutely no effect" on
based in Canton.
'".•..•...-;,................ ...._.-..,,... .......
..... .. . y •• · -· .........................
,•,.. property tax rollbacks which
.:.=·········~"!o·························~·.···················:::::w·
.............................
,..·.······················•····•·.......
Th e agreemen t to seII a large ..••
:;:::~:::~:::~~::.::;:;:::::::::::::::::~:::=::::::::::::::~::::::;~ ~:::::::~;:;::¥,:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::;:: accompanied passage of the in·
generating unit "means the
CIJIIle tax. He said the rollbacks
municipal electrical systems in
would be financed by excess
Ohio would be assured of elec·
revenues lrought about by low
trlc power without having to
estimates from the Gilligan
WASHINGTON (UP I) -A bitter HOWle confrontaUon
expand their own Individual
administration.
over enckhe-war leglslaUon came dowillo tbe wire today
systems,"George B. Crosby II,
Gilligan,
who
fought
amid reporll tbat tbe struggle had drawn In Preoldent
president of tile Ohio Municipal
throughout 1971 for the income
Nb:on and George MeGovem. The key to the Issue was
Eelectric Association and Piqua
tax, would offer no comment on
Speaker Carl Albert, ().()kJa., until now a doWii-thHine
the filing of petitions to repeal
supporter of U.S. policy In Southeast A.sfa.
it, according to his office.
But as ol today Albert had sun not said publicly which
way he would vote on a propoeal to halt direct Americau
military Involvement In the Indochina War In excb.auge
lor U. S. prlllonen, aa accounting of the mills lug and a
Hmlted ceaaeflre to allow American forces to withdraw
from tbe area.
Four defendants were fined
The provlsloa Is lnelnded In a $U biWon oveneas
and four others forfeited bonds
miUtary aid blli which the House bas debated off and on
in the Court of Pomeroy Mayor
over tbe past two days. 'lbere were repor11 Wednesday
William Baronlck Wednesday
that both McGovern, tbe Democratic pmldentlal cau·
. night.
dldate who hu long been an opponent of the war, alii
Two of the defendants Gerald Arnold and Andy
Nlxoa had gotten In touch with Albert, but neither side
LaudermUI, both of Pomeroy
would confirm theDJ.
- were fined on foil(' charges
including $5 and costs for in·
toxlcatlon, and $5 fines each on
REVIVAL SET
charges of trespassing,
Arevival will be held Friday,
disturbing the peace, and
Saturday
and Sunday at the
profane language. A1ao fined
Syracuse
Apostolic Mission
were James Hazelton, 20,
19.tcu.ft. Side-by-Sid(! Refrigerator-Freezer
.Middleport, '10 and costs, with Elder Russell Cline
speedli.g, and Thomas Drake, spealdng. Services start at 7: 3tl
NO
2(!, New Haven, $10 and costa, ea~h evening and the public is
invited,
the
Rev.
Earl
Custer,
DEFROSTING
squealing tire~ .
EVER
,Forfeiting bonds were pastor, reports. 1
•
245-lb.
capacity freezer
'
Richard Masters, no address,
• 2 sliding freezer ba skets
$25 posted on an assault
• S heezer shelwes
REOEIPTS ·UP
charge, Kenneth'· Rizer, 20,
• 4 treezer door shelves
Gasoline tax distributions for
Syracuse, U5 posted on
, •Philco Power Saver tonbol
squealing tlres charge, tile fiscal year ending June 311,
• Adjustable cold controls
Thomu Martin, 36, Rutland, jumped to almost $85.7 million,
• 3 adjustable cantilever
shelves in retri&amp;tHalor
$18.70 poeted on a llpeedlng an lilcrease of more than $4.6
mllllon
over
the
1971
•
Philco door closers
char1e, aud Fraucis Wood,
distribution,
State
Auditor
Modtl RlltM7
address not listed, ~ posted
J01eph .T. Ferguson reporta.
on an lnlolicatlun charge.
Amounts received by Metes
County communities were,
White, Avocado, Gold or
Shtdetl Copper cabinet
. Middleport, $15,286, Pomeroy,
MISSED LIST
Paige Hayman, a member of $15,892, Racine, $3,148,
the Riverview (.H Club, was Rutland, $3,~ and Syra~.
one of the young people $3,t68.
PHILCQ~
com·
awarded
apeclal
'11111 btlllr - peopllln Nfrlgel'llllro.
mendatlon ribbons at the
REIIEARSAL,SET
AniiUII Meiga County Style
The Eallam fll&amp;b School
Rmle held Tueeday nlcht at
•••tss a HIP Scbool. Silt wu baud wlllnhearle tram 1 to I
nolllattd with tbe IJ'OIIP lllllltCI p.m. Munday at the blab
In tile ar~~~na~- reluM on aehool. The band will be
the mua. Miiiiii1DJIII wu In pla)'lnl at tht Meigs County
I
0.
Fair llllt net.
lhe cWbellllp to .. ~.

FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT
USE KERATOLYTIC ACTION
BECAUSE It ·slOug hs oft and ~issolves
affected s-kin . E)(poses deepest
infection to its kill ing action .
Ge l qu ick -drying T -4 ·L•· e
keratolyti .c , at any drug
coun ter . FAST relief or your 59c
ba ck . NOW at" Swisher &amp; Lohse
Dru~ s; Nelson Drug Store.
-- Ad v.

Child Abuse, Neglect

Petitions in or Out in Two Weeks
income taxes.
Although the petitions
contained 48,000 more than
enough signatures to get the
issue on tbe ballot, they must
be verified by Brown's office
and county boards of election
during tile next two weeks.
State Rep. Joseph P. Tulley,
R-Mentor, a spokesman for the
repeal group, said even if 7 per
cent of the signatures are invalidated, the issue will still
make the ballot.
If the nwnber of valid signatures falls short of the required
318,414-10 per cent of the vote
.for governor in Ohio two years
ago - the group will have an
additiooal 10 days to collect
signatlires.
Halt Olllectlon
H approved by the voters in
November, the proposal would
halt collection of the personal
and corporate Income taxes af.

~

Drive Begun to Stem

COLUMBUS - Gov. John
to assure you that you may feel Gilligan Wednesday launched
free to ask my advice on any en all-&lt;lllt administration drive
to stop the rapidly growing
problem at any time."
~~That's very nice of you, problem of child abuse and
Bobby. Now in regard to your child neglect in Ohio.
At a news conference he ·
present position-Spassky appears to have the upper hand, urged all Ohioans to join with
state and local agencies in the
but if you ... "
11
Believe me , Mr. President, effort, which he called an atthis chess match·will in no way tempt "to protect our most
interfere with my helping you valuabl e resource, our
with your problems. Just tell children."
The governor c~ted statistics
me what's troubling you and I'll
which
show that reports of
mull it over while Spassky is
child
abuse
and neglect have
sweating out his next move."
This could be the luckiest nearly doubled in the first six
phone call Nixon ever made. months of this year. Through
With another football season June 30, 774 cases had been
coming up, he is going to need reported lo tile Ohio Depart.
ment of Public Welfare. In
all the help he can get.
1971, a total of 894 cases were
reported the entire year.
And, Gilligan noted, eight
Ohio children have died this
year due to unnatural causes
as a result of mistreatment by
where they were housed in parents - twice as many as
vaults.
"This sounds like cops and reported in all of 1971.
Nationally, he said, studies
robbers," Tull~y said, but
indicate
as many as 21h-million
there is no remedy in Ohio law
for the loss of such petitions." children are physically abused
each year, and one or two
Joining Tulley in tile presen- children are killed by their
tation were Republican state
Reps. Chester T. Cruze of Cin· parents every day in the United
cinnati, Richard G. Reichel of
Massillon and Robert E. Netz.
ley of Laura.
Freshman Republican Reps.
EdwardM. RyderJr.ofEuclid
and Donna Pope of Parma also
were in Brown's office at the
time. Not present but listed as
supporting the filing were Republican Reps . Robert E.
Levitt of North Canton,
Howard A. Knight of Fremont
and Raymond P. Luther of
Newark.
No Doubt
"We never doubted we would
be successful," Tulley said.
"We may not have known any
better, but we never doubted
the people of ohio ."
Tulley said "certain individ·
SELF-STYLING
uals who support wasteful
spending in Ohio tried every
trick in the book" to keep the
question off tile ballot.
He said the same people

By Mayor

I •

always

'MASON

Admires Fighting Spirit
"First I want to tell you how
much I admire the fighting
spirit you have displayed in ... "
"I like your fighting spirit,
too, Mr. President."
"!t's kind of you to say so,

... ..

States !
Gilligan therefore directed
llle Welfare Department to
begin immediately to train
local social workers to guard
against . child abuse and
neglect. The first in a series of
training programs will begin
Aug. 3. In addition, he ordered
the department to increase its
child protective staff lo penni!
it to do a better job of working
with local social workers.
Gilligan announced thai
the Welfare Departm~t had
produced an information kit
designed to lell Ohio citizens
how to report and to help
prevent cases of child abuse.
The kit may be obtained free
of charge by writing to In·
formation Kit, P. 0. Box
2669, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
" The facts speak fo r
themselves," Gilligan said. ~· In
every Ohio community, in·
!ants, children and teenagers
are being . beaten, . starved,
exploited and neglected by
their own parents. ~~
Q-What part of a frog is
'' source of juod for man?
A- Their meaty hind legs
are considered a delicacy.

r

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CHAIRS
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'

.

LA-Z-BOV

c:hair

said that when the meek firt~lly
inherit the earth, Fischer 'will
be cut off without a crying
diffie.
Consequently, an advisory
call from Nixon could lead "to a
conversation somewhat along
tllese lines:
"Hello, Bobby1 This is the
President calling."
"Yes, Mr . President. I had
been expecting to hear from

Four Fined

Hair Help
Sunburnt hair has to be
given very special trea t.
ment, eve n more than the
regular after-shampoo rinse.
If the hair is bad ly damaged.
a trimming is necessary.
Then invest in a heating cap
for regular scalp treatments.
and a good conditioner used
once a week should help
bring health back to your
hair.

Now yov c~n buy that
comfortable
La·Z·Boy

including his own exper.tise, ' Bobby ..\ctually, the reason
available to Fischer.
calli~g is 'to ... ''
There is, however, Fischer's
"1 think I already know why
temperament to consider. It is you're calling, sir, and I want

McGovern, Nixon Drawn in

·4~3~123~.~-------~~:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CUT WI

We all know of Nixon's
fondness for sending in plays to
his favorite football teams. So
now the question is : Will he
perform the same -servite for
his favorite chess player'
Match Is Provocative
the lighter side
Ordinarily, a chess match is
not
the sort of event in which
the world chess championship,
heads
of state become em·
to visit him at the White House
broiled. But the Spassky·
after iht match.
The magazine says Nixon Fischer match has been exceptionally provocative.
admires Fischer "becaUS!! he is .
If Spa~ky is indeed getting
a fighter."
sidellnecoachingfromMoscow,
Meanwhile, in Reykjavik, a
it is reasonable to assume that
member of Fischer's entourage
has voiced suspicion that Boris high Kremlin officials Sjlassky, the Soviet champion, perhaps Leonid Brezhnev
has been getting secret instruc- himself - ordered the Intervention. And may even be
tions from Moscow.
doing
the coaching,
When banged together, these
· In that circumstance, Nixon
two Items produce some rather
clearly would be justified in
interesting vibrations.
making White House know-how,

Opposition to Merger Ended

~nJ
v ,.-,

.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Life
magazine reports that Pres·
ident Nixon has invited Bobby
Fischer, the U.S. challenger for

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Secretary of State Ted W. Bl'own
said Wednesday he should
know by Aug. 24 whether a
citize.ns' group seeking repeal
of the state Income tax has
collected enough signatures to
get tile issue on the Nov. 7
ballot.
"By two weeks from tomorrow, we should know exactly
where we are on Ibis," Bl'own
said as he received petitions
bearing an estimated 366,036
signatures calling for repeal of
the one-half to 3\2 per cent per·
sonal Income tax and the cor·
porate net income tax.
The petitions were presented
by Citizens for Repeal of the
State Income Tax, a nonprofit
corporation headed by a group
of
.Republican
state
representatives opposed to the

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A- This is the emblem of
I 'h cups Concord grape
the everlasting Trinity.
drink
4 slices bacon
In a large bowl combine
THURS., FRIDAY,
c"bbage, apples, onions, rice.
salt, pepper and allspice.
Turn into greased 13x9-inch
baking dish. Pour Concord
• CHOOSE FROM 20 COLORS-ALL IN STOC
grape drink over all. Top
with bacon slices. Bake at
• IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
350 degrees for I hour.
Makes 8 servings.

Upmanship at its Zenith

.... -

MAR.

APRIL

MAY

JULY
JUNE

The Gas Company has a plan that makes it easy.
It's a 12-month Budget Payment Plan that lets
you avoid peak heating bills in the cold months
by spreading the cost of your winter heating over
the entire year. Here's how the plan works. You
simply slice up your yearly heating bill into twelve

AUG.

SEPT.

OCT.

small equal parts. And with Gas, that's slicing it
pretty thin I The amount you would pay each
month will be shown on your next gas bill.

DEC.

..

Ask about our Budget Payment Plan It
·your local gas company office.

' .

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

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'

-

�...
8- .The Daily Se!tlnel, Middleport-P()Ill«&lt;y, 0., Aug. 10,1972
~Q _ _e_ ..

By Charlene Hoeflich
At least three Meigs Olunty girl scout troops will be
exhibiting at the Meigs Olunty Fair.
The Salisbury Cadette Troop will have a display on the plant
kingdom and other troops exhibiting on facets of badge work will
be Middleport Junior 39 whose leader·is Mrs. Roscoe Wise, and
the Pomeroy troop of Mrs. Thomas &amp;ruth.
.The cadettes'will again this year operate !Ill information booth
for the convenience of fairgoers.
r'

•

t
•

'~
~

~

~

:1
~
~
~

•·

MRS. WILLIAM OHUNGER reports that to date only II
businesses have responded to letters sent out in the annual girl
scout fund drive. Atotal of 114letters were mailed several weeks
ago in an effort to raise money for the scout JrOgram in the Big
, Bend Neighborhood which involves several hundred girls.
Olntributing so far have been the Pomeroy Cement Block,
the Middleport Ben Franklin, the Pomeroy Ben Franklin, the
Qtizens National Bank, the Ohio Power Olmpany, Goessler
Jewelry,Swisher and Lohse,the Sugar Run Feed Mill, The Daily .
Sentinel, Royal O'own Bottling Ol. and Columbia Gas of Ohio.
The fund now stands at $105. Olntributions may be mailed to
Mrs. William Ohlinger, Route 3, Pomeroy.
·

'·

:
SEVERAL NEW TROOPS will be organized.in September
• ~d Mrs. Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, . reports · that
• volunteer leaders are needed. An organizational meeting of the
Big Bend Neighborhood of the Four Rivers Girl Sco~t Council is
planned for early September.

Sprouse Funeral is Set
~

~
~
~

••

•
~.·
•.
~
~

t
•

'~

~

Funeral services for Bill
Sprouse, 75, formerly of West
Ollumbia, Point Pleasant and
Mason, who died Wednesday
morning at an East Liverpool
hospital, will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Arner Funeral
Home at Chester, W. Va.
'Mr. Sprouse, who resided at
430'L
-.. GrantSt.,NeweU, W. Va.,
was the last member of the
Thomas Sprouse family,
formerly of West Columbia.

Harrisonville Society News

'~

Mr. and Mrs. Homer Willard
; visited Mr. Clarence Eastman
~ Wednesday.
r Sam Steimetz of California
~ are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
~ Donald Weaver and relatives.
~
Mrs. Don Gibson and
~ children of Maryland visited
,.~ the past week with heqiarents,
' Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas and
:• Mrs. Lana GibSon.
~ Bige Lambert is staying with
• his daughter, · Mrs. ·Alice
J Reeves, while Mrs. Lambert-is
confined to Pleasant Valley
~ Hospital.
~
Mr. Waldo Neal is a patient
~ in University Hospital. Mrs.

..

t

. .
:•••~;, FairVIew
~

~ News
'·•

Notes

By Mn. Herbert Roush
~ Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons
~ and baby of Ashland are
~ · visiting his mother, Mrs. Jessie
1: Parsons at the home of Miss
"' Ada Rowe. They also visited
t• relatives at Richwood, W. Va.
~
Weekend guests .of Mrs.
:: Mary Donohue and David and
:: Mrs. Rose Bachus were Mr.
~ and Mrs. John Waddle of
• Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
; Everette Roush of Galena.
t
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Rnush
~ and children, Sharon, Cindy,
: David and Edward, Mrs.
~ Ronnie Russell and daughter,
' Amanda Lynn, spent Saturday
J with the latter's husband,
• Ronnie Russell at Ft. Knox,
• Ky.
. Mr. and Mrs. James Sayre
• and daughter and husband of
' Kanauga spent Thursday with
; Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
' and son, Charles, of Letart,\'.
· Va., spent Wednesday with Mr.
; and Mrs. Charles Lawson and
' family. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
: Lawson and children spent
· Sunday with the Lawsons.
Mrs . Nancy Russell and
daughter , Amanda Lynn,
David and Edward Roush
visited Mr. · and Mrs. Robert
Russell Sunday at Wolf Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolfe
have pW'chased the Robert
. Wingett farm and are moving
• there from the Wiley Ours
• farm.

I

Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by three
brothers and a sister.
· SW'viving are his wife, Eva
Noble Sprouse; four sons,
James, Huntington, W. Va.;
William, Jr.,San Diego, Calif.;
Robert of East Liverpool and
Stephen of Newell; a daughter,
Mrs. Don (Eva) Mills, Newell ;
a grandson and several nieces
and nephews. BW'ial will be at
Newell.

Neal was called home from her
visit In Calflronla due to her
husband's illness.
Mr. and ·Mrs. Doug Bishop
and children are vacaioning in
Florida .
Mrs. Stella Atkins, Mrs .
Ardis Waggoner and Ruby
Diehl spent a two week
vacation in the western states.
Mr. and Mrs. Babe Whaley
visited Mrs. Ava Gilkey and
::ke.:t.'a,
;j.

The 21st Annual Davis
Reunion was held Sunday at
Lake Alma near Wellston with
74 in attendance. A basket
dinner was held at noon with
Mrs. Edith Hougland giving
tile blessing.
The group sang " Happy
Birthday" to Gordon Hvlter,
observing his. 19th birthday
anniversary. Bruce Davis,

acting president in the absence
of James Davis,"presided at the
business meeting.· Plans were
made for the reunion again
next year to be held at Lake
Alma.

Officers elected were Bruce
Davis, president;
Mrs .
Hougland, secretary; and Mrs.
Susie Davis, chairman of
games. Mrs. Hougland read
letters from several who could
not attend including Mrs . Ed
Davis of Aurora, Dl.; James
Davis, Lexington, Ky., who
noted that they were attending
his wife's reunion, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Hunt of Aurora,
Jll., who were on a trip and
would be in Amsterdam,
Holland on reunion day.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Rosalie Hood and daughters
who traveled the farthest; Mrs.
Edna Hill, the oldest, and
Greta Riffle, the youngest.
Mrs. Esther Davis won the
door prize, and Mrs. Jeanette
Davis conducted games.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Saunders, Lockbourne;
One McClung and Donald

Birchfield, Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Birchfield, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.; Mrs. Edna
Hill and Mrs. Eleanor
Williamson, South Charleston,
W. Va.; Mrs. James Hood,
Jolene and Leslie, Fountain
Valley, Calif.; Rodney Davis
and Paul Walker, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis and
Jimmie, Mrs. Mark Tillis and
Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Davis, David and Danny, Mr.
and Mrs. Merle Davis and
grandchildren, . Debbie and
Pammie Davis, Mrs. Elizabeth
Nelson and John, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis,
Rita, Cindy and Glenn, Mrs.
Vona Gillenwater, Langsville;
Mr. and Mrs. Worley Davis,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Molden and
Timmy, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Riffle and Greta ,
Middleport; Mr . and Mrs .
Arvil Holler and Gordon,
Bashan; Mrs. Edith Saunders,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schuler,
Jr ., Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Davis, Addison; Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Hougland,
McArthur ; Mr . and Mrs .
Melvin Hougland, Ki ttiesue
and Cindy, Mr. and Mrs.
Dannie Hougland, Michelle
and Angela, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Hougland, Kathy,
Brenda, and Ricky, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Hawk and Billy,
ChiUicothe; and Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Ravers, Greg and Mark,
Wilkesville .

rsrmJ ..w.....

:.e

·~

TRAVEL IN EAST
Mr. aDd Mn. Harold Wolfe
and cbildrea, Beth and
Datln, have rel!tmed from a
trip through -Pennsylvania,
Connecticut and
Massachusetts.
They visited Storybook
Forest at Legioruer, Pa.,
drove tbrougb the Amish
country around Lancaster,
went to Mystic Port, Conn.1
Cape Cod, and Boston and
came home by way of
Niagara Falls. Enroute
home they visited In
Cleveland wltb Mr. Wolle's
unCle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Kemya.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs . .Bruce Swart·
wont of Route 3, Pataskala, are
announcing the birth of tlleir
first child, a son, Matthew
Wayne, on July 20. Mrs.
Wartwont is the former . Ellen
Shuler. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Shuler of
Racine. Mrs. Agnes Schmidt of
Everette, Washington, and
Carl Wartwont of Minot, N. D.
are the grandparents.

Cool Cover
Coole r evenings call for
the bare look under cover.
That's a tube or tiny halter
top worn with a cardigan
sweater over it. Coordinate
or clash as''"the mood fits .

CONCORD CA BBAGE

NEA Food Editor

CASSEROLE
medium red cabbage,
shredded
3 green tart apples. cored.
peeled and sliced
I cup sliced onions
3 cups cooked rice
I tablespoon salt
'I• teaspoon pepper
'4&lt; teaspoon allspice

Casseroles come in many
guises. One that fills the
need for more vegetables on
the daily menu is a Concord
Cabbage casserole. It com.
bines the bitey navor of red
cabbage and tart apples and
makes a complete meal dish
or a side dish with a beef
or pork roast.

~rs. Edna Raibel 'and Mrs. '

Hettie Hayes will represent ,
Theodorus ·Council
17,
Daughters of America, at the
78th Annual State Council
session to be held Aug. 21·23 at
Imperial House South, Dayton .
Plans for the state session
were noted during a meeting of
Theodorus Council Monday
night at the IOOF hail. Mrs.
Reibel serves In the state
legislative committee and Mrs.
Hayes is the local Council
representative. They will go to
Dayton on Aug. 20 and attend
an open house that evening.
Announced
during
the
meeting
conducted
by Mrs.
Eva Dessalier, councilor pro
tern, was the 28th biennial
session of the National Council
to be held Oct. 3-4 at the
Marriott Twin Bridges Hotel in
Arlington, Va.

Ari~ng.Jectur~ tour wlll be a
part df the . National Council
program with the tour lo take
the Daughters of America past
the Capital, the Supreme
Court, the Library of Congress,
the White House, and . the
Washington Monument. V1s1ts
to Lincoln Memorial, Aflington
Cemetery, and M?unt Vernon
are also included on the ·totlr
agenda for those attending the
National Council. Reservations
are to be made with Mrs.
Agnes Magarity, 1233 Ingels1de
Ave., Mc.,.an, Va. 22101.
Reported ill were Mrs. Betty

'

Riebel, home from ihe. HpJ.zer
Medical Center where she
underwent surgery on July 'll,
and Marie Hauck w~o will be
entering the hospital Monday.
Also repor,ted iU wa~ Mrs.
Gertrude )lass, a ~tlent at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Nominated, elected and
installed were Mrs. Ber·
tha Parker, vice councilor; Mrs. Dessaler, warden and 18 month trustee.
A meeting of the Past Councilors to be held at the home of
Mrs. Lottie Cohen tonight at 6
p.m. was announced.

'" - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

DUTCH STANDARD
HOUSE PAINJ .

ITY
4"
IIIII·
2" NYLON TRIM BRUSH!

Cycle Style
Bicycling as a favorite
pastime has Inspired special
outfits for cyclists. Halter
tops allow plenty of movement and look so cool with
shorts. Special bike motifs
or emblems I e ave little
doubt about your favorite
sport. Either shorts or shorts
that look like skirts, scooter
culottes are available with
bike designs.

COVER BOY
Important Watches
NEW YORK (UPI)-lt was
Futuristic designers have 18 years ago on Aug. 18 that
added some modern interest · Eddie Mathews, now manager
to watches. Lucile bangles. of the Atlanta Bl'aves, adorned
chrome and silver or wood· · the first cover of Sports
en bracelets with unusual Illustrated magazine .
faces, make watches an im portant jewelry accessory .
Mathews, then with the
.Milwaukee Braves, was shown
slugging a ball in a night game.

Bitey Cabbage Casserole
By AILEEN CLAIRE

State Sessions Planned

$649 VAWE''

'

.

... - - - ....

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WITH EVERY /

QIUNG
TU Our Low Plb

Q-ln religious s y m b o l·
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within a circle represent?

'DDClr AL Q'V'F
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h
nson Family Reunion Held ,

J
~art ~'J_er the, J 0 .
•

·-

~. ~

The Stiemetz reunion was
held at the Athens Caounty
Fairgrounds July 30. There
were 107 present. Mrs. Goldie
Jones of Zanesville was a
guest.
MikeEpplecalledonMr.and
Mrs. Guy Bolin and Mrs. Ava
Gilkey recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smitly
attended the reception for Mr.
and Mrs. Larry McMurray at
the townhouse in Downington
SatW'day evening.
Charles Newhouse and Anita
Estep were married Friday
evening. A reception was held
at her parents home. A large
number aitended.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Foil and
family of Columbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Schmitz and
fljlllily were weekend guests of
their mother, Mrs. Minnie Foit.
They all attended the Steimetz
reunion Sunday.
Mr. Darrell Porter is in
Holzer Hospital. He was hW't
when an electric. pole broke
with him while at his em·
ployment.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins
were in Columbus on business
Wednesday.
Sam Damron is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center and is
somewhat improved.

The annual reunion of the
Johnson family was held
Sunday at Kachetmacher Park
in Logan .
Attending were Mrs. Nora
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Belford, Mr. and
Mrs. James Stough, David and
Mike O'Day, Mrs. Diane
Corbin and Kelly, Mr. and Mrs.
Lioyd Beets, Miss Kay Evans
and Tom Johnson of Grove
City.

Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray
Johnson, Audra, Jeffrey and
Eric, Mr . and Mrsc Paul
Johnson and Charles, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Johnson, Mrs .
Myrta Wiison, Mr. and Mrs.
William Lowery and Deanna,
and Mrs. Elhel Johnson,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Smith, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Van Horn, Michael and
Letitia, New Lexington ; Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Zarley, Sue,
Jay, Paul, Peggy, and Amy,

A /V'It"/Tn~ementsJud:gre·
d
u
1 1

Judging of arrangements rose.
and specimens exhibited by
"Food
in Biblical
Times"
members was a feature of a was
the devotional
theme
used r
recent meeting of the Chester by Mrs. Gintller. Thank you
Garden Club held at the notes were read from Mrs.
country home of Mrs. Roy William Frost and Mrs .
Miller . The meeting was Frances Spencer, and from the
preceded by a picnic hosted by Pomeroy Post Office for a
Mrs. Mlller, Mrs . Earl Ingels, planter. Mrs. Donald Mora
Mrs. Roger Gaul, and Mrs. reported on flowers at the
Gordon Anderson.
cemetery and Mrs. Howard
Winnine blue ribbons were Knight reported on the planter
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, gladioli at the high school. The door
arrangement; · Mrs. Ada prize was won by Mrs. Leonard
Holter, gladioli and Indian corn Erwin and Mrs. Earl Dean and
arrangement ; Mrs. Holter, Mrs . Donald Mora
specimen dahlia;
Mrs . contest prizes.
.Chadwell, specimen gladioli;
Refreshments were
Mrs. Rose Ginther, tiger lily;
Mrs. Miller, orange ruffled by the hostesses .

Croton; Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Roush, Rodney ; Cheryl and
Joseph Allen, Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, Jamie Sue, Todd and
Teresa , Mulberry Heights ,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Johnson, Gina, Tahnee and
Brady Gene; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Johnson, Annette and
Duane, Mrs. Helen Johnson of
Pomeroy ; and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Johnson and Mona of
Rutland.
Mrs. Nora Johnson will be 86
years old on Aug. 22. Relatives
or friends wishing to
remember her with a card may
mall it lo her at 4674
HarrisbW'g Pike, Grove City,

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'

ter Jan. 1. They would be col·
lectible for 1972, however.
Any further income tax or increase in the rate would have
to be approved first in a state·
wide vote.
Presentatlon of the petitions,
a relatively rare occurrence in
the Statehouse, brought
onlookers from all corners.
Lobbyists watched with
interest as Republican House
members representing the .
repeal group presented Brown
with the petitions in 24 card·
board boxes.
Curious secretaries from
Gov. John J . GiUigan's office
across the hall took time out to
watch the proceedings .
There was an element of
"cops aod robbers," as the petitions were driven to the Statebouse in a Brink's, Inc., armored car from various banks

if approved.
PlQUA, Ohio (UPI) - An utilities director, said.
Twelve of the 88 municipal
agreementwasannouncedWed·
"It is far better from an
nesday whereby 88 municipal economic standpoint to obtain power systems in Ohio generate
electric power systems in Ohio power from one major source tbeirown power. The remainder
ended their objections to tile than to have each system in· buy power from private firms. would mount a "massive
campaign to misle@d the
\ 11pr•ol Ule ~~\.~, .,. cre~!'\ngjts CB!l$fity.'.' he "'lid . Jr.C.:.~~ ~- witll ele~l!'· c peopf~ . of bhio with 'falSe
!ric' Power Co. (AEI') "ancf'tcJ. "The greater the production, power comitilrfrom a comlnon
lumbus and Southern Electric tile lower the per kilowatt hour existing plant, the 12 cities with statements and scare tactics."
Estimates of the revenue loss
individual operations would not
Co.
costs."
The dispute erided when AEP
Crosby would not speculate have to expand. Along with from repeal have ranged up to
agreed to sell a non-profit firm, when final approval of the now saving these cities money, Cros· $1.3 billion.
"The special interest lobfanned to provide the systems four-year-old merger proposal by said a common plant would
with low-cost p&lt;iwer, a plant would be given by the Federal ease problems of complying bying groups would have the
taxpayers of Ohio believe that
capable of producing 600 to Power Commission and the Se- with environmental rules re·
beneficial services will be
all
1,200 megawatts of power daily. curitiesandExchange Commls· garding smoke and waste· dis·
abolished," Tulley said. "They
AEP also said it would pro· sion. He also said AEP has not charges.
say
nothing about reducing the
Strong opposition to the mervide transmission lines for designated which plant it would
rapidly
growing welfare exger is expected to continue
power lo the municipal plants sell.
penditures, which will remain
in a good part of the state
The Cleveland municipal sys- from Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
unchecked."
through Its subsidiary, Ameri· tern is expected to be the Jar- Co. and Dayton Power &amp; Light
Netzley said repeal would
can Municipal Power-Ohio, . gest beneficiary of tile merger, Co.
have "aOO.iutely no effect" on
based in Canton.
'".•..•...-;,................ ...._.-..,,... .......
..... .. . y •• · -· .........................
,•,.. property tax rollbacks which
.:.=·········~"!o·························~·.···················:::::w·
.............................
,..·.······················•····•·.......
Th e agreemen t to seII a large ..••
:;:::~:::~:::~~::.::;:;:::::::::::::::::~:::=::::::::::::::~::::::;~ ~:::::::~;:;::¥,:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::;:: accompanied passage of the in·
generating unit "means the
CIJIIle tax. He said the rollbacks
municipal electrical systems in
would be financed by excess
Ohio would be assured of elec·
revenues lrought about by low
trlc power without having to
estimates from the Gilligan
WASHINGTON (UP I) -A bitter HOWle confrontaUon
expand their own Individual
administration.
over enckhe-war leglslaUon came dowillo tbe wire today
systems,"George B. Crosby II,
Gilligan,
who
fought
amid reporll tbat tbe struggle had drawn In Preoldent
president of tile Ohio Municipal
throughout 1971 for the income
Nb:on and George MeGovem. The key to the Issue was
Eelectric Association and Piqua
tax, would offer no comment on
Speaker Carl Albert, ().()kJa., until now a doWii-thHine
the filing of petitions to repeal
supporter of U.S. policy In Southeast A.sfa.
it, according to his office.
But as ol today Albert had sun not said publicly which
way he would vote on a propoeal to halt direct Americau
military Involvement In the Indochina War In excb.auge
lor U. S. prlllonen, aa accounting of the mills lug and a
Hmlted ceaaeflre to allow American forces to withdraw
from tbe area.
Four defendants were fined
The provlsloa Is lnelnded In a $U biWon oveneas
and four others forfeited bonds
miUtary aid blli which the House bas debated off and on
in the Court of Pomeroy Mayor
over tbe past two days. 'lbere were repor11 Wednesday
William Baronlck Wednesday
that both McGovern, tbe Democratic pmldentlal cau·
. night.
dldate who hu long been an opponent of the war, alii
Two of the defendants Gerald Arnold and Andy
Nlxoa had gotten In touch with Albert, but neither side
LaudermUI, both of Pomeroy
would confirm theDJ.
- were fined on foil(' charges
including $5 and costs for in·
toxlcatlon, and $5 fines each on
REVIVAL SET
charges of trespassing,
Arevival will be held Friday,
disturbing the peace, and
Saturday
and Sunday at the
profane language. A1ao fined
Syracuse
Apostolic Mission
were James Hazelton, 20,
19.tcu.ft. Side-by-Sid(! Refrigerator-Freezer
.Middleport, '10 and costs, with Elder Russell Cline
speedli.g, and Thomas Drake, spealdng. Services start at 7: 3tl
NO
2(!, New Haven, $10 and costa, ea~h evening and the public is
invited,
the
Rev.
Earl
Custer,
DEFROSTING
squealing tire~ .
EVER
,Forfeiting bonds were pastor, reports. 1
•
245-lb.
capacity freezer
'
Richard Masters, no address,
• 2 sliding freezer ba skets
$25 posted on an assault
• S heezer shelwes
REOEIPTS ·UP
charge, Kenneth'· Rizer, 20,
• 4 treezer door shelves
Gasoline tax distributions for
Syracuse, U5 posted on
, •Philco Power Saver tonbol
squealing tlres charge, tile fiscal year ending June 311,
• Adjustable cold controls
Thomu Martin, 36, Rutland, jumped to almost $85.7 million,
• 3 adjustable cantilever
shelves in retri&amp;tHalor
$18.70 poeted on a llpeedlng an lilcrease of more than $4.6
mllllon
over
the
1971
•
Philco door closers
char1e, aud Fraucis Wood,
distribution,
State
Auditor
Modtl RlltM7
address not listed, ~ posted
J01eph .T. Ferguson reporta.
on an lnlolicatlun charge.
Amounts received by Metes
County communities were,
White, Avocado, Gold or
Shtdetl Copper cabinet
. Middleport, $15,286, Pomeroy,
MISSED LIST
Paige Hayman, a member of $15,892, Racine, $3,148,
the Riverview (.H Club, was Rutland, $3,~ and Syra~.
one of the young people $3,t68.
PHILCQ~
com·
awarded
apeclal
'11111 btlllr - peopllln Nfrlgel'llllro.
mendatlon ribbons at the
REIIEARSAL,SET
AniiUII Meiga County Style
The Eallam fll&amp;b School
Rmle held Tueeday nlcht at
•••tss a HIP Scbool. Silt wu baud wlllnhearle tram 1 to I
nolllattd with tbe IJ'OIIP lllllltCI p.m. Munday at the blab
In tile ar~~~na~- reluM on aehool. The band will be
the mua. Miiiiii1DJIII wu In pla)'lnl at tht Meigs County
I
0.
Fair llllt net.
lhe cWbellllp to .. ~.

FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT
USE KERATOLYTIC ACTION
BECAUSE It ·slOug hs oft and ~issolves
affected s-kin . E)(poses deepest
infection to its kill ing action .
Ge l qu ick -drying T -4 ·L•· e
keratolyti .c , at any drug
coun ter . FAST relief or your 59c
ba ck . NOW at" Swisher &amp; Lohse
Dru~ s; Nelson Drug Store.
-- Ad v.

Child Abuse, Neglect

Petitions in or Out in Two Weeks
income taxes.
Although the petitions
contained 48,000 more than
enough signatures to get the
issue on tbe ballot, they must
be verified by Brown's office
and county boards of election
during tile next two weeks.
State Rep. Joseph P. Tulley,
R-Mentor, a spokesman for the
repeal group, said even if 7 per
cent of the signatures are invalidated, the issue will still
make the ballot.
If the nwnber of valid signatures falls short of the required
318,414-10 per cent of the vote
.for governor in Ohio two years
ago - the group will have an
additiooal 10 days to collect
signatlires.
Halt Olllectlon
H approved by the voters in
November, the proposal would
halt collection of the personal
and corporate Income taxes af.

~

Drive Begun to Stem

COLUMBUS - Gov. John
to assure you that you may feel Gilligan Wednesday launched
free to ask my advice on any en all-&lt;lllt administration drive
to stop the rapidly growing
problem at any time."
~~That's very nice of you, problem of child abuse and
Bobby. Now in regard to your child neglect in Ohio.
At a news conference he ·
present position-Spassky appears to have the upper hand, urged all Ohioans to join with
state and local agencies in the
but if you ... "
11
Believe me , Mr. President, effort, which he called an atthis chess match·will in no way tempt "to protect our most
interfere with my helping you valuabl e resource, our
with your problems. Just tell children."
The governor c~ted statistics
me what's troubling you and I'll
which
show that reports of
mull it over while Spassky is
child
abuse
and neglect have
sweating out his next move."
This could be the luckiest nearly doubled in the first six
phone call Nixon ever made. months of this year. Through
With another football season June 30, 774 cases had been
coming up, he is going to need reported lo tile Ohio Depart.
ment of Public Welfare. In
all the help he can get.
1971, a total of 894 cases were
reported the entire year.
And, Gilligan noted, eight
Ohio children have died this
year due to unnatural causes
as a result of mistreatment by
where they were housed in parents - twice as many as
vaults.
"This sounds like cops and reported in all of 1971.
Nationally, he said, studies
robbers," Tull~y said, but
indicate
as many as 21h-million
there is no remedy in Ohio law
for the loss of such petitions." children are physically abused
each year, and one or two
Joining Tulley in tile presen- children are killed by their
tation were Republican state
Reps. Chester T. Cruze of Cin· parents every day in the United
cinnati, Richard G. Reichel of
Massillon and Robert E. Netz.
ley of Laura.
Freshman Republican Reps.
EdwardM. RyderJr.ofEuclid
and Donna Pope of Parma also
were in Brown's office at the
time. Not present but listed as
supporting the filing were Republican Reps . Robert E.
Levitt of North Canton,
Howard A. Knight of Fremont
and Raymond P. Luther of
Newark.
No Doubt
"We never doubted we would
be successful," Tulley said.
"We may not have known any
better, but we never doubted
the people of ohio ."
Tulley said "certain individ·
SELF-STYLING
uals who support wasteful
spending in Ohio tried every
trick in the book" to keep the
question off tile ballot.
He said the same people

By Mayor

I •

always

'MASON

Admires Fighting Spirit
"First I want to tell you how
much I admire the fighting
spirit you have displayed in ... "
"I like your fighting spirit,
too, Mr. President."
"!t's kind of you to say so,

... ..

States !
Gilligan therefore directed
llle Welfare Department to
begin immediately to train
local social workers to guard
against . child abuse and
neglect. The first in a series of
training programs will begin
Aug. 3. In addition, he ordered
the department to increase its
child protective staff lo penni!
it to do a better job of working
with local social workers.
Gilligan announced thai
the Welfare Departm~t had
produced an information kit
designed to lell Ohio citizens
how to report and to help
prevent cases of child abuse.
The kit may be obtained free
of charge by writing to In·
formation Kit, P. 0. Box
2669, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
" The facts speak fo r
themselves," Gilligan said. ~· In
every Ohio community, in·
!ants, children and teenagers
are being . beaten, . starved,
exploited and neglected by
their own parents. ~~
Q-What part of a frog is
'' source of juod for man?
A- Their meaty hind legs
are considered a delicacy.

r

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LA-Z-BOV

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said that when the meek firt~lly
inherit the earth, Fischer 'will
be cut off without a crying
diffie.
Consequently, an advisory
call from Nixon could lead "to a
conversation somewhat along
tllese lines:
"Hello, Bobby1 This is the
President calling."
"Yes, Mr . President. I had
been expecting to hear from

Four Fined

Hair Help
Sunburnt hair has to be
given very special trea t.
ment, eve n more than the
regular after-shampoo rinse.
If the hair is bad ly damaged.
a trimming is necessary.
Then invest in a heating cap
for regular scalp treatments.
and a good conditioner used
once a week should help
bring health back to your
hair.

Now yov c~n buy that
comfortable
La·Z·Boy

including his own exper.tise, ' Bobby ..\ctually, the reason
available to Fischer.
calli~g is 'to ... ''
There is, however, Fischer's
"1 think I already know why
temperament to consider. It is you're calling, sir, and I want

McGovern, Nixon Drawn in

·4~3~123~.~-------~~:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CUT WI

We all know of Nixon's
fondness for sending in plays to
his favorite football teams. So
now the question is : Will he
perform the same -servite for
his favorite chess player'
Match Is Provocative
the lighter side
Ordinarily, a chess match is
not
the sort of event in which
the world chess championship,
heads
of state become em·
to visit him at the White House
broiled. But the Spassky·
after iht match.
The magazine says Nixon Fischer match has been exceptionally provocative.
admires Fischer "becaUS!! he is .
If Spa~ky is indeed getting
a fighter."
sidellnecoachingfromMoscow,
Meanwhile, in Reykjavik, a
it is reasonable to assume that
member of Fischer's entourage
has voiced suspicion that Boris high Kremlin officials Sjlassky, the Soviet champion, perhaps Leonid Brezhnev
has been getting secret instruc- himself - ordered the Intervention. And may even be
tions from Moscow.
doing
the coaching,
When banged together, these
· In that circumstance, Nixon
two Items produce some rather
clearly would be justified in
interesting vibrations.
making White House know-how,

Opposition to Merger Ended

~nJ
v ,.-,

.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Life
magazine reports that Pres·
ident Nixon has invited Bobby
Fischer, the U.S. challenger for

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Secretary of State Ted W. Bl'own
said Wednesday he should
know by Aug. 24 whether a
citize.ns' group seeking repeal
of the state Income tax has
collected enough signatures to
get tile issue on the Nov. 7
ballot.
"By two weeks from tomorrow, we should know exactly
where we are on Ibis," Bl'own
said as he received petitions
bearing an estimated 366,036
signatures calling for repeal of
the one-half to 3\2 per cent per·
sonal Income tax and the cor·
porate net income tax.
The petitions were presented
by Citizens for Repeal of the
State Income Tax, a nonprofit
corporation headed by a group
of
.Republican
state
representatives opposed to the

4GALLONS.,"

S. 3n!Ave.
A- This is the emblem of
I 'h cups Concord grape
the everlasting Trinity.
drink
4 slices bacon
In a large bowl combine
THURS., FRIDAY,
c"bbage, apples, onions, rice.
salt, pepper and allspice.
Turn into greased 13x9-inch
baking dish. Pour Concord
• CHOOSE FROM 20 COLORS-ALL IN STOC
grape drink over all. Top
with bacon slices. Bake at
• IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
350 degrees for I hour.
Makes 8 servings.

Upmanship at its Zenith

.... -

MAR.

APRIL

MAY

JULY
JUNE

The Gas Company has a plan that makes it easy.
It's a 12-month Budget Payment Plan that lets
you avoid peak heating bills in the cold months
by spreading the cost of your winter heating over
the entire year. Here's how the plan works. You
simply slice up your yearly heating bill into twelve

AUG.

SEPT.

OCT.

small equal parts. And with Gas, that's slicing it
pretty thin I The amount you would pay each
month will be shown on your next gas bill.

DEC.

..

Ask about our Budget Payment Plan It
·your local gas company office.

' .

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

700 W. Main • Pomeroy

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

9 to 9 Daily-Sunday 1·9

\

NOTEBOOK
FILLER ·PAPER
300 SHEETS
REG. 7'1

¢

ONLY

~~=="ERASABLE BOND
TYPEWRITER
PARQiMENT TABLET
44 sHEETS
.¢
REG. 6'1
··oNLY

PRESCRIPI'ION
SERVICE
4 REGISTERED
PHARMACISTS
TO 'SERVE YOU

Open Daily 8 A.M.

I

to 10 P.M. - SundiJ 10:30 lM. w12:30 P.M. l 5 - 9 P.M.

'

-

�10 --:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug.IO, 1972

Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resul~s!

Sentinel Classi

,.,
•',•
I"

,,t:r

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
· , 0EAD1..1NES

'

) P.M . Day Before Publicat ion-.
Monday Oeadtine 9 a.m.
Can.cellation ~ Corre ctio ns
Wip be accepted unt il 9 a.m. for.
Day of Pub lication

ELECTRIC

· Tht Publisher reserves fhe
righ t to edit or r eject any ads,
de eme d objectional.
The
publ i sh~ Will not be re sponsible
for mo~ th an one . incorrect
inser t Ion .

RUPP Min i-Trail, $85 ; phone

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Eac'h addjt iona l word 2c.

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Cha rge per
Advertisement .

;

HO\!R~

." 11 :30 a.m.. to 5:00_p .ml Daily,
11 :30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon

Saturday.

8-10 3tp

.Finest CaJS
Best Service
.1971 Chevrolet.. ................... ;....13295
Mal ibu ha.r~top c~upe , low mileage, new car title, sandal_wood fm1sh , w1th brown viny l roof, vinyl saddle in teno~ , 4-seas~n air conditioning, turbohydramatlc. power
. steen ng , wh1te-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.

1970 Monte Carlo···················· $2895

Notice
YARD Sate, Thursday . Friday
and

992-7685.

Sa tu rday

on

Lark in

Locall owner with less than 21.000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua boQy, blk . knit interior. radio, Turbo
Hydramatlc power steering, &amp; di sc br.akes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice lu&gt;&lt;ury car .

Street. Rutland .
8-9-31c

1970 Dodge ............................. 2195

:-----:-----

1

YARD Sale at Kenneth Eblin
res i den ce on Harrisonville

Polara, factory air conditioning , V-8 engine, automatic
t~an smissio n , power steering, power brakes , good white
Side-walls, many more extras. White finish , black vinyl
roof. Priced to move!
·

Rd ., Auguslll and 12. 9 a.m.

to 3 p.m .

8-9 31c

- - - -- - -

PIANO &amp; Organ lessons by

1970 Ford ................................ 11995

qualified graduate of Cin cinnati Conservatory of
Music. Phone 992.3825.

Galaxie 500 hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes , white finish, black
vinyl top, vinyl interior. While-wall tires, !Ike new, radio.

8-3-12tc

RELAXING I

:r·- ..

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr•............... 1850
1

· Local l owner car, green finish, clean interior, good tires,
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans.

( •.

1

'

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE •... }899

Do you hue curlv or h.ard to
mu•ve htir?
Stop in and have M ick or
Fred relax your hair for a
more. manageable hair

.C·door, V·8, automatk, power steering, good tires

. priced to please.

1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500 .••..•.. '449

KARR'S BARBER SHOP
Lynn St. 992·2361 Pomerg,y
Bubers' Lou1 .400· AFl·CIO

500 - 4 dr., 6 cyl. , std. trans., radio . I owner, runs out

good.

:1966 MUSTANG COUPE .....•..• }595

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT

'

.

6 cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio. A real buy .

No. 20737

Estate of GEORGE A.
EASTMA N, Deceased .
Notice is hereby gi\len that
Elma M . Epple, whose Pos t
Offi ce Add re ss is M iner sv ille ,
Oh io, Route 1, has been duly
appointed as Administratr i x
with th e Will annexed of the
Estate of George A . Eastman ,
late of Meigs Coun1y , Ohio ,
deceased .
Dated th is 4th day of August,

REFRIGERATOR and . gas
range ,· good condition ; phone

992-3982.

8-10-31c

local 1 owner new car trade-In, beige finish, vinyl in·
ter lor, V-8, automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
good w-w tires, luggage rack. A nic:e one .
Reduced!

1964 Chev. Biscayne 2 Dr....••.... 1199

6 cyl. Sid . trans.

John C. Ba con
of the Probate Court
Me igs Coun ty , Ot1io
(B ) 10 , 17 , 24 , 31
Judge

1963 Ford 2 Door................•.... 199
1

GalaKie 500, V-8 engine.

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY!

Case No . 20128
Estat e of WELTHA M . CLARK ,
Dec eased .
Noti ce is hereby given that
Robert Clark and John M .
Clark , of R . D . Pomeroy and
Albany , Ohio , have been du ly
appo inted E)(e cutors of th e
Estate of We ltha M . Cla r k,
deceased , late of Meigs County ,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to fil e
their cl aims with said fiduc iary
within four months .
Dated lh is Bth day o t Augu st

-~--·---

1969 Chev. 2-Ton

102" Cab to Axle.

292 cu . in engine, 15,000 lb, 2 speed rear aKi e, 825&gt;&lt;20 ·
10 ply tires, full depth foam seat. h. dut y spr ings,
sol id cab. Ready to work .

•2295

...

.,...

Mann ing Web ster
Probate Judge of said County

Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.

Phone 992·2181

___,__ _ _ _ _ _..J

t.__

payments ol $5.10 or pay $6 a
month ; call 992-5331.
B-9-6tc

------

S6.10 a month ; call 992-5331.
8-9-61c

- -- - - -

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

YARD SALE, Marty Will iams
home, Syracuse, Friday and

Saturday 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m.,
sectional couch , mangle ,
children's clothing and
household articles .

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

992-2126

Pomeroy

8-10-21c

------

Notice

SUMMER clearance of pallern

Help Wanted

DANCE

East. Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7

p.m. daily except Sunday.
8-10-lfc

WHISPERING PINES

NITE CLUB
Fri . &amp; Sat . Nights

From 10 'til2

Meigs

SPEC IAL for Aug ust ' Stanl ey's Cus tom Body Shop,

Transfers

r ea r quarter pa nels ap prox im ately 40 pet. off ; phone

949 2789.

8-6-61c

- - ---c--

Audrey P. Spore , Charles P. ET HAN 'S lawn movkr &amp; sma ll
Spore to Mark Sorden, 120 eng ine repair ; phone 949 -2789 .
8-6-6tc
Acres, Ches ter.
Archie E. Lee , June P . Lee to
Jack Ray Slavin, Rita Lou
Sla vin, 100 Acre Lot 295, .03
Acre, .22 Acre , Syracuse.
Millard E . Wildermuth,
Kathleen B. Wildermuth to
Dale E . Gum, Ruby E . Gum,
Lot 374, Middleport .
Edward Sycka, June Sycka
to Effie Lucille Shockey, 2.1
Window •
Air Conditioners
Acres. Bedford.
Gilbert Hart, Audrey Hart to
Hot Water Heaters
Ronald Hart, Hilda Hart, Quit
Plumbing
Claim Deed, Sulton .
Electrical Work
W. 0. Barnita, Ruth Barnilz
to Jack W. Carsey, Neacil E.
Carsey, Russell L. Wood,
Rh011da R. Wood, 100 Acre Lot,
Pomeroy.
Hilda R. Harris to Francis E.
992-2448
-Bir~n 1 Catherine E . Biron, Lot,
Pomerpy,
'

Now that

have
your attention, if
you are the kind of
guy that likes to

Music by- Gene NuHer &amp;
The Mixers, 4 piece band .
From Parkersburg, W. Va .

Property

"SEX"

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

'
Pauline M. Markins, Ad· WHY not try cosmetics
that are

drive big cars,
sleep late, eat
steak, and make
super money, call
me immediately 446-0694.

8-4-6tc

WANTED goOd used wall -type
gas furnace: also new or used

building material , any kind ;
phone 992-7494.
8-9-61c

FULL TIME bartender ; apply

FULL lime bar maid ; apply in

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms, bath, gas forced air furna ce.

person at Whi spering Pines

City water . Front and back porches . Wonderful location

-~----

ALt. RI0HT . t'Lt. GIVE

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

' WE INTUVIEWE~
A CAN~IMTE FOR
/X)()LtffiE COLUGE

PRESIDENT WJ.lO tS
GOING TO BE ~ARt&gt;
'll) TURN !&gt;OWN

BUT IF YOu'RE
SfANDING AROUND

'IOU ll-IE BENEFIT OF
REAL~~~ 1&gt;11&gt; ~E HAVE
OUTSTAND ING TRAINING,
EX~SRtSNCE

EOUCATION l

ll-IE DOIA 6T.

-FROM THE
MAFIA

ANI&gt;

8-10-61c

-------

MATURE babysitter wanted in

NEAR POMEROY
ONE FLOOR PLAN - 3 bedrooms, bath, shower In re c.

my home ; 1 child ; 5 days a
week ; call after 5 p.m . 992-

room . Nice kitchen with cook and bake units. Dlnng area .
Air conditioned . Nice carport and barbecue pit . All for

5844.

$5.55

• "'

~· ·}

On Most Amerlcin_Cai7J! :
1

...-.....

I

' t

'

...

- - -- - -

8-I0-3tc

U'L ABNER

-GlMRANTEEOPho'ne 992-2094
Pome~

®

Ho.m:t·&amp;·Auto

RUSH ME TOA

HADN'T WE eETTER TAKE
HIM TOO, SIR"' WE MAY

HOSPITAL.!!

WANTlOSUEHIM -

Open 8 Til5
Mondar thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomoroy, ~ -

KNOW I GOT
A LOT O'NER\IE
GIVII&gt;I' YOU

ADVICE ...

WINNIE WINKLE
® R:JOD AND WATER

NOW l'oON'T SOLVE
YOUR HeAL
PROeLEM&amp;!

mE GOVERNOR WILL
NEVER AGREE TO ALL

1 WANT \W-JN IE WINKl£
OUT OF m ERE, mq
5UT WE: D:JN'T HAVE

YOUR DEIAANDS-'
YOU'LL NEED A
COMPROMI5c

FUNDS 8li06ETED
FOR A NEW PRI~ON

OFFER.

\~NG!

who pa ssed away 4 years agO,

August 10. 1968. Although he is
gone, the desire to sl ill say
" Hello Dad" and to have him
answer us still i5 fresh in our
memory . Sadly missed by
wife, Bess ie Tracy Pullin s,
children, Betty Sayre, Tom ,
Gerald and Jam es Pullin s.

DON ' T BE MI SLE D BY THE OUTS I DE, OR THE
PRICE . LET US SHOW YOU THE INSIDE. THAT'S
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS.
992 -3325

8-10-llc ' -- -- - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - -'
8 ROOM house, bath. large lot,
Rt.

I,

· area by Meigs Local Teacher, COAL Limestone , Excelsior
wife and son; exce llen t
Salt Works, E. Main St .,
references; phone 992-5287.
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891 .

Middleport. phone 992-2602.
_ __ _ _ ___8_·6-6tp

4-12-lfc

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake

~-----

AKC

For Rent

registered

Wi emaran er

pup s; J . E. Pape, Box 265,

FURNISHED
apartment.

2

bedroom

adult s

only ,

Syracuse, Ohio 45779; phone

992-3420.

C'On chas, New Mexi co. $2,975.
No Down . No Interes t. $25 mo.
f or 119 mos . Vacation
Paradi se. Free Brochur e.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box

7-28-121c
Midd leport ; phone 992 -3874.
2001DD. Alameda, California
8-I0-3tc 1970 HONDA d50, phone 99294501.
- - -- - 8-6-JOip
3 ROOM apartment , un - 5951.
8·6·61p SMAL L business doing big, big
furnislled , 408 Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy .
business in the County Seat of
8-10-lfc CAN NIN G PEACHES - A load
arriving Wednesday. Be sure
to br ing your cont~iners . Ph .

apartment.

992-2582 or 992-2565. Midway
utilities paid , 4 rooms and
balh . $95 a month plus Markel.
deposit; adults only ; phone _ __ _ _ _ ___8_·8·31t
992-2568.
8-10-3tc Mobile Homes For
READ THIS!
'ROOM house and bath ; 3 room BERRY-Miller Mobile Homes,
apar tment and bath ; both
705 Farson Street, Belpre,
newly remodeled ; furnished
Ohio, Phone 423-9531. Used

Sale

or unfurnished ; no children ;
Mrs. J. W. Weaver, Racine,

8-10-61 c
AVAILABLE August 15th, 2
bedroom furni shed apart ment ; ground floor ; also
tra iler space ; Robert Hill,

Racine. phone 949-3811 .
8·10-3tp
3 BEDROOM furnished home,
full basement, 7 miles North

of Salem Center. 1 mi. off U.S.
143, phone 698-5457 ; must

have references .

Cla_rence

Proff1t, Portland,

Dh10 ; phone 843-2254.

7-19-tfc
CHINA ca binet, credenza, dish·
washer , coffee table, fire
screen, lawn chalr, bedroom

Meigs County . .BtJSiness and
books can be seen only by

appointment. Can be partly
financed . Write or cal! Elmer
F. Jones &amp; Associates,

Realtors. 227 Columbus Road,
Athens, Oh io; ph one 614-5933292.
8-6-6tc

----,----

RACINE - 10 room hou~ /
bath, basement. garage, two
lots. Phone 949·4313.
4-5-lfp

GASOLINE ALI,EY

LEGAL NOTICE
A~~J1 1~~MO,.'NT

THE YEAR . $18,900.00.
1 STORY FRAME

dec .. •od, tate of Pomeroy,
Route 2, Mtlgs County, OhiO.

NEED STORAGE?
Pomeroy , large build ing

171 27 111 3, 10, 31

In good
condition , 2
bedrooms , ba t h, modern
kitc hen ,
gas
furna ce ,
basement, Meigs Schoo l
Dist. $7 ,000.00.

creditors art requlrtd to fllt
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
l9?2~ted this 22nd day of July
John c . Bacon

come. $8,200.00.
MIDDLEPORT
3rd St. 2 story brick. has 2
apartments,
basement,
small apartment in the rear ,

ALL IN GOOD CONDITION,
REDUCED TO SELL ,
OWNER LIVES OUT OF
TOWN. {PLEASE CALL)
WAN T TO SELL? LIS T
WITH US . NO SALE, NO
CHARGE .
HENRYE . CLELAND Sr.
REALTOR
992-2259
If no answer 992-2568

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20,125
Estate of Joseph Lincoln Price
Deceased .
Not ice is hereby gi\len that
Kathryn Pr ic! of Portland ,
Oh io, has been duly appoint~d
execulrix of the Es1ate of
Joseph Lincoln Pr ice, deceased,
late of Meigs County, Oh io.
Cred itors are requ ired to file
th ei r cla ims wlfh said fiduciary
with in four months .
Mann ing Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Division

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

oi

--~
~
- ~W
~h=e~n--w_a_
s ~fo_r_m--er

1966 4 DR. SEDAN, Galaxie 500,

·Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·Underpinning
'c omplete mobile home
serv.lce - plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes , ·
always avail-1hle ;,t .. .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES -

suite, desk and chair. mal·
1220 Washington Blvd.
tress and springs. dresser ; 423-7521
BELPRE, o.
"II 992-3381 or 992-7440:
8·8-lfc .-

'-----------.J

V-8, 289 cu . in., crulsamafic.
power steering, AM radio, 2
speed windshield wiper and

Auto

President Lyndon Johnson
first elected to the Senate?
A-In 1948. winning a

weapon

AUTO

PRISON EXPLOOES

A BOM8!

DANCE

below

Ravensw~od

landing on Oh io Route 338.
_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _8:._:
·8-3tc

1965 MUSTANG, V-8, 4 speed,
1965 Comet. V-8, automatic;
both in real good condition;
phone 992-6196.
8·9-3tc

------

- - - - - - .'

I

DOWN

10 1972 Kinr Feature• Syndiute, Inc.)

I. City in

lraq
Z. Nobleman
3. Speaks
out
(2 wd s.)
t.New
Zealand
vine
5. Order lo

pc. band from Porkers.

~urg , W. Va.

Fridays &amp; Saturday
Nights 10 til2

JJ&amp;O~;f:J:::~-*c
Unaeramble lh... four Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ~rdlnary words.

abrobr

l

HECAF

I

CEWI'l

Y e~terday's ADIWfJ'

&amp;. Fit fiddle
(Z wds. l
'·Strike up
IllUDe

(3 wds.)
title
8. High Arab
17. Walk$;
office
(sl.)
9. Concert
U. State
ll. Leaven
(Fr.)
15. No more
21. You bet!
than
21. Noldi of
t)le Silents
22. Wine
disorder
24. Jury list
25. Mine

Gene Nutter
And The Mixers
4

forces

(abbr.)

18. Hardy
19. Legislate
22. Chewy
candy
23. Favorite
girl of
barbershop
quortets
!4. Ship's
berth

%8. Disposed
29.- finder
30. Boss 3Z. British
Con·
servative
35. Campara·
live
suffix
36. Aunt
(Sp.)

l

[

0

* :l7~~"-

II I I

rowDLEI []
) I

FOR A f'ElliSON
WHO CAN'T ~EAP I'T.

entrance

TOO lATE, ~i!UTEHANT,
I'VE !&gt;I.REJlQY PRIVEN
11 aY&amp; TO A 801&gt;Y

IT RATES ATTENTlON
FllOI\ A POl..Cf UE1JIENA!jf,
CA!ABOW, JU51 AH ACtlf'I!NT.

We talk to JOU

SC\1\ESOI&gt;l' MU5TI'E I1UW'EU
CAR lllfiLf IT IIA5 ~ TliE
I'MI&lt;IIIIG LOT 01/T

~ike-.,..,

5IIOP FOR ~R!

WMP0/1390
•·

%8. Scot's

1ncestor

1'1. Trust

(---.

II.Snoppy

Ye•terd•y'•

eomeback
11. Kin to

P J ·\'"ll!'-t

31. Bravo!
31: "Picnic"
play-

fN YOUR DIAL ,

wri~ht

THE VET!

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTO.QUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
' A X Y D L B A .A X It
Ia LONGFELLOW
11
61VE HIM A 5HOT! GIVE
One letter almply atands for onother. In this sample A .is HIM A PILL I HOLD HIM i&gt;OWN!
used for the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc. Single. letters,
opostrophes, the lenJth. and formolion 01 the words are all PIIT AMUZZLE ON fliM ~LOCK
HIM IN A KENNEL! Cf.IAiN
hints. Each day the code lettel'l.are dUferent.
HiM iO A POGT! II
CRYPTOQUOTES
Q
ELFKT
GLLMHC
CHWT
w

SPECIAL CONTINUES

·Rc COLA
Plus To•
&amp;' Deposit

73$

XQJHXWYKH

·

MLXPQMV
JWFVPWJ

Wfth NCh $2.00 PurcltiM
of' Aallllllll Gllllltlt.

\

tC

WX

\

W

UWXWKLV

WKK • ..: E .

XPWM

GLJHCGHX

)

HEARD IT A MILLION
"TAKE HIM TO THE VET! II

41, Senior
citizenry

. At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124

~6 ~~-K8otfs.

I HATE

ALWAI{5
END UPAT

3&amp;, Cautious

MILLER &amp; SONS

··- .....

Poinu loatingihw•enuadon-PINS&amp; NIIDLIS

LIF.E! NO
MAmRWHAT
I{OU DO, I{()IJ

U. Resiliency

.·

JvMble.. WINCE LISLI NIPHIW SMUDOI
Anewer1

pilsner
az. cragRY
bill
'II. Maxim
st. Hench·
man

rear •. clean inferior, perfect

mj .

ANSWER TO
A•STOOL
PIGEON?"

gelist
II. Try again
12. Region
13. Visigoth
king
it. Brown
kiwi
15. Armed

16. Indian

washer, 7 x 75 while side wall runoff election by 87 votes.
!ires, seat bells front and
runnrng motor, good paint
be ige with white roof, no holes
In body, new battery, 1 owner,
priced lo sell; Phone Paula L.
Sayre, Portland, 843-2286 1

T~EIR

Whispering Pines
Nite Club

10 and 12 wide

Auto Sales

ACROSS
I. Syrian
bishop's
title
5. Cavalry

INI!RTIA Ofl 10 I OADI!D
FREI~HT CARS

models in stock . Befor~ you
buy any Mobile Home see us

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MY GREATEST ENEMY IS J1EAL.
ITY. I HAVE FOUGHT IT SUCCESSFULLY FOR THIRTY
YEARS.-MARGARET ANDERSON

by THOMAS JOSEPH

10. Evan·

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots at Rock Springs.
close to High School &amp; Fair
Ground : call or see Bill Wille,
992-2789 alter 5 p.m. weekday s.
8·6·301c
- - -- -- - - l ROOM house and bath, $6,500 ;
phone 992-5786.
8·6-61c

- ----,---

- --------

~M'6td'

tBJ 10, 17 , 2.4 , 31

pr iced to sell . Phone 992 -6641.
AIR-CONDITIONED
mobile
8·6·6!C
home and lot ; $3,500 ; phone
~----992-5786.
FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
first - you'll be glad you did .
8-6-61c frame house, six rooms and
8-10-21c =-:-::~---­
both. Large lot. Located In
RACINE - 6 room house bath
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
1971,60X 12. MOBILE home In
utility room, garage, sio.ooo;
house on left going north
•-hone
949-4195.
Tuppers Plains/ on 100' x 200'
Inside corporation line .
lot ; ready to move into ; see
3-31 -lfc
7-27-lf
Dor ser Miller at trailer in
Arbaugh Addition.
HOBS TETTER , 8 ROOM house, 3 bedrooms,
8-9-61p GEORGE
REAL
ESTATE
BROKER ,
recreat ion plus bar, garage.
- -- - - - - -RACINE, OHIO.
b
1
d
'
FOR THE BEST deal In a new RACINE
Restaurant
asemen an
large front
porch.
River
View
.
Ap
or used mobile home, try
buslness in a prime location
pointment only . Call 992-5310.
Kanauga Mob ile Home Sales.
do ing a very fine volume
8-6-6tc
Kanauga, Ohio.
business, stock and eq·uip. -:-:::-::-:-:-:------7-16-301c
ment, price $5 ,500.
5 ROOM house, double lot, 2 car
Hilton Wolfe, Real Estate
~rage , Anderson Street ,
CASij paid for all makes anet
Salesman, Phone 949-3211.
son, W. Va. ; p hone 77J.
models of mobile homes . _ _ _ _ __ _ _:8·.:.
9-3tc . 5606.
Ph011e area code 614-423-9531.
8·6·61p
4-13-trc
good 8 -

Judge

with 2 floors, s~veral lots, In
good location, present in -

and repossessed Mobile
Homes is our specialty , not
our sideline. You can save
hundreds and hundreds of HOUSE in Long Bollom , phone
75 ACRE Farm at Harr ison.
985-3529.
dollars on a late model used
ville , Ohio; .house, out or repossessed Mobile Home.
6·11 -tfc
buildinqs , e~ood farm land :
We have a huge seiec.tion of

- - - -- -

Ohio ; phone 949-3584.

5-1-lfc

cabinets and dishwasher,
c 111 No . 20,7U
own water supply or Chester
estate of · Etberl Ta';'IOr
water, large garage and _. Deceased ~ ,
· "'.l-1. ,
work!hop, · frutt ston!lge ' \lt'tNottce 11 Hl'r•b'f glvtn· lhlt
building , fruit trees, berries,
Sharon Dunc1n of Pomeroy,
th
4
Route 2, Ohio, hat b"n duty
d
years
appointed ,F1ucutrhc of Tht
grapes, an o er .
old . GREATEST BUY OF
Ellate ot Elbert Taylor,

Garage and utility building . Lot about 65xlSO.

gas and electric,

Racine, Oh io

'Crill Bradford

bedrooms with closets. bath.
utility room, kitchen has nice

~
•
t
·- RUTLAND ·
•
2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City wal~ Nice bath .

For Sale

C. BRADF'ORO. Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821

3.05 acre estate. 1 story, 3

Only $4,000.00.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

5-12-ttc

15 MINUTES
FROM POMEROY

SM~LL ~ 2 bedrooms, 2 wells on country road . Stove and
refngerator. Good for a weekend outing . Ohio Power.

In Memory

Owner &amp; Operator.

.J

OUT

r

HERE 'TOMORROW...

J

I

..

F•..-'

Pomeroy, Ohio

only $17,500.00.

t'M RUNNIN:::. 'IOU IN FOR
l-OITERING!

........

tClELAND"""'
REALTY
'•
608 E . Main

on 124. Ask ing $6500.00.

Nile Club.

-----------

~,

\.

'ILl . ... ..

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

truly
different
. and
refreshing? The famous mink
~
TW0ho-r-se-1an-dem
--lrailer,
Sales
oil base and now we have the OLD Furniture, 'oak tables,
Brown, Parcel, Rutland.
electric brakes and llghfs,
lemon grove. Just 'think , 14
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
good condition ; also double 1970 PATROL Plymouth, 4 dr ., 1970 DUSTER, 6 cr.llnder, new
Albert L. Martin, Frances E.
specials this month, some for
383, 4 barrel , new tires , good
beds, or complete households .
buckslilched. silver laced
tires, good cond1tlon, 5 year
condition
; white, full p0wer,
Marlin to Edward R. Marlin , men as well as women. Ws
Wri te M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Western Pleasure sad dle ;
warranty,
must sell; phone
automatic,
alr -condltroner,
Pomeroy, Oh io. Call 992-6271.
Anna M. Martin, Lot, · KOSCOT of course. P~one
phone 992-3742.
992-5287.
992-5113.
.
$1.500. Call 992-5310.
6: 28 -lfc '
8 - 8 · 61~.
' Pomeroy.
8·6-61c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·9·31p
7-9-tfc ----------~

J . WilHam Brown, Myrvllle

B- It:&gt;

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918 .
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON$TR. CO.

------

LOST - German Shepherddog , TOMATOES ,
potatoes.
black and silver in vicinity o( cucum bers
~nd
beans,

Wanted To Buy

~

-, H

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

Lost

- - - - --

painting;

--------

mar

General ; call collect 985. 3954.
8-8-Jtp

exterior

complete lin,. of Masoory
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We

Whpet Alignment·

662 -3035.

doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum ·siding
and railing . A Jacob, sales
representative. For free
·estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse , V . V .
Johnson and Son, Inc.

;S

'
.•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

8-9-61 c
- -- - -- - - . - GR AND OPENING - Sew &amp; Go 3 ROOM house and bath, fu rShop in Alfre d area ; bonded
nished ; phone 992 -5592.
ac ryli cs, sweater knits and
8-8·1fc
po lye ster , $1 .99 and up ; - - - - - - - - owner , Mrs. E . T. Calaway.
3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed an'4
8•8·31c
unf~rn i shed
apartments.
Phone 992-543d.
REWA R0 , for shop ~ rrg at
4-12-llc
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop.
Ch es ler. Oh io: 10 per cent of
your total pu rc hase
be For Sale
applied to the purchase o any
ceramic items.,
· CANNING toma toes, sweet
corn .
cucumbers
and
8·2-301p
mangoes; Geraldine Cleland,
Racine , 0 .
7-28- lfc

Chester ; answers to name of

and

From the largest
baker; reply Box 374. Athens. - - - - - - - - 3-2· ffd l
Bulldozer RadiaJ.or to the
8-9-3\c ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe ;---- - - -- - SEWING MACHINES. Repa lr1 Smalles t Heater Core.
--------model. Complete with all READY -MIX
CONCRETE
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Nathan Biggs
APPLICATIONS now being cleanin g attachments and
delivered r ight to y.our
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
uses
paper
bags.
Slightly
used
Radiator
Speciali$-1
taken for kitchen help, cooks,
project . Fast and easy . Free·
Author ized Singer Sales and
but cleans and looks like new.
wa itresses and car hops,
estimates. Phone 992 -3284.'' Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
apply in person at Craw's
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
3-29-lfc 1
lerms available . Phone 992Middleport, Ohio.
Steak House .
B·8-61c 5641.
6-30-lfc INTERIOR. exterior painting.
"8-4-61c =~--~­
Ph . 991 -2174
Pomeroy
- - - - - - - - -- -- - remodeling, build ing; contact
DOZE!( ·and back hoe work ,
WOMAN to live with elderly
Errtest Deeter, Bashan .
ponds and septic tanks ; B &amp; K
lady, light housework, no POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
8-6-61c o·bE LL WHEEL alignment
Excavating, Phone 992 -5367 ,
laundry . Phone 992-5397 or Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
~.---------------located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
5443.
Di
ck
Karr
,
Jr
.
·
·
992-3507.
insurance been ' Complete front end service,
5-21- lfc AUTOMOBILE
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___8_8-61c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 8-1 5-tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
tune up and brake service.
-----:---operator' s license? Call 992Wheels balanced elec TOYS! Toys! Toys! Sell
2966.
tronically .
All
work
Real Estate For Sale
Playhouse toys, Aug . to Dec. Real Estate For Sale
6-15-lh
guaranteed.
RP;tll;.nn.ahl~
Free training . Good com .
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
mission, No cash investment.
992
-3213.
t-u-nc
BALKHOE
AND
DOZER
work
.
No delivery . No collecting. S
Septic tanks Installed. Georqe
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
tBi-111 Pullins. Phone 992 -2478. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Margaret Fortune 949-5414 or
4-25-lfc REASONABLE rateo. Ph . .w..
Barbara Lambert 446-3411.
110 Mechanic Street
4782 , Gallipolis, John Russell,
7-26-301c

FURNISHED

Needl ecrafl Shop. Rt . 124

remodeling,
building,
suspended (el rtngs, Interior

EXPERT

Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Pn.

buttonholes , fancy design s,
etc. Pa int slightly blemished .
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. $.49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 992-

J

are fully Insured for your

... --- -------·
SE.PTfC tanks cleaned. Miller

5641.

------

books and imported yarns .

and commercial ·raoflng ;

523 2.

2-12-lfc
zag sewing machine. For - - ; - - - - , - - - fabrics, SEE. US FOR : Awnings, storm
sewing stretch

8-10-61p

Chevelle - Monte Carlo.

vinyl and steel sldln_g(
fiberglas, brick and ·stone;
complete i'lne ol resi~HIIOI

truck s and low-b'oy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
. Pome~oy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone . 992··

CLOSE out on 1971 lull size zfg.

WANTED experienced head

18l 10, 17, 24. 31

For Sale

We specialize In aluminum,

haul fill dirt, tap,soil. Oump

7-18-301p

- - - - -- -

DELUXE a track stereo in
Walnut console, will se ll for
balan ce due of $88 .21 or pay

HOME in Middleport . Pomeroy

Good stock, air conditioned. Caprice . Impala .

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping . We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract. ,
Free Estimates. We also

exterior painting; Arthur
Musser, phone 742-5223 .

budget terms . Call 992-7085.
8-4-61c

SWALLERIN'

brick f'ront, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

budget terms. Call 992-7085.
8-4-61c
ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine ; th is - - - - - - - - PAPER hanging ; interior and
machine is dressmaker EARLY Ameri can Stereo, AMmodel; thi s machine makes
FM radio , 4 speed changer , 4
buttonholes, darns, em spea ker
soun d system .
broideries ;
fak e
over
Balance $73.56 . Use our

THIS 'lEAR, LOWEEZY ··• •
I SEEN A FELLER IN OlliE
OF THEM THAR
· SIDESHOWS

SNU FFV '5
BEEN DOIN' THAT
TRICK FER '/EARS

M'l 1.

THAT AIN'T
NOTHIN'

J Bedroqm home, with

EARTH MOVING

PHONE 992-2550

8-I0-61c

Wanted To Rent

Just In- Prompt Delivery
on
New Nova Sky Roof-Vega GT Cpe.

1972 .

mrx., Thelma Michaej, dec. to

POMEROY

WALNUT Stereo-combination ,
AKC registered miniature
4 speaker sound sys tem, 4
Schnauzers, 7 wks. old . Ph . speed dual Volume control.
446-2497.
Balance S68 .32 . Use our

IN MEMORY of Too Pu llins

·'

NO.TICE OF
APP.'OINTMENT

Mlddl~port.

All kinds , all sizes for men,
women, young men, bJys
and girls. Hurry to ..

8-61fc

1972

1

GET 1 PAIR FREE

'IE SHOULD
A·GOIIIE TO TH' COUNTRI{ FAIR

•:.

.FIRE!!

eilOOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU't lNG
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate

Buy 2 Pairs and

m person at the Meigs Inn.

1967 Chev. Impala Sl Wagon··· ·• 11295

I

PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

WARM Morning healer. $10 ;
phooe 99H050 after 5 p.m.
8-I0-31p

RATES
cFor Wan't Ad Service

5 cen ts per Word one Insertion
M inimum Charge 75c "
12 cents per word three
con secut.f ve insertioris.
111 cents per · word sfx con .
sec utive insertio.ns . ,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .

.Price Smash!

I

Business Services

----------,

8-10-3tc

~

OFFICE

Range. •· r

Holpoi r11

like new : larg•~ med icine ·
cabinet
with
mirr \)1-,
flu orescent lig ht s around
m irror ; phone 992-5045 .

REGULATIONS

'
'

r

For Sale

:=or Sale

GLORV BE!!

---

SHUX··

L---~~~------~

NO ·WONDER D065

HOW!. A'T THE. MOON !

�10 --:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug.IO, 1972

Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resul~s!

Sentinel Classi

,.,
•',•
I"

,,t:r

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
· , 0EAD1..1NES

'

) P.M . Day Before Publicat ion-.
Monday Oeadtine 9 a.m.
Can.cellation ~ Corre ctio ns
Wip be accepted unt il 9 a.m. for.
Day of Pub lication

ELECTRIC

· Tht Publisher reserves fhe
righ t to edit or r eject any ads,
de eme d objectional.
The
publ i sh~ Will not be re sponsible
for mo~ th an one . incorrect
inser t Ion .

RUPP Min i-Trail, $85 ; phone

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Eac'h addjt iona l word 2c.

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Cha rge per
Advertisement .

;

HO\!R~

." 11 :30 a.m.. to 5:00_p .ml Daily,
11 :30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon

Saturday.

8-10 3tp

.Finest CaJS
Best Service
.1971 Chevrolet.. ................... ;....13295
Mal ibu ha.r~top c~upe , low mileage, new car title, sandal_wood fm1sh , w1th brown viny l roof, vinyl saddle in teno~ , 4-seas~n air conditioning, turbohydramatlc. power
. steen ng , wh1te-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.

1970 Monte Carlo···················· $2895

Notice
YARD Sate, Thursday . Friday
and

992-7685.

Sa tu rday

on

Lark in

Locall owner with less than 21.000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua boQy, blk . knit interior. radio, Turbo
Hydramatlc power steering, &amp; di sc br.akes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice lu&gt;&lt;ury car .

Street. Rutland .
8-9-31c

1970 Dodge ............................. 2195

:-----:-----

1

YARD Sale at Kenneth Eblin
res i den ce on Harrisonville

Polara, factory air conditioning , V-8 engine, automatic
t~an smissio n , power steering, power brakes , good white
Side-walls, many more extras. White finish , black vinyl
roof. Priced to move!
·

Rd ., Auguslll and 12. 9 a.m.

to 3 p.m .

8-9 31c

- - - -- - -

PIANO &amp; Organ lessons by

1970 Ford ................................ 11995

qualified graduate of Cin cinnati Conservatory of
Music. Phone 992.3825.

Galaxie 500 hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes , white finish, black
vinyl top, vinyl interior. While-wall tires, !Ike new, radio.

8-3-12tc

RELAXING I

:r·- ..

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr•............... 1850
1

· Local l owner car, green finish, clean interior, good tires,
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans.

( •.

1

'

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE •... }899

Do you hue curlv or h.ard to
mu•ve htir?
Stop in and have M ick or
Fred relax your hair for a
more. manageable hair

.C·door, V·8, automatk, power steering, good tires

. priced to please.

1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500 .••..•.. '449

KARR'S BARBER SHOP
Lynn St. 992·2361 Pomerg,y
Bubers' Lou1 .400· AFl·CIO

500 - 4 dr., 6 cyl. , std. trans., radio . I owner, runs out

good.

:1966 MUSTANG COUPE .....•..• }595

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT

'

.

6 cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio. A real buy .

No. 20737

Estate of GEORGE A.
EASTMA N, Deceased .
Notice is hereby gi\len that
Elma M . Epple, whose Pos t
Offi ce Add re ss is M iner sv ille ,
Oh io, Route 1, has been duly
appointed as Administratr i x
with th e Will annexed of the
Estate of George A . Eastman ,
late of Meigs Coun1y , Ohio ,
deceased .
Dated th is 4th day of August,

REFRIGERATOR and . gas
range ,· good condition ; phone

992-3982.

8-10-31c

local 1 owner new car trade-In, beige finish, vinyl in·
ter lor, V-8, automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
good w-w tires, luggage rack. A nic:e one .
Reduced!

1964 Chev. Biscayne 2 Dr....••.... 1199

6 cyl. Sid . trans.

John C. Ba con
of the Probate Court
Me igs Coun ty , Ot1io
(B ) 10 , 17 , 24 , 31
Judge

1963 Ford 2 Door................•.... 199
1

GalaKie 500, V-8 engine.

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUY!

Case No . 20128
Estat e of WELTHA M . CLARK ,
Dec eased .
Noti ce is hereby given that
Robert Clark and John M .
Clark , of R . D . Pomeroy and
Albany , Ohio , have been du ly
appo inted E)(e cutors of th e
Estate of We ltha M . Cla r k,
deceased , late of Meigs County ,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to fil e
their cl aims with said fiduc iary
within four months .
Dated lh is Bth day o t Augu st

-~--·---

1969 Chev. 2-Ton

102" Cab to Axle.

292 cu . in engine, 15,000 lb, 2 speed rear aKi e, 825&gt;&lt;20 ·
10 ply tires, full depth foam seat. h. dut y spr ings,
sol id cab. Ready to work .

•2295

...

.,...

Mann ing Web ster
Probate Judge of said County

Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.

Phone 992·2181

___,__ _ _ _ _ _..J

t.__

payments ol $5.10 or pay $6 a
month ; call 992-5331.
B-9-6tc

------

S6.10 a month ; call 992-5331.
8-9-61c

- -- - - -

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

YARD SALE, Marty Will iams
home, Syracuse, Friday and

Saturday 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m.,
sectional couch , mangle ,
children's clothing and
household articles .

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

992-2126

Pomeroy

8-10-21c

------

Notice

SUMMER clearance of pallern

Help Wanted

DANCE

East. Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7

p.m. daily except Sunday.
8-10-lfc

WHISPERING PINES

NITE CLUB
Fri . &amp; Sat . Nights

From 10 'til2

Meigs

SPEC IAL for Aug ust ' Stanl ey's Cus tom Body Shop,

Transfers

r ea r quarter pa nels ap prox im ately 40 pet. off ; phone

949 2789.

8-6-61c

- - ---c--

Audrey P. Spore , Charles P. ET HAN 'S lawn movkr &amp; sma ll
Spore to Mark Sorden, 120 eng ine repair ; phone 949 -2789 .
8-6-6tc
Acres, Ches ter.
Archie E. Lee , June P . Lee to
Jack Ray Slavin, Rita Lou
Sla vin, 100 Acre Lot 295, .03
Acre, .22 Acre , Syracuse.
Millard E . Wildermuth,
Kathleen B. Wildermuth to
Dale E . Gum, Ruby E . Gum,
Lot 374, Middleport .
Edward Sycka, June Sycka
to Effie Lucille Shockey, 2.1
Window •
Air Conditioners
Acres. Bedford.
Gilbert Hart, Audrey Hart to
Hot Water Heaters
Ronald Hart, Hilda Hart, Quit
Plumbing
Claim Deed, Sulton .
Electrical Work
W. 0. Barnita, Ruth Barnilz
to Jack W. Carsey, Neacil E.
Carsey, Russell L. Wood,
Rh011da R. Wood, 100 Acre Lot,
Pomeroy.
Hilda R. Harris to Francis E.
992-2448
-Bir~n 1 Catherine E . Biron, Lot,
Pomerpy,
'

Now that

have
your attention, if
you are the kind of
guy that likes to

Music by- Gene NuHer &amp;
The Mixers, 4 piece band .
From Parkersburg, W. Va .

Property

"SEX"

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

'
Pauline M. Markins, Ad· WHY not try cosmetics
that are

drive big cars,
sleep late, eat
steak, and make
super money, call
me immediately 446-0694.

8-4-6tc

WANTED goOd used wall -type
gas furnace: also new or used

building material , any kind ;
phone 992-7494.
8-9-61c

FULL TIME bartender ; apply

FULL lime bar maid ; apply in

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms, bath, gas forced air furna ce.

person at Whi spering Pines

City water . Front and back porches . Wonderful location

-~----

ALt. RI0HT . t'Lt. GIVE

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

' WE INTUVIEWE~
A CAN~IMTE FOR
/X)()LtffiE COLUGE

PRESIDENT WJ.lO tS
GOING TO BE ~ARt&gt;
'll) TURN !&gt;OWN

BUT IF YOu'RE
SfANDING AROUND

'IOU ll-IE BENEFIT OF
REAL~~~ 1&gt;11&gt; ~E HAVE
OUTSTAND ING TRAINING,
EX~SRtSNCE

EOUCATION l

ll-IE DOIA 6T.

-FROM THE
MAFIA

ANI&gt;

8-10-61c

-------

MATURE babysitter wanted in

NEAR POMEROY
ONE FLOOR PLAN - 3 bedrooms, bath, shower In re c.

my home ; 1 child ; 5 days a
week ; call after 5 p.m . 992-

room . Nice kitchen with cook and bake units. Dlnng area .
Air conditioned . Nice carport and barbecue pit . All for

5844.

$5.55

• "'

~· ·}

On Most Amerlcin_Cai7J! :
1

...-.....

I

' t

'

...

- - -- - -

8-I0-3tc

U'L ABNER

-GlMRANTEEOPho'ne 992-2094
Pome~

®

Ho.m:t·&amp;·Auto

RUSH ME TOA

HADN'T WE eETTER TAKE
HIM TOO, SIR"' WE MAY

HOSPITAL.!!

WANTlOSUEHIM -

Open 8 Til5
Mondar thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomoroy, ~ -

KNOW I GOT
A LOT O'NER\IE
GIVII&gt;I' YOU

ADVICE ...

WINNIE WINKLE
® R:JOD AND WATER

NOW l'oON'T SOLVE
YOUR HeAL
PROeLEM&amp;!

mE GOVERNOR WILL
NEVER AGREE TO ALL

1 WANT \W-JN IE WINKl£
OUT OF m ERE, mq
5UT WE: D:JN'T HAVE

YOUR DEIAANDS-'
YOU'LL NEED A
COMPROMI5c

FUNDS 8li06ETED
FOR A NEW PRI~ON

OFFER.

\~NG!

who pa ssed away 4 years agO,

August 10. 1968. Although he is
gone, the desire to sl ill say
" Hello Dad" and to have him
answer us still i5 fresh in our
memory . Sadly missed by
wife, Bess ie Tracy Pullin s,
children, Betty Sayre, Tom ,
Gerald and Jam es Pullin s.

DON ' T BE MI SLE D BY THE OUTS I DE, OR THE
PRICE . LET US SHOW YOU THE INSIDE. THAT'S
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS.
992 -3325

8-10-llc ' -- -- - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - -'
8 ROOM house, bath. large lot,
Rt.

I,

· area by Meigs Local Teacher, COAL Limestone , Excelsior
wife and son; exce llen t
Salt Works, E. Main St .,
references; phone 992-5287.
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891 .

Middleport. phone 992-2602.
_ __ _ _ ___8_·6-6tp

4-12-lfc

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake

~-----

AKC

For Rent

registered

Wi emaran er

pup s; J . E. Pape, Box 265,

FURNISHED
apartment.

2

bedroom

adult s

only ,

Syracuse, Ohio 45779; phone

992-3420.

C'On chas, New Mexi co. $2,975.
No Down . No Interes t. $25 mo.
f or 119 mos . Vacation
Paradi se. Free Brochur e.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box

7-28-121c
Midd leport ; phone 992 -3874.
2001DD. Alameda, California
8-I0-3tc 1970 HONDA d50, phone 99294501.
- - -- - 8-6-JOip
3 ROOM apartment , un - 5951.
8·6·61p SMAL L business doing big, big
furnislled , 408 Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy .
business in the County Seat of
8-10-lfc CAN NIN G PEACHES - A load
arriving Wednesday. Be sure
to br ing your cont~iners . Ph .

apartment.

992-2582 or 992-2565. Midway
utilities paid , 4 rooms and
balh . $95 a month plus Markel.
deposit; adults only ; phone _ __ _ _ _ ___8_·8·31t
992-2568.
8-10-3tc Mobile Homes For
READ THIS!
'ROOM house and bath ; 3 room BERRY-Miller Mobile Homes,
apar tment and bath ; both
705 Farson Street, Belpre,
newly remodeled ; furnished
Ohio, Phone 423-9531. Used

Sale

or unfurnished ; no children ;
Mrs. J. W. Weaver, Racine,

8-10-61 c
AVAILABLE August 15th, 2
bedroom furni shed apart ment ; ground floor ; also
tra iler space ; Robert Hill,

Racine. phone 949-3811 .
8·10-3tp
3 BEDROOM furnished home,
full basement, 7 miles North

of Salem Center. 1 mi. off U.S.
143, phone 698-5457 ; must

have references .

Cla_rence

Proff1t, Portland,

Dh10 ; phone 843-2254.

7-19-tfc
CHINA ca binet, credenza, dish·
washer , coffee table, fire
screen, lawn chalr, bedroom

Meigs County . .BtJSiness and
books can be seen only by

appointment. Can be partly
financed . Write or cal! Elmer
F. Jones &amp; Associates,

Realtors. 227 Columbus Road,
Athens, Oh io; ph one 614-5933292.
8-6-6tc

----,----

RACINE - 10 room hou~ /
bath, basement. garage, two
lots. Phone 949·4313.
4-5-lfp

GASOLINE ALI,EY

LEGAL NOTICE
A~~J1 1~~MO,.'NT

THE YEAR . $18,900.00.
1 STORY FRAME

dec .. •od, tate of Pomeroy,
Route 2, Mtlgs County, OhiO.

NEED STORAGE?
Pomeroy , large build ing

171 27 111 3, 10, 31

In good
condition , 2
bedrooms , ba t h, modern
kitc hen ,
gas
furna ce ,
basement, Meigs Schoo l
Dist. $7 ,000.00.

creditors art requlrtd to fllt
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
l9?2~ted this 22nd day of July
John c . Bacon

come. $8,200.00.
MIDDLEPORT
3rd St. 2 story brick. has 2
apartments,
basement,
small apartment in the rear ,

ALL IN GOOD CONDITION,
REDUCED TO SELL ,
OWNER LIVES OUT OF
TOWN. {PLEASE CALL)
WAN T TO SELL? LIS T
WITH US . NO SALE, NO
CHARGE .
HENRYE . CLELAND Sr.
REALTOR
992-2259
If no answer 992-2568

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20,125
Estate of Joseph Lincoln Price
Deceased .
Not ice is hereby gi\len that
Kathryn Pr ic! of Portland ,
Oh io, has been duly appoint~d
execulrix of the Es1ate of
Joseph Lincoln Pr ice, deceased,
late of Meigs County, Oh io.
Cred itors are requ ired to file
th ei r cla ims wlfh said fiduciary
with in four months .
Mann ing Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Division

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

oi

--~
~
- ~W
~h=e~n--w_a_
s ~fo_r_m--er

1966 4 DR. SEDAN, Galaxie 500,

·Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·Underpinning
'c omplete mobile home
serv.lce - plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes , ·
always avail-1hle ;,t .. .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES -

suite, desk and chair. mal·
1220 Washington Blvd.
tress and springs. dresser ; 423-7521
BELPRE, o.
"II 992-3381 or 992-7440:
8·8-lfc .-

'-----------.J

V-8, 289 cu . in., crulsamafic.
power steering, AM radio, 2
speed windshield wiper and

Auto

President Lyndon Johnson
first elected to the Senate?
A-In 1948. winning a

weapon

AUTO

PRISON EXPLOOES

A BOM8!

DANCE

below

Ravensw~od

landing on Oh io Route 338.
_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _8:._:
·8-3tc

1965 MUSTANG, V-8, 4 speed,
1965 Comet. V-8, automatic;
both in real good condition;
phone 992-6196.
8·9-3tc

------

- - - - - - .'

I

DOWN

10 1972 Kinr Feature• Syndiute, Inc.)

I. City in

lraq
Z. Nobleman
3. Speaks
out
(2 wd s.)
t.New
Zealand
vine
5. Order lo

pc. band from Porkers.

~urg , W. Va.

Fridays &amp; Saturday
Nights 10 til2

JJ&amp;O~;f:J:::~-*c
Unaeramble lh... four Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ~rdlnary words.

abrobr

l

HECAF

I

CEWI'l

Y e~terday's ADIWfJ'

&amp;. Fit fiddle
(Z wds. l
'·Strike up
IllUDe

(3 wds.)
title
8. High Arab
17. Walk$;
office
(sl.)
9. Concert
U. State
ll. Leaven
(Fr.)
15. No more
21. You bet!
than
21. Noldi of
t)le Silents
22. Wine
disorder
24. Jury list
25. Mine

Gene Nutter
And The Mixers
4

forces

(abbr.)

18. Hardy
19. Legislate
22. Chewy
candy
23. Favorite
girl of
barbershop
quortets
!4. Ship's
berth

%8. Disposed
29.- finder
30. Boss 3Z. British
Con·
servative
35. Campara·
live
suffix
36. Aunt
(Sp.)

l

[

0

* :l7~~"-

II I I

rowDLEI []
) I

FOR A f'ElliSON
WHO CAN'T ~EAP I'T.

entrance

TOO lATE, ~i!UTEHANT,
I'VE !&gt;I.REJlQY PRIVEN
11 aY&amp; TO A 801&gt;Y

IT RATES ATTENTlON
FllOI\ A POl..Cf UE1JIENA!jf,
CA!ABOW, JU51 AH ACtlf'I!NT.

We talk to JOU

SC\1\ESOI&gt;l' MU5TI'E I1UW'EU
CAR lllfiLf IT IIA5 ~ TliE
I'MI&lt;IIIIG LOT 01/T

~ike-.,..,

5IIOP FOR ~R!

WMP0/1390
•·

%8. Scot's

1ncestor

1'1. Trust

(---.

II.Snoppy

Ye•terd•y'•

eomeback
11. Kin to

P J ·\'"ll!'-t

31. Bravo!
31: "Picnic"
play-

fN YOUR DIAL ,

wri~ht

THE VET!

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTO.QUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
' A X Y D L B A .A X It
Ia LONGFELLOW
11
61VE HIM A 5HOT! GIVE
One letter almply atands for onother. In this sample A .is HIM A PILL I HOLD HIM i&gt;OWN!
used for the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc. Single. letters,
opostrophes, the lenJth. and formolion 01 the words are all PIIT AMUZZLE ON fliM ~LOCK
HIM IN A KENNEL! Cf.IAiN
hints. Each day the code lettel'l.are dUferent.
HiM iO A POGT! II
CRYPTOQUOTES
Q
ELFKT
GLLMHC
CHWT
w

SPECIAL CONTINUES

·Rc COLA
Plus To•
&amp;' Deposit

73$

XQJHXWYKH

·

MLXPQMV
JWFVPWJ

Wfth NCh $2.00 PurcltiM
of' Aallllllll Gllllltlt.

\

tC

WX

\

W

UWXWKLV

WKK • ..: E .

XPWM

GLJHCGHX

)

HEARD IT A MILLION
"TAKE HIM TO THE VET! II

41, Senior
citizenry

. At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124

~6 ~~-K8otfs.

I HATE

ALWAI{5
END UPAT

3&amp;, Cautious

MILLER &amp; SONS

··- .....

Poinu loatingihw•enuadon-PINS&amp; NIIDLIS

LIF.E! NO
MAmRWHAT
I{OU DO, I{()IJ

U. Resiliency

.·

JvMble.. WINCE LISLI NIPHIW SMUDOI
Anewer1

pilsner
az. cragRY
bill
'II. Maxim
st. Hench·
man

rear •. clean inferior, perfect

mj .

ANSWER TO
A•STOOL
PIGEON?"

gelist
II. Try again
12. Region
13. Visigoth
king
it. Brown
kiwi
15. Armed

16. Indian

washer, 7 x 75 while side wall runoff election by 87 votes.
!ires, seat bells front and
runnrng motor, good paint
be ige with white roof, no holes
In body, new battery, 1 owner,
priced lo sell; Phone Paula L.
Sayre, Portland, 843-2286 1

T~EIR

Whispering Pines
Nite Club

10 and 12 wide

Auto Sales

ACROSS
I. Syrian
bishop's
title
5. Cavalry

INI!RTIA Ofl 10 I OADI!D
FREI~HT CARS

models in stock . Befor~ you
buy any Mobile Home see us

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MY GREATEST ENEMY IS J1EAL.
ITY. I HAVE FOUGHT IT SUCCESSFULLY FOR THIRTY
YEARS.-MARGARET ANDERSON

by THOMAS JOSEPH

10. Evan·

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots at Rock Springs.
close to High School &amp; Fair
Ground : call or see Bill Wille,
992-2789 alter 5 p.m. weekday s.
8·6·301c
- - -- -- - - l ROOM house and bath, $6,500 ;
phone 992-5786.
8·6-61c

- ----,---

- --------

~M'6td'

tBJ 10, 17 , 2.4 , 31

pr iced to sell . Phone 992 -6641.
AIR-CONDITIONED
mobile
8·6·6!C
home and lot ; $3,500 ; phone
~----992-5786.
FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
first - you'll be glad you did .
8-6-61c frame house, six rooms and
8-10-21c =-:-::~---­
both. Large lot. Located In
RACINE - 6 room house bath
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
1971,60X 12. MOBILE home In
utility room, garage, sio.ooo;
house on left going north
•-hone
949-4195.
Tuppers Plains/ on 100' x 200'
Inside corporation line .
lot ; ready to move into ; see
3-31 -lfc
7-27-lf
Dor ser Miller at trailer in
Arbaugh Addition.
HOBS TETTER , 8 ROOM house, 3 bedrooms,
8-9-61p GEORGE
REAL
ESTATE
BROKER ,
recreat ion plus bar, garage.
- -- - - - - -RACINE, OHIO.
b
1
d
'
FOR THE BEST deal In a new RACINE
Restaurant
asemen an
large front
porch.
River
View
.
Ap
or used mobile home, try
buslness in a prime location
pointment only . Call 992-5310.
Kanauga Mob ile Home Sales.
do ing a very fine volume
8-6-6tc
Kanauga, Ohio.
business, stock and eq·uip. -:-:::-::-:-:-:------7-16-301c
ment, price $5 ,500.
5 ROOM house, double lot, 2 car
Hilton Wolfe, Real Estate
~rage , Anderson Street ,
CASij paid for all makes anet
Salesman, Phone 949-3211.
son, W. Va. ; p hone 77J.
models of mobile homes . _ _ _ _ __ _ _:8·.:.
9-3tc . 5606.
Ph011e area code 614-423-9531.
8·6·61p
4-13-trc
good 8 -

Judge

with 2 floors, s~veral lots, In
good location, present in -

and repossessed Mobile
Homes is our specialty , not
our sideline. You can save
hundreds and hundreds of HOUSE in Long Bollom , phone
75 ACRE Farm at Harr ison.
985-3529.
dollars on a late model used
ville , Ohio; .house, out or repossessed Mobile Home.
6·11 -tfc
buildinqs , e~ood farm land :
We have a huge seiec.tion of

- - - -- -

Ohio ; phone 949-3584.

5-1-lfc

cabinets and dishwasher,
c 111 No . 20,7U
own water supply or Chester
estate of · Etberl Ta';'IOr
water, large garage and _. Deceased ~ ,
· "'.l-1. ,
work!hop, · frutt ston!lge ' \lt'tNottce 11 Hl'r•b'f glvtn· lhlt
building , fruit trees, berries,
Sharon Dunc1n of Pomeroy,
th
4
Route 2, Ohio, hat b"n duty
d
years
appointed ,F1ucutrhc of Tht
grapes, an o er .
old . GREATEST BUY OF
Ellate ot Elbert Taylor,

Garage and utility building . Lot about 65xlSO.

gas and electric,

Racine, Oh io

'Crill Bradford

bedrooms with closets. bath.
utility room, kitchen has nice

~
•
t
·- RUTLAND ·
•
2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City wal~ Nice bath .

For Sale

C. BRADF'ORO. Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821

3.05 acre estate. 1 story, 3

Only $4,000.00.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

5-12-ttc

15 MINUTES
FROM POMEROY

SM~LL ~ 2 bedrooms, 2 wells on country road . Stove and
refngerator. Good for a weekend outing . Ohio Power.

In Memory

Owner &amp; Operator.

.J

OUT

r

HERE 'TOMORROW...

J

I

..

F•..-'

Pomeroy, Ohio

only $17,500.00.

t'M RUNNIN:::. 'IOU IN FOR
l-OITERING!

........

tClELAND"""'
REALTY
'•
608 E . Main

on 124. Ask ing $6500.00.

Nile Club.

-----------

~,

\.

'ILl . ... ..

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

truly
different
. and
refreshing? The famous mink
~
TW0ho-r-se-1an-dem
--lrailer,
Sales
oil base and now we have the OLD Furniture, 'oak tables,
Brown, Parcel, Rutland.
electric brakes and llghfs,
lemon grove. Just 'think , 14
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
good condition ; also double 1970 PATROL Plymouth, 4 dr ., 1970 DUSTER, 6 cr.llnder, new
Albert L. Martin, Frances E.
specials this month, some for
383, 4 barrel , new tires , good
beds, or complete households .
buckslilched. silver laced
tires, good cond1tlon, 5 year
condition
; white, full p0wer,
Marlin to Edward R. Marlin , men as well as women. Ws
Wri te M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Western Pleasure sad dle ;
warranty,
must sell; phone
automatic,
alr -condltroner,
Pomeroy, Oh io. Call 992-6271.
Anna M. Martin, Lot, · KOSCOT of course. P~one
phone 992-3742.
992-5287.
992-5113.
.
$1.500. Call 992-5310.
6: 28 -lfc '
8 - 8 · 61~.
' Pomeroy.
8·6-61c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·9·31p
7-9-tfc ----------~

J . WilHam Brown, Myrvllle

B- It:&gt;

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918 .
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CON$TR. CO.

------

LOST - German Shepherddog , TOMATOES ,
potatoes.
black and silver in vicinity o( cucum bers
~nd
beans,

Wanted To Buy

~

-, H

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

Lost

- - - - --

painting;

--------

mar

General ; call collect 985. 3954.
8-8-Jtp

exterior

complete lin,. of Masoory
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We

Whpet Alignment·

662 -3035.

doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum ·siding
and railing . A Jacob, sales
representative. For free
·estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse , V . V .
Johnson and Son, Inc.

;S

'
.•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

8-9-61 c
- -- - -- - - . - GR AND OPENING - Sew &amp; Go 3 ROOM house and bath, fu rShop in Alfre d area ; bonded
nished ; phone 992 -5592.
ac ryli cs, sweater knits and
8-8·1fc
po lye ster , $1 .99 and up ; - - - - - - - - owner , Mrs. E . T. Calaway.
3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed an'4
8•8·31c
unf~rn i shed
apartments.
Phone 992-543d.
REWA R0 , for shop ~ rrg at
4-12-llc
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop.
Ch es ler. Oh io: 10 per cent of
your total pu rc hase
be For Sale
applied to the purchase o any
ceramic items.,
· CANNING toma toes, sweet
corn .
cucumbers
and
8·2-301p
mangoes; Geraldine Cleland,
Racine , 0 .
7-28- lfc

Chester ; answers to name of

and

From the largest
baker; reply Box 374. Athens. - - - - - - - - 3-2· ffd l
Bulldozer RadiaJ.or to the
8-9-3\c ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe ;---- - - -- - SEWING MACHINES. Repa lr1 Smalles t Heater Core.
--------model. Complete with all READY -MIX
CONCRETE
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Nathan Biggs
APPLICATIONS now being cleanin g attachments and
delivered r ight to y.our
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
uses
paper
bags.
Slightly
used
Radiator
Speciali$-1
taken for kitchen help, cooks,
project . Fast and easy . Free·
Author ized Singer Sales and
but cleans and looks like new.
wa itresses and car hops,
estimates. Phone 992 -3284.'' Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
apply in person at Craw's
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
3-29-lfc 1
lerms available . Phone 992Middleport, Ohio.
Steak House .
B·8-61c 5641.
6-30-lfc INTERIOR. exterior painting.
"8-4-61c =~--~­
Ph . 991 -2174
Pomeroy
- - - - - - - - -- -- - remodeling, build ing; contact
DOZE!( ·and back hoe work ,
WOMAN to live with elderly
Errtest Deeter, Bashan .
ponds and septic tanks ; B &amp; K
lady, light housework, no POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
8-6-61c o·bE LL WHEEL alignment
Excavating, Phone 992 -5367 ,
laundry . Phone 992-5397 or Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
~.---------------located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
5443.
Di
ck
Karr
,
Jr
.
·
·
992-3507.
insurance been ' Complete front end service,
5-21- lfc AUTOMOBILE
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___8_8-61c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 8-1 5-tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
tune up and brake service.
-----:---operator' s license? Call 992Wheels balanced elec TOYS! Toys! Toys! Sell
2966.
tronically .
All
work
Real Estate For Sale
Playhouse toys, Aug . to Dec. Real Estate For Sale
6-15-lh
guaranteed.
RP;tll;.nn.ahl~
Free training . Good com .
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
mission, No cash investment.
992
-3213.
t-u-nc
BALKHOE
AND
DOZER
work
.
No delivery . No collecting. S
Septic tanks Installed. Georqe
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Call
tBi-111 Pullins. Phone 992 -2478. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Margaret Fortune 949-5414 or
4-25-lfc REASONABLE rateo. Ph . .w..
Barbara Lambert 446-3411.
110 Mechanic Street
4782 , Gallipolis, John Russell,
7-26-301c

FURNISHED

Needl ecrafl Shop. Rt . 124

remodeling,
building,
suspended (el rtngs, Interior

EXPERT

Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Pn.

buttonholes , fancy design s,
etc. Pa int slightly blemished .
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. $.49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 992-

J

are fully Insured for your

... --- -------·
SE.PTfC tanks cleaned. Miller

5641.

------

books and imported yarns .

and commercial ·raoflng ;

523 2.

2-12-lfc
zag sewing machine. For - - ; - - - - , - - - fabrics, SEE. US FOR : Awnings, storm
sewing stretch

8-10-61p

Chevelle - Monte Carlo.

vinyl and steel sldln_g(
fiberglas, brick and ·stone;
complete i'lne ol resi~HIIOI

truck s and low-b'oy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
. Pome~oy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone . 992··

CLOSE out on 1971 lull size zfg.

WANTED experienced head

18l 10, 17, 24. 31

For Sale

We specialize In aluminum,

haul fill dirt, tap,soil. Oump

7-18-301p

- - - - -- -

DELUXE a track stereo in
Walnut console, will se ll for
balan ce due of $88 .21 or pay

HOME in Middleport . Pomeroy

Good stock, air conditioned. Caprice . Impala .

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping . We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract. ,
Free Estimates. We also

exterior painting; Arthur
Musser, phone 742-5223 .

budget terms . Call 992-7085.
8-4-61c

SWALLERIN'

brick f'ront, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

budget terms. Call 992-7085.
8-4-61c
ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine ; th is - - - - - - - - PAPER hanging ; interior and
machine is dressmaker EARLY Ameri can Stereo, AMmodel; thi s machine makes
FM radio , 4 speed changer , 4
buttonholes, darns, em spea ker
soun d system .
broideries ;
fak e
over
Balance $73.56 . Use our

THIS 'lEAR, LOWEEZY ··• •
I SEEN A FELLER IN OlliE
OF THEM THAR
· SIDESHOWS

SNU FFV '5
BEEN DOIN' THAT
TRICK FER '/EARS

M'l 1.

THAT AIN'T
NOTHIN'

J Bedroqm home, with

EARTH MOVING

PHONE 992-2550

8-I0-61c

Wanted To Rent

Just In- Prompt Delivery
on
New Nova Sky Roof-Vega GT Cpe.

1972 .

mrx., Thelma Michaej, dec. to

POMEROY

WALNUT Stereo-combination ,
AKC registered miniature
4 speaker sound sys tem, 4
Schnauzers, 7 wks. old . Ph . speed dual Volume control.
446-2497.
Balance S68 .32 . Use our

IN MEMORY of Too Pu llins

·'

NO.TICE OF
APP.'OINTMENT

Mlddl~port.

All kinds , all sizes for men,
women, young men, bJys
and girls. Hurry to ..

8-61fc

1972

1

GET 1 PAIR FREE

'IE SHOULD
A·GOIIIE TO TH' COUNTRI{ FAIR

•:.

.FIRE!!

eilOOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU't lNG
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate

Buy 2 Pairs and

m person at the Meigs Inn.

1967 Chev. Impala Sl Wagon··· ·• 11295

I

PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

WARM Morning healer. $10 ;
phooe 99H050 after 5 p.m.
8-I0-31p

RATES
cFor Wan't Ad Service

5 cen ts per Word one Insertion
M inimum Charge 75c "
12 cents per word three
con secut.f ve insertioris.
111 cents per · word sfx con .
sec utive insertio.ns . ,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .

.Price Smash!

I

Business Services

----------,

8-10-3tc

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OFFICE

Range. •· r

Holpoi r11

like new : larg•~ med icine ·
cabinet
with
mirr \)1-,
flu orescent lig ht s around
m irror ; phone 992-5045 .

REGULATIONS

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For Sale

:=or Sale

GLORV BE!!

---

SHUX··

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NO ·WONDER D065

HOW!. A'T THE. MOON !

�•

EL ERFELI)S BARGAIN .DAYS
'

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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM .
,...--~--------~--·---

~~
- ----~--~~~

WOMEN'S DRESSES

SPORT SHIRTS

Reduced for final clearance.
Group I Reg. 524.50 to 545.00
Group II Reg. $13.98 to 521.50

SALE $.00
SALE 3.00
Country Manor

EN JOYING RIDE - Three yearo0ld Allen Icenhower,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Icenhower of Letart, has his
Cincinnati Reds basebsll hal on backWards as he enjoys one
of the kiddie rides at the Mason County Fair.

News . . . in Briefs
'

L!)CAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at II a.m.
Thursday was 68 degrees under
sunny skies.
HAS SURGERY
Richard Weaver.of Syracuse
underwent surgery today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local School
District Board of Education
will meet at 9a.m . Saturday at
the high school in Racine.
SPEAKER NOTED
The Rev. Paul' Fitzgerald, a
student at the Nazarene
Theological Seminary at
Kansas City, Mo., will speak at
the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 7:30p.m, Sunday.
The Rev . Fitzgerald is the
husband for the former
Susanne Arnold of Pomeroy.
CONTRACT SET
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPl )
Members of the Retail Store
Employes Union ratified a new
two-year co.ntract with local
A&amp;P stores here Wednesday,
ending a six-week strike.
Details of the . new contract
were not made public.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight. Aug . 10
NOT OPEN

Friday thru Tuesday
Auguslll -15
SUMMER OF '42

(Rl

Car1oons :

Berry Funny

Oscars Thinking Cap
Admission: Adults , SUO ;
Children : Sl.OO.
Show Starts 7 P.M.

MASO~

DRIVE·IN

Tonight &amp; Friday
Aug. 10. II

DOuble Fealure Program
"PLAY MISTY FOR ME"
I COlor)
Clint EastwoO&lt;I

. , R)
Plus
·
"WHERE'S POPPA"
George Segal
Ruth Gordon
. Rated ( Rl

Demand
Quiet
REYJAVIK (UPI) - U. S.
challenger Bobby Fischer,
complaining he could hear
canday being unwrapped while
playing world champion Boris
Spas sky, today demanded
seven rows of seats be removed
and all noise stopped at the
world chess championship.
"I demand the seven first
rows of seats be removed,"
Fischer wrote, in an official
letter to arbiter Lothar SChmid
and Icelandic organizers. "The
seats are so close (to the stage)
·and so noisy and the acoustics
so bad that I could hear con·
versations, candy being unwrapped, coughing and
laughing ."
Fischer, who leads Spassky
two points in the match
following Wednesday night's
draw, hinted once again he
might refuse to play unless liis
demands were met.
"I demand an immediate
correction of these disgraceful
(playing) conditions with an
immedi.ate report to me ,"
Fischer wrote to Schmid.
Fischer aide Fred Cramer
com plained that the West
German arbiter refused to join
a meeting between Fischer
aides and Icelandic organizers
today and went to a dentist
appointment instead.
"We do not accept the arbiter
bugging out of the meeting,"
Cramer said, "The rufes state
clearly it is his job to make
sure playing conditions are
perfect and even he (Schmid)
admitted yesterday (Wednesday ) that the noise was
very bad .. "
Cramer said Fischer was
" white hot with rage"
following his 55th move draw
against Spassky Wednesday.
The American twice com·
plained to SChmid during the
game about the noise and at
one point turned his back on the
audience in anger about the
talking In the hall.

PLEASAN1' VALLEY
-DISCHARGES : Mrs. Clif·
ford Cornell, Point Pleasant ;
James Plants, Apple Grove;
Connie
Berkley,
Point
Pleasanl; Roclney Bonecutter,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Albert
Curtin, son, Pomeroy ; Cynthia
Blankenship, Letart; Carol D.
Layne, Charleston ; Mrs. Roger
Rymer, Pliny.

SALE Y2 PRICE

SALE 1h PRICE

SALE 1f2 PRICE

SPICEBEIGE CARPET

WOMEN'S SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

SALE 3.88 SQ. YD.

Group II
Reg. 5.98 to 10-98 .
Group Ill
Reg. 3.50to4.98 ,

Reg. 5.98 Gowns - .. - - . -. Sale 2.39
Reg. 4.98 Gowns - .. - · · - Sale 1.99
Reg. 3.98 Gowns - · . - - . - Sale 1.59

V.ALUES TO SIO .OO

Group I Reg. 54.98 to 57.00

SALE 2.48

SALE 2.39

f...------· - _ .........._..........._... - .....___............ - - - .

l

__

•

3.48

----- . . . '

6.29

6.09
5.89
Sale 5.39
Sale 4.09

-•

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Elberfelds Warehouse

SALE! GUN CABINETS
CURIO CABINETS .·
TROPHY CASES

SALE 2.00 ·

Reg. 7.00 - Reg . s.so ..
Reg. 5.00 •
Reg. 4.00 Reg. 3.50 •
Reg. 3.00 .
Reg. 2.50 .

CARPIT
SALE 4.49 SQ. YD.
-

Group I Reg. $5.98 to 512.98

First Qualify
7.19
6.79

.

-~-

Slacks • Shorts • Swimweaf · Tops

BRAS AND GIRDLES
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

RUBBER BACKED

GIRLS' SUMMER
SPORTSWEAR

Famous Maker

Reg . 16.00 Reg. 15.00 Reg. 14.00 Reg . 13.50 Reg. 13.00 .
Reg. 12.00 .
Reg. 9.00~·- ·

Reg . 55.50 Sq. Yd .

SALE
- . .1.39
.. ..-._..

aODYSHIRTS
Short Sleeves or Tank Tops
Reg . $8.00 and $9.00

WHILE
THEY lAST
,......

Elberlelds Warehouse

Group II Reg. 52.98 to $4.00

One Group

.
_.. ....

-

Group II Reg. $3.50 to $5.00

Sale 3.19
Sale 2.49
Sale 2.29
Sale 1.79
Sale 1.59
Sale 1.39
Sale 1.19

SALE 1.00
THIS SALE ONLY

FALL FASHION FABRICS

WOMEN'S
SWIMWEAR
SAVE OVER
50%
One and Two Piece Styles

Polyesters · wools - acrylics • corduroys · solids - plaids . patterns.

-

-_....._.__.
~-·-----~-~--''-~-~-..-,-.~-~-~--~------~

WOMENS SLEEVELESS

OUR ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED!
Reg. 5.49 .Fabrics - - - •• Sale 4.88 yd.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

99.00
109.00
119.00
149.00
159.00
169.00
189.00
198.00
209.00
298.00
339.00

Trophy Case · · . •.
Gun Cabinet · · ·
Gun Cabinet · · ·
Gun Cabinet . . .
Gun Cabinet · · •
Gun Cabinet . • •
Gun Cabinet · · ·
Gun Cabinet · · • · •
Gun Cabinet · · · · •
Curio Cabinet • . • •.
Gun Cabinet · • • · •

BEST CAMPER- Patty
Well, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Denver
Well,
Pomeroy Route 3, ind a
senior at Meigs High
School, holds a trophy she
won as the "outstanding
camper" among over 100
Meigs High School band
students attending band
camp at Rio Grande
College. Patty was
selected by popular votes
cast by band members.
The Meigs High Band will
be playing at the Meigs
County Fair at 3 p.m.
Saturday.

Sale 81 .00
Sale 88.00
Sale 99.00
Sale 120.00
Sale 128.00
Sale 136.00
Sale 152.00
Sale 160.00
Sale 168.00
Sale 247.00
Sale 272.00

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

14.98
10.98
9. 98
8.98
1. 98
6. 98
5.98
4.98

___

.....

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresse5

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

8.88
6.58
5.88
5.38
4.78
4.18
3.58
2.88

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CHILDREN'S WEAR
Famous Brand

We're closing out our stock of summer shortstank tops · sh,~rt sleeve shirts to make room
for the New Fall Merchandise.

SA.i.E 1f2 PRICE.

J...-----·---·. .

---------~----~---~~--~----1

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

SUNGLASSES

Mens and Womens Styles

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

3.99
3.19
2.99
2.89

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

3.58
2.88
2.68
2.58

August Furniture Sale

BATH(Irregulars)
TOWELS
Solids and Jacquards

1.39

·-------------------------HAND
·TOWELS
(Irregulars·)

2 for 1.00
· -------------------------~
WASH CLOTHS
(Irregulars)

3 for 1.00
ODD LOT

Early American · Modern - Spanish . French
Provincials.
Reg. 2;9.00
Reg. 319.00
R~. 35t.Oo
Reg. Ut .00
Reg, 319.00
Reg. m.oo
Reg. 419.00
Rtt. 429.Oo
Rtt . 449.00
Rtt . 417.00
. Rtt . 491.00
Rtt. 529.00
Rtt. 549.10
Rtt. sn.oo
Rtt. 695.00
R19. 749.00

Badroom
Badroom
Badroom
Baclroom
Baclroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom
Bedroom

Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites
Suites

Sale 208.00
Sale 256.00 •

Sale 2N .OO
Sole 296.00
Salo 312.00
Salt 311.00
Sale 336.00
Salo 344.00
Sole 360.00
Sale 392.00
Salt 399.00
Slit 424.00
Sole 440.00
Salt 479.00
Solt 556.00
Salt 600.00

Suites

Suites
Suites • • • .
Suites • • • •

Suites • . .

Free Cusbner parking on Second street

GLASSWARE

SALE % ·PRICE

SALE% PRICE:

--

and at.our Mechanit Street Warehouse

"

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Regional Development
Commission based in Portsmouth.
The Federal Regional
Cou ncil of Chicago, whose
membership includes regional
directors from major federal
agencies, will be responsible
for coordinating development
efforts at the federal level.
The FRC will be working
with the state, the two

development districts and local
government units to apply
maximum federal resources to
the problems in the area. The
Chicago
Council
has
established a special task
force for the economic
development of southeastern
Ohio which met in Columbus in
late June and plans. to meet in
the three-county area in
September.

r
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enttne

FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1972 '

state
campaign
swing
By United Press International
through
New
England
deThe president of the nation's
largestindependentlahor union scribed as "listening" tour
describes as "nonsense" Sen. designed to learn what voters
George S. McGovern proposals are thinking. He toured a
on welfare, taxes, amnesty, Manchester, N.H., shoe factory
and visited • HarUonl, Conn.,
baling and the Vietnam war .
Frank B. Fitzsimmons of the insurance center. Today he
2-1 million
member campaigns in Rhode Island
Teamster Union described the before ending the day in New
Democratic presidential York City.
McGovern's running mate,
candidate Thursday as an
enemy of labor. Fitzsimmons, Sargent Shriver, charged that
whose union has endorsed Nixon "blew it" whep he failed
President Nixon, urged union to take a "historic opportunity"
members to spurn McGovern's to end the Vietnam war soon
efforts to win their votes.
after he took office in 1969.
Shriver, who served as U.S.
Fitzsimmons was joined in
lambasting McGovern by Nix·
on's campaign director, Clark
MacGregor, who challenged the
South Dakota senator to put his
proposals to a Senate test
immediately . MacGregor pre·
Victor Hysell, 57, Minersdieted they would be rejected
ville,
Rt. I, suffered a !rae"by a vote of 95 to I." But
MacGregor also said the Nixon lured left leg, contusions and
campaign staff was working to abrasions, when he was pinned
combat overconfidence and was under a brush hog that he was
running the campaign as "if the driving Thursday.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
President were one vote
Department reported that
behind'~ despite polls showing
Hysell was In a valley on his
Nixon far ahead.
farm
at the time.
While his critics spoke out
With Hysell when the acagainst him, McGovern
cident
occurred was Gene
plunged into a three.
Chaney
who
called the Sheriff's
.

PHONE 992-2 156

....•

I'

ambassador to France during
the early part of Nixon's
administratiOn, argued that
Nixon·couldhave ended the war
in 1969 on better terms than he
can get now. Shriver said
Nlxon's failure was 0ne .of the
great tragedies of the Nixon
administration .' '
11

Fitzsimmons accused McGovern of "grossly distorting
President Nixon's record while
covering up his own performance in public life which Is
not one on behalf of those who
labor. "
The Teamsters president said

McGovern 's welfare proposals
would bankrupt the federal
treasury and wipe out the $750
per person income tax exemp·
tion. He said McGovern's
proposals included one "to beg
to Hanoi. thus embarrassing
the United States in the eyes of
the world."
"American working men and
ivomen did not labor and sweat
through generations for this
kind of nonsense,'' Fitzsimmons
said. ·
Despite Fitzsimmons' blast,
McGovern picked up the
endorsement of another union
Thursday- the Textile Workers

Man Hurt In Farm Accident

.

.~.,.."

By United Preas International
TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, FLA.- M. SGT. Walter T.
Perkins was found guilty by · a miUtary ju4ge today of five
charges stemming from his attempt to pass national &lt;lefense
secrets to a Russian agent In Mexico City.
'

BEDROOM' SUITES

or 18 Pocket Styles

12

yd.
yd.
yd.
yd.

Just Received

SALE 1f2 PRICE
SHOE BAGS

Fabrics - -- . Fabrics . . •• .
Fabrics. - - - .
Fabrics .. - •.

Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District, Richard
Holl, said his agency believes
"Prompt action and appropriate timing are necessary
if the affected counties are to
rece ive maximum benefits
from the anticipated private
investments."
Holl's agency will receive a
$50,000 grant from the
Economic Development Ad·
ministration (EDA) of the U.S.
Department of Olmmerce and
a $16,667 commitment in funds
and services from the Ohio
Development Department.
Referring to the planning
program, Sweet emphasized:
"The s~te is committed to
cooperating with all agencies
so that this Ohio section can
deal with impending changes."
Also participating in this
effort is the Ohio Valley

Of The Mei6s-M010n Area

.. · -,,. . , ,,,"- ' l.
ews.. in Briefs . Garden Tractor

Reg. 4.99 Fabrics · · · · . Sale 4.48 yd.

DAYTIME DRESSES

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lnler~tl

The first economic analysis
in this southern section of Ohio
will focus specifically on needs
in housing, sewer and water
facilities, transportation and
job training . The analysis will
be performed by the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District which
will have primary local
responsibility .
It is anticipated that the
analysis will be-· initiated im·
mediately and will be com·
pleted in four to six months.
Sweet said:
" In addition to analyzing
and meeting the critical,
Immediate needs, the
initial st~dy will be the key
to substantial additional
investments in the area by
state and federal govern·
ments.
The president of the Buckeye

TEN CENTS

McGovern Anti-Labor

SALE 119.95

GIRLS SLEEPWEAR

..

Teamsters' Boss Says

POWER MOWERS

Sale 1.00

........

SLEEPWEAR

VOL. XXV NO. 83

21" SELF PROPELLED

.....,..:.._...--~----

Small Group Womens and Juniors

Devoted To The

Two Only
Reg. 5149.95

Sale 3.00

'

•

•

at y

Elberfelds Warehouse

Group I
Reg . 12.98 to 24.50 . . . - - . . . Sale 6.00

SHIFT GOWNS

•

Reg. $4,!5 _Sq. Yd.

Shorts · Blouses .,.. Jeans . Tank Tps •
Blazers - Vests.

Womens Sleeveless

.

Elberlelds Warehouse ·

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

SALE 1.98

~

SALE Y2 PRICE
-

While They Last

(Irregulars)

r ...-.. . __. . . ----

LAWN FURNITURE

........

SUMMER KNIT SHIRTS

VELOUR BATH MATS

11· · ·

BIG WINNERS - Grand prise wlmHn In tile 11111111 hole-iJI.one cmlelt rl the
Pomeroy-Middleport Liona Club last week at the Rock S(rings Fairgrounds were presented
trophies Thursday afternoon at the offices of The Columbia Gas O&gt;. ln Middleport. From the
left are Mrs. Max Folmer, Pomeroy, women's winner, who was seven feet, 10 inches from
the cup; David Reed, Mason, youth winner, four feet, 10 inches; Don Browning, Gallipolis,
101:1 Inches; Tom Cassell and Lou Osborne, who served as co-chairmen of the contest for the
cl.ub, and Claren~ Struble, club member and officer. Besides.the trophy, Browning as top
WIMer also rece1ved a set of matched clubs, a part of which he holds, Struble holding the
other part. A hole-ino0ne would have meant a $200 prize. However, none of the contestants
managed that.
·

-Odd Lot

Mens ~nd_ Boys

\---~ ·~ .!~~J·!!._
-·---·
....

2 Wrecks Reported
junction of County Road 30.
The report said a vehicle
driven by Thomas F. Gilkey,
Malta, tried to stop when a
pickup truck ahead attempted
to make a left turn on to County
Road 30. The brakes on the
Gilkey vehicle failed, his car
went out of control, and turned
over in a ditch. Gilkey suffered
minor injuries. He is being
charged with driving a vehicle
with defective brakes. There
was medium damage to his
vehicle.

Reg . $1.95 to $3.95

Large 36x70 Size
(Irregulars)

.,

Assorted Styles and Colors

Short Sleeve ·

King Size . . ·
Sale 7.74
Queen Size .· ·
Sale 6.04
Full Size • . •
Sale 4.44
Twin Size · · · · · ·
Sale 3.64
pr. Pillowcases • • • Sale 3.04 pr.

_....._.._.._...~--........-.--

NOTEBOOK BINDERS

SPORT SHIRTS

BATH SHEETS

.

TYNDALL AFB, FLA.-THE PROSECUTION in resling its
case Wednesday said a senior noncommissioned intelligence
officer accused of trying to chaMel. secret documents to the
Russians was mentally competent and knew what he was doing.
The court-&lt;nartialof MAlgt. Walter T. Perkins resumed at 8
a.m. today for final arguments. A verdict was expected ,later in
the day. "There can be no question that Sgt. Perkins was men·
tally responsible beyond a reaso~able doubt," Capt. Reinald
Werrenrath Ill, prosecutor in the week-long court-martial told
the trial judge, Col. Joe E. Peck .

The Department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach in·
vestigated two accidents
Wednesday afternoon .
The first occurred at I: 10
p.m. on County Road 4 in
Rutland. Cars driven by
Emma M. McDonald, Dexter
Route I, and Ivan P. Powell,
Pomeroy Route 2, collided near
the end of a bridge. The left
front portions Qf both vehicles
were damaged but there were
no injuries. High weeds
blocked the vision of hoth
drivers, officers said. No
charges were filed.
The second accident occurred on State Route 7 at the

BACK TO satOOL SPECIAL

..----------~------........~

(Continued from page 1)

2 for 1.09
Bleached Crib Sheets ·
2.59
Boxed BabY"Biankets · · •

Boys

NO-IRON PERCALE SHEETS

The state, federal and local
governmenls are cooperating
In planning for nearlr 3,000 new
residents in Meigs, Gallia and
Vinton counties In southeast
Ohio, Dr. David Sweet, Ohio's
department of economic and
community developm ent
director, said today.
The planning program will
deal with the problems
presented by the creation of
2,823 full time jobs in the area.
It will. also address the
problems and the potentials
wociated with the expected
$613 million private investment
in . new deep coal mines in
Meigs County and the new
Gavin Power Plant in Gallia
County to which the coal will be
fed. The investment is being
made by the American
Electric Power Co. and its
subsidiaries.

1.09

Printed Crib Sheets· ·

SALE 1h PRICE

Group Ill Reg . $8.88 to $12.88

9.99
7.99
5.99
4.99
3.49

Receiving Blankets • · • • · • • 1.39
Crib Blankets . . - - • • · • 1.39

Short Sleeve
Reg. $2.98 to $8.95

SALE 9.00

Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

.SPECIAL PURCHASE

MENS ·

Jj .•

Expansion Planning Projected
In Meigs, Gallia, and Vinton

'

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•

Pull Arranged
In 2 Divisions
The Garden Tractor Pull at
the Meigs County Fair next
Wednesday, Aug. l6at 9 p.m. is
expected to be an interesting
climax to Youth Night activities ,
Five classes will be provided
for tractor operators under the
age of 16 and flv~ classes for
those 16 years old and older.
Weight classes will. range from
500 to o~er 1100 pounds.
Entries may be made by
mall to Box 32, Pomeroy, by
phone to 992-.1895, or by getting
In touch with Roy Miller or
'Dorsey Jordan.
Weigh-In location will be
announced the first of the
week. Prizes of $10, $5, and
$2.50 for each class will be
provided. Entry fee Is $1 per
class.

SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE INFANTRYMEN
alerted hy a captured Communist soldier today smashed a half·
naked North Vietnamese corrunando battalion which attacked
the large Lai Kite base 30 miles from Saigon, lnilltary sources
said. The attack at Lai Kite by blackpalnted guerrlllas wearing
loin cloths was the main point of a sudden offensive In which
Communists bombarded towns all over South Viernam today and
launched conunando raids as close as 22 miles to Saigon.
Fighting also quickened In the ~ng Tri area where South
VIetnamese said they ltilled 234 Communists In the 24 hours
ending at noon today.
The ground war became exclualvely South Viett\amese today
as the U. S. Corrunand alUIOun~ the deactivation of the last
American ground combat unit In VIetnam - the Srd Battanon iJf
the 21st Infantry Regiment. U. S. air and naval support continued, however.
l
WASHINGTON- SEN. ROBERT TAFT, Jr., R.()hlo, expressed "outrage" Thunday at the Senate Finance Committee
for diverting revenue sharing lunds from Ohio and other large
urban areas. "By lhll power pllly," said Taft; ' 'the state rl at1o
has had Its lunda cut by $42 m1Dioo u compared with the Hou.tepassed measure.! will fight ulq as I must on the floor of the
Seltate to see thia action overturned."
·
LOCAL TEMPS
Taft was protesting the rural«iented !Ofllllla approved this
Temperature
In downtown
week by the collllll)ttee in a bill diJtrlbutlng ~billion over ftve
Pomeroy
Friday
at
II a.m. wu
years to states, counties and numiclpaBtiee. In revising the
fonnula for distribution a)II)I"O\'ed by ·the House In June, the 68 degrees, undet sunny sklea.
committee was more generollf to :1311111111 or rural states at the
upense of 17urbanlzed stales and theDiatrlct of Columbia.
CHn.D KILLED
DAYTON (UP!) - Timothy
Sale, 8, Ketterlng,"wu killed
WALL.tCE E. N AD, roBIIER lqlerfntendent of ~ when bit by a car '!1tunday
vWe SChooll,llled petltionl with tblllalllqum Oltmty llolld li. nl&amp;htas he walked along a road
. (Contlntt«&lt; on 1111• 10)
In Mad River Township.

Department and summoned
the aid of Roger Chaney and
Lee Hysell.
The three men jacked the
tractor up to rescue Hysell

from under the vehicle.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was summoned, but
after picking up Hysell, the
squad truck had to be pulled by
a tractor to get out of the
valley.
The accident occurred at
2:16 p.m. Hysell is reported in
satisfactory condition.
The Sheriff's Department
also investigated an accident •
at 8:30a.m. today when a doe
deer was killed.
Jacob M. Gaul, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, was traveling on SR 7,
Chester Township, when the
accident occurred. The deer
ran into the path of the Gaul
vehicle. There was medium
damage to the Gaul car.

HIS IDEA- William B. Downie, treasurer rl the Melga
Union of America. He also was
County Fair Board, displays one of 19 flag~ which will
endorsed by the Utah Stale
decorate the front of the grandstand during next week's
AFL-CIO. With AFL-CIO Pres·
county fair.
ident George Meany at odds
with McGovern, the AFL-CIO ·
executive council declined to
endorse a presidential candidate this year, but several
large member unions have
endorsed McGovern individual·
Aset of colorful flags In Americana hues will be featured In
ly .
the grandstand for the 1972 Meigs County Fair.
Among them are the United
'!1te nag~; made by Future Homemakers of America of
Auto Workers; the State, Eastern High SChool under the direction of their advisor, Mrs.
County and Municipal Workers;
Janice Ritchie, will be used overhead at the front of the grandthe Meat Cutters; the Oil, stand. They will replace aged navy flags which have been used at
Chemical and Atomic Workers;
the spot for years to add a festive note to the race seating area.
the Communications Workers,
On a white background, edged In navy blue are letters, one
the Amalgamated Clothing per flag, and when hung they will spell out "Meigs County Fair."
Workers; the Electrical Work· There are four other similar fiagB. However, instead of letters
ers, and the Retail Clerks.
one has an ouUlne of the state of Ohio, another the outline of
McGovern has said he hopes to Meigs County and two fealure American flag~. Letters and the
gain the support of 10 million of outlines are in red. Girls working on the flags, the idea li. fair
the AFL-CIO's 13.5 million board treasurer, William B. Downie, were Sandy Wood, una
Benedum, Cathy Davis, Cindy Farrar and Cathy Pickens.
members by election day.

·19 New Flags this Year

Alliance to Back Tax

COLUMBUS (UP!) publican House members sub- tw().{old.
Organizations representing mitted petitions Wedn~y to
"We are gollig to make cerfarmers, lahor, teachel'll and Secretary of State Ted . W. tain that If they (Citizell! !..merchants have formed an Brown to get the repealer on Repeal of the state Income
Tax) get It on the ballot, they
alliance to actively work to the November ballot.
Announcing they had joined do It leg~lly," he said.
keep the state income tax.
"We are fed up with CbU
forces
against the repeal were
"And If they get It on, we are
A
citizen's
group
headed
by
a
nonsense," Middleport
the
Ohio
Oluncll
of
Retail
Mer·
going
to campaign agalnlt rehandful of conservative HePollee Chief J. J .
Cremeans said Friday
:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::~=::~:!:::~:;:;:; chants, Ohio Education peal and Inform the pubUc
Association, Ohio Farm what chaos will reault If there
mornlllg.
Bureau Federation and United are no alternative taxes."
Chief Cremeans charged
REGISTER NOW
Auto
Workers of Ohio.
Brown's office and local
that some young people of
AU seventh and eighth
John
W.
Hall,
chief
lobbyist
boards
of electioris checking
the community are
grade students who did not for the OEA; said Thursday the the signatures are expected to
destroying ftowel'll which
attend school In the Meigs alliance's operations would be determine In two weeks
have been planted at
Local School Dlstricl last
whether at least 318,414 are
considerable expense by
yel!f are to register as ooon
valld, qua!Uylng the llaue for
orgal\lzatlons tn the town.
C OF C TO MEET
as possible at Meigs Junior
the ballot.
. 6,
A meeting of the Middleport
He charged that parents
High School In Middleport
'!1tey
mainly
will
be
cheCking
are not properly super- Chamber of O&gt;mmerce will be
by pbone or tn penon,
whether the signers were
vising these youagstel'll. held at 7:30 o'clock tonight In
Principal RuooeU Moore
reglatered voters.
"Partnts will be held the social rooms of the
said today.
Hall said Brown should conresponsible," be said.
Ollumbus Bltd Southern Ohio
cern
himself with how th8 pe:ST1111¥'T I
I
Xi. Electric Co.
titions were collected.
"A lot of the petltons were
just left lying around at cdanty
William J . Mayer, chairman fairs and shopping centen,"
of the amateur painling Hall 118ld. ''We know there
division for the 109th Annual were vlolatlona, and we are
Meigs Olunty Fair next week, going to 1ns11t thai If lhll gell
announced today that Mrs. to the ballot, It gets there
David Chadwell, a teacher In legally,"
the Eulern Local School
Hall and Raymond W. Roll,
District will judge the entries. ~etary-treuurer of the Oltlo
Mrs. Chadwell, an art major, UAW, saki It has not betn de;conducted an art program In termined yet how IDIICb money
the Eastern school district last their organizations would
yeat' tmder sponsorship of the ~pend -calnst the repW.
Chester PTA. She has
"We have no war chat •"
exhibited In a number of shows Hall said rl the 10,000 member
herself and bas Judged IOIIMI OEA. "A lot rl people tblllk we
exhibits. Judging of the are lilting back. dellbenteb'
paintings will take place devlllng I plan to IUblidllt
Tuesday morning.
,
thia tltlq, delay It In court and
Eshlbltcra are reminded thai keep It off the ballot.
lllentrlea must come equipped
for hanging. No nwnber or lube
GET YOUR TICICEISHEREI-AI an llllovaUonlD lhllllliDc of1111111berahlp ticketl
MoetlyiUIIny IIOUth. Variable
painting will be accepted .
for the 1m Meigs County Fair, U.. two attracUve Melga High School10phomores will be
Pr~miums and rlbbonl will be cloudiness and . warmer,
sel1lng ticllell to the pubUc In front rl the Elberfeld Department Store this evening and aU
aw&amp;rded ln. two placei In the chance of thunderahowira
day Saturday be~ at !Oa.m. 'l1te glrla are !labs Wltte,ldt,and Anita King. The tickets
categiriea li. oil ~ acryUc, tmlght and Saturday. Low
which leD for $S each permit tile ~ free entrance and partdq for the Meigs County
water color, drawing or tmlghtln tile 1101 to lower • .
Falrforfl~~edays in addition to permitting him to vote for lair board members or to run!or
, charcoal ~ putelllld modem H1&amp;lll Saturday In the middle
a poet on the lair bard If he deelrel.
art.
to IIIII*' • .

Pure Nonsense,

Says Cremeans

1.

..I

I

I .

Mrs. Chadwell

To Judge Work

We&amp;ther

L

...
'.

,.

...'.

,.

.·

•••••
,.,

·:·,·

.
,'

''

••••

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