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&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0 ., June 11, 1973

Probers go after bigger men
WASHINGTON ( UPl ) - The
Senate Watergate committee
hopes this wee k to begi n
probint. one leve l higher in the
bugging sca nda l, hearing from
more importaot witnesses who
so far have only been quoted by
others.
But it still is not clear
whether all the witnesses will
agree to testify or whether the
courts wUI allow the hea rings

ures such as former Commerce
Secretary a nd campaign fund-

raiser Ma ur ice H. Stans,
deputy ca mpaig n director Je b
Stuart Mago oder a nd f ormer
White House Counsel J ohn W.
Dean lll - probably not all in
one week .
Poss ible Hitches

There were a nu mber of

possible hitches :
On Tuesday morning Dist rict
to continue over na tionwide J udge J ohn J . Sirica is to rule
on a r equest by Special
television.
In eight days of hearings so Prosecutor Archibald Cox that
far, the committee ha s hear d · Ma gruder a nd Dean be hea rd
14 witnesses- whose first hand in closed session, without live
knowledge was m ostly limited television, so that the publicity
to operations at lower levels in would be less likely to

Ute Nixon re-election campaign

prej udice their right to an

and to details of the Wa tergate
break-in and arrests.
But as to what higher up
figures were doin g, th ese
witnesses generally could only
report things they were told .
In the next round of hearings
- Tuesday , Wedn esday a nd
Thm:sday-after a bit more low
level testimony, the c ommittee

impartial trial- if they a re

hopes to move up one rung on
the ladder and to begin
receiving testimony from fig-

filed with court
One divorce action has been
filed in Meigs County Commou
Plea s Court and six other s
were granted Friday .
Filing for divo r ce was
Shirley
Anne
Hubbard ,
Syracuse , against Wayne Allen

Hubbard ,

MEIGS THEATRE
June 11 -21
NOT OPEN

Fri .-Sat.- Sun.
June 22-23-24
1776

fTechnicolorl
Wm . Dan ie ls
Howard Da Si lva

! Gl
Adults : $1.50

Divorce action

Children. 75c

Show Starts 7 p.m .

same

address ,

charing gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.
Awarded divorces were
Neva Ellen Ebersbach from
Willard August Ebers ba ch ,
Frank V, Musser from Virginia
Faye Musser, Pleasant A. Ellis
from Alice Ellis, Doris A.
Woodyard from James H.
Woodyard, Brenda K. Jeffers
from John R. Jeffers, and
Linda L. Priddy irom James R.
Priddy.
.

"IT'S TRUE"- - -

News.

some major rivalries among
figure s in the case . For
example, in testimony given in
CALLED TWICE
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called out twice over the
weekend, at 6:25p.m. Saturday
to assi~t Alice Spencer at 223
Union Ave . where she had
fallen, and to the home of Jack
Warner at 2:58 a.m. Sunday.
He was taken to Holzer
Hospital, Alice Spencer to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

• •

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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cruise. foreign countries . Vacation dreams
become realities when you join our popular
vacation club . Come in and get the pleasing
details. They just may set you planning.

JOIN OUR f974
VACATION CLUB
Make 49 Deposits

We ·Pay the 50th

The ' man who loves hlmul f
t;~;.j',,'w:':orrllu;
hen

he

no

Show your love for the man
In your life with a
FATHER' S DAY GIFT
selected from the SAFETY
DESIGNED BLACK and
DECKER POWER TOOLS
DISPLAY at the Pomeroy

Cement Block Company .

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federar ·Rese'rve System - $20.000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depo si tor .

zn Briefs

Carpenter News, Event

Vacation
on Your Mind?

FARMERS BANK ·
AND SAVINGS CO.

•

DELAWARE OHIO - REV . LEON SULLIVAN of
Philadelphia told 500 Ohio Wesleyan University graduates
Sunday the Watergate affair is "only a symbol of America's lack
of integrity.'' He said, ''The nation is in a crisis and we could be
headed for our destruction as a first class power in the world "
said Sullivan, ministers of the Zion Baptist Church and a bla~k
enterprise leader. "The danger comes from within.
"One crisis is a lack of integrity in government from the
county seat to city hall and from the statehouse to the White
House. This is lack of integrity of which Watergate is only a
symbol," Sullivan said. " We have had our fill of hypocritical
leaders who preach law and order for poor and clemency for
the rich. We want the President to turn his face to tl.e needs of the
poor in America,'' Sullivan said. ~ 'It is all right to deal with China
and to try to rebuild North and South Vietnam, but we need help
at home ."

Among those from this
community
who took the boat
Vada Caldwell, Helen Eakins,
Eugene Hutchison, Irene trip in the Chaperone on June I
were Mrs. Gene Jeffers and
Russell, Cora · Will, Margaret
Hammack,
Benjamin Lester, Marco and 8obert, Mr.
and Mrs. John Stout and John
Capehart, Everett Cremeans, .
Thelma Custer and Barbara Jr ., Mrs. Tim Sayre and Shane,
Carl, Cindy and Connie ICllis,
McDaniel.
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan
Sunday Discharges
and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Vanessa Petit, Mont Vance,
Harvey and daughters, Mrs.
Rise Jeffers, Robert Larkins,
Jack Allman, Kimberly and
Thelma Nease, Ella Rostofer
Mike, Keith, Cecile and Sherry
and Clara Radford.
Shiltz, Danny Jordan, Marilyn
Penn, Mrs. Robert Lich and
son, Mrs . Eugene Facemeyer
and son,
Mrs.
Dennis
Facemeyer and children, Mrs.
Dorsey Jordan, Virginia, Rick,
and Ralph, Cheryl Lawson and
Mrs. Joe McWhorter and
children .
Vicky Gillogly entertained
with a slumber party. Those
who enjoyed the night with her
were Mona Lee Peck, Julia
Johnson and Jamie Ray.
• Guests of Mr . and Mrs. Earl
Starkey were their children
and grandchildren, Mr. and

AT

mended for tran s fe r or
''dismi s sed" bec ause th e y
were " not recommended " for
reeemploymen t.
Statements regarding only
one of the visits was put on the
record during the hearing.
Tod Faller and Lawrence
Cartmill, both teachers at
Hannan , were recommended
for the transfer list by Supt.

Mitchell or former White
House aides John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldeman, all
of whom are on the committee's witness list.
(Continued from Page I )
Will Explore Rivalries
N; it gets to higher-level cnsls . Appearing on the CBS-TV program " Face the Nation"
witnesses, the committee will ::,unuay, Morton said an ~ energy czar' also would be necessary at
apparently find itself exploring a policy-making level in the White House.

Eloise Parsons, Edna Parsons,

FOUND

They wer e to the effect that
former White House aide
Gordon C. Stracha n had told
Dean that Haldema n had orde r ed Strachan to des troy
some documents a llegedly indi cating that Haldeman knew
a bout Watergate wiretap data.
It was a case of hea rsay
several times r emoved. The
account was told in a m emorandum by Weicker obtained
by The New York Times.
Weicker later said he would not
" disavow" the account.

l 1

--------------------------~
I
Letttn of oplnloD •"' wel&lt;OIIled. They ab,..ld be lea

John Hammons

.I
I
editor 1 md must be slgued with the •II-'• eddreu.
I
Names may be withheld upo11 publicotloo, However, ..,
I
req..st, names will be disclosed. Let~n should be ill food
thu 300 wordo Ioog 1or be eubject to roduotloo by tbt

of .Reedsville dies
John Hammons , 88, Reeds·ville , Rt. l , died Sunda y a t
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Hammons was preceded in
death by two sisters, Jane
Bess, and Rebecca Wiley.
Mr. Hamm ons is survived by
his wife, Betty Spence Hammons .
Funeral ser vices will be held
Wednesday at I p. m . at Ewing
Chapel. Burial will be Rushville Cemeter y. Friends may
ca ll a t the fun eral hom e
after 10 a . m . Tuesday. The
fam ily asks tha t fl owers be
om itted .

taste, atldruslng l11ues , not penoo!'ll~es,

:I

.8~../}t.,_

••• ~.. uuarr.,:

J

~-

I
I
I
I

..

.

Inside: a special 32-page tabloid Regatta Weekend section
Regatta Weekend

en tine

Friday, Saturday
and Sunday here

Against proposed bull fight

June 7, 1973;
Dea r Sir :
.
It has come to muy knowledge that a tragedy is about to:
befall a member of the bovine class. I am referring to the sick,:
morbid, excuse for a sporting event conunonly referred to as a .
Corridos de Toros (bullfight). ! hav,e always enjoyed the aMual '
Frog Jump days in Pomeroy. I hate to see it marred by some:
clown who calls himsell Elchico, who comes, parading into your:
fair city only to prove his m•&lt;~'ulinity by slaughtering a helpless;
bovine .
~
N; for the argument that this Is a courageous way for a bull
to
die,
and that he will ultimately reach that end anyway, why not·
Charles Withers and neither
line humans up across a football field and have them merciless•
Darrell Harbou r or Ira
slaughtered,
since they too will inevitably die.
Sowctrds were recommended,
In closing may I quote the famous champion of all four-legged
and since both were non-tenure
animals,
Vittorio Alfieri ( 1749-1803) "Often the test of courage is .
t~achers, this resulted in their i
not to die but to live. " Ole!
dismissal for the next school
Sincerely, F1oyd Oiler, Columbus, Ohio, :
year.

VOL XXV NO. 41

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Devoled To The ln~re.t. Of 11ae MeigJ-Ma.on Areo
TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1973 1

Remember " HIM" with a
gift that keeps on giving For
years on end ... A sk one of
the " FRIENDLY ONES "
about the BLACK and
DECKER drill at only
$7 .79 . It' s our Mr . Friendly
Special of thP. Week ...

Mrs. Donald Jones , Nelsonville, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Jones, Jr . and children ,
Alexandria, Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Howard
Juniper (the former Helen
Howery) visited with Mrs.
Clara Howery and at the Verlin
Howery home. Mr. and Mrs.
Loyd Gardener, Waynesburg,
Pa., also were at the Howery
homes.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Mattox, Charlest.Qn, W. Va.,
visited with his brothers and
sister-in-law ~ Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mattox and Ed Mattox.
Those who honored Don
Cheadle on his birthday on
Saturday evening were Mr.
and Mrs. William Cheadle ,
Metta Fisher, Tina Radekin
and his parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Rex Cheadle, Kathy and Rexie ..
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
Gallipolis, ·w ere guests of their
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey, Karen and Tad ,
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, local, along
with the Dwaine Jordan family
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Crabtree.
Tamra and Penny Clark,
Chester, visited their great
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Earl Starkey.
Members of the Burke
family enjoyed a picnic at the '
TGT clubhouse. Those present
included Mrs. Hazel Burke,
local, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Burke and daughters and Mr.
and Mrs . Hebron Burke ,
Charleston, W. Va ., Mr. and
Mrs . Roger Greer and
chi1dren, Warner Robbins, Ga.,
, Mr. and M~s. Myrl Knowlt~n
and family of Albany, and Mr.
and Mrs. Dolphus Burke and
children, local. Kim Knowlton,
Albany, accomp£nied her aunt ,
Mrs. Carol Greer and family to
Georgia for a vacation.
Friends and
relatives
gathered at the home of Mrs.
Ginevra Foster on Sunday to
help her celebrate her 92nd
birthday.
Mrs . Daisy Gillogly , Vicky
and Bruce, visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell
at. Wolfpen on Saturday aflernoon .

EPIDEMIC HERE
CHICAGO I UP!) - A New
York physician says abuse of
methaqualone - the so-called
" love drug" - has reached a
"silent epidemic" among
students · and other young
persons across the nation .

William Blaine and Robert
Bra nden be rry, teachers at
Point Pleasant, placed on the
tran sfer and s ubse quent
assignment list were recommended for transfer to Point ·
Pleasant Junior High .
The above teachers were
Recent visitors of Mrs. Opal
A damage suit has been Jiled
present for the Friday hearing Randolph were Mr , and Mrs. in Gallia County Common ·
and had an opportunity to Wilbur .M aurer of Massillon. Pleas Court as a result ,of a .
speak freely and openly when
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Drake of · traffic accident Dec 21, 197lat
board president Harry Siders Columbus were overnight the junction of Rt 554 and
directed that they "don 't hold guests of Anderson B. Kibble . County Road 13.
back anything ."
Mrs. Kathryn Dietz and Bill
Kay and Homer Hockman,.
Complaints were frequent and Bob Day of Belpre and Rt. 1, Cheshire are the
reg a rding the filing of Mrs. Lyle Balderson and Kay plaintiffs in the action filed
grievance procedures . One attended a dog show in against Audrey Jean Shuler of:
teacher said hi s had "disap- Columbus Sunday. Mr , and Middleport.
peared" from his desk. They Mrs . Bill Williams of Athens,
Plaintiffs say the defendant"
complained too of inadequate Ga ., were there with their negligentlyoperatedher car on
evaluation procedures.
German Shepherd competing the wrong side of the highway,
Tod Faller, a Hannan in the show.
so as to collide with their car , ~.
teacher who was recomMr . and Mrs. Zenith Kay Hockman seeks damages '
mended for transfer to Chevalier of near Porterfield totaling $26,800 for permanent
Wahama said his desire was to viSited ·recently with Mr. and injuries sustained and loss of
stay at Hannan because "!like Mrs. Edward Chevalier and income. Her husband seeks an
.the place and l like the kids ... Mr. and Mrs. R, E. Williams. additional
$8,199.40
for
Mrs. Opal Randolph visited damages to his car and exand I
don ' t
want
to
drive 120 miles to Wahama ." with Mrs. Gladys Morgan at penses incurred. They demand
Columbus Saturday.
a jury trial.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cowdery
have moved into their trailer
Marriage Ucense
home.
SALES REPORT
Don
Mitchell Anderson, 20,
Ohio Valley Livestock Co,
Mr, and Mrs, Alvin Reed
Saturday, June 9; 1973
attended
eighth
grade Pomeroy, and Bernadette
Gallipolis, Ohio
grad uati on for their twln :Hennessy, 19, Pomeroy.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 36.10 granddaughters Tammy and
to 37.25; 220. to 250 lbs. 37.25 to Pammy Smith at Federal
WEEKEND SOCIAL
38; Light 34 to 35.75; Fat Sows Hocking High School WedMembers of St. Paul
31 to 33.50; Stags 27 down; nesday evening .
Lutheran Church will be
Boars Tl to 30; Pigs 10 to 24;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson making ice cream TUesday and
Shoats 18.50 to 27.50.
visited with relatives at Wednesday
evenings in
CATTLE - Steers 39 to Adelphi. ·
preparation for their annual
47.75; Heifers 37.75 to 48; Baby
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson ice cream social on Regatta
Beef 49.50 to 63.25; Fat Cows 30
Weekend. Residents may call
to 33.50; Canners 25.5&amp; to 35.50 ;
992-2010 for ice cream to take
SLAWTER GRADUATES
Bulls 35 to 42.50; Milk Cows 200
Harry D. Slawter, Mid- home Tuesday or Wednesday
to 525.
dleport Route I, son of Mr. and 'evenings from 7 to 10:30 p,m.
VEAL CALVEs- - Tops 67
Mrs.
Hiram
Slawter, In addition to homemade ice
to 68; Seconds 64 to 66; Medium
graduated "with distinction" cream, lunches will be served
58.50 to 62; Com . &amp; Hvs. 54.50 to
in Agronomy from Ohio State at Fellowship Hall during the
60; Culls 60 Down.
Weekend all day Friday and
University Friday.
Baby Calves 50 to 112,50,
Saturday.

Reedsville

'34,999.40 in

News, Notes

damages asked

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, JUNE 17

Hanes

.

'

Stop in the busy mens department
1st floor -let us help you select Hanes
Underwear for Father's Day giving.
'l

ELBERFELDS IN

ME ROY

TEN CENTS

estzmate

IT'S FROG WEEK - Frogs are "in" this week as the bend braces itself for ano.ner Big
Bend Regatta Weekend and its accompanying frog activities. Mrs. Fa ye Manley of Middleport
is 11 in" with her 20 by 15-i.nch pottery frog replica, a gift from Art Hess five ye&lt;:~rs ago . " Bob~
by '', the frog, occupies a year-round position near the television set of the Manley horne .

Erosion of the Middleport
sewage lagoon is " important
and serious " i.o the extent of
approximately $250,000 in
needed repair, it was reported
Monday night to Middleport
village council in a regular
session.
A letter from Robert Hever,
an engineer with the Floyd G.
Browne and Associates firm ,
was read indicating that
erosion is a serious threat to
the lagoon which lies along the
Ohio River below Hobson . He
suggested that a rip rap
meUtod of repair be carried out
at a cost of about $250,000.
Meigs · County Engineer
Walter Buehl also met with
council to discuss the same
problem, specifically the
danger of the wall giving away,
with the contents of the lagoon
• emptying into the river as a
result. lt was reported that
piling is being driven atthe s ite
upon the recommendallon of
the engineer. Prospects of
some federal aid in helping

save
the
la goon were
discussed, but th e villa ge
ha s been give n little e ncouragement in that direction .
Council suspended rules and
gave three readings to two
ordinances recommended by
the community 's board of
public Affairs The first
provides that servi ce stations must pay a $35
deposit with the board to
insure sewage and water bills
are paid . This is in ins tan ces
when the operat or of the
station do es not own the
property.
The sec ond
ordinance
provides that anyone ' tampering with water service
lines, meters , curb boxes or

.

'

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce acted Monday to
clarify apparent confusion
over two dances to be held
during "Regatta Weekend"
• beginning Friday.
In a business meeting
following lunch at the Meigs
Inn, it was pointed out that the
Regatta will open with a
parade from Middleport to
Pomeroy, non-stop. Following
the parade a talent show will be
staged at Meigs Junior High in
Middleport at 8:30 p.m. with
organ
music
by
Mrs.
Christine Guthrie, vocal
music instructor at Migs High
School. The Lowrey organ will.
be furnished through the
courtesy of John Brunicardi of
the House of Music, Gallipolis
and Athens.
The Regatta .Queen will be
crowned during the talent
show. The crowning of the
queen is set for 10 p.m.
Also to be held Friday,
beginDing at 10 p,m, will be a
. "Regatta Boll" featuring
I&gt;ick Hawkins and "thai
buneh" from Nashville,
Tenn.
The Regatta Ball is no way to .
be confused with the fourth
annual 11 Frog Ball" which will
be held on Saturday night at
the Pomeroy Junior High
School.
·
ID other words there are to
be two "Balls," one oo
Friday night at the Pomeroy
Juolor Hgh and another
Saturday at the same
location.

The Frjday night ball is a
new addition to Regatta activities, while the "Frog Ba11"
has been staged for four years
sponsored by the Jaycees.
Jack Kerr, president, observed that more interest in the
parade has been shown this
year than any other time. Kerr
stated that this year's Regatta
would no doubt be the largest
ever to be held.
Earl Ingels announced that
entries for llie annual boat
parade are needed. The parade
will be Saturday at 12:30 p.m.
and the route will be upriver
from Middleport to Pomeroy.
Trophies will be awarded to
first, second and third place
boats in the classes of Best
Theme (A Good Place to Be in
'73),
Most
Unusually
Decorated and Best Decorated
with a Frog Theme.
Entries will be accepted no
later than Wednesday and
should be sent to Earllngles, at
the Meigs County Branch of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan, 296 W. 2nd St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
The casting derby will be
held Saturday with orientation
to be held at the Parish House
at the Episcopal Church at 10
a.m. for youngster.&lt; 16 years of
age and younger . The derby
lakes place at the Pomeroy
Tennis Courts at 10:30 a.m ,
Boat races will have nine
races with prizes of $50, i:Jo and
$20 for first, secood and third
place respectively for each
race , a total of $900.
'

HOUSTON-SKYLAB'S REI AXED astronauts turned
their cameras toward Pittsburgh and the·waahington-Baltimore
area today to monitor urban sprawl from the " big picture "
vantage of space. One flight plan for Charles " Pete " Conrad,
~oseph P. Kerwin and Paul J , Weitz was the busiest yet prepared
for tlle space station crew and concentrates on sun w~tching and

t Continued on Page 10)
'

Chamber members '!&gt;l!"d
owners of riverbank property
to see that weeds are cut before
Regatta weekend .
The senior citizens are
sponsoring the flea market and
request more displays, it was
re·ported . They are also
sponsoring a crafts fair .
Tickets to the Friday night
Ball may be purchasl!d at New
York
. Clothing
House,
Pomeroy, Village Pharmacy,
Middleport, WMPO Radio, and
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce office located on
the ground floor of the
Pomeroy Courthouse.
Tickets to the Frog Ball may
be purchased ,at Nelson's Drug
Store, New York Clothing
House, Swisher Lohse Drugs,
Athens County Savings and
Loan , Meigs County Branch,
Village Pharmacy, any Meigs
County Jaycee member and
the Pomeroy Chamber office.
Attending the noon - luncheon were Kerr, Walter
Grueser, John Kerr, John
Koebel , Don Thomas, Richard
Poulin, Ralph Werry , Richard

FOURTH BALL
The fourth annual "Frog
Ball" will be held at the
Pomeroy Junior · High
Auditorium Saturday, June
16 from 10 p. m. to 2 a , m,
Musie will be provided by
"Water Wheel."
Tickets are $3 each or $5
per couple and may be
purchased at Nelson's Drug
Store, New York Clothing
House, Swisher and Lohse
Drugs, and .Athens County
Savings and Loap, Meigs
County Branch, Pomeroy,
Village Pharmacy, · Middleport, any Meigs County
Jaycee member and the
Pomeroy Chamber
ol
Commerce office located on
the ground floor ol the Meigs
County Court House.
Chambers , Ferman Moore,
Dale Warner, Fred Crow, Earl
lnge(.,, N. W. Compton, Bob
Jacobs, Bill Grueser, John
Fultz, Jim Mee s Carolyn
Thomas, secretary, Beulah
Jones and Katie Crow.

.

raise d by goverrunent officials .
One : Did the oil companies
create the fuel crisL&lt;! or instead
is the public at fault for not
heeding the oil industry 's
warnings that the shortage was
coming ? Second : Should the
country sacrifice standards for
a clean environment to ease
the shortage'
Florida Assistant Attorney
General DanielS. Dearing said
the power crisis is a plot by big
oil firms to discredit environmentalists and eliminate competition. He promised the state
would sue the oil companies on
those grounds, alleging violation .of federal antitrust laws .
"They hope to overcome the
objections
of
the
environmentalists to exploration
in the Gulf by exci ling
everybody with , I his crisis
atmosphere
that
they
promote," Dearing said. "We
don't believe there is an energy
crisis at all. There may be a
shorage brought on by the
rising demand for fuel, but we
don't think there 's anything
near a crisis, and we don't
think people ought to put much
.stock in a crisis.' '
Scoffs at Charge

.

meoded that the ' recreation
commi ttee apply for some nf
the revenue sharing funds for
the community park. A request
for $3,000 from the revenue
sha ring funds was received
from the village cemetery
trustees, to be used to upgrade
roads in Middleport Hill and
Rive rview Ce meteries . The
reques t was referred to the
coun cil's Cemetery committee.
Necessary papers for the
right or way needed from
property owners before the
widening of Page St. can take
place ~ere received and will be
turned over to Village Solicitor
Bernard Fultz who will secure
needed
s igna·tures.
The
widening of the street was

planned several years ago by
the· state from Sta te issue I
funds .
Council approved a first
readin g o[ a n ordinan ce
provtding for the abandoning of
an alley bepind the Ohio Valley
Lumber Co. in lower Middleport . If the alley is
abandoned , the company· plans
to improve its structures .
Allen Lee King discussed
special matters with council
including community . pa rk
matters, such as light, for
night activities. He call ed
attention to a "drop off" along
the edge of Park St. which he
said is dangerous to motorists
and to c hildren re iding
Continued on Page 10

appointed

The appointments of 12 Bradbury Elementary .
Jennifer Butc her, teachers;
Resignations were accepte:d Chris Wilson, Sherry Williams,
persons to teaching positions
were confirmed by the Meigs from Phyllis Miller, Junior Paulette Leache , Joyce Hall,
Local Board of Education High School Special Education aides; Mrs . George Pierce,.
Monday evening.
teacher;
Muriel
Foley , Mrs. Bego, Sherry Williams,
Appointed were Rita Ball elementary teacher , who is Anna
Aeiker,
Marjorie
Lewis, high school B.O.E . retiring; Anna Welsh, high Manuel, Linda Hubbard and
teacher; Kathleen Scott, half- school teacher; Kim Bruno, Mary Jane Arms, drivers;
time
remedial
reading elementary teacher ; Linda Randy Snyder, custodian, and
teacher; J e raldine Payne Hunter, eleinent.ary teacher; Phyllis English and Iva See,
Samples elementary teacher ; Richard Sweet, junior high cooks.
Aaron Sayre, Vocational school football coach who will
Rutland Ce nter, Kenda
Agriculture teacher, effective remain as a teacher ; Terry Chaney and Charise Porter,
June 15; Catherine Haggerty, Garten,
custodian ,
and teachers ; May Morrison and
elementary teacher ; James · Frances Triplett, cook .
Sue Vance, aides; Wanda
Butcher a ssistant varsity
Base bids for milk from Vining, Reva Patterson, and
basketball c oach ; Ronald Valley Bell and Broughton Sharon Black, drivers; Mae
Logan, health and physical Dairies were read, but a Christian, custodian and Alma
edu cation tea Cher , reserve decision was withheld until Beller, cook .
basketball coach, an·d Junior July .
Resolutions were made to
High sChool football coach ;
Salem Center, Olive Page,
Harold Sauer , full time guid- advertise £or a budget hearing, teacher; Evelyn Davis, aide;
ance;
Winifred
Naas , gasoline oil and antifreeze, Phyllis Dugan and Martha
elementary tea&lt;:her; Robin tires, and insurance for Hicks; drivers; Evelyn Davis,
Wendy Sc hmidt , special vehicles at the July meeting. custodian, and Minnie Thorn education teacher ; Janice Ann
·The board approved a one ton, cook .
Savchak, elementary teacher, year leave of absence
Harrisonvill e Center,
and Sandra Peters, elemenlary £or Betty Fultz to fur - Margaret Ella Lewis, teacher;
teacher .
ther her edu cation and Esther Scragg, aide; Esther
A revised salary schedule continuation of the dress Scragg, Alberta Loftis, and
was adopted which included a code as it is presenUy written . Gloria Riggs, drivers ; Gloria
$200 provis ion for · the
The following appointments Riggs, custodian, and Avis
organization and supervision of were made for the MeiMS Bailey, cook.
the school safety patrol and County Head Start Program :
Salisbury Center, Vinas Lee
$100for travel between any of
Middleport
Center, .and Ed Bartels, tea c hers;
the following,
Porperoy Stephanie Nemiec, Donna Wilma Smith and Barbara
Elementary, Middleport Chadwell, Rose Ann Jenkins, Phillips, aides; Wilma Smith,
Elementary, Junior High
School , Senior High School,
Salisbury Elementary, and

Joan Greathouse,_ Mrs. Jack
King, Mrs. Phillips, drivers ;
Mrs. King, custodian , and
Florence Barrett, cook.
Director is ,John Arnott,
social worker is Harold Sauer,
social worker aide is Pam
Crow, nurse Is J..eona Cleland,
bookkeeper Is L, W. McComas,
secretary is Marilyn Meiner,
and speech therapist is Joan ·
Brown.
In additional actions the
board agreed to send a letter of
thanks to Salisbury Elementary parents who contributed
their work to paint the •chool.
It was also agreed to send a
le tier of coirunenda tion to all
retiring teachers . in the
district.
Attending were board
members Frank W. Porter,
Don Mullen, Carol Pierce, and
Virgil King; Supt. George
Hargraves, Clerk Lee McComas, John Arnott, director
of the Head Start Program,
and
Richard
Pickens,
representative of Valley Bell.
The board set its July board
meeting for July 16 Instead of
the regularly scheduled July 9.

First·state
•
TTWney coming

Agnew\rejected, to ·libraries

Costs of energy rising
United Press IQternatlonal
The price of crude oil waJi.o
raised in four states Monday ,-~·
and the State of Florida accus ed big petroleum firms of
crea ling the fuel shortage just
to drive prices up .
Elsewhere, Kansas farmers
were in doubt whether they had
enough gasoline to complete
their wheat harvest, power
companies in the Northeast
reduced·output by 8 per cent in
the midst of a record heat
wave , one senator said laying
the Alaskan oil pipieline would
ease the problem, and the
Libyan governm~ nt took over a
U.S , oil company and c alled it a
punitive action .
Shell Oil Co. meanwhile
posted a price increase of- 35
cents per barrel for crude oil in
Texas, Louisiana, Montana
and North Dakota, Citing a
need to retain its existing level
of fuel supplies,
In Fort Worth, Tex., Champlin Petroleum Co. announced ·
it is increasing its posted price
for Oklahoma sweet crude oil
by 45 cents per barrel , to $4.30,
effective Immediately.
Two Question• Raised
Tw o big__QUPStions were

other water department
equipment can be prosecuted .
Coun cil approved the May
report of Mayor J ohn Zerkle
showing receipts of $3,2\15.40 in
fines and fees and $!59 in
merchant police collec tions for
a total of $3,364.40. A letter wa s
read from the Bureau of Workmen's Compensation s tating
that a claim filed by Raymond
Frazier against llie village has
been denied .
Mayor Zerkle asked that the
building committee
di scuss what should be ' done to
improve the outside or village
hall. it was voted to install a
second street light at the
marina , and Councilman
Richard Vaughan recom-

T each ers

Weekend Balls clarified

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - A SENATE Finance subcommittee was to
meet again today in an attempt to come to grips with almos t
three-jlozen last-minute prop.osed changes in the state budget alterations which could jeopardize Senate passage of the $9.9
billion spending document by end of this week. "it doesn't look
very good," conceded Sen. Max H. Dennis, R-Wilmington,
subcommittee chairman, after his five-man panel wrestled for
three boors with the latest version of the budget Monday night.
Senate Republicans last week had written up a series of
changes for their three subcommittee members to push into the
budget, including $97.1 milliQn worth of agency cuts, $73.8 million
worth of agency increases, and $60.2 million worth of tax relief .

T Shirts. Briefs
Med, length briefs
union suits . athletic
shirts- athletic shorts in
gripper
and
boxerstyles,

and Sumla y here

•

.

See
the
comp lete
selection
of
Hanes
Underwear. .t he ideal
Father's Day gift.

Friday, Saturday

a oon reparr cost

I

you'll
find
a
complete selection of
sizes from the very ' '
smallest size up to size
56 ,

PHON E 992·2156

R egaUa Weekend

•

Mason ·teachers complaining

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Discharges- Rose
Moler, Charles Kitchen,
. Ronald Bostick, Rhonda Smith,

BEnER
VALUES
ARE

BAKER

tried.
a civiJ s ui t in May and released
Cox wants this provis ion ,last week, Haldema n blamed
written in to an ord er whic h Dea n for kee ping the Pres ident
Sirica is expected to sign in the dark about the extent of
TUesday providin g that the White House involvement in
Senate testimony of Magruder Watergate .
and Dean could not be used
But over the weekend, Dea n
aga inst them a t a tri al. was indirectly quoted making
However , at a hearing last cha r ges again s t Halde ma n.
Thursday , Sirica indi cated he Dea n's comments reportedly
was not inclined to close the were made in a May 3 official
hearings to nationwide televi- interview hetween Dean and
sion.
Sen. Lowell P . Weicker , RIn New York, where Stans is Conn ., a m e mbe r of th e
wtder indictment with former Watergate committee .
Att or ney Ge ne ral John N.
Mitchell in connection with a
$200,000 campaign contribution
by financier Robert Vesco,
a nothe r federa l judge last
week refused to delay Stans'
PT. PLEASANT - Charges
committee appearance , which
that
seven of eight tea chers
hi s lawyers s aid would
jeopardize the fairness of his were in effect dismi ssed were
trial. However, this still leaves made Friday night in a special
Stans free to decline to testify meeting of the Mason County
on grounds of possible self· Board of Education stipulated
as a public hearing.
incrimir"ltion.
Board pres ident Harry
The committee is expected to
Siders
said that seven teachers
sc he dule three days of
hearings weekly for the rest of out of eight coming to his home
this mcnth. No time has been in two separate groups said
announced for hearing from they had either been recom-

I

But in Tulsa , Okla ., W.
Tim othy Dowd, e xecutiv e
secretary of the Interstate Oil
Compa ct Conunission, a Texas
government agency, scolfed at
argume nts the crisis wa s
contrived by the oil industry.
" When they find out they
can't drive their cars to work
or that trucks can 't deliver
food to cities, then the public is
going to say that argument is
,, Do d
'd H
nonsense,
w sal ·
e
recommended easing environmental restrictions and using
lower grade crude.
§en . Sam Nunn, D-Ga .,
advocated building the controvers ial Alaskan pipeline to
help relieve the problem, a
move opposed by environrnen.
·tat'ists because of the
ecological problems the pipe
'could create in the Alaskan
wilderness.
"The problem facing us is
that we 're only 6 per cent of the
world's population but we're .
using 33 per cent of the world's
energ y" Nunn said · He added
that even if the pipeline were
built "it will only be a dent in
the problem- not a solution."
(Continued on Page 10)

probe going on
committee will continue to
perform its duty fairly and
fully with a view toward informing the Senate and the
American people with re spect
preparl!d today to exteod its to what the truth Is."
probe of the century ·~ sreatest Stans to be Called Today
The seven-member corrunitpo li tical scandal by grilling one
tce
planned to call as a witness
of President Nixon' s chief
campaign aides.
today Maurice H. Stans, the
Sen. Sam J , Ervin Jr ., the former Commerce secretary,
committee chairman, late F'ri- who directed Nixon's camday lL.Od a biblical quote to paign fuod raising in 1972.
. 11y turn as1.de the v1ce
.
qute
stans is under indictment in
preside nt 's suggestion in a St.
!Coutinued on Page 10)
Louis speech earlier Friday
th at the Senate hearl'ng s be
defer red until the special
MILLER COMING
Watergate prosecutor has a
Congressman Clareo~e
chance to develop his case.
Miller will meet with
"The King James version of
Pomeroy and Middleport
the Bible says •a soft answer
village
ofli&lt;lals
and
turns ~way wrath , ' while .representatives of lhe U, S.
grevious words stir up anger, "'
Corps of Engineer&amp; at 9:45 a,
Ervin said in confirming the
m, Sunday to discuss river
hearings would continue this
erosion problems. The
morning as scheduled.
meeting will be beld al the
· e
"f d
g t th
e v1c
eep1y re re
Zerkle Trucking Co. office in
president does not a ppro ve or
Mldd_Jeporl,
according to
the activities of th e commitWASHINGTON (UP! ) - Hejecting Spiro Agnew's view
that it was like ly "to muddy the
waters of justice, " the Senate
Watergat e · Committe e

tee ," the North Carolina
Democra 1 a dd ed . "Not:wl'th standing his disapprova l, the

Meigs_County Prosecutor

Bernard Fultz,

The Ohio Valley area
Wednesday will be awarded
the first payment for the initia·
ion of the fir st Area Library
Service Organization in Ohio.
Joseph F . Shubert, state
librarian, will present the
check to Ms. Emelyne Reed,
president of OVAI~ALSO , in
Chillicothe.
Pomeroy and Middleport
Public Libraries are among the
1'2 libraries participating in the ·
Area
Library
Service
Organization in Southeastern
Ohi o.
Through the area-wide
.library organization, a special. ·
staff will be provided as well as
additional money for book and
other material purchases in the
several areas of libra r y
collection development. This is
the first such organi za tion that
will be funded through state
money in Ohio.
In the past The Ohio Valley
Area Libra r ies have participated · in projects funded
with federal money similar to'
the one to be carried out now .
With the elimination of federal
money for public libraries, it is
necessary for state money to
replace these library services. ,
' l'he Ohio Valley Area •
Li'&gt;rarles located in Wellston is
directed by Jerry Grimm,

�3-m Daily Senlmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 June 12 1973

Generation Rap

There s 13een a Sltght Change

tn

the Scrrptf

Dear Larry
Thanks for an nterest ng survey report
Seems to me that spankmg s only effect ve f almost
nonextstent Used m extreme cases where al e se fa Is n
eluding reason pat ence d scuss on and prevent on t can fetch
a child up short and change h s d reel on But f t s
the preferred form of pun shment and replaces " se un
derstand ng d sc pi ne t s pretty useless Also rue
even
though t gets the young vote because t s soon over)
R ght Sue - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE R ght Mom I don t remember too many
spankings
n fact hardly any
but there was the t me whe I
got my mouth washed out w th soap And I diqn call my s ster
that word agam out loud) for at least f ve years
SUE

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
There s a new fad n the mus c bus ness which s go ng to be
popular I 11 predict and totally po nlless
Start ng n Los Ange es the e a e numerous polls go ng on
to select the ten b ggest songs of the past ten or maybe f ftecn
years A psychology student there used the top 40 surveys for
the l A market to come up w th his st of fourteen plus y~rs
and there s no way to say t s real y bad - t JUSt can t be ac

curate
H s cho ces for wh ch I am gratefu l o Cha leston mns c
critiC J P Roo! for publ sl ng aren all tha bad But n my
Judgment they aren t all hat accurate fo the 1958 n d 72
perod
1
The Tw st Chubby Checker 2
Mack the Kn fe
Bobby Darm
Exodus
Ferrante &amp; Te cl e
4
Andy W Il ams 5
Summer
Hawa an Wedd ng Song
Place Perc Fa th 6
Battle of New 0 leans Johnny
Horton 7 All I Have to Do Is D earn Everly B o he s 8- I
Want to Hold Your Hand Beatles 9
You ve Lost Tha
Lov n Feel ng
R ghteous Bro he s 10
Donna
R ch e
Val ens
What s wrong w th t ha Weren hose al b g h s Sure but
the 1st has several glar ng weaknesses and sow al he o her
I sts comp led b) other psycholog sts rad o stat ons mus c
histor ans and so forth
I th nk t sa most mposs ble o de elop such a s because
of about a blue n II on var abies n the ever-chang ng dynam cs
of the mus c world toda) and even back n 1958 Lets look at
JUSt a few
1 The I s above" as taker! on!) none mus c rna ket - Los
Angeles To get a real sampl ng one wou d ha e to take he same
sort of exhaust ve survey n v rtually every marke n the
countr) W th on!) one black s nger n he group and one
counlrj western vocal st t s ce r a n the same s wouldn
develop n Wash ngton or NashVIlle
2 The I st ng comp led n Los Angeles seems to be ve ghted
toward etther popular m ddle-&lt;Jf he oad n us c or to wha
could fall nto the broad class f cat on of rock Ac ually tl ere
are a dozen or n ore m n -markets among h s hornogeneoll5
amalgamat on of more than 200m ll on bodes ca l ed Amer cans
For example there s the stra ght bluegrass fan the mod f ed
Nashv lle sound lover the s tr t y soul add c the gospel
mus c love the class cal af c onado the ba bershop-quartet
bang the Jazz fan and on and on and on " h subgroup ngs
w th n each
3 There s a pecul ar trend n Arne an mus c today o
cross all the boundar es but only to a I m ted degree Thus a
song l ke A Boy Named Sue may be absolutely at the top of he
charts n country "estern but w ll sp II over nto the rock fans
field maybe r s ng no h gher than the fop 10 and mak ng an
equal dent n the m ddle-of the oad group ng 1 hus t
becomes virtually mposs ble to detern ne s ac ual tota m
pact w thout a lot more meas uremen t and reasearch than the L
A I st purports to prov de
4
There s a cur ous ph enomenon called cross..over
which also affects the popular ty and espec ally he durab I y
of a song today Good examples of his I fe on the fa c ha th
bubble gum rock h ts of the late F ft es and ea I S x es are
enJOY ng a surpr s ng rev val b~ country \\estern art sts toda)
and many sweet mus c sta ons a e p 8) ng both rock h ts and
country western smashes
but not Wlt I they ve been aun
dered and recorded by a less-exuberant mus ca group usuall)
nstrumentally Thus the popular ty of a song mav be ex remely
long 1 ved but t shows on no charts or n etl od of n easur ng
except m stat on logs
There are many other reasons to make he [ A I s ng
suspec but t s nterest ng none the ess
prov detl ) ou don
take t as gospel

BRUCE BIOS SAT
Kennedy a quest1on

Greeclls a
Terrible
Thing!'

1

Bv H( It 11 uul "im Hottel
Dear Bottels
Remember me 1 m the college student who asked for your
op mons about parental spank ng for a sociOlogy report on
corporal pumshment You generously answered ne perso 1aUy
and at length so I d 1 keto return he favor by shar ng the results
of my poll With you and your readers
l talked to 52 mothers n all and a whopp ng no pun n
tended) 39 of then bel evect that pre teen ch ldren should be
spanked when they deserve t as a deterrent to m sbehav or Of
this 39 15 though! that teenagers should also be spanked One
mother sa d So long as they act I ke ch ldren hey shou d be
treated like ch Idren Another said If a 15-year-&lt;&gt;ld s taken
over h s or her parent s knee and paddled you can bet that the
hum hat10n alone sa deterrent Jet alone the pa n
Those who supported the pract ce of spank ng cia med
ch ldren learn through pa n and !hey won t repeat a wrongdo ng
they are pa nfully pumshed for
Those aga nst were I rm n the r bel efs that corpora l pun sh
ment s outdated and that t doesn t work This group and there
were only 13 n t) ns st that cont nuously spanked ch ldren learn
to resent author ty becom ng naturally aggress ve bel ev ng
that force solves everything One mother remarked U you h l
your ch Id for everyth ng lou re only tea chmg him that n ght
makes r ght Another sad They used to wh1p pr soners !hal
didn t work so the) stopped Beat ng a person doesn t change him
for the better
Spankers often adm tted they pun sh n anger but most sa d
this was the best tune An nor ty of e ght o hers preferred to
wa t and talk tout bel ev ng that a ch ld w Iltake his n ed c ne f
he f rst concedes that he acted wrongly
Another th ng that amazed me was that nost of the cluldre l
talked to 70 pet of 30 k ds rang ng n ages from s x to 14 ac
tually sad they preferred spank ngs to ground ngs
Its better
to get 1 over w th
I was cur ous about what the pol ce thought of spank ngs and
got some surpr s ng answers They seemed most concerned tha
parents were h tt ng the r k ds too hard and too much Helen and
Sue you should go to your loca l P D and ask to ee p ctures of
ch ld abuse cases You can t bel eve what parents are beating
the r kids w th
I also talked to teachers and found the n qu te evenly
div ded for and aga nst w th a most a I however aga nst
spankings n school
What I d I ke to do s take ch ldren from both groups
spanking and nonspanking lam I es and compa e then It
would be nterestmg to see wh ch s better behaved
but then
you probably couldn t attr bute tent rely to whether or not the)
were spanked could you
These are just the poll results You and your readers an
take t from here AI I know s that spank ng s one of he mos
cont overs al ssues be ween pare ts and w II con nue so for a
long time
LARRY

WIN AT BRIDGE

Democrat outlook
is bleak for '76
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

NORTH
• AQJ 10

IZ
LAKE TAHOE - NEA
It s aston sh ng news that even as Watergate keeps bust
llg out all over the Democrats do not seem eno rmou ly
advanta~ed and may have real d rf cu t es on both cand dates
and ssues n 1976
The bluntest way to put the and date problem s to ask
one of the many Democrat c gove nors here for the nat10na
conference If not Ted Kennedy n 1976 !hen who
The answer s harshly s mp e No IH ght alternat ve n
s ght Th e outlook s very very bleak
Kennedy or eou se ea ds al po Is of Democrat c prospect
today He moves around the nat on eas ly and often per
form ng the expected prel m nares for a and dacy But he
ha s made no k nd of comm Lment and ntends to hold off for
a long t me on a dec !:) on whe her to run
Meant me Democ at and Republ can governors n con
s derab e numbe s a e say ng e the openly or pr vately that
Chappaqu dd ck hobbles h m g ave y on the Watergate rna
ter that he can t ra se he ssue on moral g ounds Some go
beyond th1s and ~ay hat even w hou Watergate as a com
pi cat ng factor Chappaqu dd ck s JUSt s tt ng there I ke an
nd gest ble lump - a th ng tha wont go away and s bound
to haunt h m n a 1976 campa gn
One m dwestern Democrat c governor s wonder ng wheth
er Kennedy aga nst th s backdrop and o her personal prob
terns really wants to make the race Even grant ng that t s
early th s governor doesn t th nk Kennedy s show ng enough
steam to be conv nc ng
The party rre ss u es on Kennedy to run may prove m
mense But
he res sts them then what Th s same m d
westerner says he cant th nk of a s ngle alternat ve prospe
who ca n attract a espectab le crowd at a party fund ra ser
The roster of potent a s ndeed s pa nful y sl m at th s
moment Everybody knows that Sen Henry Jackson o
Wash ngton and Sen Walter Monda e of M nnesota are work
ng at 1976 but ne the one ha s the Jazz Jack son can get
money from labor and defense contractors but h s d sma
road show ng n 1972 pr mares s st I a gu del ne Mondale
s JUdged br ght and ncreas ngly seasoned but la ck ng n he
needed f e
You ca n forget those eports t ha the o d perenn al Sen
Hubert Humphrey has scrub bed h s 1972 farewel and "
make another try The word s h s best I ends are tel ng
h m they won t work for h m eve aga n
Jn th s s tuat on Democrat c governors and other pa ty
people aren t even ndulg ng n the common pol t cal fan asv
a fa back used by both par-tes
that some new face
may emerge n 1974 They re n a hard crack and they ad
m t t
As f th s were not enough many concede that beyond the
negat ve thoug potent ally usefu ga ns from Watergate the
Democrats are barren of new pol cy and program d reel ons
Agreement s general the r ch ve n of New Deal soc al pro
grams s played out They see the engulf ng problems of the
age
a tangled economy tax chaos cr me popula d s llu
s onment w th government and othe nst tu ons
But they don t hav e a new dea n a ca load They a e los
n th ck woods

9 8 5~

• 832
4 107~

•s

WEST

EAST

2
•K 91
9 62
9 73
. QJI09
.76 54
4J843
4KQ 9S
SOUTH (D)
. 7S3
9AKQJ109
.AK
4A 2
Both vulne able
w st N rth l'.a."'l Sfllulh
24
Pass 3¥
Pas
2•
Pas
4¥
Pass 4 N!.
Pal'!s SNT.
Pa~
5•
Pass 6¥
Pass
6 "'
Pa s
Pass.
Pass
Open ng lt!ad .Q

h

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Voict:• along Br'"Way
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
FROM OSCAR RACE
TO RACE OSCAR
NEW YORK KFS
Black f lm ndus ry
members are plann ng a BI k Academy
Awards Wont call them Blackademy Awards
and don t want to call e Oscars oo Hanky
Glenda Jackson says to he su essful today a
ga has o be blonde " th b g b easts and a
madden ng g ggle So the sk nny s ar says she l
re re n th ee years and become a soc al
worker
The flood of pornos on Bdwy ha s theater
owners pray ng for good G fi cks one 42nd St
porn palace show ng four f lth f cks wh ch
charged $5 each f r st cr me around s almost
ba e at four for $2
One TV f m f rrr lost
$35 000 000 n f vc years mak ng fop fix
CBS
s be ng sued by stockholders fo se ng the
Yankee ball club too cheap
Raphael the
Lat n en erta ncr a the Ra nbow Gr I had a
hab t of gett ng gals o dance w th h m o I e
sta~e and patt ng the r beh nds fo the laugh
One such gals llo&gt; )rend gave Raphael a belt n
the bel y for a cr nge
The Al ce Cooper tra svest e sex rock
s cksess star ed a nauseous trend new act calls
self The Queen El zabeth and ts equ pment
ncludes scads of s mulated sex p ops Its star
rocker wears a huge w g he removes
o ex
Clevelan I co lumn st
pose ust as ong t a r
W ndsor French left a most $2 250 000 plus an
ar collect on worth near y tha
Be ty Dav s
adopted son M ke Woodman and Char ene
Bi:lwn were wed n Wes po t Ga y Merr I s the
pop No we don kno\\i why he names d fft!
Modes y no doubt
Produce Chuck Brave man won r ghts tu
some old Ma x Bros fi cks for h s Groucho TV
spec a! plus a f ock of pr vate Groucho-cellulo d
never sRown ou of Groucho s house
D ck
Cavett asked how he feels about on y one week
on TV a man h epl ed lf Carson doesn m nd
why s hould I
Ano her ath ete b es the
nsel tenn s great Tony T a bert rned acto
for Car er de Haven s The Ou f
One of he
&lt;;'OWl try s fo mer op o keys John Ta nmaro
now ps he Toledo at 225 He s a top tra ner
w th h s n gs no a Monmou h Pa k The Le

Marv ns oak r chly menac ng at the Sherry
Netherland
Merle Oberon wants to put an ocean be
ween her and her ex Plans to hve m London
after the d vorce
The Led Zeppelin group
cia ms the r chest group es m the world
several follow the Zep s pnvate jet everywhere
n the r pr vale Jets
Old West Po nter Col H D McHugh of St
An on o knocks down H wood clauns that 1ts
The Josh Clayton Story s about The f1rst
black West Po nt graduate Col McH says the
f rst black grad No 2690 n the class of I877)
was Henry Oss an Fl pper further
There
have been oqly seven Claytons at West Po nt
on ly three graduated- one n 1886 one m 1944
and one n 1955 None of the seven was named
Josh Nearest was Joel W Clayton who now
I ves n Atlanta Ga who entered W P With the
lass of I918 but d d not graduate Take that
you H wood Watergaters The colonel says the
second black graduate was John H Alexander
Class of 1887 th rd was Charles Young class of
1889 Tha shoul d clear t all up
G nger Rogers
ex spouse Jacques
Bergerac now s Revlon cosmet cs boss In
France Glamorous mage plus shrewdest
actor bus nessman h s boss here enthuses
Gas! ght Clubs Speakeasy Room drummer
Sam Ulano IS th nn ng and spreading out at the
same me th nn ng he shed 30 lbs and
sp read ng out to wr te the nev table d et book
about I s t tied How To Lose We ght and F t
Be nd Your Steer ng Wheel DSR Books IS the
pub she
h
Some of h t songwr ter Burt Bacharac s
roy a t es went to buy a $10 000 chandel er for his
Dover House restaurant n exurban N Y
Another Dean Mart n s Hangups story when
h s former fV show rnus c conductor D ck
Stab le was Ieav ng for New Orleans to take a
l fet me contract at the Roosevelt Hotel n New
Or eans he telephoned Jerry Lew s to say so
long and Jerry w shes h m goodluck then he
ca lled Dean who wouldn t get on the phone for
cal after ca ll f nally h s lawyer called Stabile
and epor ed Mart n d dn t w sh to have any
conve sa on w th D ck
Must ve thought he
wan ed to bo row someth ng Stabtle s ghs

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Air Passages Dilated

Greed s a t err b I e
th ng sa d South
The game was rubber
br dge South had reached
s x hearts after opemng w th
an artlf c al two-club b1d
A club lead would have
wo r ed h m but after the
diamond open ng h1s con
tract was secure
He won drew trumps w th
two leads and tned a spade
f nesse It worked so he re
tu ned to h s hand w th dum
my s last trump and re
pealed the spade f nesse
West had followed to the
f rst spade w lh the deuce
He played the s x th s t me
The f nesse worked aga n
South returned to hts hand
w th the second high dta
mond looked at the score
carefully and saw that he
would wm an extra hundred
po nts f he made an over
trock
That s when he made h s
remark wh ch he followed up
by takmg a th rd and last
spade f nesse

b \I ll

I e

e a r pas

2•
You

East

Suu h

4

Pass

I•

2A
~ou

Pass
h hod

8

8
9

9
0

.AQ965 952 +K4 4AQI08
Wha do you do now
A-fhc c s a tronr t!mpta,
n t get Kh nlo Bla(k
"' 1 w " uldn t ( t c ze th !ii
c eb but prefc Just t make
om: I h )S all pu po e c:ue
b d r lhre diamonds

fODA Y 5 QUESTION
You b d th ec rl amonds You
pa ne b ds th ee spades Wha
do yo u do ow
Vacuum Legs
The underside of a starftsh
s marked w1th hundreds of
t ny feet hke suctton cups
The cups anchor ng a star
f1sh are strong enough to
Withstand a pull of more
than 100 pounds for a short
t me

Thoughts
1f you eally fulfzll tl c
o
ol law accordt zg to tl c
oubt have a
sc
pture
You s/ all love
pleased to note
ou
etghb
r as y urself
to do any St
funn es th

7 00 - What s My L ne 8

The b dd n,::: ha been

s done by postural dra nage
You can th nk of the lungs
as two large bottles and the
flu d accumulates n the bot
tom of th em when you re
standmg or s tt ng uproght
If you want to empty the
botlle you have to 1 e down
w th the head down A good
way to do th s s to I e on
the bed n such a way that
you can bend your head
down tu the floor and the!)
-----=-=--~.,.... let the flu d run out of the
B A R B S
lungs and dram out the
lungs thoroughly It may
B PIIIL PASTORET
take lo mmutes of postural
One of the best ways to dra n ng to get the ungs all
ge
ound sho uld e ed s to cleared out You should
ca rv g r"d ges
probably do th s at least
twtce a day I note you don t
smoke and that s certamly
w se for someone w th your
problem

Da

6 00
News 3 4 8 0 3 5 T u h o Cqpseq 6 Sesame St 20
A oond the Bend 3J
6 JO News J 4 6 8 0 5 D eam of Jeanne 3 L as Yoga
&amp; You 33

7

Anyt n e you have a res
p ato y nfect on you prob
a b y shou ld see a doctor
and be sure that you re get
t ng proper treatment to
p even t any assoc ated n
feet on of you r lungs
II s a so helpfu to con
sta ntly dt a n out the flu d
wh ch a cum ulates n the
owe part of he lungs Th s

go

TUESDAY JUNE 12 1973

NEWSPAPER ENTEPPR 5f ASSN

~I Ills Linked to Lung Infection
re&lt;EI

Television Log

East deserves a lot of
cred t fo h s play but don t
forget West East knew that
West would have played
h gh low w th an even num
l er of spades and the efore
"as able to set h s trap

N rlh

u

well-Jan es 2 8

Slowly and pa nfully man
s lea n ng that he m st do
to others what he wo ld
I ave them do to h m
S
Anthonv
Eden
fo n
I I h I l e n n te

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wr ter
Hank Aaron IS domg more
than closmg m on Babe Ruth s
f'. all t me career home run
~record wtth unexpected speed
He s also showmg-ilnd this
ts more Important to his
Atlanta Brave teammates and
Uteor rtvals than catchmg the
Babe -that he s st ll a game
WIMtng h Iter
The 39-year old Aaron now
25 homers beh nd Ruth s
career mark of 714 after bitting
No 16 of the season and No 689
of his career m a 9-7 vtctory

2
2

ve Go A Secret 3 Elec Co 20
Bea The Cock 4 News 6 0 Untamed Wo d 3 T uth or
Consequences 3 Lee T ev no s Golf 5 L v ng 33
30 To Tel The Trulh 6 P ce s R ght 8 0 Beat The Clock
3 Th s s You L e 3 C cus 4 RF D 20 Cha es B a s
Better Wo ld 5 Chan ese Way 33
00
Mov es 0 a y of a Mdd Housew fe 3
Moment to
Moment 4 Tempe a u es R s ng 3 Baseba 5 Ame can
Odyssey 20 33
30 Haw a F ve 0 8 Mov e Second Chance 6 3
00
nte nat ana Perfo mance 20 33
30 V g nan8 Mo e TheSOOPoundJe k 0
00
Ma cus We by M D 6 3 News 20 Cancer L fe o
Death 33 NBC Repo ts 3 4
00
News 3 4 8 13 15
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 S 0 ck Cavett 6 13 Moves The
Vengeance 8 C ack n the M ror 10
00 - Pe y Mason 4 News 3
00 - Your Hea th 4
30- News 4

WEDNESDAY JUNE 3 1973
Sunr se Sem na 4 Sac ed Hea 10
Fa mt me 10
Fa m Repo t 3
Pau Har-vey 13
6 30
Co umbus Today 4 B be Answe s 8 U ban League
P esen s 0 The Sto y 3
6 45 - Co ncob Report 3
6 55 - Take F ve fo L fe s
7 00
Today3 4 5 News6 8 0 F n stones 3
7 30- Rompe Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 0
8 00 - Cap Kangaroo 8 0 New Zoo Revue J Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
8 30 Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Re ue 6
Pau D xon 4 Ph Donahue s AM 3 Lets Make A
9 00
Dta 6 F end y Junct on 10 Me v G ff n 8 Peyton Pace
3
9 3Q-To Tel The Truth 3 Jeopa dy 6 Ho ywood s Ta k ng 0
Peyton Pace 3
0 00
D nah Sho e 3 s Co umbu s S x Ca I ng 6 Joke s W d
8 0 D ck Van Dyke 3
o 30 Ba le 3 4 5 $ 0 000 Pyram d 8 0 Sp t Second 3
00 Sa le of the Cen u ·y 3 5 Love Ame can S y e 6 Gamb t
8 0 Passwo d 3 E ec Co 20
1 30 Ho i ywood Squa es 3 4 15 Bew tched 6 3 Love o L e
8 o Sesame 51 20
12 00
eopardy 3 Bob 8 aun s 50 50 Cub 4 Loca News 0 3
8 Password 6
12 30
Who Whal Whe e 3 5 Sp Second 6 Sea ch for
Torno ow 8 0
12 55
NBC News 3 5
00
News Weathe Spa ts 3 A My Ch dren 6 1J G een
Ac es 0 Nor Fo Women On y IS Its You Bet 8 As The
Word Tu ns 8 0
JG-3 On A MalctlJ -4 5 Newlywed Game 3 M ke Doug as
6 Gu d ng L gh 8 0
2 3G-Dat ng Game 3 Edge of N gh 8 0 Dodo s 3 4 5
3 00 - Anothe Wo ld 3 4 5 Gene a Hosp ta 6 3 P ce s
R ght 8 0 RFD 20
3 30- Retu n o Peyton Pace 3 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph
Do,-tahue 4 Secret S o m 0 Oh o Th s Week 20
Hollywood s Ta k ng B
4 00 - M s e Ca toon 3 Some set 3 F n stones 6 Love
Ame can S y e 3 Merv G ff n 4 Sesame St 33 Sec et
Sto m M.ov e Lady God va
0
4 30
D ck Van Dyke 5 Pett coa Junct on 3 Me v G f n 4
Love Lucy 6 W ld W d West 3 My
Abbo &amp; Cos e loB
LteMage5
S 00- Bonanza 3 B g Va ey 6 Haze a M Rage s 20 33
Andy G If th 5
5 30
E ec Co 33 Gomer Py e 33 Death Va ey Days 5
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beve y H b es 8
5 55
Ea N ght nga e 5
6 00
News Wea the Sports 3 4 8 0 5 T u h o Con seq 6
Sesame St 20 A ound The Bend 33
6 $0
NBC News 3 4 News 8 10 Zoom 33 Sesame St 20
0 eam of Jeann e 13
7 00 T uth o Con seq 3 Beat The Clock 4 News 6 0 What s
My t ne 8 Anyth ng You Can Do J E ec Co 20 Know You
Schoo s 33 Andv G If h 5
7 3o-Ep sode Act on 33 The Judge 0 Beat The Cock 3
Pol ce Surgton 3 ToTe The T uth 6 How Do You Ch dren
Grow? 20
8 00 Sonny &amp; Che 8 0 Adam 2 3 4 S Th eke Than Wate
6 3 Basebal 6 Ame ca 73 20 33
8 30 Banacek 3 4 5 Mov e Say Goodbye Magg e Cole 6
6 00
6 5 6 20 6 25 -

3
9 00

9
0

1
'2

Dan August 8 0 June Wayne 20 33
30
Tu n ng Po nts 20 33
00
Cannon 8 0 Sea ch 3 4 5 ONen Ma sha 6 13
Homewood 33 News 20
00 News 3 4 6 8 0 3 5
30
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 0 ck Cave I 6 3 Mov es
Otley 8
M ss Sad e Thompson o
00
News l Pe y Mason .11
00
News 4

over the Pittsburgh Pirates
Monday mght had been ac
cused earl er this season of
tryng for the mark at the ex
pense of h1s value to the team
It sa rugged charge to Utrow
at a true pro but Aaron has
answered t m Ute last three
days wtth three ho111ers-all of
which contributed to Atlanta
VICtories He h t two Saturday
rught leading the Braves to a 52 VIctory over the st Lows
Cardinals and hiS three-run
homer Monday n ght was the
b g blow of a SIX ..-un fourth
mmng outburst wh1ch carr ed

Atlanta over the Pirates
The Cardinals defeated C1n
cmnati lz-1 San FranciSCO
beat New York 2-1 and Los
Angeles downed Phitadelphta
$-3 10 Ute only other National
League games M !waukee
topped M nnesota 10-6 In the
only scheduled Amer can
League game
Dave Johnson h1t hiS lith
homer John Oates singled m a
run and Aaron clunaxed the
stx-run fourth to g1ve Ute
Braves an 8-0 lead That rally
stood up for the dec stve
margm as the Pirates paced

by three hits by Manny
Sangutllen and two hits and
three RBI by AI Oliver scored
two runs m Ute fifth three m
the seventh and two n the
e ghth
Carl Morton who went 6 1-3
mn ngs received credit for his
sixth wm wh le Steve Blass
suffered hiS fourUt loss agamst
three wms
Bob Gibson struck out ninehis career total of 2 862 now
ranks second to Walter John
son s 3 50S-and won his fifth
game of the season w Ut the
help of homers by Ken Reitz

Jose Cruz and Lou Brock Joe
Morgan homered for the Reds
Ron Bryant won hiS lOth
game w th the s upport of Dave
Kingman s seventh homer and
Randy Moff1tt s mnUt .. Mmg
rei ef as ille Giants shaded the
Mets Kingman s homer put
Ute G ants ahead 2-&lt;l n the
f fth nnmg while Moffitt came
out of the bullpen With one on
and two out m the nmth to
retire Willie Mays on an mf eld
out
The Dodgers sent 10 batters
to the plate m a four..-un second
mmng wh ch brought Don

Sutton his etghth wm w th the
runth nrung rei ef a d of Pete
Richert Dave Lopes and Joe
Ferguson accounted for RB!s
w Ut s ngles and B ll Russell
drove m a run Wlth a sacrifice
fly m ille key IMmg Dick
Ruthven was Ute loser lor Ute
Pllll1es
Dave May s th rd inmng
oomer and a f ve-run fourth
mn ng wh ch Included a tworun s ngle by Ollie Brown
paced Milwaukee over the
Twms Rod Carew and Joe ill
homered for M nnesota

Major Le•gue St,al)dfn7'

6y Un ted Press lnternat on1l
N1t onal Leaoue

CINCINNATI UP!) - The
Cincmnati Reds p tchmg staff
IS gomg Ute way of the IO httte
Indians
It was JUSt last December
after the Reds had acqwred
Roger Nelson from Ute Kansas
City Royals that Sparky An
derson cla tmed the club s
p tch1ng was the best smce he
became manager
Those were pretty strong
words smce they were uttered
by a guy who had managed two
pennant wmners w thm a
tllree year span
Nelson was to be one of f1ve
Reds starters Don Gullett
Ross Grunsley Gary Nolan
and Jack B Ihngham were to
be the others
Anderson pomted out that
any one of tbe f1ve was a
potent a! 20-game w nner
Gibson Hits Mark
Today the Reds p tch ng
staff has a str1kmg resem
b[ance to that of 1969 the one
which cost Dave Br stol his

job
The st LouiS Cardmals
arnvmg m town loser of four of
Ute r last five ll'!mes tattooed
Gullett and his successors wtlh
Hh ts mcludmg three homers
Monday mght as they pounded
out a 12-4 vtctory It was the
opener of a three-game serles
which resumes tomght when
Ross Grunsley goes aga nst
Reggte Cleveland
It was a Cardmal v ctory
which saw Bob Gtbson stnke
out nine to up his career total to
2 862 second only to tbat of Ute
3 508 amassed by Hall of
Farner Walter Johnson
11 doesn t take long for a
p1tchmg staff to go down the
dra n sa1d Card nat Manager
Red Schoend enst A couple of
p tchers come up w1tl1 sore
arms and you re m trouble
Nelson and Nolan have sore
arms on the Reds p1tchmg
staff
What does a manager do
when hts Pitching staff beglns

Mator League Leaders
By Un ted Press Internal onal

Mator League Results

Nat anal League
gabrhpct

Maddox SF 48 183 22 64
Lopes LA 48 167 28 58
Mota LA 37 128 6 44
Goodsn SF 51 87 8 63
Bonds SF 62 256 6 85
Unse Ph I 42 122 4 40
Watsn Hou 60 2
38 70
Rbnsn Ph 36 20 19 39
Fa rly Mt 44 36 20 44
Santo Ch 54 94 32 62
Amer1can League
g ab r h
Blmbrg NY39 1 6 20 47
Ho ton De 28 106 6 38
K kptk KC 48 171 30 60
D AI en Ch 52 88 34 62
Ca ew Mn 52 20 36 66
Kel y Ch 4 162 25 52
F sk Bos 49 182 28 57
Maybry KC59 206 38 64
Hndrsn Ch 36 135 2 42
E s Cte
3
02 9 3

350
347
344
337
332
328
326
325
324
320

manager~al

By Un ted Press lnternat onal
Nat onal League
San F an
000 10 QOO-- 2
New Yo k
000 010 ooo-- 1 6 2

B yant
Moll tt (~) and
Rade
S one
Cap a
7
Henn gan 9 and Dye WPB yant 0 3) LP 5 one
2
HR-K ngman 7th)

Los Ang
040 000 lOG- 5 1 0
Ph a
000 000 102- 3 6
Sutton
R che t
(9}
and
Fe guson Ruthven Lersch 2)
B andon 7 Sea ce (9 and
Boone WP Su on (8 4) LP
pet
405 Rulhven ( 5 HRs Luz nsk 2
358 lh&amp;Sth)
339
000 020 32o-- 7 3
330 P 1 sbgh
02060 oox 9 3
328 A an a
8 ass
Rooker 4) Oetto e
32
5
He
nandez
Gus
8
3 3 and May Mo on 71Hoe
ne (7)
3
3 1 Pan he (7 House (9 Schue
304 e 9 and Oa es WP Mo on
6 4) LP Blass (3 4) HRs
Home Runs
Aa
on 6 h) Johnson (1 th
Nat ona I League
Sta gel
P tt 17 Aa on A 6 Bonds
252 010 2()()- 2 4 2
SF 5 Monday Ch 4 Bench
200 001 001 4 4 0
C n and Wynn Hou 3
G
bson
56)
and S mmons
American League D AI en
Gu
e
Sp
ague
2) McGio h
Ch 15 Maybe y KC
4
n 5) and "Bench P umme
Sp kes Clev 13 F sk 8os 2
6
LP-G u ett (6 4) HRs
Duncan C ev Mu cer NY Mo
gan
(8th
Re tz
4th
Bando and Tenace Oak
B
ock
3rd)
C
uz
6
h
Runs Batted In
Nat onal League Bench C n
On y games scheduled
48 Fe guson LA 47 Starge
Amer can League
P t 43 Bonds SF 42 0 ve
M w
0 2 500 002 10 5 I
p t 40
M
nn
100 0 0 03
6 22
A mer can league Mayberry
Parsons
Rye
son
(6)
Ga
d
KC 56
Jackson Oak 47
8
L nzy
8
and
Melton Ch 41 0 A len Ch ner
Rod guez
Kaat Go tz 4)
and Mu ce NY 37
Sir
ckland
(8)
Sande s (9) and
P tch ng
M
t
erwa
d
WPParsons (2 4
Nat onal League B yant SF
LP
Kaat
16
41
HRs- May
o 3 B ngham C n a 2
th) Ca ew (4th L s (3 dl
Su ton LA a 4 Os een LA and
On y games schedu ed
W se S L 7 3 Reuss Hou
Ma sha Mt and Seave NY
14
Amer can League Wood Ch
The Da1~
45
Ho tzman
Oak
3
S nger Ca 0 3 Co eman Det
05 Sp to If KC93

Sentmel

GET SET
FOR SUMMER

TIME FOR A

t,tzZtif·A
.............If.l" ;r~i

. Dream
tnsurance.

GET YOUR
PARTS AND
SUPPLIES HERE
Po nts Plugs
Exhaus Systems e c We
known b ands low p ces

MEIGS
AUTO PARTS
1 J W Second
992171

Pomeroy

Talre 'lock m -\.,.,.t&lt;a

Buy l S Sa\ tn!!s'Bnnds

to crumble•

Bare CUpboard
You start hollermg at your
general manager tell ng him
to get you some p tchers an

swered Scooendienst
I maglne
he added
that s what Sparky s domg
now
When third baseman Joe

Hague went on the diSabled
I st the Reds were fortunate
enough to have a 21 year-old
youngster I ke Dan Drtessen
battmg 409 at Ind anapollS and

Nastase humiliates opponent
ROME (UP!)
ThiS IS lJ e
Nastase year
First 11 was the French
tenn s t tie Then 11 was the
!tal an Title and a com
mand ng lead on the Com
mercia! Un on Grand Pnx
race
The second seeded
Roman an won the $16 000

men ssmgles t tie In the ltal1an
cham p1onsh p Monday
humtltallng defend ng
champ on Manuel Orantes of
Span
The ftrst set went &amp;-I The
second went 6-1 The third went
&amp;-I
Nastase who came onto the
court to Ute Jeers of local fans

Today's

Sport Parade
By M lion R clunan
U"l Sports Editor
OAKMONT Pa UP!) 'l'ho money IS one thong the pres! ge
s another and then there s someth ng else far more mportant
than both wh ch Tom We skopf f na11y 1s begmmng to rece ve
maybe a 1 ttle too late
They don t even have a label for what Tom WeiSkOpf ts gett ng
here for the f1rst t me at the Oakmont Country Club where the
u S Open beg1ns th1s Thursday
Perhaps 1l can best be descr bed as some spec al l ttle
delerence or extra b t of tegard bemg shown him by h1s fellow
playing pros In the past only t tans 1 ke Jack N cklaus I ee
Trev no and Arnold Pahner have been shown t
To be sure the pros always felt We skopf had the ab l ty and
was a good golfer but now Utey are startmg to wonder f he s
about ready to assume h s place among the great ones
Outs1de of Secretar at who doesn t really count because he s a
horse no one has been any hotter than Tom We skopf these past
few weeks
Back-to Back Victories
He won the Coloma! lnv tat on a month ago at Fort Worth
f n shed second m the Atlanta Classtc two weeks later and comes
up to this one wtth back-lo-back v clones n the Kemper Open
and Ph tadelph a Class c
The tall stra ght backed 3()-year-&lt;&gt;ld Wetskopf customar Iy
referred to as that other golfer from Columbus Oh o unt 1
now has won $117 145 on his last four tournaments and sta nds
Ut rd on th s year s money 1 st w1th a $151 867 total
But there IS somethmg more about Wetskopf now than the
money and the prestige
Maturtty says Chi Ch1 Rodr guez He used to be unmature
No more He has grown up
Art Wall puts 11 another way
l 11 tell you one thing about h m says Wall It sure looks
1 ke he has his m nd on what he s dotng now
He 11 Bux That
Tom We skopf buys that
He turned pro rune years ago and he has made a ruce ltVJng on
the tour m that t1me but he didn tactually get w th 11 at least not
m h1s own mmd unttlth s past March 14
That was the day hiS father d ed and that also could have been
the day Tom Weiskopf s entire thmldng changed S tt ng n front
of his locker before going out to play a few holes for the f rst t me
ever here at Oakmont he spoke about his father Monday
H s name was Torn the same as mme he had cancer for a
year and we knew he was go ng to die sa d Wetskopf
He was 60 years old and he hved for my ROlf I remember him
taking me to the US Open at Inverness when l was a k d He
wanted me to play golf and he d sacrif ce hiS vacat on h s bonus
money and other things merely to buy me eqwpment
The Biggest Booster
He was Tom We skopf s b ggest booster satd his son softly
evenly without any change 10 h1s vo1ce He d read the sports
page every morn ng and Jive and die w1th what I d1d but I felt I
Jet h m down a I tlle b 1 I never really felt I proved my
capab hiles n front of hun Oh sure he d see me on TV but this
past year 11 was hard for hun to get around so he couldn t come
see me play
He always told me you don t practice enough He d say
Tom f you d JUSt pract ce a blUe b t more you d be that much
better He wasn t cr t cal or anythmg 1 ke that but you know
how t s he was l ke any other father He just bel eved Tom
We skopf was the best golfer out there
As Tom WeiSkopf talked about h s father Monday some of IUs
fellow golfers walked by where he was s ttmg from tune to t me
and each had some form of greetmg
Good Going
Good go ng Tom sa d Dave H 11
Thank you Dave rephed We skopf
Then Bruce Crampton happened to pass
Well done he called out
Thank you Bruce answered WeiSkopf
One of the younger pros n the f eld here stopped n front of
We skopf looked h m up and down and then simply sa d
Wow
We skopf grmned a b t self-consc ously and shook the guy s
hand
I ve never won a major tournament sa d We skopf a b t
later and that s what they Judge you on I think I m a good
player but a great player IS one who w1ns the maJor lour
naments 1 st ll don t put myself m a class with N cklaus and
Trevmo They ve won the major ones That s the true test
Maybe Tom We skopf doesn t know t but he s passed a
greater test already

demolished Orantes w U a f ne
m xture of volleys and charges
on the net
The Spaniard won the f rst
set s open ng serve at love
Then the Roman an won 11
straight games completely
break ng Orantes w 11
By the th rd set play had
become so poor that the pub! c
at the Foro ltabco began to
wh stle and ca tca ll
Nastase who won h1s f rst
maJor tournament at Rome m
1970 f red the coup de grace on
his ftrst champ onshlp pomt
when Orames h t a backhand
w de
Earlier on the cham
p onsh p s clos ng day Tom
Okker of the Netherlands and
John Newcombe of Austral a
won lhe men s doubles t tle
defeallng two new young
Auss es Ross Case and Geoff
Masters 6-3 6 2 6-4
On Sunday Evonne Goola
gong of Austral a who d1d not
lose a s ng e set m the ent re
tournamen demo! shed Chr s
Evert of Fort Lauderdale Fla
7-IJ 6-0 to take t~e women s
s ngles t tic

Ch cago
Montreal
St Lou s.
P t sbu gh
New York
Ph ade ph •

w

I

3.&lt; 23
25 25
26 29

2,. 27
23 2'9

pd

They d keep me n the
dark Howe sa d And every
once n a while come m and
throw garbage on me
OffiCials of the Red W ngs m
Montreal for the NHL s Board
of Governors meetmg demed
Howe s charges he d dn t have
anyth ng to do n the runmng of
the hockey club and stated they
wanted hun to coni nue w th
thel1\
Charges of unfa1r treat
ment real or mag ned come
as a blow to Mr (Bruce A )
Norr sand all members of the
Red Wmgs nasmuch as
Gord e s br Il ant 25 year
pia) ng career earned for him
and his lam ly speetal status
Gord e d d not at any thne
exerc se h s prerogat ve to
devote more tune to hockey
dub management
a state
ment by the Red Wmgs sa d
I ca n t contrnue w th the
club working out of Olymp a
where the Red W ngs play)
any longer Howe sa d The
kindest th ng I cou ld do for the
Red W ngs r ght now s get the
hell out of the bu ld ng
The opportun ty to play w1th

e,,,

596
SOD

&lt;73

&lt;1\
442

5h New York

1
Oe1ro t
1
M wau~ee
8 3 6os on
Oh Ba. t more

C eve and

w I

pet

gb

30 2~ 536
29 26 S27

28
26
25
21
West

27 509
26 500
25 500
35 37S

~

1
2
2

9

wlp&lt;lgb
Ch cago
3 2 596
M nnesota
30 23 .566
Kansas( ty
J 28 525
Caona
2726509
Oak and
29 28 509
Texas
a 3~ 3.46
Monday s Results
M waukee 0 M nneso a 6
(On 'f game schedu ed)
Today s Probable P tche t
!All T mes EDT)
Texas
Brobe g 2 5) a
C eve and W cox 3 3) 6 30
pm

NewYok(Kne4S at
Oak and B ue 4 3)
pm
Boston Tan 6 6) a Ca
forma (Ryan 7 6
pm
M waukee
Be
6 6)
a
M nneso a
B y even 7 6
9
pm

Ch cago (Wood 14 5
a
Del o { F ·yman 2 6 9 p m
Kansas C ry (Busby 3 7 a
Ba t mo e (Pa me 6 4 7 JO

pm

Wednesday s Games
Texas a C eve and
New Yo k a Qak and n gh
Bos on a Ca fo n a n ght
M w a M nnesota n gfi
Ch cagoat De o n gh
Kan C y a Ba t mo e n gh

Weiskopf confident

SHOT IN ROBBERY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)
Jon E Tarantmo 36 the
und sputed master of fly
cast ng
was found shot to
death Monday n his family s
fish and poultry market
Tarantino was shot once in
the forehead on a robbery
pullce satd In I970 Tarantmo
held 12 world champtonshlps In
fly-cast ng

with NHL; WHA hound

ment

Ame ctn ltiQUt

g b

23 33 &lt;1
West
wtpctgb
San Franc sco 39 23 629
LosAnge es
36 23 6 0 1 .,
Houston
33 '17 S50 S
C nc nnat
3 26 544 5 2
At anla
2A 34 4 4
3
San 0 ego
20 39 339 7 h
Mond•y s ResuHs
San F anc sco 2 New Yo k
Los Ang 5 Ph ade ph a 3
At anta 9 P ttsbu gh 7
Sf Lou s 12 C nc .11
(On ygamesschedu ed)
Today s Problble P tchers
(All T mes EDT!
San 0 ego Ca dwe 3 7) at
Montre"l no ez 3 5} 8 p m
San F anc sea Mar cha 6 4)
at New York {Pa ke 4 0 o
McAndrew 3 4 8 p m
Ange es Messe sm th 6
eagerly awa hng an op 5) Los
at Ph adelph a ( Ca ton 6 1)
portumty to put on a major 7 30p m
P ttsburgh Wa ke 2 2) at
league uniform
AI anta Niekro 52 B p m
However when 1t comes to
St Lous (Ceveand 54) at
pttch ng the mmor league cup- C nc nnat (G ms ey 54) 8
pm
board s bare
Ch cago (Reuse he 6 4 !!It
lt all bolls down to the facl Houston ( Fo sch 6 5) 8 30 p m
that the Reds farm system
Wednesday s Games
Los
Ange
es at Ph a n ght
hasn t been qutte as produetive
San D ego at Mont ea n ght
as the club s brass would like San F an a New Yo k n ght
P tsbu ghat Atlan a n gh
one to believe
Only I ve on the 25-man ros
ter were s1gned during the re
gm e of General Manager Bob
Howsam wh ch began In Janu
ary 1967
OAKMONT Pa ( UPit Tom We1skopf no longer
SABRES LINE SIGNED
satlSf ed as easily as he once
MONTREAL (UP!) - The was bel eves he can cont nue
Buffalo Sabres of the National hts tornd pace of the past
Hockey League Monday an month n the U S Open
nounced the slgmngs of Champ onsh1p th s week
wmgers R1chard Martin and
What s more some of hls
Rene Robert to long term rovals beheve t too
co ntracts at undisclosed
salar es They Will rejoin the
1 ne s th rd member G 1 RICHARD STAYS
Perreault who has been under
MONTREAl (UP!) Henri
a lon g term ton tract smce Richard w II skate w Ut the
1972
Nahonal Hockey League Mont

Howe ends connection
By RICHARD E GOSSELIN
SOUTHFIELD M ch UP))
Gordie Howe hasn t of
fie ally s gned w1th the World
Hockey Assoc at on yet but
he s severed h1s '1:1 year tie
w th the Detro t Red Wmgs of
the National Hockey League
The 45-year-&lt;&gt;ld NHL Hall of
Farner sa d Monday n ght he s
90 per cent sure of slgmng
w lh the WHA team full 11 ng a
dream of playmg on the same
pro club w th h s two sons
Marty Howe 19 and Mark
Howe 18 were both recently
s gned by the Houston Aeros of
the WHA
I defln !ely think we 11 s gn
hm sad Jm Smth presi
dent of the Houston franchiSe
Howe res gned his v ce
pres dency w th the Red
w ngs tell ng the aud ence at a
dinner follow ng the f fth an
nual Gord e Howe Golf
Tournament that Detrmt gave
him the mushroom treat

S1 Lou s at C nc n ght
Ch cago at Houston n gh1

Ent

Slumping Reds bombed by Cards

Lead ng BaHers

Yes sn t t sa d East
as he produced the k ng
South s game slam and rub
ber had van shed m a puff
of smoke

We

Aaron socks No. 16, Braves win

h[s talented sons plus the lavtsh
treatment accorded the all
tune NHL sconng great were
what apparently made up h s
mind plus hiS feeling of bemg
neffeetuai In Detro t
l haven t s gned anythmg
yet Howe emphastzed But
Jt s a matter of lronmg out
r ghl now I m not really
severed but l can t work out of
there any more We 11 be
talking ser ous for the next day
or so
Its 00-10 right now
he
sad It looks Ike mne Is a
wayward loss as far as DetrOit
IS

concerned

BRUNDAGE TO WED
CHICAGO (UP!) - At 85
Avery Brundage the former
preSident of the International
Olymp c Committee will take
a 37 year-&lt;&gt;ld German princess
as hiS brtde
Th s 1s not a June
December wedd ng
Brun
dage told newsmen as he an
nounced h1s engagement to
Princess Mar ann Reuss
whose farmly once ruled a
small kingdom n what lS now
East Germany
The pr ncess and her lam ly
have I ved through a horrible
war and she s very mature for
her age
Brundage sa d
People say l am very young
for my age
No date has been set for the
wedding but Brundage said 11
will be m Germany probably
Bavar a and he hoped It w II
be th s summer
PLAYER OF WEEK
SAN FRANCISCO UP!) Wayne Twitchell of the Ph Ia
delphia Phtll es has been
named as NatiOnal League
Player of the Week for the
per od of June 4 10 t was
announced Monday by league
prestdent Charles S Feeney
Twitchell p tched two con
secutlVe sh utouts &lt;/Urmg the
week He blanked Houston 4-0
on seven h1ts June 5 and San
D ego 11-0 on a five h1tter June
10

real Canadiens next season but
t took the richest contract m
club htstory to keep h m from
the World Hockey AssoCillt on
Richard an 18-year veteran
with th e Canad ens signed a
two year contract w th the club
Monday which reportedly w ll
g ve h m more than $IOO 000 a
season
Canad1ens General Manager
Sam Pollock sa d we never
disclose salar es of our
players But he s the highest
pa d player we ve ever had
and he deserves It too
R c hard turned down a
$200 000 offer from the WHA
Houston Aeros to s1gn with
Montreal

NO WNGER BARRED
HARRISBURG Pa (UP!) No longer can women profes
s onal wrestlers and boxers be
barred tn Pennsylvan a
Deputy Attorney General
Edward T Steckel said
Monday state a Utlet c codes
barring women are un
constltutzonal
Steckel ssued the oplmon at
the request of Secretary of
State C Delores Tucker who 1s
m charge of adm mstermg the
bcens ng of boxers and wrest
Iers A rulmg from the Com
monweaith Court supportmg
steckel s opm10n read
To anyone who ever once
has vtewed women par
t c1pants n a roller derby the
argument that all women are
the weaker sex des rous of
only the more genteel work
cames little we ght

WeiSkopf often accused of
having the potent a! but not the
temperament to be a big
w rmer has won three of his
last four starts and fmlshed
second to Jack NICklaus m the
other
111ey used to say he had the
potent al of N ck laus but now
they say he s play ng like
N cklaus B Ily Casper put the
whole matter n perspective
N cklau s and We •kopf a re
10 strokes better !ban anyone
else n the f eldon th s course
Casper said They can get to
Ute par.SS and the long par-Is
and the rest of us I ave to
stram
Bruce Crampton who en
JOYed a streak l ke We skopf s
current one earlier th s year
but says he got mentally
tored bel eves Wetskopf may
have learned to I ve w th t
(winning)
For h s part the 31&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld
We skopf f gures he s wmnlng
now because he has set his
goals a l ttle h gher than he
sed to
In the past I was satisf ed
after I won a toW'nament he
sa d But the mark of a really
great player s that he keeps on
w nn ng Jack and Lee (TreVJ
no) do that and (Arnold
Palmer and Casper d d t when
they were wmnmg
Real sllcally he went on
l know l can t cont nue on this
pace but I don t see any reason
why l should be let down this
week e1ther

the wrong
GO..L!AM TO MANAGE
LOS ANGELES UPJ)
J1m G11l am a wearer of the
Dodger Blue for 20 years as
a player and a coach will
spend the wmter season of 197374 as the manager of Ute San
Juan team of the Puerto R can
League the Los Angeles club
announced Monday
After hts debut as a
manager he Will return to ille
Dodgers the following sprmg to
resume his coaching duties

tree~

A Homeowner Pol cy
from the Down ng
Ch Ids Agency w 11
cover most ace dental
struct on of land
scaped trees bushes
lawn See us today

DOWN ING-CiiiLOS
AGENCY, INC.
220 N 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

Hey, Gangl
Let s stop at Adolphs
Darry Valley for one
Of thetr deliCIOUS
sandwtches cones or
shakes

DAIRY VALLEY
At The End of Pomeroy BrJdge

�3-m Daily Senlmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 June 12 1973

Generation Rap

There s 13een a Sltght Change

tn

the Scrrptf

Dear Larry
Thanks for an nterest ng survey report
Seems to me that spankmg s only effect ve f almost
nonextstent Used m extreme cases where al e se fa Is n
eluding reason pat ence d scuss on and prevent on t can fetch
a child up short and change h s d reel on But f t s
the preferred form of pun shment and replaces " se un
derstand ng d sc pi ne t s pretty useless Also rue
even
though t gets the young vote because t s soon over)
R ght Sue - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE R ght Mom I don t remember too many
spankings
n fact hardly any
but there was the t me whe I
got my mouth washed out w th soap And I diqn call my s ster
that word agam out loud) for at least f ve years
SUE

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
There s a new fad n the mus c bus ness which s go ng to be
popular I 11 predict and totally po nlless
Start ng n Los Ange es the e a e numerous polls go ng on
to select the ten b ggest songs of the past ten or maybe f ftecn
years A psychology student there used the top 40 surveys for
the l A market to come up w th his st of fourteen plus y~rs
and there s no way to say t s real y bad - t JUSt can t be ac

curate
H s cho ces for wh ch I am gratefu l o Cha leston mns c
critiC J P Roo! for publ sl ng aren all tha bad But n my
Judgment they aren t all hat accurate fo the 1958 n d 72
perod
1
The Tw st Chubby Checker 2
Mack the Kn fe
Bobby Darm
Exodus
Ferrante &amp; Te cl e
4
Andy W Il ams 5
Summer
Hawa an Wedd ng Song
Place Perc Fa th 6
Battle of New 0 leans Johnny
Horton 7 All I Have to Do Is D earn Everly B o he s 8- I
Want to Hold Your Hand Beatles 9
You ve Lost Tha
Lov n Feel ng
R ghteous Bro he s 10
Donna
R ch e
Val ens
What s wrong w th t ha Weren hose al b g h s Sure but
the 1st has several glar ng weaknesses and sow al he o her
I sts comp led b) other psycholog sts rad o stat ons mus c
histor ans and so forth
I th nk t sa most mposs ble o de elop such a s because
of about a blue n II on var abies n the ever-chang ng dynam cs
of the mus c world toda) and even back n 1958 Lets look at
JUSt a few
1 The I s above" as taker! on!) none mus c rna ket - Los
Angeles To get a real sampl ng one wou d ha e to take he same
sort of exhaust ve survey n v rtually every marke n the
countr) W th on!) one black s nger n he group and one
counlrj western vocal st t s ce r a n the same s wouldn
develop n Wash ngton or NashVIlle
2 The I st ng comp led n Los Angeles seems to be ve ghted
toward etther popular m ddle-&lt;Jf he oad n us c or to wha
could fall nto the broad class f cat on of rock Ac ually tl ere
are a dozen or n ore m n -markets among h s hornogeneoll5
amalgamat on of more than 200m ll on bodes ca l ed Amer cans
For example there s the stra ght bluegrass fan the mod f ed
Nashv lle sound lover the s tr t y soul add c the gospel
mus c love the class cal af c onado the ba bershop-quartet
bang the Jazz fan and on and on and on " h subgroup ngs
w th n each
3 There s a pecul ar trend n Arne an mus c today o
cross all the boundar es but only to a I m ted degree Thus a
song l ke A Boy Named Sue may be absolutely at the top of he
charts n country "estern but w ll sp II over nto the rock fans
field maybe r s ng no h gher than the fop 10 and mak ng an
equal dent n the m ddle-of the oad group ng 1 hus t
becomes virtually mposs ble to detern ne s ac ual tota m
pact w thout a lot more meas uremen t and reasearch than the L
A I st purports to prov de
4
There s a cur ous ph enomenon called cross..over
which also affects the popular ty and espec ally he durab I y
of a song today Good examples of his I fe on the fa c ha th
bubble gum rock h ts of the late F ft es and ea I S x es are
enJOY ng a surpr s ng rev val b~ country \\estern art sts toda)
and many sweet mus c sta ons a e p 8) ng both rock h ts and
country western smashes
but not Wlt I they ve been aun
dered and recorded by a less-exuberant mus ca group usuall)
nstrumentally Thus the popular ty of a song mav be ex remely
long 1 ved but t shows on no charts or n etl od of n easur ng
except m stat on logs
There are many other reasons to make he [ A I s ng
suspec but t s nterest ng none the ess
prov detl ) ou don
take t as gospel

BRUCE BIOS SAT
Kennedy a quest1on

Greeclls a
Terrible
Thing!'

1

Bv H( It 11 uul "im Hottel
Dear Bottels
Remember me 1 m the college student who asked for your
op mons about parental spank ng for a sociOlogy report on
corporal pumshment You generously answered ne perso 1aUy
and at length so I d 1 keto return he favor by shar ng the results
of my poll With you and your readers
l talked to 52 mothers n all and a whopp ng no pun n
tended) 39 of then bel evect that pre teen ch ldren should be
spanked when they deserve t as a deterrent to m sbehav or Of
this 39 15 though! that teenagers should also be spanked One
mother sa d So long as they act I ke ch ldren hey shou d be
treated like ch Idren Another said If a 15-year-&lt;&gt;ld s taken
over h s or her parent s knee and paddled you can bet that the
hum hat10n alone sa deterrent Jet alone the pa n
Those who supported the pract ce of spank ng cia med
ch ldren learn through pa n and !hey won t repeat a wrongdo ng
they are pa nfully pumshed for
Those aga nst were I rm n the r bel efs that corpora l pun sh
ment s outdated and that t doesn t work This group and there
were only 13 n t) ns st that cont nuously spanked ch ldren learn
to resent author ty becom ng naturally aggress ve bel ev ng
that force solves everything One mother remarked U you h l
your ch Id for everyth ng lou re only tea chmg him that n ght
makes r ght Another sad They used to wh1p pr soners !hal
didn t work so the) stopped Beat ng a person doesn t change him
for the better
Spankers often adm tted they pun sh n anger but most sa d
this was the best tune An nor ty of e ght o hers preferred to
wa t and talk tout bel ev ng that a ch ld w Iltake his n ed c ne f
he f rst concedes that he acted wrongly
Another th ng that amazed me was that nost of the cluldre l
talked to 70 pet of 30 k ds rang ng n ages from s x to 14 ac
tually sad they preferred spank ngs to ground ngs
Its better
to get 1 over w th
I was cur ous about what the pol ce thought of spank ngs and
got some surpr s ng answers They seemed most concerned tha
parents were h tt ng the r k ds too hard and too much Helen and
Sue you should go to your loca l P D and ask to ee p ctures of
ch ld abuse cases You can t bel eve what parents are beating
the r kids w th
I also talked to teachers and found the n qu te evenly
div ded for and aga nst w th a most a I however aga nst
spankings n school
What I d I ke to do s take ch ldren from both groups
spanking and nonspanking lam I es and compa e then It
would be nterestmg to see wh ch s better behaved
but then
you probably couldn t attr bute tent rely to whether or not the)
were spanked could you
These are just the poll results You and your readers an
take t from here AI I know s that spank ng s one of he mos
cont overs al ssues be ween pare ts and w II con nue so for a
long time
LARRY

WIN AT BRIDGE

Democrat outlook
is bleak for '76
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

NORTH
• AQJ 10

IZ
LAKE TAHOE - NEA
It s aston sh ng news that even as Watergate keeps bust
llg out all over the Democrats do not seem eno rmou ly
advanta~ed and may have real d rf cu t es on both cand dates
and ssues n 1976
The bluntest way to put the and date problem s to ask
one of the many Democrat c gove nors here for the nat10na
conference If not Ted Kennedy n 1976 !hen who
The answer s harshly s mp e No IH ght alternat ve n
s ght Th e outlook s very very bleak
Kennedy or eou se ea ds al po Is of Democrat c prospect
today He moves around the nat on eas ly and often per
form ng the expected prel m nares for a and dacy But he
ha s made no k nd of comm Lment and ntends to hold off for
a long t me on a dec !:) on whe her to run
Meant me Democ at and Republ can governors n con
s derab e numbe s a e say ng e the openly or pr vately that
Chappaqu dd ck hobbles h m g ave y on the Watergate rna
ter that he can t ra se he ssue on moral g ounds Some go
beyond th1s and ~ay hat even w hou Watergate as a com
pi cat ng factor Chappaqu dd ck s JUSt s tt ng there I ke an
nd gest ble lump - a th ng tha wont go away and s bound
to haunt h m n a 1976 campa gn
One m dwestern Democrat c governor s wonder ng wheth
er Kennedy aga nst th s backdrop and o her personal prob
terns really wants to make the race Even grant ng that t s
early th s governor doesn t th nk Kennedy s show ng enough
steam to be conv nc ng
The party rre ss u es on Kennedy to run may prove m
mense But
he res sts them then what Th s same m d
westerner says he cant th nk of a s ngle alternat ve prospe
who ca n attract a espectab le crowd at a party fund ra ser
The roster of potent a s ndeed s pa nful y sl m at th s
moment Everybody knows that Sen Henry Jackson o
Wash ngton and Sen Walter Monda e of M nnesota are work
ng at 1976 but ne the one ha s the Jazz Jack son can get
money from labor and defense contractors but h s d sma
road show ng n 1972 pr mares s st I a gu del ne Mondale
s JUdged br ght and ncreas ngly seasoned but la ck ng n he
needed f e
You ca n forget those eports t ha the o d perenn al Sen
Hubert Humphrey has scrub bed h s 1972 farewel and "
make another try The word s h s best I ends are tel ng
h m they won t work for h m eve aga n
Jn th s s tuat on Democrat c governors and other pa ty
people aren t even ndulg ng n the common pol t cal fan asv
a fa back used by both par-tes
that some new face
may emerge n 1974 They re n a hard crack and they ad
m t t
As f th s were not enough many concede that beyond the
negat ve thoug potent ally usefu ga ns from Watergate the
Democrats are barren of new pol cy and program d reel ons
Agreement s general the r ch ve n of New Deal soc al pro
grams s played out They see the engulf ng problems of the
age
a tangled economy tax chaos cr me popula d s llu
s onment w th government and othe nst tu ons
But they don t hav e a new dea n a ca load They a e los
n th ck woods

9 8 5~

• 832
4 107~

•s

WEST

EAST

2
•K 91
9 62
9 73
. QJI09
.76 54
4J843
4KQ 9S
SOUTH (D)
. 7S3
9AKQJ109
.AK
4A 2
Both vulne able
w st N rth l'.a."'l Sfllulh
24
Pass 3¥
Pas
2•
Pas
4¥
Pass 4 N!.
Pal'!s SNT.
Pa~
5•
Pass 6¥
Pass
6 "'
Pa s
Pass.
Pass
Open ng lt!ad .Q

h

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Voict:• along Br'"Way
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
FROM OSCAR RACE
TO RACE OSCAR
NEW YORK KFS
Black f lm ndus ry
members are plann ng a BI k Academy
Awards Wont call them Blackademy Awards
and don t want to call e Oscars oo Hanky
Glenda Jackson says to he su essful today a
ga has o be blonde " th b g b easts and a
madden ng g ggle So the sk nny s ar says she l
re re n th ee years and become a soc al
worker
The flood of pornos on Bdwy ha s theater
owners pray ng for good G fi cks one 42nd St
porn palace show ng four f lth f cks wh ch
charged $5 each f r st cr me around s almost
ba e at four for $2
One TV f m f rrr lost
$35 000 000 n f vc years mak ng fop fix
CBS
s be ng sued by stockholders fo se ng the
Yankee ball club too cheap
Raphael the
Lat n en erta ncr a the Ra nbow Gr I had a
hab t of gett ng gals o dance w th h m o I e
sta~e and patt ng the r beh nds fo the laugh
One such gals llo&gt; )rend gave Raphael a belt n
the bel y for a cr nge
The Al ce Cooper tra svest e sex rock
s cksess star ed a nauseous trend new act calls
self The Queen El zabeth and ts equ pment
ncludes scads of s mulated sex p ops Its star
rocker wears a huge w g he removes
o ex
Clevelan I co lumn st
pose ust as ong t a r
W ndsor French left a most $2 250 000 plus an
ar collect on worth near y tha
Be ty Dav s
adopted son M ke Woodman and Char ene
Bi:lwn were wed n Wes po t Ga y Merr I s the
pop No we don kno\\i why he names d fft!
Modes y no doubt
Produce Chuck Brave man won r ghts tu
some old Ma x Bros fi cks for h s Groucho TV
spec a! plus a f ock of pr vate Groucho-cellulo d
never sRown ou of Groucho s house
D ck
Cavett asked how he feels about on y one week
on TV a man h epl ed lf Carson doesn m nd
why s hould I
Ano her ath ete b es the
nsel tenn s great Tony T a bert rned acto
for Car er de Haven s The Ou f
One of he
&lt;;'OWl try s fo mer op o keys John Ta nmaro
now ps he Toledo at 225 He s a top tra ner
w th h s n gs no a Monmou h Pa k The Le

Marv ns oak r chly menac ng at the Sherry
Netherland
Merle Oberon wants to put an ocean be
ween her and her ex Plans to hve m London
after the d vorce
The Led Zeppelin group
cia ms the r chest group es m the world
several follow the Zep s pnvate jet everywhere
n the r pr vale Jets
Old West Po nter Col H D McHugh of St
An on o knocks down H wood clauns that 1ts
The Josh Clayton Story s about The f1rst
black West Po nt graduate Col McH says the
f rst black grad No 2690 n the class of I877)
was Henry Oss an Fl pper further
There
have been oqly seven Claytons at West Po nt
on ly three graduated- one n 1886 one m 1944
and one n 1955 None of the seven was named
Josh Nearest was Joel W Clayton who now
I ves n Atlanta Ga who entered W P With the
lass of I918 but d d not graduate Take that
you H wood Watergaters The colonel says the
second black graduate was John H Alexander
Class of 1887 th rd was Charles Young class of
1889 Tha shoul d clear t all up
G nger Rogers
ex spouse Jacques
Bergerac now s Revlon cosmet cs boss In
France Glamorous mage plus shrewdest
actor bus nessman h s boss here enthuses
Gas! ght Clubs Speakeasy Room drummer
Sam Ulano IS th nn ng and spreading out at the
same me th nn ng he shed 30 lbs and
sp read ng out to wr te the nev table d et book
about I s t tied How To Lose We ght and F t
Be nd Your Steer ng Wheel DSR Books IS the
pub she
h
Some of h t songwr ter Burt Bacharac s
roy a t es went to buy a $10 000 chandel er for his
Dover House restaurant n exurban N Y
Another Dean Mart n s Hangups story when
h s former fV show rnus c conductor D ck
Stab le was Ieav ng for New Orleans to take a
l fet me contract at the Roosevelt Hotel n New
Or eans he telephoned Jerry Lew s to say so
long and Jerry w shes h m goodluck then he
ca lled Dean who wouldn t get on the phone for
cal after ca ll f nally h s lawyer called Stabile
and epor ed Mart n d dn t w sh to have any
conve sa on w th D ck
Must ve thought he
wan ed to bo row someth ng Stabtle s ghs

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Air Passages Dilated

Greed s a t err b I e
th ng sa d South
The game was rubber
br dge South had reached
s x hearts after opemng w th
an artlf c al two-club b1d
A club lead would have
wo r ed h m but after the
diamond open ng h1s con
tract was secure
He won drew trumps w th
two leads and tned a spade
f nesse It worked so he re
tu ned to h s hand w th dum
my s last trump and re
pealed the spade f nesse
West had followed to the
f rst spade w lh the deuce
He played the s x th s t me
The f nesse worked aga n
South returned to hts hand
w th the second high dta
mond looked at the score
carefully and saw that he
would wm an extra hundred
po nts f he made an over
trock
That s when he made h s
remark wh ch he followed up
by takmg a th rd and last
spade f nesse

b \I ll

I e

e a r pas

2•
You

East

Suu h

4

Pass

I•

2A
~ou

Pass
h hod

8

8
9

9
0

.AQ965 952 +K4 4AQI08
Wha do you do now
A-fhc c s a tronr t!mpta,
n t get Kh nlo Bla(k
"' 1 w " uldn t ( t c ze th !ii
c eb but prefc Just t make
om: I h )S all pu po e c:ue
b d r lhre diamonds

fODA Y 5 QUESTION
You b d th ec rl amonds You
pa ne b ds th ee spades Wha
do yo u do ow
Vacuum Legs
The underside of a starftsh
s marked w1th hundreds of
t ny feet hke suctton cups
The cups anchor ng a star
f1sh are strong enough to
Withstand a pull of more
than 100 pounds for a short
t me

Thoughts
1f you eally fulfzll tl c
o
ol law accordt zg to tl c
oubt have a
sc
pture
You s/ all love
pleased to note
ou
etghb
r as y urself
to do any St
funn es th

7 00 - What s My L ne 8

The b dd n,::: ha been

s done by postural dra nage
You can th nk of the lungs
as two large bottles and the
flu d accumulates n the bot
tom of th em when you re
standmg or s tt ng uproght
If you want to empty the
botlle you have to 1 e down
w th the head down A good
way to do th s s to I e on
the bed n such a way that
you can bend your head
down tu the floor and the!)
-----=-=--~.,.... let the flu d run out of the
B A R B S
lungs and dram out the
lungs thoroughly It may
B PIIIL PASTORET
take lo mmutes of postural
One of the best ways to dra n ng to get the ungs all
ge
ound sho uld e ed s to cleared out You should
ca rv g r"d ges
probably do th s at least
twtce a day I note you don t
smoke and that s certamly
w se for someone w th your
problem

Da

6 00
News 3 4 8 0 3 5 T u h o Cqpseq 6 Sesame St 20
A oond the Bend 3J
6 JO News J 4 6 8 0 5 D eam of Jeanne 3 L as Yoga
&amp; You 33

7

Anyt n e you have a res
p ato y nfect on you prob
a b y shou ld see a doctor
and be sure that you re get
t ng proper treatment to
p even t any assoc ated n
feet on of you r lungs
II s a so helpfu to con
sta ntly dt a n out the flu d
wh ch a cum ulates n the
owe part of he lungs Th s

go

TUESDAY JUNE 12 1973

NEWSPAPER ENTEPPR 5f ASSN

~I Ills Linked to Lung Infection
re&lt;EI

Television Log

East deserves a lot of
cred t fo h s play but don t
forget West East knew that
West would have played
h gh low w th an even num
l er of spades and the efore
"as able to set h s trap

N rlh

u

well-Jan es 2 8

Slowly and pa nfully man
s lea n ng that he m st do
to others what he wo ld
I ave them do to h m
S
Anthonv
Eden
fo n
I I h I l e n n te

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wr ter
Hank Aaron IS domg more
than closmg m on Babe Ruth s
f'. all t me career home run
~record wtth unexpected speed
He s also showmg-ilnd this
ts more Important to his
Atlanta Brave teammates and
Uteor rtvals than catchmg the
Babe -that he s st ll a game
WIMtng h Iter
The 39-year old Aaron now
25 homers beh nd Ruth s
career mark of 714 after bitting
No 16 of the season and No 689
of his career m a 9-7 vtctory

2
2

ve Go A Secret 3 Elec Co 20
Bea The Cock 4 News 6 0 Untamed Wo d 3 T uth or
Consequences 3 Lee T ev no s Golf 5 L v ng 33
30 To Tel The Trulh 6 P ce s R ght 8 0 Beat The Clock
3 Th s s You L e 3 C cus 4 RF D 20 Cha es B a s
Better Wo ld 5 Chan ese Way 33
00
Mov es 0 a y of a Mdd Housew fe 3
Moment to
Moment 4 Tempe a u es R s ng 3 Baseba 5 Ame can
Odyssey 20 33
30 Haw a F ve 0 8 Mov e Second Chance 6 3
00
nte nat ana Perfo mance 20 33
30 V g nan8 Mo e TheSOOPoundJe k 0
00
Ma cus We by M D 6 3 News 20 Cancer L fe o
Death 33 NBC Repo ts 3 4
00
News 3 4 8 13 15
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 S 0 ck Cavett 6 13 Moves The
Vengeance 8 C ack n the M ror 10
00 - Pe y Mason 4 News 3
00 - Your Hea th 4
30- News 4

WEDNESDAY JUNE 3 1973
Sunr se Sem na 4 Sac ed Hea 10
Fa mt me 10
Fa m Repo t 3
Pau Har-vey 13
6 30
Co umbus Today 4 B be Answe s 8 U ban League
P esen s 0 The Sto y 3
6 45 - Co ncob Report 3
6 55 - Take F ve fo L fe s
7 00
Today3 4 5 News6 8 0 F n stones 3
7 30- Rompe Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 0
8 00 - Cap Kangaroo 8 0 New Zoo Revue J Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
8 30 Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Re ue 6
Pau D xon 4 Ph Donahue s AM 3 Lets Make A
9 00
Dta 6 F end y Junct on 10 Me v G ff n 8 Peyton Pace
3
9 3Q-To Tel The Truth 3 Jeopa dy 6 Ho ywood s Ta k ng 0
Peyton Pace 3
0 00
D nah Sho e 3 s Co umbu s S x Ca I ng 6 Joke s W d
8 0 D ck Van Dyke 3
o 30 Ba le 3 4 5 $ 0 000 Pyram d 8 0 Sp t Second 3
00 Sa le of the Cen u ·y 3 5 Love Ame can S y e 6 Gamb t
8 0 Passwo d 3 E ec Co 20
1 30 Ho i ywood Squa es 3 4 15 Bew tched 6 3 Love o L e
8 o Sesame 51 20
12 00
eopardy 3 Bob 8 aun s 50 50 Cub 4 Loca News 0 3
8 Password 6
12 30
Who Whal Whe e 3 5 Sp Second 6 Sea ch for
Torno ow 8 0
12 55
NBC News 3 5
00
News Weathe Spa ts 3 A My Ch dren 6 1J G een
Ac es 0 Nor Fo Women On y IS Its You Bet 8 As The
Word Tu ns 8 0
JG-3 On A MalctlJ -4 5 Newlywed Game 3 M ke Doug as
6 Gu d ng L gh 8 0
2 3G-Dat ng Game 3 Edge of N gh 8 0 Dodo s 3 4 5
3 00 - Anothe Wo ld 3 4 5 Gene a Hosp ta 6 3 P ce s
R ght 8 0 RFD 20
3 30- Retu n o Peyton Pace 3 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph
Do,-tahue 4 Secret S o m 0 Oh o Th s Week 20
Hollywood s Ta k ng B
4 00 - M s e Ca toon 3 Some set 3 F n stones 6 Love
Ame can S y e 3 Merv G ff n 4 Sesame St 33 Sec et
Sto m M.ov e Lady God va
0
4 30
D ck Van Dyke 5 Pett coa Junct on 3 Me v G f n 4
Love Lucy 6 W ld W d West 3 My
Abbo &amp; Cos e loB
LteMage5
S 00- Bonanza 3 B g Va ey 6 Haze a M Rage s 20 33
Andy G If th 5
5 30
E ec Co 33 Gomer Py e 33 Death Va ey Days 5
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beve y H b es 8
5 55
Ea N ght nga e 5
6 00
News Wea the Sports 3 4 8 0 5 T u h o Con seq 6
Sesame St 20 A ound The Bend 33
6 $0
NBC News 3 4 News 8 10 Zoom 33 Sesame St 20
0 eam of Jeann e 13
7 00 T uth o Con seq 3 Beat The Clock 4 News 6 0 What s
My t ne 8 Anyth ng You Can Do J E ec Co 20 Know You
Schoo s 33 Andv G If h 5
7 3o-Ep sode Act on 33 The Judge 0 Beat The Cock 3
Pol ce Surgton 3 ToTe The T uth 6 How Do You Ch dren
Grow? 20
8 00 Sonny &amp; Che 8 0 Adam 2 3 4 S Th eke Than Wate
6 3 Basebal 6 Ame ca 73 20 33
8 30 Banacek 3 4 5 Mov e Say Goodbye Magg e Cole 6
6 00
6 5 6 20 6 25 -

3
9 00

9
0

1
'2

Dan August 8 0 June Wayne 20 33
30
Tu n ng Po nts 20 33
00
Cannon 8 0 Sea ch 3 4 5 ONen Ma sha 6 13
Homewood 33 News 20
00 News 3 4 6 8 0 3 5
30
Johnny Ca son 3 4 5 0 ck Cave I 6 3 Mov es
Otley 8
M ss Sad e Thompson o
00
News l Pe y Mason .11
00
News 4

over the Pittsburgh Pirates
Monday mght had been ac
cused earl er this season of
tryng for the mark at the ex
pense of h1s value to the team
It sa rugged charge to Utrow
at a true pro but Aaron has
answered t m Ute last three
days wtth three ho111ers-all of
which contributed to Atlanta
VICtories He h t two Saturday
rught leading the Braves to a 52 VIctory over the st Lows
Cardinals and hiS three-run
homer Monday n ght was the
b g blow of a SIX ..-un fourth
mmng outburst wh1ch carr ed

Atlanta over the Pirates
The Cardinals defeated C1n
cmnati lz-1 San FranciSCO
beat New York 2-1 and Los
Angeles downed Phitadelphta
$-3 10 Ute only other National
League games M !waukee
topped M nnesota 10-6 In the
only scheduled Amer can
League game
Dave Johnson h1t hiS lith
homer John Oates singled m a
run and Aaron clunaxed the
stx-run fourth to g1ve Ute
Braves an 8-0 lead That rally
stood up for the dec stve
margm as the Pirates paced

by three hits by Manny
Sangutllen and two hits and
three RBI by AI Oliver scored
two runs m Ute fifth three m
the seventh and two n the
e ghth
Carl Morton who went 6 1-3
mn ngs received credit for his
sixth wm wh le Steve Blass
suffered hiS fourUt loss agamst
three wms
Bob Gibson struck out ninehis career total of 2 862 now
ranks second to Walter John
son s 3 50S-and won his fifth
game of the season w Ut the
help of homers by Ken Reitz

Jose Cruz and Lou Brock Joe
Morgan homered for the Reds
Ron Bryant won hiS lOth
game w th the s upport of Dave
Kingman s seventh homer and
Randy Moff1tt s mnUt .. Mmg
rei ef as ille Giants shaded the
Mets Kingman s homer put
Ute G ants ahead 2-&lt;l n the
f fth nnmg while Moffitt came
out of the bullpen With one on
and two out m the nmth to
retire Willie Mays on an mf eld
out
The Dodgers sent 10 batters
to the plate m a four..-un second
mmng wh ch brought Don

Sutton his etghth wm w th the
runth nrung rei ef a d of Pete
Richert Dave Lopes and Joe
Ferguson accounted for RB!s
w Ut s ngles and B ll Russell
drove m a run Wlth a sacrifice
fly m ille key IMmg Dick
Ruthven was Ute loser lor Ute
Pllll1es
Dave May s th rd inmng
oomer and a f ve-run fourth
mn ng wh ch Included a tworun s ngle by Ollie Brown
paced Milwaukee over the
Twms Rod Carew and Joe ill
homered for M nnesota

Major Le•gue St,al)dfn7'

6y Un ted Press lnternat on1l
N1t onal Leaoue

CINCINNATI UP!) - The
Cincmnati Reds p tchmg staff
IS gomg Ute way of the IO httte
Indians
It was JUSt last December
after the Reds had acqwred
Roger Nelson from Ute Kansas
City Royals that Sparky An
derson cla tmed the club s
p tch1ng was the best smce he
became manager
Those were pretty strong
words smce they were uttered
by a guy who had managed two
pennant wmners w thm a
tllree year span
Nelson was to be one of f1ve
Reds starters Don Gullett
Ross Grunsley Gary Nolan
and Jack B Ihngham were to
be the others
Anderson pomted out that
any one of tbe f1ve was a
potent a! 20-game w nner
Gibson Hits Mark
Today the Reds p tch ng
staff has a str1kmg resem
b[ance to that of 1969 the one
which cost Dave Br stol his

job
The st LouiS Cardmals
arnvmg m town loser of four of
Ute r last five ll'!mes tattooed
Gullett and his successors wtlh
Hh ts mcludmg three homers
Monday mght as they pounded
out a 12-4 vtctory It was the
opener of a three-game serles
which resumes tomght when
Ross Grunsley goes aga nst
Reggte Cleveland
It was a Cardmal v ctory
which saw Bob Gtbson stnke
out nine to up his career total to
2 862 second only to tbat of Ute
3 508 amassed by Hall of
Farner Walter Johnson
11 doesn t take long for a
p1tchmg staff to go down the
dra n sa1d Card nat Manager
Red Schoend enst A couple of
p tchers come up w1tl1 sore
arms and you re m trouble
Nelson and Nolan have sore
arms on the Reds p1tchmg
staff
What does a manager do
when hts Pitching staff beglns

Mator League Leaders
By Un ted Press Internal onal

Mator League Results

Nat anal League
gabrhpct

Maddox SF 48 183 22 64
Lopes LA 48 167 28 58
Mota LA 37 128 6 44
Goodsn SF 51 87 8 63
Bonds SF 62 256 6 85
Unse Ph I 42 122 4 40
Watsn Hou 60 2
38 70
Rbnsn Ph 36 20 19 39
Fa rly Mt 44 36 20 44
Santo Ch 54 94 32 62
Amer1can League
g ab r h
Blmbrg NY39 1 6 20 47
Ho ton De 28 106 6 38
K kptk KC 48 171 30 60
D AI en Ch 52 88 34 62
Ca ew Mn 52 20 36 66
Kel y Ch 4 162 25 52
F sk Bos 49 182 28 57
Maybry KC59 206 38 64
Hndrsn Ch 36 135 2 42
E s Cte
3
02 9 3

350
347
344
337
332
328
326
325
324
320

manager~al

By Un ted Press lnternat onal
Nat onal League
San F an
000 10 QOO-- 2
New Yo k
000 010 ooo-- 1 6 2

B yant
Moll tt (~) and
Rade
S one
Cap a
7
Henn gan 9 and Dye WPB yant 0 3) LP 5 one
2
HR-K ngman 7th)

Los Ang
040 000 lOG- 5 1 0
Ph a
000 000 102- 3 6
Sutton
R che t
(9}
and
Fe guson Ruthven Lersch 2)
B andon 7 Sea ce (9 and
Boone WP Su on (8 4) LP
pet
405 Rulhven ( 5 HRs Luz nsk 2
358 lh&amp;Sth)
339
000 020 32o-- 7 3
330 P 1 sbgh
02060 oox 9 3
328 A an a
8 ass
Rooker 4) Oetto e
32
5
He
nandez
Gus
8
3 3 and May Mo on 71Hoe
ne (7)
3
3 1 Pan he (7 House (9 Schue
304 e 9 and Oa es WP Mo on
6 4) LP Blass (3 4) HRs
Home Runs
Aa
on 6 h) Johnson (1 th
Nat ona I League
Sta gel
P tt 17 Aa on A 6 Bonds
252 010 2()()- 2 4 2
SF 5 Monday Ch 4 Bench
200 001 001 4 4 0
C n and Wynn Hou 3
G
bson
56)
and S mmons
American League D AI en
Gu
e
Sp
ague
2) McGio h
Ch 15 Maybe y KC
4
n 5) and "Bench P umme
Sp kes Clev 13 F sk 8os 2
6
LP-G u ett (6 4) HRs
Duncan C ev Mu cer NY Mo
gan
(8th
Re tz
4th
Bando and Tenace Oak
B
ock
3rd)
C
uz
6
h
Runs Batted In
Nat onal League Bench C n
On y games scheduled
48 Fe guson LA 47 Starge
Amer can League
P t 43 Bonds SF 42 0 ve
M w
0 2 500 002 10 5 I
p t 40
M
nn
100 0 0 03
6 22
A mer can league Mayberry
Parsons
Rye
son
(6)
Ga
d
KC 56
Jackson Oak 47
8
L nzy
8
and
Melton Ch 41 0 A len Ch ner
Rod guez
Kaat Go tz 4)
and Mu ce NY 37
Sir
ckland
(8)
Sande s (9) and
P tch ng
M
t
erwa
d
WPParsons (2 4
Nat onal League B yant SF
LP
Kaat
16
41
HRs- May
o 3 B ngham C n a 2
th) Ca ew (4th L s (3 dl
Su ton LA a 4 Os een LA and
On y games schedu ed
W se S L 7 3 Reuss Hou
Ma sha Mt and Seave NY
14
Amer can League Wood Ch
The Da1~
45
Ho tzman
Oak
3
S nger Ca 0 3 Co eman Det
05 Sp to If KC93

Sentmel

GET SET
FOR SUMMER

TIME FOR A

t,tzZtif·A
.............If.l" ;r~i

. Dream
tnsurance.

GET YOUR
PARTS AND
SUPPLIES HERE
Po nts Plugs
Exhaus Systems e c We
known b ands low p ces

MEIGS
AUTO PARTS
1 J W Second
992171

Pomeroy

Talre 'lock m -\.,.,.t&lt;a

Buy l S Sa\ tn!!s'Bnnds

to crumble•

Bare CUpboard
You start hollermg at your
general manager tell ng him
to get you some p tchers an

swered Scooendienst
I maglne
he added
that s what Sparky s domg
now
When third baseman Joe

Hague went on the diSabled
I st the Reds were fortunate
enough to have a 21 year-old
youngster I ke Dan Drtessen
battmg 409 at Ind anapollS and

Nastase humiliates opponent
ROME (UP!)
ThiS IS lJ e
Nastase year
First 11 was the French
tenn s t tie Then 11 was the
!tal an Title and a com
mand ng lead on the Com
mercia! Un on Grand Pnx
race
The second seeded
Roman an won the $16 000

men ssmgles t tie In the ltal1an
cham p1onsh p Monday
humtltallng defend ng
champ on Manuel Orantes of
Span
The ftrst set went &amp;-I The
second went 6-1 The third went
&amp;-I
Nastase who came onto the
court to Ute Jeers of local fans

Today's

Sport Parade
By M lion R clunan
U"l Sports Editor
OAKMONT Pa UP!) 'l'ho money IS one thong the pres! ge
s another and then there s someth ng else far more mportant
than both wh ch Tom We skopf f na11y 1s begmmng to rece ve
maybe a 1 ttle too late
They don t even have a label for what Tom WeiSkOpf ts gett ng
here for the f1rst t me at the Oakmont Country Club where the
u S Open beg1ns th1s Thursday
Perhaps 1l can best be descr bed as some spec al l ttle
delerence or extra b t of tegard bemg shown him by h1s fellow
playing pros In the past only t tans 1 ke Jack N cklaus I ee
Trev no and Arnold Pahner have been shown t
To be sure the pros always felt We skopf had the ab l ty and
was a good golfer but now Utey are startmg to wonder f he s
about ready to assume h s place among the great ones
Outs1de of Secretar at who doesn t really count because he s a
horse no one has been any hotter than Tom We skopf these past
few weeks
Back-to Back Victories
He won the Coloma! lnv tat on a month ago at Fort Worth
f n shed second m the Atlanta Classtc two weeks later and comes
up to this one wtth back-lo-back v clones n the Kemper Open
and Ph tadelph a Class c
The tall stra ght backed 3()-year-&lt;&gt;ld Wetskopf customar Iy
referred to as that other golfer from Columbus Oh o unt 1
now has won $117 145 on his last four tournaments and sta nds
Ut rd on th s year s money 1 st w1th a $151 867 total
But there IS somethmg more about Wetskopf now than the
money and the prestige
Maturtty says Chi Ch1 Rodr guez He used to be unmature
No more He has grown up
Art Wall puts 11 another way
l 11 tell you one thing about h m says Wall It sure looks
1 ke he has his m nd on what he s dotng now
He 11 Bux That
Tom We skopf buys that
He turned pro rune years ago and he has made a ruce ltVJng on
the tour m that t1me but he didn tactually get w th 11 at least not
m h1s own mmd unttlth s past March 14
That was the day hiS father d ed and that also could have been
the day Tom Weiskopf s entire thmldng changed S tt ng n front
of his locker before going out to play a few holes for the f rst t me
ever here at Oakmont he spoke about his father Monday
H s name was Torn the same as mme he had cancer for a
year and we knew he was go ng to die sa d Wetskopf
He was 60 years old and he hved for my ROlf I remember him
taking me to the US Open at Inverness when l was a k d He
wanted me to play golf and he d sacrif ce hiS vacat on h s bonus
money and other things merely to buy me eqwpment
The Biggest Booster
He was Tom We skopf s b ggest booster satd his son softly
evenly without any change 10 h1s vo1ce He d read the sports
page every morn ng and Jive and die w1th what I d1d but I felt I
Jet h m down a I tlle b 1 I never really felt I proved my
capab hiles n front of hun Oh sure he d see me on TV but this
past year 11 was hard for hun to get around so he couldn t come
see me play
He always told me you don t practice enough He d say
Tom f you d JUSt pract ce a blUe b t more you d be that much
better He wasn t cr t cal or anythmg 1 ke that but you know
how t s he was l ke any other father He just bel eved Tom
We skopf was the best golfer out there
As Tom WeiSkopf talked about h s father Monday some of IUs
fellow golfers walked by where he was s ttmg from tune to t me
and each had some form of greetmg
Good Going
Good go ng Tom sa d Dave H 11
Thank you Dave rephed We skopf
Then Bruce Crampton happened to pass
Well done he called out
Thank you Bruce answered WeiSkopf
One of the younger pros n the f eld here stopped n front of
We skopf looked h m up and down and then simply sa d
Wow
We skopf grmned a b t self-consc ously and shook the guy s
hand
I ve never won a major tournament sa d We skopf a b t
later and that s what they Judge you on I think I m a good
player but a great player IS one who w1ns the maJor lour
naments 1 st ll don t put myself m a class with N cklaus and
Trevmo They ve won the major ones That s the true test
Maybe Tom We skopf doesn t know t but he s passed a
greater test already

demolished Orantes w U a f ne
m xture of volleys and charges
on the net
The Spaniard won the f rst
set s open ng serve at love
Then the Roman an won 11
straight games completely
break ng Orantes w 11
By the th rd set play had
become so poor that the pub! c
at the Foro ltabco began to
wh stle and ca tca ll
Nastase who won h1s f rst
maJor tournament at Rome m
1970 f red the coup de grace on
his ftrst champ onshlp pomt
when Orames h t a backhand
w de
Earlier on the cham
p onsh p s clos ng day Tom
Okker of the Netherlands and
John Newcombe of Austral a
won lhe men s doubles t tle
defeallng two new young
Auss es Ross Case and Geoff
Masters 6-3 6 2 6-4
On Sunday Evonne Goola
gong of Austral a who d1d not
lose a s ng e set m the ent re
tournamen demo! shed Chr s
Evert of Fort Lauderdale Fla
7-IJ 6-0 to take t~e women s
s ngles t tic

Ch cago
Montreal
St Lou s.
P t sbu gh
New York
Ph ade ph •

w

I

3.&lt; 23
25 25
26 29

2,. 27
23 2'9

pd

They d keep me n the
dark Howe sa d And every
once n a while come m and
throw garbage on me
OffiCials of the Red W ngs m
Montreal for the NHL s Board
of Governors meetmg demed
Howe s charges he d dn t have
anyth ng to do n the runmng of
the hockey club and stated they
wanted hun to coni nue w th
thel1\
Charges of unfa1r treat
ment real or mag ned come
as a blow to Mr (Bruce A )
Norr sand all members of the
Red Wmgs nasmuch as
Gord e s br Il ant 25 year
pia) ng career earned for him
and his lam ly speetal status
Gord e d d not at any thne
exerc se h s prerogat ve to
devote more tune to hockey
dub management
a state
ment by the Red Wmgs sa d
I ca n t contrnue w th the
club working out of Olymp a
where the Red W ngs play)
any longer Howe sa d The
kindest th ng I cou ld do for the
Red W ngs r ght now s get the
hell out of the bu ld ng
The opportun ty to play w1th

e,,,

596
SOD

&lt;73

&lt;1\
442

5h New York

1
Oe1ro t
1
M wau~ee
8 3 6os on
Oh Ba. t more

C eve and

w I

pet

gb

30 2~ 536
29 26 S27

28
26
25
21
West

27 509
26 500
25 500
35 37S

~

1
2
2

9

wlp&lt;lgb
Ch cago
3 2 596
M nnesota
30 23 .566
Kansas( ty
J 28 525
Caona
2726509
Oak and
29 28 509
Texas
a 3~ 3.46
Monday s Results
M waukee 0 M nneso a 6
(On 'f game schedu ed)
Today s Probable P tche t
!All T mes EDT)
Texas
Brobe g 2 5) a
C eve and W cox 3 3) 6 30
pm

NewYok(Kne4S at
Oak and B ue 4 3)
pm
Boston Tan 6 6) a Ca
forma (Ryan 7 6
pm
M waukee
Be
6 6)
a
M nneso a
B y even 7 6
9
pm

Ch cago (Wood 14 5
a
Del o { F ·yman 2 6 9 p m
Kansas C ry (Busby 3 7 a
Ba t mo e (Pa me 6 4 7 JO

pm

Wednesday s Games
Texas a C eve and
New Yo k a Qak and n gh
Bos on a Ca fo n a n ght
M w a M nnesota n gfi
Ch cagoat De o n gh
Kan C y a Ba t mo e n gh

Weiskopf confident

SHOT IN ROBBERY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)
Jon E Tarantmo 36 the
und sputed master of fly
cast ng
was found shot to
death Monday n his family s
fish and poultry market
Tarantino was shot once in
the forehead on a robbery
pullce satd In I970 Tarantmo
held 12 world champtonshlps In
fly-cast ng

with NHL; WHA hound

ment

Ame ctn ltiQUt

g b

23 33 &lt;1
West
wtpctgb
San Franc sco 39 23 629
LosAnge es
36 23 6 0 1 .,
Houston
33 '17 S50 S
C nc nnat
3 26 544 5 2
At anla
2A 34 4 4
3
San 0 ego
20 39 339 7 h
Mond•y s ResuHs
San F anc sco 2 New Yo k
Los Ang 5 Ph ade ph a 3
At anta 9 P ttsbu gh 7
Sf Lou s 12 C nc .11
(On ygamesschedu ed)
Today s Problble P tchers
(All T mes EDT!
San 0 ego Ca dwe 3 7) at
Montre"l no ez 3 5} 8 p m
San F anc sea Mar cha 6 4)
at New York {Pa ke 4 0 o
McAndrew 3 4 8 p m
Ange es Messe sm th 6
eagerly awa hng an op 5) Los
at Ph adelph a ( Ca ton 6 1)
portumty to put on a major 7 30p m
P ttsburgh Wa ke 2 2) at
league uniform
AI anta Niekro 52 B p m
However when 1t comes to
St Lous (Ceveand 54) at
pttch ng the mmor league cup- C nc nnat (G ms ey 54) 8
pm
board s bare
Ch cago (Reuse he 6 4 !!It
lt all bolls down to the facl Houston ( Fo sch 6 5) 8 30 p m
that the Reds farm system
Wednesday s Games
Los
Ange
es at Ph a n ght
hasn t been qutte as produetive
San D ego at Mont ea n ght
as the club s brass would like San F an a New Yo k n ght
P tsbu ghat Atlan a n gh
one to believe
Only I ve on the 25-man ros
ter were s1gned during the re
gm e of General Manager Bob
Howsam wh ch began In Janu
ary 1967
OAKMONT Pa ( UPit Tom We1skopf no longer
SABRES LINE SIGNED
satlSf ed as easily as he once
MONTREAL (UP!) - The was bel eves he can cont nue
Buffalo Sabres of the National hts tornd pace of the past
Hockey League Monday an month n the U S Open
nounced the slgmngs of Champ onsh1p th s week
wmgers R1chard Martin and
What s more some of hls
Rene Robert to long term rovals beheve t too
co ntracts at undisclosed
salar es They Will rejoin the
1 ne s th rd member G 1 RICHARD STAYS
Perreault who has been under
MONTREAl (UP!) Henri
a lon g term ton tract smce Richard w II skate w Ut the
1972
Nahonal Hockey League Mont

Howe ends connection
By RICHARD E GOSSELIN
SOUTHFIELD M ch UP))
Gordie Howe hasn t of
fie ally s gned w1th the World
Hockey Assoc at on yet but
he s severed h1s '1:1 year tie
w th the Detro t Red Wmgs of
the National Hockey League
The 45-year-&lt;&gt;ld NHL Hall of
Farner sa d Monday n ght he s
90 per cent sure of slgmng
w lh the WHA team full 11 ng a
dream of playmg on the same
pro club w th h s two sons
Marty Howe 19 and Mark
Howe 18 were both recently
s gned by the Houston Aeros of
the WHA
I defln !ely think we 11 s gn
hm sad Jm Smth presi
dent of the Houston franchiSe
Howe res gned his v ce
pres dency w th the Red
w ngs tell ng the aud ence at a
dinner follow ng the f fth an
nual Gord e Howe Golf
Tournament that Detrmt gave
him the mushroom treat

S1 Lou s at C nc n ght
Ch cago at Houston n gh1

Ent

Slumping Reds bombed by Cards

Lead ng BaHers

Yes sn t t sa d East
as he produced the k ng
South s game slam and rub
ber had van shed m a puff
of smoke

We

Aaron socks No. 16, Braves win

h[s talented sons plus the lavtsh
treatment accorded the all
tune NHL sconng great were
what apparently made up h s
mind plus hiS feeling of bemg
neffeetuai In Detro t
l haven t s gned anythmg
yet Howe emphastzed But
Jt s a matter of lronmg out
r ghl now I m not really
severed but l can t work out of
there any more We 11 be
talking ser ous for the next day
or so
Its 00-10 right now
he
sad It looks Ike mne Is a
wayward loss as far as DetrOit
IS

concerned

BRUNDAGE TO WED
CHICAGO (UP!) - At 85
Avery Brundage the former
preSident of the International
Olymp c Committee will take
a 37 year-&lt;&gt;ld German princess
as hiS brtde
Th s 1s not a June
December wedd ng
Brun
dage told newsmen as he an
nounced h1s engagement to
Princess Mar ann Reuss
whose farmly once ruled a
small kingdom n what lS now
East Germany
The pr ncess and her lam ly
have I ved through a horrible
war and she s very mature for
her age
Brundage sa d
People say l am very young
for my age
No date has been set for the
wedding but Brundage said 11
will be m Germany probably
Bavar a and he hoped It w II
be th s summer
PLAYER OF WEEK
SAN FRANCISCO UP!) Wayne Twitchell of the Ph Ia
delphia Phtll es has been
named as NatiOnal League
Player of the Week for the
per od of June 4 10 t was
announced Monday by league
prestdent Charles S Feeney
Twitchell p tched two con
secutlVe sh utouts &lt;/Urmg the
week He blanked Houston 4-0
on seven h1ts June 5 and San
D ego 11-0 on a five h1tter June
10

real Canadiens next season but
t took the richest contract m
club htstory to keep h m from
the World Hockey AssoCillt on
Richard an 18-year veteran
with th e Canad ens signed a
two year contract w th the club
Monday which reportedly w ll
g ve h m more than $IOO 000 a
season
Canad1ens General Manager
Sam Pollock sa d we never
disclose salar es of our
players But he s the highest
pa d player we ve ever had
and he deserves It too
R c hard turned down a
$200 000 offer from the WHA
Houston Aeros to s1gn with
Montreal

NO WNGER BARRED
HARRISBURG Pa (UP!) No longer can women profes
s onal wrestlers and boxers be
barred tn Pennsylvan a
Deputy Attorney General
Edward T Steckel said
Monday state a Utlet c codes
barring women are un
constltutzonal
Steckel ssued the oplmon at
the request of Secretary of
State C Delores Tucker who 1s
m charge of adm mstermg the
bcens ng of boxers and wrest
Iers A rulmg from the Com
monweaith Court supportmg
steckel s opm10n read
To anyone who ever once
has vtewed women par
t c1pants n a roller derby the
argument that all women are
the weaker sex des rous of
only the more genteel work
cames little we ght

WeiSkopf often accused of
having the potent a! but not the
temperament to be a big
w rmer has won three of his
last four starts and fmlshed
second to Jack NICklaus m the
other
111ey used to say he had the
potent al of N ck laus but now
they say he s play ng like
N cklaus B Ily Casper put the
whole matter n perspective
N cklau s and We •kopf a re
10 strokes better !ban anyone
else n the f eldon th s course
Casper said They can get to
Ute par.SS and the long par-Is
and the rest of us I ave to
stram
Bruce Crampton who en
JOYed a streak l ke We skopf s
current one earlier th s year
but says he got mentally
tored bel eves Wetskopf may
have learned to I ve w th t
(winning)
For h s part the 31&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld
We skopf f gures he s wmnlng
now because he has set his
goals a l ttle h gher than he
sed to
In the past I was satisf ed
after I won a toW'nament he
sa d But the mark of a really
great player s that he keeps on
w nn ng Jack and Lee (TreVJ
no) do that and (Arnold
Palmer and Casper d d t when
they were wmnmg
Real sllcally he went on
l know l can t cont nue on this
pace but I don t see any reason
why l should be let down this
week e1ther

the wrong
GO..L!AM TO MANAGE
LOS ANGELES UPJ)
J1m G11l am a wearer of the
Dodger Blue for 20 years as
a player and a coach will
spend the wmter season of 197374 as the manager of Ute San
Juan team of the Puerto R can
League the Los Angeles club
announced Monday
After hts debut as a
manager he Will return to ille
Dodgers the following sprmg to
resume his coaching duties

tree~

A Homeowner Pol cy
from the Down ng
Ch Ids Agency w 11
cover most ace dental
struct on of land
scaped trees bushes
lawn See us today

DOWN ING-CiiiLOS
AGENCY, INC.
220 N 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

Hey, Gangl
Let s stop at Adolphs
Darry Valley for one
Of thetr deliCIOUS
sandwtches cones or
shakes

DAIRY VALLEY
At The End of Pomeroy BrJdge

�.

'

4- The DaUy Senttne;, Middleport-h.nroy, 0., June 12. 1973

Emprise charged with sports' influence p~yolas
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
o{flcers of Emprise.Sportservlce, Inc., world's largest
sports concessionaire, have
used money to make sure
public officials make decisions
favorable to them, the Dayton
Daily News reported today.
In the ninth and last article in
a cop)Tighted series, the Daily
News said Emprise has
donated generoU$1Y to politic~
campaigns, hired attorneys
with prestigous connections
and arranged for public of·

ing its hearings which delved

fjcials to make extra money in

mittee, the newspaper said .

dealings with firms controlled
by Emprise.
fn return, Emprtse expected
cooperation in obtaining liquor
permits, racing licenses and
concession contracts at
publicly owned stadiums and
arenas, the newspaper said.
Max Jacobs, son of the

Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
then chairman of the Republican National Committee, noted
that J acobs, who inherited
leadership of Emprise from his
father, was not recalled to
testify . Dole also said there
were "unconfirmed reports of
large amounts of cash flowing
through ES and its s ubsidiaries into the McGovern

Emprise

founder,

Louis

into Emprise dealings , Jeremy

Jacobs had a visit in Buffalo,
N.Y., from McGovern's national

campaign

director,

Lawrence O'Brien , the Daily
News said . ·

The timing of the visit led to
Republican charges that
O'Brien may have been
seeking campaign funds in
return for an implied promise

and had " absolutely no
knowl edge of congressional
activity relahng to Emprise
Corp." But he failed to say
what he and Jacobs did
discuss, the Daily News said.
Rep . Claude Pepper, D-Fla.,
chairman of the House committee, said he never talked to
O'Brien about Emprise and
that the hearings had never

been firmly scheduled to interest," Rep. Sam Steiger,
resume.
R-Ariz., had told the crime
committee .
E;mprise wets scrutinzed
The committee also was tllld
after it and several Mafia of an alleged $10,000 cash
rigw-es were convicted last contrib ution to the late
year of conspiring to conceal Louisiana Gov. Ea rl K, Long in
the ownership of a Las Vegas 1959, two $5,000 payments to a
casino .
one·time chairman or the~
"They intimidate, they bribe Louisiana Re~cing Commission
and they promote conflicts of and a $300,000 lobbying fund set

He and the others unlocked
the webbing and released the
animals.

03
SIZE
650x1S
700x 1S
600x 16
6S0x16
700x16
750x 16
70h17

75h 11
700x18

7-11 .5
8-11 . 5

$26 .39
$28 .80
126.95
127.93
129.72
$26 . 45
$42 .45
$48.36
.$47.35
$39.60
Ill. 59

PRICE

TAX

6501: 15•
70h15
600x16
650x 16
700x 16
750xl6
7-'17.5

533.64
535.71
$30.71
$35.49
$36.88
$45.48
$41.57
550.49

$.2.89
$3 .33
$2.63
$2 .94
$3.31
14.12
$3.57

8 ~17. 5

•

DANNY RICHMOND, 11 , and Mark Richmond, 14,
Hutland, ca ught five trout and three catiish in the fish and
game associa tion fishing derby Saturday.

'Youngsters fish

GROUND
BEEF
.SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

' ..

Any

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. "We Reserve The Rlght To Umlt Quantities"

•

Amount

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

lb.

SUPERIOR'S

SUMMER

SWEEPSTAKES

Dave Hysell singled in the
winning run in the sixth inning
for a come-from-behind 6-5
victory by the Mets over tl1e
Reds in Middleport Boys ,
League action Monday .
In the other game the Braves

upended the Indians 12-2 to
remain undefef!,led and hand
the Indians their first loss.
Dickie Herman started on
the mound for the Me.ts and
was relieved by Gregg Becker
in the second inning with two

event.

COVER PICTURE - Frank Girolami, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guido Girolami, was on the
cover of the Bowling Green state University 1972 Falcon Marching Band Album. The band is
directed by MarkS. Kelly and Jon R. Piersol. Frank will be a Junior at Bowling Green next
fall. He is a graduate of Meigs High School.

One Each Month!

A Year·s Supply of Meat
For a Family of Four

FRESH

(retail value $700')

TIRE ·STORES

Two Boards meet

Property
Transfers

North Gallia's Local Board
of Education Monday night
awarded a service contract for
typewriters
and
office
machines to Superior Office
Supply of Huntington. Francis
CottriU was granted a contract
to. furnish coal at Bidwell and
Vinton Elementary Schools.
The board receive.d no bids
for fuel oil, so Clerk Ruth
. Evans was authorized to
readvertise.
Donald Palmer and Harley
Denney, representing the E'lo
Grange, surrendered itklease
on the old Eno School Building.
The grange had leased the
building five years, but is now
moving intO another ·structure.
The ·board granted Howard
Ne.ekamp permission to con·
tinue his adult education
classes in July; granted Jon
Birkhold a one week's leave of
absence due to his military
commitment, and accepted the
resignaion of Dorothy Hall, an
educational aide. The board
will meet June 29 in a recessed

HAVE DAUGHTER
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Trout, Columbus, are
meet current expenses and announcing the adoption of a
daughter ,
payroll for the past five four-month-old
Tanya Renee. Grandparents
months.
are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trout
In contrast to reports in out
of town newspapers, the and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
district is not as wealthy as Roush, Columbus. Mr. and
some are being led to believe. Mrs. Owen Watson, Racine,
· On paper, the district may be and the late Mr. and Mrs.
the third richest in the state, Arthur Roush, Salem· Center'·
according to pupil evaluation, are gre ..t-grandparents .
but that money .is not available Another great-grandmother
-resides in Coshocton .
to the board.
The board is considering
legal advice from the Ohio
Attorney General's Office to
determine why local officials
have had such a delay in
getting their funds releaseq.
In other action, the board
discussed the. use of its high
school .baseball diamond. The
board ·decided to limit the
mrm~RifiiB.
diamond's use to teams in the
school district and its residents
only.
' '
During a long exec~tive
session, the board interviewed
candidates for the district's
Hard to believe but three key administrative
Robert Merr ill of Crane,
}X&gt;sitions, local Superintendent,
Missouri, was out hunting
high school principal and
on October 16, 1931, when
elementary principal.
he tripped and felL The
r ifl e in his hand e~ploded
The board will interview
and a .22 ca liber bullet tore
additional applicants Friday
through hi s side. The bullet
evening. Persormel will be
performed a neat apemployed during a special
pendectomy-s hearing off
Mr . M errill' s appendix
meeting next Monday.
"c lean as a whistle," , ..

Thurston Stone, Jr., Phyllis
Stone, Lawrence B. Stone,
Phyllis Stone, Robert c..Stone,
Marjorie Stone, ' Richard E.
1 R . D.
Stone, Ne1a
l. E . s·1ger,
Sigler, Thomas o. Stone,
Karen K. Rupe, Bob·
by J . nupe to Donaid L. Moore, Betty I.
Moore, Parcels, Salisbury.
Howard E. Frank, Ruth B.
Frank to General Telephone
Co., Ease ., Sutton .
Ellen Wilson II&gt; Maxine M.
Phillips, Virgil P. Phillips, Lot
No . 170, . Dabney'S Add. ;
Pomeroy.
Bernard V. Fultz, Adm.,
Ethel Chevalier , dec. to John
Hensley, Garnett Hensley,
Parcels, Olive.
Roberta E. Pullen to Susan
E. Poole, Stephen R. Pullen,
Stephanie M. Pullen, Lot,
,Middleport.
Chester Johnson, Margaret
Johnson to
Estel Johnston
.
session.
Reva Johnson, 4 Acres, Salem.
KCBOARD
Jerry L. Cline, Phyllis M,
The Kyger Creek Board of
Cline to Robert We Fellure,
Education Monday night in
Parcels, Scipio.
special session employed
Melvin Guy Drake, Marjorie
Vickie Kelley as lifeguard at
the KC Swimming Pool.. The
board also voted to borrow
Joe Fleishman of Jackson,
more money to meet its June
M
ich igan. was smoking a
payroll.
pi pe whi le fixing a t ire . The
According to clerk Doris
IS ACCEPTED
tube ex ploded in his face,
on and nobody out. Becker Roush, the county auditor's
dri v ing the pipestem deeP
Diane Milliron, daughter of
fanned the side and held the office does not have the first
into hi s throat . The stem
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Miliron
Reds to one more run. The half real estate tax settlement
perform ed a perfect ton .
Rt. 1, Middleport, has bee~
s_ilectomy , seve ring the
Reds had gotten four off available. Kyger Creek's
accepted at Hocking Technical
vittiin's di seased tonsils
Herman in the first Inning,
Board of Education has been Institute at Nelsonville in the
· with ·surg icat precision .
Dave Wilcox wen tall the way forced to borrow money to
Find · it hard to bel ieve
school of practical nursing and
for the Reds, fanning 11, and
that
you can have water
will begin her studies there in
walking 7 batters. Herman
today th at's as crystal
September. Miss Milliron is
clear as mountain water ?
fanned two, walked three and Hope Drake to Charles F .
presently
employed at Mc. . . not if you have
Wagner,
Aletha
J
.
Wagner,
hit one in his full inning.
REFINED WATER . "See
Clure's Dairy Isle. She is a 1972
Becker fanned nine, wall :.:1 Parcels, Lebanon.
the
diff erence- Smell the
Charles R. Karr, Jr., Mildred . graduate of Meigs High School.
four, and hit home.
difference Taste the
differen ce F ee l the
Met hitters were Gregg L. Karr, Richard B. Bailey,
difference" . There is
Tyree , Becker, Herman and Doris J . Bailey to General
"nothing else like if" - th e
RECEIVES TRAINING ·
Hysell, each a single. For the Telephone Co., Ease., Chester.
wa ter r efin ing appliance
Don Mayer of the Ma,ver and
Reds, John Stewart, Mark
from ~82· 2525.
.
Hill
Barber Shop, 120 E. Main
Magnotta, Rick Blevins and
·wiLDCAT STRIKE
·St.,
Pomeroy, received
Trent May had singles.
CANTON, Ohio (UP!
training on June 10 on cutiin~,
Mets
010 113-6 4
Supervisory
personnel
bec'ame
fitting
and styling men 's
400 011&gt;--5 4
Reds
882 .2 525
Hermar., Becker (2) (WP) telephone operators Monday hairpieces at the Mid-Ohio New
New J.ta ven, W. Va .
when
some
95
employes
staged
Man
Hair
Pieces
Co.
in
and Mowery. Wilcox and T.
a wildcat strike at Ohio Bell Columbus.
May.
Telephone Co .
The operators, members of 'I ••••••••••••••••••·-~
Local 4303, Communications
. Workers of America claimed
RETURNS HOME
--- Mrs. Ronald Mullins has they Were asked to work overbeen returl:]ed to her residence time during peak periods in
at Middleport Village Hall, violation of their contract.
( (1/l)l'lllt'/ll
where she assists with police
dispatching work, following CHURCH CHANGE
surgery at the Holzer Medical
CANTON, Ohio (UP! - The
Center. Mrs. Mullins ' sister The United Methodist Church
I
Mrs . Brenda Sue Fitch and son:· has choSfl\ Rev. Paul C. Bailey
i
Tommy Michael, of Ft. Lewis, of Norwalk--to be the YoungsTacoma , Wash., have arrived tOwn District superintendent.
ONDsour&gt;.iRN
_c:MPONV)
and will be here for six weeks
Bailey, senior minister at the
wi 1h Mrs. Fitch II&gt; assist in the First United Methodist Church,
care of Mrs. Mullins during her
succeeds
. Forrest
G. Nees, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • recuperation .
who will Rev
be reass
igned.

.

(

It' ilt•,J/thtt

WITH AGlfl fROM
RALL'S

BEN
FRANKLIN
M

3 BIG DRAWINGS
One Each Mon lh .. . June, July, Augu st

lb.

~OL[Ji/ieus

OHIO~~ECTRJC

·HOME MADE

HOME MADE

lONGHORN

SUPERIORS "DARf'

SAUSAGE

HAM SALAD

CHEESE

SLIC. BACON

RC COLA

' Meigs

SAYRE
HARDWARE

S4.39

Purchase
Is
Necessary

GRAND PRlZE WINNERS

BONELESS

Bob Louks and Roy Arms of the
fish and game association were
in charge of the Saturday

.

No

THREE

lb.

PORK
ROAsT

J. D TAYWRofGalllpoUs
Route 1 caught the largest
trout, · 13lfz inches, at. the
fishing derby of the Meigs
County Fish and Game
Association held In Rutland
Saturday.

Mets edge Reds 6-5 in Middleport

POMEROY

USDA Choice Beef

USDA Choice - Lean and Tender

The Electric Climate

E. MAIN ST.

Picnic and Barbecue
Time Special

PORK
STEAK

Boat Landing, said the stables
"Were just ·one huge orange
ball of fire. "
Pete Hayhurs.t, a groom who
said the fire apparently started
in the tack room of Barn 4,
said , "I first smelled smoke
and then saw the b;un on fire."
He said he tried to rescue
some of the horses there, but
they ran back into the barn.
"We couldn't get them out ," he
MARTY INGELS, 13, and Chris Ingels, 10, Ra vensWood,
said .
W.Va., were among the top fishermen Saturday in a fishing
· Firemen were hampered by
derby
conducted by the Meigs County Fish and Game
the loose horses, one of whom
Association held at Rutland.
struck an&lt;j injured one of the
firefigh~ers . Two 'other firemen
also were injlU'ed in fighting
the blaze.
The four destroyed barns
were among 40 at the tra ck.
Although they were wooden,
the newer stables are conFifty-eight young fishing
Door . prizes went to Eric
structed mostly of concrete. enthusiasts attended a trout Lipscomb, Hemlock Grove;
About 1,200 horses were derby Saturday at the Rutland Scott Bartrum, Pomeroy ;
housed in the 40 barns and American Legion Farm lake Keith Brogan, Rutland ; Calsome had raced earlier in the under the sponsorship of the vin
Ferren,
Rutland ;
afternoon. Today's card was Meigs County Fish and Game Scott Taylor, Gallipolis Route
canceled but River Downs AssoCiation.
1; Rciy Bar~rwn ,· Pomeroy ;
General Manager Ken Plattner
All of the enthusiasts were 15 Randy Arms, Minersville; B.
said he expected racing to or under. Combined, they Brogan, Rutlandi B. K. Arms,
resume Wednesday.
r:aught· 93 trout and 24 catfish. Minersville , and Daniel Staley,
The largest trout caught, 131&gt; Gallipolis. ·
Inches, was by J . D. Taylor,
The Pomeroy National Bank,
Gallipolis Rt. 1, while the Rutland Branch, donated
smallest was a bass-3% inches candy bars; the Rutland
long caught by Ricky Basham, Department Store, potato
Langsville . The largest trout chips; Archie 's Recreation
caught by 9 a. m. during the Center, k-e qeam for the
first hour of the contest, was a outing with the Meigs County
tie with Rarldy Wright, Mason, Fish and Game Associa tion
W. Va ., and Don Richmond, providing the trout, the door
Rutland, catching 13 inch fish . prizes and the cash awards.
All of the above received cash The Rutland American Legion
prizes.
operated a concession stand.

POMEROY ·HOME &amp; AUTO

PICK ONE Of THESE UP AT MARK V TODAY

USDA Choice - Lean and Tender

Mrs. Sam Luckett, who saw
th e fire from nea rby Luckett's

TAX
52.40
52 .80
52 .33
52 .58
52 .85
53.69
53 .21
54 .16
13.78
13 .23
$3 ,68

Sl ZE"

two doubles and a single, Eric
Dunning had two singles, Steve
Hendricks a triple, and Gregg
Dunning a.single off Ebersbach
who worked early and
Magnotta who came on in the
fifth.
Ebersbach fanned one and
Magnotta five, and both
together walked eight.
Middleport A 000 100 1- 2 2 1
020 103 x--6 7 0
Racine
Ebersbach, Magnotta (S)
and Berry. Riffie and Dunning,
Huffman (7).

questioning before the com·

Haulslar
PRICE

RACINE - The Racine Pony
baseball lean defeated the
Middleport A club here
Monday in a makeup game &amp;-2
on the seven hit pitching of Jim
Riffle, the first lefty to come
along in this baseball-minded
community since the days of
Larry Price a half-decade ago.
Riffle fanned 10, walked six
in hiS first pony start of his
career. Only Mike Magnotta
and Ebersbach touched him for
a single each.
Mea nwhile , Riffle socked

have to retur.n for further

Nine horses die
in blaze at RD

mass hyster'ia.''

The Daily News also said the
huge conglomerate has been
accused of trying to improperly influence public officials in Arizona and New
Mexico, where it owned dog
and horse tracks.

that Jeremy Jacobs would not

Jacobs, told the House Select
Committee on Crime last year campaign.''
he had made dozens of political
A spokesman for the
contributions in the previous Republican Natio nal Comtwo years, including to the mittee said later, however,
campaigns of Sens. Henry that only three contributions
Jackson, Hubert H. Humphrey were fou nd from the Jacobscs
and George McGovern, three to McGovern, the largest being
Democrats who were seeking $2,000.
O'Brien called Dole's acthe Democratic nomination for
cusations ''a desperate and
President in 1972.
Last September, while the despi ca~le lie ." He said he
House ·committee was conduct- solicited no campaign funds

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Nine
Thoroughbred race horses died
In their stalls Monday night
when a multiple-alarm fire
leveled four wooden stables at
River Downs Race Track.
More than 80 other panicked
horses were rescued. They
scattered about the huge
complex here and onto public
streets and were still being
rounded up early today.
The cause of the blaze, which
broke out about 9 p.m. (EDT),
was not immediately determined, although a groom told
fire officials he believed it
began in the tack room of one
of the barns.
Damage to the barns, built in
1937, was estimated at $70,000.
Jockey's agent Tom Clark,
. 30, was one of the first to spot
the fire. He and three friends
were passing by the track on
motorcycles at the time and
gained access to the stables by
climbing over a fence.
"The horses were going
crazy," Clark said. "There was

up in 196!i by Emprise to
promote night harness racing
in california.

Racine wins Pony game

~-The Dail Sentinel, Middleport, Pomeroy, O.,JW1e 12, 1973

i

lb.

79e

PAK
16 oz.

By The

89e

lb.

lb:

Piece

12 oz.

89e

pkg.

69e

SPECIAL DAIRY AND FROZEN FOOD BPYS.
SCOT PRIDE

}/OUf'IJ
lor
--;~=::t CHEESE .
•
LOVERS .

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Beer

,..__.,.,

COTIAGE
CHEESE

16 oz. bots.

FAIRMONT

8
pilk

BANQUET

ICE
MILK

TV DINNERS

9~

each
only

(VANILLA)

gallon

"{)Vy the BeSIIJf ,00"

lge. 30 OZ,
carton

.

69 ~.
Fairmont

Choc.
Milk

ON SALE ALL WEEK LON.G l

Coca-Col
Big 32 oz. bots.

FAIRMONT
FUDGE
12
BARS
pk.

Returnable Bottle

FAYGO POP
6 Varieties of Regular
and
4 of Sugar Free

FAVORITE
BREAD

bots.

STRAW·
BERRIES

·310bxs.oz.$1

79
..

LITTLE CIGARS
•
Salisbury Steak &amp; Gravy
MORTON H0 U 5 EePork &amp; Gravy 59~
• Beef &amp; Gravy
can
FOODS REGULAR 79'
MARK V PRICE

SARA LEE

ORANGE
PLUS

FISH
STICKS

POUND
CAKE

9 oz.
can

49¢

l~b.
box

79~

ea.

REGULAR 59e

59¢
poly bag
10 pak

POTATO CHIPS

•

w;1h
Coupon

Good On1r ill M.ult V
Um1 l I Coupon
Per Cus tomer

VALUABLE COUPON

J

32 fl. Ol. [l

KING SIZE . ·

!:!Y

~~~~MARK
.

qi.i

AT

7-6-;

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WITH THII COUPON

PRICE

WITHOUT
J

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LIMIT 1 COUPON PER PURCHAS E

crt.

BOOTH'S

bag

ST. J_OS.EPH
36 ct.
BABY ASPIRIN o1scouN~ PRI~E ,bot.
SAPS CREAM
pkg.4· s~
only
BISMARKS
Winchester or Derringer

BIRDS EYE

MR. BEE

lvs.
for

MARK V PRICE

QUEEN OF
SCOT

49'

PLENTY OF
ON·STREET
FREE PARKING
AFTER 5 PM

1f2 ql

6 ct.

POPSICLES

$1

3
quarts

C·

NORTH STAR

WITH THIS CO!JPON WHEN

YOU BUY A_l5 .OZ. JAR OF

.
'1111111
M

IXIELL HOUSE.
COFFEE

AT MARK V SUPER MARKET __

5

OZ. JAR ONLY$

59

79~

�.

'

4- The DaUy Senttne;, Middleport-h.nroy, 0., June 12. 1973

Emprise charged with sports' influence p~yolas
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
o{flcers of Emprise.Sportservlce, Inc., world's largest
sports concessionaire, have
used money to make sure
public officials make decisions
favorable to them, the Dayton
Daily News reported today.
In the ninth and last article in
a cop)Tighted series, the Daily
News said Emprise has
donated generoU$1Y to politic~
campaigns, hired attorneys
with prestigous connections
and arranged for public of·

ing its hearings which delved

fjcials to make extra money in

mittee, the newspaper said .

dealings with firms controlled
by Emprise.
fn return, Emprtse expected
cooperation in obtaining liquor
permits, racing licenses and
concession contracts at
publicly owned stadiums and
arenas, the newspaper said.
Max Jacobs, son of the

Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
then chairman of the Republican National Committee, noted
that J acobs, who inherited
leadership of Emprise from his
father, was not recalled to
testify . Dole also said there
were "unconfirmed reports of
large amounts of cash flowing
through ES and its s ubsidiaries into the McGovern

Emprise

founder,

Louis

into Emprise dealings , Jeremy

Jacobs had a visit in Buffalo,
N.Y., from McGovern's national

campaign

director,

Lawrence O'Brien , the Daily
News said . ·

The timing of the visit led to
Republican charges that
O'Brien may have been
seeking campaign funds in
return for an implied promise

and had " absolutely no
knowl edge of congressional
activity relahng to Emprise
Corp." But he failed to say
what he and Jacobs did
discuss, the Daily News said.
Rep . Claude Pepper, D-Fla.,
chairman of the House committee, said he never talked to
O'Brien about Emprise and
that the hearings had never

been firmly scheduled to interest," Rep. Sam Steiger,
resume.
R-Ariz., had told the crime
committee .
E;mprise wets scrutinzed
The committee also was tllld
after it and several Mafia of an alleged $10,000 cash
rigw-es were convicted last contrib ution to the late
year of conspiring to conceal Louisiana Gov. Ea rl K, Long in
the ownership of a Las Vegas 1959, two $5,000 payments to a
casino .
one·time chairman or the~
"They intimidate, they bribe Louisiana Re~cing Commission
and they promote conflicts of and a $300,000 lobbying fund set

He and the others unlocked
the webbing and released the
animals.

03
SIZE
650x1S
700x 1S
600x 16
6S0x16
700x16
750x 16
70h17

75h 11
700x18

7-11 .5
8-11 . 5

$26 .39
$28 .80
126.95
127.93
129.72
$26 . 45
$42 .45
$48.36
.$47.35
$39.60
Ill. 59

PRICE

TAX

6501: 15•
70h15
600x16
650x 16
700x 16
750xl6
7-'17.5

533.64
535.71
$30.71
$35.49
$36.88
$45.48
$41.57
550.49

$.2.89
$3 .33
$2.63
$2 .94
$3.31
14.12
$3.57

8 ~17. 5

•

DANNY RICHMOND, 11 , and Mark Richmond, 14,
Hutland, ca ught five trout and three catiish in the fish and
game associa tion fishing derby Saturday.

'Youngsters fish

GROUND
BEEF
.SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

' ..

Any

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. "We Reserve The Rlght To Umlt Quantities"

•

Amount

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

lb.

SUPERIOR'S

SUMMER

SWEEPSTAKES

Dave Hysell singled in the
winning run in the sixth inning
for a come-from-behind 6-5
victory by the Mets over tl1e
Reds in Middleport Boys ,
League action Monday .
In the other game the Braves

upended the Indians 12-2 to
remain undefef!,led and hand
the Indians their first loss.
Dickie Herman started on
the mound for the Me.ts and
was relieved by Gregg Becker
in the second inning with two

event.

COVER PICTURE - Frank Girolami, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guido Girolami, was on the
cover of the Bowling Green state University 1972 Falcon Marching Band Album. The band is
directed by MarkS. Kelly and Jon R. Piersol. Frank will be a Junior at Bowling Green next
fall. He is a graduate of Meigs High School.

One Each Month!

A Year·s Supply of Meat
For a Family of Four

FRESH

(retail value $700')

TIRE ·STORES

Two Boards meet

Property
Transfers

North Gallia's Local Board
of Education Monday night
awarded a service contract for
typewriters
and
office
machines to Superior Office
Supply of Huntington. Francis
CottriU was granted a contract
to. furnish coal at Bidwell and
Vinton Elementary Schools.
The board receive.d no bids
for fuel oil, so Clerk Ruth
. Evans was authorized to
readvertise.
Donald Palmer and Harley
Denney, representing the E'lo
Grange, surrendered itklease
on the old Eno School Building.
The grange had leased the
building five years, but is now
moving intO another ·structure.
The ·board granted Howard
Ne.ekamp permission to con·
tinue his adult education
classes in July; granted Jon
Birkhold a one week's leave of
absence due to his military
commitment, and accepted the
resignaion of Dorothy Hall, an
educational aide. The board
will meet June 29 in a recessed

HAVE DAUGHTER
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Trout, Columbus, are
meet current expenses and announcing the adoption of a
daughter ,
payroll for the past five four-month-old
Tanya Renee. Grandparents
months.
are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trout
In contrast to reports in out
of town newspapers, the and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
district is not as wealthy as Roush, Columbus. Mr. and
some are being led to believe. Mrs. Owen Watson, Racine,
· On paper, the district may be and the late Mr. and Mrs.
the third richest in the state, Arthur Roush, Salem· Center'·
according to pupil evaluation, are gre ..t-grandparents .
but that money .is not available Another great-grandmother
-resides in Coshocton .
to the board.
The board is considering
legal advice from the Ohio
Attorney General's Office to
determine why local officials
have had such a delay in
getting their funds releaseq.
In other action, the board
discussed the. use of its high
school .baseball diamond. The
board ·decided to limit the
mrm~RifiiB.
diamond's use to teams in the
school district and its residents
only.
' '
During a long exec~tive
session, the board interviewed
candidates for the district's
Hard to believe but three key administrative
Robert Merr ill of Crane,
}X&gt;sitions, local Superintendent,
Missouri, was out hunting
high school principal and
on October 16, 1931, when
elementary principal.
he tripped and felL The
r ifl e in his hand e~ploded
The board will interview
and a .22 ca liber bullet tore
additional applicants Friday
through hi s side. The bullet
evening. Persormel will be
performed a neat apemployed during a special
pendectomy-s hearing off
Mr . M errill' s appendix
meeting next Monday.
"c lean as a whistle," , ..

Thurston Stone, Jr., Phyllis
Stone, Lawrence B. Stone,
Phyllis Stone, Robert c..Stone,
Marjorie Stone, ' Richard E.
1 R . D.
Stone, Ne1a
l. E . s·1ger,
Sigler, Thomas o. Stone,
Karen K. Rupe, Bob·
by J . nupe to Donaid L. Moore, Betty I.
Moore, Parcels, Salisbury.
Howard E. Frank, Ruth B.
Frank to General Telephone
Co., Ease ., Sutton .
Ellen Wilson II&gt; Maxine M.
Phillips, Virgil P. Phillips, Lot
No . 170, . Dabney'S Add. ;
Pomeroy.
Bernard V. Fultz, Adm.,
Ethel Chevalier , dec. to John
Hensley, Garnett Hensley,
Parcels, Olive.
Roberta E. Pullen to Susan
E. Poole, Stephen R. Pullen,
Stephanie M. Pullen, Lot,
,Middleport.
Chester Johnson, Margaret
Johnson to
Estel Johnston
.
session.
Reva Johnson, 4 Acres, Salem.
KCBOARD
Jerry L. Cline, Phyllis M,
The Kyger Creek Board of
Cline to Robert We Fellure,
Education Monday night in
Parcels, Scipio.
special session employed
Melvin Guy Drake, Marjorie
Vickie Kelley as lifeguard at
the KC Swimming Pool.. The
board also voted to borrow
Joe Fleishman of Jackson,
more money to meet its June
M
ich igan. was smoking a
payroll.
pi pe whi le fixing a t ire . The
According to clerk Doris
IS ACCEPTED
tube ex ploded in his face,
on and nobody out. Becker Roush, the county auditor's
dri v ing the pipestem deeP
Diane Milliron, daughter of
fanned the side and held the office does not have the first
into hi s throat . The stem
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Miliron
Reds to one more run. The half real estate tax settlement
perform ed a perfect ton .
Rt. 1, Middleport, has bee~
s_ilectomy , seve ring the
Reds had gotten four off available. Kyger Creek's
accepted at Hocking Technical
vittiin's di seased tonsils
Herman in the first Inning,
Board of Education has been Institute at Nelsonville in the
· with ·surg icat precision .
Dave Wilcox wen tall the way forced to borrow money to
Find · it hard to bel ieve
school of practical nursing and
for the Reds, fanning 11, and
that
you can have water
will begin her studies there in
walking 7 batters. Herman
today th at's as crystal
September. Miss Milliron is
clear as mountain water ?
fanned two, walked three and Hope Drake to Charles F .
presently
employed at Mc. . . not if you have
Wagner,
Aletha
J
.
Wagner,
hit one in his full inning.
REFINED WATER . "See
Clure's Dairy Isle. She is a 1972
Becker fanned nine, wall :.:1 Parcels, Lebanon.
the
diff erence- Smell the
Charles R. Karr, Jr., Mildred . graduate of Meigs High School.
four, and hit home.
difference Taste the
differen ce F ee l the
Met hitters were Gregg L. Karr, Richard B. Bailey,
difference" . There is
Tyree , Becker, Herman and Doris J . Bailey to General
"nothing else like if" - th e
RECEIVES TRAINING ·
Hysell, each a single. For the Telephone Co., Ease., Chester.
wa ter r efin ing appliance
Don Mayer of the Ma,ver and
Reds, John Stewart, Mark
from ~82· 2525.
.
Hill
Barber Shop, 120 E. Main
Magnotta, Rick Blevins and
·wiLDCAT STRIKE
·St.,
Pomeroy, received
Trent May had singles.
CANTON, Ohio (UP!
training on June 10 on cutiin~,
Mets
010 113-6 4
Supervisory
personnel
bec'ame
fitting
and styling men 's
400 011&gt;--5 4
Reds
882 .2 525
Hermar., Becker (2) (WP) telephone operators Monday hairpieces at the Mid-Ohio New
New J.ta ven, W. Va .
when
some
95
employes
staged
Man
Hair
Pieces
Co.
in
and Mowery. Wilcox and T.
a wildcat strike at Ohio Bell Columbus.
May.
Telephone Co .
The operators, members of 'I ••••••••••••••••••·-~
Local 4303, Communications
. Workers of America claimed
RETURNS HOME
--- Mrs. Ronald Mullins has they Were asked to work overbeen returl:]ed to her residence time during peak periods in
at Middleport Village Hall, violation of their contract.
( (1/l)l'lllt'/ll
where she assists with police
dispatching work, following CHURCH CHANGE
surgery at the Holzer Medical
CANTON, Ohio (UP! - The
Center. Mrs. Mullins ' sister The United Methodist Church
I
Mrs . Brenda Sue Fitch and son:· has choSfl\ Rev. Paul C. Bailey
i
Tommy Michael, of Ft. Lewis, of Norwalk--to be the YoungsTacoma , Wash., have arrived tOwn District superintendent.
ONDsour&gt;.iRN
_c:MPONV)
and will be here for six weeks
Bailey, senior minister at the
wi 1h Mrs. Fitch II&gt; assist in the First United Methodist Church,
care of Mrs. Mullins during her
succeeds
. Forrest
G. Nees, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • recuperation .
who will Rev
be reass
igned.

.

(

It' ilt•,J/thtt

WITH AGlfl fROM
RALL'S

BEN
FRANKLIN
M

3 BIG DRAWINGS
One Each Mon lh .. . June, July, Augu st

lb.

~OL[Ji/ieus

OHIO~~ECTRJC

·HOME MADE

HOME MADE

lONGHORN

SUPERIORS "DARf'

SAUSAGE

HAM SALAD

CHEESE

SLIC. BACON

RC COLA

' Meigs

SAYRE
HARDWARE

S4.39

Purchase
Is
Necessary

GRAND PRlZE WINNERS

BONELESS

Bob Louks and Roy Arms of the
fish and game association were
in charge of the Saturday

.

No

THREE

lb.

PORK
ROAsT

J. D TAYWRofGalllpoUs
Route 1 caught the largest
trout, · 13lfz inches, at. the
fishing derby of the Meigs
County Fish and Game
Association held In Rutland
Saturday.

Mets edge Reds 6-5 in Middleport

POMEROY

USDA Choice Beef

USDA Choice - Lean and Tender

The Electric Climate

E. MAIN ST.

Picnic and Barbecue
Time Special

PORK
STEAK

Boat Landing, said the stables
"Were just ·one huge orange
ball of fire. "
Pete Hayhurs.t, a groom who
said the fire apparently started
in the tack room of Barn 4,
said , "I first smelled smoke
and then saw the b;un on fire."
He said he tried to rescue
some of the horses there, but
they ran back into the barn.
"We couldn't get them out ," he
MARTY INGELS, 13, and Chris Ingels, 10, Ra vensWood,
said .
W.Va., were among the top fishermen Saturday in a fishing
· Firemen were hampered by
derby
conducted by the Meigs County Fish and Game
the loose horses, one of whom
Association held at Rutland.
struck an&lt;j injured one of the
firefigh~ers . Two 'other firemen
also were injlU'ed in fighting
the blaze.
The four destroyed barns
were among 40 at the tra ck.
Although they were wooden,
the newer stables are conFifty-eight young fishing
Door . prizes went to Eric
structed mostly of concrete. enthusiasts attended a trout Lipscomb, Hemlock Grove;
About 1,200 horses were derby Saturday at the Rutland Scott Bartrum, Pomeroy ;
housed in the 40 barns and American Legion Farm lake Keith Brogan, Rutland ; Calsome had raced earlier in the under the sponsorship of the vin
Ferren,
Rutland ;
afternoon. Today's card was Meigs County Fish and Game Scott Taylor, Gallipolis Route
canceled but River Downs AssoCiation.
1; Rciy Bar~rwn ,· Pomeroy ;
General Manager Ken Plattner
All of the enthusiasts were 15 Randy Arms, Minersville; B.
said he expected racing to or under. Combined, they Brogan, Rutlandi B. K. Arms,
resume Wednesday.
r:aught· 93 trout and 24 catfish. Minersville , and Daniel Staley,
The largest trout caught, 131&gt; Gallipolis. ·
Inches, was by J . D. Taylor,
The Pomeroy National Bank,
Gallipolis Rt. 1, while the Rutland Branch, donated
smallest was a bass-3% inches candy bars; the Rutland
long caught by Ricky Basham, Department Store, potato
Langsville . The largest trout chips; Archie 's Recreation
caught by 9 a. m. during the Center, k-e qeam for the
first hour of the contest, was a outing with the Meigs County
tie with Rarldy Wright, Mason, Fish and Game Associa tion
W. Va ., and Don Richmond, providing the trout, the door
Rutland, catching 13 inch fish . prizes and the cash awards.
All of the above received cash The Rutland American Legion
prizes.
operated a concession stand.

POMEROY ·HOME &amp; AUTO

PICK ONE Of THESE UP AT MARK V TODAY

USDA Choice - Lean and Tender

Mrs. Sam Luckett, who saw
th e fire from nea rby Luckett's

TAX
52.40
52 .80
52 .33
52 .58
52 .85
53.69
53 .21
54 .16
13.78
13 .23
$3 ,68

Sl ZE"

two doubles and a single, Eric
Dunning had two singles, Steve
Hendricks a triple, and Gregg
Dunning a.single off Ebersbach
who worked early and
Magnotta who came on in the
fifth.
Ebersbach fanned one and
Magnotta five, and both
together walked eight.
Middleport A 000 100 1- 2 2 1
020 103 x--6 7 0
Racine
Ebersbach, Magnotta (S)
and Berry. Riffie and Dunning,
Huffman (7).

questioning before the com·

Haulslar
PRICE

RACINE - The Racine Pony
baseball lean defeated the
Middleport A club here
Monday in a makeup game &amp;-2
on the seven hit pitching of Jim
Riffle, the first lefty to come
along in this baseball-minded
community since the days of
Larry Price a half-decade ago.
Riffle fanned 10, walked six
in hiS first pony start of his
career. Only Mike Magnotta
and Ebersbach touched him for
a single each.
Mea nwhile , Riffle socked

have to retur.n for further

Nine horses die
in blaze at RD

mass hyster'ia.''

The Daily News also said the
huge conglomerate has been
accused of trying to improperly influence public officials in Arizona and New
Mexico, where it owned dog
and horse tracks.

that Jeremy Jacobs would not

Jacobs, told the House Select
Committee on Crime last year campaign.''
he had made dozens of political
A spokesman for the
contributions in the previous Republican Natio nal Comtwo years, including to the mittee said later, however,
campaigns of Sens. Henry that only three contributions
Jackson, Hubert H. Humphrey were fou nd from the Jacobscs
and George McGovern, three to McGovern, the largest being
Democrats who were seeking $2,000.
O'Brien called Dole's acthe Democratic nomination for
cusations ''a desperate and
President in 1972.
Last September, while the despi ca~le lie ." He said he
House ·committee was conduct- solicited no campaign funds

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Nine
Thoroughbred race horses died
In their stalls Monday night
when a multiple-alarm fire
leveled four wooden stables at
River Downs Race Track.
More than 80 other panicked
horses were rescued. They
scattered about the huge
complex here and onto public
streets and were still being
rounded up early today.
The cause of the blaze, which
broke out about 9 p.m. (EDT),
was not immediately determined, although a groom told
fire officials he believed it
began in the tack room of one
of the barns.
Damage to the barns, built in
1937, was estimated at $70,000.
Jockey's agent Tom Clark,
. 30, was one of the first to spot
the fire. He and three friends
were passing by the track on
motorcycles at the time and
gained access to the stables by
climbing over a fence.
"The horses were going
crazy," Clark said. "There was

up in 196!i by Emprise to
promote night harness racing
in california.

Racine wins Pony game

~-The Dail Sentinel, Middleport, Pomeroy, O.,JW1e 12, 1973

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6-The Daily Sentioc:, Middle)Xlrt-, · . meroy, 0 .. June 12, 1973

.

-~;::~~%:~*:::::·:·;.;·::-::::~:~=«:::::::::s.::·:~~x:~i·

~

~~,

Social

Chester Garden Club
with Mrs. Ridenour

:!~

ICalendar!

TUESDAY
LEWIS-MANLEY Auxlliary,
American legion , 7 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. John James.
EASTERN High School band
practice, 7-9 p.m., Tuesday and
Thursday at high schooL
RACINE Lodge No . 461
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. , at the
Racine Masonic Temple. Work
in the EA Degree. All Master
Masons invited. Refreshments.
DECORATING C&lt;Jmmittee
and all other interested persons of the Meigs High School
I
Alumni Association, 7:30p.m.
at Meigs High SchooL
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garden
Club
meeting
scheduled for June J3.posponed
un·til June '1:7.
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions ·Club, noon , Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting 7:30 p.m. , at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Election of officers . Com•
panions and officers urged to
take rituals .
RACINE CHAPTER 134 ,
O.E.S., annual inspection, 8 p.
The 50th wedding anm., at the Masonic Temple.
niversary
of Mr. and Mrs.
Sara Secoy, deputy grand
matron, will be the inspecting Lewis Harris, Minersville, was
observed Saturday evening
officer .
with a dinner party at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice ,
THURSDAY
Middleport.
PAST OFFICERS Club ,
Guests for the dinner were
Racine Chapter, O.E .S., 8 p. m .
.Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
•t the Shrine Club house.
Kenneth and David, Mr. and
::Overed dish refreshments at
Mrs. George Harris , Sr .,
'lose of meetinR .
George Harris, Jr. and ~ n, P.
LAUREL CLIFF Better
J., Mr. and Mrs. Tom Harris,
Health Club, 7:30p.m
at the
Carrie Ann and Resa, and Mr.
home of Mrs. Ernest Powell. and Mrs. ·Rice and son, Bill.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
Galling during the evening
p.m . at the grange hall. Inwere Mr . and Mrs. Gale ilysell,
spection to be held.
Colurnbusi Orr_iS Harr is,
MEIGS County Humane
Min e r svill e ; Mrs . Russell
Society, 7:30 p.m. at MidCa r s on ,
Mrs.
Durward
dleport village hall.
Cummings, Mr. and Mr s.
Hiram Fisher and Christy
FRIDAY
Baer.
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Social, II a. m.-7 p.cm. Friday
and Saturday, at air conditioned fellowship hall, St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy. Homemade ice
cream , desse·rts and lunches.
Phone in orders a·nytime at
2010.

r

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris

Mr. and Mrs. john Hoffman

Miss Wo!fo, Mr. Hoffman
exchange wedding vows

Celebrate 50th
anntversary

line double knit dress with
white accessories and a corsage of white carnations. Mrs.
News, Va., were united in Hoffman chose an orchid
The three tiered cake served
marriage on May 18 at the double knit with a flower print
at
the observan ce was topped
Board Baptist Church, Letart . bodice of white, pink and orwith a horseshoe and the
The Rev . Hoy D. Johnson and chid. She also had a corsage of
numerals
"50" in gold .
the Rev. Homer Piercy per- white carr:tations.
Flowers, ca rds a nd gifts were
Immediately following the
fo rmed the 7:30 p.m. double
presented to the honored
ring ceremony for the daughter wedding, a reception was held
couple.
of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. in the church annex. The
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Wolfe, Letart, and the son of br ide's ta ble was covered with
Mason Fisher, Mrs. Milton
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman, a white cloth decorated with
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Ross
yellow streamers and yellow
Letart.
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
pompons a nd centered with a
Kelton, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Two baskets of white car- three tiered wedding cake. The
Reed, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Purley
nations and fern were used top layer, held by four
Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
featured
the
with seven branch candelabra co lumns,
Carman, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
at the altar. Miss Denise traditional miniature bride and
Heick, Mr. a nd Mrs. John
Parsons presented a ha lf hour groom.
Sayre, Mrs. D-disy Hickle, Mr.
A yellow
and
white
prelude of traditional wedding
and Mrs. Jack Bachner and
arrangement
of
mums
was
music. The bride was give n in
Stevie, Mr. and Mrs. George
marriage by her father . She used on one of the serving'
Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
·Wore a floor length gown of ta bles with silver candelabra
Gibbs and Lois Ann, Mr. and
doubl e knit s tyled with holding white tapers. 'The cake ,
Mrs. Junior Gibbs and Mf. and
stand up
co llar ,
hi gh was served by Candy Gunnow
Mrs. Bill Van Meter.
waistline a nd long s ilk and Catherine Newberry.
sleeves with wide cuffs. A Charlotte Grimm and Lilly
Kelvington presided at the
lace train was attached at the
punch bowl. Lois Hoffman,
waistline with a yellow ribbon .
sister of the groom, reg istered
The ·bride wore an elbow
the guests.
length veil of tulle attached to a
The bride wore a blue double
headband of yellow daisies. knit s hort sleeved dress
Her bouquet was yellow and and
the corsage from
white mums on a white Bible. $he r
bridal
bouqu e t
The bride's only jewelry was a for
her traveling cosnecklace, gift from the groom. tume. The couple traveled
A laye tte shower honoring·, Wise, Mrs. Maxine Michael,
Maid of honor for the bride costume. The coup!~ traveled
SATURDAY
was her sister, Patricia Fay to Hawk's Nest, throug h the
Mrs.
Butch Brinker was held Mrs. Dianne Caruthers, Mrs ..
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Wolfe, who wore a yellow Greenbrier Valley .. White Social, 11 a. m .-7 p.m . at air recently at the Middleport Ora Bacon, Mrs . Agnes
double knit gow n fashioned Sulphur Springs, and over the conditioned fellowship hall, St. American Legion hall . Hos tess Boggess and Donnie, Mrs.
with an erripire waist, standup Blue Ridge Mountains.
Paul
Lutheran
Church, for the shower was Mrs. Nancy · Mildred Fowler, Mrs . Ida
collar and short puffed sleeves,
Martin, Mrs. Becky Teaford
The new Mrs. Hoffman is a Pomeroy. Homemade Ice . Manley.
with yellow and white lace 1973 graduate of Wahama High cream, desserts and lunches.
A cake decorated with yellow and Sherrie, Mrs. Wilma Jean
ribbon accent. . She wore a Sc hool. Hoffman graduated Phone n orders any time at and blue booties was served Buckley and Kim.
corsage of white carnations. from Point Pleasant High 992-2010.
with chips and Kooi-Aid .
Also presenting gifts to Mrs.
. .
The bride made both her .gown School, class of 1972, and was
FISHING DERBY Saturday Games were played with prizes Brinker were Mrs. Glenn .Dill,
and the one worn bY her sister. an officer in the VICA Club. He and Sunday at Rutland Legion going to Cathy Bratton, Mrs. Mrs . Clara Bacon, Mrs. Earl
James Thorton, Flalrock, W. is employed . at the Newport Farm on Beech Grove Road Leona Eblin and Margo Dill, Mrs. Kerns Roush, Mrs ..
Va., was best man.
News Shipyards in Virginia, beginning at 5 a. m, each day , Martin. Angela Marton won the Irene Hanning, Mrs. Betty
For her daughter 's wedding, and the couple reside there at Trout, bass and catfish. door prize.
Manley, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mrs . Wolfe wore a turquoise a- 4808 Huntington Ave.
Others attending the s hower Casci, Teresa Casci, Jennie
Sponsored
by
Rutland
were
Mrs . Donna Brinker and Salser, Mrs. Hendricks and
American Legion Post 467.
Teresa, Mrs. Kenneth Mohler, Mary Ann, Dolly Mowery, Mrs.
Kenda Mohler, Mrs . Rita Linda Stobart, Mrs. Delores
Boggess and Tammy, Mrs. Will, Mrs. Edna Howell, Mrs.
Pam Dill, Mrs. Kathy Powell, . David Davis, Mrs. · Edna
Mrs. Candy Brothers, Mrs. ·.walker, Mrs. Donna Aleshire,
You're lnvited!
Mildred Hutibard, Linda Di Mrs. Shirley Roush and Mrs.
Vitro, l)etty Willis, Mrs. Joan Nellie Eblin.
AN EXPERT FR0'-1 THE NEW-MAN CO. WILL
HELP US DEMONSTRATE REVOLUTIONARY
BALDNESS CORRECTION METHOD FOR
YOUR PERSONAL EVALUATION
LETART - Miss Debra Kay
Wolfe, Leta rt, W. Va . a nd John
Wagner Hoffma n, Newport

Shower honors
Mrs~ Brinker

Shrine
meets

Good Grooming Oinic

,,

SWIM, SLEEP, PLAY, ROMANCE ...
YOU WILL LOOK YOUR
VERY BEST AND ENJOY
100% WEARING SECURITY!
Vuur h.1ir i~ m~ bu ~in eu .lt 1&lt;'11 h.l\&lt;' tou II IU&lt; h of rt. r t'~ nw rob 10 ·
t, 1l 1• '·""' " , oil , 11 ul 111 ,, ~ •• 1, '" lo " ·~ 1 "'" h,q lr ~tJLI h~' (' lor&gt; lorri P.
11, "" l"b t&lt;J ' ' ' "" 1\lL&lt; IH\ " I ,"" put '0"'1' 1-&gt;.Kk on dnd make
''"' l&lt;.in ~ lll\lr bnt'
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lh •• tm w d .111• .1 11d rol,,,, . , fu,.-n ,11 tlw hu llDm ot th 1 ~ lo ldPr I
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pt

llt&gt;p t• IVU 111ll I"'"'" dllt l lt•,&gt;tll hLl" I 1,1 11 he•lp ~DU \\llh il lull
m,unt 1•n.tno &lt;' lll !&gt;~I.HH "' .odrl&lt; tn.tn .d h,.,,

W[ fAN HHP ANV

BALDNE~S

OR

TI~INNING

COND I!ION ,

lung or s~'"'
I til t'll i ll( I I ~ I'U L· ~ S' ',\h,•l •••~' • lOt'' b('~1
•'PIM ' 1\r,ll1 1&lt;' dltld\t' ' th,• '"" · \\,In Pl&lt;•..:r,uu t.ln ijtlt' 'I'Cll.' il
lltllU! ,li i!Pd ol Jli M'tl l.lll ll'

'" ll ,llllr .ll n1 l ,u I th,l t 101 1 \\I ll h~V('

' om plt·t1• \'otlllth•rlt'&lt;'

DATE: Wednesday, June 13 at 8 p.m.
PLACE:

Mayer and Hill Barber Sho~
120 f. MAIN

FOMf~OY, OHIO

·Bible school to
conclude Friday

A memorial se rvice for
Virgil Atkins, Harrisonville,
long-t ime member of Mary
Shrine 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem , was conducted
Friday night at a meeting of
the Shrine at the lOOK Hall in
Pomeroy.
Mrs . Eber Pickens, chaplain,
Attendance averaged 80 for
had charge of the service. the first week of the Riverview
During the meeting plans were community Bible school which
made for a ceremonial on Jwte will conclude Friday evening
22and for a picnic to be held on with a program at 8 p.m. at the
July 12 at the Racine Twin City school. Sessions have been held
Shrine Club.
from 9 to 11 a .m.
Harl a n Sanders, deputy
At ·the closing program
supreme · watchman , of crafts. will be on display . A
she~erds, and Mrs. Sanders,
picnic will be held for the boys
deputy of District 16, were . and girls on Thursday from 11
guests at the meeting, along to 12. Children are to take their
with others from Lafayette own sandwiCh while everything
Shrine 44, Gallipolis, and else for the picnic will be
Athens. Mrs. Sanders con- . furnished.
ducted a school of instruction
Mrs. Delores Frank is the
for the Shrine.
director ; Mrs. Marlene Put·
man , the craft director. The
HERE FROM GEORGIA
Mr. and Mrs. George Crary,
Atlanta, Ga. , have been in
Meigs
County
visiting
TOHAVESTAND
. relatives. The Crarys came
Final plans have been
here from Alexandria, Va., completed by the. Xi Gamma
where they were guests of their Mu Chapter of the Beta Sigma
son-in-law and daughter, Dr. Phi Sorority for a conceSs ion
and Mrs. F. R. Reeser who stand operation during Regatta
are moving ·this month to Weekend. The sland will be
Wisconsin. Saturday evening located near the sidewalk on
Mr. and Mrs. Crary, Mr. and the lot between the Meigs
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, and Thea Ire and the Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Mora, Motor Co. It will open at 5 p.m.
. Pomeroy, were dinner guests on Friday and will be in
of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Nibert operation all day on both
and family , Gallipolis.
Saturday and Sunday.
'·

flowers at the Chester
Cemetery . All open meeUng
was setfor July II at Bp.m. at
the Chester Methodist Church.
At that time, Mrs. Joan
Stewart will be the guest
CHESTER - " It's So Nice to
Her secood arrangement demonslrator using the Meigs
Have a Man Around the was made in a green vase o.n a County Fair flower show
House" was the theme for blue tile base and featured 1ns schedule.
Mrs .
Karl
Krautter
interpretive arrangements in leaves, blue Ins, g~apes, a~d
11
tribute to Father's Day made gold praying hands Ill ceranuc. presented devotions using We
by Mrs. Betty Dean at a The third arr?ngement was of Are Stewards" as her theme.
meeting Of the Chester Garden lemon lilies 1n a brown con· Welcomed into membership
Club at the home of Mrs. Buel tainer accented wtth a was Mrs. Philip Radford .
Arrangements were judged
Ridenour.
magazine, chewing gum and a
with Mrs. Leota Young and
Mrs. Dean prepared four . bottle.
In
her
fo~
Mrs.
' Rose Ginther receiving
arrangements . She used a arrangement, Mrs. Dean .
black base with a blue con- lea ves and greenery w1th blue ribbOns, and Mrs. Pat
tainer holding pe~nies and purple clemahs and fanta1l Holter and Mrs. Ginther, red .
Specimen ribbons went to Mrs.
daisies accented with a black willow.
.
During the business meeting Dean, allium; Mrs. Mace I
and white c;,.. figurine and a
corkscrew willow.
plans were made to plant Barton, peonies, daffodlls and .
roses; Mrs, Ginther and Mr:-s.
Ada Holter, roses. Mrs. Eva
Walker was also awarded a
blue ribbon for her Regatta
flower show arrangement in
the class "Pollution on the Ohio
River."
Mrs. RidenoUr and Mrs. Jean
Summerfield, co-hostess
A Father'S Day theme was Mrs . Dale Smith and Mrs. Rose
served a dessert course.
carried out in devotions given Ginther.
by Mrs. Gladys Cuckler at the
A vote of thanks was exmass arrangement of roses
Friday night meeting of the tended to Mrs. Meinhart, Mrs.
decorated the table.
Happy Harvesters Class of Smith, Mrs. Ginther, Mrs.
Trinity Church.
Terrell, Mrs. Lanning, Mrs.
Group singing of " What a Dessauer, Mrs. Reibel, Mrs .
Friend We Have in Jesus," and Lillie Houck and Miss Erma
the Lord's Prayer opened the Smith for working on the
devotions with Mrs. Cuckler recent rummage sale.
giving scripture from MatRead at the meeting was a
thew. Detailing what a friend card of thanks from Mrs.
is, Mrs. Cuckler described Marie Dailey for a gift sent on
USED CARS
fr iendship as that which is her golden wedding an!rue, compassionate, available niversary. Mrs. Louis Reibel
in the time of trouble, also thanked the class for
re membering when others flowers at the time .of her 60th
have forgotten . She read a wedding anniversary.
story, "The Road to Jericho,"
A picnic on July 13 at the
had a poem, "What Is Man?," Route 33 Roadside Park was
V-8 motor, auto. trans.,
and gave a story about a man planned with Mrs. Meinhart
P.S., P. B., v i ny l roQf ,
fa ctor y air .
studying to become a doctor and Mrs . Smith to have
and the kindnesses !!!' others to devotions and games.
him.
Games were played with
"I think I Shall Never se&lt; a prizes going to Mrs. Meinhart,
Dad More Faithful than my Mrs. Stella Kloes, Mrs.
~arr
Own" was the title of a · Seyfried,
Mrs .
Ethel
" You ' ll LikeOurQualily
meditation which concluded Williamson, Mrs'. Cuckler and
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
the devotional period. For the Mrs . Meinhart
992-5342
Pomeroy
program, Mrs . Clarence
Sandwiches, a dessert and
Open Evenings'Til8 : 00
Massa r read " The Black coffee were served by Mrs.
Til5 P.M. Sal.
Heating Stove Called Hir· Terrell and Mrs. Houck. A
shvogle." It related to family
life of yesteryear comparing it
with today.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling presided
at the meeting and thanked
those who assisted with the
mother-daughter
banquet. Final plans were
made :, for.. ,. , ser,viqg
~h
~.P.Oo to
rehearsal dinner for the
Hobstetter
Krawsczyil
24,000 BTU
wedding Friday night at 5 p.m.
Have cool dean air
Named to the committee to
ton ig ht . Total ve n serve were Mrs. Neutzling,
til a tion .
Mrs. Ne¥a Seyfried, Mrs. Eva
Dessauer. Mrs
Clara Karr,
PH . 771-5592
Mrs. Henry Reibel, Mrs. Edith
MASON, W. VA,
Lanning,
Mrs.
Phillip
Meinhart, Mrs. John Terrell,

craft teachers are Mrs. Connie
Reed , Mrs. Carlotta Reed ,
Mr s. Cathy Spencer , Miss
Rosemary Reed, Miss Karen
Reed and George Pickens. The
pianist is Mrs. Maralene
Kimes , and Mrs. Frances Reed
is the song leader.
· The teachers are the Rev.
Elden Blake and Mrs. Eloise
'Connolly, youth; Mrs. Vivian
Humphre y, juniors; Mrs.
Janet Connolly and Mrs. Mary
'Cowdery, middlers; Mrs. Mary
Frecker and Mrs Ruth Dillon,
primary; and Mrs. Marie.
Swan , Mrs. Connie Connolly,
Mrs. Virginia Newlun, Mrs.
Na ncy Collins and Mrs. Bonnie
Putman, nursery-beginner.
HOSTS MEETING
Mrs. Mary Jean Harrison
was hostess for a recent picnic
of the Jolly Bunch Sewing Club
at her camp site at Reyal Oak
Park. Attending were Mrs.
J a ne Gilkey, Mrs . Lillian
Smith, Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Bea
Robson, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser,
Mrs. Betty Cline, Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan, Miss Mae
Webe r, Mrs. Ethel Hughes and
Mrs. Freda Mitch.

'Father's Day '
meeting topic

1972

CHEVROLO
CAPRICE

*3495
&amp; Van landt

KeLI/ln.a#:or
AIR

CONDITIONERS

,,

Mason Furniture

questiopof
rity.

want to use that money
tight away, there's
a 10-year extension
privilege. Either way,
you'll find that Bonds mature at just the right
age for you.

Thkeck·
• sto

f
..

..

~ _::;.;-;-~ ~·~··,;"'~~~m

l!~
i

i

---M:·d
,..d.l... :e.wv.,,..~
I eport
:S
·:&lt;
~&lt;
Personal Notes f.

Chester WS.CS hosts Pzcnzc
0

Mrs. Paul McElhaney is
recuperating at home following
recent hoopitalization at · the
Holzer Medical Center,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Taunton and daughters ,
Jennifer and Sarah, have
moved to Eldorado, Ark. The
lamUy has resided in Middleport for four years. Moving
Into the South Third Ave.
property owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Moore and vacated
by the Tauntons were Mr. and
Mrs. James Sullivan and
children, Ashland, Ky. Mr.
Sullivan is employed at the
Gavin plant
Rerent guests of Mr, and
Mrs. Harry S. Moore have been
Mr. and Mrs. William N.
Moore , Carla and Cathy,
Ashland; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
A. Jones , Mrs. Harry E .
Hoagland,
Miss
Grace
Sauvage, and Mrs. Stanley
Jones , all of Columbus. Before
returning to Columbus, Mrs.
Stanley Jones spent a week
herewith her sister, Mrs. Paul
Fisher, Minersville.
tttr. and Mrs. William Bland
and Mrs. Nina Bland, Akron,
were Saturday guests of Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds. They visited in
Leon, W. Va. with Miss Edna
Burdette.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown and
son,
Christopher
Lee ,
Columbus, spent the past week
here visiting their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Bachner,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Brown , Sr ., New
Raven. Other guests of the
Bachners were Mr. and Mrs.

:~=~~

Thompson,

New

Following the p1cn1c the
CHESTER - The Women's
Society Of Christian Service Of regular meeting of the society
the Chester United Methodist was held with Mrs. Ethel Orr
Church staged a picnic presenting the program using
Thursday honoring the Bible "Empowering Women for
Missions " as her topic. Taking
School teachers.

SUMMER
SHORTS
Regular 4.95 &amp; 5.98

Sale 53.88
lOLA'S

Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

part in the program were Mrs.

Betty Roush, Mrs . Mabel
Van Meter, Nrs. Pauline Rice,
Mrs. Bernice Bailey, Mrs.
Mildred Frank, Mrs. Gladys
Spencer and Mrs. Altona Karr ,
Mrs. Bertha Smith and Nrs .
Ruth Ervin gave readings from
" Response "
maga!ine ,
Twenty-eight sick calls made
were reporteq and a card was
sent to a hospital patient. It
Pentecostal Sunday was for Pentecost made by the was noted that cookbooks,
'observed during services women. It will hang along with napkins and vanilla are for
Sunday at the Grace Episcopal a number o1 · other banners sale.
which the women have created
Church.
Attending, besides those
For the service, many Of the in the sanctuary.
named, were Mrs. Eva Hollon,
New minister of the church, Mrs. Ada Morris and Mrs.
women were attired in red and
gave red geraniums, which wtli the Rev. Harold Deeth, and his Alice Dodson.
be planted at the Iron .of the wife moved today from their
home in Leban on to the
church .
Mrs. Harry Moore, president apartment at the rear of the
of the Episcopal Church- church.
women, presented a banner

BACK FROM TEXAS
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford J.acobs
have returned from a VISit m
Houston, Texas with their sons
and daughters-in.taw, Mr. and
Mrs. l..arry Jacobs and Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Jacobs. Jim i.ewls
who accompanied them to
Texas rt!mained there with the
family .

VISITS COLUMBUS
Mrs . t.ula Hampton has
returned from Columbus
where she spent the weekend
visiting her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. · Leon
Tatwn. She went especially for
tbe Sunday graduation of her
nephew. Ronald Tatum from
Cenlral High School. Tatum

recently completed ~ years
with Timken and was

presented a gold watch and a
diamond tie pin from the firm .

MEN'S ·TOUPEES
AFTER

BEFORE
K~rr ·s

Bnber

Shop , ·110

St. ,

GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 11 to 15

Observe Pentacost

Lynn

Pomero.,-,

Ohio, has

it deled

•

new service. We

are now fitting
Men 's
Toupees.
We un fit you
wtlh a full or i
partial hairpiece.

~

7:30 P.M. Frank Higginbotham, speaker

Mason Church of Christ

STOP in and let MICK 1.how YOU whit he an do for you.

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Miller SL Ma son , W.Va .
Publ ic is invited . Visitors welcome .

110 Lynn St .
POME~OY

ljarbers local 400 AFL-CIO

Miss Roush selected
fior youth choir
·
trailer on the Ohio River bank.
Besides being seleeed for
the Youth Choir, Miss Roush
was named the outstanding girl
Mrs. Owen Watson, Racine, of the choir for the Junior class
has been selected to be a at West Jefferson . She also
member Of · the Ohio Youth recently won the Voice of
Democrary contest sponsored
Choir.
by
the veterans of · Foreign
Miss Roush, juni&lt;&gt;r at West
Jefferson Hlgh Schooi, spends Wars and placed second in
the swnmers with her famuy m regional competition where she
Haclne where they have a received a lrophy and a $50
gift.
.

RACINE - !&gt;!iss Nancy
Roush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush, Columbus,
and granddaughter of Mr. and

Most Needed

By LUCINDA L. FRANKS
NEWYORK (UPI) - British
medium Margaret . Staves, a
plump pigeon-like woman who
was fiown in from London for
the event, sank into a labored
trance, jerked and moaned.
Then she grabbed for the
nearest hand, annoWlced she
had made contact, and said
''he speaks and is alive in
another world."
Tears rolled down the cheeks
of Zan Barker, widow of the
late Lex Barker, star of
Hollywood's Tarzan movies.
She who wore a white pants
suit and fingered an old
smoking jacket belonging to
her husband to help Miss
Staves in her efforts to reach
him. " Is he happy?" she asked
hesitantly.
"He is happy," said Miss
staves, her face !lushed."He
says '1 speak .of love and a life
beyond .. . there is forgiveness
here ... I SJl"ilk of deep regret
and heartache."
The bronzed muscular actor,
54, collapsed and died of a
heart attack May 10. Zan and
son Alexander gathered
together their close friends in
the Waldorf Astoria Monday
for a television seance to call
up his spiri t.
Surrounding Miss Staves in
the hotel suite, lined with
veJvet c hairs and silk
wallpaper, were Hollywood
parapsychologists and several
friends , including actress Joan
Fontaine and New York
socialite, Pat Uchitel, both of
whom had expressed shOck at
Barker's sudden death. Miss
Staves gave his wiaow personal messages purportedly
from Barker and a set of in-

,..-----------------~...""":

structions to his son Alexander,
a restaurant owner.
Her voice was so soft, it could
hardly be heard among the
audience of reporters and TV
cameramen who strained to
catch her words. At one point
the clattering of. a collapsing
camera stand and a sneezlng
fit by a local reporter
threatened to interrupt he~
trance.
Barker, who is remembered
by cinema buffs for his daring
rope-swings through the
jungle, last January wrote a
secret sealed message along
with three other movie stars
with spiritualist leanings Rhonda Fleming, Arlene Dahl,
and Robert Cummings-and
had them deposited in a bank
vault The three then signed
agreements whereby each
would attempt to contact
mediwns at seances one month
after their deaths to tran,smit
the messages,
Miss Stav.es, however, said
although she could see the
message, which was written in
a large looped scrawl, she
could only make out a few
words.
The newspaper Natiooal Enquirer , which sponsorec;l the
experiment and the seance,
said it would take several days
to retrieve Barker's message
from the vault and check to see
if the words mentioned by Miss
Staves corresponded.
Barker's family and friends,
however, did not seem to care
whether they matched or not.
" Its enough that we seem to
have perhaps spoken with
him ,,; said Miss Uchitel.
" Since his death, we have
dreamt of him constantly. We .
knew that he wanted to speak

Permanent press

m,Nnenca.

Boncla mature in 1- than six ·yean.
No"· E 1,4&lt;lndl!*)' .51-t% inr.,..t "hen h•l&lt;l to ll"'lltW'Ity
of ~ yN~. Hl mo~~tth. (4 % t ile lm ,...,.,, Bonds.,..
r eple~ 1f l011t, 11Aitn. or d..ti'OyRI. Whtn ....ted they
&lt;!lin bf- o:&amp;ahed at ro\11' ben&amp;. lnl..-..t i1 not . .bject to
el.at~ or loxs l inc:olll&lt;!
lad r..t..,.•lt.al miJ' be
d eferr&lt;Od until redempLion .

1.11-.

BAKER FURNITURE"
MIDDI!PORT, 0.

JUNIORS TO REPORT
Meigs High School students
who will be juniors next year
and are enrolled in the. oc- .
cupational education program
are to report to Meigs High
School Wednesday.

il

6M8
web co n .
structian . Choice
of 3 colors .

wide arraY of

$

. EXTRA

394
MATURE CUTI
MENS CASUAL

94

PANTS
Slraigh t leg stvles for n:en
wh1 don't like flare leg s.
Choice of 3 colors. Mact.ine
wilshable. Values to $'1,00
p a ir . Waist sizes. 30 to 3~.

S·PEC~AL

MENS ORLON SOCKS
ONE SIZE FITS 10 To 13

$ 87

PERMANENT
. PRESS

¢

A' spcctal purcha se ju st tor Father's

OF

Day . ·Your choice of a wid e se lection of

COURSE!

PAIR

colors. All wlthnon-sa g top s. Irregula rs
tJf s 1.00 values.

COMFORTABLE KNIT SHIRTS
FOR SUMMER
- Crew Necks
- Zip Necks
- 3 Sulton Collar
Poly este r and

THAT DAD WILL LIKE!

94

cotton ,

lerrv cloth s and 100 pet .

cottons. All are

m~ chin e

washable in s ites Small
to Ex -targe .

Favorite Hot Weather Shirt

TANK TOPS
A good se lection of colors and
trim s, many with popula r novei!Y
de si gn s. Machine washable m

MENS WHITE
lr'''U BE 0

MENS COTTON

MENS DENIM

BRIEFS or
I-SHIRTS

WESTERN
JACKETS

WORK
SOCKS

"HANES" QUALITY

Size 36 To 44

Size 10 To 12

siz es s mall to ex-large.

$ 67$
TO

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES
All Your Favorite Artists!

l :lJ/4

oz.$ 894

$ OlJ

WHY
PAY
MORE?

We 1qht

FOR

We Have Dozens of Other
Gift Suggestions for Dad.
Visit Shopper's Mart!

GIR DAD WITH NEW SHOES

$andL

c!JJ!~.!j~$

SET DERBY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
American Legion Post 467 will
sponsor a fishing derby . of'
fering trout, bass and catfiSh,
Saturday
and
Sunday,
beginning at 5 a.m. each day ,
at the Rutland Legion Farm,
Beech Grove Road.

•

tabn cs i n

Comfortable flat
arm with s turdy

color s, s o lid s, prints, s tripes a nd c h~c k s •. all
with popular co llar st yles . S~ort _ shtrf ~ •r es
Smil ll to Ex . La,-ge . Dress shtrl s tze s 14 12 to 11 .

to us."

WILL HOST
Mrs. Sibley Slack will be
among the Middleport Pomeroy Area
Branch, .
American Association of
University Women, serving as
hostesses at the Heritage Day
observance at the Meigs
Museum .

LAWN. CHAIR

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS
FOR DAD

Tarzan reached
durin_g trance

Mrs . Joe Turner has
returned home from Bucyrus
where she spent a month with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner_
and family .
She went
especially to be with her
grandson, Michael, who is at
home now recuperating from
extensive back injuries suffered In a motorcycle accident.
Bringing Mrs . Turner to
Middleport were her son and
daughter-in-law and their son,
Gary.
.
• Mrs. Ann Angel and son,
•·Kevin, left Saturday from
· Columbus for Denver, Colo.
where they will visit Mrs ...Jo
Bunton and son, Brett. · Mrs.
Angel will return following a
two week 'visit. Her son will
remain. their and attend a sixweek camping session at the L.
and S. Summer Camp just
outside of Denver. Brett
Bunton will also be attending
the camp.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul HaptonstaU and Robert Sharp were
In Amanda Sunday to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Vance Sharp:

june 'Speci41!

0

•

·.·:

MEET CHANGED
A meeUng of the Busy Bee·
Class of ihe Middleport First
Baptist Church has been
changed from June 14 to June
21 at 6 p.m . It willl;&gt;e a picnic at.
the hom of· Mrs. John Lyons.

I&amp; a

A lot of people don't
buy U.S. Savings Bonds
because they think it
takes them 10 years
to mature. Take another,
look. The old green Bond
ain't what it used to be.
Now Bonds mature in
less than 6 years.
That's one reason
Bonds are so popular
nowadays. They're
simple to buy, and one
of the surest ways to
build a nest egg for
something (or someone)
special.
U.S. Savings Bontis.
Maturity at 5 years,
10 months. If you don't

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middle)Xlrt-Pomeroy, 0., June 12, 1973

===i

"Priced to s.nt"Y- a'"\\t:cfflit '1\lo~
.

MENS DRESS SHOES

DEPENDABLE ''WALKER" BRAIID
MEIIS
WORK

A com plet e selet:; ti on of styl es including

TO FIT THE JOB!

whil e s and th e new highe r hee ls. Lace -up s,
.11p..&gt; ns and strap styles in sizes 6 112 to 12 .
Some f
Wld fh s alSO .

87 $
TO

OPEN 6 DAYS
10 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY
1 PM TO 6 PM
• PT.

~LEASANT •

e PLENTY OFA DISCOUNT
OfPA RT M f. H T STQitl
.

FREE

MASON, e SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA • RIPLEY, W.VA.

P~ARKING

AT ALL
LOCATIONS

�---- ........

6-The Daily Sentioc:, Middle)Xlrt-, · . meroy, 0 .. June 12, 1973

.

-~;::~~%:~*:::::·:·;.;·::-::::~:~=«:::::::::s.::·:~~x:~i·

~

~~,

Social

Chester Garden Club
with Mrs. Ridenour

:!~

ICalendar!

TUESDAY
LEWIS-MANLEY Auxlliary,
American legion , 7 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. John James.
EASTERN High School band
practice, 7-9 p.m., Tuesday and
Thursday at high schooL
RACINE Lodge No . 461
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. , at the
Racine Masonic Temple. Work
in the EA Degree. All Master
Masons invited. Refreshments.
DECORATING C&lt;Jmmittee
and all other interested persons of the Meigs High School
I
Alumni Association, 7:30p.m.
at Meigs High SchooL
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garden
Club
meeting
scheduled for June J3.posponed
un·til June '1:7.
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions ·Club, noon , Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting 7:30 p.m. , at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Election of officers . Com•
panions and officers urged to
take rituals .
RACINE CHAPTER 134 ,
O.E.S., annual inspection, 8 p.
The 50th wedding anm., at the Masonic Temple.
niversary
of Mr. and Mrs.
Sara Secoy, deputy grand
matron, will be the inspecting Lewis Harris, Minersville, was
observed Saturday evening
officer .
with a dinner party at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice ,
THURSDAY
Middleport.
PAST OFFICERS Club ,
Guests for the dinner were
Racine Chapter, O.E .S., 8 p. m .
.Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
•t the Shrine Club house.
Kenneth and David, Mr. and
::Overed dish refreshments at
Mrs. George Harris , Sr .,
'lose of meetinR .
George Harris, Jr. and ~ n, P.
LAUREL CLIFF Better
J., Mr. and Mrs. Tom Harris,
Health Club, 7:30p.m
at the
Carrie Ann and Resa, and Mr.
home of Mrs. Ernest Powell. and Mrs. ·Rice and son, Bill.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
Galling during the evening
p.m . at the grange hall. Inwere Mr . and Mrs. Gale ilysell,
spection to be held.
Colurnbusi Orr_iS Harr is,
MEIGS County Humane
Min e r svill e ; Mrs . Russell
Society, 7:30 p.m. at MidCa r s on ,
Mrs.
Durward
dleport village hall.
Cummings, Mr. and Mr s.
Hiram Fisher and Christy
FRIDAY
Baer.
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Social, II a. m.-7 p.cm. Friday
and Saturday, at air conditioned fellowship hall, St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy. Homemade ice
cream , desse·rts and lunches.
Phone in orders a·nytime at
2010.

r

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris

Mr. and Mrs. john Hoffman

Miss Wo!fo, Mr. Hoffman
exchange wedding vows

Celebrate 50th
anntversary

line double knit dress with
white accessories and a corsage of white carnations. Mrs.
News, Va., were united in Hoffman chose an orchid
The three tiered cake served
marriage on May 18 at the double knit with a flower print
at
the observan ce was topped
Board Baptist Church, Letart . bodice of white, pink and orwith a horseshoe and the
The Rev . Hoy D. Johnson and chid. She also had a corsage of
numerals
"50" in gold .
the Rev. Homer Piercy per- white carr:tations.
Flowers, ca rds a nd gifts were
Immediately following the
fo rmed the 7:30 p.m. double
presented to the honored
ring ceremony for the daughter wedding, a reception was held
couple.
of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. in the church annex. The
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Wolfe, Letart, and the son of br ide's ta ble was covered with
Mason Fisher, Mrs. Milton
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman, a white cloth decorated with
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Ross
yellow streamers and yellow
Letart.
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
pompons a nd centered with a
Kelton, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Two baskets of white car- three tiered wedding cake. The
Reed, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Purley
nations and fern were used top layer, held by four
Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
featured
the
with seven branch candelabra co lumns,
Carman, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
at the altar. Miss Denise traditional miniature bride and
Heick, Mr. a nd Mrs. John
Parsons presented a ha lf hour groom.
Sayre, Mrs. D-disy Hickle, Mr.
A yellow
and
white
prelude of traditional wedding
and Mrs. Jack Bachner and
arrangement
of
mums
was
music. The bride was give n in
Stevie, Mr. and Mrs. George
marriage by her father . She used on one of the serving'
Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
·Wore a floor length gown of ta bles with silver candelabra
Gibbs and Lois Ann, Mr. and
doubl e knit s tyled with holding white tapers. 'The cake ,
Mrs. Junior Gibbs and Mf. and
stand up
co llar ,
hi gh was served by Candy Gunnow
Mrs. Bill Van Meter.
waistline a nd long s ilk and Catherine Newberry.
sleeves with wide cuffs. A Charlotte Grimm and Lilly
Kelvington presided at the
lace train was attached at the
punch bowl. Lois Hoffman,
waistline with a yellow ribbon .
sister of the groom, reg istered
The ·bride wore an elbow
the guests.
length veil of tulle attached to a
The bride wore a blue double
headband of yellow daisies. knit s hort sleeved dress
Her bouquet was yellow and and
the corsage from
white mums on a white Bible. $he r
bridal
bouqu e t
The bride's only jewelry was a for
her traveling cosnecklace, gift from the groom. tume. The couple traveled
A laye tte shower honoring·, Wise, Mrs. Maxine Michael,
Maid of honor for the bride costume. The coup!~ traveled
SATURDAY
was her sister, Patricia Fay to Hawk's Nest, throug h the
Mrs.
Butch Brinker was held Mrs. Dianne Caruthers, Mrs ..
REGATTA ICE CREAM
Wolfe, who wore a yellow Greenbrier Valley .. White Social, 11 a. m .-7 p.m . at air recently at the Middleport Ora Bacon, Mrs . Agnes
double knit gow n fashioned Sulphur Springs, and over the conditioned fellowship hall, St. American Legion hall . Hos tess Boggess and Donnie, Mrs.
with an erripire waist, standup Blue Ridge Mountains.
Paul
Lutheran
Church, for the shower was Mrs. Nancy · Mildred Fowler, Mrs . Ida
collar and short puffed sleeves,
Martin, Mrs. Becky Teaford
The new Mrs. Hoffman is a Pomeroy. Homemade Ice . Manley.
with yellow and white lace 1973 graduate of Wahama High cream, desserts and lunches.
A cake decorated with yellow and Sherrie, Mrs. Wilma Jean
ribbon accent. . She wore a Sc hool. Hoffman graduated Phone n orders any time at and blue booties was served Buckley and Kim.
corsage of white carnations. from Point Pleasant High 992-2010.
with chips and Kooi-Aid .
Also presenting gifts to Mrs.
. .
The bride made both her .gown School, class of 1972, and was
FISHING DERBY Saturday Games were played with prizes Brinker were Mrs. Glenn .Dill,
and the one worn bY her sister. an officer in the VICA Club. He and Sunday at Rutland Legion going to Cathy Bratton, Mrs. Mrs . Clara Bacon, Mrs. Earl
James Thorton, Flalrock, W. is employed . at the Newport Farm on Beech Grove Road Leona Eblin and Margo Dill, Mrs. Kerns Roush, Mrs ..
Va., was best man.
News Shipyards in Virginia, beginning at 5 a. m, each day , Martin. Angela Marton won the Irene Hanning, Mrs. Betty
For her daughter 's wedding, and the couple reside there at Trout, bass and catfish. door prize.
Manley, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mrs . Wolfe wore a turquoise a- 4808 Huntington Ave.
Others attending the s hower Casci, Teresa Casci, Jennie
Sponsored
by
Rutland
were
Mrs . Donna Brinker and Salser, Mrs. Hendricks and
American Legion Post 467.
Teresa, Mrs. Kenneth Mohler, Mary Ann, Dolly Mowery, Mrs.
Kenda Mohler, Mrs . Rita Linda Stobart, Mrs. Delores
Boggess and Tammy, Mrs. Will, Mrs. Edna Howell, Mrs.
Pam Dill, Mrs. Kathy Powell, . David Davis, Mrs. · Edna
Mrs. Candy Brothers, Mrs. ·.walker, Mrs. Donna Aleshire,
You're lnvited!
Mildred Hutibard, Linda Di Mrs. Shirley Roush and Mrs.
Vitro, l)etty Willis, Mrs. Joan Nellie Eblin.
AN EXPERT FR0'-1 THE NEW-MAN CO. WILL
HELP US DEMONSTRATE REVOLUTIONARY
BALDNESS CORRECTION METHOD FOR
YOUR PERSONAL EVALUATION
LETART - Miss Debra Kay
Wolfe, Leta rt, W. Va . a nd John
Wagner Hoffma n, Newport

Shower honors
Mrs~ Brinker

Shrine
meets

Good Grooming Oinic

,,

SWIM, SLEEP, PLAY, ROMANCE ...
YOU WILL LOOK YOUR
VERY BEST AND ENJOY
100% WEARING SECURITY!
Vuur h.1ir i~ m~ bu ~in eu .lt 1&lt;'11 h.l\&lt;' tou II IU&lt; h of rt. r t'~ nw rob 10 ·
t, 1l 1• '·""' " , oil , 11 ul 111 ,, ~ •• 1, '" lo " ·~ 1 "'" h,q lr ~tJLI h~' (' lor&gt; lorri P.
11, "" l"b t&lt;J ' ' ' "" 1\lL&lt; IH\ " I ,"" put '0"'1' 1-&gt;.Kk on dnd make
''"' l&lt;.in ~ lll\lr bnt'
1 " "'' '" 'l't ''''h"'' \&lt;&gt;u :o ,, tt l l,ll h owt• .md ,.,, •t111t: conc ~ pl 111
r·,, .. : ,,.;,j,~, &lt;'11Wn1 .J h.,,,. , ,.1,, lt•d 1lw 1\ t' ll ·o\l,m 'nt~·n&gt; Ot·cau~t;&lt; I
•in&lt; &gt;'rt'h lwl lo'\1' 111 \ tlh·lll• •Il l h .1• 10 111•&lt;'11 rlelt;&lt;" '' lllf' hntt ~ l

''" 'll "': II : I' " " ' "'~ h.ur pruh lt&gt;lll\ I&gt;!:•'lt •ne; to gethf'r at
lh •• tm w d .111• .1 11d rol,,,, . , fu,.-n ,11 tlw hu llDm ot th 1 ~ lo ldPr I
•\ cr{otrr&gt;

pt

llt&gt;p t• IVU 111ll I"'"'" dllt l lt•,&gt;tll hLl" I 1,1 11 he•lp ~DU \\llh il lull
m,unt 1•n.tno &lt;' lll !&gt;~I.HH "' .odrl&lt; tn.tn .d h,.,,

W[ fAN HHP ANV

BALDNE~S

OR

TI~INNING

COND I!ION ,

lung or s~'"'
I til t'll i ll( I I ~ I'U L· ~ S' ',\h,•l •••~' • lOt'' b('~1
•'PIM ' 1\r,ll1 1&lt;' dltld\t' ' th,• '"" · \\,In Pl&lt;•..:r,uu t.ln ijtlt' 'I'Cll.' il
lltllU! ,li i!Pd ol Jli M'tl l.lll ll'

'" ll ,llllr .ll n1 l ,u I th,l t 101 1 \\I ll h~V('

' om plt·t1• \'otlllth•rlt'&lt;'

DATE: Wednesday, June 13 at 8 p.m.
PLACE:

Mayer and Hill Barber Sho~
120 f. MAIN

FOMf~OY, OHIO

·Bible school to
conclude Friday

A memorial se rvice for
Virgil Atkins, Harrisonville,
long-t ime member of Mary
Shrine 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem , was conducted
Friday night at a meeting of
the Shrine at the lOOK Hall in
Pomeroy.
Mrs . Eber Pickens, chaplain,
Attendance averaged 80 for
had charge of the service. the first week of the Riverview
During the meeting plans were community Bible school which
made for a ceremonial on Jwte will conclude Friday evening
22and for a picnic to be held on with a program at 8 p.m. at the
July 12 at the Racine Twin City school. Sessions have been held
Shrine Club.
from 9 to 11 a .m.
Harl a n Sanders, deputy
At ·the closing program
supreme · watchman , of crafts. will be on display . A
she~erds, and Mrs. Sanders,
picnic will be held for the boys
deputy of District 16, were . and girls on Thursday from 11
guests at the meeting, along to 12. Children are to take their
with others from Lafayette own sandwiCh while everything
Shrine 44, Gallipolis, and else for the picnic will be
Athens. Mrs. Sanders con- . furnished.
ducted a school of instruction
Mrs. Delores Frank is the
for the Shrine.
director ; Mrs. Marlene Put·
man , the craft director. The
HERE FROM GEORGIA
Mr. and Mrs. George Crary,
Atlanta, Ga. , have been in
Meigs
County
visiting
TOHAVESTAND
. relatives. The Crarys came
Final plans have been
here from Alexandria, Va., completed by the. Xi Gamma
where they were guests of their Mu Chapter of the Beta Sigma
son-in-law and daughter, Dr. Phi Sorority for a conceSs ion
and Mrs. F. R. Reeser who stand operation during Regatta
are moving ·this month to Weekend. The sland will be
Wisconsin. Saturday evening located near the sidewalk on
Mr. and Mrs. Crary, Mr. and the lot between the Meigs
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, and Thea Ire and the Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Mora, Motor Co. It will open at 5 p.m.
. Pomeroy, were dinner guests on Friday and will be in
of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Nibert operation all day on both
and family , Gallipolis.
Saturday and Sunday.
'·

flowers at the Chester
Cemetery . All open meeUng
was setfor July II at Bp.m. at
the Chester Methodist Church.
At that time, Mrs. Joan
Stewart will be the guest
CHESTER - " It's So Nice to
Her secood arrangement demonslrator using the Meigs
Have a Man Around the was made in a green vase o.n a County Fair flower show
House" was the theme for blue tile base and featured 1ns schedule.
Mrs .
Karl
Krautter
interpretive arrangements in leaves, blue Ins, g~apes, a~d
11
tribute to Father's Day made gold praying hands Ill ceranuc. presented devotions using We
by Mrs. Betty Dean at a The third arr?ngement was of Are Stewards" as her theme.
meeting Of the Chester Garden lemon lilies 1n a brown con· Welcomed into membership
Club at the home of Mrs. Buel tainer accented wtth a was Mrs. Philip Radford .
Arrangements were judged
Ridenour.
magazine, chewing gum and a
with Mrs. Leota Young and
Mrs. Dean prepared four . bottle.
In
her
fo~
Mrs.
' Rose Ginther receiving
arrangements . She used a arrangement, Mrs. Dean .
black base with a blue con- lea ves and greenery w1th blue ribbOns, and Mrs. Pat
tainer holding pe~nies and purple clemahs and fanta1l Holter and Mrs. Ginther, red .
Specimen ribbons went to Mrs.
daisies accented with a black willow.
.
During the business meeting Dean, allium; Mrs. Mace I
and white c;,.. figurine and a
corkscrew willow.
plans were made to plant Barton, peonies, daffodlls and .
roses; Mrs, Ginther and Mr:-s.
Ada Holter, roses. Mrs. Eva
Walker was also awarded a
blue ribbon for her Regatta
flower show arrangement in
the class "Pollution on the Ohio
River."
Mrs. RidenoUr and Mrs. Jean
Summerfield, co-hostess
A Father'S Day theme was Mrs . Dale Smith and Mrs. Rose
served a dessert course.
carried out in devotions given Ginther.
by Mrs. Gladys Cuckler at the
A vote of thanks was exmass arrangement of roses
Friday night meeting of the tended to Mrs. Meinhart, Mrs.
decorated the table.
Happy Harvesters Class of Smith, Mrs. Ginther, Mrs.
Trinity Church.
Terrell, Mrs. Lanning, Mrs.
Group singing of " What a Dessauer, Mrs. Reibel, Mrs .
Friend We Have in Jesus," and Lillie Houck and Miss Erma
the Lord's Prayer opened the Smith for working on the
devotions with Mrs. Cuckler recent rummage sale.
giving scripture from MatRead at the meeting was a
thew. Detailing what a friend card of thanks from Mrs.
is, Mrs. Cuckler described Marie Dailey for a gift sent on
USED CARS
fr iendship as that which is her golden wedding an!rue, compassionate, available niversary. Mrs. Louis Reibel
in the time of trouble, also thanked the class for
re membering when others flowers at the time .of her 60th
have forgotten . She read a wedding anniversary.
story, "The Road to Jericho,"
A picnic on July 13 at the
had a poem, "What Is Man?," Route 33 Roadside Park was
V-8 motor, auto. trans.,
and gave a story about a man planned with Mrs. Meinhart
P.S., P. B., v i ny l roQf ,
fa ctor y air .
studying to become a doctor and Mrs . Smith to have
and the kindnesses !!!' others to devotions and games.
him.
Games were played with
"I think I Shall Never se&lt; a prizes going to Mrs. Meinhart,
Dad More Faithful than my Mrs. Stella Kloes, Mrs.
~arr
Own" was the title of a · Seyfried,
Mrs .
Ethel
" You ' ll LikeOurQualily
meditation which concluded Williamson, Mrs'. Cuckler and
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
the devotional period. For the Mrs . Meinhart
992-5342
Pomeroy
program, Mrs . Clarence
Sandwiches, a dessert and
Open Evenings'Til8 : 00
Massa r read " The Black coffee were served by Mrs.
Til5 P.M. Sal.
Heating Stove Called Hir· Terrell and Mrs. Houck. A
shvogle." It related to family
life of yesteryear comparing it
with today.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling presided
at the meeting and thanked
those who assisted with the
mother-daughter
banquet. Final plans were
made :, for.. ,. , ser,viqg
~h
~.P.Oo to
rehearsal dinner for the
Hobstetter
Krawsczyil
24,000 BTU
wedding Friday night at 5 p.m.
Have cool dean air
Named to the committee to
ton ig ht . Total ve n serve were Mrs. Neutzling,
til a tion .
Mrs. Ne¥a Seyfried, Mrs. Eva
Dessauer. Mrs
Clara Karr,
PH . 771-5592
Mrs. Henry Reibel, Mrs. Edith
MASON, W. VA,
Lanning,
Mrs.
Phillip
Meinhart, Mrs. John Terrell,

craft teachers are Mrs. Connie
Reed , Mrs. Carlotta Reed ,
Mr s. Cathy Spencer , Miss
Rosemary Reed, Miss Karen
Reed and George Pickens. The
pianist is Mrs. Maralene
Kimes , and Mrs. Frances Reed
is the song leader.
· The teachers are the Rev.
Elden Blake and Mrs. Eloise
'Connolly, youth; Mrs. Vivian
Humphre y, juniors; Mrs.
Janet Connolly and Mrs. Mary
'Cowdery, middlers; Mrs. Mary
Frecker and Mrs Ruth Dillon,
primary; and Mrs. Marie.
Swan , Mrs. Connie Connolly,
Mrs. Virginia Newlun, Mrs.
Na ncy Collins and Mrs. Bonnie
Putman, nursery-beginner.
HOSTS MEETING
Mrs. Mary Jean Harrison
was hostess for a recent picnic
of the Jolly Bunch Sewing Club
at her camp site at Reyal Oak
Park. Attending were Mrs.
J a ne Gilkey, Mrs . Lillian
Smith, Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Bea
Robson, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser,
Mrs. Betty Cline, Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan, Miss Mae
Webe r, Mrs. Ethel Hughes and
Mrs. Freda Mitch.

'Father's Day '
meeting topic

1972

CHEVROLO
CAPRICE

*3495
&amp; Van landt

KeLI/ln.a#:or
AIR

CONDITIONERS

,,

Mason Furniture

questiopof
rity.

want to use that money
tight away, there's
a 10-year extension
privilege. Either way,
you'll find that Bonds mature at just the right
age for you.

Thkeck·
• sto

f
..

..

~ _::;.;-;-~ ~·~··,;"'~~~m

l!~
i

i

---M:·d
,..d.l... :e.wv.,,..~
I eport
:S
·:&lt;
~&lt;
Personal Notes f.

Chester WS.CS hosts Pzcnzc
0

Mrs. Paul McElhaney is
recuperating at home following
recent hoopitalization at · the
Holzer Medical Center,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Taunton and daughters ,
Jennifer and Sarah, have
moved to Eldorado, Ark. The
lamUy has resided in Middleport for four years. Moving
Into the South Third Ave.
property owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Moore and vacated
by the Tauntons were Mr. and
Mrs. James Sullivan and
children, Ashland, Ky. Mr.
Sullivan is employed at the
Gavin plant
Rerent guests of Mr, and
Mrs. Harry S. Moore have been
Mr. and Mrs. William N.
Moore , Carla and Cathy,
Ashland; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
A. Jones , Mrs. Harry E .
Hoagland,
Miss
Grace
Sauvage, and Mrs. Stanley
Jones , all of Columbus. Before
returning to Columbus, Mrs.
Stanley Jones spent a week
herewith her sister, Mrs. Paul
Fisher, Minersville.
tttr. and Mrs. William Bland
and Mrs. Nina Bland, Akron,
were Saturday guests of Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds. They visited in
Leon, W. Va. with Miss Edna
Burdette.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown and
son,
Christopher
Lee ,
Columbus, spent the past week
here visiting their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Bachner,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Brown , Sr ., New
Raven. Other guests of the
Bachners were Mr. and Mrs.

:~=~~

Thompson,

New

Following the p1cn1c the
CHESTER - The Women's
Society Of Christian Service Of regular meeting of the society
the Chester United Methodist was held with Mrs. Ethel Orr
Church staged a picnic presenting the program using
Thursday honoring the Bible "Empowering Women for
Missions " as her topic. Taking
School teachers.

SUMMER
SHORTS
Regular 4.95 &amp; 5.98

Sale 53.88
lOLA'S

Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

part in the program were Mrs.

Betty Roush, Mrs . Mabel
Van Meter, Nrs. Pauline Rice,
Mrs. Bernice Bailey, Mrs.
Mildred Frank, Mrs. Gladys
Spencer and Mrs. Altona Karr ,
Mrs. Bertha Smith and Nrs .
Ruth Ervin gave readings from
" Response "
maga!ine ,
Twenty-eight sick calls made
were reporteq and a card was
sent to a hospital patient. It
Pentecostal Sunday was for Pentecost made by the was noted that cookbooks,
'observed during services women. It will hang along with napkins and vanilla are for
Sunday at the Grace Episcopal a number o1 · other banners sale.
which the women have created
Church.
Attending, besides those
For the service, many Of the in the sanctuary.
named, were Mrs. Eva Hollon,
New minister of the church, Mrs. Ada Morris and Mrs.
women were attired in red and
gave red geraniums, which wtli the Rev. Harold Deeth, and his Alice Dodson.
be planted at the Iron .of the wife moved today from their
home in Leban on to the
church .
Mrs. Harry Moore, president apartment at the rear of the
of the Episcopal Church- church.
women, presented a banner

BACK FROM TEXAS
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford J.acobs
have returned from a VISit m
Houston, Texas with their sons
and daughters-in.taw, Mr. and
Mrs. l..arry Jacobs and Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Jacobs. Jim i.ewls
who accompanied them to
Texas rt!mained there with the
family .

VISITS COLUMBUS
Mrs . t.ula Hampton has
returned from Columbus
where she spent the weekend
visiting her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. · Leon
Tatwn. She went especially for
tbe Sunday graduation of her
nephew. Ronald Tatum from
Cenlral High School. Tatum

recently completed ~ years
with Timken and was

presented a gold watch and a
diamond tie pin from the firm .

MEN'S ·TOUPEES
AFTER

BEFORE
K~rr ·s

Bnber

Shop , ·110

St. ,

GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 11 to 15

Observe Pentacost

Lynn

Pomero.,-,

Ohio, has

it deled

•

new service. We

are now fitting
Men 's
Toupees.
We un fit you
wtlh a full or i
partial hairpiece.

~

7:30 P.M. Frank Higginbotham, speaker

Mason Church of Christ

STOP in and let MICK 1.how YOU whit he an do for you.

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Miller SL Ma son , W.Va .
Publ ic is invited . Visitors welcome .

110 Lynn St .
POME~OY

ljarbers local 400 AFL-CIO

Miss Roush selected
fior youth choir
·
trailer on the Ohio River bank.
Besides being seleeed for
the Youth Choir, Miss Roush
was named the outstanding girl
Mrs. Owen Watson, Racine, of the choir for the Junior class
has been selected to be a at West Jefferson . She also
member Of · the Ohio Youth recently won the Voice of
Democrary contest sponsored
Choir.
by
the veterans of · Foreign
Miss Roush, juni&lt;&gt;r at West
Jefferson Hlgh Schooi, spends Wars and placed second in
the swnmers with her famuy m regional competition where she
Haclne where they have a received a lrophy and a $50
gift.
.

RACINE - !&gt;!iss Nancy
Roush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush, Columbus,
and granddaughter of Mr. and

Most Needed

By LUCINDA L. FRANKS
NEWYORK (UPI) - British
medium Margaret . Staves, a
plump pigeon-like woman who
was fiown in from London for
the event, sank into a labored
trance, jerked and moaned.
Then she grabbed for the
nearest hand, annoWlced she
had made contact, and said
''he speaks and is alive in
another world."
Tears rolled down the cheeks
of Zan Barker, widow of the
late Lex Barker, star of
Hollywood's Tarzan movies.
She who wore a white pants
suit and fingered an old
smoking jacket belonging to
her husband to help Miss
Staves in her efforts to reach
him. " Is he happy?" she asked
hesitantly.
"He is happy," said Miss
staves, her face !lushed."He
says '1 speak .of love and a life
beyond .. . there is forgiveness
here ... I SJl"ilk of deep regret
and heartache."
The bronzed muscular actor,
54, collapsed and died of a
heart attack May 10. Zan and
son Alexander gathered
together their close friends in
the Waldorf Astoria Monday
for a television seance to call
up his spiri t.
Surrounding Miss Staves in
the hotel suite, lined with
veJvet c hairs and silk
wallpaper, were Hollywood
parapsychologists and several
friends , including actress Joan
Fontaine and New York
socialite, Pat Uchitel, both of
whom had expressed shOck at
Barker's sudden death. Miss
Staves gave his wiaow personal messages purportedly
from Barker and a set of in-

,..-----------------~...""":

structions to his son Alexander,
a restaurant owner.
Her voice was so soft, it could
hardly be heard among the
audience of reporters and TV
cameramen who strained to
catch her words. At one point
the clattering of. a collapsing
camera stand and a sneezlng
fit by a local reporter
threatened to interrupt he~
trance.
Barker, who is remembered
by cinema buffs for his daring
rope-swings through the
jungle, last January wrote a
secret sealed message along
with three other movie stars
with spiritualist leanings Rhonda Fleming, Arlene Dahl,
and Robert Cummings-and
had them deposited in a bank
vault The three then signed
agreements whereby each
would attempt to contact
mediwns at seances one month
after their deaths to tran,smit
the messages,
Miss Stav.es, however, said
although she could see the
message, which was written in
a large looped scrawl, she
could only make out a few
words.
The newspaper Natiooal Enquirer , which sponsorec;l the
experiment and the seance,
said it would take several days
to retrieve Barker's message
from the vault and check to see
if the words mentioned by Miss
Staves corresponded.
Barker's family and friends,
however, did not seem to care
whether they matched or not.
" Its enough that we seem to
have perhaps spoken with
him ,,; said Miss Uchitel.
" Since his death, we have
dreamt of him constantly. We .
knew that he wanted to speak

Permanent press

m,Nnenca.

Boncla mature in 1- than six ·yean.
No"· E 1,4&lt;lndl!*)' .51-t% inr.,..t "hen h•l&lt;l to ll"'lltW'Ity
of ~ yN~. Hl mo~~tth. (4 % t ile lm ,...,.,, Bonds.,..
r eple~ 1f l011t, 11Aitn. or d..ti'OyRI. Whtn ....ted they
&lt;!lin bf- o:&amp;ahed at ro\11' ben&amp;. lnl..-..t i1 not . .bject to
el.at~ or loxs l inc:olll&lt;!
lad r..t..,.•lt.al miJ' be
d eferr&lt;Od until redempLion .

1.11-.

BAKER FURNITURE"
MIDDI!PORT, 0.

JUNIORS TO REPORT
Meigs High School students
who will be juniors next year
and are enrolled in the. oc- .
cupational education program
are to report to Meigs High
School Wednesday.

il

6M8
web co n .
structian . Choice
of 3 colors .

wide arraY of

$

. EXTRA

394
MATURE CUTI
MENS CASUAL

94

PANTS
Slraigh t leg stvles for n:en
wh1 don't like flare leg s.
Choice of 3 colors. Mact.ine
wilshable. Values to $'1,00
p a ir . Waist sizes. 30 to 3~.

S·PEC~AL

MENS ORLON SOCKS
ONE SIZE FITS 10 To 13

$ 87

PERMANENT
. PRESS

¢

A' spcctal purcha se ju st tor Father's

OF

Day . ·Your choice of a wid e se lection of

COURSE!

PAIR

colors. All wlthnon-sa g top s. Irregula rs
tJf s 1.00 values.

COMFORTABLE KNIT SHIRTS
FOR SUMMER
- Crew Necks
- Zip Necks
- 3 Sulton Collar
Poly este r and

THAT DAD WILL LIKE!

94

cotton ,

lerrv cloth s and 100 pet .

cottons. All are

m~ chin e

washable in s ites Small
to Ex -targe .

Favorite Hot Weather Shirt

TANK TOPS
A good se lection of colors and
trim s, many with popula r novei!Y
de si gn s. Machine washable m

MENS WHITE
lr'''U BE 0

MENS COTTON

MENS DENIM

BRIEFS or
I-SHIRTS

WESTERN
JACKETS

WORK
SOCKS

"HANES" QUALITY

Size 36 To 44

Size 10 To 12

siz es s mall to ex-large.

$ 67$
TO

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES
All Your Favorite Artists!

l :lJ/4

oz.$ 894

$ OlJ

WHY
PAY
MORE?

We 1qht

FOR

We Have Dozens of Other
Gift Suggestions for Dad.
Visit Shopper's Mart!

GIR DAD WITH NEW SHOES

$andL

c!JJ!~.!j~$

SET DERBY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
American Legion Post 467 will
sponsor a fishing derby . of'
fering trout, bass and catfiSh,
Saturday
and
Sunday,
beginning at 5 a.m. each day ,
at the Rutland Legion Farm,
Beech Grove Road.

•

tabn cs i n

Comfortable flat
arm with s turdy

color s, s o lid s, prints, s tripes a nd c h~c k s •. all
with popular co llar st yles . S~ort _ shtrf ~ •r es
Smil ll to Ex . La,-ge . Dress shtrl s tze s 14 12 to 11 .

to us."

WILL HOST
Mrs. Sibley Slack will be
among the Middleport Pomeroy Area
Branch, .
American Association of
University Women, serving as
hostesses at the Heritage Day
observance at the Meigs
Museum .

LAWN. CHAIR

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS
FOR DAD

Tarzan reached
durin_g trance

Mrs . Joe Turner has
returned home from Bucyrus
where she spent a month with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner_
and family .
She went
especially to be with her
grandson, Michael, who is at
home now recuperating from
extensive back injuries suffered In a motorcycle accident.
Bringing Mrs . Turner to
Middleport were her son and
daughter-in-law and their son,
Gary.
.
• Mrs. Ann Angel and son,
•·Kevin, left Saturday from
· Columbus for Denver, Colo.
where they will visit Mrs ...Jo
Bunton and son, Brett. · Mrs.
Angel will return following a
two week 'visit. Her son will
remain. their and attend a sixweek camping session at the L.
and S. Summer Camp just
outside of Denver. Brett
Bunton will also be attending
the camp.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul HaptonstaU and Robert Sharp were
In Amanda Sunday to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Vance Sharp:

june 'Speci41!

0

•

·.·:

MEET CHANGED
A meeUng of the Busy Bee·
Class of ihe Middleport First
Baptist Church has been
changed from June 14 to June
21 at 6 p.m . It willl;&gt;e a picnic at.
the hom of· Mrs. John Lyons.

I&amp; a

A lot of people don't
buy U.S. Savings Bonds
because they think it
takes them 10 years
to mature. Take another,
look. The old green Bond
ain't what it used to be.
Now Bonds mature in
less than 6 years.
That's one reason
Bonds are so popular
nowadays. They're
simple to buy, and one
of the surest ways to
build a nest egg for
something (or someone)
special.
U.S. Savings Bontis.
Maturity at 5 years,
10 months. If you don't

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middle)Xlrt-Pomeroy, 0., June 12, 1973

===i

"Priced to s.nt"Y- a'"\\t:cfflit '1\lo~
.

MENS DRESS SHOES

DEPENDABLE ''WALKER" BRAIID
MEIIS
WORK

A com plet e selet:; ti on of styl es including

TO FIT THE JOB!

whil e s and th e new highe r hee ls. Lace -up s,
.11p..&gt; ns and strap styles in sizes 6 112 to 12 .
Some f
Wld fh s alSO .

87 $
TO

OPEN 6 DAYS
10 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY
1 PM TO 6 PM
• PT.

~LEASANT •

e PLENTY OFA DISCOUNT
OfPA RT M f. H T STQitl
.

FREE

MASON, e SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA • RIPLEY, W.VA.

P~ARKING

AT ALL
LOCATIONS

�l
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-romeroy. 0 ., June 12, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS
OF

QUALITY

Pomeroy_
Motor Co.

1970 BUICK ELECTRA22S

!

I

A high volume Ashland
Service Sta. located in
M iddleport .
Paid
training. excellent opp.
to become your own
boss .

o.

$1695

A-door, local 1-owner car with tess than :nooo miles,
Cl imate Control a ir conditioning, 40-60 power seat. rad io,
gold fin ish . Loaded with many e-Kfras .

PH. 992-5221
8 a . m. til 5 p .m.
F"'" •liOQS Ph. 742 -5979

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY I
S795
4-door , 52,000 miles, good t ires , 6 cylinde r. automaf tc
transmission, black fin ish .

$895
1969 CHEVROLET BELAIR
4-door, gold finish , clean interior, good t ires. 327 V-8

Notice

For sale

LOST In vicinity of Maplewood
Lake .
Pa ir 'of
black DRIVE A LITTLE : SAVE A
pres cription
sunglasses. LOT!!! Refrigerators , sq .
Reward . Phone 4.46-251-4.
door. late models ; others
6-12-3tc
from S19.95 ; auto. washers,
$45 ; elect., gas dryers SJS ;
LOST Border Collie doQ,
gas. elec. ranges ; clothes
medium size, white w ith liQflt
closets;
dlneHes. maple, oak,
brown spots . Has curl ln tail.
ch rome ;
ROUND
OAK
Answers to " Fred" . Family
TABLES, 3. 4. 5 pc. bedroom
pet. Call 843-2778. Reward
suites; old chest of drawers.
$20.00.
dro nin g tables . SPECIAL
6-7-5fc
FOR DAD - vinyl recliners,
fabr ic swivel rockers $65.
{Cash only at th is price ! no
layaways!.
NEW
FUR WANTED _ .- OLD UPRIGHT
NITURE
l
iving
room
suites
PIANO S·. Any cond ition .
$139.95 vo : •..-hi,.. sets $16.95 ; 9
Payin g flO each . First floor
x 12 ~hag , ... ~!), oval, fringed
only. Wr ite g iving d irections .
$49 . 95 ; 9 x 12 Thrifte x
Pianos , P . 0 . Sox Box 188,
linoleums $6 .98.
Kuhl 's
Sardis, Ohio, 43946.
Bargain Center " at caution
6-10-6tp
lighf" ; Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains.
Open everyday EXCEPT
OLD Furniture, oak ta bles ,
MONDAY .
Wooden ice boxes, brass beds,
6-10-6fc
dishes
or
comp lete
households ; Write M . 0 .
REGISTERED 3 year old
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Tennessee
Walker - stallion.
call 992.6271 .
992-3518.
l -13-ftc
6-10-6tc

Wanted To Buy

Business Services
ASK US ABOUT
PRE- FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

~

...

Built to Your'' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

..

EXPERT
Ytbeel Alignment
•5.55
On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Pomeroy Motor Co.

------

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

VETERANS

BAVIN' AT TH'
MOON, PAW ·-

1.10. 8UT

/.JOT ,.,
'IUJJ - ~R. "RE '&lt;tU ?
\"l)() "~!;

IT'S PLAYIN'
HIDEY·SEEK
WIF HIM

I WONDER WHY

oooo
IM'I'f

c;w·r

TEE"IV· ACSfRS SEE TAt.r
M OVIE "'

.r- - -- '

EXPERIENCED

Radlato
Service

c " 'llo!,.l • ..,. , ,. '" YS ' " Olt

From the laroest Truck or

Bultdoz.er Rad iator to the
Heater &lt;.:ore .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator SPf'C:ialist

~mauest

SMITH NELSON

SPE CIAL Yard Sale on constructlon equipment- 1 - 1750
Open8Til5
watt portable generator, 1. 10
MATERIALS CO.
Monday 1hru Saturday
in. sabre Sol'(tl ; I transit . new
Ph . 992-2174
773-SSS4
Mason , W. Va .
406 E. Main, PomerOy , 0 .
Pomeroy
set of 20 ft . aluminum ex tens ion ladders, screw jacks
and hydraul ic jacks, dry wall
Specialist
tool s, ceramic tools, · pipe
OPEN EVE :
. ~ P.M.
dyes , approximtttely 100
Wheel
,OMEROl LltiiO
pieces small hand tools. All
Alignment
sales will be cash. Earl R.
Roofing · Roof Painting,
12 Years · 10.75 A . P.R.
Werner restdence, Bradbury,
Spouting,
Plumbing ,
II
Must
1 to 6 p.m. Saturday, June 16.
for Your
WANTED - Used merchandise AM-FM stereo received wl.th
Remodeling
,
Complete
Be Right
6-10-6fc
- for auction . We buy, we
b It
WANT ADS
Building , Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
sell, whole houseful or single
ul . /n 8 track tape player, 4
or we will
s peaker
INFORMATION
sound
system .
Siding.
JEWELL Decor ators . Dry wall
Malee it Right.
pieces , cons Ignmen t or
Balance $106.99 or use our
DEADLINES
finishing, paper hang i ng .
percentage. We will haul.
budget terms . Call 992·3965.
5 P .M. Day Before Pub lication .
interior and exterior pa int Phone 992-3354. Hayman•s.
. _ tc
Monthly Deadline 9 a . m .
PHONE , 992-2550
Qualify Today, Ca!l
6 10 6
ing . Phon 698.53.41 or 669 ·
Can ce llat ion - Corrections
- - - - - - - -- - - - - --6·5_-amc r===~----------~
3764.
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
8-4 :30 Daily, B- 12 Sat .
304-485-3809
6-1-121c ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
Day of Publication
SP~ING SPECIALS
In
the
R. H. Rawlings Sons
and 'be in fo rmed of the t un c REGULATIONS
OR MIDDLEPORT WITH OR
Choose your own home from
Building .
l ions· ot your government are
The Publ isher reserves the
WITHOUT HOUSE. PLEASE
embod ie d i n publ ic notices . In
right to edi t or reiect any ads KOSCOT SPEC IALS for June
Your AREA DEALER.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport , 0.
992 -2101
Middleport , 0 .
WRITE Box 729-F, C·O The
that self gove r nment ch arge s
deemed obtectional .
The
1
include Family Suntan Oil
Daily
Sent
inel
,
s
tat
ing
all cit i zens to be infOrmed :
publ isher will not be responsible
Spray and J r. Facial Mask.
description and lowest selling
hi Carton ,
th is newspaper ur ges eve r y
tor more t han one incorrect
Also with a purchase of either
price.
cr t rzen to read and s tudy the se
1nsert io n.
Set Up, 134.95
AfterShave or Electric Pre ·
notices We str ong ly advise
RATES
POMEROY
6'S-61p
SEPTIC TANKS
Have your T.V. Picture Tube
those citl1efiS , seek ing f ur ther
For Want Ad Service
Shave by Koscot you receive a
Restored
As
Good
As
New
N'
"'
o:.
""'
1
::-cC;;o
:-,
p
-p_
e_
r
--::5:4c
.r
a
d
:
-l
:
a
c
-:tors
,
mtormation , to e)(erc ise the ir
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Kleans ing Kream free. Phone
HOME &amp; AUTO
CLEANED
Right In Your Home .
r ig ht of a cce ss to public
Minimum Charge 75c
1 4~.95
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
28c ; brass , 20c; batteries, 85c
·records and public m eeti ng!. .
12 cents per word three
Guaranteed for 4 Mo.
· 6-1-tfc
ea ch ; dean dry roots, Gin 992-2094
In Carton
conse cut ive insertions .
DUMP TRUCK
seng
,
$52
lb.;
yellow
root,
$4
;
18 cents per word six con .
606 E . Main Pomero.v
Set
up.
554.95
4
FAMILY
rummage
sale
at
the
mayapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
secutive insertions.
Color-$30. 00
SERVICE
POMEROY
Millard Swartz residence. on
Hall , Reedsville, Ohio, 378'25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
9_._
JackW.
Carsey
,
Mgr.
6249.
Rt. 143 June 13 through 16,
Black &amp; White--$15.00
ads and ads pa id within 10 days
24 HO~R SERVICE
CARD OF THANKS
~
Phone 992 -2181
behind the Wesleyan Holiness
5-6-ffc
and
&amp; OBITUARY
Church .
PUBLIC NOTICE
$1.50 tor 50 word m tnimum
6-12-3fc WANTED - Young caltle. 742 - SHOWAL TER"s Wet
Pet ,
Glenn Davis . Stockpor t, Oh io .
Ea c h add itional word 2c.
=,...,---,.-----,-5387.
whos e e x.act address
is
Chester,
Ohio,
summer
BLINOADS
6-12-31c clea rance, five tanks of
unknown ; Mrs . St anley James ,
Add ittonal 25c Ch arg e per WILL do baking in my home.
949-3151
Stop In and See Our
JOHN TUCKER
Pies , cakes, coo kies and hoi
Jr , whose last known addr ess is Advertisement .
assorted
fish
at
5
for
Sl
while
Racine,
Ohio
Rt
. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
rolls . Phone 992 -3824.
4510 McKain Drive, Toledo ,
OFFICE HOURS
Floor
Display
.
lhey last . Will be open days 9
Ohio , De lbert Davis , whose last
8:30a . m . to 5. 00 p .m . Daily,
6-8· 12tc
992-3954
a . m. to 9 p. m. except on
known address is 1270 Camden 8· 30 a . m to 12.00 Noon
Thursday
and
Friday
,
4
p
.
m
.
· A.,.en ue , S. W ., Canton , Oh10 , Saturday .
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader EXCAVATING . Dozers. large
REDUCE excess fluid s with COOK, waitress and carhop ;
to 9:30p.m .
44706 ; Earl Davis. wh ose ad ·
apply in person, Craw's Steak
Fluldex - Lose weight with
I
WILL
do
housecleaning
In
the
and backhoe work; septic
dre ss is unknown; Harry Davis ,
and small; Backhoes and
6-• · lltp
House .
De x-A- Oiet ca psules at
tanks installed ; dump trucks
area of Middleport, Pomeroy
whose last known address is 201
loaders on track and tires ;
5-10-tfc
Nelson Drugs.
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
and Chesler. Call 992·7202 or
Park AIJenue, 77, West Canton.
Dump trucks Lo -boy
KNAPP
shoes,
10
pet.
to
28
pet.
985 -•146.
Oh io : Margurite Nice . whose IN LOVING remembrance of _ __ _ __ _ _
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
6-_11 -Jtp
service. Septic tanks Jn.
off on 16 styles. Order now.
la st known address is P .O. BoJt
BAR MAl D. apply in person . Hi and gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
6-8-6tc
s f~lled . George !Bill I Pullins.
our mother, Weltha Clark,
Supply limited. Phone 992·.
12:2, Un ion Furnace, Oh io. Dora
Ho Bar, Middleport. Equal
Jeffers , day phone 992-7089;
phone
992·2478 or 992·7402.
who
passed
away
one
yea
r
Sta n ley , address unknown ;
5324.
opportun ity employer.
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
ago today, June 12, 1972,
Mrs John J . Dixon . whose last
2-9-tfc
5-30-lfc
5232.
6-6-6tc
SOMEONE TO fill and sod six
kn own address is P . 0 . Bo x 8737 . We all miss you, Mom ,
sunken
graves ,
Wells
S Charl eston , W Va .; Mrs . The voice we loved is stilled ;
2-11 -tfc HARRISON "S TV service and
Cemetery,
North
of QUALIF IED
re frigeration EXCELSIOR Salt Works. E. AKC Toy Poodle puppies, S75
Pau l W . Hurd , wh ose la s t known A place is vacant in our he(Jrls ,
se rv ice ca lls . Phone 992·2522.
Ma in St .• Pomeroy. All kinds
and $85. Also Siamese k ittens, SEE US FOR : Awn inqs , storm
address is 1919 Lor ain Dr ive , Which never can be flied .
Harris o n ville .
Must
serv icema n . industrial.
2-9-tfc
of
salt
water
pellets,
water
Lima, Ohio , Louise Lucksy ,
$10. Phone 1·256-6247 , Kennels
guuarantee work. Write
comme rcia l, domestic , good
doors and windows, ca rports,
The Children, Louise Dixon
nuggets,
block
salt
and
own
Long Beach, California , whose
ol
Ca
lhoun
.
Ma rion (Welch) Hayman ,
pay and working conditi ons .
marquees, aluminum siding
and Rober t, and Mark Clark.
exact address is unknown;
Ohio .River Salt. Phone 992CONCRETE
5-20-30fc
1889
Case
Road,
Columbus,
Mu
st
be
experienced.
Gallia
and
rail ing . A. Jacob , sales READY -MIX
6-12-ltp
Luci lle Glasmi r e, whose last
3891.
delivered right to your
Ohio
4322•
.
Refrigera
t
ion
Co
.•
611
3rd
representative
.
For
free
know n address IS 185 Cleves
6-5-tfc POODLE puppies. Toy A.K.C.•
project. Fast and easy. Free
Ave., Gallipolis, &lt;146-4066 .
6-10-6fp
estimates, phone Charles
Avenue, , Cleve s, Ohm ; Da isy
estimates. Phone 992 -3284.
lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
6-4-tf
Chocolate - Show quality .
Roberts, whose address is
1973 - Zig Zagsewlhg machine .
G?eglein Ready -Mix Co. ,
unknown ; ' and Henry Werry .
NOTICE OF
Phone 992-5443.
John son and Son, Inc.
'
This mac:hlne darns, em Mtddleport,
Ohio.
whose Ia!.! known address is
AP:POtNTMENT
EXCELLENT opportunity in
3·2-ffc
23-ffc
broiders, overcasts, button -----~---=5..::·
Pomeroy , Ohio , ctnd whose
·
Case No. 209S6
local
retail
sales
open
for
6-30-tfc
exa ct address is un kn own , if Estate
of
LONNIE
S. 2 MOBILE homes with gas and
holes .
All without at right
men
.
Prefer
mature
HOUSE
and
roof
Painting;
air codi tioning and patio.
li ving and if any of the above LEMASTER Deceased .
tachments. · P.ay balance of
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
person - 30-40 years of age
interior and exterior, free
are deceased , th en t heir
Albert HilL Racine, phone
Notice IS hereby given that
$38.50 or pay ss per month.
with
some
background
in
REASONABLE
rates . Ph . 446es
timates;
call
992·7008
or
992unknown hei r s, devisees, Rena Lemaster of Rt . l, Shade,
68
DODGE
Charger
RT
38J
949 ·2261.
Call
992-5331.
4782,
,Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
retailing
but
will
consider
2460.
lega tees , adm in ist rators. Ohio , has been duly appoin ted
automatic, 4 barrel. Phone
6-12-6fc
6-10-tfc
-OwnE!r and Operator.
Veteran with in -service
ex.ecutors , and assigns . and the adm in is tratri x of the •Estate of
992 -5278.
5-21 -30tp
unknown heirs . d e v ise e s, Lonnie S . Lemas ter , deceased, TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
clerical , storekeeping or - - - - - - - - , 5-12-tfc
6-7-6tc
le gatee s , adm ini strators. lat e of Meigs Co unty , Oh io
warehousing
e)(perience. JUST tak·en in 1973 stereo-radio
Park
,
Minersville
.
Phone
992·
Creditors are req uired to ftle
comb. with 8 track tape. Take
executors, and assigns of E t.
Reply In confiden ce to Box
332• .
me r Dav is, deceased. Elizabeth their cla ims with said fiduciary
over payments of $7.55 per 1969 CHEVROLET truck "with
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
729-C,
C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel
,
6-12-ffc
Folmer Davis , deceased and within four months.
month or pay balance of
cheater.
axle
14'
dump
Complete Service
Pomeroy
,
Ohio.
Dated this 24t h day of May
Mabel ·
Dav idson
Dav is,
599.50. Call 992-5331.
body. Pri ced to sell. Call 992Phone 949-3821
6-10-31c
deceased , will ta ke not ice that 1973 .
FURNISED 4 room apartment.
5951.
6-10-6tc
Racine, Ohio
Joy ce A Davis , administratrix
Critt Bradford
MR asonld. APho~e J73-5147 , WANTED - Someone to paper ::-::-;:;------,-,------:-~
Manning 0 . Webster
6-12-6fp
of the estate of Elm er Davis.
Judge
deceased , filed her petition on
eyno 5 par men·
lOx 12 bedroom . Call992-6414. CRIB rnattress and jumper5-1-tfc
walker . Phone '192·7288 .
Court
of
Common
Pleas
,
May 3, 1973 1n the Common
6-12-6tp
6-10-3lp
Probate Division
O"DELL WHEEL Alignment
6-12-3fc
Pleas Cou rt , Probate Divis ion , (SJ
lo-,-ts' ln'M"'id:-d:-:l-eport ; . - --,,- - - - - --'-:29 (6 J 5,
12 , 31c :T"'w"'o::c-tr-a~i1-,-e-r :Meigs County , Ohio, Case No
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
1h duplex in Bradbury ; phone EXPERIENCED
waitress 2 USED c hain saws, Pomeroy TRACTOR fype riding mowe•,
20. 617 a II eg in g t h a t t h e person a I - --::-:::0:-:::"::':":"":::-:-:-:-::-·complete front end service,
32 in. cut. 8 h .p. like new. Will
es tate of said decedent , Elmer
NOTICE ON FILING
be!tore 6 p.m . 992 -5693.
wanted . Apply in ' person,
Home &amp; Auto, E. Main,
tune up ·and brake service.
Davis , is insuffi Cient to p~y his
OF INVENTORY
trade for Gravely. Phone 9856-11 ·5tc
King's Arms Kn ight Club.
Pomeroy, phone 992·2094.
WheelS
balanced
elec , deb ls and charges of ad .
AND APPRAISEMENT
3912 after 4:30 p.m .
6-11 -3tp
tronically . AII
work
6-12-3tc
m inister inq the estate ; that the The State of Qhio, Meig s 5 SLEEPING rooms with kit_ __ _ _ _ _ _
6·-12-Jtp .
guaranteed.
Reasonable
said Elmer Davis died seized in County . Probate Court.
chen, furn ished . For officia ls
1964
HARLEY
Davidson.
full
.
rates
.
Phone
742-3232
te e s imple of the following
To the Administrator of the
that work for the Ohio Power CUSTODIAN for Meigs ASCS
3232.
.
descnbed rea! estate:
estate , to such of the follow ing
dress - 74 - A-1 condition ,
Office part time . Contact
Co. Phone 7•2·&lt;16•5.
Coal
Sa id real es ta te being si tuated as are residents of the Sta te of
Sl
.
ISO
00
Phone
985-3912
after
2-18-tfc
Meigs ASCS Office, Masonic
in the ,Townsh~p ·of Salis b ury~ Ohio , viz : the surviv ing
6-11 -3tc
Temple Building, Pomeroy,
County of Metgs and State of spouse. tne next or kin , the
RIVER LOt
.4 : 30p.m .
..6-12-Jip
AUTO AIR conditioning . SerOh io. Applications will be
Ohi o :
benefi c iar ies under the will; ALL ELECTRIC - like new 3
•
BEDROOMS
- Large kifvice and repa ir . Call992-3802.
taken
until
Monday,
June
18.
PARCEL ONE :
and to the attorney or attorneys
1
rooms with large b'lth .
GROCERY business for sale.
•
chen, dining. gas forced air
Being an und ivided one .fh ird representing any of the
Equal
opportunity
employer
.
5-24-3otp
Electric walt oven, table. top
interest in the foll owing aforementioned persons 1
furnace. and full basement.
Bu ild ing for sale or lease.
6-12-ltc
range, large closet located on
described real estate :
A.da Jane Rowe , Deceased,
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30p.m .'
...._
Large lots, one on the river. ELNA and White Sewing
E. Main St., Pomerov . SPP tn BABYSITTER for 4'12 days
Being 1n sect ion 8, town 2, Racine. Ohio R . D. 2, Le tart
Asking
$10,500 .00 . Want to look
to
10
p.m
.
for
appointment.
~!1!!1!1!!'!!
rMachines .. . Service on all
range 13, beginning at th e Township, No . 20955.
appreciate. Ph . Gallipolis
week
.
Phone
992-3645.
and
mJke
us an offer .
makes . Reasonable rates .
northeast corner of the tra ct of . You are hereby notified that
3·20-tfc
R~:••
••6-9539.
uv.
6-12-3tc
land owned by Robert Dyke and the
Inventory
and
Ap The
Sewing Center , "Mid MOBILE
tlOME
5-29-tfc
E. MAIN._. . ._
_.
30 fee t from the center tine of prsisement of the estate of th e
dleport, Ohio.
HOOD"S AQUARIUMS : fish
3
BEDROOMS
Master
has
lh e Brick pa'ving on the Chester aforementioned , deceased, lat e
and supplies , new location,
11 · 16-ltc
nir:;e built-In vanity with lots of
POMEROY
Road , thence nor th 8 deg . 45 of said County, was filed in th is PRIVATE meeting room for
Ash
Street,
Middleport,
near
min . west on . line with a large Court. Sa id Inventory and
any organ iza tion ; phone 992drawers . Nice modern front WILKINSON Small Engine
park; Phone 992-54•3.
NOW SEE THIS
Hickory tre e back of the En - Appraisement will be tor
J975.
kitchen with spacious cup.
LAST YEAR "S timothy hay.
Sales &amp; Service, 810 3rd St.,
terp rise Schoo l lo t , a distance of hearing before this Court on the
1-7-tfc
Like new , k itchen has lots of
3-11 -tfc
Phone
949-3051.
boards
.
Oil
furna
ce.
Want
Middleport . Lawn mower
61:2 to th e school lot ; thence Mth dav of June , 1973, at 10 :00
cabinets and range . 2 nice
$6.000.00 .
6-10-3fc
repair . Free pickup and
south Sdeg . 30 min . west 201 feet o'clock A.M.
bedrooms, lots of closets,
COAL Limestone, Excelsior"
to the road ; thenc e along the
Any person desiring to file SLEEPING room over Wif!e
delivery. Phone 992:3092. Also
SO ACRES
Store, Pomeroy. References
road north 84 deg . 15 min . east exceptions thereto must file
Salt
Works,
E.
Ma
in
St.,
dining
room
,
bath
,
full
Briggs and Stratlon ond
ALL
MINERALS
Large
HANGING baskets ; white, pink
required . Phone 992-5293 .
198 ; thence north 56 deg east 64 them at leA.st five days pr ior to
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Tecumcee parts.
base ment, hardwood floors,
barn
and
several
outbuildings.
and
red
geranium
s.
mums
teet , thence north 80 deg . 50 the date set for hearing .
6·5-lfc
4· 12-tfc
lots of stone and awnings. 2
10-6fc
and begonias ; Instant color
7 room farm home , with bath. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:6·...:.::
m inutes east 236 5 feet ; thence
Given under my hand and .,--,-~--=-~,---car
garage.
JUST
$14,000.00.
along road so uth 78 deg . east 86 seal of said Cour t. th is 1st day 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
for your garden - pansies,
Some bottom l~nd . Asking
DOZER and back hoe work ,
feet , thence south 44 deg . IS of June 1973.
petunias, marigolds, Phlox ,
A LOT FOR
unfurnish e d
apartments.
$21,500.00
.
m in . east 46 .5 feel. thence north
Manning D. Webster
ponds and septic tanks, ditchColeus , · Sa lvia , Zinnias,
Phone
992-5434.
LITTLE
A
INVESTMENT
6 deg east along th e Chester
Judge and ex .officio
1969 Vendale mobile home, 2
ing service ; top soil, flll dirt,
Dianthus,
Allyssum,
Snap4-1.2-ffc
s room frame . 3 bedrooms .
Roa d a distance of 28 feet to t he
Cle rk of Sai d Court
LARGE BRICK - In town . lots
tledrooms, porch, awning and
limestone ; B&amp;K Excavatin~ .
drag
ons.
Ageratium
and
place of beginn ing, contai n ing
Bath . lots.. of tile and
steps.
·
Aluminum
under·
of
large
rooms,
city
water,
Phone 992·5367 or 992.3861 ~
Porful acca. Vegetable plants
1 55 acres
By Ann B. Watson MOBILE HOME space in
paneling .
Some
new
pinning , 8 ft . extension, air
9-1-tfc
steam
heating,
and
parking
Cabbage,
bro
cco
li,
Ex.cept ih g mineral s and right
Syracuse.
Phone
992·6329.
Deputy Clerk
plumbing
with
new
hot
water
conditioned
and
dishwasher
to mine sam e .
(6) 5, 12 , 2tc
area.
Only
$32,500.00
.
cauliflower, lettu ce, eggplant . .
6-7-tfc
$7.500.00 . Phone 773-5&lt;165.
tank . Utility room. Porches.
PARCEL TWO :
mangoes. hot pe ppers and l4
7ACRES
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
Being an und ivid ed three .
6-11 ·4tc
Level lot in good location .
kinds of tomato plants.
FURNISHED
apartment
by
lhe
5
BEDROOM~
- Only about 3
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
fourths inter es t in the fo llowing
ss.ooo.oo
.
Cleland
Farm
and
month
.
Meigs
Inn
,
Pomeroy.
CLEANED.
REPAIRED .
years
old,
1112
baths,
oak
floors
,
descr ibed real estate :
BUSINESS ROOM
MILLER SANITATION,
6-Hic Greenhouse, E . Main , Racine . CASH paid for all makes and .
Being in Section 8, Beg inning
basement and lots of cupboard
Geraldine Cleland.
models of mobile homes .
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662on the west side of the Pomeroy
In good location . Lovely 3
space. A nice designed home,
Bernard Baruch. adviser
3035.
'~,and Chester road in Kerr 's Run
Ph one a rea code 614-.:123-9531.
bedroom apartment over .
ROOMS by the week, SIB up . - - - - - -- - - -5--1-8-ffc
in ali excellent location. 5 acres
at the nor t heast corner of what to Presidents and a finan Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .
4-13-tfc
10-4-tfc
lVl baths . Oini ng room .
ot bottom . Askin"g 130.000.00.
was formerl y Dan Lewis ' lot ; cier, was known as the
6-7-6tc RIVER frontage on Ohio River - - - - - - - ---------- . ,
Kitchen with '20ft. of cabinet
then ce
alo n g
the
Wm . ·•park" bench philosopher."
DO YOU HAVE AN IN · SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
across from Pomeroy on West T
Williamson lot : thence easterly
spa ce. Hardwood floors all
OUSTRIAL
SITE, ACREAGE .
service , alI makes . 992-228.4.
AIR
CONDITIONED
sleeping
Virginia
side.
Right
In
center
Air
Conditioners
along th e south side of a road to
carpe ted . Central hot wafer
SEVERAL HUNDRED
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
room . Twin beds available
of Regatta, sandy beach,
Awnings
a point wh ere sa1d road in ·
heat and air con d. Almost
Authprized Singer Sales and
tersects w tth said Pomeroy and
A"CR ES,
OR
SEVERAL
Monday . Phone 992-5.:140.
shade, water and electricity . I
Underpinning
new. PLEASE NO PHONE
Chester road ; th ence south ·
Servtce. We Sharpen Scissors.
6-10-3tc
have two ·lots surveyed, 100ft.
HOUSES . CALL US. WE ARE
wes terly along the wes t si de of
CA LL S ON THIS ONE .
wide at low water leveL 450ft.
3-29-tfc
IN
THE
NEED
OF
GOOD
th e said Pomeroy and Che ster
2 BEDROOM mobile home, a ir
to railroad tracks, 87ft. wide Com pl ete mobile hqme
$30.000
.00.
PROPERTIES
FOR
OUR
Road to the place ol beginn ing
plus g lgantic
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
co nd i tioned , Racine area .
at railroad tracks . The lots servi ce FAMILY HOME
·co nta in ing 1.40 acres . more or
-CLIE.NIS..
,
display
of
mobile
homes
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone
992-6329.
are
all
cleaned
and
mowed
less .
5 bedrooms . Dining room ,
.'HEt:E~'Ci;'!"EAiFORb~,ib(
operator's
license?
Call
992·
5-23-ffc
off. Marl on Reynolds, Mason, always available at . . '.
Ex ce pting m inerats an d right
lots of cabinets. 11h baths.
&gt;•;, 90~ B. U ,AFORD' .
2966 .
to mine same.
W. Va ., 773-5147. Reynolds
Kitchen has about 30 H.
,· ·
• ·; .l
m ~361s · ,
: .~
Refe renc e is made to dee ds
Flower Shop.
6·15-tfc
MILLER
cabinets,
double
stainless
recorded in Vol um e 171 paRe
.
.
JISSOCI~TES'
6-6-6tc
405, Volume 186 p1ge 361 ; and
steel sink. Very large living
S.UNDAYS PLEI\SE
G&amp;t: Appliance Repair . repair
MOBILE HOMES
Volume 1:25 page 462, Meigs
NOTICE
OF
room . 2 large glassed porCounty Deed Records
Father
's
Day
Special.
New
on all · laundry equipment,
APPLICATION
ches . All storm doors and
Th e persons f1r st above
swivel rockers In velvet - 4
1220 Washington Blvd.
refrigeration equipment and
Pub
I
ic.
notice
.is
hereby
given
windows. Garage &amp; carport.
descr ibed wi tt take further
large recl iners in vinyl. Olly
house wiring,·
welding,
t~at a l ~ 1 n f app lic ation l'las been
423-7521
BELPRE,
0.
5
ROOM
and
bath
house
on
not1ce that they have been made
$12.800.00 .
fli ed Wlth lhe Public Uti lities S69.96 , c ash a'hd carry ,
electric
and
gas.
Call
992-3802
large lot in upper end of
part ies def e ndant to sai d
Con •miss ion of Ohio to transfer Pom eroy Recover y, 622 E .
2 YEARS OLD
or after 4: 30 p. m. call 992·
Syracuse.
Large
attic
outpetition and th ey are req uir ed to
CE'rtif icates of Pub lic Con . Main St. Ph one 992 ·7554.
6050.
Wonderful location . 3 large
answer the same Or• or before
buildings . S7.000. Call 9•9-2595
veni en ce
and
Ne ce ss ity
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
6·7-8tc
the 21s t day of July , 1973
5-24-Jmp
bedrooms.
walk
-in
double
before
2:
30
p.m
.
or
any
time
Number 10915· 1 and 10907 . 1·
B.EFORE you buy any new
Said person s will further take
on
weekends
.
·
c:los.ets
.
Bath
with
shower
A total of 1.128 men and
Mobile Home, think of all the
fcrorn lde&lt;~l Tran sportat io n THREE Tw in needle sewing
not ice that th e prayer of said
ompany , Transferor . the
.
d 1 ·
tile etc. The kitchen is a
6-4-12fc
money you can save on a good
pe-t it ion is that said rea l estat e wom"en· athletes from 35
present holder thereof. to Meigs
mach1r,1es, 1973 mo e Ill
wife's
dream
.
Range,
house
rate
model
used
Mobile
Home
.
be sold In its entirety , t hat th e n3tions conlpeted in the
T rans portatior1 Co mp a ny,
walnut stand . All features
r ight s, interest and lien s of all 1llh Winter Olympic games
Here are some everyday low
2 ovens, 30 tt. of cabinets,
T rtJnsfe ree, the Transferee
bullt.Jn to make fancy designs
partie s be deterinmed , that al Sapporo, Japan. Feb. agrees to adopt all tariffs and and do stretch sewing . Also
DUE to job transfer , must sell •
prices :
1·1 971
.
60x12
reL Dining room, double
there be another appraisal
Champion
Deluxe,
2
bedroom,
home , 3 bedroom , total
sc~edules
no~
?n
file
with
the
buttonholes,
blind
hems,
etc
.
glass
doors
to
concrete
patio.
made in order that the enttre 3-13. 1972. The Sovi.el Union sard Commtss ton . . Interested
S•495.00 ; 1--1971 . 60x12
electric, large lot . F. H.A.
$.:13.35
cash
price
or
terms
Large
liv
ing
room
with
interest of said real estate may was the unofficial winner parties may obtarn further
11 bl
El t
H ·
Buddy, 3 bedroom. $&lt;1695.00 ;
aJ:!proved, Syracuse. Phond
be · appra 1sed, and tha t title to . of these games garnering mformat
ion as to sa id A . ava a e.
ec ro
yg•ene
firepla ce. Utility room .
992-7836.
1- 46xl0 Armor, 2 bedroom ,
the above desc ribed reat estate
Plication by addressing t~e
Co. Phone 992-7755.
Basement. Level lot 100xl20.
__:_::
$2595.00 ; 1- 55xl0 Hillcrest, 3
5-25-tfc
be quieted as aga inst all parti es 16 medals- 8 gold, 5 silver ~ Publ ic Utilities Commission of
6-7·6tc
$23.000
.00 .
to th is action .
bedroom . $2795.00 ; 1-60x12
and 3 bronze. The World Ohio, Colum bus , Ohio .
HAVE YOU OR OTHERS
Schult, 2 bedroom , l lf2 bath,
Almanac says. East Ger·
" '/ ACUUM Cit=aners. . E te .:.t ro
Joyce A. Dav is.
7 ROOM hoose with bath in
TRIED
TO SELL YOUR
Idea
l
Transpor
t
ation
shar
p
you
can
save
lots
of
Hyg iene new demonstrators
Admix . of the estate many captured 14 medals:
Rutland , air conditioned,
Company
money on th is unit . This is
PROPERTY?
CAN
"T!
JU
ST
has
'
all
clean
ing
attachments
of E lm er Davi s , Norway. 12 ; Switzerland, 10:
l6 2J Wesl Main 'Street
carpeted
, gas furnace , dish .
just
a
few
of
the
many
YOU GIVE US A TRY . NO
plus the new Electro Suds for
decea sed . The Netherlands. 9. The
ZanesY ille , Ohio 4370 1
washer,
double oven, range,
barga
ins
available
now
at
SA
LE
.
NO
CHARGE.
shampooing carpet. Only
U
.S.
placed
sixth
with
8
double
garage,
large carport,
Berry-Miller
Mobile
Home
J . B 0 ' Bnen , attorney
Meigs Transponation
527 .50 cash price or terms
HENRY R. CLELAND
4
acres
cleared
and fenced ,
Sales,
705
Farson
Street,
tor PlainHft-,- medals.
Company
avBilable . Electro Hygiene
BROKER
small
barn
and
other
Belpre, Ohio. Phone 423-9531
l'np ~ l'llo:'hl ® 1 : 1; : ~
RDI
Co . Ph one 992 -7755.
992 -2259
buildings . Phone 614-742-6834.
.'\ • · l\'~1' :111•• 1' J.:nlo •l'for'(&gt;l, ,\ ""' "
15 18, 15.22. 29 1615,12.61
Open
7
days
.
Cheshire , Ollie
6-7-6tc
. (S l ?9 !61 5, 11. 31C
If no answer 992-2548
5·30-lfc
6-7·5fc
engine, power steering, radio .

ooo

0

Ot: BULLET STOPPED

Lost

FOR LEASE

BARNEY

MOTORS. INC.

rr ALL IN
1HESLIPE~

•••AND J..O!;f

TALK ABOUT

S ~UCK I N'

PUTT ING THAT
S IGN OVER ALL YOUR
MIRRORs;

AN b JIV IN' ... 8UT 'IOU'RE
ONL'i FOOLING YOUR-

SeLF, f:ERGY

J.

ITS " SAP $1"0RV.
HE MADE 1&lt;.
FOI&lt;"ruNE ON lllE
S10CK MARKET. ..

LET US HELP YOU

BANK FINANCING

- -- - - --

- -- - --

For Your Mobile HomeLand--No Down Payment

PUBLIC NOTICES

1-lAPPENED WH I LE
W.A .S .T.E. WA~

Your Right to Know

SPE&gt;JDI N"

All-WEATHER

SABRE TILLER
31h HP
129.95

f-1\11-.L'r'UNS-

N0Tf.llt.l' !!

&gt;.JOT

'f()U

'&gt;O"LL 1-\AF'TA
GIT ..JOBS
&amp;AI'I.NII.j'
MONE&gt;I '5TEADO"
SPEt.IDII.I'
IT.'.'- _ _,

POOR

- Ut&gt;

POOR!!

IT'S RO TTEN LITTL g.
R.E A C TlO NAP.IES L IKE HER
THAT'R.E R UI N ING AM ER ICA.~'

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP .

IS -n-IAT

FINAI-1

OFFICE SUPPLIES

- - ----:c--

JOHNSON'S T.V.

FURNITURE

MODERN

SANITATION

Help Wanted

Employment Wanted

~

,',.

.

TI&lt;E~5 A STRONG 5EN5E OF RE5PON51LITY AMON6 1HE"I5LANDERS, WINNIE.
IF A CHILD'5 PARENT5 PIE, ANYONE
WHO CAN FEED AND HOUSE HIM
TAKES HIM IN •••

In Memorv

-------=-=

Wanted

Pets For Sale

- - -- - -

For Rent

Auto Sales

QuiT MOA.IJI~! IT'5

I CAIJ'T 5TAtJD

'bUR 0\IJN FAULT!

l\i6~1JD~
.a; MEL.TitJt;, .

- - - -- -

- -- - - -

For Trade

::::!1..

Real Estate For sale

~~

~CLELAND

'1-•--...
·.oa

8E ci:lREFUL·.. HE.
IS ,::i CRUEl AND

SUsPICIOUS MAN!!

THERE IS r&lt;O WAY Of
OEDUC1Nil OUR C'Clt)fiSE I

I C.OT YO:JR C!OIJ,

"· I' LL PUT IT .POYI!l
Oil THE TABLE ... JF YOlitL
lET ME. G6T THOSE
MAPS OFF FIRST !

PRINCESS, S!t!CE WE ARE

HEVER PERMITTED
TO 40 A80'1E AND
OB'S€RYE THE HEAVEH L'f
BODIES!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Florida
tourist
re sort
6. Sa race n's
faith ·
11. Visionary
12. Snare
13. Throw in
the towel
(3 wds.)
15. Indian a
city
,.,.--------.:~---,116. ln medias

'TV

for Sale

- - -- - -

TIME!

- -- - -

...

-----

ON A CAM~LS BACK
IS A BIG BUMP.
fooD IS SToREI?THERE;
1\S CAL.L.ED

A HUMP.'

_____

We talk to JOU

like .a person._

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

-----'---

.

'

4. Per·
cc ptiblc
5. An Amer·

ican in
Me xico
6. Coroner's
duly
7. markee
8. Fren ch
river
9. Dal sylikc
fl ower
10. Untid y
14. L.S.D. ex·
cursion
17. Floor
covering
18. Evc nl(ul

days

19. Chemist's
workshop
23. Dis·
sertalion

U.A.R.
Sil ence!
Postpone
Vestige
Alfon so's
queen
Dutch
cheese
Brazier
36. }i'oot lever
38. Mother of
Hezekiah
39. One
kind
of ho g
10. Admitting
defeat
(sl.)
( 3 wds )
15. Pallid
46. Japan ese

.»lllJWIDilJ!:;-~ !::::!::!-'
Unscramble theae four Jumble-.
one letter to. each aquan, to

25. 1nlcrlacc
2'7. Sum up
28. Prcsid cn·
tial nick·
name
29. Scottish
uncle
31. Irish
island s
33. Custard apple
tree
34. Di s·
concert

35. Wall
recess

37. Rye
disease
41. Prefix
used wah
plunk and
chao
42. Sun bathe
43. Prcsiden tia l
nicknam e
44. Pendleton

~11.'1)

f

(J (]

t
) I )

··~

tltAW11E

FllAGEO
Y" '4

I

t

Now......,.. tilt drcled !etten
to fonn
....,..r, u

11M....,..._

~

~~~~~~~~A~~J:J:"]~~
(I I HIb7111t~•~
IH ll)

1_,..1115 GUISWIUnl
.
fc-•1enl•7••

I

J-mblr•• TAIDY

·..

.. ·. ,.

.. .

, .......

.·..~~ :.: ~(

v.................,
NIRVY

SOCIAL

AMOUNT

A•••en Jf'lud lite ~nd o/llae d7nally ICJ'at-NASTY

M~ BEDROOM FACES EAsT. AND
50 I COULD SEE THE 5UNCUlliNG
VP... ONL'{.IT WASN'T1HE SUN ...
IT WAS A HUGE BASEBALL!

47. Word

·"
...,.(..-~-

=

form four ordinary word1.

Yesterday's Answer

city

No

r----.:._-------------,

3. Torme or
Ferrer

ANYONE
"Gone
OLDI!NOUG ..
With the
TO STEAL
Wind"
A WIFE
character
~O:::if-"il ''" Suffix lor
IS OLO
cook or
ENOUGW
crock
TO 00
Part of

Mobile Homes For Sale

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TREES AND STONES WILL
TEACH YOU THAT WHI CH YOU CAN NEVER LEARN
FROM THE MASTERS.-ST. BERNARD
(@ 1973 King Features ~yndic8te, lnro. )

w

involvin g
a?
f.S. Principl e
DOWN
I. Nervous
twitch
2. Nabokov ·
nove l

,_,

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'fE - Here's how to work it :
· AXYDLBAAXR
ls LONGFELLOW
One le tter sim ply stands ror an other. In t his sample A is
used tor the three L's, X for th e t wo O's , etc . f-i inglc let te rs,
apostrophes; the length ami formatio~ of th wo rds are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dafTer.::nt.

OKA'f, NOW TELL ME MOO:
AflOUT TH IS HUg~B.\5E8AlL ..

CRYPTOQUOTES
OJER

zc

llTEI'DQ
ll.IT

E

C I TBI!

WEF - YWW

&gt;' Z G I E F f,

0

~;

,

C YHHTR '
RIER

'R Z C

PM · FPMF C

PMFPMPZil U

R. C Y H

E
YW

C TE . -

U Z II I. T F
\

�l
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-romeroy. 0 ., June 12, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS
OF

QUALITY

Pomeroy_
Motor Co.

1970 BUICK ELECTRA22S

!

I

A high volume Ashland
Service Sta. located in
M iddleport .
Paid
training. excellent opp.
to become your own
boss .

o.

$1695

A-door, local 1-owner car with tess than :nooo miles,
Cl imate Control a ir conditioning, 40-60 power seat. rad io,
gold fin ish . Loaded with many e-Kfras .

PH. 992-5221
8 a . m. til 5 p .m.
F"'" •liOQS Ph. 742 -5979

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY I
S795
4-door , 52,000 miles, good t ires , 6 cylinde r. automaf tc
transmission, black fin ish .

$895
1969 CHEVROLET BELAIR
4-door, gold finish , clean interior, good t ires. 327 V-8

Notice

For sale

LOST In vicinity of Maplewood
Lake .
Pa ir 'of
black DRIVE A LITTLE : SAVE A
pres cription
sunglasses. LOT!!! Refrigerators , sq .
Reward . Phone 4.46-251-4.
door. late models ; others
6-12-3tc
from S19.95 ; auto. washers,
$45 ; elect., gas dryers SJS ;
LOST Border Collie doQ,
gas. elec. ranges ; clothes
medium size, white w ith liQflt
closets;
dlneHes. maple, oak,
brown spots . Has curl ln tail.
ch rome ;
ROUND
OAK
Answers to " Fred" . Family
TABLES, 3. 4. 5 pc. bedroom
pet. Call 843-2778. Reward
suites; old chest of drawers.
$20.00.
dro nin g tables . SPECIAL
6-7-5fc
FOR DAD - vinyl recliners,
fabr ic swivel rockers $65.
{Cash only at th is price ! no
layaways!.
NEW
FUR WANTED _ .- OLD UPRIGHT
NITURE
l
iving
room
suites
PIANO S·. Any cond ition .
$139.95 vo : •..-hi,.. sets $16.95 ; 9
Payin g flO each . First floor
x 12 ~hag , ... ~!), oval, fringed
only. Wr ite g iving d irections .
$49 . 95 ; 9 x 12 Thrifte x
Pianos , P . 0 . Sox Box 188,
linoleums $6 .98.
Kuhl 's
Sardis, Ohio, 43946.
Bargain Center " at caution
6-10-6tp
lighf" ; Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains.
Open everyday EXCEPT
OLD Furniture, oak ta bles ,
MONDAY .
Wooden ice boxes, brass beds,
6-10-6fc
dishes
or
comp lete
households ; Write M . 0 .
REGISTERED 3 year old
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Tennessee
Walker - stallion.
call 992.6271 .
992-3518.
l -13-ftc
6-10-6tc

Wanted To Buy

Business Services
ASK US ABOUT
PRE- FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

~

...

Built to Your'' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

..

EXPERT
Ytbeel Alignment
•5.55
On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Pomeroy Motor Co.

------

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

VETERANS

BAVIN' AT TH'
MOON, PAW ·-

1.10. 8UT

/.JOT ,.,
'IUJJ - ~R. "RE '&lt;tU ?
\"l)() "~!;

IT'S PLAYIN'
HIDEY·SEEK
WIF HIM

I WONDER WHY

oooo
IM'I'f

c;w·r

TEE"IV· ACSfRS SEE TAt.r
M OVIE "'

.r- - -- '

EXPERIENCED

Radlato
Service

c " 'llo!,.l • ..,. , ,. '" YS ' " Olt

From the laroest Truck or

Bultdoz.er Rad iator to the
Heater &lt;.:ore .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator SPf'C:ialist

~mauest

SMITH NELSON

SPE CIAL Yard Sale on constructlon equipment- 1 - 1750
Open8Til5
watt portable generator, 1. 10
MATERIALS CO.
Monday 1hru Saturday
in. sabre Sol'(tl ; I transit . new
Ph . 992-2174
773-SSS4
Mason , W. Va .
406 E. Main, PomerOy , 0 .
Pomeroy
set of 20 ft . aluminum ex tens ion ladders, screw jacks
and hydraul ic jacks, dry wall
Specialist
tool s, ceramic tools, · pipe
OPEN EVE :
. ~ P.M.
dyes , approximtttely 100
Wheel
,OMEROl LltiiO
pieces small hand tools. All
Alignment
sales will be cash. Earl R.
Roofing · Roof Painting,
12 Years · 10.75 A . P.R.
Werner restdence, Bradbury,
Spouting,
Plumbing ,
II
Must
1 to 6 p.m. Saturday, June 16.
for Your
WANTED - Used merchandise AM-FM stereo received wl.th
Remodeling
,
Complete
Be Right
6-10-6fc
- for auction . We buy, we
b It
WANT ADS
Building , Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
sell, whole houseful or single
ul . /n 8 track tape player, 4
or we will
s peaker
INFORMATION
sound
system .
Siding.
JEWELL Decor ators . Dry wall
Malee it Right.
pieces , cons Ignmen t or
Balance $106.99 or use our
DEADLINES
finishing, paper hang i ng .
percentage. We will haul.
budget terms . Call 992·3965.
5 P .M. Day Before Pub lication .
interior and exterior pa int Phone 992-3354. Hayman•s.
. _ tc
Monthly Deadline 9 a . m .
PHONE , 992-2550
Qualify Today, Ca!l
6 10 6
ing . Phon 698.53.41 or 669 ·
Can ce llat ion - Corrections
- - - - - - - -- - - - - --6·5_-amc r===~----------~
3764.
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
8-4 :30 Daily, B- 12 Sat .
304-485-3809
6-1-121c ACREAGE NEAR POMEROY
Day of Publication
SP~ING SPECIALS
In
the
R. H. Rawlings Sons
and 'be in fo rmed of the t un c REGULATIONS
OR MIDDLEPORT WITH OR
Choose your own home from
Building .
l ions· ot your government are
The Publ isher reserves the
WITHOUT HOUSE. PLEASE
embod ie d i n publ ic notices . In
right to edi t or reiect any ads KOSCOT SPEC IALS for June
Your AREA DEALER.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport , 0.
992 -2101
Middleport , 0 .
WRITE Box 729-F, C·O The
that self gove r nment ch arge s
deemed obtectional .
The
1
include Family Suntan Oil
Daily
Sent
inel
,
s
tat
ing
all cit i zens to be infOrmed :
publ isher will not be responsible
Spray and J r. Facial Mask.
description and lowest selling
hi Carton ,
th is newspaper ur ges eve r y
tor more t han one incorrect
Also with a purchase of either
price.
cr t rzen to read and s tudy the se
1nsert io n.
Set Up, 134.95
AfterShave or Electric Pre ·
notices We str ong ly advise
RATES
POMEROY
6'S-61p
SEPTIC TANKS
Have your T.V. Picture Tube
those citl1efiS , seek ing f ur ther
For Want Ad Service
Shave by Koscot you receive a
Restored
As
Good
As
New
N'
"'
o:.
""'
1
::-cC;;o
:-,
p
-p_
e_
r
--::5:4c
.r
a
d
:
-l
:
a
c
-:tors
,
mtormation , to e)(erc ise the ir
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Kleans ing Kream free. Phone
HOME &amp; AUTO
CLEANED
Right In Your Home .
r ig ht of a cce ss to public
Minimum Charge 75c
1 4~.95
Helen Jane Brown, 992-5113.
28c ; brass , 20c; batteries, 85c
·records and public m eeti ng!. .
12 cents per word three
Guaranteed for 4 Mo.
· 6-1-tfc
ea ch ; dean dry roots, Gin 992-2094
In Carton
conse cut ive insertions .
DUMP TRUCK
seng
,
$52
lb.;
yellow
root,
$4
;
18 cents per word six con .
606 E . Main Pomero.v
Set
up.
554.95
4
FAMILY
rummage
sale
at
the
mayapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
secutive insertions.
Color-$30. 00
SERVICE
POMEROY
Millard Swartz residence. on
Hall , Reedsville, Ohio, 378'25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
9_._
JackW.
Carsey
,
Mgr.
6249.
Rt. 143 June 13 through 16,
Black &amp; White--$15.00
ads and ads pa id within 10 days
24 HO~R SERVICE
CARD OF THANKS
~
Phone 992 -2181
behind the Wesleyan Holiness
5-6-ffc
and
&amp; OBITUARY
Church .
PUBLIC NOTICE
$1.50 tor 50 word m tnimum
6-12-3fc WANTED - Young caltle. 742 - SHOWAL TER"s Wet
Pet ,
Glenn Davis . Stockpor t, Oh io .
Ea c h add itional word 2c.
=,...,---,.-----,-5387.
whos e e x.act address
is
Chester,
Ohio,
summer
BLINOADS
6-12-31c clea rance, five tanks of
unknown ; Mrs . St anley James ,
Add ittonal 25c Ch arg e per WILL do baking in my home.
949-3151
Stop In and See Our
JOHN TUCKER
Pies , cakes, coo kies and hoi
Jr , whose last known addr ess is Advertisement .
assorted
fish
at
5
for
Sl
while
Racine,
Ohio
Rt
. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
rolls . Phone 992 -3824.
4510 McKain Drive, Toledo ,
OFFICE HOURS
Floor
Display
.
lhey last . Will be open days 9
Ohio , De lbert Davis , whose last
8:30a . m . to 5. 00 p .m . Daily,
6-8· 12tc
992-3954
a . m. to 9 p. m. except on
known address is 1270 Camden 8· 30 a . m to 12.00 Noon
Thursday
and
Friday
,
4
p
.
m
.
· A.,.en ue , S. W ., Canton , Oh10 , Saturday .
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader EXCAVATING . Dozers. large
REDUCE excess fluid s with COOK, waitress and carhop ;
to 9:30p.m .
44706 ; Earl Davis. wh ose ad ·
apply in person, Craw's Steak
Fluldex - Lose weight with
I
WILL
do
housecleaning
In
the
and backhoe work; septic
dre ss is unknown; Harry Davis ,
and small; Backhoes and
6-• · lltp
House .
De x-A- Oiet ca psules at
tanks installed ; dump trucks
area of Middleport, Pomeroy
whose last known address is 201
loaders on track and tires ;
5-10-tfc
Nelson Drugs.
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
and Chesler. Call 992·7202 or
Park AIJenue, 77, West Canton.
Dump trucks Lo -boy
KNAPP
shoes,
10
pet.
to
28
pet.
985 -•146.
Oh io : Margurite Nice . whose IN LOVING remembrance of _ __ _ __ _ _
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
6-_11 -Jtp
service. Septic tanks Jn.
off on 16 styles. Order now.
la st known address is P .O. BoJt
BAR MAl D. apply in person . Hi and gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
6-8-6tc
s f~lled . George !Bill I Pullins.
our mother, Weltha Clark,
Supply limited. Phone 992·.
12:2, Un ion Furnace, Oh io. Dora
Ho Bar, Middleport. Equal
Jeffers , day phone 992-7089;
phone
992·2478 or 992·7402.
who
passed
away
one
yea
r
Sta n ley , address unknown ;
5324.
opportun ity employer.
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
ago today, June 12, 1972,
Mrs John J . Dixon . whose last
2-9-tfc
5-30-lfc
5232.
6-6-6tc
SOMEONE TO fill and sod six
kn own address is P . 0 . Bo x 8737 . We all miss you, Mom ,
sunken
graves ,
Wells
S Charl eston , W Va .; Mrs . The voice we loved is stilled ;
2-11 -tfc HARRISON "S TV service and
Cemetery,
North
of QUALIF IED
re frigeration EXCELSIOR Salt Works. E. AKC Toy Poodle puppies, S75
Pau l W . Hurd , wh ose la s t known A place is vacant in our he(Jrls ,
se rv ice ca lls . Phone 992·2522.
Ma in St .• Pomeroy. All kinds
and $85. Also Siamese k ittens, SEE US FOR : Awn inqs , storm
address is 1919 Lor ain Dr ive , Which never can be flied .
Harris o n ville .
Must
serv icema n . industrial.
2-9-tfc
of
salt
water
pellets,
water
Lima, Ohio , Louise Lucksy ,
$10. Phone 1·256-6247 , Kennels
guuarantee work. Write
comme rcia l, domestic , good
doors and windows, ca rports,
The Children, Louise Dixon
nuggets,
block
salt
and
own
Long Beach, California , whose
ol
Ca
lhoun
.
Ma rion (Welch) Hayman ,
pay and working conditi ons .
marquees, aluminum siding
and Rober t, and Mark Clark.
exact address is unknown;
Ohio .River Salt. Phone 992CONCRETE
5-20-30fc
1889
Case
Road,
Columbus,
Mu
st
be
experienced.
Gallia
and
rail ing . A. Jacob , sales READY -MIX
6-12-ltp
Luci lle Glasmi r e, whose last
3891.
delivered right to your
Ohio
4322•
.
Refrigera
t
ion
Co
.•
611
3rd
representative
.
For
free
know n address IS 185 Cleves
6-5-tfc POODLE puppies. Toy A.K.C.•
project. Fast and easy. Free
Ave., Gallipolis, &lt;146-4066 .
6-10-6fp
estimates, phone Charles
Avenue, , Cleve s, Ohm ; Da isy
estimates. Phone 992 -3284.
lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
6-4-tf
Chocolate - Show quality .
Roberts, whose address is
1973 - Zig Zagsewlhg machine .
G?eglein Ready -Mix Co. ,
unknown ; ' and Henry Werry .
NOTICE OF
Phone 992-5443.
John son and Son, Inc.
'
This mac:hlne darns, em Mtddleport,
Ohio.
whose Ia!.! known address is
AP:POtNTMENT
EXCELLENT opportunity in
3·2-ffc
23-ffc
broiders, overcasts, button -----~---=5..::·
Pomeroy , Ohio , ctnd whose
·
Case No. 209S6
local
retail
sales
open
for
6-30-tfc
exa ct address is un kn own , if Estate
of
LONNIE
S. 2 MOBILE homes with gas and
holes .
All without at right
men
.
Prefer
mature
HOUSE
and
roof
Painting;
air codi tioning and patio.
li ving and if any of the above LEMASTER Deceased .
tachments. · P.ay balance of
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
person - 30-40 years of age
interior and exterior, free
are deceased , th en t heir
Albert HilL Racine, phone
Notice IS hereby given that
$38.50 or pay ss per month.
with
some
background
in
REASONABLE
rates . Ph . 446es
timates;
call
992·7008
or
992unknown hei r s, devisees, Rena Lemaster of Rt . l, Shade,
68
DODGE
Charger
RT
38J
949 ·2261.
Call
992-5331.
4782,
,Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
retailing
but
will
consider
2460.
lega tees , adm in ist rators. Ohio , has been duly appoin ted
automatic, 4 barrel. Phone
6-12-6fc
6-10-tfc
-OwnE!r and Operator.
Veteran with in -service
ex.ecutors , and assigns . and the adm in is tratri x of the •Estate of
992 -5278.
5-21 -30tp
unknown heirs . d e v ise e s, Lonnie S . Lemas ter , deceased, TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
clerical , storekeeping or - - - - - - - - , 5-12-tfc
6-7-6tc
le gatee s , adm ini strators. lat e of Meigs Co unty , Oh io
warehousing
e)(perience. JUST tak·en in 1973 stereo-radio
Park
,
Minersville
.
Phone
992·
Creditors are req uired to ftle
comb. with 8 track tape. Take
executors, and assigns of E t.
Reply In confiden ce to Box
332• .
me r Dav is, deceased. Elizabeth their cla ims with said fiduciary
over payments of $7.55 per 1969 CHEVROLET truck "with
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
729-C,
C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel
,
6-12-ffc
Folmer Davis , deceased and within four months.
month or pay balance of
cheater.
axle
14'
dump
Complete Service
Pomeroy
,
Ohio.
Dated this 24t h day of May
Mabel ·
Dav idson
Dav is,
599.50. Call 992-5331.
body. Pri ced to sell. Call 992Phone 949-3821
6-10-31c
deceased , will ta ke not ice that 1973 .
FURNISED 4 room apartment.
5951.
6-10-6tc
Racine, Ohio
Joy ce A Davis , administratrix
Critt Bradford
MR asonld. APho~e J73-5147 , WANTED - Someone to paper ::-::-;:;------,-,------:-~
Manning 0 . Webster
6-12-6fp
of the estate of Elm er Davis.
Judge
deceased , filed her petition on
eyno 5 par men·
lOx 12 bedroom . Call992-6414. CRIB rnattress and jumper5-1-tfc
walker . Phone '192·7288 .
Court
of
Common
Pleas
,
May 3, 1973 1n the Common
6-12-6tp
6-10-3lp
Probate Division
O"DELL WHEEL Alignment
6-12-3fc
Pleas Cou rt , Probate Divis ion , (SJ
lo-,-ts' ln'M"'id:-d:-:l-eport ; . - --,,- - - - - --'-:29 (6 J 5,
12 , 31c :T"'w"'o::c-tr-a~i1-,-e-r :Meigs County , Ohio, Case No
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
1h duplex in Bradbury ; phone EXPERIENCED
waitress 2 USED c hain saws, Pomeroy TRACTOR fype riding mowe•,
20. 617 a II eg in g t h a t t h e person a I - --::-:::0:-:::"::':":"":::-:-:-:-::-·complete front end service,
32 in. cut. 8 h .p. like new. Will
es tate of said decedent , Elmer
NOTICE ON FILING
be!tore 6 p.m . 992 -5693.
wanted . Apply in ' person,
Home &amp; Auto, E. Main,
tune up ·and brake service.
Davis , is insuffi Cient to p~y his
OF INVENTORY
trade for Gravely. Phone 9856-11 ·5tc
King's Arms Kn ight Club.
Pomeroy, phone 992·2094.
WheelS
balanced
elec , deb ls and charges of ad .
AND APPRAISEMENT
3912 after 4:30 p.m .
6-11 -3tp
tronically . AII
work
6-12-3tc
m inister inq the estate ; that the The State of Qhio, Meig s 5 SLEEPING rooms with kit_ __ _ _ _ _ _
6·-12-Jtp .
guaranteed.
Reasonable
said Elmer Davis died seized in County . Probate Court.
chen, furn ished . For officia ls
1964
HARLEY
Davidson.
full
.
rates
.
Phone
742-3232
te e s imple of the following
To the Administrator of the
that work for the Ohio Power CUSTODIAN for Meigs ASCS
3232.
.
descnbed rea! estate:
estate , to such of the follow ing
dress - 74 - A-1 condition ,
Office part time . Contact
Co. Phone 7•2·&lt;16•5.
Coal
Sa id real es ta te being si tuated as are residents of the Sta te of
Sl
.
ISO
00
Phone
985-3912
after
2-18-tfc
Meigs ASCS Office, Masonic
in the ,Townsh~p ·of Salis b ury~ Ohio , viz : the surviv ing
6-11 -3tc
Temple Building, Pomeroy,
County of Metgs and State of spouse. tne next or kin , the
RIVER LOt
.4 : 30p.m .
..6-12-Jip
AUTO AIR conditioning . SerOh io. Applications will be
Ohi o :
benefi c iar ies under the will; ALL ELECTRIC - like new 3
•
BEDROOMS
- Large kifvice and repa ir . Call992-3802.
taken
until
Monday,
June
18.
PARCEL ONE :
and to the attorney or attorneys
1
rooms with large b'lth .
GROCERY business for sale.
•
chen, dining. gas forced air
Being an und ivided one .fh ird representing any of the
Equal
opportunity
employer
.
5-24-3otp
Electric walt oven, table. top
interest in the foll owing aforementioned persons 1
furnace. and full basement.
Bu ild ing for sale or lease.
6-12-ltc
range, large closet located on
described real estate :
A.da Jane Rowe , Deceased,
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30p.m .'
...._
Large lots, one on the river. ELNA and White Sewing
E. Main St., Pomerov . SPP tn BABYSITTER for 4'12 days
Being 1n sect ion 8, town 2, Racine. Ohio R . D. 2, Le tart
Asking
$10,500 .00 . Want to look
to
10
p.m
.
for
appointment.
~!1!!1!1!!'!!
rMachines .. . Service on all
range 13, beginning at th e Township, No . 20955.
appreciate. Ph . Gallipolis
week
.
Phone
992-3645.
and
mJke
us an offer .
makes . Reasonable rates .
northeast corner of the tra ct of . You are hereby notified that
3·20-tfc
R~:••
••6-9539.
uv.
6-12-3tc
land owned by Robert Dyke and the
Inventory
and
Ap The
Sewing Center , "Mid MOBILE
tlOME
5-29-tfc
E. MAIN._. . ._
_.
30 fee t from the center tine of prsisement of the estate of th e
dleport, Ohio.
HOOD"S AQUARIUMS : fish
3
BEDROOMS
Master
has
lh e Brick pa'ving on the Chester aforementioned , deceased, lat e
and supplies , new location,
11 · 16-ltc
nir:;e built-In vanity with lots of
POMEROY
Road , thence nor th 8 deg . 45 of said County, was filed in th is PRIVATE meeting room for
Ash
Street,
Middleport,
near
min . west on . line with a large Court. Sa id Inventory and
any organ iza tion ; phone 992drawers . Nice modern front WILKINSON Small Engine
park; Phone 992-54•3.
NOW SEE THIS
Hickory tre e back of the En - Appraisement will be tor
J975.
kitchen with spacious cup.
LAST YEAR "S timothy hay.
Sales &amp; Service, 810 3rd St.,
terp rise Schoo l lo t , a distance of hearing before this Court on the
1-7-tfc
Like new , k itchen has lots of
3-11 -tfc
Phone
949-3051.
boards
.
Oil
furna
ce.
Want
Middleport . Lawn mower
61:2 to th e school lot ; thence Mth dav of June , 1973, at 10 :00
cabinets and range . 2 nice
$6.000.00 .
6-10-3fc
repair . Free pickup and
south Sdeg . 30 min . west 201 feet o'clock A.M.
bedrooms, lots of closets,
COAL Limestone, Excelsior"
to the road ; thenc e along the
Any person desiring to file SLEEPING room over Wif!e
delivery. Phone 992:3092. Also
SO ACRES
Store, Pomeroy. References
road north 84 deg . 15 min . east exceptions thereto must file
Salt
Works,
E.
Ma
in
St.,
dining
room
,
bath
,
full
Briggs and Stratlon ond
ALL
MINERALS
Large
HANGING baskets ; white, pink
required . Phone 992-5293 .
198 ; thence north 56 deg east 64 them at leA.st five days pr ior to
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Tecumcee parts.
base ment, hardwood floors,
barn
and
several
outbuildings.
and
red
geranium
s.
mums
teet , thence north 80 deg . 50 the date set for hearing .
6·5-lfc
4· 12-tfc
lots of stone and awnings. 2
10-6fc
and begonias ; Instant color
7 room farm home , with bath. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:6·...:.::
m inutes east 236 5 feet ; thence
Given under my hand and .,--,-~--=-~,---car
garage.
JUST
$14,000.00.
along road so uth 78 deg . east 86 seal of said Cour t. th is 1st day 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
for your garden - pansies,
Some bottom l~nd . Asking
DOZER and back hoe work ,
feet , thence south 44 deg . IS of June 1973.
petunias, marigolds, Phlox ,
A LOT FOR
unfurnish e d
apartments.
$21,500.00
.
m in . east 46 .5 feel. thence north
Manning D. Webster
ponds and septic tanks, ditchColeus , · Sa lvia , Zinnias,
Phone
992-5434.
LITTLE
A
INVESTMENT
6 deg east along th e Chester
Judge and ex .officio
1969 Vendale mobile home, 2
ing service ; top soil, flll dirt,
Dianthus,
Allyssum,
Snap4-1.2-ffc
s room frame . 3 bedrooms .
Roa d a distance of 28 feet to t he
Cle rk of Sai d Court
LARGE BRICK - In town . lots
tledrooms, porch, awning and
limestone ; B&amp;K Excavatin~ .
drag
ons.
Ageratium
and
place of beginn ing, contai n ing
Bath . lots.. of tile and
steps.
·
Aluminum
under·
of
large
rooms,
city
water,
Phone 992·5367 or 992.3861 ~
Porful acca. Vegetable plants
1 55 acres
By Ann B. Watson MOBILE HOME space in
paneling .
Some
new
pinning , 8 ft . extension, air
9-1-tfc
steam
heating,
and
parking
Cabbage,
bro
cco
li,
Ex.cept ih g mineral s and right
Syracuse.
Phone
992·6329.
Deputy Clerk
plumbing
with
new
hot
water
conditioned
and
dishwasher
to mine sam e .
(6) 5, 12 , 2tc
area.
Only
$32,500.00
.
cauliflower, lettu ce, eggplant . .
6-7-tfc
$7.500.00 . Phone 773-5&lt;165.
tank . Utility room. Porches.
PARCEL TWO :
mangoes. hot pe ppers and l4
7ACRES
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
Being an und ivid ed three .
6-11 ·4tc
Level lot in good location .
kinds of tomato plants.
FURNISHED
apartment
by
lhe
5
BEDROOM~
- Only about 3
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
fourths inter es t in the fo llowing
ss.ooo.oo
.
Cleland
Farm
and
month
.
Meigs
Inn
,
Pomeroy.
CLEANED.
REPAIRED .
years
old,
1112
baths,
oak
floors
,
descr ibed real estate :
BUSINESS ROOM
MILLER SANITATION,
6-Hic Greenhouse, E . Main , Racine . CASH paid for all makes and .
Being in Section 8, Beg inning
basement and lots of cupboard
Geraldine Cleland.
models of mobile homes .
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662on the west side of the Pomeroy
In good location . Lovely 3
space. A nice designed home,
Bernard Baruch. adviser
3035.
'~,and Chester road in Kerr 's Run
Ph one a rea code 614-.:123-9531.
bedroom apartment over .
ROOMS by the week, SIB up . - - - - - -- - - -5--1-8-ffc
in ali excellent location. 5 acres
at the nor t heast corner of what to Presidents and a finan Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .
4-13-tfc
10-4-tfc
lVl baths . Oini ng room .
ot bottom . Askin"g 130.000.00.
was formerl y Dan Lewis ' lot ; cier, was known as the
6-7-6tc RIVER frontage on Ohio River - - - - - - - ---------- . ,
Kitchen with '20ft. of cabinet
then ce
alo n g
the
Wm . ·•park" bench philosopher."
DO YOU HAVE AN IN · SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
across from Pomeroy on West T
Williamson lot : thence easterly
spa ce. Hardwood floors all
OUSTRIAL
SITE, ACREAGE .
service , alI makes . 992-228.4.
AIR
CONDITIONED
sleeping
Virginia
side.
Right
In
center
Air
Conditioners
along th e south side of a road to
carpe ted . Central hot wafer
SEVERAL HUNDRED
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
room . Twin beds available
of Regatta, sandy beach,
Awnings
a point wh ere sa1d road in ·
heat and air con d. Almost
Authprized Singer Sales and
tersects w tth said Pomeroy and
A"CR ES,
OR
SEVERAL
Monday . Phone 992-5.:140.
shade, water and electricity . I
Underpinning
new. PLEASE NO PHONE
Chester road ; th ence south ·
Servtce. We Sharpen Scissors.
6-10-3tc
have two ·lots surveyed, 100ft.
HOUSES . CALL US. WE ARE
wes terly along the wes t si de of
CA LL S ON THIS ONE .
wide at low water leveL 450ft.
3-29-tfc
IN
THE
NEED
OF
GOOD
th e said Pomeroy and Che ster
2 BEDROOM mobile home, a ir
to railroad tracks, 87ft. wide Com pl ete mobile hqme
$30.000
.00.
PROPERTIES
FOR
OUR
Road to the place ol beginn ing
plus g lgantic
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
co nd i tioned , Racine area .
at railroad tracks . The lots servi ce FAMILY HOME
·co nta in ing 1.40 acres . more or
-CLIE.NIS..
,
display
of
mobile
homes
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone
992-6329.
are
all
cleaned
and
mowed
less .
5 bedrooms . Dining room ,
.'HEt:E~'Ci;'!"EAiFORb~,ib(
operator's
license?
Call
992·
5-23-ffc
off. Marl on Reynolds, Mason, always available at . . '.
Ex ce pting m inerats an d right
lots of cabinets. 11h baths.
&gt;•;, 90~ B. U ,AFORD' .
2966 .
to mine same.
W. Va ., 773-5147. Reynolds
Kitchen has about 30 H.
,· ·
• ·; .l
m ~361s · ,
: .~
Refe renc e is made to dee ds
Flower Shop.
6·15-tfc
MILLER
cabinets,
double
stainless
recorded in Vol um e 171 paRe
.
.
JISSOCI~TES'
6-6-6tc
405, Volume 186 p1ge 361 ; and
steel sink. Very large living
S.UNDAYS PLEI\SE
G&amp;t: Appliance Repair . repair
MOBILE HOMES
Volume 1:25 page 462, Meigs
NOTICE
OF
room . 2 large glassed porCounty Deed Records
Father
's
Day
Special.
New
on all · laundry equipment,
APPLICATION
ches . All storm doors and
Th e persons f1r st above
swivel rockers In velvet - 4
1220 Washington Blvd.
refrigeration equipment and
Pub
I
ic.
notice
.is
hereby
given
windows. Garage &amp; carport.
descr ibed wi tt take further
large recl iners in vinyl. Olly
house wiring,·
welding,
t~at a l ~ 1 n f app lic ation l'las been
423-7521
BELPRE,
0.
5
ROOM
and
bath
house
on
not1ce that they have been made
$12.800.00 .
fli ed Wlth lhe Public Uti lities S69.96 , c ash a'hd carry ,
electric
and
gas.
Call
992-3802
large lot in upper end of
part ies def e ndant to sai d
Con •miss ion of Ohio to transfer Pom eroy Recover y, 622 E .
2 YEARS OLD
or after 4: 30 p. m. call 992·
Syracuse.
Large
attic
outpetition and th ey are req uir ed to
CE'rtif icates of Pub lic Con . Main St. Ph one 992 ·7554.
6050.
Wonderful location . 3 large
answer the same Or• or before
buildings . S7.000. Call 9•9-2595
veni en ce
and
Ne ce ss ity
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
6·7-8tc
the 21s t day of July , 1973
5-24-Jmp
bedrooms.
walk
-in
double
before
2:
30
p.m
.
or
any
time
Number 10915· 1 and 10907 . 1·
B.EFORE you buy any new
Said person s will further take
on
weekends
.
·
c:los.ets
.
Bath
with
shower
A total of 1.128 men and
Mobile Home, think of all the
fcrorn lde&lt;~l Tran sportat io n THREE Tw in needle sewing
not ice that th e prayer of said
ompany , Transferor . the
.
d 1 ·
tile etc. The kitchen is a
6-4-12fc
money you can save on a good
pe-t it ion is that said rea l estat e wom"en· athletes from 35
present holder thereof. to Meigs
mach1r,1es, 1973 mo e Ill
wife's
dream
.
Range,
house
rate
model
used
Mobile
Home
.
be sold In its entirety , t hat th e n3tions conlpeted in the
T rans portatior1 Co mp a ny,
walnut stand . All features
r ight s, interest and lien s of all 1llh Winter Olympic games
Here are some everyday low
2 ovens, 30 tt. of cabinets,
T rtJnsfe ree, the Transferee
bullt.Jn to make fancy designs
partie s be deterinmed , that al Sapporo, Japan. Feb. agrees to adopt all tariffs and and do stretch sewing . Also
DUE to job transfer , must sell •
prices :
1·1 971
.
60x12
reL Dining room, double
there be another appraisal
Champion
Deluxe,
2
bedroom,
home , 3 bedroom , total
sc~edules
no~
?n
file
with
the
buttonholes,
blind
hems,
etc
.
glass
doors
to
concrete
patio.
made in order that the enttre 3-13. 1972. The Sovi.el Union sard Commtss ton . . Interested
S•495.00 ; 1--1971 . 60x12
electric, large lot . F. H.A.
$.:13.35
cash
price
or
terms
Large
liv
ing
room
with
interest of said real estate may was the unofficial winner parties may obtarn further
11 bl
El t
H ·
Buddy, 3 bedroom. $&lt;1695.00 ;
aJ:!proved, Syracuse. Phond
be · appra 1sed, and tha t title to . of these games garnering mformat
ion as to sa id A . ava a e.
ec ro
yg•ene
firepla ce. Utility room .
992-7836.
1- 46xl0 Armor, 2 bedroom ,
the above desc ribed reat estate
Plication by addressing t~e
Co. Phone 992-7755.
Basement. Level lot 100xl20.
__:_::
$2595.00 ; 1- 55xl0 Hillcrest, 3
5-25-tfc
be quieted as aga inst all parti es 16 medals- 8 gold, 5 silver ~ Publ ic Utilities Commission of
6-7·6tc
$23.000
.00 .
to th is action .
bedroom . $2795.00 ; 1-60x12
and 3 bronze. The World Ohio, Colum bus , Ohio .
HAVE YOU OR OTHERS
Schult, 2 bedroom , l lf2 bath,
Almanac says. East Ger·
" '/ ACUUM Cit=aners. . E te .:.t ro
Joyce A. Dav is.
7 ROOM hoose with bath in
TRIED
TO SELL YOUR
Idea
l
Transpor
t
ation
shar
p
you
can
save
lots
of
Hyg iene new demonstrators
Admix . of the estate many captured 14 medals:
Rutland , air conditioned,
Company
money on th is unit . This is
PROPERTY?
CAN
"T!
JU
ST
has
'
all
clean
ing
attachments
of E lm er Davi s , Norway. 12 ; Switzerland, 10:
l6 2J Wesl Main 'Street
carpeted
, gas furnace , dish .
just
a
few
of
the
many
YOU GIVE US A TRY . NO
plus the new Electro Suds for
decea sed . The Netherlands. 9. The
ZanesY ille , Ohio 4370 1
washer,
double oven, range,
barga
ins
available
now
at
SA
LE
.
NO
CHARGE.
shampooing carpet. Only
U
.S.
placed
sixth
with
8
double
garage,
large carport,
Berry-Miller
Mobile
Home
J . B 0 ' Bnen , attorney
Meigs Transponation
527 .50 cash price or terms
HENRY R. CLELAND
4
acres
cleared
and fenced ,
Sales,
705
Farson
Street,
tor PlainHft-,- medals.
Company
avBilable . Electro Hygiene
BROKER
small
barn
and
other
Belpre, Ohio. Phone 423-9531
l'np ~ l'llo:'hl ® 1 : 1; : ~
RDI
Co . Ph one 992 -7755.
992 -2259
buildings . Phone 614-742-6834.
.'\ • · l\'~1' :111•• 1' J.:nlo •l'for'(&gt;l, ,\ ""' "
15 18, 15.22. 29 1615,12.61
Open
7
days
.
Cheshire , Ollie
6-7-6tc
. (S l ?9 !61 5, 11. 31C
If no answer 992-2548
5·30-lfc
6-7·5fc
engine, power steering, radio .

ooo

0

Ot: BULLET STOPPED

Lost

FOR LEASE

BARNEY

MOTORS. INC.

rr ALL IN
1HESLIPE~

•••AND J..O!;f

TALK ABOUT

S ~UCK I N'

PUTT ING THAT
S IGN OVER ALL YOUR
MIRRORs;

AN b JIV IN' ... 8UT 'IOU'RE
ONL'i FOOLING YOUR-

SeLF, f:ERGY

J.

ITS " SAP $1"0RV.
HE MADE 1&lt;.
FOI&lt;"ruNE ON lllE
S10CK MARKET. ..

LET US HELP YOU

BANK FINANCING

- -- - - --

- -- - --

For Your Mobile HomeLand--No Down Payment

PUBLIC NOTICES

1-lAPPENED WH I LE
W.A .S .T.E. WA~

Your Right to Know

SPE&gt;JDI N"

All-WEATHER

SABRE TILLER
31h HP
129.95

f-1\11-.L'r'UNS-

N0Tf.llt.l' !!

&gt;.JOT

'f()U

'&gt;O"LL 1-\AF'TA
GIT ..JOBS
&amp;AI'I.NII.j'
MONE&gt;I '5TEADO"
SPEt.IDII.I'
IT.'.'- _ _,

POOR

- Ut&gt;

POOR!!

IT'S RO TTEN LITTL g.
R.E A C TlO NAP.IES L IKE HER
THAT'R.E R UI N ING AM ER ICA.~'

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP .

IS -n-IAT

FINAI-1

OFFICE SUPPLIES

- - ----:c--

JOHNSON'S T.V.

FURNITURE

MODERN

SANITATION

Help Wanted

Employment Wanted

~

,',.

.

TI&lt;E~5 A STRONG 5EN5E OF RE5PON51LITY AMON6 1HE"I5LANDERS, WINNIE.
IF A CHILD'5 PARENT5 PIE, ANYONE
WHO CAN FEED AND HOUSE HIM
TAKES HIM IN •••

In Memorv

-------=-=

Wanted

Pets For Sale

- - -- - -

For Rent

Auto Sales

QuiT MOA.IJI~! IT'5

I CAIJ'T 5TAtJD

'bUR 0\IJN FAULT!

l\i6~1JD~
.a; MEL.TitJt;, .

- - - -- -

- -- - - -

For Trade

::::!1..

Real Estate For sale

~~

~CLELAND

'1-•--...
·.oa

8E ci:lREFUL·.. HE.
IS ,::i CRUEl AND

SUsPICIOUS MAN!!

THERE IS r&lt;O WAY Of
OEDUC1Nil OUR C'Clt)fiSE I

I C.OT YO:JR C!OIJ,

"· I' LL PUT IT .POYI!l
Oil THE TABLE ... JF YOlitL
lET ME. G6T THOSE
MAPS OFF FIRST !

PRINCESS, S!t!CE WE ARE

HEVER PERMITTED
TO 40 A80'1E AND
OB'S€RYE THE HEAVEH L'f
BODIES!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Florida
tourist
re sort
6. Sa race n's
faith ·
11. Visionary
12. Snare
13. Throw in
the towel
(3 wds.)
15. Indian a
city
,.,.--------.:~---,116. ln medias

'TV

for Sale

- - -- - -

TIME!

- -- - -

...

-----

ON A CAM~LS BACK
IS A BIG BUMP.
fooD IS SToREI?THERE;
1\S CAL.L.ED

A HUMP.'

_____

We talk to JOU

like .a person._

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

-----'---

.

'

4. Per·
cc ptiblc
5. An Amer·

ican in
Me xico
6. Coroner's
duly
7. markee
8. Fren ch
river
9. Dal sylikc
fl ower
10. Untid y
14. L.S.D. ex·
cursion
17. Floor
covering
18. Evc nl(ul

days

19. Chemist's
workshop
23. Dis·
sertalion

U.A.R.
Sil ence!
Postpone
Vestige
Alfon so's
queen
Dutch
cheese
Brazier
36. }i'oot lever
38. Mother of
Hezekiah
39. One
kind
of ho g
10. Admitting
defeat
(sl.)
( 3 wds )
15. Pallid
46. Japan ese

.»lllJWIDilJ!:;-~ !::::!::!-'
Unscramble theae four Jumble-.
one letter to. each aquan, to

25. 1nlcrlacc
2'7. Sum up
28. Prcsid cn·
tial nick·
name
29. Scottish
uncle
31. Irish
island s
33. Custard apple
tree
34. Di s·
concert

35. Wall
recess

37. Rye
disease
41. Prefix
used wah
plunk and
chao
42. Sun bathe
43. Prcsiden tia l
nicknam e
44. Pendleton

~11.'1)

f

(J (]

t
) I )

··~

tltAW11E

FllAGEO
Y" '4

I

t

Now......,.. tilt drcled !etten
to fonn
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11M....,..._

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fc-•1enl•7••

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v.................,
NIRVY

SOCIAL

AMOUNT

A•••en Jf'lud lite ~nd o/llae d7nally ICJ'at-NASTY

M~ BEDROOM FACES EAsT. AND
50 I COULD SEE THE 5UNCUlliNG
VP... ONL'{.IT WASN'T1HE SUN ...
IT WAS A HUGE BASEBALL!

47. Word

·"
...,.(..-~-

=

form four ordinary word1.

Yesterday's Answer

city

No

r----.:._-------------,

3. Torme or
Ferrer

ANYONE
"Gone
OLDI!NOUG ..
With the
TO STEAL
Wind"
A WIFE
character
~O:::if-"il ''" Suffix lor
IS OLO
cook or
ENOUGW
crock
TO 00
Part of

Mobile Homes For Sale

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TREES AND STONES WILL
TEACH YOU THAT WHI CH YOU CAN NEVER LEARN
FROM THE MASTERS.-ST. BERNARD
(@ 1973 King Features ~yndic8te, lnro. )

w

involvin g
a?
f.S. Principl e
DOWN
I. Nervous
twitch
2. Nabokov ·
nove l

,_,

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'fE - Here's how to work it :
· AXYDLBAAXR
ls LONGFELLOW
One le tter sim ply stands ror an other. In t his sample A is
used tor the three L's, X for th e t wo O's , etc . f-i inglc let te rs,
apostrophes; the length ami formatio~ of th wo rds are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dafTer.::nt.

OKA'f, NOW TELL ME MOO:
AflOUT TH IS HUg~B.\5E8AlL ..

CRYPTOQUOTES
OJER

zc

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R. C Y H

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'

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeroy, 0., June 12, 1973

News. •• in Briefs
(Continued from Page 1)
,
medical tests as well as the earth survey .
The pilots planned to cover a 7,800-mile belt during today's
picture laking pass. Besides urban growth and urban land use
scientists were interested in such things as mineral exploraUo~
In Pennsylvania, waterfowl habitats in Minnesota and weather
patterns across the central and eastern states. Conrad, Kerwin
and Weitz swept past the world's second longest space endurance
mark - 17daysand 17hours - at2a.m. EDTandheadedwith no
apparent obstacles toward a record ~ay night .
WASIDNGTON - A FEDERAL COURT has ruled that the
man President Nixon picked to dismantle tbe Office of Economic
6iiii&lt;ir£uniiy is serving illegally . U. S. District &lt;;ourt Judge
Wt~UIJil ll . Jones handed down hls decision Monday, ordering
acting OEO Director Howard J . Phillips to take no further acUon
as head of the anti.poverty agency .
An OEO spokesman said there would be no agency comment
until the judge's ruling is checked by the OEO's general cowisel.
The administration had planned to abolish OEO on July 1. The
ruling on Phillips' status followed an earlier court decision that
the administration had no authority to eliminate the OEO without
congressional action.
·
Four U. S. senators filed the case on which Jones ruled
Monday. They were Democrats Harrison A. Williams, Jr., N. J .,
Clairborne Pel!, R . 1., Walter F. Mondale, Minn., and William D.
Hathaway, Maine .
MADRID - A NEW CABINET OF conservative and
moderate technocrats took office today after the largest govern·
ment shakeup In Spain since 1951. Government sources said chief
of state Francisco Franco, who surrendered hls post as prime
minister last Friday, would administer the oath of office to the 19
cabinet ministers.
Only eight ministers retained posts in the cabinet chosen by
new Prime Minister l.Ws carrero Blanco to run Spain for the
next five years. At the swearing In ceremonies at Franco's of.
ficlal residence El Pardo, the new ministers pledged allegiance
- m order - to Franco, to the country's only legal poliUcal party
and the constituUon.
Franco, now 80, retained the posiUons of chief of state,
· commander in chief of the armed forces and head of the sole
pollUcal party, National Movement.

Action filed to cancel mortgage
An action to cancel mort- . Lakemore, Ohlo, and George

gage .was filed Monday by ,
Robert McGrath, Pomeroy-;
Samuel McGrath, CuyahOga ·
Falls; Mary V . Griffen,

MEIGS THEATRE
June 12-21

NOT OPEN

Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
June22-23·24
1776

(Technicalor&gt;
Wm . Daniels

Howard Oa Silva

IGl
Adults: $1.50 Children: 75c
Show .Starts 7 p.m.

and Mary .Elizabeth Morris,
Pomeroy, against" the Ohio
National Bank, Columbus;
Elizabeth
Ebersbach,
Columbus ; Elizabeth
Stephenson,
Columbus;
Elizabeth Stephenson ,
executrix of the estate of
Donald
E.
Ebersbach ,
deceased, and Robert S. Eb·
bersbach, Columbus.
In a decision of Judge John
C. Bacon in Meigs County
Court the acUon of the Board of
Education of Southern Local
School District terminating the
contract of Floyd Diddle, a
non-teaching employee, was
affirmed.

Next
Sunday Is
Father's Day

Probe

Sensible
accord
reached

tContlnued from Page I)
New York on charges of perjury and conspiracy to obstruct
justice In connection with a
$200,000 campaign contribution
from financier Robert ·L .
Vesco. Last week a federal
court in New York decided
PARIS ( UP[) - Reports
Stans would have to testify from Saigon said today Henry
before the Senate committee. A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho
had reached · a realistic new
Stans was to testify following
a return appearance by Her- draft agreement that would
bert L. Porter Jr., i former bring ~ halt to the fighUng in
Nixon campaign aide who Vietnam 24 hours after the new
related in the televised accord is signed.
hearings last week that he was
Kissinger returned to Paris
asked to commit perjury about today from Washington for
campaign "dirty tricks" by more talks with Tho while
Jeb Stuart Magruder , the French officials readied the
deputy campaign director.
Kleber Avenue conference ceoThe New York Times said in ter for the possible signing of
today's editions that Porter an agreement on the Vietnam
will open the ninth annual recital of the Mid-Porn School of
OOP?NTHE BEAT - Randy Batey as a policeman on.
was expected to testify that the truce.
the
beat
IS kept busy with trio of tramps In the park (I to r)
Dance tonight starting at 8 o'clock at Meigs Junior High
Nixon r~lection committee
The reports from Saigon said
Barbara
Grueser,
Andrea
Batey
and
Sharon
Griffin,
which
School
In Middleport.
paid a taxi driver to pboto- that the draft agreement
graph documents from the provided for:
presidential campaign of Sen.
- Rigorous application of a
Edmund s_. Muskie , D- reallsUc cease·fire 24 hours
Maine.
after signature of the new
U.S. District Judge John J . accord.
(Continued from Page I)
Sirica was scheduled to rule
-On-the-ground contacts beTakeover More Serious
this morning on a request by tween military commanders or
ERIE, Pa. (UP!) - A United Mineworkers (UMW) the spring of 1969 after
The takeover in Libya ot a
special Watergate prosecutor the two sides (South VietA. "Tony" Boyle Yablonski declared his canTexas-based oil company was special prosecutor in the President
Archibald Cox that Magruder namese and VietCong) in the
didacy, Pass came to him and
more serious in its implications Yablonski case said failure to as the impetus behind the
and former White House contested zones starting 48
asked if he could hire soine
to the future of U.S. petroleum convict Albert Pass of murder slayings although he bad made
counsel John W. Dean Ill not hours after the signing.
people to kill Jock Yablonski."
firms In the Mideast than it would " throw · a monkey the charge at a previous trial.
be allowed to testify in public
- Resumption of talks heAt the Prater trial,
Pass, former financial
was to the immediate fuel wrench" into his efforts to
at the Senate hearings . Cox has tween Hanoi and Washington
Sprague established that Boyle
shortage. Libyari leader Col. obtain the "initiator" of the secretary of UMW District 19,
expressed the view that the about U.S . economic aid to
faces three counts of first authorized a transfer of $20,000
Moammar Khadafy, in an- 1969 triple slayings.
appearance of Magruder and North Vietnam, four days after
However, Prosecutor degree murder in the shooting from the union's internaional
nouncing the ''nationalization''
Dean on television would the signing.
of .Bunker Hunt Oil Co., .issued Richard A. Sprarue balked deaths of UMW dissident treasury to District 19 in the
prejudice their chances for a · French radio reports, mean- ·
Monday at naming former Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, fall of 1969. In his closing
a strong anti-U.S. statement.
fair trial if they are Indicted. while, said that the projected
his wife and daughter on Dec. argument, he said Boyle was
" The United states is being
Kissinger-Tho agreement was
Attorneys Go to Court
"where we have to go" in order
31, 1969.
defeated all over the world, but
Attorneys for Dean went to disclosed in Saigon and conPass and William J . Prater, to "get the beginning of the
MONEY ALLOCATED
has not been taught the final
federal court Monday in an tained a calendar for applicaRUTLAND
Rutland another former UMW District case.n
lesson," he said. " We tell
attempt to block his appear- tion of clauses of the Jan . 'J:l
On Monday, Sprague said
America in a loud voice that it Village Clerk Vernon Weber 19 official, were accused of
ance before the Watergate agreement.
needs a severe blow in the face reported Revenue Sharing shuffling $20,000 in union funda once again the investigation
grand jury unless he is
Kissinger broke off the talks
funds received by Rutland throug~ a phony district will continue beyond Pass.
from the Ar~bs. "
promised immunity from with Tho last week when snags
"He's (Pass) not the
In Kansa s, state officials from Jan . !this year to June 1, organizing committee to
prosecution.
arose in the new Tho agree·
arranger,"
Sprague told a jury
were in doubt whether there 1973, a total of $1,007 will be finance the killings. Prater was
Dean, who was fired from his ment that is supposed to end
would be enough fuel to handle spent as follows: $200 for public convicted of murder last of eight men and four women.
job as Nixon's White House the fighting once and for all in
"But one of the arrangers.
the wheat crop, expected to safety, $75 for Social Service March 26, and wrote a
attorney April 30, reportedly South Vietnam and bring peace
yield a record 373 million for the aged and poor, and $732 preliminary confession the We don't stop and don't you
has told investigators in- to Laos and cambodia.
day.
Sprague throw a monkey wrench into it.
for housing and community following
bushels this year.
formally that he can implicate
The snag awarently rose in
"You will see the initiator.
revealed for the first time
" We just may squeak development.
a number · of high officials- . Saigon over President Nguyen
Monday that Prater would We're close with Pass, but not
through the wheat harvest "
including former Attorney Van Thieu's opposition to
'
testify against Pass.
at the beginning.
said Randall Baxter, a
UNIT CALLED
General John N. Mitchell and terms of the new agreement.
"You will see that for the
"You're
g&lt;llng
to
hear
him
spokesman for the state
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
highranking Iormer White Those snags were believed to
Economic
Development called to the Wolfpen area at ( Prater) say 'Yes, I'm first time in his tenure of the
House aides- in the. political have been solved in urgent'
Commission. "I say 'may."' 10:20 p . m. ·Monday for Ber- guilty' ," Sprague said in a 4(). United Mine Workers, Tony
espionage plot or its coverup. conferences between acting
Boyl personally authorized the
Baxter said Monday the nard Rodgers, 67, who was ill. minute opening statement.
Dean has been seeking total U,S . Ambassador Charles
" You're going to hear from sending of $20,000 to Pass' discommission .has received 140 He was taken to Veterans
immunity in· exchange for hls Whitehouse, Thieu and South
him
that the person behind him trict." Sprague said Boyle
calls since its .fllel ~'hot line" Memorial Hospital and later
grand jury cooperation. Sirica Vietnamese Foreign Minister
never authorized such Iran·
was connected May 21, and transferred to Holzer Medical was Albert Pass.
was expected to sigri an order Tran Van Lam.
"Prater
will
tell
you
how
in
sfers normally.
about 25 per cent of them were Center.
today granting . Dean partial
from farmers needing fuel.
protection from prosecution for
There is also a shortage of
hls testimony to. the .Senate .
freight cars.
· Assistant U.S. Attorney Sey- Mm·i,d He\ 'O'"'·
mour Glanzer told Sirica at a
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
hearing Monday that the grand
Heifers : Choice,. 43.80-45.90; HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
jury itself had requested
41 to 43.
Good
SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 TO 5 PM
Dean's appearance.
(Discharged)
Cows: Commercial, 35.20 to
Patty Grimm, Edna Waller,
Agnew in his st.
speech
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY-AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM
charged that innocent men 36; Utility 32 .85 to 34 .60;. Mrs. James . .Sims and
were being ruined by the Canners and Cutters 28.25 to 32. daughter, Elizabelli Refferts,
Bulls : Commerctal, 38.10 to Harry Claar, Everett Waugh,
Senate inquiry. He said the
committee, lacked procedural 42.
·
Bobbie Westfall, Ethel Walter,
safeguards and .''ca.n hardly
Stockers and Feeders: Steer Goldie Waugh Melissa 8 ·!Ji
hope 'to find the truth and can Calves 42 to 55; Heifer Calves Edna Richards, Edna Ru~eti:
Left:
hardly fail to muddy the waters 40 to 51.85; Yearling SU,ers, 32 Franklin Price John Porter
Knit Random Str ipe Tank
ol justice beyond redempUon:" to 47.50.
Keith Miller, 'infant son of
Top, YolJr Cho ice of
"There is no question
Veal calves: Choice, 73; Bently
McCarty,
Doris
Colors . Slzes: ·a to 14.
S2.29
whatever that some men Good, 70.
Lemley, Bonnie Harrison, Paul
Girls
'
despite their innocence will .be
Ewes and Lambs by the· Dillard, Stephan Cooper and
Skant with
ruined by all this·, even though I nead, 39 to 40 ·
Michael camden.
Saddle Pockets .-Polyeste r
, ann sure the Senate inl•nded
Hogs : 200.230, 38.50; No. 1,
(Births!
/Cotton . As·
nothing of the kind when it 38-75; 2311-240, 38:25; Sows,
Mrs. Daniel Cunningham, a
sorted C:olors.
commissioned
this
in- 30.60-32.60; Boars 31.25.
son, Pomeroy; Mrs . David
S!zes: a to 14.
ss.oo
vestigation," Agnew said .
Gardner, a daughter, Hamden;
Mrs. Harold Dailey, a son,
PT. PLEASANT
WellSton ; and Mrs. Douglas
LIVESTOCK SALES
Grover, a daughter, MidCOMPANY
dleport.
June 9,1973
(Continued from Page 1)
HOGS - 175 to 220, 35 to
bicycles.
38.40;
Heavies 34 to 34.50;
Attending the meeting were
AUTOS COLLIDE
Mayor Zerkle, maintenance Lights 33 to 35; Fat Sows 35.50
The Meigs County Sheriff's .
to 35.75; Boars 25.85 to 28.30;
supervisor Harold Chase, and
Dept.
investigated an accident
Councilmen David Ohlinger, Pigs 24 to 31.50; Stock Shoats 35
at 6:06 p. m. Monday on Sutton
to 43.50.
,,
who recorded the minutes in
CATTLE -Steers 41 to 49 · Township Road 123, two tenths
the absence of Gene Grate who
' of a mile north of Syracuse
is confined to Holzer Medical Heifers 37 to 44; Fat cows'
Center; William Walters, 33 to 35; Canners 30 to · 33. CemeU,ry. Vehicles driven by
Kenneth Reynolds, Mason , and
Lawrence Stewart, Richard Bulls 39 to 44; Stock Cows and
John M. Grueser, Syracuss,
Vaughan and Fred Hoffman. Calves 370 to 537.50; Stock
in a curve. There was
collided
Steers 52 to 60; Sock Heifers 40
to 48; Stock Steer Calves 50 to heavy damage to both cars, but
61; Stock Heifer Calves 48 to 55. no injuries. The accident is still
SYRACUSE WINS
VEAL CALVES- Tops 66; under investigaUon.
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
LitUe League A team of Larry Sconds 66; Medium 63.25 to 64 ;
1
NAME PALLBEARERS
Lavendar's defeated the Common and Heavies 58.50 to·
I
Pallbearers for Harry Boggs
Pomeroy Yankees 16-7 Monday 59.50 ; Culls 51.75 to 59.25.
2 p . m. Wednesday funeral
night. The winning pitcher for
Right :
were announced today by the
Syracuse was Mike Mance and
Hlgt1 Cre.w Pullover. Your
Marriage License .
. ,Waurh-Halley-Wood Funeral
the losing pitcher was Taylor.
Choice of Co lors .
Syracuse got 7 hits, the Yanks
Daniel B. Stanley, 23, truck Home. They are : Ernest
Sizes: 2 t o 6X/7 . $1.89
5. The Syracuse team now has dr.iver, and Shirley Jean North, James F . Benson, Sr.,
Sizes: 8 to 1'4.
S3.00
Alkire, 18 .
Steve Geremesz, Douglas
two wins 11nd one loss.
Johnson , Robert Swisher and
Band Front Shorts with
F,r~d Sanders.
Contrast Check Tabs' and
DIVORCEGRANTED ,
Cuffs. Polyester/Colton .
Wh il e, Navy, Red.
A divorce was granted
UNIT CALLED
Sizes: 2 t o· GX /7. $2.79
Connie Reed from Willard
The Middleport E-R squad
Sizes : 8 to 14 . $4.00
Reed for gross neglect of duty was called at 10:18 p. m.
and extreme cruelty.
Monday to Hysell Run for Rose
Hysell who was bleeding . She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

Energy

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page I - Regatta Section

9th A IUIIUII

Big Bend Regatta

Conviction of Pass needed

The Daily Sentinel

w:

r--· -- -

-----

WHEN YOU

V~SIT,

PARK FREE

/falioNJt

....C.-CIIK114NATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
MIDDJ,.EPORT, OHIO .
Member· -l''ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation

.,

POMEROY,
OHIO

.SATURDAY,
JUNE 16
4 TO 7:00 P.M.

'300.00 FIRST PRIZE
POSSIBLE PRIZES, •1125.00
For Information Write :
Box 727, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Dale

..

-~--·

•

.
. ,..
•

.

.

Lagoon

NATIONAL FROG JUMP

c. Warner

~~"BusterlJr.o~

SUMMER

SANDALS
For the
Entire Family

heritage
house
Your Thorn MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

•

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Discharged - Kimberly
Basham, Claude Randolph,
Mildred Henry, Alice Mullins,
Barbara Mowery, Edith Ross
and Denise Riffle.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m,
Tuesday was 84 degrees, under
partially cloudy skies .

Preml u~- Be8on8

Butler Brown knits are made o!IOO%
Colton
Bu.!. r B rown anklets - socks and knee high 1 1
. 111 ensembleS,
· 41¢: lo .1 .21.
•
,
•
a o m ll n match With

1

iQI
.~
~
c

N

SHOP THE SECOND FlOOR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
for a complete selection of clothing and accessories.

For Infants, Toddlers, Girls 3 to 14, and Pre-Teen

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

--

-

-

BUSTER BROWN CLOTIIES •••
THE PACESETtERS FOR SUMMER!

Auto Teller Window and
Walk-Up Window
Open Friday EveningS 5 to 7 P.M.

...

'.

Lows

He doesn't forget the future, either. A nest egg
t~at he ~dds to regul~rly, pr~ides for emergenctes, builds up secunty. Don t forget Dad next
Sunday. It's his day!

Tue s day , June 12, 1973, Pomeroy, Ohio

~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A day when the family gathers 'round to share
its affection with the most important man on
Parth, Dad, the good provider. His labor of love
ma~~ certain that · his family has all the necessities and some of the luxuries that make life
worth Iiv ing.
·

"

1972 REGATTA QUEEN - Miss Leanna Sebo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John S~bo , Pomeroy ,
stands _on the deck of the boat ~njoy-Enjoy, owned by Mr. and Mrs . Bill Anderson, Pomeroy. Miss
Sebo w1ll have tmportant roles m the 1973 Regatta Weekend opening Friday . And hundr eds or boa ls
on the river will help make the Weekend Regatta a fun time for all.

eroy-Middleport, Ohio
June 15, 16, 1.7, 1973

.

�..

'

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeroy, 0., June 12, 1973

News. •• in Briefs
(Continued from Page 1)
,
medical tests as well as the earth survey .
The pilots planned to cover a 7,800-mile belt during today's
picture laking pass. Besides urban growth and urban land use
scientists were interested in such things as mineral exploraUo~
In Pennsylvania, waterfowl habitats in Minnesota and weather
patterns across the central and eastern states. Conrad, Kerwin
and Weitz swept past the world's second longest space endurance
mark - 17daysand 17hours - at2a.m. EDTandheadedwith no
apparent obstacles toward a record ~ay night .
WASIDNGTON - A FEDERAL COURT has ruled that the
man President Nixon picked to dismantle tbe Office of Economic
6iiii&lt;ir£uniiy is serving illegally . U. S. District &lt;;ourt Judge
Wt~UIJil ll . Jones handed down hls decision Monday, ordering
acting OEO Director Howard J . Phillips to take no further acUon
as head of the anti.poverty agency .
An OEO spokesman said there would be no agency comment
until the judge's ruling is checked by the OEO's general cowisel.
The administration had planned to abolish OEO on July 1. The
ruling on Phillips' status followed an earlier court decision that
the administration had no authority to eliminate the OEO without
congressional action.
·
Four U. S. senators filed the case on which Jones ruled
Monday. They were Democrats Harrison A. Williams, Jr., N. J .,
Clairborne Pel!, R . 1., Walter F. Mondale, Minn., and William D.
Hathaway, Maine .
MADRID - A NEW CABINET OF conservative and
moderate technocrats took office today after the largest govern·
ment shakeup In Spain since 1951. Government sources said chief
of state Francisco Franco, who surrendered hls post as prime
minister last Friday, would administer the oath of office to the 19
cabinet ministers.
Only eight ministers retained posts in the cabinet chosen by
new Prime Minister l.Ws carrero Blanco to run Spain for the
next five years. At the swearing In ceremonies at Franco's of.
ficlal residence El Pardo, the new ministers pledged allegiance
- m order - to Franco, to the country's only legal poliUcal party
and the constituUon.
Franco, now 80, retained the posiUons of chief of state,
· commander in chief of the armed forces and head of the sole
pollUcal party, National Movement.

Action filed to cancel mortgage
An action to cancel mort- . Lakemore, Ohlo, and George

gage .was filed Monday by ,
Robert McGrath, Pomeroy-;
Samuel McGrath, CuyahOga ·
Falls; Mary V . Griffen,

MEIGS THEATRE
June 12-21

NOT OPEN

Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
June22-23·24
1776

(Technicalor&gt;
Wm . Daniels

Howard Oa Silva

IGl
Adults: $1.50 Children: 75c
Show .Starts 7 p.m.

and Mary .Elizabeth Morris,
Pomeroy, against" the Ohio
National Bank, Columbus;
Elizabeth
Ebersbach,
Columbus ; Elizabeth
Stephenson,
Columbus;
Elizabeth Stephenson ,
executrix of the estate of
Donald
E.
Ebersbach ,
deceased, and Robert S. Eb·
bersbach, Columbus.
In a decision of Judge John
C. Bacon in Meigs County
Court the acUon of the Board of
Education of Southern Local
School District terminating the
contract of Floyd Diddle, a
non-teaching employee, was
affirmed.

Next
Sunday Is
Father's Day

Probe

Sensible
accord
reached

tContlnued from Page I)
New York on charges of perjury and conspiracy to obstruct
justice In connection with a
$200,000 campaign contribution
from financier Robert ·L .
Vesco. Last week a federal
court in New York decided
PARIS ( UP[) - Reports
Stans would have to testify from Saigon said today Henry
before the Senate committee. A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho
had reached · a realistic new
Stans was to testify following
a return appearance by Her- draft agreement that would
bert L. Porter Jr., i former bring ~ halt to the fighUng in
Nixon campaign aide who Vietnam 24 hours after the new
related in the televised accord is signed.
hearings last week that he was
Kissinger returned to Paris
asked to commit perjury about today from Washington for
campaign "dirty tricks" by more talks with Tho while
Jeb Stuart Magruder , the French officials readied the
deputy campaign director.
Kleber Avenue conference ceoThe New York Times said in ter for the possible signing of
today's editions that Porter an agreement on the Vietnam
will open the ninth annual recital of the Mid-Porn School of
OOP?NTHE BEAT - Randy Batey as a policeman on.
was expected to testify that the truce.
the
beat
IS kept busy with trio of tramps In the park (I to r)
Dance tonight starting at 8 o'clock at Meigs Junior High
Nixon r~lection committee
The reports from Saigon said
Barbara
Grueser,
Andrea
Batey
and
Sharon
Griffin,
which
School
In Middleport.
paid a taxi driver to pboto- that the draft agreement
graph documents from the provided for:
presidential campaign of Sen.
- Rigorous application of a
Edmund s_. Muskie , D- reallsUc cease·fire 24 hours
Maine.
after signature of the new
U.S. District Judge John J . accord.
(Continued from Page I)
Sirica was scheduled to rule
-On-the-ground contacts beTakeover More Serious
this morning on a request by tween military commanders or
ERIE, Pa. (UP!) - A United Mineworkers (UMW) the spring of 1969 after
The takeover in Libya ot a
special Watergate prosecutor the two sides (South VietA. "Tony" Boyle Yablonski declared his canTexas-based oil company was special prosecutor in the President
Archibald Cox that Magruder namese and VietCong) in the
didacy, Pass came to him and
more serious in its implications Yablonski case said failure to as the impetus behind the
and former White House contested zones starting 48
asked if he could hire soine
to the future of U.S. petroleum convict Albert Pass of murder slayings although he bad made
counsel John W. Dean Ill not hours after the signing.
people to kill Jock Yablonski."
firms In the Mideast than it would " throw · a monkey the charge at a previous trial.
be allowed to testify in public
- Resumption of talks heAt the Prater trial,
Pass, former financial
was to the immediate fuel wrench" into his efforts to
at the Senate hearings . Cox has tween Hanoi and Washington
Sprague established that Boyle
shortage. Libyari leader Col. obtain the "initiator" of the secretary of UMW District 19,
expressed the view that the about U.S . economic aid to
faces three counts of first authorized a transfer of $20,000
Moammar Khadafy, in an- 1969 triple slayings.
appearance of Magruder and North Vietnam, four days after
However, Prosecutor degree murder in the shooting from the union's internaional
nouncing the ''nationalization''
Dean on television would the signing.
of .Bunker Hunt Oil Co., .issued Richard A. Sprarue balked deaths of UMW dissident treasury to District 19 in the
prejudice their chances for a · French radio reports, mean- ·
Monday at naming former Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, fall of 1969. In his closing
a strong anti-U.S. statement.
fair trial if they are Indicted. while, said that the projected
his wife and daughter on Dec. argument, he said Boyle was
" The United states is being
Kissinger-Tho agreement was
Attorneys Go to Court
"where we have to go" in order
31, 1969.
defeated all over the world, but
Attorneys for Dean went to disclosed in Saigon and conPass and William J . Prater, to "get the beginning of the
MONEY ALLOCATED
has not been taught the final
federal court Monday in an tained a calendar for applicaRUTLAND
Rutland another former UMW District case.n
lesson," he said. " We tell
attempt to block his appear- tion of clauses of the Jan . 'J:l
On Monday, Sprague said
America in a loud voice that it Village Clerk Vernon Weber 19 official, were accused of
ance before the Watergate agreement.
needs a severe blow in the face reported Revenue Sharing shuffling $20,000 in union funda once again the investigation
grand jury unless he is
Kissinger broke off the talks
funds received by Rutland throug~ a phony district will continue beyond Pass.
from the Ar~bs. "
promised immunity from with Tho last week when snags
"He's (Pass) not the
In Kansa s, state officials from Jan . !this year to June 1, organizing committee to
prosecution.
arose in the new Tho agree·
arranger,"
Sprague told a jury
were in doubt whether there 1973, a total of $1,007 will be finance the killings. Prater was
Dean, who was fired from his ment that is supposed to end
would be enough fuel to handle spent as follows: $200 for public convicted of murder last of eight men and four women.
job as Nixon's White House the fighting once and for all in
"But one of the arrangers.
the wheat crop, expected to safety, $75 for Social Service March 26, and wrote a
attorney April 30, reportedly South Vietnam and bring peace
yield a record 373 million for the aged and poor, and $732 preliminary confession the We don't stop and don't you
has told investigators in- to Laos and cambodia.
day.
Sprague throw a monkey wrench into it.
for housing and community following
bushels this year.
formally that he can implicate
The snag awarently rose in
"You will see the initiator.
revealed for the first time
" We just may squeak development.
a number · of high officials- . Saigon over President Nguyen
Monday that Prater would We're close with Pass, but not
through the wheat harvest "
including former Attorney Van Thieu's opposition to
'
testify against Pass.
at the beginning.
said Randall Baxter, a
UNIT CALLED
General John N. Mitchell and terms of the new agreement.
"You will see that for the
"You're
g&lt;llng
to
hear
him
spokesman for the state
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
highranking Iormer White Those snags were believed to
Economic
Development called to the Wolfpen area at ( Prater) say 'Yes, I'm first time in his tenure of the
House aides- in the. political have been solved in urgent'
Commission. "I say 'may."' 10:20 p . m. ·Monday for Ber- guilty' ," Sprague said in a 4(). United Mine Workers, Tony
espionage plot or its coverup. conferences between acting
Boyl personally authorized the
Baxter said Monday the nard Rodgers, 67, who was ill. minute opening statement.
Dean has been seeking total U,S . Ambassador Charles
" You're going to hear from sending of $20,000 to Pass' discommission .has received 140 He was taken to Veterans
immunity in· exchange for hls Whitehouse, Thieu and South
him
that the person behind him trict." Sprague said Boyle
calls since its .fllel ~'hot line" Memorial Hospital and later
grand jury cooperation. Sirica Vietnamese Foreign Minister
never authorized such Iran·
was connected May 21, and transferred to Holzer Medical was Albert Pass.
was expected to sigri an order Tran Van Lam.
"Prater
will
tell
you
how
in
sfers normally.
about 25 per cent of them were Center.
today granting . Dean partial
from farmers needing fuel.
protection from prosecution for
There is also a shortage of
hls testimony to. the .Senate .
freight cars.
· Assistant U.S. Attorney Sey- Mm·i,d He\ 'O'"'·
mour Glanzer told Sirica at a
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
hearing Monday that the grand
Heifers : Choice,. 43.80-45.90; HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
jury itself had requested
41 to 43.
Good
SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 TO 5 PM
Dean's appearance.
(Discharged)
Cows: Commercial, 35.20 to
Patty Grimm, Edna Waller,
Agnew in his st.
speech
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY-AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM
charged that innocent men 36; Utility 32 .85 to 34 .60;. Mrs. James . .Sims and
were being ruined by the Canners and Cutters 28.25 to 32. daughter, Elizabelli Refferts,
Bulls : Commerctal, 38.10 to Harry Claar, Everett Waugh,
Senate inquiry. He said the
committee, lacked procedural 42.
·
Bobbie Westfall, Ethel Walter,
safeguards and .''ca.n hardly
Stockers and Feeders: Steer Goldie Waugh Melissa 8 ·!Ji
hope 'to find the truth and can Calves 42 to 55; Heifer Calves Edna Richards, Edna Ru~eti:
Left:
hardly fail to muddy the waters 40 to 51.85; Yearling SU,ers, 32 Franklin Price John Porter
Knit Random Str ipe Tank
ol justice beyond redempUon:" to 47.50.
Keith Miller, 'infant son of
Top, YolJr Cho ice of
"There is no question
Veal calves: Choice, 73; Bently
McCarty,
Doris
Colors . Slzes: ·a to 14.
S2.29
whatever that some men Good, 70.
Lemley, Bonnie Harrison, Paul
Girls
'
despite their innocence will .be
Ewes and Lambs by the· Dillard, Stephan Cooper and
Skant with
ruined by all this·, even though I nead, 39 to 40 ·
Michael camden.
Saddle Pockets .-Polyeste r
, ann sure the Senate inl•nded
Hogs : 200.230, 38.50; No. 1,
(Births!
/Cotton . As·
nothing of the kind when it 38-75; 2311-240, 38:25; Sows,
Mrs. Daniel Cunningham, a
sorted C:olors.
commissioned
this
in- 30.60-32.60; Boars 31.25.
son, Pomeroy; Mrs . David
S!zes: a to 14.
ss.oo
vestigation," Agnew said .
Gardner, a daughter, Hamden;
Mrs. Harold Dailey, a son,
PT. PLEASANT
WellSton ; and Mrs. Douglas
LIVESTOCK SALES
Grover, a daughter, MidCOMPANY
dleport.
June 9,1973
(Continued from Page 1)
HOGS - 175 to 220, 35 to
bicycles.
38.40;
Heavies 34 to 34.50;
Attending the meeting were
AUTOS COLLIDE
Mayor Zerkle, maintenance Lights 33 to 35; Fat Sows 35.50
The Meigs County Sheriff's .
to 35.75; Boars 25.85 to 28.30;
supervisor Harold Chase, and
Dept.
investigated an accident
Councilmen David Ohlinger, Pigs 24 to 31.50; Stock Shoats 35
at 6:06 p. m. Monday on Sutton
to 43.50.
,,
who recorded the minutes in
CATTLE -Steers 41 to 49 · Township Road 123, two tenths
the absence of Gene Grate who
' of a mile north of Syracuse
is confined to Holzer Medical Heifers 37 to 44; Fat cows'
Center; William Walters, 33 to 35; Canners 30 to · 33. CemeU,ry. Vehicles driven by
Kenneth Reynolds, Mason , and
Lawrence Stewart, Richard Bulls 39 to 44; Stock Cows and
John M. Grueser, Syracuss,
Vaughan and Fred Hoffman. Calves 370 to 537.50; Stock
in a curve. There was
collided
Steers 52 to 60; Sock Heifers 40
to 48; Stock Steer Calves 50 to heavy damage to both cars, but
61; Stock Heifer Calves 48 to 55. no injuries. The accident is still
SYRACUSE WINS
VEAL CALVES- Tops 66; under investigaUon.
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
LitUe League A team of Larry Sconds 66; Medium 63.25 to 64 ;
1
NAME PALLBEARERS
Lavendar's defeated the Common and Heavies 58.50 to·
I
Pallbearers for Harry Boggs
Pomeroy Yankees 16-7 Monday 59.50 ; Culls 51.75 to 59.25.
2 p . m. Wednesday funeral
night. The winning pitcher for
Right :
were announced today by the
Syracuse was Mike Mance and
Hlgt1 Cre.w Pullover. Your
Marriage License .
. ,Waurh-Halley-Wood Funeral
the losing pitcher was Taylor.
Choice of Co lors .
Syracuse got 7 hits, the Yanks
Daniel B. Stanley, 23, truck Home. They are : Ernest
Sizes: 2 t o 6X/7 . $1.89
5. The Syracuse team now has dr.iver, and Shirley Jean North, James F . Benson, Sr.,
Sizes: 8 to 1'4.
S3.00
Alkire, 18 .
Steve Geremesz, Douglas
two wins 11nd one loss.
Johnson , Robert Swisher and
Band Front Shorts with
F,r~d Sanders.
Contrast Check Tabs' and
DIVORCEGRANTED ,
Cuffs. Polyester/Colton .
Wh il e, Navy, Red.
A divorce was granted
UNIT CALLED
Sizes: 2 t o· GX /7. $2.79
Connie Reed from Willard
The Middleport E-R squad
Sizes : 8 to 14 . $4.00
Reed for gross neglect of duty was called at 10:18 p. m.
and extreme cruelty.
Monday to Hysell Run for Rose
Hysell who was bleeding . She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

Energy

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page I - Regatta Section

9th A IUIIUII

Big Bend Regatta

Conviction of Pass needed

The Daily Sentinel

w:

r--· -- -

-----

WHEN YOU

V~SIT,

PARK FREE

/falioNJt

....C.-CIIK114NATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
MIDDJ,.EPORT, OHIO .
Member· -l''ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation

.,

POMEROY,
OHIO

.SATURDAY,
JUNE 16
4 TO 7:00 P.M.

'300.00 FIRST PRIZE
POSSIBLE PRIZES, •1125.00
For Information Write :
Box 727, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Dale

..

-~--·

•

.
. ,..
•

.

.

Lagoon

NATIONAL FROG JUMP

c. Warner

~~"BusterlJr.o~

SUMMER

SANDALS
For the
Entire Family

heritage
house
Your Thorn MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

•

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Discharged - Kimberly
Basham, Claude Randolph,
Mildred Henry, Alice Mullins,
Barbara Mowery, Edith Ross
and Denise Riffle.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m,
Tuesday was 84 degrees, under
partially cloudy skies .

Preml u~- Be8on8

Butler Brown knits are made o!IOO%
Colton
Bu.!. r B rown anklets - socks and knee high 1 1
. 111 ensembleS,
· 41¢: lo .1 .21.
•
,
•
a o m ll n match With

1

iQI
.~
~
c

N

SHOP THE SECOND FlOOR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
for a complete selection of clothing and accessories.

For Infants, Toddlers, Girls 3 to 14, and Pre-Teen

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

--

-

-

BUSTER BROWN CLOTIIES •••
THE PACESETtERS FOR SUMMER!

Auto Teller Window and
Walk-Up Window
Open Friday EveningS 5 to 7 P.M.

...

'.

Lows

He doesn't forget the future, either. A nest egg
t~at he ~dds to regul~rly, pr~ides for emergenctes, builds up secunty. Don t forget Dad next
Sunday. It's his day!

Tue s day , June 12, 1973, Pomeroy, Ohio

~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A day when the family gathers 'round to share
its affection with the most important man on
Parth, Dad, the good provider. His labor of love
ma~~ certain that · his family has all the necessities and some of the luxuries that make life
worth Iiv ing.
·

"

1972 REGATTA QUEEN - Miss Leanna Sebo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John S~bo , Pomeroy ,
stands _on the deck of the boat ~njoy-Enjoy, owned by Mr. and Mrs . Bill Anderson, Pomeroy. Miss
Sebo w1ll have tmportant roles m the 1973 Regatta Weekend opening Friday . And hundr eds or boa ls
on the river will help make the Weekend Regatta a fun time for all.

eroy-Middleport, Ohio
June 15, 16, 1.7, 1973

.

�Pagt&gt;

z _ Rtga tta Section

.

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, Jne 12, 1973

Parade promised the best yet

•.

It

ANEW BRAND NAME AT

FRIDAY, JUNE 15

12 :00 - 6:30 - Flea Market
12 :00 - 11 :00 P.M. - Carnival Rides
6:00 P.M. - Parade
.
9:ooP.M.- Talent Contest - Middleport Jr. High
Crowning of Regatta Queen
9:00P.M.- Regatta Ball - Dick Hawkins "That Bunch"
9:00P.M. - Teen Dance - Tennis Court

officials can line up the parade
order in advance of the Friday
evening event.
AnotherI innovation this year
will be the bands taking part
will be making the entire
march to the destination point,
the Pomeroy Junior High
&amp;hool, ratb!rr than traveling
via school buses a part of the
way .

LANDMARK
••

• THE HOTPOINT LINE!

SATIJRDAY, JUNE 16
10 :00 A.M.- Children's Casting Derby - Tennis Court
9:00 - 6:00 P.M. - Flea Market
10 :00 A.M. - 11:00 P.M. - Carnival Rides
12:00 - 1:30 P.M. - Flower Show &lt;Pomeroy Motor
Company showroom )
12:00 ~ Boat Parade
12 :30 P.M. - 2:30P.M. - Ski Show
2:00P.M. - 4:00P.M.- Aerial Circus - Football Field
4:00P.M. - Frog Jump - Football Field
10 :00 P.M. - Frog Ball - "Water Wheels" Orchestra
9:30P.M. - Teenage Dance

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
People who carry a rabbit's foot for good luck never
meditated on the fate of the
poor rabbit .

,;: *

REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS

1973 ·R EGAnA PROGRAM

More entrants,
frogmobile 's
return expected
From all indications , the 1973
edition of the Big Bend Regatta
Parade which moves out of
Middleport at 6 Friday evening
enroute to Pomeroy may be the
"best yet".
An innovation in this year's
parade will be the pre-judging
of floats - and it is indicated
that \here will be a number this
.Year - before the parade
beg~ns. The pre-parade judging
of floats only will be held at 5 p.
m. First place winners in four
categories - theme, "The
Place to be in '73"; frog theme,
commercial
and
noncommercial - will receive
large trophies.
A record number of bands is
expected for this year's parade
with Charles Minelli of the Ohio
University instrumental music
department judging them from
the Meigs Inn porch. Bands
will be competing for trophies
in three top positions in three
categories based on the
enrollment of the participating
school in the upper three
grades.
A number of certificates will
. be awarded in this year's
parade to walking individuals
and horse mounted entries.
Bator\ and drum and bugle
corps groups will be presented
plaques.
Heading this year's parade
are Dwight Goins, . band
director of the Meigs High
. &amp;hool, and Jim Mees t&gt;f Radio
WMPO. Late entries into the
parade
can
make
arrangements for entering the
parade by contacting either
Mees or Goins. However,
registration was actually
closed Monday so that the two

Page 3 - Regatta Section

PERSONAL PORTA-COOL 1M
ROOM-to-ROOM

L

MODEL AHTQ304FB
• 4,000 BTU/HR . cooling
• Only 43 pounds light with built-in
handle ... carry it anywhere
• Only 7 Amps .. plugs into any
adequately wired 116 volt
grounded circuit

SUNDAY, JUNE 17
8:30A.M. -11 :30 A.M. - Church of your choice
11 :30A.M. - 5:30P.M. -Carnival Rides- Flower Show
National Baton Twirling ContestMiddleport Jr. High Aud.
12 :30 Noon-6:00P.M. - -Flea Market
Power Boat Race Program
Heritage Sunday- Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society

Always remember the
ladder while you're climbing it to success.

• • •

• Durable outdoor (weather side)
case molded of LEXAN ® resin
CAN'T R.UST and carries a TEN
YEAR parts and service labor
replacement warranty against
failure due to a manufacturing
defect

REFRIGERATOR MOO.EL
CTA14AP
'
.

MAT NO . 86-4204-M
REPRO NO. 86-4204-R

95

RUSSIANS ARE HERE
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Three prominent Soviet
scientists are in Cincinnati this
week to visit the University of
Cincinnati's Ketter.ing
Laboratory. The Russians and
Americans will discuss
researc)l on the biological and
genetic effects of environmental pollutants.

llfE STAFF OF BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE ·
INVITES ALL OF YOU PEOPLE
TO BREAKFAST IN llfE MORNING

• 32" wide, 63Y," high
• 10.80 cu . ft . fresh food section
never needs defrosting
• 2 .94 cu . ft . freezer holds
up to 102.9 pounds

In The Evening

Regatta Special!

Fast courteous

• Twin slide-out crispers

ser vice in a pleasant atmosphere .

¥

• Three door shelves

The hom e of famou s Col. Sanders Kentucky Fried
Chick en in Gall·ipolis ..
.

¥ Where Onl y lhe Bes l Food is Good Enough .

TIRES

Gallipolis, Ohio

$3000

$
OFF

,...,.-----.,..

WE DELIVER!
WE SERVICE!
(Bob Evans Farm Foods Inc.)

95

• Covered butter bin
• Covered cheese
compartment
• Pocketed egg racks
• Two Easy-Release
ice-cube trays

REGULAR PRICE

Tire and Retreading Speciplists

'Dayton

13.7 CU. FT.
TWO-DOOR WITH
1 02.9-LB. FREI:ZER
MODEL CTA 14AP
13.7 cu. ft. capacity

Lunch At Noon • And Dinner
¥ We guarantee you good food -

1601 E. State Athens , 0 .
Phone 592 -1877

SAVINGS!

ON YOUR WAY TO FUN TIME

ASSN.)

McKINSTRY
TIRE &amp; ALIGNMENT CENTER

GREAT

MODEL AIH0304FB

• Top air discharge provides a
gentle canopy of cooling

lf some of the current
m01&gt;ies are so bad, how
come enough people see
them to be able to develop such a consensus?

Dagto

TO

• Eight-position automatic
thermostat

Give some people an inch,
and they'll want to take this
yardstick home as a souvenir .

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE

HOP, SKIP
.AND JUMP

• Quick-Mount side panels help
· make installation fast and easy

~~

guy~ who are holding the

JUST A

WE FINANCE!

POME·ROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Gauea and Mason Counties
Phone 992-2181
Open Mon.- Sat. Until6 P.M.

�Pagt&gt;

z _ Rtga tta Section

.

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, Jne 12, 1973

Parade promised the best yet

•.

It

ANEW BRAND NAME AT

FRIDAY, JUNE 15

12 :00 - 6:30 - Flea Market
12 :00 - 11 :00 P.M. - Carnival Rides
6:00 P.M. - Parade
.
9:ooP.M.- Talent Contest - Middleport Jr. High
Crowning of Regatta Queen
9:00P.M.- Regatta Ball - Dick Hawkins "That Bunch"
9:00P.M. - Teen Dance - Tennis Court

officials can line up the parade
order in advance of the Friday
evening event.
AnotherI innovation this year
will be the bands taking part
will be making the entire
march to the destination point,
the Pomeroy Junior High
&amp;hool, ratb!rr than traveling
via school buses a part of the
way .

LANDMARK
••

• THE HOTPOINT LINE!

SATIJRDAY, JUNE 16
10 :00 A.M.- Children's Casting Derby - Tennis Court
9:00 - 6:00 P.M. - Flea Market
10 :00 A.M. - 11:00 P.M. - Carnival Rides
12:00 - 1:30 P.M. - Flower Show &lt;Pomeroy Motor
Company showroom )
12:00 ~ Boat Parade
12 :30 P.M. - 2:30P.M. - Ski Show
2:00P.M. - 4:00P.M.- Aerial Circus - Football Field
4:00P.M. - Frog Jump - Football Field
10 :00 P.M. - Frog Ball - "Water Wheels" Orchestra
9:30P.M. - Teenage Dance

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
People who carry a rabbit's foot for good luck never
meditated on the fate of the
poor rabbit .

,;: *

REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS

1973 ·R EGAnA PROGRAM

More entrants,
frogmobile 's
return expected
From all indications , the 1973
edition of the Big Bend Regatta
Parade which moves out of
Middleport at 6 Friday evening
enroute to Pomeroy may be the
"best yet".
An innovation in this year's
parade will be the pre-judging
of floats - and it is indicated
that \here will be a number this
.Year - before the parade
beg~ns. The pre-parade judging
of floats only will be held at 5 p.
m. First place winners in four
categories - theme, "The
Place to be in '73"; frog theme,
commercial
and
noncommercial - will receive
large trophies.
A record number of bands is
expected for this year's parade
with Charles Minelli of the Ohio
University instrumental music
department judging them from
the Meigs Inn porch. Bands
will be competing for trophies
in three top positions in three
categories based on the
enrollment of the participating
school in the upper three
grades.
A number of certificates will
. be awarded in this year's
parade to walking individuals
and horse mounted entries.
Bator\ and drum and bugle
corps groups will be presented
plaques.
Heading this year's parade
are Dwight Goins, . band
director of the Meigs High
. &amp;hool, and Jim Mees t&gt;f Radio
WMPO. Late entries into the
parade
can
make
arrangements for entering the
parade by contacting either
Mees or Goins. However,
registration was actually
closed Monday so that the two

Page 3 - Regatta Section

PERSONAL PORTA-COOL 1M
ROOM-to-ROOM

L

MODEL AHTQ304FB
• 4,000 BTU/HR . cooling
• Only 43 pounds light with built-in
handle ... carry it anywhere
• Only 7 Amps .. plugs into any
adequately wired 116 volt
grounded circuit

SUNDAY, JUNE 17
8:30A.M. -11 :30 A.M. - Church of your choice
11 :30A.M. - 5:30P.M. -Carnival Rides- Flower Show
National Baton Twirling ContestMiddleport Jr. High Aud.
12 :30 Noon-6:00P.M. - -Flea Market
Power Boat Race Program
Heritage Sunday- Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society

Always remember the
ladder while you're climbing it to success.

• • •

• Durable outdoor (weather side)
case molded of LEXAN ® resin
CAN'T R.UST and carries a TEN
YEAR parts and service labor
replacement warranty against
failure due to a manufacturing
defect

REFRIGERATOR MOO.EL
CTA14AP
'
.

MAT NO . 86-4204-M
REPRO NO. 86-4204-R

95

RUSSIANS ARE HERE
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Three prominent Soviet
scientists are in Cincinnati this
week to visit the University of
Cincinnati's Ketter.ing
Laboratory. The Russians and
Americans will discuss
researc)l on the biological and
genetic effects of environmental pollutants.

llfE STAFF OF BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE ·
INVITES ALL OF YOU PEOPLE
TO BREAKFAST IN llfE MORNING

• 32" wide, 63Y," high
• 10.80 cu . ft . fresh food section
never needs defrosting
• 2 .94 cu . ft . freezer holds
up to 102.9 pounds

In The Evening

Regatta Special!

Fast courteous

• Twin slide-out crispers

ser vice in a pleasant atmosphere .

¥

• Three door shelves

The hom e of famou s Col. Sanders Kentucky Fried
Chick en in Gall·ipolis ..
.

¥ Where Onl y lhe Bes l Food is Good Enough .

TIRES

Gallipolis, Ohio

$3000

$
OFF

,...,.-----.,..

WE DELIVER!
WE SERVICE!
(Bob Evans Farm Foods Inc.)

95

• Covered butter bin
• Covered cheese
compartment
• Pocketed egg racks
• Two Easy-Release
ice-cube trays

REGULAR PRICE

Tire and Retreading Speciplists

'Dayton

13.7 CU. FT.
TWO-DOOR WITH
1 02.9-LB. FREI:ZER
MODEL CTA 14AP
13.7 cu. ft. capacity

Lunch At Noon • And Dinner
¥ We guarantee you good food -

1601 E. State Athens , 0 .
Phone 592 -1877

SAVINGS!

ON YOUR WAY TO FUN TIME

ASSN.)

McKINSTRY
TIRE &amp; ALIGNMENT CENTER

GREAT

MODEL AIH0304FB

• Top air discharge provides a
gentle canopy of cooling

lf some of the current
m01&gt;ies are so bad, how
come enough people see
them to be able to develop such a consensus?

Dagto

TO

• Eight-position automatic
thermostat

Give some people an inch,
and they'll want to take this
yardstick home as a souvenir .

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE

HOP, SKIP
.AND JUMP

• Quick-Mount side panels help
· make installation fast and easy

~~

guy~ who are holding the

JUST A

WE FINANCE!

POME·ROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Gauea and Mason Counties
Phone 992-2181
Open Mon.- Sat. Until6 P.M.

�The Daily Sentinel, Jline 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

page 4 - Regatta Section

Jumping won't stop with the frog activities
There's still plenty to do
after the frogs stop jumping on

TEEN DANCE SET
Teenagers won't
be
forgotten at the Big Bend
Regatta this weekend. The
Drew Webster Post of the
American Legion will be
sponsoring a teen dance at
Meigs Junior High School
Saturday night from 8:30
until midnight. Admission Is

$1.
Live entertainment will be
provided by "Patchwork"
made up of Pete Simpson,
Rick Miller, Gary Lyons,
Marc Dailey, and Scott Echman.

JACK CARSEY, MANAGER of Meigs County Landmark, is co-chairman of the 1973 Big Bend Regatta. Carsey is
a past president of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and
a past general chairman of regatta weekend.

··

Saturday of the Regatta
Weekend. If you like to dance,
the "Frog Ball" is the place to
go.
" Waterwheel" from Nashville, Tenn., will
provide
Jive
music
for
the darice to begin at 10
p.m. at the old Pomeroy Jr.
High School. Tickets are on
sale for $3 single and $5 a
couple at Nelson's Drugs, New
York Clothing House, Swisher
and Lohse, and Athens County
Savings and Loan all in
Pomeroy, and Village Pharmacy in Middleport. Tickets
may also be obtained by
contacting
any
Jaycee
member.

"A GOOD PLACE TO BE IN '73"

Big Bend Regatta, June 15-16-17
• • •
No, Gwendolyn. f ixing
a lawn m o wer doesn't
mean you ;ve bribed it.

• • •

Why Don't You Discover Why We Are
Known As ...

There are several ways to
go broke - we prefer first·
class .
·

the family bank

• * •

Some banks are called "Business Banks", some are called
"Commercial Banks" ... we are known as "The Family Bank".
Why? Because we have all the banking services you and your
family will ever need. We'll be happy to serve you.

'·

·

Page 5 - Regatta Section

A limited offer from Volkswagen:

Put
Yourself In
The Picture

Auto Bank
Drive In Window Service
For Your ·Convenience

Free Parking
Big Bend Area On The Move ••.

In Our SpacioUs Lot
For Your Convenience

BILL GRUESER, MANAGER of the Pomeroy Motor
Co., is general chairman of the 1973 Big Bend Regatta .
Grueser is a past president of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, sponsors of the annual regatta weekend.

••

..-...c.~

KEEP YOUR COOL
At The End of The
Pomeroy Bridge
During Big Bend Regatta

JUNE 15-16-17 .

Cool, Cool Refreshments Plus
Delicious Sandwiches With
All The Extras

DAIRY VALLEY
W. MAIN

992-2556

POMEROY, 0.

Better late than never: our own Sports Bug.
With oversize radial tires. Mounted on
mag-type wheels.
True bucket seats.
An Indy-type steering wheel.
A short-throw stick shift.
Four-wheel independent suspension .
An air-cooled rear-mounted aluminummagnesium alloy engine.
Your choice of Marathon Silver Metallic
paint, or Saturn Yellow. With jet black trimming
all around.
Options? Plenty. Like flare-tip pipes.
Racing stripes. Stereo radio. And more.
If this sounds good to you, don't be late.
Because we've made only a limited number
of Sports Bugs.
Late could be never.

"We Have Grown
· Because We Have Helped

Others Grow"

"THE BANK THAT
FLIES THE FLAG EVERYDAY"
Member Federal Reserve System

�The Daily Sentinel, Jline 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

page 4 - Regatta Section

Jumping won't stop with the frog activities
There's still plenty to do
after the frogs stop jumping on

TEEN DANCE SET
Teenagers won't
be
forgotten at the Big Bend
Regatta this weekend. The
Drew Webster Post of the
American Legion will be
sponsoring a teen dance at
Meigs Junior High School
Saturday night from 8:30
until midnight. Admission Is

$1.
Live entertainment will be
provided by "Patchwork"
made up of Pete Simpson,
Rick Miller, Gary Lyons,
Marc Dailey, and Scott Echman.

JACK CARSEY, MANAGER of Meigs County Landmark, is co-chairman of the 1973 Big Bend Regatta. Carsey is
a past president of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and
a past general chairman of regatta weekend.

··

Saturday of the Regatta
Weekend. If you like to dance,
the "Frog Ball" is the place to
go.
" Waterwheel" from Nashville, Tenn., will
provide
Jive
music
for
the darice to begin at 10
p.m. at the old Pomeroy Jr.
High School. Tickets are on
sale for $3 single and $5 a
couple at Nelson's Drugs, New
York Clothing House, Swisher
and Lohse, and Athens County
Savings and Loan all in
Pomeroy, and Village Pharmacy in Middleport. Tickets
may also be obtained by
contacting
any
Jaycee
member.

"A GOOD PLACE TO BE IN '73"

Big Bend Regatta, June 15-16-17
• • •
No, Gwendolyn. f ixing
a lawn m o wer doesn't
mean you ;ve bribed it.

• • •

Why Don't You Discover Why We Are
Known As ...

There are several ways to
go broke - we prefer first·
class .
·

the family bank

• * •

Some banks are called "Business Banks", some are called
"Commercial Banks" ... we are known as "The Family Bank".
Why? Because we have all the banking services you and your
family will ever need. We'll be happy to serve you.

'·

·

Page 5 - Regatta Section

A limited offer from Volkswagen:

Put
Yourself In
The Picture

Auto Bank
Drive In Window Service
For Your ·Convenience

Free Parking
Big Bend Area On The Move ••.

In Our SpacioUs Lot
For Your Convenience

BILL GRUESER, MANAGER of the Pomeroy Motor
Co., is general chairman of the 1973 Big Bend Regatta .
Grueser is a past president of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, sponsors of the annual regatta weekend.

••

..-...c.~

KEEP YOUR COOL
At The End of The
Pomeroy Bridge
During Big Bend Regatta

JUNE 15-16-17 .

Cool, Cool Refreshments Plus
Delicious Sandwiches With
All The Extras

DAIRY VALLEY
W. MAIN

992-2556

POMEROY, 0.

Better late than never: our own Sports Bug.
With oversize radial tires. Mounted on
mag-type wheels.
True bucket seats.
An Indy-type steering wheel.
A short-throw stick shift.
Four-wheel independent suspension .
An air-cooled rear-mounted aluminummagnesium alloy engine.
Your choice of Marathon Silver Metallic
paint, or Saturn Yellow. With jet black trimming
all around.
Options? Plenty. Like flare-tip pipes.
Racing stripes. Stereo radio. And more.
If this sounds good to you, don't be late.
Because we've made only a limited number
of Sports Bugs.
Late could be never.

"We Have Grown
· Because We Have Helped

Others Grow"

"THE BANK THAT
FLIES THE FLAG EVERYDAY"
Member Federal Reserve System

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 6 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 7 - Regatta Section

Come to Johnson's
• • ~.t

On Lot Closeout I Reduced $1500
CHAMPION 60x24

I
I
I
I \
I \
\ \
\ \
\

\
\

\

''

'' ' ' '
'' ' '

......

'

•

.......

SO DO WE ... OUR
FINE CUSTOMERS!

1- TOTAL ELECTRIC
1- FUEL OIL OR GAS
Fr ont dining room, ce ntra l k itchen
fa m i ly room . side li v ing room , :;
bed room s, P t. bath s, slidin g glass
door s, carpet throughout. SAVE $1500
NOW.

'

$11,900 Furnished

You can be sure it' s true when we say we love all our wond erful
customers - and as we approach our 102nd year of s~ rvic e , th is
greeting is just our way of saying "Thanks" for your patr onage. We
hope we can continue to give you the outstanding banking servi ce
you deserve.

MODEL 263 - 60' X 24'

We Will NOT
Be Undersold!
. -~.

Model 60T2KOA
60 ft. ' 12 wide
2 bedrooms

KITC~ '"

LIVING ROOM

1 ,:. '

~;€

~·

FREDERICK WILKINSON -CROW JR., Pomeroy attorney , last week was voted by the Ohio legislature in an
official resolution the "Grand Croaker of the State of Ohio"
by (what else?) a unanimous croak vote.

k

u'-1"

T-1'

1'-t

)I&lt;

\

front kitchen
If-(

IT I

pomeroy
rutland

.. -'&gt;

WE HAVE SOLD MORE KJRKWOODS
THAN ANYONE IN THE AREA! SAVE DOLLARS!

JOHNSON 'MOBILE
HOME
SALES
YIN DALE- CHAMPION- CONCORD
NE~ MOON- KIRKWOOD- FREEDOM
Free Delivery &amp; Set Up
Repair Service&amp; Parts
Rt. 7 East Gallipolis; Ohio
Phone 446-3547

Big Bend
Regatta
June 15-16-17
. Welcome To All!

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

11

Golng one step further ..
{

............... I _NIII .. t 10,000

MEMBER
FEDERAL
RES.ERVE
SYSTEM

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 6 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 7 - Regatta Section

Come to Johnson's
• • ~.t

On Lot Closeout I Reduced $1500
CHAMPION 60x24

I
I
I
I \
I \
\ \
\ \
\

\
\

\

''

'' ' ' '
'' ' '

......

'

•

.......

SO DO WE ... OUR
FINE CUSTOMERS!

1- TOTAL ELECTRIC
1- FUEL OIL OR GAS
Fr ont dining room, ce ntra l k itchen
fa m i ly room . side li v ing room , :;
bed room s, P t. bath s, slidin g glass
door s, carpet throughout. SAVE $1500
NOW.

'

$11,900 Furnished

You can be sure it' s true when we say we love all our wond erful
customers - and as we approach our 102nd year of s~ rvic e , th is
greeting is just our way of saying "Thanks" for your patr onage. We
hope we can continue to give you the outstanding banking servi ce
you deserve.

MODEL 263 - 60' X 24'

We Will NOT
Be Undersold!
. -~.

Model 60T2KOA
60 ft. ' 12 wide
2 bedrooms

KITC~ '"

LIVING ROOM

1 ,:. '

~;€

~·

FREDERICK WILKINSON -CROW JR., Pomeroy attorney , last week was voted by the Ohio legislature in an
official resolution the "Grand Croaker of the State of Ohio"
by (what else?) a unanimous croak vote.

k

u'-1"

T-1'

1'-t

)I&lt;

\

front kitchen
If-(

IT I

pomeroy
rutland

.. -'&gt;

WE HAVE SOLD MORE KJRKWOODS
THAN ANYONE IN THE AREA! SAVE DOLLARS!

JOHNSON 'MOBILE
HOME
SALES
YIN DALE- CHAMPION- CONCORD
NE~ MOON- KIRKWOOD- FREEDOM
Free Delivery &amp; Set Up
Repair Service&amp; Parts
Rt. 7 East Gallipolis; Ohio
Phone 446-3547

Big Bend
Regatta
June 15-16-17
. Welcome To All!

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

11

Golng one step further ..
{

............... I _NIII .. t 10,000

MEMBER
FEDERAL
RES.ERVE
SYSTEM

�page 8 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 197J

I--------------------------~
of oplalon are welcomed. They abould be leu
I thanLetten
380
words
long (or be subject to reduction by tbe
I
I editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
I Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
I request, names will be disclosed. Letten sbould be in good
I taste, addressing issues, not penonaUtles.
I
I
I
..
I

Arts Guild show and sale set
The Textile Arts Guild of the
Ohio University where she got
Athens-Meigs County area will
her training in weaving.
be a featured group on
In addition to being a
" Heritage
Sunday, "
a ·
weaver, s he also enjoys
celebration of early crafts and
needlepoint and quilting. John
local folk music, to be staged
Konklin of Glouster will conby The Meigs County Pioneer
duct spinning demonstrations.
and Historical Society during
He is skilled at both the hand
the Regatta on Sunday, on June
spindle and the spinning wheel,
17, from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. at
and will show examples of his
The Meigs County Museum on
work.
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy .
The Meigs County Museum's
The Textile Arts Guild is a
"Heritage Sunday" program
group of men and women of all
will also consist of a folk song
ages dedicated to the revival of
fest;
ca lliope concerts;
traditional textile arts and also
demonstrations of sandstone
to the application of the art to
cutting and facing, potting, oil
co ntemporary n eeds,
painting, and stained glass;
materials, and aesthetics. The
geneological displays and
members of the guild range
discussion, and a Meigs County
from
beginners
to
slide show and presentation of
professionals in the areas of
the plans for the future
weaving, s pinning, dying, .
development of the Meigs
batiking , twining, knotting ,
County Museum .
quilting, and all kinds of
needlework.
Home-made food
and
The Textile Arts Guild will
beverage will be sold on the
have a show and sale at the
grounds . Visitors are enmuseum throughout the day on
couraged to wear old-time
"Heritage Sunday ." On hand
clothing and to bring historic
will be Mrs. Pandy Reiser,
items, photographs, etc. of
president of the Guild, who will
local interest to "show and
be conducting demonstrations
tell." There will be no adin weaving on the four harness
mission charge, but memloom. She and her husband
bership information will be
David, an architectural
available.
designer with an office in
For more information about
Athens, live in a brick house
" Heritage Sunday" or the
which they built together in the
Meigs County Museum in
Amesville area . Mrs. Reiser
general, call the coordinator,
graduated with a BFA from
. Elizabeth Hilferty, 992-5415.

Page 9 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

I
I
I

Dear Editor :
I would like to express a few words about the Regatta we are
having in Meigs County.
.
I think it is a wonderful amusement for old and young when
they had it the last two years. But I read in the paper a while back
where they was going to have a bull in the program ! Now what
are the boys trying to do, make a mess out of the thing? I don 't
think bulls or bull fighting would be a thing to bring in with a frog
jumping contest.
When this thing came along Mr. Crow had it incorporated as
a Bull Frog Incorporation, if I am right. I don 't think Mr. Crow
wanted to bring bulls into this affair.
I think you boys had a wonderful program the way you had it
when Mr. Crow was in charge . If some one has a bull they want to
display I know the fair board at Rock Springs Fairgrounds would
be glad to have it out at the Meigs County Fair. Besides, if I'm
any judge of bull flesh the picture they had published r~ently of
a "bull" was lacking certain requirements bulls are know to
ca~.
.
I see in the Western States and in California where they have
Cockroach racing. I listen to it on radio. The way the crowds
Sf;!em to cheer them roaches over the radio I believe something
like that would be more interesting than bulls. But nevertheless,
you boys are taking care of the Regatta, not me. And I sure wish
you all a great success at it.
.·
I sure do believe in entertainment, but I hope you fellows
keep the bulls (?) where they belong. .
.
I sure would like to see the Frog Bus m the parade this year. I
think it was as safe as some of' the cars that travel down Third
Ave. here in Middleport.
Well, I guess I have found enough fault. But always keep this
in mind I am behind the Regatta 100percent.
I j~t want to tell 'Mr. Crow and all the rest, "let's keep
Pomeroy a better place to live and enjoy ourselves and keep the
Bulls out of town! "
Yours truly, Ben Batey.

MRS. DAVID REISER, Amesville, president of the Textile Arts Gttild demonstrates
weaving technique. The guild will have a show and sale at the Meigs Museum on Heritage
Sunday, June 17, during Regatta Weekend.

··:::::.

··:·.

Regatta Time Is
Fun ·T ime!

A modified semi·vee hull cuts throu gh the
waters to your favorite fis hing spot. Loaded
with ~any extr~ not found on boats of this ·
low pnce. There s also a handy fish measuring scale! Motor and seat e~tra.

Te;~i~~ms

BIG BEND REGAnA

Boa1Motor

JUNE 15,;16-17

$286 40

$}9 9
.

~

L;uy tO operate with twi5t
"(rip · control and shallow

HELP MAKE IT AGREAT
SUCCESS
AND DRIVE
SAFELY TO GET THERE

263 W. MAIN

- - .

water tJrive. Full gear shift
of forward. neutral and reverse with aolid state igni.
tion fo~ quick s!:arts. Complete with 3Y4·1Jallon remote

I

heavy-duty au tank!

. Sears 350-lb. Rugged Boat Trailer
DeSigned for lightweight boats up to
J2.ft. The trailer features two aafety

$

chains with hooks, running lighllo and

•turdy Y·frame.

13688

Sears Authorized Catalog Merchant

CO~

220 E. Main

992·2l78

Pomeroy ,

lOll.. run, llfA &amp; SAT. t.tt 10 5:tl, "-SSJAy ,.: 11001 FIIIIIY 11:11 It t:ll

POMEROY, 0.
\

.

,•

·. ·.

'=;::F'

-

... . .

~

ELCONA "GLEN ARVIN" and PINEHURST in th~ee .siz.es ~nd
floor plans. Most any decor to please the ~o~t. d1scnmmatmg
person and set the mood for many enjoyable act1V1t1es ~
UVE MDDIERN

We carry a line of the most
distinctiv e Brands and Mod els Unmatched by any dea ler.
MARLETTE - FOREST PARK
ELCONA -GRANVlLLE ARLINGTON - SHAMROCK MIDDLEBURY .

Five Superbly Designed Floor Plans - Expertly Design ed - Superbly
Built - Ec:onomicallv Priced .
..
"The Homeofthe Future - Built To Last Until the Future ·

KIT MODULAR HOMES

The Kid Modular offers the biggest selection of floor plan s &amp; dec?r s . ..
available anywhere . There's one to fit your needs and also to frt your
budget.

We take pride in the fact that we

"GAMEFISHER 12''

TO THE

LEGAR MONUMENT

d ll

'

jumps is Crow

"Fun For Young and Old"

This home is of top quality material and workmanship . It has
become the home that most families wont, featuring 2x4 walls,
roof shingles, house windows (4
picture windows)
house
doors, ek ., when we say
"Step up to MARLETTE", we
mean just that.

Middleport, Ohio
June 8,1973

STEP
OUT
I

MARLETTE-"The Deluxe Sectional".

••• ?Jtt. uuw-c,: ·-""'

Let's stick to frog jumping

./
..

The master mind behind the
annual Frog Jump to be held on
Saturday, June 16, at Meigs
Football Stadium in Pomeroy,
beginning at 4 p.m. is Pomeroy
Attorney Fred Crow.
Last year Crow converted a
school bus into a frogmobile
that hopped along the parade
route. According to Crow the
frogmobile will be used again
this year.
This year's activities will
begin with the annual "frog
jump" at 4 p.m., with Leslie
Fultz serving as master of
ceremonies . Dale Warner, past
grand croaker , and Jim
Clatworthy, grand croaker,
will also assist with the activities.
In addition to the frog jump
and the frog races there will be
a full fight . Following these
events new honorary grand
croakers will be named. Grand
Croakers are overtaking

Kentucky .Colonels in prestige
it is reported in some quarters.
According to Warner, who is
in charge of the frog jump,
there will be a senior and
junior division in the frog
jump. The senior division is for
those persons 15 and older
which carries prizes of $300,
$100 and $50 for first, second
and third place respectively.
The junior division is for
those 15 years of age and under
which carries prizes of $100, $50
and $25 for first, second ·and
third place respectively .
Anyone under 16 can compete in the senior division,
however, if they pay an entry
fee of $2.
The owner of a frog that
breaks the world's record of 19
feet and four inches will win
$500.
Entry fee to participate in
the senior division is' $2 and to
enter the ,junior division , 50
cents.

Many Kinds! !

SECTIONAL HOMES-MODULAR

1)~J Y:6_

- Master mind of

I

We Are In The Housing Business

t~re

the A reu :-.

old(!sl

and Most Experienced dealer in Seclionlll /lome.-..

ATTENTION
VETERANS:
• V.A. Mobile Home loons
Available.
e NO DOWN PAYMENT.
12 YEARS TO PAY.
A.P.R. 10.75

U you are interested in a MOUILE
HOME, DOUBLE WIDE, SECTIONAL HOM ..:, or MODULAR
HOME, it will pay you to visit our

Lot.
(See Joe Gile11 or Jim Staats)

"WE ~ERVICE WHA1' WE SELL"Ask the fa'm ily who has dealt with us.

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOME CENTER
Upper Rt. #7- Next door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
·
Gallipolis, Ohio

.,

�page 8 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 197J

I--------------------------~
of oplalon are welcomed. They abould be leu
I thanLetten
380
words
long (or be subject to reduction by tbe
I
I editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
I Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
I request, names will be disclosed. Letten sbould be in good
I taste, addressing issues, not penonaUtles.
I
I
I
..
I

Arts Guild show and sale set
The Textile Arts Guild of the
Ohio University where she got
Athens-Meigs County area will
her training in weaving.
be a featured group on
In addition to being a
" Heritage
Sunday, "
a ·
weaver, s he also enjoys
celebration of early crafts and
needlepoint and quilting. John
local folk music, to be staged
Konklin of Glouster will conby The Meigs County Pioneer
duct spinning demonstrations.
and Historical Society during
He is skilled at both the hand
the Regatta on Sunday, on June
spindle and the spinning wheel,
17, from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. at
and will show examples of his
The Meigs County Museum on
work.
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy .
The Meigs County Museum's
The Textile Arts Guild is a
"Heritage Sunday" program
group of men and women of all
will also consist of a folk song
ages dedicated to the revival of
fest;
ca lliope concerts;
traditional textile arts and also
demonstrations of sandstone
to the application of the art to
cutting and facing, potting, oil
co ntemporary n eeds,
painting, and stained glass;
materials, and aesthetics. The
geneological displays and
members of the guild range
discussion, and a Meigs County
from
beginners
to
slide show and presentation of
professionals in the areas of
the plans for the future
weaving, s pinning, dying, .
development of the Meigs
batiking , twining, knotting ,
County Museum .
quilting, and all kinds of
needlework.
Home-made food
and
The Textile Arts Guild will
beverage will be sold on the
have a show and sale at the
grounds . Visitors are enmuseum throughout the day on
couraged to wear old-time
"Heritage Sunday ." On hand
clothing and to bring historic
will be Mrs. Pandy Reiser,
items, photographs, etc. of
president of the Guild, who will
local interest to "show and
be conducting demonstrations
tell." There will be no adin weaving on the four harness
mission charge, but memloom. She and her husband
bership information will be
David, an architectural
available.
designer with an office in
For more information about
Athens, live in a brick house
" Heritage Sunday" or the
which they built together in the
Meigs County Museum in
Amesville area . Mrs. Reiser
general, call the coordinator,
graduated with a BFA from
. Elizabeth Hilferty, 992-5415.

Page 9 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

I
I
I

Dear Editor :
I would like to express a few words about the Regatta we are
having in Meigs County.
.
I think it is a wonderful amusement for old and young when
they had it the last two years. But I read in the paper a while back
where they was going to have a bull in the program ! Now what
are the boys trying to do, make a mess out of the thing? I don 't
think bulls or bull fighting would be a thing to bring in with a frog
jumping contest.
When this thing came along Mr. Crow had it incorporated as
a Bull Frog Incorporation, if I am right. I don 't think Mr. Crow
wanted to bring bulls into this affair.
I think you boys had a wonderful program the way you had it
when Mr. Crow was in charge . If some one has a bull they want to
display I know the fair board at Rock Springs Fairgrounds would
be glad to have it out at the Meigs County Fair. Besides, if I'm
any judge of bull flesh the picture they had published r~ently of
a "bull" was lacking certain requirements bulls are know to
ca~.
.
I see in the Western States and in California where they have
Cockroach racing. I listen to it on radio. The way the crowds
Sf;!em to cheer them roaches over the radio I believe something
like that would be more interesting than bulls. But nevertheless,
you boys are taking care of the Regatta, not me. And I sure wish
you all a great success at it.
.·
I sure do believe in entertainment, but I hope you fellows
keep the bulls (?) where they belong. .
.
I sure would like to see the Frog Bus m the parade this year. I
think it was as safe as some of' the cars that travel down Third
Ave. here in Middleport.
Well, I guess I have found enough fault. But always keep this
in mind I am behind the Regatta 100percent.
I j~t want to tell 'Mr. Crow and all the rest, "let's keep
Pomeroy a better place to live and enjoy ourselves and keep the
Bulls out of town! "
Yours truly, Ben Batey.

MRS. DAVID REISER, Amesville, president of the Textile Arts Gttild demonstrates
weaving technique. The guild will have a show and sale at the Meigs Museum on Heritage
Sunday, June 17, during Regatta Weekend.

··:::::.

··:·.

Regatta Time Is
Fun ·T ime!

A modified semi·vee hull cuts throu gh the
waters to your favorite fis hing spot. Loaded
with ~any extr~ not found on boats of this ·
low pnce. There s also a handy fish measuring scale! Motor and seat e~tra.

Te;~i~~ms

BIG BEND REGAnA

Boa1Motor

JUNE 15,;16-17

$286 40

$}9 9
.

~

L;uy tO operate with twi5t
"(rip · control and shallow

HELP MAKE IT AGREAT
SUCCESS
AND DRIVE
SAFELY TO GET THERE

263 W. MAIN

- - .

water tJrive. Full gear shift
of forward. neutral and reverse with aolid state igni.
tion fo~ quick s!:arts. Complete with 3Y4·1Jallon remote

I

heavy-duty au tank!

. Sears 350-lb. Rugged Boat Trailer
DeSigned for lightweight boats up to
J2.ft. The trailer features two aafety

$

chains with hooks, running lighllo and

•turdy Y·frame.

13688

Sears Authorized Catalog Merchant

CO~

220 E. Main

992·2l78

Pomeroy ,

lOll.. run, llfA &amp; SAT. t.tt 10 5:tl, "-SSJAy ,.: 11001 FIIIIIY 11:11 It t:ll

POMEROY, 0.
\

.

,•

·. ·.

'=;::F'

-

... . .

~

ELCONA "GLEN ARVIN" and PINEHURST in th~ee .siz.es ~nd
floor plans. Most any decor to please the ~o~t. d1scnmmatmg
person and set the mood for many enjoyable act1V1t1es ~
UVE MDDIERN

We carry a line of the most
distinctiv e Brands and Mod els Unmatched by any dea ler.
MARLETTE - FOREST PARK
ELCONA -GRANVlLLE ARLINGTON - SHAMROCK MIDDLEBURY .

Five Superbly Designed Floor Plans - Expertly Design ed - Superbly
Built - Ec:onomicallv Priced .
..
"The Homeofthe Future - Built To Last Until the Future ·

KIT MODULAR HOMES

The Kid Modular offers the biggest selection of floor plan s &amp; dec?r s . ..
available anywhere . There's one to fit your needs and also to frt your
budget.

We take pride in the fact that we

"GAMEFISHER 12''

TO THE

LEGAR MONUMENT

d ll

'

jumps is Crow

"Fun For Young and Old"

This home is of top quality material and workmanship . It has
become the home that most families wont, featuring 2x4 walls,
roof shingles, house windows (4
picture windows)
house
doors, ek ., when we say
"Step up to MARLETTE", we
mean just that.

Middleport, Ohio
June 8,1973

STEP
OUT
I

MARLETTE-"The Deluxe Sectional".

••• ?Jtt. uuw-c,: ·-""'

Let's stick to frog jumping

./
..

The master mind behind the
annual Frog Jump to be held on
Saturday, June 16, at Meigs
Football Stadium in Pomeroy,
beginning at 4 p.m. is Pomeroy
Attorney Fred Crow.
Last year Crow converted a
school bus into a frogmobile
that hopped along the parade
route. According to Crow the
frogmobile will be used again
this year.
This year's activities will
begin with the annual "frog
jump" at 4 p.m., with Leslie
Fultz serving as master of
ceremonies . Dale Warner, past
grand croaker , and Jim
Clatworthy, grand croaker,
will also assist with the activities.
In addition to the frog jump
and the frog races there will be
a full fight . Following these
events new honorary grand
croakers will be named. Grand
Croakers are overtaking

Kentucky .Colonels in prestige
it is reported in some quarters.
According to Warner, who is
in charge of the frog jump,
there will be a senior and
junior division in the frog
jump. The senior division is for
those persons 15 and older
which carries prizes of $300,
$100 and $50 for first, second
and third place respectively.
The junior division is for
those 15 years of age and under
which carries prizes of $100, $50
and $25 for first, second ·and
third place respectively .
Anyone under 16 can compete in the senior division,
however, if they pay an entry
fee of $2.
The owner of a frog that
breaks the world's record of 19
feet and four inches will win
$500.
Entry fee to participate in
the senior division is' $2 and to
enter the ,junior division , 50
cents.

Many Kinds! !

SECTIONAL HOMES-MODULAR

1)~J Y:6_

- Master mind of

I

We Are In The Housing Business

t~re

the A reu :-.

old(!sl

and Most Experienced dealer in Seclionlll /lome.-..

ATTENTION
VETERANS:
• V.A. Mobile Home loons
Available.
e NO DOWN PAYMENT.
12 YEARS TO PAY.
A.P.R. 10.75

U you are interested in a MOUILE
HOME, DOUBLE WIDE, SECTIONAL HOM ..:, or MODULAR
HOME, it will pay you to visit our

Lot.
(See Joe Gile11 or Jim Staats)

"WE ~ERVICE WHA1' WE SELL"Ask the fa'm ily who has dealt with us.

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOME CENTER
Upper Rt. #7- Next door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
·
Gallipolis, Ohio

.,

�Page 10 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 11 - Regatta Section

Talent Program another Regatta 'first'
Another 1973 first in the
upcoming Regatta Weekend is
at Meigs Junior High in Middleport under direction of
Vernon Weber .
The talent show is open to
any person or persons wishing
to take part.
It will get underway at 8:30
o.m. with organ selections by

Mrs. Christine Guthrie and
several selections by the Ohio
University Players.
' Highlighting the show will be
the crowning of the 1973
Regatta Queen at about lO,p.m.
Vocal and intrumental
groups, soloists and comedy
numbers are invited to take
part.

A practice session for all
contestants will be held June 13
at 8 p.m. at the junior high
building in Middleport. Entries
will be accepted from anyone
in southeastern Ohio.

Entries should be submitted
as soon as possible in order
that the program may be
arranged. Each act requires a
$1 entry fee . All entries must be
submitted by noon on June 13.
There will be two categories :
one Is contestants through age
12, and the other age 13 and
older. Each category will be
awarded a first and second
prize, $25 first place and $15
second place.
·

Just figured our lawn care
bill . Next season we 'll mulch
the g r a s s with dollars
thrown into the lawn mower.

Heritage Day
expanded in '73

Audience participation and a
panel of judges will decide the
winners. Each contestant will
be given three to five minutes
to present numbers.

Heritage Day held last year
for the first time as a part of
Big Bend Regatta Week End,
one of the highligllts of the
event; has been expanded this
year to offer a variety of
presentations on Sunday, June

.
Don't w o r r y about
whe:e your next dollar is
commg from - w 0 r r y
about to whom it is go-

The observance, being
staged at the Meigs Museum on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy by
the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, will begin at
11 a.m. and end at 6.
Not only will the pro~ram
(Continued on page 12

17.

mg.

MEIGS

INN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

IN A NEW

By National
E njo y Liw
Enh'rta i lllll •·n t

Saturday Night

10 pm - 2 am

The Ambe r Lounge
Opens at 11 :00 A.M.

•

GORILLA IN POMEROY? - You better believe it.
Saturday "Ba-lau" stopped at the drive-in window at the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company and aeposited a .
banana . Ba-lau had with him a note which read "Monkey see
monkey.do, I would like to borrow' some money from you."
Did he get the money? Doubt it very much; however, he did
get a lot of laughs. Ba-lau will probably be at the Frog Jump
on Saturday , June 16.
·

,r~~

F=

--.....- ·-j

lATH;!

IITCH£M.DIIIIII
lOll

0

:ro· ,..•--.,.

1..0

\

Design 212

Jllllh

~~~~·o
(o:a_~

rr.;

I£DIOON l
II I II

I£0100N 3
1111

::11 ==t

-

lliiiG RODN
15 I II

~

MODEL 3381

44 X 24

I 038 SQ. FT. UPPER LEVEL
2076 SQ. FT. TOTAL LIVING AREA

1. The Trendhome is built
according to code.
2. Fully insulated .
3. Large closets .
4. Storm doors &amp; windows.
5. 2x6 rafters .
6. Copper plumbing .
7. Nearly an acre of land.
8. Prices start at $19,995.00
on your lot complete ready to
move into.

!

L

OUR MODEL HOME .

Built by
B&amp;K

LOCATED 1 MILE NORTH

Excavating

OF FIVE POINTS ON RT. 7

Shown By Appointment
SALES REPRESENTATIVE:

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associates : Helen L. Teaford, Gordon B. Teaford

EQUAL HOUSING
. OPPORTUNITIES
LARGE FROG COLLECTION - Mary Colmer, employe
at the. Court Street Grill, has on display her rare , large
collection of frogs in preparation for the Frog Jump to be
held Saturday, June 16, at 4 p.m. at Meigs Football Stadium
in Pomeroy.

Lunches 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Dinn.e rs 5 1o 10 P .M.

PHONE 992-3325

110 MECHANIC STREET

Ann Grimes

'
37 Gues t Room s - new, modern . by
day or wee k. Party and Banqu et
Rvom s by rese rvation .

This sweeper, dozer, hauler, fertil~zer and aerator
is actually a mower in disguise.~~
· . And it's as good at mowing as it is at everything
else. This tough, rugged, compact little powerhouse is all
you need for lawn or garden·work.
.
Call us for a free demonstration on your own lawn.
PowerfulS and 8 HP engines. • 5 forward speeds plus
reverse. • Completely enclosed transmission.
• Maneuvers in comfort and safety. • Costs much less
than many bulky garden tractors and still performs
the above chores.

;?I

/I

McDonouah Power Equipment, Inc. A sub.idiary of Fuqua lndustties, Inc.

POMEROY, OHIO

A GOOD PLACE TO BE IN '73

Big Bend-Regatta June 15, 16, 17
\

(Buf fet Lun cheon
11 : 00t o 1: 30,
Monday thru Sat urday)

REGATTA SPECIAL
Free Hauling Cart with
Riding Snapper purchased
during Regatta Week.

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 8 a.m.

992-2975
t~

5:30 Mon. thru Thurs.

8 a.m. til 8 p.m. Fri. and Saturday

�Page 10 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 11 - Regatta Section

Talent Program another Regatta 'first'
Another 1973 first in the
upcoming Regatta Weekend is
at Meigs Junior High in Middleport under direction of
Vernon Weber .
The talent show is open to
any person or persons wishing
to take part.
It will get underway at 8:30
o.m. with organ selections by

Mrs. Christine Guthrie and
several selections by the Ohio
University Players.
' Highlighting the show will be
the crowning of the 1973
Regatta Queen at about lO,p.m.
Vocal and intrumental
groups, soloists and comedy
numbers are invited to take
part.

A practice session for all
contestants will be held June 13
at 8 p.m. at the junior high
building in Middleport. Entries
will be accepted from anyone
in southeastern Ohio.

Entries should be submitted
as soon as possible in order
that the program may be
arranged. Each act requires a
$1 entry fee . All entries must be
submitted by noon on June 13.
There will be two categories :
one Is contestants through age
12, and the other age 13 and
older. Each category will be
awarded a first and second
prize, $25 first place and $15
second place.
·

Just figured our lawn care
bill . Next season we 'll mulch
the g r a s s with dollars
thrown into the lawn mower.

Heritage Day
expanded in '73

Audience participation and a
panel of judges will decide the
winners. Each contestant will
be given three to five minutes
to present numbers.

Heritage Day held last year
for the first time as a part of
Big Bend Regatta Week End,
one of the highligllts of the
event; has been expanded this
year to offer a variety of
presentations on Sunday, June

.
Don't w o r r y about
whe:e your next dollar is
commg from - w 0 r r y
about to whom it is go-

The observance, being
staged at the Meigs Museum on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy by
the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, will begin at
11 a.m. and end at 6.
Not only will the pro~ram
(Continued on page 12

17.

mg.

MEIGS

INN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

IN A NEW

By National
E njo y Liw
Enh'rta i lllll •·n t

Saturday Night

10 pm - 2 am

The Ambe r Lounge
Opens at 11 :00 A.M.

•

GORILLA IN POMEROY? - You better believe it.
Saturday "Ba-lau" stopped at the drive-in window at the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company and aeposited a .
banana . Ba-lau had with him a note which read "Monkey see
monkey.do, I would like to borrow' some money from you."
Did he get the money? Doubt it very much; however, he did
get a lot of laughs. Ba-lau will probably be at the Frog Jump
on Saturday , June 16.
·

,r~~

F=

--.....- ·-j

lATH;!

IITCH£M.DIIIIII
lOll

0

:ro· ,..•--.,.

1..0

\

Design 212

Jllllh

~~~~·o
(o:a_~

rr.;

I£DIOON l
II I II

I£0100N 3
1111

::11 ==t

-

lliiiG RODN
15 I II

~

MODEL 3381

44 X 24

I 038 SQ. FT. UPPER LEVEL
2076 SQ. FT. TOTAL LIVING AREA

1. The Trendhome is built
according to code.
2. Fully insulated .
3. Large closets .
4. Storm doors &amp; windows.
5. 2x6 rafters .
6. Copper plumbing .
7. Nearly an acre of land.
8. Prices start at $19,995.00
on your lot complete ready to
move into.

!

L

OUR MODEL HOME .

Built by
B&amp;K

LOCATED 1 MILE NORTH

Excavating

OF FIVE POINTS ON RT. 7

Shown By Appointment
SALES REPRESENTATIVE:

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associates : Helen L. Teaford, Gordon B. Teaford

EQUAL HOUSING
. OPPORTUNITIES
LARGE FROG COLLECTION - Mary Colmer, employe
at the. Court Street Grill, has on display her rare , large
collection of frogs in preparation for the Frog Jump to be
held Saturday, June 16, at 4 p.m. at Meigs Football Stadium
in Pomeroy.

Lunches 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Dinn.e rs 5 1o 10 P .M.

PHONE 992-3325

110 MECHANIC STREET

Ann Grimes

'
37 Gues t Room s - new, modern . by
day or wee k. Party and Banqu et
Rvom s by rese rvation .

This sweeper, dozer, hauler, fertil~zer and aerator
is actually a mower in disguise.~~
· . And it's as good at mowing as it is at everything
else. This tough, rugged, compact little powerhouse is all
you need for lawn or garden·work.
.
Call us for a free demonstration on your own lawn.
PowerfulS and 8 HP engines. • 5 forward speeds plus
reverse. • Completely enclosed transmission.
• Maneuvers in comfort and safety. • Costs much less
than many bulky garden tractors and still performs
the above chores.

;?I

/I

McDonouah Power Equipment, Inc. A sub.idiary of Fuqua lndustties, Inc.

POMEROY, OHIO

A GOOD PLACE TO BE IN '73

Big Bend-Regatta June 15, 16, 17
\

(Buf fet Lun cheon
11 : 00t o 1: 30,
Monday thru Sat urday)

REGATTA SPECIAL
Free Hauling Cart with
Riding Snapper purchased
during Regatta Week.

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 8 a.m.

992-2975
t~

5:30 Mon. thru Thurs.

8 a.m. til 8 p.m. Fri. and Saturday

�The Dally Sentinel, June 12, 19'13
Page 12 - Regatta Section

-·

•.

HERITAGE SUNDAY PROGRAM
TRADITIONAL CUITING OF SANDSTONE
Mr. Fred Tuckerman, Pomeroy Rt. 4
·
Mr. Floyd Burney, Pomeroy
LAPIDARY, Mr. Howard Nolan.
GENEALOGY AND DISPLAYS
Mrs. June Ashley, consultant on genealogy
Mr. Gerald Powell, family history display
Riverboat pictures by Mr. J . W. Weaver
Arrowheads display by Mr. Larry WoUe
Antique Cars display by the Meigs County Antique Auto Club, Mr. Carl
Brannon, Sponsor
Slide Show on Meigs County -Mrs. John Blaettnar ·
Slide Show and Presentation of the future plans for the Meigs CoJUJty
Museum by Mr. Gerald HlUerty, Pomeroy
·
Discussion of museum registration and cataloging system, and the
present collection, _Elizabeth Hilferty, Coordinator, The Meigs County
Museum
Homemade Food and Beaverages Available on the Grounds
Visitors are encouraged to wear clothing of days gone by and to bring
Items, photos, P.tc. of local historical interest to "show and tell "
HOST~ES PROVIDED BY THE AAUW .

Presented by The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
at tbe MEIGS COUNTY MUSEUM
On Sunday, June7, ll :OOA.M. to 6:00P.M.
MUSIC-Folk and Calliope Concerts
- Folk music by local musicians ali throughout tbe afternoon everyone
is invited to come and play and slog along. Visitors should bring' their own
lawn chair if possible.
-2:00 - Special concert by Ann Grimes, one of Ameriea 's outstanding
performers of folk music and a specialist In Ohio's musical heritage.
-Concerts each hour by M. J. B. Duffield, Olmsted Falls, Ohio, 00 the
calliope.
·
- Music by Francis Andrews, fiddler
HISTORIC CRAFTS DEMONSTRATIONS ,
SHOWS, AND SALES
THE TEXTU..E ARTS GUILD
Mrs. Pandy Reiser, MiiUield, Ohio- weaving on the four harness loom
Mr. John Conklin, Gl~uster, Ohio - hand spinning, and a show by
members of the guild, Items for sale.
ED KAPLAN,
LUHRIC ROAD POTTERY
Throwing pots demonstration, show, and sale of traditional American
pottery.

Heritage Day set
(Continued from page 11)
offer a variety of "something
for everyone " but visitors
during the observance will also
become "involved" through
their clothing and items of ·
local historical interest which
they are to take. Visitors are
especially being encouraged to
wear clothing of by-gone days
during the observance .
Mrs. Gerald Hilferty,
coordinator of the museum ,
has planned this year's observance which will include folk
and calliope concerts by local
musician s as well as
professionals . Th e conce rts
will be held outdoors and
visitors are encouraged to take
along their favor ite lawn
chairs fr om which they may
enjoy the music. At 2 p.m. Ann
Grimes, one of America's
outstanding performers of folk
music and a specialist in Ohio's
musical heritage, will present
a program .
Each hour during the observance M. J . B. Duffield, Olm-.
stead, Ohio, will present a
calliope concert.
Another part of the program
this year will be the historic
crafts demonstrations by Mrs .
Pandy Reiser, Millfield ,
weaving on the four harness
loom ; John Konklin, Glouster,
hand spinning, and a show by
members of the guild with
some items being offered for
sale .
Ed Kaplan will display and
sell traditional Am,erican
pottery and Fred Tuckerman
and Floyd Burney of the
Pomeroy area will demonstrate the traditional cutting of
sandstone .
A genealogy and display
area will be another feature
this year and will include a
genealogy exhibit by Mrs. June
Ashley and son, Keith ; a
family history display by
Gerald Powell; riverboat
pictures by J. W. Weaver ; an
arrowheads display by Larry
Wolfe; antique cars displayed
by the Meigs County Antique
Auto Club with Carl Brannon
u .Jp(IIIIOI".

The Classes are :
CLASS 8 - In a Rose Garden, using roses;· CLASS 9 Come up And See Me
Sometime - using frog
fig urines
in
modern
arrangement; CLASS 10 Nature 's Wonder , using
weathered or drift wood;
CLASS 11 - Would You
Believe, modern; CLASS 12 Southern Ohio On The Climb using coal as part of
arrangement ; CLASS 13 Good Old Summer Time,
Tradi tional; CLASS 14 - Knee
Deep, Frog figurine in natural

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Mrs. John Blaettnar will
present a slide show dealing

with Meigs County and Gerald
Hilferty will do a slide show
and presentation on the future
plans for the Meigs County
Museum . Mrs. Hilferty will

discuss museum registration
and cataloging.
Homemade
food
and
beverages will be available on

the grounds.
So put on your old grey
bonnet and take in the many
activities of Heritage Day.

BEFORE
YOU LEAP!

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR LOW-COST

AUTO LOANS
B£FORE YOU SIGN ANY OTHER FINANCE PLAN
WHEN YOU VISIT , PARK FREE
Auto Teller ~indow&amp; Walk-Up Window
Open Fnday Evening S-7 P.M.

Support The Frog
Jumping Contest
June 15-16-17

We 'II Be There

\

Theme centered

.LOOK

During The Regatta

ANNA KATHRYN WILES, a membeFof the Winding Trail
Junior Garden Club, made this arrangement from "pinks"
and greenery with a frog figurine as a practice piece for her
entry in the "Tadpole to a Toadpole" class in the junior
division.

0

MIDDLEPORT, OKlO

Memtt. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Page 13 - Regatta Section
setting or in scene; CLASS 15
- Pollution on the Ohio River
A 3 - dimensional
arrangement in a 3ft . high, 2ft.
wide, 10 in. deep niche of
collected or found objects on
the Ohio River bank. Interpretive design accompanied
by 3 x 5 card stating Inte.rpretation .
JUNIOR DIVISION
The jun ior division is open to
exhibitors 18 and under . The
classes are :
CLASS 16 - Tadpole To A
Toa dpole, Featuring frog
· (Continued on page 14 )

on 'place' for
MOBILE
HOMES

Regatta show
The Regatta theme "A Great
Place to Be in '73" will be
carried out in the Meigs County
Garden Club Association 's .
flower show to be staged
Saturday and Sunday in the
Pomeroy Motor Co. showroom.
A new feature of the show
will be the awarding of a
trophy to the "Best of Show"
arrangement in the artistic
designs division. The winner of
the trophy will be selected
from among the exhibitors
winning blue ribbons in the
seven classes of arrangements.
Asweepstakes award will be
given to the exhibitor with the
most points in the horticulture
section. The show committee,
headed by Mrs . Richard
Collins, chairman, will select
the winner on the basis of five
points for each blue ribbon,
three for each red, two for each
yellow, and one for each white.
In addition to the competitive
categories, there will be three
classes of educational exhibits
" In · the Garden · of
Knowledge," a display of cooks
on gardening, flower arranging
and natural resources;
" Drifting on the Ohio,"
weathered and driftwood
display along with instructions
on cleaning and conditioning
the wood; and "In a Pest Free
Garden," a pesticide control
display with materials from
theM. and R. Bargainland.
The show is open to the
public and in the horticulture
secUon there are no restric-

lions on the numbers of entries
which one exhibitor can make
nor are there restrictions as to
the number of classes one
exhibitor can enter. Exhibitors
must provide their own containers for exhibits and must
correctly name each specimen
on an entry tag :which will be
provided.
The specimen classes are:
CLASS I - Roses - A. Hybrid
Teas,
one bloom;
B.
Floribunda , one spray ; C.
Grandiflora , one bloom ; D.
Climber, one spray.
CLASS 2 - LILIES - A.
Madonna Uly, one spike ; B.
Day Uly, one spike .
CLASS 3 - IRIS - A. .Iris,
one stock any variety.
CLASS 4 - A. Peruvian
Daffodil, one stock.
CLASS 5 - Small Foliage
potted plants.
CLASS 6 ·- Citrus Plants,
May include Pineapple,
Orange and Lemon . ·
CLASS 7 - Large ·foliage
plants over two feet tall.
. Artistic Designs
According to the rules of the
show, exhibitors may enter as
many classes as they desire ,
but can make only one entry in
each class. No artificial plant
materials permitted although
painted and artitldaiiy colored
plant materials are permitted.
Bases, mats, and accessories will be considered in
all classes and plant material
is to be listed on a 3 by 5 card
accompanying the delign.

Larry's Mobile- Home Sales will be
on the Upper Parking Lot featuring
a l4x70 all Elec. Mobile Home.
~top

in and see us and have a good time
at The Big Bend Regatta.

LARRY'S MOBILE HOME SALES
600 W. MAIN (Next to Jones Boys) POMEROY~ 0.

LARRY EVANS

- 992-7777

FRANK GHEEN

�The Dally Sentinel, June 12, 19'13
Page 12 - Regatta Section

-·

•.

HERITAGE SUNDAY PROGRAM
TRADITIONAL CUITING OF SANDSTONE
Mr. Fred Tuckerman, Pomeroy Rt. 4
·
Mr. Floyd Burney, Pomeroy
LAPIDARY, Mr. Howard Nolan.
GENEALOGY AND DISPLAYS
Mrs. June Ashley, consultant on genealogy
Mr. Gerald Powell, family history display
Riverboat pictures by Mr. J . W. Weaver
Arrowheads display by Mr. Larry WoUe
Antique Cars display by the Meigs County Antique Auto Club, Mr. Carl
Brannon, Sponsor
Slide Show on Meigs County -Mrs. John Blaettnar ·
Slide Show and Presentation of the future plans for the Meigs CoJUJty
Museum by Mr. Gerald HlUerty, Pomeroy
·
Discussion of museum registration and cataloging system, and the
present collection, _Elizabeth Hilferty, Coordinator, The Meigs County
Museum
Homemade Food and Beaverages Available on the Grounds
Visitors are encouraged to wear clothing of days gone by and to bring
Items, photos, P.tc. of local historical interest to "show and tell "
HOST~ES PROVIDED BY THE AAUW .

Presented by The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
at tbe MEIGS COUNTY MUSEUM
On Sunday, June7, ll :OOA.M. to 6:00P.M.
MUSIC-Folk and Calliope Concerts
- Folk music by local musicians ali throughout tbe afternoon everyone
is invited to come and play and slog along. Visitors should bring' their own
lawn chair if possible.
-2:00 - Special concert by Ann Grimes, one of Ameriea 's outstanding
performers of folk music and a specialist In Ohio's musical heritage.
-Concerts each hour by M. J. B. Duffield, Olmsted Falls, Ohio, 00 the
calliope.
·
- Music by Francis Andrews, fiddler
HISTORIC CRAFTS DEMONSTRATIONS ,
SHOWS, AND SALES
THE TEXTU..E ARTS GUILD
Mrs. Pandy Reiser, MiiUield, Ohio- weaving on the four harness loom
Mr. John Conklin, Gl~uster, Ohio - hand spinning, and a show by
members of the guild, Items for sale.
ED KAPLAN,
LUHRIC ROAD POTTERY
Throwing pots demonstration, show, and sale of traditional American
pottery.

Heritage Day set
(Continued from page 11)
offer a variety of "something
for everyone " but visitors
during the observance will also
become "involved" through
their clothing and items of ·
local historical interest which
they are to take. Visitors are
especially being encouraged to
wear clothing of by-gone days
during the observance .
Mrs. Gerald Hilferty,
coordinator of the museum ,
has planned this year's observance which will include folk
and calliope concerts by local
musician s as well as
professionals . Th e conce rts
will be held outdoors and
visitors are encouraged to take
along their favor ite lawn
chairs fr om which they may
enjoy the music. At 2 p.m. Ann
Grimes, one of America's
outstanding performers of folk
music and a specialist in Ohio's
musical heritage, will present
a program .
Each hour during the observance M. J . B. Duffield, Olm-.
stead, Ohio, will present a
calliope concert.
Another part of the program
this year will be the historic
crafts demonstrations by Mrs .
Pandy Reiser, Millfield ,
weaving on the four harness
loom ; John Konklin, Glouster,
hand spinning, and a show by
members of the guild with
some items being offered for
sale .
Ed Kaplan will display and
sell traditional Am,erican
pottery and Fred Tuckerman
and Floyd Burney of the
Pomeroy area will demonstrate the traditional cutting of
sandstone .
A genealogy and display
area will be another feature
this year and will include a
genealogy exhibit by Mrs. June
Ashley and son, Keith ; a
family history display by
Gerald Powell; riverboat
pictures by J. W. Weaver ; an
arrowheads display by Larry
Wolfe; antique cars displayed
by the Meigs County Antique
Auto Club with Carl Brannon
u .Jp(IIIIOI".

The Classes are :
CLASS 8 - In a Rose Garden, using roses;· CLASS 9 Come up And See Me
Sometime - using frog
fig urines
in
modern
arrangement; CLASS 10 Nature 's Wonder , using
weathered or drift wood;
CLASS 11 - Would You
Believe, modern; CLASS 12 Southern Ohio On The Climb using coal as part of
arrangement ; CLASS 13 Good Old Summer Time,
Tradi tional; CLASS 14 - Knee
Deep, Frog figurine in natural

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Mrs. John Blaettnar will
present a slide show dealing

with Meigs County and Gerald
Hilferty will do a slide show
and presentation on the future
plans for the Meigs County
Museum . Mrs. Hilferty will

discuss museum registration
and cataloging.
Homemade
food
and
beverages will be available on

the grounds.
So put on your old grey
bonnet and take in the many
activities of Heritage Day.

BEFORE
YOU LEAP!

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR LOW-COST

AUTO LOANS
B£FORE YOU SIGN ANY OTHER FINANCE PLAN
WHEN YOU VISIT , PARK FREE
Auto Teller ~indow&amp; Walk-Up Window
Open Fnday Evening S-7 P.M.

Support The Frog
Jumping Contest
June 15-16-17

We 'II Be There

\

Theme centered

.LOOK

During The Regatta

ANNA KATHRYN WILES, a membeFof the Winding Trail
Junior Garden Club, made this arrangement from "pinks"
and greenery with a frog figurine as a practice piece for her
entry in the "Tadpole to a Toadpole" class in the junior
division.

0

MIDDLEPORT, OKlO

Memtt. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Page 13 - Regatta Section
setting or in scene; CLASS 15
- Pollution on the Ohio River
A 3 - dimensional
arrangement in a 3ft . high, 2ft.
wide, 10 in. deep niche of
collected or found objects on
the Ohio River bank. Interpretive design accompanied
by 3 x 5 card stating Inte.rpretation .
JUNIOR DIVISION
The jun ior division is open to
exhibitors 18 and under . The
classes are :
CLASS 16 - Tadpole To A
Toa dpole, Featuring frog
· (Continued on page 14 )

on 'place' for
MOBILE
HOMES

Regatta show
The Regatta theme "A Great
Place to Be in '73" will be
carried out in the Meigs County
Garden Club Association 's .
flower show to be staged
Saturday and Sunday in the
Pomeroy Motor Co. showroom.
A new feature of the show
will be the awarding of a
trophy to the "Best of Show"
arrangement in the artistic
designs division. The winner of
the trophy will be selected
from among the exhibitors
winning blue ribbons in the
seven classes of arrangements.
Asweepstakes award will be
given to the exhibitor with the
most points in the horticulture
section. The show committee,
headed by Mrs . Richard
Collins, chairman, will select
the winner on the basis of five
points for each blue ribbon,
three for each red, two for each
yellow, and one for each white.
In addition to the competitive
categories, there will be three
classes of educational exhibits
" In · the Garden · of
Knowledge," a display of cooks
on gardening, flower arranging
and natural resources;
" Drifting on the Ohio,"
weathered and driftwood
display along with instructions
on cleaning and conditioning
the wood; and "In a Pest Free
Garden," a pesticide control
display with materials from
theM. and R. Bargainland.
The show is open to the
public and in the horticulture
secUon there are no restric-

lions on the numbers of entries
which one exhibitor can make
nor are there restrictions as to
the number of classes one
exhibitor can enter. Exhibitors
must provide their own containers for exhibits and must
correctly name each specimen
on an entry tag :which will be
provided.
The specimen classes are:
CLASS I - Roses - A. Hybrid
Teas,
one bloom;
B.
Floribunda , one spray ; C.
Grandiflora , one bloom ; D.
Climber, one spray.
CLASS 2 - LILIES - A.
Madonna Uly, one spike ; B.
Day Uly, one spike .
CLASS 3 - IRIS - A. .Iris,
one stock any variety.
CLASS 4 - A. Peruvian
Daffodil, one stock.
CLASS 5 - Small Foliage
potted plants.
CLASS 6 ·- Citrus Plants,
May include Pineapple,
Orange and Lemon . ·
CLASS 7 - Large ·foliage
plants over two feet tall.
. Artistic Designs
According to the rules of the
show, exhibitors may enter as
many classes as they desire ,
but can make only one entry in
each class. No artificial plant
materials permitted although
painted and artitldaiiy colored
plant materials are permitted.
Bases, mats, and accessories will be considered in
all classes and plant material
is to be listed on a 3 by 5 card
accompanying the delign.

Larry's Mobile- Home Sales will be
on the Upper Parking Lot featuring
a l4x70 all Elec. Mobile Home.
~top

in and see us and have a good time
at The Big Bend Regatta.

LARRY'S MOBILE HOME SALES
600 W. MAIN (Next to Jones Boys) POMEROY~ 0.

LARRY EVANS

- 992-7777

FRANK GHEEN

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 14 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

No ·reasons
for living
By T0:\1 TIEDE

!\'EW YORK- 1 EA J - It
was a neighbor who first
called the police . She said
she had not seen the old man
in the next apartment for a
week .
" He 's in a wheelchair and
I can usually hear hi~ moving around .· but it' s been
quiet for days ."
\\'hen o f f i c e r s broke
through the locked door they
found the body of a 75-yearold man slumped in a heap
on the linoleum floor . A shutin with no friends or relati\·es . he had killed himself
with an overdose of pills ,
then lay undetected. until he
wa s finall y missed .
The story is depressingly
familiar in America . Alone ,
depressed , often sick and unwan ted . the nation 's elderly
1 especially men J are taking
their own lives with alarming regularity . Statistics in
The World Almanac indicate
that the suicide rate in. 1967
for men 65 and over is 38.1
for every 100.000. s e v e n
points higher than men in
the 45-60 category and nearly twice the total of men in
the 19-44 age grouping.
\\'hat 's more . the statistics
increase as do the years be\'Ond 65. Dr. Norman Farbei·ow, director of the Los Angele Suicide Pre\·e ntion
League. says the 65 and
above rate in Ca lifornia is
as high as 60 per 100,000 and
grows to 65 for people 75 and
older . It sta nds to reason,
add s Farber ow: the older
one ge ts . the more the
chance for deep depression
and the wish to ge t life over
with quickly .
And ge nerally . the elderly
suicides do get it O\'er with
quickly . :\o dramatics for
them , no games 1such as
maki ng ph one calls J which
indicate the threat is in reality a cry for help : old people .
tend to kill themselves. with
neither ritual nor delay . Dr.
Robert Kaste nbaum of the
Am erican Associ ation of Suicidology says that man y older people ·· make their decision and then act." An
overdose . a spoon of poison,
a bullet in the head . The seriousness of their intent is
thus part of the problem-it
makes helping them t h a t
much more difficult .

Theme is place
(Continued from page 13)
figurine; Class 17 - Dish
Gardens ,
Mrs . Clyde Mitchell of
Zanesville will be the flower
show judge and the oral
judging by the standard
system will begin at 1 p.m. on
Saturday.
All exhibits must be staged
~tween 9 a.m.· and 12 noon
Saturday and no exhibits may
be removed until Sunday between 4 and 6 p.m.
The show will be open for
viewing by the public on
Saturday from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
and on Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m.

Helping them . indeed, is a
baffling enigma for those
concerned . Farberow says
that old people with problems are somewhat I i k e
young people with problems ,
in that " you have to help
them solve their problems ,"
but this is easier said than
done with the elderly . A
young man's problem may
be marital or economic 1two
common crises heard bv suicide pre\'ention people ) and
may be corrected with the
application of common remedies . As for the aged , however . says Harry Warren of
New York 's :\ational Save
A Life League :
·'They call in here . 70-7580 years old . Maybe they 're
in wheelchairs . Maybe they
have terminal cancer. Ma ybe their relati ves are . gone
and their friends deadf What
can you say to peop e like
this to make them feel any
better ?"
There seems to be little
anyo ne can say. In fa ct, it is
not absolutely certain that
society wants to say anything. Man y geriatric specialists agree that society
gives older people precious
little reason to live , and in
fa ct feels it would be better
if they were out of the wa y.
"People ." w r o t e Ogden
·ash, ·· expect old men to
die; they look at them with
eyes that wonder when .''
This is not to say society
want s the old folk s to cut
their throats. but there is
substantial evidence t h a t
public apathy and prejudice
for the old often force exact- .
ly that.
Says L. A.'s Farberow : ' 'I
think it is true that we make
it very hard for the elderly
to live happil y. As a nation
we have tended to eulogize
and overpraise the you ng,
and ignore the old . We force
people to retire at certa in
ages , thus force them to resign , in man y cases , at the
peak of the functionin g pow. er.s . We force them to accept
a less contributory existence
and man y of them just can 't
do it. "
There are a lot of reasons
for suicide among the aged ,
Farberow adds , but the most
important is this loss of en gagement, of self-estee m.
" What we do to the old , in
other words, is to take away
their reason for living..,
That reason. too often, is
not onl y " self,esteem" but
" youth ." America , the land
where over 30 is considered
the beginning of a terminal
disease , is a civilization
where people say they would
rather die than grow old.
Actually, in a study by Robert Kastenbaum (concerning
student attitudes toward old
age}, 25 per cent of the respondents said they wanted
to die before they expected
to die . " I suppose," says
Kastenbaum , " they didn't
want to become enfeebled or
whatever."
·
The fear of enfeeblement
is quite natural. H. L. Mencken said that " No show is
(Continued on Page 15

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
MIDOLE PORT, 0.

There are many
individual and
specific causes
lor suicides among
the aged, but most
seem to come down
to ...

No ·reasons for living
(Continued from Page 14)

traditionally stood, a bother.
Every generation sees its
old people shuffled off to the
nursing h o m e s, boarding
rooms, welfare hotels or
o t h e r warehouses . Every

so good it should run forever." Besides , growing old
is unde;Jiably, as things have

generation sees its old hob·
IJiing down boulevards (for
lack of transportation) , sitting on park benches (in the
absence of meaningful activity}, and struggling with
debt (because for the great
majority on fixed income
there is no alternative}.

The sight of all thi s is
deeply disturbing to you ngs(ers; no wonder they fea r
it. But rather than solve
what they see, rather than
demand and create better
t1mes for their seniors. each
new ge neration merely accepts, then ignores or fears

Page 15 - Regatta Section
the inPvitable end.
Unfortunately, so it continues , the end for some is
worse than for others . Dr .
Robert Butler, consultant to
the White House Conference
on Aging, tells of an elderly
hospital patient who would
stand for hours criticizing
his refl ection in a mirror .
then later den y totall y that
the image was his. Like so
m a n y in America . comlitioned to think yo un g, he
could not admi t the alternll tive . As W. Somerset Maugham once wrote: "W hat
makes old age hard to IJI:'a r
ik not the fadin g of one's
faculties, but the burden of
one's memories."
Therefore . for man y, in
today's careless world , suicide is the onl y solution. Accordin g to sta-tistics . a man
of i5 can expect to Jive eight
more yea rs: but for some .
like the fellow in the first
paragraph, the time is just
too terrible to take.

The Best in Outdoor Family Recreation!

All DICIILIIIBB

•

WELCOME!

Regatta Visitors
De-Bugging Rock Hudson
By DICK KLEINER
DEAR DICK: I saw a picture of Rock Hudson recently and he looked a lot younger. Is it possible he had a
face lift'! -FLORENCE SZYMANSKI, Nashville, Tenn .
DEAR MS . SZYMANSKI : Not an entire face lift , no. He
did have an upper-lip-lift- he shaved off his musta.c heand he did have some cosmetic surgery, as they call it,
arou nd his eyes . The bags were de-bagged .
•:1

:::

·:·

DEAR DICK : Will that wonderful book , " The Exorcist,' ' be made into a movie ? I don't. see how it's possible, but I'd sure like to see lt.-MARTlN FRANK.
New Brunswick, N.J .
DEAR MR. FRANK : It' s practically done , although
they 've been having problems with it. William Friedkin ,
who made " The French Connection ," is directing and because of the problems inherent in the story , the film has
been in front of the cameras longer than any picture in
recent years- as this is being written, they've been shooting for eight-and-a-half months. It will almost certainly
be X-rated. incidentally .
¢.

f;

·~

DEAR DICK: I used to love The Monkees, especially
David Jones. What's happened to hhn?-MARILYN
RYAN, Fort Worth, Tex.

DELICIOUS
DREAM PUFFS
Jantzen swimknits are all
softness and texture and
. wonderful figure flattery .
· Turquoise , roy a I. purple .
Sizes 8 to 22 .
(varying by silhouette "and
color) . 90 pet. Dacron(r)
polyester , 10 pet . Lycra(r)
spandex .
waistrider , 22.00
sheath , 24.00

..

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PARK

\
Camping •••
With electric, water
hookup and sewer
facilities .

• Swimming
• Slides
• Diving Boards
• Fishing

• Basketball Courts
• Shuffle Board

BEACH OPEN

• Softball Field

12 to 6:00 Weekdays

DEAR MS. RYAN : He's around . He sings at clubs and
in concerts. sometimes. But he really would rather act.
At the moment, he's appearing with the Los Angeles Civic
Light Opera Association in "Oliver! " at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion in LA 's Music Center. He's playing
The Al'tful Dodger- and he's good at it , too.

10 to 8:00 Weekends

• • •

DEAR DICK: I keep hearing reports that my favorite TV show of all time-Star Trek-will be coming
back. Is that true'!-R. L. MICHAELS, San Francisco
DEAR MR. MICHAELS : It'll be back this coming fall ,
but not like you and I want it to come back . This new
version is animated and it will be on Saturday mornings
for the kiddies . It will, however, be produced b y Gene
Roddenberry, who invented the original , and he tells me
the stories will be the same quality as the original series .
And he has the voices of all the original cast members ·
he wanted. It's his hope- and mine, and probably yoursthat this will spark a real revival of the series .
111
1~
*
DEAR DICK: 1 see CBS will have a "Shaft" series
next fall. Will It be as violent and sexy as the "Shaft"
movles?-LLOYD FRANCIS, Denver, Colo.
DEAR MR. FRANCIS : No, for two reasons . First, obviously, you can't have that much sex and violence on
home screens. Second, it costs money to make violent and
sexy movies , and TV's bud~ets aren't that high. Richard
Roundtree says that the senes will be different, that he'll
play a more humanil:ed Shaft on TV. The head of CBS,
Perry Lafferty, says that Shaft will be " a black Mannix ."
You can rest easy- it'll be just another TV private eye
show, no more, no less.

• . • TIME FOR ALL

un

~

Relax!

Big Bend Reptta ·

Play!

JUNE 15-16-17

Enjoy!

ROYAL OAK PARK
3 MILES NORTHEAST OF POMEROY, JUST 1 MILE OFF
STATE ROUTE7 ON WELLS ROAD

PHONE 992-6110

PHONE 985-3341

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 14 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

No ·reasons
for living
By T0:\1 TIEDE

!\'EW YORK- 1 EA J - It
was a neighbor who first
called the police . She said
she had not seen the old man
in the next apartment for a
week .
" He 's in a wheelchair and
I can usually hear hi~ moving around .· but it' s been
quiet for days ."
\\'hen o f f i c e r s broke
through the locked door they
found the body of a 75-yearold man slumped in a heap
on the linoleum floor . A shutin with no friends or relati\·es . he had killed himself
with an overdose of pills ,
then lay undetected. until he
wa s finall y missed .
The story is depressingly
familiar in America . Alone ,
depressed , often sick and unwan ted . the nation 's elderly
1 especially men J are taking
their own lives with alarming regularity . Statistics in
The World Almanac indicate
that the suicide rate in. 1967
for men 65 and over is 38.1
for every 100.000. s e v e n
points higher than men in
the 45-60 category and nearly twice the total of men in
the 19-44 age grouping.
\\'hat 's more . the statistics
increase as do the years be\'Ond 65. Dr. Norman Farbei·ow, director of the Los Angele Suicide Pre\·e ntion
League. says the 65 and
above rate in Ca lifornia is
as high as 60 per 100,000 and
grows to 65 for people 75 and
older . It sta nds to reason,
add s Farber ow: the older
one ge ts . the more the
chance for deep depression
and the wish to ge t life over
with quickly .
And ge nerally . the elderly
suicides do get it O\'er with
quickly . :\o dramatics for
them , no games 1such as
maki ng ph one calls J which
indicate the threat is in reality a cry for help : old people .
tend to kill themselves. with
neither ritual nor delay . Dr.
Robert Kaste nbaum of the
Am erican Associ ation of Suicidology says that man y older people ·· make their decision and then act." An
overdose . a spoon of poison,
a bullet in the head . The seriousness of their intent is
thus part of the problem-it
makes helping them t h a t
much more difficult .

Theme is place
(Continued from page 13)
figurine; Class 17 - Dish
Gardens ,
Mrs . Clyde Mitchell of
Zanesville will be the flower
show judge and the oral
judging by the standard
system will begin at 1 p.m. on
Saturday.
All exhibits must be staged
~tween 9 a.m.· and 12 noon
Saturday and no exhibits may
be removed until Sunday between 4 and 6 p.m.
The show will be open for
viewing by the public on
Saturday from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
and on Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m.

Helping them . indeed, is a
baffling enigma for those
concerned . Farberow says
that old people with problems are somewhat I i k e
young people with problems ,
in that " you have to help
them solve their problems ,"
but this is easier said than
done with the elderly . A
young man's problem may
be marital or economic 1two
common crises heard bv suicide pre\'ention people ) and
may be corrected with the
application of common remedies . As for the aged , however . says Harry Warren of
New York 's :\ational Save
A Life League :
·'They call in here . 70-7580 years old . Maybe they 're
in wheelchairs . Maybe they
have terminal cancer. Ma ybe their relati ves are . gone
and their friends deadf What
can you say to peop e like
this to make them feel any
better ?"
There seems to be little
anyo ne can say. In fa ct, it is
not absolutely certain that
society wants to say anything. Man y geriatric specialists agree that society
gives older people precious
little reason to live , and in
fa ct feels it would be better
if they were out of the wa y.
"People ." w r o t e Ogden
·ash, ·· expect old men to
die; they look at them with
eyes that wonder when .''
This is not to say society
want s the old folk s to cut
their throats. but there is
substantial evidence t h a t
public apathy and prejudice
for the old often force exact- .
ly that.
Says L. A.'s Farberow : ' 'I
think it is true that we make
it very hard for the elderly
to live happil y. As a nation
we have tended to eulogize
and overpraise the you ng,
and ignore the old . We force
people to retire at certa in
ages , thus force them to resign , in man y cases , at the
peak of the functionin g pow. er.s . We force them to accept
a less contributory existence
and man y of them just can 't
do it. "
There are a lot of reasons
for suicide among the aged ,
Farberow adds , but the most
important is this loss of en gagement, of self-estee m.
" What we do to the old , in
other words, is to take away
their reason for living..,
That reason. too often, is
not onl y " self,esteem" but
" youth ." America , the land
where over 30 is considered
the beginning of a terminal
disease , is a civilization
where people say they would
rather die than grow old.
Actually, in a study by Robert Kastenbaum (concerning
student attitudes toward old
age}, 25 per cent of the respondents said they wanted
to die before they expected
to die . " I suppose," says
Kastenbaum , " they didn't
want to become enfeebled or
whatever."
·
The fear of enfeeblement
is quite natural. H. L. Mencken said that " No show is
(Continued on Page 15

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
MIDOLE PORT, 0.

There are many
individual and
specific causes
lor suicides among
the aged, but most
seem to come down
to ...

No ·reasons for living
(Continued from Page 14)

traditionally stood, a bother.
Every generation sees its
old people shuffled off to the
nursing h o m e s, boarding
rooms, welfare hotels or
o t h e r warehouses . Every

so good it should run forever." Besides , growing old
is unde;Jiably, as things have

generation sees its old hob·
IJiing down boulevards (for
lack of transportation) , sitting on park benches (in the
absence of meaningful activity}, and struggling with
debt (because for the great
majority on fixed income
there is no alternative}.

The sight of all thi s is
deeply disturbing to you ngs(ers; no wonder they fea r
it. But rather than solve
what they see, rather than
demand and create better
t1mes for their seniors. each
new ge neration merely accepts, then ignores or fears

Page 15 - Regatta Section
the inPvitable end.
Unfortunately, so it continues , the end for some is
worse than for others . Dr .
Robert Butler, consultant to
the White House Conference
on Aging, tells of an elderly
hospital patient who would
stand for hours criticizing
his refl ection in a mirror .
then later den y totall y that
the image was his. Like so
m a n y in America . comlitioned to think yo un g, he
could not admi t the alternll tive . As W. Somerset Maugham once wrote: "W hat
makes old age hard to IJI:'a r
ik not the fadin g of one's
faculties, but the burden of
one's memories."
Therefore . for man y, in
today's careless world , suicide is the onl y solution. Accordin g to sta-tistics . a man
of i5 can expect to Jive eight
more yea rs: but for some .
like the fellow in the first
paragraph, the time is just
too terrible to take.

The Best in Outdoor Family Recreation!

All DICIILIIIBB

•

WELCOME!

Regatta Visitors
De-Bugging Rock Hudson
By DICK KLEINER
DEAR DICK: I saw a picture of Rock Hudson recently and he looked a lot younger. Is it possible he had a
face lift'! -FLORENCE SZYMANSKI, Nashville, Tenn .
DEAR MS . SZYMANSKI : Not an entire face lift , no. He
did have an upper-lip-lift- he shaved off his musta.c heand he did have some cosmetic surgery, as they call it,
arou nd his eyes . The bags were de-bagged .
•:1

:::

·:·

DEAR DICK : Will that wonderful book , " The Exorcist,' ' be made into a movie ? I don't. see how it's possible, but I'd sure like to see lt.-MARTlN FRANK.
New Brunswick, N.J .
DEAR MR. FRANK : It' s practically done , although
they 've been having problems with it. William Friedkin ,
who made " The French Connection ," is directing and because of the problems inherent in the story , the film has
been in front of the cameras longer than any picture in
recent years- as this is being written, they've been shooting for eight-and-a-half months. It will almost certainly
be X-rated. incidentally .
¢.

f;

·~

DEAR DICK: I used to love The Monkees, especially
David Jones. What's happened to hhn?-MARILYN
RYAN, Fort Worth, Tex.

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\
Camping •••
With electric, water
hookup and sewer
facilities .

• Swimming
• Slides
• Diving Boards
• Fishing

• Basketball Courts
• Shuffle Board

BEACH OPEN

• Softball Field

12 to 6:00 Weekdays

DEAR MS. RYAN : He's around . He sings at clubs and
in concerts. sometimes. But he really would rather act.
At the moment, he's appearing with the Los Angeles Civic
Light Opera Association in "Oliver! " at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion in LA 's Music Center. He's playing
The Al'tful Dodger- and he's good at it , too.

10 to 8:00 Weekends

• • •

DEAR DICK: I keep hearing reports that my favorite TV show of all time-Star Trek-will be coming
back. Is that true'!-R. L. MICHAELS, San Francisco
DEAR MR. MICHAELS : It'll be back this coming fall ,
but not like you and I want it to come back . This new
version is animated and it will be on Saturday mornings
for the kiddies . It will, however, be produced b y Gene
Roddenberry, who invented the original , and he tells me
the stories will be the same quality as the original series .
And he has the voices of all the original cast members ·
he wanted. It's his hope- and mine, and probably yoursthat this will spark a real revival of the series .
111
1~
*
DEAR DICK: 1 see CBS will have a "Shaft" series
next fall. Will It be as violent and sexy as the "Shaft"
movles?-LLOYD FRANCIS, Denver, Colo.
DEAR MR. FRANCIS : No, for two reasons . First, obviously, you can't have that much sex and violence on
home screens. Second, it costs money to make violent and
sexy movies , and TV's bud~ets aren't that high. Richard
Roundtree says that the senes will be different, that he'll
play a more humanil:ed Shaft on TV. The head of CBS,
Perry Lafferty, says that Shaft will be " a black Mannix ."
You can rest easy- it'll be just another TV private eye
show, no more, no less.

• . • TIME FOR ALL

un

~

Relax!

Big Bend Reptta ·

Play!

JUNE 15-16-17

Enjoy!

ROYAL OAK PARK
3 MILES NORTHEAST OF POMEROY, JUST 1 MILE OFF
STATE ROUTE7 ON WELLS ROAD

PHONE 992-6110

PHONE 985-3341

�Page 16 - Regatta Section

ThP Thlilv

Sentinel. June !2.

l'hP

OAilv SP.ntinel. June 12. 1973
Page 17 - Regatta Section

-.

..

.' - -

·'

BIG- BE

JUNE

REG.IITTIJ

16-t&amp;;-1

--.---- -I -

\

'

'

�Page 16 - Regatta Section

ThP Thlilv

Sentinel. June !2.

l'hP

OAilv SP.ntinel. June 12. 1973
Page 17 - Regatta Section

-.

..

.' - -

·'

BIG- BE

JUNE

REG.IITTIJ

16-t&amp;;-1

--.---- -I -

\

'

'

�,.

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 18 - Regatta Section
There's nary a monument to
Indian pluck , wit, perseverance or victory.
Indeed, the victory should
· be institutionalized. If only
· because it was the last Indian triumph of .any sorts in
this area . In the more than
100. years since Crows were
deeded "eternal" rights to
reservation territories , they
have suffered a long and un broken string of defeats .
For example . According to

tribal spokesmen , the Crow
were originally (in 1851) assigned 38 million acres of
reservation land. "But by
1860," says secretary Left
Hand, "it was down to eight
million acres ." Then came a
gold rush in the Black-Hills
of nearby South Dakota ,
" and by 1920 we only had 2.8
million acres left." There
was more chipping away
after 1920 and so, today, all
told, the Crow have lost

nearly 36 million acres of
home ; currently the reservation consists of a thoroughly shriveled 2.25 million
acres.
" But even the 2.25 is not
all ours ," says Left Hand.
" We have treaty agreements
which stipulate .that none of
this land is to be owned by
outside interests- yet more
than a million of our acres
(Continued on page 2.0

··- -··
RUTlAND
FURNITURE

ITIS

so

HANDY!

For Your Home Or •••

FOR YOUR

MOBILE
HOME
NEEDS •••
HEATING &amp; COOKING

•FOR YOUR
CAMP WAGON

His real love : an
old time calliope

always ready when

The view from
Custer Land
By TOM TIEDE
C R 0 W RESERVATION .
Mo nt . - I NEA 1 - The last
time the re was a war here
it was Indians vs. whites, the
battle of the Little Big Horn
which the Indians won. The
next time there is a wa r
h e r ~. it may very well be
Indians vs . India ns, a battle
betwee n moderates and m ili. ta nts which nobody will win.
' The second battle is not actua lly forecast. Right now it
is only speculation . Many
nervous residents here believe this reservation may be
the next target for an Americ an Indian Movement demonstration , protest , di sruption , ta keover or , perhaps,
war.
The spec ulation has some
merit. AIM radicals, who
last year seized the Bureau
of Indian Affairs in Washington, and who recently lifted a
70-day · siege of Wounrted
Knee , S.D., have repeatedly
warned that such activities
will continue . Says a spokes.nan : " The idea has been to
focu s attention on the problem s of American Indians ;
now that we have the attention we can't just Jet it fade ."
Thus AIM will doubtless
strike again.
And the Crow Reservation
seems a likely possibility .
Tucked away in southeastern
Montana, only a few hundred miles from Wounded
Knee, actually, the reser va-

tion is a national shame, a
showcase of historic Indian
p I i g h t. Impover is hed. exploited, aimless, the Crow
land a nd people are microcos ms of all that has fa iled
in India n management .
To begin with there is the
twisting of history here. Littie Big Horn, as every schoolchild knows, is the site of
Col. George Custer's " last
stand ." It has been commem orated in media reports, film versions and tel(tbooks as the courageous
Thermopylae of a heroic
band of U.S. cavalrymen .
In reality, say local his torians , it · was the Indians
who were courageous and,
don 't forget, victorious. Says
Crow tribal secretary Frederick Left Hand : " Custer
was sent out to murder Indians on their traditional
and legal homeland. The Indians did what anyone would
do in such a case - defend
themselves . But do we commemorate the Indian defense of home and property ?
No, we commemorate Custer 's death while trying to invade and pillage and murder."
True enough . The U.S.
government has erected a
" Custer N a t i o n a 1 Monument" on federal land in the
heart of . this r eservation.
G r a e s mark the spots
where Custer and his men
were alleged to have fallen .

v

MYRON DUFFIELD and his . pieced-together calliope
will be in the Regatta parade Friday. He will give hourly
concerts on Heritage Sunday.

• you stop for the night
POMEROY - Myron · Dufof Olmsted Falls will
aooear with his calliope and

. or camp.

•• e

be giving hourly concerts all
afternoon at "Heritage Sun-

day" at The Meigs Coun ty
Museum, Butternut Avenue,

Page 19 - Regatta Sectton
Pomeroy.
Duffield is probably one of
the few people who have fallen
in Jove with a parade float,
turned it into a hobby, and has
now gone commercial with it.
Duffield, as he.ad of a cub scout
troop, decided to design a float
for his scouts to ride in the
Olmsted Falls Homecoming
Parade five or six years ago.
The result was a riverboat
float, complete with a working
calliope, made from old organ
pipes and a vacuum cleaner.
A native of southern Ohio,
Duffield remem~red the old
calliopes of the carnivals and
riverboats and has toured the
country looking at them,
sometimes playing them if he
gets the chance. He has played
the instrument at many carnivals and aboard old riverboats such as the Cincinnatibased, "Delta Queen. "
During his travels, Duffield
fotmd parts of four or five
calliopes in Texas, Arkansas,
and Oklahoma . From these he
decided to reconstruct his own
calliope.
"I had to bring some of the
parts back in a bushel basket,"
Myron reca lled. After two
years..and an estimated $2,500,
I Con tinn ed on page 26)

ENJOY YOURSELF AT
.THE BIGBEND REGATTA
JUNE 15-16-17

colorful circus wagon at the
Regatta parade in Pomeroy, at
6 p.m. on Friday, ~nd also will

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�,.

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 18 - Regatta Section
There's nary a monument to
Indian pluck , wit, perseverance or victory.
Indeed, the victory should
· be institutionalized. If only
· because it was the last Indian triumph of .any sorts in
this area . In the more than
100. years since Crows were
deeded "eternal" rights to
reservation territories , they
have suffered a long and un broken string of defeats .
For example . According to

tribal spokesmen , the Crow
were originally (in 1851) assigned 38 million acres of
reservation land. "But by
1860," says secretary Left
Hand, "it was down to eight
million acres ." Then came a
gold rush in the Black-Hills
of nearby South Dakota ,
" and by 1920 we only had 2.8
million acres left." There
was more chipping away
after 1920 and so, today, all
told, the Crow have lost

nearly 36 million acres of
home ; currently the reservation consists of a thoroughly shriveled 2.25 million
acres.
" But even the 2.25 is not
all ours ," says Left Hand.
" We have treaty agreements
which stipulate .that none of
this land is to be owned by
outside interests- yet more
than a million of our acres
(Continued on page 2.0

··- -··
RUTlAND
FURNITURE

ITIS

so

HANDY!

For Your Home Or •••

FOR YOUR

MOBILE
HOME
NEEDS •••
HEATING &amp; COOKING

•FOR YOUR
CAMP WAGON

His real love : an
old time calliope

always ready when

The view from
Custer Land
By TOM TIEDE
C R 0 W RESERVATION .
Mo nt . - I NEA 1 - The last
time the re was a war here
it was Indians vs. whites, the
battle of the Little Big Horn
which the Indians won. The
next time there is a wa r
h e r ~. it may very well be
Indians vs . India ns, a battle
betwee n moderates and m ili. ta nts which nobody will win.
' The second battle is not actua lly forecast. Right now it
is only speculation . Many
nervous residents here believe this reservation may be
the next target for an Americ an Indian Movement demonstration , protest , di sruption , ta keover or , perhaps,
war.
The spec ulation has some
merit. AIM radicals, who
last year seized the Bureau
of Indian Affairs in Washington, and who recently lifted a
70-day · siege of Wounrted
Knee , S.D., have repeatedly
warned that such activities
will continue . Says a spokes.nan : " The idea has been to
focu s attention on the problem s of American Indians ;
now that we have the attention we can't just Jet it fade ."
Thus AIM will doubtless
strike again.
And the Crow Reservation
seems a likely possibility .
Tucked away in southeastern
Montana, only a few hundred miles from Wounded
Knee, actually, the reser va-

tion is a national shame, a
showcase of historic Indian
p I i g h t. Impover is hed. exploited, aimless, the Crow
land a nd people are microcos ms of all that has fa iled
in India n management .
To begin with there is the
twisting of history here. Littie Big Horn, as every schoolchild knows, is the site of
Col. George Custer's " last
stand ." It has been commem orated in media reports, film versions and tel(tbooks as the courageous
Thermopylae of a heroic
band of U.S. cavalrymen .
In reality, say local his torians , it · was the Indians
who were courageous and,
don 't forget, victorious. Says
Crow tribal secretary Frederick Left Hand : " Custer
was sent out to murder Indians on their traditional
and legal homeland. The Indians did what anyone would
do in such a case - defend
themselves . But do we commemorate the Indian defense of home and property ?
No, we commemorate Custer 's death while trying to invade and pillage and murder."
True enough . The U.S.
government has erected a
" Custer N a t i o n a 1 Monument" on federal land in the
heart of . this r eservation.
G r a e s mark the spots
where Custer and his men
were alleged to have fallen .

v

MYRON DUFFIELD and his . pieced-together calliope
will be in the Regatta parade Friday. He will give hourly
concerts on Heritage Sunday.

• you stop for the night
POMEROY - Myron · Dufof Olmsted Falls will
aooear with his calliope and

. or camp.

•• e

be giving hourly concerts all
afternoon at "Heritage Sun-

day" at The Meigs Coun ty
Museum, Butternut Avenue,

Page 19 - Regatta Sectton
Pomeroy.
Duffield is probably one of
the few people who have fallen
in Jove with a parade float,
turned it into a hobby, and has
now gone commercial with it.
Duffield, as he.ad of a cub scout
troop, decided to design a float
for his scouts to ride in the
Olmsted Falls Homecoming
Parade five or six years ago.
The result was a riverboat
float, complete with a working
calliope, made from old organ
pipes and a vacuum cleaner.
A native of southern Ohio,
Duffield remem~red the old
calliopes of the carnivals and
riverboats and has toured the
country looking at them,
sometimes playing them if he
gets the chance. He has played
the instrument at many carnivals and aboard old riverboats such as the Cincinnatibased, "Delta Queen. "
During his travels, Duffield
fotmd parts of four or five
calliopes in Texas, Arkansas,
and Oklahoma . From these he
decided to reconstruct his own
calliope.
"I had to bring some of the
parts back in a bushel basket,"
Myron reca lled. After two
years..and an estimated $2,500,
I Con tinn ed on page 26)

ENJOY YOURSELF AT
.THE BIGBEND REGATTA
JUNE 15-16-17

colorful circus wagon at the
Regatta parade in Pomeroy, at
6 p.m. on Friday, ~nd also will

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•

�The Daily Sentinel, Ju~ 12, 1973

Page 20 - Regatta Section

Next time may b'e Indians' last stand
(Continued from Page 18)
are owned by outside people.
So if you really want to get
down to hard reality. the Indians themselves only own
aboLtt 1.25 million acres
now .''

At that. Indian ownership

is unprofitable. Though sev- ·
era! nonreservation corporations do a brisk business on
Crow land , Crows themselves do poorly . Left Hand
says the average income
among the 4,200 reservation
Indians is $2,100-that's $8 a
day . Forty-two per cent of

Calliope, real love
(Continued from Page 19)
Duffield has his calliope
(pronounced calley-ope by
carnival and riverboat people,
he says) .
The calliope has 43 whistles
made of brass pipes ranging in
height from five inches to two
feet and in diameter from
seven~ights of an inch to three
and a half inches. Duffield says
he had to rebuild some parts,
restore others and improvise
on even more. The cabinet, the
valves, and the keyboard all
had to be rebuilt.
There are two types of
calliopes - steam and air explains Duffield. "The steam
type was popular on the old
riverboats where there was a
boiler and a fire," he said. He
estimates there are only about
a dozen steam calliopes left in
the United States. The air

variety, the kind Myron
Duffield has, became popular
with carnivals and circuses between 1910 and 1930, he relates.
"It was more practical to plug
in a motor than to build a fire in
a boiler," Duffield said.
Duffield has recently
completed the restoration of an
old circus wagon which carries
the calliope and its costumed
player . The wagon is capable
of being drawn by horse or
vehicle. When Duffield isn 't
restoring calliopes or wagons,
he works as the east central
regional manager for RCA in
Cleveland. He and his wife
Laura have two children, Jeff,
17, and Kathy, 14. The Duffields are no strangers to the
Meigs C!&gt;unty area. Laura
Duffield is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Seines, 325
Lincoln Street, Middleport ,
where she was born and raised.

\:~ervthing You need \o~

the working force is unemployed . Says one man , who
hasn't worked in 18 months :
I'd like to work in town
(Hardin ), but they ain't too
hot about Indians there . I
had one guy tell me he
wouldn't hire me because I
didn't have enough work experience. I asked him how I
could get the experience if
nobody would give me a job, .
but he didn't answer. I had
to laugh at that."
The laughter here is bitter. Frederick Left Hand says
that he sometimes thinks
"we s h o u I d do the same
thing to the whites as they've
done to us-wipe them out."
Yet for all the hostility, 'the
poverty' and exploitation,
there is virtually no interest
here in becoming another
Wounded Knee, Tribal members say they agree with the
ideals of AIM activists. but
disagree with their tactics.
"We have no sympathy
with violence," says Crow

•

Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1m
L

A first this year will be an
aerial show performing at
Meigs Football field Saturday
from 2 to 4 p.m.
There will be two flying clubs
participating, the Pittsburgh
Flying Devils and Brentwood
Flying Aces. The show will
consist of two flying circles
from the 50 yard line.
The show will consist of
stunt, two man stunt, four man

combat, eight man combat,
and one man comedy, flying
twin engine planes. There will
be two planes flown by one
man, three line throttle control, Bi-plane exhibition, shack
demo, dive bombing, demoderby, balloon burst, also
flying of radio control planes.
There will be approximately
45 persons participting in the
aerial show.

'

BRENDA TAYLOR

MINDY YOUNG

Who will be Miss Regatta
Queen?
·' '
The answer to that question
will be forthcoming at 10 p. m.
Friday night at the Meigs
Junior High School audi tori urn
when the 1973 queen will be
announced.
This year's contest features
eight Meigs County girls who
graduated this spring from
local high schools. The group
includes Marcia Carr, Tuppers
Plains; Brenda Taylor,
Pomeroy; Mindy Young,
Middleport Route 1; Sharon E.
Drake.• Long Bottom Route 1;
Cathy Rayburn, Pomeroy;
Bonnie J. Smith, Racine Route
1; Joyce Myers, Long Bottom,
and Debra Milliron of near
Racine.
The eight contestants will
meet at the junior high school

building in Pomeroy Thursday
night where they will be interviewed by the five mayors
of Meigs County communities.
The mayors 'will select the
queen and three runners-up on
the basis of poise, personality
and appearance. The names of
the queen and her court will not
be announced until 10 Friday
ni.;nt during intermission at a
talent show to be held at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport as a part .of the
weekend activities. The queen
will be presented flowers and
crowned by the reigning queen,
Miss Leann Sebo of ,Pomeroy.
, The queen will receive a $100
bond; first runnerup will
receive a $50 bond while the
second and third runnersup
will receive $25 bonds. The
bonds are being provided by

Selection

Ever!

"TERRY"
.
' "TAURUS''
and "SPRITE"

banks of the county .
Announcement of the queen
and her court on Friday night
is an innovation in the weekend
activities. Up until this year
the queen was not selected
until Saturday night thereby
leaving little time for her to
reign over weekend activities.
The queen and her court are
expected to be more active in
being present at other regatta
weekend events this year. The
queen will represent Meigs
County at various Ohio
festivals .
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority is in charge
of the contest and is . constructing a float on which Miss
Sebo and this year 's contestants will ride in Friday
night's regatta parade.

·a.
•

Honda XL-250.
Featuring ·

Page 21 - Regatta Section

Queen will be crowned

swept up by the building
seizure and couldn't get out.
I think that says a lot for
AIM. They pressure people
into obeying. Personally , I
don't think they represent
many real Indians. "
Not here anyway. Times
are hard, history is indecent,
government is ineffective ,
yet nobody thinks the solulion to Crow problems is
loaded in the muzzles of AIM
rifles.

Two clubs will present aerial shows

Bestat
Our Largest

Authorized Dealer For

tribal chairman Dave Stewart. "I remember when
AIM took over the BIA building in Washington. 1 heard
there was a Crow youth
among them. so I called him
up to chew him out. But he
said it was all a mistake for
him. He said he joined the
AIM march because he liked
what they stood for and, besides, he thought it would be
a good Chf;lnce to see Washington . Then he just got

The

Hop on. Jump out. Honda's XL-250 has got what
it takes to win . Engine is a massive overhead cam
248cc four-stroke single-cylinder. With a nice
flat torque curve. And super response
in all five gears, thanks to a push-pull
racing throttle set-up. Tops in dirt, you
can ride it to races; it comes
fully street-equipped.
See the Baja beater at
our showrooms now.

·* 24 FUN FILLED RIDES
* FREE PARKING
CATHY RAYBURN

BONNIE J. SMITH

* PICNIC GROUNDS
* AMUSEMENT GAMES
* ROLLER SKATING
* MINIATURE GOLF
* REFRESHMENTS
*CAFETERIA

,,..

.No !liner Place /or
G.ean, · Wltole1ome
!Jamilll entertainment . . .

TRAVEL TRAILERS
''APACHE'~

U.S. RT. 60 WEST HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 25718
JOYCE MYERS

CAMPING TRAILERS

DEBRi\ MILLIRON

Phone 429-4231

PAY
ONE
PRICE

"ROYAL" TRUCK TOPS
•

$

50
PER PERSON

Your Hand Sta~p Entitles
You To All The Rides You Want

SMITH ·AUTO SALES
PH. 446-2240

from Opening Until ~ lO P.M.

OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY

KANAUGA,O.
MARCIA CARR

SHARON DRAKE

Enjoy the Regatta - June 15-16-17

'

�The Daily Sentinel, Ju~ 12, 1973

Page 20 - Regatta Section

Next time may b'e Indians' last stand
(Continued from Page 18)
are owned by outside people.
So if you really want to get
down to hard reality. the Indians themselves only own
aboLtt 1.25 million acres
now .''

At that. Indian ownership

is unprofitable. Though sev- ·
era! nonreservation corporations do a brisk business on
Crow land , Crows themselves do poorly . Left Hand
says the average income
among the 4,200 reservation
Indians is $2,100-that's $8 a
day . Forty-two per cent of

Calliope, real love
(Continued from Page 19)
Duffield has his calliope
(pronounced calley-ope by
carnival and riverboat people,
he says) .
The calliope has 43 whistles
made of brass pipes ranging in
height from five inches to two
feet and in diameter from
seven~ights of an inch to three
and a half inches. Duffield says
he had to rebuild some parts,
restore others and improvise
on even more. The cabinet, the
valves, and the keyboard all
had to be rebuilt.
There are two types of
calliopes - steam and air explains Duffield. "The steam
type was popular on the old
riverboats where there was a
boiler and a fire," he said. He
estimates there are only about
a dozen steam calliopes left in
the United States. The air

variety, the kind Myron
Duffield has, became popular
with carnivals and circuses between 1910 and 1930, he relates.
"It was more practical to plug
in a motor than to build a fire in
a boiler," Duffield said.
Duffield has recently
completed the restoration of an
old circus wagon which carries
the calliope and its costumed
player . The wagon is capable
of being drawn by horse or
vehicle. When Duffield isn 't
restoring calliopes or wagons,
he works as the east central
regional manager for RCA in
Cleveland. He and his wife
Laura have two children, Jeff,
17, and Kathy, 14. The Duffields are no strangers to the
Meigs C!&gt;unty area. Laura
Duffield is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Seines, 325
Lincoln Street, Middleport ,
where she was born and raised.

\:~ervthing You need \o~

the working force is unemployed . Says one man , who
hasn't worked in 18 months :
I'd like to work in town
(Hardin ), but they ain't too
hot about Indians there . I
had one guy tell me he
wouldn't hire me because I
didn't have enough work experience. I asked him how I
could get the experience if
nobody would give me a job, .
but he didn't answer. I had
to laugh at that."
The laughter here is bitter. Frederick Left Hand says
that he sometimes thinks
"we s h o u I d do the same
thing to the whites as they've
done to us-wipe them out."
Yet for all the hostility, 'the
poverty' and exploitation,
there is virtually no interest
here in becoming another
Wounded Knee, Tribal members say they agree with the
ideals of AIM activists. but
disagree with their tactics.
"We have no sympathy
with violence," says Crow

•

Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1m
L

A first this year will be an
aerial show performing at
Meigs Football field Saturday
from 2 to 4 p.m.
There will be two flying clubs
participating, the Pittsburgh
Flying Devils and Brentwood
Flying Aces. The show will
consist of two flying circles
from the 50 yard line.
The show will consist of
stunt, two man stunt, four man

combat, eight man combat,
and one man comedy, flying
twin engine planes. There will
be two planes flown by one
man, three line throttle control, Bi-plane exhibition, shack
demo, dive bombing, demoderby, balloon burst, also
flying of radio control planes.
There will be approximately
45 persons participting in the
aerial show.

'

BRENDA TAYLOR

MINDY YOUNG

Who will be Miss Regatta
Queen?
·' '
The answer to that question
will be forthcoming at 10 p. m.
Friday night at the Meigs
Junior High School audi tori urn
when the 1973 queen will be
announced.
This year's contest features
eight Meigs County girls who
graduated this spring from
local high schools. The group
includes Marcia Carr, Tuppers
Plains; Brenda Taylor,
Pomeroy; Mindy Young,
Middleport Route 1; Sharon E.
Drake.• Long Bottom Route 1;
Cathy Rayburn, Pomeroy;
Bonnie J. Smith, Racine Route
1; Joyce Myers, Long Bottom,
and Debra Milliron of near
Racine.
The eight contestants will
meet at the junior high school

building in Pomeroy Thursday
night where they will be interviewed by the five mayors
of Meigs County communities.
The mayors 'will select the
queen and three runners-up on
the basis of poise, personality
and appearance. The names of
the queen and her court will not
be announced until 10 Friday
ni.;nt during intermission at a
talent show to be held at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport as a part .of the
weekend activities. The queen
will be presented flowers and
crowned by the reigning queen,
Miss Leann Sebo of ,Pomeroy.
, The queen will receive a $100
bond; first runnerup will
receive a $50 bond while the
second and third runnersup
will receive $25 bonds. The
bonds are being provided by

Selection

Ever!

"TERRY"
.
' "TAURUS''
and "SPRITE"

banks of the county .
Announcement of the queen
and her court on Friday night
is an innovation in the weekend
activities. Up until this year
the queen was not selected
until Saturday night thereby
leaving little time for her to
reign over weekend activities.
The queen and her court are
expected to be more active in
being present at other regatta
weekend events this year. The
queen will represent Meigs
County at various Ohio
festivals .
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority is in charge
of the contest and is . constructing a float on which Miss
Sebo and this year 's contestants will ride in Friday
night's regatta parade.

·a.
•

Honda XL-250.
Featuring ·

Page 21 - Regatta Section

Queen will be crowned

swept up by the building
seizure and couldn't get out.
I think that says a lot for
AIM. They pressure people
into obeying. Personally , I
don't think they represent
many real Indians. "
Not here anyway. Times
are hard, history is indecent,
government is ineffective ,
yet nobody thinks the solulion to Crow problems is
loaded in the muzzles of AIM
rifles.

Two clubs will present aerial shows

Bestat
Our Largest

Authorized Dealer For

tribal chairman Dave Stewart. "I remember when
AIM took over the BIA building in Washington. 1 heard
there was a Crow youth
among them. so I called him
up to chew him out. But he
said it was all a mistake for
him. He said he joined the
AIM march because he liked
what they stood for and, besides, he thought it would be
a good Chf;lnce to see Washington . Then he just got

The

Hop on. Jump out. Honda's XL-250 has got what
it takes to win . Engine is a massive overhead cam
248cc four-stroke single-cylinder. With a nice
flat torque curve. And super response
in all five gears, thanks to a push-pull
racing throttle set-up. Tops in dirt, you
can ride it to races; it comes
fully street-equipped.
See the Baja beater at
our showrooms now.

·* 24 FUN FILLED RIDES
* FREE PARKING
CATHY RAYBURN

BONNIE J. SMITH

* PICNIC GROUNDS
* AMUSEMENT GAMES
* ROLLER SKATING
* MINIATURE GOLF
* REFRESHMENTS
*CAFETERIA

,,..

.No !liner Place /or
G.ean, · Wltole1ome
!Jamilll entertainment . . .

TRAVEL TRAILERS
''APACHE'~

U.S. RT. 60 WEST HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 25718
JOYCE MYERS

CAMPING TRAILERS

DEBRi\ MILLIRON

Phone 429-4231

PAY
ONE
PRICE

"ROYAL" TRUCK TOPS
•

$

50
PER PERSON

Your Hand Sta~p Entitles
You To All The Rides You Want

SMITH ·AUTO SALES
PH. 446-2240

from Opening Until ~ lO P.M.

OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY

KANAUGA,O.
MARCIA CARR

SHARON DRAKE

Enjoy the Regatta - June 15-16-17

'

�•

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 22 - Regatta Section

'

Pa"" r.l .:.. Re1mtta

Crafts Fair scheduled
all three Regatta .days

A craft fair will be staged at
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center located in the
former Pomeroy Junior High
School building on all three
days of the Big Bend Regatta.
Numerous
useful
and
decorative items made by the
senior citizens of the county
will be for sale including lap
boards, particularly useful for
the ill and handicapped, modpogge toy or storage chests of
sturdy construction, handmade
baseball bats, colorful artificial flower arrangements,
beautiful quilts, crocheted and
embroidered articles, frog and

go to the Center fund.
One section of the craft fair
will be designated for display
only. Three articles will be
used for door prizes with
donations to be taken on these.
Charles Hilton donated an
attractive tulip pattern quilt
top which women of the Center
are quilting and this will be one
of the prizes to be awarded. A
handmade rocker will' also be
given, along with a dancing
doll made by James Doss.
The public is invited to visit
the Center anytime on Friday,
Saturday or Sunday to view the
articles made by the senior
citizens.

owl plaques and other wall
hangings, and mod-pogge
pictures.
· Most of the articles to be sold
have been made at the Center
with the use of materials
provided by the Meigs County
Council on Aging through
federal funding, and the
proceeds from these items will
!&gt;!! used at the Center for the
purchase
of
addi tiona!
materials and supplies and
some general improvements .
Articles made by the senior
citizens in their homes will be
for sale also with a small
percentage of the proceeds to

You Always Get A Better Buy At _Goble's Lot

ORVILLE GRAHAM ANn DF.A N BLACKWOOD are two
of the men who have been busy at. the Meigs County Senior Citizens . Center these past weeks making
plywood lap boards and sturdy storage chests. Here Graham
gives a final coat of varnish to one of the lapboards. Blackwood's job has been to paint the chests.

First Frog Art Contest is set
For the first time a Frog Art
Contest has been sponsored by
thf Ohio Society for the
Promotion of the Bull Frog
with Pat 1Iolter serving as
chairman .
Tne entries were judged last
Saturday; the winners of the

contest are to be announced at
the annual Frog Jwnp. Bill
Mayer was judge.
_ T]lere were 123 entries. All
the art work is presenpy on
view in local business lllaces in
Pomeroy.

•

CRAFT FAIR- Colorful art foam frogs are
being created at the Senior Citizens Center in the
old Pomeroy Junior High building for the craft
fair to be staged there on Regatta Weekend, June
l:i-17. Working on the project are 85-year-old
Lessie Lusk of Condor St., Pomeroy; Mrs.
Heulah Utterback, and Mrs. Mary M. Seaman,
left to right.

Senior citizens
readying wares
for craft fair
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
At the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy it's not those lazy,
hazy, crazy days of swnmer we
sing about.
It's hustle, bustle, do your
thing, the time is almost here.
The senior citizens are going
to have a craft fair on Regatta
Weekend and they're busy as
beavers preparing their wares.
The scene is one of tables
everywhere filled with . a ·
variety of things ranging from
egg cartons to art foam with
the men and women chatting
with each other as they go
about the business of creating
useful and decorative items for
the fair.
The fair has a dual purpose.
The first is to give th~ public
the chance to see the Center
and what is done there in the
way of instruCting senior
citizens on how to make con·
structive use of their time.
The second purpoSe is to
provide a market for items
made not only at the center but
in ihe homes of the senior
citizens ·of the county.
Some items will be for

display only, while many will
be for sale. The fair , open all
three days of the Regatta , and
on both Friday and Saturday
evenings, provides a much
needed opportunity for the men
and women to show what they
can do and perhaps find a
market to increase their income.
All of the proceeds from the
sale of items made with
materials provided through the
Council on Aging will be used to
purchase more materials and
other supplies.
Those persons bringing
articles made at home with
their own materials will be
asked to contribute a small
percentage to the Center fund .
Donations will be taken on
three items during the craft
fair . There is a beautiful red ·
tulip quilt, the top for which
was made and donated by
Charles Hilton of Portland, a
handcarved ·dancing "Colonel
Snnclers" made by James
l!u~s, and a handmade rocker.
These will be awarded when
the Center closes on Regatta
(Continued on page 2 9)

•

'

•

LAKES

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Local~
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Regatta Weekend

Section

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YOU DO - DO IT IN A FORD

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LIVE ALimE
Many Styles
and Models

GIASTRON
MON ARK

Regatta Weekend
Stop ln, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom Laoonder

. Come see our display at the RegaHa,
June 15-16-17.

JUNE 15-16-17

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.
.--------,
I
Answer,
I
I
Daily

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Lot Ph. 992-7004

SatWARZEL MARINE ·

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Jet~ Hwy, 124 &amp; 144 Hockingport, Ohio

If No
8 to 6

992-2196

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'

'

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Up to 12
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•

KEITH GOBLE FORD

I

"Your Frienclly Fore/ Deo/er"

'

~-----M-'o_o·-~~~--r-------------------------~~~-J

�•

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 22 - Regatta Section

'

Pa"" r.l .:.. Re1mtta

Crafts Fair scheduled
all three Regatta .days

A craft fair will be staged at
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center located in the
former Pomeroy Junior High
School building on all three
days of the Big Bend Regatta.
Numerous
useful
and
decorative items made by the
senior citizens of the county
will be for sale including lap
boards, particularly useful for
the ill and handicapped, modpogge toy or storage chests of
sturdy construction, handmade
baseball bats, colorful artificial flower arrangements,
beautiful quilts, crocheted and
embroidered articles, frog and

go to the Center fund.
One section of the craft fair
will be designated for display
only. Three articles will be
used for door prizes with
donations to be taken on these.
Charles Hilton donated an
attractive tulip pattern quilt
top which women of the Center
are quilting and this will be one
of the prizes to be awarded. A
handmade rocker will' also be
given, along with a dancing
doll made by James Doss.
The public is invited to visit
the Center anytime on Friday,
Saturday or Sunday to view the
articles made by the senior
citizens.

owl plaques and other wall
hangings, and mod-pogge
pictures.
· Most of the articles to be sold
have been made at the Center
with the use of materials
provided by the Meigs County
Council on Aging through
federal funding, and the
proceeds from these items will
!&gt;!! used at the Center for the
purchase
of
addi tiona!
materials and supplies and
some general improvements .
Articles made by the senior
citizens in their homes will be
for sale also with a small
percentage of the proceeds to

You Always Get A Better Buy At _Goble's Lot

ORVILLE GRAHAM ANn DF.A N BLACKWOOD are two
of the men who have been busy at. the Meigs County Senior Citizens . Center these past weeks making
plywood lap boards and sturdy storage chests. Here Graham
gives a final coat of varnish to one of the lapboards. Blackwood's job has been to paint the chests.

First Frog Art Contest is set
For the first time a Frog Art
Contest has been sponsored by
thf Ohio Society for the
Promotion of the Bull Frog
with Pat 1Iolter serving as
chairman .
Tne entries were judged last
Saturday; the winners of the

contest are to be announced at
the annual Frog Jwnp. Bill
Mayer was judge.
_ T]lere were 123 entries. All
the art work is presenpy on
view in local business lllaces in
Pomeroy.

•

CRAFT FAIR- Colorful art foam frogs are
being created at the Senior Citizens Center in the
old Pomeroy Junior High building for the craft
fair to be staged there on Regatta Weekend, June
l:i-17. Working on the project are 85-year-old
Lessie Lusk of Condor St., Pomeroy; Mrs.
Heulah Utterback, and Mrs. Mary M. Seaman,
left to right.

Senior citizens
readying wares
for craft fair
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
At the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy it's not those lazy,
hazy, crazy days of swnmer we
sing about.
It's hustle, bustle, do your
thing, the time is almost here.
The senior citizens are going
to have a craft fair on Regatta
Weekend and they're busy as
beavers preparing their wares.
The scene is one of tables
everywhere filled with . a ·
variety of things ranging from
egg cartons to art foam with
the men and women chatting
with each other as they go
about the business of creating
useful and decorative items for
the fair.
The fair has a dual purpose.
The first is to give th~ public
the chance to see the Center
and what is done there in the
way of instruCting senior
citizens on how to make con·
structive use of their time.
The second purpoSe is to
provide a market for items
made not only at the center but
in ihe homes of the senior
citizens ·of the county.
Some items will be for

display only, while many will
be for sale. The fair , open all
three days of the Regatta , and
on both Friday and Saturday
evenings, provides a much
needed opportunity for the men
and women to show what they
can do and perhaps find a
market to increase their income.
All of the proceeds from the
sale of items made with
materials provided through the
Council on Aging will be used to
purchase more materials and
other supplies.
Those persons bringing
articles made at home with
their own materials will be
asked to contribute a small
percentage to the Center fund .
Donations will be taken on
three items during the craft
fair . There is a beautiful red ·
tulip quilt, the top for which
was made and donated by
Charles Hilton of Portland, a
handcarved ·dancing "Colonel
Snnclers" made by James
l!u~s, and a handmade rocker.
These will be awarded when
the Center closes on Regatta
(Continued on page 2 9)

•

'

•

LAKES

New· 64x14 Wide
Complete deluxe furniture
package, fully carpeted,
house -type door, storms
and streens, 30 gal. water
heater, stainless sink and
plumbed for washer .

Local~
I.

Regatta Weekend

Section

NOW ON DISPlAY
SAL£ PRICE

•6995

Owned &amp; Operated

We Welcome

'WHEREVER YOU GO, WHATEVER

Trad~lns

HILLCREST
HALLMARK
NORRIS

YOU DO - DO IT IN A FORD

EVINRUDE MOTORS

LIVE ALimE
Many Styles
and Models

GIASTRON
MON ARK

Regatta Weekend
Stop ln, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom Laoonder

. Come see our display at the RegaHa,
June 15-16-17.

JUNE 15-16-17

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.
.--------,
I
Answer,
I
I
Daily

SERVICE CENTER OF THE MID.OHIO VALLEY

Lot Ph. 992-7004

SatWARZEL MARINE ·

Open

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

If No
8 to 6

992-2196

MIDDLePORT, OHIO

'

'

Free Set-Up
We Service
Up to 12
I
1 Years Financing I
1
on the
I

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I

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JOIN IN THE FUN, THERE'S
LOTS TO DO AND SEE!!
RACES-ENTERTAINMENTDISPLAYS

GENERAL TIRE SALES
465

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AROUND

•

KEITH GOBLE FORD

I

"Your Frienclly Fore/ Deo/er"

'

~-----M-'o_o·-~~~--r-------------------------~~~-J

�•

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 24 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1m

•
Page 25 - Regatta Section

Mrs. Riggs has
baton contests
Mrs. Judy Riggs is again
heading the Big Bend Regatta
baton twirling contest which
will be staged on Sunday afternoon at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport as a
part of the weekelld activities.
Some 400 trophies·will be won
by twirlers who are entering
the various divisions which
include, according to age, ~.
7-8, 9-10, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, 1720. The divisions will be divided
also into beginner, intermediate and advanced
classes.

•

CRAFT FAIR - At the
Senior Citizens Center on
Regatta Weekend, donations
will be taken on thi s
beautiful tulip quilt . The top
was made and dona ted for
the Craft Fair by Charles
Hilton of Portland . Th e
quilting is being done at the
Ce nt er by Mr s . Me lva
Turner, Rutland ; Mrs.
Thora Blackwood, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Nannlc
Radcliff ,
Rutland ; Mrs. Cora Hilton,
Portland; . Mrs. Harri e t
Warner, Mrs. Ge rtrude M.
Butler and Mr s. E dith
Williamson, all of Hutland, .
pictured from thr left around
the table .

A, Miss Regatta Majorette
Queen and princesses will be
selected again this year along
with three high point champions in the age group of 0-10,
11-14, ' and 15-20. Those three
winners will be selected on the
total individual points accumulated throughout the day.
A travel trophy will be given to
the twirler traveling the most
distance to participate.
The contest will get underway at 12:30 p.m. and late
registration will open at 11
(Continued on Page 2 8)

GREATFABRICBUYSFOR

s~ru«L+~

-

fM~

Choose Our Beautiful Fabrics

FOR A
VACATION
AND

REGATTA

MRS. JUDY RIGGS will again chairman the baton twirling contest
being held on Sunday in 'conjunction with Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

.SEW-IN ·
it's

AND REMEMBER

BURDETTE'S

NOTHING SEWS ·

LIKE A

CAMPER SALES &amp; SERVICE
Rt. 50, East Coolville Phone 667-3386

SINGER
o POlYESTE~

&amp; COTTON
KNITS
o POl VESTER DOUBlE KNITS
Stripes. Plaids. Prints &amp; Solid
Colors
o KETTlE ClOTH
o NYlON JE~SEY

KNITS

DOTTED SWISS
DENIM
o EMBROIDERED GINGHAMS
o WHIPPED CREAMS

'

o

A complete size and price range

CAMPERS, TRAVEL TRAILERS,
CUSTOM
BUlL I TOPPERS

o B~USHED

-;.•

Clean . . . clear ... serene . . .
It makes a perfect setting for a family outing .

e Yellowstone and Chateau TRAVEL TRAILERS and

•

Wotkln9 with natute
to Jetve man.

TRUCK CAMPERS
e Intrepid Travel Trailers
e Be Sure To Se~ The ROADCRUISER 5th WHEEL
and thP. MINI HOME

We're in the business of providing the electricity you
need for today's living needs. We also lend a hand
to nature, to help preserve these pleasures for you .
Water used in the production of electricity is returned
to the streams and lakes in quality condition . It is
clean and fosters living conditions for fish and other
· aquatic life, essential in maintaining the interdependence of all nature's forms .

Your Best Buy. In Trailer Supplies
L T Tanks Filled- Trailer Repairs-Free Estimates

We treat nature well . and she returns the favor!

RENTALS

McCALL'S I$ SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

Open Sundays 12 to 5; Sat. 9to S; Other Days 9to 8

SINGH SALES. SERVICE
115 W. SECOND-992-2284-POMEROY, OHIO

Royal L'rown Bottling Co. of Middleport .
SAVE YOUR RC, DIET-RITE, NEHI, .UPPER TEN
&amp; DAD'S BOTTLE CAPS

....

•
THEY ARE VALUABLE!
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

WE WILL PAY'12 CENT
EACH TO YOUR FAVORITE CHARITY.

�•

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 24 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1m

•
Page 25 - Regatta Section

Mrs. Riggs has
baton contests
Mrs. Judy Riggs is again
heading the Big Bend Regatta
baton twirling contest which
will be staged on Sunday afternoon at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport as a
part of the weekelld activities.
Some 400 trophies·will be won
by twirlers who are entering
the various divisions which
include, according to age, ~.
7-8, 9-10, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, 1720. The divisions will be divided
also into beginner, intermediate and advanced
classes.

•

CRAFT FAIR - At the
Senior Citizens Center on
Regatta Weekend, donations
will be taken on thi s
beautiful tulip quilt . The top
was made and dona ted for
the Craft Fair by Charles
Hilton of Portland . Th e
quilting is being done at the
Ce nt er by Mr s . Me lva
Turner, Rutland ; Mrs.
Thora Blackwood, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Nannlc
Radcliff ,
Rutland ; Mrs. Cora Hilton,
Portland; . Mrs. Harri e t
Warner, Mrs. Ge rtrude M.
Butler and Mr s. E dith
Williamson, all of Hutland, .
pictured from thr left around
the table .

A, Miss Regatta Majorette
Queen and princesses will be
selected again this year along
with three high point champions in the age group of 0-10,
11-14, ' and 15-20. Those three
winners will be selected on the
total individual points accumulated throughout the day.
A travel trophy will be given to
the twirler traveling the most
distance to participate.
The contest will get underway at 12:30 p.m. and late
registration will open at 11
(Continued on Page 2 8)

GREATFABRICBUYSFOR

s~ru«L+~

-

fM~

Choose Our Beautiful Fabrics

FOR A
VACATION
AND

REGATTA

MRS. JUDY RIGGS will again chairman the baton twirling contest
being held on Sunday in 'conjunction with Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

.SEW-IN ·
it's

AND REMEMBER

BURDETTE'S

NOTHING SEWS ·

LIKE A

CAMPER SALES &amp; SERVICE
Rt. 50, East Coolville Phone 667-3386

SINGER
o POlYESTE~

&amp; COTTON
KNITS
o POl VESTER DOUBlE KNITS
Stripes. Plaids. Prints &amp; Solid
Colors
o KETTlE ClOTH
o NYlON JE~SEY

KNITS

DOTTED SWISS
DENIM
o EMBROIDERED GINGHAMS
o WHIPPED CREAMS

'

o

A complete size and price range

CAMPERS, TRAVEL TRAILERS,
CUSTOM
BUlL I TOPPERS

o B~USHED

-;.•

Clean . . . clear ... serene . . .
It makes a perfect setting for a family outing .

e Yellowstone and Chateau TRAVEL TRAILERS and

•

Wotkln9 with natute
to Jetve man.

TRUCK CAMPERS
e Intrepid Travel Trailers
e Be Sure To Se~ The ROADCRUISER 5th WHEEL
and thP. MINI HOME

We're in the business of providing the electricity you
need for today's living needs. We also lend a hand
to nature, to help preserve these pleasures for you .
Water used in the production of electricity is returned
to the streams and lakes in quality condition . It is
clean and fosters living conditions for fish and other
· aquatic life, essential in maintaining the interdependence of all nature's forms .

Your Best Buy. In Trailer Supplies
L T Tanks Filled- Trailer Repairs-Free Estimates

We treat nature well . and she returns the favor!

RENTALS

McCALL'S I$ SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

Open Sundays 12 to 5; Sat. 9to S; Other Days 9to 8

SINGH SALES. SERVICE
115 W. SECOND-992-2284-POMEROY, OHIO

Royal L'rown Bottling Co. of Middleport .
SAVE YOUR RC, DIET-RITE, NEHI, .UPPER TEN
&amp; DAD'S BOTTLE CAPS

....

•
THEY ARE VALUABLE!
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

WE WILL PAY'12 CENT
EACH TO YOUR FAVORITE CHARITY.

�'f'tlp

Page 26 - Regatta Section

nauv Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentlnel,June 1:.1,

lll'/;t

Page '1:1 - Regatta Section

Last stone men
to show skills
Two of the last "stone men"
in this area will demonstrate
their skills at cutting and
facing stone throughout the
afternoon on "Heritage Sun. day", June 17 of Regatta
Weekend at The Meigs County
Museum, .Butternut Avenue,
Pomerov. Fred Tuckerman of
RD 4, Pomeroy (Wolfe ~en)
and Floyd Burney, RD 3 on
Route 33, Pomeroy, life-long
residents of Meigs County, are
skilled in work with rock, from
the finding and quarrying of
good rock, through the cutting,
and finally the building of good
sound walls and other rock
structures. They say that good
rock is scarce in Meigs County,
the only fine grained rock
being found below Chester near
the Shade River. "Tuck" and
"Berney" have been friends
for a long time and talk of the
quality of stone, its grain, its
siz!l - like a carpenter fondly
talks of a fine piece of wood.
The last five years or so before
their retirement they worked
together for Meigs County,
building rock walls and
bridges . The last stone bridge
was built by the county nearly
five years ago near Gold
Ridge .
Fred Tuckerman has Jived

on his farm in Wolfe Pen on
Route 143 for 46 years now. He
has always been a farmer, but
the last sixteen years before he
retired, he worked for the
county doing mostly stone
work. He and Mr. Burney built
the big stone wall at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds, which
they refer to with pride. Mr.
Tuckerman said the wall fell
down the first time they built it
because they were instructed
to use stone which was too
small. After it fell down within
a few weeks, they searched for
the proper rock and the
resulting second wall has been
standing ever since. Fred
Tuckerman retired three years
ago, and since has been farming on a small scale and
doing a Jot of house and roof
painting. Presently he is a
guard at Forest Acre Park.
Floyd Burney was raised and
lived most of his life in
Rutland, until twelve years ago
when he moved to his home on
Route 33. He started to work in
the coal mines in Rutland at
age thirteen and worked for the
Essex Coal Company, Mayer
Coal Company, and the Sunday
Creek Coal Company for th'irty
years. During the depression
he worked for Dr. Boice, when

FLOYD BURNEY AND FRED TUCKERMAN, two of the last stone men in this area.

he first started to Jearn to cut
rock. Mr. Burney also worked
for the Miller Screen Door
Company in Middleport for
thirty years, constructing and
hauling screen doors, and

doing construction work,
especially work with stone. For
the last five years before his
· retirement, Floyd Burney
worked for the county as a
stone mason. Now "Tuck"

and "Burney" are coming· out
of retirement, sharpening their
picks, and looking for some
good stone so that they may
pass on some of the craft of
··(Continued on page 30)

ASCENE FROM the 1972 jumps : you can blow on 'em holler at 'em cuss
'em, cajole, urge, implore, beg, scream at them, but y~u can't physlcally
help or persuade a frog to jump.

Is
your watch a
compulsive liar?

DALE C. WARNER, THE EXGRAND CROAKER SAYS:
WELCOME TO ...
REGATTA CITY, U.S.A.

'

JUNE 15-16-17

Three minvtes h e~e. five
minutes th ere, th e time comes
when you're forc ed to admit
that your watch has a chronic
condition. Lying .

THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD

And unless you want to .
continue missing trains, planes
and dates, it's tim e to get an
Accutron watch . It has a
tunin!;j fork movement,
guaranteed accurate to within
a minute a month.· And we
have a fine selection in store
for you. From $100.

COUPE- DeVILLE
Already a classic. Coupe de Vill e
lin'es up to its distinguished nam e
with fr esh dramatic styling, and
Cadillac cra ftman ship .

COUPE DEVILLE

Building better ways to
c.,rice Clnelc Just bec:aUie it'o bia.'beouHiul and boun....._ lilully equipped doesn't mean it ion'!
rated lor h81"ty trailer tawing. Because
It is. Up Ia 7,000-pound lrailen, In fact .
This is juol about the maolluaurlouo way
we can lhink of Ia head lor the hills.

the U.S.A.

towinq, you con hook into as much as
6,000 pounds II you wish.

A. Wood grain panels on case and band. $200.

c.,rice &amp;ut.

W.C-.

We're experienced In arranging
adequate coverage for boat owners,
and their families, for full financial
protection In any ev'e ntuallty. Get
details here.

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

It's everything you'd want in a car, in a
waqon. Wlthpowerlhlo, andpawerlhat.
A vanlohlng !allqate. A qreatthlrd oeal
lor kids. And even with all that otyle it' o
IIIII capable ol lrallertrq as much as
6.000 pounds.

B. 14K solid gold, mahogany dial. $275 .
C. Stainless steel, clearv lew dial. $135.

Bulova
Accutron®

...... lltde

Chevelle-oloecl waqano were never like
...... thlo before. It's new all over. We've
upped the sia! a little which meano you
con haul mare lnw.le. And to get at all
that new opace there' o a new owing-up
tailgate. When II comes to trailer

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

POMEROY MOTORS
"YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER"

Pomeroy

The truth-IQving tuning fork watch

Omeqa Coupe

Ohio

Goessler Jewelry Store

Your Authorized Cadillac &amp; Oldsmobile Dealer
242 W. Main
Ph. 992-5342
Pomerqy, 0.

cOurt St.

Pomeroy

•we will adjust to this tolerance, If necessa ry . Gue antee 11 for one yeer .

" You' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

..

�'f'tlp

Page 26 - Regatta Section

nauv Sentinel, June 12, 1973

The Daily Sentlnel,June 1:.1,

lll'/;t

Page '1:1 - Regatta Section

Last stone men
to show skills
Two of the last "stone men"
in this area will demonstrate
their skills at cutting and
facing stone throughout the
afternoon on "Heritage Sun. day", June 17 of Regatta
Weekend at The Meigs County
Museum, .Butternut Avenue,
Pomerov. Fred Tuckerman of
RD 4, Pomeroy (Wolfe ~en)
and Floyd Burney, RD 3 on
Route 33, Pomeroy, life-long
residents of Meigs County, are
skilled in work with rock, from
the finding and quarrying of
good rock, through the cutting,
and finally the building of good
sound walls and other rock
structures. They say that good
rock is scarce in Meigs County,
the only fine grained rock
being found below Chester near
the Shade River. "Tuck" and
"Berney" have been friends
for a long time and talk of the
quality of stone, its grain, its
siz!l - like a carpenter fondly
talks of a fine piece of wood.
The last five years or so before
their retirement they worked
together for Meigs County,
building rock walls and
bridges . The last stone bridge
was built by the county nearly
five years ago near Gold
Ridge .
Fred Tuckerman has Jived

on his farm in Wolfe Pen on
Route 143 for 46 years now. He
has always been a farmer, but
the last sixteen years before he
retired, he worked for the
county doing mostly stone
work. He and Mr. Burney built
the big stone wall at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds, which
they refer to with pride. Mr.
Tuckerman said the wall fell
down the first time they built it
because they were instructed
to use stone which was too
small. After it fell down within
a few weeks, they searched for
the proper rock and the
resulting second wall has been
standing ever since. Fred
Tuckerman retired three years
ago, and since has been farming on a small scale and
doing a Jot of house and roof
painting. Presently he is a
guard at Forest Acre Park.
Floyd Burney was raised and
lived most of his life in
Rutland, until twelve years ago
when he moved to his home on
Route 33. He started to work in
the coal mines in Rutland at
age thirteen and worked for the
Essex Coal Company, Mayer
Coal Company, and the Sunday
Creek Coal Company for th'irty
years. During the depression
he worked for Dr. Boice, when

FLOYD BURNEY AND FRED TUCKERMAN, two of the last stone men in this area.

he first started to Jearn to cut
rock. Mr. Burney also worked
for the Miller Screen Door
Company in Middleport for
thirty years, constructing and
hauling screen doors, and

doing construction work,
especially work with stone. For
the last five years before his
· retirement, Floyd Burney
worked for the county as a
stone mason. Now "Tuck"

and "Burney" are coming· out
of retirement, sharpening their
picks, and looking for some
good stone so that they may
pass on some of the craft of
··(Continued on page 30)

ASCENE FROM the 1972 jumps : you can blow on 'em holler at 'em cuss
'em, cajole, urge, implore, beg, scream at them, but y~u can't physlcally
help or persuade a frog to jump.

Is
your watch a
compulsive liar?

DALE C. WARNER, THE EXGRAND CROAKER SAYS:
WELCOME TO ...
REGATTA CITY, U.S.A.

'

JUNE 15-16-17

Three minvtes h e~e. five
minutes th ere, th e time comes
when you're forc ed to admit
that your watch has a chronic
condition. Lying .

THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD

And unless you want to .
continue missing trains, planes
and dates, it's tim e to get an
Accutron watch . It has a
tunin!;j fork movement,
guaranteed accurate to within
a minute a month.· And we
have a fine selection in store
for you. From $100.

COUPE- DeVILLE
Already a classic. Coupe de Vill e
lin'es up to its distinguished nam e
with fr esh dramatic styling, and
Cadillac cra ftman ship .

COUPE DEVILLE

Building better ways to
c.,rice Clnelc Just bec:aUie it'o bia.'beouHiul and boun....._ lilully equipped doesn't mean it ion'!
rated lor h81"ty trailer tawing. Because
It is. Up Ia 7,000-pound lrailen, In fact .
This is juol about the maolluaurlouo way
we can lhink of Ia head lor the hills.

the U.S.A.

towinq, you con hook into as much as
6,000 pounds II you wish.

A. Wood grain panels on case and band. $200.

c.,rice &amp;ut.

W.C-.

We're experienced In arranging
adequate coverage for boat owners,
and their families, for full financial
protection In any ev'e ntuallty. Get
details here.

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

It's everything you'd want in a car, in a
waqon. Wlthpowerlhlo, andpawerlhat.
A vanlohlng !allqate. A qreatthlrd oeal
lor kids. And even with all that otyle it' o
IIIII capable ol lrallertrq as much as
6.000 pounds.

B. 14K solid gold, mahogany dial. $275 .
C. Stainless steel, clearv lew dial. $135.

Bulova
Accutron®

...... lltde

Chevelle-oloecl waqano were never like
...... thlo before. It's new all over. We've
upped the sia! a little which meano you
con haul mare lnw.le. And to get at all
that new opace there' o a new owing-up
tailgate. When II comes to trailer

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

POMEROY MOTORS
"YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER"

Pomeroy

The truth-IQving tuning fork watch

Omeqa Coupe

Ohio

Goessler Jewelry Store

Your Authorized Cadillac &amp; Oldsmobile Dealer
242 W. Main
Ph. 992-5342
Pomerqy, 0.

cOurt St.

Pomeroy

•we will adjust to this tolerance, If necessa ry . Gue antee 11 for one yeer .

" You' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

..

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 28 - Regatta Section

Power boat races

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

highlight of '73
Regatta Weekend

..

A MAIN FEATURE OF THE Big Bend Regatta will be the
power boat races on the river in front of Pomeroy Sunday,
June 17. The races are sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce and sanctioned by the American Power Boat
Association.
Trophies and cash prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will be given to
first, second, and third place winners respectively in each of
the nine classes. The classes which go according to the size of
the motor include Family E, G, J, and FS; Sports G, J;
Unrestricted R, S; and Unlimited U.
There will be two heats in each class with the first to begin
at 12:30 p.m.

Senior Citizens
(Continued from page 2 3)

.

Sunday.
Displaying several quilts will
be Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton. Mrs. Hilton will also
have for sale a couple of attractive Aunt jemina dolls.
Wayne Turner's contribution to
the sales area will be several
baseball bats which he made,
and there will be sturdy
decorated toy or storage chests
for sale .
Under construction now are
several lap boards, particularly useful for the elderly
or disabled individual. The
tulip quill is being quilted by
some women a llending the
sessions .
Novel and colorful · frog
replicas in art fo&lt;Jm suitable
for display on a refrigerator or
stove are being made, along
with sunflower seed plaques of

JACK CARSEY PRESENTS the winner's trophy to a first place boat driver in last year's
power. boat races at the Big Bend Regatta.
·····································'-········································-·~--.)~··
..·:·!·!·:·:·:·!·:-:-:-:-:.
•••..... ...•=·=·=·=·:·.•!·!·.·~·!·~·~·······················
·······~···!t·······························:-.·······-~:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·.················:·:·········:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!•!•!•!•!•.•.•,•!•.•:·.·····················································--··-·.-.·.···········-·;-;.r.......
........,/'.,; . . .. ••. . ••••••••• ••••
•

0

•

0

•

0

0

•

0

•• 0

•••••••• 0

• • • • • • ••••••• •••

Mrs. Riggs
(Continued from page -2'4)
a.m . Sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association, the event is
classified as a Class A contest

which is open to twirlers of all
locations.
An innovation this year is a
free corps entry ruling which
will allow groups to enter the

Casting derby open to
boys, girls Saturday
A casting derby will be held
Saturday, June 16, with
or.ienl{ltlon to be held al10 a.m.
at the Episcopal Parish House.
The derby will follow at 10:30
a.m. on the Pomeroy tenni~

courts.
There will be. first, second
and third place winners in the
boys and girls divisions. Each
child participating will receive
a gift.

corps competition free of
charge. The usual corps fee
entry is $25. A baton corps
must consist of at least 12
twirling members.
Food will be available
throughout the day and
spectators are welcome. The
door admission is $1 for adults
and 50 cents for children.
Entry blanks may be secured
by con~acting the contest
director, Mrs. Riggs, Reeds-.
ville ·Route 1, phone 985-3595
through Coolville. •
'

CHICKEN SPECIAL
3 pieces of Country Fired Chicken,
Whipped Potatoes with Perkins Famous
Gravy, Choice of Veg . and Country Toast.

Kiddie Special

•1.95
.

.

.

$1.25

• Hungarian Chicken Noodle
• Vegetable Beef
• Try Our Homemade Chili

One Call- That)s All!

CONVERSE
SURFERS
0

FOR YOUR ·
SPORTING GOODS
NEEDS •••

I"

45c
55c

Hard-To-Get Items Ordered-QUICK DELIVERY

•Rawlings
• Louisville Slugger
•Wilsou

FIRST STOP
FOR

Dishes

OINNER MENU
- - - - - - -

$2.75
$4.25
$2.10
$1.95
- $2.50
- $1.75

MONROE-GATES-S-K WAYNE
TOOLS-WALKER EXHAUSTHURST-KEYSTONE

BIG BEND REGATTA TIME!

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES.

It's Just a Short Drive from Pomeroy
Route 33 North ..• Columbus Road
Athens, Ohio
Phone 592-2578

Betty Ohlin&amp;er

Pomeroy

HRS: 8:00 TO 6:00P.M. MON. THRU SAT. ·.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
•

\

992-2151
992-2152
Ohio
88 2nd Ave.
Middleport

•Spalding
•Voit

T.AM SPECIALIS'I"ai

AMERICAN PARTS

All Dinners include: Choice of Potato, Veg., &amp; Country Toast.

•

• COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS
FOR ALL CARS-TO' NAME BRANDS

the

• 42 Varieties of Pancakes - Egg
• Omelettes - Roll-Ups - Waffles.

Pork Chop Dinner - 8 oz. Filet Mignon - 8 oz. Ham Steak - - Chopped Sirlon Dinner - - - Breaded Jumbo Shrimp Dinner Breaded Perch Dinner - - - -

SHOP Z:IDE'S

s

Casuals

TRY ANY OF THESE:

•
•
•
•
•
•

NOW THAT WE HAVE
. YOUR ATTENTION-

992-2152
9.92-21 1

Many Sun
&amp; Funtime

HOMEMADE
SOUPS

owls and dried pea frog
replicas.
Using bread dough and glue,
the senior citizens have
created miniature flowers
which they display in tiny
vases and bottles . There are
also arrangements of flowers
made from egg cartons.
Crushed colored egg shells
glued to cans of every size
make attractive containers
which will be for sale, along
with mod-pogge pictures with
ah antique fini s h, · and
decorative coasters. Crocheted
and embroidery work will also
be available .
The enthusiasm for th e
Regatta craft fair among the
. senior cilicns is high , and their
hope is that the public will vis it
the Center , see what's being
done there, and perhaps 111akr
a purchase.

SEX-~SATIONAL!

CASUALS

GOOD;FOOD SPECIALTIES

EARL INGLES WAS HIGH in the air as he
performed in the 1972 ski show by the Athens
Boat and Ski Club. The Athens Boat and Ski Club
ski show will be Saturday, June 16, at I p.m.
following the boat parade.
Featured skier for the club is Mike Meeks.
,\dded attractions are a clown act, ski jump, and
the kite flying to be performed by Meigs County's own Earl Ingles.

Basketball-·Golf-Football-Baseball

I

'11,100 Werth ef Treplllesla Steel!

I

ZIDE SPORT SHOP
NOW AT2 LOCATIONS
Our Newest Location At

GRAND CENTRAL MALL
Vienna, W.Va.
and
1412 II'IIONT aT. ·
IIAIII. I I A. OHIO
PilON. a7a • • • •

�The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

Page 28 - Regatta Section

Power boat races

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973

highlight of '73
Regatta Weekend

..

A MAIN FEATURE OF THE Big Bend Regatta will be the
power boat races on the river in front of Pomeroy Sunday,
June 17. The races are sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce and sanctioned by the American Power Boat
Association.
Trophies and cash prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will be given to
first, second, and third place winners respectively in each of
the nine classes. The classes which go according to the size of
the motor include Family E, G, J, and FS; Sports G, J;
Unrestricted R, S; and Unlimited U.
There will be two heats in each class with the first to begin
at 12:30 p.m.

Senior Citizens
(Continued from page 2 3)

.

Sunday.
Displaying several quilts will
be Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton. Mrs. Hilton will also
have for sale a couple of attractive Aunt jemina dolls.
Wayne Turner's contribution to
the sales area will be several
baseball bats which he made,
and there will be sturdy
decorated toy or storage chests
for sale .
Under construction now are
several lap boards, particularly useful for the elderly
or disabled individual. The
tulip quill is being quilted by
some women a llending the
sessions .
Novel and colorful · frog
replicas in art fo&lt;Jm suitable
for display on a refrigerator or
stove are being made, along
with sunflower seed plaques of

JACK CARSEY PRESENTS the winner's trophy to a first place boat driver in last year's
power. boat races at the Big Bend Regatta.
·····································'-········································-·~--.)~··
..·:·!·!·:·:·:·!·:-:-:-:-:.
•••..... ...•=·=·=·=·:·.•!·!·.·~·!·~·~·······················
·······~···!t·······························:-.·······-~:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·.················:·:·········:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!•!•!•!•!•.•.•,•!•.•:·.·····················································--··-·.-.·.···········-·;-;.r.......
........,/'.,; . . .. ••. . ••••••••• ••••
•

0

•

0

•

0

0

•

0

•• 0

•••••••• 0

• • • • • • ••••••• •••

Mrs. Riggs
(Continued from page -2'4)
a.m . Sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association, the event is
classified as a Class A contest

which is open to twirlers of all
locations.
An innovation this year is a
free corps entry ruling which
will allow groups to enter the

Casting derby open to
boys, girls Saturday
A casting derby will be held
Saturday, June 16, with
or.ienl{ltlon to be held al10 a.m.
at the Episcopal Parish House.
The derby will follow at 10:30
a.m. on the Pomeroy tenni~

courts.
There will be. first, second
and third place winners in the
boys and girls divisions. Each
child participating will receive
a gift.

corps competition free of
charge. The usual corps fee
entry is $25. A baton corps
must consist of at least 12
twirling members.
Food will be available
throughout the day and
spectators are welcome. The
door admission is $1 for adults
and 50 cents for children.
Entry blanks may be secured
by con~acting the contest
director, Mrs. Riggs, Reeds-.
ville ·Route 1, phone 985-3595
through Coolville. •
'

CHICKEN SPECIAL
3 pieces of Country Fired Chicken,
Whipped Potatoes with Perkins Famous
Gravy, Choice of Veg . and Country Toast.

Kiddie Special

•1.95
.

.

.

$1.25

• Hungarian Chicken Noodle
• Vegetable Beef
• Try Our Homemade Chili

One Call- That)s All!

CONVERSE
SURFERS
0

FOR YOUR ·
SPORTING GOODS
NEEDS •••

I"

45c
55c

Hard-To-Get Items Ordered-QUICK DELIVERY

•Rawlings
• Louisville Slugger
•Wilsou

FIRST STOP
FOR

Dishes

OINNER MENU
- - - - - - -

$2.75
$4.25
$2.10
$1.95
- $2.50
- $1.75

MONROE-GATES-S-K WAYNE
TOOLS-WALKER EXHAUSTHURST-KEYSTONE

BIG BEND REGATTA TIME!

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES.

It's Just a Short Drive from Pomeroy
Route 33 North ..• Columbus Road
Athens, Ohio
Phone 592-2578

Betty Ohlin&amp;er

Pomeroy

HRS: 8:00 TO 6:00P.M. MON. THRU SAT. ·.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
•

\

992-2151
992-2152
Ohio
88 2nd Ave.
Middleport

•Spalding
•Voit

T.AM SPECIALIS'I"ai

AMERICAN PARTS

All Dinners include: Choice of Potato, Veg., &amp; Country Toast.

•

• COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS
FOR ALL CARS-TO' NAME BRANDS

the

• 42 Varieties of Pancakes - Egg
• Omelettes - Roll-Ups - Waffles.

Pork Chop Dinner - 8 oz. Filet Mignon - 8 oz. Ham Steak - - Chopped Sirlon Dinner - - - Breaded Jumbo Shrimp Dinner Breaded Perch Dinner - - - -

SHOP Z:IDE'S

s

Casuals

TRY ANY OF THESE:

•
•
•
•
•
•

NOW THAT WE HAVE
. YOUR ATTENTION-

992-2152
9.92-21 1

Many Sun
&amp; Funtime

HOMEMADE
SOUPS

owls and dried pea frog
replicas.
Using bread dough and glue,
the senior citizens have
created miniature flowers
which they display in tiny
vases and bottles . There are
also arrangements of flowers
made from egg cartons.
Crushed colored egg shells
glued to cans of every size
make attractive containers
which will be for sale, along
with mod-pogge pictures with
ah antique fini s h, · and
decorative coasters. Crocheted
and embroidery work will also
be available .
The enthusiasm for th e
Regatta craft fair among the
. senior cilicns is high , and their
hope is that the public will vis it
the Center , see what's being
done there, and perhaps 111akr
a purchase.

SEX-~SATIONAL!

CASUALS

GOOD;FOOD SPECIALTIES

EARL INGLES WAS HIGH in the air as he
performed in the 1972 ski show by the Athens
Boat and Ski Club. The Athens Boat and Ski Club
ski show will be Saturday, June 16, at I p.m.
following the boat parade.
Featured skier for the club is Mike Meeks.
,\dded attractions are a clown act, ski jump, and
the kite flying to be performed by Meigs County's own Earl Ingles.

Basketball-·Golf-Football-Baseball

I

'11,100 Werth ef Treplllesla Steel!

I

ZIDE SPORT SHOP
NOW AT2 LOCATIONS
Our Newest Location At

GRAND CENTRAL MALL
Vienna, W.Va.
and
1412 II'IIONT aT. ·
IIAIII. I I A. OHIO
PilON. a7a • • • •

�•

•

Page 30 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973
BULL
FIGHT
IN :
POMEROY?;
Well,
maybe! Come the Frog
Jumps on Saturday, June 16
at Meigs Football Field In
Pomeroy, Meigs County will
be honored by the presence
of "Elchlco," reputedly a
professional bull fighter
from Valencia, Spain, who
will give an exhibition at the
Frog Ball that night. Elchlco
Is said to be well lmown for
his performances In Madrid,
Barcelona and southern
France, but he always
wanted to appear In North
America. Even the largest
bull fighting arena In Mexico
which holds a capacity of
47,000 persomwildn't satisfy
him. He will bring his own
picadors.
that Elchlco will encounter
are, front row, 1-r, .David
Burt, Dale Warner, past
grand croaker, and Eddie
Holter; back row, Jim
Clatworthy, grand croaker
of the Ohio Society of the
Promotion of the Bull Frog;
Rodney Downing, grand
croaker in charge of vice and
Roy Holter, past grand
croaker. Following the bull
fight a beef barbecue will be
held.

VISIT US DURING THE

Last stone men
1Continued

from page 26)

stone masonry to those who
come to " Heritage Sunday" on
June 17.
Also planned for that day at
The Meigs County Museum are
folk music and calliope concerts, with folk singerhistorian Ann Grimes of
Granville appearing at 2:00.
There will be textile arts
demonstrations, show, and
sale; a pottery demonstration,

show, and sale; a lapidary and
his craft; a display of Indian
artifacts, and genealogical
displays and discussions.
There will also be a slide show
on Meigs County, a presentation of the pl!ins for the
development of the museum,
and a chance to view the
museum storage room and the
present collection. An antique
auto show will also be staged
by The Meigs Antique Auto
Club whose sponsor is Mr. Carl

Brannon. Food and beverage
will be available on the
--grounds and visitors are encouraged to bring lawn chairs
for the folk concert to be sure of
a seat. Those attefiding are
also urged to wear old-time
clothing and to bring any items
or 'photographs of local historic
interest for "show and tell."
"Heritage Sunday" 'will begin
at 11 :OOa. m. and will close at 6
p.m. with free admission for
all.

BIG BEND REGATTA
JUNE 15-16-17
Can't cook tonight?

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973
Page 31 - Regatta Section

Spirit of 1976 doesn't stir Americans

IT'S NOT THE REAL THING, but the annual re-enactment at Washington CrossIng, N.J., of a local historical event is a reminder of the nation's heritage which
Americans are ignoring.
·

By TOM TIEDE
WASHINGTON C R 0 S S·
lNG, N.J.- ( NEA J- When
the United States celebrated
its lOOth birtlrday, in 1876,
a Boston newspaperman
w r o t e: "The · Centennial
closed in November, not too
soon for the many who had
found much of it so faddish
and tiresome that the word
Centennial was repulsive.
How had it stared at us
from every oyster cellar,
tripe stall, coffee booth,
grand hotel, haberdashery,
candy shop and fish store
. . . oh, give us a rest for
a hundred years!"
The people of Washington
Crossing never read that
comment. But they might
have. Here it is, not 31
months before America is to
commemorate its s e c o n d
hundred years, its Bicentennial, and the citizens of this
historic spot · couldn't care

THE PLACE TO BE • • • JUNE 15, 16, 17

less. For many, it seems, the
hundred years rest hasn 't
been long enough,
"Bicentennial?" says a
man in the Tally Ho bar,
hard by the Delaware River.
"What's that? Oh, yeah, I
know. Baloney, that's what
it is, baloney. Naw, I don't
care anything about it. Gimme another beer, huh."
Th~ opinion, minus barley
breath, is echoed thro11ghout
this tiny settlement. An official in the township (HoPe·
well J municipal building
says he hasn't "heard word
one about 1976." A man
driving a road repair truck
says he has "other things to
worry about than that stuff."
Several people queried, actually, respond that they do
not even know what Bicenteimial means.
The apathy is both odd
and at the same time understandable. Odd . because of

MAPLEWOOD LAKE

BIG BEND REGAITA

RT#124 .. RACINE, 0.
'FOR FAMILY ENJOYMENT!

VISIJ ••.

SWIMMING

~~-= e SLIDES e BOARDS

GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN
985-3832

•RINGS eDRUM'ROLL
•SKEETERS

CHESTER, 0.

SPECIALTIES:
BASKETS - Shrimp, Dlicken &amp; Big Steak
SUNDAES, CONES, MALTS, SHAKES, FLOATS,
BANANA SPLITS, COLD DRINKS, SANDWIOIES,
SHERBETS &amp;SLUSH
8 FLAVORS OF ICE
CREAM PLUS VANILLA &amp; CHOOOLATE "SOFT
SERVE" A new self service, air conditioned,
dining room has .been added, clean rest rooms, plenty of free parking.
You May Also Eat at Our Picnic Tables.
Phone: 985-3832 for Carry Out Orders. We'll have it ready.

A Bucket of the Colonel's
"finger llckin' good " Kentucky
Fried Chicken can make dinner a
"Barrel of Fun." No fuss or mess
for you. Just stop by and bring it

home. Have a "Barrel of Fun"
tonight.

MEIGS OOUNTY

loYe5 what the Colonel cooks ·

·K.tueklt
fried (;hiektlt®
Have a barrel of fun

Crow's Steak House·
POMEROY I OHIO

BEAUTIFUL
LAKE
SET IN

FISHING
•BOATS

••
'0

•
••

WOODS

;

PICNICKING
•COVERED SHElTER
•CAMPING

$300 Per

:

•

••

:

!

I

•

I ' 'J

Family/
Per Day!

.
Includes Everything

•

,~.~
.
,
.. . l ,,,
S w•mmmg
Adults SOc
\~ ~~
Children 25c
~.;'"'· ,,.,, ·~
Meet , your friends at
Maplewood Lake.

' Visit Us During Regatta June 15-16-17

the knee-jerk interest in
history here (this is where,
on Christmas night, 1776,
George Washington led his
military across the Delaware
to fight the critical Battle
of Trenton); understandable
because to this date the long
planned, long troubled, long
ignored U.S. Bicentennial
commemoration has not
caught a twit of the public
fancy.
Public fancy? The Bicentennial in some quarters is
a public joke. Some citizens
grump that the celebration
should be moved up a year
or two, "before -the Indians
take the country back."
Others complain that all the
money spent is in vain because "people won't have
enough gas to go to see it."
Still more wonder., morosely,
what with Watergate and
corruption, "if there'll be a
nation left by then to
honor."
The . cynicism should be
expected. In the seven years
since Congress first man·
dated the observation of the
nation 's 200th anniversary,
not only has there been mal-.
functions in the nation but
in the anniversary planning
as well.
Superpatriots first tried to
capture planning power,
then superpoliticians (inter.
cepted secret messages suggest the Republican administration once saw 1976 as an
opportunity to strengthen
the party). A world's fair
was planned, and rejected.
' Leaders of major participat·
ing cities argued ideas to
death.
Even now, most states
have only rudimentary plans
for the Bicentennial; Congress has rejected the top
priority Bicentennial propos·
al I national parks in all 50
states) ; and politicos are debating whether to change
the 50-member federal planning board 1The American
Revol utional Bicentennial
Commission 1 to one-man
rule.
Small wonder the avera£e
citizen IS yaw ning, In New
.Jersey, as example, the state
has not eve n named its
commemoration commission .
Anybody interested in 1976
can not find a Bicentennial
number in the phone book .
One guy connected with the
ho-hum task of organizing
some action here says, "We
think we 're goi ng to build

a Liberty Park on the New
Jersey side of the Statue or
Liberty, but , . ,"
But, indeed. Time is running out. Says one state
newsman: "What I'm going
to do in 1976 is take my kids
to Union City and let them
smell what has happened in
two centuries."
To some extent, of course,
the official confusion and
oublic inertia is a natural
byproduct of an activity so
immense and, until recentlv,
so far awav. Says an ARn·c
official in Washington : "How
can vou get 210 million people interested, much less in
agreement, on something
like this'''
You can't. Student s . for
example, according to Ch ip
Burlei of the Co llege Press
Service, " think the whole
thing is ludicrous," Other
segments of the soc iety
agree. Indians, because lhc
land to be commemorated is
land stolen from th em :
Blacks because at the time
of the revolution many of
their ancestors were slaves.
Even entire states of pcollle
feel no overwhelming pridl'
for the Bicentennial ; Alaska .
for examole. was part of
Russia in 1776.
Yet beyond these examples
of natural torpidity, there is
also evidence that Bicenten·
nial planners have not
~pened the doors to publi!'
mterest. Except for some
exceptional states 1such as
Massachusetts), rna ny people
are disinterested merely because they've not been asked
to be interested . Too often
the designated planners have
held their own meetings and
formulated their own ideas.
~~re at Washington Crossmg. the township has not
even formed a citizens Bi-

centennial committee ; all
work to commemorate the
anniversary is being handled
by state parks personnel and
historical interest groups.

*TRIUMPH
*B.M.W.
*RICKMAN
*KAWASAKI
*PUCH
MAICO

*

SALES • SERVICE
• ACCESSORIES

Athens
Sport Center
Motorcycles &amp;
Diving Equipment
Wed . &amp; Fri. 9 to 8
Tues. thru Sat. 9 to 6
140 Columbus Rd.
Athens, Ohio

•CLUB HOUSE
•GOLFING
EQUIPMENT\
~:

POMEROY GOLF
CLUB
1 Mi. From Pomeroy
Off RT. 7

�•

•

Page 30 - Regatta Section

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973
BULL
FIGHT
IN :
POMEROY?;
Well,
maybe! Come the Frog
Jumps on Saturday, June 16
at Meigs Football Field In
Pomeroy, Meigs County will
be honored by the presence
of "Elchlco," reputedly a
professional bull fighter
from Valencia, Spain, who
will give an exhibition at the
Frog Ball that night. Elchlco
Is said to be well lmown for
his performances In Madrid,
Barcelona and southern
France, but he always
wanted to appear In North
America. Even the largest
bull fighting arena In Mexico
which holds a capacity of
47,000 persomwildn't satisfy
him. He will bring his own
picadors.
that Elchlco will encounter
are, front row, 1-r, .David
Burt, Dale Warner, past
grand croaker, and Eddie
Holter; back row, Jim
Clatworthy, grand croaker
of the Ohio Society of the
Promotion of the Bull Frog;
Rodney Downing, grand
croaker in charge of vice and
Roy Holter, past grand
croaker. Following the bull
fight a beef barbecue will be
held.

VISIT US DURING THE

Last stone men
1Continued

from page 26)

stone masonry to those who
come to " Heritage Sunday" on
June 17.
Also planned for that day at
The Meigs County Museum are
folk music and calliope concerts, with folk singerhistorian Ann Grimes of
Granville appearing at 2:00.
There will be textile arts
demonstrations, show, and
sale; a pottery demonstration,

show, and sale; a lapidary and
his craft; a display of Indian
artifacts, and genealogical
displays and discussions.
There will also be a slide show
on Meigs County, a presentation of the pl!ins for the
development of the museum,
and a chance to view the
museum storage room and the
present collection. An antique
auto show will also be staged
by The Meigs Antique Auto
Club whose sponsor is Mr. Carl

Brannon. Food and beverage
will be available on the
--grounds and visitors are encouraged to bring lawn chairs
for the folk concert to be sure of
a seat. Those attefiding are
also urged to wear old-time
clothing and to bring any items
or 'photographs of local historic
interest for "show and tell."
"Heritage Sunday" 'will begin
at 11 :OOa. m. and will close at 6
p.m. with free admission for
all.

BIG BEND REGATTA
JUNE 15-16-17
Can't cook tonight?

The Daily Sentinel, June 12, 1973
Page 31 - Regatta Section

Spirit of 1976 doesn't stir Americans

IT'S NOT THE REAL THING, but the annual re-enactment at Washington CrossIng, N.J., of a local historical event is a reminder of the nation's heritage which
Americans are ignoring.
·

By TOM TIEDE
WASHINGTON C R 0 S S·
lNG, N.J.- ( NEA J- When
the United States celebrated
its lOOth birtlrday, in 1876,
a Boston newspaperman
w r o t e: "The · Centennial
closed in November, not too
soon for the many who had
found much of it so faddish
and tiresome that the word
Centennial was repulsive.
How had it stared at us
from every oyster cellar,
tripe stall, coffee booth,
grand hotel, haberdashery,
candy shop and fish store
. . . oh, give us a rest for
a hundred years!"
The people of Washington
Crossing never read that
comment. But they might
have. Here it is, not 31
months before America is to
commemorate its s e c o n d
hundred years, its Bicentennial, and the citizens of this
historic spot · couldn't care

THE PLACE TO BE • • • JUNE 15, 16, 17

less. For many, it seems, the
hundred years rest hasn 't
been long enough,
"Bicentennial?" says a
man in the Tally Ho bar,
hard by the Delaware River.
"What's that? Oh, yeah, I
know. Baloney, that's what
it is, baloney. Naw, I don't
care anything about it. Gimme another beer, huh."
Th~ opinion, minus barley
breath, is echoed thro11ghout
this tiny settlement. An official in the township (HoPe·
well J municipal building
says he hasn't "heard word
one about 1976." A man
driving a road repair truck
says he has "other things to
worry about than that stuff."
Several people queried, actually, respond that they do
not even know what Bicenteimial means.
The apathy is both odd
and at the same time understandable. Odd . because of

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You May Also Eat at Our Picnic Tables.
Phone: 985-3832 for Carry Out Orders. We'll have it ready.

A Bucket of the Colonel's
"finger llckin' good " Kentucky
Fried Chicken can make dinner a
"Barrel of Fun." No fuss or mess
for you. Just stop by and bring it

home. Have a "Barrel of Fun"
tonight.

MEIGS OOUNTY

loYe5 what the Colonel cooks ·

·K.tueklt
fried (;hiektlt®
Have a barrel of fun

Crow's Steak House·
POMEROY I OHIO

BEAUTIFUL
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SET IN

FISHING
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Adults SOc
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Children 25c
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Meet , your friends at
Maplewood Lake.

' Visit Us During Regatta June 15-16-17

the knee-jerk interest in
history here (this is where,
on Christmas night, 1776,
George Washington led his
military across the Delaware
to fight the critical Battle
of Trenton); understandable
because to this date the long
planned, long troubled, long
ignored U.S. Bicentennial
commemoration has not
caught a twit of the public
fancy.
Public fancy? The Bicentennial in some quarters is
a public joke. Some citizens
grump that the celebration
should be moved up a year
or two, "before -the Indians
take the country back."
Others complain that all the
money spent is in vain because "people won't have
enough gas to go to see it."
Still more wonder., morosely,
what with Watergate and
corruption, "if there'll be a
nation left by then to
honor."
The . cynicism should be
expected. In the seven years
since Congress first man·
dated the observation of the
nation 's 200th anniversary,
not only has there been mal-.
functions in the nation but
in the anniversary planning
as well.
Superpatriots first tried to
capture planning power,
then superpoliticians (inter.
cepted secret messages suggest the Republican administration once saw 1976 as an
opportunity to strengthen
the party). A world's fair
was planned, and rejected.
' Leaders of major participat·
ing cities argued ideas to
death.
Even now, most states
have only rudimentary plans
for the Bicentennial; Congress has rejected the top
priority Bicentennial propos·
al I national parks in all 50
states) ; and politicos are debating whether to change
the 50-member federal planning board 1The American
Revol utional Bicentennial
Commission 1 to one-man
rule.
Small wonder the avera£e
citizen IS yaw ning, In New
.Jersey, as example, the state
has not eve n named its
commemoration commission .
Anybody interested in 1976
can not find a Bicentennial
number in the phone book .
One guy connected with the
ho-hum task of organizing
some action here says, "We
think we 're goi ng to build

a Liberty Park on the New
Jersey side of the Statue or
Liberty, but , . ,"
But, indeed. Time is running out. Says one state
newsman: "What I'm going
to do in 1976 is take my kids
to Union City and let them
smell what has happened in
two centuries."
To some extent, of course,
the official confusion and
oublic inertia is a natural
byproduct of an activity so
immense and, until recentlv,
so far awav. Says an ARn·c
official in Washington : "How
can vou get 210 million people interested, much less in
agreement, on something
like this'''
You can't. Student s . for
example, according to Ch ip
Burlei of the Co llege Press
Service, " think the whole
thing is ludicrous," Other
segments of the soc iety
agree. Indians, because lhc
land to be commemorated is
land stolen from th em :
Blacks because at the time
of the revolution many of
their ancestors were slaves.
Even entire states of pcollle
feel no overwhelming pridl'
for the Bicentennial ; Alaska .
for examole. was part of
Russia in 1776.
Yet beyond these examples
of natural torpidity, there is
also evidence that Bicenten·
nial planners have not
~pened the doors to publi!'
mterest. Except for some
exceptional states 1such as
Massachusetts), rna ny people
are disinterested merely because they've not been asked
to be interested . Too often
the designated planners have
held their own meetings and
formulated their own ideas.
~~re at Washington Crossmg. the township has not
even formed a citizens Bi-

centennial committee ; all
work to commemorate the
anniversary is being handled
by state parks personnel and
historical interest groups.

*TRIUMPH
*B.M.W.
*RICKMAN
*KAWASAKI
*PUCH
MAICO

*

SALES • SERVICE
• ACCESSORIES

Athens
Sport Center
Motorcycles &amp;
Diving Equipment
Wed . &amp; Fri. 9 to 8
Tues. thru Sat. 9 to 6
140 Columbus Rd.
Athens, Ohio

•CLUB HOUSE
•GOLFING
EQUIPMENT\
~:

POMEROY GOLF
CLUB
1 Mi. From Pomeroy
Off RT. 7

�Houdashelt home haven
for 12 cuddly kittens
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
What 's cuddly, aHeetionate,
playful, and soft to the touch '
A kitten. or course!
With kittens, like people,
there's an overpopulation
problem .
Good homes for pels are at a

premium as more and more
signs, newspaper

ads, and

swap shop announcements

.,..

plead for homes for the infant
felines .

Page 32 - Regatta Section

" Free Kittens/' says ~he sign

The Athens County

at the Houdashelt home on
Grant St., Middleport.
Freddie and her mother,
Mrs . Harry Houdashelt, have
an even dozen, all available lor
"adoption." Takers can have

•a..n ·r..

th eir choice. A white one Felicia Ames, consultant for
perhaps, or one that 's yellow or Friskies Re sea rch Center
•
spotted, or a black one .
describes how cats are used in
Besidesmakmggood pel.ol for Yucca Valley , Calif . to sol"e
children and adu ll.&gt;l, there's rattler problems.
still another in ce ntive for
When cats were brought to
adding a cal to the family .
Yucca Valley, snakes simp ly
Did you know that there is disappeared ! The s nakes
some basis to believe that eats didn 't attack the cats, neithor
and sna kes don't mix '
did the cats go near U1c sna kes .
Curious when she saw a Apparently the two just can' t
snake move toward her a nd a abide one another. In Yueca
man with a hoe , instead of Valley , anyway, snakes leave;
toward a cat nearby which was cats stay.
standing perfectly still,
Another story Mi ss Ames
Freddie did some research .
related in ·•rat F'ancy" is
She found that using caLl to about an antique dea ler in the
ward orr snakes is nothing new lulls of Kentucky who got
in infested rattlesna ke country. herself a dozen cats to help
An ~rticle in !(Cat Fancy/' by sOI\'c her sna ke problems . In

sidwalk stri kes a note o( terror
•
better get yourself a ca t.
And as we sai d , the
Houda shelt s have a dozen

cudd ly, affectionate, playful
kittens ready foe adoption into
good homes, and , incidentally,
they 're litter trained .

one sunun cr the 17 snakes

which had slivCI'Cd in were
gont\ and sl1c hasn 't seen one

FREDDIE HOUDASHELT'S playful kittens, left , delight
Amy and Matthew Erwin, children of Mr. and Mrs Don
Erwin.
·

since getting the cats.
Mei gs County can hardly be
described as snake country .

However , if one tiny ga rden
slia ke slit herin g along th e

en tine

5 Pet. per year paid on
Regular Passbook S.wlngs.
No Minimum. lntere.s t from
date of deposit to date of

withdrawal. Interest com·

pounded quarterly. Interest
paid as long as an open
account is maintained.

53!•

Pet. per year on one year'

Certificate
of
Deposit.
$!1,&lt;1Uo,uu Minimum. Interest
Payable Quatterly. 90 day
· interest penalty if cashed
before malurlty.

111 The
hp.

Devoted ToDTiae l~f 17ae Meig1-Ma10n Area
VOL. XXV NO. 42

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1973

Court
hacks
racial
standard

TEN CENTS
THE TRADITION OF ROSES for the "star" was carried
out at the annual Mid-Pam SchJMll of Dance recital Tuesday
night. Mrs. Judy Jncobs Fraser, instructor, was presen ted
roses and :-1 gift from st udent.&lt;;. She not only headed last
night's production but :lppcarce.l in an excellent toe routine.
Sec story on Puge B.

New cease fire
accord signed

"

WASHINGTON ( UP! ) - A
U.S. Court of Appeals Tues&lt;tay
barred fedel'al funds to elemen·
tary and · secondacy schools
,throughout much of. the country
unless they desegregate .
The appeals court also gave
public colleges in 10 states
another 10 months tci end racial
segregation before the govern·
ment must start action to cut
off their federal aid .
The decisions - uph olding
lower court rulings- were made
Tuesday by the U.S . Court of
Appeals for the District of
Columbia.
On Feb. 16, U.S, District
Judge John S. Pratt ruled that
the Department of Health,
Education and Welfa re must
begin proceedings to cut off
federal funds to both public
sc hools and institutions of
higher education which do not
comply with federal desegregation standards.
The eight-judge appeals panel
said Judge Prall's order was
"unassailable" as to the schools
but that the college level
institutions need more time to
comply.
"... We are mindful tha l
desegregation problems in colleges and universities differ
widely from those in elementary and secondary schools and

PHONE 992-2156

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

Demon rum figures heavily
in police business of May
Driving

peace talks - for the cer,emony that bore a marked resemblance to the fir !:!l si~ ning four months
ago. It was a reluctant South Vietnam. Presidcrlt Nguyen Van 1'hicu ha s sHid ri o signing wa~
necessary because Saigon had no t violated the original agreement. But in ttlC end lw bowf•d to v.
S: economic pressure ahd decided to go along with the cere mony, diplomati c sources repo•·tcd 1n
Saigon.
SinCe the original Jan. 27 truce wrJr has continued to rava ge South Vietn:-1m iJIHJ each sifh.blamed the other for U1e thousands of c-ease-fire violation s which ha ve d&lt;limed more thou s;mrb of
lives when there was su pposed to be peace after nearly three decades of war .
President Nixon ordered Kc~s i nger back to Paris for more ta lks with Th o, suspcmkd min e
sweeping of lhe North Vietnamese har~ors, brok e off talks on rmstw&lt;:~r U.s. cconon Jic c1id to l·l;1 i1 oi
and mounted an intensive bombing campaign in CambodirJ. This time the agreement ~~ ~ uppo1-i t.' d
to bring peace to Ca mborlia too .
.
A Communist spokesman said the communique worked out in a. hist two-hoUr scssiu1'1 . tmJay
between Ki ssinger and Tho close ly resembled the H-poinl pl;m made publi c in Saigon Tuesd;.Jy
ca lling for an effective cease-fire, the first step in nwking ·it biflll! ng. The rour ptwtics ~ere c;.dl•·tl
in for the 4 p.m . ( 1J a .m .EbT).. sign ing ceremony ilm1 1t W!lS £illnounccd NorttJ Vi ctmuHcsc
officia ls would sign the fina l docWl]enls at 7 p. m. (noon EDT 1.

Ann Grimes h-eads
Heritage day cast

*; News•• zn Brzefs!;t

in-

:;::
~;~;
;:;:

~~~~
;:;;

:;::

$4,721 to improve
school libraries ·
The Mei gs Local Sc hoo l
District ha s received a grant of
$4,72 1 fr om the Division of
Fede1•al Assisl&lt;!ncc, to be used
for the purchase of library
materials, under Tille fl .
!':SEA.
Mei gs Local 's appli cation
provided that the money would
be di vided amo ng the
elemeni&lt;J ry buildings and the
juni or high on a per pupil basis
· on an app roximate division as
fo ll ows :
Meigs Junior High, $1, 1'11 ;
Pomeroy, $9{)8 ; Middleport,
$681; Rutland , $567; Salisbury,

Three bids to update and
m odernizin g pia t
book s
showing property ownership in
Meigs County were received
Tuesday by the Meigs County
Board of Comm issioners.
The bids, covering a wide
range from a financia l stand·
point, were submi tted by Allied
Apprai sa l, Cincinnati ,
$130,000; Surveys Unlimited ,
Cable, $7.1,335, and the Rightof-Way Co., Marietta, $24,950.
The commissioners will study
the bids and make an award
later.
The board appointed James
E. Roush, Racine, to serve on
the executive co mmittee
for the Buckeye Hill sHocking Valley
Regional
Deve lopment
or.
ga nization with co mm iss ioners Robert Clark and

album notes . IL&gt;l .litle is , "Ohi o singers and play ers . .Mrs.
Slate
Ballads:
Histor y Gr im es is a n Ar chivi st-atThrough
folk so ngs : Ann Lar ge for the li brary' s
Grimes , with Dulcimer ."
National Federation of Music
The Library of Congress is Club~ ' Folkmusic Archives.
duplica ting her important
Ann Grimes ha s received
tape-recordings of traditional . !Continued on Page 8)

} .'
:;f;.
:;:;·

~~~~
:;:;
;:;:

f:.:;;:;;;::::;::::;:::;:::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ; ::::::::.;·:::::::::::::: ~:;:;:;:::;:;:;: ::::::;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;::::::::i;~~

$408 ; Bradbury, $295 ; Salem
Ce nter $28.1, and Harr isonville, $261.
The remainder of the grant
would pay for transportation of
materials pur chased. '!'he
application also stipulated that
approximately one third of all
funds would be spe nt in the
area of remedia l reading
materials.
This money will help bring
schoo l libraries of the distl'icl
up .to dale with new reading
materials for the children,
school administrators said.

·Plat bids offered

Two charged in
.manJuana case

1

clos~ly

dleport poli&lt;•c during May.
'
A&lt;-cording to Pollee Chiel J. J . Cremeans, 13 11f the 38
arrests mudc by his department were charg~d. with in toxication and IQ with driving while intoxicated. Other
arre~;ts and lhc number charged with the offense In. dudt~ d : assured clea r dis~nce, three- running red li ght ,
rcsisling arreSl, two cachi one ea·ch for lollowing too
closely; orJt•ratlllg a vollicle wHhout regard for safety;
intllrtJJ)Cr tJ:u•king ; assa ult und ba ttery; dlstur·bing tlw
. peace; fig hting. One cuse was trru1sferrcd to county court
;md charges Wl!r~ dropped In one instam·e.
The chic( reported 11 accidents In town dllring May.
Parking mclcr receipts were $1,J36.50. The poHce cruiser
was driven :J,652 miles.

Florida, Georg ia, Louisiana,
Mary land , Miss issippi, Nor th
Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Virginia .
The sc hools in question are
more than 200 school systems A highlight of Heritage
una ccustomed area ."
ioca led in some of these sa me Sunday afternoon staged by the
The college level institutions states plus De laware, Kentuck- Meigs County Museum during
involved are in Arkansas, Y, Missouri, South Ca rolina , Regatta Weekend fr om 11 a.m .
Tennessee, Texas and West to 6 p.m ., will be Ann Grimes,
Virginia .
folk sin ger , lecturer and en1'""'''~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ; :·:;:·:··-::-:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~;:;::::;::;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.:;: ;::):
In New York, Jack Green- tertainet.
berg, direc tor-counse l of the
An authority on the musical
NAACP Legal Defense Fund, heritage
of
midwestern
applauded the ruling and said it. Am e rica and one of the
.;.;.
By United Press International
..
means that what he ca lled a region's leadi ng collector LAS . VEGAS, NEV. - NEWSPAPER publisher Hank
"political determination " . by performers, Mrs. Grimes is an
Greenspun told the Internal Revenue Service Tuesda y there is
the Nixon administration not to expert in the lo r e 'a nd
"no way" the government will get his private files on Howard
enforce the ban on federal techniques of the plucked, folk
Hughes, even if he goes to jail for his defiance . " I told them I had
funds to segregated schools has dulcimer. At her home in
not produced the documents and I would not produce the
been overruled by the courts.
Granville, Ohio, she ha s the
documents, " Greenspun said, emerging from a meeting with IRS
" This ought to mean that the world's largest collection of .
agents that lasted less than an hour. The IRS subpoenaed his files .
pace or school desegregation these rare, home-m~:tde inon Hughes following a reference in the Senate Watergate
will
begin ;o pick up ," he said . struments .
hearings to confidential files in the safe of Greenspun, publisher
Ann Gr imes' lecture of the Las Vegas Sun .
recita
ls reflect the midw.e st's
Creenspun was ordered to appear at the local IRS office
history through ballads and
today and turn over his files on Hughes, the mysterious
so ngs which she has collec~
billionaire who once lived in seclusion atop a hotel hete and has
••
from families , many of which,
millions of dollars invested in Nevada, to agents of the IRS
like her own, have been in tne
Special Task Force, which carr ies out crimina l investigations.
Two
defendants
,
Eric
Ritter
area
since pioneer times . She
Greenspun said he was ready to go to jail rather than relent " if
and
Rebecca
Chatfield,
-sings hundreds of the se from
that is the alternative.
Pomeroy
Roue
4,
were
memory,
se lecting
her
" We are protected by the lsi Amendment," he said. " !
.released
on
bond
Tuesday
illustrations for individual
believe that IRS always has taken the position that they arc
following
their
arrest
by
the
occasions
and audience inabove the United Slates Constitution ."
depar tment of Sheriff Robert terest, accompanying herself
Hartenbach on a charge of on th e du lcimer in unacTALLAHASSEE, FLA. - AN ARCHEOLOGIST who
possess ion and cultivation o~ companied "old-style ."
recovered the bones of Florida's first residenl&gt;l fr om an unmarijuana
,
The " Voice of Ameri ca" and
derwater cave said today the relics are proof that promitive man
Sheriff
Harlenbach,
me
mthe
America n· Association of
lived wi th '- and probably hunted - mastodon and saber:tooth
bers
of
his
department,
and
Ed uca tiona I Broadcasters
tigers in North America .
two
officers
fr
om
the
Athens
ha ve re corded her performDr. Wilburn S. Cockrell, the bearded young scientists. who
Police Department, made the ance for radio and television on
l'ecoveo ed the bones Feb. 5 from warm mineral springs of
arresl&gt;l
Mondy. The pair will which she frequently makes
·North Port Charlotle,said the bones are about 10,250 years old appear before Judge Frank W. 1 '1ive" appearances . She has
give or take a century. That would put the early Florida Indians
Porter in the Meigs County · been in many folk festiva ls.
in the late archaic or early paleo-Indian period on the arCourt Friday. The sheriff's
A long-play commercial
cheological timetable.
department said 550 marijuana recording , released by Folkplanl.&gt;l were pulled and stored ways , features her as a folk
CINCINNATI - A JUDGE RULED Tuesday .that high school
(Con tinued on Page Bl
for evidence in the case.
singer, collector, and writer of

'

£ollowcd

agreement wm·ked out by Henry A. Kissinger und Hanoi 's Lc Due Tho to bring a "~t ri d ar id

gathered once mofe in th e Kleber Avenue 'conference hall ~- site of lhe long , drawn-out Pari:-i

that HEW admittedly lacks
experience in deali ng with
them," the court sa id. It said
HEW "must carefully assess
the significance of a variety of
new factors as it moves into an

intoxi~atcd

PARIS (UPI ) - The four orig inal warring pa r ties of South VictJJa iiJ signed today another
scrupulous implementation ''·of the Jan . 27 ceHse-fir c agreement that was supposed to huvc cndcll
the fighli,ng in Vietnam.
Rep,·esenta tives of the United Stales, North Vietnam, South Vietnam and the Viet Cong

PAUL CASCI, MIDDLEI'()RT Postmaster and active in
the Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion., was presen ted
this atlracti\'e plaque at Eighth District American Legion
Convention in Lithopolis Sunday in recognition of his work as
distriCt chairman of the 1972 "Gifts for the Yanks Who Gave "
program . The program ca rried out by the Am eri can Cegion
is designed primarily to provide year-round remembrances
Jor hospitalized veterans. Casci was chairman of the
program in the district in 1972 and ha s served in the capaci ty
a number _of limes over past years. The Eighth District
under Casci's cha irman ship went 418.2 percent over qu ota
during the past year.

while

toxication aN the principal offenses detected by Mid-

CATCH AND HOLD
Middleport Chief of Police J .
J . Cremeans today adviSed
residents who sec' d ogs tearing

up their garde n or running
thro ugh their property to
restrain the dog and call the
dog ·wal'den.

Warden Ours to serve as official county representatives .
·The board approved the attendance of Judge John C.
Bacon to a judicial conference
in Chill icothe on June 15. Bills
were approved for payment.
Attending
were
commi ssi oners Ours, Clark and
Henry Wells , County Engineer
Waller Buehl , and cle rk
Martha Chambers.

Weatht'r
Partly cloudy and cooler
today with chance of thundershowers ex trem e south .
High in 70s and low 80s . Clear
and cooler tonight, low in the
50s. Thursday sunny and high
from mid 70s to low 80s.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Wednesday was 74 degrees
under cloudy skies.
Vterans Memorial Hospital
·Discharges
Bernard
Rogers, Lucy Kim , Marvin
Pullin, Susan. Knight, Charles
Barnhart, Michael Van Meter
•
Nora Reuter, l&gt;'lark Gilkey,
J~sse Cottrill and Margaret
Hammack.

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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>June 12, 1973</text>
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