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ne u any ~nune1 , :.-1utdleport.,...... neroy, 0 ., June4, 1973

HOSPI1''AI"
NEWS
~

P omeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
LODGETOMEET
will meet in regular session at
7: 30 p. m . Wedne sday. All
master masons are invited.

New
Haven
w·lnsSeniors attend
D0. _u.bIe He a de r baccalaureate 1
.

1-1 urle)" H. Gilkey
died on Sunday

Three-way race in Mas0:n

MASON - Three Mason Aldridge , Russell H. BartOO,
MN;ON - Speaking not just
Hurley R. Gi lk ey, 76, died County CotnmWlities, Mason, Gary L. Gibbs, Joe W. JonO.
Vete&amp;ans Memorialllospital
to th s g r a duates, but lo Sunday morn ing at his Mid- Henderson and Leon, are ready And Olston Wright.
SATURDAY ADM ISSIONS
everyone with a mode rn day dleport Route t residence. Mr. for th e bi ennial el ec tions
Peoples Ticket - Fred
The New Haven America n
Hesson then connected for a message, The Rev. Clarence Gilkey was born March 17,
- Russe ll Sargent, The Plains;
Tuesday at their respective Ta ylor will lead this ticket for
!.eglOn opened their 1973 solo home run leading off the McCloud , pastor of the Mason 1897, the son of the la te Bain
Kenne th Gilkey, New Haven;
city halls with hours of 6:30 the mayor 's post and Charlotte
season in a ronvincing fashio n si xth and team ed with Painter
Tonigh1, Tues. Wed . Thu rs.
Sharon M:tttox , Pomeroy ;
and
Sarah
Shuler
Gilkey
in
a .m . until 7: 30p.m. There is a Jenks wiU seek the Recorder's
\\ 1th twin-bill victories. 7-1 and and Greg Ca mp with singles in Uni te d Me th odis t Churc h ,
June &lt;1 -S-6-7
Connie K na!)p , M asoH; Sharon
NOT OPEN
16-1. Hick Hesso n and Kevin the seventh to plate three more delivered t he sermon " No Gallia Coun ty . He was a retired contes t in Mason but no races seat. Council candidates ar'e
Warner , Pome roy ; David Lee ('amp did the mound chores for ··uns. Ga llipolis plated lheir Short Cuts to the Prom ised coal miner and a veteran of in Henderson or Leon.
Russell Capehart, Dayton C.
Lync h , Col umbus; Timothy
Post "HO allowing no -earned lone un ea rn ed ta ll y in the Land," Sunday night during World War 1. Besides his
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Candidates ha ve come out on Raynes, Robert Roach, George
Bisse ll, Ma son ; Ru th Mc- runs in the doub le header . The seventh on a sin gle by Holley Waha ma High School's Bac- pa rents, he was preceded in thr ee ti cke ts in the bend
June 8-9-10
R. VanMatre , Waller C. Werry.
YOUNG WINSTON
Callis ter , Poi n t Pleasant;
loca
ls
outhit
host
Gallipoli
s
25
followed
by
two
New
Have
n
cala
ureate
service.
death
by
eight
brothers
and
community
with
several
inAnother group is in the race
(Technicolor)
Reatha McCoy, Racine.
to 7 while I stealing 15 bases to errors. Ne w Ha ven had played
Nine ty- tw o st ud ents a r e three s isters.
cum bent offi cials once more on the Progressive ticket
Robert Shaw as
Lord
SATURDAY DISCHARGES none. lfwis, Hesson and Dw·st errorless ball until the fi nal sc hedu le d to gr a duate in
Survivi ng are his wife, Clara seeking office.
Randolph Churchil l ; Anne
headed by Ira Atkinson, Jr. as
Bancroff , as Lady Jennie.
- John Eich, Di ana Hughes, t•ach hit home rWlS for New frame.
comm encem ent
e xer cises Denny Gilk ey; a son, Herschel,
Mayor
Roy
0
.
HarleS!l
is
the
mayoral candidate. Kenneth
(G P )
Joann Carnahan, Br enda \Vjse,
Il avcn .
In the second game New toni ght at 8 p.m. at Wa hama Cheshire Route I ; a br other. mayoral candidate as he heads
M.
Reynolds is the candidate
Lucille Taylor , Bessie Ka pple,
New Haven opened up the Haven came out swinging and ' Hi gh School in the gymna siwn . Home r , Mid dle por t; three th ose on the Ind epe nde nt
Show Starts 7 p.m.
for Recorder while council
Leora Zwi lling, Eddie Casto.
first game with two runs on two didn't Quit unti1 their bats had
F rances Wriston will give the grandc hild r e n, and thr ee
Ticket in Ma son . Other In- candidates are Carl D.
walks and RB I singles by exploded for 15 hits and 16 valedi c tor y ad dr esses wi th great~gra nd ch i ldren.
SUNDAY ADMISS IONS depe ndent c andid ~ tes are J ohnson, William Plesko, Jr.,
Lewis an d Gardner . They r uns. Post 140 also stole eight Marilyn Goodnite and J ohn
E verett Cremeans, Coolville ;
t' uneral serv ices will be held Recorder , Rosemary Samsel, Homer 0. Redman, Ralph R .
de li ve ri ng
th e at 2 p. m . Tuesday at the
Ernes t Mo ld en, Ru tlan d ; ... picked up a single run in the bases in th e contest. The loca ls Burris
and for council, Charles W. Ross and Charles K. Sayre.
tl
ltll
when
~el
cher
singled
plated
four
nms
in
the
openin
g
Saluta
tory
a~dresses
.
Ri
cha
rd
J
eff
e
rs,
P
omeroy
;
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
Home
~·~ V
followi ng a line dr ive double by fra me with s ingles by Kayser
Rebecca Burris was organist with U1e Rev. Ray mond Fife
Edith Ross, Pomeroy ; E loise
r, (,., Tuon "-•qhll;
P0:1i nter .
and Yeager and a double by for the service. The Rev. officiati ng. Burial will be in the Waldo A. Kent
Parsons, Parkersburg; BarM
Pa inter along with two fr ee
· Tonigh1, &amp; Tues .
bara McDanie l, Middleport ;
passes
. Steve Kayser singled William DeMoss of the New Gra ve l Hill Ce m e tery at djed on Saturday
" PLAY IT AS
Ir ene Ru ssell , Middl epor t;
(Continued from Page 1)
home a lone tally in the second Ha ve n United Metho~i s t Cheshire. Friends m ay call at
IT LAYS "
Waldo
A.
(Lud
)
Kent,
81
,
Clyde
•Kuhn,
Tuppers
Pla
ins;
Tuesday Weld
a potential political bombshell
and Painter , Yea ger , a nd Church offered the invocation the fun eral home any time arter
formerly of . Middleport died
Sa mu e l E bl en, Ne lso nvill e;
Ant hony Per kin s
7
this
evenin
g.
- not as a legitimate matter of
Hesson all had one-basers in a nd benedi c tion and th e
( R I Timot hy Lawre·ncc, Mi ne r ~
Saturday at a Charleston , W.
the
third
.
New
Haven
batted
l'l
anama
Choir
presented
two
national
Secl!fity. The Times
(Con ti nued from page 2
Also
Va.,
hosWal.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
svi ll e .
said the memos were turned
SIX . SONGS&amp; SATIRE
the Daily News, a lso fingered ~ rO Wld in the fifth innin g when choral selections.
Kent resided in Middleport
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Ca n Hei r o nym us M erk in
He
sso
n
a
nd
Gardner
ha
d
over to a Senate subcommittee
Kl ein as probable controller of
several years ago. Mr. Kent
ever forg et Mercy Humppe
r.kwis' Fox, Edison Ha rt , Jnez the major part of the coin ma- sing les, Ka yser had a double,
AUTO CHECKED
last month by Lt. Gen. Vernon
Reatha E. McCoy
and fi nd tr ue hap pin ess?
was employed as a New York
Pooler, J oan Conkle.
and
both
Lewi
s
and
Durst
Meigs
County
Sheriff
Robert
A. Walters, deputy director of
chine business in Ohio.
I RI
Central .•Railroad dispatcher
conn ec ted for ci rcuit clouts. C. Hartenbach's Dept. checked
the CIA, and James B.
Contributions Made
many years in Charleston.
Schlesinger, CIA director. The
The arti cle also said Klein Once again Gallipolis ' lone out a wrecked car that had died on Sunday
Mrs. Kent, who survives, is the documents also stated, the
tally
was
a
result
or
a
single
been
abandoned
at
1:30
a
.
m
.
has been a stockholder in the
former Nan Smith of Mid- Times said, that top White
and an error in the final frame ~ today in Salem Twp. on County
D&lt;.~yton Speedway, in which
TWO EVENINGS
RA
CINE
Rea
tha
Ellen
Camp did the mound chores for
dleport, a sister-in-law of Mrs. House aides were concerned
role he was accused of fraud New Haven striking ou{ four Road 1. The car was registered McCoy, 73, Racine, Rt. 2, died
"John K. Smith, Sr., Middleport. that the FBI investigation into
along with Emprise in a Jaw ~ and giving up three hits in the to Boyd and Dwayne Pearson, Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Pt. Pleasant. It went over a 1&gt;- Hospital. Mrs. McCoy was born Mr. Kent's death is the second Watergate could lead to high
suit involvint:; a $100,000 loan by shortened game.
in the family ·in the past two political figuras.
foot embankment, landing on
Emprise to the speedway.
in Jackson County, W. Va . and weeks.
in the dual contests New
Bally's pinball machine s , Haven out-hit the hosts 25 to 7 its nose . The Vehide was towed married Holly McCoy in 1920.
Surviving besides the widow
found virtually everywh ere, for a .416 batting average to Pomeroy Motor Company.
She is survived by five sons, are two daUghters, Mrs. Helen
are legal in Ohio, except for compared to Gallipolis ' .172.
Clarence Skeens, in Toledo ; Elizabeth Yates and Mrs.
free games which are ror- Gallipolis failed in their only
J ohn McCoy and Darrell Mary Virginia Minsker, both of
BEANS ON TUESDAY
TAKEN TO HOLZER
bidden under state law .
attempt to steal . while New
McCoy, both of Freemon!; Dunbar, W. Va. The Kent
MASON The ladies
The Middleport E-R unit Clifford McCoy , Orma, W. Va.,
Haven wa s successful in all 15
address
is
5
Riverside
Drive,
auxiliary
of
the
Mason Fire
Pleasant Valley Hospital
attempts. All six extra base answered a call for Paul and Fos ter McCoy , RavenSouth
Charleston
,
W.
Va.
Dept. will sponsor a bean
. hits in the ball game belonged Dillard, 626 High St., Mid- swood; three daughters, Mrs.
Discharges
Funeral
services
were
held
dinner Tuesday (Election Day) .
T. R. Clevenger, Bidwell; to New Haven . Post 140 is now dleport, at 9 a. m. Sunday. Charles (Rose) Curry, Racine;
today .
slatting
at 10:30 a.m. at the fire
2-0
in
the
area
Senior
Ba!)t:&gt;
Dillard, who had fallen, was Mrs. Paul ( Louise) Beekman,
Cecil Queen, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
sta tion . The charge is $1 per
taken to the Holzer Medical Waverly , and Mrs . Louis
MONDAY EVENING
Ken McComas and son, Ruth League.
Marriage License
person.
Salad or pie may be
Center:
Lesage; Ralph Kerwood, New Haven 2 0 0 0 I I 3 7
Benjamin Leonard Dowell,
(Stella ) Sar~on, Apple Grove;
AND TUESDAY EVENING
purchased at an additional
Gallipolis; Janet McDaniel, Gallipoli s 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I
two brothers, Harley Rhodes, Jr., 18, Syracuse, and Kimcharge. Bean soup will also be
CAR DAMAGED
Apple Grove; Flossy Bowen, WP-Hesson LP-Perry Do ubles5 to 9: Jo---$2 .50 all you- can eat, Ior AI. a &lt;:;art e).
Cumberland, Md., and Howard berly Sue Mowery, 17, Midsold
for 30 cents per bowl.
A car driven by Larry Rhodes , Bergholz, Ohio; a dleport.
Mason;
Mrs .
William Painter HR-Hesson.
Higginbotham,
Point Errors-Hanes ( 2), Rus s ell , Bailey, 36, · Pomeroy, had sister, Mrs. Elmer (Mabel)
medium damage at 6:15 a. m. Pyatt, Cutl er, Ohio; several
Pleasant ; Minnie Denny, Rio Perry, Sanders
Sunday ori Lynn St. when
Grande ; Jack Wheeler, Point . Gallipolis
00001 j Bailey pulled into the curb to nieces and nephews; 21
Pleasant; Frank Herley, Point.
grandchildren , and 20 greatdeposit
mail
into
a
mailbox
.
Pleasant; Mrs. James Nea l New Haven
grandchildren.
(Continued from Page I)
4 I 3 3 5 16
Pomeroy police said Bailey 's
and daughter , Letart; George
Funeral services will be held
consideration be given to affiliation with the National Council of
Wamsley, Henderson; Charles WP-Camp LI'-Saunders motor died, throwing the power at Ewing F'uneral Home
Churches or the World Council of Churches now or at any time in
Meadows, MasOn ; Mr s. John Doubles-Kayser, Painter HR- steering out of operation. The Wednesday at I p. m. with the
tt-Je future."
Little, Point Pleasant ; Lydia Lewis, Durst Errors~ Yeager, vehicle struck support posts Rev . Freeland Norris ofThe seceding churches have · disagreed with the parent
under a porch at the Meigs Inn. ficiating. Burial will be_ in
Cornell, Point Pleasant ; Ron Sa nders, Holley.
church over liberalized interpretations of the Bible and doctrinal
There was no damage to the Letart
Plantz,
Point
Pleasant;
Falls
Cemetery.
policies,
claiming it has become too liberal on such matters as
Wide Menu
Drinks and
posts. No charge was filed. Frierds may call at the funeral
Dwaine
Hendricks
,
Letart
;
Choice.
women's rights, abortion, premarital sex and other social anf
Dessert Extra .
Bailey was not injured.
DIR€CTORY OFFERED
Lorenda Samsel, Mason; Mrs.
home at anytime.
political matters.
Roger Rymer II, Letart;
Residents wishin g a copy of
Order our regular-menu every night 5 to 10.
Haddie Radcliff Leon. James a n extensive directory of a ll
Ashworth Poi,nt Pl~asant· service organizations and
Maggie Lilton, Point Pleasant ;. agencies in Meigs County 'may
Joe Wilson Point
Pleasant ·' call Trell Schoenleb at 992-2074
.
Chri s tina Tu.c ker, Racine; or Miss Lenora Michael, 985Mrs . Charles Neal, Mason; 3956. The directory is sponMrs . Fred Willet, Point sored by St. JOhn's Lutheran
PH. 992-3629
Pleasant; Lorena Miller, Church, Minersville, and St.
POMEROY
Henderson .
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy .

Parade will open regatta

MEIGS THEATRE

Every thing is "go" for the
Big Bend Regatla in Pomeroy
the weekend of June 15, 16 and
17. Thousands of visitors are
expected.
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce meeting Monday at
noon at the Meigs Inn put
together the final plans for the
annual event.
Kicking off the big weekend
will be a parade leaving
Middleport at 6 p.m . Entries
will be judged before the
parade begins and winners will
be announced at its conclusion.
Dwight Goins, Meigs High
School In s trumental Supervisor, reported approximately
10 bands and 15 floats will
participate. He added that
trophies for the winners have
been ordered , an~ displayed
certtficates to be presenlod.
Left a mystery was whether
or not the famous (or infamous ) " Frogmobile," a
variation thereof, would make
its reappearance.
This mechanica1 aberratlon
created Wlder the influence of
the charter Grand Croaker of

· MASON DRIVE-IN
','

I

Ill

I

Letter

Emprise

NOW

EACH WEEK

~·

News

.

The MEIGS INN

•••

in Briefs

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 TO 5 PM
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 to 9 P.M.

Enroll Now!

SOCIAL SET
An ice cream socia l _wil1 be
held Satur.day beginning at 6 p.
m . at the Bashan Fire Dept.
quarters. Soft drinks, pie and
cake will also be available.

JUST RECEIVED!

Boat parade open for entries

•

1973 grad is
candidate for
regatta queen

Nixon may try

.
press meetings

opens Sunday

Transitional Woven Cottons

near Jackson

W'eMh1 T

VACATION

It appeared to waddle and leap
al ong the parade route,
suggestive of course, of an old,
somewhat tired giant bull frog .
Jack Kerr, C of C president,
advised that the coast guard
has approved the Sunday boat
races. He asked members to
Entries are being accepted for the boat parade to be held in encourage persons they know
connection with Big Bend Regatta Weekend. The parade will be with talent to e nter the talent
Saturday, June 16, at 12 :30 p.m ., and the route will be upriver show to be staged at Meigs
from Middleport to Pomeroy,
Junior High in Middleport
Trophies will be awarded to first, sec ond, and third pla ce following the parade. Vernon
boats in the classes of, Best Tbeme (A Good Place to Be in '73 ), Weber is its chairman.
Most Unusually Decorated, and Best Decorated with a Frog
The Regatta Queen will be
Theme. ·
crowned during the !alent show
NICK UfLE
No entries wilt .be accepted after Jun e 13. Entry blanks which will also feature , as
RACINE - Nick Ihle, son
should be returned to Earl Ingles, at the Meigs County Branch of special
numbers,
Ohio
of
Mr. and Mrs. John !hie,
the Athens County Savings and Loan, 296 W. 2nd St., Pomeroy, University Players.
Racine, who bas enlisted in
Ohio.
Judy Riggs outlined rules
the Air Foree, left Thursday,
and regulations of the fourth
May· 31 for Lac~nd Air
H()AT PARADE ENTitY BLANK
Big Bend Regatta Balon
Force Base, Sao Antonio,
TWirling Contest to be staged
Texas, for six week.11 of basic
:'Iii\ ME
Sunday at Meigs Junior High
training. He Is a 1973
beginning at 12:30 p.m . (See
graduate of Southern High
DONNA HODGES, BOOKKEEPER of the Gallia-Meigs Community Ac tion Progra m,
.\UllllESS
story elsewhere today .)
School
where he starred in
Monday deposited a $54,964 cheek with George Hobstetter at the Pomeroy National Bank to
Jim
Mee.S
announced
the
CITY
football and basketball. He
defray expenses for the annual Head Start program in Meigs and Gatlia Counties. Director s of
STATE
first
"Regatta
Ball"
will
be
was named Most Valuable
the program which got underway Monday are John Arnott, Meigs County ; Walter Rife , Gallia
I'I!ONE
held Friday night from 10 p.m.
Back In the SV AC for the 1972
County, and John Trotter, Gallipolis City Schools. The Ga llia -Meigs Community Ac tion
until2 a .m . at Pomeroy Junior
program annually sponsors the Head Start program .
football season. Ihle was
\'LASS ENTEIIED
High. The adult dance will
honored recently at a party
feature "Dick Hawkins" of
at bls home by his parents
Nashville, Tenn. Price is $5 per
when gUests were.Patty lhle,
couple.
Mike lhle, Sharon Pyles,
The chamber voted to cancel
Diana Norris, Mr. and Mrs~
the tractor pull usually held
Ronnie Salser and Tonja,
Saturday morning.
and Mr. and Mrs. Oris
The Ohio Eta Phi Sorority
Smith.
will sponsor the queen contest
and will also provide a float for
the candidates for the parade.
lkvoled To The lnterwt. Of The Meigs-Mmon Area
Bill Grueser announced that
F. 0 . Day, Marietla, will
provide the public address
VOL. XXV NO. 36
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10
TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1973
'PHONE 992·2156
TEN CENTS system.
The
Senior
Citizens
organization wm conduct the
flea market a nd will also
sponsor a crafls fair to be held
in the old manual training shop
at the Pomeroy Junior High.
The annual Frog Jump will
Walter Bentz was named and parking area vendors in
observed that " this would not
Councilman
William Chi ef of Police Jed Webster the purchase of a new police. be held Saturday at Meigs
street comm1ss1oner by Pomeroy.
pose too great a problem."
Football Field in Pomeroy.
Snouffer slated council had two aSked council to give the crui ser.
Pomeroy Council Monday
Their
recomStrong objections were made
Legar asked that the fire more weeks to pass the or- matter serious thought before
One of the biggest attractions
night . mendation will be given at the
to the ordinance .
department and . emergency dinance, and it could be doing so.
at the F·rog event this year will
'
Bentz who operated his
next mee ling .
Charles Legar, former squad be excluded from the
be the attendance of Dave
amended. The objective of the
Meeting with council was
garbage collection service for mayor and now Pomeroy Fire
Also discussed was the
ordinance.
ordinance was to get those Wesley Buehl, Meigs County logging of ca lls by \he pollee Diles, ABC's top sports com· many years in Pomeroy, fills Chief, who inet with Council on
Mees contended during the presently se lling produce off Engineer, who explained with
mentator.
the post vacated by Calvin behalf of the Fire Department
department. Following a long
long and sometimes heated the streets.
CarOlyn Thomas, secretary,
a drawing of the upper parking discussion, no Ul!lreement on
Lane who retired after 14 years . and Emergency Squad, said
discussion that the o rd ~na nce
displayed
"Welcome Regatta
Tom Werry spoke on behalf lot wall, which is slipping, what the issue was reached.
MINDY YOUNG
service. Lane was a worker in the ordinance would make it
would ease present problems of one person ( not Werry) who repairs are required . 'l'here is a
City'.' banners. that have ~en
the street department 10 years necessary for both departGlrolaml also brought to
arising from street vending. is selling produce on the streets large cavity near the water's
purchased
by
local
council's attention the boat
Sf!d superintend~nt four years , ments to seek council's apbusinessmen .
Legar recalled that a similar daily. He staled that this was edge along the entire wall.
docks which tl)e village purIn other ·business, council prOval each and every time
ordinance already is on the the only way that man had to
Attending were Kerr, Mrs.
Buehl estimated that repair chased and at this lime have
i!ipproved the :~econd reading of they had a barbecue or sold
books . Counci l members make a living.
to the entire wall would cost them rented for $5 per month. Thomas, Go1ns: Thereon
art ordinance limiting and popcorn on the streets.
contended, however, that the
Johnson , Ted Reed, Bob
Mees moved to suspend the approximately $50,000.
Glro!ami noied that the cost
regulating sidewalks, str~_et
But Councilm.an Jim Mace ordinance books "could not be
ru1es and give the Ordinance its HoWever, he observed that he of the docks for the village, one Jacobs, ·Ear l Ingels, Bill
loca ted ."
third required readins . His .would like to verify that figure third of the tolal cost, was Grueser, C. E. Blakeslee, Jack
Mindy Young, daughter of
Carsey, Mike Zirkle, Ferman
Guido Giro lami criticized the motion died for lack of a later.
$2,190. He remarked that about·
"Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Young,
proposed ordinan ce because it secontt .
It was noted by Buehl and 80 docks are out and suggested Moore , John Kerr, Richard Middleport Route 1, is a canwould allow selli ng produce
Mayor Donald Collins
Co ll i ns that Congressma n council. recall all the docks and Chambers, Jim Mees, Beulah didate for queen of Big Bend
from the streets four sUmmer
asked council to give further
Miller, by le tter , had gjven take a comp lete inventory of Jones and Katie Crow.
Regatta Weekend.
months . He sa id this is not fair
study to the . ordinance and
little hope .in regard to finan- what Is available.
.
...
A 1973 graduate of Meigs
to loca l grocery stor.e owners.
decide what they wish to do
cial assistance to repair the
Girolaml stated that he
High School, Miss Young has
· asked at one time to lease some
by the next meeting.
. .wall.
been accepted at Rio Grande
Ralph Werry, president of
Werry recommended that of the docks and he was inCollege this fall for training in
council, suggested a curfew be the safety commi ttee, with formed that he would have to
the field of medical laboratory
WASHINGTON (UP! ) reporters and polit!cians to
placed on the entire village. Police Chief Webster, disc uss
(Conlirmed on page 10)
technology. At Meigs High
President Nixon is weighing s ubmit to questioning on
School, Miss Young was a
seve•·al possible ways of meet- Water gate in news con ~
member of the marching and
ing with the press to discuss ferences.
La s t
Sunday, ·
symphonic !Jilnds. She was a
Watergate, White House Virginia Gov. Linwood Holton,
band flagbearer , a member .of
chai rman of the Republican
sources said today .
the Latin Club, the Future
WASHINGTON (UPI) There were conflicting re- Governors Association, and
Plans have been comp leted
Nurses
Club and played a role
Who doesn't love a parade?
Unanimously rejecting a re·
ports on how long the Presi- Robert Strauss, Democratic
for the annua l Meigs County 4- The Pomeroy Chamb er of
II!G II END llEGAT1'A PARADE
quest from the special-prosecu- in the senior class play. She is a
dent's press secretary, Ronald nati.onal chairma n, urged this
H Cam p at the Canters Cave Commerce is hoping to make
June 15, l!J7:J
tor that it delay public member of th e "Pomeroy
L. Ziegler, will remain in his publicly.
Camp in Jackson.
· this year's Big Bend Regatta
hearings,
the
Senate Church of Christ.
Holton sa id he doubted the
job. Some said a talent search
Junior camp will be June 10- Wee k End parade the " biggest ·
Eight Meigs County girls are
Watergate tribunal today
for a replacement was going Pres ident cou ld. be ca ll ed
.
\
1
.\ME-14 ; beginners camp, June 17- and best" yet.
questioned convicted con- competing for the title which is
on. Other sources said Nixon before a grand jury or Senate
19 ; teen camp, June 24-28;
Registration is now taking
spirator G. Gordon Uddy's now held by Miss Leanrl Sebo of
continues to hold Ziegler in inquiry and therefore the
TV PI•; ENTitY - - - - - - - - , - -- -outdoor &lt;.~dventure camp, Aug. place. All group s and inform er secretary about Pomeroy. The eig ht conhigh esteem and noted that proper forum for him to tell his
6-9. Camp activities will in- dividuals taking part in the
"clandestine" activities in be- testants wili'be interviewed on
Ziegler has become a much story and be "cross examined"
I'IIONE NO. - -- -- -- - - clude crafts , swimming, annual event at 6 p.m. on
half of President Nixon's re- the eveni·ng of June 14 by the
more important adviser to would be a series of news
conservation, indoor and Friday, June 15, are asked to
mayors of Meigs County
election campaign.
Nixon since top aides H.R. conferences.
o"u td oor recreation, assem- com plete the accompanying
commu
nities . Winners, the
.\i)l)ltESS- -- - ----:-:-:-:::-:Summoned first to the witHaldeman and John D.
One idea put to the President
blies, singing, vespers, flag registration form and mail it to
I .V lail to !)wight Goins, Meigs High School;
ness table in the nationally queen and three runners-up,
Ehrlichman were forced out by by his staff is an interview with
ceremonies and council cir~· Dwight Goins, Meigs High
Houle :1. Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!!)
televised hearings was Sally will be announced at a talent
Watergate.
one TV comme ntator. Another
cles.
School, Route 3, Pomeroy, at
Jackson Harmony, Liddy's show to be held at 8 p.m. on
Nixon has not held a full suggestion is that the President
June 15 in the Meigs Junior
C. E. Blakeslee, Meigs the ea rliest poss ibl e time . vance of the parade.
question-and-answer news con- be interviewed for one hour by
450 students. The student secretary when he was cowtsel
Co un ty agricultural agent, will Goins and Jim Mees are coDeadJine foi- entering is number is ror enrollment in the to the Committee for the Re- High School at Middleport. The
ference since March 15. The the anchormen of the three
winners will be presented gifts
be director o( the junior camp. chairmen of this year's parade. Monday, June II.
bulk of the Watergate allega- main TV networks.
upper three grades of the Election of tbe President and at that time.
)
'All sessions will be multi- Already strong interest"in the
This .year's parade will participating schools. Baton later for the finance arm of the
Still another staff suggestion
tions effecting the White House
county events . with camps event has been reported .·
reature first place trophies for groups and drum and bugle Nixon ca~paign.
did not begin until March 23, is that Nixon permit five
closing
after
breakfast
and
Several
floats
and
seven
"Did Mr. Liddy have any
the best floats in the com- corps will be presented plaques
when Federal Judge John J. selected White House reporters
clean-up
on
the
final
day
about
bands already are verbally mercial, non-eominercial,. frog and will not be on a competitive other assignment or responSirica made public a letter to question him .
9:30 a .m .
committed
. Howeve-r , theme , or regatta "A good basis.
sibility, to your knowledge ?"
from convicted bugging conA fullscale news conference
Residents
with
any
questions
everyone taking part is asked place to be in '73" theme will be
spirator James W. McCord was viewed with some unease ·
All walking individuals in the asked Samuel Dash, chief .
of
the
camp
sessions
about
any
to
complete
the
form
and
send
awarded .
charging that persons higher by aides who fear the crossparade will be presented counsel to the special sevenmay
call
the
county
extension
it to Goins so that the line of
Bands wi11 compete in three certificates. Judging the bands man Senate Watergate comexamination would .be so inup were involved.
office
,
992-3895.
SYRACUSE - Two defenmarch,
from
Second
Ave.,·
in
categories for first, ~co nd and will be Charles Minelli of the , mittee.
The President has been tense as to sound like a trial.
•
" When I was first employed dants were fined in Syracuse
Middleport, to the former third places in each category lnstr,uinental music depart- .
und er _pressu re from both
by Mr. Uddy," Mrs: Harmony Mayor Herman London's court
junior higl) school in Pomeroy, which include 750 students and ment, Ohio University .
-"'~':&gt;.''''"''''~, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,. ·, : -·,,; ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,., ,,,,,,,, ,,,.,,, ,,,,,,.,,,., ,,,,,,,z,, ,,,,,,,,., ,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,t
Monday night.
can be comp leted well in ad- up; 450-750 stude nts , and under
·
(Continued on Page 10)
James Franklin Parsons,
Gallipolis, was fined $20 and
costs on charges of speeding
By United Press lnter~aUonal
·
'
and $10 and costs for failure to
RACINE - Honor medals
appear at an earlier court date.
NEW YORK - JOHN L. Clark, former head of a chain of will he pr esente d to the
nursing homes pleaded guilty_Monday io a massive stock fraud following Racine High School
Entries are ~ing accepted
This year's contest will 12), (13-l4), (t&gt;-16 ), (17-20 ).
Food Will be availabl: Wallace Vann Davis, Jr.,
involving $200 million. Clark, 46, of Oklahoma City, is the former students who maintained at for the fourth annual Big Bend feature something entirely new The_ diVISions Will also be throughout the day ~~
Syracuse, wa s fined $15 and
1
board chairman and president of the Four Seasons Nursing least a "8 " average in each Regatta Baton Twirling in the area as far as Baton diVlded mto Begmner, In- speclator~ are _we come.
e costs on charges of speeding.
Centers of America . AccoFding to federal prosecutors, he turned subject during the past sc hool Contest to be held on Sunday Contests go, Free Corps Entry, term~dlate and Advanced door admiS!iiOfn IS $hlldfor adTulhts The defendants were cited to
a $27-million profit in what prosecutors called the most maS!live yea r and who missed 4 ~ or less afternoon, June 17, at the the f1rs
. t t"1me th at Ba ton co·rps Cla sses ·
.
and 50 cents
.
. or c ' ren.ed be court by Police Chief Miltbn
securities fraud in 40 years.
·
days of classes:
Meigs Junior High .School will. be allowed to enter the
A "Miss Rega~ta Majorette contest _1s bemg spon~or
Y Varian.
Clark pleaded guilty to one count in a 32-count indictment
Seniors, Denise Cross, Judi Gym located on south Third Corps Competitions free of ·Queen" and Prmcesses w11l The R1ggs Royal Kad-ette
returned by a federal grand jury la st year. In an eight-page Roberts , Co nnie Smith; Ave \n Middleport
charge. The usual charge for also be selected again this year Baton Corps. .
statement Clark S.id " he was willing to accept the conseq uences juniors, Deila Cross, Roma ·
· contest under
' dJrection
·
·
· has been ·$'&lt;
The contest will start
The
corps eptr1es
""· A a 1ong WI"th three High Point
tr I"at 12:30
.
of my conduct as soon as is practicable.' ' Federal prosecutors Nease,
DEER KILLED
Faith
Smith; of Mrs. Judy' Riggs, is sa ne- baton corps must consist of at Champions, for the following .p.m. and late regis . ~to~ w~11
Sheriff
Robert C. Harsaid investors lost an estimated $200 million through the illegal sophomore, Stephanie Ord and tioned by the National Baton least t2 twirling members.
ages : (D-10), (ll-1 4), ( 1&gt;-20). openatlla.m.Anym ';.,ru~e
inanipulation of Four Seasons stock.
tenbach's department repor~
This year's All-Trophy These three wmners wtll be or group~ wanting to en ·
freshmen, Paul Cross, Molly Twirling Association and is
a
deer was killed Monday at
Fisher, Cheryl Moore , Rebecca classified as a "Class A" Con lest will offer a .total of selected on the total Individual competition may obtain entry
LOS ANGELES -AS THE SENATE'S Watergate hearing Sayre.
9: lOp. m. on Yellow Bush Road
·
· · to poI· n l s
contest which is open to about 400 beautiful
trophies
a c cu m u 1ate d forms t by
D" contacti
to M ng J the
d
resumes in Washington today, a county grand jury here opens its
Unintentionally
omitted twirlers of all locations. Last be won by twirlers entering the througho~t the day ._ A travel Contes
~rec ~svi~l: O~i: when it ran into the path of an
"Watergate West" inquiry . The grand jury is looking into a
'
.' ·auto driven by Hilton Wolfe Jr.,
from the final honor roll were year 's con test had entries various divisions, ·which are trophywtllalsobe given to the .Rtggs, Rt. 1: R
break-in at the office of Ellsberg 's psychiatrist by members of
the names of Nola Neigler and come from as far away as New broken down in to the following twirler traveling the · farthest or by phomng Chester • OhiO Ra~ine . There was light
damage to the car.
(Continued on pa ge 101
York State.
·
. ages: (0-6 ), {7-11), (9-10), ( ll- distance to the contest.
985-3595.
Becky Sams.

. Junior Camp

Mosuy cloudy tonight and .
Tuesday. Showers and thunderstorms likely tonight and a
chance of showers and thundershowers Tuesday. Lows
ton igh t in the 60s. Highs
Tuesday in the 80s.

Our New

dri ver
and
courageous
passenge r or two.
Essentially, the Frogmobile
was an ancient school bus
decorated subUy as a bull frog ,

en tine

BUFFET
DINING

..·

the Oh io Socie ty for the
Promotion of the Bull Frog,
Atty. Fred Crow, was an obvious sensation to all parade
viewers if not to ils tortured

CLUB
Savings Plan

Parade: Biggest ever!

Liddy's
secretary
·quizzed

Two defendants

MAKE 49 PAYMENTS -

fined by mayor

WE PAY 50th

.Our bank turns your savings dollars into a skilled la bor force . Under O!-Jr. wfd~ · ~wake
superv i sion, money in our new Vaca ti on Club savings accounts earns a n.ce d1v1~end .
This is -t he easy way to plan the vacation you've.alway s wanted . Why not.stop m for _
:""'comp lete detail s? Do it now .
·

0HWI
M• F,Jo,odli&gt;fl

Students win

!News •• zn ·Brzefsji: honor medals

"A iob worth doing -is
worth doing right,''

Member of Federal Reserve System
$20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

Are you the kind of person
that likes to do flx-it jobs
around your home? If you
are, chances are you want
the very best in tools and
materials.
The
"FR IENDLY ONES" are
the people to see .

Choose zip-p er .front tunnel waist or bias front shirt waist:
both with rollup sleeves. Woven Dacron Polyester-Cotton
blends in black watch or Glen plaids.
Sizes 12 to 20, 14 1 ::~ to 221 '2.

ONLY

$1198

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

\

Regatta twirling contest announced

�2- TIM! Datly Sent one! h tddleport Poo~-roy 0 June 5 l97J

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

-==Ge~eration ~ R;~,m: Must Find That Ninth Trick
u,

'l&gt;

HC'ltn n11l ";ut' Bouel

~

Fatherless Klds Put Down
Helen and Sue
It s so wrong and unfair it hurts
My mother has been a Widow for II years Sbf IS raLSmg her
thrf&lt; t&lt;fnagf children to Ole best of her ab1lity which IS pretty
darn good Sure we get mto tro uble now and then who doesn t "
But 1f any of us IS out of line right away Ole goss1pers start
'Wltll What a shame weU you know - no father and all
BALONEY
Yet when kids wath fathers get nto scnous trouble tl s
usua lly hush-hushed It seems as 1f people are JUS! " a ting for us
fatherless teens to prove we re no good
Another th ng Mom gets pushed around because she bas no
man to protect her Stores take advantage of her It shard to get
cred t The one tJmP my lrother got p1cked up by the pohce they
.acted as if bemg man less was some kind of dJ.Sease that dooms
)our children
And mamed women look upon wtdows as no good Well let
mf 1ft you m on somethmg My Mom works from 7 a m until 6
p n comes home and cooks dmner Afterwards the whole
fam ily ch1po; m and helps With the housework She nfver goes out
unless to run us k•ds somewhere or do an errand or sometimes
VISit a fr end (very seldom )
You d be surpnsed how close we are and how much love and
carmg a fatherless famaly has
Please prmt this for all one-parent farrulies Maybe a lew
people reading 1t won t be so qutck to JUdge - WIDOW S
DAUGHTER AND PROUD OF IT
WDPI
Our society has a tendency to feel sorry for those who don t
quite fllits standards And gossips have a mean way of turmng
J)lty mto conten pt or suspiclDn
- Though broken homes are almost normal these days
they re sttll used as reasons why kids get in trouble even 11 Ute
trouble s mmor You relabeled faUterless therefore people
ex pect the worst So you different ones must prove yourselves
doubly first by showmg that a no-man family doesn t have b1g
problems and second by bemg constderably better than
average
And forget the goss ps They aren t as everywhere as yo u
Ut nk
SUE

+++
,Dear Daughter
Yes fatherless homes have spectal problems and widowed
mothers don t fmd life easy m a soc1ety that still constders lone
women nadequate dlSCiplmarians managers providers and
also poor credit riSks
But - you ve got lots of company And heres a btg plus If
you prove your worth you II be doubly noticed as the word lv1ll
soon be Look how well they ve done m spite of
Rap
Whenever our group gets together wtth the children one
pverbearmg parent always corrects our kids for spearmg food
'1\lth a fork She says they should hft mstead (as HER little
wgels do)
Is UtiS really correct ' At a ptcn c ts 11 nece~ry ' And when
she gets gomg on her fork what should we say to her '
W H
WH
Tell her to sttck 1t m her ear -SUE

+++
NO'fE FROM HELEN B1te your typewriter Sue J

+++

Dear W

v Your friend s etiquette advice s mcorrect UMece$Sary and
uncalled for Pass her the bo led pearl ontons and deviled eggs
and maybe she II eat her words
HELEN

Kingsbury News, Notes
Mtsswnary Rev and Mrs
W II am Genheuner spent the
weekend w th Mrs Neva King
Mr and Mrs Harold White and
Mr and Mrs Vtrgil King
other VISitors were Mr and
Mrs Y ctor Genheuner Ball
Run Rev Jay St les Albany
Mr and Mrs Ralph Chase and
Helena Conner of Columbus
Mr and Mrs Stanley Beal of
Cleveland spept a weeks
vacat on here and attended the
alun n banquet at Harr son
vtlle
Sundar dutner guests of Mr
and Mrs Vugil King and
tam I) " ere Mr and Mrs
Weber Wood Rev and Mrs
Wilham Genh e mer of Afnca
Mrs Neva K ng and Mrs
Grace White
Rece nl SLtors of Mrs Hazel
Arnold • ere Mr and Mrs
Alpha Russell of H)sell Run
Mr and Mrs Ronald McNally
and da ughter of Athens Mr
and Mrs Lester Arn old and '
Bill of Columbus
Mr and Mrs John Dean
enterta ned Sunda) on the 25th
Y~eddin g annl\ersary of Mr
: and Mrs Kenneth Mark ns
- D nner us enJO} ed bv Mr and
- Mrs Robert R1ed Rodney and
- Dav1d Mr and Mrs Walter
Terr ell and B llv all of
Pataskala Mr and Mrs B II
..SpaWl of Pon ero~ Mr and
::Mrs John Walter Dean local
:AMN R chard Dean K I
:,sawy er AFB Mtch Afternoon
••'Vls tors were Mr and Mrs
...Paul Payn er of Carpenter A
•bea uttful a nn versary cake
--nas served to the honored
•!lllest follo•mg dinner bl Mrs
~ ed and Mrs Dean Mrs
:Markms daughters
: Mr and Mrs Leo K ng
~ealtha Will and Florence
•.Atkinson Mrs Delores K ng
jrnd Geneva Mrs Grace Wh te
n Mt Vernon for
~e re
~raduat on exerc scs at Mt
-vernon Nazarene College
~Mar) Lou K ng "as one of the
1lraduates She \\Ill be gomg to
-Kankakee DI to cont nue her
.:College educatiOn at the
)lazarene College there
; Rev W II am Genhe1mer a
'imss10nary from Mnca was
.guest speaker at the Carleton
X::hurch followmg Sundav
:;&lt;boO! and Sunday cvemn~
~

-

showed sltdes of his work m the
m ss on ltelds In Afrtca The
Rev and Mrs Genheuner are
on furlough here lor a few
months
AMN R1chard Dean of K I
Sawyer AFB M1Ch spent
Memor~al Day weekend w1th
hiS parents Mr and Mrs John
Dean and h1s brother Mr and
Mrs John Walter Dean Other
VIS tors were Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Markms Racme Mr
and Mrs Hobart Smalley Jr
Judy Kay Susan Dale and
Hob e of W1erton W Va Mr
and Mrs Garold Gilkey Cindy
Tan my and Rick of Athens
and Mr and Mrs Paul Paynter
of Carpenter
Rev and Mrs Blame Farley
of M1ch1gan VISited Frtday and
Saturday w1th Mr and Mrs
Roy Br ckles
Mr and Mrs Roger Young
and son Wesley spent Sunday
w th Mr and Mrs Maartm
Swart and daughter Roma at
Columbus

li\U

~UHIII

• AK
•
I

t AJ 9
.. J
WfS1

• QJ
• K QJ to
t

54
l-AST
• H 4 12

H~ ~

·
• H~
~ J
olo K Q

olo 6

9R

SO U1 11 ( 0 )
• og;
• A 972
t K Q 10

olo A 2
\I

Nn h So h v
N
I
Ea t

•

J.
Pa

lh Os\\ald &amp;

t tla td ll t t:\1~ 1
1.1 dt i.Js }t ~ s l covered wrlh
t1 ~ t' gl t a nd y, a a llu wt.-"d t ,
Joldti &lt; I ICk
A cl b was led back and
So th wa:s be~ c k on lead w lh
I s n nil 1 tck r ght n s ght
p1ov ded Wes t he ld both th &lt;
q ee n at d Jack of SJ ad es
South led the 10 of spades
w th t&gt;Ve y ntent on of let
1 ng. t dt! b t w~s t cove red
" th !he q een
Sout h wun n d n my a nd
cas hed the rest of the dt a
1 o ds 'r\ es t had to th1 ow a
I ea t on lhe las t d a und
whe eupon South thr t: W htm
n" th the last hea t to force
II esl to lead a spade and
g ve So th that n nth lr ck

&amp; THIN6S

P ass

S uti

•

3 NT

.K
Pas."

Jacob\
So th tad no 1 o uble count
ng p e g h t lr c ks They
ve e ght there for the tak
g The n n h m ght be
a o nd so mewhe e but ttiere
was no appa ent place tha t t
CIJ d come from
or co se there m ght be
a do bleton queen Jack of
spades b t So th d dn t be
1 e e n n racles
He d e ked the ftrst 1wo
hea ts as a matte or general
p act ce A th d heart was
ted and East splatte ed on
the 10 of cl bs
All of a s t dden South had
some hope He won that th d
I e a r t led a d amond to
Jam~s

N£WSPAPU (NTUPR: SE ASSN

o:a;w l!tiMU !l
Tl
\Vest

t&gt;

b dd

1'1 ~

S
h
1 "l! •

ha

bt.!c
Ea t
Pa

S utll

•

Pas
Pass
4 ...
PH ss
.ft
Pass
Yo u So u h hold
•AQ 9fio • sz +K4 ... AQI K
What do you d o now
A-Pa 11 V u nay lN.! m s ·~
a sla
I ut the Jdds are thai
he 1 I w II lcpend
n a

Apple Grove
News, Events

Mr and Mrs Y rg1l Norr s of
Hebron spent Memor al
weekend With Mr and Mrs
Ross Norris and attended the
Memorial dmner at the Letart
Falls Commumty Hall Sunday
wtth Mr and Mrs Ross Norrts
Mrs Margie Weaver and
SuSie Mrs Opal Zerkle and
daughter all of Syracuse
Mrs Vera Craig of Athens
Ala spent Sunday throught
Thursday With her parents
Mr and Mrs Floyd NorriS
Others v srtmg Mr and Mrs
NorriS were Mr and Mrs
Woodrow Brown of Fort
Pierce Fla Mr and Mrs
Hoyt Ferguson of Camp
Conley Mr and Mrs Herschel
Norris and Clarence and Mr
and Mrs Harold Hayman of
Westerville
Mr and Mr• Wayne Camp
bell and children of Charleston
Don Johnson of Rhode Island
New York vtslted Mr and Mrs
Jess Anderson and Mrs Zelpha
Boggess and Wayne Sunday
The Almanac
Mr and Mrs Floyd Norm
By Un1ted Press International
Mrs Vera Cra g VISited Mr
Today s Tuesday June 5 the
and
Mrs Darrell Norns and
S6 h day of 973 w lh 209 to
fo low
Mrs Freda Evans and Mrs
The moon s app oach ng ts
Phyllis 0 Brten Monday
t s qua te
Mr and Mrs Herbert
The mo n 119 stars are Mars
and Jup ter
Shtelds Mr and Mrs R ck
The even ng stars a e ~r
Sargent
of
Columbus
cu y Venus and Saturn
Those born on t h s date are Raymond Robmson of Norfolk
unde th e s gn ef Gem n
Va Mr and Mrs Howard
Madame Ch eng Ka shek
w e of the eader of Nal onal st Rob nson of Flatwoods W Ya
Ch na was born June 5 897
were dmner guests Sunday of
Mrs Jack Sargent at Racme
Mr
Ted F1sher and
The Daily Sent111el
daughter Jan of Eureka
spent Sunday afternoon With
Mrs Ferne B Hayman
MISs M1lhe R•pie) of
Charleston spent Memor al
\lieekend With her aunt Mrs
Magg1e Roush
On th s day n h story
n 19 7 more than 9 5 m on
Amer cans between the ages of
21 and 3 reg slered n the
Wor d War I draft
In 1933 Pres dent Fr.ankl n D
Rooseve t s gned a b II abo sh
ng he go d standa d
In 1966 Amer can astrona ut
Gene Cernan ef Gem n 9 fo
a wo hou
0 m nute space

wa k

In 968 Sen Robe t Kennedy
was fatal y shot n Los Angeles
by a 24 yea o d Arab nat onal
I e
den f ed
as
S rhan
S an The assa ss n em a ns r1
p son vnde fe sen ence

When a mce young n an named Johnny Bench contrmtted
baseball s ultunate gaucherte Ute other everung - str1kmg out
"lth the bases loaded on throo pitches It reminded me ol an
en barrassmg fact
The~ 'Casey at the Bat IS a bad poem descr1bmg 011e
uf the "orst-played baseball games of all time
To prove the pomt let s set 11 up as purt of the new Monday
rught TV game wtth ktndly old Howard Cosell as guest com
menta tor (as he w1ll hem a wrek or so ) along w1lh Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek
CURT ThiS really IS Sub-par baseball Mudville ts down H
m Ute bottom of the nmth and botli Cooney and Burrows have
gotten base hits but were thrown out trymg to stretch Slllgles
mto doubles So there are two out mstead of two on and nynn
due up
TONY Yeah
HOWARD Tell!! like 11 ts This kid Cooney pmch-httting tn
Ute mne spot IS dumb and reddess He sl!ould be d1Sp8tched to
the Flonda Instructional League But Burrows has been leadoff
man on this club for 1878 games m parts of 14 seasons He sl!ould
qu t
CURT Flynn ts no great hitter
HOWARD No agamst Slde-armmg left-banders h1s carrer
battmg averagetsonly 196 They should use a pmch-h1tter
TONY Yeah
CURT But there sa little looper back over second Its a hit
HOWARD Mudvtlle gets no credit for that The opposition
second baseman was drawn way m and to hiS nght Very bad
)XlStbon
TONY Yeah
CURT Now here s Blakely He s m a temble slump - 0 for

I UDA Y S Q UES TION
s ee~d of b dd g r e lubs
y ou
pa nt' b ds fou ht&gt;a
26
ov• yo
fou c u bs Wha dn
HOWARD ThiS sets up a sttuation I saw when Jun
y ou o no"'
was p1tchmg for the old Boston Braves back m 1945 and

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs Ed Hensley and
Mrs Mary Colher of Flat
woods Ky spent a day here
w1th the1r father Jerry
Culwell and brother and
stster m law Mr and Mrs
W1lham Culwell
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey
VIS ted w1th the1r grand
children Mr and Mrs Larry
Clark wtd daughters and at
tended the annual barbecue
sponsored by the Chester F1re
Department on Memortal Day
They called on the r son m law
and daughter Mr and Mrs
Roy W seman Harnsonvllle
enroute home
Those VISiting w th Paul and
Wilham C Peck were Mrs
Harley Townsend and Susie
Colwnbus and EmZLe Davts of
Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs Ralph Frazter
of Galltpolts VISited her

BY PAUL CRABTREE

mother Goldie G llogly and
they were dmner guests of Mr
and Mrs Paul Gaston
Murl Calaway accompamed
members of the Knox Town
shtp ExtensiOn group to
Wtlhamstown W Va where
they toured the Fenton Glass
Works and enjoyed dmner at a
Mar etta Hotel
Mr and Mrs Charles
McKn ght
and
family
Pataskala and Mrs Elba
McKmght Sharon and ChfiS
Columbus v s1ted w th Mr and
Mrs D 0 McKn ght
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
called on the Warren Reeves
family on Sunday forenoon and
Mrs Jeffers viSited her
mother Mrs Beulah Cordray
Athens on Sunday afternoon
Mr
and Mrs Harold
G llogly VICky and Bruce
spent a mght m Colwnbus w1th
h1s stster Mrs Bern ce
McKnight and he had dental
work done
NeJo Parker of Mtddleport s
spendmg some tlme here w1th
hiS great grandparents Mr
and Mrs Ney Carpenter and
aunt Martha Mays
Fnends and relattves from
the commun1ty attended the
E ghth Grade Commencement
at Albany Elementary School
~ udents from the area who
graduated were Brei Allman
Steve Butchart VICky Comer
Joe Gaston Carolyn Graves
Helena Howery V rg1ma
Jordan Wanda Peck John
Peerey Robert Reeves Rob n
Reeves Teresa Walsh Rob n
Wh1te Kev n Woodgerd and
Rusty Wooten
Those calltng on Mural
Gala way durmg Memorial Day
weekend were Mary Conner
Weyand Bucyrus
Ethel
Weyand Gardner
Penn
sylvama Cla1r Cummmgs
Colwnbus Mrs D V Cwn
mmgs Athens Mr and Mrs
Bob WoOdrum Timmy and
Tracy McArthur and W1lbur
Daley local
Mrs Mar e Oatley who was
confined
to
0 Bleness
Memonal Hosp1tal lor ob
servatlon and treatment has
now been released
Mrs Bern1ce McKmght
Sharon and Chrts Colwnbus
were overmght guests of
relaltves here and vlstted her
mother Mrs Goldie Gtllogly
Earl
Starkey
Carl
Greenlees
Mrs
Arthur
Crabtree Murl Galaway Mr
and Mr and Mrs Men
dal Jordan and Mr and
Mrs Robert Mattox were
am ong those who called at
Ew ng Funeral Home n
Pomeroy lollowmg the death of
V rgli Atkins Hamsonv11Ie
State Grange Deputy and well
known Me1gs County Citizen
Goldie Gillogly spent a lew
days in McArthur w1th her
brother and s ster m Jaw Mr
and Mrs T R Bormg The
Burmgs have sold the r home
m McArthur and w II have an
apartment m Colwnbus \1. here
he s employed at present but
'"II be spendmg much of thetr
t1me n Naples Fla "here
the\ ha ve purchased a home
Anna Parker
Bol var
!Hted her grandparents Mr
an J Mrs Ne} Carpenter and
a 1J1 Mart}a Ma}s An
H&lt;:tl l ILJ Ocxter Y. US a a ler
t c C pen e I ome

Tobm

CURT But look there Howard - a long dr1ve mto the left
f1eld power alley Flynn d1gs for third he rounds Ute bag and
holds up and there goes Blakely mto second w1th a stand-up two
bagger
HOWARD Now surely there s gomg to be a change m
pitchers here Casey IS coming up and this guy pttchmg must be
debilitated and caducous He s given up four strrught hits and
even 11 I hate baseball I U adm1t th1s man Casey really can
powder the ball
TONY Yeah
CURT W1th f1rst base open 1t would seem w1se to walk
Casey to get to the next batter- but there s that old maxun
about never puttmg the wtming run on base
HOWARD That s the kmd of obsolescent thinkmg tbat s
destroy ng thiS game Curt Walking Casey to get to Broomfield
a nght-handed h1tter who has little power IS obvtously the thmg
to do But thai oertam manag1ng the oppoSition IS more m
terested m tradition than wmnmg
CURT Okay here s the pttch a slider low and away for
stnke one Now a last baU up htgh called str1ke two Now
we II see a bad pttch w1th an !kind 2 count on the batter
TONY Yeah
CURT Here tt comes Oh oh a hangmg curve that Casey
swats at- and m1sses That s the game as Mudvtlle loses 4-2
HOWARD ThiS ts Ute worst game I have Witnessed smce
Kansas C1ty scored 13 runs w1th two out on Apr1l 21 I~ The
p1tchmg and base-runnmg were straight out of tittle League and

Long Bottom
Social Notes
V1s1ting Mr and Mrs Joe
BLSSell were Mr and Mrs Tom
Groenaveld and Mr and Mrs
M1ke B1ssell of Columbus Mr
and Mrs Ted Hayman and
lamtly of Westerville and
Mary Offutt Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs Howard
Lawrence and fam1ly and Ruth
YlSitlng
Thornton were
relattve:; at Gallipolts
Mr and Mrs Gene Smtih
and family of ChilliCOthe were
vtstting Mr and Mrs Harold
Newlun
Clara Friend of Mt Alto W
Va IS VIStUng Leona Hensley
Mr and Mrs Howard
Larkins and family of Portland
and Raymond Larkins were
VISlltng Mr and Mrs Fred
Larkins
Mr and Mrs David Smtih
were vtsibng Mr and Mrs
Carl Buckley of Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Atherton and fami ly are
vacat10mng in Florida
Mr and Mrs Jack Stalzer of
Columbus and Ed1th S1sson and
family of Pomeroy were dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Rank
Holter
VIS!ltng Mr and Mrs Btll
Thurston were Mr and Mrs
Don Sm1Ut of Adelphi Mr and
Mrs Joe Sm1th Laurelvtlle
and Mr and Mrs Claude Sm1th
of Tarelton
Mr and Mrs Larry Curtis
and family were v1s1tmg Mary
Pierce
Mr and Mrs Dav1d Sm1th
and daughter vtsited Mr and
m
Mrs
Tom
Drake
Reynoldsburg
VLSLtmg Mr and Mrs Garth
Sm1 th were Mr and Mrs
Milton Tuttle Pomeroy Route
3 Ed1th Osborn Keno V1rgte

Mora and Olhe Young
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Howard Young of Paden C1ty
W Va
-VloletSmltb

CINCINNATI - W1lham C
Campbell 50 year -&lt;&gt;ld Hun
tingtoman who sa member of
the West Vtrgm'" Hall of Fame
and a seven hme member of
the U S Walker Cup team
quahf1ed for a 13th time mto
the U S Open He was the only
amateur among the five to
advance to the prestigious
tournament at Oakmont
Country Club m Pittsburgh
next week
The 12 t me West V•rgtma
amateur champiOn fired a 71 70
durmg the 36-holes played m
hot hum1d weather Campbell
edged J1m 0 Hern of Goshen
Ky by a stroke
Walker Inman Jr head pro
at Columbus Scioto Country
Club tied lor thtrd w th hiS
asSistant pro Robert Ba ley
Both shot I!Js
Geoff Hensley a former
UmverSLty of Cmclnnati star
now at Zephyr Hills Fla had
the lowest round - 69 But he
had troubles on the back and
quahf1ed wtth a 144
Terry Sm th of Paden C1ty

NOTICE OF
APPOtNTMENT
C•se No 20 l2
E s a e of ERNEST DU FFY

Deceased
No ce s he eb-r g ven ha
Ka h een Francs and Jean
Duerr of Syra cuse Oh o ha ve
been du v appo n ed Ad
m r1 s a vede bon s non of the
Es ta e of
Ernes
Ou y
decea sed a e of Me gs Coun y

Oh o

Cred o s a e requ red to t e
he r c a m s w h 'HI d f due 4 v
w h n fo u mon hs
Oa ed h s 16 h day of Ma y
973

Webs e
Judge
Co u of Com man Pea s
P abate D v s on
29 ( 6 5 Jtc
Mann ng 0

5

n

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
Pub c not ce s hereby g ven
ha a o n app cat on has been
ed w h he Pub c Ut
es
Comm ss on of Oh o o t anste

Ce f c a es of Pub c Con
en ence
and
Necess ty
Number
0915
and 10907
f om
dee
T anspo a an
Company
Transferor
he
p esen ho de he eot to Me gs
Transpo at on Com peny
T ansfe ee
he T ansfe ee
ag ees to adop a
ar ffs and
schedu es now on f e w h he
sa d Com m ss on
n e es ed
pa
es may ob te n fu he
nfo ma on as to sad Ap
p ca on by add ess ng
he
Pub c U tI es Comm ss on o
Oh o Co umbus Oh o
dea T an spo a on
Company
62 3 Wes ManS ee
Zanesv e Oh o 43 0
Me gs T an spor t a on

Company
RD

Chesh re Oh o
5296523c

THE CHAMPIONS - Fruth Phannacy outlasted a rugged Quaker State
team m the champ onsh p of the Annual Poml Pleasant Area Jaycees Slo
Pitch Softball tournament held over the weekend Quaker State mpped the
Fruth team by a score ol6-4 m the f rst game of the champwnsh1p round and
then Fruth s turned t aroWld for a 6-1 w n over the 0 lers to wtn the double
ellmmatlon afla r Buck King was tourney chatrman and all proceeds of the
Jaycee Tourney wtll go to Mental Health Front row from left team

mascots John Cundiff Joe Bob Hemsley Jeff Grueser I ynn Arthur and
Karen Hemsley and John Fruth representmg the sponsor Second row
Raymte Cu ndiff Tom Grueser Gregg G1bbs Bob Whaley Danny R1zer Ron
Qu lien R ck Ash Benn} Arthur Back row Gary Clark Don Swtsher Rusty
Wood Steve Halstead Randy Clark Ray Van Matre Bob Burdette Ed
Baer Sam VanMatre and J mmy Joe Hemsley manager-player

•

•

Reds make it two In row, 5-0
CINCINNATI - Clutch
h tt ng Dave Concepc on got
the Reds f rst h t of the game a
l ne s ngle to center scar ng Joe
Morgan and gn ted Cmc nnat
to a fo ur run outburst aga nst
John Matlack and on to a 5 0
w n Monday mght before 25 264
fans at R verfront Stad un
R ghthand e r
Jack
G II ngham lim ted the Mets to
three h ts n p tch ng h s third
shut out of the season and
upp ng h s record to 8-2 but t
wasn t unt l after the s xth that
t became easy
R ghthander
Ja c k
B11l ngham) mtted the Mets to
three h1 ts m p tch ng h s th1rd
shut out of the season and
uppmg h s record to 8-2 but t

wasn I until after Ue Sixth that
t became easy
The game was scoreless
enter ng the Sixth w1th Matlack
work ng on a no-h Iter but the
Mets youn g lefthander s
w ldness helped do h m n
Morgan drew a one out walk to
slart the upr s ng stole :second
and a£ter Johnny Bench fley,
out to deep left Matlack
walked Perez ntenhona lly h s
e ghth walk of the game
However Concepc on spo led
the strategy by slapp ng a 3-2
p tch on a low I ne JUSt out of
the reach of Met second
baseman Fehx M ll an tha t
scored Morgan w th the f rst
run of the game g v ng Con
cepe on 28 RBI s on the year

Bobby Tolan broke a 0 lor 15
slump by following wtth
another smgle to center that
scored Perez Tolan promptly
stole second and moved to th rd
when Matlack uncorked a w1ld
pitch that allowed ConcepciOn
to come across w1th third rWl
of the mn ng
Weak I tt ng Denms Menke
kept the act gomg w th a double
up the r~ ght-cente r f1eld alley
that plated Tolan Matlack
pr oceeded to walk Btl!
Plummer ntent10nally to get to
B II ngham but the Reds
pitcher worked h s way on w1th
anotl er walk that f n shed
Matlack
Reliever Ph1l Henn ngan got
Pete Rose to fly out to end the

mmng as Cmc nnat sent 10
men to t1 e pia te w th Rose also
makmg the first out by wh1f
fmg
The Reds added an msurance
run n the seventh as Morgan
and Concepc on teamed up
aga n w th the help of a two
base Met error Morgan
walked to open the mn ng and
scored when Con epc10n laced
a two-&lt;&gt;ut s ngle to nght fteld
that got past Rusty Staub
allow ng Morgan to score
8 ll ngha n was never n
sertuus trouble n p tchmg the
Reds to the r th rd stra ght win
wtthout a loss against the New
Yorkers after gett ng out of
m ld Jams m the f rst and
fourth nn ngs
Wayne Garrett walked to

ope n the game and stole
second but advanc ng tQ th rd
on Mtlhan s ground out was
s randed as John M1lner
bounced mto a double play
alter Staub walked
The Mets had runners on
f rst and second wtth one down
n the fourth but Bllhngham
got J1m Gosger to ground mto a
force play and Duffy Dyer to
tab back to the p1tcher
The loss was especially
pu nful lor the Mets as the
a lrea dy nJury r ddled New
York club suffered another
blow when shortstop Bud
Harre lson hurt his left hand
wh le bemg taken out of a
double play n the ltlth nn ng
by C ncmnat s Plumn er
Harrelson who has been the

Mets hottest h1tter recently
and always a stick fielder was
taken to Chr1st Hospital lor x
rays w th t not known how long
he ll be out of act on
W1Ut the wm C ncmnat1 kept
pace w1th National League
Wes t 0 VISIOn leading San
Francisco and third place
Houston lhe G1ants slammed
Pittsburgh 7 2 to leave them
sbll f1ve full games ahead of
the Reds while Houston rode
the six h1t p1tchmg of Dave
Roberts to a 7..0 wm over
Philadelphia
The Reds conclude their
brtef two ga me homes tand
agamst New York ton ght
sendmg Ross Grtmsley to the
hill while the Meta will counter
w1th lefty Jerry Koosman

who "'on the local qualifier at
Guyan Golf and Country Club
on May 21 will compete tn the
P ttsburgh sectiona l today
Ke1th Marks formerly of
Clendenm qualtf ed locally
and Will try to make 11 to the
b g tournament at Atlanta
today
Elsewhere veteran pros
Sam Snead and Fred Marl! and
Dean Refram a former
member of the PGA tour were
among sectional qual f1ers
Snead and Marh shot three
under par 71).69 - 139s over 36
holes at the 6 700 yard
Charlotte N C Country Club
course to lead 39 qualifiers
Tra1hng by one stroke were
fellow tounng pros Hale Irwtn
and Charhe S !ford Frank
Beard Hubert Green Tom
Shaw and G bby Gilbert had
141 totals
A f eld of 85 completed lor
available spots from Charlotte
the largest of 13 sectwnal
tournaments Monday an d
today Most had played n the
Kemper Open whiCh ended
Sunday
Among tJ e name players
who failed to qualify were
Doug Sanders Ken Venturi
Labrun Hams Steve Melnyk
Bert Greene and Bob Lunn
Refram and amateur John
Ph1lhps of Sprmgfleld Ill led
se ven Ch1 cago quahflers w1th
Identical 71 71
142 scores
B11I Ogden of Glenview lll
had a H8 two shots short of
quahfying after havmg go tten
nto the U S Open 14 htnes m
the last 18 yea rs
Portsmouth Country Club
pro Jack F rust and Portsmouth
amateur Clyde lluflrr an the
other local quahf1ers t ere
failed to make the cutoff of
Clovernook
Gene Torres Dow F n
sterwald and Ed Bynum were
the three qual flers m the
Denver sect onal

Torres Top Scorer
Torres led the scorers wltb.: a
71Hi9 - 139 at Cherry Hills
Country Club tour veteran
Ftnsrerwald shot a two und~r
par71Hi5 - t4landByman the
only amateur qualifymg had
to go l ve holes of sudden-&lt;ieath
to cl ncb hiS berth afrer tym g
lor th1rd w1th two other players
at 143
Veteran tour ng pro John
Schlee of Dallas was the only
player to break par Monday 111
Texas sectional play shootms
a one under par 141 to head tile
hst of SIX quahf ers
Schlee the current Hawa tan
Open champ on beat runners
up Kurt Cox of San Antomo and
Ron Weber oFHouston b~ seven
shots

•

Btll had

an Accrdent 1
doesn on y happen o
the o he fe ow
ac
c dent s happen to us al
Tha s why we suggest a
Heal h Ace dent Po cy
f om he Down ng Ch ds
Ag~:... c y
Ia el eve lhe
m ed ca l &amp; hasp a costs

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
220 N 2nd

MIDDLEPORT

Texas eyes southpaw prep hurler

CURT I ve JUSt been banded a note Both managers have
been replaced The new manager for the VISitors 1s Ella Fitz
ge rald makmg her the ftrst black ani Ute first woman manager
m the maJors And for Mudvtlle the new manager IS oh my
gosh
HOWARD Who '
CURT Dandy Don Meredith

NEW YORK UP! )-Left
Cl]d e who has a lready
ba nd e r David Clyde from thrown n ne no-l'utters this
Spr ng Branch Tex who most season for Houston s West
scouts agree can step n and chester H gh School and has
p tch n the maJor leagues r ght
on 44 of hiS last 45 games has
now s expected to be the No 1 been sco uted heavil y b} the
select on by the Texas Rangers Rangers who draft first by
Tuesday n baseb II s annual vtrtue of f n sh ng last m the
swn mer free age nt draft
Amer can League last season

Television Log

Just last week Rangers
prestdent Bob Short along With
general manager Joe Burke
and manager Wh1tey Herzog
watched the 18-yea r old last
baller hurl his nmth no-1t1tter of
the year n the Texas schoolboy
playoffs
He s a pretty good p tcher

understated Herzog It was
the f~rst tune f d eve• seen him
but I kn ew what to expect
Every scout m th e CO W1try has
told me about h m
The Rangers Y~ oc ful1 y wea k
n p tch ng a ga m th s year w II
undoubtedly move Clyde r ght
up to th e maJor league level

Foreman to defend title Sept. I

Tuesday Junes 1973

News 3 4 8 10 3 15 Truth or Con seq 6 Sesame St 20
A ound the Bend 33
6 30
News3 4 6 8 0 5 IDreamofJeanne13 Lias Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 00
What s My L ne 8 I ve Got A Secret 3 Elec Co 20
Bea the C ock .4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 Lee
Trev nos Golf 5 L v ng 33 Truth or Conseq 3
7 30 To Tell The T uth 6 Pr ce s R ght 8 10 Beat The Cock
3 Th sIs You L feJ C reus 4 Charles Bla s Better World
5 Chan ese Wa y 33 RFO 20
8 00
Mov e K II A Dragon 3 4 15 Peanuts 8 10 B lly
G aham Spec al 3 6 Amer can Odyssey 20 33
8 30
Hawa F ve 0 8 Kopycats 10 Movie That Certa n
Summe
6 3
nternat onal Pe formance 20 33
9 00 9 30 - V g nan 8 P at F ms 10
0 00 Ma cus Welby MD 6 3 News 20 F rst Tuesday 3 4
5 Cancer L fe or Death 33
11 00
News 3 4 8 13 15
1 30 - Johnny Carson J 4 15 Jack Paar Ton te 6 13 Moves
The Two Faces of Dr Jeky
B Operat on Atlant s
0
00
Perry Mason 4 News IJ
2 00
Your Hea th 4
2 30
News 4
6 00

SAN
FRANCISCO
Heavy ve ght
c hamp on
George Fm ernan w 11 return to
the gyrr tl s "cek to beg n
shak ng 1c se for h s f rst
lttle defense h ;. manager sa d
Monday
The fight appa ently " II be
Sept 1 n fokyo aga nst Puerto

WEDNESDAY JUNE6 1973
Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 0
Fa mt me 10 Eng Ish 3
Farm Reporf 3
Paul Harvey 3
Co umbus Today 4 8 ble Answers B Urban League 10
The Sto y 3
7 00
Toda y 3 4 5 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Jeffs Col e 13
7 30
Rompe Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bul w nkle 13 Popeye 10
a 00 Capt Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
a JO Jack La La nne 3 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
8 55 - News J
9 00
Pau D xo n 4 Phi Donahue 5 What Every Woman
Wan s to Know 3 Concent at on 6 Mer v Gr ff n a Fr endl y
Junct on 0 Ben Casey J
9 30 E ec Co 33 ToTe the Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Ho lywood
Ta lk ng 0
0 00
0 nah Shore 3 15 Co umbus S x Ca I ng 6 Jok~r s W d
a 0 D ck Van Dyke 3
0 30 Baf e 3 .4 5 SlO 000 Pyram d 8 0 Spl t Second 3
00 Sa le of he Cent u y 3 15 Love Amer can Style 6 Gamb t
8 0 Password 3
30 Hal ywood Squa es 4 5 Love of l fe 8 10 Bew tched 6
3 Sesame S 20
55 CBS News 8 Dan Ime s Wor ld 0
00
Jeopa dy 3 15 Password 6 Bob B aun s 50 50 C ub 4
News 3 Contact 8 News 10
~ JO
SptSecond6 SeachforTomorow8103Ws3 S
'J 55
NBC News 3 5
00 News Wea her Spa s J A M y (h ldren 6 13 Its Your
Be B Chan Ese Way 33 No Fa Women On y 15 Green
A c es 0
?0
Fash ons n Sew ng J
30
3 On A Match 3 4 5 As th£ Ward Turns 8 10 Bow ng
6 Newlywed Game :J M ke Douglas 6 Gu d ng L ght 8 10
n e na ana Pe fa mance 33
7 JO
DatngGame 3 Docto sJ 4 5 EdgeofNght8 0
3 00
Another Wo d 3 15 General Hosp ta 6 3 P ce Is
R ght8 0 Tommy Johnson &amp; Son 33 RFD 20
3 30
Retu no Pey ton Pace J 4 15 One L fe to L 11e 6 J
S('c e Sto m 0 Th s Week 10 Ho lywood Ta k ng 8 Ph I
Donahue -l T me Fo T mothy 33
J 00
M Ca toon 3 Some set 5 Sesame St 10 33 Love
Ame can Stye 3 Me v G ff n J Huck ebe r y Hound &amp;
Yog Sea 6 Secret Sto m 8 Mov e A Dog of F ande s 0
30
PC't coat Junc1 on 3 W d W d We~t 13 F Troop 6
1\bbo t&amp; Co~ te o8 My L t eMa g e 5 Merv Gr fl n 4
Oo
M Roge s 33 Bonanza 3 4 Haze 8 Andy Gr If n IS
u
he Br de s 6
10
E" e Co J Gon C' Pyle IJ Beve l y HI b II es 8
gt'podge l odqc ?0 Dcrtth Va l ey DC\ys s
EM N gh ngA ie ~

Campbell leads qualifiers

R co s J oe King Roman
ranked by the World Boxmg
Coun c I as the No
I
heav}we gh t contender
We were hop ng for a f ght
n July but l noth ng
n ater al zes soon the Tokyo
[ ght will be the f rst defense
said D ck Sadler Foreman s
manager and tr a ner
fhe WBC la st weekend
auth or zed the Foreman
Roman t tle match and
Japanese f ght promoter
Muneo M zog uch ann ounced
Monday that t would be on a
program nclud ng another

gh

6 00
6 15
6 ?0
6 ?5
6 30

\

h ••

Joy e A oa .... s
Adm x of he es a e
o E me Dav s
deceased
B 0 B en a o nev
o P an t

r ng on
ec

o

5

a

5

n

SAYRE
HARDWARE
88'2 2525
New li a en W Va

•

We d dn t set an y m n mwn
on money We were offered $1
m1Ihon by Mad son Sque~re
Garden to f ght Jerry Quarry
$1 m II on to f ght Jimmy Ell s
n M am and half a m II on to
f ght n England
It wtll have to be
someY..here m there
The 24 yea r -old Foreman
won the t ti e Jan 22 by
knocking out Joe Frazer m two
rounds at Kmgston Jamaica
He has a 38-0 profess onal
record Wlth 35 knockouts
Foreman and Sadler both
I ve n nearby Hayward and
Foreman w II do most of h s
tra mng n an Oakland gym
Hts only f1ghtmg smce Jan 22
has been m exh b t10n matches

~:i~fE STANDINGS

ow ng
The ea es compass
was used n C/1 na mo e
lhan 1700 years ag o
was
a
e s ee man s and ng
on a evolv ng ba se made
of magne c scales so
const uc ed t ha
he man
always po n ed south
was used as a t gurehead
and gu de on the ca age
of the Ch nese emp~ro n
he yea 235 A D
G s
0 he Kada va Kanb
Ba ada lnd a have
eason o en vy a of he
s s er s n he v ho e w de
wo d
Th ey ha ve
he
poo es cha nce of f nd ng a
husband The e s on Y one
day n wh ch hey may
m e~ y and ha uc ky day
comes ONLY once every
twe ve year s S nee a len
yea r 0 d g 1 s cons de ed
an 0 d mad he s atus s
dep 0 abe ndeed
You luckyday s heday
you nsta a "'a er ef n ng
app l an ee from Sayre
Hdwe
Our
exclus ve
patented p oce ss and
ef n ng sys em hand es
unp ea sant as es odors
a nd s a n form ng m
pu
es w h ease See us at
Say e Hdwe to the
cost p ac ca way of
et n ng you ap water

IItle fight
R cardo Arredondo of
Mex co WBC JUn or lt gh t
we1ght champwn s scheduled
to meet Mor to Kash waba of
Japan n the other bout at
Tokyo s 15 ooo-seat Budokan
Mart1al Arts Hall
A Japanese televisiOn net
work has put up $2 m II on for
the f ghts and w II telev se the
heavyweight bout v a satell te
thr oughout the world The
telcast IS scheduled to start at
II p m EDT
Sadler satd the amount of
money Foreman Will rece ve
hi:!s yet to be determmed
We II have to go ove r th ere
to s gn the hnal agreement
he sa d We re wa1tmg to hear
from them now

M waukee
22 26 458 4
Nat onal League
C eve land
20 30 400 7
East
West
l Pet GB
Ch cago
27
8 600
Ch cago
3
20 608
Kansas C y 30 24 556 1 2
Pl sbugh
23 22 51 5
26 21 553 2
Man eal
2
23 477 6 1 M nneso ta
Ca l fa n a
25 22 532 3
New York
22 2l 466 7
Oak and
26 25 5 0 4
Sl lou s
22 25 668 7
16 30 348 1 2
Ph ade ph a 9 3
380 I ~ Texas
Results
West
Boston 9 Kansas C ty 3
San Fran
36 20 643
M lwaukee at Oak and
Los Ange es 31 2 596 3
0 her c ubs no schedu ed
C nc nnal
29 23 558 5
Tuesdays Games
Houston
30 25 545 5
M nnesota (Woodson 4 3) a
At an a
8 J2 ~0 15
San D ego
9 34 358 5 z C eve and Bosman 2 6) 6 p m
Ch cago (Wood 3 4) a
Results
Ba
more Cuel a 2 6) 7 30
San Franc sco 7 P ttsburgh 2
pm
C nc nnat 5 New Yo k 0
Kansas C y ( D ago 5 4) at
Houston 7 Ph lade ph a 0
Boston Patt n 4 7 7 30 p m
0 her c ubs no schedu ed
New Yo k Stott lemyre 7 5)
Tuesdays Games
Los Ange es (Osteen 5
at a Tex.as Sebert 3 3) 8 30
Ch cago (Jenkins 6 J
2 30 pm
M waukee ( Sho
2 ) at
pm
At anta (Gent y 3 2 a Oak and Ham lton 0 1
Montrea (Stoneman 2 8 05 pm
De o t
Per y 6 3 l at
pm
New York ( Koosman 54 at Cal forn a (Hand
C nc nnat (G ms ey 5 .4) 8 05
lnternat onal League
pm
Amencan
San F anc sco (Bryant 8 3)
l Pel GB
at P ttsbu g
B es 3 4 a 05
Rochester
29 19 604
pm
22 23 489 5 h
Ph lade ph a (Twltehel J 21 Syracuse
20 22 476 6
a Houston W son 4 5) 8 30 Paw tucke
19 30 388 10 '
To edo
pm
Nat onal
San D ego G e f 4 5 at St
Char eston
3
18 633
Lou s Foste 3 3) 9 p m
T dewa e
2a 2
57
J
Pen nsu a
25 23 52
5
Amer can League
R chmond
15 33 J1J 5 '
East
Tue sday s Games
W L Pel GB
To edo a Pen nsu a
De o I
27 22
55
Pawlucke at Charleston
New York
26 24 520
;I
Roches er a T dewa e
Ba f more
22 22 500 2 '
Sy acuse a R chmond
Boson
22 25 468 4

w

GET SET
FOR SUMMER

GET YOUR
PARTS AND
SUPPLIES HERE
P ug s Conden sers
E&gt;lhausl Sy s em s etc We
kn own b ands ow pr ce s

MEIGS
AUTO PARTS
3 W Second

992 1711

th us makmg h1m the--th rd
co nsecut ve No 1 ptck In the
summer dnft to by-puss the
rr nors Two yea rs ago the
Rat gers (t hen the Wash ngton
Senators) selected pitcher Pete
Broberg from Dartmouth and
he has been wtth them ever
smce while last summer the
San D1ego Padres p1cked th rd
baseman Dave Roberts fi ~m
th e Umversily of Oregon who
also stepped r1ght mto the
maJors as i:i regular
!'he Phlladelphta Phlll es by
vtrtuc of their last place f n sh
n the Natmni:Jl League will
draft second and they wtll have
a host of sluggers to choose
from nclud ng Umverstty of
Colorado catcher John Stearns
Southern Cal forma outfielder
Fred Lynn Ohio U catcher
Steve SwiSher and Tulsa U
ftrst baseman Jerry Tabb
In additiOn to Clyde the top
rated p tchers this surruner
mclude a pa1r of southpaws
Eddie Bane of Arizona State
and M1ke Flanagan of
Ma ssac hu se tt s and
n ghthander Dave Wtnfleld th e
ace of ex Btg Leaguer DICk
Swhert s Big 1 en champwn
Mmnesota team
The draft wh ch w1ll begm at
10 a m EDT has normally
been cons dered a futures
market but four players from
last June s selectiOns and six
fr om th e 1971 crop ate
currently on maJOr league
rosters
Bes1des
Broberg
and
Roberts Bert Hooton of the
Cit cago Cubs M1ke Schmtdt of
the Ph II es and Steve Busby of
Kansas City are JUSt some of
the qu1ck graduates Both
Hooton and Busby have also
p tched no h1tters n the
maJors

Bet ween 850 and I 000
players are expected to be
selected m the two day long
proceedings
Among high school hotshots
expected to go h1gh are of
Pa1ntsv lie Ky and Pat
Rockett of San Antomo Tex
thtrd baseman Joe Edellen of
Gracemont Okla and f rst
baseman Glen Tufts of
Brtdgcwater Mass
SAl ~::S PLANNED
I ETART FA! LS - The
Ltttle and Pee Wee Leagues of
l..etart Falls Will hold a com
muntty bake sale and rum
mage sale Fr day and
Saturday from 9 a m to 4 p m
at the commumty hall to ratse
funds lor th e season s play

Thes Week s Special

1971
MAVERICK
4DOOR
Sx
cy l nde
w th
automa c trans Rea buy

at

'1795

your mar

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You

Like Ou Qual

Way of Dong Bus ness

tr,

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342

Open

Even

Pomeroy

ngs

T 18 00

TtSPMSal

Fast Service?
We take your order
promptly
and
cook food to your
taste Jom us for great
eatmg modest pnces

~f&amp;J

0

car wh le r d ng
0 sco,er "'mer ca ~:~~ ~~ s Po y Mark IV s
on cooper s Poly t stop and go
goal s to excel n c y
The modern
dr v ng and on the treewa; perm ts the t re
tread to shoulder c~~or~spond mmed atety
d Po y Mark IV s
t o ct ng to the road
comman s
d
to your dr v ng
d " t rm to the roa
dges hOI you
tread r b e
ut to •s LOW •s
wh le reach ng o
grab more pa,ement
E78 14

$23S6

Like Quality,

w

~~·v

Drop In Soon

Adolph's Dairy Valley
At the Pomeroy Mason Br~dge

Real tract on act on

TJI,: ""
Plu s 2 'Zl f E T

~

cooper

WHITEWALLS
AVAILABLE

, TIRES
' ------·---

----

Moore's American
Home &amp; Auto Supply
124 W MAIN ST PH 992 2848 POMEROY 0
Monday Thurs 8 30 to 5Salurday 8 30 to 5 30

Fnday 8 30to 8-

I

�2- TIM! Datly Sent one! h tddleport Poo~-roy 0 June 5 l97J

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

-==Ge~eration ~ R;~,m: Must Find That Ninth Trick
u,

'l&gt;

HC'ltn n11l ";ut' Bouel

~

Fatherless Klds Put Down
Helen and Sue
It s so wrong and unfair it hurts
My mother has been a Widow for II years Sbf IS raLSmg her
thrf&lt; t&lt;fnagf children to Ole best of her ab1lity which IS pretty
darn good Sure we get mto tro uble now and then who doesn t "
But 1f any of us IS out of line right away Ole goss1pers start
'Wltll What a shame weU you know - no father and all
BALONEY
Yet when kids wath fathers get nto scnous trouble tl s
usua lly hush-hushed It seems as 1f people are JUS! " a ting for us
fatherless teens to prove we re no good
Another th ng Mom gets pushed around because she bas no
man to protect her Stores take advantage of her It shard to get
cred t The one tJmP my lrother got p1cked up by the pohce they
.acted as if bemg man less was some kind of dJ.Sease that dooms
)our children
And mamed women look upon wtdows as no good Well let
mf 1ft you m on somethmg My Mom works from 7 a m until 6
p n comes home and cooks dmner Afterwards the whole
fam ily ch1po; m and helps With the housework She nfver goes out
unless to run us k•ds somewhere or do an errand or sometimes
VISit a fr end (very seldom )
You d be surpnsed how close we are and how much love and
carmg a fatherless famaly has
Please prmt this for all one-parent farrulies Maybe a lew
people reading 1t won t be so qutck to JUdge - WIDOW S
DAUGHTER AND PROUD OF IT
WDPI
Our society has a tendency to feel sorry for those who don t
quite fllits standards And gossips have a mean way of turmng
J)lty mto conten pt or suspiclDn
- Though broken homes are almost normal these days
they re sttll used as reasons why kids get in trouble even 11 Ute
trouble s mmor You relabeled faUterless therefore people
ex pect the worst So you different ones must prove yourselves
doubly first by showmg that a no-man family doesn t have b1g
problems and second by bemg constderably better than
average
And forget the goss ps They aren t as everywhere as yo u
Ut nk
SUE

+++
,Dear Daughter
Yes fatherless homes have spectal problems and widowed
mothers don t fmd life easy m a soc1ety that still constders lone
women nadequate dlSCiplmarians managers providers and
also poor credit riSks
But - you ve got lots of company And heres a btg plus If
you prove your worth you II be doubly noticed as the word lv1ll
soon be Look how well they ve done m spite of
Rap
Whenever our group gets together wtth the children one
pverbearmg parent always corrects our kids for spearmg food
'1\lth a fork She says they should hft mstead (as HER little
wgels do)
Is UtiS really correct ' At a ptcn c ts 11 nece~ry ' And when
she gets gomg on her fork what should we say to her '
W H
WH
Tell her to sttck 1t m her ear -SUE

+++
NO'fE FROM HELEN B1te your typewriter Sue J

+++

Dear W

v Your friend s etiquette advice s mcorrect UMece$Sary and
uncalled for Pass her the bo led pearl ontons and deviled eggs
and maybe she II eat her words
HELEN

Kingsbury News, Notes
Mtsswnary Rev and Mrs
W II am Genheuner spent the
weekend w th Mrs Neva King
Mr and Mrs Harold White and
Mr and Mrs Vtrgil King
other VISitors were Mr and
Mrs Y ctor Genheuner Ball
Run Rev Jay St les Albany
Mr and Mrs Ralph Chase and
Helena Conner of Columbus
Mr and Mrs Stanley Beal of
Cleveland spept a weeks
vacat on here and attended the
alun n banquet at Harr son
vtlle
Sundar dutner guests of Mr
and Mrs Vugil King and
tam I) " ere Mr and Mrs
Weber Wood Rev and Mrs
Wilham Genh e mer of Afnca
Mrs Neva K ng and Mrs
Grace White
Rece nl SLtors of Mrs Hazel
Arnold • ere Mr and Mrs
Alpha Russell of H)sell Run
Mr and Mrs Ronald McNally
and da ughter of Athens Mr
and Mrs Lester Arn old and '
Bill of Columbus
Mr and Mrs John Dean
enterta ned Sunda) on the 25th
Y~eddin g annl\ersary of Mr
: and Mrs Kenneth Mark ns
- D nner us enJO} ed bv Mr and
- Mrs Robert R1ed Rodney and
- Dav1d Mr and Mrs Walter
Terr ell and B llv all of
Pataskala Mr and Mrs B II
..SpaWl of Pon ero~ Mr and
::Mrs John Walter Dean local
:AMN R chard Dean K I
:,sawy er AFB Mtch Afternoon
••'Vls tors were Mr and Mrs
...Paul Payn er of Carpenter A
•bea uttful a nn versary cake
--nas served to the honored
•!lllest follo•mg dinner bl Mrs
~ ed and Mrs Dean Mrs
:Markms daughters
: Mr and Mrs Leo K ng
~ealtha Will and Florence
•.Atkinson Mrs Delores K ng
jrnd Geneva Mrs Grace Wh te
n Mt Vernon for
~e re
~raduat on exerc scs at Mt
-vernon Nazarene College
~Mar) Lou K ng "as one of the
1lraduates She \\Ill be gomg to
-Kankakee DI to cont nue her
.:College educatiOn at the
)lazarene College there
; Rev W II am Genhe1mer a
'imss10nary from Mnca was
.guest speaker at the Carleton
X::hurch followmg Sundav
:;&lt;boO! and Sunday cvemn~
~

-

showed sltdes of his work m the
m ss on ltelds In Afrtca The
Rev and Mrs Genheuner are
on furlough here lor a few
months
AMN R1chard Dean of K I
Sawyer AFB M1Ch spent
Memor~al Day weekend w1th
hiS parents Mr and Mrs John
Dean and h1s brother Mr and
Mrs John Walter Dean Other
VIS tors were Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Markms Racme Mr
and Mrs Hobart Smalley Jr
Judy Kay Susan Dale and
Hob e of W1erton W Va Mr
and Mrs Garold Gilkey Cindy
Tan my and Rick of Athens
and Mr and Mrs Paul Paynter
of Carpenter
Rev and Mrs Blame Farley
of M1ch1gan VISited Frtday and
Saturday w1th Mr and Mrs
Roy Br ckles
Mr and Mrs Roger Young
and son Wesley spent Sunday
w th Mr and Mrs Maartm
Swart and daughter Roma at
Columbus

li\U

~UHIII

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•
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Pa

lh Os\\ald &amp;

t tla td ll t t:\1~ 1
1.1 dt i.Js }t ~ s l covered wrlh
t1 ~ t' gl t a nd y, a a llu wt.-"d t ,
Joldti &lt; I ICk
A cl b was led back and
So th wa:s be~ c k on lead w lh
I s n nil 1 tck r ght n s ght
p1ov ded Wes t he ld both th &lt;
q ee n at d Jack of SJ ad es
South led the 10 of spades
w th t&gt;Ve y ntent on of let
1 ng. t dt! b t w~s t cove red
" th !he q een
Sout h wun n d n my a nd
cas hed the rest of the dt a
1 o ds 'r\ es t had to th1 ow a
I ea t on lhe las t d a und
whe eupon South thr t: W htm
n" th the last hea t to force
II esl to lead a spade and
g ve So th that n nth lr ck

&amp; THIN6S

P ass

S uti

•

3 NT

.K
Pas."

Jacob\
So th tad no 1 o uble count
ng p e g h t lr c ks They
ve e ght there for the tak
g The n n h m ght be
a o nd so mewhe e but ttiere
was no appa ent place tha t t
CIJ d come from
or co se there m ght be
a do bleton queen Jack of
spades b t So th d dn t be
1 e e n n racles
He d e ked the ftrst 1wo
hea ts as a matte or general
p act ce A th d heart was
ted and East splatte ed on
the 10 of cl bs
All of a s t dden South had
some hope He won that th d
I e a r t led a d amond to
Jam~s

N£WSPAPU (NTUPR: SE ASSN

o:a;w l!tiMU !l
Tl
\Vest

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Pa

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Pas
Pass
4 ...
PH ss
.ft
Pass
Yo u So u h hold
•AQ 9fio • sz +K4 ... AQI K
What do you d o now
A-Pa 11 V u nay lN.! m s ·~
a sla
I ut the Jdds are thai
he 1 I w II lcpend
n a

Apple Grove
News, Events

Mr and Mrs Y rg1l Norr s of
Hebron spent Memor al
weekend With Mr and Mrs
Ross Norris and attended the
Memorial dmner at the Letart
Falls Commumty Hall Sunday
wtth Mr and Mrs Ross Norrts
Mrs Margie Weaver and
SuSie Mrs Opal Zerkle and
daughter all of Syracuse
Mrs Vera Craig of Athens
Ala spent Sunday throught
Thursday With her parents
Mr and Mrs Floyd NorriS
Others v srtmg Mr and Mrs
NorriS were Mr and Mrs
Woodrow Brown of Fort
Pierce Fla Mr and Mrs
Hoyt Ferguson of Camp
Conley Mr and Mrs Herschel
Norris and Clarence and Mr
and Mrs Harold Hayman of
Westerville
Mr and Mr• Wayne Camp
bell and children of Charleston
Don Johnson of Rhode Island
New York vtslted Mr and Mrs
Jess Anderson and Mrs Zelpha
Boggess and Wayne Sunday
The Almanac
Mr and Mrs Floyd Norm
By Un1ted Press International
Mrs Vera Cra g VISited Mr
Today s Tuesday June 5 the
and
Mrs Darrell Norns and
S6 h day of 973 w lh 209 to
fo low
Mrs Freda Evans and Mrs
The moon s app oach ng ts
Phyllis 0 Brten Monday
t s qua te
Mr and Mrs Herbert
The mo n 119 stars are Mars
and Jup ter
Shtelds Mr and Mrs R ck
The even ng stars a e ~r
Sargent
of
Columbus
cu y Venus and Saturn
Those born on t h s date are Raymond Robmson of Norfolk
unde th e s gn ef Gem n
Va Mr and Mrs Howard
Madame Ch eng Ka shek
w e of the eader of Nal onal st Rob nson of Flatwoods W Ya
Ch na was born June 5 897
were dmner guests Sunday of
Mrs Jack Sargent at Racme
Mr
Ted F1sher and
The Daily Sent111el
daughter Jan of Eureka
spent Sunday afternoon With
Mrs Ferne B Hayman
MISs M1lhe R•pie) of
Charleston spent Memor al
\lieekend With her aunt Mrs
Magg1e Roush
On th s day n h story
n 19 7 more than 9 5 m on
Amer cans between the ages of
21 and 3 reg slered n the
Wor d War I draft
In 1933 Pres dent Fr.ankl n D
Rooseve t s gned a b II abo sh
ng he go d standa d
In 1966 Amer can astrona ut
Gene Cernan ef Gem n 9 fo
a wo hou
0 m nute space

wa k

In 968 Sen Robe t Kennedy
was fatal y shot n Los Angeles
by a 24 yea o d Arab nat onal
I e
den f ed
as
S rhan
S an The assa ss n em a ns r1
p son vnde fe sen ence

When a mce young n an named Johnny Bench contrmtted
baseball s ultunate gaucherte Ute other everung - str1kmg out
"lth the bases loaded on throo pitches It reminded me ol an
en barrassmg fact
The~ 'Casey at the Bat IS a bad poem descr1bmg 011e
uf the "orst-played baseball games of all time
To prove the pomt let s set 11 up as purt of the new Monday
rught TV game wtth ktndly old Howard Cosell as guest com
menta tor (as he w1ll hem a wrek or so ) along w1lh Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek
CURT ThiS really IS Sub-par baseball Mudville ts down H
m Ute bottom of the nmth and botli Cooney and Burrows have
gotten base hits but were thrown out trymg to stretch Slllgles
mto doubles So there are two out mstead of two on and nynn
due up
TONY Yeah
HOWARD Tell!! like 11 ts This kid Cooney pmch-httting tn
Ute mne spot IS dumb and reddess He sl!ould be d1Sp8tched to
the Flonda Instructional League But Burrows has been leadoff
man on this club for 1878 games m parts of 14 seasons He sl!ould
qu t
CURT Flynn ts no great hitter
HOWARD No agamst Slde-armmg left-banders h1s carrer
battmg averagetsonly 196 They should use a pmch-h1tter
TONY Yeah
CURT But there sa little looper back over second Its a hit
HOWARD Mudvtlle gets no credit for that The opposition
second baseman was drawn way m and to hiS nght Very bad
)XlStbon
TONY Yeah
CURT Now here s Blakely He s m a temble slump - 0 for

I UDA Y S Q UES TION
s ee~d of b dd g r e lubs
y ou
pa nt' b ds fou ht&gt;a
26
ov• yo
fou c u bs Wha dn
HOWARD ThiS sets up a sttuation I saw when Jun
y ou o no"'
was p1tchmg for the old Boston Braves back m 1945 and

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs Ed Hensley and
Mrs Mary Colher of Flat
woods Ky spent a day here
w1th the1r father Jerry
Culwell and brother and
stster m law Mr and Mrs
W1lham Culwell
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey
VIS ted w1th the1r grand
children Mr and Mrs Larry
Clark wtd daughters and at
tended the annual barbecue
sponsored by the Chester F1re
Department on Memortal Day
They called on the r son m law
and daughter Mr and Mrs
Roy W seman Harnsonvllle
enroute home
Those VISiting w th Paul and
Wilham C Peck were Mrs
Harley Townsend and Susie
Colwnbus and EmZLe Davts of
Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs Ralph Frazter
of Galltpolts VISited her

BY PAUL CRABTREE

mother Goldie G llogly and
they were dmner guests of Mr
and Mrs Paul Gaston
Murl Calaway accompamed
members of the Knox Town
shtp ExtensiOn group to
Wtlhamstown W Va where
they toured the Fenton Glass
Works and enjoyed dmner at a
Mar etta Hotel
Mr and Mrs Charles
McKn ght
and
family
Pataskala and Mrs Elba
McKmght Sharon and ChfiS
Columbus v s1ted w th Mr and
Mrs D 0 McKn ght
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
called on the Warren Reeves
family on Sunday forenoon and
Mrs Jeffers viSited her
mother Mrs Beulah Cordray
Athens on Sunday afternoon
Mr
and Mrs Harold
G llogly VICky and Bruce
spent a mght m Colwnbus w1th
h1s stster Mrs Bern ce
McKnight and he had dental
work done
NeJo Parker of Mtddleport s
spendmg some tlme here w1th
hiS great grandparents Mr
and Mrs Ney Carpenter and
aunt Martha Mays
Fnends and relattves from
the commun1ty attended the
E ghth Grade Commencement
at Albany Elementary School
~ udents from the area who
graduated were Brei Allman
Steve Butchart VICky Comer
Joe Gaston Carolyn Graves
Helena Howery V rg1ma
Jordan Wanda Peck John
Peerey Robert Reeves Rob n
Reeves Teresa Walsh Rob n
Wh1te Kev n Woodgerd and
Rusty Wooten
Those calltng on Mural
Gala way durmg Memorial Day
weekend were Mary Conner
Weyand Bucyrus
Ethel
Weyand Gardner
Penn
sylvama Cla1r Cummmgs
Colwnbus Mrs D V Cwn
mmgs Athens Mr and Mrs
Bob WoOdrum Timmy and
Tracy McArthur and W1lbur
Daley local
Mrs Mar e Oatley who was
confined
to
0 Bleness
Memonal Hosp1tal lor ob
servatlon and treatment has
now been released
Mrs Bern1ce McKmght
Sharon and Chrts Colwnbus
were overmght guests of
relaltves here and vlstted her
mother Mrs Goldie Gtllogly
Earl
Starkey
Carl
Greenlees
Mrs
Arthur
Crabtree Murl Galaway Mr
and Mr and Mrs Men
dal Jordan and Mr and
Mrs Robert Mattox were
am ong those who called at
Ew ng Funeral Home n
Pomeroy lollowmg the death of
V rgli Atkins Hamsonv11Ie
State Grange Deputy and well
known Me1gs County Citizen
Goldie Gillogly spent a lew
days in McArthur w1th her
brother and s ster m Jaw Mr
and Mrs T R Bormg The
Burmgs have sold the r home
m McArthur and w II have an
apartment m Colwnbus \1. here
he s employed at present but
'"II be spendmg much of thetr
t1me n Naples Fla "here
the\ ha ve purchased a home
Anna Parker
Bol var
!Hted her grandparents Mr
an J Mrs Ne} Carpenter and
a 1J1 Mart}a Ma}s An
H&lt;:tl l ILJ Ocxter Y. US a a ler
t c C pen e I ome

Tobm

CURT But look there Howard - a long dr1ve mto the left
f1eld power alley Flynn d1gs for third he rounds Ute bag and
holds up and there goes Blakely mto second w1th a stand-up two
bagger
HOWARD Now surely there s gomg to be a change m
pitchers here Casey IS coming up and this guy pttchmg must be
debilitated and caducous He s given up four strrught hits and
even 11 I hate baseball I U adm1t th1s man Casey really can
powder the ball
TONY Yeah
CURT W1th f1rst base open 1t would seem w1se to walk
Casey to get to the next batter- but there s that old maxun
about never puttmg the wtming run on base
HOWARD That s the kmd of obsolescent thinkmg tbat s
destroy ng thiS game Curt Walking Casey to get to Broomfield
a nght-handed h1tter who has little power IS obvtously the thmg
to do But thai oertam manag1ng the oppoSition IS more m
terested m tradition than wmnmg
CURT Okay here s the pttch a slider low and away for
stnke one Now a last baU up htgh called str1ke two Now
we II see a bad pttch w1th an !kind 2 count on the batter
TONY Yeah
CURT Here tt comes Oh oh a hangmg curve that Casey
swats at- and m1sses That s the game as Mudvtlle loses 4-2
HOWARD ThiS ts Ute worst game I have Witnessed smce
Kansas C1ty scored 13 runs w1th two out on Apr1l 21 I~ The
p1tchmg and base-runnmg were straight out of tittle League and

Long Bottom
Social Notes
V1s1ting Mr and Mrs Joe
BLSSell were Mr and Mrs Tom
Groenaveld and Mr and Mrs
M1ke B1ssell of Columbus Mr
and Mrs Ted Hayman and
lamtly of Westerville and
Mary Offutt Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs Howard
Lawrence and fam1ly and Ruth
YlSitlng
Thornton were
relattve:; at Gallipolts
Mr and Mrs Gene Smtih
and family of ChilliCOthe were
vtstting Mr and Mrs Harold
Newlun
Clara Friend of Mt Alto W
Va IS VIStUng Leona Hensley
Mr and Mrs Howard
Larkins and family of Portland
and Raymond Larkins were
VISlltng Mr and Mrs Fred
Larkins
Mr and Mrs David Smtih
were vtsibng Mr and Mrs
Carl Buckley of Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Atherton and fami ly are
vacat10mng in Florida
Mr and Mrs Jack Stalzer of
Columbus and Ed1th S1sson and
family of Pomeroy were dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Rank
Holter
VIS!ltng Mr and Mrs Btll
Thurston were Mr and Mrs
Don Sm1Ut of Adelphi Mr and
Mrs Joe Sm1th Laurelvtlle
and Mr and Mrs Claude Sm1th
of Tarelton
Mr and Mrs Larry Curtis
and family were v1s1tmg Mary
Pierce
Mr and Mrs Dav1d Sm1th
and daughter vtsited Mr and
m
Mrs
Tom
Drake
Reynoldsburg
VLSLtmg Mr and Mrs Garth
Sm1 th were Mr and Mrs
Milton Tuttle Pomeroy Route
3 Ed1th Osborn Keno V1rgte

Mora and Olhe Young
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Howard Young of Paden C1ty
W Va
-VloletSmltb

CINCINNATI - W1lham C
Campbell 50 year -&lt;&gt;ld Hun
tingtoman who sa member of
the West Vtrgm'" Hall of Fame
and a seven hme member of
the U S Walker Cup team
quahf1ed for a 13th time mto
the U S Open He was the only
amateur among the five to
advance to the prestigious
tournament at Oakmont
Country Club m Pittsburgh
next week
The 12 t me West V•rgtma
amateur champiOn fired a 71 70
durmg the 36-holes played m
hot hum1d weather Campbell
edged J1m 0 Hern of Goshen
Ky by a stroke
Walker Inman Jr head pro
at Columbus Scioto Country
Club tied lor thtrd w th hiS
asSistant pro Robert Ba ley
Both shot I!Js
Geoff Hensley a former
UmverSLty of Cmclnnati star
now at Zephyr Hills Fla had
the lowest round - 69 But he
had troubles on the back and
quahf1ed wtth a 144
Terry Sm th of Paden C1ty

NOTICE OF
APPOtNTMENT
C•se No 20 l2
E s a e of ERNEST DU FFY

Deceased
No ce s he eb-r g ven ha
Ka h een Francs and Jean
Duerr of Syra cuse Oh o ha ve
been du v appo n ed Ad
m r1 s a vede bon s non of the
Es ta e of
Ernes
Ou y
decea sed a e of Me gs Coun y

Oh o

Cred o s a e requ red to t e
he r c a m s w h 'HI d f due 4 v
w h n fo u mon hs
Oa ed h s 16 h day of Ma y
973

Webs e
Judge
Co u of Com man Pea s
P abate D v s on
29 ( 6 5 Jtc
Mann ng 0

5

n

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
Pub c not ce s hereby g ven
ha a o n app cat on has been
ed w h he Pub c Ut
es
Comm ss on of Oh o o t anste

Ce f c a es of Pub c Con
en ence
and
Necess ty
Number
0915
and 10907
f om
dee
T anspo a an
Company
Transferor
he
p esen ho de he eot to Me gs
Transpo at on Com peny
T ansfe ee
he T ansfe ee
ag ees to adop a
ar ffs and
schedu es now on f e w h he
sa d Com m ss on
n e es ed
pa
es may ob te n fu he
nfo ma on as to sad Ap
p ca on by add ess ng
he
Pub c U tI es Comm ss on o
Oh o Co umbus Oh o
dea T an spo a on
Company
62 3 Wes ManS ee
Zanesv e Oh o 43 0
Me gs T an spor t a on

Company
RD

Chesh re Oh o
5296523c

THE CHAMPIONS - Fruth Phannacy outlasted a rugged Quaker State
team m the champ onsh p of the Annual Poml Pleasant Area Jaycees Slo
Pitch Softball tournament held over the weekend Quaker State mpped the
Fruth team by a score ol6-4 m the f rst game of the champwnsh1p round and
then Fruth s turned t aroWld for a 6-1 w n over the 0 lers to wtn the double
ellmmatlon afla r Buck King was tourney chatrman and all proceeds of the
Jaycee Tourney wtll go to Mental Health Front row from left team

mascots John Cundiff Joe Bob Hemsley Jeff Grueser I ynn Arthur and
Karen Hemsley and John Fruth representmg the sponsor Second row
Raymte Cu ndiff Tom Grueser Gregg G1bbs Bob Whaley Danny R1zer Ron
Qu lien R ck Ash Benn} Arthur Back row Gary Clark Don Swtsher Rusty
Wood Steve Halstead Randy Clark Ray Van Matre Bob Burdette Ed
Baer Sam VanMatre and J mmy Joe Hemsley manager-player

•

•

Reds make it two In row, 5-0
CINCINNATI - Clutch
h tt ng Dave Concepc on got
the Reds f rst h t of the game a
l ne s ngle to center scar ng Joe
Morgan and gn ted Cmc nnat
to a fo ur run outburst aga nst
John Matlack and on to a 5 0
w n Monday mght before 25 264
fans at R verfront Stad un
R ghthand e r
Jack
G II ngham lim ted the Mets to
three h ts n p tch ng h s third
shut out of the season and
upp ng h s record to 8-2 but t
wasn t unt l after the s xth that
t became easy
R ghthander
Ja c k
B11l ngham) mtted the Mets to
three h1 ts m p tch ng h s th1rd
shut out of the season and
uppmg h s record to 8-2 but t

wasn I until after Ue Sixth that
t became easy
The game was scoreless
enter ng the Sixth w1th Matlack
work ng on a no-h Iter but the
Mets youn g lefthander s
w ldness helped do h m n
Morgan drew a one out walk to
slart the upr s ng stole :second
and a£ter Johnny Bench fley,
out to deep left Matlack
walked Perez ntenhona lly h s
e ghth walk of the game
However Concepc on spo led
the strategy by slapp ng a 3-2
p tch on a low I ne JUSt out of
the reach of Met second
baseman Fehx M ll an tha t
scored Morgan w th the f rst
run of the game g v ng Con
cepe on 28 RBI s on the year

Bobby Tolan broke a 0 lor 15
slump by following wtth
another smgle to center that
scored Perez Tolan promptly
stole second and moved to th rd
when Matlack uncorked a w1ld
pitch that allowed ConcepciOn
to come across w1th third rWl
of the mn ng
Weak I tt ng Denms Menke
kept the act gomg w th a double
up the r~ ght-cente r f1eld alley
that plated Tolan Matlack
pr oceeded to walk Btl!
Plummer ntent10nally to get to
B II ngham but the Reds
pitcher worked h s way on w1th
anotl er walk that f n shed
Matlack
Reliever Ph1l Henn ngan got
Pete Rose to fly out to end the

mmng as Cmc nnat sent 10
men to t1 e pia te w th Rose also
makmg the first out by wh1f
fmg
The Reds added an msurance
run n the seventh as Morgan
and Concepc on teamed up
aga n w th the help of a two
base Met error Morgan
walked to open the mn ng and
scored when Con epc10n laced
a two-&lt;&gt;ut s ngle to nght fteld
that got past Rusty Staub
allow ng Morgan to score
8 ll ngha n was never n
sertuus trouble n p tchmg the
Reds to the r th rd stra ght win
wtthout a loss against the New
Yorkers after gett ng out of
m ld Jams m the f rst and
fourth nn ngs
Wayne Garrett walked to

ope n the game and stole
second but advanc ng tQ th rd
on Mtlhan s ground out was
s randed as John M1lner
bounced mto a double play
alter Staub walked
The Mets had runners on
f rst and second wtth one down
n the fourth but Bllhngham
got J1m Gosger to ground mto a
force play and Duffy Dyer to
tab back to the p1tcher
The loss was especially
pu nful lor the Mets as the
a lrea dy nJury r ddled New
York club suffered another
blow when shortstop Bud
Harre lson hurt his left hand
wh le bemg taken out of a
double play n the ltlth nn ng
by C ncmnat s Plumn er
Harrelson who has been the

Mets hottest h1tter recently
and always a stick fielder was
taken to Chr1st Hospital lor x
rays w th t not known how long
he ll be out of act on
W1Ut the wm C ncmnat1 kept
pace w1th National League
Wes t 0 VISIOn leading San
Francisco and third place
Houston lhe G1ants slammed
Pittsburgh 7 2 to leave them
sbll f1ve full games ahead of
the Reds while Houston rode
the six h1t p1tchmg of Dave
Roberts to a 7..0 wm over
Philadelphia
The Reds conclude their
brtef two ga me homes tand
agamst New York ton ght
sendmg Ross Grtmsley to the
hill while the Meta will counter
w1th lefty Jerry Koosman

who "'on the local qualifier at
Guyan Golf and Country Club
on May 21 will compete tn the
P ttsburgh sectiona l today
Ke1th Marks formerly of
Clendenm qualtf ed locally
and Will try to make 11 to the
b g tournament at Atlanta
today
Elsewhere veteran pros
Sam Snead and Fred Marl! and
Dean Refram a former
member of the PGA tour were
among sectional qual f1ers
Snead and Marh shot three
under par 71).69 - 139s over 36
holes at the 6 700 yard
Charlotte N C Country Club
course to lead 39 qualifiers
Tra1hng by one stroke were
fellow tounng pros Hale Irwtn
and Charhe S !ford Frank
Beard Hubert Green Tom
Shaw and G bby Gilbert had
141 totals
A f eld of 85 completed lor
available spots from Charlotte
the largest of 13 sectwnal
tournaments Monday an d
today Most had played n the
Kemper Open whiCh ended
Sunday
Among tJ e name players
who failed to qualify were
Doug Sanders Ken Venturi
Labrun Hams Steve Melnyk
Bert Greene and Bob Lunn
Refram and amateur John
Ph1lhps of Sprmgfleld Ill led
se ven Ch1 cago quahflers w1th
Identical 71 71
142 scores
B11I Ogden of Glenview lll
had a H8 two shots short of
quahfying after havmg go tten
nto the U S Open 14 htnes m
the last 18 yea rs
Portsmouth Country Club
pro Jack F rust and Portsmouth
amateur Clyde lluflrr an the
other local quahf1ers t ere
failed to make the cutoff of
Clovernook
Gene Torres Dow F n
sterwald and Ed Bynum were
the three qual flers m the
Denver sect onal

Torres Top Scorer
Torres led the scorers wltb.: a
71Hi9 - 139 at Cherry Hills
Country Club tour veteran
Ftnsrerwald shot a two und~r
par71Hi5 - t4landByman the
only amateur qualifymg had
to go l ve holes of sudden-&lt;ieath
to cl ncb hiS berth afrer tym g
lor th1rd w1th two other players
at 143
Veteran tour ng pro John
Schlee of Dallas was the only
player to break par Monday 111
Texas sectional play shootms
a one under par 141 to head tile
hst of SIX quahf ers
Schlee the current Hawa tan
Open champ on beat runners
up Kurt Cox of San Antomo and
Ron Weber oFHouston b~ seven
shots

•

Btll had

an Accrdent 1
doesn on y happen o
the o he fe ow
ac
c dent s happen to us al
Tha s why we suggest a
Heal h Ace dent Po cy
f om he Down ng Ch ds
Ag~:... c y
Ia el eve lhe
m ed ca l &amp; hasp a costs

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
220 N 2nd

MIDDLEPORT

Texas eyes southpaw prep hurler

CURT I ve JUSt been banded a note Both managers have
been replaced The new manager for the VISitors 1s Ella Fitz
ge rald makmg her the ftrst black ani Ute first woman manager
m the maJors And for Mudvtlle the new manager IS oh my
gosh
HOWARD Who '
CURT Dandy Don Meredith

NEW YORK UP! )-Left
Cl]d e who has a lready
ba nd e r David Clyde from thrown n ne no-l'utters this
Spr ng Branch Tex who most season for Houston s West
scouts agree can step n and chester H gh School and has
p tch n the maJor leagues r ght
on 44 of hiS last 45 games has
now s expected to be the No 1 been sco uted heavil y b} the
select on by the Texas Rangers Rangers who draft first by
Tuesday n baseb II s annual vtrtue of f n sh ng last m the
swn mer free age nt draft
Amer can League last season

Television Log

Just last week Rangers
prestdent Bob Short along With
general manager Joe Burke
and manager Wh1tey Herzog
watched the 18-yea r old last
baller hurl his nmth no-1t1tter of
the year n the Texas schoolboy
playoffs
He s a pretty good p tcher

understated Herzog It was
the f~rst tune f d eve• seen him
but I kn ew what to expect
Every scout m th e CO W1try has
told me about h m
The Rangers Y~ oc ful1 y wea k
n p tch ng a ga m th s year w II
undoubtedly move Clyde r ght
up to th e maJor league level

Foreman to defend title Sept. I

Tuesday Junes 1973

News 3 4 8 10 3 15 Truth or Con seq 6 Sesame St 20
A ound the Bend 33
6 30
News3 4 6 8 0 5 IDreamofJeanne13 Lias Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 00
What s My L ne 8 I ve Got A Secret 3 Elec Co 20
Bea the C ock .4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 Lee
Trev nos Golf 5 L v ng 33 Truth or Conseq 3
7 30 To Tell The T uth 6 Pr ce s R ght 8 10 Beat The Cock
3 Th sIs You L feJ C reus 4 Charles Bla s Better World
5 Chan ese Wa y 33 RFO 20
8 00
Mov e K II A Dragon 3 4 15 Peanuts 8 10 B lly
G aham Spec al 3 6 Amer can Odyssey 20 33
8 30
Hawa F ve 0 8 Kopycats 10 Movie That Certa n
Summe
6 3
nternat onal Pe formance 20 33
9 00 9 30 - V g nan 8 P at F ms 10
0 00 Ma cus Welby MD 6 3 News 20 F rst Tuesday 3 4
5 Cancer L fe or Death 33
11 00
News 3 4 8 13 15
1 30 - Johnny Carson J 4 15 Jack Paar Ton te 6 13 Moves
The Two Faces of Dr Jeky
B Operat on Atlant s
0
00
Perry Mason 4 News IJ
2 00
Your Hea th 4
2 30
News 4
6 00

SAN
FRANCISCO
Heavy ve ght
c hamp on
George Fm ernan w 11 return to
the gyrr tl s "cek to beg n
shak ng 1c se for h s f rst
lttle defense h ;. manager sa d
Monday
The fight appa ently " II be
Sept 1 n fokyo aga nst Puerto

WEDNESDAY JUNE6 1973
Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 0
Fa mt me 10 Eng Ish 3
Farm Reporf 3
Paul Harvey 3
Co umbus Today 4 8 ble Answers B Urban League 10
The Sto y 3
7 00
Toda y 3 4 5 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Jeffs Col e 13
7 30
Rompe Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bul w nkle 13 Popeye 10
a 00 Capt Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
a JO Jack La La nne 3 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
8 55 - News J
9 00
Pau D xo n 4 Phi Donahue 5 What Every Woman
Wan s to Know 3 Concent at on 6 Mer v Gr ff n a Fr endl y
Junct on 0 Ben Casey J
9 30 E ec Co 33 ToTe the Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Ho lywood
Ta lk ng 0
0 00
0 nah Shore 3 15 Co umbus S x Ca I ng 6 Jok~r s W d
a 0 D ck Van Dyke 3
0 30 Baf e 3 .4 5 SlO 000 Pyram d 8 0 Spl t Second 3
00 Sa le of he Cent u y 3 15 Love Amer can Style 6 Gamb t
8 0 Password 3
30 Hal ywood Squa es 4 5 Love of l fe 8 10 Bew tched 6
3 Sesame S 20
55 CBS News 8 Dan Ime s Wor ld 0
00
Jeopa dy 3 15 Password 6 Bob B aun s 50 50 C ub 4
News 3 Contact 8 News 10
~ JO
SptSecond6 SeachforTomorow8103Ws3 S
'J 55
NBC News 3 5
00 News Wea her Spa s J A M y (h ldren 6 13 Its Your
Be B Chan Ese Way 33 No Fa Women On y 15 Green
A c es 0
?0
Fash ons n Sew ng J
30
3 On A Match 3 4 5 As th£ Ward Turns 8 10 Bow ng
6 Newlywed Game :J M ke Douglas 6 Gu d ng L ght 8 10
n e na ana Pe fa mance 33
7 JO
DatngGame 3 Docto sJ 4 5 EdgeofNght8 0
3 00
Another Wo d 3 15 General Hosp ta 6 3 P ce Is
R ght8 0 Tommy Johnson &amp; Son 33 RFD 20
3 30
Retu no Pey ton Pace J 4 15 One L fe to L 11e 6 J
S('c e Sto m 0 Th s Week 10 Ho lywood Ta k ng 8 Ph I
Donahue -l T me Fo T mothy 33
J 00
M Ca toon 3 Some set 5 Sesame St 10 33 Love
Ame can Stye 3 Me v G ff n J Huck ebe r y Hound &amp;
Yog Sea 6 Secret Sto m 8 Mov e A Dog of F ande s 0
30
PC't coat Junc1 on 3 W d W d We~t 13 F Troop 6
1\bbo t&amp; Co~ te o8 My L t eMa g e 5 Merv Gr fl n 4
Oo
M Roge s 33 Bonanza 3 4 Haze 8 Andy Gr If n IS
u
he Br de s 6
10
E" e Co J Gon C' Pyle IJ Beve l y HI b II es 8
gt'podge l odqc ?0 Dcrtth Va l ey DC\ys s
EM N gh ngA ie ~

Campbell leads qualifiers

R co s J oe King Roman
ranked by the World Boxmg
Coun c I as the No
I
heav}we gh t contender
We were hop ng for a f ght
n July but l noth ng
n ater al zes soon the Tokyo
[ ght will be the f rst defense
said D ck Sadler Foreman s
manager and tr a ner
fhe WBC la st weekend
auth or zed the Foreman
Roman t tle match and
Japanese f ght promoter
Muneo M zog uch ann ounced
Monday that t would be on a
program nclud ng another

gh

6 00
6 15
6 ?0
6 ?5
6 30

\

h ••

Joy e A oa .... s
Adm x of he es a e
o E me Dav s
deceased
B 0 B en a o nev
o P an t

r ng on
ec

o

5

a

5

n

SAYRE
HARDWARE
88'2 2525
New li a en W Va

•

We d dn t set an y m n mwn
on money We were offered $1
m1Ihon by Mad son Sque~re
Garden to f ght Jerry Quarry
$1 m II on to f ght Jimmy Ell s
n M am and half a m II on to
f ght n England
It wtll have to be
someY..here m there
The 24 yea r -old Foreman
won the t ti e Jan 22 by
knocking out Joe Frazer m two
rounds at Kmgston Jamaica
He has a 38-0 profess onal
record Wlth 35 knockouts
Foreman and Sadler both
I ve n nearby Hayward and
Foreman w II do most of h s
tra mng n an Oakland gym
Hts only f1ghtmg smce Jan 22
has been m exh b t10n matches

~:i~fE STANDINGS

ow ng
The ea es compass
was used n C/1 na mo e
lhan 1700 years ag o
was
a
e s ee man s and ng
on a evolv ng ba se made
of magne c scales so
const uc ed t ha
he man
always po n ed south
was used as a t gurehead
and gu de on the ca age
of the Ch nese emp~ro n
he yea 235 A D
G s
0 he Kada va Kanb
Ba ada lnd a have
eason o en vy a of he
s s er s n he v ho e w de
wo d
Th ey ha ve
he
poo es cha nce of f nd ng a
husband The e s on Y one
day n wh ch hey may
m e~ y and ha uc ky day
comes ONLY once every
twe ve year s S nee a len
yea r 0 d g 1 s cons de ed
an 0 d mad he s atus s
dep 0 abe ndeed
You luckyday s heday
you nsta a "'a er ef n ng
app l an ee from Sayre
Hdwe
Our
exclus ve
patented p oce ss and
ef n ng sys em hand es
unp ea sant as es odors
a nd s a n form ng m
pu
es w h ease See us at
Say e Hdwe to the
cost p ac ca way of
et n ng you ap water

IItle fight
R cardo Arredondo of
Mex co WBC JUn or lt gh t
we1ght champwn s scheduled
to meet Mor to Kash waba of
Japan n the other bout at
Tokyo s 15 ooo-seat Budokan
Mart1al Arts Hall
A Japanese televisiOn net
work has put up $2 m II on for
the f ghts and w II telev se the
heavyweight bout v a satell te
thr oughout the world The
telcast IS scheduled to start at
II p m EDT
Sadler satd the amount of
money Foreman Will rece ve
hi:!s yet to be determmed
We II have to go ove r th ere
to s gn the hnal agreement
he sa d We re wa1tmg to hear
from them now

M waukee
22 26 458 4
Nat onal League
C eve land
20 30 400 7
East
West
l Pet GB
Ch cago
27
8 600
Ch cago
3
20 608
Kansas C y 30 24 556 1 2
Pl sbugh
23 22 51 5
26 21 553 2
Man eal
2
23 477 6 1 M nneso ta
Ca l fa n a
25 22 532 3
New York
22 2l 466 7
Oak and
26 25 5 0 4
Sl lou s
22 25 668 7
16 30 348 1 2
Ph ade ph a 9 3
380 I ~ Texas
Results
West
Boston 9 Kansas C ty 3
San Fran
36 20 643
M lwaukee at Oak and
Los Ange es 31 2 596 3
0 her c ubs no schedu ed
C nc nnal
29 23 558 5
Tuesdays Games
Houston
30 25 545 5
M nnesota (Woodson 4 3) a
At an a
8 J2 ~0 15
San D ego
9 34 358 5 z C eve and Bosman 2 6) 6 p m
Ch cago (Wood 3 4) a
Results
Ba
more Cuel a 2 6) 7 30
San Franc sco 7 P ttsburgh 2
pm
C nc nnat 5 New Yo k 0
Kansas C y ( D ago 5 4) at
Houston 7 Ph lade ph a 0
Boston Patt n 4 7 7 30 p m
0 her c ubs no schedu ed
New Yo k Stott lemyre 7 5)
Tuesdays Games
Los Ange es (Osteen 5
at a Tex.as Sebert 3 3) 8 30
Ch cago (Jenkins 6 J
2 30 pm
M waukee ( Sho
2 ) at
pm
At anta (Gent y 3 2 a Oak and Ham lton 0 1
Montrea (Stoneman 2 8 05 pm
De o t
Per y 6 3 l at
pm
New York ( Koosman 54 at Cal forn a (Hand
C nc nnat (G ms ey 5 .4) 8 05
lnternat onal League
pm
Amencan
San F anc sco (Bryant 8 3)
l Pel GB
at P ttsbu g
B es 3 4 a 05
Rochester
29 19 604
pm
22 23 489 5 h
Ph lade ph a (Twltehel J 21 Syracuse
20 22 476 6
a Houston W son 4 5) 8 30 Paw tucke
19 30 388 10 '
To edo
pm
Nat onal
San D ego G e f 4 5 at St
Char eston
3
18 633
Lou s Foste 3 3) 9 p m
T dewa e
2a 2
57
J
Pen nsu a
25 23 52
5
Amer can League
R chmond
15 33 J1J 5 '
East
Tue sday s Games
W L Pel GB
To edo a Pen nsu a
De o I
27 22
55
Pawlucke at Charleston
New York
26 24 520
;I
Roches er a T dewa e
Ba f more
22 22 500 2 '
Sy acuse a R chmond
Boson
22 25 468 4

w

GET SET
FOR SUMMER

GET YOUR
PARTS AND
SUPPLIES HERE
P ug s Conden sers
E&gt;lhausl Sy s em s etc We
kn own b ands ow pr ce s

MEIGS
AUTO PARTS
3 W Second

992 1711

th us makmg h1m the--th rd
co nsecut ve No 1 ptck In the
summer dnft to by-puss the
rr nors Two yea rs ago the
Rat gers (t hen the Wash ngton
Senators) selected pitcher Pete
Broberg from Dartmouth and
he has been wtth them ever
smce while last summer the
San D1ego Padres p1cked th rd
baseman Dave Roberts fi ~m
th e Umversily of Oregon who
also stepped r1ght mto the
maJors as i:i regular
!'he Phlladelphta Phlll es by
vtrtuc of their last place f n sh
n the Natmni:Jl League will
draft second and they wtll have
a host of sluggers to choose
from nclud ng Umverstty of
Colorado catcher John Stearns
Southern Cal forma outfielder
Fred Lynn Ohio U catcher
Steve SwiSher and Tulsa U
ftrst baseman Jerry Tabb
In additiOn to Clyde the top
rated p tchers this surruner
mclude a pa1r of southpaws
Eddie Bane of Arizona State
and M1ke Flanagan of
Ma ssac hu se tt s and
n ghthander Dave Wtnfleld th e
ace of ex Btg Leaguer DICk
Swhert s Big 1 en champwn
Mmnesota team
The draft wh ch w1ll begm at
10 a m EDT has normally
been cons dered a futures
market but four players from
last June s selectiOns and six
fr om th e 1971 crop ate
currently on maJOr league
rosters
Bes1des
Broberg
and
Roberts Bert Hooton of the
Cit cago Cubs M1ke Schmtdt of
the Ph II es and Steve Busby of
Kansas City are JUSt some of
the qu1ck graduates Both
Hooton and Busby have also
p tched no h1tters n the
maJors

Bet ween 850 and I 000
players are expected to be
selected m the two day long
proceedings
Among high school hotshots
expected to go h1gh are of
Pa1ntsv lie Ky and Pat
Rockett of San Antomo Tex
thtrd baseman Joe Edellen of
Gracemont Okla and f rst
baseman Glen Tufts of
Brtdgcwater Mass
SAl ~::S PLANNED
I ETART FA! LS - The
Ltttle and Pee Wee Leagues of
l..etart Falls Will hold a com
muntty bake sale and rum
mage sale Fr day and
Saturday from 9 a m to 4 p m
at the commumty hall to ratse
funds lor th e season s play

Thes Week s Special

1971
MAVERICK
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The modern
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124 W MAIN ST PH 992 2848 POMEROY 0
Monday Thurs 8 30 to 5Salurday 8 30 to 5 30

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�•

.·
$-The

4 - 1 ~ Uatly ~ntlnel !.liddleport-i"" 1eroy, 0 ., JuneS, 1973

Julll' ~. 1973

I

•

I

Streamlining proposal Teachers Student addresses highlight of
honored
major Methodist_issue
W ahama commencement time
COLUMBUS
Consi deration of a two-year stud)'
to
streamline
United
Methodism 's largest conference will be a major item of
business during the 1973 West
Ohio Annual Conference at
La keside June 10-15.

7:30 p.m. Monday.
Or. James T. Laney, dean ,
Candler School of Theology,
Emory Univ·e rsity , Atlanta,
Ga., a fanner pastor ln the
conference , 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Tom Skinner, converted
street gang leader of Brooklyn
Recommendations of a study and founder of Tom Skinner
committee, headed by former Associates, Inc., evangelist.
Kroger Co. president Jacob author, at 7:30 p .m . WedDav is of Cincinnati, feature nesday.
placing Council on Ministries
Featured with Mrs. Wedel
staff persons in the districts will be the lOO.voice Ministers'
where, the comnlittee feels, Wives Choir, making its debut
they can work closer with local at the conference.
Special feature before Or.
churches and develop "grass
roots" pro grams for the Laney's address Tuesday
conference .
evening will be a Centennial
More than 2,000 clergy and Celebration marking the 100th
laity members, representing anniversary of Lakeside,
the 400,000 members In the which continues uninterrupted
co nfe renfe 's 1,465 local as a church center featuring
churches, will be convened in summer
chauta uqua -type
Hoover Auditorium on the programs and year-around
Lake Erie church grounds meeting place for church and
Sunday at 8 p.m. by Bislt&lt;&gt;P F . related groups.
Gera ld Ensley.
Rev. Benjamin Ward, pastor
Legislative sessions will act of
Aldersgate
Church,
on recommendations Tuesday. Columbus, one of the conAmong othe r highlights of ference's outstanding blac k
leg islative matters will be ministers, will lead singing
budge t and program priorities prior to the address by Skinner
for )974. Three nationally • Wednesday evening.
known speakers will address
Another special program will
the sessions. They are ;
be the celebration or the 25th
Mrs. Cynthia Wedel, past anniversary of the ADVANCE,
pres ident of the National United Methodism's 1'second
Co uncil of Ch ur ches, first mile" givi ng for missi on
woman to address a major projects at horne and around
session of the conference, at the world.

•

::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::~:::~::~~:;:::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::;:-.::.:::.:::::::::~o:s::~

.

.\ C ommunity
Icorner By chanene Hoeflich~
.ill

*

§1

Happiness for Barbara White is getting her degree in biology
from Capital University Sunday and becoming a full4ime employe of International Field Studies.
,
Going to Columbus for Barbara's graduation were her
parents, Dan and Eloise White, and her grandmother , Mrs. H. E.
Cooper. Incidentally, she ·graduated cum laude from the College
of Ar ts and Sciences.
During her college years, Barbara has been involved with
Field St udies in a work study program. She has great enthusiasm
for the agency which arranges tours for high school and college
students relating to environment and ecology, and is delighted to
go on a ful l-time .basis come June 15.
She has .been working part~inle and just recently handled a.
bicycle trip for 30 Ohio state University students from there to
Tar Hollow . Batbara drove ·a Field Studies van with the tents and
supplies and did the cooking for tbe students.
It was through Field Studies that she took the trips to the
Bahamas and Mexico.
Barbara also has another activity in which she is deeply
involved. Since February she has been driving a van of crippled
ch ildren to the Easter Seal Center for treatment and schooling
for the Franklin County Society. She will continue doing this until
school is out, which happens to be just before she begins ber fulltime job, and has hi gh hopes of doing some work at the Center in
th e fall. .
To be sure - Barbara's never bored.
CONGRATULATIONS ARE in order for Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
(Smoke ) Harris. Saturday they will ob~erve their golden wed·
ding anniversary. They were married on June 9, 1923.
While an open house is not being planned, a family gettogethe r will be held Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Harr is' son~in·law and daughter, Nora and Denver Rice, on
Broadway in Middleport, and an infonnal social time will be held
following the 6-p.rn . dinner . Besides their daughter, Nora, MI- .
and Mrs. Harris have two rons, Georgea nd~Kenneth .
NORMAN AND DOROTHY YEAUGER and son, Kevin, are
nicely settled at West Melbourne, Fla . The couple moved two
weekS ago from their Middleport home.
Dorothy's mother, Mr~. Reva Beech, is down there now but
expects to be returning home sometime in the near future .
MRS. GLADYS MOWERY, who sold her new home at Laurel
Cliff following the death of her husband and moved to Californi a
a few years ago , is here for a visit with relatives and frie~ds . She
is the guest of Mrs. Leona Smith, Wehe Terrace, if you'd like to
say ''he llo".

KeLvln.a:l:or
AIR
CONDITIONERS
6,000 to
24,000 BTU
Have cool clean air
tonight . Total ve ntilation .

Mason Furniture

PH. 773-5592

MASON, W. VA .

Episcopal guests will be
Bishop Uoyd C. Wicke, Fort
Myers, Fla ., retired bishop of
Pittsburgh and then the New
York ~eas, and Bishop Shot
K. Mondo!, long-time bishop of
India, now retired and living in
Dayton .
Both bishops will assist
Bishop Ensley Thursday
evening at Ordination Services
in which more than 60 persons
will be received into the' United
Methodist ministry.
At 4:30p.m. Sunday, June 10,
some l ,000 men, women and
youth who are voting Lay
members of the conference,
will meet on the grounds for an
orientation session, designed to
acquaint them with procedures
and matters to come before
plenary sessions.
Reconunendations from the
boards and agencies will be
studied and put into form for
presentation as legislation at 10
section meetings Monday
afternoon.
The conference climax wiU
be Friday mornin~ when
Bishop Ensley reads appointments of ministers to. the
local churches and special
assignments to church-related
offices.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
'

HARRISONVILLE - Helen
carper and Margaret GoodlAin, teachers at Harrisonville
MASON - ' 'I know that my
Elementary School were
honored at a luncheon on tht&gt; life wj ll not end here with my
,..t day or school. Both ladies farewell speech, but rather it
have taught school for over 30 will prosper as I am sure the
lives of my classmates will, at
years.
At the luncheon the ladies this conunencement of a new
were
given
f1oral way of 1ife," Frances Wriston
arrangements, perfum·e, said in her valedictory address
poetry books and plaques. The in commencement exercises at
plaques read ,
" HELEN Wahama High School Monday
CARPER - Harrisonville night.
Miss Wriston, daughter . of
Elementary "Teacher
Builds Human Lives" and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wriston
of New Haven, summed up the
MARGARET GOODWIN
life graduates are facing with,
Harrisonville Elementary "Teaching is Dedication to " You can make it a great asset
to the future or you can give up
Children".
Also honored were Kathleen
Scott and Kimberly Bruno who
will be leaving the Harrison~
ville Building .
MASON - Wahama High
SChool graduates were honored
on Sunday at New Haven
HAVE DINNER GUES!'S
RUTLAND - The Rev. and United Methodist Church by
Mrs . Keith Wise , Rutland, the Rev. William DeMoss.
were
Mary
Jan
were recent dinner guests of They
Mrs. Vona McKnight and Mr. Bumgarner, John Cu.rtis
and Mrs. C. W. Stansbury. Burris, Cynthia Cooke, Carol
Other visitors at the McKnight- Noreen Circle, Donald William
Stansbury home were Mrs. Dye, Roger Dingey, William
Bertha Green, Albany, who Eugene Gibbs, Dianna L .
spent several days, and Mrs. Harr'is, Jayne Hart, Steve
Edna Hill, Chesapeake, W. Va., Carpenter, Geo r ge Jason
David
Hudnall,
and her daughter, Mrs. Ingels,
Christine
Lynn
Hoffman,
Linda
Eleanor
Willi amson,
Charleston ; Mr . and Mrs. Lou Roush, Charlene Wea ver,
Chester Erwin, Middleport ; Lawrence Weaver, Pamela
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Brown, Weaver, Debra Rickard,
St . Albans, W. Va.; Mr. and Charles W. Wood and Marion
,Mrs. Carl Miller, Athens; Mr . D. Woodrum .
Co ll ege grad uates are
and Mrs. Rolland Stiles,
Rebecca
J o Burris, B. A.
Col umbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Education;
Vaughn
M c Kni ght, Elementary
Charleston; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Marcia Ann Lidel, B. A.
Reeves , Fairport Harbor, and Special Education; Cozette
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Grate, Marie Cooke, A. B. Business;
Sherry Jea n Sole, R. N.;
Langsville.
Reginald Hart, B. A. Social
Studies,
Jody Athey , B. A.
The Ohio Environmental
Education ;
Protection Agen ~y reminds Elementary
. Ohions that they can help Thomas '· . Hoffman, B. S.
Beverly Knapp,
conserve ~ water by keeping Biology,
drinkin g water in
the Business Co lle ge; Richard
refrigerator rather than Kent, Electronic Engineering
rwming water until it's cold. Technician ; Mrs . Linda Jones,
Get involved fo'r a better en~ ·
vironment!

Goodnite of Hartford, and John
Burris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Burris of New Haven,
shared
honors
as cosalutatorians. They presented
their talks in the form of a
dialogue.
John referred to graduation
as the end of an era, while
Marilyn had another view, that
"It is the time of beginning
again."
John emphasized that the
word " impossible" must be
elimina tect in order to accomplish dreams and it was
Marilyn's contention that :a
person must decide what he
really wants. They agreed they
will remember the good times
at school, the dances and ball
B. A. Art ; Bruce Alexander,
games, and their realization of
Electronic
Engineering
the new freedoms and
Technician.
responsibilities awaiting them.
At Mason United Methodist
Marilyn said " We can also
Church these graduates of
look forward to making our
Wahama High School were
lives a success," with John
presented whit&lt;! Bibles, Robbie ·
commenting, ", .. Success is
Lambert, Linda VanMeter,
r~ l&lt;!d by more than just money .
Timmy Roush, Clarice Davis
True happiness is success" .
and Marion Woodrum.
Together in their closing they
off ered a welcome while
stating" . .. we , the members
EN ROLLSATRG
of the graduating class of 1973,
RIO GRANDE - Miss Mindy welcome you.~ !..
Young, daughter of Mr. and
The Rev. Chester Tennant of
Mrs. Wilbur 0 . Young of the Mason ·Assembly of God
Middleport, has enrolled at Rio Church offered the .invocation
Grande College this fall with and benediction.
the help of the District Trustee
Robert F. Seaman, principal
Scholarship Program. Under of Wahama High , made
this program up to $1,000 is presentation fo the class with
available for first time-lull Harry L. Siders, president of
time s tudents who live in the Mason County Board of
Ga11ia, Ja ckson, Meigs or
Vinton County. Mindy will
enter Rio Grande the fall
Quarter of 1973 to major in
Medical Laborat o ry
Technology. She is a 1973
BEFORE
graduate of Meigs High School.
hope of living."
"Things do not come easily
in this world today." U you
want to become important or
successful you must work for
that success," she said.
Advising gradual&lt;!s to make
the most of theiP lives by living
the fullest each day she asked,
"Will you be able to look back
over your past life and say I
have fought a good fight; this
place on earth has gained new
luster by my life?"
Marilyn Goodnite, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Donald

Education,
pruenllng
diplomas. Musical selections
were presented by the White
Falcon Band.
.

.

l

MAKE HER
DREAM
COME TRUE
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Ground Beef

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BUBBLE BATHS
SHAMPOOS,
AND RINSES

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WIENERS

Myrtle P. Turnbull, J. E.
.Turnbull, Mary J . Turnbull,
Thomas P . Turnbull , Sue
Turnbull , Donald Curtis
AFTER
TurnbUll, Lucy T. Turnbull,
Karr't.
Barb•r
Edward Turnbull, Edward 0.
Shop, 110 Lynn
Turnbull , Trus. , Susan R .
St..
Pomeroy.
OhiQ, h~s acldtd a
Turnbull, Harold Turnbull to
new s-ervice. Wit
Robert C. Hysell, connie S.
are now fiHint
Men's. Toupees.
Hysell, Lots, Pomeroy .
We can lit you
Bertha Bruch, Delbert A.
wtth a full or a
To Perk Up A Friend
partial hairpiece.
Bruch to Mildred Lucille
on the Sick List.
Meredith, Margaret Louise
CRAMERHffiED
Imboden to Robert Eugene
Kelpin, Lots·, Salisbury .
From
SAN
DIEGO (UP!) - Or .
Klein , Mary Patricia Klein ,
Allen G. Lipscomb, Opal M.
STOP in and let MICK shOw 'YOU what he can dO for you.
Timothy Todd Kelin , Larry J ohn Cra m'er was named
Lipscomb to Dwight W. Corbin,
Edward Klein , Rodney Allen director of physical education,
110 Lynn St.
Delores J . Corbin, Lots,
Klein , Kimberly Sue Klein , recreation and athletics at the
59N.
Second St .
I'OMEROY
Syracuse.
~rbers Loc.al 400 AF L· CIQ
Angela Lynn Klein, Penny Lou Unive r s ity of San Diego
Middleport,
Della L. Douglas, Robert
Pomerox:
Chaney, Gladys Chaney to
,.,.'
,., . '
Robert Chaney ,
Gladys
Chaney, Parcels, SalisburyChester.
Danny R. · Tillis, Saundra
T.illis to John D. Jacobs, Luz E .
Jacobs, Lot, Rutland .
Selwyn T. Smith, Rachel H.
Smi.th to Danny R. Tillis,
Saundra Tillis, Lots 129-130,
Palmer 's Add. to Sheff.,
Middleport.
,
Lee Walker, Sr., Lula Walker
to Arthur W. Scholderer, Lot
20, Riverview Acres, Mid~
dleport.
Four Easements General
Telephone Co., Pomeroy,
Extta Saving• !
Robert W. Caruthers, Diane
· Caruthers to Larry L. Mitch,
Donna L. .Mitch, Lot 13 , ·
Riverview Acres, Middleport.
Regular.
J ohnson Scarberry 1 Emma
Super-Hold or
Unscented.
M. Scarberry to Harold 0.
13· 0z S1zes
Grady, Joann E. Grady, 4
Mom•creit®Clm Cluftlt
A Cushion of Air
DISCOUNT PRICE.
D~'ITIME J0'1
Acres, Letart.
~lr fr•sh•ner
Crow's Steak House, Inc. to
General Telephone Co., Ease.,
Chester.
Paul Orr, Thelma Orr to
General Telephone Co., Ease.,
Chester.
Big, J2 · 0t. Sitts
Maurice Durst, Marce lla
J-PC. PL~Y ·
Durst to Frances E. Williams,
O~ROEII SET .
.63 Acre, Salisbury .
Frank c. Halliday, dec . to
Ruby M. Halliday, Pauline H.
. '""'bo"'
24 ·1n tong
'
Atkins, Aff. for trans., RutlandScipio.
Your Choice 11
Michael J. Fry, Exec .,
P~ll. SHOVEl ~110
th is Sp•clal
Jult Rl phl far Tor•
Frances Biron, Exec., Harrie
Prlct :
OUMPTltUCK SET
Marie Smith, decd.· to Howard
Eugene Cecil, Lots 7 and 9,
54
12 -• n two- r•ng poo l
sw 1m rmg
and ""·
24 )(
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.. '"''"d"'
" ''"
Donnaly's Add., Middleport.
w 11h 20·•n beach ball and
36-m . surl - rider. Bru~h1
.
20•n
sw
1m
nng
Wllh
John R. Duerr, Ruth Duerr to
colors.
Set
rope
Irving Karr,
Lot
198,
Correction Deed, Pomeroy.
5 Schick
Joseph G. McNabb to Frank
PKO. Of 12
Sorry, the . loris Sandals
S.~tr II®B114ts
Cleland, Delores M. Cleland,
FREEZE POPS
advertised for 27c pr .• will
Lot, Syracuse.
not arrive until Friday af·
Frank Cleland, Delores M.
ternoon . . Also through an
OUR
Cleland to Joseph G. McNabb,
LOW
order error we wi II not have
Mary Lou McNabb Naughton,
PRICE
the 99c ice cooler as adLot, Syracuse.
vertised.
Vance Imboden , Elma

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�•

.·
$-The

4 - 1 ~ Uatly ~ntlnel !.liddleport-i"" 1eroy, 0 ., JuneS, 1973

Julll' ~. 1973

I

•

I

Streamlining proposal Teachers Student addresses highlight of
honored
major Methodist_issue
W ahama commencement time
COLUMBUS
Consi deration of a two-year stud)'
to
streamline
United
Methodism 's largest conference will be a major item of
business during the 1973 West
Ohio Annual Conference at
La keside June 10-15.

7:30 p.m. Monday.
Or. James T. Laney, dean ,
Candler School of Theology,
Emory Univ·e rsity , Atlanta,
Ga., a fanner pastor ln the
conference , 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Tom Skinner, converted
street gang leader of Brooklyn
Recommendations of a study and founder of Tom Skinner
committee, headed by former Associates, Inc., evangelist.
Kroger Co. president Jacob author, at 7:30 p .m . WedDav is of Cincinnati, feature nesday.
placing Council on Ministries
Featured with Mrs. Wedel
staff persons in the districts will be the lOO.voice Ministers'
where, the comnlittee feels, Wives Choir, making its debut
they can work closer with local at the conference.
Special feature before Or.
churches and develop "grass
roots" pro grams for the Laney's address Tuesday
conference .
evening will be a Centennial
More than 2,000 clergy and Celebration marking the 100th
laity members, representing anniversary of Lakeside,
the 400,000 members In the which continues uninterrupted
co nfe renfe 's 1,465 local as a church center featuring
churches, will be convened in summer
chauta uqua -type
Hoover Auditorium on the programs and year-around
Lake Erie church grounds meeting place for church and
Sunday at 8 p.m. by Bislt&lt;&gt;P F . related groups.
Gera ld Ensley.
Rev. Benjamin Ward, pastor
Legislative sessions will act of
Aldersgate
Church,
on recommendations Tuesday. Columbus, one of the conAmong othe r highlights of ference's outstanding blac k
leg islative matters will be ministers, will lead singing
budge t and program priorities prior to the address by Skinner
for )974. Three nationally • Wednesday evening.
known speakers will address
Another special program will
the sessions. They are ;
be the celebration or the 25th
Mrs. Cynthia Wedel, past anniversary of the ADVANCE,
pres ident of the National United Methodism's 1'second
Co uncil of Ch ur ches, first mile" givi ng for missi on
woman to address a major projects at horne and around
session of the conference, at the world.

•

::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::~:::~::~~:;:::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::;:-.::.:::.:::::::::~o:s::~

.

.\ C ommunity
Icorner By chanene Hoeflich~
.ill

*

§1

Happiness for Barbara White is getting her degree in biology
from Capital University Sunday and becoming a full4ime employe of International Field Studies.
,
Going to Columbus for Barbara's graduation were her
parents, Dan and Eloise White, and her grandmother , Mrs. H. E.
Cooper. Incidentally, she ·graduated cum laude from the College
of Ar ts and Sciences.
During her college years, Barbara has been involved with
Field St udies in a work study program. She has great enthusiasm
for the agency which arranges tours for high school and college
students relating to environment and ecology, and is delighted to
go on a ful l-time .basis come June 15.
She has .been working part~inle and just recently handled a.
bicycle trip for 30 Ohio state University students from there to
Tar Hollow . Batbara drove ·a Field Studies van with the tents and
supplies and did the cooking for tbe students.
It was through Field Studies that she took the trips to the
Bahamas and Mexico.
Barbara also has another activity in which she is deeply
involved. Since February she has been driving a van of crippled
ch ildren to the Easter Seal Center for treatment and schooling
for the Franklin County Society. She will continue doing this until
school is out, which happens to be just before she begins ber fulltime job, and has hi gh hopes of doing some work at the Center in
th e fall. .
To be sure - Barbara's never bored.
CONGRATULATIONS ARE in order for Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
(Smoke ) Harris. Saturday they will ob~erve their golden wed·
ding anniversary. They were married on June 9, 1923.
While an open house is not being planned, a family gettogethe r will be held Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Harr is' son~in·law and daughter, Nora and Denver Rice, on
Broadway in Middleport, and an infonnal social time will be held
following the 6-p.rn . dinner . Besides their daughter, Nora, MI- .
and Mrs. Harris have two rons, Georgea nd~Kenneth .
NORMAN AND DOROTHY YEAUGER and son, Kevin, are
nicely settled at West Melbourne, Fla . The couple moved two
weekS ago from their Middleport home.
Dorothy's mother, Mr~. Reva Beech, is down there now but
expects to be returning home sometime in the near future .
MRS. GLADYS MOWERY, who sold her new home at Laurel
Cliff following the death of her husband and moved to Californi a
a few years ago , is here for a visit with relatives and frie~ds . She
is the guest of Mrs. Leona Smith, Wehe Terrace, if you'd like to
say ''he llo".

KeLvln.a:l:or
AIR
CONDITIONERS
6,000 to
24,000 BTU
Have cool clean air
tonight . Total ve ntilation .

Mason Furniture

PH. 773-5592

MASON, W. VA .

Episcopal guests will be
Bishop Uoyd C. Wicke, Fort
Myers, Fla ., retired bishop of
Pittsburgh and then the New
York ~eas, and Bishop Shot
K. Mondo!, long-time bishop of
India, now retired and living in
Dayton .
Both bishops will assist
Bishop Ensley Thursday
evening at Ordination Services
in which more than 60 persons
will be received into the' United
Methodist ministry.
At 4:30p.m. Sunday, June 10,
some l ,000 men, women and
youth who are voting Lay
members of the conference,
will meet on the grounds for an
orientation session, designed to
acquaint them with procedures
and matters to come before
plenary sessions.
Reconunendations from the
boards and agencies will be
studied and put into form for
presentation as legislation at 10
section meetings Monday
afternoon.
The conference climax wiU
be Friday mornin~ when
Bishop Ensley reads appointments of ministers to. the
local churches and special
assignments to church-related
offices.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
'

HARRISONVILLE - Helen
carper and Margaret GoodlAin, teachers at Harrisonville
MASON - ' 'I know that my
Elementary School were
honored at a luncheon on tht&gt; life wj ll not end here with my
,..t day or school. Both ladies farewell speech, but rather it
have taught school for over 30 will prosper as I am sure the
lives of my classmates will, at
years.
At the luncheon the ladies this conunencement of a new
were
given
f1oral way of 1ife," Frances Wriston
arrangements, perfum·e, said in her valedictory address
poetry books and plaques. The in commencement exercises at
plaques read ,
" HELEN Wahama High School Monday
CARPER - Harrisonville night.
Miss Wriston, daughter . of
Elementary "Teacher
Builds Human Lives" and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wriston
of New Haven, summed up the
MARGARET GOODWIN
life graduates are facing with,
Harrisonville Elementary "Teaching is Dedication to " You can make it a great asset
to the future or you can give up
Children".
Also honored were Kathleen
Scott and Kimberly Bruno who
will be leaving the Harrison~
ville Building .
MASON - Wahama High
SChool graduates were honored
on Sunday at New Haven
HAVE DINNER GUES!'S
RUTLAND - The Rev. and United Methodist Church by
Mrs . Keith Wise , Rutland, the Rev. William DeMoss.
were
Mary
Jan
were recent dinner guests of They
Mrs. Vona McKnight and Mr. Bumgarner, John Cu.rtis
and Mrs. C. W. Stansbury. Burris, Cynthia Cooke, Carol
Other visitors at the McKnight- Noreen Circle, Donald William
Stansbury home were Mrs. Dye, Roger Dingey, William
Bertha Green, Albany, who Eugene Gibbs, Dianna L .
spent several days, and Mrs. Harr'is, Jayne Hart, Steve
Edna Hill, Chesapeake, W. Va., Carpenter, Geo r ge Jason
David
Hudnall,
and her daughter, Mrs. Ingels,
Christine
Lynn
Hoffman,
Linda
Eleanor
Willi amson,
Charleston ; Mr . and Mrs. Lou Roush, Charlene Wea ver,
Chester Erwin, Middleport ; Lawrence Weaver, Pamela
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Brown, Weaver, Debra Rickard,
St . Albans, W. Va.; Mr. and Charles W. Wood and Marion
,Mrs. Carl Miller, Athens; Mr . D. Woodrum .
Co ll ege grad uates are
and Mrs. Rolland Stiles,
Rebecca
J o Burris, B. A.
Col umbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Education;
Vaughn
M c Kni ght, Elementary
Charleston; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Marcia Ann Lidel, B. A.
Reeves , Fairport Harbor, and Special Education; Cozette
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Grate, Marie Cooke, A. B. Business;
Sherry Jea n Sole, R. N.;
Langsville.
Reginald Hart, B. A. Social
Studies,
Jody Athey , B. A.
The Ohio Environmental
Education ;
Protection Agen ~y reminds Elementary
. Ohions that they can help Thomas '· . Hoffman, B. S.
Beverly Knapp,
conserve ~ water by keeping Biology,
drinkin g water in
the Business Co lle ge; Richard
refrigerator rather than Kent, Electronic Engineering
rwming water until it's cold. Technician ; Mrs . Linda Jones,
Get involved fo'r a better en~ ·
vironment!

Goodnite of Hartford, and John
Burris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Burris of New Haven,
shared
honors
as cosalutatorians. They presented
their talks in the form of a
dialogue.
John referred to graduation
as the end of an era, while
Marilyn had another view, that
"It is the time of beginning
again."
John emphasized that the
word " impossible" must be
elimina tect in order to accomplish dreams and it was
Marilyn's contention that :a
person must decide what he
really wants. They agreed they
will remember the good times
at school, the dances and ball
B. A. Art ; Bruce Alexander,
games, and their realization of
Electronic
Engineering
the new freedoms and
Technician.
responsibilities awaiting them.
At Mason United Methodist
Marilyn said " We can also
Church these graduates of
look forward to making our
Wahama High School were
lives a success," with John
presented whit&lt;! Bibles, Robbie ·
commenting, ", .. Success is
Lambert, Linda VanMeter,
r~ l&lt;!d by more than just money .
Timmy Roush, Clarice Davis
True happiness is success" .
and Marion Woodrum.
Together in their closing they
off ered a welcome while
stating" . .. we , the members
EN ROLLSATRG
of the graduating class of 1973,
RIO GRANDE - Miss Mindy welcome you.~ !..
Young, daughter of Mr. and
The Rev. Chester Tennant of
Mrs. Wilbur 0 . Young of the Mason ·Assembly of God
Middleport, has enrolled at Rio Church offered the .invocation
Grande College this fall with and benediction.
the help of the District Trustee
Robert F. Seaman, principal
Scholarship Program. Under of Wahama High , made
this program up to $1,000 is presentation fo the class with
available for first time-lull Harry L. Siders, president of
time s tudents who live in the Mason County Board of
Ga11ia, Ja ckson, Meigs or
Vinton County. Mindy will
enter Rio Grande the fall
Quarter of 1973 to major in
Medical Laborat o ry
Technology. She is a 1973
BEFORE
graduate of Meigs High School.
hope of living."
"Things do not come easily
in this world today." U you
want to become important or
successful you must work for
that success," she said.
Advising gradual&lt;!s to make
the most of theiP lives by living
the fullest each day she asked,
"Will you be able to look back
over your past life and say I
have fought a good fight; this
place on earth has gained new
luster by my life?"
Marilyn Goodnite, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Donald

Education,
pruenllng
diplomas. Musical selections
were presented by the White
Falcon Band.
.

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PHONE: 992-3480
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WIENERS

Myrtle P. Turnbull, J. E.
.Turnbull, Mary J . Turnbull,
Thomas P . Turnbull , Sue
Turnbull , Donald Curtis
AFTER
TurnbUll, Lucy T. Turnbull,
Karr't.
Barb•r
Edward Turnbull, Edward 0.
Shop, 110 Lynn
Turnbull , Trus. , Susan R .
St..
Pomeroy.
OhiQ, h~s acldtd a
Turnbull, Harold Turnbull to
new s-ervice. Wit
Robert C. Hysell, connie S.
are now fiHint
Men's. Toupees.
Hysell, Lots, Pomeroy .
We can lit you
Bertha Bruch, Delbert A.
wtth a full or a
To Perk Up A Friend
partial hairpiece.
Bruch to Mildred Lucille
on the Sick List.
Meredith, Margaret Louise
CRAMERHffiED
Imboden to Robert Eugene
Kelpin, Lots·, Salisbury .
From
SAN
DIEGO (UP!) - Or .
Klein , Mary Patricia Klein ,
Allen G. Lipscomb, Opal M.
STOP in and let MICK shOw 'YOU what he can dO for you.
Timothy Todd Kelin , Larry J ohn Cra m'er was named
Lipscomb to Dwight W. Corbin,
Edward Klein , Rodney Allen director of physical education,
110 Lynn St.
Delores J . Corbin, Lots,
Klein , Kimberly Sue Klein , recreation and athletics at the
59N.
Second St .
I'OMEROY
Syracuse.
~rbers Loc.al 400 AF L· CIQ
Angela Lynn Klein, Penny Lou Unive r s ity of San Diego
Middleport,
Della L. Douglas, Robert
Pomerox:
Chaney, Gladys Chaney to
,.,.'
,., . '
Robert Chaney ,
Gladys
Chaney, Parcels, SalisburyChester.
Danny R. · Tillis, Saundra
T.illis to John D. Jacobs, Luz E .
Jacobs, Lot, Rutland .
Selwyn T. Smith, Rachel H.
Smi.th to Danny R. Tillis,
Saundra Tillis, Lots 129-130,
Palmer 's Add. to Sheff.,
Middleport.
,
Lee Walker, Sr., Lula Walker
to Arthur W. Scholderer, Lot
20, Riverview Acres, Mid~
dleport.
Four Easements General
Telephone Co., Pomeroy,
Extta Saving• !
Robert W. Caruthers, Diane
· Caruthers to Larry L. Mitch,
Donna L. .Mitch, Lot 13 , ·
Riverview Acres, Middleport.
Regular.
J ohnson Scarberry 1 Emma
Super-Hold or
Unscented.
M. Scarberry to Harold 0.
13· 0z S1zes
Grady, Joann E. Grady, 4
Mom•creit®Clm Cluftlt
A Cushion of Air
DISCOUNT PRICE.
D~'ITIME J0'1
Acres, Letart.
~lr fr•sh•ner
Crow's Steak House, Inc. to
General Telephone Co., Ease.,
Chester.
Paul Orr, Thelma Orr to
General Telephone Co., Ease.,
Chester.
Big, J2 · 0t. Sitts
Maurice Durst, Marce lla
J-PC. PL~Y ·
Durst to Frances E. Williams,
O~ROEII SET .
.63 Acre, Salisbury .
Frank c. Halliday, dec . to
Ruby M. Halliday, Pauline H.
. '""'bo"'
24 ·1n tong
'
Atkins, Aff. for trans., RutlandScipio.
Your Choice 11
Michael J. Fry, Exec .,
P~ll. SHOVEl ~110
th is Sp•clal
Jult Rl phl far Tor•
Frances Biron, Exec., Harrie
Prlct :
OUMPTltUCK SET
Marie Smith, decd.· to Howard
Eugene Cecil, Lots 7 and 9,
54
12 -• n two- r•ng poo l
sw 1m rmg
and ""·
24 )(
s20-•n
.. '"''"d"'
" ''"
Donnaly's Add., Middleport.
w 11h 20·•n beach ball and
36-m . surl - rider. Bru~h1
.
20•n
sw
1m
nng
Wllh
John R. Duerr, Ruth Duerr to
colors.
Set
rope
Irving Karr,
Lot
198,
Correction Deed, Pomeroy.
5 Schick
Joseph G. McNabb to Frank
PKO. Of 12
Sorry, the . loris Sandals
S.~tr II®B114ts
Cleland, Delores M. Cleland,
FREEZE POPS
advertised for 27c pr .• will
Lot, Syracuse.
not arrive until Friday af·
Frank Cleland, Delores M.
ternoon . . Also through an
OUR
Cleland to Joseph G. McNabb,
LOW
order error we wi II not have
Mary Lou McNabb Naughton,
PRICE
the 99c ice cooler as adLot, Syracuse.
vertised.
Vance Imboden , Elma

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7

Green Thumb ·
Notes . ...
''

A weekly feature of Meigs
CoWlty Garden Club members.

•

&lt;

Raising of African Violets
Mr. and Mrs. John Rose, Jr.

BYMRS . ANNAOGDIN
Star Garden Club
African violets have become household resi~cnts in this
country just within th e past 30 years or so. In 1926, a California
firm introduced a number of named varieties . It speaks well for
them that they have gained such fam e and popularity in so brief
a time.
The first known plants we re found by Baron Walter von St.
Paulin 1892 in East Africa . He sent seeds and plants lo his father,
who lived in Germany, and th e elder St. Paul then shared plants

Recent party honors
Mr. and Mrs. Rose
EAGLE RIDGE - Mrs ,
Philip Hauck hosted a silver
anniversary party at her home
on Eagle Ridge · recently
honoring Mr. and Mrs. John
Rose, Jr., who were married on
May 18, 1948.
The couple has three
children, Archie, Julie and
Mandie. A dinner was served to
the family wilh an open house
being held from 2 to 5 p.m.

which he grew with the director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at
Hanover, Germany, Herman Wendland . He described the
species and gave it the name "saintpaulia" to honor the man who
discovered the plants, and his father , who first introduced them
to indoor gardeners. Apparently Wendland was responsible for
the use of the word "violet" as the common name for it, which is
a surprising fact coming from a botanist. In English the most

common name is "African Violet."
About 1900, they were seen growing in the tropical
greenhouses of tbe University Botanic Garden of cambridge,
England. They were se ldom seen except in botanic gardens and
plant houses of large estates. No one then had any idea of the
popul3rity t~ey were to achieve as the most widely grow n house
plant in the U. S. The charm of their flowers and beauty and
distinction of their foliage are enough to arouse the interest of all
flower lovers.
There is a wide ran ge of colors - they may be white , all
shades of blue and lavender and pink , purple and wine red, or
they may combine two or even three colors in the flower. They
now have blooms with a chartreuse edge. Leaves too have
changed - the original plants mostly had plain green leaves.
Now they may be almost any shade of green , sometimes with
white variegations, as wintergreen or frosty, or red reverses.
They may also be quilled, ruffled, scalloped, fringed, longstemmed or short, spooned or not. The mammoth varieties have
big, thick leaves. There seems to be no end to the variations
possible in these lovely plants. As of yet, there are no true reds or
no yellows. The nower sizes vary according to varieties, age and
culture. Some are as large as a silver dollar. ''America'' has the
largest bloom of any I have.
A plant just beginning to bloom may look very much different as it gets older. On such plants as the "Painted Lady"
some blooms may be variegated one way, some another , and
some plain in color. As they grow older, sometimes you have only
plain colored flowers. The variegated leaves change to plain
sometimes too. By starting a new plant from .a leaf they may
divert to original colors.
One thing I like aboUt violets is that they usually have the
heaviest bloom in winter when no other flowers bloom. To have
pretty plants and blooms one has to keep new ones starting, "'
either by leaf, division, or cutting small plants - which
. sometimes grow On side of, plant - from the stem and root in
water, then put in soH.
16 Tips On Growing African Violets
·wATER -Every other day is about right for most homes,
but check dryness before watering. Use warm water - few
degrees wanner than room . Dp n.ot water if soil feels damp.
Amount depends on type of pot, type of soil, size of plant, and rate
of growth.
HUMIDITY -To help increase air moisture around plants,
set them on a tray that is filled with moist sand, gravel, or
•chicken grit. You may also set pans of Water on mdiators or on a
table near the plants.
FEEDING - Feed regularly to keep plants in good growth.
Use soluble or liquid and apPly every two or three weeks or at
least once a month. Always feed on the day after they have been
well watered. I alternate using Hyponex and Stirnuplant.
SEPARA'TING - Separating crowded plants is an easy way

We've just received a
shipment of washers,
dryers, portable dryers,
and wringer type washers.
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HERE'S JUST ONE OF OUR
MANY BARGAINS.

Six members of the Middleport Child Conservation
· League attended the Ohio CCL
South Central District spring
conference held at the Holiday
Inn in Gallipolis, Saturday.
Going from the local league
were Mrs. Robert Schmoll,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Pat Duffy, Mrs. Lou qsborne,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Mrs.
John Blaker.
The Toddlers to Tassels
League of Gallipolis hosted the
spring conference which
carried out the theme "The
Hand That Rocks the Cradle"
in table decoration and
program.
· Mrs. William Wolfe, Ohio
CCL president, was the
speaker using "What's Happening in CCL" as her theme.
She discussed ways of increasing membei-ship and
forming new leagues and
explained the difference between a service league and an
achievement league. She reMEET POSTPONED
emphasized that CCL's purA meeting of the Laurel Clifi pose is to educate.
Better Health Club scheduled
for Thursday has been postponed until June 14. The place
will be aruwunced later.

Election oi officers for the
1973-74 year and the naming of
delegates to the 47th annual La
Marche to be.in Toledo July 22
and 23, highlighted a meeting
Monday night of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, at the home of Mrs.
Veda Davis.
The new officers are Mrs.
Marie Boyd. chapeau; Mrs.
Mary Martin, first demi
chapeau; Mrs. Eileen Searles,
second demi chapeau; Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew, l'aumonier;
Mrs . Mary Roush , Ia archiviste ; Mrs . Lula Hampton,
la co nci erge; Mrs. Mrytle
Walker, la secretaire&lt;'aSsiere;
Mrs . Julia Hysell, Ia avo~ate;
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, national
pouvior member .
Mrs. Catherine Welsh and
Mrs. Martin were fleeted
delegates at large to the Toledo
convention, with Mrs. Hackett,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, atid Mrs.
Walker as delegates, and Mrs.
Eunie Brinker, Mrs. Hampton
and Mrs. Florence Richards as
th e alternates.
Plans were made [or a
rummage and yard sale at the
horne of Mrs . Knapp, Hinkle
Ave., Gallipolis, Friday and
Saturday with Mrs , Walker,

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r(' presentatives will be seated
at the convention.
ln r.ecen t years convention
co nsideration h ;:~s incl ud ed
issues rc l atin~ to society and

govern ment. This year it will
also include consideration of
the pr oposed res tru ct urin g
plan to strea mline the work
a nd e ffec ti veness or the

Distri ct church.
Spedal times have been set
aside during the convention for
both la y and clergy delegates
to meet informally with Dr.

Pre us, the ne w chur ch
president. This will give a ll
concerned the opportunity to
communicate to Dr. Preus
some of the grass roots issues

that people in the church are
conce rned about.
St. Paul Lutheran Church is
a member congregation of the
Am~ri ca n Lutheran Church.

A CHSCOU loll
!&gt;[PART ~tf. fliT STOll

Point
Pleasant

Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza

Mason

w. va.

I

ET.
.
S

Teens and Womens
TWO PIECE

SHORT
SETS
Jamaica
or
shorter
length
s hort s, matching
sleeveless top Summer
favorites for all
gals ,

•

•I
'

..
•'

Southeast Ohio's Emergency
Medical Service will be
presented on WHTN-TV on the
"Newsmaker'' program, June
.9 at 8 p.m.
Emergency Medical
Technicians will demonstrate
their specialized skills and
discuss operations of 'various
ambulance stations throughout
the seven-county service area.
Charges for the EMS service
will also be discussed , as well
as what to expect of the service
as a consumer.
"SEOEMS" is a ncn-profit
national health demonstration
project of Ohto Valley Health
SerVices Foundation, Inc. of
Athens, Ohio.

GETS RANKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Alltime riding champion Bill
Shoemaker has put himself
squarely into the column
marked male chauvinist.
"I'd rather ride against 10
women than 10 men,"
Shoemaker said. "The women
are good and they have a fine
·touch 111 but in day in and day
out competition they cannot
compete with the men."
Queried about the difference
between mare and fillies and
male thoroughbreds,
he
replied :
"Strangely enough, most of
the good top fillies cannot beat
a good top (male) horse."

6
FOAM BACK- VINYL

Eddy's schedule _
Mr .
Eddy
Educator's
schedule for the week of June 49 in Meigs County:
TUESDAY - Rl!cine, 12:3().
2:30; Wagner's 2: 45-3: 15;
Racine
Bank
3: 30-4:30;
Syracuse-usle 5-6; Forest Run
6:15-7:15; Tuppers Plams 7:3().
8:30.
WEDNESDAY - Cook Gap
Hill, 8-8 :30 p.m.
THURSDAY - Reedsville I·
2· LongBottom 3-4; Keno 4:305;30; Bashan 6-7; Baer's 7:308· Naomi 8: liHI: 45.
. 'FRIDA)' - .Letart 12:3().
· 2:30; East Letart 3-5; Apple
Grove 5:30-6; Dorcas 6:307:30; Syracuse P. 0. IHI:30.

FOR

SANITARY
WASTE
DISPOSAL

MATS
DECORATED! IRREGULARS

:4

•

•

NO MORE HEAVY
CANS TO CARl~Y
· hrtlu 1 ,IUICI

FOR

tftl~ll C"UI
• . £11~1-lllntCIHII

•

• UR01 UIIDtN
• IIUIIIUI &amp; Wtltlthp

WHITE OR NAVY

A 79c VALUE!

.JUMBO 17 OUNCE GLASS TUMBLERS

$ 88

By "ANCHOR HOCKING"

MEN'S
WHITE
Handkerchiefs

PR.

5 DAY SAVINGS SALE! GIRLS
2 PIECE SHORT SETS

. MADRID
PATTERN!
Brown Color

PLASTIC DECANTER

SLIGHT
IRREGULARS!

% GALLON SIZE

ALL REGULAR VALUES TO $1.94

SAFETY SERVER
ON TOP

22

GALLON SIZ£ ____
TUCKER PLASTIC

SET

'77c

. Very Special- Values To $4.00

VISIT
SHOPPER'S
MART
OFTEN!

WE'RE OPEN
MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY

44e

98' VALUE- &amp;tlSS
DECORATED "PYREX"

BEVERAGE
SERVER
¢

DAISY
OR
FLORAL
PATTERN

13 OUNCE SIZE ,_

"GllDDEN"-REGULAR $4.87 ~;:;;;

PLASTIC
TUMBLER~S
UNBREAKABLE!
GREEN COLOR

""

LATEX PAINT
SAVE
$1.65 Galion

84¢
49~

.

5
DAY
SALE!

10~A.

" OPEN 6 NIGHTS TILL 9 PM - SUNDAY 1 PM TO 6 PM
8 TRACK

ANTIQUE CLASSICS

STEREO
TAPES

CLEAR CRYSTAL GLASSWARE
BY JEANETTE!
Gondola bowl. wedding
di s h, covered candy bowl.
Lomboridi di s h . Actual
VALUES TO $1.69

¢
SUMMER SANDALS
'

RED, NAVY, TAN, MULTI -COlORS
ALL SIZES!

TWIN PACK OF TWO

9" SIZE-----

$ 99

GIRLS AND WOMEN'S COLORFUL VINYL

ROLlER REFILLS

39e

9VOLT

TRANSISTOR
BATTERIES

$
FOR

.PAINT PAN
AND
ROLLER

SIZE-----

FIRST
QUALITY

more?

THE BIG 9 INCH SIZE

7"

·FITTED STRIPE SHEETS

All your favori1e artists,
with the songs you want
to hear, over and over.
Why shou ld you pay

$3~~L

4 DAY SALE

27~.

Repeat Of A . Pre~ious Sell Out!

4 COLORS!

.------~~~----.
OUTSIDE WHITE·

\

VINYL ·
;FLOOR
RUNNERS

Full Bed Size

¢

SAVE S9c
On Each One

Bigger Raft

'1.27

6 Ft. X 27 Inch

6STYLES
Whil e.
They last!

SWIM RING

10 AM TO 9 PM

INFANTS
SLEEP OR
PLAY SETS

Terry or nylon at an
unbelievable low price!
On Sale Wednesday
10 a.m . . Hurry on

INFLATABLES FOR
SUMMER SWIM FUN

ASSORTED
COLORS
SERIES DELA YEO
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -Rains
washed out another ro~d of
the National CQ!egiate Athletic
Association College Division
World Series Monday.
California.Irvine, 2-0, was to
have played Ithaca College in
the first game with the loser
then going against Eastern
illinois, 1·1.

oavc:o

PLACE

CANVAS
BOAT
SHOES

OTHER SETS
'2.•24 TO •3,94

¢

LIMIT

Set

Sizes 3 to 14 in one big group
of reduced s hort sets.
Sleeveless crop lops hav e
matching or contrasting
s horts. 5 Day -sale_!

¢

MUGS

you ' ll like . Sizes 8 to
18 and 32 to 38.

MEN'S AND BOYS'

LACE
OR
SLIPON
STYLE

FORKS AND
SPOONS

COFFEE

we

have a pair of shorts

99

I

ANCHOR HOCKING"
REG. 27c-WHJTE

Regardless of your

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

June 9

•'

f"

SETS ~
EACH
STORE

'8" IF PERFECT!

on mr

'

JAMAICA
SHORTS
age or needs -

PKG. OF 100
PLASTIC

'D~ ~
- ·~

OR

lif'autiful Ironston e din·
11 .1 '1'\\':J rt• at II Vl' l' )' Spf'C.'ial
ltrkto . 4 dlnnl'r Jllale s. (' &lt;lkt·
Jllalf'S , CUllS, s au r t"rs , and
('l' n·al J,o\\'IS .

2'4

il l ! I I I

SHORT SHORTS

FAVORITE BLUE WILLOW
DECORATED PATTERN!

•

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PRICES IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY 10 AM
Teens, Juniors, Womens

SEOEMS

!fOUr RouaeKeeper

The Electric Climate

appllll .

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
...
·--"-',

house

'' .

I

E. Main

heritage

II\

1M_.,........... _,__.....,,..,._.

'*""' « ,. ......., o...... -··

Shine

wide-awake styles

~-----

ol

The Rev . Arthur Lund ,
pastor of Sl. Paul Lutheran
. Church and TreU Schoenleb
lay delegate, will attend th~
annual convention o( the Ohio
District, The
Ameri can
Lutheran Church on June 7-9
'
at Capital University.
The Ohio District of the ALC
covers a geographical area
extending from Lake Erie to
the Gulf of Mexico and includes
the states of Ohio, Indiana
Kentucky,
Tennessee ,' .
Alabama, Mississippi, and one
congregation in West Virginia,
in all 290 congregations.
The convention theme, " A
New Day Dawns," will set the
mood for the three days in
which delegates will hear the
newly installed nat(!lnal
president of the Alnerican
Lutheran Church, Dr . David
Preus, speak of his plans and
hopes for the 2'h million
member body, and report on
the reorganization already
underway. Dr. Walter Wietzke,
executive director of the
Division
of
Theological
Education, will be the
devotional leader for the
conference and in an address
each day will remind lhe
churchmen of the new life
inherent in the Gospel they
follow .
other speakers will be the
Rev. Jack Hustad of Minneapolis, national Evangelism
director, and Dr. Otto Toelke,

Boys' Son

Tne

the convention, has urged
co~gregations to include youth
and the women among their
delegates. In addition a special
delegation of 23 youth

conference

Mrs. Wolfe announCed the
WEDNESDAY
state convention to be held in
AUXILIARY, Middieport
Toledo in Oetober.
~ire Department, will meet at
Featured on the program
p.m. at the firehouse.
was a panel discussion, " Sex 8
POMEROY LODGE 164,
Education - the Pros and
Cons." On the panel were F&amp;AM , regular meeting , 7:30
Edward Stewart , assistant p .m . All Master Masons
principal of Gallia Academy; welcome.
THURSDAY
E. Wilson Wahl, pastor of the
EVANGE~INE
Chapter
First · Baptist
Church ,
Gallipolis ;
Mrs.
Polly O .E .S. regular meeting .
Weatherholt, Gallipolis school Middleport Masonic Temple,
nurse; and Dr. Richard Pat- 7: 30 p.m . Past matrons and
terson , obstetrician at the patrons will be honored.
CHESTER WSCS at the
Holzer Medical Center.
church,
1:30 p.m . Program
Elected president of the
South Central Districf was . topic: " Empowering Women
Mrs. Lloyd Danner of the for Mission" by Mrs. Ethel Orr
ProgrCssive Mothers League. · and Mrs. Mable Van Meter.
A silver dish was presented to
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, outgoing
district president , and the
entertainment was provided by
the Gloettes of Gloria· Buck
Wallace .
Next meeting of the Middleport League will be June 21
at the home of Mrs. ·Susie
Grueser. Mrs. Rupe will install
the new officers.

Mrs . Mary J Roush, Mrs. be entered in state comBrinker, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. petition.
Hampton and Mrs , Hackett to
Mrs. Martin also presented a
Your Thorn MeAn S1ore
assist. A bake sale was also report of the Area D. child
Ml
PORT
planned for July 3 at the Dale welfare activities, noting that
PORTLAND _ Projects Erwine, Lucy Taylor and
Warner Ins . Co., Pomeroy. a1112 states have reported . Sle were discussed at a recent Leafy Chasteen.
Both projects will help with announced that Marie Loux, meeting of the Lebanon Golden
expenses of members at- Misso~ri, was the winner of th .., Age Club held at the
tending the meeting in Tole~o. narrative report award. A total Reorganized Church of Jesus
Bottle caps were turned in at of 16,31&gt; children have been Christ, Latter Day Saints.
the meeting for redemption by assisted during the past year at
Plans were made for a
Royal Crown.
a total cost of $47,307.
meeting to be held June 13 at 10
For Regatta Weekend, the
Named to the auditing at the church wtth a potluck
Salon will prepare a "frog" committee were Mrs. Roush, dinner. All senior citizens of
window at Elberfelds. Mrs. Mrs. Hysell a nd Mrs. Walker , the community are invited to
Mary Martin will have charge Mrs. Gladys Mowery, here attend and to take a friend or
of the display .
from California, was welcomed neighbor.
Mrs. Hampton reported that and a dinner was planned for
Attending the meeting and
she had sent in a repOrt of the Wednesday night at the potluck were Goldie Clendenin,
memorial ser vice. She also Holiday Inn , 6 p.m., honoring Arley West, Orpha West ,
~oted tha't a sympathy card her·
Velma Taylor, Darrel Taylor,
had been sent to Mrs. Ray Fox
An invitation was read from , Dessie Pattei-son, Carol
and that flowers had been sent Wilkesville Salon inyiting Taylor, Mr. and Mrs , Charles
to the funeral. A card and members to attend the July 2 Hilton, Ethel Johnson , Okey
flowers were also sent to Mrs. installation of 'new officers . . Paynter, Roy Blish, Garnet
Reva Cihla.
Mrs, Maitin will be the in~
Mrs . Boyd, reporting for stalling officer.
Mrs. Richards, noted thai the · The July .g meeting of the
Get In
Swtm!
' ritual and emblems report had Meigs County Salorf will be a
See Our Collection
been mailed to the state picnic at the Letart summer
-· chairwoman and Mrs. Walker home of Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
noted that she had sent in the Walker . TwO new partners
nurses scholarship report . It were voted into the salon
was reported by Mrs. Martin membership:
that the history and scrapbook
Mrs. Knapp invited the
have been completed and will members to atten:l the wedding of her son, Randy Cross to
Main at Sycamore .
to increase your collection . Cut crowns, with some roots, from Phyllis Spears on June 24, at
Pomeroy, Ohio
mother plant with knife. Pot as if a new plant. Jf there are no the Kanauga Baptist Church, 2
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
p.m.
roots, put plant in shallow dish for a week or so until roots form.
Each plant should have only one crown.
SOIL - Good soil is always conducive to good growth. Mix by
blending soil. sand or vemic.ulite and peatrno~. or use commercial mixtures.
SfERILIZING should not be confined only to soil (bake 2 hrs.
at 180 degrees if mix own soil) but should include all pots. Boil
pots fOr ten ot' fifteen minutes.
LEAF .STEM ROT can be prevented by rimming pot with
aluminum foiL Rot is caused by salts on edge of pot. Keep edge
... even for those late; late calls. Like the STAR LITE® telephon·e ... th e
clean .
dainty high -style phone with a dial that glows .. lt's ideal for he r vanity or
LEAF CUTIINGS - Each leaf will produce from one to a
night table for after-dark dialing, or JUS! as a friend ly soft n1ght llgh l (w1th
dozen plants. Cutting can be rooted in water, sand, or ver-·
adjustable br ightness). Bedroom or breakfast nook, k1tchen or rumpus
miculite. If rooted in water, must put in sand, peatmoss, or
room . .. every home should have a second phone. a step- and workvermiculite for plants to form. Pot when plants can be separated.
saver lor your greater pleasu re. convenience and security . Wherever
Do not use outer leaves for rooting.
your need, whatever your taste or decor , there's a fasc1natmg
MANICURING plants is necessary to keep pla nts neat Keep
selection of styles , colors and spec ial-purpose te lephones
all old flower stalks and dead leaves pulled off. Wash off leaves
when dusty by spraying with warm water. Do not set in sun until
in General Tele phone's Extension Extravaganza.
dry.
LIGHTING - I find mine do better in north window. East is
fine if there is a tree to filter morning sun. Do npt change plants
from window to window for they will stop blooming.
POTS - Can be either clay, plastic or ceramic. Large pots
are not necessary, seldom do YO\l need. one over 4 inches - smalJ
pl &lt;lnts in 2 ''&gt;~ in. pots. ShoW plants may need 5or 6-inch pots.
A PARTY DRESS for your plan may be made from a paper
doily, or wrapping in alwninum foil.
.
TO KEEP SYMMETRICAL in shape, give them a quarter of
a turn every week or two &lt;:IS they are inclined to -grow toward the
light.
CROWN-ROT - When your plants keep on wilting when soil
is wet, it is crown-rot. cut plant off above root, pull off lower
leaves and root in water, then put in soil. ,
LEGGY OR ILL-SHAPED PLANTS may be prevented by
cutting off stem leaving about 1 in. Pull off lower leaves just
'
leaving a rosette of leaves in crown. Rootin W~tef-' and put in soil.
· TEMPERATURES - Africa! violets need a daytime ternperature of· about 70 degrees to 75 degrees. At night a lower
temperature of 60 degrees to 65 degrees is good. Blooms may be
sparse if get too cold in winter or too hot m sununer.
lfii#l .
Reliable Companies who sell African Violets are Fischer
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE
Greenhouse, Linwood, New Jersey; Cecil Houdyshelt, 1412 Third
Street, LaVerne, California; Buell's, Eastford, Connecticut, and
Tinari Greenhouse, Bethayres, Pennsylvania.
CH~STPHONE . . a real man -type
deCorat
o r phone f or the living
••
room. his spec ial room, de sk br
•
ta ble. Modern styli zed instrum ent
••
STYLELINE.. telephone puts the works
handsome ly set in a black leathe r
right in the palm of your hand .. . ·
•
STVLELtNE~
chest with walnut trim .
. ,in
handset,
dial
and
rec"'!l
button.
Make
------- __ - - - WALL PHONE
carved walnut ... or even with a
call
after
Call
without
setting
down
the
be aut •lul. conven 1en t
sardonyx stone hunti.ng sce ne inphone. Comes In while , green, ivory,
Step -s aver fo r her
set on· the lid [
yellow,
pink,
beige,
or
avocado.
k1lchen . laundry room
. for any place
(c JIIJr •
1 • II)
where i l's hard to l ind
counter or table-top
sp·ace . Comas iil

.!
SpRd a.-, .....,._ ~ ....... UINIIIIng (II till ,
................ - - . .... drift gHr, OOtll*'ling fOd,
p11o1an «111 cluld'l 1111 """"'"'lid lor Mn y-. from dale
of ~Ill&gt; SpMd Outen •• Olv'-lon Mt~· EdiiiOn
Clmplllrr, Npon, Wit&lt;D'I..... II ""of
llallld P'ftl
11111....-...,lht II).,_- WMIIII'Itf' l*loCfM I NWII Ill I lllltiU~.. ~' fNr will be lllflletd, llbof ~ ,.,., ~
"' . . ....,... «&lt;Il ~-of filCh ptnl ....... -

Mothers League
has convention

Golden Age Club
discusses projects

Salon elects officers

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

JUST ARRIVED!

Cake , pw1ch and coffee were
served .
The three-tiered cake, ma&lt;te
by .Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, was
decorated in white and silver
with a miniature bride and
groom and " 25th Anniversary"
in silver on top. The table was
covered with a white lace cloth
and featured silver tapers in
s ilver holders and gladioli.
White bells and streamers

were used ove r the table.
Num ero us
gifts
were
presented to Mr. and Mrs.
Rose, who aloo recei ved cards
of con gr atulations. A corsag e
of white and silver carnations
was presented to Mrs . Rose by
her daughter , Julie.
Mrs .
Bertha
Dye,
Sacramento, Calif., unable to
attend ,sent a tape recording of
congratulations, and there was
also a gift sent by Mrs. Dorothy
Williard, Illinois, and Mrs .
Lu cy Williams, Columbus. All
three are sisters of Rose.
Guests were Julie and
Mandie Rose, Mr. and Mrs .
Arc hie Ro se, Mrs . Archie
TutUe, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
TutUe, Rodney Tuttle, Mr. and
Mrs. Milton TutUe, Mr . and
Mrs. Rl!y Johnson and I'Qn,
Billy, Mr . and Mrs. Jim
Codney, son, Jason, Mr. and
Mrs. Rlllph Keller, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Keller and sons,
ROOney, Russell and Randy,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
and granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Nonnan Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. George Genheirner, Mrs.
Mae Spencer and son, Vance,
and Eugene, Kermit and
Dayton McElroy.

- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Porneroy, 0 ., J une 5, 1973
executive secretary of the Ohio
DIStn ct , of the Lu ther a n
Church-Missouri Synod.
Dr . Paul Moe lle r , Ohio
bishop and presiding off icer of

Two will
att end

&amp; _ The Dally Sentinel, ;otiddleport-Po•••t roy, 0 ., June &gt;. 1973

GET YOUR SUPPLY
WHILE THEY LAST-

-

OTHER WOMENS

SANDALS

Everyday Low Price!

.,.7

¢

. -----~~:::::::::::=::::::::::..~..:::.~::::::::::::::::;::::::::::·:·::::::::::::::....................~~~~~;;;;~--;;-~-;;-~--~-;.;....................
I

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7

Green Thumb ·
Notes . ...
''

A weekly feature of Meigs
CoWlty Garden Club members.

•

&lt;

Raising of African Violets
Mr. and Mrs. John Rose, Jr.

BYMRS . ANNAOGDIN
Star Garden Club
African violets have become household resi~cnts in this
country just within th e past 30 years or so. In 1926, a California
firm introduced a number of named varieties . It speaks well for
them that they have gained such fam e and popularity in so brief
a time.
The first known plants we re found by Baron Walter von St.
Paulin 1892 in East Africa . He sent seeds and plants lo his father,
who lived in Germany, and th e elder St. Paul then shared plants

Recent party honors
Mr. and Mrs. Rose
EAGLE RIDGE - Mrs ,
Philip Hauck hosted a silver
anniversary party at her home
on Eagle Ridge · recently
honoring Mr. and Mrs. John
Rose, Jr., who were married on
May 18, 1948.
The couple has three
children, Archie, Julie and
Mandie. A dinner was served to
the family wilh an open house
being held from 2 to 5 p.m.

which he grew with the director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at
Hanover, Germany, Herman Wendland . He described the
species and gave it the name "saintpaulia" to honor the man who
discovered the plants, and his father , who first introduced them
to indoor gardeners. Apparently Wendland was responsible for
the use of the word "violet" as the common name for it, which is
a surprising fact coming from a botanist. In English the most

common name is "African Violet."
About 1900, they were seen growing in the tropical
greenhouses of tbe University Botanic Garden of cambridge,
England. They were se ldom seen except in botanic gardens and
plant houses of large estates. No one then had any idea of the
popul3rity t~ey were to achieve as the most widely grow n house
plant in the U. S. The charm of their flowers and beauty and
distinction of their foliage are enough to arouse the interest of all
flower lovers.
There is a wide ran ge of colors - they may be white , all
shades of blue and lavender and pink , purple and wine red, or
they may combine two or even three colors in the flower. They
now have blooms with a chartreuse edge. Leaves too have
changed - the original plants mostly had plain green leaves.
Now they may be almost any shade of green , sometimes with
white variegations, as wintergreen or frosty, or red reverses.
They may also be quilled, ruffled, scalloped, fringed, longstemmed or short, spooned or not. The mammoth varieties have
big, thick leaves. There seems to be no end to the variations
possible in these lovely plants. As of yet, there are no true reds or
no yellows. The nower sizes vary according to varieties, age and
culture. Some are as large as a silver dollar. ''America'' has the
largest bloom of any I have.
A plant just beginning to bloom may look very much different as it gets older. On such plants as the "Painted Lady"
some blooms may be variegated one way, some another , and
some plain in color. As they grow older, sometimes you have only
plain colored flowers. The variegated leaves change to plain
sometimes too. By starting a new plant from .a leaf they may
divert to original colors.
One thing I like aboUt violets is that they usually have the
heaviest bloom in winter when no other flowers bloom. To have
pretty plants and blooms one has to keep new ones starting, "'
either by leaf, division, or cutting small plants - which
. sometimes grow On side of, plant - from the stem and root in
water, then put in soH.
16 Tips On Growing African Violets
·wATER -Every other day is about right for most homes,
but check dryness before watering. Use warm water - few
degrees wanner than room . Dp n.ot water if soil feels damp.
Amount depends on type of pot, type of soil, size of plant, and rate
of growth.
HUMIDITY -To help increase air moisture around plants,
set them on a tray that is filled with moist sand, gravel, or
•chicken grit. You may also set pans of Water on mdiators or on a
table near the plants.
FEEDING - Feed regularly to keep plants in good growth.
Use soluble or liquid and apPly every two or three weeks or at
least once a month. Always feed on the day after they have been
well watered. I alternate using Hyponex and Stirnuplant.
SEPARA'TING - Separating crowded plants is an easy way

We've just received a
shipment of washers,
dryers, portable dryers,
and wringer type washers.
•

1

1
~

1

!

HERE'S JUST ONE OF OUR
MANY BARGAINS.

Six members of the Middleport Child Conservation
· League attended the Ohio CCL
South Central District spring
conference held at the Holiday
Inn in Gallipolis, Saturday.
Going from the local league
were Mrs. Robert Schmoll,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Pat Duffy, Mrs. Lou qsborne,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Mrs.
John Blaker.
The Toddlers to Tassels
League of Gallipolis hosted the
spring conference which
carried out the theme "The
Hand That Rocks the Cradle"
in table decoration and
program.
· Mrs. William Wolfe, Ohio
CCL president, was the
speaker using "What's Happening in CCL" as her theme.
She discussed ways of increasing membei-ship and
forming new leagues and
explained the difference between a service league and an
achievement league. She reMEET POSTPONED
emphasized that CCL's purA meeting of the Laurel Clifi pose is to educate.
Better Health Club scheduled
for Thursday has been postponed until June 14. The place
will be aruwunced later.

Election oi officers for the
1973-74 year and the naming of
delegates to the 47th annual La
Marche to be.in Toledo July 22
and 23, highlighted a meeting
Monday night of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, at the home of Mrs.
Veda Davis.
The new officers are Mrs.
Marie Boyd. chapeau; Mrs.
Mary Martin, first demi
chapeau; Mrs. Eileen Searles,
second demi chapeau; Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew, l'aumonier;
Mrs . Mary Roush , Ia archiviste ; Mrs . Lula Hampton,
la co nci erge; Mrs. Mrytle
Walker, la secretaire&lt;'aSsiere;
Mrs . Julia Hysell, Ia avo~ate;
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, national
pouvior member .
Mrs. Catherine Welsh and
Mrs. Martin were fleeted
delegates at large to the Toledo
convention, with Mrs. Hackett,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, atid Mrs.
Walker as delegates, and Mrs.
Eunie Brinker, Mrs. Hampton
and Mrs. Florence Richards as
th e alternates.
Plans were made [or a
rummage and yard sale at the
horne of Mrs . Knapp, Hinkle
Ave., Gallipolis, Friday and
Saturday with Mrs , Walker,

l
l

l

1

•1o-Yiti.R WAitMIIITY;;;rMI....IIIO&gt;II

till-·

~oi

JJet&amp;over 6e

SWIM SUITS
NOW!
lOLA'S

Your Complete Tire Center ·
992-2094
Pomeroy,

,_.._,__-..

----~·-------

BAKER FURNITURE

,

,

/(' ill'.ilt!JII'/

~UM BU SA"' 0.sou TH~tiiliO_i_tE_GT_EIC_&lt;:O_M
0.

choice of ei gh1 de h·
C1ous co lors .

•.
p A NV)

••
•••

I•

·--·-,.....

•

I

r(' presentatives will be seated
at the convention.
ln r.ecen t years convention
co nsideration h ;:~s incl ud ed
issues rc l atin~ to society and

govern ment. This year it will
also include consideration of
the pr oposed res tru ct urin g
plan to strea mline the work
a nd e ffec ti veness or the

Distri ct church.
Spedal times have been set
aside during the convention for
both la y and clergy delegates
to meet informally with Dr.

Pre us, the ne w chur ch
president. This will give a ll
concerned the opportunity to
communicate to Dr. Preus
some of the grass roots issues

that people in the church are
conce rned about.
St. Paul Lutheran Church is
a member congregation of the
Am~ri ca n Lutheran Church.

A CHSCOU loll
!&gt;[PART ~tf. fliT STOll

Point
Pleasant

Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza

Mason

w. va.

I

ET.
.
S

Teens and Womens
TWO PIECE

SHORT
SETS
Jamaica
or
shorter
length
s hort s, matching
sleeveless top Summer
favorites for all
gals ,

•

•I
'

..
•'

Southeast Ohio's Emergency
Medical Service will be
presented on WHTN-TV on the
"Newsmaker'' program, June
.9 at 8 p.m.
Emergency Medical
Technicians will demonstrate
their specialized skills and
discuss operations of 'various
ambulance stations throughout
the seven-county service area.
Charges for the EMS service
will also be discussed , as well
as what to expect of the service
as a consumer.
"SEOEMS" is a ncn-profit
national health demonstration
project of Ohto Valley Health
SerVices Foundation, Inc. of
Athens, Ohio.

GETS RANKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Alltime riding champion Bill
Shoemaker has put himself
squarely into the column
marked male chauvinist.
"I'd rather ride against 10
women than 10 men,"
Shoemaker said. "The women
are good and they have a fine
·touch 111 but in day in and day
out competition they cannot
compete with the men."
Queried about the difference
between mare and fillies and
male thoroughbreds,
he
replied :
"Strangely enough, most of
the good top fillies cannot beat
a good top (male) horse."

6
FOAM BACK- VINYL

Eddy's schedule _
Mr .
Eddy
Educator's
schedule for the week of June 49 in Meigs County:
TUESDAY - Rl!cine, 12:3().
2:30; Wagner's 2: 45-3: 15;
Racine
Bank
3: 30-4:30;
Syracuse-usle 5-6; Forest Run
6:15-7:15; Tuppers Plams 7:3().
8:30.
WEDNESDAY - Cook Gap
Hill, 8-8 :30 p.m.
THURSDAY - Reedsville I·
2· LongBottom 3-4; Keno 4:305;30; Bashan 6-7; Baer's 7:308· Naomi 8: liHI: 45.
. 'FRIDA)' - .Letart 12:3().
· 2:30; East Letart 3-5; Apple
Grove 5:30-6; Dorcas 6:307:30; Syracuse P. 0. IHI:30.

FOR

SANITARY
WASTE
DISPOSAL

MATS
DECORATED! IRREGULARS

:4

•

•

NO MORE HEAVY
CANS TO CARl~Y
· hrtlu 1 ,IUICI

FOR

tftl~ll C"UI
• . £11~1-lllntCIHII

•

• UR01 UIIDtN
• IIUIIIUI &amp; Wtltlthp

WHITE OR NAVY

A 79c VALUE!

.JUMBO 17 OUNCE GLASS TUMBLERS

$ 88

By "ANCHOR HOCKING"

MEN'S
WHITE
Handkerchiefs

PR.

5 DAY SAVINGS SALE! GIRLS
2 PIECE SHORT SETS

. MADRID
PATTERN!
Brown Color

PLASTIC DECANTER

SLIGHT
IRREGULARS!

% GALLON SIZE

ALL REGULAR VALUES TO $1.94

SAFETY SERVER
ON TOP

22

GALLON SIZ£ ____
TUCKER PLASTIC

SET

'77c

. Very Special- Values To $4.00

VISIT
SHOPPER'S
MART
OFTEN!

WE'RE OPEN
MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY

44e

98' VALUE- &amp;tlSS
DECORATED "PYREX"

BEVERAGE
SERVER
¢

DAISY
OR
FLORAL
PATTERN

13 OUNCE SIZE ,_

"GllDDEN"-REGULAR $4.87 ~;:;;;

PLASTIC
TUMBLER~S
UNBREAKABLE!
GREEN COLOR

""

LATEX PAINT
SAVE
$1.65 Galion

84¢
49~

.

5
DAY
SALE!

10~A.

" OPEN 6 NIGHTS TILL 9 PM - SUNDAY 1 PM TO 6 PM
8 TRACK

ANTIQUE CLASSICS

STEREO
TAPES

CLEAR CRYSTAL GLASSWARE
BY JEANETTE!
Gondola bowl. wedding
di s h, covered candy bowl.
Lomboridi di s h . Actual
VALUES TO $1.69

¢
SUMMER SANDALS
'

RED, NAVY, TAN, MULTI -COlORS
ALL SIZES!

TWIN PACK OF TWO

9" SIZE-----

$ 99

GIRLS AND WOMEN'S COLORFUL VINYL

ROLlER REFILLS

39e

9VOLT

TRANSISTOR
BATTERIES

$
FOR

.PAINT PAN
AND
ROLLER

SIZE-----

FIRST
QUALITY

more?

THE BIG 9 INCH SIZE

7"

·FITTED STRIPE SHEETS

All your favori1e artists,
with the songs you want
to hear, over and over.
Why shou ld you pay

$3~~L

4 DAY SALE

27~.

Repeat Of A . Pre~ious Sell Out!

4 COLORS!

.------~~~----.
OUTSIDE WHITE·

\

VINYL ·
;FLOOR
RUNNERS

Full Bed Size

¢

SAVE S9c
On Each One

Bigger Raft

'1.27

6 Ft. X 27 Inch

6STYLES
Whil e.
They last!

SWIM RING

10 AM TO 9 PM

INFANTS
SLEEP OR
PLAY SETS

Terry or nylon at an
unbelievable low price!
On Sale Wednesday
10 a.m . . Hurry on

INFLATABLES FOR
SUMMER SWIM FUN

ASSORTED
COLORS
SERIES DELA YEO
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -Rains
washed out another ro~d of
the National CQ!egiate Athletic
Association College Division
World Series Monday.
California.Irvine, 2-0, was to
have played Ithaca College in
the first game with the loser
then going against Eastern
illinois, 1·1.

oavc:o

PLACE

CANVAS
BOAT
SHOES

OTHER SETS
'2.•24 TO •3,94

¢

LIMIT

Set

Sizes 3 to 14 in one big group
of reduced s hort sets.
Sleeveless crop lops hav e
matching or contrasting
s horts. 5 Day -sale_!

¢

MUGS

you ' ll like . Sizes 8 to
18 and 32 to 38.

MEN'S AND BOYS'

LACE
OR
SLIPON
STYLE

FORKS AND
SPOONS

COFFEE

we

have a pair of shorts

99

I

ANCHOR HOCKING"
REG. 27c-WHJTE

Regardless of your

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

June 9

•'

f"

SETS ~
EACH
STORE

'8" IF PERFECT!

on mr

'

JAMAICA
SHORTS
age or needs -

PKG. OF 100
PLASTIC

'D~ ~
- ·~

OR

lif'autiful Ironston e din·
11 .1 '1'\\':J rt• at II Vl' l' )' Spf'C.'ial
ltrkto . 4 dlnnl'r Jllale s. (' &lt;lkt·
Jllalf'S , CUllS, s au r t"rs , and
('l' n·al J,o\\'IS .

2'4

il l ! I I I

SHORT SHORTS

FAVORITE BLUE WILLOW
DECORATED PATTERN!

•

•••

PRICES IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY 10 AM
Teens, Juniors, Womens

SEOEMS

!fOUr RouaeKeeper

The Electric Climate

appllll .

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
...
·--"-',

house

'' .

I

E. Main

heritage

II\

1M_.,........... _,__.....,,..,._.

'*""' « ,. ......., o...... -··

Shine

wide-awake styles

~-----

ol

The Rev . Arthur Lund ,
pastor of Sl. Paul Lutheran
. Church and TreU Schoenleb
lay delegate, will attend th~
annual convention o( the Ohio
District, The
Ameri can
Lutheran Church on June 7-9
'
at Capital University.
The Ohio District of the ALC
covers a geographical area
extending from Lake Erie to
the Gulf of Mexico and includes
the states of Ohio, Indiana
Kentucky,
Tennessee ,' .
Alabama, Mississippi, and one
congregation in West Virginia,
in all 290 congregations.
The convention theme, " A
New Day Dawns," will set the
mood for the three days in
which delegates will hear the
newly installed nat(!lnal
president of the Alnerican
Lutheran Church, Dr . David
Preus, speak of his plans and
hopes for the 2'h million
member body, and report on
the reorganization already
underway. Dr. Walter Wietzke,
executive director of the
Division
of
Theological
Education, will be the
devotional leader for the
conference and in an address
each day will remind lhe
churchmen of the new life
inherent in the Gospel they
follow .
other speakers will be the
Rev. Jack Hustad of Minneapolis, national Evangelism
director, and Dr. Otto Toelke,

Boys' Son

Tne

the convention, has urged
co~gregations to include youth
and the women among their
delegates. In addition a special
delegation of 23 youth

conference

Mrs. Wolfe announCed the
WEDNESDAY
state convention to be held in
AUXILIARY, Middieport
Toledo in Oetober.
~ire Department, will meet at
Featured on the program
p.m. at the firehouse.
was a panel discussion, " Sex 8
POMEROY LODGE 164,
Education - the Pros and
Cons." On the panel were F&amp;AM , regular meeting , 7:30
Edward Stewart , assistant p .m . All Master Masons
principal of Gallia Academy; welcome.
THURSDAY
E. Wilson Wahl, pastor of the
EVANGE~INE
Chapter
First · Baptist
Church ,
Gallipolis ;
Mrs.
Polly O .E .S. regular meeting .
Weatherholt, Gallipolis school Middleport Masonic Temple,
nurse; and Dr. Richard Pat- 7: 30 p.m . Past matrons and
terson , obstetrician at the patrons will be honored.
CHESTER WSCS at the
Holzer Medical Center.
church,
1:30 p.m . Program
Elected president of the
South Central Districf was . topic: " Empowering Women
Mrs. Lloyd Danner of the for Mission" by Mrs. Ethel Orr
ProgrCssive Mothers League. · and Mrs. Mable Van Meter.
A silver dish was presented to
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, outgoing
district president , and the
entertainment was provided by
the Gloettes of Gloria· Buck
Wallace .
Next meeting of the Middleport League will be June 21
at the home of Mrs. ·Susie
Grueser. Mrs. Rupe will install
the new officers.

Mrs . Mary J Roush, Mrs. be entered in state comBrinker, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. petition.
Hampton and Mrs , Hackett to
Mrs. Martin also presented a
Your Thorn MeAn S1ore
assist. A bake sale was also report of the Area D. child
Ml
PORT
planned for July 3 at the Dale welfare activities, noting that
PORTLAND _ Projects Erwine, Lucy Taylor and
Warner Ins . Co., Pomeroy. a1112 states have reported . Sle were discussed at a recent Leafy Chasteen.
Both projects will help with announced that Marie Loux, meeting of the Lebanon Golden
expenses of members at- Misso~ri, was the winner of th .., Age Club held at the
tending the meeting in Tole~o. narrative report award. A total Reorganized Church of Jesus
Bottle caps were turned in at of 16,31&gt; children have been Christ, Latter Day Saints.
the meeting for redemption by assisted during the past year at
Plans were made for a
Royal Crown.
a total cost of $47,307.
meeting to be held June 13 at 10
For Regatta Weekend, the
Named to the auditing at the church wtth a potluck
Salon will prepare a "frog" committee were Mrs. Roush, dinner. All senior citizens of
window at Elberfelds. Mrs. Mrs. Hysell a nd Mrs. Walker , the community are invited to
Mary Martin will have charge Mrs. Gladys Mowery, here attend and to take a friend or
of the display .
from California, was welcomed neighbor.
Mrs. Hampton reported that and a dinner was planned for
Attending the meeting and
she had sent in a repOrt of the Wednesday night at the potluck were Goldie Clendenin,
memorial ser vice. She also Holiday Inn , 6 p.m., honoring Arley West, Orpha West ,
~oted tha't a sympathy card her·
Velma Taylor, Darrel Taylor,
had been sent to Mrs. Ray Fox
An invitation was read from , Dessie Pattei-son, Carol
and that flowers had been sent Wilkesville Salon inyiting Taylor, Mr. and Mrs , Charles
to the funeral. A card and members to attend the July 2 Hilton, Ethel Johnson , Okey
flowers were also sent to Mrs. installation of 'new officers . . Paynter, Roy Blish, Garnet
Reva Cihla.
Mrs, Maitin will be the in~
Mrs . Boyd, reporting for stalling officer.
Mrs. Richards, noted thai the · The July .g meeting of the
Get In
Swtm!
' ritual and emblems report had Meigs County Salorf will be a
See Our Collection
been mailed to the state picnic at the Letart summer
-· chairwoman and Mrs. Walker home of Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
noted that she had sent in the Walker . TwO new partners
nurses scholarship report . It were voted into the salon
was reported by Mrs. Martin membership:
that the history and scrapbook
Mrs. Knapp invited the
have been completed and will members to atten:l the wedding of her son, Randy Cross to
Main at Sycamore .
to increase your collection . Cut crowns, with some roots, from Phyllis Spears on June 24, at
Pomeroy, Ohio
mother plant with knife. Pot as if a new plant. Jf there are no the Kanauga Baptist Church, 2
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
p.m.
roots, put plant in shallow dish for a week or so until roots form.
Each plant should have only one crown.
SOIL - Good soil is always conducive to good growth. Mix by
blending soil. sand or vemic.ulite and peatrno~. or use commercial mixtures.
SfERILIZING should not be confined only to soil (bake 2 hrs.
at 180 degrees if mix own soil) but should include all pots. Boil
pots fOr ten ot' fifteen minutes.
LEAF .STEM ROT can be prevented by rimming pot with
aluminum foiL Rot is caused by salts on edge of pot. Keep edge
... even for those late; late calls. Like the STAR LITE® telephon·e ... th e
clean .
dainty high -style phone with a dial that glows .. lt's ideal for he r vanity or
LEAF CUTIINGS - Each leaf will produce from one to a
night table for after-dark dialing, or JUS! as a friend ly soft n1ght llgh l (w1th
dozen plants. Cutting can be rooted in water, sand, or ver-·
adjustable br ightness). Bedroom or breakfast nook, k1tchen or rumpus
miculite. If rooted in water, must put in sand, peatmoss, or
room . .. every home should have a second phone. a step- and workvermiculite for plants to form. Pot when plants can be separated.
saver lor your greater pleasu re. convenience and security . Wherever
Do not use outer leaves for rooting.
your need, whatever your taste or decor , there's a fasc1natmg
MANICURING plants is necessary to keep pla nts neat Keep
selection of styles , colors and spec ial-purpose te lephones
all old flower stalks and dead leaves pulled off. Wash off leaves
when dusty by spraying with warm water. Do not set in sun until
in General Tele phone's Extension Extravaganza.
dry.
LIGHTING - I find mine do better in north window. East is
fine if there is a tree to filter morning sun. Do npt change plants
from window to window for they will stop blooming.
POTS - Can be either clay, plastic or ceramic. Large pots
are not necessary, seldom do YO\l need. one over 4 inches - smalJ
pl &lt;lnts in 2 ''&gt;~ in. pots. ShoW plants may need 5or 6-inch pots.
A PARTY DRESS for your plan may be made from a paper
doily, or wrapping in alwninum foil.
.
TO KEEP SYMMETRICAL in shape, give them a quarter of
a turn every week or two &lt;:IS they are inclined to -grow toward the
light.
CROWN-ROT - When your plants keep on wilting when soil
is wet, it is crown-rot. cut plant off above root, pull off lower
leaves and root in water, then put in soil. ,
LEGGY OR ILL-SHAPED PLANTS may be prevented by
cutting off stem leaving about 1 in. Pull off lower leaves just
'
leaving a rosette of leaves in crown. Rootin W~tef-' and put in soil.
· TEMPERATURES - Africa! violets need a daytime ternperature of· about 70 degrees to 75 degrees. At night a lower
temperature of 60 degrees to 65 degrees is good. Blooms may be
sparse if get too cold in winter or too hot m sununer.
lfii#l .
Reliable Companies who sell African Violets are Fischer
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE
Greenhouse, Linwood, New Jersey; Cecil Houdyshelt, 1412 Third
Street, LaVerne, California; Buell's, Eastford, Connecticut, and
Tinari Greenhouse, Bethayres, Pennsylvania.
CH~STPHONE . . a real man -type
deCorat
o r phone f or the living
••
room. his spec ial room, de sk br
•
ta ble. Modern styli zed instrum ent
••
STYLELINE.. telephone puts the works
handsome ly set in a black leathe r
right in the palm of your hand .. . ·
•
STVLELtNE~
chest with walnut trim .
. ,in
handset,
dial
and
rec"'!l
button.
Make
------- __ - - - WALL PHONE
carved walnut ... or even with a
call
after
Call
without
setting
down
the
be aut •lul. conven 1en t
sardonyx stone hunti.ng sce ne inphone. Comes In while , green, ivory,
Step -s aver fo r her
set on· the lid [
yellow,
pink,
beige,
or
avocado.
k1lchen . laundry room
. for any place
(c JIIJr •
1 • II)
where i l's hard to l ind
counter or table-top
sp·ace . Comas iil

.!
SpRd a.-, .....,._ ~ ....... UINIIIIng (II till ,
................ - - . .... drift gHr, OOtll*'ling fOd,
p11o1an «111 cluld'l 1111 """"'"'lid lor Mn y-. from dale
of ~Ill&gt; SpMd Outen •• Olv'-lon Mt~· EdiiiOn
Clmplllrr, Npon, Wit&lt;D'I..... II ""of
llallld P'ftl
11111....-...,lht II).,_- WMIIII'Itf' l*loCfM I NWII Ill I lllltiU~.. ~' fNr will be lllflletd, llbof ~ ,.,., ~
"' . . ....,... «&lt;Il ~-of filCh ptnl ....... -

Mothers League
has convention

Golden Age Club
discusses projects

Salon elects officers

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

JUST ARRIVED!

Cake , pw1ch and coffee were
served .
The three-tiered cake, ma&lt;te
by .Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, was
decorated in white and silver
with a miniature bride and
groom and " 25th Anniversary"
in silver on top. The table was
covered with a white lace cloth
and featured silver tapers in
s ilver holders and gladioli.
White bells and streamers

were used ove r the table.
Num ero us
gifts
were
presented to Mr. and Mrs.
Rose, who aloo recei ved cards
of con gr atulations. A corsag e
of white and silver carnations
was presented to Mrs . Rose by
her daughter , Julie.
Mrs .
Bertha
Dye,
Sacramento, Calif., unable to
attend ,sent a tape recording of
congratulations, and there was
also a gift sent by Mrs. Dorothy
Williard, Illinois, and Mrs .
Lu cy Williams, Columbus. All
three are sisters of Rose.
Guests were Julie and
Mandie Rose, Mr. and Mrs .
Arc hie Ro se, Mrs . Archie
TutUe, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
TutUe, Rodney Tuttle, Mr. and
Mrs. Milton TutUe, Mr . and
Mrs. Rl!y Johnson and I'Qn,
Billy, Mr . and Mrs. Jim
Codney, son, Jason, Mr. and
Mrs. Rlllph Keller, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Keller and sons,
ROOney, Russell and Randy,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
and granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Nonnan Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. George Genheirner, Mrs.
Mae Spencer and son, Vance,
and Eugene, Kermit and
Dayton McElroy.

- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Porneroy, 0 ., J une 5, 1973
executive secretary of the Ohio
DIStn ct , of the Lu ther a n
Church-Missouri Synod.
Dr . Paul Moe lle r , Ohio
bishop and presiding off icer of

Two will
att end

&amp; _ The Dally Sentinel, ;otiddleport-Po•••t roy, 0 ., June &gt;. 1973

GET YOUR SUPPLY
WHILE THEY LAST-

-

OTHER WOMENS

SANDALS

Everyday Low Price!

.,.7

¢

. -----~~:::::::::::=::::::::::..~..:::.~::::::::::::::::;::::::::::·:·::::::::::::::....................~~~~~;;;;~--;;-~-;;-~--~-;.;....................
I

•

l

�r

H- The DailySentin.i,

~

1

•

Middleport-; omeroy, 0., June 5, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentin~l Cl~ssifieds Get Results.·
WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OEADI.,.INES
5 I? M . Dr~y Before Publicat ion
Monday Dead line 9 a . m
Cancellation
Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a m . for

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Day of Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
r i ght to edit or r~iect any ads
deemed
obiectionat
The

For Rent

For Sale

TRAILER i n Brown 's. Trailer
Park , Minersville. Phone 992- COAL
33U .

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

6-l ftc

" -- -

Limestone, E)Cce/-.ior ·
Salt Works, E . Main St .,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
.d l

Ot: LUKEY JEST

GOT

[X)ES ,... "T'Rtf"t'E X
~ATT OG. ME:AJ.J "'!

·- OR HORID Y

BACK FROM
CAL!FORNEv..

Business Services

If

2 BEDROOM mob11e home. ai r
ASK US ABOUT
conditioned, Racine area , CASE 310 Irani end loader, 1967
POMEROY
Dodge 0 -500, 2 ton truck and
Phone 992 6329.
pub lisher will not be responsible
PRE · FABRICATED
1964 cab over engine, 2 ton
S-23 lfc
for more than one incorrect
HOME
AUTO
International truck . Phone
1970
BUICK
ELECTRA
225
&gt;2695
insert ion .
3_A_N_0,_4- R-:00
c=-M
-:-I:u--r n
- :is"'
h-e7d and
773 5119 .
l -door, local 1-owner car with less than 32,000 miles • •
RATES
992 . 2094
5-27 -6tp
Clima te Control .;.ir conditioning, 40 -60 power sea t, radio,
unfurnished
apartments .
For Want Ad Service
606 E. Main Pomeroy
gol~ finish . Loaded with many extras.
S cen ts per Word one in ser t ion
Phone 992· 5434.
M ini mum Charge 75c
4-12-lfc MASSEY -Ferguson 10 horse
On Mos1 Americ1n Cars
12 cents per w.ord three
1969 PLYMOUTH FURY I
S19S
=:-::-...,.--.,.,-,-...,.-...,.-:-::-...,.--- power I awn and garden
consecutive ins ert io ns .
Buil1to Your 'Specs
4-door, 52 1000 miles, good fires, 6 cylirider, automatic
TWO
tra iler lots in Middleport ;
trac'tor . mower and dozer
- GUARANTEED18 cents prr word si)( con .
transmissio n, black finish .
Delivered 1o Job Site
'lz duple)( in Bradbury. ; phone blade - Appaloosa geld ing,
and
.'
secut ive inse r tions .
Phone 992 ·2094
bef ore 6 p.m . 992 -5693.
nice for 4-H or a beginner .
'
25 Per Cent D i scount on pa id
1969 CHEVROLET BELAIR
S89S
Phone 992-2343.
6 -4-5 tc
ads and ads paid w ithi n 10 days
4-doar , gold fin ish .' clean in terior . goad tires , J27 V-8
5-3l -3tc
CARD OF THANKS
~-:-:---------,
engine, power steering , rad io.
&amp; OBITUARY
,
Open 8 Til! .
SLEEPING room over Wine
Stop In and See Our
MATERIALS CO.
SI .SO for SO word min imum .
Monday thru Saturday
Store, Pomeroy . References NEW 2 pc . Early American
Floor Display.
Each additional word 2c .
773-5554
Mason, W.Va .
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
required . Phone 992-5293 .
living rrom sui te, 100 pet .
BLIND ADS
6-S-tfc
nylon wi lh Scotchgard and
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .
~-=-:-:-~=-:--­
maple wood trim . This week
Specialist
FURNISHED apartmen L
OFFICE HOURS
only $189 .95 . Cash and Carry,
8:30a . m , to 5:00p .m . Daily ,
c lean, all electric, S85 mo. be·
Wile~ I
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E.
' .
8:3 0 a . m . to 12 ·00 Noon
tw~n Pomeroy and Athens .
Main
St.,
Phone
992
-7554.
AligntneF1t •
OPEN EVES. 8 : 00P.M.
Saturday .
Call Mason 773-5580 .
5-31 -6fc
12 Years . 10.75 A. P.R.
POMEROY, OHIO
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 6
_ -J .6tp
11 Mvst
for Your
(3) 1973 ZIG-ZAG Sewing
From the laroest ~--·-'
Be
Right
SLEEPING room , Call992-7244.
Mach ines lett In layaway .
Bulldozer Radiator to
THE FAMILY of Mrs. Han k
5-31 ·61c
or we will
Beaut i ful pastel color, full
::, rn a11esr Heater Lore .
Young are deeply grateful
Make i1 Right_
.
size model. All buill-in to
Nathan Bigg s
and wish to express the ir
SMALL 3 rooms and bath
buttonhole, de. stretch sewing
Radiator Specialist
s incere thanks to their GARAGE sale , Thursday ,
furnished apartment, utilities
and fancy stitching . Pay just Qualify Today, Call
relatives , friends , good neigh furn
is
hed,
men
preferred
.
Friday and Satur day, June 7, POODLE pupp ies, Toy A.K .C.,
$48 .57
c ash
or
terms
bors .
the
Pomeroy
Ideal tor working men .
8, and · 9. 109 Spring Ave .
available . Trade -ins ac . Chocolale Show quality.
8-4: 30 Daily, 8-12 Sat.
•
Emergency Squad and Ben H.
Completely private from
Second house from the Corner
cepted . Electro Hyg iene Co.
Phone
992-5443.
Ewing for !heir acts of kind .
In
the
R.
H.
Rawlings
Sons
'
residence
.
Phone
992
-3881
Bar .
Phone 992 -7755 .
Choose your own home from
5-lJ-ff c
Building .
'
ness and consoling words of
from 4-6 p, m . After 6 p . m .
Ph . 9?2-1174
Pomeroy
6·5-3tp
5-3J.6tc
your AREA DEALER.
sympathy conveyed to us at a
call 992.3134.
992 -2101
Middlepor1, 0 . .
time of trag ic loss of our
5-31-6tc
POODLES. AKC Pupp ies, small
M c DANIELS Custom Slaugh ter
beloved mother , Berneta
miniature,
bla
c
k
Q
r
white,
(2)
Electrolux
Vacuum
House and M ea t Cutt ing ;
Young .
Your .. unselfish
wormed , permanent shots. PRIVATE meeting room for
Cleaners complete with at .
State and Government in generosl1y will always be
any organiza ti on; phone 992 ·
$75; Phone Coolville 667 -6214.
Have your T.V, Picture Tube
tachments, cordwinder and
spected ; phone 773 -5208 .
appreciated and remem ~975 .
Restored As Good As New
520-17tc
paint
spray
.
Used
but
in
like
5·20 · 121c
bered . Mrs. Calvin (B. Louis)
Rooting ·. Roof Painting,
3-11-ttc
Right
In Your
Home .
new
condition.
Pay
$34.45
M itchelL John P. Young ,
Spouting,
Plumbil)g,
AKC Toy Poodle puppies , $75 .---~-~
Guaranteed for 6 Mo.
cash
or
budget
plan
available
.
PIANO
TUNING
.
Kar
l
Keb
ler,
24
Hour
William A. Young .
Remodeling,
Complete
and $85 . Also Siamese k ittens, All ELECTRIC - like· new 3
Electro Hygiene Co. , Phone
Mason , W. Va . Phone 7736-S-l tc
Daily Service
SlO.
Phone
1-256
-6247,
Kennels
rooms
with
large
b'lth.
Building
,
Vinyl
&amp;
Aluminum
992-7755 .
5535.
of Calhoun .
Electric wall oven, tablE top
Color-$30.00
S•ding.
5-3 1-6tc
5-24-12tc
range, large closet located on
5 20 301c
Black &amp; White-$15 . 00
E . Main St .• Pomerov . SloP tn
PHONE , 991-2550
$100 REWARD for recovering of
appreciate . Ph. Gallipolis STARCRAFT - New 1973 fold
one male Pointer and one
down
campers
sleeps
6
or
8
446-9539 .
female Britany . Phone 446- 110-12 volt , 3 burner stoves,
SOMEONE to take over my
5-29-tfc
0080, Gallipolis or 992-3589.
2 water systems, raised
John Tucker , Rt . 4
Due
to
circumstances
mowing in Middlepot by June
1&gt;· 5-3tc
kitchen, School out spec ial
beyond our control there wilr
949.3151
15. Should be able to do
Pomeroy, 0.
$1,325. Same low prices on
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0 .
tr immi ng around walks, etc .,
be no further credit issued to
Racine, Ohio
Ph. 992-3954
PAIR of Lady's glasses lost at
travel tra i lers . Use Star .
please phone 992-3911 .
anyone at·Kapple's Pennzoi I.
Racine Al-umni Mi!Jy 27. If
FARMALL
B
Tractor
with
belly
master
8,
$999.
Closed
for
6-1-3tc
All outstanding bills MUST
foun. call 949 -3471.
mower, excellent condition .
vacation June 10 thru 2.1st .
AUTO AIR conditioning. SerDOZER and back hoe work
be paid by JUNE 5.
6-l -6fc
' th
Ch t
CAMP
CONLEY
STAR vice and repair . Call' 992-3802 .
S
G
S 1
ponds and septic tanks, ditch
~· ary m ' ·
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 North DUE to job transfer, must sell
5-24-:JOip
i~g service; top soil, fill dirt
----------of Point Pleasant, behind Red
home, 3 bedroom, tota l
l1mestone ; B&amp;K Excavating.
'
CONCRETE
electric, large lot. F .H.A. READY -MIX
BEAUTIFUL walnut· stereo Carpet Inn, Phone 675-538-4 .
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861.
6-1-6tc
delivered
right
to your
approved,
Syracuse.
Phond
WILL ·do bookkeeping in my
9-1-Hc
radio tap combination, AM- - - - - - -- - - - 992-7836 .
project. Fast and easy. Free
home. Phone 1-304-773-5613 .
FM radio, 8 track tape deck .
estimates . Phone 992-3284. NOW OPEN - Roger Hysell'!
l&gt; -5-6tc
5-25-lfc
Balance S116.98 or use our HOOD'S AQUARIUMS • fish
Goeglein
Ready -Mix Co ..
E. Mai'n St.
af'!d
supplies
,
new
location,
Pomeroy , 0 .
Garage, near Crossroads or
budget terms. Call 992-3965.
Midd leport, Ohio.
Ash
Street,
Middleport,
near
BY
OWNER
selli
ng
under
St. Rl . 124 ; all mechanic wod
6-J.6tc
6-30-tfc
park ; Phone 992-5443 .
appraisal
va
lue,
newly
bu
il
t
4
including automatic tr.lns
THE UNION Optical Center will
1-7- tfc
furn i shed apartments built -in
missions
. Monday
thn
HONOA
150.
Phone
742-6878.
observe Summer hours from
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ca binet s, panelled walls, now
Saturday, 8:30a. m. to 5 p , m
6-3-3tp
Memorial Day weekend to
rented monthly income $340. REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
. Phone 992-7121 or 992-5682.
CARPORT and porch sale, new
------,-Labor Day. Closed Saturdays.
4782, Ga l lipolis, John Russell,
All elect r ic, city wafer in
and
used
,
some
electric
ap
5·3'30tc
Eye Examinations by ap MUST se ll 1973 deluxe Zig- Zag
Owner and Operator.
coun try between pomeroy
pliances. Start Thursday at 9
pointmen t.
sewing
machine .
This
and be informed of the fun c5-12-tfc EXCAVATING. Dozers. large
Alhe~ . Phone Mason. W . Va.,
a. m. Wi ll last as long as we
tions of your gOv:ern men I ar e
machine darns, embroiders ,
5-27 -6tc
773
-5580
.
Will
consider
trade
.
have
anything
to
sell
.
Mabel
and small; Backhoes anc'.
embodied in pUbl ic notices . In
makes
buttonholes.
all
Id ea l tor home and income lor
Picken-S,
College
Rd
.,
loaders
on track and tires;
that self -government charges
REDUCE excess ·fl-uids with
without attachments. Just
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
r e t ire ~ coup le .
Syracuse, Ohio.
all citizens to be informed ;
Oump
trucks Lo-boy
. dial and sew . Pay balance of
Fluidex - Lose weight with
Complete Service
this newSpaper urges every
5-20· 12.tp
Service . Septic tanks in 6-4-41p
Dex
A-Diet
capsules
at
$38
.50
or
pay
$5
per
month.
Phone 949-382 1
citiz"en to rea:d and study th ese
stalled. George (Bill) Pullins.
Phone 992-5331.
Nel!?on DrugS.
not ices . We strongly adv ise
Racine, Ohio
phone 992-2478 or 992-7402.
3
BEDROOM
mobile
home
12
x
4· 20. tfc
I hOse ci t i'zens, seeking further
6·4·3tp
Critt Bradford
DELIVERED
60, carpel, dining area, dean,
·t
2-9-H(
information. to exercise their
5-1-tfc
'
:..
TO
right of acc ess lo publi C WILL giveaway to someone for
7
ROOM
house
wi
th
bath
in
$4,000.
Call
Mason
773-5580.
·LEGHORN hens for sale . 80c
·record~ and pub.ij.c meeH ng s.
cl! ~ood home '2 kit1ens and one
each . Call 843-2145.
Rut l and, air conditioned,
6-3-6tp EXCAVATING, dozer, loader HARRISON 'S TV service and
service calls . Phone 992-2522.
and backhoe work; septic.
fu I grown cat, .orange and
5-22 -IOic
carpeted, gas furnace, dish - 35 A. 4 bedroom brick,~ full
2·9-t((
tanks
installed;
dump
trucks
bla ck calico. Call 992-2749.
washer, double oven, range, . . basement, attached 2 car
and
l
o-boys
for
h
ire
;
will
haul
6·3-31c
;;0::;,
D:cE
:
:cL:-:
L
-,W"'H"'E"'E"'L-A.,.,.-Iig
ln
_m_e_;..l
double garage, large carport.
garage, kitchen has built-in
HANGING baskets; while, pink
NOTICE ON FILING
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
4 acres cleared and fenCed,
ove n and range, lots of
located a t Crossroads, Rt. 12~
and red geraniums, mum s
KITTENS lo give away . Call
and grave l_; Call Bob or Roger
Open
Monday
through
small
barn
and
other
Sc heiri ck bronze Glow birch
complete front end servic~
ANg~~~VR~:J~!~NT
and
begonias
;
I
nstan
t
color
992·5247 .
Jeffers, day phone ~2-7089;
Friday 1 a.m . to 8:30 p. m.
buildings. Phone 614-742-6834.
cabi nets, bedrooms wi th
The Sta1e of Ohio, Meigs
tune up and brake service'!'
for Y?ur garden - pansi~s .
night phone 992-3525 or 9926-3-6tc
County. Probate Court
petun 1as, marigolds, Phlox,
Wheels
balanced
e le ~:5-30-ffc
walk
in
closets,
cedar
lined,
5232.
On Old Rt. 33
To the Executor or Ad ·
tronically : Ail
wori
C~leus, Salvia-, Zinnias, - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - . free gas, plenty of water,
2-11 -Hc
ministrator of the estate ; to KOSCOT SPEC IALS for June
Ph9ne 992-2689
Dtanlhus, Al l yssum, Snap- 6 ROOM house w i th bath and
guaranteed.
Reasonabr~stocked pond . 8 mi. N . of
include Fami'ly Suntan Oil
such of the following as are
rates. Phone 742 -3232
~.
dragons,
Ageratium
and
furniture
.
lriquire
992-5373.
Pomeroy
.
Ca
ll
992-7384
tor
Pomeroy,
Ohio
residents of lhe State of Ohio,
SEE US FOR : Awninqs, storm
Spray _and Jr. Facial ~ask .
3232.
.
Portulacca
.
Vegetable
plants
5-1B-16tp
appointment
to
see.
vh: - the si.Jry iving spouse, the
Also w1th a purchase of edher
doors and windows, carports,
2- 18-tfc
Cabbage,
brocco l i, ·
ne)(f of kin, the beneficiaries
AfterShave or Electric Pre - WOULD LIKE two elderly
_ _ _ _ _ ___:__:6:_::·3-3tc
marquees, aluminum siding
caul
iflower,
lettuce,
eggp
lan
t,
NEW
3
bedroom
home
in
under the Will ; and to the at Shave by Koscot you receive a
. persons, male or female, who
and railing. A. Jacob, sa les SEP TI C TANKS
AROBic!'
forney
or
aftorneys
K
mangoes , hot p·eppers and 14
Mason, brick front , hardwood
representing
any of
the
leansing Kream free . Phone
represe ntati ve. Fo'r free
sEwAGE
s y s T E M:s:
would prefer a private home
kinds of tomato plants .
floors, gas heat, la rg·e lot. ,.
aforemen tioned persons:
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
instead of a rest home, No
estima t es, phone CharleS
CLEANED,
REPAIRED-."
Cl e l and
Farm
and
Phone 773-5554.
James A . Roush , Route 2,
6-1-lfc
ambulatory. Call 992-7135 or
lisle,
Syracuse,
Y.
V.
MILLER
SAN
ITATION ,:
Greenh ouse, E. Ma in, Racine .
5-22-6tc
_.__
R acine , Let a rt Town sh 1p , M e i g s -:::::-:::-;-;--;:;----;- - : : - inquire at 7 Liberty Ave .•
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
_
_
tfc
STEWART,
OH
IO.
PH. 66 2(
Geraldine
Cle
land
.
County , Ohio .
JEWELL Decorators. Dry wall
32
Pomeroy .
3035.
.
NEW
Hom
es
on
your
lot
or
ours
.
5-18
-ftc
You are hereby notified lhat
fintshing, paper hanging .
6-3-3tc
NO MONEY DOWN for
the
Inventory
and
Ap inter ior. and exter io r paint H(_)US~ an.d roof Painting;
10-.4-tfc :
praisement of the estate of th e
ing. Phon 698 -5341 or 669qualified buyers using F .H .
aforementioned. deceased , late
tntenor and ex terior, tree SEWING MACHINES . Repa·i:}~
Adm . loan. (- Closing costs
SPRING SPECIALS
estima te s; call992-7008or 992~
of said Count.,-, was filed in this
3764 .
Moh1le
only . ) A variety of flour plans
2460.
service, a_ll makes. 992- 2284~
6-1-121c
Court. Said fnventorv and
wdh
various
financing
The Fabnc Shop,· Pomero~1~
Appraisement will be for
5-21-Jotp
CAS H paid for al l makes (!nd
programs
available
.
We
Au
t h_o rized .Singer Sales ant
hear ing before this Court on the DON ' T
like
to
remove
1
models of mobile homes .
9th day of June. 1973 , at 10 :00
specialize
in
working
with
Serv1ce.
We Sha rpen Scissor9: •
wa llp aper? I can do this job
.. AEP Co . emp l oyees although
WILL trim or cut trees or
110 Mechanic Street
o'c lock A .M
Phone-area code 614-423-9531.
In Carton,
3· 29-ttj:&lt;;
faster
than
most.
Call
992-7405
~hrubbe
r
y
.
Also
paint
roofs
.
Any person des iring to file
4-13-tfc
we are avai lable to all. Meigs
-::;-;:;:::::-:-:::=-=-:---- .•,
5 to 8 p.m. on ly .
S~t Up, 134.95
Phone 949,3221.
·
excep-t ions there l o musl file
AUTOMOBILE insurance bee0:"
Developmen t Co .. 150 N .
6-1-6tc
them at least five days pr ior to
5·30-30tc
cance ll ed?
Lo st · you ~:
Second
Ave
.,
Middleport.
the date set tor hear ing .
Air Conditioners
operator's lice nse? Call 99Z-:;
Ohio. Phone 992-5976 lor inGOOD NEWS
Given under my har)d and ROOF .I NG and Heal ing Repair ;
14~.95
ELNA and White Sewing
formation.
Awnings
2966. '
-- ~ seal . of said Court, thiS 2~th day
ANOTHER
TRENDHOME
a ll types; Special - Cleaning
Machines ... Servtce on all
In Ca.rton
of May 1973 .
5-6-30tc
6-15-tt
&amp;:
HAS
JUST
ARRIVED.
YOURS
Underpinning
an d oili ng of blower, complete
makes . Reasonable rates .
Manning D Webster
Set
up,
$54.95
check on furna ces; phone 843 COULD BE THE NEX T DNE .
Judge and ex -effie io C1erk
The Sewing Center, Mid Comp l et e mobile home
2341.
POMEROY
of said Court
dleporl, Ohio . .
serv ice plus giganti c
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
5-2·301c
LAND
11-16-ltc G&amp;E Appliance Repa i r. repair
By Janet E. Morrls
display of mobi le homes
Phon e 992-2181
on all laundry equipment,
21n ACRES - Flatwoods area,
Chief Dep uty Clerk S50 .00
always ava il able at .
REWARD · for
in refrigerati~n. equipment an&lt;:f
just off bla ck top road . So me
151 29 {6 ) S. 2tc
formation leading to arrest
house
Wiring,
welding..
wood.:;,
we
ll
drained.
Chester
FARM , 55 acres Rutland
4 GRAVE lot in Meigs Memorial
and conviction of persons who
electric
and
gas.
Call
992-380~
NOTICE OF
MILLER
water ovailable. On ly $5,000.00 .
Township, $300 per ac re .
Gardens. Cheap. Call 949stole a - 32 automatic pistol
or after 4: 30 p . m. ca ll
APPOINTMENT
I ACRE
4962 .
Phone New Haven 882-2984.
6050 .
'
Case No . 2DIISS
from me. Bud Bartimus,
08
MOBILE HOMES
3 LARGE BEDROOMS - Nice _ __ _ _ __ __ 6:._
5-20 ltc
Estate of Ada Jane' Rowe ,
· J.6tp
Reedsville, Phone 378-630-4.
'
5·24·301~
Deceased .
E . MAIN~---· bath, uti l ity room. side pOrch
30-6fc
1'220 Wa shington Blvd.
Noti ce is her eby given that _ _ __ _ _ __ .:..~·5 ROOM and bath house on GHEEN'S Painting Service ~
C7ROCERY business lor sale.
and double garage. · Just
POMEROY
Richard 8 . Rowe, of Box 427 ,
42J -7521
BELPRE,O.
large lot in upper end of
Building for sa le or lease .
$12.500.00
.
covering a ll work from finest
Rac ine, Ohio , has been duly
Syrac use. Large attic out INCOME
PROPERTY
Phone
773-56
18
frorn
8_:
30
p
.m
.
interior painting to exterior
RIVER FRONTAGE
appointed Administrator of the
buildings . $7,000. Call 949-2595
to 10 p .m. for appom_tment.
Brick building with · 3
Estate of Ada Jean Rciwe, WANTED ~ Used merchandise
spray pam1ing, sand blastin!)
3.3J ACRES On Route 7
before 2:30 p.m. or any time
deceased, lafe of R. D 2,
3-20-.tfc
apartments . Live in one rent
and water proofing . Call 949:.
- for auction . We buy , we
below town . 1972 mobile home,
on weeke nds.
Rac ine, Meigs Coun ty , Ohio
3295
for free est imates .
:
th
e
other
s.
One
has
3
sell,
whole
houseful
or
single
air conditioned , bath , and
MUST sell, sharp, 1972 Demon,
Creditors are r equired IO file
6-4- 121c
SHOWALTER's
Wei
Pet. bedroom s the others have
5
-24
12t~
pieces
,
consignmen·t
or
the ir cla ims wilh said fiduciary
Cheap. Call 985-3582 or see
sc reened patio . Dr illed well
Chester,
Ohio,
summer one . All have baths . Ga·s
percentage. We will haul.
within lour months .
Paul Price, Long Bottom.
and extra space.
clea
ran
ce,
five
tankS
of
Phone 992 -3354 . Hayman's.
Dated thi s 16th day of May
heated . Alway s rented .
6·1 -3tp
INVESTMENT
assorted fish at 5 for Sl while
I; 73 .
6-5·30tc --::-::-::--::---;--LARGE
APARTMENT
· they last . Will be open days 9 ASK ING $20,000.
1966 FORD Country Squire
fl4
ACRE
a.
m
.
to
9
p.
m
.
except
on
HOUSE
Has
3 apartments, .
Manning~b . Webste-r ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
Stationwagon, good condition .
Thursday and Friday , 4 p. m . Corner lot . Large home ha s 4
al
l
r
ented
.
One
furnished .
Judge
OR MIODLEPORT WITH OR
Phone 992-3764.
to 9:30 p . m .
bedroom s, l'h baths, lovely
Cour t of Com mon Pleas,
WITHOUT HOUSE. PLEASE
Asking
Only
$10,000.00
for a
6-3-6tc
Proba t e Division
WRITE Box 729-F, C·O The
6-4-1ltp kitchen, lots of ca rpeting ,
quick sa le.
(5 ) 27, 2 ; (6) S, 31c
D I
S
:::c-::-------,-Special price of $5495 -for 1973 60xl2 beautiful
glassed sun porch . Also an
ai y
entinel,
stating FURY I '66 Plymouth, 383 cu .
LARGE HOME
KNAPP
shoes,
10
pet
.
to
28
pel
.
Spanish d ecor , 2 bedroom Buddy Mobile
description and. lowest selling
th e ground is a 40x70 building
in. automatic . No rust. $500 .
CORNER LOT - 4 bedrooms, 2
NOTICE OF
off on 16 styles. Qrder now.
price . ,
in exce llent condi tion . ALL
John I hie, Rt. 1. Racine, Ohio,
Home. Full 1 yr. warranty with no .service
APPOINTMENT
baths . gas furnace, basement,
Supp ly limited. Phone 992 6-s.l&gt;tp
Phone 949-2632.
charge.
·
OF
TH
I
S
FOR
JJJS
T
$21
,500.'
Case No. 20956
5324.
, a nd large front
por c h.
Estate _of
LONN I E
S W
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
_ _A_N
_T_ E:-:-D- .-c. U-s-e-:
d _d_eep~.-:treeze .
6-3-31p
5-30-tfc
S2i,900.00
Now
$21
,000.00.
LEMASTER Deceased .
Establi shed 5 years, doing
RESTAURANT
Notice is hereby ·given that
Phone 992-9972 .
an
ex cellent
bu'siness,
We do u~dersell because we are locally owned &amp; ~per a fed .
Re~a Lemasler ot 'Rt. I , Shade,
6-4-6tc 63 CHEV;. lf2 ton with camper 1973 STEREO 8 track. A small
EQUIPMENT And fur topper, . Al condition. $435
balance of $88.64 or pay $6 .50
We serv1ce what we sell. Best service in Meigs County _
Oh10, has been duty appointed
paying a 'n ice profit . No
niture.
A
good
going
business,
firm. Phone 992 -3847 .
per month. Phone 992-5331.
adm inistratrilo:. of the Estate Of
ask our customers. We specia li ze in ordering to suit our
phone call s plea se. Come fo
in a thriving small , village.
cu stomers.
Lonnie 5 . _Lemaster , deceased, OLD Furn i tu're , oak tables,
6·5·3tp
4-20-ttc
the
office
.
Wooden ice l:)o)Ces , brass beds, :--:-:--:::-:::--::-::--::--:-:-Ask ing i ust $5,000 .00 .
line of Meigs County, Ohio .
RACINE
Creditors are required to me
dishes
or
compl ete 1960 CHEVROLET truck with
2 YEARS OLD
3 BEDROOM trailer on large .85 a cre of nice laying land . 2
their claims with said fiduciary
h ouse hold s; Write M . D .
cheater axle 14' dump
3
LARGE
BEDROOMS ~ p,
lot.
Priced
to
sell
.
Phone
667
within four months .
Miller, Rl. &lt;1, Pomeroy, Ohio,
body . Priced to sell. Call 992story frame. Wonderful new
baths, wall to wall carpeting.
3363
Or
see
Gary
Miller,
Dated this 24th day of May
ca ll 992 ·6271.
5951.
kitchen . Range , ove n, dish 1973.
667 . 3891
Tuppers Pla ins.
Beautiful kitchen and dining
Tuppers Plains
5-13-ttc
6·5·61p .
6·5·6tp washer , disposal. Loads of
13rea. One acre on hard road.
1
Manning D. Webster
- -- - - -- - - -~~~---_:_::
cabinets . 1 2 bath . 1 large
Ga rag e for 2 cars. Now only
Ju dge NO. 1 Copper, 50c; radiators,
EXCELSIOR
Sail
Works
,
E.
living
rooms
,
5
bedrooms,
$73,000
.00 .
Court of Common Pleas ,
28c; br·ass. l8c ; batteries , 85c
'
Ma in St., Pomeroy . All kinds garage and other build ings.
Probate Divis ion
LOOK AT THIS
eac h.; clean dry root s, Gin. QUALIFIED
refrigeration
of sal~ water pellets , water 51 7,000 .00. .
( 5)
29
(6)
5,
12,
31c;
N
EW
2 bedroom TREN seng, S52 lb.; yellow root , $4;
servicema n , industrial.
nuggets, block salt ·and own
RUTLAND
mayapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
OHOME
with
bath ,
full
coinrnerdal, domestic, good
Ohio River Salt. Phone 9925 acres ol groun.d. Ni(:e home
Hall , Reedsville, Ohio, 378basement tor only $18 ,000.00 .
pay and Working conditions.
3891.
6249.
has 3 bedrooms, ba th . kit Must be experienced. Gallia
Yours
in just 40
days
6-S·tfc
__:
5·6-tfc
chen with ref. and range ,
Refrigeration Co.. 611 3rd
WEATHER
PERMITTING.
OFFERS
Ave., Gallipolis, 446 -4066 .
cabinets, hardwood f loors.
REGISTERED Appaloosa fill y.
See us for this buy of the year .
TOMATO stakes. Will give ·top
Basement. 2 water sys tems
6·4-tf
NeW Holland, 66 ha yba ler.
Love ly kitchens . beaut i ful
dollars for 5,000 . Dallas
--- ---. - ----- Cal! 992 -3650, lyle Hysell.
and tap paid tor new water
baths . This house weighs over
Cleland , Racine, Phone 949- MAINTENANCE man wanted
system. $18,500.
16 tons . Come see or call for an
4121.
for Syracuse Water System . =-~==----6:..::·5-l&gt;tp
With a Phenomenal Tax Sheltered 1ncome
appoin
lm ent.
Send resume to Box 323, 72 HONDA 350, 900 miles .
5-27-71c
REAL
ESTATE
IS
·
A
To Qualified People
---,-~--~
Syracuse. Last day to apply,
HouSe, 3 years ol d, 3
BUSINE
SS
WITH
US,
N
OT
WANTED - OLO UPRIGHT
June 15.
c.tl or Writa
bedroom, wall to wall carpel ,
HELEN l . TEAFORD
A SIOELINE . L IS T N OW
PIANOS. Any condition.
6-4-Jfc
refrigera tor and stove in 992-3325
FOR QUICK SALE.
Paying S10 each . First floor
c luded, l iving room, k itchen ,
GORDON
B. TEAFORD
only. Write giving directions. COOK, waitress and carhop ;
HENRY E. CLELAND
utility rOom, bath, outside
991-36 J$
PianOs, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis,
etpp l_y in person , &lt;:row 's Steak
BROKER
uti I i ty storage, Middleport .
ASSOCIATES
125 N. Columbus St.
Ohio, 43946.
House .
Phone 992-5064.
992 -2259
'
NO SU NDAYS PLEASE
5-10-lfc
5·27-6tp
6-5-6tc
Galion.
Ohio 44833 (4i9) 468-2400
t f nn "''swer 992-2568

'

EXPERT

&amp;

------

OFFICE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE

Pomeroy Motor Co.

WOOD TRUSSES

.. siS&gt;.,. .
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

'·..;:·;-.'

"
1 ,.,,., .. , .. ... . ... .._ n '"' 011

-H&gt; ~ u.-Et..t

ITS A PLEA&lt;;URE

CHIEF Mlln&gt;LEMAN 1
I'M 5MILING Sl'ANLE.'/,

''

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

iO MEET A
REPRESENTATIVE
Of lllE LAW IN
OOR CDM.w.JNI'J\{.

lllE RADIO HOGI.

I ~ I DN'T
KNOW NAOiiR S
RA IO/ERS WERE

I WANT' 7D WI BACK
WHAT' YOU MEW AI?E
OOtM5 ON£-11KJ115ANO
PER CEAJT'l

f5'l 111E WA'I, I

W~

6tVEN A SPEEDING

11CKfl 'JOPA'I AND
I WOtJDE~D IF ...

INVESTIGATI NG
SWIM WEAA
PRODUCTS

VmRANS

BANK FINANCING

-

Card of Thanks

Notice

WHAT 1'11£ 1-\EC".

LOOKV, MAW II

For Your Mobile HomeLlnd-·No Down Payment'

Pets For Sale

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

304-485-3809

LET US HELP YOU

SE~TIC

.

.

- --

- · ..... _ - .

- - - -- -

Lost

NOTICE

-

MODERN
SANITATION

Wanted

------

- -- - - Employment Wanted

AU-WEATHER

For Sale

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

•••
WINKLE

JOHNSON'S T.V. ·

YOURE ALWAVI:J TALKING A130JT lOUR.
"V&gt;ONDERFU L 1 6EAUTieUL FRIEND'~
THE ILLU5TRIOU5 WINNIE WINKLE/
AND MANO KNOWS HOW H.~PPY
I AM WITH MY 5TATI0510E'
WIFE.

Real Estate For Sale

."H{p

KAPPLE'S
PENNZOIL

TANKS
CLEANED

WELL,~E'D BE TIER HEAD
FOR IHE AIRA::lRT. MY
I'WONDER&gt;'UL1 BEAUTIFUL
FRIEND " WILL BE
ARRIVINC1 SHoRTLY. F--T~

~------­

,

WHAT ABOUT THE THII?O
NO, H~f5 STILL AT
FELLOW INVOLVED IN
THE ~I SON BREAK ?
LARGE .. . AND YOU'D

NEVER GUESS WHAT

010 THEY CATCH

-,-,---- --

Ht5 NAME 15!

HIM, TOO?

$7.00 Per Ton

Real Estate For Sale

OHIO
PALLET co.

Ill~ f{)LWI.UIIJ(/J

IS /'&gt;.
T6ST ALERT .. I/J6Rf
IT

AN i\GTVAJ...

6M£f&lt;/t£1](,~ I ~OJ
\L'CI!W 13€ 1'6K£D

TO TUNI:- TO...

-------- --=-

____ _

•·· BY 6Eif'\~ f&gt;E~tnED
10

LIVE!

I ~Jro'l BlESSED WITH STREI1GTH W,HI CH
E~SS O,F MY OWN SIMPI.E

WHY SHOULD I NOT

VirgilB:\

r~EEDS

DISPOSE:. OF YOJ '?

... YOUR ARE WflCOh"lE ·10 II " '

------

.

ACROSS
I. Riot·
control
weapon

-

CLELAND
REALTY

HE FIRED
ME!

SWEPT AND
TilE EMPTY CELLS, 51'!.

Real Estate For Sale

m

Wanted To Buy

Auto SaleS

-----

- -- - -- -

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

He 'p Wanted

We talk to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

,,

_____

- --,-- -- -

----·

IOTEL FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY

,$'pirif or (ti Jno.f.Jnc.

10. Prize

(comb.
form )
9. Buddhist
pri'nciple
II. Port

(Lat.)
13. Bungle;
goof
(3 wd•.)
15. Sailor's

assent

16. One
oft he
Ages
17. Dry
18. Oklahoma
city
21. XI
24. Elliptical
25. Flopping

~WJWJ]l!.!J];- """ :::!!:! .-1 c
Unscramble these four Jumbl es.
one letter t o each _square, to

Arthur
and ( Man-

Yesterda)''!l Answer

21. Lamb' s

churia )

'

32. Flower

pen

14. Humble

name
22. Fat
23. Looked
over
24. Hautboy
26. Irish

(2 wds.)

17. Eager

18. Bard'•
river

19. 'jThere Js
Nothing
Like a - "
20. Priestly

county
30. Purpose

31. European
river

1'11 ~· MU , I"'

WAIT A MINUI£f
ISN'T R16HT1

!HIS

I &lt;SHOUW CARR'/
THE. 17RUM,

33. Pitcher

34. Brittany's
35.

patron saint
Greek
Jetter

36. - Ch aney
3.7. United
38. Any ob·
struc lion

IT5

~EAVY.'

LIGHTl

1/.\H U I

ON

THI~

ISET

I I

YOU

~HOULD

10iHE1'0P.

Now urance the circled letten
to rorm the IUrpriH &amp;niWfr, &amp;I
sun:ested b)' the abon cu1.oon.

(AM"'~" lo..,.rrowJ

Yuh·r.J• y'•

I

Antwt:r:

ness
(2 wds.)
:19, Chi nese

province

•&amp;O. ·Asylum 1
U. Sluggish
42. Pure and

.simple
DOWN

1.-Cass
Elliott

2. "-all
boats.!"

3. Marble
or sponge
4. Before •

5. Tolerated

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is I, 0 N G F E L ·J, 0 W
One letter sim'ply .stan'ds !or another. Jn this sample A is
used for the three L's. X Cor the two O's, ele. Si ngle letters,
apostroph&lt;'s, the length and fo rmatio~ o£ ~ he words are all
hints. Each day the code lctt('rs arc dtfferen_t.
CRYPTOQUOTES
RFD

t

Juml.lr., ABIDE

as a busi-

(S

riJ I I
t)/1''/1 ,\'
[J

State"
32. Grassland
15. Failing,

THIS TRIANGLE

0

child's
message

1;;;-t-t--+-F.:

If

@

form four ordinary words.

vest·
Jy
ments
(3 wds .)
:'!',,:::::.::::·.::" ·-127. Angered i r~"1":"-r:-r.-Male bees 1
Append
Apple or
pear
31. "Hawkeye .

-------

-------

signs
7.Giobe
8, 0£ moun·
t~lns

theatrical·

JUNE SALEI

- - - -- - -

(@ 1918 King Featu:HI S711dleatt, Ine.)

8. Gas ror

5. Nose

12. Earth

;::::========::.__,

b

YOIIerd17'1 Cryploquole: A MAN'S FEET IIIUST BB
PLANTED IN HlS COUNTRY, BUT HIS EYES SHOULD
S'OltVEY THE WORLD.--GEOBGJC SANTAYANA

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Pomeroy, Ohiq ·

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP

' .,. "''

~~tt¥

St.
Broker

.. SABRE TILLER ·
3lfz HP
129.95

. . .. ' .....

IF YOU S PARE l HE li FE. OF MY
FR.IENO ---

Teaford,

lfomts For Sale

,._.,

IS FllR.' IN

YOU, CHIL D ·--

BNRZYR

ADNJDER7.TO

XFT
ZO

BZQY

BR

.J&gt;SDNGRFZOK

!H~~· zn~DY ZH Zll 1)1'Rf'1.0K . - l'lliBF.NT7.V

RIVET

flORID

rr·1,_,. rlw /,/,,,/ ~· · r•mr • tl nwr_.
r•·ru•m,hfll- SHE WA~ FAIRIR

OPIATl

�r

H- The DailySentin.i,

~

1

•

Middleport-; omeroy, 0., June 5, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentin~l Cl~ssifieds Get Results.·
WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OEADI.,.INES
5 I? M . Dr~y Before Publicat ion
Monday Dead line 9 a . m
Cancellation
Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a m . for

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Day of Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
r i ght to edit or r~iect any ads
deemed
obiectionat
The

For Rent

For Sale

TRAILER i n Brown 's. Trailer
Park , Minersville. Phone 992- COAL
33U .

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

6-l ftc

" -- -

Limestone, E)Cce/-.ior ·
Salt Works, E . Main St .,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
.d l

Ot: LUKEY JEST

GOT

[X)ES ,... "T'Rtf"t'E X
~ATT OG. ME:AJ.J "'!

·- OR HORID Y

BACK FROM
CAL!FORNEv..

Business Services

If

2 BEDROOM mob11e home. ai r
ASK US ABOUT
conditioned, Racine area , CASE 310 Irani end loader, 1967
POMEROY
Dodge 0 -500, 2 ton truck and
Phone 992 6329.
pub lisher will not be responsible
PRE · FABRICATED
1964 cab over engine, 2 ton
S-23 lfc
for more than one incorrect
HOME
AUTO
International truck . Phone
1970
BUICK
ELECTRA
225
&gt;2695
insert ion .
3_A_N_0,_4- R-:00
c=-M
-:-I:u--r n
- :is"'
h-e7d and
773 5119 .
l -door, local 1-owner car with less than 32,000 miles • •
RATES
992 . 2094
5-27 -6tp
Clima te Control .;.ir conditioning, 40 -60 power sea t, radio,
unfurnished
apartments .
For Want Ad Service
606 E. Main Pomeroy
gol~ finish . Loaded with many extras.
S cen ts per Word one in ser t ion
Phone 992· 5434.
M ini mum Charge 75c
4-12-lfc MASSEY -Ferguson 10 horse
On Mos1 Americ1n Cars
12 cents per w.ord three
1969 PLYMOUTH FURY I
S19S
=:-::-...,.--.,.,-,-...,.-...,.-:-::-...,.--- power I awn and garden
consecutive ins ert io ns .
Buil1to Your 'Specs
4-door, 52 1000 miles, good fires, 6 cylirider, automatic
TWO
tra iler lots in Middleport ;
trac'tor . mower and dozer
- GUARANTEED18 cents prr word si)( con .
transmissio n, black finish .
Delivered 1o Job Site
'lz duple)( in Bradbury. ; phone blade - Appaloosa geld ing,
and
.'
secut ive inse r tions .
Phone 992 ·2094
bef ore 6 p.m . 992 -5693.
nice for 4-H or a beginner .
'
25 Per Cent D i scount on pa id
1969 CHEVROLET BELAIR
S89S
Phone 992-2343.
6 -4-5 tc
ads and ads paid w ithi n 10 days
4-doar , gold fin ish .' clean in terior . goad tires , J27 V-8
5-3l -3tc
CARD OF THANKS
~-:-:---------,
engine, power steering , rad io.
&amp; OBITUARY
,
Open 8 Til! .
SLEEPING room over Wine
Stop In and See Our
MATERIALS CO.
SI .SO for SO word min imum .
Monday thru Saturday
Store, Pomeroy . References NEW 2 pc . Early American
Floor Display.
Each additional word 2c .
773-5554
Mason, W.Va .
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
required . Phone 992-5293 .
living rrom sui te, 100 pet .
BLIND ADS
6-S-tfc
nylon wi lh Scotchgard and
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .
~-=-:-:-~=-:--­
maple wood trim . This week
Specialist
FURNISHED apartmen L
OFFICE HOURS
only $189 .95 . Cash and Carry,
8:30a . m , to 5:00p .m . Daily ,
c lean, all electric, S85 mo. be·
Wile~ I
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E.
' .
8:3 0 a . m . to 12 ·00 Noon
tw~n Pomeroy and Athens .
Main
St.,
Phone
992
-7554.
AligntneF1t •
OPEN EVES. 8 : 00P.M.
Saturday .
Call Mason 773-5580 .
5-31 -6fc
12 Years . 10.75 A. P.R.
POMEROY, OHIO
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 6
_ -J .6tp
11 Mvst
for Your
(3) 1973 ZIG-ZAG Sewing
From the laroest ~--·-'
Be
Right
SLEEPING room , Call992-7244.
Mach ines lett In layaway .
Bulldozer Radiator to
THE FAMILY of Mrs. Han k
5-31 ·61c
or we will
Beaut i ful pastel color, full
::, rn a11esr Heater Lore .
Young are deeply grateful
Make i1 Right_
.
size model. All buill-in to
Nathan Bigg s
and wish to express the ir
SMALL 3 rooms and bath
buttonhole, de. stretch sewing
Radiator Specialist
s incere thanks to their GARAGE sale , Thursday ,
furnished apartment, utilities
and fancy stitching . Pay just Qualify Today, Call
relatives , friends , good neigh furn
is
hed,
men
preferred
.
Friday and Satur day, June 7, POODLE pupp ies, Toy A.K .C.,
$48 .57
c ash
or
terms
bors .
the
Pomeroy
Ideal tor working men .
8, and · 9. 109 Spring Ave .
available . Trade -ins ac . Chocolale Show quality.
8-4: 30 Daily, 8-12 Sat.
•
Emergency Squad and Ben H.
Completely private from
Second house from the Corner
cepted . Electro Hyg iene Co.
Phone
992-5443.
Ewing for !heir acts of kind .
In
the
R.
H.
Rawlings
Sons
'
residence
.
Phone
992
-3881
Bar .
Phone 992 -7755 .
Choose your own home from
5-lJ-ff c
Building .
'
ness and consoling words of
from 4-6 p, m . After 6 p . m .
Ph . 9?2-1174
Pomeroy
6·5-3tp
5-3J.6tc
your AREA DEALER.
sympathy conveyed to us at a
call 992.3134.
992 -2101
Middlepor1, 0 . .
time of trag ic loss of our
5-31-6tc
POODLES. AKC Pupp ies, small
M c DANIELS Custom Slaugh ter
beloved mother , Berneta
miniature,
bla
c
k
Q
r
white,
(2)
Electrolux
Vacuum
House and M ea t Cutt ing ;
Young .
Your .. unselfish
wormed , permanent shots. PRIVATE meeting room for
Cleaners complete with at .
State and Government in generosl1y will always be
any organiza ti on; phone 992 ·
$75; Phone Coolville 667 -6214.
Have your T.V, Picture Tube
tachments, cordwinder and
spected ; phone 773 -5208 .
appreciated and remem ~975 .
Restored As Good As New
520-17tc
paint
spray
.
Used
but
in
like
5·20 · 121c
bered . Mrs. Calvin (B. Louis)
Rooting ·. Roof Painting,
3-11-ttc
Right
In Your
Home .
new
condition.
Pay
$34.45
M itchelL John P. Young ,
Spouting,
Plumbil)g,
AKC Toy Poodle puppies , $75 .---~-~
Guaranteed for 6 Mo.
cash
or
budget
plan
available
.
PIANO
TUNING
.
Kar
l
Keb
ler,
24
Hour
William A. Young .
Remodeling,
Complete
and $85 . Also Siamese k ittens, All ELECTRIC - like· new 3
Electro Hygiene Co. , Phone
Mason , W. Va . Phone 7736-S-l tc
Daily Service
SlO.
Phone
1-256
-6247,
Kennels
rooms
with
large
b'lth.
Building
,
Vinyl
&amp;
Aluminum
992-7755 .
5535.
of Calhoun .
Electric wall oven, tablE top
Color-$30.00
S•ding.
5-3 1-6tc
5-24-12tc
range, large closet located on
5 20 301c
Black &amp; White-$15 . 00
E . Main St .• Pomerov . SloP tn
PHONE , 991-2550
$100 REWARD for recovering of
appreciate . Ph. Gallipolis STARCRAFT - New 1973 fold
one male Pointer and one
down
campers
sleeps
6
or
8
446-9539 .
female Britany . Phone 446- 110-12 volt , 3 burner stoves,
SOMEONE to take over my
5-29-tfc
0080, Gallipolis or 992-3589.
2 water systems, raised
John Tucker , Rt . 4
Due
to
circumstances
mowing in Middlepot by June
1&gt;· 5-3tc
kitchen, School out spec ial
beyond our control there wilr
949.3151
15. Should be able to do
Pomeroy, 0.
$1,325. Same low prices on
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0 .
tr immi ng around walks, etc .,
be no further credit issued to
Racine, Ohio
Ph. 992-3954
PAIR of Lady's glasses lost at
travel tra i lers . Use Star .
please phone 992-3911 .
anyone at·Kapple's Pennzoi I.
Racine Al-umni Mi!Jy 27. If
FARMALL
B
Tractor
with
belly
master
8,
$999.
Closed
for
6-1-3tc
All outstanding bills MUST
foun. call 949 -3471.
mower, excellent condition .
vacation June 10 thru 2.1st .
AUTO AIR conditioning. SerDOZER and back hoe work
be paid by JUNE 5.
6-l -6fc
' th
Ch t
CAMP
CONLEY
STAR vice and repair . Call' 992-3802 .
S
G
S 1
ponds and septic tanks, ditch
~· ary m ' ·
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 North DUE to job transfer, must sell
5-24-:JOip
i~g service; top soil, fill dirt
----------of Point Pleasant, behind Red
home, 3 bedroom, tota l
l1mestone ; B&amp;K Excavating.
'
CONCRETE
electric, large lot. F .H.A. READY -MIX
BEAUTIFUL walnut· stereo Carpet Inn, Phone 675-538-4 .
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861.
6-1-6tc
delivered
right
to your
approved,
Syracuse.
Phond
WILL ·do bookkeeping in my
9-1-Hc
radio tap combination, AM- - - - - - -- - - - 992-7836 .
project. Fast and easy. Free
home. Phone 1-304-773-5613 .
FM radio, 8 track tape deck .
estimates . Phone 992-3284. NOW OPEN - Roger Hysell'!
l&gt; -5-6tc
5-25-lfc
Balance S116.98 or use our HOOD'S AQUARIUMS • fish
Goeglein
Ready -Mix Co ..
E. Mai'n St.
af'!d
supplies
,
new
location,
Pomeroy , 0 .
Garage, near Crossroads or
budget terms. Call 992-3965.
Midd leport, Ohio.
Ash
Street,
Middleport,
near
BY
OWNER
selli
ng
under
St. Rl . 124 ; all mechanic wod
6-J.6tc
6-30-tfc
park ; Phone 992-5443 .
appraisal
va
lue,
newly
bu
il
t
4
including automatic tr.lns
THE UNION Optical Center will
1-7- tfc
furn i shed apartments built -in
missions
. Monday
thn
HONOA
150.
Phone
742-6878.
observe Summer hours from
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ca binet s, panelled walls, now
Saturday, 8:30a. m. to 5 p , m
6-3-3tp
Memorial Day weekend to
rented monthly income $340. REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446·
. Phone 992-7121 or 992-5682.
CARPORT and porch sale, new
------,-Labor Day. Closed Saturdays.
4782, Ga l lipolis, John Russell,
All elect r ic, city wafer in
and
used
,
some
electric
ap
5·3'30tc
Eye Examinations by ap MUST se ll 1973 deluxe Zig- Zag
Owner and Operator.
coun try between pomeroy
pliances. Start Thursday at 9
pointmen t.
sewing
machine .
This
and be informed of the fun c5-12-tfc EXCAVATING. Dozers. large
Alhe~ . Phone Mason. W . Va.,
a. m. Wi ll last as long as we
tions of your gOv:ern men I ar e
machine darns, embroiders ,
5-27 -6tc
773
-5580
.
Will
consider
trade
.
have
anything
to
sell
.
Mabel
and small; Backhoes anc'.
embodied in pUbl ic notices . In
makes
buttonholes.
all
Id ea l tor home and income lor
Picken-S,
College
Rd
.,
loaders
on track and tires;
that self -government charges
REDUCE excess ·fl-uids with
without attachments. Just
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
r e t ire ~ coup le .
Syracuse, Ohio.
all citizens to be informed ;
Oump
trucks Lo-boy
. dial and sew . Pay balance of
Fluidex - Lose weight with
Complete Service
this newSpaper urges every
5-20· 12.tp
Service . Septic tanks in 6-4-41p
Dex
A-Diet
capsules
at
$38
.50
or
pay
$5
per
month.
Phone 949-382 1
citiz"en to rea:d and study th ese
stalled. George (Bill) Pullins.
Phone 992-5331.
Nel!?on DrugS.
not ices . We strongly adv ise
Racine, Ohio
phone 992-2478 or 992-7402.
3
BEDROOM
mobile
home
12
x
4· 20. tfc
I hOse ci t i'zens, seeking further
6·4·3tp
Critt Bradford
DELIVERED
60, carpel, dining area, dean,
·t
2-9-H(
information. to exercise their
5-1-tfc
'
:..
TO
right of acc ess lo publi C WILL giveaway to someone for
7
ROOM
house
wi
th
bath
in
$4,000.
Call
Mason
773-5580.
·LEGHORN hens for sale . 80c
·record~ and pub.ij.c meeH ng s.
cl! ~ood home '2 kit1ens and one
each . Call 843-2145.
Rut l and, air conditioned,
6-3-6tp EXCAVATING, dozer, loader HARRISON 'S TV service and
service calls . Phone 992-2522.
and backhoe work; septic.
fu I grown cat, .orange and
5-22 -IOic
carpeted, gas furnace, dish - 35 A. 4 bedroom brick,~ full
2·9-t((
tanks
installed;
dump
trucks
bla ck calico. Call 992-2749.
washer, double oven, range, . . basement, attached 2 car
and
l
o-boys
for
h
ire
;
will
haul
6·3-31c
;;0::;,
D:cE
:
:cL:-:
L
-,W"'H"'E"'E"'L-A.,.,.-Iig
ln
_m_e_;..l
double garage, large carport.
garage, kitchen has built-in
HANGING baskets; while, pink
NOTICE ON FILING
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
4 acres cleared and fenCed,
ove n and range, lots of
located a t Crossroads, Rt. 12~
and red geraniums, mum s
KITTENS lo give away . Call
and grave l_; Call Bob or Roger
Open
Monday
through
small
barn
and
other
Sc heiri ck bronze Glow birch
complete front end servic~
ANg~~~VR~:J~!~NT
and
begonias
;
I
nstan
t
color
992·5247 .
Jeffers, day phone ~2-7089;
Friday 1 a.m . to 8:30 p. m.
buildings. Phone 614-742-6834.
cabi nets, bedrooms wi th
The Sta1e of Ohio, Meigs
tune up and brake service'!'
for Y?ur garden - pansi~s .
night phone 992-3525 or 9926-3-6tc
County. Probate Court
petun 1as, marigolds, Phlox,
Wheels
balanced
e le ~:5-30-ffc
walk
in
closets,
cedar
lined,
5232.
On Old Rt. 33
To the Executor or Ad ·
tronically : Ail
wori
C~leus, Salvia-, Zinnias, - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - . free gas, plenty of water,
2-11 -Hc
ministrator of the estate ; to KOSCOT SPEC IALS for June
Ph9ne 992-2689
Dtanlhus, Al l yssum, Snap- 6 ROOM house w i th bath and
guaranteed.
Reasonabr~stocked pond . 8 mi. N . of
include Fami'ly Suntan Oil
such of the following as are
rates. Phone 742 -3232
~.
dragons,
Ageratium
and
furniture
.
lriquire
992-5373.
Pomeroy
.
Ca
ll
992-7384
tor
Pomeroy,
Ohio
residents of lhe State of Ohio,
SEE US FOR : Awninqs, storm
Spray _and Jr. Facial ~ask .
3232.
.
Portulacca
.
Vegetable
plants
5-1B-16tp
appointment
to
see.
vh: - the si.Jry iving spouse, the
Also w1th a purchase of edher
doors and windows, carports,
2- 18-tfc
Cabbage,
brocco l i, ·
ne)(f of kin, the beneficiaries
AfterShave or Electric Pre - WOULD LIKE two elderly
_ _ _ _ _ ___:__:6:_::·3-3tc
marquees, aluminum siding
caul
iflower,
lettuce,
eggp
lan
t,
NEW
3
bedroom
home
in
under the Will ; and to the at Shave by Koscot you receive a
. persons, male or female, who
and railing. A. Jacob, sa les SEP TI C TANKS
AROBic!'
forney
or
aftorneys
K
mangoes , hot p·eppers and 14
Mason, brick front , hardwood
representing
any of
the
leansing Kream free . Phone
represe ntati ve. Fo'r free
sEwAGE
s y s T E M:s:
would prefer a private home
kinds of tomato plants .
floors, gas heat, la rg·e lot. ,.
aforemen tioned persons:
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
instead of a rest home, No
estima t es, phone CharleS
CLEANED,
REPAIRED-."
Cl e l and
Farm
and
Phone 773-5554.
James A . Roush , Route 2,
6-1-lfc
ambulatory. Call 992-7135 or
lisle,
Syracuse,
Y.
V.
MILLER
SAN
ITATION ,:
Greenh ouse, E. Ma in, Racine .
5-22-6tc
_.__
R acine , Let a rt Town sh 1p , M e i g s -:::::-:::-;-;--;:;----;- - : : - inquire at 7 Liberty Ave .•
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
_
_
tfc
STEWART,
OH
IO.
PH. 66 2(
Geraldine
Cle
land
.
County , Ohio .
JEWELL Decorators. Dry wall
32
Pomeroy .
3035.
.
NEW
Hom
es
on
your
lot
or
ours
.
5-18
-ftc
You are hereby notified lhat
fintshing, paper hanging .
6-3-3tc
NO MONEY DOWN for
the
Inventory
and
Ap inter ior. and exter io r paint H(_)US~ an.d roof Painting;
10-.4-tfc :
praisement of the estate of th e
ing. Phon 698 -5341 or 669qualified buyers using F .H .
aforementioned. deceased , late
tntenor and ex terior, tree SEWING MACHINES . Repa·i:}~
Adm . loan. (- Closing costs
SPRING SPECIALS
estima te s; call992-7008or 992~
of said Count.,-, was filed in this
3764 .
Moh1le
only . ) A variety of flour plans
2460.
service, a_ll makes. 992- 2284~
6-1-121c
Court. Said fnventorv and
wdh
various
financing
The Fabnc Shop,· Pomero~1~
Appraisement will be for
5-21-Jotp
CAS H paid for al l makes (!nd
programs
available
.
We
Au
t h_o rized .Singer Sales ant
hear ing before this Court on the DON ' T
like
to
remove
1
models of mobile homes .
9th day of June. 1973 , at 10 :00
specialize
in
working
with
Serv1ce.
We Sha rpen Scissor9: •
wa llp aper? I can do this job
.. AEP Co . emp l oyees although
WILL trim or cut trees or
110 Mechanic Street
o'c lock A .M
Phone-area code 614-423-9531.
In Carton,
3· 29-ttj:&lt;;
faster
than
most.
Call
992-7405
~hrubbe
r
y
.
Also
paint
roofs
.
Any person des iring to file
4-13-tfc
we are avai lable to all. Meigs
-::;-;:;:::::-:-:::=-=-:---- .•,
5 to 8 p.m. on ly .
S~t Up, 134.95
Phone 949,3221.
·
excep-t ions there l o musl file
AUTOMOBILE insurance bee0:"
Developmen t Co .. 150 N .
6-1-6tc
them at least five days pr ior to
5·30-30tc
cance ll ed?
Lo st · you ~:
Second
Ave
.,
Middleport.
the date set tor hear ing .
Air Conditioners
operator's lice nse? Call 99Z-:;
Ohio. Phone 992-5976 lor inGOOD NEWS
Given under my har)d and ROOF .I NG and Heal ing Repair ;
14~.95
ELNA and White Sewing
formation.
Awnings
2966. '
-- ~ seal . of said Court, thiS 2~th day
ANOTHER
TRENDHOME
a ll types; Special - Cleaning
Machines ... Servtce on all
In Ca.rton
of May 1973 .
5-6-30tc
6-15-tt
&amp;:
HAS
JUST
ARRIVED.
YOURS
Underpinning
an d oili ng of blower, complete
makes . Reasonable rates .
Manning D Webster
Set
up,
$54.95
check on furna ces; phone 843 COULD BE THE NEX T DNE .
Judge and ex -effie io C1erk
The Sewing Center, Mid Comp l et e mobile home
2341.
POMEROY
of said Court
dleporl, Ohio . .
serv ice plus giganti c
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
5-2·301c
LAND
11-16-ltc G&amp;E Appliance Repa i r. repair
By Janet E. Morrls
display of mobi le homes
Phon e 992-2181
on all laundry equipment,
21n ACRES - Flatwoods area,
Chief Dep uty Clerk S50 .00
always ava il able at .
REWARD · for
in refrigerati~n. equipment an&lt;:f
just off bla ck top road . So me
151 29 {6 ) S. 2tc
formation leading to arrest
house
Wiring,
welding..
wood.:;,
we
ll
drained.
Chester
FARM , 55 acres Rutland
4 GRAVE lot in Meigs Memorial
and conviction of persons who
electric
and
gas.
Call
992-380~
NOTICE OF
MILLER
water ovailable. On ly $5,000.00 .
Township, $300 per ac re .
Gardens. Cheap. Call 949stole a - 32 automatic pistol
or after 4: 30 p . m. ca ll
APPOINTMENT
I ACRE
4962 .
Phone New Haven 882-2984.
6050 .
'
Case No . 2DIISS
from me. Bud Bartimus,
08
MOBILE HOMES
3 LARGE BEDROOMS - Nice _ __ _ _ __ __ 6:._
5-20 ltc
Estate of Ada Jane' Rowe ,
· J.6tp
Reedsville, Phone 378-630-4.
'
5·24·301~
Deceased .
E . MAIN~---· bath, uti l ity room. side pOrch
30-6fc
1'220 Wa shington Blvd.
Noti ce is her eby given that _ _ __ _ _ __ .:..~·5 ROOM and bath house on GHEEN'S Painting Service ~
C7ROCERY business lor sale.
and double garage. · Just
POMEROY
Richard 8 . Rowe, of Box 427 ,
42J -7521
BELPRE,O.
large lot in upper end of
Building for sa le or lease .
$12.500.00
.
covering a ll work from finest
Rac ine, Ohio , has been duly
Syrac use. Large attic out INCOME
PROPERTY
Phone
773-56
18
frorn
8_:
30
p
.m
.
interior painting to exterior
RIVER FRONTAGE
appointed Administrator of the
buildings . $7,000. Call 949-2595
to 10 p .m. for appom_tment.
Brick building with · 3
Estate of Ada Jean Rciwe, WANTED ~ Used merchandise
spray pam1ing, sand blastin!)
3.3J ACRES On Route 7
before 2:30 p.m. or any time
deceased, lafe of R. D 2,
3-20-.tfc
apartments . Live in one rent
and water proofing . Call 949:.
- for auction . We buy , we
below town . 1972 mobile home,
on weeke nds.
Rac ine, Meigs Coun ty , Ohio
3295
for free est imates .
:
th
e
other
s.
One
has
3
sell,
whole
houseful
or
single
air conditioned , bath , and
MUST sell, sharp, 1972 Demon,
Creditors are r equired IO file
6-4- 121c
SHOWALTER's
Wei
Pet. bedroom s the others have
5
-24
12t~
pieces
,
consignmen·t
or
the ir cla ims wilh said fiduciary
Cheap. Call 985-3582 or see
sc reened patio . Dr illed well
Chester,
Ohio,
summer one . All have baths . Ga·s
percentage. We will haul.
within lour months .
Paul Price, Long Bottom.
and extra space.
clea
ran
ce,
five
tankS
of
Phone 992 -3354 . Hayman's.
Dated thi s 16th day of May
heated . Alway s rented .
6·1 -3tp
INVESTMENT
assorted fish at 5 for Sl while
I; 73 .
6-5·30tc --::-::-::--::---;--LARGE
APARTMENT
· they last . Will be open days 9 ASK ING $20,000.
1966 FORD Country Squire
fl4
ACRE
a.
m
.
to
9
p.
m
.
except
on
HOUSE
Has
3 apartments, .
Manning~b . Webste-r ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
Stationwagon, good condition .
Thursday and Friday , 4 p. m . Corner lot . Large home ha s 4
al
l
r
ented
.
One
furnished .
Judge
OR MIODLEPORT WITH OR
Phone 992-3764.
to 9:30 p . m .
bedroom s, l'h baths, lovely
Cour t of Com mon Pleas,
WITHOUT HOUSE. PLEASE
Asking
Only
$10,000.00
for a
6-3-6tc
Proba t e Division
WRITE Box 729-F, C·O The
6-4-1ltp kitchen, lots of ca rpeting ,
quick sa le.
(5 ) 27, 2 ; (6) S, 31c
D I
S
:::c-::-------,-Special price of $5495 -for 1973 60xl2 beautiful
glassed sun porch . Also an
ai y
entinel,
stating FURY I '66 Plymouth, 383 cu .
LARGE HOME
KNAPP
shoes,
10
pet
.
to
28
pel
.
Spanish d ecor , 2 bedroom Buddy Mobile
description and. lowest selling
th e ground is a 40x70 building
in. automatic . No rust. $500 .
CORNER LOT - 4 bedrooms, 2
NOTICE OF
off on 16 styles. Qrder now.
price . ,
in exce llent condi tion . ALL
John I hie, Rt. 1. Racine, Ohio,
Home. Full 1 yr. warranty with no .service
APPOINTMENT
baths . gas furnace, basement,
Supp ly limited. Phone 992 6-s.l&gt;tp
Phone 949-2632.
charge.
·
OF
TH
I
S
FOR
JJJS
T
$21
,500.'
Case No. 20956
5324.
, a nd large front
por c h.
Estate _of
LONN I E
S W
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
_ _A_N
_T_ E:-:-D- .-c. U-s-e-:
d _d_eep~.-:treeze .
6-3-31p
5-30-tfc
S2i,900.00
Now
$21
,000.00.
LEMASTER Deceased .
Establi shed 5 years, doing
RESTAURANT
Notice is hereby ·given that
Phone 992-9972 .
an
ex cellent
bu'siness,
We do u~dersell because we are locally owned &amp; ~per a fed .
Re~a Lemasler ot 'Rt. I , Shade,
6-4-6tc 63 CHEV;. lf2 ton with camper 1973 STEREO 8 track. A small
EQUIPMENT And fur topper, . Al condition. $435
balance of $88.64 or pay $6 .50
We serv1ce what we sell. Best service in Meigs County _
Oh10, has been duty appointed
paying a 'n ice profit . No
niture.
A
good
going
business,
firm. Phone 992 -3847 .
per month. Phone 992-5331.
adm inistratrilo:. of the Estate Of
ask our customers. We specia li ze in ordering to suit our
phone call s plea se. Come fo
in a thriving small , village.
cu stomers.
Lonnie 5 . _Lemaster , deceased, OLD Furn i tu're , oak tables,
6·5·3tp
4-20-ttc
the
office
.
Wooden ice l:)o)Ces , brass beds, :--:-:--:::-:::--::-::--::--:-:-Ask ing i ust $5,000 .00 .
line of Meigs County, Ohio .
RACINE
Creditors are required to me
dishes
or
compl ete 1960 CHEVROLET truck with
2 YEARS OLD
3 BEDROOM trailer on large .85 a cre of nice laying land . 2
their claims with said fiduciary
h ouse hold s; Write M . D .
cheater axle 14' dump
3
LARGE
BEDROOMS ~ p,
lot.
Priced
to
sell
.
Phone
667
within four months .
Miller, Rl. &lt;1, Pomeroy, Ohio,
body . Priced to sell. Call 992story frame. Wonderful new
baths, wall to wall carpeting.
3363
Or
see
Gary
Miller,
Dated this 24th day of May
ca ll 992 ·6271.
5951.
kitchen . Range , ove n, dish 1973.
667 . 3891
Tuppers Pla ins.
Beautiful kitchen and dining
Tuppers Plains
5-13-ttc
6·5·61p .
6·5·6tp washer , disposal. Loads of
13rea. One acre on hard road.
1
Manning D. Webster
- -- - - -- - - -~~~---_:_::
cabinets . 1 2 bath . 1 large
Ga rag e for 2 cars. Now only
Ju dge NO. 1 Copper, 50c; radiators,
EXCELSIOR
Sail
Works
,
E.
living
rooms
,
5
bedrooms,
$73,000
.00 .
Court of Common Pleas ,
28c; br·ass. l8c ; batteries , 85c
'
Ma in St., Pomeroy . All kinds garage and other build ings.
Probate Divis ion
LOOK AT THIS
eac h.; clean dry root s, Gin. QUALIFIED
refrigeration
of sal~ water pellets , water 51 7,000 .00. .
( 5)
29
(6)
5,
12,
31c;
N
EW
2 bedroom TREN seng, S52 lb.; yellow root , $4;
servicema n , industrial.
nuggets, block salt ·and own
RUTLAND
mayapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
OHOME
with
bath ,
full
coinrnerdal, domestic, good
Ohio River Salt. Phone 9925 acres ol groun.d. Ni(:e home
Hall , Reedsville, Ohio, 378basement tor only $18 ,000.00 .
pay and Working conditions.
3891.
6249.
has 3 bedrooms, ba th . kit Must be experienced. Gallia
Yours
in just 40
days
6-S·tfc
__:
5·6-tfc
chen with ref. and range ,
Refrigeration Co.. 611 3rd
WEATHER
PERMITTING.
OFFERS
Ave., Gallipolis, 446 -4066 .
cabinets, hardwood f loors.
REGISTERED Appaloosa fill y.
See us for this buy of the year .
TOMATO stakes. Will give ·top
Basement. 2 water sys tems
6·4-tf
NeW Holland, 66 ha yba ler.
Love ly kitchens . beaut i ful
dollars for 5,000 . Dallas
--- ---. - ----- Cal! 992 -3650, lyle Hysell.
and tap paid tor new water
baths . This house weighs over
Cleland , Racine, Phone 949- MAINTENANCE man wanted
system. $18,500.
16 tons . Come see or call for an
4121.
for Syracuse Water System . =-~==----6:..::·5-l&gt;tp
With a Phenomenal Tax Sheltered 1ncome
appoin
lm ent.
Send resume to Box 323, 72 HONDA 350, 900 miles .
5-27-71c
REAL
ESTATE
IS
·
A
To Qualified People
---,-~--~
Syracuse. Last day to apply,
HouSe, 3 years ol d, 3
BUSINE
SS
WITH
US,
N
OT
WANTED - OLO UPRIGHT
June 15.
c.tl or Writa
bedroom, wall to wall carpel ,
HELEN l . TEAFORD
A SIOELINE . L IS T N OW
PIANOS. Any condition.
6-4-Jfc
refrigera tor and stove in 992-3325
FOR QUICK SALE.
Paying S10 each . First floor
c luded, l iving room, k itchen ,
GORDON
B. TEAFORD
only. Write giving directions. COOK, waitress and carhop ;
HENRY E. CLELAND
utility rOom, bath, outside
991-36 J$
PianOs, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis,
etpp l_y in person , &lt;:row 's Steak
BROKER
uti I i ty storage, Middleport .
ASSOCIATES
125 N. Columbus St.
Ohio, 43946.
House .
Phone 992-5064.
992 -2259
'
NO SU NDAYS PLEASE
5-10-lfc
5·27-6tp
6-5-6tc
Galion.
Ohio 44833 (4i9) 468-2400
t f nn "''swer 992-2568

'

EXPERT

&amp;

------

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FURNITURE

Pomeroy Motor Co.

WOOD TRUSSES

.. siS&gt;.,. .
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

'·..;:·;-.'

"
1 ,.,,., .. , .. ... . ... .._ n '"' 011

-H&gt; ~ u.-Et..t

ITS A PLEA&lt;;URE

CHIEF Mlln&gt;LEMAN 1
I'M 5MILING Sl'ANLE.'/,

''

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

iO MEET A
REPRESENTATIVE
Of lllE LAW IN
OOR CDM.w.JNI'J\{.

lllE RADIO HOGI.

I ~ I DN'T
KNOW NAOiiR S
RA IO/ERS WERE

I WANT' 7D WI BACK
WHAT' YOU MEW AI?E
OOtM5 ON£-11KJ115ANO
PER CEAJT'l

f5'l 111E WA'I, I

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INVESTIGATI NG
SWIM WEAA
PRODUCTS

VmRANS

BANK FINANCING

-

Card of Thanks

Notice

WHAT 1'11£ 1-\EC".

LOOKV, MAW II

For Your Mobile HomeLlnd-·No Down Payment'

Pets For Sale

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

304-485-3809

LET US HELP YOU

SE~TIC

.

.

- --

- · ..... _ - .

- - - -- -

Lost

NOTICE

-

MODERN
SANITATION

Wanted

------

- -- - - Employment Wanted

AU-WEATHER

For Sale

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

•••
WINKLE

JOHNSON'S T.V. ·

YOURE ALWAVI:J TALKING A130JT lOUR.
"V&gt;ONDERFU L 1 6EAUTieUL FRIEND'~
THE ILLU5TRIOU5 WINNIE WINKLE/
AND MANO KNOWS HOW H.~PPY
I AM WITH MY 5TATI0510E'
WIFE.

Real Estate For Sale

."H{p

KAPPLE'S
PENNZOIL

TANKS
CLEANED

WELL,~E'D BE TIER HEAD
FOR IHE AIRA::lRT. MY
I'WONDER&gt;'UL1 BEAUTIFUL
FRIEND " WILL BE
ARRIVINC1 SHoRTLY. F--T~

~------­

,

WHAT ABOUT THE THII?O
NO, H~f5 STILL AT
FELLOW INVOLVED IN
THE ~I SON BREAK ?
LARGE .. . AND YOU'D

NEVER GUESS WHAT

010 THEY CATCH

-,-,---- --

Ht5 NAME 15!

HIM, TOO?

$7.00 Per Ton

Real Estate For Sale

OHIO
PALLET co.

Ill~ f{)LWI.UIIJ(/J

IS /'&gt;.
T6ST ALERT .. I/J6Rf
IT

AN i\GTVAJ...

6M£f&lt;/t£1](,~ I ~OJ
\L'CI!W 13€ 1'6K£D

TO TUNI:- TO...

-------- --=-

____ _

•·· BY 6Eif'\~ f&gt;E~tnED
10

LIVE!

I ~Jro'l BlESSED WITH STREI1GTH W,HI CH
E~SS O,F MY OWN SIMPI.E

WHY SHOULD I NOT

VirgilB:\

r~EEDS

DISPOSE:. OF YOJ '?

... YOUR ARE WflCOh"lE ·10 II " '

------

.

ACROSS
I. Riot·
control
weapon

-

CLELAND
REALTY

HE FIRED
ME!

SWEPT AND
TilE EMPTY CELLS, 51'!.

Real Estate For Sale

m

Wanted To Buy

Auto SaleS

-----

- -- - -- -

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

He 'p Wanted

We talk to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

,,

_____

- --,-- -- -

----·

IOTEL FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY

,$'pirif or (ti Jno.f.Jnc.

10. Prize

(comb.
form )
9. Buddhist
pri'nciple
II. Port

(Lat.)
13. Bungle;
goof
(3 wd•.)
15. Sailor's

assent

16. One
oft he
Ages
17. Dry
18. Oklahoma
city
21. XI
24. Elliptical
25. Flopping

~WJWJ]l!.!J];- """ :::!!:! .-1 c
Unscramble these four Jumbl es.
one letter t o each _square, to

Arthur
and ( Man-

Yesterda)''!l Answer

21. Lamb' s

churia )

'

32. Flower

pen

14. Humble

name
22. Fat
23. Looked
over
24. Hautboy
26. Irish

(2 wds.)

17. Eager

18. Bard'•
river

19. 'jThere Js
Nothing
Like a - "
20. Priestly

county
30. Purpose

31. European
river

1'11 ~· MU , I"'

WAIT A MINUI£f
ISN'T R16HT1

!HIS

I &lt;SHOUW CARR'/
THE. 17RUM,

33. Pitcher

34. Brittany's
35.

patron saint
Greek
Jetter

36. - Ch aney
3.7. United
38. Any ob·
struc lion

IT5

~EAVY.'

LIGHTl

1/.\H U I

ON

THI~

ISET

I I

YOU

~HOULD

10iHE1'0P.

Now urance the circled letten
to rorm the IUrpriH &amp;niWfr, &amp;I
sun:ested b)' the abon cu1.oon.

(AM"'~" lo..,.rrowJ

Yuh·r.J• y'•

I

Antwt:r:

ness
(2 wds.)
:19, Chi nese

province

•&amp;O. ·Asylum 1
U. Sluggish
42. Pure and

.simple
DOWN

1.-Cass
Elliott

2. "-all
boats.!"

3. Marble
or sponge
4. Before •

5. Tolerated

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is I, 0 N G F E L ·J, 0 W
One letter sim'ply .stan'ds !or another. Jn this sample A is
used for the three L's. X Cor the two O's, ele. Si ngle letters,
apostroph&lt;'s, the length and fo rmatio~ o£ ~ he words are all
hints. Each day the code lctt('rs arc dtfferen_t.
CRYPTOQUOTES
RFD

t

Juml.lr., ABIDE

as a busi-

(S

riJ I I
t)/1''/1 ,\'
[J

State"
32. Grassland
15. Failing,

THIS TRIANGLE

0

child's
message

1;;;-t-t--+-F.:

If

@

form four ordinary words.

vest·
Jy
ments
(3 wds .)
:'!',,:::::.::::·.::" ·-127. Angered i r~"1":"-r:-r.-Male bees 1
Append
Apple or
pear
31. "Hawkeye .

-------

-------

signs
7.Giobe
8, 0£ moun·
t~lns

theatrical·

JUNE SALEI

- - - -- - -

(@ 1918 King Featu:HI S711dleatt, Ine.)

8. Gas ror

5. Nose

12. Earth

;::::========::.__,

b

YOIIerd17'1 Cryploquole: A MAN'S FEET IIIUST BB
PLANTED IN HlS COUNTRY, BUT HIS EYES SHOULD
S'OltVEY THE WORLD.--GEOBGJC SANTAYANA

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Pomeroy, Ohiq ·

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP

' .,. "''

~~tt¥

St.
Broker

.. SABRE TILLER ·
3lfz HP
129.95

. . .. ' .....

IF YOU S PARE l HE li FE. OF MY
FR.IENO ---

Teaford,

lfomts For Sale

,._.,

IS FllR.' IN

YOU, CHIL D ·--

BNRZYR

ADNJDER7.TO

XFT
ZO

BZQY

BR

.J&gt;SDNGRFZOK

!H~~· zn~DY ZH Zll 1)1'Rf'1.0K . - l'lliBF.NT7.V

RIVET

flORID

rr·1,_,. rlw /,/,,,/ ~· · r•mr • tl nwr_.
r•·ru•m,hfll- SHE WA~ FAIRIR

OPIATl

�I

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middle(lorl· 0 &lt;mdroy, 0 .. June;, 1973

News

• •

in Briefs

(Continued from Page I)
the White House "plwnber's squad," later arrested m the
Watergate bugging . Ellsberg was reportedly to be among the
w1tnesses at today's session.

Three convicted Watergate conspira!Alrs- E. Howard Hunt,
Berna rd L Barker and Eugemo Martinez - arnved at the
county )Oil here Monday, transferred from the federal
pe nitentiary at Danbury, Conn , to tell of !hell" rcles in the break·
ln.

WASHINGTON - REM INDED IN A CLOSED CAUCUS
MONDAY that polls show the public regards mllation as more
ser1ous a problem than the Watergate scandal, the Senate
Democrats unammously approved a resolution for a 90-day
freeze of pnces, profi ts , wages, salaries, rents and consumer
mterest rates. The resolutaon calls for attaching the proposal " to
the flrst appropriate b1ll commg before the Senate."
In a debate 1r. late March on extending the law which gives
Nixon auth onty to ac t on the economy, the same proposal was
defeated by a vote of 38-36 Wi th 24 absentees The adm m1s!ration
opposed it then and still does.
HOUSTON - SKYLAB 'S ASTRONAUTS ha ve a go-ahead for
the most dangerous spacewalk ever attempted m wh1ch they Will
try Thursday tAl fr ee a snagged power generabng wmg While
waitmg for the spacewalk procedures, the three astronau ts
turned to more sc1entif1c work . Their schedule today mcluded a
photographic swee p over Nevada, New MexiCo, Utah, Colorado
and Texas and more than 3\1 hours of solar observa tion, plus
additional medical tes ts of how man Withstands weightlessness
PARIS - U S. AN D NO RTH VIETNAMESE diploma ts
agreed to fur ther preliminary discusstons today before Henry A
Kissmger returns to Pans for more talks w1th his Hanoi col,mterpa(t, Le Due Tho, on brmgmg genu1ne peace to VIetnam.
Their negotiatlons were scheduled to resume on Wednesday
Key offiCials from the two Sides ha ve been negotiatmg ll1 a
PariS suburb for the past two days to smooth the way for tbe next
round of the talks between the higher-level envoys There was no
information on the subject or outcome of thel!" talks

•

*"
I1 editor)
tbau MO wordl 101111 (or be llllbject to Hdae\1011 by the
II
uc1
be alped
ldclma.
I--------------------------~
Letters a1 opllltom ore wel.-ed. Tllfy lil'"'ld be
I
mlUI
wllll lbe alpee'1
Name• 111111 be wllbheld UJIOil pablloatiaa. Howev", oa
requeot, aam.. wlli be dllelcloed. Letten lilould be Ia 1ood

1
1
I IIJote, addroulq wu.. , not penoaallu..,
I
C
I
. ,()~..

! ... ?Itt- tai$t:
I
I

NEVER HARD TO REACH

.~

"'

I
I
1
f

I

I
I
I

Jim Comstock asks h elp
Richwood, W. Va
May 29,1973
Dear Edi!Alr ·
The understgned individual and newspaper Js engaged in
producing for completwn m 1974 a W.volume West Vll"ginJa
Hentage Encyclopedia. One volume will be devoted to West
Virgmians who have left West Virgmia. The edi!Alr of this partiCular volume IS interested m hearmg from two kinds of expatnates. 1. Those who )eft West VIrginia years ago and to a
degree became 11Settlers" or leaders in the trade area of this
paper m whtch this letter appears. 2. Ex-West Vll"ginians who
have made a reasonable success in mdustry or a profession or m
government m the trade area of th1s paper. Names and addresses as well as a bnef biography a re requested. Chosen
candidates for mcluswn in the volume will be written tAl personally.
.
Very truly yours, Jim Comstock, W. Va. Hillbilly

No biblical title for this man

National Forest
By T. Allan Wolter, District Ranger
IRONTON - White Oak has been known and loved SIJ1Ce the
ea rliest days or settlement 1n the New World. It reminded the
colonists of the English oak, and the Indians showed how tAl boil
and eat tts large acorns. Wh1te oak grows from New England
south to Florida, through the M1ddle West to the Lake States, a nd
as far west as Oklahoma and Texas. It IS the State tree of Connecticut and Maryla nd.
ThiS ta ll, broad..,rowned tree re aches heights of 80 tAl 100 feet
(maXU"nUm, J!j() feet ), With diameters or 31Al 6 feet. Jts Whitish or
pa le gray bark is decidedly lighter in color than that of the black
(or red) oak group. Its scientific name Quercus alba includes the
classic Latin gener~ c name for aU oaks, Quercus, and alba
(whi te), applied by the famous botaniSt Linnaeus.
The large leaves are formed with f1 ve to nme rounded lobes
and, unlike the black oaks, ha ve no bristles. The deep brown, or
russet, of the oak leaf is a familiar feature of the autumn landscape, and on young trees many dead leaves remam attached
throughout the winter.
,
Acorns, the seed of !be oak, !nature m early autumn. These
shiny brown, sweet-flavored nuts, known as mast, have become
an important food for bears, squirrels, and bll"ds, particularly
With the passing of the chestnut.
The oak grows slowly but lives long, sometimes ;oo to 600
years. In open ftelds or lawns the trunk is shorter and the
bra nches spread outward 80 feet or more. In the forest, white oak
grows best in deep humus soil and is found in a mixture with
other oaks, hickory, and maple.
Of the more than 20 species of commercially important
Eastern oak, whtte oak is truly outs!andmg. From the earliest
days 1t proVIded a va luable source of timber for houses, ships,
and furmlure . Strength, durabtlity, and beauty are the words for
white oak. Its uses range from barrels and bridges to flooring
and fme cabinets.

•

'

as KC

The Kyger Cree k Local
School District today was
accepting applications for its
three administrative positions.
High School Principal John
C. Wtc kli ne submitted his
resigna tion to the board
Monday night. Wickline IS
retiring as principal, but will
remaiJl on the teaching staff. A
graduate of Olivet College in
Michigan and the Umversity of
Wyoming he has been principal
the past flVe years.
Last month, the board accepted th e r esignations of
District Superintendent Comer
Bradbury and Elementary
Princ tpa l
Walter
Rife.
Bradbury will become County
Superintendent on July I. Rife
retired.
The board w1Umeet Monday,

Poage willing
to talk about
new farm bill

Liddy-------..
(Contmued from Page I )
replied after a long pause,
chewing her lip, "He men~
tioned the fact he m1ght be
mvolved m clandestine acttvtties.''
• The hearing - the s1xth smce
the comm1ttee began 1ts public
sessiOns May 17 - began 15
mmutes late because members
held a closed meeting to
constder a format request from
the spec1al Watergate prosecu!Alr, Archibald Cox, to postpone
the hearings three months.
Cox sa1d the hearmgs posed a
"grave danger " to prosecution
of the case. But Sen. Sam J
ErVIIl, D-N.C , the chairman,

may call at the funeral home
between 2-4 and 7-9 p. m. today

princip~

WASHINGTON ( UP!)
Chairman W. R. Poage of the
House Agnculblre Committee
said !Alday he was willing tAl
diScuss a compromise w1th the
admm1stration on new farm
leglSI.Btton, but "we're not
-i-d_m_a_ b_ri_ef_ s_t_a_te_m_e_n_t_a_s _th_e_ gomg to do all the gtving.''
The Texas Democrat's
heartng began that the comcorrunent came in an interv1ew
mittee had unammously after he and Rep, Charles
rejected Cox's request.
Teague ,
R-Calif .,
the
He satd tt did not believe
Agncuiture Committee's
" that the courts will penrut
rankmg Republican, met
gUJlty parties tAl go unwhipped
pnvately Monday
with
to JUstice Sll"nply because the
Agriculblre Secretary Earl L.
Senate committee exercise~
Butz and Undersecretary J .
the constitutional rights and
Phil Campbell.
obligations of the Senate to
Poage ' s committee is
•nform the Congress and the
currenUy at work constructing
American people about the
its own version of a new farm
truth in respect to the
bill scheduled for floor debate
Watergate affair."
m the Senate thiS week.
· In other developments.
The measure, to be effective
- The New York Times said
beginmng with 1974 crops,
today that Cox and his
would f1x new ~~target prices"
prosecution team had decided
for
three maJOr crops and then
to invesllgate the conduct of
Henry E. Petersen, assistant - 1f market pnces slipped
attorney general who directed below the targets - would
th e Watergate mvestJgatton for guarantee government
nearly a year. "At issue is payments to farmers to make
whether Mr. Petersen . was up the difference
mvolved m the cover-up," the
Times said. Attorney General
Elliot L. Richardson said in a
A thought for the day
statement late this mornmg he Presldent Franklin D. Rooseknew nothing tAl cast any doubt velt said, "There Is no
Indispensable man "
on Petersen 's honesty.

SA Vlll.IU
Now 2 lor 8.49

No 187 CROSS YOUR HEART STRET CH BRA loce '"P' 32/ 36A, 32/ 408
32/42C Reg 21or 10 0032/ 42 DReg 600/ eo Nowller 11.41
0

AEP will monitor
air around plants
NEW YORK
Tht
Arnertcan Electnc Power
System today annowlCed plans
for the 1nstallahon of a
mtnute-bysophisticated,
nunute monitormg system to
measure amb1ent-atr quality
aroWld tts major generating
areas, Imtlally to encompass 12
large power plants m West
Virgmta, Ohto, tnd1ana and
Kentucky.
fn some areas, the system's

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
(Discbargeo)
Mrs. Paul Leport, Point:
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Jeffery;
Holstein and daughter, Point;
Pleasant; Mrs. Carrie Lewis',
Hendersbn; George Pefty,
Bidwell; Mrs. H. Carter, Point
Pleasant, and Larry Whitting!Aln, Arbuckle.

Charles Warthen, employed
as head football coach at the
Eastern High School recently,
will not he reporllng to hit the
post.
John Rtebel, supermtendent,
reported thts to the Eastern
Board of Education when 1t
met m spec1al sesston MonOay
mght Warthen Has decJded to
accept a post m a larger school
He IS fr om H1lllard.
The board wtll cons1der other
applicatwns for the post at 1ts
regular meetmg at 8 Tuesday
evemng. Besides the football
coach positiOn, there ts a

will be ex panded and
strengthened by the Jnstallatlon of new, supplemental
eqUipment; tn other &lt;~rea s,
totally new momtormg sub·
networks w1ll be mstalled
All of the new momtonng
stallons to be built and all of
the new mstrumentahon to' be
mstalled will be. leased from
Envtranmental Re sea rch &amp;
Technology, lnc., of Lexmgton,

vacancy for a teach.er
at the hJgh 'school m Biology,
Health and Phystcal Educ.at10n
and two vacancies m the
teachmg staff of the elementary schools
RJebel sa1d the board IS
proceedmg as fast as posstble
on the building prog ram approved by voter! m the May
pr1mary electton An architect
who has been mv1 ted to draw
plans for the add itiOn to the
h1gh school structure IS expected to have them completed
so the prOJect can be advertised m July The fum of
SqUire, Sanders and Dempsey

Atkins'
•
seat IS
filled

DIANA CARSEY
DIANA CARSEY WILL be
Installed Honored Queen of
Job's Daughters Bethel No.
52 Friday, June 8, 7:30 p.m.,
at th e Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. It will be an open
Installation. Tom Edwards Is
associate guardian a nd
Debbie Finlaw guardian. \

lessons set

Robert Burdette, Pomeroy
Route 2, Salisbury Twp , was
appomted to the MeJgs Co un ty
Board of EducatiO n to fi ll the
unexptred term of th e late
V~rgll Atkms when the board
met Tuesday mght
Burdette present for the
mee tm g, began hts new duties
H1s term expires Jan I , 1974
Ha rold Roush, v1ce president
of the boa rd , was elected
president fo r the remamder of
the yea r replac mg the la te Mr
Atkms m that post, and Gordon
Collins was name d v 1 ~e
president, replacmg Roush
The board employed Mrs
Charlene Gilmore of Athens, a
1972 grad ua te of Oh10
Umve i'sJty, as a speech
therapist 1n Meigs County fur
the 1973-74 sc hool year The
board adopted seventh and
e1ghth grade science books for
use m the county mcl udmg
volumes pubhshed by Holl.
R1ne hart-Wwston and by
L1ppenco tt A comnu ttee of
teachers studymg the ma tter
had recomme nded these
selectwns
Others attend mg the meetmg
were Coun ty Supenntenden t
Robert Bowe n and board
mem bers Gem ge Perry and
Harold Lohse

The fir st sessiOns of swtmmmg classes thts season wi ll
begm Monday at the Middleport Community Pool w1th
MISS Leann Sebo as mstructor
Those interested m enrolhn g
m classes should regtster from
I to 6 p m. th1s week at the pool
The schedule mcludes
Swtmmmg and adva nced
sw1mmer , 9 to 9 4; a m , advanced beg mn er a nd m ~
termed1ale, 9 45 to 10 30 a m. ;
begmner Ill and IV, 10 30 to
11:15 a.m ; begmner II , 11 15
to 12; begmner I, 12 to 12· 45
p m. Classes w1ll be held for a
two week periOd Regis tra tiOn
fee for each course 1s $4 A
water show ts bemg planned
for all chtldren taking lessons
durmg the season
L1fesav1ng
a nd
ad ult
The Mc1gs Coun ly Boa rd of
sw1mmmg classes will be he ld Mental Reta rdatiOn has purlater alon g w1th addJIJOnal
chased a ne w 16-passenger
sesstons of th e van ous classes school bus for next year
The bus Will be ow ned by the
Me1gs County CommtssJoners
Prospective students and bus
BAND TO WORK
The Me1gs H1gh Schopl Band routes for next year were
w1ll rehea rse at the h1gh school discussed m the meet ing
at 6 p.m. Thursday evemng, Monday mght at the courtDwtght Gmns, d1rec tor , satd house Prosecutor Bernard
Summer
ba nd Fultz met w1th the group and
tod ay
shirts ha ve a rnved as plans were dtscusscd to bmld a
have colord pictures from the com prehen!Hve men tal-health
Blossom Festiva l tnp. The mental-retardatiOn center in
second payment for band ca mp the co un ty. Letters of ap·
1s now due Band members can plicatiOn w1ll be accepted
obtam p1ctures and pa y, for before July 2 by the board for
IITStructor
camp a t to morrow mght's tns tructo r ,
ve r comass1
sta
nts·bus
dn
practice
bmatwns for the sc hool year of
1973-74 Everyone mterested m
any of the pos1t10ns IS asked lo
wn te a letter of apphcahon to
$128,0415 TO MEIGS
Mrs Jeanette Thomas, 784
The OhJO Bureau of Motor Chestnut St . Middleport
Vehtcles announced tha t more
than $74 m1ll10n m 1972 hcense
LOCAL TEMPS
plate revenues ha:ve bee n
The temperature 1n downdistributed among the state 's town Pomeroy at l1 a m
88 counties Me1gs Co unty's Wednesday was 72 degrees
share IS $128,065
und er ext remely cloudy sk1es

Bus sought by

county's board
for retarded

SAVIli.IJ
Now only 4.19
Style No 66 C ~OSS YOURHEART 111 FIBERFilltr1co t cups, stretch strops
32/36A 32/ 40B 32/40C Reg 6 00/eo No• only 4.Q

SAVE 1.01
Now I lor 4.91
SJyle No 35 CROSS YOUR HEART• COTTON BRA
32 /36A. 32/ 40B 32j 42C Reg 3 00 32/ 420
Reg 4 00 Now 2 lor 8.11
34j 44 DD Reg. 4 50/eo Now 2 for 7 .II
!Now 1n DOCu ps!

SAVE 1.01
FREE SPIR!T• TRICOT BRAS for todoy' s natural look Style No 80-soft
cop 32/36A 32/ 408, 32/ 40C Reg 5 00 Now only I.H.

Slyle No 81-lobe ,lo1132/ 36A, 32 /38B 32/38( Reg 600 New_,. 4.H
Slyle No 82- lolly podded 32/36A 32/ 386 Reg 6 00 New eely 4.H

St\ Vlli.OI
FREE SPIRIT• GI RDLE S ltghtwe 1ght perfec t fo r summer fash1ons
SJyle No 2862Brool SX S M, t, XL' 12B631 Reg 7 00 New eely I.Q
Style N o 2864- sho rtle-XS, S, M, l, xt• Rag; 8 00 Now o•ly ....
Style No 2866-Averoge leg-S, M L Xt• Reg 8 50 Ngw ••ly 7.41

SJyle No 2868- Long leg- S M l XL' Reg 9 00 New eely 'J.Q
*X l-1 00 more

SALE ENDS JUNil30, 1173

FOUNDATION DEPT., FIRST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

Mass whtch wtll mamtam both
the ne"
and
extstmg
momtormg facthltes . AEP will
con tmue to own the extsting
monttormg facthtles, as well as
the system-wide m1crowave
communi cations network over
wh1ch all of the a~r.quahty data
will be transmttted
Atr - quahty measurements
will
be
continuously
telemelered to ERT's com~
puter cenler m Chtcago, wh1ch

has been asked to sell the honds
to f~nance the bulld1ng
program
Attending
the spec1al
rneetmg were Rtebel and board
members, I 0 McCoy, Or1s
Snuth , Roger E~ple, Clyde
Kuhn and Howard Caldwell,
Jr

NEW HOT LINE
(.:QLUMBUS (UP I I Oh!oaos who ~&lt;ant to report
eo\•lronm€'ntnl problems
now bave a teh•phone
number they l'an call her~.
free of rhargc .
The number of the "e n ~
\'lronmeutal hothne" is 181)().282-11!70,

Adelle Mltrhell. ombudsfor the Ohio En·
vironmental
Protection
Agen &lt;"y, said arter th e
agcnry closes for the day, a
reco rdl~ message can be
made and someone at the
agency "111 conta ct the
caHer the next day.
man

m tw-n w11l transmit hourly
average data back to both the
AEP System Power Productlon &amp; Control' Ce nter 1n
Canton, Ohw. and AEP's 12
generattng plants
The proJect's cost over the
ne xt ft ve years, mclud1ng
charges for the leasmg of the
new facthhes and ERT 's
services, IS estimated at over
$8 m1lhon ,
Showers and thundersl1owcrs
Work on the new and ex~ hkely east portiOn tomght, lows
panded facJIIlles, scheduled to m the 50s Thursday becommg
be m fulJ operation by January cloudy east \\.lth a chance of
1, Is now under way
showers m the mormng lhghs
Prmclpal aim or the system Thursday m the 70s
w111 be to conhrm th.tt am~
b1ent·alr standards m the areas
::··:
of the power plants are bemg
EXl'ENOED OUTLOOK
met A second purpose \lotll be
Fa ir . F rid ay th ro ugh
to permit AEP to t~ ke part m
Sunda)
. ll1ghs !rom lhe mid
allcv1atmg local cond1hon:s 1f
70s to low 80s F riday wa r·
publ1 c authont1es should
m ing t o the IO\\ to m id 80s
declare an . a1r-poll uhon
Sunday. Lows from thr nud
emen~ency m a gtven area
Today' s
annou ncement , 50s to lo\\ 60s.
(C.mtmued on p.1 ge 9l
·. :-.·:·.·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:··.:: ••·.;.;.;.,.:.· ·. :

PEGGY O'BRIEN , lJncoln H1 ll, Pomeroy, has her hands full as she walks her two
r-egtstercd St. Bet nards, Joggy and Brandy. Both Joggy, who has been a farm ly pet for tw o
\\ Ceks, and Brandy, who has been around two years, are perfectl y marked St Bernardo; Joggy
went lo obcdiCncc school tn Clevela ntl e1ght months before JOmmg the O'Bnen fami ly Peggy
expects a busy summer with her pels smce Joggy ISexpecting pupptes m late August Joggy 's
vet advised Pcg~-:y to expect a iltllcr of 15 to 20 smce both parents came from large litters E1ght
of the cxp&lt;•clcd hltc1 ~llrcady h.IH' been so lri

•

enttne
Devoted To The lnteruu Of The Meig!· MtJMJn Areo

First swim

•

exiStmg monltormg facthtles

Eastern needing coach

Veteraus Memorial Hospllal
Dtscharges
Sharon:
Mattox, John Daugherty, JerryZerkle, Ruby Erb, Carl Cornell, Vivian Johnson, Luther;
Coleman, Clyde Kuhn, Roby.
Schultz, Louise Garnes ;
Timothy B1ssell and Tony.
Gilkey.

Save on these great Playtex Styles

Sty le No 13 CROSS YOU R HEART• Sli GHTL YPADDE D ST RET CH BRA
loce cups 32/36A, 32/ 40B 32/40( Reg 2 for 10 00

•
•
•
•

a:

SHOP WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

SAVIll.51
Now 2 lor 8.49

••
•

June 11, to lntervle,.;
supermtendent and princlpa~
applicants.
_
Miss Gloria Jean Kemper ~
Kerr, a graduate of Norut
Gallia High School, was em;
ployed as high school horne;
economics Instructor replacing;
Mrs. Av ice Frecker whc&gt;
retired. Miss Kemper wilt
receive her B. S. Degree fr~
Ohio Unlversity in August. :
Mike Mulford was employed:
as pool manager at the Kyge~
Creek Swirrurung Pool. Hts:
staff was hired last month;
Valley Bell was granted
contrac t to furnish milk:
_products for the 1973-74 school;
term.
.
The board authorized its;
clerk, Mrs. Doris Roush, to;
advertise for bids on a 1963;
Chevrolet school bus. The bus:
will be sold to the highest
bidder. Supt. Bradbury was:
authoriled to purchase new:
typewriters lor the high school:
Commercial Dept. and to buy;
materials
for
summer;
maintenance repairs.
John Scott was employed for:
temporary summer cus!Aldiat'
work.
At MercerviUe, the Hannan
Trace Board of Education
accepted the resignations of
teacher aides, Mary Ann
Campbell and Judith Sanders.
Markin-Bian!Aln of Portsmouth
will furnish food for the
cafeteria next year. Heiner's
Bakery and Valley Bell Dairy
were given the other lun"
cbroom contracts.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Lltbens /ialioNlt

-

•I

•

Your Wayne Wickline resigns

Grandma Gatewood made
her mark as a conservationist

MEIGS THEATRE

..

\

Dear Sir
such thmg on the part of any
I am continually em- person I am a mortal, fully
barrassmg some people m one capable of error , fallible to a
particular regardmg the title fault , perh aps, a nd ever
wh1ch I refuse to allow them tAl mmdful of my weaknesses
use in addressing me . The Perhaps some who allow and
general public has been led to even mstst on bemg addressed
assume that a preacher, or in thts fashwn possess the
mtmster, should be given a dtvme qualities of power and
spec1al and "Biblical " ~1Ue , mfalliblllty whiCh mvoke such
because of hts position m a regard. I do not presume to be
TOO EARLY TO TELL
DAMAGE MINOR
local congregation. Therefore, such.
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - OfMmor damages were m- by " Roman " example, the
The tenn "Reverend" ts a
fic•als here sa1d Monday 11 IS curred to the Richard Mitchum pubhc generally, and many
Biblical term, and it IS that, In
too early to tell1f the c•ty can home on Wyllls Hill at 4:51 ttmes automatically, bestows
the only passage .in wh1ch it
manage on the liiO,OOO gallons p m Monday when lightnmg the tttle of " Reverend " upon
appears m the whole of the
of gas allocated by Standard struck an outs1de wire cau.smg men who preach m public.
World of God, the psalm1st
011 of Ohto (Soh10) for the an mside w1re to smoulder The
The first point necessary IS , Davtd wrote, " He sent
month of June. Durmg the f~rs t Pomeroy Fire Department the defmillon of the word itself
redemp!ton un!Al HIS people.
three days of the month, c1ty answered a call to the home. The word we use, ~&lt; Reverend,"
He hath commanded H1s
vehicles used nearly 15,000
1s from the B1ble, a Hebrew covenant for ever: holy and
gallons of gasoline, accordmg
word, translated as we spel1 1t, reverend is His name ."
to Service D1rector Richard
from the word " YARE," ( Psalms 111 :9)
Jackson.
pronounced "yaw~ray " ; a
I fully appreciate the fact
primary root word meaning to that people want to express
fear; morally to revere; cause thetr respect for my vocatlOn m
(Continued from Page 1)
to fr~ghten, etc I must pomt IJfe, but to calla man by a term
make a depos1t of $100, plus $5 out that I personally have no used to Identify God IS not the
a month.
characteristics which should way to so express It.
Those who have the docks be able to invoke fear , dread, Loren T. Stephens, Evangelist,
TONIGHT ONLY
rented now only pay the $5 fe e. frtght , reverence, awe, or any Pomeroy.
" PLAY IT AS
Mayor Collins agreed to check
IT LAYS"
the s1tuat10n.
Tuesday Weld
Legar reported that the
Anthony Perktn s
IR)
delay m the construction of the
Also
new ft re station ts being caused
SIX , SONGS&amp; SATIRE
by the fact that the contractor
Can He•r o nymu s "(;,'~~;;)
has fa1led to produce a bond
ever forg et Mercy H
and f•nd true hai&gt;Pi•!1ess?
If the present contractor falls
I Rl
to purchase a bond, the next
"Her contrtbutions to conlowest bidder will be g1vert the servation will bear frUit for rocking chatr. It was 24 years
ago, while readmg a Natwnal
contract, accordmg to Legar. years to come."
Geographic magazme, that she
Ch1ef Webster's report for
That was one of several dec1ded to conquer the 2,000
the month of May was read and remarks made four years ago
mile Appalachian Trail.
It showed the m Columbus as Mrs. Emma
accepted
Tonight, Wed., Thurs.
It's hard to say how many
June S-6-7
department Investigated 22 ( Grandma) Gatewood
NOT OPEN
accidents, made 66 arrests, received a state conservation miles " Grandma" actually
walked during the past two and
Issued 1,715 parkmg tickets, award during an Ohio
one-half decades. Some feel
Fri., Sat., Sun.
rece1ved $1,713 50 from street Achievement Day m the
she
established a natwnal,
June 8-9-10
meters and $2,102.50 from Fairground Colisseurn.
maybe a world record .
YOUNG WINSTON
parkmg meters.
(Techmcolor)
Making the presentation that Anyway, she wore out more
Attending were Mayor msp fall day on Oct. !8, 1969,
Robert Shaw as
Lord
hikmg shoes the past 24 years
Randolph Churchill , A11ne
Collms, Werry, Snouffer, Mrs. was Gov. James A Rhodes.
than one would like to count
Ban croft , as Lady Jennte
Elma Russell, Mees, and
Mrs. Gatewood, mother of 11,
I GP)
In 19;;, and 19;7, at ages 67
Harry Davts, counctl mem~ and
a
great-great- and 69, she walked tbe 2,000.
Show Starts 7 p. m.
bers; Webster, Legar, Tom grandmother, died in Holzer
m1le Appalachian Tra1l from
Werry, and Jane Walton, clerk
Med1cal Center at 10 a. m. Georgia tAl Matne. In 1959, she
Monday of an apparent heart was m the national IU"nellght
attack . She was 85.
after completing a 2,000 m1le
The 1969 conservation award jaunt to the Oregon Centenmal
was presented Mrs. Gatewood Celebration along the Oregon
"for a lifetime mterest m Trail from Independence, Mo.
nature, and for her efforts in She walked the Oregon Cenmarking and mapp1ng the tennial faster than a wagon
southern route of the Buckeye train, thus stealing national
Gratl (from the Meigs border headlines from westerners for
near Cheshire to Lecta near the the folks hack home.
Lawrence County border)
Grandma d1dn 't hike for all
through Gallia County.
that publicity. In fact, she was
At age 61, most mdtviduals always cautwus around
!Alday are prepared to step newsmen. 11They ask too darn
as1de from life' s rugged many questions,' ' she once said
everyday aCtiVIties, take 1t while bemg interviewed by a
easy and dream about the good reporter.
ole' days.
In 1963, at age 75, Grandma
For Gatlla County's Grand- completed a penlous hike
rna Gatewood, 61 was the along the Knife Edge Trail to
begmmng back in 1949 of a new• Mt. Katahdin, Maine. In 1965,
way of llfe.
she walked the 164-mile
After raising 11 children, Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
"Grandma" wasn't about to !Alwpath.
spend her remaining years in a
She was described as
From work to home, or on the town ,
"
straight-laced,
and oldNOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
fashiOned," m one news
AND APPRAISEMENT
our dnve-m w1ndow IS the answer
The S'tate of Ohto , Metg$ feature. Besides her love for
County Probate Court .
To the A dmm1strator of the nature, ~nother reason for the
for those on the go We have n1ght
estate , to su ch. of the following hikes was, "I always wanted tAl
as ar e restdenf $ of th e State of
Oh to
vtz
the surv tvlng see what was on the other stde
depository too.
spou se, tn e nex t of km, the of the hill," she once said.
ben ef 1cHtr 1es und er the wlll ,
One o! the biggest evenls in
and to the attorney or attorneys
Auto Teller Window and
r e pre s enttng
any
of
the her life came on Thursday,
afor ement ioned per sons
Ada Jan e Rowe , Deceased , Sept . 17, 1959, when the
Walk-Up Window
Ra cine , O h10 R 0 2, Letart Galllpohs Area Chamber of
Town sh tp , No 2095 5
You are hereby not i f ied that Commerce welcomed her
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
th e
Inv entor y
and
Ap
p r a1 se m ent of the estate of the home followmg the 2,000 mile
aforem ent loned , de ceased , lete hike along the Oregon Tra1l.
of
sa td County , wa s f1led 1n thiS
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
The day was set aside in
Co u rt
Sat d Inven t ory and
Appra ts eme n t Wdl be for honor of Grandma. She was
hear 1ng befo r e thi s Cour t on the
PITTSBURG!{
14th day of June , 1973. at 10 00 presented a Key tAl the City by
o'cl oc k AM
the late Carl Bias Headlme of
An y p er son des lrtng to file
ex ception s t hereto must file the local paper tliat day read :
them at l east f 1ve days pr1or to
" Gallia Greets Galloping
t he date set for heartng
-..c. INCINNATI
Grven under my hand and Grandma Gatewood.''
sea l of s a 1d Court , fh1S ls1 day
MIDDLEPORT
Mrs . Gatewood 's funeral
of June 19 73
OHIO
Man n in g D Web ster serv1ces are scheduled I p. m.
Judg e and ex offt CIO
Cler k of sa1d Court Wednesday at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.
MIDDLEPORT, Oli!O
B y Ann B Watson
Burial
wJII be m Ohm Valley
Dep uty Cler k
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(6) 5, 12, 2t c
Memory Gard en ~ Fnends

Bentz

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VOL XXV NO 37

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHI O

WEDNESDAY, JUN E 6, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

•

ill ion zn cash paid blind
By MIKE FE!NSILBEI!
WASHI NGTON ( UP! )
F01 mer• Nu on campai gn
treasurer Hugh W Sloan Jr.
tes tified today he was to ld "you
don't y;ant to know" when he
asked why former Attorney
Ge ner a l John N Mitchell
approved funneling huge sums
of cash to Wate rgate conspuator G Gordon L1ddy last
spn ng.
Sloan, calmly descnbmg for
the Senate Waterga te Committee how he disbursed more
Ulan $1 million m cash to
va1tous Nixon campaign atdes
and White House staffers 1n the
months preceding the buggmg
of Democratic headqu ar ters,
said h~ generi:l lly didn 't qu estiOn what the money was for
But he sa1d he fm ally ba lked
when l .iddy -.then fmance
counsel for the carnpat gn casua lly showed lum a $250,000
budget a nd sa1d he would be
droppmg by soon to p•ck up an

mt ttal $8 .~, 000 in cash
Slo.m, rec iting the same
sto ry befo1·e na twnw 1de
telev1Sion cameras that he has
told mvesllgators m pnva te,
S(i ld he went to former Commerce Secretary Mi:!urlce H.
Stans, then the ca mpa1gn
•
Jmancc chJCf,
and complmned
that Uu::; r~ quest was ''tota lly
out of !me With anythmg we've
done befor e n
Sloan s;11d he asked Sta11s 1!
Liddy was n ght when he satd
his authonty to draw the cash
ha d come from .Jeb Stuart
Magmder, then depu ty Ci.lmp&lt;:tign manager under Mi tchell
" I 1 e4uested tha t he reconfi r m this to me," Sloan
testified " He md1 catcd to me
that he would take th e mH ltcr
up wJ th Mr M1tchell He
retu rned a nd conftrmed that
M1 Magrttder co ntinued to
have tha t authority a nd that I
should pa y the fund s
"And wt th rega rd to my
questi on as to purpose, he
(Sta ns) rephed 'I do not want
to kno.,., and you do not wa nt to

Kiwanis club
•
•
organtzatwn
is announced

know' ''
Sloan was qu estioned closely
abou t the cash disburseuu::mL'l
of $1 7 n11lhon m campaign
fu nds befo1e thl' 1\pnl 7, 1972,
deadhnc That was the dettc a
new law .... en t Into eff ect

queen hopefuJ

full dJscl u:mre of all
fini:lnC ial t ran sactions, bot h
contn bulions a n d dtsbursemenL'i

Altogc lhcl , he sa1d, he
dtspcnsed $1!l!l,OOO m cash to

Lu.hly - whn was convicted In in $100 bills
''But at one pomt, tt may
Janua1 y of consp1 racy, bureven
have mcl uded some $1,00l
glary , bugg m!-! ami wuetapmg
m connectiOn w1th the Wa ter- b1lls,'' he sa1d
Sta ns,
meanw hile,
1s
gate r&lt;.uli He sa 1d most o[ the
c,ush doled lo l.tddy and nea rly refu smg to testify before the
a dozen othc J Nixon mdcs was spcctal seve n-member Senate
Watergate comnuttce ba rrmg
p110 r dtsmtssal of an i n~
d1 clment that could send hlm to
prison for 40 yea rs.
Stans had been scheduled to
follow Slodn to the w ttn~ss
ta ble today 111 the · ornate
m;J rble hea,rmg room But his
lawyer·s wt ote to Ute com~
m1 tt cc Tuesday say wg he
crillc1zed by some m Cong ress would n' t he th ere unless
and elsew here smce he :itlliis a cons plr&lt;.Jcy ;md pe-qury
1mhtary man, w1th a top Army dm ges pendmg agatns l him In
New Yor k re lative to a $200,000
jOb
l.atnl had 1c:·nsted returnmg l'fJxon campaign contnbutwn
to govc1 nment aft c1 leavmg at are th opped
Sloan testified th at w1thm a
the end of Nixon's !Irs! adwee
k afte r th e J un e 17
rmmstr&lt;.Jtlon
Wa ter ga te break -m, he
became ve1y. concerned about
what was gomg on a t the re~
elect1on cornmtlt ee and vmced
lhts w ncern to White House
aJd cs Dw1 ght Chapin and
Kenne th Cole at a cocktail
party ,
fi e sa1d he went to the While
House the next day tAl speak
With Chupm, then lhe President 's appointments secretary
and now a Um ted Air Lines
markctmg ma n, and John D.
MilSON - It was a hot ba ttle Ehrllchman , one of Nixon's top
u1Mason Tuesday 1when voters two a1des He sa1d Chapm
selected town offiCials from apparently surveyed htm as
tht ee tickeL'3 for the next two bewg "somewhat o ve r~
wrou ght" and suggested a
years begmmng July I.
B1enmal elec tions m Hen- vaca twn

Laird lured into job
as lop Nixon advisor
By II ELEN rf!OMAS
W1\SIII NG TON 1UP I 1
President N1xon h.Js lUJ ed h1s
forme r defe nse sccielllry, MclV1 n R Lcurd, ou t of temporal y
retirement to become a toplevel Wh1te House adviser , r~nd
pla ns to make other staff
change s, mformed sources
smd loday
l.a 1rd w1ll heco me Nixon's
ch1ef domestic adv1ser, congresswnal sources Stlld Thts 1:-i
the JOb fmrnerly held by J ohn
D Eh rla:hman, one of severn}
top White House mdcs who

have lost then JObs liS a result
of the Wale1F;a te scHnda l
'J here also wc1e report-; thHt
Ger. Alexa ndCJ M Ha1g:, who
WdS
n.un ed
tem po! ar}
rep lacement for Nixon's for"'"' Chi ef of staff, II R " Bob"
Haldema n, wou ld shor tly
1ctlll n tn Ius Pentagon dc~k as
AI my VICC duef of staff ,
Bryce N Ha llow, a for mer
While House mde, was prorruncntl y mentwn cd as anoth er
pos~J bl c N1xm1 appomtee to Ius
s l!:t ttcrcd staff
H;_u g's Hppomtlllent lliJs been

System revised
A twO page qu estwnna1re
wa s drawn up to gu1dc the
selectiOn of Me1gs County's
,Jumor F w r queen and km g by
the adv isory cornnultce of the
.Jumor Fa1 r Bo1d at a special
mcet1ng Tuesday
For the fm;t time the kmg
and qu ee n will be selected from
the FFJ\, Gul Scout s, 4-H and
F'rlA, and by t hree -out-o f
county JUdges Each of the•e
clubs IS to p1ck 1ts o.,., n outstandm.g g1rl and boy wh o then
w1ll complete the questiOnna ne The} v.J II also wnte a
three page resume The n~:tmes
of the clubs and the1r out·
standm g g ~r ls and boys should
be turned mto the cxtcnt1on
of!JC~ by Fnday , .June 15
'Earlier , on May .ll ,
ar rangements for the Jumoi
F'a1r book were made at the
fourth mectmg of the Me1gs
Co un ty .Tumor Fa1r Board at

An orgamzatwnal meetmg of
a new " Big Bend K1 wams
Club" w1ll be held Thursday
evenmg 7 p m m the Tnm ty
Church basement when of~
f1ce rs will be elected an d the
Board of Directo rs named
The new club 1s bet ng
sponsored an d ass isted m
orga mzalional procedures by
th ~ Ga lhpohs K1 wams Clu b
BRENDA TAYLOR
Monday n1ght has been
tenta ti ve ly set as reg ul ar
meetmg mght With the dmner
mee ting to be each Monday at 6
p m at the Me1gs Inn
All mterestcd men are mBrenda Taylor , daughte r of 't(lted to ,the' .,Thursday mght
Mr. and Mrs Pa ul E Taylor, meetmg
Everyone who
416 Sp11ng Ave., Pome roy, 1s becomes a member by J uly 17
one of eight candidates for the wi ll be considered a cha rter
t1tle of 1973 B1g Bend Regatta member
Queen
A Charter Ntght dmner has
A 1973 graduate of M e~gs been scl fo r Tuesday, July 17 at
High School, M1ss Taylor was a lhe Me •gs H1gh School
mem ber of the Me1gs H1gh cafetena. Ohto K1wams ofSc hool ban d and wa s a fi c ia ls
will
attend
maJo rette She belonged to the Arra ngeme nts for concesston
g1rls athletiC assoctatw n. She booths al the Rega tta and the
1s a past honored queen of the Me1gs County Fa1r have been
Shenff Robe rt C. Harlnternatmnal Order of Job 's proposed as future proJects for
tenbach's
Dept wveshg&lt;Jtcd
Daughters and 1s .a member of the club
two smgle acc idents Tuesday,
the Umted Methodist Church
one
111 whi ch a doe deer was
M1ss Tay lor plays p1ano and
k1lled
her hob bies are sw1mmmg and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
At 12 50 p m on SR 7 bypass,
wate r skn ng
DISCHARGES - Charl es one-tenth of ~ mile south of
The 1973 queen and her court Werry, Diana Wells, Wil ma
or three members w1ll be an- Ande rso n, Maggte FJelds, jUncllons 7 and 124, Robert E
nounced on June 15 at a talent La ura Schaefer, Robert Love, Sr , Woodsfield, was
show to be he ld m conj unchon Car ley, Ru ssell Sargent, traveling south when the deer
w1th the regatta wee kend Beatnce Stewart, Kennet h ran mto the path of h1s vehicle
There was light darn.3ge to h1s
actiVIties at the Me1gs Junwr Gi lkey ami Sarah Congo
truck
H1gh School 10 Midd lepor t

Brenda Taylor

1 cquu·UJ I-(

.

Metgs H1 gh School presided
over by the pl'esldcnt, M arc i &lt;~
Ccm The mmutes of the
previOus meetmg we1e r cad
and approved
Changes wc r e ma de on
commJttces and rules for the
.Junwr Fmr book All committee cht~ Jrmcn a1 e to meet
w1th their rnembe1 s durmg the
month of .Jun e and t'eport their
fmdmgs ut the July meetmg
The treasu rer's report WiiS
KJven and her book i.IUditcd
Advmory Committee se tting:
up 1he system to select the
.J un1or Fa 1r's nutstandmg g1rl
and boy arc Patty Kelly,
president, Gay Johnson, vtcepres Jden t, Everett Holcomb,
sec retary , Ca rol Oh li nger,
'
treasurer,
and Jamce Ri tchie, ,
publicity cha 1rman The nex t
meetmg of the Fa1r Board w11l
be .July 5, at 8 p m at Meigs.
Hr gh Sehoul

Deer hit, killed
At 4 p m on SH G8J , sevententh:i of a mile cast of U S
Route 3:!, Mark M Ma rkham,
Pomeroy, Rt 2, dr1vmg a
p1ckup ea ston 681, we nt off the
,..nghwi.iy on the nght, back
across the road , and struck a
bnd~e
~

Mar kham h&lt;~ d "1s1ble In·
JUnes but was not unmedtately
treated There was heavy
di.image to h1s truc k

Mason
Battle
warm

derson and Leon the sa me day
f&lt;:tlled to show much mteres t
Ira Atkmson J r , a teacher at
Wahama H1 gh, unof fi Cia ll y
edged Fred Taylor by three
votes m the co ntes t for Mayor
But th1s mormng 1t was bemg
rumore d that Tay lor w1ll
request a recount
Atkm so n ran on the
Progress ive ttcket w1 th the
recorder and ftve council seats
filled from candidates on the
Peoples Ticket, whi ch was
headed by Taylor Yo un g
voters were believed to have
co ntn bu ted to 1\tkJnso n's
majonty, si nce he IS well
known at Wahama and ts
assoc iated w1th the chmr a t the
Mason Un:ted Met hodiSt
Church
The prese nt admm tstratiOn,
headed by Roy Harless as
mayor , lagged far behmd th e
other candidates where most
mcwn bents ran on the Jnde penden t T1cket
Charlotte Jenks, formerly a
Recorder m Mason for several
ye &lt;~r S 1 as well as servmg as
partllme ma yor anti wate r
secretary, 1s popular m the
comm umty,
whtc h was
ev1denj::ed through a majonty
of 177 votes Kenneth Reynolds,
IContmued on page l6 )

Steel rising
at Gavin plant
near Cheshire
Umon employees ret urned to
the1r Jobs th1s mornmg at the
Ja mes M Gavm Elec 1trt cal
Plant near Chesh1re
Accordmg to John Reece,
publi c affa trs coordin a tor ,
piCket li nes were removed
Tuesday afternoon followmg
an agreement between stnkmg
members of Local :;o; of the
ln terna tJOnal Brotherhood of
Teamsters and the General
Can tr actors Assoctation of
Hun ting!Aln
The teamsters' contract had
expJred last Thursday The
stnke, wh1ch Idled 3,000 men,
began last Fnday
Donald Bartram, busmess
manager of Teamsters Local
505 '" Hun tmgton declined th1s
mormng to comment on the
settleme nt
Tins was one of several
mmor strtkes at the plant smce
constructiOn began m March,
1971 Thus far, the longest has
lasted mne days

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